Cultural studies p lan under review By KEVIN SHEH SUito Press A Faculty Senate proposal that would add a cultural diversity awareness section University’s General Studies requirements fo r graduation w as sent back to committee for further review Monday. U nder the plan, which w as developed and approved by the Faculty Senate’s General Studies Council, students would be required to take three courses to satisfy graduation requirements. Courses that meet the requirement will include — as a prim ary focus — the experiences of various cultural groups and their contributions to education, history, languages, literature, art, music, science, politics, work, religion and philosophy in the United States, the proposal said. The concept of the scheme, which was discussed yesterday at a Faculty Senate meeting in G reat Hall, has received acclaim from administrative, faculty and student leaders. “ It’s a great concept,” said Associated Students of A S U President M att Ortega. “ W e ’ve been waiting for this for a very long time.” < % r E a rlie r (his month, the Curriculum and Academ ic P ro gram s Committee sent the p ro p o s a l to a su b co m m itte e, w hich reviewed the m easure and referred it back to the G e n e r a l Studies C ouncil fo r redefinition, said C A P C Chairm an Harold Hunnicutt. He said the subcommittee and faculty had e x p re s s e d th ree concerns a b o u t the proposal: •The criteria for the awareness area was not specific enough. •T h e c o u rs e s a lr e a d y fu lfillin g the requ irem en ts h av e not been c le a rly identified. •The plan to implement the proposal is not Clear. Hunnicutt said there would be an open meeting to discuss the matter Dec. 6, and the C A P C will m eet to discuss the matter two days latefc. The Senate likely will vote on the measure at its Dec, 10 meeting, officials said. Turn to Cultural, page 8 . S tudents w an t say in faculty b u d g e t p ro c e ss By KEVIN SHEH State Press The Faculty Senate approved a motion Monday that calls for m ore faculty representation in the budget process, while student leaders continue to ask for a voice on the financial committee. Currently, Faculty Senate President Arlene Metha, a non­ voting mem ber, is the council’s only faculty member. The motion requested that the chairman o f , Financial Affairs, n il a n the council But Associated said that While he does not oppose the faculty on the committee, students should get priority. “ There are a lot less faculty and a hell of a lot more students,” Ortega said, adding that 2,000 to 3,000 faculty m em bers are represented by one person on the Budget Council, but the 43,000 students have no voice, The approved faculty m easure will be forwarded to A S U President Lattie Coor for consideration. M etha agreed that student representation also important. “ W e highly support student involvement in the budget process,’’ she Said. M eanwhile, under an administrative reorganization - unveiled last month by Coor, wholesale changes to the budget process are possible. Corn* said that although the Budget Council m ay not exist in its present form, he supports the Senate proposal and added that student representation in the budget process is also a good idea. “ Although I ’m not persuaded that the Budget Council is the right vehicle, I support additional representation from the faculty as w ell as the student body,” Coor said. “ It makes sense to involve the chair of (the Faculty Senate Financial A ffairs Com m ittee).” The Budget Council makes financial recommendations to Coor and coordinates program change requests for the University. A fter prioritizing the requests, it recommends the changes to Coor. The council also develops budget policy and is involved in fiscal decisions m ade throughout the year. It is uncertain what form the Budget Council will take and how the budget process will proceed under the new scheme, C o w said. “ It hasn’t been determined yet,” he said, adding that a decision would be forthcoming in the next few months. C o w chairs the Budget Council, joined by Budget Director A lan Carroll, A S U W est Provost Vernon Lattin, University Provost E lm e r Gooding, Presidential Assistant L arry Mankin, Athletic Director Charles H arris, all University vice presidents and University Comptroller G erry Snyder. •W. Irwin Daugherty/State Praia G erri Glover, right, a secretary who works in Sponsored Program s Adm inistration at A S U , shows pictures of her son, Brian Callen, to her co-worker M ichelle Johnson, aeophom ore biology major. Callen, who had been discharged from eight years of Marine intelligence service a few m onths ago, volunteered for active duty soon after he heard of developments In the Gulf. Mother awaits son’s hom ecom ing By KENNETH BROW N State Press Three months ago, all G erri Glover knew of Saudi A rabia w as the vast, empty desert she saw in the movies. Now, with photographs, weekly letters and a yellow ribbon tied to her front door, the M iddle E ast has become a pet project for G lover as she awaits the homecoming of her son, a 1985 A S U political science graduate stationed there. But this is one mom who won’t cry. “ I ’m not a wim py mother,” said the 53-year-old A S U secretary and grandmother of five who works in the office o f the vice president of research. Glover told of the strength she .managed to gather the day her son, 32-year-old B rian Callen, told her he was leaving to join “ Operation D esert Shield.” “ I w as sitting at m y desk when B rian cam e in and said ‘I ’ve been called back by popular demand.’ I said, ‘Oh, Fit for a king: Preside n tia l ASU, NAli and UofA students prepare for a simultaneous King day rally on each campus today at 11:30 a.m. proses Page 2 ASASU President Matt Ortega writes a guest column to urge student support o f a MLK holiday. Page 4 w ow .’ — that w as it,” she said. Callen, who had, just months earlier, been discharged from eight years of M arine intelligence service, volunteered active duty soon after he heard of developments in the Gulf. “ When he w as bom , he cam e out with “D ie M arines’ stamped across his forehead,” said the staff sergeant’s mother, “ A s a mother, I ’m naturally worried, but he’s been trained.” E ven though his mother keeps a stiff upper lip, Callen’s two children aren’t hesitant to express their longing for him — sometimes in the form of homemade oatmeal cookies, Callen’s favorite. “ They miss their daddy terribly/’ Glover said. Meanwhile, Glover said her co-workers have grown to know h er son through the pictures and letters she shares with them. Turn to Mom, page 11. Slick win: The Sun Devil basketball team beats the Marathon Oil, 77-72, in an exhibi­ tion game Monday. Page 15 Today’s weather. Cloudy, with • chance o f rain and a high in the low 70a. Tonight! Cloudy with a chance o f rain and a low in the lo w 50s. Classifieds.. .17 Comics....... 14 Crossword.. ..8 Horoscopes. 19 Sports......... 15 Pageg Tuesday, November 20,1990 State P m - ASASU sponsors candlelight vigil fo r MLK By M ICHELLE R OBERTS AND JENNIFER FRANKLIN State Press U n iversity students and community l e a d e r s a t A r i z o n a ’s t h r e e m a j o r universities will unite this morning to protest the statewide defeat of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday. ' A related event at A SU , at the fountain near Cady M all, organized by the student group, K ing D a y F oru m and Action Committee, will begin at 11: 30 a.m. Similar rallies will occur simultaneously a t UofA and N A U , said Rob Miller, A SA SU state relations director. L eah L an d ru m , chairwom an of the student coalition and a political science graduate student, said the campus forums are for all students to voice their feelings about the M L K defeat. “ This will be a chance for people to come together — people who have been hurt hy the K ing D ay decision,” Landrum said. “ N o person is too great or top sm all to demonstrate how they feel about the defeat,” she said, adding that the forum will feature any person who wants to speak about the defeat of King D ay propositions 301 and 302. Proposition 301, which would ha ve created a p a id K in g h o lid a y s t a t e w id e b y eliminating Columbus Day, w as defeated overwhelm ingly in the Nov. 6 general Tri-university protest scheduled with rally at Phoenix Civic Center election. Proposition 302, which would have provided the M L K D ay as an added paid s t a t e h o lid a y , w a s d e fe a t e d b y a 51-to-49 percent margin. L a n d r u m s a i d t h a t w h i le m a n y community mem bers and officials have been invited to speak at the student reaction forum, she w as not positive they would attend. She said the coalition to restore King D ay w as formed the day after Proposition 302 failed at the polls, adding that many Arizonans have unresolved feelings about the M L K D ay failure. “ I ’m a native of Arizona and I ’m very embarrassed. It hurts m e that we don’t honor K in g/’ she said. In its efforts to enact a King Holiday, the student Coalition for King D ay also has begun circulating a petition around three Arizona campuses, she added. Landrum said the petition “ is meant to give people one more chance to show their support and have a clear choice.” She added that 100,000 signatures are needed and would be gathered as soon as possible. Phillip Martin, a junior political science m ajor and president of the student coalition, said the goal of the movement is to create a new proposition to m irror the federal holiday, “ It (the petition to create a proposition) would combine the two president’s holidays “ This w ill be a chance for people to come together — people who h ave been hurt by the King D ay decision. ” — Leah Landrum intq one and leave room for one Martin Luther King paid holiday — that way, it won’t be an extra paid holiday,” he said. M artin said he thinks the King holiday lost because two propositions for a King D ay w ere put on the ballot, which divided the votes of holiday supporters. “ I don’t think the people have spoken on this is s u e ,” M a rt in s a id . “ I t ’s no c o in c id e n c e t h a t t h e r e w e r e tw o propositions.” M artin said m em bers of his organization are anxious to have the King issue resolved in their favor. “ W e don’t want to have to wait two years (fo r the issue,to be decided),” he said. “ W e would like to have it tagged onto the run-off election or have a new election.” A SU Political Science Professor Michael Mitchell, a faculty adviser to the student coalition, said he thinks this m orning’s forum will be a place w here people can express their thoughts. “ Dem ocracy does m ean living by the will of the majority, but 1 don’t think that (dem ocracy) inhibits the right of people to speak out on issues they feel strongly on,” Mitchell said. Ashahed Triche, president of the A SU chapter of National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said his organization will be represented at the rally. Triche said he is not shocked the holiday did not pass. “ I ’m not surprised at people and their ignorance,” he said, adding that “ by voting T^wn to MLK, page 6. Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any cam pus 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 «¡object to editing for content, apace end clarity, and will not be taken over the phone; Due to aoeoStsm i a ituwa l l w Stefa Pres s cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is i p.nr. the previous business day. •American Marketing Association will meet at 4:15 Meetings •Alcoholics Anonym ous will have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on C ollege Avenue and University Drive. •Coalition for King Day will m eet at 11:30 a.m. near the fountain on Cady Mall to rally and discuss issues and options for an MLK holiday. -*u*tiiess College Council will m eet at 3:15 p.m. in BAC 218. p.m. in the MU Pima Room, •Baptist Student Union will meet at 7 p.m. at 1322 S. Mill Ave. for a Thanksgiving worship. •Students for Environmental Awareness will m eet at 5 p.ni. in the Language and Literature Building lobby. •Minority Assistance Program Will meet at 3 p.m. in the Student Services Multicultural Lounge for a Circle Moving Awareness group. A SA SU Lecture Series G. Gordon Liddy STATE OF TH E M IN D vs. M I N D OF TH E STATE Timothy Leary W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 28 • 7:00 p.m . A r iz o n a R o o m • M e m o r ia l U n io n W o r ld / N a t io n State Près* Page 3 Tuesda^Novembe^O^IWO Bush ready to give food to aid USSR Smoke sale Auctioneer Page Roberta, right, opens the burtey sales season Monday at the Fourth Street W arehouse C o ., In Lexington, Ky., where tobacco was going for up to $1.75 a pound. P A R IS ( A P ) — President Bush said Monday he was prepared to send food to the Soviet Union “ during the bleak winter” to help preserve Mikhail Gorbachev’s democratic reforms. “ W e want to try to help with the evolution of market systems and the evolution of the change that’s taking place,” Bush said before a two-hour meeting with Gorbachev. “ And you also want to help new friends when you find them if they’re in jeopardy.” Germ an Chancellor Helmut Kohl, meanwhile, said he and Gorbachev already had agreed that Germ any would send food, and rail shipments could begin as early as next week. The Soviet Union has had bountiful harvests this year, but a breakdown in distribution has led to m ore spoilage than usual. In addition, many ru ral communities are holding back food shipments for their own use or for barter. The Bush-Gorbachev talks focused on the Persian Gulf crisis, and the two leaders em erged with a “ conceptual agreement” that the use of force to push Iraq out of Kuwait could not be ruled out, White House spokesman M arlin Fitzwater said. Gorbachev, in his speech at the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, dwelt little on the political and economic crisis facing his country, but warned that nationalist and separatist forces threatened to undercut steps toward democracy and a m arket economy in the Soviet bloc. Turn tO Summit, page 12. P A R IS (A P ) — British Prim e Minister M argaret Thatcher’s legendary iron facade showed cracks Monday as she struggled to conduct business as usual at a summit while aides and allies fought for her political survival back home. In co m m e n ts a ft e r m e e tin g w ith President Bush and at a later news c o n fe r e n c e , T h a t c h e r d u ck ed blunt questions about the challenge to her leadership. At home, form er defense secretary Michael Heseltine w as defending himself against criticism Thatcher had m ade in r e m a r k s p u b l i s h e d in M o n d a y ’ s newspapers. H eseltin e’s econom ic policies w ere "different from everything I believe in . . . intervention, corporatism, everything that pulled us down, ’ ’ Thatcher told The Tim es of London. In an interview with B B C radio, Heseltine protested: “ As long as I w as a m em ber of the government I w as regarded as really rather a good egg, out there pushing the frontiers of privatization... . ” Thatcher appeared cool and confident Monday morning, posing with Bush on a gold brocade sofa at the British Embassy. It’s the im age of a world leader that her allies are stressing in the leadership race. But she stiffened as reporters peppered her with questions on her first serious challenge in 11 years, and she left a news conference early. Bush did what he could to help one of his most loyal allies. “ I stay out of all this,” Bush said, “ but we have a superb relationship with Mrs. Thatcher. It is indeed a special relationship, Thanksgiving travelers to g o b y road, not air N E W Y O R K (A P ) — Despite economic gloom and higher fuel prices, Am erican drivers plan to hit' the road in higher numbers this Thanksgiving, but the nation’s airlines aren’t expecting a sim ilar surge. The Am erican Automobile Association reported Monday that m ore people are expecting to drive 100 miles or more for Thanksgiving, based on a survey of 1,500 adults. The airlin es, m eanw hile, a re predicting no improvement over last year, a discouraging sign for an industry that has been hit hard by sluggish demand and steady increases in jet fuel prompted by the Persian Gulf crisis. “ Historically, we have exceeded the previous year, but this year w e think w e'll be flat,” said Stephen Hayes of the A ir Transport Association of America. Even though gasoline (»ic e s have risen by nearly 30 cents a gallon since Iraq invaded Kuwait in August, A A A pointed out that an automobile that gets 20 miles a gallon can go 100 miles for less than $7. About 22.5 m illion people, 9 percent of the population, w ill drive to holiday feasts, A A A said. The number should be 3 percent higher than a year ago, although Thanksgiving travel is generally down from levels of the mid-1980s, the A A A said. When the economy suffers, people a re less likely to plan trips, A A A spokesman Geoff Sundstrom said. But the auto club w as surprised that higher gasoline prices don’t seem to be having much of an impact. “ W e often hear analysts talk about the psychological effects of higher gas prices, but we haven’t seen it in holiday travel,” Sundstrom said. and fa r be it from m e to figure out the internal politics of a party in the United K in gdo m ... . ” On T u e sd ay , the 372 C on servative mem bers of Parliam ent w ill vote for party leader, choosing between Thatcher and Heseltine, h er suave fo rm e r defense secretary. Thatcher m ay find out if she is still party leader — and hence prime m inister— on her w ay from the summit to a ballet and state dinner at Versailles. At a packed news conference Monday afternoon in an ornate 18th century salon at the British Em bassy, she battled to keep questions on the higher plane of world peace a n d on th e a c h i e v e m e n t s o f h e r Conservative government. “ D o you feel sore that at this time when you are here to celebrate the end of the Cold W a r that you are facing a leadership challenge at home?” a B B C reporter asked. “ No, I don’t feel sore at all. I ’m just very glad that w e’ve got to a stage where w e can actually sign this agreem ent among 22 countries. It is very, very good evidence of the very good w ork that this government has done in cooperation with others and that w e have been very prominent in securing this,” she said. “ A re you confident you w ill not be at a change of address by the end of the week, and what makes you confident? ” the next reporter asked. “ I most earnestly believe that I will be at No. 10 Downing Street at the end of this week, and a little bit longer than that,” she replied. “ W hat makes m e so confident — I think I have a marvelous team working with m e and I think that w e are all optimistic.” Senators defend dealings with Keating W A S H IN G T O N ( A P ) — Sen. Dennis DeConcini directed a firey attack Monday at the Ethics Committee’s special counsel, accusing him of relying on “ lies and allegations and hearsay” to build a case that the Arizona Democrat improperly assisted form er savings and loan operator Charles H Keating Jr. DeConcini abandoned his normally low-key Style and often raised his voice to a shout as he denied wrongdoing and defiantly said of law yer Robert Bennett : “ He stands here as a prosecutor . . . H e wants a victory. He wants to nail somebody.” Bennett “ wants another trophy on the w all,” said DeConcini. H e w as the last senator to give his opening statement in the Ethics Committee hearings into allegations that the “ Keating F ive” intervened for the businessman because of the $1.3 million he contributed to their campaigns and causes. Sens. