A R I Z O N A STATE U N I V E R S I T Y ©Copyright, State Press. 1992 Tempe, Arizona Press W ednesday, Septem ber 9 ,1992 An Independent Morning Dally Vol. 76 No. 11 Faulkner ejected from team after w eekend arrest B y C arol A n n H a nsen S ta te P ress As his friends and teammates remain tight-lipped, Jamal Faulkner sits in a small cell in the Madison Street Jail in downtown Phoenix as his once-prosperous AS U basketball career lays in ruins. , ASU basketball coach Bill Frieder and ASU Director of Athletics Charles Harris on Saturday permanently dismissed the top-shooting player from the Sun Devil basketball team upon learning of Faulkner's second run-in with the law. The 6-foot-7 forward was arrested for allegedly assaulting his ex-girlfriend early Saturday morning — less than 72 hours after Superior Court Judge Steven Sheldon released him from jail after he had served six days of a 30-day sentence for violating an earlier probation agreement on fraud charges. “Enough is enough,” Frieder said at an informal press conference Saturday. "We all feel for him, but enough is enough.” On Aug. 27. Frieder testified on behalf of Faulkner when the basketball player was brought before a judge for violating his probation agreement. Faulkner was put on probation last spring when he and three of his teammates pleaded guilty to charging $13,474 in long-distance calls on an ASU athletic department telephone credit card. “When I got the call that he was in jail, there was no decision — it was over.” Frieder said. “It doesn’t matter if the charges are dropped.” Faulkner reportedly told the judge at his arraignment hearing Saturday that he expected his ex-girlfriend, ASU student Rosalyn Felder, to drop the charges she filed against him. Tempe police arrested Faulkner after he allegedly pushed and grabbed his ex-girlfriend and threw a quarter at her during an argument outside her apartment at the 900 block o f East Lemon Street. Although he was told to leave the premises, witnesses said Faulkner followed Felder into her apartment and pushed her three times down on her bed while blocking her in her room. Faulkner was booked and charged with misdemeanor assault, criminal trespassing and violating his probation. Faulkner’s probation was revoked and he will not be eligible for release until Sept. 14 when he will go before a judge regarding his probation violation. If convicted for criminal trespassing, a Class 6 felony, Faulkner could face up to a year and a half in jail. T urn to Faui.kner, page and K ris M ayes : Incum bent candidate for Congressional District 1 Jay Rhodes ran neck-and-neck with challenger Stan B arnes th roughout the night in T uesday’s prim aries, with only 800 votes separating them at press time, while Democratic senatorial candidate C laire Sargent edged out Trum an Spangrud-as the final returns filed in. Rhodes, facing four challengers from RHODES the East Valley, had been considered the most vulnerable of the incumbent Congressional candidates as a result of recent voter dissatisfaction. Rhodes was unavailable for comment at press time. In the Democratic contest for District 1, Sam Coppersmith, a newcomer to the political field, pulled in more than 70 IN S ID E S TA TE PRESS Campus News ASU sends em issaries to state high schools to bridge the transition from high school to college. Page 2 O u s te d d ire c to r th re a te n s s u it VP says Homecoming firing was not a mistake B y S . T a l b o t t S m it h S t a te P ress The fired Associated Students of ASU Homecoming director said at a Senate meeting Tuesday that she is prepared to take legal action against the University if she is not given “due process” outlined by ASASU and the University. Activities Vice President Kate Lawrence fired Tracey Kieselbach last Thursday in what Kieselbach termed a “very unethical decision.” Kieselbach cited alleged policy violations that include lack of two weeks notice of termination by Lawrence, lack of a grave offense committed and lack of a termination hearing in which any grievances could be discussed. All the policies are stipulated in ASASU bylaws and ASU’s staff personnel manual. “It is clearly evident that she has violated procedures in the bylaws,” Kieselbach said. Kieselbach said she was only given nine days notice when she was informed of her termination, and said she has yet to be contacted about a termination hearing — a requirement before she can be legally fired. . Lawrence defended her actions, saying she attempted to accommodate Kieselbach by giving her “every chance” before the termination took place. ’ “I don’t feel it was a mistake,” Lawrence said before the Senate meeting in response to Kieselbach’s charge of T urn t o Lawrence, page 14. 12. Rhodes holds narrow advantage late into night B y D .J . B u r r o u g h S ta te P ress Sean Openshaw/State Press A ctivities V ice P resident Kate Law rence, le ft, w atches as Tracey K ieselbach, rig ht, claim s th a t Law rence w rongly fire d her from her position as ASASU Hom ecom ing director. ■ ★■ ★. ;- ★ L O i Cw '*A L ■★ i ★ ★ •■ i E LE C T IO N YEAR ★ ★ ★ COVERA G E ★ ★ ★ percent of the vote to top challenger Dave Sanson. Coppersmith said the close race for the Republican seat was a result of a lack of depth in the candidates' treatment of the issues facing the district. He added that he does not care who he faces in the general election. “The voters want to see; some fundamental changes in the way Congress does business,” Coppersmith said. “There is extreme dissatisfaction and there is an extremely strong desire for change.” In the bid for the Democratic senatorial nod, local activist Claire Sargent appeared to have locked up a win over retired Air Force Gen. Truman Spangrud. Spangrud, though optimistic late into the night about his chances of overcoming Sargent’s lead of roughly 9.5 percent of the vote at press time, tagged “the power of the women’s vote” as the force behind Sargent’s victory. However, Spangrud also complained that Sargent had engaged in dirty po litick in g before the election by disseminating a “hit piece” on him just five days before the primary. He added that he had come to expect such things from Sargent’s staff. Arizona Legislative District 27, which houses all of ASU and most of Tempe, found Republican Gary Richardson running away with more than 45 percent of the vote, and in their race for the same district, Democrats Jim Driscoll and Frank Long were pulling away. The second necessary Republican candidate appeared to be Bob Eden, with more than 30 percent of the vote at press time. Richardson attributed grass roots support to the success of his bid for District 27, and said his message runs parallel to the concerns of many of his constituents. “The real thing on people’s minds is quality o f life,” R ichardson said. “It deals to a large extent With their pocketbooks.” Richardson, vowing to aid in making state government T urn to E lection , page 13. Today’s Weather: Some high cloudiness, otherwise sunny. High o f 104, low in 60s. W o r ld /N a tio n South A frica's Nelson Mandela calls for removal o f the Ciskei government, responsible for Sunday’s massacre of 24 people. A recap o f the ASU football team’s season opener against Washington. Page 3 Page 19 Sports Classifieds....,................... ...21 C om ics................................. 18 Crossword................... 10 O pinion............................ 4 Sports............................... 19 W órld/Nation............. ...........3 State P ress Wednesday, September 9,1992 Page 2 ASU faculty helps high schools ÏQDAY t * ,b y ^ B y K ate D eely S t a t e P ress K — C o c a l» » A n o nym o us: 12-step recovery. O pen m eeting. G a t e ,0 a m Student H eallh, Room A m — C am p u s A lco h o lics A nonym ous: D aily a t noon. (p s y Ä o k ® M M p .m ., Room C 6; MedHna (biom edical literature), 9:3 0-1 0:30 a m , N oble, Room ^ B i U b a G ä lte (c o -o d B fra te rn ity ): First rna r t t a g tCapian w ill speak about th e LSAT & taw school adm ission p r o c » « ^ ^ iiM '|^ ^ d ii$ K * Ä k — C o u n o o lo r T ra in in g C a n te r: Counseling for students is available a t P a y r» HaB, Room 4 0 2 . inform ation, contact Carolyn a t 965-5067. : mm m eeting. 3 s 3 9 |iJ t. M l R oom f ie » Gavéit Upfor Love: Foreign w ar bride M L 12:30-1:30 p m W om en’s Student Center« B atéstente J i — A S U C irc le K , A S U s tru e s e rv ic e c lu b : N ew fi m em ber m eeting, ari students w elcom e. 6 p m M U second floo r (check monitors fo r room num bei ). . ___M ew.^w f aeM i tWvw ewM f b i i * #R A— ■"V~ tmWPlVMtMeP te(SRftPÌrt|fl|ì *MevWlilwiv'« ^¿J;. M em ber m eeting, everyone welcom e. 3:30 p.m . BAC llllE f i’ s • , ;■! S p H K « t.-: • S tu d e n t A sso ciatio n : S c tw d u fr fK i & events, organizing the sem ester. 5 p W öR H Ä ki Group Focuses on curriculum to improve secondary education ASU’s faculty is going beyond making lesson plans for its students by taking an active role in creating a curriculum for Valley high school students that will prepare them for core courses at the University. Faculty Ambassadors, a group formed in 1987 by ASU faculty members, is an outreach program to local Arizona high schools, according to Jane Barlow, administrative assistant at the College of Liberal Arts. She said that because of a prohibitive budget, the group must focus mainly on public high schools in the metropolitan area. „ “Our mission is to establish a collaborative relationship between ASU administration and the high schools,” she said. “We want to improve curriculum and assist college-bound students.” . Faculty Ambassadors, which was approved by the Board of Regents in 1987, is em barking on its sixth year of consultation with the Valley high schools, Barlow said. The group, which consists of 45 faculty members, visits local high schools to review th eir set o f curriculum o f college preparatory courses. “This idea makes a lot of sense,” said Andy Hurwitz, regents president. “It is a good idea for thé faculty to get involved with the curriculum of possible incoming students.” H urw itz added that in the case o f tightening ASU enrollment requirements, it gives both the board and the faculty a “leg up” by being familiar with the curriculum at the high schools. Barlow said the program is succeeding more and more every year. “We recognized a large proportion of the students coming from local high schools, and too often the students were coming in not as prepared as they needed to (be),” said Leonard Gordon, director o f Faculty Am bassadors and associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts. “Our aim is to help improve secondary school preparation of students and to make a connection with them,” Gordon said. He added that the faculty members, who represent many different colleges, have responded very well to this program because they see the program as a direct benefit to themselves. He said that with the University and the faculty making an active effort to improve the high school curriculum, it is more likely that entering freshmen will be better prepared for their courses. Barlow said that with the representative faculty, there is a focus on the curriculum in English, foreign languages, natural sciences and math. She said they focus on whether the lesson plans are in sync with what the University anticipates entering freshmen must know to be successful. A ccording to Barlow, faculty m em bers discuss the curriculum with the principals and administrators at the high schools and make suggestions for expansion or modification of current curriculum. Currently, the largest em phasis has been put on the expansion of writing programs in high school classrooms in order to coincide with the increase of writing at the university level. “Writing is the way of learning,” said Aliene Cooper, assistant director o f the W riting Across the Curriculum program in ASU’s English department. “If you can’t explain it to someone in writing, you don’t know it.” Cooper said as the faculty have assessed the curriculum at the high school level, they have noticed the need to implement more writing exercises. They have been encouraging teachers to introduce writing practices in class as a process of active learning, Cooper said. She added that this is the main emphasis of constructing the high school curriculum because the University is changing its role increasingly to learning and solving problems through writing. Recently, the faculty members have also been working directly with students at the high schools. Faculty members will go into the classrooms and discuss with the students any issue that is related to their field of expertise. Barlow said some of the main issues concerned are the future of engineering, opportunities in teaching, finance and banking. Both UofA and NAU have sim ilar programs set up, according to Barlow. She said that ASU has led in the number of school visits among the three universities. She added that UofA has been lacking in involvement with its local high schools, causing Tucson high schools to request assistance with their curriculum from ASU. ASU went to 28 local high schools last year, totaling 44 visits. Barlow said that the Ambassadors have already set up 18 visitation appointments for this year and anticipate further increases.. Look B etter. B etter. I STUDENTS I Whole Lot Less! According to the guidelines of the Fam ily Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, University policy perm its the release of directory inform ation about any student w ho has not indicated that the inform ation should not be released. D ire c to ry (re le a s a b le ) In fo rm a tio n in c lu d es th e fo llo w in g : •M ajor •Student Nam e . .•C ollege t •Local and Perm anent Address •D ates of Attendance •Local Telephone Num ber •Participation in O fficially •D ate and Place of Birth Recognized Activities/Sports •Citizenship •W eight/H eight of M em bers of •D eg rees and Awards Received Athletic Team s •R esidency Status •M ost Recently Attended Institution •Academ ic Level C o n ta c ts o r T here are three prim ary ways through which your personal directory information can be released to anyone who wants it: •Publication in the Arizona S tate Univarsity Directory, which is autom atic unless you take steps to prevent it. •Response to a request over the telephone or in person a t the Registrar's O ffice, unless yog take steps to prevent it. •S ale to an outside individual or agency, unless you take steps to prevent it. Tempe 9 3 3 E. University R ELEASIN G THIS INFO R M A TIO N IS YOUR CHO ICE. H ER E'S HOW YOU CAN P R E V EN T IT FROM BEING RELEASED. If you do not w ant your directory inform ation released, you m ust fill Out a non­ release card and submit it as soon as possible to Records Inform ation Or to any R egistrar Site. N a t io n w id e , Vision Centers“, U n iversity Behind Kinkos 9 6 6 -4 9 9 1 Kinko. Mesa 4 3 7 S. Gilbert Rd. 8 4 4 -7 0 9 6 T o p re v e n t y o u r n am e an d o th e r p e rs o n a l in fo rm a tio n fro m b ein g p rin te d in th e 1992-93 A rizo n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity D ire c to ry , p re v e n tiv e ac tio n m ust b e tak en no la te r th an 4 :0 0 p .m . F rid a y , S ep tem b e r 11, 1992. In-person questions m ay be directed to Registrar staff in Records Inform ation (Student Services Building B -114) or in any Registrar S ite (Business BA 141, Payne H all ED B 42, Social Science 102) or to ASU -W est's Registration Services (U V C T R -105 ). Telephone questions m ay be directed to R egistrar staff at 96 5 3124. H U R R Y ! D E A D LIN E IS S E P T . 