«Copyright. State Press. 1993 Tempe. Arizona Tuesday, September 28,1993 An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 77 NO. 102 Law school’s in-state quota criticized New policy could curtail diversity, officials predict By J ames F rusettA S tate P ress ASU administrators are responding to a new policy enacted by the Arizona Board of Regents with fear that the boosted resident quota may limit the degree o f student diversity in ASU’s College of Law. At their meeting on Thursday, the regents approved a quota requiring the State’s law schools to admit a minimum of 75 percent residents in each first-year class. C oor TASU President Lattie Coor said he had hoped that the ratio agreed upon last semester between ABOR and the universi­ ties would continue to be used. “I prefer the 70-30 ratio that we had arrived at last semester, when the law schools and the board reached a decision,” said Coor. “It’s a fairly common practice else­ where (at other schools),” Coor said. “It’S not something that’s brand-new, and certainly not something unheard o f — GLICK lots of state law schools have these kinds o f ta rg e ts,” said Law School Dean Richard Morgan. “This changes the targets we’d already estab­ lished.” The new policy actually brings the Law School closer to the resident to non-resident ratio of ASU as a whole, Provost Milton W h at m ak es a h o u se a h om e? Third year architecture students Eddie Dom inigues and Jack Ajamian work on an upper division site model for their AD E 321 class. The model is based on a theoretical concept of what m akes a house a home and is being worked on by stu­ dents in Professor Kathy Fields’ studio. Glick said. “University wide, the Board policy is 25 percent (of students can be) out-of- state,” said Glick. Glick said the change might cause some difficulties in the admissions process. “The problem with the 25 percent number is that since we send out more acceptances to students than actually attend ASU, its very hard to stick to a number like that,” Glick said. Coor said he had some concerns that the change in the in-state ceiling might affect the diversity of the Law School. “Id o think that it is a concern — the ASU Law School has one of the best, if not the best records in the U.S., for recruiting minority students,” Coor said. “A 70-30 ratio was a better state of goals, but the Board debat­ ed the issue, listened carefully, and I think the rationale was — although I can’t know all the minds of all that voted — to bring the Law School figures into perspective.” Turn to Admissions, page 2. R eg en ts say U ofA law sch o o l co u ld ru n tig h te r sh ip B y M ark M . M acias State P ress Data released by the Arizona Board of Regents reveals that UofA could educate every resident law school student for free if the school eliminated tuition wavers for non-resident students. Student Regent Spencer Insolia told the regents at their Thursday meeting that statistics prove the university tuition waiver policy is flawed and needs to be changed. “If you look at the dollar amount of tuition waivers given to non-resident students at UofA, and you translate that into waivers for resident students we could offer a free law educa­ tion to every single resident that is currently enrolled,” Insoliasaid. “I find this to be appalling. “This, policy should be changed. If there is someone who can change this policy, we need to find him (promptly.)” Despite open criticism, many regents remained divided on the tuition waiver policy. Regent Donald Pitt said the-ABOR is not taking into account the non-resident minorities who are able to attend Arizona’s law schools because of tuition waivers. _ “We can’t look at it in that light,” Pitt said. “At ASU, you have 67 percent of all tuition waivers going to minorities. We are gaining diversity of law school students with non-resident tuition waivers. ■ “Based on the 30 percent minority enrollment (Arizona’s law schools) have, someone should come forward and say ‘We’re doing an excellent job.’” Regfent Andy Hurwitz said eliminating out-of-state tuition waivers would result in Arizona’s law schools becoming primari­ ly “Anglo schools.” “With respect to the composition of their classes — minority versus non-minority — these guys (Arizona law