ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY «Copyright, Stale Press, 1992 Tempe, Arizona Wednesday, October 21,1992 Ari Independent Mottling Daily Voi. 76 No. 41 Coor seeks athletic committee aides Suns owner, surgeon asked to assist exam ination board By Shaun Rachau State Press As part of his plan to seek long-range so lu tio n s to A SU ’s recent athletic department problems, President Lattie C oor has asked Phoenix Suns owner Jerry Colangelo and Phoenix surgeon Albert Olivier to join a committee that will examine procedures and policies of the department. C oor said the hew committee will formulate ways to help student athletes C O O R make a successful transition from their home communities to campus, as well as to enhance student athletes’ interaction with the broader campus community, “W e should now take the step and bring together a committee drawn from within our Intercollegiate Athletic Board that has been active and add to it representation from the faculty, student body and from the larger community to help us examine the underlying issue,” Coor said. Colangelo and Olivier could not be reached for comment. In the first phase o f response to the recent crim inal activities in the athletic department, Coor established a ninemember committee of faculty, staff, students and alumni and a four-member task force to develop a framework of sanctions for athletes who violate the law. The proposed sanctions include a one-year minimum suspension for athletes convicted of felonies. “I believe this step .has drawn together the first critical elements of a way to fix the problem that has severely plagued us,” Coor said. Coor said the second phase will be a long-range approach that will examine the nature of the transition student athletes go through in trying to adapt to the campus community, particularly the transition of those who come from very different settings. The second phase also will “look more actively” at ways the University can ensure student athletes are an integral part of it, he said. In another step to help strengthen the ASU athletic program, Coor has asked former university presidents Bryce Jordan of Penn State University and John Ryan of Indiana University to meet with him over the next three or four months to study the entire athletic program. Coor said he has learned when problems arise in an area to not only try to fix those problems and understand more deeply what has caused them, but to take a moment and look at the programs as a whole. “I had an occasion to examine intercollegiate athletics at ASU in the roughly three years I have been here, in terms of the relationship with the NCAA, where we moved from a heavily penalized program to an infraction-free program, and also look at it in some depth as it relates to academ ic progress,” he said. “I have -not had occasion to step back and look at the whole intercollegiate athletic program.” Jordan and Ryan have recently retired as presidents from their respective universities and both have had substantial experience in working with top-quality intercollegiate athletic programs. They will come to ASU for an initial visit in midNovember. The former university presidents will help Coor understand where the athletic programs are headed and what areas need strengthening. Coor said Jordan and Ryan also will examine recruiting, financial aid, academic standards, advising and progress, support programs, competiveness, and budgets and financing. Gay rights plan draws Tempe ire By Stephen D emoratz State P ress Debate about a possible Tempe gay rights ordinance drew fiery responses from m em bers o f a com m unity panel and an audience that gathered Tuesday to discuss the controversial topic. “Is it right that I can be fined from my job because I admit that I am a homosexual?” asked local attorney Mark Freeze, one of the fiv e-m em b er panel com prising three attorneys, a local pastor and a Tempe city councilman. T he panel and the crow d o f both homosexuals and heterosexuals were brought together by the Vision Tempe group for the Tuesday night meeting at the Tempe City Library to “facilitate ideas.” A Phoenix ordinance that outlaws Bring homosexuals from their jobs solely for their sexual preference stirred heated controversy T urn to Gay, pa g e 7. Sean Openshaw/State Ptm s Perryn Zucco, right, a 30-year-old English |unk>r, addresses the five person panel Tuesday night at the Vision Tempo public forum, where the necessity of a Gay Bights Ordinance was discussed. Zucco said she had previously felt her life had lost meaning because she had misunderstood being a lesbian, and she stressed the importance of love and acceptance. More than 80 people attended the discussion at the Tempo Library. Professor says debates acquaint voters, candidates Clinton eases voters’ minds, incumbent not strong enough By D an Zeiger State P ress Before the series of presidential debates began, supporters of President Bush considered the three televised confrontations to be his final chance to trim Democratic candidate Bill Clinton’s double-digit advantage in most opinion polls. And after a trio of debates in which Bush was often on the defensive and not as aggressive as many felt he needed to be; the worst fear of those within the incumbent’s campaign might be a harsh reality — Clinton eased the minds of most of those who had expressed concerns about him. , “H ie debates did serve à purpose,” said John Geer, ASU associate professor of political science. “O f course, they provided the opportunity to really meet the candidates, and the American people wanted to get comfortable with Clinton. He gave them a reason to be comfortable with him.” Results o f polls taken after the third debate Monday support G eer’s contention. Although an ABC News poll measuring voters’ presidential preference found that Clinton fell from 52 percent before the debate to 48 percent afterward, Bush still remained at 29 percent. And an NBC News survey showed that 31 percent of respondents said they w ere more likely to think more favorably of Bush, while 36 percent said they would probably think less favorably. Clinton scored 36 percent and 29 percent, respectively. Independent candidate Ross Perot made the biggest strides. In the ABC poll, the Texas billionaire nearly doubled the figure he had before the debates but remains way off pace at only 19 percent. In the NBC poll, 60 percent said they were T urn w iS TnA TSE id e PR ESS to D ebate , pag e A n N B C N e w s poll: “A re you lik e ly to th in k m ore o r le s s fa v o ra b ly o f th is ca n d id a te after M o n d ay night’s d e b a te ?” ¿36% 36%, 12% a M ore ■ Less B u sh C lin t o n P e r o t A n A B C N e w s poll: “W h o is y o u r p re sid e n tia l p re feren ce ?” After Before Monday’s Monday’s Debate Debate 29% 29% B u sh C lin t o n P e ro t 8. ★ ELECTION Campus News A SASU V ice P resid en t K ate Lawrence donated her salary to the org an izatio n a t a m eeting Tuesday. . • Page 2 W orld/N ation Bush, Clinton and Perot enter the final two-week stretch of the election. Page 3 9 2 YEAR ★ ★ S p orts The football season is seven weeks old and the Pac-10 is showing itself as a true competitor. Page 15 52% 11% 48% 19% Today’s Weather: Mostly sunny. High 91. Low 65. I I i *i* s Classifieds........... ...17 C om ics................. ....14 Crossword..............................6 O pinion..................................4 Sports........................... 15 World/Nation ........................ 3 *2 State P ress Wednesday, October 21,1992 HU PP fcfty.ii.is i|l J ¡¡¡¡ fl'f faijé Campus clubs denied funding by three votes ^YailhV I By S. Talbott Smith State Press . AU journalists and ,........Ti^rainirirTiEniimrntTi nniiifiiiiriTTnin ~•*.-■» - ' a.m. Cady Mail. Month. 10:30 a.m. S S 103. • M U A B M arketing Com m ittee • Afl • PW A lpha Delta • Mandatory meetina, jjfelcom e. 3 p.m. MU Room 216. tp m . m C o tm e Z im t M f liiv U M » P h i i General meeting, • Eckan kar S o cie ty • Noon. M U Graham (You needn't com e if you attended the Room (216). Oct. 7 meeting.) 6 p.m. M U Pim a Room. • M U AB • Movie: "TheQiperi,* starring Sem inar to discuss advisem ent ^ * Gregory Peck. $1 or movie pass. 5:30 & opportunities & how to register early for 0 p m Union Cinem a. M U tower leva!. spring 1993.3 p.m. Agriculture Building ' • Gam m a Beta P h i Room 250. General meeting. Group activities, guest •M U A B C u ltu re & A rts • W eekiy speaker & yearbook pictures. A il members encouraged to a flM d . 6*73D pianist, i t a.m. to 1 p m M U p.m. MU Pim a R oorrl ■ • M U A B G a lle ry Com m ittee « M eeting||| ■ Student A th le tic B o r r ì • Meeting. 5:30 A ll welcome. 3:30 p.m. M U Conference p . if » A Building. Room 2. • Pre-Vet C lu b * Speaker: Dr. McConnell, • P i Sigm a A lp h a ♦ Meeting. New & old members welcome. Discussion of dean oiCotorado State U iA w s l^ ';ip P graduate school vs. iaw a d io o l fonjm . adm issions & careers in vetw kkiq |!| ; 2:45 p.m. Postica! science d e p a rt® ^ « m edicine. 1i40p .m .A G B 262. Room 407. • A lt S a in ts Newm an C enter • Andre House. Help feed the poor of downtown i • Am nesty International • Meeting. 5 Phoenix evm y Wednesday. Depart at p.m. Hayden Lawn. W o r l d W is e If you leave the water running w hile you’re brushing you r teeth, you waste between 5 and 8 gallons o f water. ■Assum ing you brash your teeth tw ice a day. seven d eys a |week, 365 days a year, you’ve w asted between 25,550 and 40,860 gallons o f w ster in a year, Senate fails to override veto v3 A desperate attempt to override a veto by Associated Students of ASU President Scott Maasen failed at the Senate’s meeting Tuesday, denying two campus clubs funding approved by die Senate two weeks ago. The Senate needed a two-thirds majority to override Maasen’s veto but fell short of that number by three votes on each of the bills. When originally passed, the bills had enough Senate votes to override a potential veto. A representative from the American Indian Science and Engineering Society who requested $400 to send one of the group’s members to Washington, D.C., for a national AISES conference, spoke to the Senate after the bill had been rejected and expressed his dismay. “Where we come from, these opportunities don’t come up every day,’’ said Perry Riggs, a member and past president of the ASU chapter of AISES, after the bill was rejected. “I don’t understand how they couldn’t pass it since it passed earlier with a two-thirds majority.” Riggs said the University has a hard time retaining Native American students, and the small amount of funding would have been a step in the right direction to reverse the retention problem. - “This money was going to a freshman,” he said. “I hate to see him get denied because of some bureaucracy.” Maasen said he vetoed the two bills because they did not follow the prescribed procedure of being sent to com m ittee before Senate consideration. However, College of Engineering Sen. Dave Amols said last week that the bills were rushed through because the clubs needed the funding immediately. Amols, who originally submitted the two bills, said he was “very disappointed” with the outcome of the vote. The second bill unable to bypass Maasen’s veto came from a computer science honor society within the engineering college. The society was denied a $130 request for funding to help send three students to a computer contest in Colorado. In other Senate action,'ASASU Activities Vice President Kate Lawrence submitted three bills to donate her salary to three ASASU programs. The bills were passed unanimously by the Senate. Lawrence has refused to accept her salary as part o f a campaign pledge she made last semester. “I had said that when I ran for office, that was what I was going to do,” she said. “I had to wait until a budget went through because I had to know how much money was there (for the salary).” Lawrence said she feels ASASU should be more of a volunteer organization, and salary refusals are a beginning. “If it’s'feasible for a student to work on a volunteer basis, then I think that they should,” Lawrence said. “I don’t think they should take the salary just because it’s there.” She Said her recent marriage and reliance on student financial assistance enable her to donate her ASASU salary. She also said she receives state and federal disability aid in the form of Supplemental Security Disability Income from the Social Security Administration and Arizona Health Cate Cost Containm ent System, a state medical aid program. “I ’ve been dealing with the (ASASU) budget cuts since April. We know how much things have been cut, and there’s so much that we need ... that we just simply can’t afford to fund,” Lawrence said. One bill donates $1,380 of Lawrence’s salary to fund the purchase of a disabled access ramp that will allow wheelchairs easy access to a stage AS ASU rents to student groups. A second bill donates $500 to the purchase of ‘‘ask me” buttons worn by ASASU and administration officials at the start of each semester. The buttons are intended to make new students feel at home on an unfamiliar campus. The third bill creates a new budget item called “Free Conceits” and donates the $1,668 remainder of Lawrence’s salary to bringing .concerts to ASU students at no charge. Saturday, October 24th 1 lam - 4pm Sponsored by The Pack N ortheast corner o f R om & University • Tempe Arizona Bridal & Formal * Az Images • Robert Black Agency • Bob s Bicycle Barn • Cards V-Betcha • Carl s Jr. * Clothestime Le Cornerstone Salon • Fajita Prima • The Gap • H ie Improvisation • M ann's Theater • Matrix Education Center • Media Probe • Midwest Publishing • Mr. Ship N ' Chek * No Appointment * Pacific Eyes & T's Choice • Players • Pro Sports West • Studebaker's • The Tan Line ■ k Ticket Exchange • Travelmore * Ujena • Yogurt Oasis jM _____ World/Nation STATE Press -■■■'. -y,-\ Page 3 Wednesday, October 21,1992 Candidates head for hom e stretch Bush scrambling for support; Clinton trying to nurse lead N ews Analysis By T om Raum Associated P ress WASHINGTON — President Bush will be trying in the final two-week campaign stretch to shore up his weakened base and sustain the aggressive stance he struck'in the final debate. Bill Clinton’s goal is to preserve his double-digit lead. As Bush began a final blitz to save his presidency, the Arkansas governor, brimming with fresh confidence, worked the pivotal Midwest and plotted to extend his margin into Western states that have been traditional Republican turf. The tw o will spend much of the cam paign endgame fighting in the industrial battleground states — where Clinton now enjoys a comfortable lead — and swamping the airwaves with their ads. Many analysts have suggested there’s not enough tithe left for Bush to mount a comeback and that the die may already be cast for a decisive Clinton win. And even Republican strategists promoting a come-frombehind victory for Bush acknowledge it’s a long shot. With the three debates over, both major-party candidates on Tuesday signaled the likely