« Copyright, State Press, 1990 Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 73 No. 65 Thursday, Decem ber 6,1990 C o m m u n it y d is c u s s e s c a m p u s g r o w t h B y M ICHELLE R O BERTS State Press M ore than 50 community members met with ASU officials Wednesday to discuss the effect future University growth w ill have on Tem pe. The public and officials met informally to review the beginning stages o f the ASU M aster Plan, which w ill help guide campus d evelo p m en t fo r the next 20 y e a r s ,s University officials said the plan is in its research stages and that .no concrete proposals have been made. Research for the master plan began three months ago, and the project is expected to be completed in one year. Thé plan addresses districting, vehicular circulation, tram services, parking; bike paths, potential redevelopment, expansion areas, uses for Tem pe Center, campus malls, landmarks, the periphery o f campus and open spaces. M el Firestone, secretary for ASU Faculty Senate, said he was most concerned about crowding in ASU’s mails. “ I f I ’m not put under by a bicycle, it’ll be a surprise,” he said, adding that he thinks campus malls should encompass more o f an “ open” effect. However, community concerns about the plan mostly dealt with traffic patterns, land acquisitions, integrating the city’s transit system with ASU, how the campus blends aesthetically with the rest o f the community and other: issues involving ASU’s borders. “ W e have a big stake in the University,” said George Wittenberg o f the University Heights Neighborhood Association, “ We live here and w e love it — w e want to see it develop properly.” Wittenberg said ASU and toe city need to work together to install bike paths to regulate the “ 10,000 to 15,000 bikes” on Lemon Street. Dan Durrenberger of the D aily Park Neighborhood Association said he thinks t h e r e s h o u ld b e a n e ig h b o r h o o d representative on the m aster plan task force. The 17-member task fo rce includes students, faculty and representatives from Toni to Plan, page 9« Students rally against paper B y JENNIFER FRANKLIN State Press About 250 students gathered on ASU’s West Lawn Wednesday to hear minority student leaders vent their frustration with a college newspaper they claim is not covering culturally diverse issues on campus. The rally was held to raise support for the demands of four m inority coalitions, which include a request fo r a two-page w eekly cultural diversity section in the State Press. Representatives from the Asian Student Coalition, the Afro-Am erican Coalition, the Am erican Indian Council and the Chicano-Hispano Coalition told the crowd that changes in the State Press and the University’s cultural diversity program need to take place. The coalitions listed four demands in a flier distributed on campus Monday, giving State Press editors two days to respond. Bach Ta, a representative from the Asian Student Coalition, said the newspaper consistently fails to reach Asians on minority issues. “ The purpose of the State Press is to bring all students together,” he said. “ W e feel like they haven’t been doing v e ry w ell.” Suzanne Ross, State Press editor and M eg Halverson, State Press Magazine editor, invited a ll interested to apply for a job at the newspaper. “ I agree that w e need a more diversified staff at the State Press, but w e just don’t get applications from minority students,” Ross said. “ It was brought up a number of times Turn to Bally* page 9. T.J. Sokol/Stat* Prat« Ashahed Trlche, standing, a representative from A S U 's Afro-Am erican Coalition, addresses a crowd of about250 studantsand faculty members at a rally prom oting awareness of culturally diverse Issues W ednesday afternoon on Hayden Library's West Lawn. Seated from left to right are Andy O rtiz, a member of the Chlcano-H lspand Coalition, Bach Ta, from the A lsian Student Coalition, and Michael Lane, from the Am erican Indian Council. ASU to focus on faculty, staff salary increases By KEVIN SHEH State Press . Increased salaries for faculty and staff tops ASU’s Christmas list as students, faculty and administrators mobilize to set their legislative agendas. Meanwhile, lawmakers, many o f whom have pledged to stifle spending at any cost, said ASU likely w ill receive less than the $187 million it received for fiscal year 1990-91. V ASU President Lattie Coor summarized the common goal in three words. “ Salaries, salaries, salaries,” he said. “ W e have got to continue to battle for salaries — fo r both staff and faculty — to be effective in the future.” The Legislature approved a 4 percent market equity adjustment in July after an Arthur Young study revealed that faculty and classified staff salaries at the three state universities are below the current m arket level. Coor said he was pleased with the “ courage the Legislatu re showed” in approving the previous faculty hike. “ But w e have got to push forward,” Coor said. “ W e’re going full bore.” : However, Rep. John Wettaw, R-Flagstaff, said additional money for higher education is unlikely. “ The universities w ill be getting less money,” he said. “ The state w ill have less dollars next year than this year.” State Relations Director Rob M iller, an Arizona Students’ Association delegate, agreed that faculty salaries are a top priority. ’« . “ Th ey’re getting paid so poorly as it is,” he said. “ It is a prim e concern of students to (ensure that) the University can recruit and maintain quality teachers.” Low salaries w ill attract lower quality faculty and staff, which w ill directly affect Teachers’ tribute: Trust Fund, a plan under Which the the quality of undergraduate education and L e g i s l a t u r e m a tc h e s s t u d e n t s ’ $8 student life, M iller added. contributions, also is on ASA’s agenda. Not all o f A S A ’s agenda w ill require Under the expanded plan, students would revenue, h ow ever. V oter registration provide at least a $7 annual contribution reform also is of paramount concern, M iller * that would be matched by the Legislature. said. ASA Executive Director L a rry L ’Heureux Currently, people can register to vote up said the m arket equity adjustments would to 29 days before an election and must do so be the toughest goal to achieve. through a deputy registrar. “ That’s a tough one to get,” he said. “ I f they’re lucky enough to And a deputy “ W e’re talking about a big chunk of registrar,” M iller said. “ With the w ay th e . money.” Maricopa County ‘politburo’ is setup, that’s A F A T shouldn’t be as difficult to achieve, hard to do.” L ’Heureux said. Instead, ASA is proposing to eliminate the “ But it w ill be a blow to students if we deputy registrars and replace them with a don’t get it,” he added. postcard registration system, he said. L ’Heureux said that any legislation In addition, the people would have up to 21 requ iring additional m oney could be days before an election to register to vote, resisted by the Legislature. M iller added. “ It would be a lot less restrictive and a lot “ It w ill be interesting to see how this plays out. Money bills w ill be a rare, rare breed,” m ore convenient for students,” he said. he said. Expanding the Arizona Financial Aid A howler! The ASU administra­ tion is making efforts to recognize outstan­ ding teachers on campus. * frustration over be out Of the tanning o f the new music building under construction. Page 2 fa o a a liie The Sun Devil basketball team triumphs oyer the University o f New Mexico Lobos, 59-54. Classlflei Comics....... Crossword. Page 11 Sports........ State Pres* Thursday, D ecem ber 6 ,1 9 9 0 A SU seek s to re c o g n iz e effective teach ers B y ANDREW FAUGHT Stale P ress ASU is making efforts to recognize outstanding teaching faculty, University officials said in response to a recent study that concluded universities need to revamp their academic structures to give greater recognition to teachers. The report was released this week by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Henry Reeves, ASU vice president for research, said that while the administration con tin u es to Work on m eth od s fo r r e c o g n i z i n g o u t s t a n d in g t e a c h in g professors, the criteria for measuring their accomplishments often is not as evident as Carnegie study claims universities should pay m ore regard to experience the feats o f professors involved in research. “ Teaching is a lot m ore difficult to evaluate than research,” Reeves said. “ With research, there are a lot more milestones you can look at.” Reeves said student and faculty peer evaluations a re a significant measure of determining a professor’s effectiveness. A report stated that defining the work of a professor on the basis of research “ denies many powerful realities” to students. There is a need, it said, for non-research faculty committed to service to be recognized. Anne Schneider, dean o f the College of Public Progams, said a false dichotomy is being drawn when teaching and research are treated as separate entities, adding that research is the basis o f teaching. “ Without research, what would w e base our public service work on?” she asked. “ The quality o f education isn’t the Same without research.” Schneider said a “ L eg o f the Stool” award is given annually to an outstanding faculty member, teacher and public service official in t h e c o l l e g e f o r o u t s t a n d i n g accomplishments. The award also grants each recipient a $1,000 salary raise. L a rry Penley, dean of the College of Business, said his college rewards teachers and researchers with grants. He added that it is possible for a faculty m em ber both to be a proficient teacher and researcher. “ E a c h y e a r , w e r e c o g n i z e th e distinguished teacher and researcher independently at a luncheon,” he said. “ I think w e’ve done a very good job o f that.” Acknowledging the talents o f professors has long been an issue, R eeves said. “ Often the very best research people are outstanding teachers,” he said. “ They w ill go ahead and teach the la rger freshman C la s s e s to g e t th e m e x c i t e d an d enthusiastic.” 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 Stole Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to. space restrictions, the Stole Press cannot guarantee pubUtMtion. Deadline for the entries i s 1 p.m. the previous business day. University Drive. •Society for Creative Anachronism will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Pima Room to listen to Retha Warnik discuss the rise and fall of Anne Bolen. •ASU Cable Connection wifi meet at 11:30 p.m. at Phoenix Cable Channel 35. • . •Amnesty International at ASU will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Room 219 to write holiday greeting cards POCs. •United Campus Christian M inistries will meet at 7 p.m. at Danforth Chapel. •Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Meetings •Alcoholics Anonym ous wilt have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and will-meet at 3 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building Room C319 for a presentation on Ariosto’s idea of Rome. •MUAB Entertainment Committee will present Mark Innocenti in the High Noon Highlight at noon In the MU Programming Lounge. •University Toastm asters will meet at 5:15 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room to improve public speaking skills. Everyone welcome. •Le Cercle Français will meet at 2 p.m. at the Coffee Plantation to plan a Dec. 14 holiday party. •Student Alumni Association will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU Santa C ru z Room. •Students for Choice will meet at 5 p.m. in the MU. •Wrestling Support Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. on the third floor of the M U. Everyone welcome. •Native American B usiness Organization will meet at 4 p.m. in front of the Student Services Building. T he State Press M agazine A W E E KLY C O L L E G E TOWN J O U R N A L [ you’re computer shopping doesn’t mean Apple introduces the Macintosh Classic. you’rtoMlling to make sacrifices. That’s why you should consider the new, affordable Macintosh® Classic® computet Ithasevaythingyouneed— including a monitor; keyboard, mouse, 2 megabytesof RAM, and a 40-megabyte hard disk. Just plug everything in and the Macintosh Qas^c is ready to run, beause the system software is already installed! And, thanks to the Macintosh computer’s l^endary ease o f use, you’ll be up and running in no time. Like every Macintosh, the Classic can run thousands (^available applications that all work in the same, consistent way— « ) once you’ve learned one program, you’re well on your way to learning them aU. And this is one Cheap roommate that doesn’t have trouble sharihg. The Apple* SupeiOrive ^^-standard equipment with every Macintosh— reads from and writes to Macintosh, MS-DOS, OS/2, and Apple II floppy disks, which means you can share information with someone who uses a different type of computer See the Macintosh Classic for yoursetf It’ll change your mind about cheap roommates. For more information visit COMPASS in the Moeur Building, Room 108 For more information call 965-2370 H . The powertobe your best” * M acintosh C la ssic com puters purchased before January 1901 include-system softw are on floppy d isks; softw are is not in stalle d 0 199 0 A p ple Com puter, Inc. A p ple, the A pple logo, and M acintosh a re reg istered tradem arks o f A p ple Com puter, Inc. SuperO rive and “The pow er to b e your best* ara tradem arks o f A pple Com puter, Inc. C la ssic is a reg istered tradem ark lice n se d to A p ple Com puter, Inc. M S-D O S is a reg istered tradsm arfcof M icrosoft Corporation. O S/2 is a reg istered tradem ark o f International B u sin e ss M achines Corporation. World/Nation State Press Page 3 Thunday, December 6,1990 B a k e r starts p re p a ra tio n f o r G u lf talk s Associated Press photo R e b e ls a r r e s t e d U.S. troop* arrest supporter* of former police official C ol. Eduardo Herrera Hessen In Panama City, Panama W ednesday after Herrera, an escaped prisoner, seized national police headquarters and was arrested after fleeing the police building. About 50 armed men were arrested as Herrera was captured. Arms reduction progress made W ASHINGTON (A P ) — U .S . and Soviet negotiators have resolved three,big stumbling blocks as they work to complete a nuclear arms pact for President Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev to sign in Moscow early next year, U. S. officials said Tuesday. The two sides, in meetings over the last month, have agreed to lim it Soviet Backfire bombers outside the treaty, to