©Copyright, State Press, 1990 Tempe, Arizona Vol. 73 No. 43 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Tuesday, October 30,1990 Regents h ear pleas, d e la y tuition p la n By KEVIN SHEH State Press TUCSON — The Arizona Board of Regents Resources Committee, after hearing pleas from almost 40 concerned students, delayed a tuition and financial aid recommendation scheduled for approval Monday at UofA. Resources Committee Chairman Herman Chanen said midway through the meeting that because of time constraints, he would delay a decision on tuition and financial aid to allow all of the 60 students in attendance tim e to speak. T h e regents committee will meet again prior to the Nov. 9 board meeting to hopefully g en erate a tuition recommendation. Afterwards, officials said the regents are likely to set tuition. The students’ remarks yesterday were preceded by a brief presentation of the Council of Presidents’ tuition and financial aid recommendations. The COP proposed that the regents hike tuition by $50 for residents and $450 for non­ r e s id e n ts a t an O ct. 18 R e s o u rc e s Committee meeting. In addition, the university presidents recommended a 4.8 percent increase — $1.2 million — in need-based financial aid The COP, citing recent and potential increases in financial a id recipiente and financial aid dollars, contended that the proposal is fair. Meanwhile, student leaders have said they can live with the tuition hikes. Student Regent Danny Siciliano said the hearing at U ofA went well for students. “ They directly affected the regents — you could see it in their faces,” he said, adding that the students e ffe c tiv e ly focused attention on financial aid. ‘ ‘ (A fte r the hearing), thé regents did not feel they had enough information on financial aid to make a décision.” But leaders argue that the financial aid package is not near enough, and that the COP figures do not consider “ remaining need” — the amount of money a student still must pay for thé total cost o f instruction Turn to Tuition* page 15. Financial aid con cern s By KENNETH BROWN State Press Irwin Daugherty/State Press Bringing in the new The official opening of the MU is complete with the ceremonial ribbon cutting by (from left) Floyd Land, director of the MU, Christine Wilkinson, vice president of student af­ fairs, Julie Claiborne, president of MUAB, and Kevin Connell, public relations director of Associated Students of ASU. See story, page 6. TUCSON — About 60 students from Arizona’s three universities converged on a hearing in Tucson Monday to plead with the Arizona Board o f Regents’ Resources Committee to keep tuition low and meet remaining financial need. “ Have you ever heard of the Taco Bell diet?” asked 18-year-old NAU freshman Tobi Bennington as she described her battle against financial difficulties. “ That’s where w e eat Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday every week. I ’m $18,000 in debt — that’s a m ortgage on m y life.” University presidents from ASU, U ofA and N A U and student leaders attended the hearing, which officials hoped would bring a personal elem ent to the traditionally impersonal tuition-setting process. While some students asked the regents to live up to the promises of the Arizona Constitution by keeping education “ as nearly free as possible,” financial aid remained the prim ary issue in the face of probable federal cuts in student grants and loans. . Students chided the regents for what they felt was a lack o f concern for the increased — and still unmet need listed in the Nine Board o f Regents members, the By JE F F CONCORS State Press Students for Equality w ill stage a r a lly at ASU West today to boost support for Proposition 302, a state ballot proposal that would establish a paid Martin Luther King Jr. Day while keeping Columbus Day a paid holiday. “ It is time we do something about this (issu e),” said B everly P.oellnitz, president and founder of the ASU West organization. “ We as an organization want to make our support known.” The rally is scheduled to begin at noon in front o f the west campus’s Fletcher Library and w ill include statements from ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin and other ASU employees who will speak on their lunch hours. The rally comes on the heels of statements supporting Proposition 302 from ASU President Lattie Coor, the Arizona Board of Regents and the ASU Alumni Association. Lattin voiced his support Monday for a King holiday, adding that the adoption o f Proposition 302 by the voters is “ extrem ely important for the state.” Poellnitz, a senior business management m ajor at ASU, said she hopes the rally will help im prove voter turnout on Nov. 6. ‘A lo t o f people support 302 — they ju s t aren ’t g o in g to vote on it. ’ — Beverly Poellnitz “ We need to m ake people aware that they have to get out and vote on this,” she said. “ A lot of people support 302 — they just aren’t going to vote on it.” Poellnitz stessed that Proposition 362 would not replace Columbus D a y as a paid state holiday, but, instead, would establish the third Monday in January as a paid Martin Luther King Jr./Civil Rights Day. Turn to Students, page 13, Nancy Martinez-McKenna, an ASU West representative from the Classified Staff Committee, said she will deliver the committee’s resolution on Proposition 302 as w ell as some comments of her own. “ We have to do this on our own time because w e are state em ployees,” she said. “ I have a strong opinion fo r the Martin Luther King holiday. I just think it’s what w e need to do.” Martinez-McKenna said she has been an ardent supporter of a King holiday since she attended a K u Klux K lan rally in Phoenix. “ That’s what m ade m e so vocal in m y support,” she said. A li Malekzadeh, chairm an of A S U W est’s faculty forum and a professor of strategic m anagement at A S U West, said Proposition 302 has a special meaning to him. “ F or m e it is a personal issue,” said Malekzadeh, who im m igrated to the U. S. from Iran 20 years ago “ People from other countries look up to the United States and do not think there is discrimination here. “ I think it is time w e do something about it.” M aking babies: R ising son: F loored: T o d a y’s weather: Sunny and clear, w ith a Columnist Ellen Goodman discusses the effects o f . technological ad­ vances in reproduc­ tion - surrogate mothers. A leader in the Chinese democracy movement o f June 1989 Will speak on campus at 7 p.m. today. An in-depth profile on ASU Sun Devil wrestling Coach Bobby Douglas is featured.; high in the lo w 90s. Tonight: Clear w ith a Page 5 Page 9 lo w in the m id 60s. Com ics........ ,21 16 Crossw ord.. ..8 Horoscopes. 23 Sports......... 17 Classifieds... Page 2 Tuesday, October 30,1990 State Press F ratern ity raises $ 1,500 f o r M LK w e e k By JENNIFER FRANKLIN State Press A S U President Lattie Coor described a University fraternity’s fundraising efforts as “ a deeply symbolic act,” after the Greek organization raised $1,500 for Martin Luther King Jr. Week scheduled in January. “ This is impprtant because it was initiated by the students,” Coor said, adding th a t it w ill s tr e n g th e n the w h o le U n i v e r s i t y ’ s c o m m it m e n t to th e celebration. The money, raised in a week-long tennis tournament involving 10 ASU fraternities and sororities, w ill help pay for the College o f L aw ’s annual celebration, which also will be funded by the University. J eff Jacobsen, president of P i Kappa Alpha, said his fraternity became interested in raising money after speaking with Charles CaUeros, chairman o f the Campus Environment Team. “ We were happy to raise the money specifically for this celebration,” h e said. Jacobsen said the fraternity raised money by selling raffle tickets and charging entry fees to the tennis tournament. Calleros said the $1,500 w ill help cover the costs of a speaker and a gospel choir. Calleros, associate dean of the College of L a w , s a id the e ven t b eca m e m ore significant when students became involved. “ It is so wonderful to have the fraternity take the step to help with the program ,” he said. “ By having them involved, it makes the event more meaningful,” “ It has not been packed in the past, but this year I hope it is,” he said. “ (The program ) is a place for people of all different cultures and ethnic backgrounds to get together and (to ) learn more about M LK and more about the civil rights movement.’’ W alter H arris, co-chairman for the Martin Luther King Planning Committee, said the fundraiser is only one of a multigroup effort on campus. ‘ ‘There are a lot of people working on this now,” he said. Tamara Wofford/State Press Pi Kappa Alpha members Jeff Jacobsen and Matt Klopp give ASU President Lattie Coor a $1,500 check as a donation for Martin Luther King Jr. Week. A lso pictured is Walter Harris, co-chairman of the Cam pus Environment Team. Today th e Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community . Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. M eetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and A S A S U University Drive. •Academic Excellence Week will meet at 4 p.m. in McClintock Hall Room 138 for a steering committee meeting. All A SU clubs and organizations welcome. •Adult Re-Entry will meet at 2 p.m. in the basement of the MU. •Re-Entry Connection will meet at noon in the basement of the MU. •Women in Communications will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Room 211. •Fellowship of Christian Athletes will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the University Activity Center Room 35. Everyone welcome. •Gravity Tours Snowboard Association will meet at 8 p.m. at Long Wong's on Mill Avenue. •Lecture Series will present a guest speaker who was expelled from China at 7 p.m. in the MU Arizona Room. •Minority Assistance Program will meet at 3 p.m. in the Multicultural Lounge in the Student Services Building. •Hlllel will meet at 12:30 p.m. at 1012 S. Mill Ave. •Epsilon Sigma Alpha will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Room 215. Everyone welcome. •Baptist Student Union will meet at 7 p.m. at 1322 S. Mill Ave. •Coffeehouse will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU programming lounge. Bring your own instruments for a jam session. •Students for Environmental Awareness will meet at 7 p.m. in the Social Sciences Building courtyard. •ASU Kids Voting volunteers will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. •Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. at Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome. L e c tu re S e rie s China’s Rising Son CHEN JU N Expelled from C h in a in 1989 for his involvem ent in the C h in ese D em ocracy M ovem ent C o m e hear a first-hand perspective on this continuing struggle for dem ocracy Tuesday, O ctob er 30 7 p.m. • A rizo n a Room • M em orial U nion W orld/Nation S fttP fm Tuesday, October 30,1990 Page 3 B ush p re p a re d to use fo rce in G u lf O KLAH O M A C IT Y , Okla. CAP) — President Bush said Monday “ w e’d have no hesitancy at a ll” to use m ilitary force in the Persian Gulf if provoked by Iraq and indicated he feels no obligation to get Congress’ approval. “ History is replete with examples where the president has had to take action,” Bush said. Apparently referring to the U. S. invasion of Panama, Bush said, “ I ’ve done this in the past, and certainly, somebody mentioned provocation, w e’d have no hesitancy at a ll.” Bush said he was not trying to prepare the country for war. “ I ’m just doing m y job as president o f the United States,” he said. “ I ’m not preparing anybody for anything. I ’m as determined as I ’ve ever been that this aggression w ill not stand.” Bush spoke at an airport news conference in San Francisco after campaigning for Republican Sen. Pete Wilson in his race for governor. Later, he flew to Oklahoma City to appear at the Cowboy Hall of F am e with Bill Price, the GOP candidate fo r governor in Oklahoma. Shrugging o ff his slump in the polls, he accused Democrats of trying to win elections through “ tax the rich, class w arfare kind o f garbage.” v v v % “ I think people know that this Congress is controlled by the taxers, by the liberal Democrats,” Bush said in a sharply political attack eight d ay sbefo re Election Day. Meanwhile, Secretary of State James Baker w as echoing Bush’s tough gulf statements in a speech in Los Angeles. “ We are exhausting every diplomatic avenue to achieve (a peaceful) solution without further bloodshed,” Baker said. But he added, “ Let no one doubt: We w ill not rule out a possible use o f force if Iraq continues to occupy Kuwait.” The White HoUse policy in the Persian G ulf has won strong bipartisan support in Congress, although there is a growing feeling that Bush should consult lawmakers before sending troops into any combat. M ore than 200,000 Am erican forces have been deployed to the gulf after Iraq’s Aug. 2 invasion of Kuwait. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said last week that as many as 100,000 m ore troops m ay be dispatched. The gu lf crisis w ill be at the top of the agenda when Bush meets with congressional leaders at die White House on Tuesday. The president also is to consult with Cheney and Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who just returned from the Middle East. Bush appeared Unmoved by demands that Congress should be asked in advance before he sends troops into action. “ I know the authorities that a president has,’’ Bush said. “ I ’m working to try to get this matter resolved peacefully. W e have a lot of force there and they’re well trained, they’re highly motivated and that alone is sending an enormously strong signal to Saddam Hussein. ” Bush also said die Soviet Union remains aligned with the United States against Iraq, He said Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev “ is holding just as firm as he can. And that’s good, yousee, because that sends a strong signal that the free world is united against this dictator.” The Oklahoma stop concluded a five-day campaign trip that took Bush as far west as Hawaii while Congress was wrapping up a $490 billion deficit-reduction agreement. Bush said he had felt politically restrained while the agreem ent was being put together but now is taking o ff the gloves. “ I don’t like being on the defense,” he said. “ I like being on the offense.” The president will hit Democrats again in a speech in Washington on Tuesday and then hit the road Thursday for nonstop campaigning until the election. Bush has paid a big political price because of his changes op taxes and because of Dem ocrats’ efforts to portray him — and other Republicans — as defenders o f the rich. “ I ’m used to that kind o f demagoguery and so I ’m out here Tura to Bush, page 1tv Bill to reward informants w ith seized S&L m on ey A little welcom e President Bush lifts a baby above the crowd Sunday following a speech before military personnel and federal employees at Hickam Air Force Base in Hawaii. W ASHINGTON (A P ) — Savings and loan w h istleblow ers could g e t rich under legislation passed by Congress that provides rewards fo r information leading to fraud prosecutions and the recovery o f ill-gotten gains. The provisions, enacted as part o f the crim e bill passed over the weekend, offer rewards o f up to $50,000 fo r information leading to prosecution of S&L crooks. W h is tle b lo w e r s w h o h e lp J u s tic e Department investigators trace ill-gotten gains would share a percentage of the seized money if the attorney general declared the information was crucial to its recovery. The bounty provisions would only apply to people who are not participants in S&L crimes, said Laurence Urgenson, head of the Justice Department’s fraud section. But “ there’s a category of individuals on the periphery, who know about it, never have been knowing participants, but could point the w ay,” Urgenson said. “ The potential awards are ample and certainly adequate to provide incentive for someone to come forth,” Urgenson said. “ It could be millions o f dollars in certain kinds o f instances, certainly tens of thousands in many,” he said. A person who helps the government recover S&L money would share 20 percent to 30 percent o f the first $1 million, 10 percent to 20 percent of the next $4 million and 5 percent to 10 percent of the next $5 million, according to the bill, The bill also creates a so-called S&L kingpin crim e that carries a sentence of 10 years to life and fines up to $10 million for individuals and $20 million for corporations, T h e “ con tin u in g fin a n c ia l c rim e s enterprise” is defined as a fraud continuing over a two-year period by three or more people in which at least one person gains $5 million, S&L legislation passed before Congress adjourned for the year m ay not include extra money to bail out failing thrifts. But the crim e bill raises from $50 m illion to $162.5 million the Justice Department’s a n n u a l a p p r o p r ia t io n fo r fr a u d investigations. L a s t w eek , C ongress a p p ro p ria ted slightly less — $160 million — for the current fiscal year. The legislation also creates an eightmember commission to study the cause of the S&L crisis. Six of the members would be appointed by Congress and two by the president. The panel would have the power to subpoena testimony and evidence. The attorney general or the heads of the Office of Thrift Resolution and the Resolution Trust Corp. could veto commission attempts to take evidence or testimony to protect an ongoing investigation. F ive members of the commission could vote to override such vetoes, The Bush administration had opposed the creation o f the commission, saying it would interfere with investigations But it agreed to compromise language. The bill also: Tu™ *° p*se u- Non-Communists win Soviet elections marred by violations T B IL IS I, U.S.S.R. (À P ) — Non-Communist parties won elections in Geòrgia on a platform calling for independence from the Soviet Union, private ownership of land and a capitalist economy, officials said Monday. “ W e are certainly going to have a majority in parliament, ’ ’ said Zviad Gam sakhurdia, leader of the victorious Round Table-F ree Georgia bloc of political parties. W ith about 90 percent o f the region s reporting, Gam sakhurdia claimed victory in about 70 percent. H e protested what he called “ gross violations" of the election law and said Communist authorities “ terrorized the non-Georgian population” along the borders of the mountainous southern republic, which is dotted with pockets of A zerbaijani and other ethnic groups. A m em ber of the central election commission, Alexander Kobalia, said that prelim inary results showed a slightly less sweeping victory for G am sakhurdia’s Round Table, with the bloc winning