ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY P r ess F rid a y, A u g u st 2 8 ,1992 A n Independent M o rn in g D aily Basketball player sentenced to jail Faulkner to serve 30 days for violating probation terms By C arol Ann H ansen and Brian C harles State P ress A S U ’s basketball team received another c rip p lin g blow Thursday when Jamal F a u lk n e r, the Sun D evil’s top-shopting fo rw ard , was sentenced to 30 days in »”d -tw? J car* Faulkner probation for failing to meet the requirements of an earlier court- ordered restitution. Last spring, Faulkner and three teammates were placed on tw o years probation and ordered to complete 100 hours of community work, after they pled guilty to charging $13,474 in long-distance phone calls on an ASU athletic department telephone credit card. Wednesday, teammate Dwayne Fontana, another ASU basketball forward, was arrested and booked on charges of sexual assault. Faulkner was in court Thursday because he failed to meet with his probation officer three times and did not complete all 100 hours of court-ordered community service work at Tempe High School. ASU basketball coach Bill Frieder testified on behalf of Faulkner, but refused to give specifics on his testimony. “Basically, Jamal is in good standing with me,” he said. “Since June 1, Jamal has been a model citizen. “He’s made good grades, he’s done his community service work and he’s seeing his probation officer.” Frieder said Jamal’s probation officer also testified on the basketball player’s behalf at the trial. “He had a bad start with his probation officer because he had problems getting to his appointm ents and he w ent to the w rong place,” Frieder said. “But he did a great job this summer.” The Maricopa County Attorney's Office will review Faulkner’s jail term at a hearing scheduled Wednesday morning. Faulkner is the thud member of the ASU Sun Devil basketball team to run into trouble this week. On Tuesday, it was reported that center Mario Bennett would be out for the season with a knee injury and on Wednesday F ontana w as suspended from the team Board o f Regents frames 1 9 9 3 -1 9 9 4 fiscal request and Kate D eely Critical budget issues for the upcoming year were outlined at Thursday’s Arizona Board of Regents meeting, as the deadline for the submission of a budget request to the state for fiscal year 1992-93 draws near. The first Board of Regents meeting of the fall 1992 sem ester was held at ASU, and participants corresponded with officials at the University of Arizona and Northern Arizona U niversity via video-teleconference. The regents’ video-teleconference meeting, a cost­ saving' venture, proceeded with only minor time-delaying glitches. R eg en ts P resid en t - A ndy H urw itz presented the board with two budget options. He suggested the board request a budget sim ilar to the current budget or one that includes a S percent increase. Boaidmembers agreed to work on refining a budget between now and their September meeting to ensure that a finalized draft is ready to present to the state by October. The increase would request additional funding to pay for faculty and staff salary increases, utility rate increases and the prior F rieder added th at Fontana was indefinitely suspended from the basketball team “Until we get all of the facts.’’ The athletic department has refused to comment on the matter until Athletic Director Charles S. Harris holds a news conference scheduled for 9 a.m. today. Harris will focus on the recent criminal misconduct among ASU athletes. juniors Susan W ambach (left) and W right w atch a s re scu e jw o rk frs —sklen t scene. year’s unfunded mandated programs. ASU President Lattie Coor said die board needs to propose a budget that is realistic but that would strongly emphasize the need for funding to solidify the existence o f the three universities. Even if the req u ested budget is not approved in its entirety, Coor said he believes the essential needs of the universities should be logged in the minds of Arizona legislators. “We all have the same objective in mind, so we don’t want to be unreasonable in light of the budget situation o f the state,” Coor said. “We m ust be able to say w ith an unblemished voice, ‘This is so important we’ve got to have it on the table.’” Coor said in the case o f an increased budget, the m oney w ould first go to increasing faculty and sta ff salaries and improving undergraduate instruction. Future plans for improving undergraduate education at the universities were outlined in the 1992-93 goals and objectives for the Regents. The board is im plem enting a host o f T u r n t o R egents , page team Commits a rape, they are gone for good,” he said. Below : R on ald C o rd o va (left) and C h arlae Seri no a ssist Tampa police, param edics, and firefighters In siding a young woman injured St 6:15 p,m. Tuesday. The woman attempted to b e at o u t a yello w lig h t at C o lla g e and University, causing her scooter to collide with a N issan 200SX turning w est on U niversity, condition w as unknown. Universities hope for 5% budget boost B y N atalie Yo u n g State P ress pending the outcome of the sexual assault charge. _ When asked about recent developments within his squad, Frieder said the team will survive. “You never like bad publicity like this, but we are going to go on and get through it,” he said. : . Frieder refused to elaborate on Fontana’s arrest. “What I will say is that if someone on my 12 . N ew African-Am erican hall raises som e eyebrows Umoja residence life garners mixed reviews from residents B y K risten W hite State P ress Some call it solidarity. Others call it segregation. The newly created African-American residence hall, called Um oja, a Swahili word m eaning unity, is stirring more controversy as residents settle in for the venture’s inaugural in S id e S T A T E P R E S S year. Many of the students who live on Umoja Hall, a floor in Ocotillo residence hall, said they chose to five there in hopes of finding a sense of unity among residents. “You have to stick with your own kind,” said Elana Payton, a freshman psychology major who lives in Umoja. Payton said she chose to five in the new hall because she wanted the support of living with people who can relate to her life experiences as an African-American. However, other students view Umoja, which was created by ASU Residence Life last year, as a return to the racial disparity that was prevalent in American society less than 30 years ago. w ~ O p in io n W o rld /N a tio n Fresh from Houston and the GOP convention Bill Teimey bubbles over with apathy about President George Bush. Page! P ag e 4 President Bush sent in US air contingent to block Iraqui planes in southern Iraq. ★ ELECTION / 9 *J 2 YEAR ★ .: ★ “It’s segregation,” said Dan Jones, a sophomore marketing major. “If this had happened 10 or 20 years ago, black people would get really upset. Now it’s the opposite and they want to be isolated.” Conflicting opinions from both students and faculty about race relations on campus have been a burning issue for some time and Umoja has played a role in both aggravating and appeasing the debate. “It (Umoja) was bom out of student protest about the need to look at the A frican-A m erican experience on college campuses,” said Student Life Dean Art Carter. Carter was referring to a January 1992 protest in which 20 TORN t o C ulture , page 10. Today’s Weather: Fair mid hot. High 103. Low 76. Classifieds........................ 17 C om ics.................................14 Crossword............ ................. 6 Sports....................................IS World/Nation......................3 P age2 State P ress Friday, August 28,1992 ASU dubbed ‘party school’ B y B lake H erzog State P ress Autumn is, among other things, the season of the college guidebook. The yearly editions of those huge books, which purport to tell prospective students everything they need to know about the schools on their list, tend to come out in the fall — just in time for college-bound high school seniors in search of the perfect school. ASU is a large enough school to be included in even the more “selective” guides, but it has been omitted from such books as The Black Student’s Guide to Colleges and Barron’s 1986 Most Prestigious Colleges. Some of the guides, such as those issued by Peterson's, Barron's, Arco and the College Board, consist mainly of facts and fig u res supplied by the various cam puses about enrollment, costs, the student body’s ethnic makeup, majors offered, admission standards and other empirical data. The people involved in the production of the books feel that the books can be valuable resources. A licia F lorin, P eterso n ’s m edia m anager, said her company’s book has a new feature that goes beyond just the raw numbers. “We have a magazine section that’s really geared to the prospective college student with advice columns, newsy information about how to deal with entering college and what to expect,” she said. Other guides offer a more subjective view of the campuses, taking a shot at naming the best educational programs and capturing the social environment in a way the school itself might not. For example, the Princeton Review Student Access Guide to the Best Colleges calls ASU “a fine school with plenty of op p o rtu n ities for a great education and even more opportunities to have a good time.” The “good time” aspect is mentioned in most write-ups on ASU, though some emphasize it more than others. The Insider’s Guíele to the Colleges 1992, written by Yale students in conjunction with students at the review ed campuses, concludes that “the majority of ASU students flock to Tempe each fall to pursue partying, fun and sun.” Some guides even go so far as to rate schools on such aspects as academic and social life, and the competitiveness of the admissions process. One exam ple is The Fiske G uide tó C olleges 1993, published by the New York Times Press. ASU got only two out of five stars for academics, but was at the top of the scale for social life and quality of life. The narrative also said that the Memorial Union’s Grand Marketplace “may well have the best institutional food in the nation.” Some ASU authorities take a dim view of the subjective nature of a few of these books. ASU Admissions Director Susan Clouse said she feels that some of the books are not updated often enough. “There are some books where I’ll read the same text every year — where they’ll say something recently changed and they’ve been saying it recently changed for four years,” she said. But Barbara Gilson, editor of Arcp’s The Right College, said her company is consistent about revising its text. “We have very recent data,” she said. “ The books are in stores in August and sometimes July, and they’re still being updated in May, a week before they go to be printed. “Therefore, there’ll be the latest tuitions — tuitions for the coming year rather than the previous year so if there’s an increase, and there often is, they’ll have that.” Meredith Whiteley, an ASU senior research analyst who has been involved with the compiling of ASU statistics for such books, said when the different book publishers ask for the same type of figures in different ways it can complicate her work. Whiteley added that if all die guides used the same figures, “it would make the work of the student who is reading the different guides a lot easier." "I don’t know that the student who reads it realizes that one guidebook asks for S AT scores cut One way and the other guidebook calls for SAT scores cut a different way," she said. “When you’re 17 years old and reading these guidebooks, do you know that? I don’t think so.” Figures can vary from book to book. In the latest editions, total enrollment figures for ASU are in the 42,000 range, in­ state tuition is usually given as $1,590 and out-of-state tuition as $6,996. However, the most recent Princeton Review Student Access Guide reports tuition as being $1,525 in-state and $6,934 outof-state. One group that may buy more guidebooks than high school seniors are high school guidance counselors. “We have a copy here in our career center,” said Westwood High School counselor Mary Ellen Anderson. “And in most public libraries you might also find some Copies there, but,I don’t think that individuals purchase these.” Bill Holmes, head of the guidance department at Chaparral High School in Scottsdale, said that he thought the guidebooks might be bought by “a certain number o f students that are really looking at different schools and are really searching a lot of schools.” But in the advising office, the guidebooks may be replaced to some extent by technology. Holmes said many students use the School’s college Computer search system instead. Thenoisein Snyder's Bouse is loud enough to raise the roof. If it had one. AM D 100 W IN G S Snyder 's Bouse Rocks! Sun D evil Football Student Season Tickets STADIUM TICKET O FFICE OR MEMORIAL UNION 965-2381 A r iz o n a B r a n d / P h o e n ix A ir p o r t H ilto n V o lle y b a ll C h a lle n g e S e p te m b e r 4 & 5 in U A C . A d m i s s i o n i s F R E E ! ESyB"* C A R D IN A L S /B R O N C O S P R C -G A M E S P E C IA L • s e e D R A F T S (L IT E 81 M G D ) • 4 - 6 p .m . W orld /N ation S tate P ress Friday, August 28,1992 U.S. sends air power to Iraq B y J im A brams A ssociated P ress WASHINGTON — U.S. warplanes swooped into southern Iraq Thursday to enforce a coalition ban on all flights by Iraqi aircraft. Saddam Hussein’s government denounced the no-flight zone and threatened retaliation *‘in due time.’’ But the P entagon said no Iraqi planes had challenged the prohibition of flights below' the 32nd parallel. Pentagon spokesman Bob Hall, speaking at a news conference almost two hours after the 10:15 a.m. EDT ban wept into effect, said: “ As of this moment, or as of about five minutes ago. there had been no activity to prevent the monitoring regime that we’ve undertaken." He said F-18s based on the aircraft carrier Independence : and P-15 fighters were patrolling the skies of southern Iraq, and that the military was adding to its AW AC and RC-135 reconnaissance plane force in the Persian Gulf theater. British and French planes are moving into the region to participate. Hall said. President Bush announced the ban on Wednesday, saying one purpose was to prevent any attacks on coalition surveillance planes monitoring Iraqi military activities in the marshlands of southern Iraq. Bush accused Saddam of attacking the Shiite people of southern Iraq, a violation of U.N. R esolution 688 that requires Iraq to cease all suppression of its citizens. Shiite Muslims, who make up 55 percent of Iraq’s Crewmen aboard the aircraft carrier U SS Independence, sailing in the Persian G ulf, roll out m issiles Thursday to be loaded onto population, were crushed when they rose up against fighter planes that will head out to enforce the edict banning Saddam H ussein's air force from flying over rebellious Southern Iraq. Saddam following the Gulf War defeat, but have kept up More than 20 (J.S. Navy planes flew off Thursday on the first petrol, There were no reports of incidents. guerrilla operations based in the vast marshes of the south. The Iraqi military has recently stepped up its attacks on the confrontation. He said that Iraq had moved all its fixed-wing An official statement on Baghdad radio said Iraq will resist region. " aircraft and most or all o f its helicopters above the 32nd and will not let “ the enemy choose the timing and the method More than 20 American aircraft based on the Independence parallel. appropriate to them to achieve their evil purposes.” patrolled southern Iraq, some flying escorts for British He said that of 40 flights on Thursday — the ban went into One concern is that Saddam might bar further U.N. weapon Tornadoes helping monitor the special zone. effect near dusk in Iraq — all were above the line, arid that inspections and end U.N. relief operations in Iraq. Pilots returning from the flights said none fired any of their only two of 95 flights on Wednesday, both by helicopters, Hall declined direct comment on whether U.S. warplanes air-to-ground missiles and they were not locked onto by Iraqi crossed the line. would shoot down Iraqi civilian aircraft entering the no-fly radar, although they flew over roads, rivers, dirports and “ 1 don’t think anybody expects anything to happen” zone, but said the ban applies to both civilian and military known surface-to-air missile sites. immediately, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said planes and “ we’ll take the appropriate measures” if Baghdad Pentagon sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, Thursday. “ The evidence at this point is Saddam is not tests coalition resolve with civilian flights. said they fully expect Saddam's forces to test U.S. and allied looking for a confrontation. It appears that he’s keeping his The spokesman also stressed that the military mission is to resolve with possible “ cat and mouse” ploys, perhaps by aircraft above the 32nd parallel,” protect coalition reconnaissance flights, and not to take flying aircraft just over or quite near thie border of the no-fly In B aghdad, the governm ent denounced the ban as offensive action against Iraqi ground forces or artillery zone. “ aggressive, illegal and unjust” and said Saddam might order positions in southern Iraq. But H all said that so far the Iraqis w ere avoiding action against allied aircraft. H u rrica n e d a m a g e e x te n siv e B y Sc o tt M c C artney A ssociated P ress from M id a g i AMMttM ìm é m ìé K B m ted S ta i port fo r I trad© witb mMF ittj* «pp* r iir a lia g li, m d tm Ë B Ê Ê Ê ■ ■ m the economy and ith c a r» to on trip ns. Campaignin ling m ate Al Gore, C »©rate I ito ip v t n w l m « who only i w Hon lo talh hy trial th e pocket" of *ve tyers who have ¿Associated Presa i NEW ORLEANS — As Louisianians made their way back to hurricane-razed coastal neighborhoods Thursday, officials expressed relief that destruction wasn’t worse and appealed for medical help at still-crowded shelters. . ‘‘W e’ve been spared a m ajor, m ajor disaster,” Gov. Edwin Edwards said during a helicopter tour. Storm Andrew, still drenching Dixie as it w eakened to a tro pical d epression, was blamed for one final affront: a pipeline at an offshore natural gas rig apparently damaged by the hurricane caught fire. No pollution was reported and the fire was expected to bum itself out, authorities said. Officials throughout southern Louisiana began compiling damage estimates, but said no numbers would be available at least until F riday. S till, estim ates likely w ill be measured in millions of dollars, rather than the b illio n s o f more densely populated Florida. ‘‘A ll my things! A ll my things, my furniture,” Linda Henson wept in Bayou Vista, west of Morgan City. Under cloudless skies and steamy heat, a steady stream of cars, slowed by sightseers, returned to the coastal towns where Andrew’s eye and 160-mph wind gusts came ashore Wednesday. The cleanup began with chain saws and portable generators ringing out. A tow truck righted a toppled trailer and National Guard troops with Humvees and M-16 rifles took up posts. Store owners put up plastic sheets over shattered windows and swept up broken glass with shovels. Everyone, it seemed, waited for insurance adjusters. Communications were difficult. Local radio stations were out, and newspapers in - Franklin and Morgan City haven’t been able to publish since Monday. Knee-deep water receded quickly, leaving only scattered pools lying about. Stores and restaurants tried to open; however, most still lacked electricity. A few resourceful Cajuns cooked on barbecue grills and portable gas stoves and sipped instan t coffee. The Salvation,Army had 26 canteen trucks out delivering food and water. ‘‘If we can keep th eir stom achs full, ’ they’ll be a little more contented,” said A1 Ritson, a Salvation Army official in Morgan City. T here was fu rth er good new s on the gastronom ic front: the M cllhenny Co., makers of Tabasco.Sauce, said its factory on Avery Island, just south of the town of New Iberia, was spared substantial damage. The factory served as a shelter for nearly 250 Tabasco workers during the storm. The hurricane, which ravaged subdivisions south of Miami on Monday, then raked the Louisiana coast 48 hours later, has already been labeled the costliest natural disaster in U .S. history. In addition to prelim inary estim ates o f up to $20 billion in Florida damage alone, Andrew killed a total o f 20 people in the two states and the Bahamas. In addition, a woman was killed early Thursday in a collision at an intersection that lacked stoplights because of the storm. Andrew’s remnants crossed Mississippi on T hursday w ith w inds o f about 35 mph. Jackson recorded 4 inches o f rain , the National W eather Service said, and about 29,000 Mississippi horned and businesses lost power. The storm then crossed into Alabama, where tornadoes snapped trees and power poles and tore som e hom es apart. The National Weather Service made about a dozen twister sightings on radar, and at least two touchdow ns w ere reported in the Montgomery area. About 11 homes were damaged and at least two people were hurt, authorities said. The storm was on a track to cross Alabama and move into Georgia by Friday, forecasters said: In Louisiana’s inland parishes, where an estimated 10,000 people fled to 43 Red Cross shelters as Andrew approached, officials issued a plea for more workers, to relieve 500 to 600 volunteers. “ We need m edical p erso n n el,” said A lexandria, L a., M ayor N ed R andolph. “ Some of these people in the shelters need some medical care.” Power companies reported that 381,000 Louisiana homes and businesses had lost electricity, but that service had been restored to 214,000 of them by Thursday. In Morgan City, the mayor said residents should plan for two weeks without power. “ This is by far the worst hurricane I’ve been involved in ,” said M ayor C edric LaFleur, who has held public office since 1968. “ Almost every business place or home here has some damage some major and some ju st dam age to things like fences, carports and awnings." O pinion P a ge 4 Friday, August 28, 1992 S tatt P ress State Press Ed itorial Culture hall doomed To appease the rioters who stormed the Memorial Union earlier this year, ASU has opened U m oja, a p art o f a residence hall dedicated to showcasing African-American culture. Although the hall is open to anyone who wishes to live there, 15 o f the 19 students currently residing there happen to be black. The lone white student in the hall tells tales of friends not returning phone calls out o f fear o f the grand amount of culture in the hall. He is not saying much about what he is learning about the culture of his floormates. Apparently ASU is planning to open 10 campus communities in the coming years to supplement the two now open — Umoja and the non-controversial volunteer service culture hall. ■ But it «seems that H ispanic, A sian and Native American halls will not receive the controvery that U m oja has received. The reaso n fo r th a t is th e b la ck se p e ra tis t movement. To many, including possibly those living in the hall, Umoja is part of the plan outlined by some radical black leaders that calls for blacks to have no contact with any other races. The theory goes that in order to maintain their culture, blacks m ust keep themselves seperate. . . That theory has taken its strongest roots exclusively in the black community. O ther minority groups in America have, for the most part, practiced assimilation even in the face of racism. And if assimilation does not sit well with some blacks, this being A rizona, there are plenty o f whites around who don’t mind a bit. “Go back to Africa” is the silent cry of many whites when repeatedly confronted with black seperatism. Others ask die old question, “What would happen if I tried to start an Anglo culture hall?” Again, this being Arizona. In a move to ease racial tension, ASU has so far done the opposite. T he- cam p u s co m m u n ities p ro b ab ly sounded great during the meeting of suits who figured that, “Ideally, a freshman could live in U m oja and learn about A frican-A m erican culture and then as a sophomore choose to live in a Native American hall for a different experience.” But it was doomed from the start. The ideal should be for all races to get along and deal with each other as people. But there- are extremes on both ends that make that dream impossible. 'OH.ITSThs BRNN^URâEûN-lWHKdSDTbU'UEARRIVED,DOCTOR!HWSRf! ' H eaven know s w hy G od is a G O P issue “You think that maybe God is a Republican?” Slats LIKE Grobnik asked. I don’t know. My guess is ROYKO that he’s non-partisan. Why Tribune do you ask? Media “Well* listening to some of Services the Republicans, they talk lik e God is an honorary chairman of their party. Even President Bush slammed the D em ocrats for not mentioning God in their party platform . You think God really cares if he’s in a party platform that hardly anybody reads anyway?” I’ve never heard a theologian express that view. “From what I can tell, most party platforms are a lot of baloney. So I figure God would probably say: ‘Hey, if you’re going to make a lot of phony promises, don’t do it in my name, OK?”’ I’m not sure he’d phrase it that way, but that could be his sentiment. ‘‘And what about his son?’’ „ What about him? “He was Jewish, right?” On his mother’s side, yes. “And he was kind of liberal, right?” In some ways, I suppose. ’’Well, he said the poor are blessed. And so are the merciful. And that the meek are going to inherit the Earth. You didn’t hear nobody at the Republican Convention putting in good words for the poor or the merciful or the meek. Pat Buchanan sounded like he’d like to hang ‘em from a tree. And what about the rich Republican fat cats?” What about them? “Didn’t God’s son put the whammy on the rich? He said something like woe to them. And that a rich guy has about as much chance of getting to heaven as a camel has in getting through the eye of a needle. Boy, put that in the Republican platform and see what happens to contributions.” m Yes, he frequently made harsh statements about the rich. Especially those who were tightwads. He was in favor of giving your riches away, “See? If that ain’t a liberal, I don’t know what is. And I think he was in favor of taxes, too.” I’m not sure about that. “Sure. When some guys came to him and tried to con him into bum-rapping the taxes, he pointed at the coin that had Caesar’s mug on it and said that they should give Caesar what he has coming. Which meant not beefing about paying taxes. You don’t find that in the Republican platform, either. And what about the hooker?” What hooker? “That Mary Magdalene. He said she’s going to heaven, but all the rich fat cats ain’t. Now, if that ain’t liberal, I don’t know what is. And the thief, too.” What thief? “Remember, the one on the other cross. I mean, the guy was a criminal, which is why they nailed him up there. But he gets an ironclad promise that he’s going to the kingdom. Hah, all the fat cats are still trying to get through the eye of a needle, and some crook walks right through the pearly gates. Hey, if he showed up today, you think he could get into one of those fancy private country clubs a lot of the Republicans belong to?” Jesus in a country club? “Yeah. If he goes in and applies, and says that his mother was Jewish, the old blackball would come out, right?” \ , ? At some clubs, I suppose they would exclude him on that basis. “Imagine that, some membership chairman saying: ‘Sorry, Jesus, we believe in you and all that, but right now our membership list seems to be filled up.’” Well, he could apply at one of the predominantly Jewish country clubs. “Yeah, but he couldn’t get in there, either. There ain’t no way they’d let a carpenter in. No status. And he couldn’t afford the dow nstroke or the dues. Besides, he’d probably want to carry the bag for the caddy, which would embarrass everybody.” STATE PRESS s TAFF KRIS MAYES, Editor KEN BROWN, Managing Editor D J. BURROUGH................... SONDRA ROBERTO............. IOANNA G U C K LE R ............ RICHARD RUELAS.i............. SEAN OPENSHAW............... GREG SEXTON.................... BRIAN CHARLES ----------------- .............As*. Sports Editor LAURIE NOTARO.................................... Magazine Editor EHREN SCHWIEBERT______ ________ .Graphics Editor R EPO R TER S: Vicki Culver, Kate Deely, Chris Driscoll, Carol Ann Hanson, Laura Jevnikar, Scott Smith, Kristen White, Natalie Young, Dan Zeigcr. SPORTS R EPO R TE R S: Jake Batsell. Lisa Krantz, John Reznick. CO PY EDITORS: Carrie Brennan, Angela Benoche. CARTOONISTS: Ken Collins, Sean T Hoy PH O T O G R A P H E R S : Henri Cohen, M ichelle Conway, Irwin Dougherty, Susan Regnier, Darryl Webb, Cart York; COLUMNIST: Ashahed Triche. PRODUCTION: Kai Barrett, John Bozicevic, Jeff Hams, Kevin Heller, Barry Kelly, William Post, Mike Tompkins. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dcock, Sonia Benson, Jamia Birney, Shawn Loos, Jason Melvin, Lance Newman, Michael Oman, Neil Schnelwar, Tim Wolhpart. E d it o r ia l B o a r d U nsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual m embers o f the editorial board write editorials and the hom’d decides their merit. H ie editorials do not reflect the opinion-of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: H ie State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe/Ariz, 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. KRIS MAYES..»........M^,.,.,...^,.^V ^^n..^^v«?«»,‘....-.E+ F l ^ •, rtisioMk. ’r i 'Û ^ s i I m m m 1SÉ Ê O J S a le e n d s 8-30-92 R KD N o Lim it S a le e n d s 8-30-92 R L X K I J Z N E M J Z LN KE I KN N J G K U J O M NJ G K D S X H R A S X T S 12-pack cans W h ile S u p p lie s L a s t DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 8-28 CRYPTOQUOTE A K Q J L T J Z E O A S KH D J Z N O J . — S K H L M N . S Y N C X H N Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IN ANY BUSINESS EX­ TENDING CREDIT, SUCCESS DEPENDS ON KNOW­ ING WHAT NOT TO BELIEVE IN ACCOUNTING. — JUSTICE ROBERT H. JACKSON 61992 by King Feature* Syndicate, Inc. Sta t e P ress Friday, August 28,1992 _Page_7 Custodians protest proposed shift change By S haun Rachau State P ress A group of ASU custodians have formed a committee to protest a plan by Physical Plant management that would eliminate day and evening shifts, forcing all custodians to work the graveyard shift. “It would mess up my schooling since I am trying to obtain my GED,” said committee member Dan Smith of the possible change in work hours. “To change over, it would take me at least a month to get my sleeping habits together.” The custodians’ committee has come up with an alternative plan that would institute a 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. shift instead of an overnight shift, said Smith, who has been employed at ASU for more than five years. The proposed change to the graveyard shift is due to continuous budget cuts set forth by the University. In the past two years, the custodial budget has seen an 18 percent cut and the loss of 32 custodial positions. Val Peterson, director of ASU’s Physical Plant, which oversees custodial operations, said the most efficient and money­ saving way to provide custodial services is to try to Clean when buildings are vacant. “I can’t blame them .(custodians) for not wanting to move shifts, but when we have lost many people and we have to look at ways of being mote efficient, we have to start looking at ways we B ooks m Etc. S. ■ can do more with less people,” Peterson said. “We are looking at ways of providing the same service with fewer resources. Although Peterson said he agrees that the shift will disrupt and change the lives of individuals, he said most places do not have custodians clean during the day because they are too disruptive and the buildings must be recleaned later in the day. “(Night) shift work is not as desirable as daytime work. They (the custodians) have to make a decision on which is their primary job,” he said. However, Peterson said he would be willing to look at alternatives to the graveyard shift. “I am willing to look at options if (the custodians) can give me an option that still meets the same needs we have to accomplish with fewer resources,” he said. In order for him to favor the proposal, Peterson said the committee would have to convince him that its proposal is still efficient, since there are classes on campus until 10 p.m. The committee will present the proposal to Peterson by September 1. Peterson said he hopes to make a decision shortly after that. A custodian who refused to give his name said he is quitting ASU today because of the proposed plan to shift custodians to a graveyard shift and the instability of his job. “It will cause problems with steep and with my other job with another cleaning service. I work eight hours at ASU and eight hours at my other job,” the custodian said. He said most custodians work two jobs because they are not paid enough by ASU. The custodian Said he has found another job v^ith the Tempe School District. He said the move is because of better pay and steadier hours. Since he will be receiving an increase in pay, he said he no longer needs to keep his other job. “They (Tempe School District) have a pay scale that moves there and that offers advancement each year,” he said. “At ASU the pay scale does not move — not unless the Legislature comes in and says we have extra money.” According to the custodian, ASU custodians are evaluated every year and only get an increase in pay if there is any money in the budget. At his new job with the Tempe School District he will start out at $8 an hour. At ASU he makes about $6.90 per hour, or between $10,000 and $11,000 a year. , The custodian said he does not think anything will be accomplished by the switch to the graveyard shift. “By changing everyone to one shift, I don’t see how you are going to solve anything,’’ he said, “Sure the classrooms will get cleaned, but they will get messed up when the students come in the morning.” S p e c ia l a u to g ra p h in g event ^ # Author o f the award winning historical, Outlander, local author Diana's second novel continues the time travelling adventures of Clair Randall. Set in Scotland in both 1945 and 1745, Dragonfly in Am ber chronicles Clair's return to the Scottish highlands with her grown daughter. *' Author of the four book Sword Dancer series and the recently completed eight volume Chesuli series, Jennifer’s newest novel is Lady o f the Forest. 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T albott Smith State P ress M inor ed ito rial changes and additions to ASU.’s discriminatory harassment guidelines have been made by the Campus Enivironment Team and should be implemented later* this fall, said the CET chairman. ASU engineering professor and CET Chairman Timothy Tong said the changes to the CET Referral Guideline have been submitted to President Lattie Coor for review. Tong said the changes involve replacing words like “handicapped” with “disabled” and eliminating the words “Native American” from a description of a student in a hypothetical harassment situation'. Tong said the removal of the Native American description was done in an attempt to “broaden the meaning” of the description. Tong Said thè additions to the guidelines would include more hypothetical situations to help define harassment, but that the overall thrust of the policy w ouldn’t be altered by the changes. When asked if some of the changes in language of the guidelines might be construed as a shot at political correctness, Tong said he “wouldn’t characterize it that w ay.” “If there is a word th at w ould m ake som eone uncomfortable, you. don’t use it,” he said. “We don’t want to make people uncomfortable.” The CET is composed of two students, four staff members, four administrators and three professors. ASU President Lattie Coor created the team several years ago after a racial brawl on Alpha Drive. CET was formed to deal with discriminatory harassment issues on campus and, according to the guidelines’ general purpose statement, CET “promotes a campus environment that values diversity and provides respect for all individuals.” Business Finance senior Arianne Phillips, who worked as an intern at CET over the summer, said that CET “has the potential to do some really valuable work at ASU.” “Obviously we need something to combat (harassment). If it takes a guide, or whatever, it needs to be done.” But there are some students who don’t feel that CET is meeting its purpose. “I hope they consider all students and not just special interest groups that are particularly active in trying to get more rights, like the LGAU (Lesbian/Gay Academic Union) or like those black guys who tried to take over the MU last year, and the Hispano-Chicano Coalition,” sophomore liberal arts major Patrick Kaser said. “My biggest concern is that the discriminatory harassment part of the code would be abused by the Campus Environment Team,” he said. ‘‘The University needs to work to expand freedoms, not put limitations on them.” Kaser is head of ASU’s College Republicans, which was led last year by Bill Tierney. Tierney and the College R epublicans have been very critical o f C ET’s R eferral Guideline in the past. However, Kaser said that currently he is m ore concerned with “p o litical activ itie s w ithin the Republican Party.” “If (the CET guidelines are) used to advance political correctness, then I think we’d take a close look at it,” Kaser said. Leonard Gordon, who chaired CET previously and still remains on the team as a member, said the guidelines and their current additions have avoided the kind o f “overbroad language” in similar codes that at other schools have been found unconstitutional on free speech grounds. The American Civil Liberties Union has frequently pursued schools in court for free speech violations in relation to harassment guidelines. Gordon said the ACLU has told CET that its guidelines are some of the few in the country that don’t violate an individual’s First Amendment rights. rC A M P U S -i LC O R N E R J 712 S. C o lle g e A N Y SIZE FO U N TA IN D R IN K 49 ALL DAY - EVERY DAY UNIVERSITY 50* THEATRES 1025 S. 