State Press © Copyright, State Press, 1991 Tem pe, Arizona Tuesday, O ctober 29,1991 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 75 No. 44 C ET p o n d e r s r e s p o n s e to P o s t c o lu m n George W ill criticizes ASUs decision on Chavez By SONJA LEWIS State Press Campus Environment Team officials likely will determine today whether to respond to a nationally syndicated column they say “misrepresents” ASU’s decision to invite controversial “ English-only” proponent Linda Chavez to a debate. The letter would respond to a column by Washington Post columnist George Gordon Will that was printed last week. In his Column, Will said the former conservative U. S. Civil Rights Commission director was reissued an invitation to Bender on Feb. 26. “George Will gives the impression that we only invite speak in a debate-style forum at ASU — only after being “disinvited” as a solo speaker earlier for holding views that conservative speakers if they’re confronted — and that’s not true," Gordon said. “I think it makes good sense in the were not politically correct. Quoting from an October issue of the Chronicle o f Higher interest of free speech and academic freedom to hold a " Education, Will wrote, “She was disinvited because the forum.” The CET and the ASASU Lecture Series reissued an director of the lecture series had not realized ‘Ms. Chavez’s stand on the issue of bilingualism’ is ‘so controversial among invitation to Chavez on Sept. 5 after she was dropped from a list of potential guest speakers in August. minority students.’ Gordon said the CET may write a reactionary letter. “When politically incorrect people are invited to speak, Deborah Kaye, ASASU Lecture Series director, said they often are supposed to speak in tandem with a corrective Chavez “was never formally invited.” person.” Chavez was taken off a list of potential speakers after CET Chairman Len Gordon said the article implies that ASU prohibits free speech — an image that guarantees that members of ASU’s Chicano-Hispano Coalition said they “any university will have trouble attracting the best faculty favored a speaker whose views were in line with their own, Kaye said. and graduate students.” “I’m not surprised,” Kaye said of the recent publicity. Chavez, who does not support mandated affirmative action programs, will debate ASU College of Law Professor Paul “Political correctness is the hottest debate across campus.” Com m ission on women to push campus effort 24-member committee to implement changes By MARSHA MARDOCK State Press ASU’s Commission on the Status of Women, formed last week, will implement and expand recommendations approved by the Arizona Board of Regents this month in an effo rt to im prove the cam pus environment for women. The re g e n ts ’ re p o rt contains 49 recommendations to improve areas of equity, career development and campus climate. ASU’s 24-member commission, which includes m ale and fem ale faculty, ad m in istrato rs, classified staff and students, is charged with implementing the regents’ recommendations. It also will conduct studies on issues the regents did not examine — such as issues involving female students, minorities and the disabled. Anne Schneider, dean of the College of Public Programs and chairwoman of the commission, said the group will set goals for the year when it meets Nov. 5. “There’s all kinds of issues, and it’s hard to set priorities on them because some kinds of things are easier to do,” Schneider said. “Maybe they’re not quite as important, but they’re easy to do. So we might as well do them. “ Other kinds of things are really important but are both time-consuming and expensive, so what we need to do is lay the Turn to Women, page 8. O fficer says consolidation o f ASASU, councils needed By MARGO GILLMAN State Press The programming efforts of Associated Students of ASU and college councils must be consolidated to lessen the blow of budget cuts and to gain efficiency, an ASASU executive ofL H ageseth icer said. ASASU E xecutive Vice P resident Christian Hageseth said ASASU and college council programs often overlap. “There is a great amount of waste,” he said. “The college councils are reproducing a lot of the things that could be done more efficiently and with a greater audience.” The idea to combine efforts stems from Hageseth’s goal to restructure the councils to m ake them m ore academ ically responsive to students. Budget cuts will be less severe if ASASU G et a d u e : Guest colum nist Kay O lson analyzes political cluelessness. Page 4 restructures itself to increase benefits to the colleges because the need for individual programming will be reduced, Hageseth said. The effort would also enable the councils to concentrate on becoming more academic, instead of activity-oriented, he added. Represented by the ASASU Senate, the 11 councils serve as the communications link between the students of each college and the Senate. ASASU funds the councils with approximately $30,000 of its annual $823,000 budget. “We’ve been having a cut in funding,” Hageseth said. “And we can expect more. We need to think about consolidation.” Alex Bouzari, ASASU Finance Committee chairman, said about $60,000 will need to be cut from the ASASU budget next spring, according to a projection for the 1992-1993 school year. ASASU increased college council funding by 35 percent in September to assist “the D-d-d-diving The Valley’s increasingly cold weather does not stop Bill Conti, a member of the ASU div­ ing team, from practicing outside with Coach Ward O'Connell looking on Monday at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center. Monday’s high In Phoenix was 66. T arn to Councils, page 8. H uff and puff: Profile on ASU cross­ c o untry ru n n e r Trish Huffmaster. Page 11 H uskies happenings: Profile o f thè W ashington Huskies. ASU’s opposing team Saturday. Page 11 Today’s w eather: Mostly sunny and breezy w ith a high in the low er 70s1. Classlflcds..............................................14 Comics.................,.....................*....v..*-.-10 Cr osswor d. . . . . . . . . . 8 H oroscopes...... ..........................................15 Police R eport....».........«...^*»'»...............7 Sports.........s...s.v .......*..*«*«««...... 11 T iim H üw S tate Press < V tw h » r OQ 1001 City to raise water, sewer rates in Novem ber By JOHN YANTtS State Press One of life’s most precious commodities will become more expensive for Tempe residents in November because the city will raise its water and sewer rates by 23 percent starting with next month’s billing^/ Families who use the average of 15,000 gallons of water per month will see an increase in water and sewage fees from $21.74 to $26.90, a City official said. “There has not been an increase in water and sewage rates since 1985,” said Rich Oesterle, Tempe assistant management services director. “I think once residents compare the new rate with other Cities, they’ll understand that the increase is long overdue.” Using the 15,000 gallon per month average, water will increase from $15.40 a month to $17.70, and sewer fees will jump from $6.34 a month to $9.20. Oesterle said Tempe now must pay more to transfer waste water to a treatment plant in Phoenix. Expenses associated with the cost of running a city reclamation plant built in July contributed to a higher tab for residents, he said. The plant, at Kyrene and Guadalupe roads, converts 3 million gallons of sewage into usable water each day, Oesterle said. The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU M a t is presented as a service to the U niversity com m unity. Any cam pus club or organization can subm it entries fo r publication to the State Press, located in the basem ent of M atthew s C enter, Room 15. Entries m ust be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Presscannot guarantee publication. Deadline fo r the entries is 1 p.m , th e previous business day. Meetings •A lcoholics Anonymous: closed m eeting, noon, Newm an C enter on C ollege Avenue and University D rive. •S ociety o f Physics Students: m eeting about physics and photosynthesis, 3:45 p.m , Physical Sciences Building F 424. According to a newsletter sent to Tempe residents, a third factor in the fee increase is the purchasing of surface water for conservation purposes from the Central Arizona Canal Project. Surface water is about four times more expensive than pumping water from Salt River Project, the letter stated. Tempe residents also will have to pay higher administrative charges — including a 1 percent increase in deliquent account fees and a 23 percent increase in the turn-on fee for each new utility service account. According to statistics compiled by the city of Tempe, Phoenix is the only city in the Valley to have a cheaper water rate for its •R e-E ntry Connection: “ Life A fter G raduation,” noon, Adult Re-Entry C enter, north end o f M U basem ent. •S ociety fo r Hum an Resource Managem ent: guest speaker Jim W ellington w ill talk about myth vs. reality on the job, 4:30 p .m ., M U Kaibab Room. •A m erican Society o f Women Accountants: office tours, 4 p .m ., M iller, W agner & Co.; F ield , Sarvas & King, P .C . •N ative Am erican S tudent A ssociation Pow Wow Com m ittee: m eeting, 4 :3 0 p .m ., M ulti-C ultural Lounge, Student Services Building, second floor. •S igm a Tau D elta, English Honors Society: m eeting, 6 p .m ., Casey M oore’s, 9th Street & Ash Ave. •L e Cercle Francais: m eeting, 3:30 to 5 p .m ., Coffee Plantation. •W om en in Com m unication, Inc.: m eeting, 6 p .m ., M U Room 212. •A rizona O uting Club: m eeting, 7:30 p .m ., M U Pim a residents. Using the 15,000 gallon per month water usage example, Glendale residents pay $22.55 a month for water, Scottsdale residents pay $25.15, Mesa residents pay $20.55 and Phoenix residents pay $16.88. Oestele said statistics for sewage fees are not kept by the city, “but we’re probably under other cities. And we may even be under Phoenix.” Councilwoman Barbara Sherman said she received about six calls from residents Concerned about the increase in fees. “We’ve been looking into utility fees for a long time,”- she said. “Nobody likes to raise fees, but they’re not going to