©Copyright, State Press, 1991 Tempe, Arizona Thursday, January 24,1991 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 74 No. 8 U.S. ground forces seize 6 at border DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia (A P) — U. S. arm ored cavalrym en skirm ished with Iraqis in the first firefight along the border, where fleets of tanks m aneuvered and dug in (Hi the desert floor W ednesday for the land war just over the horizon. The Am ericans captured six Iraqis and suffered two slight casu alties, the U. S. command said. It denied a Baghdad claim that the Iraqis also seized prisoners. For a second night running, Iraq fired off a double-barreled volley of SCUD m issiles at Saudi Arabia and Israel. No casu alties w ere reported im m ediately. One SCUD descended on northern Israel about 10 p.m . and w as intercepted by U. S.-supplied Patriot defense m issiles, the Israeli m ilitary said. At the sam e tim e, five SCUDs apparently w ere intercepted by Patriots over the Saudi cities of Dhahran, Riyadh, and Hafr al Batin, Saudi sources and w itnesses reported. If confirm ed it would be the first tim e the Hafr al Batin area had been targeted. The northern desert city i§ jwhere Arab m em bers of the anti-Iraq coalition have m ilitary encam pm ents. Each SCUD launch against Israel pushes the Jewish state closer to striking back at Iraq. At U. S. urging the Israeli leadership w as holding its fire W ednesday, despite a Tuesday night SCUD attack that caused dozens of injuries, including three'fatal heart attacks. The cloudy skies over Iraq began to d ea r W ednesday, and T aro to War, page 8. A S a u d i visitor to a hotel In Eastern S a u d i A rab ia view s the spent and shattered rocket booster c a sin g of a U .S.-m ade Patriot anti-aircraft m issile, one Of m any fired at In co m in g Iraq i S C U D m issie s In recent days. It w as not know n w ho w rote the “Love” not e on the booster. V - ; Universities prepare for heavy budget cuts By KEN BRO W N Sta te P re ss P residents of Arizona’s three universities w ill prepare them selves today for what could be an uphill battle for university funding, after the Joint L egislative Budget Com m ittee recommended heavy cuts on Tuesday. “We are going to discuss what the recom m endations really m ean,” said Molly Broad, executive director for the Arizona Board of R egents. “They are far, far greater than what appears on print.” The com m ittee recommended that ASU receive a general fund appropriation of $179.9 m illion — $52.1 m illion less than the $232 m illion that the regents requested for the ASU m ain cam pus. B ro a d c a lle d th e JLBC p la n an “intrusion” into student tuition funds b e c a u se th e c o lle c tio n s w ou ld b e transferred to other state accounts. She said the budget also could put som e federal subsidies in jeopardy if the state does not m eet m inimum requirem ents for federally m atched funds. The n ew est budget recom m endation com es on the heels of Gov. R ose Mofford’s budget proposal la st week prom ising no new taxes and cutting ASU’s m ain cam pus funding by more than $559,000. Broad said that Mofford’s budget w as less than what the regents wanted, “but at least it provided som e financial aid funding to the State Student Incentive Program .” Appropriation com m ittees in each house of the Legislature w ill break into four subcom m ittees, each dealing with sp ecific state agencies and ask Mofford’s E xecutive Budget Office and the JLBC to justify their recom m endations. The subcom m ittees w ill then present their findings to the full com m ittees. Then the L egislature w ill vote on a final budget. Appropriations com m ittees in both le g isla tiv e h ou ses w ill b egin budget discussions on Friday. Although the Legislature is far from finalizing any budget, U niversity officials s a id t h e e f f e c t s o f t h e J L B C ’s recom m endations would be devastating. ASU President Lattie Coor vowed the regents would coordinate their efforts to ensure adequate undergraduate instruction. “It’s a tough year financially, but the difference, between the governor’s budget and this com m ittee’s budget is very significant,” he said. “It w ill'd efin itely im pair som e of our g o a ls”’ M eanwhile student leaders said they have been dealt a heavy blow by the JLBC recom m endation, which does not include financial aid funding — dollars the regents reluctantly approved after a three-month struggle la st sem ester . “It’s totally unfair,” said Associated Students of ASU President Matt Ortega. “Legislators are bouncing their budget on the backs o ( students. I just don’t think they have a good idea of what’s going on here.” But he said the news is no shock. Turn to Budget, page 8. ASU students, faculty unite in prayer for peace B y JU D I TAN C O S S u ite P re ss About 40 ASU students and faculty m em bers gathered on Cady M all W ednesday to raise their voices in a heartfelt prayer for peace. The afternoon interfaith vigil was a nonpolitical w ay of bringing the cam pus together to support the American men and women stationed in the P ersian Gulf, as w ell as civilians living in the war-torn Middle E ast, said the Rev. Richard P yke, director of United Campus Christian M inistry . As tears w elled up in her eyes, Diane M urrieta, a senior psychology m ajor who has two brothers serving in the P ersian Gulf, said she hopes the prayers w ill work. P etitio n R ep etitio n : Mario Martinez returns with a Tempe voter registration initiative. P age 7 “When w e get together God listen s to u s,” she said. As ASU students prayed out loud, a woman stood back from the circle holding two signs dem anding an end to the bombing and freedom for a ll mankind. “President Bush, Am erican people w ant you to bring A m erica’s soldiers hom e a liv e,” read a sign held by Marian Shea, a retired com m unity college teacher from California. Shea, who liv es near ASU, said peace is v ita l to the nation’s youth. “I think it’s so iihportant that w e get peace for young people,” she said. “The life you save m ay be your own.” In the mid, vigil participants joined hands and raised them in the air as a sym bol of unity and optim ism . In th e N am e o f lo v e : ■ “We don’t see the world a s divided,” said the Rev. Wayne R ay, director of Episcopal Campus M inistry. “Even people of different faiths are brothers and sisters.” Freshm an elem entary education m ajor Brad Bolt said that peace eventually w ill arrive. “It doesn’t cost a whole lot to lo v e each other, but it costs a lot to k ill each other,” he said. With heads bowed and eyes closed, cam pus m em bers listened to P yke’s prayers for soldiers and leaders, for the innocent, the people of Kuwait, the oppressor and the “countries whose weapons are aim ed at each other.” “May the search for peace end hostility,” Pyke said. B ear Facts: ASU’s basketball team plays California Golden Bears tonight in Berkeley. P age 11 Today's w eather: Sunny w ith a high in the «nM 90s. Tonight: C lear w ith a low in the 30s. Classifieds.........................................,.—l 3 Comics.......................... »C rossw ord S ports.........................— Two King scholars discuss civil rights in Arizona and Arizona in civil rights. M agazine 10 •••••11 State Press Arizona’s population increases by 1 m illion PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona’s population grew by nearly 1 m illion in the previous decade, but figures released W ednesday by the U. S. Census Bureau show a trend toward city life and m ore em pty areas. The 1990 census found that every Arizona county but G reenlee gained population, but Phoenix failed to reach the 1 m illion plateau or clim b above the No. 9 Spot it occupied in 1980 among U: S. cities. The final figures also confirm Arizona’s position as one o f the nation’s fastestgrowing states and guarantee it a sixth representative in Congress starting in 1992. The state’s population grew 34.9 percent over the 10-year span, from 2,716,546 to 3,665,268. In prelim inary figures, which placed the sta te’s population at nearly 3.7 m illion, only Nevada and Alaska showed a higher growth rate. Mohave County gained 37,632 residents, ending with 93,497. Maricopa County grew 40.6 percent, but the figure represented m ore than 600,000 new residents of the Phoenix area. The county’s population increased from 1,509,175 to 2,122,101. Tucson’s growth w as slow er (17 percent) but is still robust. It grew by 59,005 residents to 405,390. Pim a County added 135,437 to 666,880, a 25.5 percent gain. Such concentrations cannot help but degrade the quality, state Department of Environm ental Quality spokesm an Bill Norman said. ‘‘For one thing, there are motor-Vehicle em issions. That certainly m akes that job a little bit tougher because the two big carbonmonoxide exceedance areas are in Phoenix and Tucson,” Norman said. He said the state’s requirem ent that m otorists burn oxygenated fuels in the two m etropolitan areas during the winter and the greater chance to car pool were offset by the amount of driving. Norman said the problem of wood-burning stoves and fireplaces probably is as severe in rural areas as in cities. “As far as im pairm ent of pristine lands, it actually m ight w ell be considered a boon except in areas that already have a problem, such a s the Grand Canyon,” he added. M obin Q ah eri, a sen io r econ om ic sp ecialist with the state Department of Commerce, said the report w as good news if further growth w as desired. Growth begets growth, Qaheri said, and m oves to ease “som e regulations which affect the cost of doing business in this state” and should influence other businesses to follow an influx of credit-card com panies. “I think we have a lot of the advantages now that we had in the ’70s and ’80s; for exam ple, the retirem ent m igration . . . we Still have the am enities in term s of golf, warm th in the w inter, our gold course and our resorts,” he said. Phoenix, which w as one of a scattering of Arizona cities* to challenge the bureau’s prelim inary figures, grew by 24.5 percent — 790,183 to 983,403 — without being able to m ove up. The capital city started out the 1980s in ninth position but dropped to No. 10 behind San Antonio in 1984. Phoenix later moved b a c k u p t o N o . 9 , a n d h e ld a 971,565-to-970,156 lead over D etroit for the No. 8 ranking in prelim inary figu res released in August. D espite gaining about 12,000 people in the final figures, Phoenix officials continue to m aintain the city w as short-changed because of problem s in the census bureau’s m ain office here, Councilwoman Mary Rose W ilcox said. The city’s estim ates an undercount of 18,000 — a loss of m ore than $3 m illion at the rule-of-thumb figure of $170 in federal funding per capita, she said. Larry Rodgers, a statistician with the Navajo D ivision of Community R elations, said he felt the Arizona portion of the census w as accurate. It showed 90,942 Navajos living on the sta te’s segm ent of the reservation, with only 22 living on Navajo trust lands in the state. Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at A SU that is presented a s a service to the University com munity . 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. M eetings •Alcoholics Anonym ous will have a closed m eeting at noon at the Newm an Center on College Avenue and U niversity Drive. •United Christian Cam pus M inistries will have a meeting at 6:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •Pre-Vet Club will have a m eeting at 4 p.m. in A G 101. •Engineering and Applied Sciences College Council will have a m eeting at 5:15 p.m. in E C G 228. Everyone welcome, •Public Relations Student Society of America will have a m eeting at 4 p.m. in the Stauffer Hall reading room. •American Marketing Association will have a m eeting at 4:30 p.m. in the M U Pim a Room . •Students for Sym ington will have a m eeting at 2:45 p.m. in the M U Navajo Room . All students welcome. •M UAB Film Committee will present “G lory” at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at the Union Cinem a, A d m issio n is $1. •Minority Pre-Law will have a m eeting at 3:30 p.m. in M U 208D. Everyone welcome. •A SA SU will have a m eeting at 1 p.m. in the M U Pim a Room to d isc u ss club and organization funding. •Hispanic B u siness Student A ssociation will have a m eeting at 3 p.m. on the third floor patio of the Student Services Building. •University Toastm asters will have a m eeting at 5:15 p.m. in the M U M ohave Room . •Water Polo Club will have a m eeting at 6:30 p.m. at the M ona Plum m er Aquatic Center. •Christian Students Fellowship will have a bible study at 12:30 p.m, in the M U C oconino Room . •Shotokan Karate Club will have a m eeting at 5:30 p.m. in the Student Recreation Center, Gym C. •Financial Assistance Association will have a m eeting at 3:30 p.m. in B A 286; •Baptist Student Union will have a m eeting at noon at the B S U Center, 1322 S. M ill Ave. •Public Program s College Council will have a m andatory m eeting for all officers at 3:30 p.m. in W ilson 132. •Native American Students Association will have a m eeting at 4 p.m. in the Student Se rvice s B uilding Multi­ cultural Lounge to elect new officers. •The Wildlife Society will have a meeting at 7 p.m. in LS 183. •Alpha Kappa Psi Professional B u sine ss Fraternity will have a m eeting at 7 p.m. in the M U C o chise Room . ASASU LECTURE SERIES • POLITICAL UNION Celebrate MLR Week with: Julian Bond Civil Rights: Past, Present & Future Friday, Ja n u a iy 25 1:40-2:30 p.m. Memorial Union Pima Room W orld/N atíon S it e Près» Cheney: "Enormous damage’to Iraqi army W A SH IN G T O N (A P ) D e fe n s e Secretary Dick Cheney pledged Wednesday to in flict “enormous dam age” on Iraqi troops w ith new bombing raids and left open the possibility that a land war m ight not be necessary to drive occupying forces from Kuwait. “ Our strategy for dealing with this arm y is very sim ple: F irst w e’re going to cut it off; then w e’re going to kill it,” said Gen. Colin Pow ell, the chairm an of the Joint C hiefs of Staff, who joined Cheney at a Pentagon briefing on Operation D esert Storm . Cheney said that one week into the ca m p a ig n , Saddam H ussein and his 545,000-man arm y in and near Kuwait rem ain “resourceful” and “ingenious.” “There m ay w ell be surprises ahead for u s,” Cheney said, contending that Saddam rem ains capable of mounting a m assive air strik e, unleashing terrorist attacks or launching m ore m issiles. Y et both Pow ell and Cheney painted a picture of an Iraqi air force and arm y that had been forced, by m ore than 12,000 air com bat and support m issions, to hunker down in protective bunkers. “ He’s not thrown a single m ilitary punch back at u s,” the general said. He derided the SCUD m issile as a “weapon of terror” against the populations of Israel and Saudi Arabia. But he also said the m issiles posed a “vexing problem ” for warplanes scouring Iraq’s v a st d esert in search of the m obile launchers. “If w e do have to go with our ground forces to push him out of Kuwait, it w ill be after w e have done enormous dam age to his ground forces” through intensified air attacks, Cheney said. “I think tim e is clearly on oiir sid e.” On Capitol H ill, a source present at a congressional briefing by m ilitary officials said law m akers were told that “only a couple of dozen" of the m ore than 12,000 air sorties had been aim ed at Saddam’s elite Republican Guard, encam ped in Kuwait and southern Iraq. The source, who spoke on the condition of anonym ity, said the law m akers had been told that the search for SCUD launchers in w estern and southern Iraq had diverted som e air attention from the anti-personnel phase of the battle plan. A second source, a m em ber of C ongress, confirm ed that account. Spy satellite photos seen Wednesday showed that at least one Republican Guard unit, an artillery position, had been hit hard by the bombing. “It looked pretty bad” in the photos, said the source. But the official cautioned that the guard is dispersed and that represented only one of m any enclaves. Until now, the source said, bombing has been continuous but rela tiv ely ligh t, “m ostly som ething to keep them aw ake.” Pow ell, arm ed with charts, graphs and drawings of the dam age done Iraq, ticked off a list of allied su ccesses: •Iraq’s 700 m ilitary aircraft have been “totally ineffective” and allied aircraft losses have been “very lo w . . . for an operation of th is siz e .’’ In air-to-air engagem ents, only one allied plane m ay have been lost w hile 19 of Iraq’s top Sovietsupplied planes have been shot down. Overall, 41 Iraqi aircraft had been destroyed w hile total U.S. losses in the first week amount to 10, he said. •No Iraqi aircraft has conducted a ground attack against allied forces or interfered with allied attacks, given that m ost of Saddam’s com bat aircraft have rem ained in their protective bunkers. •Iraq’s nuclear reactors at Tuwaitha near Baghdad are “gone, they’re done, they’re finished” w hile “considerable dam age” has been done to Saddam’s chem ical and biological w arfare facilities. •Iraqi forces have been forced to reduce, their radar activities by 95 percent since the opening of the war. The number of sorties flown by Iraqi aircraft has dropped from an average of 235 daily to 30 to 40. •Air activity from 66 possible take-off sites had been reduced, with activity spotted A—oclUd Pr— photo P ale stin ian s In B aq aa P alestin ian cam p W edn esday celebrate th * Iraq i attack on Isra e l T ue sday night. The m an on the right is h old in g a toy rocket launcher. O thers a re h o ld in g S ad d am p o ste rs and the Koran. during the preceding 24 hours from only five. The general also listed several setbacks, such as the SCUD search and the weather, which has hampered som e com bat m issions and photographic assessm ents of bomb dam age. Cheney said it w as im possible to say when Saddam’s entire force of SCUD m issiles m ight be destroyed, adding that the problem “could be with us for som e period of tim e,” Iraq’s command com m unication system , w hile undergoing serious dam age, has been forced to go on generator power, but is still operating, Pow ell said, apparently leaving Saddam in command of his forces. As w ell, he said, it w as difficult to assess the dam age done Saddam’s troops and tanks, given that such a m easure can only be taken when an arm y attem pts to get on the m ove. The Iraqi arm y is “sitting there dug in, w aiting to be attacked and attacked it w ill b e,” he said. Turn to SCUD, page 7, Baker says Israeli reprise might not hurt coalition A gu ard at the Llthuanina Parliam ent h o ld s on to h is rifle a s he tak e s a nap behind a barricade W edn e sday. It h a s been 10 d a y s sin ce the-barricades w ere put up in th e in sid e and o u tsid e o f the b u ild in g. Soviet soldiers seize one m ore building in Lithuania VILNIUS, U .S .S .R . (A P ) S oviet soldiers seized the central paper and dye w arehou se in the L ithuanian cap ital W ednesday, despite a pledge by President M ikhail S. Gorbachev to restore peace in the B altic republics. “This is sim ply an attem pt to hamper the press in Lithuania and certainly w ill increase the tension,” Lithuanian President V y ta u ta s L a n d sb erg is to ld a n ew s conference. Landsbergis said a telegram , which had been approved by the republic’s parliam ent, w as sent to Gorbachev saying the Soviet leader should order the withdrawal of all S oviet troops occupying buildings in Lithuania. Turn to Baltic«, page 9. WASHINGTON (A P) If Israel Struck back at Iraq it m ight not hurt the U.S.-led coalition, Secretary of State Jam es Baker said W ednesday . But he said the restraint shown by Israel after Iraqi attacks on Tel Aviv and Haifa “is som ething that is very much appreciated by the United S tates.” The attacks over three days claim ed three lives and injured m ore than 100 people. Baker’s statem ent w as the first by a Bush adm inistration official to challenge the assum ption Israel’s intervention would im pel Arab allies to quit the 31nation coalition. M ea n w h ile, B ak er p ro m ised to consider any request from Jerusalem for additional U .S. econom ic aid. “We’re proud of the assistance w e have been able to render the state of Israel through the years,” he said. “She has been one of our strongest a llies.” Isra eli F in ance M inister Yitzhak Modai on Tuesday told Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger, who is in Israel, that his governm ent w as seeking an additional $13 billion in econom ic aid over five years — $3. billion to cover losses from the Persian Gulf war and $10 b illion to help resettle Soviet Jew s. The United States already provides Israel with $3 billion a year in m ilitary and econom ic assistance, m ore than any other nation receives. Baker spoke to reporters after signing a scien ce and technology agreem ent with Mongolian Foreign M inister Tserenpilyn Gambosuren. Asked if an Israeli attack on Iraq would hurt the coalition, Baker replied: “It m ight n o t. . . but it’s som ething that is very much appreciated by the United States, the restraint that the government of Israel has shown.” His com m ent follows statem ents by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and other Arab leaders that acknowledged Israel’s'right to defend itself. V isitin g C apitol H ill, m eanw hile, Israeli Ambassador Zalman Shoval said his governm ent had not m ade a form al request for additional aid. The am bassador said Modai had explained to Eagleburger “the very difficult hardships in the financial field that Israel faces as a result o f the gulf crisis” and that those problem s have been shared with the United States. Shoval suggested that Israel would ultim ately seek payment from Iraq “one day when this w ar w ill be over and Iraq w ill pay reparations” to those it has harm ed. At the sam e tim e, the House on a vote o f 416-0 a p p roved a non-bin d ing resolution condem ning Iraq’s latest attack on Isra el, com m ending the governm ent’s restraint and declaring “heartfelt solidarity with the people of Israel.” The resolution also recognized Israel’s right of self-defense and reaffirm ed “A m erica’s continued com m itm ent to provide Israel w ith the m eans to m aintain her freedom and security.” The warmth of the House language reflected warm er relations between the two countries and whgt appeared to be an im proving clim ate on Capitol Hill for new aid to Israel. Opinion State Press You are there War causes new tensions among press, D an N ow ieki Columnist Considering the fact that w e’re now frontrow spectators in what has been trumpeted a s the m ost highly covered television war in history, why does it seem that the American public knows less now than it did before the war started? Now that the initial shock of George Bush’s whimper actually turning into a bang has dissipated, people are beginning to g et disenchanted w ith the optim istic bravado provided by the Pentagon jingoes. The Pentagon has claim ed on a daily basis that the thousands of air sorties conducted against Iraqi targets have been 80 percent effective. M ilitary spokesmen have also claim ed, on several different occasions, that the U. S. Air Force has achieved air superiority in the skies over Iraq and Kuwait and that w e’re this close (im agine a thumb and forefinger squeezed tightly together, if you w ill) to wiping out Saddam H u sse in ’s SCUD m is s ile la u n ch in g capabilities. Why then, ask Mr. and Mrs. Am erica, do SCUD m issiles continue to streak toward targets in Israel and Saudia Arabia? Why are coalition pilots still routinely shot down? Why is Iraqi télévision still on the air? These questions have been asked by reporters (and dodged by m ilitary press liasons) every day since the war began. The m ilitary has claim ed that adverse weather conditions have hampered reconnaissance efforts. Pentagon spokesmen have also su g g ested th at th e r e le a se of such inform ation would jeopardize strategic operations in the area. But those bombs w ere bought with your tax money . You have a right to know hòw much dam age you got for your dollar. With such an unparalleled m ilitary su ccess rate, one would think that the Pentagon would be overjoyed to provide evidence of the widespread destruction, if only to silence the nation’s skeptics and naysayers. Instead, the U. S. m ilitary has initiated som e of the strictest press restrictions ever seen during wartim e, giving more credence to the theory that this war w ill be won by the bayonet and not the Stealth fighter. Though a certain d egree of press censorship has alw ays been present during American war coverage, a happy medium is u s u a lly r e a c h e d b e tw e e n th e tw o adversarial institutions -4^ a blend of constraint and restraint. No such balance has been achieved in the Middle E ast. The Pentagon brass have put the squeeze on the press corps’ freedom of m ovement and com m unication, and the m ilitary censors have been working around the clock. It seem s as if the scope and depth of the telecom m unications revolution is far greater than the m ilitary m inds had suspected (they seem to have a penchant for underestim ating things), and the Pentagon is straining its resources to keep Hie information flow under control. As a result, the news com ing out of the Middle E ast has been reduced to a trickle. The im m ediacy of CNN’s satellite news updates provides a unique dilem m a for the Pentagon. CNN has rem oved the past tense from news reporting: cable subscribers in Des Moines, Iowa, know the SCUDs are on the way the sam e m inute that the Israeli air hi % & STR H T raid sirens start w ailing in Tel Aviv. Unfortunately, the network’s live, up-tothe-split-second dam age and casualty assessm ents also save Saddam Hussein a bundle in post-attack intelligence costs. Critics of CNN also claim that the network’s extensive coverage of last Friday’s first m issile attack on Israel provided the Iraqis with sufficient inform ation to readjust the aim on their SCUD launchers. As you’ll notice, the Iraqis’ aim does keep getting better with each strike. However, the governm ent claim that the clampdown is due purely to concerns about national security is dubious at best. The m ilitary attem pts to m ake much of the p ress’s “ unbridled” coverage of the Vietnam War, but even then, when there w as alm ost no censorship, there are only four reported* instances of strategic security leaks (all w ere probably accidental). George Bush has told the Am erican public that one of the reasons U. S. forces are engaging the Iraqis is to protect “the Am erican w ay of life .” F ine. Let’s start w ith th e F ir s t A m en d m en t to th e Constitution, probably the m ost basic (and m ost envied) elem ent of that Am erican way of life. Secrecy breeds m istrust, and there has never been a superfluous amount of trust shared between tiie Am erican m ilitary and the American public. The Pentagon should realize that w hile strategic and operational shortfalls and underestim ations of the enem y w ill slacken public support for the war, dishonesty, cover-up and suppression w ill surely scuttle it. It would be a sham e if the freedom of the press becam e one of the earliest casualties of the Persian Gulf war, especially if it’s killed by friendly fire. Gulf crisis... Coor, ASU ready to help students When Opinion Editor M ichelle Roberts asked me la st week if I would w rite a piece about the war, I agreed to reflect on its prospective m eaning for the ASU students and their fam ilies that have already been called to active duty. That was before the war actually began, in what now seem s life ages ago, a tim e when I was hoping beyond hope that it could be averted. Now that war has begun and with it, the first reports of people being killed and injured and the first pictures of our downed pilots, hollow-eyed and speaking in that pained and stilted way we had seen in Vietnam, I guess m y original intention of speaking to those who have a loved (me involved is still what I would m ost like to do. Perhaps now it is even m ore important. This is the fourth major war I have w itnessed in m y lifetim e. F irst was World War II when I was a youngster, then the Korean War when I w as a student, and the Vietnam War when I w as a young faculty m em ber. In each of those earlier w ars, I had several fam ily m em bers and friends who served, many who were engaged in com bat and several who died. I w as hoping we, as an international society, had moved to the point where there would be no m ore w ars, and recent events in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe offered great hope that that m ight be the case. And yet war has broken out once again, this tim e in the Persian Gulf. There are hopes that it w ill be quick and surgical, but, watching reports of the last several days, I suspect it is difficult for anyone to say for sure right now. That is why I want to say a w ord to those who have loved ones serving in the gulf. Even as the daily attention is paid to sorties and cam paigns, please know that w e, at this U niversity, understand the personal anxiety and concern you are experiencing, and w e would like to help in Whatever w ay w e can. We have already taken steps to ease (he way for those on cam pus called to active duty, but we stand ready to do more as a supporter and friend to those in need. P lease let us help if w e can, and please know w e join you in our hopes and prayers that this w ar w ill be over quickly. ASU President . L attie F . Coor Kuwait not w orth ou r Mille fin g e » J o s e p h S o b ran Universal Press Syndicate WASHINGTON — Shortly before the w ar began, I read an exhortation to “support our boys in the desert,” as if thrusting young men in front of modern artillery w ere a form of encouragem ent. It m ade m e think of another mode of expressing support. In the mid-1930s, a group of Japanese officers w ere put on trial for conspiring to start a war with the United States. In response, a group of Japanese students cut off their little fingers and sent them to the court as a way of proclaim ing their solidarity with the officers. Chopping off your pinky isn’t a huge sacrifice, I suppose, but it does betoken sincerity. I wonder how many of our statew ide hawks would do as much to prove they care about the kids they’re w illing to expose to violent death. This w ill be an easy war — for m ost of us. And I suppose nearly everyone would agree that it’s desirable that Saddam Hussein pull his forces out of Kuwait. But how much is it really worth to you? Im agine that, instead of a few thousand young m en being killed to “liberate” Kuwait (m eaning to keep it a separate entity from Iraq), w e could distribute the pain and sacrifice evenly among all Am ericans. How much should each of us give? Hardly anyone thinks Kuwait is worth dying for, though m any are w illing to let som eone else die for it. B esides, it wouldn’t be very rational for all of us to die for it. Mr. Bush w as surely exaggerating when he told David Frost, “No price is too great to stop Iraqi aggression.” If he really believes that, he should be locked up. He m ight send Mrs. Bush or M illie, How many of you would be w illing to lose your eyesight if it would bring back and independent Kuwait? I don’t see many hands out there. W ell, then. How many would be w illing to give up the use of you left arm to liberate Kuwait? That’s funny. I still don’t see m any hands raised. All right, how m any would cut off an ear? Gee. We’re not getting very far. And I thought all you people cared about Kuwait. If you don’t feel any m ore strongly than that, don’t you think it’s a little presumptuous to ask others to die, or com e home as paraplegics, or suffer nervous breakdowns, in the sam e cause? Vicarious sacrifices don’t earn you Every worthy purpose costs som ething, w illing to pay out of your own pocket in real supporter. Sending som eone else to any m oral credit, and you have to be order to count as a fight isn’t an act of courage, no m atter how much you profess to honor his valor. - Here I’ll give Mr. Bush som e credit. He flew 58 combat m issions in World War II, so nobody can accuse him of cowardice, The sam e goes for anyone who has been in battle. They have the m oral standing to urge war, having served in their own tim e. But m ost of today’s hawks m ove m e to derision. Not long ago I debated a young journalist oh this question: He w as gung-ho for war, the sooner the better. I w as tem pted to ask him how long the lines were at the recruiting station, but I didn’t want to sham e him — though I should h ave.-if there’s anything w orse than old men sending young m en to die, it’s young men sending other young men to die. Do I care about Kuwait? Sure. About twenty dollars’ worth. I m ight go 25, after a couple of beers, if th o u g h t that would get Saddam Hussein out. And if it’s worfflrno m ore than that to m e, it’s not worth som eone else’s life or lim bs, I know how crass this sounds, and I’m sorty. But a little frank crassness seem s just the thing, as an antidote to all this hypocritical bravado — “speak what w e feel, not what w e ought to say.” " ' Hypocrisy has its uses. If w e didn’t pretend to be a little .better than w e’re inclined to be, w e’d a ll sink to a level it’s frightful to think of. But hypocrisy also creates m oral pressures that can drive earnest people to needless selfsacrifices that only benefit the cynical. So let those who favor this war show their support for our boys by sending in their pinkies. Otherwise, please shut up. ________________ S ta te P r e s s ____________ ____________________ O p in io n ________________ Thursday, January 24,1991 _________________ P j S S - S Foreshadow Bush m issed early signal Cody Shearer North American Syndicate WASHINGTON — I know it’s not polite to point at anyone or to act like a Monday m orning quarterback, but I’m hardly prepared to Salute President Bush now that our a llies in the Persian Gulf have sm ashed Iraq’s war m achine. Who got us into this costly m ess in the first place? You know who. George Bush. He failed to see the clear signals from Baghdad a s early as last February that Saddam Hussein w as preparing to go to war in pursuit of his ambition to dominate the Arab world. In retrospect, our governm ent and people áre now paying a high price for betraying an interest in human rights, in exchange for short-term political concessions Washington m ade in the Middle East: For the past decade, human rights organizations have been warning the world that Saddam Hussein w as a m onster but no one listened, s p e c i f i c a l l y th e R e a g a n -B u s h adm inistration. Before 1982, Iraq had been treated correctly as a pariah by Washington. But when Iraq started taking a beating during the Iran-Iraq war, the White House softened its position, fearing th at Tehran m ight prevail and instigate revolution all over the oil-rich, pro-Western gulf. By the tim e the Regan White House restored relations with Saddam Hussein in 1984, our country w as supplying Baghdad with large amounts of technology, money and grain. The Central Intelligence Agency even supplied satellite intelligence to help Iraq bomb Iran, which belies the current notion that the Iraqis had no idea of the extent of U. S. intelligence and m ilitary power. In sp ite of a ll kinds of A m nesty International and other human rights organization reports that w ere released during toe mid-1980s, which weren’t part of V ice President Bush’s reading packet back then, toe Reagan White House w as on such good term s with Baghdad that it rem oved it from the S tate D epartm ent’s list of c o u n tr ie s S p o n so rin g in te r n a tio n a l terrorism . It did so even though Abu Nidal, who had m asterm inded toe hijacking of toe A chille Lauro in 1985, openly based his Organization near the presidential palace in Baghdad, Ironically enough, U. S.