S ta te © Copyright, State P ra ss, 1990 Tem pe, A rizona W e d n e sd a y, Ja n u a ry 16,1991 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 7 4 N o . 3 Tim e’s ups U .S . c o u n t s dow n to w a r B y T h e A sso cia te d P re ss TJ.SokoVSM*Pi*» D a n K a i, 19, hold a a banner that read* “G ive Peace’’ at a protest on the steps o f the dow ntow n Ph oenix Fed eral B u ild in g Tuesday n ig h t. K a i, a native H aw aiian w ho now lives In P h oenix, d oes not w ant to see h is frien d ’s u n d e d ie In th e g u lf an d leave fo u r so n s w ithou t a father. Citizens cry ‘No more war!’ B y JE N N IF E R FR A N K LIN S ta te P ra se T h e v o ic e s o f a b ou t 500 c h a n tin g a n ti-w a r dem onstrators turned desperate as the sun set on the steps o f the downtown Phoenix F ederal Building Tuesday night and the deadline fo r battle drew closer. Sm all children, Vietnam vets dressed in fatigues, teenagers in tye-dye, business people and senior citizens stood crow ded am ong the painted signs and peacefully dem anded “ N o M ore W ar.” Phoenix police said there w ere no arrests at the protest, one o f m any nationw ide anti-w ar dem onstrations Tuesday. The United Nations authorized use o f force i f Ira q i President Saddam Hussein fa iled to pull his troops out of Kuw ait by 10 p.m. Tuesday night, Arizona tim e. V alley religious leaders, p olitical activists and an ASU professor d elivered short speeches protesting U, S. force to the standing crowd. Turn to Protest, page 6. The m idnight deadline fo r Ira q i President Saddam Hussein to pull his forces out o f Kuw ait passed Tuesday and m ore than 680,000 U. S. and allied.troops began a new countdown— to w ar. B arring an attack by Iraq, the start o f a Persian G ulf w ar la y in the hands o f President Bush and allied leaders. Bush, arm ed w ith congressional authorization to d rive Ira q from Kuw ait, was described Tuesday as resolute and “ a t peace w ith him self,” Ira q declared a “ furnace o f h ell” aw aits anyone tryin g to dislodge its 545,000 troops from Kuw ait taken o ver in an Iraqi blitz on Aug. 2. What Hussein faced was thousands o f com bat a ircra ft, scores o f warships and som e o f the w orld’s most sophisticated weapons, spearheaded by 415,000 U. S. troops. Baghdad’s shouts o f defiance com bined with a worldw ide clam or o f last-m inute appeals to Hussein and anti-war protests. The deadline expired at 8 a.M . W ednesday local tim e in Baghdad, w here the Ira q i governm ent ga ve no last-minute sign it was w illin g to withdraw from the sm all em irate it overran in a dispute over land and oil. A fter the deadline, set N ov. 29 by the United Nations Security Council, U. N . m em bers are authorized to d rive Ira q out o f Kuw ait by force. D eadline expiration a t m idnight Tuesday, Eastern Standard T im e, did not m ean w ar was inevitable, but exhausted diplom ats said efforts to find a peaceful solution w ere p ractically dead. A t a packed news conference, U. N . Secretary-G eneral J a vier P erez de Cuellar m ade a fin al appeal to Saddam Hussein to withdraw his troops and a vert w ar. He assured Ira q that once it begins a d ecisive w ithdraw al, its forces would not.be attacked. P erez de Cuellar said he also had prom ises “ from the highest levels o f governm ent” that with the crisis over, “ every effo rt w ill be m ade to address, in a com prehensive m anner, the A rab -Israeli conflict, including the Palestinan question.” That links the Persian G ulf crisis with the Palestinian issue, a connection the Ira q i president sought and the United Turn to Gulf, page 12, F am ilies fear for lo v ed o n e s in g u lf Activated students H ris i i a lilt B y K R IS M A Y E S S ta te P ra se Four-year-old M ichael Kashey on Tuesday watched the clock on the screen strike m idnight in one o f his favorite m ovies — “ C in d erella ". L ittle M ich ael w as unaware that in a m atter o f hours, his mom, M alta Kashey, an ASU nursing student stationed in Saudi A ra b ia , would fa ce the repercussions o f a much gra ver deadline. The fa m ilies o f m ore than 50 ASU students servin g active duty in the P ersian G u lf are braced fo r the possibility o f w ar as the clock ticked tow ard the United Nations deadline. They are hoping fo r the best in what looks to be a very bad situation, M a li»’« m other, Jenice, knows a ll too w ell what m ay lie in store fo r h er daughter — a sta ff assistant at a 60-bed com bat support hospital — if w ar breaks out in the gu lf. “ I ’ ll be prayin g when the clock hits 10:00 p.m . tonight,” said Jen ice K ashey Tuesday, “ f m feelin g very afraid w e’re goin g to lose a lot o f our young people to death or other h orrible fa tes.” Th e eld er Kashey bases her conclusions on first-hand know ledge, having served as a nurse during the Korean con flict. She blam es the U. S. governm ent fo r “ creatin g a do or die situation for our people o ver there,” and prays nightly that a bloody confrontation w ill somehow be averted. “ I pray very hard over this. I ’m very upset fo r a ll the people down there — even the Ira q is,” she said. Kashey’s disapproval o f U. S. gu lf policy prom pted her to initiate a phone cam paign. She called Arizona congressm en daily to urge a peaceful resolution to the standoff that has snatched her daughter thousands o f m iles aw ay. M eanwhile, depression has gripped the Kashey household as Jenice and M ichael aw ait M alia’s return. They have not heard from M alia since her a rriva l in Saudi Arabia. She le ft fo r the gu lf Jan. 3. As sad as the Kashey story is, it is only one o f many such stories at ASU“ I ’m so upset about the whole thing,” Angela Anderson m anaged to say through tears. “ It ’s so unfair, there’s so much greed involved — I wish someone would do som ething to stem the whole thing.” Anderson’s son, Pau l, is stationed in Saudi A rabia with the 348th Transport Company o f the United States A rm y R eserve and has been in A rabia since October. Pau l’s sister, Anne Medrano, an ASU graduate, said television reports o f the m assive deaths projected if a w ar between the U. S. and Ira q erupts haye frightened her Allor, Michael R. Anderson, Paul R. Andrade, Frank D. Berry, Tina L Berumen, Paul Boor, Daniel W. Collier, Nod ■ Cooper, June D. Cromley.Paul DeCosta, Joseph F. Dimilroplos, Christ Beldam, Curt A. Ellis, John F. Evans, Made S. Hores, Laura A. Gardea, Nolverto Geriach, Robert Goldstein, Daniel C. Gonzalez, Michael R. Haakenson, Timothy J. Hankins, Joseph W. Haro, JeraldoJ. CRISIS 1990 sem ester. Nemechek, Scott A Newton, Todd W. Nunez, Gilberto Rand, David M. Reilley, Sean Richardson, Mark A Riley, Brian S. Roberts, Steven Rohr, Barbara J. Scott, William P. Sherlock, Daniel Springer, Brian L Stevens, William H. Sullenberger, Zen M. Thorkdson, Dawn M. Valenzuela, Peter J. VanZanten, William Victor, MarcJ. Wdls, David T. Wentzel, Scott L Wroten, William Younger, Jeffrey Hattell,Linda K. Haycraft, Michael Hill, Byron D. Holdman, Vail Bton Holmes, James R. Johns, James H. Kashey, Malia R. Keats, Ronald D, Lowary, Stacey Marinshaw, Michael Marquez, John P. Martinez, Samud A; McDaniel, Troy A. Musgrove, Gregg S. T u rn to F a a rille s , p a g e 6 . B u t, M r. P re s id e n t: B re a k th e B u lg e : Responses to President A gu ide to loo sin g the Bush about his letter to c o lle g e students extra h olid a y poundage b efo re spring regardin g th e g u lf crisis. break. Page 4 of students activated during the fa ll B ro ck b a U : T o d a y V w eather* S u n n y w ith a h ig h In th e A feature on th e ASU baseball team 's p osi­ u p p e r 6 0 s. T o n ig h tt C le a r w ith a lo w in th e 30s. tio n players. P a g e 25 C li—j f lr if l i rnasirs P a g e 21 C r o s s wo r d . n. i ~;i....... . ,M' . . . . Sports.......................*.*— . . . . M •—••••••25 Page 2 W ednesday, January 16^ 1991____________________ ________ — — ■— .— . S f if e S lS f i L Child care facility could be ready b y fall B y JEN N IFER FRAN KLIN State P ress A child care center could be open by the fa ll sem ester, ASU President L a ttie Coor told a facu lty assem bly Tuesday, pleasing proponents who had expected the fa c ility would take nearly tw o years to build. “ I commend his (C oor) acknowledging,the need and the im m ediacy fo r a cen ter,” said Carol Balk, an adm inistrative Staff m em ber in business services. The m other o f four added that she is pleased with the progress the U niversity has m ade on child care. C ow accepted in principle a child ca re task force’ s recom m endations, which called fo r a $600,000 child care center which would serve up to 66 children and cost up to $250,000 annually to operate. The site and the student to facu lty and sta ff ratio was not determ ined. The report, com piled by the Child Care Center Task Force, said the center could serve up to 191 children aged 2 to 5 if certain flex ib le scheduling options w ere used. But he said the com m ittee’s tim etable, which said the center would take 19 to 22 months to build, was too conservative. “ Nineteen to 22 months to m eet a ll the requirem ents for building and construction is too long,” Coor said. C ow asked V ice President fo r Student A ffa irs Christine Wilkinson, who heads the task force, to speed the process by having an outside vendor provide child care in tem porary facilities. W ilkinson said a perm anent fa cility would be difficu lt to construct by fa ll, but by utilizin g a tem porary fa cility , the deadline lik ely would be m et. “ It would be difficu lt to find a place and get fu ll certification by then,” she said, citin g special building codes fo r child care fa cilities as one tim e-delaying factor. W hile adm itting the d ifficu lty in having a center by fa ll, Wilkinson called Coor’s announcement an “ excitin g step closer.” Maureen Duane, program coodinator fo r the ASU Child C are Resources Center, said the task force is com piling requests fo r proposals from outside vendors. Duane said the area child care chains probably would bid on the tem porary contract. “ The vendor’s plan could take d ifferen t form s,” Duane said, “ th e y could either ren t a building close to campus or reserve slots at their (ex istin g) fa cilities fo r A$U fa m ilies.’ ’ Duane said the tem porary center to be used during planning and construction o f a perm anent building would serve parents’ needs better than no center at all. M eanwhile, the com m ittee narrowed the search fo r a perm anent fa cility to three options: •To build a new 5,000-square-foot building at Apache Boulevard and C ollege Avenue and use a portion of Parkin g L ot 17. A S U P resid en t La ttie C o o r annotined h is p la n s to Im plem ent a ch ild care c e n te r o n cam p u s by next fa ll. •To renovate the 7,300-square-foot A rt Annex, m i College Avfenue between F ifth and Sixth streets, which currently is used by the C ollege o f F in e Arts. •To renovate M itchell School, which is located about 1.5 m iiog from campus. The area utilized would total about 5,000 square feet. Duane said a location w ill not be fin alized until a consultant or arch itect is hired to determ ine the cost o f each option. Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any cam pus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Meetings •Alcoholics Anonym ous will have a closed meeting at noon at the Newman Center on C ollege Avenue and University Drive. •ASU Libraries are offering 50-minute library tours. The times are as follows: Hayden Library at 9:40 a.m. and 2:40 p.m., and Noble Library at i 1:40 a.m. Tours will m eet in the lobby. ' •College of Public Programs will have a meeting at 3:15 p.m. in Wilson 132. N ew members welcome. •MUAB Host and Hostess Committee will have a meeting at 1:40 p.m. in the MU Conference Room. N ew members welcom e. * •Underwater Society will have a meeting at 7:00 p.m. in the upstairs classroom of thé Student Recreation Center to discuss upcoming scuba trips and officer elections. •Phi Alpha Delta will have a mandatory organizational meeting at 3:00 p.m, in the MU Navajo Room. •Arizona Outing Club will have a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Pim a Room to discuss MLK hike options. •MUAB Entertainment Committee will present the Bailey Bros. Blues Band in the High Noon Highlight at noon in the programming lounge. •ASU Gun Devils will have a meeting at 5:00 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •MIUAB Film Committee will present "D ie Hard 2” at 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema for $1. •Alpha Lambda Delta will have a proposal/ officers meeting at 4:00 p.m. in the MU Room 222. •Students for Life will have a meeting at 2:00 p.m. at Hayden Lawn to take part in the cem etery o f the innocent. •ASASU/State Relations will hold voter registration from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on Cady Mall. •M .E.Ch.A will have a meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the Student Services Building Amphitheater. IT E X T B O O K S GREAT PRICES GREAT SERVICE R O T H E R ’S ........... .. - - J L - ---------------------------------------------- - - - BO O K STO R ES 7th St. [X ] ---- — © Apache o> a> o O University 625 E A P A C H E 967-5445 Next to Alum ni Center 620 CO LLE G E 8 2 9 1 1 2 8 9^ On the Drag ✓ W orld/N ation State Press Wednesday; January 16,1991 Pagc3 Tw o scenes characterize the conflict . •■ Associated Pr«*s photo Arm ed and Dangerous A n Is c m II so ld ie r passes along a Haw k g rou nd-to-air m issle Tu esd ay at an anti-m issile batteries at the O ccu p ie d W est B ank near th e Jo rd a n ia n B o rd er. Israel’s anti-aircraft batteries are arm ed and prim ed a gainst Iraqi pre-em ptive strike, a to p m ilitary o fficial said . NICO SIA, Cyprus (A P ) — W ar in the Persian G ulf looks increasingly inevitable. N o one knows when it w ill start, how long it w ill last or who’ ll fire the firs t shot, but there are two m ain scénarios/ In the first, the allies launch an offensive to liberate Kuwait. In the second, Saddam Hussein, his back to the w all, unleashes a pre-em ptive m issile strike against the coalition — or Israel. As o f Tuesday, the U.S. Defense Departm ent said there w ere 680,000 anti-Iraq troops in the gu lf region, m ore than 415,000 o f them Am erican. They oppose m ore than 545,000 Ira q i troops in the region, the Defense Departm ent said. Analysts b elieve that Saddam would achieve nothing m ilitarily by firin g his al-Hussein and al-Abass surface-tosurface m issiles on the allied force in Saudi Arabia. But an attack on Israel could split the coalition and leave A rab states aligned against Baghdad little choice but to stand by Saddam in a con flict that pre-dates the crisis o ver Kuwait. I f the coalition takes the in itiative, it w ill start with at least two days, possibly m ore, o f round-the-clock a ir strikes by the a llies’ estim ated 2,000 com bat aircraft. The first strikes w ill lik ely take place at night to catch the Iraqis at maxim um disadvantage. A llied pilots have been practicing low -level night raids fo r months. The Iraqis rarely operate in the dark. A llied a ir pow er, which outnumbers Ira q ’s by 3-1, w ill try to knock out Saddam’s surface-to-surface m issiles and anti­ aircra ft m issile sites, command and communications centers, airbases and supply lines in Ira q and Kuwait. Strategic targets such as chem ical weapons plants, nuclear reactors, power stations and m ilitary production Turn to Scenario, page 19. In w a rtim e so m e stay, s o m e leav e Foreign minister B AG H D AD , Ira q (A P ) Thousands o f Iraqis m arched in citied across the nation Tuesday and pledged to give their lives fo r Saddam Hussein in a w ar against the allied forces. Thousands o f others cram m ed buses and cars to flee the cap ital in the last hours before the U. N. deadline for Iraq to lea ve K uw ait elapsed at m idnight Tuesday, or 8 a m, local tim e. “ Th e holy w ar is about to begin,” said one dem onstrator in Baghdad, w avin g his AK-47 rifle. His son, who was about iO years old, held a shoulder bag brim m ing with ammunition: O fficia ls o f the ruling Baath Arab Socialist P a rty said sim ila r dem onstrations w ere held in the m ajor cities of K arb ala, B asra and Mosul, and that altogether at least 5 m illion o f Ira q ’s 18 m illion people took part. In Baghdad, a c ity o f 4 m illion, the m archers included governm ent officia ls, students and housewives. “ W e w ill die fo r you, Saddam ,” women carryin g rifles shouted. Others in A rab robes danced with pitchforks and swords as sym bols o f the Ira q i president’s vow that any con flict would becom e a popular w ar ih Iraq. M ost shops in Baghdad w ere closed. A t popular fish eateries on the banks o f the T igris R iver, norm ally p ricey dishes from restaurant tanks w ere offered at a discount. Parks and playgrounds w ere virtu ally deserted. F ew er taxis w ere on the streets because m any of Baghdad's 120,000 cab drivers are form er soldiers who have been told to be ready fo r m obilization. A trader sold bottled w ater at quadruple the norm al price to residents afraid that supplies would be disrupted during a w ar. Shoppers bought lam b and beef in bulk. Thousands o f residents le ft Baghdad in cars, buses and pickup trucks fo r towns near Iran in the northeast and near Syria in the northwest. Some traveled at night, hoping to avoid dozens o f security checkpoints that en circle the city. The governm ent denied that people w ere fleein g out o f fear. T ide o f unrest surges through Baltics R IG A , U . S. S. R . (A P ) — Soviet commandos storm ed a Latvian p olice academ y and seized weapons from cadets Tuesday as a tide o f unrest surged through the Baltics. In M oscow, M ikhail S. Gorbachev clashed head-on with a hot-tem pered m ilita ry hard-liner who demanded that the Soviet president take even harsher measures against die breakaw ay republics. Thousands at a Communist Party-led ra lly in R iga roared fo r a pro-K rem lin group to take power in Latvia. In Lithuania, a m ilita ry helicopter circled parliam ent and w orkers dug a long trench behind the building to protect it from Soviet tanks. A governm ent o fficia l said 80 people w ere m issing a fter Sunday’s m ilitary assault on the republic’s television tow er. Fourteeen people are known to h ave been k illed in the attack; 230 w ere injured. About 5,000 K rem lin loyalists rallied in the Estonian cap ital o f Tallinn, condemning the separatist Estonian governm ent. G orbachev has been striking back at pro-independence forces he says are violatin g the Soviet Constitution. On Tuesday, he m ade a fie ry speech to the Supreme Soviet legislatu re. The president spoke o f the need for negotiating w ays of disarm ing civilian s who have am assed weapons to defend them selves. Suddenly, Col. N ikolai Petrushenko stood up s tiffly , pumped his righ t arm up and down and shouted: “ No negotiations! The bandits must be disarm ed ton igh t!” G orbachev, who has been under great pressure from im patient hard-liners such as Petrushenko to take tougher steps to restore order, shot back angrily. “ B efore you stands a man who understands the fu ll resp o n sib ility and fu ll acuteness o f this problem ,” G orbachev said, referrin g to him self and jabbing in the air w ith his fin ger fo r em phasis. “ It’ s not easy to do this. There are thousands, tens of thousands o f weapons. You could start such a slaughter.” Latvian In terior M inister A loizs Vaznis accused Soviet “ black beret” commandos o f staging attacks that “ are designed to provoke arm ed con flict to prom pt the intervention o f m ilitary units, which are com bat-ready.” The commandos attacked L a tvia ’s only police academ y at 2 a.m . and took pistols, autom atic weapons, snipers’ rifles and grenade launchers that Vaznis said “ could be used in provocative actions” against the republic’s governm ent. Some commandos a rrived at the academ y disguised as tra ffic police, talked their w ay past a night watchm an and disarm ed him , Latvian radio reported. Other commandos seized the building, disarm ing the cadets and severely beating two, the report said. They le ft a short tim e later. On Monday, commandos in black berets seized a police precinct station in a R iga suburb but le ft quickly and later returned the captured weapons. The black beret units are controlled by the Soviet In terior M inistry, which is headed by Boris Pugo, a form er head of the Latvian KGB secret police. “ I have com e to the conclusion that these actions w ere planned by the Soviet In terior M inistry” in Moscow, Vaznis said. He spoke in testim ony to parliam ent, which was televised live. Vaznis warned women and children to stay o ff the narrow streets o f the Old Town area where parliam ent lies. Most women w orking in the legislatu re and nearby radio building w ere sent hom e early. In an effo rt to defuse tensions, Latvian President Anatoljs Gorbunovs appealed on television fo r people to clear barricades and heavy trucks placed along the route to a sports stadium where the anti-independence ra lly was held Tuesday afternoon. appointment O K w ith U S. officials W ASH ING TO N (A P ) — The Bush adm inistration on Tu esday w elcom ed the appointm ent o f S oviet President M ikhail Gorbachev’s new foreign m inister as a sign G orbachev still seeks w arm er superpower relations and won’t disregard w orld opinion, despite the crackdown a t home. Gorbachev’s choice o f Alexander Bessmertnykh, a professional diplom at who only recently had been dispatched to the United States as the K rem lin’s am bassador, brought a sigh o f re lie f from som e U. S. o fficia ls who w ere expecting the appointment of someone they view ed as anti-Am erican., Bessm ertnykh is gen erally w ell-regarded by U. S. o fficia ls who knew him during m ore than a decade of service in the Soviet Em bassy in Washington, six years at the United Nations in New Y ork or as a deputy to Foreign M inister Eduard A . Shevardnadze. “ The president has known him fo r a number of years,” said W hite House Press Secretary M arlin Fitzw ater. “ H e’s been very instrum ental in shaping U. S.