S t c it e © C opyright, S tate Press, 1991 Tem pe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily V oi. 75 N o. 9 T u esd ay, S ep tem b er 1 0 ,1 9 9 1 R egents fie ld b ias claim ASU professor G roup says UofA receives m ore funds because ofb ias By KRIS MAYES State Press , Arizona Board of Regents members denied claims by a group of Valley citizens that it is biased toward UofA over ASU, saying the Tucson school’s graduate and research work necessitate funding inequities“The UofA and ASU are different in many ways,” Regent Art Chapa said. “The UofA has a history of emphasizing the biological and agricultural sciences, and that costs more money.” But the Citizens of Arizona for Post Secondary Education is calling for a correction in funding inequities between the two schools. In a report it presented to Gov. Fife Symington last week, the Valley group outlined a series of problems facing the university system, including a $500 million funding advantage enjoyed by UofA since 1981. “There seems to be a constant bias throughout the funding process,” said CAPSE President John Brooking, adding that the lag in ASU’s funding will not turn around soon. The non-profit organization, which undertook the study two years ago, was formed to address UofA/ASU funding inequities and a possible regent bias. CAPSE Member Butch Metcalf said the funding differences could be explained by the fact that there currently are no regents who are ASU graduates. In the past, there have been three ASU graduates who have been regents. “We started out wondering why the UofA got more money every year,” Metcalf said. “That ASU doesn’t have a member on the board seems a little strange.” But several regents flatly denied giving special preference to the Tucson university. Chapa said the differing nature of the schools explains past funding inequities. , T u rn to RcgentSi p ag e 10. Irw in Daugherty/State Presa Making tracks A trio of ASU faculty members take a break from classes Monday for a jog around the track at Sun Angel Stadium. thinks religion linked to aliens By ANDREW FAUGHT State Press Ali Kyrala is fairly sure he won’t have an unfriendly encounter with an extraterrestrial. But the professor emeritus of physics is not taking any chances. Kyrala has formulated a philosophy built on religion that he hopes will bridge cultural gaps should people ever meet up with strange and unpredictable civilizations. The professor contends the subject is nothing to be flippant about. “Will they (extraterrestrials) view us as fellow creatures or as food?” Kyrala asked. “It’s an important point to settle.” And to ensure that he does not wind up as cuisine on some alien’s plate, the soft-spoken man has turned to religion, a “central factor” in every civilization, to better relate to the unknown. “It does sound amusing, but you have to approach it seriously,” he said. Intelligent life forms need a foundation for emotional and intellectual stability, Kyrala said. And with religion, some common ground can be established between alien races. Kyrala chuckled and said he is not immediately concerned that the earth will be overrun by larger-thanlife, “not-the-kind-we-would-step-on” insects. He said his research and beliefs are an attempt to “extend the human endeavor to experience beyond this world.” Even though Kyrala said he has always been interested in “what’s out there,” he feels that “people look at me kind of funny no matter what I’m talking about.” Meanwhile, “veterans” of alien encounters said the U. S. government has been more than hospitable to aliens, to the extent that “they (the aliens) don’t want to leave.” Robert Short, a self-proclaimed alien and UFO researcher for 30 years, said he has had three alien encounters in northern Arizona. And while many aliens are friendly, just as many are intent on propagating a new race to “control things,” the 62-year-old said. Short was participating in the National New Age and Alien Agenda Conference, a four-day event that concluded Monday in Phoenix and drew about 900 inquisitive participants. The aliens adhere to their own doctrines when it comes to earthling interaction, according to Short. Aliens also predicted the Persian Gulf War 15 years ago, he said. “The aliens tell us, simply put, be of service to your fellow beings,” Short said. “If you’re going to serve yourself, you’re certainly going to wind up in a no-win situation.” Yet, Short admitted that his goal is not to make believers out of skeptics. T u rn fo A liens, p ag e 13. Tempe getting too big for britches, city officials say By ANDREW FAUGHT State Press Tempe is becoming too much of a good thing, city officials said. City planners say they will face a development “ roadblock” because of Tempe’s fast-paced population growth, which jumped from about 64,000 residents in 1970 to almost 145,000 in 1990. Only 15 percent of Tempe’s 39 square miles remains undeveloped, and the city likely will reach complete “ build out” by the turn of the century, said Atis Krigers, Tempe community, development planner. The build out would leave Tempe, which is completely hemmed in by Phoenix, Scottsdale, Mesa and Chandler, with no place to expand. Krigers said the implications could leave the city with numerous unanswerable zoning and redevelopment questions. “We have nobody to look to (in Arizona),” Krigers said. “We’re going to have to go out of state to a city about the same size (as Tempe), and ask what we can do.” Dave Fackler, Tempe deputy community development director, said Tempe still plans to expand the downtown area and replace many existing parking lots with multi-story parking garages and additional buildings — including a 300-unit hotel at the Centerpoint. In addition, the $15 million Rio Salado Project, which is expected to take 20 years to complete, is expected to be an additional T u rn to T em p e, p a g e 13. T o d a y ’s w e a th e r: M ostly su n n y w ith a hig h in th e u p p e r 9 0 s. Uncle Milty: A proflic on ASIT Pro­ vost Milt Click. Page 2 Show ing som e skin: A closer look at local skinhead groups. Page 8 No Shane:. ASU defensive tackle Shane Collins will not play against Oklahoma State on Saturday. Page 15 C |a ssifle(b ....„ ..:..M ;o...M ....VM .o...u».,».....18 C om ics. . . . . . . . . . . ......1 4 C r o s s w o r d ................................................1 3 H o ro sc o p e s ......................i................... ....1 9 P o lic e R e p o rt...........................................8 S p o r t s , . . . 1 5 Tuesday. Seotember 10.1991 .State: Press Glick’s jo b to include research, academ ics By MARSHA MARDOCK State Press Milt Glick, ASU’s new senior vice pres­ ident and provost, said he hopes his additional respons­ ibilities will mean a happy marriage be­ tween students, teach­ ing and research. . “The importance of ' jr**C k that is to recognize that teaching and research are synergistic and shouldn’t compete with each other but should reinforce each other,” said Glick, who took office in August. ASU President La'ttie Coor reorganized the office of the provost to supervise research, academic affairs and student affairs. In the past, the provost was responsible for araHomic affairs only. Research and student affairs were not integrated until they reached the president’s level. “The president in this day and age has so much intensity upon him for external affairs,” Glick said. “You weren’t able to create a sense of community between those three agendas as effectively as (Coor) wanted to.” Glick, who became ASU provost in the begining of August, left the provost’s position at Iowa State University. “ I t ’s been an intensive learning experience,” he said. “It’s only been a little less than a month, but it seems like a year.” Patricia Swan, the current provost at Iowa State University, said filling Glick’s shoes will be a difficult task. “He was a very good leader. When he came in, the University was undergoing a lot of change, and as a result of that change there was a lot dissatisfaction, especially among the faculty,” she said.“He came in and worked very well with the faculty and helped to calm down a lot of the dissatisfaction.” Glick, 53, said he is getting an education right along with the students. The University as a “big playhox” filled with new things to learn —such as problems with the new law library, Native. American anthropology issues and ASU’s state-of-theart research. One urgent task, according to a representative of the campus ChicanoHispano Coalition, is for the provost to ensure students are able to get the classes they need. “There are a lot of us who are going to be graduating but who have to remain here an extra semester to get some classes. And for some, th a t’s just not economically feasible,” Ruben Alvarez said. Glick said he is committed to Coor’s central goals, which include undergraduate education. He said he spends much of his time doing daily tasks such as allocating the budget and making sure students áre taught. “The key is to find a way to step back far enough from the required tasks to make sure you do the important tasks,” Glick s a i d . “ O ne of th e p ro b le m s of administration is that the important things are seldom urgent, and the urgent things are seldom important.” Robert Barnhill, the recently appointed interim vice president for research, said Glick’s outlook was an incentive for him to accept the position. “That’s actually why I decided to take this assignment — because I thought it would be fun to work with him given that that’s the way he looks at things,” Barnhill said. In his role as the the number-two man at ASU, Glick will have a large hand in administrative decisions that will guide the campus throughout the ’90s. Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at AStl that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries fo r publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and.clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication, beadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have a closed meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet for a worship, prayer and Bible study at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •ASU Writing Center will have a seminar, “Strategies for Overcoming W riter’s Block,” at 3:40 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building, Room C157. •Adult Re-Entry Connection will meet at noon in the Adult Re-Entry Center, MU lower level. •Alpha Mu Gamma Foreign Language Society will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU Navajo Room 219. •APICS—American Production & Inventory Control Society will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Business Administration Building, Room 358. •RMSA—Rec Majors Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. at the Vine Tavern, Apache Boulevard and Rural Road. •Baptist Student Union will have a worship and Bible study at 7 p.m. at the BSU Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave. •I.E .E .E . will have a student/faculty brunch from 10 a.m. to noon in ERC 493. Everyone welcome. •Alpha Eta Rho Aviation Fraternity will welcome Bob Merrill, McDonnell Douglas test pilot and former NASA test In fo rm atio n al •ECKANAR Society at ASU will have an open forum, “The Recycled Soul—We Have Been Here Before,” at 11:30 a.m . in the MU Hohokam Room 208B. •Arizona Outing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Pima Room, second floor. •Women in Communications Inc. will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Apache Room. •Campus Ambassadors will have a Bible study at 2:30 p.m. in the MU LaPaz Room 223. •Campus Republicans will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU Pima Room 218. County Attorney Richard Romley will speak on AzScam and its aftermath. Everyone welcome. LEGISLATIVE and GOVERNMENT INTERNSHIP APPLICATIONS: If one week wasn't enough to choose your brothers for life then RUSH SIGMA PI. Brotherhood Chivalry Socials pilot, to speak at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room 215. •NAACP ASU Chapter will meet at 6:30 p.m . in the MU Navajo Room. •MUAB Culture and Arts Committee will meet at 1: 40 p.m. in MU Conference Room 2, third floor. J % M eetings W ednesday, Sept. 11 — 1pm -2pm M em orial Union Pinal Room (#215) Thursday, Sept. 12 - 6pm -7pm Mem orial Union Cochise East (#212) Friday, Sept. 13 — 5pm Be at Sigma Pi House for Dinner 9 6 8 -6 3 4 4 (R ic h /J a s o n ) 9 6 8 -4 0 9 6 (J .T ./B ria n /C .C .) 