allow U. S. nuclear programs with Great Britain to continue and to restrict the launch and payload weight of the Soviets’ modernized, ground-based SS-18 missiles, said an official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Baker and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze in Houston cm Monday or Tuesday. The two are expected to thrash out their remaining differences and set a date for the Moscow summit. Shevardnadze is to then fly to Washington to see Bush on Wednesday. Recent negotiating sessions produced agreement on three o f the outstanding differences holding up the pact, known as START, for Strategic Arm s Reduction Treaty, officials said/ Specifically: Plans for Bush’s trip to Moscow are on hold while the negotiators try to reach agreement on other technical matters involving inspection o f weapons systems and interpretation of missile data. •The United States agreed that the Soviet Backfire bomber can be counted separately from other strategic weapons under the agreement, officials said. A separate letter, outside the actual S TA R T treaty, would lim it the number of Backfires. The White House has said Bush will go to Moscow only if the treaty — which aims to cut U. S. and Soviet arsenals of long-range nuclear weapons by 30 percent — is ready for signing. The pact w ill call for scrapping hundreds of warheads under close supervision. Initially the United States had maintained the bombers had to be included in the overall S T A R T limits o f 1,600 heavy bombers and other ballistic missiles the Soviets can retain, said an official close to the talks. Experts from berth sides w ill m eet Friday in Washington to work on the remaining technical matters. The session is a precursor to the meeting between Secretary of State James The source declined to reveal the number of Backfires that would be permitted. The Soviets have 355 Backfires now, according to an estimate by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London-based think tank. W ASHINGTON (A P ) - Secretary of State James Baker a p p e a le d W e d n e s d a y »fo r b ro a d su p p o rt o f th e administration’s Persian Gulf policy so he can credibly tell Saddam Hussein when they meet : “ Get out of Kuwait or risk all.” , He said he would not negotiate with Saddam on the visit, which the State Department said had been form ally accepted by Baghdad. And he added a new warning: “ I f force must be used, it w ill be used suddenly, m assively and decisively.” The State Department said Joseph Wilson, the charge d’affaires at the U. S. Embassy in Baghdad, had been Informed of Iraq’s acceptance of th e Baker trip, which President Bush proposed last week. Meanwhile, Bush said in a news conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina, that the United States would make no effort to give Saddam a face-saving w ay out. “ When naked aggression takes place, it’s not a question of finding face for the aggressor,” Bush said during questioning on his South Am erican trip. He added, “ When a country is literally raped and pillaged, should the w orld g o out and try to find a w ay to save face for he who has raped and pillaged that country.” H e said he was not optimistic Saddam Hussein would leave Kuwait without a fight. Baker, laying out a hard U. S. line before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said international sanctions against Iraq have not worked. H e added that he was “ very pessimistic” they would i f given m ore time, as some congressional Democrats have strongly recommended, and said the threat of attack now holds the best chance for peace. He said a form al congressional statement of support for using force i f necessary “ would, I think, significantly reduce the risk of w ar.” But a congressional debate that led to an equivocal message would be counterproductive, he added. “ Congress and the Am erican people must tell Saddam Hussein in unmistakable actions and words: ‘Get out of Kuwait now or risk all/ ” Baker said. “ Pu t bluntly, this is the last best chance fo r a peaceful solution,” Baker said o f his upcoming trip to Iraq, on which dates and arrangements w ere being worked out. “ I f (Saddam) is not stopped now, if his aggressive designs are not frustrated— peacefully if possible, or if necessary by force — w e w ill all pay a much higher price later on,” Baker ■ said. Responding to a growing chorus on Capitol Hill calling for patience and m ore reliance on sanctions, Baker said: “ Nobody can ever tell you that sanctions alone can force Saddam Hussein out o f Kuwait. I am personally very pessimistic that they w ill.” Citing intelligence assessments, Baker said four months of a well-enforced embargo have so fa r produced no glim m er of change in Saddam’s position. “ Instead, he seems to be doubling his bets,” Baker, told the committee. If Baker made any converts on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, they w ere not evident. Study: D octors o w n in g X-ray News Briefs m achines m ay overu se them BOSTON (A P ) — Doctors take four times as many X-rays when they own X-ray machines and make money on them, according to a study that provides new evidence of how profits m ay influence the w ay physicians practice medicine. Doctors make a profit on every picture they take with their own equipment. But they earn nothing when they send patients to other specialists for X-rays. In recent years, many doctors have purchased X-ray and ultrasound machines so they can take diagnostic images in their offices. While they argue that this is convenient fo r them and their patients, critics suspect that the chance to make more money is also a big incentive to buy and operate these machines. The new study provides circumstantial evidence that doctors who own their own im a g in g m achines m ay overu se the e q u ip m e n t, s im p ly to c o lle c t fe e s . Compared to those who send their patients to radiologists, those who own X-ray and ultrasound machines take four times as many diagnostic images for such common com plaints as colds and backaches, accordin g to the study published in Th u rsday’s N ew England Journal of Firefighters work to contain a fin at a metals storage facility In Industry, Calif, Tuesday. The fits touched off magnesium ex­ plosions causing an evacuation of a one-squars-mil* area sur­ rounding th* building located about 20 mils* east of Los Angelas. Thera were no injuries reported from th* fire. Medicine. Dr. Bruce Hillman of the U niversity of Arizona, who directed the study, cautioned that it could not determine whether the extra X-rays w ere needed. It also couldn’t delve into doctors’ reasons for taking them. However, he said: “ Almost certainly one has to wonder whether it’s an issue of having these machines and realizing that in com es can be in crea sed by th eir utilization. That doesn’t mean.1 believe that physicians are sinisterly abusing imaging. But when they com e to the crossroads of making the decision and they have the machine in the office, it’s awfully easy to decide that the patient needs it.” Ethical guidelines agree that doctors’ decisions should be based Solely on what is best for patients’ health, not physician’s finances. An editorial last year in the Journal o f the Am erican Medical Association said that while doctors are free to own equipment, “ the patient’s interest must always be uppermost. Exploitation for any reason is reprehensible.” S to rm d a m a g e Gertrude Labrecque stands In front of her uncle's home i at Camp Eliia near Saco, Main* on Tuesday. The houae was dsatroyed by waves whipped up by a wlntsrstorm. O p in io n _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ««™ ««««««S S i£ £ !2 2 Enem y roulette Our enemies becom e our friends fast nowadays M ike R oyko Tribune Media Syndicate While most fam ilies w ere spending the long Thanksgiving weekend eating, swapping memories, shopping, watching football games or just loafing, Daniel and Susan w ere writing a letter to President Bush. H ie White House gets a lot of mail, so I don’t know if Bush has seen the Cohens' letter. Probably not. But this is what it says: “ Mr. President: “ Many Americans are spending this long weekend with their families, and that is what w e should be doing. However, on this day we are alone because our only child, our daughter Theodora, was killed in the terrorist bombing of Pan Am 103, along with 269 other innocent people, most of them Americans. • “ Because o f the bombing, there were a lot of empty places around Thanksgiving tables in Am erica this year. You spent the day after Thanksgiving with a man without whom this act of mass murder would not have been possible, Hafez alAssad, dictator of Syria. “ You said, with obvious pride in your voice, that you had ‘no problem’ meeting in friendship with this master of terrorism, as long as he aided in the coalition against Iraq that you are trying to hold together. “ Ilu s is cynical, amoral, and unforgivable. There must be some limits to realpolitik, but apparently you do not know what they are. Assas is more than ‘the enemy of our enemy.’ He is our.enemy. “ You said you w ere almost moved to tears by pictures of the victims of atrocities in Kuwait. Not long ago, pictures of the victims o f the atrocity at Lockerbie w ere produced at the inquiry being held in Scotland. They w ere so horrible that fam ily members of the victim s had to prove that they had received psychological counseling before they w ere allowed to see the photos. I f you wish, w e could arrange to have these photos sent to you. Perhaps they would bring the horror of the Pan Am atrocity home. You were elected to be President of the United States, not chief protector of the al-Sabah and Saudi families. “ You have said that we must stop aggression now or Am erica w ill have to pay a higher price in the future. not the same be said for terrorism? Indeed, you have given lip service to that very idea. But when faced with the reality of terrorism, you have shown that you prefer to make deals with the terrorists. The Am erican public now knows how to ‘read your lips.’ We suspect that Hafez al-Assad knows how to do it as well. “ By sitting down with one of the chief architects o f the Pan Am horror, and by playing a gam e o f winks and nods with Iran, the other nation behind the terror, you have dishonored all those who w ere murdered. And you have dishonored the nation which you increasingly fail to lead.” End of letter. I can understand the grief and anger of the Cohens. But it is obvious they don’t understand the kind of high-level diplomacy required in this fast-changing world. True, it was only a few months ago that we, as a nation, hated Assad o f Syria m ore than w e now hate Saddam o f Iraq. s t a f So who knows, if w e’re patient and the economic blockade against Saddam works, he m ight back down, fold up or even drop dead, and w e won’t have to hate him as muc^ anymore. Then Assad m ight become a naked aggressor or start to build a bomb on the sneak and maybe w e can put him back on top o f our hate list. We don’t bate Assad as much as we used to because Assad h a tes S a d d a m, ■a n d a n y b o d y who hates Saddam is an OK guy. At least as o f today. Can [ But there’s always tomorrow. So just because President Bush go t together with Assad doesn’t mean that he really likes him or that he has forgiven him fo r encouraging terrorism. But in diplomacy, there is a time and a place for everything. And this wasn’t the tim e fo r Bush to say: “ Hi, there, Assad, blown up any m ore Pan A m planes lately?” It wouldn’t have been good form. In fact, w e kind o f liked Saddam because he had fought against the late Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran. And w e hated the ayatollah even more than w e hated Assad or Syria. And before the ayatollah or m aybe at the same time, sometimes it’s hard to keep track — w e hated Gadhafi of Libya more than just about anybody, But now that w e hate Saddam because he is (choose one or m ore): (a ) a naked aggressor, (b ) a threat to the w orld’s economic stability, (c ) a threat to Am erican jobs and industry, (d ) a threat to stability in the Mideast, or (e ) a threat to someday build a nuclear bomb. W e don’t hate Assad as much as we used to because Assad hates Saddam, and anybody who hates Saddam is an OK guy. A t least as of today. [ f E D I T O R I W e must learn to take the long view. Many Americans are still a live who fought against China in the Korean War. And fo r decades, w e w ere in a Cold W ar with the Soviet Union. But now w e are waiting for the Soviets and China, two of the five permanent members o f the United Nations Security Council, to give us permission to let our troops fight and die against Iraq. That shows how things can change. How many GIs in Korea would have believed it if you told them: “ Someday, the president o f the United States w ill ask China for permission to send your grandchildren into battle” ? You could have gotten very good odds on that one. So that’s why w e have to take the long view. Someday, Saddam’s children m ight buy a big Hollywood studio. Stranger things have happened. A L B O A R D 1 STATE PRESS SU Z A N N E ROSS E ditor , U n s ig n e d e d ito r ia ls r e fle c t t h e v ie w s o f th e e d it o r ia l b o a r d In d iv id u a l m e m b e rs o f t h e e d it o r ia l b o a r d w r it e e d it o r ia ls a n d th e b o a r d d e c id e s o n th e ir m e r it. T h e e d it o r ia ls d o n o t r e fle c t th e o p in io n o f t h e ^ S ta te Press s t a ff a s a w h o le . B o a r d m e m b e r s in c lu d e : . ..• N IC O L E P E R R O N M anaging Editor C H yE ditor ....... r _ ^ . .H O B A R T R O W L A N D Asst. C ity Editor......................... .................... 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M agazine Editor...._______ ____ .....NICOLE C A R R O L L R E P O R T E R S : K e n n e th B ro w n , A n it a C a r c o s e , T e e n s Chad w e l l Jeff C on cert, Joseph C raw ford , A n d re w Fought, Jennifer F taaidia, A aron le v y , Patrid a M idi, M ichelle P a u l M ich elle R ohe its, K e v in ‘G irth * Sheh, Christina Schroedea Kristie Young. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : D arren U rb a n , C r a g Z e te , D an Zciger. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Joe S a rn a to n , I r w in D a u g h e rty , Jeorj^tta Douglas, W ill P jw e n , Tamara W offord. C O P Y E D IT O R S : K ellyeK ratch ,M lch adLaM an tia. C A R T O O N IS T : Julie Slgwart M A G A Z IN E STAFF: M ichelle C ruff, Vicki C u lver ChrieUne H crtrzM o n . Sharon K in ev. leim ifer A ltd en on . C h ile Baidv. Randy Hawkins. M onique H ollin, Chris H o n k . L o ll Lsooin. Aaron Levy, Joel Press, Jon Walz. Kram er WetzeL P R O D U C T IO N : Cssssundra Cavinesa, H o lly H iatt, Barry K elly. Jeffrey Lucas, M a rk N oth aft, Lyn n e Senzek, S ta cy Towar, Eric Zotcavage. A D V E R T IS IN G R E PR E SE N TATIV E S: D aa Ellstiom. Todd M artin , C hristine M illan, M ik e M o rrU , T erri Sm ith, John Vacaux* Bill VanZanten. ..... .r. „ . ____ S u z a n n e R o s s E d it o r T h e S ta te Press N M i c o l e P e r r o n a n a g in g E d it o r D a n N O p i n i o n w e lc o m e s a n d e n c o u r a g e s w r itte n re s p o n s e fr o m o w i c k i E d it o r o u r rea d ers o n a n y t o p ic . A l l l e t t e r s m u s t 'b e t y p e d , d o u b l e - s p a c e d a n d n o l o n g e r t h a n t h r e e p a g e s i n le n g t h t o b e e lig ib le fo r p u b lic a tio n . T h e State Pies# is published M o n d a y th rou gh F rid a y during the academic yens except holidays and exam periods, at M a tth ew s C enter, R o o m 15, A r iz o n a State U n iversity, Trmpe. A rizon a M2S7. N e w s ro o m < « B )M 5 - 2 a 2 .W t d o not a n s w e r q u estion s o f n g e n e ra l nature. A d v e r tis in g an d Production: (6Q2) 965-7S7Z T h e S ta te P re s s la th e o n ly n e w s p a p e r e x c lu s iv e ly pubfidted fo r and dnotlatad on the A S U campus. T h e news and v ie w s publiriied in this n ew p sp er are not necessarily thoat o f A S U adm inistrate*, faculty, staff o r atudent body. P le a s e in c lu d e y o u r fu ll n a m e , c la s s s t a n d in g a n d m a jo r (o r o t h e r a ffilia t io n w it h th e u n iv e r s it y ) a n d p h o n e n u m b e r. R e q u e s ts fo r a n o n y m ity w ill b e g r a n te d w it h a n a p p r o p r ia te re a s o n . L e t t e r s a r e s u b je c t t o e d i t i n g b y t h e o p in io n p a g e e d ito r . A l l le tte r s m u s t e it h e r b e b r o u g h t in p e r s o n w it h a p h o t o I.D . to th e d e s k in th e b a s e m e n t o f M a tth e w s C e n te r o r e ls e a d d r e s s e d to : S ta te Press S ta te Press, M a t t h e w s C e n te r , A r iz o n a S ta te U n iv e r s it y , T e m p e , A r iz o n a 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 . 15 fr o n t Opinion State Press Page 5 Thursday, D ecem ber 6 ,1 9 9 0 N uclear rhetoric Bush is using nuclear threat to scare pu blic C ody Shearer North American Syndicate W ASHINGTON — There are a number of President Bush's close friends here who cringe when die president doesn’t think before he speaks. Perhaps his actions are deliberate? A case in point occurred at President Bush’s press conference last week. Asked of his reaction to Sen. AI Gore’s claim that he was misleading thé public in rega rd to Ira q ’s real nuclear threat. President Bush declared he wasn’t about “ to gam ble on the future about the construction of atomic weapons by Saddam Hussein.” F o r the unknowing, the president sounded sincere. To gain effect, he paused and said, “ I know what the intelligence says. E very bit o f it. And I can’t share i t . , ■’ E ver since he visited Am erican troops in Saudi Arabia, President Bush has been em phasizing the imminence of Ira q ’s n u c le a r th rea t. T o m ea su re I r a q ’ a tim etab le in years risked “ seriously underestimating . . . the gravity of the threat,” he said. Of course, the Bush administration is no innocent in deciding to play on the fears of the American people in order to muster support for m ilitary action against Iraq. Tw o recent public opinion polls Suggest eliminating Ira q ’s nuclear potential to be thé one cause that the public considers war justifiable. Independent experts, however, are right in accusing the Bush administration of exaggerating Ira q ’s nuclear potential to boost domestic support for m ilitary action. James Schlesinger, form er C IA director and defense secretary said the timing on thé part of the Bush White House was “ no accident.” He claimed at a congressional hearing last week that “ we heard relatively little about the urgency of the nuclear threat during the first 16 weeks of the crisis.” Adm iral William Crowe, the respected form er chairman o f the Joint Chiefs of Staff also told Congress last week that “ recent re p o rts o f n ea r-term ( I r a q n u clear development) are not right. They are exaggerated.” Added Leonard Spector o f carnegie E ndow m ent fo r International P ea ce: “ W e ’ re re a lly looking at a sort o f resurgence of an appreciation of what was there before in an effort to build this into a bit more of a political factor.” . V ' In short, the Bush administration has been beating Iraq’s nuclear drum on toe basis o f a very speculative scenario. The Defence Intelligence Agency now estimates that if Iraq seized about 20 kilograms of high-enriched uranium,, presently under In tern a tio n a 1 A tom ic E n ergy Administration safeguards at the Tuwaitha Nuclear Research Center near Baghdad, it could make a crude nuclear bomb in less than a year . Last week Secretary of Defense R i c h a r d C h e n e y s a i d t h a t an unsophisticated nuclear device could be manufactured by Iraq if it blended about ten k ilo g r a m s o f u r a n i u m e n ric h e d to 80 percent U-235 supplied by the USSR with the 12.3 kilograms o f 93 percent enriched uranium supplied by France. Unfortunately, for the Iraqis, the Frenchsupplied uranium is in metal form. The 80 percent enriched uranium is in the form of uranium oxide fuel supplied for a Sovietdesign research reactor and would have to be reduced to metal before being mixed with the 93 percent product, if it w ere to be used in a nuclear explosion. The bottom line is that Iraq is nowhere near having mastered the process steps necessary to convert uranium concentrate into weapons-grade uranium. I ’ m told there is no intelligence available to our government that says Iraq is capable of processing high-enriched uranium into shaped c h a rg e s , and m an u factu rin g reflectors to minimize the amount of the uranium needed in a charge or performing implosion package testing. There is also no evidence that Iraq has the technology to minimize the production c m Homi 'î * losses in processing high-enriched uranium into a nuclear weapon. In advanced nuclear weapon states, high-enriched uranium losses nimber as high as 20 percent during weapons production. Given this fact, Iraq’s m aterial processing losses would be enough to make a difference between producing a critical and non-critical weapon with the slim amount of high-powered uranium it now has. Intelligence officials also tell m e that Iraq lacks critical parts to com plete any centrifuges, such as corrosion-resistant bearings, as w ell as the expertise in the field of vacuum technology. Iraqi scientists are s im p ly unabl e to c o n v e r t ur ani um concentrate into uranium hexafluoride feedstock gas-tor centrifuges. R e g a r d le s s o f such o v e rw h e lm in g evidence, let’s suppose Ira q could soon fabricate a crude nuclear device. It still, in the worde of Secretary of Defense Cheney, “ wouldn’t be anything you could deliver from an airplane.” In other words, aquiring a nuclear capability doesn’t mean one can target it. What Iraq might have, under the worst-case scenario, is a means to produce fallout of the kind associated with a nuclear reactor accident. IS this sufficient to g o to war over? If so, why doesn’t this country attack India or Pakistan or Israel? President Bush ought to be ashamed of himself for playing the nuclear bogeyman card. E xaggerating nuclear fears and whipping up needless nuclear phobia, is not the role of a true leader. I f he has facts that refute those of his own experts, he ought to place them on the table. Perhaps the late British writer, John Ruskin, described Bush’s self-defense posture best in his 1856 book, ‘‘Modern Painters.” “ The essence o f lying is in deception,” he writes, “ not in words; a lie m ay be told in silence, by equivocation, by the accent on a syllable, by a glance of the eye attaching a peculiar significance to a sentence; but all of these kinds of lies are worse and based by many degrees than a lie plainly worded.” Males and females have a war gap between them from Saudi Arabia to Sioux Falls. But their views are diverging. Ellen Goodm an Washington Post W riters Group BOSTON — In 1925, a handful women had won the right to vote, N avy expressed his anxiety insatiable desire to interfere understand.” of years after Am erican a rear adm iral in the U. S. about their “ seemingly in matters they do not “ W ar,” said Adm. Fiske, “ they understand least and from it they instinctively recoil. There is danger in this situation. Women now have the vote and they outnumber the men . . . In spite of themselves w e must protect the ladies! ” AS it turned out, the adm iral needn’t have worried his pretty little head about the ladies. In the fight for suffrage, many had argued that women voters would usher in a millennium o f peace. But when m ilitary push came to shove in the 20th century, women and men expressed very similar attitudes toward w ar and peace. That is, until now. This fall, a vast and deep gender gap has been unearthed in the Persian Gulf. Differences about the use of force had already formed a slight trench over Grenada and Panama. But now they are close to-a chasm. In one poll, 73 percent of women say they oppose a w ar to liberate Kuwait. Only 48 percent of men concur. That’s a margin of 25 points. In another poll, women are 18 points less likely than men to believe that Bush has tried hard enough to use diplomacy. Polls are finding gender gaps of IS, 19, 24 and 25 points. Today Am erican women are working side by side with men It is possible, of course, that the pollsters are just tracking a new willingness among women to say what they always thought. There'is hard evidence that women are no longer reluctant to speak out in disagreement with the men in their lives. They have gained the courage of their convictions. But the m ore interesting questions are about the origin of these convictions. Why do women seem to be less directed toward w ar — or at least toward this w ar at this-momeht? Is it the isolationism that seems particularly acute among older women and those with young children? There is a tendency among women, for better and for worse, to keep their focus close to home. Today American women are working side by side with men from Saudia Arabia to Sioux Falls. But their views are f diverging. Is it the simple pop-female explanation that Woman the Nurturer is innately opposed to violence? That smacks of the old adm iral’s notion that women “ instinctively recoil” from w ar and the lingering im age of woman as peacekeeper. I don’t see instinct on this battlefield of ideas. But there is surely rebellion at the thought o f sending a child into battle. What then about toe official feminist explanation that we opposé this w ar because, as NOW’s M olly Y ard said, “ Saudi Arabia and Kuwait are despotic, clan-run monarchies” guilty of gender apartheid. The argument seems almost cartoon-like in its simplicity. Y e t questions about human rights are part of toe larger doubt about the worth of this enterprise and these allies. And what of toe possibility that women are m ore reluctant to start a fight because o f different experiences with conflict? In our daily childhood conflicts on playgrounds and in homes, do men learn they must confront a bully while women learn they can only maintain peace through negotiating? Such separate truths become part of a world view. Any analysis of a gender gap risks a gender stereotype. There are men and women all across this war-peace spectrum, but the differences are how real. And strikingly little is known about the reasons. As an amateur geologist sifting through this terrain, I see bits and pieces of all these reasons and add another. Men and women m ay assess risk differently. Men often see more danger in inaction; women in action. Men often think about winning; women about hurting, Surely the President’s sudden emphasis on Iraq’s atomic bomb potential is an attempt to make inaction seem m o fe dangerous, to change the direction of the worry. Thé old admiral said that wars w ere made to comfort and protect women even against their will. This week, a different sort of admiral, W illiam Crowe, form er chairman of toe Joint Chiefs of Staff, told toe Congress, “ W ar is not neat, it’s not tidy, and when you resort to it, it’s uncertain and it’s a mess.” " The im age from the polls is not o f women as pacifists, but as w ary citizens who require more and better reasons for war, who accept w ar only as the truly last resort. I f that is true, perhaps we are not splitting from men, but leading them. State Pm> Thursday, December 6,1990 B G e t yo u r se lf to g eth er, e f o r e w o r k in g A A T TH E STATE PRESS . n d after APPLY NOW! m h e S t a t e P r e s s is n o w h i r i n g fo r S p r in g ’91. X R eferrals can be picked up in the Student Services B u i l d i n g . A p p lic a t io n s c a n b e p i c k e d up i n t he basem ent o f M atthew s Center. T h e follow ing positions are available: Managing Editor 7572H Newa Editor 7571H O pinion Editor 7570H City Editor 7569H A sst. City Editor 7574H Magazine Editor 7575H Asst. Magazine Editor 7580H C o py Chief 7576H Photo Editor 7567H Sports Editor 7566H A sst. Sports Editor 7568H Artist/Cartoonist 7578H Reporter 7581H Photographer 7579H Copy Editor 7577H Freelance Writer 7572H Deadline for editor applications: Friday, Dec. 7th at noon. Deadline for a ll other positions: Wednesday, Dec. 12th at noon. PUT US TO THE TEST. Now You Can Afford True 300-dpi Output HP DeskJet 500 printer for PC S Apple He. He & lies wAhlhe new Deskjet 500 printer. Irorn Hewlett Packard- you carrstarl producing professtonallookrtig memos and teporls—_al ari.aHcir0a.ble -price1 ' . 