-Soviet relations” and has been working with U. S. o fficia ls on the G ulf crisis. “ W e know him w ell, respect him , w e can work with him ,” F itzw ater told reporters at the W hite House in an unusually p ositive assessm ent o f another country’s choice o f foreign m inister. State D epartm ent spokeswoman M argaret D. Tu tw iler described the new foreign m inister as “ a skilled diplom at o f long standing who brings to his new position great sk ill and the highest standards of professionalism .” W hile creditin g him with contributing to im proved U. S.-Soviet relations in recent years, Ms. Tutw iler reiterated the adm inistration’s concern about violence in the B altics and said, “ There can be no la s tin g U. S.-Soviet cooperation without shared values.” A State Departm ent o fficia l, speaking on condition he not be id e n tifie d , said the Bessm ertnykh appointment was further evidence o f what Gorbachev has been tellin g Bush and other W estern leaders in recent w eeks: that despite the need to re-establish central authority in the breakaw ay republics he still values closer ties with the W est and is not turning his back on human rights concerns. T o underscore that claim , the diplom at in charge of the Soviet em bassy follow ing Bessm ertnykh’s hasty return to M oscow told reporters Tuesday he hopes the Soviets’ use o f force in Lithuania w ill not a ffect the w arm er ties that have developed between his country and the United States. Opinion Page 4 State Press W ednesday, January 16,1991 NO BLO O D Education president n o t in touch w ith students Dear President Bush: reason beads o f state negotiate is to avoid deadly conflict? tiiS ilS E 6 and dialog. I read the letter in the State Press that was sent to our lfou inssult the very m e a M iH K m orality by con d en sin g i IIK iB fo e c a u s e our econom y is now said to be in the worst H Spdition since the depression? Is it because there nation’s colleges and universities about your justification fo r the Soviet Union’s b ru d H H H p in s t the citizens in r a | are runs ohbonks, wMch are expected to close by the dozens im m enent m ilitary action against Iraq. I am a teacher, ^member states, w hile d ep yin gflh e im pending Am erican parent and occasional view er o f the Vietnam M em orial, u n til!' the next yea r ? actions in Kuw ait are at f l H | . Perhaps you couU w rite another letter to our young people which contains the names of some o f m y h«^ácie*KÍS. A fter all, the Soviet c itir ta »i| n | also “ w arned.” L ik e the and expu ^W H s to totem. Perhaps you could include a request You are about to author another mom iincut lffW S B in the Soviets, and before them , R B | R p , they w ere only carrying blood o f our students’ generation. To gM raphn|p another fo r students and othtejs to not blam e those senators and out laws. You r letter claim s to show that you “ stand up for rep resen ta tivX i§rtio supported you, fo r the econom ic parent who w rote to you several months ag&JSfV°u persue human life ,” yet ju s t ify ^ jg lp p the death warrants of this course o f action, God m ay fo rg ive you, b u l l w ill not. doldrums and l i p o f jobs that w ill follow from an econom y thousands o f our youth, #nai'jj|K>ugh our country is not Your letter made a m ockery o f your o ffic e and our nation’s reelin g from your Ira q i knockout blows. threatened, and the econom ic a u ctio n s have not had tim e to students. Not only did your letter ^ ^ ^ ^ K t e llig e n c e o f our F in ally, M r. B usw B H H k end without com m enting on work. You have dem onstrated ovd| and over that you do not nation’s youth by drawing an analogy between defending an your referen ce to t h l S i # w orld order.” The United States hold human life to be s a ^ ^ ^ M id are prepared to risk had a golden opportunity tolte&d toe w orld through creative, invader of our homes and th e fÉ ^ W p i^ a fa ñ in the Arab starting W orld W ar III, evgj&M piiiist the advice o f a number sands, but it also w ill serv^ | | i$ M iron d erfu l historical m oral, econom ic and p olitical leadership. H ow ever, your o f m ilitary experts. document of how deceptive and arrogant Presidents can be thinking and im pending actions in Saudi A rabia represent P lease do not try to ta il A m erica’s students about the exact opposite o f a “ new w orld order.” in a dem ocracy. m orality! I would like to resp From 7-9 PM With A S U A P P R E C IA T IO N N IG H T GET ONE FREE Find it...FREE! Caahvalue 1/20ot I cant ti u u u i w n u u iv iM u 0 19 07 McDooaW'a Corporation Just bring in tbit coupon and when you buy one.Egg McMuffin sandwich, die second one is free. Limit W ith a L o st and F ou n d C la s s ifie d a d in th e S tate Press*. State Press Classifieds Basemen! 965-6731 Reg . I w Price I I ______________ R lf lf UKK» A H A IdJO F ffd } i *i w JJUjr Bring in this co u p o n fo r a F R E E 2 0 w ord L o st & F ou n d a d ! V VALVOUNE coupon, per: customer, visit. Please present coupo when ordering. N ot valid any other offer. Good only at Valid until 2 - 1 9 * 0 1 Valid until 2 * 1 9 * 0 1 Stadium sto re State Press Page 7 Wednôday^JanuajvJô^ITTI Poll shows support for war and Symington B y K EV IN S H E H State P re s s M ore than tw o out o f three Arizonans support w a r if Ira q does not pull out/of Kuwait, according to a K A E T-TV , Channel 8 poll released Tuesday. The poll — conducted on Sunday by Bruce M errill, a mass com m unications professor at ASU — indicated 63 percent o f Arizonans support U. S. m ilita ry action. The random -sam ple poll, which also addressed the gubernatorial runoff election and M L K D ay, w as given by telephone to 489 registered voters livin g in Arizona. T h e p o ll's re s u lts ra n k ed J. F ife Sym ington 9 percentage points ahead of form er Phoenix M ayor T erry Goddard in the Feb. 26 runoff election fo r governor. It also indicated that m ore than two out o f th re e A rizo n a n s su p p o rt co m b in in g W ashington and Lincoln’ s birthday to create a M artin Luther K in g Jr./C ivil Rights holiday. When asked about U. S. involvm ent in the gu lf, 17 percent o f those polled said econom ic sanctions should continue, and 7 percent support a w ithdraw al. The p oll’s results w ere given only in percentages. The survey has a plus or minus 4.4 percent m argin o f error. H ow ever, Arizonans do not thirst fo r w ar, M e rrill said. M errill, who has been conducting polls for m ore than 20 years, said m any people who n orm ally would not support w ar backed P residen t Bush’s stance as a show o f patriotism . “ P a rt o f it is a rallyin g behind the president,” M errill said, adding that a ll dem ographic groups supported the w ar roughly the sam e. ‘ T f people are hawkish on w ar, it cuts across a ll dem ographic areas,’ ’ he Said. R E SER V E OF F I C E R S' “ That’s pretty strong — two out of three. That’s almost a consensus.” M eanwhile, officia ls from the Goddard cam p dispute the poll’s findings, charging that events in the M iddle E ast and the unusual factors surrounding the election m ake it im possible to accurately predict the who w ill win the runoff. Sym ington holds a solid edge — 49 percent to 40 percent — in the unprecedented runoff election fo r the governorship, the poll said. On Nov. 6, Sym ington garnered about 5,500 m ore votes than Goddard, but did not win because he lacked a m ajority v o te — the 50 percent plus one required by state law. Arizonans w ill have until Jan. 28 to register to vote fo r the runoff. M errill, whose poll conducted just p rior to the Nov. 6 election predicted that a runoff was likely, said he expected a 38 percent to 43 p ercen t turnout — fa r b elow the 58 percent turnout on N ov. 6. A low turnout would benefit Symington, M errill said. “ When there is a low turnout election, Republicans and older people tend to vote m ore,” he said. KAET PO LL The follow ing are the results from three polls conducted by KAET. G u lf Crisis G overn ors R ace Pray 1% Withdraw Wait for sanctions to work Support fo r a M L K H o lid a y N ot so, said Goddard backers. . “ H e’s kind o f flipping a coin,” said Jim W est, a Goddard spokesman. “ This is a totally differen t situation,” W est said, “ W ith the M iddle E ast and the February election , it w ill be the people m ost supportive o f their candidate. I think a ll bets are off, “ Anyone is foolish to be saying what is going to happen — they w ill be w rong.” According to the poll, Republicans favor Symington over Goddard 67 percent to 18 percent. The poll also indicated that am ong voters 65 or older, 54 percent supported Symington and 22 percent supported Goddard t - a fact T R A I N I MG C0RP S Stevtn Kricun/State Press W est said is w ay o ff base. “ That’s crazy,” W est said, citin g other polls that showed only a 3 percent disparity in the voters 65 and older. “ It makes no sense.” In addition, Arizonans also support M LK D ay by a 62 percent to 24 percent m argin. H e said 62 p ercen t o f those polled supported a K in g D ay before the N ov. 6 vote; but that their vote Was split between the two referendum s. “ E ven though the rest o f the nation says w e’re racist, 62 percent favored M LK Day, ” M errill said. Wednesday Inside Live p re se n ts tonight: m m ARIZONA SOUNDS Chuck Hall &the Brick Wall Island Earth Groove Merchants 1.50 Bud & Bud Light 7 pm-10 pm D o o rs o p en at 7 pm N O C O V E R A L L N IG H T M T DEGREE GOT ME THE INTERVIEW ARM Y ROIC GOT ME TRE JOB. Browse through o u r 3 flo o rs o f: • N e w & U sed Books • • Calendars & C ards • • B ooks on C a ssette • Sell or Trade yo ur books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which, may be used to purchase anything in the store. SPECIAL STUDENT PARES Roundtrip from Phoenix ST. LOUIS..................«156 CHICAGO..................$170 KANSAS CITY.............$130 NEW YORK................$298 PORTLAND...............$265 SALT LAKE CITY.........$198 SEATTLE....,.............. $290 SAN FRANCISCO........$98 MIAMI........................$268 OAKLAND...........$40 NEW ORLEANS..........$158 DETROIT..... .......... $198 DURANGO..................$149 DALLAS.................... $130 HOUSTON.................$150 VAIL.»___ $270 & b e here tom orrow for ~ Thin gs g o t p retty com petitive tor this jo b . Fm sure m y c o lle g e d eg rea a n d g o o d gra d es kept m e in th e tunning. But in the en d it w as th e lead ersh ip and m anagem ent ex p erien ce I g o t through A rm y RO TC that w on them over. You can b e g in to d e v e lo p im p ressive lead ersh ip skills w ith an A rm y R O TC e le c tiv e . R egister n ow without obligation. Find eat mere. Call Eaalt I*. Bryaat at Arizona State University, 965 -7642. Prices subject to change. Other cities available. MILL AVE. TRAVEL ARMY ROTC T U S M U TIS T COLLEGE COSTS TOO CM TAKE. 4 3 0 N. S c o tts d a le Rd 8 9 4 -0 5 3 3 □ 966-6300 State Press W ednesday, January 16,1991 P ages O fficials w ary o f g u lf effects o n campus H ow ever, both Shell and Calleros said the talks only are a precaution to prepare ASU fo r the outbreak o f war. B y JUDI T A N C O S State P ress ASU adm inistrators have begun precautionary discussions designed to m aintain calm on campus if w ar breaks out in the Persian Gulf, D r. Leon Shell, associate vice president for Student A ffa irs, said Tuesday. Shell said the U niversity intends to protect free speech, and to guard against acts other than peaceful demonstrations. “ When som ething develops internationally, som etim es our students becom e the brunt ju st because of w here they are from ,” Shell said. W hile Shell said the discussions w ere still in the “ what if? ” stage, Calleros ga ve som e defin ite ideas about reducing the possible tension on campus. C h a rle s C a lle r o s , c h a irm a n o f A S U ’ s Cam pus Environm ent Team , said the .C E T wants to ensure the campus rem ains calm , “ so w e don’t have fighting from the M iddle East transferred here (to A S U ).” Encouraging people to stay calm and establishing a forum On campus fo r people to express their feelings would reduce the possibility o f violence on campus, Calleros said. “ W e’ve got to think o f ways that, if tensions are expressed PHI KAPPA PHI On Sale this week in the Q Memorial Union $ T h e H o n o r S o c ie t y o f P i l l K A P P A “ W e’ re here to ensure that a ll students’ view s can be expressed as long as they a re peaceful and orderly,” he said. on campus, they can be expressed in a collegiate m anner,” he said, adding that the U niversity does not w ant to see any fis t fights over the situation in the Persian Gulf. “ I think people w ill be concerned, but 1 don’t think they w ill start pushing people around. “ (B u t) w e have to be ready.” Shell, who was on campus during the Vietnam era, said things could get touchy, even though there have been no reports o f campus violence towards A rab students since the crisis began in August. Shell agreed it is difficu lt to predict student reaction to a w ar in'the Persian Gulf. Posters and Publicity Stills sET for current hit motion pictures and for classic motion pictures, —w PH I c o r d ia lly in v it e s a ll p e r s o n s in it ia t e d f o r a c o m p lim e n ta r y b r e a k fa s t in “ It’s kind of hard to gauge it at this point,” he said. T O N Y 'S N E W Y O R K E R R E S T A U R A N T and N IG H T C LU B S e rv in g Tem pe : S in c e 1977 S N ew Tim es Best o f P h oen ix 1989 B e s t I n e x p e n s iv e I t a l i a n R e s t a u r a n t M e m o ria l U n ion • V e n ta n a C T R Y O U R W E E K L Y S P E C IA LS 7 :3 0 a.m . • J a n u a ry 2 9 , 1991 C P T h is in v ita tio n is e x t e n d e d t o ess MON: All You Cun Eat TUE: Tony a Famous Spaghetti 14-9$ Lasagna *5.95 WED: Strombolle 14 45 THUR: Tour o f Italy 96 95 Includes salad & gar!it bread * In dinutg mom only SPECIAL D IS C O U N T fo r ASU F A C U L T Y , STAFF, STUDENTS: g r a d u a t e s tu d e n ts , u n d e r g r a d u a te s , 5 0 % o f f 2 n d d in n e r (e q u a l/ le s s c r v a lu e ) w i t h p u r c h a s e fa c u lty , a n d s t a ff o f o n e d in n e r a t r e g u la r p r i c e ! ! ( W i t h th is a d .) January 14-18 i4—i in the old MU information desk. w h o h a v e b e e n in it ia t e d in a n y H a p p y H o u r • 4-7 p .m . • 7 d a y s a w e e k •E N JO Y FREE H O T IT A L IA N B U FFE T* c h a p t e r o f t h e S o c ie t y . T e m p e 's H o m e o f t h e B lu e s L IV E E N T E R T A I N M E N T W E E K L Y (M e m b e r s h ip n e e d n o t b e a c t iv e . ) R .S .V .P . t o C e n t e r f o r M e t e o r it e S t u d ie s FR ID A Y SUNDAY G H O ST S p on so red b y 965-6511 mm I liW lil^ and many more available I b e f o r e J a n u a ry 2 4 , 1991. Crawlers ' (Monday) muk' Innocent! Group SATURDAY THURSDAY M O ND AY Open Mie with DON & SLIM 9 6 7 -2 9 4 1 G r a t e fu l HANS OLSEN SOLO D e a d N ig h t w ith SPINNING JENNY N o H obo B and 107 E. Broadway, Tempe (East o f M ill Ave.) 8 2 9 -9 5 8 4 ASM OVERSEAS Start Planning Now for Fall Sem ester Study in: LONDON SEMESTER « Applications now being accepted for our London Semester Programs W e now h ave 2 se p arate p rog ram s in London: ' R e g u la r Study Abroad* and N e w B u s in e s s P ro g ra m * offering b u sin e ss c la s s e s F o r further inform ation contact: O ffice of International P ro g ra m s 124 M o e u r Building 965 -59 65 •London, England •Brighton, England •Stuttgart, Germany •Jerusalem, Israel •Beer Sheva, Israel •Nagoya, Japan •Hermosiilo, Mexico •Skopje, Yugoslavia •Siena, Italy •Granada, Spain •Aberystwyth, Wales •Tllbingen, Germany •Heidelberg, Germany •Osaka, Japan •Hiroshima, Japan •Guadalajara, Mexico •Monterrey, Mexico •LaPaz, Bolivia •Lille, France •Regensburg, Germany •Grenoble, France Find Out About Education Abroad at our Information Seminar Wednesday, January 23, 2-3 p.m. Memorial Union, LaPaz Room (223) F o r M o re Information Contact: O ffice of International P ro g ra m s 124 M o e u r B u ild in g 965-5965 Page 9 Wednesday, January 16,1991 N e w elections coord in ator assistant approved B y AN D R EW FA U G H T State P ress A new elections coordinator assistant was unanimously approved Tuesday night by the ASASU Senate, despite one senator’s claim that the organization is too “ inbred” and exclusive in its appointments. Although Assistant Coordinator appointee Randy Hawkins has no previous affiliation with ASASU, Sen. Bob C arroll, C ollege o f Social W ork, criticized the Senate’s method fo r fillin g posts. C arroll’s frustration stem m ed from the controversial and prolonged search fo r an elections coordinator, in which two o f the in itial nominees had questionable ties to the Senate. In itia lly, nom inee Sarah Haske resigned a fter a discovery that four ASASU senators had breach ed nom inations bylaw s to nom inate her. Soon thereafter, nom inee E ric Maul, a fratern ity brother o f ASASU A ctivities V ice President Frank McCune, resigned minutes before his confirm ation due to a con flict of interest. “ Th ere’s alw ays been a pattern o f people tellin g their friends, ‘hey, I know o f an open position,” ’ Carroll said. “ I like students with no affiliation to ASASU.” H aw kins’ confirm ation had no such com plications, said Sen. Adrian Fontes, C ollege o f Education. Fontes said the senior accounting m ajor w ill bring experience to the post. Hawkins’ duties w ill be to ensure properly functioning general, special and run-off elections. “ I ’d hate being elitest,” said ASASU E x e c u t iv e V ic e - P r e s id e n t J e a n e tte W ied em eier. “ Anyone who wants to participate shouldn’t feel any hesitation. ” W iedemeier said many applicants to the assistant position becam e disillusioned about thé rigors o f the job. Hawkins, who has experience in elections as a poll w orker, said he wants to work closely with the students to m ake them knowledgeable o f the issues on campus. H e said his first step w ill be to create an a d v e rtis in g c a m p a ig n to en co u ra g e students to vote w hile a ctively recruiting volunteers fo r ASASU. “ H e’ll be m y righ t hand m an,’’ said elections coordinator L isa Shelley. “ I wanted som ebody who I could trust and had prior experience with poll w orking.” S tu d e n t le a d e rs to in itia te v o te r re g is tra tio n d riv e B y AN D R EW FA U G H T State P ress ASU student leaders, in an attem pt to urge students to vote in next month’s gubernatorial runoff election and drum up support fo r higher education, are initiating a voter registration d rive Friday. State Relations D irector Rob M iller, an Arizona Students Association delegate, said deputy registrars W ill be on campus F rid a y through Jan. 28 to register students fo r the F eb . 26 ru n off betw een T e rry G oddard and J. F ife Symington. M iller stressed the im portance of a united student voice. H e said he could think of 5.6 m illion reasons why students Should vote — referrin g to a possible $5.6 m illion budget cut loom ing ahead fo r ASU. And M iller said that a la rge student turnout in the election can ca ll attention to the plight of higher education. “ Seniors say they can’t get their classes,” M iller said. “ Those seniors should sit down and think about it — the state has found a higher p riority than education.” The budget cut, if im plem ented, would account fo r 3 percent o f the U n iversity’s annual funding. Traditionally, universities have received 20 percent o f the state’s budget. Both candidates have expressed concerns about higher education in Arizona. Goddard, the D em ocratic candidate, said state funding mechanisms should be redesigned to rew ard quality teaching and research. Symington, the Republican hopeful, wants to start a departm ent that would coordinate a ll financial assistance program s in Arizona. “ I would hope that w hoever is elected would have education at the top o f their list,” M iller said. Symington edged out Goddard by about 5,500 votes in the N ov. 6 general election but failed to win with a m ajority vote, as required by state law , necessitating the runoff. ASA E xecu tive D irector L a rry L ’Heureux, noting the narrow m argin separating the tw o candidates, said Arizona students could sw ing the election. “ It ’s obvious the im pact students can have on the runoff,” L ’Heureux said. “ Students need to learn to participate in the p olitical sector.” In last yea r’s ASA “ Save ’90” voter registration cam paign, the organization netted about 4,300 new voters at ASU. Statewide, the d rive attained 10,000 voters. Richard H errera, assistant professor o f p olitical science, said, given state budget Constraints, it is difficu lt to estim ate the im pact A rizona’s next governor w ill have on subsidizing higher education. H errera said student groups are the key to m aking higher education an issue. “ I think students in Arizona care about education,” H errera said. “ Students care about what’ s taught, standards and the product they get from the U n iversity.” Richard D agger, associate professor o f p olitical science, said the m edia attention surrounding the im m inence o f w ar in the M iddle E ast m ixed with voter apathy m ay detract from the runoff. Don’t be a bird-brain. Read D A V E B A R R Y every Thursday in The S tate Press Magazine. This is a test: 1. Who has the largest selection o f beer (bin t: 115)inTem pe? 2. Who has the best Deep Dish Pizza (hint: Chicago Style) in Tempe? 