END OF INNOCENCE A dobe M ountain School attem pts to treat, counsel V alleys troubled youth B y S heri Foote State P ress avid is 14, with a slender body and a boyish grin. He appears to be an average teen-age boy. But look closer. David worships the devil and thrives cm self-abuse. His arms are littered with selfinflicted scars. Wrapped in a blanket and seated at a fold-away table at Adobe Mountain School, David matter of factly said that he cuts himself “because there’s nothing better to do, Then I use my blood for art­ work. Or sometimes I’ll drink it because there’s nothing better to : do.” ;■ David’s list of criminal charges runs long and includes aggra­ vated assault and substance abuse. “I’ve been using drugs since I was about 11, maybe 9,” he said. “Speed, black beauties, marijuana, stuff like that.” Not the stuff sweet, innocent boys are made of. D avid is one o f 150 names on the client list o f Frances Gonzales, who spends her days counseling and treating troubled youths with a history of criminal behavior. She is a psychology associate at Adobe Mountain School in north Phoenix next to Interstate 17, a treatment and corrections center under the jurisdiction of the Arizona Department of Youth Treatment and Rehabilitation (DYTR). Gonzales’ caseload is nearly half of the Adobe Mountain population of about 350 adju­ dicated boys under the age of 18. Crimes range from shoplifting to murder. The DYTR is in the middle of a five-year plan to improve the quality of treatment and education in its schools. Gonzales is one of three psychology associates at Adobe Mountain who struggles each day to not only meet the needs of the department, but also meet the needs of youths, like David. “David is shocking to a lot of people,” said Gonzales, seated at a prefabricated desk in her office, surrounded by four cement walls. “But he doesn’t phase me a bit.” David doesn’t even seem to phase himself. Darryl WabtVStats Praas T h e A d o b e M ountain S ch o o l, lo ceted in north P h o en ix next to Interstate 17, Is a treatm ent an d c o rre ctio n s cen ter to r tro u b led you th w ith h isto rie s o f crim in a l beh avior. A d o b e M ountain h a s a p o p u latio n o f a bout 350 b o y s und er the ag o o f 18 w ho h a ve com m itted crim e s rang in g from sh o p liftin g to m u rd e r.- Gonzales obtained her masters degree in social work in 1990 from Western New Mexico University. She specialized in gang-intervention and prevention, as well as the signs and symbols associated with satanic worshipping. Before coming to Adobe Mountain in September she worked in the juvenile court system as a counselor. Gonzales said it was probably just as well that no one told her what to expect before she took the job because she did not go in with any preconceived ideas. Gonzales said she appreciates what she does for the youths she treats because the judicial system traditionally adjudicated them based solely on their criminal behavior, without consideration of underlying causes or history of mental conditions. “I like to help the kids who have been overlooked all these years, the hard-core trouble-makers,” she said. “They’ve just been accused and never given a chance. They’re people with just a few problems.” Gonzales said that, while she has some youths with everyday adolescent problems, some have severe mental disorders. She said she feels a lot of their criminal behavior stems from these disorders, organic and chemical imbalances, that can be treated. “As long as their criminal behavior hasn’t become a learned, conditioned response to life, they can be turned around,” said an easy-going 28-year-old Gonzales, Some days are harder than others to get up for, like when the youths act up, she said. “It’s hard to get motivated to start working with those kids again,” Gonzales said. * She added that, at those times, it is difficult to remain focused as a therapist and not feel at fault. “As staff you feel responsible, wondering what you did wrong, whether you didn’t clue in to certain things,” Gonzales said. “A lot of times it’s that the child is still making choices to fit into his peer group.” L ife in th e “ c o tta g e s ” Danÿl WobtyStata P u n s T h e A d o b e M ou n ta in S c h o o l is u n d e r th e ju ris d ic tio n o f th e A riz o n a D epartm ent o f Y ou th T rea tm en t a n d fto h a b iin e tio n . P s y c h o lo g y a s s o c ia te s a n d y o u th c a r s o ffie s r s w o rk w ith y o u th s w ho h a ve e ve ry d a y a d o le sc e n t p ro b le m s a n d o th e rs w ho have severe m ental d iso rd e rs. STA TE PRESS Classifieds..................„....25 Comics............ .............. 32 Crossword___ „______ ...,8 Entertainment ....... _.„...2l Opinion................................4 Sports...«____________ .23 Thirteen individually named “cottages” are what the youths have to call home. Each o f these living units serves a specific function, like reorientation and parole violation. Gonzales makes her way between four cottages each day, but she admits to concentrating her efforts on the kids of Gulf, a strict security cottage, and Baker, a reorientation cottage for behavior problems. She said the Baker and Gulf cottages are for the youths who can’t program into the main cottages and need structured, one-on-one assistance and treatment. Loud moans o f frustration were coming from behind a locked steel door in Gulf. A small face was pressed up against an even smaller window in that same locked steel door. Both the moans and face belonged to Joe, a soon to be 15year-old boy whose most serious charge is aggravated assault The alleged victim: his mother. “I have my good days and my bad days,” said a bright and ► Members of the ASU chapter of United We Stand America claim Ross Perot’s speech in Phoenix Sunday could bolster student mem­ bership. Page 3. ► Sun Devil Bridge Program assists minority students in making the transition from high school and junior college to a university setting in (be College of Engineering and Applied Sciences Page 10. articulate Joe. “I just like to make them (staff members) mad.” 'r Sam Pavlinch, youth care officer (YCO) and G ulf cottage supervisor, said Joe's behavior is typical and is a way of venting anger and frustration. The youths in G ulf spend their time locked behind closed doors. Their days mesh intonights. The rooms are nothing if not basic. Nine feet by nine feet at b est There is a small ledge that houses a thin mattress, a small toilet and stainless steel sink. Large, gaping spots o f peeled paint on the walls are another common feature in the Gulf rooms. Arthur King, a guard in Gulf and six-year employee at Adobe, said peeled paint makes for an ideal weapon. ’ “When this stuff is pressed together and it dries, it hardens like a rock,” he said. Some youths will use it as a weapon. Others will turn it into a self-abusing mechanism. David is somewhat more innovative than that, however. He breaks tile in the shower, or light bulbs in his room to cut himself up. His latest series o f wounds were inflicted with the use of shower tile that he harbored in his mouth until the timing was right “I couldn’t let perfectly good tile go to waste,” he said as he walked bate-foot across the table in the middle of Gulf. An employee who had been sweeping out D avid’s room placed a pile of light bulb fragments on the table in front of the boy. “Saving these for a rainy day?” the employee said. “These kids are very unpredictable,” Pavlinch said. “You can never be sure what they’re going to do.” Gonzales said she likes to begin her day in Gulf and Baker cot­ tages because they were left without counseling and treatment for so long. “When I first got hired, J saw a real need to work in there, so I’ve been really involved with the reorientation and security cot­ tages,” she said. “For the kids who usually end up in those cot­ tages over and over again, it’s usually for the same problems they haven’t resolved yet.” . Gonzales added that she likes to start there in the mornings so she can start the youths on their day, enabling her to reorganize the remainder o f her day to meet their needs. Gonzales said her main focus is to coordinate the duties and activities of the staff of the Cottage^ with the psychology depart­ ment so the staff can be self-sufficient in helping the youths with their treatment. ‘T h a t’s the goal o f the DYTR now,” she said. ‘T o provide treatment for these, kids and not to warehouse them.” G onzales said she tries to provide th e youths w ith the resources «and tools they need to go back into the mainstream as functioning, law-abiding citizens. “I teach the youths how to process problem-solving techniques and how to make positive decisions»” d ie said. “We teach the *T u r n Entertainment I Friends andfans of musician Victoria Williams, who has Multiple Sclerosis, raise money through Sweet Reliefcollaboration to help her and other artists who are stricken ill. I I K X y .'f l !■ * II j l M B Page 21 H j i to A d o b e M o u n t a in , Sports Former-ASU quarter­ back Paul Justin has led the Arizona Rattlers to a 6-4 record and a berth in the AFL Playoffs. Page 23 pag e 6. Page 2 Tuesday, July 20,1993 State P ress Faculty salaries remain at forefront o f discussion estimated that the hit in Arizona will be as much as $300 million.” But ASU President Lattie Coor said he is still hopeful some of the surplus can be used for salary increases. “As of now, we’re still asking the state to make salary increases and they probably won’t know for a while how much (of the surplus) will have to be repayed to federal retirees and how it will affect state employees,” Coor said. “I ’m pleased to know that the governor recently sup­ ported increasing state employees’.salaries.” Doug Cole, press secretary for Gov. Fife Symington, said the governor only acknowl­ edged that state em ployees helped increase Arizona revenues and should reap some o f the benefits, but did not mention specifi&pay hikes Faculty Senate President Bill Arnold said he is losing confidence that the univerities can gain access to the money. “My best guess is that it is probably not going to happen,” Arnold said. “There are so many demands for that $65 million.” Cole said the court decision is not directly related to university budgets because the surplus was never identified for use within the educa­ tional system. He added that neither the surplus nor court decision’s final figures are exact. Cole said the universities should look at thé surplus as a way to absorb unexpected state costs and thereby thwart mid-year budget cuts rather than seeing an opportunity to gain addi­ tional revenues. “We are not spending the surplus on any­ thing,” Cole said. “We have numerous obliga­ tions that we are legally bound to.” Provost says surplus o f state budget unlikely to benefit A SU employees B y T am m y M esa S ierra State P ress ■■ Despite rumors to the contrary, ASU Provost M ilton C lick said the likelihood of tapping into a $65 million state budget surplus ,to increase facul­ ty salaries appears to be fading.. “I do believe that sur- ' p . plus should be used to • reward all state employ­ ees,” Glick said. “But the opportunities present­ ed by it are somewhat dim." Glick said a U-S. Supreme Court decision handed down last month that requires certain states to reimburse federal employees who were overtaxed may eat up that surplus. About 20 states failed to tax state pension holders, but did tax federal pension holders. The court determined that federal retirees could not be placed at a disadvantage and must be reim­ bursed. “Although there are about 20 to 25 states that were caught in this position, it turns out that it impacts Arizona much more than any others because of the large number of people that end up retiring in Arizona,” Glick said. “It has been * y .y y . y yy : ’. v New University committee convenes to revamp methods for distributing faculty compensation B y T a m m y M esa Sierra State P ress In hopes o f revamp­ ing the current faculty salary structure, a newly formed ASU committee is slated to meet later this week to begin devising methods for distributing hopeful salary increases. ASU Provost Milton C oor G lick , w ho ch a irs the committee that will convene either Wednesday or Thursday, said the initial meeting will be aimed at rifling through ideas to improve com­ pensation for ASU faculty. “We want to understand the options available to us for compensation increments and to try and lay o ut the advantages and disadvantages of those options,” Glick said. Faculty Senate President Bill Arnold said it is imperative to change the compensation sys­ tem, because ASU faculty members have not received adequate salary increases over the last three years. “With the current system, we have no way of knowing what the future holds vis a vis compen­ sation,” Arnold said. “We got the $1,000 adjust­ ment this year and we have no idea of knowing when there will be another raise.” In 1992, the Arizona Legislature approved a $1,000 salary increase for all state employees including ASU faculty, but budget restraints prohibited its full distribution until this year. The University has not mandated across the board salary hikes for faculty in three years. The local committee spawned from the TriUniversity Committee that was established by the Arizona Board of Regents and the presidents of the three state universities earlier this year. “The Tri-University Committee formed at the request of faculty councils to help us posi­ tion a request for a major faculty salary increase from the state,” said ASU President Lattie Coor. “We all want to make sure this is at the top of our list of priorities.” Coor said the purpose of the local subsidiary is to determine how to allocate those increases should they be appropriated by the state. Arnold said one of the options the committee will address is the merit step system being used in the California university system. He said the system is comprised o f a set of criteria that each faculty member must meet to be eligible to apply for a salary increase. Each step corresponds with rank and time at thé insti­ tution. Arnold said adopting a model will help fac­ ulty members negotiate with the Legislature when the university budgets are determined each spring. “If we have some kind of plan in place, it w ill be m uch e a sie r to b arg ain w ith the Legislature,“ he said. J tf y -; y *%,y' •' v y '' J 'y,y-'- ■l y - y y y-' /. • 7.:-,/ y y-y y. rj ■. .• 7, - y .•\ y * . ' y /. 7; State P ress S ports - W e w rite fro m th e field, th e floor a n d th e locker ro o m . FREE the alternative copy sh o p W ith $30 Purchase While Supplies Last • With This Ad •Void w/Other Offers T-§hirt or Tank Top i 8 9 ° C o lo r I 8 9 $ p e r s id e . the alternative copy shop + A1AS03 30% OFF v / S N ot valid with any other offer. CvnirAo 7 /Q t /QQ ASU ; iseball: Cap Maroon/Styte 74 • w/Coupon • White Supplies Last • Void w/Other Offers iïliN iliLVn hn nil J « Formerly The U-Shop Cornerstone at (Jniversi ty/Rural 829-1743 9 1 5 S . M ill A v e . • T e m p e , A Z 8 5 28 1 <602) 8 2 9 -7 9 9 2 On the com er o f Mill and University in the Tem pe Center S tate P ress Tuesday July 20,1993 P ag e 3 Perot speech musters ASU support for organization Membership inquiries rise after address, official claims B y J ake Batseu . State P ress A spirited speech delivered by 1992 presidential candidate Ross Perot in Phoenix on Sunday may have resulted in a substan­ tial increase in membership of the ASU chapter of Perot’s United We Stand America (UWSA), said one of the chapter’s officials. “This event gave us a good ten names (of potential members) from just ASU only,” said Donnalee Saida, College Task Force Coordinator of UWSA’s Arizona chapter. Perot delivered a 90-minute speech Sunday at the Phoenix Civic Plaza in front of a crowd of about 3,000, composed mainly of white senior citizens. Among the topics addressed by the Texas billionaire were his disapproval of the proposed North American Free Trade Agreement and a barrage o f statistics regarding the federal deficit Sarda, a graduate student working toward a master’s degree in counseling, said a low m em bership turnover rate between semesters has hampered the development of the ASU chapter of UWSA. “(The ASU chapter) was a new thing last semester because of the election, and the problem was there was no baton-passing pro­ cedure for the next semester. We lost some people who graduat­ ed,’’ she said. “We’ll find a baton-passing vehicle so we can go from one semester to the next without losing anybody.” Before Sunday, Sarda said the ASU chapter of UWSA was composed by two members —- herself and chapter president Rick Graham, who was out o f town at the time of the speech. Perot's speech, however, may have bolstered membership, she said. “The man’s a leader, he’s holding 20-plus million people together and I believe the man’s genuine,” Sarda said following the speech. I In his speech, Perot stuck mainly to economic issues, though he did directly address students toward the end of his address. At one point, Perot asked members of the crowd who had served in World War II to stand. Pleading for students to correct what he labeled as gridlock in Washington, Perot labeled the standing individuals as heroes who had “saved the free world.” "Would you rather do what they did, or clean up this little • , Michelle Conway/State Press D onnalee S a rd a (right), an A S U graduate stud ent an d C o lle g e T a sk fo rce co o rd in ato r fo r the A rizo n a chapter o f U nited W e Stand A m erica (U W SA), ch a ts w ith fello w A S U stud ent C h ristin e C onw ay o n S u n d ay at a booth at the P h oen ix C iv ic P laza. Form er p resid e n tia l can d id a te an d U W S A lea d er R o ss P erot later g ave a sp e e ch to A rizo n a n s w hich S arda cla im s m ay have bolstered m em bership in A S U 's cha p te r o f U W SA . thing?” Perot asked of students. Perot also said that college graduates are having more trouble finding jobs now than any time period since World War II. As Arizona College Task Force coordinator, Sarda said she hopes to link UWSA groups among the state’s two other universi­ ties and the Valley’s community college system. “We’ll all be in touch, campus to campus, through United We Stand,” she said. “Our concern is keeping people together.” Perot’s speech was part of a six-stop weekend tour — he has been conducting a national membership drive for UVMSA since its formulation in January. Perot also spoke Sunday afternoon in.Tucson at UofA. Michelle Conway/State Press R o ss P erot w aves to su p p o rte rs before m aking a sp eech S u n d ay at the Ph oenix C iv ic Plaza. Campus C A S H FO R BOOKS 'Beer & Soda 'Photo Developing 'Health & Beauty Aids 'Compact Discs 712 S. College Ave. - Next to College Street Deli * Phone: 967-4049 Mon.-Thur. 7:30anri-10:30|>m; Fri. 7:30am-Midnight; Sat. 9am-Midnight; Sun. 1tam-10:30|>m Sell us your books and get a valuable gift certificate. W e’ll pay cash for your books plus give you a 10% gift certificate good on anything in the store with no expiration date. When you sell your used books for $30, you get $30 cash and a gift certificate for $3. If you get $40 for your used books, you'll get $40 cash and a gift certificate for $4. 966-6226 704 S. College Sill ffidenf* Jook? m(ê r University A U OAŸr EVERY PAY. NQ tlMBT. ^ & Ê N D S 7-2S-93. Whenit comes to pizza, we're definitelyupper-crust And w e’re multi-crust too. You can get any o f our great pizzas on your choice o f w hite, w hole w heat or sourdough crust. Quality meats, cheese, vegetables and crust. 