Frat gets la st ch a n ce to re ta in re co g n itio n B usted! ‘Theta Delts’ face deadline to appeal recommendation to disband chapter B y M axwell H iggins State P ress Members of the Theta Delta Chi fraternity are facing a deadline today to appeal a recom­ mendation by the Greek Relations Board (GRB) that ASU no longer recognize the fraternity as a student organization. The recommendation came after a GRB hear­ ing last week where testimony revealed that between one and four fraternity members caused the damage to the house on the weekend Of Aug, 21-22. ‘They contended it was done by a few indi­ viduals, not the fraternity, as a whole,” said Interfratemity Council Vice President and GRB member Justin Lane. The GRB recommendation, which would effectively disband Theta D elta C h i’s ASU chapter, will be reviewed and decided this week by ASU administrators. IFC President Reagan Dunn said GRB rec­ ommendations are usually decided by Student Life, but because of the importance of this case, the decision rests with Vice President of Student Affairs Christine Wilkinson. Wilkinson said Sunday that she will: decide Oil the m atter today or Tuesday. Dunn said W ilkinson may modify, refute or accept the G R B ’s recom m endation, adding that the University has almost always accepted past rec­ ommendations. W hile disciplinary action is decided by Wilkinson, the Arizona Board of Regents will decide later this week whether the University can revoke the fra te rn ity ’s lease. ASU Comptroller Gerald Snyder first initiated that action in August, after determining that Theta T urn t o G reeks, page 2 . Dean reports progress in gay coalition debate Some issues still unresolved but meeting yields ‘positive discussion y riiE ltS ' Craig Macnaughton/Stata Presa Senior business major and member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity Tom Fitzsimons cleans up after the fraternity's "Watermelon Bust.“ More than 400 watermelons were destroyed in the social event that raised 000 for multiple sclerosis. B y J ames Frusetta State P ress ASU officials labeled a Friday meeting of the Cultural Diversity Committee as a ‘positive dis­ cussion’ of the controversial addition of a lesbian/gay coalition to the CDC. Assistant Dean: for Cultural Diversity Jesus Trevino said the meeting’s atm osphere was Cooperative, but some issues remain unresolved. “I thought it was a very positive meeting, and I think there was some important dialogue,” Trevino said. The Council of United Coalitions (CUC) — formed Thursday --- has contended th at the adm inistration’s recent recognition of The Lesbian/Gay Coalition indicates a lack of com­ mitment to original cultural diversity goals. Members of the CUC — which includes the B lack A frican, A m erican Indian, Chicano/Hispanic and Asian American coali­ tions — said Thursday that lesbians and gays are a group classified by lifestyle, as opposed to eth­ nicity. CUC members also said Thursday that they oppose the new coalition occupying office space and suggested that Trevino’s position be limited to working with racial and ethnic coalitions. T u r n t o C o alition , page 2 . Author: Free trade leads to economic depression Expert labels NAFTA ‘Fraud and Treason Act’ Löuto Porter/State Press Rick Bresnahan, a member of Ross Perot's United We Stand A m erica party, applauds during an anti-NAFTA forum held Saturday in the MU Ventana Room. The discussion featured aixspeakers and was sponsored by the ASU chapter of UWSA. IN S ID E S T A T E PRESS W eather Outlook It's getting wanner, and sunny con­ ditions will persist. High 98, low 72. " B y M elanie K. S elcho S tate P ress The North American Free Trade Agreement that would free trade relations between the United States, Canada and Mexico came under fire at ASU Saturday by a prominent economist. Ravi Batra, author of “The Myth of Free Trade” and keynote speaker at the weekend forum organized by Ross.Perot’s United We Stand America, said NAFTA will hurt the American econo­ my. He cited historical evidence of free trade sending the U.S. economy into depression. “NAFTA is really the North American Fraud and Treason Act,” he said. “Treason is when an expert comes end says, ‘Reduce taxes on foreign goods and raise them on the American people.’” Batra. proposed that the U.S. government raise tariffs from the current 5 percent to 40 percent — a figure he said has worked in ► Faculty members of the Academic Senate reaffirmed their opposition to budget cuts affecting the University's libraries. Page 6 ► A few locals were busy doing crimes this weekend, and the State Press Police Report has only the best, handpicked incidents. Page 9 World/ Nation For Yitzhak Rabin the answers to security questions may determine the future of the PloIsraeli Peace Plan. P age3 the past to keep the economy thriving. Although the forum was touted as an open debate on both sides of the NAFTA issue, the event turned out to be an antiNAFTA discussion. United We Stand America and Perot publicly oppose the free trade agreement. Other speakers included Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who said little about NAFTA but recognized that illegal drug traf­ ficking from Mexico would continue to plague Arizona and the United States. “I don’t have the answer,” he said. “My concern is (that NAFTA) will cause more drug trafficking. I don’t have too much optimism — we can’t stop (trafficking) as it is.” David Carter, secretary of the National Farmers Union, said NAFTA will parallel the free trade agreement with Canada and destroy the U.S. farming industry. He said NAFTA will prevent regulation of the food that is imported, citing pesticides that are not legal in the United States but could be used in Mexico. Carter also warned the audience of about 100 that a recent breakout of E-coli bacteria found in beef products could be imported from Canada, where inspectors are T u r n t o N A FTA , page 2 . Sports The Phoenix Cardinals hang tough, but losUo Dallas 17-10 Sunday night in front of a recordcrowd at Sun Devil Stadium. Page 11 Where To Find it. Advertiser Index................13 Classifieds .........................14 Comics............................. 10 Crossword......... ...„•........„..8 Horoscopes ........ 15 Opinion.................... .„..,4 Police Report............. 9 Sports............. .11 Today’s Activities.............. 2 World/Nation......... ............3 State P ress Monday, September 20,1993 P age 2 G reeks T oday ■' ___ C o n t in u ed from page 1. The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to die ASU community. Requests are printed accord­ ing to the space available each day. ' • Counselor Training Center — Counseling for ASU stu­ dents, provided by counseling and counseling psychology graduate students, supervised by faculty, Ifcyae H all R0tt& 402. For more information or appointment, contact Jan, 9655067. • School of Art MFA Program — MFA thesis Thomas Strich Looking fo r Somewhere, a synthesis of land­ scape photography and sculpture, Harry Wood Gallery, Art Building. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Daily closed meeting, noon, All Saints Catholic Newman Center, northwest corner o f College Avenue and University Drive. • National Society o f Black Engineers (NSBE) — First organizational m eeting, 7:30 p.m ., S tudent S ervices Building, amphitheater. « Sun Devil Football Brown Bag Lunch — Coach Kent Baer will answer questions on the Louisville and Oklahoma games, all staff and faulty welcome, noon- 12:30 p.m., MU Gold South Room. • N orthlight G allery — Free lecture and reception for exhibit “Murray and Jones,” this Tucson couple will discuss their photographs, 7 p.m., Architecture Building North, Room 60. • W omen’s Student Center — “Gender Communication: Healing the Gap,” by Joel Hutchinson, Ph,D., counseling and consultation, noon, Women’s Student Center, MU lower level. • Alpha Mu Gamma (National Foreign Language Honor Society) — Meeting, all new members welcome, 2:30 p.m., ” Coffee Plantation, Mill Avenue and Sixth Street. • Students for Choice —- General meeting, new members welcome, 4:40 p.m., MU Yavapai Room 209. • ASU Fencing Club — Practice, beginners welcome, 7:30 p.m.. Student Recreation Center, Small Gym B. • College Republicans — Weekly meeting, 2 p m ., REACH Office, MU, third floor. CLARIFICATION An article in Friday’s State Press reported that a Thursday meeting of the Council of United Coalitions (CUC) was called by Assistant Dean of Student Life for cultural diversity Jesus Trevino. The meeting was actually called by CUC members. Delta Chi owed more than $18,000 in unpaid rent a bill out­ standing since April. However, Dunn said if the GRB recommendation is put into effect, there will be no need to revoke the lease, since the fraterni­ ty would not be able to occupy an on-campus house. Lane said that at last week’s hearing, then-Theta Delta Chi, president Mark Bailey -—who has since been replaced by interim President David Yang —■claimed that fraternity officers tried to prevent any potential vandalism by telling members to leave the house peacefully before the Aug. 23 eviction date. The names of individuals responsible for the damage were not revealed at the hearing, but fraternity officers said they are still working with DPS on the continuing investigation. Lane said if the fraternity doesn’t appeal the recommendation by today, members may still try to get Wilkinson to modify i t He added that if overdue rent was paid and repairs made to the house, the fraternity may be able to work things out with the University. Even if the recommendation is upheld, Lane said there would be no time limit on the sentence, meaning that the fraternity could reorganize and become reinstated as a student organization in the near future. NAFTA C o n t in u e d from page 1. not allowed to inspect incoming meat because of die trade agree­ ment. M ichael Shea, d irecto r o f the AFL-CIO C om m ittee on Political Education (COPE), said NAFTA is the biggest threat to American jobs. “(NAFTA is) the most important issue to confront the average American worker and poses a major threat to economic security,” he said. He also criticized NAFTA by claiming that environmental reg­ ulations would be difficult to enforce. “Environmental cleanup will cost $20 billion, and guess who will pay the billT’ he said. “Take a look in the mirror, folks.” Theresa Leal, a social activist from Nogales, Mexico, said NAFTA will hurt Mexico even though many believe the country’s economy will boost from mass relocation of American companies. “It’s very deflating for us to think that (there is) this image of Mexico taking away jobs from North America,” she said. Leal added that Mexicans don’t want low-paying jobs Working in inhumane conditions. “We balk at contamination, long hours, $4.50 for a 10-hour day, at gross sexist (policies) by North American supervisors and bosses that inhibit Women’s rights,” she said. “If you think we’re happy to have these industries that now turn out babies without brains... I think you’re very wrong.” ■ C o a litio n C o n t in u ed from page 1. “The space issue and the question regarding my own job duties (as assistant dean for cultural diversity) are unresolved, and will be addressed in a future meeting,” Trevino said. During the meeting, the CUC presented a written statement to the CDC describing its position on the admission of the new coalition. As of Sunday, that statement had not been released to the State Press. Dean of Student Life Art Carter said the meeting was a step in the right direction. “It was a very agreeable meeting, and I think there was a lot of understanding between everyone there,” Carter said. ASU officials said they were confident that tensions concern­ ing the creation of the new coalition can be eased by interaction between the parties involved. “I think a positive dialogue is going on, and I am confident, that the issue will be resolved*” said ASU President Lattie Coor. Both Coor and Vice President for Student Affairs Christine Wilkinson said they have confidence that both parties can forge an agreement. , “I th in k the people involved can w ork th is o u t,” said Wilkirison. State P ress Classifieds - the bargains are in the back. STUDENT HEALTH FACTS Before you ge t sick. . . ge t to know us. P a rtn e rs In H e alth Medical Appointments W HAT TO D O : • Schedule appointm ents by phone or in person. • Cancel appointm ents by calling 965-WELL one day in advance to avoid charges. • Arrive on tim e so w e can process paperwork and m edical charts and take your vital signs before your office visit. • Bring a picture I.D, • Parking is lim ited. Allow adequate tim e to park and walk. • Expect to be here for a t least 1 hour. HOLY COW! Ice Cream and Yogurt fe a tu r in g ^GourmetIceCream FABW wwCTDSE ; FREE ICE CREAM OR YOGUfeT I I Buy 1, g e t the 2nd (of eq u al or lesser valu e) FREE I C o u p o n Expires 9 -2 7 -9 3 , I_____ . ____---------------------- . ---------------------------- --------------- 1 W vv v r ^ ftl l W fy Comer of 6th & Mill behind Coffee Plantation TESTS A N D TREATMENTS: • Laboratory and radiology services are available. • G et your Student Health prescription filled a t our pharm acy. • Com plete all phases o f your treatm ent plan. HOURS: M O N .