get cheaper.” Room. •Fellow ship of C hristian A thletes: B ible study, 7:3 0 p.m ., UAC Room 35. •B ap tist Student Union: fellow ship & w orship, 7 p.m ., 1322 S . M ill Ave. •S tu den t Foundation: m eeting, 4 p .m ., M U Coconino Room . •SW E: m eeting followed by p izza and W ally-ball, 5 p.m ., Student Recreation Com plex Room 226. •W om en Students Association: m eeting, noon to 1 p.m ., W om en Student C enter. •S tu den ts fo r Choice: speaker M ichelle H allett from Planned Parenthood, 8 p .m ., M U Cochise Room . •C am pus Am bassadors Christian Fellow ship: Bible study, 7:30 p .m ., M U La P az Room 223. •E S P P ee r Advising: m eeting about registration, 6:30 p .m ., M anzanita H all. SfcRENDTPTTU ARTS AND CRAFTS FAIR The I p I n r i t e S gon t # th e October 29th to November 1st, 1991 GREAT FOR HOLIDAY SHOPPING!!! Handcrafted, Artisan Produced Jewelry, Ceramics, and Clothing MEMORIAL UNION WEST LAWN ARIZONA ¿rrATE UttlVSiSlT? MEMORIAL UNION ACTTVmeS Bo ah o Sponsored by the M U A B Host and Hostess C om m ittee W o rld /N a tio n Page 3 Tuesday, October 29,1991 S ta le P m » T e r r o r is t a tta c k s b r e a k o u t i n M id e a s t MADRID, Spain (AP) — In a deadly outbreak of terrorist violence just two days ahead of Arab-Israeli peace talks, attackers firing automatic weapons killed two Jewish settlers Monday in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Hours earlier, two separate terrorist attacks in Turkey — by a Muslim group opposed to the talks — killed an American soldier and wounded an Egyptian diplomat. The West Bank attack — in which assailants ambushed a bus carrying settlers opposed to trading land for peace — appeared likely to harden Israeli opposition to the peace talks and put a sharp focus on Israel’s oft-stated worries over security. Israelis blamed the Palestians and vowed revenge for the shootings, which also wounded six people, including five children. “Whoever was looking for a proof that we have nobody to discuss peace with, that our enemies . . . want to continue to kill us and to destroy us . . . got the message tonight,” Cabinet Minister Rehavam Zeevi told reporters at a rally in Tel Aviv, As word spread of the deaths, the crowd swelled to 50,000 people, some Shouting “Death to the Arabs'.” Zalman Shoval, Israel’s ambassador in Washington, said of the attack: “It certainly harms the atmosphere and it raises some very grave question marks with regard to their genuine attitude toward this whole process.” Hanan Ashrawi, a spokeswoman for the Palestinian delegation, condemned the violence but described it as the consequence of the “extreme violence” of the Israeli occupation. In a TV interview, she predicted more attempts to disrupt the talks. Some Muslim fundamentalist groups have called for attack s to sabotage the conference that begins Wednesday in Madrid, Spain. A Lebanese newspaper reported Monday that a radical Iranian leader called for suicide attacks on the Jewish state and said the peace conference was “high treason.” On the diplomatic front, Israel protested to the United States oyer plans to grant a full-length opening speech to the Palestinian delegation. Israel also rejected a freeze on settlements in the occupied territories. But in one of his most conciliatory interviews, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said on NBC-TV Monday night that he was willing to discuss anything and would not rule but trading land in the occupied territories for peace. “We believe and are convinced it belongs to us since thousands of years,” he said. “Maybe the Palestinians believe the same. Then let us negotiate how to settle it, how to find a way to avoid war.” In comments earlier in the day, however, Shamir rebuffed an appeal from the opposition Labor Party for a freeze on settlements in the West Bank and Gaza: Palestinian and Jordanian delegates arrived in Madrid to an enthusiastic greeting from a score of supporters Monday, Young Palestinians and Spaniards waved placards saying in Arabic, Spanish and English: “Long Live a Free and Independent Palestine.” Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev arrived Monday night and President Bush was to arrive Tuesday, a day before the conference begins at the 18th-century Royal Palace. At the White House, Bush said he hoped the talks would be a first step to peace, but cautioned that “ there’s a long, long way to go.” Israeli officials protested they had been taken by surprise by a decision to allow the Palestinians a full opening speech in addition to the speech by the Jordanian delegation’s leader, instead of sharing the time on Thursday. Yeltsin suggests market economy MOSCOW (AP) — Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin proposed Monday a painful one-year leap to a market economy for Russia and said the hardships consumers will suffer were better than the alternative of eternal poverty. Yeltsin invited the other 11 Soviet republics to join his speedy reform plan, which would free state-controlled prices and privatize most businesses in Russia. But he also said Russia was prepared to act unilaterally. He served notice that Russia would form its own army and print its own currency if other regions’ increasingly aggressive independence drives hurt the largest and richest Soviet republic. Yeltsin’s timetable for economic reform was the fastest and most aggressive proposed by any level of government in the Soviet Union, including Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev. Previous Kremlin plans to move to a market economy have fallen short because of half-hearted implementation or the:refusal of the entrenched Communist bureaucracy to cooperate. Yeltsin’s blunt acknowledgement that living standards will get worse before they improve was the most candid political admission of how tough it will be to dismantle seven decades of bureaucratic central planning. “Today, in acute crisis conditions, it will be impossible to implement reforms painlessly,” Yeltsin told the Russian Congress of People’s Deputies, the republic’s parliament. “ I call on all Russian citizens to understand that a transition to market prices, a difficult transition, a forced transition, is a necessary measure,” Yeltsin said. “It will be worse for everybody for about six months.” After that, he predicted, “the stabilization of our economy F ire fig h te r’s fo n e r a i Associated Press photo The flag-draped coffin of Oakland (Calif.) Fire Dept. Battalion Chief James Merle Riley is carried into St. Andrews Presbyterian Church in Pleasant Hill Monday by members o f Engine Company 17 and Riley’s sph James A. Riley (right). Riley died in the Oakland Hills firestorm . ' , >: Turn to Soviet, page 9. Video shows suicide victims’ suffering House to consider SOUTHFIELD, Mich. (AP) — Two disabled women wept and laughed on the eve of their assisted suicides as they explained the suffering that brought them to Dr. Jack Kevorkian* a videotape released Monday showed. “I thought about it for a long time, a long time. I have no qualms about my decision,” Sherry Miller, 43, told Kevorkian in her parents home in a tape released by Kevorkian’s lawyer, Geoffrey Fieger. “ I want to die and I know there’s no turning back,” she said, her voice faltering. The videotape was recorded Oct. 22, the day before Miller, who had multiple sclerosis, and Marjorie Wantz joined Kevorkian in a secluded Oakland County cabin and killed themselves with devices he invented. Kevorkian was expected to make his first public appearance'Monday since the suicides. He didn’t show at Fieger’s Southfield office, but the attorney read a statement from Kevorkian in which the retired pathologist called for a national panel to explore doctor-assisted suicide and set guidelines. Kevorkian, 63, would issue no other statements until the Oakland County prosecutor’s office decides whether to charge him with a crime, Fieger said. No charges have been brought against Kevorkian despite his apparent violation of a court order issued in January barring him from assisting suicide. The injunction followed dismissal Dec. 13 of a first-degree murder charge against Kevorkian for helping an Oregon woman commit suicide in June 1990. Kevorkian hooked Jan e t Adkins, diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, to a device similar to one used by Wantz, 58. Adkins pushed a button giving herself a lethal injection. Prosecutors said it could take six weeks to determine whether Kevorkian violated the order with the latest deaths and if criminal charges can be filed. Michigan has no laws against assisted suicide. “We must grasp this opportunity to resolve these issues or risk slipping again into the dark age of ignorance and intolerance*” Kevorkian said in his statement. “Let enlightenment and compassion be Janet’s, Marjorie’s and Sherry’s legacy to us all.” In the hour-long videotape released Monday, Wantz told of previous unsuccessful attempts to commit suicide and escape the pain of 10 pelvic operations. The disease, papilloma virus, was not terminal. Wantz, who lived in Sodus, said she unsuccessfully tried suicide on her own three times by inhaling carbon monoxide from a hose connected to a car exhaust pipe. She said she twice tried overdosing on the sleeping medication Halcion. “I tried loading a gun, but I didn’t know how,” she told Kevorkian. “If you doit yourself, you don’t know what you’re doing. I wish I could have done it a year ago or two years Bush banking plan WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Bush administration’s plan to replenish the deposit insurance fund and reorder the banking system finally is reaching the House floor this week, But, after nearly nine months of maneuvering and committee work, it’s become increasingly clear the plan’s $70 billion for rescuing the fund may well amount to only a down payment. