A R I Z O N A STATE U N IV E R S I T Y P r es s ©Copyright, State Press, 1902 Tempe, Arizona Friday. November 20,1992 An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 76 No. 60 Black leaders call protest constructive University spokesmen By C arol A nn H ansen State P ress A frican-A m erican com m unity leaders who were present Wednesday when ASU’s Black African Student Coalition crashed a University reception agreed that the students successfully voiced their concerns, but disagreed on the value o f form al gatherings with University administrators. A bout 65 BASC m em bers interrupted a reception W ednesday C arter between African-American community leaders and ASU administrators to protest the failure of the administration to invite black students. “These protests are certainly not new,” said Charles F anniel, p resid en t o f the M aricopa C ounty N ational Association for the Advancement of Colored People. He said that Wednesday’s demonstration was an effective way for the BASC to get its message across to the appropriate individuals. “(The BASC’s) protest apprised all of community leaders in attendance of their concerns,” he said. “The timing was appropriate because the issues were heard by community leaders from various organizations and groups from the community. • ■ “The students know (about the University’s problems) better than anybody,” he said. “Evidently, it was the faculty that didn’t have much foresight.” “ASU has had problems in more ways than one. W e’ve heard com plaints for long periods o f time and they are c o n tin u in g ,” Fanniel said, citin g the recent NAACP investigation that reported ASU’s Physical Plant as being biased in hiring and promoting practices of minorities and women. But Fanniel said he thinks little is accom plished at receptions such as the one on Wednesday. “After all of the excitement dies down, you rarely see any T urn to P r o test, pag e 1 3. Just stay in bed: Residence hall TVs to air ASU courses D orm debut o f televised classes draws campus praise, criticism B y J oy B eason State P ress When education major Jennifer Braxton attended her introduction to parenting classes this semester, she was able to baby-sit her niece while she took notes. This was possible for Braxton because the course she is taking is televised on cable. “I think it is the best thing the University has done in a long time,” Braxton said. “With my televised course, I can work or catch up on much needed sleep and not miss my class. I think it was die obvious next step for the University to provide the televised courses in the residence halls.” , For several years ASU has offered televised classes for credit, where students can stay home and watch their classes on TV. Beginning next sem ester, students living in the residence halls, even those who live just a few hundred yards away from their classrooms, will have the opportunity to attend classes through the newly installed cable. But some ASU faculty and students are worried that the televised courses are a trade-off of convenience for quality. T urn in to V id e o , p a g e 12. Sam OpanshawfState PraH ASU President Lattie Coor (front) and Tempo Vice Mayor Neil Giuliano start their morning Tuesday with a brisk 7 a.m. bike ride to campus to promote the annual Don’t Drive One in Five campaign. Officials call funding hike unlikely $67 m illion increase doubtful, Regents staff m em ber says By Kate D eely State P ress The chance of getting a requested state funding increase of $67 m illion for A rizona’s universities is virtually nil, according to state officials. ‘There is no history of receiving what we request,” said Stephen Jordan, director of financing and planning for the Arizona Board of Regents central office. He added that it is unlikely any state agency will receive its requested budget. University administrators have said the increase in funding is needed to raise beiow-standard faculty salaries and to protect student services, classes and programs from budget cuts. Gov. Fife Symington released the budget requests of all state agencies for fiscal year 1994 earlier this week. The requests total an increase of $611.1 million from the fiscal year 1993 state budget. Universities requested a $67 million increase in funds. The university system budget request that was drafted by ASU, UofA, NAU and the Arizona Board of Regents was submitted to the governor’s office in October. The budget request is a 12.5 percent increase from 1993 appropriations. A SU ’s request is a 12.9 percent increase from 1993 appropriations, which totaled $181.7 million. Jordan said agencies have modified requests in recent years in an attempt to stay within the confines of the available state budget. He said agencies in the past requested an increase of 25-30 percent from previous year’s budgets, but now requests are only an 11-12 percent increase. “As we have begun to limit requests more and more, we have begun to have greater expectations,” Jordan said. But he said the state is unlikely to match even the most conservative requests. Jordan said he does not know how close the state will be able to match the University’s budget request but he “hopes for the best.” Doug Cole, spokesman for the governor’s office, also said it is unlikely that the budget requests will be approved. “We are anticipating a $3.6 billion base budget and $150 million in new revenue,” Cole said. The difference between requests and new revenue to meet those requests creates a $461 million gap in unmet budget requests, he said. ‘These requests are pretty conservative, but it’s an ugly budget,” Cole said. “Because o f the recession and other factors, such as increasing costs, it is a budget this year that will be a very difficult problem to solve.” The governor’s office will release its proposed budget Jan. II, 1993. Cole said each agency’s request will be analyzed equally and all are important. “We have a gap we have to make up — with such a huge gap we will look at every agency’s request equally,” Cole said. “Every program has a constituency to it and has a reason to be looked at.” - T urn W orld/N ation Page 3 pag e 12. B r N a t a l ie Y o u n g S t a t e P ress Members of the San Carlos Apache Indian Tribe dominated the A rizona Board .of Regents meeting Thursday with claims that construction of the Mount Graham International Observatory would interrupt sacred religious worship and ultimately diminish the | tribe's culturé. ' “ I d o n ’t w ant the A pache trib e to be the laughingstock of the United States o f America,” tribe member Ferry Harney said. “Our religious freedom is being disregarded and violated." Tribe members addressed the board on the first day of its two-day m eeting in an effort to halt further construction of the observatory atop Mount Graham, which lies about 50 m iles east o f the U niversity. Members said they have opposed construction because . Turn to Regents, Rage 12. S id e President-elect Bill Clinton makes & whirlwind tour o f Capitol Hill. Fu n d s, Apaches tell Regents of observatory’s harm STA TE PRESS The Rivaliy to Sports An in-depth look at the historic rivalry betw een ASU and UofA. Saturday’s gam e against U o fA w ill b e s e n io r B rett W allersted t’s last gam e with ASU. Page 10 & 11 Page 15 S m Today’s Weather: Partly cloudy. High 72. Low 41. * Classifieds................... ..17 C om ics..................................14 Crossword................. 6 O pinion................,...... .......... 4 Sports................................... 15 W orld/Nation........................ 3 State P ress Friday, November 20,1992 Page 2 T oday • HUM Union of Jewish Students • Shabbat discussion with Rabbi Max Tichtin on "How Can a Modem Person Pray?” 7:30 p.m. 1012 S. MW Ava. • Program for Southeast Asian Studies • FBm: 1 7 » Medium is the Masseuse: A Balinese Healer.* 11:45a.m. LLC50. • MUAB • Film: “Naked Lundi.* $1. 5:30 & 8 p.m. Union Cinema. • Alpha Kappa Pei • Happy hour. 6 p.m. Flakey Jake’s. Puertoriqueños • Monthly meeting. 5 p.m. MU Room 210. ■ i Art Sale • Works by ASU School of Art students & atamni. PainSngs, prints, photographs & ceramics. 10 am , to 10 p.m. Tempe Center next to Tower Records. %Pre-Law Oay * Admissiona officers itOfti 52 law schools to speak with prospective applicants. 10 a m 10 2 p.m. MU Ventana Room. • Buena Vista Pictures Marketing • Movie release party for Walt Disney | f Pictures’ “Atacfcfcd ik to * . poeowrfcfcD giveaways. 7-9 p.m. Club Rio. See SR C display for details. ■ v-.V: «m8 D arryl Webto/State Press Wendy Ralsanen, a Junior sculpture major, posés next to the aluminum mask she made of her face. Ralsanen is just one of many artists selling their work at the Tempe Center. Christmas Art Sale premieres today b v& § : . zm :*-v ;-:v- As sí • RPG Gaming Club •A ô n e ^ ^yent; i Saturday: For Vampire: The masquerade will be *! • ACM & U P E1 Teams wW solve pttfolerns in C or Pascal »or prizes. Hegistrauon is $ 1 5 & Torms are ptajtedffom # e |É c i n i g h L l ^ half live action. Call 496-9399 ML) Kaibab, Zuni & Hohokam. ’♦* ^ Sunday: * Alpha Kappa Pal «Court of Honor for • Alpha Kappa Pal »Last day for Icwnttrf pledges. 8 a.m. BA fourth floor. payment. • Christmas Art Sale »Works by ASU School of Art students & alumni. ceramics. 10 a m to 10 p m Tempe Center next to To B y S. T albott Sm ith State P ress • 9:30 a.m. EG A 219. j ¡ •> r .\ Proceeds go to students, student-run art galleries ./.•■i.'J'li.V'.*! i •■Christmas ArtSate »Works by ASU . School of /Mt studerits * afofoflfc.^ ' • Paintings, prints, photographs ceramics. 1 0 a m to 10 p m Tempe Center next to Tower Records, § 3 8 It may be tempting when school’s out to throw «May » semester’s accumulation of ]unk. But Is «diet you . consider |unk recyclable? If you aren’t going to keep your old class notes, recycle them. Old clothes can be taken to shelters, as can various household Hems you not longer want Look in the Yellow Pages for the nearest recycling locations and charity organizations. Glycerine soaps in the shape of bombs and skulls, pieces of clay tableware with an artistic twist and other sorts of less functional but equally artistic metal and print works are for side this weekend in Tempe. At bargain-basement prices. And the best part is that they are all creatibns of students and alumni within the ASU community. According to Art Hahn, ASU Art School associate professor and coordinator of the Christmas Art Sale, the event used to be a fixture on campus every Christmas, becoming quite a spectacle during its heyday in the 1970s' Hahn coordinated the event from its inception in 1963 to 1976 when the event ended. The sale netted only $500 in its first year, but grew to $23,000 in sales in its last year. Half of the price o f each piece will go directly to the individual artist, Hahn said. The other half will raise money for the winter opening of two student-run art galleries in Tempe that will display art created exclusively gift certifica te certificates Rural à University by members of the campus community. Gallery 549 in Tempe Center will display neon works, and Gallery 709 at The Towers will display prints. All of the works will be for sale, and proceeds will be divided up in the same manner as the Christmas sale going bn now. The new g alleries, w hich are. being provided rent-free by the University, will give students “an opportunity to face the real world” in simulating a commercial gallery situ atio n , H ahn' said. ASU owns, both locations. Junior,sculpture major Wendy Raisanen and chemistry doctoral candidate Dan Partin collaborated in “goofing o ff” to make glycerine soaps in unexpected shapes. Partin said the soaps are functional, adding that he uses them at home himself. They sell for $5 each. Both also have more serious cast metal artwork in the sale. Partin will have neon art in Gallery 549 when it opens. Prices for artwork range from $5 for small clay and soap pieces to several hundred dollars for large metal works. The salé is being held in the space next to Tower Records in Tempe Center and is open to the public today, Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. For more information, call 965-1025 during those hours. World/Nation State P ress _ _ •• ______ Friday, November 20,1992 , Page 3 Teens having safer sex, survey finds B y L auran N eergaard A ssociated P ress B a rry Thum m a/A ssociated P re ss As President-elect Clinton meets reporters Ih the Capitol Rotunda Thursday, Senate Minority Leader Robert Dole of Kansas, left, and House Minority Leader Robert Michal of III. huddle behind him. House speaker Thomas Foley of Wash., center, looks on. Clinton vowed to include leaders from both parties Thursday in his economic reform. Clinton meets with Congress, vows bipartisan economic effort By J o h n K ing A ssociated P ress WASHINGTON — President-elect Clinton paid a whirlwind visit to Capitol Hill on Thursday, pledging an open door to Democrats and Republicans alike and to “ meet them halfway” on an early agenda of economic revival and health-care reform. “ I think we’re off to a good start,” Clinton said after more than 6 hours of meetings on Capitol Hill and as congressional leaders from both p arties nodded in agreement. “ I’m excited by it.” Clinton also met with Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, for a wide-ranging briefing on military, national security and foreign policy issues. Powell reiterated his opposition to lifting the ban on homosexuals in the military, but said he would help implement the change if Clinton kept his promise to reverse the ban. “ I ’m very pleased that he has said he will move carefully in full consultation with military leaders and others who have an interest in this matter,” Powell said in Pennsylvania before returning to W ashington for the meeting. C linton was w inding up a busy tw o-day visit to Washington, his first since winning the Nov. 3 election. His stay was rich with symbols not only of how Clinton plans to govern but of how he'hopes to keep in touch with everyday folks while leading the nation. In one 24-hour stretch, Clinton’s stops included: a White House meeting with President Bush, a visit to a crime-scarred city neighborhood, an elegant dinner party, a stay in a posh hotel, a jog past Washington’s monuments and into McDonalds, a visit with commuters on a city bus and meetings in the Capitol with lawmakers. As Clinton captured the capital spotlight, a host of transition aides quietly went to work on Capitol Hill and throughout the city. In addition, several Clinton economic advisers met with congressional staff. The Arkansas governor came to Capitol Hill carrying a promise of bipartisan cooperation and left predicting lawmakers would reciprocate. “ We have to pursue a different course of growing this economy, creating more jobs, raising incomes and having a disciplined plan to reduce the deficit,” Clinton said. “ I think if we work hard at it, we can have bipartisan j cooperation.” He sought to balance such optimism with a reminder that some problems facing the country are “ of mindbending complexity.” Said Clinton: “ The sense I get from the American people is ... they don’t expect miracles of us, but they do expect progress.” To court C ongress, C linton had breakfast with Democratic leaders, lunch with a bipartisan group of legislators and a handful of private meetings with senior legislators from both parties. Clinton said his challenge was “ to present a credible program and work with them and meet them halfway.” Leaders from both parties said they shared his hope for bipartisanship. “ This will be an era of unprecedented communication and cooperation between the Congress and the president,” said H ouse M ajority L eader R ichard G ephardt of Missouri. ' ATLANTA — The high number of American teen-agers having risky sex is slowly dropping and schools are increasing education about AIDS, federal health authorities reported Thursday. There’s no way to know how much of the drop in teen sex is because of school efforts. Still, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged schools to begin education about HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, in kindergarten and intensify it by the ninth grade. , “ HIV education can be most effective when it’s integrated as part of a comprehensive kindergarten-through-grade 12 health education program,” said Dr. Lloyd Kolbe, the CDC’s director of adolescent and school health. “ It’s just as important as science and math.” That doesn’t mean discussing condoms with first-graders, Kolbe said. “ In the early grades it’s important that young people