©Copyright. State Press, 1993 Tempe, Arizona Voi. 77 NO. 75 Wednesday, July 7,1993 An Independent Summer Weekly A CHANCE TO COMPETE ASUs disabled students set sights on organizing camp us wheelchair team B y G reg Sexton S ta te P ress ▼ ▼ .e m ay n o t be able to run o r ju m p in track events, but that hasn’t stopped this Arizona State University freshman from becoming one J L o f the best track athletes in the country. Like any other competitor, Matt Parry has the primeval itch to compete against his fellow man. But unlike most athletes, Parry can’t run or walk. W hen he was 11 years old, he crashed a go-cart into a ditch and broke his back. A paraplegic — confined to his chair — Parry has turned tragedy into triumph. And while the childhood accident broke his back, it didn’t break his spirit or his yearning to compete. Now 19, Parry is regarded as one of the premiere wheelchair racers in the United States. “I love racing,” Parry said. “The speed and challenges are incredible. It is also individual. You don’t need to count on anyone but yourself.” At a racing competition, Parry saw a team o f wheelchair athletes from the University o f Illinois — then it hit him. “I got to thinking, with a couple of other people maybe we could get something like that going on here at ASU.” H is m ain passion is road racing. Parry takes his 13pound, 3-wheeled, precisely tuned racing machine across the country competing in racing events. He has tasted victo­ ry, but Parry wants more. D arryl Webb/State P re s s He wants a wheelchair racing team and he is determined ASU's freshman Matt Parry is one of the premiere wheelchair racers in the West and is trying to create a competitive wheelchair to make it happen. racing team on campus. .'■ ¿ r a t A. good friend A m erican D isa b ility A ct forces A S U to m e e t n eed s o f d isab led By G reg S exton State P ress A rizona State University has one o f the largest disabled student populations in the nation. A nd w ith that distinction also comes responsibility. However, the American Disability Act helps to ensure ASU satisfies the needs o f the disabled. The A DA mandates equal access for the disabled. It ranges fro m c la s s ro o m a c c e ss ib ility to m ak in g su re p e o p le in wheelchairs have decent scats for football games at Sun Devil Stadium. ■ T he A DA , said Jim Hem auer, program coordinator for Disabled Student Resources at ASU, is not a new set o f laws, but rather a way to make sure the specifics o f the legislation are followed. “T he ADA is not a whole lot different than the laws that have been in place for some time,” Hemauer said. "The major difference in ADA is that there is some teeth to it. “There are definite tim e frames w here things have to be accom plished. Where in Section 504 o f the Rehab Act (anoth­ er law regarding fair treatment for the disabled), there were no real deadlines or anything, so enforcement w asn’t as easy.” H em auer said another m ajor difference is that the ADA covers a w ider population and those w ho m ight have been ignored in 504 are no longer left in the cold. ‘T h e ADA is different in that it covers everyone, where 504 ju st covered programs o r facilities that received federal money, which left out a lot o f private businesses and housing facilities.” Hemauer said parts o f the ADA law started in January of this year, and there is a compliance deadline date in 1995. For some, however, the ADA is more than making sure a person in a wheelchair can safely get across campus or into a bathroom. Andy Krieger, an adapted athletic specialist at W right State University in Ohio said the ADA has deeper significance. “For a long time, people with disabilities have been paying for some o f the ignorance o f our forefathers in terms of being assertive and getting out and sticking up for their own rights and w hat they deserve as human beings,” K rieger said in a telephone interview from his Ohio office. “A lot o f times, (disabled people) were ju st put in institu­ tions and now you are seeing an assertive group. ADA has passed and people are dem anding th e ir rig h ts. Society is becoming a little more used to it, and things are improving. I think our kids, if they have disabilities, will be in a lot better shape.” One o f Parry’s acquaintances, Ray Jensen, may be able to help him accomplish that goal. Jensen, the director o f purchasing fo r ASU, is also involved in wheelchair racing. Jensen works with the Mesa Association o f Sports for the D isabled.. “The organization was actually put together about four years ago to try and coordinate the activities o f a number of program s fo r the m entally and physically challenged,” Jensen said. “ M ost o f the program s involve y o u n g er people as opposed to adults. Right now we run programs for the City o f M esa Special Olympics program and we also run a pro­ gram for a broader area of physically challenged athletes. That includes track, swimming and bowling and a number of activities.” It is also where Parry began his racing career. “I went out there, got interested and now I work out every day.” - Jensen, whose son Eric is a wheelchair athlete, has been the driving force in pushing a wheelchair sport on campus. He said he met with the athletic department a few weeks ago and outlined his plan. He realizes, however, that it is an uphill battle. The idea The goal is to have a group of physically challenged ath­ letes at ASU form a team or even teams. Common sporting events would include basketball, track, tennis, swimming and racing. There are other universities that have such programs, but T urn t o P arry, IN S ID E S T A T E P R E S S Classifieds........................... 22 Entertainment.............. .....19 Comics.............................. .20 Opinion........................ 4 Crossword............................ 6 Sports............................. 21 ► A university professor’s new study sup­ ports earlier findings that homosexual orientation may have a biological basis. Page 8. ► City officials initiate restoration plans to transform a downtown building into a center for retail stores and restaurants. Entertainm ent page 12. S ports Ex-Pixies member Frank Black heads for the Paradoxx with his alternative tunes and a new moniker. Page 19. Coaches of the three ASU sports eliminated in February finally packed their M lÉÉftìLr bags June 30. Page 21 Page 18. Iff-t; T 39 IHU S t a t e P ress W ednesday. lulv 7.1993 Former Student Health director alleges illegal property seizure B y T ammy M esa -S ierra State P ress Former ASU Student Health Director Laurie Vollen alleged Tuesday that ASU officials illegally seized her personal prop­ erty and denied her due process. But ASU officials are calling the incident a misunderstand­ ing. “It was a mistake,” said ASU Attorney Mary Stevens in response to Vollen’s accusations. “We didn’t know one of those printers belonged to Laurie and it is here for her to pick up.” Vollen said, in addition to seizing her personal computer printer, officials retrieved an ASU-owned computer that con­ tains countless personal files with proof of wrongdoings com­ mitted by top administrators. “This is an invasion of my privacy and a due process viola­ tion,” Vollen said. “They have confiscated and held my per­ sonal property for over 72 hours and the campus police have refused to do anything about it.” Vollen was removed from her post earlier this year and placed in an office at the Cornerstone Mall to complete some special projects with an official termination date of June 30. “I was terminated for whistle-blowing activities on Feb. 26, 1993, regarding Charles Harris, Christine Wilkinson and my own personal health,” Vollen said. But Vollen’s ongoing accusations have routinely been brushed o ff and deemed the comments of a disgruntled employee, Vollen said she was given notice to vacate her office but was not given adequate time to transfer her personal files from the computer’s hard drive. Stevens said Vollen has known of the official separation date for over two months and had ample time to transfer any files onto a floppy disc. “I didn’t think they would engage in an unheralded seizure,” Vollen said. “I should have expected this after the treatment Don Robinson got.” Robinson, a former ASU coach, was asked to vacate his office on June 30 after the men’s gymnastics program was cut because of budget constraints. Robinson’s locks were changed and phones turned off prior to his vacating die office, but he was given a 24-hour extension to remove his possessions by ASU President Lattie Coor. Robinson requested the extension, because he was in court on the deadline date with an unsuc­ cessful last-ditch effort to save the program. Stevens said it is standard procedure to change the locks when an employee leaves for security reasons. But Vollen said regardless of turning in her keys, the com­ puter was retrieved at 1:30 p.m. on Friday when she was specifically given until 5 p.m. as a deadline for erasing the files. Vollen has retained the law firm of O’Connor Cavanaugh and said she intends to pursue legal remedies against the University including but not limited to a possible discrimina­ tion com plaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Vollen added that she will not be satisfied until she is given permission to retrieve her files from the computer and has already hired a computer expert to complete the task. D arryl Webb/State Pre ss Stevens, however, said Vollen is free to pick up her printer Former ASU Director o f Student Health Laurie Vollen vacates but the decision has not been made whether or not to allow her her office after University officials reclaimed ASU property arid changed door locks. additional access to the computer. CtllCAfGIE’S ! F O R 1 2 For 1 Sandwich Buy any sandwich & large drink at regular price and receive the second sandwich FREE, (AN sandwiches include fries.) No expiration. ★ $ 1 .1 0 D r a fts E V E R Y D A Y ★ 8 2 5 W . U n iv e r s it y - C o r n e r o f H a rd y 8 9 4 -8 3 8 7 H r trijttM R I M t Bifil&'f MIGUEL S M USIC CENTER ► IB A N E Z « A L V A R E Z • O VATIO N ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS ► A M P S • E L E C T R I C E F F E C T S • L O T S O F S H E E T M U S IC ► L E S S O N S (•Rock • Contemporary • Folk • Classic Guitar) ► R E P A IR S ~ O n A ll Instruments! 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B ut the S U N D A Y S T U D E N T S P E C IA L m akes our already terrific p rices even betted O u r din­ ners include a full-course m eal with ad the trim m lngs-from sala d to dessert. S o , dollar fo r d o lla r, w hen yo u 're hu ngry and you n e e d a b re a k , yo u c a n 't b e a t T h e S p a g h e tti C o m p a n y ! E S P E ­ C IA L L Y O N S U N D A Y S ! W ith 2 d in n e rs fo r th e p rice of II ‘ Y o u m u st p r e s e n t y o u r c u rre n t S tu den t ID c a rd w ith v a lid a ­ tio n s tic k e r to take advantage o f this offer. 15% gratuity added to all discounted checks (except sen ior citizen discounts). C h ick e n C o rd o n B lu e , S te a k D l Jo n , Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken M arsala, Veal M arsala and orders to go A R E N O T IN C LU D ED in the 2-for-1 special. Open at 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays • Open 10 a.m. on game days! T | | £ G A BASEM ENT FU LL O F BOOKS 9 6 6 -6 2 2 6 Mon.-Fn. 8-5 Sat. 9-5 ' » m p a « iy * Restaurant Phoenix Scottsdale O ld Town South on Central Just Pasta M cDow ell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ju st North of Indian Bend Tem pe 4th St. & M ill 257-0380 483-5669 966-3848 State P ress _________________ Wednesday, July ? ,_ l g 9 3 _ _ Page 3 D an fo rth controversy resurfaces w ith m akeshift crosses 1990 c o u rt decision b an n ed cross; first in cid en t since ju d g e s ru lin g By T ammy M esa-Sierra State P ress In accordance with a 1990 legal decision that specifically bans the public display of the religious symbols at ASU, administrators on Tuesday promptly ordered the removal of two makeshift wooden crosses that were Anonymously placed atop Danforth Chapel. “We understand that the court ruling is still in place and we will act in accordance with that ruling,” said Associate Vice President for Business Affairs Jennus Burton. Burton immediately notified ASU’s Facilities Management department and ordered the crosses’ removal after being contacted by the State Press. The crosses were first seen by a State Press reporter Friday after receiving an anonymous phone call. In April, 1990, the Arizona Civil Liberties Union successfully waged a legal battle against ASU in the Maricopa County Superior Court that forced administrators to remove the original cross that Crowned the building for more than 40 years. The battle was prompted by angry groups that claimed dis­ crimination because of the Christian beliefs symbolically associat­ ed with the cross. Associated Students of ASU, the ASU Faculty Senate and ASU’s Interfaith Council all voted to have the cross removed. But the emotion did not die with the judge’s decision leaving many to [notest die removal of the cross. George Cathcart, director of ASU public information, said this is the first time anyone has attempted to replace the cross since the ruling despite much heated controversy and idle threats. Art Carter, dean of Student Life, said he was unaware that the makeshift crosses were erected but fully supports the administra­ tion’s decision to have them removed. “I think it’s real important that we be in compliance with the court decision,” Carter said. Carter added that the mission of the building is to serve as a meditation facility for all denominations. “It’s a facility that provides students and organizations with a place for meetings,” Carter said. “It provides a place of contact for our campus interfaith council.