course of the rest o f the campaign. > Independent challenger Ross Perot, still the third man out, planned to stick to his strategy — spending tens of millions of dollars of his own money buying television time but otherwise staying out of public view. “ I ’m going to keep fig h tin g ,” C linton said as he campaigned in Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin, “ I have the best economic plan. That’s what I’ll hammer home these last two weeks.” Clinton campaigned in Illinois and Wisconsin before a swing through Western states that were once Republican bastions — including W yom ing and N evada. The trip underscored the confidence that was spreading through the Clinton campaign. ’’Bush is still stuck in his base. W e’ll campaign in his base, too,” said Clinton communications director George Stephanopoulos. Still, he added, “ We have a lot of work to do. We’re not taking anything for granted. We’re going to crisscross the nation in these last two weeks.” The president was in the South oh a train tour of Georgia and South Carolina — states where he shouldn’t have to campaign. “ . Quick polls suggested Bush’s forceful performance in Monthly night’s final debate in East Lansing, Mich., did little to shake the lead the Arkansas governor has enjoyed since July-. But Bush clearly was energized, and he was reiterating the themes that seemed to work for him in the debate — attacking Clinton’s record in Arkansas and accusing him o f waffling on issues from the Mexican free-trade pact to his draft record. “ You cannot flip-flop on the issues every single time,” Bush told a rally in Georgia. ‘"The president drew the contrast o f the issues that he wants. He’s got to keep that up for the next two weeks,” said senior Bush campaign adviser Charles Black. O f the prospects for a Bush win, Black conceded: “ It’s tough.” Presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said Bush would “ campaign nonstop” until Election Day, and Would be in at least three cities a day. After working to shore up his strength in the South, the president will be spending much of his tim e in swing states such as Ohio, Michigan and New Jersey. Both campaigns saved much of their advertising budgets OMptwo 8«voWA—orin d P a n Tipper G ora aim s at aingar Michael Bolton during a rally In C h icago's Loop Tuesday. In the back are Dem ocratic vice presidential candidate A l G ore, left, running mate Bid Clinton and C h icago Mayor Richard Daley. TV campaign costing hopefuls more than ever BY M ike Robinson Associated P ress John BAMmotWAn oelrttd Pirn P residen t G eorge B u sh , w earing an Atlanta B raves Jacket presented to him b y R ep. Newt G in g rich , R -G a., d o es the "Tomahawk Chop” from the podium at the old train station in N orcross, G a., Tuesday during a rally at the first sto p of h is “Great Southern W histle Stop Tour” bain trip. WASHINGTON — The presidential rivals are Waging what shapes up as the costliest political advertising blitz in the history of the airwaves, spending more than $40 million on network television this fall. From pro football gam es to prim e-tim e sitcom s, presidential ads are everywhere and will be until election eve, when the rivals are expected to air 20- to 30-minute final appeals at a rate of almost $1 million an hour. Beyond that, President Bush and Gov. Bill Clinton are pouring millions more into a barrage of radio ads and local TV spots in key battleground states. “ If the opposition is doing it, you’re afraid not to do it, that’s what drives the spending up,” said Professor Herbert A lexander o f the University o f Southern California,-an authority on campaign spending. ■ What are viewers seeing? B ush’s latest ad shows a Time magazine cover with Clinton’s face and the headline: “ Why voters don’t trust Clinton.” Perot has been running half-hour spots laying out the country’s economic problems and his proposed solutions. Clinton’s first network ad aired Thursday night. It shows Bush telling voters in 1988 they would be better off with him as president “ How are you doing?” it asks. Spending on network ads this year has easily outpaced four T urn Turn to Campaign, page 10. to A d v e r t isin g , pa g e 10. 2nd typhoon in 2 days hits Guam, no major damage reported A G ANA, Guam (A P) — The second typhoon in less than two months swept over Guam early Wednesday with wind gusts well over 100 mph, knocking out power and water to parts of the island of 135,000 people. The eye of Typhoon Brian passed over the so u th ern tip o f the islan d at m idday W ednesday (about 7 p.m . A rizona tim e T u esd ay ), then m oved back over ocean waters, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center on Guam reported. T he ex te n t o f dam age c o u ld n ’t im m ed iately be d eterm in ed becau se o f co m m u n icatio n s problem s, but in itia l, unofficial reports were optimistic. “ I t ’s c le a rly not as bad as T yphoon Omar,” said John Anderson of KGUM radio Station in Agana. Omar slammed into the island on Aug. 28, destroying 900 homes and IMIII dozens of businesses and heavily damaging U.S. m ilitary installations. Damage from Omar was estimated at $487 million. Reports of Typhoon Brian’s intensity as it hit Guam weren’t immediately available, but as it approached it had maximum sustained wind of 115 mph and gusts to 145 mph and was moving west-northwest at 7 mph, the warning center said. After passing over the island, Brian was m oving northw est about 9 m ph w ith maximum sustained of 105 mph and gusts to 125 mph, said Air Force CapL Stephen Hallin of the warning center. Pow er was out in som e places, and residents in the southern part also lost water, said Guam civil defense spokesman Carl Gumataotao. T here w ere no im m ediate rep o rts o f structural damage, Gumataotao said. “ A lot of trees and bushes were blown all over the place,’’ he said. , S chools, businesses and governm ent offices were closed and many residents were in shelters. Before the storm hit, residents had lined up at stores to buy batteries, propane and flashlights. “ Everyone is prepared,” said KGUM reporter Kevin Kerrigan. After passing over Guam, the eye o f the Storm was forecast to continue oyer open oceans and not to veer tow ard R ota and Saipan o f the N orthern M ariana Islands, Hallin said. Guam is west of the international date line, 3,800 miles west of Hawaii and 1,500 miles south of Japan. The island is about 30 miles long, from north to south, and 12 miles wide. Several thousand of Guam’s residents five in villages at the southern end of the island, which frequently gets battered by heavy rain and wind. The population centers are in the central and northern parts of the island. More than 3,400 people were reported in 14 shelters. U.S. Navy ships were sent out to sea to ride out the storm and avoid being driven aground, and military planes were stowed in hangars or flown to safety in Japan, Singapore and Hawaii, said Lt. Cmdr. Ken Patterson, spokesman for die U.S. Pacific Command in Honolulu. A storm called a typhoon w est o f the in tern atio n al date lin e is th e sam e as a hurricane in the Western Hemisphere. a ü ilM IH Ü itiiü ü U u ü iliiiiiü Ü iiiiü ü ia iiim L itm i Opinion State P ress Wednesday, October 21,1992 Pag;e 4 You ye come a long way Fighting the forces of minister manhood in all its evil and displaying undaunted bravery, a small group o f women’s studies students and concerned comm unity m em bers stood up on Tuesday to decry the prevalence o f sexism at ASU. But, alas, men still exist. The m eeting, which brought together the National Organization ftM* Women, the Women’s Student Center mid a num ber o f students and faculty members, had the potential to do some good, but instead of talking about real solutions to this still-existent problem, the open forum on sexism bemoaned sexism’s symptoms. The simple fact is this: People are turned off by com plaints bUt are m otivated by calls to action — and, in accordance, people should shun Tuesday’s meeting. In addition to the m isguided tone o f the meeting, the event’s organizer managed to be more offensive than the most sexist of people could be. According to Denise Heap, an ASU women’s studies student, tilings are the same today for women as they were in 1972. Denise, tell that to Secretary of Labor Lynn M artin, Sen. Barbara M ikulski, D-M d., U.S. Surgeon General Antonia Novello, U.S. Senate candidates from California Barbara Boxer and Diane Feinstein, or U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. We’d lay odds that these highly successful, highly qualified women would disagree with Heap and instead tell a story of a society that has m ade sig n ific a n t strid es in co m bating sexism. The scourge of sexism cannot be reversed by any o th e r m ethod th an Women p ro v in g them selves equal. ASU has afforded women every opportunity to do so, and complaining a b o u t th e c o n d itio n s in th e m ea n tim e , as progress is being made, accomplishes nothing. By presenting the problem of sexism in such a ra d ic a l lig h t, H eap a n d h e r crew are e lim in ating any possibility that others will take the sou n d arg u m en t a g a in s t sex ism a t the University seriously. T im e w o u ld be b e tte r sp e n t d e v e lo p in g solutions or program s that are realistic and would be considered reasonable by both men and women. A glass ceiling still exists, but that doesn’t mean it won’t soon be shattered by women in all fields of endeavor. Or to add a new twist to an old adage: Take action and the world moves with you; weep, and you weep alone. StOW DANCING Perot gas—tax plan primes the pump Try to imagine Bill Clinton or George Bush saying: “And if I’m elected, you’ll pay 10 cents more bœ for a gallon of gas. That’s an extra ROYKO $2 for a fill-up. And I’ll add 10 Cents every year for the next four years.” Sure, that’s about as likely as eith er of them telling dirty traveling-salesman jokes during their next speech. No mainstream politician would even consider telling Americans that in five years they w ill be paying an extra $10 for a full tank. It would be political suicide. And that’s one of the advantages Ross Perot has. Since he’s Such a long shot anyway, he can be fearless and toss out a sensible idea. It was fun watching the reaction of Clinton and Bush after Perot said, yes, he would push for a 50-cents-a-gallon tax over five years. The billions it would bring in would pay for so much of the rebuilding that tins country needs. Both acted as if someone had put a dead snake on their dinner plates. They couldn’t get away from it fast enough. And my guess is that millions of Americans who weren’t already familiar with Perot’s proposal said: “Is that guy nuts? He wants to jack up the {nice of gas?” But why not? Why should fuel for our cars be so .much cheaper than other things we buy? Yes, it is cheaper. In fact, very few consumer objects or services have fought off inflation as well as gas. For those who like numbers: In 1932, you could buy a new Ford for less than $500. The lowest-priced model, a roadster, was about $410. That year, a gallon of gas was 18 cents. Today, the cheapest stripped-down Ford, that company says, is the Festive L hatchback at $6,941. And today the average cost of a gallon of gas is about $1.12. After 60 years, you are paying about 17 times as much for the cheapest Ford. But you’re paying only about six times as much for a gallon of gas. In 1932, the average price of a three-bedroom house was a little more than $3,000. Today, almost $100,000. So the house is 33 times more expensive. The average income in 1932 was about $1,300. Today, it’s more than $30,000. So why do Americans believe that they are already being clipped when they pay more than $1 for a gallon of gas and that M it would be an outrage to tack on an extra dime for the next five years? We believe that because for so many years gas was cheap. As recently as 1972, you could buy a gallon for only 32 cents. It hadn’t even doubled in price in 40 years. That $3,000 home was up to $40,000. The cheapest car was about $2,000. We took cheap gas as our birthright. Then the Arabs wised up, hoisted the price, created a crisis, and gas started to catch up with everything else. But it is still cheaper than most other things we buy. During the '50s and ’60s, when we were paying about 30 cents a gallon, we were driving gas hogs. Those big V-8 engines drank it almost as fast as you put it in. Even the so-called economy models didn’t get more than 15 miles to the gallon on the highway. Now, thanks to the Arabs and their oil crisis, even Detroit’s biggest models provide better mileage than the old economy jobs. Nobody expects a stein of beer to cost a dime. But we still believe that we should be paying 30 cents a gallon for gas. Europeans don’t think that way. Nor do Canadians or hardly anyone else in the world. As Perot says, they’re accustomed to $3- and $4-a-gallon fuel. That’s why they’ve always been ahead of us in developing efficient cars, and why they don’t believe that God ordained that man should use a car for any trip over one block. Clinton knows that the idea makes sense. So does Bush. And so do most economists, If not a dime, then a nickel. If not spread over five years, then over 10. The only flaw in the idea isn’t economic, it’s political. It’s a tax that everybody would have to pay — rich, poor, young or old. “Shared sacrifice,” as Perot says. That’s die political flaw. Everybody in this country believes in sacrifice. It’s the sharing that’s troublesome. Which is why Clinton is smart enough to talk about raising the income taxes only on those making more than $200,000. Since about 99 percent o f Americans don’t make more than $200,000, they think it' s a great idea to sock it to those who do. And if he said he wants to spread the tax hike to those making $150,000 and up, he would still be safe because the vast majority of Americans make less than that, and they’d cheer. So if Perot is really serious about getting elected, he’ll change his gas-tax proposal before it’s too late. If he says that it would apply only to owners of cars costing $75,000 or more, especially those who snub the self-serve pumps, he might get Clinton’s support. I’m not sure about Bush, though. He might say it would be a hardship on rich old widows. r ------- ----------------------STATE PRESS i ■ I A T rr< r AH KRIS MAYES, Editor KEN BROWN, Managing Editor E ditorial Board num ber. 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J e ff H am s. K evin H eller, Barry K e lly , Richard Pomerantz, Evonne Vera. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A d co ck , S o n ia Benson. Jinjer Brody. Jamia Bim ey. Renee Headrick. Erica Kuebler. Sue Lowery, Lance Newm an. Adina Niem erow, Michael Oman, Karen Orr, Tim Wohlpert. SPO R T S R EPO R TER S: Jake Batsell, Stephen Demoratz, Lisa Krantz. John Reznkk. C OPY ED ITO RS: Carrie Brennan. Angela Benoche. C AR TO O NIST S: Ken Collins, Sean T. Hoy. PH O TO G RA PH ERS: Michelle Conway, Irwin Dougherty, general nature. T h e State Press is th e o n ly n ew sp a p er e x c lu s iv e ly published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and view s published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the A SU administration, faculty, staff or student A ll letters must be typed, double-spaced and no more than two pages in length to be eligible for publication. 