start to understand that they can influence their own health,” he said, advocating that courses gradually become more specific. “ You don’t come into the 12th grade and provide two days of HIV education and expect that to be sufficient.” Nationwide, school systems and parents are grappling with how much children need to learn about AIDS and at what age. Hundreds of Georgia parents this month opposed a state proposal for AIDS education in elementary schools. In New York City, the nation’s largest school system, AIDS education begins with general discussion in kindergarten; fourth graders are taught how HIV is transmitted and sixth graders are told of the risks of anal sex. The curriculum’s effectiveness is still being evaluated. “ The debate will come down to where people draw the line to introducing lifestyles to young people who are unaware of them,” said New York City school board member Michael Petrides, who succeeded in getting abstinence emphasized in the courses. Figures in the CDC report came from yearly surveys of about 12,000 teen-agers, conducted in 1989, 1990 and 1991, Kolbe said. The United States has about 11.7 million students in grades 9 through 12. The CDC said 54 percent of teen-agers it questioned in 1991 said they had had sexual intercourse, down from 59 percent in 1989. Thirty-five percent said they had had two or more sexual partners, down from 40 percent, and 19 percent reported four or more partners, down from 24 percent in 1989. However, condom use was up only 2 percentage points, to 48 percent, from 1990 to 1991. Students weren’t asked about condoms in 1989. Students under age 15 had the greatest increase in condom use — 57 percent, up from 46 percent. The survey found that 83 percent of students received some sort of HIV education at school last year, up from 54 percent in 1989. Students'who receive that instruction are more likely to discuss AIDS with their parents or other relatives, the CDC said. Sixty-one percent had those talks in 1991, up from 54 percent in 1989. “ We’re cautiously optimistic that young people may be beginning to reduce the risks for HIV infection,” Kolbe said. “ We can’t (attribute) that decline to only school HIV education. It very well could be a function of the entire society’s effort. ... We think that school programs are extremely important.” . * HIV education must be integrated into courses on drug and alcohol abuse and teen pregnancy, which often are taught at younger grades without mention of .AIDS, he said. Yeltsin h in ts at fu rth e r arm s reductions submarines of various types stationed with its Far East Fleet, including 25 Yankee and Delta SEOUL, South Korea — President Boris class submarines at the Pavlovskoye base, just Y eltsin said Thursday that Russia would north of the Korean Peninsula on the Sea of probably stop building submarines in the next Japan. D uring a v isit focused on w inning two or three years and had withdrawn all economic aid and investm ent; Yettsin also' strategic nuclear weapons from the Far East. His com m ents in South K o rea’s said he had settled disag reem en ts over p arliam en t stunned some aides back in Russia’s debt with South Korea and cleared Moscow. The announcement on submarines the way for a $15 billion natural gas pipeline “ sounds totally new and came as a surprise,” from Siberia to Seoul. In trust-building moves, Yeltsin indicated said Yuri Andreyev, an adviser on converting he would abrogate a 1961 defense agreement military factories to civilian production. “ Halting production will cause «serious with Communist North Korea, and he handed problems for enterprises producing subs, but , over the ‘‘black box” containing the flight we shall try to accelerate their conversion and ' recorder o f Korean Airlines Flight 007, which to cope with this problem ,“1 he told ’T h e ,, Was shot down by Soviet jets in 1983 after violating Soviet air space. Associated Press. The flight recordings, transcripts of which The International Institute for Strategic Studies estimated that Russia had a total of 86 were released by the Yeltsin government B y P aul S hin A ssociated P ress earlie r this year, contained conclusive evidence the South Korean pilots were on a standard Civilian flight and did not know they had entered Soviet air space. “ The blank wall o f distru st and estrangement that divided the two countries collapsed” Yeltsin saiS^afteir nis talks with South Koeesn President RohTae Woo. Yeltsin told reporters that Korean and R ussian experts had discussed projects “ totalling $20-30 billion” to develop the Russian Far East and convert military plants to civilian use, the daily Izvestia newspaper reported. . Yeltsin gave few details on the removal of nuclear weapons, blit it appeared to be pagt'of the short- and medium-rRpge nuclear arms cuts agreed to by President Bush and Soviet PresidenLMikhail Gorbachev in fall 1991. Y u n Ja i-h y o u n g /A sso cia te d P re ss Russian President Boris Yeltsin, left, explains to MS South Korean counterpart R ob Dae­ woo, right, while handing over the black box gf Korean Jetliner flight Q07 in Seoul Thursday . The plane Was sh o t d o w n b y S o v ie tje t fighters in 1983, Opinion Page 4 State P ress Friday, November 20,1992 ~ T T State ta P ress £ jd itorial Wildcat rivalry revisited Here w e go again. Saturday, A S U and U ofA w ill again plunge them selves into one o f the state’s great rivalries, pitting football teams in a match o f athletic skill th at is r e a lly s y m b o lic o f a m u ch d e e p e r competition. C o n tin u in g th e rich tra d itio n o f cam p u s terrorism , team s o f spirit warriors conducted furtive hit-and-run jo b s on their rival schools, w ith U o fA once again splashing blue and red over the “A ” on “A” Mountain here, and A SU terrorists su c c e s s fu lly b la zin g a h u ge U o fA sk e w e r e d by S p a r k y ’s fo rk on th e T u cso n sch ool’s practice field. D o these acts represent childish antics carried out by spirit-crazed freaks with nothing better to do, or are they healthy expressions o f pent-up emotion bordering on hostility? The answ er is probably the latter, and the r e a so n fo r th e in te n s e h y p e su r r o u n d in g Saturday’s football gam e can never be summed up entirely. F or a ll th e y e a r s th at A S U h a s e x is t e d alon gsid e U ofA (and, yes, w e count the tim e A S U spent under the alias A rizona Teachers C o lle g e ), ten sio n s have run high, e sp e c ia lly before the big game. A S U fans begin b ellig eren tly com plaining about U ofA ’s history as a pedestrian along the road o f snobbery, and U o fA ad vocates begin making inane jabs about the Tempe school being a haven for burger-flipping no-accounts. T h is a r r o g a n c e , c o m b in e d w ith A S U ’s ob viou s inferiority com p lex and the fact that there are only tw o universities with more than 3 0 ,0 0 0 students in A rizona and you have the fixings for a very bitter, very irreparable sibling spat. The intense p u b licity and anticipation that leads up to this gam e also leads m any to the betting table and spurs countless o ffice pools. Every year, som e lucky schm o takes home the wad o f money (it’s usually that one person who doesn’t know a thing about wagers and picks), and every year, one o f our tw o sch o o ls takes hom e the only prize that really counts in college football — bragging rights to the state. L a st y e a r , A S U fa n s k e e p r e m in d in g th em selv es, A S U snapped the string o f w ins piling up in U ofA ’s column by crushing the ’cals in Tempe. The w ild celebration and jubilation sparked by that victory has long since faded, replaced by the em p ty c o c k in e ss each sid e d em onstrates before The Game every year. One thing you can bet the farm on: One o f us w ill com e aw ay sm ilin g, the other grum bling about w hat cou ld have been and w hat surely w ill be next year. Gulag franchises yet to be tapped So now we have a stretch of interstate highway in Florida being patrolled by the National Guard because wackos try to kill passing motorists. It's remarkable how calm we are, considering that we have become the most violent country in the developed world. And maybe in the undeveloped world too. By the time the year is over, more people will be shot in this couhtry than iri Bosnia. And we’re not at war. A measure o f how we have adjusted to this maniacal behavior is that crime wasn’t even a major issue in the presidential campaign. It was seldom mentioned. There was a reason. The candidates couldn’t make a big deal out of it because they would have had to offer solutions. And they have none. Sure, we can say that a long-range solution is to improve education in the Crime-plagued inner cities and other poor areas. Improve education and the young men will get jobs. If they get jobs, they won’t be joining gangs, dealing drugs and shooting each other and unfortunate bystanders. But that’s long range. And after years of Reagan-Bush’s tohell-with-the-cities. policy (the punishment for being urban Democrats), the range is even longer. Which brings us to short-term remedies. Some academics and sociologists might disagree, but the only practical short-term solution is to put criminals behind bars. It won’t make them nicer people, but while they are locked up, they won’t shoot anyone. But that doesn’t work well because we don’t have enough space in our prisons. The cops bring them in, the juries or judges find them guilty, then what? If the prisons open the door to let a menace in, they have to shove another menace out to make room. We trade a new thug for a more experienced thug. We could use more prisons. But we could also use better schools, bridges that won’t collapse, highways that aren’t falling apart and billions of dollars in other projects. And because of the nature of the clientele, it costs more to build prisons than schools, motels and maybe even hospitals. So the question is, how can we handle our world-renowned, record-setting, superstar criminal population on the cheap? I have a proposal) As we know, Russia and the other former Soviet states are staggering their way toward something that is supposed to be a capitalistic, free-enterprise system. But they’re having a hard time because they are novices and don’t have much to sell. That’s not good for them or us. If they get too messed up, they’ll wind up with one form of dictator or another and will be at each other’s throats and will threaten the peace. So it is to our advantage to see them succeed and prosper so we can sell things to them someday, rather than drop bombs. Now, think: What were the Rooskies, as we used to call them in the angry old days, really good at? • • You got it. If they were good at anything, it was locking people away. Joe Stalin may have been the most efficient prison warden in the history of thé world. He had millions of people —innocent and guilty, jt didn’t make much difference — stashed in gulags all over the Soviet map. His successors weren’t as outwardly nasty, but they kept the tradition going. And they did it economically. Instead of building stately prisons with enormous walls and all sorts of high-tech electronic doodads, they just hauled the unfortunates to places so remote, there was no point in escaping. How do you plan a breakout when the final step is: “Then we walk 1,500 miles through hipdeep snow and wolves, and we’re home free.” You probably see my proposal shaping up. Now that the Soviet Union is no more, they have all these vacant gulags. And they have vast expanses where they can easily create others. They also have an army of unemployed gulag guards, gulag wardens and other gulag experts. So it is a straight business deal. We have this huge surplus criminal population. They have this huge surplus prison space and surplus guard population. We were made for each other. We ship them our surplus criminals and pay them so much a year in storage fees. We can probably cut a good price, especially in volume, because they need the business. It will help their economy and ours. We won’t have to build more prisons, we’ll have less upkeep, and we won’t have to spend as much money on law enforcement. We can then funnel the money into the long-range solutions. I’m sure there are all sorts of legalistic obstructions to this plan. But if we can legally export war weapons, why can’t we legally export criminals? I’m sure the creative minds of Congress could find a way. You say the idea is preposterous and that I’m kidding, right? Think of it this way: Some retired geezers want to drive their camper to their Florida condo. But troops have to protect them from snipers. And I’m the one who is kidding? c ------------------------------k W I i A T T |1 Z l k l ( K R IS M A Y E S , E d ito r K E N B R O W N , M a n a g in g E d ito r D J BURROUGH .... ......Editor COLUMNIST: Ashahed Triche. SONDRA ROBERTO................................... Asst. City Editor PRODUCTION: Kai Barrett. Gary Bedol, Jodi Goldblatt, JOANNA GUCKLER .......................................... News Editor Jeff Hams. Kevin Heller. Barry Kelly. Steve McDowell, RICHARD RUELAS......................................... 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Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone Front D esk..!................................... ¡ ¡ ¡ I ..................965-7572 Newsroom.....965-2292 M agazine................. ............ .............. .965-1695 Display Advertising.................. ij.............. .............. 965-6555 Classified Advertising .......*;,.;;i.f..:....'.„.:..*.;v..,..V....%5-6731 Opinion State P ress ■ ____________ ______________ Friday, November 20,1992 P age 5 Just leave Chelsea alone State Press .L/etters to the editor Officials keep mum on exploitation Editor: It would be untrue to say it is surprising that Playboy has once again named ASU one of the top 10 party schools in the nation. But I am amused by the irony that the powers-that-be — Lattie Coor, Scott Maasen, the ASU News Bureau, etc. — decry the party image but say nothing about the objectification of women at ASU. They are concerned, and rightly so, that the portrayal Of ASU as a party school is a negative image that will impact the recruitm ent of academic students apd inhibit the ability to obtain increased, funding from the state L egislature and alum ni. None of these gentlemen have publicly addressed Playboy ’s intention to once again include an exposé of the “women of the party schools.” There has been considerable discussion and outrage Wherever women gather, but neither the administration, student government nor the Store Press have confronted the real issue. No one protests that, once again, women are being portrayed as objects due to their ability to measure up to a Playboy definition of what is attractive. No one protests that these women will be portrayed as primarily interested in partying, with the innuendo that they are sexually available, W hile a great deal of attention, and outrage, is being given to the portrayal of the University, to protect its image and the harm that Playboy will do to the fulfillment of the University’s mission, no connection is made to the harmful portrayal of ASU’s women. There is no connection made to the objectification of women and the daily experiences of sexual harassment, gender discrim ination, glass ceilings, date and acquaintance rape, and physical and sexual abuse. As long as the objectification of women is portrayed as normal, and indeed flattering, these travesties will continue. Denise Heap Acting Coordinator Scottsdale/Phoenix NOW Center Laura Urbanski Student Director Women’s Student Center* Fran E. Frey Senior, Public Programs Francine Senall Vice President, Young Democrats Diane Sowinski Senior, Justice Studies Karen Martineau Junior, Education Carolyn Cohen President, Students for Choice It had to happen. There were bound to J V lo N A be unflattering CH AR EN referen ces to C h e 1s e a Creators Clinton in the Syndicate public press. The first of­ fending ex ­ ample appeared in The New York Times on Nov. 9, in the m is-ch iev o u s guise o f a friendly op-ed by a fellow teen-ager. “I have never seen another politician’s child who looks like a true prepubescent vision o f aw k w ard n ess...” w rites Samantha Shapiro. “The other politicians’ kids I see have shiny blond hair perfectly in place ... and lovely, clear skin and wonderfully tailored Polo outfits.” Chelsea is refreshing, this sympathetic (?) teen­ ager adds, because she has frizzy hair and braces on her teeth. Cán we put a stop to this kind of thing