“ But the administration was not always in favor of the decision after declining to abide by the Faculty Senate vote to have the cross removed, sending the issue to the courts. ASU, however, opted not to appeal the ruling. Carter said he would like to know if a student placed the cross­ es at Danforth but said any disciplinary actions would not be severe. “My first reaction is not one of punishment, but one of under­ standing,” Carter said. “Our concern would be to help the student D arryl W ebb/State P re s s understand why there are no crosses there — perhaps give them A Facilities Management em ployee removes makeshift wooden crosses from the top of Danforth Chapel. some literature to help them understand the history.” The Real H im People tf ASU ~DINNER- \ TUESDAY-" 1 WILD FOR TWO! i WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY! FAST, FREE Delivery «13402E.9APA-0CHE0- TEN 6DE4 i i r r iz z a ; ¡ « ft !•» !» )* ! SPECIAL 12" UNLIMITED 16" 1-ITEM TAPPINO PIZZA PIZZA ■mhI i FREE M u ! IrtW f can h u t tac "IVISTY IKCHEIHII A y Mp jmi tfíet H - Ym do#Nm A t YturMlarll FREE FOOTLONGSANDWICH Every Sunday In July! Every Sunday in July purchase 1 footlong and a large drink & receive a 2nd footlong sandwich of equal or lesser value... F R E E ! No coupon S P E C IA L ! o f oux* lr e s h , s a la d s a n d a 32-oz. d rin k fo r * 0 2 9 needed. B n w B ttw w d w trw a c t I n e ln iU d . Broadway & Rural, Tempe BROADWAY W e D e liv e r ! 9 2 1 -9 2 2 2 < AC 3 OC ■ BLIMPIE ■ CLEAN ERS ■ OFFICE MAX ■ ACE HARDWARE | | FASHION GAL Opinion P age 4 Wednesday, July 7,1993 __ ,■ , STATE PRESS And here’s the door 'N ow ASU a d n É ú m t o n have another “disgruntled employee” incident to add to their rude treat­ m ent o f the U niversity’s now-defunct gymnastics coach Don Robinson, who was booled out o f his office last week. T h e lo c k s o n R o b in s o n ’s o ffic e d o o rs w ere changed and his phones were disconnected Thursday without fanfare,* thank you or a good-luck gesture. H e h ad to ask ASU P resident Lattie C oor for an extension on his deadline to get out. He got 24 hours. Hem com es the follow-through. Laurie V oltea, former A SU health director, was removed from her Student Health Center office in the spring and tucked aw ay at an o ffic e in the Cornerstone M all. She was to be in charge o f what Student AflMat V ice Ikerideat Cbrirttee WRfcüMOU termed “special prcjoots.” ’• . V ollen M id she w as fired because d ie w as a Wilkinson’s handling o f sports medicine on campus. Suit her coomct ImrtmgÁd. inte j pushed out o f her Cornerstone o ffice. But when Low éll Crary, special assistant to the senior vice president, took items from her office, he apparently took some o f her personal property. Like Robinson, V ollen claim ed she didn’t have enough tim e to get her personal item s out o f the office, which included a computer printer and per­ sonal files on the hard drive o f her office’s computer terminal. Naturally, when she d isco m ed the items missing, it was like another slap in the free from the administration. “It w as a m istake,” said A SU attorney M aty S teven s. She »aid they d idn’t know thp printer belonged to Vollen. The fact that she was fired is an old issue, hut fte University’s haphazard handling o f her dism issal is another thorn in the side o f administrators, especially wfrhte one week o f the Rotriasoo iackteixL Robinson and Vollen practically have d ie admin. V isolation's bootprints on frieir backs. It’s surpris&tg the University didn’t have men in white state come in and hose down their offices once they frit. .¿JÉ| Administrators and their sreong-anned m likiow' have all the sympathy and concern o f s ta g » ele­ phant when som eone is fired or when th e^ a ii^ ^ g e;B like Robinson, tries toresurrect a program that has been slashed because o f budget constraints. No help, no thanks now get ou t If this tndy is a pattern and ribas is the w ay Coor’s adm inistration works, all A SU em ployees should have th eir bags p a ch o l and their personal item s boxed and ready to go just in with a hand track, Crary personally rem oved the item s from V ollen’s office, although he amd Ih ori|jr took property belonging to the University. • The issue here is not die fact that they were fired, j ¡ Both Robinson and Vollen have had their say fcRMding their dism issals. Ü t issue is one o f dignity and professionalism. Robinson debit; ity, and the administration exercised zero professionalism. [S T A F F STATE PRESS M issiles: Volley fo r approval ratings Ré; There’s no better way to get Am ericans feeling good about n themselves than to do some flag waving and shoot off some fire­ COLLINS works. President Clinton, com­ m ander-in-chief o f the biggest firew orks arsenal in the world, m u st h av e h ad th is in m ind when he decided to launch his offensive against Iraq the week­ end before la st A s h a rd as it m ay be to b e lie v e , th e sam e m an w ho p ro te s te d A m e ric a ’s w a r on Vietnam was the top head on the Pentagon totem pole, and President Clinton decided to hurry 24 tomahawk missiles off into the heart o f Baghdad as response to an alleged plot against George Bush’s life. O f course, the administration was quick to rationalize the event, couching it in terms such as self-defense and retribution, maintaining that it’s a serious message to the world that state sponsored terrorism will not be tolerated. Not surprisingly, this desperate act, a fitting tribute to George Bush, reeks of the terrorism it seeks to curtail, Instead o f choosing a strategic military target, such as the forces Iraq has amassed against the Kurds, the attack was directed at a heavily populated civic center. The U.S. military was good enough to wait until the wee hours o f the morning, ensuring that Iraqi intelligence personnel, suppos­ edly the individuals responsible for the plot against Bush, would not be harmed by the bombing. As with any good terrorist act, the only people harmed were civilians com­ pletely outside the international conflict, who were buried alive in rubble. After the attack, the Pentagon clearly stated its intent to destabilize the Iraqi governm ent, throwing aside any further doubt about the offensive act’s nature. While no one would put it past the Iraqi government to try to assassinate George Bush, President Clinton did not consider the reliability o f his sources - - the CIA, FBI and the Kuwaiti governm ent — all o f which have their own agenda. In this context, the accusations levelled against Saddam Hussein can be seen as part o f Kuwait’s vendetta against Iraq and America’s intelligence agencies’ desires to set our foreign agenda. ANGELA BENOCHE, Editor S. TALBOTT SMITH, M anaging Editor JAKE BATSELL.......................... City Editor TAMMY MESA-SIERRA ........Entertainment Editor SHAUN RACHAU.„..................................... SportsEditor DARRYL WEBB................... Photo Editor Naturally, President Clinton didn’t call for an indepen­ dent investigation by the United Nations. He didn’t even wait fo r the men accused o f the assassination plot to be put to trial. He relied completely on evidence and confessions conjured up by the FBI, CIA and the Kuwaitis. It’s no wonder, w ith company Clinton has been keeping. Oddly enough, the final evidence was presented to Clinton not only C IA director Jam es W oolsey but by A ttorney General Janet Reno. W ho can even guess why the attorney general was involved in setting foreign policy in such a manner. I guess where there’s smoke, there’s Janet Reno. In the end, the whole procedure had a storybook ending for the White House. President Clinton timed the attack so precisely that it relegated all news of military base closures re c o m m e n d e d by th e D efen se Base; C lo su re and Realignment Commission to the back pages. Thus, Clinton ended a streak o f negative press with a decisive, though Machiavellian, move mid wiped out the chances o f renewed criticism o f the administration on the extent o f the planned military cutbacks. For Americans and members of the world community, the picture isn ’t so bright. The United States continues to disrupt any possibility for peace in the Middle East by its continued military actions. W ith every act o f aggression, tiie United States places Iraq in a less stable position, pro­ m oting m ilitarism , despotism and ultim ately terrorism . Again, civilians o f all nations become the ultimate victims. Presently, Iraq would like to sell oil to provide food and supplies for its people. They are even willing to have the United Nations monitor and regulate the exchange to insure that the oil revenues are not used to purchase weapons. Iraq has also dem onstrated incontrovertibly that it has not attempted to create nuclear weapons in the last two years. Although these actions cannot be divorced from Saddam Hussein’s record, they do show a willingness to negotiate on Iraq’s part. We must at least consider the possibility of meeting them halfway. Above all, it is time we stop creat­ ing a monster in the Middle East for our presidents to con­ front when their ratings slip and begin to concern ourselves with the long-term solutions that lead to peace. Editorial Board Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write edi­ torials and die board decides dieir m erit The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publica­ tion. Requests fo r anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the managing editor. All letters m ust be either brought in person with a photo I.D , to the S ta te P ress front desk in the basem ent o f ANGELA BENOCHE.................... ............................Editor S. TALBOTT •»••^•••••Managing Editor Matthews Center, o r addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, A rizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 852871502, A D V ER TISIN G R EPR E SEN T A T IV ES: Kelly Adcock, Sonia Benson. lam ia Bimey, Dan Elistrom, Tim Hjellum, J e n n ife r H u g h es, K ate M artin , S tev e M elto n , Lance Newman, David Thorn, Tim Wohlpart. published on Wednesday) at Matthews Center, Room IS, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 852871502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. PRODUCTION SPECIALISTS: Dave Weber and Evonne Vera. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, fac­ ulty, staff or student body. The State Press is published every Tuesday during the summer semester (following holidays it will be . The State P re s s w elcom es and encourages w ritten response from our readers on any topic. State P ress P hone N umbers All letters must be typed or laser printed, double-spaced and no more than two pages in length to be eligible for pub­ lication. Information...«....,..,...... 965-7572 Newsroom...... ............ ,.,.....965,2292 Display Advertising............. .......... 965-6555 Classified Advertising...... ............... 965-6731 Please include your full name, class standing and major Opinion State P ress __________________________ Wednesday, July 7,1993 __________ I StatePress B9 o o s D B ■ ' & P age s r a v o s BOO — to ASU President Lattie Coor and Athletic Director Charles Harris for their draconian methods in kicking out ASU’s doomed gymnastics coach Don Robinson and his team. Robinson and his staff were locked out o f their offices Thursday and the phone lines w ere disconnected. C oor, show ing as little mercy as he could muster, allowed Robinson a 24hour extension from the previous Wednesday dead­ line. Robinson needed the additional time to clean out bis office since he was in court all day Wednesday trying to get a restraining order in a futile effort to stop the University’s efforts to boot him and his team out. Coor and Harris showed just how much compas­ sion they have for a group of people who have been working their butts off to remain a part of the campus community since they found out they’d been axed in February. Thanks for nothing. BRAVO — to the U.S. House of Representatives for State P ress etters to the editor Ignorance disguised as w isdom kills ' Editor:' ■ ■ .v To address Phyllis Sears’ comments on wisdom and die “gay lifestyle:” First, the first paragraph was completely irrelevant to the sub­ ject at hand. Unless of course she is saying that she experienced being gay when she was young and has learned from her mistakes. I would venture to say that is not correct and that her entire opin­ ion is just her sawed-off little description of the world. Second, if her premise is that homosexuals get AIDS more than heterosexuals and therefore the gay lifestyle is proven wrong, then she needs to take a course in logic. Hers is faulty. First, homosexuals and heterosexuals get AIDS. If you invali­ date one on those grounds you must also the other. Parallel that with the fact that if venereal diseases still exist, does that mean that people who get it are wrong for who they sleep with? Second, blaming the victim for a random disease is pure b.s. Once again, if you do that you must apply that same type of logic to all diseases. All people get AIDS —- does it really matter who gets it more? Third, speaking to the American pocket book has always been a cheap tactic that has been effective. But it does not validate her opinion that because gays get it, they are wrong for their “lifestyle.” Again, we spend millions of dollars on children with debilitating diseases of all kinds but that does not mean that they are wrong for “allowing that to happen to them” as is the common implication towards people with AIDS, heterosexual or not. Fourth, what do car accidents and AIDS have in common? Ms. Sears is drawing