Vol. 77 No. 68 An Independent Morning Daily Friday, April 30,1993 R O TC ca ll liftin g o f ban positive Most say women in combat OK, cite possible problems B y D o n n a H ogan S tate P ress Scott Jennings, a 22-year-old communications senior, tries to put a ball in the corner pocket Thursday on West Lawn. Jennings was trying to sink three shots for a free pizza in a promotion sponsored by the MU Activities Board. ASU ROTC students say they support Defense Secretary Les Aspin’s directive to remove an order banning women from combat flights, but some voiced concerns that the move may bring a new set of problems. A.J. Bischoff, a graduating cadet major in ASU’s Air Force ROTC program, said women are flying combat aircraft now, but he added there are other considerations about women serv­ ing in wars, “The only concent I have is if we do go to war arid, women fly those kinds of missions they could get shot down (and taken as) POWs,” he said. “Women are going to be abused. It’s a risk that everyone takes.’’ Aspin announced Wednesday that the combat-flight ban would be removed and that all branches of the military would reexamine restrictions against women' in other combat posi­ tions. Reactions from military leaders were generally favorable and accommodating. But Bischoff said he recently wrote a research paper on “Women in Combat” and he cited concern about capture and the cost of training as two major issues the military will face once the directive is enacted. Bischoff said that it costs more than $1 million to train someone for combat aircraft certification, and it will cost tax­ payers more if a trained woman pilot gets pregnant and has to be recertified after a year away from the job. “There is a cost involved,” he said. “It’s, no reason to dis­ criminate, however, it’s just something we have to look at — it’s out there.” Robin Hager, who will also graduate from ASU and Air Force ROTC in May, said she does not see pregnancy or the T urn t o W o m en , page 9 . A SA SU o ffic e r file s se x u a l h arassm en t co m p la in t PR director accuses Activities VP Lawrence BY M ark M , M acias S tate P ress : A sso ciated S tudents o f ASU Public Relations Director Tom Howell has filed a sexual harassm ent and hazing com plaint against ASASU Activities Vice President Kate Lawrence, alleging that the executive officer directed sexual remarks toward him. Howell said he filed the complaints against Lawrence on April 8 after Lawrence allegedly told him in the middle of an argument that he “was getting a hard-on.” “After I filed the complaints, Kate tried to use her pow er to get her o ff the hook,” Howell said. “She went and talked with (Dean of Student Life) Art Carter, but he told her she would be treated just as she was any other stu­ dent.” Lawrence said Student Life hasn’t contact­ ed her but did say that she talked with Carter. “I went and talked with (Carter) after a reporter told me about these com plaints,” Lawrence said. “(Carter) told me to wait until I heard from Student Life officially. “I haven’t heard anything from Student Life. I think someone is trying to make some­ thing big out of nothing. This is bizarre.” Lenna E rickson, coordinator for judicial program s at Student Life, said Lawrence was n o tified tw ice o f the filed complaints, but she c o u ld n ’t reveal the d etails o f the actual case. H ow ell “I’m not at liberty to say w hat this case is about because the Berkley Amendment protects confidentiality,” Erickson said. “All 1 can say is that a case is in the process. “Mail has been delivered to her that this process has occurred and it hasn’t come back undeliverable.” Carter said he did speak with Lawrence, but he also was unable to reveal details of what was discussed because of confidentiali­ ty. Kevin Johnson, president-elect for the Liberal Arts and Sciences College Council, was present when the incident took place. “Kate may have said som ething she shouldn’t have, but we* are not children,” Johnson said. “It’s nothing we haven’t all T u rn t o L aw rence , page 9 . Official predicts shortcoming in Clintons service plan F inancial aid director says loan s m ay n o t cover expenses B y J u d d T . W illiams S tate P ress Students at ASU will probably only be able to pay for their direct school expenses under a new community service pro­ gram to be created by President Bill Clinton, a University offi­ cial said. Kate Dosil, ASU student financial assistance director, said she does not have the specifics of the plan, but her best guess W orld/Nation I IN S ID E STA TE PR ESS Classifieds „,„».^>.^...».....17 Opinion Comics ............................. 14 Spoils...,.«...,....................*... 15 Crossword,...;.*.«...*,........:...,*^ W(wld/Nation.>..,...................3 Today’s W eather: Sunny. High 95. Low 66. is that an ASU student who takes advantage of Clinton’s plan will have to pay for housing, food and any other items besides books and tuition themselves. Clinton will release the specifics of his National Service Plan today in a speech to students at the University of New Orleans. The president then will submit legislation to Congress to be called the National Service Act o f 1993. An outline of thé program was released by the White House to the media Thursday. According to the outline, students age 17 and older would be able to apply to local service agencies, that are commis­ sioned by the federal government, to become eligible for assis­ ..,.«..4 The number of AIDS cases diagnosed in the first quarter o f 1993 jumped 204 percent over the same period in 1992, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported, I I I I I I I I Page 3 I Special Report Even as the debate over cultural diversity rages, black sororities at ASU are finding that segrega­ tion from predominantly white Gieek organiza­ tions may not be all bad. Page 10 tance under the program. •Students could receive up to $13,000 over two years, which Dosil said would not be enough to cover all costs of an ASU education. Currently, four-and-one-half years at ASU costs about $40,000, Dosil said. The $13,000 could be supplemented through existing grants and scholarships, if the student is eligible, she added. “What it (the plan) really could do is keep a student from borrowing while in school,” Dosil said. “So long as someone isn’t introducing another loan program to me, I feel it’s all right.” T u rn t o F inancial , page 7. Sports The second-ranted ASU baseball team will open a crucial three-game series tonight against Stanford. Page IS S t a t e P ress Friday, April 3 0 ,1993 Group wants 1994 ballot to have anti-gay initiative Traditional values organization seeks signatures B y M ike M c G o n n e ll S ta te P ress Arizona could be facing another divisive referendum if A rizonans for Traditional Values succeeds in gathering enough signa­ tures to place an anti-gay initiative, fashioned after the one recently passed in Colorado, on the November 1994 ballot The group is headed by Frank Meliti, who has been promoting his plan on local televi­ sion for the last few weeks. Meliti claims the initial coverage given to him by K.TVKChannel 3 resulted in 5,000 people joining the group. After a follow-up report this weekend by the same station, the group now numbers 7,000. Starting July 1, the group will start collect­ ing the 150,000 signatures needed to get the measure placed on the ballot. Meliti claims the purpose of the proposi­ tion is to make sure homosexuality isn’t legit­ imized by the passage of anti-discrimination laws protective of gays. “Contrary to what they’re (gays) trying to get people to believe, it’s not denying them they’re rights,” he said. “They have the same rights everyone else has; what they’re seeking is special rights and privileges that the rest of us don’t have and trying to make legitimate homosexuality. This is what they Ire attempt­ ing to do, and this is what we’re opposed to.” Current laws in the cities of Tucson and Phoenix protect residents from discrimination based on their sexual orientation while at the workplace. Under the proposed referendum, Arizona’s state constitution would be rewrit­ ten to outlaw such local laws that recognize gays as a minority or give them this protec­ tion. A nearly identical referendum passed in a hotly-debated election last November in Colorado, overturning Denver and Aspen laws protecting gays. Since then the state has been in the spotlight. Following the passage of the Colorado ref­ erendum, gays and heterosexuals alike joined in a boycott o f the state. The support of Hollywood celebrities added fuel to the fire, and the boycott got national attention. Among many private organizations, the city of Atlanta cut off business ties to the state, and proponents claim Denver alone has lost millions to canceled conventions. ' Meliti said he sees the claims as another way the gay community is forcing its position on the rest of society, and said the effective­ Associataci Press Two unidentified men hug while viewing the AIDS quilt on the Mall In W ashington, D.C., during the gay-rights march that drew an estimated 300,000 people on Sunday. A group In Arizona is attempting to mount a petition drive in hopes of establishing an anti-gay initiative In the state. ness of the boycott is just a ‘Tarce” or “propa­ ganda.” M em bers o f the gay com m unity in Arizona realize the fight that ahead. They view the referendum as a message of intoler­ ance and hale. Pete Crozier, executive director of the Lesbian and Gay Public Awareness Project, said he sees the group as “people that think gay people should be persecuted and sup­ pressed.” Randy Goibette, the founder and president of The Phoenix Shanti Group, said, “It’s a message of fear — fear o f the unknown. These are people who don’t understand peo­ ple different from themselves. They’re afraid of it. They’re afraid of what they don’t under­ stand.” The group is responsible for support and care for those suffering from AIDS, and although the disease is not restricted to homo­ sexuals, Shanti does care for them. ,i “This kind of guy doing what he’s doing is going to rally a whole bunch of people from staying in the closet. And we have a very closeted state, a very closeted community, that has not spoken out for their rights,” Gorbette added. T oday The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed on a space-available basis as a service to the ASU community. Campus clubs and organizations can submit written entries to the S tate Press, loca te d in the basem ent o f M atthew s Center, Room 15. Entries must 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 w ill not be taken over the phone. In com plete o r ille g ib le e ntries w ill be discarded.Deadline for the entries is noon the previous business day. M iscellaneous M eetin gs Department of Communication Black Interpreters Théâtre: o p en perform ance, “B eing B lack M ean s ..." 1:30 p.m ., MU Pim a Room. D epartm en t o f C om m u nicatio n P erfo rm an ce S tu dies Program: open perform ance, “COM 2 4 1 — introduction tcfOral Interpretation S how case,” 3:30 p.m., Stauffer Hall Room 318. ASU A rt Museum: open poster/fram e display, 10 a.m .-4 p.m., ASU Art Museum, Nelson Fine Arts Center. A lcoholics Anonymous: clo se d m eeting, noon, All S a in ts’ Newman Catholic C enter, 230 E. University Drive. Narcotics Anonymous: open m eetings, noon an d 5:30 p.m., Community Christian Church, 1701 S. College Ave. A IE S E C (In te rn a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n o f S tu d e n ts in Economics and Business): o pen m eeting, 4 p.m ., B usiness Administration Building C-Wing Room 311. EXTENDED HOURS Scottsdale Galleria OTHER LOCATIONS: Beverly Hills • Los Angeles • Newport Beach • Santa Barbara San Francisco • Pasadena • Palm Desert • San Diego (Solana Beach) • Honolulu Atlanta • Chicago • St. Louis • Las Vegas (Mirage & Golden Nugget Hotels) Washington D.C. (Tyson's Corner, VA & Bethesda, MD) 20% OFF for ASU students. SCOTTSDALE GALLERIA Scottsdale Rdysth Ave. • Free Valet Parking Take-Out Available • (602) 949-3020 • Open Daily at 11:30 am Excluding alcohol, tax & gratuity • Student ID required May not be combined with any other offer • Expires 5-31 -93 World/Nation Page_3 Friday, April 30,1993 'S tate P ress 1 9 9 3 U .S . A ID S cases surge m ore than 2 0 0 % N e w d efin itio n o f illness accou n ts for tw o fo ld ju m p A sso c ia t e d P ress ATLANTA — The number of Americans with AIDS increased at a surprising rate dur­ ing the first three months of the year, when more than 35,000 new cases were reported, federal health officials said Thursday. Most of the new cases stemmed from a new definition of the deadly disease, but even cases not attributed to the broader definition increased by 21 percent, double the rate for the period last year. “That is higher than we expected,” said Dr. John Ward, chief of AIDS surveillance fo r the C enters for D isease C ontrol and Prevention. “Some of that 21 percent is a sign that the AIDS epidem ic is continuing to grow.” It also means that people with HIV who have fought off AIDS with medication for several years are starting to get sick, said Lynora Williams, spokeswoman for the AIDS Action Council, a patient advocacy group based in Washington. “The figures should definitely be read as a cause for concern,” she said. Since 1987, HIV patients were defined as having AIDS once they contracted certain blood infections, the skin cancer Kaposi’s sar­ coma or any of 21 other indicator diseases. On Jan. 1, three more diseases — pul­ monary tuberculosis, recurring pneumonia and invasive cervical cancer — were added. So was a dip in the level of the body’s master immune cells, called CD4s, to 200 per cubic millimeter, or one-fifth the level of a healthy person. Between Jan. 1 and March 31, 35,779 new AIDS cases were diagnosed nationwide, a 204 percent increase from the 11,770 new cases during the same period in 1992 under the old definition, the CDC reported. Last year, under the narrower definition, cases in creased about 10 percent every three months. Sixty percent of this year’s increase, or 21,582 cases, Was based solely on the new definition — a surge the CDC expected. These are people long infected with HIV who were never considered AIDS cases because of the definition’s technicalities. Ward attributed some of this year’s extra increase to the publicity surrounding the new AIDS definition, which may have made doc­ tors more aware of the indicator diseases and prompted them to test more patients. A—ocl f d P r — ACT UP member Michael Davtdsorf burns a copy of the National Commission on. AIDS report during a demonstration Thursday outside the W hite House. