©Copyright, SM* Proas, ISSI Tampa, Arizona V ol. 7 4 No. 38 Thursday, M arch 7 ,1 9 9 1 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily N o p a rk in g : S tiff fin e s sendmessage B y JEN N IFER FR AN K LIN State P ress A proposed increase in parking fines that would take effect this summer, should send a clear message to drivers, University officials said. “The increase will work as a deterrent to students who park illegally, and for that matter, staff and faculty who park on campus,’’ said Susan Malaga, assistant vice president for Business Affairs. A University proposal to the Arizona Board of Regents planned for this month would increase some citation fines beginning July 1 and increase parking fees in July 1994. If the proposal is passed by the regents later this spring, overtime parking fines will increase from $10 to $15 and motorcycle violations will carry an $18 to $25 price tag. Fines for parking in “reserved/no parking” spaces will jump from $18 to $25, and the penalty for parking in disabled spaces will rise from $50 to $60. Other violations also will become more costly. Recently, Malaga, said decal sales have decreased and parking citations have increased. “It might indicate that some students and others are taking a chance,” she said. In addition to raising the cost of fines, the plan recommends that the cost of parking decals increase by a T.J. SokoVSMa Prosa F e e , F ife , F o , F u m ... J . F ife Sym in gton, w ith h is hand on the fa m ily B ib le held b y h is w ife A n n , takes th e oath o f o ffic e from A rizo n a Suprem e C ou rt Ju s tic e Frank X . G ord o n W ednesday to becom e A rizo n a 's 19th g overnor. T h e cerem ony to o k p la ce o n th e ba lcon y o f the o ld capita) b u ild in g in dow ntow n P h o en ix. Toni to Parking, page 6 ; Am ericans fly ‘freedom birds’ hom e B y T h e A sso cia te d P ress Snapping salutes and slapping high-fives, the last known American prisoners of the Gulf War flew to freedom Wednesday and a heroes’ welcome from Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, American paratroopers loaded their gear, meanwhile, for their own “freedom bird” — the flight home. The first large contingent of U. S. soldiers to head home — 900 troops of the 24th Mechanized Infantry Division — were leaving Saudi Arabia early Thursday for a Washington-area air base. Part of the 82nd Airborne Division also was to begin its return journey. “We’re coming home now — proud. Confident. Heads high,” President Bush said Wednesday night in a celebratory speech to a joint session of Congress. He also spoke of the need for a long-lasting peace in the Middle East, and urged compromise. “The time has come to put an end to Arab-Israeli conflict,” Bush said. U. S. troops were leaving behind a region where Iraq has slid from crushing military defeat to major internal unrest. The turbulence continued in some cities Wednesday, the U. S. command in Saudi Arabia said, but President Saddam Hussein’s government apparently has regained control of Basra, the southern city at the center of the anti-Saddam uprising. Refugees from Basra said the loyalist Republican Guard was summarily executing dissidents and scattering their bodies in the streets to terrorize others. In Kuwait City, the work of reconstruction — and of retribution — went on. Liberated Kuwait’s prime minister, Crown Prince Saad Abdullah al-Sabah, said there would be no retaliation against Palestinians in Kuwait who allegedly collaborated with the Iraqis during their occupation of the emirate. But hospital staff members and Kuwaiti resistance fighters confirmed to Associated Press correspondent John Pomfret that scores of Palestinians were being beaten, shot, tortured with lighted cigarettes and otherwise “punished” for their alleged crimes. The work of diplomacy went on as well Wednesday. In Damascus, Syria, Arab foreign ministers agreed on a long-term regional security plan under which Egyptian and Turn to Cease-fire, page 13. Aaaoci f d Prass photo A K uw aiti you n gster, 4-year-dld A hm ad A ll, p la y s w ith a live anti-aircraft round he fo u n d alon g th e beach in th e city . Professors provide insight, commentary on Persian Gulfwar B y PATR ICIA M AH State P ress An ASU professor on Wednesday labeled the war in the Persian Gulf, “unjust,” claiming the conflict had “ no clear-cut cause to begin with.” “1 came to the conclusion, and I cling to the conclusion that the war against Iraq was unjust,” said Richard Dagger, an associate professor of political science. His comments came during a panel discussion held in the College of Law’s Great Hall, in which five ASU professors shared their views on the Persian Gulf O n th e R am page: Student lobbyists have entered the second phase o f their efforts to get more money funded to ASU. Page 7 conflict and its environmental, social and political implications. About 25 people attended the discussion, which was mediated by Ron Hardert, an associate professor in the department of sociology. Each speaker had 10 minutes to present his or her points. Dagger began his talk by examining the theory of a just war. “My conclusion was that there was no clear-cut cause for the war to begin with,” he said. Dagger listed six criteria for a just war, including just cause, rightful authority, R id e r s o n th e S to rm : Between tilings known and unknown there exists Oliver Stone’s movie “The Doors.” M a g a z in e right intention, last resort, probability of success and proportionality. To that list, Dagger added another aspect he called “opportunity costs.” “Whenever we do something, we always give up something else,” he said. “We had an opportunity to use peaceful means to draw together very disparate nations in an alliance that could have achieved the same goals that we believe we have achieved militarily. “By making war, we have forgone that opportunity.” Annelle Hardt, a professor of curriculum B ill M e e ts B ill: A preview o f tonight's ASU men's basketball game against the University o f Oregon and instruction, said people need to be educated in using peaceful, non-violent solutions to resolve conflict. “We haven’t studied conflict resolution in America well enough,” she said. “If we had spent the energy and time in education that we have spent on war, we would not be in the state that we’re in.” Hardt compared peace education to a three-layer cake made up of knowledge, attitude and skills. “I ’m happy to say that we are making some progress “ she said, adding that there Tarn to Panel, page 10. Today’s weather: Sunny with a high in the mid 80s. Tonight: Clear with a low in the 30s. ClaSSifiedS.Vi.... . . . . . . . . . . , ; . . . /...... . ¿.i.. v. f>17 C o m i c s ,. «..>. Crossword.. Sports... ,r . . . »«•..,. :....... 1,4 v;l.. . . . . 11 Page g State Press Thursday, March 7,1991 H istoric Tem pe b u ild in g renovation delayed B y DAVID A . PU N D T - State P ress The Tempe Design Review Committee on Thursday postponed approval of plans for the reconstruction of the historic PetersenChipman building destroyed by fire last December. But while the rebuilding of the Mill Avenue landmark may be months away, some Tempe residents have worked to make the charred space look a little brighter. “Metro Beach is the title we decided to give the mural that masks the empty space left from the fire,” said Jonathan Barnet, an employee of Changing Hands Bookstore. A couple of days after the Dec. 27 fire, Barnet said Laura Kajfez, a management assistant with the city of Tempe, was in the bookstore talking about the empty space across the street. “I told her that if she could get some supplies, I knew some of the artists in the when members of the community come together for a project like this,” Dolesch said. “Especially when there is no financial gain. “Susan and I are very proud to have been a part of it.” What happens to the mural after the Petersen-Chipman building is replaced is up to the city and the owner of the building, Dolesch said. When demolition crews came to remove the rubble from the fire, they carefully dismantled the mural, numbered the pieces and put it back when they were finished. Meanwhile, the owners of the PetersenChipman building hope remodeling will begin on the 102-year-old Mill Avenue landmark by mid-April. Tempe F ire officials determined that a malfunctioning deep-fat fryer in Stan’s Metro Deli caused the fire, which resulted in $900,000 worth of damage to the building. Mural painted by volunteers brightens location of burnt-down city landmark community,” he said. “The Tempe Block Party was coming up in a couple of days, and we had to have a vision. “And we had to have it quick.” With roughly 72 hours to go before the Tempe New Y e a r’s festival, B arn et contacted Scottsdale mupalist Susan Dolesch. Her husband, Charles, said they looked through Susan’s old designs for about two hours to find something suitable. “We knew because of the short amount of time available it had to be a relatively simple design that could be scaled up or down to fit the space,” Charles Dolesch said. “We also looked for something that could be done quickly by untrained artists — the volunteer army that Jonathan was rounding up. “Without Jonathan and the others, there’sno way we could have accomplished this project.” H ie construction of the mural was a community effort. Home Depot and Tempe Paint donated paint supplies, and the Mill' Avenue Merchants Association furnished other equipment. Changing Hands Co-op, the Coffee Plantation and the Paradise Bar and Grill supplied other material and refreshments, he said. “There is a tremendously good feeling Today Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have a closed meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •Gun Devils will have a meeting at 5 p.m. in the M U Santa Cruz Room. •Ski Devils will have a meeting at 7:30 p.m. at Flakey Ja k e ’s. •Program for Southeast Asian Studies will present a lecture on the C hinese b usiness community at 1:30 p.m. in the M U Mohave Room. •Engineering and Applied Sciences College Council will have a meeting at 5:15 p.m. in E C G 320. •Women Students will have a meeting at noon in the Women Student’s Center. •American Marketing Association will have a meeting at 4:15 p.m. in the M U Pim a Room. •Advertising Club will have a meeting and speaker at 3:15 p.m. in B A 241. •MUAB Culture and Arts Committee will present Coffeehouse featuring m usicians at 7:30 p.m. in the M U Program m ing Lounge. •Amnesty International will have a meeting at 5 p.m. on Hayden Lawn. •MUAB Film Committee will present “ Ferris Bueller’s Day O ff” at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. in the Union Cinem a. •University Honors College in conjunction with the Jew ish Studies Program and the A rizona Center for M edieval and R enaissance Studies will present a research symposium at 10 a.m. in S S 101. •Tau Beta Pi will have a meeting at 7:15 p.m. in C O B 152 and a “ P ie Throw” at noon outside E R C . •Hp48sx User Group will have a meeting at 3 p.m. in P S A 118. •Christian Student Fellowship will have a Bible study at 12:30 p.m. in the M U Coconino Room. •Financial Management Association will have a meeting at 3:30 p.m. in B A 286. •Baptist Student Union wiH have a free lunch and devotional at 1322 S. M ill Ave. •Native American Business Organization will have ä meeting at 3 p.m. in the M U Conference Room 2. •Spanish Club will have a meeting at 3 p.m. in the M U Y u m a Room. •Wildlife Society will have a meeting, at 7 p.m. in L S 183. •IEEE will have a meeting at 3:30 p.m. outside the main entrance of E R C . •Public Programs College Council will have a meeting at 3:30 p.m. in W ilson 132. All Senate candidates please attend. C o r r e c tio n Robert Pappalardo’s letter to the editor on March 4 should have read the peace movement is “concerned that our leadership may now feel free to continue the Messianic policy of new world ‘order.’ ” Computer Systems Center MONEY MATTERS Macintosh Classic Macintosh Classic Now available for under $1,000, there is a Macintosh at a price that almost eveiycne can afford. 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Indudoetartari fricionloadaand fronteaioctabietype atyW STORE HOURS: Mon-FrfM Sa t 104 *399 For Modi in J _.■ N * : PHOENIX R Mb S U "S3Er MUMMIA 266-7873 Upgrade to color now to make all o f your fa­ vorite programa look brighter and dearer. Got an aweaamo dad on a 16 Mt VGA card and a 14" oúUv VQA m aritar with mswivel | bam. HURRY! latem 1 1 f it M TEMPE a S a utan t McCModt * I 838-1236 - W o r ld /N a t io n State Press Page 3 Thursday, March 7,1991 Freed allied POWs get heroes’ salute MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Fifteen freed American p riso n ers of w ar, two on stre tch e rs and many undernourished, were welcomed as heroes Wednesday after traveling from Baghdad to a U.S. Navy hospital ship. Doctors who examined the former POWs Said some had been slightly injured in allied bombing raids and most had been “slapped around,” including three whose ear drums were perforated. The Americans flew to Bahrain after landing in Saudi Arabia, along with 20 other former allied prisoners. The Iraqi government, which freed 10 other allied POWs Monday, said the 35 were the last prisoners of war it held. “Everyone of them’s a hero,” said Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, commander of U.S. forces in Operation Desert Storm, who was in the welcoming party at the Saudi capital, Riyadh, “They looked happy to be home, happy to be in freedom,” Schwarzkopf said. “It’s almost over.” The former POWs arrived on one of the two Red Cross planes that hours earlier had taken 294 Iraqi POWs from Saudi Arabia to Baghdad. That was the first release by the allies of more than 63,000 Iraqi soldiers captured in the Persian Gulf War. Sailors and medical personnel aboard the USS Mercy applauded and shouted: “Welcome back!” when the freed U.S. prisoners boarded the ship in Bahrain. The two men on stretchers — Air Force Capt. William F. Andrews, 32, of Syracuse, N.Y., and Army Staff Sgt. Daniel J . Stamaris J r ., 31, of Boise, Idaho — grinned. Andrews also gave a thumb’s up gesture. Both men had leg injuries, said Col. Richard Williams, the attending physician on the trip from Baghdad. Both arms of Army Maj. Rhonda L. Cornum were in bandages and slings, and she had injuries to her face and knee. The 36-year-old Cornum, from East Aurora, N.Y., was captured last weekend after her helicopter crashed, killing five. After she stepped off the plane in Riyadh, Schwarzkopf patted her on her head and the reception line applauded as she walked by. “Thank you,” she said when someone aboard the Mercy yelled: “Welcome back!” Assessing the ex-prisoners’ health, Williams said: ‘‘Generally, they are in fair condition. Some of them suffered malnutrition.” He said those who required medical care received adequate treatment from Iraq. One was treated by the chief Araociatcd P m photo A ir F o rce C a p t. W illiam F . A nd rew s, 32, o f S y racu se, N .Y ., sm ile s a s he is carrie d b y stretch er aboard th e U S N S M ercy, a U .S . Navy h osp ita l sh ip , In M anam a, B ahrain, W ednesday. A n d rew s w as o n e o f 15 freed A m erican p riso n e rs o f w ar w ho traveled from B aghdad. of orthopedics at Baghdad’s military hospital, Williams said. He said the prisoners were “slapped around a bit” by Iraqis, but reported that the perforated ear drums had healed. The injuries sustained during allied bombing raids were not serious, he said, and were caused by flying debris. He said the prisoners apparently were not used as “human shields,” and described the bombing incidents as accidental. . In addition to the