INSIDE: D u e l in t h e D e s e r t ©Copyright;? State Press, 1991 V o l. 75 N o. 14 Tempo, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning D aily T u e sd ay, S e p tem b er 17, 1991 Students claim bias grades ASUWest com m ittee rules for mark change B y JO H N YA N T IS S ta te P r e s s Henri C ohen/State P ress V a n e s s a G ira u d is le a d in g a g ro u p o f A S U W e s t s t u d e n t s w h o c la im th e y w e re v ic t im s o f b ia s e d g ra d in g . Eight ASU West education students, who last year began a lengthy process to change their grades, still have not obtained what they feel are proper marks — even after a committee recommended the grades be changed. The student group, led by Vanessa Giraud, has charged that Gail Goodman, an education professor who taught a class on Culture in Schooling, was inconsistent and biased on final grades given to them for the 1990 fall semester. The group claimed that grades on the students’ final papers were arbitrarily, changed to lower marks after the instructor decided more sources should have been cited in the papers. The Professional Standards and Services Committee for the Education Unit at ASU West, whose five members are professors, heard the students’ grievances and ruled that the grades should be changed to the original marks. But Evelyn Sowell, a dean designate for the ASU West education department, reversed the decision. Sowell makes the final decision on matters of grade changes in the department. Calls to Sowell went unanswered. Her secretary, Liz Graesman, said, “She doesn’t want to talk about it (the grade changes) because she feels she shouldn’t.” The .only two grades given in the class were a mid-semester written paper and the final disputed by.the students. “She told me that I needed nine sources after I had turned the paper in, and I had only cited six,” Giraud said. “Because of that, she gave me a B instead of an A.” Fellow student Kathy Day agreed. “She graded down my paper because of something that wasn’t on her syllabus (the number of sources that needed to be cited), and she gave me nothing for class participation — and I talked a lot,” Day said. Turn to G rading, p age 6 . Campus group supports legal marijuana use By AN DR EW FA U G H T S ta te P ress At first glance, Scott Holland is an unmistakeable crusader for marijuana legalization. He proudly wears shorts sewn with 55 percent hemp fibers — made from the leaves of marajuana — and 45 percent cotton. His left ear is studded with ah earring bearing the distinctive likeness of a marijuana leaf. However, the 21-year-old ASU student said his motivation goes far beyond the negative connotations associated with the euphoria-inducing drug. “The government and the Partnership for a Drug Free America have done a really good job at making people think marijuana is this really bad thing,” he said. "Some people still believe the stepping-stone thing where you go from marijuana to cocaine to heroine.” Jack Lien, a counselor at Terros Counseling in Phoenix, said that the ‘‘stepping-stone’’ idea is not the only danger in legalizing marijuana. “They will not only move to more dangerous drugs, but the substances they will get will be much more potent,” Lien said. Lien, who said he has been a counselor for many years, claims legalizing the drug will not make the black market disappear. “You’ll always have that black market element that will be putting out the more potent substance,” he said. He added that standardizing the drug for “safe consumption” would be an impossible task. But Holland, the president of the ASU chapter of Students for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said he is angered that the government would ban hemp without considering its “thousands of uses.” Holland refers to a book the organization turned into its manifesto called “The Emperor Wears No Clothes,” by Jack Herer, which gives a historical perspective on the uses of hemp in addition to its alleged therapeutic and economic benefits. Holland said the ASU chapter is currently working with the state branch of NORML in hopes of legalizing marijuana in medical circles. “Marijuana is a much, much safer substance to use (than alcohol),” he said. “ It’s not nearly as addictive.” Craig Nagoshi, an assistant professor of psychology and adviser to the organization, agrees with Holland and added prohibiting marijuana use is an infringement of a person’s civil rights. Turn to M arijuana, page 6* N o b o d y h a ir H a irs ty lis ts M in a M a z d e y a s n a (left) a n d J e n n if e r K in g s t o n re a d b o o k s w h ile w a itin g f o r b u s in e s s at H a ir 101 in th e lo w e r le v e l o f th e M e m o ria l U n io n . Nieto describes racism’s many forms B y S O N J A LEW IS S ta te P r e s s Jesus Nieto, a noted standardized testing opponent, implored a sparse crowd of students Monday to “turn the spotlight inward” when assessing racial bias. “It’s fundamental in eliminating racism that we are aware of our own part in perpetuating it,” the San Diego State University professor said. The lecture, the first in a series sponsored by the Associated Students of ASU Lecture Series, was considered by the Chicano-Hispano Coalition as the kickoff event of National Hispanic Heritage Month at ASU. Only about 40 students attended the lecture. The soft-spoken, articulate Nieto replaced controversial “English-only” advocate Linda Chavez, who had been removed from the Lecture Series speaker list because of opposition from the Chicano-Hispano Coalition. P e e r s: P r io r itiz in g : ASU Provost Milt Click tells the ASU Faculty Senate that the scarch for several new deans is o n e o f his to p priorities. P age 6 ASASU Executive Vice President Christian Hageseth said the University Affairs Com m ittee will form guidelines to operate the student review hoard. P age 7 * S r ,' A Nieto’s hour-long speech focused on perceived biases in standardized testing. He alleged that the authors of the Standard Achievement Test and the Stanford-Benet IQ test purposely structured the tests to establish people of European dissent as intellectually superior to minorities — and to keep minority students out of schools and positions of authority. “Standardized testing is a very, very powerful industry,” Nieto said. “But the tests are there and we have to pass the test to get in — that’s a reality.” In addition to addressing racism, Nieto incorporated sexism and classism (financial status) into his lecture, saying “all kind of ‘isms’ wind up hurting people.” Nieto said failure to score comparably with other students often leaves even the high-achieving minorities with low self­ esteem, T ara to N ieto, page 13. S u b stitu tio n : T od ay’s w eath ert M ostly sun n y w ith a h igh T hom O rtiz will supervise th e ASU w restling team 's prac­ tices w hite C oach Bobby Douglas is at th e Olym pics. o f 102. P a g e 11 C la s s ifie d s ...............................................1 4 GoflkiCS.... ..... ».... 10 C rossw ord ......^ ........4 ............................. 12 H o iw o p e s ..,..........» .....« U 4 » ....H» ....» ....1 5 P o lice R e p o r t..................M .........^ ..........s .8 S p o r ts ,...s .....4 ....................................4 ....1 1 State Press —iTu«da^egternb^7^991 Cable fans get upgrades if license renewed B y JU D I T A N G O S S ta te P re s s Dimension Cable subscribers will be getting more for their money if the Tempe City Council approves a 15-year license renewal for the company. The city’s sole cable company will invest $15 million in major upgrades over the next three years, said Dimension Cable spokesperson Lori Fields. But, “there are no plans at this time” to raise customer rates to cover the cost of upgrades, she said. As part of an agreement negotiated with city officials, Dimension Cable will upgrade technology, bury power lines, expand channel capacity and enhance public access capabilities for its 23,000 subscribers. “The result will be higher reliability and better signal quality,” Fields said. A public: hearing on the agreement has been set for Oct. 10. Tempe’s cable system will be rebuilt using fiber optics, a state-of-the-art technology resulting in “ virtually no distortion of light and crystal clear pictures,” Fields said. Tempe Deputy City Manager Jim Piper said the cable system currently uses amplifiers to distribute satellite messages from west-central Tempe throughout the city. “ People at the end of the system may receive a signal that has been through as many as 30 amplifiers,” Piper said. “This is a little bit of a problem.” With fiber optics, the picture will be as clear in south Tempe as in central Tempe, he said. Tempe’s cable system, which was constructed in pieces,' has not been upgraded since it was built more than 12 years ago, Piper said. Upgrades would begin within 120 days of the passage of the license agreement and must be completed within 36 months, he said. In addition to fiber optics and burying power lines, Dimension Cable will expand its capacity to 60 channels from the current 42. Extra equipment, extended evening and weekend hours and a limited support staff will enhance public access programming. The cable company also will pay Tempe $395,000 over two years to equip the City Council chamber and a government studio in the basement of the Performing Arts Center, 132 E. 6th St. Two government channels will be provided for Tempe’s police and fire departments, Piper said, so Officials can have access to secured information. “ People out in the network won’t be able to receive them (the channels),” he said. City Council members stand behind the agreement, calling it “ a pretty good opportunity for Tempe.’’ . “It certainly improves the cable service that people in our city receive,” said Vice Mayor Carol Smith. Councilman Don Cassano agreed, saying he was unaware of opposition to the agreement. “I think it’s very good because we’re going to get a major upgrade in the system,” he said. Cassano said there would be no major interruptions in cable service during the cutover to fiber optics because most work involving “down time” would be done in the early hours of the morning. “ (But) you can’t guarantee 100 percent that there won’t be some problems somewhere,” he said. Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at A SU that is presented as a service to the University community. A n y cam pus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the S ta te P re ss, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for Content, space and clarity, and wilt hot be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the S ta te P re s s cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous b usiness day. •American Society of Women Accountants w ill m e e t at •Arizona Outing Club w ill d is c u s s th e h a y r id e a n d s k y 3 :3 0 p .m . in M U L a P a z W e s t R o o m 22 3. •Le Cercle Français w ill m e e t fro m 3 :3 0 to 5 p.m . a t th e d iv in g a t 7 :3 0 p.m . in th e M U P im a R o o m . C o ffe e P la n ta tio n . w o rs h ip a n d p r a is e a t 7 p.m . a t th e B S U C e n te r. •Re-Entry Connection w ill w e lc o m e g u e s t s p e a k e r S te v e •Fellowship of Christian Athletes w ill s h o w th e v id e o , •Baptist Student Union w ill h a v e a n h o u r o f c re a tiv e S a ffro n fro m S c o tt s d a le C o m m u n ity C o lle g e a t n o o n in th e “ H e ll’s B e lj s ” a t 7 :30 p .m . in th e U n iv e r s it y A c tiv it y C e n te r, A d u lt R e -E n try C e n te r , M U lo w e r le v e l. S a ffro n w ill le c tu re R o o m 35 . o n “ L a u g h te r a n d P la y — T o o ls fo r S u c c e s s . ” •ASU Pagan Society w ill m e e t to d is c u s s th e trip to •I.E.E.E. w ill m e e t fro m 4 :4 5 p.m . to 5 :4 5 p .m . in th e S e d o n a fo r th e n a tio n a l c o n v e n tio n a t 9 p.m . a t M a m a ’s C la s s r o o m O f fic e B u ild in g , R o o m 150. P iz z a . •MUAB w ill m e e t a t 1 2 :1 5 p .m . in M U A B C o n f e r e n c e R o o m •MUAB Film Committee w ill h a v e a fre e s h o w in g o f “ M r. 1, M U th ird floor. •KASR Radio w ill h a v e a p ro m o tio n s m e e tin g a t 4 :3 0 p.m . R o b e r t s ” a t 7 p.m . in th e U n io n C in e m a , M U lo w e r le v e l. 7 :3 0 p .m . in M U L a P a z R o o m 2 2 3 . U n iv e r s ity D riv e . in th e T o w e r C e n te r. •Alpha Eta Rho w ill •Chi Alpha Christian Fellow ship w ill m e e t fo r p ra y e r, S h o rtrid g e , a e r o s p a c e e n g in e e r a t S h o r tr id g e In s tru m e n ts S ta te m e n t a n d D e v e lo p m e n t” a t 3 :4 0 p .m . in th e L a n g u a g e w o rs h ip a n d B ib le s t u d y a t 7 p.m . in D a n fo rth C h a p e l. a t 7 :3 0 p .m . in M U N a v a jo R o o m 2 1 9 . a n d L ite r a tu re B u ild in g , R o o m C 1 5 7 . Meetings •Alcoholics Anonym ous w ill h a v e a c lo s e d m e e tin g at noon a t th e New m an C e n te r o n C o lle g e A v e n u e a n d THEADVENTURESOFSCAVENGERMAN (A d v e rtis e m e n t) w e lc o m e guest sp e aker Randy •Campus Am bassadors Christian Fellow ship w ill m e e t at •ASU Writing Center w ill have a s e m in a r , “ T h e s is A S A S P E C I A L M A R K E T I N G T E S T A M A J O R T R A V E L B R O K E R IS I • FREE O FFER IN G E V E R Y O N E W H O C A L L S W ITH IN 7 2 H O U R S O F T H IS PU B LIC A TIO N D A T E . ' / “ ■ v ■- ■ • FREE • FREE • A D R E A M V A C A T IO N T O H A W A II A s a special marketing test, we will send to each person a vacation certificate valid for a free vacation to Honolulu, Hawaii. This certificate entitles the user to receive 8 days and 7 nights of lodging for two people and o n e free airline ticket, transfers, baggage handling and all taxes. You need pay for only one airline ticket at the regular coach price. Th ere is no other product to purchase and there is no charge for this special certificate offer. W e will however limit the number of certificates to be Issued in this market to th o s e that c a ll