©Copyright, State Press, 1992 : Tempe, Arizona An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 76 No. 62 W in d o w o f o p p o r tu n ity Tuesday, November 24,1992 H oopster ousted follow in g arrest Dale removed from team after alleged fight B y D a n Z e ig e r St a t e P ress Irwin Daugharty/State Press A lone student utilizes the solitude of W est Lawn to accom plish a little studying Monday afternoon. Ian Dale was perma­ nently dismissed from the ASU basketball team Monday after his arrest on a disorderly conduct charge stem ­ ming from his involve­ ment in a fight outside a fast food restaurant this _ ____________ weekend, n ., F Dale, a 21-year-old sophomore, was arrest­ ed early Saturday morning for allegedly fighting with another man behind a Taco Bell restaurant, 936 E. Apache Blvd., only hours a fte r playing fo r'th e Sun D evils in an exhibition game. ASU coach Bill Frieder was unavailable for com m ent, but athletic departm ent spokesman Scott Dupree confirmed that Dale had been removed from the team. The disorderly conduct charge is not Dale’s first brush with the law. He was placed on probation after an arrest on sexual abuse and assault charges in June 1991, when police said Dale touched the breast of an 18-year-old woman and slapped her. That incident was the first in a disturbing trend that saw at least 23 Sun Devil athletes named or charged in criminal complaints in a 15-month period. The fight occurred less than five hours After Dale had played sparingly in a Sun Devil defeat against an Australian team on Friday night at the University Activity Center. A ccording to Tempe police reports, officers, spotted Dale and Thomas Corbin, a 35-year-old truck driver from Tempe, fighting behind the restaurant afc approximately 2:20 a.m. Saturday, after police received a call about a disturbance in the area. Both men were taken to Tempe City Jail and booked. Dale was released on his own recognizance later Saturday morning, and his preliminary hearing is scheduled for today in Tempe City Court. “Even if the two agreed to fight, it still was not a situation where it isn’t going to affect some other people,” Tempe police spokesman Roger Austin said. “In most cases, it’s going to be a disturbance to someone. When that happens, (that’s an) incident of disorderly conduct.” Although reports said the two were still fighting when police arrived at the scenfe, Dale told officers that he and Corbin were friends who had a disagreement that “got out of hand.” He said they were slap-boxing and “just messing around.” t But responding Officer John Ferrin wrote in his incident report that Dale had a swollen and bloody lip and was out of breath at the time. Ferrin added that when he arrived at the scene, he saw Corbin punch Dale as the player was lying on the ground: T urn t o F ig h t , page 8 . Officials: D ecoupling not a threat Regents president says dividing funds w ont hurt or help colleges B y K ate D State P eely ress “D ecoupling” tuition revenue from the state general appropriations fund will not threaten the amount of money given to universities by the state, officials said Monday. But separating tuition dollars from the general fund j | probably will not mean an increase either, they said. “It (decoupling) won’t change anything, meaning that it won’t give us anymore funds,” said Arizona Board of Regents President Andy Hurwitz. Hurwitz said that without tuition and fees included in general funds, it will be difficult for state lawmakers to decrease appropriations because they no longer will be able to increase tuition to cover budget cuts. “Normally, (legislators) would say that they would give you an estimated amount and the university will raise (tuition) a c e rta in am ount,” H urw itz said, but added that with decoupling lawmakers have no control over tuition hikes. This allows the regents and the University to raise tuition when necessary depending on state appropriations, he said. H urw itz added that decoupling will continue to be a political issue in which the regents must convince state legislators that the universities need every dollar requested. A bill proposing the separation of tuition and general funds is scheduled to be introduced to the Legislature in January, although state officials have said a bill may not be necessary to implement decoupling. “Decoupling or no decoupling would not make a difference in how the state appropriates funds to the university,” said John Lee, assistan t directo r o f research for the Joint Legislative Budget Committee. “The only difference is the university will (decide) about raising tuition. The university will keep the revenue,” Lee said, Lee said appropriations will continue to be distributed based upon the availability of funds and the needs of the universities. Lee said a minor change is that the state budget listing of expenditure authority may need adjusting if tuition funds are separated. Expenditure authority is the actual amount of money the universities have to spend. Lee added that the universities will keep all tuition revenue, even when they raise tuition. Steve Jordan, director of financing and planning for the Board o f Regents, said the Legislature will consider the current rate of tuition when planning the budget if decoupling passes. In the past, regents have voted on tuition increases in D ecem ber, before the next academ ic year, so that the L egislature has estim ates to work w ith when setting appropriations. 1 ■v ’r Jordan said decoupling will alleviate the pressure on universities to increase funding by raising tuition because legislators will consider only the tuition income of the present year. According to Jordan, if decoupling occurs the regents will be solely responsible for setting tuition rates and will not have to set tuition before budget sessions begin. Also, the regents will be able to designate when and why a tuition increase is needed without the state deciding for them, he said. Jordan said he cannot say yet whether state appropriations will increase or decrease if decoupling occurs. Solar officials defend against allegations o f funding m isuse By ( ' iiris D riscoi l' St a t e P r ess ASU research officials defended their records Monday amid allegations that they misused positions on the state Solar Energy A dvisory Council and us predecessor h i order to secure funding for their own institutions and “pet projects.” “The three state universities are major participants in solar energy and it was probably a common feeling (among commission members) that it was safer to support projects in the universities than in individual industries,” said Charles Backus, associate dean of the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences and a form er m em ber o f the A rizona Solar Energy Commission. The ASEC was disbanded in 1987 by then-Gov. Evan Mccham. “They got all of the people who were knowledgeable in solar and had a background in it and appointed them to the commission.” said Backus, who is an expert in the field o f solar electric cells. “I t’s an obvious representation to have on the commission.” B yard Wood, ASU director of energy systems research and a member of the SEAC since January 1987, said, “There is a lot of sour grapes. “I think the record will show that most of these projects were done through a s open, com petitive bidding process and they were evaluated by competent people,” Wood said. "I know that while I have been a T urn TO Solar, page 8. Today’s Weather: Partly cloudy and cool. High 57. Low 37. IN S ID E STA TE PR ESS Campus World/Nation News The R eagan/Bush cam paign was cleared o f any hostage deal during the 1980 election, but accused of “outer lim its o f propriety.” R e g e n t A ndy H u rw itz sp o k e w ith s tu d e n t leaders about controlled growth Monday. Page 3 Page 6 Sports T h e A S U sw im m in g te a m h ad su c c e s s last weekend when they met USC and UCLA. Page 15 Classifieds......................... ..17 C om ics................................. 14 Crossword........................ 6 O pinion..................................4 Sports.................. 15 W orld/Nation........... 3 State P Tuesday, November 24,1992 P a g:e 2 r ess T oday • M U AB Recreation Committee • Meeting Everyone welcome for the fun. 2 p.m. MU second floor, Conference Room 2. • M U A B Special Events Committee • Meeting. Everyone welcome for the fun. 2:40 p m MU ttìrd floor, Conference Room / I p f e t! • Hillel Union of Jewish Students • Lunch. 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. 1012*' S. Mill Ave. » College of Architecture & Environmental Design ♦ Show of sports equipment for the physically challenged. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Architecture north, lower level, R ed Square. • M U A B • N8C/Mifton Bradley Tour! G am es and fun all rteiy.JCwné check it out. 10 a.m. MU lower level, Programming Lounge. • All Saints Newman Center • Candlelight m ass — quiet prayer time after a long study day. 9:15 p.m; Newman Center, Cotlege A University. •C M Alpha • Prayer, worship & fellowship. 7 p.m. Danforth Chapel. • E uropean D iscussion C lub* 'Comparing Our Difference Cultures.* 6 p.m. Barxlersnatch, 125 £ . Fifth S t, southwest comer of Fifth A Forest. • Lesblan/Gay Academ ic Union» Weekly meeting. 7:30 p.m. MU Cochise, Room 212. • N A SA • Important meeting. Everyone please attend. 4 p.m. Student Services, Multicultural Lopnge. - ' A . . . ^ ^ ;' • M U À B Special Events & Recreation Committees » The band Just Us will perform at the "Turkey Taunt.” Turkey legs contest at 11:30 a.m. and turkey gobble contest at 12:30 p.m. Pumpkin pies a s prizes — | FREE) MU Programming Lounge. • A liv e * Bible study. Everyone welcome. 7p.m . MUHopIRóorn. • Students of Objectivism »Free Objectivist literature. 8 a m . Cady Mall. • Fellowship of ChristianAthletes • Come listen to a guest speaker from tie Crisis Pregnancy Center. 7:30 p m UAC Room 35. • C e n s u s Am bassadors • Bible study. 7:30 pm. I« # L s Raz. • Baptist Student Union »Bible study on sex & dating. Join us for a creative workshop experience. Ai are invited. 7 pe R&fiZtOrONS, / 'AVE * 2 £ FW RKM c V M To VfQNK Tak F "ZAX A r te z tC A tK e . AMP Z A T Í M o f& W f i e t y i N t . . . 2 K S IPO S tanford offers C razed L iberalism 101 Humanitarian causes have taken me to some very unfriendly, parts recently. I have tw ice visited EMMETT erstw hile Y ugoslavia to TYRRELL investigate the condition of refugees in Croatia and the grisly consequences of Serbian ethnic cleansing in the besieged city of M ostar, Bosnia. The refugees’ condition is grim and gets grim m er still as w inter approaches. Food, clothing and peace are urgently needed. In Mostar, Serbian artillery began booming overhead as soon as our convoy was spotted rolling down the hills and into the city. Nonetheless, unfriendly as erstwhile Yugoslavia is, it is only marginally more hostile than the site of my most recent humanitarian mission, Stanford University. I went there a week ago to review human rights abuses committed by junior faculty members against students and against other faculty members. I also hoped to persuade the professoriate that the incidence of Nintendo playing among them (and of golf among the less intellectual profs) had become an impediment to the intellectual process. Given that the cost of a Stanford education has risen to six figures, I believed, if only out of simple human justice, that professors should make themselves more available to untutored youth. Now, after the frosty treatment accorded me by the Stanford faculty — despite my obvious commitment to human rights — and after acquainting m yself w ith the idiotic condition o f the u n iv e rsity ’s curriculum, I believe that for the good name of Stanford and for the students’ well-being, faculty members should actually be encouraged to spend more time in recreational pursuits, particularly travel abroad. Of all the intensely politicized campuses in the republic — and there are many Stanford is about the worst. Moreover, the politics that dom inate are not simply the poisonous teachings of Marx, Lenin, the German mentors to Hitler or any of the other propounders of New Dawns this century. All those fanatics come across as teachers of genius and integrity compared with the infantile nitwits being taught on America’s R- flagrantly politicized campuses. Students told me am azing stories. One spoke o f an introductory class in philosophy where the thought of Aristotle and o f P lato had to be interlarded with readings from interviews conducted with aborigines, I heard of a class in which the atomic bomb was explicated as a “phallocentric” device whose vileness issued from the fact that male scientists were trying to create “a child” w ithout any significant contribution from women. In the English Department — if it can be called an English Department — Genesis is taught as “sexist,” “The Tempest” is taught from a slave’s point of view, St. Paul is presented as a hom osexual (possibly as a compliment to the old boy), and in one of the benighted university departments there has been a course called “Black Hair’s Culture in History,” featuring such lectures as “Four Hundred Years Without A Comb.” For one lecture, hairstylists were invited in. N aturally, even students with any intellectual acuity whatsoever take all this flapdoodle quite cynically. Many told me that they know immediately what the feminist instructors and the Third World mountebanks require and regurgitate it •effortlessly. Perhaps this is all for the good. During the Cold War, universities politicized by Marxists were turning out large numbers of quasi-Marxists alienated from bourgeois reality and sympathetic to Soviet m ischief-makers. Our universities merely continue what is becoming the American way of education, to wit, spending the maximum amount of public monies to bore students with the latest goody-goody enthusiasm of our so-called liberals. Still, I believe there is a vast injustice being perpetrated here. Walking through the beautiful Stanford campus, as the profs whizzed by me on their skateboards, some heading for a seminar on who is more virtuous, the boys or the girls, others pn route to the public hanging of an effigy of Christopher Columbus, I wondered if Ralph Nader, the consumers’ friend, would agree with me that the students’ rights are being trampled. It is not only that those who disagree with the profs are punished for their beliefs. It is that these students have entered into a contractual agreement for a college education and have instead been forced to participate in their professors’ group therapy sessions. The students should be billing the profs. 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. BURRCHJGH............................................................. jCHyEditor COLUMNIST: Ashahed Triche. SONDRA ROBERTO................................... As«. City Editor PRODUCTION: Kai Barrett. G ary Bedol, Jodi Goldblatt. JOANNA NewsEditor Jeff Hams. Kevin Heller. Barry Kelly, Steve McDowell, RICHARD RUELAS..................... ......Opinion Editor Richard Pomerantz, Evonne Vera. SEAN OPENSH A W ................ ..............Photo Editor SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Kelly A dcock. Sonia DARR YL WEBB .............................Asst. Photo Editor Benson. Jamia Bimey; Jinjer Brody. Renee Headrick, Erica GREG SEXTON_____ Sport* Editor Kuebler. Sue Lowry, Lance Newman. Michael Oman. Tim BRIAN CHARLES .... ... Asst. Sports Editor Wohlpart. LAURIE NOTARO ............. ........... *............Magazine Editor EHREN SCHWIEBERT ... .. . L ; ; .Graphk-s Editor T h e Slate Press is published M onday through Friday R E P O R T E R S : Kate D eely. Stephen D em oratz. C hris during the academic year« except holidays and exam periods, Driscoll, Carol Ann Hansen. Shaun Rachau. S. Talbott at Matthews Center, Room 1.5, Arizona State University, Smith, Thomas Trask, Natalie Young, Dan Zeiger. Tempe. Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. SPORTS R EPO R TER S: Jake Batsell. Lisa Krarttz. John The Suite Press is the only new spaper ex clu siv ely ■Reznick. published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news COPY EDITORS: Angela Benoche, Jason Owsley. and views published in this newspaper are hot necessarily CARTOONISTS: Ken Collins. Sean T Hoy. those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student PHOTOGRAPHERS: Michelle Conway. Irwin Dougherty. body. . . • 7 . -••• Darryl Webb, Cart York. E d ito r ia l B oard U nsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: .......Editor KRIS MAYES KEN BROWN................ ¿.............. w..i.__ ¿.Managing Editor RICHARD RUELAS .. .:.. .. .... . . .. . .....,.. Opinion Editor num ber. O nly signed le tte rs w ijl b e c o n sid e re d for publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must be either brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basem ent o f Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe,. Ariz. 852871502. State P ress P h o n e N umbers The State Prefs w elcom es and encourages w ritten response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no more than two pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone .... .....,.....;.;;.,.„.i......965-7572 Front D e s k Newsroom............................................................... «..965r2292 Magazine .......................................... .................965-1695 Display A d v e r t i s i n g ............................... ¡.965-6555 Classified A d v e r t i s i n g . ¿ . . . . . , ; . i . ; . . . . 9 6 5 - 6 7 5 1 Opinion STATE Press • V iolence o f rio ts d id zero fo r LA Those clubs that clamp onto steering wheels to prevent auto theft come in designer ICHARD colors now. RUELAS But back in April, they still were only available in 1 Opinion th e old red-and-black Editor model. But it probably wouldn’t ■ have m attered to Jam es Greer if he was beaten with • the red-and-black model or ■with the new neon pink or green clubs. He d o esn ’t remember much about the Thursday afternoon he was pulled out of his truck at an intersection on the Imperial Highway. Greer’s beating was not nationally publicized. Thefc was no television helicopter hovering overhead to catch each'blow on videotape for rebroadcast later, as in the case of truck driver Reginald Denny. But G reer’s beating was equally gruesome and senseless. D riv in g to .a jo b site for W iztec — a m obile computer service firm on the day the not-guilty v erd ict in the Rodney King heating case was announced, Greer, 38, was pulled from his Chevrolet truck and beaten by four black men who then drove over his head with their Suzuki. All because Greer is white. Greer suffered a concussion and the bones in his eye so ck et w ere cru sh ed , but he is alm ost back to functioning normally — except for some memory slips. Greer’s demeanor has also changed. The man, whom his father described as being essentially a big, gentle teddy bear, now carries a gun in his truck. “I don’t go anywhere without my 9mm under my seat anymore,” Greer said in a phone interview this week from the New Medical Community Re-entry Center in Apple Valley, Calif. Before the beating, Greer didn’t consider himself any sort of racist. But after his attack, he became a little more leery and a little more cynical. “When 1 was in PT (physical therapy) about a month and a half or two months after I got beat up, they gave me a black therapist I wasn’t too happy about that, but it worked out.” The Los Angeles riots have been called a wake-up call for white America, a demonstration of the pent-up anger felt by poverty-stricken blacks. The violence, looting and arson are to be understood, not criticized or punished; The riots supposedly had some long-term positive effects. But those positive effects have yet to manifest th em selv es. So far, it seem s that the rio ts have accomplished nothing but a growth in the number of whites and blacks who hate each other and a growth in the magnitude of that hate among those who already did hate each other. Greer was neither overtly violent nor racist before he got clubbed and had his head run over. Now he carries a handgun when he drives and has a new attitude about race relations. “The schism between races is opening wider and wider and our laws don’t work. These guys say, ‘Oh, it was how I was raised,”’ Greer said. “They’ve got these excuses and they think they’re good. : “I don’t think they’re good, but if you can get away with it, hey, that’s wonderful. ‘I’m black. I’m raised this way. Please don’t hurt me,”’ he said. “It’s really getting had. “That’s the kind of crap that 1 figure led to the riot.” Greer gets angry when he sees threats by blacks on the news saying if the four accused of beating up Denny are found guilty, a new riot will spring up, putting the old one to shame. Speaking as if he’s addressing the potential rioters, Greer said, “Well, I hope you friggin’ do (riot), because we’re gonna shoot the shit out of you.” D em onstrating, even violent destructive demonstration, in the wake of the insane verdict of the King trial might have been understandable. Looting had nothing to do with the King verdict, but is still in the realm o f being understandable. But the violence embodied in the beatings of Denny and Greer is not understandable. White America needed a wake-up call, as many were not aw are o f the con d itio n s p resent in many communites across the nation, Few knew there were places where police would not patrol or would do so on the defensive, looking for someone to beat down rather than bring to justice. But the events of April 30 did not accomplish that. In the final analysis, history will see the Los Angeles riots as a major setback in race relations in America. Ri Page 5 T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 2 C lin t o n m eets w ith alien eltsc-t Clinton hearA the concerns o f a man who claims to h a K /e b e e n a lie n a te d in the November election. Th^ visitor hails from a small planet of liberal media ^gunes that Turn to A lien A ngst, fë g e 7 H ow about t h o s e C a rd in a ls jN ow th a t ftvéntîon the length and formation of the words are all hints. Eaçh day the code tetters are different. 11-24 CRYPTOQUOTE C A MONDAY THRU THURSDAY ;..W. N - - . • V: W Z C A N F S C D -X;F' ' S W F C FC A 1 /4 lb . B u r g e r 3 - 5 p .m . o n l y 9 9 0 No Coupon Necessary - just show your college ID (ASU, MCC, SCC ) Not valid with to-go orders. • In the Cornerstone - Rural & University * 967-3192 W N X R ^ Q -S A -v. ^- N D Z V R F A N Yesterday's Cryptoquote: CHILDREN ARE THE UVlNG MESSAGES WE SEND TO A TIME WE WILL N O T ^Ë -i-J^HN W. WHITEHEAD ; V | -¿.<4 . State P Pag';e 7 T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 2 ress State drive serves up new license plates Gar buyers urged to purchase college em blem s to raise m oney for Arizona schools By Shaun R achau St a t e P ress Aiumni associations of the three state Universities have joined forces with the Arizona Automobile Dealers Association and the state Motor Vehicle Division to launch a year-long drive to sell 40,000 collegiate license plates and raise more than $700,000 in scholarships. T he A rizona A utom obile D ealers, Association will promote the year-long drive by asking all new car buyers if they are interested in purchasing a collegiate license plate at the time of sale. The auto dealers will also handle all paperwork for the license, plates.; “The drive was started because we have ju s t been able to work through the State D epartm ent of Transportation in getting forms set up so that it is easy to sell license plates at the dealers,” said Donald Potts, ex ecu tiv e d irecto r o f the ASU Alumni A ssociation. “We found out that about 200,000 new cars are sold in this state each year, but no one until now could ask for a co lle g ia te license plate at the point of purchase.” ansa State Press photo The collegiate license plates, which' cost - is an excellent example of the tremendous $25, were first offered in 1989 and have progress that can be made through publiccontributed $213,146 to scholarships at the private p a rtn ersh ip s,” said G ov. Fife three universities. In the three years the Symington. Symington said he is proud of the license license plates have been offered, ASU has sold 5,066 plates and earned $86,122 in plate program, which provides educational opportunities for students in Arizona. scholarship money. ASU P resident L attie C oor said Each university receives $17 of the $25 cost from each license plate sold. C ar increasing the number of collegiate license owners can choose the license plate of their plates sold is very important. “The fact that a coalition of the Motor favorite state university, with the funds going directly to that university. Each plate Vehicle Division of the, Arizona Department contains the mascot, colors and name of of Transportation, the Arizona Automobile Dealers Association and two major rental each institution. “The development of this collegiate plate car companies have joined to help the three LU Z o s /"V u < state universities enhance this license plate endeavor is an immensely important'step,” Coor said; Avis and Budget rental car companies have also purchased collegiate license plates for some o f their rental fleet. Avis has purchased 300 plates and Budget has purchased 250. ASU uses the revenue from the license plate program to fund its Medallion of Merit scholarship program, sponsored by the ASU Alumni Association. The medallion is given to the outstanding junior in each Arizona high school. Coor and Dotts said license plate revenue will continue to be used for the program, but if more money is raised other University scholarships Will be considered. “Depending on the dollar flow, we will go ahead and fill out the Medallion of Merit program,” Coor said. “If we can see that the number is growing at a significant rate, we will evaluate other places where it can be most valuable.” . Dotts said the Alumni Association will continue promoting the sale of the license plates in alumni publications and through local alumni chapters. The Alum ni A ssociation has also promoted the license plates through radio, telev isio n and public address announcements during ASU football games. S ta te P re ss C la s s if ie d s That’s the ticket! » o s H o ■mm' m The S ta te Press o p en s doors o f k n o w le d g e to yo u T h e S h o w s P e o p le W a tc h MILTON BRADLEY GAM ES T h e G am es People P la y LATE NIGHT COLLEGE TOUR ALL DAY TODAY 10am *6pm \ \ Memorial Union Programming Lounge Page 8 T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 2 St a t e P ress F igh t C ontinued from page 1. A crowd of about 10 witnessed the fight. A task force appointed by ASU President Lattie Coor recently completed a student athlete conduct code that has a mandatory one-year suspension of any athlete convicted of a felony charge or two secondary offenses in a 12-month period. The code takes effect Dec. 6. It is not known whether Dale’s second arrest will result in his expulsion from the University, similar to th at of former ASU basketball player Jamal Faulkner. Faulkner was kicked out of school in September after a probation violation. Dale, a 1990 graduate of Sam Houston High School in Houston, was a member of Frieder’s first recruiting class at ASU. He was suspended from the team in February for what Frieder said was a “poor attitude,” but was reinstated in the fall. After suffering a Stress fracture in his foot, Dale missed his freshman season as a redshirt, but he played in 13 games last year, averaging 3.4 points and 1.5 rebounds a contest. His best scoring game as a Sun Devil was a 14-point effort against Brown on Dec. 27. Solar. C ontinued from page. 1. council member there were no improprieties because we haven’t had any decision-making power.” The allegations came in an article published in The Phoenix Gazette Monday. Among other charges, the Phoenix daily said $60,000 was given to ASU from state funds to support a solar Water heater hotline that unnamed industry officials charged was “ineffective” because of the untrained students who ran it. However, Wood said the two graduate students who ran the hotline in 1986 and 1987 were very knowledgeable about solar water heaters. The complaints came from solar water heater repair people who were resentful of the hotline because they thought it took business away from their companies. Wood said. “I’ll tell you straight out, it’s not wasted,” Brazel said. “We “We got a lot of positive feedback from (homeowners) who ...did what W e were contracted to do. What they did with the used the hotline,” Wood added. The hotline offered advice results is up to the solar energy commission. We had a about how to fix solar water heaters. contract with them that we finalized and produced to our Wood said the school of engineering received the $60,000 satisfaction and to their satisfaction. the year before he was appointed to the council. “All the money went towards hiring students so it was an The $20,000 mentioned in the article went to the ASU educational experience, and it takes money to produce that.” Office of Climatology for the production of a solar map of Brazel said the Office of Climatology produced a 100-page Arizona. Chairman of Geography Anthony J. Brazel was director of document full of analyses and maps using satellite imagery the ASU Office of Climatology at the time the solar energy and ground station data to produce a climatology of solar map of Arizona was produced. radiation for the state of Arizona. Thinking about your future? Let it start today with a job in advertising at The State Press. Cali 965-6555. LEIG H TO N 'S ò r r id i b O tb v 6 tb tx / fo u r Ü 2 " Ö F F “! Grease 'n Go's 20 pt. Valvolfne Lube, Oil & Filter Service 0 Reg. Price $21.95 T rt/ô ô I x j t 'ö o m ADD + *1 E PA F ee I . P la c e y o u r p e r s o n a l a d a t t h e C la s s if ie d s O ffice, M a tth e w s C e n te r b a se m e n t! A nd do n 't forget y o u r stu d e n t ID! CLIP YOURS UP! Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8-6 Sun. 10-4 1 3 5 5 S . McCIIntOCk. 1355S. Country Club Mesa, 898-8211 Tempo, 894-2798 Good only with coupon. Not valid with, any other offer. ALTERNATIVE SPORTS, INC. BUY * SEL Santa Cruz Nitro Avalanche Barfoot H-Street Wave Rave Bamboo Curtain Twist 90 RENT • TRADE ‘S A V E 15 % on snowboard rental this Thanksgiving weekend with ASU1.D. G uadalup e & R ural (Tem pe) • 8 3 8 - 0 1 7 4 weeks. For more info call 491 - 172 THE HUB OF ASU f DID 1 YOU KNOW PICK YOURS UP in the basem ent of Matthews Center _ Haircut & Dry Hawaiian Pedicure $8.50 $6.00 Manicure . $3.00 Eyelash Tint $3.00 Brow Wax Facials $20.00 $11.00 and up Colors Leg Wax $12.00 Permanent $20.00 and up $20.00 and up Weaves ^ 5 u V e ^ n v ite d Y aI r-sl S Tm T 1 L J ~ r EE TE if f E 3345 SOUTH RURAL ROAD 491.0449 A« work performed by students under the supervision of Licensed Instructors. * The Memorial Union cordially invites you to attend its 37th annual Holiday Coffee. December 2 9 a.m .-ll a.m. Arizona Room Memorial Union Please join us! Sta te P Page 9 T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 2 ress Tempe flushes out water-wasting demons The first step of the water conservation program will be to make 4,000 retrofit kits available free of cost for homes built before 1980, when building code requirements for water-conservation devices did not exist. Low-flow shower heads, water dispersement devices to be placed in toilets to B y Ste ph en D em o ratz lessen the amount of water flushed, leak-detection devices S t a t e P ress and faucet aerators will be included in the retrofit kits, said Tempe officials say they are tired Pete Smith, Water conservation coordinator. of residents needlessly flushing water An average household will be able to save 22 gallons of down their toilets and spraying too ■water per day using the retrofit kit, or 8,212 gallons a year, much on finely manicured lawns.*To he said. Combat water waste, the City Council Vice Mayor Neil Giuliano said this program is a good approved a th ree-p art w ater example of how important water conservation 's to the City co n serv atio n program last week Council. , rewarding single-family homes for “This is a good program and is a way to educate people installing water-saving products. about water conservation,” he said. “The goal of this program is to Cassano “Putting in these kits is just like putting in a light bulb,” have more effective water usage and Smith said. “Everything screws right in.” to cut down the overall water usage,” He expressed concern for elderly citizens and said city said D enzil Jones, T em pe’s w ater and w astew ater employees may be able to help the physically disabled superintendent Tempe households that overuse water can potentially install the kits because pliers may be needed to remove save 41,972 gallons of water per year, Tempo’s water and water aerators and shower heads from faucets. Jones said the kits are being given away on a first-come, wastewater division reported. first-served basis at the city hall customer service desk. He City Council offers rebates to frugal single-family homes Want a liner ad in the State Press Classifieds section tomorrow? said the city received 950 calls from water customers and expected the 4,000 kits to disappear quickly among the 38,000 homes in Tempe. The second point of the water conservation program is a $100 rebate to residents who install a low-water landscape. City Councilman Don Cassano said the banks of the Superstition Freeway represent a model of what citizens can do with their lawns. “Right now there is Bermuda grass,, which requires a lot of maintenance and water,” Cassano said. “But it is going to be replaced by a different type of grass that requires low maintenance.” He also recommended a drip system to irrigate lawns instead of the conventional above-ground sprinkler system. Smith said 25,000 gallons of water can be saved every year with low-water landscaping. The third focus of the water conservation program is to offer 50 percent rebates — up to $75 for single-family homes that convert to low-flush, toilets. Smith said 24 gallons of water can be saved per day, or 8,760 per year, with the new toilets. Jones said, ‘Tempe residents can see significant changes on their w ater and sew er bills if these program s are followed.” v We’ll need to receive it before noon today! J Matthews Center, Basement • 965-6731 Iv M i S 6 7 -2 3 6 0 H A IR C U T S aew cH ent* N A IL S WlZZAROS S tudent« reg. »12" Watt-in» H A IR S T U D I O Welcome * r '■ Qnfl ft R u ralR d . «22 0 0 Full S et S c u lp s p i Tips. F ills & m anicures to o . When you get to cam pus, clear the morning cobwebs, from your brain...read the S tale ! B H D K ) O F T H E WEEK Making faces at the camera, a group o f children play around an art sculpture PITCHERS located next to the Famcr’s Education Building. tA«s‘c 750 JAGERS G in a D ow den T OUT O f T. I b & n tiv il é * Spark \% l^e&tiKrok 965-6681 n e v » tri< > t o * * *% *»< * th e 130 E. U niversity«966-7788 W ed 11/25 Page 10 St a t e P r e ss Tuesday, November 24,1992 P la y in g G rad u ale ASU pours nearly half a million dollars into an academic support system to help its 520 student athletes graduate. What services are offered and are they making a difference in the graduation rates of student athletes? Story by Patricia Mah A SU sophom ore C arlo s Arlisv who p lays football and basketball for the Sun Devils, said he strives for both academ ic and athletic success. The graduation rates ^Z^arlos Artis wasn’t supposed to make it as a college The 1991 -92 NCAA Division I Graduation-Rates Report student. At least that's what his test scores indicated. released last summer shows that ASU has a graduation rate of When he took the American College Testing entrance exam 44 percent for all students and 40 percent for all student as a high school senior, the talented ASU sophomore football athletes, based on a six-year graduation rate average. and basketball player was just one point shy of the minimum Of the 106 Division I-A institutions, of which ASU is a score of 17 to be eligible for big-time intercollegiate athletics. member, the graduation rate of all students is 56 percent and Artis certainly did not project to be the type of student who of all student athletes, 52 percent. would earn a college degree and in the process help ASU, The graduation rate is based on a comparison of the number which maintains the lowest overall graduation rate of all the of students who entered a college or university and the number schools in the Pacific 10 Conference, improve upon its record. of those who graduated within six years. The University is determined, however, to graduate its Because of the Student Right to Know Act, this year athletes and it has put its money where its mouth is by pouring marked the first time the NCAA publicly released graduation nearly $500,000 a year into an academic support system for information of its member institutions. The Student Right to Artis and the other 519 Sun Devil student athletes. Know Act was passed by Congress in November 1990 and Artis was classified his freshman year as a “Prop 48,” took effect September 1991. which refers to the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s The report for each Division I school contains information bylaw gassed in 1986. ' about students who entered in 1983 and 1984, which were the Proposition 48 (NCAA Bylaw 14.3) states that to be two most recent available graduating classes for the required eligible to practice and play at a National Collegiate Athletic six years of information. Association Division I or Division 11 college during the The deck seems stacked particularly against the revenue freshman year, a student must graduate from' high school with sports: football, basketball and baseball. a minimum grade point average of 2.0 (on a 4.0 scale) in an According to the NCAA report, the graduation rates for 11 -course core curriculum, which includes three years of ASU athletes for sports categories are: football, 25 percent; English, two years of mathematics, two years of social science men’s basketball, 42 percent; baseball, 17 percent; men’s cross and two years of natural or physical science. In addition, a country and track, 17 percent; men’s other sports, 44 percent; student must achieve a com bined score of 700 on the women’s basketball, 80 percent; women’s cross country and Scholastic Aptitude Test or composite score of 17 on the ACT. track, 20 percent; women’s other sports, 55 percent. Artis didn’t score well on the ACT he took in high school,, The rates of the other Pac-10 schools are: UofA, students but the potential clearly existed; he was bright and dedicated, 45 percent, student athletes 45 percent; U niversity of having graduated from Washington High School in Phoenix Califomia-Berkeley, students 73 percent, student athletes 70 with a 3.0 GPA. He was confident he could do college work. percent; Oregon, students 46 percent, student athletes 42 ASU assistant football coach Don Bocchi and assistant percent; Oregon State, students 50 percent, student athletes, 56 basketball coach Lynn Archibald both believed in him and percent; University of Southern California, students 57 recruited Artis to come to the University, even though he percent, student athletes, 50 percent; Stanford, students, 91 could not practice his freshman year with the teams. percent, student athletes, 81 percent; University of CalifomiaArtis took full advantage of the system and hit the books Los Angeles, students, 70 percent, student athletes, 60 percent; hard. When he re-took the ACT, he scored a 17, which was Washington, students, 59 percent, student athletes, 52 percent; high enough to gain eligibility as a sophomore. Washington State, students 51 percent, student athletes 45 Still, based on his test scores, Artis wouldn’t be considered percent. the most likely candidate for graduation. But he has shown The graduation rates are affected by a number of factors, that standardized test scores don’t always predict academic including students needing more than six years to graduate, success. An elementary education major, Artis holds a 2.5 students leaving school for a semester or year to work or GPA and is taking 17 credits this semester. travel, students transferring to other institutions and students "When 1 came into college, my first semester was kind of being dismissed for academic deficiencies. rough, but I picked up my second semester,” he said. “This year, right now, I’m getting A’s andB ’s in all my classes. Demographics — a factor “I wasn’t even supposed to make it here. I ’m not even The demographics of ASU, the profile of the average supposed to be able to compete academically at this level. student and the inherent difficulty of tracking students over an “I proved them wrong.” extended period of time all play into the reasons behind the numbers. Jill DeMichele, assistant athletic director for academic and student services, said the demographics of ASU are different from its sister schools in the Pac-10, mainly because the U niversity is a com m uter school, which reflects in the graduation rates because many students do not take the traditional route of graduating in four or five years. “We are primarily a junior and senior and graduate school,”. DeMichele said. “We depend very heavily on the community college system around us. There are people who are taking much longer (to graduate) due to work commitments and financial constraints.” At ASU the num ber of juniors, seniors and graduate students is significantly larger than the number of underclass students. According to the Office of Institutional Analysis, the number of juniors and seniors combined at ASU is 21,412, while the number of freshmen and sophomores combined is 9,735. The number of graduate students alone is 11,729. Measuring the graduation rates of student athletes is even trickier because the pool of people is smaller. Faculty athletics representative Jerry Kingston said, “If you have a six-year graduation rate based on 100 students, every time one student decides, for whatever reason, to make a decision that leads to his or her not graduating within six years, you’ve affected that graduation rate by 1 percent,” B ecause some athletes delay graduation to enter professional sports, the NCAA figures do not necessarily reflect those who return to finish their degrees. Athletic department academic counselor Ana Maria Acosta said football graduation rates never will paint a completely accurate picture because many ASU players return to school after they get drafted. “If the student doesn’t redshirt his freshman year, then he (can be) drafted at the end of his fourth year, which means he has a full year left. If they’re good and they make the pros, .they’re there. The statistics will never reflect those students who come back (later) to finish their degree.” The academic support system ASU’s athletic department established a student services unit in 1984, but in 1987, the unit was renamed academic and student services. Its mission is to help athletes earn college degrees by providing support services such as academic advising, tutoring and study halls and by assisting with the process of admissions, registration, housing and financial aid. For the 1992-93 year, the operating budget for academic and student services is $481,392, or 4.2 percent of the entire athletic department budget of $11,410,700. The operating St a t e P ress budget does not include athletic scholarships. Artis, .19, said that when he came to ASU, he found the services helpful and the people at ASU concerned with his well-being. “When I came into college, I really didn’t know how to study,” he said. “They teach you so much. The whole system here is based on academics. They don’t just care how you play on the athletic field. They really look out for you. They want you to achieve. They want you to graduate on time.” The 6-foot-4 Artis, who goes to study hall five times a week, estimates that he studies 15 hours a week. “We get a lot of work done (in study hall);” he said. “We’re one-on-one with our tutors.” DeMichele said study halls are run for all sports, with separate ones for football and men’s and women’s basketball. “We put freshmen and new transfer students in study hall that first year,” she said. Because of budget constraints, only Scholarship athletes have the privilege of requesting one-on-one appointments with tutors, DeMichele said, She added that other athletes can participate in group tutoring sessions. “Over the course of the year, we may have 300 students out of the 500 plus (who request tutors),” she Said. DeMichele, who haS worked in the athletic department since 