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said last week that the margin of error in the plan over the next 26 months will be a razor-thin $1.1 billion. If the value of commercial real estate continues to drop, more loans will go bad, more banks will fail and the'federal fund protecting deposits up to $100,000 per account could need more money before 1993 is over, the agency’s new projection suggests. ag° ” ., • * - T f> f, ff r r | fYI’hec^jtateripiation in the ,numbers reflects the (Mertoirating economy,” said Robert Litan of the The Videotape, shot at the Roseville home of Miller’s Brookings Institution, a Washington-based research parents, showed both women chatting amiably with organization. “Basically, regulators are saying the Kevorkian about details of their planned suicides. On several obvious. If the economy doesn’t recover, the cost will go occasions, Kevorkian asked the women and their relatives up.” ‘ whether they had second thoughts. Reaction to the warning has been muted. Bush “I hate to see my sister kill herself,” Gary Miller said of administration officials simply note that their cost Miller. “But I think she has the right to say that she’s had estimate first offered last spring is just that, an enough, I couldn’t put the needle, in her hand. I couldn’t hold a. estimate, and that the faster Congress passes the pillow over her head. But I’m hot going to step in and stop banking bill, die faster the administration can put the her.” . . . . i • money to work and minimize costs. Kevorkian, from Royal Oaks, spent about 20 minutes in the Sen. Donald W. Riegle Jr., D-Mich., chairman of the tape detailing the device he planned to use to administer a Turn to Banking, page 9. ipflifll dose of drugs into the women’s bloodstreams. O p in io n S tate Press Tuesday, October 29,1991 Page 4 Ig n o ra m a Politically clueless plague, endanger society C p ís o n G uest Colum nist Mare than a month ago, I got up early on a weekday morning to watch TV. Regarding the events taking place on the screen, my roommate asked, “What’s this?” “The Senate committee hearings,” I said. “For what?” “The new president. Didn’t you hear? President Bush was run over by a broccoli truck and Quayle has been drafted by the National Guard. This guy is going to be the new president.” She squinted at the image of a tense black man sitting before 14 white men who were busy posturing. “Who’s he?” she asked. “The new president. Nobody knows much about him. From Somalia. He doesn’t speak English.” ' “Oh, I didn’t know they could do that,” she said, then went to find a pair of socks. There has been much controversy recently about the Politically Correct and the P olitically In co rrect; so much discussion has occurred that I am no longer sure which I ought to be. There is, however, another far more dangerous and subversive group — the Politically Clueless. When I told my roommate that the hearing was really for the new Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas (who, incidentally , has recently been elected King of the Politically Ambiguous ), she said : “Oh . . Did someone step down?” From the nature of our encounter it would be safe to assume that she is not a political science major. But you might also be inclined to believe that she just returned from a lengthy vacation on the planet Neptune. My sister, however, resides on the planet Neptune (actually, just Montana). She is highly involved in some version of the Society for Creative Anachronisms — similar to the group of strangely garbed folk (no, not the evangelists) on West Lawn, who repeatedly hit each other with swords while wearing armor and other heavy, nonArizona-in-the-20th-century things. All of this is wonderful because she knows exactly what to wear to a formal event in 1226 A. D., and if Charlemagne were running for governor, she’d be set. But I have never heard a politically oriented word spill from her mouth. I’m not sure she knows who is president. My first college friend, Marian, was a psych major with a 4.0 GPA. One evening she kept me company watching the State of the Union address and interrupted a commentator to ask me, “Is Reagan a Democrat?” I laughed so hard I could not reply. “Uh, OK,” she said, “what exactly is a Democrat?” governor elected by the same people who later impeached him?), they have no specific reasons for voting as they do. At this point, I believe I left the room. To make up for what she admitted were large gaps in her education, Marian later attended with me the ASU lecture event where former President Reagan spoke in the University Activity Center. Afterwards, she said she had enjoyed the evening. “What did you like best?” I asked, hoping to encourage her. I have another friend, one who recently graduated from ASU. Although I would say she is among the Politically Misguided (that is, Republican), we get along great — we have important things to talk about. Things that affect the planet. Things that are not entertaining, but IMPORTANT. “The Secret Service men were very entertaining, running around the whole time.” There is little that we agree upon, but when she goes out and votes against me, I am certain she does so based upon some knowledge of the issues, the candidates and how these relate to her value system. She was right, of course, but I was d isap p o in ted w ith h er “ p o litic a l” commentary. I don’t believe my friends and family are unique. Complacency — and the ignorance associated with it — has become the American way. I see two basic problems: First, nobody votes. Whether in University, state or national elections, the right to vote is what Americans have died for as recently the ’60s, yet those who can often deny themselves the privilege. We are not simply exercising a right, we are collectively creating a future. I call the Politically Clueless dangerous and subversive because they are. Ignorance makes one gullible, and the gullible have the power to vote, just like any other American. The media hype for the 1992 presidential election is only just beginning. However Second, this ultimate expression of freedom — the right to vote — does the hopeless it may seem (especially for the Democrats), I hope to wade through the rhetoric and find my candidate. Politically Clueless no good because if they do vote (and how else do you explain an ex­ How do the gullible find theirs? Maybe Pee Wee will be the next president. Louisiana helping Americans measure hatred Are Americans happy? Are we a kinder, gentler nation? Or are many of us filled with hatred for each other? And if we are seething and gnashing our teeth, how many haters are there? These are questions you don’t see answered by many polls. And there’s a good reason for that. A pollster can’t pick a name out of a phone book and say: “Good afternoon, I am from the Brainpicker Organization, and we are taking a poll. Do you have a seething hatred for anyone because of their race, religion or ethnic origins?” Click. People seldom share their hatreds with strangers. That’s what family and friends are for. Besides, if you revealed your hates to a stranger, he might turn out to be one of the people you hate. And what if he is big and strong? So we really don’t have any scientific way of measuring how deeply Americans dislike each other or why or bow unhappy we are. That’s why I was pleased to see that David Duke received enough votes in Louisiana’s primary to force a two-way runoff for the office of governor. Duke is a handsome, glib fellow who used to be a grand beagle, or some such lofty position, in the Klu Klux Klan. He was also an American Nazi, and until a few years ago, would celebrate Hitler’s birthday. Of course, he now says he no longer puts on a white sheet or drinks toast to the memory of the most crazed killer in the history of the world. He claims that his views have become more moderate and says: “I’m not putting other people down anymore.” Some people believe him, and others don’t. For all anyone knows, when the monster’s birthday rolls around, Duke might still spend the day humming: “Happy birthday, mein Fuhrer, happy birthday to you.” For old time’s sake, if nothing else. And since his political campaigns are rich in racist buzzwords, that old saying might apply: “You can take the boy out of the swastika, but you can’t take the swastika out of the boy.” Or something like that. Because Duke used to be an outright, public hater and is now a more polite, subtle hater, it has to be assumed that many of his supporters share his darker views. Not that they are all former or present fans of Hitler. But they apparently think that someone who is can’t be all bad. So as a hate-o-meter, a form of measurement I have just created, the Lousiana election might be as precise as anything we’ve seen. Duke will begin with about 400,000 votes, which is what he received in the primary. It represented about 32 percent of the votes cast. That can be looked at as good news or bad news. | *The good news is that 68 percent of the voters didn’t want to vote for a former Klansnum-Nazi. The bad hews is that the top vote-getter, who has never said one kind word about Hitler, received only 34 percent. Most of the other votes went to the incumbent Gov. Buddy Roemer, a decent enough guy who might have done better if he had put in a plug or two for the memory of Mussolini. So now Duke, who is running as a Republican, will fight it out in November with Edwin Edwards, a former Louisiana governor, who was popular until he stood trial on chrages of being a crook. He was acquitted, but it did appear that politics had been kind to his bottom line. They know how to pick them in Louisiana. And when the votes are counted in Louisiana in November, we’ll have some idea how many haters there are in Louisiana. Besides adding to our sociological and political knowledge, it might provide others with career opportunités. Who knows? Maybe there are some old Nazi geezers still hiding in South America who might want to move to New Orleans and run for office. Of course, the views of Louisiana voters don’t necessarily reflect those of the rest of the country. We hope. But if Duke is elected governor, we’ll probably have a chance to find out. It’s a safe bet that if he becomes governor, he’ll start thinking about running for president. Maybe on the campaign slogan: “Today Louisiana, tomorrow the world!” I wonder if he’d grow a little mustache. Then the hate-o-mater would be (kit to the national test, and we would know just how kinder and gentler we’ve become. All of this has become tiothérsome to President Bush, John Sununu and everybody else in the tybite House. Even though Duke is running as a Republican, and did wonderfully in the most Republican parts of Louisiana, the White House Republicans angrily say that Duke is not a Republican. PAUL CORO, Editor DAWN DEVRIES, Managing Editor City Editor KEVIN SHEH ...................r“/........... ........ JENNIFER FRANKLIN .............. ...... A n t City Editor MTRICIAMAH .......................................... New« Editor MICHELLE ROBERTS........................... Opinion Editor DAVID KEXEL............ ........................... ............ Copy Chief IRWIN DAUGHERTY........................................ Photo Editor DAN ZEIGER....... ........ Sport» Editor DARREN URBAN.................................. t a t Sports Editor VICKI CULVER.................................—..... M ^ in tn e Editor LAURIE NOTARO.................... Magazine Managing Editor HOBART ROWLAND ......College C ulture Editor REPORTERS Ken Brown, D.J. Burro ugh, Mark Doud, Andrew Faught, Michael Flores, Margo Gllhnan. Kristine Hart, Sonja Lewis, M arsha Mardock. Kris Mqfcs, Richard Rueliui. Lorenzo Sierra Jr.. Anty Slade, Aahahed Triche, John Yantls. MAGAZINE STAFF: Michelle Cniff, Jill Hexbranaon, D an Nowicld, Ken O nnan, David Pundt, Christy Tomhnson. Mark J a s . ty n a n . CARTOONISTS: Ken Collins. Sean Hoy. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Henri Cohen, Jeorgetta Douglas,Sean Openshaw, T.J . Sokol, Tam ara Wofford. COPT EDITORS: Shannon Loughrin, Kay Olson, Gabriella Sanchez. COLUMNISTS: Jimmy Kopf, Kristi McDowell, Larry Salzman. PRODUCTION: Celia Haroman Cueto, John Gullonard, Kevin Heller. Tanja Hutchins, Barry Kelly, Angela LaForte.Jeftrey Lucas, Dan Rlckerby, Ehren Schwlebert SALES REPRESENTATIVES:Sonla Benson. Cameron Ellis. Leo Gonzales, Paul Graves, Brittln Karbowsky, Todd Martin, Lance Newman, Ned Schnelwar. The Stale Press ti published Monday through Friday durtng the academic year, except holidays and exam periods. The Stole Press is the onty newspaper exclusively pub* hshed for and circulated on the ASU ounpua. The news and views published in this newspaper axe riot necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Editorial Board Unsigned editorials reflect die views of the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their m e rit The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the S tate Press staff a s a whole. Board members include: PAUL CORO DAWN DEVRIES MICHELLE ROBERTS Mease 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 a ppropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing fay the opinion page editor. All fetters m u s ib e either brought in person with a photo ........... Editorl.D. to the State Press front desk In the basem ent ofMatthews Managing EditorCenter or else addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arte., 85287-1502. Opinion Editor Letter Policy The S ta te Press welcomes and encourages written re­ sponse from our readers on any topic. All letters m u st be typed, double-spaced and n o longer than two pages in length to b e eligible for publication. State Press Phone Numbers .................... 965-7572 Classified Advertising.................... O p in io n ‘Cheers’ doesn’t perpetuate sexist attitudes, ideas Editor: The Oct. 25 issue of the State Press printed an interesting but skeptical opinion of the TV series Cheers. Cody Shearer failed to observe the intentional humor of the “clown,” better known as Ted Danson. He also made an improper comparison and analysis of sexual harassment and mutual fun and games between two characters. One can plainly see through Cody’s observant yet vindictive views of certain character elements (namely Sam Malone and Diane Chambers) of the most popular college sitcom. First of all, I just want to say that I too am sensitive towards the worsening issue of sexual harassment in this country. It is unethical and disrespectful to women everywhere. The HilHThomas hearings, where the rhetoric of this new and improved women’s revolution .came from, clearly d is p la y e d th is concern of fem ale harassment. I do have a problem with Professor Hill putting off such an important issue until the most crucial point of Clarence Thomas’ career, but that’s a different nut I wouldn’t like to crack. My concern is for the defense of Cheers — a program that shouldn’t have gotten pulled into this problem in the first place. Cody mentioned ‘‘their goal is to make the business of sexual harassment appear acceptable to women.” This is so erroneous that I just couldn’t wait to plop down in my normally uncomfortable dorm chair, grab my pencil and scribe away my response to this sightless comment. To begin with, Rebecca is the typical enterprising success story that was placed as the top banana of the bar Cheers. Sam Malone, on the other hand, is an uneducated bachelor and quite unsuccessful just like most of the other guys at the bar. This, in the f i r s t p l a c e , s h o u ld p u t w o m en comparatively as successful if not more successful on this show than men. As this notion of female equality is firmly established, Sam Malone, a typical guy just following his uncontrollable hormones, comes along and spreads his “quick­ witted,” smooth personality on a pretty woman who is just asking to besought after. They have a few funny exchanges of putdowns. Finally, almost always, the woman has the last laugh. (Haven’t you noticed?) Thus, the feeling that should surface is that Rebecca (or whoever) seems to have the upper hand on intimate situations brought up by Sam. What I mean is, Sam’s “sexual harassment” does not phase Rebecca —she is above that! So, the more appropriate question you5should ask yourself is: Will women of America take up this role of character that seems to be unbreakable by even the most charming, quick-witted personality of Sam Malone? Doesn’t that personality (of Rebecca) seem to be more effective and substantial for those women who grow up watching the show? I think that is more believable than some guys wanting to be like the always-failing, bar-hopping Sam Malone. You want Sam Malone to be moral? That’s just like asking Pee Wee ^Herman to grow up and mature! I would also like to point out that if you make Sam Malone more “contrite” or serious, he would not be funny at all, and neither would anyone else (especially the personality-lacking Rebecca) because the humorous atmosphere of the bar depends on Sam’s antics. Sexual harassment is more of an issue that should be compared with, real life situations like Anita Hill’s testimony. Using a TV sitcom as an example is just too vague. It is too hard to prove a point when many people think differently towards Cheers or any other sitcom. I beg to differ on Cody Shearer’s article dwelling on the possiblity of Cheers “encouraging insensitivity to women.” Jonny Spaans, Sophomore, Biology Bikers deserve equal treatment, sidewalk areas Dear Editor: Recently I have noticed a significant increase in bike cop activity on campus. This has been the result of an increase in pedestrian/bike accidents reported to campus “ officials,” resulting in the “crackdown.” If everyone rode their bikes to school, however, they would realize that the lost time for riding their bikes instead of driving their cars is made up by riding on campus, straight to class. I understand that everyone’s safety must be considered when making a huge legislative and enforcement decision such as this one. What 1 have not seen, however, is the other side being addressed on such a wide scale — namely, the citation of pedestrians walking in the bike lanes, sufficient bike lanes through main arteries on campus and proper upkeep of current bike lanes compared to that of the walkways. All I am asking is equal treatment for all involved. S leaze G e n e It s safe, comfy, obscene Dave Magner Junior, Mechanical Engineering Ev Mecham days are here again Dear Editor: I am not sure of the motivation behind Sean Hoy’s drawing in the Oct. 28 edition of the State Press, but I view it as nothing but literary gay bashing supported by you under the banner of editorial cartoon. Is printing it on the “Opinion” page supposed to make it acceptable? What point is he trying to make —that all gay men are limp-wristedor wear dresses and are wimps? So much for cultural diversity at ASU. We might as well have Ev Mecham back as governor. Tony Hodges A d m in istrativ e A ssista n t, T h e a te r Department Cartoon pins stereotypes on gays, lesbians Editor: I am amazed that a School newspaper would contain a cartoon such as the one printed Oct. 28 in the letters to the editor section. Homosexuals are among the most stereotyped, persecuted groups in the country, and the cartoon encourages gay bashing at a school (and in a society) where the practice is already prevalent. It may as well have included the word “fag.” The cartoon could only have been found am u sin g by those who sh a re the Neanderthal mentality which it supports. But for those of us who feel that everyone is equal and deserving of respect, leave such bigotry to the KKK and the Cady Mall preachers. Pamela Delcore Graduate Student, Music Weighing in on the subject of sexual harassment (or just sex) these days is like walking into a room where everyone is screaming at the top of his or her lungs. If I say, “Can I just add a word or two here?” everyone is going to scream, “NO!!” But not everyone’s first job, right out of college, was as an employee at Penthouse magazine. Mine was. Yes, I thought that might get your attention. It always does. In the 16 years since I’ve been on salary at Penthouse, I keep expecting people I meet to say, “You SLIME! How could you take m oney fro m th a t DISGUSTING organization?” But let me put it this way: I am invariably a surprise hit at parties. A major hit. People say to the man next to me, “Excuse me, I would love to talk to you some more about innovations in cost­ accounting, but right now, I’ve got to talk to that woman over th ere. . .” Then, they try to maneuver me into a kitchen (both men and women do this), and their eyes light up in a peculiar way. “What was it LIKE?” they say. (In other words, “Do you know who writes Those