A RI ZONA STATE U NI V ERS ITY ©Copyright, StatePress, 1993 Tempe, Arizona T h u rsd ay, A p ril 2 9 ,1 9 9 3 A n Ind ep en d en t M orning D ally V o i. 77 N o . 68 Regent Eddie Basha to run for governor Pole position ’9 4 D e m o c ra tic c an d id a cy c o n firm e d B y T a m m y M esa -S ierra S t a te P ress Arizona Board of Regents member Eddie Basha on Wednesday confirmed his anticipat­ ed bid for the Democratic candidacy in the 1994 A rizona gubernatorial election. “I have decided that I am going to ru n ,” Basha said. “I will offi­ cially announce it at the end of May.” Basha, who holds an appointed regent position on the ABOR B a s h a u n til January 1998, said education will play key role on his elec-' tion platform. ‘‘Education will be cornerstone of my campaign,” Basha said. Basha said that he has seen a decline in'the quality of education in Arizona since serving on the ABOR, and hopes to strive for its reform on all levels, if elected. He added that the economic condition of the state is partially a result of suffering edu­ cation. R ecent polls have not favored Basha against other possible Democratic contenders, which include Phoenix Mayor Paul Johnson and,former Phoenix Mayor Terry Goddard. But the polls in d icate each o f the three Democratic possibilities, including Basha, is ahead of Gov. Fife Symington in public opin­ ion percentage points. Basha, who is most well known for his family-owned supermaiket chain, said he has no concern for the polls because few people T urn to Basha, page 10. Building’s reverberations may not stop, expert says Exhaust system problem proved to be groundless _ By C h r is D riscoll S t a t e P ress Although vibrations rattling ASU’s new G old w ater C enter fo r Science and Engineering have abated, no one will know whether the problem is really solved until next winter-, a University air conditioning expert said Wednesday. Meanwhile, a warning by the architect’s air Conditioning consultant that a safety prob­ lem had developed in the building's exhaust system was also revealed to be unfounded by Thomas F. Corwin, ASU supervisor of build­ ing automation and controls. “The guy Who said this was-wrong. He didn’t know what he was talking about. D ie problem didn’t exist,” Corwin said. “It was a figment of somebody's imagination. The “warning,” reported in Wednesday’s issue of the State Press, was delivered by Bob Harris of Baltes/Valentino Associates, an air handling systems consultant hired by the building’s architect. In an April 8 meeting between ASU offi­ cials and representatives of Anshen + Allen, the building’s architect, along with the archi­ tect’s consultants and subcontractors’ repre­ sentatives, Harris said the preliminary balanc­ ing report indicated that exhaust air flows at the fume hoods were being controlled to a “zero” a ir flow setting, when the sash is closed. A fume hood is part of exhaust systems in labs meant to eliminate hazardous air. A zero air flow would open the possibility that toxic fumes could linger in laboratories, posing a health threat to occupants. “A 10 percent minimum exhaust air flow must be maintained at all times at the fume hoods,” said the meeting ,notes as reported by Anshen + Allen. “Bob also noted that the minimum air flow alarms were not sounding,” The meeting notes concluded: “ASU Was T urn to B uilding , page Brian Fitzgerald/State Press When Phoenix resident Charles W inters made a U-turn oh Apache Bhrd. between the Student Recreation Complex and Ocotillo Hall, he didn’t anticipate getting up close and personal with this power line pole. At approximately 10:15 p,m . Tuesday, W inters mis­ judged the jradiuf of his 1979 Chrysler Cordova’s wheelbase and brought down poles on both side8‘ df Apache Blvd., bringing down power lines and a streetlig ht W inters was alone in the car and nobody was injured, although live power lines lay across the path of oncoming vehicles for about 30 minutes. 10. Clintons 1st 100 days draw criticism, optimism Poll reports 33% approval; cam pus leaders supportive B y T am m y M esa -S ierra S t a te P ress With today marking his 100th day in office, President Bill Clinton has not gone without criticism over what some call waffling on his campaign promises, but many ASU students still have high hopes that he can deliver on his message of change. A recent Rocky Mountain poll revealed that 33 percent of those surveyed approve of Clinton’s performance and 32 per­ cent think he has done a fair job, while 23 percent disapprove of his decisions and 12 percent are undecided. IN S ID E STA TE PRESS Classifieds........ ........... .21 Comics................. .... ....... 18 Crossword............. ............ ..6 ..... ........4 ......... .19 World/Nation.... ..... ........... .3 Today's Weather: Sum y. High 92. Low 68. At ASU, there have been no official polls of students, but many campus leaders have expressed positive opinions of Clinton and the way he is handling his agenda. Peter McDonough, an ASU political science professor, said he is not surprised that many young people still hold Clinton in a high regard, especially in light o f the group’s increased involvement in the 1992 election as opposed to minimal involvement in past elections. “I think it’s not really unusual because much of Clinton’s program relies on investment in education,” McDonough said. “It doesn’t surprise me that student leaders would want to have someone in office that can help them get through school,” Among other items addressed during Clinton’s first 100 days was a redressing of his original goals aimed at refining student financial assistance. Clinton opted to use an experi­ mental group to try out his proposed system of repaying stu­ State Press Magazine Laurie Notaro bids farewell to spilling her guts to 40,000 strangers each week. Page 11 Special Report dent loans through community service. Campus Republicans President Ramona Apodaca said she is a die-hard Republican and doesn’t agree with much of what she calls “Clinton’s rhetoric.” But Apodaca said she applauds the President’s efforts to help ensure universal access to higher education. However, Apodaca said there have been many broken promises and she fears Clinton may give up on students and move on to advance other, more controversial items on his agenda. On his second day in office, Clinton signed an executive o rd er th at rem oved abortion bans put in place b y his Republican predecessor. Clinton’s actions coincided with the 20th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court decision that T urn to C linton , Sports An in-depth examination ,of free trade on the Arizona/Mexico border. Does rampant pollution there bode poorly fix the upcoming NAFTA trade agreement? F ree T rape Toxic After 17 years at the helm of the ASU archesy program, Sheri Rhodes is nearing the end of her ASU career as her team winds up its last season ever. Page 12 A l le y Page 19 o n page 10. Page 2 Thursday, April 2 9,1993 S t a t e P ress Regents propose stricter residency requirements port. She said ABOR wants out-of-state stu­ ABOR President Andy Hurwitz said the affect^ whether some students applied for resi­ dents to pay their fair share of tuition. body’s motive behind strengthening classifica­ dent status. “There is such a huge differential out there tion requirements is to benefit in-state students “I think we would see a combination of and we are losing a lot of money (from stu­ and to decrease the amount of students who reactions,” Wilcox said. She said some stu­ dents gaining in-state residency),” Pfister said. come from another state and receive residency dents might go part-time if they are unable to Last year, ABOR asked administration classification. attain residency and others may steer clear of from Arizona’s three universities to analyze “I’d be kidding you if I didn’t tell you a coming to Arizona. B y K ate D eely and intensify their current residency classifica­ number of regents will hope that this will Wilcox said the criteria for independent S tate P ress tion requirements and present them to the result in fewer students being classified as in­ support has been strengthened as far as word­ A rizona Board o f board. At their last meeting, the regents dis­ state,” Hurwitz said. ing in the current proposals. Regents members have cussed the proposals and decided they wanted He said the regents asked the universities to ~“We hope it will result in students having a suggested making resi­ even stricter requirements. reevaluate the proposals and make them more better understanding o f what is expected of dency classification cri­ Pfister said when the regents discussed the specific. He said the board members would teria even more diffi­ proposal, there was a variety of different opin­ like students to prove they are paying their them,” Wilcox said. cu lt than previously Hurwitz said as far as increasing the 12ions among the regents, creating a need to own health insurance and auto insurance in proposed and will ask month residency requirement, he hopes ABOR reevaluate the proposals. order to gain residency. university officials to “There was a great deal of discussion that Bonnie Wicox, ASU assistant registrar, said will reach a decision soon as to whether it will comment on the recom­ ensued a variety of different discussions,” increasing the residency length requirement is be asking the Legislature to discuss the matter. mended changes. H u r w it z Pfister said. Pfister said discussions are back at the uni­ something the Legislature must decide on. She Regents spokes­ The recommended proposals included said currently it is state law that students must versity level. She said administration is dis­ woman Suzanne Pfister said the regents are1 strengthening criteria such as the continuous obtain domicile for 12 months, so increasing cussing what else can be changed in the asking for the possibility of increasing the 12- 12-month residency requirement, enforcing that length is something neither the universities requirements and how thé changes will impact month residency requirement and strengthen­ application deadlines and ensuring that resi­ nor ABOR can decitle. the schools. She added that they hope to reach ing the criteria for proving independent sup­ dent applicants can support themselves. The residency changes would probably a decision during the summer. G roups spokeswoman wants all non-residents to pay their fair share T oday The Today section is a daily calendar o f évents printed on a space-available basis as a service to the ASU community. Campus clubs and organizations can subm it written entries to the State Press, located in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries m ust contain the fu ll club o r organization name, description o f event, date, time and location (including its fu ll address). They are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity and will not be taken over the phone. Incom plete o r illegible entries w ill be discarded. Deadline for the entries is noon the pre vious business day. , M eetings Alcoholics Anonym ous: closed meeting, noon, All Saints' Newman Catholic Center, 230 Ë. University Drive. N arcotics Anonym ous: open meetings, noon and 5:30 p.m., Community Christian Church, 1701S . College Ave. Cam pus Libertarians: open meeting, 1 p.m., MU Gold Room 203. MU A ctivities Board H im Com m ittee: open meeting, 2 p.m., MU Santa Cruz Room. Students fo r Life: open meeting, 3 p.m., MU Yavapai Room. Students o f O bjectivism : open meeting, 6 p.m., MU Cochise Room 212. M iscellaneous B aptist Student Union: open service/complimentary lunch, noon, Baptist Student Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave. M ovim iento Estudiantil Chicano d e Aztlan (M EChA): open testimonial service honoring C esar Chavez, 12:15 p.m.. Danforth Chapel. MU A ctivities Board C ulture and A rts Com m ittee: open per­ formance, ASU Chamber Orchestra, 12:30 p.m., MU Programming Lounge. Am erican M arketing A ssociation: open lecture, Doug Blouin of the IBM/OS2 Fiesta Bowl on “Sports Marketing,” 4:15 p.m., MU Pima Room. Asian Students A ssociation: open officer elections, 5 p.m., MU La Paz Room 223. Canterbury-Episcopal Cam pus M inistry: open dinner/Eucharist, 6 p.m., St. Augustine’s Episcopal Parish, 1735 S. College Ave. National Academ y o f Television A rts and Sciences: open career night seminar, 7:30 p.m., MU Ventana Room. Cam pus Crusade fo r C hrist: open “Thursday Night Live” social/Bible study, 7:30 p.m,, Physical Sciences Building HWing Room 150. Live it up! Read th e State Press Magazine every Thursday. A HAWGS Tempe's Wildest Karaoke after the games! W orld/Nation S t a t e P ress Thursday, April 29.1 9 9 3 Page 3 Pentagon opens com bat aviation to w om en A sso c ia te d P ress W ASHINGTON — In a revolutionary change for the U.S. military, Defense Secretary Les Aspin ordered the service chiefs Wednesday to drop restrictions on women flying combat missions and serving aboard most Navy warships. ‘T h e steps we are taking today are historic,” Aspin said at a news conference attended by the chiefs o f the Air Force, Army, Navy and Marine Coips. The policy change means that within a year, dozens Of women could be flying Navy and Air Force fighter jets and piloting the Army’s most lethal attack choppers. Permitting women to serve aboard warships will require con? gressional action. Aspin said he had instructed Adm. Frank Kelso, the chief of naval operations, to prepare the groundwork for a leg­ islative proposal to end this prohibition. “The Navy is ready to go," Kelso said. The defense secretary also told the services to provide justifi­ cation if they want to put any battlefield role, including ground combat units, off limits to women. Aspin said he also asked the Marine Corps and the Army to study ways o f finding jobs for women in field artillery and air defense combat units. Infantry, armor and cavalry would remain o ff limits to women, the officials said. “D irect c o m b a t... is a role we should (limit) to men,” said Gen; Carl Mundy, the Marine Corps commandant. Gen. Gordon Sullivan, the Army chief o f staff, said women would begin training for combat missions in Apache and Cobra attack helicopters “almost immediately.” The changes mean thousands o f jobs and prestige positions once open only to men -— and required for advancement and pro­ motion to the highest ranks o f the services — will now be open to women. In the coming weeks, the A ir Force is prepared to put its first fem ale pilot into training to fly its F -15 Eagle fighter-bomber, with a half-dozen to follow, Air Force officials said Tuesday. Female Navy-rtístructors who fly the EA-6 Prowler electronic warfiu'e-jgts'fould be among the first to be deployed aboard air­ craft carriers, Navy officials said, while others will enter special­ ized courses to command F /A -18 Hornet strike-fighters or F-14 Tomcats. About one-third o f the Army’s 300 female helicopter pilots are expected to volunteer for attack pilot training in the service’s most lethal chopper, the Apache, Army officials said Wednesday. Gen. Gordon Sullivan, the Army’s chief o f staff, said the new policy will open more fhan 6,000 additional Officer, warrant offi­ cer and enlisted positions to women, since crew, mechanic and other support jobs will also be available. “In the case o f the Army, this is not about women in combat. Today, women in the U.S. Army participate in combat,” Sullivan said. “W hat we are doing today is Opening opportunities for women to compete, serve and advance.” The four-star general said the Army has 29 female battalion com m anders, six fem ale brigade comm anders and five female general officers, numbers that are sure to increase substantially. “It’s taken us 15 years — just like it does with male officers -A to develop these women and I am proud to see them beginning to take their place alongside their counterparts in the leadership of T urn to W omen , page 9. Navy Lt. Susan Still of Augusta, Ga., leaves her A4 fighter at Andrews A ir FOrcè Base in M aryland W ednesday. Defense Secretary Les Aspin ordered the service chiefs to drop restric­ tions on women flying combat missions and serving aboard most Navy warships. Military brass demands Bosnia pacification plan A sso cia ted P ress Associated Press A Bosnian soldier, ready to go to the front line, wipes away his m other’s tears in front o f a Muslim gravestone near Ttizla Wednesday. SARAJEVO, B osnia-H erzegovina — Facing threats of Serb retaliation against their peacekeepers, W estern m ilitary brass on Wednesday demanded a strategy be devised to pacify B osnia before considering air strikes. A Bosnian Serb commander, apparently playing on fears that military intervention would put UN peacekeepers at risk, sum­ moned a British army officer and warned him that British troops would be shelled immedi­ ately if NATO bombs Bosnian Serb positions. While politicians spoke increasingly of using air strikes to try to force the Serbs to settle a war that has left more than 134,000 people dead and missing, military officers pressed them to focus on long-term strategy. “We need to have the clearest guidance on what (the action) is seeking to achieve,” B ritish F ield M arshal Richard V incent, NATO’s top military officer, said after an alliance meeting in Brussels. The defense minister of France, which has the largest contingent of soldiers in Bosnia, was even stronger in demanding a coherent political policy. Francois L eotard told the N ational Assembly that France might withdraw its sol' diers unless the UN mission in Bosnia Was better defined. “If these questions aren’t resolved, we will withdraw all or part of our forces,” Leotard said. In Washington, President Clinton has been holding talks with advisers and Congressional leaders on a tougher new line toward the Bosnian conflict, which has frustrated every international effort to halt it. C linton said he was pleased by the remarks of Russian President Boris Yeltsin opposing the Serbs. “He’s not at all happy about the continua­ tion of Serbian aggression and the refusal to negotiate in good faith to fry to settle this war and stop the ethnic cleansing, so 1 feel pretty good about that,” Clinton sgid. Bosnian Serbs, Who control 70 percent of the republic, on Monday rejected a peace plan by Lord Owen of the European Community and Cyrus Vance o f the United Nations to give them 43 percent of the republic. Among the reasons Serbs oppose the plan T urn to Bosnians, page 9. Hard-line Communist opposition attacks Yeltsin M O SC O W — B oris Y eltsin’s opponents went on the attack W ednesday to undermine his referendum victory, accusing the president of making a secret deal with the United States to punish Serbia. Hard-line lawmakers also created a special commission to investigate allegations of corruption within the Yeltsin admin­ istration, and they attacked his plan to convert state industries to private ownership. Hie sniping confirmed predictions that Sunday’s referen­ dum would not end Russia’s power Struggle, but only intensify it — at least until Yeltsin can push through a new constitution. Fifiy-eight percent of those voting expressed confidence in Yeltsin and 53 percent endorsed his painful economic reforms. But questions asking whether Russia should hold early presi­ dential or parliamentary elections fell short of the high margin needed for passage. As a result, the referendum has not quieted the opposition. Hard-line lawmakers call the results “an inconclusive opinion poll” and are trying to discredit both the voting and the victor. Y e ltsin ’s arch -riv al, parliam en t speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, told the Supreme Soviet legislature Wednesday that Yeltsin might have made a secret deal on Yugoslavia with President Clinton at their April 3-4 summit in Canada. “There is plenty of information that there was an agreement that Moscow will sanction anti-Serb actions,” Khasbulatov said. “This is very alarming.” ^ Hard-liners were enraged Tuesday when Yeltsin warned that Russia would not protect militant Serbs who Mock peace efforts in the former Yugoslavia. Russian nationalists accuse Yeltsin of kowtowing to the West and selling out the Serbs, who are fellow Slavs and Orthodox Christians. Russian President Boris Yeltsin congratulates members of the Presidential Council in Moscow W ednesday for s victroy in Sundays referendum. Yeltsin's opponents tried to undermine his victory, accusing the Present o f making a seceret deal with the United States to punish Serbia. Russia continues to oppose military intervention against Serb forces, but Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev said in an interview published Wednesday that he regretted Russia’s decision to delay tougher UN sanctions until this week, “The leaders of the Bosnian Serbs and the national-patriot­ ic forces in Belgrade (Yugoslavia) never intended to use the three-month reprieve which we won for them to hold serious negotiations,” he told the newspaper Izvestia. Yeltsin’s opponents include die-hard Communists, nation­ alists and industrialists who disagree among themselves but are united in their desire to slow the president’s free-market reforms. Their most prominent leaders are Khasbulatov, who has sought to increase the parliament’s power at the expense of the president, and Vice President Alexander Rutskoi, who says he wants Yeltsin’s job. On the eve of the referendum, Rutskoi accused the Yeltsin administration of corruption. He gave few details but claimed to have “ 11 suitcases” full of documents to prove his charges. On Wednesday, the standing