©Copyright, State Press, 1991 Vol. 74 No. 41 Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Tuesday, March 12,1991 ASU salvages recycling program By KRIS M AYES State Press U niversity o fficia ls have reinstated funding for the ASU recycling program after a previous decision to levy m assive cutbacks on the project was m et with widespread campus criticism . “We have received additional budgetary funds to continue the program at its previous lev el,” said Gerald Snyder, ASU com ptroller and treasurer. “We had departm ents and people who wanted to stay with the program " “Adm ittedly, there is a very strong desire on campus for recycling.” Snyder would not specify the actual dollar amount the program Will receive. Snyder said the recycling program was granted the extra funding by Victor Zafra, vice president of Business A ffairs, making it possible for cam pus recycling to regain the ground it lost during the period of cutbacks. Two weeks ago, the recycling program, operated by Surplus Property, was forced to scale down its efforts and lay off em ployees following , a U niversity decision to slash previously prom ised funding. Snyder defended the cuts by.pointing to a drop in paper prices, which he said m ade it difficult to turn a profit. But those close to the recycling effort did not take com fort in the reasons given for the cuts. . “It has been a nightm are,” said the program ’s driver/coord in ator, Sherrie Spaseff. “I have tried to stay positive despite everything because I believe in this.” Spaseff said the decision to re-aUocate funding to her department w ill result in the rehiring of two student workers and one tem porary, 90-day em ployee. Spaseff, who is paid a driver’s w age by Surplus Property w hile shouldering the responsibility of coordinating the program, has had to handle operations alone since the last of her em ployees w as laid off. She added that w hile the additional help does not equal the original em ployee roster, she believes the program w ill hold its own. “I think with additional effort, it could be 'Turn to R ecycle, page 8. Privacy lawpulls student names from police logs By TEEN A CHADW ELL State Press ASU police last week began withholding the names Of all students involved in campus incidents after the U. S. governm ent threatened to cut funding if officials did not abide by a federal privacy law. The government warning involves the 1974 Fam ily Educational Rights and Privacy Act, also known as the Buckley Amendment, Which protects a student’s privacy by lim iting public and press access to “educational records.” Federal officials maintain campus police reports fall under this category. The Department of Education sent a letter to ASU last month indicating all federal funding would be withheld unless the ASU Department of Public Safety im m ediately com plied with the Buckley Amendment and lim ited access to cam pus police records. ASU DPS officials did not interpret the Buckley Amendment to include campus police reports, Sgt. Bill Wright said. “We believed ourselves to be in com pliance (with the la w ),” he said. This belief stem m ed from the Arizona Public Records Law, which considers police records to be public information, Wright said. ASU was targeted by the DOE in connection with a court case involving Southwest Missouri State U niversity, said Mark Goodman, executive director of the Student Press Law Center in Washington, D. C. Turn to Buckley, page 8. Arizona DPS: Alcohol m aybe hazardous to spring break By JUDI TANCO S State Press Students celebrating spring break with large amounts of alcohol this year w ill face increased patrols on state highways by the Arizona Department of Public Safety, along with the traditional grilling from custom s agents at the Mexican port of entry. “We’re looking at underaged drinking and the possibility of younger students going to parties — and not realizing the penalties they fa ce,” said Arizona DPS spokesman Sgt. Rick Knight. During spring break, the state w ill step up patrols on Highway 86 east from Tucson and on Highway 85 south to Gila Bend and Ajo, Knight said. Many ASU students use Highway 85 to travel to Rocky Point, M exico, a popular spring break hangout. “ We do recognize an increase in traffic, so we increase our patrols,” Knight said. But ASU officials Said they have not im plem ented any special programs to discourage student drinking during break, despite the surgeon general’s recentlydeclared war on drinking during spring break. Doug Bartosh, associate director of ASU DPS, said the U niversity does not have program m ing sp ecifically targeted for spring break because m ost of the drinking is done off cam pus. “We usually don’t see much (drinking) on Good Job: ASU AcPresident Elmer Page 12 cam pus,” Bartosh said, adding that yearround program s discourage substance abuse. But Knight said the state is concerned with preventing underage drinking in addition to promoting the “safety asp ects” of drinking. “We like to prom ote designated-driver program s,” Knight said. The state also is targeting the liquor industry, whose m arketing and promotional ta c tic s often have been blam ed for irresponsible drinking, he added. P u b lic s e r v ic e a n n o u n c e m e n ts , community talks to bring problem s “to ligh t” and news articles are planned prior to spring break. A custom s agent, who would not give his nam e for secu rity reason s, said the Lukesville Port of Entry south of Ajo, Ariz., sees “quite a bit m ore” DUIs during spring break. Customs agents at Lukesville, the border crossing for Rocky Point, also are expecting increased southbound traffic and up to v20-minute w aits for cars re-entering Arizona from M exico. “Traffic (into M exico) is about triple the normal southbound traffic,” the agent said, adding that the w ait for re-entry into Arizona has declined since universities began staggering their spring breaks two years ago. Turn to D rinking, p age 8. Baseball Elbow: ASU baseball coach Jim Brock is w orking o n im proving his team ’s pitching perform ance. P a g e 15 Today's weather: Sunny w ith a high in the mid 706. Tonight: Clem' w ith a low in the 30s. Classifieds..........:.,......ri,... ;,1..,...... ÇottU ct.» ..I.. î ,,. . ...21 v i , , 14 C rossw ord...............,..,..........,....'................. 20 Sports......:...... 15, State Press Tuesday, March 12,1991 Page 2 Attorney calls for dismissal of charges PHOENIX (AP) — A law yer for former state Rep. B ill English rejected the plea bargain offered by M aricopa County p rosecu tors in the AzScam p o litica l corruption ca se today and called for dism issal of all charges against English. “It is in fact shocking to m e that a prosecutor with your fine reputation would even continue to maintain any charges against Bill English given the insufficiency of the evidence to prove that he violated any law s at a ll,” attorney Richard Parrish wrote in a letter to chief deputy County Attorney Jim Keppel. Keppel did not return a call im m ediately. In a letter to Parrish dated March 6, he had offered to dism iss aU other charges and make no recom m endation as to sentencing if English, a Sierra Vista Republican, Indicted legislator’s lawyer rejects county prosecutors’plea bargain cooperated with prosecutors and pleaded guilty to a count of bribing a public official. “In response to your surrender demand to B ill E n g lish . . . th ere is no m o re appropriate response than that of General M cAuliffe when the N azis demanded the surrender of the 101st Airborne at Bastogne: ‘NUTS! ’ ” Parrish wrote. Prosecutors claim paid inform er Joseph Stedino, u sing the a lia s “ J. Anthony Vincent” bribed /E nglish by delivering $18,000 to longtim e English associate and lobbyist Ernie Hoffman, who has also been indicted in the case. English w as present at the m eeting, according to transcripts of recordings that w ere taken by hidden microphones. Parrish said there was no proof that English had ever received “one red cent” of the m oney, however. . “Moreover, you appear to be entirely cognizant of the lack of evidence which you have again st B ill,” he added. “ The objective proof of this is that on Sept. 13, your team reviewed the video tapes of the lengthy m eeting which had occurred the day b efo re. : . ” “Your team realized that there w as ho evidence on the video tapes to prove that B ill English took any of the $18,000 that Vincent%Stedino had placed on the coffee table. So VincentV&Stedino w as instructed to telephone B ill to discuss the money. That telephone conversation indicated that B ill had no knowledge of the m oney.” “You have charged B ill English with the com m ission of five felonies, none of which you have sufficient evidence to prove,” Parrish added. “The only appropriate rem edy for you at this tim e is im m ediately to dism iss aU charges against BUI English ” Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at A SU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject t o . editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State P ress cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. •Adult Re-entry will have a m eeting.at noon in the Adult in the M U Navajo Room. Re-entry Center. •Fellowship of Christian Athletes will h av e a Bible study •Southeast Asia Studies Program will present a free film at 7:30 p.m. in U A C 40. about Thailand at 11 a m. in L L A18. •Rush Counselors will have a meeting at 9 p.m. in thé M U •Student Atheists will have a meeting at 8 p.m. in the M U Pinal Room. Yavapai Room . •Student Action Movement will have a meeting at 3 p.m. •NATAS will have a meeting at 3:15 p.m. in Stauffer A132. •Women Students will h ave a meeting at 3 p.m. in the M U in the lobby of the Language and Literature Building, Ventana Room . Native Images and N A S A , will present a film on Arizona •Greek Week will have m eetings at 9:30 p.m. Advertising heritage at 10 a m. in the M U Fine Arts Lounge. •MUAB Culture and Arts Committee in conjunction with M eetings and Publicity m eeting will be at the Phi Sigm a Kappa house, •Society for Human Resource Management will have a •Alcoholics Anonym ous will have a closed meeting at G a m e s c o a c h e s at P. V. Main Cafeteria, and Cerem onies meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the M U L a P a z Room . noon at the Newman Center on C ollege A venue and on the Pi Beta Phi floor. •Baptist Student Union will have a Bible study at 7 p .m . at University Drive. •UGW wilt present speaker Karen Morrow at 11:30 a.m. in •Women’s Studies will be showing a film at 3 p.m. in S S 1322 S . Mill Ave. 103. •Campus Am bassadors will have a meeting at 7:30p.m . in the M U Arizona Room . •Women In Communications will have a meeting at 7 p.m. the M U Y um a Room. T h e S t a t e P r e s s M a g a z in e W E E k L V C O L L E G E T O W \ j O L R N A L Spend the SununCT M & Us! •\o u i UlUH'Tuom fo r th e S u m m er May 31-August 10 $ 7 7 5 UTILITIES INCLUDED* *$60 per person utility allowance S h a ï^ fro o m * for the Sum m er May 31-August 10 $ 5 5 0 UTILITIES INCLUDED* *$40 per person utility allowance : • Close to cam pus — you can walk! • Spacious rooms —2 full baths Fully furnished • Large heated p o o l— jacuzzi • Washer & dryer in each suite! • Sand volleyball court Racquetball court, weight room, redwood sauna • Roommate matching service available Call u s now 829-0933 1 -8 0 0 -2 4 7 -6 1 4 7 THE 1° COMMONS T Make your reservations for the 1991-92 school year nowl Spaces are touted MEMBERS ONLY T W o rld /N atio n fjrtg jftp g g JU«da^M ardH^1991_ Iraqi troops shell Shiites in mosque NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Saddam Hussein’s troops shelled Shiite Muslim rebels in m osques in the besieged holy city of Karbala, and defected by the tens of thousands elsew here, opposition leaders reported Monday. They said the Shiite fighters, as w ell as civilians trapped in the crossfire, were being slaughtered, and that 500 have been killed or wounded since Friday. The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan claim ed the government h as rounded up 5,000 Kurds, m ostly women and children, and Is using them as human shields to forestall an attack on the « il industry city of Kirkuk. PUK also said rebels had been able to seize the strategic oil town of Khanakin, about 36 m iles from Baghdad. O fficial Sources in Baghdad claim ed Republican Guard troops have reestablished control of Karbala, 60 m iles south of the Iraqi capital, after several days of fierce com bat. They gave no details. But Saddam’s forces appear to have been isolating centers of resistance such as Karbala and the southern port city erf Basra and pounding them with artillery and tanks. Karbala, famed for its m osques, is revered by Shiites as the burial place of Imam Hussein, grandson of the Prophet Mohammed and one of the sect’s principal saints. It has a peacetim e population of around 120,000. In other developm ents Monday: •E xile leaders m et in Beirut to coordinate their cam paign to oust Saddam. •Iraq agreed to turn over the rem ains of 14 allied m ilitary personnel who were killed in Operation D esert Storm. •U.S. Secretary of State Jam es A. Baker III arrived in Jerusalem and began holding talks with Israel over prospects for peace with Arab nations. •Saudi Arabia celebrated its victory over Iraq and its defense minister, said he would seek m ore m ilitary hardware from the United States. •Pro-dem ocracy activists in Kuwait demanded that the Full honor Major M ariaT. Rossi of O radsll, N.J., receives a Full H onor funeral at Arlington National Cem etery M onday. Undersecretary of the Ariny John W. Shannon presents the flag to Rossi’s husband, C hief Warrant O fficer Three John A . Cayton as her parents, Paul and Gertrude Rossi, seated to the right, look on. Rossi was killed In a helicopter crash on March 1 1n Saudi Arabia. Torn to Iraq, page 1$. Baker, Levy see change in Arab-Israeli relations JERUSALEM (AP) — Secretary of State Jam es A. Baker III and Israeli Foreign M inister David Levy said Monday night they saw signs of a new Arab attitude toward the Jew ish state that could provide openings for peace in the Middle East. After receiving a report from Baker, who had m et with Arab foreign m inisters on Sunday, Levy said, “X am pleased they are beginning to show signs of change.” And Baker, only a bit more reserved, said he had seen “signs of new thinking.” He added, “Maybe we have a chance now for new thinking in both directions.” “The tim e is now for us to try and seize the m om ent,” he declared. N either Baker nor L evy gave any exam ples of what caused the norm ally hard line Israeli foreign m inister to take an upbeat approach on the view s of his nation’s Arab neighbors concerning recognition of Israel. Baker’s report w as based on talks he held with Arab foreign m inisters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Sunday and then with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Cairo before flying here to see Israeli leaders. On Tuesday, he w ill m eet with Prim e M inister Yitzhak Sham ir, w hose plan to provide som e self-rule to P alestinians on the West Bank and in Gaza w as reconfirm ed by Levy in his m eeting with Baker. Baker’s v isit was m arred, however, by the slaying on Sunday of four Jew ish women near a bus stop in Jerusalem . The man accused of the slayings w as an Arab from Gaza who said he w as delivering a “m essage” to Baker. The Secretary of State denounced the killings as “an effort to kill p eace,” and canceled a scheduled walking tour of E ast Jerusalem . His spokeswoman, M argaret D, Tutwiler, said, “We do not want to do anything that m ight contribute to a very em otional clim ate in Jerusalem .” Baker scheduled a m eeting w ith a Palestinian delegation Tuesday afternoon w hile carefully ruling out a renewal of U.S. ta lk s w ith th e P a le stin e L ib eration Organization. Lashing Y asser Arafat’s group for siding with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein in the six-w eek P ersian G ulf War, Baker said the m eeting with P alestinians in the home of U.S. Consul General Philip W ilcox “does not T arn t o Baker, page 12. Soviet lawmakers, media attack Yeltsin after people^ rally MOSCOW (AP) — Pravda attacked Boris Y eltsin as a “belligerent” and lawm akers called for the censure of the Russian president Monday, a day after his cam paign to oust Mikhail S. Gorbachev drew 500,000 protesters. Shouts of “Resign! R esign!” reverberated off Kremlin w alls Sunday as the hundreds of thousands of dem onstrators demanded that President Gorbachev and his fellow Communists relinquish power. The rally was erne of at least 16 held Sunday in cities across Russia to support Y eltsin in his political fight with Gorbachev. Y eltsin has called for Gorbachev’s resignation and on Saturday he turned up the heat by “declaring w ar” on the Communist leadership. In a front-page com m entary Monday, the Communist Party daily Pravda said Y eltsin’s speech had been “belligerent,” “confrontational” and unworthy of a veteral political leader. “It’s surprising what lev el of confrontation one can reach if one sets a goal, n ot of prosperity for the people, not of strengthening the union, not of im proving a ll spheres of life, but (of furthering) one’s personal political am bitions,” the newspaper said. The strong rhetoric on both sides com es am id a buildup to two key political events: a nationwide referendum March 17 on preserving the union of Socialist republics, and a proposed no-confidence vote against Y eltsin in the R ussian republic’s parliam ent on March 28. Y eltsin has long been the ch ief rival to Gorbachev, who ordered the referendum and is pushing the 15 republics to sign a new Union Treaty holding the country together. State television virtually ignored Sunday’s rally, although nightly new scasts carried several anti-Y elstin speeches from debate Monday in the Supreme Soviet Legislature. One parliam entarian, Nikolai N. Engver, said Y eltsin has had the flu and m ust have had a fever when he “declared w ar” on the top officials. “To announce a war . . . is a betrayal of dem ocracy,” he said. Another lawm aker said Y eltsin m ay have violated the Soviet Constitution’s prohibition against attem pting to Tara to Sot» « , page 13. Bush would broaden death penalty, stiffen other sentences WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush on Monday called for a broadened death penalty and longer prison sentences for crim inals caught with guns, saying the killings on the nation’s streets “must stop and they m ust stop now.” “We stood by our troops and today it’s tim e to stand up for A m erica’s prosecutors and police,” Bush said in a speech to state prosecutors gathered in the Old Executive Office Building next to the White House. H ie president chided Congress for not passing the “core provisions” of his crim e package in the last two years. They include extending the death penalty to more federal crim es, restrictions on appeals of death-row inm ates, and a “good-faith” exception to the judicial rule barring the use of illegally seized evidence. Bush noted that since he first proposed these m easures, “another 294 policem en and women are d ead . . . alm ost three tim es the number of precious American lives lost during this entire Gulf war .” The president’s crim e proposal com es just five days after he urged Congress to pass crim e, civil rights and transportation legislation in the next 100 days. “There is nothing new in the president’s crim e package, nothing that hasn’t been tried -rr and failed — over the years of trying to get tough,” Rep. John Conyers, D-M ich., chairm an o f the H ouse G overnm eht Operations Comm ittee, said. ‘‘M erely locking more people up or adding to the numbers subjected to the death penalty is no solution,” Conyers said. House leaders m ade clear la st week that the president’s crim e package would be considered Wily after law m akers take up a gun-control proposal requiring a seven-day waiting period for people who want to purchase firearm s. Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del, chairm an of the Senate Judiciary Com m ittee, said that Congress could pass crim e legislation in 100 days if Bush dropped his opposition to guncontrol legislation. “We could have passed a crim e bill last year had the special interests in the gun lobby not worked to stall, delay and ultim ately k ill the bill because of its ban on deadly assault w eapons,” said Biden, who is introducing an alternative m easure. Congress did pass crim e legislation last year but only after d ro n in g its deathpenalty provisions and all other m ajor features sought by Bush a s w ell as curbs on sem iautom atic assault weapons. Item s deleted included restrictions on death-row appeals and eased rules for gathering evidence. The result w as a bill far m ore m odest than what originally had been introduced. Opinión ^ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ —— — — — — M oral fo rce ’ ' , \ ' ’ Bush’s solution to crime problem typically Republican Mike Royko T ribune M edia Syndicate Now that w e’ve shown that we can win a war with Iraq, President Bush has called upon America to w in the w ar on crim e. As Bush pointed out in a speech to some prosecutors and judges, som e soldiers were safer in the Middle E ast than if they had b een - w a lk in g th e S tr e e ts o f th eir hometowns. So Bush said we m ust show the sam e m oral force, determ ination and fortitude as w e did in freeing Kuwait to free our cities from crim e. As a city dweller and an occasional crim e victim (one arm ed robbery, one unarmed mugging, three burglaries and two stolen cars), I’m all for freeing our cities from crim e. But it isn ’t clear to m e how Bush and his adm inistration plan are going about it. When two young men stuck a gun to my nose, I didn’t even consider displaying any determ ination or m oral force, and I doubt if they would have been im pressed. More likely, they would have shot m e in the nostril. So there are tim es when it is better to restrain your m oral force, lose your w allet, but retain your nose. Bush talked about how w e need a “real death penalty.” I’m not sure what that m eans. We’re executing people now and I assum e that they are really dead when w e bury them. If not, they have legitim ate grounds for an appeal. But w e’ve discovered that while execution satisfies the craving for revenge, it doesn’t do much to reduce the murder rate. If anything, the murder rate has gone up in states that are frying the m ost crim inals. He also im plied that we coddle crim inals too m uch, lettin g them appeal their sentences and use “technicalities” to avoid punishment. If that's the problem , then the solution seem s sim ple enough: Abolish the appellate courts and the state and the U. S. Supreme Courts. For that m atter, w e m ight do away with courts entirely and let the cops dish out punishment at the station house. But knee-jerk liberals would moan about that, so w e’re stuck with our present sy stem . W hich brings us to another problem: not enough prison space for a ll of our crim inals. That’s why they get out early. T here’s a solution to that, though. President BUSh should tell Congress that he wants to raise everybody’s incom e tax so the federal governm ent can help local governm ent build m ore prisons. Or if he doesn’t want to do that, he should m ake a speech urging that all cities and states im pose local incom e taxes and higher real estate taxes to pay for the new pokies. Calling for higher taxes m ight require som e m oral force and determ ination, but I’m sure Bush has the courage to sneer at any unfavorable poll results. Or he can take a m ore direct approach to launching a war on crim e — using methods that have been proven highly effective. In every city, the cops know which general areas have the highest crim e rates. They can even tell you which blocks are the m ost dangerous. In som e cases, they know which houses are used by the well-arm ed street gangs and the crack dealers. So why m ess around with w rits, warrants, judges, juries, appeals and the rest of the paperwork? It’s like diplom acy. There com es a tim e when the talking stops and the stom ping starts. We have the planes, w e have the keenly in te llig e n t b o m b s, th e p ro fo u n d ly in tellectu a l m issies and the pinpoint precision. So why not send them in to take out — a fine phrase, “take out” — parts of the Bronx in New York, the West Side in Chicago and all the other high-crim e sections of the big cities? And I know that politics shouldn’t enter into it, but le t’s face it: Most of those who would be taken out cleanly, as w ell as anyone unfortunate enough to be plinked by collateral dam age, aren’t Republicans anyway. Some m ight call that harsh. But let us be realistic. Presidents and other politicians have been talking tough about crim e for decades. They said w e should hang the varm its high, lock them up and throw away the key, let them know w e m ean business. Why, som e have even gone a s far as to say that w e should kick ass. But Am erica m ust have the world’s m ost stubborn crim inals. They sim ply refuse to heed the hard words of their commander in chief. Why, som e of them won’t even listen to their own moms. Of course, there are those dream y^yed types who have theories about crim e and its causes. They talk about education, job training, breaking the cycle of poverty, ignorance, unem ploym ent and busted fam ilies. We’ve alw ays had those kinds of silly theorists. E ven 100 years ago when Chicago’s highest crim e rates could be found in the city’s Irish neighborhoods, there w ere those who made excuses. Fortunately w e’ve been blessed with Republican presidents who didn’t buy any of those bleeding heart theories: Nixon, Ford, Reagan, Bush. They know why a crim inal is a crim inal. Because he’s born a crim inal, that’s why. And there’s no sense in throwing money at born crim inals, even if they haven’t been born yet. So it’s just the luck of the draw that more born crim inals grow up on the West Side of Chicago and drop out of school when they’re 16 than grow up in New England and go to George Bush’s old prep school. Anyway, our president says the answer is m oral force, and he m ust be right. But if that doesn’t work, m ove w ay out to the suburbs. Most of his friends did. Court takes away father’s right to seek help for daughter Ellen Goodman W ashington P ost W riter’s G roup BOSTON — There is a father in M issouri who wants to take his daughter shopping. The trip he has in mind is a grim one. He wants to find a doctor and a state that m ight allow her to die. The father is P eter Busalacchi. The daughter is Christine, the second m ost-fam ous patient in the place where Nancy Cruzan once lay. It took a Supreme Court decision and then som e, before Nancy Cruzan won the “right to d ie.” The feeding tube was rem oved only after her fam ily proved that the young woman had left “clear and convincing evidence” (hat she wouldn’t want to liv e in a persistent vegetative state. Christine left no such evidence before the car crash that severely dam aged her brain at age 1?. So last fall her father decided to m ove her from the strict and highly charged atm osphere of M issouri to a doctor he trusted in Minnesota. Now the M issouri Court of Appeals has said that Peter Busalacchi doesn’t have that right. Last w eek, the judges ruled that a low er court m ust look into thé father’s m otives «nrf the daughter’s condition before they decide whether to let this unhappy pair out of the sta te’s borders. Christine Busalacchi has becom e a ward —^ or is it a prisoner? — of the state of M issouri. Peter Busalacchi, who could take his child to any doctor anywhere if she were com petent, has lost that chance because she is not. And the state of M issouri has determ ined that it doesn’t trust the m orality of the state of Minnesota. As Judge Gerald M. Smith wrote in a harsh dissent, “There is a parochial arrogance in suggesting, a s the sta te does, that only in M issouri can Christine’s m edical, physical and legal well-being be protected.” H ie dilem m a that faces this M issouri father w as set up by the Supreme Court’s decision. The justices left tile life-ordeath fate of people like Christine — those who never stated their w ishes — to the “laboratory of the sta tes.” As a result, they insured that w e would go shopping through these laboratories for a full selection of our rights. Indeed, this is now part of the process for “consum ers of health care” and their fam ilies. At either end of the life cycle and often in between, Am ericans are learning to be com parison shoppers. We go across the border from one ethical m arketplace to the next. Back, in the 1970s, fam ilies traveled with brain-dead children to a state that would recognize their death. Today a couple in search of a surrogate m other w ill find one state open for business and another closed. A teenager can find an abortion in one state without her parents knowing, but not in another. Last sum m er an Oregon woman went to Michigan to use a suicide m achine, because there w as no law against assisting ...............* .............. .... * mI suicide there. If ROe vs. Wade is overturned, abortion would be the next right that becam e a m ere m atter of geography. But when you talk about ending treatm ent and ending life, you have entered a M iddle-Eastern bazaar of m edical ethics. It is as if every state carried a different m essage on its licen se plate, som e m acabre variation of the them e on cars in New Hampshire: Live F ree or D ie. Not only do states have different law s and guidelines, so do counties, hospitals, even doctors. In som e places a fam ily can walk down a hospital hallw ay and find a second and third contradictory opinion. As Arthur Caplan at the U niversity of M innesota sa y s, “ if con sisten cy is a fundam ental prerequisite of ethics then it is taking a long holiday with respect to the term ination of treatm ent.” Few of us are com fortable with the idea of ethical border crossing in this case. Some say 20-year-old Christine Busalacchi sm iles and feels. Others say that her responses are just reflexes. If sh e is in an irreversible vegetative state, M issouri would keep her alive forever. Minnesota has no such blanket law. How can it be right to rem ove a feeding tube in one place but not in another? How can it be right to stop treatm ent here and continue it there? But if the states are to be the “laboratories” in which we experim ent during a tim e of uncertainty, if these labs reflect the range of our m oral debate, then w e cannot be forbidden access. In the end there is som ething w orse than the difficult, disturbing, free-ranging ethical m arketplace. What is worse is a ban against shopping for m edical rights. Opinion ___________________________________________Tu^da^Mwch^JWI____________________________________________________PagC_5 Laws threaten freedoms they supposedly protect Cody Shearer N orth American Syndicate W A SH IN G T O N - T h e o r ig in a l introduction in George Orwell’s classic “Animal Farm ” included this sentence: “If liberty m eans anything at all, it m eans the right to tell people what they do not want her to h ear.” I’ve thought about this line recently in light of several incidents at home as to whether or not this country really believes in what it preaches. This month, for exam ple, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeal in Atlanta w ill rule on a critical obscenity case involving the rock group 2 Live Crew’s controversial album “As N asty As They Want To B e” If upheld, the ruling could have a chilling effect on the entire m usic industry. Many law yers are concerned about the im plications the case m ight have on future censorship of television programs and literature. In his ruling last June, Judge Jose Gonzales Jr. of the Southern D istrict of Florida said 2 Live Crew’s m usic appealed to “a sham eful and morbid interest in sex. . . : It is an appeal directed to ‘dirty’ thoughts and the loins, not to the intellect and the m ind.” Even though 2 Live Crew has yet to win artistic acceptance in the courts, the debate around the group’s m usic clearly extends beyond the court house and into the community of differing view s that m ay be held by any reasonable person. Of course, it is not only the courts that struggle with standards for m usic and perform ers. Fans and critics range when artists stray too far from the pack. Consider the case of singer Sinead O’Connor, one of the pre-eminent recording stars of the 1990s. Though her genius is singing songs about p e r s o n a l r e la t io n s h ip s , h e r a n t i e sta b lish m e n t b eh a v io r h a s draw n O’Connor much fire — even among fans who are reduced to em otional lumps of jelly from listening to her tunes. F irst she shaved her head and boycotted the Grammy A w a r d s. N ow s h e h a s e x p r e s s e d reservations about U. S. victory in the gulf. What next? The latest group to take it on the chin involves the original bad boys of rock and roll — the Rolling Stones. They are the first big rock group to refer to the gulf war in a single song. Recorded last month in London, “High Wire” has already been denounced on the floor of the British Parliam ent for b ein g in se n sitiv e to se r v ic e p e o p le ’s fam ilies. The song lyrics were w ritten by Mick Jagger, who believe the record is prim arily a condemnation of arm s trading in the Middle E ast during the ’70s and ’80s. The opening verse of the song (“We sell ’em m issiles, w e sell ’em tanks/w e give ’em credit, you can call up the bank” ) targets the arm s dealers w hile the chorus (“We walk the high w ire, sending the m en to the front line/hoping they don’t catch the hell fire/of hot guns and cold, cold, nights” ) im agines the fears of group troops. We often have little tolerance for other seem ingly wayward characters too. During the gulf w ar, a visiting Italian student who played basketball at Seton H all University in New Jersey w as forced to return home because he w as harrassed for not wearing an American flag on his jersey. In another case, a fem ale Afghan student w as attacked at the U niversity of Denver for wearing a sw eatshirt with Arabic letters on it. She had several of her front teeth knocked out. Other contenders for “Poor Behavior of H ie Month” award include som e American colleges that have instituted strict new codes which are believed to be politically correct. Stanford U niversity, for exam ple, is considering a speech code that would forbid the usual classes of Speech, but only when they are directed at women, blacks and hom osexuals, who have endured what the university calls “the special injury of cum ulative discrim ination.” . M eanwhile, the U niversity of M issouri Stfmol of Jou rn alism h a s issu ed a •D ictionary of Cautionary Words and P hrases,” which includes not only the usual r a c ia l e p ith e ts but w ord s su ch a s “ m a tr o n ly ” o r “ b u x o m ,” w h ich characterize one’s condition. Are students subm itting to the im position of an exaggerated sensitivity to unsanitized language? What w e’re seeing in these instances is the precarious debate over freedom in action. It is an ongoing battle between balancing the law a s learned in school as opposed to the truth of the street. F reedom h as a lw a y s ex iste d w ith inherent contradictions. As Freud has noted, freedom m ust be developed through the evolution of a conscience. That w e still seek to define the intrinsic excesses of freed o m , u n d ersco res th e ch an gin g sta n d a r d s o f co m m u n ity an d th è im portance of those leaders who tell us what is proper. As vocally as m ost of us defend the im portance of freedom , the concept seem s to be losing its value. With m ore law s being subordinated to feelings of satisfaction, freedom ’s m eaning is destined to unravel. “The law s keep up their credit, not by being just, but because they are law s; ’tis the m ystic foundation of their authority; they have no other, and it w ell answers their purpose,” w rote the French philosopher M ichel Eyquen Montaigne during the 1500s. “They are often m ade by fools; still eftener by m en who, out of hatred to equality, fail in equity; but alw ays by m en, vain and irresolute authors.” Indeed. The State Press will reward outstanding letters to the editor that offer insightful commentary and /or unique points of view. The letters chosen will be tagged with the award logo a n d do not n e ce ssa rily reflect the opinions of the State Press Editorial Board. Deserved support Shame on you Editor: Shame on you, State Press, for allowing the further degradation of women under the nam e of “Lattie’s Dog” com ic strip. From “boobs” to masturbation over women in lingerie, Ford M. is promoting the notion that women are sim ply objects. Get off of it Ford. Try to change the world with your work rather than rehash and rehash stereotypical scenes. As retaliation for Ford M. ’s sexism , I demand that Rainey tie one of her m ale friends up the next tim e he is out of hand and beat him with a chain. Amy Schulties Senior, P olitical Science S tate P ress SUZANNE ROSS Editor TINNY TATU SI AN Managing Ed itor City Editor.............................. .................HOBART ROWLAND .................................KEVIN SHEH .......................... KRIS TIMMONS ................KRISTEN JOHNSON Asst. Opinion Editor.............. ...............MICHAEL LAMANT1A ........................ STEVEN KRICUN Magazine Editor..................... ...................... NICOLE CARROLL Magazine Managing Editor........................ CARIN CUMMINS Assoc. Magazine Editor.................................STEVEN KK1CUN REPORTERS: K en n eth ' Brown,. A n ita C arcone, Teena C had well, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Keliye Kratch, Patricia Mah, Kris Mayes, David Pundt, Diane Santorico, Judi Tañeos./ SPORTS REPORTERS: Marty Murphy, Amy Slade>:Lorenzo Sierra Jjr./ Darren Urban, P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Joe B arnason, Irw in D augherty Jeorgetta Douglas, Scott Troyanos, Tamara Wofford. COPY É D1TORS: Son ja Lewis, Tabitha Privett-Dromiack. COLUMNIST: Dan Nowicki CARTOONISTS: Rob Minton, Julie Sigwart. MAGAZINE STAFF: Casebeer, Michelle Gruff, Vicki Culver, Joel Gelpe, Randy Hawkins, Christine Herbranson, M aty Rose Lafreniere, Aaron Levy, Laurie Notaro, C handa R. Shahanl; Christy Tomlinson Mark Jas. Tynan, Jon Walz, Kramer Wetzel. PRODUCTION: Cassaundra Caviness, Celia Hamman-Cueto, Holly Hiatt, Bany Kelly Jeffrey Lucas, M ark Nothaft, Frank N. RanUla, Renato Salomone, Eric Zotcavage. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: C olt D ôdnil; Leo G onzales. Todd M artin , C h ris tin e M illan , Lance N ew m an , N eil Schnelwar, Dan Thompson, John Vaccaro, Danielle Webster. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during th e academ ic year, ex cep t h o lid ay s and exam p eriods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We d o not answer questions of a general nature. A dvertising and Production: (¿02)966-7572. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. Editor: On Tuesday, March 12, the ASASU Senate w ill vote on proposed legislation to expand the Senate to include two Graduate College senators. This bill should be watched carefully as it w ill prove to be eith er the first step tow ard tru e rep resen ta tio n for graduate students or sim p ly another affirm ation of the extrem e undergraduate b ia s p r e v a l e n t in p a s t A S A S U adm inistrations. ASASU is charged with the representation of a ll ASU students, including the more than 10,000 graduate students at the U niversity. H istorically, the organization has a ll but ignored its graduate student constituency in its decision-m aking, lobbying efforts and program m ing. The introduction of this bill by Cherie Verhines, cam pus affairs vice president, and Sen. David Jordan provides hope that ASASU m ay be ready to re evaluate its responsibility to graduate students. Signs of a new recognition of ASASU’s responsibility to graduate students are present. Candidates for ASASU offices are seeking information about graduate student concerns and exam ining w ays to better su p p ort g ra d u a te stu d en ts in th eir respective divisions. Increased pressure to include graduate student representation on U niversity com m ittees and task forces prompted the inclusion of a graduate student on the Financed Aid Task Force. But for this graduate student, the task force would have confined its objectives solely to those related to undergraduate issues. These exam ples dem onstrate the success of Graduate Student Association (GSA) efforts to heighten aw areness of graduate student needs within ASASU. The next step, involves raising aw areness throughout the U niversity. GSA is pursuing this objective through the creation of the Graduate S tu d e n t C o u c il. W ith g r a d u a te representatives from each college, the council w ill identify, discuss and develop strategies to address graduate student concerns. Council m em bers are now being recruited and w ill begin m eeting in April. In a recent State P ress article, ASASU President Matt Ortega stated that “som e se rio u s q u estion s need to be asked regarding the role of graduate students in the future.” Those questions are being asked and addressed by GSA now. GSA has restructured its m ission and programs to better serve graduate students and is m oving toward achieving a strong and unified graduate student voice at ASU. Mr. Ortega also raised the issue of creating a separate graduate student association, a common structure at prom inent institutions including the U niversity of California at Berkeley. This is but one alternative under consideration inG SA ’s quest to address the serious shortcom ings of ASASU in serving graduate students. Graduate student issues, including the future of GSA, cannot be considered five o r 10 years down the road. They should be and are being addressed now. The ASASU Senate and leadership needs to Seriously consider its responsibility to provide support and representation for the 10,000 g r a d u a te stu d e n ts in th e ir constituency. I urge the Senate to approve Senate Petition Three and add two graduate sen ators from the G raduate C ollege. Graduate students have not been given toe support they deserved in toe past — they deserve it now. Christine Wilkins Director, Graduate Student Association Page 6 S f t t Press Tuesday, March 12,1991 as result of budget constraints By ANDREW FAUGH T State Press find an econom ic way to reproduce last year’s effort.” Shelly said the department needs to replace three damaged tents, rent state vehicles to transport elections m aterials, print ballots and pay for advertising, all with its $6,326 budget. “It sounds like a generous am ount,” Shelly said. “But w e’re talking about a lot of money going to different p laces.” Cherie Verhines, executive vice president of Campus A ffairs and a m em ber of the Finance Committee, said the com m ittee w as aware of the election departm ent’s financial needs and exem pted it from departm ental cuts when balancing ASASU’s budget. “Elections are very im portant,” Verhines said. “This is an opportunity for students to place their voice.” Meanwhile, Randy Hawkins, assistant elections coordinator, said the department is seeking out corporate sponsorship to offset the price of running elections. Hawkins said he has subm itted a letter to county officials in hopes ASASU can m inim ize the estim ated $1,000 cost of processing ballots by utilizing county equipment. He said the elections process is a vital factor that directly affects ASASU and the student body. “Without elections we can't su rvive,” he said. Student officials said Monday that funding for next month’s general election w ill shrink by alm ost $1,500 over last year — the result of an exhausted Associated Students of ASU budget and the financial negligence of last year’s elections coordinator. Sm aller concert revenues coupled with form er elections coordinator Brian Boley’s requisitioning of $290 m ore than was accounted for in the ASASU budget have resulted in the departm ent’s need to “pull itself up by the bootstraps,” said Elections Coordinator Lisa Shelly, who said general election funding w ill decrease by $1,447. Last year, concerts on cam pus generated an unexpected $3,000 in profits for the organization and increased its revenuebased budget. But this year ASASU has not m et expected concert revenues due to the opening of D esert Sky Pavillion in Phoenix, lim iting departm ental spending. Shelly said Boley spent $1,157 of the concert profits for elections and overshot last year’s ASASU budget by $290 to help p ay M a rico p a C ounty fo r e le c tio n equipment. Shelly said she w as startled upon receiving a $290 bill from the county that she had to pay out of this year’s budget. “There’s no extra money sitting around, for us this year,” Shelly said. “We’ve got to T em pe C enter m erchants g et lease ex te n sio n to y ear 2000 By DAVID A . PUNOT State Prase Tempe Center m erchants said they are delighted ASU officials decided to extend their leases through the year 2000, despite a planned rent increase. “We’ve been in this spot for 34 years, and it’s been good for us,” said Warren Hogan, owner of Jam ’s Restaurant, after learning of la st w eek’s decision. “What the heck, w e’d like to stay for another 34.” ASU had in ten d ed to turn the properties into office space when all leases expired in June 1994, but have decided against using the com plex, officials said. A task force established by form er ASU president J. R ussell Nelson had suggested a m ixed-use developm ent for Tempe Center. “ When we bought the center in 1983, we figured that w e would have more of an idea of what to do with it in 10 years,” sa id K aren K lo c, coord in ator of U niversity Properties. “But right now the U niversity doesn’t need anymore of that sort of building. “We just bought the Towers for office u se, and there is construction going on — so there is no im m ediate need.” Turn to Center, p a g e 10. Bar 1*00 OFF any regular sandw ich and medium drink PASTABAR&T0 STADABAR E xp ires 3-19-91. N o t v a lid w ith a ny o th e r c o u p o n o r offer. Different Is better and w onderfully delicious. Real m elted cheeses, fresh meats, and garden fresh vegetabiles served p ipin g hot on our baked-fresh-daily bread. Different is Better! Tempe • Tem pe V illage Square (Com er o f Priest 8, Southern) - 9 6 6 -7 6 7 2 Tempe • Tem pe Center (Across from ASU) 18 E. 10th St. - 9 6 8 -0 0 5 6 M esa - 2 2 4 5 W . Broadw ay (across from Sandwiches » Soups • Salads M otorola) -9 6 2 -6 1 1 3 U n i v e r s i t y W o m e n ’s C l i n i c , I n c . E x p e rie n ce d N urse P ractition ers p ro vid in g p ro fe ssio n a l, con fid en tial, a n d p e rso n a lize d $10 H e a lt h C a r e f o r W o m e n off pelvic exam 21 W. Baseline Rd. Tem pe I A N m ■ Prom pt, friendly service with appointm ents usually available the sam e day or evening. T C L O T H I N G Hottest selection anywhere. Second purchase price from just $16. • M EN S’ & W O M ENS’ SH O R TS Great selection. Second purchase price from $7.50. • W OM ENS' FASHION T O P S Selection of cotton tops. Second purchase price from just $8. • PRINTED T-SHIRTS Huge selection of killer designs. Second purchase price from just $6.50. • PRINTED SW EA TS Huge selection of scenic designs. Second purchase price from $9. •AND M UCH, MUCH MORE! pacific Syes&Ts Y CO RN R N ERSTO ER STO N E 725SS. .Rural RuralRd. Rd. 725 A cro ss from ASU in Tem pe 966-5560 $4.99 SunDevil Deal Save bigtime on dinner a t our new Buffet Court & Grill food bar. As usual, all you ean eat from our All-You-Can-Eat Hot Pasta, Tostada, Soup, Fresh Fruit, and Salad Bar. Now two new buffet bars make up our Buffet Court. A Hot Appetizer B ar with tem pting finger foods and a mouth-watering Dessert B ar with soft ice cream and all the gooey toppings you love. BU Y O N E, G ET SECO N D A T H A L F P R IC E ! * • A L L B AG G Y S ' T 'p rices subject to change W h y w a it t o b e s a f e ? Coupon Expires: 5-15-91 G exams, colposcopy and j a y oteo avattabU at ■ 831-5532 SUPERSTITION SPRINGS M ALL 6555 E. Southern Ave. 924-6001 OR... For $4.99 you get your .j choice of a shrimp, chicken or small sirloin steak entree I plus potato, rice or veg etable plus a green dinner | salad plus your choice of | non-alcoholic beverage with I bottomless refills. We like to think of it as the “4.99 SunDevil Deal.” It’s for our ASU friends. And their friends. Come take advantage of us. The SunDevil Sizzler’s $4.99 SunDevil Deal is only a bike ride away. Enjoy the new Buffet Court or a sirloin steak m eal at the M ill & Southern Sizzier for a lim ited tim e discount price o f $4.99. Offer good for your party w ith coupon or an ASU ID. A lso good at B aseline & M cClintock. | I I | . S iz z ie r (BUFFET COURT &GRÌLL] L - A t M ill & S o u th e rn - J I Stet« Pro» Pase Tuesday, March 1g, 1991 Buy one sub or croissant and 2 medium drinks & receive any sub or croissant of equal value F R E E Limit Five « With Coupon Expires 4-13-91 ONE COUPON Dimwri; Closed Mondav „ M jA i C-..-9 * - 4 i s të p - With purchase of large drink. Off Any 6 6” Sub only 9 9 ° Choice of: Ham & Cheese, Turkey & Cheese, Li’l Abner Combo Sub, or Genoa Sub Limit Five • With Coupon Expires 4-13-91 Exp. 3-3191 ftushi/Scishim* Dinners Inc.) ONE COUPON 6 ” ONLY ( la in ____________ With purchase of large drink. Choice of: Boast Beef, Pastrami, Steak & Cheese, or Club HHB O f Limit Five • With Coupon Expires 4-13-91 ONE COUPON 8” Com bo Sub & Medium Drink Hours: Lunch 11:00-2:30 Dinner > in 10 10 A • CLÏ3 « I I **"*■'-. 1 $ 1 .9 5 ■ f Af) ri California ■ lU l _____ 8” Sub Includes: Imported Ham, Genoa Salami, Cotto Salami and Provolone Cheese 1 R olls, 33.« Limit Five • With Coupon Expires 4-13-91 ONE COUPON Apache Terrace Plaza 1212 E. Apache Blvd. Tempe WINDOW TINTING Ihe ' "Hottest Wings Coldest Beer W annest Friends" A ll o u r fo o d is slo w sm o ked . $20 OFF Retail Price t GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE v 748 W. U n iv e rsity , M e sa \ (E x te n s io n & U n iv e rsity ) H£r I I 1 I I I I I I I I Mon-Thur 3 p.m.-12 a.m.; Fri & Sat 3 p.m.-l a.m.; Sun S P R IN G B R E A K S P E C IA L L a rg e P O P P e ro n i P iz z a (Pepperoni) $C99 _ _ UNIVERSITY 894-1234 945 S. Mill t e f f ! BEAT TH E CLO CK! Large one item pizza— You pay a ccordin g to the exact time you order the pizza. Exam ple: O rd e r P izza at 5:10, Pay $5.10! Each additional topping 90
I With the purchase of any Sweats, T'S O f T a n l® . A ll S w e a ts $ 5 .0 0 O F F H a n e s B e e fy T ’s $1 0 .9 5 T a n k T o p s $ 8 .9 5 T W O A S U L O C A T IO N S 625 E. A PA CH E N o t v a lid w ith a n y o th e r c o u p o n o r d is c o u n t. O n e c o u p o n p e r c u s to m e r, p e r v isit, ' fiflfilio 1 B O O K S T O R E Fryes & Medium Drink I I I I I I I I I 966-1391 I I 905 EasfLem on, Tempe I (Just off Rural, behind Circle K) 3 FR EE R O T H E R 'S . — —• rE xap iK a - 3 0 /9 ¡Ü : res 4 [ 1 9 4 6 - 6 6 1 7 1 6 4 0 N . S c o t t s d a l e R d . , In T e m p e 9 4 6 -6 6 1 7 1 6 4 0 C avalier C lean ers and Laundrom at C avalier C lean ers and Laundrom at 9 4 6 - 6 6 1 7 1 6 4 0 N . S c o t t s d a l e R d . , In T e m p e All Drycleaning With ASU I.D. *6.°° minimum Su nday-Friday exp^ Expires 4-15-91 I 25%OFF F R E E DRY! With Every Dry Purchased No Limit With Coupon N . S c o t t s d a l e R d . , In T e m p e 4/15*1 | 9 4 6 - 6 6 1 7 1 6 4 0 N . S c o t t s d a l e R d . , In T e m p e i » I I I 8 8 open ti 11p.m. Sunday-Friday || Expires Page 18 Tuesday, March 1% 1991 State Pica» Vice provost gets a taste o f a p resid en t’s life By JA N E BACH US Contributing Writer Organized disruption describes Elm er Gooding, ASU’s acting president. “Our objective is to be certain the president gets treatm ent and rest for a full recovery,” said Gooding, who has been filling in for ASU President Lattie Coor since he suffered a heart attack Feb. 24. Until the president recovers, Gooding, 50, handles his own duties in addition to fulfilling many of Coor’s responsibilities. “He w ill take care of anything that needs the president’s attention,” said Lawrence Mankin, Coor’s special assistant. A recent day for Gooding began with a 7:30 a.m . m eeting in his book-filled office, which is tucked behind an outer reception area in the Adm inistration Building. Later, he m et with the president’s cabinet, consisting of vice presidents and department heads, and moved on to another m eeting with the college deans. The day continued with an ad hoc Committee m eeting that w as part of efforts to coordinate ASU’s w est cam pus with the m ain cam pus in Tempe. After a staff m eeting, Gooding attended an ASU Faculty Senate m eeting. His day ended about 8 p.m . after a legislative reception in Phoenix. Gooding said the reception w as important because it involved the current budget shortfall for education. “All of the reading so far indicates that it doesn’t look good,” Gooding said of the initial responses from the Legislature on ASU funding. This year, ASU suffered a $5,6 m illion m id-year budget cut. And Gooding said the 1991-92 budget “doesn’t look good.” “However, the m essage I’d like to get across is that We are com m itted to undergraduate and graduate education, even in bad budget tim es,” Gooding said. The acting president is a Kansas native who graduated sum m a cum laude with an undergraduate degree from M cPherson College in McPherson, Kan. He earned his m aster’s degree and doctorate from the U niversity of Kansas. The vice provost has been at ASU for 24 years. Along the w ay, he w as an associate professor of econom ics, assistant dean and director of graduate program s for the College of Business and assistant provost and professor of econom ics, a position he still holds. “ASU is still an exciting university," said Gooding, who w as dressed in a dark pinstripe suit and red tie. As he paused in his office among papers piled high on his desk and table, Gooding said ASU is “really unique” because it is a major research university serving a m etropolitan area. Gooding, who in 1987 w as the first Arizona Board of Regents adm inistrative intern, authored a paper for the board indicating that adm issions requirem ents needed to be tightened. In the past several years this has happened, Gooding said, especially in the professional programs. His study also showed math and science deficiencies in students graduating from Arizona high schools. This has since improved to the point where few enrollees are deficient today, Gooding added. Taking on the president’s responsibilities, added to his own as provost, has left Gooding little tim e for relaxation. T u r n W offord/State P ress Gooding said he would like to spend m ore tim e with his Elm er Gooding, A S U ’s acting president, keeps busy doing both fam ily. his job and performing Coor’s duties while the president Is His w ife, Joyce, is a Tempe elem entary school teacher. His recoving from a heart attack. oldest daughter Carrie, 21, is a Mesa Community College part of this week. student and D enise, 19, attends ASU on a regent’s M eanwhile, Gooding said everyone from office staff to scholarship. college deans have been supportive and helpful. In addition to spending more tim e a t home, Gooding said he would like to play m ore racquetball, one way he deals with Gooding’s secretary, Carol Johnson, draws up a card for stress. his shirt pocket each day to help him rem em ber his schedule. Gooding said he expects Coor to return in gradual stages, “We just want to keep m oving forward with a ll our g oals,” but when he w ill return is not known yet. Gooding said as he headed out the door for h is next m eeting. U niversity spokesm an George Cathcart said Coor is State P ress reporter Jennifer Franklin contributed