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In a pre-session public meeting, a majority of councilmembers authorized the city manager’s office to issue a request for proposals for a consulting service to assist with the citywide organizational G i u l i a n o review. The ultimate goal of the organizational review, as developed by the Tempe city manager’s office, is to come up with ways for the city to maintain and improve its services and programs over the next 20 years, “What we’re talking about hère is finding out ways to become more organized and improve our service delivery to the city,” Tempe Vice Mayor Neil Giuliano said. “I think it’s good for a large organization to dump all the pieces out of the box and find a way to put them back in to make a more efficient unit" A steering committee comprised o f Zerkle, deputy city The organizational review consists of four major objectives: managers Gary Brown and Jim Piper and two City Council • To reassess the mission statements and work programs of members will be assigned to oversee the organizational review. each department. This includes evaluating each department’s The committee is responsible for choosing a project manager, ability to deliver such programs over the long term, given the putting review teams together and finding an outside consultant to current resource constraints and any possible ones in the future. assist. • To analyze cost effectiveness and quality of programs “The feel for the city and the community will be provided by coordinated by the city. the people with the city,” Zerkle said. “I think it’s important to • To assess the management and organizational structure of the distinguish that from the role of the consultant, which will be to city. Officials will consider consolidating management functions provide technical support based on their experience and expertise and giving city employees more opportunities to get involved in with similar plans.” decision-making processes. The City Council has appropriated $250,000 from its 1992-93 “1 really like having people at the lower levels (of the city budget for the study, with that money to be spent for executive employee structure) able to look at a review,” Councilwoman duties as well as hiring an outside consultant. Carol Smith said. “They are the ones that can see What Councilman Don Cassano was concerned about the latter, administrators don’t really see because they’re the ones doing saying he feels that instead of agreeing to pay a certain amount everyday work.” for outside assistance, the city should let consultants compete to • To create an implementation plan outlining each of the offer their services. recommended changes. This plan would include information on As many as 17 city employees will be assigned to work on the how much it would cost to institute such changes. project, which will take between nine and 12 months to complete. “The review will be a top-to-bottom look at what we are doing Councilman Joseph Lewis said he liked the idea of employees right now,” Tempe City Manager Terry Zerkle said. “We want it participating, but not if it would compromise their day-to-day to involve everyone throughout the organization.” duties. $NEED SOME FAST CASH$ W e P ay U p to * IO L For Levi's 501 *Call for details •All Colors #A11 W ashes •Levi Jackets up to $12 •Leather Biker & Bomber Jackets up to $50 r SHOP FOR YOUR ART SUPPLIES FROM THE VALLEY'S MOST COMPLETE SELECTION THROUGH SEPTEMBER 36TH A N D RECEIVE A SUBSTANTIAL 30% DISCOUNT O N MOST ITEMS THROUGHOUT THE STORE) FINE ART, ARCHITECTURE, E N G IN E E R IN G & G R A P H IC D E SIG N STUDENTS: FINE A R T M A T E R IA LS : CANVAS, PAINTS, STRETCHER BARS, BRUSHES, FRAMES, PAPER, ETC. 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Rural Rd- Tempe 921-FAST 2D Í921-3278J WM ,-Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Sat. 11 a.m.-3Fa.m. sr i & SQUAW PEAK PARKWAY Page 10 Friday, August 27,1992 S ta te P ress C u lt u r e C o n t in u e d from page I black students wearing ski masks stormed the third floor of the Memorial Union demonstrating against the lack of University response to diminishing black faculty. More than SO other students protested outside the building. Carter said the creation of an African-American hall was an academ ic response to the racial co n flict. He said the continuing student controversy is due to a lack of knowledge about the structure and purpose of Umoja. Umoja is one o f two communities under a new ASU program called Campus Communities. The hall is open to any student who is interested in learning more about AfricanAmerican culture by living in the hall and attending guest lectures and classes that focus on related topics, said Robert Hicks, director of Campus Communities. The second Campus Com m unity hall is for students interested in volunteer service. Hicks said ASU is aiming for 10 intellectual and cultural communities like Umoja over the next three years. “Ideally, a freshman could live in Umoja and learn about African-American culture and then as a sophomore choose to live in a Native American hall for a different experience.” However, Hicks also said Umoja was a response to racial tension at ASU. “There is an increase in racial tension and the key to resolving the conflict is communication,” Hicks said. “Umoja Hall is a forum for continuous communication.” This semester 19 students live on Umoja Hall. Fifteen of these students are African-American, two are Hispanic and one is white. Jason Norton, an undeclared freshman and the sole white Umoja resident, said none of his white friends will return his phone calls. “I have three white friends and I haven’t heard from diem,” said Norton. “They’re scared of black people.” Likewise, other students who live in the hall said they had problems with their white friends when they told them they wanted to live in an African-American hall. “They asked me, why do you want to live with all of those black people,” said Nichole Wamble, an African-American freshman pre-med major. “They were afraid,” Wamble said. Princess M cCoy, another A frican-A m erican Ùmoja resident and a freshman communications major, said she could identify the fear. “I was surprised that a college o f all things allowed an African-American dorm because that’s their greatest fear — educated blacks,” McCoy said. However, David McNeil, an African-American junior majoring in psychology, said black students should go to an “all black school’’ if they want to live only among other African-Americans. ; ‘‘You should cóme to school to meet hew ¡people,” McNeil said. “You should not be segregated.” itute tty s tu d e n ts MemorialUi Room*A REFRESHMENTS! DOOR PRIZES! SIGN-UP SHEETS! SOCIAL ACTIVITY! techline f u r n it u r e a n d c a b in e t r y f o r h o m e a n d o f f ic e s im p le s o lu t io n s to a ll y o u r s p a c e p r o b le m s t e c h lin e m o d u la r fu r n itu r e . Q u a lity . V e r s a t ilit y . A f f o r d a b ilit y Homeowners & Business Accounts Special Orders •Complete Departments ■ Plumbing ■ Electrical ■ Lawn & Garden te c h lin e - p h o e n ix 9 0 9 e . c a m e lb a c k p h o e n ix 2 3 0 -8 8 9 3 ■ Pool & Patio ■ Housewares ■ Glass & Screen Repair OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK CALL FOR HOURS 968-4544 to c M in e Camelback 929 E. 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See the Jaeger girls 8-11 p.m. $1.95 Jaeger Shots, I $2.75 Pitchers HI 7 p.m. F R E E GIVEAW AYS t tisten to Canrin Jones andST/i R u ra l & A p a c h e Pag« 1 2 Friday, August 27, 1992 S tate P ress R e g e n ts > o SE ZZj hi C o n t in u e d from pa g e 1. p o licies to accelerate im provem ent o f undergraduate education. Among those addressed were reviewing faculty teaching loads, strengthening graduate education and research, im proving achievem ent o f underrepresented students, clarifying student financial needs and taking strategic action through support of kindergarten through 12th-grade programs. Regent John Munger expressed the need to focus efforts on the possibility of a tuition hike and the increasing number of student cries for financial aidRegent Donald Pitt said that funding needs to be viewed globally and that appropriate funding mechanisms to operate! facilities should be identified. The possibility of a third campus located in Pima County was a point of controversy at the meeting. Because o f the proposed geographical location, UofA President Manuel Pacheco said the third campus should be under UofA’s jurisdiction, with the possibility of becoming an independent university in the future. A number o f board members were hesitant about UofA taking on the additional responsibility because of the potential for a financial drain. Since a framework has already been established for ASU West and the preliminary construction of ASU East, the board agreed th at C oor w ill control the curriculum and administration at both satellite schools. However, the Regents Commission on Public Higher Education will review the preliminary plans for the satellite campuses and make recommendations to the board based upon the cam p u ses’ ab ility to achieve a long-term goal of decreasing campus populations. NAU cuts endanger degree programs FLAGSTAFF — Northern Arizona University’s student body president w ants students to fig h t the proposed elimination o f up to 17 degree programs over the next two years, but a state official says at least some of cuts may be needed. NAU President Eugene Hughes announced Wednesday that the school is scheduled for a “painful” restructuring because of state budget cuts. Hughes said in his annual faculty address that he is recommending the curriculum cuts to save the university about $3.5 million. “In the face of fiscal constraints, NAU cannot continue to fund programs that are peripheral to its mission, no matter how high their quality,” Hughes said. “Nor can the university afford to weaken the quality of all its programs through continued across-the-board budget cuts.” Mark Popejoy, president of the Associated Students of NAU, said he and others on campus will rally students to fight for the programs. “These are recommendations and students can’t lay down and die," Popejoy said. “We’re going to encourage students to be optimistic and mobilize. Some programs wouldn't be cut until three years from now, and I’m not willing to say things won’t change in three years." About 2,000 of NAU’s 15,000 students would be affected by the cuts and about 1,000 may have to transfer to pursue eliminated majors, Hughes said. Under Phase I of the downsizing proposal, master’s degree program s in com m unity college education and applied m icrobiology w ould be d isco ntinued along with implementation of the geology doctoral degree. A dozen other graduate programs would be moved to summer session only. Also recommended for elimination are bachelor’s degree programs in arts managem ent, engineering technology, jo u rn alism , fashion m erchandising, illu stratio n and printmaking, interior design, the minor in library science and the emphases in graphic arts and construction technology. The recommendations arc subject to review by a recently appointed 15-m em ber Faculty S enate R etrenchm ent Committee, which will report its final decisions to Hughes by Nov. 25. Two students will sit on the committee and public forums will be scheduled to discuss implications of the cuts, Hughes said. , • Anticipating further state reductions, university officials have drawn up a Phase II list of cuts that would become effective in 1994. Degree programs facing possible shutdowns under Phase II include advertising, criminal justice, dental hygiene, nursing and public relations. Also, basic courses in French, German and food and nutrition could be eliminated. Don'tMisstkfloat Use State Press Classifieds 965-6731 Sigma Sigma sigm a L S ta te z o C la s s if ie d s y v J J P re te 2 n T h a t ’ s t h e t ic k e t ! < o m J "Famous Since 1977" Delicious Trailmixes • Homemade Chocolates «Fresh Roasted Nuts Dried Fruit S Candies $10 Minimum Order FREE DELIVERY B O A . Q J I O J I / a su \ LOW EST PRICES!! 