'N othing b u t th e best goes on a S u n n y 's P iz z a ' 1301E. UNIVERSITY (next to'Beauvais) Hardy Rural 1 Curry University ;; -è..Sunny's Broadway Delivery Area i 1 ! Price PIZZA & PASTA 968-6666 Opinion ¡e4 ____________________________________ _______ Tuesday,July20,1993 _________________________________________ STATE PRESS Right, Ross, right H o e ’s the deal. H. Ross Perot ain’t going to go away. And this here political group h e’s got. U nited W e Stand America, ain’t going to budge none either. T hey’re here to stay. At least up until w e all tu n to the polls again like ch ick e n s h ea d in g to w ard th e coop. T h en , in fo u r years, m aybe that little bugger m ight be running the w hole shebang. H ood propped up and all, checkin’ the oil, rotatin’ them bald tires and adjustin’ the rackn-pinion. T bat’s a metaphor, son. You figger’ it out. But in the meantime, w e get to listen to him up on his soapbox tellin’ about how if only h e ’d been put in the W hite House. H e’s a m ighty sm art man, and we should’ve moved him in there. You see, he’s got lots o f experience nm nin’ som e­ thing with a big budget bloated up like a pig before Christm as dinner: his ow n wallet. H e know s how to get that sucker plucked and cleaned fo r the frying pan w ithout th’ fancy-schm ancy frills on the side that you aren’t supposed to eat anyway. D on’t get m e wrong, h e’s a genuine feller and all, h e’s jUst got lots o f m oney. Says he know s how the little man feels, know s w hat’s good for ’em. B ut h e a in ’t ju s t blo w in g a lo t o f w ind, is he? W hen he talks, he says som ethin’. A t his speech in Phoenix on Sunday, why we lis­ te n ed to L ee G reen w o o d sin g in ’ “ P roud t ’ be an A m erican.” M ade m e feel real good inside and, heck, at least I know I’m free. Hey, he wants to get rid o f all that gridlock in the govern m en t, an d I th in k h e ’d do it. H e a in ’t ju s t luckin’ the cat. He m eans business. So w e o u g h t to e le c t the little guy n ex t tim e, right? M ake this country w hat it used to be. Proud and ready to beat the tar out o f them Japanese and Koreans. M aybe we ought to put a blockade around th e m c o u n tr ie s , k e e p a ll th o s e s te r e o s a n d m ic ro w a v es and vid eo g am es fro m p o llu tin g o u r great country. M ake a law that w e could only buy A m erican products. T h a t’ll b oost the econom y fo r ■sure.' A nd w e could put up a big w all on the M exican border to k eep all the im m igrants out, T h ey ’re the ones w ho been taking all our jobs. M atter o f fact, w e s h o u ld j u s t s e a l u p th e w h o le c o u n try . F o rtre s s America. Take all that m oney we send to other coun­ tries and spend it here at home. Self-sufficiency is the key, I think. A nd raise the gas tax by SO cents a gallon rig h t away. Y e a h ... G et rid o f th a t d e fic it in fo u r o r five years. It w ould hurt a little, right? B ut the future w ould be secure fo r all ou r kids. E verything nice and clean lik e it u sed to be. A nd W ashington w ould have gotten a firm slap o n it’s behind for knocking us voters around, right? T h a t C lin to n h a s h a d a lo t o f tr o u b le w ith Congress, and h e’s had q u ite a m ess o f good changes he w anted to happen, cuttin’ the deficit and all. B ut that w ouldn’t happen to old Ross. T hey’d lis­ ten to him. Right? i 'HO, NOCMJSE RK AUWA -THE.CORPS LICKEDTUE MlGHJYMSSISSIPPt ASURED TWkTVÖURARl*V ENGINEERS WOWTHEIRBUSINESS... ' A S U parking yield s frustration A common ailment has afflict­ ed ASU’s 45,000 students, facul­ ty , s ta f f an d a d m in istra to rs . Business m ajors, college deans, m a in te n an c e w o rk e rs an d a llAmerican athletes alike are affect­ ed by this problem, and while it m ay n o t be th e m o st p re ssin g obstacle ASU currently faces, it is undoubtedly its m ost consistent and annoying. T his p erp etrato r o f agony is . on-campus parking. A seemingly sim p le c o n c e p t, p a rk in g has evolved into the University popu­ lation’s most-often-complained-about topic. A year’s worth of frustration has provoked me to compose a timeline entailing some o f my personal parking woes: • A u g u st 1992: After moving into McClintock Hall, located at the center of campus, some friends and I venture to Parking Services to purchase our decals for the academic year. Hopeful to get decals for Lot 11 — which is conveniently located right next to our dorm — we are informed that there is a waiting Ust an d lottery to get into die ever-desirable lot. The closest lot we can purchase a decal for, therefore, is Lot 16 — nearly a halfmile south o f the dorm. (Note: A few days later, a fellow dormmate walks into Parking Services and purchases a decal for Lot 11. No waiting list, no lottery, no questions asked.) • M id-Septem ber: A memorable milestone -— my first park­ ing ticket. The adrenaline began to flow upon sight o f the white envelope, tucked gently and carefully beneath the windshield wiper of my 1976 AMC Hornet. My offense? I had the gall to park in a nearly vacant Lot 11 (which is also located right next to the State Press) for about an hour while working on dead­ line. • E arly O ctober: I start to formulate strategies on how to beat the system. Personal investigation reveals that parking in Lot 8 — a visitors’ pay lot adjacent to McClintock Hall — is not enforced oh weekends or past 11 p.m. on weeknights. A daily charade ensues in which I skillfully maneuver my Hornet between lots while still managing to avoid tickets and the $3 visitor parking fee. • L ate O ctober: I begin to recognize how pathetic it is that I’m forced to devote this much time, thought and energy into where I’m parking my car. Such introspective thinking contin­ Editorial Board STATE PRESS TAFF ues for several months. • M id-M arch: A friend and State Press editor who is expe­ riencing car trouble asks me to pick her up from a repair garage. Since she won’t be using her Lot 11 decal — and since I’m responsible for her transportation while her car is being worked on — we come to the logical assumption that it would be perm issible for me to tem porarily use her decal on the Hornet. Twenty-four hours later, we realize our Conclusion was unmistakably wrong. Not one, but two white envelopes high­ light m y windshield that morning. Apparently, a parking atten­ dant had deemed it necessary to investigate whether my license plafe was legally registered to display my friend’s decal. The tickets — issued within hours of each other — are $50 each. • E a rly J u n e : Before leaving on a sum m er-long trip to South Africa, my friend forwards me her Lot 11 decal, along with copies o f her driver’s license and vehicle registration an d her written authorization to transfer.ownership o f the decal to me. How silly for us to think such documentation would be ad e q u ate en o u g h . W h en in q u irin g a b o u t th e d ec al, I ’m inform ed by Parking Services that it’s impossible for me to assume ownership o f it — only immediate family members are permitted to do so. • L a st week: Driving my mother’s decal-less car while she’s on vacation, I’m forced to resort to perimeter parking. After 20 minutes o f searching every street, alley and parking lot north of U niversity D rive, I find nothing b ut taken spaces (or N O P A R K IN G signs threatening to tow offending vehicles and impale their owners). M y only option is to park in Lot 8, the pay lot. I later register a personal protest against the system by hitching rides and returning for the car after 11 p.m ., thus avoiding the $3 exit fee. Now, it should be mentioned that the aforementioned tickets I received were dismissed upon appeal. B ut the web of bureau­ cracy isn’t especially delightful for anyone to deal with. ’ You could probably find a sim ilar sequence o f parking plight from just about anyone who (hives to ASU for work or for class. And while some o f die more ludicrous parking stories can be pretty comical, there’s not a lot o f humor in the fact that, at times, female students have to walk neatly a half-mile across campus at night after parking their cars. It has become blatantly apparent that ASU’s students, facul­ ty, staff and visitors deserve a more convenient, efficient and safeparking system. Let’s hope improvements are made before the University population goes through another year o f petty drivel. A n g e l a B e n o c h e , E d it o r S. T a l b o t t Smith, M a n a g in g E d it o r JAKE BATSELL.............. .......................................City Editor U nsigned editorials reflect the view s o f the editorial board. Individual members o f die editorial board write edi­ torials and the board decides their m erit The editorials do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. B o n d members include: TAMMY MESA-SIERRA..................... Entertainment Editor SHAUN RACHAU DARRYL WEBB ............... Sports Editor Editor tion. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the editorial board. All letters must be either brought in person with a photo I.D . to the S ta ts P ress front desk in the basem ent o f ANGELA BENOCHE.....v..a..............v.w.....U.«..«.-.-...Editor S. TALBOTT SMITH .......Managing Editor Matthews Center, or addressed to State Presst 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 852871502. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Kelly Adcock. Sonia Benson, Jam il Bimey, Dan Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes, Kate Martin, Lance Newman, David Thorn, Tim Wohlpart. PRODUCTION STAFF: Evonne Vera, David Weber. The State Press ia published every Tuesday during the summer semester (following holidays it will be published on Wednesday) at Matthews Center, Room ;15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 852871502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. 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. S ta te P ress w elcom es and e n co u rag es w ritten response from our readersoh any topic. All letters must be typed or laser printed* double-spaced and no more than two pages in length to be eligible for pub­ lication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed le a n s Will be considered for puMka- State Press Phone Numbers \ " pwatj ' Information............................. ’■ ' 965-7572 Newsroom........»..;..«;.,;..,......................................,%5-2292 Display Advertising...«»...,..................................... .965-6555 Classified Advertising..........................................965-6731 W 3ËÊ:... STATE P ress Opinion ______________________________ ■ ______ Tuesday, July 20,1993_____ _ M idwest floods reflect poor planning Some thoughts on the “G reat Flood of 1993.” The worst in recorded history? Perhaps, but only because of inept attempts by humans to fiddle with nature. The enorm ous amount of rain th e M idw est has been forced to swallow wouldn't be causing all the dam age it has if man had ju s t known his place and stayed in it. For me, one question will not leave. If we are going to bail Midwesterners out of their dilemma, what about bailing me out? I live in the Sonoran Desert. My meager apartment has a swamp cooler and no air conditioning. Now, if Phoenix has an unbearable and dangerous heat wave during monsoon season when my swamp cooler stops working, is the American taxpayer going to pay for an air conditioner so I could avoid heat exhaustion or death? Move into a better apartment, you say? Or better yet, you would tell me that 1 moved into an area that is known for its heat. I should have known better than to move into a place without air conditioning. Well, what about those in the Midwest? Americans are going to bail out thousands who live in an area where flooding is a fact of life. And less than 20 percent of them have flood insurance! The stage was set when settlers moved into the area in the 1700s, draining wetlands and Setting up'dikes, levees and dams. Man took water out from where it belonged and moved in to farm and live. The only problem is that the land and nature’s intentions for it did not change. The land is at the Same height as it was when men dried it out — below the; river’s water level. Man made it tem­ State P ress _, porarily habitable by pushing the water away. And so the people moved in. When you get a 100-year flood, which can happen several times over 100 years, the river rises above the flood control struc­ tures and goes where it was supposed to go — where impetuous men drained it from. This flood can be added to the countless lessons man has been taught by nature, but from which he has yet to learn. Some say that Midwesterners have gotten themselves into a comer, bound by poor planning from those early, unscrupulous settlers. But they must accept the blame themselves. Davenport, Iowa, for instance. The city has no flood wall. Never had one. But it sits on a river that is prone to flooding. Surely they must have considered it? Of course they did. Three times. Each time the City Council considered it, it was shot down. Money was a factor, but frighten­ ingly, so were aesthetics. They were concerned that the flood wall would mar views of the river. Forget the possibility that everything they own might be swept down to New Orleans should an epic flood come by morning. By damn, they want to see a river from their living room window! The rains have come and now much of what many Davenport residents own is on its way to the Gulf of Mexico. They could have made changes to protect themselves. They chose not to. I’m reminded of that childhood parable of the lazy grasshopper and the industrious ant. The ant works all summer to save food for winter, while the grasshopper lounges away the warm weather, doing nothing. When winter comes, the ant does fine, has plenty of food. But the grasshopper suffers miserably because of his poor planning. Now taxpayers are going to foot the $10 billion and upwards charge for the region’s foolhardiness. Damn that grasshopper! . etters to the editor Oliphant cartoon insensitive to Navajos Editor: It is an unfortunate but necessary obligation to respond to a reprehensible reference to the Navajo Nation, in conjunction with the hantavirus: The political cartoon in your July 13, 1993 issue, (opinion page) depicting fat cats of the tobacco industry in a smoke filled room with several other ghastly ghouls lying about is certainly true. The caption reads, “W hat’s wrong with these people? O bviously they have that N avajo disease, or som ething.” However, their untimely demise is a result of an exchange that : accurately indicts the real culprits, i.e., the tobacco industry and the inherent risk associated with their products. ARE YOU WITH ME, which has no connection to the Navajo Nation, as the caption suggests! Furthermore, as evidence indi­ cates, the so called “mystery illness” is not, again, STAY W ITH ME, in any shape or form, exclusively connected to the people of the Navajo Nation. Neither death nor the macabre amuses me. This unfortunate human crisis (21 lives lost) associated with a known virus should not mirror the insensitive and outrageous treatment of the Navajo people by the national media. This kind of journalism destroys the very basic principles of respect. Families are grieving and in great pain over the loss of their loved ones. Some of you do hot realize the extern of the suf­ fering that the tribe has endured over the past months. Moreover, you should also realize that a large population of American Indians attending ASU are Navajo. An attempt to crawl and hide behind a constitutional shield, at the expense of added injury to those who have suffered, is no excuse for such irresponsible journalism. The primary mission of a university environment is to educate the masses, not to misin­ form them. Perhaps one would expect the State Press to show leadership in refusing to continue the inaccurate references to the hantavirus as a “Navajo Disease.” The State Press and ASU should make a conscionable effort to support the Navajo students who may have family members afflicted by the hantavirus. Regardless of what the first amendment guarantees, the deci­ sion to perpetuate false accusation, hysteria, stereotype, and the further destruction of the image of the Navajo Nation, says what freedom of the press truly means to the aboriginal citizens of this country: freedom to degradate. Thomas Charlie senior, business management Tribal Member of the Navajo Nation CDL, CCC: Its all the same to A SU parents Editor: In reference to the “Child-Care Crunch” article by S. Talbott Smith and the editorial in the July 13 edition of the State Press, you could have substituted the name Child Development Lab (CDL) for Campus Children’s Center (CCC) throughout your arti­ cle and the story would have remained accurate. My husband and I had the same problems with the CDL in 1990-92 that parents of children in the CCC are now having. The CDL extended the number of weeks of closure for repairs and vacation from two to four, increased tuition by over 10 percent and added extra days for closure for parent-teacher conferences and professional conferences with little or no parental input. We were quite happy with' the pedagogy at the CDL as parents seem to be at the CCC. In fact, we believe that some of the teach­ ers were underpaid given their dedication and talent. Our com­ plaint was with the administration of the CDL. Decisions were made with little regard for the parents of the children attending the CDL or for the needs of the larger campus community. You reported that the CDL has “one of the lowest rates in the Valley for the service provided.” I disagree. The last time the CDL added extra closure days w ithout consulting parents (September 1992), we decided it was time to look at other day care options. I did extensive research on the other facilities in the area. The CDL is actually one of higher-priced facilities, especial­ ly given that hot lunches are not provided, they are closed more days of the year than any other facility and they have one of the shortest days of any facility. When I communicated this to the administrators of the CDL I was told that they actually take pride in being one of the most expensive day care providers because they feel that they are one of die best. Given that the adjustments to tuition and closure at the CCC and CDL have all been negotiated with and approved by ASU officials, it is clear that those officials are not helping to solve the problem of a lack of on-campus day care but are contributing to the problem. It is unfortunate but true that when it comes to on-campus day care, ASU’s faculty, staff and students really have no choice. Cheryl Herrera associate adviser College o f Liberal Arts and Sciences V.P. Tima shows his disrespect for constituents Editor: The article in the State P ress' July 11, 1993 edition raised some questions in regard to the executive vice president’s ad-hoc committee. There should not be any question whether or not the Committee is going to benefit the students. We know the purpose o f the Associated Students is ultimately to benefit students. However, in a letter circulated to the potential committee mem­ bers, ASASU Vice President Caesar Tima stated "the ideas put forth by this committee will be implemented through the creation of a non-profit, non-partisan incorporated foundation.” The article quotes Tima as saying that several “prominent community members” have expressed interest in funding the pro­ posed foundation. Why would Tima create his own independent foundation with the purpose of soliciting funds for private distri­ bution, which are not held accountable by the University? Tima’s response that Senator Rupp shouldn’t worry about $3.20 in postage makes me wonder what else is slipping by. While spending only a small amount of student’s money for his personal aspirations is not grounds for an uproar, it nonetheless shows Vice President Tima’s attitude and disregard for the stu­ dents who elected him. Shaw* D Whaley graduate student, physics P age 5 S tate P ress ■ I # o o i& O r a v o s ® ;■ BO O — to President Clinton’s wimpy back-dpwn on lifting the m ilitary’s gay ban. W hat would have happened if President Trumtm had backed off of lifting bans mi blacks in tire military? Civil rights would have helm set back at least 10 years- That is w l»t Clinton 1res done by backing cÉf. his original campaign promise to eliminate the ban. The strides made by homosexual activists in tire last I{> years have been pushed aside for compromise with right-wing reactionary nuts in Congress who think they know what’s - best for this country’s morahty Those congressmen, name­ ly Sam Nunn, should start doing th e ir jo b o f serving America’s best interests rather titan preaching their gospel on taxpayers’ time. American gays should be treated no dif­ ferently than any other American, period. They are human beings and are citizens of this country with rights guaran­ teed by the Constitution. Let’s start treating them that way. BOO — to Pope John PaulEl for refusing to budge on the Vatican’s hotly debated policy — forced celibacy among priests. Although be said the policy Is not an essentia) part o f being a priest, it will remain nonetheless. Some say the policy is a likely cause for many o f the Church’s child molesting problems and has caused priests to leave the pro­ fession and even splinter off into separate churches. They are human and have natural human desires like anyone else. If the Church continues to be unresponsive to bs laity and clergy, it will surely continue in its «townward spiral with more people Seising its rank& B R À VO •*» to the beautiful sunsets our city’s monsoon clouds provide. Sunday’s sunset proved to he stunning and there will certainly be more store the season has just begun. If you missed that one, make sure you pause at least once in tire next month between 7:30 p.m. and 8;30 p.m. and get an eyeful. Alaska can say it has its northern lights, but nothing beats the psychedelic “southern lights” seen every summer to the Sonoran Desert. Who said we couldn’t come up with something positive about Phoenix’s lousy monsoon? Sure, when you are watching the sunsets you might be coated witiisticky sweat, dust and you’re being baked by the stillhat sidewalk like you’re to a kiln, but those beautiful colors make it aü worth it. A A A Q uote/U nquote “The Iraqi people w ill how to no one but God, and will reject treachery, deceit and threats.” '• —*Iraqi Président Saddam Hussein in a radio and television broadcast speech threatening yet again to anni­ hilate the Great Satan. “I think it’s probably no secret.” », - »E, — soon-to-be-former FBI director William Sessions, when asked what he expected would be asked o f him at a Saturday Meeting with Clinton aides. A Justice Department office has accused him o f ethical lapses, and as aresult, Clinton's administration has - been eager to oust him, “Throw champagne on my face once — shame on you. Throw champagne on my face twice ^ shame on me.” 7 * Christopher Walken, playing an mustachioed egregious paramour in the NBC Saturday Night liv e skit, (,The Continental. ” P age 6 Tuesday. Ju ly 2 0 .1 9 93 State P ress Adobe Mountain C o n t in u e d from pa g e 1. youths hdw to direct their anger and who to direct it at. and how to decide who owns a problem.” Despite all of her efforts, though, sometimes the youths return after being released from the school. “A lot of the kids go out believing they’ve changed and that everything’s going to go well,” Gonzales said. “But for a few of them,' they slip off the bandwagon. And for some of them it’s dif­ ficult to get back on.” It’s kids like Joe that Gonzales has her doubts about. While he’s learned the tools that it takes to become a con­ tributing member of society, the choice is still his own, she said. Despite all her hopes for-Joe’s success in life, she said he will return to Adobe Mountain. “Joe is such a follower. 