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A ll letters must be either brought in person with a photo I.D . to the State Press front d esk in the b asem en t o f Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, A rizona State U niversity, T em pe, Ariz. 8 5287- KRIS M A Y ES.,.......... ......... ........................................... Editor 1502. KEN BROW N........................... ......................Managing Editor RICHARD R U ELA S_____________________Opinion Editor State P ress P hone N umbers T h e State Press w e lc o m e s and en co u ra g es w ritten response from our readers on any topic. Ftont D esk ------------------------ ------- --------------------.965-7572 ...... ...... .965-6355 .............. .........965-6731 r Opinion . State P ress Page 5. Wednesday, October 21,1992 State Press letters to the editor C linton strips econom y to “Bear Necessities” Editor: I have a sister who is 2 years old. The other day she asked me to watch the anim ated cartoon “The Jungle Book.” So I Sat down and watched it with her. It came to a part where a boa constrictor tried to have Mogley (the boy cub) for dinner. The boa began to hypnotize Mogley with his eyes while singing ‘Trust in me ...” The first thing that came to my mind was “Hey, this is exactly what Bill Clinton and A1 Gore are trying to do to the American public,” Practically all the politicians in today’s world are saying, “Trust in me. Believe in me.” Well, can we as a society actually put our trust in Bill Clinton and Al Gore? It seems that every time I read an article about what they stand for, they’ve changed from the week before. For example, A1 Gore, throughout his political career, has been pro-life; Now he, comes out and says he is pro-choice, but pro­ life personally. Trust comes from reliability. How can you put your trust in someone when you don’t know how they are going to act? Another example dealing with the trust issue:’ Bill Clinton says first, “I never received a draft notice,” yet we find out he did before he went Europe and Russia; Yes, this happened 25 some years ago, but why is lying about it today? Also, he says he doesn’t remember with Whom he spoke or met while in Russia (he must have been inhaling at the time). How can we trust a man who during a time of conflict and crisis in the United States took a trip to Europe and our arch Cold War rival Russia? You have to earn trust. You can’t tell people to trust you by using hypnotic eyes and telling them what they want to hear. Bill Clinton is also intentionally misleading the country into believing that his economic plan will work; both leading economists as well as the Bush adm inistration have discredited it as “infeasible.” How does Clinton expect to get 150 billion out o f 2 percent o f the population? He claim s by closing up loopholes in Corporate taxes. Collecting taxes from tax evaders, and raising taxes on those who make $200,000 or more will do it — it is doubtful.! A) They will have to spend taxpayer dollars to initiate these programs by hiring consultants, and IRS personnel to locate tax evaders and help with policy. So in the short run it appears that this will cost taxpayers money. B) By closing up the loopholes in corporate taxes, all he is doing is passing on the tax to people who purchase corporate goods.. Historically, corporations have passed any added expenses onto the consumer, The only way he is going to be able to collect the full $ 150 billion is to lower the tax base to make up for any discrepancy. Voters need to ask them selves, with growing global competition and the end of the Cold War, do Bill Clinton and Al Gore have the credibility, backbone and experience necessary to be effective in representing our country in negotiating trade agreem ents, disarmament, etc. Their ticket offers a change, and that’s exactly what I see: A Change away from American ideals based on tru st and honesty. A change away from global stabilization. A change for the worse. Debate Roundup M DNW .1% M CÜ EK M Ö ironflß W D E B A T E . ¡FWftf =7 / a G m ßov, f S vze te F rn fo t , Tivo 'G flO tS B S & H tN P Patrick McCormick Senior, Business Management if A im A IL / Nature just fine w ithout hunting and fishing Editor: C lay G oldm an’s letter concerning Proposition 200 has some interesting ideas th a t h e e d com m ent. 1 agree that the proposition is a little convoluted in meaning for the average citizen. It is perhaps for this reason that the National Rifle Association and other organizations have spent more than $1 million in advertisements to defeat it. But the lengths these organizations have gone to defeat the initiative is a clear case of sophism. If one carefully reads the initiative, it is clear in what it proposes. Proposition 200 will not end hunting and fishing and any o u td o o rsp erso n who thinks that has the intelligence of the fish they catch or animal they shoot. The initiative is to ban traps and snares on public, not private, land. This means you can still use mousetraps in your home. Mr. Goldman does stray from the article by seeking to justify hunting. Has any hunter e v e r stopped to realize that “w eak and starving herds” may ex ist due to human encroachment into their ecosystem? Perhaps the clearest example exists in regard to the wholesale destruction of natural predators that keep these “weak and starving herds” in check. The shooting, clubbing, poisoning, trapping and other destructive tactics by ran c h e rs, outdoor “e n th u siasts” and the government (especially the Animal Damage C ontrol), to name a few , have upset the natural balance. The justification for this has usually been to protect livestock, alien intruders to the predator’s habitat (also a stupid and slow, tasty morsel not suited to the predator’s habitat). ' As for Mr G oldm an’s assertion that “W ithout h u n tin g and fishing, w ildlife populations cannot balance themselves ...” then one would wonder how the ecosystem ever survived without human intervention for millions of years! Concerning Mr. Goldman’s knowledge of the ecology or conservation, I’m afraid he has fallen victim to the FaustianPrometheus myth that the Earth belongs to humans to use as they please and God has deemed it so, no matter what the outcome. I realize th at Mr. G oldm an’s main aspiration in life as a wildlife biologist is to take anim als ap art. B ut as a future conservationist and leader in this field, he needs to understand the anim al rights activist’s desire to put the earth’s species “back together” again - or, in other words, their desire to end the destructive practices of those seeking short-term profit by destroying our ecosystem . W hen these destructive, inhumane actions occur on public lands, I believe it is the right of every citizen to prevent them- For these reasons, I support Proposition 200. Alejandro Echevarria G raduate, History D on’t drink and drive Editor: During Alcohol Awareness Week, I would just like to remind .my fellow students of the dangers of drinking and driving. She laughed at him as he leaned over and quickly kissed her, sliding momentarily off the road. He wasn’t worried, he’d done this before. A six wasn’t enough to screw him up. He was fine. It was only a short ride any way, maybe five miles if he cut through the park. The night was clear. The moon was full. The stars were shining, not a cloud in die sky, . Perfect visibility. He still doesn’t know what exactly happened. She’ll never know exactly what happened. The tree shattering the windshield was the last thing she saw. Now he sits in his cell, with plenty of time to think. How did he get off the road?' Why was he driving? Twenty was too young for her to die. Christa M. Miller Sophomore, Broadcasting - V must OHIO TOfthiS« m ■VC0WC- m J*M***mitÇ ' « M /A i WMBWMG NfoOM W~- n Q ü è d )Q H s — # « C H #'i b : » Id AltOMSRAaNN.. Violence no way to enact MLK day Editor: As one who is a frequent reader o f the State Press, I was Shocked to read o f Mr. Triche’s reasoning about what should be done to enact a Martin Luther King holiday (Oct. 15). The violence he seemed to condone in an off-hand sort of way was very disturbing. Consider if this column had been written, for instance, by a group of local dairymen or plumbers hopeful of seeing Arizona enact a holiday in their own interest. Should they be taken seriously — as Mr. Triche expects us to take him seriously — if all of a sudden they deemed that “it is not really important what method you prefer — popular vote, peaceful protest or violent action...” and took it upon them selves to see th eir holiday enacted through, “whatever it takes?” Or if, instead of struggling through the normal channels, they “felt it was about time someone got rid of the peaceful solution, and started talking about revolutionary tactics?” It is hard for me to imagine that Triche believes this. It is an unrealistic and terrorist-minded ideology that Triche has espoused here. Would he have us believe that interest groups, in trying to see laws enacted, should “handle the situations themselves, using the tactics they feel are necessary to achieve a result?” This is purblind and ill-conceived logic, notwithstanding the fact that King himself would probably roll over in his grave if such mindless and Socially undermining tactics were ever carried out. Ultimately, Mr. Triche’s column on what “action” should be done concerning the King holiday is not only frighteningly militant, it is pabulum beyond even absurdity. Blaine Comeaux Freshm an, English Page 6 S t a t e P ress Wednesday, October 21,1992 Study: More students im bibing of the state’s college students age 18 to 24 had used alcohol — 3.9 percent more than in 1990. About 58 percent were frequent users. Probably all 93 percent know how alcohol makes them feel, but how many know why it makes them feel that way? By C hris D riscoll How does alcohol work? Some local addiction-medicine specialists on Tuesday State Press More students are drinking alcohol more often, according participated in National Collegiate Alcohol Awareness Week, Oct. 18 to 24, by attempting to answer that question. to a study of college drug usage. Dr. M ichael Sucher, who specializes in addiction The 1991 study of substance abuse conducted by the Arizona Criminal Justice Commission found that 93 percent medicine at Scottsdale Camelback and Scottsdale Memorial hospitals, said alcohol- works at a biochemical level in the brain. It promotes the release of chemicals in the brain that produce the sensation of euphoria and, at a higher dose, can cause depression. Endorphins, usually associated with the “runner’s high” joggers experience, are secreted in the brain as the result of alcohol, he said. There are three general groups of endorphins — the sedative-hypnotic type, the narcotic type and the stimulant type — Sucher said. Alcohol is thought to stimulate the release of the sedativehypnotic type. Dr. Alan Kazan is the Arizona chapter chairman of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, which certifies physicians to treat drug dependency. He said that neurotransm itters, chem icals that communicate signals between nerve cells in the brain, can be stimulated in some cases, and inhibited in others, by alcohol. “Generally, alcohol slows the metabolism down,” he said. “Some people think one or two drinks a day may be good for the cardiovascular system because it vasodilates (enlarges) the peripheral vascular system (blood vessels) and it kind of relaxes, ; “But there’s a fine edge on how much you can drink a day before it becomes a toxin. Usually it’s really easier on the system — it will lower the heart rate and thé metabolism. If you drink more than two or three drinks a day, then you’re harming yourself as opposed to helping yourself.” “Alcohol actually is a toxin. It’s a dehydration agent. It dries out tissue and it’s poisonous to tissue. It kills brain cells and liver cells,” Sucher said. Kazan said alcohol is directly poisonous to the liver. People who drink large quantities develop alcoholic hepatitis, which progresses to cirrhosis or scarring of the liver, which can inhibit the flow of blood through that organ. Alcohol can Photo MratraNon by Saan Opanshaw/Stato Prats also damage the central nervous system and brain cells. There's A place for YOU! Awareness week addresses alcohol consum ption effects Women’s forum airs oppressive climate problems we dealt with 20 years ago.” Mawhiney said she encourages all students to come forward ASU students and staff who gathered at an open forum to her office and voice complaints they have about faculty Tuesday to discuss the University’s climate toward women said members, but added that many are afraid to “rock the boat.” “What is distressing is the level of fear in people that còme a lot of work needs to be done in order to lift the oppression to my Office,” she said. “(Fear) keeps people from coming ASU women currently face. “It is the same as it was in 1972,” said Denise Heap, acting forward and it perpetuates the problem.” Heather Carver, moderator of the forum, said it is not the coordinator of the Phoenix/Scottsdale chapter of the National Organization for Women, describing the failure of many young norm of young students to question authority. women today to “empower” themselves and stand up to sexual C arver, who is an ASU graduate student studying communication and a public speaking instructor, said she has oppression, The biggest concern of students attending the hour-long often been unsuccessful in encouraging her students, both men forum was the negation of women and the sexist comments of and women, to approach her with problems. faculty, members in and out of the classroom. “Hów can we expect women to come forward when no one “What is disappointing is that the female role model is not is coming forward?” Carver said. being projected in a positive light,” said Sheila Flynn, a fourthHeap, an ASU senior majoring in women’s studies, said year engineering student who spoke at the open forum. women do not come forward, and voice complaints because they “W hen women are spoken of, they are projected as are afraid of being inadvertently punished for their actions. ridiculous and incompetent.” “They see what happens when they come forward,” she said, Flynn said that in the past, sexist male faculty members describing a victim’s fear of losing her support system — negated her value as an engineering student, nearly driving her which includes faculty and peers. to quit her major. * Heap said women who come forward to report faculty “A lot of women are lost,” she said, describing the plight of members whose behavior they believe is sexist ate “labeled” as many