Cop yrig ht. Sta te P re s s , 1990 T e m p e , A rizo n a Tuesday, October 2,1990 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 16 No. 25 S in k h o le d am age too vast fo r q u ic k fix B y M ICHELLE PAUL State Press A gaping sinkhole at the intersection of University D rive and Rural Road was filled in tim e to ease rush-hour traffic Monday afternoon, but officials. said plans for permanent repairs to the road are still up in the air. The busy intersection was reopened at noon Monday after city workers and a p riv a te contractor spent Sunday and Monday morning repairing thé pipe and the road. The hole, which measured 30 feet in diam eter and 10 to 12 feet in depth, was created when a 14-inch water main burst Saturday evening. Telephone lines running along the main also were severed when the pip® burst, leaving between 600 and 800 people without telephone service for most o f the weekend. Pavem ent on the road is rougher than before because crews tem porarily patched the roadway in order to open the road quickly. The speed lim it through the area is now 25 mph. “ W e’ll be coming in at a later date to do more m ajor work,” said Jim Jones, director of Tem pe Public. Works. Jon es s a id he w a s unsure w hen permanent repairs to the roadway will start. “ W e’ll try to pick a time when there is lighter traffic.” he said, adding that crews m ay work at night or on weekends to repave the intersection. The water Spouted out of the roadway around 9 p.m. Saturday, and by the time a Tem pe Public Works crew arrived at the scene, the intersection was flooded. _ Engineers began turning o ff water valves, cutting off the water, by 11 p.m. Despite the number of valves closed to stop the gusher, city officials said homes and businesses were not affected. “ W e were able to manipulate the valves so no one was without water,” said John Mann, assistant utilities superintendent for Tempe. A fte r a private contractor was called' in to break the asphalt, officials w ere able to repair the water main. “ It ’s the largest one (hole caused by a water main break) I ’v e ever seen, it’s not something that is usual,” Mann said. Mann said w ater pressure caused the extensive damage to the roadway. He added that the water eroded the surrounding soil and finally- created the hole in the asphalt. Telephone service was back to normal around, noon on Monday. The customers a ffected w ere in the areas between University Drive and Apache Boulevard and from Rural Road to Dorsey Lane. A US West officia l said customers inconvenienced by the break in service may Turn to H ole, page 9. Recycling program extends AS Us role By DIANE T. SANTORICO State Press A new recycling program unveiled by ASU President Lattie Coor last month has left the fate o f a private contractor hired to clean up the campus in question. Robin Freedman, owner and operator of Freedm an Recycling, a company hired to work with the ASU Physical Plant in the previous pilot program, said he has been left in limbo with Coor’s latest decision to increase University involvement in the program. “ Our containers are still at ASU,” Freedm an said “ We are just wailing to find out what is going to happen next.” According to a memorandum sent by Coor on S e p t 4, A S U w ill im p le m e n t, a “ restructured voluntary program effective Oct. 1, 1990” that will be an extension of recycling efforts already taking place by the Physical Plant. Under the new program, the University plans to expand, its own recycling efforts but has not informed Freedman Recycling as to the extent o f the company’s role in the project, Coor’s decision came in response to recent state legislation that requires the University to implement full-scale recycling programs. A bill passed this year requires all state governmental facilities to implement a fullscale recycling program by Nov. i, in which at least 50 percent o f all waste paper must be recycled. The Physical Plant began its pilot recycling program in February 1990, and although the costs of the program exceeded revenues by more than .$12,000, Coor said ASU will continue its recycling efforts. The memorandum states that ASU Surplus Property w ill take over Physical Plant’s duty of paper collection at various buildings around campus. Sherry Spaseff, recycling coordinator for Surplus Property, said its department has collected computer paper from several campus locations for the last five years. She said the new program will give Surplus Property the responsibility of increasing its efforts, taking over Physical P la n t’s pick-up spots at six campus buildings. Bins are located at the Administration Building, the two business buildings, the Student Services Building, the Academic Services Building and the Agriculture Building. Spaseff said Surplus Property w ill be responsible for setting up recycling bins at each of the pick-up locations, and i t s ; employees will deposit all recyclable paper a t an undeterm ined cen tra l pick-up location; After the paper is collected, she said, At the end o f his rope Jim Tait uses repelling equipm ent to wash the windows of the Archltechture Building. Tait form erly had worked on skyscrapers in Chicago. Turn to Recycle* page 9. Kuw aiti students ban together to form organ ization By KENNETH BROWN State Press One ASU student described how two neighbors in his Kuwaiti hometown w ere shot point blank in the head, while another explained how a crowd of women were mowed down by Iraqi machine gun fire. While some might think o f the M iddle East crisis in purely political terms, to a new campus group, the results of Iraq’s annexation o f Kuwait has personal implications as friends and relatives suffer under the hand of the 2-month-old occupation. The Kuwaiti Student Organization, form ed five days ago, w ill m eet for the first time at 4 p.m. Friday in the M U Pim a Room to educate the University about what one member called “ things you haven’t seen on CNN (T V news channel) Although spared the horrors of Iraqi brutality, all of the group’s members asked that their names not be used because of possible death threats here in the United States. The new group has extended invitations to Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., to attend the first meeting. McCain’s office saidja representative w ill be present, and word has not been received from DeConcini. “ There are terrible things going on in Kuwait,” KSO’s vice president said. “ One man wakes up one day and finds a tank at his front door. Women are getting raped. Soldiers are looting.” The meeting is a spin-off of a sim ilar event organized Monday by KSO’s sister organization at UofA. The ASU group wants to show that Kuwaiti citizens are behind Am erican efforts to force an Iraqi withdrawal. Several citizens who have escaped their occupied homeland w ill speak and show unedited videos o f Iraqi treatment of ordinary citizens, including widespread looting and a massacre o f Kuwaiti youths who sprayed paint on walls. , , In addition, the club will accept new memberships open to anyone — including Iraqi nationals. “ They’re more than welcome. I have no hatred toward them,” said the group’s president, who asked to be called Al. “ It is Saddam Hussein I hate.” The group also w ill discuss Kuw aiti’s resistance force, which, according to the group’s vice president, has recaptured at least four areas in Kuwait. “ They are glad to have the U. S. there,” said the group’s vice president, adding that Kuwaitis realize that American military help is necessary to regain their freedom. “ One town even wants to put up a statue o f George Bush.” But not all are so sure of U. S. motives. A representative of the National Union of Kuwaiti Students, which works closely with the ASU group and the Turn to Kuwait, page 9. T h e rig h t path: A th le te attack: A dog’s life: Today’s weather: Cloudy* w ith a chance o f The Washington Huskies, w ho play the Sun Devils at home on Saturday, are highlighted. rain and a high n ear 90. Tonight: Cloudy, A new pathway on A-mountain, the o f three Cartoonist Rob Min­ ton targets the ICA Board’s recommen­ dation to give athletes the jump on preregistration. Page 5 P age H w ith a lo w hi the m id 60s. Classified«......... Comics...................................................10 .Cr osswor d. . . . . . . . 8 Horoscopes......,.;.....»..»..,.....,............,.. 