©Copyright, State Press, 1991 Tempe, Arizona Thursday, October 10,1991 A rizona S tate U niversity's M orning D aily Vol. 75 No. 31 Tempe Center fee irks some owners By JAE RIDEN Contributing W riter A plan to charge $3 to park at Tempe Center on weekend nights is “confusing” and a “hassle,” said merchants in the center who fear the fee will drive off customers. University officials began charging the fee, which is reimbursed if the customer spends an equivalent amount in a store, on the weekend of Oct. 4. ASU owns the center which sits on the southeast corner of University Drive and Mill Avenue. The fee will be collected from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday nights at the center. “Fridays and Saturdays are our two most popular nights,” said Bob Cohl, store manager at Baskin-Robbins ice cream shop. “I would hate to have to lose business over parking fees.” Karen Kloc, coordinator of the campus’ p r o p e r t i e s , s a id th e U n iv e r s ity implemented the fee to control late-night parking. Downtown parking has become a prize commodity since the city began blocking off Mill for weekend revelers. Cohl said he was informed of the parking fee Oct. 5, when a parking attendant asked him to pay the $3 as he pulled into the center to dose his store. Cohl was allowed to park for free when he told the attendant he was thè store manager, but said it, was a “hassle.” T a ra to Fee, page 8. Fate o f ASU s post office hangs with offer analysis By D.J. BURROUGH State Press It seems that students may have to wait weeks before learning the fate of the MU postal station while University officials evaluate a Tempe Post Office contract offer that would keep the station from closing. John R iley, a ssista n t director of Purchasing for ASU, said the Tempe Post Office offered to increase the annual payment to ASU to run the University’s postal station from $48,000 to $58,000 with “minor changes.’’ “It’s not as clear as we had hoped it would be,” Riley said. “The (contract offer) doesn’t say what the minor changes that could be made are. “I think their position is going to be that dorm mail is not one of those minor little changes,” he said. “We don’t think of them as minor changes.” Linda Augustine, manager of the postal station, said the University should postpone any decision until the Phoenix-area postmaster returns to work in two weeks. “We’ve had a real difficult time working with the (Tempe) Post Office,” she said. “I Game to the point where I’ve talked to the postmaster at Phoenix, who is responsible for Tempe. “ I know he is concerned with working L o o k o u t p o in t An ASU student stares onto the campus from the fifth flo o r o f the Business Administration C-wing. Torn to Mall, page T O; Program offers ASU disabled students opportunity to work By KRISTINE HART State Press When 22-year-old Tracy came to ASU four years ago, she anticipated long nights studying, confusing classes and tough essay tests. What she didn’t anticipate was a learning disability that was making her work even harder. Today, Tracy has a part-time job in Disabled Student Disabled Student Resources helps physicsHy and mentally handicapped ASU students obtain and maintain work. Resources and is expecting to graduate in December with a degree in political science. “I don’t haye to worry,” said soft-spoken Tracy, who asked her real name not be used because of a DSR confidentiality policy. “I can go to school and do well.” Tracy is only one out of nine eligible ASU students with learning disabilities who takes advantage of state-funded vocational rehabilitation programs, a program supervisor said Tuesday. “There may be A lot of students out there that don’t even know it (the program) exists,” Vocational Rehabilitation Program Supervisor Chuck House said. The program, run by the federal government and Arizona Department of Economic Security’s Rehabilitation Services Administration, helps eligible physically and mentally disabled individuals prepare for and maintain employment. House said there are 18 VRP offices across the state. The campus office, located at Disabled Student Resources in Matthews Center, is aimed specifically at ASU students. Susan Kotalik-Zimmerman, a former VRP client who became a vocational counselor, said her primary goal is to boost her caseload on campus. “Right now I have about 45 clients,” said KotalikZimmerman, who was diagnosed with juvenile arthritis at age 17. “But with a campus population o f42,000 or so, I know I can help a lot more.” House said the program’s services are provided on an individual basis. “The great thing about the program is its flexibility. We tailor each client’s program to fit his or her needs,” he said. Hie program provides counseling, training, job placement and any items that are needed for employment such as eyeglasses and hearing aids. Tracy said the counselors are “really nice.” “They helped me get tested by a psychologist to find out what was wrong." But for many disabled people, getting a job is only half of the battle. Keeping it is the other half. Kotalik-Zimmerman said a 60-day follow-up is the rule, and additional counseling or training may also be included. “We make sure the clients are secure once they Are on the job,” she said. Depending oh financial need, the client also may be eligible for additional help, from a transportation allowance to an artificial limb, Kotalik-Zimmerman said. Tracy said she has benefited from VRP financially, paying for such necessities as books and supplies. But Kotalik-Zimmerman added that not all disabled students are cut out for college. “Sometimes a student struggles through four years of college to please others,” she said. “Here, we aren’t so concerned about the bachelor’s degree. “Clients don’t need to be students. There are many other options.” ^ Today's w eather: M ostly sonny w ith a high n e ar 103. Kiddie care: Alcoholism: ASU W est students get to observe to ts at play in Child Care Center. In-depth look at alcoholism o n cam pus. Page 11 State Press M a g a z in e Classifieds a i' i 1ft Comics.................................................... 14 C ro ssw o rd ............................... 8 H oroscopes............................................19 Police R eport...... 10 S ports».»..»»»»^;.»..»»....«»...».».;».«.. 15 o Page 2 State Press Thursday; October 10,1991 Burglars target affluent households By ASHAHED TRICHE State Press The results of a national crime study — which indicate households with higher incomes are more likely to be the target of crime —ring true in the Valley, local police officials said. The National Crime Victimization Survey, conducted by the Bureau of Justice Statistics in Washington, D. C., showed that households with higher income levels ($50,000 or above) are more likely to be burglarized. Sgt. BUI Wright, ASÜ police information officer, said the statistics make sense. “Hie houses with a greater income are going to have more VCRs and televisions — the good things of life,” he said. “A thief is not going to go where he knows people don’t have anything.” Wright said it is common for “crimes of passion” -such as assault, rape and murder — to take place in urban areas where population is dense and the income level is lower and I I.o u s c h o lc is e x p e r ie n c in g c r im e d u r in g 1 9 8 9 / 1 9 9 0 for property crimes like theft and burglary to occur in highw income areas.. “It’s a given in any species that the more individuals you crowd into an area, the more likely they are going to fight each other,” he said. However, A. Wade Smith, ASU professor of sociology, said violent crimes may occur just as often but may not be reported in middle class areas. “ They (crim es) a re underreported in affluent neighborhoods,” he said. Smith added that people in wealthier neighborhoods can afford fanuly, marriage or mental health counseling that people in lower income areas cannot afford. “People in low income areas have fewer alternatives,” he said. Overall, the number of U. S. households that experienced crime declined in 1990, the survey reported. It reported a 25 percent decline from 1990 in rape, robbery, assault, theft, burglary or motor vehicle theft— the lowest annual percentage since 1975. Kevin Heller/State Prese Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community . Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous: closed meeting at noon, the Newman Center* College Avenue and University Drive. •A Z Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies: lecture by Munro Edmonson, “ Native American Views of the European Invasion: Then and Now,” 7 p.m ., Hayden Library. •Environm ental Law Society: lecture by Patrick Cunningham, chief environmental enforcement, state AG’s office, “Enforcement in the 1990s,” 12:30 p.m ., Armstrong Hall, Room 116. •C hi Alpha Christian Fellowship: Bible study on the book of Mark at noon, MU Hopi Room. •A $U Student Athletic Board: meeting at 5:30 p.m ., ICA Building, lobby. •Amnesty International: meeting at 3 p.m ., MU Hopi Room 208C. •IM A Accounting Society: Gallant & Co. office tour at 3:30 p.m. See map in BA 297. •American Marketing Association: lecture by Nikki Lemmon, “ Marketing Yourself,” at 4:15 p.m ., BAC 116. •H illel Jewish Student Center: United Jewish Appeal meeting at 7:15 p.m ., Hillel Building, 1012 S. Mill Ave. •CARP: international leadership seminar/USSR student exchange at noon, MU Hohokam Room. •G un Devils: meeting at 5 p.m ., MU Room 209. •I.E .E .E .: choices after graduation forum from 3:45 to 4:45 p.m ., COB 150, •N ative American Student Association Pow-Wow Committee: meeting at 4:30 p.m., Multi-Cultural Lounge. •Liberal Arts & Sciences College Council: meeting at 4:30 p.m ., Social Sciences Building, Room 234. •Public Relations Student Society of America — ASU Chapter: information on volunteering opportunities at national professional conference at 6 p.m ., Flakey Jake’s, Cornerstone Mall, University and Rural. •American Indian Institute: “Test Success” workshop at 3 p.m ., Farmer Building, Room 206. •Episcopal Campus Ministry: eucharist, dinner and meeting at 6:15 p.m ., Lutheran Center, McAllister and 15th Street. •Newman Center: side by side dinner after 5 p.m . mass, Newman Center Lounge. •Baptist Student Union: free midday meal and devotion at noon, BSU Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave. •C ircle Moving Awareness of the Minority Assistance Program: meeting at 3:30 p.m ., Student Services Building, Room A 248, •M ath Club: panel discussion, on career opportunities at 3:30 p.m ., PSA 10. •S ister Friends: reception at 6 p.m ., MU Alumni Lounge. •Public Programs College Council: biannual eat and meet, free food and drinks, at 11:30 a.m ., front of Stauffer Hall. •Psi Chi: meeting at 4:30 p.m ., PSY B205. •W om en’s Studies Brown Bag Lecture Series: women speaking to women, speaker Deborah Losse, associate professor of French, at noon, Women’s Student Center, MU iower level. SO A PS 101 : A h a n d s -o n a p p ro a c h to g e ttin g y ou o n d a y tim e T V ! Act your w ay into the h eart of NBC Network Television and win a trip to Los Angeles to appear in the NBC Soap, “Santa Barbara.” C o u rs e o u tlin e : v / Come to the Santa Barbara Screen Test site a t the New Music Product Showcase * / Give a winning portrayal of a character in a 3 m inute scene > ^ s/ Have your videotaped screen te st be chosen as th e “Best Collegiate Perform ance” by NBC Camera shy? Come byJust for the fun of it! D A TE: T IM E : p jc r v * * O CTO BER 11, 1991 1 1 :0 0 a m to 4 :0 0 p m to LO C A TIO N : W E S T LA W N lnENOI G ELCAPS __ ________ W o rld / N a tio n i d d P im ______________________________ Thursday, O c t o b j8 r 1 ^ _ 1 9 9 1 _ ^ — — — — — — — — £S3£j> Bush declares confidence in Thomas WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush on Wednesday declared he still had “total confidence” in Clarence Thomas and called his embattled Su­ preme Court nominee to the White House for a picture-taking session in a public display of support. It was the first glimpse of Thomas since a former assistant’s allegations of sexual harassment against him were made public last weekend. Thomas smiled for photographers B u s h and said he was feeling fine on the day after the Senate delayed his confirmation vote pending public hearings on the allegations against him. Asked if he would be able to refute the accusations, he responded, “Just testify. Thanks.” The Senate Judiciary Committee will begin hearings on Friday and hear testimony from Thomas and Anita Hill, the Oklahoma law professor who made the allegations. It also will hear from at least two other witnesses, according to the panel’s chairman, Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr., D-Del. “The process is simple and straightforward, it is to focus on the issue of whether the allegations that Professor Hill has made are true,” Biden said. He said both Thomas and Hill will be allowed to produce witnesses to support their accounts of what happened a decade ago when she worked for him at thé Education Department and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Hill arrived at Washington National Airport late Wednesday night. She brushed off questions from reporters and was escorted through the terminal by a phalanx of police, then whisked away in a waiting car. The hearings could last through the weekend depending on thè number of witnesses, a committee aide said. Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., Thomas’ chief Senate supporter, said the conservative 43-year-old appeals judge would “look the American people in the eye” and deny he said or did anything improper to the former aide. Bush told reporters he remained firm in support of Thomas despite the rough going in the Senate. Asked en route to a Republican reception when it would be time to cut his losses, the president said, “There aren’t going to be any losses.” Bush said after meeting with the nominee at the White House that he had “strong feeling but they all end up in strong support for Clarence Thomas.” “I support Clarence Thomas and there’s no wavering, there’s no condition,” he said. “And that’s where it is. And that’s the way it’s going to stay.” » Senate Democratic Leader George Mitchell, meanwhile, defended Hie Senate’s handling of Hill’s allegations that Thomas repeatedly made sexually explicit remarks to her when they worked together nearly a decade ago in the Reagan administration. Mitchell rejected criticism by women’s groups and others that the Senate had dragged its feet investigating the charges. He said the Senate’s hands were tied because Hill had initially insisted on keeping her allegations confidential. “Any complaints about unwillingness to proceed I think ignore the fact that the actions taken were in accordance withProfessor Hill’s request,” Mitchell said. Before the allegations became public, Hill had insisted that only members of the Senate Judiciary Committee be told about her allegations “and if not be made available to anyone beyond that,” the Maine Democrat said. All the Democrats on the panel, but not every Republican member, were briefed about the allegations before the oommittoo voted 7-7 and sent the nomination to the Senate floor without a recommendation. Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, the panel’s ranking GOP member, was responsible for informing the six Republicans. “The reality is we did confront a very serious situation, there were conflicting interests and ultimately I believe the manner in which we agreed to proceed was appropriate and fair,” Mitchell said. Hill told police in Norman, Okla., on Monday that she had received at least three harassing telephone calls after her allegations about Thomas were made public. According to a police log, she quoted one caller as saying, “You liar. If you think sexual harassment is bad . . . just wait.” A spokesman for Republicans on the Judiciary Committee said Hill can expect tough, prosecutorial questioning about her allegations. “We don’t want to attack her credibility, we want to attack her story,” said Stan Cannon, a spokesman for Sen. A1 Simpson, R-Wyo. “We’re going to have to be very very firm with her but treat her with utmost respect,” he said. “ Judge Thomas can expect some very personal questions of him” from Democrats, Cannon said. “I think the gloves are off on both sides,” If there are no other allegations of sexual harassment, rannnn said Republicans are confident that Thomas will still win confirmation. T a n t to Thomas, page 13. Iraqi, Kurdish fighting persists NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Iraqi troops and Kurdish rebels skirmished in the area of a key northern city Wednesday, the latest in five days of fighting in which hundreds of people have been killed or wounded. Tens of thousands of Kurds have fled the northern city of Suleimaniyah and surrounding towns since Iraq i bombardments began Saturday. It has been the worst flareup in fighting since troops loyal to Saddam Hussein crushed a Kurdish rebellion shortly after the Persian Gulf War. The Red Cross has evacuated hundreds of the refugees, a spokesman for thé hum anitarian organization said Wednesday. Iraq’s state-run newspaper, Al-Jumhouriya, claimed the army had regained control of the area around Suleimaniyah early Wednesday. The two sides reached a cease-fire Tuesday afternoon, but fighting continued well past then. The United States and its Gulf War allies, who once moved into northern Iraq to protect the Kurds and are now stationed in Turkey, have expressed concern but refrained from intervening. A Kurdish rebel spokesman, Serchil Qazzaz, on Wednesday decried the lack of Western military aid during the latest fighting Qazzaz, a spokesman in the Turkish capital of Ankara for the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, said coalition Turn to Iraq, page 1$. FDA approves questionable A ID S-fighting drug WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration approved a second AIDS-fighting drug Wednesday despite lingering questions about its safety and effectiveness. AIDS activists hailed the approval of didanosine, or DDI, as a milestone in the effort to get new drugs from the laboratory to patients. But some scientists said the _FDA had set a dangerous precedent in its drug-approval process. The approval was based on less scientific data than normally required, but FDA Commissioner David Kessler said that had to be balanced against the needs of dying AIDS patients. “It is the victims of this dreaded disease who are uppermost on our minds,” Kessler said at a news conference. DDI was approved to treat AIDS patients who don’t respond to or can’t tolerate AZT, the only other fully approved anti-AIDS drug. Both drugs act similarly to slow progression of AIDS, but neither cures the disease and each can have serious side effects. “ There a re still many unanswered questions,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute on Allergy and Infectious Diseases, adding that studies testing DDI’s long-term safety and effectiveness were continuing. The drug was developed by the National Cancer Institute and has been licensed to Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., which will market it as Videx. Bristol-Myers said it had two programs to help people with limited resources get the drug. The AIDS Action Council, a group of activists, said the FDA had “sensitively balanced a strict scientific standard against the needs of people with no treatments for a life-threatening illness.’’ But Dr. Deborah Cotton, a researcher at Boston’s Beth Israel Hospital anda member of the FDA’s advisory committee that recommended approval of DDI in July, said the benefit of making the drug available “is not balanced by the real loss we’ve created in credibility by peeking into clinical trials not yet concluded.” “The precedent we’ve set is a bad one,” said Cotton, who voted against the recommendation to approve DDI. “We will see more drugs approved on the basis of very little data and we will have less ability to know how to choose among them or how to use them in combination.” In clinical trials where DDI was tested on AIDS patients who didn’t respond toor could not take AZT, DDI was shown to increase the number of white blood cells, called CD-4 cells. Those cells have been shown to tie important to immune system function, which is weakened by AIDS. “We know this drug, DDI, affects CD-4 counts, and we know survival is tied to CD-4 counts,” Kessler said. “There is somewhat of a leap there, but patients are dying and we think that extrapolation makes a lot of sense and is in patients’ interests.” Kessler said a “sense of urgency” characterized the testing and review of the drug. The DDI approval was noteworthy, too, because it applies^ to adults as well as children, Kessler said. In the past, the FDA has usually approved drugs for adults before allowing their use in children. Canadian officials announced its approval of DDI Wednesday, after the first joint review of a drug by the FDA and Canada’s Health Protection Branih. The FDA based its decision on early findings of clinical trials involving more than 2,500 AIDS patients and an expanded access program that made the drug available to more than 22,000 people at no charge. Bristol-Myers said it will help people with limited resources get DDI either through insurance or Medicaid coverage, or by providing it at no cost to those who have no third-party coverage. The government’s licensing agreement requires Bristol-M yers to charge a “reasonable price” for the drug. Bristol-Myers said its'factory price for a year’s supply of the most common dose, 400 milligrams per day, will be $1,745. After markufis, the price from retail pharmacies would be $1,990. Company officials based that on a 14 percent markup they said was typical for AZT. A year’s course of the most common dose of AZT, 500 milligrams per day, costs $2,190 wholesale. After a 14 percent markup, the retail price is close to $2,500, (hough some markups drive the cost lip to more than $3,000. The federal government will get 5 percent of sales of DDI under the agreement, Bristol-Myers officials said. O p in io n State Press Thurada^OctobeM^JWI^ Page 4 Editorial state press Efficient service needs use swre«** It is a fine day when one wakes up only to discover die Associated Students of ASU did something that will directly help the a v e r a g e college stu d e n t — like computerizing its Course Information Program to boost efficiency and slash costs. The Course Source is an ASASU information package designed to help students choose courses by providing detailed info about professors’ grading and attendance policies. By Nov. 4 (just in time for spring preregistration), Course Source will be included in the Personal Guide to ASU Stuff, or PEGASUS, a com p u terized informational system available at public access terminals around campus. Last year, 10,000 paper copies of the Course Source were distributed to students. N ot only w ill C ourse S ource computerization save the students of ASU m ucho bucks, but it will put vital information at the fingertips of those who need it. Previously, die Course Source was tossed around like a McDonald’s salad. Students scattered thousands of the paper copies ($$$) around campus grounds. Then die ASASU executive candidates hurled the Course Source at each other during campaign rallies. The Course Source is finally where it belongs — tucked neatly and accessibly into computers where no one can litter with it or use if to further their political careers. There has been some concern, however, that the computerized Course Source and the seven hard copies, which will be made available for students to borrow from the library’s reference section, will not be enough. Robert Curry, supervisor at the social sciences registrar’s site, is worried some students won’t be willing to consult a computer for the information. Curry said there Should be “enough booklets so some students Can pick some up.” This is very thoughtful of Mr. Curry, hut if students want the information bad enough, they should motivate themselves to use the terminals or Xerox one of the hard copies. ASASU has met the students halfway by providing them with an improved system. The next phase should be up to the students themselves. By continuing to make hard copies, the goal of reducing costs will be forsaken. The program utilized about $12,000 last year to cover printing and typesetting costs. The computerized Course Source will operate on a $3,428 budget, which includes salaries and promotional costs. The new Course Source is a wonderful resource for students and should be encouraged to progress as ASASU officials had planned. Now if we could just get our classmates up at ASASU to stop shelling out our money for fancy schmancy stationary ., Poor; destitute Americans hav^ aMA I h n ik e Imoyko Tribune Media Services “Now I’m really confused,” Said Slats Grobnik, slamming down his newspaper. “I don’t know if I should give a panhandler a buck or not.” What is the source of your confusion, besides that drink? “I’ll tell you what. Last week I read about how many poor people we got in this country. About 30 million.” Yes, the Census Bureau released that poverty data. Very troubling, the thought of all those hunger-distended bellies, bony ribs and sunken eyes in this, the land of plenty. “That’s what I thought, too. But then I read this thing here in the paper about how the Census Bureau is giving us sort of a con job.” And who says that? “An outfit in Washington called the Heritage Foundation. You know anything about them?” I should have suspected. It is a conservative think tank, so it cannot be expected to have compassion for the needy. “Maybe so, but they have come up with some other numbers that make me wonder S s» what’s poor and what ain’t poor.” What sort of numbers? “Well, they say that about 38 percent of the so-called poor households own their own homes. And half the homes is worth more than $39,000, and half is worth less. So how can someone be really poor if they own a home?” Well, you don’t get much for $39,000 these days. “ Maybe so, but if it’s got a roof and a furnace and running water and a toilet that flushes, that ain’t exacdy the same as living in a cardboard box under a bridge,” Yes, but these homes might be in rundown old neighborhoods or on the wrong side of the tracks. “Like where I live, huh? Hey, where does it say in the Constitution that everybody gets to live in Beverly Hills? I figure that if you got a house, you can’t be a real wipeout. And it says that SOpercent of the poor got air conditioning where they live.” Naturally, since air conditioning is a necessity in a warm climate, how can one get a decent night’s sleep without it? “ I’ll tell you how. When we were kids, and it was hot in the flat, where did we go to sleep? Remember what my old man and your old man did?” Yes, on hot nights we took pillows and blankets and went to Humboldt Park and slept outdoors. Hundreds of families did that. “Yeah, and we walked there. You know why my old man had us walk there?" Of course. Because you didn’t have an automobile, and he didn’t want to spend money on streetcars. j “Right. But this Heritage outfit says that 62 percent of today’s poor households own cars. And 14 percent of them got more than one car. How poor can they be if they can afford a car? They got to have a city sticker, license plates, in some states/ insurance. And maybe one of those big cotton dice hanging from the rear view mirror.” But these Cars might be clunkers, beaters, rattletraps. “That’s what I drive. My motto is, jumper cables — don’t leave home without ’em. Even if I could afford a fancy car. I’d still have an old beater because in traffic I can scare the yuppies in their fancy Japanese cars to give me room and get out of my way. And what about microwaves?” What about diem? “It says here that 31 percent of the poor households got microwave ovens. How can that be?” Why not? It is a modern convenience, “So is a $5 tin kettle for heating water, which is about all those things are good for. And what’s wrong with the regular oven in the stove? Of a frying pan on top of the stove?” Maybe they don’t have a regular stove. “Then they should sell one of the cars and buy a stove. And here’s the number that blows my mind. It says that for every $1 of income that the poor report that they get, they spend $1.94.” That doesn’t make mathematical sense. “It does if yòu read the rest of it. See, the census people don’t count what public housing, Medicaid, food stamps and other welfare stuff is worth. It’s like they’re saying that a break on your rent, the doctor bill and the supermarket checkout line don’t, mean anything. I wish I could figure it that way.” You are as lacking in compassion as the Heritage Foundation. “ No, I ain’t. Just the opposite. This stuff about all the millions of poor people makes me proud to be an American.” You are proud that we have millions of poor in this country? How revolting. “No, look at it this way. If I had told my old man: “Pa, when I grow up, I’m gonna have a litde house, one Or two cars, air conditioning, a space-age microwave oven, a TV, and spend two bucks for every buck that comes in, he would have said: ‘Only in America.’ ” Yes, but what would he have said if you told him that despite these possessions, you were still classified as poor? “He would have said: ‘Kid, go for it.’ ” PAUL CORO. Editor SUZANNE ROSS, Managing Editor KEVIN SHEH ....------.................................. .......City Editor JENNIFER FRANKLIN ....„....................... A ss t City Editor DAWN DEVRIES ............ ............ ............... . News Editor MICHELLE ROBERTS................................. Opinion Editor DAVID KEXEL ............................. Copy Chief IRWIN DAUCHEKIY . . . . . . . . . u . . . P h o t o Editor DAN ZEIGER______ ....----- ...— ............... Sport» Editor DARREN URBAN...................................A sst Sports Editor VICKI CULVER.............. ........................... Magazine Editor LAURIE NOTARO.................. Magazine Managing Editor HOBART ROWLAND..... ............... College Culture Editor p , a i u t i b i - Ken Brown, D.J. Burro ugh. Merit Doud, Andrew Faught. Michael Flores. Margo GlOman. Kristine Hart. Sonja Lewis. M arsha Mardock. Krla Mayes, Richard Ruelaa. Lorenzo S ien a J r., Amy Slade, Aahahed Tttche. John Yanti». MAGAZINE STAFF! Michelle C ru ft Jill Heifcranaon. Dan Nowldd. Ken Orman, David Pundt, Christy Tomlinson, Mark J a s . Tynan. CARTOONISTS: Ken Collins. Sean Hoy. PHOTOGRAPHERS: H a u l Cohen, Jeorgetta Douglas.Sean Openshaw, T J . Sokol, Tam ara Wofford. COPT EDITORS: PatrldaM ah, Kay Olson, Gabriella Sanchez. COLUMNISTS: JimmyKopf, Kristi McDowell, Lany Salzman. PRODUCTION: Celia Hamman Cue to, Jo h n Gullonard, Kevin Heller. Tanya H utchins,B any Kelly, Jefhey Lucas. Ehren Schw lebert SALXS REPRESENTATTVES:Sonla Benson, Cameron Ellis, Leo Gonzales. Raul Graves, B ritan Karbowsky. Todd Martin, Lance Newman, Nell Schnelwar. The State Prema la published Monday through Friday d u r­ ing Hie academic year, except holidays and exam periods. - The Stole Press Is the only newspaper exclusively p ub­ lished for and circulated on thè ASU cam pus. The news and views published in this new spaper are n o t necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, ataff or student body. Editorial Board U n siz e d editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their merit. The editorials^ do not reflect the opinion of the S ta te Press stair a s a whole. * Board m embers Include: PAUL CORO.................................................... Editor SUZANNE ROSS ..... Managing Editor MICHELLE ROBERTS Opinion Editor Letter Policy The S ta te Press welcomes and encourages written re­ sponse from o ur readers on any topic. All letters m u st b e typed, double-spaced and no longer th a n two pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the university) and phone num ber. Only signed letters will be considered for publica­ tion. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to edlttogby the opinion page editor. All letters m u s t be either brought in person with a photo LD. to toe State Awss front d eskin thebasem entofM atthew s Center or else addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz., 85287-1502. State Press Phone Numbers Front D esk...........................................965-7572 Newsroom ......i..........................vv.......v..i........i-965-2292 Display Advertising .............................