school deans) Turn to W aivers, page 2. A SU stu d e n ts express sk e p tic ism a b o u t n a tio n a l service Clintons program seen as unrealistic By M axwell H iggins State P ress ASU stud en ts are looking at P resident Clinton’s national service program with mixed optimism that the bill signed into law last week will provide a new solution for students strug­ gling to finance their college educations. “In theory it’s a wonderful idea and the best thing to come out of the political pipeline in a long time, but I don’t think Congress will allot I SNT AST EI PDR EES S Weather Outlook Sunny, hot with late afternoon breezes. High 102, low 73. enough funds to make it an effective program,” said Erin Dickinson, a sophomore psychology major. The in itial program , w hich C linton has likened to the Civilian Conservation Corps and Peace Corps programs introduced by previous Democratic presidents, will command a total of $1.5 billion to fund community service programs for 100,000 college students over a three-year period. Each student will work for two years at a chosen “AmeriCorps” job. In return, the student earns up to $4,725 per year to pay tuition or stu­ dent loans and $7,400 per year to cover living expenses, health care and child day care. )► KAET channel 8 asks for vol­ unteers this Wednesday to assist public schools via a “Volunteer-a-thon”. Page? )► Downtown Tempe receives an international award for its aes­ thetic beauty. Page 10 Around ASU, students reacted positively to the idea behind the plan. However, some doubt­ ed the federal government’s ability to run such a program smoothly. “It’d be good for students who get out of col­ lege and can’t pay back their loans,” said Ebony Kelly, a senior majoring in public programs. “Possible flaws would be the selection process — how they decide who gets it and who doesn’t.” “It sounds like a good plan, although, like a lot of Clinton’s plans, it’s theory,” said Craig Viquesney, a junior English major. “It’d give a lot of kids opportunities they wouldn’t have. My question is, how are these kids going to support W orld/ Nation President Clinton addresses the UN General Assembly with his first major Foreign Policy speech. Page 3 Sports ASU outside hitter Christine Gamer leads the Sun Devil volleyball team to try to improve and vie for a Pac-10 title. Page 13 themselves while they’re working? Will they give you room and board or a certain allowance each month?” “I doubt it will work the way it’s intended. People are going to find loopholes,” said Susan W hite, a freshman majoring in biology. “It appears to be a pilot program. The funds will probably be directed toward people on the east coast and Arizona students will get the shaft.” Most of those polled liked the idea of per­ form ing a service to society w hile earning money to educate themselves. “I’ve always seen society’s goal as helping Turn to Service, page 2. Where To Find It Advertiser Index .................14 Classifieds............. ......14 12 Comics........ Crossword...........................9 Horoscopes ...................... 15 Opinion......... ..... 4 Police Report......................8 Sports............................... 13 Today’s Activities ................2 World/Nation....,.................3 State P ress Tuesday, September 28,1993 A d m is s io n s T o day Continued from page 1. The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU com m unity. R equests are p rin ted according to the space available each day. Campus clubs and organizations m ay subm it W ritten entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f M atthew s Center, Room 15. Requests will not be taken aver the phone. Entries must contain the fu ll name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, time and the fu ll address o f the location. A ll requests are Subject to editing fb r content, space and clarity. Deadline fo r entries is noon the day before publication. • Counselor Training Cent«' — Counseling for ASU stu­ dents, provided by counseling and counseling psychology graduate students, supervised by faculty, Payne Hall Room 402. For more information or appointment, contact Jan, 9655067. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Daily closed meeting, noon, All Saints Catholic Newman Center, northwest comer of College Avenue and University Drive. • ASU A rt Museum — Free lunchtime talk by ASU art his­ tory professor Betsy Fahlman on “Barnyards, Peasants and the Salon: Anna Klumpke and Her Contemporaries,“ in con­ junction with an exhibition of paintings by Anna Klumpke, 12:15 p.m., ASU Art Museum, Matthews Center. • W om en’s S tu d e n t C e n te r — “Fam ily o f O rig in ’s Influence on Women’s Physical and Mental Health” by Gina M. Touch, M.S., 3:30 p.m.. Women’s Student Center, MU lower level. • Creative W riting Student Association — Fall reading series presents poet Susan Varnot and fiction writer Lou Morrison, 6:30 p.m., 125 E. Fifth St. • Re-Entry Connection — Fall Lecture Series: “Campus O rganizations and C lubs,” by P aul Biwan o f Student Services, bring own lunch, norm- 1 p.m., Adult Re-Entry, MU lower level. • Arizona Outing Club —- Weekly meeting, 7:30 p.tn„ MU Pima Room 218. • Writing Center — Seminar: How to Take Quintessential Notes. 3:40 p.m .- 4:30 p.m., Language and L iterature Building Room B138. • Students Toward Educational Progress Honor Society (STEP) — Meeting, 4:30 p.m., MU Gold South Room. • NATAS — Meeting, 5 p.m., Stauffer Hall Reading Room. • Hillel Union of Jewish Students — Lunch, 11:30 a .m .-1 p.m., 1012 S. Mill Ave. • Justice Studies Student Association (JSSA) — Meeting, 4:15 p.m., MU Room 202. B • V W • V O LV O • “We want to be a national university even as we service the needs of the Valley.” Coor said the change in admissions will take place with the admissions for the next law class. “We’re to begin working toward this as actively as possible,” said Coor. Officials said they doubted that the change would have an impact on the law school’s ranking or standing. “I think 25 percent allows the law school to continue as a first rate law school,” Click said. “The ability of the University and the Law School to create a class with different geographical back­ grounds and different perspectives enriches the learning environ­ ment for all of us. W a iv e r s Continued from page 1. do the best job in the whole university system,” Hurwitz said. Regent Art Chapa refuted Hurwitz’s remarks, saying Arizona residency status needs to be given more emphasis when deter­ mining tuition waivers. “I have to tell you, I’m not that impressed with the numbers 1 saw for how much weight (students) get for being an Arizona stu­ dent,” he said. ASU President Lattie Coor said he doesn’t favor eliminating tuition waivers for non-residents because they help bring diversi­ ty to Arizona’s law schools. “I don’t think we should make a change in the waiver policy without fully understanding its origin and its nature,” Coor said. “I’m a very strong supporter of waivers for both in-state students and for out-of-state students. I think the way in which it was developed was thoughtful, so I want to make sure that any changes are thought out.” In the 1992-93 academic year, ASU’s law school gave out 36 tuition waivers to resident students and 52 to non-resident stu­ dents. That equals $102,384 in potential funds that ASU’s law school gave to resident students and $434,200 the school gave to non-residents. But the statistics raised by Insolia may not be indicative of ASU’s situation, because ASU’s College of Law gave out 31 fewer tuition waivers than UofA this year. Service. S tu d e n t R esponse Continued from page 1. other people,” said Erica Feuerbacher, a freshman majoring in bioengineering. “I like the causes, like the Peace Corps, anyway. This is a better way of getting an education than taking out loans, because you’re giving something back to the community.” “It not only allows students to pay their debts, but it also gets needed social services done,” said Dickinson. Despite the good intentions of the national service program, some may find fault with the government funding a new $ 1.5billion program, particularly when Clinton has promised to cut back on spending. “I could probably make the same amount of money at a sum­ mer job and still go to school and become a productive member o f society earlier and not be such a burden on the taxpayers,” said White. “If. the program were privately-funded, it would probably be more effective. Government funding of things