82 9 -8 8 8 1 (M a rk ) m » Applications for the 1992 Legislative and Government Internship Programs are available now in the Office of the Provost, Administration Building, Room 211. This program is coordinated through the Arizona Legislature, Arizona State Supreme Court and the Maricopa County Manager’s Office (County Board of Supervisor's) in conjunction with ASU and other Arizona colleges and universities. To be eligible, students must have achieved at least the first semester senior status by January and a GPA of 3.0 or better. Interns will receive academ ic credit and $2,800 sti­ pend from the agency they serve during the semester. ASU students will be given tuition/fee waivers. Students from a wide variety of academic and technical disciplines are en­ couraged to apply. Approximately 30 students will be selected for the 1992 program. Interns will report to various governmental offices for a full sirring term’s work with state legislators, committees, leadership officials and other selected officials. The works includes speechwriting, bill drafting, research, attending meetings and hearings and working on constituent problems. For information and explications, ASU students should contact Norma Talam ante, Office of the Provost, 965-8380. Applications are due October 2 ,1 9 9 1 . Applicants for the internships will be screened and then recommended by the ASU Screening Committee to the legislative selection com­ mittee. Nam es ot those selected will be announced the third w eek of November. Law students interested in applying as law interns with the 1992 Legislature should contact the Office of the Dean, College of Law. ASU faculty and staff are encouraged to recommend students to apply is __________ W orld/Nation__________ ^ ¡jg d g ^ S e p to n b q jlO iW I^ __________________ ________________ Page 3 Judge faces Senate after long campaign WÀSHINGTON (AP) —* Clarence Thomas will speak for himself Tuesday after a summer of vigorous political campaigning by supporters and opponents of his nomination to the Supreme Court. “There’s a fight on,” President Bush declared on the eve of Thomas’ confirmation hearing. “I am confident we’re going to win it,” Bush said as Thomas and his questioners made final preparations for Senate Judiciary Committee, consideration of the nomination. - After two months of avoiding public stands while others attacked and defended him, Thomas will be asked to detail his views on contentious subjects as he makes his case for confirmation to take Thurgood Marshall’s place on the high court. Like Marshall, Thomas is black, but he has staked out conservative positions in sharp contrast to Marshall’s staunch liberalism. So there will be tough questions from liberal Democrats concerned about how Thomas, 43, would vote on such issues as abortion, privacy and civil rights. Yet, Bush suggested that Thomas should not be pinned down on how he might vote on specific issues. Bush said that when he nominated Thomas, “the administration applied no litmus test on specific issues that might come before the Supreme Court. We did not question Judge Thomas on possible decisions or cases that could come before the court. “Similarly, I have confidence that the Judiciary Committee will want to preserve the independence of the court as it explores the record of Judge Thomas,” the president said in a written statement. Turnto Thomas, page 11. Tadzhikistan th e latest to o p t for independence MOSCOW (AP) — Tadzhikistan declared its independence on Monday, becoming the eighth Soviet republic to do so since last month’s brief coup against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev “We can’t lag behind other republics. Everybody is declaring independence so we are as well,” said Aleyev Abdodezhabad, parliamentary spokesman in the Soviet Central Asian republic of 5.1 million people. E leven republics have opted for independence — eight since the coup, including Azerbaijan, where incumbent President Ayaz Mutalibov won 90 percent of the vote Sunday as the sole candidate in an election of the old Soviet school. The majority of the Soviet republics have seized the chance to re trie v e the independence they lost with the expansion of Communist power since the Aug. 19-21 coup collapsed, and with it their fears of military intervention vanished. The Kremlin has already granted the Baltic republics of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania their independence. But Monday’s declaration by a special session of Tadzhikistan’s parliament was largely symbolic, since most of the republics, including the Tadzhiks, have agreed to transform the Soviet Union into a loose confederation of sovereign states. charges of intimidation in the weekend election in Azerbaijan show how some of the predominantly Muslim republics have trailed other republics in achieving political reform. Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher of Germany said in Moscow on Monday that his country was prepared to establish relations with all sovereign republics in the current Soviet Union. Tadzhikistan’s sluggish response to change after the coup, and opposition Tadzhikistan is to hold a presidential election on Oct. 27. Former President Kakhar Makhkamov resigned Aug. 31 after the republic’s legislature passed a vote of no-confidence in him for not vigorously opposing last month’s coup attempt against Gorbachev. News Briefs Macedonia vote appears to back independence BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) — The Yugoslav federation suffered another blow M onday when e a rly re tu rn s in a Macedonian plebiscite said the republic’s voters overwhelmingly supported declaring independence. Even before the first returns were released from Sunday’s referendum, tens of thousands of Macedonians partied in the streets to celebrate leaving the union. But Macedonian leaders stressed they would try to work out new ties with Yugoslavia as part of a loose confederation of sovereign states, rather than the complete independence sought by Croatia and Slovenia. Intense fighting continued in Croatia between Croat militiamen and Serb rebels. In a potentially dangerous escalation of tension, Yugoslav troops clashed with soldiers from neighboring Albania along their mountainous international border, and five people were reported killed. Congressional date for AIDS patient postponed MIAMI (AP) — Kimberly Bergalis, a dying AIDS patient who contracted the virus from her dentist, may get to testify before Congress after all, a congressional aide said Monday. A hearing on an AIDS bill named for her was originally scheduled for Thursday. Her family bought train tickets to Washington. “This is her chance to make her voice known maybe for the last time,” said her father, George Bergalis. Late last week, the hearing date was scratched, purportedly over a lack of space. But Rep. Tom Lewis, R-Fla., offered to provide a room for the hearing, and a new date was expected to be set Tuesday, said Karen Hogan, a Lewis aide. Ms. Bergalis, 23, of Fort Pierce, is the sickest of five patients infected with the AIDS virus by David Acer, a Stuart dentist who died of AIDS-related cancer last September. Advice to homebuyers: Go West, young people! WASHINGTON (AP) - People looking for more affordable housing might consider Saginaw, Mich. O r Amarillo, Texas. Or Greeley, Colo. But stay away from most of California and the urban areas of the Northeast. That’s the finding in the National Association of Home Builders’ latest quarterly Housing Opportunity Index that was released on Monday. The Saginaw-Bay City-Midland, Mich., area ranked first in the analysis of 350,000 sales of new and existing homes in 173 metropolitan areas from April through June. The survey found that 90.1 percent of the homes sold in that Midwest area could have been purchased at prevailing interest rates by a household earning the area’s median income. Saginaw replaced Amarillo, which had been at the top of the Home Builders firstquarter index. A prisoner, injured in Sunday violence, sits shackled in a Sowato hospital Monday in South Africa. Violence between black factions continued Monday after as many as 65 persons were killed on Sunday. 65 dead in South Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Frenzied factional fighting raged in black townships for a second day Monday, and the death toll in the year’s worst outbreak of political violence rose to 65. Nelson Mandela, president of the African National Congress, said that despite the fighting his organization would sign a peace accord Saturday with its rival, the Inkatha Freedom Party, and the white-led government. Inkatha also said it would sign the agreement, which is aimed at stopping factional fighting that has killed about 6,000 blacks since 1986. Previous agreements have not slowed the fighting. Both Inkatha and the ANC have opposed the racist apartheid system but differ over tactics and plans for a future South Africa. The left-leaning ANC favors government control of the Turn to South A frica, page 11. O pinion p J2 State Press Tuesday, September 10,1991 LL M echem plays sw itcheroo w ith students concerns M W m kheiic" Im 0 P I,|® [ o b e r t s p v i Opinion Editor I t m a y j u s t be th e f a s t e s t transmutation in the West. From a sincere, struggling student to a pompous, bumbling politician. Only two weeks into the school year, the largest decision Associated Students of ASU President Greg Mechem has made is to change his mind. Yes, h e ’s in Arizona Students Association. No, he’ll pull out of ASA. : Yes, he’s in ASA. No, he’ll pull out of ASA; The whole situation is about as annoying as M echem ’s fa v o rite icebreaker — I look like a Republican (from the front) and a Democrat (from the back when 1 turn m y head and let m y ponytail show): Republican. (Turn head) Democrat. Republican. (Turn head) Democrat. After threatening to pull out of the student lobbying organization as early as last spring, Mechem has been on a roller coaster of promises, keeping ASU’s student body and future in limbo. While pulling out of ASA would produce both good and bad effects for the students of ASU, Mechem’s inconsistency isn’t creating any brownie points with his peers in the ASA delegation, who still play an unfavorably large role in what happens within ASASU. Maybe Mechem is just trying to test the waters of student support, but even so, he’s going about it the wrong way. Instead of dillydallying around decisions, he needs to get in touch with the student body and find out what students want — and soon. ASA delegates from NAU and UofA have already asked Mechem to replace himself with a representative to the meetings. While ASA may have just a little too much power over ASASU politics, it is still an organization to be dealt with carefully and responsibly. And one thing is certain — tuition-talk season isn’t an opportune time to mess around. Mechem, who acts as though he’s Joe Six-pack with die regents, said one of the drawbacks of pulling out of ASA would be the possible “damaged relationships” with the tuition-setting board. Mechem often brags to the press that he goes over to Eddie Basha’s house for supper and that he Calls Sen. John McCain and his wife by their first names — “John and Cindy.” This is all nice, cozy and political, but th e re ’s much more than dinner, cordialities and Mechem’s personal friendships at stake here. Doesn’t he know that jerking around with ASA and his other antics and threats may already be doing a pretty secure job of trashing his accountability? Apparently, what Mechem tells the press and his constituents are two different things. During his most recent I think I ’ll pull out of ASA stint, Mechem told State Press reporter Ken Brown, “Things will heat up, but I’m not going to pull out unless I know how.” Mechem added that he did not want to elaborate (to the press) for fear of p u ttin g v a lu a b le s tr a te g ie s for w ithdraw al in the hands of his ‘‘enemies” — other ASA delegates. All of this less than a week after he detracted his fust promise to pull out of ASA after delegates backed him into a wall. After announcing to his constituents that everything was fine and dandy with ASA, he told the press: “I’m not bowing down (to ASA delegates) — I just want them to think I am.” So what are students supposed to think he’s doing with their future? He’s a chameleon without a clear cause. He says what he thinks people want to hear. And apparently he wants reporters to believe the worst of ASA. Because of his bumpy relationship with ASA, Mechem told Brown that ASA had outlived its usefulness for ASU. Mechem said: “To quote Whitney Houston — ‘What have you (ASA) done for me lately?’ ” But the more pertinent question is what has Mechem done for the students of ASU lately'! Mechem should pull out all the stops, get honest and talk straight from the shoulder. He should also remember that it’s Janet Jackson who sings “What have you done for me lately?” Witty, informed writer who cares about ASU wanted for part-time columnist. Inquire at the State Press in lower level of the Matthews Center. pulliv^ out k to tkc editor e tte rs If Russians cando it, so can we Dear Editor: As my fifth, but not final year, at the lovely and perpetually-under-constraction campus of ASU dawns, I am struck with an array of the usual vicissitudes; however, this time, with all that has happened in Russia, I feel it is my right to speak Up. This year’s schedule presents me with language classes that are too large; classrooms that are too small; classrooms that are too hot; lines that are too long; book prices that are too steep; book orders that are too small; student hubs that are crammed with people; freshmen with their m aps looking for the LL building; aggressive students trying to incorporate what they learned last semester with what they are going to learn this semester; a weight room with overzealous, one-week burnouts; and a general plot to make the process called EDUCATION all too difficult to wade through and every bit as expensive as it can be. Just one question for all you ASU bureaucrats out there: why do you make this im p era tiv e degree process so arduous?!? You charge us up the ying-yang to become matriculated (where does all this money go, because it sure isn’t toward superior professors); then you charge us to park; you charge us to work out — even if we don’t; you even charge us to go to the football games in the stadium we paid for and watch the players we’re putting through school play the game. Something is drastically wrong with this system here at ASU (possibly with all of higher education), but it is time that the student body spoke out against this travesty. If they can do it in the Soviet Union, why can’t we do it here at ASU? Stephen L. Anderson Junior, Biology Regents are volunteers .Dear Editor: In your editorial in Friday’s paper, you referred to the Arizona Board of Regents being “paid so handsomely.. . ” and listed specific salaries. As a matter of fact, the Regents receive no s a la ry of any kind. The only compensation paid to them is for travel expenses and per diem when they attend meetings. The figures used in your column are those of the salaries of members of the Regents’ full-time staff in the Central Office, Whatever your opinions concerning Regential decisions, you should be aware that these private citizens spend Countless hours at th eir assignm ents without monetary reward. Alan A. Matheson President, Faculty Senate PAUL CORO. Editor SUZANNE ROSS, Managing Editor KEVIN SHEH........................... ...........................C ity Editor JENNIFER FRANKLIN............ DAWN DEVRIES..................... MICHELLE ROBERTS............ DAVID KEXEL......................... IRWIN DAUGHERTY............... DAN ZEIGER............................ DARREN URBAN..................... V ie w CULVER......................... LAUME NOTARO.................... ¿Ugazlne M jauftn« Editor HOBART ROWLAND.......................College Culture Editor ■EPOBXBEG: Ken Brown,Teena Chadwell, Mack Doud, Andrew Faught, M ichael Flores, Margo Gilbnan, Kellye Kratch, Sonja Lewis, Mamba Mardock, Kris Mayes. Rich­ ard Ruelaa, Lorenzo Sierra Jr., Amy Shale, Judl Tancos, Ashahed lYlche. MAGAZINE STAFF: M ichelle Cruff, Jill H obranson. Don Newtckl, Ken Orman. David Pundt, Christy Tomllneon, Mark JaSiynan. CARTOONISTS: Ken Collfm . Sean Hoy. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Henri Cohen, JeoKgetta Douglas,Sean Openshaw, T.J. Sokol, Tamara Wofford. COPTEDITORB: Patricia Mah, KayOlson, G abrielis Sanchez. COUJMNIGTG: Jim m y Kopf, M ichael LaMantla, Kristi McDowelL PRODUCTION: Celia HammanCueto, John Gullonard, Kevin Heller, Barry Kelly, Jeffrey Lucaa, Ehren SchwdberL SALKS REPRESENTATIVES:Tim Berry. Robert Bettes, B tett Elliot. Cameron EQio, Leo Gonzales, Crystal Lumley.Todd Martin, Lance Newman, Ned Schnelwar, Rachel W ilson. The S ta te Press 1mpublished Monday through Friday dur­ ing die academ ic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room IS. Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 86087-1502. , The Stole Pres» la the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU cam pus. The new s and views published In this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU adm inistration, faculty, staff or student body. Editorial Board U nstgied editorials reflect the views o f the editorial h o o d , individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their m erit The editorials do not reflect.the opinion o f the S ta te P m * sta ff as a whole. Board members Include: PAUL CORO ....................................... .„ „ ..^ ..„ ...E d ito r SUZANNE ROSS ...... Managing Editor MICHELLE ROBERTS Opinion Editor Latter Policy The S ta te Press welcom es and encounges written re­ sponse from our readers on ary topic. All letters m ust be typed, double-spaced and no longer than twppqges In length I to be eligible for publication. Please Include your frill name, cla ss standing and major (or any other affiliation w ith the university) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publica­ tion. R equests far anonymity w ill be granted only with an appropriate reason. Lettera are subject to editing fay the opinion page editor. AU letters m ust be either brought In peraon with a photo LD .to the State Pm»» frontdesktn the baaementdfMatth w ID0RSIH6 V 'S V vj jflfcMÉ \ ¿z lm a ' m r J iÆ ' c 3 £k ORItW Oft**, CRANSTON, IHENftW 1S1WBR Business . **»«*•*/■ i* A £? ¿ p iW 1 ŸJ, r 1&TM4.Y fîtrifo w n GOSM RÍ6MT WN6TACK <0-6000 m ®ERíR, _ A '* Expires j^IO-31-91 1028 E. Lemon Hours: 8am-11pm Daily •Drop off - 600 per lb. (W ashed & folded for you) •Dry Cleaning •Alterations & Repairs T H A Y D E N 'S ► H the student replied he was “just doing what comes naturally.” •A man stopped his car in front of two female ASU students at 700 S. College Ave. The suspect, who was naked except for a sun visor on his head, got out of his car and proceeded to masturbate in front of the females. After the two females laughed and told the man he had a small penis, he then got back in his car and drove away. The suspect is a white male, 25-30 years of age. He is 5 feet 9 inches, 150 pounds with light brown hair. The suspect’s car was a newer model white sedan. •A Tempe man was arrested for aggravated assault after he cut his wife with an unknown object, possibly a razor knife. His wife, who sustained a 3-inch cut about a half­ inch deep, was treated at the scene by the Tempe Fire Department. •A man was arrested on Mill Avenue for driving under the influence, cocaine possession and weapons violations. He was stopped when witnesses reported erratic driving. Police found a concealed handgun, a substance suspected to be cocaine, $1,200, a pager and a mobile phone, Compiled by State Press reporter Ashahed Triche. APPRECIATION Kösa'ö-aÖTTt'. G razie! Thank You! APPRECIATION DAY for Arizona State STUDENTS Wednesday, September 11th 1 0 % M l MERCHANDISE • Greeting Cards • Gifts • Wrapping • Ribbon W > FERRY REVIEW ASU's N ational Literary M agazine Check it Out! St- NS^errace Lemon P o lic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents on Monday: •An ASU student was arrested, cited and released for disorderly conduct on the west side of the Language and Literature Building. •Police approached an ASU student who was urinating in public in the Tempe Center, on the corner of Mill Avenue and University Drive. .He left the area. •Police arrested, cited and released an ASU student for kicking a hole in a wall at Manzanita Hall. •An unknown person assaulted a female and a male, both ASU students, in front of Palo Verde Main. •Three female ASU students received harassing phone calls in their room at Palo Verde Main. •A thief stole a Microsoft serial mouse from the computer lab at Room A219 of the Engineering Center. •A thief stole two credit cards from a female ASU student’s wallet from her room at 725 E. Adelphi Drive. Tempe police reported the following incidents on Monday: •A male ASU student was arrested after he urinated on a wall at 1215 E. Vista Del Cerro Drive. When police asked him why he did it. University Rural Tempe drunk drivers busted by special police task force A.S.U. Memorial Union Lower Level • 966-9188 ; h . Follett’s Gift Shop State Presa Tuesday, September 10,1991 Additional money for bike co-op hinges on University funds By MARGO GILLMAN State Press Additional money for a student bicycle repair service likely will hinge on additional University funding because student government can not supply any more dollars, officials said. Linda Riegel, assistant director of Parking Transit Services, said she wants to provide an additional $5,000 to $10,000 for Associated Students of ASU's Bicycle Repair Co­ op service, if possible. In an effort to promote alternative methods of transportation to automobiles, she said, “the program will subsidize the Associated Students of ASU’s Bike Repair Co­ op service if our department receives adequate funding.” Co-op leaders said the money is necessary to extend hours and increase work space. Associated Students of ASU Preside'nt Greg Mechem said that while the program “ could use some extra money,” ASASU cannot provide the funds. “It’s simply not an option to get any more,” he said. “Everyone is facing a budget crunch, and so we don’t have money to throw around.” But Riegel said the funding would depend on whether the budget expectations of ASU’s Parking and Transit services are met. ASASU’s bike service, which is utilized by about 75 to 100 daily, enables students to repair their bikes at a central location on campus. Tools are checked out to students, who can perform the repairs, and workers are available for students needing assistance, The bike service has a proposed budget of about $10,000 — $1,200 less than last year — though the actual amount will not be determined until voted on by the ASASU senate. Paul Woolson, director of the Bike Rëpair Co-op, said more funding is needed to “sufficiently serve the program’s needs;” “I would like to increase the amount of employees and see the program expand,” he said; “More work space would be ideal, but there just isn’t enough money in our budget.” Tom Idzorek, a technical assistant of the co-op, said the program needs to hire more workers so that it can extend its hours. “Right now, we’re open different hours everyday because we only have four workers, and hours are worked around our schedules.” Riegel said Parking and Transit Services requested about $128,000 for the program, with hopes of allocating $5,000 to $10,000 to the student service. The final budget will be introduced at the end of this month, Woolson said the service raises some funding from equipment it sells to students, but this “hardly covers” the added costs of the service. “We do bring in a little money selling tires, tubes and cables, but it isn’t nearly what we need. “ I just spent $60 replacing some of the tools that were stolen by students. It’s hard to account for things like this with our budget,” he said. Woolson added that by hiring more employees, theft could be monitored more easily, Riegel said the department adopted a travel reduction program on July 15, after a year of planning by Department of University Relations officials. INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT? YOU SHOULD K N O W YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS! •F R E E Consultation to students and faculty •Auto Accidents •Motorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •Wrongful Death •Faulty Products •Slip & Fall •D og Bites •Insurance Disputes • R E D U C E D percentage fees for cases of clear liability or serious injury •Hom e, evening & hospital appointments available BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY, CALL BAKER & MARCUS Personal Injury Lawyers • Electronic Scoring • Full Service Snack Bar • $1 per G am e + tax Noon-6 p.m. T J $5 Hourly Lane Rental. Noon-6 p.m. 4 3 $ - 1 2 1 2 4 6 2 5 S. Wendler Dr., Suite 1 ï 1, Tempe 967-1656 1100 E. Apache C o rn er of R ural & A pache W HAT IF YOU GET _ REALLYSICK? Student Health has you covered for most health problems. But what about serious illness or injury th at requires off cam pus service? W ithout addi­ tional insurance coverage, you could be facing financial hardship—or worse—if you risk going unprotected. So right now, look into Preferred Care for Students. It helps cover w hat Student Health doesn’t. And it’s priced right! New enrollees will receive their membership card in the mail. Re-enrollees do not need a new card. Pick up a benefit booklet and direc­ tory at Student H ealth for details on coverages. Or call 965-2411. Last day to enroll is Septem ber 23. Bk» Crass BlueShield o f A rizona VxjJust c a n t do any better New York Pizza "You've tried the rest, now try the best.11 933 E. U niversity (B ehind K inko's) L A h b b Or A-LAHLafc n i “7 * 7 A PLUS 2 FREE MEDIUM SODAS Not vaild with any other coupon. FAST, FREE D E LIV E R Y checks accepted H ours: M -Th 11-2 Fri-S at 11-3 Sun 12-2 TUgda^Scptein b c M ^ V ^ « g e lo State Pué«« R e g e n ts Continued from page 1. Chapa also noted that UofA’s student body is comprised of a higher percentage of graduate students, adding further to its expenses. Student Regent Abedon Fimbres, who attends ASU, agreed, adding that the Legislature has had a tendency to provide UofA with greater funding because of its research emphasis. “The tendency is there,” Fimbres said. “A lot of money goes to UofA research and its College of Medicine.” Chapa said existing funding inequities could warrant the regents’ further review. But he balked at the notion that the funding differences are a result of personal biases. “ That’s a red herring,” Chapa said. “The regents have bent over backwards to deal with issues non-discriminately.” Regents Spokeswoman Suzanne Pfister questioned validity of the report because it did not consider tuition funding derived by the two universities. ASU’s greater size bolsters its funding figures, she added. “The statistics provided do not represent the whole picture,” Pfister said, adding that the group was strongly pro-ASU from the outset of its investigation. But Bev Hermon, R-Tempe, is expected to introduce [AgigiaHon that would establish a board of trustees for each university to insure greater fairness in the funding process. Hermon could not be reached for comment. ASU President Lattie Coor said he would like to see an increase in the number of ASU-graduated regents. But he said he doesn’t believe the inequities are generated by the regents’ past affiliations with the two universities. “I think the issues have been handled in an even-handed manner in the past,” Coor said. He added that legislators have attempted to equalize appropriations. Coor said the Legislature approved a supplemental appropriation to ASU to make up for past differences two. years ago, but the second phase of that measure — $3.9 million has yet to be implemented. ASU will ask the Legislature for the money in its 1992-93 budget requests, he added. “It is at the top of our list right now, and we are hopeful,” Coor said: The report also criticized the university system for spending 26 percent more on education than the national average, while failing to come up with a proportionate rise in educational excellence. “Arizona spends more than the national average,” Brooking said. “But we don’t feel we’re getting our money’s worth.” STUDENT PUBLI CATIONS 'TktJ^un"Gr/ìL Stale Press C r v ir lr W R J U IlV UecLwaol 965-7572 H A Y D E N 'S F E R R Y ft e v i e w Student Handbook and Calendar !Graduating Seniors! G E T T H E I 0B W O O W A N T ! Cut & Style $14 (Reg. $18) Perm Let JobPrep Show You How! (R e g . $ 4 5 ) N o w O n ly $40 (In c lu d e s C ut) Cellophane $ 2 2 Tanning $10/month, $1.50 per visit Highlight Î* X A (Includes Shampoo y ■»/ &Condition) : Eyelash Tint $ 1 2 933 E. University, SE Corner of Rural q a a A a a a Tempe Towne Plaza î? 0 0 " 0 I SmitA M E S A N IS S A N YOUR NISSAN and DATSUN SERVICE SPECIALISTS A Chairman at the Board— with 30 This Job Hunting Seminar Is Presented By JOBPREP— Real-World Business Executives Who Have Hired 100’s of People! years of hiring experience— Will fibre You The 13 Best Vlfays To Get In The Right Door...And Emerge With The Job. The job pipeline is fu ll all across America. Unemployment is growing. Yet thousands of hew university graduates are entering the job market The struggle to find the right job is m ore com petitive than it ’s ever been. This Job Prep Seminar can help you land the job you want. ■ Hear 7 proven techniques to make your resume standout on a desk fu ll o f resumes. ■ Discover 5 ways to show potential employers that gradepoint averages aren’t everything. ■ The one technique that produces 2/3rds of all jobs. Yo h WHI Learn 83 ways To Make You Stand Ont from Other Job Seekers. ■ Hear the three best ways to get that all-im portant firs t interview. ■ A respected chief executive officer w ill te ll THE m ost im portant eight words you can say in a job interview. ■ Learn 9 sure-fire ways to get through the rig h t door to talk to the right person at the right time. ■ See a dem onstration of a good interview—and a bad one. ■ The Perfect Resume. You’ll take home a specimen copy of th is resume to model yours after. The wisdom of 30 corporations in one oh-so-im portant document. ■ How im portant is how you dress? ■ W hat NOT to wear to your interviews. ■ Let the mailman help you. You w ill see a dozen examples o f m ailed item s that got the sender into that all-im portant interview. ■ Did you know the business com m unity has a handshake that's a secret to 30% of college grads? HALF-DAY SEMINAR 8 AM T01 PM ■ H ow to network—even in a city where you don’t have a lot of contacts. Sign-in from 7:30 AM, Seminar at 8:30 SHARP! PHOENIX, AZ...ASU ■ ■ WE OFFER: • NISSAN-TRAINED TECHNICIANS • GENUINE NISSAN PARTS • QUALI TY MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR WORK • REASONABLE PRICES LIMITED SEATING - S f e s Ä THURSDAY, SEPT 26, Program 1926 FRIDAY, SEPT 27, Program 1927 BOTH IN HOLIDAY INN, 915 E. Apache Blvd. at RURAL R D .- NEXT TO CAMPUS CfllLTODAY! SyoralrtWgSÜÜ AIs e near NAU S eptem ber 19 & 20, a m i U e f A O ct 2 & 3 FAST,EASY REGISTRATION!____ JOBPREPmc CALL 18002792999 M BY FAX PHONE ■ 67 Call us toll-free at: 1 M 6 2 76-2S M Please have your program number ready. 