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D o rs e y L a n e 966-5184 State Pi*»» Page Thursday, December 6,1990 ASU fresh m an , m usician battles w ith cancer By LAURA SCHMIDT State Press ASU student Christy Dillon said most students find it hard to believe she has been battling brain cancer for four years. “ I tell people what I ’v e been through,” said Dillon, an ASU 19-year-old freshman music therapy m ajor. “ I look totally normal. I like to talk about it. “ You te ll people, and they don’t know how serious it is .” Dillon said she can prove her cancer experience to friends by showing them a small, permanent bald spot on the lower right side o f her head underneath her hair. “ It ’s m y proof of seal,” she said. F ive years before Dillon realized she had brain cancer, she suffered petit maul seizures, tingling sensations in her left arm, se v e re headaches and vom iting from “ feelin gs" or dream-like flashbacks. She said her seizures became worse as her cancer developed. “ M y dad thought it was migraines,” she said. “ I never told m y parents. I f it’s not known, people w ill think you’re crazy,” Dillon was diagnosed with glio blastoma, a brain tumor, in the right hemisphere of her brain when she was 15 years old. She said the tumor affected her memory, pituitary gland and right eyesight. “ It was really shocking,” she said. “ I wouldn’t cry in front of m y parents. I just couldn’t cry in front of m y mom. She was already having a nervous breakdown. because it was not weaved into her brain or located in a sensitive area. A surgeon in Las Vegas, where she lived for 10 years, rem oved her “ lemon-size” tumor and prescribed one year of chemotherapy and six weeks of radiation treatments. Dillon said after she recovered in the intensive care unit, her doctors told her the tumor was diseased instead of cancerous. “ I wasn’t aw are of cancer,” she said. “ I was only 15. Th ey didn’t want to tell me. They wanted me to ask them.” Dillon, an avid violin player for eight years, accepted a music scholarship this year from ASU Symphony Conductor Henry Charles Smith, to perform with the University Chamber Orchestra. She also received a scholarship o f $500 per semester f r o m the C a n d l e l i g h t e r s C a n c e r Organization in Las Vegas. Dillon said she struggled for acceptance into ASU because she had low grades in high school during her treatments. “ fu s e d to get A ’s and B 's in 7th grade,” she said. “ Now I study extra hard, and when I get to the test I forget. I wanted to be a veterinarian but I know I can’t.” Dillon said her tumor and radiation treatments have slightly affected her memory and interest in music, but she can master her part-time waitressing job at Swensen’s Ice cream P arlor by writing orders down on paper. “ I used to practice (violin) three hours a day, and now I just get by,” she added. “ I would cry at night.’ ’ But Dillon said her tumor was operable But Smith said Dillon performs as well as other members o f the orchestra. Irwin Daugherty/State Press Christy Dillon, a 19-year-old freshm an mu&lc theory major, has been battling brain cancer for four years'. ■ “ Everyone has to play hard,” he said, Frank Spinosa, director of the ASU Chamber Orchestra, said he did not know Dillon suffered brain cancer when she asked him to play in his orchestra. “ She’s doing very w ell,” he said. “ She doesn’t stick out at all. She fits in the organization just smoothly.” Dillon said she receives E E G ’s, brain $coo ° OFF* great looking Cresenfa Students, Adults & Fam ilies Furnished o r U nfurnished 1Biikeirtock ÿ j 9 6 7 -8 2 0 3 1 0 2 5 East O ra n ge T em p e T f C id t . BU Y 1 TANNING SESSION AT $5 AN D GET 2nd SESSION FR E E (N E W C U S T O M E R S O N LY ! Coupon expires 1-1-91. Quiet Living Near ASU Campus START YO UR H O LID A Y T A N E A R L Y A T 'exclud ing sale item s 'w ith coupon sandals A ll Utilities Included w ave tests, and magnetic X-rays that do not interfere with her existing radiation in Las Vegas every six months to ensure that new brain tumors w ill not occur. “ I f (doctors) catch (cancer) on time, it won’t be as bad,” she said. “ Now I ’m more aware that I ’ve had this problem, so I know . what to look for. I think I ’m cured, to tell you the truth. But (doctors) have to w ait 10 years.” - \ Haven’t you gone without them long enough? N EW The Shoe Mill 398 S O U T H M IL L • T E M P E 966-3139 (B U L B S ! 8 8 4 -5 5 7 0 W 1 1 2 6 N. S c o tts d a le Rd.. #3 (D rug Em porium Plaza) OPEN EVERY D AY »SCV Exp. 1 2 -3 1 -9 0 |OTHÉR DISCOUNTS W/VALIDATED ASU LDk 704 S . C o lle g e A v e n u e One block North o f ASU 966-6226 WE EXCHANGE CASH FOR BOOKS PLUS 10% GIFT CERTIFICATE ON A L L BUY-BACKS OVER $30.00 IFF The Student Book Center will buy back your books and not only pay you cash, but give you a valuable gift certificate as wall. When you sell your used books for $30, you get $30 cash and a gift certificate for $3. If you get $40 for your used books, you’ll get a gift certificate for $4. p*a* 8 StrtdFww Police Report ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday: *An ASU student was arrested, cited and released for criminal trespassing at the University Activity Center. •An ASU student’s 1968 Nissan Sentra was damaged and several items were stolen from it while it w as parked in Parking Area 17. Estimated damage is 6650, and estimated loss is $390. •An ASU student’s wallet was stolen from his backpack while he was in The Club in the MU. Estimated loss is $60. •A woman not affiliated with ASU was arrested and charged with theft, criminal damage and possession o f marijuana and drug paraphernalia while she was at the northwest corner of Parking Area 59. Tem pe police reported the following incidents Wednesday: •A 15-year-old girl was sexually assaulted after the M. C. Ham m er concert at the University Activity Center Monday night. A fter the concert, she and a friend accepted a ride home with a T-shirt vendor. A fter one friend was dropped off at her home, the suspect allegedly took the victim to his room at the Vagabond Inn, 1221E. Apache Blvd., and forced her to have sexual intercourse with him. A fter the assault, Oie suspect g ave the girl $50. ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS: The victim called her mother, and she was taken to the Maricopa Medical Center. P olice later arrested the suspect at his motel room. •An ASU student’s Pontiac Firebird was stolen from her residence in the 1400 block of East Apache Boulevard. Police later found it abandoned near the railroad tracks on Price Road. •A 23-year-old ASU student said she was assaulted by her form er live-in boyfriend. He allegedly grabbed her throat and knocked her head into the w all several times Compiled by State Press reporter Téena Chadwell. STATE PR ESS C U ¡M teilte them personalIq! featuring M ARK I N N O CE N T I T hursday, December 6 ' from noon till 1 :00 pm m . U . Program m ing Lounge DRIVING HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS? I sh o u ld h ave had it ch e ck e d ! Visit us with your import car before you go! W e’ll help you have a trouble free trip with our tune-up & inspection for $ 3 3 .9 5 with 4 spark plugs and our $ 1 2 .9 5 oil & filter change. (Most cars.) 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He explained that the master plan guides future developments on campus to maintain the oasis effect. Ossa also said ASU’s malls are an important link between the University and Tempe. “ The m a lls th em selves w ere once (Tem pe) streets — repaved — they have become an important part of the city itself and are keeping the city alive within ASU,” Academic A ffairs, Business Affairs, Student Affairs, Research, University Relations, Intercollegiate Athletics and the city. Ignacio Bunster-Ossa, managing director for W allace Roberts and Todd, the master plan consultant, said the plan includes aspects ranging from aesthetic concerns to bike paths. Ossa compared the look o f ASU to an “ oasis” because o f the campus’ many trees he said. Mathew Betz, vice provost fo r Planning, said ASU hasn’t had a comprehensive plan since the mid-1960’s, adding that ASU’s new administration felt it was “ time to look toward the future,” Betz said a new site fo r a liberal arts building; m all development and the fact that ASU is 1 million square feet short of campus space now, pointed to the need for a master plan. Jennus Burton, associate vice president for Business Affairs, assured community inembers the m aster plan would not be a waste of ASU money. SE OF THE RAP l/v/DusrRV. Sif t in g through Album s , t h e y p o u n d M A N Y LYfi/CS TW AT WERE SEXUAL o p DEMEAN/WS TO W0W£A/ st a t e m eatt. ... 30, THEY DECIDED THAT R A P MUSIC NOT O N LY REQUIRES NO T A L E N T , BUT ALSO REQUIRES NO MORALS,v ifé c o it nisa* CONINE H CONN! Ë31 c a State Press C la ssifie d s 1 IE ■ ii? T h a t ’ s th e tickets 1 p IÛ L ii b Iz ICH American Bartenders School ¡B ir t t e n r t o t fc l sandals Haven’t you gone without them long enough? 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Or you could prep with the best — the company with the proven formula for Beating Standardized Tests- 398 S O U T H M ILL • T E M P E Custom Perm Special: W ASHINGTON ( A P ) — The nuclear power industry is having a meltdown over “ The Simpsons. ” The prime-time cartoon show’s evil power-plant owner with overbite, the dozing employees and a threeeyed fish named Blinky all have contributed to driving industry officials into a critical mass. But more than anything, Homer Simpson has them glowing under the collar. The U. S. Council for E nergy Awareness, an industry information group, told the “Simpsons” producers in a February letter it was horrified to see nuclear plant workers portrayed as “ bungling idiots.” Top “ idiot” on the council’s list was Homer, father of the Simpson fa m ilya n d an employee o f the fictitious Springfield nuclear plant. Homer, perpetually in need o f a shave, seems to care less about safety than about naps, doughnuts and having enough tartar sauce for his fish sticks. In various episodes, Homer gives aw ay the plant’s blueprints to a foreign exchange student, his boss tries to bribe a plant inspector with a bushel o f cash, and three-eyed “ Blinky” is found swimming near the plant. “ I am sorry that the “Simpsons” has offended a l o t o f people in the energy industry,” Executive Producer Sam Simon said in a Feb. 5 letter to Carl Goldstein, a vice president of energy group. “ I agree with you that in real life H om er Simpson would not be employed at a nuclear power plant. EBi WeScore More! Call Today for Course Information 952-8850 Courses filling quickly LSAT Financial Assistance Available GRE GMAT SU t« Press Page 11 Thursday, D ecem ber 6 ,1 9 9 0 ASLPs about-face beats UNM, 59-54 By P A U L CO RO State Press We have a winner in the UofA football team lookalike contest. Only the Wildcats could Jóse to Oregon State and then win against USC. And perhaps only the ASU basketball team could get beat by Drake and rebound like it did Wednesday night to hand 28th-ranked New M éxico its first loss, 59-54, in front of a University A ctivity Center crowd of 9,132. “ I ’m proud of m y kids because we had a. lot of work to do since Saturday and they did what I asked them to do and that’s to their credit,’ ’ Sun D evil coach Bill Frieder said. Once again, streak-happy ASU (4-1) ran hot and cold until center Isaac Austin poured it on the Lobos' highly-touted Luc Longley with 17 second-half points and denial defense to wash out his teammates’ dismal 35 percent shooting. While he was timid offensively in the first half with just two points on the 7-foot-2 Austrailian, Austin began to use his quickness in the key to bring back the Sun Devils from a sluggish second-half start. In one stretch, Austin was reponsible for 14 straight ASU points by his buckets or assists. “ We went into Ike at the right time in the second half and he responded,” Frieder said. “ I thought he was a little scared of the size and so forth (early). We finally got him to take it at him and that was important. ” While he was racking up the points and getting Longley into foul trouble on offense, Austin was holding Longley to just seven shots and 10 points on the night by fronting him on defense. “ We had some second and third options of how w e were going to (stop Longley), but we didn’t have to go to them,” Frieder said. “ We continued to front him and get weakside help without getting away from their 3-point shooters.” “ I felt that I was quicker than him and that helped m e,” Austin said. “ I was just playing smarter than him in the second half.” The Sun Devils began the secondhalf with what has become a typical drought. After holding a 26-23 halftime advantage, ASU did not score on its first five possessions, which dating back to a horrendous first-half conclusion gave the Sun Devils just one field goal in over 12 minutes. “ We go into the tank, there’s no question,” Frieder said. “ W e’ve got to work that out. The m ost important part of a game is the first five minutes of the second half.” With Austin’s dominance on the post, ASU opened up a 50-43 lead with 7:24 to go when Austin faked Longley into the air and scored on a reverse. However, with the Sun Devils’ 55 percent foul shooting, U N M (5-1) rallied as Ike Williams scored seven o f its next nine to pull the margin within one in the last minute. A fter guard Stevin Smith gave ASU a 57-54 lead w ith a reverse layup, the Lobos had a shot to tie but Randy Robbins’ 3-pointer with 25 seconds left slid in and out and Sun Devil guard Tarence Wheeler cinched the win T4rn to ASU-EINM, page 12i Tamara Wpfford/State Press A S U center Isaac Austin sw ats a dunk attempt by New Mexico forward Kari Jaxon in the Sun D evils’ 59-54 win W ednesday night at the University Activity Center. Longley fails to meet tall expectations By DARREN URBAN •State Press Joe Bam—on/State Press Lobo center Luc Longley drives on Sun Devil center Isaac Austin W ednesday night. Luc Longley, New M exico’s 7-foot-2 center, was predicted by some experts to have been a lottery pick if he had gone into the N B A draft after his junior campaign. But Longley stayed in school, and through the first five games of die season, blistered Lobo opponents with 15.2 points and 9.8 rebounds a gam e, shooting a remarkable 75 percent from thè field. E v e n Sports U lu s t r a t e d ’ s Curry Kirkpatrick was in town for a feature on the Perth, Australia, native. But Kirkpatrick and the 9,132 fans who watched Wednesday night did not see a dominating big man. In fact, Longley was. mostly a non-factor in a 59-54 U N M loss to ASU. Taking only one shot in the. first half, he finished with 10 points on four-of-seven shooting, reaching the foul line only twice. “ I didn’t get the ball in the low post,” Longley said. “ But other people had better shots.” The Sun D evils’ gam e plan was for center Issac Austin to front Longley and to bring in backside help on the entry pass. The strategy shut the L o b «,’ big man down in the first half. Not only did Longley shoot just once, but he only received the ball five times. “ I wasn’t scared,” Austin said. “ I ’ve played against big guys.” Longley, who finished with two assists, d id m a k e som e good p asses when confronted with the double team. But his Lobo teammates could not convert oil several makeable