15 Spom ..11 Ti i m H ü v State Press 9 1 00 0 N e w path makes A-m ountain an easy clim b B y BILL FR AN S Contributing W riter Tem pe residents havé new territory to explore now that a pathway has been completed on Hayden Butte, known to most as A-Mountain. The path, as it stands now, is the first o f three phases in a fiv e - y e a r p r o je c t , a c c o r d in g to D uane D aw son , administrator for Tem pe Parks and Recreation. Dawson said the $600,000 needed for the project is included in the city’s bond package coming up for a public vote on Oct. 23. “ I f the bond issue isn’t passed, then what you see up there is it,” Dawson said. The mountain trail consisting o f a rock-lined gravel path with benches and water fountains, has met the approval of most of its users. Leonard Monti, 78, who has walked the butte almost every day for four years, said he likes the new path, “ I think they smoothed it out pretty good,” he said. “ It’s a hell of a lot better than it was before.” Charles Billera, a junior business m ajor at ASU, also approved. “ It’s a lot easier to get up now,” said Billera, who uses the trail about twice a week. “ It’s nice to come up here and walk or just think.” A-Mountain is considered a Tempe park, and city officials thought a pathway was needed to maintain high safety standards and protect the environment. . Dawson said he hopes people w ill enjoy the surrounding scenery but not destroy it, adding that signs w ill be installed to instruct people on what they can and cannot do in the park. “ We are trying to establish trails that the predominance of people w ill use,” Dawson said. “ That way w e protect the desert wildlife and at the same time make it nice for people to com e.” , ■ The path also will be accessible to the handicapped. “ We tried to make it so it w ill be enjoyed by everyone,” said Jim Jones, director of Tem pe Public Works, adding that the city worked closely with several groups, including ASU’s Disabled Student Services. The first phase consists of a pathway from the base of the west side of the mountain, reaching just below the “ A ,” and an additional path from the south side that connects to the west path. The phase was completed in M ay, with a cost of around $200,000, Dawson said. Under the -second phase, Dawson said the city would construct a trail beginning on the south side of the mountain that w ill connect to the ASU parking lot on the north side. The proposed second trail would also be handicapped accessible. l% e third phase, he said, consists.of building a trail that extends to the top and around the mountain and then back down to park benches under the “ A .” T.J. Sokot/State Press A jogger uses one of the new trails on A-Mountain. The threephase project is part of a five-year city of Tem po plan. Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State P ress, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State P ress cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Street and University Drive. •Alpha Eta Rho will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the M U Yuma Room to listen to an aviation attorney. New members welcome. ■■■■■ •Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •Re-Entry Connection will meet at noon in the MU ReEntry Center to listen to ASU President Lattie C o o r., •Ja Shin Do will meet at 7 p.m. in the Student Recreation Complex Gym B. New comers welcome. •Fellowship of Christian Athletes will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Universtiy Activity Center Room 35 to watch a video. Everyone is welcome. •Honors Journal will meet at 8:30 p.m. in McClintock Hall Room 138. Open to all students interested in working on the Honors Journal. •Golden Key National Honor Society will meet at 5 p.m. at the Pizza Doug-Out on Mill Avenue. •Alleluia Lutheran Student Ministry will meet at 7 p.m. at 1034 S. Mill Ave. for a student Bible study. •Campus Ambassadors Christian Fellowship will meet at 7f30 p.m. in the MU La Paz Room to watch a Tony Campolo film. •Baptist Student Union will meet at 7 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave, for a Bible study. Correctioiis In a page one story in the Oct, 1 issue of the State Press, Acting Director of Parking and Transit Services John Huldane’s name was misspelled. In the same issue, the shooting incident reported on page eight happened early Saturday morning. The State Press regrets these errors. . BACK TO COOL Tank both vis, * R e g u la r *19*° value. O ffe r g o o d w h ile s u p p ly j lasts. P resen t co u p o n . O n e c o u p o n per person. Corner of Lem on & Rural *967-1114 FREE gQ». 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The L.A . police were part of the Increased security after a Raider fan severely beat a Pittsburgh Stealers fan last weekend. Turn to Bush, page 7. Report links senator’s actions to Keating gifts W A S H IN G T O N ( A P ) — A sp ecia l counsel’s report establishes crucial links between the tuning of contributions by Charles H Keating Jr. to three senators and specific actions the lawmakers took to help the form er savings and loan executive, congressional sources said Monday. The links w ere instrumental in the counsel’s recommendation that the Senate Ethics Committee investigation proceed against Democratic Sens. Alan Cranston of California, Dennis DeConcini of Arizona and Donald-Riegle Jr. of Michigan, the sources said. However, Special Counsel Robert Bennett recom m ended the com m ittee dismiss Sens. John M cCain, R -A riz. and John Glenn, D-Ohio, from the probe, according to the sources who spoke to The Associated Press only on condition of anonymity. “ The conclusion was there was no connection between the contributions and actions” of Glenn and McCain, one source Said. The committee announced Monday that it has scheduled individual meetings with the senators over the next two weeks. Glenn and McCain are to appear before the sixmem ber committee this week, the sources said. “ Under our existing practices, the committee must give each senator under investigation the opportunity to be heard by the committee in executive session before any decisions a re m ade,” a w ritten statement said. “ Following these meetings with the senators, the committee w ill meet to decide how it w ill proceed.” The panel said Bennett’s report totals 350 pages, plus thousands more pages of exhibits, including transcripts of interviews with senators and other witnesses. The five senators received at total of $1.3 m illion from Keating and his associates Tor their campaigns and causes, and intervened with U. S. banking regulators on behalf of the form er head of Lincoln Savings and Loan o f Irvine, Calif. The federal government seized Keating’s thrift in April 1989; it could cost taxpayers m ore than $2 billion to cover the losses. The senators have said they intervened with regulators — especially in two key meetings ynpotings in April 1987 — because Keating made a persuasive case that his thrift was being treated unfairly. A ll have denied that their intervention was driven by the donations. Public documents and statements show some links between the contributions and contacts/ w ith reg u la to rs by R ie g le , Cranston and DeConcini. However, Bennett reportedly has much more precise connections involving the timing. Also, his report does not dwell on just the timing of contributions, a source said, but examines the entire pattern of each senators’ conduct. The public record gives some insight into the timing o f contributions and actions by the senators. Thousands go to ‘potato fro as Soviets try to salvage crc News Briefs G as M ask s .m-m A* te n sio n m ount* in the G u lf, children of the Tovaf family in the Tel A viv su b u rb o f Ram at H ash aro h show off the g a s m asks issu e d to them more than a year ago in a pilot p ro ject to p ro te ct the p o p u lace against chem ical attack. The army announced today it w ill b egin distributing gas masks to Israel's 4.7 million citizens next week. D a y o f m o u r n in g Th ere w as a m ass m o u rn in g, Sunday,.at the monument in Babiy Yar in m em ory o f the v ic tim s of Fascism . More thanl00,000 Soviets were killed in Babiy Yar alm ost 50 years ago. w* f m m / m i r m . . . . . ____J . PE SH K I, U.S.S.R. (A P ) — Thousands of people, from alcoholics to soldiers, are slogging through the nation’s potato fields in a race to salvage the rotting crop and save Muscovites from a hungry winter. Joining the forced laborers in the muddy trenches of what the press has dubbed “ the potato front” are volunteers who are lending a hand so they can ca rry home a sack or two of the starchy staple that has vanished from store shelves in the capital. Tatyana Shcherbach, who was ordered into harvest duties by her bosses at the Lepes M etallu rgical F actory, laughed heartily as her three co-workers joked about President Mikhail Gorbachev. “ W e ’ v e b e e n w o n d e r in g w h e th e r Gorbachev eats potatoes like this,” she said, holding up a half-rotten one, “ or if he gets potatoes fromthe States.” t H er laughter spilled across the collective fa rm ’s half-plowed rows in the village of Peshki about 30 miles northwest of Moscow along the highway to Leningrad. The 44-year-old woman giggled, saying she and her colleagues had concluded Gorbachev would Opt for the Soviet spud because “ he’s not the kind of man to eat anything special.” As a stiff wind blew chilled unprotected lin n / 1 « n f k a n m n c hands iin the 40-degree ttemperatures, Shcherbach said: “ It helps to joke and make fun of one another. I t makes the job much easier, and such weather requires jokes.” She and about 100 colleagues from the factory plunked the potatoes into pails and carried them to large sacks standing in the rows. Many potatoes in the field already w ere rotten, Shcherbach said, holding a shriveled one in her soiled, thin cotton gloves before discarding it. Drenching rains have turned the fields to mud, crippling harvest operations for most o f Sept, and killing much o f the crop. Moscow has only 7 percent of the potato stock it needs for the winter. Students and soldiers w ere drafted into the harvest weeks ago, and leaders of Moscow’s regional government invited city dwellers to go to nearby collectives and state farm s to help dig potatoes — with an option to buy them at low prices. As Shcherbach spoke, young Red Arm y soldiers busily collected the 110-pound sacks of potatoes and hefted them into the arms of compatriots riding atop an open trailer pulled by an old tractor. “ W e’d rather be doing something else,” admitted P vt. Taras Grebnichenko of K iev. O p in io n Page 4 Tuesday, October 9 . 