©Copyright, State Presa. 1903 Tempe. Arizona A n In d ep en d en t M orning D a ily V o l. 77 N o. 3 Clinton, U.S. face bumpy ride Clinton takes oath of office, pledges to ‘take strong steps’ A sso c ia te d P ress WASHINGTON — William Jefferson Clinton was inaugurated the 42nd president of the United States on Wednesday in a sunsplashcd ceremony at the Capitol, ushering in a new generation of leadership and pledg­ ing to “face hard truths and take strong steps.” Inheriting a weak economy, a $4 trillion federal debt and a galaxy of ticklish foreignpolicy 'crises, Clinton called for national renewal but acknowledged, “It will not be easy; it will require sacrifice.” He specified none in his inaugural address, leaving that for later. Clinton promised his Democratic admin­ istration would end the “deadlock and drift” of government. It was a day of emotional celebration and colorful pageantry. Pennsylvania Avenue was lined with well-wishers as the Clintons walked several blocks of the parade route to their new home at the White House. Outgoing President Bush, denied a sec­ ond term by a restive electorate demanding change* watched stoically as.Clinton was sw orn in by C h ief Ju stice W illiam Rehnquist. Suddenly an ex-president, Bush stepped forward to shake his successor’s hand. Afterward, Bush flew home to Houston, ending a quarter century of public service and 12 years of Republican rule in the White House. At 46, C linton is the nation’s thirdyoungest president and the first of the post­ war baby boom generation to sit in the ■ T urn to I nauguration, page 12. Promises or procrastination? Some still unsure o f Clinton B y N atalie Y o u n g S ta te P ress Bill Clinton takes the presidential oath of office during the inaugural ceremony on Capitol Hill Wednesday. Clinton officially became the 42nd president of the United States updh his swearing in at 10 a.m. Arizona time. For more news on the inauguration, turn to page 3. For excerpts o f Clinton’s inaugural speech, turn to page 12. While most Americans stand ready to cash in on the campaign promises of the candidate who, assured a new hope for America, some are still wary that the next four years will be reminiscent of previous broken political promises. “With optimism surrounding the inaugu­ ration of President Bill Clinton, the public is eager to inherit policy changes that will reform health care, increase education fund­ ing and improve the nation’s record on the environment, said Marilyn Dantico, ASU assistant political science professor. “Overcoming the policies of the last 12 years w ill be the greatest obstacle that C linton w ill have to face,” she said. “Americans have lots of unmet desires and needs and, as a result, Clinton will have a lot to turn around. Establishing a health care reform program, increasing aid to the elder­ ly, bailing out the savings and loans, ensur­ ing affordable education and improving the environment will top the Clinton agenda. What the people are expecting is a best effort at solving these problems.” Although Clinton has been characterized as an “outsider” to the White House, he comes to Washington with 12 years of expe­ rience as Arkansas governor and what many feel is a genuine concern for the needs and problems of America. W ith a fair amount o f unity between Democratic-controlled Capitol Hill and the White House, many think the stage is set for Clinton to be known as the agenda-setting , T urn to C linton, page 12. A S A c o m m e n ts o n b u d g e t p r o p o sa ls, tu itio n Director says increase is inevitable for near future BY M ark M . M acias S t a te P ress In response to proposed budget figures that ÀSU officials say w ill require a tu itio n h ike, the A rizona Students Association said that it “has no specific recommendations regarding tuition and fees” for the 1993 fall semester. Tom Godden, director of state relations for Associated Students of ASU and a member of ASA, said the statement, which was written in October of 1992, reflects its most current plan. Godden said ASA does not support a tuition increase, but “the quality of education at ASU is suffering and something needs to be done.” “It’s a certain inevitability that (a tuition increase) will occur,” Godden said. “It’s bad because it’s the state’s respon­ sibility (to fund higher education), but the state is reneging on that responsibility. “We don’t want (a tuition increase) but, if and when, there is one, we want it to be tangible.” ASA is the organization that lobbies state agencies on behalf of Arizona's 96,000 university students. In a statement released Wednesday, ASA said that budgets proposed by the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and Gov. Fife Symington could force students to pay an additional $400 or more per year for tuition. The statement also said nonresi­ dent students could sustain an even greater tuition increase. - ASA officials say an increase of that magnitude would still not make up for funding shortfalls from the Legislature. State lawmakers are only in the first steps of developing a state budget, but proposals from the governor’s office and the Legislature recommend cuts of $24 million.to $32 million to the university system. This is the first time since 1990 that the Board of Regents plans on setting tuition in the spring semester. Formerly, the regents set tuition in the fall to avoid protests by university T urn to ASA, page 12. Today’s Weather: Sunny. High 61. Low 44. IN SID E Campus News STA TE PR ESS F orm er P re sid e n t B ush bid farewell to his life at the White House. One hundred students attended a candlelight ceremony honoring slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr, Page3 Page 11 World/Nation Sports The Sun Devils m en’s basketball squad squan­ dered a 13-point lead against the UofA Wild­ cats, losing 91-87. Page 15 Classifieds.......... ....... ........ .17 14 C om ics....................... Crossw ord........ .......... .6 O pinion.......__ _____ ........... 4 Sports............... ......... .........15 W orld/Nation........................ 3 State P ress Thursday, January 21,1993 Page 2 Planetary, ecological planning needed, author says M e a d o w s h o ld s e v e n t s o n c a m p u s , d is c u s s e s d e v e lo p m e n t a n d g r o w th By C hris D riscoll S tate P ress Twenty years ago, Dennis Meadows and his colleagues shook the foundations of power and forever altered the way people think about industrial development and population growth with the 1972 publication of Limits to Growth. A lthough the book sold nine m illion copies and was translated into 21 languages, ' Meadows is now on a quieter, less trendy — but by his account, more revolutionary — crusade to locate the best level of population and industrial growth for the earth. He started his new quest with the publication of Beyond. The Limits, an updated and dramatically revised version of Limits to Growth. “It is still physically possible on this planet to achieve a Sustainable and relatively high quality existence for all of our people,” was the up-beat message Meadows brought to ASU during several events on cam pus Tuesday and Wednesday. T Meadows is a professor of management systems, director of the Institute for Policy and Social Science Research and the Lab for Interactive Learning at the University of New Hampshire. His ASU visit was sponsored by 17 academic departments whose disciplines have been affected by his work. The study that resulted in L im its To Growth was commissioned by the Club of Rome, a high-powered group of the world’s movers and shakers from academia, business and finance. Government leaders also joined the group, which started meeting together in the 1970s to discuss options for the world’s future. Members of the club today include former President Jimmy C arter, Italian A ureleo Piccie, who is past C.E.O. of Italian auto manufacturer Fiat and Olivetti, a producer of business machines. Piccie also founded the group. , Gregory Daneke, ASU professor of public affairs, is also a local member of the club. The message of Limits To Growth was that the world was headed for bad times due to runaway population growth and the pollution from an ever-expanding-industrial economy if drastic changes were not made. In the new book. Meadows said, a new model of future world development foresees “It is still possible on this planet to achieve a sustainable and relatively high quality existense for all o f our people. ” - Dennis Meadows, Industrial development and population demographics scholar the possibility of society growing into a sustainable system that provides a standard of living equal to that of European countries. But he said that will happen only if the w o rld ’s population is brought into “equilibrium” by the time it reaches eight billion. The world's population is currently about 5.3 billion. But Meadows added that regardless of population, equilibrium should be reached before 2050. On W ednesday afternoon, M eadows exhibited a computer game he has developed, called Fish Banks, to a group of instructors and students. “I wanted to give students the chance to have the experience o f overshoot and collapse,” he said. Overshoot and collapse is what happens to the fishing fleet econom y in the g am e's scenario. Meadows said the game reflects what is happening in the real world with all­ renewable resources. After trying out the game, Asim Roy, a professor of decision and information systems in the C ollege o f B usiness, said it is an “excellent teaching tool” and helps to suggest solutions to the world’s problems. He added the real-world market system responds well to implementing solutions to environm ental problem s once they are identified. Meadows, on the other hand, thinks radical changes in the world economy are necessary to avoid a collapse of society’s standard of living. He said neither socialist nor capitalist models offer the whole solution. He calls his alternative the “ecological economy.” oday Community Christian Church, 1701 S. College Ave. Mill Ave. S tu d en ts o f O b je ctiv is m : open m eetin g, featuring C h ris tia n S tu d en ts F ello w sh ip : open Bible study, “Introduction to Objectivism” video lecture by Leonard Peikoff, 6 p.m., MU Arizona Room. Cam pus C rusade fo r C h rist: open “Thursday Night Live" meeting, 7:30 p.m., Crusade House, 205 E. 15th St. ■ “Christ Revealed in Us,” 12:30 p.m., MU Yavapai Room 209. U n iv e rs ity L ib ra rie s : O n -lin e c a ta lo g s y s te m d e m o n stratio n , 1 1 :4 0 a .m . an d 1 :4 0 p .m ., H ayd en Library, Room C6. U n iv e rs ity L ib ra rie s : o rie n ta tio n to u rs of H a y d e n Library, 10:40 a.m . and 2:40 p.m., and Noble Science Library, 12:40 p.m. G u n D e v ils S h o o tin g C lu b : tra p an d s k e e t demonstration, 5 p .m ., M U .U nited C am pus C h ris tia n M in istry: open Bible study, 7 p.m., MU Apache Room. T h e T o d ay section is a daily c a le n d a r of even ts printed on a space-available basis as a service to the ASU community. Campus clubs and organizations can submit written entries to the S tate Press, located in the basement of M atth ew s C e n te r, Room 15. Entries a re subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and wiN not be taken over the phone. Deadline for the entries is noon the previous business day: M is c e lla n e o u s M e e tin g s A S U S tu d e n t L ife A C T IV E V o lu n te e r P ro g ra m : Students fo r Life: open meeting, 3 p m., MU La Paz Room. N a rc o tic s A n on ym o u s: open m eetin g, 5 :3 0 p .m ., mm volunteer organization recruitm ent drive, 10:30 a.m ., Cady Fountain. B a p tis t S tu d en t U n io n : c o m p lem en tary lunch and midday service, noon, Baptist Student Center, 1322 S. mm 13" Color BUNDLE $ 1 8 8 9 .0 0 mm 14" Color BUNDLE $ 1 9 8 9 .0 0 TT • f m A 14" Color BUNDLE $ 2 7 4 9 .O O Ilei5/230 F o r m o r e in f o r m a t io n v is it th e A S U B o o k s t o r e Monday - Friday between 9:30 - 3:30 o r call 829-7993 •AUSpring Fling Bundle* include Microsoft Word S.l and Appl^E*tended Keyboard Apple and the Apple logo are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. 14" Color BUNDLE $ 2 4 4 9 .0 0 W o r ld / N a tio n S tate P ress Thursday, January 21,1993 Page 3 And now for the hard part AP Photo President Clinton chooses front a row of pens as he prepares to sign his first Presidential orders Wednesday in the President's Room on Capitol Hill. Joining the President, from left, are Sen, W endell Ford, D-Ky., Sen. Alan Simpson, R-W yo., Vice President Gore, House M ajority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., House Speaker Thomas Foley of W ashington and Senate Majority Leader George M itchell of Maine. B o sn ia n Serb c o u n c il a cc e p ts p e a ce p la n P a rlia m en t O K s b ill, d e m a n d s a u to n o m y Associated Press PALE. Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — An assem bly o f Bosnian Serbs on W ednesday accepted a plan to end Bosnia’s civil war, but what appeared to be a step toward peace may be little more than a tactical maneuver. , W hile giving the international community the “ yes” it sought for the peace plan, the Serbs also insisted on the right to self-determ ination — the key demand mediators have rejected. The Serbs’ foes, Bosnia’s Muslims and Croats, have tentatively accepted the plan. The international community had told B o sn ia ’s Serbs to accept the plan unconditionally or risk further isolation and p o ssib le m ilitary interv en tio n . Rejection would have doomed the peace talk s and increased figh tin g , but the manner in which the Serbs accepted also raised doubts. In any case, fighting was likely to continue for control of territory. Warfare appeared to ease throughout' Bosnia on Wednesday, but Muslim-led government forces captured the Jezero hill in eastern Bosnia after four days of bitter fighting. Serb fighters had to withdraw over the Drina River into the neighboring republic of Serbia in what appeared to be a major Muslim victory, the Belgrade-based Tanjug news agency reported. The Muslims can use the hill to control a large area on the Drina River border with Serbia. * B o sn ia ’s eth n ic groups have been fighting since last February, when the republic’s Serb minority rebelled against a Muslim-Croat vote for independence. The Serbs have captured about, two-thirds of Bosnian territory. Nearly 18,000 people, and probably many m ore, have been killed, tens of thousands are missing and more than 1 million people have been forced from their homes, Lord O w en o f the E uropean Community, who with U.N. envoy Cyrus Vance drafted the peace plan, welcomed the Bosnian Serbs’ decision, But Muslim leaders were skeptical. Kemal Muftic, a top aide to Bosnia’s Muslim president, Alija Izetbegovic, said Serbs accepted the peace plan because they were under pressure. “Our experience so far tells us that whatever they agree to, it means nothing on the ground,” he said. The Serb decision to accept the plan was made by th eir self-declared parliament, which met in Pale, the Serb military headquarters just east of Sarajevo. The vote was 55-12 with one abstention. The assembly has 81 seats, but most of the missing lawmakers did not travel to Pale. “T he Serb side is ready fo r an immediate cease-fire, including Sarajevo,” said B osnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic. But he said his self-declared Serb republic would continue to exist “until the Serbian people decide otherwise,” and emphasized the vote did not mean full agreement with the Vance-Owen plan. AP Photo A Bosnian woman lies in a pool of blood after being shot and killed by a sniper as a U nited N atio n s arm ored car speeds p a s t W ed n esd ay alo n g S a ra je v o 's infamous "Sniper Alley." Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — President Clinton’s inaugural address was the easy part. His next step is to deliver on his declaration that “ to renew America, we must be bold.” Clinton will find, as other presidents have, that being bold takes a lot of work -— no matter how noble the oratory. But he starts with a clean slate and has an advantage accorded no other incom ing president for 16 years: both houses of Congress controlled by his own party. In a 14-minute address that drew from Thomas Jefferson, John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Ross Perot, the new Democratic chief executive reprised the major themes of the campaign that propelled him to the White House. , “Raised in unrivaled prosperity, we inherit an economy still the world’s strongest, but weakened by business failures, stagnant wages, increasing inequality, and deep divisions among our people,” Clinton said. True to the word of a candidate who called fixing the economy his No. 1 priority, Clinton dwelled m ostly on domestic challenges: cutting the deficit, “investing” in the n atio n 's infrastructure and jo b skills, universal health insurance, a national youth service program. But, in a nod to the foreign policy crises that clamor for attention, C linton said: “W hen our vital in terests are challenged, or the will and conscience of the international community is defied, we will act — with peaceful diplomacy when possible, with force when necessary.” That was, primarily, a message to Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, from the first president to take office with U.S. forces in harm’s way since Richard Nixon in 1969. ‘T he brave Americans serving our nation in the Persian Gulf, in Somalia, and wherever else they stand are testament to our resolve,” Clinton added. With the exception of Harry Truman, who assumed office T urn to President, page 13. George and Barbara tour W ashington one last tim e E x -P re sid en t ‘l o o k in g fo r w a r d t o a n e w lif e ’ Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) —. George and Barbara Bush, now ju s t Mr. and Mrs. Citizen, took a final aerial tour o f this capital where they had spent nearly three decades, then flew home to Houston “looking forward to a new life.” As the capital welcomed Bill C linton and his. new administration with a joyous parade, hundreds of people who worked for Bush in the W hite H ouse and other executive offices, gathered at Andrews Air Force Base in the Maryland suburbs to bid him farewell. Photo His last act before the Air Form er President Bush and form er firs t lady BarbaraAPBush Force je t rolled down the wave to supporters as th ey prepare to board th eir plane at tarm ac was to pose fo r a Andrews Air Force Base, Md., for their return trip to Houston picture with members of the Wednesday. Air Force maintenance crews cheering lustily as they alighted. A Navy who kept his planes flying. About three hours band played m arches. The b rillian t sun later, they arrived at Ellington Air Force Base glinted off the plane that Bush rode so often in Houston. as Air Force One. Only an hour before, Bush had watched The 747 on which he flew Wednesday did stoically as Clinton took the oath that made not carry that designation because that name him the 42nd president of the United States. is given only to the plane carrying the The new chief executive lauded Bush “for his ■ president. Instead, for this flight, it was SAM half-century of service to America,” then 28000. SAM stands for special air mission. turned and saluted his predecessor. The big blue and white jum bo jet was There was a smile on Bush's face as the fam iliar to Bush. In his 1,462 days as two men faced one another — symbols of president, he traveled 612,394 miles to all 50 their generations. Bush, 68, a World War II states and 35 foreign countries, most of them hero; Clinton 46, a Vietnam war resister. aboard the 747. But in contrast to the animated expression B ush’s longtim e spokesm an M arlin on Clinton’s face throughout the celebration Fitzwater also held one last press briefing. A of the peaceful passage of power, Bush was brief one. Asked how Bush felt, he said, solemn for the most part. “He’s fine, looking forward to a new life.” A helicopter was waiting on the Capitol Fitzwater, who was wearing a cowboy hat, grounds. President and Mrs. Clinton escorted almost shouted the sentence in glee. Mr. and Mrs. Bush to it. Bush turned and Something else was different. The Navy gave a double thumbs up before he got on band, on the tarm ac to play for B ush’s board. Dan Quayle, the vice president who departure, no longer sounded the familiar left office with Bush, and his wife, Marilyn, “H ail to the C h ief,” w hich honors the also went aboard. incumbent president. The chopper lifted, circled the Capitol and With the inauguration ceremony at the then the White House before bringing the Capitol, 'Bush became one of five former Bushes to the air base. T urn i <> Kush, page 13 About 2,000 people awaited them there, Opinion P age 4 State P ress Thursday, January 21, 1993 State P ress ditorial ■ J P /W 5 « Ullffi C lin t o n r id e s o u t a p p r o v a l W hile the hotshots in W ashington sleep off their p o s t-in a u g u ra l h a n g o v e rs , th e r e s t o f u s are wondering what to expect for the future. Bill C lin to n ran an ex citin g cam p aign and a difficult one as well. To win against an incum bent is q u ite a fe a t in any e le c tio n , b u t to w in an election against a president who once enjoyed near 100 p e r c e n t a p p ro v a l ta k e s so m e s p e c ia l m aneuvering and some special promises. C lin to n ta rg e te d th e m id d le c la s s h e a v ily , looking to win the hearts o f the yuppie generation. T his generation is w atching its ch ild ren and its pocketbooks, wondering what will happen to both as the 20th century winds its way down. As it turns out* Clinton prom ised the people a lot for their future, in both explicit plans, and the whole set o f hopes and dream s encom passed by his call for “change.” But now that he has won the election and stepped behind the curtain where the political process takes place, he is stepping back from his previous promises^ For gays in the military, this may mean another presidency to stay in the closet. W hile preparing fo r th e presid en cy , C lin to n ran up a g a in st the opposition to his prom ise to issue an ex ecutive o r d e r s tr ik in g d o w n ’ th e m i l i t a r y ’s b a n on homosexuality, and presently the Pentagon seems to be w in n in g th e b a ttle w ith C lin to n o v e r retaining the status quo. For the children o f W ashington D.C., it may be e v e n lo n g e r b e f o r e th e s c h o o l s y s te m is r e h a b ilita te d . A lth o u g h C h e ls e a h a s b e e n com fortable in public schools w hile Bill C linton was G overnor o f Arkansas and Clinton maintained that C h e lse a w o u ld c o n tin u e to be e n ro lle d in public schools, he has since ch an g ed his m ind, opting fo r placing his d au g h ter in an ex clu siv e private school in the nation’s capital. This was a poor show o f faith for the future o f our schools. The middle class, to which Clinton promised a tax c u t, m ay , a c c o r d in g to S e c r e ta r y o f th e Treasury Lloyd Benson, be looking at new taxes. Along with this, Clinton aides are now saying that there is no way the budget deficit will be halved by th e e n d o f C lin to n ’s firs t fo u r - y e a r te rm . Another prom ise is deep-sixed. O f the m ajor prom ises made by C linton, this only leaves change, which may be the key to the fu tu re o f o u r n a tio n . W h ile c a m p a ig n in g fo r p r e s id e n t, C lin to n c a s h e d in o n v o te rs dissatisfaction with the previous adm inistration. Just shortly after C linton’s victory, the econom y b eg an p ic k in g up an d th e n atio n h ad a stro n g Christm as. C linton is able to ride on is the new h o p e th a t p e o p le h av e fo r h is a d m in istra tio n , despite the difficulties it m ay encounter. His youth and his ability to address problem s, regardless o f his ability to solve them , has given voters hope for the future. In the end, it may not be his fidelity to these prom ises that determ ines his success, but rather his ability to guide a country that is w illing to have hope for itself again. ' , S STATE PRESS — . - ^- , I \ L |H B ig change show s little prom ise hi Y esterday, am id all o f the pomp and circum stance o f the lSHAHED presidential inauguration, the 42nd ruler of the United States was TRICHE officially installed. No longer will he be referred to as president-elect Bill Clinton. He will now be known as President Bill Clinton. He now inherits a large house in Washington D.C., a vacation house, maids, butlers, servants and a staff of thousands waiting to serve at his beck and call. He is inheriting a legacy of 41 others who served their country faithfully before him. But Clinton says he is different from all of the rest. He maintained throughout the presidential campaign that he was for progress, change and new ideas. He is quoted as saying, “I desperately want to make a difference.” With Bill Clinton, we are supposed to have hope for a better tomorrow. America is' supposed to be looking toward brighter days after the 12-year Reagan/Bush reign of terror, but 1 am compelled to ask if we will be able to see any measurable difference between what Bush was and what Clinton is. The new est figurehead started his W ednesday by worshipping at the Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church. This was a politically correct move, seeing as though black voters have always blindly — and sometimes robotically — voted for the democratic party. By attending church there, he shows that even though he condem ned Sister Souljah, who effectively voiced the opinions o f many urban youth, he is willing to relax and seemingly rub elbows with the blacks who tend to make white America feel comfortable. However, the problems that face many of those within the AME church are problems that he probably wouldn’t be able to understand. Then on Monday, Martin Luther King Jr./Civil Rights Day, he spoke at Howard University, the nation’s most celebrated and historic black institute of higher education. It was an excellent photo opportunity to show Clinton speaking to a segment of the next generation of educated black thinkers. That is, of course, if those black thinkers aren’t forced to drop out of college because of the lack of available financial aid. Has he created a plan for re-establishing the federal loans and grants cut by Bush that were once available to college students? If you bothered to listen to“all of the candidates and their campaign promises, you would remember Clinton making statements about the Haitian refugees. While Bush was being slammed for not allowing the Haitians to come to America and escape persecution in th eir hom eland, C linton was masquerading as the champion of human rights. He stated that he would “give fleeing Haitians refuge and consideration for political asylum until democracy is restored” in Haiti. He said he would accept all refugees just as America had done in the past with refugees from Cuba and Central America. But last week he sang a different song. He now says that he agrees with George Bush’s decision and that he will continue to return fleeing Haitian refugees to political persecution and possible death in Haiti. Clinton verbally slammed Bush’s position a few months ago. Now he embraces it. What will be the next campaign promise to fall into the pit of oblivion? • And finally, speaking of singing songs, does anyone else think that it is ridiculous for thousands of people to pay between SI00 and $1,000 to celebrate the inauguration of a president while listening to Elton John, Barbara Streisand and Fleetwood Mac — and Michael Jackson, the most confused person on planet Earth? But at least Michael Jackson donates money to the starving, the needy and the homeless. While most of the people at the celebration were stuffing their wealthy faces with food, thousands of homeless people and small children are starving here in America. While these people were listening to music and wearing their best dresses and suits, children in some cities can’t sleep because of gunfire and fighting in their neighborhoods. Missiles and mortar shells are falling and people are being killed, in Iraq. No one can sleep because of the thunderous roar and ominous whistle of incoming warheads. „ OIC . . . v __ KRIS MAYES, Editor EHREN SCHWIEBERT, Managing Editor KEN BROWN ........................................................City Editor S. TALBOTT SM ITH.........:......................... Asst. Cily Editor DAN /E IG E R .......................:...............................News Editor KEN COLLINS................................... ............Opinion EdUor DARRYL WEBB......................,........................... Photo Editor MICHELLE CON WAY...................... .......Asst Photo Editor JAKE BATSELL & BRIAN CHARLES ...Co-Sports Editors ANGELA BENOCHE ..................... Copy Chief LAURIE NOTARO....................:...................Magazine Editor JASON OWSLEY.............i.......:;......Asst. Managing Editor REPORTERS: Joy Beason. Kate Deely, Stephen Demoratz. . Chris Driscoll, Kim Kaan, Mark Macias, Sondra Roberto, L orenzo S ie rra, Tam m y S ie rra, T hom as T rask , Judd Williams, Natalie Young, SPO R T S R E PO R T E R S: Michael Branem, Scott Davis, Shaun Rachau, Greg Sexton. COPY EDITORS: Anne Gilley, Jeannie Tallon CARTOONISTS: Ken Collins, Sean T. Hoy. « PH OTOGRAPHERS: Brian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Suzanne Kyer. COLUMNISTS: Ashahed Triche, Tonnvane Wiswell. ' PR O D U CTIO N : Kai Barrett; Gary Bedol, Jodi Goldblatt, Jeff Hams, Steve McDowell, Leslie Thorpe, Evonne Vera, David Wéber. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dcbck, Soriia Benson, Jam ia Birney, Julie Case, Dan Eilstrpm, Renee Headrick. Jennifer Hughes, Erica, Kuebler, Sue Lowery, Lance Newman, Ron Spaeth, Tim Wohlpart. The State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The S ta te P ress rs the only new spaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student ■body..;. E d it o r ia l B o a r d Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: KRIS MAYES EHREN S C H W I E B E R T . . ^ ...Managing Editor KEN COLLINS.......,;...;,;...........................„...Opinion Editor num ber. O nly signed le tte rs w ill be 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 fronyt desk i s the basem ent o f Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-: ' 1502. — " S tate P ress P h o n e N u m bers The State P ress w elcom es and encourages Written response from our readers on any topic. AH 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 (of any other affiliation with the University) and phone ClassifiechAdveitising ...................... 965-2292 ...... ............ 965-1695 ....................... 965-6555 ....."...... .......... 