9A-5PAZtim e. FAX the completed form to : 162*745-5548 S ir FAX Itam 1$ C P N 24 b iir s , 7 Days a w e e k. BYMAIL ■ Mail th is completed form to : J tb P re p S em inars 620 N. Craycroft, Tucson, AZ 85711 REGISTRANT’S NAME __ _______ _ •ID MUST BE PRESENTED A T TIME OF PURCHASE COURTESY SHUTTLE AND RENTAL CARS AVAILABLE 8M ITH MESA NISSAN PARTS * SERVICE HOURS Monday 7:M a.m.-8:30 p.m. TuM.-Fri. 7:30 a.m.-S:30 p.m. PARTS OPEN SAT. 0:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. We’re close to ASU... 1701W. BROADWAY MESA SERVICE PARTS 834-3366 834-0255 MAILING A D D R E S S ______ _ ; $ . Z IP . .STATE ottv _ . (payable to JobPrep) fo r $_ □ Charge to the follow ing credit card: □ MC . is enclosed. Please w rite registrant’s name on the check. □ VISA Card number Please print cardholder's name SATISFACTION ORYOURMONEYBACK ClM CkM K P Check # 9 GUARANTEED EVENING PHONE. DAY PHONE. 4 Signature Expiration date Tu«da^Septemb«|J0^991 State Press Thom as CATERING TO YOUR MUSIC NEEDS percentage points either way. An additional sampling of 218 Even after all the efforts to influence opinion for or against blacks for a total of 324 was necessary to reach useable' Thomas, 65 percent of respondents in a new poll said they conclusions; for blacks, the margin of uncertainty was given had no opinion about whether he should be confirmed. This as five points. was close to the 73 percent who had no opinion about Robert Supporters of Thomas have highlighted his rise from a poor Bork just before the confirmation hearings that led to the black family in segregated Georgia to important positions in Washington, where he chaired the Equal Employment rejection of his nomination in 1987. . Results of that CBS-New York Times poll, published in Opportunity Commission and became a federal appellate Tuesday editions of the newspaper, showed blacks with an judge. opinion splitting 23 percent in favor of Thomas and But the opposition coalition of civil rights and labor 15 percent against, arid whites with an opinion dividing organizations has focused on Thomas’ opposition to 26 percent for Thomas and 10 percent against. affirmative action programs and on writings concerning Overall, the poll of 1,519 adults by telephone from Sept. 3 “natural law” that suggest he would vote to overturn through Sept. 5 had a likely margin of error of three women’s right to abortion. Continued from page 3 . Ì Ì I ig u e l’ s f flu s ic G e n t e r N e xt to.O zzie's W ilt elio n e m the A ic h c * Shopping Center REPAIRS SALES RENTALS ELECTRONICS 968-2310 G U IT A R LESSONS • tlrrtvKGiulivi. • Àmpi • Díáfoettm ß ü u - • Llcihiwii Metrm»>êt> * Eh 1 3 0 E. U n iv e rsity D r. T e m p e • Page 11 O p e n 6 d ay s 10 a.m .-6 p.m . Hair Design With the Personal Touch Catch the action... 966-5462 STATE P R E S S Sports South A frica. C o n tin u ed fro m p a g e 3- economy, while Inkatha champions a free market. In one incident Monday, gunmen shot up a black commuter train outside Johannesburg, killing four people and wounding three. The dead and wounded were thrown from the moving train, police said. Police declared four Johannesburg townships “unrest areas,” which gives authorities expanded, powers to halt violence. Fighting also was reported in Natal province in eastern South Africa. The outbreak of violence began Sunday when gunmen ambushed a political procession of Inkatha members in Tokoza township, killing 23 people. As word of the attack spread, blacks took to the streets to battle political foes with guns, grenades, knives and spears. At least 57 people were killed around Johannesburg in the two days of fighting, police said. Eight more blacks died in Natal and almost 100 were wounded in the two regions, they said, Mandela said he did not know who was responsible for the ambush, but he hinted elements within the government security forces might be involved. Reg: $15 Men $16 Women Perm s or C olors $45 & u p j 0 r c o m r i^ Humons Hair Studio Valid until 9-28-91 966-5462 I II . I I I Forest & U niversity (In the A rches P laza) I - t | iK a J - A il I 7W f & a S & w S T c *u jE*e ]to K n ap m I f W & A N l S t t o '- r ? ) col lege can save you some money. Bet you never thought you’d hear that. But just by being a student, you can get special prices on IBM PS/2®s —computers that will help you through school, and long after you get out. IBM offers a variety of PS/2 Selected Academic Solution* models to choose from. And with an IBM PS/2 Loan ¡¡ijjpP for Learning, you can own one for as little as $30 a month* and take up to five years to pay. Buy now and you’ll get a special Bonus Pack* worth over $1,000 in savings on air travel, phone calls, software and more. So while the price of college keeps going up, at least the price of succeeding is on its way down. Visit your campus outlet to find out how to m ake a P S/2 click fo r you. .' « .V .Ç I « W ® . I „ s IBM PS/2 Hotline 224-2763. Visit IBM at Compass, Moeur 108, ^ Ä Hlf Buck i * \b > 3o ê .A r m e fCfcTM I&Tôrfgi MtC/iintock. oAí t o F e æ s t o A i b P.D. R ttK M * •This offer is available to nonprofit higher education in stitu tio n s, their students, fa cu lty and sta ff, as w ell as to non pro fit K42 in stitu tio n s, th e ir fa cu lty and staff; These IBM Selected Academ ic S olutions are available through p a rticip ating cam pus outle ts, IBM Authorized PC Dealers c e rtifie d to rem arket Selected Academ ic S olutions or IBM 1800222-7257. Prices quoted do not in clude sales tax, handling an d /o r processing charges. C heck w ith your cam pus o u tle t regarding these charges. O rders are subject to availability. Prices are subject to change and IBM m ay w ith dra w the offer at any tim e w ith o u t notice. “ PS/2 Loan for Learning lets you borrow $1,500-$8,000. M onthly paym ent is based upon 100% financing repaid in 60 m onthly installm ents and includes the 1% guarantee fee. The in te re stja te is variable, subject to change each m onth! Am ount financed $1,699 (m onths 1-12, $30; m onths 13-36, $30; m onths 3760, $48.92). APR 10.386%. tT he Bonus Pack expires Decem ber 31,1991. IBM and PS /2 are registered tradem arks of International Business M achines C orporation. ©1991 IBM Corp. Page 12 Tuesday, September 10,1991 Think of it as separate checks for your phone bill. If you’ve ever had trouble figuring out just who made which calls, take a tip from us. Get AT&T CaU Manager! For free. □ With Call Manager, all you have to do is dial a simple code. And we’ll separate your long distance calls from the ones your roommates make. □ Plus, if you sign up for CallManager now, you’ll also get a free hour’s worth of AT&T long distance calling* And you’ll become a member of AT&T Student Saver Plus, a program of products and services designed to save students time and money. □ So sign up for AT&T Call Manager. Because there are some things roommates shouldn’t have to share. Get AT&TCaUManager today. Call 1800 654-0471 Ext. 4813. tT his service may not be available in residence halts on your campus. M ust have true touch tone telephone and service. •Good tor one hour of direct-dialed, coast-to-coast, night and weekend calling, based on prices effective 2/16/91. O ffer lim ited to one $8.2$ AT&T Long Distance Certificate pot student. Offer valid through June 90,1992. ©1991 ATST State Press State Prest Page 13 Tuesday, September 10,1991 A lien s C o n tin u ed fro m p ag e 1. Tim Beckley has not had an alien encounter, but the editor of UFO Universe said he became interested in the phenomena when he saw two UFOs hovering over his New Jersey home as a young boy. Beckley Said his interest “mushroomed,” inspiring him to initially issue a low-distribution newsletter, before becoming involved with a magazine devoted solely to aliens and flying saucers. Beckley said the conference and his magazine provide a platform for people to share their extraterrestrial experiences. “There’s a growing number of people who have seen (aliens and UFOs),” Beckley said, adding that “hundreds of thousands” of people likely have seen UFOs. T em pe C o n tin u ed fro m p ag e I . v vitality and the University’s dominance. “Chase was interested in many of the students,” Schafer said. “Brainpower is where it’s at for the future, in terms of jobs.” Increased state leadership should help Arizona manufacturers export its wares to Mexico, she said, adding that Tempe continues to maintain a Taiwan office to lure prospective investors. The city is experiencing economic hardships with Tempe-based America West boon to the city’s economy. Meanwhile, Jan Schafer economic development administrator for the city, touts Tempe’s accessibility from Sky Harbor Airport, its proximity to all major highways and the presence of ASU as keys to the city’s success. She said Chase M anhattan Bank’s decision to locate its credit card processing plant in Tempe, rather than in Salt Lake City, was swayed by Tempe’s downtown Airlines in bankruptcy court and the subsequent vacancies of some of its office space. However, Krigers said another business undoubtedly will purchase the offices. Because retention and recruitment of investors has been so successful for Tempo, Krigers said the city does not need to offer tax breaks or amenities clauses to incoming business. Rich Oesterle, the city’s assistant management service director, said Tempe is consistently 2 to 3 percent more than projected revenues and 1 to 2 percent less than anticipated expenditures. Anticipated revenue for fiscal year 1991 is $146.7 million. Last year, Tempe generated $24 million in sales tax, its largest money source. “We try to be as fair and conservative as we can,” Oesterle said. “For that matter, I’ve gotten better as the years go by at making revenue projections.” Noon is the deadline to place a State Press Classified liner for the next day. Matthews Center, Basement • 965-6731 CROSSWORD 1 M 1 s S H A C K■ MA R 1 E A R E N A A T O L L M 1M 1C RU No F F EV E 1 RE s RA 1N ED NED Q U 1LTS Q U 1 RK EQ U 1T Y Ho W EOUA T E P A p A 0Uo 0 R 1 V EN N 1 T RO E L A N D A N E A R BON E S ! E0 GE S TA by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 1 Geogra­ phy reference 6 Goes under 11 Royal topper 12 Exact double 13 Present champion 15 Call for help 16 Corn unit 17 Envision 18 Mexican Indian 20 Let up 23 Dawn 27 Los Angeles ones DOWN 1 Bible book 2 Three­ some 3 Oodles 4 Leatherwork aid 5 Elicit a Sizzler In vites A ll 50,000 ASU Students And Faculty To Lunch. Or Dinner. Yesterday’s Answer ‘Gesund- h e ir 21 Scrooge 6 Crosses cry the goal 22 “What line Kind of 7 Under the Fool — ?’ weather 24 Veto SGives 25 Exploit approval 26 Golf goal 9 Patella’s 30 Elm place Street villain 10 Withered 14Topper 31 Start a 18 Lost journey 19 Eros 33 Impair 20 Skill 34 River squad 28 Tower setting 29 Burglar 31 Philly j. 2 3 4 ’ r ~ 7 eager r ■ 32 Partner of it 1 ‘danger­ 13 14 ous’' li 16 34 Health resort 16 19 37 Lunch 38 In the 20 21 22 2¿ past Í7 41 One ;■ m * showing 29 31 off his 30 32 acquain­ tances 34 36 3J 44 Prepared to fire 41 42 45 Brother hazard 35 Bucket 36 Bullets 38 Pinnacle 39 ’ Pretty Lady* actor 40 Bauxite and galena 42 Poet's contract tion 43 PGA player 8 9 SALADBAR&SODPBAR 10 'if 24 25 26 $4.99 SunDevil Deal, Part III. 38 39 40 All you can eat from our Hot Pasta, Tostada, Soup, Fresh Fruit, and Salad Bars. Plus two more: a Hot Appetizer Bar and a Dessert Bar brimming with soft ice cream and all the gooey toppings you love. 44 (Fr.) 46 Splendor 47 Cunning 46 1 J And That’s Not All. *7 For $4.99 get your choice of a shrimp, chicken or small steak entree p lu s potato, rice or vegetable plu s a green dinner salad plu s your choice of non-alcoholic bever­ age with bottomless refills. It’s year three of the $4.99 SunD evil Deal. Come take advantage of us. After all how long can we go on like this? DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to work It 9/10 AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation o f die words are ail hints. Each day the code letters are different. 9-10 M F X ' W G D The SunDevil Sizzler’s $4.99 SunDevil Deal is only a bike ride away. CR YPTO Q UO TE Q D M H I D G F Y QD H J C G T D V H X . — M j C M TF MJ G Q FG T D I D W O PASTABARitTOSTADABAR C J H T Eqjoy our Salad B ar or a sirloin steak entree at the Mill & Southern Sizzler for a limited tim e discount price of $4.99. _ Offer good for your party with coupon or an ■ ASU ID. Also good a t Baseline & McClintock, Eqjoy our Salad B ar or a sirloin steak entree . ■ | a t the Mill & Southern Sizzler for a limited | ■ tim e discount price of $4.99. Offer good for your party with coupon or an ■ " ASU ID. Also good a t Baseline & McClintock. ' I I I I I S izzler j V Y D H G T D I , O I . Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PEOPLE SELDOM IM­ PROVE W H E N THEY HAVE N O OTHER M O DEL BUT THEMSELVES T O CO PY AFTER. — GOLDSMITH © 1901 by King F eatu re* Syndicate. Inc The SimDevil Sizzler’s $4.99 SunDevil Deal is only a bike ride away. S izzler L . at M ill & Southern - J. L . at M ill & Southern - J ’toons State Press Tuesday, September 10,1991 Page 14 TH E F A R S ID E Calvin an d Hobbes by Bill W atterson Mother Goose and Grimm* MZ.600S5, GRIMMVS P t M M E WITH A MOUSe MTHE5W , By GARY LARSON we better bor^ it in the BACK^ARP IF He KNOWS «MATS by Mike Peters Í WOMflER WHATSHE WAMTSMETBPOwnH. THE¿ASERPR(ÑTBR¡ 6 W R J R H ( M ..i_ ^ D o o n esb u ry BY GARRY TRUDEAU PHOENIX (AP) — The stray cats which lived around City Hall are finding new homes, but not everybody’s happy about it. Maria Forner, a 13-year employee of the accounts division, said she was considering taking a petition protesting a city program to remove the strays. “The Cats have a long tradition at City Hall, longer than most of the current City Council members,” she said. The council — actually the council’s meeting place figured into the decision to trap the cats and place them with families, said Deputy City Manager Jack Tevlin. Several months ago, at least one of the cats got into the council chambers and stayed there for several days before being discovered. The result was a smelly room and a soiled cloth covering on the council’s table, Tevlin said. Also figuring into the decision was concern that some of the cats were in pom* health, Tevlin said. About a dozen of the cats have been trapped, taken to a veterinarian to be spayed or neutered and then placed with homes, he said. One had a diseased eye which had to be removed, and several others were treated for fevers. ’ •* Tevlin said a half-dozen or so cats remain. He said the removal program has cost the city about $500, mostly in reimbursement to a city employee who volunteered to take the animals to her vet once they’d been trapped. A private group also is contributing toward the vet costs, he said. ŒMgmm Crushers ___ m Beginning Week Blowout $5.50 Mon. & Tue.: Medium One-Item Pizza. sa Mid-Week Madness $6.50 Wed. & Thu.: Medium Pizza w/Two Toppings of your choice. Wild Weekend $8.50 Fri., Sat., & Sun.: Large Pizza w/Two toppings of your choice. S etving ASU Since rs sr^ ih iive rs ity & Rural State P ro s ,J u e sd a ^ S e p te m b e M 0 t 2 9 9 1 Collins fails test on injured knee, will miss opener Mason cleared for contact By DAN ZEIGER State Press Shane Collins has failed the latest strength test oh his right knee and will not play at Oklahoma State on Saturday, resulting in ASU coach Larry Marmie having to further experiment with his defensive line in preparation for the season-opening game. Marmie had hoped that Collins Collins would pass the examination on his surgically-repaired knee so that he could be evaluated for a possible contribution on Saturday; but the senior will again be kept out of contact and be retested next Monday . “I need to get more strength,” Collins said. “ I’ll be sitting out and will get retested next week. Things look promising. I keep getting stronger each time, and the trainers are pleased with my progress. It just needs time to strengthen, so I’ll be getting ready for next week.” An honors candidate at defensive tackle before the start of last year, Collins was injured during the seasonopener against Baylor. He made a courageous comeback three weeks later against Washington, but was still suffering from pain and went under the knife afterward. Collins has been tested on a computerized extremity system, a machine gauging the strength and flexibility of rehabilitating muscles. He has been able to run during practice for some time, but his knee has still not responded well enough for contact. “I feel very bad,” Collins said. 'These things take time, I guess. It wouldn’t be right to take a chance that I could come back too early and re-injure it —I don’t want to miss the rest of the season. I’ll just wait for the next test and take things from there.” The test failure has forced Marmie to look elsewhere for help in the front seven this weekend. Greg Kordas and Ivory Irvin, a pair of junior defensive tackles, both saw extensive practice time bn Monday. “I don’t know who will be starting yet,” Marmie said. “ I have not made a decision yet, seeing as we found out about Shane at noon. Nothing is in stone yet, but Ivory Irvin and Greg Kordas are the most likely guys right now.” T u rn to D e fen se, page 16: . Page 15 Probation hurting Oklahom a State But arrival of freshman Denson gives Cowboys hope at tailback By DARREN URBAN State Press . <■ . It was just a few years ago when the mention of Oklahoma State football conjured up the images of Thurman Thomas and Barry Sanders running past defenders, Hart Lee Dykes making touchdown receptions, and a lot of points on the scoreboard. BUt the Cowboys haven’t been quite the same since going oh NCAA probation in 1989, stumbling to a 4-7 record a year ago and falling to Tulsa 13-7 in their first game of 1991. “We’ve got one more year of no postseason,” OSU coach Pat Jones said. “I think were starting to dig out (from probation) from the standpoint that we have some young quality guys in the program. We brought in a few more junior college guys this year that have helped our football team, and I think if we can remain somewhat injury-free, we’ll have a good football team at some point this season.” While the probation has hurt the Cowboys on the recruiting front, one coup OSU did pull off was the wooing of 1990 Oklahoma High School Player of the Year Rafael Denson. Denson, a 5-foot-8,165-pound tailback who also runs track, is the heir apparent to the weighty mantle of No. 1 running back. “Denson is a unique guy,” Jones said. “He got 88 yards on 21 carries against Tulsa in a rainstorm, and I really want to see him against someone other than ourselves on a fast ' track.” One thing to guard against, Jones said, is to push Denson too quickly into the large shoes of the tailback tradition. “He’s not a very big guy, but he’s a heck of a youngster,” Jones said. “He works hard and he’s probably a little further along than we might have thought. It’s unfair to Compare him to Thurman Thomas or Barry Sanders, but he appears to be cut from the same mold.” Oklahoma State University photo The signal caller for Jones’ offense is senior Kenny Ford, who started the last five games for OSU last year. Ford Oklahoma State quarterback Kenny Ford could possibly split completed 7-of-ll passes against Tulsa, but split time with time at the position this weekend with redshirt freshman Brent redshirt freshman Brent Scott and expects to do the same Scott. this weekend..'. _ The loss to Tulsa — a game in which the Golden Hurricane Jones said that he hopes that one of the two will eventually amassed 186 yards rushing and 35 minutes of possession time bring the Cowboys offense back to a potent level. —left Jones and the Cowboys looking to shore up defensively, “I’d like to go back to the (quarterback Mike) Gundy- a chore Jones said may be tougher because of his squad’s Barry Sanders-Hart Lee Dykes offense,” Jones said. “We youth. were the fourth-highest scoring team in history that year. I’d “Tulsa held the ball on us a little more than I would’ve like to think we’d go back to an effective offense.” thought,’’ Jones said.“ The wet weather, I think; affected us, An effective offense, especially one with. Denson scooting and I played 20 guys in the game that did not play for us in the around in the backfield, relies on a steady-but-not-flashy (Tulsa) game a year ago. Our roster has been in a state of offensive line, led by seniors Josh Arrott, Brian Bobo and flux for a couple of years, and I’m kind of going to keep it that Peter Surette. way for a while.” “It’s about the same group we played with a year ago,’’ One problem OSU had in the Tulsa game — and may yet Jones said. “We’ve got some veterans in there that work have against ASU — is the loss of All-Big Eight defensive pretty well as a unit. They’re not overwhelming, but they’re tackle Stacey Satterwhite. T u rn to O k lah o m a S tate, p ag e 16. hard-working guys, bright guys that have played some ” PACIFIC PROFILING THE NORTH TO SOUTH Malauulu steps in as man in charge of offense at UofA Wildcats have youngest teamofTomey’s tenure By AMY SLADE State Press State Press photo George Malauulu is UofA’s starting quarterback after some memorable relief appearances during the last two seasons. Dating back to post-season play last year, UofA has scored just 14 points in its last two contests — suggesting reassurance to the senior class at ASU. The Streak could finally end before graduation; After losing 25 lettermen from their 7-5 campaign in 1990, which included ah embarrassing 28-0 loss in the Aloha Bowl, UofA coach Dick Tomey was forced to play 11 freshmen in a 38-14 loss at 22nd-ranked Ohio State on Saturday. “I see this as the youngest team since we have been at Arizona,” said Tomey, who is entering his fifth year at the helm, “That’s great experience for those guys to (play and then) look at themselves on film.” However, besides watching his young players in action, Tomey said there was nothing positive about losing. There were, however, some encouraging signs for the future. Redshirt freshman Charles Levy, who played his first collegiate game on Saturday at tailback, is also expected to see some time at quarterback. He led UofA receivers with five catches for 51 yards and a touchdown, and also carried the ball six times for 26 yards. In addition, the versatile Levy set a school récord for kickoff return yardage (180) while tying the Wildcat mark of seven kickoff returns. “Levy did a great job, just like I thought he would,” Tomey said. “I couldn’t imagine getting a better performance from a firstgame player.” Sophomore Terry Vaughn, a big-play receiver the last half of 1990 (he had 22 catches for 432 yards and two touchdowns in his final seven regular-season games), caught just two passes on Saturday. The Wildcats, who have led the Pac-10 in rushjng three of the four years Tomey has been with the team, plan to utilize a more balanced attack Ibis season. Junior southpaw George Malauulu has proven himself in four career starts and several outstanding relief efforts during the past two seasons, in which he had completed 45.5 p ercen t of his p asses for one touchdown. Malauulu matched that touchdown total when he completed a 12-yard pass to Levy in the first quarter Saturday. “Our passing performance (on Saturday) was nothing to write home about,” Tomey said after his team gained 140 yards in the air. “But we didn’t run that well either (35 attempts for 113 yards). “How much we pass depends on how effective it proves to be.” In order to win football games, Tomey said, stopping the run is more important. Tura to UofA, page 16. S ta te *» « » T u « d 2 ^ 2 * g n b « J^ 9 9 1 Pasc 16 Freshm en le a d ASU in g o lf to u m ey Dem sey excels in 1st outing as Sun Devils miss Mickelson By AMY SLADE State Press An unexpected source of productivity proved to be the difference for the Sun Devils as they competed in the Colorado University/Fox Acres Invitational over the weekend. Redshirt freshman Todd Demsey, playing in his first collegiate event, led the Sun Devils to a third-place finish and was the only ASU golfer to finish in the top 10. "I’m very pleased with the overall performance of Demsey,” ASU men’s golf coach Steve Loy said. “He played extremely well.” For the tourney, Demsey finished sixth after firing a final round of 68, giving him a three-round total of 2-under 210. Impressive play by freshmeri Larry Barber and Trip Kuehne landed them a spot in the top 20. They both finished in a tie for 19th with a three-round total of 5-over 218. Barber’s play was steady, as he had rounds of 70,74 and 74, respectively. Kuehne showed signs of improvement as his daily totals dropped from 77, 74 and 67, respectively. “We finally got to play our new freshmen and see their great talent,” Loy said. “Unfortunately, when your freshmen players have your low rounds, things aren’t quite where they need to be.” As a team, the Sun Devils shot a 282 in the final round, which was the low round of the day, but could not overcomea 13-stroke deficit from the 36 holes the previous day. Arkansas won the event over Nevada in a playoff at the 6,230-yard, par 71 Fox Acres (Colo.) Country Club course. “Arkansas played well for a team that hasn’t done that great the past few years,” Loy said. “Nevada was also very impressive for such a young team.” The windy weather did not effect the outcome, Loy said, because everyone was forced to play under those conditions. The Sun Devils were playing without senior All-American Phil Mickelson, who led the U S. team to a victory in the Walker Cup last week in Ireland. ‘‘Any time Phil is not there, it always plays a big part,” Loy said. “You can’t just take your No. 1 player out of the lineup, especially if it’s Phil Mickelson.” ASU senior Brett Dean just missed a top-10 finish, as he finished in an 11th place tie, posting a three-day total of 1-over 214. Other Sun Devil golfers included junior Rob Mangini, who finished in a tie for 13th, while senior Scott Sullivan struggled to tie for 37th. “This tournament gave me a very good understanding of what we need to work on,” Loy said. “We are a young team and we played like one.” last year, and we made too many major errors to be the kind of defense we want to be.” \ The kind of defense Tomey would like to see is one that is not on the field very much, but that did not go as planned as the UofA defense “wore down physically’’ according to Tomey after 85 plays and 38:57 on the field Saturday. “ (Ohio State) was in better physical condition and really wiped us out,” Tomey said. “As a coach, you really admire a team that can do that to you.” The secondary graduated three players last season, all of whom had all-conference honors during their careers, including Darryll Lewis, the Jim Thorpe Award winner as the nation’s top defensive back last year. The lone returning starter is senior strong safety Richard Holt, who is joined by sophomore Bobby Roland, who Had three interceptions, five deflections and a blocked kick in a reserve role. So far this season, there has not been an opportunity for redshirt freshman Steve McLaughlin to kick a field goal, and senior punter Adam Grand has averaged just 36.5 yards on six punts. Last season, Grand and Josh Miller shared the duties and combined for a 35.3-yard average. “We’ll have to take a look at it (on film) before we decide (who will be the punter next week) ,” Tomey said. “We didn’t have strong punts against Ohio State.” U o fA Continued from page 19. His team failed to do that by yielding 325 rushing yards and five touchdowns to the Buckeyes. Dating back to last season, the Wildcats’ defense has allowed 26 or mpre points in seven of their last 10 games. The defense returns five starters, led by junior tackle Ty Parten, who missed substantial playing time with a shoulder injury last season. Sophomore Rob Waldrop returns at nose guard, while senior Richard Maddox returns as the other starting tackle. Sophomore Pulu Poumele and senior Earl Johnson will also contribute on the line. “Our defense last fall was a disappointment, although at times we played well,” Tomey said. “We weren’t as physical College Football ASSOCIATED PRESS COLLEGE FOOTBALL POLL NATIONAL COLLEGIATE SPORTS WRITERS POLL The Top 25 teams in the Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sep. 9, total points and last week’s ranking: PTS. LAST RECORD 2- D O 1,491 1 . Florida St (53) i 2 Miami, Fla. (2) 1,344 1- D O : 3 3 Michigan (1) 1,339 1 -D 0 ' ,2 4. Washington (2) .1- D O 1,304 4 5. Penn St. 2- D 0 1,285 5 6 Florida (1) • 1- D 0 1,195 6 7. Notre Dame 1,148 1 -D 0 ■v:‘ 7 8. Clemson 1- D O 1.027 8 9. Oklahoma D DO 973 9 10. Houston (1) t- D 0 : 10 933 11. Tennessee .■■ft D O : 944 •■■•.lì 837 12. Colorado Ì- D O h t' -1 4 13. Nebraska 1 -D 0 729 14. Iowa • 715 1- D O ■•.',15' ; 15. Auburn 1 -D 0 506 18 1 -D 0 16. Alabama 501 20 17. Georgia Tech 467 17 D 1- 0 18. Michigan St. D D 0 463 19 19. Ohio St. i- DO 410 22 20. Texas A&M D D Ö 345 21 304 21;. UCLA T -D 0 : •.'23Ì . 1- D O 24 22. Syracuse 242 ,'•> 1 -D O > 162 23. Baylor • •'-V 24. Pittsburgh , 2- D O 146 25. Mississippi St. 2- D 0 125 V The Top 25 teams in the National Collegiate Sports W riters col­ lege football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sep. 9, total points, last week’s ranking and State Press ranking: RECORD LAST PTS SP ? 