here and now? How is Chelsea going to feel when she reads that? Did the op-ed editor consider her feelings? What young teen-ager wouldn’t be devastated to see herself described in print as unattractive — even if the ostensible point of the piece was how delightfully refreshing it all is. If Shapiro is envious o f Sen. AI G ore’s children (she mentions them by name as belonging in the Laura Ashley catalog), She should admit it, preferably in private to those who are interested, and find some less cruel outlet for her feelings. Scrutiny of presidential candidates is one thing. Even attention to the careers and contacts o f can d id ates’ w ives is legitimate. But, please, let’s have mercy on the kids. They are not asking us to trust them with important decisions about our lives. They do not seek the spotlight. They 'are innocent bystanders in the path of their parents’ march to power and fame. Children of politicians often suffer from neglect. Chelsea will live in the White House and get her very own Secret Service protection. It may sound glam orous, but how many teen-agers would actually choose to have an adult follow them everywhere? And while being the child o f a pow erful man may be exciting, how many kids would choose to have so little time with their dads? . This uriwélcome attention to the “first child” (let’s have a moratorium on that phrase too) is a consequence of our over­ valuation, even monarchization o f the: presidency; Reports on the comings and goings o f the president dom inate the nightly news oh television. Congress, where the true power of Washington really lies, gets scant attention. ' Part of the explanation is laziness on the part of the press. It’s easier to cover Ohe person than 535,; But the Congress is the true heárt of our government — and its byzantine com m ittee system is the circulatory system. There’s a reason all those lobbyists line up outside the door of the Ways and Means Committee and not the Old Executive Office Building. It isn’t just laziness, though. The press began its full-time focus on the presidency with the dawn of the Cold War and the nuclear age. It becam e a m atter of potential urgency to follow the person who never traveled w ithout the “football” containing n u clear launch Codes handcuffed to the wrist of a military aide; Now that the Cold War is over, the press seem s more than ready to urge cutbacks in the military, but is it ready to curtail its obsession With the presidency? With the exception of foreign policy, the pow er o f the presidency is m ostly hortatory. The president has very little effect upon the daily w orkings of government. This relentless; focus on the W hite House has given rise to assumptions that are not healthy for democracy or selfgovernment. people have come to hold presidents responsible for everything from hurricane re lie f to potholes to farm foreclosures. In the recent blame contest between the White House and Congress over Who Was responsible for the savings and loan debacle, Congress won easily because people find it easy to believe that the president pulls the strings of the entire government. If we cannot break our addiction to presidential news, le t's at least permit Chelsea to stay clear of it. It’s bad enough that, being the daughter of a Democrat, she will probably have to attend public schools and thus be robbed of a proper education. Let’s not rob her of her privacy too. Stereotypes reinforced w hen they com e true Preview procedures stink Editor: In his own freshmanesque way, Jeff Lowder has hit upon a problem in race relations that never fails to throw me into a tirade — the constant outstretched hand of whining minority groups for a ’’break” to make good on past injustices. Hey, the past really sucked, but I was no part of it. I’ve committed no injustices to these groups, but I’m treated as if I’m to take opportunities a w a y from m yself and hand them over to somebody else as reparations for my ancestors’ oppression. Programs such as affirmative action that actually cheapen the accomplishments minority groups have made by admitting that if this person wasn’t a certain color, they wouldn’t have been promoted. Sounds like racism to me. When it comes down to layoff time, employers will discard white people like last night’s rubber, but unless that Employer wants to have various watchdog agencies on him like a rash, h e ’d b etter have a m ountain o f docum entation of poor performance before a minority gets the boot. Sounds like discrimination to me. It doesn’t sound like the equality Dr. King dreamed of. As a white person, it’s difficult to hold back feelings of resentment toward the beneficiaries of various token programs. I try my best to maintain an open mind toward racial troubles, but I’ve caught myself slipping every now and then. Like the time my truck was stolen by a black man, or the time an uninsured, unlicensed Mexican migrant worker hit my car head-on, relegating my Sunbeam Alpine to vintage junk at a total loss to me. Or the time ! was visiting my home town, New York City, when a friend and I strayed out of Times Square and were encircled by four black men on 42nd Street. Luckily, an off-duty cop saw two white faces where they didn’t belong and bailed us out. I realize that it is improper to judge an entire ràce based on a few really negative incidents, but it erodes away at one's open mind when existing negative stereotypes are lived up to. I realize that speaking out against minority groups these days will have people suiting me up for thè Klan, but understand from a white perspective what I see and understand that we can’t heal the wounds of the past by fostering resentment in the present. I get tired of black people blaming white people for Editor: theit failures. They accuse white people of stuffing drugs down I was one of about 200 people turned away from the premiere their children’s throats. Come on, accept responsibility for your showing of “Dracula” on the evening of Nov. 12. As far as I own actions! If I screw up, I can’t whine, “It’s the MAN know, we aH had tickets and completed Sprint phone card keeping another brother down.” That line only goes so far. Let’s applications that were supposed to get us into the show. Neeb move forward and not yell “racism” because the Twinkies are Hall seats 481 people so this means that Cara Race and ASASU located on the shelf over the Ding Dongs in the grocery store. handed out 200 tickets beyond the capacity of the auditorium. I I’ve always taken great pride in having a realist conservative understand that it is common practice to oversell certain events view and whenever I find myself reaching for the crucifix, because of possible no-shows, but hundreds of tickets? Did they lighter fluid and white sheets, I just remind myself, “I’ve never think that people wouldn’t show up for a free movie? seen a black man wearing Birkenstocks,” and suddenly I feel I arrived at Neeb at 7 p.m. for a show that was supposed to better. So, come on guys, a little tolerance on everybody’s part start at 8 p.m. and there was already a line around the courtyard. and we can unravel the damage our predecessors did to this Someone came around with a counter and told me that I was country, TOGETHER. number 300 and that I would have no problem getting in. As time Joe Scioscia passed, I watched as the line slowly grew in front of me. By the Senior, Political Science .time ASASU started letting people in, the same person with a counter came by and told us that the line ended right here, which was about 20 people ahead of me. I hung around until the doors were finally closed and was rewarded with a movie poster for standing in line for an hour. I saw the notice for this movie in the State Press about a week Editor: before the event. When the day came around to get tickets, I went As the official designer of the M.E.Ch.A. Homecoming float, down there at 8 a.m. and was told that the tickets weren't there I would tike to thank the members of Omega Delta Phi. When I and they did not know when they would be in. I called their first learned that I would be working with a fraternity, I was a bit office at 9 a.m. and was told that the tickets would be in on skeptical. However, the first night at the float building, all of my Tuesday. I called back a half hour later and was told that they skepticism disappeared. This fraternity was there to help me and ‘ would be in by late afternoon. I called back a half hour later and devoted as much of their time as possible to the construction of was told that they would be in around noon. In all, I called five the float. They accepted and implemented my ideas without times and got five different answers until finally I was-told that question and always came up with their own. they were in. Throughout the duration of float building, during the parade This was an all-around poorly organized event. When starving and after we had won first place, the float was known as the students get a chance to see a first-run movie for free, there is M,E.Ch.A. float, Omega Delta Phi was not even recognized. Yet going to be great demand for seats. I suggest that only the correct through it all they kept a positive outlook and choose to work in number of tickets be handed out. If people don’t show, there will the background unseen. I want to thank them from the bottom of always be a few people who will show up without tickets. If my heart for helping to make the “grooviest” float ever. If you demand is still high, consider two showings. But to turn away ever need my help in the future don’t hesitate to ask because I people with tickets, people who have waited in line and missed will be there for you 200 percent just the way you were there for “The Simpsons,” is uncalled for. Also, don’t advertise the tickets me. unless you have them or at least know when they’ll be in. >. Michelle Mendoza Michael Seth Freshman, Liberal Arts Senior, Aeronautical Technology The float that flat built State P ress Friday, November 20, 1992 Pag»e 6 C am C o r p u s n e r •Beer & Soda • Photo Developing •Health & Beauty Aids •Compact Discs 712 S. College Ave. - Next to College Street Dell • Phone: 967-4049 Mon.-Thur. 7:30am-10:3 0 pm; Fri. 7:30 am-Mldnlghl; Sat. 9am-Midnlghi; Sun. 11am-10i 30pm +Deposit Coors Light, M ille r Lite, Genuine Draft, Genuine Draft Light GOOD LUCK, DEVILS! CROSSWORD p A C E o V E N by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS P olice R eport ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday: •A vandal damaged the disabled door-opening switch on the first-floor door of the Best Hall C-wing. Damage is estimated at $ 140. •A thief removed a 35mm camera and four camera lenses front ai second-floor room at Stauffer Hall. Loss is estimated at $1,325. •A thief removed art supplies from an ASU student's locked locker on the third floor of the art building. Loss is estimated at $450. ■ •A thief removed an ASU student's vehicle while it was parked in Lot 70. Loss of the 1987 Buick is estimated at $3,000. •An ASU student was questioned by police at Parking Services, where he was seen being verbally abusive to staff workers. He was warned of disorderly conduct and left the area. •A thief removed six ASU keys from a second-floor room in the Classroom O ffice Building, where they were left unattended within a doorlock. Loss is estimated at $300. •Two ASU students "Were questioned by police in Lot 40 after they were seen acting “suspiciously” around a loading dock at the MU. They were warned of loitering and left the ■area. ; ■£ , [ Tempe police reported the following incident Thursday: •A Phoenix man was arrested on charges of armed robbery, unlawful flight and criminal trespass after police captured him following a pursuit that began near a convenience Store he allegedly robbed. According to Tempe police reports, Christopher Murray, 33, walked into Texaco Star Mart, 913 E. Baseline Road, at about 1 a.m. Wednesday. He threatened.the clerk, a 36-yearold Tempe woman, with a screwdriver and took $41 from the store. He fled eastbound on Baseline Road in a pickup truck. Police were able to locate him and follow in pursuit. The chase went to the 5400 block of South Marine Drive, in the Lake residential community, where the suspect abandoned the vehicle and fled on foot. A search dog was brought in and it found the suspect hiding in the back yard of one of the houses on the block. During his arrest, a records check revealed an outstanding New York Supreme Court warrant for assault. The owner of the house said he would aid in prosecution. The suspect was taken to Tempe City Jail and booked. Authorities in New York were notified, but they said they did not want to extradite him at this time. Compiled by State Press reporter Dan Zeiger, / ¿¡oofsports, b a d s p o r t s , B IG S P O R T S , poor s p o rts . R e a d a b o u t th e m all right h e re . . 5B5g^g5gggEZSZ3gBg=BggBi^5E!5!2E5BIZgI^3ZIg3555^gEBB55BBBBBEg35BSB5BBBB3ggBBB3BB5B53BBB5B^BBBE3EgggBEE3EgSEBBBSBBSBSBga (Hoticfcry Coffee »jrses form "every 8 to 16 weelts. For more info call S P E H 1A E N G H A U L A P € D S T G I t T O V E R B E I R R E MO A U L T R A S L E E P ■ T E Ri G 1M A R E N A N A T A N 46 Polar boss E D S T U s A G E N C A DOWN 1 Gem E V E 1 Drinking 6 Blubbers R E X 11 Nimble bout A L E R T 2 Conceit 12 Heap of C O B 3 “The Thin Dickens L E G R A M Men* actor 13 Ms. Meir J A V A E 4 Senior 14 Manana A T O P S need 5 Jack T M E N S Sprat's 15 Spring Yesterday’s Answer diet period Adams Trebek 17 “M*A*S*H” 6 Save 7 Supplier of 21 Monster’s 33 Pageant star Theseus’s crown 18 Weather home 34 Ship pole thread 23 Lady’s Word 35 Follow 8 “Stalag 20 “The King date 17“ actor 24 Noted orders 9 “Shane* 22 In the name in 37 Without star fashion repair style of 39 Damage 23 Explosive 10 New York 25 Spot stadium 41 Uninvited 27 Mark projectile picnicker 16 Sailor 26 Fiesta Twain, 18 Kismet Bowl city 42 Brewed for one 19 Emcee beverage 28 Big rigs 30 Knotts or 29 Uses, as i 8 9 1Ô i Ò effort 5 12 31 School 11 dance 14 là 32 Aware of ■1 33 John Major, 15 for one i ■ 20 18 19 34 Cut off ■ j 36 Manicure & 24 25 23 target m 26 38 Across, ■ “ on a ship 29 », 40 Begin's _ ■ Peace STPrize ■ ■ 36* 35 sharer ■ :■ 51 43 Alabama 38 39 w~ 4Tc city 4Ì 44 Singer Cara . 45 Polk's pre­ 45 * decessor 11-20 491 -1721. DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: V AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for th e three L’s, X for th e tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length an d form ation of th è words are all hints. Each day th e code letters are different, 11-20 cryptoquote $6,00 Haircut & Dry $8.50 Hawaiian Pedicure $6.00 Manicure $3.00 Eyelash Tint $3.00 Brow Wax $20.00 Facials $11.00 and up Colors $12.00 Leg W ax Permanent $20 00 and up $20.00 and up W eaves fS J S T KSuVe T U K J D T U K I T U T I All w ork perform ed by students under m e supervision of Licensed Instructors. . '- v The M emorial Union cordially invites you to attend its 37th annual H oliday Coffee. December 2 9 a,m .-ll a.m. Arizona Room M em orial Union Please join us! R N U S C D W V U O U E W L M U T W K S W K Y U K X D S U M R U U T > TeJ V e 3345 SOUTH RURAL ROAD 491,0449 ; TU.E^ n*:30-5:00 f Cb T W K S R I D I L H W V O U E W L M U Q K D J K R N U S KD R. — KC ED H W M O L R W V U E N.WTZ D V R Yesterday's Cryptoquote:THEM AN WHO ISTOO OLD TO LEARN WAS PROBABLY ALWAYS TOO OLD TO LEARN. — HENRY S. HASKINS 0 1992 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Page 7 Friday, November 20,1992 S tate P ress 1 ST)?f “1 Need a ticket out of town? C h e c k t h e S ta te P re s s C la s s ifie d s T R A V E L s e c t io n ! G rease 'n G o 's 20 pt. Valvoline Lube, Oil & Filter Service Reg. Price $21.95 Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8-6 ADO+ $1 E P A Fee Sun. 10-4 1355 S. McClintock. 1 3 5 5 S. Country Club Tempo, 894-2798 Mesa, 898-8211 You’d have to be, a Teal nerd not to read the State Press Magazine! i i i i i Good only with coupon. Not valjdjwMi any other offer. âm es WAREHOUSE PRESENTS HAPPY HOUR! ☆ Every Weekday! ☆ 1 0 :3 0 a m -7 p m ASU'S SELF-STUDY FOR ACCREDITATION REVIEW A S U is currently preparing fo r its 10-year reaccreditation review b y the N o rth Central Association o f Colleges and Schools. T he N C A Self-Study Steering Com m ittee in vites faculty, staff and students to com m ent on the Executive Sum m ary and Self-Study Report. Send com m ents to Brian, Foster, G raduate College (M ail Code: A S U em ployees w ill receive the executive sum m ary in cam pus m ail; students can get copies at A S A S U . The fu ll report is available for review at: $ 2 .8 2 P itc h e rs ^ 7 5 * D ra fts & H* ☆ 8 :30 pm 1003). Hayden, Noble, Law and Architecture Libraries All dean's offices. The Academic Senate The Committee on Academic Professionals The Classified Staff Committee Alumni Association, ASASU T he Steering Com m ittee welcom es the opportunity to discuss the docum ent at the open forum s at the follow ing tim es and places: 130 E . U n i v e r s i t y • 966-7788 N ov. 23 N ov. 30 Dec. 1 230-4:00 Mohave/MU 12.