parallels where there aren’t any. Since ALL peo­ ple are at risk, regardless of her comparisons and since it is spreading too fast, doesn’t she think she is contributing to the ignorance of all people by implying that it doesn’t happen to good little straight kids? There are already too many kids having sex unprotected, regardless of who they sleep with, Ignorance of the facts and the false idea of safety in numbers does kill. Ms. Sears, stop spreading ignorance, PLEASE! Fifth, young males (and this really shows her lack of knowl­ edge) are not waiting to rush on the bandwagon of homosexuality as soon as the gates of disapproval come crashing down. With or without approval, people will love who their hearts are drawn to. It is not a choice, such as choosing which ride at the state fair will bring the most excitement. There isn’t a recruitment center going to. open up in a town nearest you, next to your local Denny’s. It is not an “experimenting” thing. I’m sure most people would agree that they are not waiting to “dally” with being in love with some­ one of the same sex. Being attracted to the same sex is not a choice at all. Contrary to popular belief, it cannot be “fixed” or “cured,” a psychiatrist can’t solve the dilemma and persecution or lack of approval cannot erase it. Just as I could not (nor would want to) make Ms. Sears desire someone of the same sex. Also, nobody wants to take over the country or desires to recruit young males or females into an invisible army. The entire point is: live and let live and leave everyone else alone! It is a fact of life, it simply is. You can’t close your eyes and refuse to. see it or turn three times and tap your toes, Dorothy. It will always be. I hope for Ms. Sears’ friends, family and/or children that this never becomes an issue of conditional love. I would hope that she would use a little more compassion for those closest to her than she does for people in general. If the victims of AIDS are wrong for their “sexual preference,” AIDS being a random disease that the victims do not get a choice of, then is the victim of rape also at fault because of her sexual preference? Or is it because she wore the wrong dress or went out dancing or went on a date with someone she barely knew? Ms. Sears, do you see the faulty logic? It is those types of stereotypes and attitudes that contribute to this nation’s seriously declining system of justice. When we should be coming together to aid in the community efforts to improve our lives in general we have people such as Ms. Sears, drawing battle lines where there shouldn’t be any at all. / Lynn Geraurine Senior, Justice Studies R ational thought needed for problems Editor: and dangerous to condone the suffering of the people who live In S. Talbott Smith’s June 29th editorial titled “Iraqis were due under the totalitarian government, and who are subject to condi­ a few missiles,” the following statement was made about the tions that are far from anything that most of us have experienced Iraqis: “Any people who would allow their government to do such or could imagine. things (commit atrocities against the Kurds in Iraq) should be By taking Mr. Smith’s statement as evidence of his reasoning, made to suffer right along with the machine they allow to contin­ are we to conclude that he believes that the fleeing Haitians ue functioning (their government).” If there is any objective rea­ should be forced back to Haiti to face an oppressive government soning behind this statement, it eludes me. and suffer because they haven’t done enough to overthrow Haiti’s Totalitarian rule is not as easy to overthrow as Mr. Smith regime of terror? Or is it just “cool” to argue that Iraqis deserve to implies. Constant pro-government propaganda and a controlled, suffer and then brush away the same argument when discussing state-run media in a closed society, such as Iraq, drastically Haiti? There is one more important point that should be made. During reduces the number of people who would revolt because those people lack the information needed to teach the conclusion that a the Reagan administration the U.S.-backed Contras in Nicaragua revolution is necessary. Information and misinformation, are and the U.S.-backed government of Guatemala committed many horrifying acts of violence against the citizens of their own coun­ power, as those who run a totalitarian regime know ‘all to well. Those in Iraq who know what their government is doing and tries. This information was available to people in the United decide to revolt are easily suppressed. As evidence I submit the States who looked hard enough, and was occasionally presented failure of the Shiite rebellions in southern Iraq and the Kurdish by the mainstream media. Does Mr. Smith, using his statement as uprisings in northern Iraq against the diminished Iraqi military evidence, believe that the U.S. public deserved to be bombed by immediately after Iraq’s defeat by the Coalition forces in die Gulf the Nicaraguan govemtiient and the Guatemalan rebels since it War. Now that Iraq’s military has had time to redistribute itself was U.S. funding that kept the Contras and Guatemala’s govern­ throughout Iraq, a revolution, without the outside assistance the ment in existence? After all, he did state that “Any people who would allow their government to do such things should be made rebels ask for, is improbable. In short, the Iraqis are not revolting either because of an to suffer right along with the machine they allow to continue func­ absence of objective information for those who would revolt tioning.” In this irrational world of violence and war, we need rational against the regime or because those who know that a revolution is necessary stand alone against a powerful regime. For Mr. Smith to people and rational solutions to deal with our problems. state that the Iraqis “should be made to suffer” leaves serious Advocating that suffering is deserved will only add fuel to the fire questions not only about the methods he used to reach his conclu­ of bloodthirsty revenge that is engulfing many lands. Raymond Koemp sion, but also of his own sense of justice. While it is essential to Freshman, Undecided condemn a totalitarian government, it is extremely short-sighted voting to eliminate that nemesis o f all 18- to 25-yearold A m erican m en, the Selective Service. Former President Ronald Reagan receives all the credit for re­ organizing and reinstating the program after it was shut down following the Vietnam War. If the U.S. Senate follows the House’s decision, the program will be elim inated, saving taxpayers millions o f dollars and teenagers a lot o f grief. BOO — to w hoever is putting m akeshift wooden crosses on top o f Danforth Chapel. That chapel is non-denom inational and is not m eant even to be specifically Christian. It is a meditation chapel where members o f the ASU community are free to go and pray, meditate or otherwise communicate with their god. When the building brandishes a cross, how many non-christian ASU students and professors groan and say what small-minded bigots and religious zealots we really are? Tolerance o f other religions means not being a jerk about preaching your own. A Maricopa County Superior Court judge spoke on the issue of separation o f church and state in February 1990, forc­ ing the University to remove the cross. Do we need another lecture from the courts0 Q uote/U nquote “You, the peoples of the United States of America and of the world, stood with us as we fought for our political emancipation. We ask you to stay the course until freedom is won.*’ African National Congress President Nelson Mandela after accepting the Liberty Medal Sunday in Philadelphia. — “It just deflated like a big pancake.” A New York policeman's comment after seeing a Bigfoot” blimp crash into a seven-story apartment building. The blimp was leased by Pizza Hut to promote its latest line o f pizzas. — “Violence is as American as cherry pie.” — Rap Brown, at a 1967 press conference. n ' P age 6 W ednesday, July 7,1993 S tate P ress N A A C P backs b ar ow ners in federal civil rig h ts su it Mike Field said additional depositions are bein g g ath ered in w hich w itnesses Developments continue to surface in the describe instances o f racial harassm ent civil rights lawsuit filed against die Tempe from Tempe police which occurred in loca­ Police Departm ent by Rowdy’s, a Tempe tions other than Rowdy’s. bar/restaurant, as ow ners Greg and Mike “There are a lot o f interesting things Field have gained the backing of the Valley coming out of the woodwork,” he said. chapter of the National Association for the Though he declined to reveal the identi­ Advancement o f Colored People (NAACP). ties o f the witnesses, Mike Field said that a “They have been violated,” said NAACP Tempe kindergarten teacher and a liquor spokesperson Nancy Jones, in reference to store owner are the subjects o f new deposi­ the Fields’ pending $66-million civil rights tions and added that three ASU students are suit filed against the city and several offi­ featured in others. cers in December 1991. “ The NAACP is in “It seems like everybody I talk to has total support o f them.” been razzed by Tempe police and have a Tem pe A ssistan t C ity A tto rn ey Ron. record,” M ike F ield said, claim ing that Dunham said the city had no response to members o f minority races who have fre­ the NAACP backing. quented his establishment have been con­ “It’s difficult to comment on when you fronted by police “where they may not do it have a law suit th at’s pending,” he said, to someone with white skin but would to a adding that the city is “going to meet what­ minority person.” ever allegations there are in court.” F e d e ra l B u reau o f In v e s tig a tio n The brothers went public last week with spokesperson Larry M cCorm ick said the videotaped sworn depositions in which sev­ F B I h a d c o n s id e re d in v e s tig a tin g th e eral Tempe police officers admitted using Fields’ allegations, but once the suit was ethnic slurs when referring to racial groups fried, the issue became a civil matter. amongst each other. The Fields, w ho are S ince the June 29 press co n feren ce, Jewish, have based their suit upon alleged Mike Field said the suit has been covered racial harassment from Tempe police. on national television by CNN and CNBC. C H I N A G A T E Buy one dinner, get 2nd at half price (of equal or lesser value). B y J a k e B atsell S t a t e P r ess For all college students and faculty. Student or faculty I.D. required. Expires 7-31-93. London Paris Amsterdam Auckland Sydney Frankfurt SCOTTSDALE LOCATIO N ONLY 7820 E. McDowell • Scottsdale • 946-0720 $348* $330* $366* $388* $433* $378* p p s j .« £ € § MEXICAN FOOD Fares are each way based on a roundtrip purchase. Restrictions apply and lares may change with­ out notice. Seats may be limited so book now. Serving Lunch and Dinner? Days a Week S p ic e u p y o u r life w ith : - Traditional Sonoran Style M exican Food - N ew Vegetarian Selections - D aily Specials - Happy H our Buffet Council Trave Located a t Forest and University, d ire ctly across from A.S.U .I i ^ F R E E D I N N E R '^ W ith purch ase o f equal or greater value. N ot good with any other offer o r d iscount. 120 E. University, Ste. E T em p e , A Z 85281 9 6 6 -3 5 4 4 Cali,for a FREE Student Travels MagazineI ^ lP L ^ I ^ R 2 i^ ^ 2 ^ S 5 ® ri£ 2 l2 !f 2 .r 2_pm ._B o (Reg. $34.-) Sham poo, Perm, Cut & Style included. Long hair, piggy back or spiral w rap extra. Exp. 7-28-93 U niversity & Rural Rd. Cornerstone Shopping C enter 968-8008 H o u is: M on.-Fri. 9-9 C ou pons not valid with w n M X h e^ peciajs. S at. 9-7 S u n 10-5 2 blocks from campus 1111E. Apache Blvd. Tempe, AZ THE COMMONS T MEMBERS ONLY Ÿ Call us today 8 2 9 -0 9 3 3 State P ress Wednesday, July 7,1993 HAIRCUTS - $8.00 P age 9 Men & Women (new clients) P e rm s, c o lo rs , h ilig h ts B ig d iscou n ts fo r sum m er session "I told you, you should have stayed in bed. " -S tate Press Horoscopes (With participating stylist) J ^ W tZ Z A R D S HAIR STUDIO 903 S . Rural Rd., Tem pe 967-2360 In An Effort To Look Younger, Some People Overlook The Obvious. F R ID A Y W EDNESDAY V A R I LUX® MONDAY NO-LINE BIFOCALS IN TEMPE: 524 S. Mill Ave. • 894-8382 IN SCOTTSDALE: 7000 E. Sheo Blvd. • 951-0288 SATELLITE T .V . SHOW ING YOUB FAVO RITE GAM ES, NIGHTLY HANGEN1 O UT W / T B S BLUE M ARLIN, EVENTS DJT. - M U SIC , DANCING NIGHTLY, PA R TY PACKAGES AVAILABLE S ta te P ress Crosswords - They aren't harsh words. They're just across-words. m b u ’s % F R E E H O U R O F T A B L E T IM E ‘B iftiards W ith th e Purchase of One Hour 1301 L University • 829-7344 Good 11am-8pm-One per coupon per table per day (Behind Sunny's) Notvalidwithanyotheroffer•Withcoupon•Expires7-22-93 m b u 's ALL DAY PA SS % •P O O L «11 AM-6 PH . M on.