w ithin 72 h o u rs o f th e publication date of this ad. T h e reason for this special offer is that we wish to test the' drawing power of this type of advertising and inform you of our spe cia l travel programs. But please remember that there Is absolutely no obligation In order to receive this special vacation offer. Call Now (702) 324*3672 9:00am to 9:00pm The Graduate Student A ssociation announces 1991-92 Research D evelopm en t Program T he R esearch D evelopm ent P rogram : •P ro m o tes excellence in g ra d u a te ed u catio n a t A rizo n a S tate U niversity. •P ro v id es financial su p p o rt fo r g ra d u a te stu d e n t research. •O ffers g ra d u a te stu d en ts experience in w ritin g an d rev iew in g research pro p o sals. A pplications are available from the G raduate Student Association in the Associated Students of Arizona State U niversity office, third floor, M emorial Union. Applications m ust be subm itted to the G raduate College by 5:00 p.m. October 25,1991. There w ill be only one funding period for 1991-92. Melvinfinds the perfect wayto surviveat ASU heenters everypromotion that involves cash Supported by the G raduate Student Association, the Office of the Vice President for Research, and Associated Students of Arizona State University. W orld/Nation State Press Page 3 Tuesday, Sept embe r 17,1991 Judge dism isses all charges against North WASHINGTON (AP> — A federal judge dismissed all charges against Oliver North, the central figure in the IranContra affair, on Monday after the special prosecutor gave up trying to reinstate North’s felony convictions. An exultant North declared himself “totally exonerated, completely. I don’t have another word for i t . . . I’ve had my last hearing forever, I hope.” North hugged his attorney, family and friends in the courtroom after U. S. District Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell dismissed the charges and said, “This terminates the casé.” Independent counsel Lawrence Walsh said he had decided it was unlikely he could win reinstatement of North’s three convictions — for destroying documents, accepting an illegal gratuity and aiding in obstruction of Congress —which were set aside by a federal appeals court in July 1990. The appeals court had ordered Gesell to determine whether testimony at North’s trial was tainted by use of the defendant’s own forced testimony before Congress, given under immunity in 1987. Last week former National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane, North’s White House boss for a time during the Reagan administration, dealt a heavy blow to the prosecution by saying in court that his testimony had been influenced by North’s statements to Congress. North was a little-known Marine colonel detailed to the White House at the time of the main events of the Iran-Contra affair — the resupply at his direction of the Nicaraguan rebels while such aid was illegal and the eventual diversion to the Contras of money from the sale of Ü. S. arms to Iran. Disclosure of the basic facts in late 1986 was the worst blow to the Reagan administration during its eight years, but the televised congressional hearings that followed made North a national figure. President Bush, who has referred to North asá hero for his Vietnam exploits, called Monday’s action “a good decision”, and said, “A long period of suffering for his family and him is over. It sounds like the system worked very well.” However, Walsh said the dismissal should be taken as “a very serious warning that immunity is not to be granted lightly.” A ssociated P ress photo F o rm e r W h ite H o u s e a id e O liv e r N o rth a n d h is w ife B e ts y ta lk to re p o rte rs M o n d a y o u ts id e th e U .S . D is tric t C o u rt w h e re a ll c h a rg e s a g a in s t N o rth , in t h e Ira n -C o n tra a ffa ir, a re t o b e d ro p p e d . Baker acknowledges ‘bum ps’in U.S.-Israeli relationship JERUSALEM (AP) - Secretary of State James A. Baker III met with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir on Monday amid tensions over President Bush’s refusal to expedite U. S. loan guarantees to house Israel’s flood of Soviet immigrants. Baker, seeking to firm up Israel’s support for a Middle East peace conference, spoke with Shamir for about 3Vfe hours, then departed without comment for a meeting with three Palestinians from occupied territories. A second session with Shamir was scheduled for Tuesday. “Because the sides did not conclude their discussions, they will meet again tomorrow morning,” Shamir spokesman Avi Pazner told reporters. Before arriv in g in Isra e l, B aker acknowledged the complications in the U. S.-Israeli relationship because of the dispute over the timing of the proposed $10 billion in housing loan guarantees. Baker insisted he wasn’t discouraged, but said “We have always known there would be bumps along the way.” Meanwhile, Bush stood firmly behind his call last week for a 120-day delay in the housing legislation, on ground that rushing the package through now could disrupt the peace process. Arabs fear the loans would be used to construct housing in the disputed territories. Bush, during a W ashington news conference with German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, said he had no personal quarrel with Shamir or other Israeli leaders, and “The less debate we have now on these contentious issues, the better.” But the president’s policy stirred strong protest in Israel. When Baker’s motorcade from the airport reached a crossroads at the entrance to Jerusalem, it was pelted with tomatoes. Baker’s car was not hit, police said. Rehav’an Ze’evi, a Shamir cabinet member from the small right wing Molodet party, called Bush “almost an anti-Semite.” Aquino prom ises referendum to allow U.S. Navy bases A ssociated P ress photo F ilip in o s d a n c e in th e s t re e ts fo llo w in g th e d e fe a t o f th e U .S . b a s e trea ty M o n d a y in M anila. L a w m a k e rs v e t o e d th e n e w S u b ic B a y le a s e a g re e m e n t b y a v o te o f 12-11, N e w s B rie fs G ates a d m its ‘m isju d g m en ts’ o n Iran-C ontra affair WASHINGTON ( AP) Robert Gates said Monday at the opening of confirmation hearings on his nomination as CIA director that he made “misjudgments” during the Iran-Contra affair and "should have asked more questions.” Skeptical Democrats accused him of willful MANILA, Philippines (AP) — President Corazon Aquino vowed Monday to call a public referendum and use “people power” to overturn a Senate vote against renewing the lease for a big U.S. Navy base. Her action could delay a U. S. withdrawal from the Subic Bay base for months or even years. The base is a major supply and repair station for U. S. 7th Fleet ships in the western Pacific and the Indian Ocean. The current lease on the base expired Monday. The U. S. government had said the Navy would begin leaving quickly if the Senate rejected the treaty to extend the lease for 10 years. But IJ.S. officials said Monday a departure would be delayed to await the referendum. ,. The White House praised Aquino. “We do appreciate her efforts. She’s trying to engender public support for the treaty,” ignorance. Questioning of Gates was dominated by Iran-Contra, the five-year-old affair that unfolded while Gates was No. 2 at the CIA. Now a national security aide at the White House, Gates was nominated last May by President Bush to succeed William H. Webster at the CIA helm. P ea ce n e g o tia to r a rriv es in a tm o sp h ere o f w ar BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) — A European Community peace negotiator came to Yugoslavia Monday spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said. Aquino’s former allies in the “people power revolution” that installed her in office pleaded with her to accept the Senate’s 12-11 vote to close the base and end the 93-year American military presence here. They said holding a public referendum could undermine the democratic institutions she created after replacing the ousted Ferdinand Marcos in 1986. But Aquino would not back down on her plan to let the voters decide the issue, ‘‘The great majority of the Filipino people still want the Americans to continue to stay oh,” she said. In an interview with NBC-TV, Aquino said a U. S. pullout would harm the country’s economy and delay plans to modernize the Philippines military . in an atmosphere of near total war in Croatia for a summit with its president and the leader of rival Serbia^ Federal military units announced an offensive to lift the siege of army garrisons in the major Adriatic coastal cities of Split, Zadar, and Sibenik. A federal air force jet was shot down near the Hungarian border. Lord Carrington, the European Community mediator, faced the task of finding common ground between Croatian President Fran jo Tudjman and Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic. What little the two men had in common has all but disappeared in 2*4 months of fighting in Croatia that has killed more than 400 people. Opinion State Press Tuesday, Septem ber 17,1991 Page 4 slate press 1 ditonal M o n e y m is e r F u n d in g in e q u it y k e e p s A S U stu d e n ts u n d e r fe d The maroon and gold Sun Devils versus the cardinal and navy Wildcats. ' It’s been that way for eons —well, at least since the mid-20th century. But regardless of what ASU and UofA head honchos would have us believe, that old rivalry carries itself well off the football field and into the everyday workings of the two top Arizona universities. Nowhere is this emulation more visible than within state money matters dealt with by the Board of Regents. ASU is getting a smaller chunk of the Arizona pie than its rival. Historically,. UofA has received more money per student than does ASU —. thousands more. And while last week's budget request may narrow the funding gap between ASU and UofA, the Wildcats still will be licking their laden lips. The Legislature promised in 1988 to narrow the funding inequities between the two universities with $7 million in inequity payments. But even with this year’s budget request for the last chunk of the inequity payments, $3.9 million, we’re still underfed. This year, UofA’s main campus is slated to receive $24 million more than ASU, despite having 8,000 less students. The difference represents a $4,809 higher perstudent allocation at UofA. That’s a lot of Wildcat food. No wonder Sparky is so skinny. It’s blatantly unfair, but not a surprise since many of the regents are from southern Arizona. The group of volunteer regents deny that where they settle their homesteads affects how much money is allocated to ASU. .But !< m the regents, touting Tucson’s agriculture and mining programs, claim that UofA courses are more expensive to administer than ones at ASU. Another problem is that the funding formula used to determine educational budgets hasn’t been changed for decades — since the small Teacher’s College became ASU in 1957. Therefore, ASU is left with an allocation based on the previous year’s operating costs. But the regents aren’t totally to blame. If ASU adminstrators would keep their beavers less eager about ASU III, perhaps ASU main would be given a chance to catch­ up financially with UofA. But it seems that just when ASU main is making same ground, as little as it may be, ASU officials create more problems for themselves and for our school. Angering the regents by requesting $625,200 to hire three administrators for ASU III won’t get ASU main any brownie points. It makes it look as though ASU main’s needs aren’t as dire as we’ve been whining about for the last few decades —if we’re willing to spend millions on yet another extension. It makes ASU look like an expanding money trap, , instead of an insitutition striving to accommodate the students who are already here. If ASU is ever to pull itself out of the red and prove its equality to the UofA, it must stop its buy-now, pay-later tendencies. Both ASU and UofA have a lot to offer. They deserve to be treated equally — even though ASU is just a little bit better than the UofA. r Caff College budget bleeds a thrifty student dry Are you economical — one who can conserve a limited resource? I’m talking about being a bonafide dollar-miser. In other words, a cheapskate. My late grandfater used to say,“A penny saved is a penny earned.” Well, since my penniless existence of higher education began in 1988, I’ve habitualized some of the damnedest methods of saving money — or not spending it. Cases in point: •I own just one store-bought suit. The majority of my wardrobe is of the second-hand, store-bought origination. One of my college buddies considers this blasphemous. (He lives in Gilbert’s upscale Islands.) “Wear clothes that someone else has worn — you must be kidding.” •I’ve attempted to beat the high-priced textbook game by late-night trips to Kinko’s, in mass-production xeroxing. Or borrowing a text from the Tempe Library and renewing it six or seven times. (Try getting away with that.) •Bicycling everywhere, I save gas, insurance payments, ASU parking fees and towing charges. ■Backpacking my lunch until my sandwiches resemble low-fat sheets of paper and cookies im itate pencil shavings. •And my latest conservationist craze, hoarding aluminum, plastic, glass, the State Press and any other substance that is redeemable at recycling centers. I even stop at my old, hard-core drinking buddies, som etim es skipping the socializing, just stealthily rummaging through their disgarded containers. Yesterday, I trashed another countless application for plastic, student, creditcard salvation. So, you can see this conservation may be going a little too far. With all these behavioral adaptations firmly ingrained in my senior-level consciousness, I got the urge — call it an experiment in microeconomics '■*&_ to jaywalk across Rural Avenue to the plasma donor center. I’ve always thought curiously about the type of character that sells his or her blood for