©Copyright, State Press, 1990 Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Voi. 16 No. 35 Thursday, October 18,1990 Coor unveils plan for administration By KELLY PEARCE State Press Monique HolHn/Siate Press Decked Out Tw o U n iversity Tow ers residents take a b reath er from h ectic m idterm schedules W ednes­ d ay aftern oo n . Student A ffa ir s and Research v ic e presidents Will no longer answer directly to ASU president Lattie Çoor under a new scheme unveiled Wednesday that w ill reorganize the administration. The plan creates a position for a secondin-command senior vice president and provost — in charge o f all deans and academic administrators — to give Coor m ore tim e for conducting ASU business. A disgruntled student leader claims the new plan should contain a direct student pipeline to the University president. “ H e ’ s s t ill the C hief e x e c u t iv e ,’ ’ Associated Students of ASU President Matt Ortega said. ‘ Places like Student Affairs should report to the president. “ D r. Coor has assured m e on two occasions that although the structure w ill change, he w ill have as much contact with students as possible. But I ’m none thé less concerned.” Ortega said the ASU president w ill meet with ASASU executive officers Oct. 30. “ This (the reorganization) tells me that parking fees and building construction are m o re im portan t than d irect student involvement,” he said, adding that he does not have any gripes about the rest of Coor’s administrative plan. Christine Wilkinson, vice president for Student Affairs, and Henry Reeves, vice president fo r Research, could not be reached Wednesday night for comment on the reorganization. Meanwhile, the ASU president lauded the form at’s potential. “ I ’m really pleased with both the process and the outcome,” he said adding that whoever is picked to fill the neW post w ill oversee teaching and research activities in addition to monitoring student and faculty relationships. “ It w ill help balance teaching and research.” Coor said a national search to fill the newly created senior Vice president and provost position w ill be launched in the first week in Novem ber and filled by April. “ I want to get off and searching,” he said; adding that he hopes to establish a search committee sometime next week. Coor said it is im pérative to find an appropriate person for the post quickly, so the position-holder can participate in selecting four permanent deans for vacated jo te in the colleges of education and business, School o f Social Work and University Libraries. Because the position is new, Coor said under A ffirm ative Action laws, an entirely new search w ill commence. When Richard Peck vacated the provost post in February to assume the presidency at the University of N ew Mexico, a p r e lim in a r y s e a rc h u n ea rth ed fo u r candidates. They are: Thomas George, dean of the C o l l e g e o f N a t u r a l S c ie n c e s and Mathematics at the State University of New York at Buffalo; C. Roland Hayden, current ASU dean of the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences; Naomi Lynn, dean of the College of Public and urban A ffa irs at G eorgia State U niversity; and Judith Stiehm, provost and vice president of academ ic affairs at Florida International University, Coor said these candidates w ill be informed that they m ay reapply for the senior vice president and provost job. The ASU president said the future provost and senior vice president w ill relieve him of some administrative duties so he can concentrate on the m ajor campus issues, carry out other administrative tasks and easily access campus leaders such as T u rn to R eorganize, p a g e 12 . Writing committee Clubs cash in on ASASU funds waits on Congress’ NEA clause ruling By KENNETH BROW N S tate Press By JENNIFER FRANKLIN S ta te Press ' Members o f the ASU Creative Writing Committee said they are waiting patiently while Congress tangles over whether to revoke a National Endowment for the Arts clause prohibiting grant recipients from producing “ obscene’ ’ art. “ Common sense will have its day,” said Ron Carlson, director of the University committee, which turned down $9,965 from the N E A in September because of a clause in the grant dealing with obscenity they said infringed on academic, social and artistic freedoms. The House of Representatives approved a compromise plan Monday as part o f an $11.9 billion appropriations bill that would lift an N E A restriction requiring grant winners to sign a non-obscenity pledge. However, it would require grant winners to repay the endowment if they are convicted of violating obscenity laws. In its vote, the House decided to let the courts decide whether federally supported arts projects are obscene. Turn to NEA, page 6. Catch the wave: Campus clubs seeking funding m ay have to bypass the Associated Students of ASU for handouts this semester because the leadership body has appropriated all of its money. Although the shortfall comes as no surprise to ASASU officials, College of Nursing Sen. G reg Schultz said Some clubs w ill be disappointed to find that appropriations are given on a “ first-come, first serve” basis. “ Some (clubs) are going to lose out,” he said. “ But that’s just part of the process.” The last of fa ll semester monetary allocations w ill be doled opt at Tuesday’s Senate meeting. College of Education Sen. Keith Pressman, who serves on the ASASU Appropriations Committee, said the body w ill not be able to fund clubs until unspent allocations are put back into the Campus Clubs and Organizations’ Budget, a process that takes place each month. But Senate Appropriations Committee officials do not expect enough money to come in to fund clubs this semester. “ Basically w e’re dry,” Pressman said. “ Last night was the closing of the CCO account. Charged!.* C o lle g e stu den ts pay “ It’s a problem. We want to give everyone money.” Pressman added that he does not think the Senate acted foolishly in allocating all of its funds, adding that all of the spending was necessary. Paul Biwan, program coordinator for REACH, a campus service organization that aids clubs, said the lack of funds w ill hurt clubs that have not come to ASASU for help. “ That’s kind of obvious,” he said. “ Obviously it takes money to accomplish some goals. I f they can’t obtain those funds through ASASU, they’re just going to have to find other resources.” Biwan said ASASU was the only source of club money he knew of, adding that he was not aware the group had already allocated its Club budget. Jeanette Wiedemeier, ASASU executive vice president, said the lack of useable funds is no problem, but added that the situation is “ unfortunate” fo r elute that w ill be turned aw ay for the rest of the semester. “ E very year it’s different and this is just a different year,” she said. “ W e’re fine. Once (ASASU’s m oney) is gone, then w e’v e done our job. W e’ve just done it sooner than we did it last year.” T u rn to Funds, p age 8. change: a red- D a n n y B en -G igi, an the p r ic e fo r the shirt fresh m an , w ill ASU H e b r e w p r o ­ c o n v e n ie n c e an d in ­ start as q u arterb ack fessor, uses a s h o rt­ w a v e tu n er t o g et th e latest n e w s fr o m th e M ideast. Page t o c r e d it Today’s weather: Sunny with a high in the low 90s. Tonight: Clear with a low in the upper 60s. gam e O regon . Page 15 .......... ................. 9 H oroscopes............... ...... Sports..... State Press Thursday. O c t o b e r 18. 1990 Page 2 Plans for By M ICHELLE ROBERTS S tate Press Tem pe officials said two milestones in the Rio Salado P roject’s development were reached when the city recently finalized three recreational site proposals and acquired a 295-acre stretch of land from the Bureau of Land Management. “ F o r a long time w e’ve (R io Salado Advisory Commission) looked forward to getting the (B L M ) lease,” said Dave Hanna, chairman of the Rio Salado Advisory Commission. “ We are very glad w e’ve gotten all the i’s and t’s dotted. “ As far as the proposals go, I know there are some exciting possibilities.” Steve Nielson, Community Development project manager, said the BLM agreement is one of the project’s most important developments, adding that the agreement was reached on Sept. 27 and took five years for the city to obtain. “ In the mid 1980’s, we (Tem pe) began to discuss having them (B L M ) lease the land to Tem pe,” he said. Nielson said the agreement would allow the city to incorporate the 295-acre span into the future park’s river channeling plan and later develop a wildlife habitat along the banks. Tempe received its permit to channel the Salt R iver between McClintock D rive and M ill Avenue on Aug. 31 from the U. S. Arm y Corps of Engineers. Duncan Patten, director of environmental studies at ASU, helped the city with the habitat plans. Officials are planning a riparian (edge of w ater) habitat that includes cattails and other streamside shrubbery, Patten said. “ The idea was to develop a habitat that would simulate what was there (along the Salt R iver) in the past (before the Salt R iver dried up),” he said. In addition* officials said the city’s finalization of proposals to develop recreational facilities on three sites is a step toward progress. When developed, officials said the land will be the western anchor of a recreational, commercial and parkway system stretching along the Salt R iver bed through Tempe — a project they predict w ill take at least 20 years to complete. Proposed sites for recreational, commercial and transportation develop­ ment under Tempe's Rio Salado Project. Van Buren Rd. t t « * * U * ' M iÒ V a' l D O * * * J J M 1 M * * M « * i i Plans for Site One, a 23-acre parcel south of the Rio Salado Parkway and west of Priest Drive, and Site Two, 62 acres north of Rio Salado Parkway and west of Priest Drive, include an ice arena and a baseball field, Nielson said. The ice arena may be used as a training facility for the Phoenix Roadrunners and possibly for an ASU hockey team in the future, he added. Steve Kricun/State Press Nielson said Site Three, a 123-acre site north of Rio Salado Parkway and west of Priest Drive, could have a m ajor public beach, restaurants, a fam ily amusement center and an 18-hole golf course. as Nov. l, but actual construction w ill begin six months to a year after the selection. Officials said the new developments for the R io Salado Project have rewarded the city for years of work and planning. “ Both of these events represent such real, positive steps toward the project after so much planning,” Hanna said. “ To see these things is downright thrilling.” The proposals will be form ally presented to the Rio Salado Commission and the Parks and Recreation Board on Oct. 30. Tempe City Council will consider the proposals on Nov. 1. Nielson added that the city could-chose a developer as soon Today M eetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at noon in the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •Tau Beta Pi will meet at 7 p.m. in ECG 320. •American Society of Women Accountants will meet at 4 p.m. at 11001 N. Black Canyon Highway for a tour of Cigna. •Students for Choice will meet at 5 p.m. in the MU Apache Room. •Young Americans for Freedom will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Arizona Room to listen to Reed Irvine speak. •Amnesty International at ASU will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the MU third floor conference room. •Engineering and Applied Sciences College Council will meet at 5 p.m. in Noble Library Classroom A. •AMA will meet at 4:15 p.m. in the MU Pima Room to listen to a guest speaker talk about entrepreneurial skills. •Christian Students Fellowship will meet at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •Pi Sigma Epsilon will meet at 8 p.m. in the MU. •Wrestling Support Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. on third floor of the MU. Everyone welcome. •Association of American Inidan Business Students will meet at 4 p.m. in the MU student center. •Financial Management Association will meet at 3:30 p.m. in BA 296. •United Campus Christian Ministries will meet at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. KASR Radio will meet at 5 p.m. at Mama’s Pizza for an anniversary party and a “ Best of Phoenix” celebration. Everyone welcome. •Young Democrats of ASU will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •Le Cercle Français will meet at 2 p.m. at the Coffee Plantation. •University Toastmasters will meet at 5:15 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room. Everyone welcome. •Baptist Student Union will meet at noon at 1322 S. Mill Ave. for lunch. •Desert Horticulture Society will meet at noon in AG 101. W e l c o m e B a c k ASU ! UTAH 21/2 Buses already soldout!! Reserve your spot now before it’s too late!t Thanksgiving W eekend N ovem ber 21-25, 1990: PACKAGE 1: $239 includes 4 day lift tickets. PACKAGE 2: $225 fo r 3 out o f 4 day lift tickets. Both include roundtrip video J>us transportation, lodging at Salt Lake's finest 5 star hotel, the University Park, lift ticket for Snowbird. Alta, Solitude & Brighton, Utah trip T-shirt, nightly parties with C alifornia schools and all the beer you can drink all weekend long!! Call fo r details: J e ffo ......966-2304 K arie..... ... .....9 6 7 -8 8 9 7 B rian.............. ...8 2 9 -1 7 0 4 H o tlin e ............ 966-3890 Toppings: Hours: Pineapple Pepperoni Sausage Ground Beef Ham Bacon Mushrooms Onions Green Peppers Tomatoes Black Olives Jalapenos Monday - Thursday 11:00 AM - 2:00 AM Sunday 11:00 A M - 1:30 AM 1340 E. APACHE TEMPE Choice of Crusts Original or Whole Wheat $50 DEPOSITS ACCEPTED NOW! UTAH DEPOSIT MEETING T O N IG H T 7 Friday - Saturday 11:00 A M -2:30 AM ★ p .m .! Soda A vailable Coke Sprite Diet C oke Dr. Pepper VOTED #1 AT ASU! ★ FAST, FREE DELIVERY All Competitors Coupons Accepted^* A R I Z O N A S T A T E U N I V E R S I T Y We Accept Mastercard & VISA on Delivery! P 20" PARTY PIZZA $10.99 n with one topping & 4 freo sodas r 12" CHEESE PIZZA 16" CHEESE PIZZA $4.99 $3.99 L_. ? ; ■9 * University 1 sL">s Broadway DINNER FOR TW O i 1 1301 E. University (Next to Beauvais) E veryo n e W elcom e! T $6.25 12’ Pizza with 2 toppings &_2Jnesodas J [ TW O TW O 12" 16" PIZZAS PIZZAS $9.88 *4thtwp toppings $10.99 J |~DINNER FOR FOUR I withonetoppingIV j T $8.50 16’ Pizza with 1 topping & 4 freejodas_ _ | Ony one coupon per order. Above prlcet DO NOT Indude tax. Offer may expire without notice. We accept a l competitor's coupon V of comparable size. (Except for 2 for 1 coupons.) W o r ld /N a tio n State Press Page 3 Thursday, O c t o b e r 1 8 ,1 9 9 0 Senate documents prove Keating ties C itizen ’s arrest? A rio t policem an fig h ts w ith a Lim a, P eru, housew ife during a m arch W ednesday, by hun­ dreds o f poor w om en dem anding governm ent food aid. W ASHINGTON (A P ) — Three senators under investigation for their ties to Charles Keating Jr., ex-owner of the failed Lincoln Savings and Loan, had m ore extensive dealings with him than they acknowledged publicly , Senate documents show. The Senate Ethics Committee documents d e ta il e ffo r ts m ad e by D e m o c ra tic Sens. Dennis DeConcini of Arizona, Alan C ran ston o f C a lifo r n ia and D onald W. Riegle Jr. of Michigan on Keating’s behalf. They also shed new light on some of Keating’s fund-raising efforts. The committee’s special counsel has recommended the probe of those three be in t e n s ifie d . H e a ls o p ro p o s e d th e investigation be dropped against Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz. and John Glenn, D-Ohio, the other members of the so-called “ Keating F ive.” T h e docu m en ts, ob ta in ed by T h e Associated Press, show: •Keating’s fund-raising efforts for Riegle w ere far more extensive than previously known, and som e inform ation in the documents do not match R iegle’s accounts in statements to the public and the committee. •Cranston, in a memo, thanked Keating for a $250,000 contribution solicited by the senator for a voter registration project and at the same time expressed his pleasure (hat Keating m et with the top thrift regulator to air his complaints about an examination of his Lincoln Savings and Loan o f Irvine, Calif. •DeConcini assisted K eatin g in his crusade to have form er top thrift regulator Edwin Gray — referred to by Lincoln’s owner as a “ mad dog turned loose” — rem oved from the examination of Lincoln. A fter Gray left office, the senator wrote Keating, “ M aybe things w ill change now that he is gone. I sure hope so.” •A form er top U. S. banking regulator, R oger Martin, said that just weeks before the government seized Lincoln, he received “ highly unusual” calls from Cranston and DeConcini at his unlisted home number urging the sale of Lincoln rather than seizure. Cranston’s call came after 10 p.m. and DeConcini’s at 5:30 a.m. the next morning. “ It sounded to m e as if they w ere reading from the same Script or memo,” Martin told the committee. The disclosures come at a politically sensitive tíme for the committee, with some Republicans on the panel reportedly pressing their colleagues to exonerate McCain. That would leave only Democrats Under in vestigation at a tim e when Democrats are trying to exploit the S&L crisis as a political issue with mid-term congressional elections Only three weeks away. It was previously known that Keating and associates g a v e $1.3 m illio n to the campaigns and favored causes of the five senators. The committee is trying to determine whether there was a connection between help the senators gave Keating as Lincoln headed toward collapse and the money he gave. Lincoln was seized by the federal government in April 1989, at a potential cost to taxpayers o f m ore than $2 billion, but Keating insisted all along he was treated unfairly by U. S. regulators. The documents show that in the month before R iegle and the other senators met with regulators in April 1987, to complain about the length o f the Lincoln exámination, there w as an exten sive fund-raising operation for Riegle. It was led by Keating, D eC oncini and E a r l K a tz, a m a jo r DeConcini fund raiser in Arizona. Money raised by Keating was turned over to Katz, then to DeConcini, who personally wrote R iegle memos accompanying the checks, the documents show. R iegle wrote the Ethics Committee on Oct. 18, 1989 that all the Keating fund­ raising efforts for him ware focused on a T u ra to Keating, p a g e 10. Congress demands voice in sending troops to Iraq W ASH IN G TO N (A P ) K ey senators on Wednesday demanded the Bush administration seek’ the approval of Congress before sending U. S. troops into Combat against Iraq, but Secretary of State James Baker resisted. B aker promised only further consultations as he confronted a bipartisan demand for decision-sharing from members of the Foreign Relations Committee. “ We should not have a constitutional argument over whether or not the President as commander-in-chief has authority to commit forces,” Baker said in an effort to end the debate. Besides, Baker said, a vote on Capitol Hill could tip off Iraqi President Saddam Hussein about a pending m ilitary operation or even cause the White House to abandon that option. But only two members of the committee. Sens. Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn., and Daniel Moÿnihan, D-N. Y., supported the adm inistration in its insistence that consultation with Congressional leaders was sufficient. Typical of the demand was an assertion by Sen. Paul Sarbanes, D-Md., that “ consultation is not enough.” “ Th ere is a d ifferen ce between consultation and authorization,” Sarbanes said. “ The notion that the President alone would be able to Commit Am erican forces in a m ilitary assault in effect without receiving a shared decision by the Congress is contrary to the Constitution.” But Baker responded: “ I f you want us to agree to do nothing unless w e get the approval o f 535 members of Congress, w e can’t agree to that right now.” The disagreement, mostly under wraps until now, is rising to the surface as Congress prepares for a year-end adjournment, beginning possibly late next week. In the meantime, Sen. Richard Lugar, D-Ind., said, “ There is likely to be m ilitary activity in that area.” He said Kuwait, was disintegrating rapidly and the trade sanctions imposed by the United Nations Security Council on Iraq m ore than two months ago m ay not force Iraq to relinquish its hold on the Persian Gulf emirate. Instead o f the Bush administration making a decision on its own, Lugar said, “ Congress ought to come back into session and authorize a declaration of w ar.” On the House side of the Capitol, meanwhile, Speaker ■Thomas F o ley, D-Wash., said he was ‘ ‘favorably inclined’ ’ to provide for Congress to call itself back into session if m ilitary action began in the gulf. The debate centers on the authority the Constitution gives Congress to declare w ar while designating the President as commander-in-chief. It also concerns the W ar Pow ers Act, which Congress passed over form er President Richard' Nixon’s veto in 1973 after thousands of U. S. troops had died in Indochina without-a declaration of war. The law requires the President to withdraw troops from combat or from situations of “ imminent involvement in T u rn to Midcast,, p a g e 10. Bush veto o f H ouse-approved civil rights b ill probable W ASHINGTON (A P ) — The House on Wednesday approved a m ajor civil rights bill designed to combat job discrimination and sent it to President Bush, who promised a veto on grounds that it would lead to hiring quotas. “ I hope that P resid en t Bush w ill reconsider the unwise and unjustified course he is on,” Sen. Edward Kennedy, DMass., said following House approval o f the bill, 273-154 H ie margin was 12 votes short of the twothirds needed to override a veto and pass the bill over the president’s objections. Thirtyfour Republicans and 239 Democrats voted fo r the bill while 15 Democrats and 139 Republicans w ere opposed. Despite months o f efforts to forge a compromise, civil rights forces succeeded in gaining just one vote beyond their total on Aug. 3 when the House passed an earlier version 272-154. “ W e’re somewhat disappointed because w e had h oped th a t th e a d d itio n a l compromises that w ere made since the vote last time would have picked up some votes,” said William Taylor, a longtime Washington civil rights advocate. The Senate on Tuesday approved the bill but also fell short of the support needed to override a veto, Somber civil rights forces planned a final campaign to persuade Bush to relent and sign the bill. “ G ive us these measly crumbs from the table,” Rep. Craig Washington, D-Texas, said as the House debated the measure, which had been nine months in the making and softened repeatedly in efforts to woo Bush’s support. The bill represents the civil rights movement’s top priority on Capitol Hill this year. It would overturn six decisions on job discrimination that created a furor when the Supreme Court handed them down last year. Provisions range from a ban on racial harassment in the workplace to punitive damages in extrem e discrimination cases. The greatest controversy, however, cam e over complex changes in rules on how job discrimination cases are decided They would m ake it easier for minorities filing suit to win and harder for employers to defend themselves. President Bush said in a letter delivered to Capitol Hill on Tuesday that the changes would “ have the effect of forcing businesses to adopt quotas in hiring and promotion.” He said that if the bill reached his desk, he would “ be compelled to veto it.” White House press secretary Marlin Fitzw ater said Wednesday morning Bush planned to veto the measure and send it back to lawmakers with an alternative version attached. Civil rights leaders, however, have been saying the chances o f passing an alternative this year are virtually nil. In recent months, they had been holding out hope that Bush would relent and sign the bill. A fter weighing Tuesday’s missive from the president, however, civil rights leaders sharpened their rhetoric. “ His announced intention to veto the Civil Rights A ct o f 1990 shows that on issues of race and sex discrimination, George Bush is a Ronald Reagan in sheep’s clothing,” said Ralph Neas, executive director o f the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights. “ While his style and rhetoric m ay differ, his substantive civil rights policies are just as deadly to those who are victim s o f job discrimination,” Neas said, “ indeed, with respect to key parts of the Civil Rights Act o f 1990, President Bush’s positions are even m ore extrem e than Ronald Reagan’s.” “ R e g r e tta b ly , P re s id e n t Bush has capitulated to the right wing,” he said. Opinion Page 4 State Press Thursday, O c t o b e r 1 9 ,1 9 9 0 It ’s hard escap in g ASU p a rk in g stra n g leh o ld D a n N o w ic k i H P Opinion Editor h There’s an addition to the old “ Death and Taxes” list of life ’s inescapables for most ASU students. F or today’s student there’s also the inevitable parking decal fees. If you’ve got the cash, ASU Parking and Transit Services has the concrete. If you don’t, well, life can get ugly. Personally, I prefer not to spend m y hard earned scratch on a window decal that allows me to park in a lot located only rem otely near ASU (and if you’re not paying for your sticker, then your overindulgent mom or dad probably is, so it all comes out of somebody’s pocket in the end, you spoiled b ra t!). In fact, for two years I took the Lot 59 trip, sloshing to class through downpours in February and risking heat exhaustion and sunstroke trekking to summer School in July. And I can count on one hand the number of times I arrived on campus early enough for class that I was able to take advantage of the trams, those overgrown golf carts that travel just fast enough so that the wind chill freezes its passengers to the m arrow during the winter, and just slow enough to ensure heat-induced headaches for its riders in the summertime. So, e v e r since last sem ester, I ’ ve eschewed the relative mental security of perimeter parking in exchange for a more covert (and hopefully cheaper) parking strategy. It’s tricky, but I ’m confident the system can be beat. However, in this dangerous game of parking intrigue, one false m ove can lead to disaster — from a $10 ticket to a $100 towing fine. ■ But things aren’t as easy as they used to be. ■ This semester the Parking Forces That L E T T E R Be have levied some heavy commandments on the heads of the blasphemers who have not paid the appropriate tribute : •Thou Shalt not find a parking spot during à Phoenix Cardinal game. •Thou shalt not find a parking spot during a Sun Devil game. •Thou shalt not find a parking spot in the visitor lots. •Thou shalt not find an empty parking m eter in the City of Tempe. •Thou shalt not find a parking spot within walking distance from campus. •Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s Structure 3 decal. •Thou shalt not attempt to prevent ASU Parking Services and/or the City of Tem pe fro m siphoning e v e ry last d ollar of disposable income from your wallet for parking fines/boot rem oval fees. So here I am, trapped in a blacktop nightmare with no parking sticker. But unlike the Bible’s Prodigal Son;, I ’m unable to return home — there’s no w ay I can afford to, not with the cheapest decal (for thé aforementioned Lot 59, located in the Sudan) now costing a whopping $45. Call me an alarmist, but this parking racket is getting w ay out of hand, especially in light of the proposed transportation recommendation (designed to decrease the number of single-occupancy vehicles driven to ASU by 10 percent over the next two years) that w ill inflate the price of decals by 50 percent. That’s not a typo. Fifty-percent. How about if I just sign over my paycheck? In addition to this unparallelled pricegouging, both ASU and Tem pe seem to be tightening the parking noose around campus, with the University roping o ff the space around the old Burger King on Apache Blvd. (fo r no apparent reason other than the fact that some students were — gasp! — parking there for free! ) and with tow trucks now keeping a scrutinizing watch on the previously reliable Centerpoint parking lot. Parking spaces are becoming scarcer and more valuable every day. I ’m actually surprised that more violence hasn’t erupted as a result of the now commonplace parking disputes/obscenity contests. Somebody told me that it’s easy to find all­ : I Ä P 'VV,v\* »*•' ‘ ‘S í «*:'.'*» v»Í."V \ V #,i <£ -.V .J*,1.. , v -• • : » *: . .fv s • * • ..-■■.•Sm Vf>; 'M ! kt** •••'.'■ vVSj V .? - >m • V - ;■: t # ^ i •V M I * Vi ... •, . 1 .••► • .y K »- nvH ^ C%| B Í P t* . •*.w < ;*» .< m &\* i tfv .’ â (0Cfj t A f ÿ > n t e * uA\lf ■fut fifKtJ CÍEAU By ^ vf f ~ A R t^ • • * t f e « H o w A H e G o ,ftt Q +ude *rf~ m rs ■fisi* • ■ ** % day spaces along the streets north of University if you get there before 7 a m. However, since I ’ve never in m y entire life gotten up that early, I don’t have any verification of truth in that statement. * As it is, I have m y own little super-secret location where I park every day free of charge. And, no, I ’m not going to print its location. Come and get me, coppers, if you can! S A fie r c e re b u tta l Editor: This is in response to the letter by Jonathan de Jong. In regards to catcalling, Mr. de Jong seems to be under the delusion that women ‘ask for it’ . This leads m e to the inescapable conclusion that he himself has yet to smell the coffee. I suppose he w ill label m e a feminist. Is this because I ’m fem ale or because I don’t agree with him? Whatever someone chooses to label me, I, like others, both m ale and female, who feel that all human beings are deserving of the same decency and respect, recognize no excuse that can justify behavior contrary to this. Mr. de Jong does. The notion that only ‘unladylike’ women get catcalled, hasseled, etc. is absurd. A ll women are targets for this type of behavior; ‘lady’ or not, has nothing to do with it. You’re certainly a product o f your times, Mr. de Jong. I ’d rather be regarded as a human being and treated accordingly than be regarded as a ‘lady’ by M r. de Jong and treated as he sees fit to treat me. Politeness is often superficial. Respect goes much deeper. As m y “ fierce rebuttal” draws to a close, I ’d like to emphasize m y point. Whether or not one is catcalled, defined ‘lady’ or not, has less to do with a woman’s behavior than it does with Hie attitudes and behavior o f those ‘gentlemen’ who take it upon themselves to define others — B y whose criteria, Mr. de Jong? In the same issue o f the State Press, I read that a little girl had been molested. But hey, I suppose she had it coming. Had she been a ‘lady’ . A re women the problem, Mr. de Jong? Sarah Greene Graduate Student, Anthropology E D I T O R I A L F F STATE PRESS S U Z A N N E ROSS Editor B O A R D Unsigned editorials reflect the view s o f the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board write editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: N IC O LE PER R O N Managing Editor City Editor.....________________________.HOBART R O W L A N D Asst. City Editor........ ................. ...,.............KELLY PEARCE ... KRISTEN J O H N S O N ....... T E N N Y TATÙ S IA N ............ D A N N O W IC K I Asst. Opinion Editor....................... ...... »JULIA C O O D R U M ................... T. J. SOKOL .................. PA U L C O R O Asst. Sports Editor.»................ .........KRIS T IM M O N S ............ STEVE KR1CUN ....................JILL T1BKE Magazine Editor.............................. ...... M E G H A LV E R SO N ..... R O B Y N PIN K S T O N Asst. Magazine Editor..................... ...... ».C A R IN C U M M IN S R E P O R T E R S : Kenneth B row n, A n ita C arcone, Teena Chad well, Jeff Concors, Joseph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron L ev y Patricia Mah, Michelle Paul, Michelle Roberts, Girth Sheh, Christina Schroeder, Kristie, Young. S P O R T S R E PO R T E R S: Darren y rb a n , G re g Zele, Dan Zeiger. . ..