© C opyright. S ta i« P ress. 1993 T em pe, A rizona T uesday, February 9,1993 An Ind ep en d en t M orning D aily V o i. 7 7 N o . 17 ASASU forced to schedule referendum C ollision course Society gains 1st success B y M ark M . M acias State P ress Darryl Wabfa/Stata Pro#* Tempe firefighters tend to a couple of automobile accident victim s in a parking lot on the com er of University and Priest Monday. Steady rains have kept emergency crews busy. C rim e ris e co n ce rn s m an y A S U p o lic e tig h te n se c u rity a fte r assau lt B y Sono ra R oberto State P ress ■ ASU’s Department of Public Safety report­ ed a slight increase in overall campus crime from 1991 to 1992, but also said the number of rapes and assaults have increased substan­ tially. The total number of criminal incidents rose from 1,310 in 1991 to 1,324 in 1992, about a 1 percent increase. But police reported 11 assaults in 1991 and 22 in 1992. The number of reported rapes also rose, from zero in 1991 to six in 1992. However, that number is significantly lower than the fig­ ure in 1989, when 15 rapes were reported on campus. One rape was reported in 1990. . Police have tightened security on campus following last week’s abduction and assault of 29-year-old Theresa Hetherington, a part-time liberal arts student who was kidnapped from Lot 59 and found 18 hours later in a ditch near Gila Bend. Police have increased patrols and student, security assistants, and parking enforcement personnel and tram drivers have been instruct­ ed to be alert in parking lots and near resi­ dence halls since the attack. Police have released no new information in the investigation of Hetherington’s abduction, but said they are putting together descriptions o f three m ale suspects in the case. Hetherington on Saturday returned home from the hospital, where surgeons reattached her ear, which was severed in the assault. Although Hetherington’s abduction took place in broad daylight, police are advising students, faculty and staff to avoid walking alone on campus, especially at night, and to walk and park only in well-lighted areas. In addition, ASU police have offered the following safety tips for students: • Lock your doors, car or office, at all times. • Tell friends and roommates where you are going, how you are getting there and when you will be back. • Report suspicious activity to police. • Keep a safe distance if a stranger asks for directions. • Never hitchhike.' T urn to C rime, page <6. A group of students completed the first phase of its attempted overhaul of student government Monday by delivering 2,492 sig­ natures to Associated Students of ASU offi­ cials, which will force a referendum on a pro­ posed new constitution this spring. “We’re ready for:the special election,” : said Luke Tigaris, a member of the Sunday Evening Society, which began its revamping effort in December. “We’re ready to put it to a student vote.” The referendum would be the first in ASASU’s 34-year history and would drasti­ cally alter its current structure, as the pro­ posed new constitution would eliminate two executive offices and mandating a mostly volunteer workforce. The signatures ensure a special election under ASASU’s current constitution. Still, ASASU Faculty A dvisor Gary Kleeman said student government officials have yet to develop procedures for the spe­ cial election because of confusion on how to go about the process. “We need to follow what the constitution says, but there are some things that aren’t crystal clear,” Kleeman said. “(A special election) is not something we’ve done before. This is new territory.” Leon Shell, associate vice president for Student Affairs, said the ASASU Supreme Court will interpret the constitution’s special election rules should any problems arise. The current ASASU constitution states that the Executive Committee must conduct a special election within three weeks of receiv­ ing the signatures. Shell said the ASASU Supreme Court can “reinterperet” that figure to give officials more time organize voting procedures. ASASU President Scott Maasen said the executive committee will meet Thursday to discuss procedures for the special election. “Putting an election together isn’t some­ thing you do in two days,” Maasen said. “It takes a lot of time and planning. The signaT u r n to A S A S U , pag e 6. Sen. A lan S im pson talks to A SU law stu d en ts B y Kate D eei .y S tate P ress U.S. Senator Alan Simpson, R-Wyoming, told ASU stu­ dents and faculty Monday in a speech at the College of Law that hie is on the Senate Judiciary •Committee because “that’s where the action is.” ; Simpson is the Senate minority whip and has been in Congress since 1964. He presided on the judiciary committee during Clarence Thomas’ U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings last year, which involved sexual harassment accusal lions by University of Oklahoma law professor Anita Hill. Simpson said that he thinks judiciary committee hearings, such as the Hill-Thomas conflict, should be held in private executive hearings rather than openly — but added he knows that can never happen. “If we were doing what we should do in cases with unsub­ stantial charges, we should have an executive hearing,” Simpson said. “But everyone would say, ‘Those slobs are meeting in secret.’ “We could never have a closed hearing. We would never be able to get away with that.” Simpson said he felt that Hill’s testimony should have been held privately because of the explicit nature of portions of it. “If you think you were surprised to hear about pubic hair, a (Coca-Cola) can and ‘Long Dong Silver,’ we were surprised,” Simpson said. He said the committee had reviewed an FBI document and two other documents compiled before the hearing, but none mentioned anything of the sort. , Simpson and Nina Tottenburg, a broadcaster with National Public Radio who broke Hill’s accusations, were involved-in a heated feud that ignited during the hearings. But he said that he and Tottenburg have reconciled since then. She dropped the ‘F’ word on me three times — but then invited me to the White House correspondent dinner a few T urn to Senator, IN SIDE ST A T E PR ESS Local News World/Nation An armed gunman terrorizes a Los Angeles hospital, shooting three doctors and taking several other personnel hostage. Pane 3 Closed nightclub Chuy’s has no prospective buy­ ers, indicating that the establishment will stay closed indefinitely. Page 10 r page 6 . Midwll« Conway/State Preas Sen. Alan Sim pson, R-W yoming, addresses students at the Law College Monday afternoon. Today’s Weather: Rain. High 65. Low 52. Sports ASU guard Stevm Smith is in the midst of a stel­ lar season, leading the nation in three-point shots made per game. Page 15 Classifieds............................. ..17 C om ics........ ...............14 Crossword................. ...........8 O pinion............... ,.................4 Sports................................... 15 W orld/Nation........................ 3 . Executive hearings should be private, says congressm an P age 2 State P ress Tuesday, February 9,1993 A SU W est considers adding Friday classes Inconvenience for some, more efficient use of facilities for others BY K im Kaan State P ress Students at ASU West will be given the choice next semester of adding Friday classes to the cam pus’ traditional, M onday- and Wednesday-only schedule in an attempt by University officials to make better use of facilities during the day; But the change has angered some students who say ASU West officials did not adequate­ ly inform students before making the deci­ sion. ‘T h e administrators (at the West campus) are a bit out of touch with the students,” said Gary CasaGrande, a 35-year-old student who is circulating a petition in hopes officials will renege. CasaGrande said he has collected 800 signatures So far. He said the new schedules will leave many students few options, especially in his case. Two of his five required classes are offered only on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, he, said. CasaGrande said he first heard about the news from an instructor who did not relish the idea of coming to campus one extra day. CasaGrande, a 35-year-old student, also said that this will be a big burden for the older students. These students, according to CasaGrande, will have to adjust their work schedules, spend more money on child care and drive back to the Glendale campus one more day a week. “I find the whole idea unacceptable,” CasaGrande said. ‘T have been told that ASU West is very student-oriented, which is totally incorrect.” , He added, “They (the administrators) have gigantic misconceptions if they think they are in touch with the students.” University officials defended the change, but acknowledged that it may cause problems for some students. “I am sympathetic with the students,” said David Schwalm, associate provost for aca­ 3,000.” The' changes, which will come gradually, will make the schedule more versatile than the old one, he added. Since ASU West is still in the process of organizing a student government, the changes were decided upon by the Academic Affairs Directors Council, made up of the ASU West provost, assistant provosts and the directors of each department. Susan Lowry, manager of campus facility, said, “H isto rically , ASU M ain has had Monday, Wednesday and Friday classes. This is a part of the regular schedule.” She said each departm ent turns in its requested times, and University officials try to accommodate them. The West campus han­ dles its own scheduling. CasaGrande has organized an open forum to serve as an arena for student opinions; M em bers from the academ ic affairs department, including Schwalm, have been invited to discuss the anticipated changes on Feb. 24-25 on the second floor of the ASU West cafeteria. The meeting is open to the public. demic programs at ASU West. “It does have an impact on the campus and the students, but we have to take everything into account.” Schwalm also said that ASU West wants to use the campus in its full capacity to meet student demands. Most of ASU West’s facilities are used at night but unoccupied throughout the day. “Enrollment has increased by 20 percent,” Schwalm said. “Perhaps this means students will have to come to campus five days a week. We are just planning for the future.” He also said that certain courses would be better if they were taught three days a week rather than two, particularly composition courses, such as English 301. “I think it would also depend on how you teach it,” Schwalm said. “We just want to accommodate as many students as we can.” According to Schwalm, the West campus has seen an increase in the number of daytime students. Half of the students attend before 5 p.m., and the remainder come afterward. “ASU West is equipped to help 8,500 stu­ dents,” Schawlm said. “We expect to have 5,000 full-time students and We already have T oday The Today section is a daily calendar o f events print* ed on a space-available basis as a service to the ASU community. Campus clubs and organizations can submit written entries to the State Press, located in the base­ ment o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and Will not be taken over the phone. Deadline for the entries is noon the previous business day. Meetings N a rc o tic s A n on ym o u s: o pen m e e tin g , 5 :3 0 p .m ., Community Christian Church, 1701 S. College Ave. Public R elations Student Society o f Am erica: open m eeting, 4 p.m ,, Stauffer Hall Reading Room. MU A c tiv itie s B oard R ecreatio n C o m m ittee: open m eeting, 2 p.m ., M U Third Floor Conference Room Two. A m erica n In d ia n In s titu te : open m eetin g , 3 p .m ., Miscellaneous Anthropology Building Room C IO . W om en’s Student A ssociation: open m eeting, noon; Women lh Com m unications Incorporated: open sign planning m eeting, 3 p.m .,'W om en’s Student C en ter.. A lpha Phi O m ega: pledge m eeting, 5 :3 0 p.m .; open m eeting, 6:30 p.m ., M U Santa C ruz Room 213. Justice Studies Student Association: open m eeting, 4 p.m ., M U M ohave Room 222.European Discussion Club: open m eeting, 6 p.m ., M U Kaibab Room. Lesb ian/G ay A cadem ic U nion: open m eeting, 7 :3 0 p.m ., M U Cochise Room. Native Am erican Student Association: open m eeting, 4 p.m , Student Services Building Multicultural Lounge. Students A gainst P olitical C orrectness: open m eet­ ing, 2 p.m ., MU Yum a Room. up, “Day on the Job,” 7 p.m ., MU Room 224. Radio Television News D irectors Association: guest s p e a k e r, K evin R ob in so n from th e P h o en ix P o lic e D epartm ent/m edia relations, noon, Stauffer Hall A 207. N ational O rganization fo r W om en, ASU/East Valley chapter: rally for campus safety, 4:45 p.m ., Lot 59. N atio n al In te rn a tio n a l S tu d en t A sso ciatio n : open international strategic planning exercise, “Indonesian V alues,” 5 p.m ., R e-entry C enter, MU Basement. College Republicans: guest speaker, M aricopa County Treasurer Doug Todd, 3 p.m ., Business Adm inistration Building Room 341. A p p a re l D e s ig n e r Z o n e FA C TO R Y O U T LET C L O T H IN G C L E A R A N C E in g n a ta ln o c w< I ____________ I .A T T H E 5 th A V E N U E & SCO TTSDALE SCO TTSDALE G A L L E R IA ROAD 9 4 9 -3 0 0 8 40- 80% p r i A U i D L L U v i ALTERNATIVE TUESDAYS c a ta lo g prices 4 PAYS FRI., FEB. 12 - MON., FEB. IS FRI. - SUN. 10am-7pm • MON 10am-5pm P h u e n ix C iv lf e iM a z a wmm ¡ ¡ t f i j t ó a D f f i j i s DffiCK S 8:00-9:00 PM A L L N IG H T '* Wmmk 3rd ^ g i^w ee^w aM ngton & Jefferson ! •. “ Phoenix “ " • ■' •• -v W orld/Nation__________ S t a t e P res $/ Tiiqsday, Febroary 9y 1993 _______________________ ___ __________ H o s p it a l g u n m a n in ju r e s t h r e e d o c t o r s T w elv e-year p a tie n t ta k e s tw o h o stag es Associated P ress LOS ANGELES — A gunman yelling for pain medicine shot and critically wounded three doctors in a hospital emergency room Monday, then took at least two hostages and holed up in the building, authorities said. The gunman entered the walk-in emergen­ cy room of Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center at 12:40 p.m. and opened fire on a group of doctors sit­ tin g at a desk near the door, hospital spokesman Harvey Kem said. Patient Hope Flynn said she heard a man demanding pain medication seconds before the shots rang out. “Bang, bang, bang, bang,” she said. “He was yelling, 'I want something for pain, can’t you understand me? Can’t you see I need help?”’ “Everybody scrambled around. All of us started running like crazy,” said Dr. Gail Anderson, director of emergency medicine. “ The patients were panicking as well as the staff.” . ' T h e attack er then took at least two hostages and was barricaded in an X-ray room near the emergency room, on the hospital’s first floor, police Lt. John Dunkin said. The area was cordoned off and SWAT members were called in. , As darkness fell, negotiators continued to talk by telephone with the gunman. Dunkin said the gunman announced certain intentions to police negotiators, but the lieutenant declined to specify what they were. Los Angeles SWAT members prepere to enter Los Angeles County-University o f Southern California Medical Center Monday after a gunman burst into the hospital emergency room. Critically shot three doctors, took two hostages and holed up inside the medical center. There was no immediate word on exactly how many hostages were involved, who they were or their conditions. The man identified himself to negotiators as 45 years old and “as a disgruntled former patient. It apparently has to do with what he perceives to be poor m edical treatm ent,” H e a lth c a r e , e n v ir o n m e n t to p s fo r c o lle g e r e c r u ite r s A sso c ia ted P ress NEW YORK — In this year’s recruiting season for college graduates, nurses are hot but aerospace engineers are not. C om panies hope' to hire m ore college graduates this year than in 1992, but only a few fields are expected to benefit, college placement officers say. With many compa­ nies restru ctu rin g and elim in atin g jo b s, there are few er openings fo r job-seekers straight out o f school. Health care is one industry that is hiring, said Dawn Oberman, a statistical services specialist at Collège Placement Council Inc. in Bethlehem, Pa. Jobs also are available in management information systems, for peo­ ple who teach others how to use computers. A focus on the environment has created openings for engineers, geologists, biolo­ gists, and chemists. And with the attention that President Clinton has promised to pay to rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure, tim es should be good for civil engineers, Oberman added. But other industries are cutting jobs just as aggressively. Military cutbacks and hard­ ships in the com m ercial airlin e industry have virtually shut dow n the m arket for new aerospace engineers. Would-be nuclear engineers may need to find another special­ ty. Jobs in finance and banking, except for technical and back-office jobs, are still hard to come by. “There’s a fundamental shift, and most of it has come from a decrease (in campus recmiting) among the Fortune 500 compa­ n ies,” said R ichard S tew art, d ire c to r o f placement at Purdue University. “You can look at your list o f companies having prob­ lem s, and th a t’s the com pany th a t’s not coming to campus now.” A survey o f 316 companies last fall by the College Placement Council found that 54 percent o f em ployers planned to hire more graduates in 1993 than last year. Respondents predicted they would hire 7.7 percent m ore graduates in the 19921993 school year than a year earlier. Actual hires were projected to rise to 70 per com­ pany from 65. “However, talking to placement officers this past January and December, we haven’t seen that yet,” Oberman said. Not only do many recruiters have fewer jo b s to o ffe r, they are cu ttin g back on recruiting costs. “Back in the heyday o f the 1980s, com panies w ould send 30 o r 40 recruiters to campus,” said Vicki B. Lynn, d ir e c to r o f R e n sse la e r P o ly te c h n ic In stitu te ’s C areer D evelopm ent C enter. “ H a lf o f the people w ould be standing around with nothing to do.” Now, compa­ nies either don’t come at all, or send just a few recruiters. And com panies surveyed by C ollege Placement said they plan to visit 11.3 per­ cent fewer campuses this year. The num ber o f job offers continues to fall. At Rensselaer, 47 percent of the com ­ panies that recruited on campus last year made a job offer, down from about 63 per­ cent in 1991, Lynn said. Worsening matters, colleges are turning out more graduates to com pete for few er jobs. Dan Hacker, a U.S. Labor Department economist, said that from now until the year 2005, the number of college graduates will outpace the number o f available jobs by 20 percent each year. The number o f college graduates contin­ ues to rise despite a slight dip in the popula­ tion of 22-year-olds, Hacker said. There are some bright spots. While big companies are cutting back, jobs are open­ ing up in smaller companies. But these are hard to come by, and tend to be at compa­ nies that cannot afford to send recruiters to cam pus. So college students and recruit­ ment officers have to be more aggressive, placement officials said. Colleges also must be more inventive to get their students placed. Cooperative pro­ grams, in which a company can test out a potential em ployee for a semester free o f charge, are gaining in popularity. Rensselaer has instituted a “Jobathon,” m o d e le d a f te r te le p h o n e fu n d -ra is in g d riv e s , in w h ich s tu d e n ts spend th re e evenings calling alumni to ask for jobs. Dunkin said. He was unsure if the man was unhappy about treatment received at CountyUSC or at another hospital. One of the doctors was rushed into surgery and was in critical condition with gunshot wounds to the chest and abdomen, Anderson said. The others were less seriously injured and were in critical but stable condition, he said, County-USC is familiar to millions as the model used for the fictitious hospital in the ABC-TV soap opera “General Hospital.” It is one o f the nation’s largest hospitals, With more than 2,000 beds. Prosecutor points to Meese in citing ip roof o I|p |e r-iip Says attorney genecaltried '0 :keep Chi Nov. 25,1986, Meese told a nation­ . WASHINGTON. — Ronald Reagan’s al television audience that Reagrehadn’t chief o f staff and secretary o f state had known about the Hawks shipment. Three been prepared to testify that ins adminis­ days earlier. Secretary of State George tration misstated facts about the Iran arms Shultz had td id fte attorney general other-. ' sa le s to p ro tect the p re s id e n t frbm w ise, acco rd in g to no tes d ic ta te d by impeachment, the Iran-Contra prosecutor Shufet » V jgi, '. Walsh said Shultz was prepared to tes­ asserted Monday. Special Prosecutor Lawrence Walsh tify at trial that he was concerned “the suggested i n a report to C ongress th at White House was attempting to ‘rearrange. A ttorney G eneral Eiiwin M eese “ was the record’” ffy aituoaaeing in 1986 that warning the president’s advisers that to ■Reagan hadn’t known about the November disclose tire president’s knowledge” of a 1985 arms-for-hostages deal. The p a r ip 1985 m issile: shipm ent to Iran “would dent’s atdesfeared the missile shipment to 1*■••r: i expose him m a charge id’illegal activify.” If Caspar Weinbeiger had gone to trial, | Arms Export Control former White House chief o f staff Donald • Act»’-• -.Reitgan Regan was prepared to testify dud Ire knew ■ T he it was untrue when Meese stated la a Nov. White House — with 24, 1986, White House meeting that the help from the CIÀ president hadn’t known about the Hawk ■i§—' gri|rftg& Reagan’s and [COijnit* ia which the president himself Shultz’s offices in C alifornia were not returned^ **' ” l*‘ ^ j ‘ j p a r tid p a te d r a iM H H ^ u Iran-C ontra prosecutors questioned . p p jp jg g o n , Bush spokesm an Andy Maynor declined to comment on Walsh’s pteagan last summer, bat his testiiijtpny hMtf. not been released. r e p o r t.B a s h has rep eated ly denied Walsh sani Meese and possibly Bush involvem ent in any aras-fp r-h o stag es would have been called as defense wit­ nesses frre Wrinbeigre and “would on pub­ I Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, a lic cross-examination have been subject to frequent critic o f Walsh’s investigation, searching questions about the administra­ called the report “a last ditch effort to jus­ tion’s conduct and their own in November tify his extravagant $35 million partisan 1986.” ; crusade.” O pinion Page 4 •' - -, " • _________________ Tuesday, February 9,1993 _______ ^ S t a t c P ress A brand new ASASU T h is m u s t b e q u ite a s u rp ris e fo r A S A S U . T h e y h a v e b e e n c o m p la in in g fo r y e a rs a b o u t stu d e n t ap ath y , u sin g it as an e x c u se fo r th e ir e v e ry sh o rtc o m in g . N ow , a g ro u p o f stu d e n ts k n o w n as T h e Sunday E v e n in g Society has pro­ vided them w ith the activ ism they have alw ays feared. T he S ociety has d raw n u p a new constitution fo r A S A S U , o n e th a t re stru c tu re s th e b u re a u ­ c ra tic o v e rh e a d o f th e o rg a n iz a tio n by cu ttin g ex ecu tiv e positions an d reorganizing the S enate. T h e S en ate, w h ich p resen tly has tw o m em bers from each college, w ill be replaced by an assem ­ bly th a t w ill h av e a n u m b e r o f re p re sen tativ es p r o p o r t i o n a l to th e s iz e o f th e c o l l e g e . A dditionally, a num ber o f sta ff p o sitions are tar­ geted to be replaced b y stu d en t volunteers. T he proposed constitution is supposed to reduce the cost o f A S A S U by $30,000. M o n d a y , L u k e T ig a ris , sp o k e s m a n f o r th e S o c ie ty , p r e s e n te d A S A S U P r e s i d e n t S c o tt M a a se n w ith 2 ,4 9 2 s ig n a tu re s — s ig n a tu re s w hich w ill force A SA SU to hold a special elec­ tio n in th e n ext th ree w eek s. You w o n ’t see a picture o f this m om entous event. M aasen w ould n o t a llo w p h o to g r a p h e r s in h is o f f ic e . H e w o u ld n ’t e v e n to u c h th e p e titio n s u n til th e y w ere out o f T igaris’ hands. T h is is n o t a ty p ic a l b e h a v io r fo r A S A S U . A lthough th eir m ain p u rp o se is to represent the students o f this U niversity, they seem to have a g reater lo v e fo r “p o lities” in th e w o rst sense o f th e w o rd . A n d , th is is w h a t T ig a r is ’ p e titio n w ould certain ly address, relin k in g the organizatio n through an assem ­ b ly , th e S o c ie ty w ill c o n n e c t s tu d e n ts m o re clo sely to th e ir lead ers. B y e lim in a tin g e x e c u ­ tiv e p o s itio n s , th e g o v e r n m e n t w ill b e m o re focused o n th e w ork o f the assem bly and rep re­ senting A S U ’s population. B a se d o n th e ir a c tio n s , A S A S U h a s n o t u n d ersto o d the c le a r sig n ifican ce o f th ese p ro ­ posals. S tudents are not ap athetic. T hey are tired o f th e b ic k e rin g a n d b e lly a c h in g th a t a lw a y s seem s to spout out o f the to p o f A S A SU . T hey ju s t d o n ’t see any reason to g e t involved w ith an o rg an izatio n that represen ts itse lf so poorly, not to m ention it’s constituency. A s f o r A S A S U , t h e r e ’s n o p o in t in th e m stalling any longer. T hey h av e lost th eir chance fo r a c h a n g e o f h eart. T h re e w eek s fro m now th ere w ill b e a special election. T hey had b etter g et u sed to th e fact th at the c h an g e h as co m e from o u tsid e th em , fro m the s tu d e n ts o f A S U , a n d th e y s h o u ld p re p a re to fo rm a n e w a llia n c e w ith th e s tu d e n ts o f th e U niversity. s STATE PRESS TAFF Critic proposes changes for ASU One of the most common cri­ tiques thrown at a critic is, “So i f ONNVANE you d o n ’t like it, w hat b etter WISWLL ideas dpi you have?” I am sure the suggestions I am about to put Columnist forth regarding the Improvement of undergraduate education will receive the same sort o f harsh scrutiny I give to others. That’s fine. This is a forum for discus­ sion, and these are ideas to dis­ cuss. First, a fantasy suggestion, based on the dream o f a large budget. Ending the de facto fac­ ulty hiring freeze would be a great boon to increasing the contact students get with professors. Back in reality land, there are other options that present themselves. First, the number of students attending ASU could be limited. Forty thousand students make for an unwieldy learning community. Fifty thousand seem s ridiculous. Enrollm ent should be capped until a faculty expansion can occur. Another option, one noted by President Coor, is raising the entrance stan­ dards. It seems clear that many students come to ASU that are not ready fo r a university environm ent. (H ave you noticed it’s more of a challenge to get residency than it is to get admitted?) A university simply should not be wasting its facilities with 077 deficiency classes. Additionally, if the goal is merely to get undergrads die credits they need, there is always the possibility of increasing the number of T.A.S Working at ASU. This option is being looked at, and many adm inistrators find it has a certain appeal. Why? T.A.s are cheap. They don’t qualify for benefits, and they aren’t paid very much. However, increasing the numbers of T.A. taught credit hours is not the way to go. It is exploitative of them and not beneficial to the University as a learning community. rr Another travesty of education is the 400- and 500-seat lecture classroom. Is this situation ever appropriate? Who wants to ask a question in front of 300 strangers? Screw die tuition revenue they generate; 1 vote they be eliminated entirely. Smaller classes would definitely make for more interaction, and the classes could be much more fun if there were a give-and-take between the people in the chairs and the person behind the podium. Another positive idea is the “break-out” section. This involves having a rather large lecture class broken down into smaller sections in which groups o f four students discuss issues among themselves. T.A.s supervise the sections, and the students get contact with a “real” teacher for the rest of the week’s meetings. Although it is labor intensive, it does get a class of more than 60 people involved with the material they are studying. Ready for more radical ideas? Give faculty members die ability to choose how they want to be promoted: make avail­ able a teaching emphasis instead o f a research emphasis. Close ASU West: our resources need to be concentrated here. (And forget about a third campus: this is a university, not a community college!) End multiple choice exams: they do nothing to help either critical thinking or writing skills.' Let students know upon choosing a major when the courses they must take will (and Won’t) be offered. Stop letting professors give overrides: until someone realizes what a state o f crisis the university is in, nothing is going to happen, and it is going to take a lot of furious students to make the legislature notice something is wrong. Finally, promote student political activism; we’re old enough to vote, so we’re old enough for the state government to take us seriously if we would only use the power of our numbers. \ W hat are the priorities here? Does the administration want to generate credit hours? Can the university survive if it limits the number o f students it accepts to the number that can be taught? These arc the hard questions that have to be answered. What answers do you have? KRIS MAYES, Editor EHREN SCHWIEBERT, Managing Editor ___ _______ Editor KEN BROWN S TALBOTT SMITH Editor DAN ZE1GER.... . .. . . .... .... KEN COLLINS....... .. ..... ..... .. DARRYL W E B B ............. ....... ..Asst. Photo Editor MICHELLE CON W AY........ JAKE BATSELL & BRIAN C H A RLES...Co-Sports Editors ANGELA BEN O C H E.............. ......... ... LAURIE N O TA R O .............. . . . J A S 0N O W S L E Y . M a n a g i n g Editor R EPO R TER S: Joy Beason, Kate D eely, Stephen Demoratz, Chris D riscoll, Donna Hogan, Kim Kaan, Mark M acias, Sondra Roberto, Tam m y Sierra, Judd W illiam s, Natalie Young, S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S: Michael Branom, Scott D avis. Shaun Rachau, Greg Sexton. C OPY ED ITO R S: Kris Fridrich, Jeannie Tallon C AR TO O NISTS: Sean T Hoy, Bryce Morgan. PH O TO G RA PH ERS: Brian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Suzanne Kyer. C O L U M N IS T S : L o ren zo Sierra, C hristoph er Stroud, Ashahed Triche, Tonnvane Wiswell. PR O D U C T IO N : Kai Barrett, Gary Bedol, Jodi Goldblatt, Jeff Hams, Steve M cD ow ell, Leslie Thorpe, Evonne Vera, David Weber. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S : K elly A d co ck , S onia B enson, Jamia Birney, Julie C ase, D ariE llstrom , R enee Headrick, Jennifer H ughes, Erica Kuebler, Sue Low ery, Lance Newman, Ron Spaeth, Tim Wohlpait. The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s C enter, R oom IS , A rizona State U n iv ersity , Tempe, Ariz. 8 5287-1502. W e d o not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on die ASU campus. The news and view s published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f die ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. E d ito r ia l Board U nsigned editorials reflect the v ie w s o f the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board write ed i­ torials and the board decides their m erit The editorials do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: number. Only signed letters w ill be considered for publica­ tion. Requests far anonymity w ill be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters.are subjectto editing by the opinion page editor. A ll letteis must be either brought in person with a photo I.D . to the State Press fro n t d esk in th e b asem en t o f Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, IS Matthews Center, A rizona State U niversity, T em pe. A riz. 8 5287- KRIS M A Y E S....................................... ....................... ...... Editer EHREN SCH W IEBERT....................... ...... Managing Editor KEN C O L U N S ------------------------------------ „.Opinion Editor T h e State Press w e lc o m e s and e n c o u r a g e s w ritten response from our readers on any topic. A ll letters m ust be typed, double-spaced and n o more than tw o pages in length to be eligible for publication. 1502. State Press P ho ne N umbers FiroiH Desk ...¿9(0-7572 Newsroom....r ..,...aM..'...^....^~ ...,*...~ ....«,..~ ........s.% 5-2292 Please include your full name, class standing and major Display A dvertising...............................................965-6555 (or any other affiliation with the U niversity) and phone Classified Advertising . ............................................. „965-6751 O pinion STATE P ress . Tuesday, February 9,1993 P age 5 A s t a iiié l|a iu ^ ^ Having seen every Fred Astaire movie; I’m quali­ iV X IK E fied to say that not onde d id Fred A staire-grab his j ROYKO crotch. It's possible that he; Tribune grabbed his crotch i s the Media p riv a c y o f h is hom e o r Services ' ’d ressing" room . B ut th at would b e d f n o c o n c e n to the public. : I mention this because M ich ael Ja c k so n , the r alleged superduper star o f show b iz. p described by many dance | critics as being the Fred Astaire of his generation..| While I’m no expert on dancing, I watched Jackson perform during halftime o f the Super Bowl, and I saw | little that |^ |f sk ia n y -p l ü Their dance styles are not alike, Astaire was. always smooth, no m atter how fast the dance. But Jackson appears to be suffering from a severe spastie disorder. 1 Astaire had a bony face that bordered on the home­ ly, but when y o u lpofcetiat that face, títere w as no doubt he was of the male persuasion, j But when die camera zoomed in on Jackson, I tried to figure out what be looked like. Then it came to me; He looks like an aging female movie star who’s had State P ress etters to the editor S o c ie ty b rin g s g o v e r n m e n t d e b a te to th e p u b lic Editor: Last week, an unprecedented event occurred on the ASU campus: a new constitution for our student government was proposed by a diverse group o f students in an effort to help an organization that is out touch with students' needs and interests and hopelessly mired in bureaucratic and political gridlock. Our group, the Sunday Evening Society, approached the current student government without malice or hidden agen­ da in an attempt to discuss the problems and proposed solu­ tions in an open, nonconfrontational atmosphere. Instead, our ideas were ridiculed and our representatives treated with little respect. . Recognizing the futility o f our actions, we will no longer debate the issues in anything less than an open, public forum. In addition, we have gone forward with Our petition drive and turned in 2,500 signatures on Monday. Because it has become increasingly clear that the current student gov­ ernment is unwilling to address its problems, we also ques­ tion its vague promises of change that address nqne o f the fundamental flaws in its structure. We, the undersigned, fully support the proposed consti­ tution because we believe in an elective student govern­ ment that works together with students and organizations to meet the needs of an ever-changing student body. In addi­ tion, we formally submit a vote of no confidence in our cur­ rent student government; we hope that in the coming spe­ cial election, the rest of the student body will do the same. The Sunday Evening Society Jim Ryan, Mike Perlman, David Garcia, Lilian Casey, Paul Wright, Andrew Krais, Brian Fitzgerald, Richard J. Rojo, Zulema Naegeie, Tiffany Hagan, Erin Penniman, Michael Drescher, Luke Tigaris, Mayra Lopez, Jeremy Bohen, Stephen Kertesz, Chris French, Tammy Wang, Lydia Perez, Douglas Nicholls, Shelia Specio, Misa Esparza G o d s m is s io n f o r Isra e l is to fix w o r ld p r o b le m s Editor: I’ve been involved with the University’s debate of ArabIsraeli issues since the early ’70s. I’m disappointed by your recent editorial. I expect more from the members o f a com­ munity dedicated to scholarship. You are calling for the destruction of Israel? Have you forgotten the peace process? Have you forgotten that we are beyond that now? We should be asking, “How can we live together?” Israel is saying, “ We can’t live with a people that wants to destroy us.” For this, you’re reading us the riot act? I would suggest to you that hatred is not the answer and that we will, have peace only when we want it more than anything else. I have heard every kind of argument, back and fo rth , o v er and over. I t’s like this: T here are two lawyers arguing a case; whoever wins, whoever loses, you will never be able to convince either o f them that they were wrong. H atred is not the answer. W hoever believes they can take their hatred, destroy Israel and have it all are wrong. W hoever believes they can take their hatred, destroy the Palestinians and have it all are wrong. We will only have peace when we want it more than anything else. What is the root o f this conflict? It is the story o f Cain and Abel. Cain slays his brother Abel in a fit o f religious jealousy. He believes God loves Abel more than him. What does God do? He doesn’t kill Cain, in fact, he marks him so no one can kill him. Why? God is saying to Abel, “I know why you did this. You are wrong. I do not love Abel more than I love you. Abel and I have this relationship because we have worked for it, in the name o f what we have learned and understand about each other. You can too. You can master this: Go and do it.” Why the Jews? God is looking for someone — finding a person, God hands over a tool and says, “I have this little problem with creation, in this universe, on this little planet called Earth. Take this and go fix it. Thank you.” That’s it; that’s all there is to being a Jew. We are just here to fix the plumbing. Why do you hate us? Yes, our two brother faiths, Islam and Christianity, have been killing us in a fit of religious jealousy. * I believe we can master this. I disagree more with what I think this editorial implies than what it says. Are you saying that the actions o f Israel are equivalent to the actions of Nazi Germany? Yob might be implying Israel is solely responsible for the tragic histo­ ry here of the last 45 years and even the existence o f Israel is fundamentally wrong. If you are serious about the peace process, as ypu say, cannot you see denying Israel’s legiti­ macy is not the way to begin? I have tried to explain, by telling you stories o f our nearly 5,000 year history, our efforts to find peace and define ourselves in a positive way in spite of our many enemies. Peace and the right of self definition is everyone’s right. I w o u ld den y th is to no o n e, n o t to y o u , n o r the Palestinians. I want only for Israel a peace with honor, a peace we can survive. James R. Seller Graduate Student, College o f Education That’s not a bad way for an aging fem ale movie star to look, b u t it’s unusual ftar a 34-year-old man. Especially since he selected.that look. Either that or his plastic w *£,. V T he single biggest differen ce, though, is that Jackson grabs his crotch As I said, that’s something Astaire never did. And from w hat I ’ve read about be wonMn’t In v e grabbed the movie director gave him a direct order. He was not . that kind of guy. ; I watched the Super Bowl with'several fxieftds,|p¡fpj 1 the first time Jackson grabbed his crotch, Harry said: “Why did he do that?” “Maybe he has to go to the john real bad.” Tony said* We thought about that for a while, then Mitch said: cross his legs. But he’s bouncing up and down arid l twitching and flapping do tihat whoa you have to go to the john real bad. ||would just make the situation worse. So maybe he is reassuring himself that it is still tiíem.” m SS e ; “What is still there?” Tony asked. ■■: / “His crotch,” Mitch said. | | “Unit (tees not make sense,” Harry said “A crotch is not something you misplace or lose, like your wallet or car keys. I f his crotch was suddenly gone, he would know i t Such a loss would surely cause considerable pain." - “As well as embajrassment,” Miteh satd, “I drink I understand why tie is doing it,“ Bank said. “He has a worldwide audience at the moment so he is using this opportunity to send a message. He Ú making a social s ta te m e n t.^ "Ah, of course,” Harry said. “But what statement is --ftflMpPfijP'T £ j ; “I ’m not m a n ” Hank said. “H e could be*saying* ‘Look, world, I have a crotch,’ O f in philosophical : terms: T grab, therefore it is.’’’ . 'r $ - i ygÉÍEould be,” MBdfef said. “Or is he rebelling * g t t § |í traditional sexual inhibitions by saying, through that g ñ a tte .tiie t it is O fe|& gm byour crotch in public.” Sum died, we were joined by Shawfe As you firom his name, he is amember of the Baby Boom gen­ eration. Thus, heisattuijedtopopularartandeultore. So we W o k him for insights on Jackson’s crotch§1 “Ob, that’s quite common, the tiring to do,” he said. ¡|¡¡you waicb f s P * ; the odds are that someone will be grabbing their crotch. And Michael Jackson isn’t the first. Rock performers have been grabbing their crotch­ es* for a long rime. Nor ¡s Michael Jackson the most renowned crotch-grabber. M adopaa is m uch more widely hailed fo r tiña art form. And the audiences are tbritijed, Ju st listen to th e ro a r w hen Jackson or Madonna grab their enriches. If might be the highlight W e pondered that for a whileTth ^ i Tony said: “We live in a strange world When the most popular m a i l ste* get their biggest ***??