965-6731 Opinion State Press -Thursday, January 21,1993 Page 5 ____________________ In Dixieland I will take my stand Gì C lin ton backs o ff gays in arm y B ill C lin to n is b e in g squeezed on the issue o f gays in the m ilitary. G ays dem and that he keep his prom ise and lift the ban. But the generals and adm irals say, please, spare us this m assive migraine. I t ’s C l i n t o n ’s o w n f a u lt because he chose politics as a c a re e r. To be e le c te d , p o litic ia n s m ak e p r o m is e s , prom ises and m ore prom ises. Sort o f like seduction. But with th e d a w n c o m e m o u th w a sh and reality. Clinton sought gay votes and money. He also wanted support o f the Hollywood stars who m ade AIDS and gay rights their favorite social issues. But in a few days, h e ’ll be president, w hich includes being com m ander in chief o f the military when the need arises. O ne o f C linton’s responsibilities as president will be to assure us the most efficient, effective military that our tax dollars can buy. So h e’ll sit dow n with his military com m anders, all very bright men them selves. And all experts in their chosen profession, which is war. And they are going to tell him that if he really wants m axim um effectiveness from the m ilitary, h e ’ll find a way to squirm out o f his political promise to the gays. W hat does he then say to the military m en? He can’t tell them that he knows m ore about their jo b s than they do. That would be laughable, since the only uniform he’s ever worn has been a goofy jogging suit. Does he tell Gen. Colin Powell: ‘T ru st me. 1 know more about this problem than you do.” ? If so, Gen. Powell could justifiably respond: ‘'H ey, trust us. We know m ore about how to run an effective Army, Navy and M arines and w hat it takes to win wars than Barbra Streisand or the G ay-Lesbian A lliance. How do you think 1 got these four stars on m y shoulder?” This is the kind o f situation Clinton doesn’t like. He prefers com prom ise, m aking everybody happy. B ut there is no way he can soothe both sides on this issue. If he keep s his p o litical prom ise, h e ’ll m ake gays happy and anger the military and a large segm ent o f the Am erican population. If he breaks his prom ise, h e’ll anger gays and their H ollyw ood supporters. W ere I asked to cast a tie-breaking vote, it would be for the military. And if the Pentagon had done a better jo b o f arguing its case, the overw helm ing m ajority o f Am ericans would agree. Instead, the Pentagon let the gays skillfully use the m edia to peddle the argum ent that the m ilitary ban is nothing m ore than evil discrim ination. And those who d isa g re e a re v ic io u s g a y b a sh e rs. T hey are e x p e rt at playing victims. T his is som ething described well by Lt. Col. Robert M aginnis, an infantry officer, who recently wrote in the C hicago Tribune: ‘W e’re caught in a propaganda'!war being waged by the m edia and gay lobbyists. ... M ost m edia m em bers who advocate lifting the ban never served in the military. They d o n ’t understand the lack o f privacy and forced intimacy in the barracks and the battlefield.” H e’s right. The m ilitary is not a campus, a department s to r e , a p ro d u c tio n lin e , o r e v e n a p o lic e o r fire departm ent. M ilitary life is unique. In a free society, there is nothing else like it. The civilian jo b closest to soldiering is being a cop. There are gay cops, and th at’s OK. But as a cop, you work your shift and go hom e. You do n ’t bunk next to another cop. You don’t live on a ship with him 24 hours a day. You don’t shower, shave and sleep near him for months at a time. A n d s in c e w e ’re ta lk in g a b o u t se x — m o re specifically a form o f sex that the m ajority o f Americans consider unnatural — anybody w ho says that it w on’t affect m orale and discipline in the m ilitary has never been in a barracks or on a crowded troop ship. *f Yes, th e re are p o lls th a t te ll us th a t b e tw e e n 48 percent and 61 percent o f Americans think the gay ban should be lifted. These polls are about as meaningful as those that say 10 percent o f Americans believe Elvis lives. I’d like to see a poll limited to those currently in the military and those who have been there. Any such poll would show that an overw helm ing m ajority w ould be against lifting the ban. T hat’s because they know that m ost who serve in a volunteer m ilitary have conservative, middle-class, Godcountryfam ily values. I t’s a conform ist organization, from haircut to stockings. A nd it places less value on individual rights than on the unit as a whole. It has its own laws and justice system, which by civilian standards would be considered authoritarian and unconstitutional. M aybe you do n ’t w ant to live that way, but if w e are going to fight wars, it works. If gays are accepted by the military, they will dem and change. T h e y ’ve served notice. O ne gay organization says that if the ban is lifted, they w ill push for a gay q u o ta a t W est P o in t. S o rry , b u t th a t h a p p e n s to be ridiculous. How one chooses to achieve orgasm should have nothing to do with adm ission to the U.S. Military Academy. T here’s nothing w rong with change if it has a positive p u rp o s e . T h is d o e s n ’t. W e ’re n o t ta lk in g a b o u t patriotism , love o f country, sacrifice. Gay obsessives — and d o n ’t c o n fu se th em w ith o rd in a ry p e o p le w ho h a p p e n to b e g a y — h a v e an a g e n d a : to ta l so c ia l acceptance. A nd they are using the m ilitary ban as a blue chip in their poker game. A gay New York law yer sum m ed it up when he told T he N ew York Tim es: “Any instrum ents that defer or delegate this issue to the m ilitary are inherently suspect.” Hey, law yer, this co u ntry’s m ilitary has w on m any more fights than it has lost. W hen it com es to fighting, C olin P ow ell’s view s are less suspect than those o f a N ew Y ork la w y e r w h o h a s n ’t sp e n t o n e m in u te in combat. This week, our m ilitary slapped Saddam Hussein and is in Somalia. It’s been effective. As the saying goes, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. And the m ilitant gay agenda has nothing to do with fixing it. Just the opposite. On Feb. 10, 1956, 21 months after the Supreme EORGE C o u rt’s school desegregation decision and WILL . less than three months after Washington Post Rosa Parks was arrested for Writers Group refusing to yield her seat to a white male passenger on a bus in Montgomery, Ala., the Georgia Legislature took a stand. It redesigned the state flag that had been adopted by the 1879 legislature (which included many Confederate veterans). The 1956 legislature made a new flag, two-thirds of which is the Confederate Battle Flag. Last week Gov. Zell Miller asked the legislature to, as it were, furl the Battle Flag. He wants a state flag without that “symbol of defiance and intolerance:” In his State of the State address he noted that for the first time since President Jackson from Tennessee and Vice President Calhoun from South Carolina took office in 1829, the nation is to be led by “two sons of the South.” The time has come, Miller said, to repudiate the flag that is the last remnant of a-political stance longsince repudiated throughout thè South. Polls today prove that Miller’s position on the flag is intensely unpopular. And his argument is especially admirable because it is optional. He could couch his argument in mushy rhetoric about “sensitivity” for “feelings” Instead, he cuts to the quick of Southern history. A former professor of history (at Young Harris College, Emory University and the University of Georgia), he knows that the shape of the future is influenced by interpretations of the past, and in his interpretation he does not mince words. The Confederacy, hè notes with nice astringency, represents ju st 1.5 percent o f G eorgia’s 260-year history. “Yet it is the Confederacy’s most inflammatory symbol that dominates our flag today.” The 1956 flag id en tifies G eorgia “with the dark side o f the Confederacy,” the determination to destroy the United States, if necessary, in order to deny some Americans the equal rights that are every American’s birthright. He finds ‘’infuriating” the notion that the 1956 flag is necessary lest Georgians forget the sacrifices of Confederate soldiers. He has standing to be furious. He is the great-grandson o f a soldier wounded while serving with Stonewall Jackson at Chancellorsville, and wounded again at Gettysburg, where his brother died. G eo rg ia’s memory is kept alive by graveyards, monuments, literature and family histories, not to mention the name of Sherman, who arguably made Georgia the first arena of modem warfare. Miller will not traffic in the cloying sentimentality about “the Lost C ause” — a sentim entality often inversely proportional to the historical knowledge of the person waxing sentimental. When Miller says the 1956 flag ‘’exhibits pride in the enslavement of many of our ancestors,” he is saying: The Confederacy was not the pretty swirl of crinolines painted by Atlanta’s Margaret Mitchell in ‘’Gone With The Wind.” Now, perhaps today’s ’’progressives,” in their current enthusiasm for “multiculturalism,” will want the 1956 flag retained. Perhaps they will think the Battle Flag is em blem atic o f ’’diversity” and therefore constructively subversive of the oppressive myth of a shared national civic culture. Perhaps. But all Georgians and others who still believe e pluribus unum should rally ‘round M iller. He is affirming the flag's importance in the civic liturgy by which the community expresses remembrance and devotion. In a new book ‘’L o y alty ,” G eorge F letcher, professor of law at Columbia University, notes that the idea of respect for a community’s sense of decency is rarely inserted into public discourse nowadays. But we ‘’should express certain wrongs not as offensive conduct to individuals but as a violation o f our collective sense of what is permissible in our public space.” L iberal individualism , he says, clouds our reco g n itio n that not all relevant harm occurs to individuals. The issue of. w hat values should be affirmed by public symbols in public space is a fit subject for political debate and “requires a commitment to the life of the community as well as to the welfare of individuals.” A flag should be a sym bolic sum m ation o f community values. Georgia’s 1956 flag no longer is, which speaks well of Georgia in 1993. Today that flag flies over a state capito! near the headquarters o f Coca-Col^ and CNN, enterprises em blem atic o f the com m on preferences and communication that help make and .define a national community. It is for the best values of that community, which modern Georgians share, that Miller, like his great-grandfather, but in a better cause, has taken a stand, like a stone wall. S t a t e P ress Thursday, January 21, 1993 P age 6 DID y o u G ET IT TH IS M O RN IN G ? P olice R eport The ASU police log was unavailable at press time because of a problem with ASU’s Pegasus computer system: Tempe police reported the following incidents on Tuesday: • Two Phoenix men were jailed for allegedly stealing more than $ 1,000 of garden equipment from an RV storage trailer at 4901 Calle Las Cdnos St. Police said the tw o jumped over a 10-foot fence and cut two padlocks to get to the equipment. Fifteen pairs of sunglasses with a total estimated value of $6,000 were stolen from Alpine Ski Keller 1753 E. Broadway Road. One of the store’s glass doors had been smashed in the process of the burglary. • A Tempe man was arrested for an argument with his brother that erupted into a struggle and left the brother with a 3-inch gash on his palm. In the course of the argument, the man began throwing things and screaming at his brother, who picked up a 3-foot machete to defend himself in a subsequent fight. The man’s brother did not want to press charges. • A Tempe man, went home to discover his hot tub missing at 1628 N. El Camino Drive. The man asked neighbors about the theft, but no one could provide enough information to give police any leads. Loss is estimated at $700. Compiled by State Press city editor Ken Brown. to b mm YOU GET IT EVERT WEEKDAY MORNING ALL OVER CAMPUS. E i m n ii itati ««IIIMITT S tate P ress A Thursday Noon Bible Study hpnnuir Place Christian Students Fellowship Memorial Union RiuMing l link Monito» Thursdays 12 10-1 11) p m Unir Date Jan, 21 Jan. 28 thurt>i S ta t e ^ R Ï e s s I Daily I *1 Subject: The Bookof Hebrews Speaker Hill Frenimi of Ministry of thè World ratlin broadcast on KHEP1280 AM G a ia tio n s th r u C o h s s ia n s Room Subject C hapter & Vereea Yavapai, 209 O nut R tirilnl In l \ Cal I Nava)», 219 Christ Living In Us ÇaL 2 Christian Students Fellowship For further information call 948-4488 CROSSWORD s e R U B b y TH O M A S JO SE PH ACROSS WHEN IT DOES, WHERE DO YOU GO FOR CARE? AND WHO PAYS FOR IT? *Tihe ASU Student Health Center covers you for a number of services. X And for those not available at Student Health, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona has an affordable health plan called Preferred Care for Students. 1 One of the Mamas 5 Pooch pests 10 Islands dance 11 Starr of the comics 12 Press 13 Made • forays 14 Conta­ gious 16 Brood activity 20 Cavalry weapons 23 Kanga's kid 24 Fad 25 Aisle waflcer 27 Broadcast 28 Poker • actions 29 Coordi­ nated 32 Closing, in a way 36 Dedicate 39 Tulip or magnolia 40 Martini extras 41 Actor Sharif 42 Windshield fixture 43 Archibald of NBA fame DOWN armed bandit feature 4 Tennis's Arantxa 5 Currency unit of France 6 Gable’s 1939 costar 7 Finale 8 Fruit drink 9 Blue 11 Londoners for short 15 Tortoise’s competitor 17 Eye part 18 Protuber­ ance 19 Leaves 20 Con game 21 La Scala 1 r - à O R A T O R T I S A N, E A A R BO R U A s ME L A N D 0 N S E S T A BO D 1 N 1 N A L E N L D BO B O N E R N E 0: L A S T G E S T E À E S O P N J O V 1 G R E D 1 T S T O E N T S N S O I R S A L E E A T E N S C E N E T E T E Yesterday’s Answer offering 22 Marge and Homer’s boy 25 Place to keep 5-Down 26 “You said it!" 28 Ceremo­ nies 30 Garlic buy 31 Misan­ 4 thrope 33 "My Friend — " 34 Tidy 35 “Pretty Woman" costar 36 Tony of "Leave H to Beaver" 37 Yale backer 38 Bigwig T ~ Ò 5“ 1Ó r~ r iâ H r r ^ Î8 ^ 1 9 ^ 16 20 23 21 ¿4 25 26 28 29 30 31 & 36 37 3 3 ^ 34 38 35 39 • 4Ô J Ài It was designed just for ASU students, and it works hand in hand with the services and resources of Student Health. 1 Stylish 2 Glow 3 0ne- If you’re covered on your parents’ health insurance, you should get them information about this unique health plan. Because chances are, Preferred Care will be more affordable than their policy and a lot more suited to your health care needs here at ASU. C T I For answers to today’s crossword, call 9 I V i l l i C l# ■ 1-900-454-7377!99eperminute,touchtone / rotary phones. (18+ only.) A King Features service, NYC. When things happen, don’t get caught without health coverage. Or without the right kind of coverage. Get information on Preferred Care for Students at Student Health. PREFERRED CARE ENROLLMENT DEADLINE: M o n d a y , F eb ru a ry 1 B lu e C r o s s B lu e S h ie ld o f A r iz o n a S tu d e n t H e a lth C e n te r University & Palm Walk Insurance Office: 965-2411 You can enroll in Preferred Care by using die In-Touch ASU touch tone phone system. Dial 350-1500 and follow the prompts. Payment may be made in person, by mail, with SurePay automatic withdrawal or by phone using VISA or MasterCard. 