Letters?” The answer is yes, I do. But I’m not going to reveal it in this column, and please do not write and harass me about it. And how do you know about Those Letters, anyway?) This is what I think I’m trying to say: People tend to be obsessed about sex, and the more you tell them they should not be obsessed about sex, the more they obsess about it. UNLESS you specifically INSTRUCT them to be obsessed about sex. In which case they will run away from it like it’s the plague. The people I worked with at Penthouse whatever else you mijgbt Sify' about them — were a thoroughly professional bunch. They managed to make the business of sex about as exciting as the business of working in a hospital cafeteria, No, less exciting. I would imagine that if you worked in a hospital cafeteria, there would be a possibility — even a remote possibility —that you wouldmeet an attractive member of the opposite sex who would want to ask you out. When you worked at Penthouse, all you ever really wanted to do was go home and try to figure out why your toaster wasn’t working. Because (and I know I’m going to get all kinds of flak about being flippant, here) WHAT WAS THE POINT OF TAKING YOUR WORK HOME WITH YOU? ,' One of the most bizarre experiences I ever had at Penthouse was when I went to my boss one day and told him I was thinking of making a career move to another type of magazine. “What type?” he asked. “Well, I like to write humor,” I said. “I was thinking maybe the National Lampoon or someplace like that.” My boss shook his head in a paternal sort of way. “ I hear they’re all a bunch of sex maniacs over there,” he said. “You don’t want to work for them. You’ll never get anything done.” At the time, I remember thanking him for his candor. The idea of being hounded by men who would prevent me from writing was so repellent to me that I held on to the job I had. Writing for a magazine that had a monthly, full-color cartoon called “Wicked Wanda” had a nice, safe, familial ring to it. In some bizarre way, my memories of that first job are about as “familial” as any job experience can ever be. I still remember Claire V., the assistant art director, who at age 29, was Everyone’s Mom, and called everyone “snookums” and “sweetie” and collected koala bears. At one point, there was a string of stuffed koala bears extending from (he door of her office to her desk, on a sort of stuffedkoala tightrope. People just gave them to her: men, women, minor employees, all the people at the high and low end of the Obscenity Totem Pole. (And to this day I’m still trying to define “high” and “low.” ) Of course, I am not defending the product the Penthouse organization put out. I am not defending myself for working for them .' I will cheerfully describe the magazine as “vile” then, and “rank” 16 years later. A^bpugh one thing I will say: The average Penthouse reader never stoops to saying he buys it “for the articles.” I think that the Good Lord endowed each and every one of us with a Deeply Sleazy side, and we try like crazy to fight it and deny it and wish it away (though we love to time into it on C-SPAN), but the Sleaze Gene is deeply embedded in the human chromosomes. I say, “Let Him Who is Without Sleaze Cast the First Stone.” One thing’s for certain: I am never working around koala bears again. i P aseó Tuesday, October 89,1991 Thomas-Hill Senate hearings skyrocket KAET-TV ratings The recent confirmation hearings for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas held the nation spellbound and provided a bonanza of viewership for public television stations such as ASU’s KAETTV Channel 8. As the d ra m a of A nita H ill’s allegations and Thomas’ responses unfolded, the nation turned to PBS stations as a way of keeping up with the fast-changing events. Nationwide, PBS stations in the markets where overnight ratings are collected saw their audiences rocket in size, according to John Fuller of the PBS research department. “The ratings for the Thomas hearings were about five times what would be considered ‘normal’ for PBS stations in these markets,” Fuller said. “Sunday night, the average rating for the PBS stations was 12.2 and drew an 18 share.” And nowhere were the audiences larger than in Phoenix. At its peak, the audience tuned into KAET generated a staggering rating of 22 and share of 39 in the local market. “I think you’d have to be surprised with any show on PBS getting that kind of rating,” said John Wilson, programming manager for KAET. “Especially when you look at it in comparison to other hearings that have been aired over the past few years." S tate P reat Dangerous antidote stolen From staff reports A chemical warfare antidote stolen from a vehicle in Tempe recently could be fatal if used incorrectly, military officials said Tuesday. If people who had not been exposed to any chemicals were injected with the antidote, it would act as a poison, having effects similar to a snakebite, said a spokesman for the 403rd Combat Support H ospital, a 300-member Army unit. Tempe police reported Thursday that a car was vandalized and burglarized on Broadway Road and Dorsey Lane. Along with stereo equipment, the thief or thieves stole a bag full ofcuther items. Police said the bag likely contains syringes and an antidote for exposure to chemical warfare called Atropine. A1 Taylor, public information sergeant of the Tempe Police Department, said there is not enough information to investigate the incident. “We have no suspects or leads,” he said. Delivered daily tb your nearest newstand- A L L B U S IN E S S S T U D E N T S Tàe Busiffinsss College CouaiaeM Back To School. Back To Style. FALL GRADUATION COMMENCEMENT DISCUSSION Featuring: Dr. Steve Happel Dr. Happel Will Address Concerns And Arguments On This Issue. All Business Students Are Encouraged to Attend. An Informal Reception With Snacks And Beverages Will Follow The Meeting Tuesday, October 29,1991 BAC 218 At 3:15 H a ir c u ts Men&Women $ O o o Cotnt Qzt Involved New Clients (Reg. $15) LEADERSHIP2000 Today’s college students face the responsibility o f being tom orrow ’s leaders; m aking critical decisions that will determ ine the world’s future. LEADERSHIP 2000 is a four day, three night program that enables college students to develop respect and understanding for racial, religious, and cultural diversity through developm ent in leadership and hum an relations. LEADERSHIP 2000 w a s founded on the belief th at cultural U nderstanding is a vital ingredient tow ards building an integrative comm unity. ASU Students Always $12.00 W ith I.D Walk-Ins Welcome Full Set Sculpted a n d com plex issues in o u r changing workforce a n d w orld. £ 0 0 0 LEADERSHIP 2000 is a result of students seeking to prom ote cultural aw areness a n d u nderstanding w ithin the A rizona State U niversity com m unity. E ncouraged by students, staff, a n d adm inistrators, a program w as developed to m eet the challenge. MmonmlUnionAnfwfWRBcmw) N ails —e t v rirp iN G t r a r r c i r e n a c iu n u n c v e t t e * 2 1 “ Culture and Arts Committee (Reg. $40 value) Also - great prices on fills, repairs and manicures. P re se n ts Reinhart Liebig Pianist P H appy Hour: Cappio Coffee Teas Soda Hostess WE USE AND RECOMMEND Wfflatrix HAIR AND SKIN CARE 1 1a.m . - 1p .m . in th e M em orial U nion Program m ing L ounge W ednesday, O ctober 30 S S 1 . 2 0 0 0 LEADERSHIP 2000 w ill help prepare stu d en ts for the problem s, challenges Any ASU student is eligible to sttend the Leadenhip 2000 Program, Januaty 9-12,1992, at no cost. Self-motivation, an open mind, and a willingness to share your experiences is the criteria for selection. SPACE IS LIMITED, SO BE SURE TO TURN IN YOUR APPLICATION BYNOVEMBER 22,1991. Tom in applications to : Student Life Office, 2nd floor, Student Services Bldg between 8 am and 9 pm, Monday through Friday. If you have any questions, please call 965-2249 or 965-6547. Applications are available at the Student Life Office, ASASU, R.E.AC.H desk and the front desk of each residence halL H " W e D o M a g ic WIZARDS $ 1 .0 0 $ $ $ $ .80 .50 .70 .60 1 0 4 1 E. Lem on Tem pe TUes & Thurs 9-8 Wed, Fri, Sat 9-5 967-2360 Press Page 7 Tuesday, October 89,1991 Need cash fast? Sell it in the State Press Classifieds • 965-6731 Basement Matthews Center M .B .A . J .D . M .D . P h .D IF YOU DON’T HAVE THE NUM BERS, YOU WON’T G E T THE LETTERS. Call us today and experience the Ronkin Advantage: •S m a ll cla sse s o f le ss than 10 students •F R E E d ia g n o stics a va ila b le anytim e p p | &r. W erition th is ad and receive : $100 o ff o f yo u r course! ★ _______ CLASSES NOW FORMING FOR DECEMBER LSAT & GRE, plus January GMAT Shooting blam ed on alcohol By ASHAHED TRICHE State Press Alcohol and a large group of people in a small place likely led to a Friday night shooting, Tempe police officials said. ‘‘When the alcohol consumption goes up, the commonsense level goes down,” said A1 Taylor, public information sergeant of the Tempe Police Department. Tempe police responded to an injury at the Cypress Garden Apartments, 1015 S. Stanley on Friday night. They found a 19-year-old Chandler man dead at the scene from a gunshot to the Chest. Two other men, friends of the slain victim, were arrested after they fired two rounds each into the apartment where their friend was lulled. According to ASU police officers called to the scene to assist in crowd control, there was a state of “mass confusion.” A crowdof about 100 people gathered, some who were very hostile, upset and aggressive toward police, officials said. “We responded to a call for help from the Tempe Police Department in handling a crowd,” said Bill Wright, public information sergeant of the ASU police. “Tempe officers were trying to clear the area,” he said. While Wright would not condemn all apartment parties, he did say people drinking alcohol in a small area often leads to disaster. “We don’t like to generalize on most apartment parties,” he said. “Yes, when you mix a large number of people, yes, when you mix alcohol — it’s going to be a police problem.” Police Report ASU police reported the following incidents on Monday: •A thief stole a car stereo and several compact discs from a vehicle parked