■» P H O T O G R A P H ERS: Irwin Daugherty, Jeorgetta Douglas, Monique Hollin, Will Powers, Tamara Wofford. C O P Y EDITORS: Kelly* Kratch, Michael LaMantia. C A R T O O N IST S: Rob Minton, Julie Sigwart. C O L U M N IS T : Nicole CarrolL M A G A Z IN E STAFF: Michelle Graff, Vicki Culver, Christine Herbranson, Lori Lappin, Deborah Nemko, Jon Walz, Kramer W etzel P R O D U C T IO N : Cassaundra Caviness, Dane Christ, Holly Hiatt, Jeffrey Lucas, Marie Nothaft, Lynne Senzek, John P. Smith, Eric Zotcavage. A D V E R T IS IN G REPRESENTATIVES: Dan Elletronv Todd Martin, Christine Millan, Mike Morris, Terri Smith, John Vaaaro, Bill VanZanten. The State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not an sw er questions o f a general nature. A dvertisin g and Production: (602) 965-7572. The State Press is the only n e w sp a p e r exclusively published for and circulated on the A S U campus. The news and views published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of A S U administration, faculty, staff or student body. Suzanne Ross Editor Nicole Perron Managing Editor Dan Nowicki Opinion Editor The State Press welcom es and encourages Written response from our readers on any topic. A ll letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include you r full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation w ith the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity w ill be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing b y the opinion page editor. A ll letters must either be brought in person w ith a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement o f Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, A rizona 85287-1502. Opinion State Press _______ ______________ Thursday, O ctober 1 8 ,1990 _______________ __________________________________________ W o m a n o r fe tu s ■■; ’ ; ■, Page 5 / Supreme Court looks at fetal p rotection p olicies E lle n G o o d m a n W ashington Post Writers Group BOSTON — When the case of the leadworkers arrived at the Supreme Court it came bearing the weight of social change. The Johnson Controls case was cast as a test of women’s rights verses fetal risks. The Court was being asked whether the Milwaukee-based company could bar fertile women from work that might endanger a fetus. Wasn’t there a conflict between a woman’s right to work and a fetus’ right to health? The case had tapped into the anxious fantasy about a world filled with women whose passion for equality in the workplace pitted them against children. A world in which w om en’s rights as individuals conflicted with their responsibilities as nurturers. In the courtroom on Oct. 10, Johnson Controls was described by its lawyer as the trustworthy caretaker o f the next generation. Surely, said Stanley Jaspen, when Congress prohibited discrimination on the basis of gender, it didn’t mean to “ require an employer to damage unborn children.” I f Johnson was the friend of the fetus then, by definition, fem ale employees were its enemies. The “ fetal protection policy” was not only protection from the dangers of lead, but from the reckless irresponsibility of these fertile working women. I was struck, from the first tim e I read of this case, by a company policy that assumed every woman was a pregnancy waiting to happen. The life of this policy didn’t begin at conception; it began at menses and ended at menopause or sterility. If infertility was a bona fide qualification, the women’s law yer warned in court, companies could discriminate against any woman capable of pregnancy. We would be back to the days when a company could legally refuse to hire women because she might, sometime, perhaps, maybe get pregnant. ' A t least 20 million other women working in industries that use chemicals could be effected. That doesn't count the millions of women working on computer chips, or in hospitals, or even on airplanes. I was also offended by the notion, not so subtly expressed, that women have to be forcibly prevented by the boss from endangering their children. That given a choice, vast numbers would poison the next generation with lead. To prove their case, the company lawyers called Johnson’s earlier policy a failure. Informing women of the risks, they said, wasn’t enough. Why, eight women with high lead content had become pregnant, and one bore a hyperactive child. This was the reason to banish every fertile woman. It doesn't require a cynic or a Justice to re-define such a “ fetal protection policy” as a “ company protection policy.” It’s less about fear of a damaged child than of that child’s lawsuit. I f w e truly care about the next generation, it makes little sense to single out women in the workplace as “ enemy,” Tim e and time again, when something affects the female reproductive System, we find out it affects the male. Lead is one o f those things. Why bar a 50-year-old woman from a job and not w orry about 30-year-old men? Tim e and time again, we discover the workplace is not the only hazardous site. Lead does its worst damage to pre­ schoolers nibbling on paint chips from a tenement wall. Does the passion to protect a child stop at the womb or the factory gate? The real world offers different risks and risk assessments than Johnson Controls. By protecting a possible fetus, you may protect a real woman and her real-life fam ily right out of health insurance, out o f the middle class. Even if you protect a fetus from a chemical, you m ay put it at the m ercy of poverty, without pre-natal care or nutrition. Writing thoughtfully about this case in the American Prospect, Brandéis’ Deborah Stone asked: “ Why are we collectively ducking our obliga tons to children and suddenly putting the bonus of responsibility for any risk potential on mothers?” Because it’s easier. Because it fits our anxieties. A t Johnson Controls, it was easier to focus on women than on all workers. It was easier to enforce sterility than a clean workplace. And at this moment of deep concern about family, about children, it is also easier to focus on the individual behavior o f women than on the need for widespread community support. The problem is, it doesn’t work. The case sets up a false conflict between working women and children, between job protection and fetal protection. The women who went before the Supreme Court are not pleading for the right to endanger a fetus. The case they bring is part o f a larger question that comes now in social change. W ill we go back, trying to hold women accountable for the fate of children against every odd and every ill? Or w ill we begin the hard and honest work of solving these problems together? . ; Interesting minds called extremist by mainstream J o se p h S o b n m Universal Press Syndicate N EW Y O R K — We seem to be living in the golden age of name-calling. The columnist R ay Jenkins of The Baltimore Sun refers to the congressmen of both parties who a b o rte d the re c e n t budget d eal as “ extremists.” I don't know about you, but I like to reserve words that strong for people who act outside the legal system and in flagrant defiance of it. When IR A gunmen kidnap an opponent and put a bullet in his brain, that, to m y mind, is extremism. When members o f Congress, whose job consists largely in voting, vote, I don’t call that extremism, even if I don’t like the way they vote. The congressmen who nixed the budget deal were actually responding to the firm ly expressed will of their constituents. I f Mr. Jenkins considers that extremism, he’d better brace himself. He may soon see a lot more o f it. The American political system is not remarkable for its diversity. European parliamentary politics abounds in small p a rtie s , who r e g is te r th e ir va riou s principles in ways that sometimes bring down governments. There is much to be said for and against such parties, but they do have the virtue of preventing the sort of bogus consensus which in this country is known as “ the mainstream.” The m em ory of Robert Bork is still fresh. Universally acknowledged as an original jurisprudential mind, he was bullied out of a Supreme Court seat when assorted interest groups stigmatized him as an “ extremist” (though his chief thesis was that the courts should accord more respect to legislative m ajorities) and pronounced him “ out of the mainstream” (which is where interesting minds often reside). Keep slicing away the margins of dissent from popular opinion, and you soon have nothing left but the mediocrity o f the safe middle. In the case of the recent budget deal, the middle consisted only o f a few Washington insiders who hoped to rush their bargain past the many voters who had been e ffe c tiv e ly disfranchised by President Bush’s defection on his pledge never to raise taxes. The “ extrémiste” were those who tried to keep that pledge. The voters haven’t even been kept informed as to what is really going on. The budget deal was billed as a “ deficit reduction package.” It was actually a package o f tax increases to pay fo r spending increases. This y e a r’s federal outlays were $1.26 trillion. Next yea r’s w ill be $1.36 trillion. That’s an increase of $100 billion in federal spending. And that’s why we have a deficit p rob lem . Spending w ill in crea se by 8 percent, so our rulers have to find a way to get 8 percent more of our earnings. Tom Betsell, one of the few journalists who tries to keep track o f the real figures, points out that federal outlays have more than doubled since 1980. When Ronald Reagan took office, there was $550 billion. So much for the myth that the federal government has been famishing for a decade. The voters have every right to be outraged by this. It shouldn’t be necessary to point out that they have every right to unhorse the men who have been riding them so hard. Y e t it seems to be thought vaguely insubordinate for the voters to assert their sovereignty, judging by the note of alarm in the press at the fury against incumbents. The fact is that the two-party system has been tending, for as long as one can remember, toward homogeneity. In 1964 Barry Goldwater threatened the unanimity o f the liberal regim e and was duly dubbed as an e x tre m is t. ( A p ro -G o ld w a ter pamphlet that year was tellingly titled “ A Choice, Not an Echo.” ) The same label dogged Ronald Reagan in 1980. But the voters are already showing this year that they are not disposed to order from the mainstream menu. John Silber in Massachusetts, David Duke in Louisiana, th e te r m - lim ita tio n m o v e m e n t, the pronouncements of many voters o f their intentions to vote against all incumbents — these are signs that millions of Americans are no longer content to be told from on high what is, and what is not, respectable in the eyes o f their supposed political tutors in government and the media. The political market has been cornered by a pair o f giant political corporations. Their shared monopoly has ceased to pass for the healthy functioning of democracy. And the American people are groping fo r a way out. Page 6 NEA ASU bike cops resurface, cyclists not to o w orried Bicyclists beware — ASU Department of Public Safety’s two-wheeled officers are back on the prowl. The ticket-wielding cyclists returned to monitoring the Chain-driven forbidden zones within the last week. But some students do not consider the “ bike cops” a threat. “ They’re really of no concern,” said Joe Gemet, a 23-year-old bio-engineering senior, who received a ticket last semester for running a stop sign on his bicycle. Gerftet said he will continue to ride his bicycle on the malls Unless more police officers begin patrolling campus. Doug Bartosh, associate director of ASU DPS, said there are only a few officers patrolling each day. I,ast semester, there was a bike patrol department, but it was eliminated because of a police staff shortage. : “ When we have extra patrol guys, w e’re putting them on bicycles,” Bartosh said. The officers are looking for bicyclists who ride through Orange and Cady malls, ride recklessly on campus or park illegally, he said. 1. But Tuesday, Senate Appropriations C o m m itte e C h a irm a n R o b e rt B yrd , D - W .V a ., m o v e d to e lim in a t e the compromise and reinserted restrictions imposed in the N E A ’s 1990 fiscal budget. “ Today the direction the Senate is taking looks very dismal,” said N E A Regional Director Ruth Draper, adding that it could be a long time before the Senate and House compromise to reauthorize the endowment, with or without the obscenity clause, and approve Dew appropriations. ‘ ‘F r o m w h at I saw com in g, (th e compromise) plan is the best alternative,’’ Carlson said, adding that he hopes Congress w ill pass the plan, Carlson said he is optimistic a new plan Will be approved by the Senate, adding that the committee would accept grants from the N E A if the restrictions are revoked.. “ We wou|d accept the grant under the pre-1990 standards,” he said. Carlson said when the com m ittee turned down the N E A money, its purpose was to p rom ote an N E A fr e e fro m outside influence. Lynn Timmons, ASU grant and contract administrator, said even though the writing Steve Sallquist, a 20-year-old junior business m ajor, was seen hopping onto his bicycle outside of Hayden Library Wednesday and then suddenly jumping off. He admitted he had to get accustomed to dismounting his bicycle on the malls. A bike ticket fine is $18, but instead of shelling out the cash, offenders can take a bicycle safety course. committee turned down the N E A grant, they are still eligible to receive future funding from the NEA. “ It would not hurt their chances (o f getting a gran t),” she said. Timmons said grants are decided by a panel on an application basis. N E A officials said the endowment added the anti-obscenity language to alert the public to what Congress was doing. “ None of the language was new,” she said. “ The N E A was always just working by the law o f the land. “ It has' had this somewhat negative reaction because it states the law up front, and that’s kind of scary.” Since the N E A included the clause, about 40 grant recipients have turned down the money as a m atter o f principle, Draper said. “ And that hurts our program because the arts are already funded so little,” she added. Draper said only 68 cents of U. S. tax revenue per person each year is spent on funding the arts. “ That, on top of having our budget reduced in the Senate, is a real shame,” she said. ? But, at this time, Bartosh said officers are “ mostly giving warnings.” “ I saw them (the o fficers) this morning, and I decided I ’d better not risk it,” Sallquist said. “ I heard that they hadn’t been on campus, so before (today),.I was driving pretty reckless.” B u m m State Press « ' Qw Continued from page L a u re l R ow e, a ju s tic e studies graduate student, applauded the return of the pedaling police officers. “ I think they’re great,” she said. “ It doesn't bother me, because people shouldn't be riding their bikes (on the malls) anyway.” Joh n T h o r n t o n , a 1 9 -y e a r -o ld sophomore photography m ajor, said he w ill continue to ride through the malls, even though he admitted it is much safer to w a lk b ik e s th r o u g h c a m p u s congestion. By TEENA CHADW ELL S tate Press O O State P ro t TC iured«£O ctober141990 w s s L & e l t i o u n e w s ? h TIME TO GET RID OF THE BIG FUZZY BLOB LIVING IN YOUR REFRIGERATOR? (No, we don’t mean your roommate.) Murph’s “Clean This Joint Up” Sale - V--AJAX BRAWNY iiCLOROX BLEACH! Coupons good thru 10-25-90 . or P a p e r T o w e ls COMET Ctenaar t402. 