Supreme Soviet legislature voted 177-1 to create a special panel of six prosecutors with sweeping powers to summon documents and demand testimo­ ny about the alleged abuses. “The number of cases of corruption, economic wrongdoing and abuse of office is growing each day,” Rutskoi told the lawmakers. As before, however, Rutskoi stopped short of accusing Yeltsin himself of corruption. The closest he came was to say that $3 billion worth of “strategic materials and rare earth met­ als” had been exported illegally from Yekaterinburg, Yeltsin’s hometown and political stronghold in Siberia. Opinion P a g;e 4 Thursday, April 2 9,1993 S t a t e P ress State P ress ditorial & C lin to n ’s vision is clear For better or worse, today m arks President Bill Clinton’s first 100 days in office. O ver a period w hen m ost p eo p le’s greatest accom ­ p lis h m e n t has b e e n to fin is h th e ir ta x e s , President Clinton has initiated some profound changes in our society. He has also encour­ aged and embraced the bad spending habits o f the previous administration. Critics o f the 100-day benchm ark m ention th a t n o th in g o f any w o rth can b e a c co m ­ plished in that short o f a period. However, it does give the nation an idea o f how the presi­ dent will conduct the rest of. his term. It’s also a good time to gauge what the president con­ siders to be highest on his agenda. W hat has Clinton accom plished, and what did Voters expect? B ack in N ovem ber, there w ere fo u r big issues: the economy, the national debt, abor­ tion and health care. C lin to n ’s jo b s package was his tribute to . A m erica’s concern for the economy. Clinton hoped to ju m p -sta rt the co u n try by setting a s id e $ 1 6 b illio n to fu n d in f r a s tr u c tu r e improvements. Unfortunately, C lin to n ’s pro­ p o sa l c la s h e d w ith th e se c o n d b ig issu e , deficit spending. Republicans, suddenly taken with the idea of spending only the money they have, managed to kill C linton’s package. It’s unfortunate that R epublicans in the Senate w e re n ’t th is h ig h m in d e d th ro u g h o u t the Reagan and Bush era. N onetheless, C linton has shown him self to be the big spender that Republicans warned us about — barely cut­ ting government spending while proposing the largest tax hike in history. H is vision w ill probably not lead to eliminating the deficit. Clinton’s strengths lie in other areas. In the Social realm, he has scored a num ber o f points with voters. He has lifted George Bush’s gag rule and proposed lifting the ban on gays in the m ilitary. W hile the latte r m ove was so controversial that it caused Clinton to falter, he m ade the first critical step in a m ove for equal rights for gay and lesbian Americans. C linton has show n a sim ilar seriousness about health care. W hile thé details o f his, or more appropriately Hillary’s, proposal are still unclear, one thing is certain. T here w ill be drastic changes in Am erica’s health care and insurance industries. O verall, C linton has tested the w ater and is n ’t h e s ita n t to ju m p in w ith th e iss u e s . Although he is having problems delivering the moon he prom ised in Novem ber, he is eager to ta c k le th e p ro b le m s A m e ric a fa c e s . H o p e fu lly he w ill c o n tin u e h is h a n d s on approach to governm ent while backing off on spending that Am erica can’t afford. s STATE PRESS A l i l i I ZV L I n President falls short on| promises ■ W hat a sem ester this spring has been. How convenient that the end of one more year o f our fHRIS collective academic toil roughly STROUD coincides with President Clinton’s first 100 days in office. W ith some renewed time soon on our hands, perhaps we could look objectively back on our presi­ dent’s performance. During the campaign, unfortu­ nately for Clinton, the media vir­ tually portrayed him as the second coming of Christ; the ubermensch who w as chosen to lead th is nation out of its economic and social doldrums. This may have caused the nation to expect too much, too soon from the man at die top of the executive branch. Speed has never been a characteristic of the federal behe­ moth, regardless of who’s the president. Republicans, o f course, have held the necessary press conferences to gleefully announce the Clinton is washed up, a failure and a “tax-andspend” liberal of the old school. This seems somewhat hypocritical for the Republicans, a fter all, th e ir last nom inee fo r p resid en t w as “M r. Regulation” himself. The GOP, especially those members with presidential aspirations, need to hold their tongues, though, Early condemnation of the president will only serve to alienate even more of their already dwindled voter pool. Quite simply, the jury is still out on Bill Clinton. Sure, his administrations has had some guffaws and public relations flaps, but whose recent administration hasn’t in this age of madia over-analyzing and hyper-simplicity? The polls have all recently been released by the various networks and newspa­ pers, and as always, they mean absolutely nothing, except that maybe media questions are usually too vague, too simple or both. No self-respecting citizen of this nation should be quick in condemning the new president. In foreign policy, he has made some moves to show him worthy of respect. Finally, he is publicly considering taking action in Bosnia; perhaps that recent visit of his to the new Holocaust memorial in Washington stirred his conscience. Any solution he wants, though, must include the European Community; after all, Bosnia is their backyard horror. Pitiful as it may be for the United States to have to lead the European Community in dealing with their own problem, it is in the dis­ integrating former Yugoslavia that Clinton can secure a leader­ ship role, as well as renewed respect for the United States. Back home, things have been somewhat bleak, though not especially so. Zoe Baird was a fiasco, but who remembers Zoe Baird? Waco was, in a nutshell, a truly regretful and tragic sit­ uation for all involved. Congress is now holding the obligato­ ry hearings on this new public interest. It seems that they want to prove to the country that they are speedy in dealing with national problems. Some Justice Department officials are certain to be politically skewered before Congress, but Clinton shouldn’t lose any sleep over these hearings, which resemble a circus more than an organi­ zation of political professionals. Nevertheless, the more time this administration puts between itself and that hell in Texas the better. The economy, in spite o f suggestions from every selfappointed economist with supposed answers for all, has been a tough beast to conquer. The ill-fated “sin” tax was a genuinely bright idea, one of few to emanate from the dim intellectual light which is the president’s budget office. Unfortunately, it seems to have been fprgotten; I guess the tobacco conglomer­ ates raised some hell and employed some clever lobbyists. Perhaps, though, after all of this wrangling and filibuster­ ing in Washington our leaders will finally realize that they have little control over the economy, and that thankfully, the nation m oves along w ithout m isguided and m isplaced Washington direction. Our local governments, as deftly proven by our governor, can be filled with incompetence, as well. Witness the recent tuition hike and the Indian gambling fiasco here in Arizona. I only hope that all of us can afford to return to this institu­ tion which always manages to remind us o f our precarious niche in this world. Some of us may not graduate because of this undue financial strain, and this is truly a tragedy. Our futures, it seems, are in the hands of men and women who care little about our own financial problems, and who seem to forget about their social responsibilities in a democratic nation. Perhaps when we inherent this country, we’ll forgive them for their narrow scope and limited vision. KRIS MAYES, Editor EHREN SCHWIEBERT, Managing Editor KEN BROW N. . ...................... . . S. TALBOTT SMITH .............................. DAN ZEIGER.... ....................................... KEN COLLINS.................. .................. DARRYL WEBB....................................... MICHELLE CONWAY............................ ..Asst. Photo Editor JAKE BATSELL A BRIAN CHARLES.,..Co-Sports Editors ANGELA BENOCHE............................. LAURIE NOTARO ..........Magazine Editor JASON OWSLEY...............................Asst Managing Editor REPORTERS: Joy Beason, Kate Deely, Stephen Demoratz, C hris Driscoll, Donna Hogan, Kim Kaan, Mark M acias, Mike McConnell, Tammy Sierra, Judd Williams. SPO R T S R EPO R TE R S: Michael Branom, Scott Davis, Shaun Rachau, Greg Sexton. COPY EDITORS: Kris Fridrich, Jeannie Tallon CARTOONISTS: Sean T. Hoy, Bryce Morgan. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Brian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Suzanne Kyer. C O L U M N IS T S : L orenzo S ierra, C h risto p h er S troud, Ashahed Triche, Tonnvane Wiswell. PRODUCTION: Kai Barrett, Gary Bedol, Jodi Goldblatt, Jefro Hams, Steve McDowell, Leslie Thorpe, Evonne Vera, DaveWeber. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dcock, Sonia Benson, Jam ia Birney, Dan Ellstrom, Jennifer Fer, Tim Hjellum, Jennifer Hughes, Steve Melton, Lance Newman, Ron Spaeth, Tim Wohlpait. Editorial Board U nsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board write edi­ torials and the board decides their m erit The editorials do not reflect the opinion of die State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: ICRIS MAYES The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s C enter, Rooih 15, A rizona S tate U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a genual nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pubIished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. EHREN S C H W I E B E R T . . . . . . . .....Managing Editor KEN CCHXINS.....::^....;,iM.....;.v.......M..^v....Opiiiion Editor T he S ta te P ress w elcom es and encourages w ritten response Bom our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed o r laser printed, double-spaced and no more than two pages in length to be eligible for pub­ lication. . Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publica­ tion. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must be either brought in person with a photo I.D . to the S ta te P ress front desk in the basem ent o f Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 852871502. State Press Phone Numbers „..„..965-7572 Front De»k............................. Newsroom............................................... „965-2292 M agazine........................ „..965-1695 Display Adveitiaiiig„„„„_„„„„.,..„„„,.„„;,.„,„„„„965-6555 Classified Advertising..............................................965-6731 Opinion S t a t e P re ss ____________ ___________________________ ____________________ Thursday, April 29, State P ress etters to the editor H om osexuality n o t responsible for fall Editor: Once again, Bryce Morgan, the State Press cartoonist, has seen fit to negatively portray hom osexuals, on this occasion attributing them with causing the fall of the Roman empire. The cartoon to which I refer shows Rome burning and in ruins, and the caption reads: “The Fate o f the L ast Society to C ondone and A ccept H om osexual Behavior....” ■ I am not a historian, and it is quite clear that neither is Morgan. But my understanding was that the Roman empire fell because it condoned and accepted unlicensed greed and avarice, imperialism, slavery and completely corrupt politics. What exactly did homosexu­ ality have to do with it? For that matter, why do State Press cartoons consistently denigrate homosexuals? In short, Morgan, do you have a uniquely accurate grasp on history or are you ju st another homophobic bigot? Aogdn Mulcahy G raduate Student, School of Justice C ru d e carto o n persecutes gay people Editor: Bryce Morgan’s editorial cartoon depicting the fall of the Roman empire as the fate of the last society to condone and accept homosexu­ ality was twisted, ignorant and asinine.1 It ignored the fact that Rome did not, in fact, condone homosexuality. It was accepted in some circumstances so long as a heterosexual marriage was in place or planned, but it did not even resemble die gay culture of today. Also, homosexuality- was completely unre­ lated to the fall of Rome, which was due, to economic problems. Why not depict Christian crusaders killing in the name of the Christian God or the Spanish inquisition torturing and killing innocent people in the name o f reli­ gious purity? The caption could read, “The fate of the last societies to accept and condone religious extremism.” Another good comic might depict a Nazi death camp with, piles of dead bodies. Tliat caption could read, “The last society to openly condone the persecution and murder of gays and lesbians.” On second thought, however, I guess that isn’t true since there are still coun­ tries in the world today for which homosexual acts carry the death penalty, and many states in America in which it carries a prison Sen­ tence. All this aside, I recognize the rights of a cartoonist to depict w hatever opinion he would like, regardless of its truthfulness. Ken Collins, the opinion editor, however, has a different job. That job is to see that garbage doesn’t get to the pages he is respon­ sible for and he failed miserably. After print­ ing and apology, he should loose his position. Adam Leeds Junior, Nursing M organ invited to u n d erstan d gays Editor: Bryce Morgan’s cartoon in the April 26, edition of the State Press is simply another example of homophobia being legitimized by placing it on your “opinion” page. When het­ erosexuals cannot understand why gays and lesbians can no longer be content remaining “in the closet,” they need only look at draw­ ings such as Mr. M organ’s to see what is thrown in our face on a daily basis: homosex­ uals are bad, sick, twisted, perverted and the cause of a civilization’s failure (I suppose we should be honored to be given such power, even when based on such a fallacy). Whether Mr. Morgan’s homophobia is based on fear, religious belief or ignorance, it is too bad the State Press gives him the space to express his bigotry. Mr. Morgan, I. would like to invite you to the theater. No, not as my date (thank you, anyway) but as my guest. ASU Theater is pre­ senting a musical comedy revue titled Some o f My Best Friends A re..., subtitled “A Gay and L esbian R evue fo r People 6 f O ther Persuasions.” If you fall into the category of “other per­ suasions,” namely straight, then this show is for you, Mr. Morgan. The premise of Some o f M y B est F riends A re... assum es a world where homosexuals are in the majority, and heterosexuals (“breeders”) are a despised, harassed and discriminated against minority. T he production may not change your homophobia, Mr. Morgan — that is your right — but if possible, it may make you think before you draw such an offensive cartoon again. Just call or stop by the Galvin Box Office. There will be two tickets in your name for any performance. They are a gift from me, the director o f Som e o f M y B est F riends A re.... Tony Hodges Department of Theater A m erican decline is everyone s fault This society of ours has become sick with­ Editor: This is in response to the Morgan cartoon out help from the homosexual community. in the April 26 State Press depicting the fall The breakdown of the family unit was not of Rome as “the fate of the last society to con­ caused by the big, bad, scary homosexuals, done and accept homosexual behavior....” Mr. Morgan. The change in the structure of Ignorant, bigoted people immediately point to the family was created by die “straight,” “nor­ a minority group considered different or bad mal,” “virtuous” segment o f society., by the majority to somehow accept responsi­ Who is responsible for the high divorce bility for society’s ills. rate in this country? Certainly not the homo­ Mr. Morgan, great nations that fall do not sexuals, who aren’t even allowed to get mar­ fa ll because o f hom osexuals. Rom e fell ried. Who is responsible for the incredibly because o f power, greed, territorial over­ high rate of raping women? Last I heard, most rapes are conducted by men against women. extension and many other factors. T ake a look at o u r ow n country. G angs and violence, drugs and drive-by Conservative groups claim that this country’s s h o o tin g s—- w ell, Mr. M organ, I d o n ’t demise is due to deviant and immoral behav­ remember seeing any drag queens with pink ior on the part of some of our country’s sons feather boas, or lesbians on Harleys (very and daughters. To blame homosexuals for the poor and outdated stereotypes the straight decline and fall of Rome, and to suggest that community has for gays and lesbians) being this might happen in our own country is pass­ the perpetrators of such crimes. ing the buck and a blatant display o f cow­ The current wildfire spread of HIV in the ardice. How arrogant and stupid to support the straight community cannot be blam ed on notion that a society free of homosexuals is a homosexuals forcing straight men to have sex “good and solid” society (which suggests to with prostitutes, taking die virus back to their me the same hate that eventually caused the wives, and passing it on to their yet unborn mass genocide o f a race of people called Jews children. Perhaps the straight community .should look at their own promiscuity and lack only 50 years ago). 1993 Page s M eat activists have no taste ■ Out of curiosity, I M ike once went to a McDonald’sl ROYKO and ordered Tribune something Media called a Services M cLean, a low-fat burg­ er. It w asn’t p ie worst thing 1 ever tie . Some years a g o ,H while fishing in the Ozarks, I yawned and a large bug with big wings flew into my month. That was really dis­ agreeable. On the other hand, dressed up with onions and ketchup, the bug might have proven a better snack than the McLean thing. I don’t say this to belittle McDonald's. To the contrary, I think that one of the finest acts of public ser­ vice this great American corporation ever did was to create the McLean burger. By putting this awful thing on its menu, it stood up for freedom or choice, private enterprise and common sense. And it dealt a blow to that most dan­ gerous creature in our society: the politically correct public nag. In this case, the nag is a male person named Jeremy Rifkin, who is usually described in the press as an activist, a gadfly or, when I write about him, a real goofbail, Rifkin is one of those people who claim to have a throbbing social con­ science and believe they were put on Earth to save us helpless dummies from ourselves. In simpler times, he would probably have been a peeping Tom. Biit now he writes books, holds press' conferences and organizes promts.. 