cold, heartless cash. Besides 1 was broke. Being a semi-prepared-kind-of-guy, and planning this windfall-of-a-nonworking pay day, I convieniently saved some time by not shaving. I also modeled m y m ost e x h a u s te d th rift-s h o p ensemble. My feelings were that I might blend in with the other regulars, if I appeared less educated and more unemployed. There above a huge, maroon logo — ABI, Associated Bioscinec Inc. — my three-hour sojourn began. Jeans were the popular attire. All ra c e s w ere re p re se n te d , with a noticeable edge to Hispanics with dark sunglasses and portly American Indians. Beards were indeed skraggy and hair was mostly unkept. The real common denominator was tattoos. BIGGG, armlong tattoos. These folks were definitely into it for the bucks . . . just like me. We were the sellers or producers — not true donors of generosity. Just when I had gotten through the first waiting area and those questions about sleeping with men or sleeping with women who had slept with men who had sex with m en, I s ta rte d feeling uncomfortable. Perhaps this plasma pretense wasn’t for me? . Quietly, a tall, slender black man, about fortyish, entered the room. His well-kept appearance and fine-leather portfolio definitely stood out. He promptly opened the S ta te Press and my deduction was complete — a real-life ASU professor. I also surmised him as a true donor, rather than a seller. It was Dr. Will Jenkins, formerly of Chicago’s southside. In fact; he’d left the same neighborhood, years back, where I’d been born and raised. Dr. Jenkins teaches English and Short Story Literature. Coincidentally, I was killing time reading my short story text. Somehow, this blood-money trip I was on, began to take on a different mindset. We briefly exchanged Windy City specifics and sentimentalities. Jenkins revealed that he does this ‘donating’ every week. “It helps other people,” he stated simply, and smiled. TTien he was gone. Another hour passed and I finally escaped the ABI lab-smocked world. My eyes fought the noon sun, staring down at my arm ’s Band-aid that branded me a $15 seller. My emotions and stomach were tossed. Would I return to help others or just to take advantage of my next visit, equaling a whopping $20. My short story class was up next at 3:15, but I kind of felt like I’d already experienced today’s lecture. PAUL CORO. Editor SUZANNE ROSS. Managing Editor KEVIN SHEH ....................... JENNIFER FRANKLIN........... ..............A sst. C ity Editor DAWN DEVRIES ............................ MICHELLE ROBERTS.................. D A W ) KEXEL..... ............ ............. IRWIN DAUGHERTY . . ...___ DAN ZEIGER....... .......... DARREN URBAN ................... VICKI CULVER .............................. LAURIE NOTARO.....— ........ M azarine Editor HOBART ROWLAND C ollege C ulture Editor REPORTERS: Ken Bk«wn,Teena C hadw ell, Mark D oud. Andrew Faught. M ichael F lo ra , M u ff) GfUman. KeUye Kratcfa, Sonja Lew is, M aiaha M ardock. Kris M ayes, R ich­ ard R u d as, Lorenzo Sierra J r., Am y Slad e. J u d l Tancoa, Aahahnd T rtche. Joh n Yanda. * * * — • U ^ L n a n . CARTOONISTS: Ken C ollins. S ean H ey. PHOTOGRAPHERS: H enri C ohen, Jeocgetta D ouglas. Sean O penahaw . T .J. S okol. Tam ara W oflbcd. OOWTEDITOR S: Patricia M ah. KayOlaon . GabrteHa Sanch ez. COLUMNISTS: Jim m y Kopf, K risti M cDowell. PRODUCTION: Ceba Ham m an C ueto, J o h n G uflonard, Kevin H eller. T anya H u tch in s, B arty Kelly, Jeffrey L ucas. Ehren Schw tebert. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: B rett E lliot. Cam er on E llis. Leo G onzales. C rystal Luxoley. Todd M artin. Lance Newm an. N ed Schnelw ar. R achel W ilson. T he S to ie /^ e ss Is p ublished Monday through Friday during fe e academ ic year, excep t h olid ays and exam p eriod s.We do n o t answ er q u estion s o f a general n ature. T he S to le Press Is fe e onty new spaper exclu sively pub* habed far an d circu lated on fe e ASU cam p u s. T he new o an d view s p ub lished to th is new spaper are n o t n eceosarityfeooe o f fe e ASU adm in istration , facu lty, sta ff o r stu d en t body. Editorial Beam U nsigned ed itorials reflect fe e view s o f fe e editorial b oard. Individual m em bers o f th e ed itorial board w rite ed itorials an d fe e board d ecid es th eir m erit T he ed itorials d o n o t reflect fe e opinion o f fe e S ta te P ress sta ff a s a w hole. Board m em bers include: PAUL CORO __ _ Editor SUZANNE R O SS____............___ M anaging E ditor MICHELLE ROBERTS.....................__ .... O pinion Editor Letter Policy T he S ta te JV sss w elcom es an d en cou rages w ritten s p en se from ou r readers on an y top ic. A ll le tto » m u st b e typed, d ou b le-sp aced an d n o longer th an tw o p ages in len gth to b e d ib b le far p ub lication . P lease Include you r fu ll nam e, d a m sta n din g an d m ajor (or an y oth er affiliation w ith fe e u iilr u ilty) an d p hon e num ber. O ntyalgM d lettem w(B b e con sid ered for p u b lica­ tion . R equests fm an oitym ity w ill b e ¿ a n te d onty w ife an appropria te reason . L etters are su b ject to ed ttln g b y fe e op in ion page ed itor. A ll le tte » m u st b e eith er b r e a s t in p erson w ife a p hoto LD. to th e State Press fron t d esk tn th e b asem en t ofM atthew s C enter or e lse ad d ressed to StatePress, 15 M atth ew s C enter, A rison s S tate U htverrity, T em pe, A ria., 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 . Stale Press Phone Numbers f o n t D esk ...................... N ew sroom ........................ D taplay A dvertising C lassified A d vertisin g..___...____ 9 9 5 -7 5 7 3 96&-23V2 ___ .... 9 0 6 -6 6 6 6 965-6 7 3 1 O pinion Slate Press Hetters to th e e d ito r Nowicki stereotypes card collectorsDear Editor: In his Sept. 12 column in The State Press Magazine, Dan Nowicki claims to be a “sensitive observer of injustice,” but I found his entire article highly insensitive, if not downright insulting. According to Nowicki, as a comic book collector I am “exceptionally odious,” “have lots of pimples” and believe that my hobby makes me “hipper than the rest of the universe.” Nothing could be further from the truth. I’ve never met Nowicki, much less offended him, yet he seems to regard me, along with every philatelist and Trekkie, with utter contempt. Nowicki seems to make blanket (and incorrect) judgments about a number of people based on just one visit to a baseball card shop. There are words to describe someone who acts like that. Words like “ignorant,” “prejudicial,” “stereotyping,’,’ “bigot” and even “moron.” Can we expect future articles discussing Nowicki’s views on dumb jocks and dizzy blonds, or even inscrutable Chinamen and greedy Jews? I hope not. Please keep this sort of hateful tripe out of the State Press and in the garbage where it belongs. David Crowe Freshman, Undeclared T KOM I W » I A ,W lin LOVfc. Classes produce intelligent grads Dear Editor : I found Thomas Mclnerney’s letter in the Sept. 12 issue of the State Press to be both amusing and sad. It is amusing because Mr. Mclnemey seems to believe that he writes well; sad because I have read poorer w ritin g th an his in m any of the undergraduate essays I have graded. While Mr. Mclnemey may believe that he writes well, he is fortunate that ASU will require him to take English 101 and 102. Certain basic subjects (such as English and math) are required of ASU students to prepare the students for life outside of the University. These subjects are required regardless of students' opinions of their own abilities in these subjects. English majors must take math and science, so they will have basic computational skills and a basic understanding of scientific thought. Math and Science majors are required to take E n g lish to im p ro v e th e ir w ritte n communication skills. These courses are not required of students to make all students into perfect mathematicians or scientists or writers. They are required because it is expected that all students graduating from any university will need these requirements to function intelligently outside of the university. The cultural diversity requirement was made in recognition of the fact that the United States has been and will continue to be an extremely diverse society. A basic knowledge of this diversity is necessary to all students to better understand the people with whom they will come into contact. There is no part of this requirement that will “ elim in a te” W estern thought from students’ courses. Anyone who believes that one three-hour course out of the total of 126 hours required of undergraduates could remove all Western thought from their course work hasn’t been paying attention in class. As of Sept. 12, we know that Mr. Stroud no longer considers cultural diversity courses as “trivial;” in fact, he acknowledges the importance of diversity in the United States. Despite this acknowledgement, Mr. Stroud still does not see the importance of the requirement, preferring instead to fall back into an attack based on the requirement’s supposed “political correctness.” As with Mr. Mclnerney’s opinion of his own English skills, Mr. Stroud has left me with little doubt that he could use improvement in his knowledge of diversity. Dennis Hurlbut Graduate Student, Anthropology Letter writers fail to enrich readers Mclnemey misses point Dear Editor:. I have followed with interest last week’s heated exchange of Letters to the Editor regarding the new cultural diversity requirement. It seems to me that the issue itself became less and less important as the week went on. This burial of the issue culminated in Thomas Mclnerney’s letter of Sept. 12. The week’s trend seemed to be to attack the other person’s choice of words or even his person, rather than his position. Mr. Mclnemey appears to foe a master of this technique. In his letter, he vehemently attacks one Thurston Hanson’s letter of Sept. 10. Having also read Mr. Hanson’s letter, I know that he is just as guilty of the ‘‘insult-the-other-guy-any-way-y ou-can” method of arguing. For example, he implies that Christopher Stroud, who started the cultural diversity fire on Monday with a letter opposing the requirement, is a member at the KKK. Really now — isn’t that going a hit too far? However, Mr. Hanson does at least address the issue, buried as it is in barbs at Mr. Stroud. Mr. Mclnemey, on the other hand, never addresses the issue at all. Instead, he tells us he supports Clarence Thomas (now that’s relevant), he deplores the fact that M r. H a n s o n ’s “ s o r d i d r h e t o r i c ’’ embarrasses other political conservatives; he wonders how an English m ajor (Mr. Hanson) could write so horribly; and he gives us “facts,” These facts consist of three items regarding the admissions of blacks to other universities and money they receive there. What does that have to do with a cultural diversity requirement? He goes on to tell us that he only came to this second-rate institution because these “double standards” at the Ivy League schools prevented his going there. In all the mudslinging, it has been entirely forgotten that the real issue is simply that the University will now require three semester hours of study in a course designed to teach students about some other culture Within our own. Does the University have the right to make this requirement? Who knows. (I, for one, question the University’s right to make B.A. students take algebra.) However, it is very clear that there is a need for cultures within our society to develop a tolerance for each other. As human beings tend to fear and dislike the unknown, there is a need for education before tolerance can develop. And because people don’t like to try new things, and/or think their own ways are best, they always need a gentle shove in the new direction. Three credit hours is a gentle shove. Remember that it is not any sort of minor in cultural diversity we’re talking about here. It’s three credit hours. One class, for one semester. M o re p o i n t s in r e s p o n s e to Mr. Mclnemey: he claims that “Homer, Aristotle, Shakespeare and other ‘white males’ stand to be thrown out,” presumably because cultural diversity classes are to be brought in. That is a “fact” that carries out to be checked into. He also wonders what the merits are in “an overly ideological scholarship in Afro-American studies and women’s Studies programs.” I Wonder, not so much that he doesn’t want to learn about the millions of Afro-Americans he shares this country with — it’s probably easy for persons of Ivy League ilk to avoid them — but that he is not interested in learning about the other “minority” — the one that outnumbers him 52 to 48 percent. Mr. Mclnemey claims that Mr. Hanson is uninformed on the topic. Mr. Mclnemey is so well-informed that he avoids the topic entirely. Talk about writing with petulance. M i k k i C u r t is S o p h o m o r e , P r e - la w / J a p a n e s e Dear Editor: The rancor and lack of civility of many recent State Press letter writers on both sides - of the cultural diversity course requirement issue leave a bitter taste in one’s mouth. The goal of the proposed requirement is to open our minds to views and experiences that may differ from our own. Tliat advocates on both sides of the question should aim relentless intolerance and feline malice toward each other demonstrates convincingly that such a requirement is indeed needed. Much of the State Press opinion page discourse on the proposal has failed to edify and enrich our community in any way largely for this reason. Recent suggestions that one person has intellectual “vertigo” if he is for the proposal or that another must surely wear “KKK robes” if he is against it, do nothing to address the merits of the issue, and such suggestions really have no' place in the dialogue at all. There are many intelligent, useful and thought-provoking ideas that can be forwarded instead to advance either case. It is these ideas, and not