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the number of AIDS cases surged during the first quarter of 1993. C linton service plan would pay $13,000 for tuition A sso ciate d P ress WASHINGTON A-*" Students who perform community service could work off $13,000 in college tuition, get a modest stipend and qualify for health care and day care benefits under President Clinton’s national service program. According to a White House outline of the program obtained by The Associated Press, the plan to be unveiled Friday also includes a more controversial component to make higher educa­ tion affordable: a $25 billion federal government takeover of the college loan program. Clinton said during the campaign he would like to have the IRS collect loan money from students, but Deputy Education Secretary Madeline Kunin said Thursday that the Department of Education will hire private con­ tractors to collect debts for now. Neither the community service program nor the loan overhaul would be fully in place before 1997, but Clinton promised last month that the program eventually will “change America forev­ President Clinton, seated with Budget Director Leon Panetta (left) and Vice President Al Gore, discusses the economy and Clinton's proposed national service plan Thursday. er and for the better.” Clinton sketched the broad outlines of this program March 1; he scheduled a speech Friday at die University of New Orleans to promote it now that draft legislation is ready to send to Congress. Some 150,000 students would join the National Service Corps, by 1997, when the pro­ gram is fully phased in. Students could work full-time for up to two years, earning $6,500 a year in tuition credits. Payments would be made direcdy to schools. The $13,000 is substantially less than the average cost of tuition but equals the average debt among graduating students. Students, age 16 or older, could serve after high school and before, during or after they attend a college, university or vocational school. The White House outline also says partici­ pants “without access to health insurance will receive health coverage.” Federal money would pay up to 85 percent of these costs. Participants also could get “child care assis­ tance, if needed,” the document says. The total cost of the health care and day care benefits was not specified in the outline. The federal government would pay a portion of the students’ stipends. The outline says the government would pay no more than 85 percent of the annual stipend now given to Volunteers in Service To America, or VISTA, workers. In Washington, that would amount to less than $600 a month, although the figure would vary from city to city. Community service programs would be allowed to double that amount using their own money. E c o n o m ic g r o w th s lu m p s d u r in g ,£ A ssociated P ress WASHING ION — Consumers turned cautious and milt tary i H B H | MBHi the first three mtWrt»« of the year, dramatically slowing the economy’s growth rale to just PH ¡I p President Clinton and top Cabinet officers immediately sensed on the number in their fight to salvage parts of the $16 j0$}$ |j||| fry last week. The latest increase in the gross domestic product, the sum of ail goods and services produced in the United States, was less than half the robust 4.7 percent annual rate of die fourth quar- CHnton said the report “proves we; were rigM” and supports I p ^implementing the budget commitment that the Congress has made to reduce the deficit and to increase targeted investments I ■ ■»>■«*« a «B B , His budget director, Leon Panetta. saidi “Right now this i t m anemic, no-jobs recovery. ... ft should be obvious that dm recovery needs a significant boost” However. Senate Republican Leader Bab Dale o f Kansasl said the president’s tax-and spend policies depressed the economy by scaring business executives, consumers and investors. ' “The. American people are gmdtag the president with their nodeetbtMksrftertdd. Economist Allen Sinai of the Boston Co. Economic Advises» fae,.said the constant wrangling in Washington, rather than the presence of absence of a small economic stimulus package, is the biggest factor making consumers nervous. “That kind of back and forth is deadly.... They ought to stop playing these games and instead spend time trying to fig­ ure out .why the economy is growing so slowly,” he said. "Die | ckar menage out of the election was to quit (he playpen stufi In advance, economists had anticipated a somewhat better To administer the National Service Trust Program, Clinton wants to merge two existing federal agencies, the Commission on National and Community Service and ACTION, which runs VISTA and other domestic volunteer pro­ grams. The new entity would be called the Corporation for National Service. The corpora­ tion would have an 11-member board of direc­ tors appointed by Clinton and confirmed by the Senate.Clinton has already budgeted $9.5 billion over five years for the program, with only $98 million set aside for the fiscal year beginning Oct. I. Programs employing community service workers would get money one of two ways: through a state commission or from the national corporation. States would be allocated money based on their population and on a competitive basis. Under the college loan program, the govern­ ment will begin borrowing money and lending it to students with colleges and universities acting as agents. Now, students borrow directly from banks, but Kunin said students would pay an interest rate as much as a half percent lower with the direct approach. The takeover would begin July 1,1994. Four percent of student loans would come from the government in the first year, 25 percent in the second year and 60 percent in the third. By the 1997-98 school year, the government would make all loans to the 8,000 colleges, uni­ versities and vocational education schools at a cost of $25 million, congressional and adminis­ tration sources said. 1s t q u a rte r mg a severe East Coast storm in mid-March, smaller-than-usual tax refunds and an inevitable retreat by consumers’ after a holi­ day spending spree that pushed the fourth-quarter growth m e u a five-year high. Other analysts, however, potnted to tonger-testìng drags on the econdtpy, including stumpstoEuroixtaitoJapai, wWcbare depressing U.S. exootis sales, and continuing defense cuts. . 1 don’t think das number in any way imp&* we are on the threshold of another recession, but it illustrates the unevenness and lack of consistency o f this economic expansion,” said Norman Robertson, an adjunct economics professor at Canugie-MetloaUnivetsity to PittsburghStock prides dipped after the report's release Bond prices, '•ftonirttor, cost hsenùse wawm gBHk *aè», Opinion P a g e _ 4 _ ^ _______ _________________________________________________________ _ ^JF rid aj^A p rjL 3 0 L1993______ STATE PRESS State P ress ■ E ■oos & JDraVps ^ B O O ^ - lo the^AMSciatedJSttidents o f ASU for approving a proposal to add yet another vice president to its repertoire. Even as it clos­ es out a ‘Season o f Discontent’ punctuated by ex cessiv e w aste and unnecessary spending, AS ASU decided it needed one more executive to clu tte r its offices. In o th er late d ev e lo p ­ m ents, the controversial-to-the-end AS ASU Vice President Kate Lawrence refused to take the advice o f the Cam pus Environm ent Team to seek counseling after she allegedly sexually harassed a fellow worker. Com e to think o f it, Lawrence is the best argument there is against adding another veep at AS ASU. BRAVO — to A SU o ffic ia ls fo r m o v in g ahead with plans to open the new ly built but until now unoccupied C om puting C om m ons building. The C om m ons com es to A SU stu­ dents in part as a trade-off fo r their generous tuition contribution next year, although use o f the facility was expected this year. A 1992-93 budget shortfall prevented the Com mons tim e­ ly opening but, like they say, better late than never. BOO — • to M ichigan Rep. John Conyers for his incredibly inappropriate com m ents during testim o ny given by A ttorney G eneral Jan et R eno on the Branch D avidian fire in W aco, Texas. Conyers interrupted R eno and accused her o f rationalizing the deaths o f children who perished in the fire, which engulfed the Branch Davidian com pound and killed over 80 people. Reno, visibly shaken by C onyers’ onslaught, responded valiantly .and successfully pinned th e D e m o c ratic C o n g re ssm a n ’s e a rs to the wall. BRAVO — to the A cad em ic and S tu d e n t Services office o f the Intercollegiate Athletic Departm ent at ASU for managing to boost the ra te o f g r a d u a tio n a m o n g a th le te s a t th e University from 40 to 52 percent. Actually, the s tu d e n ts w ho w o rk e d h ard to g e t th ro u g h sc h o o l d e s e rv e m o st o f th e C red it, b u t A c ad em ic S e rv ic e s p ro v id e s a th le te s w ith much needed scholastic guidance. M uch work is left undone, however, since half o f our ath­ letes still don’t leave ASU with a diploma. BRAVO — to the Phoenix Suns organization for breathing new life into the city and its citi­ zens. N ever known as a sports tow n, the city now looks like a veteran venue for athletics because o f the Suns and their spirited chem ­ istry with Phoenix fans, and hopefully the Suns can snag an NBA Cham pionship to prove it’s true. r I Muslims, Palestinians misportrayed David Don’s column in Monday’s State Press is only a " S am er small part of the huge amount of ATIYEH negative propaganda that Israel and its supporters put out against Arabs President, and Muslims. Israeli propaganda Progressive Students for has dehumanized the image of Understanding Islam Arabs and Muslims. All Muslims are portrayed as “fundamentalists.” Guest Columnist Israeli propaganda has led to many misconceptions about Arabs and Muslims that many Americans accept unquestionably. A list of the misconceptions: • Misconception: Muslims and Jews have been at war for thousands of years, and it will never end. Reality: Friction between Muslims and Jews is a 20th century phenomenon largely bred and aggravated by European colonial­ ists. Muslims have lived at peace and always tolerated Jews in the Middle East. Islam holds Jews in high regard. Islam considers Judaism as a religion from Allah (God). It is actually in Europe where there has been much tension between Jews and Christians. Even in Arab countries today Jews are tolerated. In Arab Tunisia a historical Synagogue is main­ tained by the Arab government, and the government allows Jews from all over the world, including Israel, to visit the place. According to a study by Israel’s Hebrew university, Islamic empires (which were dominant players in world politics from the seventh to the nineteenth centuries) were largely secular, and the rights given to Jews are only matched by twentieth century America. But, even in twentieth century America there is antiJewish sentiment, whereas in Muslim empires Jews are respected as a culture. When Muslims ruled Spain for 800 years both Jews and Christians were treated well. When Isabella and Ferdinand cap­ tured Spain from the Muslims they they forcibly converted or expelled Jews and Muslims. • Misconception: Palestinians are Muslim “fundamentalists.” Reality: There are both Christian and Muslim Palestinians. Of course, there are extremists amongst Muslims as there are amongst any group, but they are a very small percentage. Even in poverty stricken Egypt there are a maximum of 250,000 extrem­ ists with only 10,000 willing to take up arms for their beliefs. This is a small percentage out of Egypt’s 60 million people, but since the American media mainly covers the actions of the extremists it seems like Egypt is dominated by extremists. • Misconception: Israel is a democracy. This is just more deception by the Israelis. Seventy-five percent of the Palestinians live in Israel’s occupied territories which are ruled by marshall law, not democracy. Israelis are entitled to more rights and more government services. The democracy only applies to Israeli Jews. Every once in a while, a Palestinian extremist will do some­ thing crazy like stab Israeli civilians. These extremists who are often labeled as “Muslim fundamentalists” are certainly not fol­ lowing the fundamentals of Islam. Islam does not condone attacks on civilians even in times of declared war. Islam does not even condone uprooting enemy trees in times of war, and Islam does not even condone war unless it is in self defense. The media rarely covers the lives of mainstream Palestinians, and when an isolated event such as the bombing of the World Trade Center happens, the suspects are labeled as “Muslim Fundamentalists” or “Muslim Suspected.” This labeling defames the entire religion. These stereotypes make it easy for the world to sit by and watch Muslims, being massacred and raped as in Bosnia-Herzegóvina. Overall there has been a few hundred Israeli civilians killed by Palestinians since 1987, but there has been over a thousand Palestinians killed and tens of thousands jailed without trial. If one is not aware of the Israeli-Palestinian issue, everything I am writing can be refuted by an Israeli because the Israelis are masters at fooling the American public. For example, I mentioned the jailing without trial. The Israeli will say, “That is not true. Palestinians get a lawyer and a trial.” However, what he doesn’t tell you is the witness is the arresting Israeli soldier or policeman, and, in almost every case, if the soldier’s testimony contradicts the defendant’s testimony, the soldier is presumed correct. Now, I would like to discuss several blatant lies that Israeli extremists use against the Arabs. Monday’s article included many of these lies. Out of the seven major wars between Israelis and Arabs; five were started by the Israelis, and the other two were defensive moves by the Arabs. In 1948, Israelis forcibly expelled hundreds of thousands of Palestinians by massacring men, women and children. David Don says that Arabs wanted war in 1956, ’67, >69-’70, ’73, *82 and ’91. The ’56 war is a perfect example, exposing Israel’s lies about wanting to coexist in its tiny country. The ’56 war was an aggres­ sion by Israel, France and Britian to take over the Suez Canal. The Suez Canal is nowhere near Israel, It is in Egypt. Likewise, the ’82 war was an Israeli aggression into Lebanon. Of course, like I said, Israelis can make me seem like a liar, but if you’re really interested and you care whether our govern­ ment causes pain and suffering in other lands then research the issue and mist your conscience when deciding who is right. ------------------------------------------------------------STATE PRESS W I A 1 ^ KRIS MAYES, Editor L |H EHREN SCHWIEBERT, Managing Editor KEN BROWN Editor Ashahed Triche, Tonnvane Wiswell. S TALBOTT SMITH — '„U............Assl. City Editor PRODUCTION: Kai Barrett, Gary Bedol, Jodi Goldblatt, DAN ZEIGER...... ..News Editor Jeff Hams, Steve McDowell, Leslie Thorpe, Evonne Vera; KEN COLLINS .......Opinion Editor David Weber .................SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dco ck , Sonia MICHELLE CONWAY,..,,.—___ ............ Asst. Photo Editor „ _. JAKE BATSELL & BRIAN CHARLES ...Co-Sports Editors Benson’ Jam ,a B,rne* ' Dan Ellstrom , Jennifer Fer. T,m ANGELA BENOCHE . ■ ' Copy Chief Hjellum, Jennifer Hughes, Steve Melton. Lance Newman. LAURIE NOTARO.... —.___ ,_______ __ Magazine Editor Ron Spaeth, Tim Wohlptut. JASON OW SLEY........___ *______ A t« . Managing Editor REPORTERS: Joy Beason, Kate Deely, Stephen Demoratz, The State Prqss is published Monday through Friday durC hns Driscoll, Donna Hogan, Kim Kaan, Mark M acias, ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Mike McConnell, Tammy Sierra, Judd Williams. M atthew s C enter. Room IS. A rizona State U niversity, SPORTC R EPO R TE R S: Michael Branom, Scott Davis, Tempei ^ *5287-1502. We do not answer questions of a Shaun Rachau, Greg Sexton. COPY EDITORS: Kris Fridrich, Jeannie Talloh general nature. CARTOONISTS: Sean T. Hoy, Bryce Morgtrn. D ie Slate Press js the only newspaper exclusively pubPHOTOGRAPHERS: Brian Fitzgoald, Richard Komuiek. Ushed for «W* circulated on the ASU campus. The news and Suzanne Kyer. views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those C O L U M N IS T S : Lorenzo Sierra, C h risto p h er Stroud, of the ASU administration, faculty , staff or student body. E ditorial B oard U nsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write edi­ torials and the board decides their m erit The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: KRIS MAYES......__________ _______ ____________Editor EHREN SCHWIEBERT..........Managing Editor KEN COLLINS. ............. ............. „„.....OpinionEditar T he S ta te P re ss w elcom es and e ncourages w ritten response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed or laser printed, double-spaced and no more than two pages in length to be eligible for pub­ lication. Please include your fidi 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 die 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 of Matthews Crater, or addressed to State P ress, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona 'State University, Tempe, Ariz. 852871502. S tate P ress P hone N umbers Front D esk ..............................965-7572, Newroom..... Magazine 1695, Display Adyertising......,.