1987 and has been at ASU since 1974, said that the department encourages students to use resources on campus such as the writing and math centers and the Educational Support Program. Bettie Julkes, academic counselor and program coordinator for the advising unit, also coordinates the tutor program. She said the 40 tutors consist of graduate students and people from the community. Julkes added that there is a tutor fair at the beginning of the semester, where students are responsible for signing up for their own tutor. The philosophy from higher up The quest for maintaining a balance between academics and athletics can be traced to the athletic director, to the president’s office and to the NCAA itself. , “I think any good, responsible program has to have a balance between academics and athletics,” Athletic Director Charles Harris said. “It can be done. Administrators, coaches and athletes all have to make a commitment to be dedicated to achieving a goal o f balancing academics and athletics.” In order to have that balance, institutions need students with the academic credentials to be successful, Harris said. He added that the caliber of student athletes has increased in recent years because of higher standards of admission, which include completion of core-course requirements and minimum ACT or SAT scores. Harris said the higher NCAA standards are good “because it is unfair to bring anyone into an academic environment with the pretense that they will have the ability to achieve under demanding circumstances without really a clear recognition of what their abilities are.” ASU President Lattie Coor agreed and said that with the tougher admission and eligibility requirements, today’s student athletes have a better understanding of the kind of academic expectations that will be made of them. “There is a greater expectation that they must make a commitment to academics if they are to be in a Division I institution,” Coor said. “I think academics must have the upper hand in any intercollegiate athletic program.” C oor is a founding member of the NCAA President’s Commission, a panel of 44 representatives from member institutions that reviews NCAA activity, commissions studies of intercollegiate athletics and proposes legislation. Faculty athletics representative Kingston, who is the only University officer authorized to interpret the rules of the NCAA in eligibility issues, said the NCAA took a major step forward with the introduction of Proposition 48 in 1986. ' “ P rior to the tim e that rule was introduced, the only requirement to be eligible at a Division I institution was that you had to have graduated from high school with a 2.0 Jill DeMichele, assistant athletic director for academ ic and student services, and academ ic counselor Ana Maria Acosta advise a student athlete. The academ ic support unit offers advising, tutoring, study h alls and other services for student athletes. (GPA),” Kingston said. “It was the only requirement.” But Proposition 48 made eligibility requirements tougher, with the 11 -course core requirement and minimum test scores. And the requirements will get even tougher. Effective Aug. 1, 1995, student athletes will have to complete a 13-course core requirement, as well as attain a GPA and achieve an SAT or ACT score based on an index scale to be eligible. Kingston said that the decision of the NCAA to accept these standards is im portant to the developm ent o f the academ ic quality of student athletes. “As standards for everybody go up, even though the standard is higher, the level playing field doesn’t get disturbed,” he said. The NCAA requires that student athletes remain in good academic standing and show satisfactory progress in order to remain eligible. At ASU, that means athletes must pass a minimum of 24 credits each year and be in good standing with the University. Artis said that with the encouragement of the academic support system, h i has worked hard to overcome the stigma attached to the label of having been, a Prop 48. “It kind of affected me a lot,” Artis said. “It was always something that I wanted to fight against. When I go to class, I take it very seriously. “The minute I was Prop 48, the papers, they make it like you’re dumb,” he said. “They just think you’re illiterate. The thing that the press didn’t know was that I had never missed a day of school in my whole high school or grade school.” The best graduation tool The best graduation tools are the plan and the program of study, according to DeMichele. All ASU athletes are required to complete the plan of study, which lists the courses the athlete must complete during the first four semesters. “You do not have to declare a major (but) it forces the student athlete to be focused by selecting an area of study,” DeMichele said. “It’s an athlete’s road map to graduation. “If I was going to say that there was one single reason for our increase in graduation rates, this is it.” A good plan of study eliminates the taking of courses that won’t lead toward a degree and helps students focus on the direction they are taking in their academic career, she said. . Student athletes must file their programs of study at the beginning of their fourth semester in order to participate in early registration. Priority early registration is another perk of being a student athlete; The only other groups that have priority early registration are honors students and disabled students. DeMichele said that academic and student services also has worked closely with Career Services to develop a career exploration program. The program, which is divided into tow phases, helps student athletes make decisions about their careers and teaches job search skills, such as resume writing and interviewing techniques. A computer site on the sixth floor of the Intercollegiate Athletic Complex is available for athletes to use and is open about 60 hours a week. An intensive monitoring system also is in place to track the progress of student athletes and to make sure all paperwork is in order. “There’s a lot of paperwork to be a student, but there’s also a lot of paperwork to be an athlete,” DeMichele said. “You could safely say that a student athlete will have to fill out 25 pieces of paper each school year.” The academic and student services unit also writes to professors three times a semester to ask for grade reports of athletes enrolled in their classes. DeMichele said that the faculty is cooperative about sending in the information and that the unit receives about a 60 to 70 percent response rate. “We do a lot of monitoring because we want to know how students are doing in their classes,” she said. “If there’s a problem, we want to know as soon as possible so that the student can go in and talk to the teacher.” If an athlete will miss class because of road games, the academic and student services unit will write a letter verifying the travel plans, but the athlete is responsible for making arrangements with professors for missed assignments and tests. A model program F acu lty ath letics representative Jerry K in gsto n is the only U niversity officer authorized to interpret the rules of the NCAA. Page_n T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 2 The array of academic and student support programs given to student athletes have had a positive effect: The graduation rates of student athletes are steadily increasing. “When I came (to her current position in 1987), the very first graduation rate, based on a five-year study, was 26.1 percent among student athletes,” DeMichele said. The graduation rates since the. 1984-85 academic year are based on a six-year study. For that year (1984-85), the graduation rate of athletes was 32 percent. “Now it’s up to 40 percent (for 1985-86), which is the highest,” she said. “We anticipate that the 1986-87 class will be 53 percent. The class of 1987-88 — at least 57 percent. “When you look at going from 32 percent to 57 percent, that’s pretty good,” DeMichele said. Kingston also predicted that the graduation rates probably will go up, but added that to measure the success of the support system, the numbers need to be compared over a period of time. “If the graduation rates go up, we should be pleased with that, but we shouldn’t just be euphoric,” he said. “If they happen to go down from one year to the next, we shouldn’t cry out in despair that nothing is working. But over a period of time the averages should tell us something.” He added that since the reporting method has been changed from a five-year study to a six-year study, the numbers from the different surveys are not comparable. DeMichele said she attributes the increase in graduation rates to two reasons: the changing of the NCAA requirements for satisfactory academic progress "and the support ASU “I would love to play professional football. If I don't make it, it’s not a big deal to me. I want to pursue my major. ” Carlos Artis — provides its athletes to help them earn their degrees. “We expect to exceed the all-student rate in the next report,” she said. “One of the reasons is that the all-student rate tends to stay about the same. The student athlete rate is on a steady increase.” DeMichele said that the academic and student services unit serves as a modeffor other institutions. “I get questions from colleagues around the country, especially about the areas of assessment, orientation and monitoring academic progress,” she said. “People are amazed at our facilities. They marvel at the facilities and programs.” The m ajor-sports challenge The graduation rates of students in the major sports traditionally have been lower than those of students in other sports. . Jann Contento, athletic department academic counselor who handles freshmen and transfer football players, said the profile of a football player is different from that of the student in another sport. “The profile of the football player — his chance of survival statistically — is lower based on (the increased likelihood of) being from a minority group, first-generation college student, socio-economic background,” he said. Contento said that major sport student athletes often are more likely to be lagging academically when they come into college and may not be ready for college coursés or to file a program of study or declare a major. “If they don’t establish good study habits and know what they’re facing when they sit in a classroom, then -they can’t compete.” Contento added* that maturity level and difficulty with adjustment to a large metropolitan university also play into the graduation rates. “I think they’re not taking advantage of (resources) because they may have not reached that level of maturity where they realize what this University has to offer,” Contento said. “Oftentimes they were the local hero. It’s an adjustment thing.” According to the summary results of the 1987-88 National Study of Intercollegiate Athletes, a clear, pattern links greater academic difficulties of football and basketball players to the more “successfully competitive” programs. “Successfully competitive” is defined by the win-loss records and Strengths of the opponents for the sports. The report, published by the American Institutes for Page 12 St a t e P ress T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 2 swim,” said the senior communication major. “In football, it’s sort of a stepping stone to the pros. In swimming (it’s a matter of) getting paid to swim (competitively) and get an education. I think there’s also a different mentality about it.”" Swimmer Tia Rains said she chose to come to ASU because'of the swimming program but realizes the limited future of a-swimming career. The 20-year-old senior nutrition m ajor w ants to eventually get her doctoral degree in biochemical nutritional research. “I’ve always been interested in nutrition, just because of swimming,” Rains said: “With research, I just found that it was something that 1 was good at.” Research and the Center for the Study of Athletics, stated that even though football and basketball players in successfully competitive programs are more like to get academic help, they are more likely to experience difficulties in making academics their top priority at college. The study also found that experiences of student athletes in big-time sports aré markedly different from those of other student athletes. “Football and basketball players spend more timé in their sports ... have more educational resources available to them, and these resources notw ithstanding, perform less well academically and feel less capable of meeting their academic demands,” according to the study. It also added that football and basketball players in “successfully competitive” programs aré more likely to report feelings of isolation from other students. Baseball: A different land of game The academic counselors A poster hangs in the lobby of the ASU advising offices that reads, “The odds of making it to the pros are 500,000 to one. Better have something to fall back on.” Sun Devil sports teams are divided among five academic advisers who work on the third floor of the Intercollegiate Athletics Complex. The advisers help athletes with class schedules, completing their plans and their programs of studies and monitoring their progress. “My job is to guide them academically and help them out,” said adviser Acosta, who is in charge of returning football players and men’s tennis and men's golf. “Guide them until they graduate." Acosta, who has been at ASU for three years, said some football players think they will be the one in 500,000 who will make it to the professional teams, whereas that attitude in the smaller sports is not as prevalent. “ASU has a very good track record in placing professional athletes,” she said. “I would like to see them all go pro, but I also want to see them all graduate. And that’s my goal.” Contento said that ASU is doing a fine job and tencourages students to take advantage of the college experience. “What I try to instill in them is that it’s the intangibles of a college education that make the most difference,” he said. Annette Mickle, the academic assistant for the men’s basketball team, said that most of the players she works with are taking advantage of the support system and that most of them really want to cam a college degree. "They understand that without a degree, it’s not going to be so easy to get work once basketball is over,” she added. Coaches’ orders The advisers and coaches work together to keep track of the progress of student athletes. • • “The coaches are great as far as working with our office,” DeMichele said. “It used to be, and still is in a lot of programs across the country, (that) the coaches had to do what we in this office do — the advising, the direction, the monitoring of grades. But the coaches get a lot of assistance from us.” ; Julkes said that because she runs the tutoring program and study hall, she sees the student athletes in all the