11! I & coupon World/Nation Page 3 W ednesday, Septem ber 9 ,1 9 9 2 S t a t e P ress M a n d e la c a lls f o r C is k e i r e m o v a l call for Gqozo's removal. The talks collapsed in June after 39 blacks were massacred in Boipatong township. The ANC, the largest black opposition group, has accused the governm ent o f encouraging fighting between black factions. De Klerk denies that. ANC leaders in Johannesburg, meanwhile, called for the removal of two other homeland rulers who are major foes of the ANC — President Lucas Mangope of Bophuthatswana and Mangosuthu Buthelezi, chief minister of K w aZulu. B uthelezi heads the Zuludominated Inkatha Freedom Party, whose supporters have been battling ANC backers for years. The ANC did not call for the ouster of Maj. Gen. Bantu Holomisa, military ruler of the Transkei homeland, who is allied to the ANC. Mandela, after laying flowers at the spot where ANC marchers were gunned down by Ciskei troops, called for an independent investigation into the killings. “ Gqozo is not going to last, I can tell y o u ,’" M andela later told thousands o f cheering supporters at a rally in King W illiam’s Town, just inside South Africa. “ We will not rest until Gqozo is removed.” In an interview with British Broadcasting C orp.. G gozo rejected calls for his resignation. “ The people that are calling for my standing down are foreigners to the Ciskei country,” he said. Mandela was escorted by South African police with guns at the ready as he walked about 20 yards into Ciskei to lay wreaths. Ciskei soldiers with lowered guns stood near by, but there were no incidents. “ There are many people who came to this place with hope and never returned,” the ANC president said. “ It is a very emotional m om ent for us that those fighting for democracy, for peace ... should be mowed down by those who fear democracy.” Blacks scuffled Tuesday with police outside the Ciskei consulates in Johannesburg and Cape Town. Several protesters occupied the building housing the Cape Town co nsulate and protesters sprayed the Johannesburg consulate with red paint to symbolize the blood of those shot. B y T ina S u sm a n A s so c ia t e d P ress BISHO, South Africa — An angry Nelson Mandela called Tuesday for the removal of the black homeland ruler whose troops killed 24 ANC marchers and Wounded 196. The killings Monday sparked a major con fro n tatio n betw een black and w hite leaders in South Africa and dealt a severe blow to efforts to resume power-sharing talks. South Africa controls most affairs in the homelands — established under the apartheid system as separate nations for blacks — and the African National Congress and other black groups consider most homelands puppet states of Pretoria. Religious leaders, including Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu, urged the ruler of the Ciskei homeland to hold a referendum on returning the territory to South Africa. They said the ru ler, B rig. Gen, O upa Gqozo (pronounced OO-pah KOR-sah), refused. Earlier, Tutu and other church leaders went to the field where the killings took place, kneeling and praying between police arm ored vehicles, H undreds o f ANC members huddled around campfires in an overnight vigil at the site. The normally quiet South Africa-Ciskei border was sealed with barbed wire and guarded by Ciskean and South African troops. It was reopened after dusk. The killings deepened South A frica’s political crisis, making it unlikely Mandela’s ANC will return soon to stalled talks on giving blacks the vote and ending apartheid. ANC leaders said President F.W. de Klerk’s government bore direct responsibility for the killings, since they claim the government dictates policies in the homeland. The: ANC co n sid ers the hom elands illegitimate creations of the apartheid system and wants them reincorporated into South Africa. In a sign of growing confrontation, the governing National Party lashed out at the ANC, saying the opposition group was trying to seize power. The National Party called ANC leaders ‘‘hard-liners hooked on the Com m unist shortcut of trying to force the country to its knees and seizing power by force.” Ciskei troops fired on about 20,000 ANC supporters who marched into the homeland to ^CAMPAIGN IWII ELECTION Y E a A R . T *R O U N D Ü P ★ Here are Tuesday’s developm ents o s S mt presidential d to n i e n ' ’ „ ** m id . ■ ■ f/GHTf Associated Pres* photo A frican N ational Congress supporters inarch in Johannesburg Tuesday to p ro test th e deaths o f 24 p eo p le k ille d M onday in B is h o i, T he 2 4 A NC m archers w ere k ille d w hen C is k e i tro o p s opened fire on ANC p ro testers w ho w ere dem anding th e rem oval o f C iskei hom eland leader O upa G qozo. S cu ffles broke out w ith police in Johannesburg and C ape Tow n Tuesday. Bush stresses foreign policy, Clinton pushes U.S. jobs B y J o h n K in g A P P o l it ic a l W riter ** George Bush said he was asking Congress for up to $10 billion in housing loan guarantees for Israel and $7.6 billion m emergency aid for hurricane vtcthes. C,♦ Bill Clinton told blue-collar workers he p im n ed to create manufacturing development cen to * ta b d p the nation compete in global markets, -"♦ Al G e re urged students to get involved in politics. " Y o u can m ake a trem endous d ifferen ce ia the campaign, even if you are not old enough to vole,” he f . Æ dËt é é Dan Quay le sought to dissociate himself from “ gay­ bashing” at the Republican convention. “ We are the ones that have implemented a non-discrimination policy when it co re« id gays and lesbians,” he H id Bill Clinton pledged Tuesday to spend $2 billion a year to help American manufacturers create more jobs, hewing to economic themes as his Vietnam draft status came under a three-pronged attack from the Republicans. Vice President Dan Quayle and others in the Bush camp called on Clinton to clear up what they called unanswered questions about how the Democratic presidential nominee avoided serving in Vietnam. Quayle, who went through his own press ordeal four years ago over his military record, offered no sympathy for Clinton and said the Arkansas governor should “ come clean with the American people.” “ Every day there’s a new question raised, there’s a new story, a new angle, and Bill Clinton simply has not told all the facts,” Quayle said at a news conference in east Los Angeles. Quayle said Clinton had given him the same advice to come clean four years ago when the vice president’s service in the Indiana National Guard was under question. The Bush campaign’s political director, Mary Matalin, said in a statement that Clinton “ says he wants to set the record straight, but this is one draft record that continues to fly out of formation.” Senate Minority Bob Dole of Kansas, meanwhile, went to the Senate floor to call on Clinton to release all files, notices and letters about his draft status, saying the Democrat’s statements “ don’t add up.” Clinton has called recent reports about his draft status “ not worth a hill of beans” and says he has been consistent in his explanation of how he avoided the draft. The Democrat obtained a draft deferment by agreeing to join RQTC but later gave up the deferment and drew a high lottery number that was not called. ' While his supporters focused on Clinton’s draft status, President Bush himself devoted most of his day to official business in Washington, mixing in a little politics along the way. The president asked C ongress for $7.6 b illio n in T urn to C ampaign , page 17. Baboon liver in deceased 3 5-year-old was still good B y J effrey B a ir A sso c ia t e d P ress PITTSBU RG H A baboon liver transplanted into a man worked nearly as well as a human organ for 71 days until his death, a positive sign for more such operations, doctors said Tuesday. The 35-year-old man died Sunday night after a blood vessel burst in his brain, said Dr. Anthony Demetris, director o f transplant pathology at the University o f Pittsburgh Medical Center. At the family’s request, the man’s identity remained secret. He had an advanced care of hepatitis B that would have killed him had he not gotten the tran sp lan t June 28 at Presbyterian University Hospital, doctors said. The tran sp lan t apparently was unconnected to the burst vessel, and the autopsy indicated no signs the liver failed, Demetris said. Doctors were unsure of the significance of traces of blood found in his lungs and kidneys. An inspection M onday revealed the arteries serving the liver and the surgical graft holding the organ in place w ere intact, Demetris said. The man had low levels of antibodies that could have made him reject the liver, Demetris said. In previous animal-to-human transplants, kidneys, livers and hearts from primates failed because gangrene choked off blood vessels inside the organs, said Dr. Thomas Starzl, d irecto r o f the m edical c e n te r’s Transplantation Institute. The patient’s hepatitis B apparently didn’t affect the baboon liv er but could have appeared later, said Dr. John Fung, the medical center’s transplantation chief. It is believed baboons can’t get the disease. The baboon liver grew to (he size of an adult human liver within one month of the operation, and the man experienced only minor episodes of liver failure, doctors said at a news conference. Opinion Page 4 State P ress W ednesday, September 9 ,1 9 9 2 State P ress ■ ditorial Should Lawrence go? W hen Kate Law rence, A SA SU ’s em battled vice president o f activities, was tunning for office in the spring she promised to be the person “to do wonders with nothing.” In d e e d , L a w re n c e has m an ag e d to do something with nothing — by firing a subordinate w ith o u t p re m ise and w ith o u t filin g som e important papers that just happen to be required by the federal government for such an action. Last week, to the shock and dismay o f more th a n a few A S A S U in s id e rs , L a w re n c e stro n g m a n n e d T ra cey K ie s e lb a c h , th e organization's Homecoming director, right out of her job. U n fo rtu n a te ly , L a w re n c e fo rg o t th a t K ieselbach had the right to hear form ally the reasons for her dismissal, as well as the right to be presented due documentation o f those reasons. A lthough L aw rence claim s that K ieselbach w as fired fo r d isru p tin g harm ony w ith in the Homecoming Committee, her vague explanation and the glowing testimonials o f Kieselbach's past perform ance by fellow H om ecom ing w orkers suggest otherwise. S te p h a n ie P h illip s , A S A S U s e n a to r and chairman o f the Homecoming parade committee, sa id K ie s e lb a c h 's p e rfo rm a n c e as a s s is ta n t Homecoming director last year aided in making it ‘‘the best ever.” Moreover, Don Dotts, director o f the Alumni A s s o c ia tio n , w h ich w o rk s c lo s e ly w ith the H om ecom ing C om m ittee, said Kieselbach was doing an “excellent job.” Add to that the disgruntled rumblings o f late from ASASU members about the often abrasive, nearly dictatorial style Lawrence em ploys, and you have a picture o f a once-again divided and impotent ASASU. Now, only a w eek after firin g K ieselbach, Lawrence faces a possible lawsuit for her actions and could be brought up on impeachment charges, only adding credence to the growing belief that ASASU is a sad waste o f the more than $644,200 in tuition revenues it receives yearly. So how many blunders and em barrassm ents m u st s tu d e n ts be su b je c te d to b e fo re the administration wakes up to the money pit that has become our student government? How long will it be before we can m ention A S A S U w ith o u t su m m o n in g la u g h te r and ridicule? And when will students themselves be allowed to decide where their money is spent and not have to w o rry ab o u t a n tic -p ro n e ju n io r p o litic o s wasting it with every passing scandal? Lawrence currently holds a position that allows h er to spend m ore than $100,000 o f students’ money unchecked, fire students at will and claim to represent a campus population when more than 90 percent of that population did not vote for her. Maybe it’s a position she shouldn’t have. y tw ifw tfiw e CUNItJN WS R M S D lto f t.. IT IM W J TflpUWcS Jerry finds orphans on doorstep The M uscular D ystrophy A ssociation is probably the charity most people have contact with first. M DA’s annual L abor Day Telethon has becom e part of popular culture during its more than two decades on the air. Time was that Lewis would stay in full tuxedo until well into the early morning hours of the telethon. But this Labor Day he was out o f his tie by 8 p.m. Ed McMahon’s plea to “stay up with Jerry and watch the stars come out” was generally ignored around 10 p.m. after the Las Vegas-style entertainment leaned more toward puppeteers and ventriloquists. As a kid, the w orst part o f the telethon was that it interrupted Wallace and Ladmo in the mornings. But the two kid-show hosts were always out at the fishbowl in front of the station, so it all sort of evened out. Channel 5 anchorman Ken Coy used to take care of the local end of things. He cried the first time Arizona hit $1 million in pledges. A free Slurpee was enough incentive to toss a quarter into a big water jug with a shot glass at the bottom at the comer 7II. And always, right after the telethon wrapped up, after all the tears flowed and hugs were exchanged, Giliigan’s Island followed immediately. It was a childhood tradition. Which"is why it was so odd to hear about Jerry’s Orphans, a Chicago-based group calling for the resignation of Lewis as the host of the telethon ana MDA’s high-profile national spokesman. The group was started by two former local MDA poster children — children who are now adults and feel like they were exploited for the charity. They are upset over the tone of an article Lewis wrote a few years ago in Parade magazine in which he imagined what it would be Tike to have the disease. They feel that the effort to find a cure should not be a private enterprise, but rather one to be taken over by the government. In short, they feel betrayed, just like their name implies. This year, they have also received a fair amount of national attention, as they planned protests outside the telethon in Vegas and announced their nationwide membership to be 3,000. Chris Matthews, one of the Jerry’s Orphans founders, was on CNN’s Crier and Company debating with Tedde Scharf, the associate director of ASU’s Disabled Student Resouces. Scharf, who has served on the MDA Board of Directors for the past year, said it was painful to see herself pitted against someone else with muscular dystrophy instead of them both working toward the same cause. “These people are very unhappy in their lives,” Scharf said. “And for some reason, they blame Jerry Lewis personally.” As for the exploitation aspect of the Orphans’ argument, Scharf said, “No one forces anyone to go on. And when you talk to the children especially, they revere Jerry Lewis. The Orphans refuse to deal with the MDA until Lewis quits, but they still accept the charity. Most of them have to accept the charity because, Scharf said, most of them are unemployed and uneducated. Scharf said she paid for her own motorized wheelchair and, on CNN, raised the point of M atthew s’ acceptance o f a motorized wheelchair from MDA a few years ago. Matthews’ counter was that she asked for the chair in 1987 and didn’t receive it until 1989. But, Scharf said, that was because “if you’re not working and not going to school, the MDA will provide you with a manual wheelchair, not a power wheelchair. Matthews did get a job in 1989. She incorporated Jerry’s Orphans. “So technically she was working and she got the chair almost immediately,” Scharf said. Sure, Lewis shows children with the disease, but that is to get the jaded American public to react. Scharf said the same philosophy can be seen in media coverage o f H urricane Andrew, as news crews find the families who are the worst off in an attempt to invoke a response from viewers. Even if the response does not come from viewers, Scharf said Lewis has always had a big effect on her growing up. “I never thought I was going to die. I always knew that there was someone fighting for me, and there aren’t too many people like that.” A more ringing endorsement for the MDA would be hard to find. Pay no heed to the Orphans until they stop feeling sorry for themselves and start something better than Lewis has going now. ■t ’ KRIS MAYES, Editor KEN BROWN, Managing Editor D J. BURROUGH.............................. .....................Chy Editor SONDRA ROBERTO. ................................A sa. City Editor JOANNA GLICKLER .News Editor RICHARD RUELAS............. SEAN OPENSHAW GREG SEXTON.............. ...... BRIAN CHARLES LAURIE NOTARO . .. ........ ......................Magazine Editor EHREN SOH W1EBERT....................j.......... Graphic!. Editor R EPO RTERS: Vicki Culver. Kate Deely, Chris Driscoll. Carol Ann Hanson, Shaun Rachau. "S. Talbott Smith, Kristen White, Natalie Young, Dan Zeiger. SPORTS REPORTERS: Jake Batsell. Stephen Demoratz, Lisa Krantz, John Reznick. COPY EDITORS: Carrie Brennan. Angela Benoche. CARTOONISTS: Ken Colliiis. Sean T. Hoy PHOTOGRA PH ERS: Michelle Conway. Irwin Dougherty Susan Regnier. Darryl Webb, Carl York. COLUMNIST: Ashahed Jriche PRODUCTION: Kai Barrett. Gary Bedol. John Bozicevic. Jodi G oldblatt, Jeff Hams, Kevin H eller, Barry Kelly, Richard pomeratz, Mike Tompkins. Evonne Vera. 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 Bimey, Shawn Loos. Jason Melvin. Lance Newman, Michael Oman. Neil Schnelwar. Tim Wohlpart. The State Press is published Monday through Friday "during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Rohm 15. Arizona State University. Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502, We do not answer questions of a general nature The State P ress is the only new spaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Editorial Board Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: KRIS M AYES..»...^.......:;;..»^w.,;....¿.;....v..:...¿ v../...Éditor num ber, O nly signed le tte rs w ill be co n sid ered for publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must be either brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State P ress fro n t desk in the basem ent o f Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center. Arizona State University, Tempe. Ariz. 852871502. KEN BRiQWN........ ....... ..................Managing Editor RICHARD RUELAS The Slate Press w elcom es and encourages w ritten response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no more than two pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone State Press Phone Numbers Classified Advertising................ ......... ..............965-7572 .......... .............965-2292 ...................965-1695 .......................965-6555 ......965-6731 Opinion S t a t e P re ss Page 5 Wednesday, September 9,1992 G ore’s b ook h old s reality in th e balance WASHINGTON — There is som eth in g about the career reformer nowadays that motivates him to take a good cause and tender «¿.grotesque and a threat to the commonweal. I do not know what it is, exactly. Leave it to the ad ep ts in the psychological sw am plands to explain the phenomenon, or leave it to the c rim in o lo g ists. F or w hatever reason, our career reformers are given to exaggeration, and we A m ericans in v ariab ly forgive them th e ir ex cesses — good fellows and fellowesses that we are. This surely has been the case with the environmentalists. F o r roughly two decades, they have been taking the good Cause of a healthy environment and making of it a grotesque, a tddl for ruining the economy. Now the Democratic Party has given us A1 Gore to terrorize the republic with tales o f "environmental holocaust." 