1. Florida St. (24) 2- D 0 . •1 742 2. Michigan 1- D 0 686 2 .• 8 3. Penn St. (4) 2-DO 660 4 4■ 4. Miami, Fla. V3 7 1- D ö :. 639 5. Washington (1) 620 5 1* D PC • .2 ' 6. Florida 1-DO 601 - 6 5 567 7. Notre Dame 1-0-0 •; 6 8. Clemson (1) 1 -D 0 526 8 12 9. Houston 1- D O 9 3 509 10. Tennessee 482 11 1- D O 10 11. Oklahoma 459 9 D D 0 10 12. Colorado 1- D O 421 13 ': •■. 17 11 13. Iowa 1 -D 0 367 16 14. Georgia Tech D 1- Ö 353 15 18 15. Nebraska 1 -D 0 334 18 16 16. Auburn 17 1- D O 269 13 14 17. Alabama 1- D 0 240 19 18. Michigan St. D DO 210 20 19. UCLA 1- DO 190 22 23 20 20. Ohio St. 1- D O 169 23 149 24 21. Texas D 1- 0 ■ 12 22 Texas A&M D D O 144 21 15 25 1- D 0 113 25 23. Syracuse 14 24 USC D P 0 77 25. Pittsburgh '2 -D O 69 Others receiving votes : Texas 112, Georgia 79, North Carolina 79, California 52, USC 51, Oregon 45, Mississippi 32, North Carolina St 21, Illinois 18, Memphis St. 15, Air Force 14, Maryland 9, Brigham Young 8, Kansas 3, Arkansas 1, Louisville 1; Texas Christian 1. C o n tin u ed fro m p ag e 15. But Marmie did get some better news during the weekend when nose guard Pat Mason, who had been suffering from a strain in his right Shoulder, was cleared for contact. Mason did not see full participation on Monday, but Marmie said he would like to get the senior in the swing of things as soon as possible. “I’d like to get him in there as quickly as , he can stand it,” Marmie said. “We don’t want to beat him up in practice during the week, but we want to get him at least some participation and start to get him familiar with Oklahoma State.” In addition, tailback George Montgomery, who bruised his right shoulder in practice last week, was back in full participation on Monday while linebacker Gavin Hill, who W E ARE EXPANDING OUR BUYING TO INCLUDE A W IDER SELECTION OF CONTEM PORARY AND VINTAGE CLOTHING AND ACCESSO RIES. NOW IS THE PERFECT TIM E TO CHECK YOUR DRAW ERS AND W ARDRO BES AND BRING IN THOSE U NUSED \ ITEM S FOR CASH OR TRADE. THE SELECTION W ILL BE EXCITING. THE BUYING W ILL BE ACTIVE AND EXPANDED. 227 W University Dr Tempe 968 2557 had been out with a knee injury, also returned. The result has been an injury report that is nowhere near the catastrophic levels it reached last season, when 19 different players missed a total of 87 starts. Of the six players who are currently sidelined, each has a chance to return before the end of the year. Mike Balian, a freshman defensive lineman who had been making a solid impression before suffering a knee sprain, is Still out but was walking without pain on Monday. The only other players in limbo are linebacker Aaron Franklin (right ankle sprain), defensive lineman Eric Ipock (left knee sprain) and quarterback Troy Rauer (leg laceration.) O k lah om a State C o n tin u e d fro m p ag e 15. Others receiving votes; Mississippi St. 43, California 27, Georgia 27, Baylor 25, North Carolina 25, Brigham Young 23, Oregon 21, Virginia Tech 11, Mississippi 10, West Virginia 5, North Carolina St. 4, Colorado St. 3, Indiana 3, Air Force 2, Il­ linois 1, Louisiana St. 1, Rutgers 1. The State Press is on the stands every weekday morning Don't miss a single issue! 724 E G lendale Phx 870-8507 D efen se Satterwhite, a 6-foot-6, 270-pound senior, missed the Cowboy opener because he is still recovering from off-season elbow surgery. “Satterwhite had practiced the week before the game in pads,” Jones said. “We’re just going to continue to see what happens to him in practice. We’d like to think we can get him back early in the season, but it’s a day-to-day situation with him. “ Again, how much of (the Tulsa running game) was not having Satterwhite out there LC AR M — I’m not sure. That’s a concern. We’re ’ playing a couple of young guys that I think got a little frustrated at Some points.” The first and only time a Jones-led team played the Sun Devils was in the 1984 season opener, in which an ASU team picked No. I in the nation by Sport magazine was delivered a 45-3 pasting by the Cowboys in Jones’ initial game as head coach. “ I remem ber the post-game press interview,” Jones said. “A writer asked me ‘Was this your most memorable win as a head coach?’ I said, ‘It’s my only win as a head coach.’ ” TO S P C A K A R A B IC C o m e join th is learning opportunity to Study first- level jA rab ic a t T h u n d erb ird (T h e ^American ¿grad u ate S c h o o l o f International A^ariagem ent) • C la s se s held S e p t, 5, '1991 - T>e,c. 19/ 1 9 9 1 • A\o n d a y & "Thursday evenings 6-9*30 p.m. on Thunderbird cam pus, 59th jAve. & Tureenw ay/ Tülendale. C lassroom # 4 • AAust be a full-time student a t A S T I (Pall S e m e ster T99T) • Tuition scholarship available. C o n ta c tr Prof. Issa P e te r s a t 9 7 8 -7 1 9 0 or 9 3 8 -9 1 9 6 or the M odern .Language De.partme.ntat 9 7 8 -7 2 5 5 / P e te r Alorwath/ Chair, D ep a rtm en t of Foreign L an g u a g es/ 9 6 5 -6 3 8 2 . • Worth 7 hours o f credit. Page 17 Tuesday, September 10,1991 State Press Judge overrules NCAA in steroid case By The Associated Press MISSOULA, Mont. — A judge ordered Monday that Montana offensive tackle Steve Premock, who had been declared ineligible by the NCAA for alleged steroid use, be allowed to play. Citing “substantial questions” about the NCAA’s drug­ testing procedures, state District Judge Douglas Harkin issued his injunction following a two-day hearing. Harkin also said he intends to order NCAA officials to appear before his court to show why they should not “forever be barred” from penalizing Premock, a 296-pound senior who was a starter last year. Premock transferred to Montana before the 1989 season from Sierra Junior College in California. He was redshirted that year but started every game last season. He missed the Grizzlies’ season-opening 38-6 victory Saturday over Humboldt State, but probably will play Saturday against Louisiana Tech, Montana athletic department officials said. Premock was declared ineligible for his senior season after an NCAA random drug test on Feb. 28 showed positive for use of anabolic steroids. Premock and Montana officials weren’t notified of the results until April 2 and quickly had Premock tested again. His lawyers said that test, conducted at American Biotest Laboratories in Santa Clara, Calif-, proved negative for any steroids, Premock went to court, and Harkin issued a temporary injunction two weeks ago. In his ruling Monday, the judge cited the lack of a clear chain of custody of the urine specimen, inaccurate dates in the NCAA’s drug tests, an improperly signed lab manifest, and a late notification of the test results. He also pointed to a telephone appeal process that “left a lot to be desired” and uniformity of certain results for all the players tested except Premock. The overall result, Harkin said, was “nothing short of remarkable.” Premock was one of 71 college players nationwide declared ineligible for positive drug tests during the past school year, according to the NCAA. “I could tolerate some inconsistency in the testing procedure if there was some indication slight errors occurred and the plaintiff showed evidence of steroid use,” Harkin said. But team physician Dr. Robert Curry testified that Premock doesn’t exhibit the normal symptoms of a steroid user. And Harkin noted that at the time of the NCAA test Premock was on a diet, trying to lose weight, not gain it. The NCAA had no representatives at the court hearing Friday or Monday, although Joan Newman, an attorney representing the university, said she had notified the organization several times. Harkin said he was worried that the NCAA would penalize the school if Montana allows Premock to play. NCAA rules say a team that uses ineligible players may have to forfeit its games, lose its team and individual awards, be declared ineligible for postseason play, and have to send the NCAA all its television receipts and 90 percent of its gate receipts. “It’s foolish to go through a football season and have it all thrown out the window because I didn’t hear all the evidence that might change my mind,” Harkin said. “I don’t think it’s right for a party t o . . . lay back in the weeds and tag you at the end.” He told Newman and Premock’s attorney, Brad Luck, to draw up motions to require NCAA officials to appear in his court before they attempt to impose sanctions against Montana. Montana athletic director Bill Moos said Monday he will talk to football coach Don Read. But Moose said “it appears Premock will be playing” against Louisiana Tech. Read indicated he probably would start Premock on Saturday. Luck said the NCAA ‘‘should take a real strong look at their own random testing procedures” before declaring other athletes ineligible because of alleged drug use. Premock took the stand Monday and answered “no, sir” to the single question of whether he ever took anabolic steroids. After the hearing, he said that Harkin’s decision was “just another ton of bricks off my shoulders.” Athletes don’t need to use drugs to compete successfully, Premock said. “There’s no place for athletes to use them,” he said. “You have to weigh the effects and Side effects. I’d rather choose life than death any day.” Snyder keeps Cal m odest after record-setting w in By The Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif. — University of California coach Bruce Snyder said Monday he won’t let his team dwell on Saturday’s record-setting 86-24 victory over Pacific. “I’ve got to caution our team that we’ve got a long way to go, that there are a lot of things to improve on,” Snyder said. “We’ve got to avoid the arrogance, the seductiveness of a great game like that.” Cal set a modern-day school, post 1937 record for points in a game, as quarterback Mike Pawlawski threw six touchdown passes before leaving the contest early in the third period. Pawlawski, who completed l l of 13 passes for 191 yards, was named the Pac-10 offensive player of the week Monday. The Bears figure to get a much more serious test Saturday at home when they face Big Ten foe Purdue, which opened its season by defeating Eastern Michigan 49-3. Snyder is especially anxious to see how his defense will perform against a more traditional offense. Pacific, which utilizes a no-huddle, run-and-shoot offense, scored on its first two possessions against the Bears. The Bears finally responded by loosening their man-to­ man coverage in the secondary and mixing in some zone to combat the Tigers’ passing game. “Our defense began on a shaky note,” admitted Snyder, referring to Troy Kopp’s 64-yard touchdown pass to Aaron Turner on the game’s first play from Scrimmage. “But we were really uptight and we wanted to do well so badly it made us not as fluid and comfortable as we needed to be,” he said. “When We settled down and learned to disguise our defenses better, I think we confused them.” Cal limited Pacific to three points in the second and third quarters while intercepting Kopp three times. Snyder said that center Steve Gordon, regarded as one of the Pac-lO’s best offensive linemen, remains sidelined after spraining his left knee Saturday. He is not likely to play against Purdue and Snyder wouldn’t speculate on when he would be healthy again. Fullback Greg Zomalt, who injured his arch and hyperextended his knee, is probable to see action against Purdue. New Boilermakers coach Jim Collette said the Bears will be a handful even without those two. “They’ve got to many good players they can score points real quickly,” Collette said. “They’re hard to stop.” S ta te P re s s : inform ation. 965-7572 n e m . 985-2292 aduertising. 965-6555 classified. 965-6731 miy A FIESTA BOWL SCHOLARSHIP for a college-eligible Arizona Resident* 1st Prize - $3,000 Scholarship 2nd Prize - $2,000 Scholarship 3rd Prize - $1,000 Scholarship Three winners w ill be selected each week by random drawing.They w ill receive a pair of tickets to th e next home gam e o f ASU,U o f A or NAU- depending on which post office box the winning entry is m ailed to. Enter w eekly contest o f school o f yo u r choice. W in n ers o f w eekly d raw ings w ill also receive a p air o f choice seats fo r th e FIESTA BOW L Football Gam e New Year's Day where 3 o f the 33 finalists w ill w in scholarships. Enter as often as you wishfno purchase necessary).One entry per envelope. Each entry m ust include the name o f an eligible scholarship recipient* and the nutrition inform ation panelfor facsimile) from anv size carton of milk. PLE A S E P R IN T N A M E, C O M PLETE A D D R ES S, AND TELEPHONE NUMBER ON PIECE OF PAPER AND INCLUDE WITH NUTRITION INFORMATION PANEL. "Scholarship nominee must be an Arizona resident eligible for 1992 term o r be c u rre n tly e n ro lle d a t an A rizo n a C o lle g e or University.(Employees and family members of Arizona milk producers are not eligible.) Entries must be received by November 18,1991. MAIL ENTRIES TO: "Fiesta Bowl Scholarship Sweepstakes" to your choice of the following post office boxes. ASU - P.O. Box 520, Tempe, AZ 85280 NAU - P.O. Box 1448, Tempe, AZ 85280 U of A - P.O. Box 560, Tempe, AZ 85280 Sponsored by United Dairymen o f Arizona m Classifieds Page 18 Tuesday, September 10,1991 ANNOUNCEMENTS FBLA ALUMNI: Attend organizational PBL meeting September 12, 7:00pm, MU Navajo. GET YOUR bead examined! Take the Meaaa test 9/21. S2S. Mensa, The High IQ Society. 274-3538. HANG GLIDING, windsurfing, jetski­ ing, kayaking daily. Information, pric­ es, group rates, gifts: Call Adventure Sports, 897-7121. $100 PRIZE OFFERED for 1 hr. of your timé Fem ale students ages 25-40 sought to participate in research study. Julie Anne’* 391-0686 days orevenings A M R T M E N T ^ _ $425, 2 bedroom, upstairs, 1416 South J e n tilly . W a lk to cam pus. Jay , 893-2888, Realty Executives. T0W H0MES/C0ND0S FOR RENT 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath. D ose to campus. A ll am enities. $650/m onth. C ontact Russ, 967-2344. 3 BEDROOM , 2 bath condo, corner M cC lintock/U niversity, $610/month. N ew ly d e co rated , a v a ila b le im m e­ d iately, (714)497-5512 o r (602)9661157*ask for Grant QUIET, SECURE 2 bedroom condo, 15 minutes ASU, $418 per month, extras. 265-2066. R E N T A L S H A R IN ^ ^ ^ N EED FEMALE to share 2 bedroom apartment at Cameron Creek. $300 plus utilities. Call 967-6471. R E S PO N S IB L E /O P E N - M IN D E D ROOMMATE needed to share 2 bed­ ro o m , 2 b ath ap artm e n t. K elly, 752-8521. VV, . ’•-7 y / . : 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, close to campus, pool, tennis. Ideal for roommates, all appliances, $500/m pnth. C all K elli, 497-6637,234-1152. ROOMMATE NEEDED. Share 2 bed­ room , 2 bath apartm ent a t Cam eron Creek. $270 ♦ utilities. 