about 60 percent of the vote versus 30 percent for the Communist Party. H ie final results w ill be ready on Wednesday, and a runoff w ill be held for close races on Nov. 11, he said. N o date has been set yet for convening the Georgian Supreme Soviet legislature, which is expected to declare independence from the Soviet Union. Am ong the 15 Soviet republics, all but Kirgizia have declared som e form of sovereignty or independence. Gam sakhurdia said he w as unable to specify what his first proposal would be in parliament. “ I can’t decide that alone,” said Gamsakhurdia, an imposing 51-year-old with a history o f arrests and opposition to Communist rule dating back to 1950. Another Round Table spokesman, Georgi Makaridze, said the victory would translate into about 120 seats in the 250-member Supreme Soviet. “ AJong with other nonCommunist parties, w e w ill have a working m ajority in parliament,” Makaridze said. In a weekend interview, Gamsakhurdia predicted that G eorgia’s transition to independence would take about two years, and that the republic would maintain extensive economic relations with the Soviet Union. It also seemed likely that Georgia would rely on the Soviet Union in national security matters. About 35 parties, most grouped by coalition, took part in Sunday’s election, the first true multiparty vote in Soviet history. Non-Communists have won elections in several cities and republics elsewhere in the Soviet Union, but the Georgian balloting was the first in which form al parties, created under new Soviet laws, w ere listed on the ballot. Some politicians boycotted the election, claiming it was not democratic. One of them, the leader of the National Democratic Party, Gia Chanturia, was shot in the arm Friday as he left a political meeting. T w o N a tio n a l D e m o c ra tic P a r t y m em b ers, Gia Kobakhedze and Irakli Tsereteli, spoke on Georgian television and accused Gamsakhurdia o f organizing the shooting on orders from Soviet authorities. Gamsakhurdia denied responsibility for the shooting, and accused authorities in an interview Sunday o f trying to sabotage the election by not telling people where to vote. Under a complicated election system, each voter was given two ballots, one listing individual candidates mid the other listing political parties and blocs. H alf the members of the legislature w ere to be chosen from the lists of individual candidates to represent various districts. The rest w ere to be chosen at large, in proportion to the number of votes cast for each party or bloc throughout Georgia. ■ ■yy • Under the republic’s election law, a party must get at least 4 percent o f the republic-wide vote to gain representation in the legislature. That was a provision designed to encourage coalitions and large parties, and to discourage splintering into small factions. _________________ O p in io n ____________________ Page 4 .-4P BOOS & BRAVOS Bravo — with reservations — to the Arizona Board of Regents for delaying tuition and financial aid recommendations at a meeting in Tucson Monday . The regents w e r e s la t e d to d e l i v e r t h e ir recommendations bn Wednesday but after h e a rin g h ea rt-w ren ch in g p leas from concerned students, the regents pushed the scheduled date back in order to allow more students to sound o ff against the impending hikes. This is great as long as the regents are sincere in their regards for the students and not just stalling for time as has been the case in the past. Another tuition hike is unwanted (to say the least) after last year’s increase left pockets threadbare, but if the regents are going to raise tuition, they should at least make their recommendation as close to schedule as possible so students aren’t left playing monkey in the middle. ♦ S tlte P lW Tuesday, October 30,1990 B ra v o to A S U ’ s T r a v e l R eduction ■ Committee fo r having the good sense to shoot down a proposed 50 percent increase in parking fees for students in favor of a four-day work week plan for some ASU employees. The committee was formed to find a way to reduce single-occupancy traffic to and from the University in accordance with a 1988 Arizona A ir Quality Bill. H ow ever, the Legislatu re-m an dated reduction was only for em ployee traffic, not student. T o saddle students with an additional 50 percent increase on top of the already inflated parking fees as a part of this project is obscene, bordering on the immoral. ••• ■ Speaking of idiotic ideas , a resounding boo goes to the Campus Appearance Working Committee, headed by Associate Vice President fo r Business A ffairs Jennus Burton, for drafting a moronic proposal that would charge various fundraising groups for the rig h t to use the ASU’s malls. Again, this is the product of a committee run amok and overstepping the constraints o f its original mission, which was, in this case, simply to find a way to make the malls lode tidier. Instead w e have an extrem ely mercenary proposal to further bleed students that looks like it’s unconstitutional anyway. ASU President Lattie Coor should take the axe to this one, pronto! . ••• . Boo to the Associated Students of ASU Senate for wasting valuable time with its extended w ran glin g o v e r a pointless proposal to form a special investigative committee that w ill look into alleged ethics violations committed by Senate members. N ever mind that there are no such allegations currently being made. N ever mind that there have never been any acts of senatorial misconduct that couldn’t be handled by the current rules of order. N ever mind that there probably never w ill be any. H ie senseless measure iS nothing more than political posturing on the part of its s p o n s o rs — C o lle g e o f E d u c a tio n Sen. Adrian Fontes and College of Social Work Sen. G reg Schultz (a third co-author, College of Fine Arts Sen. Sean Colins, asked that his name be removed from the draft). The bill, largely unintelligible, has been sent back to the Government Operations for a massive rewrite, with even Fontes (who seems to have been watching too much CS P A N ) admitting that “ the language is not what it should be.” T o o much tim e has a lre a d y been squandered on Senate Bill 47. It should be dumped. ••• • / AtmeswEflWlCMUSlCItotWECfcWISteWCDART, NSWUVECMMS HAU.. Everybody’s a critic Editor: I am glad to see a well-written review of “ An Evening of Dance” (Oct. 25) in today’s S ta te Press. The w riter has a decent command of the language and the courage to form and articulate an opinion. However, she has evidently learned to delight in the critic’s power without first finishing her education. This is commendable in a school newspaper but devastating — and all too common — on a professional level. A critic must have m ore than an opinion, she must have some experience in the subject matter. First she accuses the a u d ie n c e o f a la c k o f p e rc e p tio n , presumably the same audience that is reading her critique, then proceeds to demonstrate that very lack in ways I don’t think she intended. It does take a little sophistication to appreciate Stravinsky and John Cage, •m ore sophistication than the critic could muster, judging from her favorites: R avel’s tired old Bolero, and the popular Tom Waits. Well, I suppose I musn’t b e to o h a rs h . W h a t g o o d d o e s a discriminating musical palate do for a dance critic? V ery well, let m e ask why slapstick and fla tu le n t b a llo o n s q u a lify a s b etter choreography? It is an easy mistake; a view er doesn’t need any experience in concert dance to laugh at such antics. Five m in u te s o f so m e th in g “ b re e z y and refreshing, abstract but not distracting” is available in your local video store starring Steve Martin. According to your critic, a u d i e n c e s d e p lo r e th e a s s u m p t io n E D I T O R I A L STATE PRESS SUZANNE BOSS Editor c h o r e o g r a p h e r s ( f o r th a t m a t t e r , composers, painters, poets, etc.) so often make, that the view er has a lively, inquiring intelligence and enjoys using it. I f the faculty w ere to, as she puts it, “ take a clue from (the guest a rtist)” and create nothing but musical comedy, no audience would ever gain the experience, the education, the appreciation this art-poor area needs to rise above slapstick. “ J a r r in g and i r r a t i o n a l ’ ’ m u s ic , “ mediocre and unfocused” choreography, a performance that was “ random and tiring to watch” sound to m e like the resentful epithets of someone who got left out o f the game. The critic did get left out because she failed to. do her job; watch attentively. Mooney’s performance of “ E xile” was about someone trapped in a jarring and irrational situation, unable to open the door (literally — how could anyone miss that?), condemning herself to a random and tiring recycling of her thoughts and fears until she finally opens the door. Nothing is “ too abstract and impossible to critique” if you pay attention to it. As I said, the article showed the author’s courage and promising writing ability. But the printed word is m ore powerful than she realizes, and should not be in the hands of someone whose ignorance is so evident. Fortunately, the choreographers she is so nasty with are very experienced in their field and will neither take her silly advice, nor bother to take offense. The damage is not to the artists, but to the reader, who has missed an opportunity to increase his artistic awareness. Candace Ammerman Post-Graduate B O A R D Unsigned editorials reflect the view s o f the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board w rite editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials d o not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: NICOLE PERRON Managing Editor Aast. City Editor.......... ...... _______________ KELLY PEARCE ________ ..KRISTEN JOHNSON ...................TEN NY TATUSIAN .......................D A N NO W IC KI ...... ..... ....JULIA COODRUM T.J. SOKOL ........ PA U L CORO ...KRIS TIM M O NS Aast. Sports Editor.— -----.... .....STEVE KRICUN Aast. Copy Chief.....—............ .— —. JILL TIBKE Magazine Editor. ...........— - ...MEG HALVERSON Assoc. Magazine Editor.-----...— ROBYN PINKSTON Asst. Magazine Editor............................CABIN CUM M INS REPORTERS: Kenneth Brown, Aqtita Carcone, Teena Chadwell, Jett Concor», Joseph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Patricia Mah, Michelle Paul, Michelle Roberts, Girth Sheh, Christina Schroeder, Kristie Young. 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Thè State Presa is the only newspaper exclu sively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newpaper ate not necessarily those of ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Suzanne Ross Editor The State Press Nicole Perron Managing Editor Dan Nowicki Opinion Editor welcom es an d encourages written response from o u r readers on an y topic. A ll letters must b e typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to b e eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and m ajor (o r other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonym ity w ill b e granted w ith an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing b y the opinion page editor. A ll letters must either b e brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement o f M atthews Center o r else addressed to: State Press, 15 M atthews Center, A rizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1502. •fur Opinion St«t«PrC»» Page 5 Tuesday, October 30,1990 A n y ro o m in th e w om b? “W o m b fo r rent ” contracts n eed to b e ou tlaw ed Ellen Goodman W ashington Post W riters G roup B O ST O N — The court has declared that she is not his mother, though he grew in her womb, though he cam e into the world down her birth canal, though her breasts filled with milk for him. Anna Johnson is now officially, legally, unrelated to the boy she bore. A judge in California has ruled that Anna was just a prenatal “ foster parent” to Mark and Crispina Calvert’s fetus. She nurtured it, fed it, housed it — but it always belonged to them. The womb was m erely rented: When her work was done, the boy-product belonged to his genetic . owners. This is what it has come to, our technological “ advances” in reproduction. Dictionaries and precedents and nature are turned upside-down. Giving birth to a child is no longer proof that you are its mother. In baby steps, from Baby Louise to Baby M, from test-tube conceptions to surrogate mothers, we have arrived now at Baby Christopher Michael Calvert — created in a petri dish, implanted in a “ surrogate” and awarded to the people who contributed their D NA and RNA. I have followed this story ever since a pregnant Anna Johnson first claimed her womb-mate as her own. I have watched as the court tried to answer the question: Whose child is this? By and large, I side with the Calverts. They willed the existence of this baby. They conceived it. They chose Anna Johnson to be their surrogate. The single mother of a 3-yearold had made this deal. Johnson’s sense of abandonment by the Calverts and her growing attachment to the fetus and then the boy were tragic proof that human nature is more complex than a contract. But to have given her custody of the boy would have been akin to allowing zygote-napping, a theft of the Calverts’ genes. As for the effects of shared custody on the child, I also agree with the judge. As he said, “ I think a three-parent, twonatural mom claim in a situation is ripe for crazy-making.” But the questions that arise out of the business of surrogacy are themselves ripe for crazy-making. The case of the Calverts “ m iracle baby” has, if anything, strengthened the entire case against payment-for-pregnancy. This was not, after all, only a tale about the importance of commerce. Surrogacy for strangers is a business. However much is said a bout-altruism, well-to-do women are rarely moved to sell their bodies. The Calverts w ere not wealthy when Crispina met Anna as hospital workers. But they had $10,000 to offer and Johnson had what they wanted: A womb. With the exchange of money, the Calverts became the employer, Johnson became their worker, and baby production their enterprise. But society can ask whether such a private agreement should be allowed. We can ask whether pregnancy is just another service industry. Is the uterus a spare room Hunt 10 available to any boarder for a price? Is the child another product w e can buy? In two or three more baby-steps of change, I can imagine what some ethicists fear: A breeder class o f women for couples who can’t bear their own. Here at last is a job you can do in your spare time at home with little training. It is fair to ask about the moral limits of commerce. If we let a woman rent her uterus, then perhaps she can lease any subsidiary rights that might adversely affect that fetus. The right to eat what she wants, go where she wants, even to choose her own medical care. The judge said that Anna Johnson made a “ substantial contribution” to the existence of Christopher Michael. Anyone who has been pregnant could list that “ contribution” in varicose vein s,sleep less nights, the great lumbering takeover of one body by another. In the labor that is indeed labor. Those who say that women are free and intelligent enough to decide for themselves if they want to “ sell” this “ contribution” have little understanding of the economic constraints on freedom. This is why w e impose limits on our medical commerce. We cannot sell a kidney. We should not be able to sell a pregnancy. There is no way to stop a genuinely altruistic act of surrogate motherhood. But there is a w ay to end pregnancy as a com m ercial activity. Make payment illegal. Make the contracts illegal. Take surrogacy off the sale rack. Until w e do that, w e are guided by the laws of the marketplace. Let the buyer and the seller beware. Arabs aren’t treated like first class citizens in Israel Joseph Sobran Universal Press Syndicate W ASHINGTON — One of the reasons Israel’s Am erican Supporters advance for w ar with Iraq is the frightening possibility that Saddam Hussein may one day get nuclear weapons. There are those who don’t find it entirely reassuring that Israel itself has nuclear weapons right now. The ruling Likud coalition is led by Yitzhak Shamir, the current prim e minister who was a terrorist in the Stern Gang, back when he had only machine guns and grenades. The fact that he now has a nuclear ace in the hole, plus a U. S. Congress that will give him everything else his heart desires (m ost recently an additional $700 million in m ilitary aid), h e lp s e x p la in I s r a e l ’ s in c r e a s in g belligerence toward the rest o f the world, including the United States itself. C o n s id e r R a f a e l E it a n , I s r a e l ’ s agriculture minister. In the wake of a series of stabbings of Jews by Arabs in late O ctob er, he s a id : “ A n yon e w ho is employing Arabs from the (occupied) t e r r i t o r i e s is e m p lo y in g p o t e n t ia l murderers.” He went on: “ We should replace them with new Jewish immigrants. And whoever is caught in an attack like yesterday’s” — referring to the murders of th r e e J e w s b y on e k n ife - w ie ld in g Palestinian — “ w e should exp el his whole fam ily and destroy his home.” This is breathtaking in its open contempt for Arabs, for personal freedoms, fo r the very idea of justice. Yet R afael Eitan is no David Duke, a fringe candidate who might put his crackpot notions into practice if elected: He already holds high office in the Israeli government and he helps make policy. In fact the analogy is unfair to Duke, w h o d oe sn ’t even s u g g e s t doing to minorities what Eitan is urging be done to them. Speaking of the stabbings on Israeli radio a few days later, Eitan added: “ The answer to the immediate problem is that if someone is found with a knife or light weapon, then he should be im m ediately expelled to Lebanon, and his entire fam ily after him.” Another approach, he said, “ would be to shoot him in the head.” By “ someone,” Eitan means someone who isn’t Jewish. Jewish settlers who carry — and use — weapons in the occupied territories are dealt with very lightly. The notorious Rabbi Moshe Levenger drew a five-month prison sentence for killing an A ra b storekeeper with indiscrim inate gunfire (and is hailed by some as a hero). The veteran peace activist Abie Nathan got six months just for talking to P L O leaders. In July, Eitan threatened to prosecute Jews — for leasing state-owned land to Arabs. This was more than an act of personal bigotry on his part: He was invoking an old Israeli law, passed Shortly after the founding of the Jewish state in 1948, long before the Likud faction cam e to power in the 70’s. Such laws, effectively relegating non-Jews to second-class