1 G a llo n U cju id v w m ,* * i i s 9 * r DOVE if GLADE ¡1 409 ^ E * »* a a « W M 0 J ^ For Dishes Expjros 10-25-90 AIR FRESHENER Variety of scents 22 QZ Expires 10-28^0 Rio Salado Restaurant ^ L iq u id C le a n s e r 22:02, Thursdays ■II am ~ 9 pm 1 1 /2 lb . C h e e s e b u r g e r with choice of fries, soup or salad 2 .9 5 Free Sodas for Designated Drivers 430 N. Scottsdale Rd. - Tempe 894-0533 FOOD MART & DELI U N IV E R S IT Y & H A R D Y APACHE & TERRACE 894-1002 968-7880 WE STILL MAKE GREAT SANDWICHES, TOO! s e l p . STATE PRESS Classifieds Matthews Center Basement, ASU 965-6731 W e ’v e g o t it c o v e r e d m s S tate Press Thursday. O c t o b e r 1 8 .1 9 9 0 Babbitt pulls a no-show at K ing day lecture By PATR IC IA MAH S tate Press About 40 people w ere not able to hear form er Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt praise Proposition 302 Wednesday, but they did get a glimpse o f four television commercials lauding a Martin Luther King Jr. paid holiday. Babbitt, who was unexpectedly called to W a s h in g to n D . C. e a r ly W ed n esd ay morning, was slated to speak in an Associated Students of ASU Political Unionsponsored lecture. “ 1 apologize on his behalf,” said Charles Coughlin, , spokesperson for the Martin Luther King Better Am erica Committee. “ He was unfortunately and truthfully pulled out of the state today.” Instead, the audience listened to Coughlin. ASASU Activities V ice President Frank McCune said ASASU made the best of the cancellation. “ Fortunately, w e did get this speaker and videos,” McCune said, adding that hopefully Babbitt w ill speak Nov. 5, but plans will not be finalized until the end o f the week. Proposition 302, which will appear on the Nov. 6 ballot, would establish a paid M L K holiday while retaining Columbus Day. On the other hand, Proposition 301 would replace a paid Columbus Day holiday with a paid King day. I f voters vote “ no” on both propositions, there will be no paid King holiday. In his speech, Coughlin encouraged people to support Proposition 302 because of moral as well as economical reasons. “ This is an issue in which we honor civil rights, and we honor those things that are inherent to our (U. S.) Declaration of Independence in our Constitution,” he said. “ We honor Dr. K ing’s contribution to the American progress in (the) civil rights movement.” S T A T E PRESS Classifieds In his emotional message, Coughlin cited m any m ilestones in the c iv il rights movement, including the 1955 arrest o f Rosa Parks, a seamstress who refused to give up her bus seat to a white man, and the 1958 assassination o f Dr. King. “ We need to rem em ber these things,” he said, “ That’s what w e honor in Proposition 302 — the progress that we m ade since those times.” Coughlin also cited the economic benefits of passing Proposition 302. “ It w ill enhance our national reputation and help us attract jobs and investment,’ ’ he said.. Coughlin said the Joint Legislative Budget Committee estimated the cost o f an official holiday to be $500,000, adding that this is only one-tenth o f 1 percent of the entire state budget. “ The benefits clearly outweigh cost,” the Babbitt spokesman said, adding that Arizona has already lost $30 million because Visa • M asterCard « Sorry, no billing of the M LK holiday controversy. “ Lately, our state spirit has been laggin g." A fter his 15-minute speech, Coughlin showed fou r co m m ercials supporting Proposition 302. He said the MU Arizona Room audience was the first to view them. “ One of the positive things that came from this presentation is the fact that the ASU community was the first community to actually view the K in g campaign holiday commercials,” said Carlos Galindo-Elvira, assistant director of the ASASU Political Union. A fter showing the Commercials, Coughlin fielded questions and comments from the audience. M c C u n e s a id d e s p i t e B a b b i t t ’ s can cellation , he fe lt th e even t was informative and educational. Galindo-Elvira agreed, adding that the e v e n t “ g a v e p o lit ic a l in s ig h t in to Proposition 302.” By P hone Want to feel this great about your first job? 965-6731 • B id R E S U L T S Featuring the 6-minute Tan! Big Beds • New Bulbs 947-9554 1 4 9 5 N . H a y d e n Rd. S c o tts d a le ^ Exciting opportunities exist at IBM! IBM is recruiting 1990/91 graduates and co-op candidates for openings in CS, E E , M E, M ktg, and Math-CS (BS/M S). ____________ __________ Get your hand in the cookie jar Meet with IBM Managers at our Career Information Day •< Thursday, October 25 M em orial U nion, Arizona R oom 207 D&E Noon-5pm There is no formal presentation, so feel free to stop by anytime during the event. Please bring 4 copies o f your data ' sheet/resume and transcript, i f available. Dress is casual. Use State Press Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 M atthews Center ► L o n d o n ...fro m ► P a ris ........fro m ► A th e n s ....fro m ► M o s c o w ..fro m ► C a iro ......fro m $509. $619. $719. $839. $839. — RT from Phoenix— —Subject to Change— —Special Discount Fares Domestic & International— -C A L L SOON FOR HOLIDAY TRAVEL— 855 W. University Dr. Suite 20 - Extension Rd. Mesa, AZ 85201 (602) 834-1700 State Press Thursday. O ctober 18.1990 Academ ic editor to speak on education bias By D IA N E SANTO RICO S ta te Press Reed Irvine, founder of Accuracy in Academia, said he hopes to create a stir on campus today by urging officials to re-establish traditional academic ethics at ASU. Irvine, editor of the conservative “ Campus Report,” a monthly publication out of Washington D. C., has been a key figure in revealing what he claims to be unorthodox and biased teaching styles in universities around the country. Thè event will be held in the M U ’s Arizona Room at 7 p.m. “ I will probably be discussing problems relating to education, environment and race,” Irvine said from his office in Washington, D, C. In a 1985 visit, Irvine criticized ASU political science professor Mark Reader for what he believed to be “ radical” teaching styles and the teacher’s unorthodox view of societal politics. “ We put Arizona State University on the map with that one.” Irvine said. Reader could not be reached for comment. Irvine said he usually takes on 40 or 50 speaking engagements a year, approximately 12 of which are at universities. A S U student M att Krumtum, president of Young Americans for Freedom — the group hosting the speaker — said the Oxford graduate also Will discuss the free speech problems some students face on campus. Krumtum and Y A F strongly believe students are here for an academic exercise — not to be taught the left wing views of some professors. “ Classes such as gay and lesbian studies and womens’ studies should not be part of a required curriculum for students,” he said. “ Let them take classes like that in graduate courses if that is what they want.” Krumtum said Accuracy in Academia and Y A F would like to see universities return to basic, unbiased traditional teaching styles. Funds__________ Continued fro m page I. - W iedem eier added that ASASU will have more to spend after the semester ends. “ A fter this Tuesday, w e Won’t have anymore to allocate, but that doesn't mean we don’t have any money,” she said. The lack of money w ill leave, the ASASU Senate Appropriations Committee with considerably less to do for the remainder of the semester, but W iedem eier said there has been talk o f making it “ more o f an investigative body.” Other senators said the ASASU Senate will have more time to focus on campus issues now that the burdensome allocating process is out o f the way. “ People see us as prim arily a budget-allocating body, but w e’re really a lot m ore than that,” said Sen. Gary Starikoff from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. “ W e’re becoming a lot m ore active.” : A M essag e to P r e s id e n t B u sh : N O WAR FOR O IL IN THE M IDDLE EAST W e u rg e y o u to reverse the U.S. m ilitary b u ild u p in th e Persian G u lf an d Saudi A rabia. T h e U n ite d States sh o u ld s u p p o rt in tern ation al n on -m ilitary n e go tiated efforts to re so lv e th e c o n flicts in the M id d le East. W h ile w e jo in y o u in c o n d e m n in g Ira q ’s invasion o f K uw ait, an escalation o f the m ilitary con flict w ill o n ly le a d to g re a t h u m an suffering. TEACH-IN Friday, October 19,1990 Hourly 10 a.m.-4 p.m. M em orial Union (s e e b e lo w ) "Bad N e w s fo r Dr. Ron Hardert Dr. Santos Vega Marian A x fo rd Shea. C oalition Hispanic S ociolog )' Us A ll" Research. ASU W o rld Peace Dr. David A ltied e, Justice Studies, ASU H enri Benkiel Diana Lebeau 212-W C en ter RevA rm s Race Shampoo/Cut G ila Wdlatrix Ms. Kathie G uthrie. CoDir., Pittsburg Peace Inst. Dr. T im B am er C oco n in o 967-2360 Want a touchdown on the SAT, LSAT, GMAT, GRE or other admissions exams? Then call the team with the best scoring record in the league—Stanley H. Kaplan. a «¿u iii D r Sheryl Santos. ASU Bi-Li ngual. Cui. Dr. W m . W o o d A Z W o rld Exec. Dir. Pittsburg W o rld Federalists Federalists 1041 E. Lem on KAPLAN PUTS YOU IN SCORING POSITION. Barbara W o ld and Brian May D r A lfred G olden, "W a r & Poetry” Physicians Soc. Respons. 2:30 p.m Dr. B ert B ender Dr. R o ge r W . : A xford . Co-Ch. English Dept. Peace C oalition Daniel Prioste, Dr. C hris Smith A ction M eetin g H istory Set. Stud. C ontinu ous Showing..,"Crisis in th e G u lf." N ational Teach-Jn, Ron K ovic, Dan Ellsberg (P e n ta g o n P a p ers), Dan Shcean N avajo kWlZZARDS Dr. Jost Reichm an. Ad. Ed. Univ. Tu bin gen Germ any 3:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. T e rry Charles Culligan. Vietnam Vet ( Christie In stitu te), Brian W ils o n ( N u rem b erg A ction s ). Eric Larson Discussion: Dr. James D riscoll. Vietnam Vet; C oor. O peration Real Security, ( Sanc-Freeze ). A S U S tu d en ts A lw a y s $10 w/I.D. C lo s e d Sunday & M onday 12:30 p.m. 9:30 a m. C och ise W. in tro d u c to ry R S Q . ^ Ì 3 ® ® o ffe r 11:30 a.m. Room s C och ise 212-E SQOO 10:30 a.m. Sponsors: C oalition for W o rld Peace; ASU, Inst, for Peace, E d u cation and R esearch; B eyon d W ar!; Physicians for Social Responsibility; Real Security; W orld'Federalists; U. U. Assoc. • Dr. Amand Hernandez, Justice Stud. Dr. Austin Jones, Psych. A I.P .E d . Res Robert A dam o, R obert Andan. President. Y ou n g Dem os. Dr: Dennis Palumbo. Justice Stud. A ction M eetin g Dr. Ron H ard en Panel S ociology "A to m ic Dangers” Panel A ction M eetin g ju s tic e Stud, _ _ _ Keep : Infou Arizona State University Touchtone Registration ASU will introduce a touch-tone telephone registration system using a pilot group, sophomore and junior business students, for the spring 1991 semester. Details on all phases of this program will be presented: STANLEY H. KARLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTERLTD. W e ’ll also put you in scoring position for the G RE P S Y C H , IN T R O T O LAW S C H O O L , BAR R EVIEW , M CAT, DAT, TO EFL, N A TIO N A L M ED IC A L BO ARDS, M SKP, F M G M S , FLEX, N C LE X -R N , C G F N S , NA­ TIO N A L D EN TA L BO AR DS, CPA, N T E , S P E E D R E A D IN G and more. MONDAY, OCTOBER 22,1990 10-11 a.m. • Memorial Union • Pima Room Take Kaplan or Take Your Chances. 967-2967 F R E E g ift a t tim e o f e n ro llm e n t, w h ile s u p p lie s last. everyone welcome ] Stale Presa Pase 9 Thursday, O ctober 1 8 ,1990 Former hostage pleads for negotiations By JENNIFER FRANKLIN S tate Press A form er U. S. hostage, who was held captive in the Middle East for nearly four years, pleaded for the freedom of those still in captivity and strongly criticized American and British governments for refusing to negotiate for their releases during a Wednesday night lecture. “ 1 say that (U. S. President) George Bush and (British P rim e M inister) M argaret Thatcher, and the British and Am erican societies are members o f a fam ily,” Frank Reed said. “ I say it is George Bush’s duty as a member o f that fam ily to negotiate.” The 57-year-old Massachusettes native told an MU Arizona Room audience of more than 200 he is no longer angry with his captors, but believes Wèstern leaders should lend a helping hand when possible. '> Reed, who was director of elementary education at Beirut's International College before he was seized, was kidnapped by a Moslem group called the Organization of the Islam ic Dawn. During the speech, sponsored by the Associated Students of ASU Lecture Series, the form er hostage said Bush and Thatcher are obligated to bargain for hostages' releases. Reed said he disagrees with a theory that claims more hostages w ill be kidnapped if the U. S. government negotiates with captors. "P r o v e it to me. show me where it has happened before," he said. As a political hostage in Lebanon, the speaker said he suffered physical and mental abuse and was kept in solitary confinement for 24 of the 44 months he was in captivity, adding that his definition of “ hostaging” is starvation and physical and mental torture. “ Electric wires have been tied to m y fingers and the juice turned on,” Reed said. “ I have been made to kneel on spikes. I have been beaten day after day.” But he said he does not seek sympathy but only wants to make sure the remaining hostages are not forgotten. “ I ’m telling you this because w e ’re not M IAs, w e’re not prisoners of w ar,” Reed said. “ Because w e went there (Beirut) on our own, people don’t care.” Reed, who converted to Islam while in Beirut, said hostaging w ill continue to be part of the system of informal justice in the Arab world fo r a long time. Hostages are seized for various reasons, he said, but they are most often kept captive because many Islam ic groups want to trade for hostages held by Israeli factions. In the Arab world, kidnapping is equivalent to trading, which in turn is the same as talking amongst the nations in the region. “ I f they didn’t want to trade, if they didn’t want to talk, they wouldn’t kidnap,” Reed said. The form er hostage encouraged the ASU audience to do whatever it could to get the rest of the hostages in the Middle East. “ Somehow or another, if you can do something, please do it,” Reed said. “ Please, let’s never forget the others.” Tired of the hike? Buy a bike! Through the State Press Bicycles for Sale! Reed H a y d en ’s F erry R eview A S U ’ s N a tion al L ite ra ry M a g a zin e M atth ew s C enter, Basement 965-1243 CROSSW ORD N O D O O V E R F A F L L ecause it does. Smart investors know that your future depends on how well your retirement system performs. 