© C opyright. S tate Press, 1993 Tem pe, A rizona F riday, S eptem ber 3 ,1 9 9 3 An Ind ep en d en t M orning D ally V o i, 77 N o. 87 D o rm fo c u s e s o n A m e ric a n I n d ia n s ASU program creates new residence hall to target culture Pierce H arrison, a 20-year-old m echanical engineering m a]or, laces porcupine q u ills into a piece o f b u c k s kin to fa s h io n a tra d itio n a l m e d a llio n . H a rris o n , o f th e Y akim a N atio n in e a s te rn W ash in g to n , is th e re s id en t a s s is ta n t fo r th e A m erican In d ian Issu es and C u ltu re flo o r at O co tlllp H all. B y J oy E. S eason State P ress In a move expected to boost the student grad­ uation rate of American Indians, ASU’s campus communities program has expanded with a new residence hall dedicated to the cultural move­ ment of the group. “As the fellow of the American Indian cam­ pus community, I see one of the responsibilities of the hall as retention,” said James Riding In, justice studies professor and community fellow who supervises the project. Riding In said the residence hall — located at Ocotillo Hall — is the first step toward improv­ ing the dim educational statistics for American Indians, citing that 60 percent of such students who enter as freshmen do not graduate. O ther culture-prom oting programs envi­ sioned by Riding In include an array of commu­ nity speakers on American Indian issues and academic endeavors. The academic component will begin in the spring semester, with four courses focusing on American Indians. Planned courses include: • Introduction to A m erican Indian Justice Studies • American Indian Justice • Contemporary American Indian Issues • A comprehensive seminar to tie together differ­ ent issues discussed in the various classes. Although Riding In said the intentions behind the new hall are positive, he said he’s not happy with the number of applicants thus far. , “I was disappointed in the number of Indian students that enrolled,” he said. “We started recruitment late in the spring, and did not get a brochure out until the summer. “I think we have a good model in Umoja (the African-American interest hall). That hall shows us that we have potential. I think this is an some­ thing the University should be proud of, and if we get adequate levels of funding we can expect an even better response in the years to come.” “1 think it is great,” said Pierce Harrison, a m echanical engineering major and resident assistant at the American Indian hall. “It is a good opportunity to learn about N ative Americans ... and for Native American students to use it as a resource. “(We need) educational programs on Native American issues, social life, culture — and still have an emphasis on school.” Harrison said he has received a positive response from the students currently living in the hall. “They like it, but we are still getting settled. Things are just getting going,” he said. Although Riding In exprçssed some disap­ pointm ent with the num ber of students the American Indian culture hall has attracted, coor­ dinators of the University’s campus communi­ ties project said student participation in the pro­ gram has been substantial. Mary Cherette, who is overseeing the entire campus communities program, said there has been growth throughout the project. “All of the halls have grown,” Cherette said. “There has been a positive response in every one of them. We are on the edge of an exciting time around here.” Cherette said that all campus communities projects revolve around three components — programs, academics and the residence option. She added that a student is not required to partic­ ipate in all of the three components of the pro­ gram to be a part of a campus community. Cherette said critics of the program argue that it promotes segregation. “There are skeptics in every audience,” she said. “I think the experience is non-segregating in all cases.” The program has received mixed student reaction. “I am in favor, of (campus communities),” said Todd Breton, a justice studies major. “If they are solely for the purpose of integration, they are being misused, because the people who are going to visit them do not have a problem with racism.” N ew Mars probe possible for next fall G reg M em au, TE S e n g in e e r fo r th e M ars O b s e rve r p ro je c t, p oints o ut th e A SU -designed spectrom eter on a sm all m odel of th e O bserver to a group o f high school students and observers la s t w eek. IN S I D E STA TE PRESS W eather Outlook Sunny, hot and humid. The weekend looks the same as today. High 104, low 80. B y G arin G roff State P ress ASU research ers are o p tim istic over Wednesday’s formation of a committee that will study the possibility of sending another NASA space probe to Mars, carrying with it another $28-million ASU research experiment. The new probe, if launched, would take the place of the $980 million Mars Observer, which scientists have been unable to communicate with since it was about to enter Martian orbit on Aug. 21. The craft is carrying the Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES), an instrument designed by an ASU research team to investigate the geologi­ cal makeup of Mars. “If it would have had one orbit around Mars, we would have learned more about Mars surface mineralogy than has ever been known in the past,” said Greg Mehall, TES mission engineer. “One orbit. And we didn’t even get that. We’re hoping that there's a new future here with ]► Arizona Board of Regents member John Munger takes a swipe at college students who can't finish school in 4 years. Page 6. Two ASU graduates have a sizzling set of coed calendars on the shelves of local stores. Page-12. World/ Nation another spacecraft.” A decision on whether to build a new craft is scheduled to be delivered on Sept. 15 by a 17member com m ittee to NASA adm inistrator Daniel G oldin. C onstruction of a new TES instrument would begin next month and could be launched with the new spacecraft in October 1994. Steve Ruff, a 30-year-old-geology major, said he thought too much time and money had been invested for NASA to discontinúe the pro­ ject at this point. “I have sort of a gut feeling that something will come out of this,” Ruff said. Ruff said he has two or three more years before he graduates, but hopes to be able to stay at ASU to and study the Mars data. “If I have the chance I’ll definitely be around to be involved in it,” he said. G retchen B ataille, associate dean of the T urn Sports Clinton takes the Muslims'side against the Serbs, led by Radovan Karadzic. Brian Johnson of the ASU athletic department prepares the Sun Devil Stadium field for Saturday's ASUUtah game. Page 3 Page 15 to M ars, page 2. Break tim e! T he S ta te P ress w ill n o t b e p u b lis h e d on M o nday o r T u esd ay o f next w eek in observance o f the L ab o r D ay h o li­ d a y . T h e p a p e r w ill resum e daily publication on W ednesday. The entire staff at the S ta te P re ss w ish e s all re a d e rs a p le a sa n t and s a fe b r e a k . P le a s e b e careful an d considerate w h e n d r iv in g o n th e h ig h w ay s. D o n ’t d rin k and drive! Where To Find It Advertiser Index,......,..,,,,...17 Classifieds...........................18 Comics.....................,...,....14 Crossword..............................8 Horoscopes .........................19 Opinion. Police Report.....................18 Sports.................................. 15 Today’s Activities................ 2 World/Nation.........................3 Sta te P ress Friday, September 3,1993 Page Mayor demands cigarette vending options T oday The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to th e ASU com m unity. R equests are p rin ted according to the space available each day. Campus clubs and organizations may subm it written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f M atthew s Center, Room 15. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the fu ll name o f the group, a descrip­ tion o f die event, date, time and the fu ll address o f the loca­ tion. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Deadline fo r entries is noon the day before publication. • Clinical Psychology Center Graduate students provide individual, couples and family counseling for students, staff and the community throughout the semester on the second floor of the Psychology Building. The program is supervised by state licensed psychologists and fees are based on a slid­ ing scale. For information, call 965-7296. • Alpha n i l Omega — Social gathering for Rush, 6 p.m., Minder Binders, Hayden Road and University Drive. • Devil's Juggling Club — All skill levels, no dues, o ffas skill exchange for many types of object manipulation, 4 p.m.- dark, ASU campus lawn, north of Hayden Library. 12 years ago today ~ The Arizona Board of Regents Audit and Budget subcommittee was going to recommend a more than 9 percent increase for in-state resident tuition fees and a 5.09 percent boost in non­ resident fees at ASU and UofA for the 1982-1983 school year. The proposed hike would boost in-state tuition from $650 to $710 per year and out-of-state tuition from $2,950 to $3,100 for the two universities. ! • M EET NEW PEO PLE * B y J oy E. B eason State P ress Expected discussion on a proposed ban on cigarette vending machines in Tempe was p ostponed T hursday night when Mayor Harry Mitchell ordered a city coun­ cil subcommittee to devise alternatives to a total ban of the machines. Mitchell delayed conversation of the measure when he told Vice Mayor Neil Giuliano and his. subcommittee members that they failed to present adequate com- promises to a total ban. Mitchell told the group that “die charge (of the subcommittee) was to give alterna­ tives to .the ban.” Giuliano said he and subcommittee mem bers Frank P len cn er and D ennis Cahill had raised the possibilities of a token system or allow ing machines in areas that monitor the ages of its patrons. Giuliano said his committee would pre­ sent alternatives and public reaction to the alternatives at a later meeting. He added that the mayor’s reaction to their initial recommendation could indicate that, he is leaning away from a complete ban. “The committee looked at the alterna­ tives and made our recommendation, but the mayor said ‘tell us more about the alternatives,’” G iuliano said. “I don’t know at this point what he is thinking, but he is probably feeling a com plète ban would be too much.” not be com pleted by the August 1994 launch date, Mehall said. NASA wants the TES in mid-April 1994, Mehall said, which would put an October start-date on the TES’s construc­ tion. . \ “The last time we built this thing, it took several years,” Mehall said. “What we’re trying to figure out is what (time) it would take us to build another one. The schedule we figured out was about 9 1/2 months to build a TES, and that’s really an aggressive one. “Any time you rush something like this, you’re opening yourself up for error. But I think people realize that, and they’re going to have to w atch w hat th e y ’re doing.” Mehall said the bugs and design prob­ lems were worked out when building the first TES, which would make it possible to construct a second TES in less time than before. “We th in k we can build a quality instrument in nine months. It’s-going to be a really tight schedule and we’re going to have to work double shifts, night shifts, things like that. You can im agine the bureaucracy involved to get something started within a month. It’s going to be a hairy experience.’ The proposed A ugust 1994 launch Mars C ontinued from page 1. * College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said, “It’s very good news for the students and scientists. There’s a lot of knowledge and science that’s gone into this.” But even if another Mars Observer is launched, the risk fo r failure would remain, Mehall said. “Space is inherently risky,” he said. “There’s no guarantee it’s going to get there the second time. That’s the price you pay for something so far away.” The committee members appointed by Goldin include astronomer Carl Sagan of Cornell University and two UofA profes­ sors from the school’s Lunar and Planetary Lab, Carolyn Porco and Jonathan Lunine. Mehall said the committee will take -several factors into account, including cost and whether the seven experiments the original craft carried can be constructed in time for the launch without jeopardizing quality. Funding for the instrument would come from NASA, he said. Mehall said the group will also attempt to determine why the signal was never returned by the Observer, and if it is possi­ ble to regain com m unication. He said recent speculation is that the craft’s inter­ nal clock failed. NASA may still launch a replacement, even if some of the research devices can- MOT CHOCO LATE CHIP COOKIES would mean data would be transmitted back to'Earth by the end of 1995/ ... If the committee rules against sending another Mars Observer next year, the next possible launch date is 1996. Alternative launching rockets are also being considered, Mehall said, since the $300-million Titan 3 which launched the original Mars Observer would need to be co n stru cted in nine m onths — three months sooner than it would normally take. The $50 million Russian Proton rocket could be used instead, since Russia has a spare one, Mehall said. If NASA purchas­ es a spare Proton, the replacement craft would be launched from Russia. ASU geology p ro fesso r P hilip Christensen, principal investigator of the TES research team, was contacted by the committee and should have some input on its decision, Mehall said. Christensen was drafting his proposal to the committee Thursday and was unavailable for com­ ment. SAGEBRUSH NTINA NICEST LAUNDRY IN TOWN!!! WHITEWATER OASIS o°> * F V MONDAY M onday Night Football $1.50 Drafts 7-11 pm TUESDAY $ 12.95 All-U-Can-Eat Alaskan Crab $1.50 Domestic Bottles 7-11 pm W EDNESDAY \ Club 42 Fashion Show $ 1.50 W ell/W ine/Draft for Ladies I 4 THURSDAY ,F Hair Show - All the Latest Trends & Styles $1.50 Domestic Bottles NWCORNER APACHEADORSEY FRIDAY We ! want < a a 1 8 a z I 1 \ YOUR dirty laundry!! FREE LARGE COKE > 7 0 n When you bring your laundry to E W h itew a ter O a sis Limit one per customer, per visit. . > 2 IE 8T L A U N D R Y A T A S U — • OOOD FOOD SUNDAY D.J. Dancing College Football Pro Football Kickoff Baby Huey's Breakfast $9.95 1'A Pound Lobster w/Fixings ^ BCPIRESjM74^ | NW C O R N E R A PA CH E/D O RSEY — 1 2 5 0 E. APACHE BLVD. W eekly M on th ly S e m e ste r L a u n d ry P la n s — SATURDAY D.J. Dancing $ 1.00 Shots $3.50 -1800 C adillac Margs. • E N T E R T A IN M E N T 8111 E. MCDONALD SCOTTSDALE 998-1987 World/Nation Sta te P ress Friday, September 3,1993 _____, ■ Page 3 ______ Around iln z o n a Witness: Manager shot after tiaving trouble opening safe PHOENIX^A!