capacities. "The coaches here are very supportive of what we try to do," Julkes said. “If I say this particular student or group were loud in study hall, then the coach will get on them for that.” M a n y c o a c h e s s a id th e y s tr e s s t h e im p o rta n c e o f a c a d e m ic s a n d e n c o u r a g e a th le te s to h a v e w e ll- ro u n d e d c o lle g e c a r e e r s . “Class attendance is absolutely vital,” head baseball coach Jim Brock said. “If he’s not going to class, I don’t want him playing. Thai’s the bottom line.” Men’s swimming coach Ron Johnson said that the athletic experience is valuable to the development of a student athlete, but that academics is the main reason a student attends college. ‘T he very first thing 1 tell my students when they walk in the door here is that you’re here as a student,” Johnson said. "Athletics is absolutely secondary. Anytime there’s a conflict between athletics and academics,-athletics has to give.” Johnson said that each of the eight swimmers who went to Barcelona this year for the Summer Olympics had a GPA of 3.0 or higher, "Our team GPA is 2.9. Our goal is to be well over a 3.0.” Head football coach Bruce Snyder said high expectations are made o f his players to excel both academically and athletically. “We’re trying to recruit players that have a balance to begin w ith,” he said. “That balance means being excellent in Graduation Rates of Pac- 10 Schools All Students School UofA All Student Athletes 45% A SU 45% 44% California 73% 70% O regon 46% O regon State u se 50% 57% 70% 56% Stanford 91% 81% U CLA 70% W ashington 59% 50% 52% 51 % 45% W ashington State 40% 50% laure*: 1M1-K NCAAGraduation-Ratee Report A SU basketball player W un Vers her said m ost players would like a chance at the pros, but keeping a realistic outlook is important. football. That’s part of the balance. It’s not one or the other.” Snyder, who came to ASU this year from the University of California-Berkeley, said commitments must be made in both areas. “There was a lot of work to do when I got to Cal in this area,” he said. “We were lousy in football at Cal and our graduation rates did not match the student body. When I left, we were in the top 10 in football and we were above the normal student body rate of graduation. / ; “I’m very proud of that. It can be done.” Head basketball coach Bill Frieder said it is important to recruit student athletes who are good players but who also are interested in school. “I think you have to work hard to get student athletes who have a sincere, and genuine interest in getting a degree,” Frieder said. “I think it’s important for them to get their degree because someday the basketball is going to end. They need to be (a) prepared and productive member of their community and out in society.” r_ ■' *. Basketball player Wun Versher said the coaches emphasize academics and that Frieder has stressed the im portance o f graduating. “You w ouldn’t play if you c o u ld n ’t do the academ ics,” Versher said. “Plus, Frieder has really stressed on me graduating. He’s really working with me on that now.” The graduation rate for baseball players at ASU is 17 percent, the lowest of all ASU sports. But baseball plays by a different set of rules. Baseball players can be drafted straight out of high school. If a player decides to enter college, he can be drafted by the professional teams after his junior year. . With a top-notch baseball program like ASU’s, many of its student athletes will play professional baseball. “It’s very rare that you have anybody who is not drafted,” Brock said. “In the last five years, I can give you names of four that didn’t (go pro). They don’t all last very long and they don’t all make it to the big league, but just starting at ASU indicates that you arc good enough to play professional baseball.” There currently are 12 former Sun Devils who play in the major leagues. DeMichele said that it’s a frustrating experience to help graduate baseball student athletes, who are alm ost sure prospects for professional teams. “Our goal here is, of course, to have them be graduates, but also if they do have a pro opportunity, have them be in good standing, so that eventually they can come back and finish their degrees,” she said. Brock, who holds a doctorate in education administration, agreed and said he stressed academics highly with-his players. “Most of my players know they can get into more trouble with me off the field — missing class, missing assignments — than they can on the field,” he said. - Post-eligibility and coming back For student athletes who have used up their eligibility for competition, the University will pay for up to a year for them to complete their degrees. “If they, can graduate within a year, they are entitled to a scholarship (whose amount is) based on the one they had as a student athlete,” DeMichele said. She added that of the 34 post-eligibility students in 199192,31 graduated and the remaining three remain in school. Sarah Wickenburg, a post-eligibility swimmer, said she thinks ASU is giving enough support to its athletes. “It’s all there,” the senior broadcast production major said. To tu rn pro o r no? Versher said most big-tim e college players would like a chance to be a professional athlete. "Everybody is not going to make it to the pros,” he said. "But it is a real big pressure in the locker room. You hear it every day." '• He said the biggest fear of most basketball players is what Tia Rains, a senior nutrition major, said she came to A SU because of its swim m ing program. their futures' will be like after She wants eventually to get her doctoral degree in biochem ical nutritional research. their college careers are over. "Are you going to get a full-time job?" Versher asked “It’s a matter of whether we want to use it or not.” DeMichele said that an NCAA program called the Degree rhetorically. "Athletes haven’t worked that much. Basketball is Completion Award offers student athletes a chance to return to all they have done." But Versher said he is realistic about his future; he wants to finish their degrees if they are within 30 hours of graduation. “That program is a great one,” DeMichele said. “It involves work with minority children in the inner city. "Inner city, to me it’s where I can be most effective," he said. "If you have giving a student a full scholarship one year to finish.his ' , somebody that’s sort of a positive role model, where you have degree. ■ “We have had 18 students approved since it’s been started a visual where you actually see somebody go out and get the degree and come back and stress that, I think that would be (four years ago).” ASU championship track and field athlete Tracy Mattes is really good." Artis said he aspires to be a professional athlete, but if he on the Degree Completion Award program. Mattes, 22, a senior broadcast journalism major, transferred from the doesn’t make it, he’ll have school to fall back on. "I’m not going to lie to you,” he said. "As soon as I University of Wisconsin after three years there. She used up graduate I would love to play professional football. If I don’t her remaining two years of eligibility at ASU and applied for make it, it’s not a big deal to me. I want to pursue my major the Degree Completion Award to finish her degree. “It’s a real advantage because I will have had five years of (elementary education). I think I’ll make it in that field scholarship plus another semester, which is really great,” said because I’m a very sociable person. I love to tutor kids." Mattes, who is carrying 21 credit hours this semester in order to graduate in December. The Olympic sports The opportunity for professional careers is considerably less in Olympic sports and, according to some minor sport student athletes, that gives a different perception of future goals. '‘The people in the smaller sports are more realistic,” said championship archer Janet Schaffer, a senior recreation major. “We know that if we become the best person in the world, we’re not going to get $7.2 million. The only-money you can get in the smaller sports is through endorsements. We’re very much aware that there’s not great opportunities.” . . Swimmer Mike Walker agreed with the notion of being realistic about future goals. “Not too many people in swimming come to school just to Taking advantage of the silver spoon The amount of time spent in athletics is no doubt rigorous, but for many it’s a ticket to a free or nearly free education. “People view athletics as a silver spoon,” said swimmer Mike Walker. “And it really is. It bothers me when people don’t take advantage of it. What I mean by ‘take advantage of it’ is use it to its fullest. “It really is a silver spoon and I’m just really happy to have it. I’m glad that I did what I did to get here.” • So is Carlos Artis. 1 “As far as school. Pm established now,” Artis said. “I know what to do. I know howto make it through school.” Page_13 T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 2 S t a t e P r ess HAPPY THANKSGIVING! Sorry, no S ta te P rett M agazine tb it week. C E N T E R P IE C E S! MAKEYOURTHANKSGIVING TABLECOMPLETE! Arrangements start at $15 or send your Family our FTD Autumn Harvest Bouquet M-TH 7:30am-6:00pm • F 7:30am-5:30pm WM MEMORIAL U N ION LOWER LEVEL « 965-0600 ] P o l ic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents Monday: •A male unaffiliated with the University was approached in Lot 59 where he had allegedly damaged three vehicles. Damage was estimated at $750. •A man unaffiliated with the University was arrested on an outstanding felony warrant from Maricopa County Superior Court for probation violation and alleged sexual assault. He was booked into Maricopa County Jail: •An ASU employee was cited for reckless driving in Lot 59. The officer reported that the man driving the car nearly hit him in the perimeter parking lot. •A man unaffiliated with the University was arrested, cited and released for disorderly conduct at Sun Devil Stadium. •Two male students were approached by ASU Department of Public Safety officers on the north side o f Physical Education West after police were called to the scene of a possible bike theft. The, students said they were not stealing bikes, but only talking about how easy it would be to steal bikes. •A fire alarm was activated at Palo Verde East residence hall by burning food; The responding officer found the area •A student reported his compact disc player stolen from Manzanita Hall when he left his room open and unattended. Loss is estimated at $200. Police have no suspects. •A student reported that his 21-speed Bridgestone cruiser was stolen from the east side of Ocotillo Hall’s B-wing, where it was secured to itself. Loss is estimated at $400. •A woman unaffiliated with the University reported her wallet was Stolen from the art building. Loss is estimated at $75. Police have no suspects. Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: •A 34-year-old Tempe man was arrested on a disorderly conduct charge after he allegedly pointed a handgun at his roommate at their apartment. Reports said the man pointed a .38 revolver about two feet above his roommate’s head and pulled the trigger. The gun did not discharge because it was not loaded at the time. The man, who officers said was intoxicated at the time of the arrest, said he was upset because his jacket had been stolen. He was taken to Tempe City Jail and booked. Compiled by State Press reporters Stephen Demoratz and Dan Zeiger. 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PE© PLEA DALLAS (AP) — Morton Downey Jr.’s radio talk show originated M onday from the form er Texas Schoolbook Depository after a judge allowed him to broadcast from the spot where Lee Harvey Oswald shot at President Kennedy 29 years ago. The show focused on the assassination and conspiracy theories and included an audio tour of an exhibit on the sixth floor. “The ghosts of good and evil inhabit this exhibit,” Downey told listeners. State Judge John M. Marshall on Sunday barred Dallas County officials from interfering with Downey’s nationally syndicated show. County commissioners said they feared exploitation of the exhibit, which preserves thé'sixth-floor perch from which the gunman killed President Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963. Downey cited the First Amendment in going to court. “This is a beautiful exhibit that took a lot of guts for Dallas to put together,” Downey said. “My intent is not to exploit it, but to open the door for the whole world to appreciate.” ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — When Miss America Leanza C ornett came to the New York State M useum to draw attention to AIDS, some people were more interested in her $1,200 speaking fee. Cornett spoke Sunday at the museum’s exhibit of 800 panels of The Names Project AIDS Memorial Quilt, which commemorates victims of the disease. Cornett, 21, has a close friend with AIDS and has dedicated her year as Miss America to educating the public about the disease “We are losing sight of this disease and who it is affecting,” Cornett said. “It is claiming the lives of our friends, our wives and husbands and lovers. These people need our compassion.” The museum and community agencies invited Cornett, hoping she would draw attention to the quilt, said Randy Roberts, head of the museum’s public programs. The speaking fee was paid by private donors, he said. But AIDS activists said the money would be better spent on housing, food and other services for people with AIDS “Does she need $1,200 to do th at w hen people are struggling and lacking medical services and lacking decent, affordable housing?” asked Steve Baratta, an AIDS .activist. Cornett said she would donate some of the fee to help AIDS patients but declined to say how much. DALLAS (AP) — Judy Nelson, former companion of Martina Navratilova, has sold jewelry, furniture and art work from her years with the tennis superslsi. A weekend auction raised more than $200,000 for Nelson, 47, who left her husband in 1984 to live with Navratilova. The pair ended their relationship last year in a bitter court battle in Fort Worth. A $46,000 dining set brought $6,500, a necklace with heart-shaped diamonds that retailed for $12,000 fetched $3,250, and a pair of pearl and gold earrings originally bought for $37,000 got $12,500. “I would say if there was any area of the auction that went for less than expected, it was the jewelry,” said Nelson Garrett, owner of the Dallas gallery where the auction was held. “There were some good bargains.” Nelson said the sale as a way to “trim the fat” from her years with Navratilova. Most details of the separation agreement between the two have remained secret. However, Nelson received a home they shared in Aspen, Colo., and later sold it for $1.1 million. SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — Elton John canceled three concerts scheduled for this week in Chile and Brazil because