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., John McCain, R-Ariz., John Glenn, D-Ohio and Donald W. Riegle Jr., D-Mich., all denied impropriety — often emotionally— on Friday. “ The issue in this case is not m e,” Bennett retorted when given a chance to speak later in the day. “ The issue in this case is the conduct o f the senators. That is what has brought them here.” The law yer also ridiculed suggestions by Cranston, DeConcini and Riegle that he w as holding them to non­ existent Senate standards of conduct. “ The greatest deliberative body in the whole world — you can’t hack it under my standards? These are not m y standards,” Bennett said. “ These are your standards.” He also said the experienced defense lawyers in the case know that “ when you don’t like the law , you go after the opposing lawyer. When you don’t like the message, you burn the m essenger.” The third d ay of hearings ended after Bennett called his first witness, McCain staffer Gwendolyn van Paasschen. She backed M cCain’s testimony that he refused to negotiate with regulators for Keating, prompting Keating to call the senator a “ w im p.” The Ethics Committee, three Democratic and three Republican Senate colleagues of the five law m akers being investigated, could recommend that the full Senate approve punishment such as reprimands — or it could recommend at the end of the hearings that no action be taken against some or all of the five. Keating w as the chairm an of the failed Lincoln Savings and Loan, of Irvine, Calif., and m ade many of his contributions while trying unsuccessfully to keep the government from seizing his thrift. The S& L’s parent company is based in Arizona, DeConcini and M cCain’s home state. Lincoln’s collapse is expected eventually to cast taxpayers $2 billion. DeConcini said he intervened for Keating with banking regulators in A pril 1987 because he believed the businessman had “ a legitimate beef” with the federal government. Constituents, he said, “ have a right to ask for your intervention” because bureaucrats “ often are wrong” and “ somebody ought to stand up” for them. “ I’ve never been bought,” DeConcini said, adding that Bennett’s evidence, presented last week, “ contains hearsay . . . contains rumors, unfounded allegations about a ll of the senators.” “ Information has been left out and distorted. I hope you find in your conscience there’s something grossly unfair. W hat is w rong with intervention for someone who contributes to your campaign? Nothing.” Last week, Bennett suggested that DeConcini and Cranston w ere most deeply involved with Keating. Evidence shows DeConcini “ w as asked repeatedly to perform services for Charles Keating, and that Senator Tara to Hearings, page 12. O p in io n Page 4 State P re n Tuesday, November 20,1990 B y candlelight ASASU rally p ro v es K ing Day b a ttle isn ’t over y et treat each other with dignity and how to extend to each human being the sam e rights and opportunities, regardless of their cultural background. Matt Ortega Guest Colum nist It is tragic irony that our state is locked in such a fierce battle over how to honor a man who lived for peace. The issue of whether Arizona w ill recognize a holiday for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., however has become the most controversial issue we face. As students, it is imperative that we let our voices be heard on this issue. In the upcoming months, Associated Students shall be concentrating its efforts toward persuading the leaders of our state to make the King holiday a reality. I believe it is critical at this juncture of our state’s history that w e honor the principles of humanity, equality, and non­ violence for which Dr. King gave his life. Whatever your beliefs about Dr. King, the man, it is indisputable that he initiated a movement that m ade the United States a better nation. Dr. King taught us how to Dr. King began his struggle in a nation sharply divided and at silent w a r with itself. A silent w a r that Dr. King understood could have erupted into a violent conflict that would have further disenfranchised the very people who he w as trying to help. Through his efforts the nation developed a clearer vision of how to understand and value differences. B y the time of his death in 1968, he had already given us the tools needed to achieve the peace he dreamed of. The task that looms before us is simply to apply the ideals that Dr. King lived for in our daily lives. A holiday reinforces these ideals. I am convinced that if Arizonans are given a clear vote, a strong m ajority would support a paid state holiday in honor of D r. King. The recent failure of propositions 301 and 302 should not be misconstrued as a vote by the citizens of Arizona against a holiday for D r. King. Sadly, Proposition 302 w as clouded by such issues as Columbus D ay , the Superbowl and the general confusion that resulted from a poorly worded ballot. Arizona must be given the opportunity to demonstration aim ed at showing support for a paid King Holiday. .This is our opportunity to take a strong stand for a King Holiday and show the state that A S U is firm ly behind the dream. vote on the King Holiday once and for all. The leaders of our state must be m ade aw are that the people of Arizona have not truly spoken on the issue. Further, w e must clearly communicate that w e desire very strongly to have a day recognizing the importance of both D r. King and the issue of civil rights that he has come to symbolize. A s president of the Student Body of Arizona State University, I am committing my efforts and the efforts of the individuals working with m e toward the goal of bringing the King Holiday to Arizona. B y honoring Dr. King, w e will not only be taking a strong stand on civil liberties, w e w ill also be reaching out to m any of the disenfranchised people in our own state. Since D r. King fought for the rights of all peoples, regardless of their color, this would indeed be a holiday that would allow everyone to reflect on the rights w e have all come to cherish. T o accom plish our m odern dream , A sso ciate d Students p lan s to create opportunities for students to a ir their views on this crucial issue. It is m y hope that all students will participate in helping Arizona to solve this problem set before us. The first opportunity will occur today at 11:30 a.m. at the fountain on Cady M all. At that time Associated Students will stage a L E T This evening, concerned citizens shall m arch from the Civic Plaza to the state Legislature in an effort to convince our state’s leaders that the hope for a King Day lives on. W e will be meeting at the Civic Plaza at 5:30 p.m. and w e hope to stage a candlelight vigil showing a unified purpose among King D a y supporters. Hopefully, Arizona will soon be able to resolve this divisive issue and allow a healing process to begin. The failure of Proposition 302 has wounded our state, and has created a false im age that our citizenry suffers from intolerance and bigotry. The fight for a King D ay must go on until our voters have had a clear opportunity to express their feelings on this issue. Twenty-two years after the death of Dr. King w e are still struggling to m ake this dream a reality. The vision of civil rights for all marches forward, and visionaries who espouse this dream cannot falter in their efforts to m ake this country truly free. M a tt O rtega serves as Associated Students o f A SU president. T E R S C a rro ll is a b a d A m e ric a n 'What t h e S T A F Editor: In response to Nicole C arroll’s editorial on the M LK holiday (Nov. 14), it seems to m e that she didn’t do very good research on the holiday. It also seems that she is not a very good Am erican for not realizing that the m ajority ‘‘wins.” The holiday w as turned down by the majority of the voters and that’s all that needs to be said. If she can’t understand that, she need to take a political science class here a t college. I ’m sure that if Hitler w as to have a holiday named for him she would probably vote for it also, because she doesn’t seem to think that what a person has done matters. W ell, it does ! If you think Washington, Lincoln, and Columbus have some ill traits in their pasts then how come you didn’t mention what they were? If you are so willing to give money aw ay for a paid holiday then why don’t you give m e that money? I can use it m ore than the state of Arizona. But, of all things, you should rem em ber that this is a free country and that each person is free to vote as he/she sees fit. That is what civil rights is about. F R E E D O M ! But yet you want to take it aw ay from everybody. Does the vote of the people not count anymore? Just because the outcome didn’t go your w ay doesn’t m ean you should jum p all over the people who voted “ N o ” . Y ou say w e don’t honor these men for who they are, but for what they did and for what they represent. Then why do you want an M L K holiday and not a civil rights holiday? It seems like all of you people want his nam e on the holiday. If I w as old enough to vote w a y back when, I probably wouldn’t have voted for Washington, Lincoln or even Columbus. Do m e a favor — think before you speak next time. Steven Todd Nicoil Senior, Elem entary Education B o a r d o f "R ege n ts E D I T O R I A L F STATE PRESS SUZANNE ROSS Editor. NICOLE PERRON Managing Editor CO PY EDITORS; Kellye Kratch, Michael LaMantia. City Editor______________________ .».HOBART RO W LAND CARTOONISTS: Rob Minton, Julie Sigwait. Asst. City Editor....... ......... ............ ..._____ KELLY PEARCE Copy Chief....____________________...KRISTEN JOHNSON M AG AZINE STAFF: Michelle Cruff, Vicki Culver, Christine News Editor.________......._______ .»..__ ...TENNY TATUSJAN Herbranson, Sharon Kaney, Jennifer Anderson, Chris Bardy, Opinion Editor.______ __________ _________ D A N NO W IC KI Asst. Opinion Editor...... ............ „ ....»....JULIA GOODRUM Randy Hawkins, Monique Hollin, Lori Lappin, Aaron Levy Joel Press, Jon Walz, Kramer Wetzel. 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T he editorials d o hot reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: S u zan n e R oss N ic o le P erro n D a n N o w ic k i E d ito r M a n a g in g E ditor O p in io n E ditor The State Press welcom es and encourages written response from o u r readers on any topic. . A ll letters must b e typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include y o u r full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity 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 Matthews Center, A rizona State University, Tempe, A rizona 85287-1502. Tuesday, November 20 , 1990 S tg tcP rC H Pd 3 e 5 The w ild card In iro n ic tw ist o f fate, Israel m ay b e key to p e a c e J o sep h S o b ran U n iversal Press Syn dicate W A S H IN G T O N — M aybe w e won’t have a w ar after all. Congress has finally begun to assert its constitutional role — w hat I suppose, in today’s idiom, w e should call “ the constitutional option. ” A little late, but not too late. The chief executive doesn’t necessarily have the sovereign power to start hostilities on his own. G eorge Bush m ay be secretly relieved at being deprived of that kingly prerogative. Congress can now rescue him from the corner he’s been painting himself into since August. If he doesn’t feel grateful yet, he probably will later. T he duel between George Bush and Saddam Hussein is like a poker gam e. Mr. Bush has been doing a lot of bluffing: He and his subordinates have given too m any reasons for going to w ar, each reason weakening the credibility of the others. A short list : Aggression is intolerable, Saddam Hussein is like H itler (only w orse), our hostages are being abused, and the whole K uw ait thing is costing us jobs. So far the Monroe Doctrine hasn’t been invoked, but give them time, Meanwhile, Saddam Hussein hasn’t said much. He clearly does not want w ar with the United States. But if the United States launches an attack on Iraq, he threatens to attack Israel. This is a threat to be taken seriously. The poker-faced dictator doesn’t go in for preppy bluster: He has told us just what to expect. He hasn’t devalued his menace by adding new threats and denunciations every day. If he fires chemical weapons into Israel, several results are likely: 1. M any innocent Israelis and A rabs will be killed. 2. Israel will strike back ferociously — without waiting for U . S. approval. Baghdad m ay be nuked. Countless Iraqi A ra b s will die. 3. Saddam Hussein himself m ay perish, but the entire A rab w orld will hold the United States responsible for the carnage. The upshot would be what the Los A ngeles Tim es calls “ a dangerous new era in global relations,’’ with the United States cordially hated by the surviving A rabs for having arm ed Israel. “ Saddam Hussein might be dead by then, but he would have won,” the Tim es quotes a senior U . S. official as saying. So a w ar would be a much higher risk operation for the United States than w e originally thought. Ira q ’s Hussein missies (modified Soviet SC U D missies with an extended range ) are aim ed at Israel, and w e will have to take them out before he launches them. One difference between Bush and Hussein is that there is no debate as to whether Hussein is bluffing. Given the scale of U . S. forces in the gulf, he would have nothing to lose by making good on his threat. And nobody thinks Israel would, should or could tolerate an attack lying down. So Israel is the wild card in this poker game, the fact that Saddam Hussein is counting on to keep the United States from starting w ar. And given the danger of a Middle E ast in which all A rabs have become mortal enemies of the United States, George Bush m ay decide, when the chips are down, to fold. W hat an irony it would be if Israel were, unintentionally, to deter the United States from m aking the w a r that Israel’s Am erican partisans are urging. It would also come as a w ry though happy surprise to those of us who have feared that Israel would som eday d raw the United States into a Mideast w ar. But what happens to George Bush politically if he doesn’t fulfill his pledge to drive Iraq out of Kuwait? H e can fall back on Congress’ refusal to declare w ar. That w ill give him a decorous out. H e can blam e Congress publicly while blessing it in his heart. And what if Congress insists on declaring w ar? That’s a whole other story. But Congress won’t do it unless the president is insistent. And m aybe not even then. Korea and Vietnam helped destroy two presidencies. But no president w as ever ruined for having kept us out of w ar. George Bush should reflect on that, and reach for the lifeline the Constitution affords him. B ush h asn ’t b e e n p rep arin g th e U.S. p u b lic for w ar C o d y S h earer N orth Am erican Syndicate W A S H IN G T O N — A little m ore than 10 years ago, I ’d finished an early morning jog with George Bush on a golf course in Little Rock, Ark., when he