1 He has had many causes, most of them unsuccessful. Bui most recently he has been sounding the shrill alarm on the evils of eating beef. He seems to believe that raising and eating beef is a threat to the entire, planet. A book he did on the subject is a hot seller among dimwits, while hailed by expert nutritionists, economists and other critics as one o f rise most idiotic things ever put between hard covers. It was people like Rifkin and his fol­ lowers who carped, scolded and squealed at McDonald’s for selling American hamburger 1overs the kind of burgers the majority of Americans pre­ fer. They w ailed so loudly that McDonald’s finally gave in and devel­ oped a lower-fat hamburger — the above-mentioned McLean thing. McDonald’s did so because it is a global institution and feels a corporate responsibility to be socially responsive. Other hamburger chains, less imageof supposed Values and morals concerning sex. The decline of education and the growth of illiteracy, the lack of marketable skills, the lack of an adequate health care system, the staggering budget deficit, ad infinitum was not caused by a secret society of homosexuals desiring to sabotage the foundation o f the country they live in. We are all responsible for what happens to this country. Don’t take the easy way out, as most pepple in this country tend to do, and blame it all on someone else. You are probably too frightened to do this, Mr. Morgan, because of your ignorance and unfounded homophobia, but I suggest the next time you take a trip to San Francisco or New York, you might take a walk down some of the streets in the predominantly gay neighbor­ hoods. They are the cleanest, most-well-kept conscious, could tell pests like Rifkin: “You don’t like some fat? Then go home, skinny lad, and stir-fry some chicken and veggies in your wok.” But McDonald’s didn't do that. It sighed and gave us the McLean burger. And how did we. the consum ers, respond? We bought it in such paltry numbers that it is one of the biggest flops in the history of McDonald’s. The most recent sales figures show that the reaction of about 98 percent of the McDonald's customers to (he dry, scrawny burger is something like: “yeeb.” The customers won’t eat it. The franchise operators consider it a nui­ sance and want to be rid of it. And who can blame them? It tastes awful. But the McLean thing was a worth­ while venture because its failure told the public nags that Americans will eat what they want to eat, not what some common scold tells them to cat. If people like Jeremy Rifkin had a sense of honor, they would apologize to McDonald’s and America’s ham­ burger lovers for being a public nui­ sance. Then they would go off to some remote part of India and seek sainthood by washing feet in a leper colony. But being a compulsive busybody, Rifkin can’t leave it alone. He and his beef-hating followers are nagging McDonald’s. They ate picket­ ing franchises and having a fine time demanding that M cDonald's add a “veggie burger“ to the menu. Now I ask: Have you, o r anyone you know, ever gone into a McDonald’s and said: “Why don't you make a burger out of shredded vegeta­ bles?” Of-course n o t If you want that kind of food, you cook it at home or go to the sort of Earth-mother restaurant that caters to aging hippies with bean sprouts stuck betw een their teeth, which is your right as an American, God bless your tofu. If Rifkin were rornething other than an intellectual gnat, he would boldly form a corporation, invest his own money, persuade his fellow beef-haters to put their savings in his stock. And they could open * chain of fastfood restaurants selling veggie burgers, tofu burgers, seaweed burgers, cabbage burgers and other healthful delicacies They could call them Twitburgers. That would be putting their money where their sensitive taste buds are. But they won't because they know it would be scorned. America does not want a Twitburger. Ir prefers something it can really chomp on. Damn the cholesterol, toll speed ahead. Now 1 must go have dinner. Steak tartare. That’s raw beef, ground up. I prefer it on the hoof, but it’s a chore chasing the critter. neighborhoods in these cities. The homeown­ ers in these neighborhoods are active in their community, are highly-skilled, talented, valu­ able and highly-paid people (who pay a lot o f taxes to support this grand country o f ours). Older straight couples move into these areas because they feel safer there. At least the gay community had the guts to march in Washington, D.C., this weekend to stand up to people who condone hate :and ignorance. Clean up your own values tod cor­ ruption, assume responsibility for your por­ tion of this country’s fate and study a little bit of history to get your facts straight (excuse the pun). If this country falls someday, you will have no one to blame but everyone. Jamea R. Mettler Graduate Student, German P age 6 S t a te P ress Thursday, April 29,1993 Police Report A SU P o lice rep o rted th e fo llo w in g in c id e n ts on Wednesday: • An employee reported that a computer mouse was stolen from the Business Administration Building. Loss is $76. • A student had her silver BMW scratched with a sharp object in Parking Structure 3. Damage is estimated at $50. • Police contacted two students at Manzanita Residence Hall. It was reported that there had been a smell of marijuana coming from their room. Police did not find any marijuana, but a deán referral will be filed. • A student injured her left ankle when she tripped and fell while walking down a set o f stairs in the Anthropology Building, • A man not affiliated with ASU was approached after he was seen loitering and consuming alcohol on the south side of Stabler’s Market, 929 S. Mill Ave- He was warned against public consumption and loitering. • Someone placed shaving cream and Kool-Aid on the entire outside of a female student's vehicle while it was .parkedin Lot 51. • A student had his dark green Rock hopper Specialized mountain bicycle stolen from Hayden Library, where it was secured with a cable lock. Loss is $530. • Someone vandalized a water fountain in the hallway on the fourth floor of Manzanita Residence Hall. Damage is estimated at $100. • Tempe P olice reported the fo llo w in g in cid en ts on Wednesday: • A developmentally disabled man assaulted his m oth» by hitting her in the head, causing a large welt. He also beat holes in the walls of the house with a baseball bat. He was later taken to Tempe City Jail. • Som eone entered a studio apartm ent at 1305 W. University Drive through the bathroom window and stole a video cassette recorder and a Caller identification unit. Police said since the window was only 1 foot wide, it had to be a small person who entered through i t • The manager of Casa Grande Apartments, 1855 E. Don Carlos Ave., saw an extension cord coming from a bedroom window of one of the apartments. The cord was plugged into an exterior wall outlet not connected to the apartment’s elec­ trical system. Apparently, residents of the abode were using power from the outlet without paying for it. The Salt River Project said the power in the apartment was not turned on and it could not determine the amount of the theft from the outlet. Police were unable to contact the suspects at the time. • Police are looking for a suspect who masturbated in plain view of a Mesa man in the parking lot at 2309 E. University Drive. • Unknown suspects told an ASU student in tHe 1000 block of South McKemy Street, “We’re going to get you, dude.” They then drove a car at him on the wrong side of the street, and pulled away at the last moment. • Compiled by State Press reporter Mike McConnell 941-9064 1005 N. Scottsdale Rd. 2 miles north of ASU Detailing. Accessories &Protection Student Discounts Available 1/2 OFF COMPUTER RENTAL! 50°o off rental time and laser prints. Self-serve only. One coupon per customer. Not valid with other offers. Exp. May 13, 1993. Services vary by location, please call ahead for details. kinko's th e c o p y c e n te r 9 Valley Locations Including: U n iv e r s ity & R u ra l 8 9 4 .1 7 9 7 • F o re s t & U n iv e r s ity 8 9 4 .9 S 8 8 M o in & S to p le y 8 3 3 .0 0 3 6 • S o u th e r n & D o b s o n 9 6 9 .3 3 2 6 Call 1.800.743.COPY for a Kinko's near you CROSSWORD SI L Uj S H ■ ■Fr T T 1 s O E ©i R O N E A T S R E Gj Ai N I □ □ □ B 8 Ü]T Âj 1 E Ml a □ MA Bj 1 I T A R R 1 A GB L E A N E[L S □ a A R R [E X G E □ □ a R A Y LT V □ H H lZ-QU □ T E F L •m liìMiìlMUl T T D Ela 1 L 1 T El s E E Ñ]1 i O S E U by THOMAS JOSEPH quality DOW N 1 Pipe Ml’ m aterial subject 2 M ine yield 6 Vam pire 3 Football killer gam e 11 Pope's breaks scarf 4 Healthful 12 Poison plant 13 Under­ neath 5 Arith­ m etic, 1 4 Add to th e Constitu­ 1960s tion style 1 5 Like does 6 S table com part­ 1 7 Favorite 1 9 -— the m ent 7 Volum e King’s Horses” 8 W oods­ 2 0 Pos­ man’s tool sessed 9 Fam i|y 23 Lives 1 0 Term inus 25 DoH's cry 16 Cam paign 26 Longloser fevered 17 R ose p art 2 8 T rebek of 1 6 Banish “Jeop­ 4 1 ardy r 29 M ade forays 3 0 ”— M iserables’ 31 First 17 nam e of 35 Across 24 3 2 Attem pt 3 3 Captain 26 Hastings, ¿8 to Poirot 3 5 “W heel of 30 Fortune” 33 host 3 8 G reek isle 35 36 37 41 Thrill 4 2 W ild 41 laugher 4 4 3 Circus worker 4 4 Good ACRO SS 1 “G eorge SHIPPING WORRY FREE BECOM E A I 33 34 35 36 style Of 3 7 Traffic tieup 3 9 Unit 40U se4a chair 1 mr 2V 19 «■ 25 29 ■ u i ¿ .V 31 1 1 34 38 4 44 39 4-29 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to work i t AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G FE L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of die words are all hints. Each day the code letters are différait. 4-29 CRYPTOQUOTE F S R NR Q M Z ' K T M H H R N R B K LG K B F W M Z S F C B Q R F O R R G F S K L Z L I T , B G T P G T N R G I R K L D G T N R B K LG K Z L L T V— Q 2602 E. Sky H aibor Hvd. Phoenix, AZ 85034 31 Bullwinkle Show” G am bler’s gam e Chess win T h e Say H ey K k r Collection In the ■ r-r~ S r r~r~dià a t id r a & f you're serious about becoming a professional airline pilot, you should be training with Sawyer Aviation at Sky Harbor International Airport. A special 21-day Private Pilot training program starring in May after finals will be available to students that can stay in Arizona this summer. Gall 273-3770 for more information. Y e s te rd a y ’s A n sw er 2 0 Periods o f difficulty f 21 Eastern ruler 2 2 W arbucks, ; fo r one 24 M adon­ na’s book 25 M e, to M iss Piggy 2 7 Fem m e fata le of The D N F L G S M U U M K Y esterday's C ryptoquote: MOST OF US CAN, AS WE CHOOSE, MAKE OF THIS WORLD EITHER A PALACE OR A PRISON. — LUBBOCK O IMS by KingFastunw Syndical*, he. P ag:e 7 Thursday, April 29, 1993 S t a t e P ress 6 n ew satellite dishes b u ilt b eh in d K A ET Station replacing all receivers in effort to increase frequency BroadenyourHorizons • ill ReadtheStatePress OPINION Sedai When it's time to pack up and go home... W e sp ecia lize in p a ck in g a n d sh ip p in g sm a ll lo a d s. 1Custom crating apd packaging. 1Shipping from 1 to 1,000 pounds including overnight delivery. Insurance to $50,000. Pick-up service. i Packaging supplies - boxes, tape, foam. 7. to 10 day delivery. m 1418 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale SW com er o f Scottsdale Rd. & McDowell 990-2552 fax 941-1300 S B H ■ « I King t o e B y M ark M . M a c ia s S ta t e P ress What has 24 legs, can transfer signals around thè world, yet doesn’t move? Answer: the six new satellite dishes erected behind Stauffer Hall, home of KAET-TV (Channel 8). Colleen Lehane, assistant manager o f engineering at KAET, said the Public Broadcasting Network affiliate is replacing all of its satellites in a national effort to increase station frequency. “ The PBS network is currently on C-Band programming, (but) in November 1993, all Of oUr programming will be switched over to Ku-Band,” Lehane said. “Replacing the satellites is part of a multi-million dollar funding project by the federal government for the PBS network. “We don’t have specifics of what the actual amount is.” Lehane said the C-Band and Ku-Band programming can he compared to AM and FM frequencies. The Ku-Band fre­ quency is capable of improving with technology, while the C-Band frequency has a lower frequency.KAET Program D irector John W ilson said view ers shouldn’t notice a change in their television pictures when the station sw itches over to Ku-Band program m ing in November. “The picture quality should be a little better (on the KuBand), but I don’t think people are going to be sitting at home and say ‘wow’ once the satellites go in effect,” Wilson said. “Our picture right now is already excellent. “The biggest gain I see from the new satellites is that (PBS) will have multi-channel capability.” Wilson said a transponder will enable the satellites to carry four different programmings. KAET is currently only able to carry one channel of programming. Ray Murdock, manager of finance and administration for KAET, said the station raised around $145,000 for the satel­ lites through the community, but it was $65,000 short of the projected costs. “The rest of the money that we didn’t raise came out of the community support fund,” Murdock said. “When we started the (satellite) project, we were interest­ ed in getting the support of the University because we’re part Brian Fitzgerald/Stata Press One o f the four satellite dishes recently installed on the south side o f Stauffer Hall that are used by KAET-TV (Ch. 8). of the University,” Lehane said. “We wanted the switchover to not be very noticeable to the viewing public, (so) we met with a design review board on how to best incorporate the (satellites).” Lehane said the architecture consultant implemented the 12-foot pedestals as part of the design. Dana Shaul, KAET’s membership manager, said viewers will see a small picture of the dishes’ design on the bottom of their channel in August. “We will do this to show how our members have brought this station up to the 21st century in telecommunications,” Shaul said. “About one month ago, (KAET) dropped a note to everyone who responded to pur campaign and let them know we purchased the satellites. We were able to purchase the satellites because our members rose to the challenge.” We’re close to campus, quiet and affordable. You'll love the quiet atmosphere and the ease of living so close to campus, but you'll love our prices even more! Studios from $308, 1 bedrooms from $320 and 2 bedrooms from $400, and we pay for gas and water! Com e by today and see how affordable it can be living so close to campus. • • • • Quiet, student atmosphere 2 swimming pools On-site laundry Right across the street from ASU campus UNIVERSITY A i s I u LEMON ■ i ■ ■ APACHE CAMBRIDGE SQUARE Continental Apartments 1011 E a s t L em o n S tre e t T em p e, A Z 85281 9 6 7 -2 5 4 4 1019 E a s t L em o n S tre e t T em p e, A Z 85281 9 6 7 -2 5 4 4 S ta te P ress Thursday, April 29,1993 P age 8 Students urged not to abandon pets after end o f term D eserted anim als seldom adopted, according to H um an e S ociety educator B y J u d d T . W illiam s S ta te P ress Many ASU students decided to adopt a pet at the beginning o f the school year to keep them company. For some, it was their first time away from home and what could be better than to come home at the end of a long day of classes and be greeted by a cute, furry, cuddly little dog or cat? That was the thought at the beginning of the school year. Now it is the end of April, final exams are almost upon us and then it will be time for many ASU students to go home, to Mom and Dad for the summer or embark on that new career. Students who thought pets were a good idea seven months ago are now getting ready to leave Tempe for the summer — or maybe forever — and can’t, or won’t take their pets with them for one reason or another. But those whose work it is to help animals stress the importance of not abandoning a pet in such a situation, because animals that are abandoned often become very confused and suffer greatly before dying on the street. ‘Taking in strays just does not happen,” said Marge Wright, director of education for the Arizona Humane Society. Wright said she was at ASU at the begin­ ning of the school year to explain why it is not a good idea for a college student to have a pet. “If you’re going to have a pet, it should be G E T IT T H IS M O R N IN G « someone will pick it .up and then dump it off again, repeating the cycle. Barbara Baxter, o f Citizens for Tempe Strays, a new local non-profit group aimed at controlling the cat population in Tempe, said that many abandoned animals starve to death, dying slowly and painfully. “ The lucky ones get killed by cars,” she said. Wright said the best thing for a pet owner to do if they cannot take their pet with diem is to take it to a shelter, where it has the oppor­ tunity to. go to another home that can care for it. “At least the animal has a chance at being adopted rather than just starve,” Wright said. She added that she would discourage peo­ ple from advertising in the paper to give their pet away, because people who do not pay for a pet are more likely to give that pet up if it does not suit them. In 1992,41,697 animals were put to death in Maricopa County Rabies-Animal Control shelters, Hoffman said. Over 70,000 animals are put to sleep each year countywide, she added. Darryl Webb/State P rats Hoffman said the number of stray-animals K's important for people who abandon pets fo realize that a very sm all percentage of strays are picked up always increases at this time of taken in, Arizona Humane Society officials say. year. She added that the pet should be familiar a lifetime commitment,” Wright said. In April 1992; the Mesa animal control A student who gets a pet without malting with the people it is left with, or it will end up shelter picked up 2,761 strays. In May 1992, that commitment is doing a great disservice to being a bad pet. that number increased to 3,657 and in June D usty H offm an, a spokesw om an for officials picked up 3,500. that animal, Wright said “It’s the animal that Maricopa County Rabies-Animal Control, suffers,” she said. Baxter said that, if it is at all possible, stu­ Wright said there is no place just to drop said there are many dire consequences that dents who have pets and are leaving Tempe in off a pet and then pick it up again in the fall can happen to an animal that is abandoned. May, should call their parents and ask if the “It can be attacked by another animal and pet can go home with them for the summer. when school resumes. “It would be extremely confusing for an injured,” she said. “If that occurs it may bite If anyone with .a pet cannot take it with animal unless you have family or friends you (someone).” them, they should take it to the Mesa Animal Hoffman said an animal can also be hit by Control Shelter, 2630 W. Fifth St., or call could leave it with that you trust to take care a car or, bike, it can mate and give birth or 894-9146, Hoffman said. of it,” Wright said. State Press ITS AVAILABLE ALL OVER CAMPUS, MCC AND TEMPE. The Honda Doctor’s Helpful H o n d a Hi n t s Tip # THE HONDA ★ CARS * * VANS * COMPACTS DAIIY MIDSIZE MfBBtflV FULL SI7F LUXURY ft CONVERTIBLES M ONTHLY •LUXURY • MINIVANS • 7 ,9 ,1 2 ,1 5 PASSENGER S P E C IA L M O N T H L Y R A T E S UNLIMITED MILEAGE AVAILABLE WE FEATURE GM PRODUCTS 3625 W. INDIAN SCHOOL RD. • 2934 E. McDOWELL RD. CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 93 For your family and friends attending gradua­ tion ceremonies, InnSuites Hotel Tempe/Phx Airport is offering your Suite choice. A O n e Room Suite for ■ Clean out your glove box! Papers and napkins jammed in there can get caught up in the blower motor, restricting the flow of air through your vents. DOCTOR lE S B lí 967-7282 Near ASU at 2090 E. University. Suite 115. Tempe (University at River, just west of Price) Service by Appointment 7:30AM - 6:00PM. Mon-Fri • Thursday nights til 8PM Also in the Scottsdale Airpark • 998-5966 NBAPLAYOFFS SP E C IA L LargePizzaForThePriceOf ASmall This weekend, buy a large size of any of our pizzas and we'll only charge you for a small! You get whatever toppings you w ant and save up to 45%! So come watch the playoffs and get a fast break on pizza. Offer good \ Friday thru Sunday, April 30-May2. 1-4 persons Tax not in c l. Dine In or Pick up Only or stay in our Plus, enjoy these complimentary Two Room Suite for Suiteners: •Social Hour for Guests •Continental Breakfast •Airport Shuttle •Local Phone Calls ■■■■■■■»—^ ■ ■ T e m p e /P h o e n ix •Morning Newspaper •Cable TV .H B O & ESPN *47 eroni’s Pizza InnSuites Hotel ^ (STA • BREAD STf> A irp o rt if For inform ation & Reservations 1651 W. Baseline Rd. at I-10 Fwy. Tempe, AZ 85283 10 m in. to ASU ! "Blue Ribbon Serv 800-841-4242 8 9 4 -1 2 3 4 m 945 South Mill Ave. • 1Oth Street & Mill • Tempe Center on Thursday, April 29,1992 S t a t e P ress Bosnians W om en__ C ontinued from page C ontinued 3. the Army,” Sullivan said. Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee who led the congressional fight tolift the ban, praised President Clinton and Aspin for the decision. “Women have been flying fighters, dropping bombs and landing on carriers — and teaching men to do all three for decades. But they’ve never been allowed to use their experience to the n ation’s benefit in a combat situation,” Schroeder said. “Clearly they have the skills and strengths to perform in any situation.” The Air Force has 16,500 pilots, of whom 295 are women; the Army has 12,442 pilots, 347 of them women; and the Navy has 9,419 pilots, of whom 184 are women. When the draft ended in 1973, women were eligible for only 9 percent of the military’s jobs. At that time, only 55,000 women — 2.5 percent of the active duty force were in the service. Now, there are 202.,000 women in active duty ranks — 11.5 percent of the total. Pressure to open the services to women gath­ ered strength in the wake of the 1990 Panama invasion and the Persian Gulf war, where the lines of combat became blurred-and women in so-called “support” jobs were in the line of fire. In the gulf, five women were killed in hostile action and two were taken prisoner, but later released. In all, about 40,000 women were assigned to the gulf region during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Strain. from page 3. is that it denies them the contiguity to connect Serb areas of the former Yugoslav federation. Countries such as Britain and France, with thousands of peacekeeping troops in Bosnia, long have'been concerned about retaliation by Bosnian Serbs if Western powers intervene militarily. British Maj. Brian W atters, second-incommand of the 1st Cheshire Regiment; told Britain’s GMTV from Vitez, central Bosnia, that the local Serb commander warned him what could happen if NATO attacked. “If one NATO bomb drops on his country, he said he will launch an attack immediately,” Watters said. “The Serb com m ander is in charge of artillery no more than 17 kilom eters (10 miles) from where I’m standing. We are well within range.” Bosnian Serbs appear confident the West would not intervene. Speaking on a television call-in show late Tuesday, military comman­ der Gen. Ratkb Mladic said; “We can sleep tight. There is not going to be military inter­ vention against us,” Tough new sanctions went into effect oh» Tuesday that freeze Yugoslav assets in over­ seas banks, block boat traffic on the Danube River that is destined for Yugoslavia and allows for the confiscation of Yugoslav ships, boats and planes abroad. Join the Third Largest Health Care Profession in the United States Considering a H ealth Career? One-of-a-kind interesting Vintage Jewelry Leather Unique Jeans Shoes Etc. F ind out about a rew arding career as a D octor o f C hiropractic. A tte n d o u r... CAREER INFO MEETING Tuesday May 4,1993 Student U nion Bldg., Room 209 2 : 0 0 ' 3 :3 0 pm A tte n t io n A ID » ro d e n t» : Palmer College of Chiropractic West I f you have completed a t least two years of college. you could qualify for admission to Palmer W est and be on your way to a personally 0 profession­ ally rewarding career as a Doctor of Chiropractic. 