gratuitous, obscurantist venom that we want to hear. Lift up the level of discussion to one that is m ore a p p ro p riate for a university community. D. L. DeBayle Bolin Senior, Geography fW s m b m f, HEti fog, THtSC i ftxrTdHl ilparts/ w ito ti* Tuesday, Septemb e r 17,1991 Page 6 Stale t o m A d m in is t r a t io n fo c u s e s o n h i r i n g By M ARSHA M ARDOCK S ta te P r e s s Senior Vice President and Provost Milton Glick told the ASU Faculty Senate Monday that the search for several new deans and a vice president is one of his priorities for falL “ From my perspective, those searches are a$ important as anything we do this year,” Glick said. The administration will be searching, for a new vice president for research G lic k and deans of the education, social work, extended education and nursing colleges. Glick asked the faculty to play a pro-active role in finding the right people for the jobs. Glick, who spoke in place of ASU President Lattie Coor, said the administration will also focus on its research mission and economic development. He said the role of the University is to “produce quality people and to develop new knowledge. ” The administration will take a “ total qualitative managerial approach" this year, Glick said. He aims to reduce unnecessary bureaucracy; seek a balance between research, instruction and outreach: and identify who the University should be serving. “ Defining clients is difficult.” Glick said. ‘‘Who are we M a r iju a n a — — __ ixM iiinued from p age 1. “Marijuana is a really good pain killer,” Nagoshi said “It’s ridiculous we have these Draconian laws that are in effect killing people.” He said he was the only faculty member who would “stick his neck out” to become adviser to the group. Nagoshi, who said he has conducted experiments proving alcohol to be more detrimental to brain functions than marijuana, added hemp also is an invaluable raw material because it “grows quickly in all environments.” Historically, the best ropes were made from hemp, he said. Meanwhile, Bill Green, the NORML state chairman, said the government’s war on drugs is “something that has been fabricated by the administration,’’ Green said marijuana is the least harmful of all illicit drugs and even safer than many pain-killing drugs prescribed by physicians, adding that there has never been a documented death because of marijuana overdose. “I think if we legalize marijuana, we would eliminate 75 percent of the (drug) problem right off the bat,” he said. “It’s big business for the government to keep it illegal.” He said the government regularly solicits greater taxes to fight all illegal drugs. : “We’re just trying to educate people,’’ he said. G r a d in g C ontinued from p age 1, Day said participation was worth 15 percent of her overall class grade. The committee based its decision on the arbitrary and unclear nature of the grading criteria, not on the quality of the students’ papers. Elayne Achilles, chairwoman of the committee, acknowledged in a report given to the petitioning students that the standards were applied after the papers'were serving?” He added that it is ASU’s job to serve students, the public and counterparts at other universities. Faculty Senate President Alan Matheson said he expects a report from the Arizona Board of Regents Commission on the Status of Women this semester and is seeking nominations for the leader of the ASU committee on the status of women. He also updated the faculty on the status of the faculty basketball ticket controversy. Faculty members were upset this summer when they were notified that their season-ticket discounts would be lowered from 50 percent to 20 percent. Matheson. said the issue is before the Intercollegiate Athletic Board. Associated Students of ASU President Greg Mechem listed these student government goals : •To establish and maintain positive working relationships with administrators throughout the semester. •To have a volunteer development program in place by the end of the semester. •To increase the utilization of the Safety Escort Service. •To increase student and alumni attendance at Homecoming and have a successful parade and street festival. •To develop a planning process and draft a stategic plan for ASASU. •To implement a plan to increase the awareness of the programs and services offered by ASASU. G M AT • LSAT GRE • M CAT and Graduate School Adm issions Counseling CATERING T O Y OUR MUSIC NEEDS Iflfliguel’s Wl usicGenter Next h Ozzie'i Wimhoiisein Ihr Artltts-Shopping Caller REPAIRS GUITAR LESSONS SALES RENTALS ELECTRONICS 968-2310 • ElectricGuitars • /traps • Distortion Boxes • Elechvnic Metronomes * Etc. 130 E. University Dr., Tempe • O pen 6 days 10 a.m.-6 p.m. r CHAMPS SALON -, •Hair Services •Nail Services »Skin Care •Make Up »Tanning 2 fo r i A ny Salon Service >Call for details •1st time clients only » Expires 10-31-91 Purchase any salon service, receive 2nd like service FREE! 1804 E. S o uthern S uite 7 • T em pe 838-0622 8 -8 M o n -F ri 8-5 S at Something as important as graduate school deserves your attention. Call us today and experience THE RONKIN ADVANTAGE: •S m all c la s s e s o f le s s than 10 stu d en ts •T hree d ia g n o stic e xa m s g iv e n throughout th e co u rse •Expert, tra in e d te a ch e rs that have sco re d in th e to p 10% of th e e xa m s taught • F R E E d ia g n o stics a v a ila b le an ytim e , Cj M en tio n th is ad an d re c e iv e $ 5 0 o ff o f y o u r co u rse ! * Tem pe • 731-9400 (Next to the Coffee Plantation) Scottsdale • 483-2100 (Scottsdale Rd. EDUCATIONAL GROUP , & Shea) Written. According to Giraud, the dean designate said Goodman had refused to change students’ grades and that she (Sowell) was “not about to change grades because a professor’s grading privileges are sacred.” All but two students who obtained B grades received, letters ' from Goodman a year after the course, offering a proposed third paper to change students’ grades back to the original A, Giraud said. "If you passed it, you got an A,” Giraud Said. “ If you failed it, you kept your B.” Giraud drafted a letter for the remaining six petitioning students and refused the proposal. “There was no way we were going to do another paper,” Giraud said. “We had already fullfilled the requirements of the course,” Larry Mankin, a special assistant to ASU President Lattie Coor, said Goodman was fair because she gave the students an opportunity to change their grades with the third paper proposal. “She sent four questions to each student, and I believe asked that two of the four be answered for the paper,” Mankin said. “She even put stuff on reserve in the library to do the papers with. “Only the instructor (Goodman) or the director (Sowell) have authority to change grades. No one else has that authority.” Some Things Speak ForThemselves. State Press ASU Football Opinions You might not agree with us, but we make you think. 3 r.c N T s E A S O £ £ ja | ! Ü TICKET INFORMATION ,9 6 5 -2 3 8 1 The Place To Be On Saturday Might! C O M IN G IN O C T O B E R : M ID N IG H T M A D N E S S Pa» 7 Tu«dB%Septoijbw1^J991 M m nos C om m ittee to ad d ress p a n el co n fu sio n B y M A R G O G H -L M A N S ta te P r e s s The establishment of a panel geared to incorporate student voice in the resolution of student disputes will be addressed at a com m ittee meeting today — despite con­ fusion over the panel’s leadership. Hageseth Associated Students of ASU Executive Vice President Christian Hageseth said the University Affairs Committee will meet to form procedural guidelines to operate the student review board, which was created by the ASASU Senate last May. The idea of a peer review board was introduced to the senate by the Office of Student Life amid concerns that students facing Code of Conduct violation charges should have the option of being evaluated by a “jury of students.” Currently, such matters are handled solely by Student Life administrators who act as both the “judge and juror,” he said. “ The c o m m i t t e e will m a k e a recommendation on how to form the board and then they’ll present it to the senate,” Hageseth said. “From that, we’ll establish a committee which will actually form it." But senators do not know what to expect from the meeting since the board’s leaders, who were elected in May, are now in question. College of Public Programs Sen. Hector Pazos said he and Debbie Willson,, College of Social Work Sen., were supposed to form'the guidelines and legislation this summer, but nothing materialized because a student coordinator failed to contact them. Pazos said he and Willson were elected to serve as the two senators who are supposed to sit on the committee. But he was recently told he would “not have to serve on it,” since the summer planning fell through. “Christian told me at the last meeting that the board’s formation would be taken up by University Affairs,” Pazos said. “And that I didn’t have to worry about it since I wasn’t a part of the committee.” But Willson, also a member of the University Affairs committee, said it was her belief that the two were still considered to be the board’s senators and would work with the committee at today’s meeting. Hageseth said he did not realize the two were designated as the official senators of the commitee. “It was my understanding that they were just supposed to help form the board this summer.” Hageseth said he will discuss the discrepancy with University Affairs Committee Chairman Heather Collins today. Willson said she hopes she will remain a senator for the board because she is “really interested in promoting the program.” “ I think it’s an excellent idea to have students involved in the decision making. It shouldn’t just be a judge, trial and jury at the administrative level. “I was elected as a senator for the board at our last senate session in the spring,” she said. “At least that’s what I’ve thought all along.” “This is all news to me,” she added. It’s not just another w ay for you to spend your money It’s a way to help you save it N o \ y g e t th e C a r d a n d g e t S tu d e n t P r iv ile g e s . S p e c ia l s a v in g s c r e a t e d ju s t t o r y o u . O n ly fr o m A m e r ic a n E x p r e s s . If you think the American Express* Card is sim ply another way to buy things, w e’d like to share som e valuable new s w ith you: Since you’re a student, the Card can actually help Use your certificates to visit friends at other schools, see your fam ily back hom e or enjoy yourself during a vacation. And the best part: Each certificate could save you as much as $250over regular ContinentalAirlinesfares On a coast-to-coast trip. OUR NEWEST ADVANTAGE: UP TO 30 MINUTES“ OF FREE MCI LONG-DISTANCE CALLING EVERYMONTH FOR A YEAR you save. a college budget . This year alone, Student Cardmembers have saved at Pizzeria Uno, Eddie Baiter, MTV and ArtCarved class rings, am ong others. You’ll find your certificates in each issue o f our exclusive Student m agazine, American Express* Card CONNECTIONS—w here you’ll also find valuable ideas and inform ation about college life today. 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SERVICES AnAmercan Express company ' • To b e eligible, you musi b e approved by December 31,1991. ** A credit o f up to $3.70 for calls will appear o n each billing statement for 12 months after enrollm ent . $3.70 is equal to th e charges for a dom estic 30-minute night/w eekend MG G ird Compatibility call and appropriate surcharges. \b u must enroll for this service by Decem ber 31,1991. © 1991 American Express Travel Related Services Company Inc. GettheCardtodayCall 1-800-942-AMEX. PageS Girl fabricates rape story, police say A Tempe teenager fabricated a rape story to prevent being punished by her father, Tempe police said Monday. The 16-year-old said she made plans with friends from the middle school she attended to go to Mill Avenue on Saturday night. She said she was picked up by the two girls, whose names she could not remember. Prior to their arrival on Mill Avenue, the girls stopped at the Howard Johnson’s Hotel at 225 E. Apache Blvd. and went to a room. There, the girls supposedly encountered two 19-year-old men. The girl said her friends left her in the room alone with the two mep, and they immediately began to attack her and remove her clothing. She said one man raped her while the other man held her down. After the incident, she said the men forced her to take a bath, then left. After the girl reported the incident to the Tempe police, officers took the girl back to the hotel to attempt to locate where the alleged rape took place. She could not remember the room she was in. Further investigation by police revealed that the girl was not sexually assaulted at all, although she was at the motel. Instead, police said she was a willing participant in a. sexual act. The youth admitted creating the story to account for her whereabouts on that evening in order to escape being punished by her father. Compiled by State Press reporter Ashahed Triche LET THE A R M Y RESERVE RAY YO UR STUDENT LO A N . P o lic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents oh Monday: •A thief stole an ASU student’s wallet from his room at 714 Alpha Drive. Estimated loss is $62. •A grease fire was accidentally started on the third floor of Palo Verde Main. No damage was sustained. •A male not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for indecent exposure in Parking Structure 5. •A male not affiliated with ASU was assaulted by unknown people near 714 Alpha Drive. He was treated at the scene by the Tempe Fire Department. Tempe police reported the following incidents on Monday: •A Phoenix man was arrested after neighbors observed him exposing his penis and “playing with it.” They also said the man was very loud and appeared to be “arguing with himself.” The man then verbally assaulted the female arresting officer bv calling her a “whore and a slut ” He was charged with disorderly conduct and indecent exposure. •Two