status, are basic to Israel’s structure. Eitan’s threat was quite public. It was reported in the Israeli press and in the international edition of the Jerusalem Post. But the Am erican media rarely report such items, and o f course, they are never mentioned by pro-Israel publications in this country. Eitan is no doubt am ong those who are eternally outraged by the U . N. resolution that pronounced Zionism “ a form of racism and racial discrimination.” But you need only imagine a country where Jews were assigned to inferior status, excluded from residence on most of the country’s territory and punished for the acts of their blood relatives, in order to understand how Zionism appears to those who are on the receiving end of E itan’s measures. Zionism, in its present form , is quite justifiable if you’re prepared to say that a guy named A b e who lives in Brooklyn has a better right to live in Jerusalem than a guy nam ed A h m ed who a lre a d y lives in Jerusalem. But even in that case it seems only fa ir to respect A hm ed’s feeling otherwise. Not that that stops the true Zionist from treating Ahm ed as a maniacal anti-Semite for feeling that way. The chilling thing about men like Eitan and Sh am ir — as opposed to, say, Jerusalem ’s mayor, Teddy Kollek — is that they refuse to concede that the A rabs of Israel even have a humanly understandable point of view. Their own sense o f grievance is lim itless and leaves no room for compromise of reciprocity. And they have the Bomb. Page 6 State Press Tuesday, October 30,1990 Cerem ony marks $6 m illion MU expansion By ANDREW FAUGHT State Press There w as an air of excitement Monday w hen the ribbo n w as cut, o fficially culminating 10 years of planning and coordination of the $6 million M U expansion. “ It was 1980 (when) we got the funding to start the building,” MU Director Floyd Land said. “ It’s exciting to see what we dreamed about actually happen.” Land praised everyone involved in the year-and-a-half long construction of the . facility. . ° “ We had meetings every Wednesday morning for the past 10 years,” the director said. “ We had our final meeting last Wednesday — that was very exciting for me. The crowd, which was mainly comprised of MU officials and employees, applauded the clim actic moment when Land cut the ribbon and proceeded to the new southeast entrance for a reception. The expansion, which has been open since Sept. 4, adds 43,000 square feet to the M U ’s existing 203,000 square feet, Trudy Thomas, director of the MU until 1983 and an a c tiv e m em ber in the conceptual planning for the multi-million dollar expansion, was on hand for the celebration; “ The MU has continued to expand and reflect the University’s needs,” she said. “ It’s all we imagined it could be.” Christine Wilkinson, ASU vice president for Student Affairs, recalled her days as a student when she served as a committee member on the M em orial Unión Activities Board. “ I always relate to students when I ’m in this building,” she said. “ It’s fabulous to have a place where students can come and interact not only with each other, but with faculty and staff outside o f the classroom.” She also lauded the addition o f more informal areas for people to meet and interact. Wilkinson was a student during the M U ’s first expansion in 1966, which added 94,000 square feet. “ T his fa c ility is a structure that represents a home aw ay from home for everyone,” she said. “ It’s a reflection of all of us.” Julie Claiborne, M U A B president, said students, clubs and organizations have benefited from h avin g a centralized structure on the third floor. ‘ ‘B e in g u p th e r e w it h a l l th o se organizations offers a m ore cohesive network in order to accomplish goals,” She said. Land said the expansion has been an immense success. “ The minute w e opened the doors it was busy,” he said. Groups to battle during food drive for AIDS patients By CHRISTINA SCHROEDER competition w ill be held Wednesday through Friday. Gregg Edgar, assistant to the ASASU executive vice president, said a three-day “ blitz” w ill take place on the M U ’s third floor. State Press A University canned food drive that w ill benefit AIDS patients throughout the East Valley has sparked a competition between three student organizations. ASU’s third annual “ Build a Wall Around AIDS” campaign, sponsored by Student Health Center and its health education department, began Oct. 15 and will continue through Wednesday. “ Students can bring their canned food donations up here and place them into the organization’s bin of their choice,” he said. “ We are structuring this as a way to increase friendly competition between offices. Whoever collects the most cans during the food drive w ill receive 10 points for the event.” “ All the food we collect will be donated to the Arizona AIDS Project,” said Danae Brownell, senior health educator at ASU Student Health. “ There are approximately 20 food bin sites on campus, and we have a goal of 200 cans.” Edgar added that at the end of the school year, the organizations will hold a celebration, and the office with the most points will get to relax while the other two offices prepare the event in their honor. You can charge your classified ad over the phone! 965-6731 S T A T E P R E S S C L A S S IF IE D S The Arizona AIDS P roject is a volunteer organization that assists the “ Patients With AID S” program financially, and practically with transportation and social services. In addition, it provides support groups and counseling for AIDS patients and their families and friends. When Associated Students of ASU, the M em orial Union Activities Board and REACH got word o f the canned food drive, they decided to get involved in the food stockpiling effort by challenging each other to a three-day competition to determine who could accumulate the most food. “ This is our first philanthropic event for the year, and w e want to get the various student organizations m ore involved in campus events,” said Thomas Neumann, chair of the M UAB Marketing Committee, adding that the friendly V IS A S T A T E P R E S S C L A S S IF IE D S Computer Systems Center Macintosh Plus Brandnew factoryfresh withone-year warrantees. i , gai INCLUDES: ✓ 800K Disk DrivB ✓ Im bof Memory ✓ Full Keyboard Macintosh pow er and ease o f use has never been this affordable before. It ^Multrinder runs 1000's o f Macintosh applications «^HyperCard and is compact enough fo r any desk. Software Û. 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Sat 10-5 am * J Ctasa _ aribarí. } PHOENIX IShStt Cameback 266-7873 Upgrade to color now to make all o f poor favarile programs look brighter and dearer. Got an aweeame deal an a Id bit VGA card nad a 14” color VGA monilar with a arrival i. HURRY! | I I [ TEMPE I SoutamI * McCMock I 83B-1236j State Press P a g e j^ Tuesday, October 30,1990 Halloween bed race to benefit United W ay By M ICHELLE ROBERTS State Press University students w ill be able to contribute to the ASU United W ay without getting out o f bed this Halloween. The Arizona State University United Way Campaign and Firebird International Raceway will co-host the second annual bed races at 4 p.m. Wednesday on Orange M all just east of Cady Mall in the center of campus. Anne Johnston, an ASU University Relations graduate assistant, said the race will consist of teams o f five — four bed pushers and one rider . The bed race’s course w ill resemble Firebird International R acew ay’s professional drags trip, complete with an electronic “ Chrismas T r e e ” starting system and a professional announcing staff that w ill introduce each team to spectators. “ So fa r there are 15 teams signed up,” Johnston said, adding that any last minute team entries can apply up until race tim e by contacting the University Relations department a t 965-4980. The $200 per team entry fee is a tax deductible contribution to the Valley o f the Sun United W ay Campaign. Organizations can solicit corporate sponsorships or use their own treasury to make the contribution, Johnston said. David Gourley, an ASU marketing professor and adviser of the University’s American Marketing Association, said the student group has helped with the bed races for the past two years. “ Students (in A M A ) have given numerous hours to the United Way in manpower as well as contributions,” he said. Gourley added that last year students participating in the bed race fundraiser helped raise $1,800 for ASU’s United Way. This year’s goal is $2,400. Johnston said the final-round winners w ill receive a team championship trophy. In addition, special prizes fo r the best team costumes and bed decorations will be awarded. The hospital beds w ere donated by St. Joseph’s Hospital in Phoenix. Get down to business. . Advertise in the State P ress Classifieds! Hayden’s Ferry Review A S U ’ s N a tio n a l L ite r a r y M a g a z in e M atth ew s Center, Basem ent JO IN THE MADNESS AS A SU HOMECOMING! .965 -1 243 A $5 OFF w ith th is c o u p o n (Participating S tylists Only) Regular Price Men $15 • Women $17 9 6 8 -5 9 4 6 7 0 9 S . F o re s t A v e . North of University Ave. M onday-Friday 9-9 Saturday 9-5 TONIGHT - 6:30 P.M. South side of A-Mountain just north of the University Towers. Candles will be provided. If that's what you think, you'll love our C o o l c u c u m b e r slices, s m o o t h c r e a m d r e e s e , n u tty s u n f lo w e r s e e d s , fr e s h sp ro u ts, rip e t o m a t o e s & o n io n s , all p ile d o n o u r fr e s h b a k e d MAROQ s o u r d o u g h . Y o u r c h o ic e o f w h e a t o r w h ite . TR Y IT , Y O U 'L L L O V E IT U and Southern S) ASSOCIATION Sheraton ASSOCIATED f>STUDENT £ lem p e Mission Palm s Hotel C o m e s e e S p a r k y a t t o m o r r o w ’s KICK-OFFCEREMONY West Lawn Tempe Hayden Library 10:30 a.m. 50* OFF Small Vegie Sandwich OR 75* OFF Regular Vegie Sandwich Expires 11-13-90 Not valid with any other offer. O ne coupon per customer. Page 8 Tuesday, October 30,1990 State Press G oddard to return Keating contribution PH O E N IX (A P ) — Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry Goddard said he will give $500 to the federal government in exchange for money given to his campaign by Charles H Keating Jr. in the mid-1980's, but his opponent said Goddard needs to do more. “ It’s a good first start,” GOP candidate F ife Symington said Monday of Goddard’s announcement that he will send $500 to the government to be used to bail out Lincoln Savings & Loan Association. “ But he (Goddard) should have his campaign manager go through his récords and investigate other contributions he’s received from Keating, fam ily members and other people affiliated with Keating,” Symington said. During a televised debate Sunday, Symington asked Goddard about his having accepted money from Phoenix- T A Goddard said he was an early critic of Keating’s practice of heavily contributing to political campaigns. St a t e P h e W E E K L Y Hi FROM EARLY TIL LATE « .C O F F E E * PLANTATION C orner o f 6th & M ill Y o u r p la ce to re la x Keating faces criminal fraud charges in California stemming from 'the collapse of Lincoln. Lincoln was a subsidiary of Keating’s Phoenix-based American Continental which, lik e , Lincoln, is under the control of the federal Resolution Trust Corp. During the pair’s last scheduled statewide television appearance, Goddard also pressed Symington to more fully disclose his financial dealings. Goddard questioned how Symington, a "developer, would handle conflicts of interest if any of the Symington Co.’s bankers did business with the state. He said Symington “ has not been forthright” in revealing his financial obligations and characterized him as a self-described “ multimillionaire.” Symington accused Goddard of trying to “ sm ear” him. “ W e’ve adhered to the letter of the law (on financial disclosure). In fact, w e’v e gone beyond the law,” he said. financier Keating during one of Goddard’s mayoral campaigns. Goddard reported the contribution in a May 1985 finance report filed with the City Clerk’s Office, Symington’s staff said. Goddard said after the debate he was not aware of the contribution, but said Monday that he would send $500 to the federal government, “ They w ere (fo r) tickets to a dinner, and that’s how it slipped through,” Goddard said of the Keating contribution. “ I think this campaign is coming down to an integrity issue,” Symington said. He added that Goddard’s questioning of his financial dealings in light of Keating’s contribution is “ political hypocrisy.” ress C O L L E G E M T O W N a g a z in e J O U R N A L S E R E N D IP IT Y A R T S & C R A F T S FA IR H a n d c r a fte d . A rtis a n P r o d u c e d J e w e l r y ... C e r a m i c s ... T o y s ... c U F F A S 1 A L A N C T L A B O U S E R G E T S A H A L S P A O A k 1 B L 1T S E N S CROSSW ORD by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 1 Mirror sights 7 Anatomy subject 11 African nation 12. Penn, port 13 Military salute 15 Desolate 16 Fossil fuel 18 Flock’s seats 21 Cherry bomb sound 22 Bucca­ neer 24 Rainbow shape 25 Sister 26 Earl Grey, e.g. 27 Nerve cell 29 Ballpark beverage 30 Links areas 31 Cat's sound 32 Miser Marner 34 Book by Alvin Toffler 40 Spoken 41 Sound system 42 Pub measure 43 Tavern DOWN 1 Little devil 2 Damage 3 Pub quaff 4 Constant yakker 5 Actor Tom 6 Math ratio 7 Lab vessel 8 Hockey’s Bobby 9 Poorly lit 10 Popular answer 14 Basketball score, of , sorts 16 Insertion indicator. 17 In a timely way 19 Dowser's find 20 Longhorn 21 Prohibit 22 Wit’s wordplay i .■ 5“ S F A N J E E R 1 R 1 T ■ £ A T ■ £ R A ■ A B o P E A f S z E E S A T H A D 1O S O N A H A X E E N C E D T O L E E R 1N R D A Y T A 1N T 1 D E R N O W Y 4 -- I I 34 Dandy 35 Swiss canton 36 Brownish shade 37 Gold, in Tijuana 38 Company VIP 39 Heyer­ dahl’s — Tiki è 1Ó 8 9 10 20 ’ 1Í .-1 f 14 i4 17 * U ■ 'i ■ 14 23 4 ¿4 .1 at ■ ■ 28 j ào ■ 1 34 ^ 3^ 38 39 4Ô I 42 ■ 19 * DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here’s how to work it: 10/30 AXYDLBAAXR JsLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for the three L ’s, X for the two O ’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. E ach day the code letters are different. CBYPTO Q UO TE 1 0 -3 0 U Y A KA A , F R W U C S A Q U W N O 2 C IX U Y A Y I O AS Y AC N O - W R X X AC , Q G G U Y A T NOU AC — W IR C J A RO M O IT O Yeotcrday'a Ciyptoqwote: FORTY IS THE OLD AGE OF YOUTH: FIFTY IS THE YOUTH OF OLD AGE. — VICTOR HUGO © 1990 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. M e m o r ia l U n io n W e s t L a w n A r i z o n a S ta te U n i v e r s i t y Yesterday’* Answer 23 Corn serving 25 Polite denial 28 Conse­ quence 29 Four pecks 31 Trattoria staple 33 Not as much O c to b e r 30 to N o v e m b e r 2, 1990 Sponsor* I f osr ariti Hostess Commicro 8 am to 4 p m T u es. T h r o u g h T h u rs . 8 a m t o 3 p m F r id a y State P ir a Tu«dw[ octob«ji0|j9 9 0 __________ Page 9 Chinese dissident to discuss personal ordeal B y JENNIFER FRANKLIN State Press A leader o f the Chinese democracy m ovem ent, who was expelled from China a fter the June 1989 bloodshed, w ill speak at ASU tonight about what he endured under the Communist regim e. Jun Chen, a 33-year-old dissident, will speak a t 7 p.m. in the M U Arizona Room. His appearance is sponsored by Chen the Associated Students of ASU Lecture Series. In a phone interview from his home in New York, Chen said it is important fo r students to study democracy and not to take it fo r granted. “ I would like (the students) to know what I have gone through and what has been happening in China for the last 10 years,” he said. “ W hat I w ill tell w ill be the story o f my years,” he said. “ What I w ill tell w ill be the story of my personal experience and the story o f what m y family, has been through.” Chen said one member o f his fam ily committed suicide during the stress of the cultural revolution and another was forced to endure 20 years in a labor camp. “ And I was kicked out for m y political activities and for speaking out,” he said. Chen said he was vocal during his activism in China. ‘ ‘What I said was pretty prevocative at thè time, ’ ’ he said, adding that he achieved world attention when he gained the support o f 17 Nobel P eace P rize winners in his effort to have a group o f political prisoners released. Chen was raised in China and earned his m aster ’s degree in philosophy from the Fudan University in Shanghai He has worked as the editor of a dissident Shanghai magazine, has taught politics at the Shanghai Architectural Engineering College, was a freelance journalist in the United States and managed two private bars in China. Chen said that since taking up residence in the United States, he has strived to promote the Chinese democracy movement among American organizations and is currently recruiting activists to bring about future changes in China. Chen said he has devised a “ T ” plan. “ The T plan is a project w e’ve been working on for a while now,” he said. “ We are organizing a team, for a solution of the temporary problem, and w e recognize that it is a transition period o f tim e.” Chen said that one day Chinese political activists w ill need to know how to deal with power. “ When you actually get power, you w ill be forced to face and solve problems,” he said. 1991 BSN STUDENTS. Chicagbhas the o u t s i d e o f W i n d y City. Coitio * Bob’s Bicycle Barn Halloween Specials Enti E n ter th e A ir F o rc e im m e d iately a fte r g r a d u a ­ tion — w ith o u t w a itin g fo r th e 1991 GT’s at 1990 prices re su lts o f y o u r State B o a rd s . Y o u can e a rn great ben e fits a s a n A ir $12 m ini-tune reg. $16 F o rc e n u rs e officer. A n d if se le c te d d u rin g y o u r s e n io r year, y o u m a y q u a lify fo r a five-m onth in tern sh ip WHh this ad, (expires i i-ï -su. ' BEST SERVICE GUARANTEED at a m a jo r A ir F o rc e m e d ic a l facili­ ty. T o apply, y o u ’ll n e e d an o v e ra ll New -Used-Buy-Sell-T rade Expert Repairs 2.50 GPA. G et a h e a d s tart in th e I O LD C H IC A G O M s 5® SSft.W. .Broadway A ir Fo rce. C all ARCHITECTURE BUILDING: CORNER OF UNIVERSITY/ FOREST N o rth e a s t c o rn e r of A p a c h e & T e rra ce 894-6852 J e m p e * 9 2 1 -9 4 3 1 S OCT. 30TH 7:30PM - AED 60 1212 East Apache, Suite 2 USAF H EALTH PROFESSIONS CO LLECT (602) 921-9582 T U D E N T R U S H 1/2 Price Balcony Tickets fo r ASU Students AUCTION/READINGS COME AND HELP THE ASU WRITING PROGRAM RAISE RE­ PLACEMENT FUNDS FOR THE NEA GRANT TH AT WAS RE­ FUSED ON THE GROUNDS OF CENSORSHIP. GREAT BARGAINS! ORIGINAL ENTERTAINMENT! ASU WRITING PROGRAM WOULD LIKE TO THANK THESE OTHER BUSINESSES FOR THEIR SUPPPORT: L- KINKO’S CHIEF DODGE ANTIQUARIAN BOOKSTORE CHANGING HANDS BOOKSTO BOOKS ETC. COLLEGE STREET DELI TOWER RECORDS NEW TIMES SALON MODA FINA HAIR