„««„».v,....f....ilf„^v....i.;„...965-6555 Classified Advertising ...........965-6731 Opinion S t a t e P r e ss ________________________ Friday, April 30 ,199 3 , State P ress etters to the editor Sexual orientation n o t connected to m oral values Editor; Heterosexuals commit adultery. Heterosexuals abuse children. Heterosexuals commit murder. Heterosexuals perform genocide. When did heterosexuals become the pinnacles of moral virtue? Byrce Morgan’s cartoon of April 24 prominently displays his ignorance for everyone’s admiration. Mr, Morgan has an incom­ plete understanding of two subjects: history and people. First, we should inform Mr. Morgan that the fall of the Roman Empire did not occur, because it condoned and accepted homo­ sexual behavior. Perhaps it was the thousands of marauders — Vandals, Visgoths and Ostrogoths — that descended upon Rome during the 5th century. Of course, Mr. Morgan probably is uhder the impression that there were not any homosexuals among these various peoples that sacked Rome. The acts stated above have been performed by het- erosexuals. Is it possible that these acts have nothing to do with our sexual orientation, whatever it may be? Perhaps Mr. Morgan is claiming that moral virtue is connected only to an individual’s sexual orien­ tation, a truly startling and ridiculous notion. Did you ever consid­ er that homosexuals are just people like everyone else on the plan­ et? I am sure you find it impossible to believe that homosexuals and yourself have something very important in common, our humanity. . , So please' continue supporting this conviction, Mr. Morgan. Then you prove that heterosexuals can also be ignorant and intol­ erant. Clinton Sandvick Sophomore, History N ative Americans are short o f cam pus resources Editor; Two weeks ago, some of you may know, American Indians celebrated American Indian culture week. This event allows American Indian students to celebrate our heritage at ASU. We invite honored guests from different American Indian nations to join us in celebration and pay respect to our heritage — the indigenous heritage in the Americas. Last Thursday, while we were honoring our veterans on the West Lawn, I noticed a Christian preacher who wandered onto the lawn and disrupted our celebration with his loud sermon. I went over to the man and asked him twice to leave and respect our rights to conduct our celebration to honor American Indian veter­ ans^ „ ' . " ,As a student veteran, I felt this was not an unreasonable request. The American Indian veterans in attendance deserve not only respect from American Indians but all Americans. I feel stu­ dents in general are harassed daily by these individuals who claim to be saving us, again. This man claimed he had the freedom of speech, to preach the word of God during our celebration. I wonder what would happen if I were to disrupt another type of celebration by beating my drum and singing my songs? Could I also claim my right to freedom of speech? Or would the campus police be called to have me removed from the area? I expect the latter would hap­ pen. ASU campus is located near and has a number of reli­ gious facilities: Christian, Moslem and Mormon. Where is the American Indian religious site? The American Indians need a site to perform blessings, healings, sweats and a place to Offer spiritual guidance to students, faculty, staff and honored guests. Well, Dr. Coor? I think that this has been long overlooked and that the ASU administration needs to acknowledge their mistake. This incident gave me the impetus to address a series of other condi­ tions we, American Indians, are forced to accept while earning our education at ASU, My feelings about this situation were feelings of anger. This man had no respect for our celebration; in the same way the University has no respect for the American Indian student. I know we are making some progress in establishing student programs to service the needs of the American Indians. But the University continues to service the needs of almost 600 American Indian stu­ dents on a substandard level. American Indians number less than 1 percent of the stu­ dent population but ASU promotes cultural diversity to access outside funding and recognition. We need stronger recruitment efforts on all reservations in Arizona to expand the tribal represen­ tation and diversity within our community. I begin to seriously question the commitment of the University’s administration and the State of Arizona to recognize and to address the needs of the American Indian. Presently, the American Indian Institute is the major facility for Indian students. The All is located in a small room in the Anthropology basement. At times the All reaches beyond its carrying capacity to adequately service the students. The University probably provides a larger room somewhere in the upper level of the anthropology building for dead Indians than they have for living Indians. That is another point, why doesn’t the University repatriate all of our ancestral bones and artifacts to our people now and go dig up some of its own to study. For three years, the University has been promising the American Indian students a new location for the All. This summer the All is scheduled to move into a larger building across the street from the brand new computer building that hasn’t even opened. The administration has projected the All to use the new location for seven years. The space consists of less than 3,000 cubic feet. Let me tell you folks, this will only continue to cripple the services of the AD and the academic success o f American Indian students at ASU. We need a full-time student support coor­ dinator, 10 more computers, three more tutors, and a child-care facility which is culturally sensitive. My personal projection in the new building is two years before the continued programs and the needed programs will exceed the carrying capacity of the new, but small location. Michael Willis Senior, Liberal Arts and Sciences Palestinians victim ized by rise o f Jewish nation Editor: David Don’s letter appearing on April 26 in the State Press is a belligerent insult and shows nothing but profound ignorance and inhumanity toward the history of the Palestinian problem. The 45 years of which Don is celebrating has been 45 years of exile and occupation for more than 6 million Palestinians. These 45 years — characterized by wars and massacres — started in 1948 when the Zionist terrorist organization Stem Gang (whose leaders included two former prime ministers of the State of Israel: Menachem Begin and Yitzak Shamir) massacred 250 men, women and children on April 9 in a village called Deir Yassin. This calculated and cold-blooded massacre occurred in order to drive the panicked Palestinian villagers from their homes and enabled the Zionists to make space for Jewish immigrants coming from Europe and the Soviet Union. Mr. Begin, in defending this massacre as a necessary step in the creation of the Zionist State, said, “The massacre was not only justified, but there would not have been a State of Israel without the victory of Deir Yassin” (Jewish Newsletter, Oct. 3,1960). Is this how your “homeland” was “hardly earned?” Who would have imagined that a morning filled with children’s laughter, conversa­ tions and babies' cries would end in dead silence by the end of the day? Is this what you are celebrating, Mr. Don? Another massacre occurred on October 29,1956 in the village of Kafr Qassem: Israeli soldiers shot and killed 51 men, women (one of whom was eight months pregnant) and children in cold blood on their way home from work in their villages fo r no rea­ son. When Major Malenkoff was asked what to do with women and children, he replied: “They should be treated like others, with­ out sentimentality ;” and as for the wounded and prisoners he said, “There should be no wounded ... there should be no prisoners” (Jewish Newsletter May 13,1957). Is this what you are celebrat­ ing, Mr. Don? The Israeli government has pursued a policy of demolishing Palestinian villages since the establishment of the Zionist state. Since 1987 alone, the Israelis have confiscated 91,000 acres of land, they have demolished more than 2,000 homes, they have imposed more than 11,000 curfews, and they have uprooted close to 150,000 trees (upon which Palestinian livelihood depends). This is to say nothing of what the Israelis have done prior to 1987. Is this what you are celebrating, Mr. Don? On December 19,1992, the Israeli military committed yet another massacre, this time in the occupied Gaza Strip: a six-day curfew had been lifted for only two hours, supposedly enough time for the 100,000 residents to buy food. An 8-year-old girl — her name was Rana — went with her younger brother to buy milk. On the way home, an Israeli soldier approached Rana, telling her to go home, in broken Arabic that she at first did not understand. As she turned to go home, the Israeli soldier shot and killed her from behind. According to Washington Post correspondent David Hoffman, “The girl was killed in a hail of more that 50 bul­ lets in an atmosphere of ‘simple hysteria’” (Washington Report, Feb. 1993). Did 8-year-old Rana pose a security threat to'the State of Israel? Is this what you are celebrating, Mr. Don? The list of atrocities committed by the State of Israel against the Palestinian people goes on. Mr. Don, the hands that your peo­ ple extended to Dima to join in your dance were the same hands that tore apart Rana’s body with 50 bullets. World Jewry must wake up and stop supporting this monster of a state. Otherwise, they are just as guilty as the German liberals who sat back and watched the Nazi crimes. The funerals for girls like Rana, the hundreds of thousands of exiled Palestinians and the daily military occupation and oppres­ sion stand as monuments to show that the existence of the State of Israel is fundamentally wrong. We will celebrate, Mr. Don, when the land of Palestine returns to its rightful owners and Christians, Muslims and Jews live in peace with one another as they did before the creation of your “State of Israel.” Alaeddin Ahram Graduate, Bioengineering Page 5 Nominee is too PC to head humanities G An institiitiQii, We are told, is the lengthening shadow of IE0RGE a man. If so, official mischief WILL at the University o f Pennsylvania is of more than Washington Post merely parochial interest Writers because Penn’s president, Group Sheldon Hackney, is President Clinton’s nominee to head the National Endowment for the Humanities. So consider the cases of Gregory Pavlik and Eden Jacobowitz, Pavlik is one of many columnists for tire student news­ paper, The Daily Pennsylvanian. Robustly right-wing, he is comprehensively offensive to the politically correct: He denounces Martin Luther King, racial preferences and much else. He is often extreme and heavy-handed, which is to say he is squarely in the tradition of undergraduate jourAnd he is the reason why, torn weeks ago, some Mack students met delivery trucks early in the morning, seized almost all 14,000 copies of the paper and dumped them in trash bins. The trashbfs offered this defease: “Not only are the papers free, but there exists no explicit restriction on the number of papers that any given student may remove.” President Hackney's mincing^description of this assault on press freedom: Papers “were removed from their regular Hackney’s first statement was of regret that “two impor­ tant university values, diversity and'open expression, seem to be in conflict,’’ A remarkable statement, that. It is clearly craven yet has no clear meaning. (Does the “diversity” value mean that tome groups but not all groups that are part o f the university's diversity have a right not to be A few days later Hackney’s even limper defense of the Fust Amendment was: “Taking newspapers is wrong.” But also: “I recognize that the concerns of members of Penn’s minority community dim gave rise to fast week’s protests are serious and legitimate.” What “concerns” are “legitimate” — concerns that right-wing opinion is being pub­ lished? The university will investigate whether — yes, whether — the trashing of the paper violated freedom of expression. The severity offeteinvestigation can be gauged by m b®Rcial’s statement that the uniyersttywill take into accountj the feet that those who suppressed the newspaper see their protest in die context of its bemg an infringement. Hackney’s credentials as a defender of fe e speech are academically orthodox. He defends federal subsidies for Robert Mapplethorpe's homoerotic exhibits and says disap­ proving things about Sen. Jesse Helms, thoughts not per­ ilous on campus. He is a First Amendment fundamentalist, but with a selectivity that suggests political calculation. Tire latest victim o f Hackney’s doctrine of balancing “diversity” (or “sensitivity”) against free expression is Eden Jacobowitz, Late one evening fre and others in his dorm were bother«! by a noisy gathering of black students outside. He and others shouted at the noisy students. Some persons shouted racial epithete.Jacobowitz shouted, “Witt you water baffeloes get out of here?” and “If you want to ; parly, there’s a zoo near here.” i When campus police arrived, others who fed shouted deaieddoingso. Jacobowitz said he had, andihathe knew ! I the race of the people he was shouting at, but he adamantly denied shouting say twttfesfur§| In subsequent proceedings against Jacobowitz, one of : the university adm inistration’s thought and speech j enforcers demanded!» know if Jacobowitz had been having “racist thoughts” that night, and insisted that tfae phrase “water buffalo” was racist. However, various s o l a r s , black and white, have defended Jacobowitz. He was for I2 j years a Yeshiva student and on the fateful night he used the : English translation of the Hebrew word “behameh.” It means water oxen, and in slang means a thoughtless, fool; ish person, The Hackney administration feffid to get Jacobowitz to plea bargain, ft would stop p ftrs fe Ä I b t o # fef-«Hfeltl| accept the punishment preferred by totalitarian regimes and : American campus libreáis — re-education, in the form of i “semirivity” training. He refused. V •, : Last Friday, the university’s trial of him was postponed, ostensibly because of a procedural technicality, but perhaps j because of scornful press attention. Tire university may | hope to resume its persecution later, when no ose is watehag that nteanwhile the example of Jacobowitz, limbo, Witt efes* a chitting efferato« speech, to : »of the politically correct. V :’ _ i institution has' a propensity for behavior both : and bullying, trimming principles to’pander to lion. As he heads for Washington to superinSsbursement of millions of dottare to scholars, fee of Higher Education reports: “Scholars praise ; ( as even-handed, moderate.” MltolUHl Page 6 Friday, April 30, 1993 S t a t e P ress P olice R eport ASU Police reported the follow ingjin¡dents on Thursday: • A man was contacted in Area 46. » here he was warned of trespassing laws and left the area. • A female employee reported that she lost one key belong­ ing to ASU. Loss is $ 10. • A man not affiliated with the University was arrested, cited and released for a vehicle hit and run in Area 42, • A student Was-arrested, cited and released for hit and run after he struck another student’s car in Area 57. • A female student was contacted at Stauffer Hall, where she had sustained an injury. She was treated at the scene by Tempe Fire Department and transported to Tempe St. Luke's Hospital.'. ^ • An employee reported, that someone stòle the license plate from a 1986 Chevy state vehicle. Loss is $10. • Police contacted a man in Area 37 while sleeping in his vehicle. He was warned against loitering and told to leave the area. • Someone stole the center console from a student’s Jeep while it was parked in Area 63. Loss is $125. • Police advised three men of trespassing laws and ASU policies on skateboarding between Farmer Education Building and Payne Hall. , • The intrusion alarm was activated at Follett’s Gift Shop in the MU by the movement of a mobile after the air condi­ tioning kicked on. The building was found secure and the alarm was reset. • Two people were contacted at the rear of Studebaker’s, 705 S. Rural Road, where they wère involved in an argument. The two were driven home in a cab. • Someone stole a glass light cover from the elevator in the New Music Building. Loss is $2. • Someone vandalized the Palm Walk Bridge with spray paint Damage is estimated at $150. Tem pe P o lice rep o rted the fo llo w in g in cid en ts on Thursday: • Two very tall unidentified men forced their way into a house on East Fairmont Drive through the rear door and removed two rifles and a gunrack from the master bedroom. The resident confronted the men and was hit in the head with an unknown object. He was taken to M aricopa County Hospital, where he is reportedly in stable condition with a concussion. • A Mexican citizen was charged with public sexual inde­ cency after he was seen, masturbating while sitting in his car at Fry’s Food and Drug, 2700 W. Baseline Road. • In another case, two women riding horses on an .equestri­ an trail near their homes passed a man that had his penis hang­ ing out of his pants. He left himself exposed as he watched them ride by. One o f the women said this has happened numerous times in the past with the same man. • A 24-year-old man tried to commit suicide by stabbing himself in the abdomen with a large butcher knife» following an argument with his girlfriend. He was taken to Maricopa County Hospital where his wound wa$ determined not to be life threatening. Compiled by State Press reporter Mike McGonnell. Croise with the State P ressai . . .fo r it brings the horrors o f the RAVENLOFT® realm to a fevered pitch. Come, now is the time to learn more about the secrets of the demiplane o f dread.. . . Put Your r p n f f i I In fiT ir Graduation. . With Hilton's BounceBack Weekend* you can bounce back from it a ll for a lot less than you thought. You'll get a free Continental Breakfast each day. And kids stay free. Check in as early as Thursday, and by Monday you could - be wearing that jusl-back-from-vacation grin. For reservations, call your professional travel agent, our hotel o r 1-800-HILTONS. 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GoodfromApril23.1993till May31. 