to this expected to leave the hospital and return home by the latter story. Baker. Continued from page } . represent a reopening of the dialogue” broken off a year ago over terrorist attacks on Israel. In fact, Baker indicated the United States had no intention of talking to the PLO again. “We have our problem s with the PLO, as you know,” he said. “We used to have a dialogue with the PLO. That dialogue is term inated.” Levy, in a lengthy assault on terrorists and their tactics, vowed that “w e w ill not surrender, w e w ill not fold up in the face of terrorism .” However, he said if Palestinian Arabs choose the course of peace they w ill find Israel w illing to foster self-rule or, as he put it, “m anagem ent of the population by the population." Baker em phasized that he brought Israel no specific offers from the Arabs toward recognition of their country. Nor, he said, was he asking Israel to respond with concrete concessions. He said that what he had seen so far on his 10-day fact-finding trip w as “what I consider to be, at least, signs of new thinking . . . a w illingness to consider new approaches.” “I think that whether that m aterializes into sp ecific, concrete com m itm ents w ill 0 depend in large part on whether or not there is a sim ilar attitude com ing from the other side of the equation,” he added. Baker described his m ission as a twotrack approach to achieve peace in the Middle E ast. The first is to engage the Arab nations and Israel eventually in negotiations based on Israel relinquishing territory in return for peace. s State Press « o c * © W e ’v e o g o t it c o v e r e d The oth er is to prod Isr a el in to “discussions of self-governm ent” with the Palestinians. Levy, assessing the overall picture after m eeting with Baker, said “there are in what w e heard . ... definitely encouraging signs that were not there yesterday or the day b e fo r e .” L e v y sa id th a t if th e se developm ents could be strengthened it would lead to “an opportunity that in the past looked very distant.” He said, “We w ill have to do more work. We are closer than yesterday.” Baker said the Palestinians who w ill m eet with him have held frequent talks in the past with U.S. and Israeli officials. Told Arafat and the PIO had claim ed to have selected m em bers of th e group, B aker sh ot back:“The PLO says a lot of things.” S.E.S. AND C.H.A.C. INVITE YOU TO ATTEND A SAFETY AWARENESS SEMINAR ON WEDNESDAY MARCH 13th IN THE YUMA ROOM (211) OF THE M.U. FROM 2:30pm — 3:30pm. OUR FEATURE SPEAKER WILL BE OFFICER LINDA STROH OF THE ASU DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY. State Prêts Tuesday, March 1% 1991 Page 13 Research shows night owls have more health problem s By DIANE SANTORICO State Press S u n d a y , A p r il 7 , 1 9 9 1 ** O N L Y A S U students, faculty, staff, alum ni & s p o u s e s are eligible ** 8 :0 0 am 8:45am - 1 m ile F it n e s s W alk 9:00am - 5-K R u n Race D ivisio n s: (m en’s & w om en ’s) 17-22 23-26 27-36 37-46 47 & up O fficia l 5K C h a l l e n g e E n try Form Sunday, A p ril To entejr, p le a s e c o n p ie te th e e n tr y fo rm fcelow and e n c lo s e you) ■fee* P rin t. C le a r ly . One e n tr y p e r person. N;ame.:' ... • .", .v A d d re ss: V ; Phone Sex .■ ' V-.: (d a y) • fo r: M a le .. •• •' : ••’ ' '■ ' ( c ir c le ) C ir c le •.■' 5K R u n ' • : •. F e m a le 1-M F i t n e s s W alk Iraq. Continued from page 3. - R e g is tra tio n at S u n A n g e l T ra c k D om in o's/A S U Students w orking evening sh ifts or studying a ll night for exam s who try to catch up on sleep during the day could face problems more serious than m issing a few soap operas, research shows. S leep d isord ers, fa tig u e, d ecreased p r o d u c t iv it y ; in c r e a s e d r is k o f cardiovascular disease and the increased likelihood of on-the-job injuries are among the m any hazards night ow ls could encounter, according to a recent report in the New England Journal of M edicine. The report said night workers never get used to their schedules and m ost people “try to combat their problems with sleeping pills, alcohol and caffeine ” Karen M oses, director of health education at ASU’s Student Health, said caffeine and alcohol hurt sleep rather than help it. “Drinking caffeine later in the day causes irregularity in our sleep — and alcohol interferes with our sleep patterns,’’ she said. M oses suggested that students “sleep in a dark, quiet room, on a good com fortable bed with a room tem perature that is not too cold or too hot.” She added that students tell room m ates Amount F $8 P r e r e g i s t r a t i o n F e e ( P o s t m a r k e d o n / b $ 1 0 L a t e R e g i s t r a t i o n F e e ( a f t e r M a r c h 29 F u r t h e r I n f o r m a t io n : 9 6 5 —8 9 0 0 B y submit ting this entry, I, intending to be legally bound f o r myself, my ex ecbiinistrators and assignees, d o hereby release, waive, discharge and oove sue ASU, Domino's Pizza, a n d Recreational Sports 4 Student Activities and respective aefeninistrators, directors, employees, owners a n d lessee's o f p to conduct the event, from any a n d all claims, demands, losses or damages < my travel to, participation in a n d return home from this event. Further, X that X am physically fit and trained t o participate a n d fully Understand that participant will b e engaging in activities that involve risk of serious injui oonpetition or the condition o f the premises o r o f any equipment used. Fur may be other rislcs not known to us or not rensonabl y »for sawable -at this tin’ all the foregoing risks a n d acoept personal responsibility for the damages such injury, permanent disability o r death. I have read a n d understand the. . . waiver a n d release, and sign it voluntarily. . X (Signature) e m ir a t e ’s r u le r s ' s e t a d a te fo r parliam entary elections. •Four American amphibious assault ships left the Persian Gulf, reportedly headed to Norfolk, Va. At the m eeting of Iraqi opposition leaders in Beirut, Ayatollah Taqi al-M udaressi, lea d er of the S h iite Isla m ic Labor O r g a n iz a tio n , to ld r e p o r te r s th a t Republican Guardsmen w ere “ruthlessly and indiscrim inately shelling the holy city of K arbala.” “They’re m assacring the people there,” he said. “I have sent letters to the world’s religious leaders, including the pope, to prevent Saddam’s crim inal regim e from m assacring the Iraqi people. ” There w as no independent confirm ation of the reports on the rebellions by the Shiites in the south and by Kurds in the north. Fighting also w as reported in another Shiite holy city, Najaf, and in Basra and lówincom e Shiite suburbs of Baghdad. The Kurds have claim ed m ajor advances since the uprising began March 1 following Saddam’s crushing m ilitary defeat by the U .S.-led coalition force that liberated Kuwait. M udaressi said two arm y brigades, about 10,000 soldiers, “have joined the popular uprising” in the south since Sunday. He claim ed the Shiites have captured 42 helicopter gunships and 11 surface-tosurface m issiles since the revolt began. Jalal Talabani, leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, claim ed in Beirut that at least three Iraqi Army divisions — 30,000 to 36,000 men — have “joined the people along with their tanks, artillery batteries and other weapons ” 965-5638 Kurdish officials said the P atriotic Union and its ally, the Kurdistan Dem ocratic Party, have seized large areas of the northern provinces and w ere poised to attack Kirkuk, 100 m iles north of Baghdad. PUK official Barhem Saleh claim ed in London that Interior M inister Ali Hassan alMajid, known as “the Butcher of the Kurds” had rounded up 5,000 Kurdish hostages and w as keeping them in Kirkuk. Saddam put Majid, his cousin and one of his m ost ruthless lieutenants, in charge of com bating the unrest last week. . Majid got his nicknam e for leading a m ilitary cam paign against the Kurds three years ago, killing thousands in poison gas attacks. He w as also governor of Kuwait during Iraq’s 7-month occupation. The Kurds have battled for years for autonomy for their mountainous homeland, which includes parts of Turkey, Iran, Syria and the Soviet Union. They m ake up about 20 percent of Iraq’s 17 m illion population. The Shiites, who live m ainly in the south, form a 55 percent m ajority. Saddam ’s ruling elite is overwhelm ingly Sunni M uslim, a sect that totals about 40 percent of Iraq’s people, including m ost Kurds. Talabani and Mesut Barzani of the Kurdish D em ocratic Party m et secretly last w eek w ith T urkish o ffic ia ls, Turkey announced Monday. The m eeting apparently represented a change in Turkey’s policy of trying to block Kurdish autonomy in northern Iraq. Turkey has feared that a Kurdish state would encourage Kurdish separatists in Turkey. T alabani said the opposition forces m eeting in Beirut agreed on a goal of establishing a ‘‘dem ocratic, federal Iraq.” Soviet Continued Crom page 3* 5-K HOTLINE hot to play loud m usic or to interrupt their sleeping tim es if necessary. M oses suggested that night workers should stick to a regular sleep schedule. “They should select regular horns for sleep, som ething that is consistent for them ,’’ she said. A study conducted by Charles Czeisler of Harvard M edical School has shown that night workers do better if they work under bright lights and sleep during the day in a com pletely darkened room. To achieve this atm osphere, Czeisler s u g g e s te d b lo c k in g w in d o w s w ith rem ovable pieces of foam board, cut to fit and covered w ith foil. Moses suggested Other strategies students could use to ensure a good night’s sleep. Students should get up at the sam e tim e every day and go to bed at the sam e tim e even if have a 7:40 a.m . class one day and a 9:40 a.m class Die next day, she said. Som e other factors contributing to productive hours of rest include a balanced diet and plenty of exercise, sh e said. “Some people feel m ore like sleeping when they have a full stom ach, it is often better to eat som ething before you sleep so that you don’t wake up from hunger,” she said. overthrow the governm ent by force. Some lawm akers wanted a resolution condemning Y eltsin, but the legislature adjourned without taking any action after others contended such a m ove would only garner Y eltsin m ore publicity, the state news agency Tass reported. Y eltsin, m eanwhile, ignored the attacks and m et with striking coal m iners instead of attending the legislative debate, Tass said. The dispatch said the m iners prom ised to back Y eltsin by “a ll possible non-violent m eans.” Sunday’s w as the largest anti-governm ent dem onstration in Moscow a t least since the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. People waving flags and protest banners filled Manezh Square next to the Kremlin. Many shouted that they w ill not allow a dictatorship to be restored in the Soviet Union. The crowd w as estim ated at 500,000 by one of the speakérs and journalists. Prod e m o c r a c y a c t iv is t s h ad d raw n 200,000-300,000 to Moscow* rallies several tim es in the past year, but never previously had tilled the huge square, Among Y eltsin’s m ost vocal supporters are the estim ated 100,000 striking coal m iners around the nation. The labor strife began M arch 1 in the U kraine and K a z a k h s ta n with a one-day warning strike d em a n d in g b e tte r w a g e s, w o rk in g conditions and benefits. It has since widened into a nationwide walkout with political dem ands, including support for Y eltsin and m ore power for the republics. In som e areas, m iners have called for Gorbachev’s resignation. M iners from the Kuznetsk basin of w estern Siberia who m et with Y eltsin on Monday discussed the possibility of putting the m ining industry under the control of the Russian republic, instead of the national governm ent, Tass said. “R epresentatives of workers’ com m ittees from the Kuzbass declared their full support for the political position o f the Russian president and their readiness to defend it by all possible non-violent m ethods,” Tass ¿aid. Page 14 Tuesday, March 1g, 1991 C a lv in a n d H o b b e s b y B ill W a tte rs o n A HËÎ OAD, H O B B B SAMS THAT TIGERS ARE MORE PERFKTL1 T H E F A R S ID E By GARY LARSON W EBETA I I THERE.' \ QUARTER, IOCEHTS.J V O V )CW SEVER. ,pl EVOLVED THAN HUMAHS ! Slate Press / m fV V44j[ .«ft V*•T ,,/Vfe “Ticks, fleas ». Ticks, fle a s ...” Lattie’s D og HEV'TMTUGHT M B RCMJMDS MEOFAJOKE/ O* oi b y Ford M. ONE TO CHANGE IT, ANP FOUR to MAKE A TSHIRT ABOUT IT// HOW MANY SOR0RIÏÏ GIRLS DOCS IT TAKE To CHANGE A LIGHT BUIE? ':BROWNSVILLE, Texas CAP) — P lastic bags bounce like tum bleweeds across the Brow nsville Sanitary Landfill. A bulldozer works over a new shipm ent of rotting food scraps, disposable diapers and other debris. Could anyone think of a better place to go birdwatching? “The Brow nsville dump is important. It has an aura of its own,” said birder Anne Copps of Grand Rapids, M ich., who visited the landfill one recent afternoon. “I’d say Brow nsville is the biggest birding dump in the country. If you want to see the M exican crow, you have to com e here,” said Jeff Gordon, a guide from Austin-based Victor Em anuel Nature Tours who accom panied Copps’ group. For birdwatchers — and birds — the landfill is the place to be. Fowl not seen anywhere else in the United States flock there regularly to feast on its mounds of garbage. P eo p le w alk in g through w ith cam eras and binoculars som etim es bring looks of am usem ent to the faces of dum pem ployees, but Brow nsville’s Econom ic Developm ent Foundation isn ’t laughing. It put out a colorful birding guide about two years ago that invites visitors to stop at the area’s “M exican Crow P ark,” which is really the dump, or sanitary landfill as it is form ally known. “Sanitary landfill. I love that nam e,” said the Rev. Tom P incelli, a local birdwatcher. ‘ But Copps said there are w orse places to birdwatch. “This is a step up for us,” Copps said. “We also go to a lot of sew age ponds.” CATERING TO YOUR MUSIC NEEDS 7Higuel’st]flusic G enter Next to Ozzie's Witttim x to'Ik'ffytfce'toppin g Outer SALES RENTALS ELECTRONICS 968-2310 REPAIRS GUITAR LESSONS *£J^lrif Guitars • Amps Boxes • Eleihoiin Metronomes • Etc. 130 E. University Dr., T k m & g M O pen 6 days 10 a.m -6 p.m. 71 2 S. COLLEGE A V E -N E X T TO COLLEGE STREET DELI M-F 7:30 a m -10 p.m. Sat 9 a.m -10 p m. Sun 11 a m .-10 p.m. P h o n e :967-4049 GUARANTEED...CAMPUS CORNER HAS THE LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! W A IST $ 0 0 0 C P ASU introductory offer REMOVAL 1/2 OFF Shampoo/Cut Rtg* *13°° FIRST MONTH •N o initial fees •N o contracts Students Always *10 w/I.D. Closed Sundays Monday matrix” MF|22AR08 1041 E. Lem on "OUT O F TIME" Student rates normally $25 a month rl P|S| I®1 Terape/Next to ASU (Behind M inder Binders) 8 9 4 -1 3 3 1 iG Y M S 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU . Gilbert/Chandler 8 9 2 -9 0 4 2 C D $ 9 .9 9 Limit 1 Tape $6.88 Expires 3-17-91 / S p o rts State P reti J U esd a ^ ta rcM ^ W ^ Pitching key as ASU resumes play B y DAN ZEIGER State Press ASU baseball coach Jim Brock sat in his Packard Stadium office after his team had defeated California on Sunday and attem pted to brush up on his science. The subject w as the study of pitching, an area of the team (bat has kept Brock and his coaching staff in the laboratory for an extended amount of tim e this season. Although Doug Newstrom had just thrown the Sun D evils’ third straight com plete gam e by earning a 9-7 victory over the Golden Bears, there was still concern as to how much ASU can continue to depend on its Starters until calling upon its struggling bullpen. "It’s all a m atter of who you have in the gam e at the tim e and who you have in the pen,” Brock said. “If there is such a large distance in your mind, then how far you’re going to go with the guy — I’m sure Einstein had som e equation that would fit here — increases and the chances of going to the bullpen decrease,” As the No. 9 Sun D evils (18-11,4-5 Six-Pac) return to action today with a doubleheader against P ace (N. Y .) U niversity at 2:30 p.m . and Grand Canyon at 7 p.m ., a full scientific method on ASU’s pitching dilem m as can be constructed: I. Identify the Problem What has been the Sun D evils’ undoing so far this season has been the lack of consistency from the bullpen, which has been alm ost invisible during the last week, as Brock has gone with his starter for nine innings in five of the last seven gam es. “ I would think the bullpen is eventually going to have to be a factor,” Brock said. “When w e get to the part of our schedule where w e start to worry about w earing out our starters, pretty quickly w e’ll get to the point where they throw only once a w eek.” m-0100®’ T.J. S o k o V S tilt Prow ASU third baseman Jim Austin tags .California’s Jon Zither out during Slx-Pac action Sunday at Packard Stadium, Having the m ost difficulty has been Tony Pena (0-3,10.18 ER A ), who w as the projected closer at the start of the season but has since slumped. Scott Dodd (4-1,5.55 ERA) w as the star at the beginning of the year, but the junior college transfer has thrown only 1.2 innings of relief in the la st three weeks. Brock said he has seen prom ise at tim es from the trio of Mike Fenton (1-0, 3.38 ERA), Rob Gorrell (0-1, 11.12 ERA) and Wayne B all (0-0,10.13 ERA), who is expected to get the Turn to B aseball, page 16. Loved ones search for answers to Janisse’s death By LORENZO SIERRA Jr. State Press Two days after the death of ASU w restler Bobby Janisse, fam ily, friends and team m ates are looking for answers to som ething they had no idea w as com ing. Janisse, a prom ising redshirt freshm an, died Saturday night of a self-inflicted gun wound. He w as at a party with friends on the 1700 block of South Dorsey Lane when he went to the bathroom and killed him self. Tempe police cannot yet confirm if the death was accidental or a suicide, but the weapon w as confirm ed to be a .38 caliber pistol. Full details o f the incident w ill not be released until an investigation is com pleted. D etectiv e P aul E . G uitteau, who is heading the investigation, said the party w as not rowdy and the apartm ent was in good shape. E arlier reports said that Jan isse, 18, had recently split with his girlfriend. Y esterday, people close to Janisse reflected on his life and the shock of his sudden death. In Portland, Ore., ja n isse’s hometown, fam ily m em bers and friends w ere working on funeral arrangem ents. “They’re grieving the death of their son ,” Said Sharon Gary-Smith, who w as speaking on behalf of Janisse’s mother Brenda Polk and stepfather Jerom e Polk. Funeral services are tentatively set for Thursday in Portland. Janisse would have celebrated his 19th birthday on that day. News of Jan isse’s death shocked students and faculty at Jefferson High School in Portland, where Jan isse was a three-tim e state champion. His high school coaches, Donny M cPherson and Don Lierman, w ere both excused from teaching duties Monday and today. According to Jefferson adm inistration, the student body w ill participate in services W ednesday for Janisse and NCAA MEN’S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP 1991 2nd Round: 1st Round: March 14-15 Regionals Indianapolis Indianapolis March 30 March 30 March 16-17 2nd Round: R egionals 1st Round;- March 16-17 March 14-15 Monday, A pril 1 W E S T 1) N. Carolina H t6) Northeastern 8) Princeton - 19) Villanova 5) Mississippi S t - 1121E. Michigan 1) U N L V 16) Montana I ' ' h 8) Georgetown 9) Vanderbilt 5) Michigan St 12) Wis. Green Bay h 4) Utah 13) S. Alabama Ifi)N M State • 11) Creighton h 3) Selon Hall 14) Peooerdine 7) Virginia 10) Brio. Youno T ? l Arizona ___ 1S St Franosi PA) I- M I t) Ohio St 16) Towson St 8) Geòrgia Tech 9) P e Paul 5) Texas 1?) St Peter's 41 St John's 13) N. Illinois 6) I SII 11) Connecticut 3) Nebraska 14) Xavier fO h io lh 7) Ipyva_______. 