decided to play a joke on Sen. Howard B aker (R -Tenn,), who was also attending a G O P state convention there. Without having a chance to offer an opinion, I suddenly found m yself trailing Bush down a series of hotel corridors where he said he rem em bered B aker w as staying. To m y horror, Bush started turning the doorknobs on various rooms in hope of finding his target and an unlocked door. After a series of unsuccessful break-ins, Bush found a door a ja r and whispered to me that this w as the right room. H e then raced in, making whooping sounds. Unfortunately, there w as no H ow ard B aker in sight, only two elderly women, half scared out o f their wits. W e m ade a quick getaway. I ’m reminded of this 7 a.m. folly because as much as George Bush likes to think of him self a s a pragmatist, he doesn’t seem to know where he is taking this nation in regards to the Persian Gulf. Decisions as fundamental as w a r and peace require a president to g e a r up the public and political mood for widespread loss of Am erican life. President Bush has yet to do this. As time passes, it will become harder not to do what people have threatened to do. I f P r e s i d e n t B u s h w a n t e d to b e straightforw ard with the A m erican people, he’d tell them that the m ilitary offensive he’s planning goes fa r beyond the liberation o f Kuwait. While U . S. A ir Force, Marines and N avy personnel tie down m ost of the Ira qi forces in Kuwait, a U . S. ground assault will hit Baghdad. This effort Will require Turkish and Syrian troops to be deployed close to their borders, forcing Hussein to disperse m ore of his troops to the north and west of Iraq. At the sam e time, protracted U . S. aerial bombardments will knock out Iraqi power stations, oil refineries, chemical works and airports. Any such assault could take weeks or even months to complete and cost up to thousands of Am erican lives. A s it succumbs to a military offensive, however, Iraq can be expected to use chemical weapons against U . S. troops and Western cities in guerrilla operations, in addition to attacking oil installations along the western G ulf coast. In the midst o f this destruction lies an even darker shadow. The m ore successful the U . S. is in defeating Hussein, the more lik e ly it is that A m e ric a n interests worldwide w ill be threatened. Perhaps President Bush doesn’t want to frighten the Am erican people but he is not telling them the following: •M ilitary hospitals in m ajor Greek cities and on the island of Crete have already been placed on alert to deal with possible Western casualties in the event of w ar. Two U S. military bases at Gournia and Souda on the northwest comm* of Crete have been freshly stocked with new medical supplies. •The well-entrenched Iraqis are prepared to use w alls of flam e to stop a U S. ground attack on Kuwait. Huge anti-tank ditches have been dug on the Kuwaiti frontier which will be flooded with oil should U . S. forces break through. •Recent U . S. intelligence reports reveal that a m edium-range surface-to-surface m is s ile w a s tested fo r B a g h d a d in Mauritania, W est A frica within the last few weeks. Iraqi technicians fired the missle known as A l H ijara, with a potential rang,» of 1,250 miles, which could put Am erican aircraft carriers within striking range. •The timetable for w a r is increasingly imminent. B y the end o f this month daytime temperatures will be down to 80 degrees in the Western desert of Iraq. This cool season lasts until late M arch. If there is going to be military action, it has to be before that date. •Portugal is one of a series o f nations that continues to serve as a staging ground for black m arket arm s shipments to Iraq. •The A ra b world rem ains convinced, regardless of what President Bush says, that U. S. interest in the G u lf is to secure oil supplies rather than achieve any ideological goals. Only now a re the Am erican people beginning to weigh the high price of military action in the Persian Gulf. Since the President hasn’t been forthcoming on the topic, it will be left to others in Congress and elsewhere to discuss the possibility of a protracted w a r o r an Iraqi attack on Israel followed by an Israeli use of nuclear weapons and the immediate collapse of A ra b support for U . S. forces. B y sending 400,000 plus forces to the Gulf, President Bush has reduced his options. N ow he must do m ore than play gam es with doorknobs. Pag« 6 State Press Tuesday, November 20,1990 Decline in African students threatens club By DIANE SANTORICO State Press A decrease in the African student population at A SU has the African Student Association concerned about their future on campus. The association has seen a decrease from 200 members, in the middle 80’s, to only about 70 mem bers today, said Uche Umuolo, the organization’s president. Umuolo, an A S U la w student, has been in Arizona since 1982 and graduated from the University with a degree in political science in 1988. Suzanne Steadman, director of the international students’ program , said the decrease in the African student population is nationwide, not just at ASU. Umuolo said the problem has many causes, adding that the lack of funds is the most prominent. ’"There are many schools that just don’t care about having African students come to their schools. The money is coming from the Japanese and the Chinese students,” Umuolo said. Steadman said the University does not cater to certain nationalities, adding that it is sad that people from poorer nations cannot afford to'come to ASU. “ It is an immigration regulation,” she said. “ The United States counsul in A frica wants to make sure the students have the money before they come here, so the students are not stranded.” Umuolo claimed the problem stems from the poor economic situation in Africa. I f parents want to send'their children to college in the United States, he said, the money goes through so many governmental channels in Africa that it m ay take up to a year before the school receives payment. “ Some parents go through the black m arket,” he said. “ But for every $l,000 it m ay cost, they have to pay $10,000. Umuolo said if the money doesn’t get into the hands of the administrators hère, the students aren’t able to register, adding that if African students cannot take classes, they must work. But if they try to work, immigration will be at their backdoors, he added. “ There are m any schools that just don’t care about having A frican students come to their schools.” — Uche Um uolo “ W e are caught in the middle,” Umuolo said, “ W e just need to make the best out of the bad situation.” Although there is not much that can be done to change the bureaucracy in A frica immediately, Umuolo said he is looking for some compromises. “ I don’t think money should be a priority,” he said. “ Why can’t they offer scholarships, or reduce tuition? I know they can’t be patient forever waiting for the tuition payments, but there should be something that can be done.” Steadman said there are scholarships available for international students but they have to be attending A S U for a year and achieve good grades. “ The best w ay they (the African students) can come here is with a teaching assistantship,” Steadman said. “ They get a salary and an out-of-state tuition w aiver.” Umuolo said he knows it’s hard for everyone involved but thinks if m ore people paid attention t o ' the cultural characteristic African students can bring to the A SU community, m aybe support would increase. In an effort to m ake the A S U community m ore aw are of the positive cultural aspects of the African students the association hosted an “ African Night” last Friday that included a K aw am be dance ensemble. Umuolo is currently working on a law degree here and said he wants to return home to Nigeria to help other students obtain the sam e opportunities. “ Y ou know, a tree doesn’t m ake a forest, but it can make a lot of noise when you go to cut it down,” he said. “ I have a. responsibility to help people understand what w e are all about.” MLK________ ____________ Continued fr o 0 page 2. it down, Arizona is confirming the racist logo put on them. H ie stigma is hard to live down.” • TWehe said he supports the student’s King D ay petition attempt, adding that a non-paid holiday is not good enough. “ It (an unpaid King Holiday) m ay be good enough for some people in the state, but if it’s not totally recognized (a s a paid holiday). I feel that it’s not good enough,” he said. Meanwhile, another student reaction to the defeat of King D ay will occur at 5:30 p.m. today. A SA SU will stage a candlelight vigil honoring Martin Luther King, Jr. while state officials meet for a two-day special session to discuss election run-off rules. Vigil participants will meet at the Phoenix Civic Plaza, march to the Capitol building and remain there pntU 8:00 p.m. A S U President Lattie Coor said he will be present at the ASA SU candlelight vigil and try to attend the morning forum. Coor said he is in full support of the events. “ I believe the more this campus can show its support for Martin Luther King, Jr. and the holiday, the better it’s going to be for all of us in Arizona,” he said. TO GEORGE COLLEGE ISA li G o lf A n d C h a m pa ig n . Champaign, as in Champaign, Illinois, where George Sakas is a Master's Degree candidate at the University of Illinois. And Golf, as in George's 1987 Volkswagen Golf. “This car's great to drive. W e've taken it on road trips to Florida and all over the Midwest. Golf's got that special, solid Volkswagen feel." (Hey George, the word is Fahrvergnügen!) “Golf's got lots of room for friends. And its hatchback design has come in handy for the many times I've moved." For practicality, performance and the fun of Fahrvergnügen, take it from George. ^ • And take up Golf. ^ If you drive a Volkswagen, you might be selected to appear in an ad like the one above. Send your story and photo to: Volkswagen Testimonials, 187 S. Woodward. Suite 200, Birmingham, Michigan 48009 © 1990 Volkswagen $ W e Press Tuesday, November 20,1990 „£522. COME H O N O R D R . M A R T IN LU T H E R K IN G , JR. A N D CIVIL RIGHTS TODAY 11:30 a.m. — Speaker’s Forum W est Lawn 5:30 p.m. — Civil Rights M arch From the Phoenix Civic Center to the State Capital 8:00 p.m. — Candlelight Vigil at the State Capital Sponsored by ASASU & MLK Day Coalition Page 8 State Prêt» Tuesday, November 20,1990 Cultural ofessional Continued from pi^e K David Schwalm, chairman of the General Studies Council, said there has been a national movement to increase cultural awareness in college curriculums by incorporating diversity. “ I think it is an idea whose time has come,” he said. Schwalm said that under the plan, which he hopes to institute in fall 1991, an additional awareness area, entitled “ Awareness of Cultural Diversity in the United States,” would be created. A S U President Lattie Coor said he backs the concept. “ I strongly endorse it,” he said. “ I think the idea of an array of courses to d raw attention to diversity is sound.” He added that the Faculty Senate timetable is reasonable. “ The most important thing is to do it right,” Coor said, adding that he would support the proposal if endorsed by the Faculty Senate. Schwalm said his committee is in the process of developing m ore specific criteria. In addition, he said the committee will contact faculty m embers and departments, encouraging the development of courses to increase cultural awareness. “ W e are already well into (the project),” Schwalm said, adding that under the most conservative estimates, several courses already satisfy the requirements. “ I did a real quick count, and I found 35 or 40 courses,” he said. But Schwalm said his committee recognized it would take time to develop enough cultural diversity course! to meet the demand created by a General Studies requirement. H e said the new plan would be instituted in two stages. For the first two years, students only would be required to satisfy two of the three “ awareness areas.” After assessments indicated there are a sufficient number of cultural diversity courses, Schwalm said students would be required to take all three courses. Schwalm said, however, that the additional requirements should not hinder or delay students’ graduation, because a single course could satisfy both a core and an awareness area under the existing University rules. “ If a student is careful (in his selection of courses), it wouldn’t add to the number of courses he would have to take,” Schalm said. However, one course could not satisfy two awareness areas, he said. U nder current A S U policy, there are five core areas and two awareness areas. Students must complete a minimum of 15 semester hours in two of the core areas — social and behavioral sciences, and humanities and fine arts — and take a minimum of six hours in one core area and nine hours in the other core area. Students also are required to take a minimum of eight hours in the natural sciences core. In addition, students must take a minimum of one course in the global awareness area and one course in the historical awareness area. $14 H a ir D Designers H a ir c u t s E. University (reg. $20) Shampoo, Tempe Towne Plaza Conditioner SE corner of Rural & University 966-6111 ONE COUPON P $5 Professional U H a ir Off Perm D Designers (reg. $45) 933 Ë. University $10 O ff Spital Tèmpe Towne Plaza Wraps, includes SE corner of Rural Shampoo, & University 966-6111 Conditioner, Cut ONE COUPON P Professional JJ D Cellophane: H a ir $22 Designers Highlights: 933 E. University Tempe Towne Plaza SE corner of Rural & University 966-6 111 ONE P Professional H D T a n n i n g S e s s io n s H a ir $10 d ow n $1.50 each visit Designers 933 E. University Tempe Towne Plaza Eyelashes & Eyebrows SE comer of Rural Tinted $12 & University 966-6111 ONE COUPON You can say many things about Macintosh. But “I can’t afford i f is no longer one o f them. You can talk about how simple the Apple* Macintosh* computer is to use. Or how it can think the way you think. Or how compatible it is with other computers. But think again when the word “expensive” comes to mind. Because it’s just not true any more. Introducing the Macintosh Classic* computer, It’s the most affordable Macintosh, yet it has all the capabilities you need to handle basic applications, such as word processing and spreadsheet analysis. The Classic is a completely integrated Macintosh system. 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Q ^aaKytfTtduadcn^cflatfnuootWlkasra Machine»Gorpaapoa C R O SSW O R D b y T H O M A S JO S E P H ACR O SS the tile 41 Glossy 42 Chopped down 43 Whirlpool 1 Jose’s home 5 Lucy’s friend TO Eggshaped 12 Money DOWN B A S 1 C A L 1 V E R A D A R C A Y U S E O P E N E N O P E N A N C E T £ W i E1 N H T A 1 N E D S P A D U A S T E s H o o 1 N P E P L O A N■ 1 N T E D N E T WO A G O E B A D N N O T A T O Y E P E T R H A P S P A R E L i KN NE OR OT 1 S ANS 1 G ets by P 2 Turns E aside (si.) B R 131990 3 Minor Yesterday’s Answer winner of despot tennis’s 4 Had lunch separator cock's U.S. Open 5 Poet “R e a r— * 19 Describes 15 G o awry Lazarus 29 Detected 20 Fenway 16 Oolong, 6 Pinnacle Park 30 Wiped eg. 7 Dr. Seuss team, for clean 1 7 “— folly to elephant 33 Like some short foe wise* 8 Director 24 Events punk 18 Prison May hairdos 25 Soap­ camp 9 Colleens 35 Bison making 20 Radius, 11 Country bunch stuff for one place 26 Immedi­ 38 Regret 21 Rancor 14 Greeceately 39 Brit's 22 Cash 27 Hitch­ Turkey quaff register 1 S- ’ 4 6 y T ~ '8 6 section 1Ó 23 Honey a drinks id 14^ 25 Chess­ man is i. 28 Gallows ■ ■ * 18 19 feature ■ 31 Singer ¿i Redding ■ * 24 32 Philadel­ phia 25 26 2 T äT” 29 3 ¡| j¡| cagers i 34 Cargo M 32 33 weight _ 1 34 w 3g~ 35 Farm , ■ J ■ layer ¿7 38^ 39 36 Siesta 4Ò 37 Runnerup to 13 ; 42 43 Across 5■ 40 Clean D A IL Y C R Y P T O Q U O T E S — H ere’s how to work i t : 11/20 AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW 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. CRYPTOQUOTE 1 1 -2 0 U M A AM O M U Z F UM A P Z E U A M P Z YM N Z A M K V F M K L T NE G EV R K L V Z ; AM P KF E V E U Y M O Z . — Y E Y Z LM Y e s t e r d a y ’s C r y p to q u o te : A BEE IS NEVER A S B U S Y A S IT SEEMS: I T S JU ST T H A T IT C A N ’T BUZZ A N Y SLO W ER. — K IN H U B B ARD © 1990 b y King Featu res Syndicate, Inc. State Press T u e sd a y. N o v e m b e r 90.1990 Transit p lan to include sales tax increase the better plans in the county. By JOHN CH AM PIO N , The full plan will be presented to voters following a series State Press T he M arico p a County R egional Transit Authority o f . open houses that will introduce the plan to all announced last week that a new transit plan will include municipalities in Hie R P T A service area. boosting the current sales tax by .5 percent while doubling the num ber of buses on the streets by 1996. The plan will be presented at an open house in Tem pe’s According to Theresa Wagoner, R P T A public informations Py le Recreation Center, 655 E . Southern Ave., on Monday, specialist, the sales tax increase would generate an Nov. 26 from 3 to 7 p.m. The Tempe City Council w ill look estimated $700 million over the first five years and would be over the proposal on Nov, 29 at 8:00 p.m. split evenly between the