890 Pomeroy Ave. • Santaclara 95051 • (800)442-4476 Special O utdoor CLUB EDGE in Hayden Square Amphitheater this Friday, April 30 featuring ONE andMEDICINE WHEEL broughttoyouby The Edge, Balboa C afe and Budweiser KAMIS NGHT GATES OPEN AT 6 P.M., NO COVER BEFORE 7 P.M. For a G o o d Time ca l! B a lbo a C a fe • 966-1300 4th Street, W est o f Mill • H ayden Square g o in g P age 10 Thuredày, April 2 9,1993 S t a t e P ress C lin to n C ontinued fr o m page 1. legalized abortion nationwide. His initiatives included lifting the “gag rule” on counseling in federally-funded clinics and the five-year ban on fetal tissue research. He also instructed the Food and Drug Administration to reconsider restrictions on the French abortion pill, RU-486. “I think he’s done a great job,” said Carolyn Cohen, presi­ dent of Students for Choice. “What I’m so impressed by is he said he was pro-choice on the campaign trail and he has stood by what he said.” But not everyone is happy with Clinton’s slant on abortion. “I never liked him to begin with, and he hasn’t done any­ thing that surprises me,” said Rachel Sandonir, president of Students for Life. “All the damage he has done to our move­ ment will do nothing more than prolong our recovery.” Perhaps even more controversial is Clinton's effort to lift the military ban on gays. While ASU military representatives were unavailable for comment, the cause has sparked comment and anger from ranks as high as Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin Powell. And Clinton’s decision to let the issue temporarily rest has caused some members of the gay community to turn an about- face, as was evidenced in a march, on Washington last week consisting of hundreds of thousands of activists. However, Bonnie Nemeth, who heads the Lesbian/Gay Academic Union at ASU, said she thinks the gay community, in general, still strongly supports Clinton-and believes he will make great strides in improving human rights. Nemeth added that she wasn’t really that disappointed when Clinton failed to make an appearance at the protest. “My understanding is, anytime a major march goes on, the president does not attend for security reasons,” Nemeth said. “This march had been planned for two years to basically focus the attention of Congress and the president on gay and lésbian issues.” Rafael Reyes, who heads the ASU Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan (MEChA) chapter, said he, like many other minorities who voted for Clinton, is happy with the efforts made toward advancing Hispanic causes. “He sent out a positive message by appointing some Latinos to his cabinet,” Reyes said. “I think he sent a message that Latinos know what is best for the Latino communities.” Doug Murphy, the Arizona director for the Democratic Building. C ontinued from page B asha 1, C ontinued advised that this is a critical safety and liabili­ ty issue which requires immediate correction. In the interim, the laboratories should either be shut down or minimum sash positions set to ensure adequate minimum exhaust air flows are maintained. Corwin, however, said no labs in the build­ ing have been shut down and that the state­ ments about the laboratory fume exhaust con­ trols by the architect’s air conditioning con­ sultant were false. He added that he was con­ cerned about the unnecessary anxiety Harris’ statement may have caused occupants of the building. “We wouldn’t sit here and let that system run like that. What do they think, we’re nuts or something?” he said. “The guy was just totally wrong when he said the exhaust shuts off to zero when you close the door. That’s not correct.” Corwin said he couldn’t be sure about whether the vibration problem had been per­ manently solved. “We won’t have a true conclusion of that until we run through next winter,” he said. He explained that it was possible that the “low load condition” the air handlers will be party, said Clinton faired well with minorities, receiving 72 percent of the Navajo vote. In congressional district 2, which is largely Hispanic, Clinton received S9.2 percent of the vote in Pima county and 51.9 percent in Maricopa County. In the primarily black districts, Clinton did even better, often receiv­ ing four times as many votes as George Bush and Ross Perot. But the matter of the nation’s economy is still foremost in many voters’ minds. Reyes said he likes the job bill and economic plan Clinton introduced to Congress and blamed their failure, thus far, on bureaucracy that has “shredded” and “watered down” the pro­ posals. Apodaca said she disagrees with the tax-hike proposals and calls Clinton’s stance on economics “disastrous.” “1 was happy that the Republicans in Congress filibustered his plan,” Apodaca said. But she said even though she doesn’t like Clinton, she too has hope that he will succeed. “I still have hope. T here’s some good in everyone,” Apodaca said, “This is a great country and I don’t want to see it fail.” run at next winter will be the same as the “mothball condition,” The term “mothball condition” refers to the settings the huge air handling systems on the roof of the six-story building were set to last fall when the building was only partially occupied. The Anshen + Allen report on the vibration problem placed partial blame for the build­ ing’s shaking on the “mothball settings” of the air handling units. Henry M ortarotti, director o f ASU Planning and Construction, said he is' satisfied that the problem has been solved. The April 8 meeting gave Anshen + Allen an opportunity to explain its perspective on the vibration problem, said Ann Buerger, the Planning and Construction department’s pro­ ject director for the Goldwater Building. Another inaccuracy in the Anshen + Allen notes on the April 8 meeting, Corwin said, was that a control panel was vandalized. In fact, said C orw in, the control panel was stolen. The Anshen + Allen report concluded that the missing control panel had also con­ tributed to the vibration problem. from page 1. know his political philosophies. “As soon as I start campaigning, I’m sure you’ll see a change in that,” Basha said of his third-place ranking in the polls. “I’m not a politician. I’m a publicly-concerned individu­ al.” _ Symington’s press secretary, Doug Cole, said he is not concerned with the polls either. “The election is 18 months off and we will address the Democratic nominee at that time,” Cole said. “Right now we are only concerned with pushing forth with the Governor’s agen­ da which includes running the state and fiscal housekeeping.” But Basha said he will not waste any of the remaining 18 months left for publicizing his platform, and insists hitting the campaign trail will not affect his performance as a regent. “I intend to remain on the board and work diligently,” Basha said. In Arizona, the governor holds an ex-offi­ cio position on the ABOR, so Basha will still sit on the board and participate in issues affecting higher education should he win the election. He also would appoint his own replacement on the ABOR. Doug Murphy, political director for the Arizona Democratic party, said procedure calls for those seeking candidacy to file a request Avith the Secretary of State and form a campaign committee. Currently, no Democrat has filed the form for the upcoming gover­ nor’s race. The candidate must then obtain petition signatures equivalent to one-half of 1 percent of registered Democratic voters. This amounts to about 40,000 signatures. Anyone who obtains the required signa­ tures will participate in the September prima­ ry election and the winner will become the Democratic candidate to run in the November 1994 election. But Murphy said if Basha loses in the pri­ mary, he will be out of the race. “If you run in the primary and lose, you can’t run in the general election,” Murphy said. Positions available on... Applications are now available for interested students wanting to work on The 1993-94 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook. No previous yearbook experienced necessary. The follow­ ing positions are available: - Assodate/Pagination Editor -Photo Editor -C opy Editor ( -Business Manager - Marketing M anager.. ' j ; - Assistant Photo Editor - Assistant Copy E d ite - Section Editors -Reporters - Photographers - Marketing Representatives T H IN K IN G c a n b e ¡h ig h ly p le a s u r a b le . A t K a p lan , «re h e lp you d e v elo p th e a b ility to th in k clearly. A nalytically. C ritic a lly . T his i s th e s k ill Deadline for applications is 5 pjn., May 15,1993. Applications are avaiable ... - Yearbook Room, No. 50 / Basement of Matthews Center - Front reception desk of Student Publications Basement of Matthews C otter th a t s ta n d a rd iz e d te sts m e a su re , m ore an d m ore, a n d it's th e s k ill th a t’s alw ays b e en K aplan s sp ec ia lty . . ' \ A s w ith ev ery th in g e lse , w hen y o u 're good a t it. you w ant to d o it. FOR * o R■ IN POn MÁ T f • Mi - caul j 1 - a ® O'• »C 'AP> T • • y For more information, cc tact Kim Kaan, 1993-94 editor in chief, at 965-6881. * ■> ■ iiimii. ni N 11 .il ini I p mu i M i • 'V ! it ■■■■in I n it i V j.n jii i . nil .H'H L r S t a t e P ress P a g e _ ri Thursday, April 29,1993 Former college coach Vaivano dies o f bone cancer B y T o m Fo r em a n J r. T h e A sso c ia t e d P ress RALEIGH, N.C. — Jim Valvano died Wednesday, a year­ long battle with bone cancer finally stilling the flash and sass of a gifted college basketball coach who led his team to a mir­ acle championship and left it after a messy scandal. With his family by his side, the 47-year-old former North Carolina State coach died at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, according to his attorney. Woody Webb. “He had a special way of bringing a smile to everyone’s face,” said Dick Vitale, his close friend and fellow broadcaster at ESPN. “He was such a genuine person. There wasn't an ounce of envy in him.” Vitale, who wept as be talked, said that for the last six weeks Valvano had been too weak to come to the phone. “Watching him the last year endure all the pain was amaz­ ing,” he said. “But be could still smile and light up a room.” Valvano pulled off one of the great upsets in college bas­ ketball history in 1983 when the Wolfpack, with 10 regularseason losses, beat favored Houston in the NCAA tournament final on Lorenzo Charles’ buzzer-beating dunk. Seven years later, Valvano was forced out after an NCAA investigation determined that his players violated rules by selling their sneakers and complimentary game tickets. “Sure he made mistakes; we all do in the coaching profes­ sion,” said Vitale, a former college and NBA coach. “He said he took some kids who weren’t college material, but if he Form er North Carolina State basketball coach Jim Valvano, didn’t take them someone else would. That’s the way the sys- hare celebrating the W olfpack's NCAA championship in 1983, tem is.” lost his battle w ith bone cancer on Wednesday. He was 47. It wasn’t long, however, after leaving the Wolfpack that Valvano returned to the college basketball scene as an analyst and deliberately, bent slightiy at the waist Standing at center court, he told a cheering crowd of more for ABC and ESPN. Earlier this year, he won an award from than 12,000 that his championship team taught him a lesson he the cable television industry for his work. “He’s one of the few people who ever moved to the top of carried through his illness; “Number one, hope — hope that things can get better in two different fields,” CBS commentator Billy Packer said. “He was a top guy in coaching and then he was a top guy in spite of adversity. The ’83 team taught us that. - “That team taught me persistence, the idea of never, ever broadcasting.” But coaching was Valvano’s first love, and he expressed quitting. D on’t ever give up. D on’t ever stop fighting,” that affection in a 10th anniversary celebration Feb. 21 that Valvano shouted. He fought his illness with the same Sense of humor that marked the first time he had been on North Carolina State’s made him popular beyond North Carolina’s borders. home court since he left die job in 1990. During a March 4 speech at the American Sports Awards “Nobody had more fun than I did in the 10 years that I was fortunate enough to stand in that corner right before every telecast on ESPN, Valvano said: “Cancer can take away all my game and thank God for the opportunity to coach at North physical abilities. It cannot touch my mind, it cannot touch my heart and it cannot touch my soul.” Carolina State University,” Valvano said. Then the TelePrompTer told Valvano he had 30 seconds to The Valvano who coached there would stroll onto the court at Reynolds Coliseum, pace the red sideline and occasionally close his remarks. He stopped and laughed. jump up and down in a burst of emotion. “I’ve got tumors all over my body, and I’m going to worry The Valvano who returned for the reunion walked slowly about some guy flashing a message that says I’ve got 30 sec­ 93ASUFOOTBALL onds?” he said, adding one Italian word to express his disbe­ lief. Valvano succeeded Norm Sloan as N.C. State’s 15th head coach bn March 27, 1980. He quickly won over fans with his wise-cracking charm and developed a style that earned high fees as a motivational speaker for corporations. “He connected to other human beings,” said Rutgers coach Bob Wenzel, who played for Valvano on the 1967-68 fresh­ man team at Rutgers. “I’m sure he could have been a very suc­ cessful stand-up comedian.” Valvano’s first Wolfpack team struggled to a 14-13 record, but followed with a 22-10 season and an NCAA tournament berth in the 1981-82 season. Then came the magical season o f 1982-83. “My favorite quote was ‘Trees would tap dance, elephants would drive the Indianapolis 500 and Orson Welles would skip breakfast, lunch and dinner before N.C. State figured out a way to win the NCAA tournament,’’’ Valvano said. “This team taught me that elephants are going to be driving in the Indianapolis 500 someday.’ The Wolfpack finished the regular-season with a 17-10 record, then went on a tear that began with the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. North Carolina State defeated North Carolina in the semifinals, then knocked off Virginia and Ralph Sampson to take the ACC title. Six more victories followed, most of them nail-biters in the NCAA West Regional. When the trip was done, the Wolfpack had taken its second national championship, 54-52, defeating the high-flying Phi Slamma Jamma Houston team led by Clyde Drexler and Akeem Olajuwon. Valvano added the athletic director’s title in 1986, but things started to unravel in the middle of the 1988-89 season. Allegations of wrongdoing appeared on die dust jacket of the book, Personal Fouls by Peter Golenbock, setting off a contro­ versy about how Valvano was running the athletic programs. He eventually stepped down as athletic director, but his prob­ lems persist»!. An NCAA investigation revealed that Wolfpack basketball players violated rules by selling their sneakers and compli­ mentary tickets. Then came point-shaving allegations, which have never been proven. Valvano repeatedly denied he Was involved in any wrong­ doing. Meanwhile, the team was placed on two years’ NCAA probation and barred from the 1990 postseason. Newspaper editorials called for Valvano’s resignation, and the school’s student legislature said he should step down. After weeks o f negotiations he did, stepping down on April 7,1990, aft»' agreeing to a buyout worth more than $600,000, C A SH FO BOOKS Sell us your books and get a valuable gift certificate. W e ll p ay cash fo r your books plus give you a 10% gift certificate good on anything jn th e store with no expiration date. W hen you sefl your used books fo r $ 3 0 , you g e t $ 3 0 caqh and a gift qertnicate fo r $3. If you get $ 4 0 fo r your used books, youH g et r $ 4 0 cash and a gift certificate fo r $4. 9664226 s 704 S. College J University STUDENT SECTION IS NOW RESERVED SEATING Guarantee Yourself A Great Seat For Next Season \ O N LY If you snooze, y o u 'll lose - yo u r seat! I I B rin g th is co u p o n to P S u p ercu ts. N o a p p o in tm en t n ecessary. O ffer en d s : 5 /2 2 /9 3 . '93 Football Student Season Tickets Spring sale season is April 17 - May 15. Purchase tickets at the Stadium Ticket Office 8:30am -4 :0 0 p m weekdays or in the Memorial Union April 19 May 5 (near S.W . entrance) 10am - 2pm weekdays. Call 965-2381 for more information. $ 6 .9 5 (REGULARLY $8.95) Buy Your Season Tickets Now! ONLY $28 k te rif* ■ H H Good a t 8 3 0 S. M ill shop only, g Not valid w ith any other offer. H One coupon per customer. \ HSK I\ WÈmmÊËmk wSÊÊk ÌSUPERCUTS' .e k w r t P a g e 12 Thursday) April 29, Free T rade on S t» T E P ress ' T oxic Alley A n omen fo r Mexico ’s future B y C hris D riscoll P hotos by W ill P owers T ranslation provided by A lvaro and G onzalo S epulveda ife is getting better in Colonia Encinos, one of the squalid, makeshift communities perched pre­ cariously to the craggy sides o f the mountains ju s t west o f N ogales, Sonora on the M Mexican-American border. S turn North America into a huge free-trade zone. B O R D E R C L E A N U P T H E R E S U L T O F NA FTA The critics fear that once the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is approved, support for the border cleanup will quickly fade, and so will the promised funds. “They’re (the Mexican and U.S. governments) putting a lot of money into the border right now because they want this free trade agreement,” said Michael firmmrv director of Arizona Toxics Information, a Bisbee-based environmental think tank focusing on border pollution problems.“ They’re trying to impress people with how much they’re doing. But in fact they need much much more than they have,” These fears were compounded by the Bush administra­ tion’s refusal to include specific environmental-protection language in the agreement when it was negotiated last year. The U.S.-Mexican plan to address border pollution is sepa­ rate ftom NAFTA. N A FTA w as signed in D ecem ber by form er U.S. President George Bush, Mexican President C arlos Salinas de G ortari and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, but it will need the approval of the Mexican, Canadian and U.S. legislative bodies, and the passage of “enabling legislation” before it goes into effect NAFTA’s goal is to lower tariffs and other trade barriers between the three coun­ tries over tiie next 15 years. It would create the largest common market in the world with North America's 380 million people. > NAFTA’s critics and proponents alike have turned their attention to the border betw een the U nited S tates and M exico because that area has been a free trade zone for 28 years. Miguel Becerra, president of the eolonia council, proudly points to the bare light bulb suspended by wire from the ceiling of his tworoom wooden shack as an example of improvements. Until a* year ago, Encinos had no electricity. Water is now piped to central locations in the community. It used to be trucked in once a week and stored in 55-gallon drums that residents often bought from one of the 76 American-owned manufacturing plants in Nogales after the containers had carried toxic chemicals. The foreign-owned factories are called maquiladoras, and 500,000 Mexicans work for them, churning out quality goods for the American market at bargain-basement wages. The improvements to Encinos and dozens o f colonias along the border are part of the year-old Integrated Border Environmental Plan, conceived by the M exican and U.S. governments to clean up border towns that are plagued by overpopulation and blighted with environmental degradation. D espite the changes, however, life in Encinos is still difficult, dirty and often even dangerous. Critics contend that the bonder cleanup plan is a whitewash that is commit­ ting millions of dollars to a problem that will actually take billions to solve. They say the three North American governments are doing Trinidada Agustaros washes clothes on the aids o f th e road that runs next to the Nogales, the minimum necessary to placate environ­ $onora, city landfill. Members of the community do their laundry using w atsr from a pipe that m entally concerned lawm akers at a time runs undameath tfra landfill and originates from a w atsr tower on the opposite side o f the dump. when legislatures in the three countries are considering a proposal to slash tariffs and T H E B O R D E R ’S P L IG H T M E X IC O ’S FATE* Conditions along the border, especially in the Mexican towns and cities, are the result of years of free trade, NAFTA’s critics say. Its proponents say poverty i$ the cause and creating a North American common market will be die cure. “The maquiladoras created an environ­ mental mess that nobody can deny,” said Nicolas Escalante, the Mexican consul to P a g e l3 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ T T lW S d a y ^ g ri^ 9 ^ 9 9 3 Mexico is serious about environmental clean-up ... the governm ent has shut down over 2,000plants in the last two years. — Nancy White Phoenix at a conference on NAFTA at ASU in October. The results of that “environmental mess” are apparent everywhere on the Mexican side of the border in Nogales, Sonora. At the city landfill, children help parents sift through acres of trash heaps looking for anything remotely useful. Pigs and horses graze on the waste of the city. Some fami­ lies have well-established camps among the garbage heaps, which they tenaciously defend. Terisa Leal, a local environ­ mentalist and labor rights activist, said the dump is a favorite spot for illegal disposal of toxic chemical waste. On the side of a dirt