-Iraq trade grew from nothing before 1982 to $3.6 billion a year by toe end of 1989. In six years Iraq bought $5.2 billion worth of U. S. exports and in return sold us $5.5 billion worth of oil. Before long our governm ent had becom e dependent on Iraq for purchasing rice and wheat. Following M exico, Iraq was the prim e beneficiary of the U. S. Commodity Credit Corporation’s guarantee credit schem e. By 1989, it had borrowed $1 billion, backed up by a powerful agricultural lobby in toe Congress. Today Iraq owes toe U. S. and other W estern countries at least $80 billion. In toe face of increasing evidence that Iraq was purchasing technology to expand its h i-tech w eaponry, the Com m erce Department kept approving exports of sensitive technology, Since 1985, at least $750 m illion in such exports w ere approved on behalf of Baghdad. Washington even OK’d a $200 m illion sa le of 45 Bell helicopters. Other U. S. defense com panies supplied toe necessary hardware for Iraq to build its now U S.-destroyed m issile com plex near Mosul. Given such a pro-Iraqi bent, it is no su rp rise W ashington fa ile d to n ote unm istakable signals from Baghdad as to what Saddam w as up to. On Jordanian television last Feb. 24, Saddam warned that if the Arab people w ere not careful, the gulf would be “governed by the w ishes of toe United S tates.” Several w eeks later on April 2,1990, Saddam boasted that Iraqi scientists had developed advanced chem ical weapons capability. How could the Bush White House have not regarded these statem ents a s cause for concern? When our am bassador April GlaSpie faced down Saddam Hussein at the end of last J u ly , her p o stu re w as a m odel of appeasem ent on order from the State Department. As Iraq moved tank divisions to toe border with Kuwait, G laspie insisted that “we have no opinion on Arab-Arab conflicts, like your border disagreem ent with K uw ait. . That toe Bush adm inistration failed to warn Iraq outright la st July of the r e p e r c u s sio n s r e su ltin g from su ch aggressive behavior, has turned out to cost this country a lot of money and discom fort. Future historians are not likely to treat President Bush on this account. Perhaps Rep. Tom Lantos (D. Cal.) put this unfortunate incident in the right perspective at a congressional hearing last S eptem ber w hen he d eclared : “ The obsequious treatm ent of Saddam Hussein by high-ranking officials encouraged him to take action; there is no escaping that responsibility.” Unclear consequences Editor: During toe next several days, many of us w ill open an ongoing discussion of toe causes and consequences of toe war. Through a series of forum s, lectures, position papers and teach-ins, w e hope to bring toe war into intellectual focus and do our best to m inim ize toe further loss of life and personal tragedy being experienced by ordinary people on both sid es of tote conflict. From our perspective it is doubtful that w e shall achieve any of our stated, short­ term national policy objectives a s a result of having this dreadful w ar on toe Arabian Peninsula. The proliferation of terror w ill not evaporate as toe fighting winds down. Instead w e w ill be left with to e bitter legacy of terrorism , which w e fear w ill be exported over toe generations into hearts and hands even less caring about human life than those of George Bush and Saddam Hussein. Nor w ill cheap energy, affluence and m eaningful jobs becom e m ore available in this and other societies as toe killing ends. More likely toe physical and econom ic pollution of the planet w ill have worsened as a result o f our precipitous m ilitary actions. Indeed there is no reason to b elieve that in the afterm ath of this war, the “New World Order” which w e have been told w ill rise out of its ashes, w ill be any better than, or d iff e r e n t fr o m , th e m o r a lly a n d intellectually bankrupt “old” order which it is to replace. The M ideast w ar has been predictable because it is an expression of hum anity’s continuing in a b ility to m ove beyond stouctural violence into a m ore gentle, solar-based, post-industrial society. It w as unnecessary because there are alw ays non-violent options to to e calculated and deliberate destruction of any part of the creation. As Albert E instein observed, “K illing under toe cloak o f war is nothing but an act of m urder.” By following our leaders into this war, we have lost w hat little rem ains of toe dem ocratic ethos in Am erican society. The longer w e continue to support it, toe less w ill be left of our ability to justify — dither to our children or to ourselves — any reason for working to preserve our own species from extinction after it is over. In our view , this w ar reflects hum anity’s common failure to address three basic challenges of our tim e. •To learn how to produce w ealth for this and future generations without polluting persons and planet. •To realize that toe national security state itself is the author of those insecurities and terrors under which none of us can operate sanely or humanly. •That toe only w ay to slow toe race to oblivion upon which w e have now embarked is to declare an im m ediate cease fire in toe Persian Gulf and to quickly reach a global accord which w ill respect each person’s inviolability as w ell a s deliver cultural; econom ic and political equality to a ll people in a ll so c ie tie s in th is and fu tu re generations. Given these realities; w e invite those of you who w ish to lessen the killing on the Middle E ast to join with us in creating a national people’s dialogue on the shape of our common human future. Mark Reader A ssoc. Professor P olitical Science D ip p el d ap p les protester’s faces S tate P ress SUZANNE ROSS Editor TENNY f ÀTUS1AN Managing Editor. City Editor.__________ HOBART ROWLAND A m . City Editor..,------ -- ------------- ----------- KEVIN SHEH Copy Chief________________________ DAWN DCVKIES News Editor..___________________ KRISTEN JOHNSON Opinion Editor_______________„..MICHELLE ROBERTS Asst. Opinion Edilor.—.— — — MICHAEL LAMANTIA Photo Editor____ — ........ —----- — — —.T. J. SOKOL Sport» Editor---- —— -------- PAUL CORO Asst. Sports Editor—_____________ .— .-...DAN ZEIGER Graphics Editor-__ — -------------------- STEVEN KR1CUN Magazine Editor.— — — — — .MEG HALVERSON Asst. Magazine Editor.....— ----- —.......CARIN CUMMINS Assoc. Magazine Editor-.———— ••••—NICOLE CARROLL REPORTERS: C hristine Bardy, Kenneth Brown* Anita Carcone, Teena Chad well Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Kellye Kratch, Patricia Mah, Kris Mayes, Diane Santorico, JudiTancos. SPORTS REPORTERS: Marty Murphy, Amy Slade, Lorenzo Sierra Jr., Darren Urban. PHOTOGRAPHERS; Joe Barnason, Irw in Daugherty, Jeorgetta Douglas, Scott Troyanov Tamara Wofford. COPY EDITORS: Sonja Lewis, Tabitha Privett, Kris Timmons. COLUMNIST: Dan Nowicki CARTOONISTS: Rob Minton, Julie Sigwart. MAGAZINE STAFF: Casebeet Michelle Cruft Vicki Culver, Joel Gelpe, Barry G rahanv Randy Hawkins# C hristine Herbranson, Mary Rose Lafreniere* Aaron Levy, Laurie Notaro, Chanda R. Shahari, Mark Jas. Tynan, Jon Wale# Kramer Wetzel. PRODUCTION; Cassaundra Caviness, Holly Hiatt, Barry Kelly Jeffrey Lucas# Mark Nothaft, Frank N. Ran ilia, Renato Salompne, Scott Wine, Eric Zotcavage. SALES REPRESENTATI VES: Colt Dodrill, Leo Gonzales. Todd M artin, C hristine Millan, Lance Newman* Neil Schnelwar, John Vaccaro, Danielle Webster. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center# Room lS, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not answ er questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602) 965*7572. Editor: This is in response to Mr. Dippel’s letter in to e Jan. 18 issue of toe S ta te P ress, in which he m ade som e peculiar com m ents regarding the gulf war. It is extrem ely difficult for us to believe that a philosophy m ajor could m ake such asinine and logically flawed statem ents. We feel a visceral com pulsion to answer your ludicrous assertions and lead you down “the yellow brick road” to ratiocination. F irst, Dippel claim ed that it is not up to the common people to decide if the war is r ig h t or w ro n g . S in ce A m erica is theoretically an egalitarian society, w e are a ll common people. And if toe m orality of a certain act is not for toe individual to decide, then who decides? Are you suggesting that our governm ent and Saddam Hpssein are om niscient when it com es to questions of m orality? We shudder a t th a t c h illin g th o u g h t. It m o st em phatically is up to every rational being to freely decide whether this w ar is right or wrong. Secondly, you said that protesting war w ill do no good. H ie student protests of toe Vietnam conflict had a direct im pact on toe m ilit a r y p o l i c i e s o f t h e N ix o n adm inistration, and in fact helped persuade President L. B. Johnson from seeking a second term of office. These protests also helped precipitate toe end of that long, m istaken conflict. Dippel also stated that the American civilians should keep up toe m orale of toe U. S. troops as this w ill m ake their job easier. What exactly is their job? To prom ote peace? Obviously not. Are you saying tout w e should help m ake killing easier for our troops by supporting them? We vehem ently disagree. We do not w ish for any U. S. soldiers to be killed, but we do not agree w ith their choice of vocation or Operation D esert Storm. We strongly believe that every American, no m atter what side they take on toe issu e of Operation D esert Storm, should let: their voice be heard. Protesting is one such w ay. Don Piraino Corbett E, Upton Philosophy English, Sophomore s m « P it« « Thursday, January 24,1991 P ageó Statew ide budget cuts may jeopardize financial aid B y J E N N IF E R F R A N K L IN State P re ss U niversity officials said they are still assessing how financial aid recipients w ill be affected by a budget recommendation m any ASU advocates said would be detrim ental to undergraduate education. One Arizona Board of Regents official predicted students receiving financial aid likely w ill feel the sting of those budget cuts. The Joint L egislative Budget Committee recommended Monday that ASU receive a 1992 general fund appropriation of $179.9 m illion, 4.1 percent less than in 1991. “There w ill definitely be an im pact on students if the (JLBC) recom m endation is approved by the Legislature,” said John K elly, the regents’ assistant director of public affairs. Paul Barberini, ASU director of financial aid, said the im pact the recom m endation could have w ill depend oh two factors. “F irst, w e’ll have to w ait for the numbers and then assess the actual dollar am ount,” he said. “ Another factor w ill be the influence the three state university presidents could have in influencing the Legislature. ” In November the regents agreed to a financial aid package that would fund 100 percent of residents’ rem aining need. Rem aining need is a national estim ate used by Hie Council of Presidents to determ ine how much students m ust pay for the total cost o f instruction after fam ily contributions and financial aid If the Legislature follows the JLBC recom m endation, financial aid funding approved by the regents would not be funded by that recom m endation, ASU budget director Alan Carroll said Tuesday. The Legislature w ill review the JLBC plan and a recom m endation from the E xecu tive Budget Office. Lawm akers can use either recom m endation, or can disregard both plans and create their own budget. John Lee, an analyst for the JLBC, said the Legislature u su ally votes in accordance w ith the com m ittee’s recom m endations. H o w ev er, L ee a ck n o w led g ed th a t b eca u se h is recom m endation deals with education, the Legislature m ay deviate. “ Nobody’s really sure what will.happen,” Lee said. ‘No new faces’ means financial trouble for community colleges B y KEN BRO W N State P re ss Community college students could be the big losers in Gov. R ose Mofford’s proposed “no new taxes” budget designed to benefit A rizona ta x p a y ers, V alley ed ucation officials said. M offord’s new budget in clu d es an 8.8 percent cut to com m unity college funding — a m ove som e officials claim would cut services as educational needs skyrocket. “Any cut in (com munity college) funding w ill m ean either a cutback in services or higher tuition,” Mesa Community College President Larry Christianson Said. “We have to put our story forward and be sensitive to the needs of our students.” But som e legislators contend the cuts are n ecessa ry and the fallou t from any reductions w ill not be detectable. “There’s no reason to com m it hara-kiri over it,” said Rep. Stan Barnes, R-M esa. “I don’t think students w ill be affected. I don’t even think they’ll notice it.” The regents w ill discuss the budget in a special session today in Phoenix. Barnes, who attended ASU when form er Gov. Bruce Babbitt announced a 10 percent cut to university funding in 1982, said the reduction did not affect him as a student. He said the econom ic “facts of life” are C O M E A N D LEA R N H O W Y O U C A N S P E N D T H IS S U M M E R W O R K IN G TO C O N S E R V E O U R P R E C IO U S NATURAL RESO U RCES! A n S C A representative wilt be on cam p u s to d isc u ss sum m er opportunities: W hen: M onday, Jan. 28th Time: 2 Se ssio n s. 4:00 & 5:00 p.m. W here: M em orial Union Coconino Room e s p e c ia lly e v id e n t in th e c u r r e n t Legislature. “As painful a s (the cut) is, it’s nessesary. It’s a good thing,” he said. “It forces the colleges to do with the budget the sam e as what fam ilies have to do with their budget— tighten up.” Molly Broad, Arizona Board of R egents executive director, said the budget could adversely affect the relationship between the university system and community colleges, because the colleges would not be able to absorb excess enrollm ent from universities. Dan W ittimore, district vice chancellor for Maricopa County Community Colleges, ASU Students See Us First! 2 for| •Live & work in National Parks, Forests & Refuges •Travel, housing & food expenses paid •Professional training and skills development •Academ ic credit possible •Expand career opportunities said thé cuts constitute a “heavy hand” on the colleges. “ (Mofford’s proposal) w as m ore severe than w e expected,” he said. “We agree that colleges should participate in any rollbacks, but 8 percent would be $10 m illion to the system .” Rep. P at Blake, R-M esa, who serves on the House of R epresentative’s education com m ittee, vowed to fight any reduction in education funding. “It’s the only thing good going on in the state right now, why cut it? ” she said, adding that the results of the Feb. 26 run-off election could com pletely change the budget picture. ASU Students, see us first at n Q t b n u u id e v i / i o n e y e g b /z e / and/or C O O tQ C t/ c e n te r ™ before you purchase your next pair of eyeglasses or soft contacts. Starting at our low. low price of $39.99 for two pairs of eyeglasses or contacts, we have great values for all our patients, old and new. Mini-Storage • V ehicle Storage ST A rizo n a S to ra g e In n s SPECIAL STUDENT RATES "The Ftiautty 5x 5 $ 999 5x 10 10x 10 10x20 # 14** $26 ” $44 ” O p t io n t » d o t t e r b r u d i tv iite b lc a t a d d itio n a l c h a r g e . Hiwi-Storage Veepk" •Som e R estrictions Apply 967-0210 2235 W. 1st St. • Tempe »70»»* .