shots. UNM began looking for Longley more in the beginning o f the second half. In the initial 10 minutes, Longley buried two foul shots, two dunks and a spinning layup as Austin began playing him without help. “ In the second half, ASU was respecting our outside shooters m ore,” Longley said. “ I had more room to operate inside.” But Austin was having his w ay with Longley on the Sun- Devils’ offensive end, finishing with 17 points and 12 free-throw attempts in the second half . With Longley trying to concentrate on stopping Austin, he w as unable to sustain his o ffe n s iv e momentum, missing his only shot in the final 10 minutes of the game. His only significant contribution down the stretch was a block o f Austin’s shot with ASU ahead 50-45, but it whs not enough to spark the Lobos. “ W e’re not moving the ball around enough,” Longley said. “ It ’s part good defense, but it’s part bad concentration on our part.” As for toe Sun Devils, two backup plans to stop Longley did not have to be used because of the stellar defensive play of Austin and his supporting cast. “ I just wanted to play good defense,” Austin said. “ He deserves toe ranking he’s Turn to Longley, page 12. SAE Lions d ow n Sigma Chi to earn b id to USF&G Sugar B ow l By DARREN URBAN State Press There is a winning football team that regularly reaches postseason play at ASU. The Sig Alph Lions, o f the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, have lost only once in two-and-a-half years — in last year’s U SF& G Sugar B o w l F l a g F o o tb a ll Cham pionship Tournament. ‘ Taking their first step back to try and capture the national crown, the Lions beat a team from Sigma Chi Fraternity, 6-0, Tuesday to earn a return trip to N ew Orleans. “ We’re going down there knowing w e are one o f toe better teams,” said tailback/safety Steven Dark, a 22-year-old communications major. “ We weren’t sure what to expect last season, but now w e know we can win it.” Last season, the Lions won four games in the tourney, including a win against toe previous yea r’s runner-ups. Dark said the team, which has played together for the entire string o f victories, is unique in the seven-on-seven sport. “ We play both offense and defense, unlike other teams that sub a lot, ” Dark said. “ It keeps us tight to be out there the time. Since we have played together all this time, w e know where everyone else is one the field.” Dark said this trip to New Orleans w ill be all business for the Lions, who Dark said fe ll prey to “ social life ” during last yea r’s tournament. “ W e’re going to put the social aspect aside,” Dark said. “ W e’re going to concentrate on winning and then celebrate later.” “ W e ’re, goin g down there to w in it ,” offen sive lineman/linebacker Rob Slattery said. “ W e know what to expect.” ' Sig Alph did come away with one m ajor win in New Orleans last year, collecting “ approximately $8,300” for toe Cure Paralysis fund to finish first in toe fundraising competition. Dark said although the team had gotten off to a late start this year, they hope to repeat as fundraising champions. “ Last year w e donated our plane tickets (to New Orleans) into our total,” Dark said. “ It put us over the top, and as the winners, USF&G paid for our trip and hotel.” Dark said after watching the national tournament, ASU ranks high in producing quality flag football squads. Ttia Sig Alph Lions, A S U ’s two-time intramural football cham­ pions, will travel to New Orleans for a national tourney. “ Looking at our performance, I think it really shows how strong the ASU intramural program is,” Dark said. “ The Sigma Chis have a great team. The breaks went our w ay, but they could compete down in New Orleans.” Dark said flag football is more difficult and more intense than people realize. “ It is very complex,” Dark said. “ You need to use your sense of football, and adapt it to flag football rules.” In addition, Dark said toe Lions use a different style of offense that throws teams off. “ Our offense is geared around running and dump passes,” Dark said. “ Most teams use a spread offense with two quarterbacks,” The other members of the eight-man roster are: offensive lineman/cornerback Rick Landry, quarterback/linebacker T im Booker, receiver/d efen sive lineman Jon Dice, center/defensive lineman Dan Siddell, receiver/defensive back J eff Nuzem and receiver/defensive back Jason Radoven. Page 12 *> Stats Press JTiursCtoj^eceijberfi^IWO LaDuke picked on all-American team From staff and wire reports ASU senior free safety Nathan LaDuke was named a second-team All-American Wednesday, making him the lone Sun Devil representative on this year’s three allAm erica squads. LaDuke, who led ASU in tackles and interceptions this season, is also a semifinalist for the Thorpe Award, which goes to the nation’s top collegiate defensive back. Besides LaDuke, eight other Pac-10 players received recognition on the squad, but only U ofA’s D arryl Lewis represented the conference on the first team. F IR S T TE A M Quarterback — T y Detmer, Brigham Young, 6-0,175, junior , San Antonio. ' Running backs — E ric Bieniemy, Colorado. 5-7,195, senior, West Covina. Calif : Darren Lewis, Texas A&M, 6-0, 220. senior, Dallas. Wide receivers — Herman Moore, Virginia, 6-5, 197, junior, Danville, V a .; Lawrence Dawsey, Florida State, 6-1,195, senior, Dothan, Ala. Tight end — Chris Smith, Brigham Young, 6-4, 230, senior, La Canada, Calif. Center — John Flannery, Syracuse, 6-4, 301, senior, Pottsville, Pa. Guards — Joe Garten, Colorado, 6-3, 280, senior, Placentia, C alif.; E d King, Auburn, 6-4, 284, junior, Phenix City, Ala. Tackles — Antone Davis, Tennessee, 6-4, 310, senior, F ort Valley, Ga.; Stacy Long, Clemson, 6-2,275, senior, Griffin, Ga. Return specialist — Raghib “ Rocket” Ismail, Notre Dame, 5-10,175, junior, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Placekicker — Philip Doyle, Alabama, 6-1,190, senior, Birmingham, Ala Linemen — Chris Zorich, Notre Dame, 6-1,266, senior, Chicago; Russell Maryland, Miami, 6-2, 273, senior, Chicago; Huey Richardson, Florida, 6-5, 244, senior, Atlanta; Kenny Walker, Nebraska, 6-4, 240, senior', Crane, Texas. Linebackers — A lfred Williams, Colorado, 6-6, 236, senior, Houston; Maurice Crum, Miami, 6-0, 222, senior, Tampa, F la .; Michael Stonebreaker, Notre Dame, 6-1, 228, senior, R iver Ridge, La. Backs -w D arryl Lewis, UofA, 5-9, 186, senior, West Covina, C alif.; Tripp Welborne, Michigan, 6-1, 201, senior, Greensboro, N.C.; Ken Swilling, Georgia Tech, 6-3, 230, junior, Toccoa, Ga.; Stanley Richard, Texas, 6-2,197, senior, Hawkins, Texas. Punter — Cris Shale, Bowling Green, 6-0,190, senior, Beavercreek, Ohio. c H e \ n e W «' p> ■ PIZZA & PUB J a n a oB with two free throws. „• “ The key to the gam e was when w e w ere five points ahead, then w e got a turnover and then w e started letting Austin fill the middle,” UNM coach Dave Bliss said. “ I ’m not taking anything away from the w ay Austin played, but that was their whole offense in the second half.” “ W e’re cutting down on mistakes and w e’re learning,” ASU point guard Lynn Collins said. “ Once you stop learning, you’re in for it. When w e lost Sautrday, everybody had to come back and say w e’re still learning. Tonight was a good win to get everybody’s confidence back up.” The Sun Devils, who suffered against Drake because of hurried shots and tempo, cam e out with a deliberate offense that was reminscent of last year’s monotony. A fter falling back 7-5, ASU scored on eight of its next nine possessions for a 21-7 bulge midway throught the first half. The Sun Devils then slipped into their scoring rut. “ I thought they w ere tight in the first half a little, especially the last seven or eight minutes,” Frieder said. “ I think w e’re trying too hard to play team basketball and find open people. We stopped playing with reckless abandon which you have to do.” Some of the first-half scoring blues could be attributed to Austin, who passed up shooting on the post against Longley on several occasions while ASU missed two-thirds of their shots from the field. “ I wasn’t nervous,” Austin said. “ I had to think about my game. I wasn’t thinking abont him.” Longley. Continued from page 11. got. H e’s a very talented player.” “ I knew (Austin) was good,” Longley said. “ He played a great game. The credit goes to him.” Longley finished with seven rebounds, but none o f them cam e on the offensive end. He was in position to grab teammate Rob Robbins in-and-out 3-pointer with 35 seconds left, but the ball bounced o ff Longley’s hands, and with it, the game. Longley said after the gam e that the attention he receives from the media has not been a distraction. “ (The media coverage) has been less than usual,” Longley said. “ We have a lot of new faces for the media to talk to. I don’t dislike it. It ’s been a pleasant surprise.” STATE P R E S S Classifieds Matthews Center Basem ent, ASU 965-6731 > , O y V o® SECOND T E A M Offense Quarterback — Shawn Moore, Virginia. „ Running backs — G reg Lewis, Washington; Gerald Hudson, Oklahoma State. Wide receivers — Wesley Carroll, M iam i; Patrick Rowe, San Diego State. Tight end — K irk Kirkpatrick, Florida. Center — Mike Arthur, Texas A&M. Guards — Dean Dingman, Michigan; Eric Moten, Michigan State. Tackles — P a t Harlow, Southern Cal; Stan Thomas, Texas. Return specialist — Dale Carter, Tennessee. Placekicker — Chris Gardocki, Clemson. Defense Linemen — David Rocker, Auburn; Moe Gardner, Illinois; Mitch Donahue, W yoming; Steve Emtman, Washington. Linebackers — Darrick Brownlow, Illinois; Levon Kirkland, Clemson; Mike Croel, Nebraska. Backs — Nathan LaDuke, ASU; Todd Lyght, Notre Dam e; Terrell Buckley, Florida State; E ric Turner, UCLA. * Punter — Brian G reen field, Pittsburgh. V T H IR D T E A M Offense Quarterback — David Klingler, Houston. Running backs — Mike Mayweather, A rm y; Sheldon Canley, San Jose State. Wide receivers — Bobby Slaughter, Louisiana Tech; Manny Hazard, Houston. Tight end — K elly Blackwell, Texas Christian. Center — Mike Heldt, Notre Dame. Guards — M ark Tucker, Southern Cal; Ricky Byrd, Mississippi State. Tackles — Charles McCrae, Tennessee; J e ff Pahukoa, Washington. Return specialist — Desmond Howard, Michigan. Placekicker — Michael Poliak, Texas. Defense Linemen — Shane Dronett, Texas; George Thornton, A labam a; Frank Giannetti, Penn State; K elvin Pritchett, Mississippi. Linebackers — Robert Jones, East Carolina; Marvin Jones, Florida State; Mark Sander, Louisville. Backs — W ill White, Florida; Merton Hanks, Iow a; K erry Valrie, Southern Mississippi; Jesse Campbell, North Carolina State. Punter — Jason Hanson, Washington State. A S U -U N M Continued from page 11. S tel “ 9ht ° 0&* h e a # ^ T H IR S T Y THURSDAY CONTINUES ALL BOTTLED BEERS i2oz, 930 “Results speak for themselves... Tanning IS better at B R C A B W A rT A N N IN C C E N T E C * ’ 3 p.m .-close S A V E «20°° 3 Months Unlimited Tanning only % Bud Light *08«* (sign before 12-15) Other packages available: • Open 7-dsys a week • State of the Art European Tan Beds • Each Bed- 34 Bulbs PLUS Face Tanner« '■ • Finest Reflector Bulbs Available Anywhere • Tempe’s Only HI Intensity Tanning Bed. • Competitive Rates . 2 Weeks *39 C O ° Corona ***> • « r$ ft Buy 20 visits at *69 reg. price, you may add 10 sessions for 1/2 price! (30 visits/*885Q) 937 E. Broadway 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 1301 E. Universtiy (Next to Beauvais) (S.E. Corner of Rural/Broadw ay) Call 894-1152 for appointm ent State N u i Thursday, December 6,1990 State Press LINER AO RATES: 15 words or less: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10 + days 15* each additional word , The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. P in o m lM n only $1,401 HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: InPeraon: Cash, Check (with guarantee card), VISA or MasterCard. We’re located in the lower level of Matthews Center, room 46H. Of­ fice hours are 8 a.m.-5 p.m. MondayFriday. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 time: $7.85 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. Inch 6 or more times: $0.50 per col. inch By Phone: •05-0731 Payment with VISA/MC only. $6 minimum on all phone orders. ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS W M W W W W W W W W PRAYER TO The Holy Spirit. Holy Spirit, You who made me see everything and showed me the way to reach my ideals. You who gave me the divine gift to forgive and forget the wrong that is done to me, and You who are in all instances of my life with me. I thank You for everything and confirm once more that I never want to be separated from You, no matter how great the material desires may be. I want to be with You and my loved ones in Your perpetual glory. Thank You for Your love towards me and my loved ones. Amen. Person must pray the prayer 3 consec-tive days without asking the wish. After 3rd day the wish w ill be granted no matter how difficult it may be. Prom ise to publish this dialogue as soon as the favor is granted. Thanks. D.B. Classifieds M atth ew s C e n te r B asem ent, R o o m 15 965-6731 A ttention!! The d e a d lin e to p la c e a c la s s if ie d l i n e r in t h e D e c e m ­ b e r 11 H o lid a y Friday, D e c e m b e r 7 at N OON! Shopper i v w w w is y w w v w v ^ w CRISIS IN Gulf- Mohave, MU, Monday noon Ron Kovac (Bom 4th July); EllsburgVietnam Vets, 12/10. Video- DiscussionAction. Dr. Axford, 5-2200. Coalition for W orld Peace. HANG GLIDE! Our gently sloping man­ made training hill. Safe and eixeiting. Fly all day. WindSports, 897-7121. SINGLES’ EVENTS, advice, personals — Arizona Singles Scene newspaper. Free sample, 990-2669. LARGE YARD sale: 82nd Street and Montecito Avenue, Scottsdale. Halfway between Indian School and Camelback. Household items, lamps, furniture, many other useful items. Saturday, December 8th; Sunday, December 9th. Starts 10am. ST JU D E Novena- S t Jude Thaddeus, relative of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Apostle and Martyr, renowned for Thy virtues and m iraculous powers, faith­ ful advocate of all those faithful to Thee and special patron of those in dire distress. To Thee dO I turn with confidence trusting in Thy power to assist those who almost despair of any help. Most earnestly do I beg of Thee to assist me in my need, for of myself I can do nothing. I promise Thee, Jude, for the remainder of my life to revere Thee as my special patron and to spread devotion to Thee as a powerful and a speedy advocate in our necessities. St Jude pray tor us and for all who invoke Thy aid. Amen. Our Father- Had Mary- Glory Be D.B LO VE TO dance? Hate the bar scene? You’ll love the A ll Singles Dances, Fridays at better Valley hotels. $4.50. Recorded information: 946-4086. STO P WAR . in Gulf! Senator John M cCain’s office— 16th and Missouri, Phoenix— Noon, Friday, December 7th. 253-5055. David. JA ZZ IN America— Monday night with Sheltans. If you have attended each class since last test and have all possible terms fo r final, call 784-9987 and receive cash for your notes. H EY CO LLEGE students! Did you know that personal ads are only $1.40 per day for 15 words? What a great (arid cheap) way to let that special someone know just how special they really are! By Mad: Send your ad (with payment) to: State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Rm 15 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 T h e n c o m e s p e n d an e v e n in g a t a n a d v e rtisin g an d m a rke tin g w o rksh o p th at w ill h e lp m ake yo u r c a s h re g iste r rin g . A n d rin g! ' W HAT YOU CA N EXPECT «TO LEARN : •How to establish a business identity. •How to position your business. •How to establish a ^business advertising budget. •How to plan an advertising campaign. •How to write powerful copy. . •How to design effective ad layouts. •How to choose the correct media. •How to avoid the seven advertising mistakes. •How to advertise during your peaks and valleys. •How to have a dearer vision of your business. P LE A S E BE OUR G U EST! THURSDAY, JANUARY 10 6:30—9:00pm Tem pe M issio n P a lm s B allroom 1 PLEASE RSVP 965-6555 Ask for Carol Haley Workshop sponsored by The State Press APARTMENTS Super Quiet Lovely 1 & 2 bedroom apart­ ments. A ll am enities. Plus beautiful pool and covered parking. H idden G lenn SAY CHEERS for only $ 1.40!! You can say cheers, happy holidays, hello, goodbye, I love you, how’s your mother...for only $1.40 with a personal ad in the Decem ber 11 Holiday Issue of the State Press. Stop by the C la ssifie d O ffice s in the south basem ent of M atthew s Center, 8am -5pm daily. Remember your student ID! 8 1 8 W . 