men were arrested for public sexual indecency when an officer found them engaged in oral sex in the restrooms at Kiwanis park. •A Tempe man was arrested for assault and disorderly conduct after he slammed his girlfriend’s head on the concrete in a parking lot at the 2100 block of South Rural Road. •A man stopped his car in front of a female at a parking lot on 1065 W. First St. He stepped out of the car naked and began to masturbate. The female victim yelled at the suspect, and he got back in his car and fled. He is a 5-foot, 10-inch white male, overvveight with brown curly hair and a “beer belly.” His vehicle was a newer model navy blue S-10 Blazer. Compiled by State Press reporter Ashahed Triche A nearby Army Reserve unit needs bright people to train in certain specialized skills. In return, we’re willing to help pay off a qualified student loan—up to $20,000. Ybu could also qualify for another $18,000 for college expenses—all for part-time service, usually one weekend a month plus two weeks’ Annual Training. Think about it. Then think about u s. T hen ca ll. I f your birthday is this month, th e S U ffT C 1P1R.CSS w ill give you I free classified liner ad. There is a lim it o f 2 0 words. IProof o f birth month required. Ylflatthews Genter, south basement ■ A IL TOUCAN ML ASU OVERSEAS Applications Are Now Being Accepted FIND O U T A B O U ^ EDUCATION ABROAD — ---------------------------------------------- % SIENA, ITALY S tu d e n ts now h ave the option fo r fall, sp ring o r a ca d e m ic y e a r in Italy. TW O T R A C K S: B e g in n e rs m ay en roll in in te n sive la n g u a g e c la s s e s or A d v a n ce d stu d e n ts m ay ta ke c o u rs e s taug ht in Italian. F o r m ore inform ation contact: O ffice of International P ro g ra m s M O E U R B U ILD IN G 124 965-5965 at our Information Seminar Wednesday September 18,1991 1-2 p.m. Memorial Union Mohave Room For more information contact: Office of international Programs MOEUR BUILDING 124 965-5965 * * £ « 9 Tuesday, Septem b e r 17,1991 S a n D ie g o S ta te U n iv e rs ity p r o f e s s o r J e s u s N ie to s p o k e M o n d a y in th e M e m o r ia l U n io n P ro g ra m ­ m in g L o u n g e a b o u t “ H e a lin g t h e W o u n d s o f E t h n ic a n d R a c ia l B ia s , H is p a n ic I s s u e s .“ N ie to ----------------------------------Continued from page 1. “Not only are the doors shut oil us because of the test scores, but we shut the doors on ourselves,” he said, adding that minorities need to recognize the bias in testing. Halfway through the hour, Nieto turned his focus to “healing the wounds of bias.” Revising curriculum to include more minority faces and culture in textbooks and training teachers to meet growing minority demographics will help to eliminate the sometimes subtle signs of bias, he said. D ate: N O W THRU FRIDAY. SEPT. 16-20 Place: ASU BOOKSTORE Tim e: 9 a m - 4 p m “We have this diversity, so the question is how well-equipped are we to deal with that?” he said. “We have to have some reflection of the diversity of the students.” Throughout the speech, Nieto emphasized the importance of examining one’s own bias, saying that change begins on an individual level. “Becoming aware of social issues is crucial,” he said. “How do we treat people different because of the way they look?” The State Picas __________ is on the stands before most people wake up! M eet with your lostens representative for full details. 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Council members passed on two other finalists: Avon Crossing and Del Mayne Crossing. “We responded to the Citizens who thought it would be fun to call the bridge Bob,” said Councilman Charlie Gersbach, who urged the name on fellow council members. Some people don’t see the humor in it. “ I wanted to see Avon’s name on it,” said CounCilwoman Gloria McRory. McRory said the name makes light of the work of officials who lobbied for assistance from the state, Eagle County and the Denver & Rio Grande West Railroad — whose tracks are on a overpass. Traditionalists needn’t worry too much. “We still left the door open to give it an official name,” Gersbach said. London Classifieds Sell $223 Amsterdam Frankfurt Parte Tokyo Auckland Sydney 965-6731 $983 $983* $993* $399* $389* $439 [-CAMPUS-1 lC ornerj •Fares are each way to m Phoenix based on roundtip puchase. Re­ strictions d o apply. Student status may b e required. C a ll fo r a FREE 1991 S tudent T ra ve l C atalog! 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C o lo r P rin ts State P it n Page 11 Tuesday, Septem ber 17,1991 Y o u th th e w o r d at USC Call him Coach: O rtiz in charge of ASU p ractice ButTrojanscom ebacktobeat Penn State after initial shock By DARREN URBAN S ta te P re s s When USC dropped an unbelievable 24-10 decision at home to that noted football powerhouse, Memphis State, in the first game of the year, experts everywhere were forced to scramble and declare the 1991 Trojans overrated. Game two with rising Penn State, which had two overwhelming victories under its belt, would only be a formality as USC would be sent spiraling to a 0-2 start. But the Trojans refused to comply, upsetting the Nittany Lions 21-10 and creating the ultimate Jekyll-and-Hyde team for ASU to face in Saturday’s game in Los Angeles. “ I’m pleased after this Saturday night’s game (with Penn State),” USC coach Larry Smith said. “But the first game of the season was very poor for us. We’re a young team that has to develop consistency from week to week.” Young just begins to describe the Trojans, who have such a youthful base that nine starters are either freshmen or sophomores. It is the inexperience of his troops, Smith said, that will not allow even him to predict the output his team will have every week. “Sometimes when you’re dealing with ..'. 18- and 19-yearolds—a sophomore-type team —you’re not quite sure what’s going to show up,” Smith said. “I hope they got excited enough ahd enjoyed the victory enough that they’ll go back out and do some of the same things we did this past week.” Leading USC on offense is quarterback Reggie Perry, a sophomore who takes over for a club that originally hoped to have NFL-defectee Todd Marinovich for both this year and next. Perry, touted in the Trojan media guide as being in the mold of former USC signal-caller Rodney Peete, came into the season with even less experience than the Sun Devils’ own Bret Powers. Perry took only three snaps, with no passes, in game situations before his first start against the Tigers. He has thrown for only 278 yards and one touchdown so far, but has also rushed for 112 yards and two scores as a double-threat in the backfield. His rushing total leads the team. “Perry can hurt you two ways,” Smith said. “He can hurt you throwing, but he can hurt you a lot running. Todd (Marinovich) wasn’t going to hurt you running.” Smith has also had to deal with the loss of top tailback Mazio Royster, who went out after a half against Memphis State with an injury after gaining 97 yards in only 20 carries and has not played since. Royster, a junior whose status for the game against the Sun Devils is still in doubt, emerged from the bottom of the depth chart last year to gain 1,168 yards on the ground. For now, sophomore Deon Strother has gotten the bulk of the backfield work with Royster out, but Smith said he is still unsure of the depth he has running the football. Douglas to still attend m atches B y L O R E N Z O S I E R R A J r. S ta te P re s s USC photo U S C c o a c h L a r r y S m ith h a s p e rh a p s h is m o s t in e x p e rie n c e d te a m at T r o y t h is s e a s o n . “We’ve had two games and we haven't had a 100-yard rusher yet,” Smith said. “I’m not really happy with that position yet. It’s a matter of who can make it happen. I think we’ve got good talent, but to say we’ve got great talent, I don’t know. To me, great talent is going to show up with big runs, big plays and 100-plus yards if you give him the ball 20 times.” It is injuries like the one to Royster that has contributed to the inconsistent performance of the offense. “There’s times when our offense has moved the ball quite well,” Smith said. “Our biggest problem is that we’ve had a When the ASU wrestling team began practice today with a 6:30 a.m. run at Sun Angel Stadium, the familiar intense glance of 18-year coach Bobby Douglas was notice­ ably absent. Former Sun Devil All-American Thom Ortiz was at the helm of the team's initial practice. Moreover, Ortiz will be in charge of training and conditioning while Douglas fulfills his duties as U. S. Olympic wrestling coach. ' “We’re in the paperwork right now,” Ortiz said. “Coach (Douglas) asked me back in early July. Ho looked over the list of people and decided I was the best qualified.” Last season, Ortiz served as a graduate assistant on a team that finished 13th nationally and first in the Pac-10. Ortiz, who graduated in 1990 and is currently in the College of Business’s graduate program, is wading through the transition from wrestler to coach. “I appreciate that he (Douglas) had a lot of confidence in me,” Ortiz said. “ I know his system — this is my seventh year with the wrestling program.” According to Ortiz, Douglas will join the team on Sept. 20, but will leave three days later to go to Bulgaria. When Douglas is at ASU, he will resume his duties as head coach. Ortiz expects Douglas to attend all matches during the season. During his seven years with the program, Ortiz never had to deal with tHe bureaucracy part of wrestling. “Now I’m finding out that the wrestling program is not just in the wrestling room,” Ortiz said. “When I wrestled here, I thought, ‘How hard can it be to bea coach?’ Now people are calling me and saying, ‘So-and-so didn’t go to study hall.’ ” Last week, Bob Kennedy was named by the Athletic Department to take care of the administration and supervision of the team. Today is the first day for all collegiate wrestling teams to begin workouts for the upcoming season. The big test, for Ortiz, will be today at 3 p.m., when the Turn to O rtiz, p age 13. Turn to JUSC, p age 12. Lewis returns to Sun Devils with earnest H e’s back: C ollin s cleared fo r contact P a u l ’s e l i g i b i l i t y c o m B y M IC H A EL F L O R E S p lic a t io n s t ill n o t r e s o lv e d S ta te P re s s ASU cross country runner Todd Lewis is the kind of person who likes to think ahead, so when the 22-year-old senior decided to sit out last season, it was for good reasons. “ I sat down with my coaches, and together we decided that it might be best for me and the team for me to save my final year of eligibility for. this year,” Lewis said. * What he and the coaches saw was a young Sun Devil team that, given a year to mature, showed great potential. Potential similar to that shown by Lewis when he first entered ASU. After an im pressive c a ree r, at Mountain View High School in Mesa, where he graduated in 1987, Lewis chose to attend nearby ASU. He quickly established himself as one of the team's top runners. As a sophomore, he won the ASU Invitational and placed 22nd at the NCAA D istrict VIII Championship. He continued to improve and in 1989 was selected as the top junior road racer and qualified for the district championship for the second consecutive year. Last year’s decision to sit out probably kept Lewis from building upon his im p re s s iv e c r e d e n tia ls , bu t in retrospect, he and ASU distance coach Ken Lehman still stand by the decision to B y D A N ZEIG ER S ta te P re s s ASU Media Relations photo T o d d L e w is re tu rn s J o A S U cre w s c o u n try a fte r re s h irtln g la s t yea r. redshirt last season. Lewis said that he, like others on the team , was able to gain valuable experience from the year off and is looking forward to contributing to what he thinks will be a “really good men’s team.” “It’s kind of a different feeling going in T urn to L ew is, p age 12. ASU football doach Larry Marmie received some additional news on the condition of his defensive line on Monday — and it was good for a change. Shane Collins, a starting defensive tackle who has been out of action for almost a year rehabilitating his surgically-repaired right knee, is finally back in full participation after passing his latest strength test. Collins, who ripped his anterior cruciate ligament in the knee in the season-opening game last year, was cleared for contact before practice and will be evaluated this week for a possible contribution at USC on Saturday. “I had felt I was real close (to passing the test),” Collins said. “ I think that at this point that the trainers and doctors feel good about my progress right now. As long as I feel good, I want to make progress toward playing as much as I can.” Marmie said that the coaching staff would progress Collins in the same manner that nose guard Pat Mason returned to playing form following his shoulder injury —getting in as much contact as possible, depending on how the injured area feels. But for the fourth-year coach, Collins couldn’t have come back soon enough. “Well, it feels really good,” Marmie said. “When you bring in a quality player who has been around, obviously it will help us very much. How much he’ll get in during practice is dependent a lot on how he feels. How much he contributes is something we’ll leave up to Shane.” While Collins admits he is looking forward to possibly venting out all the frustration he has collected in the last 11 months with a few good shots against USC, he said that he knows a lot of work still needs to be done. “Things get really serious right now,” Collins said. “I have to be a lot more focused mentally as well as physically. I’d say I’m in fair condition right now, but I think I’m in decent shape as far as other things go. “I just want to get through one game. I’m going to focus on what I have to do.” Collins’ comeback, along with the successful return of Mason and the impressive play of the rest of the linemen in the