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S D 1 M E A W P A c L A 1 T N S D A ILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s how to work it: 10/18 AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L ’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYRTOQUOTE 10-18 9 1 E nsuing the future for those who shape it." E T P Q TH E F A X D L X U D W X Y X X O G For more complete information, including charges and expenses, call I 800 842-2733, ext 5509 for a prospectus. Read the prospectus carefully before you invest o r send money. P A X — R H K K H D Z W Z T U X H G D L X U D W X R A D P Q T R E . R H Z D E G : •; THE REASON THE W AY OF THE TRANSGRESSOR IS HARD IS BECAUSE IT IS SO CROWDED. — KIN HUBBARD Y e s te r d a y 's Z . P A D E C r y p to q u o te : © 1990 by King Features Syndicate. Inc Page 10 State Press Thursday, O ctober 1 $ 1990 German unification top ic at public p o lic y forum By ANDREW FAUGHT S tate Press A renowned panel of German and Am erican public policy experts w ill gather at ASU today for a forum to discuss the implications of the recent unification of East and West Germany. The forum will run from 9:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. in the Business Administration Complex, Room 316. The event is sponsored by ASU’s Consortium for Atlantic Studies and is open to the general public. The panel is m ade up of Am erican experts and German representatives from the Rand Corporation, a major research institution. ASU history Professor Gerald Kleinfeld, a panel member and director of the Consortium for Atlantic Studies, said the unification of Germany presents changes in world security, significant.” Kleinfeld noted that Germany, with a population of 78 million people, compared to the approximately 250 million people living in the U. S., has a greater im m ediate marketing area. “ This is going to make Europe more important,” he said, “ It’s going to make m ore people sit up and take notice.” Kleinfeld said there are implications in the political realm as well. “ Where are w e going in this world after the Cold W ar?” he asked. “ Germany is going to be important politically.” Relations between the U. S. and Germany are based partly on the basis o f a common alliance against a threat by the Soviet Union, he said. “ I f the Soviet threat diminishes, what are the bases of our relations?” Kleinfeld asked. “ There is no w ay you can hide from the importance of Germ any.” economics and political relations. “ The whole question o f European and global security is thrown into a new dimension,” he said. “ It’s a different situation in terms of where any m ilitary borders are and what kind of defense strategy anybody is going to have.” Kleinfeld added that the unification spells the end for the Warsaw Pact, a m ilitary alliance among the Soviet Union and its subordinates. “ The security of Europe is the security of the United States as w ell,” Kleinfeld said, citing President George Bush. Unification also opens the world to a new economical dimension, Kleinfeld said, adding that Germany is now the world leader in exports. “ The European economy will become a more important player in the world economic scene,” he said. “ There will be a big trading unitin the world in which Germany w ill be very Keating Continued fro m page 3.- dinner the businessman hosted for him in Detroit on March 23,1987. Riegle said he did not know, until a newspaper story appeared in February 1988, that virtually all the money came from individuals with a direct affiliation with K eating’s main company and parent firm of Lincoln, American Continental Corp. of Phoenix. An Oct. 6, 1987 memo from Cranston to Keating coupled the subjects of Keating’s donations and a Cranston-assisted effort to ensure better treatment for Lincoln Savings from federal regulators. Cranston wrote that he was pleased “ to hear that your meeting with Danny Wall (then the top thrift regulator) had gone so w ell.” In the same memo, Cranston said he was “ very grateful for your willingness to contribute $250,000 this y e a r” to voter Mideast Continued front page 3* - hostilities” within 60 days unless Congress gives its approval. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum. R-Kan., told Baker she was not a supporter of the W ar Powers resolution “ but it is the law of the land, and as long as it is the law of the land I think we have to adhere to it.” Democrat Claiborne P ell of Rhode Island, the committee chairman, proposed to Baker that “ a form al mechanism should be developed for consultation with the Congress.if and when military options are considered.” But Baker rejected the proposal.“ ! would have a little bit o f reservation about a form al mechanism.’ ’ he said. However, he said he was certain President Bush would consult with Congressional leaders during adjournment. registration projects for which the senator solicited money. DeConcini’s help for Keating over a fiveyear period was detailed in memos from his staff. One memo dated March 10, 1988, said Keating first contacted DeConcini about his problems with Gray in June 1984. That was three years before a 1987 meeting that until now has been cited as the m ajor effort by DeConcini and his four colleagues to force regulators to come to decisions about Lincoln. A “ confidential” internal memo from a DeConcini staffer to the senator on Dec. 20, 1988 mentioned that in July 1985, the senator had “ phone conversations with both Don Regan (then White House chief of staff) and Secretary (Jam es) Baker (then secretary of the Treasu ry) r e : Gray. “ They share DDC’s assessment that Gray is a problem . . . .” until just before the Aug. 2 invasion. ‘ ‘Only the State Department could not see that he is a murderer, torturer and assassin,” Helms said of Saddam. Under questioning, Baker said the U. S. ‘ ‘ought to seriously consider . . . a m ajor non-proliferation effort” to enlist the world community in an effort to keep weapons of mass destruction out o f the Middle East, possibly including an embargo on conventional weapons as well. The United States, he said, has held “ inform al discussions” with other nations of an arms em bargo against Iraq if Iraq should withdraw from Kuwait “ without the destruction o f Iraq’s disproportionate m ilitary capabilities. ” “ It ’s something I think the international community has to focus on,” Baker said. Apart from the debate, the hearing was enlivened by an accusation by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., that the State Department had abandoned Lebanon and its Christian community to Syrian domination and allowed the United Nations to infringe on Israel’s sovereignty. “ What kind of policy do we have when w e turn antiChristian and anti-Jewish in one week,” Helms thundered as Baker settled into the witness chair before the committee. There was no immediate response from Baker, who read a prepared 10-page statement outlining U. S. policy in the Persian Gulf . Baker said Saddam Hussein “ must fail if peace is to succeed.” Helms, a North Carolina Republican and a persistent critic of the State Department, said the agency had supported Iraq Computer Systems Center INVENTORY CLEARANCE Macintosh Plus Brandnew IN C L U D E S : factoryfresh ✓ BOOK Disk Drive withone-year V l m b of M em ory warrantees. ✓ Full Keyboard W e’re m aking room for the ’91 m odels and now is your chance to SAVE! Macintosh power and ease o f use has never been this affordable before. It ^wultifinder runs 1000's o f Macintosh applications ^HyperCard and is compact enough for any desk. Software raw * Each New Bike Purchase Fuji KHS Authorized Dealer Reg. ‘Sunfire’ $259.95 ‘Suncrest’ $499.95 ‘Comp’ $529.95 ‘Montana’ $229.95 A O Exp. 10-26-90 í A, ^ T y / f & . M ' S'v/A >J : $ 1 8 9 .9 5 $ 3 9 9 .9 5 $ 4 4 9 .9 5 $ 1 6 9 .0 0 a « « » $ 5 .0 0 O F F Any U-Lock JLE 2010 S. Rural Rd., Tempe 968-8011 Broadway ■ § Ai* Bd® ) ¿KB0ft. 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Get an awesome deal oo a Hi bit V G A card and a 14" color VG A monitor with a awivel | HURRY! PHOENIX 16b SU Camelback 266-7873 in TEMPE I Soutient ! McClintock I 838-12 3 6 j State Press Page 11 Thursday, O ctober 1ft 1990 Police Report An ASU student was arrested on Apache Boulevard by Tem pe police early Wednesday in connection with a sexual assault. The 29-year-old student allegedly forced a woman to perforin oral sex and sexual intercourse. He then allegedly beat the victim ’s face and grabbed her neck in an attempt to choke her. The suspect denied assaulting the woman, but admitted to police that he m ay have hit her. ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday: •Two light poles on the southeast side of the University Activity Center were damaged by an unknown person. Dam age is estimated at $3,000. •An ASU student reported that the rear windshield of his vehicle was damaged in the Cholla Apartments’ parking lot. The cost is estimated at $400. •An unknown person “ keyed” an ASU student’s Ford Ranger while it was parked on the north side of Sahuaro Hall A wing. Dam age is estimated at $500. •A green 21-speed Canondale mountain bicycle was stolen from a bicycle rack on the west side of Manzanita Hall. Loss is valued at $650. •A black 10-speed Magna mountain bicycle was stolen from the bicycle racks on the north side of the MU. Loss is valued at $70. •A yellow and blue Nishiki bicycle was stolen from the east side of Hayden Library, where the front wheel was secured to thé bike rack. The lock and wheel w ere left at the scene. Loss is estimated at $225. •An unknown person tried to enter two cabinets in the Fine Arts Complex. Damage is estimated at $15. •An unknown person rem oved a banner from the lobby of the Student Recreation Complex. The loss is estimated at $10. Tempe police reported the following incident Wednesday: •A 35-year-old man was arrested for allegedly driving on a suspended license. In addition, he m ay be connected with a hit-and-run accident on Rural Road and Southern Avenue. Compiled by State Press reporter Teena Chadwell. Get down to business. . Advertise in the State Press Classifieds! ' Funded b y A S A S U A T T E N T IO N ALL B U SIN E SS ST U D E N T S B u s in e s s C o lle g e C o u n c il F a l l BUSINESS BASH "Stop by & Relax !!" Saturday, October 20th 10 am - 5 pm Bring this coupon a n d receive $5.00 OFF your next perm at 966 - HAIR focus M ake Y our A ppointment To d a y ! r University m ï Terrace 2 £ Lem on 1036 South Terrace, 'Apache Tem pe, Arizona SNIFF OUT THE DEALS P apago Park (6 8 t h éc G utty) State Press FREE FOOD & BEVERAGE M USIC - GIVEAWAYS - F U N Sponsored By: TOP'S LIQUOR B U D DRY th e a lte rn a tiv e c o p y »h o p ( PIZZA & PUB ) sS 707$ Myrtle A*e lampe. An/ano tini For better speaking, listening, & learning.. little C iesars^^ Pizza! Pizza!' 1mpt* pinati0» imepite.AkMpvAhrapi. Co-Rec Volleyball Tournament Prizes will be awarded to the top 3 teams!! S IG N -U P N O W - B A C 219, P la y Begins a t 10 am S harp!!! Questions? Call: 965-7441 UNIVERSITY TOASTMASTERS TODAY and every Thursday: 5:15 • MU Yavapai Room 209 F o r m o re in fo r m a tio n c o n ta c t: T h e R .E .A .C .H . O f f ic e a t 9 6 5 -2 2 5 5 Sponsored by ASASU Page 12 State Press Thursday, O ctober 1 8,1990 Reorganize Continued fro m page 1. students and faculty. T h e r e o r g a n iz a tio n a l S ch em e was presented to the ASU cabinet earlier this week, and was developed a fter four u n iversity presidents and chancellors visited the campus Oct. 7 to offer advice, the ASU president said. In addition to the new post,: Coor’s reorganizational flow chart has created an O ffice of the President, which w ill be coordinated in part by Bob Forsyth, senior executive assistant to the president. University departments that fall under this office, which will be separate from the tw o cam pus adm inistrations, include U n iv e r s it y R e la tio n s , D e v e lo p m e n t, G o v e r n m e n ta l R e la tio n s , E c o n o m ic Development, General Counsel, Budget and Planning, A ffirm ative Action and special projects that include plans for a third ASU campus. Brent Brown, ASU vice president for University Relations, said he believes the alteration w ill not be drastic. “ I don’t think it will be too much o f a change,” he said “ We a re all part of the same fam ily. I always have worked closely with the president’s assistants and the president,” ASU Budget Director Alan Carroll said the new plan is logical. ‘ ‘ I t ’ s (th e r e o r g a n iz a t io n ) not exceptional,” he said. “ If I w ere president, that’s exactly what I would do.” ; Brown said the reorganization w ill free up some of Coor’s tim e so the ASU president can Concentrate on community involvement and fundraising. “ The demands on the president have changed over the years,” Brown said. Coor said the new scheme was essential because of the campus’ complexity and growth over the years. While carrying the presidential reins at the University o f Vermont before heading to the Valley, Coor said he utilized a similar scheme. But ASU ’s provost and senior vice president position was broken into two jobs, he said. “ The old plan (at ASU ) reflects an earlier e r a , ” C o o r s a id , a d d in g th a t the adm inistrative organization should be analyzed every three to four years as the University evolves. Although the adm inistrative schem e altered the chain of command in some areas, it left the vice president for Business Affairs, the director o f Intercollegiate Athletics, the ASU West provost and senior vice president, and vice provosts under Coor’s direct control. Victor Zafra, Vice president for Business Affairs, was unaware of the reorganization p la n , but a f t e r le a r n in g abou t it , Commended its usefulness. “ The thing that is important in an organizational plan is that they (those in command) are responsive and serve the needs,” he said, adding that if the plan suits Coor’s style, then it will be beneficial F o r now, the administrative re-evaluation w ill stand, Coor said, adding that he will be receptive to comments from the University population. State Press reporter Kevin Sheh contributed to this report. Mountain & Fitness Bike Specialist 2 ; S ' G O M P LE TE T U N E -U P $ 2 4 -9 5 Includes adjustment of brakes, gears, chain & bearings. True wheels. External lube cleaning & 41 point safety check. And, of course, F R E E P IC K -U P & D E L IV E R Y ! NEW 1991 BRIDG ESTO N ES IN STOCK N O H A S S L E ! • J U S T P IC K U P T H E P H M iIs 1530 N. C O U N TR Y CLUB 6 4 4 -1 2 3 3 NAG, NAG, NAG! 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Indian School Road, Suite 11 Phoenix, AZ 85015-4909 FO R FA C U LTY A N D STAFF O N L Y Informational Meeting Thursday, October 18, 1990 BA 137, 1:40-3:00 p.m. If you cannot attend, contact: International Business Seminars at 830-0902 or Dr. Dick Montanari (BA 3231) at 965-7203 or 438-2278 or Wes Davis (BA 367B) at 965-5031. D iscover the exciting w orld o f International Business! State Press Page 13 Thursday, O ctober 18,1990 Professor tunes to Israel radio fo r newscasts By AARON LEVY S tate Press E very morning, Danny Ben-Gigi, an Israeli Hebrew professor at ASU, twists the dials on a short-wave tuner to reach an Israeli radio station broadcasting the latest news in the Middle East. Ben-Gigi, a journalist and form er editor of the Israeli newspaper, Main Street, moved to Am erica six years ago at age 31 to learn more about American media — especially télévision networks. “ Since the beginning of the Intifada (Palestinian uprising ), I have visited :Israel five times, which allowed m e a great opportunity to compare events as they were reported here and there,’ ' Ben-Gigi said. Ben-Gigi said that many times, the picture the U. S. media portrays in the Middle East is partial and lacks accuracy due to a superficial depiction of events. “ Since news reports tend to imitate the show-biz style, they are clinging to stereotypes such as ‘good guys fighting the bad guys’ ," he said. Israeli broadcasting services have only one television station that is owned by the goverment, he said, adding that the station is not run by the government. It can't, by law. be used by the government as a platform to advocate political ends. In many cases they refuse even to let prime ministers use it as inform ation." he said. On Tuesday Oct. 7. Ben-Gigi was able to receive reports of : the violent events that took place Oct. 8 at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. "T h ere is mounting evidence that this attack on Jewish worshipers was not random, but it was planned in advance." Ben-Gigi said. He added that it was unusual for the three to four thousand Palestinians to attack Israeli worshipers near the Wall on a Monday, which is not a prayer day for Muslims. However, he said, it was the Jewish holiday of Sukkot around the world. Rabbi Barton Lee, president of the Hillel Jewish Student Center, described the holiday as “ the fa ll harvest festival commemorating the temporary dwellings the Biblical Jews lived in during their 40 years of wandering and which provided our A m erica n p ilg rim an cestors w ith a paradigm for Thanksgiving." Lee said it is clear the Palestinian leadership has, once again, badly damaged its cause. “ And to regain the headlines and seek public sympathy,” he said, “ it callously planned an attack on Jewish Worshipers at the holiest sight in Judaism with stones that could be lethal.” B e n -G ig i s a id , a c c o r d in g to the transmission, close to four thousand Palestinians w ere throwing rocks, metal pieces and bottles they gathered