3rd S t., T e m p e (H ardy & 2 n d Street) 968-8183 APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING COMMONS ON Apache, reduced rate. $250. Take over lease for Kelly D. Male/ female. 829-0933. COMMONS ON Apache, take over lease and deposit, reduced rent. 4 payments of $225 for the semester. Don P. 829-0933 or 345-7913. DECEM BER RENTAL at Hayden PlaceStudio apartment only $300. No deposi­ tor you or for visiting relatives. Call 997-4950 for more information. IMMEDIATE O CCUPANCY- take over lease at Commons on Apache. Reduced rent and deposit. Mo monthly payment due until January. C all office, 829-0933, refer to Kitty. LIVE AT The Commons on Apache!! Take over lease, and receive cheaper rates. Great deal for Spring semester! Fully furnished apartment, only $250 a month. No depo6it necessary. CaH 831-7488 or 968-5894 M ASTER BEDROOM With private bath, fuNy furnished, queen-size waterbed and desk. Close to campus. Must rent, Only $300 per month. C all 829-0596. SU PER MOVE-IN special on 2 bedroom apartments. Walk to ASU. Pool, laundry room. 1 block south of University on 8th Street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for specials ADORABLE STUDIO APARTMENTS P e rfe ct for an in divid u al seekin g a quiet location c lo se to A S U . P o o ls, lighted te n n is court, and m uch m ore!! A S U A R E A . 2 bedroom . 2 bath. $350/month, $125 security deposit. 967-4789. No pets. HURRY! Deadline for the Holiday Issue Is noon, Friday, Decem ber 7. COMMONS ON Apache, only $250/month plus free deposit for Spring semester. Fully furnished- washer/dryer, share bedroom/bath. Call office, $29-0933 with referral to BarbS. 330 Si Beck, Tempe 8 9 4 -6 4 6 8 W ALK TO ASU. One and two bedroom apartments^, 1243 South Dorsey, Butter­ field park. Darlene, 966-67$5. WORTHINGTON PLACE— 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Pool, jacuzzi, volleyball. Close to campus. Furnished or unfurnished. Avail­ able Jan u ary 15. 921-2920, leave message. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT TEM PE’S FAIREST rates. International students welcome. $420 to $260. Devon. Apartments, 926 East Spence. 370-2366. UNIVERSITY TOW ERS reduced rent Female to take over lease next semester. Share bedroom/bath. Suzanne, 350-0221. $385 1123 E. Apache 1 block east of Rural S 184W 8 S UNIVERSITY TOW ERS urgent, second semester. Free parking, phone, and u tili­ ties. Take any price I can get. Please! 350-0543. UNIVERSITY TOW ERS— sub-lease— below cost! $350/month/offer. Free utili­ ties. Close to campus. Free housekeep­ ing, 24-hour security, pool, resident advi­ sors. Must get out!! For information, caH: Gabe at 3504)223 or 979-9387. Nights preferred. UTILITIES PAID! Bike to class, Super dean 1 bedroom in fourplex. $349. 1st Street/Hardy. $24 per month discount available. Hurry! 945-1013. FEM ALE TO share 3 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished condo, near campus. A ir condi­ tioning, washer/dryer, pool. 953-1159 p.m., 9924)088 a.m. FEM ALE TO share 2 bedroom/2 bath, Worthington Place. Pool, jacuzzi, volley­ ball. Close to campus. Furnished. Avail­ able January 1.921-2920, leave message. FEM ALE to share beautiful, quiet, 2 bedroom/2 bath condo. 4 m iles from ASU. $260/month. C all Colleen at 835-6987, keep trying. M A L E /F E M A L E R O O M M A T E , 2 bedroom/2 bath. Furnished, pool, volley­ ball, cable. $260, V i utilities. 829-9281 NONSMOKER W ANTED to share two bedroom apartment. $220 per month, upperclassman preferred. 649-0117. NONSM OKING ROOM MATE wanted. Share 2 bedroom apartment, 5 m iles from ASU. $200 plus Vi utilities. 969-3446, evenings. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, 2-story furnished condo. Hardy and University. Includes covered parking and pool. $500/morith. C all 968-7383. Contact Jeff, OWN ROOM in Foxfire apartments, $180 plus utilities. M cQ intock and University. CaH Rob at 829-4919. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, fireplace, washer/ dryer, dishwasher, garbage disposal, stove, refrigerator, swimming pool. Rent to own, 965-3850 (8-5); 945-7919, after 6 (leave message). 2 M ASTER bedrooms at Questa Vida. Firep lace, w asher/dryer, m icrowave. $650/month. Call Mark at 990-2333. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, 2-car carport, fireplace, pool, jacuzzi, gas grills. For information, call Matthew, 840-5748. BEAUTIFUL, CLEAN 2 bedroom 2 bath condo. 510 West University. Pool, quiet, close. $475/month. 9664)982, MAZATLAN, DELUXE bi-level condo on best beach. Sleeps 6, pool, maid, kitch­ enette. Available March 17-24. $600. (415)331-1376 or (415)255-9467 (days). TAKE OVER Commons on Apache lease for second semester. Discounted rate. Must move! C all Erin, 966-4566, leave message. FEM ALE ROOMMATE, attractive room in house. Pool, washer/dryer, close to ASU. 966-2360. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath townhouse With loft and fireplace^ at Papago Park Village. Available 1/1/91. $850 per month. Phone (206)644-9847. 1 5 2 2 E . S o u th e rn A v e . 8 3 9 -9 9 4 7 (Present this ad for additional $25 savings.) 1 and 2 bedrooms $160 move in Call Today! A pache Terrace ASSUM E M Y lease for Commons on Apache. Only $250/month. Reduced deposit! Mandy, 829-0933. If you w ant a LARGE APT. in a QUIET AREA 'plus a great MOVE-IN SPECIAL, come to WESTRIDGE! Eastridge Apartments 2 BED R O O M North Tem po. Pool, dishwasher, self-cleaning oven. 1007 West 1st Street. 894-1041. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, available immedi­ ately. No deposit required, dose to ASU. U sa or Sandi, home: 784-1583, work: 967-4677 READ Y T O M O VE? LO S PRADOS townhouse. 2 bedrooms, upstairs, washer/dryer, stocked kitchen.. $625 unfurnished, $725 furnished. 968-7320 1 block o ff campus 2 BEDROOM condo, walking distance to ASU. Fully furnished, wiN accommodate 4 people. Available immediately for Decem­ ber or spring term. C ali John at 528-6222 or leave message at 835-1281. Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10 a.m.>. APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM apartment, very large, washer/dryer. Partially furnished. Walk to ASU. $350/month. C all Steph, 968-3483. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, washer/dryer in each apartment: W alk to ASU. Lemon/ Dorsey area. $425/month. 496-0562. WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? Classified liner-ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). Ads may run for any length of time. Canceled ads wiN be credited to your ac­ count. Sony, no refunds. Move-In S pecial Faculty/Stafi/Graduate Students State Press Errors: Check your ad the FIRST day it runs. Call 965*6731 with any corrections before noon. Advertising Policy: The State Press reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy submitted. COMMONS ON Apache. Reduced rent. Take over lease for second semester. P riv a te room a v a ila b le . Je n n ife r, 829-0933. RETAILERS! Customer Errors: Corrections must be made before noon. Compensation will not be given for customer error. The State Press is only_responsible for the first day the ad runs incorrectly. Corrected ads w ill be extended one day. Changes called in after the first day w ill not qualify for a make-good. COMMONS ON Apache, reduced rate. Great for friends, 2 leases available. Call BiN or Jeff. 829-0933. ARE YOU EXPERIENCINGAN ADVERTISING NIGHTMARE? HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: Liner ads must be canceled before noon, 1 day prior to publication. No refunds w ill be gfosn. NEW LY REMODELED. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, a ll amenities. Pool. 1 m ile from campus. $630/month. (714)497-5512. HOMES FOR RENT 3 BEDROOM 1 bath house. $625/month, utilities, and deposit. W alk to campus, cozy, furnished. Call-Joe, 921-8868. ACRO SS ASU. Free utilities, quiet, clean, ' fully furnished, private room and bath. $265.968-4440. RENTAL SHARING 2 FEM ALES to share master bedroom of 2 bedroom apartment. C all 966-8561, Gina orD ione. AHW ATUKEE, RESPO NSIBLE person. 3 bedroom /2!A bath, pool, firep lace, washer/dryer. Nonsmoker. Must like dogs. $300/month plus V i utilities. 5984)536. COMMONS ON Apache, reduced rate. Take over lease. $250/month. C all Holly, 8294)933. FEM ALE NONSMOKER share 2 bedroom apartment. Rancho Murietta— pool, jacuz­ zi, security gate. Must be responsible and outgoing. 968-2288, Andrea. FEM ALE NONSMOKER, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Clean, responsible. $242/month, Vi u tilitie s . N ear cam pu s, S u zan n e, 966-9589 QUADRANGLES- NEED one roommate (male or female) to share 2 bedroom/2 bath. Directly overlooking main pool. Grey carpet, free cable, prefer nonsmoker. No drugs, no pets. Must be financially secure, Very happening com plex. Immediate opening! Just $288 plus utilities, usually rib more than $40 a month. C all Kevin at 968-5139. Q UADRANGLES— WANTED: Roommate for 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. Looking for liberal person. 966-0806. RESPO NSIBLE M ALE needed for own room in huge house. $230/month plus Vi utilities. Tim, 966-5039. ROOMMATE W ANTED, 2 bedroom apart­ ment near campus in Meridian Com ers Comlex. Own bedroom, furnished, ameni­ ties. $284 plus utilities a month. Call 894-5356, ask for Mike or Pete. ROOMMATE NEEDED for spring semes­ ter, 2 bedroom, 3 bath, 1,500 square feet, fireplace, security gate, etc. Very nicely furnished. Hayden/Thomas in Scottsdale. Contact John, 948-3867. ROOMMATE NEEDED! Second semester. 2 bedroom apartment at The Towers! $250/month (u tilities included). Two fem ales share apartment need third to share bedroom. Ask for Jenn, 3504)366. RO O M M ATE W ANTED to share 3 bedroom duplex near ASU. Male or female, nonsmoker. $190 plus utilities. 967-3341, ask for Sandy or M elissa or leave message. SHARE LARGE house, pool, * washer/ dryer, dishwasher, etc. Rural/Apache. Rent $180 plus utilities. 437-1048. THE TOW ERS, reduced rent. Take over lease for second semester. Private room. John, 3504)240. TWO BEDROOMS, available in four bedroom house, 14th/College. Huge back­ yard, trees. Females preferred. 894-2678. W ANTED, FEM ALE roommate, free rent iri exchange for cooking and some clean­ ing skills. I'm 37, male, raising 3 boys, living in Mesa. Need help in the kitchen. Must have transportation. C all Tom, 423-3800 (work), 8984)341 (home). WANTED MALE/female to share condo at Hayden Square. Luxury master bedroom suite with private bath. W illing to rent to two. C all 967-7144. ROOMS FOR RENT FEM ALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 2 bedroom condo in Hayden Square. $375 per month plus Vi utilities. 829*3791. FEM ALE, PRIVATE room, board, plus. Live-in, light housekeeping, excellent Ahwatukee area. Apply now, flexible sche­ dule 496-8829, C liff or Janel. FEM ALE ROOMMATE wanted: to share bedroom in Quadrangles, walk to ASU. Nonsmoker preferred. Only $200 plus utilities. C all Danielle for Spring semester only, 988-2898. RED U CED RENT- rent for less at Commons on Apache by using my lease agreement. Anyone can rent- male or female. Second semester. Call Michele W. at 9684)993; office, 829-0933. Base 14 Slat« Prew Thursday, December 6,1990 ROOMS FOR RENT COMPUTERS PRIVATE BEDROOM and bath in 3 bedroom home, all am enities including waeheridryer. Nonsmoker $200 plus ft utilities. Can Scott, 96*6880 before 3pm; 963-0693. Ray Road/McCtintock. IBM COMPATIBLE, hard drive, WordPer­ fect 4.2 software (manuals and discs). $200. Call Jennie, 730-9648. PRIVATE ROOM, private bath in house. Serious student, prefer grad. $2S0/month, free utilities. 820-5799. ROOM AVAILABLE starting February. Los prados Apartments. $200/month plus utili­ ties. Jim« 967-4492. ROOMMATE NEEDED immediately! 3 bedroom 1 bath condo... many amenities. $20Q(W utilities. 694-9270... messages. VILLA ANTIGUA Scottsdale- furnished, three bedroom, taro bath condo. Pool, jacuzzi, tennis. C all Rob, 949-7506, L e t S ta t e P re : w o r k fi TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE AVAILABLE i/15. 2 bedroom/2 bath condo. Dual level, poolside, washer/dryer. Covered parking. Vi mite from ASU. $595. C all collect, (312) 871-0915. FOR SALE or lease, 2 bedroom condo near University and Dobson, with pool. C all 963-7353. O NLY $25,000 with $100 down for this 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo with fireplace, near ASU Save almost $35,000! Why rent next semester? Greg Askins, Realty. Executives, 966-0016. Buy o f th* W ook Papago Park Village 2 m aster suites plus loft, poolside. $88,900. BobBUflock Realty Executives 998-2992 CLOTHING H ARLEY-D AVID SO N DENIM jacket, brand new, medium. New $100, asking $50. 