-Fri. A ()0 •S O F T D R IN K S *2 s s « . X U •F O O D «selected COME ANDGO 1301E. University *829-7344 menu items AS YOU (BehindSunny's) PLEASE Hittiards A. S. u. 8I A ^ 1 1 1301 East University Drive | í ii t Ifempe, AZ uHMimvomr g t Located On the East Side: Aztec Court Plaza 829-7344 OPEN 24 HOURS W ED N ESD AY 11AM - SUNDAY 3 AM MONDAY & TU ESD A Y 11 AM - 3 AM NOW SERVING B R E A K FA S T 5 AM - 11 AM TH-SUN PLAY W H ER E PO O L IS COOL 74° CLEAN. COMFORTABLE BILLIARD R OOM 20 POOL TABLES F U L L G R ILLI S a n d w ic h e s & S ubsl B e e r • W in e Grill is open until 3:30 a.m. Friday & Saturday 8 2 9 -7 3 4 4 Page 10 Wednesday, July 7,1993 S tate P ress Governor’s approval stagnant, poll says S “He’s on a rebound from the Indian gaming controversy that was a very contentious issue and I think future polls will A recent poll shows Arizonans support for Gov. Fife reflect that,” said Doug Cole, Symington’s press secretary. Symington rising slightly, but his prospects as a candidate for “Indian gaming was very polarizing and now that we have 10 re-election in 1994 look slim against his potential gubernatori­ compacts signed I think people will see that the governor’s al opponents. Among those with an opinion, SO percent approve of the strategy did work.” Symington signed new gaming compacts Tuesday with the job the governor is doing while 50 percent disapprove. Twelve Gila River Indian Community and the Tonto Apache Tribe. percent had no opinion on his performance. The survey* w hich contacted 398 reg istered voters Until the original agreements were worked out some two statewide, was conducted by KAET Channel 8 pollster Bruce weeks ago, the issue was hotly debated and some tribes went Merrill in late June. Republicans made up 49 percent of those as far as attempting to get an initiative put on an upcoming polled and Democrats comprised 39 percent. Independent vot­ ballot to allow full-blown casino gambling on Indian lands. ers represented 12 percent. Symington placed second among his four potential guber­ Symington’s slight rise comes as not-so-bad news follow­ natorial opponents* third if undecided voters are included. ing his 35 percent approval rating this time last year, also from a KAET poll. In similar KAET polls, Symington hovered Former Phoenix Mayor Terry Goddard, who lost the 1990 below between 35 and 45 percent approval ratings between governor’s race to Symington in a runoff, soundly defeated the November 1991 and August 1992. He hit an all-time high governor in the poll. Goddard garnered 24 percent support approval rating in January of this year with a 68 percent from poll respondents, while Symington had 17 percent. approval. Twenty-five percent were undecided. t ATF pR F SS The o n ly free th in g at ASU. 1 B y S. T albott S mith State P ress R E S ID H N C :V r Every Wed. & Thurs. 2-3 p.m . Student Services Am phitheater LONDON.................. ..... .$ 646 FRANKFURT..;.,...,..¡*..i...;.,..$ 729 AUSTEHnau.:....:.^:!,.^ 778 COSTARICA.................. $ 550 GUATEMALA... ................$ 525 BELIZE........ ........ ......... $ 502 EuruH passes now Issued In our ofllcel YOUTHFLEXIPASS 220 EURAH. FLEXIPASS 1 MONTHYOUTHPASS........4 508 1 MONTHFIRSTCLASS 298 460 O th er Cities Available MILL AVENUE TRAVEL 966-6300 RESTR ICTIO N S APPLY. S U B JE C T TO AVAILABILITY. a I OCE4NSIDE REAREn H S ta y Goo! 2 fo r 1 PA SS •1st person pays adm ission •2nd person skates FR EE! •Skate rental on ly S I .25 . , (next to Big Surf) E x p ir e s 8 - 1 6 - 9 3 ft Ì ■ I ___ I 1 5 2 0 N . M c C lin to c k • 9 4 7 -2 4 7 0 Residency Applications Available Round trip from Phoenix TOKYO..... ......... .........$ 799 SINGAPORE............... .;™*......$1008 HONGK0NG.......,.:t.,l...;..._.$ 875 SEOUL........................... $ 978 KUALALUMPUR....... ........$1039 MANILA....................... ..... $900 ...................................... I I I I___ IN F O R M A T I O N S E S S I O N SPECIAL STUDENT FARES - SUMMER TRAVEL LIVE ROCK & REGGAE NIGHTCLUB DAILY DRINK SPECIALS 'til 10pm $1.75 Well Drinks & Schnapps $4 Pitchers $1 Drafts B E G G A R S THEATER w ith D e a d lY A r n a z Thursday, July S PRIMITIVE ID w ith S h a r d H o u s e Foster's Friday, July 9 erage H older Arm R ests Digital, THX or Dottiy Sound In a ll Auditoriums — . Jm w ith I s o t o p e s Saturday, July 1 0 DEAD HOT WORKSHOP TOM C R U I S E WALTER MATTHAU w ith S k in n y J im St. Pauli Sunday, July 11 S IS T E R M O RPH IN E w ith S k in n y J im $ 2 St. P auli G irls M&Untverstty 966-6655 C LU B JAXON U U iU M Ê il 1 2 :0 0 ,2 :1 0 , 4a— . 7 :10, 9;4B, 12:1 S n < f» 6 l3 ) S O N -IN -L A W M t a a M . & 0 0 . S .1 0 ,7:20, 9 3 0 t P Q 1 3) Monday, July 12 S O M I t t A W f ia d O . 3 :0 0. 5:16, 7:30, 9A0 (PQ 13) a UIPGC2N T ÿÉO PO »â|.12î20,2:60, 6:20, 7:60.10:20 c a v i ijfcftb l; g ;io . 7-4Ó.ié:*o M1IRCWJI«UORfV122». 23S. 4:4s, 720, sao 0 _.?i O N T H E C U T T IN G ED G E O F M O D E ttN n O C K 2.00 32oz. Beers 2 .0 0 Long Islands AU G U ST R E D 18 12pm) • A n A SU student reported M onday that betw een July 1 and July 6, cash and sunglasses w ere stolen from his room at C holla Apartm ents. L oss is estim ated at $60. • The car o f an A SU student was crim i­ nally damaged w hile parked in Lot 63 on Sunday. L oss is estim ated at $50. • An A SU student reported that $500 worth o f damage w as done to his vehicle on Sunday b etw een 2 p.m . and 3 p.m . w hile parked in Parking Structure One. • An A SU student w as arrested, cited and released for crim inal trespassing at th e S tu d en t R ecr e a tio n C en ter on Saturday. • A SU police were contacted Friday by a student who requested that police stand by and investigate a civ il rights com plaint at the Psychology Building. • A lso on Friday, a non-affiliated male w as c o n ta c te d by p o lic e in H ayden L ib rary a fter h e f e ll a sle e p and w as locked in the building. Tempe Police reported the follow ing inci­ dents over the weekend: Free food buffet (4-7pml • A 3 7 -y ea r-o ld C handler m an w as a rrested e a r ly T u esd a y m orn in g on attem pted first degree m urder charges after he alleged ly scabbed a man in the parking lo t o f the D en n y ’s restaurant located at 4403 S. Rural Rd. The stabbing capped a car chase which began in northern Phoenix, when the sus­ p ect sh ot sev era l tim es at the v ictim ’s v eh icle, tutting the car but not injuring any passengers. The suspect’s w ife was reportedly with the victim throughout the incident Two M aricopa County Sheriff deputies w ere in sid e D enny’s w hen the stabbing o ccu rred , and w en t to th e sc e n e and detained the suspect. The victim is listed in critical but stable condition. • A local couple took Valley police for a ride early M onday morning when they a lleged ly sto le a 1988 C hevy pickup in M esa and fled from authorities in a high­ speed chase. A fter leaving M esa, the vehicle was at the Broadway Road entrance to Interstate 10. Tem pe p o lice follow ed the car into m etropolitan Phoenix, but after entering the freeway again, the car w as lost. The veh icle w as again spotted on the R ed M ountain Freew ay, at .w hich point state Department o f Public Safety officers took oyer. The suspects abandoned the vehicle at 31st Avenue and M oreland and were caught on foot. • Unknown suspects fired five shotgun rounds into a hom e located in the 1000 block o f N. Harold St. at around 1:20 a.m. on Saturday morning. Three residents w ere w atching telev i­ sio n at th e tim e the sh o ts w ere fired . N eighbors reported seein g subjects fle e from the scene. • Two D allas m en w ere arrested and booked on child prostitution charges on F rid a y a fter a p o lic e in v e stig a tio n revealed that tw o 17-year-old girls had b een -solicited to perform sexual acts at 1612 N . Scottsdale Road. P o lice reports indicated that the sus­ pects have been known to arrange ju ve­ n ile prostitution in Texas and California, as w ell as A rizona. One victim said she has been affiliated with the suspects when she was 14 or 15-years-old. Compiled by State Press C ity Editor Jake Batsell. 4 - 11pm: 2 F0R1 AT THE BAR 3.00 Pitchers of Beer 6.0 0 Pitchers of Teas C H E S T E R W H IT E ^ LIV E H. M U SIC by LiML < Mike Jones & 1 Steele Horse Band e i eeueuux tX tif it I t it i rn m m s m m m NO cover for ladies ALL night! & "l, j iv u r L:*L 7 - 11pm: $1.00 well, wine & draft AFTER HOURS ’til 2am for those 21 & Older 4 3 0 N. S co ttsd ale Rd. 8 9 4 0 5 3 3 IIS SOUTH tt'ClINTOCK f * ; i T t H t t A t 83281 • 966-1911 Page 16 Wednesday, July 7,1993 TbaHmr State P ress r LOBE-OIL FÏÊTfR"1 $ T U I A. AUTOMOTIVE 30W • 10W30 • 10W40 Lubricate your vehicle & ch a ssis, drain old o il, add up to 5 qts. of new o il and install a new oil filter. D iesel extra. M ost ca rs and light trucks. Includes a 17 pt. v e h icle m ainten ance in sp e ctio n . P lu s $1.50 oil disposal charge. Alignments D elivery T o Your Brakes W o rk e r Shocks/Struts ; H om e. 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Contact Wife at (602) 883-5509: Ph/Fax U RG EN T D evising 27 com petitive kinds o f tissue paper to w ipe the consum er's personalized arse doesn't leave tim e or inspiration to conceive spaceships that w ill bring humanity to the stars— literally and metaphorically. a n in v ita tio n to p a rtic ip a te in th e MHaang mentor i Forum to target juvenile justice system B y A ngela Ben oche S t a t e P ress There is an over-representation of minority youth in Arizona’s juvenile criminal justice system, and state groups ate looking to community members for possible solutions,'said a committee chairwoman with the Arizona Juvenile Justice Advisory Council. “We are trying to gather community input through our forums in order to pull in parents and young people to express their ideas and concerns and to recommend a progressive action plan to cre­ ate an equitable situation for minority youth in this state,” said Carole Coles Henry, the chairwoman of die Minority Youth Issues Committee. The committee is sponsoring a Community Forum from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on July 8 at the Ramada Hotel, 401 N. First St., in Phoenix to discuss the issue of disproportionate incarceration o f minority youth in the juvenile justice system, Coles Henry said. “The forum is designed to open dialogue between the commu­ nity members and the system that is supposed to serve them,” she said. “This is the only way we can begin to make die system equi­ table.” Arizona was one of five states the U.S. Department of Justice funded to conduct research and develop solutions to the inequitable minority youth incarceration rates, said Cathryn Lore, an administrator for the Governor's Office for Children. During the past 18 months. Native American, Hispanic and African American representatives have been collecting and study­ ing information from interviews and forums to determine where minority youth are most involved in the juvenile justice system, Lore said. 1829 N. Scottsdale Rd. (In The ABCO Shopping Center) Temps, AZ 85281 . Scottsdale Rd. and M cKellips Mon. - Fri.: 7am - 7pm & Sat: 8am - 5pm 946-7587 C TOUCH ZEA N ERS had been deliberated upon for four years, began w ith a declaration and a vow taken a t Valley o f Fire, Nevada, May 29,1993 The teachers, the m edia, the parents immunize the youngsters’ soul against the hazards o f hill commitment to people, visions, aspirations. Those elders define the next generation's growth in accord w ith the w ay "life is." They breed teens to fulfill the customary needs o f our society t is a past extended forever. Phis program w as conceived in order to create a future, 'G eared to people w ith a passion for life, Trailblazing ^Mentor Program is a milieu spurring these people to realize, to live out their inner fire. 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Through confronting interactions, one may grow to ow n the courage to think first-hand; through situations that kindle one’s imagination, one's mental shutters may open; through being trained, one may articulate visions. No individual teen-m entor relationship w ill be alike^ or set, or predictable; how ever, their format and timej span (though not content) do parallel that o f the teen—mentor in the m ovie The Karate Kid. $5“ Off Leather & Suedes • Tailoring • Shirt Laundry •Draperies 990 ea. 990 ea. $5°° Off A n y Dry.Cleaning Men's Regular A n y Dry Cleaning With Order O f $10 O r More Dress Shirts With Order of $10 Or More i* | On Hungers t n| Not Valid With Other Discounts One Coupon Per Visit One Coupon Per Visit Expires July 27,1993 | * Expires July 27,1993 Expires July 27,1993 PRESENTCOUPONWITHORDER •11PRESENTCOUPONWITHORDERK IPRESENTCOUPONWITHORDERI Free Consultation for New Patients. Make Your Own Coupon SUMMER CLEANING SPECIAL IN C LU D ES : necessary x-rays, exam, cleaning and oral cancer screening (reg. $122) off any service I New patients only. _ Not valid with any I other offer. ■ Valid with coupon only • Exp. 8-31-93. "n ig h t /w h it e " ■Whiten Y our Teeth! (rag. *500) H iS *189 [Valid with coupon only • Exp. 8-31-93 l Valid with coupon only • Exp, 8-31-93. We're dose to campus, quiet and affordable. You'll love the quiet atmosphere and the ease of living so close to cam pus, but you'll love our prices even morel Studios from $305,1 bedrooms from $320 and 2 bedrooms from $400, and we pay for gas and water! Com e by today and see how affordable it can be living so close to • upon responding, specify sex and age »the Program is for ages 17-20 «it is fully subsidized financially »it w ill not hamper one's daily responsibilities C A M B R ID G E S Q U A R E • Quiet, student atmosphere • 2 swimming pools • On-site laundry • Right across the street from ASU cam pus 1011 East Lemon Street Tampa, AZ 85281 867-2544 UNIVERSITY - :! J I A § LEMON ■ c o m p ly . ■ This is the birth o f Trailblazing M entor ProgramBehind it there is no precedent, no past-perform ance record, gto^creditation. Behind it there is one man, a vision, and commitment. If you aiifm M e& ted,'’ don't bother. H owever, if you are co 1 , |S / than that, mail a $7 processing fee an # l i n M w e s t to deter you through a trying admission questionnaire—from w hich you w ill get a feel for the Program. Beforehand, you may send in any inquiries you h aw , enclosing a self-addressed stamped envelope. T.M.P., 13850 N. 19Ave. #29IEPhoenix, AZ 85023-6160 “Their research has found that disproportionate treatment occurs throughout the process from arrest, detention, treatment, rehabilitation to transfer to adult court,” she said. “The African American disparity is more prevalent — seven of 10 African American males have a criminal record by the age of 18, compared with four of 10 Hispanic males and three of 10 Anglo males.” Such findings should raise concerns for members of the minor­ ity community. Lore said. “We are dealing with the criminalization of an entire generation.” : < However, die forums were organized as an effort to unite com­ munity members and develop a shared and common ground on this issue, she said. But the communities involved have different vantage points and different resources, Coles Henry said. "The resources are there but people are just not using them right,” Coles Henry said.