1 don’t know how well he’ll do out thefe,” Gonzales said. “He told me he’d be back. That’s all he kept saying over and over.” S o ciety is th e e n e m y For David, whether or hot he would come back to Adobe is not an issue. He said he does not even want to go back into society . “I want to stay in,” he said, staring off into space. “I feel safer .here,” : For every tentative success, there are always those that make Gonzales’ job worth every effort. She said one of those success stories is a 14-year-old boy who entered the system in September, a hard-core gang member. After extensive “limit and lead” work, and other pro-social programming, today he is a peer role model, she said. He is able to lead group sessions and take groups through an in-depth crisis­ solving process. “He may even come back as a peer group counselor after he leaves,” Gonzales said, obviously proud of the boy’s progress. There are a variety of new pro-social treatment programs that Gonzales is working on. She said they are hands-on approaches geared at making positive behavioral changes in the youths. The limit and lead approach is a daily group session that allows the youths the opportunity to report on problems with peers and staff, and to Come up with alternatives to negative behavior. Keys to innervision is another group session that provides youths with alternative thought processes, encourages them to alter their belief systems and helps them develop techniques to control their lives and make better decisions. Gonzales said the limit and lead program is designed to teach youths how to be leaders, how to be responsible, and to live by pro-social values with a positive self-image. “The programs that are being implemented give youths a chance to ¡succeed as leaders and give them the tools to fall back on,” Gonzales said. “Intensive tools they can use the rest of their life.” She humbly said that the youths are the ones she credits for their own successes, not herself. “I’m not the one with the problem,” Gonzales said. “I’m there with them through the whole process to support them.” She added that the choices the youths make are their own, but as long as the staff is there for support and doesn’t give up on them, that is half the battle. If there is one thing she Credits herself with, she said it is that she is a stable person and makes herself available to them at any time. “Stability is part of the treatment process and a lot of them have never had that,” Gonzales said.“ The kids need an advocate and if they’re right, they know I’m there for them and that I’ll’ back them up in whatever the problem is.” Gonzales said that gang lifestyle is often a contributing factor to their Criminal behavior. All but one of her present caseload is involved with gangs in one form or another. She said to some kids it’s just a fashionable thing to say, “I belong to Something,” but to others it’s a way of life. “For some it’s generational and, God forbid, you better belong or else you stand to discredit the family,” she added. D is re sp e c tin g th e “ h o o d ” Gonzales said the majority of the problems and violent behav­ ior that occur between youths at the school arise out o f gang or racial affiliation. It’s all a matter of disrespecting another gang’s “hood.” “When you’re on the street, the gang mentality is essential for survival,” said Charles Pugliese, YCO and Mary cottage supervi­ sor. “In here all it’s good for is to cause trouble. Whatever they can do to disrespect someone they’ll do i t ” Mary cottage is another one of Gonzales’ stops on her daily tour of campus. She counsels an average of 32 youths, virtually all of whom can be referred to as “gang-bangers.” David would not fit in with these youths. He said he has never been in a gang, never wanted to. As he tugged on his blanket to cover himself up, he added that he has no friends and prefers to stick to himself. He does not like to get close to people. Mary is divided into two wings, and in keeping with the pro­ social goals of the school, a new technique was created to enhance treatment. In order to give the youths an opportunity to voice con­ cerns, the cottage turned into a democracy. Each wing elects two “lounge representatives" to represent the interests of the others and to meet with staff to discuss how to work together. “We try to use the peer culture to make them responsible for their own actions,” Pugliese said. “And staff members have to respond to all the requests by the youths.” One of the lounge representatives, 15-year-old Tony, is a gang member with a mission. He has every intention of getting out of Adobe and making a life for himself working for his father in California. As far as David is concerned, he has no family. He said he wants nothing to do with the Mormon family that raised him and they want nothing to do with him. “My grandparents try to keep in touch,” he said. “But 1 don’t want them to. I want them to leave me alone.’’ For Tony, knowing that he has a supportive family on die out­ side is what helps keep his dreams alive on the inside. “I love art,” Tony said. “I’m going to be an architect one day.” Darryl Webb/State Press M ary cottage is o n e o f 13 in d iv id u a lly nam ed b u ild in g s in w h ich A d o b e M ou n tain 's youth live- E a ch co ttage se rv e s a s p e c ific fu n ctio n , s u c h a s reorientation and p a ro le vio la tio n . M ary is d ivid e d into tw o w in g s and is op erated a s a d e m o cra cy. E lected represen tatives o f the w ings m eet w ith sta ff to d is c u s s how to w ork together. The artistic talent was definitely there, despite the fact that it was displayed through gang-related insignias. Weapons and blood. With any luck Tony will meet his aspirations, even though he has no intention of pulling out of his gang completely . “I’m going to. go to California because I’ve got to get away,” he said. “Otherwise I know my brothers will get me in trouble if I stay.” David said he got into his own trouble. No one convinced him that Satanism and a life of prime were the way to go. He said those were choices he made on his own. Gonzales said that,; with the exception of the American Indian kids who tell it like it is, most of her kids blame society for their problems. “I can blame society a little bit. Certain things for certain peo­ ple and so on,” she said. “And that’s something that a lot of these kids haven’t been taught how to deal with.” Gonzales said the prototype cottages, implemented last year, are the newest pro-social addition to the DYTR program- The 24hour programming in these units helps the youths develop the social Skills they need to cope with those kind of problems. “They have structured treatment all day: groups, affirmations, keys to innervision, limit and lead,” she said. “The kids learn how to handle their problems, how to express a complaint appropriate­ ly. “They just learn how to be respectable adults.” Mary-Lou Benitez is a youth care officer in Hope, one of the prototype cottages that houses about 25 boys who Gonzales adds to her list of clients. “A lot of kids call me mom, but I don’t mind,” said Benitez, one of only a few female YCQs at Adobe. “I think it’s because a lot o f them have never had a real positive female role model.” The rooms at Hope are a far cry from those o f Gulf. The youths are permitted to place artwork on the walls, they have twice the room to roam around in, the doors remain open through­ out the day and daylight shines through a large window to the out­ side. “We have a lot of angry kids in here,” Benitez said, “We have to teach them how to release it productively. “We try to teach them responsibility ami how to make the right choices.” That is where Gonzales comes in. She works with both the youths and staff to create a daily schedule of programming that works. Their day is structured and rehabilitation oriented. For half the day the youths are in the classroom and the rest of the day is reserved for group work. Gulf and Hope are the two extremes. Baker cottage is the mid­ dle of the road. “To get into the Baker program there are things like severe program dysfunction for a long period of time, escape attempts, severe acting-out,” she said. Once the youths are sent there, they must endure intense limit and lead groups at least twice a day, she said. And they get less recreation time, less free time. “Most of their time is spent in programming with groups, indi­ vidual counseling, groups, groups and more groups,” Gonzales said with a laugh. “We do a lot of grouping with them so they’ll get sick of it.” L ike the rest o f the youths in the m ainstream program, Gonzales said they attend school for half a day. “They start out with alternative education for a week and if they program OK they’re allowed to go back to their home cot­ tage’s classroom,” she said. ‘They’ll still go to school no matter whether they’re in Baker or not.” When the kids exhibit negative behavior in other cottages, they are often sent to their rooms and that is all there is to it, she said. But in Baker it is a little more involved. “You don’t just get to go to your room and call it a day,” she said. i\ . Gonzales added that sometimes she will go to their rooms with them and process with them on the problem they had, and that does not always sit well. “ They don’t like one-on-one because I sit there for at least 45 minutes resolving the problem,” she said. “So what these kids do is they don’t act out because they don’t want to go through all that. “We have a lot o f kids in the reorientation program with out­ standing behavior because they hate having to go through so much therapy. They get tired of it.” She added that Baker, along with Gulf, have the best staff in the school and she enjoys working with them because they help to make her job easier. “They have so much empathy for these kids,” she said. “They put up with the Same behavior over and over and they never give up.” She said even in a case like D avid’s that never seems to change, she and the other staff members still work closely with him and try to support him. Gonzales said it is not the kids that make her job difficult, it is when she has trouble convincing, staff members that all their work is worth it and that it can work. “It’s not the kids that give up, sometimes it’s the staff that gives up,” she said. “And when the staff gives up, the kids give up. “That’s why we have to keep the staff motivated.” C o n v in c in g th e s ta f f is to u g h Gonzales said working with troubled youths is something that works well for her and is something she finds rewarding and ful­ filling. She said she relates well with them, and because she is young the boys Understand that she knows where they are coming from, “I think that’s something the kids look for, someone they can look up to as a role model," she said. Gonzales said the most fulfilling thing about being at Adobe Mountain is not only working with the kids and seeing them turn around before her very own eyes, but working with staff members from all sorts of backgrounds who are dedicated to doing the same thing. “Seeing the youths change their lives right before you, seeing them become progressive people, that’s what makes it all worth­ while,” she said. Spending time working in a department of corrections is some­ thing that Gonzales recommends that everyone experience at least once in life, if for no other reason than to see what society is pro­ ducing. While those products aren’t always positive ones, Gonzales said all is not lost. “There’s still hope,” she said. “There’s always hope. “When you feel there’s no hope anymore, that’s when you need to get out because then you bring the whole system down with you.” She said her decision to work in juvenile treatment and correc­ tions was a positive one for her life and one that she had planned on for years. “I flunk it’s something I’ll do the rest of my life,” Gonzales said. “Maybe as a counselor, or I may return to law school and come back as an attorney, but I will always work in corrections in one way or another. “It fits my personality and who 1 am,” Gonzales said. “I’m' very confrontive and very direct, and I’m not afraid of the kids. “I know how to approach them, and when, with w hat” She said that besides her age she attributes her success in relat­ ing to the youths to her commitment to treatment and rehabilita­ tion, as well as to her education. She added that her college studies in Satanism have helped her in her relationship with David. She said they have talked about it and David knows she under­ stands him. “I understand the spiritual side of it, why he does what he does and what’s motivating about it,” Gonzales said. “Because he knew people were freaked out about,it he used it to his advantage.” Satanism is not David’s real problem, however. Gonzales said his life is in a dysfunctional tailspin. Despite all his problems, Gonzales Said she feels there is still hope for David if he can ever recover and come to terms with all he has been through, which she would not discuss at length. “I think there’s a part of him that’s very sane, very aware,” she said. “I think he’s just hurting a lot.” A fter this story was written, Gonzales testified in court as to D avid's m ental state. He was rem oved from A dobe M ountain School and committed to the Arizona State H ospital to undergo serious psychiatric treatment. “There was a bigger problem to D avid than his crim inal record," Gonzales said. “I think h e’ll be in there fo r a very, very long time. " S ta te P ress Page 7 Monday, July 20,1993 WEARING MOSCHINO 'OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF MINDI' SHOPPING Squelching of racist plot celebrated LOS ANGELES (AP) — Worshippers jammed the First AME Church to celebrate its deliverance from “the haters o f the world” just days after authorities smashed an alleged white supremacist plofcto blow up their church and start a race war. “Hate groups cannot succeed unless love groups give permis­ sion,” shouted the Rev. Cecil Murray as 2,000 members and visi­ tors rose to their feet “You and I are a love group.” In three rousing Sunday services that drew city and state lead­ ers — including Mayor Richard Riordan — to the South Central church, Murray admonished his congregation to “let your light shine” in battling evil, “Our problem is not with the haters of the world who have nothing within; our problem is with the lovers of the world who have something within and never let it come out,” Murray said. Several celebrities, including Jayne Kennedy and Dionne Warwick, also attended. One of the eight alleged white supremacists arrested Thursday was charged with plotting a machine-gun attack on the First AME Church and killing Murray, a leading voice for Los Angeles’ black community. ■ Federal agents said they were pursuing other suspects in con­ nection with the plot to attack First AME and also to kill other prominent blacks, including videotaped police beating victim Rodney King. First AME spokesman Mark Whitmore said security was tighter than usual. At the church’s entrance, ushers checked brief­ cases and large bags. ‘I t ’s not a search, it’s just a look-see,” one usher explained. Lonnee Hamilton of New York City interrupted her vacation to attend Sunday services, “It made me want to come out to church today,” she said. “I’m not a regular churchgoer, but you can’t let people scare you off.” Is y o u r favorite restaurant ru n n in g a special in today's State P ress? See th e Advertisers In d e x - page 25. S OPTIC^UE IN TEMPE: Quality living that's close to campus . . . enjoy. 524 S. MHI Ave. • 894-8382 IN SCOTTSDALE: 7000 E. Shea Blvd. • 951-0288 S/MINjSUMMER SALE! SCflUm A iim m A K INSTOCK roo® r m ¿ n Ra is in s A m e n itie s t m r .N m m * Swimming Pool * Volleyball * Basketball * F itness Room * Sundeek w ith BBQ G rills * Laundry F acilities * Saunas BEST stim m m m cw rm A 0/EK20UNES OF £ m ç â m /£ M BEACH TEMPE McOINTOCK & SOUTHERN 839-9600 SCOTTSDALE SEVILLE H A ZA 998-7566 WEST UNIVERSITY S tate P ress Tuesday, July 20, 1993 P a g: e 8 C om m u n ity jeers black law yer DETROIT (AP) t— As Michael Batchelor drove home from another grueling day defending a white policeman charged in a black motorist’s death, a carload of black teen-agers pulled along­ side him. “That’s the bastard representing the white cops! We ought to beat HIS ass to death!” one of them yelled out the window. It was nothing out of the ordinary. Batchelor has endured threats, crank phone calls and insults from fellow blacks ever since he agreed to defend Walter Budzyn, one of three white offi­ cers charged in the fatal flashlight beating of Malice Green. Entering the courthouse each morning, he tries to ignore cat­ calls from protesters denouncing him as a traitor to his race. Riding the crowded courthouse elevator each day, he pretends he doesn’t hear people muttering “Uncle Tom” under their breath. Reading the Wayne State University student newspaper, South End, he grimaces at a column calling him a sellout. “You don’t see the faces but you hear it all the tim e,” Batchelor said. "It hurts. It really hurts.” Witnesses say Budzyn and partner Larry Nevers bludgeoned Green with heavy metal flashlights outside a suspected crack house Nov, 5 when Green refused to open his clenched hand. Some say Green held drugs. Others say it was a scrap of paper or keys. Budzyn and Nevers, both of whom have been fired, are LOOKING GREAT THIS SUMMER JUST COT EASIER. charged with second-degree murder. A third fired officer, Robert Lessnau, is charged with assault with intent to do great bodily harm. Sgt. Freddie Douglas, the only black among those charged, faces later trial on a misdemeanor charge of willful neglect of duty. No testimony has indicated that race was a factor in the beat­ ing. But “the events speak for themselves,” said Joann Watson of the Detroit NAACP. Batchelor, the only black defense lawyer in the simultaneous trials o f Budzyn, Nevers and'Lessnau, says h e’s defending Budzyn because he believes in the man's right to a fair trial. If a white man can’t get a fair trial, he said, how can a black man ever expect to? “I feel like part of What I’m doing is right down the alley for the cause,” he said. “I don’t know if my commitment to my race, so to speak, can get any stronger.” But Eddie Allen Jr., a former South End Writer who criticized Batchelor in a recent column, said Batchelor is “allowing himself to be used in a way that’s an insult to a lot of black people.” “Out of respect for what normally goes on with black men arid out of the knowledge that black men are harassed and mistreated by police all over the country, I think he should have bypassed that case as a black man,” Allen said. St a t e P ress Crosswords - G o ahead...do them in ink. SHOW US YOUR CURRENT STUDENT I.D.* OU'LL GET A DINNER UL.OS) T h is y e a r w e 're d o in g it a g a in ! E v e ry S u n d a y (but O N L Y on S u n d a y ), M ik e Pulos of the Spaghetti Com pany will give you one F R E E dinner* for each dinner you order! It’s our 2-for-1 S U N D A Y S T U D E N T S P E C I A L . A n d it's g o o d fo r the w hole school year at our Tempe, Scottsdale and Phoenix locations. Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner, T h e Spaghetti C o m p a n y is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the S U N D A Y S T U D E N T S P E C IA L makes our already terrific prices even better) O ur dim ners include a full-course meal with alt the trimmings-from salad to dessert. So, dollar Stud ent ID ca rd with v a lid a ­ tion stic k e r to take advantage of this offer. 