fem ale students in predom inantly male m ajors. trouble makers. “Especially in the first year.” Tim Tong, chairman of ASU’s Campus.Environment Team • Lois Roma-Deeley, coordinator of the ASU W omen’s and the only male to attend the open meeting, said he believes Student Center and Adult Re-entry Center, said she has noticed a shroud of silence surrounding the issue o f sexism in the sexist and oppressive behavior the women spoke of was probably a product o f th e offending faculty, m em bers’ classrooms at ASU. “There has been a lot of concern, but I’m curious as to why ignorance. ‘There are people with different types of attitudes,” he said, it has not coalesced yet,” Roma-Deeley said. Barbara Mawhiney, director of ASU’s Equal Opportunity, adding that there may be hope for sexist faculty because they and Affirmative Action Office, said the concerns students aired can be educated and possibly “change their practice.” Tong, who is a professor of mechanical and aerospace at the meeting were similar to the problems she experienced engineering, said his department encourages women to enter the when she attended college. “What I hear you describe is what I went through when I engineering field, and hopes the oppression Flynn described is was in school,” she said. “We are still dealing with the same not the prevailing attitude. By C arol A nn H ansen State. Press P o l ic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents on Tuesday: •A vandal damaged an ASU forestry vehicle while it was parked in Parking Structure 2. Damage is estimated at $800. •A vandal dam aged three windows at Sonora Center residence hall. Damage is estimated at $300. •A vandal damaged a parking meter at Lot 14. Damage is estimated at $300. •A thief removed a license plate from a vehicle belonging to an ASU student while it was parked in Parking Structure 5. Loss is estimated at $10. •Officers spotted a fictitious license plate on the vehicle of an ASU student while it was parked illegally near the Arts Warehouse. The vehicle was ticketed and the license plate was impounded. , Tempe police reported the following incidents on Tuesday: •A 47-year-old Tempe man was arrested on a disorderly conduct charge after he allegedly yelled several abusive remarks to patrons at the Coffee Plantation, 680 S. Milj Ave. Reports said thé man repeatedly shouted demeaning phrases, resulting in at least five customers complaining to store management. He was taken to Tempe City Jail and booked. •A 23-year-old ASU student filed a misdemeanor assault complaint after a man allegedly bit her on the left arm during an argument in an apartment parking lot on the 600 block of South Hardy Drive. 1 •A 22-year-old Tempe woman filed a theft complaint after an unknown person reached under the wall of the bathroom stall she was using on the 400 block of North Scottsdale Road and stole her purse. Loss is estimated at $66. •A 37-year-old Mesa m an was arrested on a shoplifting charge after he allegedly attempted to conceal a woman’s skirt in his pants and leave J.Ç. Penney Outlet Store, 1028 E. Baseline Road, without paying for it. Compiled by State Press reporter Dan Zeiger. All Saints Catholic Newmaii Center College Road and University Chapel Retreats/O utreach Q u iet Place For Study C ounseling ; v , Cafe (H om e C ooking!) Place To M ake Friends Phone 967-7823 CROSSWORD dIGIEILITM M □ a a n s by THOM AS JO SEPH ACROSS 1 Oz-visiting dog 5 Native Am erican money 11 Vitamin additive 12 Narcotic drug 13 Weak, as an excuse 14 Thoughtbased 15 Chicago trains 16 W aiting room call 17 Make amends 19 File folder feature 22 Had a chinfest 24 Sportscast feature, for short 26 Cam eo stone 27 Sign of what’s to come 28 Undoes a dele 30 Sheriff's group 31 Yon lass 32 Draw out 34 Ship staff 35 Blackjack half 38 Fits together 41 Tennis star Lendl 42 The East 6 H o 0 m EN s □ D 1 E T E□ C w E AM A M O N □ B S [öl i O E G 0 E B a w B Eo O F R E B u N T 0 0 T E S 43 TV’s Griffin 44 Photo finishes 45 Victim DOWN 1 Scrabble piece 2 vaccine H □ □ ma a m B b B U Li s u m N a a R E E V s □ E A R E C> R L E A O E □ R E A A D D am □ E N E 0 O R M S Yesterday’« Answer 3 Twain hero 4 Singleton 18 School effect 5 "Tw o— ’ 33 Suit pieces book 34 David's (Loren’s 19 Hall-ofco-anchor O scar film) Fame 6 Pinnacles 36 Be con­ pitcher 7 Coin cerned 20 Iowa city factory 37 Be 21 Radius, 8 Butter covetous for one serving 22 Kid 38 Apple pie 9 Actress baker 23 Pot Hagen 39 Time starter 10 Singer period 25 “Behold I" 40 Pose Torme 29 Placid 16 Show 41 Mischief 30 Punch approval sound maker 7 s 9 1Ô i í— r ~ \¡ 0 il 7 i il 19^ ■ 23 " 25 26 » ■ 26 29 I 21 30^ 32 33^ li iff * 40 ' 42 36 37^ ■ ■ 44 10-21 P T I I U P E U f r F o r answers to today's crossword, call 9 I U m r C U . 1-9October21i 1992 Page7 G a y Continued from page f . this summer. Record-breaking crowds turned out at Phoenix City Council meetings to speak on the proposed ordinance, which was passed after months of City Council waffling. Questions to the panel came from heterosexuals and from gays and lesbians, some who said they were turned down for jobs because of their lifestyle choice. T h e p an el was sp lit in agreem ent on the topic, but attempted to shine light on both sides of the issue. “The simple fact is that a gay rights ordinance protects everyone,” said panel member Louis Rhodes, an attorney and executive director of the Arizona Civil Liberties Union. “ I f you d o n ’t have th is o rdinance, then anyone — absolutely anyone — can be discriminated against.” Pastor James Eastin took a biblical stand on the issue and said he was opposed to anything that went against the Bible and cited scripture to defend his stance against gays and lesbians. Tem pe C ouncilm an D ennis C ahill reto rted by acknowledging that his constituents include Jews, Hindus, Buddhists and many other religious faiths. ‘T o think that the Christian religion is the religion that I am going to govern all these different people with,” Cahill said. “No. I don’t want to know, or do I care to know, what my employees, straight or gay, do when they go home.” Cahill said that he was not specifically interested in any one group o f minorities, but he felt “ very strongly about civil rights." Conversely, attorney Laura Cogdell said she is opposed to a gay rights ordinance. She said such a law would espouse homosexuality. “Oral intercourse with people of the same sex should be prohibited,” Codgell said. In response to C odgell, F reeze asked, “W hy are heterosexual relationships loving and my relationship with my Thousands of people get it every weekday morning* You can too* partner is wrong?” Cogdell said an ordinance would inact “the right for people to have anal and oral intercourse with people of die same sex.” She said she felt gays and lesbians would have sex on the job. Cahill said that it did not matter whether people were gay, lesbian or straight. If they were having sex on the job, they would be dealt with accordingly, he said. ASU student Bonnie Nemeth said ASU’s Lesbian/Gay Academic Union was asked to participate in the forum but declined. “(Lesbians and gays) were the last people to be contacted about this forum. A panel of professionals was already put together and then they asked us to be on the same panel as professionals. I don’t think that is fair, and that is why we declined,” Nemeth said. 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Curry University Hardy $ 9 0 0 What More could you ask for? 1 CE Sunny's Broadway Delivery Area 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 i 1301 E University (Next to Beauvias) i $2.00 OFF ANV PIZZA 4 FREE PRINKS P ic k U p o r D in e In o n ly with any 12" pizza ($1.50 value) 12" or 16" One coupon per pizza Sunny's Pizza - 968-6666 with any 16" pizza ($3 value) or 2FREE PRINKS Sunny's Pizza - 968-6666 State P ress Wednesday, October 21,1992 Page 8 D ebate PICK-UP & DELIVERY ON ALL REPAIRS Continued from page 1. likely to think more favorably of him. “(Perot did well) because he went back to the things he did in the first debate, where he was most strong,” said Clark Olson, director of forensics, communication. “What might have hurt him is that he started out repetitive. “And as a whole, there wasn’t a whole lot of new information in the third debate. I think only two debates were necessary.” With Bush turning in what many felt was his best performance of the three debates by attacking Clinton on his Arkansas record and what he called “w affling” on issues, the president’s camp felt that the incumbent did better than the numbers indicated. Some o f those who watched the third debate at the MU television lounge Monday said Bush’s inability to hurt Clinton in the polls centered around the D em ocrat’s sw iftness in defending his gubernatorial record. “I think Clinton has come across, as a more flamboyant speaker during the debates,” said Rachel Brazee, a junior communication major who was among the crowd at the MU. “He has a good ability to defend himself, and Bush didn’t faze him.” Bush was already a t a disadvantage heading into the meetings with Clinton and P erot because, w ith only tw o notable exceptions, history shows that the debates don’t change public opinion much. T he advantage that John F. K ennedy gained from his series o f debates against R ichard Nixon in 1960 has been w elldocumented. After critics assailed Gerald Ford for declaring that Eastern Europe was E X C E L L E N T jflftU Y W f H ltU IC | I ►we repair all makes & models ►Trade-Ins welcome R A M Æ K S H U S /S ►Financing Available (OAC) $'i&’0FFTUN£W NOW $19*95 Reg. $29.95 $ 1Ò O F F O V E R H A U L NOW $59.95 Reg. $69.95 Very complete tune-ups. FR E E pick-up & delivery. Very complete overhaul. FR E E pick-up & delivery. 644-1233 644-1233 C all 6 4 4 -1 2 3 3 855 W. University (corn er of E x te n s io n ) ______ M esa . Turn to Poll, page 13. The Hispanic Business Students Association Romanian Journalists Tudor Stancu & lleana Diaconescu Discussion: C ultural & Political Upheaval In Romania Yearbook Group Picture w ill be taken TODAY on the West Lawn at 3:20 p.m . M eeting w ill follow in BÀC 316. All Majors W elcome, Social hour to follow! Date; October 21,1992 Time: 1:00 pm Place: Mohave Room 222 Memorial Union ■^Leadership, professional development, friendships, netw orking W IN A F IE S T A B O W L S C H O L A R S H IP for a college-eligible Arizona Resident* 1st Prize - $3,000 Scholarship 2nd Prize - $2,000 Scholarship 3rd Prize - $1,000 Scholarship Three winners will be selected each week by random drawing.They will receive a pair of tickets to the next home game of ASU ,U of A or NAU- depending on which poet office box the winning entry is mailed to. Enter weekly contest o f school o f your choice. Winners of weekly drawings wiH also receive a pair of choice seats for the FIESTA BOWL Football Game New Year’s Day where 3 of the 33 finalists will win scholarships. Enter a s often a s you wish (no purchase necessary). O ne entry p er envelope. E ach entry m ust include the nam e o f an eligible scholarship recipient1 and the nutrition inform ation panel (dr facsim ile) from any size carton o f milk. PLEASE PRINT NAME, COM PLETE ADDRESS, AND TELE­ PHONE NUMBER ON PIECE O F PAPER AND INCLUDE WITH NUTRITION INFORMATION P A N EL 'Scholarship nominee must be an Arizona resident eligible for 1993 term or be currently enrolled at any Arizona College or University. (Employees and family members of Arizona milk producers are not eligible.) Entries must be received by November 17,1992. ASD^ <*%Uof A MAIL ENTRIES TO: "Fiesta Bow l S ch o la rsh ip Sw eepstakes" to y o u r c h o ic e o f the follow in g p o st o ffic e b oxes. A S U - P.O. Box 520, Tem ps, A Z 85280 N AU - P.O . Box 1448, Tem pe, A Z 85280 U of A - P .O . B ox 560, Tem pe, A Z 85280 Sponsored by United Dairymen of Arizona Page 9 Wednesday, October 21,1992 State P ress - • E m « £ ST flu M £ K S 5 C, JB c 3 — T3 c. 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University Dr. «966-7788 SKI C LU B [ 111 o o o T he A R IZ O N A STA TE VOLLEYBALL 'R E A M R I Z O N A SKI UTAH Thanksgiving-November 26-29,1992 $249.00* ' will take on HflLLOGLRTD NORTHERN ARIZONA O CTO BER 22 TROLLEY 7:30 PM UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA OCTOBER 23 7:30 PM A WASHINGTON STATE OCTOBER 30 7:30 PM WASHINGTON OCTOBER 31 University Minder Binders 715 S . McClintock 966-1911 Meetings every Thursday night, 6:30 p.m. on the back volleyball court or upstairs. Thursday, October 29tb tIO for Çu^ryonv Çoytuiw IDandatory Meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday at Minder Binders 5:00 PM v 111 a A ll gam es p la ye d a t The A c tiv ity C e n te r S tudents FR E E w ith v a lid ID BETH ERETO CHEER THEM ON ! For more info, call: 965-2381 Ski Pro 1467 W. Southern Ave. Mesa, AZ 85202 HOTLINE: 990*9077 * * V W * " Y State P ress Wednesday, October 21,1992 P age 10 A d v e r tisin g Continued from page 3. years ago. At this time in 1988, for example, ABC had taken in a total of $5.9 million from Bush and Democrat Michael Dukakis in postconvention ad money, compared with $19 million so far this year from Bush, Clinton and Perot. Perot’s presence in the race is one reason for the higher spending levels. Another is Bush's underdog status in most states, which has forced him to spread his message far and wide. H e’s taking to the networks with ads that in happier times might have been more economically targeted to key states. “ With Perot in the race, it has to be the most spending ever, no doubt about it,” said Washington political consultant Vic Kamber. “ Obviously, we’ve taken in a lot more this y e a r,” said ABC spokesm an Stephen Texas, where strategists say Bush must win — but might not, This state of affairs is the opposite of years past. “ The Republicans have always done a much better job of taking that finite amount of money (for ads) and targeting it very carefully to states that won them the 270 magic num ber’ ’ o f electoral- votes,' said C linton adman Frank Greer. “ Democrats in the past, for whatever reason, have wasted a lot of resources on network buys,” said Greer. “ They’ve kind of covered the nation but didn’t target individual states. We’re not going to make that mistake again. ... You cannot run an effective campaign, coast to coast, in every state, So you’ve got to pick your targets.” campaigns told him after the 1988 election that Bush had spent $30.2 million on air time and Dukakis $22.3 million, the bulk of it on spot buying in local m arkets. Thé Bush campaign reported general-election spendihg o f $9.2 million for network ads in that race. This year’s network totals make Clinton look like the penny-pincher among the rivals, but that is far from the case. The Democratic candidate, consistently ahead iti the polls, is holding down network buys and putting large amounts into local spots in key states. The idea is to get more advertising punch for the dollar. For example, the Democrats have bought only a tiny amount of time in California, where Clinton is, riding high