in advance from a 70-foot height. "Im m ediate reaction was panic,” he said. "Jewish worshipers fled for their lives, and the few policemen (on the site) were confused and didn’t know whether to attend to the worshipers or to confront the attackers.” Ben-Gigi said it is cynical to portray the Palestinians as “ demonstrators” when they were m erely a violent mob. Will Powars/State Press "In some instances, violent rioters were misnamed as demonstrators while there is a clear distinction between the two/’ he said. "Throwing rocks, metal pieces and bottles over the heads of people is prim arily meant to cause severe injury among the attacked.” Meanwhile, Ben-Gigi said the United Nations is expected to debate a resolution condemning the “ particularly excessive Israeli response” to the riot. “ The Palestinians are calling for the United Nations to protect the lives of Palestinians,” Ben-Gigi said, “ where as they know very well that their lives are under no danger whatsoever if they don’t attack first.” According to Ben-Gigi the recent refusal of the Israeli government to cooperate with the U. N. investigation team, basically ZENITH data systems common trust that is so needed in order to solve the Palestinian problem. “ Many Israelis; as it’s reflected in Israeli m e d i a , r e g r e t t h e k i l l i n g o f t he Palestinians,” Ben-Gigi said. “ But they are as well frustrated with the problem of how to defend themselves while being attacked by violent mobs.” Eventually, Ben-Gigi said he plans to return to Israel and work for a changed media system. “ In the near future, Israel w ill m ove to a multi-media phase, which means there will be more T V stations in the pattern of how it is here,” he said. m P h o n e : 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 THURSDAY & FRIDAY ONLY! 4 0% -5 0% D IS C O U N T S F O R E D U C A T IO N ■ SswV points out the hypocritical nature of the investigation. “ Israel has been already condemned before the investigation,” Ben-Gigi said. “ It’s like sentencing someone to ja il and then conducting an investigation whether he deserves punishment or not.” Ben-Gigi said that, in fact, there was a growing sentiment among many Israelis towards Palestinian grievances. “ But the contradiction between their words in one hand (talking about peace),” he said, “ and their deeds on the other hand ( their violent acts against Jews and assassination of other Palestinians who talk with Jews as collaborators), do not allow the Beer and Soda Pholo Developing Heallh & Beauty Aids Compact Discs G roupe Bull r'Çt'WV Every m orning, Danny B en-G igi, an Israeli H ebrew p rofessor a t A S U , tw ists the d ials on a short­ w ave tun er to reach an Is ra e li rad io station broadcasting th e latest new s in th e M id d le East. Z -286-LP P lu s is a 12. M II Z 841286 zero wail stale, small footprint desktop w ith u 20 M B harddisk, 1MB RAM,«»ne3.5’’ ■ floppy drive, ¿» M OU SE, p a ra lle l p ort a n d 2 serial po rts am i 14" M< IN O lT iR O M I’- m onitor. Alk»wvftprint deskhtp w ith a 20 M B h arddisk, 1MB R A M , «»nr 3.5* floppy-drive, a .■MOUSE, parallel p ort am i 2 serial ports am i 14" C O L O R H A T SC R LLN m onitor. A lhiw s.for kiyv eost iipjira Add Oakland’s ace reliever to Cincinnati’s hit list and give the Reds a perfectly astonishing 2-0 lead in the World Series. A day after beating Dave Stewart in the opening game, the Reds’ Joe Oliver got the third straight hit off Dennis Eckersley in the bottom of the 10th inning to shock the A ’s 5-4 Wednesday, night and take a lead few imagined possible. Suddenly, from thoughts o f sweeping their second straight Series, the A ’s now go home for Game 3 Friday trying to keep from being swept themselves. Billy Hatcher enjoyed his second consecutive perfect night making him 7-for-7 with four doubles and a triple. His triple o ff right fielder Jose Canseco’s glove in the eighth inning gave him the Series record for consecutive hits and he then scored the tying run on Glenn Braggs' force play. “ They know they’re in for a battle now,” Hatcher said. “ I ’m just in a good groove.” Eckersley took over to start thé 10th and retired Eric Davis, but à scratch single by pinch-hitter B illy Bates, a ground single to left by Chris Sabo and O liver’s hard single down the third-base line gave Cincinnati its seventh straight World Series victory. “ It was kind of disappointing the way we went about our business,” Oakland manager Tony La Russa said. “ I really don’t want Eckersley pitching in a tie gam e on the road if I can avoid it.” The Reds’ victory, in the first Series extra-inning game since Bill Buckner blew it for the Boston Red Sox in 1986, cam e a day after the Reds beat up D ave Stewart, the A ’s four-time 20-game winner. Canseco ended Oakland’s home run drought in the postseason, but the Athletics stranded 10 runners, for a total of 21 in the two games. Rob Dibble pitched two shutout innings for the victory. Four Cincinnati relievers shut out Oakland for 7 1-3 innin&s. “ I think the key to the gam e was the bullpen,” Reds manager Lou Piniella said. “ It ’s something they’ve been doing all year.” Of the 40 teams to take a 2-0 lead in the World Series, 30 went on to win. Tom Browning will start Game 3 for Cincinnati Friday night against Mike Moore. M en’s tennis players com pete at Classic By DARREN URBAN S tate Press Three members of the ASU men’s tennis team are traveling to Lafayette, La., this weekend to represent the Sun Devils at the Lee Michaels Rolex Classic. Seniors D ave Lom icky and Joel Finnigan and junior Ross Matheson w ill compete in the 32-man field, which Commences Thursday. Lomicky w ill be seeded No. 1 in the singles, while Finnigan draws the No. 8 position. The doubles team of Finnigan and Matheson is seeded No. 4. ASU coach Lou Belken said that with his squad’s experience, this fall has been different than past seasons. , ■“ It’s been a bizarre fa ll,” Belken said. “ W e’ve got a lot of older guys. What w e’re trying to do is send our guys to different tournaments. I f you always send your top two guys to play in the fall, then the bottom guys never get a chance to show if they’re ready to m ove up. ” Due to the experience the players receive in preseason, Belken said he expects a lot o f shuffling in the lineup this season. “ I think w e’re going to have a lot m ore movement in our lineup this year,” he said. Lom icky is playing is his first fa ll tournament, although he was scheduled to go tó Louisiana for the LSU j Invitational two weeks ago. Lom icky bowed out due to arm problems, “ I really don’t know exactly what was wrong,” Lom icky said. “ It just took more strengthening of my ligaments and tendons to get it stronger. ” Lomicky, ranked 25th in the nation, is anxious to get his season underway. “ I ’v e been practicing o v e r a month,” he said. “ I ’m ready to see action.” Lom icky said his arm is not quite ready to play doubles. Lom icky teams with Finnigan normally to form the nation’s sixth-best duo. “ I f I played doubles, I might have to play four matches in one day,” Lom icky said. Matheson, a transfer from Oklahoma, is coming o ff a fairly successful tournament in New M éxico last week. “ It was a good trip,” Matheson said. ‘ ‘This week, I need to work on m y return of service, which isn’t very good right now. ” Matheson said he is ready to team with Finnigan in the doubles tourney. “ “ If we play well, someone would have to play really w ell to beat us,” he said. Mini-Storage • Vehicle Storage ear 5 0 ° UMasti CYCLE INCLUDES: Hair Studio i » Best Price Best Wash W w C H E C K w w U S 5x10 $ 9 »* $ 1 4 »* 10x10 $ 2 6 »* 10x20 $ 4 4 »* 5x5 25« Pow er Vacs Touchless Automatic *2 Terrace & Apache O U T w w w 'w w w M A riz o n a S t o r a g e In n s T SPECIAL STUDENT RATES New digital touch pad control box with remaining wash tir n e ^ - Expires 10-27-90 S rw w r w (1 block east o f Rural) w w w w w w ’w "Tke Ftiewtty tfüiá-Storage Veepk" 967-0210 2 2 3 5 W . I s t St: • T e m p e ’w ’i THE VOLKSWAGEN COLLEGE TRADITIO N... > T That was then, ,9 9 5 C h a n g in g H an ds BOOKSTORE U \ The tradition hasn’t changed. It’s just been updated. The 1990 VOLKSWAGEN Cabriolet. U fe r d o n e V o l k s w a g e n , w e m a k e t h e l/fe rd o n e v o l k Browse through ou r 3 flo o rs o f: • N ew & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette • Sell or Trade your books a t Changing Hands. For qualitydoth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchaseanything in the store. ; . . (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M - F 10-9 Sat..10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 M ill A v e n u e • Tem pe • 966-0203 15th S treet & Cam elback Road • 265-6600 State Pres« Page 17 Thursday, October 18,1 9 9 0 W H Y W A IT T O BE SAFE? C la s s ifie d s University Women’s Clinic, Inc. SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES SPECIAL TESTING PACKAGE: C y flO O O (Includes exam and tests for chlamydia, gonorrhea, trichomonas, gardnerella, and yeast.) 21 W est Baseline Road, Tempe S/W Corner of Baseline and Mill Phone 8 3 1 -5 5 3 2 ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS HANG GLIDE! Our gently sloping man­ made training hill. Safe and exciting. Fly all day. Windsports, 897-7121. "STO P OIL W ar!" Now! Come Teach-In, October 19, Memorial Union- K M pm . 9 6 5 -2 2 0 0 . (S tu d e n ts , Facu11y, Community). ASU AREA. 2 and 3 bedrooms for rent. $325 and up. 966-8838 or 967-4908. LOVE TO dance? Hate the bar scene? You'll love the All Singles Dances, Fridays at better Valley hotels. $4.50. Recorded information: 946-4086. RECENTLY COMPLETED Biology 100 with Dr. Alcock? I need some help, will pay! Message, 966-8478. REWARD! FOR any information on persons involved in a fight at the Rockin’ Freddy’s parking lot (Mill Avenue), approx­ imately three years ago (October, ’87). Call G riff o r leave message at (914) 428-4628. Your call w ill be reimbursed. Expirés 1-15-91 UNDERGRADUATE LAW^ Club sponsors the Mock LSAT on October 27. To regis­ ter, contact Scott Emery at 649-1927. SINGLES’ EVENTS, advice, personals — Arizona Singles Scene newspaper. Free sample, 990-2669 SHORT AFFAIR? BEAUTIFUL, NEW, large 1 and 2 bedrooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laundry room. 1 block south of University on 8th Street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 fpr specials. "COMMONS ON Apache," room over pool, spa, volleyball. Take over payments refer Matt Ross, 968-0051. TAKE LEASE at Hayden Place, studio on 3rd floor. 6 weeks left. Call 997-4950 for information. TEMPE DUPLEX, 1201 East Weber. Quiet, fenced yard, air conditioning, all appliances. $435/month. 966-0962. TEMPE’S FAIREST rates. 2 bedroom/1 bedroom/studios. $420 to $260. 926 East Spence. 370-3366. Arizona Shorts FREE RENT 5th & Mill 0n,1 & 2 bedroom apartments in newly remodeled complex. A T T E N T IO N APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM apartment $250, furnished, no pets. 1339 South Sunset Drive, apart­ ment no. 9, 1 block south of Apache, 1 block west of Rural- 968-7012 after 1:30, or 967-3658. any student interested in applying for THE NATIONAL HONORARY 2 BEDROOM 2 bath. Washer/dryer each unit, Walk to ASU. Lem oit and Dorsey area. $425/month. 496-0562 or 893-1994. among students in American colleges and univer­ sities, may pick up their application at Associated Students on the third floor of the Memorial Union. UNFURNISHED 1 bedrooms and studios, utilities included. Clean, quiet, ground level. Close to ASU. Marianna Apart­ m e n ts . 9 6 6 -8 5 9 7 . E q u a l h o u s in g opportunity. Those students applying must have a minimum of a 2.2 GPA and no less than 60 hours. FREE STATE PRESS LINER AD RATES: The deadline for application is 5 p.m ., O c t. 3 1 ,1 9 9 0 15 w ords o r less: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 1 0 + days 15* each additional word The first 2 words are capital­ ized. No bold face 'or centering. Personals are only $1.40! Must show personal ad. IFC and PA N H E LLE N IC m m w m m m m m m m m m m m u m m John H a rm o n A llis o n N ic k W a d s w o rth F o x h o ven M ic h e lle C h a lin M ea g h er M ic h e lle B ron w yn K r is ti M o r r is B e n to n B en z S h ep h erd C o - c h a ir L N C o - c h a ir s in g I I K G reek s in g 11 B O G reek gam es G reek gam es C e r e m o n ie s E v e n ts CALL NOW 965-6731 A A F Jam es C rossm a n J e n n ife r C h r is T r ie ia S u r in a H ig h to w e r M an cu s T in g le y A d v e r tis in g T IM E : S a tu rd a y, O ct. 2 7, 8 a m -4 :3 0 p m PLACE: S h e rato n T e m p e M P H o tel C a sh /C h e ck /M O A X Q P u b lic ity F iji P u b lic ity XQ S e c re ta ry Z O E T rea su rer A ANNOUNCEMENTS • Increase capacity to learn •Triple reading speed, comprehension, memory •Take fast, readable notes • Focus by blocking distractions $1 39 .9 5 R h on d a Mock o ff campus M O I G reek W e e k C o m m itte e A p p lic a tio n s ji a v a ila b le O c to b e r 22 • G reek L ife O ffic e I" |N $ University 1 and 2 bedrooms $160 move in Call Today! Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache 1 b lo c k e a s t o f R ural 968-6383 EN JO Y TH E QUIET! 1 /2 B lo c k F ro m C a m p u s Beautifully furnished, h u g e 1 b e d r o o m , 1 ba th ; 2 b e d r o o m , 2 b a th a p a rt­ m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le TV, heated pool, and s p a c io u s l a und r y f aci l i t i es. Friendly, courteous management. Stop by today! T e rra c e R oad A p a rtm e n ts 9 5 0 S . T e rra c e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 TOWNHOMES / CONDOS EOR RENT 2 BEDROOM- loft. Papago Park. $900. Rosemary/Realty Executives, 998-2992. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, unfurnished. Close to ASU. $450/month. 840-6550. 2 MASTER suites, Quests Vida. $650. Call Bob Bullock, Realty Executives, 998-2992. REA DING LOAD TOO HEAVY? HELP IS ON THE W AY! K K F B o o k le t Eastridge Apartments 1522 E. Southern Ave. 839-9947 Fiee gift to all for stopping by? Ü B O A A A ADO RABLE 1 BD APARTM ENTS (Present this ad for additional $25 savings.) £ N C a r n iv a l 437-1048 Roommate m atching service also available. 437-1048 Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10 a m). I I B O G reek Apartment Locating Service Perfect for an individual seeking a quiet location close to ASU. Pools, lighted te n n is court, and m uch m ore!! 1 time: $7.85 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. inch 6 or more times: $6.50 per col. inch CREEK STEERING C O M M IT T E E B in g m a n n a CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1991 M is s y ID to place Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). c o n g r a t u la t e s th e H a ll T 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. Washer/dryer/ dishwasher in unit. 6 blocks to ASU. $400/month. 967-6429. WHO'S WHO D e r r ic k Westridge Apartments 330 S. Beck, Tempe 894-6468 Call 860-9 638 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, ASU 2 miles. Covered parking, washer/dryer, vaulted ceiling. 961-1707. $650/month. BEAUTIFUL, CLEAN 2 bedroom 2 bath condo. 510 West University. Pool, volley­ ball. $475/month. 966-0962. BEAUTIFUL, CLEAN 2 bedroom 2 bath condo. 510 West University. Pool, quiet, close. $475/month. 966-0962. CLEAN 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. 48th and McDowell. 5 miles from ASU. $350. Graduate student preferred. 967-4059. No pets. FOR SALE or rent. Luxury Hayden Square 2 bedroom , 2 b a th , w asher/dryer, refrigerator. Very nice. $850/month. 940-1762. B P S M EXICAN FOOD FREE DINNER iSM W ith purchase of equal or greater value. N o t good with any other offer or discount. Tem pe location only. O ffer good after 2 p.m. Expires 10-31-90. ■ R osita’s Plaza, 960 W . U niversity, te m p e , 966-0852 Page 18 TOWNHOMES / CONDOS FOR RENT HAYDEN SQUARE Super D ' model 3 bedroom/2 bath luxury condo. All ameni­ ties. Available January 1, reserve now. $1.250 per month. 940-0518 (David). TWO BEDROOM, two bath condo. 