-W E D .-F R I. 8 -5 TUES.-THURS. 9 -5 IN F O R M A T IO N UNE: 965-c All students are e ligible for services. Fees m ay apply. ASU Student Health JUst south of the University Bridge on Palm Walk , , World/Nation St a te P ress ■ _______ _______ Monday, September 20, 1993 rQ u n d irizona Man sues state officials after court overturns convictions PHOENIX (AP) — A man whose arsonmurders convictions were overturned is «ling two state officials, including the fire inspect»' who was the chief witness at his 1982 trial. Ray Girdler spent eight years in prison for the 1981 fire that killed his wife and daughter. Now-retired Deputy Fire Marshal David Date was the main witness at the trial. He testified the fire was set with liquid acceler­ ants and that arson was the only possible explanation. B ut G ird le r's law suit claim s D ale ignored evidence that the fire was acciden­ tal because he was trying to establish him­ self as Arizona's pre-eminent arson investi­ gator. “Dale acted w ith a single-minded deter­ m ination to connect Mr. G irdler to the crim e o f killing his family, showing no regard for the truth,” it says. Dale's telephone number was unlisted, and he couldn't be reached for comment Sunday. But when Girdler’s conviction was overturned three years ago, Dale said he stood by his arson assessment State Fire Marshal Duane Pell also is named in the suit that was filed Thursday in UJS. District Court in Phoenix. He referred questions to lawyers for the state, and attor­ ney Daniel Malinski said he hadn’t seen the suit ami couldn’t comment. Scottsdale man perishes in mountain-climbing accident MOOSE, Wyo. (AP) —- An Arizona man and an Illinois woman died, and anoth­ er man was injured while climbing Mount Moran in Grand Teton National Park over the weekend. R obert Tim othy K ieeberger, 23, o f Scottsdale, and Jennifer M. Grundel, 20, of Springfield, 111., died of multiple injuries after falling from the South Buttress of the 12,605-foot peak, park o ffic ia ls said Sunday. Stephen R. Golden, 20, of Burke, Va,, survived rite fall. He was airlifted from the mountain Saturday and was listed in good condition at St. John’s Hospital in Jackson Sunday. The three climbers worked for Signal Mountain Lodge in tfte park, officials said. They signed out with park personnel on Thursday with plans to climb the South Buttress Right on Friday. Stormy weather caused them to abandon their ascent on Friday an dtry to return to the valley, park spokeswoman Linda Olson said. The accident occurred sometime late Friday or early Saturday. The^ause of die accident is under inves­ tigation, Olson said. Officials weren’t sure Sunday how f ir the three fell. The South Buttress is one of the park’s most challenging technical climbs, Olson said. When the climbers didn’t return when expected, their friends alerted authorities. P ark rangers began searching from the ground and air and spotted the party at - about 6:30 p.m. Saturday. G otden was flown fry helicopter from die mountain at about 8 p.m. and taken by ambulance to Jackson. Rangers weite frying to recover the bodies o f Kieeberger arid Grundel Sunday, but CM«» said they were bafrtjfrg bad weather. Study: U sers foot $15-miUion MB to clean stinky CAP water TU C SO N (A P ) R esidents w ith Central Arizona Project water have spent $15 million this year to deal with hard, dis­ co lored and o ftep fo u l-tastin g w ater, accon&frg to a new study. The extra money bought water-treatment equipment and replaced appliances and fix­ tures, said the study commissioned by The Arizona D aily S ta r and conducted fry the IM A . CAP users also spend $3.5 m illion more a year on item s such as bottled water and m aintaining hom e-treatm ent system s, the 8 8 % im )iceH t That averages to $170 per CAP house­ hold, pirn $42 a year in ongoing costs. T he u n iv e rsity ’s W ater R esources Research Center based the study on 374 responses to a random mail survey o f 940 Tucson households this month. Tucson W ater D irector M ike Tubbs declined to comment on die study because he had not seen ft. Israèli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, fight, gives the thumbs-up at a news conference with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak after the two met in Alexandria, Egypt Sunday, Israel, PLO share security cares JERUSALEM (AP) — Who will arrest and prosecute a dissident who launches an attack in Israel and then retreats to a Palestinian-run area in the Gaza Strip or West Bank? What protection would Palestinians have against reprisals from Jewish settlers? ■ For both Isra elis and P alestin ian s, the answers to security questions like these will be a major factor in determining the success or failure of the PLO-Israeli peace plan. Under the plan, the Israelis will withdraw from Gaza and the West Rank town of Jericho. Later, limited self-rule is to be expanded to other areas of the occupied West Bank, and the two sides will negotiate a permanent solution. Israelis are -worried that Muslim fundamen­ talists and leftist opponents of the accord will use the autonomous zones as launching pads for terror attacks on Israelis in Israel or the occupied lands. Israeli forces would not be able to get at attackers if Palestinian police are too weak or Q uestions still rem ain on paying for reform WASHINGTON (AP) — The first question President Clinton was asked when he created his health care task force in January was how could he deliv er m edical coverage to all A m ericans w ithout d riving up the deficit. It may be the last q uestion he answers about the plan. “You have to give me something to announce” Wednesday, Clinton told reporters when asked about his financ­ ing plans late last week. Just days before Clinton formally unveils his health care plan in a nation­ ally televised address to Congress, final figures on how he would pay for it were among the details still being decided. How much to raise “sin” taxes? Should he relax the limits on Medicare and M edicaid spending? Should big companies that set up their own health purchasing system s pay a special assessment? “I still have another round of meet­ ings to attend that will go through one last tim e what our best estim ates of costs are,” Clinton told reporters Friday. He was meeting Sunday night with his speech writing team to review a draft on give Palestinians the tools to do the job. “If the Israeli army has helicopters, why shouldn’t the Palestinians? If the Israeli army has armored personnel carriers, why shouldn’t they? Do we want them to fail?” said Ga/.it. Starting in October 1992, Gazit and two other Israelis held secret meetings with three PLO officials every two months in Rome and London to explore the key security questions of a han­ dover. In the talks: • The Israelis proposed direct cooperation on intelligence gathering, but Palestinians wanted an international umbrella to avoid looking like collaborators. • The Palestinians proposed joint IsraeiiPalestinian patrols to safeguard against attacks by Jewish extremists, and insisted any attackers who sought shelter in PLO-run areas should be tried in Palestinian courts. unwilling to help. Palestinians worry that Israeli settlers will launch vigilante attacks on Arab residents or that the Israelis will not give PLO chief Yasser Arafat the manpower and military hardware he needs to control his opponents. Sari Nusseibah, overall Palestinian coordina­ tor of the transfer to self-rule, criticized state­ ments from both Israeli and PLO officials about taking a hard line with opponents of the plan. Nusseibah said the emphasis should be on educating the public that the autonomy plan, not violence, would end Israeli occupation. “I believe the only guarantee against any kind of action that might blow up the experiment is public opinion, which has to determine whether such actions are good or harm ful for Palestinians,” he said. Shlomo Gazit, a former chief of Israeli intel­ ligence and now a senior researcher at the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, said Israel should Wednesday’s address to Congress. Spokesman Jeff Eller said the final decisions, including how to pay for the reform s, may not be m ade by Wednesday. He said there is bipartisan agreement on the administration’s broad goals, “but that doesn’t necessarily mean that we’U bring every last detail up to the Hill on Wednesday. I think we will, but I don’t think it’s fair to say w e’re running out o f tim e” to make decisions. Unlike the days leading up to unveil­ ing his budget package, Clinton is not in a panic to nail down the specifics of his health care plan. Eller said the White House wants to show that Clinton is open to consultations. Many items in the fine print of the health plan were still under review. Aides insist the basic structure of the plan and its financing system have long been in place, but allow that some details of the sweeping reform proposal still are evolving — and will continue to change even after it has been presented to Congress. “It’s not written in absolute stone,” said Chief of Staff Mack McLarty. Minister shot, killed during church service NOR IH SALEM, Ind (AP) — A Methodist minister was finishing his sermon Sunday when a woman shot him to death in front of his horrified congregation and 13-year-old daugh­ ter, police said. A woman be once dated was arrested. The Rev. Roland Phillips. 