KUTTERS GROOMING HUMANS HAIR PERFORMERS CARSTEN'S CHUYS HARKIN S THEATERS m A SU CREATIVE WRITING PROGRAM G A M M A G E A U D IT O R IU M Opening and H allow een Nights only O ctober 30 & 31, 8 p.m. GAMMAGE Student Rush tickets will go on sale at 10 a.m. the day of each discounted show at the Gammage Box Office only. Call 965-3434 fo r m ore Information ARIZONA S T A f E UN IVER SITY N State Press Tuesday, October 30,1990 Page 10 Police Report ASU police reported the following incidents Monday: •A man was observed on the Karsten Golf Course putting range after closing hours. He told police that he was practicing. The man was warned about trespassing and told to leave the area. •A man not affiliated with ASU was sleeping on the South side of Campus Inn, near the Parking Services building. He was warned about trespassing and told to leave. •A black Cannondale bicycle, valued at $75, was stolen from the bicycle racks west of H ayd en L ib r a r y , w h ere it was le ft unattended and unsecured. •A red Spectrum bicycle was stolen from Cholla apartments. Tem pe p olice reported the follow ing incidents Monday: •A 40-year-old woman was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct at E dcel’s Attic, 414 S. M ill Ave., after she allegedly threw approximately 20 small blocks from the balcony onto people on the sidewalk. An officer said he saw her throw a block while shouting and singing, “ Somebody buy me a drink.” Th ere w ere approximately 50 spectators gathered beneath the balcony. The woman allegedly tried to avoid arrest by kicking the officer and attempting to flee. •A 30-year-old ASU student was assaulted early Friday by an unknown white m ale who grabbed her arm, threatened her with a small knife and said he was going to stab her ^ with it. He then left the area in an unknown direction. Police have no suspects or witnesses. •A 22-year-old ASU student was arrested and charged with first degree hindering prosecution after he was contacted by an officer in Connection with a hit-and-run accident involving injuries. The student was a passenger in the suspect’s vehicle, and he told an officer that he did not know the suspect. Another passenger then told the officer that the student and the suspect w ere roommates. The student then admitted that he knew the suspect’s name, but he refused to give the suspect’s home address. •A 27-year-old ASU student was arrested and charged with drunken driving after he nearly collided head-on with a patrol car. He struck a raised median with his vehicle before the officer could stop him. •Several items w ere stolen from an ASU em ployee’s home in the 1100 block of West 12th Place. Tw o suspects entered the house by shattering a kitchen door window. Estimated loss is $1,100. •A UofA student was arrested and charged with criminal damage in the 1300 block of West Broadway Road after he allegedly threw a rock through an apartment window because he had been told to leave a party. Estimated damage is $25. Com piled by State Press re p o rte r Teena Chadwell. O L I D C la s s if ie d A d v e r t is in g W e w ork to help you find work. A I R F A R E Don’t wait for fares to go up any higher! Book your trip home - or anyplace else you want to go - for the holidays now. Seat assignments are available and you get JfineeParking at ATT Shy Haitoor Parking. Certain rules and restrictions appty. &£py Balfour College Ring? A irfares from Phoenix roundtrip to A m erican Airlines* d tie s: * Austin . . . . . . . . . ; Baltimore... Boston .......... Cedar Rapids .. Chicago . . . . . . . . . Dallas . . . . . . . . . Daytona Beach ... Des Moines. . . . . . Ft Lauderdale. . . . Kansas City..... 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Payment must accompany reservation and can be made by cash, check or credit card. Limited number of tickets available at these greatly reduced rates. Flares subject to change at anytime. OFF! -------- A Y D E E P D IS C O U N T S O N F A R E S TO O V E R lO O D E S T IN A T IO N S . CALL FOR Y O U R LOW EST FARE TODAY! S la t e P r e s s Æ ? H P a r e n t H o t L in e TWOAll) LOCATIONS *25 B. APACHE 9*7-5449 *29 8. COLLEGE 929-1129 1 -8 0 0 -5 2 8 -0 2 9 0 Open TAM to 7PM M-F Deposit required AD lares subject to availability. Limited num ber o f seats available AD sales final Certain restrictions apply. AmericanAirlines S tt» Pues» Page 11 Tuesday, October 30,1990 Bush_____________ S&L________ Continued front page 3. Continued from page 3. now on the campaign trail laying it to rest,” Bush said. “ I ’ve got to get that in focus because they’ve been getting away with this tax the rich, class w arfare kind of garbage that they always resurrect at election tim e.” Am id sharp Republican divisions on taxes and the budget, Bush’s popularity has dropped below 50 percent in the polls, the lowest of his presidency. “ These polls don’t mean anything to m e,” Bush said. “ The Am erican people are fair,” he added. “ They know I ’m against taxes.” In the budget negotiations, Bush resisted increasing the tax load on the rich but in the end finally agreed to raise the tax rate on the highest income brackets to 31 percent, from 28 percent now. —authorizes court-approved wiretapping of S&L officials suspected of wrongdoing —expands the list o f crimes under which ill-gotten gains would be subject to civil forfeiture. Urgenson said it was too early to tell whether the bounty provisions would produce many useful tip6 fen* prosecutors. But Urgenson said he expected word would travel quickly through the legal community o f provisions allowing lawyers to earn contingent fees based on a percentage o f stolen S&L assets they recover for the government. Some day you may write a book about your college days... your Sun Devil Spark Yearbook will make a great reference book! O rd er yours today 1 965-6881 Matthews Center Basement r C A M C l o r P U S - i n e r j 712 S . C o l l e g e PHOTO! DOUBLE PRINTS J $4991 EVERY DAY 24 Exp. Color Prints 1300 N. McClintock Tempe, AZ 966-9810 HALLOWEEN BOSH Charisma Recording Artists < D 3 [ß S ANNIHILATOR REALM REVEREND Z (David Wayne from O ¡¿j Metal Church) -1 6-9 p.m. — All Ages Doors open at 6 p.m. Over $1500 in cash & prizes > o < 5 1st P R IZ E : 3 2 o z M onster S p e c ia ls K Q Concert Package for 1year $100 cash & $ 5 0 cash & P r iz e s fro m B a re C o ve r P r iz e s fro m B a re C o ve r L.S.D. MIZERY 1C DRINKS Including: 32 oz Beer 32 oz Long Island Tea 32oz Maui Wowie Punch Rit u a l $2 Monster W 2 Pitchers (60 oz.) ^ ^ 99c Drafts, Shots ^ > Frozen Margs Q 3 H 3 > o UNDERTOW with Zig Zag Black 99c Drafts, Shots $2 Longnecks U- _i Doors open at 7pm LADIES NIGHT >- h< J Q 2 c ^ uj < a CO j Live on the Patio 7~llpm (2 2 430 N. Scottsdale Rd. ■Tempe 894-0533 m ~ g 0 DJ Randall spinning the best in Alternative & Progressive Dance Music LADIES: No Cover till 11 p.m. 51 Drinks All Night GUYS: S1 Shots $4 Monster Pitchers (60 oz.) VIP Passes given away ALL NIGHT 11/7 Scratch-N-Sniff 11/8 Bar None Recording Artist Miracle Room with The Rise & August Red V 11/9 Dead Hot Workshop 11/11 Metal Blade Recording Artist Lizzy Borden 11/15 August Red Page 12 State Press Tuesò«^October3^1990^ I T 'S T H E R IG H T T H IN G T O D O ! h ATTIK F.COOR D e a r Friends and C o lleagu es. „„„ortu nity. O n that d a y , 6 each o f us is presented with 30 O n N o v e m b e r 6, each decide w hether our state w ill jo i w e w ill g o to the p o j r . state holidays. established M artin Luth er K m g , • (AnMn, s W h e n 1 accepted the p r^ id e m ;y o l ^ n z o n a •• ^ 47 others w h ich h ave , ^ n o r t a n c e to A S U and to the state « administration on fo u r p illar . . excellen ce in teaching, : ,m _ T h ese fo u r themes s iv e s ,ls m a 8 " ' f,c e n t ,he foun dation o ft h is h d m W a r a t t o n . o p ie o f A rizo n a. they are a p led ge o • , uthe r K i n g Jr. has co m e to sy m b olize the w here all m em bers o f the u m v e finest potential. , in reco gn izin g the K in g h oliday and all it sym bolizes. Please jo S in cerely, Latrie F . C o o r PROPOSITION 302 IS ENDORSED BY: ASU FACULTY SENATE ASU ALUMNI ASSOCIATION ASU W EST FACULTY FORUM ASU FACULTY WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY VOTE YES PROPOSITION 302 ESTABLISH A MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR . / CIVIL RIGHTS DAY AS A PAID STATE LEG A L HOLIDAY PAID FOR BY THE ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION State P m a Page 13 Tuesday, October 30,1990 TU ESD AYS 1/3 lb. Charbroiled BURGER |*3 FR IES & DRAFT Soft Drink or Tea Enjoy Sports on our 2 Satellites and i t Screens Woodshed I Woodshed II Baseline & Mill Dobson & University 831-WOOD 844-SHED T O N Y ’S N E W YO R K ER RESTAURANT and N IG H T C L U B Serving Tempe Since 1977- «ir Students Continued from page 1. . Council of Presidents recommendations to the regents’ committee. According to the COP, last year, unmet student need increased an average of 1.9 percent for Arizona universities, and ASU’s unmet need for undergraduate residents jumped from $470 to $592. “ Tuition numbers I ’m not so concerned about,” said Associated Students of ASU President Matt Ortega. “ Financial aid I am. I think (the regents) are beginning to revisit financial aid, think about it some more and create a better package for the final board decision.” Arizona Students Association Executive Director Larry L ’Heureux said he w ill not be satisfied until additional need created by the proposed increase is matched “ dollar for dollar” with financial aid. L ’Heureux said he was disappointed by the number of régents who attended the hearing. “ Over half the board didn’t hear testimony today and that’s a shame,” he said. “ I don’t think the personal stories get expressed in too many reports. Since every regent casts a vote, I ’d like to see every regent hear testimony.” Still, L ’Heureux called the hearing successful and said he thinks the decision makers w ill reconsider the proposed financial aid package. “ I would not chastise the regents. They are ve ry much pro­ education,” he said. However, ASASU Fine Arts Sen. Michelle Petrulis said she believed the regents w ere still apathetic to students. “ I think that it is perfectly disgusting that half of them got up and le ft at a quarter to four,” she said. “ They invited the students, and they weren’t even paying attention.” . Despite her disappointment, Petrulis said she was pleased with the diversity of students represented. “ Almost all the financial aid hardships that could possibly occur have been covered,” she said. Meanwhile, other students expressed their frustrations as they told the Resources Committee of their struggles in juggling work, home responsibilities and school. M aricella Orazco, a freshman philosophy m ajor from NAU, read the regents a poem she wrote that potrayed students “ Walking the E dge” o f educational defeat, “ I w ill become a part of the darkness/’ she said. “ Who will be my savior?” U ofA religious studies senior Adam Roig said he has to work 80 hours a week to accommodate educational costs. “ You’re increasing our tuition,” he said. “ As a result, you’re also increasing our need.” International students m ade their Case as well, criticizing w hat they claimed w as an underfunded tuition w aiver program for foreigners. Arun Pandy, a 19-year-old ele c tric a l engineering sophomore from Nepal, asked the regents to consider foreign students when looking at financial aid. “ I left m y parents and my fam ily to come here, " h e said, “ When w e come here, w e come with a big hope. “ Think about us. W e like Am erica and w e want an education.” The Finest Pizza and Italian Food in the Valley New Times Best o f Phoenix 1989 Best Inexpensive Ita lia n Restaurant T R Y O U R W E E K L Y S P E C IA L S Includes salad & garlic bread • In dining room only MON NIGHT SPECIAL WED NIGHT SPECIAL A ll Y o u Can E a t . . Stromboile $4.95 ACADEMIC SOLUTIONS Spaghetti $4.95 TUE NIGHT SPECIAL THUR NIGHT SPECIAL A ll Y o u -C a n Eat Tour o f Italy $6.9I5 B rin gin g New Freedom of Lasagna $5.95 Featuring in O u r Lounge: M on: T oe: O p e n M ic N ig h t with L o ra & Matt Showcase your musical or comical talents tonight! Thu: O p e n M in d Jam Hosted by Y o u n g & Slim W ed: K n e e V o lle y b a ll It’s fun. Free giveaways Cash prizes.. Join us! Expression to the College Faculty | T h e IB M Advanced Academ ic System c a n free j you to do what you do best: impart knowledge B uilt-in tutorials and faculty-written exam ­ ! to your students. G ra te fu l D ea d N ig h t with N o H o b o B an d ples free you from a long learning process. I lie IH M F r i & S a t : H o o D o o K in g s & The Roach Motel S u n : Hans O ls o n Solo Easily recognizable icons eliminate the need \ d \ a n c e d \ c a d e m k * S v s te m to type commands. You simply point your mouse to select and move through programs. You can compose and design your ow n lectures T h e Advanced Academ ic System is avail­ and course materials— even add animation to N igh tclu b In fo 829-9584 Tempe’s Home for the Blues stimulate interest and understanding. Y>u able w ith three m odels o f the IB M Personal can create imaginative literature for class or System/2®: M odel 70 (121), M odel 55 S X (061) and the 994 H appy H our — 7 Days a W eek 15< N ew Y ork er W ings A ll Night 9 6 7 -3 0 7 3 Ip? E. Broadway. Tempe 100 yardsfeast o f Mill Avenue portable M odel P70 (121). 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OR! • A college degree in any field and one o f the following: • 2.95 overall grade point average (GPA). - i • 3.5 (>PA in major field o f study. • Standing in the upper 'A o f class or major subdivision. • Membership in scholastic honor ■ society. » One year o f graduate study. D Call Our Recruiting Dept, at 602-640-5700. —To* Cm* Mmke the Difference!— model features a mouse, high-speed processing, huge memory high-capacity storage. administrative needs with the system’s graphics and desktop publishing capabilities. You can W e have listened to the needs o f college - faculty and the result is a personal computer create an interactive environment w ith the solution that is focused on the tasks o f higher system’s Classroom Presentation Option. B y education. It m eans new freedom to express m eans o f student response keypads, your class your ideas more clearly, m ore forcefully and can react to questions or discussion points projected on a screen. From research to classroom lectures, from more effectively. For information, visit your cam pus location o r call 1 8 0 0 525-4738 for a brochure. grading papers to a d ­ ministrative and tasks, the system can help you be more pro ductive and creative. See a demonstration at COMPASS in M oeur 108, or call 224-2763 fo r an appointment ®IBM, Personal System/2 and PS/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. Microsoft is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation- ’“W indows is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation. ToolBook is a trademark of Asymetrix Corporation This offer is available only to qualified institutions and their faculty, staff and students who purchase IBM PS /2 s through participating cam pus locations. Orders are subject to availability. IBM may Withdraw this offer at any time without notice. ©IBM Corporation 1990 Page 14 Tuesday, October 30,1990 T h e St a t e P ress M a g a z in e State Pré» SPSS for the Macintosh Academics can now have SPSS mainframe capabilities on the M ad And at a price less than our already low academic p rice... 71 2 S . C O L L E G E A V E — N E X T T O C O L L E G E S T R E E T D ELI M -F 7:30 a m -10 p.m S at 9 a m .-10 p.m . S u n 11 a m .-10 p m. P h o n e : 967 -4 04 9 A sa n u n d e rg ra d u a te stu d e n t,g ra d u a te S P SS fo r the M a c in to s h fea tu res '"Mac- student, o r faculty m e m b e r, y o u k n o w Like" Pull-Dawn Menus, p r o v id in g all the m a n y ap plication s a n d features th e a d v a n ta g e s o fu n d e rs ta n d a b le a n d S P S S ® o ffers w it h y o u r institution's easy-to-use com m ands. m a in fra m e system . 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U N E X P L A IN E D P H E N O M E N A OPEN HOUSE COME TO THE MU PROGRAMMING LOUNGE FOR A TRIP INTO THE UN KNOW N... 9:40-12:30 Watch interesting videos on metaphysics & (Dream interpretation, astrology, crytals, 1:30-3:30 channeling, etc.) A D U L T R E -E N T R Y C E N T E R W O M E N ’S S T U D E N T C E N T E R C H IL D -C A R E R E S O U R C E S 10.30-12.30 “ 1:30-3:30 October 30, 1990, 2-4 p.m. Refreshments Served 1 ?-a n 1*^0 Consult our fortune teller and discover your fortune for only $.50! r See Arizona's best hypnotist perform a live show...FREE! Lower Level Memorial Union W E DARE YOU TO SPEND HALLOWEEN W IT H US OCTOBER 31st Statt Press Page 15 Tuesday, October 30,1990 Tuition ACCIDENT LAWYERS Continued from page 1. BAKER & MARCUS FREE CONSULTATION ★ A S K ABO UT REDUCED PERCENTAGE FEES FOR ASU STUDENTS AND FACULTY Telephone Inquiries Welcome á ^ A . 1I M 9 1I mm 9 Corporate Fountains • 4625 S. Wendler Dr., Suite 111 « Tempe S O M E T H I N G ’S B R E W IN G at the MU NEW COFFEE HOUSE This Week's Featured Musicians -Art Kershaw-Jim SimpsonSouthwest Folk Music Association October 30, 1990 7:30-10:00 p.m. Bring your instrum ents and jam with the m usicians following the performance THESOUTHPOLE reicunôÿ r rexes Yc*u*t Sort CnnJcS . 