-00-1:30 La Paz/MU 530-730 Havasupai/MU F ree h »I w» H a t o r T - S h ir t W ith $ 2 5 P u r c h a s e o f C h a m p io n M e rc h a n d is e W hile Supplies Last SunOevil L o c a te d I n t h e C o rn e rto n e ■ -o cc H o u rs: M -S 1 0 -9 Conferitone • Rural & University • 8 X9*1743 S u n ix -6 cc N A H Ia M fc s HÉÜW . Cornerstone University Page 8 Friday, November 20, 1992 S tate P ress Poisoning o f birds probed G LENDALE (AP) — A uthorities are investigating the apparent poisohing of hundreds of mourning doves, a protected species, in the vicinity of a dairy plagued by nuisance birds. The investigation was launched last week by the Arizona Game and Fish Department. Also involved in the investigation are the state Agriculture Department and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Conrad Gingg, owner of the Triple G Dairy, said he asked Animal Damage Control, a division o f the state A griculture D epartm ent, for help in getting rid of nuisance birds. An Animal Damage Control employee spread a poison called Starlicide, Gingg said. ‘The birds were eating grain of my cattle,’’ Gingg said, “There were literally thousands of them, mainly starlings and blackbirds.” ■ Ray Kohls, law-enforcem ent program m anager for A rizona Gam e and Fish, estimated as many, as a thousand mourning doves have died. “This is not supposed to happen,” he said. Area, residents complained to authorities about dead birds. “W e’ve been in te a rs,” said resident Cynthia Halsey. “It’s sickening to watch these birds, dead and dying and having to pick them up and dispose of them. They’ve been coming to our yard for seven years.” The mourning dove, said Denise Baker of the U.S,- Fish and W ildlife Service, is a protected species to the extent that it can be killed only during hunting season. Agency officials and Gingg said there is no chance any poison could end up in milk because it was spread where cows couldn’t get it. / 1; 1 i ?i a1 ¡1 I SüiCinto the. (and 1 o f dreams zoith ' \Jiayden’s fferry %evit%o D arryl W ébb/State P re ss y JoDina, 52-year-old lead singer for the group One Foot in the Gravë, sings “I’ve Fallen and I Can’t Get Up" Thursday afternoon in the MU Programming Lounge. C o m fo r t & Joy GRAHAM GREENE IS BRILLIANT!" The giftthat turnsagood Hoiidayintoagreat one. The OriginalBirkenstock* Contoured Footbed provides firm support that feels wonderful - and & K it m m té z s k (800) 525-08 ÑORÍHtRU ARTS IN UR W N M ÍN 1 O P E N S FRIDA Y! VALLEYART THEATRE Call F o r S h o w tim e s 5 0 9 S . M il l • 8 2 9 - 6 0 6 8 the warm th o f thè southw est & coaster with THE SHOE MILL every pair! Where Arizona Goes For Comfort » ___ I 398S.MID#100• Tempe•966-3139 ? Nfrlto tit It/Ut/T to ôunio und wml B E S T LE T T E R TO SAN TA C O N T E S T •All you have to do is write a letter to Santa, submit it to the State Press informa­ tion desk located in the north basement of Matthews Center and you could be a winner! Please include your name, address and phone number on your entry. •Entries will be judged on originality and creativity. Winning letters and honorable mentions will be published in the December 8 issue of the State Press Holiday Gift Guide! •Entry deadline is Tuesday, December 1, noon. •First, second and third place winners will receive prizes from: CAM PUSl C o rn er, olfege A ve. - Next lo College Street Deli • Phone: 967-4049 Oam10:30pm: Fri. 7:30am-Midnight; Sal. Sam-Midnight; Sun. Itam-10:30pm Q U E S T IO N S ? C A L L J A C K IE E L D R ID G E 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 $25 GIFT CERTIFICATE $50 GIFT CERTIFICATE $25 GIFT CIRTIFICATE A L L C O N T E S T A N fS WILL R ECEIVE A FR E E STATE P R E S S P ER SO N A L AD. S ta te P ress Friday, November 20,1992 ASASU, race organizers urge students to join AIDS benefit 122 e 9 A m ou th fu ll B y C h r is D r is c o l l S t a t e P r ess Associated Students of ASU and the organizers of the Tempe Grand Prix bicycle races have, issued a challenge to the University community: Help sponsor the annual ¿vent, raise money for the Arizona Aids Project and maybe win a mountain bike. The fund-raising activity is a part of ASU bike awareness week, said Skip Schrader, ASASU campus affairs vice president. O ther bicycling-related activities in the last week included ASASU Bike Co=op tables on Cady Mall and an ASU Department of Public Safety booth in the MU registering students’ bikes. “1 hope (local companies) will match the contributions (from the ASU community). There are plenty of major corporations, in Tempe that I think will be interested,” said Tom Conner, one of the Grand Prix organizers and a member of the Governor’s Taskforce on Bicycling. “A big part of the money will go towards the (Grand Prix) prize money, plus the cost of things for staging, fencing and police,” Connor said. The group will donate 10 percent of the funds to the Arizona AIDS Project, a local HIV/AIDS service committee. The group is soliciting donations a $1 contribution Will get a student one chance in a drawing for a mountain bike. The drawing for the bike is 1:30 p.m. Dec. 4. Students can enter the drawing — and help finance the Tempe Grand Prix — at the ASASU Bicycle Co-op or in the student government offices on the third floor of the MU. Domenic Malvestuto, owner of Domenic’s Cycling and a member of the committee that organizes the race, said the Tempe Grand Prix has been the biggest one-day event in Arizona. » This year’s race, scheduled for March 21, 1993, will take place in downtown Tempe. • Connor said organizers hope to raise $10,000 from students. “We’re hoping the focus is not on the chance that they can win the bike,” he said. “That?s die encouragement obviously {or the student to participate. I’m a big believer that a lot of people doing a little bit can have a big impact, To me the focus should be on the student body coming together to raise the $10,000 so that they can be a title sponsor and get the recognition that comes'along with that.” The race drew a crowd of 7,000 last March, Malvestuto said. He hopes it will be even bigger this year. The races will run throughout the day of March 21, with both professional and amateur contestants. Last March, 350 racers competed. Connor said bicycling for sport, recreation and commuting to work and school1 has grown quickly. There were 1.5 million commuter bicyclers in 1983, he added. There were 4 million by the end of 1991. A ssociated Press photo Stuntman Jim Mouth uses a fan to blow the smoke away as he puffs on 154 cigarettes tn Los Angeles Thursday. He took advantage of the Great American Smokeout to show that smoking is ugly and hazardous to your health. P re -L a w D a y "A t m o s p h e r e a n d d e l i c i o u s f o o d t o o . BACKSTAG E RESTAURANT in Scottsdale Mall So you 're tired o f the sam e o ld sam e o ld . Burgers and fries. Pizza an d beer. You w a n t a fu n place to g o t o .... som eI th in g w ith a little am biance. Som e p lace ju st a little d iffe re n t. . . a "fin d." Perhaps a place w here you co u ld en joy excellen t N o v e m b e r 20 | fo o d an d d rin k in a relaxed, co m fortable b u t h ip atm osphere? Backstage Restaurant and Bar in th e Scottsdale M a ll is th e place. Take a little h ike u p Scottsdale Road an d enjoy a | lu n ch o r d in n er in a restaurant th a t offers sim ple elegance in a back stage settin g as w e ll as a m isted p a tio th a t offers post­ T a lk T o R e p r e s e n t a t iv e s card b lu e sky view s a t lu n ch tim e and co o l desert breezes in th e evenings. It's fresh and fu n and alive. Live m usic on the w eekends m akes it a fa vo rite even in g stop fo r a few drinks an d som e co lle g e vernacular. F ro m The foo d ? O u tstan din g . A b so lu te ly ou tstan ding . N o t o n ly is th e fo o d deliciou s, it's prepared so a rtistica lly th at it's 5 0 La w S c h o o ls ! I alm ost crim in al to alter its desig n . B ut th is th o u g h t q u ick ly fades w ith th e first bite! I'm a C aju n ch icken C aesar salad fa n a tic. I alw ays use them as barom eters o f cu lin a ry excellen ce , I m ust s a y ,; Ventana Room, Memorial Union I0 i.n i. -'2 p.m. I Backstage's is the m ost savory and d iv in e C ajun ch icken Caesar salad I've every had! As a m atter o f fact, it puts m y once alt tim e favo rite Pischke's in second place! I n ever dream ed there w as a better salad than Pischke's, b u t Backstage d e fin ite ly is | th e w inner. M y d in in g partn er had a bow l o f th e hom em ade soup an d a sm all salad. Professing to eat soup o n ly w hen there's a I fo o t o f snow on the grou n d o r w hen h er m oth er m akes her, she w as pleasantly surprised h ow deliciou s the sou p w a s . . . she a ctu a lly contem plated a second bow l! I She had to save a little room for the beautiI fully designed lattice-patterned carrots and | perfectly seasoned dressing that decorated | her salad, which she said was also divine. ----- EO T PON W e fin ish e d o u r m eals w ith sm iles I everyth ing on th e m enu. I'm sure th a t a ll (COUPON) I you have to d o is v is it Backstage fo r lu nch I o r d in n er an d y o u 'll be talkin g abou t com - RESTAURAMI & BAR B u y o n e d in n e r e n tr e e a n d 1 ing back, to o . O n e last th in g : n o t o n ly is a 7 3 7 3 S c o t t s d a le M a l l g e t th e s e c o n d o f e q u a l o r I Upstairs N ext to Scottsdale G rab a date o r a h andful o f frie n d s , . ■ m m -ljew F o ae r ’Tl 'L h eo W ■C onEov 1«*« l a n d e a t a t B ackstage to d a y . I ts lo ca te d . I upstairs in the trendy Scottsdale M a ll, n ext I I to th e Scottsdale C en ter fo r th e Arts. 1025 E. Broadway 829-6666 ¡¡CE” ! S 1 SIBE (2DIIm R l an d talked abou t co m in g back an d try in g great p lace to eat, it's affordable too! UNIVERSITY DOLLAR THEATRES " - I— 820 S. M ill / SW side of M ill at Unwersity...Mon-Sat 11am-9pm. ..Dine in or cany out 5AIGON \ 1EALTHY DELI A t Tl ILNTIC \ il TNAMI SI Cl IVINI le s s e r v a lu e a t h a lf p r ic e . YUMmr FM> YOU, TOwnr, Fragrant Jasmine Rice *Organic Brown Rice Crisped Spring Rods • Savory Saigon Subs • Delicate Fried Rice Vietnamese Espresso *Jasmine Tea • Fresh Honey-Lemonade C om e pick it up à t thè Information desk in die basement of Matthews Gemer, 8 a.m.^5p.m. 1 A L L S E A T S -A L L T IM E S M EM O R IA L UNION b r lä g e t fo n d a C a m p b e ll s c o t t k y r a S e d g w ic k m a tt d i l l o n Coupon good Sun.-Thurs. Not valid with any other offer. I COUPON ___I Interested in advertis­ ing on this page? C all Jinjer Brody 965-6555 THE s in g le s W ARNERBROS,f Choice Ingredients • Homemade Goodness Rice, Noodle, & Vegetarian Specialities NMW SMV*I* MUirr* Miss and issue of thè State Press this semester? 1pO-»3| BRIDGET FONDA MAY WEST HOME,MADEFOOD OAliySPECIALS STANGAI S3.99 OPEN7DAYSWK. 24 HRS. ADAY SINGLEWHITE FEMALE o Z o H b fPd n m (OWN n «JS® ■ T O M HANKS i B r a æcosiÆSPFMcqjNtacK« : IJMVÎRSÜV , 966-2761 T H E K ID i OF ASU R ite # DID YOU KNOW THAT TACO BELL IS LOCATED IN THE GRAND MARKET PLACE OF THE MU? |HAVE LUNCH WITH US | TODAY! Page 10 Sta te P ress Friday, November 20, 1992 STv A SU vs. IIoffA the For nearly a century, two Arizona collegiate football teams have battled fo r the bragging rights to the state *s most heated and divided rivalry. Come Saturday afternoon, ASU and UofA will meet yet again in this intense war o f attrition. k J o r r y Wilbur, but Bruce Snyder doesn’t like your kind. Don’t take it personally; he isn’t fond of any of your kind. Snyder despises cats. In fact, the first-year ASU coach feels a special, deep-down animosity for the feline species. “I hate cats,” Snyder said emphatically. “I think they are selfish, aloof and grumpy unless they’re hungry and they want you to feed them. They have no redeeming value.” Snyder said his daughter has a cat named Oliver North (insert own sneaky joke here) and they call it Ollie for short. But even with the cute namesake, Snyder doesn’t like it. A t all. “I have never fed it or cleaned up after it and I never will,” he said. “I wish it would run away.” This feline factoid might not be that important were it not game week. Oh sure, there have been 10 football games so far this season, but there is still the one big game yet to be played. The man leading ASU’s troops knows this fact as well. “I think it’s time to get ready for the big game,” Snyder said. “Everybody has been talking about it since the day I got here. . “They say we’ve got 10 scrimmages and one really serious game, and that one is coming up.” Call it survival of the fittest. For more than 100 years now, there has been some form of war raging and its sole participants have been located less than 100 miles from each other. T h e g ra n d fin ale It is the grand finale of every ASU-UofA season —• the intrastate rivalry that dates back to 1899. Now that, my friends, is a long-fought war. And while the Wildcats may lead in the overall standings, the war is nonetheless heated. ‘There is no question in my mind that the rivalry runs as deep, if not deeper, than ever,” said ASU Director of Athletics Charles S. Harris. “It’s a competitive rivalry as opposed to a Hostile rivalry, and I think it’s healthy,” Snyder may not know about the health part, but he does know that the folks around here get into a certain mind set come the week of the game. “I have heard a great deal about this week and about this particular game,” Snyder said. “And I am looking forward to coach in it and to be a participant.” And for Snyder, who has dedicated 30 years of his life to football, he has seen some intense rivalries. He has been through the Oregon-Oregon State quackaro, the USC-UCLA bitter battle, the Utah-Utah State upsurge and of course the Cal-Stanford stuffing serenade. “There is nothing like the last game of the season,” he said. “And from what I have heard about this (ASU-UofA rivalry) is that it is a fierce and competitive and dominating week of football. So I am looking forward to it.” Snyder isn’t the only one who has a long history in rivalries. Harris, too, has seen a few bitter battles in his athletic career. Harris said he has fond memories of his days at Virginia and later onto the Big Ten conference, where he witnessed feuds between Michigan and Michigan State, and he added that the Ivy League contests were some of the best games “It was those rivalries or those debates on Monday after the game that made all marriages fall apart and for businesses to break up,” he said. Yet Harris said there is something special about this ASUUofA game. “This one has some very, very unique features about it,” Harris said. “I think part of it has to do with the history of the state itself.” The eight-year Sun Devil athletic director might be on to something. In the history of Arizona, both the Valley and Tucson have been competitive and conversely combative. Some of the tensions date back to the Civil War days when Tucson was with the Confederates while the northern tier of the state was staunchly Unionized. Eventually the South would cave in to the North, but Tucson, once capital of Arizona, never forgot its defeat. Then when the universities got themselves going, it was UofA that took control of the higher educational role for Arizona. And while people were going to Tucson for an education, many teachers w ere being trained at the The intensity o f the day is different than any other g a m e day. It feels p e a t. i f ■— W ildcat coach &*ch Tomey 1982 1983 S*U* DcPfflls lo s e .2 8 - 1 8 S iiiD e v ib lose 1 7 -1 5 predecessor school to ASU. Not exactly a fertile ground for athletics. “All the rivalries I have been around have been intense,” Harris said. “But I haven’t been around one this intense, and I think part of that is the way that our state is configured.” Harris said back in the days (1962-77) when the two schools belonged to the Western Athletic Conference, the game was for all the marbles and it was important in the WAC sense — it had other significance. “I think, bluntly, for a long time,” Harris said, “when we were both in the WAC, the given was these two schools were going to be the best two in the WAC. “So then it really boiled down to singular bragging rights because it wasn’t like winning the WAC put you in the Róse Bowl. With something like that it is not a five- or 10-year issue — it is a 30- or 40-year issue.” T h e series i Thi brt SU The Sun Devils (5-5, 3-4 Pac-10) go into Saturday’s game do in Tucson trailing in the series, 37-27-1. And while ASU leads m; the series 15-12-1 at Sun Devil Stadium, it is only 12-25 in Tucson at Arizona Stadium. The Sun Devils have not won di down south since 1980. w From 1965-81, ASU was the team that dominated this M affair. It won 15 o f 17 during that tim e span and more impressive is the record the Sun Devils have under 21-year Coach Frank Kush. In his 21 attempts from 1958-78, his ASU teams beat the Wildcats 16 times. There is no question And while ASU is not in any Rose Bowl contention this year, there have been many times mind that the rivai in the past where UofA has knocked the Sun Devils right out of a bowl berth. runs deeper thane However, ASU has slid into the depths of — A S U A tM etic th mediocrity for the past decade, dropping five straight from 1982-86. ASU tied UofA in 1987. Charles i But for the next two years the Sun Devils lost. It. was nine, long years of a Wildcat steak. 