transit and the freew ay systems. W agoner said there is no decision on a referendum yet, but Should the tax hike be implemented countywide, the funding would pay for approximately 325 new buses. The the R P T A hopes to put it on the ballot during 1991. M ark Lynne from the Tem pe Cham ber of Commerce said federal government also would chip in for h a lf’the cost of the the plan would be beneficial to Tempe. buses. “ The increase in service to areas in the V alley would be a T h e re m a in in g fu n d s w o u ld go to w a rd c a p ita l improvements, including shaded benches at m ore locations, benefit to all residents,” he said. Although the cham ber itself has not been briefed on the m ore park-n-ride locations and a method for carrying proposal, Lynne said he believes it will be received bicycles on buses. Officials called Tem pe’s portion of the proposal, which favorably. Tempe Transit Department staffers said they also believe includes a nine-fold increase in bus service and the possibility of light rail line service in the distant future, one of the initiative will help the Valley and surrounding areas alleviate traffic problems. L arry Truitt, a m em ber of the R P T A ’s Citizens Advisory Board, said a sim ilar transit proposal put before voters in Pim a County recently w as voted down. “ W e like public transportation, but w e don’t like paying for it,” he said. Truitt said the defeat of the proposal in Pim a County has the m em bers of the R P T A concerned. W agoner said another plan, which included rail service in and around the Valley, w as voted down in 1985 and led the R P T A to look for a new plan to be presented to citizens before a referendum w as to take place. This time, the R P T A acquired the help of a Citizens Advisory Committee m ade up of people from approximately 99 percent of the surrounding governing bodies. The 118-member panel included nine Tempeans and five m em bers of A S U concerned with the needs of the Phoenix metropolitan area. Police Report stolen from the yard of 414 Adelphi Drive. A S U police reported the following incidents M onday: •A t Sunday’s Cardinal/Packer football gam e, 10 people were ejected for possession o f alcohol, two m en were warned about possession of m arijuana and one man was ejected for disorderly conduct. T em p e police reported incidents Monday: the follow ing •A 19-year-old A S U student w as arrested and charged with criminal trespassing and possession of a fake driver’s license at Taco Bell, 936 E . Apache Blvd., after he tried to enter the restaurant without his shoes on. The officer said he asked him at least three times not to enter the restaurant, but the student ignored his requests. •Between Oct. 18 and Nov. 17, several items w ere stolen from two rooms at Manzanita Residence Hall. Estimated loss is $2,110. •A black Huffy bicycle, valued at $100, was •A 22-year-old A S U student w as arrested a n d c h a r g e d w it h t r e s p a s s in g a n d possession of a suspended license at Flakey J ak e’s, 715 S. R u ral Road, after the m an ager asked him to leave. The student refused and allegedly began fighting with the employees. A fter he w as handcuffed and on the w ay odt the door, police said he headbutted the m anager in the nose and mouth. He w as then charged with assault in addition to the previous charges. •A 19-year-old A S U student w as arrested on c h a r g e s o f c r im in a l d a m a g e and trespassing after he w as kicked out of Asylum nightclub, 1300 N . Hayden Road, and he allegedly went onto the roof and m ade a sm all hole. •A 22-year-old A S U student w as arrested and charged with disorderly conduct after allegedly being involved in a fight at 700 S. M ill Ave. Compiled by State Press reporter Teena Chadwetl. Get down to business. 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Perfect 256 i u tocolornow | _____all ofyourfaE s á ¡5 ^ ' lorpopyeand JBSETJSn Melon faada and *399 FPfOoSi Colors I .- ■ i m Eg 4. i — I Gaia > «■ * 16 bit VGA c anda 14- color VQA ] nt»afectable type My*—. STORE PHOENIX 4 HOURS: « tetistt p 4 Mon-FriM CiwBiii VolMUM Sat. 10-5 1 » 1 266-7873 InAliai 1 i TEMPE I “ 4 liÉ MSoutien) cCModi ■ í I 838-1236 . Siate P ie » Tuesday, November go, 1990 P age 10 ASU study refutes previous hurricane data By TEEN A CHADW ELL State Press T h e a t m o s p h e r ic w a r m in g m a n y scientists predict will occur as a result of the greenhouse effect will not result in more hurricanes, according to a recent study by three A S U climatologists. A S U researchers believe there will not be an increase in hurricanes or their intensity because statistics show that if the air is already w arm in the atmosphere, the air containing the hurricane does not rise as high, resulting in a lower, less intense hurricane, Cerveny said. T his runs co n tra ry to a previou s s t a t e m e n t m a d e b y the A m e r ic a n M e te o ro lo g ic a l Society that claim e d greenhouse warm ing would lead to more hurricanes of greater intensity, a federal researcher said. The difference lies in the w ay ASU “ If anything, w e would see a slight decrease in the intensity of the big storms, like G ilb ert or H ugo,” said R andall C erven y, assistant A S U professor of geography, referring to recent hurricanes that occurred in 1988 and 1989. Robert Balling, director of the laboratory of climatology at ASU, also participated in the research. “ If the temperature goes up about a half a degree it would appear that hurricanes would be no more frequent and less intense,” Balling said. researchers studied the “ real w orld.” , The model upon which, the A M S based their statement is not adequate to compare to the world, said Sherwood Idso, a research physicist at the U . S. W ater Conservation Laboratory — a division of the U . S. Department of Agriculture — who helped in the A S U study. However, Idso concedes that the evidence is not air-tight. “ W e concluded that -it w as difficult to really say what w as going to happen with hurricanes if something Were to happen (greenhouse w arm in g),” he said. T o r e a c h t h e ir c o n c lu s io n , A S U researchers compiled hurricane data from the past 40 years and checked how the statistics varied according to temperature, Idso said. National project aimed at cutting fat intake supermarket tours in selected F r y ’s and Bashas’ grocery stores, in addition to working with school-age children. Shirley Strembel, a registered dietician at the county health department, said that during the supermarket lours, registered dieticians provide a 1%-hour aisle-to-aisle tour to sm all groups of shoppers helping them determine fat contents by reading labels. “ Grant recipients throughout the United States w ill also work with chefs in local restaurants to present low fat food choices to people,” she said. The national guidelines w ere released Nov. 7 in a 27-page booklet that presented w ays to reduce the amount of fat Am ericans eat to an average of 30 percent of their total caloric intake. The previous standard w as 37 percent. Some of the guidelines introduced included: •eating two or three servings daily of meat, poultry, fish, dry beans or eggs, but no more than six ounces a day. •trimming fat from meat and removing the skin from poultry. •eating beans and peas instead of meat, occasionally. By ANITA CARCO N E State Press Cut out the f a t In an effort to encourage healthier eating habits, Project L E A N , a national cam paign aimed at educating and influencing the public on eating less fat, has been instigated. Project L E A N , Low-fat Eating for Am erica Now, Was recently revised by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. It is being sponsored by the Henry H. Kaiser Fam ily Foundation and the Partners for Better Health, an advisory group of 34 national organizations concerned with health and nutrition. The Maricopa County Department of Health Services Bureau of Nutrition w as awarded one of 10 national grants from the K aiser Foundation to implement the two year lowfat eating education program. Project L E A N , initiated statewide in 1989, is committed to promoting the importance of a low-fat diet and helping local residents change the w ay they eat. C u rren tly , A rizo n a P ro je c t L E A N is conducting •eating two or three servings of milk and dairy products daily. •using sugar and salt in moderation. •eating two or m ore servings of fruit, such as one medium apple, an orange or a banana, daily . “ But for the first time» the guidelines are identifying a target for people to reduce the amount of fat people eat to 30 percent or less total calories,” Strembel said. “ The two top killers of eating too much fat are coronary heart disease and cancers such as colon and breast cancer.” Robyn DeBell, Project L E A N nutritionist, said that since the new dietary guidelines w ere m ore positively focused, m ore people w ill likely m ake dietary changes. “ The guidelines will be m ore appealing to people and encourage them to make changes instead of threatening them if they don’t,” she said. “ People can m ake changes at whatever age. E ating lower fat doesn’t mean cutting it out altogether but using sm aller quantities and eating less fatty foods.” T h e St a t e P r e s s M a g a z i n e A W E E K L Y C O L L E G E T O W N J O U R N A L G AM M AG E PRESEN TS ZENITH HASREALLY! datasystems Groupe Bull 40%-50% DISCOUNTS FOR EDUCATION E D P R IC E RETAIL /:/M M in iS p o r t HO laptop is a 10 M in 80C88 processor, 20MB F V /# Harddisk, an external 3.5" 720K drive, 1MB, RAM* a 9.5" Day bright screen, parallel, serial and RGB ports, three hour battery, and an A C adapter/charger. Part No. Z L r M I. $1399 $2399 ¡m m DON’T LEAVE FOR CLASS WITHOUT IT!! , Supersport 286 is an 80286, switchable 12/6 Mhz, zero wait slate laptop with 20 MB harddisk, one 3 3 " 1.4 MB floppy drive, 1 M B o f RA M , parallel port, serial port, and a full size backlit supertwist LCD Microsoft DOS. screen. Software included is Part No. ZWL-200-2. FAST, POWERFUL AND PORTABLE!! SÙpersport 286e $1999 $3499 with 40 MB $2199 $3899 iSH is an V G A 80286, switchable 12/6 Mhz, zero wait state laptop with 20 MB harddisk, one 3.5" 1.4 MB floppy drive, 1 MB o f RA M , parallel port, serial pent, and a full size backlit supertwisi LCD screen. Software included is Microsoft DOS. Part No. ZWL-200-21. $2099 $3599 BATTERY POWERED VGA PERFORMANCE !! JL □ Supersport 386SX Is a V G A 80386, 16Mhz, zero wait state laptop with 40 MB harddisk, one 3 5 " I À MB floppy drive* 1 MB o f R A M , parallel port, serial port* and a full stee $3299 AnwfcanAirimes $5499 S u p e rs p o rt 386SX is a V G A 80386, 16Mhz, zero wait harddisk, one 3 3 " U MB floppy state laptop with 120 M B drive, 1 MB o f RA M , parallel port, serial port, and a full size backlit supertwist LCD screed. tÉ É É É l . i n r f f i t n f f h i j U U A D O C M U H I £ B Wmfen I p N8ff3t0Ouy pAnrtfcN lm 4Ä P»OdUced%KIjirr backlit supertwist LCD screen. ZWL-300-4 G A M M A G E A U D IT O R IU M $3699 Part No. ZWL-380-10 For more information stop by COMPASS in the Moeur Building, Room 108. or call COMPASS at 965-2379 Prices subject to change without notice. Other systems available. For information call (602) 274-9877 F R E E gift to anyone who stop s in for a Zenith system dem o! $6499 Fri. Nov. 30 • 7 & 10 p.m. Sat. Dec. 1 * 2 & 7 p.m. Doors will open 90 minutes prior to show time (30 minutes prior to the Friday 10 p.m. show) for the annua) "Salute to Skiing" Exhibit in the lobby. Tickets on sale at Gammage, ASU Activity Center and Dillard’s Box Offices. Discounts good at ASU ticket outlets only. A R I Z O N A %U»6u 6 0 i (DON BROUN andPETS!fTickets: $10 $5 for full-time ASU students. $7 for ASU faculty, staff, and part-time students, INFORMATION/CHARGE 965-3434 (G AM M AG E! S I A T I I %! \ I K N I T \ Stale Press Tuesday, November go, 1990 A dvertising Display, 965-6555 Classified, 965-6731 put us TO TH E T E S T . Mom Continued from page 1 . • LSA T • GM AT • GRE • M CA T • D AT • GRE • P S Y C H • G R E BIO • O A T • T O E F L • N M B • NDB • NCLEX-RN • MSKP • FM GEM S • FLEX • C G F N S • C P A • BAR EXAM • NTE II you have to take one of these tests, take Kaplan first. Our students get the highest scores. We've proven It to over one million students. Let us prove It to you i KAPLAN Take Kaplan or Take Your Chances F r e e g ift at tim e o f e n ro llm e n t, w h ile s u p p lie s last. ■* < Michelle Johnson, a 21-year-old biology m ajor who works with Glover as a student secretary, said Callen has become a friend. “ It’s different when you see what’s really going on over there,” Johnson said. “ Y o u ’re dealing with friends and family. It’s exciting when he calls.” Johnson added that another friend’s involvement with military operations in Saudi A rabia has helped her relate to Glover’s situation. Patty Cederburg, who works in the sam e office, said Glover’s pictures bring memories o f her four-year stay in the Middle East. “ I can empathize with her because I know what it’s like being over there,” said Cederburg. “ I can say, ‘When I w as over there, I rem em ber this.’ ” Despite rum ors of w ar, Glover is confident her son will be home soon. “ Certainly there is a lingering fear, but he’s welltrained. H e knows how to take care of him self,” she said. D o n ’t be a bird-brain. Read DAVE BARRY every Thursday in The S tate Press Magazine. 9 0 r ""2 9 0 f ■ Scottsdale Detail bia ve Y o u r G a r D etailed by IPorsche C.xperts W e w ill: •S team cle a n e n g in e • B u ff an d w ax exterior • D re ss ex terio r • C le a n in te rio r & trunk • P a in t f ende r w ells Regular Price $99.95 Save $30,00 A SU Special $69.95 FREE HAIRCUT S c o tts d a le D E T A IL when you * A ll M a k es a n d M o d e ls *V a n s an d t r u c k s S lig h tly H ig h e r Help the Hungry! F o r a p p o in tm e n t c a ll D w ig h t o r S c o tt at 994-9142 6905 E. M c DOWBII (Behind Scottsdale Lexus) Expires Jan. 30, 1991 G et into the Spirit o f T H A N K S G IV IN G by donating 2 cans o f food. (F ood w ill go to St. M a ry ’ s Food Bank.) Hairstyles by: Ti%@lliP§ (from the B o u q a tta ) Tuesday, N ovem ber 20, 1990 • Sponsored by m. 10:00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. V MEMORIAL UNION ACTMTICS B o a r o Special Events 7pm-ciose 2SC Drafts $2 Pitchers 5(K Pint Drafts ^ ¡8 . 7 pm-Close $1 *° long Islands $ 1 Margs INJURED IN A N ACCIDENT? YOU SHOULD KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTSt •F R E E 25CDrafts $2 Pitchers 7 pm-Close $ l50 Long Islands $1 M args^ Sing along w ith K araoke 7 pm-Close Open 7 p.m . Thanksgiving Night •A u to Accidents •M otorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •W ro n g fu l Death Consultation to students an d faculty • R E D U C E D p ercen tage fe e s fo r cases o f clear liability or serious injury •F aulty Products •S lip & Fall •D o g Bites •H om e, even in g & hospital appointm ents available •In su ran ce Disputes Shooter Specials 7 pm-Close L IV E M U S IC 25< Drafts $2 Pitchers 5 pm-Close BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY CALL BAKER & MARCUS Personal Injury Lawyers D O N ’T GET HURT TWICE R ural & Apache Tem pe 4 3 8 -1 2 1 2 4 6 2 5 S. W en d ler Dr., Suite 1 1 1, Tem pe State Press Tuesday, November 80,1990 Summit Continued from page 3. “ It has been generally recognized that the historic shift, occurring in the Soviet Union, aw ay from the totalitarianism to freedom and democracy . . . to a state anchored in the rule of law and political pluralism, from the state economic monopoly to a diversity o f eq u itab le pro perty ow nership . . . constitutes a m ajor change in the world,” he it w as five years to the day since he held his first summit meeting with then-President Ronald Reagan, beginning the thaw in U . S.-Soviet ties. “ Our country has changed and will never be the sam e a s it w as before,” -he added. “ W e have opened up to the world and the world has opened up in response.” s a id But some people were failing to consider the well-being of Europe overall and were practicing “ m ilitant nationalism and reckless separatism ,” he said, a clear allusion to efforts by some Soviet republics to quit the union. “ They m ay spell conflicts, animosity, the ‘Balkanization’ or what would be worse the ‘Lebanization’ of entire regions,” he said. Rising ethnic tensions and efforts to change Europe’s post-1945 borders could have “ a destructive snowball effect” if any government gives w ay to them, he noted. “ A breakthrough in Soviet-American relations has been pivotal in improving the international climate,” he said, noting that “ N o matter what difficulties the Soviet Union faces today, it will rem ain a great European power, in line with its enormous potential,” Gorbachev said. In Washington, House M ajority Leader R ic h a r d G e p h a r d t w e lc o m e d B u s h ’s comments on food aid and said they “ placed the United States firm ly on the side of democratization, peaceful change and economic reform ” in the Soviet Union. Gephardt cam e under sharp criticism last M arch when he suggested U . S. aid for the Soviet Union, particularly from Bush and other Republicans who said such talk w as premature. Bush chats with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev before dinner at the U.S. em bassy in Paris. Hearings Continued from page 3. D e C o n c in i a lm o s t a l w a y s h o n o re d M r. Keating’s request,” Bennett said. DeConcini also contended that Bennett w as giving the only Republican among the five, McCain, preferential treatment. He said Bennett had failed to ask McCain about his w ife’s investment in a shopping center with Keating, and to press him on vacation trips M cCain and his fam ily took on Keating’s airplanes. Bennett mentioned both last week but dismissed them as without serious consequence to the case. B ennett, in u n released but w id ely reported recommendations, has proposed that McCain and Glenn be dropped from the investigation while the probe be intensified for tiie other three. McCain has said his w ife’s investments w ere separate from his. H e also belatedly paid for trips on Keating’s plane and notified the Ethics Committee of his action. N o action w as taken by the panel. D e C o n c in i a ls o s a id th a t fe d e r a l regulators Waited for two years to criticize the senators’ intervention and that they complained only after “ the savings and loan crisis w as coming down e in54tak I R I I on a walk in basis. Iront S in the photoniohile on ( ad\ Mall State F i t » W H Y W AIT T O BE SATE? U niversity W o m e n ’s Clinic, Inc. next day I Ir* health care. SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES SPECIAL TESTING PACKAGE: I $ 4 Q 0 0 - e ^ /roe (rcg $ <65) (Includes exam and tests for chlamydia, gonorrhea, trichomonas, gardnerella, and yeast.) 