on the third level of Parking Structure 4. Estimated loss is $1,492. •A thief stole several items of stereo equipment from a vehicle parked on the top level of Parking Structure 4. Estimated loss is $1,320. •A thief stole an ASU student’s license plate from a vehicle parked in Parking Structure 4. •Police warned three male and two female ASU students who appeared to be intoxicated about public consumption of alcohol while on thé third level of Parking Structure 3. •A thief stole a white 1991 Pontiac Grand Am from Lot 44. Estimated loss is $14,000. •A thief stole a radar range from Room H12 of Sonora Center. Estimated loss is $300. •A thief stole a silver Hardrock Specialized bicycle, valued at $330, from the west side of Manzanita Hall. •An ASU student was arrested, cited and released for attempted theft of a hike tire at the bike racks at Manzanita Hall. •Two males not affiliated with ASU were involved in a non­ injury accident in the parking lot of 601 E. Apache Blvd. •A thief stole a purse and its contents from a woman’s car parked in Lot 26. Estimated loss is $75.. •A thief stole a black 1986 Saab 900S from Lot 57. Estimated loss is $15,000. Tempe police reported the following incidents on Monday: •A 61-year-old Canadian man was killed when a car struck him at the 2100 block of North Scottsdale Road. •A female was sexually assaulted by a man at her apartment located on the 700 block of West 13th Street. The suspect allegedly entered her unlocked apartment while she was sleeping, placed a pillow over her head and raped her. Compiled by State Press reporter Ashahed Triche. ML Tempe • 731-9400 (N ext to Coffee Plantation) Scottsdale • 483-2100 (Scottsdale Rd. & S hea) W ell make sure you make it. OIC U l I M l 610 IP O p en ü p and say ahhhhüH I* 7 pm-Close 25* Drafts $250Pitchers $250Pitchers $ l 50Long Islands $1 Margs sing Along W ith Karaoke 7 pm-Close 7 pm-Close to another exciting issue of the m State Press mï i i Margarita^Tuesday Midi-ávítf 7Strawberry 9 « r r ^ 25* Drafts $250Pitchers or Original $ lso Long Islands $1 Margs $2” Pitchers Sing Along With Karaoke ALL DAT 7 p m -C lo se $1 Shooter Specials T p m Close L IV E M U S IC 2 Cheese Enchiladas 25* Drafts $2” Pitchers ^ 8 i Live Rock & Roll 7 pm-Close I „4 5 Ä * n i ■ L R ic e & B ean t i a i f s CANTINA G reat Food & Good Value Satellite Sports Rural & Apache « Tempe 855 S. Rural i University j 966-1914' 10:30 a.m.-12 a.m. Weekdays; 10:30 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri. & Sac. i o O K T » PJX Page 8 S late Press Tuesday, October 89,1991 W om en State Press Classifieds LU Continued from page 1. groundwork for getting the resources to do those things.” The commission also will work on fostering a non­ intimidating environment, providing communication channels, and networking with other universities and national women’s groups. ASU President Lattie Coor said the group will report to him regularly with a major annual report. The commission’s work will improve the University climate for everyone, men included, Coor added. “I think we all gain when there is a broader and deeper understanding of the issues related to the status of women on campus and when we all can make progress toward fairer and more equitable treatment regardless of gender,” Coor said. “In a sense, I think it makes life better for all of us, and that includes men as well.” Students, faculty and staff can address the commission informally at a brown bag lunch meeting from noon to 1:30 p.m. Nov. 5 in Pedrick Hall at the College of Law. 1 groups that have the greatest impact on students,” said Bouzari, also a senator for the College of Business. Hageseth said the increased funding “wasn’t a prudent decision with the recent budget cuts.” “ It was not fiscally conservative,” , he said. “A disproportionate amount of money is being spent to benefit a small group of people.” Bouzari said he and Hageseth agree that something should be done with the college councils “since they’re the major backbone of ASASU.” But the amount of changes he wants to make are huge, he said. “He has a lot of planning to do — it’s very ambitious.” The ASASU Lecture Series department is one area that can consolidate council programming, Hageseth said. But Bouzari said the Councils need to have their own lecture series. “ College councils have more focused activities,” he said. “ ASASU isn’t as detailed. “I don’t think we should generalize them because then we will kill the communities we create with the college councils,” he said. Bouzari said he agrees with Hageseth’s claim that the councils are not functioning as they were intended by solely concentrating on activities, but “ I don’t think we should shift the whole focus —there should be a balance of the two.” Richard Wade, president of the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences College Council, said Hageseth’s general goal is “good” but the specifics need to be discussed. “The only problem with this is that he is trying to make a big rule for the whole school, and it won’t work, ’’ Wade said. “ASASU won’t provide for everyone.” Wade said his college has not hosted any speakers because the clubs and organizations within the college have assumed the responsibility. "I don’t really see the point in trying to use (the ASASU Lecture Series) to get speakers here,” he said. “It’s better to leave it up to the clubs. “The (ASASU) Lecture Series might help us, but engineering speakers don’t really charge a lot.” Hageseth said he will work with each college council “to establish each specific situation.” “And then I’ll work with administration to empower the necessary changes,” Hageseth said. “This is nothing carved in stone.” ^ r ii FAST, nit DELIVERY! rIZ.Z.M — 2107 S. Rural Rd., Tempe 11a.m.-2 a.m. (Broadway & Rural) 7 days a week CALLUS! 921-FAST Fw tour Entire Family. .. 2fcx| ■ eyeglo/ze/ a n d /o r C O fltO C t/ TW O PAIR e y e e ^ p p n N ationw ide’* EYEDEAL $2 2 ° ° IN C L U D E S G L A U C O M A T E S T FR E E T I N T Buy one tin t and get the 2nd T int Free! eyegto //e / (plastic lenses only, solid tint) Expires 11/ 15/91 *39" * $7 9 " * S in g le V is io n P la s tic L e n se s B ifo c a ls F T -2 8 . 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McKemy Blvd. afKrm~..cwdUrBM. course DOWN 1 Detroit product 2 Coach Paiseghian 3»Thumbsdown vote 4 Trips around the world 5 M erits 6 For men on|y 7 Fellow in the red 8 Flightless bird 9 Broadcast 10 M ake schnitzel 14 Drugged 16 Kohoutek, for one 1 2 •; 3 4 11 13 15 16 17 21 a 24 ■ 28 27 30 32 34 35 36 40 42 A M A S P A S T T, O P E E R O L L A V O W P E C O S N Q O L R A M A L A C V A L u E N T E s| A D Ä] ■n p E A K| E h | w H 1 s p E H O L E E R O D M A G E L O N S T H E R E A P Y E R 1 E F L E T S O T A R A B s M A R 1 o S P E N D Yesterday's Answer 29 Severe 17 Spry 19 O neness 31 Actress Dey 20 T ake it 33 Bistro easy 3 4 Little devil 21 Boxing 35 T ake to punch court 22 Deceit 36 Pub brew 23 D ale's 3 7 Im pair hubby 3 8 Keats 25 M exican work native 28 T el Aviv’s 39 G eese formation setting a 5 6 1 i£ 14 ,8 ■ 25 9 10 22 ■9 2 ■0 ■ 1 23 a i 26 a ■ ■ 33 31 37 36 39 ■ 41 * 10-29 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to w oik i t $ 9 9 9 9 • c h a n g e w ith o u t n o tic e . ght More Valley-wide Locations. 9$3 E . by THOMAS JOSEPH B O T H P A IR : vi/ion center »m e VISA Large 16" Htem Pizza! AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W ALL FOUR...Reg. $159.99 ^ n a o o m ju ia Coupons may eKPÎre without notice. BUDGET BLÖWOÜT C R O S S W O R D lu i/ip n c e n te r € That’s the ticket! O < Councils:__ ___ Continued from page 1. > o PHO EN IX PHOENIX/SCOTTS. 5130 N. 19th Ave. 4615 E. Thomas 242-5292 952-8284 One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for th e three L's, X for th e tw o O 's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation of the words are all hints. Each day th e code letters are different. 10-29 CRYPTOQUOTE K ZG R V M X V G R NV ZM W N F O Y V 11B R H K L D V 1 K Z G R V MX V O V Z U D R G S GS V Y V X L N V H HR O P , - X S R M V H V KILE V 1Y Y e ste rd a y 's C ry p to q u o te : TO MANY PEOPLE, DRAMATIC CRITICISM MUST SEEM LIKE AN ATTEMPTTO TATTOO SOAP BUBBLES.—JO H N MASON BROWN > © 1991 by King F e a tu re s Syndicate, Inc. S ia te Puts» Page 9 Tuesday, October 89.1991 Soviet C ontinued from page 3. ■ T a G m o N ’s* """™ ' Automotive S e rv ic e ^ 1 3 5 5 S . M c C lin to c k T e m p e , 8 9 4 -2 7 9 8 "Your vehicle maintenance specialists" •Wheel Alignment |«Brakes ■ 'Front End Repair . 'Tires Rotation/Balancing I 'Shocks/Struts | 'Fan Belts & Hoses ^In terstate Batteries 10% O FF Any services with this coupon Good only with coupon. Not valid with any other offer. Last Chance For Your Best Chance. will begin by autumn 1992 and the living standards of the people will gradually improve.” Yeltsin urged that lawmakers give him new executive powers to help him carry out the reforms and proposed he be given the additional title of prime minister. The post has been vacant since Ivan Silayev resigned to run the national economy following the failed August coup. The offer was a tacit acknowledgement that Yeltsin has been unable to end the infighting within his administration that has prevented it from carrying out real reform. It also represented a throwback to previous heads of the Soviet Union who endowed themselves with more than one leadership post. Yeltsin’s ¡reform plan, which must be adopted by the Russian parliament, includes lifting artificial government controls on prices and wages by the end of the year and privatizing half of Russia’s 10,000 small- and medium-size businesses within three months. Beginning Friday, he said, Russian will stop financing about 70 Soviet ministries and other central institutions not specifically mentioned in an economic community treaty signed by Yeltsin and the leaders of seven other republics; earlier this month. Banking LSAT P rep C ou rse ESTANLEY H. KAPLAN Russia also plans to cut foreign aid and credits to all countries and will charge world prices for its natural resources to those republics outside the new common market, he saiid. Tax laws will be rewritten to stimulate businesses, particularly