-i»«4rv G as a p a ir of Ocutd. Optacryl . ^ ♦30*** Dur&soft C olor* (for ( a p a ir of ¿ la s s e s C o n ta c ts A l p h a P h i G & ttw ga Opaque lenses ............. --•e s » * * wo > ! « « • * * National Service Fraternity "Leave college with more than a degree.” Spring Rush 91 LEADERSHIP • FRIENDSHIP • SERVICE Today! Stop by our booth on Cady Mall! Tonight! C om e to our Free Pizza Party & Info Session 6 p.m ., Pizza Hut, Apache & Rural For m ore information call 784-8958 u i/b n c e n te r Including? Tempe—9 3 3 E. University, 966-4991 Mesa—4 3 7 S. Gilbert Rd., 844-7096 W IN i By attending your school'* GM A u io Expo event, you can he eligible to \ GMAC Financial Services. While attending Ihe. Expo. ju>t fill out an .entry forniTand drop ii o f the GM Am o Expo event. No purchase is necessary lo enlor or win. and the winner necdn our tuition expenses provided by penerai Mot o $500.w inning entry forms w ill he drawn at th CHEVROLET ■PONTIAC »OLDSMPBILÉ ■UICK* CADILLAC • OMC TRUCK HM u IVI -------# V General M otors, "sh a rin g your future” GMAC Page 8 State Pres« Thursday, January 84,1991 W ar_______ __ Continued from page 1. allied air com m anders pressed their m ission-a-m inute cam paign in the seventh day of Operation D esert Storm, the U. S.-led offensive to reverse Iraq’s six-month-old m ilitary occupation of Kuwait. Bombing raids have dem olished half of Iraq’s oil-refining capacity, allied com m anders said. Iraq announced it was suspending gasoline sales. Allied officers also say bombing runs have wrecked much of Iraq’s chem ical-weapons and nuclear installations. Many analysts believed Iraq to be near achieving the ability to produce nuclear weapons. In a televised address in Washington, President Bush said the air w ar had put Iraq “out of the nuclear bomb-building business for a long tim e to com e.” He w as both upbeat and cautious in his overall assessm ent of the w ar’s progress, saying Iraq could still pull som e surprises. In Baghdad m ore and m ore people w ere em erging from their shelters, CNN’s P eter Arnett reported from the Iraqi capital. Commerce seem ed to be resum ing, Baghdadis were shopping at the Central m arket, and water trucks were m aking their rounds, said Arnett, one of the few foreign journalists in Baghdad. The shops still offered dry food, canned goods, soft drinks and bottled w ater, Canadian P ress correspondent Leila Deeb said in a Tuesday dispatch reaching Jordan on Wednesday. She also said the air raids rem ained intensive Tuesday. Arnett said Iraqi authorities w ere reviewing W estern news reports but had censored little. Beyond northern Saudi Arabia’s rem ote desert frontier, more than a half-m illion Iraqi troops are in position in Kuwait and southern Iraq, facing a growing arm y of hundreds of thousands of American, Saudi, British and other allied tankers and infantrym en. The allies have alm ost 3,000 tanks at or converging on the front lines, facing off against som e 4,200 Iraqi tanks in Kuwait and southern Iraq. The allied arm y is deployed along the 130-mile SaudiKuwaiti border and farther w est along the Iraqi-Saudi border, where tanks of the desert-trained 3rd Armored Cavalry Regim ent — from Fort B liss, T exas— are believed to be conducting reconnaissance and guarding the allied force’s w estern flank. W ednesday’s first report of a ground action cam e from the Iranian news m edia, which said Iraq reported its forces had attacked enem y troops in Saudi territory and captured allied prisoners. Later, apparently reporting on the sam e firefight, the U. S. command reported that 3rd Armored Cavalry troopers were manning an observation post near the Saudi-Iraqi border late Tuesday when they cam e under sm all-arm s fire from an Iraqi patrol and returned fire. Two Am ericans w ere slightly wounded and returned to duty after treatm ent, and six Iraqis w ere captured, the command said. It denied that any Americans had been captured. American arm ored units continued m aneuvering into place along the frontier W ednesday after days of rain and drizzle that turned desert-dry areas into sm all lakes and created sinkholes — “sabkhas” — that can bog down a tank. Commanders have begun to slow the pace of combat exercises at the front lines so soldiers can be rested and equipm ent put in good shape for what could be a long ground battle. A ground offensive is not expected until February at the earliest. Am erican tank officers, like Marine Capt. Rob Philon, know it won’t be a rollover. Philon’s M-60 tanks w ill have to go up against Iraq’s Soviet-m ade T-72s, whose laserequipped guns have a longer range than his. “We’ll have to outm aneuver them and not let them get the drop on u s,” Philon said. For now the allied troops are content to let U. S. and allied airpower “soften up” Iraqi positions. In Washington Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Colin Powell told reporters, “Our strategy for dealing with this arm y is very sim ple: F irst w e’re going to cut it off, then w e’re going to kill it.” The Iraqi arm y is “sitting there dug in, w aiting to be attacked and attacked it w ill be,” Pow ell said, adding that the a llies are “assem bling a fairly sizeable ground force that can finish the job if necessary.” Again W ednesday bombers pounded the Iraqi port city of Basra, site of the m ilitary headquarters for Iraq’s: defense of Kuwait, the new s agency in neighboring Iran reported. The blasts have been shaking the ground in the Iranian city of Khorramshahr, 25 m iles away. The allies have m ade Iraq’s SCUD launchers a prim ary target. But both Pow ell and D efense Secretary Dick Cheney conceded W ednesday that knocking out the elusive launch vehicles w as proving m ore difficult than anticipated. The Iraqi m issile attacks on Israel are a bid by President Saddam Hussein to draw the Israelis into the gulf war, a developm ent that m ight lead som e of Israel’s traditional Arab enem ies to abandon the anti-Iraq alliance. Only a fraction of the SCUDs fired have hit home, but Iraqi radio W ednesday boasted of the weapon’s prowess, declaring that they “have the protection of God.” A llied planes have flown som e 12,000 sorties thus far, the U. S. command said. A llied airpower has damaged alm ost all main Iraqi m ilitary airfields, has dislocated the Iraqi air force, and is “degrading” Iraq’s command-and-control system , said Maj. Gen. A lex Harley ^deputy operations chief for British defense forces. Budget _ _ Continued from page 1. “It doesn’t com e as that big of a surprise,” Ortega said. “We started fearing for thew orst a few w eeks ago.” Still, Ortega said he is not ready to give ÏT “ 1 newMacsnow .$12» Mac LC2M/40HD~12" RGB color $22» MacW2M/«HDirRoa,oHi*...$31» bnageWrtor I ______$3M ■ Pmoml LoacrWitcrNT $21M State I P ress.» I eupfulon .CALL H A _________ R D D IS K DMacintosh R IV E S formemory Mac (internal or external; 40 MEG....S389 • 100 MEG...... $599 H PU s k M P $ 9 3 9 U I . $1599 2 Meg upgrad* for U6P, II ..$ 1 « PostScript Cartridge MM ApploTaftF »22« DeskJet 500torPC órcompand .$ 465 DeskWrfterforMac ___ $679 PaintJet Color Printer____ $869 Piccai Identify(you arcatacuCy/Student r a S S S S S 955-1404 Aether i t t é i provoke I thought. I B London $478 Roundtrip from Phoenix LosAnselcs $ 40 San Frandsco $ SO Tokyo $ 519 Paris $549 Sydney $ 949 Restrictions do apply. Student status may be required. C h a n g in g H a n d s BO O K STO RE flrowse through bur 3 floors o f : ; • New & Used Books • • C alendars & C ards • • Books on Cassette • Sell or Trade yo ur books a t Changing Hands. For quality clothand paperbacks ino texrbooks. please.) we pay 30% of our resaleprice in cash o r .50% . iti trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in thè store. ' ■■ . • • (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M -F10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 Mill Avenue • Tempe • 966-0203 Eurailpasses issued on-the-spot/ Call for a FREE Student Travel Catalog! America's oldest and largest student travel organization. C o u n ci Travel Located a t Forest and University; directly across from A.S.U.! 120 E. University, Ste. E tem pe, A Z 85281 966-3544 WANTED up “The recom m endations are just that — recom m endations,” he said. “We’re still going to fight, but I don’t have a good gauge on how students feel right now.” LOSE YOUR PUPPY? AGE OCCUPATION WANTED FOR Find it...FREE! W ith a L o st a n d F o u n d C la ssifie d a d in the State P r e s s i B rin g in th is c o u p o n fo r a F R E E 2 0 w ord L o st & F o u n d ad! Junior Student Leadership Q ualities Scholastic A chievem ent Campus Involvem ent WANTED BY: State Press Classifieds Basem ent, 965-6731 MORROW ifpipr - ■■ , * *- „ ^ • an aw ards program recognizing one junior from each College m £ 4 0 °o ^fil i State Press « • each recipient w ill then com pete on a national lev el for "The N ational O utstanding Junior" A N Y PERSON W ISHING TO TURN THEMSELVES IN , PLEASE PICK U P AN APPLICATION AT ASSOCIATED STUDENTS, 3RD FLOOR/MU O O W o We’ve got it covered * APPLICATIONS ARE DUE BY FEBRUARY 1,1991 QUESTIONS CALL THE INSURING TOMORROW OFFICE AT 965-1258 State N » Pase 9 7hurada£january2j^991 Kinko’s robbery ends in assault o f clerk B y T EEN A CH AD W ELL State P re ss A 22-year-old clerk working at Kinko’s Copies store in Tempe w as sexually assaulted Tuesday night by a man toting a black autom atic handgun, Tempe police said. The woman was alone in the store at 960 W. U niversity Drive when a man wearing a face m ask entered and demanded money from the cash register. After receiving an undetermined amount of cash, he raped her, police said. When the crim e occurred at 9:15 p.m ., som eone had just left the store, said Darrin Palm er, the store’s manager. After (he woman was attacked, she called Palm er and he reported it to the police. “I don’t know why She called m e first,” he said. P olice, who have not found the suspect, a re continuing to in v estig a te the incident. After the attack the clerk was taken to the hospital but was not injured, said ADOT holds off construction due to crew m em ber’s death Tempe P olice Sgt. AI Taylor. In the future, Palm er said, safety precautions w ill be taken at Kinko’s, and a p an ic button w ill be in sta lled underneath the counter. The parking lot at the shopping center is dark at night. Palm er blamed this on the m anagem ent com pany that owns the center and said he w ill m ake sure the lights are repaired. The victim , a Scottsdale resident, probably w ill not continue to work at the store, the manager said. To p r e v e n t su ch c r im e s from occurring, women need to avoid placing them selves in a position that m akes them an easy victim , Taylor said. “Awareness is probably the best tool a girl can u se,” Taylor said, adding that people should avoid working alone — especially near closing tim e. The su sp ect in th e a ttack w as described as a white m ale, 5-foot-9, 185 pounds, last seen wearing a black knit m ask, a black hooded sw eatshirt and black jeans. Police R eport : ASU police reported the following incidents W ednesday: •Three fuse boxes at the Karsten Golf Course exploded and burst into flam es. The Tempe Fire Department extinguished the fire — the cause of which iS unknown. Estim ated dam age is $1,200. •A gray mountain bicycle, valued at $300, was stolen from the north side of the Life Sciences Center. •An ASU Student’s backpack was stolen from a cubbyhole at the ASU Bookstore. Estim ated loss is $81. •An ASU student’s w allet w as stolen from the basem ent of the MU. Estim ated loss is $25. •A white Huffy bicycle, valued at $150, was stolen from the east side of Grady Gammage Auditorium: •An ASU student was arrested, cited and booked in M esa for hit-and-run, reckless driving and crim inal dam age at 620 Alpha Drive, Estim ated dam age is $400. Tempe police reported the following incident Wednesday: •The residence of two ASU students in the 1200 block o f E ast U niversity D rive was burglarized Monday. Estim ated loss is $377. By TEEN A CH A D W ELL State P re ss Construction on a Tempe freew ay project is on hold until officials from the Arizona Department of Transportation m eet with a general contractor concerning the death of a 29-year-old man working on the E ast Papago Freew ay extension, an ADOT spokesman said W ednesday. “We want to revise the Way they are doing the work,” said Mark Bonan, an ADOT spokesman. But D rillers Inc. of Houston, the general contractor for the $32.1 m illion job, is preparing to continue construction, said Max Dillard, president of the company. The body of Fernando René Garcia of Hpuston w as recovered by rescue workers at 8:20 p.m . Monday, m ore than nine hours after the worker fell 12 to 15 feet when the soil he w as standing on collapsed. The accident occurred during the drilling of a hole for the extension on Scottsdale Road between Curry Road and the Rio Salado Parkway. An 8-foot pipe w as buried lengthw ise in the ground, and 10 to 12 feet of soil had been dug out below the pipe. The worker fell beside the pipe, and it fell 10 to 12 feet with the worker said Larry Randall, an investigator for the Tempe F ire Department. The official cause of death w as asphyxia due to ex te rn a l ch est com p ression , according to the Maricopa County M edical Exam iner. The Arizona Occupational Safety and Health Adm inistration office w ill determ ine the role of the contractor in the accident and release a report within a few w eeks, an spokesm an Said: Q ne s a f e t y p r e c a u tio n ADOT is considering involves a solid platform for workers to stand on rather than standing around the drill, Bonan said. Bonan said ADOT is open to other safety suggestions from the contractor. Randall said rescue workers on Monday knew their effort w as prim arily for body recovery. “It w as a very difficult rescue attem pt and posed severe danger to the firefighters attem pting that rescue,” he said, adding th at throughout the re sc u e , se v er a l em bankments collapsed. Three co-w orkers, a ll em ployees of D rillers Inc,, w ere injured when they tried to rescue Garcia. Baltics. Continued from page 3. Gorbachev told the nation Tuesday that his main task w as to achieve calm in the B altics. But he also called on the republics to abide by the Soviet constitution. The Lithuanian parliam ent’s press office said two civilians who claim ed to represent the Lithuanian Communist P arty announced they were taking control when they arrived at the warehouse with soldiers at 1 p.m . Wednesday. About 20 Interior M inistry soldiers w ith autom atic weapons drove up in five jeeps and took up positions throughout the warehouse. There w ere just a few workers in the w arehouse, who offered no resistance, said Lithuanian governm ent spokesm an Audrius Azubalis. He said the building had about 37 tons of paper inside, but added that the seizure w as unlikely to have a serious effect on news because m ost independent publications have their own supplies. The Soviet m ilitary already controls P ress House, the m ain printing plant in Vilnius. A unit of the socalled “black beret” troops of the Soviet Interior M inistry last weekend seized a sim ilar plant in the Latvian capital, Riga. Nikolai Gribanov, a m em ber of the Lithuanian Communist P arty’s Central Committee, later said the arm ed forces of the Soviet Interior M inistry were carrying out a resolution of the Soviet Council of M inisters on the protection of Communist Party property. The Soviet m ilitary has m ade sim ilar m oves at sev era l other buildings in Lithuania and the neighboring B altic republic of Latvia, which along with Estonia seek independence from Moscow. On Jan. 13, a Kremlin attack on Lithuania’s broadcast center left 14 people dead and injured hundreds. In Latvia, six people have been slain since last week in Soviet attacks. T h e St a t e P r e s s M a g a z in e A W E E K L V COLLEGE Tonight Programs you count on — count on you! ASU President Lattie Coor's Address to the Faculty Assembly T O W N ] O U R N A_ L the alternative copy shop at the comer of Mill and University in the Tempe Center We Feature: Som ething for those o f you w ho aren’t taking Kaplan Prep.™ •XEROX9500 w ith C om puterized collatin g. •XEROX 1038's w ith R ed u ctio n / E n largem en t ca p a b ilities (64% to 156% in 1% in crem en ts). 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Comics Page 10 State Prest Thursday, January 24,1991 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson WHO, ME:■? v DID '(00 THROW THAT?/ the far By GARY LARSON 1^25 - '- © 1991 Universal Press Syndicate VtVtoîY ME.?? MHO.. ME?