1990 State PlSSS V iva Las Vegas Most consistent candidate is‘none o f the above’ Ellen Goodman W a s h in g to n Post W rite rs G r o u p LAS VEGAS — This is not a city for the faint o f heart. The one-armed bandits here do more financial damage on a given night than the muggers in Manhattan. Thé gaming tables stretch across more football fields — the current American standard of measure — than the entire N FL. F or 24 hours a day, seven days a week, tourists who visit this environmental nightmare, spend their tim e making hard decisions and hoping for good luck. People come here to put their money where their mouths are. But in politics, the true residents of Nevada have learned what solvent citizens must in this risky state. Thfey have learned to hedge their bets. When they go to pull the lever in a polling booth, the house rules allow Nevadans an advantage the rest of us don’t have. In statewide races, they can vote for “ None o f the Above.” NO TA has been a perennial candidate in this state — the Harold StaSsen o f Nevada politics technically called “ None of Thèse Candidates” — since 1976. It w as originally introduced by then-assemblyman, Don Mello, as a way to fight apathy in the post-Watergate climate. “ W e w ere having a hard time getting people to come out to vote,” remembers Mello, who is now retired. “ I came up with the idea of letting them go and vote ‘no.’ I took the phone bode and started calling people and asking them what they thought about toe idea. I didn’t find anybody who didn’t like it.” ■: . M ello’s original idea was that NOTA would run on every ballot and if it won, there would have to be another election, with presumably a new set o f options. The state legislature didn’t go for that, but NO TA did win a place on the ballot. Says Mello, “ I f it hadn’t been for Richard Nixon, w e wouldn’t have gotten it at all.” Fifteen years later, NO TA remains, in the words o f Robert Elliott, the deputy secretary o f state for elections, “ a protest vote.” To mangle gram m ar and politics, “ None” cannot actually win. But, as Elliott puts it, “ Politically it would be a complete embarrassment to lose to none of the above.” Indeed toe genial deputy counts among his blessings the fact that he is an appointed official. NO TA actually topped the prim ary ticket of both parties in the state treasurer’s race four years ago. It comes in second L E T T E R These days Las Vegas has nothing on the rest of Am erica in an era when politics is described as a gamble and covered like a horse race. Democrats and Republicans seem as sim ilar philosophically as black and red, and toe voters have toe feeling the deck is stacked. The old conservative hostility to government and politics is rapidly being matched or even topped by mainstream disgust. Even the stalwartly left-wing magazine, The N ation, recently ran a piece favoring “ none o f the above.” People aren’t voting for outsiders this year; they’re voting against insiders. There is already a sort of NOTA vote. Why. not the real thing? If NOTA wins, call another election. In m y dyspeptic state of Massachusetts, party stalwarts last Tuesday turned out in favor of B ill Weld, a New Yorkborn Republican Reagan-Bush supporter and John Silber, a Texas-born Democratic Reagan-Bush supporter. The last remaining liberals are left to choose a governor between toe aristocrat and toe autocrat. G ive m e nobody. F o r years, m y own perennial candidate has been “ the lesser o f two evils.” Now there’s NOTA. I ’m not much of a gam bler even when surrounded by cards, chips and slots. But I ’ll bet Nevada’s got a winner in toe high-stakes game of politics. None o f the above. Let it ride. In your letter, you ramble on about toe quality food, plush housing accqmmodations and athletic scholarships they receive, b u t l ask you, where in your argument do you address toe issue at hand? Although toe previous facts are, in fact, true, what do they have to do with student-athletes receiving first dibs on scheduling? The answer — nothing! I w ill now give an accurate, va lid argument for the studentathletes. How many times have w e seen the following scenario? An athlete, w e’ll call him “ Joe,” suffers a career­ ending injury. Because he has no education to fall back on, Joe is ridiculed by the public for not maintaining his studies in college. How could he have kept up his studies if he couldn’t go to class? Why couldn’t he go to class? Because Joe was in the plush hotel or on toe plane traveling across the country helping his squad win a national championship, which would not only bring millions o f dollars to his school, but gain valuable recognition for toe school. So, Mr. Babier, when you head into the job market and your possible employer sees you have graduated from Arizona State, who’s football team is ranked 21 in toe nation, golf team ’s have won national title after title, baseball team is consistently in toe Top F iv e in the nation, etc., you m ay have an edge on your competition. In conclusion, I would like to compliment Christine Serritella, a member of ASU women’s softball, on her letter also appearing in the Sept. 27 issue. And as for Jaspn Babier and all the others who feel that this whole topic is unjust, I welcom e any le g itim a te arguments you m ay have. Jason Gilfillan Freshman, Communications with a regularity that is toe envy of oddsmakers. In 1980, in the Democratic presidential prim ary NOTA cam e in behind Jim m y Carter and before Ted Kennedy. In toe recent gubernatorial primaries here, it took second on both tickets. Alas, NOTA hasn’t had as much luck — if you w ill forgive the expression — in getting out toe vote. Only 58 percent of toe voting population in this •transient, growing state is registered. Only 37 percent of the registered actually turned out for the recent primary. But toe popularity of NO TA is not to attract new voters. It appeals perhaps most to confirmed, addicted, can’t-helpourselves Voters who want some w ay to register our horror . S 9 Irked b y a letter Editor: In the Sept. 27 issue o f S tate Press, you printed a letter in the Opinion section concerning the controversial topic of student-athletes receiving priority in scheduling. This letter, written by Jason Babier, a senior broadcasting major, really irked me. Let m e begin by stating m y position on the argument in choosing their classes and times. Now, I am more than open to opposing opinions, if they are legitimate. Needless to say, I examined Mr. Babier’s letter and have but one thing to ask him: Have you any va lid argument as to why these athletes shouldn’t receive a scheduling advantage? 0 STATE PRESS SUZANNE ROSS Editor ’ . •O NICOLE PERRON Managing Editor City Editor— — _ Asst City Editor... Copy Chief» Now* Editor... Opinion Editor.--------Aait Opinion Editor:-. Photo Editor-----------Sport» EditanAsst Sport» Editan— .-----Tbdinknl/Graphics Editor.» ‘ ROW LAND ..KELLY PEARCE »KRISTEN JOHNSON „TENNY TATUSIAN ___D A N NOWICKI — LYNN VAVRECK JXJ. SOKOL -PAUL CORO _____KRIS TIMM ONS » ~ j n r E V B « KR1CUN .. J iO B A MsÉsriaa Editor______________________MEG HALVERSON Asaoc. Magari«* Editor------------------- R O SYN PINKSTON Aart. Editor...... ................... GARIN CUMM INS REPORTERS: Kenneth Brown, Anita C a rc o »«, Teena Chadwell, Jeff Conoors, Joeeph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Patricia Mah, Michelle P a i l Mtçhmllg Roberta* Girth Sheh, Chriatina Schroeder, Kristie Vnqa^ SPORTS REPORTERS: Darren Urban* Greg Zele, Dan Zeiger. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty Jeorgetta Douglas, Monique Hollín, Will Powers, Tamara Wofford. CO PY EDITORS: Kellye Kratch, Michael LaMatltia, JU1 Tibke. CARTOONIST: Rob Minton, Julie S^wart COLUMNIST: Nicole CanoR M AGAZINE S1XFR Michelle Cruff, Vicki Culwet Christine Herbranaon, Lori Lappii^DebocahNeinkck Jon VShte, Kramer WstseL PRODUCTION: Caaaaundm Cavinca* Dane Christ Holly Hiatt, Jeffrey Luca* Marie Not haft, Lynne Senzel* John P. Smith, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Dan EUetronv Todd Martin, Christine Millan, Mike Morris, Terri Smith, John Vacean* Bill VanZanten. The State Pres» is published Monday through Friday during the academic yea* except holidays and exam periods, ft Matthews Cente* Room IS, Arizona State University, lempc, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (802) 985*2292. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602) 955-7572. s The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of ASU adminiatration, faculty staff or student body. 1 O p in io n _________ Jugda^ ctgb«jtjl990___^______________________________ State P u n Bureaucrats Page 5 . Most federal workers would lose‘real world jobs Mike Royko T rib u n e M e d ia Syndicate Thinking I might have missed something while on vacation, I asked a co-worker if there had been a big story out of Washington about hundreds of federal bureaucrats being fired. “ No,” he said, “ I don’t recall seeing anything like that.” , How about dozens? Or even half a dozen? Maybe one? “ Uh-uh, nothing of the kind. I ’m sure I would have noticed.” How strange, if you think about it. F irst w e had the S&L scandal, with a final bill to the taxpayers that w ill be more than $500 billion. Now w e’re told that w e’re going to be stuck with the tab for at least $12 billion in unpaid student loans, farm loans and other federally backed IOUs. And that’s just an early estimate. Remember, when the S&L debacle first surfaced, they w ere talking about $50 billion or less. So nobody really knows what the cost will be to cover the latest round of frauds and deadbeats. And maybe w e’ll never know. One federal agency said that it’s impossible to tell how many loans are unpaid because the records are in such a shambles that they can’t be audited. Think about that. What if you ran a corporation and your accounting firm told you: “ You are losing money but w e aren’t sure how much because your widget­ making division has screwed up their books and records so badly that we can’t even audit them.” What would your reaction be? I mean, besides trying to strangle somebody. Of course — you’d march into the widget­ making division and fire the people who caused the mess. But that’s not the way the federal government works. We have agencies and agencies, and even more agencies. And their jobs are to keep an eye on the various industries that make federally insured loans. I f they had done their work, we wouldn’t have the massive S&L scandal, the biggest financial mess in this country’s history. N or would w e be waiting for the next muddy shoe to drop. And the next and the next. We wouldn’t be hearing the incredible statement that some loan records are so hopelessly confused they defy audit. But is anyone being fired? Has anyone been told: “ Say, John, I hate to disturb your nap, but w e’re talking billions here. What have you and your people been doing?” O f course not. It’s as if there is a large w all around the federal bureaucracy. And what goes on within that wall is their business, not ours, even though we have to pay their salaries and cover for their blunders. And there is such a wall. You can’t see it, but it is as thick and impenetrable as anything Brink’s could conceive. It’s called “ civil service.” Some years ago, I gathered numbers on how many federal bureaucrats exist and how many are fired in an average year. I don’t remember the exact results. But think of it this w ay: Take a bucket of sand. Rem ove one or two grains of sand. That’s about it. That meant one of two things: Federal employees w ere remarkably diligent and efficient. Or they w ere invulnerable.. As the S&L mess has shown us — and other massive blunders w ill soon be telling us — diligence and efficiency aren’t running rampant. So that leaves invulnerability. And that’s what the civil service system provides. L E T Once they a re in their jobs for a while, it’s as if they are bonded to their office chairs with K razy Glue. The federal civil service system provides so many safeguards for the bureaucrat that it would be easier to convict one o f them of high treason than of being a bumbler. There are hearings and more hearings. Then appeals and m ore appeals. T o fire one, you have to clear more hurdles than an Olympic champion. So there they remain, stuck to their Krazy Glue chairs, tUl death or retirement do they part. When I was young and idealistic, I thought the old patronage system, with political bosses handing out jobs to the party workers, was evil and corrupt. And, no question, it did lead to considerable profiteering and waste. But it had one m ajor advantage over civil service. I f a political hack goofed up bad enough, there was a simple procedure for getting rid o f him. His boss walked ii^and said: “ You’re fired.” 1r That’s the w ay it works in most o f the real world o f employment. And that’s the w ay it should work in Washington. But, then, whoever said Washington, was the real world? T E R S Athletes not m ore important Editor: : Regarding the proposed plan to give athletes scheduling priority during preregistration: While I am sure there are some student athletes with superior academic performance, I know there is an overabundance of these people who are more “ athlete” than “ student.” I do not believe they should be given more privileges. Is there any other program employing the number of tutors to retain students that Intercollegiate Athletics does? Is there any other program that provides books for its students as ICA? Given all the “ perks” of being a student athlete, I am surprised that the graduation rate for these select few continues to decline. I do not think that giving them priority in scheduling is the answer. I think there is a fundamental problem with the way athletes are recruited for collegiate'sports. The minimum G P A for these students is far too low. With all o f the difficulty these students w ill have in adjusting to the university setting and balancing practice sessions, competition away from home and so forth, they need a little more “ smarts” to make it through the system. I am sure that many of these students become disappointed with their academic progress and are either dumped from the program or quit on their own. À *èy ‘-'Vvvs, ■ ■V s •> ■^ . ms We, as a society, place all too great an emphasis on the glam our o f collegiate and professional sports. Our expectations of athletic greatness jeopardizes academic excellence. T o grant student athletes more privileges will further increase the aura o f exclusitivity surrounding participants in college sports. They need to know, as w e need to know, that w e are all here fo r the same purpose: to get an education. Whether one competes on the gridiron, the baseball diamond, the tennis court or in the swimming pool, a student should not have greater importance than the one who plays a friendly gam e of chess or Pente or who participates in some other club or extracurricular activity. A ll students should be given the same oppurtunity for success. Kristie Butler Graduate Student, Anthropology Christians invite investigation Editor: David Winn’S objections to the claims that God exists, that Jesus is divine and that the Bible is true typify a problem that plagues the discussion o f these issues: confusion in the use of the terms “ evidence” and “ proof." Consider a lawsuit in which Mr. X claims that Mr. Y ran a stop sign and damaged X ’s car. “ Evidence” is anything that tends to support or contradict the claim to be proven, i.e., that Mr. Y ran the stop sign. It m ay include tangible things, such as photographs o f the vehicles, but it m ay also include the testimony of witnesses. Whether Mr. X can “ prove” his claim depends on the evidence he has and on the definition of “ prove.” I f “ m ove” means to demonstrate that it is m ore likely than not that Mr. Y ran the stop sign, Mr. X stands a chance. If, however, “ prove” means to demonstrate that every other explanation of the evidence is logically impossible, then Mr. X can never prevail, regardless of the truth of his position. Mr. Y ’s attorney will always be able to pose explanations which, however unlikely they may be, can never be demonstrated to be logically impossible. It’s possible that Mr. X ’s 500 witnesses w ere all lying as part of a conspiracy; it’s possible t h a t M r . X ’ s 500 w i t n e s s e s w e r e simultaneously hallucinating; it’s possible , that all the photographs of the vehicles were fabricated; and the attorney could go on. Mr. Winn’s claim that there is absolutely no “ proof” that Jesus is the Son of God leaves one wondering how he is defining I f in saying there is no “ proof” that Jesus is divine, Mr. Winn means that the quantum of evidence does not meet his standard or definition of “ prove,” one must ask what that standard is. I f his standard of proof is that every other explanation of the evidence must be shown to be more likely than not or to be clear and convincing, there is no way one can meet that test. If, on the other hand, his standard of proof is that the claim in question must be shown to be more likely than not or to be clear and convincing, there is no way one can evaluate whether such “ proof” exists regarding Jesus’ divinity w ithout m akin g an independent and impartial investigation o f the evidence! It is to precisely such an investigation that Christians invite the world. “ proof.” Does he mean there is no “ evidence” supporting that claim or does he mean that the quantum o f evidence does not meet his standard or definition of “ prove?” If the form er, he is obviously wrong. The same historical records that attest to Jesus’ existence, a claim Mr. Winn accepts as a fact, attest to his claims to divinity, to his perform ing m iracles, to his receiving auditory praise from heaven and to his being raised bodily from the grave. Mr. Winn m ay find that this evidence does not m eet his standard or definition of “ prove,” he m ay even long fo r a different type o f evidence (e.g., videotapes), but he cannot rationally argue that there is no evidence. Ashby Camp Slate P it» Tuesday, October g, 1990 AS U opens relaxation room By ANITA CARCO N E Start« Press ASU students can block out the stresses of school by sinking into a “ Lazy Boy” recliner and listening to sounds of the ocean in a new relaxation room scheduled to open today. An em ployee of the U n iversity’s Counseling and Consultation program cam e up with the idea of a stress-free environment, incorporating it into a small cubicle on the third floor of the Student Services Building. “ Everyone out there is under some kind o f stress, and there’s no w ay to avoid it,” said Robert Zubia, a counselor at ASU Counseling and Consultation and the room ’s creator. “ The room is a place to Come to during the day when students feel frazzled and then can realize what it feels like to relax,” A fter a year-long search for a suitable atmosphere, Counseling and Consultation set aside a location within its department. Three years ago, a sim ilar room available at the Student Health Center closed its doors due to crowding. Zubia said he hopes to avoid overcrowding in the new location by only allowing students to sign up for the relaxation room an hour at a time between 9 a m. and 3 p.m. fiv e days a week. techniques, or tune-out