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SORORITY RUSH September u ,3 ( 178 OTHER LOCATIONS THHOUGHOUTTHE USA. CANADAAND EUROPEI P a g e 13 Friday, August 27,1992 STAiE P ress C o o l d o w n ... W ED N ESD A Y $1 PITCHERS 8-11 $1.50 LONGNECKS 11-CLOSE $3 COVER TH U R SD A Y X*0*TEK 18 & OVER $2 DRINKS ALL NIGHT $4 COVER F R ID A Y ANY SILVER COIN BUYS ANY DRINK 8 -iip m . $ 1.50 LONGNECKS 11-CLOSE $3 COVER Photo by Sue Rognier A n A SU student reaches for a cold drink at the Fanner Building» one o f the shadier spots on cam pus. IM lfc S d k n f h i ’92 SA TU R D A Y $1 DRINKS FOR LADIES $1.50 LONGNECKS NO COVER BEFORE 10:30pm. BY FREE TUB jazz V o lta g e 'b y Trek USA M ountain Bike • Quick Release W heels Over-Bar Shifting • F a n n y p a c k w ith e v e ry b ik e p u rc h a s e •1 Y e a r G e a r a n d Brake A d ju s tm e n ts • Life tim e W a rra n ty o n F ra m e a n d Fork • T e m p e Bike R o u te M a p ! TUBE ! WHAT ARE DOING THIS W EEK.. «28Í* with ’ Your Collegiate Cycling Headquarters" Compete Sales & Service , » 968-801S JU JE é RS Apache OPEN DAILY Layaway Broadway 2010 S. Rural Rd., Tempe SW Corner of Broadway & Rural All items subject to quantity and sizes on hand. Sony no rainchecks. Comics P ag e 14 ______ C a lv in a n d Friday, August 28, 1992 H obbes b y D o o n e s tm ry B ill W STATE PRESS a tte rs o n T R I F A R By GARY LARSON S ID E BY G AR R Y TRUDEAU "T h is is it, M aurice! I’ve w arned you to keep-your h en s o ff m e!” • PHILADELPHIA (AP) — NBC reporter Andrea Mitchell said she probably wouldn’t have appeared on the 'Tonight” show last week had she known she was a replacement for fellow reporter Arthur Kent. : Kent was suspended by NBC on Aug. 12 for refusing an assignment and Mitchell said she learned just an hour before taping Aug. 21 that he had been fired. “I didn’t Want it to appear I was in any way taking sides by appearing on the show,” she said in an interview published Thursday by The Philadelphia Inquirer. T can’t take sides. I don ‘t know the issues. I never met Arthur Kent.” Mitchell said she was called the day before the show as a last-minute guest. "They told me a guest had canceled and asked if I could fill in,” she Said. “I assumed it was an actress or comedian. I had no idea fe was Arthur.” Kent, who was based in Rome, was fired amid a longrunning contract dispute. Mitchell is based in Washington. • PITTSBURGH (AP) — Bruce Willis took a break from filming his next movie and hit the stage with his harmonica to raise money for victims of Hurricane Andrew. The actor and his band, the Termites, played Wednesday night at a riverfront complex along the Allegheny River. In sunglasses and a khaki suit, Willis crooned “Who Do You Love?” and other rhythm and blues tunes. No admission fee was charged, but the American Red Cross collected donations. The agency hadn’t tallied the money by Thursday, when a second show was planned. Willis released an album in 1987. He is in Pittsburgh for the filming of “Three Rivers,” in which he plays a riverfront police officer tracking a serial killer. Noon is the deadline to place a State Classified liner for the next day. Matthews Center, Basement • 965-6731 ill * Q 0. SIMPLY THE BEST! Sh $2.99 S U N D E V IL S U N D A Y ! Large Pepperoni &two Medium Cokes • Q 0. / i l Domino’s Pizza has the Best Service, the Best Pizza & the Best Value on Campus! fo ra S m a ll C h e e s e for $6.99! P iz z a Yonr favorite topping« 69C each. M ID N IG H T M U N C H ! Medium Pepperoni & two Large Cokes $3.99 f o r a M e d iu m O r ig in a l C h e e s e for $5.99! P iz z a T o o r fkvoritc topping« 99C cad i. $4.99 fo r a O rd e re d a fte r 10 :0 0p m o n ly . V a lid at th is lo c a tio n o n ly . B o th o ffe rs su bject to a ll a p p lica b le «tate ft lo c a l tax. N o t v a lid w ith a n y o th e r co u p o n s, o ffe rs o r s p e cia ls. i DELIVERY J p n M j i .> The Pizza People of ASU! L a rg e C h e e se P iz z a Y oor favorite toppings $1.19 each. 'n t e j m jU CAnY-OUTr e ' * q a o p M r9 ( J U lil Hours: ,, 11:0 0 a m -1:3 0 am Su n .-T h u rs. ll:0 0 a m -2 :3 O a m F ri. Sat. Our drivers carry less than $20.00. limited delivery areas to. ensure safety. Our drivers are never penalized for late deliveries. ©1992 Domino'sPizza, Inc. Sports Sun Devil receivers begin catching fever Guliford: ‘Were going to attack, crush and confuse any defense’ By B rian C harles State P ress Listening to senior split end Eric Guliford talk about the 1992 Sun Devil offense is like listening to a general describe how he might invade a country. “We are just going to attack, crush and confuse any defense that we face,” the wide receiver said, “Coach (Bruce) Snyder’s philosophy is completely different than Coach Marmie’s and we plan on taking full advantage of Darryl Webb/State Press A S U se n ior fla n ke r Kevin Snyder, pictured w ith receivers co a c h Don B o c c h i, is on e o f co a c h B ru ce S n y d e r's key weapons in his p assing attack. it.” -. In an old system that used to simply wait for the defense to show its formation, the new offense will be coming at it head on. No matter what. “This offense is very involved and forces you to get up, get down and get off all of the time,” Guliford said. “What I like best about it is that we are going attack the defense every time we are on offense, whether we are down by 100 points or up by 100 points.” Confusing and attacking arc two things that Guliford has been able to use to his advantage throughout his career. Already noted as one of the top receivers in the nation, Guliford has been predicted to finish with top honors in the conference. Last year, Guliford pulled in 55 catches for 801 yards, and his versatility also makes him a strong punt returner. Guliford led the team in all purpose yards last season with 1032. “If we can get Eric the ball enough times per game, he’ll definitely be productive,” ASU receivers coach Don Bocchi said. “He sets an on-field example for the other players and sets the standard to work up to. He works extremely hard on this field.” Although Snyder has stated that Guliford will be a key factorin his offense, there are others aiming to contribute. ■One leader is senior flanker Kevin Snyder, who is coming out ready to distinguish himself. “Now that I am fully back from my injury,” he said, “I have my confidence back and I just want to be the best receiver I can be. “This new offense is totally different and I look forward to picking apart any defense that we come up against.” Not only is Snyder looking forward to playing, but he has set some pretty high goals for himself. “I’m not really looking to be the best receiver on this squad, I want to be the best receiver in the conference.” Snyder will look to have a much bigger role this year than'he had in previous seasons and, with the new offense, he will most likely get more chances at receptions than the 19 he had last season. Snyder is joined by a host o f young, speedy talent. Heading the list is Vance Smith and Clyde McCoy. Smith, a junior, has good depth and also looks to contribute more in the revamped system. Smith has also managed to use his versatility on special teams, and could be seeing action there as well. McCoy, who only caught two passes last season, continues to display his talents in practice. His versatility will also cam him special team playing time. Other wide receivers vying for playing time will be junior Derrick Hart and sophomore Carlos Artis. Hart, who played behind Guliford and Snyder last season, might be seeing more action as those receivers will most likely start. Artis, who is a graduate of Washington High School in Phoenix, has the potential to be an impact player, but has been hindered by an injury. Because no positions are set in stone yet, Bocchi said T u rn to Fever , page 16 . C rim e and P unishm ent As ASU ju n io r basketball player Jamal Faulkner sits in his G reg jail cell today — serving a 30 day sentence fo r violating his sexton probation — a strange feeling of Sports Editor inevitability permeates ASU. This may be M urphy’s Law gone ballistic. But are we really surprised? With the arrest Wednesday of Sun Devil Dwayne Fontana on charges of alleged sexual assault, an ugly trend continues in the ASU athletics program. Some say the 10 arrests in the past 15 months are just a matter of boys being boys. And that may be true. This may just be a case of young college kids behaving in ways. ASU Director of Athletics Charles S. Harris calls “fundamentally stupid.”' We’ve all been guilty of doing some stupid things. When you’re an athlete at a major university you have numerous pressures. Not only do you have to maintain a good class standing to stay on the team, you also'have to practice daily and keep impressing the coach. Add to that some media attenion and a social life and it is understandable that some college students can make mistakes. But it is no mistake that at ASU and at other colleges across the nation athletes are being caught in situations they should not be in. Athletes are committing basically inane crimes, but the major problem is not only the crimes; it is the punishment. T his is defin itely not D ostoyevsky’s Crim e and Punishment. What has been happening at the collegiate level is more like Crime and a Slap on the Wrist. Athletes have found out that they really don’t have to worry about getting arrested for sexual assault, burglary or fraud. They know they may get suspended for a game or two, but they know their scholarship will not be rescinded, nor will they be dropped from the team. Harris told me when he suspended four ASU basketball players for four games last fall for charging more than $13,000 on an unauthorized credit card, he got about a 50-50 reaction from the public. W ould these four players have been punished more severely if they were not such an integral part of the team? “I got as many letters from fans that said, ‘How dare you jeopardize our chances to go to the basketball tournament?’ as 1 did from people saying it wasn’t severe enough. And if there is going to be a tilt (on my part) it is going to be towards doing the right thing,” Harris said. ASU and other universities need to make it clear that if you break the law and are convicted, you will not play for the team and you will not go to our school with scholarships that could go to someone else, preferably not a felon. No more slaps on the wrist. In one shocking case in 1986 at Syracuse University, the school’s judicial board came to the defense of football player Tom Watson after an 18-year-old freshman charged him with raping and sodomizing her. Watson pleaded guilty in criminal court to sexual misconduct and was sentenced to three years probation. But the board decided that Watson had not violated school policy. He kept his scholarship and continued to play on the team. But the school’s chancellor, incensed at such injustice, came down hard. The chancellor suspended Watson for five games. Smith wrestles control of ASU program Shoots to fill big shoes left by Bobby Douglas B y J ake B atsell State P ress Lee Roy Smith has always been up for a challenge. Throughout his illustrious career coaching and-competing within the collegiate wrestling circuit, Smith, ASU’s new wrestling coach, has faced adversity before — and he has answered the call. His latest challenge is to replace former Sun Devil coach Bobby Douglas, a modem wrestling legend. Douglas left ASU for Iowa State last April after an 18-year tenure that featured nine first-place Pac-10 finishes and a 1988 NCAA Championship. “Coach Douglas did an outstanding job of b ringing this program up to national prominence,” Smith said. “T h a t’s the tradition that I want to build off of.” Smith, however, comes to ASU with some high-caliber credentials of his own. As coach of the U.S. Freestyle Team since 1989, he guided six w restler's to individual world championships. While Smith was at the helm of Team USA, his squad was among the elite of international wrestling, finishing second for three straight years at the W orld Championships and first at the 1990 Goodwill Games. He also teamed up with Douglas in Barcelona this summer, helping coach the U.S. team to an Olympic silver medal. Melvin Douglas, assistant wrestling coach at ASU, expressed optim ism tow ard the opportunity to work with Smith. “I expect this season to be one of the best seasons ASU has ever had,” Douglas said. “I feel that Lee Roy Smith is bringing jiew life to the team. “H e’s a young coach, and h e ’s very excited.” . S m ith ’s success has its root in his experience on the mat. At Oklahoma State, he was a three-time