doesn’t solve any problems.” FIAT G raig V iquesney J unior , English S usan W hite Freshman , B iology I ’d definitely participate in the Program i f l was qualified, especially with the new finan­ cial aid program where they look at your income and your parents. The funds go directly toward people on the East Coast and people in A rizona w ill m ost likely get the shaft. • IS Y O U R C A R M A K IN G TH E G R A D E ? Draft Come into IM M A uto and let us show you the three R's o f auto repair. R ight Service! R ight Price! R ight Attitude! Minor Tune-up $3 9 95 Includes in stallatio n o f New Plugs. Check: Air Filter, Distributor, Cap, — Rotor,Timing, Oxygen Sensor [m u S E R V IC E V O LV O • V W 967-7805 4 3 0 S. Price Rd. o n Price — north o f U niversity • SA A B • ALFA • FIAT BSP 933 m m HJith the 55 P “ ìcce PtuwUx 'lecttm l Oickedtia TONIGHT ONLY 9-28 before 9 p.m. w /couDoriKl w e d v t e & c U it y Sefcteméen 5 frott . T icke ts ava ila b le at all **------ G e n u in e D r a f t ZIA•WHEREHOUSE TOWER■ROB'NSONS-t.lAV 602 784-4444 AJDEÜA GET INTO THE COLD World/Nation Tuesday, September 28,1993 S ta te P ress ■ rqund .Tizona F-16s collide; pilots unhurt GILA BEND (AP) — Two Air Force Reserve F-16 fighter jets collided Monday over southwestern Arizona and one subse­ quently crashed, but both pilots escaped injury, a military spokesman said. The je ts collided over the Barry M. G oldw ater Range near G ila Bend about 12:30 p.ro. during a routine training mis­ sion, said Master Sgt. Chris Hunkel of the 58th Fighter Wing at Luke Air Force Base new Phoenix. Both planes were part of the Reserve's 944th F ighter Group assigned to Luke, Hunkel said. One of the planes landed at an Air Force auxiliary field at Gila Bend and the other crashed about 40 miles southwest of Gila Bend after die pilot ejected safely, Hunkél - said. G ila Bend is 51 miles southwest of ; Phoenix. H unkel would not say if either pilot needed medical attention. He said no other details of the collision were immediately ¡mown. Identities of the pilots were not immedi­ ately released. A board of officers will investigate the crash, Hunkel said. 11th “killer bee” swarm found PHOENIX (AP) — A swarm of “killer bees” has been found 54 miles south of here near Arizona City, officials said. This is the 11th swarm of the highly aggressive Africanized bees discovered in the sta te , A rizona D epartm ent o f Agriculture officials said Monday. The swarm was collected Aug. 31. It's unknown if this is a pioneer swarm migrating north or an isolated swarm that came into Arizona on a train or vehicle, officials said. The Agriculture Department is setting ; up 60 additional traps near Arizona City to determine whether more Africanized bees w e in the wea. K iller bees are blamed for about 150 deaths since their accidental release in Brazil 36 years ago. They tend to sting in greater number and with less provocation than domestic bees. Killer bees arrived in Arizona one year earlier than predicted. Texas is the only other state where they’ve been identified. ,■ Teen convicted o f murder in December carjacking murder TUCSON (AP) — A 17-yew-old youth who allegedly didn't have the heart to kill a woman was convicted Monday of shooting herduring a carjacking. Levi Jackson could face the death penal­ ty when he’s sentenced Dec. 7 — exactly one year after Patricia Baeuerlen was killed. During the Pima County Superior Cotut tria l, Ja c k so n ’s law yer, D an C ooper, claimed Jackson confessed to the slaying to get attention but actually wasn’t involved. "Levi Jackson was a troubled, immature, distutbed 16-year-old braggart who would d o anything fo r attention,” Cooper told ju ta s . They w eren ’t convinced, finding Jackson guilty of armed robbery and kid­ napping as well as first-degree murder. M ine accident probe continues TUCSON (AP) — A preliminary report is expected in about a month on an accident in which four miners were crushed to death Aug. lift at Magma Copper Co.’s underpou n d mine new Superior, a state official says. The investigation has included use o f a remote-control camera in areas of the 6-by8-foot-wide, 400-foot-long ore chute where the accident occurred and which remains unsafe fo r hum ans, said Fran Franklin, administrative