the world by listening to ocean sounds and piano and synthesizer music. Zubia said the room is free to students when they exchange their student I. D. for one of the relaxation tapes. In addition to the audio tapes, a variety of reading material on relaxation training and stress-reduction techniques is available. The counselor, who also delivers stress management seminars on campus, said the causes of stress can range from a lack of assertiveness and a lack of exercise, to unclear short- and long-term goals and poor time management. Zubia said, however, the main cause of stress is the questionable interpretation of events. “ An event in our lives is neither good nor bad,” he said. “ It’s how we interpret the event that adds to our everyday stress.” Relaxation training goals do not eliminate stress, but teach people to recognize it, prevent it and, ultimately, reduce it. Zubia said one misconception about stress is that it arises because of certain events in people’s lives. “ It is never the events in oiir lives themselves that cause stress, but the views we take of them, thè meanings we give them and what we tell ourselves about them,” he said. Students who use the room can kick back in a recliner and drift o ff to a variety of audio tapes on stress reduction Samantha’ Brown, a sophomore finance m ajor, said she intends to use the relaxation room once or twice a week to 1-HOUR j i H FO TO , W op° e n Irwin Daugherty/State Press Sara Reeves, a new ASU student, uses one of the many relaxation tapes available In the Student Services Building, clear her mind of school pressures. “ During the middle of the semester, tests and homework seem to pile up,” she said. “ An hour of m y timeS. Mail • Resumes • Word Processing & Typing • Mail Box Rental • Money Orders and much morel! • Full Copy Services 24 HOUR MAIL A C C ESS 824 S. Mill Ave. 9 6 6 -0 0 7 6 (S W co rn e r o f M ill & U niversity) 9 6 6 -1 7 5 9 Sponsor. ttHMÊm Student« FeRpwftMp Place: M em orial Unton B uilding «M k Subject: T I» G ospel of John Speaker. B ill Freem an o f , HwwHHH. VOTE I d » » « » t># lilMeWlpie:|li n m t m m '' Fall Samaatar - 7 7 » G ot pal of John, Part I D a te O c t. 4 O c t. 11 (C h a p te rs 1-13) S u b je c t T h e S e c re t o f L iv in g a S u p p lie d L ife In w ard an d O u tw a rd C h ris tia n s C h a p te r Som ething Special : D ru g , Enforcement Administration SPECIAL AGENT — INJURED IN A N ACCIDENT? YOU SHOULD KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS! nnrrrj J i TTn arwa ! n ■ ■ •F R E E a w en fo rcem en t is a rew a rd in g and ch allenging career. It o ffe r s u p w a rd m obility, dom estic and fo reig n assignm ents. T h e DEA is the Federal govern m en t's leading a gen cy in the fight against d ru g trafficking! ■ EA Special Agents con d u ct crim inal in vestiga tio n s and p rep a re fo r the prosecu tion o f m ajor viola tors o f the drug law s of, th e U n ited States. D The minimum qualifications for the Special Agent position are: • • • • Be a l ' S, citzcn. Be at least 21 years o f age and not o ld e r than 34 at appointment. Be in excellent physical condition. Have a valid driver's license and ability to drive a vehicle at maximum highway speeds. • Be w illing to'relocate, to another city in the I. ..S. • Have une o f reeled vision o f not less than 20/200 in both c yes. corrected. ¿0/20 in one eye and 20/40 in the other. * A college degree in any field and one year o f experience conducting criminal investigations or comparable experience. O R : • A college degree tin any field and one o f the \ following: • 2.9S overall grade point average ((¡PA). • 3.5 <»PA in major field o f study . • Standing in the upper »/y o f class or major subdivision. • Membership in.scholastic honor society. • O n e year o f graduate study. LOOK FOR US ON CAMPUS TODAY! RECRUITERS ON CAMPUS TODAY! C all O ur Recruiting D ept, at 602-640-5700. — You Cam Make the Difference! — Consultation to students and faculty •Auto Accidents •M otorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •W rongful Death •Faulty Products •Slip & Fall •D o g Bites •Insurance Disputes • R E D U C E D percentage fees for cases of clear liability or serious injury •Hom e, evening & hospital appointments available BEFORE GALLING THE INSURANCE COM PANY CALL BAKER & MARCUS Personal Injury Lawyers DO N T GET HURT TWICE IM fli 4 6 2 5 S. WendlerDr., Suite I I I , Tempe Page 8 State Press J^jesda^OctoberSjJWO Rape class to stress defense By M ICHELLE PAUL State P rats It w ill never happen to me. Tem pe P olice are combatting this falsely reassuring cliche with a program designed to make women understand that rape is more common than they think, motivatiilg them to take steps to avoid potentially dangerous situations. “ I f it comes to thinking a manipulating war — you’re (wom en) going to win,” Tem pe police spokesman Roger Austin said. “ All you’re trying to do is get a couple seconds to get away.” The free Sexual Assault Survival Course is offered once a month, usually on Tuesdays or Thursdays, said Tempe Public Information O fficer Nachie Marquez, adding that the program was started in April of this year. Rape statistics in Tempe, many of which are provided in the city's course, indicate that preventative measures were long overdue. Last year, Tempe Police said 66 rapes occured, with 10 to 15 of the incidents going unrecorded. Seventy-five percent of the victims knew their attackers. Nationally, One out of every seven women are the victims of sexual assaults on college campuses. Austin said the conviction rate for rapists in Tempe remains at only 50 percent because of the difficulty in convincing a jury that a rape actually occurred. A person convicted of rape for the first time can receive up to seven years in prison, he said. The rape prevention course addresses the problem in three phases. During the field test, participants are sent outside the building one at a time to encounter various dangerous situations at bus stops, in parking garages and in other settings. Each scenario, officials said, is suppose to get the participant to think, “ This could happen in everyday life.” The second part of the program, involving active resistance, is taught by Tem pe Police Sgt. George Guariglio, a teacher of self-defense classes for 10 years. Guariglio said he stresses tactics to surprise the attacker long enough for the victim to escape. “ Do what the rapist doesn’t expect,” he said. To throw a rapist off course, Guariglio suggests biting, screaming, carrying keys between the fingers and always remaining alert and watchful. “ I say fight back, but that is a decision you have to make,” he said. “ It’s better to be safe than sorry, w e don’t want you to go out there and be a statistic.” The final part of the program deals with statistical and educational information regarding rape. À film shown to participants describes the typical rapist as a male aged 15-24 who has been sexually abused and w ill be more likely to attack a victim at home during a summer evening. Women between 12 and 29 are the most vulnerable to rape, according to the film. So far, officials said response to the program has been positive. “ W e’ve got a waiting list where w e could fill at least three more classes,” said Siobhan Bowler, a volunteer who works with the police to schedule the classes. Bowler and Wendy Briones, another volunteer, have been involved in the program for a year and a half. Residents who participated in the program said they left better informed. . “ Even though w e knew what to expect, it gave us an idea (o f what to expect),” said Am y Effect, who went to a class last week. Sue Drake, another participant, agreed. “ It made you think and deal with the potential (o f being raped),” she said. H obart Row land contributed to this report. introductory R © 9 • ^ 1 3 °° otter A SU Students Alw ays 'lO w/LO. Closod :^ .w-v’4-v* Sunday ft’ ... J M onday ■ • • *- fWlZZAROS 1041 E. Lemon CROSSWORD p 1EC E G HA N A o R LON L EN 1N AMEN 0 0 E L F T WA Y F EDS i N T ER E S T ROME■ B E ET L E 1N E P T ■ s AW 1N S E N O R A ■ K 1N D T EN C N T S BA D S T A T E L 1O T S T R UM A V A t L E L 1Z A MA L L E S E P t A Yesterday’s Answer by THOMAS JOSEPH A CR O SS Police Report ASU police reported the following incidents Monday : •A disturbance at Sigma Chi Fraternity, 606 Alpha Drive, was reported after a man from Scottsdale Community College tried to get into a party. The man allegedly pushed and bit a resident’s shoulder. The SCC student said he was provoked by the Sigma Chi member; who grabbed hint in the groin. The SCC student was arrested on a misdemeanor charge, cited and released. •A student was injured when he fell down the stairs at Manzanita Residence Hall. The student was taken to Tempe St. Lukes Hospital by ASU Department of Public Safety officers, treated and released. •A student was arrested at Cholla Apartments and charged With drunken chiving. •A man exposed himself to two women at Ocotillo Residence Hall. Police have no suspects in the incident. •A vandal damaged a window a f Ocotillo Residence Hall. Policé said thé vandal probably threw a rock through the window. Dam age is estimated at $70. 1 Stun with noise 7 Hacienda home •Vandals damaged two overhead signs on the second level of the Parking Structure Three behind Stauffer Hall. Police are unsure how vandals damaged the signs. Damage is estimated at $100. Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: •A man entered the Subway sandwich shop, 2214 W. Southern Ave., showed a gun to the clerk and demanded money. Meanwhile, a youth soccer team entered the store, and the robber said he would return. The man fled the scene on foot em pty handed. •An officer observed two men approach the AM -PM Mini Market, 2309 E. University Drive. One man held the door open while the other took beer from the cooler. As the clerk tried to stop the men, she was assaulted. The police followed the men to 1018 S. Lola D rive where they w ere arrested. The clerk sustained minor injuries but did not require medical treatment. Com piled by State P ress re p o rte r M ich e lle Paul. T O N Y ’S the alternative copy shop N E W Y O R K E R RESTAURAN T and N IG H T C L U B at the comer of Mill and University in the Tempe Center T h e F in est P izza and Ita lia n F o o d in th e V a lley Resumes Choose From our Five Style Selection or create your own. Our Resumé Package includes: N ew Tim es Best o f P h oen ix 1989 Best Inexpensive Italian Restaurant T R Y Ö U R W E E K L Y SPECIALS Includes salad & garlic bread • In dining room only MON NIGHT SPECIAL WED NIGHT SPECIAL S p a g h e tti $ 4 .9 5 For only 17.95 23.95 for Custom Style Open Monday thru Friday 7am to 9pm Saturday and Sunday Warn to 5pm ¡Free Cover Letters with this coupon and the purchase of our | low priced resume package. | & the alternative copy shop ■ at the oomar of M ill & University In th* Temp* Canter 5 Not valid with any other offer. Good until 12/13/90 ~ THUR NIGHT SPECIAL Tour of Italy $6.95 TUE NIGHT SPECIAL y * A one page resume, tied in a 3-5‘ diskette, * 15 copies on resume paper, * 15 matching blank sheets and envelopes. 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W edi H un Knee V olleyball G rateful D ead Night It’s fun. Free giveaways. Cash prizes. Join us! with No H obo Band Rri ft tat: The Bechet M V ta n : Wane (Mann Solo Nightclub Info CRYPTOQUOTE IB-2 M E A T L H F S M P E T F F , U M F F H Y E 829-9984 Tem pe’s H om e fo r the Blues 994 Happy Hour — 7 Days a Week 15* New Yptfcer W ing» A ll Night 967-5073 One letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for tiie three L ’s, X for the two O ’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Elach day the code letters a re different. 107 E. Broadway. Tempe 10Q yards east of Mill Avenife 967-2941 FY M S Y S T E V M L N IY E V L Y W Y L H V N YQ L B H W W I Y E V L Y W N Y Q . - K Y L M IT Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: O U R PROGRESS A S A NATION C A N B E NO SWIFTER THAN O U R PROG­ R E S S IN EDUCATION. — JO H N FITZGERALD KENNEDY © 1990 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. \» Stata Pra» Tuesday, October ^jj>90 Hole STATE PRESS C M takethempersonally! Continuati from page 1. A U n iq u e C o n su ltin g F irm SIG N U P NOW ! CAREER FIESTA Tuesday October 2nd IN FO R M A T IO N S H A R IN G Wednesday October 10th 5:00 p.m. Room 223 Memorial Union Building O N -C AM PU S IN TER VIE W S November 2,1990 March 1,1991 See Career Services fo r details. Page 9 Hewitt Associates be entitled to a refund. “ It ’s customary to give them credit on their bills,” said D ave Banks, a spokesman for US West Communications. “ They should contact the business office for more information.” Owners o f local businesses dampened by the road closure said they w ere surprised to see the road reopened so quickly. An employee at the Whiskey Barrel Cooker, 735 University Drive, said business at the restaurant suffered yestenlay due to the closed road. “ A lot o f people thought w e w ere closed because the road was closed,” Andrea Wautelet said. But now that traffic is moving through the intersection, she said things are returning to normal. “ From what I heard, it would be open this weekend at the earliest,” she said. “ It really surprised m e.” is v is it in g A S U H ew itt Associates is an in tern ation al firm o f consultants and actu aries sp ecia lizin g in the design, financing, com m u nication, arid a d m in istra tion o f em ployee ben efit and com pen sation program s. We are included in the pu blication s T h e 100 Best C om pan ies to W ork fo r in A m erica and T h e Best C om pan ies forW am en . Wfe are interested in students w ith the following majors: Com puter Inform ation System s Econom ics Finance G en eralB usin ess M anagem ent Hum an Resources Mathem atics/Statistics We look for people w h o are adaptive, creative, analytical and intelligent; people w h o w ork w ell together. O u r challenge is to iden tify and develop th ose people w h o can respond to the opportunities o f today and tomorrow. Hewitt Associates • Santa Aria, C A • Walnut Creek. CA • Lincolnshire. II. .= • Rowayton. C T • Boston, MA • Bedminister. NJ • Atlanta. G A * I.as Colinas, T X • T h e Wfoodlands. T X . A n e q u a l o p p o rtu n ity e m p lo y e r m/f Recycle____ Continued from page 1^ Surplus Property w ill then sell the paper to the highest recycling bidder. The pilot program is voluntary and w ill extend through June 30, 1991, according to the memorandum. Though the University has revitalized its recycling efforts, one ASU student is still dissatisfied. “ People try and make everything so complicated,” said Sarah Scottio, a junior broadcasting m ajor. “ It ’s so simple. Everyone just needs to work together.” Sciotto is trying to establish what she thinks w ill be a more effective recycling program on campus. A fter attending a recycling congress conference last August, where she met contacts and in itiated the U n iversal Recycling Network, Scottio proposed to Coor a student run program that works in cooperation with administrators, faculty and staff. “ W e need unification. We also need someone to be brought in full time who is experienced in the sale o f recyclable goods because it is such a touchy market.” she said. Scottio said she has not received a response from the University. Kuwait Continued from page 1. Kuwait embassy in Washington, said the United States’ m otive in moving troops into the area is not altruistic. “ The U. S. is there for its own interests,” he said. “ I don’t want to put it rude, but that’s just the w ay it is. It’s like a big prize. Whoever has. their hand in the Middle East has their hand in a pot of gold.” Still, A l is encouraged by what he sees. I think (A m e r ic a n stu d e n ts ) a re learning.” he said. “ Before, they did not even know where Kuwait was on a map.” While most have not heard from their families or friends, the Kuwaiti students are hoping for the best. “ I ’m optimistic,” A1 said. “ I know (K u w a it) w ill return (to its form er sovereignty), but I don’t know how it will return.” But for now, he said, Kuwaiti students can only wait and hope. “ Saddam Hussein is a ruthless dictator,” A1 said. “ (Kuwaitis) do not have the right to travel, to open up businesses or to do anything. Hussein is hated by his own people.” C om ics Tuesday, October 2,1990 Page i o State Press b y B ill W atterson Calvin and H obbes WOW THAT ITA ON TELE­ VISION, I'M DIFFERENT FROM EVEMBOOl EISE / I'M FAMOUS ! IMPORTANT/ SINCE EVERSONE KNOWS w e , everything r do NOW V5 NEWS WORTHY. A CULTURAL- ICON. rw the far side By GARY LARSON I THINK YCXJR ANTENNA NEEDS ADJUSTING. D pon esbu ry you've ear THATLOOK A6AHMIKE. THEYGAVE ME M O L ACCOUNT TODAY— UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM. X . M m b y Julie Sigw art Rainey D ays "Ode toN oD öz” 3 a m ~ mo big p e a l ! (BUT DON'T ASK ME HOW I FEE t í ) by Haoncy, 3a.m. V V AND SYSTEM BßZOR , è ' A T TH IS POINT, , , I P O N Y CAPE-ER/ YOU KEEP M E WIDE AWAKE, TM O ' MISTAKES I M A K E , I A A i COMPUTER B om b OH! HOW I LOVE THAT N0-T>52.' / Tired of the hike? Buy a bike! Through the State Press Bicycles f or Sale! P tin g fo r a î that shares interests? I the State s s to d a y To submit a masting an­ nouncement, come to the State Press offices in the basement of Mat­ thews Center. Deadline is 1 p.m. the day before publication. Due to space limitations, there can only be one insertion per club per edition. It may be necessary to o m i t s o m e submissions. State Press “ ^ J N S f iC T " Professional H $14 Haircuts H a ir D Designers 933 E, University (reg. $20) Tempe Towne Plaza Sham poo, SE comer of Rural C on d ition er & University 966-6111 ONE COUPON P your search fo r the CORTEZ End perfect place to live. Available Soon! $5 Off Perm Professional H H a ir (1st o r 2nd week In Oct.) Extra clean, very nice. D Designers (reg. $45) 933 E. University $10 O ff Spiral Tempe Towne Plaza W raps, includes SE comer of Rural Sham poo, & University 966-6111 F tim ls h e d Studio $306 2 Bedroom $456 C on d ition er, C u t ONE COUPON tP Cellophane: Professional H H a ir D Designers 933 E. University Tempe Towne Plaza SE corner of Rural & University 966-6111 $22 Highlights: $40 ONE COUPON P Professional J-J D H a ir Designers Tanning Sessions $10 down $1.50 each visit 933 E. University Tempe Towne Plaza Eyelashes & Eyebrows SE comer of Rural Tinted $12 & University 966-6111 ONE COUPON M IA M I (A P ) — A flood of criticism of a pay-as-youspray scheme to activate the city’s Claude and Mildred Pepper Fountain with credit cards hasn’t splashed cold water on the plan. - The idea cam e up two weeks ago because the city says it can’t afford to spend the $42 an hour or so it costs to run the $3.2 fountain, whose computercontrolled water jets are designed to m im ic the sea. And city commissioners appear prepared to at least consider the proposal to install a machine like a bank’s automatic teller, despite a deluge of ridicule. “ It ’s the most preposterous, thing I ’v e ever heard of in m y entire life,” said Howard Kleinberg, form er editor of the M ia m i News and