/ 1 WHO, WE??'3 s r r 'feW you f o is •fb o f f back "tiñere/...Or' me i'll jusf -fa Ke ¿ar and drive i f o f f •first cliff Í come to' I9*fw by Garry Trudeau Doonesbury M AJIP, LUHATS THE STORY H ER E? SOLP/BRS FROM A PO ZEN COUNTRIES, INO UPING FELLOW A RA B NATIONS, A R B OUT IN THE PESENT, PUTTING THEIRIM S PETER, I'M H ERE A T K IN G KH A up c o u n try cw b , t a lk in g TO M A IIP A L KAKI, ONP OFMANY YOUNG A R A B IA N M EN RUTH NO INTEREST IN PEFENP/NG THEIR OWN HOM ELANP' m in e ... A N P YET H ERE YOU A R E , FAR FROM THE FRONT, SIPPIN G A FRO STY BEVERAGE B Y THE poolofan e x c u se s cam /aw t V i A SA R E ALLAH, H ELL. YOU. ALLAH I'M WORKING, IS GENEROUS. BU PPY! ■ \ Lem m ings on vacation by Julie Sigwart Rainey Days I BROUGHT I M EA N .. BUT... IT 'S NICE TO I PONTUKE ' _____ __ D O N 'T YOU SEE TOU AGAIN, .you A fl TO S E E OUR. , PROTEST] THINK VIE KYLE... BU T I'M N fW T O 'l iTROOPS THERE) SO N G S \ OUGHT TO SHIRT... NOT TOO SU RE SUPPORT E IT H E R .. ABOUT THIS OUR TROOPS? PRO TEST STUFF. \ V W HAT WAS THAT ABO UT, T R O O P S? \ I EV EN SO T A BANDANA .TO T IE around MV HEAP- [C5 Bsl Lattie’s D o g b y Ford M. U/HIU You WERE PEA» W E STifRTep BOMBING IRAQ , ISRAEL WAS attacked w ith / missiles, , T tA IS S E D “p E â l S T R A T l O N / THE RUSSIANS 0ODPSLAMMtO UTHUAHtA , /UW yU/SSEO kEGlSmAT/OA/. ft Don’t be a bird-brain. Read DAVE BARRY every Thursday in The S tate Press Magazine. BRYANS ROAD, Md. (AP) — W hatever they’re called — outhouse, privy, w ater closet or “necessary” — Homer Allison finds the backyard bathrooms of his childhood as am using as the old Sears Roebuck catalog that once hung from their rough pine w alls. A llison, who Was reared in the countryside north of Baltim ore, vividly rem em bers those treks to the shanty behind the fam ily home. “You’d freeze your butt off in the winter and you’d roast in the sum m er,” he said. “You were alw ays sitting with bees and spiders around you. My parents tried to keep it clean, but it sm elled really bad.” A llison, 65, a retired Air Force sergeant, felt a twinge of nostalgia as a young man when somebody gave him a reprint of an obscure verse by Hoosier poet Jam es Whitcomb R iley titled “The Passing of the Outhouse. ” “All day the spiders spun their webs to catch the buzzing flies that flitted to and from the house where Ma w as baking p ies,” it read. “And once a swarm of hornets bold had built a palace there, and stung my unsuspecting aunt — I m ust not tell you w here.” Allison was hooked in 1975 when his stepfather gave him a hand-carved m odel outhouse with “Homer’s R etreat” inscribed above the new moon over the door. He added a tiny m ouse, and his mother m ade the little Sears catalog that lies on the floor. Thus began his collection, which includes several m usic box outhouses. One plays “Here C om » Santa Claus” while the wreath-decorated door (carved with such graffiti a s “No Snowballs P lease” ) sw ings open to reveal St. Nick enjoying a moment of leisure. Another, with a lace curtain covering the crescent ventilator, plays “The Way We Were” and contains a photo of A llison’s seated granddaughter. His den also contains paintings and photographs of you-know-what and a poster depicting the “Great Australian Dunny” (you guessed it). The only m em ento m issing from Allison’s collection is a real, full-sized outhouse. He’s fearful that his friends and neighbors, who are am used by his hobby, m ight m ake that their next gag gift. “My w ife is afraid she’ll wake up som e morning and see an outhouse on the front law n,” he said. “I hope not. She’d probably divorce m e.” State Presi Page 11 Thursday, January 94,1991 Bearing pressure: ASU heads to Bay By PAU L CORO Sta te P re ss Saying you have to sw eep a team that you have not played yet and that has swept you for the past two years sounds like the work of an eccentric and demanding coach. Always eccentric ASU coach B ill Frieder is now placing adm irable expectations on a team that he once felt fortunate when it stayed close with Pac-10 foes. These days, Frieder is saying his Sun D evils (11-4 overall, 2-3 Pac-10) m ust beat California (6-9, 2-4) tw ice this season, including to n ig h t’s gam e at B erk eley ’s rowdy Harmon Arena, to m ake it to the big dance. “To say that is kind of stupid because we haven’t beat them at all y et,” Frieder said. “But if w e’re going to get into the NCAA tournam ent, these are the kinds of team s you have to beat tw ice.” The two-gam e road trip to the Bay area A m o c M m I P re s*, photo C a l sophom ore B rian H endrick sh o o ts over U C L A 's D on M acLean in the B ru in s’ 98-81 win Su n d ay. w ill be the first for ASU since it opened the year with a split in W ashington. Frieder said he w ill be surprised if his team is not prepared this tim e around but expects the Golden Bears to be a rejuvenated team . Cal has yet to put m ore than two wins together this season, losing to the likes of UC-Irvine; Stetson and Alaska-Anchorage on one consecutive lull. However, the Bears have won two of their la st three with the defeat com ing at UCLA. “They’re going to return home with a fire in their eyes and really rally together and make a run,” Frieder said. “If there’s one team that’s a little lower in the standings than anybody projected, it would be Cal.” While the Bears pose a form idable frontline with Brian Hendrick and Roy Fisher, Cal’s backcourt is still suffering the loss of last year’s floor leader Keith Smith. Sean Harrell, a form er walk-on, has tried to take over but the offense has slowed and the shooting has plummetedThe Bears own the worst turnover ratio in the conference, w hile the Sun D evils specialize in creating m istakes. To exploit that, Frieder said, ASU needs to draw Cal into a faster tem po tonight. “We’ve got to get out and really pressure them and force them into the type of gam e they don’t want to play,” Frieder said. A quick pace is exactly what Bear coach Lou Campanelli does not want after UCLA runned and gunned Cal for a 98-81 romp in L. A. Sunday. H ow ever, C am panelli’s concerns run much deeper than that. “We don’t m atch up w ell with (the Sim D evils) at a ll,” Campanelli said. “They’re more athletic at every position except at center, but (Isaac) Austin is much stronger than H endrick. We’re probably at a disadvantage at every position.” In its three-guard offense, sophomore B illy Dreher is the only guard averaging in double figures. Senior Ryan Drew, a dangerous perim eter shooter a year ago, has gone ice cold this season with a shooting percentage of 36 and Fisher has not been able to becom e a 3-point threat like Campanelli had hoped. “ (Drew) is the one, m ost of any, that m isses Sm ith,” Campanelli said. “When you don’t have a pure point guard, you don’t have somebody orchestrating and Irwtn Oaugharty/State P m A S U gu ard Tarence W heeler, w ho ran k s eighth in the Pac-10 In 3-polnt sh o o tin g, and the S u n D e v ils v isit C aliforn ia ton igh t in the first o f a tw o-gam e B a y road trip. making the good decisions whether it be in the half-court set or on the break.” ASU has that in junior Lynn Collins, who ranks second in the Pac-10 w ith 5.6 assists a gam e. However, Collins’ and freshm an S tevin S m ith ’s ou tsid e sh ootin g has deteriorated to the point that senior Tarence W heeler is the Sun D evils’ only big-tim e threat on the arc at 43 percent. “ I’m con cern ed about our 3-point shooting,” said Frieder, who w ants his team hitting 50 percent of about 15 attem pts. “When w e get up over 20 and m ake a third of them , it hurts u s.” ASU freshm an Dwayne Fontana, a San Francisco native, m ay get his second collegiate start tonight as he returns to his hom e a rea . F ontan a w ould rep la ce sophomore Brian Camper, a defensive specialist, to possibly give the Sun D evils more scoring and rebounding. The m arquee matchup of the gam e w ill be Austin and Hendrick. While Austin’s stats m ake him ASU’s prim e player, the Cal sophomore ranks ahead o f Austin in points, rebounds and blocked shots. “Hendrick is as good an inside guy as there is ,” Frieder said. “He’s so quick inside. He’s an explosive player. He can score; he can jump; and he can rebound.” B esides m aking the Bears run, Frieder said a key to the gam e w ill be the Sun D evils’ ability to decipher Cal’s varying defenses. The Bears w ill com e with man-to­ m an, m atchup zone and other zone form ations, “They try to confuse you and you have to m ake sure you don’t go five or six possessions without scoring,” Frieder said. Cal has been ditching the three-guard look on occasion lately in order to play 6-foot-U senior Andre R eyes for either Harrell or Dreher. The Bears have also received a turn to ASUHCal» pafl« 13. Devils try for 2nd straight win tonight versus Cal By AM Y SLA D E State P re ss H ie wom en’s Sun D evil basketball team is seeking revenge tonight when it takes on the Golden Bears of California at 7 p.m . in the U niversity A ctivity Center. The Sun D evils (11-4 overall, 2-3 Pac-10) w ill m eet the Bears for the 14th tim e after last year’s sweep gave Cal a three-gam e win streak in the series. “Cal has som e very good athletes," ASU coach Maura McHugh said. “I expect it to be an up-tempo kind of gam e.” The Bears (10-6, 3-3) have a balanced scoring attack with “two or three” 3-point shooting threats. Junior forward Trisha Stafford’s near 20-point average leads Cal. Her 10 rebounds per gam e also is tops for the Bears. “She can pop out or play in because she has good range on her sh ots,” McHugh said. “She’s an all-around good athlete.” Cal w ill som etim es run the full-court press, McHugh said, because of its run-oriented style of play. “They’ve got a quick point guard (junior Monica W iley) who w ill look to run on any occasion and is equally adept at driving with the ball or dishing it out,” McHugh said. ASU w ill m atch up senior Karen O’Connor and sophomore Crystal Cobb, who share the duties of point guard, against W iley. O’Connor, who has been riddled by injury and had a MRI scan on her back Tuesday, is averaging 10.4 points w hile Cobb is leading the team with an average of 13. W iley is the only starter for the B ears who is not averaging in double figures. The rem ainder of Cal’s lineup features senior guard Laura Baker, who is averaging 11 points a gam e, and does not fear attem pting the 3-point shot a s her 106 attem pts last year, a school record, prove. “We need to get back on our defense and find the person quickly,” McHugh said. “We’ve got to be good on the boards and not allow them that second shot.” McHugh added that ASU is capable of a good inside gam e and the team is im proving on making easy baskets. Karen Sm ith, form er Cal All-American and now an assistant coach for the B ears, said her coaching staff has had tim e to look at several Pac-10 tapes so they do not anticipate any surprises in this matchup. The gam e can present a huge problem , Smith said, if her team is unable to stay even with ASU on the boards. “We’v e got one in double figures (senior forward Teresa Palm isano) and two others close (Stafford and junior forward Kesha M artin),” Smith said. “Our girls can play bigger than what they are, and they need to because they (ASU) a r e a little bit bigger than w e are.” Although the Sun D evils are not playing a huge lineup, Smith said the $ ears m ust give away a couple of inches inside on each post. “We create our offense off of our defense,” she said. “So w e need to be on top of the boards.” Right on target: archers host tourney this w eekend B y L O R E N Z O S IE R R A Jr. Sta te P re ss In the world of sports, parity has becom e the norm. At A SU , h ow ever, one team has risen above the norm to be­ com e — dare w e say — the ‘D ’ word. Y es, the m en ’s and w om en’s a rch ery tea m s have becom e bonafide dy­ Rhodes nasties. During the past 14 years, Sun D evil coach Sheri Rhodes has assem bled the type of dynasty that would m ake the Egyptian pharaohs green with envy. The m ixed team (m en’s and women’s) have won 13 consecutive national titles. Approximately 75 team s com pete at the collegiate level. With championship 14 still to be earned, the team sets its sight on the current season. ASU resum es its year-long schedule with its first contest of the sem ester. The Sun D evils w ill host the Arizona State Archery Association Indoor National Championships Saturday and Sunday. The events start at 8:30 a.m . at the P . E . E ast Complex in Gym 139. Team s scheduled to com pete include Phoenix Community College and Navajo Community College. “Everybody’s anxious to g et underway,” R hodes sa id about the tea m ’s first com petition of the year. Even though the team gets back into action this weekend, several Sun D evil archers have been com peting on an individual level. Individual achievem ent w as highlighted by Janet Schaffer, who took first place at the World Indoor Tryouts in Colorado Springs, Colo., on D ec. 30. An im pressive feat by any standards, but even m ore rem arkable because the 20-yearofal junior took up the sport when she w as 17. “I didn’t know archery really existed before high school,” Schaffer said. Schaffer said her m ain goal at the m oment is to be a m em ber of the 1992 Olympic archery team . Rhodes said with this year being a pre- O ly m p ic y e a r , a rc h e ry tea m s and individuals com pete m ore Often. “In a pre-Olympic year the intensity doubles,” Rhodes said. As for the Sun D evil team com peting on the collegiate level, Rhodes feels the women’s side m ay be m ore im pressive this sem ester. “We’ve added a lot m ore depth to the lad ies’ sid e,” Rhodes said. Last sem ester the team bed only four women on the squad and som etim es three, a situation that Rhodes said left “no room for m istakes.” The team ’s anchor shooters include Schaffer and Kris M askrey. On the m en’s side of the arrow, Rhodes sa id Chris Castner and Jim Cassidy have been com peting w ell. Page 12 State Press Thursday, January 24,1991 NCAA outlaws taunting B y T tM A sso ciate d P re ss CORPUS CHRISTI, T exas — The NCAA Football Rules Committee, concerned with m ocking incidents that marred the Cotton Bowl, adopted new regulations W ednesday to curb taunting and show boating. Tighter regulation of unsportsm anlike conduct w as a priority at the m eeting in Corpus Christi, said David M. Nelson, the com m ittee secretary. “The No. 1 concern of the com m ittee w as the im age of the gam e deteriorating because of antics and actions of players,” said Nelson, the Yankee Conference com m issioner from the U niversity of D elaw are. “I believe that w as the com m ittee’s top priority in this year’s m eeting.” The 12-member NCAA R ules Com m ittee, com posed of head football coaches and athletic directors from NCAA D ivision I, II and III schools, decided Tuesday to pass new rules on field behavior. H ie com m ittee conducted the form al vote on W ednesday. Taunting on the field becam e a m ajor factor after M iami’s 46-3 victory over Texas in a penalty-plagued Cotton Bowl gam e on Jan. 1. The Hurricanes w ere flagged 16 tim es, .including nine tim es for unsportsm anlike conduct or personal fouls. “There’s no question that the activities of the Cotton Bowl helped bring this issue to the forefront,” com m ittee chairm an Mike R. Lude told the Corpus C hristi Caller-Tim es on Tuesday. ‘‘And the concern w as and is there that this type of behavior, if tolerated, w ill continue to affect the im age of the gam e.” Miami coach Dennis Erickson said he was em barrassed and disappointed by his team ’s unruly behavior in the Cotton Bowl. “It took aw ay from what w as a great win otherw ise,’* Erickson said in a statem ent shortly after the Cotton Bowl. U niversity president Edward Foote said shortly after the gam e he w as disappointed by the Hurricanes’ antics. The M iam i H erald said Erickson w as despondent when talking about the situation hours after the Jan. 1 gam e. “I dop’t have any answ ers,” the second-year Miami Coach told The H erald after the gam e, “This has been the worst year of m y life, between today’s unsportsm anlike conduct stuff and som e of the m ail I got after the Brigham Young and Notre Dam e gam es (both Miami lo sses).” The Hurricanes established the tone for the Cotton Bowl before it started, charging off their sideline to taunt Texas as the Longhorns sprinted onto the field. The Hurricanes ended the gam e by taunting a near-empty stadium with a group dance. As the penalties mounted Erickson reprimanded his players after the first quarter and again at halftim e. “Coach Erickson m ade it clear, point-blank, that he didn’t want the taunting, but em otions just took over,” senior crater Darren Handy said at the tim e. “I feel bad for him because h e’s going to take the heat, but w e w ere just playing Hurricane football. “It m ight be em barrassing to the university and the coaches, but it’s not to the players. We enjoy it. It’s like a show. People from Texas cam e to se e.” The stricter ru les prohibit p layers from inciting spectators, taunting and show boating. They leave judgment on what is acceptable up to gam e officials. Nelson said the rules would be em phasized in the 1991-92 rule book. “There really w eren’t any dram atic rules changes that alter the character of the gam e,’’ he said. Texas U niversity Interscholastic League officials, who govern athletic and academ ic com petition among the state’s public high schools, addressed the com m ittee Monday. They asked the NCAA to tighten rules or enforce existing rules governing unsportsm anlike conduct. Texas high school football generally follow s NCAA rules. Among other rules changes, the com m ittee w ill require a goalpost width of IS feet, 6 inches. Width w as changed from 24 feet last year but rem ained optional. O fficials narrowed the goal posts to reduce the number of field goals. ND’s Ismail expected to turn pro B y The A sso ciate d P re ss SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Raghib “Rocket” Ism ail, Notre D am e’s talented flanker and return sp ecialist, has called a press conference for Thursday, where university officials expect he w ill announce his decision to enter the NFL draft. “I think everyone has the im pression that’s the direction in which he’s leaning,” sports inform ation director John H eisler said W ednesday. “I probably put m yself in that category.” Ism ail has conferred in recent w eeks with friends, players and coaches about giving up his final year of eligibility to enter the draft early, H eisler said. “The overwhelm ing m ajority of people are saying, Suns waive former lst-rounder Battle B y The A sso c ia te d P re ss PHOENIX — Second-year forward Kenny B attle, on the NBA’s injured list since D ec. 26 with a sprained left ankle, w as waived W ednesday by the Phoenix Suns. B attle, a first-round draft pick in 1969 out of Illinois, averaged 6.0 points in 16 gam es including four starts this season. He has m issed the last 14 gam es. The Suns have been trying to m ake a trade for B attle for the past two weeks without any su ccess. The 6-foot-6, 211-pound B attle averaged 4.1 points in 59 gam es for Phoenix as a rookie la st season. ‘Looking at the pros and cons, you should go,’ ” he said. Ism ail w as a 1990 All-American and a finalist for the Heism an Trophy. In three seasons he has returned five kickoffs for touchdowns, one short of the NCAA record set by Southern Cal’s Anthony D avis from 1970-72. He has am assed 4,187 all-purpose yards and a total of 15 touchdowns, including four passing, five rushing and one punt return. Coach Lou Holtz, who w as out of town on a recruiting trip, ca lls Ism ail “the best football player in the country.” H eisler said Ism ail did not discuss his intentions when he visited athletic departm ent offices late W ednesday afternoon to ask for the press conference. 