36. of North Salem, was con­ cluding the sermon before about 25 people at the United Methodist Church when he was shot three times in the chest, said L t Terry B n n k e i, a H endricks C ounty S h eriff’s spokesman. He died on the way to a hospital. Rrjnlfiy said Efizabeih S . Mgvberi'v Of Bloomington approached Phillips during the Mimon m d ashed »tupeak with him, but die minister asked her tow aituntil he was Qn{shtth j Vf"' » ,~ii * • Mayberry then stood next to Phillips until he was conclud­ in g frié; sermon, when she pulled e a t s gun ami shot him three | rimes in the chest, Brisker said. ■' Authorities said a member of the conpregation wrestied Mayberry to the ground while another parishioner took away the gun. A fourth shot was fired during the -struggle, but it ; harmlessly hit a railing in front of the congregation. Mayberry, 36, was held a tth e HejidricksGcwntyJaii. She was expected to make a court appearance Monday, Brinker w d H I I Phillip«, who was divorced, once dated Mayberry, Brinker gafai fin t he added that police had no idea what prompted the • V*,* The priest’s 13-year-old daughter was in chinch when her; father w asM ied, Brinker said. Opinion State P ress Monday, September 20,1993 P age 4 Press " T 7 State t/ Eidito r ia l It’s Greek to tts The boom is being low ered on the T h e ta Delta Chi fratemity. and apparently it is well deserved. The fraternity jbas been implicated by ASU administrators in the $300,(KM) worth o f damage that was done tO ttesr Satermty house on “New Row” the weekend before classes started, AMg. 2 1 -2 2 , The Greek Relations Board met last week and 1 made a recommendation to ASU administrators: Boot Theta Delta Chi o ff campus. No splitting 5 o f hairs, no sympathy for their plight against evil administrators— just get rid of them. According to testimony from the hearing, as many as four Theta Delta Chi fraternity mem­ bers participated in the destruction. The damage came conspicuously after the University evicted the boys from their house, which the University had deemed uninhabitable because an asbestos-laden ro o f hadn’t been repaired by the organization for seven years. After the fraternity held what will likely turn out to be the last big bash of its existence on campus, the house was really made uninhabit­ able: 40 windows w ere smashed, holes were p u nched in w a lls, d o o rs w ere rem o v ed , waterbeds on the second floor were slashed, ruining the first floor’s ceiling, human waste was left throughout hallways and furniture was destroyed. Those responsible should be charged with the house destruction when ASU’s Department o f Public Safety’s investigation finds a concrete link between the damage and those responsible. And administrators should boot the fraternity off campus for not providing the simple leader­ ship necessary to prevent such a heinous inci­ dent. The move by administrators to disband the group w ould follow the G reek com m unity’s own wishes, as interpreted by the GRB. Use no velvet glove. Get Theta Delte Chi off cam pus and m ake a strong statem ent to th e Greek community that fins kind o f destructive ;J and ju v en ile behavior w on’t be tolerated at ASU. At no time in the future should any ASU stu­ dent or Arizona taxpayer have to worry abOht footing the biM fora few brats who take it upon ffi themselves to destroy public property. And perhaps the Um versity a h ^ M re tb p k the entire idea of Greeks on campus, and J policies a c c m ^ t^ fi W hy make all students p p for the elite status o f a few? Some schools are already deciding to let Greeks survive on thesr own without administrative support. I f G reelp |si^in i to have a I k d e c irc le o f friends and han$ out together, fine — let fbtm do it oh their own like most other organizations do without help from the school. The University and : concern th©B*sad^:T i ^ f t t R M B B ttB I unsi«^«iatertUAiié»i»^ majority voted among its a»e«*eis. They do not reflecuhe opinion o f the Stau F reu '§ § M & S ë S. Talbott Smith j E d ito r s . jM w X M ttr.-1 Mfmf^ w g fifÙor STATE PRESS TAFF K m Brow* ■ I AMERICANS WELCOME. Dear President C linton: Let’s stop acting as w orld’s police Dear President Clinton: D a v id S i r o w It has come to my attention that you are considering sending U.S. C o lu m n ist forces to Bosnia. From what I have read, this NATO force o f 50,000 troops would be 50 to 60 percent American. Mr. President, th is would be a monumental mistake. Recent American history has been marked by an alarming number of U.S. interventions around the globe. Several o f these interventions got completely out of hand. Remember the Korean War? We fought a see-saw war there for three years, and lost nearly 39,000 men. What did those 39,000 lives buy? A few square miles of territory for. South Korea and a heavily fortified border between the two combatants. V ietnam was . worse. Rem em ber V ietnam , Mr. President? The war that you so staunchly opposed? I am sure that you know that the Vietnam War lasted for over a decade and cost us 50,000 troops. At its height in 1968, we had more than half a million men in the jungles of Indochina. Our efforts in Vietnam proved futile; for in 1975, two years after our withdrawal, the government o f South V ietnam fell to Communist forces. Our past attempts at being the world’s policeman have cost us nearly 90,000 young men. So why are we considering embroiling ourselves in another bloody and futile “police action?” Are we really prepared to endure a Vietnam in the Balkans? Past history has taught us the foolishness of attempting a mili­ tary operation without clear-cut objectives. What would our objectives be in Bosnia? A year ago, there was a single aggressor: the Bosnian Serbs. Things aren’t so simple now. The Croats and Muslims, once allies against Serb aggression, have taken to fighting each other for territory. Every ethnic group in Bosnia can rightftilly be con­ sidered an aggressor. I know that you remember Vietnam well. Recall, then, how our presence there began with the introduction of a few thousand “military advisors.” A war is very easy to get into, but very difficult to leave. And wars, once they begin, tend to escalate. How long will it be before the U.S. force in Bosnia must be expanded? How long before you decide that a draft is necessary to keep up with the ever-rising demands of the Bosnian Conflict? You have probably considered all of this, Mr. President. That is why you have held out against intervention so far. But it is difficult to stand idly by while we see images of the horrible atrocities being committed in Bosnia. We have all seen them: the TV images of Sniper’s Alley in Sarajevo, the pictures of young children mutilated by war, the haunting faces of POWs starving in concentration camps. There are even reports coming out of Bosnia that it is regular practice to crucify prisoners of war. These images seem to scream for our intervention in Bosnia. As a compassionate nation, how can we stand back and allow such animal-like behavior? But consider the flip-side of this. Are we prepared to subject American soldiers to such horrors? A re we ready to w atch American POWs die in concentra­ tion camps? To greet American soldiers returning from the war as cripples? To hear of horrific sto­ ries about A m erican prisoners being crucified by vicious guerril­ las? Let those images {ram into your mind real, real well. Then ask yourself if you are still so eager to march into the Balkans. Mr. President, the tim e has come for you to set a prece­ dent. No longer should the • American people be asked to fight for causes that have absolutely no bearing on national security. If the war spills over into the territory of an ally, say Greece, then American intervention is warranted. But as long as the civil war remains inside the borders of Bosnia, it is none of our busi­ ness. It would be the height of injustice to force young Americans to fight and die for such a vague cause. You recognized this in the sixties, when you protested asim ilar injustice perpetrated against your own generation. Don’t lose yottr idealism now. For God’s sake, stay out of Bosnia! It would be a mistake that we cannot afford to make. Our p a st attem pts at being the world's police­ man have cost us nearly 90,000 young men. ... Are we really prepared to endure a Vietnam in the Balkans? David Strow is a junior journalism major. His column appears on Mondays. S. TALBOTT SMITH, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor JAKE BATSELL............... ............................. ......City Editor TAMMY MESA-SIERRA..................... ......A sst City Editor ANGELA BENOCHE___ ._____ ______— .......News Editor KEN BROWN.... ............................................. Opinion Editor BOB CASTLE................ ......................................Photo Editor BRIAN FITZGERALD.... ................ ........A sst Photo Editor MICHAEL BRANOM ..Sports Editor JULIE R E U V E R S .............A ......... A sst Sports Editor KRIS FRIDRICH TROY FUSS,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Magazine Editor J A N E C O O K -^ w ^ ..« ;^ » .:..» « ... A sst Magazine Editor R E P O R T E R S : James Frusetta, G arin Groff, M axwell Higgins, Melanie Selcho, Greg Sexton, John Guzzon, Mark Macias, Joy Beason. SPO R T S R E PO R T E R S: Scott D avis, Paul Matthews, Shaun Rachau. 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 Mauchline, Dawn Reisinger, Skip Schrader, John Tracey, Anna Ulinich, Evonne Vera, Dave Weber. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Kelly Adcock, Mike Aim, Sonia Benson, Joe B orgw ardt, Dan Ellstrom , Jennifer Hughes, Kate Martin, Lance Newman, David Thom. The State Press is published. Monday through Friday dur­ ing die academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively p u l* . lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. 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 ______________ __________ Change o f guard proves NEA needs to be elim inated Not the least legacy of the late S a m F r a n c is R obert M applethorpe to W a s h in g to n T im e s American civilization is that he helped make it much more diffi­ cult to write about governmentfunded art in family newspapers. You can say many things about American journalists, but almost no one ever called them prudish. Nevertheless, even the most jaded news hounds have to blanch at the latest budgetary offspring of the National Endowment for the Arts. A couple of weeks ago, the NEA, at last liberated from the long nightmare of the Bush regime, announced it had decided to fund several masterpieces of “hom oerotic” art in the Mapplethorpe tradition. Ever since then, the editors of your newspapers have been trying to figure out exactly how to tell you about what you are paying taxes for. This is not a criti­ cism of the editors; theirs is no easy task. ... The new boondoggle consists of $17,500 in tax-funded grants to the National Alliance for Media and the Arts. This “alliance” is nothing Roosevelt and Churchill would have rec­ ognized; it’s an umbrella for several groups whose names more immediately communicate what they do and want. They include the Gay and Lesbian Media Coalition of Los Angeles, the New F estival o f New Y ork and the P ittsb u rg h International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. When these peo­ ple say “festival,” they’re probably not thinking of Ferris wheels and cotton candy. The Pittsburgh festival sports a number of cinematic tri­ umphs, among them something called “Chumlum,” described as a "surreal and gossamered transvestite orgy,” and “We’re Talking Vulva,” captioned as “an outrageous five-minute fem­ inist romp concerned with the câre and feeding of happy female genitalia.” I confess I am not sure how a “gossamered” orgy differs from the non-gossamered species, and probably most newspaper editors don’t know either. Now you see why they may have had trouble telling you about it. In any case, the NEA’s funding of these treasures is among the first indication that under the Clinton administration, the