9H B H “There’s no difference whether you go down there or they come up here,” said Sun Devil wide receiver Eric Guliford. “It’s a new game. It’s college football rising to a new level.” For Wildcat coach Dick Tomey, Saturday’s game will ha mark the third ASU coach he has faced with this Sun Devil (I team and he recalled some thoughts former ASU coach John pi Cooper told him. ce “When I first got here,” Tomey said, “Cooper told me, ‘Now are you sure you know what you’re getting into?’ 1 m thought I did, but I really didn't. rij “The intensity of the day is different than any other game day. It feels great. It’s exciting for the players, the coaches, fans — everybody.” S tre a k b u s te r But ah, how sweet the fruits of revenge, can be. In 1991, in front of a packed Sun Devil Stadium, ASU stomped the Wildcats 37-14. The victory was led by Tucson native Mario Bates. The ASU tailback ran it up on UofA totaling 169 yards. The Sun Devil defense also limited the Wildcats to 155 yards. W ith the win, the Sun Devils got possession of the heralded Big Game Trophy. Actually it is a (gulp!) sculpture that was designed by (another gulp) world-renowned artist Ben Goo. However, for those who have seen this work of art, it m pf to to sa Si th al oi K P a g e 11 Friday, November 20,1992 S tate P ress RESS S Ü P , Stadium » P lÜ M B ü iiB a a a s shedding 37-14 ASU victory over S ie of the most memoi able games W hat m a ||p iis $ ||p y e & r streak-ending w in all the m ore special was th a tis w as t h e n ^ ^ H H w U W ' Marmie’s final win with the Sun Devil | | B i . Achieving a recoii^H iM |l^ p M w 4 ..* with ASU, M armie .was fired only four d a v s .a iilil^ ^ K l W^PBBWpc' - . - .*kK9 j f j w i p B W p 'm § |:"ITa really proud o f the w # that pur players went oat ‘ and played the gam e," M arm ie said after the victory "T E i^|*ayed the w a y lt was supposed to h e played.! *.... The game was a true team effort and yet still some Sun D e v ilsste d out as key figures fs -i ASU tlttlback M ario Bates, a Tucson native, shone in last year’s win. He racked up 161 yards cm 3$ carries, :.Another crucial cog in ASU’s machine was wide receiver Eric Guiiford. He took a punt return and broke loose for a 68-yatd touchdown score. „ *\’ Guiiford said affet die game that he saw daylight and i proceeded to score. < / •* ' It is ironic, perhaps, to think o f seeing daylight when such dark darns were looming. B ut Marmie wm always ?M remembered ^ the coach who broke The Speak; •" for se,” nd I two the the we vere ghts Lose /ear Irw in D aughtery/State P re ss The ASU-UofA game is always a hard-fought contest. In the photo above, Wildcat Billy Johnson (38) is brought down by ASU’s Brat Walleretsdt and others. The two teams meet Saturday in Tucson's Arizona Stadium. As always, a capacity crowd Is expected. ame :ads 5 in doesn’t matter. The point is that we got it after the win and no matter what it looks like aesthetically, ASU is proud. In fact, more so than UofA. The Sun Devils actually « 'O n display the trophy in the football office, while down in Wildcat land they said they stored it in the basement of this McKale Center. (Ore : But the emotionally gut-draining victory had its ironic /ear twists. Even though former ASU coach Larry Marmie had a record of 24-21 -1, it wasn ’t good / ‘ivV.CjinJ' ■ enough and he was fired. “I d o n ’t think this y ear’s game has ire is no question in my anything to do with last year’s,” Tomey said. “I mind that the rivalry think obviously, we were beaten by a better team and we understand that ASU deserved to ms...deeper than ever. win. “Obviously, we remember what happened - A S U A th letic D irector last year, but once the game starts it’s just a Charles H arris matter of going out and playing.” Tomey remembers a certain feeling he and his Wildcat team felt during that 1991 game. “I remember them running around on the field having fun at our expense,” he said. “It was a sick feeling, but they deserved it.” While those numbers tell the rivalry’s adult life, it did will have an interesting childhood as well. For the first 50 years evil (1889-1950) UofA was the larger school and proceeded to lohn push the puny Arizona College around. In that first half century, the Wildcats took a 20-4 advantage. me, “I think these are two schools that have grown a lot and ?’ I matured a lot, and so now it boils down to the bragging rights,” Harris said' ame hes, T h e sen io rs Another factor that distinguishes this game and, in turn, makes it all the more emotional, is that it is played at the end of the season, and therefore it is often the seniors’ last game together. These players have often spent four or five years together battling through thick and thin and it goes without saying the feelings run deep. Even minutes after last week’s 28-12 win over Gal, many. Sun Devils were thinking of the last game — the Big Game. “We started hugging and there was some tears shed in there,” said ASU’s Guiiford after the Cal game. “I think we all realized after the UofA game it’s going to be time to go our own ways. “It’s sad. I really don’t have any words to describe it. Knowing that it’s over and there is nothing we can do about 1, in the The Sun the ture rtist t, it it. * Well, there is one thing. - Because most rivalries áre scheduled and are played as the very last games of the season, a different edge is added to it. “I think the (ASU-UofA) rivalry is real intense,” Tomey said. “But I think the Pac10 is just full of season-ending rivalries, which is really a great thing for all the teams in the league. “It just means regardless of what kind of season you are having, you have got a game at the end of the year that’s going to get the juices flowing.” , It’s a s m a ll w o r ld <; Sane P r é « Photo While Arizona is relatively large in Former ASU football coach Lanry,Marmie was fired only four days after acreage, the choices for pursuing a higher fast year's nine-year streak ending victory over UofA. But Marmie will education ate limited. And realistically for always to remembered as the coach who broke The Steak. an athlete, the choices are further limited. If a serious athlete wants to play college sports, it is obviously ASU or UofA. It’s not that NAU isn’t a great school, but it is not in the same league as its two neighbors when it comes to athletics. “If you get recruited in-state you either go here (ASU) or you go there (UofA),” Guiiford said. “You lose a lot of friends and you gain a lot, but at the same time animosity is felt in a big way.” Tomey also sees the demographics playing a role in this heated ASU-UofA game. “ We are a small state in terms of population and we have got a lot of people who went to both schools,” he said. “We have fathers, mothers, daughters and sons who go to the opposite schools. There is just a strong feeling for this game.” The game is like an ASU, or UofA, fan’s drug. It is the serum that relives the magic spell that lasts for one week in November. It is the fix. And only after the game can the victor revel in the goodness of the intoxication that the win provides. Even though it only lasts a fleeting moment, it is nonetheless fulfilling. And come next year, the emotions will begin to soar as Arizona once again prepares for The Game between ASU and UofA. “It’s infectious,” Harris said. “In a way it’s good because it gives us all a rallying point and that’s important. “That’s what sports is.” 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 Sun Devils Sun Devils lose Sun Devils lose Sun Devils lose Sun Devils win Sun Devils 2 8 -1 8 2 8 -1 0 2 1 -1 7 3 7 -1 7 « . . ; . They say we’ve got 10 scrimmages and | |j¡ | g one really serious game. —- Sun D evil coach Bruce Snyder S ta te P re ss Information * 965-7572 V id e o __________ C o n t in u e d f r o m f age 1. “I think that not having the instructor right there to solidify the information given affects the quality of education,” said sociology major Scott Payne, who is taking Botany 394 on television. “I don’t think it (a televised course) allows you to grasp all the information you really need. The classroom setting forces you to concentrate on the material being presented. At home, there are a lot of distractions.” Charles Corbin, who will be teaching a televised Fitness for Living course next semester, said he was unaware that his class would be shown in residence halls. “Cam pus is easily accessible for students living in residence balls, and they can come to campus for class for the immediate feedback, that is so important,” Corbin said. “The reason 1 teach televised courses is to reach those who wouldn’t otherwise come to the campus to learn.” ASU President Lattie Coor said he doesn’t think televised courses will have a negative impact on quality of education. “As a modern institution, 1 think it is necessary that-we feature the multiple ways to provide instruction,” he said; Elizabeth Craft, director of Distance Learning Technology that provides the televised courses, said televised classes expand the number of people able to take a college course. “Students will get the same quality of education,” Craft said. “Having televised courses is simply a way of serving a lot more students, and students really like it.” : The courses are listed in the back of the ASU Bulletin and students can sign up for them just like any other course. Craft said. ■■ ■^ ' - .. The televised classes ASU offers are Introduction-to Parenting, Modem American Economy, Personal Growth in Human Relationships, Political Statistics, the Use of Research Libraries, Women in Contem porary Society, Domestic Violence, American Indian Justice, Fitness for Living, Geography of Middle East and North Africa, the History of Arizona and Home Gardening. Craft said most courses are interactive, which means a student can call and have questions answered during class and it will be heard by everyone watching. Three of the courses offered next semester are “canned courses,” which have been prerecorded, so students must come in and speak to their professor if they have a question. The University saves money by sending televised courses to residence halls because more students can sign up for televised classes than the regular on-campus courses, Craft said. Corbin said he sees some advantages to interactive televised courses,- but not in expanding the courses to the residence halls. “These courses allow us to take the University to the people, people who couldn’t come to the University otherwise, like people who lived far away or non-traditional students,” Corbin said. “With the interactive courses, students can still receive immediate feedback. “It is exciting to know we are on the frontier of education.” R eg en ts________ C o n t in u e d St a t e P ress Friday, November 20,1992 Page 12 f r o m pa g e : 1. they feel an observatory would detract from the sacredness of the “spiritual crown dancers” and the holy ground ceremonies. “There are 22 other sites that have been identified, and Mt. Graham ranked 14th,” Harney said. Harney made a strong plea to individual board members to visit the tribe and talk to tribal leaders. ‘That is the only way you will gain a true understanding of the significance of the land to the tribe’s culture, heritage and future existence,” Harney added. Echoing the concerns of the Apache tribe, a group of UofA students, adorned with UofA President Emanuel Pacheco masks that read “Duke 92 Pacheco”, protested the funding UofA allocated to the project and its disregard for the habitat of the red squirrel. Steve Emerine, a member of the Mt. Graham steering committee, said he hopes a compromise can be reached with the San Carlos tribe. “I understand their concerns over the land, but the tribe is 20 miles from Mt. Graham,” Emerine said. “I hope we are able to work out some accom m odation where the Native Americans can practice their religious ceremonies and the observatory can be built.” The Native Americans also said they were offended by the name, “Columbus Project,” that was chosen for one of the telescopes. However, Emerine said the name “Columbus Project” was chosen because of the scheduled completion date of the telescope and the link the observatory has with Ohio State University. “At the time the name was determined, it wasn’t politically" incorrect,” Emerine said. “We thought the telescope would be finished by 1992, which would mark the quineentenary'of Columbus’ discovery of America, so at the time it seemed logical. “Due to the current sentiment, I expect some decision to be made about the name of the telescope.” Emerine said the $200 million project was approved in stages and only two telescopes are currently completed. When the first phase of the project is complete, the mountain will have three telescopes and an access road. The first phase of construction would cover 8.6 acres of the 24 acres allotted for the project. Before the second phase is constructed, the U.S. Fish and • Wildlife service is required to study the area and determine whether construction has damaged the habitat of surrounding animals. Despite concerns surrounding the Mt. Graham observatory, ASU President Lattie Coor found room to praise ASU for graduating three leaders of Arizona Indian tribes. Coor said that Hopi Tribal Chairman Vernon M asayesva, Tohono O’odham Nation Chairman Josiah Moore and Navajo Nation President Peterson Zah received distinguished service awards from ASU during Homecoming ceremonies last weekend. “They all entered the University at a time when it was not easy,” Coor said. “The fact that they got an education equips them with the ability to lead their tribes.” FLY SAWYER AVIATION SKY HARBOR INT'L AIRPORT ^OMLOIMi, ¡ » .© T liTMÂMIMÎ • A S U D IS C O U N T • FAA APPR O VED PART 141 SCUO O L • M A JO R TO A A IR P O R T E X P E R IE N C E 24 H R S . A DAY, 7 D A Y ^ W É fk L-TJM E IN S TR U C TO R ^ CENTERPIECES! MAKE YOURTHANKSGIVING TABLE COMPLETE! Arrangements start at $15 or send your family our FTD Autumn Harvest Bouquet. 