965-4200... JU , Call th e Sun Devil Sports Hofllno for additional f ô M i information on Arizona State University Intercol- ag^ œ K jg légiste athletics. The hotline features interviews with ASU coaches and student-athletes, as well as scheduling and ticket Information on ASU JT events. The hotline is changed daily and updated y jP J each night with that day's results. "1_______ Advertising state press Display, 965-6555 Classified, 965-6731 Hayden’s Ferry Review ASU’s N ational L iterary M agazine M atth ew s C en ter, B asem ent 9 6 5 -1 2 4 3 Canon Laser Color Copies ’Buy 0ns Copy Get On« Free! THEN-NOW! Haircut* Shampoo Style $12“ Spiral Perm $39®* FREE mm Hew “WrteihBiyttm fib 894-9588 lax 894-6457 VBA mÉ& m Mon. by appt. Tue.-Fri. 11-8; Sat. 9-6 ■ Appts. made 24 hours m E^ns MM1. 4 9 1 -8 5 9 2 •Southern & Dobson M u stert! twd <1 £ “University A Rural ¡¡¡894-1797 fax 894-1986 University & Hardy 921-0168 fax 894-2038 § 969-3326 fax 461-8442 £ 833-0036 fax 8330972 *lliln & Stapley 'Open 24 Hours! . • 18-Speed Mountain Bike mam jgm Ready to ride: I $189< In c lu d e s U - L o c k water bottle and water bottle cage reg. $259 while ^ supplies last H H A AH A ■ A r 1/2 Price U -L o c k with any bike p urch ase o p e n 7 d a y s th ru J a n . 2 6 ,1 9 9 1 M on.-F ri. 9-6 S a t. 10-6 S u n . 11-5 3 -i-r-m894-6852 CROSSWORD by T H O M A S J O S E P H A C R O SS film) 1 Disorder 5 Prado paintings 10 “S a n s* counter­ part 11 Eloquent; glib 12 Actress Olin 13 Tiresom e recitation 14 In a line 16 In confronta­ tion 20 S a c k s out 23 A ctress Gardner 24 Story em bellish. ers 25 M ean mutt 2 7 Part of ETA 28 Heart and liver, e.g. 29 O ne way to talk 32 O n e way to see 36 Noted golf event 39 Ran, a s color ' 40 Personnel workers 41 S o n g ­ stre ss Jenny 4 2 Liberates 4 3 “— Rider” DOW N 1 B uck or bull 2 Flat 3 Transm it 4 G o every direction 5 Gleam 6 Top; Yesterday’s Answer exceed 7 Thum bsservin gs 31 Court up vote 20 Bridge hearings 8 — Arbor feat 33 Lam b’s 9 P ig’s d igs 21 Italian alias 11 Lam s it m oney 34 Longings 15 “Clum sy 22 Merit 35 Whirlpool m e!' 25 Rotten kid 36 T V dial 1 7 British 26 D ebased setting bye-bye 3 7 Knight 28 S ig n s of 18 Roasting tomorrow title site 30 H om e of 3 8 M ine 1 9 C om the brave output i•.•5 5—4 s 7~~8 9 10 ii u 1 16 Yr 20^21 ¿4 f■ ¿7 29 25 26 1* 19 * 31 & 33 34 37 38 >■ 4Ô 42 41 4$ 1 (1969 D A IL Y CRYPTO Q U O TES— Here's hew to work it; 1/24 AXYDLBAAXR isLO N GFELLO W One lette& siands for another. In this sam ple A is used for the'three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ation of die words are all hints. E&ch day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE 1-24 HRS I I I “University t Forest Any Hair of Tempe i KIN KO 'S DELUXE RESUME PfiCKfiGE kinko's copias H k Sculps-Tips 1 $25 219 W. University COVER J8 M » LETTER I of any Self-Serve Macintosh Computers Hk E xtensions'm 5 16 in .-$185 1 Ig A 18 in .-$225 ¡m H I 20 in .-$250 j j 829-8483 For a free , 34-page outline that clearly explains and documents the major weaknesses and faith assumptions of modern evolutionary theory, call Ulti* rapirapte on2Mtari trip Culm«tarimi m H a ir I E V O L U T IO N ? RJDZYNAHS DWFJK NZWS ZVS FVC BAVFWWJ GRZ FWGFJK HRS KFES YSFKSK HZ PS F R J D Z Y N A H S . — VAS HMKYR S Y esterday’. C ryptoquote: THERE IS A ROAD FROM THE EYE TO THE HEART THAT DOES NOT GO THROUGH THE INTELLECT. — G.K. CHESTER­ TON © 1991 by K in g F u tu re s Syndicate, Inc.- Stale Presa Page 13 Thursday, January 84,1991 U ndefeated ASU Classifieds to face W ildcats State Press From staff reports The ninth-ranked ASU m en’s tennis team,- com ing off a successful Pac-10 indoor tourney, hosts Weber State today at Whiteman Tennis Center at 10 a m, For the Sun D evils (1-0), the m atch is the second home m eet of the season. ASU defeated BYU 9-0 eight days ago. The W ildcats fell to Utah in their first m eet, 5-4. Senior Brian Gyetko, ranked 35th in the nation in singles, plays in the No. 1 seed for the Sun D evils w hile Dave Lomicky is in the No. 2 slot. The team of Lomicky and Gyetko, ranked second in the nation in doubles, make up the No. 1 doubles squad. Weber S tate is led by No. 1 singles player Dermot Sweeney, the W ildcats’ lone senior. Sweeney and junior G raem e F orem an are th e top doubles squad. ' Gymnasts pick up road w in over BYU From staff reports The ASU m en’s gym nastics team picked up its first road victory of the season, a 277.45-271.80 win at BYU, to improve its record to 2-0. Senior Licurgo Diaz-Sandi led the Sun D evils with a score of 56.55, which m ade him second in the all-around. Diaz-Sandi placed in five of the seven events With a share of first-place honors on the vault. The Cougars’ Jason Brown, who tied Diaz-Sandi on the vault with a 9.45, w as the all-around winner with his score of 57-65. ASU sophomore Paul Bedewi finished third in the allaround with his 54.10 mark. In. addition to Diaz-Sândi’s vault honors, senior Christian Rohde and junior Jody Newman also took individual firstplace honors. Rohde captured his specialty, the pommel horse, with a 9.75 grade that put him w ell ahead of the pack. Newman edged out Brown by one-tenth with a 9.75 to take first place on the parallel bars. Individual events and the top three finishers follow : All-around: 1. Jason Brown, BYU (57.65) 2. Licurgo DiazSandi, ASU (56.55) 3. Paul Bedewi, ASU (54.10) Floor exercise: 1. Jason Brown, BYU (9.60) 2. Licurgo Diaz-Sandi, ASU (9.50) 3. Eric Brown, ASU (9.40) Pom m el horse: 1. Christian Rohde, ASU (9.75) 2, Jason Brown, BYU (9.45) 3. Licurgo Diaz-Sandi (9.30) Still rings: 1. Jason Brown, BYU (9.75) 2. Chris Smith, ASU (9.65) 3, Licurgo Diaz-Sandi, ASU (9.55) Vault: IT. Licurgo Diaz-Sandi, ASU (9.45) IT. Jason brown, BYU (9.45) 3. Freddie Martin, BYU (9.35) P arallel bars: 1. Jody Newman, ASU (9.75) 2. Jason Brown, BYU (9.65) 3. Chris Smith, ASU (9.55) High bar: 1. Jason Brown, BYU (9.75) 2. Chris Reshetar, BYU (9.65) 3. Carlos Fulcher, BYU (9.50) UD trips Ice Devils in spite o f hat trick From staff reports Todd Shimirak scored two goals and added one a ssist to lead the U niversity of Denver to a 6-4 victory over the ASU Hockey Club W ednesday at the Tower Plaza Ice Arena in Phoenix. Shim irak’s second goal at 10:37 of the third period gave UD a 5-3 edge and proved to be the gam e winner as the Ice D evils (10-7) suffered their third straight loss despite a hat trick from senior Dan Ciaramentaro. After UD skated out to a 4-1 lead in the third, ASU cam e back with Ciarmentaro’s second goal, which w as assisted by P ete Nicklason only 31 seconds into the period. With 5:15 gone, junior Abel Moreno scored to cut die lead to one, but thé visitors then answered with two more goals, with Tim Rutherford scoring at 12:56 to clinch the victory. The Ice D evils host UD again tonight at Tower Plaza with faceoff at 7:30. ASU-Cal Continued from page 11. Classifieds Matthews Center Basement, Room 15 Personal* ( IS words or loss) a n only $1.751 M ust place personal ad In person with student ID. C LA SSIFIED D ISP LA Y RATES: 1 time: $7.65 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. inch 6 + times: $6.50 per col inch ADVERTISING POLICY: The State Press reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy submitted. State Press Classifieds HOW TO PLACE A C LA SSIFIED AD: In Person: / Cash, Check (with guarantee card), Visa, M asterCard or American Express. We’re located in the lower level of Matthews Center, Room 46H. Office hours are 8am-5pm, Monday-Friday. L et S t a t e P r e s s C la s s if i e d s w o r k fo r yo u ! By Phone: 965-6731 Payment with Visa, MasterCard or American Express only. $6 mini­ mum on air phone orders. Personal ads a n not accepted over the phonal ANNOU NCEM ENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS A C T O R S W O R KO U T , listed in the Yellow P a ge s under Theaters. 234-6443. 1 A N D 2 bedroom s, $199 special m ove in. Covered parking, fireproof, pool, very near A SU , quiBt. 1 bedroom : $310, 2 bedroom: $380. 968-6926 or 967-4568. T E M P E : F U R N IS H E D 1 bedroom , clean. 1409 South Rural. $265/month. 968-2279, 940-0518 (John or David). A S U LIB E R T A R IA N S, classical liberals, anachists (?). Are you out there? Let’s organize and raise som e hell. Call Terry, 784-4585. A U D IT IO N IN Tucson for 140 paid posi­ tions for 26th se ason of m usical dram a “Texas,” Saturday, January 26, noon-' 5pm, M ain Stage— Theatre Arts Center, University of Arizona. Perform ances in Palo Duro Canyon near Amarillo, nightly except Sundays, June 12— August 24, 1991. Rehearsals begin M ay 19. For more information, call (806)655-2181 or write: Box 268, Canyon, T exas 79015. 2 BE D R O O M , 1 bath apartment, w alking distance to school (Rural/Apache). $350 per month. Available now. Call Paul at 837-9071 or 968-1002. W A N T E D : A nonsm oker fem ale to subléase Tem pe apartm ent from February 1 to M ay 30. Large, furnished one bedroom. Very low rent. Utilities split. Excellent for college student. N o drugs. Lori, 820-4556. Y ou sa y it. w e ’ll d is p la y it! O n ly in S ta te P re s s C la ssifie d s. 3/4 BE D R O O M , 2 baths, fenced yard, close to ASU.. $595/month. 966-8838 or 967-4908. A S U A R E A . Studio and 1 bedrooom for rent. $260 and up. 966-8838 or 967-49Ó8. N O O N IS the deadline to get classified liner a d s in th6 following day. D on 't m iss it! Matthews Center basem ent, 965-6731. LA RG E 2 BEDRO O M APARTM EN TS Perfect for room m ates seeking a quiet location close to A SU , Pools, lighted tennis court, and much more!) By Ejlall: Send your ad (with payment) to: State Press Classifieds Dept, YST-1502 Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Personal ads a n not accepted through the mall! W HEN W ILL YOUR AD RUN? Classified liner ad s will begin 1 day after they are placed (If placed before noon). Classified display ad s can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10am). Ads may run for any length of time. Canceled ads will be credited to your account. Sorry, no nfund s. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S F O R REN T L U X U R Y 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo. All a p p lia n c e s in c lu d in g w asher/dryer. $525/month. 375-3300, Tama. T EM PE/A SU /SK Y H A R B O R . Neat and clean 1 bedroom , washer/dryer, pool. $360. 396-9877 W A LK T O A SU . 2 bedroom , 2 bath townhouse. Full-size washer/dryer, all appliances. $485/month. 843-2640, ask for Hal, or 264-6308, leave m essage. M O O O V IN G ? Eastridge Apartments 1522 E. Southern Ave. 839-9947 (Present this a d for additional $2 5 sa v in g s.) 1 block off campus 1 bed: $385 2 bed:$sas $160 move in Call Today! Apache Terrace L E A R N E S P E R A N T O , the international language, and meet the world. C la sse s held every W ednesday, 7:30pm , in M U room 213. Free. C all M ark, 834:3272. L E T JO H N C asablancas take your picture and show it to the world. Free adm ission to our grand opening event at the Phoenician on January 26 all day. For more informa­ tion, call the John C asablancas Studios at 946-8422. LO V E T O dance? Hate the bar sce ne ? Y ou’ll love the AH Sin g le s Dances, Fridays at better Valley hotels: $4.50. Recorded information, 946-4086. S IN G L E S ’ E V EN T S, advice, personals-^ Arizona Single Sce ne new spaper. Free sam ple, 990-2669. Y O U S A Y it, we’ll display ft! O nly in State P re ss Classifieds. 1123 E. A pach e 1 b lock e a s t o f Rural 9 6 8 -6 3 9 3 B E A U T IF U L ¿ N E W la rg e 1 and 2 bedroom s. W alk to A SU . Pool, laundry room, 1 block south of University on 8th Street. C ape C od Apartm ents, 968-5238. O N E B E D R O O M , furnished. C lean and quiet in sm all com plex. 1 mile to A SU . 968-5279. ST A T E P R E S S Production Departm ent p ro vid e s typesetting, p a ste -up and process cam era services. CaH D onna at 965-7572 for rates and information. APARTMENTS Locating Service 437-1048 Roommate matching service also available. 437-1048 boost upfront after junior Matt Lien made his first substantial contribution this weekend. Campanelli could use the size to com pensate for his team ’s deficiencies. “ (ASU) is much more athletic across the board,” A N N O U N C E M E N T S Campanelli saim “If they can play Arizona head-to-head for 40 m inutes, they’ve got to be a pretty solid team .” •With a sw eep of the Bay schools this week, ASU could attain win No. 13. Tlie Sun D evils did not win their 13th gam e last season until March 3. •Tonight’s gam e at Cal w ill be televised locally by KTVK, Channel 3, beginning at 8:30 Arizona tim e. U N CR AD RATES: IS words or less: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10+ days 154 each additional word. The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. G ET P E R SO N A L . Se n d som eone special a State P re ss personal ad. A 15-word personal is only $1.751 Com e down to the basem ent of M atthew s Center to place your ad today! And remember to bring your student ID! T E M P E , S IN G L E fam ily home. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, fireplace, 2-car garage. 1,800 square feet. $775/month. C all 493-8447. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S F O R REN T 2 BE D R O O M , 2 bath condo. Living room, kitchen, nook, patio, balcony, 2-story, fireplace, 2-car parking. $525 per month. (619)282-8641. 2 B E D R O O M condo, 12 m inutes A SU , heated pool, m any extras. $435 month. 265-2066. T e rrace R o a d A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra ce 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 ANNOUNCEM ENTS tmUL THE HOTTES1 WEARS Levl*Cuess*Cap »and others ÉPMÍRIíÍÉkÍ í C lC IS S lC iS “ ” ° I B l 491-2029 CowiforhlQ or bust! Let us help you advertise your garage or m oving sale. state Press Classifieds Beautifully furn ish ed , h u g e 1 b e d r o o m , 1 b a th ; 2 b e d r o o m . 2 b a th a p a r t ­ m e n ts . All b ills p a id . C a b le TV , h e a t e d p o o l , a n d s p a c i o u s l a u n d r y faci l i ti es. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t . S t o p by to d a y ! jVtaàaLWatte iMUÉUÉMNIIIIMttáÉllM I 2179 E A S T Howe. U nfurnished one bedroom house. Fenced backyard. $250 rent, $200 deposit. 966-6308. 2 B E D R O O M , 2 bath townhom e near A SU . W asher/dryer, pool, Jacuzzi, covered parking. Quiet. 967-9368. 'r S t U M S C M S T W i ■ 0 7 C A $ H T Fry s Plaza H O M E S F O R REN T E N J O Y T H E QUIET! 1/2 Block From C am p u s Bm Hm |W V ifßä m m $ » < ÍÉ § ¡ | I Free gift toall forstopping by! 3 B E D R O O M , 2 bath condo. University Ranch, 2 m iles from A SU . Pool, jacuzzi, c o v e r e d p a r k in g , w a sh e r/ d ry e r. $690/m onth . C a ll M att N a w ro ck i, 952-0050, leave m essage. H A Y D E N S Q U A R E condo! 2 bedroom/2 bath, u n fu rn ish e d . A ll appliance s/ fireplace. Great location! Available Janu­ ary 25. 951-8382/285-9902. N E E D A back issu e of the State P re ss? Com e dow n to the basem ent of Matthews Center. If we have what you need, it’s yours. APARTM ENTS REN T AL S H A R IN G 2 B E D R O O M , own bedroom/bath. Split utilities- Pools, sauna, exercise room, Jacuzzi. $225. 835-9575. 2 BED R O O M /2 bath tow nhouse,'1.5 m iles from A SU , all am enities, quiet area, clean, nonsm oker, male/female. $275/m onth plus Vfe utilities. 