42 4à s 1-21 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's h o w to w o ik i t A XYD LB AA XR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 1-21 P G C RYPTO Q U O TE T O P R L D N R O L I G R B S E I G P Z R R Q D D A D C R A D D B D O Q I H C R L X , S E l L ID N B T K R X L . — S R X O T X A C . S T X E P G Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te : I W A N T EVERYBODY T O TELL M E T H E T R U T H E V E N IF IT COSTS T H E M T H E IR JOBS. — SA M U EL G O L D W Y N e 1993 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Thursday, January 21,1993 S tate P ress _Page¿ Flight program changes elicit variety o f reactions B y J o y B ea son S ta te P ress THURSDAYS ^ _____ [ 7 p m 250 Beers 25 Shots of Maui Schnapps 2 .0 0 32oz. Beers 2.0 0 Long Island iced Teas V F R I D A Y HAPPY 4pm ~7pm The aeronautical technology department has cemented plans to change the “mission” o f its flight program , and flight schools currently under contract with ASU are still upset about the loss of business front the University. “The new flight program will be quite different from what we have now — we are still deciding on details,” said Robert Meitz, chair o f the departm ent o f aeronautical technology. Last semester, flight contractors and some flight students said they Were upset with the proposed changes in store for the aeronautical department. In the past, flight students have chosen between four flight schools, contracted by ASU, to complete their air-time requirement for graduation. Last semester, the aeronautical technology department proposed to bring in a new flight school, Airline Training Center Arizona, and drop the other four. Laurence Geselt, associate aeronautical technology professor, said his department is changing its flight program to comply with new standards fo r co lleg iate aviation accreditation. , The new guidelines require all universities to have their own planes for flight training or contract one flight school to give flight students time in the air. Gesell said the accreditation committee was trying to give universities more control over safety and • facilitate program maintenance. “Our first consideration is the students,” he said. “We think our program will be on the cutting edge.” The cost of the new program will increase from betw een $25,000 and $35,000 to between $40,000 and $50,000. The program, which is Roused at several flight schools around the Valley, will be moved to Litchfield Airport in Litchfield Park. Officials from the flight Schools that ASU currently uses said they are unaware of the changes that are going to take place. According to Bill Lane, assistant chief ground instructor at ATCA, the differences betw een ATCA and the flight schools currently under contract fall under two categories: planes and instructors. Lane added that he thinks the younger instructors at other schools are looking for career advancements, and teaching is not their primary goal, “I believe there are very distin ct differences,” he said. “We provide air time to students who have little air experience. We have required a level of excellence from our Students and w ill require it from ASU students. We feel that it will make them more desirable after graduation.” ; H ow ever, SAS Executive A viation director Ben York disagreed. “M ost people looking to hire are not looking for what kind of planes students have been trained on, but they are looking for the number of hours in the air.” York said he felt having older flight instructors was a negative rather than a positive aspect of ATCA. Flight students had mixed reactions to the new program after a briefing yesterday. M any students said they d id n ’t know enough about the changes to comment on them, while some students said they were impressed and interested in the new setup, “It sounded very p ro fessio n al,” said R obert Rch, an aeronautical.technology major. C o m p lim e n ta r y F o o d B u ffe t BUDWEISER REP 4pm ~11pm Position Available 2 fo r 1 a t t h e b a r $ 3 . 0 0 P itc h e rs o f B e e r $ 6 . 0 0 P itc h e rs o f Teas H en sley & Company, th e G reater P h o en ix area A n heuser-B usch distributor, has One position avail­ able for a contemporary m arketing representative. Job responsibilities demand approxim ately IS hours ISO®11© $ ANNIVERSARY All# ■ft ]Vy 'll It Ì/J/ ' j 7 ~ 11pm 4 3 0 N. Scottsdale Rd. ■Tempe 8940533 * '■ II A * $1 well, wine & draft ■■• :■ |$1 Kamikazi)» all night! V fi >«»nciiip: Inyinsat 9pm (A fter hours til 2am1 Upcoming Concerts: January 27 FAITH NO MORE February 1 SPIN DOCTORS February 7 IZ Z Y STRADLIN February 10 DREAM THEATER per w eek and include: • D eveloping and im plem enting promotional and m arketing programs • M aintaining a call frequency on college area accounts • W orking w ith campus clubs and organizations • W orking in the area o f alcohol education respon sibility programming Individual m ust be o f legal drinking age. Preferably w ith tw o years rem aining after n ex t semester. M ust have an autom obile. Salaried position plus expense accou n t Applications w ill be accepted until M onday, February 1,1993 M onday-Friday, 8 a m - 5 p m at* H ensley & C a 2 9 2 7 SL H ardy • Tempe, A Z 9 6 8 -2 4 7 1 M ust apply in person. H ensley & Co. is an Equal O pportunity Em ployer Statt P ress Thursday, January 21, 1993 P ro v o st p ro p o ses ch a n g es in fa c u lty w o rk lo a d ^ Departments to focus on increased instruction time B y K ate D eely S tate P ress ASU departm ent chairpersons will be asked to draw up policies requiring faculty to change the distribution of workload hours to better accommodate students. Kathleen Church, ASU vice provost, Said faculty members Work an average of 56 hours per Week but spend only about 45 percent to 50 percent of that tim e on instructional activ ities. She said the p ro v o st’s office decided to install a policy that suggests faculty -spend more working hours on student-related activities. “The notion of the policy is to change the ratio, so more time is related to (instructional time),” Church said. Church said when faculty are not performing instructional activities such as teaching, class preparation, grading or advising, they are involved in administrative work, public service and research. m , .vî*t She said these non- instructional activities The memo will propose the policy and include , are necessary, but in order to make “optimum” general guidelines and goals. According to Church, departm ents are use of the University’s resources, work hours expected to have policies developed by March must be redistributed to emphasize teaching. Church said she realizes faculty members 15, and then the provost’s office and the already work “long hours” and some may faculty senate will design an “outcome-based have a difficult time redistributing their time, University policy” by the end of the semester. Faculty Senate President Dick McGaW said but she added that there must be a change. “You either have to work longer hours or the pro v o st’s proposal is a response to concerns aired by the state Legislature and the redistribute,” Church said. She said the message she wants to send to A rizona Board o f Regents about faculty faculty with this policy is to “be smart, use contact hours with students. . He said that he has heard concerns from your heads and make the optimum experience regents that students experience lack of access you can for students.” Church said the policies are development- to ranked faculty and to courses taught by oriented. They will not be the same for each ranked faculty. “It (policy-making) is a work in progress,” department, she said, “We realize all faculty are not Cut out of McGaw said. He added that this step is a preliminary the same cookie cutter,” Church said. , She added that faculty have varying action to many more “complex University teaching loads and additional academ ic missions” such as high projected enrollment growth. responsibilities, depending on the department. McGaw agreed with Church that each Church said it is up to each department to decide what sort of policy would work best for department’s policy will be different in order it. She said a memorandum will be distributed to accommodate varying situations. That is to department chairpersons early next week. why the provost’s office is not providing a akinp. he strict rsiitlin^ outline fnr for nnlirv-m policy-making, he SâkL said, “They are not laying out a fixed formula or solution, but are providing a general framework,” McGaw said. Gary Krahenbuhl, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said he has been discussing faculty workload options with the provost’s office. He said that although the University has been examining workload d istribution for som e tim e, U niversity administration is now “giving (the issue) a m ore com prehensive look than we have before.” ■The provost’s philosophy is to have things start at the department level so we have a more comprehensive look,” Krahenbuhl said. Krahenbuhl said a fair policy-m aking system has been proposed to take into account differences between departments. The system allows everyone to submit suggestions. He predicts that each departm ent and college will develop policies to fit its needs. From there, the provost and faculty senate will look for shared objectives in order to devise an overall outcome policy. 1000s Arizona State University Eighth Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration '93 L iv in g th e D rea m : L e t F reed o m D in g in A rizo n a ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 5:00 pm -6:00 pm ASU West, Kiva MLK Youth Rally 9:00 a m - 4:00 pm Phoenix College 276-0180 (Arizona Celebration) Dave Montour, Am erican Indian Flutist 5:00 pm -6:00 pm ASU West, Cafeteria N oon-1:30 pm ASU West, Kiva 8:00 am Assemble at Eastlake Park 262-7331 or 276-9669 (Arizona Celebration) Jam es O liver: “Poetry in Black” Friday January 22 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm ASU West, Cafeteria 10:00 a m -4:00 pm Wesley Bolin Plaza 262-4837 (Arizona Celebration) Noon ASU Main Campus, West Lawn 5:30 pm ASU Main Campus Memorial Union, Turquoise Room 7:00 pm St. Mary's Basilica Bishop Thomas O’Brien, Celebrant Bishop Moses Anderson, Homilist Reception following 257-0300, ext. 527 (Arizona Celebration) Directed by Charles St. Clair Noon - 1:30 pm ASU West, Kiva 6:15 pm ASU Main Campus, Cady Mall Saturday January 23 Speaker : Arthur Fletcher Directed by Charles St. Clair 8:00 pm ASU West, Kiva Perform ance: “The M eeting” 7:00 pm ASU Main Campus, College of Law Willard H. Pedrick Great Hall Reception following Special MLK Jr. programming Tuesday January 19 F ta tM To Cdabral* MLK Holiday 11 am-2 pm Arizona Room, MU Food • Fun • Uv» E nfrtalnm ut Everyone invited • Staff & students! O pening Ceremony TO O * Perform ance: 'T h e M eeting” Candlelight Procession KAET-TV/Channel 8 Horizon a17:00 pm COULD Kwambe Dancers Dinner fo r Essay W inners, Familiesand Teachers Catholic Mass Honoring MLK Jr. you 8:00 pm ASU Main Campus, Lyceum Theater W ords to Action Coffee House: Slides and Interpretive Readings, M usic of the Sixties Festival /:★ ; Noon - 1:00 pm ASU West, CLCC Room B09 Panel Discussion: Spreading the Dream: From C ivil Rights to Human Rights Victory/Com m em orative March ★ Video Showing: Henry Cisneros 12:30 p m - 1:30 pm ASU Main Campus, West Lawn M artin Luther King, Jr. Holiday ★ Noon ASU Main Campus, West Lawn M ariachiTrio M onday January 18 ★ Charles Calleros & Group: Dance Noon -12:30 pm ASU Main Campus, West Lawn 6:00 pm Civic Plaza Ballroom 256-0551 p r 276-4085 (Arizona Celebration) ★ 11:30 am -1:30 pm ASU Main Campus Memorial Union, Alumni Lounge Applause Productions: Native Am erican Dance Annual Candlelight Service ★ Sister Friends, AAWASU M ulti-Cultural Program /Luncheon W ednesday January 20 Sunday January 17 ★ Thursday January 21 Video: “I Have a Dream” Saturday January 16 ★ W ednesday February 24 “I Dream A W o rld . . . Langston Hughes Speaks" Jam es O liver: “Poetry in Black” 8:00 pm ASU Main Campus, Lyceum Theater 8:00 pm ASU Main Campus Grady Gammage Auditorium Noon -1 :00 pm ASU West, UCB Courtyard ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★- ★ "★ ■ ★ ★ ★ ★ .★ ★ ★ ★ 11:00 am - 2:00 pm daily ASU Main Campus Memorial Union, Pima Room ASU Main Campus Hayden Library Concourse Displays: MLK Collages and Essays January 11 - 29 Arizona State Capitol, West Wing 253-0668 (Arizona Celebration) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ '★ For more information, call the number listed or call 965-0100, For ASU West, call 543-7050. Visitor parking available at ASU MWn Campus. Fsss range from $1 per hour (m eter) to $4 (parking structure). No charge for visitor parking at ASU W est * * ★ * * ★ * ★ * ★ ★ * * * - ★ * ★ ★ * YO U CA N G ET IT EVERY W EEKDAY M O R N IN G A LL O VER C A M P U S, M CC ANDTEM PE. GET YOURS TODAY All programs subject to change. ASU Downtown Center College of Education ASU Visitor Center ASU West, Fletcher Library A rt Exhibit ★ Remembrances of Cultural Experiences in Honor of MLK Jr. ASU West, Fletcher Library Video Viewing “Color Adjustments" Exhibit: "Researching M artin Luther King Jr." ★ Exhibit: Book of Connections January 1 9 - 2 2 January 4 -2 9 OF PEOPLE GET IT EVERY WEEK­ DAY AM* ★ /* * * * * * * * * * S tate P ress ARIZONASTATEUNIVERUTY Page 9 Thursday, January 21, 1993 S t a t e P ress R io Salado Project a success, T em pe officials say Increased river flow from rains has no adverse effects on channels How flooding will be avoided in the Rio Salado Project B y S t e p h e n D em oratz S ta te P ress Tempe officials say the heavy rains that have doused Arizona for several weeks have not set back the plans for the future Rio Salado project, tout only confirmed that the first step of the 20-year project is a success. “The channelization works very well,” said Jim Jones, Tempe director of public works. “This test was a big vote (of confidence) for Rio Salado.” Jones said Channelization involves enlarging the width of the river and trenching the middle to straighten the flow of water through its banks. The process makes the river’s flow more predictable instead of a meandering natural stream of water. Gary Meyer, Tempe senior planner, said that “it has been an encouragement to see that the project works.” The Rio Salado Project, which was first conceptualized by a group of ASU architects in 1965, is expected to be able to handle 250,000 cubic feet per second (CFS) of water: The current rains had increased the flow of water to 130,000 CFS -r- a level easily handled by the finished project, Meyer said. Part of the flow came from Theodore Roosevelt Dam, located 80 miles east of Phoenix. The dam added 37,000 CFS to the flow of the Salt River because construction reduced its ability to accommodate water levels, Salt River Project officials said. Dave Fackler, deputy community development director for Tempe, said the dam will hold an additional 30 percent of water for flood protection. In the future, Meyer said, the flow of the Salt River will be maintained by two inflatable dams. One of the two six-foot dams will hold water a half-mile east of Scottsdale Road, and the second dam will stand 1,000 feet west of the second Mill Avenue Bridge. “The beauty of the dams is they are so easy to deflate and inflate,” Meyer said, "it takes about 30 minutes to do each.” If heavy rains began falling, the dams would be removed, “It has been an encouragement to s e e that the (Rio Salado) project works . . . The beauty of the dams is that they are easy to deflate and inflate. It takes about 30 minutes to do each.” Gary Meyer T em p e s e n io r p la n n er or they could be deflated partially to release a portion of the rising water, he added. If plans go as scheduled, the surface of the lake will be 200 acres and between 6-16 feet deep, Meyer said. The depth of the lake'w ould allow sail and’paddle boating as well as skulling, but no power boats. ..