*) — A restaurant manag­ e r was fatal ly shot by a robber who taunted the victim even after being given money from tie business' safe, a witness has t e n ­ ded. |Sg&£&j .O ; <£.:«. • rj j The details of the April 11 robbery-slay­ ing at the Piccadilly cafeteria were necetsdted W ednesday during a Juvenile Court hearing for 17-yeaisoM Damon Rmil Judge M ark A rm strong o f M aricopa County Superior Court was holding rite hearing as he considered w hether Kerl should be transferred to adult court to stand trial for first-degree murder in the slaying of Stephen Simpson. Kerl also is charged in the slayings of Carlos Bustamante-Grijalva, 26, during an April S robbery and Padriac “Patrick” Hill, 19, d uring a robery at the W estridge Discount Cinema on April 20. Davis-M onthan may get axed PHOENIX (AP) — Defense Secretary Les A spin’s statement that more bases clos­ ings will be needed has raised renewed con­ cern about the future of David-Monthan Air Fence Base, a training and aircraft-storage base in Tucson. While briefing reporters Wednesday in W ashington on a Clinton administration defense review, Aspin said additional base closings will be required under a new, postCokl War defense strategy. Aspin did not provide any details, bat aides for members of Arizona’s congres­ sional delegation said what Aspin did say wasn't good news for Davis-Monthan. Davis-Monthan is primarily a training base for the A -!0 Thunderbolt II anti-tank attack jet, which is scheduled to be phased out by die mid of the decade. As a result, the base needs to find ofeer uses, said Robert Johnson, spokesman for U.S. Rep. Jim Kolbe, R-Ariz., whose dis­ trict includes the base. “Talk like this is another reason why we need to find another mission for D-M,” Johnson told The Arizona Republic. “They (Davis-Monthan) definitely face some peril,” said Scott Celley, a spokesman for Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. Informant: Agent involved in drugs prior to shooting TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) —>An informer claims a former U.S. Border Patrol agent may have been involved in drug activity nearly two years before he fatally shot an illegal alien in a drug stakeout. Pretrial motions filed last July showed that an anonymous letter was sent to federal authorities in January 1991 and alleged that Michael Andrew Elmer and another agent stole 11 pounds o f cocaine from an area where 4,300 pounds had been scattered after a confrontation between agents and smugglers. The motions also quoted an interview with Elmer’s ex-wife, Tina James, in which rite said Elmer allegedly brought five pack­ ages of cocaine to their Green Valley home in October 1990. Elmer, 29, has never been charged with drug crim es. H is law yer, M ichael Piccarreta, said the allegations by informant George R. Chudalla are not credible and that his client doesn’t even know Chudalla. Feds probe Western deals NEW YORK (AP) — Federal authori­ ties are investigating securities transactions involving mi Arizona thrift that collapsed in one o f the costliest failures hi the savings and loan debacle, people familiar with the investigation said Thursday. Merrill Lynch & Co., which served as underwriter of the asset-backed securities, said it was cooperating in fee investigation but was not a target. It was not immediately clear what possi­ ble wrongdoing was being investigated. A spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in New York refused comment, as did a spokesman for the Securities and Exchange Commission. Bosnian Serb leader R adovan K aradzic ta ils rep orters T h u rsd ay th a t B o snia-H erzegovina m ay be s p lit betw een Serbs and C roats a fte r th e M uslim -led governm ent rejected a three-w ay partition plan. C lin to n backs M u s lim d e m a n d s A dm in istratio n w arns o f m ilitary action against Serbs WASHINGTON (AP) — The Clinton admin­ istration on Thursday backed Bosnian Muslim negotiating demands for a larger slice of territory and threatened air strikes if Serbs and Croats resumed offensives against key cities. “First I would remind you that the NATO military option is very much alive,” President Clinton said. He tied his threat to any resumption of Serb shelling of Sarajevo, the besieged Bosnian capi­ tal, or interference with relief supplies now that peace talks have broken down. The State Department broadened the threat to include any new Croat drive against Muslims in Mostar. The aim was to deter renewed aggression even While prodding Serb and Croat negotiators to sweeten their offer to end the 17-month war in Bosnia-Herzegovina. It was rejected by Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic as inadequate to guarantee his coun­ try ’s survival and the talk s in G eneva, Switzerland, collapsed Wednesday night. “U nfortunately, the war w ill co n tinue,” Croatian President Franjo Tudjman said after­ ward. S tate D epartm ent spokesm an M ichael McCurry fired back: “That is a statement with ominous implications.” He said a renewal of the shelling of Sarajevo or M ostar could prom pt the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to implement a plan to use force in defense of the Muslims. At fee White House, Clinton held out hope for a quick resumption of fee peace talks. “They are stalled,” he said. “I don’t believe they are collapsed. The United States will do everything it can in fee next few days to get fee T urn to Bosnia , page 10. Most Americans covered by 1996 under new Clinton health care plan WASHINGTON (AP) — Most Americans will be guaranteed medical coverage by 1996 under President Clinton’s health-care reform plan, the W hite H ouse said Thursday. The administration also ruled out short-term price controls. President Clinton vowed to bring down fee soaring costs of health care but insisted, “I don’t think we have to have a bureaucratic system of price controls to do it.” Drug company stocks rose on fee news. He rejected suggestions the health reforms could cost America jobs, saying, “I believe feat this will be a job generator if we implement it sensibly and gradually and over time we slow fee rate of growth of health care costs.” Clinton sides in fee past have estimated it would take five to seven years to phase in fee president’s sweeping health-care reform plan. But in response to a Washington Post report feat fee plan would not be fully implemented until 1998, the White House said Thursday that the new system should be “up and running” in a number of states as early as 1995. “The vast majority of the American people will have guaranteed coverage by 1996,” the statement said. “There will be a firm deadline of December 1997 for any remaining states feat are not yet a part of fee system,” Drew Altman, president of fee. Kaiser Family Foundation, a non-profit group that has spon­ sored studies on the need for health reform, said fee White House timetable represented “a pretty fast implementation schedule. ... 1 don’t know feat you could move much quicker than three or T urn to C linton , page 10. Democratic Hatian govemmenttakes office PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (ÀP) — A democratic government tiptoed into office Thursday urging joyous supporters to show restraint, aware feat restive soldiers still held the weapons used to seize power nearly two years ago. H undreds o f H aitians su rro u n d ed the National Palace, chanting, the names of aess ’ Prim e M inister Robert M alvai and soon-toreturn President J ean-Bertrand Aristide. Malvai said his government represented per­ haps Haiti’s “last chance as a nation,” and he urged supporters to temper their enthusiasm. “We am express our joy, but in an orderly way,” Ite said. Ite swore in his Cabinet before 650 people in fee grand hallway of fee palace. A half hour hast, plainclothes polke stopped a budding pro-dem ocracy rally o utside by punching ami shoving demonstrators. Malvai and foreign diplomats lobbied all day. Thursday to maintain the momentum of a U.N. plan under which army commander Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras is to resign and Aristide to return. Malvai, installed Monday in Washington by Aristide, bluntly described the stakes involved. “Our mission is simple: to save our country from anarchy, from adm inistrative disorder, from hate,” Mai val said, appealing for fee return of hundreds of thousands of Haitians who fled after fee September 1991military coup. “It is perhaps our last chance as a nation.” Cefeas and fee army high command fed not line up to shake hands wife the new Cabinet members. Many rank-and-file soldiers strongly oppose Aristide, saying he will allow retribution if he regains power. On Wednesday night, a Parliament member who supported fee coup, the Rep. Evans Rteot, was shot in th e left shoulder in suburban Petionville. . U.N. mediator Dante Caputo, White House envoy Lawrence Pezzullo and three senior for­ eign military officers laid fee groundwork for the next UnitedNations armed overseas force — a 1,000-member team feat will oversee police reform mid economic development. An advance team of up to 30 members is to begin arriving Sunday, U.N. officials said. The U.N. mission will have a much greater U.S. role than originally thought, w ith the Pentagon funding fee army reform mission and the U.S. Justice Department paying for fee pro­ gram to establish a civiBan police force. The separation o f fee police from the army w ill be m odeled on program s u sed in El Salvador add Panama, Pezzullo told reporters. A hew police academy will bp established, and graduates will be commanded by the; civilian justice minister, Pezzullo said. The army reform program, commanded by U.S. Army Col. Greg Pully, is intended to give a new mission to fee Haitian army, known more now for repression than for upholding the law. Soma offee new tasks for the army will include building barracks and hospitals, Pezzullo said. State TV and radio, which are still controlled by fee military, have given ample coverage to nationalists who say fee police training mission violates Haitian sovereignty. The state media has harshly criticized an existing U.N.-Organization of American States human rights monitoring mission. T u r n t o H aiti , page 1 0 . Opinion Page 4 ____________ ___________ State P ress I B f Friday, September 3,1993 _______ __ ______ ” oos & Dravos ■ BOO— to Regent John Munger for accusing students who take more than four years to get their bachelors degree o f “cruising through the s y s te m .” Munger, a Tucson regent, obviously does not recognize the realities o f an urban commuter school and its non-traditional stu­ dents. H ie truth is, many students at ASU work at least one job while in school. H its means they must schedule their classes around their job, and — even though they are required by financial aid to maintain a 12-hour per semester course load they cannot get the classes they need to graduate. That’s why many have 150 credits or more by the time they actually get their degrees. Monger’s statement, in addition to being out-oftouch with the educational needs o f today’s stu­ dent, serves as a perfect example o f why the Board of Regents needs more Valley representa­ tion. BRAVO — to Haiti for getting a democratic J | government back into office after the September 1991 coup, when hundreds o f thousands o f H aitian s fled th e country. H aitian Prim e M inister R obert M alval appealed fo r th eir return. BOO — to the whiny students who com­ plained when ASU’s short-term loan program ran out of money. Most of these students, who were in no real financial emergency, mm to wait a day or two because they were a month or more late in filling out their loan applications. Believe us, there are greater tragedies in the world than the minor inconvenience resulting from your own procrastination. BRAVO —■to both Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization for finally putting down th eir guns and picking up th eir pens in an authentic attempt to achieve a peaceful solution to their problem s. PLO leader Yasser Arafat says the PLO plans to return to Israeli-occupied territories soon. Both sides said mutual recogni­ tion is only days away, and the two longtime foes are quiqkly moving toward an agreement on Palestinian self-rule. BO O — to the lead ers o f B o sn iaHerzegovina for letting their peace negotiations deteriorate so quickly. Negotiations broke down when Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic could not guarantee the security of the future o f the Muslim sector of Yugoslavia. ^ ; Instead of pushing harder toward resolution of their problem, the faction leaders simply gave up. BRAVO — to David Letterman for coming back Monday with style and sass. His first show on CBS earned a 34 percent, 13.4 rating share, blowing away everything else in his time slot. Congratulations, Dave. Keep us laughing. Sf T r ? A I | S A L |q "M O W N «Bnsm^sftSS Hamm saving taxpayer money through efforts to serve others concern. I don’t understand why there is so If Mr. Hamm is to be denied admission to law school because much fuss about Jam es H am m ’s M jch a el o f his felony conviction, w here does th is reasoning end? enrollment in law school. With all the K antor Whatever he does, he will be taking the place of someone else. If problems facing this nation, the news­ C olum nist he gets a job, one could argue that he shouldn’t be working, papers shouldn’t be wasting ink on the because someone who never committed any crimes is unem­ problem o f one form er p riso n er’s ployed and could be working instead. admission to law school. It is understandable that some first-year law students might be Yes, the state of Arizona is substantially subsidizing his educa­ tion. The tuition at the law school, even now that they’ve raised it a little concerned about having to sit next to a murderer. This by $1,000 over everyone else’s tuition, is still a lot less than it hasn’t been an angle played up by those opposed to Mr. Hamm’s admission to law school. costs the state of Arizona to provide that education. Maybe these opponents secretly hate lawyers, and therefore But so what? If James Hamm had remained in prison, the state would have instead been paying for the costs of keeping him in aren’t overly concerned if a law student, or even a law professor, shows up dead, prison. But seriously, Mr. Hamm doesn’t seem to me to be inclined to Normally, when we worry about people released from prison, our concern is that the released prisoners will commit more recidivism; I’m not the slightest bit worried about having him crimes. It’s ironic that everyone is so concerned about James around the law school. And no one is going to be forced to study Hamm going to law school. We should just be glad that he hasn’t with him who doesn’t want to. (Unlike certain other graduate pro­ grams, in law school the students aren’t required to work in returned to his criminal ways and let matters rest. It has been said that Mr. Hamm shouldn’t have been admitted groups.) The people who usually to law school because he has say that we need “diversity” in little or no chance o f being higher education are quiet on admitted to the bar. It is true the Hamm issue. If anyone will that Mr. Hamm w ill have a “C o n v ic t e d fe lo n s w ith th e a b ilit y to add diversity to the classroom, tougher time getting admitted it will be Mr. Hamm, who has than most other law students. s c o r e in th e 9 6 th p e r c e n t ile o n th e a unique perspective on the That is a risk he is willing to L S A T a r e a n e x t r e m e r a r i t y . I ’ v e legal system. take. If minority students are B ut if I could bet even s e e n c o n v ic t e d f e lo n s ; t h e s e g u y s adm itted under affirm ativ e money, 1 would wager that the action programs because of the a r e h o t v e r y b r ig h t .” bar will admit him. diversity they add to the law And if Mr. Hamm is not school, then there is an equally admitted to the bar, and can compelling reason for admit­ never practice law, then he’s doing his other classmates a great favor, because the fact is that ting students with criminal records as part of an affirmative action there are too many law students graduating from ASU and too program! But as interesting as the affirmative action argument is, diver­ few jobs. I don’t see why the College of Law should have to change its sity had nothing to do with Mr. Hamm’s admission. His admis­ sion was based on his academic record and his high LSAT score. admission policies as a result of Mr. Hamm’s admission. Mr. The diversity he adds to the law school is merely a bonus. Hamm’s admission is a fluke. 1 wish Mr. Hamm the best of luck in his studies. I wish the Convicted felons with the ability to score in the 96th percentile on the LSAT are an extreme rarity. I’ve seen convicted felons; same for all students at ASU. I am sure that this controversy will these guys are not very bright. There are simply not enough felons eventually be forgotten, and that Mr. Hamm will then be able to smart enough to go to law school for this to be a matter of any pursue his studies without being hounded by the news media. S. TALBOTT SMITH, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor JAKE BATSELL..................................................... City Editor TAMMY MESA-SIERRA.-..:..... —............ Asst. City Editor ANGELA BEN(X:HE.................. News Editor KEN BROWN.....................................................Opinion Editor BOB CASTLE......................... Photo Editor BRIAN FITZGERALD..... ........................Asst. Photo Editor SHAUN R A C H A U . . . . . . . . ................. .Sports Editor MICHAEL BRANOM ............ ........... ....: Asst. Sports Editor KRIS ERIDRICH............................. Copy Chief TROY FL'SS........................- ................ !......Magazine Editor JANE COOK.........Asst. Magazine Editor R E P O R T E R S : Jam es Frusetta. Garin Groff. M axwell Higgins, Melanie Selcbo, Greg Sexton, John Guzzon, Mark Macias, Joy Beason, Colby Osborne. SPORTS R EPQ R TEItS: Scott Davis, Paul Matthews, Julie Reuvm . C O PY 'E D IT O R S : Dave Proffitt. Jerem y Stein. Nick Bacon. CARTOONIST: Bryce Morgan, George O'Connor. Mateo Willis PHOTOGRAPHERS: Brian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Craig Macnaughton, Louis A. Porter. COLUMNISTS: Alan Holcomb, Michael Kantor. Jessica Klinger. David Strow, Wade Swanson. PRODUCTION: Jodi Goldblatt, Amie Madden, Britton Mauchlinc. Dawn Reisinger, Skip Schrader, John Tracey: Anna Ulinich, Evonne Vera, Dave Weber. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Kelly Adcock. Mike Aim, Sonia Benson, Joe Borgwardt, Dan Ellstrom , Jennifer Hughes, Kate Martin, Lance Newman, David Thom. The State P ress is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center. Room 15, A rizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287 1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information.............. 965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising.............. 965-6555 Classifieds................ 965-6731 Opinion STATE P ress _________ Friday, September 3, 1993 P age_5 Clinton plays dangerous game by putting U.S. under UN rule “Put none but Americans on guard tonight,” wrote George Washington to S am uel his regimental commanders in 1777. It F r a n c is probably never occurred to the Father W ashington of his Country that one day his succes­ T im es sor would be putting non-Americans on guard over the heirs of the men who had won national independence. Last week, the New York Times report­ ed, President Clinton was about to scribble his name on ju st such an order. The plan is to expand the American role in the peacekeeping missions of the United Nations, and part of this brainstorm is to have “Am ericans serve under foreign commanders on a regular basis.” The plan is a disgrace to an American head of state and an insult to those who fight for this country. U.S. troops, to be sure, have occasionally served under foreign officers — in wartime or in special circum­ stances — but never has a president gone so far as to institutional­ ize the practice “on a regular ,basis.” But the plan is not only an insult to American fighting men. It's also yet one more stage in the gradual whittling away of national sovereignty by the New World Order under U.N. authori­ tyFor the last few years,'U .N , Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali has been whining for the free and sovereign nations of the world to hand over to him the command of a permanent U.N. army. Only if the United Nations acquires such muscle could the supernational regime of the New World Order flap out of cloudcuckoo land into reality. Once Boutros-Ghali or his successors have their army, they can then intervene whenever and wherever they'd- like, and the troops, whether Americans or not, would be at their beck and call,. They could go to Somalia to blast teen-agers or come to Los Angeles to corral the local police force, or they could perform theif deeds of derring-do in any other country on the planet. Last year the New York Times listed some 48 different coun­ tries ranging from Rwanda to Papua New Guinea where U.N.U.S. forces might intervene. In the winter issue of Foreign Policy, authors Gerald Hclman and Steven Ratner listed a bunch of others in which international intervention would be warranted. The barri­ er to such meddling, they wrote, is precisely the quaint and curi­ ous notion of sovereignty. ■’That ill-defined and amorphous notion of international law,” they sneered, "has been used to denote everything from a state’s political independence — its separate existence as a political unit on the world scene — to the more extreme view that all the inter­ nal affairs of a state are beyond the scrutiny of the international community.” Imagine citizens of a nation actually believing they have a right to conduct their own internal-affairs without being “scrutinized” by the United Nations! Well, count me as one who entertains .“the more extreme view,” Clinton’s plan to let foreigners command Americans in U.N. m issions is part of the larger scheme to chip away at the sovereignty of nations. By mixing troops of different nationalities in U.N. operations, Americans, and citizens of other sovereign states as well, will gradually be accustomed to abandoning their “extreme view” that they and only they should run their own nations. Once we are so accustomed, the "ill-defined and amor­ phous” barrier to sending Americans anywhere New World Order headquarters wants will be overcome. Granted, Clinton isn’t giving Boutros-Ghali everything he seeks. The secretary-general wanted U.N. member states to guar­ antee him 1,000 troops from each country, and he’d like far more authority to give them orders than even Clinton will deliver. Yet Clinton’s plan, if signed, will grant the premise of what the wanna-be New World emperor demands. “The difference with this administration,” the Times quotes an unnamed State Department desk jockey as saying, “ is that it envi­ sions the United States, in-principle, taking part in any peacekeep­ ing operation in any capacity.” With the Gulf war of 1991, the illconceived Somalia adventure last year (and this year and probably next year) and the Continuing tap-dance with intervention in the Balkan quicksand, we were somehow tumbling to that principle. The New World Order was not just a slogan that President Bush found fetching when he first used it on the eve of the Gulf W ar in 1990. I t's an ancient concept o f a hom ogenized humankind compressed together in a global utopia, and still it squirms in the brains of the Clinton administration and the coun­ try’s foreign policy elite. i : And it’s an enemy of everything this country stands for and has stood for ever since Gen. Washington, his American soldiers and their American officers assumed among the powers of the Earth the “ill-defined and amorphous” national sovereignty to which they were and are entitled. Americans need to stay on guard to stop it now. State P ress etterstothe editor The Siete Píes» wrieoines and encourages writtea response oar ««adere on say topic. AU letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include y o u full name, class standing said major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Onjjr signed b ite rs wffi h e considered fa r publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted ooty with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual m o ts, and prim space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors will be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person witb a photo LD. to the State Press front desk in the basement of the Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State Ujnversity, Tempe Ariz„ 85287- 1502 ’■ I G reeks u n fairly cast in negative new s coverage As members of a Greek-letter fraternity or sorority we have committed ourselves to a set of ideals. This commitment, and the experiences that we share together, provide us with many opportu­ nities. These opportunities also bring increased responsibilities and scrutiny. Some have suggested that Greek students condone the events of the past week. The majority of Greek students on this campus certainly do not approve of the destruction of University property. In fact, we are more critical of these action because they unfairly cast a shadow on our organizations. Those responsible for the destruction, and the negative exposure which resulted, have not only tarnished their own image, but have per­ petuated the false stereotypes which our system has worked so hard to destroy. It is a shame that this negative event has overshadowed so many positive recent developments. Fraternity rush numbered 650 men — up 60 percent! Sorority rush numbers also rose signifi­ cantly, proving that Greek life at ASU is becoming increasingly attractive to those seeking the ideals that push men and women to their very best. The Greek system has also teamed up with the Arizona Special Olympics to organize their first annual dance-athon. Over the last week the Theta Delta Chi house has dominated the media. The State Press devoted three extensive front-page articles, as well as numerous editorial spots to the damage at the Theta Delt house. This attention is justifiable; the State Press has a responsibility to its readers to cover stories about student groups as thoroughly as possible. I challenge the State Press to continue its commitment to these responsibilities by placing as much atten­ tion on the positive events which affect our campus throughout the year. R ickSodja Interfratem ity Council Vice President of Internal Affairs Beware o f ‘red tape beast’ ¡ill I » liÉ I S i Q u o tables ■w fm “The state is subsidizing every student, whether they’re on financial aid or not. Every tim e we do thatforstudents who are cruising through the system, that’s assets we can’t use on other students.” '. \ ; * — R egent John M utiger, w ho is considering a p ro ­ posal th at w ould req u ire anyone w ith m ore than 150 cred it hours to pay th e fu ll co st o f th eir educa­ tion, about $7,000 p e r year. I bid a good-day to ail the men and women currently enrolled here at this fine institution called Arizona State University. Yet 1 offer this bit of advice; watch out for the red tape beast. If it hasn’t caught you yet, it’s probably after you. Let me explain. I pre-registered for the fall '93 semester in the spring. I had received all of the classes I wanted, even at the times I had requested. August 23 rolled around and found me awake for my first class, an 8:40 a.m. chemistry course. I proceeded through my day without a hitch and finished Monday at ASU with Introduction to Computers, a CSE 181 course which ended at 6:30 p.m. The rest of the week went smoothly until Thursday at 8:30 a.m. when I realized I was not on the role for my chemistry lab, and, following the advice of the instructor, I promptly decided to go to the chemistry department to find out what had gone wrong. I was inform ed that the University had dismissed me as of August 20, much to my sur­ prise. Thus began an adventure through advisors and departments that ended in the records division of Admissions. It turned out that a high school course in American history that I had taken had not been recorded as being an American history course, leaving me with a deficiency in social sciences. Easily taken care of: produc­ ing a course description of Gilded Age, the course in question, and an official copy of my high school transcript, I was reinstated without delay and told to being to reregister. Oh joy. I was able to bring my schedule back to 11 hours and no matter how much I tried, the one course I had been enrolled in, needed for my major, and apparently wanted by everyone else, was full and would be until next semester. Well, since it was not my fault that I had been dismissed from the University, I thought it would be no problem to receive an override for the course. I had a snowball’s chance in hell. My advisor sent me to the instructor, who sent me to the department, who sent me packing with these parting words: “Because you aren’t a graduating senior, you will not be given an override for the course.” If I need a course to go on to take the other computer courses I need for my major, why should need to be graduating to receive an override? It seems it would be a little late by that time. I kept these thoughts to myself and bid the Department of Computer Sciences and Engineering a “good-day” and traveled to records to see if they couldn’t offer some assistance in enrolling me. in the course they had so kindly dropped me from. How did Wayne from the movie Wayne’s World put it? “Ch’yah right.” So I do say be careful of the red tape beast; it’s out there and is probably after you, too. Brian W alker Sophomore, Bioengineering State P ress Friday, September 3,1993 P age6 Regent wants undergrads earning excessive credits to pay for own education B y M ark M . M acias S tate P ress Arizona Board of Regents member John Munger on Thursday said he opposes publicly subsidizing university students who earn excessive crédits and fail to graduate in a time­ ly fashion. Munger said that the stringent state budget should mandate that students who have accu­ mulated 150 credit hours without earning a degree should finance 100 percent of their edu­ cation. Following an Arizona constitutional provi­ sion that requires public education “to be as nearly free as possible." taxpayers currently Subsidize $5,200 a year on each in-state stu­ dent attending Arizoná's three universities. In­ state tuition is SI.778, a year while the cost of educating each student is roughly $7,000, “We're trying to subsidize students’ educa­ tion to the greatest extent that we can, (but) at some point the student who has taken advan­ tage of that has an obligation to graduate and move aside for (future) students,’*Munger said. “Once you've used up your share (of tax dol­ lars), my sense is that you ought to leave some for the next person." Munger said the regents are researching how many students fall into this category, but he does not expect any statistics for two months. : M ungèr’s statements have encountered; opposition from fellow regents in the past. In Apri 1, M unger received opposition from Regent Arthur Chapa for making comments that angered student masses. "The students must carry some of the bur­ den of the cost of education," Munger said at the April ABOR meeting. “I am deeply con­ cerned about people understanding their responsibilities. I am deeply concerned about a culture where people want someone else to pay the bill.” R egent Andy H urw itz, who called Munger’s remarks in April "abrasive,” said he prefers offering incentives to students who graduate within an allotted amount of time, rather than resorting to cutting subsidies. “I’m not convinced, without hearing more, that it's a serious problem,” Hurwitz said. “But I am in favor of trying to consider whether there are incentives that we should be thinking about that might encourage students to finish up quicker. “For example, lower the level of tuition if you were to complete a degree in three-and-ahalf years rather than four, or (provide) schol­ arships for people who w ent to sum m er school." Hurwitz said that the time span for gradua­ tion is a prevalent problem at Arizona’s univer­ sities. because it currently takes students too long to graduate. Karen Spahn, who heads ABOR research and planning, said many students no longer graduate within four years, because most pro­ grams require more than the 120 credit hours. "This extra time it takes to get a degree is not just in Arizona.” Spahn said. “The federal government recognizes that it takes an average of six years for students to graduate. "There are more students working today and there are more non-traditional students who have a job and are coming back part time.” A student can accumulate 120 credit hours and graduate in four years by taking 15 credit hours per semester, if the student does not transfer schools, change majors or complete dual and specialized degrees. ^ 5 .0 0 O ff Are your favorite p la ce s advertisin g in to d a y ’s issu e ? Check out the Advertiser’s Index on page 18. L e a rn t o $5 0 0 ° " l SKY DIVE I w 3 W ith P a ir-A -C h u te In c . « Specializing in Tandem Free Fall Training C a ll T o d a y! ■ 431^92790^949^9789^ nun DEVILS! Hear a ll o f the ASU a ctio n plus the la te st In sports including a ll o f the scores from ba ck home. State P ress Crosswords - Go ahead...do them in ink. OCTOBER PLAYBOY* ON SALE NOW! ★ A r iz o n a S ta te V Autograph Sessions: Campus Corner 712 S. College Avenue Tempe, AZ Tuesday, Sept. 7th 11:30 a.m. -1 :3 0 p.m. ★ * GIRLS OF THE PAC 10 MEET THEM IN PERSON America’s Original Sports Bar 455 N. 3rd Street Phoenix, AZ Tuesday, Sept. 7th 6:00 p.m . - 8:00 p.m. Pagev Friday, September 3,1993 State P ress Harkins 'B est o f Phoenix~Snodi Bars • kf•¡SMtíSJáSKÜSBHSiM T h 2 00 Shows ' before6PM / State P ress Crosswords They aren't harsh words; They're just across-words. Lowest Admission Prices Drink 'Advance Ticket Saies. CALENDAR GIRL THETHM CALLEDLOVE» n k i 11:50,2:25.4:56.7:35, 1005. 