and gravel road that cuts a stony path between the dump and a small Collection of decrepit shacks, a woman bending over a washtub washed her fam ily’s threadbare clothes. Her name was Guadalupe. She refused to give her last name because she was embarrassed. Her washtub sat under a pipe about 6 inches wide. The pipe appeared to emerge out of a 6-foot berm from under the dump. Guadalupe explained that the water is clean; it comes from the water tower on the other side of the dump, and besides, she said, it is the only water anywhere close to her small unnamed colonia. While Guadalupe talked and washed clothes, other peo­ ple occasionally dropped by to rill their one-gallon plastic containers with the water that trickled from the pipe. The air was heavy with the stench of the nearby dump as Guadalupe talked about her living conditions. No water, no electricity, no heat at night except what her family can get from burning trash in a small bucket left in the doorway so as not to smoke up the place. Such burning, for heat, is cred­ ited with a good deal of the air pollution problem in the Nogales area. Guadalupe’s little community is just starting out, like Encinos was seven years ago. If the critics of NAFTA and the Mexican-American Border Plan aro correct in their assessments, her community may be a long time in seeing die same types o f improvements older, more well-estab­ lished colonias such as Encinos are reaping as part of the attention NAFTA has brought them. Critics contend that NAFTA will simply spread the prob­ lems the border area has experienced.to the rest of Mexico, making that country a toxic dumping ground for the rest of North America. The maquiladoras are the result of a cooperative program of the Mexican and U.S. governments. Begun in 1965, the Mexican Border Industrialization Program allowed U.S.and other foriegn-owned companies to build manufacturing plants inside a 12.5-mile wide swath of Mexico along its northern border. The companies are allowed to ship raw materials and parts for assembly into the plants duty-free. The program began with 12 factories. Now there are an estimated 2,000, one for each of the 2,000 miles of the Mexican-American border. Hie United States allows the finished goods back into the country while taxing only the value added to a product dur­ ing its stay in Mexico. The companies are thus able to enjoy the benefits of close proximity to the U.S. market while at the same time profiting from cheap Mexican labor. The polluted Nogales Wash flow s northward under the Sonoran city, and makes Its. way Into the United States. Pollution from the entire city flow s into the channel. Citizens of Nogales, Sonora, have been told to avoid the wash bscause o f a recent outbroak o f cholera. F L O O R S O F D IR T , W ALLS O F P A P E R The homes in the many colonias that encircle Nogales, Sonora, are framed with the wood of discarded pallets and roofed with scraps of used tin. They are insulated with card­ board and newsprint. This is the ultimate recycling. Here, oid of necessity, just about everything is put to some use. Each narrow, unpaved street is parted by a fissure that becomes a river'when it rains, washing away garbage and « Workers file out o f the Chamberlain Plant In Ndgales, Sonora, after a Saturday shift. The Chicago-baaed company is the largest producer of garage door openers for the United States, and is one of the American companies that moved south of the border to capitalize oh cheap Mexican labor. even human waste from the outhouses. Broken rusted-out cars line die dirt streets and the constant sounds of barking dogs mix with music from radios, children’s laughter and shouting from within the hovels the cling to the steep hill­ sides. The polluted water flows downhill toward the center of the city, eventually reaching the Nogales Wash, a channel at the bottom of the valley. On the way, it blends the pollutants of other colonias and the many maquiladoras. A bare trickle most of the time, the Nogales Wash swells into a torrent in rainy weather. It flows north, into Nogales, Ariz., carrying with it tons of untreated sewage and toxic industrial waste. The Nogales Wash is one of those infamous waterways that occasionally catches fire, resulting in charcoal-black fumes climbing into the sky and - depending on the wind direction - blowing north into Arizona or south into the inte­ rior of Mexico. The National Toxics Campaign Fund of Boston tested 23 border industrial areas in 1991 and found that 75 percent of the maquiladoras were dumping toxic waste into neighbor­ ing streams. The U .S. Arm y C orps o f E ngineers described the Nogales Wash in a flood-control feasibility report it prepared in 1987. “Inadequate sewage treatment facilities in Nogales, Sonora, result in the release of raw sewage which flows across the border via Nogales W ash. During flood events pipe breaks result in even more sewage being released in Mexico which flows into Nogales, Arizona.” The Mexican and UiS. governments have responded to their environmental critics with a commitment to spend more titan $800 mil­ lion on border cleanup projects through 1994 as a part of their border environmental plan. The M exican governm ent promised to spend $460 million by the end o f 1994. Of that amount, $225 million will finance new sewage and water treatment systems; $26 mil­ lion is for solid waste disposal; and $120 will be spent on road construction and public tran­ s it Also promised is an increase in environ­ mental inspectors, along the border from 100 to 200, about one for every 10 maquiladoras. The United States has promised $380 mil­ lion for border cleanup efforts, most of which is earmarked for international water-sewage treatment, but it has already begun to back­ track on the original commitment Funds for one of die projects included in the $380 mil­ lion plan, expansion o f the international sewage treatment facility 15 miles north of the border on the Nogales Wash, have been cut from the federal budget. President Clinton announced his support for NAFTA shortly before the November presidential election. While expressing some concern over the need for environmentalprotection guarantees, he didn’t commit him self to any major changes in the treaty itself. Now some think Clinton is reneging on his campaign promises to address environmental concerns in a separate agreement that would create a border commission on health and the environment. “Unfortunately, recent media coverage indicates that the administration is backing away from what many had thought would be a strong position on die role of the proposed commission,” said Gregory of Arizona Toxics Information. “It is especially discouraging to see the administration apparently giving up on such essential elements as mandato­ ry pollution controls and cleanup, enforcement and investorrelated funding; elements that have repeatedly been insisted on by the environmental community,” N A FTA SU PPO R T E R S: PO V ER TY IS E N V IR O N M E N T ’S EN EM Y While NAFTA has many detractors in Arizona who fear its long-term environmental consequences, the treaty also has many local proponents who see it as the birth of a new era of prosperity for the three nations of North America that will finance a cleaner future environment. Supporters of NAFTA admit to the serious environmental problems on the border, but they say poverty is no friend of ARIZONA ' SAN : LUIS, SONORA SONORA, M E X IC O \d NOGALES, SONORA DOUGLAS AGUA f. PRIETA the environment. Only through industrial development, they argue, will Mexico have the money necessary to tackle its environmental problems. Nancy White, chairwoman of the Phoenix Chamber of , Commerce M exico Free Trade Task Force, which was formed to help area businesses take advantage of the treaty’s benefits, said NAFTA is the best route to better environmen­ tal protection in Mexico. She pointed to the money the Salinas government has committed to the border cleanup plan as a sign o f Mexico’s deep commitment to the environ­ ment. “Mexico is serious about environmental cleanup,” she said, adding that “the government has shut down over 2,000 plants in the last two years” for environmental law viola­ tions; As the Mexican economy improves with freer trade, standards o f living w ill increase and funds for better enforcement will be available, she said. im P a g e 14 Thursday, April 2 9 ,1 9 9 3 S tate P ress I t ’s a trade-off. I f you come out and you begin asking fo r your rights, you’ll probably be left hanging there... without a job. — Terisa Leal mental criticism of the NAFTA. It really doesn’t create a lot he said, “the workers suffer a number of illnesses from skin Dick Kamp, director of the Border Ecology Project, an of additional funding. It’s just being renamed and repack­ problems to high levels of lead in the blood.” environmental advocacy group based in Naco, Ariz., another aged as the border plan. Leal, a form er social worker who has worked with border town, disagreed w ith the rosy assessm ents o f “It’s clearly not enough.” maquiladora employees for years, equated their attitudes NAFTA’s local allies. about environmental and health issues with battered women, “We should not be lured into the trap of believing that a NAFTA: BEST H O P E F O R another group with whom she has experience. NAFTA alone will raise the standard of living in Mexico, M E X IC O ’S EN V IR O N M EN T? “It’s a trade-off,” she said. “If you come out and you thereby protecting the environment,” he said. “Look at the begin asking for your rights, you’ll probably be left hanging border, Assembly line wages peak at around $6 a day.” Gregory still sees the trade agreement as the best hope for there. In this case it’s without a job, with battered women White said as the United States grew richer, attention progress toward cleaning up the border. it’s without someone they can depend on economically.“ turned increasingly toward environmental issues. “As [U.S. House Majority Leader Richard] Gephardt Gregory said the Mexican government in some ways has Mexico has come farther with environmental efforts in made clear in a speech [last fall], there’s a lot that can be a better environmental-protection program than the United the last five years than the United States did in the first 25 done in the so-called implementing legislation that goes States, but in other ways it doesn’t have a program at all. years of its efforts to clean up the environment, she added. along with the NAFTA, and that’s where the changes will “The glaring example is hazardous waste,” he said. Opponents of NAFTA in its current form are not con­ occur. T h at’s the best pressure point now , the U.S. “They do not have an adequate hazardous waste regulatory vinced that the com m itm ents made by the U .S., and Congress.” program. They don’t have a cradle-to-grave tracking system Mexican governments to clean up border pollution are gen­ Even without NAFTA, there will be an increase in envi­ like we supposedly have in this country.” uine. When they compare the current level of expenditure by ronmental problems on the bonier and an expansion of those Felix said, although the law requires that all hazardous both countries to the needs, they say the border plan is woe­ problems to the interior of Mexico, Gregory said. waste generated by the maquiladoras be returned to the fully inadequate. “The Salinas administration has already put into motion a United States, or other country of origin, only 1 percent is A study by the University of Texas at Austin concludes it deregulation process that has generated explosive growth in returned, and the other 99 percent is illegally dumped in will cost $18 billion to clean up years of environmental industry” he added. damage along the 2,000-mile border. Less W hite, o f the Phoenix Chamber of optimistic estimates go as high as $50 billion. Commerce, delivered a sim ilar message. Gregory, referring to the U.S,-Mexican “The trend of moving [U.S.-owned] manu­ government expenditures, said, “Compared facturing [out of the country] will continue to where they started, it’s great. Compared to whether there is a NAFTA or not,” she said. what’s necessary, it’s minor, it’s too small.” “W hat the NAFTA does is give us an Gregory said that before any serious esti­ opportunity to respond appropriately to this mate can be made, it would be necessary to problem,” Gregory said. “NAFTA can give monitor the border to find out what problems us a way to find a source of funding and to exist. keep attention on the problem.” “The border plan Said that (the Mexican Land said, “Increased trade between the and U.S. governments) will figure out a way United States and Mexico is going to put to track existing abandoned waste dumps additional pressure on the limited infrastruc­ sort o f a superfund program ,” he added. ture of the border. There’s really nothing in “Well, they haven’t done that. There’s no U.S. legislation to address that.” money allocated for that. So we don’t even Gregory added that “NAFTA will cause know what’s out there in the way o f waste an increase in hazardous materials and waste dumps.” ■ ■ -. moving through border states like Arizona.” “One of the first things that has to be done is a good monitoring program of both human N O G A LES, SO N O R A : A C ITY health and the environment,” he said. O V E R W H E L M E D BY PE O P L E Kamp gave an example while testifying to H aphazard urban grow th, like that o f a congressional com m ittee hearing on Colonia Encinos and others o f its kind are NAFTA in Nogales, Ariz., on Feb. 21, 1992. examples of what happens when numerous He said, “The La Tomatera well in Nogales, large industrial plants move to what was not Sonora, continues to pum p sew age and very long ago a small town. D ie system of industrial solvent-contaminated water into roads, bridges, electric lines, gas lines and tanker trucks delivering their cargo to the sewers, not to mention the schools, hospitals, poorest people 15 months after data generat­ police and fire departments, are still those of ed by the Nogales Water Project indicated a small town in Nogales, Sonora. The popu­ the risk.” lation though, is that of a large city. Gregory added that in his opinion along Duncan Patten, director of ASU’s Center with NAFTA, the Mexican and U.S. govern­ for Environmental Studies, which is part of a ments should “start to implement pollutionprevention programs. All the new industry fiv e-u n iv ersity consortium funded by coming in should be required to use bestCongress to study the border environment, available technology to control pollution and said: they ought to have detailed prevention plans “Much o f [M exico’s] pollution comes so they’re not creating the pollution in the from urban development, urban expansion.” first place to have to control.” Colonia Encinos is an example of what That may be a difficult action to get out of has happened all along the border over the the Mexican government, though, because last several years. It began as a squatter’s the average Mexican is in favor of NAFTA camp in 1986. just the way it is. A poll last year found that The lure o f jo b s in the m aquiladoras 80 percent fav o r the treaty and many enticed thousands to move north to the bor­ Mexicans are afraid that if extra environmen­ der during the economically troubled 1980s. tal demands are placed on the maquiladoras, Mexico’s rate of unemployed and underem­ the incentive for them to come to Mexico ployed often reached 50 p ercen t then. will be lost. Nogales, however, didn’t have the housing to Rosa E lvira M ancillas Pacheco is an accommodate the large numbers. example of the typical maquiladora worker. Becerra said homeless people by the thou­ She is a single, 20-year-old who lives with sands began to camp on empty government her mother and sister in Colonia Encinos. and privately owned land. Eventually, they The three women moved to the Nogales area An unidentified man cut» up a chicken, blanketed by files, on a makeshift table In the Nogales, began to build their simple shelters, and the three years ago, leaving behind all the men in Sonora, landfill. The chicken, like many Other things, was pulled from the dump fo r muse by coldnias were bom. the family. members of the community, despHothe health haiarclB, Nogales is typical of other Mexican-borMancillas’ sister works at Avent, a manu­ der boomtowns that are literally bursting at facturer o f surgical-face masks and~other the seams with growth. In 1965 the population of Nogales Mexico. h e alth -in d u stry p ap er p roducts. A vent is ow ned by was 37,700. Now estimates range from 200,000 to 250,000, An example of the scope of the problem is given by the Kimberly-Clark Corp. of Dallas, the makers of Kleenex tis­ and the infrastructure - the housing, electricity systems, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which said that only sues. . roads, bridges, sewers, waste treatment facilities, schools 9 percent of the 600 maquiladoras south of Texas in Mexico Until recently, Mancillas worked for Chamberlain, a and hospitals - hasn’t kept pace with the enormous growth requested permission to repatriate hazardous waste from Chicago-based company whose Nogales factory makes rate. 1987 to 1991. garage door openers. Chamberlain management credits its Becerra estimates that 85 percent of the colonia’s adult The Integrated Border Plan gives only vague promises ability to undersell other U S- manufacturers to its location population work for American-owned maquiladoras making that each country will try to protect the environment, Felix in Mexico. from 50 cents to 80 cents an hour. The wage is less than jobs said. He added that the programs were announced without Mancillas said she is not aware of any of the environmen­ in the interior pay and not enough to buy the basic necessi­ the allocation of sufficient funds. tal-health dangers of working in the maquiladoras. She has ties for the average fam ily, but people m otivated by “What’s really sad is the department in charge of taking heard about some o f the ecological damage caused by the Mexico’s high rate of unemployment are still desparate for care o f these problem s in M exico [S E D E S O L ,.the illegal dumping of hazardous waste, but said she is not con­ the jobs. Secretariat of Social Development] doesn’t have the money cerned with that kind of problem. And people continue to flood north to the border from or the persorinel necessary to study contamination prob­ Low wages and long hours, she said, are what caused her Mexico’s interim'. Meanwhile, U.S.