direction of the NEA will be —» well — pretty much what it was under the Bush administration . It’s true Bush sort of sat on and eventually sacked NEA Chairman John Frohnmayer, though he sat on him only after intense arm-twisting by Congress and the grass-roots right and he administered the boot to him only in the heat of a primary challenge that made an issue of the NEA. It’s also true that Bush replaced the witless but self-inflat­ ed Frohnmayer with Anne-Imelda Radice, who rejected fund­ ing to these very films. Nevertheless, none of the tepid water Bush and his lieutenants poured on the fiery passions of the NEA was spontaneously distilled. In every case, the refusal to fund dirty little pictures was the result of pressure from angry constituencies, and, after all, the NEA’s nasty habits date mainly from the Bush years. Today, with Bush in Siberia and Radice booted herself, the NEA is in the sweaty little palms of the Clintonians, and while the Congress has yet to confirm a new chairman, the under­ lings who have lurked and gibbered in the NEA woodwork all along are now effectively in charge. There seems precious lit­ tle difference, if any, between the tastes of those worthies and those of the NEA’s previous inhabitants. The meaning of the NEA decision to fund these films, then, is clear: the problem with the NEA is not who runs it, not who’s president and not who’s appointed to it. The same kind of cultural atrocities have been seeping out of the bureau­ cratic bosom and will continue to seep out regardless of whether Bush or Clinton, Frohnmayer or Radice, Republicans, Democrats, liberals, neo-conservatives, paleo-conservatives, neo-Bukharinite revisionists, or the Aryan Nation runs it. The problem with the NEA is not who “runs” it but the NEA itself and the "culture” it serves. Just as the Pentagon in many ways serves a certain con­ stituency, sometimes called the “military-industrial complex,” so the NEA serves what may be called the “bureaucracy-arts complex” otherwise known affectionately as the “cultural elite.” The movies about happy female genitalia and gos­ samered orgies and so forth are endemic to that elite and that complex. YVhat it means further is that worrying about who runs or doesn’t run the NEA and whether there are or not “content restrictions’7on what it may fund is a colossal waste of time. It means that if newspaper readers and taxpayers who finally learn the truth about the pornography their tax dollars are funding at the NEA want to do something serious about it, what they’ll have to do is work for the outright abolition of the whole gossamered agency and the permanent defunding of the cultural elite’s tax-funded orgy, w Monday, September 20,1993 _________ - ' , S tate P u s s letters to the editor The St nr h n a v rlu n n e end encottfages written response fmniAur n a d ir on in) topic All Icttets must be typed, double-spaced and no lodger than tw o pages In be eligible tor publication Please unhide your full tam e, dM a standing end major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only sighed letters win he considered fa r publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters ate subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual eirors end print space availability Letters containing obvious factual m o rs wilt be rejected. All letters must e&her be brought m person with « photo LD to the State Press {font desk in (be basement o f the Matthews Center, or addressed to Skate Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona Stare University, Tempe Ariz., 852871532 ’ * •’ .* Fairness bad, Strow good This is in response to David Straw’s September 13 column on the Fairness Doctrine. Excellent job! We must retain all radio talk shows’ free speech. It is my understanding the Fairness Doctrine passed in the U.S. Senate. I am hoping all readers will drop a postcard or letter to the U.S. House of Representatives urging them to keep free speech on our air waves. If the Fairness Doctrine passes, all listen­ ers (liberal, moderate and conservative) will lose. Tell your con­ gressmen what you think of the bill — Today! Sandie Trailing Administrative assistant College of Engineering and Applied Sciences “We certainly can ’t a ffo rd to do anything th a t w ould perm it the country, a fter a ll the efforts the U nited N ations has m ade, to deteriorate to its fo rm er condition where hundreds o f thousands o f people are killed o r starved a t ran­ dom .* , \ — President Clinton, resisting calls for the with­ drawal o f U.S. troops from Somalia. ' “There hasn’t been a cattle roundup. There hasn’t been a targeting o f ju s t à segm ent o f our people. The m edia has overreacted.” —-Florida Gov. Lawton C hiles defending police ; against mounting charges of racism for interro­ gating black teen-agers in this week’s fatal shooting ofanEnglishtourisL - ■ . . - P a g e '5 Swanson has bad platitude Much like one listens to Rush Limbaugh to hear absurdities, one reads Mr. Swanson’s column on Thursdays. Might I remind Mr. Swanson that there are two simple com­ mandments which have the same relevancy today as ever: love thy God above thyself (whether this may be the earth, the universe, some higher spiritual being, or simply the creator) and love thy neighbor as thyself. It doesn’t have anything to say about sex, nudity or morals, for when all is boiled down to its essence, one can agree with die master’s point that these two commandments cover everything. In fact one could go so far as to say that this morality which Mr. Swanson advocates is not the product of a higher conscious­ ness, but an archaic and reactionary remnant of a repressive Victorian past. Actually, some social science studies point to the opposite conclusion Mr. Swanson asserts, in that it is precisely these feelings of guilt toward human sexuality, and the obsession to repress its expression which create sexual deviance. Yet agreed, the study of human behavior is not exact, and therefore one shouldn’t base a conclusion on any number of studies. , Certainly one can lament th e obvious fact that above all women are used and abused iti this and other societies as objects to be bought and sold in many ways which make sensible persons uncomfortable. However, until society places higher value on all individuals, loving thy neighbor as thyself so to speak, 1 cannot fault any man woman who freely chooses to employ their personal capital, whether it be skills, money or in this case outstanding physical beauty, for furthering their personal betterment. I find it interesting that Mr. Swanson is appalled at the idea of males masturbating with these photos as inspiration. Is it shame of Mr. Swanson’s own physical needs which breeds the disgust he feels about a natural human activity? Is it an unwillingness of Mr. Swanson to admit that masturbation may be a positive activity, particularly when it may enhance one’s sense of self control and prolong the ability to satisfy one’s partner? One can only conclude that to Mr. Swanson sexuality and the shedding of moral dilem­ mas is inherently evil, and that all people should be relegated to rules chosen by others more enlightened. One can understand how easy it is to become lost in a morass of conflicting animalistic emotions and the pressure to conform to some artificial ideals. However, tolerance, and compassion, as displayed so long ago, do not go out of style. For when they are forgotten, or carefully cir­ cumvented with oblique language, artificial moral constraints may tend to erupt in violent, irresponsible behavior; as well as holier than thou platitudes. James Urbina Sophomore, French Major S o u n d O ff: 9 6 5 - 4 2 8 7 The Stale Press would like to hear from you on its Sound Off Line. Each Monday, the opinion page will print a question of University or community interest, taking answers all week, 24 hours a day at 965-4287. When leaving a mes­ sage, please leave your name, major, class stand­ ing (or any other affiliation with the University) and a number where you can be reached. All calls will be verified, and responses will be published every Wednesday, starting September 1. Responses may be edited for length and to eliminate profanity. Sorry, the Stale Press will not grant requests for anonymity on the Sound Off Line. This W eek’s Question: “Should hom osexual coalitions be counted as a m inority groups?” h /H n r tm to o P * « * J u S T Tftw M irtfc- A t ? S o M C OCa OVOq d j> « **5f V m P age 6 S tate P ress Monday, September 20,1993 Library receives support From Academic Senate New resolution recommends ‘budgets not be further reduced’ By J ames Frusetta State P ress ASU’s Academic Senate has reaffirmed widespread faculty opposition to continuing library budget cuts by passing a resolu­ tion supporting fiscal needs of campus libraries. The newly-approved policy, which requests that “library bud­ gets not be further reduced,” was initiated last spring when a 1percent cut in the library's budget was recommended by adminis­ trators. The resolution was passed at the Senate’s first fall meet­ ing. “The last couple of years have been very difficult for the libraries in general,” said Marianne Alcorn, former chair of the Academic Senate’s University services and facilities committee. “The resolution was written when it still looked as if cuts might be enacted.” Dean of University Libraries Sherrie Schmidt credited the res­ olution as a major factor m this summer’s reversal of proposed fiscal cuts in the library budget. “As a result of even the introduction of the resolution, it made the University administration aware of the faculty’s support,” said Schmidt. “Even before the recent vote of support, the proposed resolution showed support.” Schmidt also said the proposal reaffirmed the confidence that ASU faculty hold in the University’s libraries. “Certainly from my perspective, I think it was a show of sup­ port by the faculty that signals to the administration the impor­ tance of the library,” Schmidt said. The resolution also recognizes the escalating costs of periodi­ cals. Faculty members and library officials said they fear that even if the budgetary status quo is maintained, the library will continue to face a steady erosion in periodicals as costs escalate. “To accommodate the spiraling costs of periodicals, (the library) had to make across-the-board cuts,” said Margaret Knapp, current chair of University services and facilities committee. “We’re concerned that this doesn’t come up again.” Schmidt said without an increase in library funding to match the rising costs of subscriptions, the cuts are inevitable. “We’ve had a steady state budget for the last four years, but with the rising costs of periodicals, cuts in subscriptions have occurred,” Schmidt said. But faculty members argue that the last round of periodical cuts is the last that can be made without crippling consequences for ASU as a research institution. “Unless the Legislature begins funding the libraries at a much better rate than it has before, we won’t be funded nearly as suffi­ cient as needed,” Alcorn said. “We are the 26th largest research library in the country,” Knapp said. “But I don’t know if we’U be able to maintain that if cuts continue.” St a t e P ress O p in io n s - W e lc o m e to A d v e n tu re L a n d , T o m o rro w L a n d a n d F a n ta s y L a n d . Apartment rental ads. Cultural activities. World news. •O b ey all traffic control signals, signs, and laws. •A t night, ride w ith a white light on the front of your bj- w cycle and a red rear reflector on the back of your