$*? * I i^»d M itch said: ÍR M M » like dhow b u s f lp i So nupbe I’ll d g p w State P ress Tuesday, February 9,1993 ASASU. C o n t in u ed fro m page 1. tures have to be verified and everything has to be legit before we (can get started).” Luke Tigaris, one of the writers of the pro­ posed constitution and a m em ber o f the Sunday Evening Society, said his group had hoped to gather 5,000 signature!! — twice the required number — to make a “statement.” But the group was hindered by time pressures. “W e realized we had to have this done quickly,” Tigaris said. “If this was pushed back any further, it Would interfere with the general election! Right now, most of the can­ didates are already in limbo as to what posi­ tions they can run for.” In addition to eliminating two executive offices, the proposed constitution would replace the current Senate with an Assembly. The Assembly will give each college rep­ resentation according tp the number of stu­ mine the fate and future of student govern­ dents enrolled. Currently, each college is ment at ASU. “If there is a special election held before allotted two senators, regardless of its size. ■ If ASASU follows the constitution guide­ our general election and the constitution fails, lines and holds the special election within nothing w ill be affected,” Leonard said. three weeks, it will take place four weeks However, he said ff the new constitution is ' accepted in the special election, “our general before the general election. Andrew Leonard, elections coordinator for election will be (voided) because our offices ASASU, said the students’ vote will deter­ are completely different.” C rim e Continued from page 1. • Do not drink in excess. • Use the Safety.Escort Service. ASU’s Safety Escort Service is available to students Sunday through Thursday, from 7 p.m. to 12:15 a.m. There are about 15 volunteers in the program who will walk students to and from their cars or dorms at night. SES coordinator Sean Allen said calls to the service have increased substantially since Hetherington’s abduction, but still not enough students opt to use an escort at night. “We see women and everyone walking around by them­ selves at night, and sometimes, we’re just sitting around.” Allen said SES receives about 15 calls on an average night. Volunteers Use walkie-talkies and wear bright yellow jackets. The phone number for SES is 965-1515. ASU DPS Director William Bess could not be reached for ty on campus,” said Kerri Jones, a junior education major. comment Monday. Sgt. A1 Taylor, a Tempe police spokesman, said the key to “Me, myself and 1 don’t stay around campus past 5:30 p.m. or crime prevention is “making a good decision based on data 6 p.m.. It’s not safe.” available to you and on not being naive.” Tamara Jones, a junior computer information systems Tempe police have been asked to step up patrols near cam­ major, said she used the ASU DPS emergency phones when pus. ./■;/ ‘•‘If you want to take no risks, you should never open your her car was broken into. There are about 150 of the bright yellow boxed phones door, if you’re comfortable with that kind of living,” Taylor said. “But on the other side, you can assess what’s out there. around campus. Each phone has a bright cobalt-blue light -There should be a voice inside saying, ‘This is notgood.’ above it that can be seen from a distance. “Give people less opportunities and be aware that there are “I kind of have a feel for security here, and its not much,” people out there willing to hurt you.” Jones said. “I don’t feel any less safe (since the abduction), but Despite increased police patrols, some students said ASU • they should have more security. I’m not surprised it hap­ just doesn’t have enough security. “There should be a lot more lights around and more securi­ pened.” Senator. Continued from page 1. . months later,” Simpson said. He said that people in legal struggles have to be prepared "to beat each other’s brains in and then go off and have a civil relationship.” Simpson’s sajd he respects President Clinton, who Simpson called an intelligent man with good insight. But he added that he thinks Clinton has already made one “big mistake” with the issue regarding homosexuals in the military. ‘The biggest mistake (Clinton) made was not meeting with the joint chiefs of staff (about the issue) and saying T will lis­ ten to you’ instead of ‘I will listen to you, but I have already made up my mind,’” Simpson said. He said he thinks the issue will be on the forefront of American politics for the next six months. Also, Simpson said he is ready to be the minority party in the Senate because he has had experience from his first term as a Senator in 1964, “when Republicans were not being elected anywhere.” . “The country is in the hands of the Democrats, not out of glee, but out of reality,” Simpson said. He said he is ready tp cast “hard votes,” and his main con­ cerns are with cutting cost of living allowances, retirement funds and veteran’s administration benefits. D on’t M iss the ‘B oat U se State Press C lassifieds 965-6731 E A R N H A R D T J E E P / E A G L E buy a *9 3 J E E R W R A N G L E R 4 x 4 ONLY MSRP Less Earnhardt Discount Less factory rebate, 1st time buyer cfiscount or College Graduate discount $1000 $9895 $ 16 0 0 s a v i n g s ! 11 a t t h i s p r i c e E A R N H A R D T J E E P /E A G L E • B A S E L IN E & .R U R A L * T E M P E Jeep IEagle «1 (J U S T W E S T O F T H E F O R D S T O R E ) * 3 4 5 -7 7 0 0 • 8 0 0 -5 7 2 -0 0 6 5 W E A R E P R O U D S P O N S O R S O F A S U A T H L E T IC S ! ! AU. PRICES PLUS TAX, U C.A OOC. FEES. OA.C. SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. S fate P :e 7 Tuesday, February 9,1993 r ess cup© COUPONS T H E T AA L IV E T h e t at l o t e 6 TANS FOR 95 $19 SAVE IN A BIG WAY FO R VALENTINE'S DAY! XXXOO 207ON«0TADNISCNINOGUNLOTTIONS Located in Cornerstone Mali (Upstairs from Flakey Jake's) 9 6 6 -6 3 9 7 Located in Corn erstone M ali (U pstairs from F lakey Jake's) w/coupon w/coupon Exp. 2-16-93 J Exp. 2-16-93 GIVE HER WHAT SHE REALLY WANTS/ TREE J£OWER$ Something fun Something lasting Something to WEAR! J O R Ä E R W/430 PURCHASE v GIFT CERTIFICATES* 5th&AAiR• Tempe 921-7456 N O W _______________________ 5th&Mill • Tempe 921 7456 Exp. 2-14-93 CUPID SPECIAL! ASU T-SH IRT RECEIVE 2 0 % OFF ANYTHING RED W /C O U P O N ONLY EXP. 2 -1 5 -9 3 (NON-SALE MERCHANDISE ONLY) 425 S. Mill Ave. Tempe, AZ 966-9199 w /$ 2 5 PURCHASE O F N EW SPRING ACTIVEW EAR 1 per customer Exp. 3-1-93 425 S. M ill Ave. Tempe, AZ R ÉÀ D Y F O R T H É R Ô Â D Ô R T R À lL " ONE MONTH¿W /M T ' A N N 1 MONTH UNLIMITED TANNING O a y S fU ä ii? ? !* -' BROADWAY & HARDY • 9 6 6 -6 6 7 6 Ex». 2 /2 8 /9 3 ¥ flRY YOU ÇUPI? TOTOPflTBLY? w Rw ?ha? $10.00 O ff”a yvnulnv ro?v dippvd in 2d karat yold 9 date, place, and tkne of brtb) A t y , c M e c u te s tá , C H IC K E N ■ H ■Rural & University •3 0 3 E. Southern, Mesa |p r expires 3-9-93 plus tax Reg. 2.69 TRY'EMU •R u ra l & University •3 0 3 E . Southern. Mesa ONLY expires 3-9-93 (4 b locks w e s t o f M ill) 966-6896 Expires 3-15-93 10% O FF A SU S P E C IA L Bring this coupon in for 10% Off list price on any item. ^ ... Excludes sale items. 330 w. TEMPE BICYCLE U n iv e rs ity & F a rm e r 966-6896 (4 b lo cks w e s t o f M ill) Expires 3-15-93 V A LE N TIN E 'S DAY S P E C IA L 10% O FF suggestedretail on anybicycleaccessoryor clothing tax 1 With coupon. 330 W. U n iv e rs ity & F a rm e r TEMPE BICYCLE 966-6896 (4 blo cks w e s t o f M ill) ^ Expires 3-15-93 H B IC YC LE TU N E -U P Regular $29.95 N O W $14.95 plus ^ ^ S a l e P ric e w ith C o u p o n TEMPE BICYCLE U rriversity & F a rm e r t o N ACHOS Loaded wtth beef, beans, tomatoes, cheese, olives, and sour cream. DELICIOUS! 95 $ Contact store for information on tire selection aa fin d D ut (Uitb flo Approximately I5 pay*? report o f tlw Ttrvnytby and (UYaKovyrn In your rvlationybipy. This is a juicy chicken fillet wrapped in specially seasoned bread and our unique sauce. THE BEST CHICKEN ON EARTH! 2 N E W T IR E S and a !T U N E -U P 330 W. U n iv e rs ity & F a rm e r 966-6896 plus parts TEMPE BICYCLE (4 b lo cks w e s t o f M ill) Expires 3-15-93 Sta te P Tuesday, February 9,1993 P age 8 ress N ew doors open to recently separated fam ilies ASU launches program to help children cope with parents divorce By C hris D riscoll S tate P ress With one out of every two marriages in the United States ending in divorce, programs to treat the emotional and psychological fall-out of ruptured families have flourished. But how does a family make an objective choice between the available programs? A new ASU research program funded by a $1 million National Institute of Mental Health grant will gather data that should help to answer that question. ASU’s Program for Prevention Research is calling the project “New Beginnings.” “W e're evaluating the effectiveness o f three different approaches to promoting the positive adjustment of kids following the divorce of their parents,” said Irwin Sandler, ASU professor of psychology and one of the program’s principle investigators. “First is the use of self-help books, books the parents and kids could read.” The second is a group for custodial moth­ ers on parenting after divorce. The third com­ bines parenting skills for mothers and coping skills for children. Sandler said each group will include about 30 families. Some of the objectives of such programs are to help the custodial mother learn how to knit together a healthy family structure, “how to keep the kids out of the war zone between Mom arid D ad” and how to parent after divorce, Sandler said. E nrollm ent is now open fo r “New Beginnings,” and those interested can call Danielle Bolduc^ program director, at 9655401, or w rite to ASU Program for Prevention R esearch, New B eginnings Program, Community Services Building at Papago Park, Tempe, AZ 85287-1108. “They have to have had the divorce within the last two years, thè kid has to be living at least half-time with the mom, there has to be at least one kid in the family between 9 and 12 (years old), they have to not be in some other type o f therapy and not have been remarried yet,” Sandler said. The research program includes only moth­ ers and children because in 95 percent of the cases the children live with the mother after divorce, he added. “Since we work in a group environment you wouldn’t have many fathers in there, and it’s very difficult to have a group work where it’s say, 90 percent female and one male, lust the mix and interreaction in the group is not helpful.” The goal o f the program is to evaluate which of the programs is most helpful and from there to design a model program that can be disseminated to institutions that work with divorced families, he said. Would-be participants must agree to go through the entire 11-week program and be interviewed once before and three times after. Sharlene Wolchik, ASU professor of psy­ chology, said the groups will meet for an hour and 45 m inutes. All participants w ill be recruited from Maricopa County. Bolduc said through the 1970s and 1980s m ore th a n 1 m illio n c h ild re n y e a r w ere involved in th e ir parents divorces each year. We'll need to receive it before noon today! Want a liner ad in the State Press Classifieds section tomorrow? Matthews Center, Basement • 965-6731 CROSSWORD b y TH O M A S JO SEPH WOOMIlD i 831-WOOD a Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days aW eek Spice up yo u r life w ith : WqqdsreD II844-SHED - Traditional Sonoran Style Mexican Food - N ew Vegetarian Selections - Daily Specials - H appy Hour Buffet NW comer of Dobson & University BUY O N E C harbiofled and FormedVIEWING Burger !►H SPORTS OR Chaibroiled Chicken B rea« Sandw ich IN AN UPSCALE ATMOSPHERE 4 A nd G et O ne W IN G S FREE! • V p u n h n a of a p W ia rc tb H r «V purchaM of a p ic h « OfbMT -OWE W ONLYEXP. 2-1S 43 - o w e M Only e x p . 2 -1 M 3 P ' T 5 * f r e e F d in n I r W ithpurchase mtrrhsafiAoof Aoualoor araatervalue. value. W ith f equal r greater ■ I . . .. N ot good with any other offer or discount Tem pe location on jy.O ffergoo d a jta r2 p m . Expire« 2 -15 -9 3 . j FREE! 2 Canyon sounds 1 Bound 3 Plummer 5 ‘ Up in the or Blake sky! ft’s 4 Apiece —r 5 Preten­ 10 Pinnacles tiously 12 Insurance decora­ worker tive 13 “Ben-Hur* 6 Saloon feature Yesterday’s Answer 15 Long time 7 Roma’s Sullivan 27 Orangey nation 16 Bond, acid works 8 Sports for one 29 *Moon19 Assists summa­ 17 — Vegas Itaht— ‘ 20 C o u p ries IB C o o l30 Vestiges 24 Route 9 Like headed 3 3 Used up of travel formal 20 Party 3 5 Corrals 25 Fancy attire staples 3 8 Slangy head11 Abby, to 21 Cavalry refusal Ann sword 39 Aries 14 Gifoert & 22 Simple 23 Put up r~ 1 25 Diplo­ ■ macy 10 11 28 Breakfast 1 is bread , 31 Singer it 15 Redding J ■ ■ 3 2 Gives 19 lessor» to 1 « ÏT" 3 4 Favorite ■ a 3 5 Golf goal 24 » 3 6 Siesta ■ 3 7 Track 29 » event ■ * 30 ■ 4 0 Easterner it j ■ * 41 Con­ SIsumed 1 ■ “ 42 Lab 39 38 workers, for short 4 3 Ship pole 42 DOW N ■ 1 1 Sneaker 2-9 features ACROSS SW comer of Baseline & Mill ” ” elebratInc"jo"years"of”bringing"” FINE M EXICAN FOOD A N D FRIENDS TOGETHER; 9 6 0 W . UNIVERSITY -9 6 6 -0 8 5 2 1 T~r~ BILL IS BACK! TH E FU N N IEST- hill,BlliJhEsATkU MJHURRAY M O V IE EVER!’ NEWSVirtu Ip|a|n |g | n A E RfsM S G RE E S L 1 S A s E AG A L A L AD D 1N US A R£ L 1 A N T L 1 T 1 I ■ £ MS F A D E N E Q A RE 0 S P P A C T Ho C J A RE F E D E RA L RA F- J A S M 1NI E D i T O R■ A V 1 V S AL E 0 È s E R T1 ■si HE. O S 1 Kj E I * r r~ r~ r~ ii z ih M wm m m at m D V H U IP M For answers to today’s crossword, call 9 1 U M r C l i l 1-900-454-7377! 99C per minute, touch lone/rotary phones. (18+ only.) A King Features service, NYC. Bill Murray G ro u n d h o g iTMVOtAUSFJtT D a y CO tniBU ftCU lLv-»?«:- ___ iKUOtDLUffiftK BU.Mill».