“ These forums are an effort to engage the communities into conversation and input and to make the system accessible to the community members it serves.” Representatives from each of the ethnic minority communities will attend the Community Forum and will review their research findings for those new the forums, Lore said. And the issues that will be addressed are not just important to minorities but to everyone in society, Coles Henry said. “We can ensure an equitable system fix' everyone if we work together,” she said. “There are those who want to just write off the next generation, but there has to be a better way.” u APACHE Continental Apartm ents 1019 East Lemon Street Tampa, A Z 05281 967-2544 Page 18 State P ress Wednesday, July 7,1993 C ity plans to restore building, create dow ntow n center B y J ake B atsell S tate P ress Plans are in the works to transform a threestory building in downtown Tempe into a center for popular restaurants and retail stores. Developers are finalizing plans to restore the Laird & Dines building, located at the southeast corner of Fifth Street and Mill Avenue, into the red brick Victorian style it embodied a century ago. According to Tempe Deputy Community Development Director Dave Fackler and restora­ tion project managing partner Ted Claassen, a Hooters restaurant will occupy the building’s entire second floor, while McDonald’s will open another Tempe location on the first floor. Negotiations are also presently being conducted with TCBY Frozen Yogurt and Vans California Days. ‘I t will be a very unique building, even as it relates to the true historical architecture in downtown Tempe,” Fackler said. The building, built in 1893, operated as the Laird and Dines drugstore for 75 years and served as an informal City Hall and hub of local political activity. Claassen said ASU students were a primary target in determining which businesses would occupy the building. “We didn’t want to price students out of the picture.” Fackler said construction is slated to begin in Stateli courtesy of the City ol Tamp* mid- to late-August and will be completed near Restoration construction of the Laird and Dinee building, located at the aoutheast corner of the end of the year. He said the building is likely Fifth Street and Mill Avenue, is slated to begin in mkMo late-August. The three-story building will feature Hooters and McDonald’s restaurants, among other b usin esses, and is scheduled to to open for business in early 1994. open In early 1984. CompuWorld 712 S. College Ave. - Next fo College Street Oeli • Phone: 967-4049 Mon.-Thur. 7:30am 10:30pm Fri. 7:30am-Midnight; Sat. 9am-Midnighf; Sun. I1am-I0:30pm Sales • Service • Repair 386-40DX 486-255X 48Ó-33DX 486-66DX CD ROM w/Software Encyclopedia, Atlas, games,. Fax modem 2400/9600 Upgrade 266 to 386 386 SX w /1 MB $ 179 a n d a d d a c c e sso rie s from f B d f co m patibles. SCOTTSDALE '901 E. Thomas Rd.. #105 945-6353 PHOENIX: 10625 N. 35th Ave. 375-2536 Valid O nly W ith Coupon HIGH QUALITY • GREAT VALUE • LOW PRICE FREE TIRE ROTATION HOURS: FAST M-W 4AM-12AM THURS. 4PM - 1:30AM FRI. & SAT. 4PM-2:30AM SUN. 11AM -12AM F B F F DELIVERY! 921 -FAST PAtlAPA a a u TACO* MARITO* TOSTARA* TARTA* MCSARIUAS n c i A REEF FORK CHICKEN FISH VECETARIAR FISH TACO VEGETARIAN MENU OFEN Til 1*100 FN Ssa. - Than. 12:00 AN Fri. t Sat. 921-1011 tsbiad tbs Cs N m FIsatstiM 6ENTEBF0INT CO0RTVAM Entertainment S ta te P ress Page 19 W ednesday, July 7,1993 By Troy Fuss The last time Frank Black came to town he wasn’t Frank Black. He was Black Francis, head noisem aker and conductor of core alternative band The Pixies. It was a packed show under the blue sky at Hayden Square Amphitheater. The last time Frank Black came to town without The Pixies he wasn’t Frank Black either. He was Black Francis, solo, with nothing but an electric guitar and a car parked out back packed with his personal possessions on his way to the East C oast But times have changed, and so has the name. “Too many people discussed what my real name was and got my stage name wrong,” Black said as he spoke from a hotel room in Louisiana Saturday. “They’d mix up the two names, put it backwards, so I came up with a stage name I thought was more palatable, so that it went down easy. Frank Black is very palatable, very normal sounding.” What’s his real name? . It doesn’t matter.” Despite the fictitious but normal sounding name, Black’s music is anything but ordinary. H ie Pixies were known for consistently putting out some o f the most inconsistent music in die alternative realm. Black keeps up the tradition with his first solo release, the ominously titled Frank Black. Radio airplay has focused on two tracks, Los Angeles and the Brian Wilson cover Hang On To Your Ego. Los Angeles is not so much about L.A., Black says, as it is “everything from Perry Mason to Arlo Guthrie to Blade Runner to the history o f the conquistadors in South America.” About the Wilson cover, he simply says, “Ask Brian.” “ , He will say that his favorite songs on the album are Every Time I Go Around Here and Tossed. He will also say that when Frank Black puts out an album it is Frank Black, not the record company, who decides how it will sound. “Everybody has as much control as they want,” Black said. “I’m not denying there is pressure, as a matter o f fact if you went ahead and said, ‘No, I’m gonna do exactly what I’m gonna do.’ A lot of people would lose their contracts. “Maybe someday I ’ll be in the situation where I’ll say ‘no, I’m gonna do this,’ and they’re gonna say ‘if you do that we’re gonna drop you,’ And then that’s where people fool themselves into thinking they have no control. Because there is a kind of a compromise that goes on - and it’s not an unholy compromise. I’m not saying that people are bad because they change something in particular. I may have taken an idea or two or done a little something to keep some people happy, but what I’m saying is in the end the artist always has as much control as he or she wants.” It seems that not only did the record company give Black full control over his album, they also lay the claim that he has total control over the tour. When asked why Black’s Saturday show at Paradoxx begins at 6 p.m., representatives o f Black’s record label said that it was Black’s idea: One said he has friends in Sedona and wants to go there after the show. Another said he doesn’t like Phoenix and wants to get out as soon as possible. Black said he is unfamiliar with either theory and that he didn’t even know it was an early show. “That’s great how the myth is just getting larger and larger,” Black said- : “Is it an early show? I’m sure it’s some­ thing a lot more boring, not that that’s very exciting. I’ve never even played this venue. There’s probably a disco after­ wards, That’s usually why you play early, the owner of the place wants to get the disco lights going so he can sell some booze.” .. _ ■ . . Boring theories aside, Frank Block promises to be one o f the summer’s best shows. Armed with The Pixies catalog and a powerful solo album, Black has no reason to cut the set short and head back to Los Angeles. Besides, he says, he likes it here and frequents Arizona often. What does Black do When he comes to Arizona? “It’s a secret,” he said, But the secret is out and the show is Saturday. Frank Black who dropped hla moniker, Black Frància, when leaving the Pixies la striking back with a e d o project and gatti* ering hla own cult-like following. Frank Black with Reverend Horton Heat at Pam bxx Sa*an«My 1 9 * 6pm. AS A p t- C in e m a ‘The Firm’ e n d s u p soft on su sp e n se that the firm is not what it appears to be. The FBI then B y J ake B atsell approaches McDeere, informs him that the firm has ties to S tate P ress the mob and requests his assistance in obtaining evidence Based on an enormously successful best-selling novel, to bring the firm to trial. and featuring a star-studded W h at e n s u e s is an cast, The F inn emits expec­ incredibly slow-paced suc­ tations o f becoming one of cession o f events in which th e su m m e r’s m ig h tie s t M cDeere wrestles with his blockbuster hits. c o n sc ie n c e an d se n se o f It doesn’t deliver. legal ethics w hile running H ie film simply fails to fro m th e firm , th e M afia do ju s tic e to Jo h n and the governm ent Grisham’s novel, which has McDeere spends much so ld m ore than 7 m illion o f th e m o v ie in fro n t o f copies since its publication books, making photocopies in 1991. Instead, it carries o r talking on the phone — the audience on a stagnant not nearly enough action to tw o -an d -a-h alf h our ride, sustain a “thriller” for two le a v in g th o s e w ho h av e and a half hours. read the the novel in a state While Grisham’s skill­ o f discontent as they walk fu l d e p ic tio n s o f le g a l out of the theater. graduate of an Ivy League school who accepts a position witn The F irm s ta r s T om a small yet wealthy partnership only to discover that the firm events made the novel near­ Cruise as M itch McDeere, isn't w h it It appears to be. Jeanne Tripplehorn co-stars a s ly impossible to put down, an ambitious Harvard Law Mitch’s wife Abby in this film based on the beetselling John that tension is not adequate­ ly transferred to the screen graduate who is presented Grisham novel. in The Firm. And the music with.an offer he can’t refuse from Bendini, Lam bert & Locke, a M em phis-based tax in the film is incessantly annoying, with ragtim e piano firm. In addition to offering McDeere an opening salary tunes accompanying each climactic scene. Neither Gene Hackman (Avery Tolar, McDeere’s men­ that approaches six figures, the firm arranges a mortgage for his first home, pays off his student loans and provides tor) or Holly Hunter (secretary Tammy Hemphill) succeed in spicing up the film. him with a brand-new Mercedes. It’s d ifficu lt to get excited about a m ovie w hen its Though McDeere’s wife Abby (Jeanne Tripplehorn) is suspicious from the outset, they decide to accept the offer. longest fight scene pits Cruise ag a in st... Wilford Brimley? Soon thereafter, when two of die firm’s lawyers are suspi­ The Quaker Oatmeal Man? Something is missing in the on-screen romance between ciously killed in a boating accident, the couple discovers Cruise and Tripplehorn. Their chem istry is hikevfom at best, and both seem aloof throughout the film. . ■• One o f the few criticisms o f Grisham’s novel was that the ending lacked believability, so the film ’s producers opted to change the finale in the film . The result? H ie .film’s ending is even less believable, and much more con­ fusing. A ticket to The F irm (rated R) m ight be worth it if you’ve read the book and want to see its on-screen adapta­ tion. . .. . But once you get home, you’ll reach for that familiar forest-green paperback to convince yourself that The Firm really is a magnificently suspenseful story — in p rin t What Mitch McDeere (Tom C ruise) thought w as a golden opportunity could co st him h is life after the gifted young lawyer accepts a position with a law firm and discovers the terrifying reality of the firm’s Inner works. C o m ic s Page 20 State P ress W ednesday, July 7,1993 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson THE FAR SIDE DID CAOAR ClEAH WS ROOM AS I ASKED HIM TO, OR DID HE SPEHD THE YWOVE WORKING PLAMIN6 VfffH _ By GARY LARSON UP1... 5Ï5TEP1 ERROR... DELETE QUE5T10H RHD TRS HBRIN. A CARDBOARD. ^ Box ? V Doonesbury OH, MIKE... YOU'RE NOTactuallypenne SUPERMARKETPUU.