7 3 Ï CO” : '•acunar Courtret Coffee after fam ily contributions and financial aid. T h e A riz o n a Students A s s o c ia tio n proposed a dollar for dollar match so the unmet need — now at $15 million — does not continue to inflate. Odus E llio t, the regen ts’ associate d ir e c to r fo r a ca d e m ic a ffa ir s , said remaining need figures m ay not be valid statistics. He added that “ remaining need” uses students who are actually enrolled. “ Students were able to m eet their needs somehow,” he said. But State Relations Director Rob Miller, an ASA delegate, said the COP is not taking into account the human factor. “ You have students working 35 hours, going to school full tim e and eating Alpo,” he said. “ And you’re saying their need has been m et?” Later, he reiterated his message to the committee. “ Yes, they do (m eet unmet need),” M iller told the regents. “ But the w ay they do it m ay be diminishing (students’ ) education.” AlSU President Lattie Coor said that while he re c o g n ize d stu den ts’ p ligh ts, he supported the COP recommendation. H e n o te d t h a t th e in c r e a s e , i f implemented, would raise financial aid by 30 percent — and would include non­ residents. Regent Andy Hurwitz said the financial aid issue was still troubling him, adding that he ■: was extrem ely sympathetic to the students. But the $1.6 million needed to meet the stu d en ts’ dem ands w as not re a d ily available, he said. “ I ’d love to find a way to help them,” Hurwitz said after the meeting. “ I ’d love to raise the financial aid by 60 percent. But someone is going to have to tell m e where the money w ill come from ,” During the meeting, students asked the same question. Shahzad Khan, 21, is an international student attending U of A who said he hopes to earn an electrical engineering degree. “ In all of your data, I have not seen anything for international students,” Khan told the regents. International students are here on student visas that allow them to stay in the country as long as they are enrolled as full-time students and are making progress toward their degrees. But they restrict them from working, except for a maximum o f 20 hours a week on campus. Khan’s girlfriend* also an international student, had to sell her jew elry to handle last y e a r’s $1,000 non-resident tuition increase. “ Please take us into account,” Khan said. “ We want higher education, too.” Khan said this is an education his parents m ay not be able to fund. “ M y parents now have to come up with $450 m ore,” he said. “ I don’t know if they can do it.” Associated Students of N A U President Sue Sisley said she feared the recent tuition and financial aid trends m ay be pricing u n derp rivileged and underrepresented students out of the Arizona university system. “ The less fortunate ethnicities w ill be gradually eased out of the system,” she said. “ Cultural diversity is becoming more and m ore something we read about and less and less something w e experience. “ And w e w ill all suffer for it.” By thé end o f the hearing, 36 students, many who w ere out-of-state or international students, had sounded o ff about financial aid, cultural diversity and tuition. Many related their personal experiences to the board, telling the regents they have had to skip eating once or twice a weèk so they could afford to go to college. Others said they would not return to school if tuition was raised. . Fresò Baked Good* MU Programming Lounge Lower Level MU mm, Memorial UnionActivities Scapo j "tzirz c s u C firis Q m m d iti M .U RECREATION cente: C h a n g in g H and s BOOKSTORE Browse through ou r 3 flo o rs o f; • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • •Books on Cassette • M OONÜ B O W LIN Sell or Trade your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% o f our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. _________ ■ ,' (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M-F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 M ill Avenue • Tempe • 966-0203 n u p te 1 -H O U R W ED. O CT. 31 FO TO , O n Halloween Night from 8:00 to 11:00 p.m., bowl in the eerie moonlight!!! Only the pjn and concourse lights illum inate the center, while colored pins pop up in the head pin spot, giving you a chance to win free games, The cost is only 75*/line & 50*/shoes. £¡£ *ASU M EM ORIAL UNION* L,°^ I,R LEVEL D e s k p e rs o n n e l m u s t b e n o tifie d o f c o lo r e d p in s . 12 GXP. Fo rm ort Information: Please contact: Memorisi Union Recreation Center at 965-8642 MEMORIAL UNION Arizona Stata University I SINGLE |M IIPRINTS mm ■ 15 GXP. 24 GXP. 36 GXP. C A I EXTRA SETS AM 1 99 ¿99 j g * PER PRINT i--...'. .1- I Th is photofinishing coupon m ust accom pany order. 110,126,35m m o r D isc co lo r print film (c-41). R o lls aré pro cessed a s so on a s volum e perm its. Not good with any other coupon/ offer/ discount. N o reproductions. 17391 1739 E. Broadway.........967-7590 TheÇ Th# CornerstoneMal l . .968-0027 , Othsr Locations 3228 S. Mil.........966-6636 930 W- Broadway. . . 96841593 COUPONS GOOD THROUGH 12-31-90 Any Full rt roll at timo of proesasing. Coupon must accompanyordor. I I ■EXPIRES 12/31/90 1/90 5110 S. Rural.........839-6634 6834 ■ 1840E Warner... .820-:igni V Comics Page 16 State Press Tuesday, October 30,1990 by B ill Watterson the far side Calvin and Hobbes OPEN WIDE .,, OPEN WDE, ..THAT'S GOOD... _ NON TUVS MIGHT CNJSE SOME SUGHI WSTOMFORT, ...HOLO REM SULL... RRGGHH/ MMF/ RRG/ STOP THRASHING ! „ I’VE ALMOST GOT \r... ALMOST.; MMC' TUTBF f Doonesbury m c ,T M AFRAIPÏLL m vm.MRs. HAVETO DISAPPOINT P ! RM S SURE RIANT YOUBACK THEM,PEAR... INOFFICE! A 1 SORRY you MISSED THE By G A R Y L A R S O N BC«. \TS A GOOD THING TÖO HAO TWS REMOVED.' JUST LOOK AT AUf— ------ THESE BAO SPOTS by G arry Trudeau SOMEONEHAD 10ACCEPTPESPOK SIBIUTY FOR OUR BANKINGMESS. 1 RESIGNED OVER PRINCIPLE ■ IF I UNRESIGN, IVHAT POES THAT SAYABOUT THE FLIP! I STRONGLYFEBL. PU P! I MEAN, FLOP! P IP I SAY FUP* I MEANT FLOP! PIPlTTIP ^ ____ ITS OKAY, SIR, ITS OVER. ITS ALL-OVER. 1 “My God! It is Professor Dickie!. . . Weinberg, see if you can make out what the devil he was working on, and the rest of you get back to your stations.” by Julie Sigwart Rainey Days YyW KNOW V f t h e long 1 t h a t c u t e ] . BIONDE [ N O - 1CAN'T. ] ifl\ UMFZ... O H -L E T 'S SAY l B L O N D E I1/ a l r e a d y h a v e I I WAVE A HOT \y0UVE BEEA/J! And th e ... I A DATE! D A T E FOR J 1DROOLING S L THE... BACK A T KYLE'S FRATERNIT'!-. WHAT'S WITH YOU? ■ ■ -i . B u r r r '5 t h e K E f b l i n d EXTRAVAGANZA! W E PIC K YOUR DATE/ d ate ■ANYWAY, SHE SAID you! likes THE GUYS THE 8DÊ PARTY.' 'OVER FOR M ONTHS? TOLO YOU „ 1 <7ABOUT K R IS TI? K R ISTI? SHE'S Y6ÙR I PATE I ! REALLY?/ r. A HEWCOMIC m A\ankm d owes to the child the bestit has to give.” W H EATO N, Md. (A P ) — A popular playground was closed because o f feisty Squirrels hunting acorns for the winter. Tw o children w ere bitten and a man bludgeoned one of the animals to death because it was annoying. „ Visitors to the popular park w ere greeted Saturday with the discomforting yellow tape used at crim e scenes and a sign that read’: “ Playground closed due to over-aggressive squirrels.” O verseers o f M ontgom ery County’s Wheaton Regional Park said two children were bitten at the playground by gray squirrels in the last two weeks. On Thursday, a man beat a squirrel to death with a stick because it was aggressive. “ The squirrels are just acting squirrelly now ," said park maintenance worker Kathy Lowe. “ They are so busy burying acorns they are aggravated at the people.” The rest of the sprawling park, just outside the Capital Beltway, remained open. P ark officials did not know when the playground w ill reopen. A bumper crop of acorns over the past two years has attracted an abundance o f gray squirrels. They are gathering food for the winter with particular fervor, Low e said. 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(Bring in this coupon iM c ilt e g e lP ); | 1041 E. Lemon mm (Financing Available) Gall Now!’ 957-3770 WS4 iMuicm) State Prest Page 17 Tuesday, O ctober 30,1990 OSU fans’ high hopes return to Earth at 1-7 By DAN ZEIGER State Press If Johnny Carson ever felt compelled to poke fun at Oregon State during one of his “ Carnac the Magnificent” skits, the King of the Night would probably compose a script that goes something like this: Answer: A sunny day, a w inning N F L lo tte ry tick et and a four-w in season at OSU. Question: N am e three things that would m ake a C orva llis resident dance in the streets. .Alas, the Beaver faithful will never be confused with the rough and demanding fans at Alabama or Ohio State. In fact, at an OSU basketball gam e last January, football coach D ave Kragthorjpe, who led the Beavers to a 4-7-1 mark in 1989 and who was named the Pac-10 Coach of the Year, received a standing ovation after it was announced that he would stay at Corvallis instead of bolting to Utah. “ I think there is a lot of hope among our fans,” Kragthorpe said. “ Our program has been down for so long and obviously the fans are scrambling for any hope. As fa r as that goes, I couldn’t very well discourage that because I ’d be less than optimistic if I did that.” As funny as it may sound, to fully appreciate four happy Saturdays in Beaver country, one would have to look back at the stories of OSU’s not-so-pleasant past. The Beavers have not posted a winning record since going 6-5 in 1970, last appeared in a bowl gam e when Lyndon Johnson was in the White House and compiled an anemic 22-85-3 mark in the 1980’s. So when OSU elevates to sixth in the conference standings, as it did last year, optimism can tend to run a little rampant. But so far this season, it has yet to be justified. The B eavers, who v is it ASU (2-5) Saturday at 7 p.m. in Sun D evil Stadium, are 1-7 and have been labeled as a schizophrenic team. OSU has played well at times (d e fe a tin g U o fA , 35-21, and leading Nebraska at halftime, 7-3) and looked completely unnerving (losing to Kansas, U N L V and I-AA Montana) at others. “ When you’re in a situation that w e’ve been in at Oregon State for so many years, you’ve got to keep thinking progress,” Kragthorpe said. “ I felt the last two years here w ere seasons of progress and it certainly hurts to take a step backward.” Despite OSU’s struggles so far this season, defensive tackle Esera Tuaolo continues to win respect. Tuaolo is a finalist for both the Lombardi and Outland Trophy awards and was the Pac-10 Defensive Lineman of the Y e a r in 1989. “ Esera is the best player at his position I ’ve ever coached,” Kragthorpe said. “ It’s just amazing that one guy can make that much difference, especially playing on the line of scrimmage. You’d think that a linebacker or somebody else would have m ore influence than a down lineman.” Tuaolo missed the first three games of this season after suffering a ligament knee sprain in the B eavers’ final preseason practice. In the five games he has played, Tuaolo has recorded 26 tackles and two sacks. Offensively, OSU has depended on the run in the last three games after sticking to the pass at the start of the year. The Beavers have counted largely on fullback James Jones and tailbacks Dwayne Owens and R eggie Pitchford, who have combined for 857 yards this year. “ W e’re just trying to utilize our personnel as best we can,” Kragthorpe said. “ W e’d like to have a balanced attack, always have. In the past, it was easier and more profitable to pass as much as w e did. What w e’d like to have now is get the passing gam e to where it was and the running game where it is.” The Beavers’ passing ineffectiveness in the last three games has dropped them to ninth in the Pac-10 at 143.6 yards per game. Matt Booher, who is eighth on OSU’s alltime passing list and has thrown for 568 yards this year, has had injury problems but is expected to start Saturday if he is healthy. When Booher suffered a sprained left thumb and broken foot, redshirt freshman Oregon State University photo Oregon State nose tackle Esera Tuaolo is a Lombardi Award nominee as well a s being rated as the nation’s No. 4 nose tackle by The Sporting News. Fred Schweer took over and lad the Beavers in an Oct. 13 gam e against U ofA. The result was a 167-yard effort which guided OSU to victory. Kragthorpe said a healthy Booher is OSU’s No. 1 quarterback, but was unsure whether he would be ready to play. “ I ’m not sure (w h o w ill s t a r t ),” Kragthorpe said. “ I ’m not being evasive, it’s just a matter of health. W e haven’t made a definite quarterback change, but I ’ve been asked that by the media on a daily basis. I don’t know why it’s such a big deal. W e’ll play the one that’s healthy.” No matter who starts Saturday, one of the Beavers’ prim e targets w ill be wideout Maurice Wilson, who has caught 32 passes for 333 yards and was one of the nation’s prem ier freshmen last year. ASU ’s to p m en ’s ten n is guns snu bbed fo r V o lv o By DARREN URBAN State Press and Lom icky should have received spots.” Lom icky w ill instead participate in the qualifying tournament, along with junior Chris Gambino. Gyetko said he will pass because he can not afford to miss classes. The biggest men’s tennis tournament of the fall begins today, and ASU’s best w ere not invited. “ It used to be the returning All-Americans (go t automatic bids),” Gyetko said. “ Last season, I finally made AllAm ercian and one of the things I thought it would do is get me into this tournament. But a couple of years ago they changed it to top 20.” _ Seniors D ave Lomicky and Brian Gyetko, ranked 25th and 27th in the na­ tion respectively, were not extended automatic bids for the Volvo All-Am eri­ can tournament in Athens, Ga., which runs through Sunday. “ The coaches’ association pushes for more regional representation,” Coach Lou Belken said. “ With the West region L o m ic k y being the best in the country, w e’re going to have guys squeezed out. There’s no question Gyetko “ The top 20 get in, plus two wild cards and eight at-large, along with the four qualifiers,” Belken said. “ Of the eight regions, they want two representatives from each.” Lom icky said he is not affected by not getting the spot. “ That’s the w ay it is,” he said. “ It’s the only fair way. It’s OK. I want to win each match . . . If I get to the main draw, I ’ll have some matches under m y belt.” Gyetko w ill team with Lom icky, seeded sixth in the doubles’ tourney. The duo are also the sixth-ranked pair in the nation and are playing together fo r the first time since the NCAA Championship. “ W e’ve played a couple of sets in practice,” Gyetko said. “ Last tournament, I played with (D an) Marting. It ’s hard to, in college, m ix partners all the tim e.” “ W e should have a great chance to win as long as we stay composed,” Lom icky said. Gyetko said that although he is skipping the singles’ qualifier, he tries to separate tennis and school. “ Leaving in the middle o f the week can make things difficult,” Gyetko said. “ Mentally and emotionally you try to keep a balance. But you forget about those things on the court, and during school, you forget about tennis while you’re in the classroom.” D evils’ fall baseball season concludes w ith sw eep ofB Y U By DARREN URBAN State Press The ASU baseball team, with the help of wild B Y U pitching, scored eight runs in the Sixth inning Saturday, icing a 13-3 win to complete a weekend sweep of the Cougars and wind up the fall season at 9-1. “ We were fairly pleased (Saturday),” ASU coach Jim Brock said. “ (Sean) Rees pitched well and w e seemed to have a pretty good zone most of the day.” Rees, a junior, pitched a complete gam e in earning the win, giving up three runs and fiv e hits while striking out seven. In the sixth, Sun D evil left fielder Brian Smith led o ff with a walk and catcher Clarke Rea doubled to right. A fter a walk to third baseman Ryan Anderson, shortstop Kurt Ehmann singled in two runs for a 7-3 lead. B Y U pitchers lost the strike zone, walking or hitting five of the next six batters, and Rea closed out the scoring with a two-run single. Ehmann, a junior college transfer, led the offense, going 3-for-5 with a home run and four RBI. Rea added his 2-for-2 with four RBI. Despite defensive lapses early in the fall, Ehmann said he is more comfortable with some experience. “ I ’v e had a couple of bad days,” Ehmann said. “ There have been a couple o f bad hops, but I ’ve been working hard after practice and I pretty much have it down.” Ehmann said he believes he can hit successfully at the m ajor college level. “ I don’t have a doubt,” he said. “ I ’m working with the best hitting coach in the nation (J eff Pentland). I just want to have fun . . . (and) play ball. That’s what I ’m here fo r.” “ Ehmann certainly had a good series,” Brock said. “ That was encouraging, both defensively and offensively. “ Rea also had a good series and those are two new guys who w e think w ill play every day and are perform ing very well. ” Friday night, the Sun Devils used a fiverun eighth to propel ASU to a 7-2 victory. Sophomore righthander Tony Pena pitched three scoreless innings, surrendering one hit for the win. Sophomore Todd Steverson led the Sun Devils in hitting this fall, going 13-for-27 for a .481 average with three home runs. Steverson was happy with his fa ll performance after a difficult freshman year. “ A fter a year o f not doing well basically I learned a lot from last year,” Steverson said. “ I ’v e figured out pitchers a little m o r e . . . I ’ve tried to keep back more. A lot of teams know I struck out a lot on offspeed pitches and they figure they can do it again, which is not going to be the case. Junior first baseman D ave Robson led in the power department, launching four homers and knocking in 15 runs. Rees, a returning All-American, led the pitching staff. The junior lefty went 3-0 with a 2.45 E R A and struck out 25 in 22 innings. Senior Gary Tatterson posted a 2-0 record with a 2.40 ERA. Page 18 Tuesday, October 30,1990 State Prass M axim u m p oten tial By K E LLY PEAR CE State Press Bobby Douglas stood ram -rod straight with arm s crossed, grim acing as he barked battle-cry commands at M s ASU wrestlers. “ F ig h t w ith those hands, H old that g u y ’s hands on the m at, and he ca n ’t g e t away fro m you. ” About 30 sweaty grapplers squirmed around in the maroonand-gold Room 16 of the University Activity Center, grabbing at each other’s muscle-toned legs, shoulders and arms. As they worked out, they could see the rectangular board in the front of the room that details the accomplishments o f past University superstars. A hush fell and an intensity rose in the wrestlers’ eyes. “ G et y ou r hands o ff the m at. You gotta attack the gu y ’s hands. ” Douglas, who captured fourth place wrestling honors in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, has been yelling words of wisdom at collegiate grapplers in Room 16 since 1974 when he cam e to ASU from UC-Santa Barbara. “ Some of these guys will lose three to four pounds in the next 1% hours,” the ASU coach said during a typical daily practice session. “ Some of them will lose 42 ounces of sweat before w e’re done here.” Before the wrestlers donned multi-colored mouth pieces and protective head gear, they ran circles in the tiny room, occasionally somersaulting, side stepping and readying themselves for yet another strenuous workout under Douglas’ omnipotent eye. The stocky 5-foot-7 man m ay not be a giant, but his threatening voice speaks louder than words. “ D on ’t gra b lik e that. Y ou ’l l n ever take him down lik e th a t.” And Douglas, 48, would know. Childhood packed with tragedy j The Ohio native said he began wrestling at the age of 3 years. But his life has not been as easy as a quick wrestling pin. One of his first memories is of a stranger entering his home in Qhio. As his 3-year-old eyes watched, his mother was stabbed 16 times in the chest. She survived, but never fully recovered. In addition, his father was in prison when Douglas was born. To compensate for the tragedies that befell the young Douglas, his grandparents in Bridgeport, OMo, took him in and raised him as their own. “ It took me out of an environment that wasn’t very safe,” Douglas said. ‘ ‘Psychologically, it