15% gratuity added to all discounted checks (except senior citizen discounts). C h ic k e n C o rd o n B lue, S tea k Di Jo n Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala and orders to go A R E N O T IN CLU 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! V l ||> E T u C L O s L A s0 1 T c F E A□ 0 S 1R E A R E A F E A T A V L R A 1g 1NTg 0 Vg G by THOM AS JO SEPH DOW N 1 Library stamp '2 Draw out 3 Software tycoon BUI 4 Volcano output , 5 Singer Cat fe e t by) 6 Base­ 16 T u b 17 Actress ball's George MacGraw 16 What Rod­ 7 Fink 8 Michigan ney Danneighbor geifield longs for 9 Eternal 10 Makes 20 Blushing fun of 21 Squid’s 14 Need defense 19 Cherry 22 Saga­ cious 23 Soft fabrics 26 Angry 2?Tarzan's pals 28 Writer Levin 29 O S S suc­ cessor 30 Plug 34 Invite 35 Sunday seat 36 Pub quaff 37 Undermine 40 Mystery­ writing award 41 Skilled 420ozes 43 Valentine flowers ACROSS 1 Painter of ballerinas 6 Wide 11 Sailor’s cry 12 Kitchen appliance 13 Exactly 1 5 — out P T A c E O Do R s R P A R E E C E■ T A N H R B E DS OG L E En S 0 R E E D ■ MjW 1 ■ ■ Hg E B Ua S E□ D T H E A 0 a 1WE R N i C ü R S SF AU S I Last W eek's A nsw ers centers 28 Article 30 Boot 22 Boa or attach­ stole ments 23 Front 31 Paste sides 24 T V series 32 Wed secretly unit ' 33 Leases 25 Pipe 38 Siesta problem 39 Tokyo’s 26 Prying old name tool l 2 s- r~i 17 r~~rr s- 1Ô ■te il 14^ là i5 « , j1 1' M L 71 i ■* T * ■ ' 24 ■ 27 r J 22 ¿5■ ■ i 1 f ST” ? ■ ■ »■ * sr~ 40 7 42 1* for dollar, when you're hungry and you n eed a break, you can't beat T h e S p a g h e tti C o m p a n y! E S P E ­ C I A L L Y O N S U N D A Y S ! With 2 dinners for the price of 1! ‘ Y ou m u st p r e s e n t y o u r cu rre n t Enjoy nightly drink specials on our patio. CROSSWORD | .. S p a g lt f ? t t i C o m p a n y Restaurant DAILY CRYFTOQUOTES— Mere's how to work it AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ate all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE K T M B K Y C Y Y W B H W W Phoenix Scottsdale Old Town South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. Just North of Indian Bend Tempe 4th St. & Mill 257-0380 483-5669 966-3848 K T W U BYQ W P Y C C HE P S M R T KH S F T WC S MEN V Y K H S . — P M E H F K F M N H E A Last Week's Cryptoquote: I NEVER SAID ALL, DEMOCRATS WERE SALOON-KEEPERS; WHAT I SAID WAS ALL SALOON-KEEPERS WERE DEMOCRATS. - HORACE GREELEY State Press JP ag eJJ Tuesday, July 20,1993 Meeting to address vending machines, smoking laws Darryl Webb/State Press photo illustration M in o rs' p u rch a sin g o f cig arettes from ve n d in g m a ch in es w ill be the fo c u s o f a Tem pe C ity C o u n c il subcom m ittee m eeting to n ig h t, th o u g h c o u n c il m e m b e rs s a y th e m e e tin g c o u ld extend to d is c u s s io n a bout re stru ctu rin g the c ity 's n o sm ok­ ing ord in a n ce . Plencner added, “I would like to be able to go into a restaurant and not be able to have smoke blown in my face.” Several ASU students who smoke said they would not be in favor of banning smoking altogether, particularly in restaurants. “They already have restrictions all over ASU,” said Russell, a senior psychology major. He also claimed that with a Citywide no-smoking ordinance, “less students would be going to restau­ rants to study.” “It deters a lot of people to smoke in restaurants, and it deters a lot of business,” added Jack, a junior psychology major. Tempe’s current ordinance mandates that smoking is prohibit­ ed in “enclosed public places” except in designated smoking areas. While the committee could feature discussion on amending the current ordinance, its focus will be on minors’ usé o f Cigarette vending machines. Though it is illegal for youths under age 18 to purchase tobac­ co products, an article in Monday’s Tempe Daily News Tribune reported that a local doctor’s experiment revealed that preteenagers encountered little resistance in purchasing cigarettes from vending machines. “I realize that (smoking) is an addiction, and for us as govern­ ment to allow this loophole would be pretty bizarre,” Cahill said. While tonight’s meeting Could lead to bigger things, Plencner stressed that the process is still in its formative stages. “ We’re talking about a long process,” he said. “(Tonight's) meeting is simply a get-together to talk about what We think we. should consider.” By J ake Batsell State P ress A Tempe City Council subcommittee meeting scheduled for tonight could be the first step in restructuring local smoking laws. Tonight’s meeting, slated to begin at 5 p.m. in the third floor conference room at Tempe City Hall, has been called to address the issue of minors purchasing cigarettes from vending machines. But members of the council say the meeting could extend its boundaries to include discussion about imposing more stringent restrictions upon smokers in Tempe. “The feeling is that something should be done (about cigarette vending machines), but exactly what it is going to be is one of the things we’ll discuss,” said Councilman Frank Plencner. “I believe we will discuss the entire smoking ordinance to see if there are any more modifications that we should consider.” Some communities including Flagstaff and Los Angeles —have banned smoking altogether in restaurants and other public settings. Council members said they would entertain discussion of imposing such an ordinance in Tempe. ‘1 don’t have any pre-disposed designs on what we should or shouldn’t talk about,” said Neil Giuliano, vice mayor of Tempe and head of the committee, “So if that is something the communi­ ty would like to talk about, I won’t block that.” Giuliano added, “I’m not sure there would he a majority of support for something similar to Flagstaff or Los Angeles at this point.” . Plencner and fellow councilman Dennis Cahill, however, said they would be in favor of imposing such restrictions. “I’d welcome it in a flash,” said Cahill, a former smoker. “There’s a whole lot of other people out there, just like myself, that don’t want to breathe somebody’s filthy exhaust.” 1829 N. S cottsdale Rd. (In The A B C O Shopping Center) Tem pe, A Z 85281 S cottsdale Rd. and M cK ellip s Mon. - Fit: 7am - 7pm & Sat: 8am * 5pm c TOUCH I EANERS 00 ------ — 946-7587 Leather & Suedes •Tailoring • Shirt L a u n d ry Draperies Off $5“ Off Any Dry Cleaning Any Dry Cleaning With Order Of $10 Or More * With Order of $10 Or More Not Valid With Other Discounts 9 One Coupon Per V isit 9 Expires A u gu sts, 1993 I" Not Valid With Other Discounts One Coupon Per V isit Expires August 6,1993 ! 1PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER | M PRESENT COUPON WITH O R D E R S I PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER | I TPRESENT CO UPO NW riH ORDER FREE 6-INCH SA] B u y a n y regu lar 6-inch s u b a n d a la rg e drink. G et th e seco n d o f eq u a l or lo o se r v a lu e for FREE. B igger b ite s + ex tra s n o t included. N ot v a lid w /any oth er offer. V alid w /eoupon on ly. SUBS & SALADS I BROADWAY * FREE FOOTLONG SANDWICH 8 8 1.8 8 8 2 R U B A I. Every Sunday In July! Every Sunday in July purchase l footlong and a large drink & receive a 2nd footlong sandwich of equal or lesser value... F R E E ! N o c o u p o n needed. S U M M E R S P E C IA L ! a n y o f our fresh , sa la d s and a 32-oz. drink for B ig g er B ite« an d e x tr a s n o t In clu d ed . *029 Broadway & Rural, Tempe Broadway W e Deliver! 921-9222 VYIY'V v _l < DC 3 IE ■ BUMPIE ■ CLEAN ERS ■ OFFICE MAX ■ ACE HARDWARE | | FASHION G AL P a g e 10 Tuesday, July 20,1993 S tate P ress Summer program gives minority students bridge into college Bv Angela Benoche State P ress A grant of almost $50,000 from the Coalition to Increase Minority Degrees (CIMD) is giving 32 minority students a chance to develop a strong academic background before attending ASU. The Sun Devil Bridge Program, a five-week residential project at the University, which is a collaborative effort of ASU and South Mountain Com m unity C ollege (SM C C), was funded through the National Science Foundation and partially and through ASU’s Office of Minority Programs, said the program’s director ASU pro­ fessor Marian Barchilón. “The program is designed to help the stu­ dents forge an academic bridge into University life,” Barchilón said. “We want to give the students a good start so they are prepared'for success.” The students in the program are eligible minority students who are entering freshmen and transfer students planning to attend ASU or one of the Maricopa community colleges in the fall, Barchilón said. Eligible minorities include U.S. Hispanics, blacks, American Indians, Alaskan natives and Pacific Islanders, she said. “The students differ widely in age from the teens to the 40’s and their cultural backgrounds are also very different,” she said. All of the students are interested in fields of study o ffered through A SU ’s C ollege o f Engineering and Applied Sciences, Barchilón said. “T hey are learning sk ills to help them progress through the engineering program and succeed at earning their baccalaureate degrees,” she said. During the program, which will run until Aug. 6, the students work in teams to design and manufacture a logo for the Sun Devil Bridge Program, Barchilón said, with the winning logo being used for future programs and the team receiving academic scholarships. As one of the three team leaders, Dennis Leon, who is entering ASU this fall after taking courses at Em bry R id d le A ero n au tical University in Prescott, said he has worked hard to channel the thoughts o f his group into the same direction. ”We all have different talents that we can put to use within the group,” he said. “And the program gives us a chance to see what college is all about and to test it,” he said. And Harry Jones, another team leader who is a mechanical engineering major transferring to ASU in the fall from SMCC, agreed that the pro­ gram is opening doors. “It has shown me new directions that I can take and a lot of things that I wasn’t aware were available to me,” Jones said. Stu d e n ts In th e A S U sum m er S u n D e v il B rid g e P rogram w atch a s R u perto Q u in tero , a tran sfer stu d en t en terin g A S U th is fa ll, d em on strates a C om p u ter A id e d D e sig n (C A D ) p rog ram . “It gives us all a good head start into colIn addition, Barchilón said she and ASU pro­ fessor Donald G. Kelley ale teaching the stu­ dents with innovative techniques, such as collab­ orative instruction and teaming. However, Patrick W ilson, the th ird team Free Consultation for New Patients. EMERGENCIES WELCOME! 7 D ays a W eek We use only the must up-to-date heat sterilization. Make Your Own Coupon SUMMER CLEANING SPECIAL off any sendee INCLUDES: necessary x-rays, exam, cleaning and oral cancer screening (reg. $122) ♦30 $189 are definitely different but effective. “We are only given information as we need it and team work is stressed,” he said. “Overall, I think we are learning a lot.” Y 1 ARIZONASTATEUNIVERSITY 'I ^ : .' '.■■■■.. S t a t e P r ess New patients only. Not valid with any other offer. Valid with coupon only • Exp. 8-31 -93. Drily-Exp. 8-31-93. ‘ " n i g nh . j/ W hiten *49 D IA L 336-8478 leader and a military veteran who has returned to college, said he thinks the teaching techniques Valid with co u p o n only • Exp. 8 -3 1 -9 3 , Your Teeth! (reg, *500) W / w Hh iI tT eE" " You don't need a highlighter to read it. Valid with coupon only * Exp. 8-31-93. mm F FREE HOUR O F TABLE TIM E Billiards z/m -w ru o W ith the Purchase o f One Hour 1301E.University*829-7344 (BehindSunny's) Good 11am-8pm • One per coupon per table per day Not validwithanyother offer• Withcoupon• Expires 7-31-93 A pipys % jT A L L D A Y P A S S »POOL miam -6 pm w S r rf? J‘B u lla rd s M o n .-F r i. «SOFT DRINK S »FOOD « s e l e c t e d 1 3 0 1 E. U niversity • 8 2 9 - 7 3 4 4 $ 1 A 1 U * 2 s s o*. COM E A N D 0 0 m e n u it e m s (Behind Sunny's) ARS 0 0 A S YOU PL E A SE Located On the East Side: Aztec Court Plaza 1301 East University Drive Tempe, AZ 829-7344 O P E N 24 H O U R S WEDNESDAY 11AM- SUNDAY 3 AM MONDAY &TUESDAY 11 AM- 3 AM NOWSERVING BREAKFAST 5 AM- 11 AMTH-SUN Grill Is open until 3:30 a.m. Friday &Saturday PLAY W H ER E PO O L IS COOL CLEAN, COMFORTABLE BILLIARD ROOM 20 POOL TABLES P a g e 11 Tuesday, July 20,1993 S ta te P ress D IN N E R M o n ., T ues ., W ed . O n ly •E n t r e e •S o u p o r Sa l a d •P o t a t o , t- jo o V eg et a ble j : 4 p.m.-10p.m. C O M E S T U D Y W IT H U S FREE COFFEE O R IC ED TEA WITH SS* HOMEMADE MUFFIN PURCHASEAFTER 10PM 1825 E. UNIVERSITY • SE CORNER UNIVERSITY & McCLINTOCK « 966-2761 A lte rn a tiv e ¡St a t e P r e s s TUESDAYS The Lepcy Continues. 75* Well, Wine &Draft all night No Coyer ADNight FREEValet Parking D on 't miss great spedals at your favorite shops and restaurants. The Advertisers Index on page 25 shows w ho's i running ads in tod ays issue. A lte rn a tiv e FRIDAYS 50* & Well, Wine Draft 810 p.m. » u r n a IM W 8 I 8 OUTBACK $ 2 .0 0 Any Drink in the House all nifltllt Mix Masters D.J.s Rob Wagner Techno Ton Pannell & CONCERT spin the Hottest Progressive, Techno and House in the Valley!! SATURDAY, JULY 24th 9P.M. to CLOSE LADIES SATURDAY No Coverforthe Ladies before Up.m. $1.50 AnyDrinkintheHouse fortheladies all night $1.50 Ice ColdLongnecks forthepys - all night 8 d i.li S t . & M c D o w e ll 231 0123 A S U S T U D E N T O W N E D and O P E R A T E D MILLER GENUINE DRAFT N |CU O i MILLER UTE « ra « j f l i S O U T H M c C L I N T O C K R O . , T E M P E A t 8S181 • 966-1911 -T h a n k s f o r y o u r p a i n i n a p ! Page 1 2 St a u P ress Tuesday, July 20,1993 P olice R eport ASU Police reported the following incidents over the weekend: • ASU and Tempe police responded to a shooting late Friday night in a parking lot just east of Taco Bell, 936 E. Apache Blvd. A 43-year-old Phoenix man was reportedly shot several times in the back in the parking lot after exiting Club Encounters, 919 E. Apache. The suspect, 23-year-old Freddie Harris of Phoenix, was arrested by Tempe Police and was booked and charged with attempted first degree murder. The victim wandered to the ASU Visitor Information Center following the incident, where he was found by University police and transported to a hospital in Scottsdale. Reports listed him in stable condition on Monday. The suspect and victim had reportedly had an earlier con­ frontation in Phoenix. • University police warned three ASU baseball players and a non-affiliated male of trespassing Sunday at the ticket trailer at Packard Stadium. The players were asked to leave and no cita­ tions were issued. • An ASU employee reported Sunday that the men’s restroom in the College of Architecture was criminally damaged sometime between Friday and Sunday. Damage is estimated at $100. R E S I D E N C • A fire started in Room 122 o f the A wing at Sahuaro Hall Friday afternoon. Damage is estimated at $1,000. • A box o f ammunition was impounded after it was found in the M U on Friday. • A non-affiliated m ale was arrested, cited and released Friday for furnishing alcohol to minors at the Tempe Center, located at the intersection o f University and Mill. Tempe Police reported the follow ing incidents over the week­ end: • Police suspect juveniles were involved in starting a fire S aturday afternoon in the recreation room at G reen b riar Apartments, 200 W. Hermosa Dr. W itnesses claim that the fire was started with a flare by several minors, who fled the scene. Damage to the structure is estimated at $3,000 to $4,000, while damage to property is estimated at $500. • Two 19-year-old Phoenix men were arrested for second degree burglary Sunday after they allegedly forced entry into an occupied apartment in die 2100 block of North Van Ness Ave. The suspects reportedly removed a television from its stand and left it on a sofa after being discovered by the resident. • The Unocal 76 service station located at 8805 S. McClintock Ave. was robbed at gunpoint early Saturday morning. The suspect, who reportedly took about $200, is described as a white male, approximately 6 feet tall, 170 pounds, with dark hair and was last seen wearing a dark t-shirt and blue jeans. • A 28-year-old Mesa man was pronounced dead Saturday morning after a motorcycle-pedestrian collision at 900 E. Baseline Rd. on Friday night. The victim, who was riding a motorcycle, reportedly lost con­ trol of the vehicle after the collision. The motorcycle struck die curb, and the victim hit a palm tree on the south side of the road­ way. The victim was not wearing a helmet and was pronounced dead at 2:50 a.m. Saturday morning. Die pedestrian, who had reportedly been drinking, was treated for lacerations and a broken right leg and was listed in stable con­ dition on Monday. • A Chandler man was arrested Saturday night for two armed robberies in Tempe. The suspect, who was on probation, had his probation consequently revoked. Compiled by State Press City Editor Jake Batsell. Y INFORMATION SESSION Every Wed. & Thürs. 2-3 p.m. Student Services Amphitheater Residency Applications Available FLIGHTIHAINWGAVF H O P FROM HIGH SCHOOL TO HELICOPTERS. You could be piloting a sophisticated Army helicopter less than a year after high school graduation—if you have what it takes to qualify for Warrant Officer Flight Training, This program takes a lot of work—40 weeks of intensive training, but tough it out and well make you one of our elite helicopter pilots. Find out more from your local Army Recruiter. Call: 967-1611 ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAM B K F O R M E R F D IC H EA D TELLS ALL Find out about the S&L scandal from the perspective of the former FDIC chairman who was also the Dean o f ASU's College of Business from 1982 to 1986. Inform yourself with L.W. Seidman's new book and . , . Pick it up at BOOKS, etc. The perfect place for summer, any time of year. The C om m ons is th e perfect place to live w hile going K. th e pool. All to ASU. It's o n ly 2 blocks from cam pus a n d a b o u t 20 steps to th e su ites are large, 2 b e d ro o m s, 2 fu ll b a th s, c o m p le te ly furnished w ith a m icrowave, d i s h w a s h e r ^ j j j j ^ a n d w a sh e r & d ry e r i n e a c h suite! T h e re 's a b ig , h u g e v o lley b all-p o o l w ith ja a re g u la tio n san d - volleyball court, sauna, plus an inside racquetball court & weight room. There are also planned social activities, a roommate m atching service, a great m anagem ent team and did w e m e n tio n th e p o o l? O f co u rse, th e s u m m e r is p rim e -tim e to b e living a t The C om m ons, b u t it's great any tim e o f y ear.jP ■ r : T he G*E G p í¡ i&L D ebacle - V eb ant ■ J r ano»O O ther i t ! 1 a / I A* I M l B H P shington ÇSaoas Is 'W k a 14 — /7 taking reservations for th e fall. D on't w ait u n til th e last m inute. 1 BOOKS, etc. a We're already You'll have enough to do. M ake y o u r fall reservations today. d N O W A V A IL A B L E A T . , 901 S. M ill L %f i | | | 2 Hocks from campus 1111E. Apache Blvd. Tempe, AZ COMMONS f i MEMBERSONLY Call us today 829-0933 P a g e l3 Tuesday, July 20,1993 State P ress si-mu« nocovercharge^j 1B P S £ V ^ 1 lw MEXICANFOOD Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week Spice up your life with: - Traditional Sonoran Style M exican Food - N e w Vegetarian Selections - D aily Specials - H ap py H our Buffet FREE DINNER W ith purchase of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. ^ Tem pe location only. O ffer good after 2 p.m. Expires 7-26-93. j CELEBRA tTNG 30 Y EAR S O F BfUNClNC_~ FINE M EXICAN FO O D A N D FRIENDS TOGETHER 9 6 0 W . U N IVER SITY - 966 -0 8 52 J)ust devils distant cousins of tornadoes SUN CITY (AP) — Contrary to popular belief, dust devils are not. “baby tornadoes” that move to the Midwest and grow up along the way to wreak havoc on trailer parks. Tornadoes and dust devils both involve gyrating columns of air and debris, but the similarities pretty much end there. Tornadoes are rare in the Phoenix area, even during storms, but dust devils are a common sight during the summer’s 100degree weather and full sunshine. Tornadoes and dust devils, besides the obvious difference in the size of the funnels, also differ in their causes. The column o f air in a tornado is several hundred feet wide, spins at 200 to 300 mph and can travel hundreds of miles, accord­ ing to the National Weather Service. A tornado usually is part of a larger storm that includes heavy rain, thunder and lightning. A tornado forms when air temperatures are unstable and warm and moist air at low levels converges with cooler, drier air aloft. The force of a tornado can flatten buildings, drain ponds and lift cars, livestock and people off the ground, usually to ill effect. A dust devil is a much smaller column of air, only inches to several feet wide, that turns at 40 to 50 mph. A dust devil is creat­ ed by differences in the rate that areas of the ground heat up under the glare of full sun, said Dennis Sturm, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in Phoenix. As spots On the ground heat at different rates, air from the hotter spots usually, those that are the darkest and heat up quicker begins rising as the slightly cooler, higher air falls. The exchange in air begins swirling (usu­ ally in a counter-clockwise motion in the northern hemisphere). A prevailing wind kicks up dust that gets lifted into the column by the vacuum effect of the rising air, and the dust devil takes on it familiar form. “Dust devils tend to dance from hot spot to hot spot, and when they run out of hot spots, they collapse,” said Chris Breckenridge, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. Most dust devils last only a few seconds before the differences in air temperature are stabilized. Dust devils typically travel no more than a few hundred feet and seldom leave behind mote than a sprinkling o f dust on your car or patio. TH E B I O L ____ U T A E J Ü A WÊÊËKÊÈÊËÈÈÊ 'C LUB Ír h = = i? c NHS/HT 1 0 6 .) GUEST GIVEAWAYS!! DJ. FM — ■ - Allison Strong > CD'S, T-Shirts & More! 75 < DRINKS A LL NIGHT ■ NO COVER ■ M ISS ZIMA SWIMWEAR CONTEST 7 Ç ( 2"SAS (7-10 p.m .) " LONGNECKS 'M H H P ■ 7 5 ' C O C K TA ILS v-wm s1 .5 0 L O N G N E C K S Free S h am p oo w / C u t • N O CO VER BEFORE 10 RM. W /C O O EGE I D. " O N L Y l^ ( R e g .