All-American and swept four consecutive B ig-E ight titles. A fter his collegiate career. Smith continued to compete internationally, becoming the National Open F reestyle C ham pion from 1980-82 and placing first at the 1984 Olympic Trials. “I was the type o f competitor that was blessed with a certain amount of talent and athletic ability, but it wasn’t enough,” he said. “It took a strong work ethic to bring out my abilities. I feel that my practice and work ethic are attitudes that I carry on into my coaching.” P ractice for the 1992-93 Sun Devil Wrestling squad begins Sept. 19, and the first meet is scheduled for N ov.21 at C lairon University. With the combination of seasoned veterans and what Smith labeled as a “very promising” freshman crop, it seems that Smith and the rest of his staff might have the tools to orchestrate another successful year. “We have a good blend o f youth and seniority,” Smith said, identifying senior AllAmericans Marco Sanchez, Shawn Charles, Ray Miller and Wayne McMinn as the team’s most promising returnees. “We do have the potential to be a force at the national level,” he said. However, the goals Smith has set for the team go beyond the boundaries of the mat. “I want a total program,” he said. “The main goals that I hope to accomplish with this program are to have a graduation rate of 100 percent, to pursue in dividual and team national championships every year, and to encourage a sense of responsibility toward a respectable level of citizenship.” “ These are the goals, the mission, and the objectives that I hope to accomplish to create’ the best program in the country,” he added. Lofty goals? Perhaps. But for Lee Roy Smith it is just another challenge. Ssan Openshaw/Stat* Press New S u n D evil w re stlin g co a ch Lee R oy S m ith b rin g s an im p re s s iv e lis t o f accom plishm ents to ASU . Page 16 Friday, August 27, 1992 KEEP YOUR EYE O N US!! The State Press Magazine is published once a week as the center section of the State Press. Read us for the latest in entertainment events and the hottest places in town to seel! KEGS ID 6 0 Papago Liquor N ext to Blue Iguana Scottsdale & M cD ow ell Sta te P ress Fever C o n t in u ed from page 15 everyone could be seeing action. “I think you can expect to see five of six different guys getting regular playing time,” he said. As for the tight ends, veteran Bob Brasher will most likely get the Call and looks forward to the new system as well. “I have already seen a difference with this offense,” the senior said. “They (the coaches) want to get me the ball more often which is great. I think that I can contribute with blocking and catching and I want to get the ball more.” Playing behind Brasher will be junior Bryan Ryder and sophomore Marquis Tucker. Ryder had a good scrimmage and continues to shine in practice, while Tucker’s 6-foot-5inch, 258-pound frame should be able to provide ample blocking. Despite the progress and intensity, there still are some bridges to cross. “I think as a group they know that they have to get better. They’re willing to work hard, and if that continues we will keep getting better and better one day at a time,” BoCchi said. Contributing to this article was' State Press sports reporter Jake Batsell. FROM THE DIRECTOR OF THE ACCLAIMED “28 UP’ ★ ' ^ ¡ EXTRAORDINARY!” ■ I K j & f i S K H ‘W ★ ★ ★ ! BRILLIANT!" -lack Carner, GANNETT NEWS SERVICE W l I l W / W It's been seven years since ‘‘28 UP.” Discover where the "children" are now. The Valley Art Theatre • $09 S. Mill O ld Town Temp« • 829-6668 Mon.-Tbur. 6:30-8:45 SA, $3 Student* - Opens Fri. S-28,8:45; SatVSun. 4:45. TIRED O F FURNITURE LIKE THIS? State P ress S p o r ts... .. .alw ay s a lap ah ead o f the re st 4SîêS? C ru is e w ith the S tate P r e s s ^ Ü f Be a member o f Beauvais HARD BODY TEAM ! (S a v e $ 4 2 .0 0 ) 4 M o n th iff r X —a *150 Next to ASU It í B eauvais S P E C IA L Plus a Free T-Shirt ARIZONA The Bodybuilding Capitol o f the Southwest USA CORT has the answer with high quality rental resale furniture you’ll really like. A t special student prices you can really afford. H u rry w h ile q u a n titie s la st! Matt Beauvais "Come see why Beauvais gym is where all A rizona's B odybuilding C ham pions T rain. It's also hom e to Every Pro B odybuilder in Arizona because o f the atmosphere, the superior quality of equip­ ment and the great people. Come in and try it out and you will find out why Beauvais Gym, next to ASU, is the Bodybuilding Capitol of the Southwest!" : COUPON " ■ ■■■ COUPON ■ ■ ■ ■ COUPON l GETHAW STAYHMD $40 VALUE Rental Packages start at $69 per month (6 monthlease) ,(T 4 pc. furniture set) For more Information call 957*2005 FREE 2 WEEK PASS | The DeareroHNs coupon is anmadipfci use of ail BeauvaustacHOes for two weeks. This pass mayonlybeuaad . onceby RRRTT— IVWlTDm ONLY. Beauvais members are not eigWatoueelhiecard. Bearer muat present B acunent ArtzonaDrtuera Ucenae or locai ooligeiD. and muat be a maidont of Maricopa County. Ali dub ixaas | andreoiM ldrw mmibei>riciyattmPBdto.3\^ieyloca bath; condo. U n iv ersity/M cC lintock,, CLEAN AND quiet home. Walking dis­ LA R G E D O RM s ty le re frig e ra to r n onsm oker, •• c le a n , have cat, tance to SCC, on bus route to ASU, $225/month + 1/2 utilities + deposits, w orks g reat. O ffice sty lé com puter $300 p e r m onth in c lu d e s all. N onstand. 968-8097. call Shawn 967-4638. smoker please. Call anytime 821-4032. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, air condi­ FEM A LE ROOMMATE, huge 2 bed­ MAYAN STRING hammocks for apart­ FOR RENT- Furnished bedroom with tioner, dishwasher, washer/dryer, pool, room, 2 bath at Rancho Miirietta. Wash­ ment, patio or camping. Gorgeous col­ bathroom in nice, very clean condo tennis. (714)499r4065 or 967-4908. o rs, sele c tio n o f sizes and fab rics, er/dryer. Gall Barbara 921-1653 leave close to SCC: $225 month includes util­ wholesale price. Call Bill at 966-4385 message! HAYDEN SQUARE condo, 2 bedroom, ities, deposit flexible. Prefer non smok­ or 921-3711. 2 bath, covered parking, washer/dryer, ing female: Rodney947-0921. FEMALE TO share 4 bedroom; 2 bath dishwasher. Rob 893-8523,967-8118. NIKON CAMERA: FM 50 F2 camera, house. W asher/dryer, pool, 1/2 mile HAYDEN SQUARE: Room for rent. Kiron 80-200 F4 telephoto lens, Vivitar from ÁSU; $180/month plus 1/4 utili­ $3503 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer, LUXURY CONDO automatic censored flash. Nikon strap­ ties. 921-8733. pool, spa, excellent location! Available 2 bedroom, 2-1/2 bath, washer/dryer, ping, leather casing and protectors in­ now! Easy going students! Call, ask for FURNISHED ROOM available in luxu­ pool, tennis court, patios. Available 8/1. clu d ed . $250 ta k e s alL C all M ike Erin, Greg, Armando: 966-0806. Must ry Scottsdale apartment for native grad 994-5488. 784-0013: . see! | ' student 990-3306. YOU SAY it, we display it —only in the R E FR IG E R A T O R , PE R F E C T fo r FIND IT in the State Press Classifieds! M ASTER BEDROOM w ith bath, in State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731! dorm room, 32x18.5”, great condition, large house with pool, in quiet neigh$100 o r b e st o ffer. M ust sell. C ari borhood, 5 minutes south o f ASU. $325 929-0852. plus utilities. Contact Joe or Mike at APARTMENTS APARTMENTS SUNGLASSES: RAY-BANS, Serenge731-9020. ti, V uam et 50% to 60% off retail. New ROOM AND bath to student with ma­ with warranty. 251-6666. ture attitude. Prefer graduate student. THE ULTIMATE Party T-shirt is now Wall units with bookcases, desk. Quiet finally available! Don't be left out, send home Scottsdale 15 minute drive, kitch­ en privileges, non-smoker. $250/month, for free information describing this rev­ olutionary breakthrough in "Party Ap­ $150 refundable deposit 947-5954. parel", Don't delay, taire part in this lat­ ROOM FOR tent'in 3 bedroom, 2 bath e st W est C o ast M adness! W rite to : home one mile to ASU. Furnished $235 Spank, 2930 Geer Road, Suite 171, Tur­ month plus 1/3 utilities. Contact M att lock, California 95380. 921-7374. STATE PRESS Classifieds wok! CaO 965SPICE UP your personal ad with an Ait6731 today for rates and information on a-ma-bob! Come to the Matthews Center how to place your classified ad! basement for details! HAYDEN SQUARE 968-0917 ANNOUNCEM ENTS UNIVERSITY CHURCH CHRIST • ' .V:"■ REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE IT S NOT A GAME!!! Buying or Selling Your Home is one o f the most Important Movies You’ll Ever M ake!' D O N T PLAY AROUND W ITH IT! Trust your Red Estate needs to someone who has experiance, dedication and know-how! A p a ch e Terrace 1123 E. Apache . (13g*T CALL US TODAY 968-6383 KATHERINE K. WHITING, CRS, GRI Certified Residential Specialist DUKE PADILLA RaltadeAUbdue 4677 S. Lakeshore * Tempe, AZ 844-5900 h i® g in —i f i t . Page 18 COMPUTERS RECYCLE FOR $$$ Sell your books for cash (no textbooks, please) o r get trade credit towards the p u rch ase o f a n y th in g in the store. Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers welcome. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill ' Avenue, 966-0203. ’ FURNITURE BEDS, DRESSERS, desks, Scottsdale used furniture , 7620 East McKellips Road, Scottsdale, 3 miles from campus. 949-0380 BUNK BED/TWIN top plus mattress/ full bottom black lycra. $200 or best. Must sell. Call 350-9210. CONTEMPORARY SOFA set $300, di­ nette $115, coffee table set $85, mattress set $75, daybed $125. 530-1680 HPScm M P I M , Coto Scan« »C$1499 N«rt:HPPar^XL300fc«BM*MKl2299 CA.T. TO M »M«A aqr P«Miagakp« 1) PoWMSook 100MO wdr *899,4/40*1«» P 0 140 4440$1899, PB 1704/40 $3299 PBUm «MTO>»4M ib MÍ<»»I4«M* Mac Classic II4/40.$1199, «».$1399 Mac h i 99042149 Mac Ila5(120.. 12349 M«iaM$24MW O$2e9a 5/200 $2999 Da*«*itef...$399, Dakwrtw color $589 0*»S«TOfc—JJ4* LaOTrtwlg8M>gw/Photognde $31» R»*»rVitC?/$?> rttft torfw r Arali ptMurtä.I PncMand »w NowrUiarafe Computers Plus Comp any 2303 303 N . 44th St. • Phoenix rPh; h : 955-1404 FANTASY FUTONS F low prices O N ALL QUALITIES SO FAS‘ LOUNGES CHAIRS & OTTOMANS COVERS ►MATTRESSES TA B LES‘ ETC. STUDENT DISCOUNTS FREE DELIVERY! 4 5 0 E. SOUTHERN AV„ MESA (NE comer of Southern & Mesa Dr.) Authorized Apple HP&.Rctdiu JEWELRY BEADS! African trade beads, crystals, pendants, supplies and more. N ear ASU- -1222 South Farmef #1. 966^-8906. Open 7 days/week. CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Ave­ nue Jewelers. 4 14 South Mill. Suite 101. Tempe,968-5967. TICKETS JIMMY BUFFETT tickets, 4 reserved seats $ 150, Gall Mike 784-4561. TWO TICKET'S for Cats on September 2 - $72 for both - Call Sharon921-9320. GOOD AS new, fiiH-size futon few’ sale, make an offer. 966-4357 ask for Dave. ; O F F IC E FU RN ITU RE Used d^sks from $39.95, chairs froin $9.95, bookcases from $ 19.95, com ­ puter furniture, files and more- Arizona O ffice Liquidators, 5064 South 40th Street ( 1/2 m ile south o f Broadway). 43.7-2224;.; House Rooks! SA V E M ORE re sa le fu rn itu re and clothing, dinettes $85 and up. Chests $55 and up. Sofas $150 and up. 1915 * North Scottsdale Road, one block north o f McDowell. 990-3364. IBM PS-2 M ode), 5 0 £ 30 meg hard drive, 1 meg RAM, 1.44 meg floppy drive, with VGA color monitor. $580. 930-0290 or 376-1826. H O M E, S C H O O L O R OFFICE C o m p u te rs 20 meg hard dri ve, color mon i tor, 5 -IM " dri ve/tnoiire, 100% IB M cpmpatiblc, $599 each. Gold Pawn Brokers 1444 E. M a in St., Mesa 85203 644-0622 MACINTOSH 512 system internal and external 400K (hive; exhaust hood, Im­ age W riter I printer, padded carrying c ase, $75 0 /p ffer. C o n ta ct T ony a t ’ 965-3630 or 981 8483. TANDY RGB CM -5 c o lo r m onitor, 100EX 640K, 5-1/4 disk drive computer/keyboard, DOT matrix printer/300 BAUD, modem $375. 730-9370. YOUR AD HERE! Spice up your liner or personal ad by ta p in g it with a bold, cratered headline! It's only $1 extra —what a deal to make your ad reaUy stand out from the rest! Call 965-6731 today for information! State Press Classifieds work! AUTOMOBILES 1984 HONDA Accoid LX, gray, 2 door 97.000 miles. Air conditioning, cruise control, anti-theft device, new brakes, w ell m ain tain ed . R uns g reat. $330Q/offer Call 952-8862. 89 YAMAHA Riva Spent Scoot. Great shape $675, 964-9790 evenings. 1985 FORD EI50 van conversion, dual a ir and ta n k s, m uch, m uch m ore. $580Q/ofTer. 926-8547. Tickets Available at M em orial Union & Stadium Ticket O ffice 965-2381 AUTOMOBILES ;90 M ITSUBISH I M irage, auto, air, A M/FM stereo,, low m iles, m aroon, brand new, excellent condition,$6300, must sell. Call 482-8235. 1976 FIAT convertible, bright red, lug­ gage rack, sharp car, see to appreciate. 