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CONCERTS SU N DAY, N O V E M B E R 29 DAN HICKS A N D THE ACOUSTIC WARRIORS SUNDAY, DECEMBER 13 JOHN STEWART Tickets Available at Dillard's Box Office 921-7456 5th & Mitt • Tem pe 2602 East Sky Harbor Blvd. • Phoenix, AZ 85034 P age 13 Friday, November 20,1992 S t a t e P ress Delivereddailytoyour nearest newstand CARTER'S P ro te st C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1. major changés,” he said. “That’s the reason a lot of blacks and minorities are frustrated with the system.” Fannie! said that during the receptions “many promises are made, but little progress is realized.” However, another black, community leader, Clinton Strickland, principal of Trevor Brown High S chool, said m eetings with administrators are beneficial because they bring different segments of the population together to exchange ideas. “They are an effective way to update the community,” he said. “It gives (participants) an opportunity to highlight what’s already been done and feature what needs to be done in the future.” Strickland said that by bringing members of the African-American ,population together, “you address the segment of the population Who can best tell you about the issues.” “(ASU administrators) did a superb job of including students,” Strickland added. “The students gave very orderly presentations and were clear With viewpoints.” BASC Vice President Jonathan Scaggs said studehts from his organization decided to interrupt the meeting in order to raise issues facing the University’s African-American population. Scaggs said the BASC students’ concerns included the retention and recruitment of ASU m inority students and faculty and the development of an African studies department and courses. According to Scaggs, none of the members of the BASC knew about W ednesday’s reception beforehand. “It’s really strange that you invite black leaders to campus to learn about the concerns of the campus environment, but you don’t invite the black campus leaders,” he said. Art Carter, ASU dean of student life, said event organizers were able to accommodate the BASC students after about a 20-minute delay. Carter said the University might look into conducting “Town Hall” type forums that would include more students. But Scaggs pointed out potential problems in a “Town Hall” setting. “In terms of productivity, you increase problems by increasing participants,” he .said. “There are possibly better ways to be more productive.” Scaggs said he thinks W ednesday’s m eeting would have been b etter if the adm inistration had asked b lack student leaders to take part. Funds C o n t in u e d fr o m pa g e 1. Regents President Andy Hurwitz said the amount requested for the universities is much, needed, and the state should realize th a t funding universities is. an investment in the sta te .. ;■ a “We are going to lobby our hardest in the Legislature to get all of our request,” Hurwitz said. “I am in the opinion that we have no RUFF H E W N more fat to cut,” Hurwitz said. He added that the universities are below the average of req uested budget increases by all state agencies, “The problem is not a one-year issue,” HurWitz said. “ If th e state is not in the condition to finance the University we can hold our breath and put it off to the next year. Keep up with the aetion! ¿ f e u e , ¿ fe b /n e e tô a s t (ì$ fe a /t H EY ASU! HELP SP O N SO R "hm PE I GRAND PRIX M ARCH 21, 1993 ARIZONA'S LAR G EST ONE-DAY BICYCLE ROAD RACE EVENT NORTH CAROLINA ST. UNIU. O F NORTH CAR. OHIO STATE MICHIGAN UNIU. KANSAS UNIU. FLORIDA FLORIDA STATE UNIU. OF SOUTH F L UNIU. OF GEORGIA PEN NST. ASU s tu d e n ts c a n win « ^ ^ r n a ^ n t a i n bike / ì ? » p a n t a i n b ik e ^ C $ '7 9 D 0 3 m o À ta in bijgÉ / $ ! 0 ,0 0 0 E a c h $ t cld m tio n i n t e r s you in t i e draw ing,lor t i e BJKE! | Portion of the d^ation&presénted .to ArizöW AtÖ^^roj ect $ 1O,QQ0 by November 30th MICHIGAN ST. UNIU. OF ILLINOIS UNIU. TEXAS UNIU. OF WISCONSIN TEXAS A & r M CALIF. BERKELEY ■ » 9 2 1 -FAST J J P I f Guwnvflin 'm R T Y m ar'j I MEDIUMONE ITEM PIZZA 1 X-LG. PIZZA WITH I AND ONE SODA I TWO ITEMS AND i 1 I ^ FOUR SODAS ONLY$ 5 * 1 6 ONLY $ Z * 9 9 N AM E: PH O N E: T U R N IN (M H JP O l'fA N D $ « X 3 N Â T IO N l Dom enici»Cycling, Ehrbafdt's Schwinn,^ Bicycle B a ^ ^ iÉ R i^ ^ e e t Dèli òr on cs Bicycle R epair C O -O P . Deadline is Novem ber 30th^ NOW PROUDLY SERUING THESE R N E UNIUERSITIES AND THEIR SURROUNDING COMMUNITIES! r ^ I I ! , I D O R M S P E O ftL I~ C U M B Y M A D N E SS, , ^ $i 0FFQuaALR£A0yyxy | . 20 2OttGiANTPIZZA "GIANT PIZZA ..!.1 I PRICE WHEN GETTING GUMBYS . WITH ONE ITEM PIZZA DELIVERED TO YOUR B i DORMJB00W I i«cy$ [GOODWED.-SUN.J H 9*99 1 ■ CALL AND ASK ABOUT OUR OTHER GREAT SPECIALS Comics Friday, November 20, 1992 P age 14 Calvin Hobbes and HELLO? ... NO, MN MOM O H t COME TO TUE WOKE RIGHT NOW. THE FAR SIDE by B ill W atterson 50ÇE, I'D BE GLAD TO TMCE k MESSAGE. \ - 'M TOO WRITE IT DOWN, DRWE AT CNER HERE, m WE PAVE BOCKS, AND I'LL OWE IT TO HER TOE NEXT TAME I Ä HER. By GARY LARSON HE WVIST NOT HATE WILNTED TO TALK TO MOM OERX BAD. t-------------V “ l,. *9AA\> D o o n e sb u ry I'M SO RRY, BO O PS/E, Z O N K E R ISO U T O F THE Q U EST IO N .' / R R .U H A T CHOICE DO H E H A V E? BY GARRY TRUDEAU HUE BO TH H A V E TO W O R K, AN D W E H A V EN T ' BEEN A B IE TO H N D AFFO RD ABLE, R EL IA B L E C H IL P C A R E A N YW H ER E! R E L IA B L E ? R a .R T L B A S T YOU T H IN K H E W O N T ' TAKE SA M CN AM O U R-] 70N K ER C YC LE!AT LEAST] H E U S E S H IS HEAP! \ HOW ABO U T T H IS O N E ? TV- V V N O TBW ENO UGH! %"’L ? - M f Killer bees are generally described as starting out as larvae delinquents. PEO PLE «. LOS ANGELES (A P )L - Elvis Presley’s grandson finally has a name: Benjamin Storm Kcough. The baby was bom Oct. 21 to Lisa Marie Presley and her husband, musician Danny Keough, but publicist Paul Bloch said.Thursday they hadn’t decided on a name until now. The couple’s first child, Danielle, is 3 and a half. GREENWICH, Conn. (AP) — Gene W ilder said he’s looking for “a little peace of mind” by trying to establish a NeW York City support center for cancer patients. The center, to be called Gilda’s Club, was a dream of his laté wife; Gilda Radner. She died of ovarian cáncer in 1989 at age 42. Wilder, who lives in Stamford, and his wife, Karen, visited Tuesday with a group of supporters of the project at the G reenw ich hom e o f Andy G ordon, a m em ber o f a development committee working on the center. “ What I’m doing — this is peanuts,” Wilder said. “This is popcorn, so I can have a little peace of mind.” Wilder has helped raise $5 million for the center. TUSTIN, Calif. (AP) — Rodney King fold high school students during a rare public appearance that he would never forgive the police officers who beat him. “No. There won’t be any forgiveness,” he told about 100 people Wednesday during an unscheduled appearance at Tustin High School. King said the beating, videotaped from an apartment balcony, left him knowing how slaves must have felt. “1 could imagine what the slaves went through — to be stripped of your dignity,” he said. Four white police officers were acquitted in April on nearly all state charges in the beating March 3, 1991, after a car chase. King, who is black, said of the acquittals: “It put us back almost 200 years.” Three days of deadly rioting broke out after the officers were acquitted. They face trial Feb. 2 on federal charges of violating King’s civil rights. “Fbr the decency and humanity of all of uS, we can’t just let them get away with it like that,” King said. “I mean, you put street criminals in jail. These thug police officers ought to be held responsible for their action.” LOS ANGELES (AP) — Barbra Streisand urged fellow entertainers to boycott Colorado because of a new anti­ homosexual rights amendment to the state’s constitution. “There are plenty of us who love the mountains and rivers of that truly beautiful state, but we must now say clearly that the moral climate there is no longer acceptable, and if we’re asked to, we must refuse to play where they discriminate,” she said Wednesday night at a gala AIDS benefit. Liza Minnelli, Shirley MacLaine, Elton John, Billy Joel and his wife, Christy Brinkley, Hugh Hefner, Dolly Parton and Penny Marshall were among celebrities who attended. Colorado voters approved the amendment Nov. 3. The amendment invalidated several city ordinances that protected homosexual rights. The measure also barred such policies and laws in the future and prohibited recognition of homosexuals as a minority group. GET IT THIS MORNING. YOU CAN GET IT ALL OVER CAMPUS EVERY WEEKDAY MORNING. ARIZONASTATE UNIV1ISITT ~ ^ S tate P ress >nmdapædnt*ornimcany Our Prices Are Turning ASU UPSIDE DOWN!! "ASU DAILY SPECIALS“ ASU Value Menu (MktolgWMTOdi Sett Devil Sunday Small Pizza........$2.99 Your favorite toppings 69C each. O N LY O N LY $ 5 .9 9 ! $ 6 .9 9 ! M ediu m Pepperoni Pizza and two Large d iet or C la ssic Cokes. Large Pepperoni Pizza and two M e d iu m diet o r C la ssic C oke, CARRY-OUT SPECHI O N LY Medium Pizza.....$3.99 Your favorite toppings 99C each. Large Pizza........$4.99 j P F o r a L a rg e P e p p e ro n i P iz z a (or with your fevortte topping.) Valid on carryout only. Specials valid at this location only. Kam substitutions available where applicable. Not veld witti any other coupon», offert or «pedal» Customer pay* a> «alee tax where applicable. Limited delivery areas to ensure safety. Our drivers cany lees than $20.00. Our drivers are never penaJoed for late deirvenee C1982 Domino's Pizza. Inc Your favorite toppings $1.19 each. Prices subject to change w ithout notice. V a ld aft tld s location only• N ot va lid w th any other c o u p o n , offers o r qpcctak. CuM om cr pays ta le s tax where appftcabk. Icy Cold Fountain Cokes < Medium.... 59C T H E P IZ Z A P E O P L E .. O F ASU! Large........ 99C 968-5555 9 0 3 S. Rural Rd. Sports Page 15 Friday, November 20, 1992 State P ress ‘The Game’ lies on defense, big plays B y G reg S exton State P ress The day is nearly here. The hardest part of waiting for the ASUUofA Big Game is just that — the wait. The two meet at 7 p.m. Saturday in Arizona Stadium in Tucson. A capacity crowd is expected, but those who are unw illing to make the ja u n t down Interstate-10 can watch the action live on NewsChartnel 3. But the week of hype and talk is nearing an end, and with it comes what everyone has been waiting for— the moment when the two teams take the field and begin the rival game. And ASU coach Bruce Snyder he feels that the game w on’t be a blowout, but rather a game of inches. In fact, the firstyear coach thinks the game could hinge on a small group of circumstances. ' “I think the game is going to unfold and be a game of big plays,” he said. “Not necessarily very many of them, but when one happens, it will dramatically affect the outcome of the game.” The Sun Devils (5-5, 3-4 Pac-10) enter the game as an underdog in terms of points and the past. ASU hasn’t won in Tucson since 1980 and its cumulative record in Arizona Stadium stands at 12-25. But Snyder thinks that this ASU team —one that has been hardened by a bumpy ride this year — will be able to handle the pressure..> ■.n “My sense is the players will not need any help getting emotional,” he said. UofA (6-3-1, 4-2-1) are still in the hunt for a bowl berth, and the game against the Sun Devils could determine which bowl it is and how important it will be. Wildcat coach Dick Tomey said he isn’t ASU’s Brian Hooks puts a hit a on a UCLA player. When ASU meet UofA Saturday in Tucson, the game could prove to be defensive struggle. Wallerstedt looks forward to playing rival game, pro ball Bv J ake Batsell State P ress After anchoring the Sun Devil defense for three years, Brett Wallerstedt has been through his share of significant games. But ‘T he Game” oh Saturday may have the highest number of incentives the senior linebacker has ever faced. It will likely be Wallerstedt’s last game in a Sun Devil uniform , accom panied by the frenzy o f em otion traditionally involved in any ASU-UofA contest. In addition, Wallerstedt is closing in on a defensive milestone: H e’s 10 takedowns away from becoming ASU's career leader in solo tackles. 7 “It would be my way o f leaving my mark on the program and in the record books,” said Wallerstedt, who is second to Nathan LaDuke’s 238 tackles on the all-time list. “It would be a nice way to be remembered as holder of the solo tackle record. “But more importantly, it would be nice to win this game. If I don’t get any tackles and we win this game, it’s still going to be just as great a feeling in itself.” Sun Devil coaich Bruce Snyder said that he has always had respect for Wallerstedt, both at ASU and at his former T urn to W a u er st ed t , pag e 17. concerned about the bowl for now but just wants to go out and have his team play the best game possible and worry about the postseason afterward. And, according to Tomey, taking this one from ASU could be rough. “I think it will be quite a challenge for u s,” he said. “ I know »*=<> Pres*; Mat* WEss stai* Pro^i MEMORIAL UNION thursday THE HUB OF ASU DID YOU KNOW JA G E R GIRLS SPECIAL $050 to take home for PITCHERS 5-8 PM ■jxuajmte You can buy hats 1 fri./sat. Thanksgiving at N O C O V E R FREE APPETIZERS The Bookstore LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Connection? Main Level MU J STOP BY THE HUB TODAY Next there was Shakespeare... C o m er of A p o c h e /T e r r o c e For table reservations after 2 pm 968-2201 x- While you live, tell truth an d sh am e the d evil.” P a g e JT Friday, November 20,1992 St a t e Press Classifieds W a lle rs te d t C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e I S . position at the University o f California. “In our strategy planning against him (w hile at C al), we always took him into account,” Snyder said. “You try to pick out two or three outstanding players on the other team and then try to make sure that they don’t dominate the game, because he’s capable of doing that, »•‘Now that I’ve been here, I can appreciate w hy w e did it, because he really is outstanding. I’m glad that I had at least one year to coach a team that he was on. ” As an integral contributor in last year’s 3714 streak-ending victory against the Wildcats, W allerstedt said he hopes to help the Sun Devils achieve another win in the ongoing series. “ It’s a big rivalry, of course,” he said. “I’ve learned more about it each year that I’ve been here, because I’m not from Arizona. “I respect Arizona a great deal. It’s always been a good game ever since I’ve been here, even though they have won the majority of them.” Wallerstedt was recognized as the Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week for his effort last Saturday against Cal, when he collected 14 tackles, one sack and recovered a fumble. Though the Sun Devils (5-5) will likely m iss out on a bow l bid this season, Wallerstedt said he has been happy with the way the team has responded to a plague of injuries and off-season difficulties. a “There’s no question about how hard we play,” he said. “I give great respect to all of these players for not quitting and not giving up, “We’ve fought through a lot of adversity off the field and on the field. I think it shows a lot for the character of this team,” he said. While the final gun Saturday will likely signify the end of W allerstedt’s career at ASU, he looks to be a sure bet for next spring’s NFL draft. Wallerstedt said he does hope to play professionally. “That’s been a dream of mine and, with the last couple of years, I think that’s within my reach,” he said. “It’s som ething I ’m striving for and something I’d like to do.” Wallerstedt is on target to graduating in May with a degree in general business. O utside o f football, he said he hopes to pursue a career in athletic administration. But for now, his sights are focused on the Wildcats. “I think we need to play good defense, like we have all year, and try to shut down their running game,” he said. “I think it’s going to . be a defensive game and a low-scoring game. I think it will probably come down to the last quarter.” ANNOUNCEM ENTS PH O TO CO N TEST Attention all photographers! The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is sponsoring a photo contest. Great prizes including tuition and gift certificates. Pick up forms, Matthews Center room 50 or call 965-6881. F r o m s t a f f r e p o r ts Friederball finally gets started at the U niversity Activity C enter, as the Sun D evils host the M elbourne Tigers at 7 tonight. This will be the first of two exhibition gam es ASU w ill play.; The T igers are currently touring the United States and have recently played both Long Beach State and UCLA. Plenty of tickets are still available at the Sun Devil ticket office located in front of Sun Devil Stadium. APARTMENTS IDID Y o u k n ö w !.T I BEDROOM, secluded, private patio, covered parking, laundry facility, pool, dishwasher,, self cleaning oven,, very quiet. 968-8183. The MU has a convenience store on the main level? PUBLIC NOTICE: In 1988, Maricopa County Courts released the following case 88-0020, all ‘property to be re­ leased to owners. The following people need to contact ASU DPS a t 965-3456 before December I, 1992 with ID and description o f property: Humaira Ah­ mad, Saleh Al-Katheer, James Ames, Joan B enoit, R osalie B ondad, Julie C hang, Elizabeth D eW itte, M irjane GrOzdic, R obert G uenther, P atricia Haight, Debbra Harkins, Tammy Kane* Sarah Kealy, Frances Netting, David E. Smith, Sandra Stewart, Umest E. Uwa- 1 OR 2 bedroom,$250 move-in, near ASU, pool, laundry. 829-7059/9217257 leave message. -2 BEDROOM spacious decorator apart­ ment, private patio, self cleaning oven* pool, covered parking, very quiet. 8941041. . \ THE HUB OF ASU M E M O R IA L U NIO N 2 BEDROOM, $335, covered parking, pool, backyard! 