12:20m(PG13) A 110,3:15,520.7:50,1000, Midmohl (P013)a NEEDHJLTHMGSow« IS h m VfstcMAWio' O FF/. «SHIRT m e M i> sr p tK & l WL« 1C A SHtee B(/VCNE-2M)0UE T M M tf A PIZZA X-LG 3-ITEM « POZA & 2 SODAS I 921-FAST MEET THE MEN & WOMEN OF ASU’S CAMPUSVISION CALENDAR! ... W ith E v e ry C a le n d a r P u rc h a s e Il WH3NESDàYS 75C LONGNECKS & ZIMAS 7-10:30 p.im. • NO COVER •, SW & m c d o w e l l Owns J /STOFF? 6 lu ® FM C IIA&fc f lu f c k . JSver(Xerheads a*Vf ’z ® rally wir* MATMHmr & \ Irmno MMUI IH AKI ff &v | | S k tM ; tu - m r 750 COCKTAILS $150 LONGNECKS & ZIMAS 7-11 p.m . LTURDAY 11 LADIES NIGHT $1 DRINKS ... ALL NIGHT LONG! $150 LONGNECKS FOR EVERYONE TIL 10 p.m . • N O COVER BEFORE 10 p.m . • C O R N E R SCOTTSDALE >49»1o £ | | J at half mice < o a n O il/ 'il& T CARDINAL 17U>/«18 •F*R*E*E‘ ;v i9 O A K .U V hyfcnumM.. with ISIUFFS09É» [órand ferenti 6if ¡GUMBY I PRIMO! RECEIVE AN AIK JSNORTS EKBRMMKCP •SHitr Mm OF 53004 HOB^ 3 RD. tv-State P ress Friday, September 3,1993 Page 8 P o lic e R eport • A Tempe man was taken to Tempe St. Luke’s H ospital Tuesday after the soda he bought from a machine at 835 W. 22nd Street made him sick. The man told police the soda had a foul taste, burned his throat and made him feel weak. Police said the soda smelled like oil of some kind. He was released a short time later. • A 21 -year-old Tempe man was arrested Monday after stealing a $2.89 bottle of Visine from the Smitty’s at 3232 S. Mill Ave. • A Tempe man was arrested Wednesday after pushing a police officer at 737 S. Priest Drive and spitting on a jailer while in transport to Tempe City Jail. The 26-year-old man is on probation for burglary. • Two Tempe men were arrested Tuesday night after yelling at police officers at 700 E. Weber St. Police were called to the scene by upstairs neighbors about loud noise and a party downstairs. The two men became angry with police and would not follow the officers’ request to quiet down. • P olice are looking for a w oman who stopped Monday in front of the house at 604 E. Weber St. and shouted racial expletives. The owner of the house said this outburst was the third in three days. f An 18-year-old McClintock High School student was arrested after police saw him smok­ ing marijuana at 1522 E. Southern Ave. • Police reported Thursday that seven people were arrested for DUI. • Police reported five car thefts Thursday. C om piled by S ta te P ress p o lice reporter John Guzzon. À SU police reported th e fo llo w in g incidents Thursday: • Thé Grounds Maintenance Building and the plan ter w all on the south side o f the Life Sciences Building C-wing were vandalized by spray paint on Wednesday afternoon. Damage is estimated at $110, and suspects have not been located. • The lane pin setter at the MU bowling cen­ ter was damaged Wednesday. The damage is estimated at $498. • A $4,000 check was stolen Wednesday from room B-102 in the Ritter School. • The car of a ASU student was damaged Wednesday in Lot 59. The damage is estimated at $21. • An ASU student was taken by ASU DPS to Tempe St. Lukes Hospital Wednesday after she had become ill at Physical Education East. • Spray paint set off the fire alarm in the eighth floor of Man/.anita Hall Wednesday night. • ASU DPS reported five bike thefts from the ASU campus Wednesday. Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Thursday: • Two Tempe men were arrested Tuesday after a minor traffic accident turned into a brawl at the in tersection o f K yrene Road and Guadalupe Road. The men got out of their vehi­ cles after the initial collision, but one of the men got back in his truck and crashed into the other vehicle. He then got out of the truck, and the two men began to fight. The only injury was a bitten finger. CROSSWORD T O T o O VA L b y TH O M A S JO SE PH 43 British ACROSS N E R R A Q coins 1 Lost color 44 Productive 6 Singer one Lou 11 Friend, to 45 Lisper's problems Francisco 46 Jury 12 Visitor members from DOWN space 1 Eastern 13 Boarded tem ple 14 Confer­ 2 Ignoring ence site ethics of 1945 15 Refinery 3 Star writers need 4 Conceit 16 Cigar 5 Hawaiian storer singer 18 — es 6 Dustin's Salaam “Rain 19 Artist M an’ role Yoko 7 J a i— :■: 20 Actor's 8 Unsanc­ prompt tioned 21 Sighed word 1 2 3 4 23 Remove 11 one's topper 13 2 5 Capek drama 15 27 On the — (precisely) 18 28 Keyed up 21 30 “Como — H usted?" 33 Tooth­ paste type 34 Comic Bill, for 37 38 short 36 Decimal 40 base 43 3 7 Clothes 39 Cleaning «r cloth 40 Dodge 41 G et up T R RO C O NO T A N S T E E Ä G A N G i 1 ■ T D O N 1 T 1 N E CKS K Y 0 G 1 E 1 N G l L A L E S S T■ s E T O U X E' D p 1 N E E S R T G A A L H A 1 T E B T O N O D S T 1 R R S R A T E S A V A ■ L o XE H M 1 N D labor action 9 Dismiss 10 Catch 17 Former Burmese premier 22 Dine 2 4 Garden tool 26 Diminishes 28 Throws 29 Baseball’s Cey 31 Movie ad 32 Ticks off 33 Raisinto-be 35 Hem for a philatelist 3 8 M aze runners 42 Norma T~ 8 Ô 9 10 12 14 1^ m 10 w ¿3 24 2? 30 29 35 ¿0 Ja 31 32 36 39 41 42 N C U D M D U D J F G R I Y W Q G M W HEN rr DOES, WHERE D O YOU GO FOR CARE? AND W HO PAYS FOR IT? he ASU Student Health Center covers you for a numbel- of services. And for those not available at Student Health, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona has an affordable health plan called Preferred Care for Students. _ ■■ _ ■ It was designed just for ASU students, and it works hand in hand with the services and resources of Student Health. 9-3 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s how I d work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONG FELLOW 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 are ail hints. Each day the code letters are different. 9-3 CRYPTOQUOTE F G G What more could you want? Yesterday ’s Answer ■ F ]■ O C P N At last. . . something to read without using a highlighter. And there's no quiz. If you’re covered on your parents’ health insurance, you should get them information about this unique health plan. Because chances are, Preferred Care will be more affordable than their policy and a lot more suited to your health care needs here at ASU. When things happen, don’t get caught without health coverage. Or without the right kind of coverage. Get information on Preferred Care for Students at Student Health. PREFERRED CARE ENROLLMENT DEADLINE: T u esd a y , S e p te m b e r 7 Z W J F N K Q R W K G I W Y U N U - ZU PFD . — G MOPKM YPFX YG Q Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE STRONG EST MAN IN THE WORLD IS HE WHO STANDS ALONE. — IBSEN © 1993 by K ing F e a tu re s S yn d ica te . Inc. You can enroll in Preferred Care by using the In-Touch ASU touch tone phone system. Dial 350-1500 and follow the prompts. Payment may be m ade in person, by mail, with SurePay automatic withdrawal or by phone using VISA or MasterCard. BlueCross BlueShield of Arizona Student H ealth Center University & Palm Walk Insurance Office: 965-2411 A m em ber o f th e B lue C ross and B lue S h ie ld A sso cia tio n , an a ssocia tio n o t independent B lue C ross and B lue S h ie ld P lans. State P ress Friday, September 3,1993 A rizona Teachings Inc. Presents: Nobel Peace Prize Laureate THE DALAI LAMA OF TIBET In H is First Arizona Appearance Arizona State University Activities Center Tempe, Arizona Thursday, September 9,1993 at 6 p.m . Tickets are $15 per person $12 for students and seniors with IDs and are available from: Dillard’s Box Office, (602) 678-2222 ASU Activities, (602) 965-3434 Co-sponsored by Arizona Friends of Tibet Bosnia C ontinued State P ress Friday, September 3, 1993 Page 10 from page • 3. parties to resume the talks in good faith.” The president went on in an exchange with reporters: “If while the talks are in abeyance, there is abuse by those who would seek to interfere with the humanitarian aid, attack the protected areas and resume the sustained shelling of Sarajevo, for example, then first I would remind you that the NATO military option is very much alive. “And, secondly, 1 would say. as you know, I have always favored lifting the arms embargo. I think the policy of the United Nations as it applies to that government is wrong. But 1 am in the minority. 1 don’t know that 1 can prevail.” Secretary of State Warren Christopher, meanwhile, called on Serbia and Croatia to yield to demands from Bosnian Muslims for more territory. The Muslims would get nearly 31 percent of the land under the rejected proposal. They are seeking nearly 35 per­ cent as well as access to the Adriatic Sea from Sarajevo. If there is a breakdown “because of the stubbornness and intransigence of the Serbs or the Groatians, the world community will certainly hold them responsible,” Christopher said. Stiff messages, known to diplomats as demarches, were sent to Presidents Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia and to Tudjman, outlin­ ing the tough U.S. position. The United States supports the Muslims in their three main demands, a senior U.S. official said. These are that Sarajevo have a corridor to the sea, that the Muslim area around Bihac in the northwest be enlarged and that a corridor be established between that area and a Muslim enclave in the center of the country. Christopher’s support for the Muslim position, in a brief news conference outside his State Department office, should strengthen the Muslims' bargaining position if the talks are resumed. He said the United States “deeply regrets” the breakdown in negotiations and added: “It’s our evaluation that with the parties close to settlement and with the winter coming on it would be especially tragic if they don’t grasp the opportunity to contain the settlement that seems to be within reach.” At the same time, Christopher dismissed implementing soon the U.S. proposal to permit weapons to be delivered to the M uslim-dominated Bosnian government and to bomb Serb artillery sites. The immediate goal should be resuming the negotiations while retaining the option of lifting the U.N. arms embargo for “future consideration,” Christopher said. “We think that the Serbs and Croatians should show greater flexibility in working to consider and achieve the adjustments that the Bosnian government has asked for in order to find a more equitable settlement,” he said. Clinton________ ________ H aiti___ 3. four years from passage." ' However, the Clinton plan drew sharp criti­ cism from Rep. Jim McDermott. D-Wash.. who advocates a Canadian-style. government-run system. He said the White House “appears to be going down the wrong road without a road map." . McDermott said he was called back from Seattle to attend a briefing Wednesday where White House officials could provide no cost estimates or details on Medicare and Medicaid financing. McDermott predicted there could be “whole­ C ontinued from page 3. C o n t in u ed from page sale defections from the Democratic side of aisle" and that health care costs could “soar through the roof' without cost controls between now and 1998. Clinton is holding a series of intensive poli­ cy meetings this week to decide the final shape of his plan, due to be unveiled this month. A key sticking point has been how to pay for the plan, which will guarantee coverage to all Americans. Clinton plans to require all employ­ ers and employees to help pay for health insur­ ance, with government subsidies for low-wage workers and small business. The military trainers will be armed but will not intervene in conflicts or serve as bodyguards for Aristide, U.S. officials said. Aristide gave perm ission for the train ers to bear arm s, Pezzullo said. Haitians outside the palace cheered the for­ eign diplomats and booed nationalist and antiAristide politicians. Malval broke away from the diplomats to shake hands through the black iron gate as people chanted“ Aristide! Malval!” Among those listening to the ceremony was a beaming Eric Lamothe, whose north coast radio station was destroyed by soldiers three days after A ristide’s overthrow. “I want to rebuild now,” he said. “I have confidence in the future.” But many Haitians tempered their enthusi­ asm, as Malval did. “W e’ve suffered a long time waiting for this,” said Fern Dalzon, 26, a Protestant theolo­ gy student. “But we know we haven’t seen the last of repression.” r Cam pus - i L Corner J EAT‘EMUP SIN D E V IL S ! KEGS 712 S. College (College & University) 967-4049 WELCOME BACK A.S.O. n jM 39.99 plus deposit KElmDRE R eg., Dry 8c Light 7.99 24 pk cans Sale ends 9-12-93 chocolate candies h Son Devil Adelicious newway to showyour school spirit! Pick up your FREESAMPLEon campus this Friday or around the stadium Saturday. ( f f i r n m PEAN U T CHOCOLATE CANDIES Available at: ABCO F oods, S m itty ’s , B a s h a s ’ a n d Q -F re sh Page 11 Friday, September 3,1993 S tate P ress By M axwell H iggins State P ress This Labor Day weekend, instead of watching Jerry Lewis’s annual muscular dystrophy telethon, students can benefit “Jerry’s Kids” by enjoying the music of Dramarama, Spinning Jenny and a small army of other local bands at Hayden Square. Starting at 2 p.m. Sunday, the MDA Alternative Fest ’93 will also feature sets from local favorites Brick Chair, Swamp Cooler, Sister Morphine, Ant Farm and California’s Caroline Spine. Admission to the all-ages show is $5 at the door. Proceeds from the nine-hour event —- organized by ASU’s Kappa Alpha fraternity and KEDJ 106.3 FM — will benefit the Greater Arizona Chapter of the Muscular Dystrophy Association. Officials expect the event to raise at least $7,000 for MDA from the Sale of tickets, T-shirts, compact discs and food. In addi­ tion, 25 percent of all beer sales from the neighboring Balboa Cafe will go toward muscular dystrophy. Most local bands will perform for free, though Dramarama will make just enough to cover expenses before embarking on their upcoming tour, officials said. Following the bands’ lead, free water bottles will be handed out at the door, with refill stations inside. “This is really the best way to raise money for a charity, com­ ing to see all these bands and having a good time doing it,” said Butt McRoy of Kappa Alpha. Tom Bisson of MDA said the proceeds will be used to contin­ ue operating a free clinic at St. Joseph’s Hospital and to fund an annual week-long summer camp in Heber for young MD patients. Judge rethinks 3-year sentence for teen-age ice cream th ief TH OM ASTON , Ga. (AP) D ehundra Caldwell was an acclaimed student, and he was eager to return to high school for his junior year. Instead, on the day classes started the 17-yearold was sentenced to three years in jail. He had pleaded guilty to breaking into a school and stealing a box of ice cream bars. W ednesday night, after the N ational Association for the Advancement of Colored People and an organization of black lawyers complained and Caldwell denied that he com­ mitted the crime, the black teen-ager was freed tem porarily while the judge, who is white, reconsiders the sentence. Caldwell went back to class Thursday at Upson-Lee High School in Thomaston, 65 miles south of Atlanta. Caldwell, who earns A’s, B’s and C's, wants to attend college. He didn't have a criminal record and he was listed in the 1991-92 “Who’s Who Among American High School Students.” In an interview from jail Wednesday before he was freed, Caldwell said a police officer twisted his statement and made it into a confes­ sion. But Caldwell signed it. “I thought he wrote down everything I said. I didn't think there was any need to read it,” he said. He said he pleaded guilty because he thought he would be held responsible for being with his 15-year-old brother and a 16-year-old friend, who walked into Upson-Lee Middle School after him through an open door in July. The other two boys admitted they took the box of ice-cream bars. “Since I was with them, that makes me just as guilty,” Caldwell said. ■ Caldwell said he told police the three were walking to play basketball when he stopped at the school and walked through an open door to use a bathroom. Though he says the door was open, Caldwell was charged with burglary. Caldwell also faulted his court-appointed lawyer, Richard Bishoff, who he said never asked the judge for leniency despite the boy’s prior clean record. Bishoff denied that. “I asked for a firstoffender treatment, but judges traditionally in this circuit don’t do that,” he said. Caldwell said he never saw the other boys take the ice cream. He said they had disappeared by the time he emerged from the school. On Aug. 23, Superior Court Judge Andrew Whalen sentenced Caldwell to three years in jail — a normal sentence in the judicial circuit, which has a reputation for tough punishment. “I got three years for a box of ice cream that I didn’t know about,” Caldwell said. After spending 10 days in jail, Caldwell was freed Wednesday night on a $15,000 property bond in a deal struck by the district attorney, Caldwell’s attorney and the judge. A hearing on whether to reduce the sentence is set for Oct. 15. The NAACP and the Georgia Association of African-American Attorneys are investigating the case. “We call on Judge Whalen to stop putting African-American students and the disadvan­ taged more at-risk than they already are,” Audrey Fisher, an education specialist with the N A A C P’s regional office in A tlanta, said Thursday. The judge has refused to comment and didn’t return a telephone call Thursday. Caldwell’s brother admitted taking the ice cream and said Caldwell did nothing wrong. The brother received probation and community ser­ vice in Juvenile Court, said the brothers’ mother, Teresa Caldwell. The third boy’s punishment from Juvenile Court was sealed and his parents’ telephone number wasn’t listed. St a t e P ress S p o r ts - W e cover good sports,bad sports, rich sports, and poor sports 6 0 o z P itc h e r s O n ly $3 .7 5 Every Freakin' Day 1 968-6666 1301 E. University • Tempe Rural 1 C PIZZÀ&jÂCTA ) PIZZA PASTA SANDWICHES SALADS & SUDS Gurry University .