820-4825. LAPTO P TOSHIBA T-1000, excellent port­ able word processing, spreadsheet, library note taking, battery/AC operation. Steal $450.821-5581. M AC SE. Floppy disk/high density. 2.5 meg RAM; 40 meg hard drive; mouse, keyboard, manuals, programs including MS Word, Excel, MacDraw, MacPaint, Cricket graph, Quicken, games. Under 1 year old. $2,500. 968-0675, 897-2437. SHARP IBM compatible laptop. 2 3.5 disk drives, 640K RAM, with carrying case. Ideal for students. First $425 takes. 731-9102. TERMINAL, TELEVIDEO 925 “ Dumb” terminal. Is fully compatible with all ASU VAX computers. $110 or $190 with 2400-BAUD modem. Jeff, 957-8895. COMPUTER MULTI-SYSTEMS Buy & sell new and used computers, printers, and software. 225 W . U niversity Next to Buffalo Exchange 966-1388 S Œ) ENGAGEMENT RING SPECIALIST 10th St. & Cametback 2 7 9 -4 0 3 4 The Southwest’s largest diamond importer. TICKETS FURNITURE CASH TO you for furniture, TV, dinette, etc. 786-9077. MUST SELL! Full-size bed set, box springs, mattress and frame; $250 or best offer. Can 921-1951. , REFRIGERATOR, FRIGIDAIRE, 14 cubic feet, excellent condition. Moving; must seH 4314X198 GRATEFUL DEAD ticket. Saturday and Sunday show. 827-1767. GRATEFUL DEAD tickets, December 8th. Great price Call J ill at 838-6480, leave message. G R ATEFU L DEAD tickets- Sunday, December 9th. C all Dave, 784-0661HEART — SEATS in the first 1Ó rows. 967-3510 ZZ TOP,' 2 ticket», $35 each, for sokkxjt December 8 show. Call 784-0307 or 938-0707, leave message. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE RECO RD COLLECTION, modern assort­ ment, over 300, $2-$3 each. Baldwin piano, excellent, $325. 9rfoot couch, $50. East Mesa 380-3278 SKIS, BOOTS, poles Just $35 total 6 different sizes. 4 good bikes,’ $20 each. 820-2657. SKIS FOR sale. Dynastar 190s with Look bindings and Rossingnol 195s, with Mark­ er bindings. Also Soloman boots SX92, size 10-10% 966-9445. JEWELRY COMPUTERS 286-AT MONO-MONITOR. 20meg hard disk. 640k memory. Epson printer, $850/offer. 844-9833. Scott, leave message. CASH FOR gold, diamonds. M ill Avenue Jewelers,, 414 S. MiH, Suite 101, Tempe. 966-5967. APPLE HE. Color Monitor Lots of soft­ ware, word processors/games. Great condition. $800/offer. Tim, 966-5039. OOOOOOQOOOOOOCO OOO MILL AVENUE JEWELERS IBM AT turbo done with 40 meg hard drive, 5%, 3W drive. Super VGA monitor and 2 printers, 24-pen Epson, 9-pen Panasonic and software. $1.100/offer 784-1589. •FULL SERVICE JEWELERS* 414 $. Milj, Suite 101 Tempe. 968-5967 CustomDesign & Remounts Jewelry & Watch Repur (¿old/Diamonds/Silver Pulsar Watches/Pearls TRANSPORTATION H ey . . . Bub H E Y ! I’m t a lk in ’ t o y o u ! Now look, you’ve been gone for awhile now ; . A know you’ve got some time off cornin’ up. So I expect to see you home for a visit. Even if you have to run an ad in the State Press transportation section and find someone to share the expenses. The few bucks it’ll cost will be much more painless than dealin’ with me if you don’t AUTOMOBILES BICYCLES TRAVEL 1978 VOLVO 2420L. Original owner. 5-speed coupe. Sunroof, tinted windows, great air, well maintained. 77,000 miles. 946-6637 (can leave message). MUST SELLI Indonisian Bejak (rickshaw), needs paint, great for trat parties. $50. 838-9343. NEW YO R K, round-trip, $300. Spend Christm as and New Year’s. C all John, 545-1030 (days); jlS2-4443 (pager). TREK 990 mountain bike Deore XT components. Like new, $500/offer. Trek 1400 road bike, Shimano 105 computer Look pedaling system, $500. Andy, 731-6507 - ONE-WAY, PHOENIX to New York. JFK. 12/21/90. $130. 994-9525. 1960 HONDA Accord!! Excellent college car, air conditioning, power steering, tinted windows, 5-speed! Very reliable! $2,00Q/offer. Call Stephanie, 968-4185. 1982 HONDA Accord LX. 80,000 miles, air, AM/FM cassette, 5-speed. Excellent condition. Asking $3,600. 820-6479. TRANSPORTATION 1982 RX-7 GSL. Loaded, leather, tint, alarm, new tires, air-conditioning. Excel­ lent. Must see. $4,200. 829-9281 AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most major cities. Gas allowances available. 21 or older. Call 468-1733. 1987 VW Golf GL. 5-speed, air condition­ ing, AM/FM, tinted windows, excellent condition. $4,900/offer. 947-2375. NEEDED; DRIVER for my car, Seattle to Phoenix, in January. For information, call 1(800)426-9867. $ $ $ $ ANDREW DICE Clay — great seats. First 12 rows. 967-3296. Financing Available ALW AYS BUYING jewelry of all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South Mitt Avenue, Tempe Center, 968-6074. TRANSPORTATION JEWELRY SPO RTS IN FO H O T LIN E Get the picks and spreads of upcoming college and pro sporting events with 76% accuracy. A ■ multi-level mark­ eting plan is also available with this program. FO R A FR EE BRO CH U RE C A LL 230-7015 HELP WANTED— GENERAL TRAVEL INSTANT C ASH fo r your v e h ic le s! $ $ $ $ $100 TICKET, one-way, leaving Phllidelphia on 1/15/91. Call 784-9878. A ll m a k e s & c o n d itio n s . Lisa 484-7055 AIRLINE TICKET from Phoenix to Chica­ go. Leaving January 3, returning January 15. $295. C all 968-1908. 1968 JE E P Wrangler soft top, bikini top, a ir conditioning, power steering/brakes. 30,000 m iles. $8,800. 924-7439. AM ERICA W EST tickets, roundtrip, Phoe­ nix #to Portland. Both 12/19-23 and 12/30-1/6. Best offer. Call Kim, 838-7619. '72 CHEVY Caprice, 2-door. Automatic, air conditioning, 70,000 miles, clean in and out, runs perfect. $2,250 or best offer. 921-7723, leave message. BICYCLE TOUR the Canadian Rockies this summer! Banff and Jasper National Parks Alberta, Canada. 6/1/91-6/12/91. C all Dave at 966-0752. 85 PONTIAC Grand Am, 5-speed, 69,000 m iles, excellent condition. $3,80Q/offer. Dave, 967-2725. EU RO PE NEXT Summer? Save up to 16' percent- buy purchasing your Eurail Pass (issued on the spot) by 12/31/90. Contact American Youth Hostels at 602-894-5128. National Auto Mart '86 FORD EXP. 45,000, air conditioning, AM/FM cassette, 5-speèd, cruise control and more, Great condition. Must sell. Asking $3,600/offer. 829-6757. FAM ILY CLEARANCE: Four excellent autos. 1966 Impulse Turbo, 1984 200SX Turbo, 1985 Camaro, 1988 Oldsmobile. Buy hundreds below Bluebook, 949-0766. MOTORCYCLES 1980 HONDA XR2Ô0, street legal trail bike, 4 stroke, plates good until 10/91. $600/offer. 784-1589. 1985 HONDA scooter 150, excellent condition, well maintained, with helmet. $600/offer. Must sell. 968-5112. 1985 NINJA-600: Excellent condition, quick. $1,950. 921-7924. 1986 HONDA Elite Deluxe 150, Great condition, low m iles, blue. Must sell! $725. Call 966-9122. HOT! HO T! HO T! HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! Inexpensive Spring Break trip's M e x ic o — H a w a ii— M e x ic o 1(800)543-9205 FLY ANYW HERE USA. In your name! 48 states, $285-400. Alaska, $500-600. Hawaii, Europe, ètc. You can leave today. A lso buying tran sferab le coupons/ vouchers, to p prices paid. Travel Tips, 968-7283 (YOU-SAVE). PERSO N WANTED to share partial costs and driving to Iowa for Christmas. Call Kent, 820-4281. * RO U N D -TR IP P H O E N IX - M idw ay, Chicago. Leave 12/22, coming back 1/2. Only $225. C all 979-5957 or leave message. ROUND-TRIP TICKET to Sacramento, California (2 hours/San Francisco, 3 hours/ Tahoe). Leave 12/21/90, return 1/2/91, 997-6105 after 6pm, 678-1650. ROUND-TRIP AM ERICA West, Phoenix to Boise. 12/25-1/4. $125 Or best offer. 967-0571. ROUNDTRIP TICKET to Houston for sale? $150. Please call 921-3156 for more information. RO U N D -TR IP TICKET; Phoenix to Minneapolis, December 18 to January 3. Must be male. $110/offer. Pete: 829-9021. ROUND-TRIP TICKET, Phoenix-La Guar­ dia,. New York. 12/19, return 1/7. $300/offer. 997-4356, leave message. SAN FRANCISCO round-trip— Am erica West. 12/20/90 to 1/7/91. $150 or b e st. offer. 968-6861. TO COLORADO, round-trip. Leave 12/21, return 1/13. $190/offer. Dan, 827-8263. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FIRST TIME on your own? Is your check­ book a mess? Did you forget to pay your phone bill? Call Erin for help with your finances. 784-0756. NU SKIN alternative! Call 899-8435 to learn why former Nu Skin executives and others are now working with a more exciting, fair, and lucrative program. HELP WANTED— GENERAL J GOING ON vacation? Home , for the . holidays? Discount travel, call 491-0501. $200 TO $500 per week part-time. Hiring Alaska $499. immediately 6-8 enthusiastic individuals, no experience, w ill train, ho phones!! Call HOLIDAY TRAVEL^- Lowest available 921-8282. prices. Make your plans today! 967-6556. 1987 HONDA Rebel, 250cc. Black, runs great. 967-5435, leave message. LOW E$T COST— Eurail passes and international youth hostel memberships— both issued on the spot! Student-fare flights, student identification cards, travel packs and other travel items also avail­ able. Contact American Youth Hostels, (602)894-5128, or come by 1046 East Lemon Street. ‘86 HONDA scooters white with blue, great condition, low m iles. $60Q/offer. Must sell. 860-9579. M ALE PLANE ticket to Boise, Idaho. 12/29-1/3. Paid $236, make offer. Call 784-0494. HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL 1986 KAWASAKI Ninja 600R, extremely quick and clean. Must sell. $1,400/offer. 784-8482. ONE W AY Ticket- Phoenix to St. Louis. Leaves 12/21. $80/offer. Steve, 966-6467. AIRLINES HIRING immediate entry-level customer service, flight attendants, cleri­ cal, and maintenance. Top pay and bene­ f it s . S o m e c o lle g e p r e fe rr e d , (303)441-2448. A MODELING agency needs agents for Christm as season. Great $$$ now! No experience. C all (602)352-4057. A SSEM B LY PRO G RAM ERi part-time. Close to ASU. Rapidly growing company is looking for students with strong math aptitude to write software for Real Time multi-user operation systems applications for VAX and the 68020. To apply, call Ticketmaster at 968-2323. TEACH FOR AM ERICA application deadline for spring interviews January 4,1991 Teach For America is a national teacher corps of talented, dedicated individuals from all ethnic backgrounds and academic majors who work for two years in urban and rural schools that have persistent teacher shortages. Applications are available at Career Services State Press HELP WANTED— GENERAL BE ON T V. many needed for commer­ cials; Now hiring all ages. For casting information: (615)779-7111, ext. T-130. BEST FUNDRAISER on campus! Looking for a fraternity, sorority or student organi­ zation that would like,to make $500-$ 1,000 for one week on-cam pus m arketing project. Must be organized and hardwork­ ing. Call Jeanine or Amy at (800)592-2121. CASH PAID daily. Delivery position for Cardinals Pizza. Immediate openings. Call Todd, 829-0064. CASTING CALL: Entertainment company seeks talent for print, TV, movies, photos. CEEC Entertainment, 274-6362. EARN EXTRA money over Christm as break. Banquet servers, general laborers, reC eption ist/typ ist, and se cre ta rie s needed. We can keep you busy. Apply at 20 East U niversity (University/MiII) Between 9-11am and 1-3pm. Weekly pay. Must have phone and transportation. Apple One Temporaries. ENGINEERING TECHNICIAN, foil- or part-time. Minimum 1 year mechanical engineering or technology. Some job experience required. 956-8200. E X PE R IE N C E D AU TO CAD user to compose map Call Garry at 921-0005. GAM E ROOM attendant, honest and dependable Able to work unsupervised. $3-80/hour. Must be able to work over holiday break Flexible hours. Apply in person: Players Choice, Cornerstone Mall, Rurai/University. ORDER CLERK Expanding Tempe office needs 12 persons for our inside Sales Re-Order Dept. Avg. $7-11/hr. * Hiring additional help for the holidays* Call Neil 966-7164 HELP! FAST-GROWING company needs you to market unique products. Unlimited income potential. 899-8435 IMMEDIATELY PART-TIME employment availab le for experienced w aiters/ waitresses/hostesses Also need prep cooks. Apply in person, Tuesday-Sunday, 5-10. Chopandaz, comer of Scottsdale Road and McKeflips. ' IN V E N T O R Y C O U N T E R S needed, permanent part-time. Paid training. No experience necessary. Apply in person: Inventory Auditors, 3910 South Rural Road, M onday-Tuesday, 9am -3pm, 12/10-11th. LOCAL RADIO station hiring for temporary part-time phone research. Beginning January 1991 No selling involoved Hours available: Monday through Friday, 4pm to 8pm; Saturday and Sunday, 12pm to 5pm. C all 731-6505, leave name and number. EO E • ' TIME ON YOU HANDS DURING BREAK? WHY NOT EARN $100+ PER W EEK PART-TIME? W e offer an excellent opportunity to m ake m oney and to get in v o lv e d . W e ’ re lo o k in g fo r co n scien tio u s people to raise funds on behalf of a national non-profit organization in an enthu­ siastic atm osphere, very Close to ASU * $5 per hour guaranteed • Ffoxible schedule «B on uses CAU TODAY f M M b r o t lw Page 15 Thursday, December 6,1990 921-6112 r » , Inc. HELP WANTED— GENERAL O VERSEAS JO BS- $900-$2,000 month Summer, year round, all countries, all fields. Free information, Write U C, P.O. Box 52-AZ03, Corona Del Mar, California 92625. PER FECT STUDENT job. Flexible hours. Apply at Aaron’s Carwash, Terrace/ Apache, or call Sky: 964-8941 PERSO NAL CARE assistance needed by disabled man: Live-in preferred. Contact Jim , 965-1234 or 967-8440. Notetakers Wanted AN graduate students eligible. U ndergraduate upperclass­ m en with a 3.3 G P A o r above eligible. A ll undergraduates with a 3.3 G P A or better registered in a c la ss with an enrollm ent larger than 100 are eligible to be a notetaker for that course. A p p lica tio n s a v a ilab le at: Glass Quotes A S U B ookstore S e rv ice C ounter 965-4169 s g o t t s d a l e /p A r a d is e v a l l e y YM CA hiring counselor for afterschool program. Apply in person: 6869 East Shea, Scottsdale. 951-9622. S C O T T S D A L E /P A R A D IS E V A L L E Y YM CA. Lifeguard 11:30-2:30, MondayFriday shift. Must be certified. $4.75/hour. Call Barbara, 951-9622. STUDENTS! GREAT part-time job! Set your own hours, meet people, make good money! Sell Avon! Calf Nicole- 921-2122 for more information! THE RO SE Company is now hiring for rose sales in nightclubs and restaurants. C all for interview, 921-8855. * * EASY CASH * ★ C o m p le te ly au to m ate d don or p la sm a -p h e re sis . D iscover how easy, safe and fast it is to: Earn *30+ a w eek! w h ile d o n a tin g m uch need ed pla sm a. M ention this ad for a $5 bonus on y o u r f ir s t d o n a tio n . ( M o n d a y - S a t u r d a y ) O n ly center in V alley paying: $10 — 1st donation, $20 — 2nd donation in sam e week. UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe 894-2250 HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE HOSTESS NEEDED part-time. Apply in person at La Casa Serrano, 6440 South Rural; 345-0044. PAPA JA Y’S needs parttime drivers and cooks. Apply after 4pm, 804 South Ash. 966-4292. STO CKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch waitresses, lunch busboys. Apply In person: 5001 East Washington, (between 10-11:30am and after 1:30pm). MUSIC MAKE GREAT money working fuH- or part-time. Set your own hours. 