$ 8 ~ ) SATURDAY Flat Tops & Artwork $1.°° extra LADIES MfflT Exp. 8-10-93 H AIR CO LO R *1 DRINKS . . . A LL NIGHT LONG! *3 RASPBERRY ZIM A SHOTS • NO COVER BEFORE 10 RM. » O N LY Includes: Blow C . Long Hair $5 Exp. 8-10-93 D e sig n e r Perm S pecial (Reg-$34.*) Shampoo, Perm, Cut fit Style included. Long hair, piggy back or spiral wrap extra. U rn m m m m . exP. 8-10-93 SW Corner Scottsdale Rd. & M cDowell 423-8499 Tuesday, July 20,1993 State P ress M exican troops anticipate C hinese refugee ships ENSENADA, Mexico (AP) — Two boats filled with hundreds o f Chinese refugees who sought a fife in the United States steamed toward a Mexican port early today where troops waited to send them quickly back to China. Meanwhile in Washington, the Coast Guard reported more refugee boats were seen heading toward Hawaii. The Chinese heading toward Ensenada had been in interna­ tional waters off the coast of Mexico since the Coast Guard inter­ cepted their three rusty, dilapidated ships July 6. They left their homeland weeks before that The United States pressured Mexico to take the Chinese because allowing them to reach U.S. soil would qualify them to apply for political asylum. That process can take years, and the Chinese would have been allowed to stay until their cases were resolved. Mexico has no such process. A Mexican naval escort was accompanying the two boats toward shore. A third boat remained offshore because of an undis­ closed political problem , said Jorge M edina V iedas, ch ief spokesman for the Mexican Interim' Ministry. Once on Mexican soil, the undocumented Chinese were to be examined by doctors and placed on buses bound for Tijuana’s international airport, the spokesman said. During the 60-mile trip about 250 federal, state and local police were expected to line the highway to keep anyone from escaping. Mexico is trying to avoid a repeat of an incident m May when desperate Chinese captured in Ensenada broke free at a Mexicali airport and sprinted toward the U.S. border. A S tate D epartm ent o fficial, speaking on condition o f anonymity, said anyone determined to be a genuine political refugee “will be brought to the United States to pursue that claim.” Another U.S. official, also speaking oh condition o f anonymi­ ty, said so far only one of 58 migrants surveyed has been deter­ mined to have a legitimate application for asylum. The 58 filled out questionnaires. Coast Guard Commander Mark Wolfson confirmed that an unspecified number of vessels presumed to be carrying Chinese migrants have been spotted off Hawaii. “They could enter U.S. waters around Hawaii some time this weekend,” Wolfson said. High-risk commodities game lures some weather forecasters KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) --- About the only thing more mer­ curial than the weather might be the grain and soybeans futures market. Put the two together ■*- weather forecasts and future crop prices — and you’ve got a recipe for a high-risk, high-stakes game that’s irresistible to some meteorologists. Sometimes it pays off. Dave Dusik, meteorologist at WDAFTV in Kansas City, says he’s made a 250 percent return on his bet that soybean prices would soar because of relentless rains in the Midwest. Dave Relihan, chief weatherman at WIBW-TV in Topeka, Kan., missed the upswing in prices caused by flood conditions. But he's poised to jump into the market at the first sign the rains might cease. “A meteorologist needs to know more than just the forecast,” Relihan said. “He also needs to know the psychology of the mar­ ket or else he’s going to get burned. And if he doesn’t understand agriculture, he’s going to get burned.” Commodities trading by weather forecasters, farmers or any­ one else with an edge about crop performance is perfectly legal, said Dave Gary, a spokesman for the Commodities Futures Trading Commission in Washington. “The concept is entirely different than in securities, where someone might get advance information about a company’s per­ formance/’ he said. “Insider information is not a violation of the. Commodities Exchange A ct” A meteorologist who thinks the price of soybeans will go up because damaging weather is on the way might buy a soybean futures contract. The contract specifies delivery at a certain date and price. If the futures price rises, the contract can be sold for a profit.' __ That’s just what happened over the past month as rain and flooded croplands drove key farm commodities sharply higher. For example, the soybean contract for delivery tins month was Selling for $5.82 a bushel a month ago. It closed Friday at $7.24 on the Chicago Board of Trade, a gain of 24 percent. The gamble isn’t for everyone. Some meteorologists say they know just enough about weather and agriculture to stay well clear of any trading pits. “My father’s a commodities broker out of Topeka,” said Cory Barron at KWCH-TV in Wichita, Kan. “I don’t mess with it because it’s too risky. You can lose a lot of money in a hurry,” He and other meteorologists have access to computerized gov­ ernment forecasts as well as satellite data showing weather pat­ terns with likely trouble spots. BRAIN STUDY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED W omen 21-30 years old are invited to participate, in a study o f the brain’s control o f eye movements. If you are in good health, right-handed, have normal vision w ithout corrective lenses, and would like to participate in this study, please call: GOOD SAMARITAN REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER ilversity, Tem pe 968-2557 239-5251 724 E . G len d ale A ve. 870-8507 4 G re a t T a stin ' S u m m er S p e cia ls! N o w a t T a co Jo h n 's E X P R E SS M E A L S 4 D e licio u s M e a l D eals • m ade w ith yo u r fa v o rite s • E a sie r t o o . . . th e num ber! Tempo • Mesa • Ahwatukee TACO JO H N 'S ’ HOURS M-W 4AM- 12AM TOURS. 4PM -1:30AM FRI. & SAT. 4PM-2:30AM SUN. 11AM-12AM PIZZA 921 -FAST DELIVERY' Page 15 State Press Tuesday July 20,1993 ft! 2 For 1 Breakfast Not good wtthany other offer. 2nd breakfast of equal or lesaar value. 7am • 11am M on.-Sun. Open at 7am 7 days a week Casa Loma Building Old Town Tempe 398 S. Mill Ave. 966-1700 THE COOLEST PLACE TO BE IS JUST A HOP, SKIP & A JUMP FROM CAMPUS WITH THIS COUPON • EXPIRES 8 -0 3 -9 3 W e're more than h o t . . . W e’re Cool!! BE THEk'E THE FUN NEVEI?STOPS! U V E ROCK & REGGAE NIGHTCLUB 'til 10pm Italian Soda DAY AND NIGItr. NIGHT AND DAY DOWNTOWN TEMPE DAILY DRINK SPECIALS H alf Price w ith this ad ■TA K E A B IT E O F F T H E P R IC E S 1 .7 5 W e ll D r in k s & S c h n a p p s $4 P it c h e r s S1 D ra fts W ed n esd a y , July 2 1 Anytime Expires 7-26-93 $ 2 .0 0 ' w ith F la th e a d I I4 a i RAIN CONVENTION >¡r w y o ^ i N ew T im es —Best o f Phoenix Since 1989 I I SANDWICH PIERSONS T h u r sd a y , J u ly 2 2 Stop in & enjoy a cool, refreshing Buy any sándwich, g et the 2nd sándwich for $2.00 with coupon. Not valid for delivery. Expires 8/2/93. I I I I W e D e liv e r Coffee Roasters Tropical Coffeehouse «VCOFFEE ■ :/* PLANTATION $2 C o ro n a s the ^/Vlcllowcr nul of l7Hill S^lva S P E C IA L S T U D E N T F A R E S Round trip from Phoenix F o s te r 's F riday, July 2 3 SUMMER TRAVEL • ONE-YEAR STAY SPINNING JEN N Y FRANKFURT........................ TOKYO................. .....799 SINGAPORE..— ..— ........$1006 LONDON....................... $ $ »75 PARIS........................... t 659 HONG KONG........... MANILA.......................... $ 900 AMSTERDAM....-..— .....^...,. GUATEMALA........................... 525 O S L O , . - . ™ , __ -, BEUZE...... ..................... $ 502 MADRID......................... COSTA RICA-.................. $ 550 ROME....... — ........— ... SAO PAULO.— ...— .................*MBSTOCKHOLM-..,....--...........»820 C a fé & Baker y w it h P r i m i t i v e Id S 4 O il C a n s 1/É PRICE ESPRESSO DRINKS 4-7 Weekdays O ther Cities Available Email passes now Issued In our office! ♦Best Cappuccino in The Valley ♦Live Entertainment Fit-Sat Night YOUTH FLEX1PASS 220 ONE MONTH YOUTH PASS..» 508 EURAIL FLEXIPASS— ,--,.-» 200 ‘ EURAIL FIRST CLASS... ..» 460 M ILL A V E N U E T R A V E L 966-6300 310 S. K ill Ave. RESTRICTIONS APPLY. SU BJECT TO AVAILABILITY. *15 DAY > 968-2737 24 m m DEAD HOT WORKSHOP I sbarra SIZZLIN' sbarra w it h T h e D r a k e s S t , P a u l! S u n d a y , July 2 S D EA D A N IM A L P IC K U P w it h S i s t e r M o r p h i n e S 2 S t. P a u li G ir ls M onday, July 2 6 C L U B JA X O N L a d ie s F R E E | 4 ftS t M t il .1 0 p m I W I A i % 4 a i H i 0 f t R oB rl Call 894-9113 for Lineup C o rn e r 6 th & M ill 640 S. Mill Ave. • 6th Street, w est o f Mill • 967-4448 w it h I s o t o p e s Saturday July Open horn 7 a.m. Lunch Daily Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. M-F Half Price Drinks Live Entertainment m yfTastefui, I \ Lingerie I I -C_a Lingerie r-j-— ,Tarries) (ask about C o o l Cottons .a n d other Natural Fabric Fashions an d receive ^ ^ A 'SUMMER SPECIALS 17" PIZZA I L Y O U CAN EAT BUFFET P in a , P a sta , S a la d B a r s3-99 Lunch ( l i r a - Spai) $4.99(3-8pm Dinner ) D ine In O nly. Not good w ith any other offer. $ 0 . DINNER DEALS (3pm - d o ee) *6.99 Cheese * 7 .9 9 p e p p e r o n i o r S ausage *8.99 Supreme, Hawaiian o r Vegetarian Second Pizza Just ,55.99 (equal or leaser value) lim ited tim e oilier. N ot good w ith an y oth er offer. 20% off month of July Sin the50% Off ail sale Hams 414 Mill Ave. 967-7425 411 S. Mill Ave. Sbarro Italian Eatery 921-3187 _____ Patio Seating • Dine In • Take O ut * Catering St a t e P ress Tuesday, Ju ly 20,1993 P a g e lô W elcome to Telluride —now go away TELLURIDE, Colo. (AP) — Dogs used to sleep in the middle of the main street during the summer off-season at this southwest­ ern ski resort. Now the hip mountain town is so popular it has to take a weekend off. Telluride is in the middle of its second “Nothing Festival/’ reclaiming its privacy for at least one weekend. Promoter Dennis Wrestler was just putting up the festival's blank white banner, while “Nothing Festival” T-shirts — with “Leave Me Alone” stenciled on the back — were selling briskly Friday. Asked what he planned to do after buying his, Jay Simon said, “Nothing.” Wrestler got the idea two years ago after a big rock concert left the town covered in trash and its ears ringing. “I was ju st trying to eliminate one big rock concert,” he recalls. To preempt plans for another concert in 1992 for thesame weekend, he proposed a “Nothing Festival” to the commission that controls cultural events. City Manager Virginia Egger jumped at the idea. The 1991 rock concert “was a disaster,” she $aid. “We said never again. We’re going to get lynched.” Wrestler, owner of a carpet-cleaning service and liquor store, adds, “People just ate it up because they wanted a little peace and quiet. We’re putting on the tourists but not putting them down. It’s a sort of mental health weekend.” The town of 1,500 has become a victim of its own success. Tourism has been growing 20 percent per year, with many visitors attracted by the many festivals and forums that draw participants and celebrities from around the nation. Forty-two events are listed on the Telluride calendar for this summer. Festivals range from the M ushroom Festival and Native American Writers Forum to the Telluride Bluegrass Festival, which has become so popular the town has to limit attendance to 10,000. Mel Gibson and Sissy Spacek performed A.R. Gurney’s “Love Letters” last week in two sold-out benefits for the Sheridan Opera House. * “It’s hard to be nice to people every day,” Egger said. “The town needs a break.” During the “Nothing Festival,” residents are encouraged to pay visits to one another, although much business is already conduct­ ed during roadside chats. Delivery trucks still park right in the middle of the main street, a relic of Telluride’s mule train days. “Last year’s festival was a total success. Nothing happened,” said former Mayor Peter Spencer. Dave Erickson, owner o f Timberline Hardware, says most townspeople moved here to ski, but then discovered there is much more to do during the summer, including hiking, mountain biking and camping. The town’s newfound popularity has spawned a wave of antigrowth sentiment The bankruptcy of a $79 million luxury hotel seems to have been greeted almost with a sigh of relief. The town council, ner­ vous about additional growth, has voted to oppose expansion of the ski area. 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For over 75 years, we've been there for the simplest questions as well as when disaster drops in. 4^ TO M & B E C K I C H A M B E R S & Sons of the Western Plains Auto & Home Insurance bran Thursday, July 22 • 12 Noon California Casualty A S U Memorial Union Programming Lounge (Lower level, Southeast com er below Information Desk) You'll love us when you need us. Phoenix ToUFree Tom& Becki Chambers combine music, cowboy poetry, humor & loreto recreate a sense of.the Wild West. The Sons of the Western Plains are knownfor their fiddle playing and "bunkhousebass* sound. Revisit the Old West Thursday inthe MU! Enjoy free lunch hour entertainment inthe ProgrammingLounge everyThursday during summer session. Upcoming shows: Azz Izz Band •Ted Allen Quartet. 1(602) 861-2220 1(800) 841-4736 For Faculty and Staff Only mi Sponsored by ASU Summer Sessions Call 965-5062 for rridre information P a g e 17 Tuesday, July 20,1993 State P ress Slip o f the tongue: Frenchville, P.A. losing its French FRENCHVILLE, Pa. (AP) — Education helped take the French out of Frenchville. Radio and television provided the coup de grace. The central Pennsylvania community o f fewer than 500, whose French-speaking ancestors hiked up the Susquehanna River 163 years ago, now has only five residents who speak the language of Napoleon and Voltaire. All are in their 70s, 80s and 90s. Recent generations haven’t kept up their unique dialect, said Francis Perrot, 84, one of the surviving Francophones. “They ought to have their behinds kicked,” he said. The slip o f the tongue began at thé turn of the century, when mandatory education — in English — became Pennsylvania law. Two generations battled with teachers to maintain their French, but world wars, industry and television stacked the piquet deck against them. Time soon will silence them. “It’s a damned shame if we lose these. This is the end of the trail,” said Simon Belasco, a retired linguistics professor from the University of South Carolina who studied the Frenchville dialect in the ,1970s. "Their particular pronunciation is unique in the United States. Usually it develops and becomes something else” like the French Canadian and south Louisiana varieties, he said. “It never developed. It stayed the same,” Belasco said. The only corruptions are new words like airplane and automobile. Perrot, regularly spitting tobacco in his shed, recalled his first teadher. “She said it wasn’t right to speak French because she was afraid we were talking about her,” Perrot said. “Well, of course we were, but we all spoke French before we spoke English.” The generation behind Perrot’s had similar stories to tell. Merle Roussey, 62, and other children would get their mouths slapped if they spoke French at elementary school. The idea was, if a person wanted to get ahead in the world he had to speak English. “I went to school with both languages, and it was difficult to sort out what was French and what was English,” Roussey said. French remained a taboo until he was at Clearfield High School, when it was offered as an elective. He took the class, but doesn’t speak French fluently now. Eventually, parents did not teach their children French to pro­ tect them from the same torments. The language became Some­ thing parents used in front of the children if they wanted to keep secrets. Children picked up phrases and swear words, but not the language. “I would have liked to have learned,” Said Vicki Gormont Davis, whose French-speaking parents have died, “I regret we’ve lost i t ” At the beginning, French was the official language of the town and church records. A Paris merchant accepted the land as a pay­ ment for a debt in the 1820s. After buying land for $1 an acre,' Frenchmen fiom Alsace, Normandy and Picardy arrived in Baltimore and Philadelphia and hiked up the Susquehanna. Masses were in Latin, so it didn’t matter that early Roman Catholic priests assigned here were named Leahy, Loughran or Flanagan.. In P846, the town Was assigned a French pastor, John Baptist Berbigier, who stayed 34 years. The names on die tombstones in St. Mary of the Assumption Church cemetery are the same as found on many mailboxes in town. They have buried Valimonts, Rousseys, LiegeyS, Plubells, Picards and even someone named English. * When Frenchville men went to war, many were assigned to Europe for work as interpreters. When they got back, they took lumber or coal jobs, where English was the language of business. Perrot was an interpreter in the militaiy and stayed away from Frenchville for a time after his return to the United States. HisFrench was rusty. “I pretty near forgot it,” he said. “When we went to say some­ thing, it wouldn’t come out right.” His sister, Edith Voinchet, taught him the language again. Until last September, when she died, he had someone to talk with regularly. Now he regularly speaks French to himself, “and answer in French, too,” he Says. He doesn’t expect the language to survive once he and the oth­ ers are gone. The French descendants of south Louisiana suffered similar declines, but their larger numbers have helped them turn around some of the losses. The 1990 census showed that Louisiana had 262,000 French speakers. The Real Pirn People of M B WILD ! DINNER ! TUESDAYFA ST, F R E E D elivery •FOR tWO! ! WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY! 829-0064 « 4 0 E, AFACHE - TENFE ! té" pizz a :■ ■■£■■■■ W2 Toppings ! and 2 FREE Sodas > 16" 1-ITEM PIZZA 1r UNLIMITE» TOPPING PIZZA $6 ” Nebody een tauch ear "TWENTY INCHER"!!! E Z U IH ! B T O M K C tt I A nf N y jmu slice H -Y o u 6*t M on h r Your M o ri! M n u ro m M i ARIZONA S TATE ARIZONA STATE the business MINOR/ BA 123 or call 965-4227 Page 18 St a te P ress Tuesday, July 20,1993 Hooters’ bars: An open invitation to harassment? BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) — Former waitress Whitney Miller remembers the customer who refused to pay for his food — unless she took off her shirt. W *“ , That, hie thought, “was what Hooters was for.” Was he mistaken? A growing number of critics of Hooters, a chain of bar-restaurants, would say he was right on the money. They say Hooters’ success — 107 franchises in 28 states and annual sales in excess of $130 million — is built on a corporate image that uses women employees as sexual ornaments and, according to recent lawsuits, encourages Unwelcome sexual advances by customers and managers. One lawyer who has filed sexual harassment lawsuits on behalf of former Hooters waitresses calls it a “corporate culture of misogyny,” . Protests have been launched in Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Ohio and Virginia, the National Organization for Women has raised objections, and Working Woman m agazine inducted Hooters into its 1992 Hall of Shame. Like many other bars, Hooters features waitresses — “Hooters Girls" — in scanty costumes, taking orders for beer and chicken wings. But Hooters attorneys and Company officials.. deny they’re marketing anything more than innocent “sex appeal.” The law­ suits are “outrageous,” they say. And the nam e? It’s not a double-entendre reference to women’s breasts, Hooters’ management says. It’s about owls. “For us, Hooters is just the name of the restaurant,” said Mike McNeil, vice president of marketing for Hooters of America, Inc., in Atlanta. “If that was our desire, to blatantly name it after a por­ tion of the female anatomy, there are much more blatant slang terms that we could utilize.” No question. When the original Hooters opened in Clearwater, Fla., in 1983, it inspired several competitors: Knockers, Melons and Mugs ’n Jugs. Seven harassment lawsuits have been filed by former waitress­ es at the Hooters bar in the Mall of America, the giant shopping and en tertainm ent com plex in the M inneapolis suburb of Bloomington. Another sexual harassment lawsuit was filed earlier this month in Fort Lauderdale, Ha., by a former Hooters waitress. At the heart of the lawsuits is the argument that Hooters’ “con­ cept” — waitresses in scanty costumes, nod-and-a-wink refer­ ences to women’s anatomy, cheesecake calendars and swimsuit photo magazines featuring “Hooters Girls” —* invites sexual harassment of women employees. T hat harassm ent, the M innesota law suits say, included Hooters’ managers and other employees grabbing and proposi­ tioning women employees and commenting about their breasts. One of plaintiffs, Dawn Felepe, said she was propositioned by Hooters managers at least 50 times in the nine months she worked there. Customers also felt flee to make sexual comments, the law­ suits say. Some waitresses said they were asked if they wore underwear. Others were asked their bra size. Others were simply asked for sex. Managers told them to tolerate it, the women say. M iller, bne of the plaintiffs, said, managers told her she shouldn’t work as a “Hooters Girl” anymore because her breasts became smaller after she stopped breast-feeding her son. “I now realize that no amount of money is worth being a sexu­ al target because I’m female,” Miller said, when the lawsuits were filed. , ' v Lisa Gray, Hooters’ attorney in Minneapolis, says the lawsuits contain “outrageous and inflammatory allegations which are clearly written for press consumption.” McNeil denies that the Hooters concept degrades women. “Hooters Girls in our concept are put on pedestals,” he said. Still, the first thing that greets visitors to the restaurants is the Hooters logo, an owl whose enormous, round orange eyes form the O ’s in “hooters” and look like line-drawing representations of breasts. The m ost com plete arsenal of test prep toots in the world. LSAT Nickel Palace C A LL NOW: KAPLAN RULES 967 2967 N o cover charge. A fte r im agin in g a g ia n t pizza, o n e as big as th e bam , Brenda silently adm itted to b eing th e big, fat co w she really is. LUNCH M O N D A Y T H R U F R ID A Y D IN N E R E V E R Y D A Y L IV E M U S I C T U E S D A Y T H R U S U N D A Y ✓ “"Vnly at Perkins* Family Restaurants can you enjoy all I lo f your breakfast, lunch and dinner favorites anytime V j / n) the day. Like our fluffy buttermilk pancakes, scrumptious edible bread bowl salads, premium threp-ege omelettes, creamy chicken pot pies and more. All available when you're hungry. Morning. Noon, O r night $2.99 ALL YOU CAN EAT PANCAKES OfferexpiaesAug. 