921-3166, leave m essage. 2 B E D R O O M to w n h o u se , R u ra l/ Guadalupe: $200/month plus !£ utilities. Furnished, pool, tennis. Darin, 631-6842 (days), 491-2598 (evenings). 2 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E S w anted. $300/month. 2 m iles from A SU . Q uesta Vida. 3 bedroom , 3 bath, furnished, pool, racquetbal! court. Call Heila, 967-1360. A C A R E E R -O R IE N T E D n o n sm o kin g female needed to share 2 bedroom/2 bath condo in Papago II, $225/Vb utilities. C hrists, 784-1582. C O M M O N S O N Apache! Reduced rent. All the extras! Great place to live. T.J; Puglisi, 967-8852. APARTM ENTS i/2 Month Off on 6 Month L ease • Quiet Professional Atmosphere • Close To America West and ASU • Spacious Studios, 1 Bedroom, 2 Bdrm/2Ba • Covered Parking • 2 Pools • Jacuzzi ASKABOUT OUR 12-MONTHLEASE SPECIAL HAYDEN PLACE 625 W. 1st St. - Between Hardy & Mill - 968-5444 REN T AL S H A R IN G COM PUTERS MOTORCYCLES F E M A L E N O N SM O K E R for fully furnished condo. Pepago Park. $230 plus V i utilities. Neat, dean, responsible. 894-8189. A M IG A 500, monitor, m ouse, 880K drive, 150 disks. $650. Brandon, 649-1927. 1989 H O N D A scooter, 50cc. 350 miles. $850, cash only. Evenings, 899-6209. A T T EN T IO N E N G L IS H students: FuH Atari Computer and printer, $199. Another Atari com puter only $89. 991-5466. M U S T S E L L ! Yam aha 125 scooter, great condition! Low m ileage on new engine. 464-8513 $95Q/offer. F E M A L E . N O N -SM O K E R . Take over lease im mediately through mid M ay. C lose to cam pus. 966-9078. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E 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 d o se to A SU . $270 plus W utilities. Call 968-5564. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E , 10 m inutes from A SU . Clean 4 bedroom . Patio, pod. W asher/dryer, ceiling fans, furnished. $250, >4 utilities. 966-2360. F E M A L E S P A N IS H speaker to share 2 bedroom , 2 bath apartment. 3 m iles from cam pus. 966-9365. L A R G E R O O M in nice hom e close to cam pus. Study, sw im m ing pod , kitchen, and laundry facilities. $250/m onth plus V* utilities. 967-1787 or 893-4834. M A L E / F E M A L E N E E D E D sh a re 2 bedroom , 2V i bath. Available now! Call Lisa, 220-9679. N IC E 2 bedroom , 2 bath at Kyrene and Ellid . New washer/dryer, heated pod, Jacuzzi, microwave. $270 plus V i utilities. Fem ale preferred. Call Chris, 820-0339. N O N SM O K IN G R O O M M A T E wanted: $238/month with utilities included. M cClin­ tock and Broadw ay location. Call Brian, 731-3043. G E T P E R S O N A L — Se nd som eone special a State P re ss personal ad. A 15-word personal is only $1.75! Com e down to the basem ent of Matthew s Center to place your ad today! A nd remember to bring your student ID! COMPUTER MULTI-SYSTEMS Buy & sell new and used com puters, printers, and. software. R E S O R T -S T Y L E L IV IN G R o o m ie wanted. W e have everything. Sauna, pod, spa and more. Nice, large spacious condo. O n ly $1,300 m onthly w hich includes utilities. Please call Andy or C hris at 921-4150. R O O M À V A ÌL A B L E at L os Prados Apart­ ments. $200/month plus utilities. Jim, 967-4492. : ^ S P R IN G T R E E L U X U R Y 2 bedroom/2 bathroom condo. Pool/spa, washer/dryer, covered parking, vaulted ceilings, more. M ale/fem ale, nonsm oker. Broadw ay/ M cClintock $270, V i utilities. 220-7004, 921-9677 T W O B E D R O O M apartm e nt. O w n bedroom , furnished, and own bathroom. $284.50 plus V i utilities. M eridian Com ers, Mike, 894-5356. R O O M S F O R REN T F R E E R O O M and board in exchange for babysitting. Som e nights and w eekends. Mature, female. 20 m inutes drive from cam pus. Call M arissa, 840-4140. G R E A T F O R students! 5 m inutes from A SU . $275 ind ude s water. V i electric and phone 946-2584. L A R G E R O O M for rent! P o d , close to A SU . $165 per month. Contact Cindy, Katie: 829-1953. S H A R E L A R G E house, pod , washer/ dryer, dishw asher, etc. Rural/Apache. $180 plus utilities 967-7364/437-1048. ST U D EN T S: A W E SO M E house with one room left to rent. It’s student owned and fully furnished, even your room if so desired. Very close to A SU . P o d , Jacuzzi, garage, can be aH yours to enjoy: Call M ark. 423-5657 $ 31 0 per month. ST U D E N T S: N IC E furnished room, 10 m inutes from cam pus, ind ud e s kitchen and electric. 947-4258- TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S F O R SA L E 2 B E D R O O M , 2 bath condo. Fireplace. W alk to A SU . $49,900 Owner. 991-6992. L A R G E F U R N IS H E D 1 bedroom . 1 bath condo. C lose to A SU . Days, call 951-8898; evenings, 948-0970. Next to Buffalo Exchange 966-1388 SC EE) Financing Available Z EN IT H E A S Y PC, IB M compatible. 540K, 1,200 baud modem, monitor, first choice, Lotus metro, D O S plus, other programs/ gam es $700/offer. 438-9432, Pat. T IC K E T S J A N E S AD ITIO N , reserved and general seating. Beil Biv Divoe/Johnny Gill/Keith Sweat. First 20 rows. Tickets Unlimited, 840-2340 JEW ELRY A L W A Y S B U Y IN G Jewelry of all kinds, including gold, sterling, gem s, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South Mill Avenue, Tem po Center, 968-6074. C A S H F O R gold, diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 South Mill, S u it? 101, Tfempe. 968-5967. oooooeeooocooeeooo MILL AVENUE JEWELERS 414 S. Mill, Suite 101 Tempe, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICE JEWELERS» Custom Design & Remounts Jewelry & Watch Repair Gold/Diamonds/Silver Pulsar Watchcs/Pcarls » 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 « C E N T U R IO N L E M A N S road bike with accessories, $350. Kevin, 784-9696. SC H W IN N S U P E R Sport with 600 series, good condition. New $859, sale $250. 350-8436, Cris. T R A N S P O R T A T IO N LO O K IN G F O R a ride back “East” , anywhere remotely close to P A Leaving on or after 5/9/91. W illing to pay for half of the gas. Please call M ichele at 966-6984 if TRAVEL 3 R O U N D -T R IP tickets, Phoenix to Los Angeles. 2/1 to 2/4. 966-0590, Bill. $80 each/offer. P L A N E T IC K E T S to Orlando! Leave Satur­ day, 1/26, 9am ; return Tuesday, 1/29, 9pm . M ust sell! P a id $223. $150. 860-8080. S P R IN G B R E A K packages to C ancún and Mazatlan. Low, low prices. Reserve your spot now and save. C all Bob, 967-4050. HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! HOT! Inexpensive Spring Break trips Mexico—Hawaii—Mexico 1(800)543-9205 T R A V E L C H E A P in your name. I special­ ize in quick departures. M ost places U SA. $285-450, round-trip. Alaska, $550-650. A lso worldwide. I a lso buy transferable coupons. 968-7283. TW O R O U N D -T R IP tickets from Phoenix to Portland, Oregon. Departs 2/21 and returns 2/24. B uy one or both. $158 each. Call today. Leave m essage, 834-1481. V A IL C O M P A N Y luxury tim eshare. Febru­ ary 2 to February 9: 3 bedroom , 2 % bathsleeps 8. 829-7780 or 602-634-8538. H ELP W A N T E D — G E N ER A L HELP W A N T E D G E N ER A L H EL P W A N T E D — G E N ER A L B E O N TV. M any needed for com m ercials. Now hiring aH ages. For casting information, call (615)779-7111, ext. T-130. G O LF P R O M O T IO N S! Earn extra money part-time by selling golf passes. Call Jim, 649-1510. PA R T -T IM E C O O K S and counter help. Apply in person, Long W ong’s, 701 South Mill. C A ST IN G Q ALL: Entertainm ent com pany se e ks talent for print, TV, m ovies, photos, C E E C Entertainm ent, 274-6362. L IB R A R Y A S S IS T A N T , W est Phoenix engineering firm. Shelving, filing, data entry. Obtaining books from A S U library and other sources. M ust have transporta­ tion. Part-time, flexible hours. Call Susann e a t 272-6848. EO E. PA R T -T IM E C A S H IE R and part-time wait­ ress, beverage cart operator, and relief assistant m anager needed. Apply in person at Pete’s 19th Tee, Rolling H ills Golf Course, 1405 North Mil! Avenue in Tempe. L O S E U P to 25 pourids/month. W eight lo ss program ne e d s 10 overw eight subjects. New m edical breakthrough. Tested 10 years. Personal support. Rob, 966-8306. SP O R T S IN TERN C A T L O V E R wanted. Upperclassm an needed to d e an house, run errands, do occasional cooking, m iscellaneous odd Jobs for w orking couple with cats. C ar and references required. $6/hour plus errand m ileage. M onday-Friday, 3-6pm. Rural/ Southern area, Tem pe. Call Stephanie, 838-1643 or 897-3044. ★ ★ EA SY CA SH * * Completely autom ated donor plasma-pheresis. Discover how easy, sa fe and fast it is to: Earn $30 + a weekl while d o n a tin g much n e e d e d p la s m a . M en tio n this ad for a $5 bon u s on y o u r first d on at ion. ( M o n d a y - S a t u r d a y ) On l y cen ter in Valley paying: $10 — 1st donation, $20 — 2nd donation in sa m e week. UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe 894-2250 C H IL D C A R E positions available. The Chandler Y M C A is looking for individuals w ho are 21 years and older to work part-time for their afterschool child care program s. Experience w orking with child­ ren is required. Please pick up an applica­ tion in person at the Chandler Y M C A , 398 W est R ay Road. C O R K ‘N Cleaver accepting applications for lunch w aitress, lunch hostess. W ill train. Concern with appearance, reliability and personality are important. Apply in person, M onday-Friday, 2-5pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street (44th and Cam elback). 952-4585. G IR L S, G IR L S, girls, boys, boys, boys! Bicycle rickshaw driver wanted. U p to $10 per hour.’ Part-time, full-time. Apply in person, W ednesday and Thursday, 2pm sharp: 225 W est University no. 109. 894-9155. 'r e a d READ READ READ READ READ read read' READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ part-time, flex. hrs. $6/hour M u s t h a v e e x c e lle n t w r i t i n g s k ills . S e n d resum e an d cover letter to: P.0. BOX 40113 PhX, AZ 85067 ^ H A Y D E N ’S F E R R Y R E V IE W , N E E D : D E P E N D A B L E , energetic, real estate student for research and errands. M acintosh user a m ust. M . Scott, 951-0758; O IL C O M P A N Y re f» hiring im mediately for our Tem pe office. $200-$500 per week, full- or part-time. Flexible hours, will train. Call 921-1103. O P P O R T U N IT IE S F O R experienced, dedicated broiler and pantry line cooks in a fast-paced grow ing business. Apply in person: Red Robin, L o s A rcos Mall. PA R T -T IM E S A L E S , evening hours, need excellent com m unication skills, and be team oriented. Prospecting arid limited sale s in fun environm ent. Excellent train­ ing. 966-8788, Desert Green. S A L E S M A N A G E M E N T trainee. B ig earn­ ing potential. Call 941-4667 between 10am and 4pm. . SP O R T S*; M IN D E D individuals: Hiring im mediately 8-10 enthusiastic individuals for our A S U office. Perfect for students! Great experience! $300-$500 per week part-time/fulltime. Call 921-8282. FORTUNE III CORPORATION If you are a positive, enthusiastic person who likes to have fun and make money WE OFFER: •Flexible hours «Guaranteed Salary •Excellent bonus program •Group Medical «Paid vacations •Rapid advancement & Mesa 2 LOCATIONS «31-8358 Ask for Mike . . _ v.':v VV; rp___ Tempe_ 9 6 8 -7 1 6 4 » ^AskforjBart^y Got The No Money Blues? A U D fO EQ U IP M EN T : 15” Subw oofer with 140-watt amplifier, equalizer, double-tape deck, big speakers with 15” woofer. Great prices, call Doug, 829-1135. G O LF C L U B S great buy. $85/offer. Lynx "M a ste rs” 3-pw (irons), new grips! Rusty, 241-9888. L A D IE S, A R E you tired of being harassed and terrified of being m olested or raped? W e have ladies defense w eapons: Key ring tear g a s units starting at $8.99; stun g u n s starting at $49.99; sm all-caliber hand g u n s starting at $55. Party Ice and Firew ood Com pany, 4029 E ast University, Phoenix 437-3139. RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW! DAYTONA BEACH .7: NIGHTS SOUTH PADRE ISLAND 5 A N D 7 NICH TS STEAMBOAT 2. 5 A N D 7 N IC H TS FORT LAUDERDALE 7 NIGHTS PANAMA CITY BEACH 7 NIGHTS CORPUS CHRISTI / MUSTANG ISLAND S A N D 7 NIGHTS HILTON HEAD ISLAND 5 A N D 7 NIGHTS A U T O M O B IL E S 1983 B E R T O N E X I 9 convertible. Airconditioning, 5-speed, leather interior. Excellent condition. Too m uch to list. $2,500/offer. Andy, 423-0692. 1984 R E N A U L T Alliance, burgandy. 2-door, 4-cylinder, automatic, power steer­ in g , A M / FM . G o o d tra n sp o rta tio n . $i,200/offer. 990-8385. S P R IN G T R E E C O N D O , buy or lease. 1 % m iles ftom A SU . Z bedroom/2 bath, washer/dryer, poolside. 967-8248. 1987 T O Y O T A M R 2, 5-speed, air condi­ tioning, C D player, alarm, tint, cover, rims, warranty. $7,500. 649-1699. F U R N ITU R E 1990 A C U R A Integra L S , automatic, air, stereo, sunroof, cruise, extended warran­ ty, 6 month old, 5,000 miles, excellent condition. $14,500. 962-7404 O F F IC E F U R N IT U R E sale! D e sk from $39.95. C hairs from $4.95. Bookcases from $19.95. Com puter furniture, files and more. Arizona O ffice Liquidators, 5064 South 40th Street (on 40th Street, south d Broadway). 437-2224. 1990 C A N N O N D A LE Shim ano 105, Look Pe d als, com puter. 58cm , like new! $450/offer. 350-0514. M ISC E L L A N E O U S F O R SA LE 1987 M A Z D A 4x4 pickup, black beauty. 5-speed, air, pow er steering, tinted windows, custom w heels, more. $4,800. 897-6932 M O V IN G S A LE : Everything 3 m onths old. 2 queen beds, loveseat and sofa, antique dining table, dishes, gla sse s, pans, forks...everything you need. 967-6178. 1969 G T Tequsta m ountain bike. Excellent condition. Call for information: 994-4997, leave m essage. $300. you can help. C O M M A D O R E 64 with disk drive, color monitor, lots of software, and printer. $500/offer. 784-9574; LO W DO W N , no qualify. 3 bedroom , 3 bath. University/Price. M ary Ram seyer, 820-5506, Century 21 All Star Realtors 9 5 % W A V E L E S S queen-size waterbed with bookcase headboard, heater, and liners. $175 or best offer. 464-4788. B IC Y C L E S 225 W. University GET PERSONAL! O W N R O O M in 3 bedroom condo in South Scottsdale. $185/m onth, % utilities. 945-6225 State Press Thursday, January 84,1991 Page 14 1991 V O LK SW A G E N G olf G TI, 16-valve Nastiest. 5 m onths old, immaculate, black, 136-horsepower, 125-watt cassette stereo, 6 speakers, B B S alloy w heels, P 6 special tires, sunroof, Recoaro racing front seats, 10,000 m iles. $14.000. 967-6178. ‘80 C H E V Y Citation 2-door hatchback, power steering, air conditioning, radio, new front tires. $700/offor. Call 921-1727. C O N V E R T IB L E ! 1965 yellow Pontiac Sunbird. G ood condition. $4,500. Call 893-6508. *108 M r CALL TOLL FR EE TODAY 1- 800- 321-5911 •Depending on break dates and length of stay B U S IN E S S O P P O R T U N IT IE S $$$ A unique network m arketing opportun­ ity; experiencing dynam ic growth! Unlim­ ited incom e potential. Be your own boss. 899-8435. HELP W AN TED— GENERAL A C C O U N T E X E C U T IV E S , e asy sale. C o m m issio n e d re o rd e rs. F u rn ish e d account leads. Low selling price, high take. Great atm osphere. 968-0773. A C C O U N T IN G M A JO R S — local C P A firm h a s an immediate internship available for a motivated upperclassm an. Valuable experience. 870-4777. A C C O U N T S R E C E IV A B L E clerk, parttime. Com puter experience required. H ours flexible. Near 40|h Street and Broadw ay. Apply: Bond Pharm acy. 6135 North 7th Street, $100+ per week part-time! W e offer you an excellent opportunity to make money and to get involved in a very exciting organization! W e’re looking for conscientious people to raise funds on behalf of a national % non-profit organization in an enthusiastic atmosphere. And we’re close to ASU! •$5 per hour guaranteed •Flexible schedule •Chance for bonus each shift •Be proud of what you’redoing ¡n Hours Available: 2-6pm 6-9:30pm Make money and get involved Call 921 -8112 TO DAY SttfrPrw Page 1>. Thursday; January 84, 1991 H EL P W A N T E D — GENERAL S T O C K Y A R D S R E ST A U R A N T now hiring lunch w aitresses and lunch hostesses, night hoetesses/cockta iI w aitresses. Apply in person, 5001 E a st W ashington, 10-1t:30am/after 1:30pm, M ónday-Friday. ST U D E N T W A N T ED for part-time work M onday-Friday. Arizona driver’s license, c a r and auto in su ra n c e required. $6-8/hour. Call 921-8080. S U M M E R JO B S. Counselors/sum m er children’s cam p/Northeast— Top salary, room/board/laundry, travel allowance. M ust have skill ih one of the following activities: A rchery, crafts, baseball, basketball,, bicycling, dance, dram a, drum s, fencing, football, golf, guitar, gym nastics* hockey, horseback. English, juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photo­ graphy, piano; rocketry, rollerblading, rope s, sailb oard irig, sa ilin g, scu b a , soccer, track* waterski, weights, wood. M en call or write: Cam p W inadu, 5 Glen Lake, Mam aroneck, New York 10543 (914)381 -5983. W om en call or Write: Cam p Vega, P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, M a ssa ­ chusetts 02332, (617)934-6536. S W IM M IN G J O B S (W ater Safety Instruc­ tor) —e Sum m er children’s cam pus— N ortheasts- M en and women w ho can teach children to swim, swim team, beauti­ ful pool and lakes in the Northeast. G ood salary, room and board, travel expense. M en call or-write: Cam p W inadu. 