1 have just read his book, “Earth in the Balance," and henceforth shall mark him down as just another environmentalist fanatic. Consign him, I shall, ip the elegiac chorus with the likes of Dr. Paul Ehrlich and Amory Lpvins. Ehrlich is the hysteric who. among other enormities, wrote two decades back “The Population Bomb,” which inspired en v iro n m en talists in 1970 to w ear buttons prophesying “Famine ‘75.” (What was your calorie count that year?) Lovins is the prophet of doom who wrote:“ It would be little short of disastrous for us to discover a source of clean, cheap, abundant energy because of what we might do with it,” Dr. Ehrlich elaborated on what Americans might do: “Giving society cheap, abundant energy would be the equivalent of giving an idiot child a machine gun,” he warned. Gore relies heavily on this sort of thought in his hortatory book. Based on dubious science and the hypochondria that afflicts so many on the American left, Gore writes, “We must all become partners in a bold effort to change the very foundation of our civilization,” And two pages later; he writes, “I am trying to convince you to be part of the enormous change our civilization must nów undergo.” And there is more: “ The; future of human civilization depends on our stewardship of the environment.... We must make the rescue of the environm ent the Central organizing principle for civilization.” When Brit Hume asked Mr. Gore on ‘This Week With David Brinkley” if he would make the environment the central organizing principle for a Democratic administration, he neither confirmed nor denied. He blubbered. M aintaining the environm ent has been a good and honorable cause since G ifford Pinchot and T heodore Roosevelt put it on the national agenda eight decades;ago. Ever since then, Americans have episodically risen to the challenge. T his tim e around, we have been attending intelligently to the environment for some 20 years. Today, in most parts of America, the air and water are Cleaner than they were 20 years back. Our resource management is superior to that of most of the nations on earth. Nonetheless, Gore continues to treat the issue of the environment in sensational terms. “In the 1930s,” he writes, “when Kristallnacht revealed the nature of Hitler’s intentions toward the Jews, there was a profound failure of historical imagination.... Now warnings of a different sort signal an environmental holocaust Without precedent.... Today the evidence of an ecological Kristallnacht is as clear as the sound of glass shattering in Berlin.” So many of the great political geniuses of this city rely on speech writers. I certainly hope that Gore can claim this excuse. The above quotation is at once tasteless and senseless. The victims of Kristallnacht were identifiable people. They were the victims of organized hate. A polluted river is not comparable to a murder victim murdered because of his religion. No one has written a “Mein Kampf” recommending the elimination of natural resources. Yet no one questions the intellectual stability Of the environmentalists Who write alarmist tosh of the sort Gore is proud to call his own. Few even question the environmentalist extremists’ sense of proportion. In this election year, the No. 2 man on the D em ocratic ticket had best hope that this dispensation continues. S tate P ress etters to the editor W hite’ is more than meets eye Editor: ; In response to Mr. T rich e's question. “What would I learn by living in a Caucasian culture hall that 1 have not learned in 21 years of brainwashing?”. 1 say there would be just as much to learn in a Caueasion culture hall as there is in Umoja. , I am more than just "w h ite” . I am a mixture of the German. Scandanavian, and : English cultures, a past very rich in culture and one in which I learn more about each day. Mr. Triche points out the lack of knowledge that influences other opinions. Often times people form opinions based on what little they know without adequate discussion or research. An opinion is defined as ones thoughts about a subject based on facts, but w ithout the assurance o f know ledge. Opinions are a reflection of feelings,values, and beliefs. I ufge everyone to be openminded and respect other opinions, though they may contrast with ones own personal convictions. Lanette L. Miller Freshman, undecided W hat do you want for nothing? Editor: All the d iscussion relating to the availability and convenience df academic computing sites on campus has compelled me to offer my humble opinion on the subject. Mr. Scaggs questions the priority oTthe University in providing convenient access to Computing facilities on campus. What he faiIs to mention is that in addition to providing the facilities and resources to students, those resources and facilities are provided to the student body free of charge. That‘s right, Mr. Scaggs — FREE. The tuition you pay d o e sn 't provide funding for the purchase o f com puting equipm ent. In addition there are other associated costs to operating those sites. Have you ever had to pay for a laser printout? The cost of paper alone is in the tens of thousands o f dollars every academ ic year. Many universities in the country not only charge 50 cents a page for laser output but charge a lab fee for using com puting fa cilities. The moneys collected are used for purchasing additional w orkstations and supplies for student use. If the poor, downtrodden students of ASU paid a $25 lab fee for computing access, the revenues, conservatively stated, could provide for the purchase of over 200 workstations a year. ' v>' : • It seems ironic that the students saw fit to pay for a recreation complex at the same rate. ; Where are your priorities, Mr Scaggs, and where are the priorities of the rest of the students at ASU? D aren K a h u s System Support Analyst Senior Information Technology D on’t waste dough on jocks E d ito r: A fter reading the A ugust 27th article regarding student athletes in trouble with the law, and seeing related articles on the TV news, 1 wonder why we citizens and students continue to allow scholarships to those who waste time and money and are not sincerely interested in academics anyway. I feel that most of the money spent on athletic scholarships is w asted, and Vk a taxpayer and a student who is working her own way through school I resent it very much. A recent TV news report stated that only 1 o f 5 students on the ASU m en’s baseball team will graduate. It also mentioned that many good players are drafted in their junior year, thus making it impossible for them to graduate. When asked why we should give scholarships to students who do not graduate the baseball coach stated that what education and campus experience they did get was good for them even if they did not graduate. Tell that to the guy who doesn't make the team and ends up sweeping floors. In the same August 27th State Press was an article regarding program cuts that the University was making to deal with a reduced budget. I say to the ASU President and Athletic Director, “Why don’t we make cuts where the fat really is?” the A thletic Department! Another solution is to put the financial burden on those who can pay. If a student on scholarship gets drafted by a professional team either the student or the pro team or league should refund the student’s costs to the U niversity. A voluntary contribution from pro teams wouldn’t hurt either, since they are harvesting a continuous crop of young bodies that have been honed by the University free of charge to them and paid for by my tax dollars. Let’s get serious about what a university is really about — learning —r and I don’t mean football plays. V. Yoder G raduate Student ASU biased against Peppers Editor: machines scattered around campus, I have discovered that there must be a ban on Dr. Pepper on the ASU campus. Indeed I was informed by a vendor that only Pepsi products are sold on campus. For those of us for whom Dr. Pepper is “the only beverage” this is indeed a shock; nay, a crisis. How can one enjoy one’s break from academia or one’s gourm et lunch w ithout o n e’s favorite beverage? : ’ Also it is dismaying that in the midst of academic, intellectual, and social freedom one finds monopolistic commerce. Can other commodities be far behind? Soon perhaps one will only be able to buy a Bic pen, or a Faber pencil, or Brand X geology, engineering or music book, s the monopoly message a good way to introduce students to the global world? I say no! let’s have freedom of choice and beverage on the ASU campus. Valia Kriston G rad Student, Botany As a grad student new to the ASU campus, I set out to explore my new environment. I successfully located my classes, the computer lab, the library, and the Memorial Union. At the typical time of day when one usually relaxes from academic pursuits and searches for repast to fill the void in the midst of one’s stomach, I decided to investigate the gourmet opportunities among the “restaurants” in the MU. I joined one of the long lines at one of the venues and as I approached the counter 1 was finally able to read the menu board — “Ah a chicken sandwich — that would be good!” I thought. Then my eyes skipped down to the beverage choices — Pepsi, Diet Pepsi, Slice. "Oh well,” I thought, "I’ll have to get my Dr. Pepper somewhere else." 1 thought. Well, after checking nearly every food venue in the MU and num erous soda Senior wants to sit Editor: On Saturday, September 5th, 1 attended my first football game at ASU. I bought student tickets of course, arrived early for good seating, watched the teams practice, watched the band, and all the other things that were going on. When the team took the field we all stood and cheered, the national anthem was played and we stood. The opening kick-off came and went and we were still standing! We stood through the entire first half! I simply could not believe it! Why were there seats even built into the student sections of the stadium? I looked around several times during the first half to confirm that we (students) were the only people stupid enough to be standing when there were perfectly good seats to be had right underneath our feet! I don’t know if this is a tradition at ASU, but I have attended many games in high school and at the University of Michigan and have never seen anything like this! We left at the start of the second half when everyone stood up again. We simply did not care to stand there another two hours ! We students are the first to complain about the long lines that we have to standing in; long lines at the R eg istrar’s site, at the Financial Aid office, at the bookstore, and all the long lines we stand in daily on campus. At the game we are given the opportunity to SIT DOWN, relax and enjoy some football. So what do we do? We voluntarily stand, of course! I know that I was not the only person unhappy with the situation, so I ask of those students that sit in the front row to please sit dow n. Stand and cheer only when it’s appropriate! Thank you! Steve Berenter Senior, Anthropology Stroud mirrors Perot Editor: I guess I didn’t realize I was back at school until I opened up Wednesday’s copy of the State Press and saw a letter from the anointed spokesman of the entire white race (Christopher Stroud). Yes, it seems that Mr. Stroud and his regiment of Trichebashers have a new enemy to march against: that horrifying bastion of segregation, Umoja Hall.. When are these people going to realize that Um oja H all does not co n stitu te segregation? It is open to members of all races, creeds and cultures, a fact pointed out by Mr. Triche and the members of the hall. Obviously, Mr. Stroud and a number of others on campus do not want any exposure given to any culture other than their own. The thought of African-American culture is alien to him, as illustrated by his eloquent use of the phrases “my people” and “your people.” Silly me. I thought we were all part of the same nation! Lighten up, Mr. Stroud. Mr. Triche, keep up the good work. David Strow Sophomore, Pre-Medical S t a t e P ress Wednesday, September 9,1992 P age 6 The Honda Doctor’s Helpful Honda Hints T ip * 2 THE 1 H O N D A Our brutal Arizona heat is a major factor in developing battery corrosion. To cut down on corrosion, spread any type of auto grease around battery cable ends and terminals. ♦ 1/4 lb. D ouble S tack DOCTOR □ r^ | 967-7282 OLD FASHIONED BURGERS... I OLD FASHIONED PRICES. Where Blue Ribbon Service”means honest, quality repairs at NOW: Free Drink Refills! No Coupon Needed! Near ASU at 2090 E. University, Suite 115, Tempe (University at River, just west of Price) Service by Appointment 7:30AM - 6:00PM, Mon-Fri • Thursday nights til 8PM Aiso in the Scotiscaie A:roark • 998-5966 c J T ie W o m e n ’s g t u t f e n t Çjenter F IN E A R T , A R C H IT E C T U R E , E N G IN E E R IN G & G R A P H IC D E S IG N S T U D E N TS : ^Presents: S pec ia l T o pic S em inars SH O P FOR YO UR ART i m ( PARALLEL RULES, TRIANGLES, TEMPLATES, LEADS, D R A W IN G BO ARDS, TE C H N IC AL PENS (ALL BRANDS) A N D MORE. D R A F T IN G S U P P LIE S : ' - - ■y: V ■; Wm ALSO : A million foreign wom en married American GTs during World War Q and finaBy their history is being recorded t o a nation il J oral history project being done by Janice Austin Com e hear what this remarkable group of women w ent through to follow their hearts to America. Women horn m ore than 5 0 countries left everything to come here. Now, SO years later, would they d o ia g a i n if they had die choice? ~ • *1' ;‘ FLAX COMPANY, INC. 1001 E. JEFFERSON ST. 2 5 4 .0 8 4 0 H T sr . C A N V A S , PAINTS, STRETCHER BARS, BRUSHES, FRAMES, PAPER, ETC. :}\Y Project Director and Faculty Assodate SUPPLIES FROM THE VALLEY'S M O S T COMPLETE SELECTION T H R O U G H SEPTEMBER 30T H A N D RECEIVE A SUBSTANTIAL 3 0 % D IS C O U N T O N M O S T ITEMS TH R O U G H O U T THE STORE! i- Janice Austin 1314 South Rural u rd U g t 9 F IN E A R T M A T E R IA L S : Septem ber 9 • 12:30 pm -1 :3 0 pm liièI 0 AIRBRUSH EQ UIPM ENT A N D SUPPLIES, G R A P H IC ARTS MATERIALS A N D BO O K S. ; (J3TH Of AUGUST THROUGH SePtEMflER 30TH) ■ H O JEFFERSON H O UR S: M O N . - FRI. 8 : 3 0 - 5 : 3 0 SAT. 9 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 X K EXT. 202 •- 1**» 1 J : U7 SQUAW PEAK PARKWAY V •DISCOUNT APPUIS TO IIST PWCES O N i» HEMS ALREADY ON S A ll ARE NOT SUBJECT TO FURTHER DISCOUNT SOME RESTRICTIONS APR.- Noon is the deadline to place a Classified liner for the next day. Matthews Center, Basement • 965-6731 I Y o u r ro o m m a te lo o k s lik e th e k in d o f p e rs o n th a t w o u ld n 't lo s e y o u r m e s s a g e s ... I FLY SAWYER AVIATION SKY HARBOR INTI AIRPORT i^OLOT.1lâüftÜP® SDW©1 - A S U D IS C O U N T - FAA A P P R O V E D P A R T I 41 SCHOOL. - M A JO R TC A A IR P O R T E X P NCE 24 H R S. A DAY, 7 DAY! iL t T IM E IN S TR U C T1 A L C R ^ T IN G S -P R IV A T E L o o k s a re n 't e v e ry th in g . Catch the B uç, it1 'Monday ;Æ Your roommate is cool, but can they really take your messages? Don't take chances. G et a failsafe voice mailbox and try it out on us for two weeks. FREE. / A S U to Wgstboühd-' lifi & Univ 7:29am 7:58am 3:25am 8:56am 9:24am Me R in 2 0 mins. JbouhdLV-i 9:20am 9:50am 10:25am 10:50am 11:18am ThursdayIs REDSAND DAY All merchandise 20%Off! *Bus runs approx, every 1/2 hour C a ll: (6 0 2 ) 2 7 3 -3 7 8 7 DIAL-COM VolceM all, ine \ 2 W EEK TRIAL N — ^ s a w vFftr U viATiom ~~7 Membership Info N a tio n a l H e a d q u a rte rs fa ía ii (602) 345-7585 2 6 0 2 E a s t S k y H a r b o r B lv d . • P h o e n ix , A Z 8 5 0 3 4 9 6 6 * 9 1 9 9 AT THE CORNER OF 5IH & MILL 9 4 5 * 3 3 2 1 SCOTTSDALE FASHION SQUARE Wednesday, September 9,1992 S t a t e P r e ss Page 7 S U N D E V I L S ... JOIN THE REST OF AMERICA AS ARIZONA BECOMES THE 50th STATE TO PLACE ON THE BALLOT ★ ★ ★ ★ “O n ly G I VE AMERICA A REAL CHOICE PROTECT YOUR FUTURE DEMAND RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT PUT AMERICA BACK TO WORK th e p e o p le , c a n m a k e A th m e o w e r ic a n e r s o s tr o n f th g is c o u n tr y , a g a in .” Ross Perot, August 1992. Help place Ross Perot on the ballot. Look for your Petition Insert in The State Press. Follow the instructions to sign, then have your friends sign too. Drop the Petition at the Perot Booth in front of the Student Union. Petition drive starts Sept. 9, thru Sept. 18. F o r M o re In fo rm a tio n , P h o n e 957- R o s s TAKE YOUR COUNTRY BACK Paid for by the P E R O T for P R E S ID E N T Com m ittee of Arizona, Franklin M ackenzie, Treasurer. S t a t e P ress Wednesday, September 9, 1992 Page 8 P o l ic e R e po r t ASU reported the following incidents on Monday: • An ASU student reported that the spare tire to her car was stolen when it was parked in Lot #59. • A man unaffiliated with the University was warned of littering and trespassing when he was found lying on his back extremely intoxicated at Tempe Center. • A student's Honda CRX caught fire in Lot 63 damaging another car parked next to it. Estimated damage is $2,500. • The volleyball net from the Best Hall courtyard was stolen. • A student reported that her flute was stolen from Hayden Library. Estimated loss is $ 12,000. Tempe police reported the following incidents on Monday: • An unknown suspect made off With $861 When he held a gun on two employees at Gumby’s Pizza at 2107 S. Rural Road and demanded cash. Witnesses could not describe the suspect to police because he wore a white bandana over his face. • An ASU student was arrested for knowingly attempting to pass counterfeit money at the McDonalds at 5144 S. Rural Road. The suspect, who was in possession of four counterfeit $20 bills, had attempted to buy food earlier at the Church’s Fried Chicken at 1102 E. Baseline Road. . - ■ • A man was arrested and charged with two counts of sexual abuse for grabbing the crotch of a 14-year-old girl and the buttocks of a 15-year-old girl at the 600 block of S. Mill Ave. • An man was arrested and charged with misdemeanor theft when security guards at Club Orb at 411 S. M ill Ave. observed him steal a girl’s purse from a bar top and rummage through it. The man said that he had an accomplice but would not give police his name. • A man was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct at the intersection of Price and Broadway roads when police observed him walking around the intersection completely nude. The suspect told police that he was “tripping on LSD.” • An ASU student was arrested at Chuys, 414 S. Mill Ave., after he threatened an employee that he would “cap him” when he was Caught sneaking into the blub without paying the cover charge. Police were called to the scene when the suspect was found inside the bar later that evening. • A man was arrested for kidnapping-and assaulting his girlfriend after he forced her at gunpoint to drive around the 700 east block of McKellips Road in his car. T h e S ta te d o o rs P re s s o p e n s o f k n o w le d g e to y o u Brush-Up on Basics How to Improve Your College Reading Skills Did you know that independent reading of high level textbooks and tech­ nical journals constitutes 80% of college learning? This workshop will intro­ duce you to methods of making your textbooks understandable while improving your comprehension, retention, and reading speed. Techniques for notetaking, surveying, skimming, recall, mind-mapping and speed/critical reading will be covered. ’prices subject to change 21 W. Baseline Rd., Tempe Dawn Peters, Graduate Student; Reading Education Program Why wait to be safe? Walk-ins welcome. TODAY, Wednesday, September 10, 1:40-3:30 p.m ., Re-entry Center, Lower Level, Memorial Union Prompt, friendly service with appointments usually available the same day o r evening. Cost* $3 in advance; $5 a t th e d oo r m mm mm mm 'mm mm War awa'oar apaW aiaa aap mm mm mm mm mm mm aap mm: ^ Sponsored ty : The A d u lt R e-entry P ro g ram /S tu d en t Life Seating is lim ited. Com e into th e Re-entiy C enter and sign up today! O r call, 9 6 5 -2 2 5 2 to reserve your place. TUCKER - BRAMSEN TIRE I LUBE-OIL! FÌLTER 24 EXP. ¿INGLE PRINTS Lubricate your vehicle & chassis, drain old oil, add up to 5qts. of new oil and install a new oil filter. Diesel extra. Most cars and light trucks. Includes a 17 p t vehicle maintenance inspection. DOUBLE PRINTS e x p ire s l 0 /1 0 /9 2 University s 1 IMnsr! i £ tu i 2 0 3 3 W . University, M esa 1 (In the Auto C enter betw een Evergreen & Dobson R d.) ■ ______ § 4 4 - 1 2 0 1 J 36 EXP. 099 499 C 9 9 799 499 £99 099 099 F rom 110, 126, 3 5 m m o r D is c (C -4 1 ) c o lo r p rin t film . R o lls a re p ro c e s s e d a s v o lu m e p e rm its N o t g o o d w ith a n y o th e r c o u p o n /o ffe r /d is c o u n L C o u p o n m u s t a c c o m p a n y o rd e r. | BASELINE & RURAL BROADWAY & BECK SOUTHERN & Gl GILBERT 5 1 1 0 S. R u ra l R o a d 9 3 0 W . B ro a d w a y 1 3 1 6 S. G ilb ilbeeirt m Q .K ora 839*6834 968*8593 968-8593 o o o .n ne 892-7106 ■ 19 V a lle y Loca tions. C heck W hite Pages fo r s to re nea re st you. COUPONGOODTHRU12/31/92 ASU STUDENTS C orner DON'T CRACK UNDER PRESSURE A L L S IN G L E C D ' s $15.98 List r EVERY DAY Photo Special FR EE DOUBLE PRINTS EVERY DAY 99* BURGER TAG-Heuer SWISS MADE SINCE I860 GANEM JEWELERS MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 1/4 lb. Burger 3-5 p.m. only 990 No Coupon Necessary - just show your ; college ID (ASU, MCC, SCC) Not valid with to-go orders. Jewelry Brokers k Manufacturers • Retail/Wholesale In the Cornerstone The Only Authorized Tag-Heuer Dealer in Tempe 4409 S. Rural Rd., Tempe 820-1122 Rural & University • 967-3192 St a ^Wednesda^Segtember^^992^ P ress ti P age 9 m um MANY ARCCALLED, BUTFEWARE CHOSEN..." JESUS 32 A.D. ""TH thechoi ECHOICEIS YOURS..." JESUS- w THE WAR IS RAGING... bW« c4 l ° ^ U N ts s ° rU G 5 * * * . PRO BLEM S »«U ^ ST*tSS .