made me want to become strong physically so I could protect m yself and those around me. I think that probably more than anything it gave m e a lot of determination and made me self-reliant.” As he remembered the brutality that induced nightmares throughout Ms adolescence, Douglas grasped for the right words to describe what it was like on that frightening day 4% decades ago. A S U wrestling Coach Bobby Douglas shouts Instructions to two of his wrestlers during practice. Douglas has been coaching the Devil grapplers since 1974. “ It is very hard to tMnk about what happened, ” he said, Ms eyes focusing on the floor of his office — a cubbyhole crammed with wrestling memorabilia and his past. “ But it opened up a lot of doors for me. I was a very introverted cMld and wasn’t very quick to make friends. Wrestling gave me an extended fam ily.” Douglas would not let Ms childhood adversity get him down — he used it to fuel his quest to reach the wrestling pinnacle. “ There w ere a lot o f kids in the area (Bridgeport) that used to wrestle,” Douglas said. “ M y grandfather (Anthony D avies) wrestled all o f his life. I learned from him and began competing when I was 15 years old. “ Wrestling is one of the few sports that I thought I had a chance o f doing well in. That’s one of the beauties of the sport — I felt like I was someone important.” Douglas, who weighs about 160 pounds and sports a closely shaven beard, now beamed as he talked about the sport that has become his life. He sat in his third-floor office in the Intercollegiate AtMetic Complex overlooking campus and munched on m icrowave popcorn, talking as though he wanted every word that cam e from his mouth to carry a meaning. “ It is one o f the oldest sports families in the world,” he said. “ W herever there are wrestlers, I have friends.” Douglas is much more than an articulate coach. His array of titles includes atMete, Olympian, student, author, celebrity, husband and father. In 1958, he became the first black Ohio high school state wrestling titlist when he captured the 112-pound weight class at Bridgeport High School. “ I never knew it when it happened,” he said. “ I ’m proud to be the first, but not because I ’m black,” Later, Douglas became the first black Am erican to represent the Urnted States in the Olympic Games in wrestling and the first black coach in the sport at a m ajor university. “ I consider m yself a role model for all atMetes, not just blacks,” he said. An example o f Ms leadersMp and mentor roles is a plaque that sits in his office window sill that reads: “ No chewing tobacco allowed in tMs area.” Today, the coach said that wrestling is not dominated by blacks, although it really should be. “ There are not a lot of inner-city wrestling programs,” he said. “ This is a sport that does not take a lot of money. There should be more interest.” The ASU coach said someday he might consider establishing sudh an inner-city program in the Valley. “ Wrestling has no racial barriers,” Douglas said. “ It’s a sport that’s an equal opportumty based on individuals. The beautiful part of the sport is what it does for the individual internally.” Wrestling legend then, now Douglas’ office le In the Intercollegiate Athletic Building on campus. This inner motivation rang true for Douglas when he was a young boy sitting on his grandfather’s lap, listemng wideeyed to legends about Nuba warriors. The legend spins a yarn about a tribe dating back to 700 B. C. in the Sudan. Douglas said that through extensive research on the topic later, he discovered that these early wrestlers are his relatives. “ ‘Nub’ means ‘gold,’” he explained. “ The Egyptian oral history tells how important wrestling was to a boy becoming a man (in this culture).” In Douglas’ Chandler residence that houses artifacts he State Press Tueiday, O ctober 30,1990 Page 19 P h o to s b y T. J. S o k o l has collected from all over the world, including Japanese dolls and a rug from Pakistan, a large portrait of a Nuba warrior hangs above the fireplace and a hardback book about the tribe sits in full view. “ At the tim e (3 to 5 years old), the stories w ere exciting to me,” he said. “ I looked at them in a wrestling perspective.’’ Douglas said the wrestling conducted in these ancient times is sim ilar to today’s collegiate matches. “ The technique hasn’t changed," he added. “ W e’re still trying to throw someone down. Only the rules have changed.” In addition to his high school athletic glory, Douglas has a plethora of mat accomplishments. Besides his Olympic fourth-place finish, the ASU coach has won five national AA U Championships and a pair of U. S. Olym pic Trial titles. “ It was very exciting,” Douglas said. “ I felt like I was at the very edge o f accomplishing all of m y goals.” In addition, Douglas has been a member of the Olympic coaching staff for the past four Games and was head coach for the 1989 U. S. World Championship team. Leroy Smith, national freestyle wrestling coach in charge of international competition including the Olympics, said Douglas is one of the best strategic and technical coaches in the sport. “ His impact has been really international,” Smith said during a telephone interview, adding that he met Douglas in 1975 when Smith was a high school 'recruit. “ He has been successful in collegiate wrestling, collegiate coaching, international wrestling, international coaching.” Smith, who resides in Colorado Springs, Colo., — home to the Olym pic Committee — said Douglas is a pro a t analyzing wrestling videos. Douglas said his photographic memory has made this ability a m ajor plus. “ This is very important for my profession,” he said. “ Because I ’ve been doing this for so long, there are very few things I haven’t done or haven’t seen.” ^ \ • Douglas said he spends about two hours a day reviewing w restling tapes, adding that he began learning by observation in high school when his coach, who did not wrestle, often used videos. G reg Strobel, director of national wrestling teams including the Olympics, agreed, adding that he first heard of Douglas in 1968 while in high school. “ He is one of our prem ier coaches,” Strobel said during a telephone interview from Colorado Springs. “ He is one of our prim e candidates for 1992 (Olym pic, wrestling coach position).” By the time Douglas retired from competitive wrestling in 1970, he had accumulated a career record of 303-17-7. In 1987, he was inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame. “ I never consider myself in the limelight,” Douglas said. “ I consider wrestling in the limelight. To tell you the truth, I don’t pay too much attention to it (the g lo ry ).” Douglas has been named Pac-10 Coach of the Y ear seven times in the past 11 years, and his team has posted one firstplace and two second-place finishes in the NCAA Championships in the last three years. He is considered one o f the top wrestling technicians in the world. In December 1988, he guided a U. S. squad to a 7-3 victory over the Soviet Union in Sunkist/Fiesta Bowl Takedown I — marking the first tim e in the 17-year history o f dual matches between the two nations that the United States had won. “ I am never satisfied with a performance,” Douglas said. “ I ’ve never seen a perfect match. I ’m always trying to find a better way to get results.” His team knows this perfection well. Zeke Jones, a form er A SU wrestling standout who graduated in M ay and is currently an assistant coach at Bloomsburg College in Pennsylvania, said Douglas is in a class of his own. “ Right before m y matches he would come over and talk one-on-one about strategy,” said Jones, who placed fourth in the 1990 World Championships in the 114‘¿-pound category. Jones established an ASU record by compiling 22 dual victories during his senior year last season and easily won the Pac-10 Conference title. “ It doesn’t m atter if you put your left shoe on first or your right shoe first — he (Douglas) only wanted you to win on the mat. “ He m ay seem intense at first, but once you get to know him he has a great sense of humor and knows a lot about history.” Although Jones has moved on since his days in Room 16, he said Douglas w ill always be his coach. Coach expects only the best Douglas does not change much from year to year. He continues to expect incredible feats from his team, which begins this year’s season on Nov. 17 against Cal-Poly at San Luis Obispo, New M exico State and Cal State-Fullerton. “ I want Arizona State to become the wrestling capital of the world,” Douglas said. “ I feel very confident that I am the person to make it happen. ” , H e sajid he loves challenges, adding that he hopes this one will become a reality in the next five years. In order to guide A S U wrestling to this pinnacle, the coach will continue his fierce recruiting, intense practices and enlightening advice. “ I want to win some more national titles,” he said. The ASU w re s tlin g squad cap tu red the 1988 n ational championship and finished second place in the past two NCAA tournaments. First, Douglas said, he has to acquire, m ore knowledge. “ You can never stop learning — you can never stop going to school.” Douglas, who was the first in his fam ily to acquire a College diploma, earned his bachelor’s degree from Oklahoma State University in 1967, m aster’s degree in health education from ASU in 1981 and has 60 hours accrued towards a doctorate in education. The Sun Devil wrestling coach said he demands this sam e educational intensity of his team, adding that academics are vital. Douglas began his coaching career at Oklahoma State as an assistant coach from 1966-69. He went to Cornell in 1970-72 and Iowa State in 1969-70 and 1972-73. He earned his first head coaching position at UC-Santa Barbara from 1973-74, before heading to ASU. Joe Seay, Oklahoma State’s wrestling coach, said his friendship with D ouglas began when Seay w as coaching at UC-Bakersfield and Douglas w as in Santa B arbara. Douglas talks with rsdshirt freshman Tim Gressley after a long practice. Douglas met his wife, Jackie, in high school. Douglas’ schedule only affords him one or two weekends a month to Spend with his wife and 22-year-old son, Bobby Jr. “ He is a very intense person,” Seay said, adding that when Douglas was training for the Olympics in the early 1960’s, the two had a wrestling match that ended in an 8-8 draw; “ He really cares about his team. The sport is his life.” Head-to-head battle between the two is not a rarity as their teams have been among the best in the nation in the past several years. Last spring, OSU edged ASU for the national title. “ We both have a deep appreciation of each other’s skills,” Seay said. “ W e’re rivals when w e’re competing, but after the match w e can go out and sit down and have dinner." When Douglas took ASU ’s wrestling reins, he quickly brought the squad from last place to national prominence. “ This is not a very sports-minded community,” he said. “ ASU has grown so much since I first cam e here.” In addition, the ASU wrestling coach has written three bodes and has three m ore sitting in boxes at his home. “ I wrote the books because I don’t want to lose what I ’ve learned,” Douglas said. “ Theonly w ay to save the knowledge is to record it.” His published works, Takedown System , Takedown I (1972) , Takedown System , Takedown I I (1987) and W restling W ith thé D e v il (1989), detail wrestling techniques that the coach has learned on the mat. A lth o u g h D o u g la s ’ l i f e has b een lo a d e d w ith accomplishments, the sport has taken its toll on his w ife Jackie and son Bobby Jr. “ I haven’t been present at a lot of birthday parties,” he said. “ It ’s been a real sacrifice. A lot o f m y tim e is away from home.” Jackie Douglas, who said the two m et in high school, admitted that her husband’s wrestling intensity has been difficult at times. “ I had to be both parents at times,” she said, adding that during the wrestling season from Novem ber to March, Douglas is home only one or two weekends a month to spend time with 22-year-old Bobby. “ But to see him (Douglas) make sacrifices makes it easier for us to not nag and to make our own sacrifices.” But at home the threesome and their dog Shogun have a unique relationship. A fter Evander Holyfield was victorious over Buster Douglas in the heavyweight boxing match last Thursday night, the fam ily displayed their closeness. ' Douglas and his son put a w ager on the matchup. When the younger Douglas returned home after the televised event, he tried to sneak upstairs, hoping that his father Would not notice that the loser of the bet had arrived. But Douglas was quick to detect his son’s presence, and Bobby Jr. entered the living room with a wide sm ile on his face. The fam ily joked around, and finally it was agreed that the younger Douglas would wash the fam ily car at least five times and mow the lawn. Bobby Jr. frowned, but continued the good-natured banter. Son Bobby carried on the Douglas wrestling legend status through his high school years at Dobson High School in Mesa, but opted to pursue an'education at Chandler-Gilbert Community College after high school. Mrs. Douglas said she is her husband’s biggest fan and never misses a match, “ You become ve ry attached .to the guys w e bring in,” she said. “ When they Win, you can’t help but be drawn in.” The couple meshes well together — Douglas’ intensity is a perfect dimension to Mrs. Douglas’ easiness. Douglas and his w ife are very proud o f their home that is filled with a delicate Southwestern flare. The memories of their life together a re manifested throughout the home, including various photographs and souvenirs. In addition, wrestling is displayed throughout the immaculate home. A fram ed copy of a Congressional Record ’ Turn t ò Douglas» page 20. Page 20 State Press Tuesday, O ctober 30,1990 Douglas_________ Continued from page 19 . written by Seri. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., after the 1988 ASU wrestling squad won the national championship, and wrestling trophies and paintings adorn the walls. When a rare free moment away from these continuous wrestling memories does em erge in Douglas’ hectic lifestyle, he enjoys running, reading, playing chess, listening to music and practicing karate. One o f the most intense sports “ K eep y ou r hand out, so you can b lock him . T h a t’s a high school fundam ental. ’’ The ASU wrestlers slowly lost momentum as the final 15 minutes of the workout ticked away. Douglas continued to shout advice and demonstrate important techniques. “ Wrestling is a lot more intense than other sports,” Douglas said. “ There is a lot more energy output. As you can See, none of these guys are overweight.” ;■ / To Douglas, each daily practice is sim ilar to an all-out street fight. “ B reak. You ’re goin g to h it the wall. ” As the ASU wrestlers rolled around on the maroon mat, the smallness of the room seemed to intensify as one twosome almost collided with the wall. Grapplers have been taking down each other in Room 16 since 1974, and Douglas said it is definitely time to expand. “ W e’ve outgrown this room ,’’ he said about the dilemma he has complained about for years. “ W e could be much, much better if w e had more space. Already three people have been injured this year because of the lack of space.” The limited space is not Douglas' only gripe — his $40,000 salary does not reflect all o f the work he has pumped into the Douglas decides If a wrestler Is using the right technique to achieve points towards a final victory. But despite the problems, Douglas’ popularity shines true inside and outside of the wrestling room. “ This was simply not a wrestling community before Bobby got here — he made it into one,’ ’ said Harris, who has worked University’s wrestling program with Douglas since Harris took ASU’s top sports position five “ M y salary doesn’t reflect m y accomplishments,” he said. years ago. “ I am delighted to work with him. He is creative “ Salary plays a m ajor role in motivation. But I don’t let it and wants things that are good and positive.” hinder me from what I have to do.” Just as Douglas made the ASU Wrestling program stand As Douglas talked about his salary, his intensity seemed to out, his fur hat that he acquired in 1987 in Mongolia gives him grow with every word. “ I ’m not in wrestling for the money,’ ” : a unique identity. he said. “ But salary is important to m e because of my “ It was the coldest place I ’ve ever been to in m y life,” he fam ily.’ ’ said, adding that his closely cut hairdo warrants such winter ASU Athletic Director Charles Harris said Douglas’ salary garb. “ I bartered the first day fo r it because I wanted that is adequate, ‘ ‘Bobby is well-compensated as far as coaches at hat. It was very warm, and I fell in love with it.” ASU go,” he said. Douglas said he wears it while recruiting in the East, but Douglas said the highest paid wrestling coach in the there have been a few brisk mornings in Tem pe where it has country is Dan Gable at the University of Iowa, who takes in come in handy. $70,000 a year aside from incentives and bonuses. “ I hope things are being done to help it (the sa la ry),” Douglas said, adding that he also feels for all the faculty on campus who do not receive a salary that reflects their Back at practice, the wrestlers do their thing. performance. “ In order to stay on top, w e’re going to have to In addition to the 1% daily practice sessions, wrestlers also do some things.” lift weights, run six miles on the track. perform extensive Practice leads to perfection stair drills and huff and puff two miles up and down Squaw Peak in Phoenix each week. Practice is the key to reaching the top. “ This year, w e w ill be a respectable team,” Douglas said, adding that the team has lost four national titlists to graduation. “ But two years of being in the national spotlight is hard to follow.” His 1990-91 squad m ay be young and inexperienced, but if intense practices and a watchful Douglas eye are any indication, the team w ill grow up quickly. “ It’s like a fam ily affair here,” Douglas said, “ There w ill be a fight here and there, and some hit pretty hard, but they’re all friends.” Andy McNaughton, who has wrestled under Douglas for five years, said his coach and mentor is the “ Ghandi of wrestling.” “ He has mastered wrestling to a science,” McNaughton said. “ You can see it in his éyes — when he wants something done, he gets it done.” McNaughton said he first set eyes on Douglas’ wizardry during his senior year of high school in Ann Arbor, Mich., when the ASU coach was recruiting Jones — McNaughton’s fellow student at Huron High. E ver since then, the w restler has become an integral component of Douglas’ team. “ Right before a match he (D ouglas) will get us all together, put our hands together and tell us to give our all,” McNaughton said. “ He tells us to not get injured and to win.” Although the ASU senior said Douglas is an extrem ely serious man and he would n ever think of calling him anything but “ sir or coach,” Douglas does crack a smile once in a while. “ If one o f us is put on our back, he’ll razz you about it,” he added. R ay M iller, a 158-pound sophomore who placed fifth in the nation last season, said Douglas has great control over his team. “ I have a lot of respect for him,” M iller said. “ He is dominant. This is one of the things that keeps a coach and athlete Separate. “ He’s straightforward with us.’ “A ll rig h t now, i t ’s tim e fo r w eight train!*. The ASU wrestlers, clad in sweat-laden starts and shorts, moved about the room — satisfied that yet aimther grueling practice in Room 16 was complete. Outside the room, a glossy, fram ed photo of a victorious Douglas and his 1988 national title wrestling squad adorns the wall — a constant reminder that the ASU coach is never without a goal.' ASU Sports Information photo Douglas is known lo r his intonso coaching stylo. “ The awards will definitely com e,” Douglas said. “ The best is yet to com e.” NEW & RECYCLED FASHIONS B U Y SE LL TRADE ATTENTION any student interested in a p p lyin g for THE NATIONAL HONORARY W H O 'S W H O among students in American colleges and univer­ sities, may pick up their application at Associated Students on the third floor of the Memorial Union. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL.,, 724 E. G len d ale. Phx 870 8507 227 W. University Dr. Tempe 968-2557 Those students applying must have a minimum of a 2.2 G P A and no less than 60 hours. Tom o rrow is the D eadline, by 5 p.m. State Prc»» Page 21 Tuesday, October 30,1990 Ic e Devils pounce USC in opener B y G R EG Z E L E State Press A t least there was one ASU team that beat USC over the weekend. Not only did the Ice Devils (2-0) beat the Trojans (0-2), they crushed them. ASU took its season opener, 8-3, Friday night and followed Up with a 12-3 trouncing on Saturday. “ Th ey w ere a little stronger than w e expected,” Coach Jim M in gu so said. “ But overall, w e’re a solid team.” Saturday’s gam e was largely a hard-hitting, penaltym arred scorefest. ASU received 41 penalty minutes during the course o f the gam e. Ice D evil junior defenseman Aron Lundstrom even drew a ga m e misconduct call after he kicked a USC player with his skate blade. ASU opened up the scoring on Saturday as sophomore defenseman Jason Muzychenko tallied his first goal of the season 5:19 into the gam e on a power play. Less then four minutes later, senior forward Jay Giacalone was fed by junior forward Abel Moreno and netted his first score o f the season to give the Ice Devils a 2-0 advantage. Senior forw ard Dan Ciramentaro added his lone goal of the night at 16:09 and two minutes later Muzychenko rounded out the period’s scoring with his second goal o f the night. Junior forw ard Brian Smith accounted for the first two ASU goals in the second period, giving the Ice Devils a 7-0 lead before K y le Cruce managed to put the Trojans on the board at 5:31. Down by one player, sophomore defenseman Rich Matthews gave ASU a short-handed goal at 11:26. Just seconds later, at 11:50, Lundstrom leveled a m ajor hit on USC center Tim O’Neil that sent O’N eil to the ice and his helmet airborne. As O’Neil was attempting to get up Lundstrom’s skate went into his body and the officials slapped Lundstrom with a fiveminute m ajor for kicking and the gam e misconduct for intent to cause bodily harm to another player. The Trojans took advantage of the power play to score their second goal behind the shot o f Vince Carter. Ice D evil junior .forward Drew Spaesard, who had a shorthanded goal Friday night, added his second goal o f the season at 18:04. ., * The third period found ASU sporting a 9-2 lead when Smith scored his third goal o f the night giving him a hat trick. P at M cNam ara scored just over a minute later to give the Ice Devils an 11-2 edge. Carter scored USC’s final goal at 13:58 and junior forward Abel Moreno scored less than a minute later to cap the scoring at 12-3. Friday night, neither team was able to put the puck in the net during the first period and Manguso blamed it on opening-game jitters. The Ice Devils appeared to be pulling aw ay with a 2-0 lead early in the second period before the Trojans managed to tie the score at 2-2. ASU went on to score six straight and take a commanding 8-2 lead before giving USC a m ercy goal with less then two minutes to play. Classifieds ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS HANG GLIDEI Our gently sloping man­ made training hill. Safe and exciting. Fly all day. Windsports, 897-7121. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, washer/dryer in e a c h unit. 5 b lo c k s from A S U . $400/month. 967-6429. KEY VALUE Auto Insurance. Good rates, low down, monthly payments, all drivers, DWI’s. 230-1900 or 939-1900. ASU AREA. 2 and 3 bedrooms for rent. $325 and up. 966-8838 or 967-4908. PUBLIC PROGRAM!! Homecoming is here! March in the parade. Stop by our booth. Meet alumni. For information: Shannon, 894-1791. PUBLIC PROGRAMS!! Are you ready?? For the Pumpkin Carving contest?? Wednesday, October 31 outside MU, 10am. T-shirts for Homecoming, too!! TONIGHT!! MEET EpSiion Sigma Alpha 7pm in the MU, Room 215. Everyone welcome!) p e rso n a l (per’son-al), a. Per­ taining to a person. Did you know that you can get a free 15-word personal ad on your birthday? If you have a Student i.d., a driver’s license, someone special to send a message to and a b irth d a y this month, come down to the basement of Matthews Center to gpt your free A S U A R E A . 2 bedroom, 2 bath. $350/month, $125 security deposit. 967-4789. No pets. 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 lor specials. COME JOIN us at Hayden Terrace Apart­ ments. Spacious 2 bedroom units. Call now for our new students move-in special. 967-7335. "COMMONS ON Apache," room over pool, spa, volleyball. Take over payments refer Matt Ross, 968-9268. FALL SPECIAL: 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Cute red brick duplex apartments. Great loca­ tion, fenced yard. Quiet graduate student preferred. 829-7675. NEAR ASU! One and Two bedrooms. Poo), laundry, dishwasher. $330-400; move-in special. 1014 East Spence. 968-6947. TEM PE’S FAIREST rates. International students welcome. $420 to $260. Devon Apartments, 926 East Spence. 370-2366. THE COMMONS on Apache. Take over lease at second semester. Call Lyndee at 829-7323. personal. Rem em ber, the key w ord is personal. Your personal can be to your b est friend, your boy­ friend o r g irlfriend o r any s p e c ia l p a rs on o r persons in your life. (Advertisem ents o f club m eetings, rushes, etc. do not qu alify as personal ads.) conplimentyou onyourchoice. So, if your birthday is coming up this month, have a friend help you celebrate — send them a 15-word personal — for FR EE! State Press Classified Advertising Matthews Center South Basement 965-6731 RANCHO LAS PA LM A S Best deal around— Walk to ASU! Move in for first month’s rent No deposits/fees! One month free with 13 month lease. One Bedroom/$395 month Two Bedroom/2 Bath $525 month Call now! 1249 E. Spence 829-9607 APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM apartments, $250. Furn­ ished, swimming pool, laundry room, 2 blocks from ASU. 967-3658, or call after 1:30- 968-7012. 2 BEDROOM 2 bath. Washer/dryer each unit. Walk to ASU. Lemon and Dorsey area. $425/month. 496-0562 or 893-1994. SavenowonselectcolorMacintoshsystems.: 2 BED R O O M North Tempo. Poo), dishwasher, self-cleaning oven. 1007 West 1st Street. 894-1041. ANIMAL LOVERS, 2 bedroom 1VSe bath townhouse. Ceiling fans, covered patio, 44th Street/Palm Lane- near park. Small pet welcomed. $495/month. 863-4066. Now throughJanuary 5,1991, take advantage of special savings when you buy a Macintosh* Dsi, Macmiosh Uti, or Macintosh flfx computer and an AppfeColor™ High-Resdution RGB Monitor* Whether you choose die new Madntosh flsi, Apple’s latest powerful, affordable system. Or die Madntosh Dei, known for its high performance and expandability. Or the maximum-performance Madntosh life, with its virtually unlimited expandability. You’ll be getting a system of lasting value. Not to mention special savings when you buy your system with the AppleColor High-Resolution RGB Monitor, Hurry in today for a closer look at these Macintosh 0 systems. You’ll praise their value, and w ell compliment you on your choice with special savings. No matter which system you choose. ANNOUNCEMENTS Apartment Locating Service 437-1048 Roommate matching service also available. 437-1048 ANNOUNCEMENTS STATE PRESS Classifieds LINER A D RATES: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10+ days 15* each additional word. The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Personals — 15 words or less — ere only $1.401 15 words or less: — Must show ID to place a personal ad. Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). For more information visit COMPASS CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 time: $7.85 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. inch 6 or more times: $6.50 per col. inch Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10 a m). in the M oeur Building, Room 108 965-2379 *OffCT good October 15,1990 through January 5 ,19910ffer void where prohibited by law ©1990AppleComputer, Inc. Apple, IkeApplelogo, AndMacintoshan registeredtrademarksofAppleComputer, he. AppleColorisa trademarkofAppleComputer, he. FREE v P m ® CALL NOW 965-6731 Page 22 Tuesday, October 30,1990 APARTMENTS ROOMS FOR RENT THE COMMONS, 2-4 spaces available in same unit. Great for friends. Call 829-7323, 829-8238. F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R , graduate student. Room and board in exchange for help with children. Professional couple, Paradise Valley. 991-0612. UNFURNISHED 1 bedrooms and studios, utilities included. Clean, quiet, ground level. Close to ASU. Marianna Apart­ m ents. 966-8597. Eq u al bousing opportunity. 1 Mock o ff campus 1 and 2 bedrooms $160 move in Cali Today! A p a c h e T e rra c e 1123 E. Apache 1 block east of Rural eaa-asss TOWNffOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, furnished, washer/ dryer, poolside, 16 mile from campus. $570 Kelly, <303)431-4772. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, spacious condo. All amenities. Available November 4. $545 per month! 940-0518. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, fireplace, washer/ d ry e r, a larm s y s te m and pool. $615/month, 1 year lease. 834-9288. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, ASU 2 miles. Covered parking, washer/dryer, vaulted ceiling. 961-1707. $650/month. TWO BEDROOM, two bath condo. 68th Place/Thomas- Scottsdale Washer, dryer, fireplace. 15 minutes to ASU Bob MorHs, 948-0550. RENTAL SHARING FEMALE NONSMOKER— share quiet 2 bedroom apartment. 5 miles to ASU. $200 plus Vfe utilities. 969-3446. MALE ROOMMATE to share 1st class apartment across from Kiwanis Park. Furnished, all amenities, pool/tennis/etc. La Estancia Apartments. Chris, 730^6703. ROOMS FOR RENT 2 ROOMS available. House 4 blocks from ASU. $195, $210 (master). Utilities shared. 948-3285, 2-5;30pm. , AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. Room in 3 bedroom condo, 1 mile from ASU. $225 plus 1/3 utilities. 784-4725. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE PRIVATE BEDROOM, male. Use of home. $195, 16 utilities. 2 miles from ASU. 253-1210. ROOM FOR rent. Female, nonsmoker. All amenities, separate bath. Washer/dryer, covered parking. Nice Scottsdale home. Hayden and Camefback area. $275 plus 16 utilities. Call Greg at 994-1626, leave message. ROOM IN large house. Near ASU. W a s h e r/d ry e r, u tilitie s in clu d e d . $ 2 2 5 / m o n th . S e r io u s s tu d e n t. (213)824-1254 L e t S ta te P re s s C la s s ifie d s w o rk fo r yo u ! TOWNHOMES/ CO N DO S FOR SALE 3 BEDROOM 2 bath condo near ASU. 916 assumable, no qualifying. $452 payment, $7,000 down. Leave message, 966-0678. HAYDEN SQUARE condo for sale. 3 bedroom/tri-level. Camel back Mountain views. Act now for January occupancy. 9400518. Buy o f tho Weok Papago Park FURNITURE WEBB’S FURNITURE New & Pre Owned 10% Discount w/ASU ID All types of furniture for student's needs st student prices. 2077 E. University 829-7259 COMPUTERS State Pres* AUTOMOBILES BICYCLES 1974 MGB Roadster, custom street/show car. Excellent condition— must see. Must sell. $4,750/offer. Call 897-2743. '90 CANNONDALE 3.0 frame, Shimano 105, Look pedals, computer, 58 centime­ ters. $600/offer. 350-0514. 1988 HYUNDAI 4-door G L Excellent condition, 35 miles/gallon, 38,000 miles, new tires, brakes, battery, tinted windows, am/fm cassette with amp. $4,900/offer. 948-4226. SCHWINN SPRINT 10-speed, great condi­ tion. Call Dave, 894-2045. Best offer. ‘86 SHELBY Charger turbo, oil cooler, immaculate condition, custom interior, loaded plus sunroof and cruise control. $3,975. 443-8305, MOVING SALE- Macintosh and Imagewriter plus lots of software. Steal for only $250. 966-2292, ask for Blake. P C DATA recovery. Set up MS DOS help. 895-7227. Mark Computer Service. QUALITY MERCHANDISE at warehouse price. We have everything you need, from custom built computer systems to mice to harddrives. Motems- $77, Packard Bell Super VGA color monitor, $369; printers from $169. Harddrives International, 1912 West 4th Street, Tempo. Just 16 mile from ASU Call 350-1199. WORDPERFECT 5.1* $135 Educational ’ discount direct from WordPerfect Call 582-1700. TICKETS TRAVEL STUDENT SPECIALS 1970 Duster— 1 owner, 57,000 original mi Ie s , v e r y dean. $2995* 1966 M u stan g— 6 cyl., air conditioning, great buy. 4495* 1973, E l C a m in o — 454 cu. inch, co ld air, sw ivel bu cket seats, m ags. $4995* 1967 Chevetle— V8, Hurst, air c o n d it io n in g , r e d e x t e r ­ ior. $5995* 7809 E. McDowell 945-2886 HOMES FOR SALE STEREO SYSTEM— Carver 200 watts, Infinity 7-kappas, laserdisc, VCR, tuner. $1,600. 898-1852, after 5pm SURFBOARD, 6’6” Tri-fin. Miramax— half-moon bay. Turkey color. G an$j S leash, $240. 967-7653 1981 SUZUKI GS450. Good bike, needs minor work. Call Erik, 968-9612. $500/best offer. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry of all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South Mill Avenue, Tempo Center, 968-6074. CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 966-5967. AUTOMOBILES ONE WAY to Madison, Wisconsin, North­ west Airlines. Male, 12/20. $150/offer. 947-1704. ONE-WAY UNITED Airlines. November 21 — Phoenix-Dulles-New York. $100 or best offer. Call 890-8515 1986 HONDA Elite 150 Loaded, good condition, with cover. $950/offer. Cal Adelle, 829-8238. MOVING, MUST sell scooter 1987 Honda Elite 80. Runs perfect, no crashes. $250/offer. 966-2292; ask for Blake. HELP WANTED— GENERAL JOIN OTHER ASU students making big money. One student cleared $6,400 last month! Call Mark Hansen— 966-8336. LOOKING FOR aggressive, motivated people willing to work hard. Double your imeome in one year without leaving your p r e s e n t p u r s u it s . C a l l s o o n . (602)423-7698. HELP WANTED— GENERAL AEROBICS INSTRUCTORS. Motivated, certified, experienced instructors wanted. $10-plus/hour. Close to ASU. Club Aerobics, 894-6543. 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 f e r r e d . (303)441-2448 ANSWERING SERVICE, part-time, morn­ ings. Telephone, typing experience required. Scottsdale, 941-4890. APARTMENT MANAGEMENT— Mainte­ nance. Married couple for 26-unit complex in Tempe. Outside employment neces­ sary. Small salary plus 2-bedroom apart­ ment. 943-8977. ASSISTANT, DISABLED man, his Para­ dise Valley home. Saturday, Sundays, approximately 16 hours. Call Dave, 966-6873. ASU TELEFUND...is calling on you! Are you looking for part-time evening, oncampus employment and want to earn up to $10/hoUr? Gain valuable work experi­ ence while working in a friendly, fun, no "high pressure" environment with other ASU students. If you have a positive attitude and good communication skill?, pick up job no. 6665 at the Student Employment office. For more information, call 965-6754 after 1:00pm. Don’t delay— hirihg now! ATTENDANT, DAYCARE school, Tempe 1pm to 6pm, $4 per hour. 966-9643. . A V A IL A B LE NOW . Temp# market research firm needs telephone interview­ ers evenings/weekends. No sales, $4.40/hour. Su&an, 967-4441. • v: ; CAREERS IN Foreign Languages for Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Arabic, Russian, or East European language and area specialises at the Foreign Broadcast Information Service, P.O. Box 2604, Washington, DC, 20013. Information session Wednesday, October 31 * 5pm, room 218, Memorial Union. CA SH IERS/SALES part-time/full-time. Dobbs Houses, Inc., a leader in airport newsstand and gift shop operations, has opportunities available at Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport Terminal 4. Outstanding benefits; Medical, dental, life insurance, vacation, free parking, and free uniforms. We are interviewing at: Wyndham Garden Hotel, 427 North 44th Street, northeast corner of 44th Street and Van Buren, October 29-November 1, 9am to 6pm. EOE. Male/female. 1950 CHEVY 2-door sedan. Great project car. Best reasonable offer. Call 730-9832. DYNASTAR SKIS, Tyrolia bindings, KZ poles Must sell Only $90. Call .784-6126, M O V IN G F O R C E S salé- Yam aha keyboard, $75; VCR, $75; entertainment center, $75;, 19” color tv with remote, $100 966-2292, ask for Blake. GOING ON vacation? Home for the holidays? Discount travel, call 491-0501. Alaska $499. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MOTORCYCLES ANSWERING MACHINE for sale, $35 or offer. Practically new. Call 784-0176, leave message proof positive. FLY ANYWHERE USA. In your name! 48 states, $285-400. Alaska, $500-600 Hawaii, Europe, etc. You can leave today. A lso buying transferable coupons/ vouchers. Top prices paid. Travel Tips, 968-7283 (YOU-SAVE). DISCOUNT TRAVEL! USA- AlaskaHawaii- international, we buy/sell awardsbumps, unused tickets. 921-1102. A»1 AUTO EXCH ANGE Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most major cities. Gas allowances available. 21 or older. Call 468-1733. *10% off list price w/ad & ASU I D. ROUND-TRIP TICKET Thanksgiving weekend. To Las Vegas. 11/21, back to Phoenix 11/25. Female only. 784-6120. 2. b d „ im m aculate. A ssu m able, no qua), loan at 10.5% . $75,000. IMMACULATE PATIO home, 1,175 square feet. Great location near McClintock/ Guadalupe. 4 miles to ASU, in lovely, quiet 48-unit community with pool, RV parking. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, den, fireplace, double garage. Low maintenance yard, vaulted ceilings, more. $85,000, all offers consid­ ered. 966-8875. TRANSPORTATION HELP WANTED— GENERAL $ $ $ $ IN ST A N T C A S H for your v e h icle s! $ $ $ $ A ll m akes & co n d itio n s. N a tio n a l A u to M art U s a 484-7055 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE HEY STUDENTS! PART TIME $8°° to $ 10##/hr Full Training $5.50/hr Guaranteed •NEW COMPUTERIZED WORK STATIONS • •NEW LOCATION • Walking distance from ASU (Univ. & Rural) • NEW OFFICES • • NEW EXPANSION • • NEW HOURS • Turn Your Old S tuff... early morning, morning, afternoon, evening, weekend As our Telemarketing Representatve, you would work in a fun professional environment contacting customers nationwide for major clients earning great part time money on a schedule that you set up. For confidential interview, please call extension #33 at: DIALAMERICA 894*0264 A s k fo r e x te n s io n #33 State Press Classifieds...Let them work for you! State Press HELP W ANTED— GENERAL ORDER CLERK Expanding Tempe office needs 12 persons for our inside Sales Re-Order Dept. Avg. $7-11/hr. Call Neil 966-7164 CHRISTMAS $$$, $S.50/hour guaranteed, up to $10/hour Earn spending money for Christmas now. TMI Corporation, one of the nation’s most successful direct response marketing firms, is now inter­ viewing for phone agent positions. Quali­ fied, candidates need only to possess a clear speaking voice and professional attitude. We provide complete paid train­ ing program. Earn $5.50/hour guaranteed with bonus structure to $10/hour. Flexible work schedule. Nightly contests; fun, friendly environment. Call today for a personal interview. Positions begin imme­ diately. 967-0066 and ask for Christopher Statner. 3 blocks from ASU campus (EOE) ./ , ' .V . CONCESSION STAND food handler Prepare fast food and operate food concession in park setting. Experience preferred. Fulltime, parttime, weekend shiffs. $3 85-$4.25/hour 2720 Sduth Hardy,' No 3. 894-8740. EOE Cruise Ship Jobs HIRING Men — Women. Summer/Year Round. PH O T O G R A PH ER S, TOUR G U ID E S , R E C R E A T IO N P E R S O N N E L . E x ce lle n t pay p lu s F R E E travel. Caribbean, H aw aii, B ah am as, South P a c ific, M exico. HELP WANTED— GENERAL RESTAURANTS/ BARS JOB HOTLINE- Tempe Center for the Handicapped. Entry level positions teach­ ing, caring, and assisting mentally/ physically handicapped adults and child­ ren. Group homes and day programs. Fulltime, part-time, all shifts available. Call 894-2704 EOE. RETURNED PEACE Corps volunteer Graduate assistantship available to conduct Peace Corps strategy campaigns on ASU campus. Call 965-5517. WRITERS WANTED for internship. For more information, call Dawn et 345-6456, Monday-Friday, 12-6. h elp w an ted — FOOD SERVICE 1-206-7364775, Ext C113 CR UISELIN E JO B S hiring now for Christmas/Spring break. No experience needed 1(900)990-5621, ext P117. 99« per minute. DATA ENTRY/NUMERiC. Flexible hours for Tempe market research firm. $5 per hour Call 967-4441. DOWNTOWN YMCA child care needs site coordinators, 21 years; or older Call now: •257-5161. ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY looking for a few people for Hollywood/Vegas, CEEC Entertainment, 274-6362, ENTREPRENEUR ALERT! Would you enjoy the challenge and excitement of owning your own business with virtually unlimited potential and a minimal initial investment? For details call me at 948-5667 INTERNS, FALL 1990; for college credit, in : U S. Senator peConcini’s- Phoenix, Mesa, and Washington offices .if inter­ ested. contact: Carrie Cdxon at 379r67$6 or Mirm Burns .at. 379-4996. RED ROBIN needs to hire nearly 100 sharp people in the kitchen, dining room, and bar Of our soon-to-open Glendale location, Apply Monday-Saturday, 10-5, at the northeast corner of 59th Avenue and Bell. Several kitchen and host/hosteSs positions available at our Los Arcos Mall restaurant. MUSIC SELMER ALTO saxophone, Super Action 80 Like new. 991-7512, ë LET’S MAKE A HIT TOGETHER!! Singers, songwriters — mail or bring us your cassettes! • REASONABLE RATES • Call 833-3196 for more details! 5 S tar HEY COLLEGE students! Did you know that personal ads are only $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! PIZZA & P I B TA N K UP TUESDAYS $ 1.88 60 oz. p itc h e rs B u d Dry, C o o rs L ite 1/2 price drinks 9 8 C p it c h e r s o f s o d a 968-6666 1301 E. U n iv e r s ity A LL DAY PART-TIME CUSTODIAN Cutter Aviation at Sky Harbor, a leader in General Aviation services, has a part-time opening for a custodian 15-20 hours/week, evenings and weekends. Reliable transportation a • must. $5.25/hour to start Apply MondayFriday, 9-11am or 2-4pm 2802 Old Tower Ropd Phoenix. No phone inquiries please. EOE/AA 11am — 9pm Our Fam ous A L L YOU CAN EAT Sp ag h etti! PERFECT STUDENT job. fifteen flexible hours per week Inquire at Aaron's Car Wash, 1201 East Apache or ceil 964-8941 after 5pm. •$200-$400 weekly •Inbound phone reps •2 shifts available $2 9 5 : bandersnotch * 5th St. & Forest BREWPUB HELP WANTED— GENERAL A n o u ts ta n d in g p o s itio n for a person who can tutor high school science and math. A love of and total knowledge of high school Algebra, Geometry, Trig, Calculus, Chemistry, and Physics is an absolute must. G as money provided. $8-$10 an hour; pick two to four days to teach between 1:30-8:30pm, Monday through Thurs­ day. International students welcome to apply. 953-3070 PETS FREE KITTEN to loving home. Female pastel calicó with personality. Box trained. Help! Cannot keep. Call Trish, 966-2192. FREE L05T/FOUND JASON-*- I'm sorry, I had you confused for someone with a brain. I’m confused about alot, though, like why, when you’re friends with David, you’re a jerk to me: Christa. KKG INGRID: Everyone “ nose” that we’ll have a blast on Friday. I can’t wait!! P.S. Today’s Word is "single.” MICHELLE T. and Colleen (B:O.S.T.)when are the New Kids coming back in town?!! ORDER OF Omega members, tonight is ogr Second meeting. Be in the PV Main Cafeteria at 9; 15pm. Please attend. OX CASTER: Halloween’s only a day away! Hope you’re in top physical form because we’ll be trick or treating until the sun comes up! PI PHI Nancy, how often do you ride your bike? Love, a pledge. PI PHI’S remember to do your KGL’s. Practice makes perfect. Love, a pi phi. RAEANN TSCHUMPER thank you for helping us decorate our floor for Hallo­ ween, love, the A-Phi’s. SIGMA NU Aaron Holmes* I love you, I love you, no, I like you. From the sober one. FOUND: WIRE hair terrier, tan, no tail, leather collar, I.D. no. ASU 21141, good natured. animal. 835-6236. THEATA CHI Dave: So what if you can’t teach calculus? Every day with you is still perfect!. I guess practice makes perfect. XOXOXO Pretty Lady. LOST- A gold I.D. bracelet with "Lisa*’ engraved. on it. Had alot of sentimental value. Reward offered. Call Lisa, 784-6075, ■:’ / ■ TO THE men of AETT thanks for an awesome Golf Classic- Halloween Bash Saturday night! Love the Chi-O’s. LOST: PRESCRIPTION glasses in blue case. On campus. Reward. Please call 894-9484. TWIN PEAKS aficianados: Did you videotape on 10/20/90? If so, please call 392-0929, and leave message. TP fanatics desperate to see this episode! Will trade. PERSONALS ZBT— 4 days to rush. Interested? Contact Eric at 966-3190. In c RESTAURANTS/ BARS KITCHENWARE .SHOP needs holiday help. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, plus, November through : Christmas. $4.25/hour. 820-1893. 227 East Baseline. NEED MORE MONEY? Music S a g u a r o R e c o r d in g & P u b l is h i n g HAIR REMOVAL — Both electrolysis and waxing. Safe, sterile, effective. Spider veins, also. University and Country Club ‘ 962-6490 GREEKS: DO you want to be apart of the largest honorary on campus? Ask your president for an Order of Omega applica­ tion now. Return to Greek Life Office by Friday, November 2. SPORTS-MINDED: HIRING immediately, ASU office. $8-10/hour. Part-time/fuli-time. Perfect for students, day/pvening. Call 921-8282. URGENT: SALESPEOPLE needed, make $10 to $15 per hour at school. Must start now. Call Larry, (213)746-2078 EPSILON SIGMA Alpha (ASU’s new soror­ ity)— Meeting 10/30 in MU 215, 7pm. Everyone welcome!! MALE/FEMALE GROUP work psychother­ apy group forming for males and females to resolve old issues (i.e. childhood trau­ ma, Co-dependence, death, assault, relo­ cation) to create improvement for today! PhD will lead. $35,2 hour weekly session; for more information: 998-0900. C. . S N A C K B A R AT T EN D A N T needed. Scottsdale location. For mòre information, call David: 829-9212 or 389-6122. TRAIN TO be a weekend mobile disc jockey- Good income, vehicle needed. 820-8220 SERVICES GAMMA PHI Jodi I had a grate time Thursday and Friday, sorry about Satur­ day. Let’s do it a gin and do it rite. Stephen SERVICE REPRESENTATIVES Local insurance company needs friendly students to process customer insurance applications. Spanish speaking helpful. Part-time, $5/hour 252-3700. SUMMER JOBS outdoors. Over 5,000 openings! National parks, forests, fire crews. Send stamp for free details; 113 East Wyoming' Kalispell,Montana 59901. PERSONALS GAMMA PHI- TraCy: Short notice, long drives, hard steak, dog poop, nasty shots, wet feet, warm jungle juice, falling rocks, hairy coconuts, ice ice baby, Fun? How about another chance? ’ CA LL NOW! Call refundable. 961-0919 Page 23 Tuesda£O ctober3^ 1990 ACT—r ACN r- Activation! Tri-Sigma Actives are the berst, a.step above all the rest— Oh, this week will be so great— Four more days till we activate! We love you! Tri-Sigma Pledges. AETT ANDY Mark Brent Kevin Brian and Eric thanks for staying up with us till 3 am. Duck duck goose wouldn’t have been the same without you guys!! We would, have allowed Breeze to play but he was too slow- just like you Mark! Love the 3 Chi-O convicts. AGAIN ANP again arid again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again arid again and again and again and again? Please. AGD AMY, Happy 18th Birthday. You're a great dot. Have a great day. Love, mom. AGD JENNIFER, you're a cool cat] How can I rag on you? Tonight will be fun! KA Pave. ADO PTION ARE YOU looking for the best mom for your baby? I am a single, professional woman living in California who can provide your baby with financial and emotional Security— and lots of love. Call Joan at (818)794-3665, or my attorney, Lindsay, at (213)854-4444 (collect). HAPPILY-MARRIED PRO FESSIO N AL couple want healthy infant to adopt and love. Our attorney is very understanding and kind. Pleae call him collect, anytime, Larry Siegel: Office, (415)457-6313; home, (415)456-2495. LOVING COUPLE seeks to adopt infant into their country home. Lots df nieces and nephews nearby. Legal and related expenses. Please answer our prayers. Call Diane and Bob, collect, anytime: (508)822-9959. ALPHA PHI Susan: Thanks for always being there to listen to me. You’re a true friend. Love, Teh. P S. Ready for another paint fight?? PHYLLIS AND Paul Wish to adopt infant into: their Massachusetts home. Lots of family nearby, Call collect after 6pm, (508)649-3177. Confidential and related expenses. Get P w o m l! THANK HEAVEN for little ones. Wanted: a very special baby for a child-adoring home in Southern California. Ultimate outcome: devotion, security and unlimited love. P le a s e c a ll ( c o lle c t ) a tto rn e y : (213)8544444 or Ginny, (213)208-1308. A-PHI JESSICA Koessler, you did a wonderful job on the Halloween decora­ tions, 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 someone else a happy day with a free 15-word personal ad! Happy Birthday!! ATTENTION ASU Greeks— Make a differ­ ence! Apply for 1991 Greek Week commit­ tees today! ATTENTION: CUTIE in SPE311 1:401 saw you in your car, I thought it was nice, after reading your license, I needed some ice! Signed East to West table. CHI-O’S LORI and Angela- nothing like the 2 of you getting picked up by the same guy!! Thanks for waiting for me! Love Peep DANNY, YOU mind reader. Cheesecake was already on the agenda. Happy Birtfc day!! Cindy. PREGNANCY COUNSELING Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy and counseling. testing 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 SERVICES ELECTRO LYSIS— PERMANENT hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discounts. Call for more informa­ tion: 969-6954 T h o r b e c k e 's G y m 966-6621 $12 per m onth p lu s $ 5 0 o n e ­ tim e m e m b e r ­ sh ip fee. H O M E SERVICES PEACE OF mind. Let me Care for your house, pets, plants, etc. while you are away- Lyn, 993-4301. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.50 AAA Word Processing/laser printer. 35 years experience. Theses, dissertation, A PA specialization. Marion, 839-4269. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, resumes, etc. At Your Service Word Processing, Linda, 839-6167. $1.75 AND up, professional word proces­ sor and former English teacher. Laser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. ACCURATE RESUM ES composed and typed ($25); guaranteed. Call Carol, 924-8064, evenings and weekends. East Mesa. 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 West University, call 921-0168. Open early, open (ate, open 7 days! ALL PAPERS, resumes, letters, docu­ ments, transcribing, editing, mailings. College graduate using IBM computer. Mike. 964-0994. ALWAYS AVAILABLE for typing. Call Susan at 833-0373. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. Prices are competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. A TERM paper special— $2.75/page laser printed. Resume package special— $19.95. Dr. Copy, 968-7771. CAREER RESUMES Grand Opening: Resume package for only $14.95. Expires 10/31/90. Call Dennis, 438-7341. FLYING FINGERS has Maclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. Call 945-1551 for details. LETTER QUALITY word processing for your typing needs. AMA/MLA, fast turnar­ ound. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825. NEED TIME to study? We do APA/MLA formats. $1.50, double-spaced page. Call Joanne, 966-1516 or Bobbi, 968-9166. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. $1/page. Laser printing included. You deliver and pick up. Alma School Road/Baseline. Jan, 8974744. WORD PROCESSING, reasonable rates; Fast, dependable, accurate. Tòrm papers, business letters, mail outs, etc. 839-7527. WORD PROCESSING, resumes, papers, W ordPerfect train in g; S cottsd ale/ Camelback area. Call to discuss your needs, 945-4770. L e t S ta te P re s s C la s s ifie d s w o rk f o r y o u ! TUTORS ACCOUNTING AND finance professional instruction, study aides and examination strategies. Rates from $6/hour. 497-2097, Gil. FRENCH TUTOR, graduate of ASU, with a B.A. in French. $8/hour. Call Susie, 966-2612. NEEDED— MATH 210 tutor. Must have knowledge of ASU testing. Call Mike, 968-3346. PH O TO G RAPH Y Brides-To-Be Ï f) H eart to H eart f H jÿ P u o r o G K A n iY V 839-3999 Coverage begins under $300. Your Individual Horoscope = Frances Drake—n—: IF YOUR BUSINESS WOULD LIKE TO SPON SO R THE H O RO SCO PES, PLEASE CALL 96i~6$55. F O R W E D N ES D A Y , O C T O B E R 31,1990 ■A R IE S ■ • SCORPIO (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) (O c t 23 to Nqv. 21) You’re warned against unwise You’ll have to be able to distinguish business expansion today. You need between the bona fide and the bogus more tacts at your disposal. It’s an today in business. Progress may be excellent night for socializing and slow until late in the day. Consider going out for merriment options carefully. TA U RU S ^ SA G ITTA R IU S ^ (Apr. 20 to May 20) J i­ (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Sfv lt’s hard to get on the right track It’s not a good day for financial right now. You may have too many risk-taking or gambling. Though irons in the fire. You’ll find family life shopping isn’t favored, recreational especially heartwarming tonight. interests are happily highlighted. Shopping is a plus. Tonight accents romance. C APR IC O R N ^ G E M IN I M (May 21 to June 20) w f (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Be conservative regarding invest­ It’s not a good day for taking on extra financial responsibilities. Stay ments today. You may be inconsistent away from risky moves. Curb impati­ in your dealings with a family mem­ ence on the job. Tonight brings you a ber. However, tonight should bring good news affecting the family circle. social success. A Q UARIU S CANCER . tan (June 21 to July 22) (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Communications are muddled for a Try not to be short-tempered with great part o f the day. It's not until a child. You get more accomplished on your own than in partnership at tonight when you’re able to get your present. Move fast on a career best ideas across effectively. Couples opportunity that comes now. are in rapport. PISC E S LE O (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) •**«. (July 23 to Aug. 22) W Again, a Mend may seem like a To o much is up in the air for definitive action on a business prop­ drain in some way. YouTl be making positive changes at home and in os a l You should say yes to the travel business you should meet with a invitation that comes now. Social life is favored tonight splendid new opportunity. V IR G O - a YOU BORN TODAY are creative (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) fls » and 'practical but sometimes have difficulty reconciling these qualities. You need to keep your feet on the ground where romance is concerned You can succeed, however, in both now. Someone who flatters may be the arts and sciences. You have an insincere. New chances for financial adventurous approach to life, but still gain and business success arise now. are capable o f hard work. Medicine, L IB R A rv^ education, and writing are some o f (S e p t 23 to O ct 22) the fields in which you’ll find fulfill­ ment. You may experiment, though, I f you invite someone to stay with you, it could be a longer visit than before settling on a career. Birthdate anticipated. You may be invited to a of: Ethel Waters, singer; Barbara Bel wonderful party. Couples are simpar Geddes, actress; and Wilbur Shaw, tico now. auto racer. Copyright 1990 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Page 24 Slate Prest TUöday^OctobwSO^WO REFINEMENT IN SPECIAL OCCASION DRESSING Gunne Sax puts femininity and fashion together in a collection of velvet, taffeta and satin dresses. Choose Shown Black velvet chemise with irridescent green taffeta pleated fischu collar and rosette. 122.00. Shop Monday through Saturday 10*9, Sunday 12-6 In Phoenix at M etrocenter, P a ra d is e Valley, F ie s ta M a ll, Chris-Tow n a n d S co ttsd a le . Shop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-6, Sunday 12-6 at P a rk C e n tra l a n d W e strid g e and in Flagstaff Mall. W e w e lc o m e y o u r D illa rd 's C re d it C a rd , T h e A m e ric a n Express® C a rd , D in ers C lu b International, M a s te rc a rd ? V is a ? a n d T h e D is c o v e r C a rd .