Americans, the group that arrived in Saudi Arabia included nine Britons, nine Saudis, one Kuwaiti and one Italian, officials of the International Committee of the Red Cross said. The release of prisoners was agreed to Sunday at a meeting of allied and Iraqi commanders at a desert airstrip in Turn to POWs, page IT. Ju st desserts: Gifts galore aw ait retu rn in g tro o p s By The Associated Press Americans are tying a yellow ribbon around a vast array of gifts, freebies and perks for troops who served in the Persian Gulf — offering them everything from casino flings to breaks on college tuition. On top of hero’s welcomes coast to coast, merchants, lawmakers and promoters are busy drafting shopping lists of goodies to shower upon the more than half a million men and women who served in the gulf. With some restrictions, the freebies include a night’s stay at a casino, steamboat cruises, treks through a movie studio, baseball games and hunting and fishing licenses. Discounts of ás much as 70 percent are being o ffered on se v e ra l a irlin e s. Restaurants, a winery owner and other smaller enterprises are putting together packages that cut prices for military personnel. And after the hoopla dies down, the troops will find more bargains at state-run colleges and universities offering free tuition. The returning members of the 253rd Transportation Company of the New Jersey Army National Guard will be able to make another trip to the sands — this time to the Sands Hotel & Casino in Atlantic City. The hotel is giving them a free overnight stay and a free meal at the casino’s Italian gourmet restuarant. Steamboat Casino River Cruises, which will begin riverboat gambling on the Mississippi River off Iowa’s eastern shore on April 1, is offering a free cruise for soldiers who are at least 21 years old. “It’s our way of saying, ‘Welcome home and thank you for your gallant efforts in the Persian Gulf,’ ” . said spokeswoman Carol Heaton. Collette Tours of Pawtucket, R.I. is offering all returning soldiers a discount of $150 per couple on a Collette land tour of seven days or longer. “We’ve got your calm after the storm,” is Collette’s new motto. For the men and women tired of dining on MRE’s — which stands for meals ready to eat, formerly known as C rations — the Steak Escape restaurant chain, based in Columbus, Ohio, is offering discounts to military personnel. And after as much as seven months of alcohol-free life in the Middle E ast desert, California’s wine country is offering homecoming bonuses of free lodging, meals and wine. “ Sonoma County has always been considered a good place to rest and relax — not like a Disneyland,” P at Ross, executive director of the county’s Convention and Visitors Bureau. Other military personnel in California can take advantage of a free tour through Universal Studios in Universal City, Calif. The airline industry moved quickly to show its patriotic colors. United A irlin es, D elta Air Lines, Continental Airlines and USAir slashed fares by 70 percent on their lowest domestic excursion fares to military, officials said. “We’re glad to see them come back,” said United spokeswoman Sara Dornacker. Midway Airlines will offer military personnel complimentary space-available upgrades from coach service to first class. T he b a s e b a ll co m m issio n e r said individual teams are offering free tickets to troops. The California Angels, for one, planned to offer free seats to military personnel and their families. And after the flings with baseball, gambling and jet-setting, there also are educational opportunities for the Desert Storm troops. Mistrust o f governm ent causes thousands to flee Albania VIENNA, Austria (AP) — Albanians crowded onto ships halt the flow, barring 6,000 Albanians who had arrived from sailing for Italy on Wednesday, and police fired over the leaving their ships. Authorities also said 2,000 more already heads of thousands of others who mobbed Tirana’s embassy on shore might not be allowed to stay. row seeking exit visas to leave the Balkan nation. Premier Giulio Andreotti’s spokesman, Pio Mastrobuoni, The crowds had gathered outside the French, German, was quoted by the Italian news agency AGI as saying that Greek, Polish, Czechoslovak missions, drawn by spurious although the government hasn’t blocked the ships’ docking, rumors of wholesale visa giveaways. Police fired warning the Albanians aren’t eligible for political asylum. shots and doused people with water cannons. Some in the It wasn’t clear if the government would send them back. crowd threw rocks at police officers. Italian officials asked the Red Cross for help in caring for In Durres, Albania’s main port, thousands of people the refugees, who are being put up in hotels, schools and ignored police warning shots Wednesday and boarded the camp grounds. 11,000-ton ship, Tirana, which they forced to sail for Italy, the The exodus to Italy and other attempts to leave appeared to state news agency ATA said. reflect mistrust of Albanian President Ramiz Alia’s promise It said a total of 15 ships headed for Italy, which is 50 miles to improve political and economic conditions in Europe’s away across the Adriatic Sea, and some carried children poorest nation. without their parents. Thousands have tramped overland to Greece and Ben Ruka, a journalist with opposition newspaper Yugoslavia since the Communist leader reversed 46 years of Democratic Revival, estimated by telephone from Tirana one-party rule in December and allowed opposition parties to that up to 20,000 people left Durres, following in the footsteps form following demonstrations. of thousands who left through the post last week. The chaos also cast doubt on the ability of the ruling One Italian official, who refused to be named, said the Communists or opposition parties to control discontent narrowest stretch of the Adriatic between Italy and Albania leading up to elections scheduled for March 31. The Atoanian government issued a statement describing was so crowded with boats it “seems Uke one of our highways during the tourist season.” the situation as tense and urged would-be refugees to stop But late Wednesday, Italy appeared to be taking steps to seizing Mdps. The Yugoslav news agency Tanjug, meanwhile, reported that up to 1,500 ethnic Serbs and Montenegrins were trying to cross into Yugoslavia from northern Albania. The agency said that the crowd ignored warning shots fired by Albanian soldiers as it press toward the Bozaj crossing, about 18 miles south of Titograd, capital of Yugoslavia’s southern state of Montenegro. They were stopped near the frontier by Albanian border guards and were awaiting permission from authorities in both countries. In Tirana, diplomats reached by telephone said police fired in the air to prevent crowds gaining access to the foreign missions, which last summer hosted 5,000 Albanians who refused to leave the buildings until Alia allowed them to emigrate, ■ Some people threw stones at extra police brought in to guard the diplomatic missions, said Arben Puto, an Albanian historian, by telephone. Turkey’s ambassador to Tirana, Theoman Surenkok, went on Albanian television to urge Albanians to stay at home and to deny rumors the foreign embassies would issue visas. “Albania is undergoing a very delicate period,” he said, according to ATA. “The Albanian people are duty bound sit present to create an atmosphere of peace and understanding for the elections.” . ___________________ O p m Page 4 ■ U k Thursday, March 7,1991 SW « PH»» Em otional issue blocks out rays of reason C h r is tin e H erb ra n so n M a g a z in e E n te rta in m e n t E ditor ira E T All I really wanted to do last Wednesday was get a bread pretzel with cheese. So I was walking to the MU, minding my own business as ever, averting my eyes from the picture of the disembodied fetus head that had destroyed the ambience of so many pretzel lunches before. A crowd had gathered around the Pro-Life booth. Participants on both sides of the issue were em broiled in a mouth-frothing discussion of rights. Eyes were bugging out, teeth were gnashing, and anger and frustration were becoming entities all their own. “Christine!” someone yelled. “Howdja like to get involved in this?” “Oh, brother!” I retorted, pretending to be nonplussed. I purchased my pretzel: Extra salty. I put it in my purse. Upon passing the booth again, I was suddenly seized by the desire to try to reason with the seething mass of fury bobbing around the poignant dismembered fetus head poster. I had this wacky idea that through a calm discussion involving rational facts and pure logic, perhaps both sides could make a few concessions. I suggested that everyone involved take a few deep breaths for theraputic reasons. Those who didn’t look like they wanted to hit me ignored me. Stepping between the fighting factions, I acknowledged the fact that I make a better door than a ' window, and proceeded to present my point erf view. It is important to realize that the source of the conflict lies in the perception of the definition of human life. To pro-lifers, it seems inconceivable that anyone could condone the murder of innocent, defenseless unborn babies. To pro-choicers, it is unbelievable that the blobs of protoplasm in women’s wombs have more rights than the women themselves. The issue is so deeply emotionally rooted that discussion between the two groups usually leads to severe group polarization, a phenomena in which conflict or debate causes an individual to believe even more fervently in his cause than he did initially. This is frightening, because reason is ignored. T h e p r o - l i f e r s r e s p o n d ' to t h e overpopulation question by stating: “You can fit every person in America into a 5-foot space in Florida.” Whether or not this is true, I have no idea; unfortunately it is completely irrelevant. Hie government isn’t going to redistribute the population. The homeless will remain homeless. The ghettoes will continue to grow unchecked, as will the ever-increasing number of singleparent families below the poverty line. Doesn’t it make more sense to take care of these people? “We must speak for those who can’t,” say the pro-lifers, ignoring the fact that they are not only infringing upon the rights of those who do not share their beliefs, but they are also compounding A m erica’s severe overpopulation, hom elessness, employment, educational and welfare problems. The fact of the matter is each individual needs a certain amount of resources, and when there are more people than there are resources, that is overpopulation. We are, in this sense, already suffering dramatically from overpopulation. If we continue on our present course, we will obliterate ourselves by exceeding our resources. The pro-lifers, disregarding the fact that it is unsound to force people to have babies that we, as a nation and as a species, can’t afford, say that you have two choices if you conceive a child: raise it, or give it up for adoption. W h e n a w o m a n t a k e s on t h e re sp o n sib ilitie s of m otherhood, she essentially gives up her own life for the child’s — unless she has the financial resources to hire help, which is a rare circumstance. For a woman to raise a child when she is not ready is disastrous to both herself and the child. “So you give it up for adoption,” say the pro-lifers. If you are so inclined to go through nine months of pregnancy, endure morning sickness and put your school or your career or your life on hold in order to be an incubator, that is your choice, but you should not force people who do not share your beliefs to make such a sacrifice. “You would kill a baby because it’s an inconvenience to you?!” cry the pro-lifers. It is monumentally more than "an inconvenience. If only they would see how tremendously being forced to give birth to a baby and then give it up for adoption affects a person’s entire life. They claim that having an abortion is psychologically painful, but they refuse to acknowledge the fact that it is infinitely more psychologically painful to be forced, because of someone else’s interpretation of morality, to ca n y a child, give birth to it and then give it away, wondering and worrying about the fate of that child every day for the rest of your life. This is far more scarring than any nebulous post-abortion depression — most of which is caused by the effects of pro-life propaganda and psychological manipulation on the malleable minds of unstable, confused, frightehed girls. No form of birth control is 100 percent safe. Despite any and all precautions a woman might take, there is still the possibility of her becoming prégnant (ruling out abstinence, which is an unreasonable alternative, explaining why it is so often cited by this unreasonable, unseeing group.) This hypothetical woman’s convictions do not matter to the pro-lifers. Her financial, emotional, physical or psychological situation does not matter. It doesn’t matter to them that their adoption statistics are misleading — they don’t mention the fact that if your baby is anything but white, strong and healthy, it doesn’t have much of a chance of getting adopted. And what about mentally retarded or physically deformed babies? What about crack babies? Pro-lifers feel some sort of success when they get a reaction out of people to their disgusting posters and tapes. They try to associate the revulsion with the evilness of abortion, when in truth any picture involving blood and innards is going to affect a person. The pro-lifers don’t care that the rest of the world no longer subscribes to their archaic, oyerly theological interpretation of the simple group of cells created by thé mixture of bodily fluids. No one is denying that a fetus is a living organism,-but then so is a gerbil, and so is a fern. It is a sociological truism that a baby is an animal; the only distinction is that it has the capability to learn human culture. Hie pro­ lifers must simply put into perspective what is more important: saving the lives of an oblivous group of cells, or saving toe lives of those who a re already living human beings by every definition. Pro-lifers’ efforts are sorely misplaced ; what’s more, their actions are adding Significantly to m a jo r societal and environmental problems that are jettisoning us into extinction. If they could see 2 inches past their noses they would realize that what they are fighting for is not noble or moral, but is rather toe immoral violation of rights. The pro-lifers feel they have the right to put undisputably living people through complete physical, psychological and emotional hell because they imagine that their theological beliefs lead them to have a say over the contents of someone else’s body. They believe they are doing good, but their short-sighted visions are toe detriment of our society. Forcing their views on an unwiUing people is an unspeakable crime. What is pro-life anyway? Pro whose life? Certainly not toe lives of toe women with unplanned pregnancies. And certainly not toe lives of the children they would (have them give birth to. Pro-lifers are only concerned with saving the fetus. They forget that babies grow into children. Essentially, the woman doesn’t matter. Some crisis pregnancy centers are run. by pro-lifers, though they don’t advertise this fact. When scared girls come in to get a free pregnancy test, they are unaware of the fact that the center will not give them the test until they have watched a videotape of a botched abortion, and been innundated with pressure not to abort. Pro-choice is hot pro-abortion, a loaded term that’s a favorite with toe pro-lifers. Self-proclaimed pro-lifer Robin Hager’s letter to toe editor in March 6th’s State P ress