1993 CROSSWORD c O H A o R A L B E L O F E P E T E X 1 S T 1M E A t E X t E SW s T A K E T O X 1 N W AME N D MA L E HA D A L L MAMA T S HO NO R E D R A 1 D E D P A T ■ T R Y MO N AM 1 S A J A K S A MO S 1 E L AT ® H Y E N A T AM E R A S S E T by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS subjects 1 Twitch 6 Minestrone et at. 11 “Gay* city 1201 hearing 13 Pot starters 14 Scenic view 15 Cheer 16 Sauk — Marie 18 Fancy uacfl 19 Flightless bird 20 Poke fun at 21 Real estate buy 22 Scientist on the Beagle 24 Stands sitters 25 Bridgeside path 27 Risque 29 Grownups 32 Under the weather 33 Go awry 34 Pitching stat 35 Trevino’s org. 36 P eace symbol 37 Argon, e.g. 38 In aw ay, in slang 40 Sentence 42 Actor Alan 43 Mia Far­ row movie 44 Sobs 45 Highway divisions DOWN 1 Used frugally 2 Colombia neighbor 3 Noted science fiction author 4 View 5 Gl*s food pack 6 Rescued 7 Gallic agree­ ment 1 5 à 1| E 1 Yesterday’s Answer 8 Noted science fiction author 9 Store frequenter 10 Inclines 17 Some dishes 23 Method 24 Winter ailment 4- r~ 26 Gland near f the kidney 27 Lumbering tool 28 Tipper’s hubby 30 Stupor 31 Is pert 33 Date of W esterns 39 Gratuity 41 Palm leaf i r- 6 7~ r 1 15 id f 1 1 1 “ 23 25 27 28 32 I J ■ 33 * / ; 2■^ 58 56 3ti 45 44 N 30^ 31 » 56 1 d J 1 j 1 40 4L 45 *5 34 57 4-30 FORBIDDEN LORE Boxed Set Van Richten’s Guide to Ghosts Van Richten’s Guide to the Lieh Reveals the secrets of the Vistani, psionics, Strahd Von Zarovich’s spellbook, and much more. 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CRYPTOQUOTE N U NO J J R G I M U Q Y C P D TU M U Z U EU Q RT O M C P Y G KG TU O P C M K R I K R I W Q J . KR G P W 1O K U Y G Q M T C I CK. — S R A P X C Q Q U I Y esterday’s C ryptoquote: THERE’S A MIGHTY BIG DIFFERENCE BETWEEN GOOD, SOUND REA­ SONS AND REASONS THAT SOUND GOOD. — BUR­ TON HILLIS © 1MS by Kino Features Syndicate, Ine. 1. S t a t e P ress Friday, April 3 0 ,1993 P ag e 7 F in a n c ia l C o n t in u e d from page 1. F IN A N C E Y O U NO CREDIT NO PROBLEM HUGE INVENTORY OF USED CARS, TRUCKS AND 4 x 4 * 6 4 9 -3 0 3 0 But according to the White House outline, Clinton wants to create a new federal loan program. ' Under the new program, the federal gov­ ernment would borrow money and then loan it to Students through the university. Students would then be allowed to pay the money back based on a percentage of their income once they graduate. That would change the current practice of students obtaining their loans directly from banks, which are now responsible for loaning money to students. However, neither the loan program nor the service plan will be fully in place until 1997, according to the outline. ASASU Président Scott Maasen said he supports the idea of the plan, but he does not c ^ oUAT,OA' spf CASH FOR BOOKS JJT * 966-6226 704 S. College s f $45 Idenf Stay 3 nights for the P®r ™9ht price of 2 nights!_____ _____ FREE TRANSPORTATION TO AND FROM ASU FOR GRADUATION! f Subject to availability. Call Fiesta Inn for advance reservations. University I M e d iu m P iz z a z fa r a e 2-Item Pizzas 1 w it h U n lim it e d T o p p in fis P IZ Z A I - I t e m P iz z a s F rie n d s a n d fa m ily c o m in g to to w n ? 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If you get $40 for your used books, youll get $40 cash and a gift certificate for $4. think it will make it much easier to afford a college education. “I like the spirit of the idea, (but) it seems very sym bolic in n a tu re ,” M aasen Said. ‘There’s not a lot of substance there.” The plan would be overseen at the federal level by an 1 1-m em ber board o f the C orporation for N ational Service, which would be appointed by Clinton and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. Health coverage and child-care assistance also would be available under the plan. By 1997, 100,000 to 150,000 students will be able to participate in the program. That ends up being about one out of every 100 stu­ dents nationwide, according to White House estimates. FAST FREE DELIVERY! Sodasi ; > Page 8 Friday, April 30,1993 S t a t e P ress TONITE ClilCAGIES icl Grease 'n Go's 20 pt. Valvoline Lube, Oil & Filter Service Reg. Price $21.95 Add'1 EPA Fee Mesa 898-8211 1355 S . 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Whether your interests involve the environment, j, politics, econom ics, or other fields, you can internationalize your course o f study on Semester at Sea. Each semester over 400 undergraduates from across the U.S. and abroad live and || learn aboard the S.S. Universe, an 18,000 ton ship equipped as a floating campus, 1 During this 100 day voyage you can earn 12-15 transferable credits, choosing from i more than 50; lower and upper division courses. During the Fall 1993 semester the I Universe w ill visit Japan , C hina, T aiw an, M alaysia, India, U kraine, T urkey, I G reece an d M orocco. Space is available for the F all sem ester. For more information call 800-854-0195 or 412-648-7490; or write Semester at Sea, University o f Pittsburgh, 811 W illiam Pitt | Union, Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Located in SW Comer Scottsdale Rd. & McDowell A pply now and prepare for the learning adventure o f a lifetim e. 423-8499 ••rmm mm J i St a t e P ress Page 9 Friday, April 3 0 ,1 9 9 3 W om en Law ren ce- C o n t in u e d from page 1. C o n t in u ed from page 1. CO 03 1 JZ CO Ü ) ■c 1_1 03 o oÖ o 03 Q Q. C\J Ó) T~ CD GC o CO E ■'3' _i o threat of enemy abuse as issues but she does worry about the right women being selected as the pioneers for combat flight training. “They shouldn’t put someone through just to get through,” she said. “Hie biggest issue is that the first women are 100 percent qualified so that women behind them don't have a problem.” Another female ROTC senior, who did not want to be identified, said if the military just tries to “fill a quota” of combat-trained women, it will be a setback rather than an advance for women in the military. She said if any unqualified women are let into the program it will give those who don’t believe women should have advanced positions a weapon to use against further advances. But for freshman cadet Crystal Wiecken, Aspin’s announcement is “like a huge door opening.” “It’s what I want to do,” she said. “I want to be a pilot.” Wiecken said she definitely will apply for combat pilot training if the field is open to her, and added that she believes the directive affects more than just those wanting to enter pilot training. “I think women being allowed in combat is a big step toward women being able to do anything in the military,” she said. Col. Ron Karp, ASU’s chairman of Aerospace Studies, said the University’s Air Force ROTC pro­ gram will not be affected by a change in policy regard­ ing women in combat. He said 10 of 76 cadets currently in the program are women and that all the students are trained to enter any of the Air Force “entry branches” upon graduation. “We don’t differentiate between male and female requirements,” he said. “We all train to the same stan­ dards.” -C Q) 03 CO A ru c u f i l l i lË m æ B ïïs s h à m M IN I-S T O R A G E 9 6 7 -3 9 0 0 V A D on't H aul It H o m e... 9 i 1 FOR R E I T ! 1 ■- ■' r . . 1 B rin g c o u p o n f o r 1 S pecial S tudent Rate i 4 - m o s . - p r ic e o f 3 ; *Not to be used with any other specials. i •Your lock, your key | •F ull security •Visa/M astercard •Open 7 days 1 190S E. A pa ch e B lv d . I University Price © □ 1 McClintock Rural KEYSTO N E $3 S T O ;<-1 m I * h ig h p r ic e s p a id * fa s t a n d fr ie n d ly s e r v ic e Looking for Student Publications? A SU BO O K STO R E 2 C o n ven ien t Cam pus Lo catio ns Wfc're in the basement o f M atthews Center... State Press The State Press Magazine The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook Hayden's Ferry Review The Student Handbook M in a ti issue o f the State Prêts this semester? Cam pus Corner heard before. “I don’t believe she meant to sexually harass him, but, if he was offended by if, lie has every right to bring a case against her.” ASASU E lections C oordinator Andy Leonard, who was present with Johnson, said Lawrence’s remarks were made “in the heat of the moment.” “It’s typical of what’s gone on up there (ASASU) all year,” Leonard said. “I don’t think it’s anything to get excited over. They were both saying anything they could to go at each other, but I don’t think it was said in the manner, ‘Oh, this turns you on.’ “This is childish and unnecessary.” Come pick it up at die information desk in the basement o f Matthews Center, ¡8 a.m.-5 p.m. A S U B o o k s to r e M E M O R IA L U N IO N Receive your holiday bonus coupon worth orange mall 20% ASUBookstore BUYBACK DATES: M A Y 6 -1 7 * Mon.-Thur. 8-6, Fri. 8 5 "Open Sat., May 8 & 15, 9 2 orange m all ,South Entrance Near INFO DESK when you sell your textbooks back! OTHER S U R P R IS E S TOO!! BUYBACK DATES: M A Y 1 0 -1 4 Mon.-Thur. 9-4, Fri. 9 3 P age 10 Friday, April 3 0 ,1 9 9 3 S t a t e P ress B y N a ta lie Young Photos hy D a rry l W e t l Marteena Reed, a for­ mer member of the pre­ dominantly white sorority Alpha Phi, questions her decision to crossover racial lines and Join a white Greek organization. Reed said at times she felt isolated by the experience, and wished she had had more con­ tact with people of her own race. P h illip s had her eyes as group of black women welcomed into a lifelong bond of sisterhood in Alpha K appa A lpha S orority. There w ere no blowouts or all-night parties, just a small communion of women sharing the inti­ mate secrets of the initiation process. M arleena Reed didn’t shed a tear during her initiation into Alpha Phi. Reed shared her initiation with more 30 other women, and after the formal ceremony, she attended a new members, in the entire napier. Phillips and Reed, two black ASU students, joined sororities fo r die same reasons: to find a place to belong. But their experiences during their four years of college have presented harsh realities for the nature of cultural integration and acceptance in American universities. Phillips joined a histori­ cally black sorority. Reed joined a historically white sorority. “For me, I don’t think there was a choice,” said Phillips, an ASU senior majoring in business man­ agement. “For me, if I was going to join a sorority, it was going to be a black one. “I think it would be really difficult to join a white sorority knowing that the organization wasn’t founded with you in mind; in fact, it was founded to exclude you.” The racial barriers that are entrenched in the white Greek system would be too difficult to over­ come, Phillips said. The system is not going to be integrated overnight when it is already 98 percent white, she added. “Being black in the white Greek system would definitely be a mental adjustment. 1 don’t think there would be a way for me to justify the fact that these women weren’t interested in me and my her­ itage”. ' . ; ‘ . A sisterhood and cultural struggle The concept of sisterhood and building a soror (a Greek word meaning sister) relationship is a vital part of the initiation process into the black Greek system. The pledge process, which in some cases included hazing (before it was banned), is used to enable the initiates to bond as sisters by overcom­ ing adversity administered by full-fledged mem­ bers. For P hillips, calling som eone a soror goes beyond just building the friendship relationships that are found in most white sororities. It is a bond that is created through cultural ties and struggle. “I could not classify someone in the white Greek system as my soror because there are few common­ alties between us,” Phillips said. “I would really doubt, and I may be being S t a t e P ress Page 11 Friday, April 30,1993 stereotypical here, that there are white females and Phi Beta Sigma. that have any real sense of what it’s like to be a black woman. I come from a single-parent Differences block family, from a mother who endured racism, efforts to unite systems and I don’t think many women in the white Greek system can identify.” Even though the two sorority systems are On the other hand, Reed, an ASU senior separate at ASU, Meredith Link, president of majoring in organizational communication, Panhellenic (the governing body of sororities entered ASU from a small white majority on college campuses), has been caught in the community in Michigan. Reed said she was middle of the struggle to unite the entire initially satisfied with the white Greek sys­ Greek system here. tem, but after going through four years of col­ Two university-recognized councils over­ lege and having only one close black friend, see the sororities and fraternities. Panhellenic v she began to wonder if she was missing some­ governs the sororities and Inter-fraternity thing. C ouncil (IFC ) controls the fratern ities. “My specific reason for doing this (joining Currently, the black fraternities and sororities, a white sorority) was to meet people. As I got with the exception of AKA, are not recog­ older, I began to realize how limited I was,” nized in IFC or Panhellenic and do not have an established Black Greek Council. Reed said. ‘T here were times when I wished I had “The two Greek systems were founded for someone o f another race close to me, but, different reasons and that is a major part of because it was just a product of my life, I the reason why we haven’t functioned better in the past,” said Link, a senior majoring in didn’t focus on it. I was used to it. “Going through rush told me immediately journalism. which houses I wouldn’t want to be a part of. “A lot of what we discuss at Panhellenic There were houses I definitely wouldn’t be meetings doesn’t apply to the black Greek comfortable in. I saw that the first day I went system. I know the AKA representative gets through rush. bored.” “There w ere houses I could tell were A large part of the Panhellenic meetings uncomfortable with me. It was like they had are devoted to Greek games or other teamnever interacted with a black woman.” related activities, which the black sororities Breaking down cultural differences was a and fraternities don’t participate in because large part of Reed’s experience in the white their numbers aren’t large enough. In addi­ Greek system. During the time Reed was tion, there are discussions surrounding the active in her sorority (currently she is inac­ rules for social exchanges, whether the houses tive), she could only remember seeing one will provide the alcohol or whether members other black woman in the entire white Greek w ill bring th eir own beverages to the , system. There is only so far a person can go in exchange. Alcohol discussions don’t pertain building a relationship with someone of a dif­ to the black Greeks because they don’t partici­ ferent race, Reed added. pate in or organize on campus exchanges “I would have rather been in the black involving alcohol. Greek system for a sense o f com m unity On a large campus of more than 40,000 because everyone in there would understand students, m any women join sororities to anything I said to them,” she said. become a part of something smaller. Reed, added that for her it was difficult “I pledged at the University of Colorado, having to respond to statements from her white sorority sisters. “If I w ould have jo in ed a black sorority, I would have had an instant Comfort zone. They w o u ld n 't ask me the type of questions that people asked me in the white Greek system,” she said. “Quite often people would tell me that 1 wasn't like most black people. I knew that the reason they said things like that w as because of their lim ited interaction with other blacks.” Currently, there are 26 recog­ nized fraternities and 15 recog­ nized sororities (including AKA) at ASU. The total num ber of Greeks on the ASU campus is 3,200 (this number fluctuates because of members that drop or go alum). The average size of the white soror­ which is a fairly large campus,” Link said. “On a campus that size it gave me an iden­ ities is 80 and the average for the fraternities is 90. The only recognized black sorority on tity.” In the white Greek system, there are no campus, AKA, has a current active member­ ship of 10. None of the black sororities main­ nationally required community service pro­ jects as in the black Greek system, but the tain residential houses on campus. There are four nationally recognized black University Commission on Greek Life, a body sororities: Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma formed by the Office of Student Affairs to Theta, Sigma Gamma Rho and Zeta Phi Beta. examine Ihe quality of Greek life at ASU, is The four national black fraternities are Alpha attempting to change that. Phi Alpha, Kappa Alpha Psi, Omega Psi Phi “There are new requirements that are being Arianne Phillips, a member of the black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha, insists that her organiza­ tion’s uniqueness and identity would be lost if intégration into the w hite system of sororities was mandated. AKA is the only black sorority at ASU recognized by the official white Greek governing body, Panhellenic. placed on the Greek system as far as commu­ nity service is concerned,” Link said. “The U niversity seem s to be m oving toward a format where the houses will select from a group of community service oriented options. There will also be changés made in the area of GPA requirements.” In the black Greek system, it is not possi­ ble for a student to rush as a first-semester freshman. A minimum of 12 credit