««BUT, THE RIVER IS RISING—TO A.S.U«! nivwef lifeis a N on-D enom inational C hristian Church in South Phoenix, A Z and is ■ ^co n sid e re d one o f the greatest, fastest-growing, contem porary, m ulti-racial churches in the w o rld ! W h a t has lite ra lly transform ed South Phoenix is now com ing to A.S.U . this i SUND0 ' 9 A M , 11 A M St 7 0 4 0 S . 40T H STREET ( 6 0 2 )4 3 7 -3 9 1 2 fa ll. V ision Q uest U niversity O utreach, a m inistry o f River o f Life C hurch, has been established on cam pus to b rin g the same fired-up, pow erT illed, presentation o f the gospel o f Jesus C hrist to the students o f A.S.U . Under the direction o f River o f Life Pastor Lee Pace, M ich a e l Z aletel and his posse' have been com m issioned to put religious tra d itio n aside and replace it w ith the 9 0 's version o f the sim ple gospel o f Jesus Christ. T hursdaySept. 10,1992 ATDANFORTNCHAPEL• 10:00AMS1:00PM TWO HAPPENIN' SHOWS 45 MINUTES SHORT • CENTER OF CAMPUS BETWEEN M.U,AND HAYDEN LIBRARY WE ARE HERE TO HELP IN A N Y A N D EVERY W AY WE C A N I • A re you struggling with drugs or alcohol? • A re you battling depression o r loneliness? • A re you haying serious financial problems? • A re you having a tough time adjusting to college life? • A re you a fra id you might have A .I.D .S . or a similar disease? • Is your schoolwork too difficult to handle on your own? • Has stress an d fe a r becom e a regular part of your life? • A re you just not h a p p y with your life? If you a re not a b le to m ake it to one of the shows but you have problem that you need help w ith, please coll our A.S.U. HELP-UNE AT 967*1202 (8 :0 0 This Lofiofiot saved at one of our shows! If you knowof a lofio thats tost, brinfi iti a .m . - 1 0 :0 0 p.m .) an d w e w ill m ake sure you a re taken care of. W e have financial advisors,doctors, fam ily & substance counselors, as w ell as tutors an d ...A CHOICE FOR A N EW GENERATION! Caring, friendly students on staff or a v a ila b le to provide help w henever you need it— W e C a re A bout You! AT ONE OF THE CAMPUS AREA RESTAURANTS BELOW TO THE FIRST 50 PEOPLE TO ATTEND EACH SHOW. Jesus w as known for M iraculously feeding the people to whom he ministered. Similarly, G o d has m ad e it possible for us to g ive these free meals to the students o f A .S .U . that w e might o bey the Bible com m and to feed the people an d meet their real needs— not just preach a t them out o f an em pty heart! ‘ These are not coupons but actual certificates for a complete free meal including drink a t your choice o f restaurants listed below— N o Purchase Required A t AIH SA IG O N H E ALT H Y DELI 5=1 £ ! 936 E.Apache Rlvd. », AZ 85281 DUE 24 AND CARRYOUT KOREAN GARDEN m N H B 9 JestSostiat Apeche on theWestSideofRural .iM iB M .e u s .iM s a iii TACO H ELL. JustEastofRuralRd On North sidec i Apache Rlvd. 9 66 -7 7 63 "VERY HEALTHY, VERY GOOD!” Lunch E ntrees Prom $2.95 SW SaleofMG and Uniwfsily 820 S.MB Avenue,Tempo (602)967-4199 W t. 1030 E. APACHE • TEMPE JUST EAST O f RURAL ROAD (6 0 2 )8 2 9 -8 9 0 7 P age 10 S t a t e P ress W ednesday, September 9,1-992 ASU Express shuttle too crowded Another bus run, schedule changes being considered by administrators B y D a v id S o n C o n t r ib u t in g W riter For the students who-commute between ASU’s'm ain campus and west, cam pùs, the ASU W est Express is an economical alternative to driving and paying parking fees. But the Express is so loaded with passengers during peak hours that som e stud en ts have found it may be more convenient to drive. The ASU West Express is a shuttle service that began Aug, 17, and is designed to m eet the needs o f students who commute between ASU and ASU West, There are two buses currently running from 6:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. The buses leave each campus every hour on the half hour, and the $1 ticket for a one-way trip is sold only to ASU students, faculty or staff. “ASU Only expected the 1,800 students who attend classes at both campuses-to use the shuttle,” said ¡Richard Albin, one of the shuttles’ drivers, as he made the overcrowded 4:30 p.m. run from Tempe to the west side campus at 47th Avenue and Thunderbird Road. “They (ASU) didn’t anticipate the large numbers of west side residents to use the shuttle to get home.” The 4:30 p.m. bus had 35 people on board, but only 22 seats were available. The rest had to sit in the aisles, and the overcrowding made air conditioning ineffective. Many students said they are willing to tolerate the heat and overcrowding to save money on gas, avoid parking headaches and have an alternative to making the long drive between the . two campuses. Ron Baker, an electrical engineering major who commutes from'the west side twice a week, said he hates the hassle of driving and the high cost of parking. He currently does not own a parking decal. He said he also appreciates the time he has to study while aboard the tram, and the money he saves 829-0064 CARDINAL'S PIZZA r ------------------ STUDENT ACCESS M E M B E R S SA VE U P T O • Continental Airlines Por example: New York/Chicago round trip $200 off lo w est fa re •S p rin t. Long Distance FREE Calls $25 •IB M * PS/1 Computer 386 sx 80MB $894 •6-m onth subscription to TIM E magazine. $65 . . . A N D HERE ARE S O M E O TH ER S A V IN G S O P P O R TU N ITIE S ! GUARANTEED TO SAVE you money o n .. . M O NEY-BACK GUARANTEE If, after 30 days, you haven't taken advantage of any Student Access offerings, call us to receive a full refund. Even if you decide not to keep your Student Access m em bership, keep the 6-m onth T IM E su b scription .. . a $65.00 newsstand va lu e :. .FREE w ithout cost or obligation! • Financial Aid Services • Sum m er Study Program s • FREE with your membership: A wallet card with personalized ID num ber and a 30-page directory of savings and services and hundreds of dollars in savings to gain! CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-FON-INFO to use your credit card, or detach and mail the coupon below with your paym ent Join TODAY! DETACH & MAIL . . .and MOREI N am e. M A IL TO: Z . Apt. # . A d d ress. ) S C .S ch o o l ( 4 5 S tared at 46 Actress Ally DOW N 1 "Casa­ blanca* pianist 2 G reek letter 3 Johnson or Adam s 4 W rong 5 Place for C leo’s barge 6 Look over 7 Jacques Plante, eg- 8 G oal 9 S uit — T 10 Yon lass i 1 r~ T A R s A D L 1 D 0 E R F E W R U D E O S A C V 1 S E E A E 0 G A P L C 1 Ho T 1 N T I R 1 MAN E DG P L 1 T T 1 N G S H A N G E R S E A N C E Y esterday** A nsw er 16 17 18 19 21 22 24 25 30 M ini-m ap 33 Singer Following M idler D epart 35 Blubbers Descriptive 3 6 Provo’s word place S kater 3 7 Mim ic Sonja 3 8 Arthur's M ake law foster brother Afrikaners Com m er­ 40 Dined out 41 Unite cials Destroyed 42 Som e 8 4 ; r ~ s— 9 16 21 22 4i ll u I il W ?; 1 8 ^ 19 _ * U * f l » 8 2i ■ » ii # 35“ _ “ ■ r “ f l 41 45 HZ I X GJ J D X City, State, Zip Phone ( 1 Som e cars 7 Rom a raider 11 Bomb type 12 O ne of the wood­ winds 1 3 Philip­ pines city 14 Not quite shut 15 Feeble 1 7 Sighed cry 20 Alcove 23 G -m an 24 W hat w e count in 26 — M ahal 27 Pindar poem 2 8 O ne — million 29 Highest p eak 31 Actor Morrow 3 2 Happen again 3 3 Sym bol of redness 3 4 S n eezer’s aid 3 7 R elated 3 9 North Am erican capital 4 3 M ake streets 4 4 Secure the * 1 9-9 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to w ork i t AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW O ne letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for th e tw o O ’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation of th e words are all hints. Each day th e code letters are different. 9-9 CRYPTOQUOTE YO U HAVE N O TH IN G TO RISK .* T E S f Y C T l I l l B l d h O For answ ers to today's crossword, call V I U l f l r E I / i 1-9 0 0 -4 5 4 -7 3 7 7 !99e per minute, touchtone/rotary phones. (16+ only.) A King Features service, NVC. • M agazine Subscriptions • G raduate Exam Preparation I CROSSWORD A FE W E X A M P L E S O F Y O U R S A V IN G S : • Ki-Nexus Job Placem ent R a lly f i r L u n e h ! FAST, FREE DELIVERY DARVI d u b f o r m e d t o S A V E y o u h u n d r e d s o t d d l a r s o n tr a v e l, c r e d i t c a r d s , lo n g d is ta n c e p h o n e c a lls , j o b p la c e m e n t s e r v ic e s a n d M O R E I • Exclusive on-line com puter com m unications network 0 y from not driving and parking everyday. Open f1am-2am M ike T ram el, a graduate student in construction Daily! management, said he was taking the shuttle, even though it is sometimes crowded, for environmental reasons and because he does not like to drive alóne. Tramel lives only four blocks from ASU West and he commutes to ASU Main to attend classes. He is forced to take the city bus in the morning because the ' tram does not leave early enough for him to make his 7:15 class. Tramel said that from now on he will use the city bus exclusively to get to class because o f the sh u ttle ’s overcrowding problem. Trame! said he would take the Express again if it expanded its services to include the early morning hours and added more buses to alleviate the crowding problem. According to Linda Riegel, assistant director o f the Department of Public Safety, steps are now being taken to confront the overcrowding problem. She said plans are being made to either add an earlier afternoon run at 3:30 or to add an additional bus for the 4:30 trip. She said that it would cost approximately $13,600 a year to add another run and about half that for an extra bus at 4:30 ! Reeelvt t FREE Veggie Teppiife p.m. ; I wfcea erierlni Miele Wheat. Riegel said she has made a proposal to the administration to change the shuttle schedule so that it would run only every t LUNCH SPECIAL other hour and throughout the day. With the change, the I TtKS.-VIDS. SPECIAL l shuttle would run on Fridays. Riegel said she hoped the ft" Cheeee Pina f t * t-lteM Phtsf change would eliminate the overcrowding and offer greater service to commuters. j $ 5 .9 9 . $ 3 . 9 9 “Every other hour seems like it would provide more [_ I 91 i.m.-t p.m. (M-F) service for more people,” she said. Tickets can be purchased in books of 10 from the ASU West cashiers office and from ASU Main Parking & Transit Services. Students at ASU West can catch the tram at 47th R E S E A S H E S Avenue and University Way or at the Visitor Parking Lot just E X 1 L RO A S T west of Fletcher Library. Students at ASU can catch the tram T 1 0 E A N * S E by THOMAS JOSEPH at College and Lemon or at College and University. P R O T E C B A R hatches ACROSS S T S A T 1 T 8 ATTENTION STUDENTS! NEW »* MiitirCird $ Vit« m Itlln ry l T P QJ I X QH X YJ Q H V I V J P Z F D V Q YD H X 1 Q S G V F B , Z G B ) Z H H I SZ Y D VJ O VJ D I X K X I - □ C heck enclosed for $34.95 (payable to Student A ccess) S T U D E N T ;. A C C E S S P lease bill $34.95 to my C ard # ' ' ' 606 Columbus Ave. New York, NY 10132-0122 Signature O M B I -^ QBE ■ ■ ; Fxp. Date y :: . - X G Y X .— W X S I W X T Z Y BS G Z F B Y esterd ay 's C ry p to q u o te : STAY AT HOME AND YOU W O N 'T WEAR OUT YOUR SHOES. — YIDDISH PROVERB □ M ■ / . y y nnooa ©1992 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. S tate P ress P a g e 11 W e d n e s d a ^ e g te m b e ^ W ^ O r g a n iz a t io n p la n s t o b u ild B rush -L/p on Basjcs B y C h r is D riscoll S ta te P ress Survival Skills for Collage Writing Techniques for writing dear and condse term papers and essay exams. Sydney James, W riter and former English instructor Saturday, September 1 2 , 1am -11:30am Re-entry Center, Lower Level, Memorial Union Cost: S3 in advance; SS a t the door Sponsored by: T h e A d u lt R e -e n try P ro g ra m , S tu d e n t L ife Seating is lim ited. Come into the Re-entry Center and sign up today) O r c a l, 965-2252 to reserve your place. ■ m m if lr a E iF A c Ü B Á I CAR SP E C IA LIS TS INDEPENDENT SERVICE •C o m p lete Parts D epartm ent •Factory T rain ed Technicians h o u s e o n A S U c a m p u s la w n •F R E E Estim ates •F air Prices •O n e D ay Service on Most Repairs Organizers of the ASU chapter of Habitat for Humanity have announced they will build a house on University grounds as their first campus project. “We’re literally going to build this house a dollar at a time,” said Paul R. Petersen, boardmember of the East Valley Habitat for Hum anity and cam pus m inister with the University Lutheran Church. The new campus chapter will be building the shell of the house on the lawn in front of the Student Services Building beginning Oct. 15. ' Supporters of the project can assist in the construction by purchasing a section of the frame at a $1 per foot. For their donation, supporters can write their name on the footlong section and see that secftiOn be added to the frame of the house. Carina Sass, program coordinator for Student L ife and one o f the p ro je c t’s organizers, said the new ASU Habitat chapter has targeted student organizations that she hopes will commit their entire memberships to work on the project. She said she needs people to work three-hour shifts during the campus-construction phase of the project that will continue to the end of October. The group held its first meeting Sept. 3 and several ASU fraternities, sororities and campus religious groups sent representatives. “Habitat for Humanity ’s major purpose is to elim inate poverty housing,”, said Pete Craig, an ASU student and veteran volunteer with the group. The group is known for its house-building projects in low rincom e urban and rural communities. When the frame of the house is com pleted, thé house w ill then be disassem bled arid transported to 2439 E. Victory Drive in east Tempe. The second phase of construction at the Victory Acres site will be from Nov. 1 to Feb. 1. Ground breaking for the final resting place of the house will be Sept. 19 at 9 a.m. in the Victory Acres location. ASU P resident L attie Coor has also extended his support to the project. “Habitat for Humanity is one of the most splendid examples I have ever seen of using people’s commitment to help other people by enriching both the giver and the recipient,” he said “This hands-on com-mitment to creating an opportunity for those who need it is a great Contribution to both the giver and receiver,’’ he added. Sass said she hopes to have Coor and other community leaders come out to help on special days during the construction. The group is also seeking volunteers for construction and administrative tasks. M illard F uller, founder and w ealthy benefactor of the Habitat for Humanity, is scheduled to appear Sept 24 at ASU. ASU Student Life, the Student Recreation Complex, the Campus Interfaith Council and the East Valley Habitat for Humanity are a few of the project’s other sponsors. B u y o n e o f th e s e . Get over *400 worth of preloaded software when you buy one of the Apple® Macintosh® computers shown above at our best prices ever, And if you are interested in financing options, be sure to ask for details about the Apple Computer Loan. But hurry, because student aid like this is only available through October 15,1992 —and only at your authorized Apple campus reseller. , . • l i l C M E C Ü ltO S h S t u d d l t A i d P S C K S g C . w * Fór more informationvisit ASUBookstore Mon-Fri 9:30-3:30 or call 829-7993 This includes a color system as shown © 1992 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. Classic i5 a registered trademark licensed to Apple Computer, Inc. PowerBook is a trademark ofApple Computer, Inc. The Random House Encyclopedia is a trademark of Random House, Inc. American Heritage Electronic Dictionary, Electronic Thesaurus, and CorrecText® developed by Houghton Mifflin Company, publisher of The American Heritage Dictionary And Roget’s H The New Thesaurus. CorrecText underlying technology developed by language Systems, Inc. Calendar Creator is a trademark of Power Up Software Cotporation. ResuméVriter is a trademark of Bootwait Software Company, Inc. All product names arc the trademart of their respective h o l d m . O f c ^ t m the Macintosh FowifiooltMS 4/40 configuration only. All qualifying computers come pteioaded