-ÓU15 NOW, ARE YOU* B Y G A R R Y TRUD EAU net, UJHATSWRONG UUTH THAT* UH PROUPOFTHEM! SOMEOP THESE SMALLJC8S AREAMONE THEBESTWORK V TVE PONE! UM...RIGHT! ONTHEIR ANPTHOSE WAY TO LAPES THEBEACH. ARETHEIR. ' ****' MÉ&! GIRLS!" \ "J*L V “Ah, yes, Mr. Frischberg, Ithought you’d come... but which of us is the real duck, Mr. Frischberg, and not Just an illusion?” PEOPLE« BALTIM ORE (A P) — F red G w ynne shared the Broadway stage with Helen Hayes, did Shakespeare and Tennessee W illiams, earned accolades for his movie roles. But to millions he'll always be Herman Munster. Gwynne, 66, died Friday at his farm in Taneytown, 40 miles northeast of Baltimore. He had suffered pancreatic cancer. “Fred will be remembered for giving us all so many hours of laughter and enjoyment with his characterizations,” said Joe Pesci, who played the smart-aleck Brooklyn lawyer to Gwynne’s sly Southern judge in the movie “My Cousin Vinny.” The film’s director, Jonathan Lynn, said he chose Gwynne because “there was nobody else who coulcl give it the same qualities of intelligence and im peccable tim ing, and weight and strength. It’s very hard to find people with that amount of screen presence that are truly funny.” Frederick Hubbard Gwynne was bom July 10, 1926, in New York City, the son o f a stockbroker. He served in the Navy during World War II and graduated from Harvard in 1951. G w ynne began his career w ith the Broadway production o f “Mrs. McThing” with Miss Hayes in 1952 and went on to alter­ nate among stage, screen and television for the next 40 years. His two 1960s television series each lasted just two seasons but have had a long life in reruns and in viewers’ memories. From 1961 to 1963, he played Officer Francis M uldoon in “C ar 54, W here Are You,” the straight man in a mismatched pair of New York City cops. Joe E. Ross was his short, Chubby partner, Officer Gunther Toody, who had a habit of exclaiming “Ooo, ooo!” when excited. “He was fabulous, absolutely terrific,” said Charlotte Rae, who played the wife of Officer Leo Schnauser in “Car 54.” “He had a wide range of talent and acting styles.” The following year, Gwynne took up the role of Herman Munster in “The Munsters,” playing a comic Frankenstein’s monster in the popular CBS series whose two-year run was alm ost sim ultaneous w ith A BC’s “The A, Ÿ &. Club,” a thief in “Disorganized Crime,” a cow orker o f M ichael D ouglas in “F atal A ttractio n ” and a curm udgeon in “Pet Sematary.” He appeared in such plays as “Love’s Labours Lost,” a revival of “Cat On a Hot Tin Roof,” “A Texas Trilogy,” “Our Town” and “Hamlet.” He won an Obie, the off-Broadway equivalent o f a Tony aw ard, in 1979 for “Grand Magic.” He last appeared on Broadway in 1983’s “Whodunnit.” In 1982, Gwynne was asked about his favorite roles, and he cited serious ones like Big Daddy in “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.” Then he paused. “And I might as well tell you the truth. I love old Herman Munster,” he said. “Much as I try not to, I can’t stop liking that fellow.” Gwynne is survived by his wife, Deborah Gwynne, and four children. Private funeral services were planned. Addams Family.” Herman was the patriarch o f a lovably scary family that lived in a cobwebbed man­ sion and included a vampire for a grandfather (A1 Lewis) and a pet dragon named Spot. Gwynne wore green makeup and special boots to boost his 6-foot, 5-inch height. Lewis, who also played Schnauser in “Car 54,” recalled his friend and co-star as a shy, introverted man. ‘‘He very rarely got excited,” Lewis said in a telephone interview from New York. “I would scream and yell on the set and he would play the guitar or draw caricatures.” In his varied career, Gwynne also did voic­ es for commercials, which he joked were “the sweetest, most generous thing that could hap­ pen to an aging actor.” The onetime art school student also wrote and illustrated children’s books such as “The Story of Ick,” 1971; “A Little Pigeon Toad,” 1988; and “Easy to See Why,” coming out later this year. Gwynne’s film career began with a small role in “On the W aterfront,”. 1954. More recent roles include a mobster in “The Cotton Ladies Night No Cover ■ 00 ¡Ld & Well, Margs & teasers 9-11 pm Ladies Only e D rie s D a y A cKy ♦ it * icrit & C aterp ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ PITCHERS * 7 p m -C lose HAPPY HOUR M-F4-7 P.il. Well, Pint», Marge and Teeter* $2.95 P IT C H E R S E V E R Y DAY Sports S t a t e P ress - W ednesday, July 7 ,1 9 9 3 ^ P age 21 Time expires for 3 ASU sports M ens gymnastics denied injuction for extension By S h a u n R a c h a u S t a t e P ress Time finally ran out for three o f the most successful ASU intercollegiate athletic programs. The archery and badminton teams were responsible for all six of the national cham pionships received by the University during the 1991-92 school year, and the men’s gymnastics team won a NCAA title in 1986. But, four months after Athletic Director Charles Harris announced in February that men’s gymnastics, archery and badminton would be eliminated because of the increasing $3.5 million intercollegiate athletic deficit, coaches of the three sports were instructed to vacate their offices and turn in their keys June 30. Badminton coach Guy Chadwick and archery coach Sheri Rhodes were reluctant to leave, but the men’s gym­ nastics team put up a good fight. Men’s gymnastics coach Don Robinson — in an 11th hour attempt to keep his program alive — filed a 21-page complaint June 30 seeking an injunction and restraining order against Harris. Robinson and attorney Charles Stegall claimed that Harris exceeded his jurisdiction by denying the men’s gym­ nastics team access to its training facilities and offices with­ in the Intercollegiate Athletic building. “It is our position that Mr. Harris exceeded his jurisdic­ tion because our claim had been submitted to the Arizona Board of Regents,” Stegall said. “He is not only denying (the team) access to University facilities to facilitate their fund raising, but he has gone one step further and has stated ■'* that the individual gymnasts will not be permitted to use their practice facilities.” The men’s gymnastics team said retaining their offices is essential because of their continued fundraising efforts. Also, because of the high degree of difficulty associated ■"with gymnastics, the team claims it is essential to practice in the summer to prepare for next season. In a affidavit submitted to Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Sherry Hutt during court proceedings, Harris said the University had already allotted the office spaces to accommodate existing department’s critical needs — which included academic services. “The real issue here, as disappointing as it is, is that this program has been eliminated because of the budgetary requirements,” said Ron Cohen, an attorney representing Photo by Darryl W«bb Booster Club President Steve Economides, left, end ASU m en's gym nastics coach Don Robinson pack their belongings last Wednesday after Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Sherry Hutt denied the team a temporary restraining order against Athletic director Charles Herds to keep their offices and training facilities. Harris on behalf o f the University. “Everybody in the ath­ letic department has for months and months and months known that this program was to be eliminated on June 30, and we are here (Wednesday), three hours before the dead­ line.” After 90 minutes of deliberation, Robinson and his team were denied the temporary restraining order by Hutt and were forced to vacate their offices by 5 p.m. on June 30. However, Robinson was granted a 24-hour extension by ASU President Lattie Coor because of the time restraints caused by the court proceedings. The Board of Regents has until July 29 to determine whether they will accept the team’s appeal. “Right now we feel like we have presented a package to Charles Harris that proves that we have worked like crazy and have the funds to continue thp program,” Robinson said. “1 think the (Board of Regents) is going to look at what we have done since we’ve got so much cash and since we’ve got so many promises. “By the time the Board of Regents meet, who knows how much money we’ll have.” The team has approximately $35,000 in the bank right now and has a chance to raise between $200,000 and $400,000 in the immediate future. Stegall said litigation is still a possibility if the team’s appeal is denied by the Board of Regents. He plans to seek damages against the University when he represents four freshmen gymnasts. U n d e rc la ss m e n save b a sk e tb a ll d ra ft I love the NBA Draft. It is surrounded by a strange sort of frenzy with last-second ICHAEL trades, rumors and the feeling that BRANOM each teams’ pick could alter the franchise's destiny. What if the Houston Rockets or Portland Trailblazers — owners of the first and second picks in the 1984 draft — selected Michael Jordan? They did not and Jordan brought three championship ban­ ners to Chicago instead. Marvelous. This y ear’s draft, held last Wednesday, would have been very poor pickings for the NBA had it not been for the early-caitiy candidates. The first four picks — Chris Webber, Shawn Bradley, Anfemee Hardaway and Jamal Mashburn — all came out early. J.R. Rider is a good enough scorer, but when he is the first senior to be drafted, that is the sign o f a weak bunch of seniors. The Pac-10 had a mediocre showing with four players picked, two being first-round selections. Last year, the confer­ ence had four first-rounders. It was a down year for the confer­ ence, no matter what Pac-10 boosters like Lute Olson say. Next year lodes about the same. I see just two potential first-round picks among this y e a r’s seniors, three if you include California’s Jason Kidd. Other then diem, there’s going to be some had basketball in the Pac-10 next year. Speaking of things not being what they once were, UofA small forward Chris Mills took the second biggest dive in the draft — with biggest dive honors going to Cincinnati’s Nick Van Exel. Mills was projected by a few experts to be headed to the Los Angeles Clippers with the 13th pick. Wrong. The ex-Wildcat dropped like a rock down to Cleveland at No. 22. Ouch. Apparendy, he thought we was too good to attend the pre-draft camps and sewed people away with his attitude. How much money does a mid-first round pack get as opposed to a late-first rM rounder? Bet he never makes that mistake again. ASU’s Lester Neal did not get drafted, either, but it was not because of his attitude. Last season’s Pac-10 rebounding champ drew raves from Phoenix Suns broadcaster Cotton Fitzsimmons for his work ethic, but at 6-foot-6, he simply is not big enough to be a pivot man in the NBA. But the big story o f Draft Day wa$ the trader hetweeh Orlando and Golden State. At first, I thought the Magic absolutely fleeced Warrior coach-general manager Don Nelson, who was selling his soul to win now. Anfemee Hardaway and three first-round picks for Webber? Nellie, I know you wanted a big man, but at what cost? But the more I thought about it, the more sense it made for Golden State., which is not to say that I would have done it. I f I am running the Warriors, I draft Kentucky’s Jamal Mashbum. He is a big guy who can score, rebound, and pass. He can also shoot from long-range, spreading the court for Tim Hardaway, Billy Owens, and Saranas Marciulionis to drive the lane. Best of all, you do not have to give anything up to get Mashbum. Pick him and he is yours. Nellie, though, wanted either Webber or BYU’s Shawn Bradley — ¡who was truly a man on a mission — and he got his big man without having to sell off any of his talent core. This last point was critical for Golden State, as they did not want to fool with a team that won 55 games two years ago. While I do not think that the addition of Webber means the Warriors are better than the Suns, but they now are just as good. And as for three draft picks? Well, Nelson must feel he's got a winner and that these picks in 1996, 1998, and 2000 will not be worth all that much. Besides, there might not even be a draft in seven years. But if filings do not improve, Nelson’s next stop after his bontract expires in two years is rumored to be Orlando, of course. Nellie did not get his genius reputation for nothing, you know. The Suns wanted to get some rebounding and defense and that is exactly what tirey got, but not from whom they expected. Tire Suns’ hierarchy planned on taking UofA center Ed Stokes with the last pick of the first round, provided there was no hade with Detroit for Denpis Rodman. However, a late run ofi centers left Georgia Tech’s Maicom Mackey available. Drey took him. I have mixed feelings about taking Mackey. He’s a good rebounder (10.2 rpg last season) and a fair scorer (15.6 ppg), but is two inches shorter than his listed height of 6-foot-ll. I like the pick because he is already the second-best rebounder on the Suns and he fills the role of Charles Barkley’s back-up, something the departed Tom Chambers could not do. , 5' ' What I do pot like about Mackey is less, a reflection on his talents tiian on tire Suns’ handling of the situation. Since fiiey did not belieye ,Mackey would be available so low in the draft, they did riot bring him to Phoenix for an examination and work­ out. In short, they do not know everything they could about him. Come to think of it, the Suns did not bring super-stiff William Bedford to Phoenix before drafting him in 1986, either. When Suns coach Paul Westphal was asked about Mackey's _ injury history, Westphal said that he was injury-free, as far as he knew. Sorry, Paul, but Mackey had surgery to repair to m . wrist ligaments a year ago. Wouldn’t you want to know stuff like this before deciding whether or not to draft someone? I sure would With their two picks in the lasfround, Phoenix selected Mark Buford, a football player-tumed-center from Mississippi Valley State, and Byron Wilson, a shooting guard out of Utah. Buford provides bulk and quickness in die middle, but is still; a raw talent. Wilson, according to Suns’ head scout Dick Percudani, “has Vinnie Johnson’s body and plays defense.” I like them, not because fiiey will make the team (neither probably will), but because of who they are. You see, the entire draft is a big crapshoot. There's no telling if your highly-touted first-rounder will be a success or fall on his face, washing out within a season or two. Conversely, NBA rosters are stocked with low draft picks. There's really no telling if Buford or Wilson or even some undrafted free-agent wifi blow into the Suns’ camp, shoot the lights out, and make the squad. Why cotddri’t that happen?, Late picks in a draft stand as heroes of fate and hard work If scouts and experts were always right, none of them would play NBA hoops. Yet they do anyway. Some get hot at the right time and some just outwork everyone else. Buford and Wilson may never play a minute for fire Suns, but, they got their chance and that is all anyone can askior. ....... ^ C la s s ifie d s ; '■+ Page 22 N otice to o ur read ers: 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 o f the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact die Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. A N N O U N CEMENTS ATTN: SPECIAL ed & ed stud­ ents. volunteers needed to ac­ company on field trip to PraderWilli conference July 15- 17th in S c o ttsd a le. C all C h risty 964-^322, or Vanessa 945-0512. NEED C L O T H E S ^ CASH a APARTMENTS 1 MONTH free, 2bd, $495/mo, close to ASU, pool, Apartment Renters 831-5900. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, close to ASU, pool, $475/mo, Apartment Rentéis 649-0077 or 831-5900. 2BD, IB A 4-plex, refrigerated, from $249. Laundry facilities. 9665596. 2BD , 2BH, w/d hookup, pool, gym , m any e x tra s, $ 5 2 5 /m o, Apartment Renters 831—5900. A BETTER way to find an sqpc! Free rental locating service, p ill 992-1300. ASU housing assistance/Apartment Locators. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 & 2 bed­ rooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laun­ dry room. On East 8th Street bet­ ween Rural & McClintock. Cape Code A p artm en ts, 9 6 8 -5 23S . Call for move-in special. JULY FREE, lbd $395/mo, 2bd $495/mo, walk to ASU, pool, ten­ nis, Apartment Renters, 649-0077 CC's CLOSET CLASSICS jà APARTMENTS $150 MOVEJN special, walk to ASU, 1 bedroom, $320/month, Apartment Renters 831-5900. $195 SPECIAL first mo. lbd apt, furnished, laundry. Call Jacob, 844-5900, or Sean 894-2040. $199 FIRST mo, 2bd, $365/mo, single level, Apartment Renters 649-0077. $299 TOTAL m ove-in, studio $295/mo, 2 bedroom $385/mo. Apartment Reiters 649-0077. $99 FIRST m onth, 1 bedroom $325/m onth, pool, A partm ent Renters 649-0077. G ALLEO N A P T. 1920 E. H ayden Lane (Near McClintock/University) 2 bedroom $390 Call Norma at: 9 6 8 -4 9 6 7 Frank Bennett Realty, 969-18.18- M O V E -IN S P E C I A L Free trip to Las Vegas for two. 1 and 2 bedrooms, newly remodeled, new c a rp e t pool, covered parking, laundry, small complex, free utilities. ASRAlflA APARTMENTS 11 16 E. Lemon. Tempe 8 7 8 -8 7 2 5 STU D IO & 1 bed ro o m o n ly , ASU area for rent. $265 & up. 967- 4908 or 966-8838. UTILITIES INCLUDED, studio $330/mp, l bd $420/mo, pool sau­ na, Apartment Renters 831-5900. HOMES FOR RENT 1BD, 1BA mbl hm. All new crpt, dips, pnt, 15 blks/ASU, 1912 E Apache. $450/roo. 968-7630. BEAUTIFUL 1 bedroom, 1 bath, lan d scap ed yard , 5 0 4 W est Brown, $550. Tim 894-0288. LARGE 5BD house pool jacuzzi, w/d, dish/w, maid service, Hardy/13th St, $1200/mo. 437-1048. PAPAGO 1 10k in tile/fiirniture. Share 3br, m ust see. Poolside, plush, $315.968-8345. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT $505 PE R m o. 2 bed, 2 bath condo w/pool & jacuzzi. 5th S t & Hardy. Meave msg. 929-0214 PAPAGO PARK: 2 m asterm ites plus loft $930. Bob Bullock, Re­ alty Executives, 998-2992. 2BD, 2BA, $500/mo, patio, pool, jacuzzi, cvd pkg, w/d hkup, laun­ dry nn, 1/2mi/ASU. 921-3995, RENTAL SHARING 2B ED R O O M , 2 b ath , w asher/dryer hookup, close to cam­ pus. Call for specials, 921-3586. ALAMEDA & Dorsey. Room­ mate to share house w/3 others. $300 + phone. Steve 921-7707. 3 MILES to ASU, 2 story, 2bd, 2ba. fireplace, community pool & jacuzzi, phone & utility hook­ up included, $600/mo. 838-6621. FEMALE TO share 2br, 2ba, no cats, 1/2 reht/utilities, Cameron Creek, $295/montfa. 966-0254. AVAIL. AUG. 1: $680, 1 yr. lse. Spac 2bd/2ba w/priv bale, w/d, well-planned ktehn, all appl, fjp, walk-in closet. Cmplx offers in­ side a ir cond bsktbll ert, wgt room, saunas, tennis erts, pools, spa, great South Scottsdale Ictn. Unbelievable-Hurry!!! Pam Pea­ cock, West USA Rlty, 952-8550. B LO CK S AW AY from A SU, 2bd, 2ba, furnished, util hook-up, $600/mo. 838-6621. leave mess. HAYDEN SQUARE, 1 bedroom, $650/month. Re/Max Excalibar Gary Greenacre 483-3333. HAYDEN SQUARE, 2bd, 2 bath, $900/month. Re/Max Excalibar, Gary Greenacre 483-3333. HERMOSA PL., 2bd, 2ba, $550; 3hd, 2ba, $690. Pool, w/d, near ASU, Chase. 2bd, lba, N.Tempe, $450.966-0987. PAPAGO PARK 2 hr, 2.ba, w/d* part. film. 224-2816,963-1896. Large 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo, $425. A pache/ D obson area. Ask about furnished, no pets. Call Norma ac 968-4967 Frank Bennett Realty, 969-1818 APARTMENTS APARTMENTS FREE Apartm ent Locating Service Roommate m atching service also available. the M illstone APARTMENTS C lo sest to Com post 2 bedroom /2 bath, pool, jacuzzi and much, m uch more! MCCLINTOCK CONDO, w/d, ftp, micro, pools/spa, indr rktbl, wt/rm, mst/ste, $325.968-7132. NEED 2 people to share 2 bed­ room, 2 bath condo, $225/month each, utilities included. Kristine 267-3750 (work phone). NEED ONE female roommate to share 3bdrm 2ba condo near ASU, nonsmoking, no pets, has wash/dryer, $230/mo + 1/3 util. Call Amber or Tim, 968-2412, NEED ONE female to share 3bd, 2-1/2 ba townhome. $200 + 1/3 utilities, w/d, fireplace. Close to ASU. Jane, 829-7408. ROOM M ATE W ANTED for 2 bedroom, 2 bath furnished apart­ ment at Cameron Creek begin­ ning ASAP. $325 per month rent. Please call Steve in Tuçson. 1(602)323-2085. ROOM S FOR RENT CLEAN QUIET resp gm to share 2br apt in East Phx. Great view! $285 util pd. 955-0794. APARTMENTS $200 OFF W alk to A S U . Q u ie t , s p a cio u s, 1 b edro om , fu rn ish e d , A/C, p o o ls id e ap artm ents. $280/month George Ann Apts. 894-2620 Apache Terrace 1 bedroom, 1 bath, $375 2 bedroom, 2 bath arid 3 bedroom, 2 bath also available If out-of-state call 1-800-536-6283 437-1048 T a kin g reservations fo r A ugust M ove-In 1 1 2 3 E . A p a ch e FREE ASU Housing Assistance» Apartments, condos, townhouses, houses, & roommate matching 968-6383 La CresenFa Students, A dults 8c Families 2 b edroom /1 bath o r 1 bedroom /1 bath U nfurnished N ow Available A ll Utilities Included 800-955-7545 <* 992-1300 St a t e P r e ss W ednesday, July 7, 1993 9 6 7 -8 2 0 3 Tempe 1025 East Orange RANCHO LA S PA LM A S is now taking Summer Deposits* •For Fall Move-In O ne B edroom s from $390 TWo Bedroom s/Two B a th s from $490 « C lo se to A S U • G as Barbecues * Pool/Spas « Built-in M icrowaves * Ceiling F a n s « Clubhouse S R P Utility H ook-up« Laundry Room • Exercise Room « Light, Assigned, Covered Parking SUMMER DISCOUNTS! R eserve Now for Fall 1/2 Block from Cam pus B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d h u ge 1 b e d ro o m . 1 bath: 2 b e d ­ roo m . 2 bath a p a rtm e n ts. A ll u tilitie s paid. C a b le TV. h eated p o o l, an d s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s . F rie n d ly , c o u r t e o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by today!!! Terrace Road Apartments 950 S. Terrace 966-8540 $200 OFF! FREE UTILITIES! W a lk to ASU. S p a cio u s, 2 b edro om a p a rtm e n ts. A/C, fu r­ n ish e d or unfurnished av a ila b le . From $439/ m onth. Beautiful p o o l area, laundry fa cilitie s availab le. 1249 E a st Spence • Tem pe, A Z 85281 (Just O n e MMe from A S U ) H O U R S : M -F 9-6; S A T 10-5 FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS 1224 E. Lemon 894-2620 TRAVEL HOM ES FOR RENT BOOKS CLOSE TO ASU, own bdrm in 2br apt. M /f. non-smkr. A vail Aug 1, $285+1/2 utls. 350-9159. Sell your books for cash (no text­ books, please) or get trade credit towards die purchase o f anything in the store. Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, music, etc. C all ahead for buying h o a rs. B row sers w elcom e. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue. 966-0203. FEM A LE, N O N sm oker ow n room, pool, w/d, all am enities $275 + 1/3 ua.C hrista 831-1680. MATURE FEMALE non-smkr, lrg mstr bdrm. Alma/Eftiot, w/d, $290/utilincl. 814-7806. RECYCLE FOR $$ HOMES FOR SALE WE BUY BOOKS $ CASH $ SH A R P TO W N H O U SE- near ASU. Payments like rent. Tom Wood, 839-2600, Realty Execs. TOWNHOMES/^ C O N D O S FOR SALE TRADE BUY, SELL U TRAM 1 BR condo. W/D, fireplace, car­ port, security gate. Scottsdale Rd./Thomas area. $34,000. Jane, 202-5168. Book Central 1100 S/F, 2bd, 2ba, 2 car pkg, liv/rm, kitchen, din/rm, balcony, pourch, non-qual FH A loan, $490/mo, 300 yrds from ASU, $58,500. l-(206) 568-7237. HAYDEN SQUARE- 1 bdrm - 1 bath- owner will carry w/$10,00 dow n. W atch the sunset from ■your ow n balcony. A sking $67,900 Re/Max Excalibur- ask for G a y Greenacre 483-3333. HAYDEN SQUARE - £ o r 3 bdrm unit has fresh paint and is c lose to the H ayden Square (pool). Relax between classes or work in this fantastic unit, ideal location. Re/Max Excalibur, ask for Gary Greenacre 483-3333. HAYDEN SQUARE - 1 b d rm -1 bath- great unit for student! Great terms! FHA assumable qualify­ ing- $6500 down, approx 63,400 balance 9.5%, $640/mo, asking 69,900 Re/Mac Excalibur ask for Gary Greenacre 483-3333 HAYDEN SQUARE -ow ner will take a loss at this price! This 3 bdrm - 2 bath unit is priced to sell today! G reat location an condi­ tion! Approx 1273 sq/ft of pure downtown Tempe loving! Ask­ ing only $1100,00 Re/Max Ex­ calibur ask for Gary Greenacre 483-3333. HAYDEN SQUARE, 2 bd, sharp fp, all appl $94,500. Carol Royse Realty Executives 831-0322: HAYDEN SQUARE- 2bdrm- 2 baths- no qualifying assumable FHA loan only $10,800 down! This is th b e st buy in H ayden Square in years! Current loan has approx, bal o f $79,100 at 10.5% (reduce that in 6 inos.- call Gary fo r d e ta ils) $847/m o. O w ner wants it sold today! Hurryr you could be living in this one in 2 weeks! Asking $89,900- Re/Max Excalibur ask for Gary Greenacre 483-3333 PAPAGO PARK 3bd th $77,000. O w n/agt. P rice $8k o r m ore under competition! 840-7132. Buy of the Week Now that you've made it, m ake it at Papago. 2 bedroom, loft, $85,000. Bob Bullock • Realty Exec. NEW -and-USED 7340 E. McDowell Rd. lust east of Scottsdale Rd Scottsdale • 947-5106 I No Textbooks M o n d a y -S a tu rd a y 1 0 a m -1 0 p m FURNITURE FU TO N S! 1 sin g le , 1 double w/matching black covers. Use as couch/bed. $75/obo. 929-0214. SOFÁ SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. 352-7249. C O M P U T C g^ XT-COMPUTER & Dot-Matrix printer, 640k ram, 2 floppies, 30 m eg hd. C o m p lete system W/W ordFerfect installed $300. Call 926-7139. JEWELRY ( M I L L A V E N U E JE W E L E R S I « 4 S. Mill, S u ite 101 Tem pe, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICE JEWELERS*: | Custom Design & Remounts Jewelry4c Watqh Repair Gold/Diamonds/Silver Pulsar Watches/Pearls AUTOMOBILES CARS AT W HLSE! Tired o f hassle in used car buy* ing? We will find, purchase & de­ liv e r any c a r o f y o u r choice. $l,000s below dealer prices. Call now for infq: 966-8961, Brian, The Desort Group. M OTORCYCLES 998-2992 19815 HONDA E lite 80. R uns great! Cheap insurance and gas; recent tune-up and new battery. Steal a t $350. 921-9937 leave message. HERMOSA PLACE Stata Preti Classifieds 965-6735 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chan­ d ler needs vet receptionist/assistant. Please call 963-2340. A TTEN TIO N- W AREHOUSE m an u factu res rep w a n ted for small Tempe business, $7/hr + benefits, hrs flex, Jim 820-8408. DELIVERY DRIVERS needed. Night & weekend shifts. Apply in person at Blimpie's-Broadway & Rural. EA RN $10-$40/H R . p /t on wk/ends. Top mobile DJ. co. look­ ing for responsible people to DJ ASU & private parties. Exp. pre­ ferred, 966-3900, M-F, 3-6pm. ELEMENTARY EDUCATION needed in September. Student in A SU ’s m a sters program w e l­ com e. M ature person w ho has outstanding know ledge o f elementry education, loves children, can work 20 hrs/wk from 1:306:30pm, 4 nights/wk. Some sum­ mer work possible, 953-3070. FIDDLESTICKS FAMILY Fun Park needs p/t(f/t summer) help. Have fun, make money. Apply in person, 1155 W Elliot, Tempe. G R E A T O PPO R T U N IT Y fo r everyone. Autoin is looking for picker and shippers. P /t and f/t, clean cut, flexible hours. Earn up to $7.00 per hr. Pis apply at 5226 S. 3 i s t PL, see Vickie. LIFEGUARD NEEDED at gym­ nastics cam p in the cool pines. July 26th through August 14th, W SI required gym nastics ex­ perience a plus but not necessary. Call 941-34% for details. M O D E L S/A C T O R S All ages/types needed for German Catalog! Pays $25.00. FashionLA (602)266-6224. POSTER PLACER- rspnsbl per­ son to place posters in stores/resta u ra n ts. P a rt/tim e flex b l. $7/hr+ bonus+ expenses. M ust have car. C all Ted 1-800-7838424 . START AT $8.20 Natipnal retail firm has p/t and fit openings'. V ery flexible hours. No exp. req. W e train. Scholar­ ships. Secure foil position now. 968-1840 v ' SUMMER JOBS Hiring immediately, 4-6 students for p/t work. Earn $10- i5/hour working 15-30 hrs/week. Flexi­ ble hours, will train. Call Mike for interview. 921-8282. THERAPEUTIC WORK, xclnt pay, flexible: hours, w ill train. Call 844-9000 or page 219-9000. W A L K FR O M A S U ! Near Downtown & Chase 2 Bedroom, $64,950 3 Bedroom, $77,500 C han Sahota The Prudential Arizona Realty 893-8800 MISCELLANEOUS AKAI SINGLE tape deck, like new $35, (may see on campus). Judith 965-3502. LOOSE UP to 301bs of fat in 30 days for $30. 100% natural, safe, guam ateed. W ard's, (515) 2968202. SELL IT with State Press Classifieds, only $3 for 3 lines! _____ BICYCLES BIKES...WHY PAY MORE? USED BIKES FROM $55 NewBikes... Mongoose Mlyata Nishiki Fuji STUDENTPRICES •ALL REPAIRS WE BUY BACK BIKES BUY SELL TRADE BICYCLE STORE 1042 S. T errace Rd: T e m p e , A Z 85281 966-6070 QB University & Mill Tem pe C en ter 966-7090 No Selling Telephone Survey Research' F le x ib le h o u r s a v a i la b le T u e s .