and Bush trails far behind. But Clinton has flooded the airwaves in Battaglio. The network so far has gotten $7.9 million from Bush, $10.4 million from Perot and $680,000 from Clinton. CBS said total spending by the campaigns came to $4.07 million for Bush, $4.04 million for Perot and $2.4 million for Clinton. NBC reported $5.5 million thus far from B ush, $3.7 m illion from Perot and $1.2 million from Clinton. All told, those network buys total $17.47 million for Bush, $18.14 million for Perot and $4.38 million for Clinton. And ABC is scheduled to air three 20minute ads on election eve, one from each of the campaigns, from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. EST, at a total cost for the hour of $975,000. NBC is offering each of the presidential rivals a 30minute slot for a final pitch to the voters. Political scien tist A lexander'said the p a ig n Continued from page 3. for the final two weeks. And Bush was planning ads not only in battleground states, but also in GOP “ base” states such as Virginia, Arizona, South Carolina, Alaska and, of course, delegate-rich Texas and Florida. “ He’s spending a fortune shoring up his base in states where rio Republican (presidential candidate) has spent a dime for advertising in years,” said Clinton media adviser Mandy Grunwald. A heavy dose of negative ads is expected from the Bush campaign. Grunwald said ads for frontrunner Clinton will be more upbeat, seeking to make voters feel more comfortable about the prospect of a Clinton presidency. FThere's^l no place like home. Scalile Portland Chkaso NewYork Wash, DC $118* $118* $139* $119 * $198* •Fares are each wery from Phoenix based o n a roundtrip purchase. Taxes n ot in d u d e d . Restrictions m ay a p p ly . Fares s u b je c t to d v in g e . M a ty other destinations available. Am erica's o ld est an d largest student travel organization. Council Travel L o cated a t Fo rest an d University, d irec tly e a v e s from A .S .U .I 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, A Z 85281 966-3544 Call fo r a FREE 1992 Student Travels MagazineI We'd like your first visit to our new that in an emergency, you need to think emergency room to bea happy occasioa fast So we’re inviting you to celebrate the grand opening at our emergency and safety expo called the Think Fast Fair. O ur renovated and expanded The Place for Faster Care. The last thing you want to do in an emergency is w ait At L o o k in g f o r S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s ? Think Fast Fair Emergency and Safety Expo Tempe St. Luke's Hospital Saturday, October 31,1992 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fast, Free Health Screenings. Have your blood pressure and cholesterol checked at the i fair absolutely free. And learn safety tips from demonstrations by the W a're in the basement of Matthews Center... State Press The State Press M agazine The Sun Devil «Spark Yearbook Hayden's Ferry Review The Student Handbook Tempe police and fire departments. There's fun for children, too - downs, face painting, a chance to decorate their own finger casts and more. It's our way of teaching you to stay safe and healthy—and to remind you \ and avoid extra paperwork emergency facilities make us faster, too. W e’ve increased the number of beds to 14. So whether you require sophisticated orthopedic or cardiac care—or just something for Tem peSt Luke's, you life's everyday cuts, scrapes, won't have to. A bee stings and bruises— recent survey showed Tempe S t Luke's has i t Fast that many of our emergency room patients see a nurse within 10 minutes of arrival. And a full 95 percent started their care with a nurse within 20 minutes. Pre-Registration Makes Fast Care Even Faster. <£ Nf 13th St. emergency ^^ApacheRd. 14th St. Hudson Ln. Physicians’Offices ■ Tempe M B St. Luke’s ■ Hospital At the Think Fast Fair, youll have the opportunity to pre-register for our A.S.U. Tempe High School ■ Broadway Rd. £ £ aft services. Your “Think Fast Card* will allow you to save precious time in an emergency Tempe S t Luke’s H ospital 1500 South Mill Avenue 968-9411 N; State Press _Page_ 11 Wednesday, October 21,1992 ART Pop an AKT-4+mM-Minto your personal liner ad for only $31 STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS South Basement •Matthews Center 965-6735 .tu* A LO T O F FU N FO R A L IT T L E M O N EY FLY SAW YER AVIATION H APPYH O U R SKY HARBOR IN T 'L AIRPO RT AORUWHi IP0IL©f ■TKADMOM®S i - A S U DISCOUNT - F A A APPROVED PART 141 - MAJOR TCA AIRPC HRS. A DAY, 7 IME IN! »ftfVATEJKRU ATP Thursday, OcL 22nd l*00-3.*00pm IMU Programming Lounge fro m 5 :3 0 to 6 :3 0 M O N T H U R FRI ASU Student Discount Price,.. Now Only $180.00 + books Tempe's Newest and Brightest Countiy Star, Sponsored by the O FF YOGU IH Do the Achy Breaky, the Boot Scootin Boogie the Electric Slide, and MODE!!! Ene«-slappm t toe tappin f real happenin' event!!!! in C la ss starts Oct. 13th fu s s . & Thurs. 6:00 pm - 9:30pm 10 weeks Call: (602) 273-3787 DO WRIGHT... BO W AT SAWYE V \ SAW YFR( N :— ....... y U m T io tA — y • W e bake o u r ow n 99% F a t Free Muffins 10 Assorted F la v o rs of 100% F a t Free Bagels • Espresso & Cappuccino Bar • 9 F a t F re e F la v o rs of Y og u rt & G is e D a ily 2602 East Sky Harbor Blvd. • Phoenix, AZ 85034 % To the 80 % of ASU students who are of legal drinking age: I f you choose to drink, know when to say when To the 20 % who are not of age: Don ft even think about it. Budweiser K IN G O F B EER S « *Source: A S U office o f In stitu tion al Analysis Wednesday, October 21,1992 P a g e l2 State P ress • •: CUP YOURS UP! Em <•< mi t u m Homecoming A IN THE H i® J| PICK Ì h i YOURS UP m [I Consignment Wardrobe^ Inthe LAD IESN EW AN DN EARLYN EW D ESIG N ERFASH IO N S^ basement of p' BestResaleShopintheValley b §» » »NOWACCEPTINGW FALLM ERCHANDISE*X Matthews eCarry: !j U jf Center T W v i \ je w e lry and accessories Sizes 2-82 S HOURS:M on.-Fri. 10:30-5:30 Sat. 10:30-4:00^ 32 S.MacDonald • Mesa • 461-3339 N S M C VMHB Ialonaadoa ■f ♦*5-7572 i Guess-Esprit-LizClaiborne-Carol| Little-CalvinKlein-AnneKlein-Evani^ Pioone-EllenTracy-&ManyMorelJÌ ^ Tip # TH E W hile we never recom m end anything other than G enuine H onda Parts and Fluids, this is especially crucial with your pow er steering fluid. Your pow er . r i ' 6 steering is desig n ed for their lubricant only. Anything else can cau se seal HONDA DOCTOR Hmm CAR 967-7282 JOIN THE FLOCK FOR FUN AT m RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE I SUNDAY MONDAY • CAME DAY • WATCH MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL ONWIDE-SCREEN TV • PLAY OBI • WIN PRIZES During football gam es enjoy: • $3 Pitchers o f beer • $1.50 Long Island Teas A Bloody Mary's During th e game: • io e w ings (minimum o f 12) • $3 Pitchers o f beer > 1/2-prlce on o u t snack menu During half-tim e: • Freshly carved roast beef sandw iches fo r just $1,50 ; ! I SPECIALISTS 1 INDEPENDENT SERVICE •FREE Estimates •Fair Prices •One Day Service on Most Repairs •Complete Parts Department •Factory Trained Technicians 95 P eople W ho K ncw Use Valvoune- OIL CHANGE & OIL FILTER (Includes up to 4 quarts) C h e ck our Low P rice on 15,000 & 30,000 S ervices 9 6 8 -5 9 8 9 TW O LOCATIONS T O S ER V E YOU 954-7923 1 8 2 0 E. A P A C H E B L V D . TEM PE One way trips to ASU 3 0 3 9 E. T H O M A S RD . P H O EN IX Where ''Blue Ribbon Service" m eans honest, quality repairs at fair prices— a n d student discounts. 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 Also in the Scottsdale Airpark • 998-5966 c m dam age. BVfiB m v a ila b le APPLYNOW The Honda Doctor’s Helpful H onda H in ts A Sponsored by Deadline O ct. 28 th Call 985-3161 for info Associated Students Alumni Association *_*• ( GO-SPONSORED by the Tribune and Sheraton Tempe Mission Palms) * • M 7. N o w pick up applications at ASASU 3rd floor MU. Juniors & Seniors with a 3.0 gpa and an enthusiastic dedication to A S U . . . A M p p lic a tio n s TUESDAY • SHOWDOWN TRIVIA • WIN PRIZES W EDNESDAY • -HUMP DAY­ During Trivia: • Taco bar • $1.50 M argaritas • $3 Pitchers o f beer AN night long: • $1.50 lo n g island Teas 5pm - 7 pm: • Freshly carved roast beef sandw iches for $1.50 CO M E AND U SE THIS C H A N CE TO HAVE YO U R PICTURE TAKEN FOR FREE PO R ­ TRAITS FO R TH E YEA R B O O K WILL BE TAKEN ON CADY M ALL W EEKS O F OCT. 1 9 NOV. 6 THURSDAY FRIDAY • SPORTS TRIVIA • T.C.I.F. 5pm - Closing: com plim entary • stuffed pizza breads- MONDAY - FRIDAY • 10C Wings (minimum o f 12) • $3 Pitchers o f beer • chips/salsa • veggie tray i 5pm - 7pm: • Pasta bar All night long: • $2.00 Rum ple m lnze o r Jägerm eister PHOENIX-TEMPE/ASU 9)5 E. Apoche Utvd Tempe, AZ 85281 " 802-MS-346) For More Information, C A LL O UR O FFICE AT 965-6881 DONT BE LEFT OUT OF THE ACTION! Page 13 Wednesday, October 21,1992: S ta te P ress ■HBbM niMINMN P o ll Continued from page 8. TAKE SPRING BREAK A SEMESTER EARLY! T ßtZ free o f Soviet dom ination during a 1976 debate, the race began to turn in Jimmy Carter’s favor. And since Bush failed to make a similar breakthrough, most in his campaign have conceded that with only two weeks remaining until the Nov. 3 election, tim e is rapidly ticking away for the president. “I think the only thing (the Bush camp) can hope for is that Clinton can make some catastrophic error that can give them the election,” Geer said. "But I think even if a big bombshell gets dropped at this point (in the race), the vo ters are going to be- very; skeptical.” The Associated Press contributed to this report. Cheek the State Press Classifieds daily! (yes, four!) Help Wanted sections to help job you want! State Press Classifieds work. fiiie M EX IC A N FOOD FREE DINNER $ i I j 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 10-27-92 Rosltas Plaza, 960 W. University, Tempe, 966*0852 i Family: w• Games • Prizes W ith T h e S u n D evil B a sk e tb a ll T e a m s B U D LIG H T ASU ACTIVITY CENTER S A T U R D A Y O C T O B E R 3 1 , 10 P M Vl C o m ic s S ta te P ress Wednesday, October 21,1992 P age 14 Calvin am i Hobbes by Bill W atterson By G ARY LARSON TUEKE RENJ-1 O06HT TO BE A FAILOWMPICS. D oonesbury THEN ITS SETTU P!\ iu ,a & W £ 9 a e\ ONsmmoNsmm m ccm m eJM i DY1N6AHALFA WOñPMM GOOD, [ good . BY GARRY TRUDEAU UIelL I you ar e a femarkæ nB iæ . abiepo unem an , œ nM E ATHEBKMSTUDENT! i M i f OMt- * Bm jM P m beyo u to TOGOFOSE U r "OK/CCWMHW. - ÜJEU.,1 PONTWORRY,WEU JUSTHCPE HAVEONECFOUR. NOBOCV AGENTSMTHESmrE HNPSOUT D E fm m trm iae I)E BEEN HEBE. \ THEVISAfA 6 & EMM YXRTASSKXTFEE. “W ell, l’H be! It s still there! TT» hen house ( u s a d lo w atch m r Iddr 102/1 PEO PLE! BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — The dress actress Julia Roberts wore in the hit movie “ Pretty W oman” wasn’t available for rental, so the chief concierge at the Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel did the next best thing: He had one made. ' And a couple from Texas was able to have their own “ Pretty Woman” weekend at the hotel that was the setting for the hit movie. Thomas Warrick, a 38-year-old former actor, has provided guests with everything from luxury yachts and private jets to cans of deodorant and tubes of toothpaste. And a special red dress. “ A few months ago, a man called to say he was coming in from Texas with his girlfriend,” Warrick said recently. “ He wanted us to get that dress — the redone — that Julia Roberts wore in the movie when she went to the opera. “ I asked the studio. They said no. So the man said: ‘Get one made that’s just like ite’ “ When they arrived, I had the dress waiting for them,” Warrick said. “ She looked beautiful. Just like the movie, they hired a jet, flew to San Francisco and went to the opera. It was their ‘Pretty Woman’ weekend. ” NEW YORK (AP) — Lee Mazzilli has traded his baseball uniform for a tuxedo — and some greasepaint. The former major league baseball player joins the cast of the long-running off-B roadw ay hit “ Tony N ’ T in a’s Wedding” on Wednesday night as prospective bridegroom Tony Nunzio. The 37-year-old Mazzilli played for the New York Mets, the New York Yankees, Pittsburgh Pirates and Toronto Blue Jays. Since then, he has been a sportscaster for CBS Radio. “ Tony N’ Tina’s Wedding” is an environmental theater piece in which the audience members are guests at the wedding of Nunzio and Valentina Vitale. Theatergoers attend the ceremony at a Greenwich Village church and then walk to a nearby restaurant for the reception that includes a pasta dinner, wedding cake, dancing and assorted fights between actors posing as other guests and relatives of the bride and groom. ATLANTA (AP) —- Form er heavyw eight boxing champion George Foreman taught some kids from a housing project a proper left jab and then urged diem to stay in school. Get that degree, said Foreman, “ and someday you can afford to eat the way I do.” Speaking Monday to a group of boys from John Hope Homes, Foreman compared the importance of school to a famous fight. “ In 1974 — w ere you born? — I fought the great Muhammad Ali. I got tired about the seventh or eighth round. And I felt bad about losing because I didn’t finish what I started out to do,” he said. “ It’s the same thing with your education.” TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie will spend his 75th birthday Wednesday on a cruise ship irith 50 other musicians, including Benny Carter, his publicist said. Gillespie, who lives in Englewood, has been recovering from surgery he had in March to relieve an obstruction in his MIGUEL'SMUSICCENTER ►METRONOMES *ACCESSORIES • ETC. ► ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS A riz o n a 's ►AMPS >ELECTRIC EFFECTS >SH EET MUSIC ► LESSONS (Rock•Contemporary•Folk•Classic gultai) ►REPAIRS >- O n A ll Instruments! ...and much MOREI #1 c e n te r fo r o n e on o n e T R A IN IN G 1400 S. M c C lin to c k Next to O a le 'e Warehouse In The Arches Shopping Center 130 E. University Dr. SPECIAL STUDENT FARES CH ICAG O ...,........»....$179 ST. LO U IS ................ $149 NEW YO R K ....„.........$308 SAN FR A N C IS C O ......$99 HO U STO N................$167 NEW O R LE A N S ...... .$204 D ETRIO T..................$214 SEATTLE....__ »..„*.$198 P O R T LA N D ...... ....... $218 D E N V ER ..... ....... $230 RENO_______ „....4108 CO LO . SPR IN G S ......$198 M EXICO C R Y .____ ..$298 C A BO SAN LU C A S ...$230 H O N O LU LU..............$369 M IN N EAPO LIS.........$278 D ES M OINES............$218 K A N SA S C IT Y ..........