“What is out there now is about the width of the lake,” he said. The Rio Salado Project will not only be comprised of a lake, but encompass 2.5 million square feet of office space, 650,000 square feet of retail area which will produce an estimated 7,000 permanent new jobs. The businesses that will be located'in Rio Salado—- who are paying for much of the $440-million project — will be 150 feet away from and 12 feet higher than the banks of the river, Meyer said. The banks would protect the businesses from any flooding. The m erchant trade is expected to bolster T em pe’s economy. The project is expected to add $300 million in sales revenue and nearly $20 million in sales tax revenue each year to Tempe’s economy, according to the Rio Salado Project board. foilsomonthowmuchyoucmintkStatet o ñrsoné, | Page 10 Thursday, January 21, 1993 State P ress D iversity sem inar added to business curriculum C o lle g e o f B u s in e s s p r e s e n ts 3 - d a y fo r u m e m p h a s iz in g c h a n g e By D on na H ógan S tate P ress The complexion of America’s work force is slowly changing as increasing numbers of women and ethnic mitiorities challenge the statu s quo of w hite m ale dom inance in business leadership. To help prepare tom orrow ’s business leaders, the ASU College of Business is holding a three-day seminar on diversity for master’s of business administration students. The forum , which began T uesday, addresses business issues with creative angles such as “Myths, pigeonholes and stereotypes: the shortcuts we take to evaluate people and situations." and “White males, women and minorities: culture and power." Henry V illareal, director o f academic access programs for the college, said the forum will become a regular part o f the curriculum and is mandatory for all first-year MBA students. “W ithin the context o f business, “Within the context o f business, recognition o f diversity is a necessity," he said. “Corporations are recognizing that if recognition of diversity is a they don’t prepare their managers, it will necessity. Corporations are drastically affect profits.” recognizing that if they don't Villareal and Vicki Sm ith-Daniels, an prepare their managers, it will associate p rofessor o f decision and information systems, developed the seminar, drastically affect profits. ” which is cosponsored by the the College of B usiness D iversity Forum , the MBA - H en ry V illa re a l, A ssociation at ASU and A rizona Public C o lle g e o f B u sin ess Service. APS provided a $2,500 grant to d ire c to r o f scsd em ic cover 50 percent of the project’s cost. access p ro g ram m in g Villareal said the tone of the seminar was set by the opening speaker, Anthony Ipsaro, who has been w orking with corporate, 75 MBA students, 65 percent of whom are professional and educational groups for more white males. Women make up 30 percent of than 25 years. Ipsaro holds doctorates in the class, minorities 5 percent. clinical psychology and organization/adSam Skrupa, 27, said Ipsaro’s approach ministration. was not typical of the many viewpoints she D uring the sem inar, Ipsaro told the has heard on issues relating to diversity in the students that an organizational or individual workplace. commitment to diversity cannot be limited to “He said it is everybody’s problem — an the workplace, but must involve a lifestyle equal partnership that everyone has to fix,” change. Skrupa said. V illareal added that Ipsaro’s theories Allan Williams, 27, said it was refreshing prompted interesting discussions among the to hear the problem of dealing with diversity presented “ in a d ifferen t light, not ju st affirm ative-action plans, num bers and quotas.’.’ A lthough he said he found Ip saro ’s presentation interesting, Williams added that he thought the subject is “overworked” and the three-day seminar is too long. “I get tired of hearing about it,” he said. “I know it’s a problem and a relevant one, but I’m not sure just hearing speakers is going to change it.” : __ Yet Corey Maxfleld, 20, said the seminar is important because “it makes us aware of what we’re facing and changes we’ll need to make.” Villareal has been developing the seminar since he came to ASU from Stanford less than a year ago. Formerly director of admissions to the MBA program at Stanford, Villareal said he developed a similar program there. The program is now an integral part o f the Stanford curriculum. Villareal said he looks forward to the day when there will be no need for a separate sem inar to teach skills for dealing with diversity. He believes the issue should be part o f the syllabus in each business management class. America West leads new round o f non-refundable discounts A sso ciated P ress PHOENIX — A irlines launched a new round of com petitive fi*fe cutting W ednesday in a bid to bolster slumping passenger volume. America West Airlines announced it would offer discounts of up to 30 percent on travel to most of the cities it serves. The non-refundable fares, available until Feb. 17, require 14-day advance purchase and a Saturday night stayover, the airline said. America West said it offered the new fares because its other.promotions were scheduled to end this week. United Airlines, Trans World Airlines and Continental Airlines said they would match the cuts on all routes in which they compete with America West. American Airlines Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines and USAir either said they were considering similar discounts, or could not immediately be reached for comment. The discounts came a day after Northwest dropped special fares it had introduced to stim ulate off-season travel by fam ilies and groups. Michael Levine, a Northwest vice president, said the decision by competitors to- match and broaden the offer threatened “industry pricing havoc.” While Wednesday’s fare cuts may fill empty seats in the near-term, they will probably hurt the industry’s bottom line, already bruised by the recession, higher costs and previous fare wars. Air travel agents and airlines reported holiday traffic was up this season after slumping in recent years, but the travel industry’s own recession does not appear to be over. American parent AMR Corp. .said Wednesday it lost a record $935 million in 1992. Other major U.S. airlines also are expected to announce losses for the year. United said earlier this month it would trim 2,800 jobs in a bid to save $400 million.' In December, Delta, which pared its staff by 5,000 last year, announced salary and dividend cuts and delayed aircraft purchases through 1995. America West, TWA and Continental are operating under bankruptcy court protection while they reorganize. We want YOU to be a RESIDENT ASSISTANT C a n v n n a n s w e r Y E S t o t h e s e m ir a tio n s ? •Will you have completed 25 sem ester hourB before Fall Semester? •Do you have a 2.25 GPA? (BA's m ust have a 2.25 GPA a t tim e of application and m u st m aintain a 2.25 sem ester and cumulative GPA while employed) •A re youenrolled fo r Fall sem ester, 1993? • Do you have an in terest in helping students? •C an you begin Working as early a s A ugust 2,1993? •A re you tired of jobs th a t don't u n derstand your class schedule? •H ave you been looking for ways to get involved a t A.S.U.? •Are you ready to m ake a difference on th is campus? The Resident A ssistant position is a g re a t opportunity for graduate students, too. Come to a n Information Session to learn more a b o u t th is im portant leadership opportunity! Where can 1 learn mòre about being a R.A.? R e s id e n t A s s is ta n t In fo rm a tio n S e ssio n s D av T hursday D a te Ja n u a ry 2 1 T im e 7:30-8:30 PM •M em orial Union, Mojave Room Sunday i Two full weeks for took refunds. Open late first week of classes. Plenty of hassle-free parking. Two Convenient Locations o o 625 E. Apache 967-5445 m O m CO UNIVERSITY AVE. J3 C A SU 30 > r~ 620 S. College 829-1128 3J O APACHE BLVD. W e a c c e p t: P (Continued from page 3presidents still living, a record equaled on inauguration day only when Abraham Lincoln was sworn in for the first time. “History will record George Bush’s presidency as having been well done,” said Bob Simon, who was a White House speech writer for Bush. He said he bore no ill will towards the Clinton administration. ■ “It’s their turn. Let them have it. We’ll be back in four years:” On the flight home, the Bushes took along a number of friends, including many former officeholders: his Chief of S ta ff Jim B aker, Secretary o f H ousing and Urban Development Jack Kemp, White House counsel C. Boyden Gray, and political director Ron Kaufman. The crowd of people carried signs. One said, “Mr. Bush, may I have a hug?” Its bearer didn’t get it. Bush’s final hours in the White House were filled with poignant moments marking the end. of a tenure he had fought hard to extend for another four years. K E E P Y O U R E Y E O N U S !! T h e State Press M a g a zin e is pub lish ed o n ce a w e e k as th e c e n te r section o f th e State Press. Read us fo r th e latest in e n te rta in m e n t events a n d th e h o ttest places in to w n to seel! ON . B u s h _________ _ Comics State Press Thursday, January 21, 1993 Page 14 Calvin an d Hobbes ?00 KNOW, ITS AMAZ.IUG NOW MANM THIN&S 1O0 CAN TAKE APART WITH JUST ONE ORMNARl SCREWDRIVER.' by Bill W afterson „.THAT \5, HVPOTHETICAUX, WEIL, JUST TOR STARTERS, L MEAN ... NOT THAT TO KNOW FOR A FACT, OF THERE'S... COURSE ... JUST IN THE0R1, I IMAGINE THAT MMBE... i UM, WEIL, GOSH, ITS 8! HARO TO SM, SUCH AS? TH E FA R S ID E By G A R Y LA R SO N I'VE SOT TO STOP introducing topics OF CONVERSATION. !v t I i D oo n esb u ry -Æ BY GARRY TRUDEAU she. m u , 5eetN67HAT JERK?WH/TT IMSHISNAME, OEM? ! - B y M ary C am pbell T h e A sso c ia te d P ress NEW YORK (AP) — “What do you want to know?" soprano Lconie Rysanek asked with a smile that says she knows very well what you want to know. At 66, she has been receiving ecstatic ovations at the Metropolitan Opera this season. "How can I sing at my age, no wobble, no screech? 1 never made a secret of. my age. I am proud of what I can do at my age. Who can do this at my age? To act is not so difficult. To sing, really sing, is.” The Vienna-born soprano said she never has had a facelift, adding: “Each line is a high C” * ' v'. ' As Kostelnieka. stepmother of Jenufa in Leos Janacek s Jenufa, Rysanek received a long, cheering, flower-throwing, standing ovation at the Metropolitan Opera after both Acts 2 and 3, all six times she sang it in December and January. "I expected to be successful in this,” she cine, yes, SHE'SSTILL SEEINGHIM. SHEHASTD. SHEMARRIED HIM. NO! KE- HEB, HEB, ( MEMBER VEAH.'UHAT RUHENHE SHOWEDUP STONERFOR. 0UR6RAPUAVON? ARAI! REMEMBEROUR| 6RADUATÌON SPEAKER? \ said. “I knew it was a good part of mine. But I didn’t expect my unbelievable success.” As for how it’s possible, when colleagues her age are retired, to sing so beautifully and emotionally, Rysanek has no secret to share. “I really, honestly, don’t know. "1 think I have a great gift from nature. My voice is a big, natural thing. I never had to work very hard on three things. I always had a trem endous top (high notes), an easy pianissimo and I always had a big voice. A lthough, I led and still lead a very disciplined life. I watch my weight. I don’t go out when I have to sing. “Maybe it’s that you feel there is someone onstage who gives everything. Maybe that’s my Success. Audiences feel I kill myself for them.” Offstage, Rysanek also is emotional. “ My husband (Elu G ausm ann) says, ‘Please don’t be so dramatic in life. You have the stage.’ When I’m rude to him, he says, ‘Don’t Kabanicha me.’” (Kabanicha is the WELL,MBNEITHER. BUTI'LLBETSHE WASINSPIRIN6! part that Rysanek sang at the Met two seasons ago in another Janacek opera, K a t’a Kabanova. The soprano explained, ‘This is a brutal, ice-cold woman. She is everything mean.”) Rysanek finds Act 2 of Jenufa emotionally and vocally draining. Kostelnieka agonizes aloud about her stepdaughter having an illegitimate baby; she pleads, separately, with two men who have loved Jenufa to marry her; she has a long dramatic monologue. “Then in Act 3, she has to sing like an angel, when she begs forgiveness from Jenufa,” Rysanek said. “The beautiful last aria I sing is killingly difficult. “When Laca says, ‘How dare you ask me to take her with the child o f S tev a,’ Kostelnieka is so desperate she says the child is dead. That’s the reason she had to kill the baby. In the aria, it’s her fight against herself and against her religion whether to kill the baby. That’s why I play her third act a little out of her mind.” " Some sing Kostelnieka as a cold woman, but Rysanek sees her as very religious. “She is honored in this little village, respected, not beloved,” Rysanek said. “The whole world breaks down for this woman. In those days it was catastrophic to have an illegitimate baby. It was the finish for Jenufa. She loves Jenufa. I want the audience to feel what Kostelnieka feels.” She gave her last U.S. performance as Kostelnieka Jan. 11. She’s performing it in Spain, where she’ll retire the role for good. She will then concentrate on less demanding roles. When young singers ask Rysanek how to match her longevity, she tells them: “To many offers, you have to say no. The danger is when you’re young and think you can do everything unpunished. You can sing the soubrette in Der Freischutz and the next day do Isolde. O f course you can, but how long?” Live it up! Read th e State Press Magazine every Thursday. YOU'RE BACK AND SO ARE WE! T H A N K S TO Y O U R P A T R O N A G E L A S T S E M E S T E R , W E 'V E K E P T O U R V A L U E M E N U TH IS S E M E S T E R ! ASU Value Menu $2.99 10" Cheese Pizza..................... Your favorite toppings $.69 each. Medium Cheese P izza.... ....... $3.9 Your favorite toppings $.99 each. Large Cheese P izza.». ............ $4.99 Your favorite toppings $1.19 each Twisty Bread tm MEGA THURSDAY! Only $7.99! Unlim ited toppings on a Large Pizza. Build your own Mega Pizza! .$1.59 9 6 8 -5 5 5 5 Zesty Tomato Sauce available on request. sm Garden Fresh Salad $1.99 Cool, crisp lettuce, red cabbage, carrots, green peppers and cherry tomatoes plus ranch dressing. 2 N m n f ColdFountaiG Cokes m M e d iu m 19 o z...$ .6 9 ta r g e 3 2 o z ...$ .9 9 903 S. Rural O Ü Q CL Use your Marriott Maroon & Gold Card Here. (Special prices apply). Specials Valid at this location only. Not valid with any other coupons, offers or specials. Customer pays all sales tax where applicable. Umited delivery areas to ensure safety. Our d m »« cany less than $20.00. Our drivers are never penalized for late deliveries. No double portions on Mega Thursday Special. . • ^ Sports JPage 15 Thursday, January 21, 1993 St a t e P ress Wildcats slip past pesky Sun Devils, 91-87 Second half spells doom For A S U by working inside on the taller Wildcats and getting some early offensive rebounds. Unfortunately for ASU, they couldn’t From the opening tip of Thursday night’s ASU basketball game, you could tell that find the net, as ASU had a zero for eight this was no ordinary conference game. This shooting slump early. But then veteran guard Stevin Smith, playing despite a hip was against archenemy Arizona. With an enthusiasm rarely seen in the pointer injury, bombed a three-pointer and . • University Activity Center, the 13,438 fans ASU took off from there. ASU shot eight of 19 from the threestood, scream ed and rooted th eir overmatched Sun Devils in one of the most point arc in the first half, with Smith having exciting Sun Devil basketball games in four and four other Sun Devils contributing recent years. In a game of runs, ASU held one each. Combined with a defense that was all the cards in the first half but were unable swarming on their opponents like an angry to keep up with the 1lth-ranked Wildcats in hornets nest, the Wildcats were stunned by the second, as ASU dropped a disappointing the pressure being applied by ASU, ASU’s field goaf defense, which is last in 91-87 decision. The deciding factor in this game was the conference, held UofA to 13 o f 30 clearly the second half, in which the UofA shooting in the first half, and. the Wildcats shot 64.5 percent from the field as opposed were only three of nine from the three-point to their 43.3 percent in the first half. ASU stripe. In addition, Sun Devil forwards was also unable to force tu rn o v ers, a Dwayne Fontana and Ron Riley ganged up trademark of their game. The Sun Devils on Arizona star Chris M ills, the team ’s had seven steals in the first half and only leading scorer, and held him to five of 15 shooting for the game. two in the second. But the Wildcats would come back, as In addition. ASU was outrebounded by 10 in the second half, where they were only reserve Joe McLean hit back-to-back threepointers and closed in on the UofA deficit. outrebounded by one in the first. “The key. was the last 15 minutes when ASU would answer with three’s of their 1Arizona didn't turn it over and their big own from point guard Marcell Capers and guys decided to play,” coach