48th and McDowell. Call Gavin 968-4951. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, newly decorated. $400/month; lease. No pets. 1857 E. University Drive, 940-9152. Available ' 11-15-92. ADD AN Art-a-ma-bob to your personal ad for only $3! Call 965-673 l for details. 2 BEDROOM, secluded, private patio, covered parking, laundry facility, pool, dishw asher, self cleaning oven, very quiet. 968-8183. $ $ CASH $ $ 2 B ED R O pM , sm all enclosed yard, quiet neighborhood 172 mile from ASU, $380 per month. 967-4908. U P T O *10 * fo r Levi's 501 's •All Colors «All W ashes Levi Jackets...up to $15* 2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, new applianc­ es, I block from cam pus, starting at $375. 759-7625. M appy (BirtfuCay j ‘Restrictions Apply CALL FOR DETAILS ASU hoops to have exhibition game ANNOUNCEM ENTS Ü 1 Tempe • 805 S. Farmer 966-9320 Phoenix • 4504 N. 16th St. 241-1388 NW Phoenix »7144 N. 35th Ave. 973-6367 APARTMENTS ‘EfizaBetfil you're lookingyounger everyday. “E ver since you transferred to classifieds you don't loot^a day over 20! j ' j \ ASU I mile. C lean, cute I bedroom ap artm en t in q u ie t 4-p lex . $295 a month. 921-1181. BEA U TIFU L LARGE 1 and 2 bed­ rooms. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry room. On East 8th Street between Rural and McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. $199 move in on 2 bedroom. STUDIO, 1 and 2 bedroom in ASU area for rent. $275 and up. 966-8838 or 967-4908. | APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM luxury apartment com­ munity, washer and dryer hookups, spa­ cious floorplan, covered parking, quiet community, close to ASU. 967-0679. Cable Available LARGEST 2 bdrm, 2 bath QUADRANGLES ^ V IL L A G E APARTMENTS H The MUAB D o n 't m ill» ' f in le v , t h a n t h e liu s t 1 STUDIO • ONE BEDROOM • TWO BEDROOM • Fme Cable TV• FREE Hot Waler • Great Location • 3 Refreshing Pauls • 2 Soothing Spas • lush Landscaping • ExardaeDunn «Ample Covend Parking 1255 University Dc Ikape ■Sg Getter«fUnmnitp aiuUtnnil I 968-8118 $200 OFF! FREE UTILITIES! Walk to ASU. Spacious 2 bedroom apts. A/C, fu rn ish e d or unfur­ nished available. From $415/month. Beautiful p o o l area, laundry facilities available. FR E E FO O D ! A Substance Abuse R esistan ce Show 9 1 0 E . L em on #2 966-8704 R eceive $50 towards groc your choice > Offer applies only to new move signing a 7-9-or-12 mon ieSb •Spacious 2 f t j f iij T •Close to •5 m ia. •Coves •2 pools,’ •24-hodr M aintenance ** p M O T 6 2 5 W. 1st Between Hardy ft Min 968-5444 FIESTA PARK — APARTM ENTS 1224 EAST LEM ON 894-2935 B U T T E R F IE L D ❖ 1 /2 PARK ❖ M O N T H FREE RENT Walk to ASU . V olleyball Court Private Patios Pool/Spa Washers/Dryers CALL US TODAY! 966-6755 1215 S. D o rsey S APARTMENTS ROOM S FOR RENT STUDIO APARTMENT for rent, walk­ ing d istan ce to ASU. Q u iet, green neighborhood, laundry, pool and spa, no pets. $275 per month, utilities \tb eluded. 968-1248. ROOM RENTAL Scottsdale at McDon­ ald and G ranite Reef. Pool, fam ily room, $ 150 monthly. Robin 946-0706. TA K E OVER lease, 2 bedroom s, 2 baths, Cameron Greek Apartments 9 2 10344,949-7716 U TILIT IES PAID, furnished/unfurnished; studio $299; I bedroom $359. ASU 10 minutes. Move-irt special. 4371048. ; $900 O FF Walk to ASU. Quiet, spa­ cious, 1 bedroom, fur­ nished, A/C, p o o ls id e apartments. $280/month G eorg e Ann A p ts 894-2935 FREE A p a rtm e n t L o c a tin g S e rv ic e R o o m m a te m a t c h in g s e r v ic e a ls o a v a ila b le . 437-1048 E N J O Y T H E Q U IE T ! 1/2 Block from Campus B e a u t if u lly f u r n is h e d , huge 1 bedroom , 1 bath; 2 bedroom , 2 bath apart­ m e n ts . A ll b i lls p a id . C a b le TV, h e a te d p o o l a n d s p a c i o u s la u n d r y f a c ilit ie s . F r ie n d ly , c o u rte o u s m anagem ent. Stop by today! ROOMMATE NEEDED. 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom house. $ 140/month, 1/3 utili­ ties. Must like dogs. Call Karl 82^8303 HOMES FOR SALE 2 BEDROOM, I bath house. Large lot, bike to ASU, only $52,900. Call Marty, Realty Execs, 839-2600. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 2 BEDROOM 2 bath condo at Los Pra­ dos, Only $3000, take over payments! Call Marty, Réaity Execs, 839-2600. HAYDEN SQUARE 3 bedroom condo, newly remodeled. You pick tile and car­ peting. $ 116*900 John 829-8160 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE LA RADA’S ARMY Surplus h a s all your cam ping needs- inexpensively. Also more weird stu ff than you cain im agine. 764 W est M ain, M esa 834-7047. XMAS AUDIO digital Loudspeakers- in boxes, never u sed !! Paid $800. must, s e ll!! $500/offer. 921-8689. BOOKS RECYCLE FOR $$$ Sell your books for cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit towards thé purchase, o f an y th in g in th e store. Choose from 3 floors of new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead fpr buying hours. Browsers welcome. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 M ill Avenue, 966-0203. FURNITURE SOFA SET, dinette, bed, entertainment center, futon, daybed. All new, very reasonable. 351-3007. W ATERBED- W AVECREST, C a li­ fornia king softside. waveless, frame, heater, excel lent condition, $275. 8328595 leave message. HELP WANTEDGENERAL AUTOMOBILES HOMES FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, 2 blocks from ASU, fenced-in back yard. $450/mohth, 967-4908. FANTASY FUTONS FLO W PRICES OH AU QUALITIES SOFAS • LOUNGES CHAIRS & OTTOMANS COVERS* MATTRESSES TABLES* ETC. STUDENT DISCOUNTS N. TEMPE BORDER FREE DELIVERY! 3 bedroom 2 bath house with pool. New carp et, p ain t th ro u g h o u t. Includes washer - dryer $725 plus deposit. Drive by 2717 North Myrtle - off 68th at Con­ tinental. 968-3501. 450 E. SOUTHERN AV., MESA (NE comer of Southern & Mesa Dr.) M OTORCYCLES 1985 ELITE 250cc,.m int condition. 65mph, unused Bieffe helmet ($180) included, $1250/offer. Kirk 968-3865. 1988 KATANA 600. Runs super! Nq problems. Metzler tires, alarm, two hel­ mets, U-lock. $3300/offer. 966-6923. 20" NISHIKJ Prestige 12-speed, excel­ le n t condition, $ 125/offer. Call Eric, 350-9556 (leave message). NEW; 12 speeds $ 122.95, Ladys Cruis­ ers $129.95, tune-up $12.95, "Spoke Easy";, above SpageMi . C om pany 350-9320. SPECIALIZED, RED, water bottles, Ulock, graduating, steal for $ 160. Carl 967-3341. TRAVEL — AMERICA WEST round trip Phoenix to Dallas, 12/23 to 1/3. $2$0. Julia 9657293 or 967-6393 BI-COASTAL TR A V EL, cheap a ir­ plane tickets for international students. Call us in Japanese or English, 916-251- 5535 - v.; - DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places USA. Also worldwide. J also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. :. ■ , • • HAYDEN TRAVEL Discount prices on vacation packages. Low est airline fares. Free delivery. Our correct phone number is 759+5402. SPRING BREAK ’93 Lake Havasu / House boats. Book your boat now! 1-800-242-2628. SPECIAL STUDENT FARES PARIS ......... ..$498 QHIGÄGO.............. ...$179 FRANKFURT............$498 MEXICO C IT Y .......... $258 NEW Y O R K ........... ..$298 A M STER D AM .......... $498 CAB O SAN LU CAS ...$230 LONDON.................. $498 DENVER....;...!..........$230 BOSTON..,...,,.,....;.... $298 R O M E ...........!.......... $498 M U N ICH .................. $498 H O N OLULU..............$369 O ther Cities Available M ILL AVENUE TRAVEL 966-6300 ONE BLOCK SOUTH TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3 BEDROOMS, .2.bath condo, air, dish­ w asher, w asher, dryer, pool, tennis, near ASU, $800. (714) 499-4()65; 9674908. LOS PRADOS/13TH/ROOSEVELT 3 bedroom/ 2 bath, refrigerator, washer, dryer, 1342 square feet. $750. Western Star Realty .Judy 280-21 II. 831 -1065, Uhi i V ERSI T Y /PR ICE. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, washer! dryer, covered parking, $650/month;. 961- 1707. ALASKA SUMMER Em ploy m e n t-fish e rie s. B arn $6 0 0 + /w eek in. can n eries or $4,000+/month on fishing boats. Eree transportation! Room & board! Over 8,000 openings. Male or female. Get a head start this summer! For program call 1-(206) 5 4 5 -4 1 5 5 , e x tension A5918. APPLICATIONS ARE now being taken for part time rec staff at Dobson Ranch. Evenings and weekends, will start at $4.25 an hour. For more information call 831-7464. ! ASSEMBLER JOBS! BICYCLES Restrictions apply. Subject to availability. 3 bedroom 2 hath house/ new carpet, paint, washer - dryer. Drivé by 720 E , Vista Dèi Cèrro $695 plus deposit avail­ able 12/1 968-3501. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CHEAP! FBI/U.S. Seized. 89 Mercedes...$200, 86 VW... $50, 87 Mercedes...$100, 65 Mustang... $50. Choose from thousands starting $25. Free information- 24 hour hot­ line (801 )3 7 9 -2 9 2 9 . C opyright #AZI0KJC R ound T rip From P h o en ix T e rra c e R o a d A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra c e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 S t a îe P ress Friday, November 20,1992 P age 18 Lighting company needs responsible students for day assembly work. Elec­ tronics background desirable. $7/hour. Scottsdale Airpark, 998-0325. * ATTENTION: $8.20 to start. Holiday help. 17 im m ediate part time o r full tim e retail openings. Temporary and permanent positions available. Scholar­ ships available. Conditions apply. Flexi­ ble hours 968-1840. BIG; STRONG students needed to assist disabled student with workouts. $7 an hour. 966-2059 V CAD OPERATOR. Part time, flexible hours. Own computer helpful. $10 per hour. 829-4969.; DELIVERY DRIVER heeded, apply at Blimpies on Broadway and Rural, Tempe.. ;. . : . . ; GAME ROOM attendant. Must be. hon­ est and dependable. F lexible hours. Apply in person, Player's Choice, Cor­ nerstone Mall, Rural/University. KINKO’S COPY Center now hiring 2 positions: Desktop publishing assistant, hours 5 - 10p.m. Monday-Friday, must have know ledge o f P agem aker 4.2, Freehand 3.0; M icrosoft W ord 4.0, Adobe Photoshop a plus; Customer serv­ ice representative, 4-Midnight MondayFriday, operate copy machines and wait on customers. Apply in person; 25,9 N. 1st Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona. MODELS NEEDED- for fashion, com­ m ercial p rin t, runw ay, and c atalo g work. Serious inquiries* contact Elle, (619)454-2347; . V ■NANNY POSITIONS Available nationwide including Florida & Hawaii, summer or year round, great pay, free travel (612)643-4399. NATIONAL COMPANY seeks on-cam^ pus representatives to post materials. Commission paid for each completed ap­ plication. W ork few hours, on your own time. Call 1-800-758 9918 EST. NEED ;5 students immediately! No ex­ perience, $4.60 start, part-time; Casual Tempe office. Phone surveys, abso­ lutely no sales. Susan, 967-444L PART TIME: need mature people to work the Old Town Tempe Fall Festi­ val, December 4th thru 6th. Various po­ sit ions available, must be at least 16 years old. Interview s will be held at MAMA Warehouse 21; East 6th Street, Tempe, Saturday November 21 10am5pm. PART-TIME PRODUCTION assistant for paper corporation. 20-30 hours per week, hourly $ above minimum, graph­ ic design/marketing experience/interest desired. Tamara 248-8818,7-9am. SPORTS MINDED Hiring immediately 6-8 individuals for our Tempe office, full or part-tim e. Flexible hours. Perfect for students, $8$ 10 per hour, call 9 2 1-3 9 6 1. TELEMARKETING POSITIONS No selling! Computer experience helpful but not necessary. Will train. $6-$9 hourly, $300-$500 weekly possible. We pay every week on time! !! 829-3030. THIS IS no t Telemarketing! Perform C ost M anagem ent i n Scottsda Ie has openings for highly m otivated indi­ viduals seeking part time positions. Ex­ cellent communications;& typing skills on a CRT keyboard are required. Please contact Debbie 1-800-743-4441exten­ sion l^ L ; v -,- V; YOU' RE HIRED! Earn up to $10/hour. Full-time pay, part-time work. 3-9pm, Monday-Friday. 966-5765, HELP WANTEDSALES HOLIDAY CASH Looking for 5 sales people to conduct sale promotions in the Valley. Holiday time off not a problem. Guaranteed in­ come plus incentive. Call 921-7755 for interview, PAY FOR COLLEGE Im m ediate Openings for enthusiastic males and females as sales reps for hot­ test product on market. Aggressive in­ dividuals only need apply. Ground floor opportunity. Immediate income on sales 491-5537. ; HELP WANTEDFOODSERVICE CORK'N CLEAVER Accepting applications for lunch food server and lunch hostess. Will train. C oncern with appearance, reliability and personality are im portant; 2-5 days, short shifts, fun atmoshere. Apply , in person Monday through Friday 2:305pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street (44th Street and Camelback) 952-4)585. PIZZA M AKERS, must be available through the holiday breaks, Pizza Pret­ zel, 525 South Forest RED ROBIN of Tempe has immediate openings for wait staff, b.ussers, host and hostesses and cooks. Apply at 1375 West Elliot. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch waitresses, dinner bussers, and hostesses. Apply in person MondayF riday, 10am to 3pm , 5001 East W ashington, cross street 48th Street. 273-17378, . HOSTESS & CASHIER Ç aÎI 2 - ï p.M. M'F Spuk wiih PATRick Liu '946-0720 F ín e d¡N¡N{¡ ¡n S cottm Ia Ie , COMPUTERS MACINTOSH 512KE. 20M harddrive, two 800K drives, i mage Writer 2, mo­ dem, programs, $700, Jamie 4 9 1--2955¿ HELP WANTEDGENERAL WANTED: CHAUFFEUR for lim ou­ sine service in Mesa, part time basis. Minimum age 25. ¿all 491 -1083 LET CLASSIFIEDS work for you.Call 965-673! today! WANTED: RETAIL m erchandiser to help at Gold Canyon G olf Club parttime/full-time. 982-9449, TICKETS ASU VERSUS UofA football tickets, Saturday. November 21! 6 great seats, $35 each. Call (602) 881-2365, SUNS TICKETS!! Trade/offer 2 each: November 27. Golden State; December I , Charlotte Eddie. 966^3913 AUTOMOBILES RENTAL SHARING ,1984 BMW 325E black with red interi­ or. Needs engine work, new clutch and transmission, 2,600/ offer. 968-0771. 3 BEDROOM furnished, laundry facili­ ties, back yard, walk/bike to ASU* $250 per month. 894-6773. 1987 WHITE/WHITE Volkswagen Ca­ briolet. Excellent condition, new tires, priced to sell. $6.9(K). Jan, 451-117J. FEMALE NON smoker, Hayden Place, bike to school. Covered parking, laun­ dry facilities, dishwasher, 2 pools. Ja­ cuzzi. Good rent deal. 967-1850. Lisa. 1988 SUNDANCE,; ! diRtr, automatic transmission. AC. other extras, looks and runs great. Super buy. $4500. 9941493,965-7631. FEMALE NONSM OKER w anted to share tw o bedroom , tw o bath apart­ ment. Close to campus. 966-9926. Ni­ cole. 3 CARS tor sale: 79 Cougar, 88 Yugo. 86 Buick. Must sell 966-0513, 88 AEROSTAR VAN FEMALE ROOMMATE: $22U plus 173 u tijitm s, large bedroom and closet, wusher/dryer, hear ASU. 967-4)907. Eddie B auer deluxe model mini-van with all Options. V-6 dual air. excellent condition. $9450. 998-0325 or 7884366. V ROOM MATE WANTED: 3 bedroom. 2 bath, $256/month includes utilities: 68th Street and Camelback. 970-1190; 90 CRX- HF. 39.000 miles, extended w arranty, a ir. A M /FM . cassette. 55 miles/gallon. $9500. 274-1421. 0 « i ? 8 issues Íeft this sem ester/ • Have fun almost anywhere (resorts, hotels, cruise ships) • Use the videos the industry uses to train their bartenders • Complete course includes 2 VHS cassettes & 2 training books. • FREE gift with your order! % ; ' "S S F 7 1 (800) 333-3737 Ext. D-1051 X Midwest Publishing, Inc. M odern Office in C ornerstone M all •Part-time Hours »Evenings & Saturday •$5.50/Hr. Guaranteed »Paid Training •Referral Bonus »Incentive Bonus •Year Round Employment 968-4457 Call Mr. Williams restaurant HELP WANTEDGENERAL WALK FROM ASU! M a k e $ $ $ $ B a rte n d in g • This same information normally costs $3,800, yours for $99.95 w o u ld w¡NN¡Nq No Sales Phone Interviewers Tues-Fri, flexible part time afternoon/ evening shift, & Saturday shift. Comfortable office atmosphere. Higginbotham Associates PETS BABY BOA Constrictors and Burmese Pythons. $80 each! Cash only, leave message 986-3302 BLACK LAB / husky puppy 9 months, female, lias had shots, friendly. Free to a good home. Leave a message 6497041. PERSONALS I DOZEN red long-stem roses deliv­ ered $20. Also balloons. After Hours Flowers. 