hours must be earned before a student can be considered would just get sucked up and lose what makes it unique if efforts to combine the two systems was ever realized, Phillips said. “With cultural diversity and integration, people are trying to move toward an integrat­ ed system, but 1 don’t see it as a positive thing. To a certain extent, the two systems.can work together, but to become one system would be detrimental,” she said. “What makes us unique is the personaliza­ tion of our system. I would be offended if people classified us as being like the white Greek system. “To have just one all-encom­ passing Greek system and not make the distinction between black and white does a disser­ vice to those who founded the black system.” Historically, the black Greek system was founded to promote service to all mankind — black and w hite — and a sense o f brotherhood and sisterhood. Community service defines the purpose of the black Greek sys­ tem. When the sororities and fra­ ternities were founded, there was a strong need to assist the black race in all aspects of life. The black Greek system was founded as a step toward rectifying the m any social problem s th at plagued the race. The national chapters of the bladk Greek system, which individually have national ser­ vice projects, require the undergraduate chap­ ters to fulfill their own community service projects. In the case of AKA, the women are required to fulfill programming strands that touch upon the areas of strengthening the black fam ily, education, econom ics and health. P h illips said the im personal, m oneyfocused structure of the white Greek system is what discouraged her from being interested in the system to begin with. She said that having a formal dinner at $100 a plate and raising money for charity is noble in its own right, but, for Phillips, that doesn’t get her any clos­ er to interaction with the people the money is intended to help. Alpha Kappa A lpha sorority, the first nationally recognized black sorority, was founded on the campus of Howard University in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 15, 1908. The oldest black fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, was founded Dec. 4, 1906, on the cam pus of Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. The black Greek system was founded part­ ly because A frican A m ericans w ere not allowed to join the white Greek system. I th in k it w ould be really d ifficu lt to join a w b ite .5 5 sorority know ing th a t the organization wasn’t founded w ith you in m ind; in fa c t, it was founded to exclude you. — A ria n n e P h illip s M I m w there are issues both systems can agios on, bid adm its that ths black sororities and tnrtsm itiss would be bailor asrvod through a Black Greek Council. for initiation in a black sorority or fraternity. “The pledge processes too are incompati­ ble. I know AKA doesn’t go through rush like we do,” Link said, In the white sorority system the women go through a bid process that enables them to pick their top houses. The sorority members in the various houses also have an opportunity to choose the women they want. Eventually, the women write down their top three choices and from there it is determined whether or not there is a compatible bid. In the black Greek system, the pledge pro­ cess is more discrete. Women are sought out in some cases and in other cases members of the sorority are approached with inquiries about membership. Those who are interested are then required to bring a letter of interest and an official copy of their transcripts to a membership tea. There is no bid process and women cannot be held over as initiates for an entire semester. The length of time it takes to become an active member has been drastically reduced by the national chapters because of severe hazing concerns. While building a soror relationship is a pri­ mary concern for the black Greek system, Link said that in the white Greek system there is a strong emphasis on building leadership potential. “Leadership is definitely the strongest ben­ efit I got out of the system,” Link said. “If it wasn’t for my sorority, I wouldn’t have the leadership position I do now.” Link said that given the differences, unit­ ing the two systems would be difficult to achieve and probably shouldn’t be the goal. “There should be a black Greek council,” she said. “We can help each other in the areas of mutual agreement, but there should be a place where blaclyGreeks can get benefits from a recognizedSeparate system.” , Phillipsis also adamantly against combin­ ing the two systems. The black Greek system Crossover Creeks’ loyally cjuestioned Despite the fact that Reed grew up in a largely white community, she couldn’t help but have the same experiences as most blacks growing up in America. She said that joining a white sorority was nothing more than sur­ rounding herself with the same environment in which she grew up. “I do consider these girls my sorors, but I think there will come a point when they can’t understand what I am experiencing,” Reed said. Black students at ASU may question th e , S tate P ress Friday, April 3 0 ,1993 ee 12 motives for any minority student who willingly submerges herself in an environment dominated by whites, Phillips said. In many instances, blacks call people in similar situations as Reed sell-outs, she added. “It would not come down to the notion that the white soror­ ity system fits her needs better,“ Phillips said. “What it would come down to is the fact that she identifies with those people more than she does with blacks.” Reed admitted that there were times when black students would pass her by and look at her sorority shirt questionably. “There have been times when I would be walking around campus with my Alpha Phi shirt on, and while no black stu­ dent would come right out and say anything, I could tell they were questioning why I would pledge a white sorority,” Reed added. W itk o u ttie », officials search for accountability aren’t applicable to the black Greeks because the black Greeklettered organizations do not live on fraternity row or in other collective-housing arrangements. The community service requirement handed down by the national presidents of black Greek organizations are also incompatible with the, IFC and Panhellenic system. Most of the philanthropic events in the white Greek system require entry fees that are too demanding on small chapters. “Before I came to ASU, I was at a small school where I interacted with seven of the eight national Panhejlenic groups (the national body for black Greek-lettered organizations, also called pan dash), “ Hersh said. “I would call the sororities and fraternities social groups or social service groups, and I tell you my black Greek-lettered organizations really didn’t like that because they really don’t consider themselves social organizations.” Buying or selling? Black Greeks seek out Quality Greek Life Coordinator Vicki Hersh is directly accountable Hersh also said the membership intake process for black for the Greek system at ASU. During the process of construct­ ing the Commission on the Quality of Greek Life, the black organizations is not even remotely similar to the bid or rush Greek system raised concerns because most of the black frater­ process found in the white sororities and fraternities. “Instead o f spending a lot of time and energy getting to nities and sororities are not recognized by university-organized know these people and their potential for lifetime membership, governing bodies. “Alpha Kappa Alpha (AKA) is the only black sorority rec­ they (the white men’s groups) take a whole gob of them and ognized by Panhellenic,” Hersh said. ■ ■ '^ 1 . “For aw hile, there was an absence of AKA at meetings and for about two years now, we h a v en ’t seen any co n sisten t involvem ent from A lpha Phi Alpha and Phi Beta Sigma (two national black fraternities).” It is not uncommon to deny membership to fraternities and sororities that are not recognized on this campus, but somehow WC the black fraternities and sorori­ ties have evaded the system . U niversity o fficials have not pressured the black Greeks to become a part of the governing — V ic k i H e r s h bodies of fraternities and sorori­ ties. When there are fraternities and sororities that claim to be recognized in Panhellenic and IFC but do not participate in the kind of weed them out and take the one’s that they want,” she said. meetings, accountability becomes a real concern, Hersh said. “But when you look at how the black Greeks do it, you “Members of IFC raise the point that if they don’t come to have to be at least a sophomore, you have to have a certain meetings, then why should we recognize them?” Hersh said. ‘Taking it a step further, you could say why don’t we hold GPA and a certain number of hours. Black Greek organiza­ them to the same standards that we hold the majority groups tions spend a lot more time preparing someone just to pledge.” The white Greeks do more o f a selling job to potential to?” There may be quite simple reasons as to why there isn’t members by telling them that they will get so much out of it, greater attendance and consistency in on-campus fraternity and whereas black Greeks do more of a buying job, Hersh said. The high retention rate and prominent graduate chapter activi­ sorority meetings. “If you have six members, you all have three different ty is directly related to the lifetime commitment approach offices and probably have to go to two other meetings during taken by members o f the black organizations, she said. the week, so what happens is IFC and Panhellenic become a Essentially, after the undergraduate experience, the organiza­ tion of the national white chapters dwindle, she added. low priority for you,” In order to remain an active member of a black sorority or Hersh said. ‘T hey also don’t understand the wicked cycle that is in fraternity, a student must join a graduate chapter; however in place. AKA doesn’t come to Panhellenic because they don’t the m ajority Greek system graduate mem bership is not get anything out of Panhellenic. They don’t get anything out of required as long as the member pays dues. Integrating the majority Greek system will not happen Panhellenic because they don’t come to Panhellenic, so Panhellenic doesn’t know what they need to get out o f overnight, Hersh said. “M ommy and Daddy w eren’t Sigm a C h i’s o r D elta Panhellenic.” The primary argument from the black Greek system is that Gamma’s,” she added. “Most of the white sororities and fraternities discriminate it is pointless to go to council meetings because there is noth­ ing to be gained. Most of the social activities and exchanges. ; more based on class thaii anything else. Whether we like it or not, social barriers are not always based on ethnicity; they are quite often based on status.” When going through the majority system’s rush, minorities may be turned off by the white faces that are consistent throughout the rush books. Á minority looking through the rush books might question whether or not they would be accepted or if they are just too different, H ash said. In attempting to find a viable solution to the accountability and coexistence problem, the establishment of a black Greek council should be explored, she added. “What makes sense to me is to have a liaison from the black Greek council attend the IFC and Panhellenic meetings. I think the black Greék council is going to talk more about issues pertaining solely to them than to the Greek system as a whole,” Hersh said. “The liaison could provide some continuity and under­ standing as to how the systems are going to exist separately. We need to look for more similarities because I don’t thiiik that we work against each other.” Agreeing to disagree: M oving toward separate systems Even though black and white Greeks agree that the most viable resolution leans toward having two separate Greek sys­ tems, the problem of integrating the black and white sororities and fraternities remains unre­ solved. Reed said her experience in the white Greek system solidi­ fied the differences between the tw o races. “The desire to be around black people and give back to the com m unity is stronger due to the severe lack o f in teractio n With blacks throughout my college life,“ she said. “When I graduate, I think I am going to be in Chicago, and, when I went to visit there, I was so excited because there were black people everywhere. These are my brothers and sisters. “I te ll my room m ates that I love them, but they have to realize I have never been around my people.” After graduation, Reed said she will try to reclaim what she feels she has missed. “Deep within I have the need to get involved and give back,” she said. For Phillips the sorority provides a lifeline that is instru­ mental and almost vital on ASU’s campus of fewer than 1,000 African American undergraduate students. While she recognizes that racial limitations are a large part of the problem, she does not exclude class differences as being a primary deterrent of the white Greek system. “It’s bad enough going into an organization where you are one of the only minorities in there, but then having to go in and deal with a class difference on top of that would be justas tremendous an obstacle,” she added. “Maybe Joe Smith is from the upper echelon black commu­ nity and that may be what he identifies with, but for me I iden- ■ tify with the members of my sorority. “The majority Greek system will never have a real under­ standing of the black Greek system and I wouldn’t really push the issue of having them understand it. It was societal and probably back in the day we would have liked to have been a part of the white system, but it wasn’t offered to us.” M o st wliite sororities and fraterni­ ties discriminate more W e d on class than anything else. WTiether on like it or not, social harriers are not always ethnicity; they are cjuite often kased on status. r Sponsored by the Western Sunbathing Association, an association for nude recreation. TRYNUDE RECREATION HAYDEN’S FERRY REVIEW ASU’S AWARD-W INNING NATIONAL LITERARY MAGAZINE Relax N aturally NEW ISSUE available Tuesday, M ay 4 swimming • jacuzzi • restaurants • dancing mt... «m usic S P R IN G /S U M M E R 1993 I s s u e 12 John Askbery, Alison Doming, Vivian Gormck, Gary Nathan, Naomi SMhabNye Available at • Student Publications-Matthew* Center baaement, • your favorite bookstore, or • look for our table an the Language and Literature Building patio. ONLY $5.00 D o n ’t 9 Á is s ‘B o a t Use State Press Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 S t a te P ress Friday. Anril. 1993 Candlelight vigil to protest use o f laboratory animals B y C hris D riscoll S tate P ress Animal-rights advocates will be broadcast­ ing their anti-vivisectionist message silently on campus tonight with a candlelight vigil for the “millions of lab animals which die each year at the expense of human research,” the group announced Thursday. ASU officials, meanwhile, defended the University’s policy on the use of animals in some research and teaching applications as “humane and necessary” for limited purposes. Prof. James Collins, ASU chairman of zoology, said he couldn’t say it any better than his department’s guidelines on die issue do. “Observations and experiments on living and preserved animals are important and nec­ essary to teach effectively certain zoological principles and processes. In the teaching activities of the department of Zoology, every effort will be made To minimize using animals while maximizing the educational impact and quality of each demonstration of a concept in' process,” the guidelines say. The candlelight^ v ig il, sponsored by Concerned Arizonans for Animal Rights and Ethics, CAARE, will focus on ASU’s use of animals in research. It will begin at 6:30 p.m. at the south side of the pedestrian overpass on University Drive. The group will give out candles and gather in silence until 7:15 p.m., when speakers will discuss research being done in ASU life-science labs. “We don’t have the number of animals used in m edical sch o o ls,” said G eorge Bjotvedt, director o f the ASU animal Care program, which is responsible for animals used in laboratories for teaching and research. “We don’t do*>as much invasive (surgical) types of research on large animals,” he said. He said most research at ASU is on inver­ tebrates like grasshoppers and roaches and that the federal law on treatment of animals is very strict and humane. He said his department tries to adopt out animals if they don’t pose any biological haz­ ard, such as dangerous bacteria, and he Chal­ lenged CAARE members to adopt such ani­ mals. The CAARE speakers will talk about what they think are cases of inhumane treatment and unnecessary use of animals in the labs at ASU. Examples they will speak about include the use of dogs and pigs in cardiac bioelectric experiments, in which the animals are eutha­ nized, and physiological instrum entation Classes, in which hundreds of rabbits are used in experiments and then euthanized, the group said. Stephanie N ichols Young, founder of CAARE, said that while she has no reason to suspect ASU o f not following the federal Animal Welfare Act, she wants researchers to know that her group is watching them. 