13.1993 . $2.49 M AGNIFICENT 7 3 Buttermilk Pancakes, 2 Eggs Any Style, 2 Scrips of Bacon or Sausage Linfe Offer expires Aug. 13,15193 Oaccnupoaperpensapervukai pnkhUhfMW ». Notvalidwithanyoditi dneouotof , nbapaidbptuenwir. ■' hcouponwhenordering 1/20ccmcadi «value. 01993feihiai Rouumitt Operating ap,LP. • P ag eJL9 Tuesday, Juiy 20,1993 State P ress Tim-b-e-r-r-r! -P h o to s by Darryl W ebb and M ichelle C o n w ayC hannel 10 sp o rts b roadcaster J.D . Hayw orth (left) su p p o rts team m ates In a g rea sed p ole co n te st at the 18th annual Lo g g er Saw dust F e stiva l in P a y so n la st w eekend. Tw o con testan ts (below ) try to kn ock ea ch other o ff a lo g w hile com p eting in a lo g b illin g even t. BUI N eal o f P a yso n (right) p articip ates in a sin g le buckin g c o n te s t sm C H IN A GATE Buy one dinner, get 2 nd at half price o r e q u a l o r le sse r v a lu e ). Fo r all co llege students and faculty. Student or faculty I.D. . required. Exp ire s 8-13-93. ■ Schlotzsky's S C O TT SD A LE L O C A T IO N O N L Y 7820 E. M c D o w e ll • S c o tts d a le • 946-0720 Not to be combined with any other offer. S andw iches 4m ou |iai^ pS aiads TO D A Y'S S P E C IA L H i 2 fo r 1 P A SS •1st person pays at •2nd person •Skate rental only 1520 N . M cC lin to ck • Complimentary admit-two passes to an a d v a n c e screening of M H a r k in s T h e a tr e s this great new movie! V B e sr o f Phoenix" Snack Bars • Low est Adm ission Prices »I •offer g o o d w hile supply lasts Ìì ì WìU'Mìì Ì^M IFREEWIU.Y 1 230.MS.5 ftB IN THE UNE OF ORE, JJEDS 11:30.2:00.4:40.730. 103» TH E FIRM « OH2SCREENS! T E E 12:30.1ao. 3:46.4:36. 7:00. 7:80. 10:18 JU R A S S IC P A R K <*»» o*eag*Bm •o n e p er custom er 11:45,230,5:15,000,10940............THXeoif 11:00.148.4:30. 7:15. BBS .81»suuw -------- " V1:20.3:30. 5:40. 7:80. 10*» (POI3) M M T V tbw Q iÿnoow m ir 11:30am.2:10.4:80.7:30.10:10 (R) 81206.225. 4:85.7:10, MO(POI 1001RABBITTALES umiiwir.f •no purchase necessary _____ _______ IfcÒO.2:00.4:30. 7:80,10:00 (B) ROOKtt OFTMKVKAR1220230*40, TOft830(PO) PAVg12:aO, ftlQ, 4:45, 7:10. 9:45 (PG) 1236,248. 8:18. 7:30.0:80 Oft 12:10,2:48.8:10.740.10MI0 (PQ13) TODAY ONLY! GO NOW! S c h lo tz s k y 's STAKEOUT I M iH K » -. . I i m M H I l H * « . JHIKÌHmo« H iB iin b nuit im %zm m * * 5 « r am m m hhmsiibhh ’" t a f t a n i R i i i w ^ h ü l •lOUCitSTOW nctuKt Sandwiches • Soups • Salads 10TH&MILL only: G R E A T M O V IE GREAT DEAL g H O CU S P O C U S , 12MB. 2:20. 8:00. 7:20,040^ a I O p e n s J u ly 23 at theatres everyw here dam p ;e 2 0 Tuesday, July 20, 1993 St a t e P r es s Library Cafe learns a lesson in m osh pits By Lorenzo Sierra State P ress If there were any doubts about Phoenix being headbanging town, they were pummeled beneath the feet of a moshing hoard Sunday night at the Library Cafe. On that day of rest, local thrashers Sacred Reich showed why they are one of the heavy metal bands in this area that have made good on a national scale. Over 800 of Phoenix’s headbanging legion came out to see Sacred Reich play in their home market for the first time since the release of Independent —the band’s major label (Hollywood Records) debut “We’re doing it just to do it,” said rhythm guitarist, Jason R ainey, about the show’s pur­ pose. “I t’s fun to play w here we’re from.” Rainey said the Library Cafe gig Was a warm-up fo r the b a n d ’s impending fourw eek n atio n al to u r w ith Danzig. Arizona fans will get tó see S acred on the final ten­ tativ e date in T ucson som e­ tim e in midAugust. The show at the L ibrary Cafe photo by Lo Sierra also featured a H8 Inc. pair of hard S t a t e P r e ss 100 Iced Anim als rocking local talent. Although considered alternative, Tempo’s 100 Iced Animals kicked off this night of destruction with an impressive 40-minute set. When 100 Iced Animals hit the stage about 500 people had showed up. Many o f the younger people in the audience seemed dazed at the Tempe band. Once 100 Iced Animals began playing the riffheavy “ 18 Stories High,” it seemed as though a collective light bulb went off in the crowd’s head as they probably thought ‘hey, these guys rock — cool.’ “The crowd was great,” said bassist Tim Brink. “They totally gave me a boost” Brink was quick to point out the zealousness of the predomi­ nantly under-21 crowd. “They’re much more enthusiastic than the drinkers,” he said. Next on the firing line, was H8 Inc. This quartet bears the ban­ ner of thrash present in the Phoenix area and have the potential to follow in the footsteps of Sacred Reich. By the time H8 Inc. began playing, the central Phoenix night-. club was nearly full. As vocalist/guitarist C J. asked, “We’re H8 Inc., has anybody heard of us?,” a roar of approval signified in the S p o R T S -W e c o v e r a n d g o o d p o o r C n iC A G IES ! FOR 1 2 For 1 Sandwich Buy an y san d w ich & large affirmative. H8 Inc.'s 45-minute set had the crowd moving in neck bob­ bing unison. “I felt like it was totally positive energy,” C.J. Said after the show. “It was so beautiful to see the thrash scene come together.” . Over the past few years, H8 Inc. has opened up for the likes of Pantera and Suicidal Tendencies. The show at the Library Gafe, in someway had Sacred Reich passing the thrash torch to H8 InC. When Sacred Reich hit the stage at about 10:15 p.m. a tsunami . o f bodies nearly overpowered the three-bodyguard barricade that separated the band from the moshers. The show turned to near lunacy when H8 Inc.’s C.J. did a sw an dive into th e fro n t row . I Bodies m eshed together in the I stuffy bar mak- H ing sw eat the H m ost abundant I liq u id in the I joint. Sacred Reich I play ed a g reat I material In d ep e n d en t. And in the end, these young men th at are li out the every peachfuzzed face boy in the audience, * J tk proved once and e fo r the H I ^ H H l-*___ Valley is a giant ^ mosh pit. Sacred R eich s p o r t s , b a d s p o r t s , s p o r t s am . y’ r ic h [HE photo by lo Stem s p o r t s , • wmmm MIGUELS MUSIC CENTER ► IB A N E Z • A L V A R E Z • O VATIO N drink a t reg u lar price ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS a n d rec eiv e th e s e c o n d san d w ich F R E E . ► 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) (All sandwiches include fries.) No expiration. ► R E P A IR S •* On All Instruments! ★ S 1 .1 0 D ra fts E V E R Y D A Y ★ 8 25 W. U n iv e r s it y - C o r n e r o f H a r d y 8 9 4 -8 3 8 7 N e x t t o O z z le 's W a r e h o u s e In th e A r c h e s S h o p p in g C e n te r iL . m u fn i T V f f lU v C i P IT C H E R S APPETIZERS WÊ§Ê S U N .-T H U R S . 1 0 P M -1 2 A M - Monats P IZ Z A -R A M A Mexican Food T H U R SD A Y SATOmWkYVttâtiMAX ALL YOU CAN EVERY EAT MONDAY F R ID A Y FTiiPAY mntxMmm ■ $ 3.99 Unlimited pepperoni and supreme pizzas plus bottomless soft drinks 5pm-8pm E V E R Y Monday 829-8907 Hit the Hut 1030 E. APACHE Entertainment State P ress Page 21 Tuesday, July 20,1993 SWEET RELIEF Musicians unite in fight against Multiple Sclerosis ByTammyMesa Sierra t was a good day for musician Victoria Williams as she chatted in her Louisiana twang from her Los Angeles home. The sun was shining above while she blissful­ ly worked on writing some new music with a fellow artist. Her body was only slightly numb. A bad day is quite different. “It was bad when I couldn’t w alk,” she recalled. “It’s a bad day when my hands are numb and I can’t play or move the strings on my guitar,” 7 But W illiam s, who was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis in the spring of 1992 while touring with Neil Young, is not one for self-pity or for giving in — thanks to some friends in high places. The incurable disease, referred to simply as MS, typically strikes young adults in the prime of their lives w ithout warning. Like a vast majority of musicians, Williams had no health insurance and was even turned away from cer­ tain treatments. But news of the situation rip­ pled through the music industry and struck a cord with many o f her friends and fans. After learning of W illiams’ condition, an impressive array of musicians collaborated to hold two benefit concerts raising over $20,000, and later released a 14-track compact disc with all proceeds allotted to her mounting medical costs. The bittersweet coalition left Williams so heartfelt, she started the Sweet Relief Musicians Trust Fund with $3,000 of her own money to aid other artists in similar predicaments. A ffectionately labeled Sw eet Relief, the effort was released earlier this month and con­ sists of covers written by Williams and per­ formed by the likes of Soul Asylum, Pearl Jam, Lou Reed and Giant Sand to name a few. ■ Though she knew most o f the musicians contributing to Sweet Relief, Williams didn’t meet Pearl Jam until they phoned and asked to join in on the compilation. Holding a quaint affiftity for the band’s vocalist; Eddie Vedder, Williams revealed a common thread between the two. “Those guys are so nice,” she said. “Eddie and I share the same birthday.” Apparently, all ofthe musicians adore her as well with many attaching quotes of adoration to the release. Howe Gelb of Giant Sand calls Williams “a delicate crossing of Mickey Mouse and Michael Jackson without the weirdness.” “This is no typical compilation/tribute record, nor is it your average Artists-for-Cause-of-the-Week type thing,” according to Shudder to Think. “That someone like Victoria Can rally such a strong group of is testimony to her songs and to the breadth of her spirit.” On living With Multiple Sclerosis “I thought ‘He’s crazy,”’ Williams said of the time her chiropractor first attributed her ailments to MS. “1 thought I had a pinched nerve,” She said. But he wasn’t crazy or even off target with his diagnosis. After a string of blood and numerous other tests, the condition was confirmed. Williams' said sometimes she doesn’t believe she has MS, because spirit and her mind have remained up to par. But her body can’t up, and there are many days she has difficulty walking. Still, she refuses to acknowledge any prognosis that is even remote­ ly grave and has revamped her habits to correspond with holistic treatments. “I’m studying a lot of alternative treatments,” Williams said. “I’ve changed my diet and I’m taking a whole lot of supplements like different vitamins, lecithin, primrose and herbs.” For Williams, the best reme­ dy thus far is to continue Victoria Williams making music to extinguish stress that often triggers was diagnosed severe bouts of MS. with Multiple “I just don’t let myself get stressed o u t” Sclerosis while On Generation X “I’m an idealist, and I really hope they can m ake a d iffe re n c e ,” Williams said of the new generation of liberals try­ ing to revam p social awareness and concern. Deemed Generation X, th e fac tio n o f tw entysom ethings raise d on O r r j h f E 'f m it ic “The Brady Bunch” and Though relatively unknown in radio circles, MTV has abandoned Williams is no newcomer to the music industry. much of its frivolity and In addition to touring with Young and other entered into the political big-name artists, Williams released albums on realm of social consciousness. the Geffen and Rough Trade labels. Happy B ut W illiam s, 34, expressed Come Home and Swing the Statute, respective­ M u sicia n V icto ria W illiam s h a s re ceived m ou n ds o f su p p o rt from fello w big some concern over the movement ly, provided the bulk o f Sweet R eliefs material. nam ed a rtists In b a r fig h t a g a in st M u ltip le S c le ro s is . A c o a litio n re co rd ed and even the current administra­ Williams’ style obviously lends itself to the Sweet R elief in h er hon or. tion. blues and soft-alternative genres. But the style “I think he’s got good intentions, interjected by Sweet R eliefs rainbow of artists, but I think he’s kind of wishy-washy,” she said o f President Bill often makes for crunchy and hard-hitting pieces that leave the listener wondering exactly what this Clinton. music is all about Williams said although the coalition is impressive. She fears “W ell, I guess any k ind o f m usic is an a lte rn a tiv e to the goal could get lost in the bureaucracy which plagues the coun­ an o th er type o f m u sic,” try“The ’60s people were like that, too, and look what has hap­ Williams said unable to classi­ fy her work. “I think th a t’s pened to them now,” she said. “They’ve been sucked into the sys­ why people like it. It’s such a tem.” Like many in her class, Williams attributes America’s prob­ great honor to hear other peo­ lems to a wealth addiction and simple greed. ple sing my songs.” “I ’ll tell you, it starts with education. If we spent money, Soul A sy lu m ’s v ersio n o f “Summer of Drugs,” passion­ instead of on bombs, on education, doctors could graduate and not ately opens the disc and pre­ feel like they have to make a big profit to pay back all this money. “People all over this country are being turned away from emer­ pares the listener for a multi­ dimensional voyage that culmi­ gency rooms. Doctors won’t see them because they don’t have nates with Michelle Shocked’s insurance, so they turn them away and send them off to another gospel-like rendition of “Holy hospital. “It’s going to have to get back to people doing a job because Spirit.” Perhaps m ost im pressive, is they love to do it, because they’re called to do it;” she said with the haunting “C razy M ary” obvious despair. S O U L A S Y L U M • t U C IN D A W I U J A M S • P £ A R l JA M Williams said she yearns to see the day when people aren’t B U F fA L O T Ó M * M IC H A E L P E N N • S H U D D E R T O T H I N K performed by Pearl Jam with LOU HEED » M A R I A M CKEE « M A TTH EW S W E E T caught up with monetary possessions, but live just to experience William’s serving up some elo­ E V A N D A N D O O F L E M O N H E A O ® » T H E JAVMAWK& quent backing vocals and flat­ what life has to offer. TH E W A T E R S O V S • G IA N T S A N O ' M IC H E L L E S H O C K E O “That would be a good day,” she said. tering guitar riffs. touring with Neil Young during the spring of 1992. Since then two benefit concerts have been held and the following artists contributed to the Sweet Relief effort to help raise money for her medical expenses: Soul Asylum Lucinda Williams Pearl Jam Buffalo Tom Michael Penn Shudder to Think I.on Reed Maria McKee Matthew Sweet 1A an Dando of Lemonheads The iayhawks The Waterboys Giant Sand Michelle Shocked Comics Calvin and Hobbes ivy Bill Watterson THE COMIC STRIP. VAPID. JUVENILE. COMMERCIAL HACK YO R K. ART. A PAINTING. MOVING. SPIRITUALLY ENRICHING. SUBLIME. ART/ SUPPOSE I DRAW A CARTOON A PAINTING O f A COMIC STRIP PANEL. SOPHISTICATE) OF A PAINTING OF A -------- COMIC STRIP? IRONY. PHILOSOPHICALLY CHALLENGING. k T f S0PU0M0RIC I -'.'HIGH* ART. ,] I INTELLEOUAU-Y STERILE. ...TOW 4* ART. Doonesbury rrs s o m State P ress Tuesday, July 20, 1993 Pagé22_ so rt o f le t m e seeth at , OU?MAP, PAPPY! SQUIRT... \ FAR SIM By GARY LARSON BY G ARRY TRUDEAU W 600... H El ÎA M A P m am p ilo s ; PFANOENT \ T M SIST H EV EKT po cu m en tpescr /b e p e t LOPP DEPUIS IN HtS ESSAY ON THE LOSTAMULETS OF KING PNLAX! U E LLI \ THOUGHT AMAZING. AND YET ¡HOOPS REMARKABLY URBAN EVICTION N O KS. ' WEIL,TOTNB UNTUTORED ETE,SURE. CO O L! “ E rn ie ! L o o k w hat y o u ’re d o in g ta k e th o se s h o e s o ff!” PEO PLE By L ynne B ernstein A ssociated P ress NEW YORK — Cyberpunk dogma gave Billy Idol a focus for his new album, which became a “letter o f the future” to his 4-yearold son. “It took my music in a new dimension. I wanted to take my life in a new dimension,” the punk rocker known for his bleached hair and sneer said as he sat in front of his com­ puter in a hotel room. “Like what Lincoln s a id ,‘the better angels of our nature.