^............965-6555 Classified Advertising 965-6731 O p in io n State Press Thursday, O cto b er 10,1991 Page 5 ________ ____________________ ___ Column preaches state control intead of private decision making Dorm resident lives in doghouse due to RA Dear Editor: Why is ASU having difficulties finding and retaining residents for its dormitories? Why do many students choose to live in apartments that offer substandard living conditions? While there are many answers to the two aforementioned questions, the following incident is a prime example of inexcusable action and subsequent non-action by a resident assistant in Best Hall B and the dorm director of Center Complex. Said actions, which are detailed in the following paragraphs, in no way enhance the attractiveness of living in the dorms. The events that are to be described cause damage to the rapport between resident assistants, dorm directors and residents of the dormitory. In an effort to prevent residents of Best Hall C from venturing out onto their window ledges, the resident assistant from Best Hall B (second floor) decided topost a large (3 feet by 4 feet) sign adjacent to the elevator on the first floor of the dorm. Her efforts to prevent an accident are commendable; however, the language displayed in the sign insults the intelligence of every resident in the dorm. A section of the sign reads, “Now what if you fell off this ledge because the ledge finally gives way or you tend to be STUPID enough to actually step out onto it,' lose your balance and then fall? (caps mine) Why is this resident assistant, who is supposed to be a friend and helper to the residents, using such insulting language (i. e., stupid)? By using such language, she (RA) takes a pretentious stab at all of the residents who reside in the dorm. Such language directly insults the intelligence of the residents, and it is demeaning in its context. Maybe the RA didn’t realize that the language used in the sign was offensive to the residents, She was, however, soon notified that the language was offensive. This is where the atrocities began and, thus far; continue. In response to the RA’s unprovoked foray on the residents, I wrote her, and the dorm director, a professional letter. The letter Stated that I, as well as my fellow residents, felt offended by the sign. I even suggested, in good faith, an alternative choice of verbiage that could be used in the sign. My suggested wording was as follows: “Because the ledges of this building may not support your weight and because there is a potential risk of one falling off a ledge, we recommend that you refrain from going out onto the ledges.” Three days later (upon writing this) I have received no reply from the dorm director. I have, however, received a verbal response from the RA, albeit a reply in which she vowed not to change the sign. There is no excuse for such apathy by a dorm director and a resident assistant. Residents’ needs should be addressed promptly and in a professional manner. The interactions between dorm directors, resident assistants and residents must remain harmonious. Such incidents cause dissension towards resident assistants and their respective dorm directors. While many of my experiences at ASU thus far have been positive, the “STUPID” sign, with its many negative connotations, has not been something to remember favorably. While my dorm may not be a castle, l am happy living, studying and sleeping there. It is quite distressing, however, when I and my fellow residents are insulted by such aforementioned events. Maybe the RA was upset because she happened to read my letter during her “tea time.” After all, residents should ask to be treated with common courtesy . How dare the residents expect a reply to a legitimate concern? Alan Holcomb Junior, Sociology Dear Editor: Rick Giovanetto pays homage to the new right with a tirade that assaults truth and attacks personal liberty. His column is filled with blatant representations of reality. He describes “liberal special interests that so desperately want to control our nation’s political process.” And just what exactly are these “special interests? ” National Organization for Women, American Civil Liberties Union and Planned Parenthood are three named culprits. NOW addresses the concerns of all women — half the population of America. ACLU seeks to protect the constitutionally guaranteed rights of all Americans. Planned Parenthood provides low-cost health and consultation for women. Giovanetto labels them ‘‘special interests” because they do not happen to be his interests. In the column, Giovanetto comments that “our society is gradually descending into an abyss of irresponsibility that may be irreversible.” Does this mean Giovanetto is on a crusade to impose his moral agenda on others? Giovanetto’s article describes a government that takes responsibility for personal decisions and a court that justifies its decisions on ambiguous natural law. He writes that all freedoms depend upon individual responsibility, yet his column is devoid of the concept of individual responsibility. Individual responsibility means that the individual is empowered to make decisions and choices as a means of self-determination. This is ironic since Giovanetto argues that it’s the woman’s fault if she gets pregnant in the first place. He states “a woman chooses when, where and with whom she will be sexually active. She also has a wide variety of birth control methods at her disposal. . .’’He completely ignores the issue of male responsibility. This theme continues when he comments that legalized abortions encourage “irresponsible behavior” from individuals because they do not have to accept the “consequences of their actions.” Does that mean pregnancy should be a punishment for “irresponsible behavior?” And if so, is there a way that we can make the man carry the child so that he can also accept “punishment” for his “irresponsible” action? It appears that Giovanetto views women as harlots soliciting sex from men innocent of responsibility over birth control or the reproductive process. Yet, as Giovanetto so brilliantly informs us in the article, “pregnancy is a byproduct of sexual intercourse.” It takes two to tango. Giovanetto also asserts that pregnancy is always preventable. Birth control can fail. Even the pill, the most effective means of birth cotrol, is not 100 percent foolproof. Giovanetto’s column is not about freedom or individual responsibility as he proclaims. The article is about state responsibility and control for private decisions. Giovanetto whines that the framers of the Constitution “forgot to mention” individual responsibility. The Constitution is a document that enumerates specific rights, such as, the right to privacy, that are guaranteed from infringement by people like Giovanetto. Rhonda R. Diskin Senior, History W edding march, w hite cake a livin g nightm are m kristi cDowell Columnist Marriage is an institution. One I hope I’ll never be committed to. Not that living with a person indefinitely doesn’t appeal to me. I don’t mind sharing my toothpaste and never being able to cover up completely with the bedspread. I just don’t want to throw a bash designed to please everyone from my third-grade teacher to my ex-boyfriend’s mom’s hairdresser. I simply don’t believe it can be done. First, take ugly dresses in hues of magenta or sapphire, mix them into a ceremony filled with rambling clergy, screaming babies and unleavened bread; throw in enough white cake to end starvation in Ethiopia and top the day off With three crock pots. To me it. sounds more like a Brady Bunch reunion, a bad episode of Laugh In or a soiree at Hugh Hefner’s Playboy Mansion. However, couples everywhere choose to begin their married life this way. There are critical decisions for an engaged couple to make. Floral china or paper plates? Forest green or ravenous red? Champagne or Hawaiian Punch? And finally, will it be a priest or a justice of the peace? Whatever the choices, planning a wedding while satisfying friends and family is no small task. 1 consider myself a credible source on the topic after attending five weddings and participating in a sixth since January. One of the first steps is signing up at a bridal registry. With plates and dishes in every color, and silverware ranging from $25 to $85 per set, choices must be made wisely to accommodate a variety of guests’ incomes. For example, my friend signed up for a $50 iron. I wondered if it did the job itself for that amount. The customer service representative at Dillard’s snorted loudly when I said I wanted to stay in the $40 range and purchase a nice gift for the couple. “You can’t even look at the flatware,” she said as she led me to the bathroom rug display. The wedding apparel selection is yet another Crucial factor. It seems young brides-to-be are so shocked by their true love that they cannot think sensibly when choosing bridesmaid dresses. Blushing brides make a feverish trip to “Hie Ugly Store,” where they choose costumes destined to make the wedding party cringe. The color is sure to be offensive, something like “melting umbo:” or “largely lavender.” The dress design is bound to be even worse. Brides seem to be determined to make their attendants look like pumpkinshaped gnomes, frequently opting for steroid-puffed sleeves, fitted bodices and gloves reminiscent of the Wicked Queen from Sleeping Beauty. Regardless of the clothing selection, mass approval can be won if the ceremony itself is appropriate. If it is impressive enough, parents might even be convinced that young love and premarital sex are Synonymous with marital bliss. When a couple Writes their own vows and doesn’t repeat after Ibmepne, the crowd tends to be awed. Worn phrases like “love, honor and obey” are becoming obsolete in today’s ceremonial rites. Clergy are becoming progressively liberal by allowing applause in the church as well as giving advice like, “Have a cosmic life.” The reception is the proverbial icing on the cake. Some are complete with a band, while others feature a selection of music played by a disc jockey. However, the most entertaining celebrations include grandparents and great uncles imbibing in spirits and dancing madly to ancient Chubby Checker tunes. It seems funny enough to watch someone else’s family tree shaking to Frank Sinatra and the Fab Four. But for now, I’m content keeping my sanity and trying to catch the bridal bouquet instead of carrying it. Page 6 State Press Thursday, October 10,1991 Off-campus offerings to increase By MARSHA MARDOCK State Press The College of Extended Education, which provides ASU resources to people Valleywide, will aim to increase its number of off-campus course offerings, said Betty DeGraw, new interim dean. “I’m very excited, and I’m very pleased and honored to be asked to help out the University,” DeGraw said. “We’re ready and willing to take on the challenge.’’ DeGraw will replace Dennis Prisk, who will leave in December to become president of the College of Graduate Studies at the University of West Virginia. The College of Extended Education is most utilized by students who work full time or who live in areas of the Valley that are distant from the ASU main or west campuses. Lois Roma-Deeley, coordinator of the ASU Adult Re-Entry Program, said re-entry students are likely to use the college’s programs. “1 think in many respects it’s vital to offer classes through alternate means, and the re-entry populations on all the campuses nationally is growing, so this is going to become more of an essential service as time goes on,” Roma-Deeley said. Five permanent dean positions and one vice president position remain vacant. Milt Glick, senior vice president and provost, said progress is being made in the search to fill the other vacant dean positions. A search committee has been established for the deans of the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences. He added that the search for a dean of the College of Social Work has been reactivated after being deferred for a year. Glick said the administration is close to having a committee appointed to search for the vice president of Research and that they are collecting names for the search committees for deans of the education, extended education and nursing colleges. ASU President LattieCoor said he is pleased at DeGraw’s willingness to take the assignment. “She is familiar with the world with which the College of Extended Education deals, not only from her experience with the downtown center, but in the work she’s done as associate dean in recent months,” Coor said. Glick said he is impressed by DeGraw. “ She understands both the Valley community and the University and how those two mesh,” Glick said. “Bette excels at bringing people with diverse agendas to the table and finding a way to bring those agendas together, so that we can make progress.” In addition to her work as the associate dean and as the coordinator and founding director of the Downtown Center, DeGraw has been the coordinator for the Division of Instructional Programs, Distance Learning Technology and Independent Study by Correspondence. The ASU Downtown Center, located in the Phoenix Mercado shopping center, offers credit and non-credit classes and provides research opportunities to people who work in the downtown area. DeGraw said she will also be looking at opportunities for professional development training and ways to improve the Lifelong Learning program and the American Language Culture program in the Japan Center . 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Sit « h t M Page 7 Thursday, O cto b e r 10,1991 Tem pe to renovate M oeur house effectiveness of the remodeling. “We’re deciding what to save and what to take out,” Kelly Nearly a year after its restoration approval by the Tempe Said. “We hope we’ll be able to leave the floor plan intact.” The delay in construction resulted when the architect City Council, the historic B. B. Moeur house, located at Seventh Street and Myrtle Avenue, is scheduled to be decided to. do selective demolition on the structure, said Mark Vinson, senior planner and architect. overhauled in January . “It’s a painstaking process,” he said. “We’re going Since April, architect Michael Kelly has been working on a historical study of the house, attempting to preserve the through it piece by piece because we don’t want to tear integrity of the building while making certain the building is everything down.” Day said the renovation of the building hasn’t been the structurally sound. The city plans to use the refurbished building to house the city’s highest priority project and that the architect has stuck Tempe Community Council. The council works with the to Tempe planners’ time line. Vinson and Kelly said the modern day building codes are United Way agency by overseeing distribution of its funds. The dilapidated 3,000 square-foot house was built by also hampering the restoration of the building. “They’re (building codes) much more stringent than they Benjamin Moeur, Arizona’s first governor who served from used to be,” Vinson said. 1933 to 1937. Also, some problems exist in the structure of the house. Moeur died in the house in 1937. It was later used as an “Termites have damaged the wood flooring, and the Indian trading post. The city bought the house in 1985 for $235,000. It now sits rafters are somewhat flimsy,” Vinson said. He added that the restoration of old buildings like the empty with security screens protecting its entrances and Moeur house is more labor-intensive than building a new windows. “We’re in the semifinal stage,” said Terry Day, structure. The $595,000 restoration fee is being funded by community community development director for Tempe. “ It still needs to go in front of the design board and the council for the development block grants from the federal governmentVinson said the city also plans to build a new building on review process.” Kelly has been interviewing people related to Moeur in the site that will be compatible with the Moeur house. The new structure will house meeting space for city officials and order to reconstruct the house. He will present a formal report to the council with the cost- community groups. By JOHN YANTIS State Press We've moved closer to A.S.U! T O N Y ’S N E W Y O R K E R Voted Best of Jeorgetta Douglas/State Prats The city ofTem pe plans to restore the B. 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Duality programming N o v . 2 8 -D e e J l $239 i SKI UTAH Thanksgiving W eekend. Nov. 28-D ec. 1.1991. S239 Includes 4 days lift tickets to Snowbird. A lta . Solitude. Brkfrton. Utah Trip T-Shirt*. R o vndtrip video bus transportation, resort accom m o dations a t Salt Lcke C ity's driest 5-star h otel, th e University Parkin th e foothills. Parlies a n d drinking com petitions against other schools, a n d o f course, all the b everages you c a n drink d l w eekend long. Trip is sold on a first com e first M p aym en t. In order o f tun buses. W e win sel as m any fid buses as possible. Party w ith 500 o th er students Irorh ASU. NAU. a n d UNLV on th e trip. TAKING $50 DEPOSITS N O W !!!! ' ’ FINAL PAYMENT DUE NOV. 7,1991 ’ Must p a y by fin d paym ent d a te to receive tre e T-shirt, otherw ise T-Vvrts a re $5 e a c h . Lim ited supplies. Bring w eek only.) able, this ad with you to receive a free onetrial. (One per person, non-m em bers S tu d en t life s ty le M em b ersh ip s avail­ only $ 3 9 .0 0 p er month — n o Initiation fe e req u ired ! 5 M IN FROM ASU ASU ? UNIVERSITY 1 > APACHE I If 8 O ffer ex p irés N ovem b er 1 , 1991 y ■• 1 i l BROADWAY i SOUTHERN SUPERS ITDNnW . . . L F O R M O R E IN P0 |N C ALL: A IM E E ........7 8 4 -0 8 3 8 E R N IE ........9 4 5 -0 6 7 6 J E N N ............ 9 4 5 -0 6 7 6 WESTERN RESERVE CLUB B A R B A R A ...9 6 8 -3 0 5 6 T H O M A S ...8 2 9 -1 4 5 3 BY D A V E B R O W N J E F F O ........9 6 6 -2 3 0 4 HOTLINE 4 8 7 -0 9 9 7 A W A R D -W IN N IN G S P O R T S C E N T E R Broadway West of Price • Tempe, AZ • 968-9231 Page 8 Thursday, October 10. 