68th Place/Thomas- Scottsdale. Washer, dryer, fireplace 15 minutes to ASU. Bob Morris, 948-0550 ; ïïu jrsd a ^ X to b eria iW O COMPUTERS AUTOMOBILES TRANSPORTATION LEADING EDGE 8080-2XP, 20 meg hard drive, 51/« floppy drive, 640K, software included. Amber monitor, $650. IBM Quietrider Printer, $650. After 4:30pm, 837-1161. 1971 VW Bug, very clean. Must sell. $2,800/offer. 860-9589 AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most major cities. Gas allowances available. 21 or older. Call 468-1733. COMPUTER MULTI-SYSTEMS WALK TO ASU. 1 bedroom, 1 bath condo. Only $297.95 a month. Refrigerator, washer/dryer, pool and jacu?zi: Call Marc at MGM, 345-1919. Buy & sell new and used computers, printers, and software. Classifieds W ork for You! 225 W . U niversity 1984 CHEVROLET Citation, 4-door hatch­ back. Runs well. After 4:30pm, 837-1161. 1986 BUICK Skyhawk, 5 speed, AM/FM c a s s e tte , a ir c o n d itio n in g . $2,995. 962-5113. • DRIVE A legend BMW 2002. Beautiful, 2-year restoration. A must-see car. $6,000. 443-1236. Next to Buffalo Exchange RENTAL SHARING 3 BEDROOM condo hear ASU; Washer/ dryer. Female preferred. $225 plus Wi utilities 784-4725. A 10 minute walk from ASU! I need a maie/female housemate for a spacious hacienda perfect fdr bicyclers Only $260/month. Already furnished, beautiful neighborhood. C all Ben, evenings, 968:9627 Yes, I think you’ll like it. FEMALE/MALE NEEDED to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment at The Commons on Apache. Call 968-9268. No deposit FEMALE NONSMOKER;.' Nice, clean townhouse Washer/dryer. University and Price Call 968-1582 TICKETS MC HAMMER tickets with VahHIa Ice, En Vogue.. Second row, center section. Call 784-0245. A-1 AUTO EXCHANGE 7809 E. McDowell 945-2886 MOTORCYCLES MALE/FEMALE. MATURE. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, amenities, pool. Close to University; $250/month, Includes utilities. 994-4291! BUY • SELL - TRADE CLOTHES PEDDLER » ROOM IN large house Near ASUW a s h e r /d r y e r , u t il it ie s In c lu d e d . $ 2 2 5 / m o n th S e rio u s s tu d e n t. (213)824-1254. HOMES FOR SALE DORM LIVING got you down? No qualify­ ing loan makes it easy to buy! 4 bedroom tri-level, no pool. Walk to campus. Cell Mickey at Cddwell Banker — 997-4950. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE Location ARCHES — FOREST FEMALE NONSMOKER, own bedroom and bath, 2 miles from ASU. $300 plus Vi. utilities. 784-4025 MILL ROOMS FOR RENT 1983 YAMAHA 650 Maxim. Lots of extras, excellent condition. 6,000 original m ile s like new. $1,350/pffer. 896-0276. CLOTHING □5 Clothes Peddler 966-2300 9-7,, Sat 10-6, 1964 HONDA Interceptor 500— Supertrapp exhaust— new Metzler tires— very c le a n —, m u s t sëe! $1,6 0 0 . M ark, 968-4186. 1984 HONDA Elite 125! Well maintained, new tires, battery and more, 10,000 miles. $700. 966-2388. 1985 HONDA Elite 150. Must sell. $300 or best offer Call 968-5328. ASU M -F read READ READ Sun 12-5 MISCELLANEOUS EOR SALE COMPLETE DARKROOM—Omega Color Enlarger with Nikor lens. Plus 25 dark­ room items. $350. 224-5902, David, leave message. MONEY FOR your car or truck. Any condition. 497-6298. ’84 GPZ750, silver/red. Runs great. 18,000 miles, top much to list: $1,700. Tom, 921-7642. BICYCLES HARD ROCK Comp mountain bike. 21” , perfect condition. Never ridden offroad. Loaded with extras. $300/best offer. Bob, 838-9266 ENTREPRENEURS WANTED. Fantastic product. Great part-time job for students. U n lim ited income. 24-hour recorded message. 994-2261. PUBLISHING COMPANIES need free­ lance readers. Read books for pay! Earn $100 or m ore for each book you read. A m azing re c o rd in g reveals details. 2124)74-1493, department LOT. O r write: Mor Enterprises. P.O. Box 751, Planetar­ ium Station, New York, New York. 10024-0539. SKI FREE, live cheap in Colorado! For information on '32 page book, write: Shred Publishing, Box 3082, Vale, Colorado 81658. HELP WANTED— GENERAL ADVERTISING SALES representatives needed to sell advertising for the State Press. W e are looking for dependable individuals who aré interested in getting great experience in marketing/advertising and earn money, too! Must be a peopleperson, have a car and not be a senior. Call Jackie Eldridge, 965-6555 today so you can begin training tomorrow! AIRLINES HIRING immediate entry-level customer service, flight attendants* cleri­ cal, and maintenance. Top pay and bene­ f it s S o m e c o lle g e p r e fe r r e d . (303)441-2448. LADIES 10-SPEED Huffy mountain bike. Used 6 months. Only $85. Silva, 921-9126 (leave message). OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-2,000/month. Summer, year round. All countries, all fields. Free info. W rite: DC, P.O. Box 52-AZ03, Corona Del Mar, California 92625 SPEC IALIZED SIRR US racing bike Excellent condition»— m ust see. $350 or possible trade for m ountain bike. Dave, 894-0214 (leave message). MISCELLANEOUS EOR SALE UNSTOPPABLE! Papago Park 1 0 H D iscount w /A SU ID All types of furniture for student’s needs at student prices 2077 E. University 829-7259 COMPUTERS IBM COMPATIBLE 286, 50 megabytes harddrive. 51/« floppy, color, $700/offer. Rick, 834-9279, after 6pm PC DATA recovery Set up MS DOS help. 895-7227 Mark Computer Service. DRIVERS WANTED to pick up and deliver small packages in the Phoenix area. Must provide own van or pick-up with camper, with full insurance and good driving record. H ourly p lu s m ileage. Call 275-8244, weekdays between 8am and noon.. ! AT ONCE. Growing company seeking individuals with excellent communications skills to fill telemarketing sales depart­ ment! Must be outgoing, enthusiastic and responsible. Paid training, incentives. Hours: 1-8pm, Monday-Friday; 7-12pm, Saturday. 279-0062. ENTERTAINERS WANTED for national marketing publication. CEEC Entertain­ ment, 274-6362. AVAILABLE NOW: Part-time technician position with Ticketmaster, America’s largest ticket service. If you are mechani­ cally inclined, personable, enthusiastic arid have transportation, you may be the ¿andidate that we are looking for. To apply, call ticketm aster at 968-2323 or apply in person at 2323 West 14th Street, no. 501, Tempe, Arizona. EXCELLENT PART-TIME Jobs! We are looking for a few anbitious students to work on an on-campus marketing project for major companies. You must be person­ able and outgoing: Excellent earnings! Cali Jeanine or Amy at (800)592-2121. INTERNS, FALL 1990, for college credit, in U.S. Senator DeConcini’s Phoenix, Mesa, and W ashington offices. If inter­ ested, contact: Carrie Coxon at 379-6756 or Mimi Bums at 379-4998. BE ON T.V. Many needed for commer­ cials. Now hiring all ages, For casting information^ Call (615)779-7111, extension T-130. ' LIVE-IN MANAGER for small complex 1-2 bedroom garden apartments, private, fenced yard, pets ookay. University/ McClintock. Call evenings, weekends, 967-5848. BEST FUNDRAISER on Campus! Looking for a fraternity, sorority or student organi­ zation that would like to make $500-$l ,000 for one week on-campus marketing project. Must be organized and hardwork­ ing. Call Jeanine or Am y at (800)592-2121. LOCAL RADIO station hiring for perma­ nent part-time research positions. After­ noons and evenings available, no selling involved. Professional and friendly envi­ ronment. Call 731-6505, leave name and number. EOE. COMPUTER GRAPHICS artist— Parttime for Mesa print shop, IBM: WordPer­ fect, Pagemaker, Windows, Corel Draw. Mark, 835-8976. MODEL-QUALITY TALENT needed to work exhibit tables, $10-$15 per hour. Part-time. Greg, 230-0771. CRÜISÉLINE JOBS hiring now Tor Christmas/Spring break. No experience needed. 1(900)990-5621, ext: P117. 994 per minute. TÉMPE CENTER fo r the Handicapped Job Hotline. Teach, care and assist disab­ led adults and children. Group home and day program. Part-time, full-time, varied shifts. O ther professional and paraprofessional positions also. Call 894-2704. EOE DRIVER NEEDED to take child to ballet on Mondays at 5:15pm arid Tuesday at 4:30pm. Phone Kate, days, 262-3472; evenings, weekends, 8294)570. PART-TIME HELP wanted. Flexible hours around school schedule. Three miles from campus: Hiring immediately. The Packag­ ing Store, 990-2552. TMI CORPORATION, ranked in the “Top 10” by the telemarketing industry’s trade magazine for the past 7 years, is now hiring for fall. $5.50/hour guaranteed. Realistic earning potential to $10/hour. Flexible scheduling— you set your own hours around your classes! Day and evening hours available. Paid, profession­ al training. Contests, prizes, fun, friendly faces. Call today for a personal interview: 967-0066. Ask for Stacy Jrland. TMI Corpo­ ration, Broadway and MillAvenue, Tempe. (EOE). PHONE SOLICITORS. $6-$15 per hour. Call Duane. 921-2831 or 470-1527. STANLEY KAPLAN Educational Center needs part-time help for fon job. Ideal for resident students. General office work, must have telephone skills and sales ability. Minimal hours. Call between 3-9pm only or apply in person at 1000 East Apache, Suite 219. P art-tim e J o b JOIN THE STARTING TEAM! $50 p er day T h ., F ri. & S a t. Mr. V acca, 967-9431 Roòm 205 MCDONALD’S now h i r i n g f ri e n d I y , enthusiastic people of all ages (at least 16) for a NEW RESTAURANT with an excit­ ing sports theme near ASU. We have flexible hours that will fit your home, school or child care schedule. No exper­ ience needed — We’ll train you. In addition, we offer. ★ * EASY CASH ★ ★ Completely automated donor plasm a-pheresis. Discover how easy, safe arid fast It is to: Earn $120 + a month while donating much needed plasma. Mention this ad for a $5 bonus on your first dona­ tion, (Monday-Saturday) UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER • Regular wage reviews Associated Bioscience, Inc. •' Free meals 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe • Free uniforms • Stock and savings plan t • McDonald's sponsored f activities • Opportunities for advance* ment “Country Glazed Ham” G row th oriented specialty restaurant is currently accepting applications for the fo llo w in g positions: People, Our Most Important Ingredient IN TER VIEW S: Monday through Friday 10am—5pm at: M cD o n ald ’s Site 1205 S. Rural Rd. Flexible hours. C om petitive salaries. Bob Bullock Realty Executives BBS-2992 New & Pre Owned ANSWERING SERVICE, part-time. Tele­ phone, typing experience required. Scotts­ dale. 947-7351. ; • F ood service elerks F/T, P/T Lunch 2 bd, dramatic spiral staircase entry, very clean. $88,000. WEBB’S FURNITURE HELP WANTED— GENERAL • R etail sales clerks F/T, P/T A M Buy of the w eek tì* HELP WANTED— GENERAL 894-2250 ONLY $100 down for 3 bedroom, 2 bath Los Prados townhome. Save over $20,000 at Ohly $55,000 and walk to campus! Greg Askins, Realty Executives, 966-0016 FURNITURE ' CRAZY COLLEGE entrepreneurs. Have fun, make lotsa money. 994-2101,24^jiour recorded message. CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. ■* read READ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ALWAYS BUYING jewelry of all kinds, including gold, sterling,- gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South Mill Avenue, Tempe Center, 968-6074. ROOMMATE NEEDED for 3 bedroom apartment, very nice, fireplace, washer/ dryer, micrpWaye, vaulted ceiling, upstairs balcony, pool. Offering master bedroom w ith own bath. Needed immediately. $260. 947-6919. 'r e a d HAYDEN'S FERRY REVIEY^ JEWELRY N ew FLY ANYWHERE USA In your name! 48 states, $285-400. Alaska, $500-600. Hawaii, Europe, etc. You can leave today. A ls o b u y in g tra n s fe ra b le coup ons/ vouchers. Top prices paid. Travel Tips, 968-7283 (YOU-SAVE). ROUND-TRIP TICKET Phoenix to Toledo, Ohio! Leave 12/21,- return ; 1/1. Call 926-9149, ask for Kim. 2 TICKETS to Billy Joel on November 9; Row MM, seats 3 and 4. Best offer. 966-6561, leave message FEMALE TO share 2 bedroom, 2. bath apartment in The Commons on Apache. Call 839-5860. No deposit necessary. RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE- 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. $200 plus Vi utilities. Nonsmoker. Stapley/University. Leave message, 844^7806. CHICAGO THANKSGIVING plane ticket, one-way, 11/21, America West. Free drinks, dinner, movie. $100. Call Lisa, 461-8597 anytime. ROUND-TRIP TICKET, Phoenix to Atlan­ ta. Leave 11/9, retu rn 11/13, Gail 966-6871. Financing Available F E M A L t NONSMOKER, own room, w a s h e r/d ry e r, 2 m ile s fro m ASU $l95/m on th, Vi utilities and phone. 967-3424, Danielle,. M A L E /F E M A L E R O O M M A T E S — 2 master bedrooms, plush apartment. Close to ASU 839-9285, 893-9600, Lauren TRAVEL ONE-WAY TICKET; Phoenix to Los Angeles. Friday, 10/19- Evening flight. Great deal!! $29. 966-4691. 966-1388 0pen9^i“ 1 SPACIOUS master bedroom, $250; comfortable loft, $195; plus utilities in resort condo, quiet. 461 -1023. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath house, private room, p riv a te bath, q u i e t . n e ig h b o rh o o d , $250/month, free utilities. 820-5799. State Press A p p ly in person: STIMULATES THE GLANDS TO ENHANCE PEAK PERFORMANCE ★ Increases energy & endurance ★ Increases mental alertness ★ Reduces body fat ★ Increases body tone POR MEN A N D W O M EN , WORKS SO G O O D IT S GUARANTEED! To O rder: Send $ 2 4 .9 9 plus $ 2 .0 0 s h ip p in g and h a nd lin g : To: Raw Power, Inc., P.O. Box 2 3 6 5 8 , Tem pe, AZ 8 5 2 8 2 \lonc>\ Orders Allow 3-5 Days lor Delivery A v a ila b le at G e n e ra l N u tritio n C e n te rs a n d o th e r F ine S to re s D e a le r s In q u ir e s ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ TELEMARKETING New division of a large telemarketing firm just opening in AZ needs full & part-time telemarketers. Excellent opportunity with best pay program. EARN BIG BUCKS! Call today! 731-9123 1 mile from ASU on University Welcome G E N E R A L N U T R IT IO N C E N T E R S ] -800-544-95 1 1 Alw ays an Equal O pportuni­ ty , A f f i r m a t i v e A c t i o n Employer. 6107 N. Scottsdale Rd. (Hilton Village) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ State Press HELP WANTED— GENERAL PETS WORLD CYCLE is looking for individuals with good mechanical abilities and retail sales experience to work flexible hours. Call Chris at 921-3466 or Randy at 461-1875 BURMESE PYTHON babies, $150; Boa Constrictor babies, $100. Leave message at 986-9457, Mesa. FREE KITTENS— 6 weeks bid Please leave message, 829-6626. TREE LOST/EOUND HELP WANTED— EOOD SERVICE BARRO’S PIZZA is hiring evening counter help and delivery drivers: Call 826-9282 for more information. LOST: CHOCOLATE lab— female, 5 months old. 13th Street and Hardy. If; found, call David at 967-4492, PERSONALS RESTAURANTS/ BARS AEPIS — THE AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tou rnament will be yours October 20th and 21 it ! . AFTER TWO years in hiding, Paddy Murphy is back, bigger and better than ever. AGDS THE Phi Psis can't wait to do the "Luaua” thing w ith you this Saturday! Hawaiin wear a must. ALPHA PHI Marylin Gorton, congratula­ tions on being Pike Dream Girt! Love, your Sisters. ARE YOU a student? Is it your birthday? Bring your valid college ID to the State Press classified department in the south basement of Matthews Center and you can wish yourself or sorneohe else a happy day with a free , 15-word personal ad! Happy Birthday!! ASU SWIMMERS— Thanks for the incred­ ible Happy Hour— We had so much fun! Looking forward to doing more with you! 6 EAST LOUNGE Love the PiPhi’S- 6 E. 7th St. Tempe 25C pool Music Happy Hour M-F 3-6 966-2111 ATO — GET psyched for the AXO Volleybail Tournam ent October 20th and 21st! ATO KEVIN— Study, study cuz formal will jam. Prepare to rage babe!!! AXO Attitude. Stacie. ATTENTION ALL Greeks- Greek Week 1991 is coming!!! Get involved by applying for a Greek Week committee. Applications available oh Monday. October 22nd in the , Greek Life Office. ATTN.