-owned companies con­ lems,” he added. to quit working at Chamberlain. She added that she can get a tinue to flee south. Geof Land, also of the Naco, Ariz., Border Ecology better-paying job elsewhere, although she has yet to find While other colonias on the border are just beginning and Project, said, “If you look at appropriations, you’ll find that one. just starting to organize to achieve the essentials like water, a lot o f the programs now being funded under the border L eonardo F elix , a p ro fe sso r o f econom ics at the electricity and sewage, Becerra is hoping NAFTA will help plan were on line for general appropriations or other pro­ University of Sonora in Hermosillo, who has studied border Encinos become a well-established community. grams. They were just channeled into the border plan. en v iro n m en tal issu e s, rev e a le d another side o f the “We want the government to pave the streets next,” he “They’re still inadequate. That is an argument for the fact maquiladoras. said, flashing his ever-ready grin. that the border plan is largely a political response to environ­ “In the maquiladoras that operate with toxic materials,” Page 15 Thursday, April 29,1993 St a t e P ress Injuries, hard feelings from last years LA riots linger Bv L arry G erber T h e A ss o c ia t e d P ress LOS ANGELES — Some wounds heal slowly, some hurt forever. The three days o f burning, beating and shooting that began a year ago Thursday killed 54 people. It also left 2,383 people injured or maimed. And while many have recovered, some bear pain that time may never ease. For fire Capt. Scott Miller, the problem is his immobile left hand and arm. It’s tough to play ball with his children, he said. For trucker Reginald Denny, it’s the dent in his skull. “My daughter calls me Reginald Denty,” he joked. For Fidel Lopez, it’s the illnesses that fol­ lowed his beating by a mob. Fifty-eight stitch­ es patched up his forehead, but his health n ev er recovered^ leaving him broke and unemployed. For Wally Tope, it’s everything. The street preacher went into a coma after he was beaten April 30 and has not awakened. On the riots’ first, anniversary, he was the only victim still hospitalized. “He was a normal guy. He loved to hike and play with the kids in the neighborhood,” said longtime friend Victor Marquis. “He cer­ tainly wasn’t afraid to die for his faith, but he wasn’t attempting that, either.” . On the Second day o f the riots, Tope, 53, figured looters needed to hear the word of God. “He saw his home town going to hell in a handbasket. Basically, all the stops came unplugged,” Marquis said. Tope, a nondenominational fundamentalist Christian, drove to Holly wood and started preaching to people emptying a store of liquor and disposable diapers. “Eventually’, they got mad at him and they got into a scuffle,” said his brother, Dennis Tope. "They just kicked him for three or four minutes.” The riots started after a jury acquitted four w hite police o fficers o f nearly all state charges in the March 3, 1991, beating of black motorist Rodney King. More than two years after the videotaped beating, a federal jury convicted the sergeant in charge and the officer who struck the most blows. Friends visit Tope nowadays at a care cen­ ter, where a picture on his night stand reminds visitors of the energetic evangelist he used to be. They talk to Tope and mássage his limbs. Sometimes he moves, they say, but there’s no response to stimulus. Miller was driving a hook-and-ladder truck to one of the riots’ first fires when a sniper’s bullet almost killed him. It pierced his cheek, went into his neck, severed an artery and par­ alyzed his left side. He was one of about 20 police, firefighters and paramedics hurt in the riots. T he 34-year-old, w ho today is stuck behind a desk, undergoes three days of super­ vised therapy a week, but that’s just part of i t “Actually, every day of my life is therapy, and everything I do is therapy. It’s just a long, slow process,” Miller said. M iller helps coach his 6-year-old son Ryan’s T-ball team, “but there are some of: those fluid motions that I just can’t demon­ strate the way I’d like to,” he said. Construction worker Lopez was uncon­ scious after a beating at die intersection of Florence and Normandie avenues when he was saved by a clergyman who braved the streets. The Rev. Benny Newton defied a mob, threw his body over Lopez, dragged him to his car, and drove him to a hospital. “They would have burned me if not for the pastor,” Lopez said. Lopez, 47, mourned his rescuer, who died Saturday of leukemia. It has been a long year for Lopez, who was sick most of the tíme and unable to work. Demonstrators protest the verdict in the Rodney King beating case in front of the Los Angeles Police Department headquarters on April 29,1992. The three days of rioting that began a year ago today left 2,383 people injured. “They broke all my plans,” Lopez said. “I owe money to everybody now.” The 26-year-old with a family of five said he would move to the country if he could get out from under his $127,000 mortgage, Denny, who is white, awoke to unwanted fame after he was pulled from his rig by three black men and beaten in the riot’s opening moments. The images of a dead-looking truck driver being battered on live television were America’s first taste of the mayhem that fol­ lowed. Denny received more than 25,000 letters. TV talk show host Arsenio Hall visited him in the hospital. While recovering, the 36-year-old Denny Finally, A Bar and Grill In T em pe With Balls. FREE HOUR OF TABLE TIME (A $ 2 .5 5 V A L U E ) ‘B ittiards met the woman he plans to marry. T he men charged in his attack are sched­ uled to be tried on attempted murder charges on July 14, Others also have been arrested and charged in the three other attacks. Denny, who jokes about the crater in his forehead, said he bore no hatred toward his attackers. So did Miller. So, probably, would Tope. “He would forgive these guys if he could say it,” said Marquis. Lopez remained bitter, “If I knew it was going to happen to me, I would have been on the freeway” out of town, he said . © ^ J f r m fik B lR fif t l inM M H v • R9Q.72AA Good 11amApm-One per coupon per table per day ■ M W l E. V m n x n i Not ra id wiSi any other oner • WHhcoupon • Expiree &-14-93 (Behind Sunny's) i. . 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Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin gesture during their post-sum m it news conference in Vancouver oh April 4, J ATTENTION 93 GRADS ANNOUNCEMENTS A D V E R T IS E R S ! & Add an Art-a-ma-bob to your ad for only $3. State Press Classifieds * Matthews Center basement * 965-6735. LEIGHTON'S «nr Reg. Price $21.95 Add M EPA Fee $2 O FF G rease 'n G o 's 20 p t. V alv o lin e Lube, O il & F ilte r S ervice M esa 898-8211 1 3 5 5 S . C o u n try C lub T em p e 89 4 -2 7 9 8 1355 S . M cC lin to ck 941-9064 1005 N. Scottsdale Rd. 2 miles north o f ASU HOURS: MON.-SAT 8-6, SUN. 10-4 u o o o only with witn coupon Not n o i valid vano witn n e rj Good with any otner other o offer. I Student Discounts Available Detailing. Accessories &Protection LSAT• GMAT GRE• MCAT R ESU LTS T hat's how w e m ade o u r nam e. i> Princeton Review students have achieved the highest average score improvements on the LSAT, GMAT, MCAT and GRE. The highest Period. 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Clinton shares a m om ent w ith w ife H illary afte r his State of th e Union speech to. a Joint session of Congress on February 17. Flam es en g ulf th e Branch D ivision com pound outside Waco, Texas on April 19. More than 88 cult members died in the blaze. Clinton ordered an investigation into the FBI as sa u lt on th e com pound, b u t said c u lt lead er D avid Koresh was ultim ately responsible for the tragedy. W 'Keep up with crime... read the State Press Police eport. Yogf OwflRooja^Ifee WholeSummer ■ Price- MayMr AggjbstM" l- '?■ la c iiM ? y p to$12G per «indo per month < r $371* $366* M adrid Rm m CALL! Fares are each way based on a roundtrip purchase. Restrictions apptyand faresmaychansewith­ out notice. Seats maybe limited | so book now. VARI LU X ' N O W EDNESDAY - L I N E B I F O C A L 8 ^EYE EXAMSbyDoctorofOptometry PA R I S O P T I C y J E INTEMPE * 524 S. Mill Ave. < IN SCOTTSDALE • 7000 E. Shea • $389* $435* 894-8382 951-0288 Eyewear fo r D ifferent People CouncS travel Located at Forest and University, dkaetty across fromA.S.U.l 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, AZ 85281 966-3544 Call for a FREE Student Travels Magazine! Comics o P age 18 Calvin Thursday, April 29, 1993 __________ and Hobbes State P ress by Bill Wàtterson By GARY LARSON Back in his co llege days, Igo r w as considered to be the HBOC. By J im D o n a g h y T h e A sso c ia te d P ress NEW YORK — The reunion of boyhood pals Darryl Strawberry and Eric Davis hasn’t gone as expected for the Los A ngeles Dodgers. v The Dodgers are off to a slow start with a 7-13 record. The play o f Strawberry and Davis has a lot to do with that. Davis has one- extra-base hit in 76 at-bats, a double. Strawberry is batting .175 with three homers and seven KBIs. On the Dodgers’ seven-game road trip (1 6) that ended Tuesday, Davis was 2-for-27. "It’s still early,” Strawberry said, “Sure I'm disappointed. I thought it would be fun to be together again.” Strawberry and Davis were friends grow­ ing up in Los Angeles, and often talked about playing together in the major leagues some­ day. They got that chance last season when Davis was acquired in a trade with Cincinnati. PEO PLE Both players, however,/were plagued by injuries and combined for only 10 homers and 57 RBIs in 119 games in 1992. Strawberry, signed as a free agent from the New York Mets before the 1991 season, had back surgery last Sept. 15 to repair a damaged disk in his lower back. “They told me it might take a while to get back,” Strawberry said. “Playing in cold weather and on turf in the East hasn ’t helped.” But some in baseball are starting to won­ der whether the two outfielders will ever be as good as in the past. Before coming to the Dodgers, Strawberry averaged 32 homers and 91 RBIs in eight controversial seasons with the Mets. Davis, meanwhile, was compared to Willie M ays when he first Came up w ith the Cincinnati Reds. But in eight seasons with Cincinnati, he averaged a disappointing 21 home runs and 62 RBIs. The left fielder has been hurt by injuries his entire career, averaging only 103 games in nine seasons while going on the disabled list five times, In the past two seasons, Davis, has aver­ aged 82 games with only eight home runs and 33 RBIs. “ I d o n ’t like to say the Los A ngeles Dodgers depend on two guys for a good-sea­ son,” manager Tommy Lasorda said. “But there is no doubt they are an important part of our success. But we have six other guys in the lineup who can win a game.” The problem is some of those other guys aren’t doing much, either. The Dodgers hit .214 as a team in their .first 20 games. Third baseman Tim W allach, acquired from Montreal, was batting .153 (1 l-for-72) With five RBIs. First baseman Eric Karros, the 1992 NL Rookie o f the Year, was hitting .227, and shortstop Jose Offerman was at .157. Los Angeles had hit only eight home runs and was averaging three runs per game. It could be another long season for Lasorda and his Dodgers. The Dodgers finished last in the NL West in 1992 with a 63-99 record. It Was the club’s most losses since finishing 53-101 in 1908, and the first time the Dodgers finished at the bottom since 1905 (48-104). Los Angeles made 174 errors last season, including 42 by Offerman and 27 by infielder Lenny Harris. “Every team in the big leagues, no matter how good they are, is going to lose one-third of their games, which is 54 games,” Lasorda said. , “And every team in baseball, no matter how bad they are is going to win one-third of their games. I t’s the Other one-third that makes the difference. The games that we have just lost are part of that losing one-third,’’ Trouble is, he said that last season, too. State P ress Thursday, April 29,1993 Page 19 Archery nears ‘Rhodes’ end M ens g o lf rallies for Pac-10 title 17 years concluding for Sun Devil coach B y G reg S exton S t a te P ress Her smile and friendly personality are as well known as her extremely successful archery program. And for Sheri Rhodes, the coach of the Sun Devil program for the past 17 years, the sport of archery has given her enough friends that she could travel to just about any cornet of the world — as she frequently does -4- and have a warm, hospitable place to stay. Of course, archers worldwide know that if they are shooting in a competition in Tempe, they have an invitation to stay at her abode, too. “I would have never have thought in the beginning that archery would have taken me to as many places as it has,” said Rhodes, sit­ ting behind her small desk on the third floor of the Intercollegiate Athletics Building. “Archery has given me numerous friends. That's probably the biggest thing that the sport has given me. It’s like an extended fami­ ly.” U nfortunately for Rhodes and her entourage of archers, the ‘family’ is going through a major change. In a move to curb a .$3 million deficit, the ASU athletic department in March eliminated the archery program effective June 30, along with badminton and men’s gymnastics. After a June 12 competition, the ASU archery team will cease to exist in its present form, and Rhodes will be out of a job. The eyes o f ASU Archery conch Sheri Rhodes have sesn a great number of successful Sun While Sun Devil archery will probably Devil archsrs over her 17 years at the helm o f the program. Archery has bean elim inated from continue in a club sport format, the world of the ASU athletic departm ent beginning next season, archery likely won’t be the same. The ASU giate program in the world. took die national collegiate championship in program has been that good. In her 16 seasons, Rhodes has guided the 1984. H u m b le b eg in n in gs ' The ASU archery program was started id 1955 with a $100 investment. Margaret Klann, a physical education teacher at ASU, was presented a $100 budget by thenwomen’s athletic director Nina Murphy. Klann then invested the money in a dual meet, and the face of collegiate archery was changed forever. Klann would coach for 21 years and claim 16 national titles. She not only began the win­ ning trend, but served as a mentor and coach for Rhodes. Rhodes took the reins of the program in 1976 and the record she has accumulated since then can not be matched by any colle- Sun Devils to 42 out of a possible 48 national team titles. She has tutored 21 individual champs and more than 100 All-Americans. Furthermore, Rhodes has guided ASU to win all five national archery titles in a single season in seven different years. T he O lym pic connection ASU’s archery success hasn’t stopped at the national level, either. Rhodes has coached seven ASU Olympians, including Rick McKinney, who has been a member of four U.S. Olympic squads. He won a silver medal in the 1984 games in Los Angeles. Another archer to enjoy great success under Rhodes’ assistance is Jay Barrs. He par­ ticipated on the 1983-84 Sun Devil team and In 1988, Barrs was reunited with Rhodes in Seoul, South Korea, and was part of a team that took the gold. And tjiat 1988 Olympic team is one that will go down in ASU history. Three of the four U.S. team members were from ASU, the team coach was Rhodes, and the team manag­ er was also from ASU. It’s a yew Rhodes will never forget. “I think that’s pretty good representation,” she said of the 1988 team. ‘I t’s something to say you have X number of athletes (represent­ ed on an Olympic team), but when you have coaching and management — that says some­ thing.” T uxn to R hodes , page 20. B y Sh a u n R achau S ta te P ress The ASU m en ’s golf team fired a finalround, six-under-par to tal of 354 W ednesday to edge UofA by two strokes fo r the Pac-10 C ham pionship in D emsey Goleta, Calif. The fifth -ran k ed Sun Devils had three golfers birdie the on 18th hole to edge the W ildcats, w ho led ASU by nine strokes going into Wednesday’s final round. “It was very sweet,” ASU golf coach Randy Lein said. “We played just awesome go lf (W ednesday) and finished o ff real strong.” It was the fourth time in the last five years that ASU and UofA finished one-two at the Pac-10 Championships. The Wildcats won the title in 1991, while the Sun Devils won back-to-back titles in 1989 and 1990. Lein said being behind UofA going into the final round was actually to the Sun Devil’s advantage. “I think it is always easier being behind and knowing that you have to catch up,” he said. “We knew what we had to do, and we responded in a big way . “They didn’t play poorly. We just played really well.” In d iv id u ally , ASU sophom ore Todd Demsey was runner-up to UofA’s Jason Gore for the conference title, after both golfers posted final round scores of 70 to tie at 284 and force a sudden death playoff. In the extra session, Gore shot par on Sandpiper Golf Course’s 220-yard 11th hole to secure the title. Sun Devil Chris Stutts finished in third place at 285, while Keith Sbarbaro tied for fifth with the W ildcats’ David Hdwser at 288. Other top individuals for ASU were Cade Stone (19th, 296), Larry Barber (21st, 297) and Rob Mangini (31 St, 303). Lein, in his first year as the Sun Devils’ coach, was awarded Pac-10 Coach of the Year honors.. Earning all-Pac-10 first-team honors for the Sun Devils w ere Demsey and Stutts," while Stone and Barber were named to the second team. Mangini and Sbarbaro each earned honorable mention honors. The Sun Devils will next compete at die NCAA Western Regionals in Provo, U tah .' S w in g in g & S p i k i n g A SU volleyball star G arner extending talent to softball squad squad that will compete in the World University Games this summer which Snyder described as the Olympic ‘B’ team. If it isn’t astounding enough that Christine Gamer is one of In softball, Gamer is hitting .274 with 15 RBIs — tied for die best collegiate volleyball players in the country, in addi­ third on the team — with an on-base percentage of .421. Wells tion to performing as a star hitter for the ASU softball team, is currently using her as a designated player and rightfielder. consider that in high school, she was a/our-sport athlete. Garner was recruited as a volleyball player, but said that At Tustin High in Tustin, Calif., she earned three letters she had ideas of pulling double duty for Sun Devil athletics each in volleyball and basketball and one each in both track even before she came to ASU. arid softball. Gam er was also captain She approached softball coach of the hoops and volleyball squads as a Linda Wells over winter break and senior. asked to try out. Gamer impressed Wells enough to be granted a ros­ This year, though, Gamer has limit­ ter spot, an addition which Wells ed h erself to two sports, But team­ m ates and coaches alike have said has been a bonus for the softexpressed admiration for Gamer’s abil­ ball team. ity to achieve success both on and off “I obviously had the team all planned without her,” Wells said. the court and diamond. “I think it’s wonderful,” volleyball “So, if we were able to get any coach Patti Snyder said. T think she’s additional talent from a person like a great personality for the team, and Third in a three-part series herself, it would be a plus. In this regard, we’re happy to have her.” it’s great to be able to share those type Gamer said the Snyder understood her desire to play anoth­ o f kids. Sire’s got a lot o f spunk.” “W hen she first got here, it didn’t seem like she had a er sport and was even supportive of her. whole lot of experience,” said ASU catcher Wendy Johnson. “H old her when I was being recruited by her that I might want to play another spent,” Gamer said. “She always was “B u t in this season alone, she has improved so much. She’s a open to it and had no problems with i t ” natural athlete.” “As good an athlete as Christine is, if she could help tire Gam er has displayed her athleticism thoroughly this year. She has been selected for the 24-member U.S. volleyball T uin t o G a r n e r , p a g e 20. B y M ic h a e l B ra n o m S t a t e P ress ASU freshm an Christina Devil vollayball tanin, tun plate fo r the ASU eoftbalt team. Thursday, April 29, 1993 S t a t e P ress Rhodes. B y G reg Se x t o n St a t e P reS I sc* of Venus, has been working overtime on the ASU ■nsttoty leant No lest dun tim e couples have been shot with his anti they eh* *nr&ute their love f e e W |o a * ^ |^ | First, ASU a t i e t y coach Sheri Rhodes and her fiancee Rkk McKinney, a former Sun Devil and fourdme Olympian, met at as Olympic festival in 1979. Again, tie arrow strode when former Sun DnB-m E Olympias lay Bans me* Janet Schaffer, also a former ASU archery team member. th e two now Ifce togethoc. Yet another couple has fallen victim to Cupid’s shots: current ASU shooters Jamie and Kathie Loesch. The married couple met in Texas and now have »young daughter. Rhodes said having a relationship «nth a competitive personality is chaBengmg. “Somewhere along the Mae, I think (me has to take a back scat to the other,” Rhodes said. “Actually, a lot of tones it doesn’t work out. It is hard to handle tnro esmpetitors in the same family.” But the current and former Sun Devils who have been pierced with Cupid's love arrow apparently have been C ontinued from page 19. softball team, I think that it is wonderful,” Snyder said. “It’s nice to be able to share the athletes.” Since Gamer admits that her heart is in volleyball, Wells said ASU will never know what kind of softball player she could have become. “To me, she is a volleyball player that is playing softball,” Wells said. “And I guess my treatment of her has been with an attempt to temper my expectations. I haven’t wanted to sway my opinion to force more out of her. “Right now, she’s exclusively a hitter and a part-time out­ fielder. Also, there was the question of injury . Although the softball diamond is not the safest place in the world, neither Gamer nor Snyder are worrying about anything serious. “Actually, I think the only thing that could happen on the softball field is that l would get some bruises and cuts,” Garner said. “I don’t think it is that dangerous as far as injuries go, like blowing out a knee.” “She’s a pretty tough kid,” Snyder said. “She rides her bike all over campus, and that’s probably more dangerous than softball. A kid can get injured any time. I’m not one of those coaches who worries about injury.” Another o f Garner’s talents, teammates say, is her sharp wit and ability to keep her teams loose through humor. “She is so funny,” pitcher Mona Nand said. “She totally brings you up when you are down, and always makes you laugh.” “Well, someone has to do it,” explained Gamer. “Why not me?” from page 19. The Sun Devil Olympic connection isn’t lim­ great.” ited to Americans, either. In addition to Sun Not only has Rhodes been impressive as a Devils McKinney and Barrs competing few the coach at ASU, she was also a strong competitor. U.S. team in 1992, shooting for her home coun­ She was a three-time All-American at ASU, and try of England was ASU senior Alison is a current member of ASU’s Hall of Fame. Williamson. She finished seventh overall, and Rhodes in one of six Sun Devil archers hon­ said she came home with a lifetime of memo­ ored in the hall. ries. ■ For years now, ASU has been the main gath­ Rhodes, Williamson said, was a central fac­ ering point for archers who want to train and tor in her decision to come to ASU, and has compete at the national and international levels, been instrumental in her success throughout her Rhodes has been able to fine-tune their already collegiate career. honed skills. “I knew about ASU,” said Williamson, 22, “Let’s just say I extremely enjoy what I do,” on her decision to come to Tempe. “I knew Rhodes said. “That’s the thing that has made about all the people who had gone here. And I ASU so dominant, is the fact that I enjoy what 1 knew about Sheri." Williamson, who also placed second in the “My main purpose is to train and prepare European Archery Championships last summer, archers for competition.” said Rhodes’ coaching technique has been help- Tbugh decisions While Rhodes has been critical of the athletic “She is very observant to detail,” Williamson said. “If you have a problem, she can point it out department and Athletic Director Charles Harris, she said the thing that bothered her most about and help you fix it.” the elimination of her Sport was the way it was K lann’s offer brings handled. . R hodes to ASU Rhodes said she was first told last year that Ironically, Rhodes, an Arizona native, began her program was in jeopardy of cuts. She said her sporting career not as an archer, but as a the department told her that in order for her pro­ golfer at Alhambra High School in Phoenix. But gram to remain “as is,” she would have to raise during the golf off-season, Rhodes took up $300,000 in each of the next three years. The archery and it didn’t take her long to fall in love money would then be banked, and the interest with the sport She won the state archery cham­ used to support the program. pionship her senior year. ■But for Rhodes, a part-time: employee mak­ » At the time, Rhodes wasn’t sure where she ing $14,000 a year, raising that astronomical wanted to go to college, but she did know what (for archery) amount proved to be too over­ she wanted to study —- education. whelming. “I don’t think I ever really thought about “If I could raise $300,000 a year, why would coming to ASU until I was approached by I be working here for $14,000?” Rhodes pon­ Margaret Klarin,” she said. ders. Rhodes took Klann’s offer and enrolled at Rhodes said the hardest thing for her will be ASU, earning her bachelor’s degree in physical packing up her office and finding something education in 1976. She would go on to earn her new to do with her life, an existence that has master’s degree in secondary education in 1979. been devoted to archery and ASU for nearly 20 Rhodes explained that both the individuality years, and camaraderie of archery are what attracts her “A major part of my life has changed,” she to the sport. said. “Normally you get tp make those changes “It can be a social thing if you want it to,” and for the first time in my life, I don’t get to she said. “You can have people around you if choose what I want to do. you want to, or you can go out and be by your­ “It’s difficult for me, but at least I can say I self and be individual and self-motivated and did the best I could when I was here, and now work with yourself, to accomplish something it’s just time to move on.” THEY NEVER tD CARS LIKE THIS IN DRIVER'S ED. < MINI-STORAGE 967-3900 D o n 't H a u l It H o m e ... Bring coupon for Special Student Rate 4 -m o s.