3. Who has the only Fresh Pasta and Sauce Bar (hint: 6 sauces) in Tempe? 4. W ho has 2 for 1 Entrees on Wednesday Night with your student ID? (hint: we’re a t530 W. Broadway) 5. Which ex-Chicago Cubs pitcher was just elected to the Baseball Hall o f Fame? (hint: you’re on your own with this ottel) 530 W. Broadway, Tempe 921-9431 Stale Press W ednesday. January 16.1991 Cam pus’ future p lan n ed through 2010 B y C H R IS B A R D Y Sta te P re ss A com m ittee in the process o f developing a plan that w ill chart ASU ’s future through 2010 w ill include student input in its aim s fo r a b igger, better campus, U n iversity officials said. A drián Fontes, the lone student representative on the com m ittee, said the U niversity is forced to listen to student input. “ So now the students have a say on the actual aesthetics,” Fontes said. “ N ot just location and function.” The goals and objectives outlined in the ASU M aster Plan, cu rrently under developm ent, w ill set guidelines fo r any future construction on campus. “ N ew m all designs, building projects, bicycle plans and landscape plans w ill have to com ply w ith the m aster plan,” said R ick Collins, campus planner in ASU Planning and Construction. “ It w ill be the guiding document fo r all future grow th on the U n iversity.” A 18-member task force, which includes students, facu lty and adm in istrate««, began looking into the m atter late last year. The project is expected to be com pleted in one year. Th ere w ill be a open m eeting with com m unity mem bers F eb. 5. T h e task force W ill work together with W allace, Roberts and Todd, a San Diego based consulting firm . The firm w ill receive a $200,000 consulting fe e to develop the plan and an additional $25,000 fo r support m aterials. Jennus Burton, associate vice president fo r Business A ffa irs, said the firm was chosen, through an extensive in terview process. The fee w ill be paid by local investm ent funds, he added. Collins said L a ttie Coor has already m et with W allace Roberts and Todd and w ill be m eeting with them again in two weeks to review progress on the plan. “ This group,” Collins said, “ w ill determ ine what is wrong with the campus now. I f there is a problem , to what extent does the problem exist? “ And then, how do w e construct a m aster plan that w ill address that problem ?” In four phases, the plan w ill develop plans and alternative plans based on statistics and inform ation gathered by the task force. Fontes, an Associated Students o f ASU C ollege o f Education senator, said the first stage, during which data was gathered, was com pleted shortly before Christmas. “ Since August w e’ve been gathering data and checking projections from the U niversity on what they think enrollm ent w ill be,” Fontes said. “ W e’v e also gathered inform ation that people re a lly don’t think about, lik e future w ater consumption and how much electricity the U niversity w ill use.” Fontes said the second stage, currently under w ay, w ill address alternative planning fo r tra ffic, tram routes and student circulation on the m alls. F in al preparations w ill be m ade in the third stage. The fin al document is projected fo r com pletion in August 1991. Fontes said the possibility o f the com m ittee’s hard work being disregarded is his biggest concern. “ H opefully this w ill not get shelved,” Fontes said. “ M y biggest fea r is that w e w ill have spent a ll this tim e and it w ill g et shelved.” , Fontes said that som e universities are in the 18th or 19th year o f their plans. Others universities, how ever, have failed due to changes in adm inistration or changes in the field where the plan is taking p lace, he added. “ L a rge institutions that have spent a lot of tim é and money m aking a b ig plan that can w ork, and a ll o f a sudden the plan becom es unacceptable,” Fontes said. Fontes said he hopes the plan w ill provide a com fortable learning environm ent. “ A s it stands,” Fontes said, “ the U niversity is a hodgepodge. There’s no set plabs. “ This is an opportunity to im prove on what w e already h ave.” North Carolina man arrested after threatening flight attendant P H O E N IX (A P ) — A North Carolina man w as arrested a fter threatening a fligh t attendant, causing the pilot to divert the fligh t to Phoenix, authorities say. D aryl Glenn A very , 36, o f R aleigh, was taken into custody by Phoenix p olice and the F B I at Sky H arbor International A irport on Saturday night, F B I spokesman Jack Loughney said Monday. A very apparently got into an argum ent with his w ife on the plane, then threatened an attendant who tried to resolve the con flict, authorities said. The captain o f the Am erican Airlines jetlin er reportedly le ft the fligh t deck tw ice to calm A very, Loughney said. The captain then diverted the fligh t from D allas which was en route to B akersfield, C alif., he said. A very was booked into a M aricopa County ja il and accused o f in terferin g with the operation o f a flight crew, a federal offense. He later was released. The U. S. A ttorney’s O ffice on Monday declined to prosecute, Loughney said, but A very still m ay fa ce c iv il action by the a ir iin e a n d th e F e d e r a l A v ia t io n Adm inistration. THE ‘ B N U 4 G i GAMMAGE PRESENTS C o u r s e O u t l i n e : Gam m age Auditorium , designed by Frank Lloyd W right and located on ASU’s main campus, presents w o rld class entertainm ent throughout the year. ASU students, faculty and sta ff are in vited to attend and take advantage o f the many discount program s available. One experien ce leads to another. E vent A ssign m en ts— S p rin g, 1 9 9 1 BIG BAND JAMBOREE January 16 • 8 p.m . CRAIG D AHN “ Jump and Shout ’91 R evue” January 19 • 8 p.m . “ SIDE B Y SIDE B Y SONDHEIM” January 20 • 7 p.m . M ARTIN LUTHER K IN G JR. TRIBUTE CONCERT Starring O detta and R ichie Havens and his Band January 22 • 8 p.m . USSR STATE SYM PH O NY Conducted by Y evgen y Svetlanov January 24 • 8 p.m . AVNER TH E ECCENTRIC January 25 • 8 p.m . K O D O - Japanese Drummers January 27 • 8 p.m . „ THE ROMEROS February 4 • 8 p.m . PIR IN BULGARIAN FOLK ENSEMBLE February 7 • 8 p.m . “ THE GONDOLIERS” — Opera A La Carte February 9 * 8 p.m . ACADEM Y O F ST. M AR TIN IN THE FIELDS Conducted by Kenneth Sillito February 14 • 8 p.m. “ An Elegant Musical Evening” w ith AN N B LYTH & BILL HAYES February 16 • 8 p.m. PETER NERO — Piano February 24 • 7 p.m . “ THE H O B B IT” — LE THEATRE SANS FIL March 1 • 8 p.m . March 2 • 2 p.m . TC H AIK O V SK Y CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Conducted by Lazar Gosman March 3 • 7 p.m . JOSE GRECO SPANISH DANCE CO M PANY March 10 • 7 p.m. “ SARAFINA!” — The Music o f Liberation A pril 5 • 8 p.m . THE IMPERIAL BELLS OF C H IN A A p ril 20 • 8 p.m . GEW ANDHAUS ORCHESTRA OF LEIPZIG Conducted by Kurt Masur A p ril 26 • 8 p.m . Each and Every W ednesday BOSTON SYM PH O N Y ORCHESTRA Conducted by Seiji O zaw a May 3 * 8 p.m . NO C O V E R .with C O L L E G E ID * H alf p rice tickets fo r ASU full-tim e students * $3 o ff fo r part-tim e ASU students and all faculty and staff *$5 balcony seats fo r all students Tickets on sale at Gammage and the ASU A ctivity Center B ox O ffice. For inform ation, call 965-3434. M u st b e 21 Fills the void with the best mix of progressive m usic. FRI.: 25* Drinks 8-10 p.m. SAT .: 1* Drinks for Ladies til TÖ p.m " Open until 3 a.m. Fri. & Sat. A F T E R T H E G O L D R U S H 1216 E. A p a c h e , T e m p e • 968-2446 /GAMMAGfA State Press Page 13 W ednesday, January 16,1991 Letter from the gulf D ear Sir and F am ily, W hat’s up? How’s is everything back home? E verything here is going as w ell as can be expected. W e are staying in a barrack at least. E veryone here is hopeful that w e w ill be home in A p ril but none o f us know much o f anything here. The w eather is nice. Boredom and our com m ander are our biggest problem s — even though w e have started driving m ore. Thanks fo r the package. I got it on Christmas m orning so it was pretty good tim ing. N ext package can you please include the follow in g: A A batteries, munchies, books, checkbook. So, how’s everything back there? I hope everyone is doing alright. How’s it working out w ith C harlie? W ell, I ’ll sign o ff now and I ’ll try to ca ll as soon as possible. Take care. Paul Arizonans protest gu lf action TUCSON (A P ) — Dem onstrations against a possible m ultinational m ilita ry attack to liberate Kuw ait drew several hundred Tucsonans Monday, including students at two schools. Approxim ately 300 students dem onstrated outside Am phitheater and Canyon del Oro high schools. M em bers of the Tucson Coalition for M iddle E ast Understanding presented the sta ff o f Rep. M orris K . Udall, D -Ariz, with p etition s b ea rin g sign atu res o f 3,100 signatures o f Arizonans who oppose a w ar. “ E veryw h ere w e petitioned w e m et people who b elieve this is a w ar fo r oil and who do not b elieve w e should have any part o f it,” .said Jessica Sampson, a coalition spokeswoman. The group denounced Sen. John McCain and Rep. Jim K olbe, both R -A riz., as “ w a r m o n g e r s ’ .’ fo r s u p p o r tin g a m ultinational attack on Iraq. TWE RAMIMI NUBE m Oä m State Press >« °u ' C O 9 W e ’ v e g o t it c o v e r e d . Have You Ever Taken 100 Shots Without a Hangover? Well now you can at Caswell Shooting Range. We feature: TONIGHT $1.75 M ON STER 60 oz. PITCHERS O F D R A FT and $1.00 MALIBU CO CKTAILS TILL 11:00 PM plus TONIGHT NO C O V ER WITH C O L L E G E ID and the unique top 40, dance and progressive mix of D J DAN! •11 computerized shooting lanes •Excellent classes for novice to experienced shooter, including armed & unarmed self defense •Comfortable, clean & climate controlled •Finest safety equipment in the industry •Helpful and knowledgeable staff •Firearm rentals available •E ye and ear protection at no charge •Com plete retail facility— great prices 15 Min. 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COLLEGE AVE — NEXT TO COLLEGE STREET DELI Page 14 State Press W ednesday, January 16,1991 A S U con tem plates bu yin g U n iversity T o w e rs B y K EN BR O W N State P re ss ASU is debating the purchase of the U niversity Tow ers Apartm ents fo r a p rice one o fficia l called a “ h ell o f a good deal,” a fter a structural study indicated the buildings could be used as o ffic e space. T h e T ow ers, freq u en tly d escribed as a “ p riva te dorm itory” because o f its sm all livin g units, cam e under governm ent control last year a fter M eraBank, its form er owner, collapsed financiaUy. According to estim ates, ASU could buy the building for as low as $3 m illion. Cheree Scholar, U niversity Tow ers m anager, said she was not perm itted to answer questions concerning the possible purchase. The owners o f the com plex w ere unavailable fo r com m ent Tuesday. D espite view s that the U niversity should buy the com plex to ease com petition w ith ASU ’s already under-used dorm itory system , ASU President Lottie Coor said other factors ultim ately w ill m ake the difference. “ It is an unusually attractive price,” Coor said. “ W e haven’t- rea lly sorted through what the best use fo r the U n iversity would be, but it is concievable that the building could s till be used fo r dorm itory space.” H ow ever, Residence L ife D irector C liff Osborne said the com plex m ay be unsuitable fo r dorm itory use because balconies exist on both sides of the twin structures, creating an open space between the buildings. “ M y personal opinion is that the nature of the condition of the building is not ideal fo r a dorm itory,” he said. “ It certain ly would not be in its current condition of bëing up for sale if it w ere superior to the dorms. “ On whether w e need m ore dorm itory space, the answer is clea rly ‘ no,’ however, looking at the long term , the U niversity could benefit from (th e purchase).” Last sem ester, ASU officials said declining dorm itory use could force the closure o f a residence hall. The decline is blam ed on decreasing freshm an enrollm ent and the com pletion o f Sonora H all, which houses an additional 400 students. ASU V ice President fo r Business A ffa irs V ictor Zafra said the U niversity is “ c ritica lly short” o f o ffice space, but added that regents m ight be hesitant to approve the purchase because o f an anticipated budget crunch. “ Now would defin itely be a bad tim e to ask,” he said. “ W e need the Board (o f R egent’s ) approval, but with the cutbacks any fin al decision is still uncertain.” Zafra added that in itial results of a structural study undertaken in Decem ber indicate The Tow ers would not need m ajor renovation to hold the higher payload o f o ffic e space. I f approved by the regents, the U niversity Tow ers would not be the firs t student housing ASU has converted into o ffice space. D ixie Gam m age, W est, arid M atthew halls w ere Irwin Daughmty/Stat« Pres« A S U is contem p latin g p u rch a sin g U n iv ersity T ow e rs, a p rivately ow ned d orm itory, fo r u se a s o f lic e sp a ce. origin ally dorm atories, but during ASU ’s growth, the residences becam e adm inistrative facilities. Student uproar convinced form er ASU President J. Russell Nelson in 1987 to scrap {dans o f converting M cClintock Hall, which now houses the U niversity’s Honors College. ASU radioactive waste generation dow n m ore than 29 tons B y AN ITA C A R C O N E State P ress O fficia te said they hope new ASU program s w ill continue to reduce the m ore than 29 tons of hazardous w aste generated by ASU last year. But uncertainty about the safe handling of radioactive w aste s till exists. A S U ’ s n e w ly im p r o v e d W a s te M inim ization Program sign ifican tly aided ASU ’s hazardous w aste disposal last year, o fficia ls said. The process involves chemical techniques a im e d at lessening the amounts o f h a z a r d o u s w a s t e m a t e r i a l s us e d , minimizing the amount of waste to dispose. Robert Gomez, assistant director of the O ffice of Hazardous M aterials M an a gem en t, said 57,000 pounds o f hazardous waste was generated at ASU lost year, compared to 70,000 pounds in 1984. And the reason, Gom ez said, was the W aste M inim ization Program . Campus expenditures fo r w aste disposal are estim ated at $80,000 annually, Gomez said, adding that about $1,260 is spent on m edical waste disposal yearly. E ach y e a r, m ore hazardous w aste generators are discovered in the many departm en ts at ASU , addin g to the ex p a n sio n o f o p era tio n s and w a ste m inim ization. “ Certain w aste treatm ent technologies such as “ burn valu e” solvents are used as a fu el additive fo r destructive incineration,” Gom ez added. A fter view ing other schools’ facilities, G om ez sa id A S U ’ s hazardous w aste departm ent has one o f the best program s in the nation that is continuing to im prove yearly. He added that this is due la rgely to the departm ent’s com puter tracking system which traces w aste from its point o f origin to its disposal. Gom ez credited students, researchers and c itiz e n s a lik e fo r th e ir h eig h ten ed environm ental awareness beneficial to the hazardous w aste fa cility on campus. ASU ’s ch em istry departm ent, which generates the most hazardous waste, has “ m icroscale labs” to reduce the amount of chem icals and waste, he added. B ut B ru ce H o w e ll, tech n icia n fo r Radiation Protection at ASU, said that in com parison to the U ofA m edical school w aste, ASU ’s is “ very sm all.” He added that ASU ’s R adiation Protection fa c ility has a budget o f $8,000 fo r waste disposal, not including w orkers’ salaries. In contrast the U ofA ’s waste disposal budget, accounting fo r their m edical and pharm acy schools, has a $100,000 budget. On a yea rly basis ASU’s radioactive waste is shipped to Nevada and Florida where th ere a re sp ecial sites a va ila b le fo r treatm ent, H ow ell said although he has noticed a decrease in the volum e o f radioactive waste used in the past year, uncertainty exists in deciding what w ill happen with the waste and how it is to be disposed. “ W e’v e been encouraging users not to switch to using an environm entally benign cocktail or a m ixture of radioactive and chem ical m aterial. It ’s much m ore d ifficu lt to dispose o f such w aste,” he said. H o w e ll s a id th e r e is c o n tin u in g controversy regarding the safest w ay to handle radioactive waste, especially am ong governm ent officiate within the Departm ent o f E nergy who attem pt to find the safest h azard ou s w a s te s ite s p o s s ib le fo r incineration. N E W Y E A R . . . 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WESTERN RESERVE CLUB ,( ') FA M ILY S P O R T S C E N T E R A DAVE BROWN COM PANY P age 15 W ednodfl^anuar^& l991 H olid ays prove productive fo r thieves B y T E E N A C H A D W E LL State P re ss “ School’s started and I ’m probably there, but that’s no invitation to com e borrow m y V C R ,” quipped the answering machine of an ASU student who becam e a statistic in th e num erous b u rg la ries d u rin g the sem ester break. S everal students returned to their dorm room s and apartm ents a fter the holidays only to find their residences ransacked by thieves in th eir absence. Tem pe P o lice Sgt. A1 T a ylor said the in c r e a s e in c r im in a l a c t iv it y o v e r Christm as break is norm al. “ M ost burglars are opportunists, they look fo r opportunities,” T a ylo r said, adding that the holidays offer plenty of chances for a thief to strike. In other campus crimes during the holidays, an ASU student’s 1987 Hyundai Excel was stolen from a campus parking lot and later recovered. Another ASU student returned home to find $4,840 in property stolen from his residence in the 1300 block o f West Third Street. In addition, $950 in property was stolen from an ASU student’s apartment in the 1900 block of East University Drive. When W ade Heydhauff, an 18-year-old freshm an music m ajor who vacationed in C alifornio, walked into his room P a lo Verde W est on Sunday, he was shocked by its condition. P o lic e R e p o rt ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Tuesday: •A VCR was stolen from a storage area in Neeb H all. Estim ated loss is $200. •A pink and blue mountain bicycle was stolen from a b icycle rack on the w est side o f M anzaiiita H all. E stim ated loss is $350. •The north w a ll o f the Nelson Fin e A rts Com plex was painted. Estim ated dam age was $2,000. Tem pe p olice reported the follow in g incidents Tuesday: ; . •A 37-year-old man was w alking southbound on Rural Road from Southern Avenue ea rly M onday when he accepted a rid e from a car w ith four occupants. One of the m en in the car put his hand in his coat pocket and poked the victim , dem anding m oney. The victim gave him his ja ck et and le ft the vehicle. Tw o o f the suspects are Hispanic, and one is 5-foot-10, 180 pounds w ith ligh t brown hair. They w ere last seen in a 1969 to 1972 ligh t brown 2-door car. C om piled by State P ress re p o rte r Teena Chadwell. State Press Classifieds “ It was trashed,” he said. “ I thought it was a joke at first.” Heydhauff said four friends w ere by his side when he entered the room, and he thought they had trashed the room as a joke. “ I said, ‘Okay guys, give it back.’ ” A fter the rea lity o f the situation soaked in, Heydhauff said he called ASU police to rep ort $7,635 in m usical instrum ents, c o m p u te r e q u ip m e n t a n d s t e r e o components stolen. Doug Bartosh, associate director of the ASU Department o f Public Safety, said the case is still under investigation, adding that there is a suspect, but no arrests have been made. “ I think this one had som e special overtones to it,” Bartosh said. Som e o f th e sto len p ro p e rty w as recovered M onday night, H eydhauff said. “ W e found som e o f the things in a room down the hall last night,” he said. The room that held the stolen property was unoccupied a t the tim e o f the discovery, but someone secretly had been livin g in the room over the holidays, Heydhauff said. Heydhauff speculated on the identity o f the thief. “ Only three people knew how to get in the window to the room down the hall,” he said, adding that one o f those people is now in Saudi Arabia. ASU D PS declined to com m ent on the identity o f the suspect. M oney crunch forces tuition increases By The Associated Press Th e w orst college m oney crunch in m em ory is forcin g rare m idterm budget cuts at schools in at least 25 states and m aking double-digit tuition increases a virtu al certainty next fa ll. “ T h ere is w idespread pain, and anticipated pain, nationwide,” said Robert Aaron, a spokesman fo r the N ational Association o f State U n iversities and Land Grant Colleges, based in Washington. H ig h e r e d u c a tio n ’ s w o es, c o n s id e re d m a in ly a Northeastern problem just last fa ll, have spread to states like California, F lorid a and Minnesota. A t least h alf the states have announced m idterm appropriation cuts, even m ore than during the recession in thé ea rly ’80s, said R ichard Novak o f the land grant association'. “ M ore states are m aking m id-year changes than I ’v e ever seen, and virtu a lly a ll are n egative,” said Edw ard R . Hines, a professor o f educational adm inistration at Illin ois State U niversity who edits The G rapevine, a journal o f higher education finance. He and others said students across the country next fa ll can count on double-digit tuition .increases not seen since rates at public colleges rose an average o f 12 percent in 1983. H iring freezes, few er and m ore crowded classes and cuts in student counseling are already the rule on public campuses around the country: •The U niversity o f F lorida has lost about $17 m illion in state aid this year, suspended most hiring and m ay cancel som e spring course sections as w ell as much o f summer school. •A t V irgin ia Tech, class sizes have tripled in some disciplines as 131 vacant facu lty jobs have been elim inated since the fa ll sem ester. “ I f you’ re up near the top (o f the auditorium ) you can’ t even see the teacher,” said M ichele Gunter, a sophomore from Roanoke, Va., whose introductory biology class has sw elled to 500 students. •Massachusetts, in the throes o f a 2-year-old state budget crisis, has cut higher education spending $175 m illion so fa r this y ea r to $522 m illion. Tuition at the state’s 29 campuses has risen 50 percent in the last 2% years, with further increases likely. O ver 1,100 sta ff positions have been elim inated. “ The quality w e’v e built up over the last 12 years w ill be lost,” said T e rry Zoulas, a spokesman fo r the Board of Regents. M orale is “ the lowest I ’ve e v e r seen. Th ere’s a feelin g that nobody cares.” •C alifornia’s new governor, P ete W ilson, unveiled plans Thursday to cut higher education spending 1.6 percent for fiscal 1991-92 to $5.5 billion. Included would be a 20 percent rise in student fees, which students are protesting as a stunning departure from a long tradition o f m ore gradual increases. Look good, ill. Feel good. at C a n ’t g e t t h e QNE T h e s o lu t io n -958-0537 Come to Gateway for that class you need We’re just minutes from ASUand therefc plenty of free parking dose to classrooms. Day or evening classes are easy to fit into your schedule Courses are just $24per credit hour for residents and academic credits transfer to ASU Cutting hair is only part of our job. Cutting your hair the w ay you w ant it is everything. Our experienced staff is trained to listen first. . . then cut. M O WO Biology BIO 201 & 202 Anatom y and Physiology BK) 205 M icrobiology EN G M M & KR English ENH 204 Literature o f Ibday ENH251 M ythology GPH 111 in tro to Physical Geography HUM 101 G eneral H um anities MAT 129 Interm ediate A lgebra (M AT 106) M AT 155 College Algebra SPA KM Elem entary Spanish SKA 115 Beginning Spanish Conversation M C a i 275-8500 fo r a com piete d a m Usdng! Late registration ends August 3L Register Now! Only 4 miles from ASU! (Bus ro u te # l) 40th Street A WMhington 275-8500 — 5li Comm State Press State Pr Peace Corps sends ASU graduate to Africa Se: B y DIAN E SA N TO R IC O State P ress include fiv e hours of language lessons a day and classes on politics and the culture. B y JUD I State P r An ASU graduate w ill tra vel to A frica fo r two years o f work helping people o f an underdeveloped culture grow vegetables and raise livestock. “ Zaire is a rea lly p rim itive country,” she said. “ I ’D be livin g in a hut. I ’ll have to haul m y own w ater. And I ’ll learn how to build m y own latrin e.” Sally Horaney was recently accepted into the P eace Corps and w ill be leavin g fa r Zaire, A frica on Jan. 31 fo r a threemonth training program . Horaney grew tip in Illin ois, where she was a gardener. Her gardening skills and strong grasp o f the French language helped her qu alify fo r the Peace Corps. H oraney, 23, who graduated w ith a psychology degree last year, said she decided a long tim e ago the P ea ce Corps w ere fo r te r. Although t e r fam ily supports her decision, Horaney said they b elieve tw o years is long enough. W ednesday, January 16,1991 Page 16 She said she first heard of the Peace Corps w hile in high school and reaffirm ed te r decision a fter talking to several volunteers. “ One o f the reasons I graduated from college was because I knew you had to have a college degree to join the Peace Corps,” she said. Horaney said she w ill undergo intense training that w ill M akii discrim E n viro i chairnu Recer working prevent “ The assault ) said Let affairs. Plann “ They are a ll pretty happy fo r m e because they know it’s m y dream , and it w ill m ake m e happy,” she said. A few weeks ago, ASU, which has been without a Peace Corps recru iter fo r a sem ester, hired E lizabeth Stephens to take over the position. “ W e are in the process now o f getting the o ffice under control and w e are putting fliers around the cam pus,” Stephens said. M Salty H oraney, an A S U g raduate, «rill travel to A fric a fo r a tw o year m issio n «rith th e p ea ce co rp s. K eatin g Five attorneys h o p e to finish u p cases W ASH ING TO N (A P ) - Attorneys fo r the K eatin g F iv e senators hope to w rap up their cases before the Senate Ethics Com m ittee this week at hearings that have run much longer than anticipated. The com m ittee was m eeting today for what its m em bers hoped would begin the last two days o f public hearings, two months a fter the televised public inquiry began. Rep. Trent Lott, R-M iss., a com m ittee m em ber, com plained last w eek that the hearings have run on fa r too long. Another m em ber, Sen. D avid P ryo r, DrArk., said he w as h avin g trou ble concentrating on testim ony about m inor details at a tim e when a ll concerns w ere focused on the potential fo r w a r in the M iddle East. O nce the h ea rin gs end, the th ree Republicans and three Dem ocrats on the ethics panel w ill begin deliberating whether the fiv e senators acted im properly in aiding a cam paign contributor, form er savings and loan operator Charles H. K eatin g Jr., with fed eral regulators. The panel also would have to decide whether to take action against any o f the fiv e . Lott said last week he would be ‘ absolutely am azed” if the case against a t least one o f the fiv e senators does not reach the Senate floor. Fin al witnesses w ere being called on behalf of Sen. Alan Cranston, D -C alif., one o f the K eating F ive. H e planned to seek supporting testim ony from R ep. Don Edwards, D -C alif., and form er California Supreme Court Justice Cruz Reynoso, both o f whom w ere involved in Cranston-led voter registration efforts that Keating supported fin an cially. A fter, a ll witnesses have been heard, the co m m ittee plans to h ea r conclu ding argum ents firs t from Robert S. Bennett, the com m ittee’s special counsel who has been depicted as prosecutor by the senators’ law yers. Bennett w as being given 1V4 hours fo r oral argum ents, and another half-hour fo r rebuttal a fter argum ents from each o f the senators’ law yers. H ie defense law yers w ere getting one hour each. One o f the fiv e , Sen, Dennis DeConcini, DA riz., was considering d eliverin g part o f his closing argum ents him self. Other senators under investigation are Sen. John M cCain o f Arizona, the only Republican; and D em ocrats John Glenn of Ohio and Donald R iegle o f M ichigan. Bennett was expected to draw distinctions between the cases against each o f the fiv e senators. B efore the hearings, he p rivately recom m ended to the com m ittee that Glenn Sigma LEADERSHI MIKE M O O R E 784-0576 and M cCain be cleared and focused his case against the other three senators. M cCain was scheduled to be the first senator offerin g closing argum ents through his attorney, John Dowd. “ I plan to dem onstrate that John rea lly acted honestly and properly throughout,” Dowd said. “ The most significant thing was that he broke o ff from K eating before any m e e t in g s (b e t w e e n s e n a to r s a n d regu lators).” The Senators are under scrutiny fo r intervening w ith fed eral regulators on behalf o f K eatin g and his Lincoln Savings and Loan, at a tim e when K eating was raising $1,3 m illion fo r the law m akers’ reelection cam paigns and related causes. Lincoln, based in Irvin e, C a lif,, collapsed in A p ril 1969, and the bailout cost to taxpayers is expected to top $2 billion. PHOE supplier the trad H ow e the Am< been dei on two l “ Davi donate D r. G er stateme prepare Gulf, wi •Cento Cross w prograr donatio) The c week, E Durin t Page 17 W ednesday, January 16.1991 Stale Press S exual d is c rim in a tio n a w a re n e ss to p s CET ag e n d a By JU N TAN CO S State P re ss M a k in g stu d en ts a w a re o f sex u a l discrim in ation tops the ASU Campus E n viron m en t T e a m ’ s sp rin g agen da, chairm an Charles Calleros said Tuesday. R ecently, C alleros said the C E T began w orking with the O ffice o f Student L ife to prevent sexual discrim ination on campus. “ Th e goal is to work against the sexual assault and sexual harassm ent o f students,” said Lenna Erickson, coordinator o f judicial affairs. planned a ctivities include date rape sem inars in residence halls and a sexual awareness day, Erickson said. “ (B u t) It’s not enough,” she added. Erickson said Calleros has joined her task force because the C E T shares the desire to prevent sexual harassm ent on campus. “ It (th e C E T ) is a group that has been constructed by the p residen t to pay attention to the campus environm ent and the kinds o f things w e are a ll trying to prevent,” Erickson said. “ W e’re being pro­ a c tiv e .” In addition, Calleros said he would lik e to see less separatism at ASU. “ I ’d lik e to see diverse groups on campus work together m ore,” C alleros said. Last fa ll, m em bers o f the P i Kappa Alpha fratern ity raised $1,500 to help finance a Jan. 24, 1991 gospel celebration of M artin Luther K in g’s birthday. C alleros said that although the m oney is “ g rea tly appreciated, “ I would lik e to see them (th e fratern ities) join hands w ith the African-Am ericans.” Dr. Leonard Gordon, associate dean of the C ollege o f L ib eral Arts, said the C E T has been tryin g to work with the Associated Students o f ASU and fratern ities and sororities to im prove the environm ent on campus. “ W e want to m ake everyone feel w elcom e (a t A SU ) no m atter what background they com e from ,” Gordon said. Meanwhile, Calleros said “ celebrating diversity” is a very positive message that needs to get out on campus more and more. Calleros said the CET plans to distribute “ Celebrate D iversity” shirts on campus that correspond w ith posters alread y displayed. The posters and shirts, Which depict flow ers of d ifferen t colors and sizes, represent the d iversity o f ASU, Calleros said. “ The m ore w e learn about other cultures, the m ore w e grow to adm ire them ,” he said. M ilitary troops den ied access to b lo o d supplies > >e st ¡h iy .»» » as jy id or an gs as e- ed to PH O E N IX (A P ) — A Scottsdale-based regional blood supplier says donations had risen to an adequate le v e l a fter the traditional Christm as lull. H ow ever, the situation was critica l in the area served by the Am erican R ed Cross Blood Center o f Tucson, which has been denied access to blood donated by active-duty personnel on two m ilita ry bases. “ Davis-Monthan (A ir F orce B ase) and F o rt Huachuca donate over 10 percent o f southern A rizon a’s blood,” D r. G erald Giordano, the center director, said in a prepared statem ent. “ In ord er .... to co ver local needs and to be prepared to assist the m ilita ry w ith blood fo r the Persian G ulf, w e need m ore blood donors now.” - Center spokeswoman K a y Donohoe said M onday the Red Cross was told F rid a y that the m ilitary had activated donor program s a t bases nationwide. The notice cam e just as donations had begun to rebound a fter the holidays. The center usually collects about 900 pints o f blood each week, Donohoe said. During the holidays that dipped to about 450 pints. “ W e are sim ply not positioned as We would lik e to be to be able to help in the P ersian G ulf should w e be asked,” she said. Blood centers anticipate a slowdown startin g in midD ecem ber each yea r because o f Christmas shopping and other distractions and the closure o f schools that provide convenient blood-drawing sites. P eople also d efer everything but em ergency surgery, which helps reduce the demand. H ow ever, the demand surges a fter the Y u le period, and this year circum stances have conspired to prevent supplies from catching up, Donohoe said. R ed blood cells cannot be stored fo r m ore than 35 days, so stockpiling grea t quantities is out of the question, Donohoe said. Blood System s In c. o f Scottsdale, the non-profit parent com pany fo r thè 13-state United Blood Services network, received the notification about stayin g o ff m ilita ry reservations but isn’ t hurting yet, said Sharon Conrad, the organization’s m arketing director. “ O f course, the situation could change by next Week, but it’s not a rea l heavy burden,” she said. □ State Press Classifieds g IH 13? ID K [> IO K 10 17 l!3 The organization, which operates UBS centers and subunits in A rizon a , Arkansas, C a lifo rn ia , Illin o is , Louisiana, M ississippi, Montana, N evada, New M exico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas and W yom ing, is able to distribute Supplies around to hard-hit areas. Blood System s has contracted with the governm ent to supply 530 pints a week “ if a shooting w ar breaks out,” Conrad said. “ W e’ll typ ically draw about 15,000 units (p in ts) per week am ong the 20 centers, so that would be only 3 or 3Vi percent of our w eekly draw ,’ ’Conrad added. Both organizations said escalation of the M iddle East situation could play havoc with blood supplies if donations rem ain at current levels, Giordano said the national Am erican R ed Cross is shipping 1,000 pints o f blood per week to the Persian G ulf; if w ar breaks out, that could increase by m ore than 500 percent, he said. R ed Cross Blood Services acts as a backup to the m ilitary blood program through an agreem ent created a fter W orld W a rH . That’ s the tickets IP • S O C IA L RICK JU D G E 784-0563 Page 18 State Press W ednetday, January 16,1991 ASASU begin s search fo r n e w student regent position, because it’s the only direct student input the 90,000 tim e with funding issues. B y K E N BR O W N S ta ts P ress students in this state have to the regents.” “ W e’ll probably see two themes next y ea r — a slow ing The student regent represents the student body interests o f econom y and grow ing university needs,” he said. “ W e w ill the th i«e Arizona universities. The student regent post, defin itely want someone who is vocal and know ledgeable on which the state Legislatu re m ade a voting position in 1988, the issues.” rotates am ong the three U niversities each year. ASASU w ill pick three regent candidates fo r the governor O rtega said the new student regent w ill be instrum ental in repeating what ASA o fficia ls called a tuition victory when the to choose, from . A fter the governor m akes his nomination, the the Board o f Regents accepted ASA ’s proposed financial aid Senate Educational Com m ittee and eventually the entire Arizona Senate must approve the choice. package in Novem ber. M aren Lee, associate director o f the Arizona Students’ W hile O rtega said having a regent from ASU w ill be a Association, said the search w ill begin a fter she and ASASU “ definite benefit,” he does not expect it to g iv e ASU an unfair officia ls develop guidelines fo r the new regent. advantage in the board’s decisions. M eanwhile, Siciliano said his work this yea r is fa r from “ The regent is not supposed to be biased tow ard one school, over. He added that the next student regent w ill benefit from groundwork laid this year, but should expect a m ore d ifficu lt but another advocate from ASU doesn’t hurt any,” he said. Associated Students o f ASU officia ls have begun their search fo r a new student regent who w ill persist in the expected uphill figh t fo r U niversity funding next year. This year, the student regent w ill be chosen from ASU and w ill rep lace Danny Siciliano, a U ofA student; in June. ASASU Presiden t M att O rtega, who plans to begin the search w ithin the next two weeks, said student leaders are in fo r a “ tough” legisla tive session next yea r because of anticipated budget cuts statew ide. This, he said, w ill make the regents’ choice o f a student representative especially crucial. “ Th e regents play a big role in financial aid, and w e want to m ake sure the universities continue to get the funding they need,” O rtega said. “ (Student regen t) is a very im portant Surplus property prom otes ASU recycling efforts Snyder said that since the im plem entation o f the in itial pilot recyclin g program in six campus buildings last February, others have expressed interest in it. In Novem ber, ASU o fficia ls decided to expand the pilot program to com ply with a new law requ irin g state agencies to establish a program fo r recyclin g a t least 50 percent o f its paper. T h e p rogra m p resen tly co vers the A c a d e m ic S e r v ic e s , A d m in is tra tio n , Agriculture, Business and Student Services buildings. “ The Psychology Building, Associated Students q f ASU and the M U have expressed interest in the program . Bins w ill soon be availab le at three buildings,” Snyder said. Th e restructured voluntary ; program , adm inistered by ASU ’s Surplus Property, is responsible fo r collecting the trash and B y A N ITA C A R C O N E State P ress ASU Surplus P rop erty has added several new trash receptacles and increased its sta ff — doubling its capacity to collect campus w astepaper — in an effo rt to further the U n iversity’s recyclin g efforts. G erald Snyder o f ASU ’s C om ptroller’s O ffice said he b elieves the addition o f three new em ployees and an extra recyclin g veh icle w ill be a positive step in U niversity efforts to expand recyclin g. H e added that the college recyclin g trend is not unique to ASU. “ Th ere’s a grow ing sen sitivity towards recyclin g on campuses around the country, and there’s grow in g interest in it,” he said. B y Feb. 15, Snyder said the ASU campus w ill have doubled its capacity to recycle paper. separating it into plain com puter paper, non-computer paper — which includes any kind o f colored paper — and newspaper. The revised program w ill extend through June 30. Sherry Spaseff, recyclin g coordinator fo r Surplus Property, said her departm ent has increased its effo rts to provid e bins and centrally located containers throughout campus. One new outdoor trash receptacle is located behind M atthews Center, and others w ill be distributed random ly throughout the ASU m alls, he added. M ean w h ile, S nyder s a id com m ittee m eetings are being held to determ ine the costs and types o f trash container options, available. The identification process and cost im plications w ill be com pleted by the end o f the sem ester, he added. “ W e w ill continue to encourage (cam pus newspaper) readers to put back th eir paper into the kiosk to reduce the papers bring printed and at the sam e tim e ensure that the left-over papers are recycled /’ Snyder said. He added that the com m ittee also is considering containers designed to hold bottles and cans, as w ell as newspapers and com puter paper, as a via b le option. H ow ever, D ennis E d e re r, assistan t com ptroller, said he is concerned that providing the campus w ith such dumpsters ' m ay prom pt undesireable responses from som e people . “ One o f the prim ary objectives is to keep the aesthetics o f the campus w hile at the sam e tim e satisfy recyclin g interests,” he said. “ P eop le m ay not lik e u gly, m etal containers with labels around cam pus.” ‘‘ T h e State P ress M a g a zin e A W F; e K i. 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W M XW / V - 7 L u f f i - l l i 'B T fB -'i i l B l i S a E j u ] L „ , . \ o p e n 7 d a y s th ru J a n . 26, 1991 M o n .-F ri. 9-6 Sa t. 10-6 S u n . 11-5 R IT T E R S Y S T E M S & C O N S U L T IN G 14826 N. 38th S t., P h x, A Z 85032 - m 894-6852 z: ppóm cmenc H 4IRC U T T E R S Get a Haircut. Everyone has someone they want to look great for. EverydayLowPrice SHAMPOO & CUT 0^ *7 K id s ®695 (1 2 & U nder) orient HOIR (UTTERS Coupon Everyday Low P rice CUT COMBO DESIGNER PERM SPECIAL « 1 0 0 OFF Shampoo, Conditioning Rinse, Cut and Style. Reg. *119S/Women Reg. *1 OaV M en Reg. ®895/Kids M i l Ment FOm iLY HOIR (UTTERS $2 9 ‘Gel With the Programs’ Shampoo, Cut & Style Included Long Hair, Piggy Back or jg f Spiral Wrap Extra S T U D E N T R E C R E A T IO N C O M P L E X cmenc FOmiLY HOIR (UTTERS J Coupons not valid with any other specials. Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-7 Sun. 12-5 U n iversity f i Rural Rd. C o rn e rsto n e Shopping C e n te r 968-8008 a u> Ò X* IN Sa a a. H IT'S TIM I: i:01l DOM INO'S 1M7YA:" 965-8900 Page 20 State Press Wednesday, January 16,1991 SAVE 40% S W E A T P A N T S • T - S H I R T S • T A N K S • S W E A T S H IR T S F a b u lo u s se le ctio n of hot new d e sig n s and colors! • T -S H IR T S N O W J U S T $7.20-$10.80 R e g u la r p ric e $12-$18 • TANK TOPS NOW JUST $6.60 R e g u la r p ric e $11 • SWEATPANTS NOW $14.40 R e g u la r p ric e $24 • SWEATSHIRTS NOW JUST $14.40-$18 R e g u la r p rice $24-$30 C O U P O N O FFER N O T G O O D O N SH O R TS. W IT H C O U P O N O N L Y T H R U 1/20/91 S U P P L Y A N D S T Y L E S L IM IT E D ‘pacific G ycs& Ts CO RNERSTO NE S U P E R S T IT IO N S P R IN G S M A L L 725 S. Rural 6555 E. S ou th ern A ve. A c ro s s From A S U in T e m p e 924-6001 966-5560 r © London $478 Leadership W eekend in Prescott. Romdtri^a^fttoenbc Los Angeles Sanfnw dsco Tokyo Paris Sydney 40 80 $519 $ 549 $949 $ $ "\ Janu ary 18-20 I t 's T im e T o P la y ! O n ly $36®° Restrictions do apply. Student status may be requited. Eurailpasses Issued on-the-spot! If y o u ’v e e v e r b een in v o lv e d with Y o u n g L ife, o r sim ply want to kn ow m o re abou t it, this trip cou ld b e a g r e a t w a y fo r you to g e t in volved . Call for a FREE Student Travel Catalog! America's oldest and largest student travel organization. Counci Trave Located at Forest and University, directly across from A.S.U.I F or m o re inform a­ tion ab ou t th e trip o r abou t Y o u n g L ife le a d ersh ip training, call B ruce at 966-9371. 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, A Z 85281 946-3544 OPEN TO BO W LIN G DIVISIONS: ENTER: FEE: A L L ASU STUD ENTS, FAC U LTY, AND S TA FF W HO AR E SR C S U B J E C T T O A S U IN T R A M U R A L E L IG IB IL IT Y G U ID E L IN E S . TOURNAM ENT Men's & Women's Jan. 14-17 $3 per person BASKETBALL DIVISIONS: EN TER: FEE: LEAG U E Men, Women, Co-Rec Jan. 14-22 $20 per team M EM BERS, VO LLEYBALL REVERSE TR IPLES TO U R N A M EN T DIVISIONS: C O -R EC EN T ER : Jan. 14-23 FEE: $9 per learn T E N N IS P O W ER LIFT IN G M E E T DIVISIONS: Men's & Women's EN TER: Jan. 28 - Feb. 6 FEE: $3 per person DIVISIONS: ENTER: FEE: FR EE THROW SH O O TIN G C O N T E S T DIVISIONS: Men's & Women's ENTER: Feb. 4-13 FEE: $1 per person Men's & Women's Feb. 4-12 $3 per person DIVISIONS: EN TER : FEE: Men's & Women's Jan. 14 -F eb . 5 $3 per team HrO -R-S-E A N D O N E -O N -O N E T O U R N E Y DIVISIONS: Men's & Women's ENTER: Feb. 4-13 F EE: $3 per event P I C K U P I N F O R M A T IO N P A C K E T S ( E N T R Y F O R M S , R U L E S , E T C .) A T T H E S T U D E N T R E C R E A T IO N C O M P L E X R E G IS T E R A T T H E S R C - 2ND F L O O R O F F IC E 9 A M - 4 P M M O N D A Y -F R I D A Y Visit your Intramural or Recreational Sports Department and sign up today! ' S o n n 4 n P in trod u ctory o ffe r Shampoo/Cut Reg, *13°° í A SU Studente Always *10 w/I.D. Closed Sunday & Monday yfflatrix General Motors is proud to be associated with your campus intramural recreational sports and activities. C H EV R O LET •PONTIAC «OLDSMOBILE BU IC K -CA D ILLA C-O M O T R U C K IZZARDS 1041 E. Lemon * ML GM AC G eneral M otors..7sharing your future" O 1969 ________ College Culture________ S tttP re s » Page 21 Wednesday, January 16,1991 THE USUAL SUSPECTS "Beat It" king hits Africa NEW Y O R K CAP)— F or the first tim e in alm ost two decades, M ichael Jackson w ill visit A frica . H e’ll take a 10-day trip beginning Jan. 21, at the special invitation of Om ar Bongo, president o f the Republic of Gabon, visitin g that country as w ell as Tanzania, N airobi and A gidar. Jackson’s first and only visit to A frica was as a m em ber o f the Jackson 5, about 20 years ago, fo r a concert ap­ pearance in Senegal. During the trip Jackson w ill produce, direct and appear in a video m em oir of the experience fo r his personal use. The project has been underwritten by a private, unnamed donor fo r Jackson, who is the second w ealthiest entertainer in the w orld, according to Forbes. His tw o-year earnings in 1990 totaled $100 m illion. Holiday parties and lazy winter breaks have students rushing to. PUMP IT l^ t o t r im p o s H v id a ^ ld , asprescribedby Michete *. Bodlander, Mesaresident àrittVfeîgihtlft^ftclsâs groupleader: to c v e r a m fie lp c ^ biue&*Mariypeopte feel :; depressed:^ the holidays p id ^ o d d g a f h a r ^ s n d s , S o n g s o f P e a c e — Y o k o O n o, S ea n L en n o n , an d L en n y K r a v itz , fla s h a p e a c e s ig n r e c e n tly in L o s A n g e le s . A n e w m u s ic v id e o fe a tu r in g a n e w v e r s io n o f J o h n L e n n o n 's " G iv e P e a c e a C h a n c e " w a s r e le a s e d T u e s d a y to c o in c id e w ith th e e x p ir a tio n o f th e U n ite d N a tio n s d e a d lin e fo r Ir a q 's w ith d ra w a l fro m K u w a it. togethertoteeplram 7 seasonaffruteandveget- The name is Bond, er, Blair LOS AN G E LE S (A P )— From the im peccably stylish Jam es Bond to the rum pled, boozy B arley B lair, Sean Con­ nery has now run the gam ut o f the spying breed. . In “ The Russia H ouse", the Scottish actor switches from the glossy m ake-believe o f Ian Flem in g to the sardonic rea lity of John le Carre. It ’s another of the latter-day per­ form ances that have won him an Academ y Aw ard ( “ The Untouchables” ) and box-office glory ( “ The H unt fo r R ed O ctober’') . Connery recently analyzed his two spies: “ This is an over-sim plification, but the character in the Bond film s was very much fu lly realized. In fact, he did not change from page one to the end. What he did was change the situation him self through his own character. He was, you know, the com plete m achine fo r w hatever was necessary at the tim e. “ (B a rley B lair in ‘The Russia H ouse’ ) is lik e an unmade bed, with no direction. He is certainly not a successful figu re, not heroic m aterial by any means. He m ight have been b etter to stick in som e ja zz group touring around and m aking an ea rly departure at 35 or so. But in som e drunken m om ent he makes a claim and then is picked up on it. His number is called and through her (M ich elle P fe if­ fe r as a Soviet dissident) and an extraordinary change of circum stances, becomes a h ero.” cfciles forred meataid other fatly foods a moderate exercise program. leftover holiday goodies to neighbors ordonate them to charity. ^Pbsffiuteashort walk for a snack. 1|im ain persistent and optimistic with your weight-loss goals. Tam an WoffonVStata Presa A rlin d a G om ez, a Junior ed u cation student, w orks out o n the Stairm aster m ach ine at the Student R ecreation Center. v e r had that feelin g a fter a large and sumptuous holiday feast that you could explode? The feelin g that someone could com e along, push on your stom ach and halfdigested pumpkin pie, cranberry sauce, baked ham and See’s candy could be regurgitated on Aunt D ee’s livin g room floor. /Magazine Mi writer Aaron Levy M any students did overinduldge during the holidays, and that uneasy feelin g o f a fu ll stomach has now turned into extra weight. delves into the controversy Holidays a re notorious as “ weight gainers,” dieticians say, adding that before ASU goes packing fo r spring'break in M arch, it m ay be best to shed those ex­ tra (h elpin g) pounds. among acoustic artists and local radio by Mark The State Press Magazine Nothaft G erry M aas, D irector o f R ecreational Sports and Student A ctivities at the Stu­ dent Recreation Center, agrees wholeheartedly. “ It is most im portant to keep your health and fitness regim en consistent and long term ,” M aas said E veryday at noon, M ass carries out a rigorous workout in ASU’s state-of-the-art recreation center. “ It is the rollercoaster rid e o f eatin g and fasting that your body doesn’ t lik e,” he said. “ You can do a pretty good job, eat healthy and get into a regular-exercise pattern, but then a party com es up on F ri­ day and you toss back a few beers. B eer is fattening.” M aas says that if students exercise three days a week fo r 30 minutes, he can “ alm ost guarantee” they w ill m aintain a constant body weight. The SRC offers a va riety o f fitness fa cilities that are free o f charge ($25 is autom atically added to full-tim e student tuition, $6 to part-tim e) . Students can make use o f an immense weight room, aerobic dance studios, six basketball courts, four olympic-size pools and over 20 raquetbaU courts. In addition, students can sign up for fitness swimming and weight training courses at a reasonable rate. But, fitness and good health are more than just a hard workout. SRC manage. Torn to Fitness, page 22. Page 82 State Prew W ednesday, January 16,1991 Ju m ble o f p lo t lin es ru in s Intruder's a ctio n a p p e a l B y BER RY GRAH AM State P ress The producers of “ The Hunt fo r Red O cto b e r" set out to make another good action film , but "F lig h t o f the In ­ tru d er” is not it. Although the action sequences are thrill- ' mg, the m ovie lacks a focused story. From the best-selling book by Stephen Coonts, the film centers on three N avy pilots during the Vietnam W ar: Commander Frank C am parelli (Danny G lo ver), Lt. Cmdr. V irg il Cole (W illiam D afoe) and Lt. Jake “ Cool Hand” G rafton (B rad Johnson), A fter the death o f his partner, G rafton becom es sullen and starts to question the fruitless missions he must fly every night, i. e., bombing trees. H e is mad that they are not allow ed to bomb Hanoi, which hhs been designated as a restricted zone. G lover is likeable as the tough yet sweet commander, and D afoe is excellent as usual playing the intense V irg il Cole. But Brad Johnson, as the m ain character, is weak. He has no presence and is hard to sym pathize with. How ever, he does shine in one scene w here he explains his actions to the court-m artial com m ittee. H e spoke with ge­ nuine sincerity and innocent believablity. The m ovie could have been gripping if director John M ilius had focused on the issue o f the governm ent’s refusal to let the m ilitary win the w ar and how it affects the fighters, which he does to som e extent, but not enough. Starring: Danny Glover Brad Johnson Directed by John Milius b M ilius cannot decide what type o f film this should be. It tries to be a buddy film , a love story, an action m ovie and a w ar epic with a m essage, but gives us too little on every account to fu lfill any genre. The best parts of the m ovie are the flyin g sequences. I f you lik e planes, go see the m ovie; if you like good m ovies, g iv e this a miss. CROSSW ORD by TH O M A S JO S E P H B A S 1S ENAc T ETTER N 1MA TRAP A N E C K HENS ERVE 1D E D P A OA X E D O M Al LOT|T E L■ o L A I R I S H S E T T E R R 1T E Ç A N O El E L O P Ë 1 > C ED IK_E JP JJ ± ñ J. N XI TRENDS T A MIV A STATIC ACROSS signer 1 — Raton, 45 Pesky insect Florida 5 Syngman DOWN R hee was 1 Violinists’ needs one 2 Ronny 11 Masterwork Howard role 12 Ferdi­ 3 Flee nand's Yesterday’s Answer 4 Mt. St. wife Helens blackjack Cole 13 Accom pa­ nying output 16 Backgam- 30 Remit 14 Strive 5 Russian , mon piece 33 Tennis ballet against great 18 Epochs 15 Mermaid’s 6 Egg dish 19 Accident 34 “Mona — * / R em a in ­ home 36 Bit type der 16 Idiot 37 Blemish 20 Erelong 8 Yale 17 Ingenu­ 21 Office note 38 Catch student ous 22 Cote cries 39 Exist 19 Bad 9 Class­ 23 Pinnacle 40 Beige thespian ifieds 25 Locks 41 — Ham­ 10 Singer 22 Sheriff’s marskjöld 29 Ace, in ID 1 2 à 4 6 7 8 9 fô 24 Yours, biblically 11 26 Lot Unit 27 Lab particle 1$ 28 Entertain ■ Ï7 V 20 21 30 Cliburn's 19 need 22 23 W 24 25 31 D.C. VIP 32 Get smart 26 34 Impose * 29 1 28 30 taxes 35 Under­ H 32 33 world god 34 37 38 Inhabitant 36 41 Plummet “ 38 39 40 41 42 Mistake clearer 45 43 Detroit 44 45 product 44 Lease D A IL Y C R YPTO Q U O TE S— H ere’s how to work it: 1716 ■ï1 6■ Fitness ment, in conjunction with (be Student Health Center, has assem bled the W ellness Center, a total health and fitness concept. Coordinator Danae Brow nell, said the W ellness Center offers workshops on exer­ cise, diet, stress m anagem ent and a host o f other com prehensive program s. Barbara Lasater, an ASU graduate stu­ dent who recen tly signed up fo r Wellness Center services, has lost 60 pounds over one year, going from a size 20 to a 12. “ I attribute much o f m y success to exer­ cise,” Lasater said, w hile signing up for the body fa t reduction sem inar. “ It takes discipline and m otivation.” A host o f off-cam pus health clubs also CRYPTOQUOTE .1-16 G X R Z H K E C R G T Q R P K U R N 6 E P I W X T W W X R Y K Q O K H Z K K Z R B Q K E Z M CRZRTW X Y Q K P HKE. — N W TZD N S TG SRF Y esterd ay's Cryptoqwote: THE A R T IS T W H O A IM S A T PERFECTION IN EVERYTH ING ACHIEVES IT IN N O TH IN G . — EUGENE D ELACROIX )1991 by K in g Fe a tu re s S y n d ica le . Inc. Beauvais’ general m anager D ave Johnson, who has worked fo r owner M att Beauvais fo r fiv e years, said that working out gradually, not a “ hit and m iss” regim ine, is the best w ay to ensure a healthy look. “ People don’t adopt a fitness lifesty le,” he said, “ They do it on a short-term basis.” Pictu re spring break now. Th e tropical drinks, the beach, volleyb all •. . State Press re p o rte r D iane Santorico contributed to this rep ort. Som e d a y you m a y w rite a book about y o u r college days.., you r Sun D e v il Spark Y earbo o k w ill m ake a great reference book! PROJECT T O rd er yours today ! ~fhtónQvil 965-6881 M atth ew s C enter IPITCH-HU Basement T h re e choices that d eliver great results. T h e deeper you delve into m ath an d science, th e m ore im p o rta n t it is to choose th e best AXYDLBAAXR isLO N G F E LLO W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L ’s, X for the two O ’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are a ll hints. Each day the code letters a re different. cater to ASU’ s student body. Continued from page 21. possible scientific cal­ culator. A n d now th a t’s a n easier deci­ sion th a n ever. Texas In stru m en ts scientific calculators are designed to spe­ cifically m atch your m a th a n d science course needs, w ith just th e right functions a n d features for faster, easier results. W hether you require a general, interm ediate o r advanced scientific calculator, T I has your num ber: T h e easy-touse TI-30 STA T. T h e TI-35 PLU S w ith statistics and com puter conversions. A n d , th e engineeringo rien ted TI-60, as well as m any o th e r hard-w orking models. M ore students d epend o n T I cal­ culators because | we’ve got th e rig h t functions an d fea­ tures dow n to a sci­ ence. To find the calculator th a t’s ideal for your courses, check with your near­ est TI calculator dealer. © 1990 T I IH00077 T e x a s In s t r u m e n t s Stete Pira» Pase 23 Wednesday, January 16,1991 Jazz leg en d to b ack -u p Sim on in w eek en d concert Coltrane. When he was 18-years-old he m oved to N ew Y ork City, the place deem ed as the center o f the ja zz w orld at the tim e. His firs t recording experiences w ere w ith a jazz-rock fusion group called Dream s. The ensem ble recorded two records on the Columbia label. B y M AR K JA S . TYN AN State Praaa I f you cra ve m usical experiences involvin g suprem e v ir­ tuosity and diverse styles, then you had better see w orld acclaim ed tenor saxophonist M ichael Brecker. He w ill join Pau l Simon on stage Saturday at D esert Sky Pavilion . B recker is one of the m ost respected and sought a fter ja zz m usicians o f our tim e, revered by both audiences and m usicians everyw here. H ie tour began three weeks ago and w ill run fo r alm ost seven months, with dates planned throughout theAl.S., Europe and A frica . B recker is playing as a featured soloist in Sim on’s band, yet his role is m ainly as a -band m em ber. He w ill, how ever, get a chance to play a cut from his re­ cent com pact disc, “ Now You See I t . . .(N ow You Don’t ),” on this weekend’s concert in Phoenix. B reck er played on “ The Rhythm o f the Saints,” Simon’s latest recording, which led to Simon inviting B recker to go out on the road with him. Playin g as a sideman is definitely not a new experience fo r Brecker. H ie tenor-man has appeared on more than 500 recordings, including contributions to albums by Frank Sinatra, John Lennon, Bruce Springsteen and Frank Zappa. B recker said that although he has a lot o f sideman ex­ p erien ce the present tour is still somewhat challenging. “ I haven’t toured as a sidem an fo r quite a w h ile .. but it ’s given m e a bit o f a break. It ’s kind of nice to get a chance to fad e into the background,” B recker said. H e added that so fa r the tour has been fun. “ This is a v e ry excitin g m usical experience fo r us and I think that it w ill be fo r the audience as w ell,” he said. The tour w ith Simon is a great opportunity fo r the sax­ ophonist to widen his appeal, B recker said, givin g him a chance to display his virtu osity to an audience that is m ore m ainstream than fo r which he norm ally perform s. “ I hope that it serves to expand m y audience,” he said. “ I t would obviously be grea t fo r m e if that happened.” B reck er said that exposure is not the purpose of the tour. H e said that he enjoys playing with Simon. The ja zz dem igod cited his experience o f m aking an album with Sim on as one o f the m ost enjoyable o f his career. “ T h ere h ave been a lot o f great experiences in m y life ,” he said. “ R ecording w ith Pau l was a very m em orable exp erien ce.” Simon certain ly has no need to boost his ticket sales, yet B recker played in the bands o f Horace S ilver and B illy Cobham in the ea rly ’70s and otherwise kept busy doing studio work. He joined forces with his brother Randy in 1975 fo r a m usical project that they called The B recker Brothers. The band was funk-oriented and put out six highly suc­ cessful albums over a six yea r period. Follow ing The Brecker Brothers, B recker played in a group named Steps Ahead. The band evolved from latenight jam sessions with M ike M anieri, Steve Gadd, Don Grolnick and E ddie Gomez. Steps was origin ally planned to be an acoustic ensemble, but they w ere in filtrated with high-technology when B recker began pioneering the E lectronic Wind Instrument. The E W I is a wind-controlled synthesizer m anipulator with im m ense flex ib ility and an eight-octave range. B recker w ill use the E W I along w ith his tenor sax at Saturday’s concert. Steps recorded six records, with three released only in Japan and three on the E lektra Musician label. B recker’s sidem an experiences include recording with P a t M etheny, Chick Corea, Jaco Pastorius and Joni M itchell. J a z z legend M ichael B reck er w ill perform w ith P aul Sim on Saturd ay at 5:30 p .m . at D esert S k y P a va illio n In Phoenix. having B recker in his band w ill attract a strong jazzoriented audience. B reaker’s m usical expertise stem s from a history of ja zz in his fam ily. His father, a pianist, initiated his ja zz educa­ tion by playing his vast record collection fo r B recker. His trum pet-playing older brother Randy shared in this learn­ ing experience. Randy is equally renowned today as a ja zz trum peter. Brecker began playing the clarinet when he was seven before changing over to the alto sax. His ea rly m entors in­ cluded ja zz legends M iles D avis, C lifford Brown and John B U D W E ISE R REP Applications will be accepted until Wednesday, January 30, 1991 Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m, at: Hensley & Co. 2927 S. Hardy • Tempe, AZ 968-2471 M u st a p p ly in person. H ensley & Co. is an E qual O p p ortunity E m ployer “ Winning the G ram m y was v e ry special fo r m e, m y daughter was born on the sam e night,” he Said, adding that the birth m ade winning the G ram m y one o f the m ore m em orable experiences o f his life. The ja zz m usician said he is alw ays learning and that he s till has m usical goals fo r him self. “ I ’m learning about A frican music righ t now,” Brecker said. 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THE W S ICE/ t h e f a r s id e By GARY LARSON RUN, HOBBES.’ DADS A SNOWGCOU TOO.' b y G a rry T ru d e a u D o o n e sb u ry )OUKNOW tUHATTHB/SW: P O N TfíP B A TT H E FIR ST AR AB S TOUSeBT m 'U - æ RETREATING SAUPtS. HQ C A U S Ih m "SPFFP BUM PS’ TH6TP5 NOTINTBRESTSP IN DeFdNPfNô THFIR COUNTRY, M M . THBY'Vß HIRBPTHB BR PS A N P US TO P O P FOR THBM, JU S T UKB THBV60T F & ffP lA lB TO PUMP THEIR O lí-, A N P m tOONPFR WHO TH BI'LLG ST TO CU A H U P THBPESBRT u u m m 'p e sa O B I.TH S JAPAN ESE SHOULPBE W Ol-PEGW P. POUF: / > J3 V- M3 In su d d en d isgu st, the th ree lio n e s s e s rea lized th ey had killed a to fu d e b e e s t — o n e o f th e S e re n g e ti’s o b n o x io u s health a n telop es, b y J u lie S ig w a r t R a in e y D a y s A T THE FLIGHT COUNTER, HAWAII... HMEWST AlOOO-HA? I'M LOOKING FOR M V LUGGAGE... FLIG H T ^ 3 ? 752 ... .. .OOOHÍ.. UM ... WE. 