1991 Fee Continued from page 1. Only three of nine entrances to the parking lot will be open Friday and Saturday nights, and some merchants said they expect long lines of traffic to get in and out. Kloc said the decision was made with the input of merchants and city and campus police. Revenues from the plan will go to paying lot attendants and an off-duty officer who will act as security, she added. Vandalism of some of the stores as well as congestion in the parking lot prompted the new parking fee, Kloc said. ASU Parking and Transit Services officials will monitor the new policy and make adjustments if necessary, she added. With the lot’s proximity to blocked-off Mill, Kloc said, the problems in the center have been caused by the overflow of people visiting downtown on weekend nights. But Bret Lange, assistant manager of Tower Records, said the new policy makes for “a very confusing situation.” “The parking problem hurts our business, period,” he said. Lange said people renting and returning videotapes, as well as people who just want to browse, will be deterred by the parking fee. The policy will not last long though, Lange said. If it does, he said the store will complain. “Until our lease is up, we have our rights,” he added. Dominic Palazzo, store manager of Stabler’s Market Place, agrees with other merchants that something must be done to control the parking problems, “but this parking fee isn’t the solution.” Palazzo said he sees the parking fee as a problem fo t those who want to write checks and don’t have cash — such as students. ■ M M 1 Jed Allen on open from 7am til late Serving Lunch Daily corner o f 6th & Mill ffe f S t a t e P r e s s D a ily J A C K E T A DO S ATONC E Z E T A R E T I R E; A T 0 M T US S L E T ERPS w ADS OWE c L E A R u P R AT RO I E R R D I E DOw N N E A S T ET S T R Aw G U N G H O1 WR E N R E F 1 NE A UN T AR i S E N G E T S B E AM E D CROSSWORD by TH O M A S JO S E P H ACROSS 1 Like old lettuce 5 Library stamp 10 Having an advantage 12 Martini garnish 13 Release 14 Mine finds 15 Simian 16 Soup cracker 18 Accent 20 Persona — grata 21 “The Untouch­ ables” hero 23 Racket strings material 24 Caldwell's “ —- Little Acre" 26 Try out 28 Rainbow shape 29 Espy 31 No longer working (abbr.) 32 Black­ board accessory 36 Rues, for sure 39 Yale student 40 Near­ sighted cartoon character 41 Inventor Howe 43 Matinee stars 44 Infèrno describer 45 Dis­ patches 46 Keg contents DOWN 1 Montez and Fa|ana 2 Clumsy 3 Yard plus a bit 4 Shorthaired dog 5 Toy store buy 6 Oodles 7 News 8 Flatten9 Take umbrage at 1 Yesterday’s Answer ‘ 10 7 5 6 ■ !? ■ 1 12 1 14 1 16 17 3. i 28 Friend of D’Artagnan 30 Pod unit 33 Paris's river 34 Thrill 35 Stair part 37 Midas's love 38 Noted flagmaker 42 Chemist’s milieu 11 Own 17 Dunder­ head 19 Finale 22 Was furious 24 Hurled explosive 25 Stop sign, essen- ■ tialty 27 Greek vowel 13 i5 8 9 34 35 ■ 19 18 - 21 24 27 26 25 l 23 w m - ■ H 2 9 30 28 33 32 31 m 36 37 38 » ■ 42 40 1 4^ 1 45 1 ■ ? DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s how to work i t 10”10 AXYDLBA AX R is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for the three L’s, X for the tw o O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ation o f the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 10-10 CRYPTOQUOTE FREESCHEME PM NEEBHALL sponsored by MUAB FILM COMMITTEE ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY / TEMPE Passes are available at the MUAB office, 3rd flo or, MU, beginning October 9. Brought toyoucourtesyof * i_ is C l a i b o r n e C O S M E T I C. S FR R QV W W F B Q V U FX Z — QB W FJ O B WJ X F P P G Q GPW Y B W P X V RGJQ KB GY U B T P M LG L W P Q . G H W B U Y esterday’$ C ryptoquote: THE MAN W HOM AKES NO MISTAKES DOES NOT USUALLY MAKE ANY­ THING. — EDWARD PHELPS e 1991 by King Features Syndicate, Inc, Thursday. October 10,1991 State Press Language classes lacking vital equipm ent years old. She said students are required to attend the listening labs and are tested On the material covered. “I think the listening lab is ridiculous,” fashion merchandising major Lori Nichols said. “A lot of the time you can’t even hear (the tapes). By S. TALBOTT SMITH State Press There are severe problems in the foreign languages department at ASU that probably will get worse because of recent budget cuts, a Spanish teaching assistan t supervisor said. “ The reality is everything in this University is going down because of budget cuts,” Said Carmen Urioste. Urioste said a lack of audiovisual equipment and computers is hampering the ability of the Spanish section to educate its 100- and 200-level students. “I have tapes and computer programs that the students could use, but there are no computers and only two video systems that work,” she said. “That is supposed to help educate almost 3,000 students (in the Spanish section)?” ASU Provost Milton Click said he is aware of the problem in the department. “We have always had a problem meeting the needs of the department of foreign languages,” he said. “We think the situation will get worse before it gets better.” Sue Hendrickson, who supervises the TAs in the French section, Said the equipment in the department’s listening lab is about 30 “The equipment is shoddy,” she added. Lab attendant and Spanish major Alex Jones said 24 tape drives in the lab have been permanently disabled to provide parts for the working tape drives. “They don’t make the parts anymore,” she said. Hendrickson said the equipment “really is out of date.” “The money situation has hindered what we would like to do — there is a lack of resources,” she said. Enrollment in the French section this semester has dropped by 245 students from last fall, according to the department. Hendrickson attributes this loss to a lack of funding that subsequently forced the department to drop 12 sections of its lowers division French courses. “A lot of undergraduates who needed these classes couldn’t get into them,” she Automotive Service Mathews cites demands placed on TAs as another factor aggravating toe situation in the department. “The workloads TAs face can hamper their degree goals,” he said. “There is a concern for them about not being able to complete their own studies.” Hendrickson said toe TAs “deserve more than they’re getting.” “ For the quality of undergraduate education, they should be compensated more,” she said. Sen. Doug Todd, R-Tempe, said toe University’s fiscal woes likely will get worse before they get better. “I believe there are legislators who would vote to shut down toe universities tomorrow, if given the chance,” he said. “The best case for next year is that funding levels will remain stable.” Todd said he shares the students’ frustration. “The mental confusion (in state government) about ASU’s impact on the east Valley is difficult to deal with. “There is a struggle going on down here, and people should realize that they need to support those of us fighting for toe universities,” he said. Sizzler Invites All 50,000 ASU Students Faculty And Staff To Luncn. Or Dinner. 1355 S. M cClintock T em pe, 894-2798 "Your vehicle maintenance specialists" 10 % OFF I «Wheel Alignment I 'B rakes ■ 'F ro n t End Repair ! 'Tires R otation/Baianang I -Shocks/Struts I 'Fern Belts & Hoses ^ In te r s ta te Batteries said. Glick said the spring semester will be more crowded, forcing the department to stretch even further to meet student demands. “We will try to keep the situation from slowing students down (in. their academic progress) ,” he said. Poorly trained TAs are compounding the problem, said Lisa Tucker, a marketing senior,' who said she had a “bad” TA. “She wasted a lot of time skipping around on tangents, not covering the required material,” she said. “They shouldn’t expect someone with little or no experience to teach a class,” she said. However, Urioste said all TAs must attend a one-week orientation prior to teaching where they are introduced to the textbook and given instructions on how to teach a class. “They also must- take a course in methodology (during their first semester of teaching) ,” she added. ASU Graduate Student Council Chairman J. Scott Mathews said TAs do need a quality training program. ‘‘TAs don’t want to go to class unprepared,” he said. 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After all how long can we go on like this? 7 pm-Close $1 Shooter Specials Tpm -C lose L IV E M U S IC 25* Drafts $2“ Pitchers L iv e R o c k & R o l l 7 pm-Close W IN G S & SHRIM P r 1 The SunD evil Sizzler*s i i i i $4.99 SunD evil D eal is only a b ike ride away. Enjoy our Salad Bar or a sirloin steak entree i at the Mill & Southern Sizzler for a limited time discount price of $4.99. i Offer good for your party with coupon or an i ASU ID. Also good at Baseline & McClintock. i Satellite Sports Rural & Apache • Tempe S iz z le r "I I I I I I ( ! I I"' The SunD evil Sizzler’s I $4.99 SunD evil D eal is I only a bike ride away. I "1 I ; i i I Enjoy our Salad Bar or a sirloin steak entree i at the Mill & Southern Sizzler for a limited i I i: time discount price of $4.99. Offer good for your party with coupon or an I ASU ID. Also good at Baseline & McClintock. i i I I S iz z le r L . a t M ill & S o u t h e r n - J -----L . a t M ill & S o u t h e r n - J Page 10 P o lic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents mi Wednesday: •A thief stole a red 1968 Honda Elite scooter from Lot 63. Estimated loss is $1,500. •A thief stole a blue Giant bicycle from the north side of the Farmer Education Building where it was locked. Estimated loss is $350. M Sfate Pres» Thurada^DctobeMÇ^WI a •A woman became ill on Palm Walk near the Student Health Center. She was escorted to the center where she refused treatment. Tempe police reported the following incidents on Wednesday: •Two men, ages 25 and 27, were arrested for motor vehicle theft after they stole a car that was parked at Taco Cabana at 25 W. University Drive. The owner had left the keys in the car. •An 18-year-old woman was assaulted by a man at the intersection of Seventh and Wilson streets when he threw her to the ground. She suffered a bump behind her left ear. C om piled b y S ta te P ress reporter K ristin e H art il “Nobody would claim that we don’t need a contract station. We would try to do whatever it takes to avoid closing the contract station.” Riley said ASU could take weeks to respond because the U niversity is evaluating the cost to run the facility and is considering other options. Other options include transferring the responsibility of running the postal station from Mail Services to another campus department or to contract out the operation of die station to a third party, who would bid for the contract. Business Affairs, said the postal station is “a very important service to the campus community.” But because of ongoing investigations, Forsyth declined to say how far the University would go to keep the postal station. “We’re going to be reasonable in the negotiations, and we hope the post office will be (too),” he added. University officals said a cut in the payment would force them to dose the station because it would leave them without sufficient operating funds. “We need a contract station,” Riley said. C ontinued from page 1. with ASU, and so I’m hoping we can come to an agreement.” Contract negotiations began when ASU demanded that the Tempe Post Office assume responsibility for delivering mail to the drains. Tempe responded by threatening to cut the annual payment to ASU to run the University’s postal station in half — to $24,000 — unless they continued to deliver dorm mail. Ben Forsyth, interim vice president for Another department could run the facility more inexpensively through the use of student employees, he said. University officials also are hoping the post office assumes the task of forwarding mail of former dorm residents, a task each dorm now performs, Augustine said. Campus officials are trying to persuade the post office to pick up and drop off ASU’s mail. Riley said the University must go to the Tempe Post Office to pick up and drop off ASU’s mail, a function no other contract station is required to do. S ta te B r ie f s UofA p ro f o n h ot seat TUCSON (AP) — A UofA dean has recommended state Public School Superintendent Diane Bishop’s husband be fired as a professor because he refuses to teach classes. Edgar J. McCullough Jr., dean of the faculty of science, said Richard Morse should be relieved from his $74,665-ayear job because wants to do only research. McCullough’s recommendation will be presented to the campus conciliation committee this weeik. If nothing is resolved, the UA Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure will hold a hearing and make a recommendation to university President Manuel T. Pacheco. Morse, who has been a UA faculty member since 1976, has said through legal representatives that his contract with the UA does not specify that he teach. P eoria m anager n ot to return PEORIA — City Manager Dennis Frederickson win not have his contract renewed for next year. O ur R e p u t a t io n O pens he will not run for re-election. “This country’s in trouble,” Freestone said. “Right here in the state of Arizona, we have some very Serious problems, from transportation to the economy, education and the environment, just to name a few. Plus, the world is in transition.” The City Council made the decision in a 4-3 voté Tuesday. “It’s pure personality differences,” Fredrickson said during a break in the council’s meeting. Fredrickson, who has served as city manager since June 1990, said he believes he can work something out with the . council that would allow him to keep his job. But Mayor Ken Forgia, who voted to not renew the contract, said renegotiating the contract is not an option. Forgia had praised Frederickson last month in the firing of then Police Chief Jim Humphrey, but has criticized him for spending $23,000 for a new city logo. Sentence give on support case PHOENIX — A Phoenix electrician has been sentenced to 1% years in prison for failing to pay child support. Paul Michael Norton also was ordered to pay his former wife, Connie Norton, $39,771 in delinquent support and interest over the past 10 years, said Marian Yim, an assistant state attorney general. Norton, 37, was sentenced earlier this week by Judge Robert Gottsfield of Maricopa County Superior Court. Yim said Norton was accused of the Class 6 state felony of “failure of parent to provide for child.” Yim said Norton will haveto begin paying the debt when he is released from prison. New bid p ossib le for congress PHOENIX — Another Maricopa County supervisor may run for congress. Supervisor Tom Freestone of Mesa has formed an exploratory committee for a possible bid at the 6th Congressional District seat that will be created for Arizona during the Legislature’s redistricting process. Freestone, a former Maricopa County recorder, has said T he W o r ld T o E n g in e e r s A s a major worldwide engineering firm, The Ralph M. Parsons Company has established a sound reputation for building some of the world's most dynamic and challenging projects. Culture of complexity, diversity, and lo c a tip j^ iito ia m ^ airportinSauh A ral» to omstructiramanagemeRtl)* Los Angeles' $ i3-biIlion Metro Rail Rapid Transit System, Our p rd w iM K » And oraoonoemgaiejiBtasgkibal—fnraprojecteflwrthanrfJ fa il envlonmental needssuch asthe treatmentof hazardousand nucku WMf$f>roduets to studies (N ine Advanced Laundt system for fee nextgeneration of large-payload space Shrce 1944, our projects and people have advairapeur world's capabilities. In theprocess,we'vedesMpedaflfa lteife d W M p^opportunity for Engineering p ra fe *k » te in ij^ M ow ing disciplines; Chemical, Civil, Electrical (power the Ralph IR Parsons Coti., an O f m l y M e d H ^ ^ U c le a r , Strurlwal, and Project Controls. We o ^ } C M & e t { f i v e salary and bdtefiRT p a c k a g e ¡including an EmploU^HDdc Ownership Plan. Our on-campus intervigafe aqg scheduled for Thursday,October 24th, and an information session vyjj^eh e ld ^ Wednesday, October 23rd. See p i i r Placement Office for d e tJ L The Ralph M. Parsons C om panfS K West Walnut Street, Pasadena, Califqpfa'^itTI. Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/D /p o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o c o o o o o o o o o o o o o c \ T E l i f t e w L ROCK m BOWL! ( | 8 J O 8 F • Electronic Scoring • Full Service Snack Bar • H Q O ~|JU $1 per Game + tax Noon-6 p.m. V ~ ^ $ 5 Hourly Lane Rental Noon-6 p.m. X v ...................................................... T m B q : i Q V 967-1656 1100 E. Apache Corner of Rural & Apache Q Q G 0 G R A D U A T B O E S 8 R S 8 T U D E N T S T h e G rad u ate S tu d e n t A s s o c ia tio n h a s tw o (2) p o s it io n s o p e n for g ra d u a te s t u d e n t s e n r o lle d for a t le a s t 6 c r e d it h o u r s t h is a c a d e m ic year. T h e s e are s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t jo b s, p a y in g $ 6 p er hour, 5 -1 5 h o u r s p er w e e k . D u tie s in c lu d e e d itin g a n e w s le tt e r a n d a d m in is tr a tiv e w ork . O b tain referra ls from S tu d e n t E m p lo y m e n t. 0 0 O W A Q Q 0 O V O C C O G O C C O C O C G O O O O O S O O O O O O Q Q O O G C / m Mm JJiunda^OctobwlOjJW^ State Press Pase 11 ASU child care serves educational purpose By MARSHA MARDOCK State Prase ASU West’s Child Study Laboratory not only provides the University with an opportunity to study tots at play but also provides child-care services for faculty, staff, students and the general public. But it is not structured to provide the baby-sitting service that the main campus’ parents need — a service that will be provided by the new child-care center slated to open this summer. ASU West’s Child Development and Family Studies Lab School, which opened Aug. 26, provides ASU West students with the opportunity to observe the tots’ interaction. “It’s a research lab,” said the school’s director, Barbara Robinson. “The University Students (and parents) can observe activities in the classrooms from observation booths without disturbing them.” Robinson said the center soon will have video cameras so students in University classrooms can watch the children learn and play. The school does not subscribeThthedld adage that children should be seen and not heard; microphones in the classrooms and on the playground pick up the children’s conversation. ASIJ’s eagerly-awaited main campus child-care center will have a different focus, according to Maureen Duane, program coordinator for the ASU Child Care Resources Center. “What was very important to the administration was that the new facility have a different focus that would be service versus research,” Duane said. “We do have our research programs on campus, so this center will be more service oriented.” Paul Miller, an assistant professor of psychology, has been very involved in the program from the start. He said because ASU West’s center is a lab school, it will be run differently than a service-oriented day care center. “That changes how you approach your curriculum. It changes how you approach staff training. It changes sometimes how you approach the kids,” he said. “There is a much stronger emphasis on the educational aspect of the program than on just plain service,” he said. A “Our goal is to allow a private day care operator to integrate itself within the overall mission of the University.” Miller said that by combining research, teaching and child care, the program is enriched by the added teacher expertise and the latest child development information. ASU West’s school, which is operated by Sunrise Preschool under the direction of the Child Development and Family Studies Lab Program, can accommodate 58 children from 2% to 5 years old, as long, as they are toilet-trained. The facility has two intermediate rooms for younger students, two preschool classrooms for 4- and 5-year-olds, a kitchen, and an enclosed playground. The child-to-teacher ratio is six to one for the younger children, with a maximum of 12 children and two teachers in a group and a nine to one ratio for the 4- and 5-year-olds with a maximum of 18 children and two teachers in a group. Robinson said that spaces are still available and that she is confident the school can handle the demand for child care at ASU West. “I think our biggest problem is to just let people know we’re here,” she said. Miller said it normally takes some time for a center to fill .up. .. . “I anticipate that people will move their children over into the center as they see it’s a viable place and they see the program and what we have to offer,” Miller said. The school’s lead teachers must have a bachelor’s degree and three years experience; associate teachers must have child development associate’s credentials or an associate of arts, Robinson said. “But currently, all our teachers have a bachelor’s, except for one associate teacher, who has her early childhood certificate — so we’re overqualified.” Robinson said everything has gone smoothly since the opening of the school both because of the “tremendous amount of preparation done to get it ready” and because enrollment was gradual. “If we would have opened our door the first day and we would have had 100 people standing there, it might have been a little overwhelming, but it worked out really well. “We did a lot of upfront organization and work,” Miller said. V'■ . d S u n Oparahaw/Stata P rat* Giselle Guron, 4 (upper left), 4-year-old Nicholas Van Lewen and 3-year-old Alex McCall play on the slide a t ASU W est’s child care center. Because the center is operated by Sunrise Preschools, employees of certain businesses, including America West, the U. S. Postal Service, Arizona Public Sendee, American Express and others, are eligible for a subsidy program, which will pay for part of their child-care costs. fr You can firid everythingintlîe State I(ress California Casualty CARES In a receent C .A .R .E .S . (C ustom ers Always Receive Excellent Service) survey, o u r cus­ to m e rs q u e stio n e d , “ W hy d o n ’t y o u o ffer more convenient payment options?” This spring our C.A .R.E.S. Committee imple­ mented our new E-Z Pay A utom ated Paym ent P lan. You can now have the convenience o f 10 m onthly, autom atic deductions from your b a n k o r cred it un io n a c c o u n t to pay y o u r policy premiums. 98% o f our p olicyh old ers recom m end u s* ... because w e h ave th e b est serv ice... and th e best p eo p le to d eliver it! You can stay on top o fth e new s because we do. STATE PRESS . .. your morning daily at ASU. I 'll ta k e ... P a r ty f P a r a p h e r n a lia fo r $ 2 0 0 , A le x Sounfl Like Funf Be a contestant onjeepsurdy! October 22nd, 11:30 a.mM:30 p.m. in the Programming Lounge Applications availablein the Ml§AB Office,¡3rd floor o | the M.U. Deadline is Oct. til Memorial Umon Activities Soaao California Casualty Our Group Serving Yours Phoenix 253-6329 or call Toll Free 1-800-841-4736 2102 W. Indian School Raod, Suite 11 Phoenix, AZ 85015-4909 FO R FACULTY AND ST A FF ONLY ♦ B ased o n th o u sa n d s o f c o m p a n y w ide c u sto m e r surveys re tu rn e d in 1990. California Casualty CARES THERE A R E TW O SIDES TO BECO M ING A NURSE IN THE ARMY! A n d they’re both repre­ sented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you’re part of a health care j system in which educational and i \\J 6 l career advancement are the rule,! I n o t th e exception. The gold hat on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. Ifyou’re earn­ ing a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, EO. Box 3219, Warminster, PA 18974-9845. O r call toll free: 1-800-USA-ARMY, ext. 438. ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE A LL YOU CAN BE! Page 12 r> StalePuKs» Thursday, October 10,1991 ASASU computerizes spring Course Source By MARGO GILLMAN State Press The Associated Students of ASU will computerize its Course Information Program to promote “efficiency and cut down on waste,” the program’s director said. The Course Source, an ASASU information package to assist students in selecting courses, will be included in PEGASUS — Personal Guide to ASU Stuff — a computerized informational system, said Jeff Concors, a senior journalism major. “This will probably be the most effective way to put out a Course Source,” Concors said. “And it will allow us to put more information in for the students.” PEGASUS is accessible through five public access terminals located in the MU and the Student Recreation Complex and through terminals at certain on-campus computer sites. The information also is accessible to anyone off campus through a computer and a modem. It was put on-line for the public last May to offer information about the ASU course catalog and schedule, entertainment and athletic events, daily weather forecasts, the Gold File research catalog, games, a faculty/staff on-line directory, and an Arizona economic development database. The Course Source is a supplement to the University’s course catalog and schedule. It provides detailed information about courses such as the professor’s grading and attendance policies. About 10,000 Course Source booklets were offered to students each semester last year. Concors said this year seven hard copies of the Course Source will be available for Student reference at the University’s registration sites. Robert Curry, supervisor of the social sciences registrar site, said the computerization of PEGASUS is “ a good way to save money,” but seven hard copies will not meet student needs. “Not all of the students will be willing to consult a computer terminal for the information,” he said. “I would like to see enough booklets so students can pick some up. “There will be a transition period, so there shouldn’t be such a drastic change.” Concors said the transition “could be a hassle.” “But this is the first year we’re doing this, and we’ve gotta start somewhere,” he said. ASASU decided to computerize the Course Source after it discovered “a large amount of waste” being produced, Concors said. “People would pick ’em up and just leave ’em all over the place,” he said. “This will eliminate a lot of clutter.” The program utilized about $12,000 last year to cover printing and typesetting costs. PEGASUS will enable it to operate on a $3,428 budget, which will cover salaries and promotional costs, this year, Concors said. “ASASU volunteers will assist with the data entry and editing,” he said. “This will greatly cut the previous costs.” Joy Kramer, ASU support systems analyst, said she has not been informed of the plans to incorporate the Course Source in PEGASUS. “But I’m all for it,” she said. “We’re trying to expand PEGASUS so we can have all the information students need in a central location. Concors said the plan will “save students time because they won’t have to travel from department to department to find information.” Students can make individual copies of the hard copies, he added. “It will definitely be a lot easier and accessible in the future, but I think it’ll work students just have to know aboutit.” Concors said the Course Source will be available on PEGASUS, in time for early registration on Nov. 4. N EED H AVE Y O U BEEN INJURED IN A N A C C ID E N T ? 00 contact PAUL D . FR IEDM AN A TTO R N E Y A T LAW 501 Law Offices o fJames fF- “Brooks Since 1972 Practice Limited to Personal Injury PHOENIX TEMPE GILBERT 838-5022 545-5711 Rural C ourt, Suite A -140 Lakeview O ffice Building Biltm ore Executive C enter 4450 S. Rural Road 3651 E. Baseline, Ste: 130 Tempe. A rizona G ilbert, A rizona 11024 N . 28th Dr., Ste. 200 Phoenix, A rizona 375-0414 CALL FOR A FREE CONSULTATION ¿C i USED ron LEVIS UP TO from the M O N E Y N O W ... The Blue Jean Buyer CALL FOR DETAILS SE Corner of Broadway/MiU • close to ASU Tempe 966~9320*call for lnfo*PHX 241-1388 ADD ?M E M l u I V I U : »1 C TO Y 0 U I pU R (LIFE FIR E E ! Stop by the photo booth on Cady Mall between Oct. 1 through Nov, 1and enter in tie Sun Devil Spark Yearbook music giv eaway, You could win a GE portable CD fM/AM cassette stereo or a Sony Walk man! X* A ls o , r e g is t e r t o w in f r e e t u it io n f o r a s e m e s t e r ! The photographer's hours: 8 a.m . • 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Friday. 10 a .m .- 7 p.m. Thursday and Wednesday, N o p u r c h a s e n e c e s s a r y t o w in . O n e e n t r y p e r s t u d e n t . F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n , c a ll 965 -6 8 81 o r v is it o u r o ffic e in th e M a tth e w s C e n te r, R M 50. Page 13 Thursday, October 10,1991 Thomas ________ Continued from page 3. F ie s t a V a n T o M e x ic o l7 ig & T 5 £ \ Lé - SHHSil ’ Southwest Shuttle Service Info - 1-800-288-4909 October 10 fr e£ 1 all ages TNT C oncert Series 6-10 p.m . A ZZ IZ Z 10-1 a.m . (21 & over) O.P. Stylee October 12 The Groove M erchants October 13 The Jeff Dayton Band “Great Country” October 15 October 11* 7 :3 0 p .m . In C o n cert M ayn ard F erguson an d his Big Bop N ouveau Band 9-1 Bluesday Tuesday Dave Andrews and the Method Biden said he advised Hill to bring a lawyer because “it’s an incredibly traumatic process for a woman to go through.” Thomas created an odd inconsistency in the public record. In the sworn affidavit released Tuesday by Danforth, Thomas said he “told the Federal Bureau of Investigation on Sept. 28,1991” that he “totally and unequivocally” denied Hie allegations. Thomas, however, was interviewed by the FBI several days earlier — an important fact since that would have been before the Judiciary Committee’s Sept. 27 vote. Steve Hilton, Danforth’s press secretary, said Thomas referred to Sept. 28 because that was the date of the FBI’s “final interview and transcription.” Justice Department spokesman Doug Tillett said the FBI put the wrong date on its report. Biden and other committee members were formulating a request the FBI to interview potential witnesses. Iraq_____________ Continued from page 3. forces reneged on a promise to intercede if the Iraqi army attacked. Responding to reports that Kurdish guerrillas were massing on the Turkish border for an attack, Qazzaz said only that it was not unlikely. “We learned that we should depend only on ourselves,” he said. Hie Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that sporadic gunfire continued around Suleimaniyah on Wednesday and tension was high, particularly at nearby Dukan Dam. Hie Kurds have accused Iraq of trying to cut off electricity in the area by reducing the amount of water behind the dam. Statements from the Kurdish groups said an estimated 76 civilians had been killed and 750 Kurdish civilians injured since the bombardments began. They said medical supplies were running low in the city and that tens of thousands had fled Suleimaniyah and the surrounding towns. The Kurdistan Democratic Party claimed that up to 4,000 Iraqi troops had been taken prisoner. Saddam moved against the rebels as Kurdish leaders were planning to establish a rival provisional government in their mountain stronghold, in their latest attempt to overthrow the Iraqi president. Saddam’s government and the guerrillas hod been negotiating on a degree of autonomy fra: the Kurds in northern Iraq, but the talks foundered. The Kurds rebelled in March after the Gulf War cease-fire, seeking to win a decades-old battle for autonomy from the central government. Tuesday’s cease-fire agreement was signed by an Iraqi Defense Ministry official and the Iraq Kurdistan Front, a coalition of eight rebel factions fighting for autonomy from the Baghdad government. There was no immediate independent confirmation about the situation; but both the British government and the Red Cross expressed strong concern. ' In London, the Foreign Office on Wednesday summoned Zuhair Ibrahim, head of the Iraqi interest section and the ranking diplomat, to underline Britain’s concern about renewed attacks on the Kurds. In Geneva, the Red Cross spokesman, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the organization had evacuated hundreds of wounded in the past few days and the humanitarian group issued a statement expressing alarm about the fighting. . Kurdistan Democratic Party leader Jalal Talabani appealed to President Bush, British Prime Minister John Major and the president of the U.N. Security Council to take action to stop Hie fighting. Talabani said 50,000 civilians have fled Sulaymaniyah, Kalar, Kfri and Arabat. He claimed that columns of refugees traveling toward the Iranian border have been bombed by government forces. U S. Army Maj. Michael McKinney, a spokesman for the allied coaliUon force in Incirlik, Turkey, said the force was watching the events “very closely.” October 16 9-1 August Red 10:30-1 A Z Z IZ Z Wise Monkey T tc tc e f / ! / v* srcf= 9 . 