10) E. Tenn St Syracuse, NY T ucso n, A Z 4) tJC I A j 13) Seattle, W A — i ~~ E. Rutherford, NJ Penn State fit N T . S ta te 1 i t ) S M u sh a ip p i 3) O k la h o m a S t -1141 New Merda) 71 Purdue 1101 Temóle College Park, MD Salt Lake City, U X ?) Syracuse ■11S) Richmond C H A M P I O N D W E S T s o U T H E A 1) Arkansas : ■ .i 1161 Georgia St 1 81 ARIZONA ST ' V" ' -H-I 9) Rutgers Atlanta, GÀ 5) W ake Forest 112) Louisa. Tech _________ 4) A la h a m a • 1131 Murray St ■■‘ Dayton, OH Pontiac, Ml M in n e a p o lis , h 2) QuKx. N F Louisiana 1 Charlotte, NC another student who died this weekend. Administrator Brenda Seymour said if a ll goes w ell, the service Will be held after classes are dism issed. While at Jefferson, Janisse w as named a first team AllAmerican by Amateur W restling News. AWN dubbed Janisse as one of the nation’s top recruits in the 126-pound division as w ell as one of thp best Oregon high school w restlers ever. Janisse w as a two-tim e junior national champion in GrecoRoman w restling and also won one junior national title in freestyle com petition. “I feel like I’ve lost one of m y friends,” said AWN editor Ron Good. “It w as the best senior class Oregon ever had and he w as the best of the bunch.” Good, as w ell as a ll of Janisse’s Sun D evil team m ates, said he had the potential to be a great collegiate wrestler. Turn to Janisse, p age 20. L E T T : ______ R After ASU’s victory over Oregon State Saturday, a strange thing happened. The student body poured onto the court in a display of em otion and appreciation that few would have expected to ever occur at the U niversity A ctivity Cento*. Sun D evil fans crowded around the corridor entrance and would not leave until ASU coach B ill Frieder returned for a curtain Call. After appearing briefly on the ram p, Frieder spoke to the crowd with a microphone m om ents later a s he stood high in the stands, “I think the students w ere phenom enal,” Frieda: said Sunday. “Wasn’t that great? At M ichigan, (the students) all w ere gone before the gam e w as over. In ’86, when w e won the B ig Ten Championship against Indiana, w e w ere up by 28 and s—, they a ll left. There w as 6,000 out of 13,000.” At Sunday’s gathering to watch pairings, Frieder gave the following letter to the State P ress to show his appreciation for the students: D ear students, Saturday night, a s the regular season cam e to a d o se, our entire team and sta ff felt the need to thank our greatest supporters — the student body. Your backing through the entire season, especially Saturday night, m eant the world to our ball club. Just a s w e walk together on cam pus, w e win together on the field of athletic com petition. As the scoreboard flashed “It Has Happened,” our team knew it w as only possible with the never-ending support of the faculty, staff and students of Arizona State U niversity. Thanks again for your great support and w e w ill see you at the “BIG DANCE.” GiU fi) Pirtshurgh 1111 Georgia 3) Kansas __________ 11141 New Orleans Louisville, KN 7) Florida St IUL E & V"* .JSr^SaSi :v,' A":*h oiusg- < 5 ^ ?) Ind ia na __ - ____ - JllS I C t l. Carolina m S O U R C E : The Associated Press Steven Kricun/State Press ÍM 1 ^ ¥ State Press Tuesday. M arch 1 9 .1 9 9 1 By P A U L CORO State Press Senior center Isaae Austin w as honored Monday night a s the Sun D evils’ Most Valuable Player w hile freshm an forward Jam al Faulkner w as named Rookie of the Y ear at the ASU B asketball Awards Banquet at the Pointe at South Mountain Resort. Austin, who w as named to the All-Pdc-10 team Sunday, is averaging 16.1 points and 8.7 rebounds going into Friday’s NCAA opening round gam e with Rutgers in Atlanta. The 6-foot-10, 260-pound senior led the Sun D evils in scoring on 11 occasions and in rebounding 20 tim es. “I think he’s done an outstanding job,” ASU coach B ill Frieder said. “Every crucial situation or tim e out, I think our kids are sick of it, I say get the ball inside and this guy has learned to do the right things with the basketball.” Faulkner took the ASU rookie award just a day after being picked as the Pac-10 Freshm an of the Year. Faulkner broke Byron Scott’s freshm an scoring record this season as he becam e the first to score over 400. The 6-foot-7 M iddle V illage, N. Y„ native is currently the Sun D evils’ No. 2 scorer with 15.1 points per gam e and rebounder at 6.2 a gam e. His scoring and rebounding averages lead all conference freshm an. “I’ve told this to Glen R ice, Terry M ills and R u m ea l R o b in so n , but if you (Faulkner) take care of business, you’re going to be able to take care of your mom three to four years from now,” Frieder said. Senior guards Tarence W heeler and Matt A nderson w ere co -recip ien ts o f the Academ ic Award, given to those who best display excellence in the classroom and on the court. W heeler, a Proposition 48 victim , w ill graduate this May with a degree in justice studies and a 2.5 GPA. “If there’s a way to com e out of adversity and be a role m odel, it’s ia r en ce W heeler,” A thletic D irector Charles Harris said. Anderson, a business and Chinese double m ajor, w ill also get his degree this May after building up a 3.1 GPA and m aking the AD’s honor roll. Freshm an Dwayne Fontana, who has seven of his eight starts in the last seven gam es, collected two Awards Monday. The San Francisco; C alif., product w as named the Most Improved P layer after averaging 8.1 points and 3.8 rebounds per contest in the regular season. More than half of his boards cam e on the offensive side a s. the 6-foot-4 swingman used his inside gam e to shoot 57.7 percent from the field. “I think from start to finish, he has m ade the best and m ost progress on the team ,” Frieder said. Fontana also earned the B ill Frieder Buzzer-Beater Award for his shot in the lane a s time, expired that beat Kansas, 70-68, in the season-opener. The Ned Wulk Award, presented to a b a sk etb a ll su pp orter, w ept to S teve Butterfield. Baseball C ontinued from page 15. start against Pace. II. Form ulate a Hypothesis With the troubles plaguing the relief pitching, Brock has gone with the notion of leaving his starters in the gam e as long as possible. Newstrom (5-1,5.80 ERA), who along with Sean R ees (4-1, 5.77 ERA) and Gary Tatterson (4-4,3.03 ERA) com prises the trio who has carried the recent load for ASU, said the extra confidence from the coaches has been a benefit. “In m y opinion die starters weren’t going as long as they could have at the beginning of the year,” Newstrom said. “The bullpen Was getting ready in the second or third, which made them so tired that they struggled when they did get in. So I think it’s a lot better that the coaches are letting us go.” III. Collect D ata from the Experim ent The Sun D evil starting threesom e has no doubt responded w ell to its added responsibility, as ASU has won eight of its last 10 gam es. Tatterson allowed a combined seven hits and only one run in 18 innings in victories over R ice on Feb. 27 and UCLA on March 4. Newstrom said he has gained confidence and Rees w as named the Six-Pac P itcher of the Week for his 12-strikeout perform ance in a win over Cal on Friclay. “I feel very good about our three starters,” Brock said. “I think they can go up against anyone in the conference. But there is a gap, and it’s scary because I don’t think there w ill be another weekend where w e’ll get three com plete gam es in the conference.’’ ASU now owns the Six-Pac’s two strikeout leaders, as Rees is on top of the league with 61 and Tatterson is second w ith 60. R ees is slated to start tonight against Grand Canyon and Brock said he was hopeful the junior could deliver about five to six solid innings. IV. Arrive at a Conclusion As the Sun D evils head toward the second half of the regular season, Brock said he is hopeful the bullpen w ill get its act together. But for now, ASU plans to stick with their three-m an rotation for a weekend road trip at Hawaii with Tatterson starting on Friday, Newstrom on Saturday and R ees on Sunday. “Playing at Arizona State when it’s not going very, good is a pressure-packed sort of thing,” Brock said. “A lot is expected of them and they feel the pressure. The first tim e I talked to them during the (Cal) gam e, I tried to approach the fact that it’s still only one of 30 conference gam es.” With B ill Frieder leading the ASU basketbalH eam to its first NCAA tournament bid in a decade being the sports talk of the town, Sun D evil baseball coach Jim Brock had glowing praise for the second-year coach after Sunday’s gam e. , For those caught up in “March M adness” and interested in what the 20th-year coach had to say, here is Brock’s assessm ent of Frieder’s job perform ance in turning Sun D evil basketball from grim e to shine: “What Frieder has done is certainly an am azing feat,” Brock said. “When I think of the tim e I w as a student and all the years that I’ve been working here, I can’t rem em ber a better coaching perform ance.” “You’ve got to rem em ber that this is a guy who cam e to this program with absolutely nothing going for him. The man cam e in with his name — that’s about all. It’s just a m iracle for the team to get where it has gotten now.” “From this point on, I think he has definitely turned the program into established one that can be clearly successful as long as it’s not screw ed up.” Swimwear Separates with Personalized Service We're celebrating our 2nd Anniversary & we want to show our appreciation to the most important people in our business... O U R C U S TO M E R S ! We're featuring live entertainment & great food & drink specials all week long! So plan to join us this week to help us celebrate 2 great years! WATCH FOR DETAILS ! ! 5th & Mill • Tempe 921-7456 7 a .m .-l 1 p.m . M on.-Thurs 7 a.m .-2 a.m . Fri. & Sat. * COFFEE/» PLANTATION Corner of 6th & Mill 829-7878 State Press $1 O FF 10 or 15 PIECE S $1.00 OFF ANY PIZZA F R E E D E L IV E R Y (12" or 16") ASU AR EA 1301 E. University 968-6666 ( P1ZZA& PUB | 968-6265 968-6666 With coupon CHICKEN NUGGETS DINNER 1017 E . Apache With any 12" P izza • ($1.50 value) o n e coupon per pizza With coupon. Expires 3-31-91., $1 O FF M l or 16 PIECE 2 FREE DRINKS F R E E D ELIV ER Y ASU AR EA ■ (Reg. $3.95 or $5.40) With any 16" Pizza • ($3 value) -or- ) I 1301 E. University CRABETTES & CHIPS DINNER 1017 E . Apache 4 FREE DRINKS \K m With coupon. Expires 3-31-91. Valid only at Tempe location. One per coupon. Not valid with other offers. 968-6666 One coupon per pizza I (Reg. $3.95 or $5.40) $1 O F F 10 or 15 PIECE 1301 E. University PIZZA&PUB 968-6265 0 F R E E D E LIV ER Y ASU AR EA With any 12" or 16" Pizza sw s SHRIM P & CHIPS DINNER SSPSS SMALL SALADS ■'m m 1017 E .A p a ch e Valid only at Tempe location. One per coupon. Not valid with other offers, With coupon O ne coupon per pizza 2 FREE I ( Page 17 Tuesday, March 18,1991 968-6265 ■ 1 Valid only at Tempe location. One per coupon. Not valid with other offers. (REG. $3.95 OR $5.40) With coupon. Expires 3-31-91. m ■1 M O N STER BU RG ER CHEESE BREAD With any 12" or 16" Pizza 1301 E. University Dine in only O n e coupon per pizza te -— Proudly Serving fbe Valley of the Sun 625 E. APACH E - 9 6 7 -5 6 4 5 j VISA jiMast«»Card b sssu a 1 I * £ • 4 $10 O F F VO LLEYBALL SHORTS Club • Sideout N o t v a lid w ith a n y o th e r offer. V oid on s a le ite m s E xp . 3-31-91 'lliu versify sporting goods 968-7725 1038 S. Mill, Tempo Across from Gammage $10 O F F SW EATSH IRTS Reverse Double Weave t í 968-6265 FIÜ S 20 o z . D R IN K Valid only at Tempe location. One per coupon. Not valid with other offers. ^ l 88 With coupon. Expires 3-31-91. LETTERS With the purchase of any Sweats, T ’s or Tanks. A ll S w e a t s $ 5 .0 0 O F F H a n e s B e e f y T ’s $ 1 0 .9 5 T a n k T o p s $ 8 .9 5 6 2 0 S. C O L L E G E • 2 9 -X 1 2 8 C E L 1017 E . Apache 3 FREE -— - B O O K S T O R E TW O A S U L O C A T IO N S 968-6666 With coupon R O T H E R 'S — :— .— F R E E D E L IV E R Y ASU AREA S.A. N o t v a lid w ith an y o th er offer. V oid on s a lé item s E x p . 3-31 91 A IliuvefSity sporting goods 968-7725 rS \ H AYD EN SQ U A R E 5 1 W. 3 R D S T , T E M P E 9 E x p ire s 4 -1 5 -9 1 894-6774 $7.50 OFF ANY BEACH VO LLEYBALL Spalding • Mikasa • Wilson Tichikara Not valid with any. other offer. Void oh sale items. Exp. 3-31-91 RENTAL SKI SALE!! Head Skis (150cm only) $25 per pair (Only 15 pairs.) 1038 S. Mill, Tempe Across from Gammage Not valid with any other offer. Void on sale items. Exp. 3-31-91 NCAA Tournament at a glance EAST REGIONAL F irst Round Thursday a t Cole Fieldhouse in College Park, Md. Oklahoma St. (22-7) vs. New Mexico (20-9), 12:20 p.m. N. C. State (19-10) vs. Southern Miss. (21-7), 30 minutes alter comp, of first game Purdue (17-11) vs. Temple (21-9), 7:35 p.m. Syracuse (26-5) vs. Richmond (21-9), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Friday a t the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y. Mississippi St. (204) vs. E. Michigan (24-6), 12:25 p.m. UCLA (23-8) vs. Penn St. (20-10), 30 minutes after comp, of first game N. Carolina (25-5) vs. Northeastern (22-10), 7:32 p.m. Princeton (24-2) vs. Villanova (16-14), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Second Round Saturday a t Còle Fieldhouse Syracuse-Richmond winner vs. Purdue-Temple winner, 12:15 p.m. Oklahoma St.-New Mexico winner vs. N.C. State-Southern Miss, winner, 30 minutes after comp, of first game Sunday a t the Carrier Dome N. Carolina-Northeastern winner vs, Princeton-Villanova winner, 12:10 p.m. UCLA-Penn St. winner vs. Mississippi St.-E. Michigan winner, 30 minutes after comp, of first game Regional Semifinals March 22 at the Meadowlands Arena in East Rutherford, N.J. Syracuse-Richmond—Purdue-Temple winner vs. Oklahoma St.-New Mexico—N.C. State-Southern Miss, winner N. Carolina-Northeastern—Princeton-Villanova winner vs. UCLAPenn St.—Mississippi St.-E, Michigan winner Regional Championship March 24 a t the Meadowlands SOUTHEAST REGIONAL F irst Round Thursday at Freedom Hall in Louisville, Ky. P itt (20-11) vs. Georgia (17-12), 12:15 p.m. Kansas (22-7) vs. New Orleans (23-7) , 30 minutes after comp, of first game Florida St. (20-10) vs. USC (19-9), 7:40 p.m. Indiana (27-4) vs. Coastal Carolina (24-7), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Friday at the Omni in Atlanta Arkansas (31-3) vs. Georgia St. (16-14), 12:15 p.m. ASU (19-9) vs. Rutgers (199), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Alabama (21-9) vs. Murray St. (24-8), 7:36 p.m. Wake Forest (18-10) vs. La. Tech (21-9), 30 minutes after comp, of first game a Second Round Saturday at Freedom Hall Kansas-New Orleans winner Vs. Pitt-Georgia winner, 4:50 p.m, Indiana-Coastal Carolina winner vs. Florida St.-USC winner, 30 minutes after comp, of first game Sunday at the Omni Alabama-Murray St. winner vs. Wake Forest-La. Tech winner, 2 :15 p.m. Arkansas-Georgia St. winner vs. ASU-Rutgers winner, 30 minutes after comp, of first game Regional Semifinals March 21 at the Charlotte Coliseum in Charlotte, N.C. Indiana-Coastal Carolina—Florida St,-USC winner vs. Kansas-New Orleans—Pitt-Georgia winner Arkansas-Georgia S t —ASU-Rutgers winner vs. Alabama-Murray St.—Wake Forest-La. Tech winner Regional Championship March 23 a t the Charlotte Coliseum MIDWEST REGIONAL F irst Round Thursday a t the Metrodome in Minneapolis Duke (26-7) vs. NE Louisiana (25-7), 12:35 p.m. Iowa (20-10) vs. E. Tenn. St (28-4), 30 minutes after comp, of first game LSU (299) vs. Connecticut (1910), 8:10 p.m. Nebraska (297) vs. Xavier, Ohio (21-9), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Friday at Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio St. John's (20-8) vs. N. Illinois (295), 12:35 p.m. , Texas (22-8) vs. St. P eter’s (24-6), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Ohio St. (293) vs. Towson St. (1910), 7:35 p.m. Georgia Tech (1912) vs. DePaul (20-8), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Second Round Saturday at the Metrodome Duke-NE Louisiana winner vs. Iowa-E. Tenn. St. winner, 4:30 p.m. Nebraska-Xavier Winner vs. LSU-Connecticut winner, 30 minutes after comp, of first game Sunday at Dayton Arena Ohio St.-Towson St. winner vs. Georgia Tech-DePaul winner, 12:20 p.m. St. John’s-N. Illinois winner vs. Texas-St. P eter’s winner, 30 minutes after comp, of first game Regional Semifinals March 22 at the Silverdoine in Pontiac, Mich. Duke-NE Louisiana—Iowa-E. Tenn. St. winner vs. NebraskaXavier—LSU-Connecticut winner Ohio St.-Towson St.—Georgia Tech-DePaul winner vs. St. John’s-N. Illinois—Texas-St. Peter’s winner Regional Championship March 24 a t the Silverdome WEST REGIONAL F irst Round Thursday at the Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City Seton Hall (22-8) vs. Pepperdine (22-8), 2:30 p.m. New Mexico St- (295) vs. Creighton (23-7), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Virginia (21-11) vs. BYU (2912), 8:05 p.m. UofA (26-6) vs. St. Francis, Pa. (297), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Friday a t the McKale Center in Tucson Michigan St. (1910) vs. Wis.-Green Bay (24-6), 2:30 p.m. Utah (293) vs. S. Alabama (22-8), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Georgetown (1912) vs. Vanderbilt (17-12), 8:10 p.m. UNLV (30-0) vs. Montana (297), 30 minutes after comp, of first game Second Round Saturday at the Jon M. Huntsman Center UofA-St. Francis winner vs. Virginia-BYU winner, 2:20 p.m. Seton Hall-Pepperdine winner vs. New Mexico St.