withsoftware and electronic versions of instructions. Disks and printed manuals are notincluded in this offer. S t a t e P ress Wednesday» Septem ber 9 ,1 9 9 2 P age 12 Faulkner. C ontinued from page 1. “It’s sickening,” Harris said. “I’m sorry for Jamal Faulkner that he has thrown his life away.” According to Scott Dupree, ASU assistant sports-inform ation directo r, the athletic department has given Faulkner a scholarship release that allows Faulkner to transfer to another college team. “It’s strictly up to him,” he said. “He’s a good player and some schools might want to pick him up.” ASU Dean of Student Life Art Carter said his department cannot address Faulkner’s situ atio n , even though he violated the University’s code of conduct by assaulting m another student. “O ur m ajor concern with the code of conduct is sanctioning incidents that occur on the ASU campus or at University-sponsored events and activities, Carter said. mmmm “t n T f r f l [ m HAVE FUN &MAKE GREAT MONEY TEMPE BICYCLE VOTED AS BEST 12 Sp eed M ountain B ike Manufacturers list price $249“ ♦ BEST BICYCLE SHOP IN PHOENIX IN 1991 AS SELECTED BY THE REPUBLIC GAZETTE NEWSPAPER. WHILE THEY LAST $179” fully assembled & lifetime warranty Teaching Bartenders Since 1933 * BEST BICYCLE SHOP IN PHOENIX EVERY YEAR FOR THE PAST TEN YEARS AS SELECTED BY THE NEW TIMES. •Flexible H ours & Personalized Training •Serving age in AZ is 19 f ONE OF THE BEST 100 BICYCLE BUSINESSES IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1991 AS SELECTED BY BICYCLE DEALER SHOWCASE. • $ 2 0 0 O F F T U IT IO N mhm STOP BY AND DISCOVER THE BEST IN LOW PRICES, SERVICE, SELECTION AND FRIEND­ LY HELP { ■ ■ m i mm — F in an cin g A vailable AMERICAN BARTENDERS SCHOOL 968-7657 957-3770 Tem pe TEM PE BICYCLE 330 W. U niversity • 966-6896 (Across the railroad track, west of Gentle Strength Co-Op) Phoenix DO YOU KNOW YOUR CHOLESTEROL NUMBER? FIND OUT AT STUDENT HEALTH! ■Student Health is offering cholesterol screen­ in g fo r only $5 d u rin g September, w h ich is N ational Cholesterol Education and Awareness M onth. A fter September, the cost w ill be $7. ■To have the ir cholesterol measured, students can g o directly to the Student Health lab w ith o u t checking in at the fro n t desk. ■Payment can be m ade w ith cash, personal check. Visa, Mastercard o r can be billed to the student account. ■Cholesterol screening Is available to students o n ly (not faculty o r staff). ■Results o f the cholesterol screening w ill be available a t the Health Education desk w ith in 48 hours. U niversity Dr. 1 i * 1 ' 267 E. Bell Rd. *3 7 5 -1 5 1 5 ASU (N orth Phoenix, 2 m iles east o f 1-17) i The quality of a TREK* will last long after the price Is forgotten A by V o lta g e ' b y TREK 1 8 Speed M tn . Bike * SIS In d e x S h iftin g • Q u ic k Release W h eels U1 MI IN C L U D E S FREE U -L O C K •F a n n y p a c k w /b ik e p u rc h a s e •L ife tim e W a rr a n ty o n F ra m e a n d F o rk »1 Y e a r A d ju s tm e n ts •T e m p e B ik e R o u te M a p U - L O C K S *5 “ O f f (■ ( ■ k r M a iH I M H I M t a M H k M M WmÊm Compete Sales & Service 968-8011 IT T O D A Y ! Apache OPEN DAILY Layaway O U T ...D O p§p^ "Your Collegiate Cycling Headquarters’ S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T S ' F IN D rmir 2 0 1 0 S. R ural Rd., Tem pe SW C o rn er o f B roadw ay & R ural ez & i B ro a d w a y P age 1 3 Wednesday, September 9,1992 S t a t e P ress Election C o n t in u e d from page 1, “bite the bullet and live within its budget, said he would not stray from his primary strategy as he enters into the general election fray. If he wins in November, Richardson will replace long-tim e Tem pe R epublican leg islato r Bev H erm on, who is running ' unopposed for the District 27 Senate seat being vacated by Doug Todd. In legislative races, 16 incumbents faced primary challenges, and 33 seats were vacated in the L egislature due to retirem ent and AZScarn, which snared seven lawmakers. T urnout for the prim aries was low, according to A rizona Secretary o f State Richard Mahoney, who attributed the lack of voters to the candidacy of former Gov. Evan Mecham for the Senate seat held by John McCain. Mahoney said conservative voters may have stayed away from the polls in order to be elig ib le to sign M echam ’s independent candidate petitions to get him on the ballot for November. PARTY O N ... . - OLLIE the TROLLEY T o f a S co ttid a L E . Sell it with 'a State Press *250®° classified adl INCLUDES: W e’re located in the* • basement of Matthews i Center U 965-6731 -— 4 Party Hours on OJIre the Trolley — Travel to anywhere in the Valley — Designated Driver — Driver & cleaning fee Sponsored by ASSQCIATEDC®)STUDENTS OF«ARI 2 0 NA: • S TÀTÉ.»ÜHf VER SI f V M em o rial Un io n AcnwmES B oaro Of s tu ff? Party on O l lie w ith up to 34 friends fo r ONLY SCHOOL TIES Got boxes and boxes r CALL 970-8130 ONLY *225°°IF YOU PARTY SUNDAY-WEDNESDAY EXPIRES 9/30/92 I KNOWWHATI KNOW. WECOMEft WEGO. IT’S INTHE BACKOF MYEYES A LL M O D ELS O N SALE from $ 1098 •G reat on Gas •L o w Insurance •Easy M aintenance •Easy Parking •B rin g in Your ASU I.D. fo r Discounts •F irst Tim e Buyer Plan fo r C ollege Students F re ig h t & H a ndling A d d itio n a l Same Day Financing M o n d a y -F rid a y ................. 8 -7 S a tu rd a y ...............................8 -5 W E BUY USED BIKES "Bring us your best deal & w ell beat it!" S u n d a y .............. ................ 1 0 -4 C o m e r id e w ith u s . "ASU's Closest D ealer"...G et Q uick & Easy Service a t w estern Honda of Scottsdale Come ride w ith us! M cDowell URGESTTRAVEUNG MOVIE POSHERSHOWONTHE PLANET W estern H onda S P O N S O R E D BY IN THE M E M O R IA L U N 6717 E. M cD ow ell Rd. 994-8400 ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS ASU O L D IN FO DESK F IR S T F LO O R «S O U T H MMORML U n h n A o t m t k s S ommo FILM C O M M ITTE E 965 -6 822 IN FO P a y 14 S t a t e P ress Wednesday, September 9,1992 Law rence— C ontinued from page m ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL 1. planning of the event. However, Kieselbach presented to the Senate several letters o f support from committee members and a petition signed by, 17 students and alumni involved with the H om ecom ing com m ittee who support Kieselbach’s performance and disagree with her termination. “(L aw rence) has put a bad taste in people’s m ouths,” Kieselbach said. “The (Homecoming) staff is not happy.” ' Homecoming is scheduled for the week of Nov. 10, and Hom ecom ing planners are baffled as to why Lawrence fired Kieselbach so close to the event. “To say this was unexpected is an understatement,” said Jeff Patrick, chairman of the Homecoming committee for ASU’s Alumni Association. “1 have worked with (Kieselbach) for two years on a weekly basis and she’s an outstanding person.” “Within two months all the work we have done will be implemented,” he said. “We’re hanging out to dry. This isn’t conducive at all to a cohesive committee.” ASASU and the A lum ni A ssociation jointly Coordinate Homecoming events. O ID 30* OFF ANY PEZA III O C III X » C U T O UT HERE improper termination. “ The only mistake was that I didn’t fire her sooner.” W hen C ollege o f L iberal A rts Sen. Stephanie Phillips asked during the meeting w hether L aw rence follow ed the correct p ro cedures in term in atin g K ieselbach, Lawrence responded that she “didn’t realize that this was a time when anybody was on trial.” H ow ever, L aw rence added that she followed termination procedures correctly after consulting with Gary Kleeman, ASASU faculty adviser. Kieselbach is set to meet with ASASU’s executive committee on Friday to discuss the situation further. She said she will discuss her term ination with the executives and from there will deal with Art C arter, dean of Student Affairs. At that point, if Kieselbach feels she has not received due process, she said she will take legal action against the University. Lawrence called Kieselbach’s threatened lawsuit “extremely funny;” Lawrence said Thursday that she fired Kieselbach because she wasn’t “doing her job in a way that was m ost conducive to harmony” within the Homecoming committee and other organizations involved in the V alid afte r 5PM • D ine-in only • PresenM hig ad w hen ordering • O nlyone §on • N ot valid w ith o th er oners Good through Sun. 10/4/92. Ü CgffjjfcjCfcRd to ODD JsgtanadaUn 2501 E a st C am elback Road RESTAURANT * BAR ■ 553-0910 O 1M 2 PIZZERIA UNO CORPORATION WÊÊ■■■■■«« cur our h e r e Hayden's Ferry R eview ! I N T E R N•' A T I O N A L f ■ { ’ S T U ^D Y ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I P R •O G. /' R A M S I. I | ~ | m r 'V, offered by ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ASW s National Literary Magazine A U N IQ U E O P P O R T U N I T Y T O E X P A N D Y O U R H O R I Z O N S A N D PREPA RE F O R THE FUTURE «anGK* Find out about studying abroad at the second general information meeting. 965-1243 Matthews C enter Basement Wednesday, September 9, 1992 1:30 pm Memorial Union, Room 224 El London Frankfurt Paris Madrid Munich fo r more inform ation, contact: OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS MOEUR BUILDING, room 1 2 4 9 6 5 -5 9 6 5 $339 $419 $415 $495* $431* -fares are each way from Phoenix based on a roundtrip purchase. Taxes not included. Restrictions may apply. Fares subject to change. Many other destinations available. ASU INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAMS ARE OFFERED IN BOLIVIA, ENGLAND, FRANCE, GERMANY, JAPAN, MEXICO, YUGOSLAVIA, the NETHERLANDS, WALES, SPAIN, ITALY, ISRAEL; PORTUGAL Am erica's o ld est a n d largest stu d e n t travel organization. CouncilTfcavd Located at Forest and U n tfen k y, d irectly across from A.S.U .I 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, A Z 85281 966-3544 C a ll f o r a FREE 1992 S tu d e n t T ra v e ls m a g a z in e ! i additional program s a vailable though o th er universities; fo r m ore inform ation, please inquire a t th e O ffic e o f International Program s '■ r S t a t e P ress P a g e IS W e d n e s d a ^ jS e jrte m b e r9 ^ 1 9 ^ THE' FREE LSAT CLASS RI C. M en S16 W OMKX S I” Bring your lunch and we’ll take care o f the tips. M .-T h . Fri. Sat. Here's the first tip: Kaplan prepares you for the LSAT better than anyone: Find out why at our FREE LSAT class on September 15 from 12:00-1:00 p.m. Call to reserve a seat. 9 67-2967 9-9 9 -6 9-5 7 0 9 S. F o rest Ave. Over SO years experience. KAPLAN ■$20FFlI LEIGHTON'S T h ean sw er to Km te s t question. Reg. Price $21.95 + $1 EPA Fee 1355 S. M cClintock Tem pe, 894-2798 Grease 'n Go's 20 pt. 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C o rn e rs to n e S h o p p in g C e n te r 968-6008 Coupons not valid With any o th er specials. Hours; Mon-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-7 Sun 10-5 W JO m w L flM H E W LE TT PA C K A R D A S U B O O K ST O R E 965-5818 PageJYí S t a t e P ress Wednesday, September 9 , 1992 Study shows phone savings possible DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A review commissioned by re g u la to rs says U S W est’s custom ers m ight receive significant savings if the telephone company’s non-regulated businesses change research, accounting and salary practices. U S West, which serves Arizona and 13 other states, said it is preparing a plan in response to the reports released Tuesday. But a spokesw om an called at least some o f the recommendationsconfusing. At issue is how state regulators evaluate the services provided U S West Communications by unregulated affiliates, such as U S West Advanced Technologies Inc,, a research and engineering business. In 1991, U S West paid all of its affiliates $517 million, or about 8 percent of its $6.31 billion in operating expenses. “The questio n is, w hat portion o f that, if any, is inappropriately carried by ratepayers,” said Dennis Nagel, chairman of the Iowa Utilities Board. Nagel and utility commissioners Renz Jennings of Arizona and Joan Sm ith o f O regon com prised a com m ittee o f regulators that hired a private consultant to conduct the study. The review was conducted from December 1991 through June 1992 by Schum aker & Co. o f Ann A rbor, M ich., a management consulting firm. The findings were submitted in reports on U S West Inc., the Englewood, Colo., parent of the telephone company and its affiliates, and U S W est A dvanced Technologies in Boulder, Colo. “This review will be extremely useful as each state works to determine that telephone ratepayers get full value for the services purchased by U S W est Com m unications from unregulated affiliate companies,” Nagel Said. 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Customize party invitations with fun clip art, organize your busy life with calendars and lists—even personalize your own database with job search information! C L A R I S Simply powerful software.”' 01992 Claris Corporation. All righi» reserved. Claris is a registered trademark at Claris Corporation. ClarisWorks and Simply powerful software are trademarks of Claris Corporation. All other product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of dieir respective owners. ASU BOOKSTORE P a g e 17 Wednesdaj^Segtembe^^992 S t a t e P ress C am p aign _ C ontinued from page 3. emergency aid for cleanup and rebuilding in the wake of Hurricane Andrew. Later, in a speech to Jewish leaders, he suggested that Saddam Hussein’s ouster from Kuwait might hot have happened had C linton been president. “ Ask yourself where we would be if we had someone in the Oval Office who would have waffled, who Would have wavered and wanted to have it both w ays,’’ said Bush, sounding his theme that Clinton is indecisive and straddles the fence on tough issues. The day after the ceremonial Labor Day sta rt o f the fall race found C linton in C onnecticut, sounding fam iliar economic them es and d etailin g plans to help m an u factu rers deal w ith fast-ev o lv in g technology and ever-changing world markets. “ Unlike opr competition, this nation has no n ational strategy, no com prehensive partnership between business and workers and education and government,’’ Clinton said. Connecticut is among the states Bush won in 1988 that the Clinton campaign believes are ripe for plucking this year. C linton running mate A1 Gore spent the day in a larger, tougher prospect on that lis t— Bush’s adopted home state of Texas, Gore targeted Hispanic voters who live near the Mexican border, calling Bush a “ puppet of the rich” and promising that a Clinton-Gore adm inistration would bring better roads and jobs to the poor, isolated area. Quayle focused on California, the biggest electoral prize o f all and a state where a punishing recession has pounded Bush’s standing. C linton’s big lead there is the foundation for much o f the optim ism in Democratic circles. equipment, constant retraining of workers, and tax reform to remove incentives that encourage American plants to move overseas. C linton also called fo r creating 170 m anufacturing extension service centers around the country in communities where local government and businesses need help and promise to share costs. The centers are an anchor of Clinton’s pledge to take m oney cut from defense research and invest it in a new civilian research agency designed to identify new products and markets. Clinton adviser Bruce Reed said the entire manufacturing package would cost $2 billion a year, paid for with defense cuts and other spending cuts promised by Clinton, The vice president met privately with form er P resident R eagan. D uring an appearance on a morning television show in Los Angeles, Quayle tried to distance the Bush-Quayle ticket from GOP convention “ rhetoric” critical of homosexuality. “ We are the ones that have implemented a non-discrimination policy when it comes to gays and lesbians,” Quayle sard on KTLATV. Still, he said he supported the military ban on hom osexuals, which C linton has promised to end. Clinton’s morning speech to the owneremployees at Standard Knapp in Portland was more policy lecture than partisan stemwinder. Citing Labor Department statistics, Clinton said the president sat idly by as America’s manufacturing sector lost 1.3 million jobs since 1988. He promised an investment tax credit for purchasing new plants and Y o u c a n s e ü ju s t a b o u t a a jr t b iiig :it i5 i| ^ | State Press Classifieds D ining C o cktails SS? 11am-2:30pm t f I 5-10pm J ' \ 4-1 Opm Æm D ine in o r ta ke o u t • A -V P * w FOR STUDENTS with Always LHe - Virtually V \J / Unbreakable Lenses! » m m m i 16 n r oakm ais infer B . w a l A r i VHuJylHwdœ ble Nwy» U * la n a te«nuam Typur c H A w i1» e ye e w É AÉweye De _________ _____________ prolwototi. Always Lite Lenses a *8 8 VUua • Chaioe o f Frames to *43.78 •Ljgitsr and Hwner Lenses ^OolegeStudwils^leaBe show a veldC I OTHER COMPLETE EYEWEAR PACKAGES! FREE Scratch Coating, FREE Breakage Guarantee & Frames to $39.84 Bronze . . . . . C R -39 $49.84* Lenses h**0 Lansaa Lenses I No Line Bifocal Lenses I L u n ch o r D in n e r E at h i o n ly 92' 69 E. 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A Z 445-3033 445-6755 §71-3284 87341312 1380 Was» E llio t f j f c Tsm ps. AZ 345-8558 ___ 345-0861 2020 N o rth 75 m A v * : R h o m b A Z 4617 E. M R d - PHo m I z . A Z & j i University W lZ Z A R D S HA IR S T U D IO Wlzzard's O ffe r s c a n n o t b e c o m b in e d w ith a n y o th e r d is c o u n t s . M u s t h a v e c u r r e n t, v a lid p r e s c r ip tio n . Valley Bank 9 6 7 -2 3 6 0 9 0 3 S . R u ra l R d . • T e m p e T ues. fitT h u rs. 9-8, W ed., Fri., S at. 9-5 Comics Wednesday, September 9,1992 P age 18 Calvin and Hobbes S ta te P ress by Bill W atterson WHAÎS WITHTHE OMBRELLA AND . BACKPACK? PREPARED FOR WHAT? ONE. NEVER KNOWS fa t" I'VE OUT A PART SON, EWE COVUC BOOKS. S 3K E S U M , A WRENCH , A BOOK ON BUGS. A MAP OF MONTANA, AN ERASER, . v an d a r o c k . *»L 9? By GARY LARSON GEE, flW ro N E 1 THE SHOULD CARRI UM8REU A A KIT LAKE TWS.J DOUBLES ___________ ^ 5 g, X I I PAPACHOTE A i Sinn sorry, Mom and \ ( Cï* D oonesbury HtCE-LOCKMGCOUPLE.UTS CHECKOUTTHEIRUAUJES. fíi» lyrinq fell rnyiPif b u t Bradawl ? are in love - and Vrn qoina To run ot-t un/j join his herd- BY G A R R Y T R U D E A U I HamtOOPELITE.NE*7?J I GREAT,WHERE*} io u m . u e M unu ve knot "P_yau w vea? sn m lo o k in g r ' / ow w p tío RIGHTHERB I'MINSHOW N MALIBU. BUSINESS.I \ WANTTOWORK CLOSER) HOME! TORAISING A FAMILY! NO...NO, ms NOT Hes UFETHAT! UBRE GOTA FROMTHECHAROON GUN!GO HESTONW/NG! GETTOUR \ GUN,HONEY! Red Cloud’s ultim ate nightmare PEOPLE television movies and Ford commercials. She has also been happily married to Helmut Huber for 23 years. They have two children. NEW YORK (AF) •— TV soap queen Susan Lucci has received more publicity from losing out on an Emmy Award 13 times than for winning it. But to hear her talk, it’s just part of Iter formula for making her own luck. “11vave had a great deal o f luck in my life,” said the actress, whose age is estimated at between 42 and 46. “But it’s what I did with that luck that counts. I worked very, very hard.