proposed: “ How about a ‘pro-self’ group that makes their own decisions, and not everybody else’s? A group that may be pro-life or pro-choice but has the. maturity and self-awareness not to impose their morals on others.” That is exactly what it means to be prochoice. Pressure created by increased incarceration leads to brutality M ic h a e l L a M a n tia Asst. Opinion Editor Recently, an amateur video camera operator filmed some of toe Los Angeles Police Department’s finest whaling on a suspect with their night sticks. Hie news stations that aired toe video warned viewers toe scene was gruesome and to refrain from looking at it if they had weak stomachs (not necessarily in those words). Ramona Ripston of toe American Civil Liberties Union denounced the attack and said police brutality is common in this city and “toe difference is, we have toe proof this time.” Anyone who views the tape should be outraged. George Holliday, the neighborhood resident who recorded toe incident, said the suspect was cooperative — as far as he could tell — and willingly got out of his car and lay face down on toe pavement. That’s when the police decided to beat him. Sooner or later everyone snaps. The stress police officers deal with daily, especially in Los Angeles, may be eclipsed only by toe stress levels of doctors. The whole law enforcement system stinks. The police are strung way out and paranoid. Criminal prosecutors and public defenders are overworked and aren’t paid toe glamorous salaries they expected after graduation. Case loads for judges are so large and toe plea bargains so numerous, it is nearly impossible for there to be consistency in justice. Prisons do nothing but compound the problem. In an editorial printed in the Los Angeles Tim es, Franklin E . Zimring, professor of law at tho University of California at Berkeley, contends that prisons are failing. His editorial articulates the fact that toe prison system is not providing adequate security. Because of this, there is a public demand to be even tougher on the criminals. “As the prison population doubled and then tripled, toe proportion of citizens who said they believed criminals were not punished harshly enough increased from more than 70 percent of the population to more than 80 percent.” Z im rin g sa id the d em an d for imprisonment seems insatiable. He’s right. A victim of any crime wants to see the perpetrator get what he or she deserves — and then some. After time in jail, crooks on parole often commit more crimes. The cycle keeps repeating itself. Prison offers little opportunity for rehabilitation and tho criminals seem worse when they get out. Zimring adds, “The less effective prisons are in reducing crime, toe greater toe dissatisfaction with levels of punishment and therefore toe higher the demand for still more imprisonment.” But if prison will not reduce crime, what is . there to do? Zimring maintains that “Americans must start to see the demand for prison expansion as evidence that toe prisons are failing to provide adequate public security>Balanced policy requires that the public and politicians come to view prisons with the same skepticism and pragmatism we lavish on all toe other institutions of government.” Try as he may to let the public know the prisons are failing, Zimring’s solution is useless. Because prison is an “institution,” it is the root of all problems with the judicial system, It is easy to throw people into a place and forget them. It gets easier to do as time goes by because of toe overload of cases and too public demand to be tougher. It is because prison is an easy solution that there are so many laws written. For example, current drug laws send people to prison for their habit. These people should be educated and rehabilitated. What makes drug users worse than alcoholics? In many cases, people become criminals because society didn’t deal with them in toe first place — neglecting children, running out on toe family, growing up in a lowincom e neighborhood or ju s t being emotionally unstable. If prison meant criminals would have to complete mandatory work assignments, educational courses and counseling classes, incarceration might not be such a problem. The disparity of wealth in America will always produce criminals; a solution would be to get these people to change instead of leaving them to rot in a cell. Why can’t they turn all the closed schools into prisons? In m ost ca ses, it is government property anyway. These places could become centers for people contemplating being a criminal as well as for people who don’t want to be a criminal anymore. Something needs to be done so the demands put upon the law enforcement agencies let up. Otherwise, officers will continue to become numb to the fact that they are dealing with human beings. This numbness is what causes them to lose their minds in tough situations. Opinion Stata P r w L E T Page 5 Thursday, Anarch 7,1991 T E R S W eird lead__________ _ Editor:. Ken Brown’s article on the ASU purchase of the Towers in the March 1 State P ress began with this curious sentence: “While Kuwaiti citizens can return home after the allied nd ih victory over Iraq, students living in the Towers have until May 11 to skedaddle from the eight-story apartment complex.” I was so taken aback by this reference in such a prosaic ush s j se in both story that I couldn’t help but attempt to divine the reporter’s intention. My first hypothesis was that Mr. Brown was attempting to evoke sympathy for the plight of the Towers’ residents, who are generally — perhaps crassly and unjustly — held in no great esteem by ASU students. Yet by the end of I E m R o r a r il v . . . û j the article I ’d completely inverted my first hypothesis and the education felt that Mr. Brown was at best shedding crocodile tears and perhaps even has a vision, suggested by'the graphic footage How&essNess, health c a r e , of the Iraqi column, of mostly civilian vehicles that we mercilessly bombed and strafed for its belated skedaddle other chkkéns o m í home home: ASU warplanes decimating a desperate flight of Towers denizens in their Benetton and Izod-crammed Rabbit convertibles and 300ZX’s for having defied the evacuation deadline by five minutes. ^ ?O N S ÄS A>, Yet I finally decided I was imputing an unlikely and ^■pe^pcewbyzantine subtlety to your reporter, who most likely was merely striving to be topical and — perhaps also frustrated by the limited excitements of his college beat and dreaming of one day becoming a foreign correspondent — couldn’t resist allusion to the story obsessing the nation. I still find the juxtaposition of events of utterly different import, which are to begin with not even truly analogous, to be very grating. The same method could have just as well and as absurdly been applied to other stories in that day’s paper: “As Editor: In his editorial (March 4) Michael LaMantia says that “as Kuwaitis showed reporters around an intensive care unit which had been stripped of incubators by the Iraqis, ASU long as the Japanese, Germans, British and Israelis can let President Lattie Coor was moved out of the inten$ive care their big stupid brother fight for them,” why should they unit of a Mesa hospital;” “With peace in the Perisan Gulf make any sacrifices? Well, how much Jewish blood does he advancing by the hour, 100 ASU students gathered in the hope want? After six million holocaust victims and thousands of Jew s killed in Israel’s wars, does LaMantia really think Jews of restoring racial peace on campus,” I don’t know whether there is an award for the college have not bled enough? As for the British and French, who journalist who commits the most egregious non sequitur, but suffered far more in both world wars than the United States, they tried, rightly or wrongly, to bear the brunt of the battle if there is, J think Ken Brown may have a lock on it. in the Middle E ast in 1956, but the United States forced them Jonathan Gerber out. Senior, Russian Î. N fttfbKttTo NUMflfcuS REQUESTS, A T5EC36NITON OF Hn before May 10,1991 and receive $ 25 off any complete pair of prescription glasses (frames and lenses). Offer may not be combined with any other out of store offeror dis­ count. Doctor’s prescription required. Cash value of this coupon equal to l/20th of one cent, (foupon required for pur­ chase. Some restrictions apply. 57B2 EyeMasters Get a better look. State Pres* Page 9 Thursday, March 7,1991 ...... iBsw» i* « m m H f im m é ? . m BBBBm ES9 &£$mh mmSmm «il IP É f B r e e » fl | 2 ^ S Sfen £ n D e Solctt MrfJÌT , ,'■**■**i S s £ .- r y RKiT fitfc V» ;.-■*% ^V*^r *^^|^!wc hT omw? D r u g M E M B E R E m p o r iu m S “ We a re lo c a lly o w n e d ." ’ D E E P D IS C O U N T S E V E R Y D A Y O N E V E R Y T H I N G ! S tore H our»: M on.-S a t. 9am -9pm « Sun. 10am -6p m Tempe Tempe l i w l Glendale Glendale CChandler handler NNorth orthPhoenix Phoenix North NorthScottsdale Scottsdale W West estPhoenix Phoenix EEast astM Mesa esa MMesa esa HO & S lo t Rood 893-2702 893-2867Rx C ts y l JB S JL _ S rottidal» i 89+9733 r s n \ 894-2515Rx E g a l1 59thAwanuc A oooiuo 59th &A Bell BadRood Road 843-1211 843-1211 843-1282R* 843-1282Rx Dotson Dotson £5 Ray Ray 786-1179 786-1179 786-1192Rx 786-1192Rx 19thAvenue Avenue 19th &hBoD BedRoad Road 866-1581 866-1581 863-1757Rx 863-1757Rx ScottiHaU& & Scottadale ThundorbM Thundarfetad 483-2083 483-2083 483-2102R* 483-2102R* 43rd Avenue Avenue&& 43rd Indian IndianSchool School 247-2884 247-2884 247-3363Rx 247-3363Rx Power&& Power Soidtsm Soutlsm 981-9878 981-9878 981-0650Rx 981-0650R» Country Qub Country Qub & 4Southern Southern 834-4905 8344905 8345796Rx 8345796Rx j ■ 1 ■ '- f l f l -■ State Press Thursday, March 7 , 1991 Page 10 Panel sending women to war because they are childbearers. “We raise our males to think in terms of courage and bravery, when in fact those term s a re simply covers for social expandability,” she said. Hopkins said one of the most positive things to come out of the gulf war “can be a reassessment of how and why, and how readily, we will send our children to die.” She added that for the first time, people have seen women, as well as men, in combat. “ We now have an opportunity to transform the unity of this wonderful (allied) coalition into a world community,” she said. “It’s time for us to move into an Continued from page 1. are national organizations on conflict resolution and university courses on mediation., “I’m suggesting that we need to make this crucial in education.” Wednesday’s discussion was part of an interdisciplinary workshop titled, “The Gulf War in Perspective: History, Context and Impact, ’’ that was sponsored by the political science department, the department of sociology, the School of Justice Studies and the College of Public Programs. Continuing the panel discusson, Annis Hopkins, a lecturer of women’s studies, said society often thinks that “young men are socially expendable,” yet worries about Mitchell said that America has been " E v e r y t h in g f o r t h f r S p o r t s F a n " Cornerstone Mall • University & Rural • 9 2 1-7710 After obtaining her own enlightenment in the Himalayas, M aster Ching Hai has been travelling around the world teaching others that there is only one Truth in the universe and we can all tap into it through inner meditation and prayer. Known throughout the world as a living Saint, the Master has taught thousands o f people that enlightenment is a practical and obtainable reality. Free admission - Open to the public ju.-' Peoria Ave. Y W ÍA & á v Y O U R S P R IN G T R A m iN G H E A D Q U A R T E R S •Caps •Shorts & Boxers •Souvenirs •T-Shirts & Tank Tops •Authentic Jerseys *Starter Jackets N u < £ ON á S “Somehow we are going to have to begin to produce wealth for ourselves and future generations without polluting the earth,” he said.” PRO SPO R TS W E S T with T M E SHJIPIRIEMIE MASTIEIR C M N G M M Utilize the full potential o f your inner power and have a happier and healthier life. i n Meanwhile, Mark Reader, an associate professor of political science, said the gulf war has failed to solve the world’s energy dilemma. “We have not solved the energy problem, but we have in fact, speed up the rate of entropy,” he said, citing Kuwait’s burning oil fields and the pollution in the gulf. “ (The United States) wanted to predate vital reserves of à natural resource on which our modern economies are based,” he said. Discover the Method of Immediate Enlightenment Lecture: Sunday March 10th, 1991 from 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at YWCA of the U.S.A. Leadership Development Center 9440 North 25tb Avenue \ Phoenix, AZ 85021 ' fighting a “Vietnam Syndrome” that left people with a sense of shame and humiliation, and described the gulf war as a “flowering of low-intensity warfare.” ethic of care.” Mike Mitchell,:an associate professor of political science, discussed third world countries’ perspectives on the Persian Gulf war, saying that “the United States has taken out a hunting license on third world countries.” Mitchell said the United States had its moral and économie motivations for intervention. Ì O FF ICM F or information, please call John Mannion Dunlap Ave. (602)780-9397 Any Wool Cap in Stock. Reg. $ 15.99-$ 18.99 Expires 3-16-91 PRO SPO RTS W EST onVy m o t o « e to t tt e r e P / ' EX CELLEN T B IC Y C LES w , y rS Mountain Bike Specialist ATTENTION ENGINEERING STUDENTS IM U D D Y FO X m S . 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State Press LS A T G M A T REVIEW PO W s_______ R O T H E R ’S BO O KSTO RES | free Continued from page 3. southern Iraq as part of the allied terms for a permanent cease-fire. Shortly before the 15 American ex-POWs arrived, a Navy psychiatrist, Cmdr. Deborah Wear, discussed her examinations of the first six freed Americans, who boarded the Mercy early Tuesday. “They each have their own story to tell, but they’re all in very good shape right now,” she said. “They’re mainly suffering from lack of sleep and getting readjusted to being able to walk free, talk to whomever they want and to be around other people and know that they’re going to be able to get home.” " • A SU Squeeze * Bottle w ß BAR REVIEW b With any purchase. n M ust present coupon. _While quantities last. I THE NATION’S #1 BAR REVIEW CLASS START DATE TWO LOCATIONS 625 E. APACHE 967-5445 620 S. COLLEGE 829-1128 LOCATION Tempe April 10,1991 Asked about possible long-term effects, Wear replied: “There are some subtle ones, but I don’t think anything too serious. They’re all going to have some subtle things that will take some time and a lot of it will Save s100 By enrolling one week prior to the class start date. 969-5456 % C O FFE E * PLANTATION FROM EARLY TIL LATE Y o u r p la c e to re la x C o r n e r o f 6 th & Mill CROSSWORD b y TH O M A S JO S E P H p I P E E V O K R O L E I R E Si S I C H E A R D E S 1 1 D D E O S N A V A L C H H O 1 L L E offering T L E D 44 West 1 Actress A R H Pointer Diana and S T I R T O R N DOWN family R D E A R D E 1 Great, in 6 Lethal A R C A Y ■ V 1 E surf slang 11 Cupid's R A M E L O T H ■ 2 Anger need R O D A N O D E H 3 Surround­ 12 Hit S E V E jj À L 1 B 1 ing area Broadway S E E s ■ P L E 1 N of parks musical 13 Plow 4 Like Yesterday’s Answer slasher inventor poetry conifers John films 17 G o fishing 31 Secretes 14 Like some 5 Add 33 Lady's 18 Novelist sugar to paper man Ephron 6 Com poser and others 34 Zhivago's 15 Pupil M endels­ 20 Envious coverer love sohn 17 — Arbor 21 Usher’s 35 Scenery 7 Eager 19 W ear out chewer milieu 8 Metallic 22 G aggle 20 Jo ke 36 Actress element 23 “Whether MacGraw members 9 Dined ’tis-T-...” 