-p rice of 3 'Not to be used with any other specials ^ k y N MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE GS: Hardly a learner's car. The Mitsubishi Eclipse GS is stylish, sporty, and exciting. •Y our lo ck, yo ur key •F u ll s e c u rity •V isa /M a ste rca rd •O pen 7 days dual power remote sideview mirrors. For a truly educational experience, test drive an Eclipse today. 1905 E. Apache Blvd Contact; Anthony Ingram, College Grad Program Administrator 934-1111 A spirited performer that makes driving fun again, Standard features include: multi-point fuel-injection, four-wheel disc brakes, AM/FM stereo cassette with 6 speakers, and * $2,000 Rebeteeoainst price Including dealer added equipment. K E Y S T O N E $3 .9 9 C ontinued _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _U n tve rait y _ _ _ _ _ _ ? i i i □ 4 4 3 4 W e s t G l e n d a l e A v e . , G l e n d a l e • 9 3 4 -1 1 1 1 Ca m p u s Corner S t a t e P ress Thursday, April 29,1993 P a g e 21 Classifieds Head over heels Notice our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investígale the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of die offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance reg ard in g the in v e stig atio n Of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. APARTMENTS $100 MOV e ^IN. 2 bedroom, washer, dryer, fireplace, $445/month. Apart­ ment Renters, 831-5900. 1 BEDROOM 1 block from ASU, fur­ nished, la undry, $255. C all Jac o b 844-5900 or pager 389-7571. 1 BEDROOM, utilities included, pool, jacuzzi, club house, $385/month. Apart­ ment Renters, 831-5900. 2 BEDROOM apartments, new paint/ carpet, short walk to cam pus, $450/ month, 750 square feet. Call 602-4282217 or 602-428-1255. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath 4-plex, refriger­ ated or evap, covered parking* from $249.966-5596. 2 BEDROOM, 2 hath, pool, jacuzzi, utilities included, $545/month. Apart­ ment Renters, 831-5900. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, w asher/dryer hookup, pool, jacuzzi, many extras, $499/month. Apartment Renters, 8315900. Sun Devil gymnast Jenny Ester flies above a tram poline Wednesday during a carnival on the W est Lawn. The carnival was to benefit theASU’s men’s gymnastics team in Its quest to restore Its program from elim ination. APARTMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D ^F ^M N T LA R G E 2 bedroom , 2 b ath , 1,000 square feet, utilities included, $600/ month. Apartment Renters, 831-5900. STUDIO , UTILITIES included, pool, $389/month. Apartment Renters, 8315900. H O M |S r o R R |N L _ LUXURY 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo, Questa Vida, washer/dryer, pool, avail­ able 6/1, $750/month. 714-673-3122. PAPAGO PARK 0 , 2 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer, $575/month. David, 8293862,201-3942 REN T O R SALE LARGE 5 bedroom house, pool, wash­ er, dryer, dishwasher, maid service, Rural/Apache, $1200/month. 966-1847. LOVELY 3 bedroom, 2 bath furnished house on beautiful South M ountain. Pool, air conditioning, quiet neighorhood, 20 minutes from ASU. $400 per month plus utilities and deposit. Available May 29-October 2. Call 276-9445. WANTED: HOUSE or patio home for 5/15 through 8/15 with fenced area, $400 to $500. Mature doctoral student Call 965-1349 or 926-1838. 2 bedroom master suite condo in Questa Vida. Near pools and recreation areas. Full size washer/dryer, microwave, ceil­ ing fans, new carpet, fireplace, im ­ maculate. Joe, 985-1111. RENTAL SHARING DESPERATELY SEEKING roommate to share two bedroom, two bath apart­ ment. Nonsmoker, fem ale preferred. Available May 1. Call 423-5760. ^ N D ^ F O R J I ^ FEMALE NONSM OKER, fu lly fu r­ nished (except your room). Pool, ja ­ cuzzi, weight room, laundry facilities. Private bath and two large closets. Close to ASU and MCC. Call 491-6152. 10 MINUTES from ASU 2 bedroom, 11/2 bath, dishwasher, laundry, pool, car­ p o rt, $400/m onth. J e ff o r L aura 943-8186. FEMALE PREFERRED, nice 4 bed­ room house, pool, washer/dryer, Tempe, $205/month, 1/4 utilities. Matt, 8387016. • v V '.? - : :• ■ : TO W N H O M ES/ 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath near Mill and Uni­ versity, new carpet, refrigerator, wash­ e r and d ry e r, pool and spa. $ 4 3 0 / month. MGM* 345-1919. 2 BEDROOM, all utilities paid, $455. Studio $309, all utilities paid, ASU area. 437-1048. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, air, dish­ washer, washer, dryer, pool, tennis, near ASU, $800. (714)499-4065, 9674908. .2 BEDROOM* 2 bath, one block from A SU . S u b -lease a partm ent. $480/ month. No deposit, no hook-up fees. May, June, July. 967-4072, Jodi o r Kris­ ta. BIKE TO ASU, pool, washer, dryer, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $500. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, $695. 510 West University, Her­ mosa. Sale information also available. 966-0987. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedrooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laundry room. On East 8th Street between Rural and McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. Call for move in special. FEMALE ROOMMATES for summer and/or next school year: 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 1 mile from ASU (Worthington Place). Pool, volleyball, club house. Call Tracy, 431-0638. - ^ JUNE AND July free, 1 bedroom, pool, tennis court, $395/month. Apartment Renters, 831-5900. HAYDEN SQUARE condo for summer and fall rental. Three bedroom , two bath. Contact Mike at 921-3651. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call 965-6731! FEMALE, SHARE 2 bedroom, 2 bath, no cats, 1/2 rent/u tilities, C am eron Creek, $295,423-1305, HOUSE: OWN bed/bath, $225,1/3 util­ ities, large yard, washer/dryer.Kevin or Jeremy, 945-3323. LOOKING FOR roommate to find new place starting this summer. M ale/female. Call Rob: 582-9172. MALE/ FEMALE, share large 2 bed­ room, June and July, mid-May move-in possible. 968-0962. OWN BATHROOM and bedroom. All amenities and utilities included. Townhouse has washer/dryer and is 1 mile from ASU Quiet area, good for gradu­ ate or serious student. $300 month. 8299047. OWN BEDROOM in 3 bedroom condo, 16ft, full amenities, 10 minutes/ASU, next to South Point, $320, utilities in­ cluded. 598-9803. OWN BEDROOM in 3 bedroom house with pool/spa. Great location. $250/ month plus 1/3 utilities. Female pre­ ferred. Call 839-9840., Need a tax break? O rder your 1993-1994 Sun Devil Spark yearbook before May 30th and we'll pay your taxes! OWN ROOM in 2 bedroom condo, five near ASU, serious student, nonsmoker, male/female, $350 plus 1/2 utilities. 423-5203. RESPONSIBLE INDIVIDUAL, share summer rental. 1-1/2 mile/ASU. Fully furnished, utilities included, $250. 9668958,852-8549. RO O M M A TE N EED ED !! $ 2 7 0 / month. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, furnished apartment. 1/2 utilities. Call Trini, 9299187. U teS tn U d C r e ip l IS APARTMENTS s a lÁ u íé o o l The yearbook is YOUR book! * Not valid with any other offer ($1.93 value) Complete the attached order form and drop off at the Spark office, room 50 or at the front recep­ tion desk of Student Publications, both located in the basement of Matthews Center. - n .s » a j . Spaif t 1 9 9 3 -9 4 O R D E R FO R M ieUoo/ C |,., neu m■ ve, . u l u i . innuNj n NAIIE ( L u t nam . rirei mhhiiv AZUD* j~ ^ YEAR M COLLEGE I , , , FREE m ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ( ) Mail form to: The Sun Devil Yearbook Student Publications, Box 871902 Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Office phone: (602)965-6881 or 965-7572 A partm ent Locating Service 'Specializing in Student ¡Housing' GREAT LOCATIONS RENTAL SERVICES Don’t delay, call today! 9 6 8 -8 8 8 6 Broadway & M cClintock In Ih e ABCO Plaza St a t e P ress Thursday, April 29, 1993 P age 2 2 ROOMS FOR RENT JEWELRY TRAVEL BEDROOM/ BATH in 2 bedroom/bath condo near AS U. Pool/ jacuzzi/ laundry in complex. $275/month. Joe, 929-0372. I MILL AVENUE JEWELERS DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places USA. Also worldwide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. ~ 414 S. Mill. Suite 101 Tem pe, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICE JEWELERS» FEMALE NONSMOKER, share four bedroom house until August or longer, Southem/McClintock, $200/month, 1/4 utilities. 491-9484. > Custom Design & Remounts Jewelry Watch Repair G old/D iam onds/Silver Pulsar W atches/Pearls & NONS MOKING RES PONS IB LE fe­ male, own room/bath, from 5-15 until 7-31 only! Walk to ASU! Perfect for summer school! $257.55/month, but only half that for May! $150 refundable deposit. Angie, 966-6206. TICKETS 2 TICKETS for Aspects of Love Satur­ day. night, $60 (originally $7Q). Call Cynthia, 678-0555, OWN ROOM in house. Male/female. All amenities and utilities included. $210 month. John, 273-0309. 1979 OLDSMOBILE Regency *98, ex­ cellent condition, $ 1800/offer. 6492069, leave message. 1979 TOYOTA Cel ica, black, air, 5speed, sunroof, must sell, $1000/offer. Call 966^9723 ROOMMATE WANTED to share home néar ASU. P ool, laundry; $300 per month. Call Ellen, 894-9786. . 1980 PORSCHE 911 SC Weissach Ltd Annivèrsafy Edition. Factory spoiler, whale tail, power sunroof, air, special wheels, metallic black, you will love this car!! Excellent condition. $16,500/ offer 829-6992. 4 B ED R O O M , 3 bath pool, 1,700 square feet, fireplace, vaulted ceiling, bike tó ÀSU, $77,500. Rene or Mitch, 967-5462, , -' 1983 OLDSMOBILE Omega. Reliable, cold air conditioning, $ 1200. Call Dave, 941 -3443 evenings/weekends. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 1985 RENAULT Alliance convertible, auto, pow er steering, air, ÀM /FM , gold. Must sëll ! ! $ 1700/offer. Ajay, 929-9187v HUD SALE!! B u y o f th e W e e k B e a u tifu l 3 b e d ro o m w /p o o l, S c o tts d a le /M c K e llip s LOSE WEIGHT with Diet Magic. Con­ trol allergies. All Natural Herb Pro­ ducts, 963-8263. Seized. 89 Mercedes..^$200, 86 V W .. $50, 87 Mercedes...$100, 65 Mustang... $50. Choose 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; M ESA A U T O X -C H A N G E We Buy Cars for Cash We Finance You _______ Call 649-3030 I 1 001 S . C o u n try C lu b D r. M esa. A Z Smith Mesa Nissan Ytmr Nissan Parts & Service Experts BOOKS Always G ives You^SfC R E C Y C L E F O R $$$ Sell your books for cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit, towards the p u rch ase o f a n y th in g in th e sto re . Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers welcome. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill ; Avenue, 966-0203. FURNITURE O FF on A ny Service o r P arts Purchase T h is offer is good w ith a Valid Stu d en t, Faculty, o r S taff ID W e offer a free ro u n d trip s h u ttle to ASU M o n , 7 :3 0 a.m .-8:30 p.m . Tues.-Fri. 2 :3 0 a.m .-5:30 p.m . BRAND NEW beige leather queen size waterbed, $75. Evan, 730-8228. FOR S ALE - lots of really nice furni­ ture TCall 350-9630 for details! Parts D epartm ent Also O p e n Saturday 8:30 a.m .-12:30 p>m. .MOVING SALE! Dining room table with four chairs, rattancouch, vacuum, and more! $10-175 220-0913. 1701 W . Broadway Rd. Mesa C a llfor a n a p p o in tm e n t to d a y! MOVING! M UST sell all Furniture, prints, 13" color television, microwave, and more. All good condition. Jason, 966-3504. Service 834-3366 Parts 830-0255 MOVING! MUST sell furniture: Beige sectional couch, $ 100; Oak wood coffee table, $30; TV stand, $30, Prices nego­ tiable Call A shl^^^^^ M O T O R C Y C yS ^^ SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed,. entertainm ent Center, d resser. 3527249. COMPUTERS IBM COMPATIBLE 8088 with printer, 32 meg hard drive, softw are, W ord­ Perfect, Lotus, $350/offer. 964-3719. S ta tt P r ttt C lm ifìtd t 96S-673S À HosmiNr; Answers all questions. Stop by or call our International Information C enter. Available: •Eurail Passes •Student International Flights •H ostel Memberships •International Student IDs 1046 E. Lemon S t . , Tempe 8 9 4 -5 1 2 8 Hostelling International's E nd o f Semester Clearance MEI Travel Packs Sihrerstreak Voyager Vagabond Wanderlust Scottsman I Trekker I Eurail I Reg. 95 80 115 140 125 155 190 is % o ir 81 68 98 119 106 132 161 W ell beat any price-guaranteed! C all 894-5128! r Coupon Coupon Coupon 15% Discount j on all merchandise A h o s t e l l in g ■ INTERNATIONAL* 1046 E. Lemon S t T e m p e J HELP WANTEDGENERAL AAA- BUILD your resume having fun this summer with internship, all majors, 3 college credits, save $4000 living in North Carolina- it's so g reen! Leave message for Jay, 894-5283. AEROBICS INSTRUCTOR, experience preferred but not necessary. Call Bren­ da at 952-0420, extension 427. ATTENTION: HARKINS Theater is now hiring to fill several staff positions. Exciting atmosphere and flexible sched­ ule. Apply in person Saturday and Tues­ day between 2-7pin at the following lo­ cations: Scottsdale Fashion Square, Ar­ cadia 8* and Metro Center-^. A TTN STUDENTS Hiring immediately for part time posi­ tions, Earn $8-$12 per hour. No phone sales. C all for appointm ent, ask for Mike, 921-1103. 13" COLOR TV, remote, $110. Queen bed, $100. Bookcase, $20. Call 9413443 evenings/weekends, SOFA SET, coffee table, entertainment center, dinette set, bed, night stands, dresser and more. Perfect condition, must see. 966-1013. Considering Europe on a budget? Talk to the expertsWe can help! CHEAP! FBI/UJS, Bob B ullock • R ea lty E xecutives MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE STARR TRAVEL 1-800-288-5617 1990 ACCORD EX 2-door, lo a d e d / $ 11,500/offer. 7314967, Barry. $ 8 9 ,0 0 0 998-2992 S u p e r D iscou n t A ir Fares $539 & UP (Phoenix-Tokyo RT) We Speak Japanese 1988 NISSAN Sentra; 52,000 miles, stick, air: Must move. $2800. Jason, 966-35Q4. ; ' Papago Park •V illage-'Q uesta V ida * ? 19 9 1 CA V A LIER , great condition, 22,000 miles, white 5-speed, AM/FM "Government Hud Sale" 3 $ down. Hur­ ry .c a ll T.J. C arty Realty Executives; cassette, air, $5975/offer. 350-9375. ' 831-0322. UNIVERSITY SHADOWS 2 bedroom/ study, 2 bathrooms, security system- No down, take over mortgage. 731-9563. DA PA KI AUTOMOBILES ROOM M ATS NEEDED to share beau­ tiful 4 bedroom home. Pool, washer, dryer, 3 miles from ASU, $225, . i/4 util­ ities. 49 i-877b. NO DOWN- take over mortgage, $700 per month. 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Air conditioning, dishw asher, washer/dryer, pool, tennis. (7 i 4)499-4065 or 9674908. PHOENIX TO Minneapolis, one way, Sunday May 16th, 7pm, female, $150. Please call 921-8599. SUNS PLAY-OFF: Suns vs. Lakers Fri­ day night and Sunday noon. Great seats, affordable prices. Steve, 274-7136. QUIET LOVELY with privacy and all amenities plus membership in athletic club. $250 month. Prefer non-smoker non-partier Broadway and Price roads. Chris 894-9839 HOMES FOR SALE GOING TO the Dead? 1 plane ticket $63, Leav£ Friday May 14th, returning May 17th. 644-1645. 1979 KAWASAKI. Runs, but needs work. A-B bike, perfect for student. $450.784-9733, leave message. SCOOTER HONDA Elite 8Qcc Good condition $499, call John 966-1874. BICYCLES FOUR 10-SPEED racing bikes, reason­ able condition. $30 each/offer. Call 9413443 evenings/weekends. CHECK OU T our new section: Em­ ployment Opportunities, located at the end o f classifieds. COLLEGE STUDENTS and teachers! C hildren's Summ er Cam p in O racle, Arizona, is looking for program lead­ ers, horseback riding staff, counselors, lifeguards, cam p nurse, and cooks to work June 2-August 14. Good salary, job experience, plus room/board. Write YMCA Camp, PO Box° 1111, Tucson, AZ 85702, or call 1-602-884-0987. COUNSELORS: BOYS camp, Maine. Openings: WSI, sailing, Windsurfing, tennis, waterskiing. Soccer, lacrosse, hockey, crafts, baseball, rock-climbing, drama, basketball, riflery, archery, etc. U pper classm en p referred. T errific working conditions, exciting, fun, in­ teresting summer. Camp Cedar, 1758 Beacon Street, Brookline, M A 02.146; 617-277-8080. EVENINGS AND weekends for local moving company. Apply at 4048 East Superior in Phoenix between l-3pm. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES CUSTOM HARVESTING operation needs experienced combine operators and CDL equipped truck drivers to trav­ el entire midwest for summer. Call 405726-3353. ARE YOU staying in Arizona this sum­ mer? A Well established promotional firm is looking for self assured, ambi­ tious students. Salary pins incentives will total $200-$450 w eekly fo r the right individual. Flexible hours, busi­ ness and com m unication m ajors en­ couraged to apply. 921-7755,1-4pm. DATA SOURCE Hiring for part time telephone survey interview ers. Requires good reading skills and pleasant voice tone. Starting wage $4.50 plus per hour. Night shift 3:30-9:30pm. Apply in person MondayFriday 4515 South McClintock Suite 101, Tempe 831-297L EOE. EX ECU TIV E ASST Needed for shopping center investment broker. Apple computer skills a must. Real estate or escrow experience help­ ful. Mail resume to: 4040 East Camelback, Suite 130, Phoenix 85018 HELD CAMPAIGNS: Why flip burg­ ers when you can work with Greenpeace earning valuable and meaningful ex­ perience. Join our outreach staff work­ ing to prevent toxic waste, pollution, protect our oceans and promote nuclear disarmament. Hours 2-10. Call Kim, 966-1986. -— ■' . ■ HELP WANTED! Looking form odels for fashion shows and swimwear shows. Full and part time positions available. $10 per hour. Call Everybody In The Water Swimwear, ask for Coyanne or Sheri, 253-1641. HELP WANTED: Student to work in a part/full time capacity, who is familiar with shipping/receiving. Visa/Mastercard processing and can handle secre­ tarial duties such as typing and comput­ er processing. Pay is based on monthly sales; Porsche automotive experience helpful. Cal! 921-0921, Chris or Merle. IF YOUR job sucks, call me ... Looking for 8-10 ASU students to make $1880/ month this summer. Call 631 -0308. ja p a n It's happening now! Major U.S. com­ pany has just opened in Japan. If you have contacts in Japan, it could be worth a fortune to you. Call 1-800-473-9434 for information. M ODELS/ACTORS All ages/types needed for soft drink commercial. Pays $2,500. Fashion-LA, (602)266-6224. NOW H IR IN G for full time summer work in Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington. Sales position available, not door to door or multi-level. Call 641-2755. Interviews April 12th, 13th, and 14th. PART TIME clerical position with test prep cqmpany. Sales experience help­ ful. Excellent phone/com m unication skills a must. Also must enjoy working With, students. 967-2967. PERSO NA L FITNESS trainer parttime. Degreed, certified of experienced only. Body Sculpture, 954-9313, SU M M ER JO B S Diversified Telemarketing needs quali­ fied people to work part time evenings. Make sales on incoming calls. No dial­ ing a phone. Guaranteed $6/hour plus bonus fo r every sale. C all Joe, 921.