Bill Frieder reserve Wun Versher. This enabled the Sun said. “We just gave up to much size. They , Devils to spread their offense and continue did a good job extending (their defense), to own the offensive boards. In the first half, ASU had six more they gave up some stuff inside occasionally, but we got in trouble in their (inside) as offensive boards than the W ildcats, and second chance op p o rtu n ities w ere much as we got baskets.” In the first half, ASU was able to dictate unexpectedly favoring ASU. ASU took a 41-34 lead into the half, but the pace to the slower Wildcats. The Sun Devils used their two key weapons — a A rizona coach Lute O lsen som ehow pesky defense and the three-point shot — to mapped out a new game plan that would turn ASU’s world upside down. dominate the first half. ASU started th e'h alf on fire, with an A S U ’s main concern was the battle underneath the boards, and they showed early three-pointer by Smith and a steal by Arizona that they would not be intimidated B y B r ia n C ha rles S t a te P ress ; Turn to Devils, page 16. D arryl Webb/State Press ASU center Lester Neal (24) makes a leaping attempt to save an errant pass in last night's game against UofA. The Sun Devils were narrowly defeated by the W ildcats, 91-87. Loss to UofA doesn’t erase Sun D evils’ surprising success The ASU men’s basketball team and its fans are pred ictab ly d isap p o in ted AKE following last night’s 91-87 BATSELL loss to UofA at the University Activity Center. But a fte r an 8-4 start following the most disastrous off-the-court period in school history, the mood surrounding th is y e a r’s Sun D evils is anything but melancholy. The charade of misfortune for the team began last April, when freshman forward Tony R onaldson opted to return to his native A ustralia. It continued when last year’s team MVP — center Mario Bennett — was lost for the season in August to a knee injury, and exploded in early September with the athletic J department’s legal scandal. Altogether, ASU’s basketball team has lost six underclassmen it had planned on using this season to injury and legal problems. T herefore, prescason ex p ectatio n s w ere hardly optimistic. Several publications predicted a last-place finish in the Pac-10 for the Sun Devils, and even the most faithful ASU followers could not envision rooting for a team that led UofA for three-fourths of last night’s game. The abrupt exodus of players left ASU coach Bill Frieder with a depleted front court. The Sun Devils feature only four players 6-foot-6 or taller, which is minuscule by collegiate basketball standards. Frieder and his coaching staff rapidly implemented a new system concentrating on pressure defense, fast breaks and the three-point shot. „ w Judging from the enthusiasm the fans have displayed in the Sun Devils’ last three home games, the new fast-tempo style has been well-received. In last night’s game, fans cheered after every ASU rebound, and several times they rose to their feet and raised th eir voices to a nearly L o o deafening decibel level. Dick Vitale, college basketball’s famed and boisterous analyst, was in attendance at the University Activity Center last night. “I think he (Frieder) is doing the right kind of style — run, press, shoot... playing exciting basketball,” Vitale told me at halftime. “I think the students that don’t come out to this are missing a heck of a lot.” “It’s a show. It really is a show.” Frieder, his staff and players have produced an exciting product which has rem ained com petitive all season. Postseason play not only seems to be attainable for ASU, it’s actually a strong possibility. And while nobody is penciling them in for a visit to the Final Four, the Sun Devils have earned respectability in a season that was once headed for demolition. The Sun Devils’ spark finally ran out last night, but not before making believers out of 13,438 at the UAC. k i n g A h e a d N e w c o a c h h o p in g to fin e -tu n e p itc h in g sq u a d B y G reg S e x t o n S ta te P ress Suzamw Kyw/StaU Pirn* Sun Devil pitching conch Bill Khtnaharg is ona of two now assistants to Bassbai coach Jim Brock this Manon. ASU basins play with à four-gams sariM naxt weak in Hawaii. Like a Sw iss w atchm aker, new ASU pitching coach Bill Kinneberg just wants to fine-tune his throwers. He doesn’t want to rebuild them. “At this point, they are here because they have had a bit of success somewhere else,” said K inneberg, who jo in ed ASU in late October. “I’m not here to change anybody. (My job is to) refine the mechanical.” Kinneberg, 35, who spent eight seasons at the University of Wyoming compiling a 245183 record, accepted the Sun Devil pitching job on Oct. 29 after the resignation of former coach Dub Kilgo. Even though Kinneberg inherits a roster that lists 12 pitchers, there is still cause for worry. The No. 1 thrower, Doug Newstrom, remains,a big question mark. Newstrom told reporters last week that he feels confident that the will play, but ASU coach Jim Brock wasn’t as optimistic. “It doesn’t look very good,” Brock said. “Certainly, (there is) an even possibility that he will not pitch this year.” Newstrom had a M agnetic Resonance Imaging test earlier this month that did not rule out the possibility of a tom ligament in his right arm just below his elbow. He is still in rehabilitation and most likely will not attempt to pitch until the Sun Devils begin conference games in mid-February. Still, Kinneberg does have the luxury of some backup talent — and he plans on Utilizing it. K inneberg said his pitching strength goes about “seven or eight deep” and that he will need every bit of effort he can get. “In this league, what you’d like to have is (at least) three guys that will give you six or seven innings every time you go out,” he said. “With this schedule, we are going to be taxed Turn to Coach, page 17. State P ress Thursday, January 21, 1993 P a g:e 16 Tennis confident after lopsided victory; heads to Pac-10 indoor meet in Seattle Mclnerncy pleased with 7-2 pummeling o f Pacific little time beating Kanani Gololo (6-2,6-1). The Sun Devils swept the three doubles matches. The only The ASU’s women’s tennis team is heading to the Pac-10 team forced to go three sets was the top-ranked tandem of indoor championships in Seattle this weekend with a renewed Schad and Bartelt. Schertzer and Kori Davidson of the Sun Devils teamed up confidence. +■ This newfound attitude was gained after the Sun Devils to defeat Marsa Kuurse and Molly White (6-4, 6-3), while defeated Pacific. 7-2, on Tuesday at the Whiteman Tennis' ASU's Pam Cioffi and Meredith Geiger won easily over Chang and O’Kelfife (6-0,6-2). Center. _ It was seen as a Victory in two ways for Geiger, as it was “The kids gained a little confidence by winning,” ASU coach Sheila Mclnemey said. “The bottom line is to get five her first time on the tennis court since suffering a major knee injury. , points (win five matches), ahd that’s what they did.” Geiger, the No. 1 doubles and No. 3 singles player last Mclnemey said she was pleased with the opening effort, considering that this year’s squad consists of five year, had been out of action since Oct. 8. Geiger’s doubles effort with Cioffi, left only smiles on underclassmen and two seniors. “The first match is always a little nerve-racking,” Mclnemey’s face. “I’m pleasantly surprised with the way Meredith is coming Mclnemey said. “We’ve got a lot of young kids playing now.” On Tuesday, the Sun Devil underclassmen erased any back,” Mclnemey said. “She’s only been hitting 10 days.” The fully recovered and confident Sun Devils will now test doubts that Mclnemey may have had. Freshman Julie Coppinger easily handled Pacific’s Julie heavy conference competition in Seattle this weekend, as they compete in the Pac-10 Indoor Championships. Radder (6-2,6-2) in her first collegiate match. Included in this tournament will be the best individuals the “1 felt good.” Coppinger said. “I moved around well and Pac-10 has to offer — plus Stanford, the top-ranked team in made her move side to side.” Another freshman. Page Bartelt, defeated Kimberly Chang the nation. Mclnemey said she feels assured that her team will do well, (6-4,7-5). Sophomores. Joelle Schad and Kara Schertzer also recorded victories. : v ■ based on the fact that half of her team spent the Christmas Schad, whose game consists of power as well as finesse, break competing in an indoor tournament in Palm Springs, knocked off Leslie O’Keife (6-4;6-2), while Schertzer wasted Calif. Bv S C o rr D avis State P ress Suzanne Kyer/SUne Sophom ore J o e lle Schad w as ju s t one o f A S U 's key weapons in their 7-2 demolishing of the Pacific Tigers on Tuesday. The Sun Devils travel to Seattle this Weekend to compete in the Pac-10 Indoor Championship. D e v ils C ontinued from page 15. center Lester Neal. ASU opened up its lead to dpuble digits at 57-44, but a deadly Arizona run ensued. . The UofA would go on a 7-0 run and close to within four points. A three-pointer by Smith got the crowd back into the game, but a stifling UofA defense was not allowing ASU good shots, and missed opportunities by the Sun Devils allowed the UofA to tie the game at 68. A three-pointer by reserve UofA guard Reggie Geary gave the Wildcats a 71-68 lead, which not only took the crowd out of the game, but also the wind out of ASU’s sails. The Wildcats had successfully forced the Sun Devils to play their half-court style of game, and ASU simply was unable to keep up with that type of game. ASU regained the lead with a three by Riley, but an easy transition dunk by Mills gave the UofA a 85-82 lead, and they never looked back. Despite the frustrating loss, ASU had an excellent night from Capers, who had 19 points and eight assists, while the freshman Riley had 18 points and three rebounds, including five three-pointers. Neal, who was anywhere from three to six inches shorter than the opponent guarding him, led the Sun Devils with 12 rebounds. Although the loss was one that Frieder would like to play over again, he was pleased with the performance from his players. “I think ouf kids played really hard and we played as well as we are capable of playing,” Frieder added. Capers, who led the Sun Devils in their “run and shoot” offense, said tie felt that the change of Arizona’s style of play led to the second-half breakdown. “We were a little fatigued, but that’s our style (running),” the point guard said. “The crowd helped us a lot, though, and they gave us the motivation to come back.” Statft FrCSS Police Report... Too absurd to be anything bul real. Your home away from home State Press S p o r ts... .. .alw ay s a lap ah ead o f the rest. C R EA T N AILS You may have noticed that other students spend a lot Of time at Kinko's. Drop in and discover why Kinko’s is the most popular hangout on campus. Ask for your FREE A THREE-GENERATION TRADITION by Nancy P* P e d i c u r e s ^ FULL SET FIBERGLASS •stronger and thinner 00 •non-damaging reg. S45 OR Acrylics new clients only CALL TO D A Y ! D I"Z IN 730-5992 24 1/2 m ile E. o f Rural *1 4 2 0 E. Southern Student Discount Card! •«iewoiy Piwes Caiup I Quality copy services 9 Rill color copies NEEDS A FEW TOP COUNSELORS I Computer rental for the 1993 Summer S w o n , beginning May 31 I Posters & Banners FOR AN APPLICATION PLEASE STOP BY THE STUDENT EMPLOYMENT OFFICE I Binding 9 School supplies 9 Resumé packages 9 ...and muchmore! r HC32, Box 520, Pt»«cott, Arizona 86303 (602)255-0550 We will interview on campus February9,1993. Total Image introduces iÜ i R toM ictwcal C e n t e r the humantouch S ta r t th e N e w Y e e r E a r n in g E x t n C a s h NF.W CUSTOMERS Earn up to $ 1SO the first month! RETURN CUSTOMERS Earn over $135 a month! $ 15 for 4th, 5th & 6th Donations! $20 for 7th, 8th & 9«h Donations! Tempe Donor Center 933 E. University Way #115 Tempe, AZ 85281 (602)894-1330 We Also Accept Whole Blood Donors NEW HOURS: Mon-Fri 8am-6pm • Sat 8am-12pm Electrolysis by Deanna & Lani featuring state of the art equipment for permanent hair rèmovai including Multi-needie/Thermolysis and blend methods for a more comfortable and effective treatment. Topical Anesthesia ‘ »Disposable Probes «Free Consultation Lips * Eyebrows • Bikini « legs • Stomach * lack * Btekte» m»m b | Total Image Beauty Mali Hours: Mon,-SaL 9am-7pm 9020 S. McClintock Suite 21 • Tempe 730-6701 * I I I Buy onecopy,getonefree,upto 100freecopies! Offer ippUesto ? self-serve, single-sided, 81/2 x 11” black and tallite copies on I standard copy paper. One couponper customer. Not valid with | otheroffers. GoodthroughJaniia^ 31,1993. ■ Open 24 Hours! I Unmnky A lm i io Tempe • ©4.1757 Untori I Southern A Dotxon io M ot • 969 3526 th e copy < ! Form A Urivenity in Tempe • 8M9S88 St a t e P ress C o a ch C ontinued from page IS. a little bit.“ Kinneberg, who was the 1990 Western Athletic Conference coach of the year, has some roots in Arizona. He pitched on the 1976 JU C O national cham pion C entral Arizona Community College squad and also with the UofA in the ’79 College W orld Series. “I just feel he brings an awful lot to us,” Brock said of his newest coach. “I couldn’t be happier.” Brock said Kinneberg’s approach differs from that of former coach Kilgo. “H e’s more cautious,” he said.“ I think ASU he’s maybe more o f a mechanics (coach) (and) less a pitcher’s teacher.” “I think we have the makings of a good s ta ff,” K inneberg said, adding that his approach is not to retrain pitchers, but rather to “fine-tune.” Kinneberg is not the only new coach on the Sun Devil team — joining him is hitting coach John Pierson. Brock said he is happy with his two newest members. “We have got two unbelievably low-key guys,” Brock said, pausing. “ Three, if you count me.” ASU is ranked 13th in preseason polls and opens its season on Jan. 28 at Hawaii. SPORTS SAT: JAN. 28 JAN. 30 FEB. 4 FEB. 6 FEB. 11 FEB. 13 4 PAC* 1 0 Standings W 5 4 3 2 ASU 2 UCLA u se 2 Stanford 1 ,r . Washington Washington St. 0 Oregon 0 Sun Devils at Louisville Sun Devils at Oregon St. Sun D evils at Oregon Sun Devils vs. CalHomia Sun Devils vs. Stanford Sun D evils at W ashington Sun Devils at W ashington St. Arizona Oregon St. California Mens basketbaH L 0 Ö 1 3 2 2 2 2 3 4 Pet. GB ... 1.0CX) 1.000 ' — ' .750 1 .400 3 2 .500 2 .500 .333 2% .333 «V, .000 3V2 4 .000 P A C -IO Standings Upcoming Games w 4 3 3 2 ASU Oregon St. 2 California i 1 Washington Washington St. 1 1 Arizona Oregon Ö . Sun Devils at U of A SAT: Sun Devils vs. Oregon St. JAN. 28 Sun Devils vs. Oregon JAN. 30 FEB. S Sun Devils at C alifornia Sun Devils at Stanford FEB. 7 Sun Devils vs. W ashington FEB. 11 Sun Devils vs. W ashington St. FEB. 13 u se Stanford UCLA Womens basketball GB t Pet. 0 1.000 0 1.000 % . 1 1 .750 2 2 .500 2 2 .500 2 .333 2V2. 333 2M, 2 2% 2 .333 3 3 • 000 4 .000 ■ 4 . ■ Upcoming Games and Matches TO D A Y : Men's Swimming vs. Stanford 3:00 p.m ., Mona Plum mer Aquatic Center SAT: Men's Gym nastics vs. University of Moscow 7:30 p.m ., UAC SAT: Men's Swimming vs. California 12:00 p.m ,, MPAC Olympic Sports C la s s if ie d s ANNOUNCEM ENTS ARAJCTM|NTS= = = RO O M S FOR RENT AD V ERTISIN G O R IEN TED sen io r w anted fo r sem e ste r in te rn sh ip at unique m arketing com pany. C opywriting, customer service experience a plus. Unpaid but full of great experi­ ence. Fax resume and/or letter ASAP 941-5808, attention Trish. B EA U TIFU L LARGE 1 and 2 bed­ rooms. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry room, On East 8th Street between Rural and McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. $199 move in on 2 bedroom. BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom, 2 bath, Ahwatukee, fireplace, washer, dryer, pool, furnished or unfurnished. Close to free­ way access, 15 from ASU. Quiet, re­ sponsible, no smoking/drugs. $250 plus 1/2 utilities. Karen 496-4275 evenings or 983-0320 days. CONTRA DANCE Saturday, January 23, 8pm, ASU Re­ creation complex, 2nd floor, $3. FRATERNITY RUSH Saturday, 12:30 p.m., in the Rec Center, or call 965-3806. DIGEST Upcoming Games APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM apartment, a|I utilities paid, pool, dishwasher, etc. $455. Stu­ dio $300, utilities paid. 437-1048. 