21 W est Baseline Road, Tem pe S/W Corner of Baseline and Mill Phone 831-5532 Expires 1-15-91 I Page 13 Tuesday, November 20,1990 • Should LARRY MARMIE return next season as ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY FO O TB A LLCO A CH ? Call 1-900-990-CO ACH (1-900-990-2622) Sponsored by A SU Students & Alumni 990 to Vote ALWAYS WANTED TO MODEL? We want students to model in a fashion show. W H A T : Holiday Fashions by Kim Warmack-Mason, ASU Alumni W H EN: 12 p.m. on December 5th WHERE: M.U. Programming lounge Robert Black, noted modeling agent will be on hand to scout new talent. No Experience Necessary Pick up Applications at MUAB office (3rd floor of MU) Phone Applications Accepted. Call 965-6822 Turn in by 4:30, Wednesday, Nov. 21 Hurry — Spaces limited S p o n s o re d b y U IMO» XCTiyiTQ Bo f Q VACO Ü ■ S p ecial E ven ts C o m m itte e . V u vm A South African, ASU faculty swap possible By ANDREW FAUGHT State Press Faculty and students could get the chance to encounter a teaching or learning experience in South Africa, if one A S U political science professor has his way. P a t M cGowan, who spent last sum m er on a teaching fellowship at Rhodes University in Grahamstown, South Africa, said he is in the process o f submitting a proposal to the U . S. Information Agency to acquire a three-year association with professors at the South African university. “ Last year m y proposal w asn’t funded,” he said of his application to the faculty exchange University Affiliations Progam . “ I w a s en cou raged to re-subm it an application — it’s very competitive.” A faculty exchange program among A S U and universities in South, A frica remains a possibility, while student exchanges within the African continent are only in the very most preliminary stages, M cGow an added. Meanwhile, Richard Olson, director of A S U International Program s, said student exchanges are often developed according to departmental links. A S U has no African studies program. “ W e ’ve had individual faculty that have had research and teaching interests m Africa, but there’s never been an organized faculty push for an exchange program ,” he said. M cGowan said there is a noticeable gap at A S U because of the lack of student exchange program s in Africa. “ W e have very few faculty who teach subjects related to A frica,” he said. “ It’s “ T o m y knowledge, no university in the United States has a student exchange program with South A frica,” he said. “ There’s the problem of apartheid and whether Am erican universities want to be associated with universities that exclude blacks.” M cGow an refused numerous invitations to the country because of a conflict of interest with the ruling system of apartheid, but said he has recently noticed several changes within the country, including few er constraints on the media. “ Whether you would want to actually put an exchange program into effect now, while blacks in South A frica can’t vote, is a matter to consider,” M cGowan said. H e added that South A frican President F r e d e r ik d e K le r k h a s co n trib u te d significantly to the normalization of the political climate. “ If democracy comes to South A frica it would in some w ay s be the best country to h a v e an e x c h a n g e p r o g r a m w it h ,” M cGowan said. “ The conditions would not be that drastically different from what students are fam iliar with on this campus.” ASU h isto ria n an x io u s a b o u t evolving E u ro p e By LAUR ALYN BEATTIE State Press An A S U history professor shared his fascination on the m erging of the two Europes Monday. “ The old Europe has not yet been replaced by the new Europe -4 the one is em erging from the other,” said Gerald Kleinfeld, who is one of the leading international researchers on Germ any. “ I have grown up in the old Europe. I cannot tell you with what joy, anticipation and anxiety I look toward to the new Europe.” Kleinfeld, who heads the A S U Consortium fo r Atlantic Studies, an organization devoted to the study of W estern Europe and Western European/Am erican relationships, discussed the fall of the B erlin W all and its ramifications to an audience of about a dozen people in the University A rt Museum. H e a t h e r L in e b e r r y , e d u c a tio n a l consultant at the a rt m useum , said Kleinfeld is the only historian in the country currently researching the Berlin W a ll’s demisé. ZJ I TH E OR IG IN A L M E X IC A N P A T IO C A F E natural, given our location, that w e have student exchanges with Latin Am erica and the Pacific Rim .” M cGowan said a student exchange with South Africa is something he is thinking about and planning. H e added that the current anti-apartheid movement is part of an international movement supporting sports, cultural and academ ic boycotts and preventing student exchanges. The A S U professor said Am ericans have a challenge “ to be part of it (the m erging of E urope), to help it and not to return to our isolationist policies of the past.” Kleinfeld said there are four key elements that are the backbone to change in Eastern Europe. F o r example, he said that a democratic ethic has permeated Eastern European society and triumphed. This, combined with a new sense o f European patriotism, revolutionary international relationships and a W est Germ an role on the European stage, have initiated the change. Kleinfeld w as interviewed by N B C -T V anchor Tom B rokaw on the B erlin W all the night it fell. “ I told Brokaw that night that the only Marxists rem aining are those on Am erican university cam puses,” he said Monday. K lein feld ’s lecture accom panied an exhibit that w ill be displayed in the University A rt Museum through January 13. D ia n e C rip e, the m u seu m ’s public information officer, said Kleinfeld’s lecture w as presented in conjunction with the m useum ’s current exhibit, “ The Berlin W all: The E nd of a Divided E urope.” She said the exhibition includes photo-text collages by T am arra K aida, an A SU art school faculty m em ber; and Rita Dove, a Pulitzer Prize winning poet. W est Germ an novelist and artist Fred Viebahn also contributed videotapes to the collection. I say?! You do read NEW: FROZEN COCKTAILS ' The State Press Magazine W ITH O R W ITH O U T A LCO H O L... peach • banana • pina colada • mango • blue hawaii • cexas margarita • & morel (REG. 9 9 C —89 ' " l ò f i T H E STO RY O F A W L IV E R FLU KE AM P O - J fB R S I j i- TH E 1; ; i è A R a a ■ t tj 1 1 Nature film s that D isney test-marketed but never released. b y Julie SIgwart Rainey Days W O o n 't HAVE TOAPötOG/ZC-' y/s / TOO.1 HERE... I M A D E T H IS FOR YOU ■■ M ACARO NI A N O C H E ESE ? IT'S THE ON LY THINS f CAN MAKE BESIPES * BUDGET GOURMET41 / You can charge your classified ad over the phone! S T A T E P R E S S C LA S S IF IE D S 965-6731 V IS A M O U N T A IN V IE W , Calif. ( A P ) — W hat do you do with a drunken sailor? F o r a 5-year-old boy who woke up and found a stranger in the next bed, the answer w as obvious: Call mom and dad. The youngster woke his parents at about 7 a.m. Sunday. “ There’s a stranger in m y other bed,” he said. Indeed, a man w as fast asleep — fully dressed under the covers. The parents called police, who cam e to the apartment and woke the uninvited guest. The intruder, a 22-year-old N avy man, told police he had no idea how he’d gotten there, according to a report in Monday’s San Jose M ercury News. Apologetically, the sailor Confessed to having had too much to drink Saturday night. He climbed in an open window and went to bed, thinking he w as sneaking into his Moffett Field barracks about half a mile away. The fam ily didn’t press charges and police let the sailor go. The newspaper did not identify the fam ily or the sailor. Mountain View is about 45 miles south of San Francisco. S T A T E P R E S S C LA S S IF IE D S It will move you. Literally. At 140 MPH, there’s never been a faster VOLKSWAGEN than the Corrado. Corrado’s looks will move you too. The Corrado’s sleek aero shape is sure to turn your head as well as a few others. # C o 'ra d ° $14,995 Demo C h a n g in g H The 1990 VOLKSWAGEN Corrado. It’s moving quickly, so come in today. ands Uferdona V O M C S W A G E N . W E M A K E T H E BO O K STO RE C O L L E G E R ID E EASIE R Browse through our 3 flo o rs o f: • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette * S T O P B Y O U R NEW O N S IT E O FFIC E IN THE S T U D E N T R E O C E N TE R LO B B Y . Sell or Trade your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash o f 50% in trade-in credit whichrray be used to purchaseanything in o Verdona Vo l k s w a g e n I 15th S treet & C a m elb a ck 265-6600 AT. State Pres* Page 15 JUesda^N ovem berfiO JW ^ ASU slides past Marathon Oil, 77-72 T.J. Sokol/StMe Pran ASU freshm an forward Jam al Faulkner plays defense against Marathon O il’a Earl Kalley hi the Sun D evils' 77- 72 exhibition win at the University Activity Center Monday night. B y P A U L CORO State Press F resh m an fo rw a rd J a m a l F au lk ner stepped onto the court Monday night for the A S U basketball team ’s exhibtion closer with Marathon Oil and in a matter of seconds, he had already met his four-point total of last w eek’s preseason game. Now, imagine if he knew what he was doing. Despite the fact that he admittedly has yet to fully learn the Sun Devil offense, Faulkner flourished with a 19-point, ninerebound performance that catapulted-ASU over M arathon Oil, 77-72, in front of 3,995 at the University Activity Center fo r its second consecutive exhibition win. “ In the Germ an club gam e (a 101-96 win W ednesday), I forgot some of the plays,” Faulkner said. “ This gam e, I m ade it my business to know m y plays and score. “ I ’ve come from not even knowing any plays at all to knowing half the plays.” Faulkner, the 6-foot-7 M iddle Village, N . Y ., native, is indicative of the Sun Devils’ inexperience and inconsistency. On Monday night, they displayed much of it as they wavered back and forth with Marathon Oil (9-14), a team that has beaten Virginia Tech, Clemson and Tennessee despite a rigorous road schedule “ I thought w e did a nice job playing a pretty good team ,” A S U coach Bill Frieder said. “ The biggest thing w as I thought we played pretty w ell in the last five minutes. W e were m ore consistent, did a better job in not letting them beat us and w e rebounded better.” D ow n the stretch, Frieder went with a lineup of center E m ory Lew is, Faulkner, and B rian Cam per, Stevin Smith and Lynn Collins at guards. A fter falling behind 70-69 with under six minutes remaining, those five cranked out an 8-2 rally in the next 1:35 that put aw ay Marathon. The final four points of the spurt cam e on Faulkner tip-ins as A S U ’s defense cam e up with two steals and forced a turnover and three missed shots in the final minutes to secure the win. “ Faulkner has got to w ork,” Frieder said. “ H e has good ability and he’s going to be a good player. W e ’re going to go with him because he’s going to be a good player. It w as nice to see him play better than the other night.” Paced by Faulkner, the Sun Devils had five scorers in double-digits Monday as center Isaac Austin and guard Tarence W heeler each had 11 points while Collins and Smith chipped in 10 apiece. A S U ’s starting backcourt trio of Wheeler, Collins and Cam per shot just 35 percent (8-of-23)’ from the field while the team cooled off in the second half to finish at a 48 percent clip. Cam per opened the gam e in place of Smith, who started W ednesday’s gam e against T T L B am berg and scored 20. “ I just didn’t like the w a y (Smith) practiced,” Frieder said. “ I ’m not going to h a v e an y fre s h m a n not g iv e m e 100 percent.” During a Sun Devil scoring drought m idway through the second half Smith cam e up with a 3-pointer, and an offensive rebound with a one-hand jum per to follow, that kept A S U in the gam e while Frieder had to pull the press. “ When they cam e out on us and caught us, w e w ere getting beat on the boards,” Fried er said. “ W e ’ve got to get after them defensively. They alw ays struggled on the boards. “ W e ’ve got to play harder and sm arter with greater intensity.” In the first half, the Sun Devils did not come out a s aggressively as they had against T T L B am b erg but Fau lk ner scored six o f A S U ’s first 10 points to help file Sun Devils lead for most of the half. “ M y main goal tonight w as to make a m e n d s f o r the g a m e a g a in s t the Germ ans,” Faulkner said. “ I felt m y performance w as subpar (W ednesd ay). W e need a jum p start in offense tonight and I felt like I had a fairly good touch. “ Coming out of high school, it didn’t really m atter whether I knee the play or not. On a broken p lay . I ’d just take it to the basket.” With a 2-0 preseason complete, A S U will open its regular season F rid ay at 7 p.m. in the University Activity Center against non­ conference foe Kansas. “ I ’m not satisfied with how hard w e’re playing,” Fried er said. “ These kids don’t know how hard they have to play.” n il .• •• «Fried er said sophomore forw ard M arlon Jones did not suit up fo r W ednesday’s gam e because of a high fever, adding that he has “ got to talk to M arlon about his status.” Miller wins match with injured knee By DAN ZEIGER State Press R ay M iller cannot say A S U wrestling coach Bobby Douglas didn’t w arn him. Only four minutes and 55 seconds into his first match of the season against Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo’s Kordell Baker Saturday, M iller attempted a difficult move that Douglas had warned him not to try in practice. Leading by two points late in the second period, M iller stood up attempting to reverse a hold. When the A SU sophomore turned back inside to complete the maneuver, he heard two pops in his left knee as Baker twisted it forw ard to counter the reversal. “ I got in one of those positions where I feel comfortable in,’’ M iller said. “ The coaches had been telling m e to stop WM Pmmra/SM* Pr*u ASU«ophoptor* wrestler Ray M iller grim aces In pain after Injuring his left knee In Saturday’s meet against C al Poly-San Luis O bispo at the University A ctivity Center. Tura to Miller, page 17. un Devil tennis players suffer in clay-court competition __ - By DARREN URBAN State Preaa A SU tennis player B rian Gyetko, knocked out in the first round of the DuPont National Clay Court Championships, cruised to the finals of the consolatimi bracket before falling in two sets. In th e o n ly c o lle g ia t e c la y -c o u r t tournament of the year, Gyetko, a senior, w as beaten by Y a s e r Zaatini Of E ast Tennessee State, 7-5,6-4. Senior D av e Lomicky, also ousted in the first round of the m ain draw , lost in the consolation semifinals to Zaatini, 6-2, 7-6 (7-0). “ W e just don’t have the experience on clay,” Sun Devil coach Lou Belken said. » ~ i t mi>' -• — •' ■ _ 1 _ _ 1 ' IIT 4 « « . a ' “ Zaatini grew up on clay, so he is very comfortable on it.” Gyetko said he did not feel totally overmatched on the new surface. “ It w as a nice change because most o f our tournaments are on the hard courts,” Gyetko said. “ C lay is just a different gam e.” “ A lot of the players were from different countries, so they’ve had m ore experience on clay,” Gyetko said. “ But I ’ve p la y e d . . around the world (on d a y ), so it w as not really m uch of a m ajor adjustment.’’ Belken said considering the lack of work his players get on clay, it w as a successful tourney. “ C lay is very different,” Belken said. “ The footwork is different, the strategy is d iffe ren t. . . for us to have these results we a re very happy. B rian had three quality Gyetko, ranked No. 27 in the nation, said file strength of the 32-man field m ade even the consolation rounds difficult. wins.” “ It took m e m y first match to get com fortable,” Gyetko said. “ The actual chaw was tough enough that even in the consolation matches film players w ere . . . ranked.” Gyetko said the fragmented nature o f the fall tournaments did not lend itself to' evaluating the team as a whole. “ I really haven’ t been able to see m y teammates play much,” he said- “ When I ’m / in m iiw t it r t iu *K n m u p n o m o n t tlio ir V a coming k home trom o a J otournament, they’re leaving for one and vice versa . . . it’s hard for m e to say how w e ’re doing.” Gyetko added that the results of the fall w ere not very important. “ I ’m not really overly concerned with the fall,” Gyetko said. “ The fall is a time for individual achievement, and I really want to concentrate this y e a r on the team. I have file rest of m y career to play individually.” T he Sun D evil men résum e p lay in early January, when they travel to Wisconsin for a final preseason tournament before the re g u la r season starts Jan. 16 against Brigham Young. “ W e use the M ilwaukee tourney as a w arm -up for the regular season,” Gyetko said. Stale Pres» Tuesday, November 80,1990 Page 16 Ice Devils smash SDSU in 2 games TUESDAYS 1/3 lb. Charbroiled $399 BURGER FRIES & DRAFT > By GREG ZELE State Press The Ice Devils got out the big broom as they twice crushed the fledgling San Diego State hockey team over the weekend. After administering a lopsided 22-2 drubbing to the Aztecs Friday night, A S U (5-2) shortened the periods, switched around the line-up and changed locations for Saturday’s contest but the result w as much the sam e as the Ice Devils breezed to a 11-2 victory. “ They fought with us the whole way, I give them lots of credit, ” forw ard Dan Ciaramentaro said. “ It w as just a case of two over-matched team s.” M anager M ike Hofarth said the periods were shortened from the usual 20 minutés to 15 minutes for Saturday’s gam e held at Veterans M em orial Coliseum. This w as to give SDSU a break because it is the Aztecs first sèason. A SU jumped on SD SU early scoring on its first shot When forw ard B rian Smith put the puck in the net just 25 seconds into the opening period Defenseman Pat M ay added the Ice Devils second point at 6:59. A S U ’s third point w as not fa r behind when, at 7:24, the Ice Devils had a two-on-one break aw ay and, after the Aztec goalie turned aw ay the first shot With a stick save, forward Kevin Hicks put the rebound in the goal. A fter A S U ’s Brian Hartley recieved a penalty for highsticking at 7:41, Rocco Valentino scored a power play goal for SD SU to make it 3-1. The Ice Devils were not done scoring when goalie Matt M alec (playing forw ard for this gam e) scored his first goal of the season. Hicks added his second score o f the contest shortly after and the score w as 5-1 at the period’s end. Both teams looked fairly even opening up the second period and A S U did not score until Ciaram entaro slipped one past the goalie at 7:22. Forw ards D rew Spesard, Abel Moreno and Justin Bell rounded out the period’s scoring improving the Ice Devils advantage to 9-1 at the end of two. Spesard had two goals. The Aztecs frustrations cam e to the surface in the third period and the braw ling began at the 3:30 mark. Smith, the perpetrator of the multi-player engagement behind the SD SU net, w as tossed from the gam e after being given a five-minute penalty for fighting and two minutes for instigating. F o rw ard Jay Giacalone w as the Other A S U player implicated for his role in the fisticuffs and he received two minutes for boarding. The Aztecs lost two players for two minutes; Sean Turley for roughing and Steve Jeanson for high sticking. Rather than have a one-man, three-minute advantage SD SU evened things up when D ave Nunley got two minutes £ Soft Drink or T ea Enjoy Sports on our 2 Satellites and 11 Screens Woodshed I Woodshed II Baseline & Mill Dobson & University 831-WOOD 844-SHED O ” co 3 LU S Q > -u SOUP DRAGONS with Material Issue LADIES NIGHT <0 û 7 Œ Dw cnZ 965-6731 1° Drinks W NO COVER Û Matthews Center Basement, Room 15 with Marilyn Suicide 1JU > Turn to Ice Devils, page 17. State Press Classifieds CARNIVAL o z - o O w O If) DJ: Randall (The dangerous longhaired DJ from Underground Sound Spinning the Best in Alternative & Progressive Dance Music) Ladies: No Cover till 11 p.m. $1 Drinks All Night Guys: $1 Shots $4 Monster Pitchers (60 oz.) Every Mother’s Nightmare Trouble Tribe Marilyn Suicide Widow’s Rose Tickets $4 Advance, $6 Day of Show 11/29 12/6 12/7 August Red August Red Dash Rip Rock 1300 N. McClintock Tempe, AZ 966-9810 Stete Pro» Page 17 Tuesday, November 20,1990 Bugel in question Classifieds after Cards’ loss S la te P ress T E M P E , Ariz. (A P ) — The armchair q u a r t e r b a c k s a r e a ll o v e r P h o e n ix C ardinals coach Joe Bugel, questioning his fourth-quarter strategy in Sunday’s 24-21 loss to the Green B ay Packers. Phoenix blew a 21-10 lead with 13:14 rem aining and turned the ball over on downs at the Green B ay 43-yard line with 2:10 left. The P ackers won on backup quarterback Anthony D ilw eg’s 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end E d W est with 16 seconds to play. “ Y o u can second-guess all you want,” B u gel told reporters Monday. “ But I ’ll never second-guess our call. The w ay our offense w as moving, there w as no doubt in m y mind w e could make the first down. “ On fourth and inches, you go for it. If I pulled the offense off the field and didn’t allo w them to win the game, I wouldn’t have been able to face them today. This is a gam e of split-second decisions. If you can’t make decisions like that, you don’t deserve to be on the sidelines.” B ugel said he had the full backing of his staff for the call, which was supposed to be a running play around left end by rookie Johnny Johnson, who had 103 yards on 15 carries in the game. H ow ever, fullback Ron W olfley and Johnson both went in motion before the snap and Johnson w as tackled for a 1-yard loss. “ I have to take fault,” Johnson said. “ It Müler. C o n tin u e *! from page 15. when w e get in that position while wrestling, that all w e ’d do was get hurt. I told them I didn’t see how I could get hurt because I felt com fortable in that position.” But now. M iller’s position w as oh his back, writhing in agony and anxiously holding his knee. A lread y missing four projected starters to injury at the start of the season, Douglas w as obviously concerned. “ R ay stood up and made a technical mistake,” Douglas said after the match. “ H e t u r n e d the w r o n g w a y an d hyperextendetl his knee. H e’ll be all right, but I hope it’s not something w e need to w o rry about.” A later prognosis of the injury indicated that M iller had only suffered strained ligaments in the knee and would miss, at most, two days of practice. After M iller w as able to get up, he walked the initial pain off. Although he said his knee rem ained stiff, M iller wanted to return. “ I didn’t think about quitting,” M iller said. “ After I got up and walked around, I figured I ’d just go with it.” Miller, ranked fourth at 158 pounds, returned to pin Baker 42 seconds into the third period to break the match open for the Sun Devils, who eased to a 24-9 victory. A further testament of the toughness of the All-Am erican is that he wrestled again later in the day, winning a technical fall over Cal State-Fullerton’s Ron Cottrell at 6:41. ; ‘ ‘That match w as a little bit more pleasing for m e,” M iller said. “ I started hitting my low shots a lot better, but I can’t kid myself. It really w asn’t a test because the guy was only a freshman. I won’t say 1 wrestled well because I have a lot of technical problems I need to work on.” In A S U ’s final match of the day, M iller got a well-deserved break as New Mexico failed to come up with an opponent for him and forfeited the bout. M ille r ’s tim ely method o f winning was a breakdown on my part. I jum ped.” The Packers declined the penalty, took over possession and Phoenix went into a prevent defense. D ilw eg completed passes o f 19 and nine yards to Herman Fontenot and 16 yards to Clarence Weathers before Fontenot’s 3-yard run brought the ball to the Phoenix 1 with 53 seconds- left. Green B ay w as out of timeouts so the clock w as running until D ilw eg rolled right on a third-down bootleg play and found West in the back of the end zone. “ W e were in perfect position. The tight end just made a great play,” Bugel said. “ I didn’t think they’d be able to score. W e were in the best possible defense. If I had called a timeout, I ’d probably have been booed out of the stadium. W e just didn’t come up with the great play and they did.” Bugel said he had a sleepless night before getting up at 3 a.m. and heading to his office to watch the gam e films. Almost every newspaper columnist in town ripped him for the critical fourth-down call. “ I think it goes with the territory. I ’ll take that heat,” he said. “ I told the team, if it comes up again this Sunday, w e’ll do the same thing again. I want to win the game now. That’s m y mentality. W e were moving the football. It’s not like we were stinking up the place.” Matthews Center, Basement 965-6731 LINER AD RATES: By «tall: The State P re ss is only responsible for the 15 words or less: Send your ad (with payment) to: first day the ad runs incorrectly. Corrected $3.00 per day for 1-4 days State P re ss Classifieds ads will b e extended on e day. Changes $2.75 per day for 5-9 days Matthews Center, Rm 15 called in after the first day wilt not qualify Tem po, A Z 85287-1502 for a make-good. $2.50 per day for 1 0 + days By Phone: 965-6731 15* each additional word T h e first 2 words are capitalized. Customer Errors: N o bold face or centering. Payment with VISA/MC only. $6 minimum Personals are only $1.40/ on all phone orders. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 time: $7.85 pier col. melt 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. Inch 6 or more times: $6.50 per col. inch HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: In Person: Cash, Check (with guarantee card), VISA or MasterCard. W e ’ re located in the lower level o f Matthews Center, room 46H. Of­ fice hours are 8 a.m.-5 p.m. MondayFriday. Adveitisihg Policy: \ T h e State P ress reserves the right to edit o r reject any advertising copy submitted. WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: Classified liner ads can begin 1 ATTENTIO N A LL students— Liner ads must be canceled before noon, 1 Classified display ads can begin 2 days day prior to publication. N o refunds will be given. after they are placed (if placed before 10 ‘ State Press Errors: Ads may . run for any length o f time. Check your ad the FIRST day, it runs. Call 965-6731 with any corrections before ANNOUNCEMENTS “ I w as disappointed,” M ille r said. “ Everyone shoots for one goal. Nobody shoots to be second or third or fifth. I guess I did all right, but m aybe I could have done things differently. There’s alw ays room for the' ifs and buts, and I guess that’s what I ’m looking at.” W ith alm ost three fu ll seasons of eligibility left, M iller is also looking at a potentially productive career at ASU. “ I ’m about right where I want to be,” M iller said. “ But I know I still have a long w ay to go. I ’ve got to recognize that fact. It’s all being patient. I’ve got to know where I ’m at and what steps I have to take. Then, I ’ll start taking them.” Ice Devils — Continued from page 16. for elbowing 23 seconds later. Less than a minute later, Eric Freedm an cam e to blows with M ay. Freedm an spent the rest o f the gam e in the box after receiving a 10-minute misconduct and four minutes for roughing. M ay, for his part in the rumble, drew a four-minute roughing penalty. “ You just can’t sit there and take it,” Ciaramentaro said o f the fighting in the third period quickly adding, “ W e didn’t com e out and instigate it.” Ciaram entaro and Moreno increased the Ice Devil’s lead with two m ore goals in the period and E d Chamick finished out the ga m e ’s scoring with the Aztecs second goal. A S U outshot S D S U 48 to 17 throughout the game. Ciaram entaro w as the hero of the contest for the Ice Devils compiling two goals and five assists. “ It w as a personal thing,” said Ciaramentaro of his effort. “ I was coming off a pretty big slump.” State Press 965-6731 distance to ASU. John, 835-1281, leave open from 8-12 and from 1-5. Don’t out, bet your photo taken today! , GREAT FREE TRIP! Enter contest to win fabul 1(900)321-1400 ext. 132 and tell how y Take over le a s e , Marla, 894-1647. met your lover. T h e most absurd, outi geou s story wins! Toll $2.95 per minute G R E A T DEAL, take over lease, Coral Point Apartments. 1 bedroom, furniture if needed. Dan, 827-8263. all day. Windsports, 897-7121. P A PA G O I condo, 2 bedroom, washer/ dryer, 1 mile from campus. $65Q/month. 829-1812SPE AK IN G A T ASU Tuesday November 20, 8pm, is Myron Kronisch from New SHORT AffAIR? Jersey " A N ew World O rder Challenge of the 90s,’ ’ in Ventana Room — MU. SPAC IO U S O N E bedroom apartment for rent. No deposit required. $360/month. Available immediately. Call Andria at 829-8925, or leave m essage. W RITE A letter to Santa...win $50!! The State Press is having a "B est Letter to Santa” contest. All you have to do is write a letter, submit it to the State Press 1 block off campus information desk in the north basement o f Matthews Center and you may b e a winner!! Entries will be judged on originali­ ty and creativity. Entry deadline is Friday, Decem ber 7 at noon. Winning letters will Arizona Shorts 5th & Mill be published in the Decem ber 11 State Press Holiday Gift Guide. 1 and 2 bedrooms $160 move In call Today! Apache Terrace APARTMENTS N ATAS CAREER Night!!!!! M eet Directors. Producers, and other important peopile of 1 the T.V. industry!!!!! A must for anyone A S U . 1339 South Sunset Drive, apartment who wants to b e employable. Tuesday, no. 9. Call 967-3658._____________________ BEDROOM, $250. Furnished, pool. By 1123 E. A p a ch e 1 block east of Rural M 8 -6 3 8 3 Novem ber 27th, 7:15pm, Ventana room, m .u . : ! ; ■' 2 BEDROOM dishwasher, NEED QUICK cash? I’ ll buy your baseball, football, basketball cards, and N orth Tem pe. self-cleaning oven. P ool, 1007 W est 1st Street. 894-1041. ASU books. Angelo, 451-8425. AREA. $350/month, 2 b e d ro o m , $125 security S U B -L E A S E APARTM ENT in th e Commons on Apache. $250 per month or comic 2 bath. deposit. 967-4789. N o pets. best offer. Call Kelly, 894-1647. S U PE R MOVE-IN special on 2 bedroom apartments. Walk to ASU. P o d , laundry room. 1 block south o f University on 8th READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ R EADY T O M OVE? If you want a LARGE AFT. in a QUIET AREA plus a great MOVE-IN SPECIAL, come to WESTRIDGE! 330 S. Beck, Tem pe 894-6468 HAYDEN'S FERRY REVIEW ANNOUNCEMENTS \ * # \ \| V I \ * - GIFT W RAP YOUR HOLIDAY PERSONAL! Choose from one of the Mowing: Street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for specials. TE M PE ’S FAIREST rates. International students welcom e. $420 to $260. Devon Apartments, 926 East Spence- 370-2366. E N J O Y T H E Q U IE T ! 1/2 Block From Campus B e a u t i f u l l y f u r n is h e d , huge 1 b e dro o m , 1 bath; 2 bedro o m , 2 bath ap art­ m ents. A ll b ills paid. Cable T V , h e a te d p o o l, an d s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa cilitie s. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by today! T e rra ce R oad A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra ce 966-8540 HOMES FOR RENT HUGE $ bedroom; pool, d o s e to ASU. C e le b r a tic space and p r iv a c y / $1,250/month. 966-7979. Owner/agent., 1324W 1 University (|usl east o f Priest) M ilw a u k e e B e s t 6 pack........-S I-S t M o n t e r e y V in y a r d W h ite Z in fa n d e l 750m l.................$ 3 .8 9 V o ls k a V o d k a 750nn............. S 5 .4 S Used Playboy Magazines........$1.17 Adult M agazines, G roceries, Ice, W ines, D EAL. Commons on Apache. Perfect for friends2 leases available. Call now, Michelle or vacation to Mazatlan for two. T o enter, •* xrxtl APARTMENTS Fully furnished, all appliances. Walking on Cady Mall next to Danforth Chaj (in addition to regular personal ad price) BUNDLES count. Sorry, no refunds. FO R RENT: The Commons on Lemon. ber 21. The mobile photo studio, k Add a piece of art for only $2X !l *"\ LIQUORS » MKT. Canceled ads will b e credited to your ac­ rent.