he felt tired after giving two concerts in Buenos Aires, A rgentina, organizers o f his Latin A m erican tour said Monday. Luis Venegas, a spokesman for Providencia Television, said his company was arranging to reimburse some 20,000 ticketholders who paid $22 to $53 for Tuesday’s concert in Santiago. The British rock star was to perform later this week in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, Brazil. NfrlU/ 0 Itillt/f lo ò o W tìi e n d ww! BEST LETTER TO SANTA CONTEST •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: ( QUESTIONS? CALL JACKIE ELDRIDGE 965-6555 PIZZjA & PASTA 0 $25 GIFT CERTIFICATE ASU BOOKSTORE $50 GIFT CERTIFICATE Ca m p u s CORNERlollegeAve. N 1loCollegeStreet Deli *Phone: 967-4049 Oim 10:30pm; Fri. :303m Midnight; Sal. 9am Midnight; Sun. Ilam-!0:30| $25 GIFT CIRTIFICATE ALL CONTESTANTS WILL RECEIVE A FREE STATE PRESS PERSONAL AD. Sports State P P age 15 Tuesday» N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 2 ress ASU swimmers squash L.A. com petition S u n D e v il m e n to p p le b o th B y L is a I . K r a n z S t a t e P ress After the USC newspaper referred to some ASU swimmers as “desert rats,” the Trojans learned that just because the Sun Devils are surrounded by cactus and sand dunes doesn’t mean they can’t hold their own in the water. Not only did ASU’s m en’s swimming team drown USC in their own pool with a meet score of 176-124, but the Sun Devils went on to beat UCLA 134-107 the next day . “We ju s t won on the basis o f pure enthusiasm and w ere extrem ely high emotionally,” ASU coach Ron Johnson said. “Girls and guys were real supportive of each other and you did not see that with USC or UCLA (squads).” Johnson admitted he was surprised with how easily they won because ASU had been training extremely hard right up to the meet and, besides going hard with weights and U C L A a n d U S C swimming longer distances than normal, the swimmers are more focused on the upcoming NCAA championships. “We didn’t rest for (USC and UCLA), and traditionally they are very ready for Pac-10 dual meets,” Johnson said, While the squad seemed to draw energy from each other’s performances, the key was dom inance in the 500 freesty le and the backstroke. “B ackstrokers Sim on Percy, D avid H olderbach and Doug King all swam exceptionally well. In the freestyle Renato Ram alho, Jason B laylock and C ristiano Michelena were exceptionally good,” Johnson said. . ri Michelena was also outstanding in the distan ces, and team m ate Em m anuel Nascimento swam some brilliant relay legs for ASU, besides timing very close to his T urn to M en , page 17. Women swimmers take 1, drop 1 over weekend In the dual meet, the Sun Devils swam a lot of close races that went to their California The ASU women’s swim team realized opponents, who would out-touch them at the this w eekend w hat it felt like to have wall for a number of finishes. “For example, in the 1000 freestyle, we achieved something big and in the very next lost two points by a tenth of a second. We moment have it taken away. There was no question the Sun Devils were out-touched at seven-hundredths of a defeated USC in their home pool With a score second in the 500 free, and by One-hundredth of 179 to 1.19. However, the three-point loss of a second in the 200 free for two points,” to UCLA the follow ing day had som e Hill said. F ru stratio n s aside, H ill said from a question marks behind it, “In a lot o f our. minds; we probably did swimming standpoint the weekend went well beat UCLA if the scoring had been right. overall, especially since going into the meets They miscounted on some of the points and ASU was ranked 13th and USC and UCLA we tried to correct them, and at the end they were ranked 10th and fifth or sixth, even said, ‘I guess you were right,’” freshman respectively. “Losing (to the Bruins) maybe helped us Joanne Currah said. Sun; Devil coach Tim Hill said he thought realize we lost a lot o f close races. But ASU needed only a second-place finish in the swimming wise, we out-swam them ,” he added. last relays to win the meet. Currah saw a number of other positives. “We thought we won, but then they found • “We got our first NCAA hard-cut, which a mistake in the scoring, so right now I’m appealing some of the things that went on,” was Chris Jeffries by two seconds in the 400 individual medley. She’s in the NCAAs for Hill said, B y L is a I . K r a n z St a t e P ress' Sean Opensturwr/State Press The A SU m en’s swim m ing team beat both U C LA and U SC over the weekend in California. Sun Devil Renato Ramatho is pictured. He took first-place in the 500 freestyle against UCLA. T urn to W omen , page W illia m s o n , J o lly te s t f r ie n d s h ip in to u r n e y Archers end first and second in Invitational B y J o h n R e z n ic k State P ress ASU archers Alison Williamson and Michelle Jolly claim to be good friends. But friendships are sometimes tested — especially in a competitive setting, However, such was not the case when they squared off against each another last Saturday in the ASU Invitational held on campus. Williamson and Jolly finished first and second, resp ectiv ely , in the elim ination form at tournam ent, but both said th e ir m atchup in the championship bracket produced no ill feelings between them. “It was fun,” Williamson said with a laugh, describing her matchup with Jolly. “We shoot together all the time. It’s just like, if she wins — she wins and if I win 1 win.” Jolly agreed the tension in her headto-head meeting with Williamson never cam e clo se to strain in g th eir relationship. “Even on the tine during the tournament we goofed around a little bit and were laughing,” Jolly said. “But I think there was some tension. “She w asn’t about to let me beat her,” Jolly said. W illiam so n and Jolly met to determine the tourney champion in a “b est-o f-fiv e” rounds form at. Both were scheduled to shoot a total of three arrows in each round — the winner of each w ould be determ ined by the highest score accum ulated with the three shots. Whoever could win three rounds first would be crowned tourney champion. Williamson jumped to an early 2-0 lead and appeared as if she would sw eep the m atchup ag ain st her teammate. But Jolly rallied. The junior won the next two sets to even the score at 2-2. Williamson finally prevailed in the fifth and deciding set. Rounding out the top three women’s finishers was Sun Devil Cathy Loesch. Meanwhile, no Sun Devils placed in the top three in the mens’ competition. H um berto K eene, Don Rabske and Stewart Bowman --- all independent archers —^ captured the top spots, respectively. Jolly said she and W illiam son practice together, sharing tips on how to improve their games. Jolly said she has even helped Williamson, a native of Church Stretton, England, adapt to life in the Tempe. “I know she helps me,” said Jolly, a graduate of Mesa Mountain View High School, “And I think, sometimes, (I help her) just by being someone here to help her and keep everything positive. With all of her family back in England T u r n t o F riends , page 1 6 . A SU defensive end Israel Stanley shares Pac-10 defensive honors this week. He earned the tribute for h is effort in A S U ’s 7-6 victory over the UofA on Saturday. Stanley recorded nine tackles and one fum ble recovery. He is pictured celebrating with Su n Devil quarterback Grady Benton. Stanley given Pac-10 honors S ta ff a n d w ire re p o rts After an outstanding effort in the upset victory over UofA Saturday, ASU defensive end Israel Stanley was given Pac-10 defensive honors of the week, it was announced Monday . Stanley was credited with nine tackles and a fumble recovery and sacked UofA quarterback George Malauulu oh Arizona’s final offensive play of the game as the Sun Devils upset the Wildcats 7-6. “It felt great,” Stanley said after the game, referring to the hit he put on Malauulu. “I was just hoping he wasn’t going to get away from me. I grabbed him and I was lucky enough to pull him down.” UCLA’s walk-on quarterback John Barnes was named the Pac-10 Player of the Week for rallying the Bruins to a 38-37 victory over Southern Cal. W ashington State running back Shaumbe W right-Fair shared the offensive honors with BarneS, w hile Stanley and S tanford’s Glyn Milbum also were honored. Barnes, a senior, joined the Bruins this spring after UC Santa Barbara dropped football. Against the Trojans, he completed 15 of 28 passes for 385 yards, the most in a Pac-10 game this season, and also threw scoring passes of 29,57 and 90 yards. Wright-Fair rushed 22 times in a snowstorm fo r 194 yards and three touchdow ns .in the Cougars’ 42-23 win over Washington. The senior finished with 1,207 yards to lead the conference for the season. 17. Pag;e 16 State P ress T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 , 1992 S u n D e v il w re s tle rs s h in e in B v J ake B a tsell S t a t e P ress In its first competition "of the season under first-year coach Lee Roy Smith, the ASU wrestling team asserted itself with a pair of season­ opening victories on the road this weekend. The Sun Devils (2-0) defeated Clarion University 23-15 Saturday in Clarion, Pa., and followed it with a 35-9 victory at Cleveland State on Sunday. “It was a positive start,” Smith said. “It gives us a reference point to really start from, outside of the (ASU) wrestling room. There were definitely more positives than negatives.” Senior Shawn C harles, a 126-pound returning A ll-A m erican, Spen cer forcefully won both his matches. He pinned Mark Kaleal of Cleveland State in just 41 seconds and registered a 14-4 victory over Clarion’s Kyle Wolfe. “He (Charles) picked up a major decision against a pretty formidable opponent at Clarion, and he didn't waste any time (at Cleveland State),” Smith said. Three freshmen also swept their matches over the weekend: Miguel Spencer (150 pounds), Markus Mollica (158 pounds) and Pat Lynch (177 pounds). Spencer, a true freshman from Del City, Okla., defeated Moss Grays of Clarion 5-3 and routed Cleveland State’s Marty Collins with a 20-5 technical fall. Both Grays and Collins competed in the national collegiate championships last season. d e b u t m a tc h “Miguel was a real bright spot,” Smith said. “He handled two guys that had both been to the NCAAs before. “He completely controlled and really dominated. He’s going to be an exciting wrestler for the fans to watch.” Mollica, a redshirt last season, took a 21-7 majority decision over Clarion’s Paul Antonio and defeated Marty Ohl 7-5 at Cleveland State. Lynch pinned both Dan Payne of Clarion and Rick Tomaro of Cleveland State. Lynch’s pin of Tomaro took just 19 seconds. “Our freshmen got some confidence and that’s important,” Smith said. There are seven freshmen, five seniors and one sophomore on this year’s squad. At 142 pounds, returning All-American Wayne McMinn and redshirt freshman Steve St. John both came up with impressive victories. McMinn defeated Clarion’s Dave Thomas 11-5, while St. John put together a 19-7 victory over John Mazey at Cleveland State. McMinn and St. John battled against each other in the preseason in attempting to claim the 142 spot, and a decision regarding which wrestler will be representing that.weight class will not be made until next semester. “We’re in good shape there at 142,” Smith said. Scott Schluchter-Nevez (118 pounds), returning All-American Marco Sanchez (134 pounds) and Dan Henderson (190 pounds) all split their matches for the Sun Devils. Because it has no wrestlers at the heavyweight slot, ASU was forced to forfeit six points in both matches. The team will continue to forfeit at heavyweight for the remainder of the season, though it is likely that spot will be filled in January. T urn to W restle, page Bow l picture begins taking shape Friends C ontinued (AP) — Thanks to a great snow job, Washington State is going to sunny Arizona. The No. 21 Cougars upset No. 11 Washington 42-33 in a snowstorm Saturday to earn a bid to the Copper Bowl in •Tucson. Washington State will play Utah in the Dec. 29 game. Cougars coach Mike Price has a special fondness for Tucson, where his son Aaron kicked a game-winning field goal against Arizona on Sept. 12, “We are really excited about going back,” the coach said. “We have great memories from playing in that stadium’.” : Washington State appeared to be out of the bowl picture last week, but the Cougars couldn’t be ignored after beating Rose Bowl-bound Washington. Washington State (8-3) tied Southern Cal for third in the Pac-10. “The Cougars are a prime-time team,” said Burt Kinerk, the bowl’s selection committee chairman. “They’re exciting, they're a top 20 team, they beat Washington and Arizona, and 2 Convenient SELF-STORAGE LOCATIONS # 1 C urry R oad S elf-S to ra g e 1606 E. Curry Rd. 968-4852 #2 U n iv e r sity Dr. S elf-S to ra g e 965 E. University Dr. 968-9261 they’ve got a great quarterback in Drew Bledsoe.” Utah was invited to the Copper Bowl despite a 6-5 record that includes losses to New Mexico and Texas-El Paso, the two worst teams in the Western Athletic Conference. But Utah coach Ron McBride has a local connection — he’s a former assistant at Arizona — and the school pledged to sell 10,000 tickets. “Utah has been on our short list since day one,” said Larry Brown, executive director of the Copper Bowl. “W e’ve always wanted a WAC team, and Salt Lake City is closer to us than most of the other WAC schools. The fact that coach McBride used .to be at Arizona is also important. He’s a popular figure here, and they’ve got a good football team. They’re better than a 6-5 team.” There will be another Pac-10 vs. WAC matchup D$c. 29 when Southern Cal plays Fresno State in the Freedom Bowl. from page 15. — a lot of times she can get down.” Williamson came to the Sun Devil program last year from Ludlow College in England but had to sit out the fall campaign due to an academic transfer. This past summer, she placed seventh in the Olympics while representing Great Britain. Jolly said she met Williamson last year but claimed they didn’t become close Until this season. “We were friends last year, but we didn’t spend a lot of time together,” Jolly said. “This year, w e’re almost inseparable.” Jolly said the Sun Devils archers will have about two more official team practices left this semester. Meanwhile, coach Sheri Rhodes will continue working on an individual basis with the 32-member squad. The Sun D evils n ex t com petition w ill be the Invitational Indoor, Jan. 23-24 in Glendale. M ini-Storage • V ehicle Storage AT § Arizona Storage Inns YV SPECIAL STUDENT RATES O p e n 7 D a y s-A -W e e k 5X5 5X10 10X10 10X20 •R esid en t M an a g e rs »NO DEPOSITS •F enced & lig h te d '• 5 'x 5 ' to I0 'x 2 0 ' •M onth-to-M onth R en tals Two L ocations to C hoose From! "Th« Friendly Mini-Storage People" CALL FOR OUR STUDENT SPECIAL 2235 W. 1st St. «Tempe 9670210 1020 W. IstSL • Tempe 968-3133 HAPPY THANKSGIVING! Sorry, no State Press M agazine th is week. LOOKING FOR “H IG H “ A D V E N T U R E ? B a r g a in B r a k e s ! ec Mufflers - „ w For h o n est, exp ert service. PREMIUM BRAKES <*«‘ 4 6 * • I i I •Inspsct »«tira «ystsoi k lo w ttN tcir «tswitfrw *wwWotorx -Mott U.S.