24M GM 37 Huge 25 Cracker 10 Young amount mascot buck 25 Hazard spread 39 Sm all bill 16 Som e 26 Moon 27 Like some 40 Enmesh matter 4 8 9 1Ó > 3 è 28 Com poser 1 5 Edouard 11 29 Monopoly i buys “ 30 Superla­ 15 tive suffix 20 21 22 31 D ress 17 18 bottom 1 14 26 24 • 32 Born 33 Song­ 27 26 stress, — Mackenzie 2¿ i * 35 Detested M 38 Manmade ■ 1 * fabric 34 41 Without 37 30 40 assistance “ 42 Worth of 4i films 1 4Í 43 Diner's « counter i ■■ ACROSS DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to woik it: 3/7 AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two 0 's , etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 3-7 CRYPTOQUOTE B Q U KY Q Z Q M A M V F YQWF Page 11 Thursday, March 7,1991 O D T P L F A CQMV Q B OX EQLJ D W OTBM M V Q B NXJJXJF F L D TJ V. — Z V X P Y F B C X P L FP Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MUSIC SWEEPS BY ME AS A MESSENGER CARRYING A MESSAGE THAT IS NOT FOR M E.— GEORGE ELIOT e 1991 by King Feature! Syndicate. Inc. depend on. how the readjustment process is once they eet back to the States.” Capt. Richard Osborne, the ship’s chief of medicine, was asked if his examinations turned up evidence of serious mistreatment. “None of the physical findings that we found were accountable by anything other than ejection and landing and battle injuries,” he said. “They were in better condition than we had expected. They were much more chipper and most of their problems had to do with deprivation of company and some deprivation of food, just less than they were normally used to.” Their greatest fears, he said, resulted from the proximity of some of the allied bombing raids. “They never told me of any fear that it was not going to turn out as a victory,” he said. IF YOU’RE THIRSTY FOR REFRESHMENT — GRAB A PEPSI IF YOU’RE HUNGRY FOR A FUN JOB -G R A B ONE AT PEPSI! P EP S I IS L O O K IN G FO R A R E S P O N S IB L E , D E D IC A T E D U N D E R G R A D U A T E T O BE O U R O N -C A M P U S M A R K E T IN G R E P R E S E N T A T IV E . T H E P O S IT IO N R E Q U IR E S A C O M M IT M E N T OF 1 0 H O U R S /W E E K A N D B E G IN S A P R IL 1 5 . • A S S IS T IN E X E C U T IN G O N -C A M P U S P R O M O T IO N S • H E L P D E V E L O P N E W F U N A N D E X C IT IN G M A R K E T IN G P R O G R A M S FO R T H E A S U C O M M U N IT Y • B E R E S P O N S IB L E FOR U N IV E R S IT Y M A R K E T IN G B U D G E T • A T T E N D P E R IO D IC M E E T IN G S W IT H PEPSI M A N A G E R S 'A N D C U S T O M E R S W E ’RE L O O K IN G FO R S O M E O N E W H O H A S L IV E D A T L E A S T 6 M O N T H S O N C A M P U S , H A S A B A S IC U N D E R S T A N D IN G O F M A R K E T IN G . A N D IS A C T IV E IN T H E A S U C O M M U N IT Y . W H A T ’ S T H E P R O C E S S ? ! •BR IN G A RESUME TO CAREER SERVICES BY MARCH 21 •O N -C AM PU S INTERVIEWS W ILL BE HELD APRIL T Page 12 TtHjradafcMarchT^iÇÇi^ S tate P ress City buses utilize bike racks Police Report to better serve Valley cyclists B y K EL LY E KRATCH State P ress ASU students can benefit from a new Valley program designed to test the feasibility of bicycle racks mounted on city buses, one biking enthusiast said. “A good many of students utilize bikes, and we encourage them to use bicycles and buses,” said Eugene Berlatsky, a member of the Bicycle Institute of Arizona. ‘‘Hie bus folks are anxious to cooperate with bicyclists.” Hie bike racks, which are mounted on buses serving routes 44 (44th Street and Tatum Boulevard), 72 (Scottsdale and Rural roads) and 106 (Peoria Avenue and Shea Boulevard), are easy to use and accommodate most bikes, City officials said. On Feb. 28 Phoenix Transit mounted the specially designed bike racks to the front of each bus. The racks hold two bikes at a time. The $10,000 trial program will last six months and is funded through a Department of Transportation air quality fund. It involves 35 city buses in an effort to increase city bus usage. There is no cost for the service, other than the regular bus fare. “We urge all students to use the bus and their bike together — it works out very well and is very efficient,” said Berlatsky, who was part of a city task force that approved the racks. “Now is a good opportunity to use (the bicycle racks) — because if we don’t use them we’ll lose them.” Berlatsky said that so far the rack’s limited, two-bike capacity has not posed any problems because few people know about the program. If the racks become more popular, the city would take steps to accommodate the increased number of bicycles, he added. Projects planner Mike Nevarez said the bus bike racks are hot new, adding that California and East Coast cities have been, using the racks for years, “The program was designed to provide an alternative to single occupancy vehicles,” Nevarez said. He added that the program will make it possible for those who cannot walk to a bus stop to catch the bus. The Bicycles on Buses Citizen Task Force developed for the project was instrumental in approving the racks, ensuring safety and determining experimental routes. Originally, the task force considered the possibility of allowing passengers to bring their bikes on the buses with them, but they decided “it was not a safe proposition,” Nevarez said. Another option the task force looked into was rear-mounted bike racks, which Can hold more than two bikes. The project is expected to continue through September, when it will be evaluated for usage, and whether loading and unloading the bikes delayed bus schedules. If the program is determined to be successful, Berlatsky said bike racks will be added to more bus routes. ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday: •A fight occurred at the University ' Activity Center Tuesday night during the Arizona Interscholastic Association basketball games. A male who had been struck in the face fell backwards. As he fell, the suspect pulled out a revolver and pointed it at an officer. The officer pulled out his own gun and pushed it into the suspect’s chest. Both were pushed out into the hallway by the crowd exiting the building and slipped because of a wet floor. While the officer was regaining his balance, the suspect escaped. The officer strained his back and pulled a leg muscle during the incident. Another officer was punched in the face during the fight, but was not injured. The suspect is a black male, last seen wearing a green wool long-sleeved shirt. •An ASU student tripped on a brick Monday at the Art Warehouse and injured her knees, chest and jaw. •An ASU student injured his knee at the ASU Student Recreational Center tennis courts and was transported to the Student Health Center. •A' three-vehicle accident occurred Tuesday afternoon on Lemon Street, west of Rural Road. Two vehicles were damaged. No serious injuries were reported. •An ASU employee’s 1988 Jeep Cherokee was stolen from the Community Services Building parking lot. Estimated loss is $12 ,0 0 0 . •A 1989 Honda Elite was stolen from the west side of Normal Avenue, south of Apache Boulevard. Estimated loss is $815. •Police approached an ASU student in his llth -flo o r room a t Manzanita residence hall after someone reported smelling a marijuana-type odor. Police said the student admitted to smoking marijuana, but there was no evidence of marijuana in the room. •A black Trek bicycle, valued at $390, was stolen from a bike rack at the Physical Science Building, where it was secured with a cable and padlock. Tempe police reported the following incidents Wednesday: •Police arrested an ASU student Tuesday at Sigma Alpha Epsilon and accused him of having an outstanding warrant for failure to appear in court. •Police arrested a 34-year-old man at Sunshine Convenience M art, 2531 E. University Drive, and accused him of shoplifting and indecent exposure. After allegedly putting a bottle of alcohol in his pants, the suspect allegedly left the store without paying. The owner confronted the suspect outside the store. The suspect allegedly removed his pants, exposing his genitals to numerous people. Compiled by State P ress reporter Teena Chadwell. T em p e m an drow ns in canal w h ile trying to rescu e d og B y T E E N A C H A D W E LL State P ress A Tempe man drowned Tuesday in the Western Canal near Priest Road after he jumped into the canal to rescue his dog. Tempe police said Gregory Thomas Meyer, 33, drowned around 6:30 p.m., likely from exhaustion after he struggled with his dog in the water. He did not have the strength to battle the water current and climb up the smooth concrete walls along the sides of the canal, Officer Roger Austin said. Investigators had to speculate on what happened at the canal because no one was present at the actual drowning. Police were called to the scene after a passerby saw the rescued dog sitting on the canal’s west bank next to a pair of wet tennis shoes and a sock. A cap was floating in the water. Two hours later, the body was recovered. During the search for the victim, the man’s wife, Shelly, came to the scene trying to find her husband, unaware he had drowned. The water where the victim drowned is 8- to 10-feet deep, police said, a little deeper than the average 6-foot depth in the rest of the canal. There are built-in steps in the concrete so people can climb out, but they are hard to find when covered by water, Austin said, adding that he does not consider the canal exceptionally “dangerous.” ACCIDENT LAWYERS BAKER & M ARCUS F R E E CONSULTATION ★ ASK ABO UT REDUCED PERCENTAGE FEES FOR ASU STUDENTS AND FACULTY Telephone Inquiries W elcom e F 4 3 8 .1 2 1 2 -a m ANa N m m | C o rp o ra te F o u n ta in s • 4625 S . W e n d le r D r., S u ite 111 • T e m p e “If he hadn’t been exhausted from trying to get that dog out of there, he probably could have gotten out,” Austin said. Larry Randall, Tempe fire inspector, said no one has drowned in any Tempe canal for the past four years, when the Tempe Fire Department started keeping complete records of drownings. Animals have died in the canal. But Austin said even that is unusual. “Animals have better instincts than we do. It’s unusual when they get in there,” Austin said, adding that the victim’s dog could have fallen into the canal. A C C ID E N T ? IN JU R E D ? IF YOU H AVE B EEN IN A N AUTO ACCIDENT... OR HAVE AN ON-THE-JOB INJURY SEE A DOCTOR! •ALL L E G A L C A S E S A C C E P T E D •M O ST IN S U R A N C E A C C E P T E D •W O R KM AN ’S C O M P •NO O U T O F P O C K E T C O S T S SAM E DAY APPOINTM ENT ’ 24 HOUR ON-CALL W e C an H elp Find an Attorney 956-4655 V A LLEY G EN ER A L PRACTICE 7 7 0 1 E. IN D IA N S C H O O L R D . S UITE E ANNOUNCING BOOKS, ETC. S 13th ANNIVERSARY FO U R D A Y S ONLY: M ARCH 10 30% O FF EVERYTHING! (M agazines & new spapers excluded. No coupon necessary.) BOOKS ETC 901 S. Mill (Tempe Center) 90/ HOURS: Mon-Sat 9-8 Sun io o We accept Visa, MC, and Amex State Press Page 13 T h u rs d a y , M a r c h 7 , 1 9 9 1 Cease-fi Continued from page 1 . Syrian troops will help guard the gulf oil states. Their agreement also called for a U. N. peace conference on the Middle E ast — a plan long resisted by Israel, which fears such an international conference would pressure it to accept a Palestinian state on Israeli-occupied lands. Later this week, Secretary of State Jam es Baker travels to the Mideast to meet with both Arabs and Israelis to discuss the region’s future in the wake of the 43-day war that drove Iraqi troops from Kuwait and devastated Saddam’s military power. Fifteen freed American POWs, the second group released since Monday, were flown aboard a chartered Red Cross plane from Baghdad to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and then were transferred to the U. S. Navy hospital ship Mercy, docked in the gulf emirate of Bahrain. The Americans and 20 British, Saudi and other POWs were exchanged for 294 Iraqi prisoners flown in to Baghdad by the Red Cross — the first of more than 63,000 Iraqi prisoners to be freed by the U. S.-led Desert Storm alliance. The ex-prisoners, in yellow jumpsuits emblazoned “PW,” waved or saluted as they stepped off the plane in Riyadh. One gave a high-five hand slap to a waiting American serviceman before embracing him and walking away. Two were brought out on stretchers and many appeared undernourished. Examining doctors said some airmen had been injured on their missions, and most had been “slapped around,” including three whose eardrums were perforated. But the doctors described the ex-POWs as “upbeat” despite their injuries. “Everyone of them’s a hero,” said U. S. commander Schwarzkopf, in the Riyadh welcoming party. The freed prisoners — the last known to be held by Baghdad - * included a woman, U. S. Ar my f l i gh t surgeon M a j . Rhonda L. Comum of Freeville, N. Y. Her arms were in bandages and Slings, apparently having been broken when a search-and-rescue helicopter on which she was flying crashed last weekend. ®NO Tonight Program s you count on — count on you! 7:00 Entrepreneur to educate students about finances ASU s t u d e n t s f ac i ng f inanci al hardship can gain insight today from a leading Western entrepreneur who is t o u r i n g t h e nation to encourage fiscal responsibil­ ity. T h o u s a n d s of Haynes students graduate annually from college with an unrealistic outlook and a large debt, said Max Haynes, executive director of the Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs. Haynes is taking his message to ASU students today in the Student Services Building Amphitheater in a series called “Money Matters.’’ His two talks run from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and from 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. A ccord ing to cu rre n t fin a n cia l HISTORY... &MYSTERY! Fifteen Years of MacNeil/Lehrer David Gergen and Mark Shields host this retrospective of the award-winning work of journalists Robert MacNeil and Jim Lehrer, remembering historic (and sometimes comic) moments in their | 15 years of news and interviews. S C R A T C H IN G .Touchless Autom atic M ystery! lcludes U nder C arriag e W ash (Recommended by a ll owners manuals) ONL 1504 S e lf S e r v e Terrace and Apache KAET statistics provided by the Citibank corporation, 93 percent of college students have checking accounts, 83 p ercen t have automati c te lle r machine cards and 27 percent have credit cards. As parents struggle with skyrocketing tuition p r i c e s , t od ay ’s stu d en ts apparently think they are financially sophisticated. But this is often not the case, Haynes said. Primarily, Haynes said he will attempt to “give some perspective to (college students) about how to develop habits to be financially secure in the future.” He said studehts tend to think of financial issues in general terms, failing to relate financial matters to themselves. “A lot of students get credit cards, and credit cards are good credit risks. They can be good if you don’t abuse them,” Haynes said. “Some students overspend, thinking that they’ll have the money later. “But later never comes.” B y A N ITA C A R C O N E State P re ss Watch Poirot reveal the truth . behind “T h e Mysterious Affair at S tyles' in this 2-1/2 hour special! 