6 0 2 /2 3 0 -9 1 1 2 For N ightly Lineup - 967-CHUY 410 S. M ill - Hayden Square - Tempe M .B .A J.D . M.D. P h.D IF YOU DON’T HAVE THE NUMBERS, YOU WON’T GET THE LETTERS. Call us today and experience the Rorikin Advantage: ¿ Mention M e a d « m l receive $100 off of y o u rc o w e l ★ LSAT & GRE classes starting Oct. 14 Tempe • 731-9400 T I !. ifla a P la n t 9 t in n \ (Next to Coffee Plantation) Unique travel/study opportunity in Europe, the South Pacific or the Orient! Interact with top executives of well-known organizations! Travel to Europe and eam academ ic credit!! INFORMATIONAL MEETING October 15,1991 3:00 pm > 4:00 pm BAC 324 If you cannot attend, contact: International Business Seminars 830-0902 OR: Jim Spiers, Asfet. to the Chair Marketing Dept., 965-2936 Discover the exciting world o f International Business! Scottsdale • 483-2100 (Scottsdale Rd. & Shea) We'll make sure you make It. GET INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS EXPERIENCE THIS YEAR! International Business Sem inars 1991/1992 Program s •Small classes of less than 10 students •Three diagnostic exams given throughout the oourse •Expert, trained teachers that have scored in the top 10% of the exams taught FREE adiagnostics available anytime c Wm®, D I 6 I T I I I X L fi l OIP Slate Press Thursday, O cto b er 10,1991 Page 14 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson T H E F A R S ID E By G A R Y LARSON © 1991 Universal Press Syndicate HERE -N HM WON'T3HEBE COMES HORRIFIED TC.SEE SU5\£ HOWCUR FACES HME TRA61CAV1X km newtttH&tó FROZEN ! m i tiPSN . Mother Goose and Grimm b y M ike P eters A t th e m o n thly m eeting o f S q uid head s A nonym ous D o o n esb u ry BY G ARRY TR UD EAU m m 9JPS YÒT. Wm KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Firefighters at station 19 have taken on tradition by making a pig their mascot, Kato the Rig Pig, of die Vietnamese potbellied variety, is a hit with firefighters and a steady stream of visitors. HB IS TOTAUX l i f HOT! I DON'T I f KNOWHOWYOU CANK&PWUR HANDS OFFHIM! “He’s got a rough life, doesn’t he?” firefighter Ray Wynn said as Kato lolled in his pen next to a water cooler., Wynn recently bought the pig and brought him to the station. The 4-month-old pig is about the size of a loaf of bread. He weighs 10 pounds and has a gold “Junior Fire Marshal” badge pinned to his red harness. When the alarm sounds, someone plops Kato in the back of a hook-and-ladder truck. Wynn concedes: “He doesn’t do much on the truck.” STUDENT P UBL I CA TI ONS ~TheJOuní^i/rf State Press S p a rk I H A Y D E N 'S FERRY W Tjetahook WE’RE OPEN LATE Open D aily fo r Lunch! Soda Available Coke Diet Coke Sprite Dr. Pepper M o n d a y -T h u rs d a y 11:00 A M -2 :0 0 A M F rid a y -S a tu rd a y 11:00 A M -2 :3 0 A M S unday 11:00 A M -2 :0 0 A M FREEDELIVERY 9 -0 0 6 4 Serving ★ mb, M esa, Chandler, Scottsdale, Gilbert) 1340 E. Apache AS U Best Quality, Best Service, Best Value! Student Handbook and Calendar Page 15 Thursday, O cto b er 10,1991 State Press PULLING IT IN G uliford steadies Sun Devils w ith focused play at split end By DAN ZEIGER State Press St. Louis meet 1st in season for badminton According to ASU split end Eric Guliford, the duties that com e with playing his position can easily be split into mathematical increments — and he thinks he’s got the numerical distribution figured out just right. D om inant ASU wants 11 th title “Actually, catching the hall is only about 10 percent of it,” Guliford said. “The rest of it is focusing and concentration^ how quickly y ou get around to see the ball and get your hands up to pull it in. Obviously, the quicker you can do that, it’ll be easier. Those are the little things that are important.” Since he began his Sun Devil career as a highly-touted recruit out of Peoria High School three years ago, the only constant to describe the play of Guliford has been 100 percent effort. But do not ask Guliford exactly what the statistical results of his labors have been, because chances are he doesn’t know. “I couldn’t tell you the number of catches I’ve had so far,” Guliford said. “I can tell you about the rdutes I’ve ran and the techniques that have helped me, but I try not to think in terms of stats. Just getting better is the key.” As the ASU badminton team departs for St. Louis Friday morn­ ing to compete in the St. Louis Classic, it will be aware of its obscurity among ASU sports — despite the fact it is the best in the nation. Most people only know that bad­ minton is a racquet sport played with something called a birdie on Chadwick what looks like a volleyball court. While relatively unknown in the U. S., badminton is played worldwide and is accepted as the national sport in many countries. In American badminton circles, the Sun Devils have built their reputation as a powerhouse with a dynasty comparable to the UCLA basketball teams of Coach John Wooden. The way in which both programs were able to consistently dominate play in their respective sports is what makes the analogy fit. While the UCLA dynasty is a thing of the past, ASU is alive and well. The Sun Devils are aiming for their 10th consecutive men’s, women’s and mixed team national championship — the fifth in a row under Coach Guy Chadwick. Chadwick attributes the success of the ASU program to the support given to it by the ASU Athletic Department, prim arily through its scholarship program. Only a handful of major colleges in the United States offer full-ride scholarships to badminton players. ASU is one of them. “We are able to attract some of the top (badminton) players in the U. S., many with Olympic potential,” Chadwick said. ASU’s appeal stretches far beyond the U. S. The Sun Devils have been able to successfully recruit top By MICHAEL FLORES State Press What does Guliford consider getting better? His play against Utah last weekend could serve as a perfect example. Guliford pulled in five passes for 90 yards, but ASU coach Larry Marmie said afterward that the junior had played his best overall game in different areas — blocking downfield, setting things up and participating on kick returns. But the thing that makes Guliford so special is his ability to catch the ball — in fact, he might be the most consistent and sure-handed receiver in the Pac-10. He leads the team with 17 receptions for 280 yards and a score this season, and it seems that almost anybody —from Marmie to Sun Devil receivers coach Don Bocchi to any of the quarterbacks — says that he has the best pair of hands they’ve ever seen. Guliford credits his pass-catching abilities to a number of factors. “I played a lot of sports in high school, especially baseball, which helped my hand-eye coordination a lot,” Guliford said. “I guess I have good-sized hands, which comes from my mom’s side of the family. I don’t have blazing speed, but God gave me lots of other abilities to make up for it, and I’m thankful for it.’’ Irwin Daugherty/Stat* Press ASU Junior split endErie Guilford leads the Sun Devils in recep­ tions with 17 catches in four games. But Guliford said that after getting in a pattern of catching pass after pass for so long, complacency — and some accidental drops — can set in. That’s why improving his performance from the previous one is so important to him. “You just know inside of you if you have gotten better from a week ago or not,” Guliford said. “It’s a matter of going out and working hard. The goal is to improve, and I think that is Turn to Blrdtes, page 17. T uni to G uliford, page 1?. Mens golf win encouraging for No. 1 ASU By AMY SLADE State Press T .J. Sokol/Stata P ra ia Women’s swim co-captains Heidi Hendricks and Jennifer McArtor both returned from in­ juries to swim this season. Fighting back injuries Swim captains rebound to earn team’s respect By MARK R. DOUD State Press By the time ASU swimmers Heidi Hendricks and Jennifer McArtor got over their injuries and into the pool last year, the season was almost over. But their determination must have been impressive to their teammates — they voted the duo co-captains. “ I had knee surgery last year,” senior All-America Hendricks said. “It was really hard to come back. I ended up swimming OK for the training I had. I got 14th in the 50-meter freestyle, and I went in the 100m breaststroke but didn’t score in that.” For McArtor, a former Saguaro High School star and state champion, multiple problems kept her from reaching her potential, according to Coach Tim Hill. “Last year Jennifer had some asthma problems and was really sick in the fall,” Hill said. “They didn’t know if she was going to be able to swim anymore. She had a rough spring with a minor shoulder injury and just never swam up to what she was capable of. “Jennifer still has a shoulder problem, but she’s learned to adapt. She’ll work around it.” According to Hill, knowing what his captains are made of makes it easier to count on them for team leadership. “I know they’re both motivated, and I Turn to Captains, page 17. The ASU men’s golf team got a sneak preview of the future at the Ping/Golfweek Preview in Albuquerque, N.M., and what the Sun Devils saw was quite encouraging. Playing in a field of strictly ranked teams on the University of New Mexico South Golf C o u r s e , s i t e of t h e 1992 NCAA Championships, the Sun Devils captured their first victory of the fall. Despite a 6-stroke victory over No. 13 Arkansas on Wednesday, ASU coach Steve Loy was not convinced the team could walk away with a national championship tomorrow. “Are we good enough to win it all?,” Loy said. “No, not yet.” Luckily, the NCAAs are not until June, giving Loy plenty of time to “play” with his lineup and “find the fifth and sixth m anneeded to secure an already impressive squad. The Sun Devils, who also competed on the same course last week in the Tucker Invitational (they took fourth), played with better depth, according to Loy. ASU had three players finish in the top 10 while one other missed by only two strokes. “It was a tremendous advantage playing (the same course) two weeks in a row,” Loy said. “We were better prepared this time out.” Redshirt freshman Todd Demsey was the low Sun Devil finisher, along with senior AllAmerican Brett Dean; both finished in a tie for fifth place with 5-under 211s. Demsey has now finished in the top 10 in all three of his collegiate tournaments, which includes a low score of 67 in the opening round of the Preview. “ I’m very proud of him; he’s an T.J. Sokol/Stata Pntas Senior Brett Dean tied fo r fifth in the'Ping GolfW eek Preview earlier this week, helping ASU to victory. outstanding player,” Loy said. “I’m looking forward to having him around for three more years.” Dean fired a final round of 68 to move up from 17th place on the final day to secure his first top-10 finish of the fall. “Any team can win on any given day,” Dean said. “But we started to play like we are callable of playing and we won . . . it was fun.” Freshman Trip Kuehne also had his best showing as a collegian, as be finished tied for 15th, only two strokes away from his first T o m to G olf , page 17. P a g e jó la State Preti T h u re d a ^ O c to b « ^ ^ ^ 9 9 1 Pirates win, Twins don’t Toronto evens series with 5-2 win behind Minnesota-killer Guzman MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Metrodome magic was simply no match for rookie Juan Guzman and Toronto’s bullpen. Guzman pitched 5% strong innings as the Blue Jays beat Minnesota 5-2 Wednesday to even the American League playoffs at one game apiece and break the Twins’ sevengame postseason winning streak in their high-decibel dome. After a day off, the series shifts to Toronto for Game 3 on Friday night. Scott Erickson (20-8) is scheduled to pitch for the Twins against left-hander Jimmy Key (16-12). The last time the Twins lost a postseason home game was in 1970, when they played at Metropolitan Stadium. But it really shouldn’t come as a surprise they lost to Toronto. Coming into Game 1 of the playoffs, the Blue Jays had won 10 of 12 games at the Metrodome and 12 of 18 overall against the Twins. Minnesota was trying to tie the record for consecutive postseason victories at home, set by the New York Yankees (1927-36). Guzman, 10-3 after his recall from Triple-A Syracuse on June 4, is becoming something of a Twins killer. He beat Minnesota starter Kevin Tapani for the third time this season. The top of the order came up big for the Blue Jays. Devon White had two hits and scored three runs and Roberto Alomar had two hits and scored a run. Each stole a base, too. Toronto Scored a run in the first when White led off with a single, stole second, took third on Alomar’s sacrifice mid came around on Joe Carter’s single. The top of the order got Toronto going again in the third when White doubled and moved to third on Alomar’s infield hit to third. Alomar stole second and both runners scored on Kelly Gruber’s broken-bat single to right. Something Special... Drug Enforcement Administration ■ aw enforcement is a rewarding and challenging career. It offers upward mobility, domestic and foreign assignments.The DEA is the Federal government's leading agency in the fight against drug trafficking) L M innesota's Chill Davis ponders the end of the Twins’ undefeated post-season record in the Metrodome during a 5-2 loss to Toronto, evening the playoff series at 1-1. Killer B s plus Van Slyke send Pittsburgh past young Braves, 5-1 PITTSBURGH (AP) — The B’s turned to ZZZs in last year’s National League playoffs, but the troika that has taken Pittsburgh to the playoffs the last two years had a Beeutiful start in Game 1 against Atlanta on Wednesday night. Andy Van Slyke homered and doubled in his first two atbats and Bobby Bonilla contributed two hits— and a big throw — as the Pirates took a 5-1 victory over the Braves. Atlanta’s young Braves entered the world of postseason play with a shaky seventh consecutive playoff loss, while the Pirates played with the confidence and composure that helped them to 98 regular-season victories — the third-best season in their history. And the B’s plus V — Bonilla, Barry Bonds and Van Slyke — were the big weapons that did a hatchet job on the Braves’ Tomahawk chops. Van Slyke had two RBIs by himself by the third inning with his second homer this year off Tom Glavine and an RBI double. Van Slyke hit just .194 against left-handers during the season. Bonilla, who hit .190 against the Reds last October, followed Van Slyke’s double with a run-scoring single in the third for just his second career postseason RBI. He added a SPECIAL AGENT S H B B single and had an assist when Mark Lemke was thrown at third in the Braves’ fourth. The Pirates became the first home team in four years to win Game 1 of tee playoffs — but they also won the opener last year in Cincinnati before losing four of tee next five. The Pirates have talked confidently since last month of reversing that defeat, with Bonilla hoping for a big finish to what almost assuredly will be the end to his Pittsburgh career. He said there is a “95 percent chance” he will sign elsewhere as a free agent later this year, “We’re not even dose,” Bonilla said of negotiations with Pittsburgh. The Pirates weren’t even close to Atlanta during tee season, losing nine of 12, but Leyland said, “That means nothing now.” \> Instead, starter Doug Drabek and reliever Bob Walk teamed on a four-hitter. Drabek strained his left hamstring while trying to stretch his double into a triple in tee sixth and was forced to leave the game. Walk, the Pirates’ starter and winner in Game 1 last year, finished up, allowing a ninth-inning homer to David Justice. D EA Special Agents conduct criminal investigations and prepare for the prosecution of m ajor violators of the drug laws of tiie United States. H ie minimum qualifications for the Special Agent position are: •Be a U.S. citizen. •Be a t least 21 years of age and not older than 36 a t appointm ent •Be in excellent physical condition. •Have a valid driver's license and ability to drive a vehicle at maximum highway speeds. •Be willing to relocate to another city in the U.S. •Have uncorrected vision o f not less than 20/200 in both eyes, corrected, 20/20 in one eye and 2 0/40 in the other. •A college degree in any field and one year of experience conducting criminal investigations or comparable experience. OR•A college degree in arty field and one of the following: •2.95 overall grade point average (GPA). •3.5 GPA in major field of study. •Standing in the upper 1/3 of class or major subdivision. •Membership in scholastic honor society. •One year of graduate study. Call Our Recruiting D ept at 602-640-5747 -You Can Make the Difference!- .ik - 9 3 P R E 3 m S E SwitA MESA NISSAN m N T S YOUR NISSAN and DATSUN SERVICE SPECIALISTS GROOVE MERCHANTS WE OFFER: • N IS S A N -T R A IN E D T E C H N IC IA N S • G E N U IN E N IS S A N P A R T S • Q U A L I T Y M A IN T E N A N C E A N D R E P A IR W ORK • R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S OCTOBER11,1991 r AtTHEPOINTE On South Mountain Sand Courts «vi CO UNTER PARTS TO ALL M U STU D EN TS, FACULTY A STAFF W ITH ABU ID CARO* •ID MUST BE PRESENTED AT TIME OF PURCHASE COURTESY SHUTTLE AND RENTAL CARS AVAILABLE Cover Good Food and Drinks • Dance to Live Music from 7 P.M. Until ? •You'll be helping to support a good cause SMITH MESA; NISSAN PARTS A SERVICE HOURS Monday 7:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Tum .-FiI. 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. PARTS OPEN BAT. SPONSORED BY 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. B f t W e're close to A S U .. . 1701W. BROADWAY MESA SERVICE PARTS 834-3366 834-0255 State Press Page 17 Thursday, O cto b e r 10,1991 Captains. Birdies. Continued from page 15. C ontinued from page 15. international players. “The international flavor makes it interesting and more fun,” Chadwick said. “It’s also a good learning environment.” Senior Jenny Chan is from Hong Kong, sophomore Andrea Andersson is from Sweden and junior Tom Reidy grew up in Ireland. Those three made up three of the four finalists at last year’s St. Louis Classic, which ASU dominated. Chan beat Andersson in the women’s final while Reidy lost in the men’s final to a player whom he later beat in another tournament. Despite, the perennial success of his squad, Chadwick is anxious to see how his team will perform. “We’ve practiced hard for about a month now. But you can practice until you’re blue in the face, yet without competition, you won’t know where you stand,” Chadwick He is also curious to see how the four new members of the team will perform in their first competition. Chadwick said he expects the women to dominate but said that the men’s draw will be tougher. Reidy, the Sun Devils’ top player and a U. S. Olympic team hopeful, has a great shot at the men’s title as well as the double’s title with partner Benny Lee, a former ASU standout. Reidy’s performances at recent Olympic qualifying events have raised his world singles ranking into the top 30, which would be good enough to make the Olympic squad if it was named tomorrow. Because of his accomplishments, Chadwick said that the team is content to let Reidy be the “highlight player” of the team. know they both care,” Hill said. “They’re focused in on what they want to do. 1 would expect, if they stay relatively healthy, ttiey’re going to be fine. I expect them to do real well.” Hendricks, a sociology major, an eighttime Indiana state individual champion and four-time collegiate All-American from Logansport, Ind., agrees with her coach. “I’m excited for this year,” she said. “I’m really ready to come back. I also know it’s my last year.” And what a last year it could be with the Olympics being held next summer. “I should make the (Olympic) trial cuts,” Hendricks said. “I’m working toward that. I’ve done the 50 freestyle time. I just have to do it this year.” Getting to the Olympic trials and making the team are two different things, said Hendricks. She should know. “Making the Olympic trials is a big honor,” she said. “I’ve been to the trials before, in 1988. It’s really fast. The only way you make the (U. S. Olympic) team is if you win.’’ McArtor would also like to make the Olympic trials, which will beheld March 1-6 in Indianapolis, but knows making the team would be very difficult. “Sure I’d like to go,” she said, “Every swimmer would. I’ll just do my best and work hard and see what happens.” Doing her best as captain has also been evident, Hill said. “Jennifer is a quiet leader, ” Hill said of the accounting major. “She’s an analytical type of person. She’ll work hard, and we’re looking at an outside chance for her to make the (Olympic trials) cut in the 200 freestyle or 500 freestyle.” Hill said Hendricks is more high-spirited, someone not afraid to speak up. “At this point, I’m going to ask them to take a little bit stronger role,” Hill said. “In terms of being more active now that they know the people on the team better.” With 14 new faces to get to know in the form of freshmen, transfers and redshirts, the captains have their hands full. “So far they’ve done a good job,” Hill said. “What’s really helped more than anything this year is that they’ve taken it upon themselves to make sure our hew people feelmore Comfortable and part of the team.” The job of captain is important to both s wi mm er s, an d they welcom e the responsibility as well as the challenge. “I was a little surprised,” Hendricks said about her election. “I wanted to be captain. I get along with the team well, and I like them. It’s a lot harder than I thought it would be. You’ve got to set a good example for the other swimmers.” McArtor agreed. “You can’t slack off in practice;” she said. “You’ve got to keep things in order.” Hill says captains need to give up a little of themselves sometimes in order to make the team better. It may include swimming relays or swimming events they may not be as good with in terms of performance. “They help guide the team,” he said. “I try to get them to understand what we’re doing. Their job is to make sure we’re all working toward a common goal. They must set examples in terms of training habits.” Hill said it’s the sacrifices of the captains and upperclassmen that will make the difference. “ Good leaders are people that you don’t need to tell a lot of things to,” Hill said. “I want all our upperclassmen to be leaders. They’ve been around awhile, and they just know they have to give up some things sometimes to get where they’re going.” G uliford Continued from page 15. 7pm~11pm 25 Beers 25 $ Shots of Maui Schnapps 1.00 Monster Beers & 2 .0 0 Long Island Teas FREE ADMISSION THURSDAY ALL NIGHT w / this coupon what an athlete should expect of himself.” Despite his solid play so far this season, Guliford said that there is no shortage of things to improve on. “My performance so far isn’t everything that I hoped it would be,” Guliford said. “I don’t think that I’ve done all the stuff that I could have. But that’s the kind of person I am — I want to always do more. If you ask me the same question at the mid of the season, I’ll say the same things.” Improving was something that was very important to Guliford at the beginning of this season, as he said that he wasdetermined to help rid the team of the memories of last: year’s disappointing campaign. The Sun Devils’ surprising start this season can partly be attributed to what they like to call a “new attitude,” which is something that Guliford said he hopes to exemplify in his play. Guliford is an obvious leader among the ASU receivers, but he said he would like to be an influence to the entire team. exp.10*10 91 B rian P age & th e N ext 7p m ~11 pm Live on th e Patio “I think that the coaching staff has called upon me to be a leader,’’ Guliford said. “I’m one of the oldest among our core of wide receivers, but I think that I try to lead by example for the rest of the team. I’m not the kind of guy who’s going to go crazy and yell to lead, but you have to do it right. “If you come out here every day and try to do it right, the other players see that and it gets contagious. Soon, everybody out here wants to give their best effort.” To go along with his responsibilities on the field, Guliford also has a pair of important matters in his life — girlfriend Michelle and infant daughter Breanna, who are regular viewers at almost each ASU practice. While Guliford said he is beginning to truly appreciate the duties of being a parent, he added that there are few things he enjoys more than their company. “When you see parents, you really don’t know what it is like,” Guliford said. “It takes time, patience and tolerance. But she is my firstborn, and I enjoy being with her and Michelle as much as anything. “Every time I see (Breanna), it seems she gets bigger. I’m a sociology major, so I always try the psychological techniques that I learn in class on her. She’s fun to be around.” ASU Note •ASU coach Larry Marmie said Wednesday that the recent acknowledgement that a score of 17 on the college-board ACT test was the equivalent of the SAT 700 score was “unfortunate for those kids who got 17.” Previously, the minimum standard for a student-athlete to avoid Prop 48 status was a 700 on the SAT or an 18 on the ACT. However, recent studies proved a 17 ACT score was the 700 SAT equal, and not 18. The rule will not be retroactive to those already affected. “The kids are the ones who get hurt by it,” Marmie said. “My first reaction is ‘Is there something we can do for (those hurt by the past, rule)? A big thing would be if they could maybe get that year of eligibility back.” Marmie added that star recruit Carlos Artis, a Prop 48 casualty, was right around the 17 mark on his college boards. G o lf & coming 0ct.14th= Big Audio Dynam ite II 4 3 0 N. S c o tts d a le Rd. 8 9 4 0 5 3 3 Continued from page 15. top-10 finish. “I played pretty well, but I gave away a couple of shots,” Kuehne said. “There is always room for improvement, so I have to keep working hard.” The Sun Devils shot a tournament low 12-under 276 in the first round of tournament action on Monday morning, but saw their lead cut to three after an afternoon round in which ASU shot a l-over 289. “We made a lot of mistakes and didn’t capitalize on some key ppportunities,” Loy said, “We could’ve run away with the tournament if the guys didn’t play like they were tired in the later rounds.” ' Kuehne agreed. “We were getting kind of tired, and we were, lucky nobody else shot a great (second) round,” Kuehne said. “We all played OK, but no one really took charge.” Another plus for the Sun Devils was beating rival UofA. The No. 5 Wildcats won the Tucker, but finished fourth at the Preview, 11 strokes behind ASU. “It’s always nice to beat the Wildcats,” Loy said. 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For more in fo rm atio n c a ll Z ee, W est U SA 820-3333. FEMALE NONSMOKER/DRINKER 2 b ed ro o m . 2 bath apartm ents. $207/month, 1/2 utilities. 831-0262, Andrea. HONDA INTERCEPTOR 1000! Runs great, excellent condition, low miles. Lots accessories. $4,000/offer. David, 839-1247. C U STO M -B U ILT CO M PU TER S at wholesale prices. Built to your specifi­ cations. V eltri E lectronic, Inc. Cali 926-7797. BICYCLES IBM COMPATIBLE Recieve IBM compatible 286 computer for only $297. 386 & 486 available. 253-8479 TANDY 1000, 128-K memory. O ne disk-drive, monitor screen. Dot metric printer $395.00.961-1707. JEWELRY A LW A Y S B U Y IN G Jew elry o f all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S outh M ill A venue, T em pe C enter, 968-6074. URGENT! FEMALE roommate needed by November 1st Own room! $175.76 plus utilities. 649-8712, leave message. ANNOUNCEMENTS University Lutheran Church Sundav Worshio 10:15am Jazz Liturgy O ctober 16th CAO 340 East 15th St ¡)4 % 5 (1 blk east of College Ave.) CHEAP TRANSPORTATION, nothing fancy, just wheels to get you there. Ideal for petite person. $60.350-0506. SEN TU R IO N M ASTER, Shim 600, 60cm, 1 month old, $500/offer. Marc, 784-8938, leave message. TREK 1000,47cin, blue, aluminum, cyclocomputer, accessories. $375 firm. 969-9914. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places USA, Also worldwide. I a lso bu y tra n sfe ra b le coupons. 968-7283. TRAVEL OVERSEAS (Europe, Orient + South Pacific) and earn upper division B usiness credit! M eeting 10/15/91, 3pm, BAC324. Call International Busi­ ness Services, 830-0902. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FR EE D EL IV ER Y . L oo k in g to do something special for someone? Send 12 beautiful long-stem roses for only $22. 941-1603. QUALITY NEON beer signs. Priced to sell. Contact Eve, 939-7503. *83 DATSUN 280ZX, red, beauty, auto, new tires, air, must sell, got company car. First $4,400 takes i t 996-3212. 1987 NISSAN 200SX. Original AM/FM stereo, 60,000 miles, white, excellent condition. $6,300/offer. 952-8269. CHEAP! FBI/U.S. se iz e d 89 M E R C E D E S ..$200. 86 VW ...$50, 87 M E R C E D E S...« 00, 65 DENTAL ORTHODONTICS progres­ sive office in Scottsdale will train you fo r an e x c itin g , re w a rd in g c aree r. 948-1440. ★ ★ E A S Y CASH ★ ★ Com pletely automated donor plasmapheresis. Discover how easy, safe and fast it is to: Earn $30+ a week! while donating much needed plasma. Mention this ad fo r a $5 bonus on your first donation (M o n d a y-S a tu rd a y). O nly center in Valley paying: $10- 1st donation, $20- 2nd donation in same week. UNIVERSITY PLASM A CENTER Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe 894-2250 FINNISH-RUSSIAN SPEACKING per­ sons wanted for international trade and travel development office. C all Nick, 759-9703. HELP WANTEDGENERAL G E N E R A L O FFIC E w ork. T y p in g skills, good phone voice, some computer knowledge-437-1048. A PPL IA N C E D E L IV E R Y person. Some appliance knowledge or experi­ ence helpful. 437-1048. AUTOMOBILES DATA SO U RCE M ARK ET research firm is currently hiring telephone sur­ vey interviewers. No selling, will train. $4.50 per hour. Bilingual a plus. 8am to 2:30pm shift, 3:30pm to 9:30pm shift, and 6:30pm to 10:30pm shift available. Apply ¡if person, Monday-Friday: 10am to 4pm, 4515 South McClintock #101. Tempe. 831-2971, E O E FUN! FUN! Hard-working, dependable people needed to work inside. Delivery drivers also needed. Apply in person only after 3pm at little Caesar's Pizza on the northeast com er o f University and Hardy. No phone calls please! Now hiring to fill many entry level po­ sitions. Starting salary range to $24,000 w ith travel benefits. (303)441-2455. ASU. Large yard, privacy. $250/month including electricity/water. 966-3155. , HELP WANTED -GENERAL W IN 2 round-trip tickets to Cancún, Mexico! 51.00 raffle tickets available at old MU Info Desk. For more info: 965M U AB. AIRLINE NEED ROOMMATE im mediately. 3 bedroom, own bath, large yard, $275 plu s 1/3 utilities. C herry o r Doreen, 730-9211. SHARE TWO bedroom, two bath house with couple, pets okay, 2-1/2 miles from ASU, yard, washer/dryer, $248 + utilities, 991-3787. .. . - FOR SALE 85' Honda Interceptor 500. Excellent condition. R ed/w hite w ith helmet, storage bag, $1,450. Call An­ thony 784-6053. 286/12,640K RAM, 43 meg hard drive, 1.2 floppy, math co-processor, EG A c o lo r m onitor, D O S 3.3. $695. 837-0483. SM IT H CO RO N A PW P-55D W ord Processor. Includes: Spell Right dic­ tionary, unlim ited disk storage, auto correction, disks, manual and carrying case. $200. M ike, 967-7871 or 2421539. STUNNING VIEW lake two Balconies ! 2 bedroom ; vaulted celling; all a p ­ pliances; Tenq>e Lakes; $74,900. Carl 897-1899. 1987 HONDA Elite 250, excellent con­ dition, 6,000 miles. $2,000 or best off­ er. Contact 230-9345. HONDA ELITE 15p, 1 year, need to sell, w illin g to negotiate. R ebecca, 756-0710, message 965-3774. T0W NH0MES/C0ND0S F M ^ E _ 1 BED RO OM condo, all am enities, Tem pe V illas, 1111 E ast U niversity, #125. Excellent condition. 952-1745. M 0T 0R Q Y C ^S__ COMPUTERS IBM XT compatible, 512K, 360K flop­ pies, 32 meg hard drive, color monitor. $S50A»ffcr. Paul, 784-0792, ATTENTION COLLEGE students: full­ time, part-time positions needed. Flexi­ b le hours, no experience necessary. Earn while you learn 829-6898. H EL P W ANTED: D rivers. M ondayF rid ay , lim ited delivery area, lla m 2pm. $4.50diour plus tips. 966-9266. HOUSECLEANING AND general as­ sistance. Flexible hours. $5 .50/hour. Call 438-1222. LOOKING FOR male personal care at­ tendant for 22-year-old, good-tempered m ale w ith Cerebral Palsy. AM or PM a v a ila b le , pay $7-$9 p e r h our. 994-4590. ;; M A K E $ 1 5 0 -$ 3 0 0 B E A p a rt o f the V a lle y 's prem ier movie theatre! The Fashion Square Lux­ ury 7 Cinemas is now hiring part-time cashiers/consesskm attendants. W e are looking for bright, friendly and outgo­ ing individuals to join our team. Prim­ ary shifts available are either 11am6pm or 6pm -llpm . Apply in person at our box office (inside the Scottsdale Fashion Square Mall on the Palm Court level). B E ON TV . M any needed for com ­ mercials. Now hiring all ages. For cast­ ing info, call (615)779-71 U , e x t T130. ; ■■ ; . C A SH IER /W A IT R E SS N EED ED Thursday, Friday 11-3, Saturday, Sun­ day 9-2. Apply at Pete's 19th Tee, Roll­ ing Hills G olf Course, 1/2 mile north of Mill Avenue Bridge. CASTING CALL: Talent for print, TV, movies, photos, CEEG Entertainment, "Star Seekers" hotline, 274-6362 In 3-10 hours by selling 50 funny college t-shirts. No financial obligation. Smaller and larger quantities available. Cali toll-free 1-800-728-2053. MARKETING ASSISTANT for Scot­ tsdale stockbrokerage firm . Flexible hours, full or part-time. $5 p e r hour. Call M ike Vucekovich or Kirk Tushaus at 941-2100, Kemper Securities Group, Infc. ' . .. . M A R K E T I N G /S A L E S P E O P L E NEEDED to promote a small business's new product. C om m ission p lu s rec­ ommendation for your resume. No in­ v estm ent. C all M ark , 4 2 3 -5 6 7 6 or Dave, 752-1932. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Tech­ nic ia n . P a rt-tim e p erm a n e n t year round. One semester of engineering or technology and some job experience re­ quired. $6/and up. 956-8200. Marker 38 bindings. lust like new, used twice. $400/offer. 730-6465. MOTORÇYCŒ S= _ YAMAHA KEYBOARD - never been used. Asking $250 or best offer! Call 929-0137. '86 HONDA Elite 80. Great condition. L o w m iles. $6 0 0 /b e st o ffer. C all 890-7806, leave message. COCKTAIL SERVER, The Blue Igua­ na. Apply in person, Monday through Friday, 12-3pm, Scottsdale/McDowell Roads. 1985 HONDA B ite 250. Good condi­ tion, locking trunk. $875.839-6259. CLASSIFIEDS REALLY work! Call 965-6731 to place your ad today! NOON IS the deadline to get a classi­ fied ad in for the next day's paper! Don't miss itl SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES FURNITURE 967-3! $149 Double-size 9 2 1 -9 0 8 4 CLASSIFIEDS WORK - believe it! 1 w ith frame ROOMMATES NEEDED male and fe­ male, to share two bedroom, two bath Apartment. $265.00 plus half utilities. Contact Foxfire Apartments 966-4655. Rental Service ANNOUNCEMENTS FUTON NONSMOKING MALE fo r own room. Huge house! Loaded. $325 includes util­ ities. Tim, 966-5039/965-3529. FREE Apartment 8 3 8 -8 8 6 0 R E N ^L ^A fflN G ^^ FEM A LE ROOM M ATE needed for 2nd sem ester lease. $300/m onth in­ cludes everything. Very close to cam­ pus. Please call, must move, 350-4X262. 1 b ed room Pool, free cable TV; covered parking, laundry facilities. H 0 M E S ro R ^ L ^ _ _ FURNITURE RENT OR sale 2 master suite bedroom condo in Questa Vida overlooks main recreation area. Full size washer/dryer fireplace, microwave, ceiling fans. Best location in subdivisión. Call Joe 9854111. ' - FEMALE ROOMMATE needed for 2 bedroom, 2 bath. $255 plus cheap utili­ ties. 894-1017. C LO SE TO ASU LARGE, PRIVATE room for rent with C atholic family. $200/month. Broadway/Rural. 894-6366. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, all amen­ ities, pool, w asher/dryer, microwave, close to campus. 967-2344. Brand new carpet, turn., + appliances. 1 block from ASU. Pool, BBQ's, laundry facilities. Immaculate apts., must see! ASU AREA, studio, 1 and 2 bedrooms fo r ren t. $260 and up. 967-4908 or 968-8838. R 00M S F0R R EN ^_ B E D S- B RA N D new : T w in m attress/box $50, full $60, queen $90. Free delivery. 