* It's great to see those and not the lowest demons. I hope this is the begin­ ning of me shining rather than the worst side of my nature coming forward.” It may not be defined yet in some dictio­ naries, but cyberpunk has become an under­ ground subculture, and Idol is excited about the range of freedoms it can create. Formed from the words “cybernetics” (the science o f human control systems and elec­ tronic systems) and “punk” (a hoodlum), its ideology encompasses music, art and cutting edge technology in tandem with an antisocial it’s going to make you want to interact with or unconventional attitude. “Cyberpunk is all about ordinary people other people. T his w ould be a m uch m ore through their own endeavors carving out their imaginative way to do it.” The com puter also gave him a choice to future, and ab etter future through science and chemistry,” Idol said. “And it’s not going to circ u m v en t th e u su a l stu d io p ro ce ss. H e recorded the album “Cyberpunk” at home on be up to th e m e g a c o rp o ra tio n s b e c a u se they’re not interested in making things bet­ ' a co m p u ter, w hich can d ig ita lly sto re an instrument’s sound. ter.” T h e 3 7 -y e a r-o ld ro c k e r ’s la s t alb u m , I d o l’s e n th u sia sm fo r th e c o m p u te r’s “Charm ed L ife,” took three years to make; p o te n tia l sw e lle d a f te r re a d in g W illia m this one 10 months. G ib s o n 's m id -’8 0 s sc ie n c e fic tio n b o o k Idol, known for such punk rock anthems as “N eurom ancer.” Later, som eone w rote the word “cyberpunk” on Idol’s muscle stimula­ “ R e b el Y e ll,” “W h ite W e d d in g ” an d tor cast which he was wearing because o f his “D ancing W ith M y s e lf’ as w ell as “Eyes Without A Face,” finds the traditional record­ famous motorcycle accident. ing process to be painstaking and boring. “The point is choice,” he said. “I f you w anted a keyboard to go ‘beep For Idol, that means not wearing a helmet while riding his motorcycle. O r signing on to beep bop bop’ all the way through a song it a computer bulletin board for alternative ideas took two days to record,” he said. The album ’s first release, “Shock to the and information. Or rooting for the advent of System,” is Idol’s punk rock response to the virtual sex. “It’s less destructive than alcohol,” Idol Los Angeles riots after the first Rodney King verdict. maintained, adding: “W hat we really wanted was the song to “And it really wouldn’t get in the way o f you interacting with other people. If anything, be raw and nasty and aggravated, which was what the riots were about.” H e’ll tour in the fall, using 30-foot screens and a swarm o f video cameras to create an interactive frenzy between the crowd and the stage. Idol’s eagerness to use technology extend­ ed to the album cover as well. ‘T h ro u g h th is com puter y o u ’ve got the tool to create it all. I’m the painter. An ordi­ nary individual can see the result o f his own mind, to realize h e’s slightly larger than he was led to expect.” Idol said he’s “fighting against my medi­ ocrity. But I’m really enjoying myself.” Indeed, Idol was at a popular restaurant one night dancing with him self —- on other people’s tables. He reportedly was down to his silk under­ w ear when he was finished. A patron said; “He wasn’t even drunk — ju st having a good time.” . Sports S tate P ress_______________________ ' ' ____________ Tuesday, July 20,1993 P age 23 _________________ A S U coach doing well after surgery Baseball coach has 80% o f liver removed State P ress Jim Brock, the head baseball coach at ASU for the past 22 seasons, underwent successful surgery at Good Sam aritan R egional M edical C enter in Phoenix R a ttle rs c o a ch D a n n y W hite, left, and form er-A SU quarterback P aul Ju stin co n fe r o n the sid e lin e s d u rin g an A ren a Fo o tb a ll Le ag u e gam e at A m erica W est A rena. Ju stin h a s led the R attlers to a 6-4 record and a berth in the A F L p la yo ffs. S nakebitten Justin leads Rattlers to 6-4 record, AFL playoflF berth By Shaun R achau State P ress Playing for the Arizona Rattlers in the Arena Football League could not be more suit­ able for former-ASU quarterback Paul Justin. W ith hard rock music blaring in the America West Arena between plays and having the Rattlers’ mascot — a biker named Fang — entertain the crowd while riding on his Hatley Davidson, the atmosphere suits Justin’s badboy image. In his four years as a Sun Devil, two years with the Chicago Bears in the National Football League and this year with the Rattlers, Justin’s tenacious style of play and competitive attitude on the field have helped contribute to his team’s success. “There’s no question about Paul,” Rattlers coach Danny White said. “He has been die dif­ ference in our team this year.” Despite playing with a cast on his left arm and a bruised knee, Justin has led the Rattlers to a 6-4 record and into playoff contention in the team’s second season in the AFL. “He has been able to stand in there with a hurt knee and a cast on his hand and throw passes with people hanging all over him,” said White, a former quarterback for the Sun Devils: and NFL Dallas Cowboys. “ That, has been the difference this season.” With only eight men per team playing at a time, two nets on both sides of the goal posts and a shortened 50-yard field, the AFL game is quite different from the NFL. Because of the differences in the style of play, the action is quicker and more exciting for the fans. However, the switch from the NFL to the AFL has not been difficult for Justin. T urn to J u s it n , pa g e 24, Dr. Law rence BROCK Koep, a transplant specialist at Good Samaritan, performed the surgery. “Coach Brock’s surgery went smoothly, with no problems,“ Koep said. “I anticipate recovery and a winning season in 1994.” The three-hour operation involved removing 80 percent of Brock’s liver and a sm all portion from the colon. Brock remained in’intensive care for 48 hours after the surgery and will remain in the hos­ pital for seven to 10 days. Koep expects Brock to fully recover and be able to return to the job by early September. “Two things were important for my father,” Jim Brock Jr. said. “One, there has been a tremendous outpouring from fans, family and friends. You can see that in his spirits. Two, Dr. Koep has done a lot to make the whole family confident that Dad will recover fully. He had a terrific attitude before the surgery and I know that helped him.” Brock has 1,054 career victories at ASU, a job he started in 1972. He has two national championships — 1977 and 1981 — and his teams have finished in the top three at the College W orld Series nine times. Brock has 10 regional titles and 11 conference championships to his credit. This past season, ASU posted a 46-20 record, won the Pac-10 Southern Division title and advanced to the College World Series. Brock, who was named the league’s coach-of-the-year, has won the award five times in the conference’s 13-year existence. ;«&j Young gymnasts invade campus ASU camp draws national attention W By Shaun Rachau State P ress At one time, ASU gymnast Katie Freeland was a young high school student participating in various gymnastics camps across the country. - Now, the 5-foot college sophomore from Axtell, Neb. is a member of the Sun Devil women’s gymnastics team - - proof positive that gymnasts can benefit from attending summer camps. Freeland was discovered in 1990 — along with teammate Tina Brinkman — by ASU coach John Spini at the Lake Owen gymnastics camp in Wisconsin . After working with Spini in Wisconsin, Freeland attended the Sun Devil Gymnastics Camp in 1990 and 1991 as a high school junior and senior. Spini will be looking for another Katie Freeland this week, as he conducts his Sixth annual Sun Devil Gymnastics Camp until Friday. “Those are two big recruits,!’ Spini said about discovering Freeland and Brinkman at a summer gymnastics camp. “This year I think we are looking at some really strong local kids. (The camp) gives us a way to look at them and see how good they are legally.” T urn to G y m n a st ic s , rage 24. nmm D ttiyl Webb/State Press C am p e rs at th e S u n D evil G y m n a stics C a m p p ra ctice ro u tin es o n the b a la n ce beam M onday. T h e cam p , w hich attracted cam pers from a c r o e i the natkM L ru n s u n til Friday* ** ^ Page 24 Tuesday, July 20,1993 Justin St a t e P ress Gymnastics from page 23. “The big difference is just that the field is sm aller and there is three less people on each side,” Justin said. “The (defensive) ends are getting to you quicker —- as opposed to the NFL ends, where it takes a second longer for them to get to you. All the pressure coming against the quarterback in this league is right away, and it does come.“ Because of the faster action in the AFL, Justin said it is a lot easier for a quarterback in the NFL. “I think the NFL is a little easier because you can combi­ nation block, you can double­ team, you can triple-team and you Can trap a lot easier,” Justin said. “In this league you can only trap from either side and you can’t run too many combi­ nations oh the line. It is all pret­ ty much man-to-man.“ This is Justin’s first season with the Rattlers. He sighed as a free agent in April after being released prior to the start of the 1992 NFL season by Chicago. With the Bears, Justin served as a backup quarterback and also contributed ori the developmen­ tal squad. C o n t in u e d C o n t in u e d Prior to being selected by Chicago in the seventh round of the 1991 NFL Draft, Justin fin­ ished his career as a Sun Devil among the top five in several ASU career passing categories. He is fourth in pass attempts with 753, third in passing yards with 5,761 and second in pass completions with 418. Justin established a school and Pac-10 record by throw ing for 534 yards in a single game versus Washington State in 1989. Despite suffering a number of shoulder injuries as a junior and senior, Justin was listed as the No. 1 quarterback prospect in the nation by The Sporting News in its 1989 preseason magazine, After the AFL season con­ cludes in early August, Justin is hoping he can retu rn to the NFL. . “My agent is on the horn to everybody and we’re keeping the lines open,” Justin said. “Hopefully, I can get into an NFL camp because it is never too late for the NFL. “It is never too late because they can pick anyone up during the season.“ from pa g e 23. More than 50 of the 80 girls 100 and a lot quality coaches. and two boys traveled from Each kid gets a lot of special­ N orth C aro lin a, T exas, ized attention.” Each day, campers perforin W isconsin, C alifo rn ia and Nevada to participate in- the three m orning rotations and w eek-long cam p. C am pers break for lunch at 12 p.m.- The staying overnight on the ASU gymnasts practice two more campus paid $290 to attend the ro tatio n s in the afternoon, camp, while commuters paid break for,dinner at 5:30 p.m. $190. and then meet for an aCtivty “We try to go out and invite each night. clubs that want to be out in this Spini said the camp coach­ area,” Spin! said. “I think we es take each Camper and try to get a good rapport with the figure out w hat they want to coaches because w e have not learn before the end o f the had a major injury at this camp week. in six years, and 1 think it is “We want them to have a one of the better camps in the Very happy, positive experi­ country.” ence with gymnastics,” Spini The camp features g y m -» said. “They might come in and nasts between the ages o f 6 be a beginner and want to learn and 17, with skill levels rang­ a double-back. That is a little ing from beginner to elite. bit unrealistic, but if we can “It is a very good camp,” teach them the progression said G lenn L aw rence, who steps to do the trick they will brought three gymnasts from - become more goal-oriented.” G.L. Gymcats in Texas. “The R evenue from the cam p thing we like about it is that it helps b en e fit the ASU is not really big, because some women’s gymnastics program of the camps have 300 to 400 to buy equipment and fund an kids. Here we have less than assistant coaching budget. Darryl Webb/Stato Press A volunteer co a ch a s s is ts a cam p er on the sp rin g b o a rd d u r­ in g M on day’s m orning p ra ctice s e s s io n . E a ch g ym n a st p a id $290 to attend the cam p and sta y overnight. STATE P r e s s C ro ssw o rd s—They aren't harsh w ords. 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University, Ste. E Tem pe, A Z 85281 966-3544 horoscope. In the classified section. • Quiet, student atmosphere • 2 swimming pools • On-site laundry • Right across the street from ASU cam pus CAMBRIDGE SQUARE 1011 East Lemon Street Tempe, AZ 85281 967-2544 UN IVERSITY -J 1 A u § LE M O N 1 Council Itave read your 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 cam pus. ■ Fares are each way based on a roundtrip purchase. Restrictions apply and tees may change with­ out notice. Seats may be limited so book now. unless you We're close to campus, quiet and affordable. APACH E C o n t in e n t a l A p a rtm e n ts 1019 East Lemon Street Tempe, AZ 85281 967-2544 Tuesday, July 20,1993 State P ress A dvertiser I ndex Name Page Magic Touch Cleaners...... i...............................9 May West Restaurant......... .................. ..........11 Miguel's Music Center.«......................... 20 Mill Avenue Travel......................... 15 Mill Landing................................ —............... 15 Minder Binders................................................11 Movie Freebies at Schlotzsky's..... ...... 19 No Appointment Necessary............................13 Oceanside Ice A rena.........................................19 Dr. O'Neal............................. 28 Paris Optique...................... 7 Perkins....................................... ..18 Pizza Hut............................................. ~...........20 Rosita's.................................. .....13 Saban's Rent A C a r...........................................16 Name Page Chicagies............................ — .................— 20 China Gate.... ...................................... 19 Coffee Plantation..... ........................... 15 Commons on Apache.... .......... .......................12 Compuworld.............................................. 16 Council Travel...^.........,.....,.......,.....,.«—-;......24 Edcel'S A ttic.............................................. ....... 15 Gammage.... ..................................................... 16 Grooming Humans....... ..................................... 8 Gumby's Pizza......................................—........ 14 Harkin's Cinemas...........................................:. 19 Independent Honda Car Care.......................... 24 Kaplan Educational Center..............................18 Kelly's Cafe....................................................... 15 Kolby's Billiards................................................10 Name Page Alternative Copy Shop..................... ...2 Arizona Images........................................... 2 ASU College of Business......................... 17 ASU Registrar's Office...... ..............................12 Babs Fabulous Fashions...... ............................ 15 Beach Club West..... ...........................................7 Bite of New York................................ .15 Blue Iguana............... ...13 Books Etc.............................. 12 Buffalo Exchange..............................................14 California Casualty................ 16 Cambridge Square Apartments.... .............. ....24 Campus C om er...................................................3 Campus Point................... 7 Cardinal Pizza................................................... 17 Name Page Samaritan Health System.—............;------- .—14 Sbarro ........................ ..............— ----- -— 15 Spaghetti Company......... — .........— ...... — 8 Student Book Center ..L ....................... 3 Sunny's P izza....««—.........................................3 Taco John's...... ...... 14 Tempe Dental C are.....................- ...................10 Tilly’s Nite Club................. ....................20 Time Zone............................................ 11 Tony’s New Y o r k e r 18 Tucker Bramsen T ire.......................................24 US Army............. 12 Vine Tavern.......................................................22 Wunderland Arcade............................. 18 Classifieds N o tic e to o u r readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the Offers advertised in our classified section. For more infonnation and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. A N N O U N C E­ MENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS $1 A BETTER way to find an apt! Free rental locating service. Call 992-1300. ASU housing as­ sistance/Apartment Locators. 2BR, 2BA at C am eron Creek, move-in for lst/m onth rent. No deposit, take over lease, cheaper than going through leasing office, $585/mo. 966-0254. 4 BEDROOM, 2 bath with lagoon pool, $875. Tim 894-0288. $195 SPECIAL first mo. Ibd apt, furnished, laundry. Call Jacob, 844-5900, or Sean 894-2040. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 f t 2 bed­ rooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laun­ dry room. On East 8th Street bet­ ween Rural & McClintock. Cape C ode A partm ents, 9 6 8 -5 2 3 8 . C allfor move-in special. LARGE 5BD house p o d jacuzzi, w/d, dish/w, maid service. Har­ dy/13th St, $1200/mo. 437-1048. $199 FIRST mo. 2bd, $365/mo, single level. Apartment Renters 649-0077. ST U D IO f t 1 bedroom only, ASU area fo r rent. $265 f t up. 967-4908 or 966-8838. $299 TO TA L m ovc-in, studio $295/mo, 2 bedroom $385/mo, Apartment Renters 649-0077. SURVIVE THE summer at Mesa Court Apts. Studios 1, 2 & 3 brs, starting from $305. Features inc. spark lin g pool, te n n is c o u rt, laundries, 8 lg floor plans, bal­ cony f t more. $199 move in special !!! 530 S Dobson, 833-7978. $150 MOVE-IN special, walk to ASU, 1 bedroom, $320/raonth, Apartment Renters 831-5900. $99 FIR S T month, 1 bedroom $325/m onth, pool, A partm ent Renters 649-0077. CC's CLOSET CL/LSSICS APARTMENTS GALLEON A P T . 1920 E. Hayden Lane (Near McClintock/University) 2 bedroom $390 C all N o rm a at: 968-4967 Frank Beanen Realty, 969-1818 MOVE-IN SPECIAL Free trip to Las Vegas for two. 1 and 2 bediooins. newty remodeled, new carpet^ pool, covered parking, laundry, small complex, free utilities. ASRAMA APARTMENTS 1116 E. Lemon, Tempe 878-8725 SUMMER DISCOUNTS! Reserve Now for Fall 1/2 Block from C am pus B e a u tifu lly fu rn ish e d h uge 1 b ed ro o m . 1 bath: 2 b e d ­ room . 2 b ath a p a rtm e n ts. A ll u tilitie s paid. C a b le TV. heated p o o l, and s p a c io u s lau’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 95 0 S. Terrace 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 $200 O FF! FREE UTILITIES! Walk to A SU . Spacious, 1 bedroom apartments. A/C, fur­ nished or unfurnished available. From $420/ month. Beautiful pool area, laundry facilities available. 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 Renters 649-0077 or 831-5900. 2 pFnpobM , all utilities paid, $455. Studio $309, all utilities paid, ASU area. 437-1048. 2BD, 1BA 4-plex, refrigerated, from $249. Laundry facilities. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3BR, 1-3/4BA, w/d, walk-ASU, $675 w/rebaie, 1 car garage f t 1 carcarport, blk fence. 331-8176. H A Y D EN LANE A pts 829-1155. l f t 2 br, call for spec. 3 stories w/elevators, els-ASU. GORGEOUS 4BD, 2ba, fenced yard, 2garage, lakefront resort style, x-tra cool, $1490 inc water, nu roof, kitchen. Avi, 839-1652. APARTMENTS 2B ED R O O M , 2 b ath , w asher/dryer hookup, close to cam­ pus. Call for specials, 921-3586. 2B R, 2BA tow nhouse, 1 m ile A SU , p o o l, c o v ered parking» $550/month, no pets. 438-0229. AVAIL. AUG. 1: $680, l 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 bsktbil e rt, wgt room, saunas, tennis cits, pools, spa, great South Scottsdale lctn. Unbelievable-Hurry!!! Pam Pea­ cock, West USARlty, 952-8550. Large 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo, $425. Apache/ D obson area. Ask about furnished, no pets. Call Norma at: 9 6 8 - 4 9 6 7 Frank Bennett Realty, 969-1818 APARTMENTS Apache Terrace $200 O FF Walk to ASU. Quiet, spacious, 1 bedroom, furnished, A/C, poolside apartments. A S U H ousin g A ssista n ce » $280/month Apartments, condos, George Ann Apts. townhouses, houses, FREE & 894-2620 roommate matching 800-955-7545 La^CresenFa Student», A dult« & Fam ilie« 2 bed ro o m /1 bath o r 1 b edroom /1 badi U nfurnished N ow Available AllUtilitiesiH A VERY nice, spacious 2 story, 2 bd, 2 bath, w/d, fjp, vaulted, com­ munity pool, appliances included, pet ole, $650/mo, 1 yr lease, McClintock/Ray, 786-6114. PAPAGQ PARK: 2 master suites plus loft $9S0. Bob Bullock, Re­ alty Executives, 998-2992. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, $375 2 bedroom, 2 bath and 3 bedroom, 2 bath 11231£ Apache 968-6383 2BD, 2BA, $500/mo, patio, pool, jacuzzi, evd pkg, w/d tricup, laun­ dry nn, 1/2 mi/ASU. 921-3995. HERMOSA PL. pool, w/d. ceil fans, patio, near ASU; 3bd. 2ba, $690/mo; also 2bd, 2ba; no dogs, for sale/lease. Info call 906-0987 HOM ES FOR RENT 2BD, 2BH, w/d hookup, pool, gym , m any e x tra s, $ 5 2 5/m o, Apartment Renters 831-5900. Taking reservations fo r AugustM ove-In TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT PAP AGO PARK 2 br, 2 ba, w/d, p art fum. 224-2816,963-1896. OM ccnc also available TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HAYDEN SQUARE, 2bd, 2ba, w/d, all.appl, fp, pat, bale, evd pkng, $850.966-1718 Matt. WILLOWBROOK - APTS 1-2 bedrooms. Call for move-in spe­ cials, 966-1053. 992-1300 APARTMENTS RENTAL S H A R jN G ^ _ = IBD, 1/2BA, 32nd St/Thomas, fum, $300 incl all. Deposit, no smoke, no pets, 957-9244. A SSU M E LE A SE on 1b r in 3br/2ba lrg condo. No pets. Close to c am pus. $ 235/m o+ utl. 894-6697. Avail immed. FEM A LE TO share 2 b r apart w/2 f on Lemon, $145 incl utili­ ties, non-smoker. 833-0418. M/F, ROOM, bath in 2 bedroom condo. Pool, jacuzzi, volleyball, 1 mile to cam pus, $275 plus 1/2 utilities. 829-9281, Dan. MCCLINTOCK CONDO, w/d, f/p, micro, pools/spa, indr iktbl, wt/rm, mst/ste, $325.968-7132.- , PAP AGO I, m/f, m str bd, own ba, w/d, $380+1/2 util, vaulted ceilings, must like pets. 968-0037. ROOM M ATE W ANTED Aug. 15. $250/m onth + u til. N ear ASU. Must like dogs, be respon­ sible and friendly. Prefer grads. ROOMMATE W ANTED for 2 bedroom, 2 bath furnished apart­ ment a tC am e to n C reek begin­ ning ASAP. $325 per month rent Please call Steve in Tucson. 1(602)323-2085. APARTMENTS FREE Apartment Locating Service Room m ate m a tch in g se rv ic e a ls o a v a ila b le . If out-of-state call 1 -8 0 0 -5 3 6 -6 2 8 3 437-1048 RANCHO LAS PALMAS is now taking Sum m er Deposits* c h u ie d ‘ For Fall Move-ln 967-8203 Tempe 1025 East Orange O n e B e d r o o m s fro m $390 RENTAL SHARING= = RO O M M A TE W A N TED fo r 2bd, 2bath large a p t + 1/2 util, & expenses. Non-smoking, serious, f t responsible student for adult life-style f t active community at Pointe So. Mtn. Leave voicemail at 966-5050, e x t 1311. RO O M M A TE W A N T ED to share 3br house w/2 male ASU students. $216/mo+l/3 utl. Very close to campus. Hardy f t Uni­ versity, More info call 829-7420. ROOM S FOR RENT CLOSE TO ASU, own bdrm in 2br apt. M /f, non-sm kr. Avail Aug 1, $285+1/2 utls. 350-9159. ROOM M ATE N EEDED, nonsmkr to share twnhse 2-1/2 mi/ ASU. Own bd/ba. $265/mo+1/2 util. 967-6821. Avail. Aug. 1. HOMES FOR SALE $43,500, TEMPE, Bike to ASU! N ear theaters f t shopping cen­ ters. 2br, patio home, end unit, cvd/prkg, comm/pool. 986-7177. SH A R P TO W N H O U SE- near A SU. Payments like rent. Tom Wood, 839-2600, Realty Execs. CLASSIFIEDS WORK for you! TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 1100 S/F, 2bd, 2ba, 2 car pkg, liv/rm, kitchen, din/rm, balcony, p o u rc h , n o n-qual FHA loan, $490/m o, 300 yrds from ASU, $58^00. l-(206) 568-7237. DUAL MASTER suite condo convenient to ASU/Tempe. Upgrad­ e d front ro o f to the flooring. Genuine bargain at $69,888. For details contact J. Banhagel- John Hall f t Assoc, at 820-7078. HAYDEN SQUARE- 1 bdrm - 1 bath- owner will carry w/$10,00 dow n. W atch the sunset from y o u r ow n b a lc o n y . A sking $67,900 Re/Max Excalibur- ask for Gary Greenacre 483-3333. H A Y D EN SQ U A R E - 2 o r 3 bdrm unit has fresh paint and is d o s e to the H ay d en 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 bdrm- 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 fra Gary Greenacre 4 8 3 -3 W Two Bedroom s/Tw o B a th s fro m $490 ¡P f ?WT.