967-7026. ENSONIQ ESQ keyboard, sounds and stands- $800. 8-channei stereo mixer with 600 watt PA- $2,000. Call Joe, 921-8868. MARKET RESEARCH interviewers In person or phone Absolutely no sales. Tempe. $4.40-$6/hour 967-4441, Susan. EREE LOST/FOUND MODELS NEEDED— Haircuts or color, $5. Tuesday nights. Can The Tivoli at the Borgata, 991-6999. LOST: MACINTOSH computer disks in 'a red case. One of the five disks is labeled “SAVE II". Lost 12/1/90 Call 784-8940. M O D ELS W AN TED — V alley-based company is looking for women and men for catalog work, national advertising and brochures. No experience necessary. Please call for requirements, 259-4368, ask for Lisa PERSONALS NEED EXTRA cash? Part-time work, full-time pay. 3 hours in the evening. Earn up to $10G/night, outside sales. 350-3066 O FFICE ORGANIZER, Putting things away, dean-up, light typing. On call. $5/hour. C all Zam ir Hasan, Tempe, 967-1766 PERSUASIVE PEO PLE wanted. Unheard of $5 to $30 per hour guaranteed plus bonus. Write your own paycheck. Appoint­ ment setting. Experience not required but preferred. See Natalie at 1817 South Horne, Suite 3 in Mesa O r call 892-1639 alter 2pm. C all today, start tomorrow. REAL ESTATE office in Scottsdale needs part-time help next semester. Monday and Friday afternoons. Light typing, phones. CaH between 1-5 at 951-9159. ask for Lisa AAAA IN honor of Pearl Harbor Day, the Sammy's (Sigma Alpha Mu) are getting bombed!! Party with us. This is a Pre-Rush event for all men intereeted. Call Danny S. at 941-3838 for information. AAAATTENTION RUSHEES! Know your options Pre-Rush Dinner at Theta Chi, 410 Adeiphi Drive. Thursday, December 6, 6pm. Questions 784-9028. ADPI WAK Wak: What am I gonna do without my cheesy one? The Vine will never be the same! Here’s to Sedona, J.T., Little boys, and Mogwai's. Love you, Kat a/k/a Jasmine! PERSONALS Huy Students. ■a V The deadlin e to place a personal in the December 11 Holiday Shopper is Friday, December 7 at NOON! ATTENTION ALL Rushees. The men of Phi Delta Theta invite you to our pro rush dinner Wednesday, December 5, 6:30pm, 701 Alpha Drive. For more information, contact Donald Bond, 784-0438 or 967-9755. CHELLE: ES la primavera para el Senor Hitler en alemania. ?Donde se puede alquiler un tobogan? You're a great friend/roomfe! "Amoeba; egg— yolk; yes!; say no m ore..." With love, th e £ungee Jumper. DELTA, SIGMA Phi Pre-Rush dinner tonight at 5; Food, beverages, and brothers to meet. For more information call Dave at 784-0661. PERSONALS ADOPTION MIRIAM YOU have been being so kind. Thank you so much for your care when I was sick. You are wonderful! Kant. ADO PTIO N. CARIN G New England couple wants to give love and cuddles to an infant we hope to adopt. If you are pregnant and considering adoption, call J e rry an d M a rg a re t, c o lle c t, at (802)235-2312. Let’s help each other find e solution. PHI BETA Sigma- get ready to throw down in Vegas. Blue Phi... ...you know! Gomab!! PHI PSI pledges: good luck on T Sorry to inconvenience you! week. PHI SIG Randy, Star light star bright ooh-oh there's one out tonight. PIKES. THE Soccer Tournament was successful- thanks to you. You’re a great team. Can’t wait tIM next year. Love $K Anita, Angi, Dawn, and Gina. RAM BLER— WHAT do you do all day? Keep talking —I’M listen. RUSH BARBEO UE this Saturday at 1:00. Meet at the Phi Psi house for fun and food. 784-8822. RUSH BETA. Become a Active Member of Beta Theta Pi. ASU Men, contact Len, 921-7573. SAMM Y’S, WE are ready to get bombed with you on Friday. Love Cindy, Lisa, arid Marissa. DG MELANIE We’re gonna have a blast at the Sigma Chi Christm as Formal. Pat. SIGM A KAPPA —congrats on your successful soccer philanthropy! Love, Delta Gamma. FRATERNITY SPRING Rush begins Janu­ ary 20 — Don't m iss out! SK AMY, your secret santa is watching you! Good luck with finals! FRATERNITY SPRING Rush begins Janu­ ary 20— Don’t m iss Out! SK ANGI Dawn and Gina. Thank you so much for making Sunday g/eat. You’re thé best. Love Anita. Did I spell everything right? G O GREEK! Fraternity Rush begins Janu­ ary 20! Questions? C all 965-3806. GO GREEK! Fraternity Rush begins Janu­ ary 201 Questions? C all 965-3806. GOSH W ALLY, the Farce Side Comedy Hour is performing a free "Best of” show Friday, 12:30-1:30 in thé Union Program­ ming Lounge. —Beaver. KAPPA ALPHA PhiH: The time to go is now! Installment is real! —Your Big Brother. S K BABY Snakes. You did a great job with “ Kick in the G rass" and setting a pledge class tradition. We knew you could do it! Lots of SK love and pride, Pledge Education. SK KIM, here’s to 7pm dates, caddy soft tops, older men, dinner at Fridays, Chucky! And toy stores, Bathroom trips, Pretty Woman, and morning pizza. 17 hoursU... Way to long! Let’s try not to break that record! SK Merrylynn. KAPPA SIGMA RHO Chapter 402 M cAllis­ te r To Cotton quester (Rob) and halfbreed (BooBoo). Sorry to disappoint you but we didn't want to go to your formal anyway. Besides the cotton sucks W eil to conclude this inspiring personal two words from the authors Happy Holidays! With the deepest regret possible, Bobhisattra and Buddah Lotus Sutra. THETA DELT Pappy: I m iss being your roommate. Please call me. Love, your Utah Snowbunny. KAPPA SIG Mark and Graham, we chal­ lenge you to a Hokey Pokey sing along. Meet us at the A. T H B T A S - SHOWDOWN raged! Hope ya’ll bad as much fun as we did! Love, Delta Gamma. LORA DOGUONE Happy 22nd Birthday!! Yours and mine! Haha! I love ya Mikki. WHAT A Rush! Fraternity Spring Rush begins January 20! LOU— THANX for a great time in Sedona! Lou-ser... No way!! (haha) See you over X-mas- —Sherry. WHAT A Rush! Fraternity Spring Rush begins January 20! MEN O F Sigma Nu— Thanks so much for dinner last week. We all had a great time! Love, Delta Gamma. . MICHELLE--CONGRATULATIONS! You made it to the end. But it's only the beginning for us. I love you, and can’t wait until we drive back to cold Connecticut this winter. I know I don’t have to say this, but we are going to have a great time living together. Thanks for being such a wonder­ ful and perfect girlfriend. Love always, Kyle. HELP WANTED— FOODSERVICE SK STEPHANIE, have you been a good baby snake? Mommy and grandma are going to visit Santa... he knows all!! But maybe your badge w ill be on his list. Good luck with finals! W e love you!! ADOPTION HAPPILY-MARRIED couple unable to have baby desires to adopt newborn. We wiH pay expenses. Call collect: (805)297-5987. CONFIDENTIAL OR open adoption...with Southwest Adoption Center, if you would liké, you cfen choose the fam ily and even meet them, and be reassured that they are qualified to provide a loving, caring home for a child. Get the facta from a licensed adoption agency. Southwest Adoption Center. We can provide a professional and confidential help with housing, counseling, arid m edical arrangements. We serve a ll areas of the country. We facilitate tradi­ tional, confidential adoptions or open adoptions, it’s your choice. For help, call Southwest Adoption Center, 234-BABY. HAPPILY MARRIED professional couple from Northern California wishes to adopt newborn. W ill give your baby lots of love, security, and a wonderful future. C all our attorney collect, (406)288-7100. LOVING STEPM OM wants to b e a mom too. Lawyer, financially secure, presently single. I will love arid nurture your baby as my own. T wdbld love to hear what you want for your baby. Call Kristi collect, 415-731-1101, evenings or leave m essage anytime; or call m y attorney D iane Michelsen, 415-945-1880. CHILDCARE BABYSITTER W ANTED for darling child­ ren, afternoons. Must be staying in. town for Christm as vacation. Near Paradise Valley Mall. Own transportation neces­ sary. 494-4392. CARE FOR 2 boys, 7 and 9 years. 1 block from campus. Hours: Monday-Thursday, 3:30-6pm; Friday, 2-6pm. Friday morning desirable. $4 an hour. Good driving record required. Start January 2 if possible. Call 968-5676. PREGNANCY COUNSELING TYPING/WORD PROCESSING ALL PAPERS, resumes, letters, docu­ ments, transcribing, editing, mailings. College graduate using IBM Computer. Mike, 964-0994. . APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. CaH anytime. P rice s are com petitive, negotiable. 966-2186. CAN’T TYPE? Typing/word processing. Only $1.50/page. Pickup, delivery if needed. Overnight service available. 844-6362. DESKTOP PUBLISH your resume/thesis/ paper. You won’t believe how good it looks! Free pick-up/delivery. 945-2581. FLYING FINGERS has Maclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. CaH 945-1551 for details. FREE PICKUP and delivery. Fast, accu­ rate, professional word processing, laser printing. 82/page. Barb, 396-4632. IN A jam? Call Cereus Word Processing for dependability, quality and laser print­ ing. 947-7796. LETTER QUALITY word processing for your typing needs. AMA/MLA, fast turnar­ ound. Close fo ASU- $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825 N EED TIME to study? We do APA/MLA formats. $1.50, double-spaced page. CaH Joanne, 966-1516 or Bobbi, 968-9166. R E S U M E S t- $15. H igh-R es La se r Imager. Also great for highest quality theses, dissertations. C all Joe, 839-2770. TYPING/WORD PRO CESSING. $1/page. Laser printing included. You deliver andpick up. Alma School Road/Baseline. Jan, 897-1744. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c re ta ria l services. 23 years experience. Student discounts. Southwest corner, M iller and Chaparral. 994-8145. WORD PROCESSING, typing, graphics, and custom computer programming. Pick­ up and delivery. Sharon, 892-0281 INSTRUCTION Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing LEARN FRENCH the fun and easy way. French native teacher with 11 years experience. Reasonable rates. Vanessa Sinani, 996-3930. Northeast Phoenix. and counseling. 2 4 -h o u r H o tlin e 966-5683 TUTORS CALL NOW for finals) Accounting and finance professional instruction, study aides and examination strategies. Rates from $6/hour. 497-2097. Gil. W HY SETTLE for less?! Delta Sigma Phi Pre-rush dinner tonight at 5. SERVICES ADOPTION ALL METHODS hair removal. Electrolysis and waxing. Private and confidential. Beth Harada, 962-6490. 340 W est University no, 21. ENGLISH TUTOR, paper editing. ASU English degree, professional w riting experience. A ll subjects, reasonable rates. 829-6712. ELECTRO LYSIS— PERM ANENT hair removal- Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discounts. C all for more informa­ tion: 969-6954. FRENCH TUTORING, need any kind of help with your French? CaH Thomas (from Paris), 921-3902. $8.50/hour (negotiable). ADOFTION/AND BABY makes three!!! Let us help you through this difficult time, Reasonable expenses paid. Call collect, Beth and Steve, (602)947-4775. W E CAN’ T have kids, ff you’ re pregnant but not ready to start a family, let’s talk— we can help each other. 375-8131. HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE CORK ‘N CLEAVER Accepting applications for: Lunch waitress & lunch hostess W ill train Short shifts Convenient hours Fun atmosphere Concern with appearance, reliability, and personality important. Apply in person, M - F , 2 -5 p m or by appointment: 5101 N. 44th St. (44th & C a m e lb a c k in te rs e c tio n ) ___________ 952-0585 _______ T.C. ECGINGTON S An exciting breakfast and lunch restaurant is accepting applica­ tions fo r part-time cook/prep cook position (Sundays plus 2 other days). w ith excellent starting wage. ALL ORDER of Omega members: There wM be a Happy Hour on Friday, December 7, at 5:30pm a! Sunny's Pizza. Come say goodbye to our December graduates. Apply in person after 2pm: ALPHA PHI pledge SheHi Phillips— I hope you have a great week. Get psyched for Monday. Love your secret sis. Mesa GIVE THE gift of massage. 1-hour massage gift certificates, only $35. By licensed massage therapist. Contact The Arizona Athletic Club at 894-2281. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.50 AAA. Typing/Word processing, 30 years’ experience- Fast turnaround. Call Linda, 962-6075. $1.50 AAA Word Processing/taser printer. 35 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. Marion, 839-4269. $1.50 PER *page. Term papers, letters, resumes, etc. At Your Service Word Processing, Linda, 839-6167. $1.75 AND up, professional word proces­ sor and former English* teacher. Laser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. ... MISCELLANEOUS CAR GET lowed? Get it back today without paying any fees. Guaranteed resu lts. 1(900)726-9600, ext. 105: $3Mtinute. FREE SHUTTLE BUS TO LOS ARCOS M ALL Pick up at College and University on the hour and half hour. Leave Los Areos mall a quarter before and a quarter after the hour. M - F 3 - 9 p m Sat IO -6pm Sun I2-Spm Los Arcos Supports the Valley C lean Ai r Campai gn. (602)945-6376 A KINKO’S paper makes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, etc. Self-serve Macintosh computers and laser printers, too. 933 East University, éáll 966-2035. 960 West University, call 921-0168. Open early, open late, open 7 days! M ISS PHOENIX Grand Prix Beauty Pageant. Ages 21 to 30. Arizona resident. CaH 423-7555. HOTELS/MOTELS HOTELS/MOTELS WANTED embassy suites Hotel—Tempe/nsu welcomes Parents of Graduating seniors! •2 room suite w ith sofa sleeper fo r kids •Free full cooked-to-order breakfast dally •Free cocktails, soft drinks & popcorn nightly •Free airport transportation •Less than 2 miles from asu ASK FOR GRADUATION SPECIAL! 1660 S. Alma School ~ Em bassy CU '“ ’ H O T E L 1 4400 s. Rural Rd. Tëmpe, AZ 85282 (602K97‘7 444 800-EMBASSY $57 per suite per night up to 4 people plus tax subject to space availablility » Page 16 Thursday, Decem ber & 1990 Stale Press atch the spirit of holiday hip with G en erra sportswear. W ith our exciting n ew colors and easy-goin g fashions, you 11 be relaxed an d ready for the fun and the action. G e n e r ra ” separates— all the comfort a n d style you ve b e e n dream ing of Pullover. 59.00 Pant. 30.00 S h o p Monday through Saturday 10-10» Sunday 12-7 In Phoenix at Matiocenter, Paradise Valley, R ests Mall, ChrieTbwn, Scottsdale. Superstition Springs, Park Central and Weetridae. D illard’s We welcome your D illard a Credit Card, The American Express* Card, Diners Club International, Mastercard? Visa? and The Discover Card.