966-5291. ASU AREA, studio, 1 and 2 bedrooms fo r rent. $260 and up. 967-4908 or 968-8838. ROOMMATE W ANTED 2 bedroom * 21/2 b ath to w nhouse, Pointe South M ountain, pool, spa $300, 1/2 utilities.496-6769. PöoäLlaundry facility parking, dishwasher S u n r ise A p is . 1014 E. Spence 96S-6947 BEAUTIFUL NEW large 1 and 2 bed­ room s. W alk to A SU. Pool, laundry room, 1 block south o f University on 8 th S tree t. C ap e C od A partm ents* 968-5238. LARGE STUDIO apartment for sale. Full price: $10,900. 814 North Hayden. C lo se to A SU , fu rn ish e d o r not. 848-6800. N IC E 2 b e d ro o m , w a lk to ASU/Downtown $370 pool, BBQ, laun­ dry, microwave 1014 Farmer 966-4797ONE BEDROOM apartment/condominium , W alk to A SU ; all a p p lia n ce s, w ash er/d ry er, poo l, jacu zzi. $350 257-8758/236-3125 O NE/TW O BED RO OM S, $240. fur­ nished, 1 block/ASU, laundry. Call Ja­ cob, 921-0952 or pager 389-7571. T0W NH0M ES-C0ND0S FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM tow nhouse near ASU. $385/mooth. Refrigerator, tw o pools. C arl: 897-1899, 844-5900. A vailable new. ' 2 B ED R O O M , 1 b ath c o n d o , near Dobson/University, w asher/dryer and refrigerator. $395. MGM, 345-1919. APARTMENTS ROOM M ATE W ANTED to share 2sto ry c o n d o . 2 m aster bedroom s, 3 baths. W asher/dryer, nicely furnished. Close to ASU. Nonsmoker. $275, 1/2 utilities: Aaron, 350-9238. ROOMMATE WANTED, 5 bedroom, 3 bath house with pool. $150/month, 1/5 u tilitie s . 5 m in u te s from ASU ; 967-3441. A LARGE room- private bathroom in huge house. W ith w asher/dryer, m i­ crow ave, color TV , VCR and more. O n ly $2 3 9 , w ith fre e u tilitie s . A l, 829-7166. LOOKING FOR a clean fun loving male or female to share a 2 bedroom, 2 bath a t M eridian C orner. C lose to ASU 5260/month plus 1/2 utilities and phone. Call Ben 829-7470. M A T U R E N O N SM O K ER to sh are house with pool. $350 month including utilities. Call Chuck, evenings or wee­ kends. 345-6602. APARTMENTS • 1 bed: $375 *2 bed: $520 Move in with 1 block past of Rural 968-6383 TOMAS MOPED, good around cam­ pus, must sell. $250/offer. 752-3066. BICYCLES MENS TEN-SPEEDS. 26"-28", $25$100. 1 b ik e ra c k fo r c ar $10. 969-0761. TRAVEL BAHAMAS CRUISE for 2, 5 days. 4 nights $600 retail, must sell $300 or best offer. 990-1702 leave message. HELP WANTEDGENERAL PAPAGO PARK Village 1: Only $100 down for beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath unit with vaulted Ceiling! Save $10,000 and stop renting. Greg Askins, Realty Executives, 966-0016. B u y o f th e W e e k Papago Park Village S exy, s p a c io u s 1 b d . V aulted ceiling, s u n d e ck . $B 2.500. . Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 25* COLOR floor-m odel T V , $115. 19", $100, look* and works good. Call 254-9484. FURNITURE BEDS: TWINS $49, Full S59, Queens $89, 5 drawer chest $39.50. 4-draw er desk $49.95. H alf p ric e delivery for students. 256-7675. BUNKBEDS, BUELD/REPAIR. Quali­ ty. $4fr$100.967-6321,966-9493, « ACCOUNTING M AJOR, 3.5 + GPA, close to cam pus, flexible hours. Gall Joan 968-4960. AIRLINE JEWELRY Now hiring to fill many entry level po­ sitions. Starting salary range to $24,000 with travel benefits. (303)441-2455. A LW A Y S B U Y IN G je w e lry o f all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. R are Lion, 921 South M ill A venue, T em pe C enter, 968-6074. ATTENTION: M ANUFACTURERS rep wanted for small Tempe business. $7/hour plus benefits, hours flexible. Call Jim, 820-8408. CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Ave­ nue jewelers, 414 South Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. CHILDCARE NEEDED for 3-year-old boy Wednesday all day, Thursday 7amnoon. My home or yours. Need refer­ ences. Shawna, 967-9479. AUTOMOBILES '82 TOYOTA Supra. Black, automatic, a ir AM /FM cassette, original ow ner. $3,500. Day 965-1438, night 598-9008. '82 VW Rabbit, w hite, 4-speed, rnns fine. $1,200/best offer. 966-3208 '85 CHRYSLER LeBaton convertible, gold, Mark Cross edition. Leather in­ te rio r, autom atic, pow er everything, A M /FM c assette. G re a t c o n d itio n . 829-0153. '87 NISSAN Pulsar, black, t-tops, air, p o w e r stee rin g , b rak es. 5- sp eed , A M /FM cassette. Beantiful car, must sell immediately. Mike, 730-5339. DAYBED WITH trundle, brand new, iv o ry ra ilin g s, e x ce lle n t cond itio n . 52 0 0 /b est o ffe r. K im , 963 -2 1 1 3 , 251-0230. ^ 9 8 4 CJ7* 34,000 original m iles, tilt wheel, 5-speed, new stereo, tags, paint, D ESKS FROM $39.95, chairs from all black, looks and drives like new. $9.95, bookcases from $19.95, com­ $6,800.838-3080,942-9440. puter furniture, files and more. Arizona O ffice Liquidators, 5064 South 40th 1984 HON D A C R X , blue, tw o-door S tree t (on 4 0 ih S tre e t, so u th at hatchback, 5-speed with air condition. Broadway), 437-2224. Very economical to drive and maintain. FURNITURE WAREHOUSE Closeout Sale. All new couches, loveseats, chairs, dining room table/chairs, coffee/end ta­ bles, lamps, hide-a-beds, much, much more. $25 to $300. M erchandise Liq­ uidators, 233-4443. U V IN G /D IN IN G ROOM: O ff-w hite fabric sofa $250, rattan chair $60, cof­ fee table $65, rattan hutch $70, small rattan bookcase, 3 shelves, $40; white­ washed TV cabinet $150, end table $20. Call Erin, make offers, 844-8835. W A TER B ED S: Q UEEN; K ing; Su­ persingle; C om plete. $59 B ookcase headboard $79, 6 drawers, $129. De­ luxe $249.966-7544, CHECK US out! Arizona Amiga Users Group meets Friday, 9/13/91 and sec­ ond Friday of each month at Pyle Center, Southern at Rural, 7-10pm. 948-2515. R ose Sales The Rate Company is now hiring for rose sales in restaurants and night clubs. Must be at least 19 and have reliable transportation. Call between 10am and 6pm for interview. 921-8855 '86 SUZUKI Sam, 4x4, bhie, convert­ ible hardtop, AM/FM cassette, 30 mpg, runs great, $2,900/best offer. 756-2801. 1-602-531-3987 OR 921-3048: N eed $cash$? B uying vehicles, running or not! Free tow/notary. Call anytime! Apache Terrace 1123 E. A pache TICKETS MOPED QT50N, in excellent condition, new battery and tuneup, has 202 actual miles. $275. 833-8952. NO Q U A LIFY IN G condo. M inutes from ASU and East Tempe. For more inform ation call Judy Anne Casey at Realty Executives 839-2600. TWIN BED with mattress $60, desk $50 new! Excellent! Great condition. Close ASU. 968-4493, Naoko. 1 b lo c k off c a m p u s HONDA ELITE 50cc, black with pink letters, 1 year old, low miles, excellent condition. $499. 899-4095. MUST SELL. 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Assume 8-1/2%, $588, includes asso­ ciation. University/ftrice. 464-4335. STEREO SPEAKERS- 3-way high ftdelity speakers. G ood condition. $25 each. Call 894-0464. 2 SERIOUS students to share 3 bedroom borne, walk to ASU, covered pool, pa­ tio, BBQ, grassy lawn. $275.493-7998. MACINTOSH SE, 2 meg RAM, 40 meg h a rd d riv e , p rin te r Im ag e W rite r II, software and reference books. $1,000. 966-2853. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places US A. Also worldwide. I also buy tra n s fe ra b le coupons. 968-7283. SHARE TWO bedroom, two bath, fur­ nished except bedroom . C lean, nonsmoker. $243,1/2 utilities, 267-1562. $225 PU IS IH utilities. Folly furnished room- W alking distance to ASU. Call Farah, 966-6841. H O N D A 150 E lite d elu x e, d ig ita l package, sky b lu e , great condition, u n d e r 15,000 m ile s, hew tires. S900/offer. Phil, 730-5448. TOWNHOMES/CONDOS FOR SALE SO FA B ED , b ro w n v e lv e t, $250. T o sh ib a P32/S L p rin te r , $200. 997-2322. R M H STO R R E^^ C O M PU TER PR IN T ER , A pple Im ageWriter H , like new condition, now for $200 negotiable. C all 7 8 4-6044 after 3pm weekdays. ASSUME, NO qualifying, $1500 CTM. 3 b ed ro o m , 2 b ath , dou b le carport, $525/month. 48th Street/Southern. Jim, 966-7252, owner/agent ROOMMATE WANTED, Papago Park condo, overlooking pool, 2 bedroom, 11/2 bath, gorgeous place, $175 month. Minutes from ASU. 350-9316. TW O FEM A LE room m ates w anted, nonsmokers, own rooms (master avail­ able). huge two-story bouse, pool, etc. M ust see! $208/m onth, 1/5 utilities. Roger or Clint, 838-3371. M 0TO R C Y C yS __ H O M g S F O R ^ L !^ ^ 3 BEDROOM* 2 bath house, large corner lot in an established neigh­ borhood, pool, 2-car garage and lots more- Near Southern/Rural. $96,600. Call Kraig, 894-0126. 1 OR 2 bedroom. Total move in $250. Pool, bike to ASU, quiet patio, storage, laundry. 967-4568/894-8143 1 bedroom s available n ow i R O O M M A TE- 2 bedroom , 1 b ath , w a sh e r/d ry er. B ike to A SU . L arge house. $200,1/2 utilities. 966-2935. C H A R M IN G UPPER 2 bedroom , 2 bath, fireplace, all appliances, gated. 3002 North 70th. $500. Owner/agent, 994-9968. TW O BEDROOM , tw o bath Condo, near ASU, washer/dryer, upgraded car­ p e t quiet, onsite manager. $550, 510 West University,966-0987. 2 b lo c k s fro m A S U NONSMOKING MALE for own room in furnished house. Pool, all facilities. $325. Tim, 966-5039, evenings. $900 DOWN, assume $740 P H I pay­ m ents, 27 years left, 9.75% APR. 3 bedroom, 2 bath plus huge pool. Call Marty Griffin, John Hall, 844-5900. D UPLEX TW O bedroom , one bath. Newly decorated, no pets. $425. 1424 West 5th Street 961-1798. COMPUTERS B B S B B B S ■ ■ M M I H I ia B 3 B ED R O O M , 2-1 /2 b a th , w ash­ e r/d ry e r, re frig e ra to r. $650/offer. M cClintock/Baseline. M arty G ., John Hall. 844-5900. 1 BEDR O O M * 1 bath Units, w alk to A SU, 4 available, only $250/month. M O M , 345-1919. 2 B ED R O O M , 2 b ath u n fu rn ish ed apartm ent, w asher and dryer in each uniL 1/2 m ile to A SU . L em on and D o rsey a rea. $ 4 0 0 m onth With lease;Ca!l for move in special 496-0562, 893-1994. ROOMS FOR RENT State P rm $3000 431-8365. CHEAP! FBI/U.S. se iz e d 89 M E R C E D E S ..$200. 86 VW...SS0, 87 MERCEDES...$100, 65 M U STA N G .S50 C hoose from thou­ sands sta rtin g $25. FR E E 24 H our Recording R eveals D etails 801-3792929 Copyright «AZ10KJC. MOTORCYCLES B BB B B SSB B BB SSBB B B 1 HONDA elite 250, black, perfect con­ dition, 5,000 miles, bought new 9/90m helm et included, $l,;400/offer, Brad 431-1510. 1980 Y A M A H A X T /T T 500, runs strong, $375 or best offer. 929-0211. 1985 HONDA Rebel. Looks, runs great. Wbll m aintained. $990 or best offer. 921-3643, evenings. 1989 K A W A SA KI 250 N inja- 3500 original m iles, w h ite w ith red trim , m in t c o n d itio n , m ust see. $2,100. 967-9265. G ET PERSONAL! Send som eone a State Press Personal Ad! Come to the basement of Matthews Crater today! HELP WANTED •GENERAL LAWN SERVICE needs part-time em­ p lo y e e s, no e x p erie n ce necessary. SS/hour. 966-3269. MAKE$150-$300 in 3-10 hours by selling 50 funny college t-shirts. No financial obligation. Smaller and larger quantities available, Call toll-free 1-800-728-1130. MARKETING COORDINATOR need­ ed part-time by Adventure Sports busi­ ness in Tempe. Enthusiastic sales per­ s o n ality re q u ire d . M r. G ordon, 897-7121. N O W H IR IN G Local Tempe office is looking for en erg etic people to work part-time evenings in our order department. Guaranteed salary plus bonus. No experience needed. Start immediately. Cell for interview Tue. or Wed. 730-0110 MARKETING Salaried, part-time positions available fo r m otivated b u s in e s s stu d en ts. K now ledge o f business inform ation sy stem s h e lp fu l. W o rk a t hom e. 470-1630. MAXIMUM PAY- easy work. Disabled female looking for part-time help with personal care (lifting involved) and/or housekeeping. 967-8829, leave message. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Tech­ n ic ia n . P a rt-tim e p e rm a n e n t year round. One semester of engineering or technology and some job experience re­ quired. $6/and up. 956-8200. MODELS WANTED. Professional hair care company needs male/female mod­ els for cutting/perming at Phoenix hair show S e p te m b e r 22 and 23. C all 967-6464. ★ ★ EASY CASH ★ ★ Completely automated donor plasmapheresis. Discover how easy, safe and fast it is to: Earn $30* a week! while donating much needed plasma. Mention this ad for a $5 bonus on your first donation (Monday-Saturday). Only center in Valley paying: $10- tat donation, $20- 2nd donation in same week. UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER Associated Bioscience, In c DELIVERY DRIVERS 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe Immediate openings. Tempe area, must have dependable transportation, current driv er's license, p ro o f o f insurance. Call today, 242-3966. 894-2250 EX CITIN G NEW career in m assage therapy. Beautiful new facility. Flexible h o u rs, fu ll-tim e , p a rt-tim e po sitio n available. Joinus! 220-9090. FLAG FOOTBALL coaches. Boys and girls teams 5th through 8th grades. $60 stipend per team. Program begins late September and ends prior to Thanks­ g iving holiday. C oaches traing p ro ­ vided. F or applications inform ation, contact Mark Richwine or Shane Isabell at City o f Tempe Recreation Division at 350-5200. FUN, ENTHUSIASTIC cocktail wai­ tresses wanted for new sports bar and nightclub. Som e experience needed. Apply $111 East McDonald, Scottsdale. GET EXCITED Looking for several positive individuals who can train and manage others* No experience necessary^ W ill train. Call Dave, 649-8777. G Y M N A STICS CO ACHES needed. Advanced level coaches needed evenings 5-8pm. Call Desert Devils, 941-3496. JOAN AND David Shoes wants you if you are an experienced, outgoing sales­ person and available M onday, W ed­ nesday and Friday days, plus flexible nights/w eekrads, then call Natalie, 957-1101. JOH N N Y ROCKETS a t the Fashion Square Mall is now hiring service cash­ iers and cooks. Apply in person or call 423-1505 9 -1 1:30am and after 2pm, Monday through Friday. M O D E LS W A N T ED — L ong h a ir, short hair, colored hair... all types of hair for international hair stylists show. For information, cal) 263-1138. PART TIME no experience necessary, guaranteed hourly plus bonus. Call John 966-5765. PART-TIME, FLEXIBLE hours sales. 756-2675. PROGRAM M ER/ANALYST. TICKE T M A S T E R S re s e a rc h and d e v e l­ opment center is looking for self start­ ers with strong math aptitude to develop system level software for VAX and the 68000. These entry level positions have unlim ited grow th potential. Students w elcom e. To apply call 921-1112 or apply in person at Ticketmaster, 2323 West 14th Street, Suite 501, Tempe, AZ HELP WANTED-SALES ^SSK K SSSSSSSSSSSSS PART-TIME, FLEXIBLE hours sales. 