“ L ucci’s m ainstay is playing Erica Kane on ABC’s daytime soap, “All My Children, ” since it began in 1970. Along the way, sh e’s m ade a lucrative sid e career in HYANNIS, Mass. (AP) — Victoria Reggie Kennedy says she won’t shrink from die political fray when her new husband, Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, seeks reelection in 1994. “I enjoy politics,” said the 38-year-old lawyer. “I know who I am and where I come from, and I feel passionately about issues Ted’s involved in.” Repair • Parts • Restoration School Supplies t* Bikenstock.*In the dorm, classroom or just tanging out, it’s « classic look. No matter wine you are, die Original Contoured Foolbed supports and cradles your feet. Biikenstodc.* The shape of comfort. Arizona1" Void with other «fieri and ori tale itema. Hurry, supplies ore limited. The couple, who lately have been giving interviews, married this summer, cementing a courtship that began in 1991 with a chat at an anniversary party for her parents, who are longtime Kennedy family friends. “She’s been good for my heart and my soul and my happiness,” said die 60-year-old Kennedy. As for speculation that he married again to mend a tattered public image, Kennedy said: “Vicki and I know this is real, arid... our children and our family know it’s real, and our friends know it’s real and people who see us together know it’s real, and that’s about as much asyou care about.” We Genuinely Core About Your Volkswagen Available in to Mooring colors «Me supples last b m j euede, end euodo, mote nubucfc, navy leather, gray suede THE SHOE MILL - 25 6 0 S. In d u stria l Park Dr. Tem pe, A rizona 398 S. 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O ur driver« a re never penalized far late deliveries. 0 1 9 0 2 Domino's Pizza, Iric. Small Pepperoni Pizza and one Medium diet or Classic Coke. S p ed avaHC ls valid at this location only. Item substitutions available w here applicable. N o t valid w ith any other cou p on s, offers or sp ecials. Specials C ustom er pays all sa les la x w here applicable. THE PIZZA PEOPLE OF ASU! ■ ■ ■ 968|5555 903 S. Rural Rd. Sports W ednesday, September 9,1 9 9 2 S ta te P ress P a^e 1 9 4 days after H-bomb, Sun Devils regroup Coach Snyder sees many bright spots B y G reg S ex to n Sta te P ress S ophom ore ta ilb a c k M ario B ates fou nd d ay lig h t as h e ham m ered h oles in th e W ashington defense a ll nig ht S aturday. He rushed fo r 218 yards, inch idih g one touchdow n burst fo r 80yards. It’s been four days since the H-bomb was detonated in Sun Devil Stadium. It’s old new s, the No. 2 team in the nation, Washington, showed ASU why it’s at the top of the polls. It was the good, the bad and the ugly as the Sun Devils fell 31-7 in its first game of the season and first under new coach Bruce Snyder. First, the good. • Mario Bates rushed for 214 yards and the 6-foot-2 tailback also burst open on the first play of second half for an 80-yard touchdown run. It was ASU’s only score. “For a win I’d give up all (of the 214 Bruce Snyder: ‘Troy Rauer is my hero’ Freshman quarterback gains respect of coach, teammates B y G reg S e x t o n S t a t e P ress While ASU freshman quarterback Troy Rauer may not have had the best game of his life when the Sun Devils were thumped by Washington last Saturday, he did achieve hero status. “One of my heroes actually is now Troy Rauer.” said ASU coach Bruce Snyder after a 3.1-7 gouge inflicted by the Huskies. “He was placed in almost a no-win position. I have great admiration for him and for what he did.” : And for a rookie quarterback, playing against perhaps the best collegiate defense in the nation, to throw 8 of 18 for 69 yards is a feat unto itself. R auer, who also threw two interceptions, showed good arm strength and a competitive spirit that set well with the big honcho—Snyder. “1 know he wished he would have played better, been able to score more and all those things I really appreciate,” Snyder said. Rauer, at 6-foot-4. 213 pounds, didn’t seem to have a favorite target as he aired it out to a variey of receivers. He nailed Sun Devil sophomore Clyde McCoy twice for 19 yards and Rauer also found Kevin Snyder, George Montgomery and Brian Ryder at one time or another. ' . “I felt really comfortable going into the game,” Rauer said. “(And) as the game went on, I tried to stay focused.” ; While the ball did find its way into the hands of a Husky or two on more than one occasion, that is something that is expected w ith a big gun defense like W ashington. Additionally, with more time to work on patterns and routes, to study weak and vuncrable spots, Rauer would have done much better. The next question is—with a comendable performance in his debut, will Rauer move up the roster or on the depth chart? “There is so much to be done with that quarterback position right now in terms of other guys, plus Troy, 1 haven’t T urn t o rauer , pa g e 20; yards),” Bates said. “Washington is not that great, but I do give them their credit.” • A balanced offensive attack. Snyder’s squad ran the ball effectively for a good portion of the game. Key blocks were given on a consistent basis. The bad. • Too many pénalités crippled both the offense and defense. ASU racked up 18 penalties for more than 100 yards. A decent passing game grew out o f a tum ultuous quarterback scenario. This aspect will get better once a starter is in there for good. “I am never pleased with a loss,” Snyder said. “We feel lousy about that. I do; the entire team does. T urn to H usky, page 20. Fans react to Husky win, remain optimistic for remainder o f season B y L isa I. K ranz Sta te P ress Fans of Sun Devil football are counting on the fact th at last w eekend’s 'd isappointing 31-7 loss to Washington won’t be a statement for the rest of the year. Instead, they are predicting an exciting season ahead, even if victories fail to emerge. “If ASU wins the first game, a lot of pressure will be off the team,” said ASU sophomore Jeremey Dolby. “People like instant gratification. If they lose, people will be like, ‘this new system (under Snyder) fails.’” However, Skip Blunt, a “serious fan” of 12 years, said a new coach will keep the fans’ attention up. “The excitement will keep people coming back,” he said. “You can win boring and people won’t come back, but you can lose exciting, and they’ll come back. “Under Marmie, ASU football ran just plain old bread-and-butter plays,” Blunt said. “With Coach Snyder you’ll see things like flea-flickers and off-thewall stuff.” Many are trying to narrow down exactly how this season will shape up. “ASU wilt lose two games for sure, Washington and California (Berkeley). We’ll win the University of Arizona. 1 think we’ll be just above •.500, but we have tough games in our schedule,” predicted Jon Berge, a 22-year-old communications major. “The talent is there, but not the experience,” senior SteveTlori said. “It will take at least a year to merge.” Then again as ASU wide receiver Eric Guliford said at practice last week, "We do have some rough edges to smooth out, but give it time...” -c . R edshirt quarterback Troy Rauer w aa dubbed a hero fo r h is perform ance against W ashington, A SU lo st 31-7. ASU volleyball begins season with wins Sweep three team s in w eekend tourney, coach likes what she sees B y S t e p h e n D em o r a tz S tate P ress W hile all the hype was being channelled into the ASU football game, another sport was also kicking off its season. Ip The ASU women’s volleyball team, ranked 24th in the nation, began their season by sweeping four games in the A rizona B rand/Phoenix H ilton Sun Devil Volleyball Challenge on Sept. 4 and 5. Snyder “We played good offense and good defense," said Sun Devil coach Patti Snyder. “It (the tournament) was good volleyball, The games had a high pace and a nice flow. “We gained tremendous confidence by winning the four matches and not losing a single game.” “We clicked very well as a team,” said senior middle blocker Christine Everett. “We played much smoother than last season.” . ASU began the tournam ent march on Friday as they defeated an over-matched Western Illinois squad 15-10, 15-1 and 15-9. ASU got 18 kills from freshman outside hitter Christine Gamer and 43 assists from senior setter Jennifer Helfrich. In the second match, the Sun Devils needed only 55 minutes to dispose of Weber State 15-7, 15-1 and 15-8. Senior Amy Nelson had 11 kills, and Schuster had 9. WSU as a team had only 22 kills. On Saturday, ASU started slowly against an average Iowa team, falling behind 2-7 in the first game due to long serves and the inability to handle the Hawkeyes’ serves. But, strong net play by Everett and Nelson brought the Sun Devils from behind to win the game 15-13. The second game saw a different, more aggressive ASU squad on the court as they jumped to a 10-1 lead. Schuster ended the game with a service ace making the score 15-6. The third game saw the Sun Devils jump out to a 7-0 lead, ■ but ASU allowed the Hawkeyes back into the match and they forced an ASU timeout at 14-10. Nelson and Helfrich ended all hopes of an Iowa victory when Nelson put away a quick set from Helfrich for the final point of the matchFor the match, junior Nancy Christian had 14 kills, 5 service aces and 9 digs. Schuster added 6 service aces. In the final game of the tournament, ASU met Cal-State Northridge. The match pitted unbeaten teams against each other for the championship. “This was a good match to end on,” Snyder said. “CalState Northridge is a very good team.” In the first game of the match CSNU was leading early 8-3 when SnydCr subbed in freshman outside hitter Kelly Harris for Nelson. Harris ingnited the ASU offense with her service game, and Gamer followed Harris with her own jump-serves and the freshmen serving gave the Sun Devils an 11-8 lead. ASU finshed the 12-point run when Everett killed a CSNU recieving error to win the game 15-8. Schuster, Christian, Gamer and Helfrich were named to the all-tournament team. qp Wednesday, September 9, 1992 Page20 H u sk y C ontinued from page »•]1ftJ J PCAJ 19. “I was really pleased with how hard we played. We really played hard right until the end." Snyder said his offense placed the Sun Devil defense in à difficult position and “the defense responded.” ; Also, the Coâçh expressed, happiness with the offensive line, which allowed Bates much of his yardage. Other positive aspects were found within the team being able to overcome a week of questions about off-field activity, but this was dealt with in a mature way, Snyder said. “That's what 1 am so proud of,” he said. "There was a lot of reasons for us not to play well tonight— when I say well, 1 mean hard. We focused in and we played hard. ; “I was very proud of this football team. We are going to be fine, we have a lot of S t a t e P ress good guys and we are going to be fine.” But Snyder knew when credit was due, and the simple fact was that the Huskies deserve praise after dominating ASU for the majority of the game. "The Huskies have great speed,” Snyder said. “They are very physical — that’s a physical football team. They have great skill and they certainly proved to me tonight that they have the ranking that they have.” Why will the new ASU football coach rem em ber his first game at Sun Devil Stadium? ‘T il remember this game because it’s my first game as the Arizona State football coach, and that we played hard even though there were a lot of reasons not to. I think there were a lot of heroes out there.” - r i University s If yOu think you’ve got what it takes to play hardball under legendary Sun Devil coach Jim Brock, then here’s your chance. Basebai I tryouts will be held on an invitation basis at noon on Sept. 27 at Packard Stadium. If you are interested in W ant a liner ad in the S tate Press Classifieds section tomorrow? - i With purchase of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Tempe location only. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 9-16-92 j R ositas Plaza, 960 W . University, Tem pe, 966-0852 Show Your College I.D. & Save WINDOW jh TINT •Rejects up to 48% of thé sun's energy •Rejects up to 96% of UV rays •Professionally installed •Micro Edge & Invisa-Seam included •Metallized Tint only $10 additional ($40 value) Sun Devil tailback M ario Bates, who shined at the opener, rushing for more than 200 yards including an 80-yard romp on the first play of the second half, said Raucr did a good job under the circumstances. .i “Troy did a great job,” Bates said. Sun Devil baseball tryouts announced Staff reports $ i MEXICAN FOOD F R E E DINNER from page 19. even thought about it,” S nyder said. "I haven't even given it one ounce of thought." Snyder w a sn 't the only one who was im pressed with R au er’s im prom tu performance. Many players also expressed adm iration tow ards the once-4th string quarterback. n fine Rauer. C ontinued [•T r ¡T T | I ■ 1 [ t I L ill trying out for the baseball team, stop by the baseball office located on the 5th floor of the Intercollegiate Athletics Building and fill out a questionnaire. If you have further questions regarding the process, call the baseball office at 9656085. * J # REMOTE AUTO ALARMS SUNROOFS • Remote arm & disarm JP& ■Shock sensor ' Rem ote panic feature M JR ■ Transmitter fits on keychain • Lifetim e warranty on parts r.-S lLS .. •Two-position latch provides easy removal and installation of g lass •No-leak w arranty •15"x30" Microdot •Professionally installed •FREE S u n sh ad e (S349Svalue) or Bag (s2495) FROM 9995 System 225 Installed $159i W e'll need to receive it before noon today! 1005 N. Scottsdale Rd. (Only 2 miles north ot ASU) 941-9064 O ffer expires 10-31 -92 For better looking, longer lasting M atthews Center, Basement • 965-6731 1 Does your ree center have a Students join the prestigious W estern Reserve Club for just the w a it! mit problem $39.°® per month, no initiation fee*. Call now and lose Bring this ad to W estern Reserve Club for a free one-week trial. Um it one per student. Offer expires November 1, 1992. * 9 m o n th student lifestyle membership. WESTERN RESERVE CLUB AWARD-WINNING SPORTS CENTER BY DAVE B R O W N 2140 East Broadway Road • Tempe • 968-9231 State Classifieds Presse<*MISS ITI A N N O U N C |M |N T C _ ARIZONA CONTACT LCNS CO. IN D EPEN D EN T PR ESID EN T IA L candidate "Bo" Gritz will be speaking ' 9/9 at Tower Plaza. 44th Street and Tho­ mas. 7r00p_m. Replacem ent Lens Service 2 7 7 -5 6 2 2 New Lenses Delivered in 84 Hours Guaranteed Quality and Price Dr. Michael Sachen O.D. POWER CURVE D IA M E T E R BRAND R IG H T THE FINANCIAL Management Asso­ ciation (FMA) would like to thank ever ryone who stopped by our table during the College of Business rush week. Join us this Thursday, September 10, at 3:30 in the M/U.’s La Paz room #233 for a short but inform ative m eeting. All majors welcome. ' A C ollege D eg ree a n d no p la n s 7 B ecom e a TIm UNIVERSITY OP SAN DIEGO, often an Inten­ sive ABA Approved poet gradual« 14 week LAWYER'S ASSISTANT PROGRAM: This Program wM anabl« you to put your education to work as a aMNad member of the legal team. A representative will be on campus Thursday, November 11, 1992 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 pm. Memorial Union, Rm. 224 Coconino Por mòre Information contact your career cen ter at: ASU TW O BED RO OM , tw o bath condo; bike to ASU, pool, washer dryer, Her­ mosa Place, $500. Two bedroom, two bath duplex, fenced yard, near Scot­ tsdale, Weber intersection. 966^0987. P e rs o n a l a la rm s c a re s a tta c k e r s , c a lls h elp , security at your fingertips. $29. 8 9 2 -6 1 6 2 RENTAL SHARING PROBE SECURITY SYSTEMS FEMALE W ANTED, room in house with popí. $260 includes utilities, $100 deposit. Baseline/Hardy 491r-8540. University of San D icgj (619) 260-4579 N a m e __ C u rre n t Address. .S ta te . City. MALE ROOMMATE. Two bedroom, two bath apartment, beautiful complex • by Kiwanis Park. $290/month plus util­ ities. 838-3024, 2 BEDROOM. I bath, cute red brick du­ plex apartment with fenced yard, quiet neighborhood, east of ASU. Good deal: $385 plus special. Call Jeamie and Brian ROOMMATES WANTED, Three bed­ • 929-0382. , '■ ' ■V':;; : room, two bath, fireplace. Next to pool. Call 967-5140 ask for Travis. 3 BEDROOM furnished duplex near ASU, washer/dryer, fenced backyard, RO O M S FOR RENT carport, $490/month. 965-4630 (day) 756-2788 (evening). 3 BÉDRÓÓM/2 bath home, furnished. ASU AREA, studio $275/mpnth; 3 bed­ Walk/bike to school. $250,678-0656. room, I bath, $395 utilities extra. 967PÁPAGO PARK I roommate wanted, 4908 or 966-8838. . fu rn ish ed . v e ry nice! 3 bedroom $30(Vmonth, nonsmoker. 968-6237. CLOSE TO ASU. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, huge yard, new ro o f; n e w ; evap, $54,900. Call Debbie Barcón at Pru­ dential Arizona Realty, 730-5200. .Z ip . Current P h o n e* Perm anent Phone • TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE B EA U TIFU L LARGE 1 and 2 bed­ rooms. W alk to A SU. Pool, laundry room. On East 8th Street between Rural and McClintoCk. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. Call for special. IM M ACULATE 2 bedroom , 2 bath, 1,063 square feet, appliances. Univers­ ity/D obson, 540 N orth M ay S treet, B uilding 11 #21 ¡29, $34,900, ow ner ' 833-3305. LA MIRAGE 2 bedroom, $610 month, near school, ceiling fan, move in im­ mediately, call 968^2042 or 945-7398. PAP AGO PARK Village I: Save almost $20,000 with low down for 2 bedroom unit in nicest complex near ASU, In the $50’s - will sell soon! Greg Askins, Re­ alty Executives, 966-0016. HNK~ Apartment Locating Service $$$ ATTENTION $$$ BUSINESS STUDENTS SCHOLARSHIPAPPLICATIONS A R E N O W A V A IL A B L E IN : *Your Department Office T h e Undergraduates Program Office (BA 140) T h e Academic Access Office (BA 140) T h e College of Business Honors Program (BA397G) T he Dean’s Office (BAC 600) One application will qualify you for A ll college and MISCELLANEOUS F O ||A L |= _ COLOR TV, 19", $85. 