#• s; Sunny's 23 Broadway a Delivery Area d e s ig n e r * Lunch * Dinner * Take Out v in ta g e le a th e r u n iq u e je a n s GRAND OPENING SPECIALS ALL YOU CAN ¡ ^ R e s ta u r a n t H ours < DINNER SPECIALS LUNCH BUFFET ! OPEN | . ! f $ 4 .9 5 i I I I -430 p . m - T-v 6 th Street £ i □ ■K in ko ’s i B u y O N E E n tre e i 1FREE i i N1 r SH AU M AR ■ Indian Cuisine M 7 th Street expires9/l£/93 i tat ” s A « i I expires 9/12/93 U niversity D r. A.S.U. Campus SIBS-Fopestlwe. 8utte #2, lempa, ÆZ85281 M: (602) 967-8389 I State P ress Friday, September 3,1993 Page 12 2 ASU alumni start campus emendar business Business school grads market ‘Campus Visionwith the high quality of the calendar. By G reg S exton State P ress A business venture started last year by two “No one expected a product like this,” Dye said. “A lot of times we have to convince people ASU students is getting its first real test this fall, as a calendar of ASU events featuring student that we are just out of college — they actually models is being marketed campuswide. Trevor Crane and James Dye graduated from dents.” ASU’s School of Business last May. Now, after designing, marketing and funding a calendar dents because “everyone needs one, and our cal­ called Campus Vision, they’re running their own business. The 17-month calendar went on sale last month and features ASU students as models. There are separate calendars for both men and women. .,1 “We knew it w ould w ork, because the (ASU) market lacks such a product.” said Dye, a 23-year-old. who holds a degree in finance. “It was frightening at first, because it’s our doubt it was designed and marketed by stu­ Crane said the calendar is valuable to stu­ endar lists important dates for students like finals and vacations, so they can plan according­ ly ” Crane said once the business breaks even, the partners plan on giving some of the proceeds back to ASU in the form of scholarships. They said they are also giving student organizations the chance to sell the calendar and use some of the profits to support their own clubs. Crane said there may be prospects to expand own money. But we are confident that students the business in coming years. will go for it.” Initially, the plan was to have advertisers’ the desired market, and maybe next year to have “The future of our business is to expand with support, but the students said the idea of having calendars for UofA and NAU,” Crane said. a calendar strewn with ads didn’t sit well w ith' ‘T he reason why we did this is because we them. The only remaining option was for the had an idea and most people talk instead of do. two to raise atl the money themselves, and they We are doers. Our skill is in our persistence. We did. learned a lot in school, but we also learned a lot Crane, a 21-year-old marketing graduate, from doing and not being afraid and to learn declined to say exactly how much cash was from our mistakes.” invested. He did say. however, that the amount Said Dye, “We learned a lot from textbooks, is “a very nice piece of change that runs in the but books can only teach you what to achieve, tens of thousands of dollars.” Crane said they had more than 200 models but they don’t tell you how. We had a vision apply for the calendar. Crane and Dye said sales are good thus far, and we took it.” adding that many students have been surprised and near ASU. Campus Vision is on sale in bookstores on ASU alum ni Jam es Lye and Trevor C rane are form er classm ates and now business partners in a cam pus calendar venture. S tate P ress Classifieds - we're always in th e back. 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M rn -4 N o lin Ii nrpqnir Tnn lllu LKplJ 1\jIiflU'inbill intiniiU.o UpL 3 n H H H V 1 Veil I I A I I vine K i n i n ivF/ P K I ^ % Jr ■ e i u i c 7 I •■¥■• 2 3 1 -0 1 2 3 3 4 th Street & M c D o w e ll NO COVER BEFORE 9 P.M. ■ ms b ,1 ■ g r u i i V. ■ n ^ ■ ^ kP ■ ■ Easy Access O ff th e 202 A.S.L . Student O w ned and O p e r a t e d • ■ s % # Comics State P ress Friday, September 3,1993 Page 14 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson that THE FA R S ID E By GARY LARSON W orld news. Classified ads. Sports. Coupons. ASU news. Crossword puzzles. It's free. cuauo Does IMPRESSIONS ,V .- D o o n esb u ry DBKU 'US.. M i REALLY THINK DOHTKNOtU! rrm x P B B u h ypo r xj SOM FULTO 7 H /N K I eeg ay . m a b c * m ig h t m * BY GARRY TRUDEAU tu a i, IT JUSTSEEMS ONEPOSSI­ BLEEXPLANATIONFORkHYWVE CHOSEN TOBEALONEM L THESE TEARS. MAYBE YOUCANTBEAR THEMPUCATKNSOF YOUR TRUE SEXUAL NATURE. \ OH,PLEASE, I'M TOO O P 70 DEALW ITH SOMETHING URE TUTS! I F YOU'RE RIGHT, IT CHANGES E M & m iN O -Jk F A R Y 7H ÌN 6! THAT'S FDR.5URE. SAf.YO U HAVENT BOUGHT YOUR FALL CLOTHES YET,HAVE YOU* C H .60P , IU A H T TOMARE UP! State P ress Back home in his native India, Toomba tails and retells the story of his daring escape from th e Cleveland Zoo. PEO PLE filed. Miss Jackson said when she lived at home, Michael had young friends and “lots of little boys would spend the night at the house and they would stay in his room.” Asked if she believed the sexual abuse allegations, she said: “We really don’t know. He’s a wonderful person. And-1 really can’t say. I honestly don’t think,he’d do anything like that, but we don’t know.” Miss Jackson has been estranged from her family since the publi­ cation of her tell-all autobiography in which she claims she was abused by her father. She said on “Today” she had no plans to join LOS ANGELES (AP) — Tenor Plácido Domingo grudgingly took her family at a reunion concert in December. In Singapore, Jackson returned to the stage Wednesday after con­ time out of his busy schedule to help publicize the Sept 9 opening of cert cancellations since the scandal broke during his world tour. His the Los Angeles opera company’s eighth season. “I have, a big, big enthusiasm for what (do,” said Domingo, 52. “I personal physician. Dr. David Forcast, said Jackson’s health “is great, KENNEBUNK, Maine (AP) — Edmund Muskie remembers love i t It gives me energy. Part of the work is publicity. I would pre­ really great,” although he is taking medicine for migraine headaches. In Los Angeles, disclosures about the 13-year-old boy, especially being as surprised as anyone when Democratic presidential nominee fer to work purely as an artist. I wouldn’t do as many interviews.” Domingo, his star in place Thursday on Hollywood’s Walk of news accounts citing investigative reports, raised the concern of the Hubert Humphrey picked him as his running mate 25 years ago, Muskie, then the junior senator from Maine, was propelled into Fame, will sing in three performances of Verdi’s “The Masked Ball” Superior Court judge in charge of keeping such reports confidential. Marcus O. Tucker, presiding judge of Juvenile Court, told media prominence at the party’s 1968 national convention in Chicago, where and conduct four performances of Puccini’s “La Boheme” at the Los organizations in a memorandum that a court order is required before street clashes between police and demonstrators opposed to the Angeles Opera this season. “Conducting is something you either have or you don’t,” confidential documents can be made public. Vietnam War overshadowed the party politics. He “formally admonished” employees of the county Department “I really hadn't expected to be on the ticket. I just didn’t think; Domingo said. “I’ve always wanted to do it once I stopped singing.’■ of Children’s Services and the Los Angeles Police Department to given the events before the convention, it was likely that a vice presi­ It’s something that has to be inside of you.” keep the documents private. dential candidate from a small state in New England would add very The Jackson camp played a tape for reporters Wednesday that is a LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Jackson’s sister LaToya said much to Hubert's chances,” Muskie recalled in a recent interview at Thursday he used to spend the night in his room with young boys and purported recording of an Aug. 17 conversation between Jackson's his Kennebunk Beach home. Many observers felt Humphrey could have defeated Richard “we really don't know” if child molestation allegations against him private investigator, Anthony Pellicano, and Barry Rothman, a lawyer for the boy’s father. are true. ’ t Nixon had the campaign lasted one more week. Jackson’s attorney, Howard Weitzman, said the tape confirms She also said on NBC’s ‘Today” show that the public has treated , “You can make history whatever you want to make it, if you Pellicano's allegation that the child molestation charges stem from a haven’t won and had the responsibility,” said Muskie, a former gover­ Jackson unfairly since word of a police investigation leaked., “If you really think about it, he’s been convicted before a trial,” $20 million extortion attempt by the boy’s father, a prominent dentist nor, senator and secretary of state. and sometime screenwriter. Muskie, 79, spends most of the year in Washington, where he is a Miss Jackson said from the network’s London bureau. The 25-minute tape contains nothing about molestation claims and A 13-year-old boy reported he was molested by the pop star dur­ senior partner in a law firm. He returns each summer to Kennebunk ing a four-month relationship. His lawyer, Gloria Allred, scheduled an is dominated by heated and profanity-laced exchanges between BeachPellicano and the man said to be Rothman over terms of a movie deal afteroon news conference to make a statement on behalf of the teen. Jackson has denied any wrongdoing and no charges have been between Jackson and the boy’s father. PARIS (AP) — Buckingham Palace denied a magazine report that STUART, Fla. (AP) — Burt Reynolds and Loni Anderson don’t agree on much these days, but they have an understanding on two things: The custody battle over their son will be settled in California and their divorce in Florida. Reynolds filed for divorce June 10 in Martin County, asking Circuit Judge Marc Cianca to decide the case in Florida. Anderson said California is her home state and filed for divorce more than a month later in Los Angeles. A private California judge hired by Anderson and Reynolds will determine who gets custody of the couple’s adopted son, 5-year-old Quinton, and the amount of child support. : Cianca, who approved the agreement Wednesday, will decide alimony issues and how to split the couple’s property. Princess Diana bought a six-room vacation home in southern France. Paris-Match said the Princess of Wales paid Belgian baritone Jose Van Dam 10 million francs, or $1.72 million, for the converted farm­ house in Provence. Photos of the 20-acre property showed a rustic complex with tiled roof and green shutters. It has a small sypmming pool and large patio, on a hillside near Saint-Remy-de-Provence, a fashionable vacation destination for the wealthy seeking seclusion. Princess Di is estranged from her husband. Prince Charles. WEEKENDS a t THE VINE HAPPY HOUR 4 to7 WELL & DRAFT H PITCHERS 7 to Close Live Entertainm ent 9 to Close ii'N Start your day at 10am and watch all the college games on 17 screens. ASU pre- and post-game HEADQUARTERS. LADIES N IG H T - no cover, ladies. 9 to Close $ I WELL, MARGS & L I.'s, I 9-11 Ladies only Catch all the NFL action at T he Vine via satellite beginning at 10am. CARDINALS vs. EAGLES. N oS ch°°l $ ^7 5 ’UMBO }Jlot«W* BLOODY BtWK' MARYS Sports S tate P ress 8 , _______ Friday, September 3,1993 P a g e 15 Last minute preparations p o rts B rie fs Helfrich up for NCAA award Former ASU volleyball player Jennifer Helfrich was named as one of 51 state win­ ners hi the 1993 Woman of the year by the NCAA Thursday. Helfrich was one o f 497 nominees. Helfrich played for the Sun Devils from 1989-1992 where die established herself as one of the outstanding setters in ASU histo­ ry, She finished her career with 1,296 assists which ranked second on the all-time list. ASU will receive a $5.000 award from Champion athletic wear in Helfrich’s honor. A panel of national media representatives and sport personalities will select select 10 finalists from the state winners. An additional $5,000 will be awarded to the institutions of the finalists. They will be recognized in November during an awards presentation in Washington D.C. where the Woman of the Year will he announced. M iller returns to USC Cheryl Miller, Southern Cal’s leading ' all-time scorer and rebounder, returned to the Trojans as women’s basketball coach Thursday. Miller, 29. replaces Marianne Stanley, who did not renew her contract after four years with the Trojans. Stanley sought to be reinstated, but a federal judge denied the request while her ■$8 million sex discrimination suit against Southern Cai and athletic director Mike Garrett is being resolved. Miller was a three-time Naismith Award winner and led USC to national titles in 1983 and 1984. She holds school women’s records for points (3,018) and rebounds (1,534) and the Trojans had a 112-5K) record during her four years as a starter. Miller most recently worked as a televi­ sion color commentator for college football and college basketball. Pro-Bowler Rison arrested Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Andre Rison was arrested Thursday and charged with beating Us girlfriend and firing a gun after two men tried to stop him, Atlanta police said. ■ Falcons officials stud they would not comment on Rison’s arrest pending further investigation. Rison practiced wiA the team Thursday and was expected'to m eet with coach Jerry Glanvilte. “First of all, I ’d like to apologize to my organization and to my fans,” said Rison as he left jail. Police said Rison assaulted Lisa Lopes, a singer with the rap group TLC, after the two left an Atlanta nightclub early Thursday :hto«ii|lgv R ison was charged w ith aggravated assault and freed on $16.500 bond. Lopes was arrested for allegedly attacking a police officer. She was freed on $1,200 bond on a charg e o f o bstruction. Both face a Municipal Court bearing Friday. Quote o f the Day “W e aren’t going to stop Northwestern. I d o n ’t th in k anybody has stopped Northwestern. That would be a little naive. What we do have to do is we have to be able to control them.” — Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz. T he Fighting Irish are Baseball Roundup Thursday's Games AMERICAN LEAGUE Late Games Not Included New York 7, Chicago 1 Cleveland 4, M innesota 3 M