those producing scarce consumer goods, and new rules will be drawn up to facilitate land reform, the selling of government-owned housing and unprofitable state farms, he said. Yeltsin promised to strengthen the ruble, which is all but worthless outside the Soviet Union, and tighten banking regulations to end uncontrolled money circulation. The national mint now is churning out rubles around the clock, fueling galloping inflation. Yeltsin said freeing prices is “the most painful” part of his reforms, but said “without this measure, any talk of reforms and of free markets is sheer ballyhoo.” To soften the blow, he plans to raise pensions, the minimum wage and students’ allowances as well as pay higher salaries to low-income professions, which in the Soviet Union includes teachers and doctors. “The crisis has reached the point where only quick and decisive steps can save the situation,” Yeltsin said. “The time of running in place is over,” , , Continued from page 3* dm Take Kaplan O rTake Your Chances 967-2967 FREE Diagnostics & Scholarships Available 1000 E. Apache « Suite 211 (1 block east of Rural) • Tempe Senate Banking Committee, called on the deposit insurance agency to raise its insurance premiums now to ensure it has the money needed to repay taxpayers. But no one has suggested adding to the replenishment to avoid the stop-and-start patterirthat has plagued the savings and loan cleanup. “In this political climate, I think they’re going to be lucky to get what they’re asking for,” Litan said. The Bush plan for the FDIC is not a bailout in the same sense as the 1989 savings and loan law, which has so far channeled $80 billion in taxpayer money directly into that industry. The FDIC would be borrowing from taxpayers and, at least on paper, would repay every penny — $45 billion by Selling the loans and property inherited from failed banks and $25 billion by collecting insurance premiums from banks. S iz z le r I n v it e s A ll 5 0 ,0 0 0 A S U S tu d e n ts F a c u lt y A n d S t a f f T o L u n c n . O r D in n e r . ROCK $4.99 SunDevil Deal, Part III. What Is SANDWICH ROCK? The Sandwich Shop that brings together both great food and low prices in a Rock & Roll atmosphere. That you will find somewhere... All you can eat from our Hot Pasta, Tostada, Soup, Fresh Fruit, and Salad Bars. Plus two more: a Hot Appetizer Bar and a Dessert Bar brimming with soft ice cream and all the gooey toppings you love. And That’s Not All. For $4.99 get your choice of a shrimp, chicken or small steak entree plus potato, rice or vegetable plus a green dinner salad plus your choice of non-alcoholic bever­ age with bottomless refills. It’s year three of the $4.99 SunDevil Deal. Come take advantage of us. After all how long can we go on like this? , The SunDevil Sizzler’s $4.99 SunDevil Deal is only a bike ride away. Ei\joy our Salad Bar or a sirloin steak entree I at the Mill & Southern Sizzler for a limited ■ time discount price of $4.99. Offer good for your party with coupon or an ■ ASU ID. Also good at Baseline & McClintock. I I I ! I I I I I I I I The SunDevil Sizzler’s $4.99 SunDevil Deal is only a bike ride away. HOCK 'COOIPLACE BUY A j Enjoy our Salad Bar or a sirloin steak entree ' | at the Mill & Southern Sizzler for a limited | GET A ■ tim e discount price of $4.99. Offer good for your party with coupon or an ■ ASU ID. Also good at Baseline & McClintock. Small Sandwich or Salad ■ I j Sizzler j Sizzler j L . at Mill & Southern - J Large Sandwich or Salad L . at M ill & Southern - J 960 W. University Im UL FREEy ROCK Hours: 11am-9pm Daily 921-3040 til 3am F ri. & S at. to o n s C a lv in and H o b b e s CALVIN ANDUISTRUSTV NAVIGATOR HOBBES ROAR. \x m THE UESIDENTIAL R.OAD AT 9 0 MPH.' by Bill Watterson PASTER AHDFASTtBTTe'GO'. THE WUCE ARE AFTERTHEM! ABUSLOAP OFSCHOOLCHlLD&ll CALVIN CRAWLS DOWNTO WES FtÖATVfe SIDEWALK' PUT TNTHEaUTCH ANDSHIFT.' THE FAR SIM ByGARYLARSON ML RIGHT, I'M BACK AIREADV ! CANT I EVEN RUN AN ERRAND WITHOUT V0Ü BLOWING THE HORN ACROSS, THE PARKING lût?! 'Te7 = E 7 wB 8E5 PUTSOH \ d Z l THE HWPSWQJD Mother Goose and Grimm by Mike Peters Stum py didn’t know how he got in this situation, but w ith the w hole town w atching, he knew he’d have to play it out. Doonesbury THOUGHT HLO.HBO! HO,BUT yolîp ju s t could youblamoho7 PULL UPA LOOKSUKOOUPStCO CHAIPANP SGO/NGTOGBr GLOAT, OH, QUITOA GOOPHÎT UJOODY? OFfTHO THOMS \ HOAPINGS! v BY GARRY TRUDEAU LOVOTOHOAP WHY, BUTI'M LATO TOA MOOTING.., WHAT? UH-OH! OOAR SIGNAOS CITY! H A,H A ! \ OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH! Hurt: Monday-Tkgnday 11:00 AM - 2:00 AN 1340 EAST APACHE FrUif-Situriiy 11:00AMMOAM OH.WOU-H POALLY PPOFCP TAUKINO TO YOU ONSONONOANY­ WAY, JOAN G/PU! WHY WOULD THATBO, WOOD BOY? \ NO WITNOSSOS! HA, HA, H A ! JUST KIDPINO! GOT YOUA COKO? HA, H A ,H A ! JOKO! JOKO' Buy it, sell it, find it, tell it...in S ta te Press Classifieds The Rice University Publishing Pregram 8 2 9 -0 0 6 4 #1 AT ASU SEMESTER & SPRING BREAK SPECIALS! BAHAMA VACATION Sunday 11:00AM-I:30AN FAST, FREE DELIVERY NEW YORK (AP) —Home alone on Halloween? Scare off the goblins with what a gift catalog describes as “the urban scarecrow . . . the latest weapon in the war on .crime.’’ And a perfect 42. The scarecrow is Gregory, an 11-pound mannequin with curly brown hair , a small cleft in his prominent chin and three-axle movement in his wrists, elbows, shoulders and head. Gregory has been on the market for several years, but so far most buyers have been police departments in towns too small to afford enough real cops. Now, after untold hours sitting behind the wheel of parked and otherwise empty cruisers to deter speeders, Gregory is ready for civilian life. That, at least, is the hope of the Anatomical Chart Co., a Skokie, 111., mail-order house which also sells such gifts as eyeball key chains, spine night lights and “The BonePhone.” In the passenger seat of a car or in a chair by the living room window, Gregory’s “muscle-bound fiberglass body and intimidating stare are guaranteed to reduce crime — just by the mere presence of a companion,” the catalog boasts. What’s more, he “doesn’t sweat, leave toothpaste in the sink or forget to put the toilet seat down. ” Gregory was created by two Utah men, Steve Bennett and Lou Ruffolo, who took his name from “gregos,” Greek for vigilant. T h e Rice U niversity P u b lish in g Program , July 13-August 7, 1992, is designed to develop talent, skills and career opportunities for persons interested in book and magazine publishing. The program is designed for students who will be enter­ ing their senior year in 1992 and for college graduates. Although participants come from all disciplines, the program has ..been of particular value to students in English and other Mumanities, Journalism, A rt, Social Sciences and Business. The roster of guest lecturers includes more than 35 top professionals in editing, graphics, marketing and production from throughout the country. $ 3 3 9 per person g ifc # H ^ includes: * S days/4 nights * ro u n d trip airfare to Florida * roundtrip cruise aboard luxury o c w r a f l j j H Discovery I * meals aboard ship included ■ all p o rt taxes & transfers included j J *. * stay at e ith e r •Bahama Princess H otel & Casino (double occupancy only) 1 -H oliday Inn Lucayan Beach (double occupancy only) v§ '* v - 1 ¿ §& j | , y . J|f -Free Port Inn Resort (groups only) For m ore inform ation, contact the Office of Continuing Studies, Rice University, P.O. Box 1892, Houston, Texas 77251-1892. Telephone (713) 520-6022 or 527-4803. William Marsh Rica University is an EO/A A institution. Subject to availablility. Single persons welcomed. 18year* ©f age required. Proof of drivers license with birth cxruftcKRROf . passport a must. CALL YOUR TRAVEL PRQFESSI0NA$|B 1-800-2964723. V YftfA ¥ 1 S tof» N w P a g è lli Tuesday, October 89,1991 PERSISTENCE Huffmaster battles knee injury in leading way for cross country By MICHAEL FLORES State Press Tamara Wofford/State Press ASU junior Trish Huff master hopes to overcome injuries before com peting in the Pac-10 Championship. It seems that no one is immune to the injuries which have plagued the ASU women’s cross country team this season. No fewer than five members of the, team have been slowed by injuries in what has kindly been described as a rebuilding season. The Sun Devil women have failed to run the minimum of five runners necessary for a team score in each of their three meets this season. “It’s unfortunate,” ASU distance coach Ken Lehman said. “We’ve been hoping to get some people healthy all season, but it’s been day to day.” Trish Huffmaster, the Sun Devils’ top finisher in three of four regular-season meets last year', has been battling a knee injury this season which, although it hasn’t sidelined her, has definitely hampered her performance. “It’s caused me major problems all season,” the junior said of her 5-month-old injury. “But it’s gotten better, and I’m ready to make my comeback rtow.” A successful comeback for Huffmaster would mean returning to Hie form she showed last year when she had three top-10 finishes and finished 22nd at the Pac-10 Championship. In the first two meets of this season, she was ASU’s secondhighest finisher behind junior Sharette Garcia. In the Sun Devils’ last meet, the Pre-NCAA Invitational in Tucson on Oct. 21, she was ASU’s top finisher in 27th place. Her road to recovery resumes Saturday when the Sun Devils compete in the Pac-10 Championship, to be hosted by Stanford. Huffmaster would like to do well at the meet for that and another reason. “When I was choosing which college to attend, it came down to ASU and Stanford,” said the graduate of Show Low High School in northern Arizona. The Sun Devils won out when she decided to follow the wishes of her parents, both of whom attended ASU. “I’m from a Sun Devil family,” she said, adding that she harbored no regrets about her decision. With early-morning practices arid daily treatments for her injured knee, Huffmaster said that there seems to be little time left for school, or anything else. “It’s hard,” said the education major, who turned 21 Monday. “Sometimes school suffers.” She admitted that her birthday wasn’t as