2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, new appliances, 1 block from campus, starting at $400. January free. 759-7625; 2 BLOCKS form ASU, I and 2 bed­ room apartments. Pool, laundry facili­ ties, parking, dishwasher* free basic ca-* ble, no pets. Sunrise apartments, 1014 E ast Spence* 968-6947. •• RESERVE "NOW" FOR LOW SUMMER RENT Luxury Living... FREE Microwave FREE Tennis Lessons "SPECIAL" Student Program 9 66 -5 81 8 LPC FREE Apartment Locating Service State Press Inform ation R o o m m ate m a tc h in g service also available. 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 437-1048 W restling at National Duals. A ll day, Lincoln, Nebraska Distance ALearning... A Limitless C om m unity Education RC ioo llegSalado e’s D istance Learning j^e you a busy, w orking Hdult w h o n eed s a co n v en ien t alter-native to the traditional co lle g e form at to help you m eet your personal and professional c o lle g e goals? courses to students conveniently in their hom e, o ffice or nearby com m unity site. C lasses are offered b y television , audiocassette, com puter conferen ce, Conference call or print. ? «j. .y ♦*. ♦*. .j. .j. «j. .y .y T elevision co u rses o ffered : •Owning & Operating a Small Business •Introduction to Business •Healthful Living •Business Organization & Management A U CLOSE 10 ASU A p a rtm e n ts •1 bedroom , pool, in 4-plex, $325 •2 bedroom in 4-plex, pool, $425 •2 bedroom in 4-plex, large p a tio , $390 •G uest apartm ent w ith fireplace, central Phoenix, $225 Hom es •1 bedroom house, •_ large fenced lo t, $350 967-6000 A vailable LARGEST 2 bdrm, 2 bath »Introduction to Psychology •Introduction to Oceanography •Humanities through the Arts »Child Development C lasses are offered in all general education areas. B usiness courses are also available including Business Com m unications, B usiness E thics, Business Calculations and Principles o f M arketing. O ur m odem technology is the perfect solution for anyone lim ited by tim e and m obility constraints - call us today! For m ore inform ation, p lease call 2 2 3 -4 2 0 6 ! M ost Classes begin the week o f February 1. Class schedules are a v ailab le a t an y C irc le K , W hataburger o r public lib rary. qM *la»-'n»MarimpaC«n»w«*y C rt*g anirtriari»a««rtdrtg >i* irt«o rilh »b »ii at m m . a r t* . n lp iT nadanoi origin, t m . r iu r t oriairirtio». hwrtfnp m irti« ,. agri. * VM nant * * M Page 17 Thursday, January 21, 1993 rtuMori vrtairin rtrtva in amrispnant * Inri rt »«!»■■ ti inm m biirt iir»g~«~T ttT — ‘■-1- "' ***—— - - f — g*-T ------‘ --1-- ■*-* < * -* -* • * Marta!»« «a a rt* * « — Irtg rtw m « « r t i i nprto a«« rt« « rtM < ■ « ■ **» . — rtrtn. pwrir p u n n. ay— ria— — — riiavn— , y— ri* d— rioam ra. nartr. wllgion. origan ri. o p a ri GOOD LOCATION, 3 bedroom, 2-1/2 bath, 1250 square feet, washer, dryer, $625/month. 924-9130, Blaine. STUDIO, 1 bedroom, in ASU area for rent* $275 and up. 967-4908 or 9668838* PICK YOUR OWN SPECIAL!H 3 to choose from! 1-2-3 Bedrooms Available Heat, air conditioning, * private park, covered parking located close to your apartment. Root, laundry facilities, convenient shopping and quiet street, VILLAS APARTMENTS 1718 S. Jen Tilly Lane (Broadway/Rural) . Tempe, 968*8945 HOMES FOR RENT 3 BEDROOM 2 bath, walk to. ASU, $675. Call Tim, 894-0288LARGE 5 bedroom house, washer, dry­ er, dishwasher, ceiling fans etc. Apache/Rural, 437-1048, TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 1 BEDROOM, unfurnished, very nice, private balcony, 540 North May, Mesa, Price/D obson, M2 block N orth/U niversity. $360/month. 320-5039. 2 BEDROOM tbwnhouse 1 mile form ASU, $550/moiith. 482-9558. 3 BEDROOM* 2 bath condo, air, dish­ w asher, w asher, dryer, pool, .tennis, near ASU, $800. (7 1 4 )4 9 9 ^ ^ 5 ; 4908. t ;.' HAYDEN SQUARE: 2 bedroom 2 bath, $850/month, no pets. Re/Max Excali­ ber. Call Gary Greenacre 483-3333. LOS PRADOS townhome for rent; 2 bedroom , 2-1/2 bath* w asher/dryer. Pool view. $600/m6nth. Summer dis­ count. 784-2571. NO DOWN- take over mortgage, $700 per month. 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. A ir conditioning, dishwasher* w ash­ er/dryer* pool* tennis. (714)499-4065 . or 967-4908. Parents & Students Tired of dorm fees or renting? T a k e advantage of owning! Units are currently available in HAYDEN SQUARE T em p e's hottest complex! W alk to class & live the Old Tow n T em p e lifestyle, - t bedrooms from $ 6 7 ,9 0 0 - 2 bedroom s from $ 9 3 ,5 0 0 - 3 bedroom s from $ 1 1 7 ,5 0 0 G reat floor plans! S om e leases available. TW O BED ROOM , tw o bath condo. Bike to ASU, pool, washer, dryer, ceil­ ing fans. $525.966-0987. Interested? Call H ayden S quare's #1 Realtor, RENTAL SHARING 3 BED RO OM 2-1/2 bath condo, mile/Campus, $220/month, 1/2 utilities^ all amenities. Jeff, 784-4930. GARY GREENACRE 3 B ED R O O M , 3 bath c ondo, pool, washer, dryer, $200, 1/3 utilities. Pre­ fer female, 21-29. 897-7382. 483-3333 C R E A T IV E , T E C H IE, o r e n tre p re ­ neur« non smoker. Quiet home, pool, O ak/44th, all am enities $285 total. 840-1117. . M ASTER B ED R O O M , 2 bedroom ' house, Alma School/Elliot, $220, 1/2 utilities, w asher/dryer. Nonsm oker. 899-3704._________________ ENJOY THE QUIET! ROOM M ATE NEEDED: prefer m a­ ture individual, possibly graduate stud­ ent. Call Karçn at 943-1866. T e rra c e R o a d A p a r tm e n ts 9 5 0 S . T e rra c e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 N ICE 2 bedroom to'wnhouse, I mile from ASU, all appliances, no down pay­ ment, m ust qualify to take over loan. 482-9558. , ; . / ; , . ; PAPAGO PARK, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances included, $650. Call Q U IET PERSON« Share 2 bedroom fu rn ish ed apartm ent. 5 m iles/A SU , Scottsdale, $265 includes all. 949-9243, Beautifully furnished, 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 rt­ m e n t s . AM b i l l s p a i d . C a b le TV, h e a t e d p o o l and sp a cio us laundry facilities. Friendly, c o u r t e o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by to d a y ! 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, washer, dryer, pool, near campus, $550/month. 9908147 or 839-8986. Gall for financing Info. 9 6 6 -8 7 0 4 1/2 B lo c k fro m C a m pu s TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S T O R J A L |_ LUXURY CONDO, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, ■w asher, dryer, fireplace, microwave, University/Price, $600. Neighborhood Realty, 945-1013* ! M A L E/FEM À LE R O OM M A TE to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 1/2 utilities, non smoker. $200 month. 437-8756 leave message. 910 E . Lem on #2 ONE ROOM for rent in four bedroom, two bath house. With washer, dryer. $150 per month plus utilities. SCO TTSD A LE ROOM rental, pool, barbecue, family room, $150 monthly. Call Robin, 946-0706. SERIOUS STUDENT to share 3 bed­ room, 2 bath home, 3 miles from ASU, $225/month plus 1/3 utilities. Call Sheri 894-1760. » ^ ,J" SMALL, COZY room, large Scottsdale home. Furnished, hardwood floor, fu­ ton. North Papago area, 5 miles/campus. $300/month, utilities included. 8403339. . • : BUY IT? tell it, find it, sell it —only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information! 1-800-535-6619 RE/MAX Excalibur Realty MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE DELUXE TYPEWRITERS- two mem­ ory, two regular: Hermes, Panasonic, Remington Rand, IBM Quietwriter. By owner, 277-8388. NEW O FFIC E sized re frig erato r, 1 cubic foot, with freezer and door stor­ age, 28” high, $95. 780-0369. R EFR IG E R A T O R , PE R F E C T for dorm, 32" by 18-1/2", great condition,' $80/offer, must sell. Cari 929-0852. SOFA AND love seat, like new beige floral $550. Typewriters: Brother $30, Panasonic Memory $60, IBMIII $375. 947-0562, BOOKS PHYSIOS 111 text book, brand new, call now 9 4 2 -1189, leave message, rally $40, save $20. RECYCLE FOR $$$ Sell your books for cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit towards the pu rc h a se o f an y th in g in the store. Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers welcome. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mil) Avenue, 966-0203. ; FURNITURE TRAVEL SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed. e n tertain m en t cen ter, d resser. 3527249. VISIT SIX Caribbean countries during 1993 first summer session, earn 1-6 ASU credits. Department of Recreation M anagem ent and T o u rism , C all 965-4630 for information packet. FREE DELIVERY FREE FRAME Factory Direct Beds TWIN SETS FULL SETS $89 $99 SPRING BREAK 93 Any city w orldw ide, 2 round trip a ir fares $89. V alid fo r 3 years. Book your hotel room through our travel agency and we take care of the a ir fare for 2. 650-4830 396-6639 Mattresses & More SB H f iS HELP WANTEDGENERAL 4815 E Main St., Suite 14 $$*$$’ ATTENTION ASU students!! Earn great money while representing your school. Join the ASU Telefund and earn valuable sales and public rela­ tions skills while working with, other students in a fun environment. Call fo r. info. 365-6754 ' '< < FA N TA S Y FUTO NS LOWPRICES f^ r ONALL QUALITIES" ’ S t a t e P ress Thursday, January 2 1,1993 P age 18 SO FA S'LO U N G ES CHAIRS & OTTOMANS COVERS 'M ATTRESSES .26 YEAR old quadriplegic ASU student seeks weekend attendant. Call Tom, 840-3857. ; Ï "; AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS, experi­ enced and energetic for audition. Please call Mark, 949-0937. T A B LE S 'E TC . STUDENT DISCOUNTS ATTENTION FREE DELIVERY! 450 E. Southern Ave., Mesa Construction supply company, sell tools nationwide $5-8/hour guaranteed, part time hours. Joe, 894-1257, (NE Corner of Southern £ MesaDr.) HELP WANTEDGENERAL ARTIST WANTED Persons with good drawing ability, ex­ perience in watermedia .painting, oils or intaglio printing skills wanted for posi­ tions in growing art production compa­ ny. Excellent pay potential, full-time p re fe rred , w ill c o n sid e r p art-tim e schedule. Apply with original work to dem onstrate abilities to Accent Fine Art, 424 North Central, Phoenix, Mon­ day-Friday I Oam-noon. BUSINESS IS booming at Domino's Pizza the world's largest pizza delivery company. At Domino's Pizza our driv­ ers m ake $7-12/hour, including tips, hours are flexible. Safe driving cash bo­ nus. Come join the {excitement. Apply after 1 lam at 903 S. Rural.968-5555. CARE PROVIDERS Work with persons with disabilities as tutor assistant or personal care attend­ ant. A ssist fam ilies w ith respite or housekeeping- Flexible hours/flexible locations. Will train. Connie, Creative Networks, 494-1234. : COLLEGE STUDENTS and teachers! Children's summer camp in Oracle, Ar­ izona'is looking for program leaders, counselors, lifeguards, camp nurse, and cooks to work June 2- August 14. Good sala ry , jo b ex p erie n ce , plus room/board. Write YMCA Camp, P.O. Box 1 11 1, Tucson, Arizona 85702 or call I -602-884-0987* HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL CRUISE SHIP/RESORTS/ALASKA jobs! $ 1200-$5000 month! Summer! Career! Guide, cassette, news service! (9 16)9222221 extension 3.. NEED OUTGOING, enthusiastic per­ sonnel w ith positive w ork a ttitude. Starting $6/hour plus commissions. 39pm Monday- Friday. 966-5765. FASHION SHOW models wanted, sizes 6 - 14, modeling ladies apparel (careerwear, resort wear,* etc.) For on campus interview, cal) 433*0975 after 6pm. NEWSPAPER CARRIERS/THE New York Times: daily .and/or Sunday am, 36 hour routes, need dependable trans­ portation, good pay, Tempe based, Kell , leave message. 966-2526* FUN & MONEY Opportunity exists! in this area for intel­ ligent, motivated people who can earn substantial money while sharing new multi-million dollar marketing concept. Full time, part time, 952-0958. GREAT OPPORTUNITY- innovative company needs several motivated indi­ viduals for easy, brainless work. Make $6.50+ per hour if you perform. Pro­ fessional appearance, reliable transpor­ tation required. Very flexible hours. Call 952-9500, 8am*5pm for appoint­ ment. HOW ABOUT summer camp? Camp Counselors USA Works with oyer 600 summer camps in the USA, Europe and Russia. Have die best summer of your life working in the outdoors teaching: swimming, crafts and many other activ­ itie s w ith c hildren: C on tact C am p Counselors USA, 420 Florence Street Palo Alto, California, 943ÓI . Phone: (800), 999-2267; / ^ ^ IN fE R N S H iP : A TTEN TIO N all majors- 12 week marketing, manage­ ment internship. Earn 3 college credits, $5700. Call 894-5283. M ESSEN G ERS NEED ED , over 21, Tempe or Scottsdale areas, reliable and economical vehicle needed. 381-1245. COMPUTERS NEED A JO B? We need 5-1 0 people fo r p art-tim e work from 4-8pm. We sell tools na­ tionwide and we'U payyou $7/hour to start. No weekends and no experience necessary. Call Jim, 820-8408. M AC l N TO SH C L A SS IC 4/40H D , Word 5 .1, Excel 4.0, Pagemaker 4*0, SUperpaint 2.0a, Mac Draw and more. S950/offer. W ill co n sid er tra d e for laser printer. 898-0705. W ORD PROCESSOR: L etter quality memory typew riter. Excellent condi­ tion. Ideal for college work. $2Q0/offer, 582-4235. N o te ta k e rs W a n te d All graduate students éligi­ ble. Undergraduate upper­ classmen with a 3.3 GPA or above e lig ib le . A ll un de r­ graduates with a 3.3 GPA or better registered in a class w ith an e n rollm en t la rge r than 100 are eligible to be notetaker for that course. Up to $12.50/lecture. . JEWELRY MILL AVENUE JEWELERS 414 S. Mill. Suite 101 Terrvpe, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICÊ JEWELERS* v\- Custom Design & Remounts Jewelry &'Watch.Repair Gold/Diamond«/Silver .PulsarWatches/Pearls . C la s s Q u o te s Inside Campus Corner at College/Universify TICKETS PHOENIX OPEN tickets: 5 tickets avail­ a b le , re g u la rly $15, s elf . fò r $ 10 each/offer. Message" 829--0679. ROUND TRIP to Oakland Coliseum for G ra te fu l D ead C h in ese Ne^w Year: $105, must sell immediately. Leave Sat­ urday morning (1*23), return Wednes­ day morning Cl-27J. 784-8500. 921-0968 TRAVEL TRAVEL PART TIME help Wanted. National re­ tail firm has 17 openings. Starting pay is $8.20. Flexible hours. Scholarships awarded. No experience required. 968■1840. ■ ; -." y " -. PART TIM E jo b s available, flexible hours around your course schedule, on an off cam pus positions. $6.00/hour. 921 -0968 for information. PA R T -T IM E JA N IT O R 15 hours/week. Small building near cam­ pus. Indoor/outdoor maintenance. Ex­ p e rie n c ed and re fe re n c es. C all 967-756j . y-y • ' v -y -y POSITION OPEN: Advertising/Publie Relations Assistant. Intern position with established Tempe agency. Writing and creative skills a must. Energetic and available to work daytime hours. Must be available to begin immediately and work through March, maybe longer if you're good. Fantastic learning expéri­ ence. Send letter stating lwhy we should hire you. if you sell us with this, we will call you for an interview. Be sure to in­ clude your phone number. Mail only. No phone calls, please. Care of: RSA, 432 East Souhtern A venue, Tem pe, 85282. ' ■'■■'. y : : •■■■; . ': SCOTTSDALE TENNIS club attend­ ant, Saturdays 10am-6pm and Thurs­ days 4:30-10pm. Call Bonnie 948-5990 for appointment. y~, SPORTS MINDED Hiring immediately 6-8 individuals for our T em p e office, full or part-tim e. Flexible hours. Perfect for students, $8$10 per hour, call 921-8182. MOTORCYCLES *86 ELITE 150, low mileage, excellent student transportation, tags expire 8-93, $900/offer. 957rO960. I987H O N D A scooter. Aero 50, red, good condition, $.150 or best offer. Call 596-9561. ■■■ : '• • '• ' 1988 HONDA Elite 80, red, low miles, new seat, good cond ition. $650/offer. Derek, 829-1440. 