$198 Other Cities Available MILL AVENUE TRAVEL 966-6300 RESTRICTIONS APPLY. SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY Tem pe 1 * 3 O ff Cut Reg. $16 Men $18Women ■ no 1 - - Ä or R ound trip fro m Phoenix <0> o O ff Perm and Cut One out o f two people who take the LSAT doesn't get into law school. To improve those odds, ENROLL NOW. Reg. $55 and up I I I The Right Cut The Bight Products Bight Here ahql Grootrtn I I LOS ANGELES (AP) — Author James Ellroy has been lugging around images of Los Angeles at its darkest, carrying them cross-country to Connecticut. “ I’m obsessed with L.A. in the ’40s and ’50s so I write about it,” Ellroy said recently. “ I grew up in it. I always thought dark things were happening just outside the fíame of my four eyes, end I have an inexhaustible instinct for the dark.” Ellroy, 44, has just published his 10th book, “ White Jazz,” the final installment in a four-book series in which the cops are scarier than the criminals. “ ‘White Jazz, I think, is ‘Dragnet’ for psychopaths. It’s the «mff a lot of us sensed going on beneath die surface of that program — back-room beat-ups, coerced confessions, railroad jobs, stem justice, rudely enforced. It made a big impression on me.” Ellroy grew up in Los Angeles, where his mother was murdered when he was 10. When he was 17, his father died. His mother’s murder remains unsolved and his earlier book, “ The Black Dahlia,” is dedicated to her. I f You Want to Be a Lawyer; Start Practicing Now. H e lp in g y o u reach y o u r b e s t form is o u r b u s in e s s 968-1105 968-2310 bowel duct, said publicist Virginia Wicks. The legendary m usician has been having difficulty recuperating because of diabetes and an allergic reaction to many drugs. But he has been making progress and has tentative plans to perform some concerts in several months. “ His doctor says right now, he can’t do any interviews or play any concerts,” Wicks said in a telephone interview from Studio City, Calif. “ It’s been tough, blit some musicians have been stopping by to practice with him, and he loves that.” Hum ons V - / FREE Diagnostics and Tuition Assistance Available. 1000 E. Apache • Suite 211 (1 block east o f Rural) Tempe M-Th 9-8 Fri 9-6 Sat 9-5 Hoir Studio In the Arches at Forest fit University • 966-5462 Expiras 10-29-92 Last chance to enroll for Dec. LSAT. Classes begin Nov. 7. I < 967-2967 Over 50 years experience. KAPLAN The answer to the teat question. Sports S t a te P ress ;'■■■ Wednesday, October 21,1992 , ASU offense making holes Sun Devil line making holes big enough for coach Snyder to run through, says center Toby Mills By J ake Batsell State P ress » It’s difficult to conceive that a five-man group with dimensions averaging 6-foot-3 and 287 pounds could be overlooked. But as dazzling and athletic as the runs of Jerone Davison and Mario Bates have been this season, ASU’ coach Bruce Snyder feels that the success of this season’s Sun Devil rushing attack can be attributed to an area less glorified — the offensive line. “All five of these guys (linemen) are playing well as a unit,” Snyder said. — He added that the establishment of a dominating running game is crucial in physically defeating an opponent. “If you (run the ball well), the chances of winning are 80 to 85 percent greater,” Snyder said. “The running game is seductive.” * . Last week against Oregon State, the run continued to tantalize Snyder, as ASU ran the ball 52 times for 190 yards. For the season, the Sun Devils have averaged 49 rushing attempts and 211 rushing yards per game. “W e’re doing a pretty good job up front,” said junior center Toby M ills. “Some o f the holes that have been opening up, I think even coach Snyder could run through diem.” Strength and size have also contributed to the lin e’s ■success,“It’s because we’re all strong up front,” junior guard Farrington ’T aco” Togiai said. “AH the guys on the line, they’re mean. We take pride in running the ball.” “We don’t clash, we function as one unit,” Mills added. “W e’ve all got one goal, and that’s to win. Our job is to block for the runners and protect the passer.” Both goals have been achieved in the Sun Devils’ most recent contests. Tailback Jerone Davison ran for 136 and 157 yards in the last two games respectively. And the lack of pressure on quarterback Grady Benton has allowed him to set single-game passing efficiency records each of the past two weeks. P agç IS Pac-10 power, prowess proves it can compete Defensive efforts provide key By G reg Sexton State P ress State PraMphoto S u n D e v il o ffe n s iv e lin em a n J e ff K y sa r is o n e o f th e m em bers of A S U ’s hole m aking m achine. The line has led the way for the rushing game to achieve great su ccess. They h ave a ls o p ro te cte d th e q u a rte rb a ck w ith m arked consistency. Still, members of the line claim they are far from content with their efforts this season. “We’ve still got a long way to go to be where we can be,” Mills said. “I think we’re unlimited where we can go as a unit. “The only people that can really stop us, in our minds, are ourselves.” Togiai agreed. “We haven’t played up to our potential Seven weeks into the college football season, several things have become apparent in the Pac-10 conference. The most obvious is that it is a brutally tough conference this year. The Pac-10 is much like that of the NFC East, to which the Phoenix Cardinals belong. In current rankings, Washington is tied for the No. 1 slot with Miami. The two have been fighting tooth and nail for that prestigious spot. Further, Washington State is undefeated in both national and conference action, and is cu rrently ranked No. 13. O ther ranked team s in the Pac-10 include USC (No. 15), Stanford (16) and even UofA shocked everyone. The Wildcats are ranked No, 21. UofA has beat UCLA and Stanford and also gave Miami a scare. There is no question that SNYDER the com petitiveness and prowess of these teams are similar to that of the NFC East, The Cardinals share the conference with Dallas, Philadelphia, the New York Giants and 1991 Super Bowl champion Washington. “I think every coach in this league is going, ‘This is really much stronger, or at least balanced (between teams), than anyone thought it was going to be,”’ Turn to Pac-10, page 16. T urn to O ffense, page 16. W omen s golf heads to southern tourney No. 3 Sun Devils set to compete in Georgia against national rivals By J ohn Reznick State P ress The ASU women’s golf team will have Georgia on their minds this week when squaring off in the second tournament of its young season. Sun Devils women’s golf Coach Linda Vollstedt . and five members of the women’s squad travel south today with visions of capturing top honors in this weekend’s Georgia Preview Invitational. The three-day, 54-hole tournament takes place on the University of Georgia Golf Course in Athens — the same site that will hold this season’s national championship. “We would like to get a good feel of what the golf course is like, so we can get some ideas what we need to practice on between how and Nationals,“ Vollstedt said: The tournament marks the debut of Sun Devil freshman Linda Ericsson. She missed the team’s first tournam ent last m onth in Bend, O re., w hile representing the Swedish National Team in the World Cup. Ulrika von Heijne, also from Sweden, is making the trip as a last minute replacement The senior will take the place of teammate Tricia Konz, who has been iU the past week. Fellow Sun Devil Wendy W ard said K onz’s Turn to Golf, page 17. ASU s Cone improves consistency By Kelley Stover Contributing W riter ’ 8—n Op«nBtw*rtjtete Prill T ra cy C o m , a m em ber o f the A S U women’s g o lf team , said sh e has greatly Improver! on her consistency. The No. 3 Sun D evils leave today for a tournament In G eorgia. Consistency has been one of the biggest obstacles — and challenges — facing ASU golfer Tracy Cone. That is, Until now. But the 20-year-old junior has worked hard on this essential part o f her gam e. And now, she provides a solid addition to the Sun Devil team and to her own score card. ‘T racy has continued to improve,” Sun Devil women’s golf coach Linda V ollstedt said. “Her consistency has gotten better, which was something she needed to work on.” Cone credits her consistency on the course to her positive attitude and competitive spirit. She has also become more comfortable with college golf and the pressures of being a student athlete. “I feel I am more experienced this year,” she said, adding her short game has improved greatly. “I have a better idea of what’s expected from me on the team,” Last year, Cone notched two top-10 finishes and said she is looking forw ard to a spectacular individual and team effo rt in this y e a r’s link campaign. The ASU women’s golf team is definitely living up to national expectations. The Sun Devils captured second place in the O regon In v itatio n al, with freshman Emilee Klein taking top honors. They are currently ranked No. 3 in the nation. Cone said this year’s team is the “best I have ever been On,” and although her average scores fall in the mid to high 70s, Cone said she doesn’t mind; She said she doesn’t see herself as a team leader, but rather as a “consistent m iddle-w om an, alw ays contributing a score.” Cone, an Oregon native, said success isn’t limited Turn to Cone, page 17. Page State P ress Wednesday, October 21,1992 16 P ac- 1 1992| St a t e P r ess Classifieds ____ __ Gol f Continued from page 15. illness was “asthma-related.” Emilee Klein, another freshman, will make her second start fo r A SU . She is attem p tin g to equal h er incredible performance last month at the Oregon Invitational, where she captured top individual honors in her first collegiate start. Also representing the Sun Devils are Ward and junior Tracy Cone. The field of teams competing should also give the No. 3 Sun Devils a good indication of how they compare to other nationally-ranked teams. At least 14 of the top 20 women’s teams in the nation will be present. Notable opponents facing the Sun Devils include the IJofA, UCLA and Oklahoma State. All three are currently ranked in the topS. Vollstedt said the team is mentally prepared after finishing second in the last month’s Oregon Invitational. “We’ve had three weeks off, so we’ve had time to practice, get organized and ready,” Vollstedt said. “W e’re in good shape.” C o n e______ _ Continued from pace 15. to collegiate golf, either. She was a semifinalist in a PNGA women’s amateur event and a Oregon Amateur medalist Cone also participated in the USGA women’s amateur. In her high school years, Cone qualified for the 1990 U.S. amateur and in that same year she was an AJGA runner-up in the Smith Corona Invitational. She was also an academic AllA m erican as a senior, three-time all-state performer and member of a trio of state championship teams. 'Cone, who currently is a economics and French major at ASU, captured the America’s Cup title in 1989. The team’s next competition will be at the fall preview in Georgia, the location of the NCAAs in May. The top 18 teams in the country will compete in next weekend’s mock tournament. Cone said one major change of this year’s Sun Devil team is the co h esiv en ess and unity the p layers share. This teamwork. Cone said, is a definite plus for ASU“For the team, the chemistry this year is a lot better,” Cone said. “That is a strong point for us.” At least two other golfers said they felt the extra practice time has been beneficial in strengthening their games. “I’ve been working on some new things,” Ward said, describing new techniques she’s added to her game. “I talked to my golf pro last night (Monday), and we’ve been basically working on continuing to be more consistent.” Vollstedt said she would like to finish in third place or higher in this weekend’s contest. Ward said the competition will only help the squad. “There wiU be a lot of East Coast schools there,” she said. “So we get to see a bunch of teams that we never get to play with, which is good for us.” A N N O U N ttM |N T S i:s ALPHA GRAPHICS Late night special- 3 cent s e lf serve cop­ ies 7pm-mkinight, Monday-Friday. 122 E ast U n iv e r s ity in th e A rch es. 968-7821. ASA SU LECTURE series is holding a discussion on the political status o f East­ ern European countries today at 1pm in the Mohave room in the MU. GUNSHOW ASU softball to tangle w ith N ew sChannel 3 Staff reports The ASU softball team plays its first game o f the season tonight, but against an unlikely opponent — NewsChannel 3. With fall practices winding down, the Sun Devils will battle the local news station at 7 p.m. at the Sun Devil Club Stadium at Rural Road and Sixth Street just north of University Drive and next to the football practice field. The public is welcome to watch and there is no charge for admission. The game will feature Channel 3 celebrities Mike Chamberlin, Tim Healy and Bill Mosley, as well as others. And while the team has comprised all men for the past two years, ASU softball coach Linda Wells said she would like to see some of the anchorwomen come out and compete. “It would be interesting if some of the newswotnen would come out and play,” Wells said. The Sun Devil coach added that her team has been practicing for almost a month and she expects ASU to beat the media. “We are in our fourth week of practice and I expect our basic skills to be sharp,” she said, adding that the game is toned down a little with no bunting and no base stealing. “Both sides play a little soft.” Wells said it is a fun game for all. “Bill Mosley is hysterical," she said. "He really helps keep it fun.” (In-Country V ietnam V ets presents). October 24th & 25th. American Legion Post # 2 , 2 1 2 5 S o u th Industrial Park Drive. Buy sell trade gun, militaria, $3 a d m ission , p ro ceed s to charity. In fo 8 4 4 -8737/4964)057. [D ID Y O U K N d W .,‘ 1 ■ You dan bank, buy ! stamps, study, watch ! TV and have fun in the M U? ! APARTMENTS 1 B E D R O O M n e w c o n d itio n , v er y clea n , free laundry, new appliances. N ear M c D u ffy ’s. $ 3 2 5 /m o n th , 967-7201. 1 BEDROOM, secluded, private patio, covered parking, laundry facility, pool, dishw asher, s e lf clean in g oven , very q uiet 968-8183. 2 BEDROOM spacious decorator apart­ m en t private patio, self cleaning oven, pool, covered parking, very quiet. 8941041. y - '.,''; /; .y /; ; : ; 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, cute red brick du­ p lex apartm ent, quiet n eighborhood, east o f ASU. Good deal: $ 3 8 5 plus spe­ cial. Call Jeannie and Brian 929-0382. SanMisud Apartments Large 2 bdrm, 2 bath THIS IS a TOOTW DOOU f OF A DEAL! « il S K M E M IM «99 $ PUS MX little Caesars'!^) PlzzalRzzaT LARGE TWo great posasi Ont k w price AJwyysl Always! •iw*um cm»cmrsdM,me. W e D eliver LIMITED A R E A $ 7 M IN IM I)M O flD E R $1.50 DELIVERY CHARGE N.E. Corner Hardy & University Crazy Bread • warm stick» of freehly bated bread brushed with garlic and ftaaM m quM tC ratybraaiM & naofoider. VaM only wth eeupon « UM* C t H M . University and Haidy location. Espine 11-4-82. DOOft DELUXE 966-3181 3 BEDROOM 1 badi. Old Town Tempe, w a lk to A S U , $ 5 7 5 /m o n th . T im , 894-0288. B E A U T IF U L 3 - 4 b ed ro o m 2 bath bouse. Walk to A SU $72S/month. Call Tim 894-0288. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3 B E D RO O M /2 bath tow nhouse near A SU . Washer/dryer, covered parking, new carpets/Uinds. $595 277-0002 3 BEDROOMS, 2 bath condo, air, dish­ w ash er, w ash er, dryer, .pool, ten n is, near A SU , $800. (714) 4 9 9 -4 0 6 5 ,6 9 7 4908. W A L K TO A S U . T w o bedroom tw o b ath, p o o l, sp a , v o lle y b a ll. $ 5 3 5 a month. Call Wendy Cyr 945-7299 RENTAL SHARING A A A A M A L E /F E M A L E share sp a­ c io u s house. $ 2 0 0 /$ 150 month, Scottsdale/ Oak area. Call Bob, 990-2284. THE HUB OF ASU M E M O R IA L U N IO N B E A U T IF U L L A R G E 1 and 2 b ed ­ room s. W alk to A S U . P o o l, laundry room. On East 8th Street between Rural and McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. Call for special. I H O M K J O jy Œ N T ^ FEM ALE N O N SM O K E R to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath, nicely furnished apart­ m en t Must be cleaitresponsible. $238 + 1/2 utilities. 267-1562. L O O K IN G -FOR th ird room m ate. Male/female, close to A SU . Please call Mike or Brent 9294)919 LUXURIOUS 5 bed 3 bath in Mountain Park Ranch, 2 roommates need 2 more. Nonsmoker $280. Open November 1st Call 966-7971 ROOM FOR rent- Private bath, p ool, patio, barbecue, laundry, southeast Scot­ tsdale. $ 2 5 0 per m onth, 1/2 utilities. 945 -6 2 2 5 , leave message. ROOMMATE SHARE 2 bedroom/bath, fu ll k itch en , furnished, pool/laundry c o v e r e d parking^ $ 1 9 9 /m o n th , $ 4 9 /electric, $ 7 5 /d ep o sit. 8 9 4 -5 3 2 1 Martyr RO O M M A TE TO share 2 bed 1 1/2 bath cond6, Papago I. Clean, responsi­ ble. $300/month. Call D ana 968-9782 SEEKING GRAD student, q u ie t, non­ sm oking fem ale to share 2 bed/2 bath house. Roosevelt/Hayden. 9 4 7 -9 7 5 1 . STAPLEY/UNIVERSITY 2 bed 2 bath condo. Poll, n o sm oking. 1/2 utilities 1/2 phone $185.00 Leave message 8447808 TA K E OVER lease. O w n room in 2 bedroom Cam eron C reek Apartment, $ 2 7 2 .5 0 / m onth, plus u tilities. 8941552 Andrea. ADVERTISERS! The best way to reach ASU, ASU West, MCC and SCC is through State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731. RO O M S FOR RENT 1 5 0 0 S Q U A R E f e e t n ew h om e, tw o great room m ates need a third. S250, 1/3 utilities. 8 1 4 -7 4 4 3 .________ _ _ _ 910 S. Lem on #2 966-8704 E N J O Y T H E QUIET! 1/2 Block from Campus B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d , huge 1 bedroom, 1 bath; 2 bedroom. 2 bath apart­ m e n t s . A ll b i l l s p a id . C a b le TV. h e a te d p o o l and s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s . F rie n d ly , co u rte o u s m anagement. Stop by today! T e rra c e R o a d A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra ce 966-8540 ANNOUNCEM ENTS NICE ROOM in 3 bedroom condo, laun­ dry, $ 2 0 0 + 1/3 utilities and deposits. Mill/Southem. Cynthia 784-4945. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE BETTER T H A N rent, T w o bedroom two bath, pool, spa, volleyball. Price re­ duced to $30K. Call W endy Cyr at 9457299. N O DOW N- take over mortgage, $700 per month. 3 bedroom , 2 bath Condo. A ir co n d itio n in g , dish w ash er, w ash­ er/dryer, p ool, tennis. (7 1 4 )4 9 9 -4 0 6 5 or 967-4908. B u y o f the W eek 2 bed, 2 bath condo, Papago P ark, $7,000 down, no qualifying. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992 ANNOUNCEM ENTS MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE L A R A D A 'S A R M Y Surplu s has ail your cam ping n eed s- in exp en sively. A lso more w eird s tu ff than you can im a g in e . 7 6 4 W est M ain, M esa 834-7047. LASER POINTER (pen type). Great for lectures, slid e presentations, etc. $83,969-1143. RAY BAN Sunglasses, all styles, cannot be undersold!!! Guaranteed, Jon Pulli li­ censed wholesale distributor. 239-4610 STOP YO-YO Dieting with sensational new Therrtiogetics. Lose 10-30 pounds in 30 days, for $30. Bob 345-7606. 9 E E R N E O N SIG N A frn o s t b ran d n ew . B e s t o ffe r. 78 0 State P ress Wednesday, October 21,1992 P age 18 -1 4 -3 9 (Leave m essage) BOOKS RECYCLE FOR $$$ Sell your books for cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit towards the p u rch ase o f an y th in g in th e store. Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, m usic, etc. Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers w elcom e. C hanging Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue, 966-0203. FURNITURE QUEEN SIZE futon. New 9/1/92, paid $270. Best offer. Natural w ood with tan cover. 967-4202. COMPUTERS COMPUTER N EEDS - IBM compati­ bles, tailored to fit your needs. Con­ sultin g and training available. 6490875. ■•;■■■■ ,-y MACINTOSH PLUS with 40 Megabyte harddrive com es with all software and case $800, 543-8872. / : PERSONAL LASERW RITER LS for M acintosh, 35 fonts, lik e new , $650. 350-9750. •••;: ,- ’ •' : : ; TYPEWRITERS, IBM, various models. G ood c o n d itio n , $ 5 0 to $ 2 5 0 . 945-2010, Pam. TICKETS DISCOUNTED U2 tickets, Larry 9537807 ELTON! ELTON! Elton! John»!! One night on ly. R eserved seats, row N N. Cali Marc, 966-0085. PACE VALUE U 2 tickets. Great seats, Call 967-2734 -ask for Aaron. U2 FLOOR 38 rows from stage, section F, 4 seats, S50 each/offer, 966-3913 1)2 FLOOR SEATS Good seats, w ill sell at low price. Call and make offer. 894-6347. U 2 Id e a l lo c a tio n . S e c tio n A , row 14. F lo o r sea ts m id w a y b etw een m ain stage/acoustic stage. $60. 678-0816. U2 TICKETS 2 tickets, section 112 row 2, seat 14-15, $35 each. 890-9185 ask for Robert U2 TICKET $25! Good seat. Must sell. Cali Steve 843-0898 U 2 TIC K ETS $ 9 0 /tw o or $ 5 0 /e a ch . Lets deal. Great rows! 350-9836 leave message AUTOMOBILES 88 V W C a b r io le t, m in t c o n d itio n . 50,000 miles, 5 speed, air, cassette, Sil­ ver. $ 8 5 0 0 9 4 8 - 2 2 1 0 /w o rk 6 6 1 0077/home BMW 325IS dolphin gray with tan leath­ er in terio r; a ll o p tio n s, r e lig io u s ly m ain tain ed , ask in g $ 1 1,900s Phone 585-4867. CHEAP! FBI/U.S. Seized. 89 Mercedes...$200, 8 6 VW... $50, 87 Mercedes...$100, 6 5 Mustang... $5 0 . C h oose from thousands starting $25. Free information-2 4 hour hot­ lin e (8 0 1 )3 7 9 -2 9 2 9 . C o p y rig h t #AZ10KJC. M O TO R CYCL|S^ _ 1987 RED kawasaki EX 500. Excellent condition, 3200 miles, $2400 966-9375 1991 Y A M A H A R azz fo r s a le L ow m ile s , g o o d co n d itio n , n eed to se ll. $700/negotiable Laura 894-8366 89 SUZUKI GS500E, black, excellent shape, runs good. $2300 or best offer. 967-5748. HONDA SCOOTER SL50 Elite 1990. 2 m ile s , w on . on the P rice Is R ight; $950/Offer. 852-0642. BICYCLES V.~ - BLUE 10 speed Schwinn bike. Great shape setting with U-Lock, for $ 1 0 0 / offer. Jenny 970-1272. RELEIG H PEA K E d ition m ountain bike, 18 speed, Deere XT components, rides smooth and fast $350. 431-9515. TALL G U Y S mountain bike. New 1992 Diam om i Back Sorrento, 21 speed 2124" fra m es. R egu lar $ 3 7 9 .9 5 , now S 319.95. Orange, black, red. B icy cle Wheelers 968-8011. TRAVEL CHINA G R A N D Tour, N A U summer session 1993, 15 days, optional 3 cred­ its. Dr. Alan Lew, N A Ü B ox I5Ö16; Flagstaff 8 6 0 1 1 ,523-d567. -, DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost p laces U SA . A lso w orldw ide. I a lso buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL $ 2 5 2 .5 0 . SELL 5 0 funny, c o lle g e Tshirts and make $252.50. N o financial obligation. A risk free program. Aver­ age sales time * 4-6 hours. Choose from 18 d esig n s. Sm ailer/larger quantities available. Call free 1-800-733-3265. EA SY M ONEY. W ill pay SS/hour to make calls with no selling involved. TJ 894-0531.___________________ ■ A NATIONAL w holesaler begining a telem arketing d iv isio n . Strong closer with professional phone manner. W ill have opportunity to ."Get in on ground floor." Business to business experience expected. 20 to 25 hours. 967-2678 MF, 1-5pm ask for Gary A A A H A N D Y c o lle g e student, parttim e f le x ib le h o u r s, g o o d d riv in g record, resp on sible helper to d eliver sm all furniture item s, hang pictures, furniture touch-up, etc., 840-8120. ACROBATIC TEACHER needed be­ g in n in g th rou gh a d v a n c ed . 4 0 th S treet/In d ia n S c h o o l, c a ll C arrie 9 5 7 -0 0 4 6 or 946-7666. ACTIVISTS $300/w eek. M eaningful job working fo r th e e n v ir o n m e n t. H ou ra^ 310:30pm. Call 9 6 6 -8 3 3 8 for interview. ELEMENTARY ED Graduate student on ly . Substitute or tem p orary c e r tific a te o k . 1 5 -2 0 hours/week. $7-10/hour. Experienced with childrens programs. Call Candice 9 5 3 -3 0 7 0 Monday-Thursday._________ ’ E N T H U SIA S T IC P R O F E SS IO N A L motivated telemarketers needed imme­ diately no selling! Near A SU , full/part time. Earn $6-9/hour depending on ex ­ p erien ce, p lu s b onu ses/com m ission s. Paid weekly . 829-3030. FAMILY LEARNING Centers o f Scot­ tsdale are lo o k in g for instructors for after sch o o l and e v e n in g program s. They include art, music, sports, hiking, cam ping, biking, m agic, m odel build­ in g , e tc . I f in terested, w rite a letter about y o u rself, you r q u a lific a tio n s, your ideas for a class and a sample o f w hat you w ould cover. B e creative! Send your letter to: Fam ily Learning Centers P.O. Box 1633 Scottsdale, AZ 85252 : ADMIN. ASST. L arge m a n agem en t c o n su ltin g firm needs part-time administrative assistant with experience in WordPerfect 5.1 and com plex project filing. Strong organ­ izational skills a m ust Needed to work approximately 30 hours/week. Position is temporary depending o n project du­ ration (a p p r o x im a tely 6 m o n th s). Please send resum e to B ox CP-PW C, 1850 North Central, 7th R o o f, Phoe­ nix, 85004. B U FFA L O E X C H A N G E now hiring for part tim e. Looking for energetic, fa sh io n -m in d ed hard -w orking in d i­ vidual; Must enjoy working with peo­ ple. Apply 9am-6pm Monday-Saturday. I2pm-5pm Sunday: 227 West Univers- / ity, Tempe. N o calls please. C R U IS E SH IPS n o w h irin g - Earn $2,000 + / month + travel (Hawaii, Mex­ ico, the Caribbean, etc.) Holiday, Sum­ mer and Career employment available. N o ex p e r ie n c e n ece ssa ry . For em ­ ployment program call 1-206^634-0468 extention C5918 GET PERSONAL! State Press Classifieds. G O LF Outgoing individuals needed for bever­ age cart position. Call Monday - Fri­ day, 11-3. Pavilion Lakes 948-3370 GOLF R ange / utility p o sitio n s available at S co ttsd a le club . A pp ro x im a tely 25 hours/week. Call Monday - Friday, 113. Pavilion Lakes 948-3370. HELP IN finding a job is as close as your nearest Issue o f the State Press. HELP W ANTED, $6/hour to start plus bonuses. Monday through Friday. Part tim e e v e n in g s . T e m p e lo c a tio n , 966- 6765. MODELS NEEDED- for fashion, com­ m erc ia l p rin t, ru n w a y , and ca ta lo g work. Serious inquiries, contact Elle, (619)5 8 4 .9 2 6 6 . N A T IO N A L M A N U F A C T U R IN G com pany seeking a marketing support person. Hands on experience working for autom otive products manufacturer. C lose to ASU, 18 to 2 0 hours flexible. 967- 2678 ask for Karen VISIT SIX Caribbean countries during 1993 fir^t summer session and earn up to 6 ASU credits. Informational meet­ ing on Wednesday October 21, AED 68 (A rch itectu re N orth) 1:30pm . C all 965-4630. Yon don’t have to be rich to be a world traveler, le t Hostelling International show you how: •Hostel Cards •MEI Back-Packs •Travel Accessories •Flights & Eurail •Int. Student ID's M-F 128pm 1046 ELLemon St. U2 TICKETS. Excellent balcony seats, bought on 9 /2 6 . $ 3 2 .5 0 each, w hat 1 paid. David 829-8393 HELP WANTEDGENERAL 5 students needed for part tim e promo­ tional work for auto serv ice centers. $150-300/w eek. Call 921-8282 ask for C hris._______ • ' . ; '88 HYUNDAI Excel! GLS, 4 door, air. AM/FM cassette. II month warranty. 83700/offer. 350-9234. ________ 1977 BUICK Electra, power window», seats, air, cmiae, body and engine in great shape, 83K original m iles. Chris, 9669614. $120Qtoffer. 1983 SAA B 900 Turbo. Excellent con­ d ition . W h ile, 2 d oor, 5 sp eed , sun roof, air, alarm, etc. $ 3 9 9 3 . S teve, 9 4 3 -7 3 4 8 ._________ SELL IT in the State Press Classifieds! HELP WANTEDC g R T C A L _ sss_ TELEPHONE SALES for Tempe Serv­ ice Company, experienced only, guar­ anteed $7 hourly plus commission, part tim e ev enings o r Saturday. C lo se to A SU , 968-2932. NATION'S LEADING test prep com ­ pany seeks part tim e evening and w ee­ kend help. O ffice, clerical, and organ­ izational skills needed. Must be a good communicator. Som e sales experience helpful. Call Debbie 967-2967. TUTOR NEEDED For private S cottsdale sch o o l. Prefer graduate student w ho is outstanding in these three areas: high school Chemis­ try, P h ysics and Math. Please d o hot apply i f not efficient in all three areas. A b ility to speak French or Spanish a plus. E xcellent potential for manage­ ment. Professional attire, management skills and reliable transportation a must (2 0 m inutes from A S U ). $ 8 -1 0/hour, 15-30 hours per w eek , require 1 year com m itm ent Women encouraged to ap­ p ly . A w ond erful stead y jo b fo r the grad u ate stu d en t. C a ll C a n d ic e 953 -3 0 7 0 , Monday through Friday. R E C E P T IQ N I S T / S E C R E T A R Y . M U ST have ex cellen t organizational, communication & telephone skills, neat, energetic, outgoing, personable and selfm o tiv a ted . W P 5 .1 , L otu s required. Non-smoking office. $7/hour plus ben­ efits. Send resume with salary history to A ssociated B io scien ce, Inc., 1 1 1 0 E. M iss o u r i, S u ite 6 4 0 , P h o e n ix , A Z 85014. SELL IT in the State Press Classifieds! HELP WANTEDGENERAL U N L IM IT E D IN C O M E part tim e . Your hours- your schedule. Successful candidate should expect $150.00/w eek minimum. Mr. Sublette 940-8681 WALK FROM ASU! N o S a lé s Phone Interviewers VIP EVENT Services, crowd manage­ ment. Apply at 1525 W est University #102, 12-5pm, ask for Tom. Walk-ins only. - ... . Tues-Fri, flexible part time afternoon/ evening shift, & Saturday shift. Comfortable office atmosphere. W E NEED a few select photogenic mod­ els. Experienced or unexperienced for T .V . and print. Part tim e okay. Ap­ p o in tm en t n e c e ss a r y 8 3 9 - 1 9 6 9 , En Avant A gency, 4 5 0 0 South Lakeshore, Tempe. H igginbotham A sso cia te s 8 2 9 -3 2 8 2 Midwest Publishing, Inc. W e w ant you on our team! O u tb o u n d Telemarketing N o experience necessary. M odern office in the C ornerstone Mall. Evening hours $5.5 0 /hour guaranteed Bonuses • Call Bill 968-4457 Walking Distane« From ASU * D ID Y O U K N O W ... that you can use Visa* MasterCard or American Express to place yoür classified? Don’t delay — call 96 5-6731 today! 