now a history columnist for The M ia m i H erald. “ To think o f the endless possibilities this opens to credit cards! ” As plastic as thé plan m ay seem, the commissioners are considering it as a sort of user fee to save taxpayers’ dollars. As it stands, no money is budgeted in the tight fiscal year that started Monday to run the fountain named after the late Miami congressman and his w ife, City Manager Cesar Odio said his $269 million budget just can’t spare the $370,000 a year it would cost to keep the fountain running. “ W e can only afford to run it about two minutes a day,” he quipped. ,] Unfurnished Studio $326 1 Bedroom $346 919 E. Lemon Tempe Heated Pool • b b q Grills 9 6 8 -4 4 0 4 $30°° w ill hold an apt. until Oct. 31. Tuesday, October 2^1990 S t a ir f t « » STATE PRESS C U M t d k e t h eem m neTK-nn/illiil perron oihj! A Unique Consultiiig Firm SIG N U P NOW ! CAREER FIESTA Tuesday October 2nd IN F O R M A T IO N S H A R IN G Wednesday October 10th 5:00 p.m. Room 223 Memorial Union Building O N -C AM PU S IN TE R V IE W S November 2,1990 March 1,1991 See Career Services fo r details. Hewitt Associates is visiting ASU H ew itt A ssociates Is an in tern ation al firm o f consu ltants an d actu aries sp ecializin g in the design, financing, com m u n ication , and ad m in istra tion o f em ployee b en efit and com pen sation program s. We a re included in th e p u blication s T h e 100 Best C om pan ies to W ark for in A m erica and T h e Best C om p an ies fo r W om en. Wfe are interested in students w ith the following majors: Com puter Inform ation System s Econom ics Finance General Business Managem ent Hum an Resources Mathematics/Statistics We look for people w ho are adaptive, creative, analytical, ana intelligent; people w h n o w o rk re w wen togetne O u r and ell together. _«— — *» - id en — •ul- - J developthose who challenge is to tify and thosepeople pec can respond to the opportunities o f today and1tomorrow. 1 Hewitt Associates • Santa Ana, C A » Walnut Creek, CA » Lincolnshire, IL • Rowayton. C T • Boston. M A • Bedminister. NJ • Atlanta. GA • Las Colinas. T X • TheWfoodlands. T X A n e q u a l op p o rtu n ity e m p lo y e r m/f, Page 9 Hole Continued from page I.' be entitled to a refund. “ I t ’s customary to give them credit on their bills,” said D ave Banks, a spokesman for US West Communications, “ They should contact the business office for more information.” Owners of local businesses dampened by the road closure said they w ere surprised to see the road reopened so quickly. An employee at the Whiskey Barrel Cooker, 735 University Drive, said business at the restaurant suffered yesterday due to the closed road. “ A lot. o f people thought w e w ere closed because the road was closed,” Andrea Wautelet said. But now that traffic is moving through the intersection, she said things are returning to normal. “ From what I heard, it would be open this weekend at the earliest,” she said. “ It really surprised m e.” Recycle____ Continued from page ^'"I. Surplus Property w ill then sell the paper to the highest recycling bidder. The pilot program is voluntary and will extend through June 30, 1991, according to the memorandum. Though the University has revitalized its recycling efforts, one ASU student is still dissatisfied. “ People try and make everything so complicated,” said Sarah Scottio, a junior broadcasting m ajor, “ It ’s so simple. Everyone just needs to work together.” Sciotto is trying to establish what she thinks w ill be a m ore effective recycling program on campus. A fter attending a recycling congress conference last August, where she met contacts and in itiated the U n iversal Recycling Network, Scottio proposed to Coor a student run program that works in cooperation with administrators, faculty and staff. “ We' need ’ unification. We also need someone to be brought in full time who is experienced in the sale of recyclable goods because it is such a touchy market.” she said. Scottio said she has not received a response from the University. Kuwait____ Continued from page 1. Kuwait embassy in Washington, said the United States’ m otive in moving troops into the area is not altruistic. “ The U. S. is there for its own interests,” he said. “ 1 don’t want to put it rude, but that’s just the w ay it is. It’s like a big prize. Whoever has their hand in the Middle East has their hand in a pot o f gold.” Still, A1 is encouraged by what he sees. I th in k (A m e r ic a n s tu d e n ts ) a re learning.” he said. “ Before, they did not even know where Kuwait was on a map.” While most have not heard from their families or friends, the Kuwaiti students are hoping for the best. “ I ’m optimistic,” A1 said. “ I know (K u w a it) w ill return (to its form er sovereignty), but I don’t know how it will return.” But for now, he said, Kuwaiti students can only wait and hope. “ Saddam Hussein is a ruthless dictator," A1 said. “ (Kuwaitis) do not have the right to travel, to open up businesses or to do anything. Hussein is hated by his own people.” State Prêt» Tuesday, October 2,1990 Page 11 W ashington wanes after wave o f w in n in g By DAN ZEIGER State Press In 100 years o f Washington football, rarely have the Huskies gone from such an emotional win to a depressing loss. A fter exhibiting great promise with a 31-0 embarrassment o f USC two gam es ago, the Huskies were handed a grueling 20-14 defeat by Colorado Saturday. As a result, UW coach Don Jamies and Sun Devil coach L a rry M arm ie both face the same task as the Huskies (3-1) face ASU (2-1) Saturday at Sun Devil Stadium: preparing their teams to play after tough losses. Quarterback Mark Brunell won the starting job after finsihing spring drills ahead of Billy Joe Hobert on the depth chart. In four games, Brunell has completed 46 of 108 passes fo r 603 yards and four touchdowns, but three crucial interceptions w ere the Huskies’ undoing last week. “ M ark has gone up against three tough opponents,” James said. “ He threw three interceptions against Colorado and they all hurt. He cam e back and drove us late in the game, but w e had two touchdown passes dropped. But he’s a smart kid who should get better.” Colorado went ahead 20-14 with 4:24 to play, but UW drove to the Buffalo 7, where split ends Curtis Gaspard and Mario Bailey committed the fatal drops. A fter the third-down pass was broken up, Brunell tossed his third interception to seal the Huskies’ fate. The running game begins and ends with tailback Greg Lewis, who has 485 yards on 97 attempts for an impressive 5-yards per carry average. Lewis is so dominant in the Huskies’ attack that the team ’s second leading runner is Brunell, with 230 yards on 43 tries. “ Greg is off to a good start,” James said. “ We haven’t overwhelmed people with the run, but w e’ve been solid with it. Greg has good vision and is a good blocker and receiver, he doesn’t have the quickness to break a long one every play, but he’s a good, solid college football player.” Last week, Lewis carried 20 times for 101 yards and has passed the century mark in all four games this season. He is also the Huskies’ No. 2 receiver with 10 receptions for 128 yards. Although Mesa High graduate Orlando M cKay is the most highly-touted of UW ’s receivers, B ailey leads the team with 17 catches for 281 yards and two scores. James said he would like to see the team increase its usage of McKay, who has seven receptions for 112 yards. B ru n e ll M cK ay “ Orlando has started all o f our games, but w e haven’t really gotten that much out of him,” James said. “ W e’re not throwing the ball consistently, but Orlando is a guy who has got to play w ell for us to have a chance.” UW features most of its experience in the offensive line, where tackles J eff Pahukoa and Siupeli Malamala and guard Dean Kirkland are returning starters. Lincoln Kennedy edged out Rick Schulberg, who started nine games in 1989, for the other guard spot and Ed Cunningham is at center. Defensively, the Huskies have had their biggest troubles in , ^ Turn to Washington, page 13r ASU diver takes on role of veteran among youth By DARREN URBAN State Press . i .. WHI P o w e rs /S ta te P r e s s A SU junior diver Janae Lautenschlager finished seventh on the 1-meter at the N CAA Chifhpionship and sixth at the U. S. Senior Nationals this summer. Being the oldest is a new concept for ASU diver Janae Lautenschlager. “ I ’ve always been the young one,” the 20-year-old/ said. “ I don’t think I ’ve ever been considered the oldest. . . Now I have to take on this leadership role.” With five freshmen on the eight-woman diving squad this season, Lautenschlager, a junior, will take the position of veteran and leader entering her third year of collegiate competition. “ I don’t want to push it too far,” she said. “ I don’t want the other girls to think, ‘Oh, she thinks she is so good.” It m ay be difficult for her teammates not to think it. Lautenschlager, who finished seventh on the 1-meter at the NCAA Championship and sixth at the U. S. Senior Nationals this summer, is easily the best diver on the team. ' “ She is a coach’s dream ,” diving coach Ward O’Connell said. “ She’s extrem ely selfdisciplined. I ’ve been coaching 30 years and I haven’t had one like Janae before.” Lautenschlager has already assumed part of the leadership role, running both the men and women divers through aerobics and gymnastics at 7 a.m. each day. It is only part of her very regimented schedule, which includes a sorority membership and 14 credit hours. “ I have to plan out m y days hour by hour, otherwise I ’m lost,” she said. Lautenschlager