756-2675: PROMO SALES Id e a l o p p o rtu n ity fo r b u sin ess and communication majors. People-oriented sales position that requires an energetic, self-m otivated individual. Part-tim e, flexible hours, tremendous earning po­ tential. Call now, 921-7755, CHECK THE State Press Help Wanted sections for new job opportunities. We have four help wanted classifications to help you find the job you want! State Press Classifieds work! State P reti Page 19 Tuesday, September 10 ,1991 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL S E C R E T A R IA L /B O O K K £ E P IN G . A P PR O X IM A T E L Y 20 hour* per week. $4.50 per hour. Flexible schedule. Spectrum, 968-5002. HELP WANTED-FOOD SERVICE DELIVERY DRIVERS Immediate openings. Tempe area, must have dependable transportation, current d riv e r's licen se, p ro o f o f insurance. Gall today, 242-9966. NOW MIRING full and part, various flexible daytime hours. Phoenix Espla­ n ad e s to re , 2501 E a st C am elback. Apply now. R ED RO BIN Tem pe has im m ediate openings for cooks and waitstaff. Red R obin, 1375 W est Elliot, Price Club Plaza. RESTAURANTS/ BARS PERSONALS P R O 'S , I'M going to b e at D uck's at 8:00pm on Tuesday. B e T here! Mr. Love and Respect CHI-O DIAMOND Pledges: Good luck w ith in itia tio n th is w eek! W e’re so proud o f you! Chi-O Love, Katrina and Steph. CHI-O KATRINA: So far this year is off to a great start California dreamin. Dash Bound, and South Coast Plaza on cred it lets keep it going! Your the best frien d I could ask for. C hi-O Love, Steph. SERVICES A SOFT Touch Electrolysis. Permanent hair removal, near ASU, private office, 15 years' experience, student discounts. 829-7829. E L E C T R O L Y S IS— PERM A N EN T hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discounts. C all for more information: 969-6954. STRESSED OUT? D o n 't feel as good as you sh o u ld ? Overweight? Hypoglycemic? I can help with low cost natural herbs. Call Russell at 464-9576, Mondays, Tuesdays. TYPING/ WORD PROCESSING SSSSSSSSSSB SSSSSSSS ACCURATE RESUM ES com posed, typed ($25); guaranteed. Call Carol, 839-6083, evenings and weekend, also. Dobson Ranch. A PA /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA typing, wprd processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186. DO YOU know what 101 is? GREEK STEERING Committee appli­ cations now available in the Greek Life Office. Deadline for applications to be returned to Greek Life Office is Friday, September 13. Any questions? Call Matt Rosin at 784-0551 or Kristi Shepherd at 965-3806. HEY D I knows: Socials, Exchanges, In­ te r m urals, P h ilan th ro p ies, b ro th e r­ hood. If you want to know about Sigma Pi here are some informational meet­ ing: 9/11 lpm -2pm M.U. Pinal/Room (# 2 1 5 ) 9 /1 2 6 pm -7pm M .U. E ast Cochise (#212). No cost just come and lis­ ten then yquU know like 2H knows!!! JUSTIN, THANKS for the great time at Whitewater Oasis. Bumps. KA ROB, will you be my date on Sep­ tember 28th - IK Pledge Presents? KRIS TAG- thanks for the bagel breskfast. You are the coolest RA. Love, the Dee Gee's. TYPING/WORD P R O C E S S IN G ^ ^ 24-H O U R . K IN K O 'S does p ap ers, resumes, flyers, self-serve Macs, copies and more!’ 933 East University* 9662035 AAA T Y P IN G , p a p e rs, resu m es, g ra p h ic s, la se r p rin te r, re a so n a b le rates. Call Vanessa at SOS, 892-6124, M esa NEED SOM E typesetting done? The State Press Production Department can help! Call Donna at 965-7572 today! RESUMES $29.95 l-page resume, 10 copies, 10 blank sheets, 10 envelopes & 1 MÀC diskette. 24-hour delivery. ALPHAGRAPHIÇS, 122 E. University, Tempe 968-7821 SAE, SIGMACHI, DG, we had a great time Saturday night at Margaritaville. Thanks! Love, Pi Phi. SIG M A C H I'S, SA E ?S, a n d P ip h i’sthanks for Saturday night's exchange. We had a blast! Love, the DG's. SIGM A DÈLTA Tau, Pi Phis would like to welcome you to ASU, and Good Luck in Rush! Professional writers, original work. full graphics, all writing services. 965-6731 1-602-743-3637 or Write for o rd er form: Box 18640, Tucson, A 2 CREATIVE TYHNG.termpapers, resumes, essays, laser printer, reasonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat 897-1741. FA ST /C O N V E N IE N T T Y P IN G ! 3 blocks/A S U . W o rd P erfect. L aser. Faculty/students. Any size job. Diane. 966-5693. perfect papers Service includes typing (computerized), full editing, grammar, syntax, spelling correction. Graphics capability. Quick turnaround. Experienced editor. Best rates around. Jim, 945-6793. State Press C lassifieds Matthews Center Basement Room 46H LINER AD RATES: TRI-SIGMA PLEDGE Lyn— You are the best dot! I’m so proud of you! Love, Mom. 15 words or less $3.50 per issue (1-4 issues) $3.25 per issue (5-9 issues) $3.0 0 per issue (10+ issues) 150 each additional word. No abbreviations. The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering, no type size changes. T R IS IG M A KATHLEEN : Can you guess who Mommy is?? Only two more days!.! I love you!! Personals (IS words or less) are only $2.00. You can also add Greek symbols to your personal tor only 50a per set (3 symbols max. p e r set): TO TH E new D elta Gamma actives! Congrats, girls, you're not Hannahs any longer! W e're p roud o f you! Love, your sisters. TYPING/ MISCELLANEOUS WURD P R_ O C_ E S _S I N G _ _ _________ RELAX! Let me turn your rough draft into a report you'll be proud of. Professional word processing plus delivery to and from cam pus. R ea so n ab le rates. Theresa, 924-1976. W O RD PR O C E SS IN G , s e c re ta ria l services. 27 years experience. Student discounts. Southwest corner, Miller and Chaparral. 994-8145. X1 lu ll INSTRUCTION \m ¿1 DID YOU know that renting an airplane is almost as easy as renting a car? If learning how to fly sounds like fun to you or a career as a pilot,with the airlines sounds interesting, call me for details. Patrick, 924-3027. . ■^ NOON ÍS the deadline to get a State Press C lassified A d in for the next day's paper. You may call your ad in w ith V isa, M asterC ard or A merican Express (personal not accepted over the phone). Call 965-6731 for details! BOA CONSTRICTOR babies! $100 cash only. Leave message for Deane, 986-945T i M M 1301 E. University WRINKLY SHAR-PEI puppies for sale, champion sired, 10 weeks, male/ferhale, pet/show quality, registered. $200Aip. 756-0719. FREE L0ST/F0UND FU N D R A ^N G ^_^ FA ST F U N D R A ISE R , S i ,000 i n i week. G reeks, clubs; anyone. N o in­ vestment (800)748-6817, e x t 50. LOST: ONE bright blue 3-ring binder labeled ’’textiles." C ontact Shawn at 966-7512. j LOST: TORTOISE shell rimmed pre­ scription glasses in brown case. Lost in L an g u ag e and L ite ra tu re B u ild in g , C157 on9/3. Call 423-5749. LOST: WATCH o f high sentim ental value, at Student Rec Complex on 9/8. $300 reward, no questions asked. Mark, 996-7355. CHILO CARE LO V IN G C A R E fo r 1 c h ild in my home. Weekdays 1:30pm to 4:30pm. $3 per hour. Experience a plus. Call Linda, 756-2089. NEED ENERGETIC person to watch 6 and 8 year olds. Super active, sports m inded boys. G e n erally 4 evenings/month. 893-3078. PERSONALS A-PW S, GET payched to win it all! See ya oo Wedaeaday. ATO coache*. ATA FRAN- You are a star roomie and friend! ...And thank you for your tupport Amy. ATA Jacky, La* Vegaa was a blast I can t wait to go again. Because o f big closets and M.C. men it was more fun then I ever expected. Luv Jen. ATA's your th e beet. W ith our knew pledge claaa it w ill make an awesome year even better. SEND YOUR significant other a State Preea Personal Ad today! R E S P O N S IB L E , LO V IN G w om an needed as companion to delightful 3y eàr-o ld g irl w ith very good tem ­ perament. 15 hours during work week, exact hours flexible. Light housekeep­ ing while child naps. Dobson/Warner area. 963-2071. WANTED: MATURE, student with car to stay with 11- and 14-year-olds while parents away. 1-2 weeks per month. M ust have good sense o f hum or, be nonsmoker, nondrinker and have excel­ lent references. Call Linda, 946-8127. ADOPTION ARIZONA COUPLE unable to have children wiah to adopt a white infant. Pleaae call Cathy & David. 820-8485. ,I\l ^ m w l ■ 1 1 | f | | / 'SlA Jr# ¿u • ie J VDLINE lave a TE PRESS 1' f l 1^1 P L , TUTORS L la ! C IS 335 T U T O R needed. R equires knowledge of Cobol85 and JCL. Call Ann at 846-1761 after 6pm. II 1| M / j NEED EEE, ECE, or M AT tutor? Call 921-7699 » A U NEED TUTOR HCA for ohe-on-one tutoring in statistics. Emphasis on preparation o f graphs and charts. 1 to 2 hours per week. Flexible hours. Leave message on voice pager: 238-3806. TU TO RIN G ! C A LC U LU S, trígonometry, intermediate and college Algebra, other lower division math courses. College and U niversity Physics. Call Thad Coons 829-3816 for details and reasonable rates. kSified r in the f || w | i day. m _ atthews L v liter . C v W uth Dñ l # Q sentent, M 0, _ TUTORING SERVICES available for mathmatics, eagineering, computer science and programming. Call 264-6242 and leave message. Q K )000( YourIndividual Horoscope " PETS 'I lfi'r f|L Frances D ralte= 5-6731. % tw SEMI-DISPLAY RATES: 15 words or less $4.50 per issue (1-4 issues) $4.25 per issue (5-9 issues) $4.00 per issue (10+ issues) 150 each additional word. The first word(s) are 10point bolded, centered type (15 characters max ): Rest of ad is regular justified liner ad type. C LA S S IFIE D DISPLAY RATES: (per column inch, per insertion) 1 time: $8.50 p.c.i. 2-5 times: $7.75 p.c.i. 6+ times: $7.35 p.c.i. All classified display ads have borders. Type can be bold face, centered, etc. An average of 15-20 words can fit in one column inch. HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: In person: C as h , c h eck (w ith g u ara n te e c a rd ), Visa, M asterCard or American Express. W e’re located in the basem ent of M atthews C enter, Room 4 6H . Office hours are 8am -5pm , Monday-Friday. Personals are accepted In person with student ID . By phone: Paym ent with Visa, M asterC ard or American Express only. $6 minimum on a ll phone orders. Personals are not accepted over the phone! By Mail: Send your ad (with payment) to: State Press Classifieds ‘ Dept. 1502 Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Personals are not accepted through the mall. HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: Liner ads must be cancelled before noon, 1 business day prior to publication. No refunds w ill be given. ^ WAXING WORKS ■&J Gentle organic wax removes hair fronvlegs, arm s, back, chest, etc. for a clean, sm ooth look. Also perm anent hair removal. A-PLUS ELECTROLYSIS 962-6490 W hat kind o f day will tomorrow be? T o find out what the stare say, read the forecast given for your birth sign. FO R W EDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1991 A R IE S (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) B usiness talks are favored today. Y ou’ll bring a project to completion now. Y ou're invited somewhere spe­ cial. Romance-is a plus, but a friend may let you down. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to*May 20) Couples make decisions today about a child 's welfare. Delays are likely in business. Still, a new opportunity comes now that pleases you. Accent together­ ness tonight. G E M IN I (May 21 to June 20) It's a good day for making changes at hom e base. Creative work is a plus now. Enjoy a short visit to a nearby locale. A meeting w ith an adviser may disappoint you. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) The purchase o f major appliances is favored. Extra expenses could arise in connection with children. K eep the lines o f com m unication open. D o n 't hold things in. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) M orning hours bring you good news. Judgment is good about domestic inter­ ests and finances. A partnership matter may weigh on you toward nightfall. V IR G O (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Behind-the-scenes developments are positive financially. Y ou express your­ self to good advantage now, butm ay not g e t im m édiate feedback from others. L IB R A (Sept. 23 to O ct. 22) B e n e fits com e through friendship today. A private talk pertains to finan­ cial concerns. Reading and studying are favored over outside interests tonight. S C O R P IO (Oct. 23 to Nbv. 2 1 ), A connection pulls strings m youir be­ half regarding business. Y ou shine now at a group activity. Talks w ith friends ' are stim ulating. A hom e m atter con­ cerns you tonight. S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 22 to Dec; 21) It's best to m aintain a low profile in business today. Still, you will make gains. Friends from afar contact you. A lack o f self-confidence could hold you back tonight. C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) B usiness brings m oney opportunities today, but you still could be worried about the outcom e o f one financial con­ cern. Friends give helpful advice. Group interests are a plus. A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) A partner is enthusiastic about a new p roject. T o d a y 's business develop­ ments are positive, y et you m ay tend to undersell yourself in som e way. Have confidence. P ISC E S (Feb.* 19 to Mar. 20) A fringe benefit com es in connection with career. Financial developments are positive now . D o n 't keep worries to y o u rs e lf. H e a r t-to -h e a rt ta lk s a re favored. Y O U B O R N T O D A Y w o rk b est when inspired and m ay be somewhat nervous and highstrung. Y ou need to watch that tem peram ent doesn't get in the way o f your success. W hen you find a c o n stru ctiv e o u tle t for yo u r sen ­ sitivities, you achieve the heights in both the arts and sciences. Though y o u 're not always easy to get along with, you thrive w ith the support o f a partner. Y our work is often ahead o f the tim e. B irthdate o f: Jessica M itford, w riter, Paul “B ear" B ryant, football coach; and Alfred van Loen, sculptor. Copyright 1991 by King Features Syndicate, lac. Stete Pres« Are you achieving maximum performance with yo«r HP? HP SEMINAR W ednesday September 11 ASU Bookstore Recommended... Extra-strength m pm 1Graphics combined with calculus like never before 32 Kbytes of RAM built in • Technical rep available 9-5 • T raining sessions a n d p ro d u ct d em onstrations HP Equation Writer and HP MatrixWriter applications ■Choose from the expandable HP 48SX or 1 new HP 48S HP calculators — the best for your success. HEW LETT PACKARD 9:00-10:00 HP 48 Family 10:30-11:30 HP 95LX Palm Top 2:00-3:00 HP19B (Business) Come Join Us. Register to win an HP Calculator. >