921r-3590,350-9694/ 1978 D A TSU N 280Z , 5 -speed, air, AM/FM cassette, rebuilt engine, pew brakes, transm ission and drive train, runs great a real (Elector's item, excel­ lent condition. $6.000/offer. C ontact Tony at 965-3650 or 981-8483. 1983 CAMARO Berlanette, good con­ dition, air conditioning, charcoal grey, sunroof, $2800 or best offer. 461-1595. 1983 TOYOTA C ressida, autom atic, air, AM/FM cassette w ith equalizer, power windows/locks, digital display, on-board trip computer, cruise control, new tires, brakes and transmission, all leather interior, runs great, excellent condition, $6.000/offer. Contact Tony at 965-3650 or 981-8483. STATE PRESS Classifieds woik! Call 9656731 today for rates and information on how to place your classified ad! 1986 NISSAN Sentra, silver, air, 4 cy­ linder, 5 speed, AM/FM cassette, re­ cently serviced. $4,000. 946-9495. HONDA ELITE 80. White, excellent condition, 4,000 miles, must sell by 9/1. $650/offer. 929-0242. 1986 TOYOTA Tercel, 2 door, hatch­ back, 4-speed, AM/FM cassette, looks and runs excellent $2,200.962-4)906. BICYCLES 1987 CELEBRITY tw o-door. Cruise control, air, stereo, four cylinder. Call 967-6317 Nabeel. $2900/offfcr. 1987 FORD Bronco II XLT. 4x4, too .many extras. New everything. 69,000 miles, mint. $7500/offer. Joe 829-3874. 1987 ISÜZU pickup, air-conditioning, black, customized, convertible, excel­ lent condition^ 994-8217. 1987 VOLKSWAGEN Cabriolet con­ vertible, white, 40,000 miles, AM/FM cassette, air, like new. $7,900 or best offer. ’988-2606. 1988 VW G T ir 16v, red, 5-sp eed , pow er everything, air, sunroof, Ken­ wood pullout with amp, Viper alarm, cover, Pirelli tirés, 50,000 miles, mint condition. $6795/6ffer. 957-7976. 1990 TOYOTA Camry, 26,000 original miles; 5 speed'air, AM/FM cassette, 75.000 extended, warranty, cream puff, $9,50Q/offer. 661-1523. ;■__ 1991 PLYMOUTH Sundance 2-door hatch b ack , a ir conditio n in g , pow er steering, airbag, new tires, extended warranty, custom stereo, 18,000 miles, .tint, excellent condition. $7,350/offer. ' 483-0984. 78 VOLVO 244DL, excellent shape, runs very well, $1850. Call. 839-1345. 84 M ITSUBISHI Starion Turbo, au­ tom atic, air, pow er (windows, steer­ ing), cruise control, sunroof, AM/FM c assette. M ust sell im m ed iately , $3,200/offer. 731-9572. FAST NISSAN 300ZX Turbo loaded. E x cellen t c o n d itio n . $7,500. C all 431-1782 or 340-3401 pager. 7520 E M cD ow ell R d • S co ttsd a le (Near the Comer of Miller & McDowell) HELP WÀNTED- HELP WANTEDGENERAL CLUB RIO is hiring cashiers, must be available weekdays from 11-2 and some evenings, m ust be 19 years or older. Please apply in person: 430 North Scot­ tsdale Road, Tempe. NEW SPAPER CARRIERS, 3-4 hour daily routes, early, a.m., plus Sunday routes, ideal fo r students, good pay, must have dependable auto. Call and leave message 966-2526. COPYWRITERS NOTE TAKER needed temporary, 9/9 through 9 /2 2 .1 will be out of town dur­ ing there dates. M ust haive references and good note taking skills. Salary ne­ gotiable. Call Debbi 940-9813. HONDA ELITE 150cc, 1986, perfect condition, $750.968-9533. HONDA »ELITE 80, white, runs/looks good. Cheap transportation $600/offer. Call Matt 921-7374. 1991 SPEC IA LIZED Stum p Jum per Comp with Rock ShOx and extras, 19", perfect shape, $700/offer, 784- Í 589 evenings, 396-1674 days. 1992 CANNONDALE SM 700, week old, paid $850, sacrifice $650, 19-inch. Joe 829-3874. : j MENS 12-SPEED, with helmet, digital odometer, water bottle. $100. Gall 8390971 leave message. SCH W IN N S, O TH ER to p b rands $35 /u p tra d e s, rep airs, re n ta ls 41 4 South Mill #207 above Spaghetti Com­ pany; 10-7 everyday 225-7550. TRAVEL AIRLINE TICKET to B oston roundtrip, leave 9/3, return 9/8. $ 197. Please call Debbie 948-5234 evenings. DISCOUNT TRAVEL; Cheap,, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places USA. Also worldwide; I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283: ONE WAY ticket'ip Newark, Septem­ ber 10th, only $100/bfter. Female. Call Jen 784-9221; /V ; PHOENIX TO Newark, one way ticket, September kl, American Airlines, $80 or best offer. Call and leave message 9 6 7 -1 4 7 0 / The Sun Devil Spark yearbook is look­ ing fo r copyw riters. G et y o u r work published in an award-winning publi­ cation. Call 965-6881 or stop by the M atthews Center, room 50 for infor­ mation. DANCE INSTRUCTOR to teach ballet/jazz to children; 840-9006. Also needed hip hop teacher. 840-9006. W ALK FROM ASU! No Sales Phone Interviewers Tues-Fri, part time noon evening shift, & Saturday Shift. Com fortable office atmosphere. $5‘.50-$6/ HOUR guaranteed! Neodata, a leader in the telemarketing industry, is currently hiring enthusiastic students with good verbal communication skills fo r several pair-tim e afternoon and evening phone agent positions. 2:308pm + Saturday or 1 l:30-8pm + Satur­ day. We offer flexible scheduling, paid training, great bonuses and incentives, plus a convient location near capus! To schedule an interview, call 967-0066 and ask for A ngela Smith. N eodata, Broadway & Mill, Tempe. (EOE). $6.50/ HOUR. Landscape maintenance, yard work. Tim 894-0288, HOT! 90 Honda Civic SI, horsepower {Hus. Red, dark tint, cold air, must see. $9,995, call Baibara 496-9790. ACTING TEACHER for children want­ ed. Part tithe. Degree preferred, not re­ quired, experience required, profes­ sional 585-3831. V O LK SW A G EN JE T T A 1986, 5speed, 4 door, air, sunroof, roof rack, for details 838-5194. $4300/offer. VW SCIROCCO, 88, 16-Valve, silver, 30,000 miles, pow er steering, power b ra k e s, a ir co n d itio n in g , 5-sp eed , AM/FM cassette, sunroof, excellent con­ dition. $8,700.829-1617. MOTORCYCLES 1986 HONDA Elite 150: Great reliable tra n sp o rta tio n . O nly $750. C all 784-0675. 1986 HONDA Elite 250. Very depend­ a b le . $ 8 0 0 /o ffer, L eave m essage 438-8940. 1986 HONDA E lite 80: Runs good, loo k s g o o d , $550 le a v é m essage. 784-9442. 829-3282 MUST WORK SATURDAYS DELI V ER Y PERSO N needed for Tem pe shipping Company., M ust be friendly and professional w ith own pickup or full-size van w ith insurance and able to lift 50 pounds. M onday through Friday starting lpm, 1.6 to 20 hours per week, $5 per hour plus 220 per mile; Stop by Total Fulfillment to­ day, Monday or Tuesday between 8ani and 12pm at 2125 East 5th Street #106, just one block north o f University and west of Price. EARN PART-TIME You choose w henever & how many hours you work - it’s your own busi­ ness. No experience needed but must be motivated. Support network is excel­ lent; Involves environmental and edu­ cational products. Inc. top-25 company. Call 860-5720 for information. 838-8405 Not An Agency Never A Fee Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/H PHOTOGRAPHERS Work on an award winning publication! Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is looking for photographers who are interested in shooting for the 1992^-93 yearbook. A great experience. Call 929-0717. PR ESC H O O L STA FF: M esa, 1:305:30pm, Monday through Friday, 8901624. C handler, over 21, 2-6:30pm ; 8am-lpm Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8998430. ' EDITORS WANTED The Sun Devil Spark yearbook is now hiring section editors. Previous year­ book or design experience required. Ap­ plications available in the M atthews Center, room 50. Or call 965-6881 for more information. Take Note I is looking for note takers for the fall semester. Graduate students and undergraduates with a 3.3 G P A or better eligible. C all if reg­ istered in a class with an enroll­ ment larger than 100, and you m ay be eligible to be a note taker for that course. Excellent pay with bonus program! The Rose Com pany M otivated, responsible, well groomed Individuals needed for part time rose sales in some of the V alley's finest resorts, restaurants and night clubs. Call to schedule first Interview: The Rose Company 921-8855 Tues.-Thurs.. 8:30am-2:30pm. 201-N O TE (6683) Y O U 'R E HIRED Immediate openings, part-time . flyer deli^éry walkers from ;• 5:30 AM-1 PM. M-F. 094-2117 ADULT SITTER needed, Monday and W ednesday, 5 :3 0 -9 :30pm . M ay use co m p u ters. O n tim e , re fe re n c es. 838-6983. AEROBICS INSTRUCTOR needed to develop morning program. Unlimited p o te n tia l, e x p erie n ce req u ired . 840-9006. ATTENTION: WAREHOUSE/ manu. facturers rep wanted for small Tempe business. $7/hour plus benefits, hours flexible. Tim 820-8408. 1987 HONDA Elite 250. Mint condi­ tion, only 5,000 miles, black, $1900 or assume payments o f $115 Warranty in­ cluded. 892-4525. AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES RD Automotive/ Inc. Complete Foreign & Domestic Auto Repair 8 a.m.-5 p m. Mon.-Fri. Call for Appointment CALL BACK TO School Special: Outbound telemarketing, 20-25 hours per week, im m ediate openings, $5.50 per hour guaranteed. Cornerstone Mall location. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 5pm9pm: Suite 201.968-4457. •Complete Brake Service CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVES Higginbotham Associates TUITION DUE? Need cash? I buy cars/trucks/motorcycles, runningor n o t 226-4703. PA R T TIM E help $ 18 0 /w eek gu ar­ anteed. International retail firm is fill­ ing 20 openings. No experience re­ quired. Scholarships and internships available. Flexible hours. 352-7037. 20-30 hours per week. Type min. 20 wpm and have prior customer service experience. Starts at $5.“/Hr„ long term commitment. HELP WANTED- G |N ! ] ttL _ !_ _ _ FREE REPAIR estim ates on student cars and trucks. Brakes, oil, tune-ups, electrical. Call Nick 897-1741. •Tune-Ups •Engine Rebuilding 481-9891 FOR SALE 1990 Honda Elite 80cC like new. Low mileage, excellent condition. $1000 cash. 898-7576. 1985 GOLD Renault Alliance conven­ ab le, 7 6 ,000 p iile s, a u to m a tic , air, $1700 or best offer. 423-5702. 87 HONDA, excellent shape, white, 5 speed, air, AM/FM cassette, rose in­ terior, one owner, 897-6580. Sm ith M esa B ud get U se d C a rs Now in S co ttsd a le •Daily A S U Specials •Quality Used Cars •Huge Selection •Trade-in Welcome •Discounts for Cash •Finance Available M OTORCYCLES^ 86 MAZDA RX-7 GXL, excellent cemdition, m ust see, below low book a t $4850. 241-7544 COMPUTERS IBM COMPUTERS: 2 X T’s with 20 meg hard drive, $350 each; 2 XT's with 40 meg, $400 each; 1 AT with 40 meg, $400; 1/4" streamer tape backup, $150. Call Lori at 678-1010 oy 843-2285 AUTOMOBILES Factory Trained Mechanics "Since 1960" 967-4851 1953 E . U n ive rsity D r., Tem pe RECEPTIONIST and leave a voice message! GREENPEACE. THE future is now! we are training women and men to build public support in Arizona. Learn and implement effective activist strategies. Excellent work environment, benefits, medical insurance and great advance­ m ent o p p o rtu n itie s. E a rn $ 190$250/week, full-time, part-time. Flexi­ ble scheduling. Call Susan 966-1986 10am-2pm. LEADING SERVICE company has im­ mediate opening fo r full or part time position; M ust have a proven track record in sales and marketing. Send re­ sume to: 1000 East Apache Boulevard, Suite 211, Tempe, Arizona 85281. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING tech­ nician, perm anent, year-ro u n d , part time or full time, minimum one semes­ ter of engineering or technology, some jo b experience required. 956-8200. Start $5-$8/hour. LET STATE Press Classifieds work for you! Call 965-6731 today! $ Jenny C raig W eight Loss C entres is seeking mature, enthusiastic individuals who enjoy working with people, accu­ rate with figures, excellent phone skills and tikes a busy, fast-paced environ­ ment. P a rt time hours plus Saturday. Scottsdale area. Gall Lisa 949-0119. RED ROBIN of Tempe has immediate openings for codes with day side avail­ ability. Red Robin Tempe, 1375 West Elliott. .RESEARCH ASSISTANTS for Tempe m arket research firm . O penings for computer assistants (days) and phone in­ terviewers (evenings). 967-4441. SKI FOR free. Ski area employment guide, western US, California, Color­ ado, Idaho, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah* W yom ing, all a re as need help. 1(800)879-8366., SPORTS MINDED Hiring immediately for ASU West ahd ASU. Earn $10-$ 12 per hour at 15-30 hours per week. North Phoenix 8641121, Tempe 921-8282. $ PLASMA DONORS NEEDED $ $ Extra money is nice, but you can help people, too. Donate critically needed plasma, which is manufactured into a variety of therapeutic blood products. We pay up to $40 your 1st week! New & return donors (after 2 months lapse) receive $5 bonus 1st time & $5 bonus 2nd visit within 7 days. jo, «oumfoeje ■894-2250 Æ I IAssociated ' 1Rlnarlanna| Jnf ■ A Terrace N Cholla Apts. Rural BOOKS Personal S t a t e P r ess Friday, August 28, 1992 Lemon JB 5È Ê Sno O asis ' HELP WANTEDGENERAL STUDENTS NEEDED to assist disabled student w ith personal care in mornin g s/e v en in g s. $8 an h our. C raig 966-2059. SWIMMING Instructors, $12 an hour, must be WSI certified. 