Î:-^WÊÊÊimÊ • C lose to A SU • G a s Barbecues • Poot/Spas • Built-in M icrowaves • Ceiling Fans « Clubhouse S R P Utility Hook-up * Laundry Room « Exercise Room • Light, Assigned, Coveted Paiking jp g ■ fe ■ J j l FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS ^ ♦ Buy of th e W eek ♦ 1249 East Spence • Tempe, A Z 85281 1224 E. Lemon 894-2620 BEAUTIFUL 2BD, lb a , gor­ geous yard, walk to ASU, $575. Tun, 894-0288. UTILITIES INCLUDED, studio $330/mo, lbd $420/mo, pool sau­ na, Apartment Renters 831-5900. 3BD, 2BA, beautiful yard, walk to ASU, $800. Tim, 894-0288. JULY FREE, ib d $395/mo, 2bd $495/mp, walk to ASU, p o d , ten­ nis, Apartment Renters, 649-0077 HOMES FOR RENT AU » (Just One MHe from ASU) HOURS: M-F 9-6; SAT 10-5 Now that you've made it, m ake it at Papago. 2 bedroom, loft, $85,000. Bob Bullock • Realty Exec. 998-2992 Page 26 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE HAYDEN SQUARE- owner will take a loss at this price! This 3 bdrm - 2 bath unit is priced to sell today! Great location an condi­ tion! Approx 1273 sq/ft o f pure downtown Tempe loving! Ask­ ing only $1100,00 Re/Max ExCalibur ask for Gary Greenacre ■483-3333, v ; ;. . /.-•■ HAYDEN SQUARE, 2 bd, sharp fp, all appl $94,500. Carol Royse Realty Executives 831-0322. h a y d e n s q u a r e - downtown Tempe 3br- 2ba- luxury unit- see city & mtns- covered parkingshow by appmt- AZ 1 Marvin Jones Realty. 966-6221 call Bob. Tuesday, Ju ly 2 0,1 993 AUTOMOBILES CARS AT WHLSE! 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. $1,000s below dealer prices. Call now for info: 966-8961, Brian, The Desert Group. 84 FORD Econoline 150, a ir/ cruise, high mi., engine model V8302. Call JT, 921 -0298. $3K M U ST SE LL b e fo re A ugust 23rd, 1989 red Pontiac LeMans. It got me throu^i ASU & it will get you through too. G reat gas mileage, new tires, tinted wind­ ows, stereo, very cold ac, $4,300 obo. 969-6791 after 6pm. M OTORCYCLES PAPAGO PARK 3bd th $77,000. O w n/agt. P rice $8k o r more under competition! 840-7132. '82 HONDA Passport scooter. Red & white, neo-1960s look. Like new, only 850 miles. $600.968-6816. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 1987 YAMAHA Razz scooter, 50cc's, runs good, $400 obo, ball Jim after 5pm, 350-9037. LOOSE UP to 301bs of fat iii 30 days for $30: 100% natural, safe, guarnateed. Ward's, (515) 2968202. BOOKS RECYCLE FOR $$ Sell your books for cash (no text­ books, please) or get trade credit towards the purchase of anything in the store. Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead for buying ho u rs. B row sers w elcom e. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue, 966-0203. 12 SPEED race bike with pump, blue, light weight, $55.00. Call 994-5655 or 252-2800. Y EL LO W M OU N TA IN bike, ATX7Ó0, $350. Great condition. Call Paul at 831-7879. BIKES...WHY PAY MORE? USED BIKES FROM $55 New Bikes... Mongoose Miyata Nishiki Fuji STUDENT PRICES • ALL REPAIRS WE BUY BACK BIKES BUY SELL TRADE BICYCLE STORE 1042 S. Terrace Rd. Tempe, A Z 85281 or 966-6070 TRADE University & M ill Tém pe Center QB 966-7090 « IY , SELL & TRAD E entrai N£W-aisd-USED 7340 L McDowell Rd. ¡ust east of Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale • 947-S108 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. 1 specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable cou­ pon s/awards. 968-7283. SU M M E R S P E C IA L Free Trip to Las Vegas for Two Professional and Friendty FURNITURE SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. Cheap. 352-7249. COMPUTERS TANDY/QRID LAP top computer, portable, .40 meg hard drive, soft­ ware included, with case, $450. 981^7773 International and Domestic Hotel and Car Rental Free VaHeywide Delivery 1-800-284-3827 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chandler needs yet reception ist/assistant. Please call 963-2340. ATTENTION- W AREHOUSE m a n u fa c tu re s rep w anted for small Tempe business, $7/hr + benefits, hrs flex, Jim 820-8408 . ■ W ALK FROM ASU! No Selling Telephone Survey Research JEWELRY | MILL AVENUE JEWELERS . 414 S. M ill, Suite 101 Tem pe, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICE JEWELERS* Custom Design & Remounts jewelry & Watch Repair G old/Diamonds/SUver Pulsar Watches/Pearls F le x ib le h o u rs a v a ila b le T u e s.-F ri,, 2pm -9:3Qpm & Sat., 9am -5pni. Train at $5. W eekly pay. Frequent raise reviews. Higginbotham Associates 1 829-3282 AUTOMOBILES 82 PONT J2000 Wagon, loaded, 1 owner, 87K, ps, pb, new batry, clutch, brake, paint, mice, no dent, ... tinted, ac, $2290,839-1652 83 DATSUN 280ZX, pampered, still looks great, 1-owner, 5-spd, new tires, P W , PD L, c ru ise, louvres, gold/tan. Must sell, fam­ ily too big for 2-seater. $3750/ obo. 246-8243. StataPrati ClaatM aSt 965473» HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE RESTAURANTS/ BARS COMPUTER PROG: Grad student, kn o w led g e o f Fox P ro , som e communications exp. 437-1048. THE STATE Press is currently interviewing students for adverHELP WANTEDtis in g sale s rep s. S u c c essfu l g M L D e A g !_ _ candidates are those who enjoy people, have personal integrity, - LIVE-IN: 3 small children, light who excel at team sports and thrive hou sew o rk , m ust have ow n trnspt, travel some w eekends. on the competitive arena. You must Will be around horses, $75/wk, be graduating no sooner than Spring Scottsdale area 493-2567. 1994 and have a reliable vehicle. All majors welcome. This is an excellent PT LIVE-IN nanny, room/board, opportunity to line your resume beautiful th, Baselirie/M cClinwith solid, practical experience. If tock, start Aug 23» Nonsmoker, you want to join a winning team, refs needed. Pager: 227-2044. work hard, have ftui, learn, earn money and experience, then call JO B Jackie Eldridge today for an in­ O P T O C T U N m H ^ terview . C a ll right now . 9656555. ALASKA EMPLOYMENT-fish­ eries. Earn up to $600+/week in HELP WANTEDcanneries, $4000+/month on fish­ ing boats. Free transportation! Room & board! Male or female. For employment program call 1O FFIC E A S S IS T n eed ed p /t. 206-545-4155 e x t A591& Good communicaVorganization, EL E C T R IC A L SU B C O N ­ TRACTOR firm sedes student to be a computer technician to serv­ ice maintenance problems w/computer system. Need rally for parttime and be on-call. Call Katie asap 252-0737. GREAT P/T opportunity. Strong phone sk ills, great m kt./sales e x p ., e x c e lle n t pay. W ork 38:30pm, M-Th. 894-6886. LIFEG U A RD S F/T, p/t, week days/ends, start 8-11 dim school year, AZ Country Club 947-7666 MARKET RESEARCH phone in­ terv iew ers. N o sales. Tem pe, eves-weekends. Susan, 967-4441. A ll ages/types needed for German catalog! Pays $25.00. FashionLA (602)266-6224. PARADISE BAR & Grill is ac­ cepting applications for hostess & cocktail positions. Must be avail­ able fra the entire month o f Au­ gust. Apply Wed 11 to 5, Thurs after 6pm, RESPONS, OUTGOING, mature sales asso needed. Must be here thru next Spring. See Sandra, AZ Shorts, 5th/MiU, Tue/Wed only. START AT $8.20 National retail firm has p/t and f/t openings. V ery flexible ftoúrS. No exp. req. We train. Scholar­ ships. Secure fall position now. 968-1840. STUDENTS NEEDED to assist quadriplegic w ith am(pm per­ sonal care, Must take initiative & be responsible. 966-2059. TE LE M A R K ET ER - FIN A N ­ CIAL firm seeks pt-help. Salary plus bonus. Exp helpful. Calling on businesses only. Unusual op­ portunity: Call 345-6040. computer/phone skills. 437-1048. SECRETARY RECEPTIONIST needed fra fast paced engineering contracting firm. Seeking quali­ fied individual. WordPerfect, fil­ ing & organizational skills need­ ed f / t Contact Emily 491-7577. HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for drivers & counter help. Earn up to $8 per hour at Sammy B's Pizza. 945-8850. , DOMINO’S PIZZA Come & join die #1 pizza deliv­ ery team for the ASU area. We need f/t & p/t drivers & inside help, Drivers make $7-$10 per hour including mileage & tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can also be earned. We are very flexi­ b le & c an w ork around yo u r school schedule. Apply in person after Mam at 903 S. Rural, Tem­ pe, or call 968-5555. EOE. We're closed til Thursday for remodeling. S ee you Friday night, 9 p.m. & 11p.m. PEN N Y M G E R SH O TS For a Good Time Call 966-1300 . Balboa Cafe j \ j*04 S. M ill Ave., Suite 101 SPORTS & RECREATION , FEMALE GOLF partner wanted. If interested please call 437-8801 after 4pm. MUSIC FLU TE, G EM EINH A RD T for sale. $100.00 o f bo. Like new condition. Call 921-4185. CHUB RESUMES WITH RESULTS! 1 Pg. Resumes $40 Includes 10 copies on bonded paper. We do the writing for you! The Write Resume H O T W IN G S & Broadway / Mill i C O O L JA Z Z 10 c W IN G S S1.25 M IC D R Y SPSSS BANDERSNATCH P|R|ONAy^;_ DARLING! THELO ena till sto stoma! S’agdpo Very very much! Thanks4 d love! Me! $12 per month plus $50 One­ time member­ ship fee. SERVICES SU M M ER SPEC IA L: A H air Today Gone Tomorrow Electro­ lysis, blend m ethod/permanent h a ir rem oval, Southern/R ural, private spite, std/diset. 921-1146. ***: •C ontact prequalified customers, nationw ide, fro m a com puter-dialed data base/phone (4.5 hours) available throughout th e day, evening & weekends. 894-0264 INSTRUCTION Introductory flight. Low cost, quality instruction. CARY HAYES CFIIMEI 902-0724 WANTED LOOKING FOR black bar stqols and end tables. Call 921-8772, BE A SPERM DONOR T h o u s a n d s o f w om en cannot conceive and bear Children due to th eir hus­ b a n d 's la c k o f no rm al sperm. & E. Comer Rural & University They Need Your HelpDonate Your Sperm I F in d O u t! & PAVIA •Average $ 7 - $9/H our, Up to $ 1 5 - $ 2 0 fo r our topproducers D IA LA M E R IC A receive a Second S u b of equal or 257-8420 I ) 894-2250 •W ork on great programs like: T ria l book preview s, m agazine renewals, orfund-raising •Short shifts B u y O n e S u b and a I Large Drink and UNIVERSITY PLASM A C E N T E R •Represent m ajor clients: T im eL tfi, Sesame Street, D isney, M ajor m agazine publishers, or non-profit Special O lym pic Chapters 966-9211 ~ $25 N o w O f f e r in g $ 1 0 N ew D o n o r BONUS! E xcellent p a rt-tim e jo b s acrossfro m A S U F o r a p p o in tm e n t c a ll LEARN TO FLY SELL IT for only $3 with State Press Classifieds! 965-6735. DialAmerica M arketing; a 3 6 year old telephone m arketing firm , is interested in speaking w ith articulate communicators. A Perfect Image RESUMES $15 College English Instructor Since 1980 RESTAURANTS/ BARS P Choose Your O wn Hours W ORD PROCESSING» secre­ tarial services, fax. 23yrs exper. Student discounts. S/W corner, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. 969-3242, Debra EVERYBODY CAN use extra money for books, tuition, bills, o r whatever. We have a-spectacular program that can help you with hose important needs. Call us & we will explain how easy it is. 319-7095. Step Right Up! 1015 S. Rural Rd. I W ANT It Now! Desktop Pub­ lishing: Term Papers, Resume Service, Charts, Graphs, Manu­ scripts, Thesis. Q uick service: Call 966-1984. Near ASU. PROOFREADING BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES interested individuals should contact Jeff Ward with Marriott at 965-5507. (next to Sno Oasis) CREATIVE TYPNG, term pprs, rsmes, essays, 1st prntr, fax, rsnbl rates, fasttmrnd. Pat, 897-1741. 967-0907 We have the following positions available: If you're »low of funds, the University Plasm a 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! APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/ word processing. Need i t ¡ fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU- AREA typing, w/p, editing, transcription, W ordPerfect, las­ er. Fra fast service, 966-2186. Near ASU & Univ of Phoenix FOOTBALL SEASON IS HERE! E O E M/F/V/D G ^ •Papers *Theses ‘ Dissertations •Book Manuscripts Fast, meticulous, reasonable. HELP WANTED* GENERAL •Concession Stand W orkers •Walking Vendors P R g O ^ W Same Day Service, Laser Print Type & Edit Reports CRUISE' SHIPS hiring- Earn up to $2,OOftf/month. Summer & ca­ reer em ployment available. No experience necessary. F or in- ' • formation call 1-206-634-Ó468 e x t C5918. d TYPING/WORD 1 DAY turn- most papers. Prof, w/p/ papers/ resumes. Laser. Resonable. Caroline 892—7022. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch waitresses & line cooks. Apply in person M-F, 10am-3pm, 5001 E Washington. 5th St. &Forest BREWPUB M arketing TICKETS AERO SMITH tickets, 2 flo o r seats, section F, $75 obo. Concert 7/29,968-2286. — E v a 's International T r avel No Textbooks Magazines or Book Clubs Monday-Saturday 10am-10pm — INDEP. SALES reps needed for licensed u tility co. Lucrative! 861-2381 Pat. THERAPEUTIC WORK, xclnt pay, flexible hours, w ill train. Call 844-9000 or page 219-9000. TRAVEL HELP WANTED* ^ 1 1 - = CAMPUS CHEVRON now hir­ ing. Apply in person, com er of Rural & Apache. MODELS/ACTORS BICYCLES WE BUY BOOKS $ CASH S HELP WANTEDGENERAL S ta te P ress I TANK UP TUESDAY SUNDER & LARKIN AUomeyi at Law I Handling all ■Immigration Matters Student Virus Adjustment of Status I Employment Family Reunification $2.25 Fo r fu rth er inform ation call the Arizona Institute of Reproductive Medicine at 468-3840 Financial Compensation Stai« Fri» Clm ifltft Miriti 965-6735 SERVICES p lu s ta x 60 oz.|Pitchers Bud, Coors Light 98 < Pitchers of Soda 968-6666 1301 E. University ‘b a t e s c o w fp E L w fg ASSOCIATES T a t (Bradley (Bates, M .'Ed., O W filC 2164 T . ‘Broadway, Suite 240 addictions & relationship issu es 230-2153-FlexIble Fees S ta te P ress Page 27 Tuesday, July 20,1993 SERVICES SERVICES tsrwm Wß ONE FREE PERSONAL t Self Serve Bring in this coupon for one free personal in either the July 27 or August 3 issue. O ne per custom er. Expires August 2 ,1 9 9 3 at noon. (Deadline for August 3 issue is noon on August 2.) Tryour*2 Touchless Automatic Je t Wash AAA I franto Dratr I Ü COMMIT YOURSELF. W h y ? By c o m m ittin g yourself today, you can guaran­ tee m u c h g reater career o pp o rtu n ities u p o n g rad u a­ tio n . p e o p le , a b o u t m a rk e tin g , a b o u t m e d ia p la n n in g , a b o u t a d v e rtisin g plan s, a b o u t la y o u t a n d d e sig n , ab o u t tim e m an ag em e n t and a b o u t yourself. A sk y o u rse lf th is q u estio n : "If I w e re an e m p lo y e r, w h o w o u ld I hire? The n e w co llege grad w ith exp eri­ en ce o r w ith o u t?" I th in k y o u kn o w th e answer. You can join th e successful d ozen s o f A SU students b y b e co m in g an advertising sales representative fo r th e State Press. If yo u 're serious a b o u t th e future, w e can h e lp you . . .seriously. W e h ave an o p p o rtu n ity fo r y o u to learn an d earn w h ile a tte n d in g ASU. You w ill learn m ore o n this jo b th a n in an y classroom o n cam pus. You'll learn a b o u t T hree p osition s are cu rren tly available. C o m m it y o u r s e lf n o w . C a ll Jackie E ld rid g e at 965-6555 STATE P r e s s C lassified Ad O rder Form N am e H om e P hone B u sin e ss Phone A d d re ss C ity, State Z ip P le a s e print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. P le a se be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly a s you w ish it fo appear in the State Press, including punctuation. P le a se check your ad the first d ay it ap p ears-th e lia b ility o f the State Press sh all not exceed the co st of the ad and credit m ay b e given for the first insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify fo r m ake-goods. N o refunds w ill be given, but if you need to can­ ce l your ad a credit w ill be held on account for future advertising. □ Check# R A J g 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for only $1.50! S mm b per Day □ # of Days ... B ank C a rd Num ber : X ■. — 068 052 Fundraising Furniture 049 Garage Sales 101 074 072 073 070 071 030 Health & Fitness H elp W anted-Chiid C are H elp W anted-O erical H elp W anted-Food Se rvice H elp W anted-G eneral H elp W anted-Sales H om es for R ent 040 102 107 103 056 0 76 015 120 050 045 — j * È ***" Aää&ü N am e o n C ard 098 Adoption 065 Airplanes 010 Announcem ents 020 Apartm ents 061 Autom obiles 064 B icycles 051 Books 077 B usiness O pportunities 054 Com puters 086 Free Lost/Found Com m ercial 1-4 days, $1.25 p er line, per day 5-9 days, $1.17 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.09 per line, per day P rivate Party 1-4 days, $1.00 per line, p er day 5-9 d ays, 920 per line, per day 10+ days, 840 p er line, per day Driver's license A □■ gj ®1 a Tour Individual Horoscope That's right...no strings attached. Cycle includes: Tire/engine clean, pre­ soak, foamy bubble brush, high pres­ sure wax/soap/rinse, SPO T F R E E rinse. A p a ch e & Terrace SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES mÊÊmwÊ WÊÊÊIm. W Êm m ■ I ■ $ S ---------- ;--------- --I t .......M M H M H f is S 'f í S v ia s i» ::; li — - ..................................... 1 siili ÌÉÉ H om es fo r S a le H ousecleaning Instruction Insurance Jew elry Jo b O pportunities Leg al N otices M iscellaneous M iscellaneou s fo r Sa le M ob ile H om es 063 082 090 084 110 097 0 47 035 080 037 M otorcycles ■ M usic P ersonals P ets Photography Pregnancy Counseling R eal Estate R en tal Sharing R estaurants/Bars R oom s fo r R ent i 100 081 058 031 041 060 067 106 105 115 I i.Si.- 1 Se rvice s Sp orts & R ecreation T ickets Tow nhom es/Condos fo r Rent Tow nhom es/Condos for S a le Transportation T ravel Tutors Typing/W ord P rocessin g W anted For Tuesday, July 20,1993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You'll fight, kiss, and make up on this day when a small difference reveals how much you care for each other. Outings to favorite entertain­ ment spots are fun. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Though shopping for the home is a plus now, you should guard against extrava­ gant spending on pleasure pursuits. Entertaining guests tonight is favored. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You're especially charming and personable today and will receive admiration and com­ pliments. Dating is a plus, but a domestic disagreement may arise. CANCER (June 21 to Aug. 22) As you're easily distracted now, extra self-discipline will be needed on the job. You may overspend when socializ­ ing, but you'll be having fun times tonight VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) It's best to be low-key where business interests are con­ cerned now. It's not a good time to force issues. However, behind-the-scenes moves bring benefits. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) A dispute that arises about travel w ill quickly be resolved. It's a great day for getting together with your friends for happy social times. News comes from afar. SCORPIO (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) Y ou're on the right track where business interests are concerned. New opportunities arise now. A quarrel while socializing may disrupt har­ mony tonight. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You may be invited to some place special for the weekend. T ension is likely about a career concern. Couples feel very close to each other now. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Y o u . may have second thoughts about a financial matter. A co-worker may be envious of your accomplish­ ments. Good will, however, brings you gains in business. "AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You should go easy on your use of credit today. However, you'll have a lovely rime at a favorite restaurant or enter­ tainm ent spot. Romance is highlighted! PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) New chances for success arise in business today. Minor fric­ tion with a partner is quickly abated. Tonight favors family interests and having company over. YOU BORN TODAY are cooperative and work well with others. More universal in outlook than the typical mem­ ber of your sign, you have an interest in politics and public affairs. Though you dislike conflict, you do well in crises situations. You have a strong wiD and are quite determined. Teaching, law, philosophy, religion, music, and writing are some of the fields which will provide you with fulfill­ ment. Birthdate of: Natalie W ood, actress; Edmund Pereival Hillary, explorer, and Tony Oliva, baseball player, 01993 by King Features Syndicate, Iqc. Page 28 Tuesday, July 20,1993 State P ress