25" color consol TV, $100, looks and works good. Call 271-0697. R o o m m a te m a tc h in g se rv ic e a ls o a v a ila b le . LAR ADA’S ARMY Surplus has all your cam ping n e eds-inexpensively. Also more weird stu ff than you can im a g in e . 764 W est M ain, M e s a ’ 437-1048 834-7047. ^V. ' / • BLUE CONTEM PORARY sofa and love seat sleeper, only 1 year old, $350, 1(602)488-4682, 1(602)488-3710. COMPUTER DESKS. Two styles to choose from . V ery nice. $45. 391-0254. FANTASY FUTONS LOW PRICES O N ALL QUALITIES VERY LARGE refrigerator for dorm rooim nearly 4 cubic feet. For info call 894-9157. UTILITIES FREE. Ask about special. Unfurnished studios and I bedrooms. Call 9am-5pm weekdays: 966-4J597, BOOKS H O M K T O R R |N ^ _ _ RECYCLE FOR $$$ 2 BEDROOM , 2 bath house, lagoon pool, S825/month. Tim 894-0288. Sell your books for cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit towards the purchase o f a nything in the store. Choose from 3 floors of new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers welcome. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue, 966-0203. BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom, 2 bath, large y a rd , fru it tree, w alk to A SU, $675/month. Tim 894-0288. H O USE FOR rent 4-1/2 bedroom , 2 bath, large backyard, 3 blocks from ASU. Call 968-9331. 450 E. SOUTHERN AV„ MESA (NE comer of Southern & Mesa Dr.) FREE REPAIR estim ates on student cars and trucks. Brakes, oil, tune-ups, electrical. Call Nick 897-1741. 890-0339 CONTEMPORARY SOFA set $300, di­ nette $ 115, coffee table set $85, mattress set $75, daybed $130,530-1680. NEW QUILTED twin/full/queen mat­ tress sets. $99. $120, $150. 897-8634. OFFICE FURNITURE Used desks from $39.95, chairs from $9:95, bookcases from $19.95, com ­ puter furniture, files and more. Arizona O ffice Liquidators,; 5064 South 40th Street (1/2 mile south of Broadway). 43?-'2224. COMPUTERS IBM XT compatible portable with 20 Meg hard drive. $180. 391-0254. STUDENT SPECIAL: 386/16 mega­ hertz- $859. 386/25 megahertz- $889, 2 meg RAM, VGA, 40 meg hard drive, 101 keyboard 1.2 o r 1.44 floppy. 497-6558. » 1 __ Scab ...$649 Lesele! II .$1499 C*i>MuliftafeRtp»tMMiyai»rtat»iHndia CAT. pngmi iw «aiay PomBo¡ VItNtwríniN loraBiaria J ‘ BEAUTIFUL SOUTHWESTERN style sofa, with pillows. Lifetime stain and soil warranty, CallDonny at 929-0844. 2303 N. 44th St. • Phoenix Ph: S55-1404 Authoris'd Apple HP * RikJiusDealer CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Ave­ nue Jewelers, 414 South Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. STATE PRESS Classifieds work! Call 965-6731 today! YOU SAY it, we display it —only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731! APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Close to ASU HAYDEN PLACE 625 W. 1st Between Hardy & Mill 968-5444 • 2 pools, jacuw.i 1986 HONDA Elite 150, moving to Col­ orado, m ust sell. A steal, $650/bffer. Tina 276-9445. 1987 HONDA Aero 50, red. $450/offe h . F or inform ation call 860-20^1. Leave message if necessary. BICYCLES STEAL MY bike. 1984 Bianchi Camp­ ione D’Italia C eleste, 52 centim eter frame, Campagnolo dereilers, mint con­ dition. $450/offer. 945-1760 Mario. TRAVEL CHINA TOUR, NAU summer 93, 15 days, 3 Credits. Professor Lew, NAU, Flagstaff 86011-5016.523-6567. DISCOUNT TRAVEL- Cheap, in your name. 1 special ize in quick departures. Most places USA. Also worldwide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. NEWARK AIRPORT one way, Sep­ tember 11th. $80 or best offer. Male, call and leave number. 967-1470. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call 965-6731 for rates and information! HOSTELLING INTERNATIONAL A Let us make your travel dreams an affordable reality. •Hostel Cards •MEI Back-Packs •Travel Accessories •lnt. Student ID's, •Fllghts& Eurail M-F12-6pm 1046 E. Lemon St. T e m p * 894-5128 ^Ap a r t m e n t s • 5 m in u te s fro m a irp o rt • covered parkin g, w eig h t room 1985 HONDA interceptor 500. New tu n e -u p new tags; good co n d itio n , $ 1500/best offer. Norm 966-4762. AflftANGLES U A G ly l eee • MOTORCYCLES APARTMENTS departmental scholarships. Deadlines: ,, PLM Scholarships - Oct. 2,1992 All other scholarships - Dec. 18,1992 | BUY IT, tell it, find it, sell it— only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information ! APPLY TODAY« VW SCIROCCO, ’88, 16-valve, silver; 30,000 miles, power steering, power brakes, a ir c o n d itio n in g , 5-speed, AM/FM cassette, sunroof, excellent con­ dition. $7,700. 829-1617. ComputersPlusCompany JEWELRY FURNITURE LARGE 4 bedroom, pool, washer/dry­ er, dishwasher, 2 car garage, Arizona room, maid service. $950/month, McClintock and Broadway. 437-1048. A W ESO M E 1.985 BM W 325e- im ­ maculate, 4 door, pearl white, leather interior. Pioneer Autoreverse AM/FM cassette with security system, deluxe 6 speaker system, automatic transmission, a ir c o n d itio n in g , pow er w indow s, power door locks, ABS brakes, Pirreli tires, alloy rims, power sunroof, dark tinting, nonsmoker, electric side mir­ rors, read head rests, fog lights, custom dash mats, hand pinstriping, low mile­ age, fuel economy package, complete service records at Linda Brock, tool kit, owner must sell at a steal to make ends meet. $9,150 or best offer. 966-6499. FREE DELIVERY! HPUsnjet 2«tornii. 1974 OLQSMOBILE Delta 88, 75,000 original miles, one owner, 2-door, new tires/air conditioning/vinyl roof. Call 821-1654 to see on campus. 83 JEEP CJ7, 68,000 miles, 5 speed, 6 cylinder, bikini top, excellent condition, $4,900/offer. 345-7880. STUDENT DISCOUNTS S AUTOMOBILES_____ 1991 HONDA C ivic SE, 5 speed, 4 door, black 5,300 m iles, everything power, salvage title, $5,800 or best off­ er. 784^4669. SOFAS • LOUNGES CHAIRS & OTTOMANS COVERS MATTRESSES TABLES • ETC. I BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN tickets!! First show 11 th row on th e flo o r. G reat seats!! Great price!! Call immediately840-2146. 1986 HONDA A ero50 $390. 1987 Honda Elite 150, $680. Both run great. Offers accepted. 966-8151. ...».s, up*ih». i falSm S >>$8« Color Scan« He$1499 / • HP■Scafa ütT O e o X aL-300fctBM*Mac$2299 SUNGLASSES: RAY-BANS, Serengeti, Vuamet. 50% to 60% off retail. New with warranty. 251-6666. ONLY ONE studio left. Full bath, low prices, I mile from campus. Call Mitra 860-1665,92,1-«582. TICKETS FURNITURE HOMES FOR SALE 9 6 5 -2 3 5 5 Lawyers Assistant Program R oom 318, S e n a Halt S a n D iego. CA 92110 2 BEDROOM 1-1/2 bath “near ASU, w asher/dryer, small backyard, com ­ munity pool, carport. $500/month + de­ posit. 786-3445. NEAR ASU 3 bedroom. 2 bath townhouse. $625 per m onth. 1(619) 438-7572, : APARTMENTS L aw yer s A s s is ta n t TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HAYDEN SQUARE condo, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, covered/ parking, Washer/dryer. dishwasher. Rob 893-8523,967-8118. PREVENT RAPE LEFT f P a g e 21 W ednesday, September 9 ,1 9 9 2 State P ress Don’t nettle for less than the best! • 2 4 hr, secu rity & m ain ten an ce STUDIO • ONE BEDROOM • TWO BEDROOM • c o v ered ca b a n a s » fete Cable TV• FREEHot Vfetar • Great Location • SRefreshing Pools • aSoothfanSyao ♦tooh h»iidot»ptog • Erereioe Room• AmpleCovered Parking • o u td o o r p ic n ic areas • sp a c io u s s tu d io s, 1 b d rm , 2 b d r m / 2 ba 1255 University Ik Toape • 8EComer atL'nireriity tad Rural 9 6 8 -8 1 1 8 Page22 ONE WAY ticket to Newark. Septem­ ber 10th. only $ lOG/offer. Female. Call Jett 784-9221. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $5.50-$6/ HOtJR guaranteed! Neodata, a leader in the telemarketing industry, is currently hiring enthusiastic students with good verbal communication skills fo r several part-tim e.aftern o o n and evehing phone agent positions. 2:308pm 4- Saturday or f 1:36-8prif + Satur­ day. We offer flexible scheduling, paid training, great bonuses arid incentives, plus a convient location near capus! To schedule an interview, call 967-0066 and ask fof Angela Smith; Neodata, Broadway & Mill, Tempe. (EOE). to o JO B S Valley Temporary Services, 4801 South Lakeshore Drive, Tempe, has 100 open­ ings for inventory clerics on September 30th & October 1st. The hours are from 6pm until midnight o r later. No experi­ ence is necessary. Must be 18 years of age and have proof o f eligibility to work in U.S, Please apply Tuesdays and Wed­ nesdays at 1pm sharp! ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT -Fisheries. Earn $5,000+/ month. Free tran sp o rtatio n ! R oom & Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience n ecessary . Met« or Female. For employ­ m ent program call Student Employment Services at HELP WANTEDGENERAL BUFFALO EXCHANGE now hiring fo r part time. Looking for energetic, fash io n -m in d ed hard-w orking in d i­ vidual. Must enjoy working with peo­ ple. Apply 9am-6pm Monday-Saturday, 12pm-5pm Sunday: 227 West Univers­ ity. Tempe. No calls please. MARKETING ASSISTANT- Financial firm seeks part-tim e assistance with marketing program. Salary plus com­ mission. Experience preferred. Calling on businesses only. Unusual opportun­ ity. Send resume to: 2659 West Guada­ lupe #D104, Mesa 85202. CAMPUS ASSOCIATE, Appligene, a leading supplier of molecular biology products, has immediate pan time open­ ings for undergraduates in the biologi­ cal sciences to promote Appligene pro­ ducts on campus. Call for information at 1-800-955-1274. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING tech­ nician, perm anent year-round, part time or full time, minimum one semes­ ter o f engineering or technology, some jo b experience required. 956^-8200. Start $5-$8/hour. C O PY W RITERS OPPORTUNITY TO make good mon­ ey, $20 an hour possible. No invest­ ment. Good for fundraisers. 967-1875; The Sun Devil Spark yearbook is look­ ing fo r copy w rite rs ,G e t your work published in an awafd-wirtning publi­ cation. Call 965-6881 or stop by the M atthews Center, room 50 for infofmation. DEFUSCO INDUSTRIAL Supply needs pan Time trainees up to $8/hbur. Col­ lette 966-5765. Business is boom ing at D O M IN O 'S P IZ Z A the world's largest Pizza delivery company. At Domino's Pizza our dri­ vers make $7- 12/hr. including dps, hours are flexible. Sale driving cash bonus. Come join the excitement. Apply after 11AM at 903 S. Rural. A CTO RES ATTN. STUDENTS Looking for 6-8 individuals to market memberships for Firestone Service Cen­ ters. Flexible hours, füll or part time. $ 8 $ 10/hour. Call 921 -3961 CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call 965-6731 ! CAN YOU MANAGE ON AN EXTRA $2,500? P r a c tic a l e x p e r ie n c e fo r Bu s in e s s / M a rk e tin g M a jo r s : M a n a g e c r e d i t card p ro m o tio n s o n cam ­ pus fo r a N a tio n a l M a rk e tin g F irm . H o u rs flexible. E arn u p to 12,500/term . CALL 1-800-950-8472,Ext. 17. AUTOMOBILES PA RT T IM E a fte rn o o n s, M onday through Friday, l-5pm , Tempe mort­ gage com pany near . M cC lintock/Southern needs processor trainee with business/flnance background, com­ puter knowledge helpful, assist proces­ sors d a ily w ork. C o n tact Pepper •;-. 345-0295. 968-5555 PA R T TIM E help $ 180/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. PART TIME music teacher for'grades K-8, in small Catholic school in Mesa. Applicant must have an Arizona Teach­ ers Certificate to teach music. If inter­ ested caii 969-0226. SCUBA DIVERS interested in joining a dive club now forming at ASU, call 2666100 box 1018, leave name and number. PA R T-TIM E M M G reat Hoagies &5ausage 731-4905 = CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call 965-6731 ! Work 4-8pm, Monday-Friday. We wiH train you to process advertising claims. Basic math skills required. No typing needed. A pply at T h e A d vertising Checking Bureau, Inc., 1919 West Fair-, jnont Drive, Suite 7, Tempe, 7am-3pm, Monday through Friday. 438-2320, MON-FRI 4 -10pm Different entre daily C o lle g e & A p a c h e Next to Howard Johnsons August Red Tonight 9 m KAMI'S A R IZO N A C O U N T R Y C lub hiring part time food servers, no experience. A pply 5668 E ast O range B lossom , Phoenix. 4-7pm Daily $2 2 50 PITCHERS 10< WINGS BARTENDER FOR fun neighborhood bar. $8-$12 per hour. Sports knowledge a must, experienced hustlers only; 1630 h o u rs p e r w eek. A pply: T h e Woodshed 1 ,19 West Baseline. SAT: LADIES NIGHT 2 5 T 4PM-CLOSE 404 5. Mill, Suite 101 (Hayden Sguare)966-‘300 C O R K ’N CLEAVER Accepting applications for lunch wai­ tress and hostess. Will train. Concern with appearance, reliability and per­ sonality are important Apply in person Monday-Friday, 2-5pm or by appoint­ ment: 5101 North 44th Street (44th and Camelback). 952-0585. HELP WANTEDGENERAL .HELP WANTEDGENERAL $ $ PLASMA DONORS NEEDED $ $ PE TEACHER needed fo r Q ueen of Peace Catholic School in Mesa, Applic­ ant must be certified to teach elementary K-8. Those wishing to apply call the school office at 969-0226. ADVERTISERS! The best way to reach ASU, ASU West, MCC and SCC is through the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information! We pay up to $40 your 1st week! New &return donors (a fte r 2 m onths lapse) receive $5 bonus 1st time & $5 bonus 2nd visit within 7 days. EARN $ 10-$40 per/ hour pan time on ' w eekends! Top m obile DJ company looking for responsible people to mo­ bile DJ ASU and private parties. Ex­ perience; p referred but not required. 966-9900 Monday-Friday. PROGRAM M iNG AID w anted. Dynamic SQL embedded in C on Academic VAX. $6/hour or pay by project. Choi 967-3481 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HARD BODIES wanted, malc/female, for video feature "Wild Times". Spo­ tlight Video 263-0307 (leave message). IMMEDIATE OPENINGS, full time, pan time, $50-$ 100 daily, cash paid da­ ily. Own hours/locations. (602)256" 5922. ; ••.V:-; ; ■ ,LAWN SERVICE needs pan time help fo r Tuesday/Thursday, no experience necessary. If you use drugs, please don't apply. $5 peri hour. 966-3269. MAKE $50 in two hours selling t-shirts; Call Mike 967-1875. DID YOU KNOW ... that you can use Visa, MasterCard or American Express to placeyour classified? Don't delay-- call 965-6731 today! JAPANESE AUTO SERVICE Welcomes all of ASU We specialize in all Japanese Cars: Volvo & SAAB Brake $45.95 Maintenance Tune-Up Transmission Service $20.95 e c J S m « Fuel Injection Service $34.95 Clutch Job $199.954249.95 Lowest Prices Gusrsnteed O ffer Expiree 10-30-92 R ione 966-5007 1501E. Apache Blvd. Tempe AZ 85280 RD Automotive, Inc. & Ram sey Radiator C o m plete F oreign & D om estic A u to R epair W EEKEND BOUQUETS, p a rt tim e work, $6 hour cash, no transportation n ecessary , w om en , encouraged. 437-0601. DEFUSCO INDUSTRIAL Supply needs sales trainee. We train full or part time up to $8/hour. Our top producers make $50,000. Collette 966-r5765. EARN AN extra income o f $400-$500 or up/month part time or full time. Call : 827-0408 or 964-1437 for interview. Spice up your liner or personal ad by topping it with a bold, centered headline! It's only $1 extra -- what a deal to make your ad really stand out from the rest! Call 965-6731 today for information! State Press Classifieds work!. NO IN V ESTM EN T! Jew elry m er­ chandiser, to display in dorm lobbies, mall area, etc. Local representative will assist you in your efforts. Must be en­ ergetic, honest, creative. Potential of $30-$50 per evening, work at your own schedule. Wiltex Enterprises 460-0821, RAPIDLY GROWING marketing firm is looking for focused individuals to fill full and part time positions. Excellent income opportunity, aggressive, highly motivated individuals with outstanding people skills are encouraged to apply. Call 921-7755 Monday-Friday, I -4pm. SELL TOOLS and supplies nationwide on a 30-day billing; $8/hour; call Todd 831-2992. TELEM A R K ETIN G *Since 1960‘ 967-4851 1953 E. University D r., T e m p e Jorwrt'b.foeJr 894-2250 U M Part time, evenings, easy non-threaten­ ing, non-sales calls, that's night- no sell­ ing. Earn up to $I3/hour with bonuses. Call 496-6402. Whitson Financial, Inc. YOU SAY it, we display it! Only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information! jm I Associated i 1Biosclenoe, Inc. ■T ♦ Terrace N Cholla Apts. J B 1 Sno Oasis c W alkin g D istan ce From A S U $22.l7/HOUR. 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 month. O rder shipped next day. Work on consignment with no financial obligation or purchase for $5.95/up. (Visa/MC accepted). Sate fo r $I0-$15. Call free anytime 1(800)733-32|65. Factory Trained Mechanics •Engine Rebuilding •Complete Brake Service 7 RED ROBIN o f Tempe has immediate openings for cooks with day side avail­ ability. Red Robin Tempe, 1375 W e s t. Elliott. HELP WANTEDSALES DRAFTS CORNER OF 968APACHE/TERRACE 2201 DRY CLEANER & tux rental company needs full and pan-time reliable counter . person, experience preferred but not necessary. Commission. Thomas & Hay­ den, Scottsdale. 947-753Q, EXTRA $$$ H H $4,99 Extra money is nice, but you can help people, too. Donate critically needed plasma, which is manufactured into a variety of therapeutic blood products. Product promotion, pan time. Must be 21, size 6 thru 10, modeling experience preferred. For interview phone 230J084. 525 s. Mclintock Dr. Tempe ALL Y O U CAN EAT HELP WANTEDK > O y § R V IC g s = COCKTAIL WAITRESS, Jockey Club, 52 East Camelback (Central and Camelback), an upscale progressive night club/restaurant. Experience required, part time evenings. Call for appoint­ ment. Bobby 279-7777. F re e P elivery ! - Jolly Ed's Mr. Peli RESTAURANTS/ STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch waitresses. Apply in person Monday through Friday, 10am to 3pm: 5001 East Washington, cross street 48th Street 273-7378. YOUR AD HERE! 