-'' 2342. v . " ; ; >- ' ' SU M M ER W O RK $8.20- S tarting pay. N ational retail chain has summer openings in retail sales, customer service, and display. No experience requited. Scholarships availmile. Flexible hours. Must apply now, start after finals! Call 968-1840. SWIM INSTRUCTORS needed WSI re­ quired. For more information call Paul or Jackie, Chandler YMCA, 899-9622. TELEMRKTRS WANTED No experience necessary, $5/hour guar­ anteed. Close to ASU. Call 437-1101. THERAPEUTIC WORK, excellent pay, flexible hours, will train. Call 844-9000 or page 219-9000. W A LK FR O M ASU! No sales. Phone interviewers. Tuesday-» Friday, flexible part-tim e afternoon/ evening and Saturday shifts. Comfort­ able office atmosphere. Higginbotham Associates, 829-3282. WOULD YOU like to make some extra money this summer? Clear Image Pools is looking for pool ,service attendant. Need reliable transportation. Call Mat­ thew at 423-5374. "SPOKE EASY Bicycles"- Anniversary sale! Tune-up $12.95. M ill A venue Shops, southwest corner, # 116. 35Q9320,- : ., ' ' ; Defusco Industrial Supply has part-tim e & full-time desk jobs up to $10/hour. YMCA ARIZONA Camps: Looking for fir s t cooks (la rg e volum e cooking, knowledge o f baking, entrees, desserts), wranglers, rifle range counselors, kitch­ en support, life guards/WSI. For an ap ­ plication or more information please call 602-254-1571 or 1-800-660-1385. Spend your stimmer in a fun, exciting, and rewarding job. FIND IT in the State Press Classifieds! Call Dave » 966-5765 GET PERSONAL! State Press Classifieds. GRAY 18rSPEED mountain bike. ExceUent condition with U-lock, $ 100. An­ drea. 437-9480. BEAT THE HEAT! BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Q U IC K CASH Do parente òr friends have business long distance phone bill or 1-800 number? Save them and make yourself money. Call Greg, 784-0544. PETS GREEN IGUANA, makes great pet, only $30,990-8949. PO LLU TIO N Solution! State o f the art environmen­ tally beneficial product, distributors wanted. We show you how to earn ex­ cellent part-time or full-time income. Call now, 969-5150. THE STATE Press is currently inter­ viewing students for advertising sales representatives. Successful candidates are those who enjoy people, have per­ sonal integrity, who excel at team sports and thrive in the competitive arena. You m ust be graduating no sooner than Spring 1994 and have a reliable vehicle. All majors welcome, This is an excel­ lent opportunity to line your resume With solicl, practical experience. If you want to join a winning team, woric hard, have fun, learn, earn money and ex­ perience, then call Jackie Eldridge today for an interview. Call right now. 9656555. RESTAURANTS/ BARS W O O D S H E D II fofSf in an ■ I _________ We slfotçÆ Êfoa games! NWComei|gS6tson & University miAhm ► ► — HELP WANTEDCLERICAL ► A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs full time front and back office person. Experience in personal injury helpful and other medical experience helpful. Must type and have computer experi­ ence, 941-3812. ► ► [ I. I .U I I L l J I H A im n o H T nJy*«% *dat "Ye« tb m is a FREE lunch day!" ► 10 L i n . to 3 p.m. 1 fish Street & Mill 829-7878 SUMMER JOBS W e a re h irin g 1 0 0 .s tu d en ts & te ac h e rs fo r a v ariety o f tem p o­ ra ry c le ric a l p o s itio n s . If you h a v e o ffic e s kills such a s ty p ­ in g , re c e p tio n , c le ric a l, W P O , s e c re ta ry , e tc ., p le a s e c a ll fo r appo intm ent: T e m p e , 9 6 6 -1 1 0 0 P ho en ix, 2 6 4 -4 5 3 7 990 Long Is la n d Ic e T e a STIVERS T o n ig h t TEM PO RA RY PER SO N N EL SPINNING JENNY Fora Good Time call 966-1300 Balboa Cafe 404 S. Mill Ave., Suite 101 IN C . Ï HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CASHIER/ COUNTER person days 10 am-3pm, friendly, dependable. $4.75/ hour. Close to campus. Honey Bears Barbecue, 5 0 12 East Van Buren, 2739148. C O R K ’N CLEAVER Accepting applications for lunch; food servers. Will train, part time, fun at­ mosphere, fast pace, Concern with ap­ pearance and reliability and personality are important. Apply in person Monday through Friday 2-5ptn, 5101 N. 44th Street (44th Street & Camelbackj. m ill a v e n u e EXPERIENCED WAFTRENS and buspeople needed for summer. Call Joseph at 970-8017 from 11-4 for interview. Î M oadiy i W a d a tid ty C a v a r $ 3 . 5 0 P it e h a r a | Tuesday & Thursday $1 C a v a r FEMALE BARTENDER for fun neigh­ borhood bar. $7-$10 per hour, 20-30 hours per week, days mid nights. Sports knowledge a plus. Friendly* responsible a d u lts o n ly . A pply to R andy B., Woodshed I, 19 West Baseline, after 5 p.m. Great school job. u 7 01 S a u th M ill A vanti* V »60-3147 J GRILL COOK for sports restaurant, $6$8 per hour, fun and stable atmosphere, experienced please. Apply after 5pm, The Woodshed II, Dobson/University. Great school job. PREP COOK, dishw asher, w aitress, counter help wanted, Part/full time. Ap­ ply: Long Wong's, 701 S. Mill* RED ROBIN of Tempe has immediate openings for experienced w ait staff. Apply in person: 1375 West Elliott. T.C. Eggingtons An Exciting Breakfast & Lunch Restaurant W e are interviewing for a waitress position at our M esa restaurant. Must be available to work some weekdays. Please in person a t 1660 S. Alma School Rd., M esa (Alma School and the Freeway) Presents Live Music this Friday, April 30th, with P o s t V a le R o a d $2 Cover SPEC IA LS 75« Drafts $1.50 Bottles $4 Large Pitchers 833-9930 2311 E. Main Mesa E ast of Price on Apache State P ress RESTAURANTS/ BARS PERSONALS A D O PTIO N PRE RUSH Sigma Pi. A LOVING couple seeking a newborn for open adoption. Confidential. Call collect, (408) 298-5608. ________ __ F IJI PRE-RU SH w eekend 30A pril02May v-ball, boats, BBQ, and bever­ ages at Bartlett lake. Call 921-0561. GAMMA PHI Kodi- O ne more awe­ some day! We will miss you! Love ??? T ftB : TONIGHT’S the night to pay y our ransom . C heck flo o r fo r info. Your Kidnappers. JEFF- MEET you at Bother's Bookstore on A pache to o rd e r g rad u atio n an ­ nouncements and get our cap and gown. -Jan. JULIE, WE met on the plane 12/28/92. Julie is from Traverse City, Michigan. Her major is Child Development. She drives a Honda CRX. If you know her, ask her to call Leslie. Home: 788-9682. Woik: 866-6180. C U N N Y ’C KA MARK- Thank you for the great time at Old South. I had a blast! Heywhat's a good word!? Love, Ashley. PIZZA & PASTA THIR!STY THURÍ¡DAY i l 25 H e in e k e n A m s te l B ecks Sam A dam s C o o rs L ig h t S t. P a u li M o ls o n KA TYLER, Old South was beautiful, I had a crazy time! Thank you. I'm glad you didn't hurt your back on die chair! Raz. HAPPILY MARRIED White/Asian cou­ ple with lots o f love to give wishes to adopt infant. Call Chris & David collect, 619-741-9252. Let's talk. _________ RESPONSIBLE PROFESSIONAL cou­ ple can provide a loving home for your baby. Call our attorney collect, 408-2887100. A491. SERVICES ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Facials/waxing. Student dis­ counts. C all fo r m ore inform ation. 969-6954. SUMMER SPECIAL: A H air Today G one Tom orrow Electrolysis, blend m ethod fo r perm anent hair removal, Southem/Rural, private suite, student discount 921-1146. WHY HAUL it home? Store it! See our ad today. Best Little Warehouse in Tem­ pe, 967-3900. LetGreyhound ptckupyourroom. LARGE NATIONAL fraternity seeks to establish at ASU. Any person or group interested in beginning a chapter at ASU please send letter o f interest to: 940 East University Drive Suite E l05 Box A 15 Tempe 85281. STUDENT DISCOUNT! HEALTH ft FITNESS 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 PRE-RUSH DINNER CERTIFIED PERSONAL trainer. Get in shape for summer! Muscle BuildingToning- A erobic, Fitness- Individu­ alized Program. Affordable. 481-0305. A DOZEN red long-stem roses $20 de­ livered in Tempe- Also balloons. After Hours Flowers, 894-3419. EAT ERIKA, your mommy loves and cannot wait for you to go active! Love n' Sigma, Robyn. SEE CHRISTINE, I'll be more selective from now on when I ask for favors. TO SIGMA D elta Tau new members, get ready for initiation! We love you! TYPIN G /W O R D PROCESSING “ 1 DAY turnaround - most papers. Pro­ fessio n al w ord p ro c e ssin g / pa p ers/ resumes. Laser, Reasonable. Caroline, 892-7022. PRE RUSH Sigma Pi. ATTENTION GREEKS- Looking for a summer job? Work like a dog... Get paid like a king. Make $5,643. Call 6310308, leave message. ATTENTION GREEKS: Applications for the 1993-1994 Greek Steering Com­ mittee Chairs for Sponsorship and Ad­ vertising are due Friday, April 30, by 5:00pm in the Greek Life Office. Pick Up your application in the Greek Life Office! A X O CO CO : W e're there! Is n 't it wacky? Sisters in the bond, Razi. T H A N K S G IV IN G N O V E N A T O S T .JU D E O H o ly S t. J u d e , A p o stle a n d M artyr, great in virtue and rich in m iracles, n ear k in sm an o f Jesús C h rist, faithful intercessor o f all who invoke your special patronage in tim e o f n e e d , to you 1 have re c o u rse fro m th e d e p th o f rny h e a rt an d h u m b ly beg to w hom G od has given such great power to come to my assistance. H elp me in my present and urgent petition. In re tu r n I p ro m ise to m ake y o ú r nam e known an d cause you to be invoked. St. Jude pray for us and all who invoke your aid. Amen. Say th re e O u r F a th e rs , th re e H a il M ary s a n d G lo rias. P u b lica tio n m u st be prom ised. T h is N ovena h as n ev er been k n ow n to fail. I h a v e h a d m y re q u e st g ra n te d . Publication promised. M P D . 1-DAY TURNAROUND. Professional typing. W alkable/A SU . R easonable ra te s. E xp erien ced . L aser. Faculty/Students. Diane 829-1602. FUNDRAISING C r a A H J jr Z E B D 8400 Two s tu d e n t c lu b s needed for fall project. Y our group GUARANTEED a t lea st $400. M ust call BEFORE END OF TERM! 1 -800-932-0528 E xtension 9 9 AA A - K IN K O 'S C opies m akes the grade! Papers, resumes, flyers, color copying, self-serve Macintosh & IBM and more! Open 24 hours. 933 East Uni* versity. 966-2035. ALLOW ME: Fast, efficient, quality work. Papers, APA /M LA , resum es, presentations, tran scrip tio n s, m ore. Reasonable rates. 481-9703. APA/M LA EXPERIEN CED typing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASAP SPECIALIST Term papers, flyers, resum es. Laser, 18+ years experience. South Tempe area. Sheri Patrick, 961-14.1 J . CHILD CARE ENERGETIC PERSON needed to babysit for 2 boys, 8 and 11, in my north Scottsdale home 2 to .3 afternoons per week. Available by 2pm and have own transportation. Begin May 10, continue through summer. M ust provide refer­ ences. Call Judy at991-8155. EXPERIENCED FULL time nanny to ’ care for 1-1/2 year old. Have excellent references. Tatum and Shea a re a ,9216325. ' C REA TIV E TY PIN G , term papers, resumes, essays, laser printer, fax, reasonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. I WANT It Now Desktop Publishing: Term papers, resume service, charts, graphs, manuscripts, thesis, quick serv­ ice: Call 966-1984. Near ASU. RESUMES W ITH RESULTS! 1 Pg. Resume Pkg. (all inclusive) $40 Career Testing $20 The W rite Resume WANTED: SITTER for summer, Glen­ dale area, my home, full time, 2 boys, good pay plus activities. 931-1808. SPORTS ft RECREATION /'PLAY IT A 0A IIT \ + a «* a A A A P ■ n o g g | I ravel a n d (Ÿ ' SUM MER SCHOOL blu es... if you need tutoring w ell be open during both summer sessions. Classes are smallerrates are lower. We offer tutorial for the following classes: MAT 106, MAT 117, MAT 119, MAT 210, MAT 270, PHY 111, PHY 112, PSY 230, QBA 221, CHM 101. C all Simon at Matrix Education Center^968-4668. — “ M jS C j^ L A N |O y |~ JET SKI RENTAL We deliver! $25 off with ad. Call 9901754. EMPLOYMENT O PPO R TU N JTj||s_ ALASKA FISHING opportunities, 'fhe only guide by students for students. $8. 800-959*5182, recorded information. C R U IS E SH IPS now h irin g - earn $2000+/month + world travel (Hawaii, Mexico, die Caribbean, etc.) Holiday, summer and career employment avail­ able. No experience necessary. For em­ plo y m en t program call 1-206-6340468, extension C5918. INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENTMake money teaching basic conversa­ tional English abroad. Japan and Tai­ wan. Make $2,000-$4,000+ per month. M any provide room and board, plus other benefits! No previous training or teaching certificate required. For In­ ternational Employment program, call the International Employment Group: 206-632-1146, extension J59I8. ^ S t u d e n t A sso ciatio n S t 1954 W. B roadw ay c°rner°f ne & Dobson Broadway rl 1 Budw eiser 965-6731 State P ress Matthews Center Classifieds UNERAD Basement, Rm.46H RATES: 15 words or less $ 3 .9 0 per issue (1 -4 issues) $ 3 .7 0 per issue (5 -9 issues) $ 3 .4 5 per issue (1 0+ issues) 204 each additional word. No abbreviations. The first 2 words are capi­ talized. No bold face or centering, no type size changes. SEMI-DISPLAY RATES: A bold, centered, all caps headline can be added to your liner ad for an additional $ 1 .0 0 . H eadline cannot exceed 15 characters (all letters, punctuation marks and spaces count as one character each). HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: In person: C ash, check, Visa, M asterCard or American Express ($6 minimum on a ll credit card orders). W e're located in the basem ent of M atthews Center, R oom 46H . O ffice hours are 9am -5pm , Monday-Friday. Personals are accepted In person w ith student 1.0. By phone or lax: Paym ent with Visa, M asterCard or American Express only. $6 minimum on a ll phone orders. S tate P ress fa x num ber is 9 65 -8 4 84 ; please include your credit card number and expiration date on fax. Please call before you send fax so we can anticipate the transm ission. Personals are n o t accepted oust the phone o r b y fax! By M ail: Send your ad (with paym ent) to: State Press Classifieds Dept. 1502, ÁSU Tem pe, A Z 85287-1502 (if sending a personal check, please include your driver's license number.) NEED GRADUATE/SENIOR business student to assist in doing 5-8 page anal­ ysis report, not associated with ASU. R ep o rt m ust be co m p le ted b efo re 6/1/93. Background/major must be in a cc o u n tin g , fin a n c e , e conom ics o r QBA. Call 5454757 and leave message, ie; name, number, graduate/senior and background. Pays well. Other work pos­ sibly available as well. T ourism q KNOW WHEN TO SAY ^ WHEN Sorry, Personale cannot be accepted through the m all. WANTED SERVICES g F R I E N D S Liner, paraonal and sem i-display ad deadlines are 12 noon, one business day p rio r to publication. U n lo c k t h e p o s s i b i l it i e s w it h c r e d it c a r d k e y s o n C a d jy M a ll ^ w ISPORTSjw 8 3 4 -0 no 0 no 0 no 5 ' 966-9211 MISCELLANEOUS P ersonal* (15 w ords o r less) are o n ly $2.00. You can also add Greek sym bols to yo u r paraonal h r o n ly SOt p a r sat (3 sym bols max. p e r set). that you can use Visa, MasterCard or American Express to (dace your classified? Don't delay ^ call 965-6731 today! SERVICES B rin g in y o u r u sed s p o rts e q u ip m e n t and le a v e w ith cash! W O RP PROCESSING, secretarial serv­ ices. 23 years experience. Student dis­ counts. Southwest com er, M iller and Chaparral. 994-8145. DID YOU KNOW... B roadw ay/M ill F or a p p o in tm e n t c a ll' 32* SPORTS ft RECREATION TY PIN G SERV ICE, affordable, re­ ports, resumes, laser printer, student d isco u n t, quick tu rn a ro u n d . K athy 962-1077, Mesa. MATH 117 and 210 spring final review claSses/summer classes forming now. Graduate student, over four years tu­ toring experience. References available. Call Mark to reserve your spot. 4239338. y, CERTIFIED PERSONAL Trainer, Mr. Illinois and Cybergenics Spokesmodel H arry Than os w ill get you in shape quick! Just call 268-4130. "THE ONE"- Y es you Yvonne! Since you always read the personals... this one's for yóu! Have a good day Puta! Love T and Kiki. THE WRITE Stuff. Fast, professional, reasonably priced word processing. T erm p ap ers, resu m es, fly e rs, etc . APA/MLA formats. Pick-up, delivery available. Call Beth, 963-3537. (Subject to a m inim um o f S IS .) PRE RUSH BBQ MISCELLANEOUS RESUMES- AFFORDABLE! Make it easy. Professionally written, typeset and laser printed. Call 947-3311, evenings 946-7710. HEBREW TUTORING, all levels, avail­ able during summer. Please call, Itai Klein. Evening: 279-6571. Show your ID for 50% OFF Padove Express Shipments. A0 M onday, M ay 3rd, 701 Alpha Drive (new row). Food, hoops and vol­ leyball!! 6:004:00pm. Questions? Rob/ Kurt, 784-0598. PERSONALS RESUMES $15 High success rate! Repents, editing, fly­ ers. Laser printing, same day. SP Secre­ tarial, near ASU, 967-0907. TUTORS MR. SHIP N’ CHECK Shipping stu ff hom e? Free pick-up/ packing and big student discounts! 9686656. Tonight 7pm Sigma Pi house. 784-9405. LEGAL SECRETARY: Resumes, term p ap ers, any type legal w ork, som e graphics. L aser printer. A ffordable prices. 465-9080. ATTENTION POTEN TIAL athletic stars: Run faster, jum p higher, throw further! M ovement Through A w are­ ness. Steve, 829-1127. All 12 oz. IBottles 1 3 0 1 E . U n iv e r s ity TYPING /W O R D P R O a jS S IN G _ _ _ INSTRUCTION .JB Ê & t--. I p ÿ i OE- FINALLY! Disneyland tomorrow! Speed limit- 85. Mad Dog- the Magic Kingdom awaits! -Jenny. P>S. I think Ed Debevics is the other way! B a rtle s & J a y m e s * Page23 Thursday, April 29,1993 A p ril 2 6 - 3 0 • 1 0 a m '.2 p m Mon.-Sat 8 a.m.-12 a.m. Sunday 9 a.m.-9 p.m. WE DELIVER! B ro a d w a y & Rural For Thursday, April 29,1993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) An offbeat business idea may be off the mark. Be practical in your drinking and tactful with higherups. Couples will be sharing happy times together. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Someone goes on and on about a sub­ ject of no particular interest to you. You won’t have to act like the boss to get other family members to do their share. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) It is not a good idea to loan objects you value to others today. A friend may well get on your naves. You will have fun dating now. Take in a movie. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) An idiosyncrasy o f a close tie could bother you today. Others who interrupt m ake it d iffic u lt to gdt y o u r p o int across. S hopping fo r the hom e is a delight LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Electronic equipment just won’t behave today. Som ething may have a loose connection. Downplay ego in career dealings. Travel is fun and social visits are upbeat. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Beware of electronic cqsh machines that eat plastic today. A child’s antics may test your patience. You may rind just what you need at a garage sale. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to O c t 22) It is a lovely day for social visits, hut guard against extravagant expenditures. A m ix-up could occur o v e r a home delivery. A relative is contrary. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) 921-9222 You are somewhat outspoken today and may lack discretion. Try to be tactful in dealings with coworkers. Maintaining a low profile is your safest course o f action. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21), Errors in judgment could occur in the way you handle monies today. Avoid financial risk-taking. You will be mak­ ing plans now to visit friends who live afar. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Try not to be abrupt or impatient with a fam ily m ember. A career interest o f yours gets a favorable boost now. Have fun to n ig h t w ith o u t ta p p in g Credit resources. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) It is not a good day for expressing unpopular opinions. Others may think you are a bit eccentric. You are on the same wave length with a partner. Share happy times tonight. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You will meet with new opportunities to get ahead in business today. Social plans are subject to change now or a friend may seem d iffic u lt and selfwilled. YOU BORN TO D A Y are dynam ic, inventive and high-strung. You often have ideas that are ahead o f the times and are capable o f original creative work- You are more humanitarian than the typical member of your sign. You are somewhat visionary, but m ust be careful not to let temperament under­ mine your accom plishm ent. You are artistic and your creative potentials are enorm ous, B irth d a te of: W illiam R andolph H e a rst, p u b lish e r; Rod M cKuen, poet; and Duke E llington, jazz great P age 2 4 POOL activity 0 0 0 State P ress Thursday, April 29,1993 © THURSDAY A P R IL 2 9 1 1 A M -2 P M H A YDEN W E S T LAW N I ai ! OFF ANY SERVICE!! ----------H A I R -----------CUTS (M-sie.sow-sis.30) Recreation Comm toe « COLOR • N A IL S j FROM PEOPLE WHO KNOW HOW Qroominq TIME TO HAVE FUN AND WIN PRIZES! Sponsored by: MUAB Recreation Com m itee and M U Recreation C enter. PERMS Hum ons v University |ln The Arches V BJ ^ H o lr S tu d io Exp. 5-7-93 j ASU Clothing fc Gifts Quality hats • shirts • shorts • decals • licenseplate frames • etc Alot more thqnjustbooks! 966-6226 704 S. College 9 6 6 -5 4 6 2 ! M-TH 9-8 I SAT o«t I 9-5 1 » ? j N o $ -J 5 0 Fdm ILY HdlR G e t a H a irc u t* E veryone has som eone they w ant to look g re at for. Free Shampoo w/Cut JAGER SHOTS A Flat Tops & Artwork S I .“ extra Exp. 5 -2 0 -9 3 HAIR COLOR $ ONLY Includes: Blow Dry & Style Long Hair $ 5 ." Extra Exp. 5 -2 0 -9 3 N D $ 4 50 ZIM AS NO COVER W/COLLEGE I.D BEFORE NO COVER R THE LADIES TILIO pm L o c a te d in S W C o r n er S c o t t s d a le R d . & MCD o w e l l T h e Ig u a n a ! Designer Perm Special $ 24 9 5 (R e g . $ 3 4 .") Shampoo, Perm, Cut & Style included. Long hair, piggy back or spiral wrap extra. Exp. 5 -2 0 -9 3 University & Rural Rd. C o rn e rs to n e S h o p p in g C e n te r Coupons not valid with 968-8008 Hours: M on.-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-7 Sun 10-5 4 2 3 -8 4 9 9