894-0264 ' t fP • .............................. - Morning, Afternoon, Evening *’ $5.50/Guarantee/Hour ★ S TO P ... ★ $8-$10/HOUR f i f e d extra m oney for Christmas ? ★ Nation's most experienced, largest Telemarketing Co. Hundreds of dollars hi cash, bonuses given out weekly ★ Call on great program s like: ZOO (U 2) Tour 6 great seats $45/offer 941-8389 Randy AUTOMOBILES STUDENTS Best part time opportunity! Earn excel­ lent money. Make your own schedule. N o experience necessary. C all today 698-2498. SPORTS MINDED Tamps 894-5128 U 2 .3 at row 9 section B, 897-2853 ZOO TV, a pair o f U2 tickets, floor sec­ tion C, row 19 Gall Jay 929-0503. LOCAL GA LLER Y/FR AM E shop is seek in g a reliab le, profession al indi­ vidual with excellent design skills for sales position, part time Saturdays and Mondays. North Scottsdale, 951-8907. NEED A JOB? W e need 5-10 people for part time work from 4-8pm. W e sell tools nationwide & w e ll pay you $7 / hour to start. N o w ee­ kends & no experience necessary. Call Jim 820-8408. U 2 TICKETS Great seats, section B, row 23. $50 each. Call 967-7989. U 2 TICKETS section 7 ,1 8 , 240, C a ll 829-8113 HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WÀNTEDGENERAL ASSEMBLY/PACKAGING JOBS Looking for motivated people for part-time work. Day shifts available. Apply in person at: Dillon Precision 7442 E. Butherus Located In the Scottsdale Airpark ■Magazine Renewals «Telephone Services •Trial Preview Book Clubs •Non-Profit Representation "GREAT ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES" •Management staff committed to your success. •Part or tuli time, flexible scheduling. •Lots of sales made hourly. DIALAMERICA St a t e P HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE B U S T E R S R E ST A U R A N T in S co t­ tsdale is now hiring experienced food servers. Please apply in person 8320 N. Hayden (Mercado Del Ago). 951-5850 DAYTIME HELP needed, full and pait tim e; very fle x ib le hours. Energetic and m o tiv a ted in d iv id u a ls ap p ly at Country Glazed H u n Company, 2S01 East Camelback Road- Camclback Es­ planade. PETS FOR SALE one male english bull dog pup p y A .K .C . registered , pure-bred 756-0439 FREE LOST/FOUND FO U N D O V ER the w eek en d by The Vine, key ring with ASU/bike keys, and a voodo man on ring. 965-3342. FO UND SET o f keys. North side o f Old M ain. ’ C all and identify. Call T ele­ phone Services at 965-2011. L A R G E M IX E D breed, you ng m ale d og, golden tan, very friendly. Found near C ollege and Southern. 894-9414. PERSONALS 1 DO ZEN red long-stem roses d eliv­ ered $ 20. A lso balloons. After Hours Flowers. 894-3419. BE A hero donate blood today! FALL BLOOD Drive *92 October T5th through the 22nd in'front o f Danforth Chapel and on Tyler Mall 9am- 3pm. 3 FOR 2 enlargement special: same size en largem en t from a negative. Photoamerica 965-4322 in the lower level o f the MU ATTENTION GREEKS with large arms: "Over the Top" is waiting for you! Kappa Sigma. RESTAURANTS/ BARS J**' j ' , /m l ’ I ■ i i i wi V L ' J **¿»*3 i s PERSONALS SERVICES BE A hero donate Mood today! A£d> Masquerade Ball. There's no bet­ ter way to celebrate a holiday than being with brothers and that special lady. A ll b roth ers w e lc o m e . O c to b e r 30th Y.I.T.B.O.S. A SOFT Touch Electrolysis, permanent hair rem oval, disposable probes, great student discounts, near A SU . 829-7829. FALL BLOOD D rive V2 October 15th through the 22nd in front o f Danforth Chapel and on Tyler Mall 9am- 3pm. A X Q L o o k in g forw ard to to n ig h ts HAIR 101 gives you expert hair design at elementary prices. Check out this full service salon in the lower level o f the MU. Hair 101 965-7222 Happy Hour. Pikes AAFI Alpha Danielle get excited for ini­ tiation! Pi love, Michelle HOMECOMING R OYALTY applica­ tions available now! Juniors and Seniors apply today! Applications on 3rd from' MU! ■, A A ll Alpha Kelly get excited for ini­ tiation! Pi love, Jessica _______ A A il Kelly get excited for initiation* FI love your diamond sis IN A gigantic warchouseon November lOtii Arm Wrestling Masters will clash in Kappa Sigma "Over The Top" Tournament A4> Actives love their pledges. AF PLEDGES you’re actives can't wait to present U at formal INSENSITIVE JERK HOMECOMING ROYALTY applica­ tions available now! Juniors and Seniors apply today! Applications on 3rd floor MU! - ' ^ • . : :/ : . ARE Y O U interested in the social and the political situations o f Eastern Eu­ rope? Then come to the Mohave Room in the MU at l pm today. CARA—I'M HERE anytime you need to talk. Y ou're a sp e cia l ffie n d —D e lta love, Jen , - ' -V. CHICKEN OUT! Enjoy delicious chick­ en sandw ich w ith outrageous w a ffle fries and a 32 oz. Monster Bash Soda for $3.05. Such a deal! Stop by Chicken Out in the Grand Marketplace o f tire MU. Sun 12-9pm BANDERSNATCH BREWPUB AAA Jen B. Congratulations on winning Pike Dream Giri. DELTA SIGS would like to thank our Kappa Football coaches Ingrid, Heath­ er, & U sh . AT- Had a great time at Sunny's! Kappa 8 4 4 -s h e d "We show all NFL, Iowa, & Nebraska games" T h e H a tf ie l d s T o n ig h t 9 9 $ Kamte AY MEN: Y all did an awesome job on Sunday! W e are so proud o f you .. . How about another date at Stan's for suds and cheese fries? Love, your Kappa coaches Mollie, Lisa & Dana. D ID Y O U k now A m eric a n E xp ress TraVel is located on campus in the MU? for all your travel needs call 921-4301 or stop by today. . v DON'T FORGET to checkout our great selection o f Halloween cards, gifts and decorations! Follett's Hallmark Shop. Lower level MU. 4 0 4 S. M X Suite 101 (Hayden Square) 966-1300 W A XIN G A N D Nail specials. B ikini $12, full leg $20, back wax $20. Full set $30. F ills $18 969-6954 H a irs ty le s NOVEMBER 10th+Dead Milkmen concert + Pro Arm Wrestling + Aids Benefit + 1st Annual Kappa Sigma "Over The Top" tournament 90S E. Lemon 966 1391 S5 Off Any Service ASU CHEER! ASUCHEER1 ASU CHEER! M e n 's and W om en 's V arsity & JV tryouts O d . 26 -28 . Info & ap plication a t M U Info desk. PRE RUSH dinner at the Delta Sigm a Phi H ouse, tonight at 5:30. 714 Alpha Drive. Call Steve W., 784-0668 if you h aveany TV SOMEONE WILL eie last night ght is dead please don't Worry help you. THETA CHI would like to congratulate . our sweethearts on their selection: Sandra W. (A M I) and Courtney L. (K A 8 ) TKE C A E N smooth: W e had an aw e­ some weekend. Thanks! Here's to many more! Love Anne ; ' TO D G Alexis: Congrats on being TKE Sweetheart! W e loVe you! Your sisters TO PIKE Brian F.: Congrats on being the 1992 DG Anchor Man ! You are the best! Love, t h e P e e Gees ________ TO THE men o f Kappa Sigma: Thank you for the pizza! It was fun! Love. the Dee Gees TRE-J’LL M ISS y o u very m uch this weekend. Remember o f love you! L ove, RESTAURANTS/ BARS T R I-D E L T A . P L E D G E e la ss r - T h e Scottsdale Symphony thinks You're ter­ rific! ■.. ■- ’ INSURANCE HEALTH INSURANCE save 50% o ff campus plan! $one m illion benefits. En­ ro ll a n y tim e! Prater in su ra n ce 829-4919. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING 1 D A Y turnaround- m ost papers. Pro­ fe ssio n a lw ord p r o c e ss in g /p a pers/resumes. Laser. Reasonable. Caro­ line. 892-7022. S ta te P ress Classifieds M atthew s C enter, R oom 46H (tower level) 965-6731 O ffice hours: 9 a.m .-5 p.m . M on day-Friday Lin er a d s (15 w ords o r less): $3.90 p e r day fo r 1-4 d ays $3.70 p e r day fo r 5-9 d ays $3.45 per d a y fo r 10 or m ore d ays N o cop y ch an g es. 200, each w ord ever. P e rso n a ls (15 w ords o r less): $2.00 p er d ay. 2 0 c, each w ord over. (Student rater m ust show photo ID.) STATE PRESS Personals personify! A£ti> Get psyched to kick some grass! at the ¿ K Soccer Tournament Love your coach Kimberlee UR T U E SD A Y 10/27 M oonlight/R ock N Bowl-W in Prizes. Memorial Unión R e­ creation. 965-3642 v W ATCH FOR the red and w hite sale com ing to The Bookstore Connection, October 27-29. ; WHO’S WHO Associated students o f A SU invites, all outstanding juniors and seniors to apply for "Who’s W ho A m ong Students in American U niversities and C olleges." Pick up your application in the À SASU offices on the 3rd floor o f the MU. Application deadline is October 29, 1992. Call 965-3161 for information. HOMECOMING ROYALTY applica­ tions available now! Juniors and Seniors apply today! Applications on 3rd floor MU! •Gourm et Z -J& tJ Coffee \ N H | •Imported B eer •18 Sub Varieties ^ N ow ...H alf Subs Available •Fresh Baked Muffins •Salads RESEARCH A N D writing help all sub. jects catalog $2. 1 (800) 351-0222. MUAB ROCKS the M em orial U nion. Stop b y . the M U today and d isco v er what's rockin'. Memorial U nion Activ­ ities Board makes it happen! TACO BELL Express is now open at the south end o f the Memorial Union. U sé your maroon and gold card there! Sigma SPO RTS & W INGS N W c o rn e r o f D o b s o n & U n iv e rs ity ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Facials/w axing. Student d is­ c o u n ts. C a ll fo r m ore in fo rm a tio n . 969-6954. w ith this ad 4 s a t e l l i t e s 15 s c re e n s W O O D SH ED II DIVORCE Bankruptcy, name change, incorpora­ tion, SL child support modifications. A lt documents prepared by Paralegals. Con­ sumer Legal Inc, 9 5 4 - 6 5 1 1 ._________ C r a ig Iverson at F la m in g o H a ir c u tte rs COME MEET the bros o f Delta Sigma Phi at our Pre Rush Dinner tonight at 5:30. N ew row- 714 Alpha Drive. Call Steve if you have any ?'s. 784-0668. X Q - Lauren and Lori w e’re getting hungry for dinner tonight! Scott and 'N i c k ; v.. MISCELLANEOUS KX N ick & Scott form Jason to goat hair. Canyon Lake to Spaghetti, we had a blast. C a n t w ait until ton ite. L ove your favorite XQ's MOCK PRESIDENTIAL election! It’s happening today at Fotiett's Hallmark Shop in the. MU low er lev el. Follett's w ill be conducting this election in over 400 o f their managed stores nationwide. Results w ill be announced Monday, Oc­ tober 26. ATTENTION ALL Greeks: There will be an in form ation al m eetin g for all those wanting to be on a Greek week committee. The meeting will be Octob­ er 26 at 9:30pm in P.V. Main cafeteria. WANTED You were an insensitive jerk so buy her som e R ow ers On Campus, M U lower level, %5-Q600. X Q - L ooking forward to our happy Bud. Bud Light M-Th 3-7pm Sat11am-5pm nSt. Fo.e PERSONALS hour tonite KE 10c WINGS U S S DRAFTS 70c 1 \ Page 19 W ednödaj^>ctober^l^992 ress 1-D AY TURNARO UND. Professional ty p in g . W alk a b le/A S U . R ea so n a b le r a te s. E x p erien ced . L a ser. F a c u lty/Students. Diane 966-5693 A C C U R A T E , E X PE R IE N C E D ty p in g /w o r d processing W P 5.1. Reports, resu m es, charts, graphs. Làura 8 2 0 ' 0305. A P A /M L A E X P E R IE N C E D ty p ing/word processing. N eed it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. A SU A R E A typing, word processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186. A S U W EST P rofessional Secretarial Services. School/Business. Resumes, re­ pents, graphs. Laser printing, fax serv­ ic es, 938-1096. C R E A T IV E T Y P IN G , term p apers, re su m es, e s s a y s , la ser printer, reasonab le rates, fa s t turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. CUSTOM RESUMES C ustom developed and designed docu­ m ent, personalized service, computer generated, laser printed, $ 3 0.451-1850 EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will do typing/w ordprocessing. $1.50+/page. For m ore in form ation c a ll Suzanne, 8^ 1-2119. KINKO'S COPIES makes the grade! Pa­ pers, resu m es, fly ers, c o lo r cop yin g, self-serve Macintosh & IBM and more! O pen 2 4 hours. 933 East U niversity. 966-2035. NEED SOME HELP? * Experienced professional will handle all you r typ in g needs. E d itin g upon re­ quest. Fast, reasonable. Joan, 827-9625. R ELAX! LET an A SU graduate pro­ fession ally type your term papers, as­ signments, letters, mailing lists, and la­ b els. G ood prices: Fast turnaround. Teresa 924-1976. RESUMES $15 High Success rate! Reports, editing, SP Secretarial, 2201 S ond i M cClintock., N eer A SU 967-0907 TYPING DONE iit iny home. Scottsdale area. Small and large jobs. 9454)849 PHOTOGRAPHY G R A D U A T IO N P H O T O S . H urrydon't wait until die last minute! Cteativ e id ea s, reason ab ly p riced. J u lie 990 -1 6 2 6 . fiant«Drakf In t e r e s t e d in s e e in g y o u r a d G iv e u s a c a l l a t State Press A For Wednesday, October 21,1992 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) E v e n th o u g h you g e t so m e h e lp fu l a d v ic e , y o u s till n e e d to d elib era te longer about a business or investment matter. A luxury item appeals to you. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) It’s the bonds o f affection between you that should stand out in consciousness. D on’t let little things get in the w ay o f relationship harmony. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) C heck, counter-check tactics are not th e way to Success. Y our charm and good will are the things that put you in g o o d sta n d in g w ith th o se in h ig h places. CANCER (June ¿1 to July 22) Y ou get your day unnecessarily tied up b y m ix in g b u s in e s s and p le a su r e . Happy rom ance, en joyable entertain­ m ent and travel are the highlights on your calendar for today. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Y ou ’ll have a good tim e i f you don’t sp rea d y o u r s e lf th in . H o m o -b a sed a c tiv it ie s a re fa v o red o v er o u tsid e entertainments. Invite others o v er for sociable tim es. VIRGO (A ug. 23 to S ep t2 2 ) G iv e oth ers som e cred it. Y ou d o n ’t alw ays have to explain your position . for people to catch on. Just be yourself and rapport with clore ties com es easi­ ly / . LIBRA (S ep t 23 to OcL22) * Indecision may mean it’s best to put o ff shopping till another tim e. Y our per­ sonality is an asset for you in business. Y ou make friends now and open d o o n . in t h i s s p a c e ? 963-6333. d v e r t is in g SCORPIO (O c t 23 to N ov. 21) It may be hard to concentrate on work today, bm you ’ll have no troubte enjoy­ in g y o u rself tonight when all s ig n a ls ' point to romance mid joyful leisure. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2 2 to D ec. 2 Í ) : Y ou’ll probably want time for yourself t o ca tch up on u n fin is h e d c h o r e s. Frankly, however, your time would be better spent with relaxing h obbies and pursuits. CAPRICORN (C)ec. 22 to Jan. 19) It’s better to visit w ith others than to have company oyer at present Accept social invitations. T hose e lig ib le are likely to m eet with romantic introduc­ tions. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2 0 to Feb. 18) You w on't w in others over w ith logical arguments, but a friendly demeanor on y o u r p art w iIf b rin g o u t s im ila r responses from others. Chaim m akes you persuasive. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar, 20) Travel plans are favored right now, but there are a lot o f details to b e w oiked o u t. T ru st in th e a d v ic e o f ex p er ts regarding a career concern. E ven in g accents romance. Y O U B O R N T O D A Y h a v e m any in terests and n eed se lf-d isc ip lin e to k eep fro m scattering your en e r g ie s. Y ou’re sociable with a genuine like o f other people. You enjoy travel and are both artistic and literary. A flair fo r get­ tin g you r id eas across is an a sset in w hatever you d o . Y o u ’re w illin g t o work h u d to achieve your objectives. B irthdate o f: D iz z ie G ille sp ie , j a z z great; G e o r g S o lt i, co n d u cto r; and Carrie Fisher, actress. -1 9 9 2 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.