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TM FAR SIM By GARY LARSON I'mmiu. »LULiiJMJUi WHEN fOUYE GOT TALENT UKE OURS, STUE WORLD iS TOUR CN5TE.R.. w D o o n esb u ry BY GARRY TRUDEAU iOUKNOW, At£X, iOUMAY NOTBeueve mia but DRMN6A CABHAS ITS OWNSOTOFHOWARDS...' “And so,” the interviewer asked, “Do you ever have trouble coming up with ideas?” “Weil, sometimes,” th e cartoonist replied. B y M ary C ampbell A ssociated P ress NEW YORK — Public te le v isio n ’s Dancing is as much about why people dance as how. • . ’ ', “I wanted to approach dance from a way that connected it to larger issues in life, so that people could see that dance comes from something real,” says Rhoda Grauer, execu­ tive producer of the eight-part series, which begins Monday on PBS. As far as Grauer knows, never before has there been a detailed television exploration of dancing’s worldwide diversity and history. “To me, the message has been how many zillions of different ways there are for human beings to express themselves culturally, mak­ ing their lives rich, in this case in dance,” she said. “I wanted the series to be intriguing to a general audience. I wanted it to have real information that would make people say, ‘Wow! I didn't know that.’ “ How many people know that couple dancing is uniquely European? There’s not another culture in the world in which men and women embraced and danced face to face, until colonialism spread it.” D ancing is accompanied by the largest outreach program ever created in conjunction with a TV series, Am erica D ancing, with som e 90 perform ances and events taking place across the country. In Texas, for instance, 25 organizations plan the w o rld ’s longest conga line. In Colorado, an alliance of libraries, schools and dance companies plans a multicultural dance festival. Pittsburgh will have a “Family Day of Dancing,” with 10 local troupes offering ballet to clog dancing. The first show, The Power o f Dance, is mostly about schoolchildren taught group dancing by Jacques d’Amboise, a former bal­ let star, who believes people are bom with the rhythms of dancing in their breathing and heartbeats. In the second program, about reli­ gion, Grauer said, “I selected forms I thought would be dynamic for a viewer. A man with a green face I saw outside a temple in India swept me away. I didn’t understand a word and I got it all.” “There are no stand-up narrators,” she said. “Each culture speaks for itself.” Grauer went .scouting first, to 18 countries, and selected what she wanted filmed. In India, she commissioned a temple festival, so the dancers she had chosen could be filmed, doing their regular thing, in one place. Another venue was the 1990 Los Angeles Festival, where the dancing was as different as a centuries-old fishing dance by aboriginal children from Australia’s Momington Island to local teen-agers’ improvisations. Grauer started working in dance by pre­ senting choreographer Jerome Robbins at the Spoleto Festival in Italy. Before moving to New Jersey PBS station WNET, she was director of the National Endowment for the Arts dance program, 1978-82. For Dancing, she first intended to profile American dance. “But Ruth St. Denis was drawing on Asia and the Middle East and Martha Graham was exploring yoga, Native American ritual and Greek mythology,” she said. “What made our dance powerful was, we were drawing on movement styles of the whole world. .That led me to the world. “Two W estern dances came out o f the European court — ballroom dancing and bal­ let. What struck me about ballet was that it * has been around so long. The question i became, why do some forms come into exis­ tence and remain? “One of the mysteries is how successfully ballet has crossed cultural boundaries. It car­ ries in it the ideal of European aristocratic behavior. Yet people in South A m erica, Africa and the East have not had a difficult time embracing it.” The seventh program is about the 20th century. “We have the emergence of the individual artist who says, ‘This is how I move. I don’t have to do it the way my teacher told me. , Whatever I decide is a dance is a dance.’ By the end of the century, this is all over the world,” Grauer said. The message of Dancing, she said, “is that dance carries in it a lot of clues about history, values and attitudes — clues to who people are.” ■ THEY NEVER LIKE THIS The Sun Devil An ASU Tradition. Gifts To Co Hardly a learner's car. The Mitsubishi Eclipse GS is stylish, sporty, and exciting. ASUClothing fir Gifts Qualityhats • shifts • shorts • decals • licenseplate frames •etc A lot more than just books! 966-6226 704 S. College 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 dual power remote sideview mirrors. For a tally educational experience, test drive an Eclipse today.. * $ 2,000 R ebate against price including dealer added equipm ent. Contact: Anthony Ingram, College Grad Program Administrator 934-1111 A il 4* University 1 1 ■* GLENDALE MITSUBISHI 4 4 3 4 W e s t G le n d a le A v e ., G le n d a le • 9 3 4 -1 1 1 1 Sports S tate P ress _____________ Crucial Stanford series begins tonight S ix -P a c s to p p itch ers sq u are o f f in o p e n e r B y G reg S ex to n S tate P ress rightfielder Scott Shores and the second-ranked Sun Devil baseball team begin an important three-game aeries w ith Pac-10 foe Stanford at 7 tonight at Packard Stadium. Legal tro u b les cloud sports y e a r Just as I was beginning to sense that the reverber­ ations of last fall’s ASU athletic department legal scandal had finally dimmed, a message print­ ed on the back of a T-shirt provided me with a bla­ tant reminder. Standing i s line for dinner at a fast-food restaurant, I read the black, block-style letters of a shirt obviously pur­ chased is th e pre-game hoopla surrounding the N game is Tucson: “The Game *92'-* Cats vs. Convicts,” It then became painfully clear bow the 1992-93 year of AMI sports will be remembered. The flinty of arrests and suspensions that g n m in j ASU President Lottie Coor to form a committee aiming to prevent further athlete legal troubles baf lcft a s indelible scar on the S m 0 r i i athletic program. And when you add the department’s decision to eliminate die archery, badminton and men’s gymnastics programs, it certainly has not been a blissful year fen ASU athletics. Misfortune has overshadowed a year that saw numerous successes from ASU teams: • Tailback Kevin Galbreath provided the Sun Devils \ ---------- .fh T Ift Ifttmn with a 51-yard touchdown scamper dim moved to be the difference in ASU’s 7-6 win over rival UofA. *• aguad, minus seven players lost to injury and problems with the law, paced, feU-eourt style to w tx m M tm its way to a thkd- piace Pac-10 g n l l E p » r; # |P ^ fW N % « i|,lii ll hitter Paul LoDuca is currently a 32-game hitting streak as the second-ranked ASU baseball team sits atop the Six-Pac standings. I I » A S C p S ia |h # Ä te«n made its first the NCAA " i m i 1988. « ftarior Raa M tto r o d t o | | each took individual i ' wrestling team’s four AA W ith six gam es remaining in a tight conference race, this w eekend’s threegame stretch against Stanford couldn’t be more im portant for th e second-ranked ASU baseball team.' The two team s BARCELO will meet tonight and Saturday at 7 and Sunday at 1 p.m. at Packard Stadium. And even though the Sun Devils (3816 overall, 15-9 Six' Pac) lead the confer­ ence by one and a h a lf gam es over UofA and swept the Cardinal in their last meeting, the week­ A d a m s end series rem ains critical. To assure itself of the crown, ASU must take at least two from Stanford and then sweep UofA in its final regular season games of the year. Earlier this year, the Sun Devils beat the Wildcats at home before los­ ing two in Tucson. ASU will meet UofA in Tucson on May 14, and then will host the Wildcats May 15 and 16 at Packard in the home season finale. But the series with the Cardinal (22-20, 7-14) is foremost on the Sun Devils’ agen- da. And Friday’s game will most likely boil down to a battle on the m ound, w ith arguably the two best pitchers in the SixPac pitted against one another. Stanford’s ace Willie Adams (8-2, 3.15 ERA) will start tonight. Adams struck out a career-high 11 batters last Friday, the third time he’s K’d 10 or more batters, Adams will go against ASU pitcher Marc Barcelo (9-3,3.11). In Barcelo’s last outing, he went the dis­ tance against UCLA last Friday. He threw a five-hitter, allowed only three runs to score (two earned) and struck out seven. He leads the team w ith 82 strikeouts and he has walked just 31 batters. ASU’s pitching is atop the Six-Pac with a 4.62 ERA, and Barcelo also leads the con­ ference in innings pitched and ERA, and is second in wins. When ASU last played Stanford March 26-28 in Palo Alto, the Sun Devils handily beat the Cardinal, 12-2, 3-1 and 6-5. And those wins came in a park ASU coach Jim Brock labeled “one of the hardest parks to hit in,” Now, with the series at Packard, the Sun Devils will again aim to utilize their potent bats against the Cardinal. ASU is second to UofA with a .336 team average, w hile Stanford is fifth in the conference with a .285. Leading the ASU hitting force is junior Paul LoDuca with a .454 average, a 32game hitting streak, 109 hits, 72 RBI and 12 home runs. LoDuca leads the conference in average, hits, RBI and his 22 doubles’are second in the conference. ASU to end regular season in a flurry T rio o f d o u b leh ea d ers aw ait so ftb a ll sq u ad B y M ic h a el B ra n o m S ta te P ress The ASU softball team will attempt to its way into the NCAA Regionals this week­ end as it wraps up the regular season by host­ ing three doubleheaders, two against confer­ ence foes. Oregon is the 19th-ranked Sun Devils’ first opponent, visiting Sun Devil Club Stadium tonight at 6. Oregon State arrives Saturday for a 1 p.m. twinbill, closing out ASU’s Pac-1 play. The last doubleheader will be against Cal-State Fullerton at 1 p.m. on Sunday. The four games against the Oregon schools are crucial, as ASU (30-22 overall, 10-10 Pac10) is tied for fifth in the conference Ducks (15-13, 5-5), one half-game behind the Beavers (11-11,6-5). “These games are very important,” Coach Linda Wells said. “We need to move as high as we can in the polls and we need to win as many games as we can this weekend to do so.” Both UO and OSU are hot entering this weekend’s play. Oregon has won four of its last six, while Oregon State has the confer­ ence’s second-longest current winning streak, with five straight victories. ASU, by contrast, has played flat of late w ith a 6-8 record in its last 14 gam es. However, all eight losses came to No. 1 UCLA and No.3 Arizona. Sun Devil Note: Wells needs one victory to reach the mile­ stone 500th for her career. Her record now stands at 499-369 (.574) with a 143-93 (.605) (Mrryi w n w s m i * Pi«m mark at ASU. Before coaching the Sun Sun Devil catcher Wendy Johnson promises to see plenty of action this week­ Devils, she held the head coaching position at . end as the 19th-ranked ASU softball team w ill host dues doubleheaders In three days a t Sun Devil Club Stadium. the University of Minnesota for 15 years. P a g e 16 Friday, April 3 0 ,1 9 9 3 S t a t e P ress C o lu i I I n W e e k e n d P r e v ie w C o n t in u e d from page 1 5 . M ens tennis team hopes to salvage year at Texas B y S c o t t D avis Sta te P ress should present a good match-up with ASU’s Bruce Haddad. After struggling to its worst record in 10 “Eriksson is your classic Swedish, all-day­ years, the ASU m en’s tennis team has a long baseliner,” Belken said. “He’s gotten chance to finish off the year with a sense of better at coming to the net.” pride this weekend. Haddad will be the favorite prior to the The Sun Devils (6-13 overall, 2-8 Pac-10) match, but because of recent health problems, will put all o f their season-long frustrations Eriksson will have an excellent chance of on the line Saturday, when they travel to upsetting Haddad. Austin to square o ff against 16th-ranked Haddad was forced to skip the Pac-10 Texas. ASU was in a similar situation last Cham pionships last weekend because of season -¿- entering as a severe underdog — severely pulled groin. He sustained the injury and was able to upset the Longhorns. during ASU’s April 14th meeting with UofA. “W e’re playing against a quality pro­ Belken said the entire ASU team is count­ gram,” ASU coach Lou Belkcn said. “We’re ing on a 100 percent effort from Haddad. playing for pride and to build something for “At this point, (H addad being at full next year. It’s a good opportunity on the strength) is what we are counting on,” Belken schedule for us.” said. “We haven’t tested him all week. He’ll In last y ear’s ' contest, the Sun D evils be fine.” . dethroned Texas at home. This year will be The other Longhorns expected to offer a d iffe re n t, as ASU w ill travel to the challenge to the Sun Devils arc Ian Williams Longhorns’ domain. and Trey Phillips. They will be taking on Another difference in this year’s battle is A SU ’s Eric Brunner and Chris Gambino, the added depth of the Texas squad. The respectively. Longhorns have added three players to their Both match-ups figure to be intriguing, as lineup, and have an additional three ranked in Williams and Phillips both stand over sixthe top 50. T h eir top play er is A nders foot-five, while Brunner and Gambino both Eriksson, who is currently ranked 36th and are slightly under five-foot-10. Championships. * The ill-fated ASU badminton team swept all possible individual and team titles at the national level in its last season ever. • The ASU men’s and women’s golf teams both claim ed Pac-10 cham pionships this week. But despite these successes, the unfortu­ nate reality is that 1992-93 will probably be looked back upon by most as the year charac­ terized by off-the-field conflict. ASU TODAY: Sun Devils vs. Stanford 7 p.m., Packard Stadium SAT: Sun Devils vs. Stanford SUN: Sun Devils vs. Stanford I DIGEST SIX^PAC Standings ASU Arizona UCLA use C alifornia Stanford W L Pet. 15 15 11 14 10 7 9 12 10 13 14 14 .625 .556 .524 .519 .417 .333 GB l7* 2% 5 27« 67* 1 Upcoming Games and Matches TODAY: SAT: J&SD By S haun R achau State P ress Olympic Sports The ASU men’s and women’s track teams will travel to Eugene, Ore. Saturday to com­ pete in the annual Pepsi Team Invitationals. The Sun D evils will face Pac-10 foe Washington State. Big-8 Conference member Kansas State and host Oregon. For the women’s téStfi, the competition between Oregon and the Sun Devils is consid­ ered a preview o f the upcom ing Pac-10 Championships, which will take place on May 21. Last Saturday at the Penn Relays, the women’s team had an impressive showing. Twins Lade and Tayo Akinrcmi finished twothree in the 400-m eter hurdles, and then SPORTS Upcoming Games Track and field ventures to Pepsi Invitational joined junior Shanequa Campbell and fresh­ man Janice Nichols to place second in the 4x400-meter relay with a time of 3:32.03. They also recorded the second-best time in ASU history (1:34.64) with sister Christie Akinremi and freshman Lesa Parker in the 4x200 relay. The men’s team, who also performed well at the Penn Relays, should do well in Eugene Saturday. At the Penn Relays, senior Gabe Beechum bettered his season outdoor high jump best with a jump of 7 feet 3 1/4 inches. The 4x100 relay team o f George Page, Brian Ellis, Jimmy Kegler and Fred Campbell finished third with a time of 40.42. Some ASU coaches and athletes claim that the legal debacle actually helped strengthen teams ift their attempt to overcome adversity. But none suggested that they would welcome the same situation again. “I know we got better, and I know we learned from it,” said ASU football coach Bruce Snyder. “But I don’t want to go through it again.” SUN: Softball vs. Oregon 6 p.m ., Sun Devil Club Stadium Softball vs. Oregon 6 p.m ., Sun Devil Club Stadium Track & Field -P ep si Invitational Eugene, O ra .; Men's Tennis at Texas Softball vs. Cal-State Fullerton 1 p.m ., Sun Devil Club Stadium Men’s Tennis a t Texas I Baseball S H O N W T U S S T U 'L L D Y O IN T h is , y e a r w e,'re do in g it a g a in ! E very S u n d ay (b u t O N L Y on S u n d a y ), M ik e Pulos of the Spaghetti Com pany will give you one FR EE dinner* for each dinner you order! It's our 2-for-1 SU NDAY STUDENT S P E C IA L . A nd it's good fo r th e w hole school year a t our Tem pe, Scottsdale and Phoenix locations. Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner, T h e S pagh etti C om pany is known fo r a great m eal at an affordable price. But the SUNDAY S TU D EN T SPEC IA L makes our already terrific prices even better I O ur din­ ners include a full-course m eal with all the trim mings-from salad to dessert. So, dollar D G N U E N E T R T I . D . * ENTIRE STOCK A E R fo r d o llar, when you're hungry you need a break, you c a n t -bee T h e S p a g h etti C om pany! E S P E C IA LLY O N S U N D A YS! W ith 2 dinners fo r the price of 1! "You m u s t p re s e n t yo u r c u rre n t S tud en t ID card w ith valida­ tion sticker to take of this offer. 15% to all discounted checks senior citizen discounts). C hicken C ordon B lue, S teak Di Jon Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala and orders to go ARE NOT INCLUDED in the 2 -fo r-t special. Open at 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays ^ p a g l i e t t i G » t t c p a i |y * R estaurant Phoenix NOW OPEN IN SCOTTSDALE In Old Town S o u th o n C entral J u s t P a s ta McDowell 7 3 7 3 N. S co ttsd a le Rd. J u s t North of Indian Bend T em p e 4th S t. & Mill 2 5 7 -0 3 8 0 4 8 3 -5 6 6 9 9 6 6 -3 8 4 8 Sweatshirts • T -S rts • Jackets and C la ssifie d s S t a t e P ress Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate die company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more infoimation and assistance re g a rd in g th e in v e stig a tio n o f an advertisement* please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. ANNO UNCEM ENTS Conridwing Europe on « budget? Talk to the expertsW« can help! A H OS TH C INT M IN AU TN IO k;M : .. Answers all questions. Stop by or call our International Inform ation Center. Available: •E urail Passes •Student International Plights •H ostel M em berships •International Student IDs 1046 E. Lemon S t, Tempe 804-5128 APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM , 2 bath, w asher/dryer hookup, pool, jacuzzi, many extras, $499/month. Apartment Renters, 831 3900. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bed­ rooms. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry room. On East 8th Street between Rural and McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. Call for move in special. : JUNE AND July free, 1 bedroom, pool, tennis Couit, $395/month. Apartment Renters, 831-5900. L A R G E 2 bed ro o m , 2 b ath , 1,000 square feet, utilities included, $600/ month. Apartment Renters, 831 -5900, ONE BEDROOM, small, clean inside, quiet neighborhood, 5th Street/Hardy, perfect for single/sim ple tastes. 9677565, HOMES FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, L2th & Maple $550/month. Tim, 894-0288. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, walk to ASU, great yani, $675. 894-0288. $ 100 MOVE-IN, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer, fireplace, $445/month. Apart­ ment Renters, 831 -5900. LOVELY 3 bedroom, 2 bath furnished house on beautiful South M ountain. Pool, air conditioning, quiet neighbrhood, 20 minutes from ASU. $400 per month plus utilities and deposit. Avail­ able May 29-October 2. Call 276-9445. 1 BEDROOM 1 block from ASU, fur­ n ish e d , lau n d ry , $2 5 3 . C all Jaco b 844-5900 or pager 389-7571 TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT I BEDROOM, utilities included, pool, Jacuzzi, club house, $385/month. Apartment Renters, 831-5900. 10 MINUTES from ASU 2 bedroom, 11/2 bath, dishwasher, laundry, pool, car­ p o rt, $4 0 0 /m o n th . J e f f o r L a u ra 943-8186. APARTMENTS £ BEDROOM apartments, new paint/ jcarpet, short walk to cam pus, $450/ month, 750 square feet. Call 602-428¿2217 or 602-428-1255. ^2 BEDROOM, 1 bath 4-plex, refriger­ a te d or evap, covered parking, from j$249.966-5596. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, pool, Jacuzzi, futilities included, $545/month. Apart­ ment Renters, 831-5900. STUDIO , UTILITIES included, pool. $389/month. Apartment Renters, 831 5900. D ESIG N F O R SHA RIN G •FREE A /e »FREE Heat •FREE Hot & Cold Water •FREE Volleyball •FREE Basketball •FREE Covered Parking T he Villas Apartments 1718 S. Jentiliy, Tempe 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath near Mill and Uni­ versity, new carpet, refrigerator, wash­ e r a n d d ry e r, pool and spa. $430/ month. MGM, 345-1919. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, air, dish­ washer, w asher, d ryer, pool, tennis, near ASU, $800. (714)499-4065, 967•4908HEMALE ROOMMATES for summer and/or next school year: 2 bedroom, 2 bath, I mile from ASU (Worthington Place). Pool, volleyball, club house. Call Tracy, 4314)638. APARTMENTS G A LLEO N APT. 968-8945 1920 E Hayden Lane (East o f Rural, N orth o ff Broadway) (N ear M cC lin to d t/U niversity) TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT Reserve Now for Fall 1/2 block from Campus B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d , huge 1 b e d ro o m . 1 b a th : 2 b e d I roo m . 2 bath apartm ents. A ll b ills paid. Cable TV. heated I p o o l and s p a c io u s la u n d ry | fa c ilitie s . F rie n d ly , c o u rte ­ o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by to d a y ! T e rra c e R o a d A p a rtm e n ts 9 50 S. T e rra c e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 Call Norma at: 9 6 8 -4967 ROOM M ATE TO share nice 4 bed­ room, 2 bath house, College/Broadway. Walk to ASU. $230 plus 1/4 utilities. 965-3644 days; 966-2427, 839-5054 evenings. H A Y D E N SQ U A R E 3 bedroom , 2 bath, $1200 and 2 bedroom , 2 bath, $900 RO O M S FOR RENT BEDROOM/ BATH in 2 bedroom/bath condo near ASU. Pool/jacuzzi/laundry in complex. $275/month. Jde, 929-0372. . 966-3298 FEMALE NONSMOKER, share four bedroom house Until August or longer, Southem/McClintock, $200/month, 1/4 utilities. 491-9484. RENTAL SHARING 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath apartment, $245, 1/2 Utilities, $100 deposit, Available now. 827-0468, Paul*/Smoker OK. NONSMOKING RESPONSIBLE 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. FEMALE NONSM OKER, fully fur­ 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. FEMALE PREFERRED, nice 4 bed­ room house, pool, washer/dryer. Teriipe, $205/month, 1/4 utilities. Matt, 8387 0 16 . ..■ •• -W . FEMALE, SHARE 2 bedroom, 2 bath, no cats, 1/2 re n t/u tilitie s, C am eron Creek, $295,423-1305 HOUSE: OWN bed/bath, $225,1/3 util­ ities, large yaití, washer/dryer.Kevin or Jeremy, 945-3323. ' 9047; y • OW N BEDROOM in 3 bedroom house with pool/spa. Great location. $250/ month plus 1/3 utilities. Female pre­ ferred. Call 839-9840. QWN ROOM in 2 bedroom condo, live near ASU, serious student, nonsmoker, m ale/fem ale, $350 plus 1/2 utilities. 423-5203. APARTMENTS Apartment Locating Service Roommate m atching service also available. 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. ROOMMATE WANTED to share home near A SU. P o o l, laundry, $300 per month. Call Ellen, 894-9786. MALE/ FEMALE, share large 2 bed­ room, June and July, mid-May move-in possible.9684)962. OWN BATHROOM and bedroom. AH 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. 829- OWN ROOM in house. Male/female. All am enities and utilities included. $210 month. John, 2734)309. ROOMMATE NEEDED to share beau­ tiful 4 bedroom home. Pool, washer, dryer, 3 miles from ASU, $225,1/4 utilities. 491-8776. LARGE ROOM in nice house. $195 per month and 1/4 utilities. Pool, wash­ er/dryer. Call Patrick 994-8946. NOW OPEN UNTIL 7 PM 9 6 6 -5 8 1 8 R O O M M A TE N E E D E D !! $ 270/ month. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, furnished apartment. 1/2 utilities. Call Trini, 9299187. PAPAGO PARK II, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer, $575/mqnth. David, 8293862,201-3942, Meridian Corners •S tu d io s $355 •1 b e d ro o m $370 • 2 b e d ro o m $485 LPC... WE CARE... 30 day guarantee RESPONSIBLE INDIVIDUAL, share summer rental. 1-1/2 mile/ASU. Fully furnished, utilities included, $250. 9668958,852-8549. LUXURY 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo, Questa Vida, washer/dryer, pool, avail­ able 6/1, $75Q/month. 714-673-3122. Flank Bennett Realty, 969-1818 M-F 9a.m .-7p.m . Sat 10a.m .-5p.m , Sun 1 la.m .-5 p .m . Luxury a p artm e n t living w ith low m ove-in... RENTAL SHARING HAYDEN SQUARE condo for summer and fall rental. Three bedroom , two bath. Contact Mike at 921-3651. 2 bedroom $390 SUMMER DISCOUNTS! P a g e 17 F rid a y, A p ril 30, 1993 TWO ROOMS in four bedroom house, summer only, $180/month plus 1/4 util­ ities. Fifth and Priest. Tod or Aaron, 967-8488. ' TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE HAYDEN SQUARE I, 2 and 3 bed­ room available starting upper 60's. Why pay rent? RE/MAX Excalibur. Call and ask for Gary Greenacre, 483-3333. HAYDEN SQUARE 2 bedroom, 2 bath poolside condo for sale. Vaulted ceiling, owner motivated. Jon Gillan, 967-3392, extension 3019. NO DOWN- take over mortgage, $700 per month. 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. A ir conditioning, dishw asher, wash­ er/dryer, pool, tennis. (714)499-4065 o r 967-4908. YOU SAY it, we display it! Only in die. State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information! Buy of the Week Q uesta Vida. 2 bedroom/loft, new plush carpet, counter tops & tile backsplash. You'll love It! Bob Bullock « Realty Executives If o u t-o f-sta te call 1 -8 0 0 -5 3 6 -6 2 8 3 4 3 7 -1 0 4 8 998-2992 APARTMENTS 1440 E. Broadway TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE HUD SALE!! Papago Park V illage, Q uesta V ida, "Government Hud Sale” 3% down. Hur­ ry,: call T.J. Carty Realty Executives, 831-0322. UNIVERSITY SHADOWS 2 bedroom/ study, 2 bathrooms, security System. No down, take over mortgage. 731-9563. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE LOSE WEIGHT with Diet Magic. Con­ trol allergies. All Natural H erb Pro­ ducts, 963-8263. BOOKS RECYCLE FOR $$$ Sell your books for cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit towards the p urchase o f an y th in g in the store. Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers welcome. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue, 9664)203. W E BUY BOOKS $ CASH $ or TRADE Book Central 7340 E. McDowell Rd. just east of Scottsdale Rd. (formerly Irwin's for Children) Scottsdale • 947-5108 Magazines or Book Clubs Monday-Saturday lOam-Spm FURNITURE 1983 OLDSMOBILE Omega. Reliable, cold air conditioning. $1200. Call Dave, 941-3443 evenings/weekends. 1985 RENAULT Alliance convertible, auto, pow er stee rin g , air, AM /FM , gold. M ust-sell!! $1700/offer. Ajaÿ, 929-9187. 1988 NISSAN Sentra; 52,000 miles, stick, air. M ust move. $2800. Jason, 966-3504. 1990 ACCORD EX 2-door, loaded, $11,500/offer. 731-4967, Barry. 1991 C A V A LIER , great condition, 22,000 miles, white 5-speed, AM/FM cassette, air, $5975/offer. 350-9375. CHEAP! FBI/U.S. Seized. 89 Mercedes...$200, 86 VW... $50, 87 Mercedes...$100,65 Mustang... $50. Choose from thousands starting $50. Free information- 24 hour hot­ line (8 0 1 )3 7 9 -2 9 2 9 . C opyright #AZ016910. Smith Mesa Nissan Nissan Parts & Service Experts Always Gives Y o t T ^ H ^ O F F on A ny Service or Parts Purchase This offer is good with a valid Student, Facility, or Staff ID We oiler a Iree round trip shuttle to ASU Mon. 7:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Tues.-Fri. 2:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. A*«hN«»W0Mt merefrwm mtmr“ Pans Department Also Open Saturday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 1701W . Broadway Rd. Mesa FOR SALE - lots o f really nice fumiture - Call 350-9630 for details! C allfo r an appointm ent todayf S e r v ic e 834-3366 P arts 830-0255 MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE for sale. Sofa and cover, $50. Two a id ta­ bles, coffee table, file cabinet, more. All for low prices. Call 921-8599 for more information. MOVING SALÉ! D ining room table with four chairs, rattan couch, vacuum, and more! $10-175.220-0913; MOVING! M UST sell all. Furniture, prints, 13” color television, microwave, and more. All good condition; Jason, 966-3504. TICKETS 2 TICKETS for Aspects o f Love Satur­ day night, $60 (originally $70). Call Cynthia, 6784)555. SUNS PLAY-OFF: Suns vs. Lakers to­ night and Sunday noon. G reat seats starting at $40. Steve, 274-7136. AUTOMOBILES ■ 1980 PORSCHE 91 ISCW eissach Ltd. Anniversary Edition. Factory spoiler, whale tail, power sunroof, air, special wheels, metallic black, you will love this car!! Excellent condition. $16,500/ offer; 829-6992. 13" COLOR TV, remote, $110. Queen bed, $100. Bookcase, $20. Call 9413443 evenings/weekends. SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, d resser. 3527249. ■ 1979 TOYOTA Celica, black, air, 5speed, sunroof, must sell, $1000/offer. Call 966-9723. No Textbooks M M SOFA SET, coffee table, entertainment (renter, dinette set, bed, night stands, dresser and more. Perfect condition, must see. 966-1013. mm 1979 OLDSMOBILE Regency 98 , ex­ cellent condition; $ 1800/offer. 6492069, leave message. Y our Now Open for Trading MOVING! MUST sell furniture: Beige sectional couch, $100; Oak wood coffee table, $30; TV stand, $30. Prices nego­ tiable. Call Ashley, 921-7102. mm A U T O M O B jL |S _ _ _ MOTORCYCLES 1979 KAWASAKI. Runs, but needs work. A-B bike, perfect for student. $450,784-9733, leave message.______ SCOOTER HONDA Elite 80cc. Good condition $499, call John 966-1874. BICYCLES FOUR 10-SPEED racing bikes, reason­ able condition. $50 each/offer. Call 9413443 evenings/weekends. "SPOKE EASY1Bicycles"- Anniversary sale! T une-up $12.95. M ill A venue Shops, southw est corner, #116. 3509320. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places USA. Also worldwide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. HEADING FOR Europe this summer? Only $269!! Jet there anytime for $269 from West Coast, $169 from East Coast with Airhitch! (Reported in Let's Go! •and New York Times.) AIRHITCH® 800-397-1098. PHOENIX TO Minneapolis, one way, Sunday May 16th, 7pm, female, $150. Pleasecall 921-8599. ROUNDTRIP TO San Diego May 13 to May 23, $90, female. Call Shana at 9682070. M E SA A U TO X-CH A N G E We Buy Care for Cash W e Finance You BUY IT • m i IT FIN» IT • TELL IT Call 649-3030 Stef* Prut Clattifiedt 1001 S. C o u n try C lu b Dr. Mesa, AZ with 965-6735 P age 18 Friday, April 30,1993 TRAVEL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Hootefling International1» Emd t f Semetter Clrmrm c* M EI Travel Packs Süuenareek Voyager Vagabond W anderlust Scottaman I Trekker 1 E u n il I 95 10 115 140 125 155 190 IK M •I a M 119 1M IS m Well beMany pñce-guarante*d! C m U 8 9 4 -5 1 2 8 ! Coepor Cotpam Coupon 15% Discount D IS C O U N T A IR FA R E S R o u n d trip fro m P h o en ix T O K Y O ............................. . * 6 3 5 F R A N K F U R T .......... S IN G A P O R E ...... ...6 8 3 ........ ...8 5 5 DATA SOURCE WALK FROM ASU! Hiring for part time telephone survey interview ers. R equires 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 831-2971. EOE. No sales. Phone interviewers. TuesdayFriday, flexible part-tim e afternoon/ evening and Saturday shifts. Comfort­ able office atmosphere. Higginbotham Associates, 829-3282. EVENINGS AND weekends for local moving company. Apply at 4048 East Superior in Phoenix between 1-3pm. FANTASTIC SUMMER job, flexible hours, $7/hour. Not telemarketing. Urn Nelson o r Patrick Hickey, 264-2332. FIELD CAMPAIGNS: Why flip burg­ ers when you can work with Greenpeace earning valuable and meaningful ex­ perience. Jo in our outreach staff work­ ing to prevent toxic waste, pollution, protect our oceans and promote nuclear disarmament. Hours 2-10. Call Kim, 966-1986. GAME ROOM attendant. Must be hon­ e st and dependable. Flexible hours. Apply in person. The Cornerstone Mall, Rural and Uni versity. HELP WANTED! Looking for models for fashion shows and swimwear shows. Full and part tim e positions available. $10 per hour. Call Everybody In The W ater Swimwear, ask for Coyaime or Sheri, 253-1641. PARIS................................ . ...6 5 9 H O N G K O N G ......... ...7 1 9 A M S T E R D A M ................... ...7 6 2 S E O U L ........................ ...7 8 5 M E X IC O C I T Y . . . .......... 388 G U A T E M A L A ................... ...4 9 4 C A B O S A N LU C A S ....... ...2 9 0 M A Z A T L A N ...................... . 3 3 7 PUERTO VALLARTA....... . 3 5 3 966-6300 MILL AVENUE TRAVEL Restrictions Apply HELP WANTEDG |N |^ L _ _ _ _ AAA- BUILD your resume having fun this summer with internship, all majors, 3 college credits, save $4000 living in North Carolina- it's so green! Leave message for Jay, 894-5283. , ADVANCED PUBLIC Executive Pro­ gram located ASU Downtown Center... need clerk for basic office duties, typ­ ing, filing, telephones, word processing skiils/WordPerfect 5.1 experience re­ quired. Center located downtown Phoe­ nix, across from A rizona C en ter... hours flexible, 25-50% time, can start May through August... $6 hour... Call Mary, 965-4006; AEROBICS INSTRUCTOR, experience preferred but not necessary. Call Bren­ da at 952*0420, extension 427; ATTENTION- WAREHOUSE/ manu­ facturers rep wanted for small Tempe business. $7/hour plus benefits, hours flexible. Jim , 820-8408. ATTENTION: HARKINS Theater is now hiring to fili several staff positions. Exciting atmosphere and flexible sched­ ule. Apply in person Saturday and Tues­ day between 2-7pm at the following lo­ cations: Scottsdale Fashion Square, Ar­ cadia 8, and Metro Center. CAMPUS CHEVRON now hiring attendant/sales part/full time. Apply in person, southwest comer Rural and Ap­ ache. CHECK O UT our new section: Em­ ployment Opportunities, located at the end o f classifieds. COLLEGE STUDENTS and teachers! C hildren's Sum m 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 J u n e 2-August 14. Good salary, job experience, plus room/board. Write YMCA Camp, PO Box M i l , Tucson, AZ 85702, or call 1-602-884-0987. CUSTOM HARVESTING operation needs experienced combine operators and CDL equipped truck drivers to trav­ el entire midwest for summer. Call 405726-3355. 