Sun Devils’ 30-3 victory at Oklahoma State last Saturday, results in a front four which could be at its most solid in a year. In addition, freshman Mike Balian, who might have played a role on the line before spraining his knee in the preseasom was also cleared for contact on Monday. But there is still room for concern. While Marmie can feel good about the return of Collins, he said that he had no further information on the status of tackle Arthur Paul, who didn’t play on Saturday because of eligibility problems that ASU officials would not elaborate on. State Press Tuesday, Septem ber 17,1991 Pasc 12 use . Continued from page I I. lot of early season injuries and a lot of preseason camp injuries. We’ve never really been able to get everybody together,” The difference between a loss to a probably inferior Memphis State school and a win against a probably superior Nittany Lion squad was the time leading up to the games, Smith said, as the Trojans fell prey to the we-took-them-toolightly disease against the Tigers. “There was a lot more attention to detail, a better attitude (against Penn State),” Smith said. “ I think players went out on the practice field to practice to Win instead of just practicing to get through. “We had a lot more respect for Penn State. For Memphis State, we looked at film of them a year ago and it’s the worst mistake we ever made, because a year ago Memphis State was not a very good team. I think it’s a matter of preparation and attitude and respect for your opponent.” The win over the Nittany Lions was a far cry from the trials and tribulations of last season, when the on- and off-field exploits of Marinovich captured many of the headlines at the end of last season and in the off-season. “There was a lot of distractions,” Smith said. “There was a lot of things going on, a- lot of things being said and being written. We most certainly did consider that that had an affect on us but 1 think once we got back here and got into football, that Was put behind us. But you never really know. It definitely was a distraction last winter, in the spring and in the summer. “I think our players came back with an excellent attitude, and I think everything turned, out for the best. I think the biggest thing is that we’re just a very young team and we’re easily distracted.” L e w is. Continued from page 11. because I haven’t run competitively in a year,” Lewis said Lehman feels that Lewis should have no problem returning to the form he showed in 1989, when he posted four top-10 finishes for the Sun Devils. “He’s a year stronger and a year more mature,” Lehman said. “As long as he can stay healthy, he should have a great year.” Lewis agrees. “It’s my senior year, and I’d like to do as well as possible,” he said. “I feel real confident going into the season. ” ASU opens its season Sept. 21in San Diego in what Lewis calls “a good starter meet.” “It’s a fun meet,” he said. “It’s also very traditional having been around for such a long time.” Close to a .dozen schools will be competing, with the most notable being CROSSW ORD B Ä] S 1 E by TH O M A S JO S EP H A CR O SS station name A D O R N R T U E M E O N R A Q C E O R A S T A E R R E UofA, NAU, San Diego State and UCLA. “There will be a lot of teams there, so it will be a good chance to get a look at the competition,” Lewis said. Cross country races vary in distance from 8 km (5 miles) to 10 km (6.2 miles). Lewis has also run track for ASU and is the school record holder in the 5,000-meters as well as in the 3,000-meter steeplechase. As far as individual goals for this season, Lewis hopes to be named All-American in cross country and to place in the top 10 at the National Championships in Tucson. “That would be a great achievement for me,” he said. Looking farther into the future, Lewis plans to continue running competitively after college, with his sights set specifically on the U. S. Olympic Team. “ After that, I’ll just take it from there,’.’ he said. □ □ □ □ □ □ A m 1 C o L- E M A A G E P R G E 0 S 1 E 11 T O N T A N G 0 B O X M 1 N 1 M A U P S C A L T E i A N O E 0 B 1 N S s 1 S A G 5 N O R 1 Little dog, E briefly DOWN L A S 5 Sends 1 Calls with O D packages a beeper O V L 10 Sports 2 Printing S 1 E site mistakes E S N 12 Halley’s 3 “Batman* S E 0 find star M PI S 13 EntomoloMichael Yesterday’s Answer gist's 4 Print units 14 Gymnas­ 29 Leg-todrink? 5 Highbody tic feat 15 Chow lander 19 Bounds connec­ down 6 School tion 20 Putrid 16 Butter dance 30 Villain’s 24 Fielder’s senring 7 African looks blunders 17 Pub quaff antelope 33 Trunk 25 Salon 18 Hot 8 Kitchen jobs 35 Is in debt 20 Run away gadget 38 Summer, 26 Sage; 21 P u t— to 9 “SHkseer to Simone (stop) wood* star 39 Mineral 27 Mold; 22 Lawman 11 Quaking suffix cast Wyatt trees 23 Good r ~ T~ TT r ~ 7~ r ~ T7 quality u r n r ti 1Ô 25 Frolic 1 28 Journeys 14 31 Gershwin and Levin 15 32 Eager ■ * ■ 1Ô 19 34 Singer — ■ * r King Cole ¿1 35 Lennon's 4* wife » 36 Zodiac ■ ■ ZB sign ■ I I 37 Repair­ h man’s * drink? 36 $4 F 40 Cream of ■ • j ■ 47 99 the crop 41 Agitates 4Ò 42 Battle of : jd the — a 43 Old gas 1 ■ ■ r a r a r a r » iE i| CAR acurai SPECIALISTS IN0EPEN06WT SERVICE O n e Day Sende« o il M o s t R e p a ir* W E ON LY S ER V IC E HONDA CARS 3039 E. 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Y I K . — V F L R V D D M H V Q T M E Q T Y esterday's C ryptoquote: THE CHIEF PLEASURE IN EATING CONSISTS NOT IN COSTLY SEASONING ... BUT IN YOURSELF. — HORACE • 1991 by King Fm Iu t m Syndicate, Inc. I S iz z le r j S iz z le r L . at M ill & Southern - J ---- L . at M ill & Southern • J Page 13 Tuesday, Septem b e r 17,1991 Automotive Service^ LEIG H TO N 'S 1355 S. McClintock Tempe, 894-2798 Continued from page 11. wrestling team has its first practice. At that time, Ortiz will have to replace the legendary intensity of Douglas. Ortiz feels going in with Douglas’ intensity, would not fit him, so he has decided to bring his own personality to the team. He also feels the team will eventually let things fall into place. “I’m not going to be the strict discipline guy that Coach is — I couldn’t do that,” Ortiz said.’ “I’m not too worried because the guys that are returning want to get the job done,” According to ASU Director of Athletics Charles Harris, Ortiz’s experience with the program will reflect the teachings of Douglas. “Thom has obviously been through the program,” Harris said, “Hie practice regiment will be exactly the way Douglas developed it. It’s nothing new for Thom or the "Your veh icle m aintenance sp e cia lists’ 10% O F F •Wheel Alignm ent •Brakes Any services with this coupon •Front E n d R ep air • T rès Rotatkxi/Balancing ■Shocks/Struts •Fan Belts & H o s e s G o o d only with coupon. •Interstate Batteries Not valid with a n y other offer. Cool Savings! FREE SNOi Buy one Sno and get I soda 2nd one of equal or lesser value F R E E ! ® V /M Ir O With purchase of any 6" sub. N o t g o o d w ith o th e r o ffe r s . E x p . 10-4-91 N o t g o o d w ith o th e r o ffe r s . E x p . 10-4-91 Comer of Lemon & Rural 967-1114 (T fe O rtiz. j MungLife Young Life is Having an Informational Meeting Wednesday, September 18 7:30 p.m., MU Room 209 upperclassmen.” Ortiz said he will be helped by senior co-captains G, T. Taylor and Mike Anderson. One veteran, junior Ray Miller, feels the program made a good choice in Ortiz. ■ “It’s an order of command and for everything to run smoothly, you have to accept that,” Miller said. “It’s no big deal to me; he’s probably the best for the position.” As a recent graduate, Ortiz will be in charge of people who were his teammates. “The toughest thing will be developing a coach/athlete relationship,” Ortiz said. “I’ve wrestled with these guys on the same team. “They’re all my friends, too. There will be times when I’m going to need to say, ‘Look, you have to do this,’ and they’ll say ,‘I thought you were my friend?’ and I’ll have to say, ‘I’m your coach, too.’ ” . was he safe? was he oat? Had out with state Press Sports! Attention! Graduating Seniors! a f f in hYOU WANT Let JobPrep Show You How! Com e on by if you: were involved in YoungLife in high school; want to get involved now; are looking to meet som e new people; or just want more information. Call Bruce at 966-9371 for details A Chairman of the Board— with 38 years of hiring experience— W ill Give You Tim 13 Best ways To Get In The Right Door...Aed Emerge With The Job. This Jab Hunting Sem in» is Presented By JOBPREP— Real-World Business Execntlns Who Have Hired lOffs ef P e tite! The job pipeline is full all across Am erica Unemployment is growing. Yet thousands of new university graduates are entering the job market. The struggle to find the right job is more competitive than it’s ever been. 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STA N LEY BL K APLAN Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances 967-2967 w ■ Hear the three best ways to get that all-important first interview ■ A respected chief executive officer will tell THE most important eight words you can say in a job interview. ■ Learn 9 sure-fire ways to get through the right door to talk to the right person at the right time. ■ See a demonstration of a good interview— and a bad one. ■ The Perfect Resume. You’ll take home a specimen copy of this resume to model yours after. The wisdom of 30 corporations in one oh-so-important document. ■ How important is how you dress? ■ What NOT to wear to your interviews. ■ Did you know the business community has a handshake that’s a secret to 30% of college grads? ■ Let the mailman help you. You will see a dozen examples of mailed items that got the sender into that all-important interview. Sign-in from 7:30 AM, Seminar at 8:30 SHARP! ■ How to netw ork-even in a city where you don’t have a lot of contacts HALFDAY SEMINAR 8 AM T01 PM PHOENIX, AZ...ASU LIMITED Brwj^ ^ r SEATING -2!g jg S S ■ THURSDAY, SEPT 28, Program 1926 ■ FRIDAY. SEPT 27, Program 1927 BOTH IN HOLIDAY INN, 915 E. Apache Blvd. at RURAL R D - NEXT TO CAMPUS CALL TODAY! AEC M ar NAtt September H A 28, awl U *1A Oct 2 A 3 FAST,EASY JOBPREPmc CALL 1 8 0 0 2 7 9 2 9 9 9 REGISTRATION!____ ■ « y F N M E C a l l us toll-free at: ■ 17 FAX FAX the completed form ■ BY MAIL Mail this completed 1 888 278-2888 Please have your to: 882-745-5548 O v FAX NM Is program number ready. 9 A -5 P A Z tim a •D M 24 bows, 7 days a weak. form to: J M P w t — Pu r i 620 N. Craycroft, Tucson, AZ 85711 REGISTRANT'SNAME______ MAILINGADDRESS ___ » tv ___ ,, DAYPHONE . ZIP. .STATE. .EVENINGPHONE. *49 SATISFACTION 6VARAIHEEB OR YOUR MONEY BACK .(payable to JobPrep) for $l. □ Check#. □ Chargetotttefolowing creditcard: □ MC □ VISA Pleaseprintcardholderls name . is enclosed. Pleasewriteregistrants nameon thecheck. Cardnumber Signature Expirationdate Classifieds Stale Flew T to « d 2 ^ S 2 to n b « ^ 1 7 ^ 9 9 1 _ P a g e l^ /d jN O U N C E M E N T ^ ^ ^ HOMES FOR RENT ROOMS FOR RENT FURNITURE S ^ S B E E S I^ S E S I^ S S S ^ ^ S E S E S S E S3B SB 5SSSSSE 5E SSSSS5S GET YOUR bead examined! Take Ibe Meaaa test 9/21. $25. M m >. The High IQ Society, 274-353$. GUEST HOUSE for rest, walk to ASU. Beautiful yard. $315 per mouth, utili­ ties included. Tim, 894-0288. $190 GETS you a room at our 3 bed­ room condo. U niversity/Price. Pool, Jacuzzi, tennis! Need immediately! Fe­ male, nonsmoker, no pets. 968-5339. W ATERBED. U PH O L S T E R E D , queen, 6-drawer pedestal, heater. $125. Evenings 897-A409. HANG GLIDING, windsurfing, jetskiing, kayaking dnily. Information, pric­ es, group rates, gifts: Call Adventure Sports, 897-7121. TH R EE B LO CK S from ASU- F our bedroom, beautiful bouse. $700 month. rim , 894-0288.___________ $225 PLUS 1/2 utilities. B illy furnished room. W alking distance to ASU. Call FarA , 966-6841. COMPUTERS A R A R TM EN T^^^ 1 BEDROOM, near ASU, 5th and Har­ dy. New appliances and carpet. Clean, quiet, laundry room. $300 per month. Move-in special available. 860-2130. /1 OR 2 bedroom. Total move in $250. Bool, bike to A$U, quiet patio, storage, laundry. 967-4568/894-8143. 2 B ED R O O M , 2 bath u n fu rn ish e d apartm ent, washer and dryer in each u n it. 1/2 m ile to A SU. L em on and D o rsey a rea. $400 m onth w ith lease.Cdl for move in special 496-0562, 893^1994. 2 b lo ck s from A SU 1bedrooms a v a ila b le now ! ftxd,U undiyfaci0ty, THE STATE Press Classifieds work. T0W NH0M ES-C0ND0S FOR RENT LOOKING FOR a clean fun loving male or female to share a 2 bedroom, 2 bath at M eridian C orner. C lo se to ASU $260/month plus 1/2 utilities and phone. Call Ben 829-7470. 2 BEDROOM tow nhouse near ASU. $385/month. Refrigerator, two pools. C arl: 897-1899, 844-5900. Available ' now.' ■ MASTER BEDROOM with own bath, tw o m iles from A SU , p o o l, w asher/dryer. $300 plus 1/2 utilities. Call at 784-4025. 2 B ED R O O M , 1 b ath condo, near D obson/University, washer/dryer and refrigerator. $395. MGM, 345-1919. 2 BEDROOM , 1 bath condo, w ash­ er/dryer, dishwasher, pool, spa. $425. Close to ASU. 829-1471. 2 BEDROOM , 1*1/2 bath, poolside, washer/dryer, near Hardy f t 5th Street 5550/month. 644-9226. 3 BEDROOM townhouse, pool, dish­ washer, completely furnished, near 48th S tree t/B ro a d w a y . $400/m onth. 437-1048. H 0M ESF0R ^ Lg___ SELLER'S LOSS Your gain! Upgraded split-level 3 bed­ room, 2 bath townhome located 2 miles south o f canqms. $70,000. Call Karen Fisher of Realty Executives, 831—1010. T0W H0MES/C0ND0S FOR RENT HAYDEN SQUARE T h ree b e d ro o m , tw o b a th tri-le v e l condo for rent. Hardwood floors, new carpet Call 894-1919. Sexy, spacious 1 bd. Vaulted ceiling, sun deck. $62.500. PAPAGO PARK Village D. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. $650.894-2616. Realty Executives 998-2992 2 BEDROOM; .1 hath, cute red brick duplex apartm ent w ith fenced yard , quiet neighborhood, east of ASU. Good deal $385 plus special. Call Jeannie and Brian 929-0382, y 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, close to campus, pool, tennis. Ideal for roommates, all appliances. $500/m onth. C all K elli, 497-6637,234-1152. BEAUTIFUL NEW large 1 and 2 bed­ room s. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry room, 1 block south o f University on 8th S tree t. C ape Cod A p artm en ts, 968-5238. Apartment Locating Service 437-1048 Roommate matching service abo available. 4 3 7 -1 0 4 8 NEAR DOWNTOWN Tempo and ASU: 1 bedroom, newly renovated. $320 p€r m onth. C all betw een 5pm and 7pm: 443^1183. , R EN TA LSH A R IN G ___ Papago Park Village Bob Bullock MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FEM A LE N O N SM O K E R , m aster b ed ro o m /b ath , w a sh e r/d ry er, all SMITH CORONA typewriter, Eiectra a m e n itie s. $265 p lu s 1/3 u tilitie s . 350-3531. ' ...I. ? X T , hardly u sed , $70 o r best offer. 921-3491. FEMALE ROOMMATE, nonsmoker, $95 month, close to campus. 829-6507. LOOKING FOR female/male who's not u p tig h t an d lo v e 's life to s h are my ap artm e n t. Own ro o m /b ath , $270/month m 1/2 utilities. Quadrangle Apartments, 1/2 m ile from ASU. Call Brittny, 967-0476! NON-SMOKER TO share 2 bedroom, 2 bath house, w ith fem ale, ASU grad. M aster bedroom w ith b ath , w asher, dryer, Alma School/Elliot, $210 plus deposit 899-3704. ROOMMATE NEEDED to share bed­ room with another has bathroom, kitch­ en, TV room. $120, utilities. 984-0023. R O O M M A TE N E E D E D to sh are 3 bedroom house w ith law student. 15 m inutes/A SU . O w n room /bath. B ig front yard, closed backyard, den, J a ­ cuzzi, oniric room. Smoker okay. Room furnished o r unfurnished, rent nego­ tiable. 839-8413. D ESKS FRO M $39.95, chairs from $9.95, bookcases from $19.95, com­ puter furniture, files and more. Arizona O fflce L iquidators, 5064 South 40th .... S tre e t (on 4 0 th S tre e t, sou th at Broadway), 437-2224. ANNOUNCEMENTS ST O P BY A S U B O O K ST O R E Mon-Fri 9am -4pm Sept. 16-20 VISA AMEX i a n a THE HOTTEST WEARS Levi«Guess«Gap*and others C C S C lo s e t C la s s ic s 491-2029 I for* t o Southernk Mcdintok BICYCLES B IK E FO R sale, N ishiki one-speed. W hite, great condition. $75 best offer. Call Shawna 821-2137. TICKETS APPLE I is c u rrently recru itin g in­ ventory clerks. 150 tempories needed to help take inventory at Los Arcos, Metro and Paradise Valley Malls for weekend o f September 28th. All shifts', apply in person M onday thru Thursday, 8:3010:30am or l-3pm , 2Ò East University Suite 101 (University and Mill), Tempe or 9201 N orth 29th A venue, M ètroCenter. Also 7272 East Indian School Road (Scottsdale Road/Indian School). Bring 1-9 identification (drivers license and Social Security card and/or birth certificate). Weekly pay. ARIZONA COUNTRY Club now hir­ ing part-time evening food and cocktail serv ers. N o e x p e rie n c e necessary. A pply after 4pm : 5668 E ast O range Blossom Lane, Phoenix. CONSTRUCTION SUPPLY CO. DIAMOND BACK 21-speed, with Shimano components, Veda Gel, Quick-re­ lease front and rear! Just tuned up and ready to ride. Like new! Asking $250! Help wanted, part-time, hourly plus bonus ■9 6 7 -8 7 2 6 . J o h n • 9 66-5765 RO AD B IK E, specialized Sirrus, 58 centimeters, Wolver rims, U-lock, like new, $350 firm. 730-8551. TRAVEL BAHAMAS CRUISE for 2, 5 days, 4 nights $600 retail, must sell $300 or best offer. 990-1702 leave message. ATTENTION: M ANUFACTURERS warehouse rep wanted for small Tempe business. $7/hour plus benefits, hours flexible. Jim, 820-8408. EARN UP TO $12 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places USA. Also w orldwide. I a lso b u y tra n s fe ra b le coupons. 968-7283. _______ _ or more an hour! If you are an outgo­ ing, dependable individual with excel­ lent phone drills, we need you for mis­ cellaneous research projects. No selling! Call FMG, 9511-1381. N E W Y O R K ro u n d -trip a irfa re s , $275/both or $150 eachfoffer. Depart 11/15, return 11/18.829-9265. GREENPEACE ACTION. The future is now! We are training women and man to b u ild pub lic support in A rizona. Learn and implement effective activist strategies. Excellent work environment, benefits, m edical insurance and great advancement opportunities. Earn $190250/week, full-time, part-time, flexible sch ed u lin g . C a ll L inda, 9 6 6 -1 9 8 6 , SKI FR E E ! Sell ASU Lake Tahoe ski trips! Call Sue, Mill Avenue Travel, 966-6300. HELP WANTED -GENERAL GET PERSONAL! M ake som eone's day special —send diem a personal! AUTOMOBILES *87 HONDA Prelude. W hite 5-speed. Power sunroof, AM/FM cassette, tinted windows. 50,000 miles, excellent con­ dition. $9,500. 285-1224. 1-602-531-3987 OR 921-3048. Need $cash$? B uying vehicles, running or not! Free tow/notary. Call anytime! tt-S W M O U K » jo cuAuurnMow M0RNMG, AFTERNOON, EVBNIIK FUTON FOR sale! X-cellent condition! Navy blue- includes frame. $200. Call 941-1755, ask for Stephanie. 87 N ISSA N S entra, re d , autom atic, pow er steering/brakes. Cloth interior, am/fm 70000. $4200 /offer. 820-0056. ★ Nation’s most experienced, largest Telemarketing Co. SAVMORE THRIFT Store, 1915 North S c o ttsd a le R oad, 1 b lo c k north o f McDowell, featuring quality used cloth­ ing and home furnishings. 990-3364. SE LL T H A T car in the S ta te Press Classifieds. Call 965-6731 for rates and information! ★ Hundreds of dollars in Cash, bonuses given out weekly APARTMENTS ★ Call on great programs like Magazine Renewals, Telephone Services, Trial Preview Book Clubs, Non-Profit Representation APARTMENTS 1 block from campus : M 1989 YAMAHA Zuma, blue, only 150 miles* b ra n d new p a id $1,800, $l,100/pffer. 894-1274. AIRLINE 915-2381 4 ROOMMATE, FEMALE. 2 bedroom condo. Hayden and Indian School by park $200 plus utilities. 947-5903. ANNOUNCEMENTS Now hiring to fill many entry level po­ sitions. Starting salary range to $24,000 with travel benefits. (303)441-2455. 10am-2pm. N IC E 2 b ed ro o m , w a lk to ASU/Downtown $370 pool, BBQ, laun­ dry, microwave 1014 Farmer 966-4797. VERY COMFORTABLE! Room, share bath in spacious bouse. Washer/dryer, recreatio n al com plex, c ab le. M ovie Channel. Good studying atmosphere. $220 ♦ 1/3.756-2760. J( )STE\'S America's College Ring BEDS: TWINS $49, Full $59, Queens $89, 5 drawer chest $39.50. 4-drawer desk $49.95. H a lf price delivery for students. 256-7675. DAYBED WITH trundle, brand new, iv o ry ra ilin g s, e x ce lle n t condition. $ 2 0 0 /b e st o ffer. K im , 963-2113, 251-0230. TW O BEDROOM, private, newly re ­ m odeled. Furnished o r u n furnished. Walk to ASU W est $375 monthly, in­ cluding utilities. 843-2766. P e r M o n th B E A U T IFU L IV O R Y la c u er fulllength dresser w ith mirror/headboard. 1 year old- must sell! Original $900. S a c rific e $470/$130M B rittn y , 967-0476. ROOMMATE WANTED 2 bedroom , 2-1/2 bath tow nhouse, Pointe South M ountain, pool, spa $300, 1/2 utilities.496-6769. PRIVATE FENCED yard-1 or 2 bed­ room, pets Qtk., near A .S.U., Melody Lane Apartments, 894-8156 . $39 ASU STUDENTS, save 10% at Porters New f t Used B irniture and Major Ap­ pliances. Come check our low prices on couches, chairs, dinettes, beds, air con­ d itio n e rs , frid g e s, e tc ... 1405 E ast Broadway, Phoenix. Open 8-5, MondaySaturday. 276-3783 RO OM M A TE N EED ED , F em ale to share tw o bedroom , tw o bath. W or­ thington Place: pobl, Jacuzzi, sauna, vol­ leyball. Available October 1 .921-2920leave message. TW O FEM A LE room m ates w anted, nonsmokers, own rooms (master avail­ able). huge two-story house, pool, etc. M ust see! $208/m onth, 1/5 utilities. Roger o r Clint, 834-3371. LANCIA BETA 77 2-doors, brown, 5speed, leather, a ir conditioning, radio/cassette, power windows, new Pir­ elli tires, new battery, serviced by Lan­ cia dealer. Nice spoitscar in very good condition. Alec, 396-4131. WHY BUY a scooter instead of a mo­ torcycle? 1983 Suzuki GR650, all re­ ceipts, new parts, $800! 275-3530. No Interest • Save Up to $100 $150 PER WEEK Work Monday through Friday, 4pm to 7pm distributing flyers and setting ap­ pointm ents fo r R eynolds alum inum products. N o transportation needed. Call 1(800)426-2295, ask for Lee. CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Ave­ nue Jewelers, 414 South Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. FURNITURE N E E D 2 p e o p le to assu m e lease. 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th , C am ero n C reek . $540/mooth. 921-7216. O N E/TW O BEDROOM S, $240. fur­ nished, 1 block/ASU, laundry. Call Jacob, 921-0952 or pager 389-7571. C H E A P ! FBI/U.S. TW O 1989 Honda É lite 80 scooters, excellent condition, $1,000 each. Call daytime 437-4339, nights 482-6386. YOU CAN A FFO RD TO BRAG!! HELP WANTEDG g N g R A L_ _ _ _ seized 89 M E R C E D E S ..$200, 86 VW ...$S0, 87 MERCEDES...$100, 65 M U STA N G .$50 C hoose from thou­ san d s s ta rtin g $25, FR EE 2 4 H our R ecording R eveals D etails 801-3792929 Copyright »AZ10KIC. A LW A Y S BU Y IN G je w e lry o f ail kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S outh M ill A venue, T em pe C enter, 968-4074. Buy of the Week free cable TV 968-6947 _ PORTABLE PC-ZENITH 161, MCG, 640K, 2 floppy drives, good condition, $350/bffer. Call Dana, 831-7512. JEW ELRY S u n rise A p ts. 1014 E. Spenœ IB M COMPATIBLE: M onitor, CPU. keyboard, letter quality printer. Win do graphics, programming, word process­ ing, business. Value $12,000. Reduced to $3400-986-7061. A N JTO U N C EM E N TS ^ •1 BED •2 BED $365 $500 ★ Now Hiring 30 Telemarketers IMMEDIATELY ★ Great Advancement Opportunities ★ Management Staff Committed to Your Success gfPflEE Apache Terrace 1 1 2 3 E. A pache CALL US TODAY 968-6383 ★ Part or full time; flexible scheduling ★ Lots of sales made hourly DIAL State Press HELP WANTED -GENERAL HELP W ANTED P art-tim e p osition for student. M ail room - filin g an d g e n eral o ffice re ­ sponsibilities. Beautiful corporate Scot­ tsdale office. 25 hours w eekly. Days AM, Spanish speaking a plus. 423-0531. IN ST R U C T O R S TO teach G R E .G M A T , L S A T p re p c o u rses, e v en in g s. O u tg o in g p e rso n alities. Ronkin Educational Group. Scottsdale and Tempe locations. 483-2100 or 7310400. •••■•' " - ■ . ; : . ; / JOH N N Y ROCKETS a t the Fashion Square Mall is now hiring service cash­ iers and cooks. Apply in peison or call 4 2 3-1 5 0 5 9 -1 1 :30am and after 2pm, Monday through Friday. Page 15 HELP WANTED-SALES SALES PROS needed. Great opportunity for students. G uaranteed $5 an hour plus commis­ sions and bonuses. Flexible hours. 20 p o s itio n s to fill im m ed iately . Rural/Apache locations. Don, 921-3961. HELP WANTED-FOOD SERVICE B B B B B B B B S B B B B EXPERIENCED RESTAURANT food servers wanted. Apply at: Quality Inn (I10 f t Elliot Road). RED RO BIN Tem pe has im m ediate openings for cooks and waitstaff. Red R obin, 1375 W est E lliot, Price Club Plaza. PETS ATTENTION BUSINESS/ M ARKETING M AJORS SET PRACTICAL SALES AND MARKETING EXPERIENCE Need a challenge? Earn up to $2500/term managing credit card promotions on campus. Flexible hours. (AU 1-800-950-8472 ext.25 LOOKING FOR a fraternity, sorority, student organization that would like to make $500 to $1000 for a one-week oncampus marketing project. Must ~be or­ ganized and hardworking. Call Kevin, 1(800)592-2121: M AKE $150-$300 In 3-10 hours by selling 50 funny col­ lege t-shirts. N o financial obligation. Smaller and larger quantities available. Gfdl toll-free 1-800-728-1130. 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 perm an en t year round. O ne semester of engineering or technology and some job experience re­ quired. $6/and up. 956-8200. MODELS WANTED. Professional hair care com pany needs male/female mod. els for cutting/perming at Phoenix hair show S e p te m b e r 22 a n d 23. C all 967^6464. N- : . q ;' . M O D E LS W A N T ED — L o n g h a ir, short hair, colored hair... all types o f hair for international hair stylists show. For information, call 263-1138. NEW PROJECT requires either full or part tim e help. M ust be proficient in E n g lish lan g u ag e, have e x ce lle n t communication skills and have some computer literacy. Should be loquacious and q u ic k on th e ir feet. 'Scot* tsdale/Lincoln area. Call 991-5836; O FFICE ASSISTANT needed. Com­ m unication sk ills, filing, answ ering phones, etc. Computer knowledge help­ ful. 43X-1048. OIL COMPANY R IP S H irin g im m e d ia te ly 4 re p s fo r our Tempe office. Part-time, flexible hours, perfect fo r students. $6-$8 per hour. Call 921-4044. PART-TIME, FLEXIBLE hours sales. 756-2675. PROFESSIONAL PART-TIME secre­ tary wanted for Tempe business. Type 50-80 words per minute. Hours flexible. Good salary plus benefits. 820-S408. PROGRAM M ER/ANALYST. TIC K , ET M A S T E R S re sea rc h a n d 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 growth potential. Students w elcom e. To apply call 921-1112 or apply in person at Ticket master, 2323 West 14th Street, Suite 501, Tempe, AZ. RELIEF NIGHT auditor, $6.50/hour, MICROS experience. Apply at: Quality Inn (I-10 ft Elliot Road). VALET PARKING attendant. 3 nights per week, $5-7 per hour (this figure has your tips figured in). Must have a clean driving record, at least 20 years old, be w illin g to work in P arad ise V alley, S c o ttsd a le d r C en tra l Phoenix. 861-9182, Shawn. W A N TED : GRAD U A TE stu d en t in Microbiology to do part-time studies on antim icrobial susceptability o f interococci. Contact V. Gopal, PhD, VAMC, 277-5551, ext. 7387. EOE. B O A CONSTRICTOR babies! $100 cash only. Leave message for Deane, 986-9457. , • •=• 7 t- ■ IGUANAS, EMERALD green. Makes great pet. Only $35.990-8949. WRINKLY SHAR-PEI puppies for sale, champion sired, 11 weeks, male/female, pet/show quality, registered. $200/up. 756-0719. FREELO^OUN D^ FOUND: KEYS ia PS-5. Call 998-8693. LOST: YELLOW male lab. 6 months old. M issing around 12th and Farm«*. Please contact 921-0248 if you have any information. FU N D R AISIN G ^ _ FA ST FU N D R A ISE R , S I ,000 iit 1 week. Greeks, «clubs, anyone. N o in­ vestment. (800)748-6817, ext. 50. U IS E $ 5 0 0 ...$ 1 0 0 0 ...