« LVNEtljCDOttU. -aiK'SDHOu CMT CHUS FLLKlTr CEUfeE FENTON CO ERICKSON ___ DAXXYMIX DLNXYMIN «i> HAROLDRAMIS _ _ _ coLymi tfTl TRiVORALBERTactHAROLDLOUS HAROLDRUMS5 8 S g gEjaO U U SEE IT F O R FREE! THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11 8:00PM NEEB HALL Free tickets will be available on the 3rd floor of the M U beginning at 12 N O O N today. B R O U G H T T O Y O U BY THE A S S C C lA T E P e S T U D E N T R t Ox L « I f t t t «u e V1 » S |T i m m MwM UMOkAcumi«* 9o»t SN EAK PREVIEW CO M M ITTEE DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to w o * i t AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation o f the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 2-9 CRYPTOQUOTE L K N Z H H G S G X M L R L D R B I D L N Y RBL R B K W Z H T N X X G FL R P L D G T G P G N L N H M L D Z H 1. — HR K W N H S Z H X G H L F G N Q G Y esterday's C ryp toq u ote: DEFEAT IS NOT THE WORST OF FAILURES. NOT TO HAVE TRIED IS THE TRUE FAILURE. — WOODBERRY e 1903 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. St a t e P ress Page 9 Tuesday, February 9,1993 Scholars: Government faces hurdles in civil rights trial Obstacles could loom during trial of 4 officers in excessive force case T he Associated P ress LOS ANGELES — The federal government has a number of huidles to cross to win convic­ tions in the civil rights trial of four white policemen accused of using excessive force against black motorist Rodney King, legal scholars say . Jury selection in the case began last week, with oral questioning of prospective jurors set for Feb. 16. The main thing setting the federal case apart from last year’s state assault trial is the ques­ tion of intent, experts say. The federal indictment charges the police­ men “intentionally and willfully” deprived King of his civil rights when they beat and kicked him after a traffic stop on March 3, 1991. W ith prosecutors discounting a racial motive, the likely claim is that King was deprived of the right to be safe from unreason­ able searches and seizures, said John Markham, a former federal prosecutor and professor at the University of Santa Clara Law School. “What the government has to prove beyond a reasonable doubt is a specific intent to violate a federally protected right,” he said. Whether the officers knew such a right was being violat­ ed is irrelevant. “You don’t have to be a constitutional scholar” to be convicted, Markham said. “You don’t have to know you’re violating a specific right. But you do have to intend to do some­ thing that does deprive someone of a federally protected right.” The officers, who were acquitted on most charges in the state case last spring, are expect­ ed to maintain that King’s beating was justified because he appeared dangerous and was resist­ ing arrest. “In the state trial the issue Was one of exces­ sive force and the reasonableness of that force from a reasonable person’s point o f view,” said Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor and professor at Loyola U niversity Law School. “In the federal trial, that is still the issue. But there is a second step: even if a reasonable person thinks it was excessive, did these defen­ dants know it was excessive?” The defendants.—• O fficers Laurence Powell and Theodore Briseno, former officer Timothy Wind and Sgt. Stacey Koon — wilt claim they Were acting within Los Angeles Police Department policy when they used their batons, boots and taser stun gun on King. The prosecution, in its trial memorandum, said the intent requirement of die federal statute involves “an act done with a bad purpose.” “The fact that the defendants were hot thinking in constitutional terms is not materi­ al,” the prosecutors said. Because the officers are charged with acting “under color of law,” the roles and training of the LAPD will be relevant. “It isn’t so much the focus on forcé or the extent of it, but whether they were exceeding the authority of their office,” said Norman Garland, a former trial attorney and professor at Southwestern University School of Law. cap© SAVE IN A BIG WAT FO R VALENTINE'S DAY! XXOO TAUT LI1WE T H E TA^f L l i m BUY 1 TAN GET 1 TAN FREE (N ew Clients Only) w/coupon Exp. 2-16-93 FA ST TANS » FA ST TANS ■ALL WOLFF SYSTEMS «CONVENIENT HOURS (7A.M.-10P.M.) ■NEW TANNING BULBS ■DISCOUNT PACKAGES Located in Cornerstone Malt (Upstairs from Flakey Jake's) 966-6397 Located in Cornerstone Mall (Upstairs from Flakey Jake's) 9 6 6 -6 3 9 7 820 S. Mill/SW side of M ill at U niversity. . . Mon.-Sat. 11-9 .... Dine in or carry o u t . . . 967-4199 9% ow eM td la & w k 4 5A IG O N H EALTH Y DELI -O ne Dozen Long-Stemmed Roses and a pass for 2 to th e lM P R O V ONLy $ ^ Q 9 5 A uthentic V ietnamese C uisine C hoice Ingredients » H om em ade G oodness R ice, N oodles, & V egetarian S pecialties m m W ith th e purchase o f 2 E n fts $ & -.7. * (Excluding C risped S hrim p) Exp. 2 -2 2 -9 3 4 J . COMBO PLATTER When you buy one combination platter and medium coke, you'll receive the second combination platter of equal or lesser value free! BRING A FRIEND! •Rural & U niversity 203 E. Southern, Mesa GET 1 FREE Buy 1 sub with 2 m edium drinks and receive the second sub of equal or lesser value for FREE! Double m eat or G rilled Chicken not included. Expires 3-31-93. 2155 E. University 968-6369 University ■***Vvi 2155 E. University 968-6369 930 W . Broadway 967-7573 University Broadway M ayo, Lettuce, Tom ato, on a toasted roll Expires 3-31 -9 3. Limit 3. University 9 30 W . Broadway 967-7573 Broadway 930 W . Broadway 967-7573 Broadway 6 " SUB ONLY *1 « m PURCHASE OF A M EDIUM DRINK SUB, MEDIUM DRINK & CHIPS IV W»I>irloc 1 nfWL C PkudrAn iu m Phaoco Includes 100% hicken Draool Breast, C Swiss C heese, •g g e fe Li'i Abner Com bo with purchase of drink. Sub includes: Im ported Ham , G enoa Salam i, Cotto Salam i & Provolone Cheese. W ith coupon. Expires 3-31 -9 3 . Limit 5. G° u n n e f k i t e GRILLED CHICKEN *3** 2 15 5 E . University 968-6369 990 COMBO SUB wKÂSîP#V 4 expires 3-9-93 S ni w w e J * S ■' • Choose from Turkey & C heese, Genoa Salam i & C heese, Ham & C heese, or Club. Expires 3-31 -9 3 . Limit 2 . 2155 E . University 968-6369 University, 9 30 W . Broadway 967-7573 Broadway Corrections Director Sam Lewis said a 1973 court order allowing inmates up to three food packages of 25 pounds each “goes back to a time when the inmate population was 10 times less than it is now. With more and more inmates coming into the prison system each year, it is imperative that we elim inate food packages they receive at Christmas.” The department has asked U.S, District Judge Carl Muecke to allow it eliminate Christmas food packages. Hamm said Middle Ground offered last month to settle for allowing prisoners ohe Christmas package of 25 pounds of factorysealed food items and one birthday package of 40 pounds, which could include home­ made food items. “We are trying to be cooperative. We are getting nothing from the D epartm ent of Corrections,” she said. Hamm said M uecke during a Jan. 21 hearing ordered attorneys for the department and Middle Ground to meet with Magistrate Morton Silver on Feb. 24 to try to reach a settlement on thè issue. 00 W C UP fi§ B U Y Y O U R V A L E N T IN E A T A N N IN G S E S S IO N A T 24 K Tanning G if t C e r t if ic a t e s A v a ila b le • 2 0 W o lff Beds • A ll N ew Bulbs • M-Th 8 a .m .-m id n ig h t, Fri. 8 -9 :3 0 Sat. 1 0-7 0 Sun. 12-6 D on't miss o u t on our Special Introductory O ffer! CALL N O W FOR AN APPT, 5 tons for S IS 947-2662 X-LARGE 16" PIZZA «llig&w, 2RtFOR 1 SANDWICH tv one of Mustard's Famous Kina Size (Limit 1 Topping) Buy one of Mustard's Famous King Size Sandwiches a t regular price a n d 2nd King Size Sandwich of equ al or lesser value JEBEEU ONLY -M enu Items #300 to #326Limlt one coupon per custom er N ot va lid w /o th er specials (Dine-ln Only) Exp. 3-1-93 omu-m/uamr mmumumun F R E E D E L IV E R Y ! S c o ttsd a le G a lle ria 43 4 3 N . S c o tts d a le R o ad HOURS: 7 AM-10PM Every day! 949-DELI (3354) 945-8850 W/coupon only Exp. 3 -2 1 -9 3 1 4 2 0 N. Scottsdale ltd. ONE 10“ GOURMET PIZZA 2 F Ö R 1 A PPETIZER -PEST0, ARTICHOKE HEART OR -WHITE WITH ONE LARGE PEPSI Buy one appetizer a t regular price an d g e t 2nd app etizer of eq u al or lesser value EREEii -M enu item s #273 to #288Umit one co u p on per custom er Not va lid w /o th er specials (Dine-ln O nly) Exp. 3-1-93 O m U -m A K K H Y KK9 TAUKAM T r *5 HOURS: 7AM-10PM Every day! S c o ttsd a le G a lle ria 945-8850 949-DEU (3354) 4343 N. Scottsdale Road 1 4 2 0 N, Scottsdale Rd. GREAT NAILS ___________________________________ b y N a n c y F U L L S E T FIB E R G LA S S * Stronger & Thinner ■Non-Damaging $ 7 J , ° o Æ .T Reg. $45 (N ew clients only) CALL TODAY! DI-ZIN 1/2 Mile E. of Rural • 1420 E. Southern FREE Cup of Coffee or Cappuccino w/purchase of Muffin or Bagel 730-5992 ¥ )Buy one Yogurt and get the 2nd of equal or lesser value FR E E . . J P 2 P -—8- 9- « ■. • f i N L S t f f r S ? - . W/coupon only Exp. 3 -2 1 -9 Arizona's largest supplier of marine life and supplies, Ocean-Vu manufactures custom acrylic aquariums and design and build virtually any style aquarium. •Largest selection of saltwater fish •Live corals •Rare invertebrates •Filtration systems •Aquarium stands •Ail accessories >Aquarium service and manufacture you ▼ 99 F R E E D E L IV E R Y ! Your Aquarium Store In Tempe Your V alentine FREE! * 6 " VALENTINE'S PAY SPECIAL 1 Any 0cean-Vu Aquarium 50% OFF LIST PRICE Coupon must be presented Not valid w/any other offer ^ ^ ^ )ffe re x p ire ^ 2 A 6 /^3 V om im iB L ^7 — i 1 m F in d Out ULIItb fln ” Approximately 15 pa^e report o f the ytren^tby and (ueahoeyyey in your relationyblpy. Rweii/v $10.00 O fT a ^crxilrx? royv dipped In 24 Karat 9old (tilth tbiy coupon and compatibility report. v m o u t t ^ K T i> r a f K L P r o i • f f r i ^ ^ ^ .jp ja c e ^ a n d dree p i/ e a of brtb) AA d f | State P ress Tuesday, February 9, 1993 P ag e 12 P o l ic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents Monday: • A student reported that an unknown sus­ pect stole his ctQthes from |h e laundry machines on the fifth floor of Palo Verde West. Loss is $40. • A student reported that he witnessed and videotaped a possible bike theft on the south side of Mariposa Hall. • A fire alarm activated on the sixth floor of Palo Verde West, set off by burnt food. • A woman unaffiliated with ASU was injured at Grady Gammage Auditorium. She was treated at the scene by paramedics from the Tempe FireDepartment. • A student was questioned at the Music Extension Building after he requested access into his professor’s office to retrieve his keys. • Drug paraphernalia was impounded from Room 508 of Manzanita Hall at the request of a resident assistant.. • A man unaffiliated with ASU reported that the driver’s side mirror of his vehicle was damaged while parked on Adelphi Drive. Damage is $75. • A white, m en’s Schwinn Impact Pro bicycle was stolen from thè west side o f Hayden Library, where it was secured with a cable lock. Loss is $380. • A student reported that an unknown sus­ pect burglarized a vehicle belonging to a per­ son unaffiliated with ASU. The vehicle was parked in the U niversity Towers Parking Structure. Loss is $50. • A man u n affiliated w ith ASU was warned of indecent exposure and trespassing laws after he was caught urinating in public at the Art Building. • A student reported that an unknown sus­ pect damaged four windows in 410, Adelphi Drive, causing $2,000 worth of damage. • Two men unaffiliated with ASU were warned o f trespassing and loitering laws when they were caught panhandling at Tempe Center. They left the area. • A juvenile unaffiliated with ASU was questioned in Tempe Center, where she was panhandling. She was found to be a missing person. Her mother was notified and stated she was aw are that her daughter was in Arizona. Her mother was advised to notify her local police agency of her daughter’s whereabouts. Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: . DISC0UER THE EHCITING WORLD OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • A man was assaulted by his uncle, who placed a .357 Magnum handgun to his head and told him he was going to “blow'his brains out.” The two men, who were intoxicated, started arguing over the inability of one man to identify the other in a group photograph. The uncle was arrested and booked. Nine firearms were removed from his residence. • A suspect “carjacked” a man by threaten­ ing to kill the man and his passenger if they did not exit th e ir car. T he suspect, who appeared to have a firearm, was located later and booked on armed robbery and motor vehicle theft. • A 43-year-old man was killed after he was hit by a w est-bound car on A pache Boulevard. His friends, who ran across the road in front of him, said they had all been drinking alcohol. The driver of the vehicle had not been drinking. The driver was not cited. • A student notified a Tempe detective that another student at McClintock High School had a gun and threatened to shoot someone. A search of the suspect’s bookbag revealed a loaded .38 revolver. The suspect was on juve­ nile intensive probation. He was taken into custody and transported to Southeast Juvenile Detention facility. • During a warrant search, a suspect was found to be in possession o f m etham phetamine and drug paraphernalia: He was arrested and transported to Tempe City Jail, but police were unable to read him his rights because he kept falling asleep. • A man was arrested in the 100 block of Luna Vista Drive when an investigation revealed he was walking up and down the street yelling with his pants around his knees. Witnesses said they saw Him urinating on the sidewalk and screaming at them. • A transient was arrested for violating a curfew at Tempe Beach Park, 54 W. First St. He said he didn’t want to leave the park, he wanted to go to jail. He stated, “(Expletive) you, take me to jail,” so the officer did. • An ASU student was arrested for trying to enter Balboa Cafe, 404 S. Mill Avc., with a fake identification card and then providing false information to police. Another student was arrested, cited and released after trying to enter Balboa Cafe with fake identification also.' Compiled by State Press reporter Sondra Roberto. UniqueIrauel/study opportunity in Europe & Asia Learn about international business from business leaders! Interact with top executives of well-known organizations! Travel the world’s greatest cities and earn academic credit! IN F O R M A T IO N A L M E E T IN G W e d n e s d a y , F e b ru a ry 1 0, 1993 3 :0 0 pm in R oom s B A 130 and B A 296 C o n ta ct: J im S p ie rs in M ark etin g 9 6 5 -2 93 6 D an B re n e n s tu h l in M an a g e m e n t 9 6 5 -3 43 1 In te rn a tio n a l B u sin e ss S e m in a rs 8 3 0 -0 9 0 2 T h e S i z z l e r $ 5.99 S u n D e v i l D e a l. Choose From Hot* To Fresh, To Crispy, To Crunchy, To Gooey, To Soft, To Icy Cold. Keep up with the action! APPETIZER BAR Blood Helps to Heal. Please Donate Blood. DESSERT BAR Or, Shoot The Works. On an average, five people need approximately three units of blood every 60 seconds. For every 100 units of blood being used by local hospitals, only 62 are being.collected. i - PLEASE HELP TO HEAL AND DONATE - ’ CADY MALL Near Danforth Chapel 10-3:30 pm TYLER MALL Near Daniel E. Nobel Library 10-3:30 pm IP United Blood Sei ' < Dnnsimof uooo tnism t. «c * « an M p re M M u riw f g lR 1 Hüi V Wêêè. 11Ë1i -V" l i i Select all you want from our hot pasta, tostada, soup, fresh fruit, and salad buffets. Indulge in endless hot appetizers and soft ice cream with all the gooey toppings you love. PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT SEMINAR Or Go For The Full Meal Deal For $5.99 choose a shrimp, chicken or small sirloin steak entree plus potato, rice, or vegetable plus a green dinner salad plusyour choice of non-alcoholic beverage with bottomless refills. It’s the SunDevilDeal, and it’s fix our Mends and their friends. So come take advantage of us. Bobylme & Body I mages Loam to lova your body from smotbnal, physical and spiritual perspectives. >Is s u m of body image, body memory and body boundaries will ba addressed. Rod Graham, M.C.; Licensed Patricia L. Kerstner, Ph.d.; Licensed Massage Therapist, private practice; Psychologist and Faculty Associate. Recent graduate of University of Women's Studies; Faculty in the Master of Phoenix; Terras, Inc., counselor. Counseling program at the UnivarsKy of Phoenix. Wednesday, February 10 1:40pm - 330pm Re entry Center, Lower Level, Memorial Union Presented by: Adult Re-entry Student Ufa ; $3 in advance, $5 at the door. - -r. Seating is GmUed. Your check reserves your place. C a l 965-2252 for more information. ! | The Mill & Southern Sizzler’s $5.99 SunDevil DeaTis only a bike ride away. For students, faculty and staff. Enjoy our salad buffet or a small sirtoin steak entree at the Mill & Southern location for a limited time discount price of $5.99. Offer good at lunch and dinner for your party with a coupon or ASU ID. i-1 - Sizzler. ; That Sounds Good J j . I iI w -. L _ __ _____ ;__ ____ ___ _________________ I SunDevil isaregisteredtrademarkoftheArizonaBoardofRegents. P age 13 Tuesday, February 9,1993 S t a te P ress State Press P o lic e R e p o r t ... Rain, rain, go away. . . T o o a b s u rd to b e a n y th in g b u t re a l. * m ' FUN W mM . FOOD S P IR ITS A m erica’s, Largest & Finest M liard E m porium OVER 100 CUSTOM PINK FOOL TABLES AIR HOCKEY • FOOSBALL • DARTS SHUFFLEBOARD • VIDEOGAMES FREE POOL 8827 E. BEIA RD. 482-8350 MON.