* < 0 < - 17. M en C ontinued from page the 100 and 200, Sun D evil new com er Mike Raley also had a big weekend, winning the 200 breaststroke against UCLA and recording his personal best in both the 100 and 200, W om en from page 2 4 exposure IS . sure. Against UCLA, we won the 400 1M one-two-thrce, and they w ere re a lly far behind us,” she said. In addition, Currah felt ASU show ed its p o w erh o u ses in the breaststroke. Beata Kaszuba won both the 100 and 200 breaststroke against UCLA and Hill says her time for the 100 was a new team record. Other newcomers to the Sun Devil squad also swam well. “Suzi Fawcett swam her best 100 breaststroke and led off relays with her best 100. “We started out really well in the 400 m edley relay but ended up getting secondthird. We lost it by about eight-tenths o f a second,” Hill said.. DOUBLE PRINTS C o lo r C -4 1 P r o c e s s L o w e s t P r ic e in T o w n / m SMDMAL U N IO IM from ANNOUNCEM ENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS 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 at 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 G rozdic, Robert G uenther, Patricia Haight, Debbra Harkins, Tammy Kane, Sarah Kealy, Frances Netting, David E. Smith, Sandra Stewart, Umest E. Uwazie. 1 BEDROOM luxury apartment community, washer and dryer hookups, spacious floorplan, covered parking, quiet community, close to ASU. 496-9098. 2 BEDROOM spacious decorator apartment, private patio, self cleaning oven, pool, coveted parking, very quiet! 8941041. I BEDROOM, secluded, private patio, covered parking, laundry facility, pool, dishwasher, self cleaning oven, very quiet. 968-8183. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, newly decorated, $400/month; lease. No pets. 1857 E. University Drive, 940-9152. Available 11-15-92. ANNOUNCEM ENTS ANNOUNCEM ENTS The Fall/W inter 1992 issue of H A Y D EN 'S FERRY REVIEW is now available. Call 965-1243 for more information. [DID VÔÜKNÔW .r.] W restle C ontinued Classifieds Campus^ — .MS CoC orner llègeAve. - Neil It CollegeStreet Deli • Phene: 967-4049 15. personal best in sprints, E duardo P iccinini was also tough to beat. Piccinini won all his butterfly events against both Los Angeles area opponents, and the went on to beat national champion Mike M errill from USC in C ontinued Page 17 Tuesday, November 24,1992 S t a t e P ress F low ers o n C a m p u s has j T han k sg iv in g c e n te rp ie c e s ? j Page 16. ... S enior Ray M iller, an o th e r retu rn in g AllAmerican for ASU, posted a 17-1 technical fall victory at Cleveland State. As a whole, Smith labeled th e opening weekend as a positive effort, “We were a little rusty in spots,” Smith said. “But like 1 said, it gives us a reference point to build on. L ow er Level 9 6 5 -0 6 0 0 THE HUB OF ASU “I’ll take it, in addition to a strong finish.” The Sun D evils commence their home season on Friday w ith a pair of m atches at the U niversity Activity Center. ASU will face Phoenix College at S p.m., followed by a 7:30 p.m. matchup against Cal State Fullerton. Ç DID, | THEHUBOFASU ■ M E M O R IA L U N IO N YOU Ì KNOW H ot Fashions at Cool Prices! w * C to ò e t Q tdA òiJC A, •Put THAT THE M.U. I RECREATIO N C E N T E R 1 fi W IS H E S YOU A H A PPY 1 g THANKSGIVING AND I I LOOKS FORW ARD T O 1 I SEE IN G YOU IN I | D ECEM BER FO R SO M E 1 i FINAL EXAM S T R E S S 1 SL RELIEF & FUN I S o u t h e r n /M c C l i n t o c k in F r y 's P la z a C a ll: 491-2029 I U ^ O LEVI 50Ts POR SALE] Buy Self \ c t o i» THE A M ERIC A N IN DIA N INSTITUTE presents the 4th Annual Feast - n - Fest '92. Date: 24th Novem ber 92 Time: 7.00 p.m. to 10.00 p.m. Location: MU Arizona Room, Rm 207 Keynote Speakers: Kenneth White - “Indian Education and Health Issues" M ary Jane Blue Spruce, Pueblo Ballerina "Personal Story" M ichael Lane - "Indigenous Sovereignty" Com edy Show: Drew L aca p a (M C ) & Charlie H I (TV ap p earan ces on “The Tonight Show" an d “Arsenio Hall") Pageant: Mr. & Mrs. Indian ASU Student Entertainment: Delphine, Pearl, Keith Secola LU Banquet hosted by AISES Student Group S t a t e P r e ss Tuesday, November 24,1992 Page 18 APARTMENTS RENTAL SH ARIN G TRAVEL 1 OR 2 bedroom,$250 m ove-in, near ASU, pool, laundry. 829-7059/9217257 leave message. T A K E OVER lease, 2 bedroom s, 2 baths, Cameron Creek Apartments 9210344,949-7716 SOUTHWEST ROUNDTRIP Phoenix to SanDiego, 11/25 to 11/29. $50 Holly 784-0381. 2 BEDROOM, $335, covered parking, pool, backyard. 48th and McDowell. Call Gavin 968-4951. UTI LI TIES PA! D, furnished/unfurnished; studio $299; 1 bedroom $359. ASU 10 minutes. Move-in special. 4371048, ROOMMATE(S) NEEDED 3 bedroom townhouse. Upstairs m aster bedroom big enough for tw o. Own bathroom. Two-car garage, pool across street. L o­ cated at Marlborough Park {College + McKellips) $350/month Available now. 990-7626 SHARE HOME. $325/month. Utilities in clu d ed . Fem ale o n ly . Jackie 491-8934. VACATION. TW O round trip tickets With one week hotel to Orlando, Flori­ da. $600 James 838-1858. 2 BEDROOM, secluded, private patio, covered parking, laundry facility, pool, dishwasher, self cleaning oven, very quiet 968-8183 2 BEDROOM , small enclosed yard, quiet neighborhood 1/2 mile from ASU, $380 per month. 967-4908. ASU I mile. C lean, cute I bedroom apartm ent in q u iet 4 -p lex . $.295 a month. 921-1181. ' BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bed­ rooms. Walk 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 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 in­ cluded. 968-1248 STÙDIO, I and 2 bedroom in ASU area for rent. $275 and up. 966-8838 o r 967-4908: FREE A p a rtm en t HOM ES FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM, I bath, 2 blocks from ASU, fenced-in back yard. $45Q/month, 967-4908. N. TEMPE BORDER 3 bedroom 2 bath house with pool. New carp et, paint th ro ughout. Includes washer - dryer $725 plus deposit. Drive by 2717 North Myrtle - ofT 68th at Con­ tinental. 968-3501. ONE BLOCK SOUTH 3 bedroom 2 bath house/ new carpet, paint, washer - dryer. Drive by 720 Ef Vista Del Cerro $6^5 plus deposit avail­ able i 2 /1 968-3501. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3 BEDROOMS, 2 bath condo, air, dish­ washer, w asher, dryer, pool, tennis, near ASU; $800. (714) 499-4065, 9674908. UNIVERSITY/PR1CE, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, washer, dryer, covered parking, $650/month, 9 6 1-1707. L o c a tin g Condo fo r R ent Service R o o m m a te m a t c h in g se rvice a ls o a v a ila b le . 2 B e d r o o m , 2 B a th w ith U p g ra d e s S c o tts d a le a t H ayden & T hom as A v a ila b le J a n u a ry , 1 9 9 3 $ 5 2 5 /M o n th 437-1048 951-2337 (D a y s ) 948-1423 ( E v e n in g s ) SHARE NICE 3 bedroom, 2 bath house. Washer, dryer, garage, backyard, pool. Drew- 921-2985,693-4229. RO O M S FOR RENT ROOM RENTAL Scottsdale at McDon­ ald and G ranite Reef. PooJ, family room, $150 monthly. Robin 946-0706. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 2 BEDROOM 2 bath condo at Los Pra­ dos. Only $3000, take over payments! Call Marty, Realty Execs, 839-2600. HAYDEN SQUARE 3 bedroom condo, newly remodeled. You pick tile and car­ peting. $ i 16,900 John 829-8160 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE LAR A DA'S ARMY Surplus has all your camping, needs- inexpensively. Also more weird stu ff than you can im agine. 764 /W est M ain, M esa 834-7047. TECHN ICS TA PE & receiver, JVC CD . F ish e r speak ers. A ll; $ 150. $50/compOnents. $30/speakers. Shawn after 6pm 649-7451. COMPUTERS RENTAL SH ARIN G A v a ila b le LARGEST 2 bdrm, 2 bath 2 BEDROOM 2 bath Springtree condo must be clean, responsible, mature. $300 / half utilities. Jennifer 968-3787: FEMALE NONSM OKER w anted to share tw o bedroom , tw o bath apart­ ment. Close to campus. 966-9926, Ni­ cole. FEMALE ROOMMATE, $ 135.00+1/4 utilities. Share bedroom in furnished apartment, smoker or non-smoker ok, available December 18 or January 13. C all Kim, 968-5263 Cameron Creek Apartments. 910 E. Lemon #2 966-8704 ENJOY THE QUIET! 1/2 B lo c k fro m C a m p u s B eautifully fu rn is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 b a th ; 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th a p a r t­ m e n t s . Al l b i l l s p a i d . C a b l e TV, h e a t e d p o o l and sp a c io u s laundry facilities. F riendly, courteous m anagem ent. S to p b y to d a y ! T e rrace R o a d A p a rtm e n ts 950 S . T errace 966-8540 FEMALE ROOMMATE: $220 plus 1/3 u tilities, large bedroom and closet, washer/dryer, near ASU, 967-0907. MALE / Female roommate needed to share 3 bedroom furnished house with la u n d ry , pool, m aster bedroom , and bath! $250 plus 1/3 utilities. Call Alii or Kathi at 970-1169. RESPONSIBLE MALE nohsmoker to share 3 bedroom house. Pool, garage. Mili/Baseline. Includes utilities, phone. .$225/month plus $ 100 deposit. 839-, •2147.:- V ’• \ V • ' -' y ' ROOMMATE WANTED: 3 bedroom, 2 bath, $256/month includes utilities. 68th Street and Camefback. 9 7 0 -1190. FEMALE ATTENDANT needed for disabled woman in Quadrangles Apartments. Hours flexible- mornings, evenings. No experience or lifting required. Call968-6284. SPRING BREAK’93 Lake Havasu / House boats. Book your boat now! 1-800-242-2628. IBM SELECTRIC 111 $350. Brother Pro-7800 $50. Panasonic text memory spell correct $75. AH excellent, like new 947-0562. MACINTOSH 5I2KE, 20M harddrive, two 800K drives, ImageWriter 2, mo­ dem, programs, $700, Jamie 491-2955. BANQUET SERVERS Work w eekends, evenings, a n d d u rin g b r e a k a t th e Valley's finest clubs, re so rts and restaurants. If you have: •TUX BLACK & WHITES •PHONE AND AUTO •FOOD SERVICE EXPERIENCE Call for an appointment LIVE-IN POSITION for 2 children to begin January 1st. References required. Call collect, 816-665-8059 for more in­ formation. NEED 5 students immediately! No ex­ perience, $4.60 start, part-time. Casual Tem pe office. Phone surveys, abso­ lutely no sales. Susan, 967-4441. Thinking about visitingsome fneiitHDowiiUnder, relaxinj on the French Riviera, H O SP IT E M P S 1462 N. Scottsdale Rd. Tempe q u ic k c ash th c M i t t /ups«M s s u m i ^ y H P H R 1 Bing Internationaloffett ^ HOM ES FOR SALE 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath house. Large lot, bike to ASU, only $52,900. Call Marty, Realty .Execs, 839-2600. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDGENERAL APARTMENTS 1|46 É. Lemon ^ í i # Tempe, AZ 85281-|Í0#? • filiali (602) 894*5I28A • • • • • • • • • • •» • HELP WANTEDGENERAL PETS SPORTS MINDED Hiring immediately 6-8 individuals for our: Tempe office, fu 11. or part-tim e. Flexible hours. Perfect for students, $8$10 per hour, call 921-3961. BABY BOA Constrictors and Burmese Pythons. $80 each! Cash only, leave message 986-3302 SUN DEVIL Theater: accepting appli­ cations for floor staff, must be available through holiday break. Apply in person after 4pm daily. Equal opportunity em­ ployer. FOUND: JEW ELRY item in parking structure #1 on 11/20. Describe exten­ sively. David 829-8393. WANTED: RETAIL m erchandiser to help at Gold C anyon G olf Club parttime/full-time. 982-9449. ACTIVISTS $300+/week. Meaningful job working for the environment. Hour 3-10:30p.m. Call 966-8338;for interview. ALASKA SUMMER E m p lo y m en t-fish eries. Earn $600+/w eek in c an n e ries or $4,000+/month on fishing boats. Free 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/ ’/ ASSEMBLER JOBS! 990-9312 The "ultimate card" sensational savings everyday 500+ local restaurants, bars and etc. Mr Crockett, 251-2411. YOUR HIRED! Earn up to $10/hour. Full-time pay, part-time work. 3-9pm, Monday-Friday. 966-5765. HELP WANTEDSALES ; : ~ PAY FOR COLLEGE Imm ediate openings for enthusiastic males and females as sale$ reps for hot­ test product on market. Aggressive in­ dividuals only need apply. Ground floor opportunity. Immediate income on sales 491-5537. Lighting company needs full time as­ sembler immediately. 7am to 3:30pm. $7/hour Scottsdale Airpark 998-0325. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE ATTENTION: $8.20 to start. Holiday help. 17 im m ediate part tim e or full tim e retail openings. Temporary and permanent positions available. Scholar­ ships available, Conditions apply. Flexi­ ble hours.,968-1840. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT how hiring lunch Waitresses, dinner bUssers, and hostesses. Apply in person MondayF rid ay , 10am to 3pm , 5001 E ast W ashington, cross street 48th Street. 273-7378. FREE LOST/FOUND PERSONALS 1 DOZEN red long-stem roses deliv­ ered $20. Also balloons. After Hours Flowers. 894-3419. A HAPPY Thanksgiving to the women of ASU. The men of Sigma Nu, AFA BRODY: you did-a great job sten­ ciling the roses on the floor. You're a star! Love your sister^. A FA PLEDGES: C ongratulations on everyone getting 100% on the pledge test! Keep up the good Work! AFA RA Carolyn: thanks for your sup­ port and hard Work. We really appre­ ciate it. You're a'star! Love, the Alpha Gams, PIZZA- HAPPY 20th! Welcome to sun, fun, and things we won't tell our par­ ents! Luv'ya, Princess. CALL, MATT, because it said to in the phone book. But you're always studying or out. We miss you. Come play. Luv, D in 807. MUST SELL! Complete system: 28612, SVG A m ono m onitor, prin ter, mouse, WP 5.1 & Win 3:1. $65Q/offer Shawn after 6pm 649-7451. HELP WANTEDGENERAL AUTOMOBILES '88 NISSAN 4x4, custom paint, multiple show w inner, m any featu res, $11,500/offer. David, 831-7938, leave message. GREAT OPPORTUNITY CHEAP! FBI/U.S. 50 O penings Seized. 89 Mercedes..,$200. 86 VW... $50, 87 Mercedes..,$ 1QÓ, 65 Mustang... $50. Choose from thousands starting $25. Free information- 24 hour hot­ line (801 )379r 2929. C opyright #AZI0KJC. S5.50/hour plus bonus •CUSTOMER SERVICE or ‘DATA ENTRY OPERATOR G R EA T C O N D ITIO N ! O nly $ 1,400/offer. 1980 Pontiac Phoenix, 66,000 miles, 4 cylinders, air, cal! 7329666. TEMPE LOCATION Shifts A vailable 5a.m .-l;30p.m . 1:30-9 p.m. BICYCLES 9 \ B R ID G E ST O N E M B -5 , $350, SERIOUS STUDENT to share 3 bed­ room. 2 bath home. 3 niiles form ASU. $225 plus 1/3 utilities: 894-1760. m ixed com ponents, R itchey rims & tires, Vettagèl softseat,°car rack, éxçellent condition, Mark 921-7037. C all Corporate Job Bank (602) 966-0709 APARTMENTS fr o m ( D ia l A m e r ic a M a r in e ‘Emettent fioCiday Cask!! TRAVEL BI-COASTAL TRA V EL, cheap a ir­ plane tickets for international students. Call us, in Japanese or English. 916-251-/ 5535, DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places USA. Also worldwide. 1 also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. : PRIVATE FLIGHT? Purgatory. Tellurjde. Snow skiing! Air­ fare, lodging, lifts. 