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. Call 921-0921, Chris or Merle. IF YOUR job sucks, call m e... Looking for 8-10 ASU students to make $1880/ mondi this summer. Call 631-0308. JAPAN It's happening now! Major (j.S. com­ pany has just opened in Japan. If ydu have contacts in Japan, it Could be worth a fortune to you. Call 1-800-473-9434 for information. LA N D SC A PE L A B O R ER S- T h e Groundskeeper in Scottsdale. $4.75-$5/ hour start. Must have Arizona, driver's license. Apply at main office: 620 N. Golden Key, Gilbert. MODELS/ACTORS Ail ages/types needed for soft drink commercial. Pays $2,500. Fashion-LA, (602) 266-6224. NOW HIRING for filli 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'. WALT DISNEY Studios sedes paid publicity/promotions campus intern. First semester sophomore/junior in Business o r Cronkite Schools preferred. Starts Fall '93. Send resume to 3550 North Central, Suite 915, Phoenix, Arizona 85012, Attention: Disney Internship. Deadline:May 14. 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. YMCA ARIZONA Camps: Looking for first cooks (large 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 summer in a fiin, exciting, and rewarding job. HELP WANTEDSALES POLLUTION 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. TH E 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 grad u atin g no sooner than Spring 1994 and have a reliable vehicle. All majors welcome. This is an excel­ lent opportunity to line your resum e with solid, practical experience. If you want to join a winning team, work hard, have fun, learn, earn money and ex­ perience, then call Jackie Ekkidge today for an interview. Call right now. 9656555. HELP WANTED- C y R IC A L ^ ^ ^ ^ 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. 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 o r page 219-9000. United States Navy Recruiter Navy Recruiting Station NAVY It's Worth Looking Into FEMALE BARTENDER for fun neigh­ borhood bar. $7 $ 10 per hour, 20-30 hours per week, days and nights. Sports knowledge a plus. Friendly, responsible a d u lts o n ly . A pply J o R andy B .,. Woodshed I, 19 West Baseline, after 5 ; p.m. Great school job, RED ROBIN of Tempe has immediate openings fo r experienced wait staff. Apply m person: 1375 West Elliott WANTED FLIERERS & pizza makers for G um by's Pizza. Experience pre­ fe rred . P le a se c o n ta ct S teve at 921-3278 T .C . Eggingtons An Exciting Breakfast & Lunch Restaurant We are interviewing for a waitress position at our Mesa restaurant. Must be available to work some weekdays. Please in person at 1660 S. Alma School Rd., Mesa (Alma School and the Freeway) BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES LOST BLACK Liz Claiborne wallet on W ednesday. M ust And, rew ard. Call any time 784-6099, ask few Annette or leave message. LARGE NATIONAL fraternity seeks to establish a t ASU. Any person or group interested in beginning a chapter at ASU please send letter o f interest to: 940 East University Drive Suite E105 Box A15 Tempe 85281. A DOZEN red long-stem roses $20 de­ livered in Tempe. Also balloons. After Hours Flowers, 894-3419, HAPPY 22ND B-Day Veronica C. Love Paula, Chuck, Maria ATTENTION GREEKS- Looking for a summer job? W ork like a dog... Get p ai& ite a king. Make $5,643. Call 6310308, leave message. Shipping stu ff hom e? Free pick-up/ packing and big student discounts! 9686656. MR. SHIP N'CHECK NICK C.- How about you and me [day the piano this weekend?-Your not-so se­ cret admirer! ^ ATTENTION GREEKS: Applications few the 1993-1994 Greek Steering Com­ mittee Chairs for Sponsorship and Ad­ vertising aire due Friday, April 30, by 5:00pm in the Greek Life Office. Rick up your application in the Greek Life .o ffice!. / ■ : v- - / : ", / , / / : . / „ PRE RUSH BBQ BAG M onday, M ay 3rd, 701 A lpha Drive (new row). Food, hoops and vol­ leyball!! 6:00-8:00pm. Questions? Rob/ Kurt, 784-0598. CHI OMEGA pledges-thank you few an awesome semester! Get ready for fallLove, Jen. RANDY P.- You are so hot!!! ATA BROKEN Delt: Thanks few every­ thing! H ope you don't have dishpan hands. The Only Child. , IA T MICHELE Y.: You’re almost ac­ tive! I'm so proud o f you! Love your mom, Marisa. ED - The past 20 months have been the greatest, but since it is only the begin­ ning the best is yet to come! All my love, Kathryn. P,S, Get ready for the most exciting B-Day you've ever had. SDT NEW members, hang in there, Ini­ tiation 1993 is almost here! We love you. ’ ERIC AND Shannon- good luck oh fin­ als!!! Call- let's go jet skiing sometime soon! FIJI PLEDGE M r. Pussycat: Happy, Happy Birthday! How does a birthday backrub sound? Will you purr or fall as­ leep? Love ya much. Your trusting 'lil Tri Sigma. LAT NICOLE; You're such an awesome suitemate. Thanks for everything. Love and Sigma Kim. £AT NIKKI, Fm so proud of you. Ac­ tivation is almost here. Bug out! Love and Sigma Kim. EAT NISS A, I can't wait fw activation! M omluvs ya- Love, Stacey. sen d FIJI PR E-RU SH w eekend 30A pril02May v-ball, boats, BBQ, and beyerages at Bartlett lake. D ill 921-0561. GAMMA PHI Kim! Congratulationsyou made it! Senior week is here. I'll see you Sunday! Luv you're secret sis??? GAMMA PHI Kodi- Tonight is upon usbe prepared to win Moonlight Madness! I luv U !! Your secret sis! FBB Melissa- Be ready for tonight. Be­ cause you're a senior you deserve a great time. Be careful you may be the first one to pass out! W ell miss you! ??? TH U M PER : C A N 'T b eliev e th a t 3 months have gone by already. Remem­ ber, f per mondi. 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 J5918. HO W TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: In person: C ash, check, V isa, M asterCard or American Express ($6 minimum on all credit card orders). W e're located in the basem ent of M atthews C enter, Room 46H . O ffice hours are 9am -5pm , Monday-Friday. Personals a n accepted In person with student l,D. By phone or fax: Paym ent with V isa, M asterCard or Am erican Express only. $ 6 minimum on a ll phone o rd ers. S tate P ress fax num ber is 9 65 -8 4 84 ; please include your credit card num ber and expiration date on fax. Please call before you send tax so we can anticipate the transm ission. Nut Niiky and Tnaaday arili bt tha last tara iaaaaa far this sanierter! Stata Praia Classifieds Personals a n n ot accepted over th e phone or b y hurl By Mail: Send your ad (with paym ent) to: State Press Classifieds Dept. 1502, ASU Tem pe, A Z 85287-1502 (if sending a personal check, please include your driver's license num­ ber.) Sorry, Personals cannot b e accepted through the mall. INSTRUCTION ATTENTION PO TEN TIAL athletic Stars; Run faster, jum p higher, throw further! M ovem ent Through Aw are­ ness. Steve, 829-1127. TUTORS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS Create friendship bracelets, leather bracelets, necklaces and earrings. MISCELLANEOUS Feel th e n eed to bead? N o w O p en B ead W eaver 41 I S . Mill Old Town Tempe 829 -1 5 7 9 JET SKI RENTAL We deliver! $2S off with ad. Call 99011754. V- . ' BUY IT, td l it, find it, sell k -otdy in the Stare Press Classifieds!Call 965r673i. STATE PRESS back issues can ge picked up at the Information Desk in the basement of Matthews Center. SERVICES SERVICES Tour Individual Horoscope ! francés Drake I M on.-Sat M Pf WE DELIVER! ZIMA NIGHT s3 95 D om estic P itc h e rs s2 P itc h e rs Red Rockin' Double D ecker B us Night Sunday 9 a.m .-9 p.m. lb your exact measurements! M ir r o r o f F a s h io n > •Bridal, formal, party, career, an d m ens w ear •Alterations D esigner: Alana August T rained in Europe 947-3101 6925 5di Avenue, Scottsdale, AZ I E. University We acceptAmerican Express, Mastercard and Visa RESTAURANTS/ BARS 52 9S P i t c h e r s L a d ie s N ig h t ' l 95 J u m b o M a rg s & T ea se rs RESTAURANTS/ BARS Do N o th in g S u n d a y ... îs e l^ x îs e c o v e r a t th e V in e LIV E M USIC SUNS PLAYOFF NIGHT BUDDY COSMO NIGHT SUNS I PLAYOFF 4^ HEADQUARTERS A ll this in one night! | Y o u w o n 't w a n t to m i s s th is! . High success rate! Reports, editing, flyo s . Laser printing, same day. SP Secre­ tarial, near ASU, 967-0907. RATES NEED GRADUATE/SENIOR business student to assist in doing 5-8 page anal­ ysis report, not associated with ASU. R eport m ust be c o m p le ted before 6/1/93. Background/major must be in acc o u n tin g , fin an ce, e conom ics or ■QBA. Call 545-875? and leave message, ie; name, number, graduate/senior and background. Pays well. Other work pos­ sibly available as well. 8 a.m.-12 a.m. i 968-6666 w RESUMES $15 MATH 117 and 210 spring final review classes/summer classes forming now. G raduate student, over four years tu­ toring experience. References available. Call M ark to reserve your spot. 4239338. Dine-ln. Pick-Up. D elivery , I LEGAL SECRETARY; Resumes, term p ap ers, any type legal w ork, som e graphics. L aser printer. A ffordable prices. 465-9080. HEALTH | FITNESS 1 DAY turnaround - most papas. Pro­ fe ssio n a l w ord p ro c e ssin g / papers/ resumes. Laser. Reasonable. Caroline, 892-7022. SUNNY'S DELIVERS IT FREE. $1 OFF ANY PIZZA I W ANT Jt Now Desktop Publishing; Term papers, resume service, charts, graphs, manuscripts, thesis, quick service: Call 966-1984. Near ASU. WHY HAUL it home? Store it! See our ad today. Best Little Warehouse in Tem­ pe, 967-3900. TYPIN G /W O R D PROCESSING ; DO YOU need extra help creating qual­ ity papers? ASU graduate profession­ a lly types, edits, APA /M LA . Laser printer. Fast turnaround. Theresa* 9241976. .. . HEBREW TUTORING, all levels, avail­ able during summer. Please call, Itai Klein. Evening; 279-6571. CERTIFIED PERSONAL Trainer, Mr. Illinois and Cybergenics Spokesmodel H arry Thanos w ill g et you in shape quick! Just call 268-4130. 4 2 l^ \ 1301 : HAPPILY MARRIED White/Asian cou­ ple with lots o f love to give wishes to adopt infant. Call Chris A David collect, 619-741-9252. Let's talk. tim w m w w w w w w j P IZ Z A & PASTA : -• A D O PTIO N Nili Avaaaa « SIm :s • - - ■\ WANTED; SITTER for summer, Gleodale area, my home, foil time, 2 boys, good pay phis activities. 931-1808. M««4«y £ W#d«»jJiy [Ha Cavar $3.SO Pitaban| Taatiay t TWrtJiy $1 Cavar C C REA TIV E TY PIN G , term papers, resumes, essays, laser printer, fax, reasonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. For a Good Tim e call 966-1300 Balboa C afe . 4 04 S . M ill A ve., Suite 101 > ' S32*- **-m? ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, transcription, WordPerfect, las­ e r. C all anytim e fo r fa st serv ice , 966-2186, MEDICINE WHEEL CHILD CARE needed, my home, 25-30 flexible hours/week. Light housekeep­ ing, driving required. Wage depends on experience. Children ages 2 and 5. 9662263. ■ .. ; . - ' ' la|0 y APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/ Word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. CHILD CARE r\ N I Saath WANTED 1-DAY TURNAROUND. Professional typing. W alkable/A SU . Reasonable ra te s. E xp erien ced . L aser. Faculty/Students. Diane 829-1602. W O O D S H E D II m ne 19 Friday, April 3 0,1993 Rural & A pache 894-2662 10c Wings & Shrimp Anytime! Broadw ay Sr Rural For Friday* April 30,1993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Don’t be pressured into making a financial decision. Though joy comes through hobbies and mental interests, social life m ay fall short of expectations. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Visitors could upset your daily routine. Delays affect career progress. You are most effective now when by yourself. Reading and studying bring you contentment. GEMINI (May 21 to Juipe 20) You will enjoy a stimulating conversation with a friend. Some are indifferent to wfiat you have to say now. The work pace is slow today. A project gets bogged down. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) The financial potential of a business talk is indeed promising. You are likely to meet with extra expenditures today. You may not feel like socializing tonight. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) ;• In a subtle way, a relative is manipulative now. Unexpected changes throw business plans temporarily out o f whack. Higher-mind pursuits will bring you satisfaction. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to S ept 22) A meeting with a business adviser goes very well. A host of minor problems makes the day less than satisfactory. Avoid dwelling on problems tonight. LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) ^ Partners are in agreem ent today about mutual concerns. Problems at home or with children may place a damper on social plans. The accent now is on teamwork. 921-9222 SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21)- , There is no need for you to be manipulative or controlling to succeed in busin ess today. E ncourage a free flow and exchange o f ideas for progress now. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Someone’s prying makes you feel as if you are under a micro­ scope. Hobbies o f a mental nature are fun now. Travelers may meet with unavoidable delays. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) A friend who drops by could overstay his or her welcome. Family interests are highlighted now It is a pom* time to make important financial decisions. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Someone in business plays his or h a cards close to die chest now. Shortly after you find a solution to one problem, another cme crops up. Try to be patient PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) It is one step forward, then three paces backward* where busi­ ness interests are concerned today. Your progress seems limit­ ed because of delays and other complications. YOU BORN TODAY are gregarious, but you have a private side as well. You seldom Wear your heart on your sleeve. You can be stubborn and must guard against being fixed in your viewpoints. Your ability to communicate your ideas is an asset to you in both business and the arts. Law, teaching, writ­ ing* music and sales ace some o f the fields which promise you fulfillment. Birthdate of: Willie Nelson, singer; Eve Arden* actress; and Alice B. Toklas, writer. ©1993 by King Features Syndicate* Inc. Page 20 S t a t e P ress Friday, April 30,1993 W o rld -F a m o u s ATTENTION 93 GRADS C O M PU T E R MULTI-SYSTEMS 2 2 S W . U N IV E R S IT Y , SL IT T E 1 1 3 . T E M P E . A Z < 6 0 2 ) 9 6 6 .1 8 8 8 ANNOUNCEMENTS CAPS NOW AVAILABLE plus *■ H a re y o u r p o rtra it X 933 E. University, #103 , Bell Rd. & 7th St. (S.E. Comer of Rural & University) 942-4224 921-2200 Open 7 Days A Week Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:30 Sat.-Sun. 11:30-4:00 Dinner 5:00-10:00 GOWNS ROTHER'S BOOKSTORE MONEY Cuisine o f India 2 Locations! I indf# i n A t B in IH i n n o r SOFTWARE m GAMES GAMES Ci AM HS UNIVERSITY O R I G I N , SIERRA M IC R O P R O S !:, SSI j $ 4 .9 5 L u n d i B u f f e t o r • ¡ J g J J f 2| 8S2S1 _ BUSINESS SOFTWARE WORD PROCESSORS DATA BASES. UTILITIES SPREAD SHEETS AND MUCH MORE! ____ Use them with your announcements and resumes. Reasonable package prices! Please call for times. 6 2 5 E . A p a ch e • 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 DRINK SPECIALS • 5 FOR 1 • $1.50 5 to 6PM 6 to 6:15PM 6:15 to 7PM 8-9PM 910PM 1011PM ' 11- 12AM 121AM HONEY, PD YOUBRING YOURCALCULATOR? MCOWTJSED! O ne taste and you will gobble it down. Schlotzsky's® wood-smoked turkey breast sandwich, sliced thin and stacked high on that famous sourdough bun. Complete with sliced fresh tomato, lettuce, ground Special Outdoor CLUB EPGE in Hayden SquareAmphitheater this Friday, April featuring ««T A R m 25 < JO IN with guest dj JAMIE WHITE DRINKS morning dj LADIES 8-10 PM NIGHT with ONE and MEPONE WHEEL THE VALLEY'S O N L Y ALTERNATIVE brought to you by The EPGE, Balboa Cafe and Budweiser JELLO j SCENE FORLADESW1s30PM NOCOVERFORLADIESUNTILHH30PM SHOOTERS] LOTS OF EDGE PRIZES! ^ 990 KAMIS ALLNIGHT Gates open a t 6 pm, nocover before 7: For a good time call ßalboa Cafe • 966-130 0 ^ I t l ^ ^ e ^ e s t ^ M ^ ^ l a y d e n ^ S ^ u a i ^ ^ ALL NIGHT 75< DRINKS AT THE SCOTTSDALE GALLERIA 5th Avenue & Scottsdale Road 949-3009 $150 LONGNECKS FOR EVERSONE 9-1150PM