1 London $470 Roundtrip from Phoenix Frankfurt Paris San Juan Tokyo Sydney $338 $338 $818 $519 $967 Conference May 22, 23 & 24 Phoenix, AZ The Pointe Resort on Sooth Mountain Designed for Men end Women: • Over 30 Distinguished Spnekers • Unlimited Networking Possibilities • Meet Experts In the field of Sports • Job Interview Opportunities Restrictions do apply. Student status may berequred. Sign up now for Early Bird Special by A iril 20,1991 Eurallpasses Issued on-the-spotl Parto! na State University Call for a FREE 1991 Student Travel Catalog! X® »" Third Annual Thisisagreatway tospendthe summer but itdoesn’tlook veryimpressive onyourresume At Allstate, summer interns get the chance to do resume-ouality work on real projects in offices all orer the country So if you’re interested in audit­ ing, accounting, systems, actuarial science, human resources, finance, tew, marketing, graphics, under­ writing, advertising, or other relat­ ed areas, send ynur resume to the Internship Coordinator, Allstate Insurance Company Allstate Plaza, GIC, Northbrook, H 6OO62, Of course, you’ll still have time to perfect your pcw«r serve. It’s just that you’ll also finish the summer with skills that people may actually pay you for. America's oldest and largest student travel organization. C o u id T ra v e l Located at forest and University, directly across ftomA.S.U.1 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, A Z 85281 Alter April 20th: $350 Students $450 Non-Students Your Resource to a Career In Sports CALL N0W I Space is Limited! •800-776-7877 *8tud«nt Discount Only For the Most up-to-date Job Leads call: Sports Careers Jobline 1-900-420-3005 966-3544 i tllfC h a rb o r v ie w (619) 239-6171 S AN D IEG O Overlooking the San D iego H arbor in the H eart o f Downtown Just M inutes from the Beach $60.00 S^ mp&I per room pernight plus tax ♦Y ou m ay book in advance or bring this ad Ask fo r our Spring B reak Special A member of the IT] Sears Financial Network [HJ 1617 First Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 /instate Y o u ’r e in g o o d h a n d s . O ffer good thru April 1 5 ,1 9 9 1 0 1991 Allstate Insurance Company, Northbrook, Illin o is . Comics »»- Page 14 Staici Thursday, March 7,1991 C a lv in a n d H ó b b e s AH ORDINARY CHEETAH CAM O M OTCR GO MILES AH HOUR. A HUMAH CAN HARDLY DO A QUARTER O f THAT. WHAT A JO K E.' b y B ill W a tte rs o n IF CATS ASE SO SREAT, HOW COME THEM DOW HAVE CARS, o r Ro c k e t s , o r B o m b s , O R HUCLEAR...UM.. REACTORS, O R.. OR», t M EAN ... YOU THINK. CATS ARE SO G R EAT / WELL HUM ANS > * 3 O O H V/iW tTO f j 1 B E 5 0 FAST OR À S O STRONG TH E F A R S ID E By GARY LARSON AND WE CAM S E E S\K TIM ES BETTER AT NIGHT THAN MOO CA M .' SI* TIMES ABOUT AGILITY V BECAUSE»* So m U S /M E t! % m D o o n esb u ry b y G a rry T ru d e a u NO. MAN. I PONCTUANT C M O i, M y ? TOPICK A m C A R P .IH M B HI6H- , CARP TRICKS! o O m -aw e# j / 14KB THk > \ J / T M CHARLOTTE PBTBRS, yes, THCCHOPPCRPILOTUNO MA'AM* FÍCUJ YOUHCRB. HOWYOU MAKING OUT? REAL6O0D, CAPTAIN. TUB M CB OF YOU TOCHBCK. YGS, M A'A M . COULP YOU ANYTHING I CAN PO FOR.YOU? p r o p tu g m o r a ls o m m i, n s AG AIN ST REGULA­ TIONS. BUT... CBRFRO M A GK&UHBIGITT* / OKAY, OKAY, I CA N TAKE A H IN T! / ONB[ V “Hey, l o o k . . . y o u knew w hen y o u m arried i that I w as a non -w orking b re e d .” A b y J u l i e S ig w a r t R a in e y D a y s ALL RIGHT. FERRIS'. W H Y A R E YOU O F F E R IN G TO FLY U S SO M EW H ER E F O R S P R IN G B R E A K ? FERRIS-W H Y Pû Y O UH... W P R Y U P A IV R PACK, N IA » / H E'S GIVING M E THAT •‘INNOCENT LOON" ... rO O N T WANNA HANG ABOUND AND FIN D OUT WHAT H E 'S DONE W W YOU NEVER, po ANYTHING FOR US WITHOUT W ANTING. s o m e t h in g f ir s t ! UH... I THINK / H EAR . • S /jB E A JS ... ¡C M b y F o rd M . L a t t ie ’s D o g b bN W9® tM m m sm TO AT HOME fo lk s . } "St' hJJJJJ Ask Mr. Know-It-All! ~r WANTED TV A n y o n e w is h in g t o d e v e lo p a n d im p r o v e : ★ G o o d s p e a k in g a n d p r e s e n t a t io n s k id s ★ A b ilit y t o t h i n k q u ic k ly a n d c le a r ly o n y o u r f e e t . ★ B e t t e r l is t e n in g t a l e n t s ★ S t r o n g le a d e r s h ip s k ills _ I Before Big Bird, kids j cut their teeth on I satirical humor that I made their parents laugh even harder. Rocket J. Squirrel and Bullwinkle Moose kept Boris Badanov and Natasha Fatale from destroying their world, j= = = = a while hosting a show starring Mr. Know -It-All, Peabody and Sherm an (and their “W ayback M achine") and those unforgettable Fractured Fairy Tates. TOASTM ASTSAS GAN HEX.?! ■THURSDAY ¡HEAP BEER NITE Longnedcs Drafts Pitchers Visit a Toastm asters club and begin improving your communication skills today. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT THE REACH OFFICE. OR VISIT: Meetings Every Thursday 5:15 p.m. MU Mohave Room Funded by ASASU L m I 1 imm■ rw K M e G y rO S Ubi tswee» * i s s i r 43 A A A C Æê 50« $250 i Buy 1 Sub, Ge J 2nd 1/2 Price I 5 equal or lesser value valu« Ufith with nnrrhecA purchase nf of medium drink CORNING, Calif. (AP) - A black bear cub that someone apparently tried to domesticate and then dumped near Lassen National Park needs some ‘‘bear lessons.” ‘‘How can you teach a bear to hibernate? I’m sure not going to crawl hack in a cage and go to sleep with him,” said state Department of Fish and Game warden Warren Duke, who rescued the cub about 10 days ago. The cinnamon-colored bear was mooching food from passing motorists and campers, and “showing no fear of human beings,” Duke said earlier this week. “ Probably, someone had dumped it the previous weekend. I doubt if it would have survived. It’s still winter up there,” he said of the national park and forest northeast of this Sacramento Valley town. Zoos in several cities, including Sacramento and San Francisco, were contacted to see if they wanted the bear. But there were no takers, bears being pretty common, Duke said. So wildlife officials decided a private refuge in Oregon was the place to rehabilitate the cub into a wild animal. Game warden Tyler Young and his Wife, Linda, cared for the bear at their ranch in Corning before Tyler Young drove the cub to Oregon on Monday . The bear showed signs of mistreatment, Young said. The animal, which is about 1 year old, was smell for its age, weighing only 25 pounds, he said. “His teeth are worn down a lot, maybe from chewing on a cage, and the bottom of his feet have sores,” Young said. Discover Kinko's ^ and you're bound to impress. Put the finishing touches on your next report, manual or proposal with professional bindings from Kinko's. Choose from a wide variety of styles and colors fora fast, affordable touch that's bound to make a great impression. 99tf Binding O ffer Choose from VeloBind* or spiral binding on documents up to one inch in thickness with card stock cover for just 99$: eachOffer good at listed locations only . Does not include copies. One coupon per customer. N ot valid with any other offer. Good through March 1991 •University & Forest • 894-9588 •University ¿R u ral • 894-1797 University & Hardy • 921-0168 with coupon, exp. 3-21-91 ^ »Open 24 Hours! M nkpy CHltET Stet« Press Page 15 Thursday, March 7,1991 Robsongets well in hurry as Devils win B y D A N ZEIG ER State P re ss Scott Troyanos/StatsPress A S U se n io r gym nast Licu rg o D iaz-Sandi p o se s during h is third-place perform ance on the still rin g s W e d n e sd a y . Sep sto ry, page 16. ASU hopes not to Duck NCAAs By PAU L CO RO S ta te P ress One fo r the money, two fo r the show. Elvis’ worldly wisdom holds true today as one more win gives ASU a betting chance at a NCAA tournament bid, and a two-game sweep of this week’s regular-season ending home games with the Oregon schools makes the Sun Devils a shoo-in for the big show. ASU’s quest to return to the NCAAs for the first time in a decade could be completed with a victory in tonight’s game against Oregon at 8 p.m. in the University Activity Center , but the Sun Devils will not be taking anything for granted. “I think we have a good chance at that,” ASU coach Bill Frieder said. “If we can finish strong, then we should be one of those teams. But when your fate is in other people’s hands, you just never know.” While Frieder said he has no doubt that two wins will put them in the 64-team field, he and his players are unsure about anything less than that. “ I ’m looking at two games,” senior center Isaac Austin said. “I’m not looking at a split or whatever. I wasn’t even satisfied with a split on the last trip.” Austin will get a shot at redemption this week as a scheduling quirk has the Sun Devils playing the Ducks and Beavers again. A week ago ASU blew past Oregon 91-69 on the road, riding a 71 percent first-half shooting performance to the end. However, the Ducks (13-13,8-8), in a five-way tie with the Sun Devils for third place in the Pac, are a changed team. Oregon came back two nights later with a slow-down game that stymied UofA and gave the Ducks a 62-58 home upset. “It won’t be easy,” Frieder said. “Just because we beat Oregon doesn’t mean anything for this Thursday. All you have to do is look and see what they did against Arizona on Saturday. “They controlled the ball a little better and kept the ball in (Terrell) Brandon’s handsmore.” ASU cannot rely on another lights-out shooting night, especially with its share of cold games. What it needs, according to Frieder, is an all-around solid game from its backcourt. The guards’ foremost dilemma is keeping a lid on Brandon, the Ducks’ floor general with a 26.4 scoring average. “You have to pick (Brandon) up quick enough so that he doesn’t get to that screen where he goes by you,” Frieder said. “He’s going to get the ball back, but you’ve got to work hard to try to limit the number of times he gets it back.” Lynn Collins, Stevin Smith and Tarence Wheeler have a combined assist-turnover ratio of less than two to one, which Frieder wants to be closer to three to one. Without the backcourt playing well, Collins in particular, Frieder said the whole team struggles. “We need Collins to really take care of the basketball and get us in our offense,” Frieder said. “When we have defenses like zones, he has got to find a way to penetrate and dish that basketball off to our shooters.” Those shooters (Wheeler, Smith and Matt Anderson) were a combined two-for-14 shooting from 3-point range in Saturday’s loss at OSU. If ASU does indeed receive a NCAA invitation when pairings are announced on C BSat 4:30p.m. Sunday, a possible regional site for the Sun Devils would be Tucson with UofA being the top seed in Salt Lake City. It is highly possible that four Pac teams will be sent to four different locations. Turn to Basketball, page 16 Austin anticipates furthering playing career By PA U L CORO State P ress At times this season it has looked like the Pac-10 Conference Office’s Bermanism of Isaac Austin “Space” seemed appropriate for the ASU center. At other times, Luc Lohgley’s “fat ass” term for him seemed to fit, as his weight rose more than his stats. But for the majority of the season, the goggle-eyed, shorts-drooping Austin has been anything the Sun Devils wanted and needed to get to their 17-9 record and NCAA bid position. For the co-captain’s efforts, the senior center is beginning to look toward a pro career as his college days wind down. Austin said this season-ending week and ASU’s postseason fortune will be critical to his pro possibilities. “ If I get any chances, it will just depend on how the team ends up — if we go to the t o u r n a m e n t , w h a t we do in t h e tournament,” the 6-foot-10 Reedley, Calif., native said. “I feel that’s going to be a big part of it, how I play out these two games and how aggressive I am .” Austin said he is shifting the focus away from his future and to ASU’s present, even though he thinks a good showing this week would help him attain his goal of playing in the NBA. “I want to win because we’ve got a chance to do something, to go to the tournament and make a statement that ASU’s program is turned around,” Austin said. Austin was considered a strong honors candidate before the season and he looked like one early, racking up big time numbers in low playing time. But in his last 11 games with more minutes, he has averaged 14.4 paints in comparison to his 17.7 average in the first 15 games. Austin said he a t t r i b u t e s the d e c l i n e to increased scouting during the P a c se a so n and the r e s u l t a n t co 11a p s i n g defenses. But also, when A u s t i n w a s Austin outplaying the likes of Longley, Mark Randall, Shawn Bradley and Texas’ frontline, he was still at his preseason weight of 250. Numerous fast food stops and nearly three months later, Austin claims he weighs about 260. “I gain weight pretty fast,” Austin said. Weight control is not all Coach Bill Frieder has got on Austin about this season. Frieder said he has been harder on Austin than anybody, but Austin said he has always taken the bashing in a positive light. “R e’s going to come to me regardless,” the junior college transfer said. “It’s true. I ’m .a senior. The freshmen, they’re young. They’re going to make their mistakes. The mistakes I make I shouldn’t be making.” Austin’s play has not picked up momentum down the stretch, going from a 24-point, 18-rebound game last Thursday at Oregon to a 17-point, four-rebound performance in ASU’s loss at Oregon State Saturday. “I was playing real lazy,” Austin said. “I can’t let that happen again because it’s going to cost us.” One of Austin’s largest problems has been dealing with the double- and triple-teams.^ Austin’s frustration carries over to his play at times, but he said he is now over that. “I know how to cope with that,” Austin said. “Just catch, turn and shoot is all I think now. I ’m not more into the power game because of their double team.” Austin said this is an important week for him because more scouts are looking at him. His size and shooting ability are in his favor, but the team’s leading scorer (15.9) and rebounder (8.6) still has a lot to prove. “I feel I could do some damage in the league (NBA),” Austin said. “I feel I can play at the next level, but with the people evaluating you, you don’t know.” Austin’s brother, Alex, is now playing for Grand Rapids in the CBA after leading ASU in scoring last season. Frieder has said that Alex’s problem was that he did not listen to him when he was working out a NBA tryout for him and if Isaac listens, he will get his shot. “He has had a good year,” Frieder said. “I think, against teams like we’re playing coming up, he’s capable of playing very well. We need him to play well for us to be successful.” Austin’s biggest fan is well-known among ASU faithful as his father, Alex Sr., and makes the nine-hour trek from Greedley, Calif., regularly to cheer on Austin and lead student section cheers. Austin, the youngest of seven children, seems to hold an opposite personality from his father as he is normally subdued with the exception of his post-dunk balancing act trot. Nevertheless, Dad will be cruising the gas-guzzling Coupe de Ville to stay with his son again this weekend for both Austins’ last shot of glory at the University Activity Cente r. “God bless him,” Austin said. “He’ll be here fired up and ready to go.” ASU first baseman Dave Robson came up with a scenario each star-gazing 8-year-old dreams about — the score tied in the bottom of the ninth with the winning run on third — and absolutely the last thing he wanted to do was think about it. So be it. With the Sun Devils facing such a situation against Texas Tech on Wednesday, Robson nonchalantly took the first offering from Mark Brandenburg and singled to right. The base hit scored Mike Scialo from third with the winning run in ASU’s 6-5 victory in front of 1,264 at Packard Stadium. Robson, who missed the first game of the series with a slight upper respiratory ailment, was 2-for-4 with two R B I and said that being a little under the weather may have actually helped his play. “When you’re healthy, you’re jacked up and always thinking about it,” Robson said. “But when you’re playing while sick, there’s ju st this lull feeling and you react differently. It’s kind of weird.” While Robson may not mind being ill for awhile, the No. 9 Sun Devils (16-10) certainly hope that the sicknesses will