5 Glen Lane, M am aroneck, New York 10543, (914)381-5983. W om en call or write: Cam p Vega, R O . Box 1771, Duxbury, M a ssa ­ chusetts 02332, (617)934-6536. T E L E M A R K E T E R S W A N T ED . Earn up to $8 per hour. Full-time or part-time. Call 990-3080. EARN $100 + P E R W E E K P A R T -T IM E We offer an excellent opportuni­ ty to make money and to get involved. W e're looking for conscientious people to raise funds on behalf of a national non-profit organization in an enthusiastic atmosphere, very close to ASU. • $5 per hour guaranteed • Flexible schedule • Chance for bonuses each shift C A LL TO DAY 921-8112 raesebrothers, Inc. T E N N IS J O 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 call or write: Cam p Vega, P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, M a ssa ­ chusetts 02332, (617)934-6536. M en call or write: Cam p W inadu, 5 Glen Lane, M a m a ro n e c k ', N e w Y o rk . 1 0 $ 4 3 , (914)381-5983 W A IT R E S S E S , D E P E N D A B L E , no experi­ ence necessary. Pim a G olf Resort, Scotts­ dale. Evening or m orning. Apply in person: 7330 North Pim a Road. H ELP W A N T E D — C L E R IC A L A M E D IC A L office in Scottsdale needs part-time/fuli-time help. M ust have good clerical and typing skills. W ill train for medical. 941-3812, S E C R E T A R Y , $5/HOUR, 20 hours/week. Flexible schedule. C lose to cam pus. Bookkeeping skills a plus. Spectrum E le c­ tronics, 968-5002. SPORTS & WINGS 2 satellites 11 screens W oodshed II Northwest corner of Dobson 8 Umv 844-SH E D For all your sports viewing “Tke PERSONALS A T T E N T IO N G R E E K S , Sp rin g Break packages to Cancún and Mazatlan. Low, low prices. Reserve your spot now and save. Call Bob, 967-4050. A T T EN T IO N A L L G reeks- Greek W eek 1991 is com ing! Find out the theme and your Greek W eek team s at Them e Announcem ent, W ednesday, January 30th at Sport R ock Cafe! A S H A M E D B Y breast, facial or bikini ha ir? C all A Soft Touch Electrolysis. Student discounts. Tempe. 829*7829. N E E D T IM E to stu d y? W e do APA/M LA formats. $1.50, double-spaced page. Call Bobbi, 968-9166 or Joanne, 966-1516. FA C U LT Y : P R O O F R E A D IN G for texts, dissertations, articles. M aticulous, fast. 10 years college E n glish teaching experi­ ence. Price varies. 969-1164. T Y PIN G , W O R D processing, graphics, custom com puter program m ing, P C help. Sharon, 892-0281. L E T ST A T E P re ss C lassified s work for you! C all 965-6731 for Information. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , se c re ta ria l services. 23 years’ experience. Student discounts. Southw est corner, M iller and Chaparral. 994-8145. •Bodywaxing» D O N ’T B E a pledge, be a Take- call rush chairm an Bryan Crum , 966-6172. O RDER YO URS TODAY 965-6881 H ELP W A N T E D — F O O D SE R V IC E A D V E R T IS E R S ! R E A C H 45,000 readers daily in the State Press. B U S T E R S R E S T A U R A N T is now hiring experienced food servers, b u sse rs and hostesses. Part-time and full-time posi­ tions available. Please apply in person, 8320 North Hayden, 951-5850. M A L E O R female bartender wanted at fun neighborhood bar. 16-30 hours per week. $8-12 per hour. Apply 2-4pm , The W oodshed 1 ,19 W est Baseline. N EW JA P A N E S E restaurant will be taking applications on January 20 through 25, 1-5pm for w aitresses and kitchen helpers. Part-time and full-time positions available. Please apply in person at Kobe Club, 1845 E ast Broadway, 431-8725. BANQ U ET SER V ER S • W A IT E R S • W A IT R E S S E S Experienced reliable people can start immediately if you have... • T R A N S P O R T A T IO N • B L A C K & W H IT E S (tuxwear) • TELEPH O N E Days, nights & weekend work available, valleywide. Call for appointment. 234-1600 E XECU TEM PS, INC 2701 N. 16TH ST. #101 PA R T -T IM E H E L P needed, prep cook, hostess, waiter/waitress. Apply in person at Chopandaz, com er of Scottsdale Road and M cKellips, Tuesday-Sunday, 5-10pm .. W E N E E D self-m otivated students. Earn up to $1Q/hour. M arket credit cards on cam pus. Flexible hours. O nly 10 positions available. Call now, 1(800)950-8472, ext. 20 (Frank). PERSONALS PERSONALS W HAT IF YOU GET REALLY SICK? Thé Student Health Center’s got you covered for most health problems. But w hat about serious illness or injury that requires off campus service? W ithout additional insurance coverage, you could he facing financial hardship—or worse—if you risk going unprotected. ; So right now, look into Preferred O re for Students. It helps cover what Student Health doesn’t. And it’s priced right! Be sûre to sign up for the Spring sem ester by , February 11, the last day to enroll. Fbr details on coverages and exclusions, contact the Student Health Center at 965-2411. Blue C ross Blue Shield of Arizona \b u just can’t d o a n y bette»: Any 12 oz. Bottle $125 Thursday only! 1301 E. University (Next to Beauvais) 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 M E N O F A S U don’t just join a fraternity be a part of one. R ush Sam . P S I S IG S thanks for a great happy hour! Love, the ladies of Sigm a Kappa. S IG K A P G A B R IE L LA — Y ou’re alm ost there, but beware, we don’t call you Snakey K ’s fbr nothing!! Love, Mom. S IG K A P P L E D G E S : w e can’t wait to call you sisters. Get ready for initiation. Love the Actives. S IG M A C H I Steve L. — H appy Birthday to m y best friend! Hope it’s a great 22nd! Love, your P I Phi. S P R IN G B R E A K H 2 0 and snow is back and ready to ragein Lake Havasu. For more information call Kevin at 784-8426. FREE L O ST /E O U N D F O U N D : M O T O R C Y C L E cover. C all 5-2244 or see booth attendant at lot 44. FO U N D : Y O U N G adult male, all white cat. Very affectionate and h a s a loud voice. Please call 966-2280. W e can’t keep him. LO ST - W O M A N ’S gold watch. Lost on Tuesday, January 22nd, som ew here between 3rd floor parking structure no. 1 and Payne Hall. If found, please contact Erica, 894-9607. T O A L L G reeks: G ood luck with Spring Rush! Love the ladies of Sigm a Kappa. T O T H E ladies of all A S U sororities: Panhellenic is behing you 1 0 0 % for Spring R ush! Best w ishes! G o Greek! W O R D P R O C E S S IN G : Accurate, fast, affordable, laser printer. Located: 30th Avenue/Thunderbird (A SU W est area). 863-22§3. Gentle organic wax leaves skin soft for weeks. •Electrolysis* Permanent hair removal, free consultation, licensed electrologist. Private. Confidential. A * Plus Electrolysis Clinic G R E E K W E E K Them e Announcem ent— January 30— 6pm — at Sport R ock Cafe!! Y O U S A Y it, w e’ll display H! O nly in State P re ss Classifieds. 962-6490 IN S T R U C T IO N T Y P IN G /W O R D P R O C E S S IN G A PA /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D processing. Need it fa st? 946-5744. typing/word Call Jessie, A S U A R E A typing, w ord processing, edit­ ing and transcription. C all anytim e for fast service, 966-2186. L E A R N JA P A N E S E , Chinese. Spanish. French; Germ an, R ussian, Arabic, E nglish conversation, T O E F L preparation. Arizona Language Institute, 962-8677. TUTORS C O N V E N IE N T T Y P IN G ! 3 blpcks to A SU . W ord Processing. Quick. Laser. A ny size job. Diane, 966-5693. A C C O U N T IN G , F IN A N C E , and M ath professional instruction, study aides and exam ination strategies. State approved tutor. 9-212-211, Sun-D evil Tutoring, Gil. F LY IN G F IN G E R S h a s M aclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. C all 945-1551 for details. E D U C A T IO N G R A D U A T E tutor sought for shut in Advance Post Graduate quality research direction. June, 278-7820. H EA LTH & F IT N E SS H EA LTH & F IT N E SS Y O U R G R A N D F A T H E R w as a pledge, your father w as a pledge, but tim es have im proved* don’t be a pledge, be a T KE. Join the world’s largest and proudest fraternity. H igh Im p a ct • L ow Im p a ct C om bo • B o d y T o n in g • S te p A D O P T IO N PERSO N ALS A G D , T H E T A Deegee have a great week w orking at the Phoenix Open. Stu d e n ts & F a c u lt y H A P P IL Y M A R R IE D , loving couple w ishes to adopt white newborn. Medical, legal e x p e n se s paid . P le a se ca ll (6 0 2) 971-0593, collect. Confidential. A L P H A K A P P A Psi- Sm oker professional dress, C hochise Room No.212, 7pm. All in te re ste d b u s in e s s stu d e n ts a re welcom ed to attend! S E R V IC E S A L P H A P H I Om ega, a co-ed national service fraternity, is having Sp ring Rush. Be a part of it. Com e to our free pizza party and inform ation se ssio n tonight at Pizza Hut on Apache, east of Rural. S K Y D IV E T O D A Y at Skydive Adventures. Student discounts, training by skydiving Ch a m p i o n s . 1 (8 0 0) 4 4 1 -5 8 6 7 , (602)723-9595. A T O JO N A TH A N , W hatsa matta yo u ? You lush! Call us. Buurg W innabom , and Portah. T IR E D O F ironing? W e offer quick services at reasonable rates. 481-0510 after 6pm. Pickup and delivery at A SU . M ISC E L L A N E O U S M ISC E L L A N E O U S 20% OFF 1 3 0 1 E. U niversity, Tem pe H ey . Bub HEY! I’m talkin’ §o yo u ! Now look, yo u ’ve been gone for awhile now . . .I know yo u ’ve go t som e time off cornin’ up. S o I expect to see you hom e for a visit. Even if you have to run an ad in the State P re ss transportation section and find som eone to share the expenses. The few b ucks it’ll co st will be m uch more pain less than dealin’ with me if you d on ’t j T Y P IN G /W O R D P R O C E S S IN G S E R V IC E S O H IO 'S, T H A N K S so much for making my Birthday so special. Love you always, Jette. D E B T H IN K IN G about you and w ish to talk again, hope move went well thanks D S. R E D R O B IN is grow ing. S u cc e ss creates growth. If you are interested in a su cce ss­ ful restaurant m anagem ent career in the Tucson or Phoenix marketplace, why not join the best, Red R o b in ? W e have im mediate m anagem ent trainee opportunities for aggressive self-starters w ho want the challenge and excitement of a restaur­ ant career. In-house training provided. Salary, benefits are based on rjssults achieved. Apply in person or send resum e: Red Robin T ucson Mall, 4500 North Oracle no. 155, T ucson, 85705. W A N T ED : 100 people. W e will pay you to lose 10-29 pounds in 30 days. All natural. 351-8635. R E ST A U R A N T S/ BARS 894-6543 Your Individual Horoscope — E m a k M I\» « L a —— — II — FOR FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1991 gladly cooperate with you. that is if - ABIES (Mar, 21 to Apr. 19) JWv you’re not too demanding! It should Though you’re self-disciplined on be a plus day for you regarding career the job today, you're inclined to interests.' impetuousness when shopping now. SAGITTARIUS S v Evening hours bring fun times (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Self-discipline combined with ini­ through social interests. tiative bring you progress on the job TAURUS ^ (Apr. 20 to May 20) ".1W; today. There’s a lovely accent on, You’re raring to go now, but could partnership interests tonight Ei\joy easily ruffle someone's feathers. happy times. Avoid bossiness and coming on too CAPRICORN strong. Career strivings, however, (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) There’s a favorable accent on both should meet With success. work and play today. You!) take the GEMINI lead now in planning good times and (May 21 to June 20) M You’ll want to get some unfinished new opportunities await you on the job at present tasks out of the way now. Do a good job, however, and don’t be in so much AQUARIUS 9 /t of a hurry. Tonight brings you some (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You’ll certainty be putting your happy news. CANCER • (go house in order now, but try not to be (June 21 to July 22) H K dictatorial with family members. You may be organizing a party now, Tonight brings happiness in love and but you could also get involved in a joyous good times. dispute with a friend today. Financial PISCES developments at present are defi­ (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You may do an old friend a favor nitely in your favor. now. Try to be on time for appoint­ LEO -•*’ ^ ments. Happiness comes through (July 23 to Aug, 22) W You have extra incentive today and family interests and home-based will make things happen for you in activities tonight YOU BORN TODAY have intellec­ yourcareer. Tonight you’ll definitely be in the mood for socializing. Look tual gifts and the ability to commer­ cialize them. Though you can succeed forward to good times! VIRGO « a in business, you would be unhappy ii\ work that did not reflect your ideals.4 (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) SK You may m eet with a child’s You have good taste and may be teacher today. Also, you may make something of , a connoisseur. To be plans for a trip. What seems like a your best, you need regular periods of lucky break could bring you success solitude to replenish your spirit and. energies. You're often blessed with and recognition now in business. LIBRA ■■ ■ ,rg_ creative talents. Birthdaxe of. Edwin Newman, newsman; Virginia Woolf» (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) It’s a day that favors investment writer; and Mildred Dunnock, actress. moves. Try not, however, to be bossy Read y o u r h o ro ­ with close ties. Leisure activities are fun-filled tonight You're quite popu­ scope dally In the lar! S t a t e P r e s s SCORPIO ^ {Oct 23 to Nov. 21) This is a time when others will Copyright 1991 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Classifieds. Page 16 State Press TJM*da^Jwui»ry24jJ99^ WELCOME BACK TEMPE LIFE CENTER TfiEHD.CU-TTEftS Your insurance is welcome! •ASU insurance coverage •Auto insurance coverage •Workman’s Comp coverage •Health insurance coverage varies 7 H i* . 10% OFF WITH VALID ASU ID 1126 N. Scottsdale Rd.. #6 [Drug Emporium Plaza] OPEN EVERY DAY M ust present this coupon. Perm s and Color O FF Exp 2-30-91 967-6484 t or f iT 838-8384 (cut included) Dr. Brad E. Fraum Chiropractor 414 S. Mill Ave. (Next to Eckel's Attic) exp. Feb. 14 4435 South Rural, Suite 4 Tem pe, A Z (Just south of the freeway.) Sigma Sigma Sigma International Fraternity of S o ro rity R ush • S prin g 91 ..STiie e?(perience o f a lifetim e f o r a lifetim e. Delta Sigma Pi A Coed Professional B u sin ess F ratern ity an n o u n ces "Recruitment Week" Thursday's Event: Pizza Party 7-10 p.m . B utterfield Village C lubhouse (nice dress) January 29,30 & 31st «6 p.m. Memorial Union, Arizona Room Friday's Event: Cocktail Party 8 p.m . Los Racim es C lubhouse (nice dress) Please call for more information - 784-8781 F or m o r e in fo r m a tio n p le a s e c a ll 8 3 3 -5 6 0 7 NEW YEAR... NEW GOALS! At the award-winning Western Reserve Club, you will enjoy the benefits of the Southwest's premier health and fitness facility and the p rivacy of a sports country club. No crowds to fight. No lines to endure! • • • • • • • • Free Weights Lifecycles Eagle-Cybex Keiser Cam II Nautilus Suntan Beds Olympic Swimming Pool Co-ed Jacuzzi • Steam/Sauna • Cafe/Lounge • Walkaerobics • • • • • • • • • • • Aerobics Stairmasters Basketball Indoor Volleyball Sand Volleyball Racquetball Wallyball Martial Arts Tennis Diet Center Treadmills UNIVERSITY A SU 3 ! If i A APACHE 3 7 ■ • 1 ■ROADWAY f I SOUTHERN SUPERS mONFWV . . . |N SHOW US YOUR CURRENT STUDENT I.P .* YOU’LL GET A DINNER T his year w e’re doing it again! Every Sunday (but O N L Y on Sunday), M ike Pulos of the Spaghetti Com pany will give you one F R E E dinner* for each dinner you order! It’s our 2-for-1 SU N D A Y S T U D E N T S P E C IA L . A nd it’s good for the w hole school year at both our Tem pe and Phoenix locations. A ny day of the week, for lunch or dinner, The Spaghetti Com pany is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the SU N D A Y ST U D E N T S P E C IA L m akes Open 7 D a y s a Week our already terrific prices even better! O ur dinners include a full course meal with all the trim m ings— from salad to dessert. So, dollar for dollar, w hen you're hungry and you need a break, you can’t beat the Spaghetti Com pany! E S P E C IA L L Y O N SU N D A Y S! W ith 2 dinners for the price of 1! *B ut you M U ST have your current student I.D. card with you to take advantage of this offer. 1 5 % gratuity added to all discounted checks (except senior citizen discounts). Open at 11 a.m . to 11 p.m. Sundays Call Now! 968-9231 Enjoy nightly drink spoetali on our patio. ring this ad with you to receive a one week free trial. (One per erson.) Student lifestyle memberships available at no initiation fee. ti {pmpan^* Restaurant WESTERN RESERVE CLUB AW ARD-W INNING S P O R T S C EN TER BY DAVE BROWN P h oen ix South On Central JliSt Pasta McDowell 257-0380 C hicken C ordon Blue, Steak D IJ o n , stu ffe d Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, C hicken M arsala, Veal M a rsa la and orders to g o A R E N O T IN C L U D E D in the 2-for-1 special. in Old Town Tempe 4th Street and Mill 966-3848