-F ri., 2 p m -9:30pm & Sat., 9am-Spm . Train a t $5. W eekly pay. Frequent raise reviews. Higginbotham A asociatee 829-3282 HELP WANTEDSALES BUSINESS &/OR communica­ tions majors needed! Ideal oppt for right indv to join successful promotional advt co. People orentiented position that requires outgoing, energetic team player. Prev sales esp a+, flex schudlesexc pay! 921-7755,1-4pm. State Press Classifieds Merit ft fisd yee trerkl St a t e P ress Page 23 Wednesday, July 7,1993 HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BUSINESS W ESTER N R ESER V E C lu b , Courtside Cafe, now hiring for am & pm positions. Free mem­ b e rsh ip fo r g o o d em ployee. Apply in person only: 2140 East Broadway, Tempe, EOE. HEALTH & FITNESS MUSIC O PPO R T U N m ^ FLUTE, GEM EINH A RD T for sale. $100.00 o r bo. Like new condition. Call 921-4185. NEED MONEY for books, tui­ tion or bills? It's not a loan, it's not a job, just cash. Call 966-6745 Thorbecke's Gym 966-6621 RESTAURANTS/ BARS SIS per month i plus $50 one­ time member­ ship fee. HELP WANTED- C H JU y ^ A jŒ ^ ^ 10c WINGS D R A FT S 70c «^ Ci LIVE-IN: 3 small children, light h o u sew o rk , m u st have ow n trnspt, trav el som e weekends. Will be around horses, $75/wk, Scottsdale area 493-2567. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING Lessons vailable. ma a s » B A N D E n S N A T C H 5 th Si BUY«SB »TRADE REP 1RS & F o r e s i BREWPUB HELP WANTED­ GENERAL APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA typing, w/p, editing, transcription, W ordPerfect, las­ er. For fast service, 966-2186. HELP WANTEDGENERAL SERVICES A gregarious independent thinker who waAts to succeed in the busi­ ness world should apply. This challenging position offers a liberal salary and benefit package- PROOFREADING PDM Business Products 7501 E. Hehii, Bldg. D Scottsdale, AZ 85260 955*0180 969 -3 2 4 2 , D e b ra ; College English Instructor Sim e 1980 FIND IT in the Classifieds! LÜÖ HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDSALES 1015 S. Rural Rd. STATE P 1 Pg. Resumes $40 Includes 10 copies on bonded paper. We do die writing for you! The Write Resume 2164 ‘E . ‘Broadway, Suite 240 FRENCH TUTOR: Help if you’re falling behind or need extra help at any level. Albeit, 731-9820. T h e y N e e d Y o u r H e tp D on a te Y o u r S p erm F o r fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n ca ll the Arizona Institute of Reproductive M edicine at 468-3840 Financial Com pensation A d d re ss C ity , S ta te Z ip P le a se print one letter per box, leave a blank box betw een words. P le ase be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly a s you w ish it to appear in the State P ress, including punctuation. P le ase che ck your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State P ress shaft not exceed the cost of toe ad and credit may be given for the test insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. N o refunds wiM be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit win b e held on account for future advertising. It A P rivate Party C om m ercial 1-4 d a y s, $1.00 p e r lin e, p e r day 1-4 d a y s, $1.25 p e r lin e, p e r d a y J 5-9 d a y s, 92« p e r lin e, per da y 5-9 d a y s, $1 .1 7 p e r lin e, p e r d a y g 10+ d a ys, 84« p e r lin e, per da y 10+ d a y s, $1.09 p e r lin e , p e r d a y S 3 lin e m inim um . A d d a b o ld headlin e for o n ly $1.50! j D riv e r's h cense # I I M Bank Card Number | Name on Card ¡¡ 1*1 ........ ipil 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 066 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Lost/Found 068 052 049 101 074 072 073 070 071 030 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales HeaKh & Fitness Help Wanied-Child Care Help Wanted-Clencal Help Wanted-Food Service Help Wanted-Genera! Help Wanted-Sates Homes tor Rant Almost Everyone at ASU Reads State Press Classifieds. C a ll 965-6735 to place your ad using V isa, M asterCard or Am erican Express d 1 âiizcitt » m i .m u n ir* 040 102 107 103 056 076 0t5 120 050 045 Homos for Sale Housedoaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes 063 082 090 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate , Rental Sharing Reataurants/Bars Rooms for Rent 100 061 058 031 041 060 067 106 105 115 . " State P ress Classified Ad Order Form ress □ 230-2153-Flexible Fees Tour Individual Horoscope B u s in e s s P h o n e □ SB addictions & relationship issues TUTORS H om e Ph one C heck#. A S S O C IA T E S !Tat 'Bradley‘B ates, 9d!Ed., CSVDAC ■ For a p p o in tm e n t call CBS 966-9211 M N am e Q (BATES COW & 'ELI9{g Broadway/Mill T h o u s a n d s b f w o m en cannot co n ce ive and b ear ch ild ren d u e to their h u s­ b a n d 's la c k o f n o rm a l sperm . PDM B urine» Products 7301 E. Helm, Bldg. D Scoctscble, AZ 85260 955-018Ó 894-2250 SERVICES BEA Please come to the address below between the hours of 8am and 5pm to fill o u t o u r Application. O u r office is 5 blocks n o rth o f Thunderbird Road off 73rd Street. UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER SERVICES W ORD PRO CESSIN G , secre­ tarial services, fax. 23yrs exper. Student discounts. S/W corner, MiUer/Chaparral. 994-8145. SPERM DONOR The company is marketing a medical system in the Southwest in die hospital market. Some travel is expected. The company has a liberal training salary and benefit package- If you are .self-motivated and would like to leam how to sell large systems into hospitals our com­ pany is a great opportunity. N ow O f f e r in g $ 1 0 N ew D o n o r BONUS! STATE PRESS back issues maybe picked up at the Information Desk in the basement of Matthews Center between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. MondayFriday. If the issue you need is no longer available, we have bound issues from which you can obtain copies for 10tf each. TUTO RS N EED ED WANTED Corporation has challenging sales trainee position available in the Scottsdale area. Trainee will be working with Sales Professionals as assistant until a high enough level o f expertise is acquired to assume a sales territory of your own. If you’re low of funds, the University Plasma Center may ju st be your answer. You can earn $30 a week by donating critically needed plasm a. It's easy, safe and, best of all, you can now watch TV/movies while you donate! For private S cottsdale school. Outstanding Chemistry, Physics, Algebra, Geometry, Trig, Calcu­ lus instructors. Must have had ex­ perience tutoring. Graduate stud­ ents preferred, $6-$10/hr. 10-20 hrs/week. Call 953-3070. MISC SUMMER SCHOOL blues..if you need tutoring w ell be open dur­ ing summer session. Classes are SmaUer-rates are lower. We offer tutorial for the following classes: MAT 106, MAT 117, MAT 119, MAT 210, PSY 230, QBA 221, CHM 115. Call Simon at Matrix Education Cento*- 968-4668. SALES TRAINEE S te p R ig h t U p ! I WANT It Now! Desktop Pub­ lishing: Term Papers, Resume Service, Charts, Graphs, Manu­ scripts, T hesis. Q uick service: Call 966-1984. Near ASU. 500 LEVEL statistics tutor need­ ed, must speak English clearly. Call 992-6418. •Papers •Theses •Dissertations •Book Manuscripts Fast, meticulous, reasonable. SU M M ER SPEC IA L: A H air Today Gone Tomorrow Electro­ lysis, blend m ethod/permanent h air rem oval, Southern/R ural, private suite, std/diset 921-1146. Please come to the address below between the hours of 8am, and 5pm ’ to fill out an application. O ur office is 5 Mocks north o f Thunderbird Road off73rd Street. (next to S n o Oasis) CREATIVE TYPNG, term pprs, rsmes, essays, lsr pmtr, fax, rsnbl rates, fast tmmd. Pat, 897-1741. PLACE TRAINER • MEDICAL SYSTEMS Corporation has trainee position for individual with desire to travel and train medical personnel. The individual should be able to travel extensively with a corporate expense account in die Southwest. TUTORS RESUMES WITH RESULTS! 1 DAY turn- most papers. Prof, w/p/ papers/ resumes. Laser. Resonable. Caroline 892-7022. CLASSIFIE»* WORK FOR Y0«! Call HS-47IS b a h n aaaa aa MaaSay ta plaaa a Haar a l la TaatSay'i payar. TYPING/WORD P g O C | | S IN G _ Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomea/Condoe for Rent Townhomes/Condoe for Sale Transportation Travel Tutore Typin^Word Processing Wanted •• Trances Drake___ For Wednesday , July 7,1993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Some friends are somber today and others are flighty. It is not the best tim e fo r social visits. Focus your attention on business and family matters. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to M ay 20) You will meet with extra respon­ s ib ilitie s in b u s in e s s to d ay . Socializing could lead to excess expenditure. A friend keeps you waiting for an answer. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Concentration is good today, but th e m ental w o rk lo a d m ay be heavy. A touchy higher-up needs tactful handling; D ouble check costs when malting travel plans. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Stay on top o f bills and credit obligations. Advice you receive now m ay b e o f f th e m a rk . A partner seems indecisive today. A travel plan requires further thought LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) P a rtn e rs w ill b e sh a rin g a responsibility today. Be discrim­ inating about which social invi­ tations you accept now o r you end up at a boring get-together. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) S elf-discipline enables you to cope w ith pesky details which arise today on the job. A person m et in b u sin e ss is in sin c ere. Evening social plans are up in the air. L IB R A (S ep t 23 to Oct. 22) Extra duties may arise in con­ nection with child rearing today. It is not the best tune for home entertaining. A coworker seems moody and sensitive now. SCORPIO (O c t 23 to Nov. 21) A home repair may be necessary today. You may be uncertain on how to best m ake use o f your le isu re h o u rs. G u a rd a g a in st o v e rsp en d in g w h ile p le a su re ' seeking tonight SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec, 21) A fam ily m em ber is sensitive now and may need extra consid­ eration. Shopping by mail order ‘ c atalo g is h o t fa v o re d today. A pply yourself to m ental pur­ suits, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) I t is one o f th o se d ays w hen someone could take things the ’ wrong way. An innocent remark may be misinterpreted. Keep on top o f financial record keeping. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Small details need watching on thè job today. Y ou are too seri­ ous as the day begins, but later efforts to unwind coukl find you overspending on pleasure. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) D on't let ah introspective mood lead to needless worrying today. Think twice about what really is an unnecessary home expendi­ ture. A friend keeps you waiting. YOU BORN TODAY are both adventurous and introspective. You have strong philosophic or spiritual leanings and work better on your own than in partner­ sh ip . O fte n , y ou e x p erim e n t B efore s e ttlin g o n a c a re e r. . Though you get along well with others, there are times when you need to b e alone. Behind your need for travel and a variety o f 'l if e e x p e rie n c e s is a sin ce re ■ d e sire to find the m eaning o f life. B irthdate of: Ringo Starr, - rock star; Chagall, painter; and Pierre Cardin, designer. ©1993 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. I lllv M*A*T W •B •8 •T 7 State P ress 1003 S T A fl PRËSSr You d o n 't need a decal to use it. RESTAURANT HOME COOKING 24 HOURS A DAY K■ ■ »Sa n d w ic h o r S alad B | 11 of the D ay » D esser t * 3 " 11a.m.-4 p.m. „ , FREE M EA L P a rty of lo u r o r m ore lo r lu n ch o r d in n e r special, one eats free! Po ta t o , $C *99 V e getab le *-* 4 D.m.-lO D.m. I N C O M E S T U D Y W IT H U S FREE COFFEE O R ICED TEA j W ITH 85« HOMEMADE MUFFIN PURCHASE AFTER 10PM PRESENT COUPON • NOT VAIID W/ANYOTHER 0FH31* EXP. 8-6-93 1825 E. UNIVERSITY » SE CORNER UNIVERSITY & McCLINTOCK • 966-2761 X-LARGE 16" PIZZA "j (Lim it 1 Topping) $££99 ONLY W FREE DELIVERY! 945-8850 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. W/eoupon only E x p . 7/12/93 ONE 10" GOURMET PIZZA | -PESTO, ARTICHOKE HEART -WHITE WITH ONE LARGE PEPSI 945-8850 ^ 4 2 0 N. Scottsdale Rd. $ C ^ 9 nly at Perkins* Family Restaurants can you enjoy all of your breakfast, lunch and dinner favorites anytime of the day. Like our fluffy buttermilk pancakes, scrumptious edible bread bowl salads, premium three-egg omelettes, creamy chicken'pot pies arid more. All available when you're hungry. Morning. Noon. O r night. ■ 9 - FREE DELIVERY! W /coupon on ly E x p . 7/12/93 $2.49 $2.99 MAGNIFICENT 7 ALL YOU CAN EAT PANCAKES 3 Buttermilk Pancakes, 2 Eggs Any Style, 2 Strips of Bacon or Sausage Links Offer expires July 27,1993 One coupon per penon per vitii at participating Perkin»' Family Renaurano. Nor valid with any other dneount or offer. Sale» tax. if applicable, mutt be paid by cusromer. Please preaent coupon when ordering. 1/20 cent caah redemption value. ©1993 Pedum Restaurants Operating Company, UP. . ' ____ .Offer expires Jufy 27,1993 One coupon per person per visit at participating Perkins Family Restaurants. Not validwith any other discount or offer. Sales tan. if applicable, mutt be paid by cummer. Please present coupon when orderiag.1/20 cent cash redemption value. 01993 Perkins Restaurants Opetating Company,UP. . .. the ____ B Sure the food s great, but I'm there for the Hoo Doo Kings and the grain alcohol." L U E I G V A H Î Â H jj TONIGHT! MISS ZIMA POSTER CONTEST 7SC Z im a s & L o n g n e c k s rtnoPMj COLLEGE f.D. NIGHT *NO COVER BEFORE 10 RM * 7 5 e COCKTAILS (7tun pm, *1-50 LO N G N ECKS & ZIMAS H TONIGHT WEDNESDAY JULY 7 O O D O O K I N G S 9pm LIVE MUSIC TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY DINNER EVE. LUNCH MONDAY THRU FRIDAY SATURDAY JULY 10 Tempe Unplugged 3 p m -8 p m Tempe's Best Bands in an all acoustic show TONY'S NEW YORKER RESTAURANT & NIGHTCLUB Including members from: . One, The Medicine Wheel, DeadlT Arnaz, The Piersons, Strangelove & mäny more New Management • New Menu • New Music Try the ^Scampil 921-1300 107. E. Broadway, Tempe (1 block east of Mill) 75« DRINKS A LL NITE! ■ N O COVER ■