bicycie. Did You Know T h a t. . . I A n d ¡j|||ays *' <.: •In 96% of all bicycle accidents •Y ie ld to all traffic when in Tempe, the bicyclist was entering a street (roadway) injured or killed. from a sidewalk, bikeway, or •W earing a helmet will reduce bicycle path. the chance of a serious head injury by 85%, and is much •Slow downwhen approaching intersections. cheaper than a trip to the •D o not assume you are safe hospital. because you have the right-of- •T h e m ajority of bicycle-car way. In a car-bicycle collision, accidents occur at intersections, the bicyclist always loses. and in 73% of such accidents the bicyclist was at fault. Make it a safe school year! •R iding against the traffic flow is a m ajor cause of all bicycle Follow the traffic laws. Failure accidents in Tempe. to do so can cost you more than a tic k e t.... it can cost you Avoid Being C ite d , . . your life. State news. Classified ads. Sports. Coupons. ASU news. Crossword puzzles. In-depth features. Help wanted ads. Letters to the editor. D a ily h oroscopes. •A n y bicyclist or pedestrian citation w ill cost you between For more informafloh or a free $49 and $100. copy o f theTem po Bikeway Map brochure, call 350-8204. •N ever ride against the flo w Far Side cartoons. of traffic on sidewalks or streets. Always ride with the CHy of Tempe traffic flow . Bicycle Advisory Com m ittee Daily events schedule. It's free. S t a te P ress P age_7 Monday, September 20,1993 S tate P ress The Psychology behind the Citibank Classic Visa card, and the emotional security of the Photocard. Thecitibankclassicvissr instills in students feelings o f safety, security, and general wellness not unlike those experienced in the wornb. Therefore, it is the m other of all credit cards. Som e experts attribute these feelings to the Citibank Photocard, the only credit card w ith your photo on it. A voice inside says, “T his is me, really m e ” (As opposed to, “W ho the heck is th a t? ’—a com m on response to the photo on o n e ’s d r iv e r ’s lic e n s e .) I t’s a n im m e d ia te fo rm o f ID, a boost to your self-im age, f O f course if your card is ever lost or stolen and a stranger is prevented from using it, you’ll feel exceptionally good (showing no signs o f C redit Subject suffering from Credit CanI Theft Nerwsa. C a rd T h e ft N ervosa), f O th e r e x p e rts p o in t to s p e c ific services, such as The Lost W aller Service that can replace y our c a rd u sually w ith in 24 h o u rs. O r th e 24-H our Cus­ tomer Service line, your hotline, if you will, for any card- The M onarch* N otes Version: T h e C itib a n k C lassic c a rd gives related anxiety whatsoever, f F u rth er analysis reveals three students peace o f m ind, protection Subject after m eiviitfi Citibank CltisskVim Phirithanl. services that protect the purchases you m ake on the C itibank against F reud—o r rath e r fra u d —a Classic Visa card, at no additional cost. 1. Buyers Security " can cover them against accidental low rate and no fee. Apply today. dam age, fire or theft, for 90 days from the date o f purchase1 (preventing, o f course, Insecurity). C a ll 1-800-C ITIBA N K , ext. 19 2. Citibank Lifetime W arranty " allows one to extend th e w arranty for the expected service life o f eligible products up to 12 years.23. A nd Citibank Price Protection assures you o f the best price. You need only see the sam e item advertised in print for less, w ithin 60 days, and C itibank will refund the difference up to $150' (hence no Post Purchase Depression), f Special student savings are particularly therapeutic. T here’s the free Citibank Calling Service" from M CI to save up to 26% on long distance calls versus AT&T.1 (You’re encouraged to call M om and D ad regu­ larly preventing Parenta N on-Supportus.) A nd a $20 Airfare Discount4 on any dom estic flight. (Case studies indicate that a Fear of Flying is overcome when Spring B reak in sunny F lorida is a possibility.) Not to m ention the low variable interest rate o f 15.4%* and no annual fee for college students. H Suffice it to say, you’ll have a credit card you can depend on while building a credit history. So call 1-800-CITIBANK, extension 19, to apply over th e phone (students don’t n e e d a jo b or a cosigner) o r to have your photo added 1 to your C itibank Classic Visa card. H If we say that a I :s h m h h h ■ 'h fÎÙ Ü A sense o f Identity is the first com ponent of the Citibank 9128 0812 395b Classic Visa card, a sense o f Security the second, and « * /« > 1 /y c d a se n se o f A u to n o m o u s W ill fro m y o u r new fo u n d financial independence the third, don’t be crazy...Call. Not ju st V isa. Citibank Visa. ■Certain conditions and exclusions apply. Please refer to vour Summary of Additional Program Information. Buyers Security is underwritten by The Zurich International UK Limited Certain restrictions and limitation* apply. Underwritten by the New Hampshire Insurance Company Service life cxpectancy vari^s by-product and iS at least the'm inim um based on retail industry data. Details of coverage are available in your Summary of Additional Program; Information....-.Savings .claim.is based on a l6-minute night/weekend calf in the 1.911 to 3. ) SAVE $$$ SOI anhattan GREEK OPEN HOUSE Storewide Discounts On All Merchandise —- Special Sale On U IP & |c o u t e $5 ^ R T  IN M é ^ CARD G e t your discount card to d a y a t a n y o f th e s e h o t T e m p e lo c a tio n s o r c a ll 1 -6 0 2 -5 4 0 9 6 2 8 fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n . ‘SiCBaris GROUP DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE Cham pion Sweatshirts Russell Sweatshirts Hanes Beefy-T's GROUP DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE IS THE STRATEGY G AM E WHERE YOU PREDICT THE PLAYS DURING UVE TELEVISED NFL, COLLEGE A N D CFL FOOTBALL A C TIO N. Bunge* Oper Brizona The discount entertainment card that .saves you money all over Tempe, Like Any Student, We Enjoy Cool People, Endless Activity; And Anything Free. (Come In Now And You W ill Too.) PLAYED WITH LIVE TELEVISED FOOTBALL GAMES Monday Night Football NFL Sunday Football Thureday & Saturday College Football Most Bowl Games NFl Playoff Games - . ' . OBI IS EXCLUSIVELY LICENSED BY THE NFL Superbowl 2 Free Months Join Before Sept. 30 M O N D A Y -F R ID A Y 5PM-7PM COMPLIMENTARY HAPPY HOUR BUFFET The Western Club is celebrating ten years as the Students Choice for sports, fitness, and recreation clubs. Call or come in for a complete tour, membership information and 2 free months when you join. Free 2 month offer expires Sept 30,1993. New members only. neST A U H A N T AMO SPQ W TS LO U N G E Rural Road at Apache Blvd. • 968-3451 A SniA./Phoenlx • Tempe/ASU 2140 East Broadway (west of Price) Tempe, Arizona Tel968-9231 W estern Reserve Club Award-WinningSports Center Comics Sta te P ress Monday, September 20,1993 P age 10 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterseh A V A S T M AJO R ITS O F HOUSEHOLD S I*'« E A R - o l d s SAT MOORE HOT L IV IN G UP TO THEIR EXPECTATIONS O F FATHERHOOD. WHAT WERE TH E IR E X P E C TA TIO N S ? i THAT MOU'D BE MORE L IK E A N AUTOMATIC TE LLE R M A C H IN E . T H E F A R S ID E WHERE DO MCO POLLSTERS FIND TH E S E RESPONDENTS? By G A R Y LA R SO N T i:jMk Doonesbufy BY GARRY TRUDEAU Vacationing from their jobs of terrorizing young teen-agers, zom bies Will often relax at a W estern dead ranch. ASHFORD. Conn. (AP) — Kim Basinger and Alec Baldwin looked like happy newlyweds at a weekend fund-raiser held by Paul Newman. The couple, married last month on a beach in East Hampton, N Y , Cuddled and smooched Saturday at rehearsals for a show at Newman’s Hole in the Wall Gang Camp in northeastern Connecticut. Basinger and Baldwin appeared in skits dur­ ing the annual show to raise money for Newman’s camp, which gives children with can­ cer and other life-threatening diseases a chance to go to summer camp free of charge. More than 400 people paid up to $500 a tick­ et to attend the annual benefit, which also fea­ tured appearances, by Joanne Woodward, Carole King and actor James Naughton. IRVING, Texas (AP) —- Don’t worry, the concerts will be safe, although the special effects might leave some people needing a change of clothes, Garth Brooks says. He held a news conference to reassure his fans after 16 workers suffered minor injuries while setting up for this coming weekend’s four concerts at Texas Stadium. The workers were injured when a metal frame built to hold lights and sound gear above the stage and audience buckled. “There have never been safety concerns” for the fans, Brooks said Saturday. Despite the accident, the shows will go on as scheduled th is com ing T hursday through Sunday, he said. And the special effects package, including wind, fire and rain, has been redesigned to be even more spectacular. “Everything’s still on cue, but a few more people are going to get wet,” Brooks said. NEW YORK (AP) — Christian Slater says he can’t resist falling in love with the women he’s works with in movies. “They’ve all been beautiful,” he told People magazine for its Sept. 27 issue. Some o f that co m p atib ility may show through the cam era in “True Rom ance,” in which he stars with Patricia Arquette. “We got very clo se, i t ’s one o f those unavoidable things,” he^aid. S t a t e P ress O p in io n & Letters Life in the "fussed" Iane. r FREE WINGS EVERY SUNDAY & MONDAY HALF YOUR W ING ORDER IS FREE! Their nude love scene, he said, was “really special.” ‘T iôst sight of the crew being around. It was the first time nothing on the outside really mat­ tered.” LANDER, Wyo. (AP) — He didn’t fire a shot, but retired Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf claimed first place in Wyoming’s annual OneShot Antelope Hunt as his three-member team brought down two antelope in 47 minutes. In the competition, hunters grouped in teams of three get one shot each. Rainy, foggy weather Saturday made it difficult to find antelope. The team of Colorado Gov. Roy Rotncr and his two sons also took two antelope, but took more tim e to do so than did Schwarzkopf’s team. The celeb rity team; headed by Jam eson Parker, formerly o f the télévision series “Simon arid Simon,” took one antelope, as did the team headed by North D akota Gov. Ed Schafer. Schafer brought down the lone antelope for his state’s team, Rhode Island Gov. Bruce Sundlun’s- team also shot one antelope. Sundlun, whose partici­ pation in the hunt was criticized by the animal rights group Defenders of Animals, missed his shot. MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Ginger Rogers says “Sleepless in Seattle” escapes the flaws she sees in most of today’s movies — a lot of flesh and little serious thought. Rogers, 82, was in Madison for a weekend American History and American Film Festival on the U niversity of W isconsin campus. It included several of her films, including “Kitty Foylé” (1940), for which she won the bestactress Oscar. Rogers says “Sleepless in Seattle” — starring two of her ¡Favorite young stars, Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks — is her favorite recent release. Most contemporary movies are too “promis­ cuous in their relationships between the key characters,” with too much emphasis on flesh and too little on serious thought, said the dancer, singer, actress and comedian. DISCOVER THE EXCITING WORLD OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Unique travel/study opportunity Learn about international business from business leaders! interact with top executives of well-known organizations! Travel the world's greatest