ilwaukee at Seattle (n) Baltimore at California (a) Only games scheduled NAT1KR4ALUBA6UE Florida 8, San Diego 2 Los Angeles 4, PBtsbaigh ft Atlanta 5, San Francisco 3 -M .. i . j t tS S S *• § - iM s . C ra ig M a c n au g h to n /S tate P ress Brian Johnson o f the ASU A thletic D epartm ent paints the logo in the south end zone o f Sun Devil Stadium w hile th e ta ll flag s corps prac­ tice in th e background. These preparations are being m ade fo r th e ASU foo tb all hom e opener VS. Utah tom orrow night at 7:00 pm. Sun Devils, Utes set to rumble By J ake B atseu . State P ress ASU football coach Bruce Snyder isn ’t certain what specific tactics he’ll use against Utah in his team ’s season opener on Saturday night. But the Sun Devil coach is confident his team will be ready for battle. “We haven’t come up with a game plan yet,” said Snyder, who is set to begin his sec­ ond year at the helm of the Sun Devils. “But I know th a t it is p art o f my n atu re to see whether we can knock people off the ball.” Utah, however, has voiced its own mili­ tant confidence toward the game. “W e’ll take care o f Arizona State," Ute comerback Kareem Leary was quoted as say­ ing in The Salt Lake T ribune ea rlier this week. K ickoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Sun Devil Stadium. vThe Sun Devils (6-5 in 1992) will face a Utah team coming off its first bowl appear­ ance in 28 years. The Utes (6-6) made it to the C o p p er Bow l in T ucson last season, w here they w ere n ipped by W ash in g to n State, 31-28. U tah returns seven starters on offense, highlighted by running backs Pierre Jones an d K eith W illia m s. T he tandem is heralded by Utah sp o rts p u b lic is ts as the strongest Ute backfield in a decade. “They have tw o terrific runners,” Snyder said. B ut the Sun D evils are Saturday, August 4 /«# excited about their prospects m Sun Devil Stadium in th e b a c k fie ld as w ell. 7:00 p.m. S a tu rd a y w ill m ark th e re tu rn o f ta ilb a c k M ario Bates, w ho ranked second K EY FACTORS: nationally in rushing yards • ASU tailback M ario Bates returns from last seaso n b efo re fallin g victim to a year-ending knee successful knee surgury. injury. • ASU leads the series 15-6. T he Sun Utah coach Ron McBride Devils last beat the Utes 21-15 in 1991 — a fo rm e r a s s is ta n t at • Latest line : Sun Devils by 13. U ofA — b ecam e fam iliar with Bates when the sopho­ more back was playing for A m phitheater High School special talent. Anything he does as a football in Tucson. McBride said he is* hilly aware of Bates’ player won’t surprise me.” Snyder said Bates has made his presence capabilities. “I w atc h ed M ario all th ro u g h h ig h felt on the ASU practice field during the pre­ ' school,” McBride said. “I think he’s a very season. “Even though his practice time was spot- SUN DEVIL FOOTBALL • GAME 1 ARIZONA STATE VS. UTAH ASU spikers ready to go Two-a-days over, Snyder raring for the real thing By P aul J . M atthews State P ress After suffering through two-a-day practices, endless hours in the weight room and battling for starting positions, the ASU volleyball team will finally get a chance to prove itself this weekend. “No bold predictions, no blowouts,” coach Patti Snyder said. “We expect to win all four matches, but it’s not going to be an easy road. They are all good teams.” This w eek en d ’s Sun D evil V olleyball Challenge will feature Santa Clara University, Northern Arizona University, California State U niversity-N orthridge and C alifornia State University-Sacramento. Northridge and Santa Clara both qualified for the NCAA Tournament last year. Sacramento played in the NIT, . . “They will all return fairly strong,” Snyder said. “None of them have All-Americans on their team. They’re all just very solid, athletic, ball-control teams.” Sun Devil senior Michelle Monson, an out­ side hitter, is anxious for the first tournament of the season to begin. “It’s the first tournament and you’ve got to get your feet on the ground,” Monson said. She added that in the past two years ASU has met Northridge in the tournament championship and “they have been the team to beat.” Entering her final year, Monson said she will, play every game like it is her last. “It makes you play harder because you know its your last year,” she said. “You kind of go for the gusto.” Team m ate M onique A llen said the Sun Devils will not be overlooking anyone in this tournament. Tickets sales on rise, ASU officals say B y J ulie R euvers State P ress Season ticket sales for ASU football are higher than last season, athletic department officials said, despite an overall decrease in game attendance in the last four years. “W e’re selling tickets so fast that it’s impossible to give out any specific num­ b ers,” said Sun D evil Ticket M anager Marie Carey. Ticket sales this season have reached 46,000, up 2,000 over last year, according to ASU Sports Information Director Mark Brand. Those numbers include student tickets. The attendance rate at ASU games last year averaged 45,089, the lowest in 14 years. The falling numbers have prompted the Sun Devil marketing and promotions department to take extra measures. Page 16_____________________ __________ _____ _______ Friday, September 3,1993 __________________ j ______ ________ St ATE^PRESS Tickets C ontinued from p a g e 1 5 . “We’re going above and beyond the tradi­ tional medium of advertising,” said Director of M artketing and Prom otions Greg W alaitis. “What we’re trying to do this year is to create excitement and keep the excitement alive in the Valley. This season’s “Red Hot and Ready” cam­ paign, launched by the marketing department, is one of many steps taken to stimulate sales. A team's season attendance relies on its abil­ ity to win and to stay healthy, Walaitis said. For that reason, the department’s second major cam­ paign this season, "Shante’s Inferno,” revolves around ASU defensive end Shante Carver. The senior has stayed healthy for ASU throughout three seasons, playing in 33 games after he redshirted in 1989. “When we do have a key player, we try to put him in the same status category as a Kevin Johnson or a Dan M ajerle,” W alaitis said. “Something like, ‘Shante’s Inferno’ really sticks in peoples’ minds.” Reserved seating in the student section, another new approach this year, will be a change felt by all ASU students who attend games. The form er general adm ission seating system allowed students to sit in any empty seat in that section. “Now every time a student purchases a tick­ et, they get that same seat each game,” Walaitis said. “It will benefit people that are motivated to come out and purchase tickets to get the best seats.” He said that in the past, there has been too much apathy among students who thought they could buy football tickets at any time- He feels that the reserved student seating will lift the stu­ dent spirit level, and make the games a more popular event. A trend has taken over the nation in the past few years, Walaitis said, and sports fans are no longer content to watch a game. They want to be entertained. But professional teams like the Phoenix Suns and the Phoenix Cardinals, who are able to spend more to entertain fans, don’t hurt Sun Devil attendance, Walaitis said. “If anything, the Suns help,” he said. “If the Cardinals do well then hopefully the whole Valley will go football crazy. Everything flows. We win, they win, the Suns Win, it could be a great scenario.” Volley C ontinued from page 15. “If you overlook a team they can become hard,” Alien said. “I think we should do fine.” A llen said she was nervous before Wednesday’s scrimmage and hopefully that experience will leave her better prepared for this weekend. “I was a little jittery." Allen said. “I think I got first game jitters out of the way. I'll proba­ bly still be nervous (for this weekend’s tourna- ment) but it helped a little bit.” ; There were some bright spots for the Sun Devils in Wednesday’s scrimmage. Sophomore C hristine G arner earned high praise from Snyder who said “she rocked some balls.” Snyder also praised the performances of freshm en K irsten M attson and Shannon Morgan. “Kirsten Mattson came in games four and five and really sparked us,” Snyder added. “It was nice to see a rookie come in and make a difference in the match. Shannon Morgan was a steady. She played defense for us and did a real­ ly good job.” Assistant coach Jeff Nelson praised setter Tiffannie Johnson, saying that she “seemed to be in control and mixed things up pretty well.” Devils CONTINUED FROM PAGE 15. ted and limited. I think we all have recog­ nized that he's back.” Snyder said. D efensively, the Sun D evils are led by returning all-A m erica defen siv e linem an Shante Carver. The 6-foot-5, 228-pound pass rush specialist is already ASU’s career leader in quarterback sacks (31). Four returnees anchor the ASU offensive line, w hich w ill try to p rotect sophom ore quarterback G rady Benton. Benton set an NCAA record last season for pass completion percentage as a freshman (66.2). S nyder said he expects stiff opposition from the Utah defense. “(U tah) thinks their linebacker corps is really going to surprise some people,” he said. SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU I.D.* or FEE RECEIPT, YOU'LL GET A DINNER “If you take (defensive end) Luther Elliss and some of the other players they have on that d e fe n siv e lin e , th a t w ill b e s tre n g th on strength there. “If we can capture that part o f it — our line against their defensive line — that will go a long way in determ ining who is going to win the football game.” Cards, Eagles in bird battle By M ike Branom State Press When you examine the losses suffered by the Philadelphia Eagles in: the last year, you begin to w onder if they have a chance against the Phoenix Cardinals on Sunday. Reggie W hite, Jim M cM ahon, Keith Byars and Bob Golic are some of the names that the Eagles will miss when they take to the Veterans’ Stadium field in the regularseason opener. However, do not believe for a moment that the Cardinals think they have a cake­ w alk w aiting fo r them in the City o f Brotherly Love. “W e’re going into a buzz saw and we don’t want to get ambushed,” Phoenix coach Joe Bugel.said. The Philadelphia buzz saw still has a good deal of talent remaining with players like defensive end C lyde Sim m ons, linebacker Seth Joyner, quarterback Randall C unningham , running backs H erschel Walker and Heath Sherman and receiver Fred Barnett. Much has been made of the turmoil in the Eagles' camp, what with the defense report­ edly upset with Cunningham and everybody reportedly angered at owner Norm Braman. Things got so out of hand the Coach Rick Kotite threatened to fine any player who publicly spoke ill of the team l/16th of his salary. Joyner did not take well to that gag order, saying, “Nobody’s going to take away my constitutional rights.” ' Bugel will have none of the talk about how an angry team is a bad team. “They may be unhappy, but those are sometimes the guys who play the best foot­ ball, the unhappy ones,” he said. “Them unhappy guys are dangerous.” The game will be televised locally on Channel 10 KTSP beginning at 10 a.m. Jim Nantz and Randy Cross will be handling broadcasting duties. SUNDEVIL FOOTBALL Home Schedule S e p t. 4 U TAH S ep t. 2 8 OKLAHOMA. ST A T E O c t. 1 6 OR EG O N O ct 30 W A SHINGTON N ov. 6 CAL-BERKELEY N ov. 2 6 A R IZ O N A HOM ECOM ING GAME SATURDAY 7PM ASU vs UTAH T h is ye a r w e're doing it aga in ! E very S unday (b u t O N LY o n S u n d a y), M ike P ulos o f T he S paghetti C om pany w ill g ive you one FR EE d in n e r* fo r each d in n e r you orde r! It's o u r 2-for-1 SU NDAY ASU S PEC IAL. A nd it's good fo r th e w hole ye ar a t o u r Tem pe, P hoenix and S cottsdale locations. A ny day o f th e w eek, fo r lun ch o r d in n e r, The S paghetti C om pany is know n fo r a g rea t m eal a t an affo rd a ble p rice . B ut the SU ND AY ASU SPEC IAL m akes o u r a lready te rrific p rice s e ve n b e tte r! O ur d inners include a fu ll-co u rse m eal w ith a ll th e trim ­ m ings from salad to d essert. So, d o lla r fo r d o lla r, w hen yo u 're hungry and you need a break, you c a n t beat T he S paghetti C om pany! ESPEC IALLY ON SU N D AYS! W ith2 dinners fo r th e price o f 1! *But you MUST have your currant student LD. card or fM receipt w ith you to take advantage of thie offer. 15% gratuity added to aN discounted c h a d » (except senior citizen dtecounts). Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak 01 Jon, Stuffed Filet o f Sole, Tenderloin» Chicken M arsala, Veal M arsala, Three Pasta Opera and ordsra to go ARE NOT included In the 24or»1 Special. OPEN AT 11:00A.M. TO 11:00 P.M. SUNDAYS! OPEN AT 10 A.M. ON GAME OAYSI E n |o y o u r n ig h t ly d r in k s p e d a l a . | ^paglietti (pttfpaity* T T Isa * RESTAU RAN T PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE South on C en tra l Ju st P asta M cD ow ell 7373 N . S cottsdale Rd. Ju st N orth o f In d ia n Bend 257-0380 483-5669 OLD TOWN TEMPE 4 th S t. & M ill 966-3848 Y O U R S E A T IS O N S A L E NOW ! m G uarantee yourself a great seat all season | pang by purchasing your M student season tickets today! Stu d en t seatin g w ill be assigned w hen you purchase your tic k e ts, so place your order w ith friends! T ickets are on sale now at the A thletic Ticket Office (South end of Sun Devil Stadium ) from 8:30 a.m .-4:00 p.m . w eekdays, and in th e M em orial U nion on A ugust 23-S ep tem ber 3 near the inform ation desk w eekdays from 10:00 a.m .-2:00 p.m . P ageJ7 Friday, September 3, 1993 3313 N. Hayden Scottsdale State P ress Classifieds - w e're always in th e back. M STRUftAKT O pen at 4 p .m . T u e s. - S un. “VOTED #1 SEAFOOD RESTAURANT BY KUPD LISTENERS!” Great Prices! Great Food! BUY 1 DRINK, GET 2nd FOR SH RIM P COCKTAIL SPECIAL! H BUY l , GET 1 FREE Not valid with any other offer Not valid with any other offer FR E E G O U R M ET SA LA D & SO U P B A R during Happy Hour (Scottsdale location only) Sun D evil M emories Friday, September 3,9PM - Midnight S c o t t s d a le G a lle r ia OTHER LOCATIONS: Beverly Hills • Los Angeles • Newport Beach • Santa Barbara San Francisco • Pasadena • Palm Desert • San Diego (Solana Beach) • Honolulu Atlanta • Chicago • St. Louis • Las Vegas (Mirage & Golden Nugget Hotels) Join KTAR’s Bill Straus and share some great Sun Devil memories from the past on the eve o f die first ASU game of the 1993 season. Bill will bring back a host o f warm and wonderful memories that are sure to make every Sun Devil proud! Washington D.C. (Tyson's Corner, VA & Bethesda, M D ) 2 0 % OFF for ASU students. SCOTTSDALE GALLERIA Scottsdale Rd75th Ave. • Free Valet Parking Take-Out Available • (602) 949-3020 • Open Daily at 11:30 am News/Talk Radio • 620 on your AM Dial. A d v e r t is e r Name Arizona Shorts................................ Arizona Teachings Institute........... Blue Cross/Blue Shield.................. Blue Iguana......... Excluding alcohol, tax & gratuity • Student ID required May not be combined with any other offer * Expires 12-19-93 In d e x Page ..................7 .................. 9 ..................8 ..................7 16 Brach's......... ..................... ;............ ................10 Buffalo Exchange........................... ................11 Page Page Name Name Pair-a-Chute................................ ......................6 California Pizza Kitchen............. ..................... 2 ÍÁ Phillips and Associates..,^«.;..,...;.. Campus Comer............................. ...................... 6 Gumby's Pizza......................... . ..................... 7 ; Playboy.»...................................... j6 Harkins............ .............................. Shalimar Restaurant.................... .................... h Intercollegiate Athletics.....,......... ...................12 KTAR Radio................................ ...............6, 17 Spaghetti Company..................... ....................12 16 O ne........................ ..................... ». Name Sunny's Pizza............................. ............ V ine..... ................. ................................. The Works.............................................. Page .... 