$260 and up. 966-8838 or 967-4908. Spark Yearbook until Wednesday, K m ade training hill. S a fe and exciting. Ft. Such an accomplished rookie season might be satisfactory by most wrestler’s standards, but M iller said he had hoped to achieve more. a.m.). A SU AREA. Studio and- 1 bedrooom for Student portraits are being taken for T h e Su HANG GLIDE! Our gently sloping mar matches has earned him comparisons to form er Sun Devil great D an St. John. Lofty company, considering the fact that St. John posted 147 career victories, three Pac-10 titles and two national championships. “ In some ways, he does (com pare),” Douglas said. “ H e’s better in certain positions than D an St. John w as when he w as a sophomore. But there is only one Dan St. John. R ay M iller has his own personality and his style is a little bit different, but it can be as effective as St. John’s is.” M iller said he often learned a thing or two when wrestling St. John, who w as his workout partner in practice for two seasons. “ The biggest likeness between m yself and Dan, more or less, is that w e are both very competitive,” M iller said. “ W e don’t want to give an inch. It w as like that when we wrestled. I cam e out on the short end of the stick most of the time, but I didn’t give anything.” As a redshirt freshman last season, M iller finished fifth at the N C A A Championship with a 29-12-1 record, which included first place at the Midlands Invitational in Evanston, HI. day after they are placed (if placed before noon). ' noon. ANNOUNCEMENTS Corrections must b e m ade before noon. Compensation will not be given for customer error. Oust 40 Imported 967-9079 These special holiday personals w ill be available starting with the December 3 Issue, and continuing through the Decem­ b e r 11 Holiday Shopper, l e s e r v e y o u r spaed today I TOWNHOMES / CONDOS EOR RENT 1 MILE ASU. 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Washer/dryer, pool, fireplace, parking. $600.966-5437. BEAUTIFUL, CLEAN 2 bedroom 2 bath condo. 510 W est University. Pool, quiet, cfOM. $475/month. 966-0962. Page 18 Tuesday, November 20,1990 TOWNHOMES / CONDOS FOR RENT FURNITURE AUTOMOBILES ARE YO U short o f $7 W e pay cash for your FAM ILY goods. TV, tables, chair, etc. 786-9077. autos. 1986 Impulse Turbo, 1984 200SX BEAUTIFUL SURROUNDINGS, large 3 CLEARANCE: Four excellent Turbo, 1985 Camaro, 1985 Oldsmobile. bedroom, 2 bath condo. Dishwasher, washer/dryer. $545/month. 2.5 miles from EARTHTONE SECTIONAL. 7% feet by campus. 940-0518 (David). ing table/desk. $350 for all or buy sepa­ Buy hundreds below Bluebook. 9494)766. 7Vi; earthtone rediner, adjustable draw­ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FREE SEM INAR for art amazing career oppdrtinity. Com e join us for a free seminar with a national corporation, and sacrifice: $800. 894-5154, leave message. CaH R en ee at 986-1191' for location and II 2 b e d ro o m , 2 W ATERBED, QUEEN-SIZE mattress and liner inducted, $80. Drafting table, $50. 784-0669 bath. 1984 GPZ750. Runs well, needs battery. Looks sh a rp , has m any e x tr a s . 1986 DELUXE Honda Elite scooter, red, 16,000 miles. 827-8162. IMAGE W RITER II printer for Madntosh 1 BEDROOM for rent in furnished 4 bedroom, 2 bath house includes: pool* 2-car garage, dishwasher, microwave and cable! Mike, 897-7955 com pu ter. Just like new , includes own bedroom in exchange for morning transport to daycare. 991-0612. in excellent running condition. $650 or best offer. 968-5112. LA P T O P COM PUTER. Zenith SuperSport UNIQUE 1982 Honda Trail 110 on/off 286/20; math coprocessor; Fortran 5.0; FEMALE NONSMOKER. Paradise Valley, ‘85 HONDA 150 scooter. Well-maintained, cartridges $325. 964-3743. W ord P erfed 5.1; Autocad 10.0; Quattro­ Pro; Windows 3.0; case. $1,800.788-9803, 870-2407. scooter. Only 1,100 original YAM AH A 125CC, 1985. Excellent condi­ tion. $700 or best offer. UNIVERSITY TH EATERS is now hiring for a manager o r assitant manager. Full- or Distributors needed. G reat profit potential. Fu ll o r part-time part-time. P lease apply after 1pm, 1025 East Broadway. 899-8435 stu den t. W ork hours 8am-2:30prh, Monday thru Friday. A verage $5-$6/hour, VALET PARKER, perfect for night time 32Mi hours per week. Clean-cut, not more miles. $500/offer. 829-6925. Call Eric, than ,1 ticket in last 3 years. 861-9182, Shawn. HELP WANTED— GENERAL W O R K IN beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheley Colorado Camps 966-3644. FEMALE NONSM OKER: N ice, dean townhouse. Washer/dryer. University and TICKETS Price. Call 968-1025. FEM ALE N O N SM O K E R to share 3 bedroom house in Dobson Ranch. $250 ASU/UOFA FOOT ALL tickets, $20. Call BICYCLES Bob, 967-9403 or 964-6296. TW ELVE-SPEED ROAD racer. 25-inch plus Y i utilities. Call Janelle or Nicole, WANTED: M.C. Hammer tickets for 12/3. Schwinn Super Sport. Excellent condition. 756-2760. Will pay top $$ Call 312-280-1212. Cost: $517 in 1985, will sell for $225. 894-9123. FEMALE ROOMMATE, attractive room in house. Pool, washer/dryer, d o s é to ASU. JEWELRY MALE/FEMALE NONSM O KER wanted to A LW A Y S BUYING jewelry of all kinds, share comfortable tw o bedroom apart­ inducting gold, sterling, gem s, ment. N ew living room furniture, covered pearls, antiques, etc: R are Lion, 921 South Mill Avenue, Tem pe Center, 968-6074. CASH FO R gold, diamonds. Mill Avenue 2 bath beautiful immediately. 839-9285. apartment. G reat Available location. AA A DRIVEAWAY. F ree cars to most major cities. G as allowances available. 21 Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. FLY A N YW H E R E USA. In your name! 48 states, TO share 2 bedroom Split-level apartment near campus. Yoii get master bedroom, $240/month, Vfc su ccess system. Unique products. Unlimited income. 899-8435. leaders, riding, hiking, backpacking, sports, crafts counselors. Campers age APA R TM E N T M ANAGEM ENT— Mainte­ 9-17. Room apd board, cash salary, travel nance. Married couple for 26-unit complex allowance. Our 71st summer! Must b e at least 19 to apply. Applicants will be in Tem pe. Outside employment neces­ sary. Small salary plus 2-bedroom apart­ notified o f campus interview date. Apply to ment. 943-8977. Cheley $2 8 5 4 0 0 : Alaska, $500-600. CAN ’T TOUCH THIS! 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo $2S0/month plus MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE A re you tired of C o le s d ir e c t o r ie s a n d s e r ia l dialing? If you’re ready to m ake top dollar in tele­ phone sales, buying tra n sfera b le $6-12/hr. coupons/ W e ’ll train 968-7283 (YOU-SAVE). Cali GOING ON vacation? Hom e for 966-7262 the Alaska $499. great condition. $120, 967-7671. G R E AT PRICES! Any U.S. or international destination. SKI PAN TS. Fera 5-way Stretch. Red with utilities to share 3 bedroom house. Imme­ University. A TTE N TIO N : ATTENTION: BEER drinkers, keg fridge com plete Ç 0 2 hookup, new compressor, Vi utilities. 967-9164. ROOM FO R Rent!!! “ 210/month plus Vi Upgrade affordable. Call help or business. $7/hour plus benefits, hours flexible. Cadi Jim, 82Q8408. 967-6556. CO NCESSIO N M UST SELL!! Plane ticket, Phoenix td $85 cash! Mario, 966-5125. W AREHOUSE manufactures rep wanted for small Tem pe blue. Excellent condition, worn once! 32-R Denver, 12/20-1/12. Call 7848026. Ed: S TA N D food handler. Fulltime, parttime, O NE-W AY TICKET to Cleveland on 12/23. shifts. ROOM M ATE W ANTED , Los Prados town- condition, $175. San Marco front entry $175/offer. 784-9225, leave message. Hardy, No.3. 8948740. EOE. house. N icely furnished. Walk or bike to boots, fits size 10, $80. 7844)669. ROUND-TRIP AIRLINE ticket (m ale) to EARN EXTRA cash! Easy-selling products Albuquerque. Leave 11/21, return 11/25. can g ive you extra money. Call 678-1168. ASU. Washer/dryer. $275. 968-7320 W H EEL D EAL er share 2 bedroom, 1 Vi bath townhouse. $300/month, Vi utilities. 1 mile to ASU. 968-7852 bath co n d o ... M a tu re many roommates, male/female. 10 minutes from class. $180, indudes utili­ ties. JC, 2730309, evenings. “ COM M ONS ON A p ach e’ ’ room for rent for second semester. Anyone can rent! Let state Press Classi­ fieds work fo r you! HOMES FOR SALE weekend. $50. Phone David, 898-3294. TRAVEL .2 ROUND-TRIP tickets, Phoenix/Burbank 11/21, 4:12pm; 11/25, 9:59am. Best offer. 784-0922. CH EAP FLIGHT- $300 Am erica W est voucher for $25Q/best offer. 491-0591, $995. Call Bruce at 852-0381. leave m essage. 1978 FO RD Fairmont, 2-door. Air Condi­ EU RO PE NEXT Summer? S ave up to 16 TIME ON YOU HANDS DURING BREAK? WHY NOT EARN $100 + PER W EEK PART-TIME? W e o ffe r an e x cellen t opportunity t o m a k e m o n e y a n d to g e t i n v o l v e d . W e ’ r e lo o k in g fo r c o n s c ie n tio u s p e o p le to ra ise funds on b eh a lf o f a national non-profit organ ization in an enthu­ siastic atm osp h ere, v e ry c lo s e to ASU. • $5 p e r hour gu a ra n tee d • F lex ib le sch e d u le «B o n u s e s CALL TODAY 921-8112 r— — brother«, Inc. percent- buy purchasing your Eurail Pass Handicapped. Entry level positions teach­ car. Only $1,500. 937-7705. (issued on the spot) by 12/31/90. Contact ing, caring* and assisting mentally/ physically handicapped adults and child­ American Youth Hostels at 602-894-5128. ren. Group homes and day programs. FuHtime, part-time, all shifts available. Call 894-2704. EOE . owner/agent. t-tope. Excellent condition. $2,795/dffer. 7594)499 PA TIO HOME. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Vaulted ceilings, atrium, fireplace, pool, heated 1969 CH EVY 810 pickup AM/FM tape. sp a. N e a r 838-0784 27,000 miles 827-8162. ASU. $ 9 9 ,900. O w n er, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES n ess 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo N ear ASU. 9V i% assumable, no qualifying. jacuzzi, tennis court. $54,400. message, 966-0678 CLEAN. QUIET Pool, near ASU. bath . C a ll S te v e , C e n tu ry 21, 892-2000/392-9787 Walk to ASU $2,000 cash to ‘83 280ZX Turbo. Loaded, t-tops, air RESEARCH interviewers. great condition. N eed money, best offer. Bruce, 921-7372. '84 M AZDA BLC, 1 owner, dependable transportation, 867-4913 conditioning. 80,000 mites. $2,900/pffer. Fran, 968-8794 5-speed, M ORNING S O N LY, answering service. Telephone, typing experience required. Scottsdale, 941-4890. HELP WANTED— GENERAL AIESECERS I love you all thanks for making my b’day fun and tipsy as hell. W ow ! Atul. A LPH A PHI Tara — Thank you for a nice evening. Sorry about the misunderstand­ ing. Cliff. to m odel? MUAB HELP WANTED— FOODSERVICE on D ecem ber 5, 12:00. Noted modeling M A R R IO TT Exciting A R E YO U a student? Is it your birthday? Monday-Friday daytime position. Perfect Bring your valid co llege ID to the State C O R PO R A TIO N . agent will attend to scout new talent. No experience necessary. For more informa­ tion call 965-MUAB. for an energetic, strong, quick learner with Press classified department in the south enthusiasm. You will b e responsible for basement of Matthews Center and you expediting lunch in our restaurant, assist­ can wish yourself or som eone else a ing in inventory, and general office duties. happy day with a free 15-word personal Creative flair a plus. Must b e both Profes­ ad! Happy Birthday!! sional and flexible. Apply in person at 201 North Central, Valley Bank Center at the Plaza Cafe. Just 15 minutes from ASU. Ask for Kell. HELP WANTED— GENERAL A SU VS. UofA football in Tucson, $45 package, For more information, call Liana Bruce: 437-3227. HELP WANTED— GENERAL M A N A G E R T R A IN E E CLO SER S M ARKETERS W e o ffer great hours, relaxed atmosphere, paid training, paid vacations, guaranteed hourly w age plus excellent incentive bonuses. Applicants must be enthusiastic, motivated; depend­ able and have a desire to earn above-average income. For personal interview, call Monday o r Tuesday: 730-0256 A s k f o r M s. M e n lc y Summer, year round, aH countries, all fields. Free information, Write UC, P.O. Box 52-AZ03, Corona Dei Mar, California 92625. air- ‘89 STEPSIDE 4x4 pickup. Loaded, like |ONNjjT|N |mmecjja|e openings: Banquet servers/set ups D f lQ lS Black & white clothing needed Light industrial • Tempe/Mesa area Must have phone new. $14,000. 838-4255 TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED if needed *90 CELICA 8T. Automatic, air, C D player, Apply in person sunroof. Under 10,000 mites. $13,600. 921-2680 H A R D TO P FO R GJ7 with doors. Black. Must saM. $660. 7844)669. In W ANTED: STUD ENTS to get involved in the hottest multi-level marketing company deal. $7,500.988-5933. lify FHA loan. $639 PITI p er month. Papago Park Village Bank repo. 2 bed, 2nd floor, balcony $66,900. BobBuHocfc Realty ExeeuUvee 9 M -2 M 2 M ARKET person or phone. Absolutely no sales. Tem po. $4.40-$6/hour. 967-4441, Susan. conditioning, 5-spaed , new paint. Great 4-door, HELP WANTED— CLERICAL O VERSEAS JOBS- $90082,000 month. L isa 484-7055 mortgage. 9Vfe% fully assum able nonqua­ Buy o f tho W ook earning ited income. CaH now. 9478777. *84 300ZX turbo— grey, t-tops, low miles, PA PA G O PA R K Village, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Unlim ited this country has seen in 25 years. Unlim­ ' com plex opportunity. potential 1(800)3388375. National Auto Mart Leave Modem, bright and'upgraded 2 bedroom, 2 $ $ $ $ IN S T A N T C A S H fo r y o u r v e h ic le s ! $ $ $ $ A ll m a k e s & c o n d itio n s. MAKE G REAT m oney working full-, or part-time. Set your own hours. 967-7026. NUTRITIONAL BREAKTHROUGH. Busi­ TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE PERSONALS JOB HOTLINE- Tem po Center for the tioning, new transmission. Clean, reliable mission, dutch. Air conditioning, 4-speed, 897-9138 894-2250 ture). Please call 965-3584. wants students to m odel in a fashion show 1981 FO RD Mustang. N ew paint, trans­ deal. LOST: PLASTIC bag with scarves and box o f notecards, in AED Building (Architec­ Salsas, 1000 East Baseline. 8398736. make a 9678829; Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe wanted for Tem pe business. Type 5080 able, no qualifying. H uge place. Let’s Owner will carry with under $6,000. in vicinity of A LW A Y S W A N TE D 1971 V W Bug, good mechanical condition. 5 BEDROOM, pool, d o s e to ASU. Assum­ keys blus benefits. 8208408. round-trip. 12/19/90 to 1/3/91. $300. Call Eric. 966-3644. 4-6:30pm. 926-0197. I lost my Matthews Center. Tw o keys. Reward. Call, or evening sh iftej)vailab te. W eekends FREE ROQM and food plus $50/week for AUTOMOBILES HELP! mandatory. Must b e 19 or older. Apply at AM ERICA W EST. Phoenix to O ’Hare, responsible fem ale student who will care FREE LOST/FOUND $250. CaH 8944)561. Call Amy, 894-2643. for our 2 sons daily from 7-10am and 966-4439. UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER HELP WANTED: Part-time food server 12/25, returning 1/8. $118 or best offer. Sell your car In the State press Classifieds! y o u can even charge your ad with visa. Mastercard or American Express) drums, need vocals and bass. N o metal. worda/minute. Hours flexible, good salary TICKET T O San D iego for Thanksgiving 2 South A LM O ST COM PLETE: Have guitar and needed for small Mexican restaurant. Day 968-5455, after 5pm. 894-9270, leave m essage $2008225. 1 OR 2720 MUSIC Leave D ecem ber 21, return January 13. R O U N D ! R IP TICKET to Chicago. Leaving stu d en ts: ROOMS FOR RENT 6525, PRO FESSIO NAL PART-TIME secretary RO UND-TRIP FROM Phoenix to Denver. TW O ROOM M ATES needed soon! Three tw o $3.85-$4.25/hour. $80. Jim, 464-1872. SPR IN G SEM ESTER— Female nonsmok­ a m en ities/ extras. Box weekend with 747 Solomon bindings in decent b ed room , Camps, C o m p le t e ly a u to m a t e d d o n o r p la s m a - p h e r e s is . Discover how easy, safe and fast it is to; Earn $30 + a week! while donating much needed plasm a. M ention this ad for a $5 bonus on you r first don ation . ( M o n d a y -S a tu rd a y ) O n ly center in Valley paying: $10 — 1st donation, $20 — 2nd donation in same week. Prepare fast food and operate food concession in park setting. Experience preferred. SKI SALE. 190-centimeter K2 TR comps, 897-8346 Colorado ★ * EASY CASH ★ ★ holidays? Discount travel, coll 491-0501: NONSM OKING ROOM M ATE wanted and office, wranglers, nanny, kitchen, song Proven vouchers. T op prices paid. Travel Tips, utilities. Nonsmokers only. 273-1342. H ardy summer program. Cooks, R.N.s, drivers, ty. Hawaii, Europe, etc. You can leave today. Lauren, A ls o MALE/FEMALE diately. TRANSPORTATION or older. Call 468-1733. utilities. 921-0455. MALE/FEMALE NEEDED for 2 bedroom, A D YNAM IC network marketing opportuni­ Denver, Colorado 80206, (303)377-3616. 966-2360 parking, 1Vi miles from ASU. $220 plus RESTAURANTS/ BARS Strength, 234 W est University. GROUND FLOOR OPPORTUNITY $650/month. Contact G reg, 966-0463. RENTAL SHARING p r o v id e d . Call 784-2222, ask for Kristy RESPONSIBLE CASHIER needed, morn­ ings. Walk to class. Apply at Gentil times and reserve your place now. $1,200/offer. Call Tom, 921-7642. COMPUTERS Apply in person. needed Rader. ings to b e held within walking distance o f PAPAGO 1405 North Mill, Rolling Hits G olf Course. Guadalupe. Tempe. 820-4012. w a n te d . T r a n s p o r ta tio n 234-2200. the campus. Limited seating is available. Pool. 1 mile from PART-TIME W AITRESS, Pet’s 19th Tee, ASU. $5/hour plus bonus. IBM experience N ew tires, battery. Bluebook: $865, will campus. $630/month. (714)497-5512, store R u ra l/ Don’t miss your chance to prosper. Meet­ 1982 HONDA CB650 Only 18,500 miles. bath, all amenities for THE STAFFING Connection. Food servers sell. 431-0098. 2 Claus D ecem b er, Monday-Saturday, flexible hours. Close to feet, excellent condition. Moving, must bedroom, in PH O NE O PERATO R needed, part-time. amenities. $890/month. (John) 945-8274. 