-Creighton winner, 30 minutes after comp, of first game Sunday at the McKtue Center Utah-S. Alabama winner vs. Michigan St.-Wis.-Green Bay winner, Stata Pro» Tu«sds^^xcfH £J991_ Page 18 Remember M r. Keating? ITIl Programs you count on — count on you! I This investigation of Charles Keating, Jr. and the role politics played in the Lincoln Savings and Loan debacle, first aired in May, 1990. If you want a refresher on why taxpayers are out billions, watch this! (Channel 8 1 will update the program with recent U.S. Senate Ethics committee decisions regarding “The Keating 5”), KAET Frontline: Other [People’s Money Roundtrip from Phoenix Conference May 22, 23 & 24 C Phoenix, AZ The Points Resort on South Mountain am pus- - C o rn er Frankfurt Paris San Juan Tokyo Sydney Health & Beauty Aids I Designed for Men and Women: • Over 36 Distinguished Speakers • Unlimited Networking Possibilities • Meet Experts in the field of Sports • Job Interview Opportunities Restrictions d o a p p ly. Studen t status m ay be required. EuraBpasses Issued on-the-spot! 712 S . C O L L E G E A V E — N E X T T O C O L L E G E S T R E E T D ELI M -F 7:30 a m .-10 p .m . S a t 9 a .m .-10 p .m . PHOTO T I DO UBLE P R IN TS $499 I I I EVERY DAY I 24 E x p . C o lo r P rin ts I I 4 S u n 11 a m .-10 p .m . P h o n e :9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 Call fora FREE 1991 Student Travel Catalog! ASU Sign up now fur Early Bird Special by April 20,1991 Sweatshirt After April 20th: $350 Students $450 Non-Students $500 O o r s2 00 O F F Your Resource to a Career In Sports CALL NOW! Space is Limited! A n y T - S h ir t 1-800-776-7877 F F in c lu d e s a le ite m s Lim it 1 Located a t Forest and University, d irectly across ftom A.S.U. l For the Most up-to-date Job Leads call: Sports Careers Jobline 1 -9 0 0 -4 2 0 -3 0 0 5 Am erica's oldest and largest student travel organization. C o u n ci Travel •Student Discount Only w /co u p o n . d o e s not e x p ire s 3 /2 4 /9 1 $338 $338 $418 $519 $847 120 E. University, Ste. E Tem pe, A Z 85281 966-3544 sw n Rue Speech. Ifyou’re an off-campus student, get theAI&TCallingCard and your first call is free. There’s no better time to speak your mind. Because now when you get your free AT&T C alling Card, you'll get your first 15-minute call free? With your AT8rT C alling Card, you can call from almost anywhere --1 to anywhere. And you can Iseep e x saw your card, even if you move and g eta new phone num ber Our Calling Card is part of the AI3Œ Student Saver Pius program, a whole package of products and services designed to make a student’s budget go farther So look for AT&T C alling Card applications on campus. Or call us at 1800 525-7955, Ext. 655. And let freedom ring. AI&T. H elping m ake college life a little easier. 2:35 p.m. UNLV-Montana winner vs. Georgetown-Vanderbilt winner, 30 minutes after comp, of first game Regional Semifinals March 21 at the Kingdome in Seattle UofA-St. F ra n c is—Virginia-BYU w inner vs. Seton HallPepperdine—New Mexico St.-Creighton winner UNLV-Montana—Georgetown-VanderbiU winner vs. Utah-S. Alabama—Michigan St.-UWGB winner Regional Championship March 23 at the Kingdome 1 AKT •A BOO value for a eoast-to-ooast Calling Card call. Applies to custom er dialed calls m ade during the AIST Night/iXfeekend calling period, 11pm to 8am, Sunday through Thursday and H>rp Friday through 5pm Sunday. You may receive more or less calling tim e depending on w here and w hen you call. Applicarions m ust b e received by December 31,1991 The right choice. Stot* Presi 9 2 2 E. Apache GERMAN AUTO REPAIR * 968-4613 * $500 OFF U-LOCK AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE $18.95 •Recharge AC system up to 1 can •Leak check AC system •Check belts & entire system •(Additional Freon $7.95/can ) •With coupon 922 E. Apache Page. 19 Tuesday, March 12,1991 Reg. $24.95 with guarantee. N 2 CYCLING 1 ASU O PEN 7 DAYS A W EEK GERMAN AUTO REPAIR OIL & FILTER SPECIAL ANY MTN. BIKE TIRE Reg. $21.95 922 E. Apache $5®° OFF 968-4613 $16.95 VW, Audi. BMW, Volvo, Saab •Oil change up to 4 qts. Castrol 2 0 /5 0 •Oil filter •Not valid with any other offers 968-4613 of $14.95 value or more (no exceptions!) N 2 CYCUNB ■ ASU Any 1 item in the store! (excluding sale items) iltip í •Replace thermostat •Flush & fill system •Check system for leaks •Som e models slightly higher N 10th St. CYCUNB GERMAN AUTO REPAIR 968-4613 F U E L IN JE C T IO N S E R V IC E 1004 S. Mill • Tem pe • 967-7700 $1000 O FF ANY PAIR OF CYCLING SHOES Exp. 3-25-91 Purge injectors on vehicle Add injector treatment CYUiNB cafe&bakery )) Expires 3-15-91 Double Double | Dam m it | I 2-16” Cheese Pizzas 16” 2 Item Pizza * 7 .4 8 921-FAST • With C o u p o n 2 1 0 7 S . R u ra l • + Tax FREE DELIVERY! « * . 3 5 • With C o u p o n • + Tax Lunch Specials Gumby Aid (11am-5pm) 1 12” 1 Item P iz z a 16” 1 Item P iz za and 1 Soda Only * 5 . 1 4 9 921-FAST $5.61 +Tax 12” 1 Item P iz za • With C o u p o n 2 1 0 7 S . R u ra l ] • + Tax FREE DELIVERY! I Only 10th St. ASU 1004 S. Mill • Tem pe • 967-7700 Buy one coffee CINNAMON ROLL, PECAN ROLL OR MUFFIN 968-2737 ■ O PEN 7 DAYS A W EEK 1/2 OFF ANY P o k e y ’s R evenge N 2 Hours: M-F 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Exp. 3-25-91 ASU OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK 31 O S. Mill Ave. Exp. 3-15-91 10th St. 1/2 O FF CLO TH IN G COOLING SYSTEM SERVICE 922 E. Apache Exp. 3-25-91 10th St. $4.21 Tax Riid receive the 2nd one of equal or lesser price 310 S. Mill Ave. 968-2737 I Pokey M ad n e ss B • With Coupon • + Tax PIZZa 921-FAST 2107 S. Rural FREE DELIVERY! S u n D e v il S u rp lu s I • With Coupon • + Tax Only «S.00 • With Coupon • + Tax Gum by C h a lle n g e 20” Cheese Pizza °nly$8.99 Gum by D o u b le 2-14” Cheese Pizzas 14” Cheese °nly$4.75 Expires 3-15-91 PIZZA 921-FAST 2107 S. Rural FREE DELIVERY! 20” Unilimited Item Pizza Only *12.62 • With Coupon • + Tax Pag ç g Q State Press Tuesday, March 1g, 1991 O lson preparing for NCAAs TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — UofA coach Lute Olson says he thinks his team ’s No. 2 NCAA seeding in the West Region’s first round Thursday at Salt Lake City is appropriate. He also said Sunday , the W est’s No. 1 seed, top-ranked Nevada-Las V egas, “did not get any breaks in their bracke t ” The Runnin’ Rebels (30-0) face I6th-seeded Montana in Friday’s first round at Tucson and, assum ing a win, w ill face the victor between Georgetown and Vanderbilt, the eighth and ninth seeds. But Olson said he thinks the NCAA basketball tournament selection com m ittee’s decision to give Ohio State the No. 1 seed in the Midwest Region despite losing its last two gam es and having a questionable nonconference schedule m ight prom pt som e schools to re-exam ine playing strong nonconference opponents. “I don’t question our position because I think w e probably should be a No. 2 seed ,” said Olson, whose W ildcats finished the regular season 26-6 and won their fourth straight Pac-10 Conference title. UofA w ill face 15th-seeded St. Francis of Loretto, Pa., Northeast Conference winners (24-7). The Red Flash qualified for the tournament by defeating Fordham in an NCAA play-in. T heir nonconference schedule included lo sses to Pittsburgh and Cincinnati. Olson said his players are “happy to be going to Salt Lake and not having to truck all the way across the country — the feeling being that it’ll be an easier place for our fans to get to.” ■ If UofA advances to Saturday’s second round, it would face the winner of seventh seed Virginia and 10th seed Brigham Young. Other first-round gam es in UofA’s bracket w ill pit No. 6 seed New M exico State against llth-seeded Creighton and No. 3 seed Seton Hall against 14th-seeded Pepperdine. “If you sw itched us into the bracket that V egas is in and vice-versa, I don’t think they got any breaks over what we Janisse _ _ _ _ _ C ontinued from page 15. “I saw him w restle for four years (in high school) and in the junior nationals,” Good said. “I w as looking forward to seeing him w restle four years at Arizona State. He w as an extrem ely talented kid.” With just four days before the ASU w restling team tr a v e ls to Iow a C ity , Iow a fo r th e NCAA Championship, the mood in the practice room was solem n. Team m ates of Janisse said he w as a confident person who gave no signs of being suicidal. “I think it w as an accident,” said graduate assistant coach Thom Ortiz. “He didn’t give any signs. He was very confident. We didn’t know this was going to happen.” Ortiz said m em bers of the team feel responsible in som e way to JaniSse’s death and that the team has put the incident into perspective. “W restling com es second to som ething like this,” he said. At practice, two Sun D evils who are preparing to com pete at the NCAAs went to the session in a state of confusion. “I’m guess I’m just really confused about why he would do that,” heavyw eight Mike Anderson said. “I cam e to practice and coach (Bobby Douglas) told me and I couldn’t believe it. On the outside he didn’t look like he was suicidal.” Shawn Charles, who com petes at the sam e weight division as Janisse, also spoke of Janisse’s positive attitude. “I can’t understand why he’d do that because he seem ed cheerful,” Charles said. “He w as really im proving.” Douglas w as in Iowa City Monday and could not be reached for com m ent. have,” Olson said. “The whole thing this year w as whether you would be in the sam e region as V egas.” With three wins each, UofA and UNLV would play each other in the West Region final, with the winner advancing to the Final Four . “I’m really not sure that the strength of schedule plays the important part that it’s supposed to b e,” Olson said, “because of the eligible team s, the top 15, our strength of schedule w as I think rated second to Kentucky and Kentucky Was not eligib le.” He said he thinks Ohio State’s seeding over Big Ten rival Indiana, the No. 2 seed in the Southeast, “w ill raise a lot of questions,” despite the Buckeyes’ two wins in gam es with Indiana. “But I think the com m ittee w ill have a lot of explaining to do as to how som eone could drop their last two and still be a No. 1 seed, because that’s part of the way they usually determ ine these kinds of things ” He also said Ohio State’s nonconference schedule — which included Bethune-Cookman, Chicago State and Wright State — m ight cause everyone to take a look “at how you go about scheduling your nonconference opponents. “Whether you should go to LSU and play Duke or play Villanova or som e of the other really tough schedules, because I’m not sure that that really had a whole lot to do with where people w ere placed when it got down to it.” UofA lost at Louisiana State, beat Duke at home in a double overtim e, defeated Villanova on the road, Arkansas on a neutral court and UCLA at home and away. “R’d be nice if the NCAA would m ake public what are the actual policies, how are they w eighted,” Olson said, “because I think there w ill be a lot of questions about that particular thing.” Olson said he thought the other three Pac-10 team s that made the tournament also w ere seeded correctly : Arizona State a s No. 8 and Southern Cal in the Southeast Region and UCLA a s No. 4 in the E ast. ASSOCIATED PRESS CO LLEG EB ASK ETB ALL POLL The top 25 in the final Associated P re ss college basketball poll, with first-place votes In parentheses, records through March 10, total points based on 25 points for a first place vote through one points for a 2Sth-piace vote and last week’s ranking: PREV PTS. RECORD 1 1,600 3 0 -0 1, U N LV (64) 5 31- 3 1.490 2. Arkansas 3 1,446 27- 4 3. Indiana 7 1.398 2 5 -5 4. North Carolina 2 1,360 2 5 -3 5. O hio State 6 1,234 2 6 -7 6. Duke 4 1.232 26- 5 7. Syracuse 9 1,203 2 6 -6 8. UofA 10 952 22- 6 9. Kentucky 8 923 2 8 -3 10. Utah 13 878 2 6 -7 11. Nebraska 12 796 12. Kansas 2 2 -7 21 785 22- 8 13. Seton Hall 14 691 22- 7 14. Oklahoma State 11 687 23- 5 15. New M exico State 17 2 3 -8 609 16. U C L A 15 589 2 8 -4 17, E. Tennessee State 19 517 . 2 4 -2 18. Princeton 24 489 2 1 -9 19. Alabam a 20 364 208 20. St. Jo h n 's 18 319 20- 8 21. M ississippi State 16 290 2T 9 22 LSU 23 234 2 2 -8 23. Texas 25 164 20- 8 24. OePaul 22 154 2 1 -7 25. Southern M ississippi Others receiving votes: Missouri 136, North Carolina State 42, Wake Forest 29, Iowa 27, Florida State 22, Georgetown 21, Brigham Young 20, Virginia 17, Connecticut 16, Michigan State 16, Pittsburgh 13, Illinois 10, Eastern Michigan 9, Creighton 7, New Orleans 6, St. Peter’s 5, Pepperdine 3, A S U S , Lousiana Tech 2, Northern Illinois 2, New M exico 2, Oklahoma 2, Georgia Tech 1, Houston 1, South Alabam a 1, St. Francis, Pa. 1, Tem ple 1, Wisconsin-Green Bay 1, Xavier, O hio 1. AIR TIMES Cable 32 Cable 35 Tuesday, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, 5:30 p.m. See TV Times weekly listings State P ress Classified Advertising W e work to help you find work. We G ive You Honest, Expert Service W h y P a y M o re ? BARGAIN B R A K ES AND M UFFLERS BR AK E SERVICE, Mon-Fri 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat 8 a.m.-3 p.m. u M esa, 2033 W. University Expi.es 464-2362 3-30 -9 ^ J CROSSWORD A P A C by TH O M AS JO S EP H ACR O SS 1 Cowardly Lion portrayer 5Givesout hands 10 In the vicinity 12 Hybrid primrose 13Cher’s ‘Moon struckfiance 15 Riviera season 16 Dull routine 1 7 “How was — know?” 18 Tyrant 20 Quick look 21 Pool participant 22 Gambling numbers 23 Story telling Uncle 25 Pod contents 28 Actor’s comment 31 Pot contribu tion 32 Japanese mat 34 Wedding promise 35 Pan handle 36 Craggy hiU 3 7 He was Louie De Palma, in Taxi40 Worrier’s worry 41 Craps natural 42 Beseech 43 Hardy heroine DOWN 1 Put on cargo 2 Lets up 3 “No kidding” 4 Baseball score 5 ‘ Let’s — ‘ 6 British river 7 Joined forces 8 Sang melodically 9 Ghosts -5 1Ö id 1 E N C O 0 S 9 E ■ I R ■ " -■ 51 ■ a • 54 57 E A T H A N D S S S A H E AT N1 L 1 c Z o E D E L T A N T J O Y S B U N O E N G R 1N K ■ E C 1 E A i N T■ M om M A T E U R E R 1 V E D L A R U E E V 1 L T 1 M E L Y D E E D S S Yesterday's Answer 19 27 O N C E D 11 Power of film 14 Like some assembly lines 19 Intrinsi cally 20 State 24 Employ ments 25 Settled accounts 26 Be-alTs partner ■ iè ■ p i ,. E L A N D S C E T 1 E R 5 15 C o L o N 27 Immediately 29 Grammar case 30 Hams it up 33 Some golf chibs 35 Polar explorer Richard 38 Teacher’s org. 39 Dog’s doc 6 r 7 ó 5 ■12 J ■i f •i i 42 ; ■M g; ■ 1 9 9 14 ■ i 39 41.;, 40 1 a m DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work i t 3/12 AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W j n e letter stands for another. In th is sam ple A is used ror th e three L's, for th e tw o O 's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation o f th e w ords are all h in ts. Each day th e cod e letters are different. X 3 -1 2 CRYPTOQUOTE N U H X E QG I D K K H E W I D K K H EW D U X T N P X E KT G P F M DE Q F M G X K Q T Z . — N U X E IA OUTLXUF Y esterd ay's C ryp toq U ote: LEARNING WITHOUT THOUGHT IS LABOR LOST; THOUGHT WITHOUT LEARNING IS PERILOUS.— CONFUCIUS 0 1 M 1 tiy King Features Syndicate, Inc. Stott Press _TwBd«^^ardl1SL1991 Office pools beginning to kick in Classifieds J i m L it k e A ssociated Press Sports A m erica's largest annual crim e spree went off without a hitch Monday morning. P olice adm it they have no suspects and as yet, no victim s. Along Madison Avenue in New York, down the corridors of power in Washington, on the floors of com m erce in Chicago and throughout plush law -office suites in Los A ngeles, the lawbreakers congregate around fax and copying m achines that are beeping, clicking and whirring at a frenetic pace. The center of attention in these respective centers of advertising, politics, money and justice w as a newspaper page listing the 64 invitees to college basketball’s postseason gala and the paths they m ust travel to the promised land of Indianapolis — a.k.a. the NCAA Tournament office pool. “It’s one of those damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t things,” said an investigator with the Chicago Police Departm ent’s gam bling unit who, like everybody else contacted for this story, spoke on the condition of anonymity. “I could fill th is place up in 45 m inutes if w e wanted to — law yers, secretaries, (com m odity) traders, factory workers, restaurant owners, m aybe even a judge or t w o . . . you name it. “But w e’re supposed to be concentrating our efforts on organized crim e,” he said. “With all the technology today, som e of them m ight com e under the heading of organized. But they’d just about have to be running a pool in the hallway here before w e’d do anything about it.” If this investigator can be believed, law-enforcement officers m ight be the only working m en and women in the nation who are not taking part in a pool of one kind or another; Sportscaster Dick Vitale, who lives in Bradneton, F la ., tries to catch a spring training gam e, but the talk of spring training these days is basketball, not baseball. P irates M anager Jim Leyland “jumps on m e, telling me, ‘Wait ’til you see Coastal Carolina.’ That’s all these guys w aiit to talk about, the tournament. Sparky Anderson is a fanatic.” No wonder earned-run averages are up and productivity in the offices is down. Once nothing more than m odest enterprises undertaken to fill dead tim e at the w ater cooler, som e of the pools have grown in term s of purses, participation and prestige to the point where work is a secondary concern for the entire three w eeks the tournament takes place. The attractions of the pools are m any. Most are cheap to enter and m any are weighted so that the edge afforded by preparation and knowledge are m ore than offset by the vagaries that produce a single champion from a 64-team field. Like handicapping a horse race after a heavy rain, picking colors or nam es on the spur of the moment yields as m any winners as a bleary-eyed afternoon spent locked up with H ie R acing Form. “You’d think d ie m arkets give people enough to gam ble on, but it’s nuts over here already,” a trader with one of the Chicago Board of Trade’s old-line com m odity brokerage houses said Monday morning. “You’ve got everything going from the $1 (pool) where the secretaries go ‘Hmmmm’ and take one team or nix another because they dated a guy who went to school there. . . t o the $100 gam e, where, the so-called experts get killed in the first round, buy their way back in next round, and the payout hits 10 grand ea sy .” Incredibly enough, money isn’t alw ays the object. The value of som e pools are m easured by who’s in and who’s not. “There are five or six going around, but for the big one, they only allow one entry for every school,” an attorney in the Chicago office of a prominent national law firm said. “Which m eans right about now, there are junior partners all over the country checking with their secretary to see if they are one of the chosen 64.” One of the m ost prestigious pools in the country, based in media-mad New York, takes the opposite tack. There, industry heavyw eights, like network anchors, gladly plunk down a $5 entry fee to com pete against the newspaper intern who got stuck on the obit desk late at night. First-place winnings are nothing to sneeze at — la st year’s payout w as $2,300 — but what is prized m ore, perhaps, is the informal title bestowed on the winner as “Most Astute Member of the Entire Communications Industry,” or som esuch. As it turns out, the really, really astute people — at least one hopes this can be said of the the people who run the country — won’t even get a chance to prove their prow ess this year. It seem s that m em bers of the W ashington law firm that usually put out the paperwork for the m ost popular pool on Capitol Hill are on vacation. You can charge your classified ad over the phone! S T A T E P R E S S C LA S S IFIE D S 965-6731 LOOKING FOR SOMETHING TO DO FOR SPRING BREAK? W hy not spend it learning skills that can make you money! $50 Gift Certificate From C h ili’s to use anytime. 