cities and earn academic credit! INFORM ATIONAL MEETINGS September 22,1993 3-4 p.m. Room BAC323 or September 23 ,1 9 9 3 3-4 p.m. Room BAC 323 (These meetings ara identical) October 14,1993 3-4 p.m. Room BA 463 Vii or November 21, 1993 4-6p.m. Coconino Room - MU 224 (Novem ber 21 M eeting for W in ter 93 Participants O nly) We show all bwa & Nebraska games! W OODSUEDI W O O D 344ED H Food & Drink SW Carrier cf Baseline & Mill 831-W O O D Casual Dining & Libations NW Comer cf Dobson & University 844-SHED Contact: Dan Brenenstuhl in M anagem ent 965-5031 G reg Moorhead in M anagem ent 965-4566 Jim Spiers in M arketing 965-3621 or International Business Sem inars 830-l09 02 Sports ______ Monday, September 20,1993 S tate P ress O Briefs Cross country places 5th, 7th The ASU cross country team finished in fifth place in the laen’s division and seventh in the women’s division Saturday at the A ztec In v itatio n al m eet in San D iego. S ta n fo rd 's m en topped the field o f 12 teams, while defending NCAA champion Arkansas outran a field of 14 teams to cap­ ture the women’s division in the 50th annu­ al event. Freshman Ari Rodriguez led th e Sun Devil men with a t5th-place finish in osiy his second collegiate race. He was followed by E rin Scroggins (22nd), Tom W eber (24th), Matt Repak (34th), Geoff Owens (38tii), Marlin Posvar (43rd), Eric Strachan (46th) and Eric Aragoni (49th). T he ASU women were led by senior Kristin Wellman and junior Kim Toney who finished 33rd and 34th, respectively, Other Sun Devil finishers included Christie Masson (42nd), Kathryn Karrels (45th) and Jennifer Dander (67th). Form er S u b D evil w ins b ig Former ASU golfer Brandie Burton, five shots behind at the start of the round, matte a b ack-nine su rg e Sunday to win the $450,000 Safeco Classic by one stroke. The 2l-year-old from Rialto, Calif., a member of the 1990 ASU women’s NCAA Championship team, shot a 7-under-par 65 to finish at 14-under 274 on the Meridian Valley Country Chib course in Kern, Wash. The victory, Burton’s fourth in three years oif the tour, was worth $67,500. Rosie Jones collected the second-place purse at $41,891. Patty Sheehan was third at 69>—279. Kris Monaghan and Latin Merten, the U,S. Women's Open champion, each had a .7 2 for a 280. Record crowd for Cards-Cowboys A franchise-record 73,025 fans attended the Phoenix Cardinals-D allas Cowboys game Sunday night at Sun Devi! Stadium, tweaking die old mark of 72,439 set last sea­ son against Dallas. C ard in als' o ffic ia ls announced that 73,115 tickets were distributed for Sunday's game and that 90 tickets went mused. The game was the fifth sellout for the Cardinals since moving to Phoenix from S t Louis in 1988. ft was also the thud straight tim e that the Cow boys played-before a capacity crown in Sun Devil Stadium. Football Roundup O dias 17, Phoenix 10 -1 É Cleveland 19, Los Angeles Raiders 16 ¿ Seattle 17, New England 14 San Diego 18, Houston 17 San Francisco 37, Atlanta 30 Philadelphia 34, Washington 31 New Orléans 14, Detroit 3 Pittsburgh 34, Cincinnatti 7 New York Giants 20. LA Rams 10 Baseball Roundup Sunday’s Games AMERICAN LEAGUE Late Games Not Included Boston 8, New York 3 Cleveland 12, Detroit 2 Toronto 10, Minnesota 0 Baltimore 8, Milwaukee 4 Chicago 3, Oakland 1 California 9, Texas 8 Seattle 4, Kansas City 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE Late Games Not Included Montreal 6, Philadelphia 5 » . Louis 7, Pittsburgh 6 San Francisco 7, Cincinnati 3 Florida 2, Chicago 1 San Diego 6. Houston 3 Colorado 8, Los Angeles 5 Atlanta Y «k2jpfc.' g Compiled from AP and sta ff reports. , P a g e ll^ Cowboys outlast Cardinals Aikman looks sharp, Smith shines in debut By M ike Branom State P ress On an evening when both team s found answers to some pressing questions, the Dallas Cowboys defeated the Phoenix Cardinals 17-10 Sunday at Sun Devil Stadium. Phoenix found out that it can legitimately contend this season. Dallas discovered that it isri't as bad as its first two games, both losses, would have one believe, and that running back Em m itt Smith will be worth the money he squeezed out of team owner Jimmy Jones after a lengthy holdout. The Cardinals (1-2) received an early test of their strength as they sometimes sparkled and sometimes stumbled against the defending Super Bowl champions. Phoenix made the same mis­ takes that plagued it in its opening-week loss at P hiladelphia, but also exhibited the sam e prom ise seen last week in its victory at Washington. On many offensive series, especially in the first half, the Cardinals drove downfield only to have an" untimely sack, penalty or dropped pass thwart any scoring chances. In the second half, however, Phoenix was able to move the ball and score 10 points behind the arm of quarterback Steve Beuerlein. He com­ pleted 11 of 15 passes for 164 yards and a touch­ down in the final two periods. The Cardinal defense alternated between looking solid and soft all night. It would stop one Cowboy drive after three plays, only to allow two series of sustained length and time. When Dallas took over on its 15-yard line with 6:37 remaining in the game, Phoenix could not come up with a defensive stop, allowing the Cowboys to run out the clock. “We did not make a play to win the ballgame,” Phoenix Coach Joe Bugel said. “You have to find ways to make plays. I didn't think anybody could push our defense around, but they did.” Despite the loss, the Cardinals believe this game was a step forward and not a useless defeat like last season. “We played a very good football game all the way around,” Beuerlein said. “On certain occa­ sions, we didn’t make the plays when we had the opportunities. Anybody who brings up that ‘same old Cardinals’ bullshit, they’ve got major problems, because we played a dam good foot- Phoenix Cardinal quarterback Steve Beuerlein drops back to pass during Sunday night a con­ test against the Dallas Cowboys. The Cowboys prevailed 17-10. ball team tonight. We had chances to win. We didn’t make the plays to win. “This is going to be a damn good football team.” “I don’t think we choked,” Bugel said. “I don’t think we took a step back. We had an opportunity tonight, but we missed it.” The Cowboys, and especially quarterback Troy Aikman, did not miss the opportunity to post their first win after a rocky beginning to their post-championship season. Dallas jumped out to a 17-0 lead thanks to an T urn t o C ardinals , page 13. Sun Devils on rebound W eak d efen se, p en alties lead to 3 5 -1 7 loss B y S haun Rachau State P ress ASU Coach Bruce Snyder can only hope that Saturday’s 35-17 loss to Louisville wasn’t a total failure. Blaming the loss on a weak defense and penal­ ties, Snyder hopes his Sun Devils (1-1) can rebound after Saturday’s defeat at Sn y d er Cardinal Stadium. “I’ve got to believe this game will help us somewhere down the road,” he said. “ We’re not good enough and talented enough to overcome those things. “ We ju s t made some dumb m istakes. I thought we blew up as a defensive team at the end.” The Sun Devils had a hard time setting an offensive rhythm, were penalized 12 times for 144 yards and had a hard time overcoming the passing efficiency of Cardinals’ quarterback Jeff Brohm. Brohm’s timely passes led Louisville (3-0) to the victory and its’ best start since 1972. He passed for two touchdowns, ran for another and was 26 of 38 for a career-high 331 yards. “ He’s so accurate, right on the numbers, my mom could have caught the ball,” Jamie Asher said. “He was almost perfect there for a while in the first h a lf,” L o u isv ille coach H ow ard Schnellenberger said- “If he plants his feet and throws, he’s as good as anybody in the country.” Brohm’s offensive line gave him plenty of time to throw, a big difference compared with last year’s 19-0 loss to the Sun Devils. In that game, he was sacked 10 times for 100 yards of losses. “It was a drastic difference,” Brohm said. “We knew what they were going to do 99 percent of the time.” ASU could do little to contain Brohm as he led Louisville on touchdown drives of 66, 75,92 and 80 yards. The game’s finishing touch was Louisville defensive back Anthony Bridge’s 78-yard inter­ ception return for a touchdown with 11 seconds left. The last scoring drive came on the Cardinals’ first possession of the third quarter. At ASU’s 25, running back Ralph Dawkins caught a pass from Brohm at the 20, broke a tackle at the 4 and ran into the end zone to put Louisville up 28-10. The Sun D evils’ top running back, Mario Bates, was ejected from the game early in the fourth after both benches cleared when lineback­ er Vince Duberry applied a late hit on ASU quar­ terback Grady Benton. Loqjsville drove 92 yards on 12 plays, ending with Brohm’s 1-yard run up the middle to give Louisville a 21-10 lead late in the first half. During the drive, Brohm was 6-for-6 for 85 yards, including a 17-yard pass to Bailey to ASU’s 2 that setup the touchdown. Brohm, ranked No. 3 in passing efficiency in T urn t o F ootball , page 13. ASU spikers suffer first big loss vs. WSU Faster-paced Cougars too much for Sun Devils B y P aul M atthews State P ress ASU volleyball coach Patti Snyder said early in the season that she preferred to play fast-paced teams. Snyder may wish to reconsider after the Sun Devils shut out the slow-paced Washington Huskies, but were pummeled by the faster-p aced W ashington State Cougars. ASU needed only three games (15-3, 16-14, 15-9) to dispatch the Huskies, as Sun Devil outside hitters Leanne Schuster and C hristine G am er com bined for 32 kills. The Cougars were a different story. After suffering their first defeat of the season Friday night at UofA, the Cougars were out for revenge and dispensed of ASU in three straight games (16-14,15-6, 15-5). The C ougars dom inated ASU from every position, rendering ASU’s big guns com pletely helpless. G arner, w ho led ASU with 34 kills against New Mexico last w eekend, had only 14 against the Cougars. . 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SELEC TIO N O F W IN NERS: Each daily w inner w ill be random ly selected from among all eligible 1-800-C O LLE C T telephone call entries and all eligible m ail-in entries received for that day’s giveaw ay. Random selection win take place 6 days after the specific prize giveaw ay date. Odds of winning a prize win depend on the num ber of eligible 1-800-C O LLE C T telephone calls com pleted each day and the tim e of day the call w as m ade, and on the num ber of m ail-in entries designated for each day's prize aw ard. Odds win vary each day of the prom otion based on thé above factors. Odds of winning via m ail-in entry will be as good as odds of winning via telephone entry. 4 . PR IZES: 1 G rand Prize per day of $5,000, divided equally betw een Caller and Call Recipient. Can Recipient portion o f the prize will be aw arded to the individual or com pany whose nam e appears on the telephone bin tor the telephone num ber called. If potential winner has entered via m ail, ha/she subse­ quently win be required to give nam e, address and telephone num ber of individual with whom ha/she wishes to share prize equally. 