$ 1 5 0 0 FOOL RAISING F o r y o u r fratern ity, so ro rity , team o r o th er cam pu s o rg a n ization . ju s o tv m r mo INVESTMENT EEQUIEEDi CALL 1-800-950-8472, e x t. 50 PERSONALS 101- B E patient. It w ill be worth the Wait:’ ■ A FREE hot, giant cookie when you do ÿqur Wash/dryclean at Whitewater Oa­ sis. Monthly; weekly, semester plans. Nicest coin-op in town. Apache/Dorsey 968-9397. A STAR is bora at ASU — Sigma Delta Tau. A-PHI'S, FOOTBAL practice and game on Wednesday. Meet at the ATO House at 5:00pm and be ready to kick some But! Love, your coaches. A ATI A L P H A m em bers a re to ta lly amazing! !! Keep up the good work la­ dies! Pata! AAI1 WOULD like to thank our Deltasig coaches! W e had a blast!! Pata! PERSONALS PERSONALS DG REAGAN- congrats on being cho­ sen as the new Kappa Sig sweetheart! Love, your sisters. V O G LIO U N A D onna Ita lia n a . H o occhi scuri, carnagine olearia, e capelli spessi ed ondulati. Devi ti chiami maria. AEO- THE ladies o f Gamma Phi would like to congratulate you on another suc­ c essfu l v o lle y b a ll tourney an d say thanks for a great time!! WATCH FOR thè stars... Sigma Delta Tau is back. FD Q , SA E ft DG thanks for a great party Friday night!!! Pata! Pata! Pata! A A n. T ® B - K IM , C arrie, A my, N ic co le, Denise and Nancy: You guys are awe­ some! ! Congrats on #1 at the AE4> Vol­ leyball tournament! Love in PiKE. JENNIFER, GRAB your crayons and w rite to your heart's content on the wall! I'll b e at the lounge lower level MU. Biff. II 8 4 4 -S H E D We show all Bears, Vikings & Packers games. Catchagood breakfast •NewYork-styledbagels •99%fat-free muffins •Fresh gormet coffee We open a t 7:30am 580 S. College * 966-6754 HOT WINGS & COOL JAZZ ? 8-1210c WINGS S1.25 MIC DRY BANDERSNATCH 5th St. & Forest NEWS FLASH- Sigma Delta Tau will be bolding rush on Thursday September 19 to Sunday September 22. For more information please call 835-5018, PANHELLENIC WELCOMES Sigma Delta Tau to Arizona State University! Best of luck! PHI DELI'S, R ii Sigs, AAITs- Thanks for Fridays exchange! W e had a great time! Love, the DG's. PI PHI'S: Watermelon Bust is here! Get psyched to win! Love, your Lambda Chi coaches Mark, John, Todd. BREWPUB P IZ Z A & P U B TANK UP TUESDAYS $ 2 .2 5 p lu s ta x 60 oz. PREMEERING THURSDAY, Septem­ ber 19 —Sigma D elta Tau— from 7:00 to 10:00 in the Memorial Union. pitchers Bud, Coors Light 6AX, 1TKA and KA6: We had fun with you all on lucky Friday the 13th! Love, Chi Omega. 984 pitchers o f soda EAT- WE are looking forward to hav­ ing you on campus!! Good luck!! The ladies of 1Ills. SIGMA DELTA Tau Sigma Delta Tau S igm a D e lta T au S igm a D è lta Tau Sigma Delta Tau. SIG M A D E L T A T au- A lpha C hi Omega is looking forward to a great semester with you 1 . 1301 E. University ADOPTION ARIZONA COUPLE unable to have children wish to adopt a white infant. Please call Cathy f t David, 820-8485. SIG M A D ELTA Tau: A SU sorority women welcome you!!! S E R V IC E S ^ ^ ^ SIGMA DELTA Tau: Best of luck dur­ ing your colonization rush! ASU Panhellenic. A SOFT Touch Electrolysis. Permanent hair removal, near ASU, private office, 15 years' experience, student discounts. 829^829. SIG M A D E L T A T a u : W elcom e to ASU! We look forward to meeting you soon. The Gentlemen o f Lambda Chi Alpha.• ."SIGM A NU 'S- W e had a great tim e roadtripping with you. W e look for­ ward to doing it agan. Love, the Thetas. EK JODI revealing is tonight I will see you there- do y ou know w ho I am ? Love, Mom. EL E C T R O L Y S IS— PER M A N EN T h air removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discounts. C a ll for more information: 969-6954. str essed ou r? D o n 't feel as good a s you sh o u ld ? Overweight? Hypoglycemic? I can help with low cost natural herbs; Call Russell at 464-9576, Mondays, Tuesdays. EK JQDI you are the best snakey kay ! Love your heart sis Wendy. EEE'S GET psyched for Bust! Y ou're #1! Love, your coahces Andy, Jim, Sal, and Nick. T H E N EW EST a d d itio n to A SU Sigma Delta Tau. , T H E TA S- A R E you read y fo r W a­ termelon Bust? Your coaches are! SERVICES are a star! ATO- BE at the House on Wednesday for Composite Pictures at 6:30pm! Mr. S o cial.. .. • ■' ■;.'; v DELTA SIGS coach Jason, Spike, and Volunteer coach Steve, thanks for your support and great spirit during the voir ley ball tournement! We tried! We lost! But w e won in spirit! You guys were great! Always Thetas, Stephanie Stepha­ nie Stacey Kate, M erit and RDNDA! DELTA SJGS! Thetas raged at your yolley ball tournement! Especially after ending up in the pool! We can't wait for next year! Thanks for all your support! Love the Thetas! CHINESE MARTIAL ART ACADEMY GRAND OPENING - FREE CLASS OFFERED Programs offered: •WingTsun-Kung Fu •Tai Chi, Sparring set , ' - ' , v tiÊ tA iÊ Ê M iiïm 829-7937 TYPING/WORD PR O CE8SIN G __^ Northwest corner of Dobson & Univ LEAVE YOUR mark on the wall. Come to the MU Programming lounge lowin' level of MU before 9/25. You say it. we’ll display it! Only in State Press Classitieds. ALPHA GAM Dana, your sisters ap­ p re cia te your hard work for rush! You 11 s c r e e n s W o o d sh e d AXA JASO N - W elcom e to th e leg­ endary Lavoie legacy! The best a.m. de­ serves the best family! Big Bro Chris. A A n WOULD tike to welcome EAT to our campus! Good luck!!! ALPHA CHI Omega welcomes Sigma Delta Tau to ASU! Good luck with Rush! No order too small S P O R T S & W IN G S KAPPA KRISTI E. Hope your 21st was special. You're beautiful, (what a bod!) with a great personality. Wish you were m ine.? SK SHANNON, remember everything happens for a reason. I l l always look out for you. have a great week. T a k e care!" Love MerryLynn. AEPI JASON- Thanks for Friday! I had a gr8 time!! Sorry! Jamie. Screen printing, dying, etc. K A Kevin: News flash!: Shick digs for being feeble and weak! Big Bro Adam; K A 0 , BUST is only four days away! Get psyched! Your coaches Wes, Thos, Jeff, Brad; QUICK, AFFORDABLE word process­ ing. Spellchecking, spreadsheets, and graphics. $1.25 a page and overnight service in most cases. 491-9540. Personalized t-shirts & gaiments. RESTAURANTS/ BARS 2 s a te llite s TYPING/ WORD PROCESSING SERVICES Aoe Groups: i 5 yrs old and up Dr. Juy Chaudhurî Master Lee 732-9520 l 2051 E. C ed ar SL S u ite #1 T e m p e A Z 0 SI r Martini ( --- £ IO l í 1 sr 24-H O U R . K IN K O S d oes papers, resumes, flyers, self-serve Macs, copies and more! 933 E ast U n iv e rsity ,9662035. : .. , A+ TYPING/WORD processing service avaiable, plus English tutoring and cus­ tom resumes. Call Nancy, 964-7501. AAA T Y P IN G , papers^ resum 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, Mesa. ACCURATE RESUM ES com posed, typed ($25); guaranteed. Call Carol, 839-6083, evenings and weekend, also. Dobson Ranch. RESUMES $29.95 1-page resume, 10 copies, 10 blank sheets, 10 envelopes ft 1 MAC diskette. 24-hour delivery. * A L PH A G R A PH IC S, 122 E. University, Tempe 968-7821 ACCURATE, FA ST turnaround. Pro­ fessional word processing, typing. Any job size. (North Phoenix area). Carole, 997-0092. A PA /M L A EX P E R IE N C E D ty p ing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. RELAX! Let me turn your rough draft into a re­ port you'll be proud of. Professional word processing plus delivery to and fro m cam pus. R easo n ab le rates. Theresa, 924-1976. SECRETARI AL/TYPING/BOOKEEPING SERVICES available, call 350-9335. T H E W O R D SM ITH Now in Arizona! Professional w riters, original work, lull graphics, all w riting services. 1-602-743-3637 or W rite for order form: Box 18640, Tucson, A Z 85731 TUTO RING ! CALCULUS, A lgebra, other lower division math. First-year P h y sic s and C hem istry. C all T had Coons, 829-3816, for details and rates. W O R D 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. IN S T R U C T IO N ^ ^ ^ 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 air­ lines sounds interesting, call me for de­ tails. Patrick, 924-3027; PILOT TRAINING! Introduction flight $25. G all for inform ation: T anja or Christian at 962^8726. TUTORS ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast sendee 966-2186. MATH 119 and QBA 221. Free introduetory session. Cali Kevin 731-9400. ASU W EST is only one mile from Pre­ cision Typing f t Word Processing. Call Mary at 843-1641 for student discount. TUTORING SERVICES available for mathmatics, engineering, computer sci­ ence and programming. Call 264-6242 and leave message. C LO SE ST TO ASU. A ccurate, fast, reasonable word processing with laser p rin te r. G raphics. S tu d e n t/fac u lty w elcom e. A u to m ated S e c re ta ry , 829-8854. CREATIVE TYPING, term papéis, resumes, essays, laser print«:, reasonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat 897-1741. F A ST /C O N V E N IE N T T Y P IN G ! 3 b lo c k s/A S U . W o rd P erfect. L aser. Faculty/students. Any size job. Diane. 966-5693. LETTER QUALITY word processing for your typing needs. APA/MLA, fast tu rn a ro u n d . $ 1 .5 0 /u p , R oxanne, 437^-8830. New location! PH O T O G R A PH Y ^^ CANNON SLR cam era, m odel AE1 with 50mm lens and carrying protective case. $130/offer. 483-6546. STUDENTS! We have used Pentax K-1000 and Mi­ nolta SRT manual cameras required for most photo classes. Student discount on all cam eras and darkroom supplies. Frye's Photo* 126 W est M ain, M esa. 964-8002. M IS C E L L A N E O U S ^^^ PERFECT PAPERS D IE T IN F O Service includes typing (computerized), foil editing, grammar, syntax, spelling correction. Graphics capability. Quick turnaround. Experienced editor. B est rates around. Jim, 945-6793 C alories vs. Fat. C all now. 1(900) 535-8900, e x t 361. ($2 per minute). NEÈD A back issue of the State Press? C om e to th e In fo rm a tio n D esk a t Matthews Center basement! Your Individual Horoscope = = = = F rances D rake = = = = = this evening has romantic overtones. S C O R P IO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Getting your house in order is today 's theme. D o repair work and shop for necessities. However, an unusual puf.chase will be among the items you buy now; SA GITTA RIUS (Nov: 22 to Dec. 21) Inspiration opens the door for you in creative interests, but it's self-discipline that will be the key to accomplishment. Follow through on beginnings. C A PRICO RN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Though you may surprise someone with a gift, the Overall accent is on saving money today. Some may turn a hobby into a revenue producing ven­ ture. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) D on't back a higher-up into a corner. You may volunteer for an assignment in connection with a club. Romance and dating are taYored for tonight. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) LEO A valuable career tip com es from an (July 23 to Aug; 22) Doing something different together unexpected quarter. Then, it’s up to you today strengthens ties, of affection. to apply yourself and capitalize on this Singles meet with romantic introduc­ opportunity. Be resourceful. tions. Accent the spontaneous. Be yourYO U B O R N T O D A Y a te inde­ self. pendent w ith a strong wiH. You do best V IR G O in a leadership position and may n ot be (Aug.,23 to Sept. 22) h will u k e you a while before you get com fortable taking orders. You are all gears in motion on the job. Once you happy in intellectual spheres and are do, however, you *tp liable to continue also dram atic by nature. : Y ou seem working well past your normal quitting resilient in crisis situations arid bounce b a c k fro n t s e tb a c k s . Y ou h a v e a , time. penchant for handling details, but are at LIBRA your best when motivated by universal (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Yoti're visited by the muse today and principles. Birthdate of: Greta Garbo, will have success in such endeavors as actress; Samuel Johnson, writer; and music, poetry and art, A chance meeting Frankie Avalon, singer. FOR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,1991 A R IE S (Mar. 21 to Apr. T9) Romance comes unexpectedly today. Love at first sight is a possibility. Be Sure to honor s social obligation tonight. Travel plans are finalized. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Morning work difficulties are over­ come..by-nightfall. A solution comes out o f the blue. Couples make creative decisions regarding the use of joinit funds. ’ „ G E M IN I (May 21 to June 20) Legal interests ate favored. Spur-ofthe-moment travel plans ate feasible. Sound advice comes from a dose fie. Be sure to fiilfiU commitments tonight. CA NCER (June. 21 to July 22) A n unusual job possibility piques y our interest. Avoid disputes with children about money. Self-discipline allows you tocapitalize on current op­ portunities. CopynflM IWI by King Fcattm> Syndic«», lac. Tuwdaj^S^tembeMTjjÇÇI^ Page 16 State Press m— i As CREEKS % It's Tonite < r v> * The 2nd Annual Greek Open House 6-9pm Y o u r c h o ic e !!! 5 « A W h e n y o u b rin g y o u r ^ ^ H I H H I c a r in fo r a fre e e stim a te o n c o llis io n re p a ir o r p a in t w ork. G u a ra n te e d c o lo r m atch . A ll p a in t w o rk g u a ra n te e d up to 5 y e a rs ! i> i A ll w o rk m a n s h ip w ith lifetim e w arra n ty. Serving ASU Since 1980 JAN'S SPECTRUM COLLISION CENTER INC. 968-5946 709 S. Forest Ave. 6 4 0 S . S m ith R o a d T e m p e , A Z 85 28 1 V lo n d a v -T h u rsd a v 9-9 N $5 O F F MMreei BOOKSTORE B 0/o L r* sA M-F 7:30-5,-3o I 625 E. A P A C H E B LV D . 967-5445 I S A T 8-13 j j ^ 1 Month Unlimited Tanning $39 P IT : «Mwnar 0^i ¡ $10 O F F w ith c o u p o n w ith c o u p o n rDifferent is Better 1 R O P ÏC A N A -II A N Thirteen delicious ingredients including three m eats and three cheeses served hot on our baked fresh daily bread have made the Original a favorite for over 17 years. "The Best Tan Money Can Buy" 894-1152 1212 E. Apache Blvd. m m :' S a tu rd a y 9-5 UTS “Ä i ? j PERMS IMS X 5 Buy as many months at this special rate before 9-30-91 MSA F rid a y 9-6 \