968-7657 1523 E. Apache A D VERTISER S! R E A C H *5,000 readers daily in the State Press! $199 MOVE-IN Special! 2 bedroom, unfurnished. Washer/dryer hook-up, pool, covered parking, cam pus area. Clean, quiet. 966-2485. MIUTARIA A N D Q un Collector Show, M arch 23 and 24, K F C HaH, 644 East Chandler Boulevard, Chandler. Saturday 8-5, Sunday 9-4. Information, 844-8737. (Proceeds go to Chandler’s Retarded Children’s Home) OUT WITH L'IMAGE & IN WITH .MTM. Model and Talent Management i n t r o d u c i n g all n e w o w n e rs h ip , m a n a g e m e n t and a gen cy faces. Call to d a y f o r m odels and talent. (602)941-4838 ST U D E N T PUBLICATIONS: State Press. Sun Devil Spark Yearbook, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Student Handbook. Matth ews Center basement, 965-7572. U N D E R G R A D U AT E L A W Club— meets Wednesday, M arch 13 in Room 116 of the Law School. Note: time change 5-6pm. Everyone welcome. Lovely, comfortable, spacious 2 bed, 2 bath apts. Close to ASU. Available now. 330 S, Beck, Tempe. Call or see Cody ___ _ 894*6468 2 B L O C K S from A SU . O ne bedroom, pool, laundry, covered parking. $350; move-in special. 1700 South College, University Apartments, 967-7212, A V AILAB LE IM M EDIATELY. 2 bedroom. 2 bath. $510 plus S R P . Washer/dryer hook up, dishwasher, pool, sauna, Jacuzzi. Near ASU. 967-4072. B E A U T IF U L N E W la rg e 1 a n d 2 bedrooms. W alk to ASU . Pool, laundry room, 1 block south of University on 8th Street. Cape C o d Ap artments, 968-5238. G IR L N E E D E D to take over my lease at The Comm ons on Apaohe. Reduced rate. CaH Torey, 829-0933. NEWLY REMODELED 1 bedroom 2 blocks from ASU 1700 S. College, Tempe 9 6 7 -7 2 1 2 Pass it on. H elp us begin a successful recycling program on campus by putting the State Press back in its original rack or kiosk when you’ve finished reading it. This wilt allow another person to read it and/or be easily picked up for recycling. at the comer of Mill and University in the Tempe Center We Feature: with Computerized collating. Recycle. It works. •XEROX 1038 s •XEROX 2510 copies up to 36” wide any length. (If you work it.) • Varitronics Poster Printer P lu s enlarges from 8 1/2" x 11" to 24" x 36" in Just seconds. Y O U S A Y it, we display it! O nly in the State Press Classifieds! 1 block o ff campus 1 b e d :$ 3 s s 2 bed: $525 Also, 3 bed available $160 deposit call Today! Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache 1 block east o f Rural ANNOUNCEMENTS LINER AD RATES: 15 w ords or loss: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10+days 150 each additional word. The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Open Monday thru Friday 7am to 9pm Saturday and Sunday 10am to 5pm S ell S ervici " Copies ft I 91 No Limit. I Good until 4-15-91 STUDIO A P A R T M E N T for rent. Spacious Scottsdale guest house available now. 10 minutes from cam pus. Fresh paint, new carpet. $250/month includes utilities. 946-3547, Shirley. STATE PRESS Classifieds • Wide variety o f paper more than 70 colors and sizes to choose from. 12 O N E B E D R O O M apartments, half off first month! W alk to school. Washer/dryer. Call today, Butterfield Park, 1215 South Dorsey, 966-6755. thank you. •X ER O X 9500 ■ on 8*4" x 11" white bond |N o l valid with any other offer. 2 B L O C K S from A S U . One bedroom, pool, laundry, dishw asher. $330; move-in special. 1014 E ast Spence, Sunrise Apart ments, 968-6947. Ask for specials for ASU students. the alternative copy shop I Ë t the eltemalive copy shop 2 A N D 3 bedroom apartments from $395, V i month free. Covered parking, gas barbeque, pool, private patios. Casa Grande Apartments, 1655 East Don Carlos, Tem ps. 968-6926. W estridge Apts. (please) .i 3W 1 A N D 2 bedrooms- Student Special. $150 total rent. Believe it! Fireproof, sound proof, pool, very near A S U , quiet. Th is is for real! 967-4568, Don. John Casablancas VISA' S T A T E P R E S S C LA S S IF IE D S F in a n cin g A va ila b le AMERICAN BARTENDERS SCHOOL APARTMENTS Pool, free cable TV, covered parking, laundry facilities. with R eduction/ Enlargement capabilities (64% to 156% in 1% increm ents). Sign up for our one week course & w e’ll give you a F R E E ANNOUNCEMENTS I Personals (15 words or less) are only $1.751 * Personal ads must bo placed at the Classifieds O ffice In Matthews Cantor basem ent, and must show student ID to place personal. * Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 time: $7.85 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. inch 6 times: $6.50 per col. inch Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10am). C A L L NOW 965-6731 Slate P ie » T ü«da£^w çM £J991 Page 22 APARTMENTS ■ ■■■"V" ..... :.. •— S u p er Q uiet Move-In Special Faculty/Staff/Graduate Students TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE 2 BEDRO O M /2 bath spacious condo. Patio, washer/dryer, pool, quiet, near A S U , 5 1 0 W e st U n iv e rsity . From $52S/month. 96B0962. 2 BE D R O O M 2 bath condo. Walk to A SU. Fireplace, appliances. By owner, $49,900. 991-6992. A S U R E A L Estate Specialist! Looking for a house/condo/townhouse? Call us first. Currently it’s possible to own your Own for less than rent. A sk about the Papago I and II condos available for $100 down. Gregory Abbott, 966-3577, Austin Realty. 2 B ED RO O M , 2 bath condo. Living room, kitchen, nook, patio, balcony, 2-story, fireplace, 2-car parking. $525 per month. (619)282-8641. Lovely 2 bedroom apartments. All amenities. Plus beautiful pool and covered parking. 32ND S T R E E T and Cam elback area, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 2-car carport, communi ty pool. Near Safeway. $650 unfurnished, $800 furnished. Alice, Jacobson Realty, 949-5281 Hidden Glenn 818 W. 3rd St., Tempo (Hardy & 2nd Street) O N L Y $38,900 for 2 bedroom. 2 bath Springtree condo. Save over $30,000 with only $100 down! G reg Askins, Realty Executives, 966-0016. PRICE/SO UTH ER N. 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. Fireplace, security system, spa, pool. Available 4/1. 831-5628. 968-8183 Now That You’ve Made H Papago Park Village 3 bd former model. It's beautiful! $92,000. RENTAL SHARING E N J O Y T H E QUIET! 1/2 B l o c k F r o m C a m p u s Bob Bullock Realty Executives 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. B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m . 1 bat h; 2 b e d ro o m . 2 b a t h a p a r t m e n t s A ll b ills p a id C a b l e TV. h e a te d p o o l, and s p a c i o u s l a u n d r y fa c il i t i e s . Friendly, courteous m anagem ent Stop by to d a y ! F E M A L E W AN TED to share 2 bedroom/2 bath patio home with garage. $250, Vi utilities. C lose to ASU . Debbi, 946-0368. ROOMS FOR RENT Terrace Road Apartments 950 S. Terrace 966-8540 C L E A N H O U S E, mile/ASU. Needs clean, nonsmoking, serious student. $225/Vj utilities. 968-0253. Available 3/21. E M P L O Y E R S — LO OKIN G for help? P lace a State Press Help Wanted ad. We have three Help Wanted sections— General, Clerical and Food Service— to help you keep your business growing! R O C K Y POINT— Spring Break 8 bedroom house available for responsible girls. Showers, air conditioning. Call 678-1391'. JEW ELRY TRAVEL A L W A Y S BU YIN G Jewelry of all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South Mill Avenue, Tem ps Center, 968-6074. A M E R IC A W EST/AM ERIG A West. 30% off anywhere they fly. Cali 220-9559. C A S H F O R gold, diamonds. M ill Avenue Jewelers, 414 South Mill, Suite 101, Temps. 968-5967. S E N D Y O U R significant other a personal today! Come down to Matthews Center basement. CLOTHING B U SIN ES S SUITS— 8 famous maker 40R. Cost $350 each, now $60 each. 391-3308. S T AT E P R E S S Production Department p ro vid e s typesetting, p aste-up and process camera services. Call Donna at 965-7572 for rates and information. FURNITURE KING-SIZE W A T E R B E D with heater and liner. $125 or best offer. Must sell. Trary, 838-3492, ST U D E N T PUBLICATIONS: State Press, Sun Devil Spark Yearbook, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Student Handbook. Matth ews Center basement, 965-7572. L A R G E M A ST E R bedroom suite with private bath (big enough for two). Huge house has washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, color TV, fruit trees and more— $279/morith with free utilities. Al— 829-7166. RO O M F O R rent in 2 bedroom, 2 bath, partially furnished condo. Available imme diately! $210 month plus half utilities ($200 deposit). Worthington Place. C a ll Dennis, 921-3995. ANNOUNCEMENTS COMPUTERS C O M P L E T E V G A system s with hard drive, software, mouse, and warranty. 286/12: $999, 386SX: $1,199, 386/25: $1,399. 962-1509. M ACINTO SH PLU S: 1 megabyte RAM , 2 8 0 0 K d is k d riv e s , c a r r y in g c a s e . $700/offer. Call 941-5195. TICKETS INXS, STING, Scorpions, David Copperfield, Nelson, Frank Sinatra, Neil Young, Grand Hotel, Les Miserables. Call Ticket Exchange, 829-0196. ANNOUNCEMENTS MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE B U Y IT, sell it, find it, tell it in the State Press Classifieds. M IN O L T A E L E C T R O N I C typewriter, EW 501. Excellent, never used. With memory. Options, original $995. Best over $350 takes. 993-3102, message. 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! S M O K E D G L A S S moonroof for ‘ 81-'85 M azda RX-7, includes carrying case, like new. $120. 829-9281, Dan. AUTOMOBILES 1967 C H E V R O L E T Camaro, factory air conditioning, automatic, protecto-plate, been in family since new. 73,000 original miles. New tires, radiator, brakes! Runs great! Must sell to pay for school. M y loss, your gain. $3,000. Ca ll John at 965-6555 (work) or 784-8939 (home). 1983 D O D G E 600: Automatic, air, AM/FM. 83,000 m iles. G o o d transportation. $1,200/offer. Call 784-0928 1984 PO N TIAC TransAm. 71,000 miles, cruise control, power, tinted windows, new Sapphire Blue paint job, power steering. $3,000. Will, 731-9848. WHEEL DEAL \MUAB> r1991-92\ ' SELECTIONS 1 We are looking fora group of people1 to help make ASU a /special place. We are the\ Memorial Union Activities /Board and you could be one\ /of those people. The following \ positions are available: PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT COMEDY CHAIR ENTERTAINMENT CHAIR HOST AND HOSTESS CHAIR MARKETING CHAIR CULTURE AND ARTS CHAIR GALLERY CHAIR FILM CHAIR SPECIAL EVENTS CHAIR These positions are for the 1991-92 academ ic year. /Applications are available at the Memorial Union Activities\ 3oard office, third floor of the Memorial Union. Applications \ due by 4:00pm March 2 9,1991. Sell your car In the state Press Classifieds! you can even charge your ad with visa, Mastercard or American Express! Let State Press Classi fieds work fo r you! 1985 300ZX. Loaded, turbo features red, leather, t-tops, digial— dash, bra, hot car. $6,995. Brian, 897-7876 or 756-2965. 1985 NISSAN 200SX— This sporty coupe is loaded with power everything! Power locks, windows, sunroof. Great stereol Automatic. 60,000 miles. Need to sell immediately! It Blue Books for $6,500. You can have it for $4,800 firm. Call today. Leave message, 834-1481. 1989 JE TTA , white. Power steering, auto matic, 16,000 miles, air conditioning. Avoid sales tax. Call Kevin now! 821-6838. MOTORCYCLES 1987 HO N D A Elite 80 scooter. Needs little w ork, lo o ks good. $600/offer. C a ll 820-6036. 1967 HO N D A 150 Elite scooter. Rune great, looks great. $1,100. Rob, 962-5175. N E E D A back issue of the State Press? Com e down to the basement of Matthews Center. If we have what you need, it’s yours! M otorcycle Accessories with Student Discounts FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 965-MUAB Scootei Street — Dirt MokNcydeExpress Dobson 4 Main 968-0751 ALL ASU STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY! MUAB MUAB MUAB MUABMUAB MUAB MUAB MUAB MUABMUAB MUAB MUAB MUAB A M ED IC A L office in Scottsdale needs part-time/full-time help. Must have good clerical and typing skills. W ill train for medical. 941-3812. A M E R IC A W EST, round-trip. Phoenix to Hawaii. Leave 3/17, return 3/21. $250. 968-5092. A PAFtT-TIME job with full-time pay for go-getters. O ffice work as manufacturers rep. Mike. 968-2141. HAWAII! I have a ticket to Hawaii I will sell for $300. Has to be used over Spring Break. Call 894-0333. A T P E P S I’S request, Apple O ne is currently recruiting merchandisers. Appli cations are being accepted at 20 East University, suite 101 (University/MHI), M on d ay-T h ursd ay, 8:30-10:30am or 1-3pm. 829-3782. (Please, no calls to Pepsi Cola). O P E N ROUND-TRIP airline ticket. Any Midway Airline’s destination in continental U.S. Good until 12/26/91. Male only! $400/offer. Jeff, 949-1721. ROUND-TRIP, D ELT A ticket to Orlando, M arch 18 to M arch 23. Discounted to $350.955-5548. RO UN DTRIP TICKET, Phoenix to Port land. Departing 3/16, returning 3/24. $168/offer. 786-8037. S A N DIEGO! Spring Break. Round-trip, 3/15-3/24. Southwest. Female. $60 or best. 784-6079. S P R IN G BREAK! Am erica West $100 gift certificates for $70. Hurry while supplies last. Gordon, 831-2666. S P R IN G B R E A K in Mazatlan. Beach front condo, sleeps eight. Close to clubs. Available 3/16-3/24. O nly $75Q/offer. Call 838-3492. S P R IN G BREAK: Round-trip to Aspen via Denver. Leaving 3/18, returning 3/25. $189/offer. 968-6597, Nancy. S P R IN G BR E AK- rqundtrip to Los Angeles March 18-22. 780-1494. T R A V E L C H E A P 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. N E E D RIDE to Telluride, Colorado, or near- Spring Break. W ill drive arid pay half gas. Brett, 784-0060. C O R K ‘N Cleaver accepting applications for lunch waitress, lunch hostess. Will train. Concern with appearance, reliability and personality are important. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 2-5pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street (44th and Camelback). 952-0585. C R U IS E LINE positions. Land-side and on-board entry-level positions available. Seasonal/perm anent. Travel benefits. (303)440-6933, ext; 7. D RIVER N E E D E D to pick up and take student to after school activities, 3-5 d a y s/w e e k . $ 5 .5 0 /h o u r, p lu s g a s. 956-6222. E M P L O Y E R S — LO OKING for help? P lace a State Press Help Wanted ad. We have three Help Wanted sections— General, Clerical arid Food Service— to help you keep your business growing! F E M A L E LIVE-IN companion for lovely 80 year lady. Non-smoker, own transporta tion. Ahwatukee area. Salary/hours very negotiable. Little care needed, mostly c o m p a n y at n ig h t . L y n d a , 921-7077/966-0795. FL U E N T FR E N C H and English speaking tour guides needed for the Eastern and W e ste rn U nited States. P ay sc a le depends on experience. Please submit resume to ICB, Inc. 1702 East Highland Avenue, suite 310, Phoenix, Arizona 85016. ffie cpg»rk Ifeaxbool ORDER YOURS TODAY 965-6881 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES G U A R A N T E E D N O -R U N pantyhose. Ground-level, mulfMevel marketing. Huge m a rk e t. C a ll 8-5 , M o n d a y -F rid a y , 277-8856. LAD IES T O Hold parties for an excellent skin-care product— develop clientele. Sm all irivestment. 439-4753. OFFICER HELP W ANTED— GENERAL A M E R IC A W E S T $100 certificates— $70/offer! Good for round-trip continental United States through 12/8/911 829-3874. L E T S T AT E Press Classifieds work for you! Ca ll 965-6731 for information. 998-2092 FU R N ISH ED RO O M , 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. HOMES FOR RENT ANNOUNCEMENTS TOWNHOME5/ CONDOS FOR RENT T H O M A S N E L S O N Com pany interviewing now for selective summer internship. Highest paid interns in country, travel, gain college credit and resume experi e n c e . 3.0 or above, active and positive: Call 894-5283, M ichael U N IQ U E G A M E /P O O L room -; Heart of A S U at University/Rural. $3,500 required. 955-4956. HELP W ANTED— GENERAL 3/4 or 1-ton late 80’s or newer pick-up with 2-men teams equals to $150 per day and more. Weekends, mornings, afternoons. You are athletic, sharp, and understand quality custom er service. Send name, contact phone* year, model of truck, day8/timee available to “ Crew” , Box 23774, Tempe 85285-3774. AD VERTISER S! R E A C H 45,000 readers daily in the State Press! . AIRLIN ES HIRING. Seeking students and grads to fill many positions. Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. Phone (303)441-2455. A L A S K A ’S E C O N O M Y is expanding! Annual empolyment report detailing all employment areas w ith facts on finding employment and living in Alaska, plus numerous resume addresses. Send selfaddressed, stamped envelope for more information: T R Alaska, Box 338390, Juneau, Alaska 99803. LIVE-IN C A R E T e ch n ician , Sunday through Thursday— 4pm-9pm, MondayFriday, 6am-9am, sleep over. $5.55/hour plus benefits plus meals. Minimum age 21, clean driving record. Part-time Van Driver, s p lit sh ift: .M o n d a y-F rid a y , 2-4pm, 6am-8:45am. Minimum 21, clean. $5/hour. Apply at TCH , 2720 South Hardy, no. 2, Tempo. EOE. M ARKETING M AJO R S: Gain valuable and practical experience at a leading in d u stria l dia m o nd tool distributor. Become a National Account Representa tive for Am erican Tool and Supply Inc., and have flexible hours, paid training, high com missions and great benefits. N o experience preferred. For interview,r call 350-2260 and ask for ext. 33. M A R K E T R E S E A R C H Phone Interview ers. Absolutely no sales. Evenings/ w e e k e n d s. T e m p s . $ 4 .4 0 -$ 5 /h o u r. 967-4441, Susan. MIDNIGHT SU N ! Summer employment —Alaska— Women/Men* to $600/week. Airfare plus room/board provided. Hiring through April. Ca ll now! 1(900)988-5152« e xt; 170 ($ 3 /m in u te — 4 m in u te s maximum). N E W E N G LA N D Brother/Sister Camps— Massachusetts. Mah-Kee-Nac for boys/ Danbee for girls. Counselor positions for Program Specialists: A ll team sports, especially baseball, basketball, field hock ey, softball, soccer arid 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 cam p craff; a ll waterfront activities (swimming, sk iin g , sa ilin g , w indsurfing, canoe/ kayaking). Inquire: Mah-Kee-Nac (boys), 190 Linden Avenue, Gieri Ridge, New J e rs e y 07028. C a ll 1(800)753-9118. Danbee (girls), 16 Horse neck Road, Mont.v i l l a , N e w J e r s e y 0 7 0 4 5 . C a ll 1(800)776-0520. O R D E R C L E R K S ! 12 persons needed for our inside sales order department. Aver age $7-11/hour base. Bonus plus rapid advancement. C a ll Matt, 966-7262. PART-TIM E P H O N E sales: O ur customers call us! Paid training for bright, pleasant voiced men and women who like people. W e are the best because o f our people. Year-round position. Resum es with availa bility to “ sales". Box 23774, Temps 85285-3774. State Press H ELP W ANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL P LA N N IN G INTER N— Temporary, parttime, not to exceed 12 months. Requires current enrollment in City Planning (or closely related fièld) baccalaureate or m asters program. Proficiency in 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! 786-2290 T V. PRO GRAM M ING /M ARKETIN G trai nee, week of Spring Break, part-time. Numbers-oriented individual, Macintosh experience. 894-6768. SERVICE STATION Reps. $6-$8/hour. Hiring immediately for Tempe area. Full or part-time. Perfect for students. Call 921-1103 S T U D E N T S — LO O KIN G for work? Check the State Press Help Wanted sections daily! S U M M E R JO B S ! Cam p 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, p ho tog ra ph y, w oodw orking, e n g lish 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 cam p salary, travel allow ance, room and board. Interviews oh cam pus. For mòre information, applica tion, appointment, call Cam p Sequoia, 914-679-5291 or Write to Sequoia, Box 1045, Woodstock, New York 12498. S U M M E R J O B S available near Glacier National park. The Park Cafe and Grocery in St. Mary, Montana, east entrance to Glacier, has positions open in the cafe, gift and grocery store, and gas stations. Call kathryn, 406-587*1816 for information and applications. P ut AT&T on y our resum e before you g ra d u a te W A ITERS/W A ITRESSES N E E D E D for immediate part-time employment. Apply in person, Tuesday-Saturday at Chopandaz, corner of Scottsdale Road and McKellips. W A N T E D : 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. Y O U R CA REER... 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. HELP W ANTED— CLERICAL E M P L O Y E R S — 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! PHO EN IX C O M PA N Y needs part-time person for customer service/order taking. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday; will be full-time June and July only. 8am to 5pm, $5.50/hour. Call for an appointment: ADIA Personnel, 831-1131. FO U N D 2/20: Young female cat, spayed, declawed, yellow eyes. Near Broadway/ Mill. Call 966-2928 to identify. SC O TT SD A LE C O U P LE , physician and nurse, want to provide a loving home for your white newborn. Call Jim or Susan at 483-6946 or 222-6436 (office). FOUND: RING Must identify. Call Cecilia. 833-5662. LET ST AT E Press Classifieds work for you! Call 965-6731 for information. LOST: A L P H A G R A P H IC S card holder, brown. Lost in math department. Driver’s license, insurance card, bank cards, etc. in holder. 947-5654, leave message. Reward! PERSONALS A L P H A G A M S Karl and Jocko— .I'm having the biggest craving for wheat thins! Got any? Love Alpha Gam Heidi. BETAS- TA K E it to the Ice with Roadruriners Hockey. Whether or not you plan to rush this fall, join us Thursday, 3/14. For more information call Rob, 921-4329. B L A C K JA C K P LA Y E R S : Tony Korfman. brownies, hashbrowns, Bacardi surprises, room 4812, car keys. Thanks! Koc(ethics). CHI O M E G A ‘90 pledge class: The drug awareness booth w as great— You guys áre excellent! Love, your sisters. C U T E 20-YEÁR-OLD looking for male companion to fill lonely nights. Send response to Cholla Box 62, CO CKTA IL W AITR ESS— Jockey p u b Night Club/Re$taurant, 52 East Camelback (Central and Camelback, Phoenix). Part-time evenings, includes weekends. Experience required, must be at least 19 years old. Call Bobby for appointment: 279-7777. G Ë T P E R S O N A L — 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! RESTAURANTS/ BARS | I I I [ | Get Vmmtl N O O N IS the deadline to get classified liner ads in the following day. Don’t m iss ttl Matthews Center basement, 965-6731. P IK E S T H AN K you so much for letting us use your house while we were painting the row. Also, we had a terrific time on Saturday. Love A-Phi. SIG KA P K ER R Y : Thanx for an awesome time Saturday! You were the bestest date! Love, Mark. S IG M A P I'S- Congratulations on a successful "B ounce for Beats” . We enjoyed, helping out! Love, the Delta Gam m a’s. AT&T ASSISTANT STUDENT | CAMPUS MANAGER To manage a group of students on a daily I basis and assist with overall event imple mentation. Saies/leadership experience | a plus. T H AN K Y O U for answering my prayers Saint Jude, L,C. and L .C TKE PLEDGES We had a great time Saturday night at Sunny’s. Thanks! The TriSigm a Pledges. A T A T STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE/ CAM PUS GROUP To act as our on-campus representatives. | Must be outgoing and sales-oriented. T O KRIS Tag- the Dee G e e ’s want you to know how much we appreciate you! Love, the girts on the floor. To find out more about these great op portunities, call 1-800-592-2121 or send | resum e to: GDI, AT&T Recruitm enL 500 Walnut St, 19th fl., Philadelphia, P A 19102. Equal Oppty. Employer. T O TH E ladies of Delta Gamma, we had a blast Saturday night, even though we were running a little late. Let’s rally again soon. Love the gentlemen of SA E. P.S. I hear Leslie is expecting. S U M M E R RECREATIO N Leaders, parttime. Pool Manager: $8.25/hour; Assistant Pool Manager- $7.44/hour; Lifeguard II$6.41/hour; Lifeguard I- $5.52/hour. Requires current certification in Lifeguard Training, Water Safety Instructor, CPR, and First Aid; 25-40 hours/week; must be able to work Memorial Day through Labor Day. Apply to: City of Tempe Community Services Department Parks, Recreation and Cultural Division, 3500 South Rural Road, Tempe, Arizona. 350-5200. TH AN K H EA V EN for little ones. Wanted: a very special baby for a child-adoring hom e. in Southern California. Ultimate outcome: devotion, security and unlimited love. Please call Ginny’s attorney, collect: (213)854-4444. SERVICES SK YD IV E T O D A Y at Skydiving Adven tures. Student discounts, trainihg by skydiving champions. 1(800)441-5867, (602)723-9595. YO U S A Y it, we display it! Only in the State Press Classifieds! Ginnie Monroe, ACSW 8 9 7 -0 4 4 4 LONELINESS AND RELATIONAL SKILLS GROUPS Are you feeling alone and isolated from others? This six-week»: free group for students will provide „you with skills for understanding yourself and others and help ypn form better relationships. Call: Ben McWhirter, M.C. 829-6728 If necessary, please leave a message. Times and locations of group: to be announced. These groups are p a rt o f a research study. FAST REFUNDS E le c tro n ic FEDERAL INCOME TAX F ilin g Y ou no longer have to wait 6 to 8 weeks for your refund. We will be offering this service commencing January 1,1991. E X P A N D H O R IZ O N S . sounds. Call 945-9962. New m usical TW O W E E K old Roland keyboard- amp ho o k u p , p e d a l, d u a l h e a d p h o n e s. $550/best offer. Jennifer, 784-0810. 820-9927 D E A R BIRTHMOTHER: Let’s help each other. Warm, loving family eagerly awaits your newborn. Secure future With a ll the opportunities you’d hope for. Expenses paid. Legal/corifidential. Ca ll collect, (212)249-5840; SERVICES RD Automotive Inc. D ATSUN • TO Y O TA PETS BA R N E Y , 4 month old Cocker Spaniel n e e d s home. $125. C a ll K rista at 7314409. DALM ATIAN A K C pups. Hearing tested. Parents O FA clear. $350 each. 921-9268, message. F R E E P U P P Y , Black Pointer, female. Cute and very friendly. Cali 894-5210. WW go to pound if not taken. ST AT E P R E S S Production Department p ro vid e s typesetting, paste-up and process cam era services. Call Donna at 965-7572 for rates and information. T E R M P A P E R S and reports typed. Discounts on 50 or more pages. Reason able rates. C a ll 998-4424. A C C U R A T E R E S U M E S composed, typed ($25); guaranteed. Ca ll Carol, 839-6083, evenings and weekends, also. Dobson Ranch. W O RD P R O C E SSIN G , 20 years’ experi ence. Grammar repairs, marketing, legal briefs, nursing, theses. Janet, 834-0893. AP A /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D processing. Need ft fast? 945-5744 INSTRUCTION typing/word Call Jessie, A S U A R E A typing, word processing, edit ing and transcription. Call anytime for fast service, 966-2186. TENN IS A N Y 1? Improve your tennis skills with lessons!! Everyone welcome! Todd or Tom, 968-4005. TU TO R S ADVERTISERS! REACH 45.000 READERS DAILY IN THE STATE PRESS! C O N V EN IEN T TYPING! 3 blocks to ASU. WordPerfect 5.1. Laser. Any size job. Diane, 966-5693. E D IT IN G /R E T Y P IN G , reorts, m anu scripts, large documents. W P 5.1/5.0 disks accepted. Experienced editor. Optimize Spring Break. 945-6793. FLYIN G FIN G E R S has Maclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. C all 945-1551 for details. F R E E L A N C E S E C R E T A R Y . Services, term papers, new sletters, resumes, graphics, laser printing, notary public. 1 d a y se rvice /7 d a ys w eek. Student discounts. Sheri Patrick, 961-1411, LE T T E R Q UALITY word processing for s your typing needs. APA/M LA, fast turnar ound. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825 N E E D TIME to study? W e do A PA/M LA formats. $1.50, double-spaced page. Call B o b b i, 9 6 8 - 9 1 6 6 or J o a n n e , 966-1516.(Please leave message). PH O EN IX M C S Y S T E M S , Inc. Typing/ Word Processing; $1.50 on disk, $2 laser output, rapid turn around; page layout available. Call 278-1230. ACCO U N T IN G , FIN AN CE , and Math professional instruction, study aides and examination strategies. State approved tutor. 9-212-211, Sun-Devil Tutoring, Gil. Y O U S A Y ft, we display ft! Only in the State Press Classifieds! MISCELLANEOUS TW O PAIR of EYEGLASSES and/or CONTACTS* nationwide M a n center Tempe 966-4991 Mesa 844-7096 ’ so m e re strictio n s apply Your Individual Horoscope : Frances Drake Creative Mailboxes Inc. 6340 S. Rural Rd., Ste. #111 Tempe, AZ 85283 A B A B Y 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. B A S S P L A Y E R needed for new, almost working band. 90% originals, alternative sound, need motivated, creative bass. 966-4871 A C C U R A T E , R E A SO N A B LE , fast turnar ound word processing with lazer printer, tra n scrip tio n . S tu d e n t/fa cu lty . M ill/ University. B29-8854. TY PIN G /W O R D PR O C E SSIN G Ask fo r D e ta ils A bout R e c e iv in g Y o u r M oney in a H u r r y A D O PT IO N MUSIC $1.50 P E R page. T e rm papers, letters, resumes, etc. At your service word processing. Linda, 839-6167. B U L IM IA Private, confidential counseling. Insurance accepted. There is a solutionl T O TH E men of Sigm a Alpha Epsilonthanks for the "elegant’’ wedding on Saturday night. We had a great time, and we hope the tradition continues! The ladies of Delta Gamma. T e l e m a r k e t e r /s e c r e t a r y , M UST have pleasant phone voice and good communication skills. $5/hour. Call Davy, 437-4773 TY PIN G /W O R D PR O C E SSIN G A S U W E S T is only one mile from Precision Typing and Word Processing. Call Mary at 978-8686 for student discount. A S U HO O PS: G ood luck in Atlanta this weekend! The men of Lambda Chi Alpha. D ELTA CHI and the rest of the houses that participated in Saturdays 8-way: We had a great time at the House Launching! Thanks, The Women of Chi Omega. T o be responsible for overall event I implementation, daily management and J training of student group. Requires strong I leadership ability. Prior management/1 sales-related experience a plus. M u st] be available to attend National Training | on AuQUSt 1-3,1991. TRIED T E L E P H O N E work before but didn’t like it? Give us a try! Telephone work without the pressure of sales. Work in a comfortable atmosphere gathering people's opinions from across the country. C lose to campus. Flexible evening and weekend hours. Train at $4.50/hour, earn up to $5.50/hour. W e provide complete training for individuals with good reading and speaking skills. Interested? Apply in person, 4-7pm, Tuesday-Friday, or by appointment. Higginbotham Associates, Inc. 1130 East University Drive, suite 103, Tempe, Arizona 85281 (602) 829-3282. A D O PT IO N HELP W ANTED— F O O D SERVICE A T& T STUDENT CAM PUS MANAGER TH E S T AT E Press is hiring advertising sales representataives to begin training now for next semester. If advertising/ marketing interestes you and you won’t be graduating untH after Spring 1992, please apply today. You must have a vehicle, too. Stop by the State P re ss information center in the north basement of Matthews Center between 8am and 5pm for an application. Return your application to the same place when you get back from Spring BreakQ uestio ns? Ca ll Ja ck ie Eldridge at 965-6555. FREE LO ST/FOUND H E Y — T O the girls of Flounder City, NV. We had a great time — the Barneys. I N I ra il M a rk e tin g O p p o r tu n itie s A v a ila b le AT&T is seeking ambitious, sales-oriented students to participate in our seven day on-campus marketing program selling AT&T products and services. Hours are flexible, with top compensation and bfr nuses. Must be available 1-2 weeks prior to the start of classes. We need: Page 23 Tu«day^MarcM^99^ SPECIALISTS COMPLETE FOREIGN AUTO REPAIR •Tune Ups •Engine Rebuilding •Complete Brake Service Factory Trained M echanics 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 1953 E. University Dr,, Tem pe • 967-4851. FOR WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13,1991 ARIES __ You’ll get a lot of things settled to (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) flWh your satisfaction regarding domestic A friend gives you helpfiil advice. interests today. Work proceeds nicely You may make plans to host a party. as welL Your personality is an asset in Tonight could bring you a romantic all you do. introduction. Your popularity is on SAGITTARIUS ^ the rise now. Sfv (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) TAURUS Travel and romance are pluses for (Apr. 20 to May 20) you today. Bonds of affection are Extra incentive puts you a step strengthened now and singles meet ahead of the competition now. Some with romantic introductions. Ei\}oy one also puts in a good word for you. this fine day! There are happy developments at CAPRICORN ^ home tonight (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) 1 ^ GEMINI M You’ll get a lot accomplished in (May 21 to June 20) AA your work today and financial returns You may be temporarily stumped should be good. An investment may by a problem at work. Travel pros pay off now. You’ll enjoy having pects look great now. Tonight brings company over tonight you a social success. Others are AQUARIUS :-}± & responsive to your ideas. (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) ¿9a CANCER an Handle a higher-up with diplo (June 21 to July 22) H03 macy. Joy comes through travel and You’re making plans now to insure recreational interests. Partners reach your overall financial security. Busi a new level of mutual understanding. ness and pleasure mix to your PISCES , advantage. Monetary developments (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) SE are positive. You’ll be accomplishing a lot LEG ^ around the house today. Your ideas (July 23 to Aug. 22) T* go over well on the job. Shopping You work well in concert with leads to great finds and financial others today, lf s a good time for developments are positive. reaching agreements. Tonight places YOU BORN TODAY are creative a special accent on love and Mend- and practical but sometimes have ship. Good news comes! difficulty reconciling there qualities. VIRGO « a You have a decided philosophic viewpoint and good insight into (Aug. 23 to S ept 22) You may receive a fringe benefit in community affairs. It is important connection with yoUr career. Income that you like your work or you won’t should improve now. Something pays put in the necessary effort to suc off for you today. Romance may ceed. In your personal life, you need to let others know how you truly feel come through the job. Birthdate of: Sammy Kaye, band LIBRA- \ leader; Leona Powers, actress; Perci(Sept 23 to O ct 22) It's a great day for making plans for val Lowell, astronomer. a pleasure trip. Contractual interests Read y o u r h o ro are favored. It’s a time of renewed romance and faith in the promise of scope daily in the the foture. SCORPIO ^ (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) St a t e p r e s s Classifieds. Copyright 1091 by King Features Syndic««, Ine. T üesdaj^^rctvI^W I SU/? Page 24 T | a k in g th e tim e to lo o k great is the easiest thing to do with Levi's? Find yourself wrapped in the comfort and ease of pure cotton in colors that are bound to catch some one's eye. Coordinate your fast-paced or leisurely activities around the brilliant style of Levi's® shorts and knit shirts, and your favorite combinations. Shown from our collection: Levi's® pique knit shirts in sizes S-M-L-XL. 14.00 each. Levi's® 550 Crystal Black shorts in waist sizes 28-34 and 36. 28 j00. Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-6 in Phoenix at Malrocanler. Paradise Wiley, Fiesta Mall, ChrMhwiv Scottsdale and Suparatition Springs. Shop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-6, Suntfcy 12-6 M Park Central and Westridge. D i l l a r d ’s We welcome your Dillard’s Credit Card, H ie American Express* Card, Diners Club International, Mastercardf Visa* and The Discover Card.