assistant for the State Mine Inspector’s Office. ■ The camera was M ilt and operated by Magma personnel, she said in an interview published Monday by the Tucson Citizen. The video evidence is being reviewed by state and federal investigative teams trying to determine the accident’s cause, she said. Pag Clinton: UN m ust lim it missions UNITED NATIONS (AP) — President Clinton told the United Nations Monday the American people will support sending U.S. troops to keep peace around the world only if new missions are sharply limited. “The United N ations m ust know when to say ‘n o,’” he declared. Noting that he is the first president bom after creation of the organization. Clinton insisted on new rules for "new times” as he outlined his for­ eign policy views with a mixture of caution and high purpose. Clinton is prepared to send as many as 25,000 American troops to Bosnia if peace terms can be worked out, and he defended keeping 4,700 U.S. peacekeepers in Somalia. But he told the repre­ sentatives of more than 180 nations that the U.N. must limit its involvement in international fight­ ing, beginning “by bringing the rigors of military and political analysis to every U.N. peace mis­ sion.” •He also proposed a network of nuclear arms restraints, including a worldwide ban on stock­ piling of weapons-grade uranium. And yet he hinted he might abandon his three-month old ban on underground weapons blasts if China resumed its testing program. At a news conference later with Japanese Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa, Clinton said the United States sent peacekeepers to Somalia in December “with our eyes open” but “may have underestimated” the difficulty of restoring political stability. “1 still believe President Bush made the right decision,” he said He also listed conditions for deploying American forces to a NATO peacekeeping unit in Bosnia. “I would want a clear understanding of what the command and control was and I would want the NATO commander in charge of the opera­ tions," Clinton said. "I would want a clear timetable for first review and ultimately for the right to terminate American involvement.” Clinton said there would have to be “a clear political strategy” for the peacekeeping mission, and the deployment would have to be endorsed by Congress. “We would have to know what our financial > Turn to Clinton, page 6. President Clinton addresses the 48“ sessio n of the United Nations General Assem bly Monday. In his first major Foreign Policy speech, Clinton asked the U.N. to limit sharply new m issions of peace keeping and problem solving. Golan unpopular home for Israelis KATZR1N. Occupied Golan Heights (AP) — Nona Sadot left a career as an accountant to open a perfumery called “Dreams” in this Golan Heights town. . " Now that she — like many of the 12,000 Jewish settlers in the Golan — sees the return of the territory to Syria as inevitable, she is abandoning the scent of “Dreams” to move back to Israel. Few settlers disagreed that Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was moving closer to compromise with Syria after his agreement with the PLO earlier this month. But some were digging in. “I won’t move,” said housewife Ramona Bar-Lev...; The 556-square-mile territory, captured from Syria in the 1967 Mideast war, was once considered sacrosanct to Israelis. They saw the heights’ van­ tage, used by the Syrians to shell Israel’s northern towns prior to 1967, as crucial to security. ", Countless memorials to fallen soldiers in the 1967 and 1973 wars dot the landscape, giving the Golan a deep emotional resonance for Israelis. It is also home to 12,000 Druse, the remnants of the 100,000 Syrians who lived in the Golan Heights before 1967. Sadot, 35, is concerned more for future generations than past and is ready to move. : . * “Peace is worth anything. I have two young sons, 9 and 11,” she said, their future compulsory military service understood. “I don’t want to be a mourning mother.” The 1991 Gulf War, during which Iraq shelled central Israel with nearly 40 Scud missiles, convinced many Israelis that, with modem weapons sys­ tems, territory was not the buffer it once was. Some already are lobbying for favorable terms of departure — such as government compensation. “The