998-9633 (EOE). TEM PORARY JOBS throughout the state. Set your own hours. Good pay. Good communication skills required. Outside work soliciting petition sig­ natures to repeal Polluters Protection Act. 25T-0284. GROCERY/ MERCHANDISING Work Every Day! Mon-Sun, Up to 40/Hrs Wk 5:15 A M -2:00 PM OR HELP WANTEDCLERICAL $4.3Q/HR+.20* PER MILE R EQ U IR EM EN TS: •Have own transportation •Weil groomed •Reliable & detail oriented Please call to schedule appt. or apply in person. Rio Salado Bank Bldg. 1400 E. Southern #940 Tempe (W. of McClintock) 838-8405 Equal Opportunity Em ployer Not An Agency Never a Fee M/F/V/H TUM BLING INSTRUCTOR wanted Experience required. Call after 3pm: 840-9006 V A LET PARKING attendant, night shifts and day shifts (1 lam-3pm). Aver­ age $5-$7 per hour with your tips in­ cluded in that average. Must have good driving record, must be at least 20 years old, must be willing to drive to Paradise Valley, Scottsdale or Central Phoenix. 861-9384 HELP WANTEDSALES $22.17/HOÜR. PROFESSIONAL com­ pany seeks students to sell popular col­ lege party T-shirts' (includes tie-dyes). Choose form 12 designs. 91-92 average $22.17/hour. sales over twice average 1st m onth. O rder shipped next day. Work on consignment with no financial obligation or purchase fo r $5v95/up. (Visa/MC accepted). Sale for $ 10-$ 15, Call free anytime. 1(800)733-3265. ■ APPOINTMENT SETTERS, financial planning practice, full time » part-time, 3rd stre et an d osborne. $5 .5 0 per hour/bonus 631-4637 or 631-4639. BUSINESS AND/OR communications majors needed! Ideal opportunity for right individual to join successful pro­ motional advertising company. People oriented position that requires outgoing, energetic, team player. Previous sales experience a plus, flexible schedulesexcellent pay! Call 921-7755 I, 4pm. EARN $$ 15/hour, flexible hours. Col­ lege marketing firm. Ideal for student interested in advertising, marketing. Car and communication skills necdessary Call Alex <310)533-8722. by HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE M ARCONIS 9pm-12:30am - NO CO VER - BANDERSNATCH - "THE DASH" is looking for an ambi­ tious, reliable and experienced indi­ vidual to manage Tempe's busiest res­ taurant and bar. If you can handle work­ ing 5 nights in a busy, crazy, casual at­ mosphere. Call for appointment Mon­ day through F rid ay , 10am -2pm , 966-0775, ask for Dave. BREWPUB MA20LA BOYS Tonight 9 9 4 Duck Pins Saturday JOHNNY P & THE SLUES DETONATORS A C CEPTIN G A PPL IC A TIO N S for drivers and counter help. Earn up to $8 per hour at Sammy B's Pizza 945-8850. BUSTERS RESTAURANT Scottsdale now hiring experienced food servers. Friendly, energetic people only need apply in person, 8320 North Hayden, S c o ttsd a le (M ercad o D el L a g o ). 951-5850, COCKTAIL WAITRESS, Jockey Club, 52 East Camelback (Central and Camelbackj, an upscale progressive night club/restaurant. Experience required, part time evenings. C all for appoint­ ment. Bobby 279-7777. 4 0 4 S. M ill. S u ite 101 (Hayden S qu are)96 6-13 00 F R ||_ ^ ^ ^ r o U N D _ HONEY BROWN Chow Retriever mix found 8/23 by Mesa ABCO on Alma School. N eed p ro o f o f ow nership! 893-8056 leave message. PERSONALS 1 DOZEN red long-stem roses deliv­ ered $20. Also balloons. A fter Hours Flowers. 894-3419. DEMAND THE b e st Rush Kappa Sig­ ma. Call Brock at 784-8426 for more information. JOHNNY ROCKETS now accepting applications for part-time cashier and grill men. Fashion Square Mall, Camelback R o ad /S co ttsd ale R oad, S uite 576. 423-1505 '-.i, •/ • : ';;y V DR. Z, Treat policy applies to all UP alum ni until they die. Love,- U nder­ graduate Programs. WOODSHED 11 Waitress 3-5 shifts a week. Hours flexible, experience pre­ ferred Apply at Woodshed II 430 Neath Dobson. 844-7433. M USiC LOOK!NG FOR female singer/sorigwriter/musician that's into progressive music to share ideas & possible band. 7JR4-I535, SERVICES Reasonable rates- Discounts ori other merchandise/services to boxholders. 24 hour access. AAA Mail, 824 South MiU, 966-0076. Tem pe's m ost innovative salon. Try a full set of sculp­ tured nails for $25. reg. $45. Ask for Shellye (8yrs experi­ ence) call for appointment 7 3 0 -5 9 9 2 COMPLIMENTARY COLOR ANALYSIS k MAKE OVER -Perform ed b y a C ertified Beauticontrol Im age C onsultant -A ppointm ents lim ite d Jackie L udlow HAPPY 22ND Birthday Derek F ! Have a great day! Love you tons. Toots! I N W j t t N C g _ ^ _ s_ HEY ZOOBIE, all my hugs, kisses, and love belong to you. Love you so much, Little Grasshopper. STUDENT HEALTH Insurance 50% off campus plan. Enroll anytime! State approved program . P rater Insurance 829-4919. KAPPA ALPHA Theta pledge class of . 1992 is the best! KAPPA SIGMA Rush. Don't miss out on the experience o f a lifetim e. Call Brock a t 784-8426 for more info. KA@ LOVES their Great new pledge class. K A 8 C A RO N W ord- H appy 21 st Birthday. Its about time! LAUREN H.- Tin glad you’re back roo­ mie! W ell be raging bigtime. Sari. IA T JESSICA Happy 20th B irthday! Looking forw ard to a great year to­ gether! Love Lisa. SIGMA PI gear up for football season. If ASU goes 8 and 3, I’ll shave my head. V V-'' . . ; r: ' y: El£ Tracey, have a blast during blow­ outs. You’re an awesome baby snake, £A£2, your heart sis* Jennifer. THE A-PHI ladies are back and ready fo r an intense semester with/our awe­ some & adorable new pledges!! THINK YOU’RE funny? Can you tell a one-liner? Amateur comedians wanted! N o ex p erien ce n ecessary. F or local Tempe nightclub. Call now: 96843074. Big, big prizes! TO ALL fraternities: We wish you the best with Rush! Love, the women o f R>B CHILD CARE BABYSITTER NEEDED in borne. Cen­ tral Phoenix, 3 days per week: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday. Approximately $25 p e r day. R eferen ces re q u ire d . 264-7545. CHILD CARE worker needed for South Tempe neighborhood. M ust have owu transportation, experience w ith kids, references, non-smoker, available week­ d a y s and som e w eekends. C all 899-3379. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL O FFICE HELP Part tim e afternoons, som e weekends, tight filing, typing, good phone skills a must. 966-5570. LOOKING FOR weekend babysitter for 4 year, 6*14 hours. References needed $3.75/hour. Denise 840-7447. 9 6 6 -3 1 4 7 7 th & Mill STATE PRESS Classifieds-965-6731 ! MATH 210. Electrical engineer with 10 sememsters' experience. Guaranteed A o r B w ith my p rogram . C all M ark 345-7616, leave message. $TATE PRESS Classifieds work! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information, or drop by our office in the Matthews Center basement!. A / l J . T u to rin g I Service YOU SAY it, we display it —only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731! Instructor recommended tutors familiar with classes at ASU* MCC, SCC, CGCC, Phoenix University & area high schools. Make same quick e a th ... te ll it in M athem atics* C a lculus, F in ite , T rig o n o m e try , A lgebra (C ollege, Intermediate and Ekmentaiy) & Others. Physics* Mechanics and Electromagnetic. Chendsttyi 100 Level. English* All lev­ els, & assistance in papers. Foreign Languages* Spanish. Business* 100 & 200 Level Accounting and Statistics. ik e State Press Classifieds! STATE PRESS Classifieds (602) 786*1409 965-6731 MISCELLANEOUS òt-nd vour TYPING/WORD PROCESSING bOJt>v d òtóte Trt/ôô Ivrso m . CALL NOW! •464-8006* i n A W ESOM E Rush. K eep up the good work!!! Jim. UPSCALE SCOTTSDALE retail store needs reliable person for evenings and weekends. Marketing major/retail ex­ perience necessary. 9 4 9 -3 5 5 5 , Ms. Miller. YOU AND your car feeling helpless? Reduce your need for auto repair. Save big money. For free information call now: 1(717)697-9542, e x t 159. BACK-TOSCHOOL-SPECIAt Place your personal ad at the C lassifieds Office, Matthews Center basement! And don't foraet vour student ID! “ 1- DAY turnaround. Professional typ­ ing. Walkable/ASU. Reasonable rates. Experienced. Laser. Faculty/Students. Diane 966-5693. A CCU R A TE, EX PER IEN C ED typing/word processing. WP5.5. Reports, resum es, c h arts g rap h s. L aura 820-0305. ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186. C RE A TIV E TY PIN G , term papers, resum es, essays^ la se r p rin te r, rea­ sonable ratés, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. R E S U M E S from $ 1 5 HIGH SUCCESS RATE! Consultation - Sam e D ay STUDENTS. YOU can make a d if­ ference. If you're looking fo r a part time job that requires more than sling­ ing hamburgers, this may be fo r you. The product is something that everyone .enjoys, has potential benefit to society and in addition, 10% o f the sales price is donated to charity. You must be sales oriented, outgoing, and have a car at your disposal, hours flexible. Commis,sioh, Cali Larry 996r-7236. MISCELLANEOUS Day, Night & Weekend Appointments p ie Z in HAM/C- THANK you for a great first week. You sure make me happy to be here! RC. • Jeff RESTAURANTS/ BARS Learn Real Kung Fu Personalized Instruction SELECTED STUDENTS ONLY Call 966-7766 after 5p.m. TUTORS ADVENTURESOME FUN-LOVING dad, down-to-earth at home mom and terrific big brother long to give your baby a warm , nurturing hom e filled with encouragement and love. Will help any way we can. Call Susan and Cart col­ lect: 1(708)510-9569. MAILBOX RENTALS HOSTESSES NEEDED for day and night shifts at La Casa Serrano, 6440 South Rural, Tempe. 345-0044. WESTERN RESERVE Club Courtside Cafe now hiring for AM and PM posi­ tions. Free membership for good em­ ployee. Apply in person only: 2140 East Broadway, Tempe. EOE* ADOPTION WING CHUN SPEAK RUSSIAN? Translation needed to aid personal correspondence both ways. Call with quote per page. Tom 266-2338. Experienced, Patient, & Professional - AA RUSH Kappa Sigma. #1 in GPA* So­ cial 4v most of all. Brotherhood. Call Brock at 784-8426 for more info. TONY'S NEW Yorker. Immediate part tim e em ploym ent. Experienced w ai­ tresses, bartenders, cooks, pizza mak­ ers. Apply in person after 11am. 107 East Broadway (East o f Mill)- Degreed teachers/low ratios. All or part day. Ages 2-5, Tempe. 894-5338. ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal, Facials/waxing. Student dis­ co u n ts. C all fo r m ore inform ation. 9 6 9 -6 9 H D R IV E R S W A N TED im m ediately; av erag e $ 6-$ 10 p e r h o u r; flex ib le schedule; apply within; 1250 East Ap­ ache; Spaiky's Pizza. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch waitresses. Apply in person Monday through Friday, 10am to 3pm: 5001 East Washington^ cross street 48th Street. 273-7378. PRESCHOOL WEST ARIZONA NATIVES Company: Swim­ ming pool cleaning, repairs and chemi­ cals. $20 off with this a d Call anytime 731-3154. . BUS PERSON part-time. Baby Kay's Cajun Kitchen, apply Monday through Friday, 4pm-6pm, start immediately. 990-9080; MOTHERS HELPER for 10 and 7 year old s, N orth S c o ttsd a le, 10-15 hours/w eek, T uesd ay , W ednesday, Thursday afternoons, reliable transpor­ tation, references preferred. 451-0941. WANTED 9 9 4 KaniiS BARM AID/W AITRESS PART time, will train, m ust have jo b references. BeachComer, 1825 East Apache, Tem- OUTGOING STUDENTS needed to sell T -sh irts to ASU students. Flexible hours. $10-15/hour. Call 273-9425. STATE PRESS Classifieds work! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information, or drop by o u r office in the Matthews Center basement! LIVE MUSIC! S INSTRUCTION CHILD CAR E RESTAURANTS/ BARS PART TIME secretary needed for pro­ fessional firm located on Mill Avenue. Flexible hours. Must have experience with Macintosh. Light filing, typing and office organization.. Contact Christy at 921-8414; 2:15 PM-11:00 PM Stock Grocery Stores with Soda Pop. Page 19 Friday, August 28,1992 Sta te P ress Laser Printing, Reports & G raphics <^£3-^ ** C. List price ‘ 16995 NOW *129“ Regular•49915 NOW *369“ Hours: M on.-Fri. 9:30 a.m .-8 p.m. S a t. 8 a.m .-6 p.m . Sun. 11 a.m .-5 p.m . U Shaped Locks Reg. *29“ NOW *13“ We will meet or beat any advertised price on items of comparable quality. 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991 New Times Best Bike Shop TEMPE BICYCLE 3 3 0 W. University 1 9 6 6 -6 8 9 6 (Across the railroad track, west of Gentle Strength Co-Op) Farmer Ave. ■ University Dr. I ASU 267 E. Bell Rd. • 375-1515 (North Phoenix, 2 m iles east of 1-17)