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. PART T IM E re c ep tio n ist. C asual, friendly office seeks cheerful, depend­ able person. Experience in IBM com­ patible, 45 wpm, phones, filing, corre­ spondence. !0 plus hours per week. Call 921-7755, M onday - Friday, I 4pm. PART TIM E receptionist, M ondayT hursday, 8am -2pm . L ig h t typ in g , phones. A bbott Tile 9 6 1-1707 after 5pm. DEPENDABLE AUTOMOBILES •Tune-Ups SPORTS & RECREATION 9-1 or 1-5, Monday-Friday, help in real estate office. Mac literate, own trans­ portation; 948-3436. 1-806-545-41S5, ext. A5918 A u d itio n s: Septem ber 12-13, 1:006:00pm in the Rehearsal Hall of Nelson Fine Arts Center. Need two actors and one actress for an experimental théâtre work in Spanish to be staged by the ASU : Institute for Studies in the Arts, De­ cem ber 2-6, 7-13. Must speak native : Spanish, have good movement skills, and be available for evening and/or wee­ kend rehearsals. Honorarium o f $1000. C all 965-3447 to schedule an audition and/or for more information. OPPORTUNITY! OPINION research firm needs am bitious hard-w orking overachiever who wants an interesting part-time job now with career potential. Survey research experience preferred. Highly computer literate, excellent cler­ ical skills. Also hiring interview ers. Phillip 967-4441, RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTED- cuyHCALs_ _ _ _ Rural ONE ROUND-TRIP ticket. Phoenix to San Francisco, departing 9/24. return 9/29. M ale only, $125. C all Tim at 829-7064. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 1 TRAVEL ti» S t a t e P ress Wednesday, September 9,1992 y ■ • ** ★ $8-$10/H O U R M orning, A fternoon, Evening $5.50/G uarantee/H our --------------------------- ---- — ★ N ation's m ost experienced, largest Telem arketing Co. ★ H undreds of dollars in cash, bonuses given out w eekly ★ Call on great programs like: •M agazine R enew als •Telephone S ervices •T rial Preview Book C lubs •N on-P rofit R epresentation "GREAT ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES" •M anagem ent staff com m itted to your success. •P art o r fu ll tim e, flexible scheduling, •Lots of sales m ade hourly. 894-0264 DIALAMERICA St a t e P ress Page 23 Wednesday^September9j^992 INSTRUCTION M U S IC _____________ PERSONALS AD O PTIO N SERVICES PEAVY T 40 bass guitar $100, Crate B20XL Practice Amp $150, 6 channel stereo PA $200.967-8873. K.L. #1- ADVENTURESOME FUN-LOVtNG dad, down-to-earth at home mom and terrific big brother long to give your baby a warm, nurturing home filled with encouragement and love. Will help any way we can. Call Susan and Carl col­ lect: 1(708)510-9569. DIV O RCE M AILBOX RENTALS Bankruptcy, name change, incorpora­ tion, & child support modifications. All documents prepared by Paralegals. Con­ sumer Legal Inc. 954-651 h Reasonable rates- Discounts on other merchandise/services to boxholders. 24 hour access. AAA Mail* 824 South Mill, 966-0076. ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Facials/waxing. Student dis­ co u n ts. C all fo r m ore inform ation. 969-6954. H |A U H & F IT N |^ _ _ PETS" KKG PLEDGES- You guys are awe­ some. Get psyched for pledge retreat on Friday. BOA CONSTRICTOR babies $80! Bur­ mese python babies $130! Cash only.' Leave message 986-3302. F R g |J g $ T £ F O y N C ^ _ A B RO W N w allet belonging to Tey Hong Leng was lost. If somebody finds it, please kindly return to Tey. LOST I pair o f Oakley glasses on Friday, by the BAC building. 894-0222 REW ARD: LOST dog, large male, long brown hair with black face. University area. 431-111 8. REWARD: LOST dog, large male, long brown hair with black face, University area. 431-1118. W ATCH FOUND on 9/2 by MU. Call 965-5183. FU NDR AISING WOW! RAISE S500-1000 IN JUST ONE WEEK! For your fiat, sorority, dub, etc. Assist Maifceting Finn running fun event on campus for Fortune 500 Co’s. IE E E HEADPHONE RADIO jua for calling l-8DQ.9Sft-1037.exL 25 GRE E KS & CLUBS RAISE A COOL nooo IN JUST ONE WEEK! PLUS $1000 FOR THE MEMBER WHO CALLS! No obligation. No cost You alio get a FREE HEADPHONE RADIO iuit for adling 1-800-932-0528, E x t 65 PERSONALS 1 DOZEN red long-stem roses deliv­ ered $20. Also balloons. After Hours Flowers. 894-3419. AGO SHELLY Happy Birthday Baby love Paul. ALL GREEKS: Applications for Greek Steering Committee are available in the Greek Life Office. Due September 11th at SKlOp.mi ^ • ' COM E JOIN Sigma Pi, Fraternity for' Eternity. Western grill BBQ andM onte C arlo night this Thursday at 7:00pm. For more info for a ride call 968-5648. P P B PAULA M. Maybe one day we can go out. Give me a call. Love, Ami. HUGO- HERE'S to four years and forty more. Thanks so much. Love forever, Angelito. SERVICES KURT E. W elcom e Home! I'm glad your back! W e're gonna have tons of fun Telly. 143 Michelle. A SOFT Touch Electrolysis, permanent hair removal, disposable probes, great student discounts, near ASU. 829-7829. OX/CLYDIA: WANTED: SexologistsThe only people who must bring their work home with them. - Sassafrass. FIND IT in the State Press Classifieds! LAT KIM you're doing a snazzy job. Keep it up! Thanks for everything love Charity, SDT THE fall new members can't Wait to get to know you. W e are to ta lly Jazzed. SIG KAP Laurie, you are doing an awe­ some job as treasurer! Thanks for com­ ing through for us! Don't Stress! Sigma Alpha Omega! X K K IM J. Happy Birthday H.B. 1 love you more than the Dash, beer, and the democrat induced national deficit Love your M.S. Milo. SN RICK M ick Dave we are total y pumped to haye you as our coaches for Relays. We will be #1 Ipvç SDT. SERVICES YOU SAY it, we display it! Only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information! D i- Z in T e m p e 's m o st in n o v a tiv e salon. T ry a full set o f sculp­ tured nails for $25, teg. $45. Ask for Shellye (8yrs experi­ ence) call for appointm ent 7 3 0-5992 -Since 1985Up to 2000 wts of power and a total variety of music now avail, at student Disc. Rates as Lowas$3Q/hr. 839-5398, message ... s - 7. State Press Matthews 9 5- 731 ¿ l assxfíeds LINER AD RATES: Center Basement, XN T C -1 have wanted you from the: day we met. Tonight you're mine. I love you. Happy 21st B-Day 15 words or less Rm. 46H $3.90 per issue (1-4 issues) $3.70 per issue (5-9 issues) $3.45 per issue (10+ issues) 20$ each additional word. No abbreviations, The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering, no type size changes. EXX MARLENE- T in psyched you're my d o t Get ready for a great semester. Love, Mom. , Personals (15 words o r less) are only $2.00. You can also add Greek symbols to your personal for only 50c per set (3 symbols max. p er set). ,SN SDT will be number 1 this year so brace yourself love SDT. SEMI-DISPLAY RATES: STEPHEN L. One year ago you capr tured my heart with your shy but com­ passionate and mature personality, those big brow n eyes, and that incredible smile! The fun we've had and the love that's grown over this past year is such an important part o f my life. Happy Anniv. Stephen. Loye you! Yours always Lisa. ; THETA CHI thanks for a terrific happy hour! Lové Sigma Kappa. THINK YOU'RE funny? Can you tell a one-liner? Amateur comedians wanted! No experience necessary. F or Ideal Tempe nightclub. Call now: 968-0074. Big, big {Mizes! TO THE women o f AAA, looking for­ ward to a great Happy Hour tonight! Pike. TR1C1A- TO friends and good times. Happy 21st Birthday. Put on those boots and let's party! Love, Jen. C H jL D C A R |_ _ FLEXIBLE LATE afternoons and even­ ings, babysitter for 1-1/2 year old. My home near ASU. 967-9307. NANNY NEEDED various hours, ex­ perienced, reliable transportation, 44th Street and Camelback. References re­ quired. 840-0635 before 7pm please. WANTED RESPONSIBLE individual to care for 4 month old pail time. Ref­ erences a must. 496-9124 evenings. SELL IT in the State Press Classifieds! A bold, centered, all caps headline can be added to your liner ad for an additional $1.00. Headline cannot exceed 15 characters (all letters, punctuation marks and spaces Count as one character each). Liner, personal and sem i-display ad deadlines are 12 noon, one business day p rio r to publication. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: (p er column inch; per insertion) 1 time: $8.95 2-5 times: $8.15 6 or more times: $7.70 All classified display ads have borders. Type can be bold face, centered, etc. An average of 15-20 words can fit in one column inch. Classified display ad deadline is 10am, two business days prior to publication. HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: In p e rso n : Cash, check (with guarantee card), Visa, M asterCard or American Express ($6 minimum on all credit card orders). W e're located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 46H. Office hours are 9am-5pm , Monday-Friday. Personals are accepted in person with student I.D. By phone or fax: Payment with Visa, MasterCard or American Express only. $6 minimum on all phone orders. State Press fax number is 965-8484; please include your credit card number and expiration date on fax. Please call before you send fax so we can anticipate the transmission. Personals are not accepted over the phone o r b y fax! By Mail: Send your ad (with payment) to: State Press Classifieds Dept. 1502, ASU Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 (if sending a personal check, please include your check guarantee card number.) Personals are not accepted through the mail. TUTORS TUTORS TEARSHEETS Tearsheets will be forwarded by request for 50c and full copies of the paper for $1.50. ALL TUTORS ARB MOT ALIKE Know w h o you ore d e a lin g w ith . We're registered with the State o f Arizona, and have a n e x c e lle n t re p u ta tio n a m o n g th e ASU com m unity. We can assist you in achieving a h ig h e r le tte r g ra d e w ith a true desire a n d understanding o f your most d ifficu lt classes. G ive us a try - our results speak for themselves. We offer tutorial for the follow ing classes: MAT106, MAT117, MAT118, MAT119, MAT210, MAT270, FHY101, PHY111, PHY112, QBA221, PSY230, CHEM101, CHEM113, CHEM115, and many morel Register now for Fall Semester, Our sessions will fill up fast, so sign up early to secure a spot with us. 968-4668 MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER ■SIMON'' Cornerstone Mall, D207 ADVERTISING POLICY: The State Press reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy submitted. HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOU AD: Liner ads must be corrected or cancelled before noon, one business day prior to publication. NO REFUNDS WILL BE GIVEN. State Press Errors: Check your ad the FIRST day it runs. Call 965-6731 with any corrections b efo re noon. The S tate Press is only responsible fo r th e first day th e ad runs incorrectly. Corrected ads will be extended one day or credit will be held in the Classifieds Office for one year. Changes called in after the first day will not qualify for a make-good. M ake­ goods will not exceed the cost of the original ad. Customer Errors: Corrections must be made before noon. Compensation will not be given for customer error. The State Press is not responsible for corrections called iri by phone. CHANGES: D on't delay - ca ll us today at: . ’ INSURANCE STUDENT HEALTJi Insurance 50% off campus plan. Enroll anytime! State approved program. Prater insurance 829-4919. There may be a change fee for any changes m ade on classified ads. T h e minimum fee is the cost of one more day's run (minimum fee on changes made by phone is $6; the State Press is not responsible for changes made by phone. Ads may be prorated if discounted ads are changed before the run is complete. PROFESSIONAL ARABIC teacher, private lessons or groups, translations available. Please call 994-4460 or 9412404. TENNIS ANYONE? Learn to play with a tennis pro. 8 years experience. Call 839-9111, reasonable rates. TUTORS A C COUNTING TU TO R: 2 1 1 ,2 1 2 , 321, &. 3?2. ASU graduate student, 7 years experience, groups or individuals. Bruce 957-0357 leave message. MATH TUTOR, excellent reputation. Any algebra or calculus course, etc. Fee negotiable. Call Scott- 784-0734! MATH TUTORING, $8 per hour. Call Rick at 834-8672. TYPING /W O R D RATES RATES QUICK MEAL- all nutrition. Less than 750/meal. All 22 amino acids, vitamins, and minerals. Have energy and strength, handle stress better, liquid. Good for ac­ tive college students and those with chronic fatigue and weakened immune system. Mix Re-vita in juice or milk. $13 fo r 16 m eals. C all fo r delivery 827-0408 or 964-1437. AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS certifica­ tion Workshop in Mesa, weekend Oc­ tober 2nd, by National Aerobics Train­ ing Association 963-9415. P R O C f g |N < ^ _ = NEED TUTOR for German Lit; prefer native speaker. Call Julie 929-0298.; 1- DAY turnaround. Professional typ­ ing. Walkable/ASU. Reasonable rates. Experienced. Laser. Faculty/Students. Diane 966-5693; ADD AN Art-a-ma-bob to your personal ad for only $3 ! Call 965-6731 for details. ACCURATE, EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. WP5.Í. Reports, resum es, charts graphs. Laura 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, essay s, la se r p rin ter, re a ­ sonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. KINKO'S COPIES makes the grade! Pa­ pers, resum es, flyers, color copying, self-serve Macintosh & IBM and more! Open 24 hours. 933 East University. 894-Í797. •/. LASER PRINT, W ordPerfect 5.1, re­ ports, papers, etc: Resumes composed. Accurate, fast turnaround. AAA Mail, 824 South Mill, 966-9017. .RELAX! LET an ASU graduate pro­ fessionally type your term papers, as­ signments, letters, mailing lists, and la­ bels. Good prices. Fast turnaround. Teresa 924-1976. Malte toms quick cash... tall it ia the State Praia Classifieds! STATE PRESS C lassifieds 965-6731 Tour Individual Horoscope fmrw. Drake__ — IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SPONSOR THE HOROSCOPES, PLEASE CALL 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 ! For Wednesday, September 9,1992 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Try not too upset about a morning financial concern. It is not the best day to get your ideas across to others. A friend seems somewhat indifferent or cool. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) A partnership matter concerns you early in the day. Higher-ups may not be amenable to requests today. Watch a ten­ dency to put things off. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Perseverance is needed on this day when you may feel stymied by a work related problem. You may not agree with an in-lay now. Complications affect travel plans. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Parental concerns may wight on you early in the day. Some good news comes by phone or letter. Moods are changeable today. You vary from pessimism to overoptimism. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) ; Grievances form the past are best forgotten. D o n 't rehash matters from long ago. Partners may not agree about a financial Or shopping matter. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Various problems a t work could make you out of sorts. Don’t magnify the im portance o f a small concern. Perfectionist tendencies may you self-crit­ ical. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Shoppers need to be wary of defec­ tive items* today. Escapist tendencies could interfere with accomplishment on the job. Be m ore hopeful and less inclined to worry. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Your all or nothing attitude could make you seem unreasonable to others today. Seek a middle ground. Concerns at home may take priority over socializing tonight. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Concentration is not at its best as the day begins. An inclination to worry too m uch can interfere w ith m ental progress today. H appy news comes through a friend. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Social graces count for much in business today. A difficulty with a friend Could arise. Don’t let concern and worry, about financial interests dampen your outlook. ' AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Temperament may could your judg­ ment in business as the day begins. Be diplomatic with higher-ups. You have mixed feelings now about making an investment, PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) By retreating into,your own private inner world, you could inadvertently be shutting out a close tie. You are not in the mood to listen to advice from others. YOU BORN TODAY have leadership abilities and are drawn to politics and public service. You usually have a broader outlook on life than the typical member o f your sign. Teaching, writing, law, pub­ lishing and humanitarian pursuits are likely to appeal to you. You often possess administrative talents and organizing abilities. You have a strong will and are emotional. Birthdate of: Sylvia Miles, actress; Paul Goodman, writer; and Otis Redding, ringer. © 1992 by King Features Syndicate, Iiic P age 24 S tate P ress Wednesday, September 9,1992 Know,iti io Kdiculouf. If I dorif call my parent; every Sundsy af exact(y S +Key think I wa; Kidnapped a'fenf.or Something. Anyway, one Sunday one and l^ark, we decide to tike-off and checkoff fhe d W lo vtfre hanjinj «/t and I looKat rrvy watch. 5 o'clock ^ 9^ mY < % .. card and I head down +o me local pool hail. (WhichI happen to Know ha; a payphone) And I tel* the folk; the Martian; Send > / ■their be;!-. o matter where you happen to be, the AT&T Calling Card can take you home. It’s also the least expensive way to call state-to-state on AT&T, when you can’t dial direct. With the new AT&T Call and Save Plan, you’ll get special discounts on AT&T Calling Card calls' And once you have your card, you’ll never need to apply for another. If you get your Calling Card now, your first call will be free?* And you’ll become a member of AT&T Student Saver Plus, a program of products and services that saves students time and money All of which makes the AT&T Calling Card out of this world. TbgetanABTCallingCardforoff-campuscalling?call 1800654-0471 Ext. 850. C>1992 AXÜ- 'fending ICC approval Please a ll abow 800 number for details. • • Vom’II receive me $3 AlKT LD. Certificate equivalent K>22 attautea of cud or direct-dialed, caast-tc>-a)ast,ni0N and weekend catling based an rates effective ( t/lffl Vbu could net more or fewer minutes depending an «fere or when yaucill Offer liste d to one certificate per student. AT&T