11 .... 13 .....14 ...... 2 .....20 State press Display Advertising • 965-6555 GET PERSONAL...NOW AND LATER Everyone loves getting a personal message in the State Press Classifieds! Now (and later) you can double the value of what you have to say. And what's more valuable that what you say to your friends? Use this one now... ...and use this one later. Classifieds N otice to our 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 of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regaiding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. ANNOUNCEMENTS PRIVATE SOCIAL party for gay student athletes and fraternity men. 929-0129 for information. APARTMENTS $199 MOVE-IN, lbr, $325/mo. 2br $375/month. close to ASU. Apartment Renters 831-5900. 1 BD in 4-plex near ASU stove, frig, a/c laundry, $295 + $250 dep, some free rent. 945-3970. 1 BD p o o l, w /d hook-tips $419/mpnth Apartment Renters. 831-5900. 2 BEDROOM, 2 ba, 900 square foot, pool, washer, dryer hook-up $499/ month. Apartment Renters. 649-0077. 2 BD, 2 ba, pool, close to ASU $400/mo. A partm ent Renters. 649-0077; ASU AREA-1*5 and 3 bedrooms, pool. Starting at $295, plus utili­ ties. 967-4908,966-8§38. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 & 2 bed­ rooms. Walk to ASU: Pool, laUndiy room. On East 8th Street bet­ ween Rural & McClimock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. Call for move-in special. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT FOR RENT, furnished 3bd, 3 ba Tempe condo. Major appl. incl. 2 pools, sauna, je t spa, etc. $900/ month. Available immediately. Deposit required. 921-7387. FULLY FURNISHED. Gorgeous 2bd 2ba condo. Set-up like 2 mas­ ter bedrooms, deluxe complex, all furnishings, very nice:, near Broadway/McClintock. $610/mo. Era-American. 966-9030. IM M A C U LA TE 2BD lb a , linens, dishes, etc. $600/mo util incl. Near Univ/Dobson. Short term. 838-6621 WALK TO ASU Nice 3bd, 2ba single level condo. Refrigerator, w /d, $690. H ardy/U niversity. Era-American, 966-9030. WALK TO AZ Center, Herberger, Sym phony' Arena. R enais­ sance Square 2Bd, 2 Ba W/D, Mi­ crowave. $675 899-1954 RENTAL SHARING 2BD 2BA condo, fireplace, w/d, pool, $240/mo + 1/2 util. Quiet 952-2362. •""; ■ A+ LIFESTYLE in lux resort condo__ms.tr. $235 + util quiet prof, atmosphere. 351^-8683. A A A A M/F non-smkr, share spa­ cious house 3 mis ASU w/bike route access, w/d, AC* ffplc, mi­ cro, extra study space, $200/mo +.. util, Oak/Sctsdl. Bob 990-2284. FEMALE NS quiet share 2bd apt 3 mi to ASU Fully fum $275/mo inc util Mary Ann 897-1367 FEM A LE R O OM M A TE to share 2bd 2ba Townhouse, w/d, furn.-$250/mo Sandy 945-0216 FEMALE TO share house, own room , $200 + 1/4 u til, avail, im m ed. Southern/M cC lintock area. 491-9484. M/F MATURE nonsmoker, large master bedroom, w/d, $275 incl util. Call after 4pm, 814-7806. M /F ROOM M A TE needed to share 2bd 2ba apt. Walk to A$U, all amenities, pool, $250/mo, no deposit Wes 731-9903. M/F TO share 2bd/lba apt near Univ. & Priest. Big apt with nice furniture—mature and responsi­ ble person desired. Call for de­ vils. Jason 894-6354. MALE N/S, share 3 bd house w/ pool, garage, 10 min7ASU, $225 mo. utiL incl, Mike, 839-2147. ROOM S FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS FO R SA LE___ 2 ROOMS available fo r rent. R ent open fo r neg o tiatio n . Southern and Emerald. 464-8613. COLOR TVS. 13", 19", & 25" $65-$ 175 must see to appreciate. call 270-0697. 3BD/2BA HOUSE - own bed & bath w/d pets ok $225 + 1/3 util call Kevin or Jeramy 945-3323. 4BD HOUSE, Southem/Rural, female, must be financially secure $215/mo+util Lisa 345-0350 PRIVATE RM w/fiill bath in lux­ ury home at "The Cottonwoods". Extremely quiet/private. Kitchen p riv ileg e s. P re fe r fa c u lty or graduate sutdent $250/mo + 1 /2 util. Mac McCormick 345-6789. PRIVATE RM furn, free w/d, nice carpet, pools, parking, bike ASU 2 mi, 893-2577 96S-2814. ROOM IN house $250 per mo plus 1/4 utilities, pool, cable,fur­ nished. 990rl941 lv mess. FIND IT in the Classifieds! HOMES FOR SALE LIVE FOR free, duplex, walking distance to ASU seller financing, no qiial call John 264-6077 NEED ROOMMATE to share 2 bd 2 ba Condo in Scottsdale. Call for details. 481 -0057. •PAPAGO 2, m/f student, master bd w/ba, $335 + 1/2 util. Pool, jacuzzi, w/d. John, 921-9522. ROOM M ATE NEEDED M /F, N/S, no pets. 1800 sq ft townhouse 3 b d/3ba, 2 c a r garage, pool, 2 mi from ASU. $238/mo, + 1/3 utilities; Call 966-0812. 3 B D 2 ba Fireplace 1 block to ASU 1191 S Maple $750/month Tim 894-0288 S iit i P r ill C liiiifitd s M ittlia w i C u tir B iiim it 965-6735 ROOM S FOR RENT S250/MO, SHRmtl, 3bd, own bd Rural/M cKellips, w/d, respons student 949-2489 Mia/Annalisa YOUR H U Y DOSE ‘H e's been a student so long.. when he started the D ead S ea was only sick. BOOKS RECYCLE FOR $$ Sell your books for cash (no text­ books, please) or get trade credit towards the purchase of anything in the stoie. Choose from 3 floors of new and used bodes, posters, music, etc. Call, ahead for buying hours* B row sers w elcom e. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue, 966-0203. FURNITURE Q U EEN W ATERB ED $75[ couch $50, above ground 15V round pool $400.994-9655 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE SOFA & chair $275, sofa & love seats starting at $300; Southwest + contemporary fabrics 997-9568 HUD SALE!! Hayden Square, Papago Park Village I & II, Questa Vida, Los Prados. "Government Hud Sale" 3% down hurry call T J . Carty Realty Executives 831-0322. SOFA'SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed; entertainm ent center; dresser. Cheap. 352-7249. TWIN CAPTAIN'S bed for sale. Includes: sheets, blankets, mat­ tress^ 6 drawers, $100 obo. Call 265-8939, leave message. LG T H ,2bd,2ba, 1000 sq. f t , 10 m in/A SU , pool, spa, $10,000 down, est $397/mo. 967-6514 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE LABOR DAY SALE 50% OFF All Merchandise REPEAT DEPOT A Thrift Store 794 E. Southern, Tempe (Rural & Southern) that saves cash at these Tempe hot spots! /M anhattan L mo M n saN N sn COMPUTERS COMPUTER TUTOR/ advisor software/hardware set-up: IBM PC /com patibles, M ac. C all T. Gibbons, 784-0226. MAC POWERBOOK 100- 2mb ram, 40mb H D. Ext; H.D. Flop­ py, weighs 5 lbs, runs 4 hours on battery. Great for school. Soft­ ware loaded (collectors item ) only $1095 956-4000 Michael ir Dff Computer] 1486-33 $99»,(-5* $1249,-46 $1449) I |w /!3 0 Mb. 4Mb, .28 SV G A .Im b| ■Video, Teac Floppy, IDE I/O &KDB, a ' -Fax/Modem $49,245 Mb maxtr $99 ■ 'Upgrade your 286 to 386 for$100 j Se Habla C++ 234-2344 J A l w a y s B u y in g J e w e l r y . Including: gold, sterling, pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion 921 S Mill Ave, Tempe Center 968-6074 ART Bungee Over Arizona T he discount entertainment card - . that saves you money all over town! -1987 TOY Tercel Very gd cond blue hatch 4spd FM 38mpg ac tint cloth 78,500 $3850/obo 892-5915 1989 HUND Al Excel GL 5-spd Hatchback, sunroof, ac, tinted, new tires/battery under warran­ ty, excellent cond. 460-2665. 88 HONDA Prelude Si, red, mint cond., 58K mi., tint sunroof, 5sp, $9000. Contact Dane, 873-4501 HONDA 1988 Civic Hbk, 5sp, Al­ pine cassette, ac, cruise, 88K hwy miles. $5900 obo. 829-6996. HONDA ELITE 150, brand new, 3600 mi, red, must sell, $995, 921-2757 HOT 86 Pontiac TA- New engine ($3000), new paint; all white, Wht lo u v e rs. O ry/blk in te rio r im ­ m aculate, fully loaded, looks new* a steal at $5395. Must sell Michael 9564000 MUSTANG GT convertible 1987 red white top and leather 5spd 64K Loaded! $8600. 858-9558 Leave message NISSAN 300ZX 1987 all power, loaded to hilt, top, le a th e r auto, w hite, m nt cond; low mi, $77;OO0 obo. Karen 947-0522. M OTORCYCLES" 1986 HONDA interceptor 500cc low miles, exc cond, fast $1900 call 968-1976 1989 HONDA Elite scooter show­ room cond less than 70 miles, 80cc, 55mph extras include bookrack and all weather cover. $1200 997-5612 ° i 1991 FZR 600, blk, showroom cond, new Battleaxe tires, DND pipe headers, Stage 3 je t k it, Lockhardt shield, m any o ther xtras, 7000mi, $4200/obo. Brett, 350-9556. CT HONDA Trail Bike for sale. Reliable, 7000 mi., cheap insur­ ance, $650 obo. Mick, 831-5357. HONDA SCOOTER 150 runs great new brakes/rear tire must sell low mi $900/obo Bill 8448227 BICYCLES MENS 20" Nishiki 10-speed; $85 obo. Call Linda at 966-8060. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283ONE WAY ticket to LAX Sept. 17. Female. $60/obo. Call Amy, 921-7882. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ALLIED VAN Lines Agency is seeking a p/t accntng clerk; hrs 1-. 5pm daily , f/t d uring breaks. Please apply btwn l -4pm at 4048 E. Superior Ave. (I-10/4Oth St*) O FFIC E H ELP needed. M ust know MS W ord/W ord Perfect for windows. Start ASAP. Full time & part time. Salary or hour­ ly pay. Also hiring valet parkers & delivery drivers C all 9909223 b /t 7& 9am . o r 4& 9pm . leave name and we will call to set up interview. A LT ER N A TE PO STA L c o n ­ tractors needed for door delivery o f 2nd, 3rd, 4th class m ail in Tempe & Mesa areas with Natl Fortune 500 lisc. P/T positions hourly rate, mileage bonus + ad­ vancem ent opportunities 4700700. AMERICAN CLEARING House is hiring college students for teL emarketing at 2 locations in Tem­ pe. 2 shifts are available, 7amlpm or lpm-7pm call Brandy at 784-2225. • •- APPT. SETTERS needed, hrs 5:30pm-8:30pm M-Th. Top pay + bonus. Scottsdale mortgage co. Contact Gary 481-9791 ARE YOU articulate and enthu­ siastic and looking to build your resume? Earn $5/hr + bonuses to raise $$$ for A$U. For ment info call A$U Telefuiid 965-6754. ASU TELEFUND is looking for someone who is responsible & de­ tail oriented w/some com puter experience, applicants need to be available for approximately 20 hrs/w k, am o r pm hoprs. For more info call 965-6754. ASU TELEFUND is looking for office assists, applicants must be available late mornings & after­ noon hours approx 20 hrs/wk, m ust be responsible & pfofessional. Call for info 965-6754. CASH-DANCERS Now hiring female for bachelor parties. Call Randy at "Only The Classiest" 997-6698. CHANDLER YMCA hiring for childcare counselers & specialty in stru c to rs, p /t am & pm hrs available. Apply at 398 W. Ray Rd; 899-9622. COMPUTER ZONE Corp, want­ ed: P erson good w /phones, knowledge o f computers an asset. Call 829-6126 or apply at 904 N. Scottsdale Rd. C O U PLE TO m anage sm all apartment complex. Office skills & handyman skills required. Of­ fice hours are 9am-5pm M-F and 10aih-4pm Saturday; M atiance/ handyman hrs are flexible (aver­ age 1-2 hrs per day). Call even­ ings after 6pm 967-1700. EASY W ORK, flexible hours, great pay. Transportation & neat appearance a m u st! C all 951 0600, ask for Ted. FURNITURE DELIVERY help­ er fo r Broadway Southwest on Sat> $ 6 50/hr 966-5139 G O O D TE LEM A R K ETER S wanted! $6/hf + bonus. Short evening hours - no Weekends - no selling. Appt. setting only Call Tu-Fri 269-1800 GREAT P/T employment woric 3 nights 3:30-9:30 arid 1 Weekend day telephone survey interview­ ing. Requires good reading skills and some keyboard experience. Bilingual a plus. Starting wage $5.00/hr. Apply in person M-F DataSource 4515 S. McClintock Ste 101 Tempe 831-2971 EOE HELP WANTEDGENERAL HARKINS FASHION Square ? is c u rre n tly h irin g fo r d aytim e help. Free movie benefits and a flexible schedule. Apply in per­ son M-F. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs Part/Full time for front & back office, will train, must type, apply in person 4020 N Scottsdale Rd. #108 LOCAL RADIO station hiring fo r tem p o rary , p a rt tim e re ­ search positions; Late afternoons, evenings and weekends. No sell­ ing involved. Call 731-6505. PC SUPPORT TECHNICIAN Get your CARD TODAY at any of these hot Tempe locations or call 1-602-540-9628 for more information. Croup Discounts A vailable 1987 DODGE Daytona Pacifica Turbo 44K loaded, AT, new tags, $4000/obo 894-2171 482-3927 1989 HONDA Elite 50cc, excel­ lent transpo. will trade for mtn bike or $500.929-0396 lv msg JEWELRY (IM W U V ) 1987 C AMARO RS Cherry red! 80K, AT, PW, PDL, CC, arti/fm cass $3800 call 493-3055lv msge! •Student Desk.... ........ $59.95 •D«5kChair..................$19.95 Files, work tables, book cases, computer stands & much, much more. New in d used. Cal 545-5109 ^ 1985 NISSAN Pulsar NX, $1600. Pioneer CD player. 306-1836. Office Furniture Warehouse FAX MACHINES! Lowest prices guaranteed. Plain paper, thermal & laser. Call 831-1001. ENTERTAINMENT G IR D A u ro M O g y s _ 1987 HONDA E lite 150 pearl w h ite, l ow 4 3 0 0 m iles; exc cond., great for school. $980/obo Call Brad 980-7239 D iscounts given w ith current ASU lb . Monday, Sept. 6 8am-6pm W A NTED to share 2bd 2 1/2 ba Condo $275 + 1/2 utilities 844-1838 SERIOUS STUDENT, fem ale only, share 2bd condo, $210+1/2 util. N/S. University & Dobson. Must like large dpg. 964-3053. HP48SX W ITH 2 applications cards, $400 obo, brand new. Call Charles, 898-3239. WALK TO ASU 3 bdrooms & 2 bath, AZ-room* plus bonus room, new roof & paint. 69 K Mary W 948-5554 WUSA Realty. room m ate ROOM M ATE W ANTED: Fe­ m ale n/s, prefer upperclass or grad. Lg 2bd, 2ba, NW Mesa a p t, w /d, fp, alarm sy stem , furn* $300/mo + 1/2 util, 461-0764. DINO DUNG! Fossilized, Grade A* 1 oz speci­ mens. Send chk/mo $14.95 to: The Jurassic Fart, PO Box 5905, Tucson, A Z 85703. OVER 200 offices o f furniture to sell* desks; chairs, files, bookcas­ es, computer furniture and more. AZ Office Liquidators 5064 S. 40th -St.' (on 40 th St south o f Broadway) 437-2224. MALE PREF non/smkr, no pets 4bd, 3 -l/2 b a 2750 sq ft house w/view of Camelback. w/d, pool, cable, 20 min to ASU. $292/mo+ 1/5 utils, 1st and last down. Sense o f humor a must! 970-3844. HOMES FOR RENT S t a t e P ress Friday, September 3,1993 Page 18 Im ports from all over the w orld. Jewelry, am ber, icons, nested dolls, pointings, vases & plates, handbags. Global Fine Art 5555 E. Bell Rd , Ste. 22-A (602)493-1393 15% Introductory D iscount N e e d to w o rk a fle x ib le schedule o f 2 0 -3 0 hours a week. Duties include PC hardware con­ figuration, deliveries, and misc. related tasks. M u st have ow n vehicle and fam iliarity w ith computer hardware installation & troubleshoot­ ing. Experience with AutoCAD, networking, & various Microsoft software programs is helpful. Apply to: ESSJconnect, Attn: Julie 64 E. Broadway, #230 Tempe> AZ 85282 PART TIME $5/hr + comm paid daily, female pref. 256-6476 . PART TIME HELP Nat'l Retail Co. has p/t hrs. for the fall. Very flexible hrs. Eve and wkends. Start at $8.20. No exp req. 968-1840, r PART TIME POSITIONS, work 4-8pm Monday-Friday process­ ing advertising claims. We train. No typing o r phones required. Basic math skills needed. Apply at The Advertising Checking Bu­ reau, Inc., 1919 W . Fairm ont D r„ Suite 7* Tem pe, 7:30am 4pm M-F, 438-2320. . PRODUCT HANDLERS. Must be 18, lift 501bs. P/T sorting, merging N atl magazines. Flex hrs, F ri & S a t $4.35-$8.00/hr A pply at Á Z A lternate Postal Service 4840 S 40th St Phx SA LESPER SO N S & delivery driv ers fo r Body G aurd 2000 Pepper Spray. Call now Gold En­ terprises 548-1222 pgr 217-3502. SPORTS SHOTS Looking fo r energetic people available Tue & Thür for pho­ tography & sales, no experience necessary. Interview ing W ed, 9/8, 12-4pm. Call for appoint­ ment, 952-9171, ask for Bob. THE ARIZONA House of Repre­ sentatives is seeking applicants for page positions for tfie upcom­ ing regular séssion of the Legis­ lature, Pages provide general as­ sistance to members and staff. Po­ sitions are full timé and the pay is approxim ately $5.95 per hour. C all 542-3656 for fu rth er in­ formation o f apply at the Arizona H ouse of the R epresentatives, 1700 W. Washington* Phoenix. WAITRESS NEEDED. Bostons N ight C lub. P/T C all J e f f or Corey after 7pm 921-7343. WALK FROM ASU! No selling, telephone survey research, flex, hrs avail m rng, a ftrn s, e v es/ wknds. Start at $5/hr. Wkly pay, frequent raise reviews. Higgin­ botham Asso., 829-3141. HELP WANTEDSALES BUSINESS &/OR communica­ tions majors needed! Ideal oppt for right indv to join successful promotional advt co. People orentiented position that requires outgoing, energetic team player. Prev sales exp a+, flex schedules^ exc pay! 921-7755, l-4pm. COMMISSION PAID regularly $L50-$300 w eekly F lexible hours. Call 834-5946. G RE AT O PPO R TU N ITY for right student, work wknd days at Greyhound Park & Swap sèlling auto accessories,training avail­ able guys/gals, earn $5-$9/hr (sal.