-r- SCOTT H. (Lambda Chi) needs a date to any formal. If not asked, I will just print up my own t-shirt and pretend that I went. AXO JjLLIAN Friedman; have an awsome formal! Friday's your night to shine. You id mom loves you! A ^O Stacie. BIRD LADY: watch this space. OHIO ALENA, you are the greatest. Thanks so'm uch: The tradition— Rio on Friday night? Sure! And it w ill be my treat I owe ybu a huge one Chio Love, Karen. CHIO BAFlB, an 85 on his math test?? I still don’t understand. XO Karen, CHI— O Karla this one’s for you: Love Kim and Britt. . . I i 1 1 2 in. or 16 in. | 1301 E. U n iv e rs ity (N e xt to B e a u va is) FREE DELIVERY TO ASU AREA 968-6666 M U S IC a LET’S MAKE A HIT TOGETHERI! * Singers, songwriters — mail or 40 bring us your cassettes! • REASONABLE RATES ♦ Call 833*3196 for more details! 5 S tau M usic I nc S agù ano R ecording 6 P ublishing HEY COLLEGE students! Did you know that personal ads are dnly $1.40 per day for 15 words? What a great (and cheap) way to let that special someone know just how special they really are! IU SIGMA Nu Bill! It was cjreat to see ybu again! I hope you had the best time here in Arizona! See you soon! Nikki. JIM— DID you hear the secret about the bear who said you should take the gorilla girt on a motorcycle ride next week? Call me. Love, ? -.... KA JORDAN— Good luck on National Exam. I ’m thinking of you! Stacey. KAPPA CHRISTY and Tri— Lisa, thanks a million for your support this past week. You guys are awesome! “ By all m eans" I’ll use my “ Gold coins” this weekend! Bugspit—: we can’t live w ith it, we can’t live without it! Don’t hit the panic! I love you guys,' Cami. KAPPA SlG — Get ready to take over the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament O ctober 20th arid 21st! LAMBDA CHI — Let’s take all at the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21st! M IN DY NELSON— Student Foundation would like to thank you for your pheno­ menal effort on the Seminar! Great job! NOT TOO late to register for Student Foundation Leadership Seminar. At door registration takes place 9:30am at Biltmore this Saturday. Get V m tm ll OPM TTH 9:15 to the blonde girl wearing glasses 2nd row. I should've talked to ybu Tues. SorryT- I’m kinda shy. I would like to meet you. The guy in the black t-shirt. PATRICK STEVEN Rampson: Happy Birthday to you, Happy Birthday to you, You’re now 22 and I still love you! Happy 22nd! Lové always, Erica. PHI PSI Pledges: Pull together (no pun intended) and make Ropebum a huge success! PHI SIGS — W ill control the AXO Fraterni­ ty Volleyball Tournament October 20th arid 21st! PIKERS '-rr. G E T . psyched for th e AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21st! PI PHI pledges— You're doing a “ heaven­ ly " job trying to win Pledge Class o f the Year. Keep up the Great Work— You'll aiwasy be the best in our eyes. Love the Actives. . ’ r PORK CHOP: Hi! I miss your smile A : W hat’s the deal? Still love ya, Min. PSE GREG: Clue: Your Big Sib is of thé opposite sex. Interests: CGW. COOL KAPPAS, friends in low places. Oasis, Friday, Buckeye Yee-Haw!! RUSTY, I ’M looking for you! Soon every­ body will know what a wimp you are! Hugo, DELTA CHI — Will take all in the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21st! : OFF ! ! ANY ! ! P IZ Z A i DELTS GET psyched for Kappa fraternity football. Love your coaches, Candee and Stephanie. PSE LIANA: Hope all is well. Hope you èrijoyed the Bud. Clue: I'm TD and H. DEKE JEFF: Missing your diamonds? Smile! There’s another gem o f a formal Saturday! Tri-Sigma Beth. PIZZA & P Í B PERSONALS CHI— O’S- Kelly and Mindy glad you guys are back on you're feet again. Love Kim and Britt-..' • COOL MIKE! Here’s to another awesome y ear W e re gonna have to do dinner again. Are we gonna be in the same classes again next semester? Surprise!!! Love, Melissa ATTENTI ON! one coupon per pizza Page 19 Thurada^O ctob^^^^W SAE G-SPOT; It may be hard to beat what we’ve done in the past, with rooftops and roadtrips, CA at last! But if you beware of parking brakes on cars, the best time at form al will soon be ours. Love, J, SAE- IT’S even better the 2nd time!! Get keyed up to win again- Love your Kappa coaches. SAE— LET’S make it two in a row! Be ready to Dominate Football tourney. Love your Kappa coaches. DELTA CHI EricT. only two more days till my pledge presents. Get ready to rage!! P S. Are you “ psyched"? Love ya Raechel SAE WILL take first in the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21st! DELTA GAMMA Amara— I’m so excited you’re my Dot. Have fun this week! Love, Mom. SlG EP — Be prepared to take over the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21st! DELTA SlGS — Just do it at the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October20th and 21st! SIGMA CHI — Let’s do It up at the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21st! DG PLEDGE Presents!!! If you don’t go ypu won’t know! SIGMA KAPPA— Bonnie, Happy 20th Pal! I’m proud of you! Love Ya! — MJA pTD GET psyched for Kappa football you all will dominate. Love, Candy and Steph. Sig m a KAPPAS: We w ill always be. Sigma Alpha Omega! DTD’S — GET psyched for the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October SIGMA NU — Get psyched for the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21st! 20th and 21st! PERSONALS SIGMA PI — Get ready to take first in the AXO Fraternity Volleyball tournam ent October 20th and 21st! TED ZANT— Clear the streets— she’s back! Congrats! Payson— here we come!! Love ya, Rick, < THETA CHI — Will conquer the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21 st! THETA’ DELTS — Let’s do it right at the AXO Fraternity Volleyball Tournament October 20th and 21st! TO MY wonderful Chris! You are very special to me and I love you so much. Yours forever, Kelli. TRIDELTA PLEDGES are psyched to rage with ATO ADPi and Sigma Nu tonight! TRIDELT ERIN McKallor: Happy 21st Birthday!!! Formal “ talker“ , drunk T.A.’s, —and bargains! “ USC” in for the celebra­ tion? —Maybe he could drive his rent-acar!! Delta Love, Jean. WANTED PADDY Murphy, last Seen fall ‘88 at Arizona beta chapter of SAE. WINGO, HI there! I hope you had a fun tim e with B ill You guys are so cute! You’re a great friend! Love you lots! Nikki. YOU CAN still register for Foundation Leadership Seminar! Come to Student Life or come to the Bjltmore at 9:30am this Saturday! TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING $1.50 AAA Word Processing/laser printer. 35 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. Marion, 8394269. $1.50/PAGE. On-campus pickup and delivery. Daily or FAX direct to me. WP5.1 and Laser printer. Class papers all types, charts, resumes, etc. 15 years experience. Robyn, 996-3911. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typingSword processing. Need if fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ^ ASU ÀREA; Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. Prices are com p e titive , negotiable. 966-2186 ADOPTION FLYING FINGERS has Maclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. Call 945-1551 for details. UNWANTED PREGNANCY? W e have many loving couples who have been court certified and wish to adopt your baby. Law Offices of John W. Matlock, 8344544. WARM LOVING couple wants to adopt newborn— up to one year— we will provide a lifetime of love, security, happi­ ness, intellectual stimulation, and a sense of wonder. All expenses paid. Call Elaine and Jerry 1(800)766-0706. Please leave message. PREGNANCY COUNSELING Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 HOME SERVICES PEACE OF mirid. Let me care for your house, pets, plants, etc. while you are away. Lyn, 993-4301. SERVICES ELECTROLYSIS— PERMANENT hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discounts. Call for more informa­ tion: 969-6954. PERMANENT HAIR removal through elec­ trolysis. Great student rates! 996-0343. Astrology Reports C om p r eh en s i ve personal profile, chart and 3 mo. forcast. $ 22.00. Compatibility Chart Astrological Insight tor relation­ ships. $16.00. 443-1100 Resume Package: $ 1 4 .9 5 This package includes: • • • • LETTER QUALITY word processing for your typing needs. AMA/MLA, fast turnar­ ound. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825: MESA SECRETARIAL Service, computer­ ized, laser printer, full graphics. 15 minutes from ASU. Northeast comer, Mesa Drive and Brown Road. 844-1876. PROFESSIONAL W ORD processing, microcassette transcribing. Legal briefs, MKT 351, Nursing, Theses, Dissertations. $2/page. Janet, 834-0893. One T en T en Ten laser-printed rdsumd copies on 24# paper matching envelopes sheets o f 24# paper Call Dennis 4 3 8 -7 3 4 1 ALL PAPERS, resumes, letters, docu­ ments, transcribing, editing, mailings. College graduate using IBM computer. Mike, 964-0994 BUSY B ’S Word Processing. No job too big or too small. First-time customer discount. 962-9768. HAPPILY-M ARRIED PROFESSIONAL couple want healthy infant to adopt and love. Our attorney is very understanding arid kind. Pleae call him collect, anytime, Larry Siegel: Office, (415)457-6313; home, (415)456-2495. Grand Opening Career R isu m fe A KINKO’S paper makes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, etc. Self-serve Macintosh computers and laser printers, too. 933 East University, call 966-2035. 960 W est University, call 921-0168. Open early, open late, open 7 days! CHILD CARE part-tim e and light house­ keeping, approximately 15 hours per week. Phoenix (Central and Glendale). 943-8892. CONFIDENTIAL OR open adoption...with Southwest Adoption Center* i f you would like, you can choose the family and even meet them, and be reassured that they are qualified to provide a loving, caring-home for a child. Get the facts from a licensed adoption agency. Southwest Adoption Center. We can provide a professional and confidential help with housing, counseling, and medical arrangements. We serve all areas of the country. We facilitate tradi­ tional, confidential adoptions or open adoptions. It’s your choice. For help, call Southwest Adoption Center, 234-BABY. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. $1/page Laser printing included. You deliver and pick up. Alma School Road/Baseline. Jan, 897-1744 $1.75 AND up, professional word proces­ sor and former English teacher. Láser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. A TERM paper special— $2.75/page laser printed. Resume package special— $19.95. Dr. Copy, 968-7771. CALIFORNIA FAMILY with much love and security to offer desire to adopt newborn. Can collect Carolyn, (818)368-4813. PROFESSIONAL TYPIST. Experienced in correspondence manuscripts, newslet­ ters, editing— reasonable, accurate, reli­ able. Carmen, 2794007. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, resumes, etc. At Your Service Word Processing, Linda, 839-6167. CHILD CARE ADOPTION. CARING New England couple wants to give love and cuddles to an infant we hgpe to adopt. If you are pregnant and considering adoption, pall J e r r y a n d M a r g a r e t c o l lé c t a t (802)235-2312. Let’s help each other find a solution. TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING Expires 10-31-90 INSTRUCTION IMPROVE GRADES. High-speed reading, 3-20 times faster. Learn more. Better c o m p r e h e n s io n / r e c a ll. M e s s a g e , 420-1202. LEARN TO speak Arabic, translation is available. Professional native speaker. Tel/Fax, 9944460 or 966-8754.. TUTORS ACCOUNTING AND finance professional instruction, study aides and examination strategies. Rates from $6/hour. 497-2097, Qil. ACCOUNTING 211 tutor needed desp­ erately! Rate negotiable. Can meet anywhere on cam pus preferably Sundays, Monday evenings and Thursdays. Please call Melissa, 7844)048. DISSERTATIONS/THESES. Ex-college English professor with doctorate in educa­ tion, statistical software, laser printer. W ill provide support services you need from start to finish. Not cheap, but good. 483-8722. MISCELLANEOUS W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c r e ta ria l services. 23 years experience. Student discounts. Southwest.corner, Miller and Chaparral: 99441145. ' IMPERFECT GIFT!!! For holidays and special occaSsions. Satin photo albums, only $20. For information and orders» call 947-4729. WORD PROCESSING, reasonable ratés. Fast, dependable, accurate. Term papers, business letters, mail outs, etc. 839-7527. SELF HYPNOSIS for learning. Learn faster, retain longer. Release stress of study/exams. EGS, 497-0333. YourIndividual Horoscope : Frances Drake IF YOUR BUSINESS WOULD LIKE TO S P O N S O R THE H O R O S C O P E S ;! PLEASE CALL 965-6555. FOR FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1990 (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) fN ® You need to guard against wasteful spending and an unwise use o f credit now. You’re on the right track with career interests. Accent ingenuity and inventiveness. TAU RU S ^ (Apr. ¿0 to May 20) Teamwork is favored now and a close associate has some interesting new plans for the both o f you to enjoy. You could go overboard in entertaining now. G E M IN I (May 21 to Jiine 20) nA At times today you’re tempted to goof off. Pay extra attention to details. Right now you have big plans, but practical measures will be neces­ sary to insure their success. C AN C ER (June 21 to July 22) Dating and outings with children are highlighted now. It’s a time o f growing closeness between couples. Try npt however to overspend in the pursuit o f pleasure. LEO ^ (July 23 to Aug. 22) W Make sure you follow through on commitments made to others now. Your tendency now is to be a bit boastful. Progress though is assured in both home and job interests. VIRG O « a (Aug. 23 to Sept22) You’re usually careftil about details but today you could become easily distracted. An impromptu entertain* ment is fun and romance turns for the better now; L IB R A . (Sept. 23 to Oct22) You'll be making some exciting changes at home today. Some find an extra source o f income today. When socializing with others, keep the lid on excessive spending. Copyright 1990 by King SCO RPIO ¿kr (Oct. 23 to Nov. 2 Í) HR5 You’ll hear some big talk in busi­ ness today and need to guard against over expansive plans. Creative inter­ ests are highlighted and things go pretty much your way. SA G ITTA R IU S (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) flv It’s a day for keeping things to yourself. One o f your friends talks too much. You may find something o f interest at a garage sale. Private money talks go well. C APR IC O R N ^ (Dec* 22 to Jan. 19) You get along famously with your friends now, but Stay clear o f finan­ cial involvements with others. Halve a good time without going overboard in the use o f credit A Q UARIU S '¿ A (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You have good insights into career concerns today. Behind-the-scene moves however are best at present You work better on your own than in collaboration now. PISC E S ^ (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Though you’ll make the right decisions in business today, you ptill could let some matters slide now. Judgment right now seems better than execution. Stay on top o f details! YOU BORN TODAY are a good moneymaker but áre more inclined to the arts and professions than busi­ ness. You may have an especial interest in politics, reform, and gov­ ernment service. You have original ideas, but need ^cooperative spirit to get them across to others. You'll succeed in business for yourself and are a person inclined to do his or her own thing. Birthdate of: John le Cane, writer; Leigh Hunt, poet; and Lewis Mumford. writer. Features Syndicate, Inc. Tliureda^OctobeMaiWO Page 20 R E C R E A T IO N A L SPO R TS & S T U D E N T A C T IV IT IE S S T U D E N T R E C R E A T IO N C O M P L E X Schedule O f Events FREE Water Fashion s W w i- 8 W ater Relays - Frizes to all winners!!! Intram ural Pool-Side;gl^0]^£p®e|^ys^J^^^^^§ Charge - $1 Per Person onated to U S F & G 's "D rive to Cure Paralysis" 9figæ| From 4 - 7:30 p.m. pizza's w ill be delivered every 1/2 hour. 2 pieces per participant - F I R S T C O M E F I R S T S E R V E !!! IT’S TIME FOR DOMINO’S PIZZA Sign-up for Q UESTIO NS ?? C A L L : 965-8900 State Prêt»