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In M aine, facin g a $160 m illion shortfall, a radio station held a bake sale. It raised $275. Thé idea cam e from a W M G X-FM listen er during a m orning talk show, said co-host Bob Anderson, The Jaycees in suburban Gorham Sent 10 dozen cookies, a bakery sent 50 loaves o f bread, and owners o f a horse farm in coastal W oolwich sent a horseshoeshaped Cake w ith a m essage addressed to Gov. John M cKernan: “ Good Luck Jock.” v m m rm trocess QUICKLY BEGINS/ . A m i f y o u ca n c u t t h e m u s ta rd , w e 'll c u t y o u a c a r e e r . We re looking for energetic people who are interested in preparing for a future in the advertising /marketing field. What does it take to "cut the mustard" in this fast-paced field? You must be depend­ able, dedicated, self-motivated, able to work independently, be a people^person, have sharp communication skills, be some­ what creative, enjoy a challenge, have a vehicle, be graduating no earlier than S ta te P re ss ASU S Morning Daily Newspaper spring 1992 and above all, the desire to give yourself the best possible chance of securing a better-than-entrylevel position upon gradua­ tion. The job includes selling, designing and creating advertising campaigns for valley retail businesses. interested? Let’s talk a little. Call me today. Jackie Eldridge 965-6555. Make a difference in your life. .hiring the best for success, State Press Page 25 W ednesday; January 16,1991 Talented outfield leads D evil charge T his is the second o f a tw o -p a rt Series p re v ie w in g th e 1991 A S U ba seb all team . T oda y’s in s ta llm e n t focuses on the p o s itio n p la y e rs . B y D A N ZEIG ER State P ress Shortly after the top-ranked ASU baseball team had com pleted one o f its preseason morning workouts, quick-witted Sun D evil coach Jim Brock was talking about the new dimensions at Packard Stadium. “ The centerfield fence has been m oved in 10 feet, but it’s about 3 feet ta ller,” Brock said. “ But it shouldn’t be dw elled upon too much because as soon as M ike K elly leaves, w e'll certainly m ove it back.” E veryone is thinking about M ike K elly — and why not? A fter all, ASU possesses sim ply the best collegiate pilayer in the nation in the 6-foot-4, 190-pound cen terfielder from Los Alam itos, C alif. K elly was named ASU ’s 11th National P la y er of the Y e a r last season a fter a breathtaking cam paign in which he hit .376 with 21 home runs, 82 R B I, and 20 stolen bases. Brock, who pays K e lly the ultim ate tribute by saying he is the best player he has ever coached (six of ASU ’s previous 11 player-of-th e-year w inners played fo r B rock), said he has adm ired his star’s handling of the som etim es overwhelm ing attention. “ I can’t im agine anyone having a m ore d i f f i c ul t jo b , f r o m a p s y c h o lo g ic a l standpoint, than M ike has,” Brock said. “ A fter a year that he had, you usually go on to the next league, but now he has" to com e back and prove it wasn’t a fluke. W ith a ll the talk, it’s m ind-boggling what he has to deal with this year.” K elly, the only player in Am erica last season to com pile at least 20 homers, 20 stolen bases, 80 runs scored and 80 R B I, is projected as this June’s No. 1 draft choice by Baseball A m erica , but the junior said he tries to avoid reading his clippings. “ I try to do m y best just to block it out of m y m ind,” K e lly said. “ Stuff lik e that can have a tendency to go to your head and I think it can add even m ore pressure if you keep it in the fron t o f your mind. It ’s a challenge trying to accom plish all the expectations that people place in front of you.” K elly is the cornerstone of the Sun D evils’ “ M illion -D olla r O u tfield ,” a deserved nickname since the trio, which also consists o f leftfield er Jim Austin and righ tfield er Tom m y Adam s, could garn er that much in signing bonuses should they decide to turn pro a fter this season. Austin, a junior Who batted .358 with 17 homers, 57 R B I and 40 stolen bases last season, joined K elly as the only two players in the conference to rank in the top 10 of every offen sive statistical category. As a m em ber o f the U. S. National Team who batted a com bined .389 at the Goodwill Games and W orld Championships last summer, Austin is one o f ASU ’s most determ ined players. “ Austin is a v e ry outstanding college baseball p la yer,” Brock said. “ I f it wasn’t fo r K elly, Jim would have been the best ou tfielder in the conference last season. But right now, I would say that there is no doubt in m y mind that he is one o f the top three outfielders in the country.” Adam s is undeniably gifted , as his ,310 average, 13 hom ers, 51 R B I and 37 stolen bases from last season attest, but his attitude has been a concern. The junior has W restlin g to g e t 2 o f its in ju red b ack fo r Friday B y LO R EN Z O SIER R A Jr. State P ress The news for the ASU wrestling team is just what the doctor ordered. With the toughest part o f the season righ t around the corner, the fourth-ranked Sun D evils (7-1-1) m ay be com forted in knowing that some key injuries m ay have mended. Slated to. start in F rid ay’s m atches against Fresno State and Bucknell and Sunday’s home match against Oklahoma State are senior Andy M cNaughton (150 p o u n d s) and so p h o m o re R e x H o l m a n (1 9 0 ). McNaughton was out o f action due to a r ib injury, and Holman was sidelined with a knee injury. “ This brings up your confidence,” said graduate assistant coach Thom O rtiz about the return of McNaughton and Holman. “ W e’ll be stronger with Holman back as w ell as M cNaughton.” A third ASU starter, sophomore R ay M iller (158), is currently listed behind freshm an G ary Weatherspoon on the depth chart. M iller, an All-Am erican, is questionable and the status o f his knee injury w ill not be known until the m atches draw closer. The three injured w restlers account fo r a total o f 24 Sun D evil victories this season. The return o f M cNaughton and Holm an w ill allow G. T. Taylor and K elly Gonzales to return to their regular w eight classes. L a st weekend at the National W restling Team Championships, T aylor had to w restle in the 177-pound class and Gonzales m oved up to 190. This weekend, T a ylor w ill return to 167 and Gonzales w ill com pete at 177. “ They’re regrouping w ell,” Ortiz said. “ They’ll come through.” In addition to his return to the m at, Holm an (8-0-1) has been selected to com pete in the N ational W restling Coaches Association A ll-Star Classic. Holman w ill square o ff against Northw estern’s M ike Funk Jan. 28 at the P alestra in Philadelphia. Taylor and M iller have been named as alternates fo r * the event and m ay see action. A S U cen terfie ld er M ike K e lly , the c o n se n su s national c o llsg ia te p layer o f the year In 1990, returns a s p art o f the Su n D e v ils' “ M illion -D ollar O u tfie ld .” been ham pered by injuries and in and out of B rock’s doghouse throughout his ASU career, but the 20th-year coach said he thinks Adam s, a third-team preseason A llAm erican, can put his personal problem s behind him. “ Th ere’s e v e ry indication at this point that Tom m y is com m itted to com ing along,” Brock said. “ I have no reason to b elieve that he’s not going to consistently get it done. Things with him could not be any m ore encouraging than they are right now, and he’s defin itely perform ing how w e’d lik e.” ASU ’s in field m ay not command the atttention of the three which play behind it, but the group is no doubt solid. Perhaps the most interesting story going into the season is the progress o f third baseman Todd Turn to Baseball, page 26. WSU’s young faces put end to old ways B y D A R R EN U R B A N State P ress F or W ashington State coach K elvin Sampson, it is not d ifficu lt to find the reason fo r his team ’s turnaround from a disastrous 1989-90 cam paign. “ W e have som e hew players,” Sampson said. “ Basketball is a sim ple gam e. Our team is winning because w e have better p layers,” The Cougars com piled a 7-22 record last season, including a season-ending 18-game losing streak and a pitifu l 1-17 conference m ark. But w ith an influx o f new players, WSU has jum ped to an 10-4 start (2-2 in the Pac-10) that has encouraged Sampson. “ The fa ct that w e’re v e ry young is the biggest surprise to m e,” Sampson said. “ W e’re so young and inexperienced . . . W e don’t have any Seniors am ong our regu lar p layers.” Sampson is in his fourth season as Cougar head man, attem pting to rebuild a program that had finished in 10th place in the Pac-10 once and eighth place tw ice in the four years before he arrived. “ I think you need to throw out the first tw o years I was here, ’ ’ Sampson said. “ The program was in turm oil when I got here, so this is rea lly only the second year of rebuilding. I think w e’re w here w e should be.” Sampson added that the strongest aspect o f his squad was its opportunity to im prove into next season with a ll the young players. WSU em ploys a three-guard offense that is composed of N eil D errick, Bennie Seltzer and Terren ce Lew is. D errick, a 6-foot-3 junior college transfer, has em erged as the Cougars’ leading scorer. His 17,5 points per gam e is eighth-best in the Pac-10. “ W e knew when w e signed D errick he was goin g to be good,” Sampson said. Seltzer, a 6-foot sophomore who m ade the Pac-10 A llFreshm an team a y ea r ago, is averagin g 11.3 points and fiv e assists a gam e w hile leading t h e . offense at point guard. But of the th ree, Sam pson said L ew is, a 6-foot-4 JC tranfer from Alabam a, is the key to the team . “ Lew is is probably our best play­ e r,” he said. “ H e’s the guy who is Turn to Cougars, page 27. I W ashington’s optim ism higher after Pac-10 w in against U o fA B y D A R R EN U R B A N State P re ss In any rebuilding plan, a coach looks fo r that first breakthrough gam e — a big W against a good team that signals that his program has turned the corner. ' F o r W ashington and second-year coach Lynn Nance, that gam e was against U ofA Jan. 3, when the Huskies beat up the No. 4-ranked W ildcats 70-56. “ I think w e’re beginning to m ake som e inroads teaching,” Nance said. A fter f inishing ninth in the Pac-10 last year, N ance has only begun to rebuild the Husky program . W hile W ashington is in no w ay ready to challenge fo r the conference title, it has nine wins in its firs t 13 gam es a fter finishing 11-17 in 1989-90. “ W e’ve gotten out to a good start and that helps attitudew ise,” Nance said. Nance utilizes a controlled half-court offense and m ostly zones or a sagging man-to-man on defense. W ith its slow­ down style, Washington leads the Pac-10 in defense, surrendering only 66 points a gam e. “ P la yers have a d ifficu lt tim e playing the gam e w hile thinking w here they need to be,” Nance said. “ Converting to a new system slows the athletes down.” Another im portant factor in the Washington im provem ent has been 6-foot-5 forw ard Dion Brown. Brown, who averaged 11 points and 6.6 rebounds as a junior, has blossom ed as a senior, pouring in 19.5 points per gam e on 56 percent Shooting. Brown also leads the Huskies in rebounding w ith an 8.8 per gam e average. The other Washington forw ard is 6-foot-8 senior M ike Hayward. H ayward, the Pac-10 freshm an o f the year in 1988, is averagin g 10.5 points and 6.6 rebounds this season. “ I think H ayw ard has continued to em erge,” Nance said. “ P a rt o f that is that M ike knows what his role is and what is expected o f him .” ' H ayw ard, who has n ever quite lived up to the prom ise o f his freshm an year, is com ing o ff a disappointing junior cam paign in which he scored only fiv e points p er gam e. “ We never had any doubt that M ike was capable,” Nance Turn to Huskies, page 27. Page 26 State Press W ednesday, January 16,1991 M en ’s ten n is b e g in s seaso n w ith B Y U B y D A R R EN U R B A N State P rase ASU ’s tennis player Brian G yetko knows little about incom ing opponent B YU . “ T y D etm er is up there (a t B Y U ), isn’ t h e?” G yetko quipped. T h e n in th -ra n k ed Sun D evil m en’s team w ill not be fa c in g any Heism an Trophy w i n n e r s w h e n it G y e tk o opens the regu lar season today at 1:30 p.m. a t the W hiteman Tennis Center. Instead, ASU w ill m eet an unranked team they rea lly know nothing about. Sun D evil coach Lou Belken said he does not want a letdown entering dual-m eet play. “ The last two years w e’ve taken a loss ea rly in the season and w e want to avoid that,” Belken said. ASU enters the regu lar cam paign with a four-senior nucleus: Gyetko, Joel Flnnigan, D ave Lom icky and Dan M arting. Finnigan captured the 1990 U. S. Am ateur title w hile Lom icky won the 1990 U. S. Am ateur indoor title. Gyetko alsb took the Canadian Singles title during the summer. In addition, the Sun D evils have received solid play from two transfers, sophomore Chris Gambino and ju nior Ross Matheson. Juniors M arc Rothchild, Bryan G eiger and G reg Prudhom m e round out a roster that does not include one freshm an. During the fa ll preseason, ASU had m ixed results in singles play, w hile G yetko and Lom icky, ranked second in the nation in doubles, headed up a tough doubles contingent “ It ’s been a tough fa ll,” Gyetko said. B a s e b a ll_ _ -_ - Compagnie Internationale Continued from page 25. Steverson (189, four hom ers, 27 R B I), whose m ediocre statistics should jum p this season thanks to his corrected eyesight. Steverson, a sophom ore who turned down a $300,000 offer from the St. Louis Cardinals to attend ASU, was diagnosed as having an unusual vision problem that caused him to lose perception of the baseball as it neared the plate. A fter glasses and contacts fa iled to rem edy the problem , Steverson underwent eye exercises nearly an hour each day . last summer. The result was a .469 average during the fa ll, a 148 percent im provem ent over last spring. “ The fa ll helped m e out a lo t,” Steverson said. “ It ga ve me confidence, and that’s som ething you need in this sport, or you’ll be ruined. R ight now, 1 can’t say anything solid o f how I ’ll play this year, but I can say I feel much better now than I did last year since I ’m a little m ore experienced.” Shortstop K urt Ehmann, a junior college transfer who batted .413 last yea r at M endocino C ollege in Ukiah, C alif., is one o f the two newcom ers who w ill start fo r the Sun D evils. “ Kurt has been encouraging,” Brock said. “ H e’s not as fa r along w ith the bat, but w e expected that. Our main concern w as whether or not he would be a better-than-average college shortstop, but w e think that w ill happen.” One o f ASU ’s m ost versatile players is junior M ike Scialo (.244,10 hom ers, 46 R B I), who w ill see his duties this season lim ited to starting a t second base. Scialo, who has also played at first, third and the outfield during his career, led the team in home runs fo r the firs t two months o f last season. D ave Robson (.328, eigh t H R, 42 R B I) returns as the first “ W e’v e traveled around a lot. W e need to get focused on the season.” Although the Sun D evils are unfam iliar with the Cougars, Gyetko and Belken agreed the lack o f inform ation should not hinder ASU. “ Som etim es w e get overconcerned with who w e’re playin g,” G yetko said. “ W e need to concentrate on what w e’re doing.” “ Tennis players by nature categorize people,” Belken said. “ It works in the locker room , but out on the court, everything is equal. W e’re strivin g not to (ca tegorize) this yea r.” E X P R E S o iiil u k S k s y U jj > ASU B A SEB A LL SCHEDULE JA N U A R Y — (19) A lum ni Gam e, (25-27) Long B each State, (30) U C -R iverside. FE B R U A R Y — (1-3) Loyola M arym ount, (4-6) St. M a ry ’s, (8-10) Florid a State, (15-17) Texas, (19) G rand Canyon, (22-24) Stanford, (26-27) R ice. M A R CH — (1-3) U C LA , (545) Texas Tech, (7) C hicago C ubs, (8-10) C aliforn ia, (12) P ace and G rand Canyon, (15-17) H aw aii, (22-24) UofA, (28-30) U SC . A P R IL — (1) St. Francis, (5-7) C alifo rn ia, (9) New M exico State, (12-14) Stanford, (10-21) U S C , (26-28) U C LA , (30) U N LV . M A Y — (1) U N LV , (10-12) U ofA, (15) G rand Canyon, (16) G rand Canyon, (17) U. S. International. *ita lic s ind icate hom e gam es baseman a fter a season highlighted by his being named to the N C AA W est I I all-tournam ent team . The junior, who earned the starting job in M arch and never relinquished it, hit .400 with six R B I in the playoffs. The other newcom er who w ill start this season is catcher Clarke R ea, a junior college transfer who replaces the departed E ric H elfland. R ea Was a honorable mention juco All-Am erican at Scottsdale Community C ollege a fter hitting .401 with seven hom ers and 58 R B I. “ The biggest chore was to keep R ea out o f pro b a ll,” Brock said. “ Now that w e’v e done that, w e don’t want to take a step back from what w e had last year. W e won’t, so w e’re very pleased about that.” Brock said he was unsure about who would be the designated hitter, but narrowed his choices to outfielder Scott Samuels and pitcher Doug Newstrom against righthanded pitchers and catcher Jim Henderson and first baseman Brian Smith against southpaws. 4ifo i D u fíio r CLOTHING CONCEPTS T O P S • P A N T S • S K IR T S • D R E S S E S • ASSO RTED SPORTSW EAR Thursday January 17 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Sheraton Mission Palms Mission Room 60 E. 5th St. (Near Campus) GAMMAGE PRESENTS Martin Luther King, Jr. Tribute Concert starring & 0DETTA & RICHIE HAVENS and his Band GAMMAGE AUDITORIUM Tuesday, January 22 • 8 p.m. Tickets: $18, $15 (Half price for all ASU Students, Faculty and Sltaff) » tu r 7 pm-Close 254 Drafts $2 Pitchers 50« Pint Drafts . ^ 9 , 7 pm-Close $P° Long Islands $ t Margs 7 pm-Close 254 Drafts $2 Pitchers S i50 long Islands SI Mares Sing along w ith Karaoke Tickets on sale atGammage, ASU Activity Center and all Dillard's Box Offices. 7 pm-Close INF0RMATI0N/CHARGE: (602)965-3434 $1 Shooter Specials 7 pm-Close L IV E M U S IC 254 Drafts $2 Pitchers W 5 pm-Çlose IN G S SHRIM P GAM M AGE Take part in celebrating tie work and sprit ot Dr Martin Lufrier King, Jr. and ti particpale in a candelighl ceremony from Cady Mall to Gammage at 7 p.m. Co-sponsored by the Multi-Cultural Awareness Board of ASASU. V K I / 'O . N \ M A I I l M \ I R S I I Ï Rural & Apache Tempe im »n m Page 27 W ednesday, January 16,1991 TRO CADERO S Phoenix keeps fighting to keep ‘93 Super Bow l B y Th e A sso cia te d P ress F U N IN T H E S U N I N 1991 EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT CABOW ABO COUEGEMGHT NOCOVERA ll NIGHT PH O E N IX — The 1993 Super Bowl, the first ever granted to Arizona, is only an N F L ow ner's vote aw ay from being m oved to Pasadena or San Diego, N F L v ice president Joe Browne said Tuesday. H ow ever, the Phoenix ’93 organization won’t g iv e up without a fight. “ It ain’t over ’ til it’s over, so w e’ll do our best to keep the gam e in Phoenix,” W illiam R . Shover, chairm an of the non-profit group, said. “ You must rem em ber that the com m issioner does not have a vote. A ll he can do is recommend. “ W e’re preparing a new presentation that w e’re taking to Haw aii with us,” Shover added. The two C alifornia cities lost out in the M arch 1989 vote which awarded the $200 Cougars Continued from page 25. the glue to our team .” Freshm an E ddie H ill and JC transfer Tyrone M axey, a 5-foot-10 lea per w ith a 35-inch vertical jum p, are the backcourt reserves. Upfront, WSU starts 6-foot-8 freshm an Rob Corkrum and 6-foot-8 JC transfer Ken Critton, with 6-foot-10 junior Brian Paine com ing o ff the bench. N either Corkrum or Critton truly fu lfill the center position, but Sampson said that does not m atter to him. “ I put m y best athletes on the floor,” Sampson said. Without a dominant big man, the Cougars re ly on the 3-pointer. WSU has attem pted 308 threes as a team , m ost in the Pac-10, converting 39 percent. Sampson said that despite the horrible season a year ago, he was confident 1990-91 would go w ell in Pullm an. “ As bad as last year was, w e signed most o f our guys in N ovem ber,” Sampson said. “ W e knew that w e’d be better this season. You ’re only as good as your p layers.” And what does Sampson think now, four gam es into the Pac-10 season? “ W ashington State is an upcom ing program ,” Sampson said. “ Don’t ' get carried aw ay, w e’re not going to win the Pac-10 this year, but w e h ave a solid chance at a winning season. B eating ASU (95-86 Jan. 3 in Pullm an) was no flu ke.” Sampson added that the conference is getting better as a whole. “ I really lik e the Pac-10,” he said. “ Th ere’s a lot o f parity in our league.” H u s k ie s Continued from page, 25. $ 1 .0 0 W e ll and D rafts till 11:00 PM and $ 1.50 Souza T equila p lu s re g iste r for a trip to Cabo San Lu ca s to be g iven aw ay February 6 for 3 days/2 nights at the El President^ . m illion plum to the Phoenix suburb of Tem pe. Pasadena and San D iego officials have been told to submit bids during the annual N F L owners m eeting in mid-March in H aw aii, Browne said from N ew York. He said Commissioner Paul Tagliabue wanted “ to allow Arizona to continue its long-time political debate over a Martin Luther King holiday without the Super Bowl as a factor.” / ■"' Arizona voters on Nov. 6 rejected a paid state holiday in honor o f King. “ M any o f our players regard M arlin Luther King as a role m odel. W e’re encouraging them to be role models, and I think it would be unfair to ask them to go play their championship gam e in that state,” he told reporters in K noxville, Tenn., on Nov. 9. said. “ He’s a quality athlete who has had a frustrating career. I would like to see him have a good rest of the year and go out feeling good about himself.” Freshm an M aurice Woods starts at center, but Nance gives thé bulk o f the minutes o f the rem aining frontcourt slot to 6-foot-6 junior forw ard Doug Meekins. Meekins has scored 15.9 points per contest oh 56 percent shooting in his sixth-man role. Senior guard Brent M erritt is the rem aining dou ble-figu re scorer fo r the Huskies, scoring over 12 points per gam e. r I I I D espite their quick start, Washington has encountered their share o f injuries and illnesses in the early season. Senior reserve center Todd Lautenbach, who underwent open-heart surgery in high school, has m issed tw o gam es due to com plications from his heart m edication. Sophomore guard Quentin Youngblood missed the season’s firs t six outings due to arthroscopic knee surgery. “ W e’ve had som e dings and injuries and w e’re not a team that can afford that,” Nance said. BPS E «« P ~ " MEXICAN POOD ' FREE DINNER is 1 I University R o sita ’s P laza, 960 W . U n ive rsity, T em p e, 966-0852 This Sunday Night you can be a star and Sing along with Trocaderos’ own KARAOKE MADNESS plus REVERSE HAPPY HOUR AND 2 for 1 s ALL NIGHT LONG. 1H S MJBSDffi F1 M 6SATIJM WIN G R EA T SKI VACATIONS TO FAIRFIELDS S N O W BOWL, STEAMBOAT, TELLU R ID E AND VAIL, CO LO R AD O . TROCADEROS 7117 É. THIRD. AVE ♦ SCOTTSDALE - 990-3466 B With purchase of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Tempe location only. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 1-31-91. 17” inch cheese pizza w/coupon Welcome Back ASU V v X \ "-Vy 1V J - V 7 PAPA JAY’S PIZZA difference between ordinary and extraordinary /s a few more minutes. 966-4292 804 SOUTH ASH (2 BLO CKS W EST OF MILL) 1 FREE DELIVERY F I <1 State Press W ednesday, January 16,1991 Page 28 State Suns boun ce Bullets; ‘X ’ perfect T h e A sso cia te d P ress PH O E N IX - - X avier M cDaniel m ade a ll 12 of his shots in scoring 24 points, and Tpm Chambers had 23 as the Phoenix Suns routed the Washington Bullets 127-97 Tuesday night. K evin Johnson had 20 points and 10 assists as Phoenix won its sixth straight home gam e. J e ff H om acek had 15 points and rookie Cedric Ceballos added 14, and M ark West contributed 14 rebounds. Bernard K ing, the N B A ’s leading scorer with a 31.2 average, paced Washinton with 26 points. Led ell Eackles had 18 and H arvey Grant 17 as the Bullets lost their fifth straight against Phoenix. Th e Suns n ever trailed, leading 35-19 a fter a first quarter in which they m ade 71 percent o f their shots (17-of-24). Johnson had 11 points in the period and three of his team ’s seven steals. He scored six points during a 22-5 run that put Phoenix ahead 35-19 with 43 seconds left, W ashington closed to 39-30 on P ervis E llison’s dunk 8:37 Press 965-7572 U h ■ before h alftim e but Dan M ajerle cam e o ff the bench to score 10 points and give the Suns a 67-52 lead at interm ission, K in g, with 19 points, and Eackles, with 14, accounted fo r 33 o f the Bullets’ first-h alf points. M cD aniel had 18 by halftim e, Johnson 16 and Chambers 13. Chambers had fiv e free throws and a three-point play for an 86-58 Phoenix lead with 5:57 le ft in the third period and added another three-point play with 56 seconds le ft to m ake it 100-68. The Bullets trailed 103-70 entering the fourth quarter and got no closer than 28 from there. M cD aniel sat out the fourth qi& rter and m issed tying the A rizon a V eteran s M em orial Coliseum record o f 13 consecutive field goals, set by Kansas C ity’s Steve Johnson on M arch 24,1983. The team record o f 15 was set by W alter D avis on Feb. 25, 1983 at Seattle. 1 «zg C omputers P lus C ompany AltnewMacsnowinstock BROADEN YOUR HORIZONS IMac Classic 2 Meg/40 HD.......$1249 IM a c L C 2 M /4 0 H 0 12" R G B color $2299 I M ac la i 2 M / « » i r m g * » _ $ 3199 tn o g e W rito rl________ $399 FMOMlLMCiWHMir $2199 Macintosh memory expansion .CALL HARD DISK DRIVES for Mac (internai or external) 40M EG ....S389 • 100 M EG.......S599 Read the State Press OPINION HPLaserJet»»$939 UM $1599 2 Meg up^ad* for U NP, M _$ 146 PootScrlpt Cartridge*4M AppleTakF$229 DeskJet 500forPC orcmipeaeie.$ 465 DeskWrtlartorMac...-------$679 PaintJetColor Printer«____$899 PIh m Manli, a youaie ■ lenity /Student. ■aSSSS 955-1404 1/1Ä91 Aut horized De aler Section EARN $ 15'$20 PER HOUR (Full or Part-Time) Teaching Bartenders Since 1933 Last Chance on 1990 Bicycles Flexible Hours & Personalized Training •COED Courses •Serving age in AZ is 19 r e a lle g e S tu d e n t D is c o u n t”! (Bring in thtì'coupoa & coltegelDl I ^ $ 1 0 0 O F E lT p T I O ^ N N ' * e„ u t C ' b \ V .e V 0 < Financing Available AMERICAN BARTENDERS SCHOOL 968-7657 1523 E. Apache A.S.U. W ELCOME THIS / MONDAY - O PEN MIC NITE 99° Longnecks 8:30-11:30 p.m. TUESD AY - WING NITE 9 for 99* 7-10 p.m. W EDNESDAY - $2.81 60 oz. Pitchers 8:30-11:30 p.m. TH URSDAY - WING NITE 9 for 99*R ™ 10 p.m.-Close SUND AY — 2 f o r i Pitchers 4-10 p.m .v ¿.WAREHOUSE DELI & PUB 130 E. University Drive • 966-7788 DIAMOND BACK — 1990 Models Reg.: $319.95 $349.95 $469.95 $559.95 Sorrento Topanga Ascent Ascent EX SALE: $259.95 $299.95 $399.95 $449.95 DIAMOND BACK — 1991 Models Reg.: $324.95 $399.95 $484.95 $569.95 $669.95 $879.95 Sorrento Topanga Ascent Ascent EX Apex Axis SALE: $299.95 $349.95 $429.95 $509.95 $599.95 $789.95 »upon e x p ire s T--16-91. • Offer good O n ly with coupon. R eg . $49.95 iie n lf H e lm e S H ^ ^ I f S g s M I Q W $ 3 2 .9 5 Guaranteed best prices for all your cycling needs... All 1990 bicycles specially priced for back-to-school riding. Come In for more great savings on bikes, clothing & accessories... ILE i irnmns. 2010 S. Rural Rd. Tempe, AZ 968-8011 NEW A N D U S E D BIK ES Broadway N4 S W C o rn er o f R u ral a n d B r o a d w a y Open 7 Days - Student Discounts sm t Page 29 W ednesday, January 16,1991 C la s s ifie d s ACCIDENT LAWYERS BAKER & MARCUS ANNOUNCEMENTS FR E E CONSULTATION ir A S K ABO UT REDUCED PERCENTAGE FEES FOR A SU STUDENTS AND FACULTY T elep h o n e Inquiries W e lco m e 4 3 8 -1 2 1 2 C o rp o ra te F o u n ta in s • 4 6 2 5 S- W en d le r I D r., S u ite 111 • T e m p e APARTMENTS AUDITIO N IN Tucson for 140 paid posi­ tio n s for 26th season of m usical dram a “ T exas,” Saturday, January 26, noon5pm, M ain Stage— Theatre A rts Center, U niversity o f A rizon a. Perform ances in P alo Duro Canyon near A m arillo, nightly except Sundays, Ju n e 12— August 24, 1991. R ehearsals begin M ay 19. For more inform ation, c a ll (806)655-2181 o r write: Box 268, Canyon, T exas 79015. Lovely, comfortable, spacious 2 bed, 2 bath apts. Close to ASU . Available now. 330 S. Beck, Tempe. Call or see Cody D ATING W ISELY. W ho? How ? W hen? Education? For inform ation, w rite W inners P ublication s, 525 W est Broadw ay no. 772, Aurora, Illin o is 60507. 1 AN D 2 bedfoom 8, $199 sp ecial m ove in. Covered parking, fireproof, p o ol, very near A S U , quiet. 1 bedroom : $310, 2 bedroom: $380 968-6926 or 967-4568. Westridge Apts. 1 block off campus 1 bed:$38s 2 bed: $525 $160 move In Call Today! •ASU MEMORIAL UNION* 12 EXP. 1 5 EXP. 2 4 EXP. 3 6 EXP Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache EXTRA I SETS io~ I I PER PRINT T h is p h o to fin is h in g co u p o n m u st a cc o m p a n y o rd e r. 110, 126, 35m m o r D is c 'c o lo r p rin t film (c-41) R o lls a re p ro c e s s e d a s so o n a s v o lu m e p e rm its. N o t g o o d w ith a n y o th e r c o u p o n / o ffe r/ d isc o u n t. N o re p ro d u c tio n s. O ther Locations 1739 E. Broadway___ ..967-7590 The Cornerstone Mall , . .968-0027 3 2 2 8 S .M ll.........966-6836 930 W. Broadway. . . 968-8593 Any Fu ll ro ll at lim a of processing. Coupon must accom pany order. » E X P IR E S 1-311-91 m J m ■6834 I 5110 S. Rural____ .839-6834 1840 E Warner. . . .820- CO UPO N S GO O D THROUGH 1-31-91 1 block east o f Rural LEVEL mi THIS SUMMER, DRIVE A $200,000 COMPANY CAR IN ALASKA N E E D A back issu e o f the State P re ss? Com e down to the basem ent o f M atthew s Center. If we have w hat you need, it’s yours. READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ THE LEADING TOUR OPERATOR IN ALASKA. IS HIRING DRIVER/GUIDES • Must be personable, conscientious and responsible • Must be 21 and have a good driving record • Excellent wages and benefits • Paid training and round trip airfare from Phoenix 2 B LO C K S from A S U . Two bedroom s, pool, laundry, dishw asher. $400; m ove-in sp ecial. 1014 E ast Spence, Su nrise Apart­ m ents, 968-6947, READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ NEWLY REMODELED 1 bedroom 2 blocks from ASU Pool, free cable TV, covered parking, laundry facilities. A sk for specials for A SU students. 1700 S. College, Tempe 967-7212 B E A U T IF U L N E W la rg e 1 a n d 2 bedroom s. W alk to A S U . Pool, laundry room , 1 M ock south o f U niversity on 8th Street. C ape Cod Apartm ents, 968-5238. B U Y IT, se ll it, find it, te ll it in the State P re ss C la ssifie d s. CO M M O N S O N Lem on. 2 bedroom furn­ ished, for 2 o r 4. 838-6621. LA R G E 2 BEDROOM AP A R TM EN TS Perfect for roommates seeking a quiet location close to A S U . Pools, lighted tennis court, and much morel! Eastridge Apartments 1522 E. Southern Ave. 839-9947 Locating read\ H A Y D E N 'S F E R R Y R E V I E iy G ra y Lin e o t A laska 2 BED RO O M , 1 bath apartm ent, w alking distance to school (Rural/Apache). $350 per m onth. A vailab le now. C a ll P au l at 837-9071 or 968-1002. W ANTED: 100 people. W e w ill pay you to lose 10-29 pounds in 30 days. A ll natural. 1(800)772-8884. /READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ A SU A R E A . Studio and 1 bedrooom for rent. $260 and lip . 966-8838 or 967-4906. G R E A T LO CATIO N , clo se to A S U and downtown Tem pe. 2 bedroom , 2 bath a p a rtm e n t. $ 3 5 0 . F re e c a b le T V . 967-4789 FR E E VIDEO tape that can change your fin a n cia l future forever! C a ll 230-5393, 24-hour m assage. LE T JO H N C asablan cas take your picture and show It to the w orld. Free adm ission to our grand opening event at the Phoenician o n January 26 a ll day. For m ore inform a­ tion, c a ll the John C asablan cas Studios at 946-8422. ' ■’ ' , - ■ 2 M A ST E R su ite s left in beautiful Papago Park V illa g e. A m en ities include w asher/ d ryer, re frig e rato r, fire p la y , se cu rity system and lots o f clo se ts. 266-5555 or 877-3232. 894-6468 1 B ED RO O M , furnished, 1 m ile to A SU , laundry. $300. C lean, quiet. 968-5279. ^ APARTMENTS 437-1048 R o om m ate m atch in g se rvice a lso availab le. 437-1048 ANNOUNCEMENTS STATE PRESS ClassMeds U N E R A O R A TES: (Present this ad for additional $25 savings.) Free gift to all for stopping by! M O V E IN free! No deposits for apartm ent, phone, u tilitie s. Ja n u a ry’s rent already paid! N ice 2 bedroom , 1 bath apartm ent near A S U . C a ll Todd: 835-6076 o r Chris: 483-8407. $429/m onth. O N E AN D two bedroom apartm ents from $330. Q uiet com plex near A S U . Laundry, pool. 921-7229, 991-3078. G E T P E R S O N A L — Send som eone sp e cia l a State P re ss personal ad. A 15-word personal is only $1.751 Com e down to the basem ent o f M atthew s Center to p lace your ad today! And rem em ber to bring your student ID) ST U D IO — C H A R M IN G , p riva te . 10 m inutes from A SU . $250 p lus $50 u tilitie s. 966-9487. 15 w ords o r le s s : $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 1 0 + days 15« each additional word. T he first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Personals (15 words o r less) are only $1.751 « P e rso n a l a d s m ust b e p la ce d at the C la s s ifie d s O ffice in M atthew s C en ter basem ent, and m ust show stud ent ID to p la ce p e rs o n a l.« Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). CLASSIFIED DISPLAY R ATES: 1 time: $7.85 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. inch 6+-times: $6.50 per cof. inch Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed befo re 10am). CALL NOW 965-6731 GENERAL INTEREST MEETING ANNOUNCEMENTS Thursday, January 17, 1990 MU Mohave Room 222 • 7 p.m. ■ g oC d en 2^ 2, N otio n o C H c m o tS o c ie ty F O R F U R T H E R IN FO R M ATIO N C O N T A C T : * T H E N E W OFFICERS: Student Employment Office or Call (206) 286-3203 collect (§). Holland America WLstours ...Welcomes all Golden Key members back to an exciting new semester. ...Join us for our First Meeting to be held January 22 (place to be announced Fri.) •For more information, call 964-8909 Ad sponsored by ASASU P ay 30 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT APARTMENTS E N J O Y T H E Q U IE T ! 1/2 B lo c k F r o m C a m p u s Beautifully furnished, h u g e 1 b e d r o o m , 1 b ath ; 2 b e d ro o m . 2 b a th a p a r t­ m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le TV. heated pool, and s p a c io u s la u n d r y f a c ilitie s . F rie n d ly , courteous management. S t o p by to d a y ! Terrace Road A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra c e 966-8540 RENTAL SHARING FURNITURE S P A C IO U S 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo, 2 levels, w asher/dryer, availab le im m ediate­ ly. $575. 949-1707 PRIV A TE RO O M , furnished. Free washer/ dryer, pool, nicely decorated. B ike A SU , C olleg e Avenue. 893-2577, 965-2814. $180. T E M PE /A SU /SK Y H A R BO R . Neat and d e an 1 bedroom ; w asher/dryer, pool. $360. 396-9877. R E A L FIN D !!! Fem ale room m ate, 2 bedroom , 2 bath. $240, '/a u tilitie s. Fire ­ place, spa. G reg, 966-7516. O FF IC E FU R N ITU RE sale! D esk from $39.95. C h airs from $4.95. Bookcases from $19.95. Com puter furniture, file s and more. A rizona O ffice Liquidators, 5064 South 40th Street (on 40th Street, south of Broadway). 437-2224. U N IVERSITY SH AD O W S. 2 bedroom , 2 bath. C athed ral ce ilin g . $500/m onth. W a s h e r/ d ry e r/ re frig e ra to r. M a rty , 899-5082. RO O M A V A ILA B LE at Los Prados Apart­ m ents. $200/m onth p lus utilities. Jim , 967-4492. W A LK TO A SU . 2 bedroom , 2 bath townhouse. Fu ll-size w asher/dryer, a ll appliances. $465/m onth. 843-2640, ask for H al, or 264-6308, leave m essage. NO O N IS the deadline to get cla ssifie d lin e r ads in the follow ing day. Don’t m iss it! M atthew s C enter basem ent, 965-6731. RENTAL SHARING HOMES POR RENT 2179 E A S T Howe. U nfurnished one bedroom house. Fenced backyard. $250 rent, $200 deposit. 966-6308. 2 B ED RO O M , 1 bath w ith refrigerator and double carport: $450. 1 bedroom , 1 bath d u p le x: $250. C a ll K e n K em ptoh, 844-5900, John H all and A ssociates. 3 B ED RO O M , 2 bath, fam ily room, dishw asher, large yard. C lo se to A SU . C lean, quiet. $600. 966-5279. 3 BED RO O M , 2 bath cul-de-sac home. Pool, garage. Southern/H ardy area. $785. A vailab le 2/1. 921-2486. A D V E R T IS ER S! R E A C H 45,000 readers d a ily in the State Press. B E A U TIFU L LA R G E 3 bedroom , 2 bath house. W alk to A SU . B eautiful enclosed yard. 894-0288. T E M PE , SIN G LE fam ily hom e. 3 bedroom , 2 bath, pool, fireplace, 2-car garage. 1,800 square feet. $775/m onth. C a ll 493-8447. 2 BED RO O M , 2 bath, w alk to A SU . fu rn ish e d to w nh o use, w ash er/d ryer, m icrowave. $250/m onth. 944-4997. 2 BEDRO O M /2 bath townhouse, 1.5 m iles from A S U , a ll am enities, quiet area, clean, nonsm oker, m ale/fem ale. $275/m onth p lus Va u tilitie s. 921-3166, leave m essage. 3 BED RO O M /2 bath cul-de-sac hom e to share. Pool, garage. C lo se to cam pus. $250 p lus Va u tilitie s. $250 p lu s V5 utilities. A vailab le 2/1. 921-2486. _ A A A O N E fem ale nonsm oker for 3 bedroom , 2 bath condo. Own room, w asher/dryer, dishw asher, near A SU . $208 p lus W U tilities. 966-7699. F E M A L E N O N SM O K E R to share 2 bedroom , 2 bath apartm ent. Near A SU . $220.11 p lus Va e le ctric. 275-6538. F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R to share 3 bedroom house in Dobson Ranch. $250 p lus V i utilities. P le ase c a ll 756-2760. FE M A LE N O N -SM O KER , own m aster bedroom with bath. F u ll size washer/dryer. $25Q/month p lus Va u tilitie s. 967-9354. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS POR RENT FE M A LE RO O M M ATE wanted, nonsm ok­ er, tp share 2 bedroom , 2 bath. A ll am enities. $280 plus !A u tilitie s. 820-0339. 2 BED RO O M , 2 bath condo. Living room, kitchen, nook, patio, balcony, 2-story, fireplace, 2-car parking. $525 per month. (619)282-864V ; FE M A LE RO O M M ATE, 10 m inutes from A S U . C lean 4 bedroom . Patio, pool. W asher/dryer, ce ilin g fans, furnished. $250. V« u tilitie s. 966-2360. 2 B ED RO O M , 2 bath town hom e near A S U . W asher/dryer, pool, jacu zzi, covered parking. Q uiet. 96&9331 FE M A LE RO O M M ATE wanted to share apartm ent at Cam eron Creek. Private bedroom /private bath, non-sm oker. Look­ ing for som eone fun, outgoing, and energetic. Very clo se to A S U . $290 plus Va: u tilitie s. C a ll 968-5564. 2 M A STER bedroom s at Q uests Vida. F ire p la c e , w ash er/dryer, m icrow ave. $650/m onth. C a ll M ark at 786-0050. 32N D S T R E ET /C A M E LB A C K area. 3 bedroom , 2 bath, 1,450 square feet; 2-car carport, com m unity pool. $650 unfurn­ ished, $800 furnished. 949-5281. A lice Jacobsen Realty. 3 BED RO O M , 2 bath luxury townhouse, private deck, pool, tennis, near A SU . $790/m onth. 968-7027. (W- A V A ILA B LE IM M ED IATELY 2 bedroom , 1% bath condo. 15 m inutes to Tem pe, Scottsdale, Paradise V alley, downtown. 8634066. LU X U R Y 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo. A ll a p p lia n c e s in c lu d in g w ash e r/d rye r. $525/m onth. 375-3300, Tama. M AZA TLA N D ELU X E bi-level condo on best beach. Sleep s 6, pool, m aid, kitch­ enette. A vailab le M arch 17 through M arch 24. $600. (415)331-1376, evenings or w eekends: (415)255-9467, days. PA PA G O P A R K V illa g e I. 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo, $630. A ll applian ces, w asher/ dryer. N o P113 375-9383. A vailab le im m ediately. ANNOUNCEMENTS State P r o t« Wednesday, January 16,1991 FE M A LE TO share large m aster bedroom in 2 bedroom /2 bath condo in Papago Park V illa g e II. $275/m onth includes utilities. C ontact D om inica or H o lly at 968-2653. H A Y D EN SQ U A R E, m aster room, clean livin g, 829-8160, John. $350. LA R G E RO O M in n ice home clo se to cam pus. Study, sw im m ing pool, kitchen, and laundry facilit»es.#$250/m onth p lus V* u tilitie s. 967-1787 or 8934834. M A LE/FEM A LE TO share 2 bedroom/bath condo, furnished, pool, volleyball. $260 p lus u tilitie s. 829-9281. M A TU R E N O N SM O KER fem ale to share 3 bedroom , new hom e. $275/m onth plus Vt u tilitie s , d ep osit. F ire p la ce , garage, W asher/dryer, dishw asher, extras. M ust lik e anim als. Ahw atukee area. 893-7046. NO N SM O KIN G FE M A LE for 3 bedroom/2 bath, fu lly furnished. W alking distance to cam pus. 921-1177. OW N RO O M in 3 bedroom condo in South S co ttsd a le . $185/m onth, Va u tilitie s. 945-6225. ANNOUNCEMENTS RO O M M ATE W ANTED: $238/m onth with u tilitie s included. Coronado Apartm ents. M cC lintock and Broadway. C a ll Brian, 731-3043 SP A C IO U S T H R E E bedroom , two bath­ room, vaulted ce ilin g s, w asher/dryer, 2 m iles from A SU . Je rry, 730-1441. S P R IN G T R EE L U X U R Y 2 bedroom /2 bathroom condo. Pool/spa, w asher/dryer, covered parking, vaulted ce ilin g s, more. M ale/fem ale, nonsm oker. Broadw ay/ M cCtintock. $270, W u tilitie s. 220-7004, 921-9677. T W O B E D R O O M a p a rtm e n t. O w n bedroom , furnished, and own bathroom. $284.50 p lus Va u tilitie s. M eridian Com ers, M ike, 894-5356. W O M EN TO share townhouse, private bed, nonsm oker. $200 plus sp lit utilities. 253-1210. Q U EEN -SIZE M A T T R E SS box spring and fram e. Brand new, upgraded top, sacrafice: $195 takes a ll. 275-8177. COMPUTERS IBM PS/2 M odel 25. In perfect condition, 3V t” drive, w ith m onitor and keyboard, 512K mem ory. $475. A lex, 784-9908. LA P TO P personal w ord processor with p rin te r, a u to sp e ll, gram m ar ch e ck , thesaurus. A sking $500. C a ll 966-4129. PC CARE - PC RENT CO M PU TER R EN TA LS STA R TIN G A T $65 Mth. D ELIV ER Y A V A ILA B L E F U L L S E R V IC E C E N T E R 10% D ISCO U N T O N S E R V IC E W /THIS A D ROOMS POR RENT PR IV A TE RO O M , private bath in house. Serious student, prefer grad. $250/m onth, free u tilitie s. 820-5799. STU D EN TS: NICE furnished room, 10 m inutes from cam pus, includes kitchen and e lectric. 947-4258. HOMES POR SALE V/a M ILES from A S U . 2 bedroom , 1 bath. $59,900. John H all. C a ll M arty G riffin, 844-5900 or 899-5082. M A C S E . 30 meg hard drive, extras, desk included. F irst $1,500 takes a ll. 831-7885, 839-9947. TO SH IBA T1000 laptop com puter, 10(y IBM com patible. 720k diskdrive, 512k mem ory. $500. 940-1945. FO R SA LE : Two tw in m attresses (extralong), lik e new. $60 or best offer. C a ll 964-4849 HELP WANTED— GENERAL ....* 1 1 9 ' *129' STEAMBOAT 2. $ AN D 7 NIGHTS FORT LAUDERDALE *137' 7 NIGHTS PANAMA CITY BEACH 7 NIGHTS .* 1 2 9 ' CORPUS CHRISTI / MUSTANG ISLAND MOTORCYCLES 5 AN D 7 NIGHTS HILTON HEAD ISLAND 1982 HO N DA CB650. O nly 18,500 m iles. New tires, battery. Bluebook: $865, w ill sacrifice: $800. 894-5154, leave m essage. CALL TOLL FR EE TODAY 1- 800- 321-5911 ’Depending on break datesana iengtn of stay F U L L FER R IN G bra for 1989 N inja 600R, excellen t condition. 784-0668, M ark. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES LIK E NEW , ‘87 Honda scooter. L e ss than 500 m iles. $900. Evenings, 860-6700; days, 833-0722 F R E E VIDEO tape that can change your fin a n cia l future forever! C a ll 230-5393, 24-hour m essage. BICYCLES CEN TU RIO N LEM A N S road bike with accessories, $350. Kevin, 784-9696. DIAM O ND B A C K A scent m ountain bike, 1989 m odel, lila c and sm oke, good condi­ tion. 784-0668, Mark. AUTOMOBILES WHEEL DEAL W AN T TO go to M ardi G ras in New O rlean s? 2 a irlin e ticke ts, 2/7 to 2/12. $300/offer. 967-5253. HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! Inexpensive Spring Break trips Mexico— Hawaii—Mexico 1(800)543-9205 HELP WANTED— GENERAL Sell your car In the State Press Classifieds! y o u can even charge your ad with visa, M astercard or A m e r i c an Express! L e t s ta te p re s s C la s sifie d s w o rk fo r you! Y O U S A Y it, we’ll d isp la y it! O nly in State P re ss C lassified s. bike for SPR IN G B R E A K packages to Cancún and M azatlan. Low, low p rices. Reserve your spot now and save. C a ll Bob, 967-4050. 1984 R E N A U LT A llia n c e , burgandy. 2-door, 4-cylinder, autom atic, power steer­ in g , A M /F M . G o o d tra n sp o rta tio n . $1,200/offer. 990-8385. *108* ... * 1 1 2 ' 1990 ARAI Signet helm et, red, w hite and black, large. 784-0668, M ark. TRAVEL LO W DOW N, ho q ualify. 3 bedroom , 3 bath. U niversity/Price. M ary Ram seyer, 820-5506, Century 21 A ll Star Realtors. BED LO FT fo r sale. $120 or best offer. C a ll H olly. 784-8327. 7 MIGHTS SOUTH PADRE ISLAND 5 A N D 7 NIGHTS ST A T E P R E S S Production Departm ent p ro v id e s ty p e se ttin g , p a ste -u p and process cam era services. C a ll Donna at 965-7572 fo r rates and inform ation. U SE D XT w ith hard drive, $495. U sed AT w ith hard drive, $750. 967-1482 2 BED RO O M , 2 bath condo. Fireplace. W alk to A S U . $49.900. Owner, 991-6992. FURNITURE RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NO W ! DAYTONA BEACH TIR ED O F getting speeding tickets! Protect yourself with the best. Passport radar detector, $150. 921-9632. C A N N O N D A LE TR IATH LETE sale! $185. 969-9217. 2 BED RO O M , 2 bath condo with fireplace, a ll appliances. By com m unity pool/spa. C lo se to A SU B y owner. $67,000 C a ll 968-2499 fo r apppointm ent. U N B E LIE V A B LE V A LU E ! Lender-owned 2 bedroom Scottsdale condo near Hayden/ M cDow ell. $36,000. T h e Prudential A rizo­ na R ealty, P atricia F a ir, 991-3300. T A X R E FE R E N G E library, - leg al and g e n e r a l. A ll o ffe r s c o n s id e re d . 1(800)869-2088 or (602)488-4220. 966-6360 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS POR SALE S P R IN G T R EE CO N D O , buy or lease. V/z m iles from A SU . 2 bedroom /2 bath, w asher/dryer, poolside. 967-8248. AUD IO EQ UIPM ENT: 15” Subw oofer w ith 140-watt am plifier, equalizer, double-tape deck, big speakers w ith 15” woofer. Great p rices, c a ll Doug, 829-1135. 5 a n d 7 NIGHTS NEW 286 S Y S . $795 IN H O M E w ith toother, 51, daughter, 19. Fem ale only. 4 m iles from cam pus. $250 inclu d es u tilitie s. 838-6224. TRAVEL MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE HELP WANTED— GENERAL $100 FO R 10 hours/w eek. Part-tim e deliv­ ery of food, M onday-Friday, 11am to 1pm. Need own vehicle. 2352 E ast University, no. 101, Phoenix or C all 275-8894. AD M IN ISTRATIVE A SS IST A N T needed to help m anage a sm all consulting firm in Chandler. Flexib le hours (30-40). M ust be custom er oriented, have strong W ordPer­ fect 5.1 sk ills, self-starter, good organizer, car. 963-4540. AR CH ITECTU R A L/D R A FTIN G STU D EN T needed to work part-tim e doing estim at­ ings and take-offs. N ear A SU . C a ll for inform ation, 967-1451. A SU IS ca llin g on you...to join the Telefond team ! Convenient on-cam pus loca­ tion, Sunday-Thursday shifts available, 5:30-9:30pm, earn up to $10/hour speak­ ing w ith alum ni nationw ide. If you have a positive attitude and w ant to gain valuable experience, p ick up job referral no. 7652 at the Student Em ploym ent o ffice o r ca ll us at 965-6754. H iring now!!! ■' B E C O M E A N expert in personal finan cial planning and m ake great m oney w orking part-tim e. C a ll 948-5667. FORTUNE niCORPCmATION If you a re a positive, enthusiastic person who Kkes to have fun am i m ake money, WE ÖFFER: p ^ e x ib le h o u rs ,C ■;‘.f «Guaranteed Salary •E xcellent bonus program •G roup M edicai t »Paid vacations Mesa 2 LOCATIONS 831-0356 Tempe 964-7164 Is HELP WANTED— GENERAL PART-TIME Part Time Jobs!! COLLECTORS E nlighten th e w orld! Place an announcement in the State Press Classifieds i/Zk, 9 6 3 - 6 7 3 1 Seeking self-assured individuals with excellent com­ munication skills & ability to effectively deal with customers. Collection experience is not mandatory as w e will train motivated candidates. Positions pay $7 per hour and offer a com petitive .benefits p a ck a ge including TU ITIO N A S S IS ­ T A N C E for qualified em p loyees through ZALE CORPORATION The world's largest jewelry retailer. If you’re energetic & can work in a fast-paced environment, w e invite you to find out more about these opportunities. Apply in person, Monday - Friday. JEW ELERS FIN A N CE1 « 1221 N. C ollege Ave. (College/Curry) Tem pe, AZ 85282 829-5800 Equal Opportunity Employer This Coupon Good for $10.00 BONUS on your First Full Week’s Paycheck. W e h a v e th e id ea l jo b fo r students (m in im u m a g e IS ) to w o r k in w h a t h as been d es crib e d as “ th e industry o f the fu tu re” , a n d g a in so m e o f the m o st v a lu a b le w ork ex p e rie n c e possible. Check out these exciting facts: • C O N V E N IE N T H O U R S - G R E A T PAV • E X C E LLE N T C A R E E R O P P O R T U N IT IE S • N O S A T . N IG H T S O R S U N D A Y S « FLE XIBLE S C H E D U LE S > V A R IE TY O F B O N U S P R O G R A M S • M O O E R N O F F IC E 'S M ctro ce n te r an d C o rn e rsto n e M all > R E F E R R A L IN C E N T IV E S • G R O U P AC TIV ITIE S M any o f our part-time em ployees go on to become full-time em ployees with full frin g e benefits and earnings between <25,000 ana 160,000 per year. Call Mr. W ilson 943-1244 - PHOENIX/TEM PE • 968-4457 StatePres» HELP WANTED— GENERAL B O O K K E E P IN G /A C C O U T IN G , P A R T TIM E, for entrepreneur w ith offices at Scottsdale and Cam elback Road. Do monthty/annual personal and corporate books, coordinate w ith the C P A , $5 per h o u r. 9 4 1 -0 5 7 2 . P re fe r a d v a n ce d com puterized sk ills. C A SH IER POSITIO N, fle xib le hours. Next to ASU Punctual, accountable, excellent custom er service. A pply in person: G entle Strength, 234 W est U niversity, Tempe C A STIN G CA LL: Entertainm ent com pany seeks talent for print, T V , m ovies, photos. C E E C Entertainm ent, 274-6362. CUSTOMERSERVICE $7/hour Phone reps needed for large financial institution. Up to 17 hours/week. C u stom er s e rv ic e or retail e x p e r i e n c e needed. Call 381-3830 for appt. CH ILD C A R E p o sition s available. The Chandler Y M C A is looking fo r individuals who are 21 years and old er to work part-tim e for their afterschool ch ild care program s. Experience w orking with c h ild ­ ren is required. P le ase p ick up an applica­ tion in person at the C handler YM C A , 396 W est R ay Road. C O R K ‘N C leaver accep ting applications for lunch w aitress, lun ch hostess, evening hostess, and evening cocktail. W ill train. Concern with appearance, relia b ility and personality are im portant. A p p ly in person, M onday-Friday, 2-5pm o r by appointm ent. 5101 North 44th Street (44th and Cam elback) 952-4585. C O U N S E LO R S FO R boys' cam p in M aine. O penings in m ost activities: W ater Safety Instructor, Tennis, Basketball, Crafts, Archery, Lacro sse, Soccer, etc. Upper classm en preferred. T errific work­ ing co n d itio n s, fun and in teresting sum m er. W rite: Cam p C edar, 1758 Beacon Street, B rookline, M assachusette 02146 or cad: (617)277-8060. E X C E L L E N T A P P A R E L sa le sp e rso n needed. Hourly p lus com m ission, up to $7.50 per hour. Saturday and Sunday only at Park and Sw ap. Experience required. Can M r. Better, 944-0189 G AM ERO O M A TTEN D AN T Honest and dependable, able to work unsupervised. $3.80 per how , fle xib le hours. Apply in person: P layers C hoice, Cornerstone MaM, Rural and Unive rsity . G IR LS, G IR LS, girts, boys, boys, boys. B icy cle rickshaw d rive r wanted. Up to $10 per hour. Part-time/fuH-time. Apply in person M onday, Tuesday, W ednesday, 2pm sharp: 225 W . U niversity, no. 109, Tem pe. 894-9155. TELEM ARKETING N o e x p e rie n c e ne ce ssa ry . National company needs 6 people to schedule appts. $5/hr. guar, plus commission. After 2 wks $6/hr. Good work environ­ ment, no high pressure sales. Work hrs.: M-F 4-9pm, Sat. 8:30am-2pm Mill & Broadway Call anytime 829-3910 M A N U FA C TU R IN G C O M PA N Y needs part-tim e help, $4.25 per hour. Can 967-3060 o r 831-6669 N A T IO N A L M A R K ET IN G firm seeks m ature student ot m anage on-cam pus prom otions tor top com panies this school year. Flexib le hours w ith earnings poten­ tia l to $2,500 per sem ester. M ust be organized, hardw orking and m oney m oti­ vated. C a ll Lena at (800)592-2121, ext. 115. NEW FAST-G RO W IN G autom otive detail b usiness looking for dependable, hard­ w orking em ployees. F lexib le hours, start­ ing at $5 per hour 75*6856. TUTORS Page 31 W ednesday, January 16,1991 HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL N EW FIN AN CIAL com pany looking for account executives to c a ll custom ers. $300 to $500 week. 921-8167. TEN N IS JO B S — Sum m er children’s cam ps— Northeast— M en and women w ho can teach children in the Northeast. G ood salary, room and board, travel expense. W om en c a ll or w rite: Cam p V ega, P.O . Box 1771, Duxbury, M assa­ chusetts 02332, (617)934-6536. M en caN or w rite: Cam p W inadu, 5 G len Lane, M a m a ro n e c k , N e w Y o rk 1 0 5 4 3 , (914)381-5983. O IL CO M PA N Y reps h irin g im m ediately for our Tem pe office. $200-$500 per week, fuR- or part-tim e. Flexib le hours, w ill train. CaH 921-1103. P A P A JA Y ’S has im m ediate openings for counter help, d elivery d rivers and cooks. Evening hours. 990-2279. P E R FE C T C O LLE G E jobs: S ite Coordina­ tor: $5.64 p er hour, M onday-Friday, 1 30-6pm. C onducts a ll aspects of a youth recreation program . M ust be experienced and w ork w ell w ith children. Assistant: $4.36 per hour. M onday-Friday, 2-5:30pm. H elps coordinator conduct d a ily youth program s. A b ility to speak Spanish help­ ful. A pplication deadline: 1/31/91. Loca­ tion: South Phoenix. Contact L isa Drovin a t th e P h o e n ix D ow ntow n Y M C A , 253-6181. EO E. PH O N ERO O M , 2 shifts, 7am-2:30pm and 2:306pm . $6/hour p lus bonuses. Gary, 949-9431. R E LIA B LE ASSISTA N T . Sophom ore or junior, excellent secretarial sk ills are required. M acintosh know ledge is a plus. M onday through Friday, 8:30am to 5pm, out of John HaM and A sso ciates, Scotts­ dale office. C a ll D ick Sh efrin or C indy M ille r only, 948-0550. Rose Sales The Rose Company is now hiring fo r rose sales in restaurants and night clubs. Must be at least 19 and have reliable transportation. Call between 10am and 6pm for interview. 921-8855 W ANTED: 100 people. W e w ill pay you to lo se 10-29 pounds in 30 days. A ll natural. 1(800)772-8884. HELP WANTED— CLERICAL A M ED ICA L o ffice in Scottsd ale needs part-time/fuM-time help. M ust have good cle rica l and typing sk ills. WHI train for m edical. 941-3812. R ECEPT IO N IST. JE N N Y C raig W eight Lo ss C entres seeks m ature, enthusiastic ind ivid uals w ho enjoy w orking with people, accurate w ith figures, excellent phone s k ills and lik e s a busy, fast-paced environ­ ment. Evenings and Saturdays. O pening in Scottsdale. CaH R ene, 9496119. HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE BA N Q U ET S E R V E R S needed. W ork at prestigious resorts around your school schedule. A p p ly im m ediately: A pple O ne, 20 E ast U niversity, S u ite 101 (U niversity and Mid). B U S T E R S R E ST A U R A N T is now hiring experienced food servers, bussers and hostesses. Part-tim e and futt-time posi­ tions available. P lease apply in person, 8320 North Hayden, 951-5850 H O ST ES S W AN TED, part-tim e A pply in person at 640 South R ural, Tem pe. 3456044. R ETA IL S A LE S , fle xib le hours. Candle shop on 5th Avenue in Scottsdale. For more inform ation, please c a ll 946-4142. S U M M E R JO B S . C ounselors/sum m er children’s cam p/Northeast— Top salary, room /board/laundry, tra ve l allow ance. M ust have skW in one o f the follow ing a ctiv itie s: A rch e ry , c ra fts, b a se b a ll, b a ske tb a ll, b icyclin g , dance, dram a, drum s, fencing, footbaH, golf, guitar, gym nastics, hockey, horseback, English, juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photo­ graphy, piano, rocketry, rollerblading, rop es, sa ilb o a rd in g , sa ilin g , scu b a , soccer, track, w aterski, w eights, wood. M en c a ll or write: Cam p W inadu, 5 G len Lake, M am aroneck, New York 10543 (914)381-5963. W om en c a ll o r w rite: Cam p Vega, P.O . Box 1771, Duxbury, M assa­ chusetts 02332, (617)934-6536. SUMMER— TENNIS, water sports, afl field sports, crafts, piano counselors needed for top-notch children’s camps in North East: C all A rle n e howl M A LE O R fem ale bartender wanted at fun neighborhood bar. 16-30 hours per week. $8-12 per hour. A p p ly 2-4pm , The W oodshed 1 ,19 W est Baseline. N EW JA P A N E S E restaurant w ill be taking applications on January 20 through 25, 1-5pm for w aitresses and kitchen helpers. Part-tim e and fuH-time position s available. P le ase apply in person at Kobe C lu b, 1845 E ast Broadway, 4316725. SW IM M ING JO B S (W ater Safety Instruc­ tor) — Sum m er child ren’s cam pus— Northeast— M en and wom en who can teach children to sw im , sw im team , beauti­ fu l pool and lakes in the Northeast. Good salary, room and board, travel expense. M en c a ll or write: Cam p W inadu, 5 G len Lane, M am aroneck, New York 10543, (914)381-5963. W omen c a ll o r write: Cam p Vega, P.O . Box 1771, D uxbury, M assa­ chusetts 02332, (617)934-6536. T E M P E C O N S T R U C T IO N com pany w ants outgoing person w ith b asic compu^ ter sk ills to conduct telephone survey to update custom er database. Prior tele­ phone experience helpful. 5 days per week, flexible 4 hours per day- M orning or afternoon. $5 per hour. CaH 966-1862. TUTORS M ATH 210 tutor. 5 sem esters experience, senior ele ctrica l engineering. CaH M ark at 7846612. TUTORING GALL GIL MYERS ANYTIME 9- 212-211 -Leave A Message on Machine State-Approved Tutor Professional instruction in accounting and finance ATTEN TIO N G R E E K S . Sp rin g Break packages to Cancún and M azatlan. Low, low prices. Reserve your spot now and save. CaH Bob, 967-4050. H A P P ILY M ARRIED professional couple from Northern C a lifo rn ia w ishes to adopt newborn. WM give your baby lo ts o f love, security, and a w onderful future. CaH our attorney colle ct. (406)288-7100. FLYIN G FIN G E R S ha s M adntoeh/laser quality and now F a x -a -S h k i CaH 946-1551 fo r details. SERVICES TYPIN G , W O RD p rocessing, graphics, custom com puter program m ing, P C help. Sharon, 8926281.________ __________ _ B R A D — G LA D to see you back from England. Have a spiffy sem ester. C-ya! Steen s. C A TC H TH E sp irit o f Sorority Lifo. Get inform ation about A S U ’s 13 so ro rities at the free a ll sorority inform ation day. W ednesday, 1/23, from I0am -2pm in the Ventana Room at the M em orial Union. CHI-O A CTIV ES! Bew are o f L.O .C . CO M E AN D learn everything you ever w anted to know about sorority life on A S U ’s cam pus. AH wom en a re invited to attend a free inform ation day about sorori­ ties. W ednesday, 1/23, from 10-am-2pm, in the Ventana Room at the M em orial Union. D EE- TH IS is your la st sem ester as a Sun D evil. Let’s m ake it the greatest!! -Love, Dum. D O N T P LE D G E a fraternity— join one. R ush ZBT. You say it, w e 'll display it! O n ly in State Press Classifieds. D O N T T R U ST R usty. Don’t trust Rusty. D on't trust Rusty. D on’t trust Rusty. Nope. Nope. Nope. G E N T L E M E N A T A S U — J o in o u r fraternity— Don’t pledge another. Rush ZBT. K EN D A LL, I lost your phone number. P lease c a ll me at 497-8301, R ich from History. 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S PO R TS & WINGS CHILD CARE 11 screens W oodshed II B A B YSIT T E R W AN TED to play with darting child ren, afternoons. $6/hour. N ear P aradise V alle y M all. 494-4392. 844-SHED For all your sports vrewing ADOPTION 1(800)4436428. S W E N S E N S T E M P E has im m ediate openings for w aitresses and sandw ich cooks. Day and nights available, fu ll- or part-tim e. Apply M onday through Friday, 4-5pm, P rice and Baseline. ADOPTION Students & Faculty A E R O B IC S ) 2 0 % OFF 1301E. University. Tempe 8B4-6S43 TO TH E good k isse r I m eet at cathouse and left m y g irlfrien d for. I w ant to see you. D an, 649-9073. RESTAURANTS/ BARS 2 satellites TYPING/WORD PROCESSING PERSONALS MUSIC S IN G E R W A N TS exce p tion a lly good piano player to accom pany on origin al and other tunes and for se ssio n w ork. M ust be able to read, arrange, w rite m usic and play by ear. AH equipm ent supplied. D etails: 8926077. A D O R A BLE, A D O PTED g irl looking for a Caucasian newborn brother/sister or both! WiHing to share my lo ving young Christian parents, dog, cat and Southern C aliforn ia hom e. P lease caH my 'm om and dad colle ct, T rish and P au l, (213)454-4695 or th e ir w on d erful fe m a le atto rn e y at (213)854-4444. PERSONALS PERSONALS on Valentine’s Day with a ■ State Press Special Valentine’s Day Personal 15 words for only Deadline: M onday, February 11 4pm (personals must b e placed m the Classified Office. Matthews Center basement. Must show student ID .a to p t a c 9 Jm Your Individual Horoscope P S Trances Drake: j 'i MF YOUR SPONS PLUUHI «1 _____ i______________ FO R THURSDAY, JA N U A R Y 17,1991 A R IE S ■"■OjE*"'' (M ar. 21 to Apr. 19) f C S ocia l prosp ects a re e x c e lle n t today. You’ll appreciate the good w ill o f friends and singles m eet with rom antic introductions. Tem pera­ m ent mav need watching tonight TAURUS ^ (A pr. 20 to May 20) W You r personality g o es over w ell w ith higher-ups today. Business and pleasure com bine to your advantage now. Compromise w ith a partner ton igh t G E M IN I nn (M a y 21 to June 20) T O Th ose w ho travel n ow w ill meet w ith romantic introductions. Deal­ ings with advisers are especially fortunate. You may fe e l at a stalemate w ith one w ork project today. CANCER . ^ (June 21 to July 22) n K Partners are in agreement now about the use o f jo in t assets. You have extra charisma and others w ill find you attractive. Guard against m oody behavior to n igh t LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) T C You’ll m eet w ith affection from others now. Partnership interests are happily highlighted. A family situa­ tion may require you r consideration ton igh t w a V IR G O (A u g. 23 to S ep t 22) ¿SsT Som a o f yo u w ill m eet with rom an ce through the job. Even though an assignment com es that pleases you, distractions could inter­ fere with w ork accomplishm ent now. L IB R A . (S e p t 23 to O c t 22) && Th ere’s a happy accent on leisure interests now. Joy com es through children and dating is a plus. Shop­ pers, though, could find themselves returning an item. S C O R P IO ^ (O c t 23 to Nov. 21) This is a go o d tim e to add a decorative touch to the home o r to j£ogjnrjßhM 99^jJvi^ have others o v e r fo r dinner. You’ll attract m ore flies w ith honey than vinegar now: Don’t b e seif-insistent. S A G IT T A R IU S (No*v. 22 to Dec. 2 1) flv Local travel m ay have romantic overtones. Th e enjoym ent o f artistic interests is favored now . It’s a game o f one-up-man-ahip w ith one associ­ ate today. C A P R IC O R N ^ (D ec. 22 to Jan. 19) Some w ill derive extra income from a hobby now. It's a good day fo r shopping, but a differen ce o f opinion could arise w ith a friend about a money matter. A Q U A R IU S ^ (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You’ll be sprucing up your appear­ ance in som e w a y today. Your personality w ins the support o f others and you ’ll fin d this a good time to further your overa ll interests. P IS C E S w (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You may shut ou t the w orld n ow to spend extra time w ith a loved one o r an artistic pursuit. You m ay be disappointed that o n e acquaintance is prejudiced in outlook, YOU BORN T O D A Y often have administrative talents and w ill be frequently draw n to governm ent service. You w ill succeed in business fo r you rself and o ften have ap innovative fram e o f mind. Your attitude towards m on ey is not always consistent. On occasion you’re gener­ ous, but at other tim es you’re the penny pincher. You m ay be drawn to businesses allied to the arts, though you yourself m a y also be creative. Birthdate oft Anne Bronte, writer, M oira Shearer, b a lle t danseuse, Muhammad All, boxer. Read your horo­ scope dally in the s t a te P r e s s Classifieds. State Pi*» HOW CAN STUDENTS WM ■B M Tum eN AT SUN DEVE. BASKETBALL GAMES? $ ITS ALL M IM I SWATCH WATCH FREE TUITION SHOOT-OUT. S t u d e n t s ca n c o m p e te in a H a lft im e S h o o t- o u t fo r a fre e s e m e s te r o f tu itio n . S ig n -u p t a b le s lo c a te d a t t h e S o u th e n tra n c e . ASU vs. Arizona Jan. 17,7:00 pm a su vs. wosnmgcon Jon. SI, COO pm ASU B A S K E T B A L L ^ ITS HAPPENING. +