cease. What started with assistant coach Steve Kmetko and spread to Robson also sent pitcher Sean Rees and catcher Clarke Rea home before the game Wednesday. “I got sick from Coach Kmetko,” Robson said. “I was rooming with him at UCLA (last weekend), so I was bound to get it. It was the worst — I had an ear infection, fever, some trouble breathing, everything.” ASU coach Jim Brock was forced to watch Robson’s game-winning hit from the press box after being ejected by home-plate umpire Mike Pietro for arguing a called third strike on designated hitter Doug Newstrom in the third inning. Scialo led off the ninth by hitting the first offering from Brandenburg over the headof center fielder Kent Blasingame and off the fence for a triple. Both Scialo and Robson connected on fastballs and said they looked for the pitch on the advice of Sun Devil hitting coach Je ff Pentland. “ (Brandenburg) had started me off on the first pitch with a fastball all day,” Scialo said. “That’s what he was generally doing to the left-handed hitters. I was looking for it in the ninth and I got a good one to hit.” Brandenburg pitched a complete game, but was the loser by allowing 11 hits and five earned runs in eight-plus innings. ASU seemed to have trouble early in the game adjusting to the submarine pitching style of Brandenburg, who has gone the distance in each appearance this season. “He had a weird motion,” Robson said. “He was coming from the side a lot and it was tough to judge his release point. But I thought we adjusted well.” The Sun Devils matched Texas Tech (17-4)' in each of the first three innings behind the hitting of Jim Austin, who had his fifth home run in seven games with a solo dinger in the first, and Newstrom, who was 2-for-4. i Newstrom turned out to be the winning pitcher by tossing three scoreless innings on only one hit to improve his record to 4-1. The freshman came in for starter Wayne Ball, who allowed nine hits and four earned runs, but achieved Brock’s biggest objective by not walking a batter in six innings. “That was very encouraging,” Brock said. “I think Ball had been overthrowing and pressing, and that made him lose control. He went back to doing the things he is able to do and that’s throw strikes. He was able to do that last year and today he went out and pitched like he is capable of.” ASU center fielder Mike Kelly extended his hitting streak to a career-high 14 games by beating out a bunt single in the eighth inning. The Sun Devils return to action today as they face the Chicago Cubs in an exhibition game at Mesa’s Hohokam Park at 1 p.m. F a se 16 S ta tt P ro » Thursday, March 7 ,1991 T e n n is team s cruise ASU gymnasts clobber W M U 6 y M A R T Y M U R PH Y State Prase B y D A R R EN U R B A N State P re ss With big matches coming up this weekend, the ASU men’s and women’s tennis teams rolled through their tuneup/ meets with relative ease Wednesday. The men’s squad beat up Washington 8-0 at Whiteman Tennis Center while the women whipped North Carolina State 9-0 at Tempe Western Reserve Club. The men (10-3), who host the Penn National Collegiate Invitational this weekend, had little trouble with the Huskies. “I ’ve been so involved with the weekend I kind of forgot about today,” A SU c o a c h L o u R e l k e n s a i d . “Everything we’ve done in practice has been for the weekend. That made this difficult, but we have four seniors and they know what to do.” ’ No. 1 Sun Devil B r i a n Gyetko converted a fast start against UW’s Chet Crile to a 6-4,7-5 victory, despite missing some easy volleys late in the match. “The level of my game was higher in the beginning,” Gyetko said. “I had a few lapses in the second set and couldn’t put him away.” With the Penn tourney being the focus of practice, Gyetko said he wanted to make sure he played a solid match. “There’s been a lot of hype,” Gyetko said. “You can’t overlook this team.” Gyetko sat out doubles due to an elbow injury in a “preventative” move. Seniors Dave Lomicky and Joel Finnigan eac h had ea sy tw o-set victories, as did junior Ross Matheson. Senior Dan Marting and sophomore Chris Gambino encountered tougher opponents, losing their first sets before rebounding to win. For Gambino, his 2-6, 6-3, 7-6 (7-5) win over the Huskies’ Manuel Marti was the norm for his season. “Gambino is realizing that he’s going to be out there three sets, no matter if we’re playing a good team or not,” Belken said. “Fortunately for him, he’s played them before.” Marting and Matheson won in doubles for ASU, as did juniors Marc Rothchild and Bryan Geiger. The women (9-5) had no trouble with the Wolfpack despite lineup-juggling by Coach Sheila Mclnerney. The Sun Devils lost only eight games in the singles competition and swept all 18 sets. Senior Kristi Jonkosky, junior Luann Klimchock and freshman Meredith Geiger all won 6-0, 6-0. Paola Conte, Krista Amend and Jennifer Rojohn also picked up wins for ASU, who travel to the Bay schools this weekend. Hair cut & style Reg. $15 men $16 women T Oroomhc H u m o n s’ Hair Studio 966-5462 3-16-91 •In trie Arches next to the Warehouse Deli* Forest and University great looking $5°Qpp ASU men’s gymnastics coach Don Robinson figured that Wednesday’s meet with Western Michigan would be an easy contest — and his thoughts came to fruition as the Sun Devils destroyed the Broncos 278.10-261.65. WMU looked like an undermatched team compared to the superior Sun Devils. The Broncos are a very young team as they have no seniors oh their squad. WMU coach Fred Orlofsky, in his 25th season with the Broncos, said hie felt his squad could have done better. “This is our spring break, and we’ve been out here since Monday,” Orlofsky said. “I think we might have been enjoying ourselves too much out here. We could have hit better too, but we faltered on a lot tonight.” Before the start of competition, Robinson made it a point to honor four ASU seniors who were in their final home meet of their careers. The ASU coach presented Michael Basketball__ Continued from page 15. “I think it’s a natural that we’ll be in the West if we’re in the tournament,” Frieder said. “I think Tucson is a strong possibility just because of the geographic location of all the teams. Not many teams from the West are going to go the other direction.” A split this week would probably put the O Alwicker, Christian Rohde, Kevin Singer and Licurgo Diaz-Sandi with envelopes containing a letter he first wrote back in 1974. Robinson explained that it had become his custom to do this for every senior since then. The letter extends advice to the men for their post-ASU life. The seniors responded and had a strong meet. Diaz-Sandi scored a 55.60 in the all-around for first place. Rohde had a superb 9.7 on the pommel horse, which gave him the first-place spot over teammate Alwicker, who finished second with a 9.55. _ Singer had a second-place tie in the Vault by scoring a 9.25. Geoff Eaton, a freshman, stole part of the show away from the seniors by nabbing first place in the vault, second in the floor, and third in both the high bar and parallel bars. “ Geoff Eaton looked really good," Robinson said. “He hit three of the six goals that he had set for himself prior to the meet.” Sun Devils either third or fourth in the conference’s final standings because UO and OSU play at UofA and Washington State and the Los Angeles schools will move each other around. “I cannot believe we won’t get at least four,” Frieder said. “We just got to hope that we’re one of the four. If we take care of business this week, we will be.-’’ T N EVERYONE IS INVITED TO THE VALLEY’S BEST LADIES NITE AT e x c lu d in g s a le item s with c o u p o n sandals Coupon expires 3-31-91 w ith o u t th e m lo n g e n o u g h ? * The Shoe Mill 398 so “™ mill - tempe y b b *»31 w«7 A N Y C O IN — A N Y D R IN K the alternative copy shop at the comer of Mill and University in the Tempe Center UkHm S-IÒ Drafts for everyone!! We F ea tu re: Bottled Beer • XEROX9500 with Computerized collating. • XEROX 1038 s with Reduction/ Enlargement capabilities (64% to 156% In 1% increments). •XERO X 2510 copies up to 36” wide any length. • Varitronics Poster Printer Plus enlarges from 8 1/2” x 11" to 24" x 36" In ju st seconds. 8-11:30 pm MEN When the bass is Thump’ln we're Donald Tnim p'in C o m e d a n c e with the H O T T E S T girls to the S h re a d d in g s o u n d s straigh t from N Y C with the o n e & o n ly • Wide variety o f paper more than 70 colors and sizes to choose from. Open Monday thru Friday 7am to 9pm Saturday and Sunday 10am to 5pm \3\c I a L O O K F O R 1 /2 P R IC E D R IN K S P E C IA L S A L L N IT E 1320 E. Broadway Tempe, AZ Selfservice 1 Copies | v t t r •KtnMin copythop ■ on 8%" x 11" white bond —Not valid with any other offer. 829-7777 N o lim it . G ood untH 3-30-91 W e 'll jjjkefe your w orld! N O C R Y BABIES Stet« Hw Page 17 Thursday, March 7,1991 Swimmers begin P ac-1 Os B y D A R R EN U R B A N S ta te P re ss It is not often a coach can go into a meet and say that winning is not the top priority. ASU men’s swimming coach Ron Johnson has that luxury as the Pac-10 Championship starts today in Long Beach, Calif. The fourth-ranked Sun Devils’ first order of business will be to gather more NCAA qualifying times, while a victory would be a bonus. “A win is of secondary importance,” Johnson said. “The main thing we’re emphasizing is focusing on standards. Hopefully, we can get six to eight more guys in.” After finishing the regular season with a best-ever 9-1 record and what Johnson calls his “best team ever”, the 16th-year coach said the squad is looking ahead to the nationals. “It’s far more important what we do in NCAAs." Johnson said. “For the Pac-lOs, whatever happens, happens. If we did our maximum preparation, we would stand a chance of winning.” Johnson added that intense training will take ASU out of any serious conference contention. “We’ve continued the integrity of, the training,” Johnson said. “Of the guys who have qualified, they’ve rested very little and they probably won’t be at (heir peak. Without your nine best guys, you’re not going to set the world on fire.” The Sun Devils have continually added to their NCAA times all season, which Johnson said is unusual. With nothing on the line against UofA in the last meet of the season, ASU qualified its last two relays. “I’m real relieved to get the Short relays out of the way against UofA,” Johnson said. “We have all five relays qualified.” The divers already competed for their conference title, but with no finisher higher . than ninth,, they have no meet points to add to the team score. W omen’s hoops travels to UW By AM Y SLA D E S ta te P ress If the ASU women’s basketball team expects to win on the road at Washington, the Sun Devils must pick up where they left off in their 81-64 victory over Oregon State on Saturday. “Our biggest problem all year has been consistency,” McHugh said. “We can’t keep turning on and off like a faucet.” “You can’t win in a conference like the Pac-10 with only 50 percent intensity.” ASU (14-12 overall, 5-11 Pac-10) will bring along an additional player, forward Amy Nelson, on its final road trip of the Season. Nelson, who has two years of eligibilty after transferring from Old Dominion where she played basketball for one year, is also a member of the volleyball team.' McHugh said she will see some time this weekend to replace injured freshman guard Regina Davis, who has a stress fracture and will be limited on the court to help the injury heal. “This happens more to freshman, but it is not uncommon,” McHugh said. “ It’s a painful thing, so we are going to rest her.” The No. 12 Huskies (21-4, 13-3) beat ASU 71-54 in the season’s first meeting thanks to the Sun Devils’ 29 percent shooting and 29 turnovers. In the all-time series, ASU won the first three games but are in the midst of an eightgame losing streak. Washington is an especially tough team at home, losing just once to Stanford in a 75-71 contest. “They are a very physical team that plays hard defense,” McHugh said. “They have a balanced scoring attack and can hit either inside or outside.” The Huskies are led by senior forward Karen Deden with 16 points and eight rebounds a game. YOU'RE BEING FOLLOWED. NOW W HAT? A C T IO N F IL L E D Complete Personal Safety WORKSHOP Classifieds State Press Classifieds Matthews Center Basement, Room 15 SPRING ¡24 HOURS ■ t$3 i T a n n im i between kahu Tanning 1-6 From March 7 thru 15 High intensity tanning bed available. Don’t burn TAN YOUR days after they are placed (if placed before lOem). A d s may run for any length of time. Can celed a d s will b e credited to your account. Sony, no refunds. Personals (15 words or* /ess) are only $1.75/ O ust place personal ad In person with student ID. ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS GIRL SCOUTS, Boy Scouts; organizing campus GF group. Looking for opportuni­ ties for fun service and continuing your good scouting experiences, short or tong term? Call Cam ille, 644-9866. SINGLES' EVENTS, advice, personals— Arizona Single Scene newspaper. Free sample, 990-2669- 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, washer/dryer hookups. $330/month. Rural/Broadway area. Clean and quiet. 968-2279. WITNESS NEEDED for bicycle-truck acci­ dent on Valentine’s Day near Tempe Center. Please call 966-8681. 2 BLO CKS from ASU. One bedroom, pool, laundry, dishwasher. $330; move-in special. 1014 East Spence, Sunrise Apart­ ments, 968-6947. HAIRCARE: SORBIE, KMS, Framesi, Roffler, Peter-Hantz and coming soon: Paul Mitchell and Sebastian, Always 20% off. Grooming Humans Hair Studio, Arches Plaza, Forest and University. OUT WITH L'lMAGE & IN WITH .MTM. Model and Talent Management John Casablancas i n t r o d u c i n g a ll n e w o w n e rs h ip , m anagem ent and a g e n c y faces, call to d a y f o r m o d e ls a n d ta le n t. (602)941-4838 LOVE TO dance? Hate the bar scene? You’ll love the A ll Singles Dances, Fridays at better Valley hotels. $4.50. Recorded information, 946-4086. MILITARIA AND Gun Collector Show, March 23 and 24, KFC Hall, 644 East Chandler Boulevard, Chandler. Saturday 8-5, Sunday 9-4. Information, 844-8737. (Proceeds go to Chandler’s Retarded Children’s Home) STATE PR ESS Magazine is looking for ASU women/men to discuss collegiate sex life/attitudes for upcoming feature story. Identity can be kept confidential. Call 965-2292, ask to speak to Sonja. ; 1 AND 2 bedrooms- Student Special. $150 total rent. Believe itl Fireproof, sound­ proof, pool, very near ASU, quiet. This is for real! 967-4568, Don. 2 AND 3 bedroom apartments from $395, % month free. Covered parking, gas barbeque, pool, private patios. Casa Grande Apartments, 1855 East Don Carlos, Tempo. 968-6926. 2 BLO CKS from ASU. One bedroom, pool, laundry, covered parking. $350; move-in special. 1700 South College, University Apartments, 967-7212. B EA U T IFU L NEW large 1 and 2 bedrooms. Walk to ASU . Pool, laundry room, 1 block south o f University on 8th Street. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. NEWLY REMODELED 1 bedroom 2 blocks from A S U Pool, free cable TV, covered parking, laundry facilities. Westridge Apts. Lovely, comfortable, spacious Ask for specials for ASU students. 2 bed, 2 bath apts. Close to A S U . Available now. 330 S . Beck, Tem pe. Call or see Cody 1700 S. College, Tempe 894-6468 967-7212 ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS W E ’RE BACK! 1 DAY ONLY S E LL U S YO UR USED 501 LEVI’S FOR $8.00 WITH: • No holes or stains • Waist size 30” — 3 8 ” • Blue or black Drop off at Long Wongs in Tempe This Thursday 12p.m.