540-8785. COMPLETE BED set, includes Kingsize waterbed. Dirt cheap. Just want to g e t rid of. A ll w ood, beautiful set. 921-4289/840-7132. FOR SALE: Computer desk, 1 year old, white, $175/offer. Also have matching bookshelf for $30/offcr. Call 897-1864. OAK BEDROOM set with queen size bed and lamps- $360. Super single waterbed- $50.951-9031. W A TER B ED S: S U PE R SIN O L E , Queen, King, complete $59; bookcase, headboard $79; with drawers $129; de­ luxe $249.966-7544. ORDER CLERKS! 12 persons needed for our inside sales order department. Average $ 7 -ll/h o u r base. Bonus plus ra p id adv an cem en t. C all M att, 966-7262. SOFT SUDS Free Vacuum VS/asn Try our 50$ Self Serve bays or our $2.00 Touchless Automatic Jet Wash and use our Vacuums fo r Free. Apache & Terrace This Saturday and Sunday October 12th & 13th Stole Pubi RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTED -GENERAL OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-2,000 month. Summer, year-round. All countries, all field». Free info. W rite UC, P.O. Box 52-AZ03, Corona Del Mar, California, 9 2 6 2 5 . ________ . RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Computer literate with strong clerical stalls. Min­ im um 25 h o u rs / w eek . Sandy, .967-4441 R ESPO N SIB LE PERSO N w anted to manage small conq>lex close to A.S.U. campus. Salary plus apartment includes utilities. M ust be available a t least 1 year. 967-5206. SH O E SH IN E R S w a n ted , in m ajor country-w estern bars, part-tim e eveaings. S6-$10/hour. Call 336-8202. TALENT NEEDED M ovie extras, television, commercials, voice-overs, etc. Call for an interview, 957-7434 W ANTED COMPUTER Programmer working on Database, Dataflex, Novell, A dvanced N etw are part-tim e B arrett Jackson 273-0791. W ANTED: PHOTOGRAPHERS. Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is looking for ex­ perienced photographers. All film and chemicals provided. A great way to get photos published ! Contact Scott Burgus immediately at Matthews Center Room 50 or call 965-6881. WE WANT YOU! For the Sun Devil Sprk Yearbook Mar­ keting staff. If you are interested, please call Us at 965-6881, ask for Shannon. Thanks! HELPW ANTED-SALE^ SPO RTS & WINGS 2 s a te llite s 11 s c r e e n s W o o d s h e d II Northwest corner ot Dobson & Untv 844-SH ED We show all Bears. Vikings & Packers games.______ J MUSIC WANTED: VOCALIST for Alternative Rock band, influences: U2, Cult, R.E.M. and Ozzy Osbourne. Stage presence de­ sired, if you can play guitar great Call 784-9478. WANTED: SALES Reps who are ag­ gressive. self-starter. You will be sell­ ing video rental promotion packages for the largest, oldest video promotion com­ pany in Arizona. Seletees will receive extensive training, guaranteed hourly w age an d valuable experience. Call 921-7755. WET SEAL now hiring for enthusiastic Career-minded management and cus­ to m e r s e rv ic e re p re sen ta tiv e s. F o r m ore in fo rm a tio n call F ie sta M all 644-1546, Scottsdale Fashion Square 423-9017, Paradise Valley 4944)335. A MEDICAL OFFICE in Scottsdale needs full time front and back office help. Typing, clerical and computer drills necessary. Medical ex­ p e rie n c e h e lp fu l b u t w ill train 941-3812. ~ HELP WANTED-FOOD' SERVICE A C C E PTIN G A PPL IC A TIO N S for driven and counter help. Earn up to $8 per hour at Sammy B i Pizza 945-8850. FIENDLY, ENERGETIC person need­ ed Monday-priday lOam-ipm, flexibel hours. Apply in person after 2pm,The Yogurt and Sub Connection, 1074 East T H I p K i p v .■ NEEDED CHEF. Experience in Persian or Middle East food. Call 966-^9502. RESTAURANTS/ BARS pi b SI00 OFF Any Pizza 1 2 * or 16" 1 coupon per pizza 968-6666 1301 E. University SIGKAP ANGIE-SOME o f my hints might have been wrong, hut fortunately you'll know before long. Here's a hint that's definately true-I'm your mom and H ove you! AKE P A T -1 am thrilled to Death for formal. The IA T Latin Scholar. DKE- THANKS for last night's w on­ derful dinner. W e enjoyed it alot! Love, thcD.G's. AE MCFLY- W e "whipped it " good this weekend! Thanks for being such an awesome date! Love AGD D onna Trixie- Thanx for coming with on Mon­ day! Go Germans! -KA Gentlemen. ADPI ALPHA Members- W e love you and are always there if you need any­ thing! Love, the Actives. LAMBDA CHI Craig G. D o you have your car shocks ready fo r Saturday? Love your backseat driver. AETI YOU keep talking - we'll keep playing. _______ AXA CRAIG G. Looking forward to Saturday I hope you score high! Can’t w hit Love Carol ATA GERBIL- Help it's dark in here. I'm suffocating! Hope you see sunshine soon! Love the rest of the Alpha Gam Gerbil Clique! ASU VS. UofA Blood Drive - Oct. 3rd thru 11th. Let's beat UofA! MY GIDGET psychic sister! U R the best! W e are going to rage this year and hang out at Dana Point Life's a beach and we all surf to heaven. Love, psychic sister #2. V , ■' „ ■ PI PHI- Sissy. Thanks for a great Birth­ day. Looking forward to a super wee­ kend. Love, Dale. BILL KAVAN- wishing you a godsped recovery. BRONWYN- SPIRITS of Death, souls of sorrow, a whole other world of fun begins tomorrow. CHIO KIM what an awesome Big Sis! Couldn't ask for better! Your Little Sis Brenda. CONGRATULATIONS TO Alpha Chi Omega's newest initiates! BA. X Q G R A M S-JO Y ? A re y ou ly ing again? Ha! I couldn't ask for a neater grandus. Love, Jen. X fi KAREN S.-Hola big sis! Holy weekend-you better w atch that intram ural trophy like a hawk. (Betty) thanks for - listening. Love, Pledgelet. XQ- Y O U R com pany w as m ost en­ chanting last evening a t R ed Robin. Love, KA Pledges. XQ- Y O U R com pany w as m ost en­ chanting last evening at R ed Robin. Love, KA Pledges. C p \y ic DEKES BILL and (T)ed- How is Death hangin? PETS ATTENTION ALL students! Buy your Bar Cards at the Cady Mall. Save money on food, drinks, and fun! HELP WANTEDCLERICAL SOT THE men o f t K E would like to welcome you u d hope to have many succesful exchanges. rB AMI and Anrdrea, congradulations on junior panhellenic social and publicity!! Love in IIKE. . PERSONALS AX - HEY B ro's victory is alm ost in sight no row, no problem. AAA JENIFER, get ready to see a dead man dance! Your Deke date. D EK E "W IL L IE " K avan- g e t w ell soon. You're gonna miss a "killer" for­ mal! Weaver Southern. P JD . DEKE BILL Kavan, hope you get well toon. The ladies o f Alpha Gamma Delta. D EK E B ILL K avan- W ishing yo u a speedy recovery. Deke Pledge C lass Fall 1991. DEKE LA NCE presents the beautiful and killer Ayteoe to the deadliest party there ever will be. DEKE MARKY Marc: Y o. it's about that time... for Undertaker's Ball! (Yo, c'mon swing it!) DEKE'S- KNOW thou the secret o f a spirit! SERVICES PERSONALS DEKE: HEY chief! John and Lisa are going to g et "b u rie d " F riday night! P J D . 86. AKE BILL Kavan - Get well soon. 101- OCTOBER 26. Be there! PR O G R A M M E R 'S W A REH OU SE seeks salesAech-support team member w ith co m p u ter science background. M ust h ave e x cellen t com m unication skills and self-directed work abilities. Contact Laurie James at 443-Q580. PERSONALS__s_ _ _ _ DEKES- NIGHTSHADE w ishes and H emlock dream s - U ndertaker's Ball Fall 1991. PART-TIM E R ETAIL sales position for men and w om en's fashions at the B orgata. Sales experience preferred. Call Malt 468-3007. pizzt a Page 19 Thursday, O cto b er 10¿ 1991 0 X BRET, Formal was great! Every­ thing from those long 7 m inutes, to "Rose, Rose, Rose," to being the last one’s up at Wooley*s. Thanx for .'every-', thing. Renee. R .I.P, PL ED G E Sunshine died on a Cloudy Day. R.I.P. TRO Y died from "tooting his own Hora" one time too many. ROSS-I AM looking forward to Friday night. W e are going to have a blast! Love always Trade. SCOTTMEISTER SCOTT-A-RAMA. scott-a-rino, andiam o o ra a H avasu. Tam o molto. Die (beeping) Janet Love lots. Peaches. EAT ROBYN-1 know yqu will dazzle us on Monday! You've got the personality. ZAT. Maria. THE D C S want to say "thanks again" for all the great support we had for An­ chor Splash, and to say "congrats" to the winners! Large Houses: 1st: SAE; 2nd: Pike; 3rd: Sigma Nu. Small houses: 1st, Theta Chi; 2nd: ZBT; 3rd: ATA. Yea, guys! THETA C M "It's Pat" hope you had as good a time Saturday as I did! I promise no wakeup calls this weekend- no more champagne for me! Love Lisa________ WHOEVER RETURNED my keys back to PV East from somewhere around ritter-Thank You! ADOPTION Tutoring —All subjects IL L DO your typing, my home. Grace, 967-8034. Near Southern and PriesL LETTER QUALITY word processing for your typing needs. APA/MLA, fast .turnaround. $1.5 0 /u p . R oxanne, 437-8830. New location! PERFECT PAPERS RELAX! TYPING/WORD PROCESSING Let me turn your rough draft into a re­ port you'll be proud of. Professional word processing. Rush jobs okay. Rea­ sonable rates. Theresa, 924-1976. .§ 15+ YEARS experience. Quality secre­ tarial services. N ew sletters, resumes, graphics, laser printing. Sheri Patrick961-1411. W O RD PR O C E SS IN G , s e c re ta ria l services. 27 years experience. Student discounts. Southwest corno’. Miller and Chaparral. 994-8145. A C CU R A TE EX P E R IE N C E D typing/word processing. WordPerfect 5.1. Reports, resumes, etc. Laura 820-0305. TUTORS ALL PAPERS, resumes, editing, tran­ scribing, grammar and spelling checks. C o lleg e grad u sin g IB M com puter. 964-0994. WILL TUTOR ETC 201, EET 205, or related. Cheap. Josh, 832-0482. W ILL TU TO R S pan ish -E n g lislu or English-Spanish. Cheap. Josh 832-0482. WANTED PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Call TOLL FREE & discuss options. California counselor and attorney. Bonnie & Marc Gradstein 1-800-922-0777 C H IL D C A R E ^ ^ ^ NEED HAPPY, active, directive female to c a re for 2 children, T uesday and Thursday 2-7pm, Scottsdale area. Need own car and references. 994-4547. N EE D PA R T-TIM E bab y sitter w ith light housekeeping, morning hours, 1 toddler, my home. Call 437-3428 after 5:30pm* HOTELS/MOTELS Walk to ASU & Tempe Night Life •AAA Approwd-Gexn ■FrceHBO S fiO a U O •Quiet-Friendly A S U Rate .ficeLoolCdli •ReeCoaLBreakfast •TryOur(tarneSedudedPool BO R O R m TYPING/ W O R D P R O C E glN G ^ Sendee includes typing (computerized), full editing, grammar, syntax, spelling correction. Graphics capability. Quick turnaround. Experienced editor. B est rates around. Jim, 945-6793. THAT MOLTEY drama- Oh be sure. It shall not b e forgotten! D eke Undertakers Bail 1991. m n 1005 E. Apache Blvd./At Rural, Just 5 M inutes N o rth o f Superstition Frwy. Next Door l b Holiday Inn on Restaurant Row Tempe, AZ 85281 (602) 968-7871 Present Coupon A t Check In Good Thru 12/22/91 SERVICES iyjTTElg) $500 OFF CUTS 9 6 8 -5 9 4 6 TUTORS TUTORS EL EC TR O LY SIS— PERM A N EN T hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. S tudent discounts. Call for more information: 969-6954. H E BRANKI, I thought you were just walking him out to the car? What took so long?? Luv ya, Carol. ¿jiggg PM AN- ROSES are re d , v iolets are blue, I answer "A," how about you? A + Electrolysis f t waxing- When both health f t beauty matter. Licensed electrolygist 962-6490._____________ _ N eed Help? C a ll. . . Tutors Unlim ited Convenient Times Convenient Locations One on One Groups Low Rates Tutore H'utim f a 964-4434 RESUMES $29.95 l-page resume, 10 copies, 10 blank sheets, 10 envelopes & 1 MAC diskette. 24-hour delivery. A L P H A G R A P H IC S , 122 E. University, Tempe 968-7821 A PA /M L A EX P E R IE N C E D ty p ing/woid processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. MODELS WANTED for Fashion Show on cam pus. A pplications available at MUAB desk (MU 3rd floor). Must be in before 5pm on October 11th. Get a free pair o f jeans! YOU CA N p la c e your classified ad over the phone with Visa, MasterCard & American Express! Call 965-6731 ! PHOTOGRAPHY ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186. ASU WEST is only one mile horn Pre­ cision Typing f t Word Processing, Call Mary at 843-1641 for student discount C LO SE ST TO ASU. A ccurate, fast, reasonable word processing with làser printer.. G rap h ics. S tu d e n t/fac u lty w elco m e. A u to m ated S e c re ta ry , 829-8854. C RE A TIV E T Y P IN G , term papers, re su m es, e ssa y s, laser p rin ter, re a ­ sonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. r v PARTY P I C ’S Wild and Crazy Photos of Y o u r G ro u p Your Them e Y o u r L o c a tio n Masterfully crafted in B&W by the photographer who's as nuts as you are! Parties on speculation- Xmas card photos. 8 2 9 -9 2 4 0 Your Individual Horoscope :FrancesDrake : (with this ad )~ Univ. &Dorsey fl0(L1TJ7 ! Next to Beauvais j FO R FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11,1991 A R IE S ' (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You have terrific drive now and are capable o f record-breaking accomplish­ ments on the job. Your efforts should be marked with success. Congratulations. TA U R U S (Apr. 20 to M ay 20) A minor difference could occur with a friend. Judgm ent is good now regard­ ing business interests. Your attention turns to travel or educational matters later. G E M IN I (May 21 to June 20) Partners make plans together about the future. Judgment is o n the money now in relationship matters. Luck is with you in business and financial inter­ ests. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Y ou’re able to get a lot accomplished on the jo b today and later w ill be celebrating w ith friends and loved ones. Feelings grow stronger in romance. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 27) A domestic project is brought to a successful conclusion. A stroke o f luck benefits you in your career. Mental hob­ bies appeal to you now. Romance is favored. V IR G O (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Y ou’ll enjoy sports, exercise, and recreational pursuits today. An exciting travel invitation could com e now. Crea­ tive types m eet with success. LIB R A (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You express yourself well today and should m ake those important phone calls. M eet with bankers about property interests. Fam ily interests are high­ lighted. S C O R P IO (Oct. 23 to N oy. 2 i) Judgment is excellent when shopping today. Good new s com es from a partner. Evening hours accent togetherness and pleasant tim es w hen socializing. S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 22 to D ec. 21) W riters and speakers are in fine form today. A project on the back burner now gets hot. Som e get a lucky new assign­ m ent or recognition for work already done. C A PR IC O R N (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Private talks about financial interests go well today. Y ou may decide to take a more active role in a group activity. By all means go out for a good time tonight. A Q U A RIUS (Jan. 2 0 to Feb. 18) Y ou'll be able to Straighten out a dif­ ference with a friend today. Keep your cards close to your chest in business now. Home matters prosper tonight. P ISC E S (Feb. 19 to M ar. 20) R esearch a b o u t a c areer concern proves successful. Luck comes to you thro u g h frien d sh ip s. P articipator in group activities. Tonight is special! YOU BORN TODAY are idealistic and work best w hen inspired. Y ou’re usually adept at getting your ideas across to others and can succeed in comm u n ic a tio n s . Y o u a re a lte rn a te ly diplom atic and tem peram ental. You enjoy being before the public and place a high demand on-financial and emo­ tional security . Often you have a special talent for music. Law, brokerage, w rit­ ing, and public speaking often appeal to you. B inhdate of; Eleanor Roosevelt, - h r s t lady; W illie H oppe, b illia rd s player, and Francois M auriac, writer. C o p y rig h t 1991 b y g i n g P a u m a S yn d ica le , In c . Page 80 State Pices Thursday, O cto b er 10,1991 DO ING IT RIG HT FOR 1991 Casual combos add up to style that you can be comfortable with. The look is easy, the feel is right. Maritile S Francois Girbaud» has a number of ways to put you at ease; on and off campus. Shown from our collection: Striped long-slewed In biue/wtxte Sizes S-M -l-Xl. «2,00. Belted baggy cowboy jean in super-soft wntage v«sh Join us for a Juniors and Young M en’s Girbaud" Fashion Extravaganza with giveaways amt moral -Enjoy music, mayhem, merriment and food, ■ Wednesday, October 16, __ 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m „ campus, in front of the Memorial Union. j^ ^ ^ ^ H F R e g is t e r to win a pair of Girbaud* jeans listen to p| the M om ingstaf Band live and m person, get some Gittoaud® gifts and more! Event is sponsored by the Memorial Union Activities uoaro Special Events Committee. Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-0 In Phoenix at Metiocantar, Paradise VaHay, Fiesta M ail. ChrW bwn, Scottsdale and Superatition Springs. Shop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-8, Sunday 12-8 at Path Central and Westridge. We welcome your Dillard's Credit Card, The American Express41 Card, Mastercard? Diners Club International, Visa? and The Discover Card.