3 S A N TA incomes are unlimited. Opportunity was REFRIGERATOR. FRIGIDAIRE, 14 cubic REMODELED. PART-TIM E p r o m o t io n just m ade available to the state o f Arizona. luxury condo, available immediately, all NEW LY HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE HELP WANTED— GENERAL judge for yourself. W eekly and residual MOTORCYCLES rately. Call Michael, 894-9123. HAYDEN SQUARE, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, State Press Saturday 11/24: Howard Jo h n so n ’s 225 E. Apache, Tem pe Room 214 CITY OF SCOTTSDALE RECREATION DIVISION W ANTED: "HT boys and girls BASKETBALL COACHES & OFFICIALS $6 - $8 PER HOUR For application in form ation contact the Student Em ploym ent O ffice, jo b re fe r r a l *5036 j A pp lications w ill b e accepted until Friday, D ecem ber 7 99 4- 240Ô State P u n PERSONALS PERSONALS A T O J.R.- I hope you have an incredible FREE birthday- and remember it! Thanks for a Clothes Peddler honors your birthday. great tim e at Bamdance. Can’t wait to go EARRINGS, PERSONALS Birthday earrings. M ARK Forest and University in the Arches. GREEK WEEK Publicity R a ttle s n a k e , dance date, or boyfriend! Love, Nika. C o m m ittee- Congratulations! W e ’ re excited to work ing. Dancing, and square-dance hopping, with the best publicity committee ever! Have a great Thanksgiving break— W e ’ll Barhdance with you was hot! Everything M ACGOW AN- couldn’t have asked for a better Bam­ A TO ZEKE— Book staking, taking, break­ bopping. Rustlers Roost was the spot. PERSONAIS Lobster, Beer, Saloons, and $17 richer. 1 to Cali. Love, Brin. s ee you on the 27th at Sunny’ s! PIKE MARC: Thanks for thé ultimate lomo "G R E E N getting open from 8-12 and from 1-5. Don’t miss “ G reener Eyes” . TYPING/W ORD PRO CESSING . $1/page. Laser printing Included. You deliver and cool too, as far as you know! Love, Processing, Linda, 839-6167. you and Karen talking about a “ blonde” Michelle. M E IN E E YE S” - nothing wrong with a little festive...right? b is t brain? Four lectures to G-day. RR the C C is back. about dinner som etim e? P le a s e respond -A secret admirer!... Happy Turkey day. Luv, Karen. HEY COLLEGE students! Did you know sor and former English teacher. Laser W O R D PRO C ESSIN G — resumes, term kickn’ up your spurs with m e on the 30th? printer. Claudia, 964-6012. papers, letters, reports, manuscripts, mail­ Sounds like a real hell raisn' timet? Get row...love ya, Kimber. SK B ABY Snakes have a great turkey day! call 966-2035. 960 W est University, call 92H-0166. Open early, open late, open 7 °days! I’ m a smoker, I’ m a midnight CO N G R ATU LATIO N S T O all new Panhel- survived the night! I love and will miss you lenic officers. Best wishes, Delta Gamma. all next semester! Best wishes! Love, the Baby Betty . X T . CONGRATULATIONS on your pres­ PHI PSI Danny H.: congrats on 3rd in the idency. Y ou ’re the best for the job. You 5K. Cotton is just around the comer. have m ade my first year o f college the PIKE F O X and Sully- w e still feel sick from the rollercoaster at Excaliber- too bad w e Smis, Smis, Smis! model a didn’t s e e Bruce at the "T ro p ” ! Blackjack fashion show with m e? W e just need to anyone? H ave another double Jamey! return an application which is available at Yeah- and h e’ll have a Bay Breeze. Sean- THETA CHIS- our happy hour was awesom e!! Thanks, Delta Gamma. TH ETA CHI Justin, thanks for an 965-6731 aw esom e time at Barn Dance on Satur­ ments, our transcribing, APA/MLA hour on Saturday. W e look forward to processing. getting together again. The Gentlemen o f 945-5744. Call Jessie, W RITE A letter to Santa...wiri $50!! The airport- ouch! H ow ’bout that head-first editing. Fast, late, yet! The mobile photo studio, located State Press is having a “ Best Letter to information.^-Elizabeth, tumble at formal? Would you like alMypad P ric e s a re next to Danforth Chaperon Cady Mall, wHI Santa" contest. All you h ave to d o is write for an appetizer? Is that realty a hotel or is 906-2186. a letter, submit it to the State Press ENGLISH TUTOR, paper editing. ASU English d e g re e , professional writing experience. All subjects, reasonable rates. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, accurate. Call anytime. c o m p etitive, n egotiable. 17 P LU S 2 plus equals $7 89. Arid that’s a fact. Just ask Papa Jay, 966-4292. E A T DELICIOUS cookies, lose weight. K A P P A SIG Kyle; Klyester I had a blast it just a “ mirage” ? T o o bad the birds were last my information desk in the north basement of D AND M Tax/Secretarial. W ord process­ on vacation. Pickle and Larry sure had E x c it in g giggles and smiles are cause your so cute. Matthews Center and you may b e a ing. Term papers, theses, dissertations, winning down to a science (hurry, put 2 225-8448. winner!! Entries wHI b e judged on originali­ coins in quick arid push spin)! N o more ty and creativity. Entry deadline is Friday, resumes, letters, books, editing, taxes. 464-9064. " SE LF taxis- but m aybe a minivan for 6- oops, w e D ecem ber 7 at noon. Winning letters will mean 4! Did you pass Caesar on your b e published in the D ecem ber 11 State D ESKTO P PUBLISH your resuma/thesia/ lance electronics. Catalog. morning jo g ? W h ere can you buy those Press Holiday Gift Guide. Tri-Star Enterprises, recorded m essage, hotel-casino air fresheners? W e are start­ ing our descent into Phoenix- need an paper. You won’t believe how good it looks! Free pick-up/delivery. 945-2581. YIPEEEE CHI-O! Bam dance w as peheno- Friday. Thanks! Don’t worry D O N ’T PLEDGE a fraternity, join one. ZBT Heres to our memories o f choescake. is looking for gentlem en at ASU. CaH Eric L ove Chrissie. KA— YO U guys are the greatest— esp e­ FREE HAIRCUTS! Free haircuts! Novem ­ cially your pinners! ber 20 from 10-3:30 on Cady MaK, with 2 Thanksgiving! Jenna. Have a fantastic cans o f food. Sponsored by MUAB Special LAMBDA CHI, DTD, Gamma Phi: Thansk oxygen mask or perhaps a cocktail? Music menal. Has anyone figured out where w e for a terrific time at Friday's Mexican to our ears- 22CM444I H ey guys- thanks for such a “ gold” timet Let’s d o it again w ere? That little town wiH never be the quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. Can 945-1551 sam e. Any tickets left? I didn’t think so! for details. ZB T— CYRIL, Garrild and Dennis. How FREE PIC KU P and delivery. Fast, accu­ w as Flagstaff? Thanks for com ing back to rate, professional' word processing, laser ..... on time-... P.S. Take us next time. printing. $2/page. Barb, 396-4632. for our first meeting on Tuesday, Novem­ ber 20 at 9:30pm on the Kappa floor! lent exchange! Love, the Chi-O’s. HELP WANTED— GENERAL when “ lady luck” is on our side. -KeNi and T-yn." HELP WANTED— GENERAL WALK TO WORK your typing needs. AMA/MLA, fast turnar­ PART TIME $8<>o to $ 10°°/hr Full Training $5.50/hr Guaranteed days per week, flexible. Adorable infant. East Phoenix. Happy home. 840-2424, OCCASIO NAL BABYSITTING needed for Walking distance from ASU (Univ. & Rural) • NEW OFFICES • • NEW EXPANSION • • NEW HOURS • . 11:303pm . $3.50/hour. Contact Barb Silverman, 829-9383. ADOPTION 894-0264 A sk for extension #33 W o rd processor an d Sun S a l IM -6 p m 1 2 -5 p m proofreader/editor available. 275-3080. Los Arcos Supports the Valley Cl e a n Ai r C a mp a i g n . NEED TIME to study? W e d o APA/MLA formats. $1.50, double-spaced page. Call (602)945-6376 Joanne, 966-1516 or Bobbi, 968-9166. Your Individual Horoscope :Frances Drake us help you through this difficult time. Reasonable expenses paid. Call collect, C lo th e s P e d d le r Don't just waste your money in a retail store— LOVING STEPM OM wants, to b e a m om j u s t d o US!! too. Lawyer, financially secure, presently single. I will love and nurture, your baby as my own. I would love to hear what you BUY-SELL-tra d e 966-2300 Forest & University (the Arches) want for your baby. Call Kristi collect, 415-731-1101, evenings or leave m essage anytime: or call my attorney Diane Michelsen, 415-945-1880. PREGNANCY COUNSELING Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 SERVICES E LE C TR O LY S IS — PERM ANENT hair removal. R em ove u n w an ted hair forever. Student discounts. Call for m ore informa­ tion: 969-6954. DIALAM ERICA e t c .? More. Call ADOPTION/AND BABY makes three!!! Let early morning, morning, afternoon, evening, weekend As our Telemarketing Representative, 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: tools, ^ g v ^ n d j - y e a r - o l d girts in our home. ~ ■- M M u « Thursday. 8-11:40am; M onday o r W edn esday, Beth and Steve. (602)947*4775. •N EW 15,000+ sq. ft. OFFICE SPACE • • NEW COMPUTERIZED WORK STATIONS • • NEW LOCATION • M - F 3 -9 p m NEED H ELP with papers, theses, disserta­ tio n s , N A N N Y NEEDED second semester. Tw o Locksmith Pick up at College and University on the hour and half hour.'Leave Los Arcos mall a quarter before and a quarter after the hoiir. 966-2825. Lioensed. Call Jufie, 784-4413. PRO TE C TIO N . m essage: FREE SHUTTLE BUS TO LOS ARCOS M ALL ound. C lose to ASU . $1.50/up. Roxanne, CHILD NIGHT care provider. 5pm to 1am. record ed 3503065. LETTER Q U ALITY w ord processing for CHILDCARE fr e e stun guns, tear g a s dispensers, surveil­ FLYING . FINGERS has Maclntosh/laser Fiesta! O le! The food, folks and fun, not to mention the Margaritas, created an excel­ HELP WANTED— GENERAL ENGLISH P A P E R editing and proof read­ MISCELLANEOUS Hashish...wow- that tiki sure had a domin­ GREEK E VEN TS Committee— G et ready from $6/hour. 497-2097, GH. 829-6712. N eed it fast? ant feature- and his dad was ever! at the Events. r ZBT. experience is necessary and w e could be discovered! Let’s cadi 965-6822 for more at 966-3190 for Rush Information. mailings. typing/word the MUAB office by Novem ber 21. N o delay...have your pidture taken today! editing, EXPERIENCED DID YO U forget to have your picture taken T h e hours open are 8-12 and 1-5. Don’t resumes, letters, docu­ C ollege graduate using IBM computer. Mike, 964-0994 TRI DELTS— Thanks for a great happy finance professional Instruction, study aides and examination strategies. Rates rates. 967*1598. A LL PAPE R S, T R ID E L T A P L E D G E S delta love actives! You guys are awesom e! TUTORS ing, also revision. AH subjects, reasonable day. W e ’ll have to d o it again sometime! G ive m e a call. Chi-O love, Karen. needs, 945-4770. CALL N O W for finals! Accounting and C la u lfle d Advertising Matthews Center South Basement for the yearbook? Don’t worry it’s not too b e open until Wednesday, Novem ber 21. grade. laser printers, too. 933 East University, toker...” Dork, thanks tor making sure I v DGS-CANNERY, Tuesday at 4pm! Smis, the back with som e good tales o f adventure. joker, to m akes SKMerrylynn. how special they really are! apply paper grape shots have marred us all for life! The past year has been a real experience-! SK Merry Lynn. JUUE— W A N T ' T O W o r d P e r fe c t t r a in in g ; S c o tts d a le / Camelback area. Call to discuss your KINKO’ S same, nor will w e! S&ki bombers and great SK KE R R Y Happy B-day and turkey day! Love, JaneUe W O R D PRO CESSING , resumes, papers, Mesa. etc. Self-serve Macintosh computers and a ings. Highest quality/lowest prices. Karen, 833-5563. 924-8064, evenings and weekends. East Kiriko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, have “ green ” to a lighter shade! Special thanks best! I love you. Kelly. Carol, thanksgiving ERIN to the Bettys tot all the memories. “ I’m a happy Thanksgiving! You two are the best! Call break... “ Walk on the beach” and com e think you helped m e g o from a deep forest DQ AN D Theta Showdown! Star shining guaranteed. SK for 15 words? What a great» (arid cheap) way to let that special som eone know just little sis! I luv you! Big Sis. ($25); Kyoto’s and Grapevine will never be the L ove Chrissie. DG MOM Michelle and dot Alison, have a typed PH/IFC EXEC 1990 Bettys and Bobs, that personal ads are only $1.40 per day your spurs!! ACCU RATE RESUM ES com posed and L ove Merry Lynn: C H I-0 PA M ! You R the best mom! Thanks! 0 8 * 0 PLEDGE Tammy, your R the best pick up. Alma School Road/Baseline. Jan, 897-1744. SIGM A NU Fish, hey cowboy! How about A HEATHER JUREK Bio 100 10:40. How Saturday at Bam Dance. You’re the best. du At You r Service Word $1.75 AN D up, professional word proces­ stoked for Colorado, w e leave tomor­ is Kennedy’s out, bet your photo taken today! CHI-O A M Y F, thanks for all the help on SCH M UTZELLE, MGT463: LAU RA’S dad did it. But where Love, L a ser resumes, etc. wunderbar! ber 21. T h e mobile photo studio, located H ig h -R e s $1.50 PE R page. Term papers, letters, once. — Gutless. on Cady Man next to Danforth Chapel, is $1$. drinking experience! Oh yeah, formal was Y'all are the best! Can’t wait to work with Spark Yearbook until W ednesday, Novem­ Imager. Also great for highest quality theses, dissertations. Call Joe, 839-2770. haven’t even noticed me. In class I heard you! First meeting W ednesday, Novem ber 28, 5pm! RESUM ES— 35 years experience. Theses, dissertation, your attention for a long time now and you ATTE N TIO N portraits am being taken for The Sun Devil $1.50 A A A W ord Processing/laser printer. PHI PSI pledges: keep with it and strap it on! T h e day is nearing. guy. Could h e be m e? G o out with m e just Student' in the 5K run. T h e banner is ours! TYPING/WORD PROCESSING M AR LO M ABRY— I’v e been trying to get GREEK WEEK Cerem onies Committee— students— PH I PSI Mike Cimino: congrats on take 1st TYPING/WORD PROCESSING A P A specialization. Marion, 839-4269. was right— Thanx for the night! Love, Bubbles. ALL Page 19 Tuesday, November SO, 1990 NEED A secretary? Papers, letters, resumes. W ordPerfect with printer. Pickup and delivery, reasonable rates. 829-6714. Y O U R O W N personal trainer/diet consul­ tant. Mr. Arizona-Mark Isham w it train you for a psrfsct body. Call 546-1161. Digital p a g s r.4964184. /. . .... G h o stw rite r Have a w ritin g problem? Resumes, proposals, ads. C a ll 9 9 0 -0 4 9 2 FOR WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1990 A R IE S „ SCO RPIO ^ (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) flNh (O c t 23 to Nov. 21) Conservative tactics are best in This is a good day for making business now. Overall, it’s a day o f important phone calls and for begin­ progress for you, but last minute ning creative projects. Mental work is developments could take you by a plus, but a dispute about money surprisecould occur now. TAU RU S SA G ITTA R IU S (Apr. 20 to May 20). .. (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) S f9 Dealings with agents and advisers You could come up with an extra are highlighted now. Contractual source o f income today. Shopping agreements are also favored. Tonight, now could lead to an unusual purch­ however, you may meet with an ase. It-s not a good time to raise unexpected expense. sensitive topics with close ties. G E M IN I C APRIC O RN (May 21 to June 20) !Ka ! (Dec, 22 to Jan. 19) You may be taking on a financial This is a good time to go after what responsibility in connection with you w ant Your personality goes over somebody else today. Work goes well in dealings with others. Some smoothly. Tonight something about extra care, though, is needed if money concerns you. handling hazardous machinery today. CANCER .^ A Q UARIU S (June 21 to July 22) nB (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You and a partner will be sharing a You could be totally preoccupied responsibility now, but there will also with either a research project or the be time for a Ain outing together, t*** completion o f some unfinished tasks. night finds you upset about some­ Evening hours want against upsets thing. with close ties. LEO ^ PISC E S (July 23 to Aug. 22) xC (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) «S S It’s a productive and busy day for Visits with friends are favored now, you on the job. Powers o f organiza­ but guard against laziness and letting tion and concentration are tops, things slide on the job. You may be Tonight an argument comes out' o f embarrassed when a quarrel erupts nowhere with a friend. between a friend and a family VIRGO member. (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) SaS YOU BORN TODAY haye an adven­ A matter in business could anger turous approach to life. Friends will you, but prospects for relaxing times be helpfUl to your career, once you with a favorite companion are excel­ overcome a tendency to be overly lent now. Creative work turns for the suspicious o f their motivations. You better. often have a flair for the written and LIBRA spoken word. Advertising, teaching, (Sept. 23 to pet. 22) OT5 Writing, banking, and promotional Try to stay away from a friend who work ale areas in which you'll find wastes your time. Domestic obliga­ fulfillment. Birthdate of: Stan Musial, tions are your priority concern now., baseball player. Martha Deane, radio Something an in-law says could lead personality; and Vivian Blaine, to a disagreement actress. C o p y rig h t 1990 b y K in g Features Syndicate. Inc. Page 20 Tuesday, November go, 1990 State Press ;fe V % S # á S & S S ffÉ ® % & $»& & ■ & W ^ # M Ï 5 « í M ííí X 'y 'w r 'i Î^ S ^ y f; §m m i ’" K ? ; V t 'r V ,'’, '1ft Í y> «M « §MIÉ% S#iM # ^V »Í k í í i j r í r í 1•' Shop Monday through Saturday lo g , Sunday 12-6 In Phoenix at Metrocenter, Paradise Valley Fiesta Mall, Chris%wn, Scottsdale and Superstition Springs. Shop Monday through Frictay 10-t, Saturday 1 M , Sunday 1 M at Park Central and Weetridge. We welcome your Dillard's Credit Card, The American Express* Card, Diners Club Internationa, Mastercard* Visa? and The Discover Card.