-THÜRS. 11-4 SAT. 11-6 TWO LOCATIONS! ' ^ ' 93 E . SOUTHERN 889-1882 SPRING BREAK ROCKY POINT SAN CARLOS Hotel reservations available March 12-20 4 - 5 -9 night packages available Richard Komurek/State Press . > Come back another day. ASU students equipped w ith proper shelter from Monday's precipitation make their way over the University Drive pedestrian bridge. MEXICO TOURSl/w/OAM'S (602) 8 8 2 -8 5 9 5 ■ W HAT IS YOUR TOPAEROBICS PROGRAM! F it n e s s Beauvais’ AERobicS > A ID S IQ ? Find out during AIDS AWARENESSWEEK February 8-12 • MONDAY and TUESDAY visit Stu­ dent Health's ta b le on C ady M all fo r state o f th e art inform ation on HIV an d AIDS. FREE CONDOMS. 10am -3p m . •WEDNESDAY, V alentine condom s wM b e distributed on C ady M all from 10am to lp m . •THURSDAY is WeBness D ay a t SRC. Join us for a huge dteplay o f healthy Iving m aterials & prac­ tices. including free condom s, posters, brochures, e tc . E ducate yourself ab o u t M V and Iving a healthy life. • FRDAY you can g e t a FREE and ANONYMOUS HIV TESTa t Student H ealth from M aricopa C o. H ealth D ept, from Sam - 3:30pm a t th e H ealth Education Desk. Please Join us this week. BE AWARE! «O U G H T TO YOU BY ASU STUDENT HEALTH PHOENIX 4843 N. 8 th Place 2 3 0 -0 0 5 5 BEAUVAIS' GYM NEXT TO ASU 1301 E. University 921-9551 TEMPE 1102 W. Southern 8 2 9 -6 9 6 9 Com ics St a t e P ress Tuesday, February 9,1993 Pag«:e 14 Calvin and Hobbes b y B ill W a tte rs o n By GARY LARSON T H E P A R S ID E CAM REW HINT. \ OH THE VTEWVIER H IN T./ LIKE EMERI CSTWEJ SKI RESORTS USE MAN-MADE SHOW. KID. D o o n e sb u ry BY G A R RY TRU DEA U THANKS,BUT TMONPUTY. raupiose mSOCJAL- SeCURTTY. B e a viru s, see th e w orld. PEOPLE! B y L ynn E lber T h e A ssociated P ress LOS ANGELES -A Television’s fictional female reporters are showing a knack for get­ ting into scrapes in the real world. First, there was last year’s Dan QuayleMurphy Brown clash, with the then-vice pres­ ident chastising Brown for her unwed mother­ hood. Now, we have the case o f Georgie Anne Geyer and Georgie Anne Lahti. Geyer, veteran journalist, can be seen as a guest pundit on such program s as PB S' W ashington W eek in Review. Lahti, sitcom character, is a reporter dwelling in the world of CBS’ Hearts Afire. Geyer, who generally doesn’t watch TV comedies, has been scrutinizing Lahti recently — and not for professional guidance. She claim s the c h aracter (played by actress Markie Post) is based, in part, on her. “My first feeling was I was being exploit­ ed,” Geyer says. Linda Bloodworth-Thomason and Harry Thomason, the high-profile couple who pro­ duce Hearts Afire as well as presidential inau­ gurations for close friends named Bill, have issued adamant denials. “I can tell you unequivocally that I am not in the business o f stealing other people’s liv e s,” B loodw orth-T hom ason told the Washington Post. The series debuted in the fall, but the dis­ pute heated up recently after Chicago newspa­ per columnist Mike Royko, a longtime friend o f Geyer, wrote scathingly about the show and its producers. Royko and Geyer note that she and Lahti are blondes with the same unusual first name. Both’started their careers at Chicago newspa­ pers and became globe-trotting correspon­ dents who won prized interviews with Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Cuba’s Fidel Castro. Unlike Geyer, the series character hits a rocky patch in her career and is forced to take a jo b as a press aide in a conservative Southern senator’s office. Geyer, in addition to her TV appearances, writes books and a column syndicated in 120 newspapers. Lahti is a liberal; Geyer describes herself as a m oderate. And w hile L ahti’s father (played by Ed Asner) is a convicted felon, Geyer wants it known her dad was a respected Chicago businessman. Lahti had an affair with C astro while reporting on him, a major ethical no-no. “I’ve never even considered sleeping with someone I’m interviewing,” Geyer says. The words “law suit” and “settlem ent” have, been uttered, along with “invasion of privacy” and “libel,” and the issue rests now in the hands o f attorneys (w hose hearts undoubtedly are afire). HAIRCUT * 8 .0 0 w New clients M en& women WlZZARDS HAIR STUDIO Serving up the news 9 0 3 S . R u ra l R d ., T e m p e Viewers, understandably, may be con­ fused. Is this further evidence of the slippage between fiction and fact on television, more careless blurring of reality’s boundaries? “It’s a classic case of the confusion of entertainment and the media and politics,” maintains Geyer. A call seeking comment from BloodworthThomason was not immediately returned. W hatever the Lahti character’s origin, whether the blending was or was not deliber­ ate, the dispute offers worthwhile reminders. Ruth Ashton Taylor, a respected California television journalist who began her career four decades ago working with Edward R. Murrow, suggests that Geyer may be taking the sitcom too seriously. “A person can be used a little bit as a char­ acter, but it takes off from there,” Taylor said. m & FUN FOOD SPIRITS t TONIGHT BE MY W z NITE: $ 4 50 LONGNECKS (7-11 P.M.) 9 3 E . S o u th e rn 967-2360 829-1822 (S o u th e rn & M ill) H o |n \ma □ CAR SP EC IA LIST S NEWANDRECYCLED FASHIONS BUY-SELL-TRADE 11 INDEPENDENT SERVICE CASH FOR CLOTHES ALL DAY, EVERYDAY MEN’S A WOMEN'S CONTEMPORARY O N EO FA M N D LEATHER VINTAGE JEANS Ü P eople pleW ho Know Use ValvouneRECYCLING SINCE 1974 “B M to tP h o a n ix * 227 W U niversity Dr T e m p e 9 6 8 -2 5 5 7 •F R E E E stim ates »Fair P rices •O n e D ay S ervice on M ost R epairs •C o m p lete P arts D epartm ent •F acto ry T rain ed T echnicians f. $ 14.95 OIL CHANGEA OIL FILTER (In c lu d e * u p t o 4 q u a r ts) C heck our Low Price on 15,000 & 3 0 ,0 0 0 Services 9 6 8 -5 9 8 9 T W O L O C A T IO N S TO SER VE YOU 9 5 4 -7 9 2 3 1 8 2 0 E. A PA C H E B L V D . TEM PE One way trips 3 0 3 9 E. T H O M A S RD. P H O E N IX toA SU Sports STATE P r e s s ____________________________________- , Tuesday, February 9,1993 P age 15 W hether It's scoring on a layup (left), surveying the defense (above), or setting th ree-po int records (right),. ASU guard Stevin Smith is leading the Sun Devils to one o f their most surprisingly successful seasons ever. Smith leads the Pac-10 in per-game scoring average (21.1 points), and ¡s tops in the nation in three-pointers made per game (4.7). T r ip l e T h r e a t H ot-shooting Sm ith in m idst o f banner season B y J ake B atsele S tate P ress Life is good for Stevin “Hedake” Smith these days, which explains the boyish smirk he has been wearing lately while giving postgame interviews. : The junior guard has been on a torrid shooting spree all Season. He leads the nation in three-point shots made per game (4.7). He is the Pac-lO’s top scorer, averaging 21.1 points per outing. And, most importantly, he has been the catalyst for an undersized Sun Devil team that has overachieved its way to a second-place tie in the Pac-10. ASU (12-5,6-3 Pac-10) is cu rren tly knotted at second w ith O regon State and Washington State in the conference standings. “I’Ve been a little bit happier lately, because I’ve been knocking the shot down,” said Smith, who has hit 26 out of 50 three-pointers in the Sun Devils’ last four games. “I’ve been working pretty hard ... letting the shot come to me more, and less (of) me going to the shot. “I’ve been very fortunate to knock most of them down.” The fast-paced, run-and-gun style ASU has adopted this No minor “Hedake” A look a t where ASU guard S tem Smith ranks natìonatty and in the Pae-iO. Pac-10: • 1st in scoring at 21.1 pts. per game. • 3rd in steals at 3.0 per game. • 10th in 3-pt fg pet at .403. • 10fh m assists at 3.9 per game. NCAA: • 1st in 3-pointers per game at 4.7. season has undoubtedly been to Sm ith’s benefit. Fast breaks have routinely resulted in easy layups for Smith, and a lack of size inside has forced the Sun Devils to shoot from outside more often. Smith said he has felt comfortable fitting in with the run-and-gun system. “They (the coaching staff) knew when they recruited me what kind of a player I was,” he said. “I feel like they have found a style that actually is letting me show my abilities.” Smith earned His nickname while growing up in Dallas, Texas. His mother, Eunice Smith, claims she dubbed him “Hedake” because he had a hard head as a toddler. The unorthodox spelling came about when she had to adjust the word in order to fit it on her customized Texas license plates. Already ASU’s all-time leader in three-point shots made (190) and attempted (517), Smith expands his career-lead­ ing marks each time he takes the court. Many, including Sun Devil coach Bill Frieder, feel that Smith’s prolific scoring and defensive tenacity may lead him to the NBA. “He (Smith) is a quality guard,” said Frieder, who came to ASU four years ago after 16 years o f coaching at Michigan. “I think I’ve had some great guards, notably (former Michigan standouts and current NBA players) Gary Grant and Rumeal Robinson. T u r n t o S m it h , page 16. ASU alum Monday returns for game F o rm e r D o d g e r recalls experiences as a S un D evil B y M ichael B ranom S tate P ress When the Kansas City Athletics picked him its their first draft choice in the 1965 draft, former ASU baseball star Rick M onday ended a successful collegiate career that saw him leave an indelible mark on the Sun Devil baseball program. Monday returned to the site of his Sun lr * M Devil days last Sunday, as he participated in DreamGame ’93 at Phoenix Municipal Stadium, a matchup of the 1971 Oakland A thletics against the 1971 Pittsburgh Pirates. The game benefited the Phoenix Memorial Childrens’ Hospital Fund. In his only season at ASU, Monday played center field and was an integral p art o f th e team th at won the 1965 College World Series. The national cham­ pionship was the first of the University’s five titles. : After the season, Monday wgs named The Sporting News' National Player of the Year, and he also made the first-team All-America squad. However, if not for the Los Angeles Dodgers and Tommy Lasorda, Monday may have never played at all for the Sun Devils. “I was playing for a Dodger rookie team that was coached by Tom Lasorda, now the manager of the Dodgers,” Monday said. “It was during one of these games that Bobby Winkles, who was the coach at Arizona State, had come out to see me play. I was offered a scholarship to play at ASU. “There are some people that you have in your life that you think back and say, ‘Thank goodness, that person was in my life.’ That’s the way I feel about Bobby Winkles and that’s the way I feel about ASU.” Monday’s accomplishments during his baseball career gar­ nered him a great amount of respect among his peers. Fellow ASU alumnus Reggie Jackson spoke of Monday in his Reggie: “He was 6-foot-3, 190 pounds; he could run the 100 in ' about 9.7 (seconds); he had ah arm like a cannon ... he was a big-league ball player when he was 19 years old, and he knew it,” Jackson wrote. Monday was one of three mem­ bers of the 1965 team to move on to m ajor league baseball. Third baseman Sal Bando and right field­ er Duffy Dyer joined Monday soon after the championship season. “These are people I feel very hon­ ored to have been teammates with,” Monday said. “Dyer, Bando, and I went on to fulfill a lifetime dream to play in the big leagues.” The first part of that dream came when the Athletics made Monday the No.l pick in the inaugural draft. By the end of the 1966 season, Monday was Kansas City’s starting center field­ er. He kept his spot in the Athletics’ line-up until 1971, when he was traded to the Chicago Cubs in exchange for pitcher Ken Holtzman. Ironically, the trade was the key to the Athletics’ dynasty of the early 1970’s, when the now—Oakland team won three straight World Series titles. “I fel( frustration and, at the same time, a lot of jo y ,” T urn to M onday, pa g e 16. Former ASU baseball standout Rick Mqpday returned to the Valley on Sunday fo r DreamGame '93, a m atchup between members of the 1971 Oakland Athletics and Pittsburgh Pirates team s. Monday attended ASU in 1965 and was the national player o f the year. S tate P ress Tuesday, February 9,1993 ‘Little skinny guys’ winning in Pac-10: ASIJ tied for second Badminton gets set for San Diego Tourney Wily is it that so owe By Scott D avis State P ress « 4 U R IA N CHARLES thinks that Son D evil athletics are any good? First, we had the problem with fo o t­ b a ll, and ASU turned in a good season, j u s t ' 'p is s in g , a sh o t at a . bowl gawa, ASU basketball, which was picked to finish dead last in the P k ->0 conference, is also proving the “experts” wrong. Big time. ' At exactly half way through the con­ ference-season, ASU has compiled a 12-5 overall record and a 6-3 record in the con­ ference, putting diem in a three-way tie for second place. Not only are the'Sun Devils setting conference records right and left, they have made their presence felt on the national scene as well. Guard Marcell Capers leads the con­ ference in assists; Stevin Smith leads the conference in scoring and leads the nation in th ree-p o in t sho ts m ade; forw ard Dwayne Fontana is among the leaders in field goal percentage; and 6-foot-6 “cen­ ter” Lester Neal is among the heading rebounders. .' ASU as a team is second in the nation in three-pointers made, and among the top 20 mams in scoring. It is this team concept that coach Bill Frieder thinks has made the mam as suc­ cessful as it has been. Frieder feels the team is playing with unity and synchro­ nization, a combination that is spelling victories. But more importantly. Binder is happy his troops are playing beyond die presea­ son predictions, even if they ate a small team. "Not bad for a bunch of little skinny kids.” Frieder said o f his squad after ASU’s big win over California. “They play hard and that’s all I can say. They are playing as a team and as a result, they are fdayiiqLltotH-.”; • C oaching paying off If there is any clear front runner for conference coach o f th e y ear honors, Frieder has to be the leader. A fter the team has becom e a m ajor com petitor within the conference after tbe poor pre­ d ic tio n s, F ried er has show n th a t his coaching style and enthusiasm are pro­ ducing wins. W ins that, at th is point, should give him the nod. How do you spettN CA A ? W ith h alf a season to go, th e Sun Devils will need to continue their runand-gun style of p a y to have a shot at the tourney. With a 9-0 record in the confer­ ence, UofA will most iikely run away with the conference title. ASU has a shot at an at-large bid, but they will probably need 19 or 20 wins to get it. ASU has nine conference games and one non-conference game left. W hile already ow ning road wins against both Oregon schools and sweep­ ing both the Washington and Bay Area schools at home, the Sun Devils still can’t le t up. W ith a trip dow n to M cK ale Center and the Los Angeles schools com­ ing for a visit to finish the season, ASU still has their work cut out for them. Around the Patc-10 W ell, i hate to adm it it, but the Wildcats are paying excellent basketball. After losing at home to Arkansas and paying mediocre, the Wildcats have now won 13 straight and are headed right back to the NCAA tournament. Once again, Arizona coach Lute Olsen has his dynasty in the desert collecting royalties. With only road games at the Los Angeles schools and W ashington schools for the rest of their conference season, Arizona is in the driver’s seat for an undefeated conference season. However, ASU will have a chance to avenge their earlier loss to the Wildcats with a trip to Tuscon next week. ASU threw away that game in the University Activity Center, and the Sun Devils will be seeking revenge. from pace The Los Angeles drought Last season, the most feared road trip in th e conference was the UCLA and USC games. The Bruins amt the Trojans had excellent seasons, and both made trips to the NCAA tournament. But those visions are long gone, and both schools are struggling to p e k up vic­ tories. At seventh and eighth in the con­ ference, respectively, both schools need a drastic turnaround if they hope to have any shot at some postseason play. Despite losing three of the best payers in the country last season in UCLA’s Don MacLean and Tracy Murrary and USC’» Harold Miner, both teams still have die talent to get wins. The problem is that those wins just aren’t coming. Under the knife W ith fans already upset at UCLA coach Jim Harrick for his inability to get the Bruins into tbe final four, it looks like H arrick’s days could be num bered in Westwood. Callers on Los Angeles talk shows scream vehemently about UCLA’s skipper, and the current drought isn’t helping any. Fans want Harrick out, and unless he can make some drastic changes, he could be getting his walking papers. 15. Monday said. “Frustration, because I had been with the A’s since ’65; I was part of a ballclub that went from a laughing-stock to where, in '71, we won the American League West Championship. “We celebrated the night in Kansas City when we guaranteed ourselves of not losing a hundred ballgames. In ’71, we won over a hundred ball games. That was the frustration and the sadness. “There was a little bit of joy in the fact that I was getting away from Charlie Finley, who owned the Oakland A’s. Charlie and I did not see eye-to-eye, or anything close to it.” Dick W illiam s, O akland’s m anager in 1971, said that Monday was expendable due to the quality and numbers of outfielders the Athletics had in their farm system. “I had Rick M onday my first y ear in Oakland and at the end of the year, Finley traded him for Holtzman,” Williams said. “He was my regular center fielder. Luckily, we ith Cougars making a roar W ith a 6-3 conference record, the Washington State Cougars are another surprise team in the Pac-10. After watch­ ing the Cougars simply outplay and out­ class the UCLA &ruins this weekend, anyone can see that Kelvin Sampson’s club is for real and is making waves. G uards B ennie S eltzer and Tony Harris are forming a lethal combination in P ullm an, w hile freshm an M ark Hendrickson is rivaling Cal’s Jason Kidd for freshman player-of-the-year honors. Expect the Cougars to give ASU a run for their money when it conies bid time. Monday _ C ontinued After a 10-day layoff follow ing a grueling tournam ent in Los Angeles, the ASU bad­ » minton team is hard at work preparing them ­ selves for this w eek­ end’s Freeman Classic in San Diego. The Sun Devils last C h a d w ic k com peted at the Manhattan Beach Open on Jan. 30-31. It turned out to be a marathon type of tournament, giving the Sun Devils good reason to take off two weeks. • “It was a brutal tournament,” ASU coach Guy Chadwick said. “There was massive non­ stop play.” Tom Reidy, the Sun Devils’ top player and nine-time national champion, was dethroned in, the sem ifinals o f his singles division. Reidy, who plays with a rhythm of consisten­ cy and accuracy, would have played in seven matches on the second day if he had won his semifinal match on the first. “Reidy would have had the singles final, had (George) Hendrick and Bill North com­ ing up. But Rick Monday had a heck o f a major league career.”After his five-year stint with the Cubs, Monday was traded to the Dodgers, where in 1981 he was finally able to be part of a championship team. Monday retired after the 1984 season and moved to the broadcast booth, doing televi­ sion play-by-play and color for the Dodgers and later, the San Diego Padres. Monday was released by the Padres last season after four years o f service as the Padres’ ownership, citing financial reasons, which cut the front-office personnel by half. “I’m ‘unattached’, as they say in the busi­ ness,” said Monday, with a smile. “I’m talk­ ing with a couple of clubs and radio stations. We’ll see what transpires.” “He is a great announcer,” Williams said. “He is one of the better baseball announcers and, for some reason, he hasn’t been able to hook on with anybody. I hope he does. He’s a class person.” the semifinals and finals in doubles, and the quarters, semifinals and finals in mixed (dou­ bles),” Chadwick said. Next up for ASU is the Freeman Classic, which takes places over V alentine’s Day weekend in San Diego. The Freeman Classic has a history of pro­ ducing winners that have gone on to take part in the Olympic trials and compete for various other U.S. national teams as well. “(The Classic) is a long-standing, tradi­ tional open-adult tournament,” Chadwick said. “It is an individual based tournament that has been in existence over 50 years. It’s a . very important tournament, individually, for many of our players.” ’ /?■’ Chadwick said the Sun Devils enter eight to 10 tournaments a year in order to prepare themselves for the stiff competition of the Collegiate Nationals in March. “A number of our tournaments are open U.S. tournaments,” he said. “We face the best competition there is at any level.” ASU has seen the best competition avail­ able in winning the national championships nine years in a row. The Sun Devils have col­ lected a total of 27 national titles. C ontinued from page 15. “He (Smith) is a better shooter at the same stage than Rumeal Robinson was. If he devel­ ops into being a consistent shooter, then he’ll play in the NBA. D efensively, h e’s got strength. If he can perfect the shooting, he’ll play in the NBA.” W hile the NBA may lie in his future, Smith said he doesn’t want to think about it until the time comes. “That’s one of my biggest dreams,” he said. “But right now, I have to not worry about the NBA and just try to focus on a dayto-day basis on my college career.” The relationship between Frieder and Smith is one of mutual respect. And though while they commonly exchange frivolous barbs, there isn’t a hint of sarcasm when Smith describes his regard for his coach. “I have so much respect for Coach Frieder, it’s unbelievable,” Smith said. “(Smith) is doing a great job,” Frieder said after Saturday’s 109-87 win over Stanford. “I’m probably harder on him than anybody. He’ll tell you that.” On Jan. 30, Smith set a Pac-10 record by hitting 10 three-point shots in a game at Oregon. :M ak e som e re ald o u g h ! Sell it in the STAtEi^RESS Classifieds! M AIN E CA M P STAFF POSTIONS W ekeela is one o f Am erica's p re m ie re c o -e d re s id e n tia l sum m er ca m p s, lo c a te d on the shores o f Bear Pond, in the rura l co m m u n ity o f H a rtfo rd . M a in e . W e h a v e 110 s ta ff members a nd 225 cam pers. We a re cu rre n tly a c c e p tin g applications fo r key adm inistra­ tiv e p o s itio n s a n d s p e c ia lty te a c h in g /c o a c h in g a re a s, these areas in clu d e a th le tics, tennis, co m p e titive swim m ing, gymnastics, w ater skiing, b o a t­ in g , w o o d w o rk in g , d a n c e , m usic, d ra m a , c re a tiv e arts, p o tte ry , rop e s a n d o u td o o r wilderness education, S everal D e p a rtm e n t H e a d a n d G roup C o-ordlnator posi­ tions need to be fille d fo r 1993. There are also openings on our k itc h e n a n d m a in te n a n c e s ta ff. O ur season runs fro m June 17toA ugust21. For m ore in fo rm a tio n a n d a fuH a p p lica tio n m anual, please c o n ta c t our w inter o ffice . D on't d e la y as our to p positions fill quickly. CAMP WEKEEU W inter O ffice 130S. M erkle Rd. Colum bus. OH 43209 tel. (614)235-3177 LIV E ENTERTAINM ENT Tues.-Sat. 9 pm-Close T o n ig h t . . . C om edy S tan d-U p (P atricia W ed . . . . . C arvin Jones B and T hurs , . . . W ishingstone Fri. . . . . . . Forrest Sm ith Band S a t . . . . . .O N E G ray) ¡§ ¡1 fSSÉ Êm m m ßm Apache PAPILLONS 1 2 5 0 E. A p ach e, Tem pe 8 9 4 -2 0 2 1 S t a t e P ress Page 17 Tuesday, February 9,1993 Classifieds ANNOUNCEMENTS HOMES FOR RENT COMPUTERS BEST BUDDIES mandatory first meet­ ing tonight! 7:30pm, MU Room 208FTurquoise. For more information call 967-8782. LARGE 5 bedroom house, washer, dry­ er, dishwasher, etc. N ew paint/carpet. $900/month. Apache/Rund. 4 37-1048. F O U R , 3 8 6 -S X 2 5 w ith hard d riv e , V G A co lo r m onitor, from $ 7 0 0 with mouse. Call 834-7773. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT AUTOMOBILES 2 BEDROOM , 2 bath condo, washer/ dryer, p o o l, upstairs bedroom s, 3-1/2 m iles from A S U , MCC. A cross from park, fishing, golf. $550.890-0736. Seized. 89 M ercedes...$200, 86 VW ... $50, 87 Mercedes...$100, 65 M u stangSSO. C hoose from thousands starting $50. Free information- 24 hour hot­ lin e ( 8 0 1 ) 3 7 9 - 2 9 2 9 . C o p y rig h t #AZ016910. D J . PRODUCTIONS D isc jockey service. Fun and interactive en terta in m en t. S p e c ia l: $ 1 2 5 /p e r 3 hours. 902-8120,784-7726. SOCCER DEVILS Inform ation al m eetin g W ed n esd a y , 2/10, 6:00pm. Location: SRC 2nd floor classroom. Questions: T J ., 892-1733. A sso cia te d P ress p h o to T-SHIRTS ETC. Grand opening. A ll new , w h o lesa le prices, students w el­ come! 325 South Gilbert, Mesa. liii. Erving, Walton among 8 new H all o f Fame selections B y T rudy T ynan A ssociated P ress SPR IN G FIE L D , M ass. — Ju liu s Erving, who took pro basketball to new heights, and Bill Walton, noted for his pinpoint passing, were among eight play­ ers elected today to the Basketball Hall of Fame. Joining them in the Hall at induction cerem onies May 10 will be NBA stars Walt Bellamy, Dan Issel, Dick McGuire and C alvin M urphy, S oviet O lym pic standout Ulyana Semyonova and UCLA and Olympic star Ann Meyers. The 7-foot Semyonova was nominated by a special com m ittee established to honor international greats. The Hall of Fame, which inducted its first women in 1985, also has a special women’s nomi­ nating committee. Walton, who led UCLA to two NCAA titles and played on NBA championship teams in Portland and Boston, and Erving were nominated in their first year of eligi­ bility. Both retired in 1987. Form er UCLA coach John Wooden had no doubts about two of the picks. “Strictly on the fundamentals, shoot­ ing, rebounding, inspiration and all that, I’d have to rate Walton over any o f the great centers that ever played the game,” said W ooden, the only man ever to be inducted into the Hall of Fame both as a player and a coach. “ A nnie was one who really got women’s basketball going,” Wooden said. “She was the first four-year women’s AllAmerica and the only woman who ever signed a professional contract with the NBA. She was a com plete player and great ballhandler.” Meyers held 12 o f 13 school records when she graduated and led UCLA to the 1978 AIA W cham pionship. She also played on the U.S. Olympic team that won . ; TW O B E D RO O M , tw o bath con d os. W asher, dryer, pool, near A SU , open­ ings for February, May. Hermosa Place, 966-0987. RENTAL SHARING Please help people with AIDS. ASU S tudent Health is sponsoring a canned food drive, to benefit people w ith AIDS. Canned goods w ill be donated to lo r» ! valley food banks. Drop your cans o ff a t S tudent H ealth o r The W ellness Center. 