5 . G EN ER A L RULES: To be eligible, callers/m ail-in entrants must be 16 years or older as of 8 /3 0 /9 3 . Sponsor's em ployees directly involved in the planning and im plem entation of this prom otion and em ployees of it's advertising and promotion agencies, and their im m ediate fam ily m em bers and/or those living in sam e household of each are not eligible for any prize, either as an entrant or designated recipient, neither potential w inner of a daily prize is not eligible, per the above, that entire $5,000 p rize will not be aw arded. Void w here prohibited by law. No substitution or transfer of prize perm itted. Al I fed­ eral, state and local taxes are the sole responsibility of w inner. All federal, state arid local law s and regulations apply. Not responsible for malfunctioning o r breakdown of telephone system s, for faulty telephone transm ission or for lost, late or m is­ directed entries. In the event that technical difficulties prevent selection of a w inner for any daily prize of the promotion, that prize will be aw arded on the following day. Random selection of winners will be under.the supervision of D .L. Blair, Inc., an independent judging organization whose decisions are final. By participating in this prom otion, entrants agree to be bound by the O fficial Rules and decisions of thé judges: CO M PLETE rules are subject to any requirem ents or lim itations that m ay be imposed by the Federal Comm unications Commission. Sta te P ress P age 13 Monday, September 20,1993 The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook Order yours today for $36.93 M attews Center basem ent, rm 50 F o o tb a ll: C o n t in u ed from page 11. the nation, was 18-for-22 for 244 yards in the first half. Working out of the shotgun formation much of the game, Brohm beat his career-best 292 passing yards set last year against Tulsa. “I think it really helped his vision,” Snyder said. “Their guys did a great job and we gave them too much of a cushion in our zone.” ASU scored on its first possession. At the Sun Devils’ 47, Benton threw a 13-yard pass to Carlos Artis, who raced 40 yards down the left sideline. But Louisville tied the game on its first possession on a sevenplay, 66-yard drive. Chris Fitzpatrick ran 5 yards for his first career touchdown. “I don’t think we got real worried when we got behind early,” offensive guard Tom Carroll said. “I guess they thought they were going to come in here and do the same thing to us this year they did last year.” The Associated Press contributed to this article. V o lley b a ll____ C o n t in u ed from page 11 . defense applied by W SU ’s 6-foot-5 outside hitter Becky Howlett. Howlett frustrated Gamer at every opportunity as the frustrated Garner committed 13 errors for a measly ,022 hit­ ting percentage. “W e tried to make them guess where we. were going to put Becky,” Cougar coach Cindy Fredrick said. “We switched blockers, our m iddles w ent outside. W e ju st tried to mix things up.” ASU’s woes continued on defense, where the Sun Devils only registered 10 blocks compared to 22 for the Cougars. The Sun Devils were particularly outplayed in the middle. WSU middle blockers Carrie Gilley and Joanne Johnson com­ bined for 25 kills, hitting .481 and .455 respectively. ASU’s starting middles, Nancy Christian and Holly Sones, combined for 3 kills, both recording negative hitting percent­ ages. After the game, a livid Snyder gave her squad the kind of talk that left everyone, including the trainers, red-faced. “W e got' outplayed based on heart, and to me that is the C ard in als statistics , WINNER KEVIN EVANISHYN! Kevin submitted a correctiy an swered trivia contest entry form that was randomly selected as the winner of a brand-spanking-new 1994 Trek 800 from “the Collegiate Bike Shop" 2010 S. Rural Rd., Tempe HAPPY PEDALING, KEVIN! Dallas 7 ; 3 7 0— 17 Phoenix 0 0 7 3— 10 First Quarter Dal—Lassie 8 ran (Murray kick), 7:01. Second Quarter Dal—FG Murray 23, 3:00. Third Quarter Dal—-Lassie 2 run (Murray kick), 6:02. Pho—Proehl 12 pass from Beuerlein (G.Davis kick), 8:27. Fourth Quarter Pho—FG G.Davis 20,4:34. A—73,025 Dal Pho First downs 23 ' 14 Rushes-yards 34-129 19-68 Passing 281 205 Punt Returns 1-3 1-2 Kickoff Returns 1-14 4-64 Interceptions Ret. 1-4 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 21-27-0 20-27-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 2-13 Punts 3-40 4-43 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 4-59 2-15 Time of Possession 33:33 26:27 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Dallas, Lassie 14-60, E.Smith 8-45, Gainer 3.-S, K.Williams 1-9, Irvin 2-6, Johnston 2-5, Aikman 4-(ininus'5). ' Phoenix, Bailey 7-34, Hearst 9-31, Moore 2-4, Beuerlein T(minus 1). PASSING—Dallas, Aikman 21-27-0-281. Phoenix, Beuerlein 2027-1-218. _ ' ■■ : *v RECEIVING—Dallas, Harper 6-136, Johnston 6-49, Irvin 5-74, Novacek 2-11, Gainer 1-8, E.Smith 1-3. Phoenix, R.HÜ14-78, Clark 4-43, Proehl 4-40, Centers 2-14, Bailey 2-8, Hearst 2-2, Ware 1-27, Rolle 1-6. MISSED FIELD GOAL—Dallas, Murray 50. most disappointing thing,” Snyder said. “ To get outworked based on heart in your own gym is incredible.” Snyder had nothing positive to say about the Sun Devils’ performance, describing Christian’s perform ance as “tenta­ tive.” , “She was soft,” Snyder said. “I ju st thought she played totally non-aggressive.” Starting Sun Devil setter Tracy Heflin said that ASU just wasn’t ready. “We heard they lost three straight to Arizona,” Heflin said. “We weren’t expecting them to be a good team.” However, Heflin said that the Sun Devils will be ready for Thursday’s match with top-ranked Stanford. “I think w e’re going to get our butts kicked in practice this week so we will be ready. I think the whole thing’s mental. We can beat anyone in the .Pac-10.” C ardinals C o n t in u ed from page 1 Ç effective combination of Aikman’s passing and a smothering defense. Aikman was “in the zone”, as Cardinal linebacker Garth Jax put it, completing 21 of his 27 passes for 281 yards. His first incomplete pass came at the 3:59 mark of the second quarter after nine straight completions for 149 yards. The Cowboys defense was in a zone of its own, allowing just 68 yards on the ground. Before bending in the second half, the defense was nearly impenetrable, surrendering 73 first-half yards of total offense to Phoenix. However, the big story for Dallas was the arrival of two-time NFL rushing leader Emmitt Smith, who made his season debut after holding out during a contract dispute. Smith saw limited action, but looked spectacular at times, rushing for 45 yards on 8 carries. “It feels pretty good (to be back),” Smith said. “I was pretty nervous, to tell you the truth. 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W/d, a/c, 20 min. from ASÛ, $400/mo. Call. Ron, 276-9385, / ■ BOOKS ANNOUNCEMENTS WARM WISHES for a great new school yéar! Our mission is to encourage individuals o f ethnic m inority backgrounds, which have been historically underrep resen ted ; in the physician force, to consider careers in med­ icine. Please contact Us if wé can assist you l Minority Recruitment Project; Minority Affairs Office; University of Arizona, College of Medicine, Rm. 2208; Tucson, AZ 85724; (602) 621-5531 • .. ; MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE APARTMENTS SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon; day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. Cheap. 352-7249. ' COMPUTERS BVS! 649-7438 Dò yòu have a computer and a modem? Call Flatland Center! 14 + lines! *5 free hours"' with this ad. M AC PLUS w/ext. 35MB hard drive & printer $500 obo 759V 73,10 before 9pm. N EED M ORE from your PC? C all Friendly C om puter Asso­ ciates today! 220-1408. USED XT, AT & 486SX com­ puters avail from $325-$995. All w /color m onitors, hard drives, . Dos 5 0, WordPerfect or Micros soft Works. Many options & ex­ tras included. For details call 4863289 after 5pm, or leave message. [UÒlCompuiePì ¡486-33 $993,(-50 $1249,-66 $1449)1 |w /!30 Mb, 4Mb, .28 SVGA, 1m b| ■Video, Teac Floppy, IDE I/O &KDB, | r... 0$49,24S 41) 144 A 4V»mavlr OO Fax/Modem Mb maxtrC$99 Upgrade your 286 to 386 for $100 J Se Habla C++ 234-2344 \ JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYB^G jewelry. In­ ch».: gold, ster, pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S Mill Ave, Tempe Center 968-6074 top $$ PAID •Fort gold jew elry ■ diamonds gold & silver coins - watches broken je w elry OK. "N obody pays more." call Bill 784-8881. AUTOMOBILES 1986 DOQGE Daytona-turbo Z, 5 spd, Shelby limited edition, 64K miles, $3,700 Call 981-7757. 86 OLDS 88 royal B rougham touring sedan 70K mi. 1-owner e»c car $3500 obo 832-4284 87 BUICK Skylark, excellent con­ d itio n , m ust sell $3000/oho. Blake 461-3251. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL APPT. SETTERS needed, hrs 5:30pm-8:30pm M-Th. Top pay + bonus. Scottsdale mortgage Co. Contact Jonathan Class or Gary 481-9791 ; FR EE LAN G E P/T G raphic Design. Proficient in Quark Ex­ press and Photo Shop. Call Craig . at 273-0791. SA LESPER SO N S & delivery d riv e rs fo r Body G aurd 2000 Pepper Spray. Gall now Gold En­ terprises 548-1222 pgr 217-3502. GLAM OUR INDUSTRY For­ tune 500 Company. Sales&marketing. P/T $10-25/hr Call Elise 7564)553 , ::: WALK FROM ASU! No selling, telephone survey research, flex h rs av ail m rng, a ftrn s, eves/ wknds. Start at $5/hr. Wkly pay, frequent raise reviews. Higgin­ botham Asso., 829-3141. ARTIST NEEDED Local bakery is lookitig for an exr perienced artist to decorate spe­ cialty cakes. Will train. 967-5541 hrs flexible / , ;, . ★ EARN $7.50/HR!A M-Th 4-9; Sat. 10-4. Setting appts fo r free h ealth sves. (H rly & Comm.) 470-1828. AZ STATE jobs, State SVC In­ tern. $6.23/hr/Phpenix. M ust have satisfactorily completed at KFC BROADWAY/BECK hiring le a st one y e ar (30 sem ester pA eves hrly pay doe 967-0858. hours) of academic training in a college or university and be cur­ LOOKING FOR a part time job? rently pursuing a degree in "plan­ ASU T elefund is s till hiring. ning", "recreation" or closely feEarn $5/hr + bonus to raise $$$ lated field-. Public Hlth Micro- -, for ASU teiefund. Fdr more info biologist H, & 11 13/hr/Phoenix. call 965-6754 . / P o sitio n is p a rt-tim e. Public MAINTENANCE & Janitorial, H ealth M ic ro b io lo g is t 11 M-F, 15 hrs. Near ASU campus. $23,238/yr/Phoenix , Apply at AZ State Personnel, 1.831 W. jef- . Ref & exp. req. 967-7563. ferson, Phoenix, À Z 85007 or M OD ELS/AC TOR S. M /F, all local DES Job Service office. types, for international music vid­ eo. Pays $1600! N o experience BLUE IGUANA W aitress and necessary. 602-266-6537. doormen positions, apply in person between 12-3pm at Blue Iguana OUTSIDE SALES S/W comer of Scottsdale/McDowell National marketing firm for Fire­ stone is guaranteeing $8 per hour BRIGHT, MOTIVATED, outgo­ for fun and easy selling. Ambi­ ing, person who loves football tious reps earn $18 - $24 pur and has a working knowledge of hour, part time, flexible hours, ASU C am pus to m ake approx casual dress. Gall M ike for inter$500 a wk. Page 259-4603 for an VieW 921-1103. / appointment PEST C O N TR O L Tech G ood driving record, reliable clean cut, $6/hr start 961-1944 BROADWAY DC is accepting ap­ plications for merchandise pro­ cessing Flex shift. Apply M-F 10 am to 4 pm. 1524 W. 14th St., •T e m p e . ;■'/ ; •• ;' PHOENIX SYMPHONY needs enthustastic, articulate, dynamic people- sell tickets via phone! Management potential! Flex p/t $u Th 3 to 9:30pm 265 0417, BUSINESS MAJORS, creative, career-minded individual wanted to develop & implement sales & m arketing strategy. Part-tim e, hourly plus commission. APPty in person: The Alternative Copy Shop- 915 South M ill, Ask for Rob or Michael. PT POSITIONS fo r on-call & wknd relief staff in group homes for DDH Adults. AZDL & clean MVR needed. East Valley 9410690 C A SH D A N CERS, FEM ALE students needed for bachelor par­ ties, Earn $200/hr C all Ernie "Only the Classiest" 966-2059 PETLAND FIESTA Mall needs p /t sales persons, eves/wknds. Must be enthusiastic, energetic & reliable. Retail experience help­ ful. Call Richard at 844-2920 for interview. TE1CHERT MARKETING is hir­ ing! W e're looking for 5 or 6„, students who would like to gain valuable sales/promotions exp. We offer an excellent compensa­ tion structure with hrs to fit your class schedule. Please „call 921 7755 between ll-4pm WE NEED students to sell con­ sum er electronics on cam pus. Products are effective and af­ fordable. Demonstrate the pro­ ducts and they sell themselves. C all Synergy Electronics 9481512. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Top people earn $15-$20/hr. We have a beautiful, stateof-the-art telemarketing fa cility at Camelback and 44th Street and Invite exp. saleswomen and men to call for a personal interview. Please ask fo r Joyce at: 952-0 100 SCOTTSDALE FAMILYTREASURES Mart today),1 B # g e sponsored p h o iia ^ fê s f ja N p /h r . Programmers Warehouse NEED A JOB? We need 5-10 people for part time work from 3-7pm. We sell tools nationwide & we'll pay you $7/hr to start. No weekends & no exp nec. Call Alex 820-8408 •$8/HR GUARANTEED W AGE TO START •PART-TIME ft FULL TIM E SHIFTS •VERY FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES (20-35 Hours W eekly) $287.50 SELL 50 hilarious, out­ rageous, & often alcohol related, college t-shirts & make $287.50. All shirt 100% guaranteed: a risk free program. 22 designs1a v a il.. C all now fo r free c atalo g 1(800) 304-3309. Are you looking for a challenging posi­ tio n w ith a g re a t com pany? Then w e have th e p e r­ fe c t p o s itio n f o r you! PW is a spe­ cialty distributor of programming tools. We are looking for sa le s te c h n ic ia n s and technical sup­ port people. Know­ ledge of C. Clipper, ASM and/or o ther tools helpful. Flex­ ib le h o u rs , good pay and a friendly environment. DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED, on campus, ensmr electronics. Own hrs, unlmtd income. 839-8038. THE BEST TELEMARKETING JOB IN THE VALLEY IS ONLY 15 MINUTES FROM ASU HELP WANTEDGENERAL COMPUTER PROGRAMMERS HELP WANTEDSALES ■ C O M E J O IN THE E X C IT E M E N T Ö 5 < 2N O í! O 0. We're re-writing th e record book a t th e Number 1 food delivery company fo r th e ASU campus‘ * 2 0 positions available fo r day, night, o r la te night •Flexible hours t o f i t your school schedule •D rive rs can make $7-$10 per hour including tip s •S a fe driving cash bonuses S to p by fo r an interview on Monday o r Tuesday fro m 11 a.m. t o 6 p.m. a t: 903 5. RURAL o r call . 968-5555 8283 N. Hayden Rd. Suite 195, Scottsdale t o s e t up an interview. 443-0580 Equal O pportunity Em ployer HELP WANTEDSALES RESTAURANTS/ BARS P/T SALES, Ladies Boutique, eve. & wkends.outgoing person, Scottsdale, call Kim 941-8629 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL BOAT DEALERSHIP close to ASU. Typing/phone, mess, p/t, must be d ependable. Paul at 894*-2778 •■ NANNY REGISTRY: Live-in nanny needed; days free, wrk.hfs :l0pm-9am; Live-out, p/t, 2-7pm, M-F: No fées. 981-5494. NANNY’S P/T days eves, or wee-, kend hrs. m ust have re lia b le transportation call 345^2433. A X Q 's love th eir 2N coaches Allen and Sean!!! I N KAO I N K A O I N K A 0 ZN KAO AO*- Thanks for the great happy hour on Wednesday- IIKA I N nB4» I N nB I N nB CO M M U N IC A TIO N C O U N ­ SELING/ Therapy: Sensitive, ex­ perienced Phd. Relationships-crisis-love-intimacy-fears. 443-2799 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax.. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. 1 DAY turnaround- Most papers, prof w/p, papers, resumes. Laser. Reasonable. Caroline, 892-7022. CANDY GREAT job on the Delta Gamma Fall retreat! You are a star! IN -P i Phis will take relays! APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. W ORD PROCESSING, secre­ tarial services, fax. 28yrs exper. Student discounts. S/W comer, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. DANNY, CHUCK, Terry, Rob, Matt & Jason I'm so proud of you! Your sister has an interview . too! Whiner. DO PLEDGES - We had a blast! Bus ride was as fun as bar! We will sing to you anytime. Thè Sig Ep Pledges! hangout to watch MOM ! o b A T , THE AE's are getting ready to repeat A nchor Splash, G et ready for a lot of fun! I A2XDThanks for the honor Dreamgirl. You guys are the greatest. I'm so excited! Get ready for lots o f treats! Love ya Higgins SODJA- GET ready for I N re­ lays. We love ya M olly Hilary Carrie Brantley SURE YOU DO Wanna save big bucks at Sunny's Pizza, Stem's Metro Deli, Tempe Bowl, Kolby's Billards, The Improv, Studebaker's, Bungee over AZ, Manhattann Limo, M inder Binders and Papillon's? Sure you do! Get tiie Night on the Town reusable entertainment discount cards for only $5.00 at any of these Tempe hot spots! For more info call 1-602-540*9628. d u rin g t HÉ GREEKS/CLUBS Raise Up to $1,000 in just 1 week! For ybur fraternity, sorority & club. Pius $1,000 for y o u rs e lf. and a free t-shirt just for calling. 1-800-932-0528, ext. 75. A DOZEN roses delivered $20 also balloons. Call AfterHours Flowers 894-3419.;. I K Larissa! You are an awesome pledge. Yòuf secret sis loves you. V^ .... " " ■' , AXfTs are psyched for I N re­ lays! Can you say repeat? I N JERR Y, Jim and Sean Thetas love thier Relays coaches! P/T BABYSITTER wanted M-F, 12-5: M ature & responsible. Qiild care exp. rèqd. 264-1553 WE BUY, sell & repair VW bugs & sandrails. ABC Towing 231 8638 pager 223-9578 - MUSIC Name BASS PLAYER w anted, 5 yr exp; 18-22 yrs ASU area orig band. Call Mike 929-9665 Address STAY IN TOUCH AuVwrind Aatnr Ot UBMCSrfeuuvG PAGER SERVICE * 8 per month •B ased on a $25 D im ension pager purchase and annual service w ith US W est R EN TA L - M IM W W MA I L BO X SUPERSTORE 7 1 7 S . M ill A ve * 9 6 6 -4 2 9 4 HIGHEST QUALITY vitamins spray mist, 90% absorbed, stop • smoking, appetite control. 4941247 after 7pm. N U TR IT IIO N -D E TO X CEN* TE R . H ygienic colonic, herbvapor therapy. B lood-hair-Iris analysis. $10 off with this ad. Any therapy. 730-1999 $10 O ff with this coupon - Exp. 9-30-93 . C ity, State See stofes fo r com plete details. For the Nearest Wherehouse Accepting Used CD's Call 1-800-825-2000 088 052 049 101 074 072 073 070 071 030 Fundraising F urniture O arage Sales H ealth & Fitness H elp W anted-C hitd Care H eip W anted-C ierical H elp W anted-Fodd Service H elp W anted-G eneral H elp W anted-Sales Hom es fo r Fient 040 102 107 103 056 076 015 120 050 045 967-3722 r LOOKING FOR the # 1 Rock & Roll expert on campus. Win cas­ settes, C D 's, and up to $1600 cash. Take the 10 question Rock trivia quiz. Call 1-900-344-9335 $2,99/minute, must be 18 Adoption A irplanes Announcem ents Apartm ents A utom obiles B icycles Books B usiness O pportunities Com puters Free Lost/Found ARLENE HAS MOVED SERVICES Business Phone Zip P lease print one letter p er box, le a v e a blank box betw een w ords. 096 065 010 0 20 061 064 051 077 064 066 SERVICES SERVICES SHAPE UP fast, increase energy, lose weight, bum fat and build m uscle, 3 capsules a day, it works, get it today! Call Joyce or Carolyn at 833^1854. (Not Herbalife.) DJ WANTED w/equipment send tape 990-2689 ’ •• Trade us your tired, your over­ played, your CD titles thafve lost their zing, and you'll receive any­ where from $1 to $6 credit per title Oh anything you purchase at The Wherehouse. M esa........ .....1928 S. G ilbert __ ..318 E. Brown Mesa..............1350 S. Longmore P hoenix....... ...4242 N. 51st Ave. Phoenix .....401 E; Bell Rd. Phoenix..... 3823 E . Thom as Rd. Phoenix .....3401 W, Thundeibird Phoenix ..939 W. Cam elback Rd. T e m p e ...........Broadw ay & Rural TUTORS NEVER HAD a private tutor? T ry M iracle T uto rin g . G reat rates! We also offer exciting in­ teractive, pre-test group sessionsnot boring "lectures" like our competitors. 967-2226. CO M PA C T D ISK & tapes at wholesale prices, delivered to your door. Call 483-5336. iW M S E K O tiS E PROFESSIONAL W ORD pro­ c essin g , papers, (short-long;) NEED HELP? We still have space in the following classes: MAT 106, MAT 118, MAT 119, MAT 210, QBA 221, PHY 111. Small groups, low rates. Contact Ma­ trix; Education Center ("Simon'') 968-4668 i NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE? FIN A N C IA L AID i i SCH O LA RSH IPS i GRAN TS i i i Min. 6 Non-government Sources that you qualify for, OR YOUR MONEY BACK! i i CALL: 820-9720 i Home Phone Please be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you w ish it to appear in the State Proas, including punctuation. P lease check yo u r ad the firs t day it appears-the lia b ility o f the State Press shall hot exceed the cost of the ad and credit m ay be given fo r the firs t insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify fo r m ake-goods. No refunds w ill be given, but if you need to can­ ce l your ad a cre d it w ill be held on account fo r future advertising. COMPUTER HELP available, customized solutions for home­ work and programming assign­ m ents, study a ids, tutoring. 649-8703 CAR REPAIR EL EC TR O LY SIS BY D egna Perm, results, blehd method one. Rural/Southem area 921* 1146 D j A i Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day s Hom es fo r Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Jew elry Job O pportunities Legal N otices M iscellaneous M iscellaneous fo r Sale M obile Homes Commercial 1 day $2.00 par 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. 063 062 090 084 110 097 047 035 060 . 037 M otorcycles M usic P ersonals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling R eal Estate R ental Sharing R estaurants/B ars Room s fo r Rent AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS Cer­ tification Workshop in Mesa by N at'l A erobics T raining A ssc wk/end of Oct 1. Diane 963-9415. FRENCH TUTOR: Help if you're falling behind or need extra help at any level. Albert, 731-9820. S tate P ress Classified Ad Order Form FIND IT in the Classifieds! I WANT IT NOW! INSTRUCTION D esktop P u blishing. T yping, term papers, resumes, charts, the­ sis, quick service. N ear ASU. 966-1984. Mobile mechanic, student rates, work guaranteed 836-*5398 LOOK OUT I N bachelors The­ tas will dominate SIGMA SIGMA Sigma, I'm so . psyched. Sigma Love, Terri PERSONALS' TEM PE FA M ILY G uidance. Short-term therapy. Stress, anx­ iety, depression. Ins welcome st rates. 491-2755, R. David MED. A SOFT Touch Electrolysis, per­ m anent h a ir rem oval. C areer training in electrolysis available Rural & Southern 829-7829. AXA - HBO coaches - Thanks for everything you guys are great nBd> Relays coaches are the best! FA ST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. $$ FOR COLLEGE JENNIFER: LIGHTEN up! PIKES - Dutton & Lund- 1 sur­ prise down - a few more to go Don’t be afraid o f what you don't know - Milk & cookies we're fun - Q uestions anyone? - Ltiv, Denise & Ali MASSAGE/ ROLFING The best body therapy avail. St. disc, near ASU Steve 966-1776. Scholarship financial aide serv­ ice, $89 fee. Money back guaran­ tee. 730-9087. GREAT JOB Andrew on being se­ lected to GARRP. Your bro's are proud: FOUND: MENS watch and gold military ring near SRC, Call 8290537 to identify and claim. ASU AREA typing, w/p, editing, transcrptn, W ordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime SERVICES GAMMA PHIS are ready to take on £N relays! Go G Phi B! . FREE LOST/FOUND FREE $$$$ for college! D ata base of more than 300,000 sourc­ es o f financial aid. Can locate aw ards fo r you, M oney back guarantee. Call R.C. McPherson 602-265-1758 THETAS ARE psyched to win I N relays.