special as she had hoped it would be. It began with the usual 6:30 a.m. practice at a local park, which, on this occasion, contained a foot of standing water from Sunday’s rains. After practice it was off to class and then to her internship. “Mondays are awful,” she said. N o doubt about w h o Pac-lO ’s top D og is Memo to anybody who has not been aware: Washington Huskies By DARREN URBAN State Press The battle for Washington coach Don James hasn’t been worrying about talent — the No. 3 Huskies have plenty of that. Instead, it is precisely the enormous juggernaut Jam es leads that must be protected against itself. “You want to get your guys to play 11 games,” said James, whose squad hosts ASU Saturday at Husky Stadium, “We’ve had our distractions — there’s been a lot of bowl talk, a lot of national championship talk. We’ve had a very difficult time trying to concentrate on the games, but I think our guys have done a pretty good job.” Good enough for Washington (74, 4-0 Pac-10) to have remained in the race for the mythical national title and, despite its No. 3 slot in the latest AP poll, garnering more first-place votes than second-ranked Miami. Good eriough for the Huskies, with respect to a California squad that came within seven points of beating Washington two weeks ago, to have motored through their schedule to an average final tally of 41*8. And good enough for the 1991 version of the “Purple Haze” defense to be tied (with Miami) for the nation’s top spot in points allowed. The Huskies leave an impression on every team they play. Oregon coach Rich Brooks, whose team lost to Jam es’ 29-7 last week, said Washington was probably the best team in the Pac-10 in a long time. However, Jam es, ever the Cautious mentor, is quick to point out that any “greatness” tags should be held until the end of the year. “ I hope he’s right,” Jam es Said. “There’s a lot to be proven yet. From a coach’s standpoint, I think you evalúate your team once all the games are played. I’m not sure I’m ready to go that far (and call us great). I think we have a ways to go, and we’ve got to get better.” Offensively, the Huskies are led by sophomore Billy Joe Hobert, originally a fill-in for injured junior Mark Brunell but now firmly entrenched in the No. 1 position. Hobert, who has passed for 1,498 yards and 13 touchdowns, has had the kind of Season James said is necessary for an undefeated mark and gives the Huskies a different dimension than Brunell. “Billy got off to a start in our first two games better than any quarterback we’ve ever had,” James said. “He’s really done well for u s . . , Mark was a lot quicker, and we could get a lot more out of the option and the quarterback scramble last year. But Billy is throwing the ball downfield and reading defenses probably as good as anybody we’ve had.” What makes Hobert even more effective is the receiving tandem of Mesa native Orlando McKay and Mario Bailey, who have combined for 67 catches for 1,053 yards and 14 touchdowns within a Washington offense that is on pace to set a school record for scoring. The running game is stocked with junior tailbacks Jay Barry and Beno Bryant. Washington photo Washington junior defensive tackle Stove Emtman is the leader of a Husky defense tied for first in the nation. Bryant leads the team with 598 yards rushing while Barry, who has 570 yards, has come up through the depth chart to start. “ (Barry) was really reminiscent of Greg Lewis two years ago when (Lewis) went into his junior year and everyone thought he was going to be the backup tailback,” James said, “ (Barry) got a lot of respect within the team and probably not a lot of notoriety outside the team prior to this year.”But the scary part of the Huskies is their defenders, a we’ll-get-right-in-your-faceand-dare-you-to-try-something defense that relies on a risky blitz-the-gaps scheme. Washington has racked up 81 tackles for losses, its defense being successful more often than not. T arn to W ashington, page 13* W eather causes dropoff for ASU womens golf at Stanford Sun Devils cant recover when rain cancels second round By AMY JOY SLADE State Press For once, lousy weather conditions might have favored the ASU women’s golf team. But the sun came out and the tournament went on. The No. 12 Sun Devils found them­ selves leading the Stanford Intercolleg­ iate after one round of play, but when the second round was rained out, ASU dropped to fifth place as the tourna­ V ollstedt ment was completed on Sunday. “I think the weather conditions worked in our favor when we were leading after the first round,” Sun Devil coach Linda Vollstedt said. “But, after our performance in the second round, I wish we could have played all three,” No. 4 San Jose State won the event by one stroke over topranked UofA, with a two-day total of 606. ASU, who shot a tournament-low 298 iri the first round and had the only tournament score to break 300, had four players finish in the top 20. Sun Devil sophomore Tracy Cone and senior Kim Millies shared a I2th-place tie at 7-over 153, while freshman Wendy Ward and junior Tricia Konz finished in a 16th-place tie at 8-over 154. Millies j who rattled off five birdies over a stretch of six holes during the middle of the first round, turned in a par 73 first round score, which was a season low round. “Right after I got those five birdies, we caught up with about two or three groups at the next hole, and we had to wait awhile before we could tee off,” Millies said. “I wonder if I didn’t have to wait if I could have turned in a great round.” Millies said the delay broke her concentration, but nonetheless it was rewarding to be the low gun Devil finisher. “It’s nice to see a couple of different names at the top for ASU,” Millies said. “We know the whole team has potential to produce good scores and that we don’t have to depend on (Konz) to cover us.” PiP f:; Vollstedt said she was proud of the bottom of her lineup (No. 4 Millies and No. 5 Cone) and that all four top 20 finishers will be exempt from the Sun Devils next tournament. “Kim and Tracy went through approximately five rounds of qualifying for the tournament,” Vollstedt said. “ (Their low finish) shows it really paid off.” Overall, the tournament proved that ASU is capable of beating top notch schools such as UofA and San Jose State, Vollstedt said, adding that the strong winds and inconsistent greens caused problems for the Sun Devils in the final round. “ I don’t know where this leaves us,” Vollstedt said. “But I hope it will boost our ranking.” Page 12 S tate P ie ts Tuesday. October 29.1991 Twins’ win MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - It’s Tony the Tiger vs. The Breakfast of Champions as the nation’s two largest cereal makers duke it out to capitalize on the Minnesota Twins’ World Series victory. Battle Creek, Mich.-based Kellogg Co. announced Monday that it will put the likeness of Tony the Tiger, clad in a Minnesota Twins uniform, on boxes of Frosted Flakes to be sold in the Midwest. At the same time, Golden Valley, Minn.-based General Mills Inc. unveiled a Wheaties box featuring hometown heroes Kent Hrbek and Kirby Puckett swinging their bats. The Frosted Flakes boxes fie in with the com pany’s M ajor League B aseball sponsorship, Kellogg communications manager Dick Lovell said in a telephone interview Monday. They should arrive in the Twin Cities by the middle of the week. One-half million of the special Wheaties packages also will be available this week to Twins fans in supermarkets throughout Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and parts of Wisconsin, Iowa and Nebraska, General Mills said. General Mills featured the entire team on the cover when the Twins won the World Series, in 1987, but had to limit it this year. “Hie team could not cooperate with us,” because of Kellogg’s sponsorship, General Mills spokeswoman Kathryn Newton said. Lovell of Kellogg said this is the first time Tony the Tiger has appeared on the box in a team uniform. The front of the box shows the cereal mascot flashing the No. 1 sigh and the back has a history of the Twins, a team picture and highlights from the year. “We began printing (the packages) early this morning and we expect them to be on the shelved in the Twin Cities in two to three days,” he said Monday. When asked if Kellogg was going after General Mills’ Minnesota markets, Lovell would only say, “I expect these packages will be very popular with consumers in the Twin Cities:” He declined to discuss the monetary value of Kellogg’s sponsorship, but said it was part of a “multi-faceted” program to tie in baseball with the sugar-frosted cereal. Newton of General Mills said the pictures of Hrbek and Puckett were taken at games within the last three to four weeks. Volleyball’s Penney honored by Pac-10 From sta ff rep o rts ASU senior volleyball playerDebbie Penney was named Pac-10 co-player of the week, conference commissioner Tom Hansen announced Monday. Penney, a middle blocker, shared the honor with California’s Sienna Curci after helping the Sun Devils to a two-match sweep over Oregon and Oregon State on the road. The 6-foot-2 Penney compiled 28 kills and 21 digs during the weekend, to go with six solo blocks and six block assists in ASU’s first conference road sweep since 1986. Her 20 kills against the Beavers was a career-high. It was the first such honor for a Sun Devil in three years, when Christy Nore was named three times in 1988. Penney and her teammates are at home this weekend against UCLA and USC, with both matches starting at 7:30. Jim AT&T’s long distance savings plan can take you to this location. AT&T has always helped college students call the places they want to call. In fact, one of our savings plans for off-campus students, the SelectSavei** Plan, lets you direct-dial the one out-of-state area code you call most often. For just $1.90 a month, and 12 cents a minute, evenings, nights and weekends. 20 cents a minute, weekdays? □ And now AT&T can take you to another place you’ve always w anted to go. Just enter the AT&T “It Can Happen to Me” Sweepstakes. You could win a trip for you and a guest to any U.S. and any European rock concert. 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