3 nights/3 ski: Prices start at $369. A dyentours Club. 9441717; • T a r t- tim e J o b s - fte ? ( i6 C e iH o u r s ß b t t - T m W e e lç ç n d s . $ 7 - $ 1 1 iH o u r ( T o s e p l u s C o ir ; a C o n f i d e n t i a l I n t e r v i e w In fo r m a tio n PERSONALS CLASSIFIEDS WORK ! Call 965-6731 ! HOT WINGS & COOL JAZZ IBM CONSULTING. Do you need help in classes, training, setup or any, other advice? Cheap student rates. 894-9456. 10c WINGS S1.25 MIC DRY AAA PLEDGE Moms- thanks for all your help! W e're one step closer to going active. Deltaluv v, your dots. DID YOU know there is. a 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! 5thSi .Fetes! GOBBLER-^ D ID you know that on Tuesday, November 24th, Larry Latin's Band will be performing in the M U pro­ gram m ing Lounge from 11-1 ? W e'll also get a chance to enter ourselves in die turkey legs contest and turkey n ib ­ ble contest, and diey're awarding prizes too. The M U AB Special Events and Re­ creation committees are so cool ! -Tom BREWPUB RESEARCH AND writing help all sub­ jects catalog $2. 1 (800) 351-0222. SPORTS & W INGS 4 satellites 15 screens W OODSHED II ■T -- • GROUP PROJECTS. Make great im­ pressions with your presentations using transparencies, enlargements and color copies from Kiiiko's Copy Centers. 8949588,894-1797. HEY ALL you good looking,. Spirited, holiday loving ASU students. Apply now to be the iflrst annual Mr. or Mrs. Claus, ASU. Pick up an application in the MUAB office, 3rd floor, MU. Due December 1. Show your holiday spirit! Sponsored by the MUAB Special Events Committee. 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. JIL L , T H E R E 'S plenty o f room for Kim on p ur Colorado ski vacation at Purgatory-Durango. It sounds like a dream come true. More. friends? (800) 525-0892 for bargain lodging and tick-, ' ets., INSURANCE J. 8 Cover NW corner of Dobson & University lV» N c N e rm b e i* 8 4 4 -sh e d Ko C/0V£fc_ iVi December m on.- Ih u rs "We show all NFL, Iowa, & Nebraska games" Walt Richardson 7oi s.tniii ave- tonight 9pm-12am 994 Long Island Ice Tea $2 Red Stripe Deer 1-DAY TURNAROUND. Professional typing. W alkable/A SU . R easonable rates. E xperienced. L aser. Faculty/Students. Diane 966-5693 LOVING NANNY needed for 2 small children. Part time Mondays and Tues­ days. 56th street/Indian School area. 840r2967. 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. SERVICES A PA /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945^-5744. C R E A TIV E TY PIN G , term papers, resum es, essays, la se r p rin ter, rea­ sonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, aajDauua 897-1741. TANK UP TUESDAY KORI- Happy Birthday that is! So* you're legal now, huh? Nirowwll Love you!! Bri. The memorial Union cordially invites you to attend its 37th annual Holiday Coffee. 9am to 1 lam December 2 in the MU Arizona Room. POKY THE past week has been very in­ teresting. I don't know what the future . holds for us. I'll miss you very much this week,- have a great Thanksgiving. Love Chad ROY: THANKS for Friday. Wanna play a game? Dried Kiwi- a godsend. Want if... LoVe; Bertha. SAVE MONEY by Saving The Bakers Dozen Card at Follett's Hallmark Shop in die lower level o f the MU. SDT ELLIE- happy 21st birthday! Just shuck up on you! Love your little sis*Marisa SIGEP DAVE B.- Belated congrats on you r crossing over! Guess we'll ju st have to buy our own can-opener for next semester. -The girls in 807. STOP BY the Bookstore Connection today and give this personal to the cash­ ier and you will save $5.00 on the pur­ chase o f a sweatshirt. THETA CHI Fall 92 pledge class. Con­ gratu latio n s on yo u r activation, and thanks for the entertainment. WANT TO plan an outing for your club o r o rg an izatio n ? Try the M emorial Union Recreation Center, we take res­ ervations!! Bowling-Pool-Video. 9653642. ART-A-MA-BOBS for Christmas! We now have a selection of Christmas ait-a-ma-bobs to draw attention to your ad fo r only $3. Call 965-6735 to ask about them, or come down to the basement o f Matthews Center. : / V .;;’ RESUMES 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. plus tax 60 oz pitchers Bud, Coors Light u to n MC O C © \r 2 lu O) © oc Pitchers of Soda o * $ |S CO uS £ IÄ Q co £ il Q .= oo ! ÈS « > P o> RESTAURANTS/ BARS 1301 E. University C lilC A G IIS IT c T ~ ------------ RATES S t a t e P ress C lassified s 965-6731 MatthewsCenter Basement, Rm.46H SS25T $3.90 per issue (1-4 issues) $3.70 per issue (5-9 issues) $3.45 per issue (10+ issues) O ffice h ours: 9 a m -5 p m , M o n -F ri . 204 each additional word. No abbreviations, th e first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering, no type size changes. Person als ( IS w ords or le ss) are only $2.00. You con a lso add Greek sym bols to your personal for only S0€ per set (3 sym bols max. per set). SEMI-DISPLAY RATES: A bold, centered, all caps headline can be added to your liner ad for an additional $1.00. Headline cannot exceed 15 characters (all letters, punctuation marks and spaces count a s one character each). Liner, personal and sem i-display ad deadlines are 12 noon, one b u sin ess day prior to.publleatlon. C L A S S IF IE D D ISP L A Y R A T E S: (per column inch, per insertion) 1 time: $8.95 2-5 times: $8.15 6 o r more times: $ 7 7 0 All classified display ads have borders. Type can be bold face, cen­ tered, etc. An average of 15-20 words can fit in one column inch. C lassified display ad deadline Is 10am, two b u siness d ays prior to publication. Fast, professional, reasonably priced word processing. Laser printed. Term papers, theses, resumes* etc. Pick up and delivery available. Beth 963-9119., TUTORS C O RN ELL G RAD- S ocial scientist works with you to create well written papers. Ask for Van 820-9490. PHOTOGRAPHY VIDEO CONVERSIONS, U.S. to for­ eign form ats and vice versa. $30, 2 hours. Tape included. 924-0431. MISCELLANEOUS CHEESESTEAK or CHICKEN SANDWICH -V oted ‘Best of Phoenix’­ Buy aCheoMMaokorCNckanSandwichandaCokaandracaiva il tho *acond or any othor torn of aqual or iM M r value FREE. J (Al sandwiches include (riot,) Expiree 12-31-82 State P ress D isplay A dvertising, 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 C lassified s, 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 ★ 990 RATES THE WRITE STUFF 98 < ll 7 . RESUMES $15 $ 2 .2 5 I -; ; .. High Success rate! Reports, editing. SP Secretarial, 2201 South M cClintock, near ASU 967-Q907. KORI! Brian is really mad at us! He placed an ad for you that was supposed to ran yesterday, but our Computer has a mind o f its own. Here's what he wanted to say: TYPING/W ORD PRO CESSIN G 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. P IZ Z A & PA S T A 968-6666 HEALTH INSURANCE save 50% off campus plan. $one million benefits. En­ roll anytim e! P ra te r In surance 829-4919. 1 DAY turnaround- most papers. Pro­ fe ssio n a l w ord pro c e ssin g /p a pers/resumes. Laser. Reasonable. Caro­ line. 892-7022. CHILD CARE 4 0 4 S : Mill, Suite?101 (Hayden Square) 9 6 6 -1 3 0 0 > ;> % STRESSED OUT? AZd> WELLS- Pizza?! Pizza?! Buckets of ice- I swear we're unarmed! Missing you in D -w ing. Love, your favorite summer roommates. GET YOUR Thanksgiving cards, gifts and decorations right here on campus! Follett's Gift Shop located in the lower level o f the MU. ...H appy Birthday, Dear Jennie, Happy Birthday to y ou ... MISCELLANEOUS Try a relaxing professional massage. Certified, local references, student dis­ counts. Jim 266-6100 extension 1015. BANDERSNATCH DON'T GET clipped off 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. A£4> BRETT S. congrats bn your disa­ bled show. Much luv T- MISCELLANEOUS ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Facjats/waxing. Student dis­ counts: C all fo r m ore inform ation. 969-6954. AAA PLEDGE Cara- You're legal now! Have a great birthday. Deltaluv. Jen and Kristie. DID YOU know photoam erica has a night film drop for your convenience? Lowerlevel MU 9654322 SERVICES RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ CENTERPIECES Take Home a Thanksgiving centerpiece for your family. Flowers On Campus 965-0600. MU lower level: P a g e l9 Tuesday, November 24> 1992 S t a t e P r ess D ra fts E V E R Y D A Y ★ 8 2 5 W . U n iv e rs it y - C o rn e r o f H a rd y N ew sroom , 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 Inform ation, 9 6 5 -757 2 894-8387 SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES NOW IS THE TIME! 1 0 % OFF Student Discount' SPECIAL FULL 5ET NAILS $22pQ (regularly $ 3 5.00) Expires ■February 1,1993 Not valid with: any other offer: ANlD 937 E. E3roadway NAILS Tempe, AZ (SE Corner of Broadway ..md R u r a l ) ^ j | 9 a.m.-9 p .m . SUBS & SALADS B ro a d w ay & R ural For Tuesday, November 24,1992 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) The focus now is on distant affairs. Couples may get the chance to go away and perh ap s v is it old frien d s. Collaborative efforts and legal matters are favored. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) A ttend to insurance m atters, invest­ ments and financial record keeping today. New chances to get ahead arise in business: Self-discipline brings you rewards. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Partnership interests are happily high­ lighted today. Visit a favorite restaurant together or enjoy some other form of entertainment. Love blossoms now. CANCER (June 2 1 to July 22) C oncentrative pow ers are excellent today. New sta rts in b u sin ess are favored and you will take pride in what you accomplish. Home developments are positive. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) New ideas regarding creative projects come today. A fun outing with the chil­ dren should be on your agenda. Dating and recreational interests are happily accented. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) This is an excellent time to make major purchases for the home and to begin household improvements. A job related project keeps you occupied tonight. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct, 22) Local travel may be on your calendar for today. Y o u r optim istic attitu d e attracts benefits. Make important phone calls, now. You may be helping a child 9 2 1 -9222 tonight.. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You may attend to a repair that you have been putting off today. Shopping will lead to a delightful purchase. It is a good day for your financial interests. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You have a w ay w ith people th a t endears you to them. You will be mak­ ing new friends today. Things go very much your way now . Tonight accents mental work. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) It is a low key day, but not one without opportunity. Today’s business develop­ ments will certainly please you. Private pursuits are accented tonight. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You enjoy being with people and today accents group activities and get-togeth­ ers with friends. You may soon travel to attend a weekend seminar or confer­ ence. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Your main priorities today relate to business. Not only do new opportunities come now, but you are ready to work hard to realize their full potential. YOU BORN TODAY work well with groups and may achieve a leadership position in that capacity. You are natu­ rally ambitious and will work hard to achieve your goals. You are a person . that needs to keep busy to be happy. Usually, you are happiest in work that reflects your ideals, You have a philo­ sophic bent and are also dramatic. You may have a talent for journalism and promotional work. Birthdate of: Scott ' Joplin, composer, Spinosa, philosopher; and Toulouse-Lautrec, painter. ©1992 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. S t a t e P r ess T u e sd a y , N o v e m b e r 2 4 , 1992 P a g e 2 0 Best Bicycle Shop Slate Press - in Phoenix ADVERTISING We Give You A B igger Slice O f T he Pie At T he Low est C ost P er Bite. As Voted by: O N E BITE, A N D YO U 'LL S E E T H E LITE. - Republic and Gazette 1991 & 1992 - New Times for the past 10 years - Bicycle Dealer Showcase 1991 & 1992 $ 1 .0 0 OFF I Any regular size sandw ich and | m edium drink. Receive a 15% Discount off List Price I Try our delicious Turkey, Vegetarian or | Tuna Sandw iches served hot on our fresh baked bread. Or try th e Original - a favorite for over 17 years. I J u s t b r in g in th is a d o ffe r e x p ire s 12/10/92 i c chlotzsky's I Sandwiches ♦ Soups ♦ Salads Not valid with any other offer. Tempe ♦ Tempe Center (across from ASU) 18 E. 10th St. ♦ 968-0056 Stop in and Discover the Difference The Honda Doctor’s Helpful Honda Hints During the cooler season, run your air conditioner 10 minutes each week. This keeps your A /C seals, gaskets and components properly lubed, so they’ll be in top shape when you realty need them. Bònus Tip: Run your A /C with your defroster In the winter, a s a dehumidifier. Tip# TH E TEMPE BICYCLE HONDA DO CTO R 967-7282 330 W. U niversity • 966-6896 (Across the railroad track, west of Gentle Strength Co-op) Apple Macintosh PowerBook“145 4/40 Apple Macintosh Classic* II Where Blue Ribbon Service'' means honest, quality repairs at fair prices— and student discounts. Near ASU at 2090 E. University, Suite 115, Tempe (University at River, just west of Price) Service by Appointment 7:30AM - 6:00PM, Mon-Fri • Thursday nights til 8PM Also in the Scottsdale Airpark * 998-5966 - Apple Macintosh LC II Apple Macintosh Osi or buyaMacintoshthat's alreadyloaded. Get a great value on your choice of these Apple* Macintosh* computers which include over *400 worth of pieloaded software: The American Heritage Dictionary with Roget's Thesaurus, the Random House Encyclopedia, Correct Grammar, ResumeWriter and Calendar Creator. But hurry, because student aid like this is only available for a limited ' time *- and only from your authorized Apple campus reseller. . . • U o A *• i n i 1OC MâClÎltOSu otUQCflt AlQ PâCKcl^C. V* FOrmore information visit ASUBookstore Mon-Fri 930-3:30 or call 829-7993 .1- This indudes a color systemas shown © 1992 Apple Compmer, Inc. Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh ire registered trademarks of Apple Compuetf, Inc. Classic is a registered trademark licensed lo Apple Computer, Inc. PowerBook is a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc. The Random House Encyclopedia is a trademarit of Random House, inc. Américain Héritage Electronic Dictionary, Electronic Thesaurus, and CoirecTen* developed by Houghton Mifflin Company, publisher ofThc American Heritage Diaionary and Roget'sU: The New nitsaunjs.CorecTœ underlying technology developed by Language Sptems, Inc Calendar Creator it a tradcmaiR of Power Up Software Corporation. ResuméWriter is a trademark of Bootware Software Company, Inc. AHproduct names ait the trademailc of their respective holdeis. Offergood on the Macintosh towerilook 145 4/40 configuration only.