— 5p.m. For more information 540-4580 H E Y ! I ’m Pass it on. ADVERTISING POLICY: APARTMENTS H e y 9 a .m . t o 5 p .m . W E W ILL B E O P E N Classified display a d s can begin 2 15« each additional word. T h e first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face o r centering. ANNOUNCEMENTS Discount with Student ID RGET YOUR TAN BEFORE placed (If placed before noon). T h e Stale Press reserves the right to edit Or reject any advertising copy submitted. SUNDAY, M ARCH 1 7 f l ; 8 5 0 E , Isabella, M esa C all fo r info, 4 9 7 -5 1 4 1 after they are $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per da y for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10+ days CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 time: $7.85 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.po per col. inch 6 + times: $6.50 per col inch •Comprehensive training on the use of firearms pertaining to self defense including live fire. •A realistic approach to unarmed self defense using skills you already have. R E C R E A T IO N A L & S P O R T S H O O T IN G WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? Classified liner ads will begin 1 day UNER AD RATES: 15 word* or (m k . . . B u b t a lk in ’ t o y o u ! Now look, you ’ve been gone fo r awhile now . . .1 know you ’ve got som e tim e off cornin’ up. S o I expect to see you home for a visit. Even if you have to run an ad in the State P ress transportation section and find som eone to share the expenses. The few bucks it’ll cost w ill be m uch more painless than dealin’ with me if you don ’t com e home. (please) Help us beginJ a successful recycling program on campus by putting the State Press back in its original rack or kiosk when you’ve finished reading it. This will allow another person to read it and/or be easily picked up; lor recycling. thank you. University & Dorsey (Next to Beauvais) R ecycle. It works. 829-1737 (If you work It.) (I’m just doing this fo r your m other, it’s not like / want to see you or anything.) State Press Thursday, March 7 , 1991 APARTMENTS HOMES FOR RENT ROOMS FOR RENT COMPUTERS MOTORCYCLES ONE BEDROOM apartments, half off first month! Walk to school. Washer/dryer. Call today! Butterfield Park, 1215 South Dorsey, 966-6755. LIKE NEW, 3 bedroom, 2 bath house. Appliances, carport, washer/dryer. Tempo area. Available immediately. $595. Laverne, 396-2699. CLEAN HOUSE, mile/ASU. Needs clean, nonsmoking, serious student. $225/16 utilities 968-0253. Available 3/21. IBM CLONE, 640K, 25% , monitor, printer/ typewriter, DOS, word processing soft­ ware. $700 or best offer. 649-1430. 1985 HONDA Elite (150), needs muffler, tires, runs good. $300/offer. Contact Bob, 968-2458. PRIVATE FENCED yard-1 or 2 bedrooms, pets okay. Unfurnished, covered parking. McClintock and University. 894-8156. Melody Lane Apartments. ROCKY POINT— Spring Break 8 bedroom house available for responsible girls. Showers, air conditioning. Call 678-1391. EM PLO YERS — LOOKING for help? Place a State Press Help Wanted ad. We have three Help Wanted sections— General, Clerical and Food Service— to help you keep your business growing! GET PERSO NAL Send someone special a State Press personal ad. A 15-word personal is only $1.75! Come down to the basement of Matthews Center to place your ad today! And remember to bring your student ID! 1987 HONDA Elite 80 scooter. Needs little work, looks good. $600/offer. C all 820-6036. Locating S e r v ic e 437-1048 R oom m ate m atching service also available. 437-1048 STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. Spacious Scottsdale guest house available now. 10 minutes from campus. Fresh paint, new carpet. $250/month includes utilities. 946-3547, Shirley. TEM PE 1 and 2 bedroom, furnished. 1 block from ASU. Pool, laundry. 967-7012, after 5pm. YOU SAY it, we display it! Only in the State Press Classifieds! THREE BLO CKS ASU. three bedroom house, furnished, many trees, quiet neigh­ borhood. $595. Hansart, 258-6839. TOWNHOMES / CONDOS FOR RENT 1 MILE from ASU- nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Air-conditioned, dishwasher, washer/dryer, and pool. $610/month, 921-0279. FURNISHED ROOM, private bath- lovely Metrocenter home. Park-like yard with pool. Fireplace, microwave, dishwasher, washer/dryer. House privileges. $265 includes utilities. Sm all deposit. 931-3343, leave message. LARGE ROOM in' lovely private home, fe m a le . F a s h io n S q u a re a re a . $150/month, includes utilities. 945-0502. $160 deposit call Today! Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache 1 b lo c k e a s t o f R ural HOMES FOR SALE 1/2 B l o c k F r o m C a m p u s B e a u lifu liy fu r n is h e d , h u ge 1 b e d ro o m b ed ro o m . 2 1 b a th ; 2 b a th a p a rt­ m e n t s . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le TV. h e a te d p o o l, and s p a c i o u s la u n d r y f a c ilit ie s . Friendly, co u rteo u s management. Stop by «3* ANNOUNCEMENTS NEED A back issue of the State Press? Come down to the basement of Matthews Center. If we have what you need, it’s yours! HAYDEN SQUARE 1 bedroom. 1 bath luxury condo. Washer/dryer, covered parking, pool, spa. $60Q/month. Carl, 967-2869. GOVERNM ENT HOMES from $1 (U repair). Deliquent tax property. Reposses­ sions. Your area. 1(805)962-8000, ext. GH-9624 for current repo list. ALW AYS BUYING jewelry of all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South M ill Avenue, Tempo Center, 968-6074. BICYCLES ONE BEDROOM condo, University and Rural, washer/dryer. $365 rent, $265 refundable deposit, assum e lease. 894-2469: MUST SELL 3 bedroom, huge lot, work­ shop, walk or bike to ASU. No qualify, owner licensed. 967-5594^ CASH FO R gold, diamonds. M ill Avenue Jewelers, 414 South M ill, Suite 101, Tempo. 968-5967. SPECIALIZED STUM PJUM PER Team 1990, Prestige frame. Shimano Deore XT with Hyperglide. New tires, new saddje. Excellent condition plus extras. $700. 496-6115, leave message. PRICE/SOUTHERN. 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. Fireplace, security system, spa, pool. Available 4/1. 831-5628. B u y o f th s W eak 3 bd house near A S U . Pool, sp a, a ste al! $117,900 Bob Bullock Realty Executives 9M-2992 1 BEDROOM. Pool, washer/dryer. $175 plus V i utilities and deposit. 921-9542, leave message. 5 STUDENTS wanted to share large, remodeled, 5 bedroom home with pool. Includes all appliances. Close to ASU. $260 each, 1/5th utilities. Available 3/8/91. 969-4480. CLEAN, RESPO NSIBLE female room­ mate for 3 bedroom/2 bath furnished c o n d o , (ow n roo m ) n e a r A S U . $225/month. 967-4092. MALE/FEM ALE FOR 4 bedroom townhouse. Pool, air conditioning, dean, quiet. $217, V i utilities 839-1527. MALE TO share, 2 bedroom townhouse, Hayden/Osbom. Very sharp. $300, % utilities. A ll am enities: Brian (days, weekends), 990*2220. NONSMOKER NEEDED to share 3 bedroom,, 2 bath townhouse. Washer/ dryer, dishwasher, fireplace, covered parking. $200 plus w Utilities. 952-1577, 966-4783. NOON IS the deadline to get classified liner ads in the following day. Don’t m iss it! Matthews Center basement, 965-6731. ROOM M ATE W ANTED: Male/fem ale nonsmoker. Own room and bathroom. W aSher/dryer, m icrowave, volleyball court. Furnished. $250 plus !A utilities. 2 blocks from ASU. Cal! Edwin, 894-0342. ANNOUNCEMENTS TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE NEED A back issue of the State Press? Come down to the basement of Matthews Center. If we have what you need, it’s yours! O NLY $38,900 for 2 bedroom, 2 bath Springtree condo. Save over $30,000 with only $100 down! Greg Askins, Realty Executives, 966-0016. COMPUTERS COMPUTER MULTI-SYSTEMS Bu y & sell new and used com puters, printers, and software. 225 W . U n iv e rsity Next to Buffalo Exchange 966 -13 88 0pen9^ioTsal Financing Available SEND YO UR significant other a personal today! Come down to Matthews Center basement. MILL AVENUE JEW ELERS 4 1 4 S. Mill, Suite 101 Tempo, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICE JEW ELERS* Custom Design & Remounts Jewelry & Watch Repair Gold/Diamonds/Siiver Pulsar Watchcs/Pearls BUSINESS SUITS— 8 famous maker 40R. Cost $350 each, now $60 each. 391-3308. Turn Your Old Stuff». SPRING BREAK! Am erica W est $100 gift certificates for $70. Hurry while supplies last. Gordon, 831-2666. 1976 MGB convertible: Good top/tonneau, looks/runs good. 125K m iles. $2,200/offer. C all 968-5192. 1984 PONTIAC TransAm. 71,000 miles, cruise control, power, tinted windows, new Sapphire Blue paint job, power steering. $3,000. W ill, 731-9848. 1985 NISSAN 200SX— This sporty coupe is loaded with power everything! Power locks, windows, sunroof. Great stereo! Automatic. 60,000 m iles. Need to sell immediately! It Blue Books for $6,500. You can have it for $4,800 firm. Call today. Leave message, 834-1481. ; 7. 1985 SILVER Renault Encore, standard shift, am/fm stereo. 45,000 m iles. $1,100/offer. 968-0713, Wendy, leave message. 1989 JETTA, white. Power steering, auto­ matic,. 16,000 m iles, air conditioning. Avoid sales tax. C all Kevin now! 821-6836. 260Z SPO R T Y transportation. A ir, 5-apeed, new tires, struts, brakes, starter. Excellent in-and-out, 70K. $ 1,700/offer. C all 275-3969. Classifieds...Let * them work for you! BE ON TV. Many needed for commercials. Now hiring all ages. Casting information: (615)779-7111, ext. T-130. BE ON T.V. many needed for commer­ cials. Now hiring all ages. Casting informa­ tion: (615)779-7111, ext. T-130. CASTING CALL: Talent for print, TV, movies, photos. CEEC Entertainment, ‘Star Shine’ hotline, 274-6362. EASY MONEY to be earned from in-home sales. 6-9pm, flexible days. C all now, let us explain: 894-0531. BRAND NEW queen size boxspring. $85. Michelle, 967-1816. 1967 CHEVROLET Camaro, factory air conditioning, automatic, protecto-plate, been in family sinde new. 73,000 original miles. New tires, radiator, brakes! Runs great! Must sell to pay for school. My loss, your gain. $3,000. Call John at 965-6555 (work) or 784-8939 (home). ATTENTION: W AREHO USE help or manufactures rep wanted for sm all Tempe business. $7/hour plus benefits, hours flexible. Call Jim , 820-8408. LET STATE Press Classifieds work for you! Call 965-6731 for information. SKIERS! ROUND-TRIP ticket to Salt Lake City, 3/16*3/20. $100. Call 496-8460. USED NINTENDO set, 7 games and turbo controller. Only $275! A steal! Brian, 968-4073 A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs part-time/full-time help. Must have good clerical and typing skills. W ill train for medical. 941-3812. DRIVER NEEDED to pick up and take student to after school activities, 3-5 days/w eek. $5.50/hour,- p lu s gas. 956-6222. BRAND NEW Zetra roller blades. Mens size 1016. $100. Chris, 894-6251. NINTENDO FANS!! Collection of arcade games compatible for Nintendo on one cartridge! 52/$159, 82/$229, 110/$249. Visa/Mastercard accepted. Call Sean, 968-7823! AIRLINES HIRING. Seeking students and grads to fill many positions. Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. Phone (303)441-2455. , AMERICA W EST round-trip ticket: Phoe­ nix to San Francisco, weekend of 3/9, returning evening 3/10. $55. Michelle, 967-1616. ROUND-TRIP, DELTA ticket to Orlando, March 18 to March 23. Discounted to $350. 955-5548. M INO LTA E LEC T R O N IC typewriter, EW501. Excellent, never used. With memory. Options, original $995. Best over $350 takes. 993-3102, message. AIRLINE— GOVERNM ENT jobs. For more information, call Mt. Clemens Mark­ eting, (602)275-8904, ext. AG3. AMERICA WEST/AMERICA West. 30% off anywhere they fly. Call 220-9559. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE BUY IT, sell it, find iL tell it in the State Press Classifieds. AERO BICS INSTRUCTORS, certified and experienced, $10-plus per hour, close to ASU. Club Aerobics, 894-6543. CO U NSELO RS. PRESTIGIOUS co-ed Berkshires, MA summer camp seeks skilled college juniors, seniors and grads. Water Safety Instructor, Tennis, Sailing, W aterski, Canoe, Athletics, Archery, Gym nastics, Aerobis, Golf, Arts and Crafts, Photography, Silver Jewelry, Musi­ ca l D irectors, Piano Accom panists, Science, Rocketry, Cam ping, Video, Newspaper. Have a rewarding and enjoy­ able summer! Salary plus room and board. C all Camp Taconic, (800)762-2820 TRAVEL CLOTHING ADVERTISERS! REACH 45,000 readers daily in the State Press! CO UNSELO RS WANTED. Trim down­ fitness, co-ed, NYS camp. 100 positions: sports, crafts, many others. Camp Shane, F e r n d a le , N e w Y o r k 1 2 7 3 4 . (914)292-4045. GOOOOOOCOOOCOOGOOOr ANNOUNCEMENTS HEY STUDENTS! Press ‘86 SUZUKI GS550 ES, 17K, runs excel­ lent. Bieffe helmet included, many extras. Serious inquiries only! $1,700/offer. 839-3043, Rob JEWELRY AUTOMOBILES State ‘84 AERO 125, just tuned-up, new drive belt, good condition. $500/offer. Bryan, 921-3955. BUY IT, sell it, find it, tell it in the State Press Classifieds. to d a y! T erra ce Road Apartm ents 950 S. Terrace 966-8540 1990 CBR 1000, 500 m iles. Assume payments, $258.99/month, $250 down. 831-2959. 32ND STREET and Camelback area, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 2-car carport, communi­ ty pool. Near Safeway. $650 unfurnished, $800 furnished. Alice, Jacobson Realty, 949-5281. FEM ALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 3 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Very nice. $300/month, includes utilities. 844-9130. E N J O Y T H E Q U IET! INXS, STING, Scorpions, David Copperfield, Nelson, Frank Sinatra, Neil Young, Grand Hotel, Les Miserables: Call Ticket Exchange, 829-0196. STING TICKETS, great seats. March 29, Desert Sky Pavillion. $50/offer. 968-7859. RENTAL SHARING 1 Mock off campus 1 bed: esss 2bed: fsas Also, 3 bed available TICKETS 1987 HONDA 150 Elite scooter. Runs great, looks great. $1,100. Rob, 962-5175. HELP WANTED— GENERAL SPRING BREAK. 2 round-trip tickets to Reno/Lake Tahoe. Leave 3/16, return 3/21. $90 each. 967-4979. SPRING BREAK in Mazatlan. Beach front condo, sleeps eight. Close to clubs. Available 3/16-3/24. Only $750/offer. Call 838-3492. TRAVEL CHEAP in your name. I special­ ize in quick departures. Most places USA. $285-450, round-trip. Alaska, $550-650. Also worldwide. I also buy transferable coupons. 968-7283. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES HIRING NOW! “ On Campus Marketing” Is looking for students interested in working hard w hile making a minimum of $9/hour. Past sales and hard workers preferred. C all Brian, 968-4073 NEED INCOME? Excellent opportunity selling for major corporation. Great experi­ ence for future. C all now, 631-5449. HELP WANTED— GENERAL EM PLO YERS — LOOKING for help? Place a State Press Help Wanted ad. We have three Help Wanted sections— General, Clerical and Food Service— to help you keep your business growing! FLUENT FRENCH and English speaking tour guides needed for the Eastern and W estern U nited States. Pay scale depends on experience. Please submit resume to ICB, Inc. 1702 East Highland Avenue, suite 310, Phoenix, Arizona 85016. I.D.D. AMERICA, mens fashion sportwear and clothing store, is seeking dedicated, energetic managers and sales personnel for new store to open at the Scottsdale Galleria. Great opportunity for growth. Must have prior menswear experience. Good benefits. Send resume , to: LD.D. America, 1125 Glendon Avenue, Los Angeles, California 90024, Attention: Mario Fiumani, or call: (213)208-0068. LO SE U P to 25 pounds/month. Weight lo ss program needs 10 overweight subjects. New medical breakthrough. Tested 10 years. Personal support. Rob, 966-8306 MARKETING MAJORS: Gain valuable and practical experience at a leading in d u strial diam ond tool distributor. Become a National Account Representa­ tive for American Tool and Supply Inc., and have flexible hours, paid training, high commissions and great benefits. No experience preferred. For interview, call 350-2260 and ask for ext. 33. NEED A back issue of the State Press? Come down to the basement of Matthews Center. If we have what you need, it’s yours! HERE IT IS! ** F lexib le hours * * O u r salespeople earn $ 8-$17/h r. ($5 hourly guaranteed) * * G r e a t job w hile going to school (walk from A S U ) * * P a id daily a n d w eekly NORTHAMERICAN CONSOLIDATED SERVICES *97 VW Cabriolet convertible. White on w N ü, standard, loaded, 10K miles! Excel­ lent condition. $10,000/offer. 