1988 HONDA In te rc e p to r 250 w hite/blue, excellent condition, new tires must sell. $ 1450/offer. 242-9178. HONDA ELITE 80, 3900 miles, new battery- tune-up. Looks/runs perfect. $850, call 967-1334. • BICYCLES 1 9 9 1 SP E C IA L IS E D S tu m p ju m p er Team Sun to u r X C Pro g re a se g u a rd T an g e .P restig e, tu b in g , new tires, $525/offer. Andy, 829-8431 CENTURION IRONMAN ju st tuned. G ood co n d itio n w ith Shim ano 105 crank set. Many accessories. Leave message, Jeff 834-4734. SPOKE EASY bicycles- good used bikes; tune-ups 12.95. 350-9320, 414 South Mill, above Spagetti Company. TH REE SPEED fem ale cru iser mint green, great condition; U-lock included. $90 or best offer 968-0272. SPICE UP your personal ad with an Arta-ma-bob! Come to die Matthews Colter basement for details! SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS and substi­ tute school nurses needed for MPS. Teacher/nurse and/or substitute certifi­ cate required. Contact Carol/Jamie, Per­ sonnel Office of Mesa Public Schools, Substitute Office, 898-7723, 898-7724. THE BIG Bear Tennis Ranch in south­ ern California needs live-in counselors to Work as tennis instructors, water and jetski instructors, and recreation coun­ selors. Call Bob Durkin for more in* formation. 909-585-3133. W ANTED: Ò C ÈA N SlD E Ice Arena needs part-timer. Apply in person L2793 between l2-5pm. 1520 N. McCIintock. , _■ , ••■;>• ■ HELP WANTEDSALES . ■ ASST. MGR. For Tempe record store. Music knowl­ edge helpful; Strong retail background a must. 2C+30 hours/week, flexible. Pager #852-8311. y y \y y > BUSINESS AND/OR communications majors needed! Ideal opportunity for right individual to join successful pro­ motional advertising company. People oriented position that requires out go­ ing, energetic team player. Previous sales experience a plus, flexible sched­ ule- excellent pay ! Call 921-7755 14pm. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL NEED DEPENDABLE part-time front and back office help for doctor in Scot­ tsdale. Must be able to type. Apply at 4020 North Scottsdale Road, Suite 108. PART-TIME FRONT office, Scottsdale ophthalmologist. Filing, light typings errands. Must have transportation. 947- '76SI- : y •. RECEPTIONIST FOR small business part time to full time, light typing and , co m p u ter, 32nd S tree t/U n iv e rsify . 961-1707. HELP WANTEDr o O D « ^ jC ^ _ _ H E Y S T U D E N T S ! A C CEPTIN G A PPL IC A TIO N S for drivers and counter help. Earn up to $8 per hour at Sammy B's Pizza 945-8850* CORK N CLEAVER WELCOME BACK TO SCHOOL! D on't let the first few weeks of a new semester pull you under. If you can spare a few hours a week - you can earn up to $30 by donating critically needed plasma. Lots of students study while they donate! We're the ★ UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER ★ located at 1015 S.. Rural Rd„ Tempe, (next to Sno Oasis) call 894-2250. " Accepting applications for lunch food servers: Concern with appearance, re­ liability and personality are important. Will train. Flexible hours, part-time. Fun atmosphere, fast pace. Apply in person Monday-Friday 2-5pm, 5101 N. 44th S tre e t (4 4 th and C am elback) 952-0585. / yy' PETE'S 19 Tee Restaurant at Rolling Hills Golf Course, 1405 North Mill, ac­ cepting applications for part time day positions: cashiers, waitress and bever­ age cart. Apply in person. • RED ROBIN TEMPE Has immediate openings for wait staff and cooks. Apply in person 1375 West . Elliot. y. : • : y . AUTOMOBILES C ADILLAC C O N V ERTI BLE, 1975 classic Eldorado. 120,000. Looks and runs great, $2-900. Rhys 756-6680. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Resolution 1991: 1 . Pay aff holiday bills 2 . Pay far faltian & books ) . Start toving for Spring Break! 4 . Accomplish t , 2 , and 3 with a jab at PialAmerica Marketing Staft your year o ff right by earning $8-$12 an hour, or m ore, w ith a flexible part-tim e jo b at Dial Am erica! •Flexible scheduling-Earlya.m., mid-morn­ ing, afternoon, evening, and weekend shifts available •5-10 minute walk tjrom ASU •Stable year-round employment opportunities •Weekly paychecks , •Paid training •Nice, automated offices you to work for us so we work hard for you ! W e .W a n t DIALAMERICA MARKETING. INC. T > m For a confidential interview, please call 894-0264 1100 E. U niversity Dr., Suite 111 (Near Rural & University) STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch waitresses, dinner bussers. Apply in person Monday-Friday, 10am to 3pm, 5001 East Washington, cross street 48th Street. 273-7378. BUSINESS O P P O R T U N m |S _ _ MAKE $100's In your spare iime. The most profitable business opportunity* Designed especially for college students. For further information call: 1-800-769-9392. FREE LOST/FOUND FOUND: PART Siam ese/Tabby cat. A pache/M cClintock area. Please call 967-5426. TO PLACE a free lost or found ad, come to the basement o f Matthews Center or câll 965-6735. SPORTS & RECREATION ~ PERSONALS PERSONALS $399 C A BQ San Lucas $399. If you IK want to party with students from ASU, Prepare to get twisted with ATA at The UpfA, NAU and UNLV on the beaches Pizza Pretzel at University Towers at o f Cabo you'll get your reservation in ' im m ediately. This trip is selling out • 8pm .. ’ • fast! For info and reservations contact ■ TO D D your house rep or call Dan at Collège I'm so sorry. I’m a slimeball- will you Tours 271 -4 8 % or 829-1319. ever forgive me? I’ve taken very good I DOZEN red long-stem roses deliv­ care o f diem for you. Can I make it up ered $20. Also balloons. After flours to you with a greasy slice o f pizza? Call me- I promise, swear to God, I'll have Rowers. 894-3419. them here for you! K. A E n RUSH- call Jason at 784-0642 or WELCOME BACK Greeks. Hope you Jon at 350-9308. Go APE or go home! had a safe and happy holiday. Good luck AGD PLEDGES- get psyched for ini­ this semester. Panhellenic Council. tiation week! It has been great working w ith you! -Sheri. Cl DO NOT enter the KE house! The place is packed, you figure it out. É Ë BANDERSNATCH sms. » Forni WOODSHED II JA C K A N D kirn. W hat is thiSi Let's make a deal? I'm going to book my own reservations for a Colorado ski vacation at Purgatory-Durango (800) 525-0892. Jill, ________ fo r S p o rt^fp w in s in an Upscale Atmosphere 4 i m lU M 1» t o t w W e s h o w o f Iowa gam es! KW Comer o f Oofeson ft University DIN N ER Not valid with other specials or discounts. Valid w ith coupon only. Expires Feb. 28,1993. LATE NITE w/ GROOMING HUMANS China Delight 9 6 6 -6 1 1 4 M ake on appointm ent fo r betw een 5-8. M onday-Thursday Perm , C u t, Style ABCO CENTER 1731 E. Broadway Rd. Tem pe, AZ (or Color) Humons tì&S Tonight 9 9 $ Long Island Ice T ea B U Y • S EI PI KAPPA Alpha welcomes the men of ASU to Spring Rush *93. Any questions • call Brad, 921 -0156 or Mike, 784-0628. University ." . . V ^ . PLACE $ 2 OFF A n y L a r g e P iz z a c m B L £ A j* L _ _ : Good through 3-31-93 One coupon per order M ention coupon when ordering ALL 'BOUT Childcare referral service now acc e p tin g a p p lic atio n s. C all 759-6330. V. -■ -=-:; BABY SITTER needed Tuesday 8am12pm, need own car. Located near 44th Street/Indian School. 952-8252;. ADOPTION 99 LOVING COUPLE seeking adoption of infant. Will pay birth related expenses. Call collect 24 hours, 714-7224)616; GIAN T BEERS OUR DREAM, to be parents. Tp share in joys and tears. To be a family. If you know o f a birth m other looking for adoptive parents, please call us at 8404997. [1 1 a m -9 p m d a ily ] w ith student ID $5 RESUMES WITH RESULTS! F in d it w it h S ta te Press C la s s if ie d s ! 1 Page R esum e (all inclusive) $40 C areer Testing $20 The Write Resume B roadw ay/M ill For app o in tm en t call T h e Arches 966-9211 I TAURUS ( Apr. 20 to May 20.) You could be attracted romantically today to someone who lives afar. A social function leads to a delightful surprise. Partnership bonds grow stronger. GEMINI • (May 21 to June 20) Someone does you a favor in business. An unusual investment opportunity intrigues you today. Your charm and personality win you the support of others now. • CANCER . ' ; (June 21 to July 22) You will be swept off your féet by the exciting pace o f today’s events. Couples may plan a\romantte getaway and singles could meet with sudden romance. led ; o’ - ; (July, 23 to Aug. 22) For some of you it is the beginning of a business partnership today; Freelancers get; important new assignments. Romance could come through the job. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Love at first sight is certainly possible on this day when heart interests are happily highlighted. Couples may go on a spurof-the-moment outing. V St a t e P ress V a le n tin e O r d e r F o r m v SPORTS ft RECREATION I I I I I M ethod of Paym ent □ February 9 at Noon . Mail to the address below, or bring to the Basement of Matthews Center (Room 46H) ■ _____ I Cash. □ Check (include driver's license #) □ Visa/MasterCard/American Express ($6 min) Name on Card ■ Card N o .. Exp. date . Start vour ad here: S U N D E V IL T A N N IN G I AND NAILS 15Words $1.75 937 E. BROADWAY SE Com er o f Brood w ay f t Rural Rd. I — — — Deadline: OCE4NSIDE ICEARBi^ I (n ext to Big Surf) Phone City/St/Zip---- — —------— ——— 20* each additional word * No abbreviations, bolding or centering * Please write clearly! * ONE WORD PER LINE I Exp ire s 2 28-93 0 —- Rates: 15 words or less $1.75 YOU THINK you can, huh?! •1 s t Person pays adm ission •2 n d person skates FREE! •Skate rental on ly $1.25 152Q N . M cC lintock • 9 4 7 -2 4 7 0 • V alentine Section will ru n Friday, February 12 Canoas 2 fo r 1 PASS N am e--------------------- ;--------- -— Address. FR6E PARKING under Hayden Square S k tfa or Die cocktails and dinner. SC O R PIO (Oct. 23 to Nov, 21) Creative interests flourish now. You will feel touched by the muse today. You will opt for something out of die ordinary. Romance blossoms. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) . Shopping will lead to an unusual and unexpected purchase. You are investigating ways to add to income now* but stay clear of get-rich-quick schemes. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) There is a lilt to your voice and poetry* in your speech today. ^You certainly have the gift of gab now. Others are impressed by what you have to sayl AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18)You may surprise someone with a gift today. Time by yourself now leads to important new insights. While cleaning up, you will come up with new decorating plans. PISC ES' . ’ (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) This should be an enchanting time for you socially. You will dazzle others now with your personality. A social get-together could lead to a romantic introduction. YOU BORN TODAY are clever, artistic and versatile.1You have promotional skills and can succeed in such fie ld s as advertising, brokerage and public relations. Visionary in out-look, you sometimes feel stifled by a routine job. You are at your best when your woric reflects your ideals. Self-discipline enables you to make the most of your potentials; Birthdate of: Christian Dior, designer; Jack Nicklaus, golfer; and Steve Reeves, actor. ©1993 by King Features Syndicate, Inc O FF 14 -Ui Street westof A filli Hayden Square 2745, I ______ _ 0 (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Some plan to make an office in the home. Decorating projects are favored today. It is a good time to have guests over for I WELCOME BACK I 9 6 6 *1 3 0 0 SIN C E YOU c an 't beat us, jo in us! Rush KX. For more info call Hal at 966- i is A PA/M LA EX PERIEN CED typing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. For Thursday, January 21, 1993 A r ie s (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) The unexpected works to your advantage in business today. A social contact also proves helpful. You will end this day in a good position. Privacy abets romance. AN Y T A N N IN G PA C K A G E SIGM A PI bros let’s show o ff our Pi Atitude! _______ ___ i Spy Cat says. 1-DAY TURNAROUND. Professional typ in g . W alkable/A SU . R easonable rates. E xperienced. L áser, Faculty/Students. Diane 966-5693 LIBRA SERVICES SH A N N O N SB W SW O TH - chuckle chuckle chuckle chuckle! Glad you're here at A SU ! Love, Boo. , i MISCELLANEOUS TYPING/WORD PROCESSING H oroscop e XX PLEDGE Scott S. The end is almost here, and yet it is ju st the beginning. Congratulations! VPME. r VIDEO CONVERSIONS, U;S. to foreign form ats and vice -versa. $30, .2 hours. Tape included. 924-0431. ! f r a n c « D ra k e - RUSH TO join the sisterhood. Applica­ tions are available at the Greek Life Of­ fice, PV Main or PV East. SPORTS ft RECREATION PHOTOGRAPHY_____ $ 6 H a irc u ts «TRADE NEED FEM ALE babysitter, on-call. Must have own car/references, CPR cer­ tified. Call 963-4383, or leave message. RUSH KX- the most wanted men in the country. For more info call Hal at 966- TUTORING /RESEA RCH ONE-TOO N E m ath o r en g lish c o m position $6/hour. Research help if you don't have time. Graduate student. 945-1418.. T o u r I n d iv id u a l 970-1364 , - r V •• ' • Behind AZ Sunwear Monday-Saturday: 9-7 In 40 4 S . Mill, S u ite 101 '(H ayde n S q u a r e ) 966-1300 J a k e 's P iz z a PRE-RUSH COME join Sigma Pi open house and poker tonight at 8pm calf 4 2 5 S. M ill # 1 0 6 TUTORS RESUMES $15 Mon-Thur 9-8 §> Friday 9-6 J* Saturday 9-5 Lessons vajlable. MAZATLAN- CABO San Lucas. At­ tention ASU spring breakers. In 50 days spring break begins, and if you want to party with College Tours and thousands of other students on the beau­ tiful beaches o f Mexico, get your res­ ervation in now! Don't be left out. Res­ ervations due no later than January 29. For reservations o r more info contact your house rep or call Dan at 271-4896 or 829-1319. ^ ' 9 6 8 -9 5 3 9 High success rate! Reports, editing. SP Secretarial, 2238 South M cCIintock, near ASU. 967-0907. Hair Studio O rch estra MARK DAVID Duplissis, die Duperm an, F ran k B u rn s in d isg u ise , the P rince- Have’ a wonderful 23rd birth­ day! Love, H." . v ; ■ $39“ Oroomi W ise Monkey KX EX -PLEBES: congrats on initia­ tion! You did a great job. Good luck w ith ru sh . You g u y s are great. A E K A .B . P o o r H e n ry 's II WORD PROCESSING, secretarial serv­ ices. 23 years experience. Student dis­ counts. Southwest corner, M iller and Chaparral. 994-8145. C RE A TIV E TY PIN G , te rm papers, resumes,- essays, laser printer, fax, reasonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. V. - •' ; 7 ■: O ffer g ood untji 2-13-92 MUSIC KX e.j.e your not- so- secret- admirer is thinking o f you and smiling. ' TAX RETURN preparation, tax plan­ ning. Contact Peter J. Hollingsworth, 820-3173, professional tax practitioner. F amily P lanning A ssociates M edical G r o up % Pregnancy Testing ^ Birth Control Exam 3 Pregnancy Termination 3143 N. 32nd St. • Phoenix, AZ 553-0440 20% OFF KA BRIAN G. a brother cap only be so hungry for a cheese burger KA Craig. 2745. ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Facials/waxirtg. Student dis­ counts. C all fo r m ore inform ation. 969-6954. D E S I G N $ 2 5 P e rm s Box 1996 Saturday, 12:30 p.m., in the Rec Center, o r call 965-3806. * BREWPUB r CHINA DELIGHT "* RESTAURANTS/ BARS FRATERNITY RUSH 8:30-11 "p.m. NO COVER lì g i] RUSH 266-6100 BUD DIM0CK ¿111! H A I R ED IT O R IA L A SSISTA N C E, wordprocessing, proofreading. Reasonable rates! Call David Broome 265-8364. by National Progressive Fraternity COME JOIN in the sisterhood! Women Rush begins February 1st. For more in­ formation call Greek Life or attend in­ formation day January 26th. D U I D EFENSE; don't face it alone! Reasonable, experienced. No chargé for consultation. 820-5726, call 24-hours. JAZZ! TYPING/WORD PROCESSING SERVICES SERVICES RESTAURANTS/ BARS AA