894-3419.; 1992-93 DG officers: good luck in thé com iiig year. We are behind you! Love, yoursisters. À G D JAM IE“ fear more beer! Yum yum, how about some rum! Good luck. Happy Birthday! À K ^ MICHELLE E , well by the end o f today your stessfull week will almost be over. You made it! ! Now all you have is COH. Just relax and follow di­ rections closely and y o u 'll be fine!! Good luck! ! Yo' big bro Murph. c e n t e r p ie c e s Take Home a Thanksgiving centerpiece for your family. Flowers On Campus 965-0600. MU lower level. . CHAPTER PRESIDENT s - Don’t for­ get to have your Greek Week Repre­ sentative e le cte d by N ovem ber 23. Thanks! The Steering Committee. DG PLEDGE Erica: you did a great job on homecoming. We are so proud of you! Love, the Dee Gees, DID YOU know photoamerica offers overnight slide processing? Lower level . MU 9654322 : -, I DID YOU know there is B full .service travel agency in the MU? American Ex­ press Travel! Let us help with all your travel needs! American Express Travel 965-8410 stop by today! DONT GET clipped o ff campus! Come to the full service salon in the MU, Hair " 101 . Expert service at elementary pric­ es. Call or stop by today . 965-7222. FRATERNITY MEN: applications for IFC cabinet are now being accepted, ap­ plications are due in the Greek life of­ fice November 20th. GET YOUR Thanksgiving cards, gifts and decorations right here on campus! Follett's Gift Shop located in the lower level of the MU. hey partner Glad to have you working at this end of thé building now. We hope you have a good time on your Birthday, tomorrow. JK & T . ; ; ; .' HOLIDAY COFFEE The memorial Union cordially invites you to attend its 37th annual Holiday Coffee. 9am to 1lam December 2 in the MU Arizona Room. HOW DOES $2 pitchers sound? Pay $1 cover, and drink cheap from 9pm to close at Minder Binders! IF YOU attend strip bars and want to share your story confidentially, çàll Yvcmne Bt 827-0103JILL, ANOTHER day? How about a week? There's a lot to do on a Colorado ski vacation at Purgatory-Durango. I can book everything'by calling (800) 525-0892. : .. V; ■ ./ ^ ;• MU AB PROUDLY presents The Farce Side every F riday iii the MU Pro­ gramming Loungej Come and laugh ! PER FEC T ST R A N G ER - I know som ething very special is ending to­ morrow. But remember the other very special things in your life. Good luck! 1 love you! Little One, STEVEN: THANKS for the great time last night. We'll do it again some time! GREAT OPPORTUNITY TAKE A study break in the Memorial Union Recreation Center, Bowling, bil­ liards, video and football. Open Mon­ day - Thursday 8am to 9:30pm, Satur­ day 10am to 9:30pm and Sunday 12:30pm to 7pm. 50 O p ening s THE BOOKSTORE Connection is the place to buy ASU clothing in the MU! $5.50/hour plus b o n u s THE DEE Gees wish everyone a safe and Happy Thanksgiving! •• » 8 2 9 -3 2 8 2 ‘ CUSTOMER SERVICE or ‘ DATA ENTRY OPERATOR TEMPE LOCATION Shifts A v a ila b le 5 a.m .-T :30 p.m . 1:30-9 p.m . C a ll Corporat« Job Bank (602) 966-0709 G O SUN DEVILS?? G O W ILD CATS?? V ote for the w inner o f .the ASU/Uriiversity of Arizona football/ game. Just pick Up' the phone: and take a; moment, to show t^ejother school who REALLY supports their team-..then find out why thf.lPthcr team won't get .the job dpno. :R *:fun. It's easy! It's for YOUR School.'Call now, d o n 't lei the W i t D CATS show you'.up. •. 1-900-446-3038. $2 per m inute (average call 2 njinutes). Over 18 years o f agc^only..T ouch-tone phone needed. ^ Caribou Communications .* Gig Harbor, Washington Page 19 Friday, November 20,1992 S t a t e P ress PERSONALS W HY L E A V E cam pus to cat lunch when the MU has Pizza Hut, Taco Bell and even a salad bar in the Maricopa room ...plus much more? The MU...it's for you! Stop by for lunch today. Or breakfast. O r dinner! TYPING/WORD PROCESSING RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS SPORTS & WINGS 4 s a te llite s 15 screens WOODSHED II NW co rner o f D o b so n & University 844-shed "We show all NFL, Iowa, & Nebraska games" ' 8 N F f* H* z Season* No -tsiiv ou+s m m In the m rv w so good 8 9 4 / 9 9 4 Small f M edium All Day, Every Day 968-9512 L IV E M U S IC ! by BABYSITTER NEEDED for 2 small boys, afternoons o r evenings, some weekdays. Own transportation and ref­ erences, Kimberly 460-4008. MARCONIS 9pm-12:30am - NO COVER - BANDERSNATCH r.si CHILD CARE BREWPUB Tonight Method U LOOKING FOR holiday sitter, heavy hours from December 10th through the end o f January. Weekends necessary, weekday nights optional. My home, ref­ erences necessary. Denise 840-7447, 1 page resume package $35. Holiday gift certificates available. The Write R esum e, B roadw ay/M ill. M astercard/Visa. For appointment 966-9211. ACCURATE, EXPERIENCED. Word processing, WordPerfect 5.1. Reports, resumes, charts, graphs, theses. Laura 820-0305. WORD PROCESSOR, trimscriptionist, typing fo r s tu d en ts/fac u lty , m anu­ scripts, reports. reasonable rates. Pau­ la, 846-6436. A PA /M LA EX PER IEN C ED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call JeSsie, 945-5744. TUTORS ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186, ASU GRADU ATE will professionally type term papers, assignments, and take home exams. Good prices. Fast tumaround. Theresa, 924-1976. C RE A TIV E TY PIN G , term papers, resum es, essay s, la se r p rin ter, rea­ sonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. 'V . :: • RESUMES $15 High Success rate! Reports, editing. SP Secretarial? 2201 South M cClintock, near ASU 967-0907. MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES 99$ Duck Pins Saturday LA Jones & The EJIues M essengers * 99$ Kamis RESUMES AAA- K IN K O ’S C opies m akes the grade! Papers, resumes, flyers, color copying, self-serve Macintosh & IBM and more! Open 24 hours. 933 East Uni­ versity. 966-2035. CA LL JU L IE to w rite, edit, design? type, print your resume, flyer, report, ad, newsletter and more- Professional; Fast; Cheap! 279-5481. m ill RATES TYPING/WORD PROCESSING ASU MATH tutor available for private appointments, MAT 077, 106, 117, sin­ gle and group rates. John, 483-6043. . CORNELL GRAD- Social scientist works with you to create well written papers. Ask for Van 820-9490. RESEARCH AND writing help all sub­ jects catalog $2. 1 (800) 351 -0222. 4 0 4 S. Mill. S u ite X )\ (Hayden Square) 9 6 6 -1 3 0 0 SUNNY'S DELIVERS THE M IND SPA M ind Fitness for Stress Management and Performance Anxiety 10% Student Discount 829-1351 INSURANCE HEALTH INSURANCE save 50% off campus plan. $bne million benefits. En­ ro ll an y tim e! P rate r Insurance 829-4919. 12" OR 16" 1 COUPON PER PIZZA L CLASSIFIED DISPLAY R ATES: VIDEO CONVERSIONS, U.S. to for­ eign form ats and vice Versa. $30, 2 hours. Tape included. 924-0431. M IS C ELLA N EO U S ^ DOES YOUR Honda need a black bra to look complete or a cover to protect it against thé elem ents? C all Tony at 946-9078. NEED A back issue o f the State Press? G xne to the basement of Matthews Center to the Front Information Desk MondayFriday, 8am-5pm. If we have die issue you need? it's yours! L S H ■ 64 Bicycles ¡6 7 ■ 70 1 71 a 72 Travel H elp W anted-Generai H dpW anfod-Salcs H *lpW anted4Jertcal ¡7 3 HelpW antedI Fo o d se rvice 1 77 Burinaas O pportunities ■ SO Restaurants/Bars ¡8 2 M Uric 1 84 Pets 1 8 6 Free Loat/FOund ■ 90 Penonals ¡9 5 C M d d r e 8 9 7 foagnancy CounaeMng 1 9 8 A d o p tio n ¡1 0 0 Services • 101 H ealth and Fitness 1 105 Typing' They're going fast! But you can still get free copies of ASU's Coupon Book. W ord Processing S 107 matro ctfon 1 108 Tutors. 1 110 Photography ■ 115 W anted s i 8ft Minceim er* it C lassified disp lay ad deadline Is ,10am, two business days p rior to publication. HOW T O P LA C E A CLASSIFIED AD: In person: Cash, check (with guarantee card), Visa, MasterCard or American Express ($6 minimum on all credit card orders). We’re located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 46H. Office hours are 9am-5pm, Monday-Friday. Personals are accepted In person with student I.D. B y phone or fax: Payment with Visa, MasterCard or American Express only. $6 minimum on all phone orders. State Press fax number is 965-8484; please include your credit card number and expiration date on fax. Please cali beforesending fax so we can anticipate the fax. HOW TO CO R R EC T OR C A N C E L YOU AD: Liner ads must be corrected or cancelled before noon, one business,, day prior to publication. NO REFU N D S WILL B E GIVEN. ■ - ■- I d d re ts Citv/St/ZÎD Run Dates Classification Rates □ Cash 9 a.m -9 p.m. ‘ Method o f Payment □ Check (include guarantee # on top of personal checks) □ Visa/MasterCard/American Express ($4 min) Name on Card ■ W-v ; ’■ V ' .. ...■■■/.-»J- Card No. Ex d . date 15 ' 17 ■ 18 . Ant bring or man your ad In on this form to the Matthews Center basement. It's quicfc...ifs easy) We're open 9am-5pm, Mon-Fri. Please make sure your ad redds EXACTLY as you want It to appear in the State Press, Indudng punctuation! Deadline is noon, one busi­ ness day prior to pubteatton. Al advertising is subject to approval by the State Press. We reserve the right to edit or reject copy. NO REFUNDS! Any questions? Call 965-6731. 19, . 80 Mailing address! State Press Classifieds Dept. 1502, ASU Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 illP iranio u'raxjr SUBS ■■■■— - &SALADS For Friday, November 2 0 ,1992 ARIES (Mai*. 21 to Apr. 19) . U nexpected business developm ents could interfere with some of your social plans. You will have time to drop in on an old friend A partner has good news. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) A new business o p portunity com es now. The daily work routine may be interrupted and a cow orker may be moody. Accent self-discipline for added gains. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You may be invited to a special social function now. An old school mate may reenter your life. Unexpected expenses could arise in connection with children. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You could be making a major purchase for the home today. There may be some household repairs to attend to now. A close tie’s behavior is erratic and unpre­ dictable. LEO. : %V (July 23 to Aug. 22) Daydreaming or moodiness could inter­ fere with your job performance today. A partner gives you a valuable sugges, tipnc It is. a good time to make plans for travel. VIRGO . (Aug. 23 to Sept? 22) It is a day when money could cpme in and then go quickly out. Guard against personal extravagance. You are able to accomplish much of a routine nature on the job. ' LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Qct. 22) - 16 . ÆBès, i Com e down to the basem ent of Matthews Center and pick yours up today! Phon« $3.90 per issue $3.70 per issue $3.45 per issue 204 each additional word • No abbreviations, bolding or centering • Please write clearly! »ONE WORD PER UblC »same ad, no copy changes Tearsheets will be forwarded by request for 50« and full copies of the paper for $1.50. Tour Individual Horoscope State Press Classified Liner Ad Form Liner Ads, 15 words or less 1-4 issues 5-9 issues* 10 issues* TEA R SH EETS B ro a d w a y & R u ral N íhikí Start vour ad here: (per column inch, per insertion) 1 time: $8.95 2-5 times: $8.15 6 or more times: $7.70 All classified display ads have bottlers. Type can be bold face, cen­ tered, etc. An average of 15-20 words can fit in one column inch. Personals are not accepted through the mail. J iC * * DEALS I 1 DAY turnaround- most papers. Pro­ fe ssio n a l weird p ro c è ssi ng/papers/resumes. Laser. Reasonable. Caro­ line, 892-7022. C la ssifica tio n s Announcem ents A p artments Hom es fo r Rent Townhom es/Condos fo r Rent Rental Sharing Rooms fo r Rent Hom es fo r Sale Tdwnhom es/Conclos fo r Sale M obile Homes Reel Estate Garage Sales M iscellaneous fo r Sale Furniture Com puters Jew elry Tickets Traraportadon A utom obiles M otorcycles SEMI-DISPLAY RATES: A bold, centered, all caps headline can be added to your liner1ad for an additional $1.00. Headline cannot exceed 15 characters (all letters, punctuation marks and spaces count as one character &ch). PHOTOGRAPHY YOU SAY it, we display it —only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 ! 1 P erson als (15 w ords d r less) are on ly $2.00. You can a lso add, Greek sym bols to you r personal fo r on ly 5 0 t p er set (3 sym bols max. p er set). Send your ad (with payment) to: , State Press Classifieds Dept. 1502, ASU Tempo, AZ 85287-1502 (if sending a personal check, please include your check guarantee card number.) 1301 E. UNIVERSITY 110 1 20 ■ 30 ¡3 1 ■ |3 5 ■ 37 ¡4 0 ■ 41 I ■ 45 ” 47 1 49 ■ 50 ■ 52 ¡ 54 1 56 ■ 58 ¡6 0 ■61 1 63 15 words or less $3.90 per issue (1-4 issues) $3.70 per issue (5-9 issues) $3.45 per issue (10+ issues) 20« each additional word. No abbreviations. The first 2 words are capi­ talized. No bold face or centering, no type size changes. By Mail: 1-DAY TURNAROUND. Professional typing. W alkable/A SU . R easonable rates. E x p erien ced . L aser. Factilty/Students. Diane 966-5693 968-6666 RATES: Personals are not accepted over the phone o r b y faxl TYPING/WORD PROCESSING ANY PIZZA LINER AD Matthéws Center Basement, Rm.46H Liner, personal end sem bdlsplay ad deadlines are 12 noon, oner business d ay p rio r to publication. IBM CONSULTING. Do you need help in classes, tr^ning, setup or any other advice? Cheap student rates. 894-9456- □ 965-6711 S t a t e P ress Classifieds THINK C tutor wanted. Good pay. 831-9884. ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Facials/waxirtg. Student dis­ co u n ts. Call, fo r m ore in form ation, 969-6954. M IMI'S NAILERY holiday specials? fu ll set $30, fill in $15. C a ll now 926-4946. RATES It is a good day to v isit a fav o rite restaurant or to have fun through hob­ bies* Though self-confidence improves now, .a home situation has you slightly WE f DELIVER! 9 2 1 -9 2 2 2 perplexed. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Catching up on unfinished household chores may be one of your priorities now. New found luck brings inner joy. Be leery of rumors that circulate today. SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 22 to Dec. 21) You may be invited to a party today. It is probably not a good idea to loan money to an irresponsible friend. Know when to say no. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 fo Jan. 19) A new career opportunity comes today, but you must be careful not to' muff it. You are in an independent mood and could alienate others through contrary or inappropriate behavior. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) This is a grand day for making plans for a trip- Rapport between you and an in^ law may not be at its best. You both seem to be com ing from opposing directions. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Today’V financial? develqpijients are fortunate, but be careful that others do not im pose upon you in som e way. Evening social plains iqa)£ be subject, tp change. YOU BORN TODAY ar? sensitive, intuitive and imaginative. Though cooperative? you dislike taking advice. You are empathetic and would make a fine teacher, physician or psychologist. Law, politics and religion are fields that often appeal to you. You are likely to travel a lot and sometimes have writing ability. You work well in conceit with another. Birthdate of: Robert Kennedy? politi­ cian; Duane Allman, rock musician; and Norman Thomas, socialist leader. ©1992 by King Features Syndicate? Inc. State Press Friday, November 20,1992 ONLYM NEW YORK OM Y AT NYU Session I: May 24-July 2 Session lit July 6-August 13 THIS SU M M ER , Y O U C A N ... • Oh«— ovmr 1,000 co— « ro í . • Stody with • OhMafofahod f— Hy • Uwo in Now Yoifc CMy fa r a t MM* «oc $100 por «I» — oh ALL YOU Make the NYUSummer part of your year-round plan. CaDus today toil free at NewYorkUmwnity 25WestFotith Street Room326 NewYork, N.Y. 10012 1-800-228-4NYU, e x t 240 Please send me a FREE 1XK5 summer sessions nanean. or send in the coupon. S0C.Stt.N0. NAME January 8,1993 W arn Loeb Student Center 566 La Guardia Place Mondays Fried Shrimp $5.99 0 Graduate □ Undergraduate Open Home CAN REEL IN. ADDRESS CITY tu t STAit EVOK( ) All you care to eat Available 4:00-10:00 p.m. zrcore ) TELEPHONE Ik VfiKM Fridays Fish Fry $4.99 All you care to eat Available 4:00-10:00 p.m. pit University between Rural and M cClintock SCHOOLClÄRENTLY ATHNDWG NewYork Universty is anaffirmativeactkm/cqual opportunity institution. CM ‘ Not valid with any other offer. Available at participating Perkins® Family Restaurants. © 1992 Perkins Restaurants Operating Company L.P. TO NIGH T! tat ^ tabern & eatery T h e lo n g e s t liv in g le g e n d . 93.7 A L T E R N A T IV a This weekend is cosmic at the Vine. Buddy C o s m o L iste n to FRI. & S A T . C A TC H ALL THE A C T IO N O N 7 T .V .s! largarti»»: Strawberry, Melon k Regular •MSfs: Long Wand, Long Booeh Á Ride the bus to the Cardinals game on Sunday. Rural & Apache Tootoro , Jo o flo rmo iator, C u e rvo G old , Rumplominzo, Southern Comfort SA T.