1 BEDROOM 1 block from A SU , fur­ nished, laundry, $235. Call Jacob 8445900 or pager 389-7571 1 BEDROOM, secluded, private patio, covered parking, laundry facility, p o d , dishw asher, s e lf clea n in g o v e n , very quiet. 968-8183. 2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, new appliances, 1 Mock from campus, starting at $400. February free. 75^-7625. 2 B L O C K S from A S U . 1 b ed room apartm ents. P o o l, laundry fa c ilitie s , parking, dishwasher, free basic cable. Sunrise Apartments, 1014 East Spence. N o pets. 968-6947. B E A U T IF U L L A R G E 1 and 2 b ed ­ room s. W alk to A S U . P o o l, laundry room. On East 8th Street between Rural and McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 9 68-5238. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, $375 3 bedroom, 2 bath available T aking reservations fo r A ugust m ove-in. 1123 E. Apache 968-6383 ■ Available HONDA ELITE scooter, excellent con­ dition, low m iles, red. $800/offer. 9668964, leave message. TRAVEL CHOYA BA Y, Rocky PoinL Cabins for Spring Break o r anytim e. C all to re­ serve yours. 968-8009. FEM ALE ROOM M ATE, clea n , nonsmoker, washer, dryer, swimming pool, fu rn ish e d . W alk to s c h o o l, $ 2 4 0 . 9 66-2360, leave message. LEARN ABOUT international business in Europe or Asia. Informational meet­ in g -to m o rro w - in R oom B A 1 3 0 at 3:00p.m. , LARGE 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. P o o l, ja c u z z i, tennis! A pache/R ural. $262. 373-1509,437-1048. ROUND TRIP ticket, Phoenix to LAX only $59 Leave 2/19,; 4:30p.m.- Return 2/21. Call 784-8125. - MALE/FEMALE, SHARE 2 bedroom, 2 bath, c lo s e to M ill/Sd u th ern . C a ll (le a v e m essa g e), 7 8 4 -1 5 7 9 . $ 1 9 7.50 plus 1/2 utilities. VISIT SIX Caribbean countries during 1 9 9 3 first sum m er se s sio n , earn. 1-6 ASU credits. Department o f Recreation M a n a g em en t and T o u rism . C a ll 9 6 5 -4 6 3 0 for information packet. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $10 PER HOUR S ettin g appointm ents fo r free health GRAD STUDENT: Quiet, clean room, M cC lin tock /S pu th ern . $ 2 2 5 /iiio n th , part utilities. B ik e to A SU . 897-1440. services. N o selling. Call 730-5141. HOMES FOR SALE $ 1 0 0 0 /W eek , ro o m , board, a irfa re. Fishing, education, o il, A more. A laskemp. Guarantee: Secure Alaskan job or 100% refund. 80-page guide, $ 9 .9 5 + $ 2 shipping/handling. A laskem p, Box 1236-FX, Corvallis, OR 97339. EXCELLENT 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 2 car garage, fen ced yard, p o o l, near A SU . 1038 Bluebell, $74,9 0 0 cash 9653330, evenings 968-3881. NEAR A SU , close to Alameda Estates/4 b ed ro o m , 2 bath, 2 4 0 0 squ are f e e t / p o o l/ fireplace/ large lo t/ im m aculate/ $ 1 3 4 ,9 0 0 / M ike M endoza, R ealty Ex­ ecutives, 893-2888. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE 3 BED RO O M , 3 bath co n d o . Q u ests V ida, assum able loan, d o s e to A S U . Call 966-1268» Russ. N O DOW N- trice over mortgage, $700 per m onth. 3 bedroom , 2 bath condo. A ir con d itio n in g , d ish w ash er, w ash er/dryer, p o o l, tennis. (7 1 4 )4 9 9 -4 0 6 5 or 967-4908. M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE ATTACK ALARMS! A must for all students. Protect your­ s e lf , p ull th e pin! Order to d a y , 8 5 2 8 5 6 2 -Quorum, Sean. RAYBAN SUNGLASSES straight from d istrib u to r..L o w est p rices in v a lley ! Guaranteed!!! Hurry!! 259-4610. BOOKS AM EiUCANA ENCYCLOPEDIA, new 3 0 volume set, only $ 8 3 0 (retail usually $1400). 9 6 8 4 7 5 4 . M U ST SELL- 2 black futon cou ch es, g ood condition, $75/each; Black Tiecbline entertainment unit, $20Qfoffer. 2736482. SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, en terta in m en t c e n ter , d resser. 3 5 2 7249. TRAVEL ALASKA JOBS! AN EASY JOB We're new! We're innovative! W e need more people! Visit businesses to obtain fax numbers for unique fax-based pub­ lication. N o sales- n o problem! $S/hour p lu s g en erous b o n u ses based on fa x numbers collected. Extremely flexib le daytime hours. Car required. Call 9529 5 0 0 M onday-Friday fo r inform ation or appointment. ANSW ERING SERVICE: A ll day Sat­ urday. T elephone and typing experi­ e n ce required. Scottsdale, Jack 9 9 0 7371 ' . V B U FFA L O E X C H A N G E now hiring for past time positions. Looking for en­ ergetic, fashion-m inded hard-working individual. Must enjoy working with die public. Apply 10am-5pm Monday-Saturday at 724 East Glendale. C A L IF O R N IA -B A S E D IN T E R N A ­ TIO N A L com pany now offering paid sales internship now through 2 -15-93. $500-$1000/m on th part-tim e. Inquire about PSP, Inc., Career D evelopm ent Cfemqrtoday! C R U IS E S H IP S n o w h irin g - earn $2000+/month + world travel (Hawaii, M exico, the Caribbean, etc.) Holiday, summer and career employment avail­ able. N o experience necessary. For em ­ p loym en t program ca ll I -(2 0 6 )-6 3 4 0468, extension C 5 9 18. CUSTOM ER SERVICE FURNITURE LARGEST 2 bdrm, 2 bath 1987 HONDA B ite 80cc motorscooter, fu lly automatic, super mint condition. M ust see, m ust sa crifice, $ 7 5 0 . 4 9 3 0457. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost p laces U S A .A ls o w orldw ide- I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. G O O D L O C A L E . C o ntem porary hom e. A m enities include: p ool, cable, satellite, washer/dryer, fireplace, $275 phis utilities, 820-2875. APARTMENTS M OTORCYCLES FEMALE NONSMOKER to share three bedroom house; Pets okay. B ig back yard. $280 plus utilities. Walk to school. $150 deposit. Call 967-1848. ROOM S FOR RENT APACHE TERRACE ■ <. 111 > State PreM z o o Classifieds 3 _ir9' (C J ff i §nu That’s the ticket! Omm m < RENT OR SALE 2 bedroom master suite condo in Questa Vida. Near pools and recreation areas. Full size washer/dryer, microwave, ceil­ in g fa n s, n ew carpet, fir ep la ce, im ­ maculate. Open house daily. Joe, 985- Calvin Murphy speaks with reporters at the Summit Arena in Houston Monday during a press conference announcing his selection to the NBA Hall of Fame. Murphy and seven other players w ere selected, including Philadelphia 76ers legend-Julius Erving and Bill W alton. a silver medal in 1976 — the gold was won by the Semenova-led Soviet team — and was the first MVP of the Women’s Professional League. A fter playing two years at Massachusetts, Erving began a 16-year pro career with the Virginia Squires of the . American Basketball Association in 1971. He was the league’s most valuable player in 1974 and 1976 when he led the New York Nets to the ABA championship. In 1976, Erving, one of three players in pro basketball history to score more than 30,000 career points, jo in ed the Philadelphia 76ers. An 11-time NBA AllStar, he was named the league’s most valuable player in 1981 and led the 76ers to the 1983 NBA championship. His athleticism , leaping ability and acrobatic slam dunks made Erving one of the game’s outstanding attractions. Walton first attracted national attention at UCLA, where his Bruins’ teams com­ piled an 86-4 record. Perhaps his best col­ lege performances was in the 1973 NCAA final against Memphis State, when he made 21 of 22 field-goal attempts. Nagging injuries slowed his 10-year professional career with the Trail Blazers, C lippers and C eltics. But in 1977, he helped the Trail Blazers win the NBA championship and was named the league’s most valuable player in 1978. In 1986, he received the NBA’s Sixth Man Award for coming off the bench to help the Celtics win the NBA title. Walton was not only known for his scoring but his accurate outlet passes that led to easy fast break baskets. Bellamy, a 1961 graduate of Indiana and member of the 1960 U.S. Olympic team, scored 20,941 points and had 14,241 rebounds over a 14-year pro career with Chicago, New York, Detroit, Atlanta and New Orleans. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, air, (fishw ash er, w ash er, dryer, p o o l, ten n is, near A SU , $800. (714)499-4065, 9674908 CHEAP! FB1/U.S. $1500 part tíme, $3500 hill time. A per­ fect match! W e need help A you need $$$. W e ll train. Start now ! Call 9972 8 7 9 o r4 9 8 -1091. DRU M M ER W A NTED : A lternative, original sound. Our goal is to play in bars. W e have connections. Please con­ tact D ave at 894-2539. . TRAVEL STU D EN T TRA V EL 910 E. Lemon #2 966-8704 ! i 1800777 0112 S T A TRAVEi J the world's largest student « youth travel organization. | $2.95 22 words - $3.15 4$epl 23 W-Oct:-22) ' P rob lem s rela tin g to p aren tin g may may reach a turning point m romance. Watch details on the 18 words - $2.35 ‘ 19 words - $2.55 2 0 words - $2.75 23 words - $3.35 24 words - $3.55 25 words - $3/75 9 2 1 -9 2 2 2 Mailing address: State Press Classifieds, ASU, Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 | For Tuesday, February 9, 1993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) r You m ay be asked to assume a respon­ s ib ility in c o n n e c tio n w ith a group activity. A friendship reaches a critical juncture. Meet partners halfway tonighL TA U R U S (Apr. 20 to May 20) You reach a turning point in your career today. A solution is found for a long sta n d in g p ro b lem . S o m e s e e k n ew e m p lo y m e n t n ow or ta k e on extra responsibilities. GEMINI (M ay 21 to June 20) S tudents m ake d ecisio n s concerning their academ ic future. Travel may be for business reasons. M oodiness could affect dealings with a d o s e tie. Others are sensitive now. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) An old bill may come due now. Career duties may interfere with time you had p la n n ed to sp e n d w ith th e fa m ily . M onies ow ed to you are paid now. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Y on w ill make an important d ecision today about a relationship. Shopping for the hom e is favored now , but getting yoapr view s across to others may be dif­ ficult VIRGO (A ug. 23 to Sept 22) Im portant d e c is io n s are m ad e n ow r e g a r d in g j o b in te r e s ts . Y o u m ay am om e additional duties today. Guard ig iin n extravagant spending tonight. LIBRA , job. Cooperate with close ties tonight. SCORPIO (O c t 23 to Nov. 21) The care o f an elderly relative may be a concern today. Stay on top o f household repairs. Social life goes best early in die*' day. You are in a retiring mood tonight. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec, 21) Behind-the-scene moves are favored in business. You may sign up for a course o f study now. A romantic interest could be temperamental tonight. CAPRICORN (Dec, 2 2 fo Jan, 19) Keep in touch with a friend who lives afqr. Monies due you may arrive now or y o u c o u ld m eet w ith n ew w a y s to increase income. A family member may be touchy. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2 0 to Feb. 18) You may have recently been experienc­ ing an identity crisis. Today you emerge with a new sense o f who you are ahd a greater sense o f personal direction. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) An inner restriction seem s lifted now. Self-doubt gives w ay to self awareness. G uard a g a in st ex tra v a g a n ce th is evening. Partners are supportive. YOU BORN TODAY naturally gravi­ tate to public service. You dislike being in a subordinate position and do best in a position o f leadership. You are inde­ pendent, unconventional an d perhaps temperamental. You have a-good intu­ ition and you inarch to the beat o f your ow n drum. You are often found in an artistic or professional career. Birthdate o f:; M ia Farrow, actress; B ill V eeck , baseball team owner; and Dean Rusk, government official. €>1993 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. |J| ...and use this one for your best buddy! v State Press V alentine O rd er F o rm v Name. — — ------- ------ — — _ — _ •Phone _------------- :— _ City/St/Zip-___________________ Address. Valentine Section will run Friday, February 12 Rates: 15 words or less $1.75 200 each additional word • No abbreviations, bolding or centering • Please write clearly ! • ONE WORD PER LINE Deadline: February 9 at Noon Mail to the address below, or bring to the Basement of Matthews Center (Room 46H) Method of Payment □ Cash Q Check (include driver's license #) □ Visa/MasterCard/American Express ($6 min) Name on Card Card No. . Exp. date Start vour ad here: 15 words - $1.75 I I 16 words - $1.95 17 words -$ 2 .1 5 18 words - $2.35 19 words $2.55 2 0 words - $2.75 21 words - $2.95 22 words $3.15 23 words - $3.35 24 words - $3.55 25 words - $3.75 Mailing address- S/qfe Press Classifieds, ASU/Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 1 S ta te P ress Tuesday, February 9, 1993 Page 2 0 ASU INTERNATIONAL STUDY 1 PROGRAMS GENERAL INFORMATION MEETING WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2: M E M O R IA L U N IO N P IN A L R O O M ( 2 1 5 ) # km s '€% • 16 hours o f elem en tary and in term ed iate language courses • s a tisfie s A SU lan gu ag e requirem ent z O . Portugal, France, Mexico AfsenUns (Buenos Aires), C h fle( France (O rleans, Nancy, MontpeMer, Pau), Italy (L’Aquila), £ Sweden (Uppsala), Austria (Innsbruck, Vienna),Germany (Luneburg), Japan (To Switzerland (Lausanne), Belgium (Antw Israel (Tel A viv, Haifa), AuM nHa (Townsville M elbourne Perth, Sydney W ollongong) lai"- ,L giano {ntrmingnam, r o w Colchas tsr, Canterbury, Manchester, London, Coventry While participating in overseas programs, ASU students: •are enrolled at ASU for "IPO 495", a category that designates participation in an international study program •receive ASU resident credit for the courses completed on the program, not transfer credit •can use most financial aid to pay program costs For m f li information, contact: OFFICE OF OTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS MOEUR BUILDING 124 (602) 965-5965