463-2790. One of the highest paying telemarketing companies in Arizona! AUTO FOR sale. Runs well, needs some work. 248-0796, 423-5391 or 390-7840. For your interview, call 8 9 4 - 0 1 3 6 Stott Presi HELP WANTED— GENERAL________ HELP WANTED— GENERAL MIDNIGHT SUN! Summer employment —Alaska— Women/Men, to $600/week Airfare plus room/board provided. Hiring through April. Call now! 1(900)988-5152, ext. 170 ($3/m irtute— 4 m inutes maximum). NEW ENGLAND Brother/Sister Camps— Massachusetts. Mah-KeerNac for boys/ Danbee for girts. Counselor positions for Program Specialists: All team sports, especially baseball, basketball, field hock­ ey, softball, soccer and volleyball; 25 tennis openings; also archery, riflery, weights/fitness and biking; other openings include performing arts, fine arts, news­ paper, photography, cooking, sewing, rollerskating, rocketry, ropes and camp craft; all waterfront activities (swimming, skiin g , sailin g , w indsurfing, canoe/ kayaking). Inquire: Mah-Kee-Nac (boys), 190 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, New Jersey 07028 C a ll 1(800)753-9118. Danbee (girls), 16 Horseneck Road, Montv ille , N ew J e rs e y 0 7 0 4 5 . C a ll 1(800)776-0520. theSuntivil SUMMER JO BS! Camp Sequoia, New York state Catskill Mountains (90 miles northwest of New York City). Cabin Counsellor and Specialty Instructor posi­ tions available in all team sports, swim­ ming (water safety instructor/lifeguard training), tennis, waterskiing, theatre, art, photography, woodworking, english riding, outdoor education and many more. Additional positions available in all facets of kitchen, dining room, secretarial and maintenance. Work can start as early as 5/1. Competitive camp salary, travel allow­ ance, room and board. Interviews on campus. For more information, applica­ tion, appointment, call Camp Sequoia, 914-679-5291 or Write to Sequoia, Box 1045, Woodstock, New York 12498. W AN TED S A L E S P E O P L E to s e ll construction tools and equipment, parttime hours, full-time pay. Call Gene or Adam, 966-5765. YOUR CAREER... What are you doing this summer to prepare for it? Find out why IBM, Proctor and Gamble, Xerox are interested in graduates of our Summer Program. If you’re interested in developing your resume, call 821-8213. Ue&tlool ORDER YOURS TODAY 965-6881 RESTAURANTS/ BARS PART-TIM E TUTOR wanted: Math, computer and social skill development. $10/hour. Call 945-2003. SPO RTS & WINGS 2 satellites' 11 screens W oodsh ed II Northwest corner of Dobson & Umv 8 4 4 -S H E D For all your sports viewing PIZZA & P I B THIRSTY THURSDAY Bud Amstel C 4 O C Heineken: Becks Coors Light 968-6666 1301 E. U n i v e r s it y WINGS DRAFTS70C 10C T PER SO N FAMILIAR with electronic processe s wanted. Microwave and communication knowledge a plus. Leave message, 9961727. Bud. Bud Light . 3-7pm: M-Th K PLANNING INTERN— Temporary, parttime, not to exceed 12 months. Requires current enrollment in City Planning (or closely related field) baccalaureate or masters program. Proficiency ih word processing, database, spreadsheet, and graphics software on IBM PC City of Chander application forms required. Apply City of Chandler Personnel Department, 25 South Arizona Place, Suite 201, Chand­ ler, Arizona 85225- 7862290. n m i ß SUM M ER CAMP positions: YM CA's SkyY Camp, Chauncey Ranch Horse Camp accepting' applications. Call 257-5136 SUM M ER EMPLOYMENT: The Big Bear ten n is Ranch in Southern California needs live-in counselors to work as tennis, water sports and recreation counselors. Please contact Eric Ouadd or Bob Durkin fax more information, (714)786-6322. SUM M ER JO BS outdoors Over 7,000 openings! National parks, forests, fire crews. Send stamp for free details. Sulli­ van's, .113 East i Wyoming, Kalispell, Montana 59901. CRYSTAL BEADS, 16” necklace, passed down to me from my grandmother. Lost near Fine Arts Complex. Cash reward! 9462379, Mia. LET STATE Press Classifieds work for ' you! Call 965-6731 for information, “ In the Cornerstone” 926-3464, STUDENTS — LOOKING for work? Check the State Press Help Wanted sections daily! FREE LOST/EOUNP PERSONALS GAMMA PHI Marybeth, we are really happy to have you here!! You will be missed very much when you leave. Love in PKE, Beta Kappa. GET PERSO NAL — Send someone special a State Press personal ad. A 16word personal is only $1.75! Come down to the basement of Matthews Center to place ypur ad today! And remember to bring your student ID! GRAND PR lX Results; 1,) Phi Sigma Kappa, 2.) Delta Kappa Epsilon and 3.) Alpha Tau Omega— Congrats from the ladies of Gamma Phi Beta. GREEK SING team— Sigma Chi, Theta Deft, DTD, KA, AEPi, DG and AGD are number one! METAL W ORKS 10pm tonight! Hear the latest greatest new bands featuring the slag set, cd/tapes t-shirt giveaways! Iron Maiden, Slaughter, Metallica, Megadeth, and more! 680am KASR . Iguanas welcome. . NOON IS the deadline to get classified liner ads in the following day. Don’t miss it! Matthews Center basement, 965-6731. SK M ICH ELE Sm ith yeah! Y ip p iel Yaahool Yawza! I'm so excited that your my (dot. TER i RICKARD it was nice seeing you again after all thdse years. We have alot of catching up to do. C all me. C all 784-0470 to get my number. Dan. THETA DELT Vince, formal was a blast. Have you thought of anything else we can do? Want another strawberry or? Thanks alot! Agd Icecube. P.S. it’s getting really cold! TO THE AGD with the pearl necklace. had fun at formal did ya? Love, Icecube. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING INSTRUCTION ASU AREA typing, word processing, edit­ ing and transcription. C all anytime for fast service, 9662186. ASU W EST is only one m ile from Precision Typing and Word Processing. C all Mary at 978-8686 for student discount. ED ITIN G /RETYPIN G , reorts, manu­ scripts, large documents. W P5.1/5.0 disks accepted. Experienced editor. Optimize Spring Break. 945-6793. ADVERTISERS! REACH 45,000 readers daily in the State Press! TENNIS ANY 1? Improve your tennis skills with lessons!! Everyone welcome! Todd or Tom, 9664005. MISCELLANEOUS TWO PAIR of EYEGLASSES and/or CONTACTS* FLYING FINGERS h t f Maclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. Call 9461551 for details. FREELAN C E SECRETARY. Services, term papers, newsletters, resum es, graphics, laser printing, notary public. 1 day service/7 days week; Student discounts. Sheri Patrick, 961-1411, LETTER DUALITY word processing for your typing needs. APA/MLA, fast turnar­ ound. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, 9662825. PHOENIX MCSYSTEM S, Inc. Typing/ Word Processing: $1.50 on disk, $2 laser output, rapid turn around; page layout available: Call 2761230. STATE PR ESS Production Department provides typesetting, paste-up and process camera services. Call Donna at 9667572 for rates and information. W EST CAMPUS area for all your typing needs by mail. Send self-addressed stamped envelope for rate sheet: B and B Business Associate, 6914 West Acoma Drive, Peoria, Arizona 85345. W O RD P R O C E S S IN G , s e c re ta ria l services. 23 years’ experience. Student discounts. Southwest comer, M iller and Chaparral. 994-8145. $ 39 ” nationwide wi/ion center Tempe Mesa 966-4991 844-7096 ‘ some restrictions apply HEALTH AND FITNESS________ _ SAMAZING MICRO Diet$. New from Europe, doctor endorsed. Need dieters/ FOUND EARRING. EDC 117, Tuesday a m. Call to identify, 839-3443. PRESCHOOL DIRECTOR and staff, parttim e . Over 21. Mesa/Ghandler. i2:30-6pm RESTAURANTS/ BARS A ll 1 2 o z . B o t t l e s C3 8am-12:30pm; 8961624 Page 19 Thursday, March 7,1991 FOR l LOST: GOLD Delta Tau Delta Lavalier Friday, March first. If found, please call 6363205. PERSONALS______ J P u rc h a s e a n y sm a ll, j m e d i u m , o r la r g e J yo g u rt a n d re c e iv e a n y s m a lle r s iz e for FR EE Toppings extra Exp. 3-16-91 l LOST, BOX of Macintosh diskettes, between bookstore and P E . East on Orange Street, 3/5/91 Cali 967-6925. Reward. 968-9512 HELP WANTED— GENERAL WALK TO WORK AGD tEAN - will we survive our wild weekend o’ fun? I’m sure I will be a “ prize” on Saturday. Love, your roomie. AGD LISA Messenger. Happy Birthday to the best dot in the world! Love, Mom. ALL HOUSES that participated in Grand Prix— Thanks for making it a great success and a lot of fun— The ladies of Gamma Phi. ARE YOU a Greek and are interested in becoming a member of Order of Omega? Get you application now from the Greek Life office and apply! . ATO, ADPI, Delta Sig, TKE, Alpha Phi, ZBT make room for the Banner! We will dominate Greek Week! PART TIME $ 8 oo to $ 10 °°/hr. Bear Your Soul Full Training $550/hr Guaranteed Say it in a State Press Personal Ad • NEW OFFICES • > NEW EXPANSION • • NEW HOURS • Ask for extension #33 SCOTTSDALE CO UPLE, physician and nurse, want to provide a loving home for your white newborn. Call Jim or Susan at 483-6946 or 222-6436 (office). YourIndividual Horoscope SERVICES SKYDIVE TODAY at Skydiving Adven­ tures. Student discounts, training by skydiving champions. 1(800)441-5867, <602)723-9595. STATE PR ESS Production Department provides typesetting, paste-up and process camera services. Call Donna at 9667572 for rates and information. TODAY, IMAGE is everything. A Soft Touch Electrolysis. Perm anent hair removal. Student discounts. 829-7829. R EFU N D S E lectro n ic FEDERAL INCOME TAX Piling L You no longer have to wait 6 to 8 weeks for your refund. We will be offering this service commencing January 1,1991. Ask fo r D etails About Receiving Your Money In a H urry Creative Mailboxes Inc. 6340 S. Rural Rd., Ste. #111 Tempe, AZ 85283 820-9927 early morning, morning, afternoon, evening, weekend DIALAMERICA 894-0264 DEAR BIRTHMOTHER: Let’s help each other. Warm, loving family eagerly awaits your newborn. Secure future with all the opportunities you’d hope for. Expenses paid. Legal/confidential. C all collect, (212)249-5840. FAST Walking distance from ASU (Univ. & Rural) As our Telem arketing R epresentative, you would work in a fun, professional environm ent contacting custom ers nationw ide for m ajor clients earning g reat part-tim e m oney on a schedule that you set up. For confidential interview , please call extension # 3 3 at: A BABY to love is our dream. Devoted couple wishes your white newborn to grow with love/happiness/security. Expenses paid. Call Lynne and Rod collect, (516) 223-0828. AGD LISA, Happy Birthday Til sis! Be good! Love, Com. BDF W AS green sign from you? Is this a joke? We are not amused! Shawnna. • New 15,0004- sq. ft. OFFICE SPACE • • NEW COMPUTERIZED WORK STATIONS • • NEW LOCATION • ADOPTION Basement Matthews Center CONGRATULATIONS to a ll the new DG initiates —The men of ATO, CRAZY FUIS Matt and Mark, get ready to party with the best dates around! Doww! TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, resumes, etc. At your service word processing. Linda. 839-6167. „ Bart» DEKE HOLDOVERS— The Countdown is on. Be prepared for a great weekend. DEKE HOUSING Committee— Congrats on a>job well done! For more information on the new Deke-house call Troy or Wes. DELTA SIG— Jason L. Happy Birthdayil! Get psyched 4 Kite and K eyll! Can’t wait for Ultimate Vacation!!! Love Tons!!! S.W .A.K. Tish. A A A T Y PIN G /W O R D P ro c e s sin g . $1.50/page. Fast turnaround. 20 years’ experience. Call Linda, 962-8075. ACCURATE, REASONABLE, fast turnar­ ound word processing with lazer printer, tra n scrip tion . Student/faculty, M ill/ University. 829-8854. APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/word proemsing. Need it fast? Call Jessie. 9465744. =.. — Frances Drake ".. IF YOUR BUSINESS WOULD LIKE TO SPONSOR TH E H O RO SCOPES, PLEASE CALL 965-6555. FOR FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1991 g: ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) iW Someone could irritate you now, but developments in rom ance should pick up your spirits. Don't m ake too much o f a small m atter tonight. Take things in stride. TAURUS ^ (Apr. 2 0 to May 2 0 ) ™ ' Either you o r a clo se tie tends to extravagance how. It m ay be difficult to reach agreem ents where money is involved. Private interests are pre­ ferred over socializing. GEMINI M (May 2 1 to Ju n e 20) M Singles m eet with rom antic intro­ ductions now. B e sure to accept so cial invitations. D on't becom e' involved in $ contest o f wills. B e attentive to details. CANCER „ utn (June 21 to July 22) Business and pleasure m ix to your advantage. H ow ever, you could becom e upset with a co-w orker now. F o r your own peace o f mind, try to meet others halfway. LEO ■ (July 2 3 to Aug. 22) W You’ll ei\joy going to a new restaur­ ant o r som e other outside entertain­ ment today. A friend, though, m ay be in a cranky mood. Tonight, avoid being too critical. VIRGO «a (Aug. 2 3 to S e p t 2 2 ) ME Financial developments are posi­ tive now, but in business there is something to upset you today. Perfec­ tionist tendencies m ay work against you tonight. LIBRA (S e p t 2 3 to O c t 22) Don't let som eone draw you into an argu m en t. F eb lin g s d eep en in rom ance. Partners work well a s a team. You need to stay on top o f details on the job. SCORPIO rtgg (O c t 23 to Nov. 21) You could m eet with rom ance through the job. An argument about money could arise now. Business and pleasure combine to your advantage. Your personality goes over well. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec.21) S fv Even if someone is a ~bit pushy now, you needn’t get into a quarrel. Existing ties grow stronger how and singles will ei\joy romantic outings after dark. CAPRICORN ^ (D ec. 22 to Jan. 19) You may be a bit impatient a s the day begins, J o y co m es through domestic interests now. You may feel that someone you know isn't telling the truth today. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) fffk Dating is favored now and you^1 could also be invited to a party. Parents need to be m ore patient with a child- You shouldn't lend money to an unreliable friend. PISCES •>w (Feb. 19 to Mar. 2 0 ) <**< You’ll be shopping for the home now. An irritation could arise with a family member. C areer interests prosper, but ta ct is necessary with one business associate. YOU BORN TODAY gravitate tow­ ards large enterprises and usually have good business sense. Ideals are important to you and they may becom e the guiding force o f your life. You can be temperamental and need a creative outlet for your strong feeling nature. You seem to be at home in both business and the arts. You have a strong affinity for music and the stage. Birthdate of: Claire TYevor, actresq; Oliver Wendell Hol­ mes, jurist; and Ruggiero Leonca­ vallo, composer. Read y o u r Horo­ scope daily In the s ta te P re s s Classifieds. Copyright 1991 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Page go Thursday, March 7,1991_______________________________ _______________________________ H a*« P l W Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-6 in Phoanix at Mstrocenter, Paradise Valley, Fiesta Mad, Chris-Tcwn, Scottsdale and Superstition Springs. S hop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-6, Sunday 12-6 at Park Central and Westridge. We welcom e your D illard's Credit Card, The Am erican Express* Card, Diners Club International, Mastercard* Visa* and The Discover Card.