+comm.). Wendy, 967-7730. HELP WANTEDGENERAL WEEKEND RN INTAKE COORDINATOR K im b e rly Q u a lity C a ra , th e n a tio n 's le a d in g h ea lth ca re provid e r, is seeking a m oti­ v a te d R N in te re s te d in w orkin g th e e xcitin g fie ld of hom e h e a lth ca re . A s p a rt o f th e KQC team , th e q u a li­ fie d c a n d id a te w ill be re s p o n s ib le fo r re fe rra l co ord in atio n . The ide a l can­ d id a te w ill p o sse ss excep­ tio n a l In te rp e rs o n a l a n d o rg a n iz e d s k ills . H om e hea lth experience h elp fu l. Call Trida or Jill EOE/M/F/H/V . HELP W ANTEDSALES NEED A JOB? We need 5-10 pt students to sell tools, hrs 3-7pm M-F no wkends, no exp nec. Call Jim 820-8408 PART TIME $5/hr + comm paid daily, female pref. 256-6476 SELF MOTIVATED powerful personalities needed. Hourly + bonuses p/t positions avail now Young growing co. 829-8888 RESTAURANTS/ BARS SPORTS & WINGS! 4 S a te llite s 15 S creen s "We s h o w all NFL, Io w a & N eb ra sk a Games" WOODSHED II NW C o rn e r D o b so n & U n iv e rs ity 844*SHED LIVE MUSIC! by í MARCONIS OPPORTUNITY AWAITS YOU AT PROGRAMMER'S WAREHOUSE A leading M ulti N atio n al D istrib u to r o f Software, .is looking for HIGH ENERGY telemarketers. We think you’ll appreciate: •High Pay, $7 to $12 hour 1 ' •Bonuses: and Gomm. •Paid Vacation •State of the Art: Environment . •Very Positive Attitude. 602-443-0580 cfirl -N O C O V E R - l BANDERSNATCH 5th St. & F orest AAAA NOW hiring wait people, hosts, cooks. Apply 1-4 M-F Sage Brush 8111E McDonald COUNTRY GLAZE Ham look­ ing for p/t days M -F apply 2501 E Cam elback, Cam élback Espla­ nade. DOMINO’S PIZZA Come & join the #1 pizza deliv­ ery team fór thè ASU area. W e 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 ble & can w ork aro u n d your, school schedule. Apply in person after I ’lam at 903 S. Rural, Tem­ per or call 968-5555. EÒE. F rid ay N ig h t T o n y M a la b y Q u a rte t 4:30-7 p.m. 3rd Floor 9pm-1am $ 2 .5 0 22 o z. P ete's W icked A le & Lag er 9 p m -1 a m 9 9 c J e lly B e a n S h o ts H jg C A g l^ ^ LOVING BABYSITTER needed, 6 mo. old, o w n transport, Mc«»Clintock, S o f Warner. 839-5213; NANNY'S P/T days eves or wee­ k en d hrs. m ust have re lia b le transportation call 345-2433. NANNYS WANTED! Full tim e, p a rt tim e, live in, live o u t. Call All Bout Child Care Referral Service 759-6330 JO B oppoR T W |m !!_ A LA SK A EM PL O Y M EN T S tu d en ts n eeded! E arn up to $2,50Q+/monfh in canneries or fishing, vessels. Many employers provide room & board & trans­ portation. O ver 8,000 openings. No experience necessary! Male or female. For .more information call: (206)545-4155 èxt. A5918. C R U ISE SH IPS now hiring E arn upl to $ 2 0 0 0 + /m o n th + world travel. Summer and career em ploym ent available. No ex ­ perience necessary- For more in­ formation call 1-206-634-0468 eXt c59I8 Statt Praia Clasiifiadt Matthawi Cattar Batamtnt C O M M U N IC A TIO N CO U N ­ SELING/ Therapy: Relationshipscrisis-divorce-career. Sensitive, exp. PhD. 443-2799. $ AVE HUNDREDS of dollar$ oil professional tutoring. Call Mira­ cle Tutoring®, the "budget" serv­ ice. For help in most subjects. Tu­ tors: Let us advertise you! 9672226. BEST BUDD IES has com e to ASU! Don't miss out! Sept. 15 MU Room 218 Pima 7:30pm. BILLYBEAR, I w ill m iss you this weekend. Probablyf 1 love you SallyBear. AY THANKS for a fun and inter­ esting summer. The keg parties, Rio and of course sidewalk chalk were ail a blast! Love, The Girls. FUI INVITES everyone to join lis tonight for an explosive party at FUnand! > GAMMA PHI Suzy Happy 21st. You can finally throw out: Tracy! Have an awsome time tonight! Hope to see you put. Love J-man JIMMY B ! Happy 11 month an­ niversary Hun ! Every day you m ake my life b rig h ter- even w hen you talk about d irt and cows! (ha ha!) I love you! Sharon Sunday DRAMARAMA Live in Hayden Square with 5 local bands For a'Good Timé call 966-1300 Balboa C afe 404 S. Mill Ave., Suite 101. PETS BABY BÖA Constrictors, $50! Albino Burmese Pythons; $150!. Cash only. Message, 986-3302. RELAYS RELAYS R elay s... ASU S ororities, get ready for Sigma Nu Relays!. ROSÉS 99* long stem, Carnation boutonniere 99*. 968-6149, 1711 E. Apache, Tempe, AZ SEE THE m en A women from ASU Campus Vision Calendars at The Blue Iguana tonight, Sept. 3. .Free prizes from Hub* C alvin Klein A more ! £ £ £ Tori, welcome to the floor. I'm so glad you're my sister! ILove, Joy STEPHEN (CA LV IN ), you’ve been my best frien d , buddy, strength, support and the love of my life fo r the p a st 2 years. Thanks! Love you. Yours ai­ rways, Lisa. ’ SURE YOU DO Wanna save big bucks a t Sunny's Pizza, Stan’s Metrò Deli, Tempe Bowl, Kolby's Billards, The Improv, Studebaker's, Bungee ewer AZ, Manhattann Limo, Minder Binders and Papillon's? Sure you do! Get the Night on the Town reusable entertainment discount cards for only $5.00 at any o f these Tempe hot spots! For more info call 1-602-540-9628. JOHNNY ROCKETS now ac­ cepting applications for. super­ visors., w ait staff, cash ie r & cooks. Apply in person in Fash­ ion Square Mail. HELP W ANTED- BABY SNAKE Kim- Can t wait to get together this weekend and get to lmow you! YourM sis Katie. FIJI W ANTS to thank all the 5300 people that showed up to blowout! JACKSON ST. Grill now hiring cooks, w aitresses, bartenders.: Apply in person M-F 2-5, 1 East Jackson St. (behind the Suns Aréna). 257-Q99Ò. THE LANDMARK Restaurant is looking for p/t A f/t food servers with a friendly & outgoing per­ sonality. 809 W Main St., Mesa 962-4655 TUTORS FUI THANKS the women of ATA for a great happy hour! F/T; P/T days, evenings & wee­ kends. For Tempe location o f Taco John's. 784-1515. SWENSENS TEMPE has imme­ d iate: o p en in g s f o r sandw ich co o k s, co u n ter, & w ait staff. Days A nights avail, full/part time. Apply M-F 4-5pm Price & Baseline, PERSONALS BREWPUB | W ARSAW HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE PERSONALS 9 p .m .-1 2 :3 0 a.m . S a tu rd a y N ig h t C Page 19 Friday, September 3,1993 S t a t e P ress TODD, I hope you liked the movie. Too bad you had to pay ! NAILS - FULL set $10 first 25 callers. Call Lisa Scottsdale Salon 947-6606. PERMANENT HAIR removal: A H air Today , G one Tom orrow Electrolysis, blend method. Pack­ age deals available. Southern/ Rural (private suite). 921-1146. PRO - BODYWORKER, Skilled bodywork natural therapy. Re­ lieves stress & more.o Close to ASU. Student discounts. Dave 351-8698 leave message. TEM PE FA M ILY G uidance. Short-term therapy. Stress, anx­ iety, depression. Ins welcome st rates. 491-2755, R. David MED. INSURAN CE ~ ~ PAYING TOO much for health insurance? Low cost quality plan. Phone 897-7232. ' WANTED ARE YOU biracial? Author of teen book seeks biracial teens* adults, and parents of biracial and multicultural children to inter­ view for new book. No pay but unique chance to share experi­ ences and offer coping skills. Please call Renea at 253-3972. PERSONAL ASST p /t. bus. tasks fo r startup co. (mktg/adm) 4- It dom/prsnl emds. Free rent/util, huge, lux 3Q00sf home + bonuses. Grwth to f/t. Fe­ male, pref BA maj/deg; (not req) 759-3090 eve/Wknd, 1v mes. For Friday, September 3,1993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Though today brings romantic times arid happy leisure events, you still need to guard against quarrels after dark w ith close ties. Be cooperative with others. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Be careful that you don't take oh moré than you can handle o f a work nature today. Privacy abets romance now and family times are favOréd Over . so cia liz in g tonight. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Singles meet with romantic intro­ ductions today and happy times are shared with loving friends. Tonight you may be inclined to bum the candle at both erids. CANCER (June 2Í to July 22) Your social graces are an asset to you on the job today. Business and pleasure com bine to your advantage. Tonight brings festive times with family members. GETYOUR FREE TICKETS T Y P IN G /W O R D PRO CESSING TO THE 24 HOUR .turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ASU. Diane 829-1602* APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945h 5744. ASU AREA typing, w/p, editing, transerptn, W ordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime FA ST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser* fax. Pat,.897-1741. RESUMES $15 High success rate;! Reports, laser printing,, same day. A Perfect Im­ age, Near ASU 967-0907. MDA'FEST '93 Sun., Sept. 5 2-1 lpm at H ayden Square A m phitheater featuring DRAMARAMA BRICKCHAIR SPINNING JENN1J TOWNSEND W P thesis, term papers, resumes, fast turn arnd. Maureen 955-0969 or 274-3891. S W A M PC O O LER I W ANT IT NOW! A NT FARM D esktop P u b lish in g Typing term papers, resumes, charts, thesis, quick service. Near ASU 966-1984 INSTRUCTION AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS Certification Workshop in M esa by N atT A erobics T raining Assc wk/end of O ct 1. Diane 963-9415. COMPUTER HELP available, customized solutions for home­ work and programming assign­ m ents, stu d y a id s, tu to rin g . 649-8703 lio C (iKO Line spute (July 23 to Aug. 22) Romantic getaways are favored now. An advisor proves helpful in business. You may be overly enthusiastic tonight. Keep think­ ing down to earth. Don't get' car­ ried away. VIRGO (Aug. .23 to Sept. 22) ; * Loved ones will want to. shut the World out to spend time alorie together now. You or a partner may have a tendency to be extravagant tonight LIBRA (Sept; 23 to Oct. 22) This should be a very enjoyable day fo r you. B enefits com e though friends and you may be invited to a party. Love blossoms now , but don’t be headstrong tonight / Viytvr IDorpblnv Just come to the Classified Ad offices of the State Press in the south basement of Matthews Center after 9am today and tell us the tide of the famous Jerry Lewis movie that was filmed at ASU. ; SCORPIO (Oct. 23 tp Nby. 21) You will be receiving recognition today in c o nnection w ith jo b interests. New contacts made now are in d e e d W orthw hile. G uard1against overindulgence after dark. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Those who can get aw ay now have the perfect day to do so. There is a happy accent now on re c re atio n al in te re sts arid romance. Tonight you may be overly exuberant. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Romance certainly looks reward­ ing today and you will be enjoy­ ing happy times with family now. You should guard against overexpansion. Look before you leap. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Couples who can get away now will feel as if they are on a sec­ ond honeymoon. The exchange of romantic sentiments is favored now. Guard against fast driving tonight. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You are on the right track where business interests are concerned. Financial prospects will improve now. Still, guard against money quarrels tonight YOU BORN TO D A Y have many talents, and many interests, but must be careful not to scatter your energies. A bom writer, you are at your best in fields which allow you to use your talents for self-expression: You are at home in front o f an audience and some­ times are drawn to theatrical pur­ suits. You have salesm anship skills and are good at getting your; ideas a cro ss to others. Birthdate of: Alan Ladd, actor; Louis Sullivan, architect; and Valerie Perrine, actress. FREE W j|T £ F O U N D _ TRI SIGMA Anjanette, yoiir Beta K appa siste r w ill m iss you! Thanks for all your help and the gummi bears! LOST GENETICS text book in LL by the elevators. Please call 955-7265 if found. TRI SIGMA Jen, Happy belated 21st. Have a 3 Wise Men on me! ELove, Jim, Jack, and Jose! ; FU N D R A IS IN G TRISIQM A Joy-Joy Here’s to all the "odes to whoever" we'll write in the future! I'm glad I have you to help with mine. P.S, Don't forget, Mickey's Secret is out! £ Love, Amy Name Home Phòne Business Phone Address City, State Z|P TRI SIGMA loves our newest Sig­ ma, Tori!! Please p rin t one le tte r per box, leave a blank box between w ords. NEED CLUB or group for Fun­ draiser on campus September 8 A 9 fro m 8:30-2:30. $300 fo r 2 days o f handing out our circular Call 800-888-8575 ask for Jpn PERSONALS A DOZEN roSes delivered $20 also balloons. C all AfterHours Flowers 894-3419. AL: SEE you tpmorrow a t4 am!!! ALLISON FROM O hio, I met you in the M U Tuesday, 1 lost your #, I still want to have lunch please call me; Chris, 423-3865. ASU SORORITIES, Sigma Nu Relays are right around the com­ er, A TTEN TIO N B U SIN ESS majors, particularly Real Estate majors, visit the RHO EP table during Rush Week at the Courts yard between Business bldgs. RUSH ALPHA KAPPA PSI Professional Business Fraternity All potential business majors welcome. Visit our booth in front of the BAC building. Funded by ASASU This concert is a benefit for MDA. State P ress Classified Ad Order Form TRI SIGMA Lynn get well soon! This weekend might be the cure. ELove Christine TRI SIGMA Marlene, keep smil­ ing! The straw man loves you! T R I SIGM A T o ri, Y our new sisters love you A D O P T IO N ADOPTION: BEAR hugs await your infant. We promise dedi­ cated care, a loving family and a fine education. All our hom e needs is a very special baby. Cull Amy & Merrill 1-800-959-5219. We're easy to talk to. Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day $ Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+- days, $ 1.00 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Dates you w ish your ad 10 ru n :................... ... -■■■..... .......».......-<■.. ............. □ $ FOR COLLEGE ■ a wê □a i Bank Card Num ber Scholarship financial aide serv­ ice, $89 fee. 730-9087. P rice per Day Expiration D ale 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 066 A doption A irplanes Announcem ents Apartm ents Autom obiles B icycles Books Business O pportunities C om puters Free Lost/Found # o f Days U i QbasHieoHon NamMNunÉMT H a rt« on C u d APARTMENT MOVING? lbd $135, 2bd $160, 3bd $210 Call Super Movers Inc. 829-8888 for details. Homes A Offices too! Green cards business & professional. D on Dodge Scottsdale * 443-3100 J A 5.9 days, $1.25 per line, per day T 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day Please includa ; y SERVICES IM M IGRATION LAWYER m P lease be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you w ish it to appear in the S tate P ress, including punctuation. Please check yo u r ad the firs t day it appears-the lia b ility o f the S tate Press sh a ll not exceed the co st o f the ad and cre d it m ay be given fo r the firs t insertion only. M inor sp e llin g errors do not q u a lify fo r m ake-goods. No refunds win be given, but if you heed to can­ ce l your ad a cre d it w ill be held on account fo r fu tu re advertising. ' 088 052 049 101 074 072 073 070 071 "4 030 : S o n y ,w e cannot a ccep t personal a d s through the m alt Fundraising F urniture G arage Sales H ealth & Fitness H elp W anted-C hild C are H elp W anted-C lerical H elp W anted-Food Service H elp W anted-G eneral Help W anted-Sales Hom es fo r Rent 040 102 107 103 056 076 015 120 050 045 Hom es fo r Sale Housecleahing Instruction Insurance Jew elry Job O pportunities Legal N otices M iscellaneous M iscellaneous fo r Sale M obile Hom os 063 062 090 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 M otorcycles M usic Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy C ounseling Real Estate R ental Sharing R estaurants/Bars Rooms fo r Rent 100 061 058 031 041 060 067 108 105 115 Services Sports & R ecreation Tickets Townhom es/Condos fo r Rent Townhom es/Condos fo r S ale Transportation Travel Tutors Typing/W ord Processing W anted S t a t e P ress Friday, September 3, 1993 Pace 20 2 DANCE FLOORS 2 FORMATS ANY DRINK LJ i s r r I L I Q P IV I 50,000 WATTS OF SOUND! D.J. MARKUS SCHULZ SPINS HOUSES TECHNO D.J. DAN WILSON SPINS ALTERNATIVE TH E W ORKS A W i 9464141 7223 E. 2nd St. SCOTTSDALE