began diving when she was 11, after participating in gymnastics for three years. Originally from Granada Hills, Calif., Lautenschlager joined what is now the G. O. Diving Club, using her years as a gymnast as background. “ (Gymnastics) helped,” Lautenschlager said. “ It gives you a sense o f balance (that is useful in divin g).” Volleyball money in the bank vs. Reno By G R EG Z ELE State Press Gambling is legal in Nevada but not many people will be betting on Nevada-Reno when it takes on the ASU volleyball team tonight. The Wólfpack, which hás posted a dismal 2-15 record this season, is in the midst of a 14-game skid. The Sun Devils (8-7 overall, 2-3 Pac-10) are looking to atone for the loss they suffered to Stanford Saturday night. The match w ill take place in the University A ctivity Center at 7:30 p.m. “ Th ey’re a struggling team and I ’m not sure what to expect,” coach Patti Snyder said. “ Emotionally, they’re down.” Snyder said the Pack is a tough serving team. NevadaReno averages 2.3 service aces per game. Jennifer M iller leads the Pack with .4 aces per game. ASU averages only 1.58 aces per game, and is led by senior outside hitter K elly Plaisted, who averages .3. Nevada-Reno’s best all-around player is junior hitter Lisa Long who leads the Pack in kills and digs per game, averaging 3.5 and 2.9, respectively. Long also has 38 total blocks on the year. In contrast, ASU junior outside hitter Mindy Gowell paces the Sun Devils averaging 4.34-kills and 4 . « digs per game. Plaisted is not far behind averaging 4.26. Senior middle blocker Tina B erg continues to lead the Pac-10 in blocks, averaging 2.09 per game. Snyder, who is confident ASU will win the match, said she is hoping the team w ill im prove statistically. “ W e’re not going to take them lightly,” Snyder said. “ W e’re going to go with our starters initially but everyone will be able to play.” Snyder said she expects the gam e to be slow-paced, but hopes the Sun Devils will avoid letting the Pack dictate the tempo of the match. She added that Nevada-Reno’s poor record makes it a ve ry unpredictable team. “ Hopefully w e can play at our level,” Snyder said. “ These are the kind o f matches that m ake m e nervous.” The Sun Devils dispatched the Pack in three games in the two teams’ only previous meeting in 1988 at ASU. Snyder said the match should be a good tune-up for ASU before it resumes conference play this weekend against Oregon and Oregon State. The Sun Devils are currently in a five-way tie for fifth place in the Pac-10. A S U Lautenschlager placed 12th twice at the U. S. Junior Nationals, in 1985 and 1988. She also captured three Los Angeles city championships while in high school. “ The w ay diving works, at least in California, is that you represent your high school in competition, but you practice with your own club,” she said. “ Only a few schools have their own pools.” A fte r high school, L a u ten sch la ger accepted a scholarship at ASU. “ I didn’t really look anywhere else,” she said. “ (A SU ) had the atm osphere. . , (and) everything I was looking for in a school.” Lautenschlager finished 21st on the 1-meter her freshman year at the NCAAs before moving into the top 10 last season. “ I ’m looking fo r a top three finish in the 1and 3-meter this year (at the N C A A s).” Lautenschlager said. Lautenschlager said she is definitely planning on pursuing diving after her collegiate career. “ Most divers peak at 24,” she said. “ You’ve been in it for so lo n g . . . You’re out of college so you don’t have to worry about studying.” O’Connell chuckled when he heard of Lautenschlager’s plans. “ When she cam e here two years ago she had no plans to go on (after A S U ),” he said. “ She responds to seed-planting. I plant a seed in her head and she lets it grow .” The nursing m ajor said her career highlight so fa r was her finish at Nationals. S ta rtin g the last w e e k of M a y , Lautenschlager spent the summer training for the August competition. She began by accompanying club coach Dennis Taylor for a week of training with the University of Michigan team. “ W e went to get a different perspective,” Lautenschlager said. “ E very coach has a Turn to Lautenschlager, page 13, la n d s g o lf N C A A s From staff reports When the Karsten Golf Course was constructed two years ago, the hope was that one day it would be the site for an N CAA Championship. How does 1992 sound? The ASU women’s golf team has been selected to host the event and the 72-hole tournament is scheduled for M ay 27-30,1992 at Karsten. “ This is something we have strived for ever since the idea of the Karsten G olf Course evolved,” said ASU Athletic Director Charles Harris. “ This is another first for ASU athletics, and w e plan to host the finest NCAA women’s golf championship ever. “ We feel that hosting the N CAA championship will further enhance Arizona State’s outstanding heritage in collegiate golf and w e are very excited about the opportunity to showcase our athletic facilities.” The bid was put into the N CAA in June and Miami was ASU’s only competition. “ It will give us the advantage because there is something to be said about the home course advantage,” Linda Vollstedt said. State Press Ti i m H m v ñ r f n h c r 0 : 1 0 0 0 Cross country im pressive against tougher teams By DAN ZEIGER State Press With the competition at the UC-Riyerside Invitational a little bit tougher than at their first meet, ASU cross country team members hoped to find out just how good they are. But at the Agricultural Experimentation Fields in Riverside, Calif., Saturday, the Sun Dev­ ils found out they just m ay be one of the best in the region. Case in point: •The ASU women’s team won back-toback invitational team titles fo r the first time in its history by finishing first with 71 points, 20 ahead of runner-up Cal PolySan Luis Obispo. UC-Irvine was third with 124 points, UCLA finished fourth with 156 and Occidental placed fifth with 233. L eh m an •The Sun D evil men w ere victim s of a dominating Cal Poly-SLO squad, which placed first in a landslide with 69 points, but ASU finished second with 122. Occidental was third with 128, Fullerton State finished fourth with 155 and Point Loma placed fifth with 198. “ I thought we could compete with the teams out there,” Sun Devil distance coach Ken Lehman said. “ We told them just to concentrate on the placing as opposed to the time and they did very w ell.” PRESCHOOL The ASÙ women w ere able to employ a balanced attack for the second straight race, placing five runners in the top 20. Trish Huffmaster paced the team by finishing 10th in the 5,000-meter race with a career-best tim e o f 18 minutes, 24 seconds. K elly Cordell turned in her usual consistent performance by placing 11th, less than a second behind Huffmaster. In the second race o f her career, freshman Kristen Wellman came in 13th with a time of 18:28. The Sun Devils’ other scorers w ere Michele Sosnowski, who finshed 18th at 18:39, and Jill Sieniki, who cam e in a second later in 19th. “ The women gave us a big win,” Lehman said, “ W e’ve got some great athletes and the team is working hard and doing well. Our runners have a lot o f talent and right now w e’re doing about the best w e can.” , Shannon M cK ay and Dawn Arrigoni successfully returned from injuries to contribute Saturday. M cK ay placed 26th at 18:51 and Lehman said he was pleased with the performance of Arrigoni, who finished 69th at 19:44 in her first race in two years. “ Dawn’s performance was very encouraging,” Lehman said. “ She raced the best she could and ran a long 5,000 meters in under 20 minutes. She finished ahead of about 150 other runners, so I think she’s got to be very happy.” : Tony Hernandez and Kendall Fink led thè Sun D evil men, who w ere the only team to place two runners in the top 10. Hernandez, a transfer from Central Arizona College, exhibited the ability expected of him by finishing seventh in the 5-mile run with a time of 25:46. \ “ Tony’s a good runner who competed in all the big meets in junior college,” Lehman said. “ This was one o f the biggest runs he’s participated in and as the meets get bigger for him, I expect him to do even better.” Fink came in ninth place at 25:57, 11 seconds behind Hernandez, and Mike Frick was solid, placing 24th at 26:16. Lehman said he was pleased with the effort of freshman Erin Scroggins who finished 40th at 26:41 in his second collegiate race. “ A t the 3-mile mark, Erin was right up there with Kendall for the lead,” Lehman said. “ Erin is getting more experience and getting better. He had a good week o f practice and Kendall has been getting even more consistent.” ASU’s other finishers included T roy McKay, who was 42nd at 26:43, Gerald Fougner, 43rd at 26:44, and D ave Harkin, 73rd at 27:23. .“ A lot of the coaches there said they held some of their runners out, so it’s hard to tell how good w e are,’’ .Lehman said. “ But if you look at some of the runners who did compete, I think w e’re right up there with some o f the better teams.” . ' .i The Sun Devils return to action Oct. 12 as they host the 11-team ASU Invitational. ‘ r " “ PRESfcHOOL and EXTENDER DAY Prereading and math experiences, science, cooking, field trips. SCHOOL A G E PROGRAMS Transportation to local schools, summer camp, after school program There’s an IB M PS/2 made for every student body. INFANT and TODDLER PROGRAMS Educational programs just for toddlers and twos. S U M M E R PRO G RAM FOR A L L A G E S 437-0153 Monday-Friday 6 a.m.-6 p.m, C a t g o t 3920 E. 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