best evacuation possible” is the slogan for garage owner Shmuel Nahmani’s single-issue campaign for local council elections on Nov. 2. “If we have to go, we have to go,” he said. Udi Margalit, of the Committee of Golan Settlements, is not ready to accept a deal with Syria. “They want it all,” he said. Golan settlers, unlike their counterparts in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, are for the most part not passionate ideologues. Rabin was the top vote-getter in the Golan, and even hard-liners such as Margalit say their claim to the land is not based on the Bible. N ation al h e r o o r sp o ile d brat? Book says Schwarzkopf’s tantrums, pretensions almost got him fired W hen B usft w as asked a b W tth e air WASHINGTON (AF)[— Gen. HL Norman ited bunker, w h erein itiativ e wifberedi a a |g Schwarzkopfs towering rages and imperial even senior generals hesitated to bring Itidpj [attacks, he' sai|£:[ ^ e ’rë,not in the business of pretensions prompted Defense Secretary Dick unpleasant tidings,” according to the book. ^ A tkinson w rqie th at n o tw ith s ta n d in g Cheney to consider replacing him as comman­ ¡J A B ^ s o n j b ^ a ^ 0 % GbMfi Powell, der of allied forces in the Persian G ulf War, denials by President Bush, U.S. airw ar plan-if ||h a ^ É « i [ o f 't h t ; Jo in t C hiefs o f jStaff as ners had Saddam Hussein as a prime target. according to a new book. H e called k illin g the ir a q f le a d e r “at% Schwarzkopf s protector in Washington, The hot*, “Crusade,” by Washington Post d escrib ed as aw are, o f rep o rter Rick A tkinson, d escrib es unstated war aim i - ntore aspiration than fb fg p C heney Schwarzkopf s “reputation as â volgtile man Schwarzkopf as publicly and loudly upbraid­ Oit Aug. 8, ing his staff, including fellow generals. who berated his subordinates and was, as the “Obliquely or directly, he had threatened to .. ‘Saddam’ at th e to p c # th e h ta tg e tl^ ? ’ secretary drÿîjf observed, ‘something o f a ' , He « M e that among more than 400 sorties relieve or court-martiaiUs senior ground com» screamer.*” :**" .* ?•» '. ? 1 ijfiP w P p fc mander, his naval commander, his air Com­ against Iraq’s command authority “bombers The defense secretary was particularly dis­ manders and both Army corps commanders,” attacked fite presidential palaces in Baghdad, 8 ¡ ' com m and com plex ' at*d bun ker at Abu ; turbed during a 15-hour flight to Saudi Arabia wrote Atkinson. “His headquarters, swept wi& bis verbal Ghurayb west of the capital, his summer home when he saw a major standing in a long line to grapeshot month after month, became a dispir­ [use Opinion Page 4 State Press Tuesday, September 28> 1993 It’s nò joke In a surprising move at last week’s regent meeting, student Regent Spencer Insolia said that if all non-resident tuition waivers for law school students were eliminated at UofA, in­ state students would have a free ride. Insolia said the waiver policy i$ flawed and needs to be re-thought. It was a bold move by the student regent. Some regents agreed with Insolia’s view, saying that the waivers are a bad idea when in­ state students may have to forgo a law degree from UofA or ASU simply because they can’t afford it. As should be expected, there was vocal opposition to rem oving the out-of-state waivers. Regent Don Pitt said the waivers are an indispensible tool and have a significant impact on diversity. Pitt said ASU has 67 per­ cent of all tuition waivers going to minorities. Regent Andy Hurwitz said if out-of-state tuition waivers were eliminated in favor of in­ state students, Arizona’s law schools would become “Anglo schools.’’ We can only assume he meant “more Anglo” than they already are. All the free-flowing hot air from Insolia and supporters may have been made without much thought for what the impetus of the waiver policy is and what the waiver policy does for the state’s two law schools. But response from supporters of the waiver policy leave little explained. The point is this: This year’s waivers for out-of-state students at ASU’s law school alone cost $434,200 for 52 waivers. In-state law students got 36 waivers at a cost of $102,384. Quite a disparity when you consider who is footing the bill — Arizona taxpayers and the rest of ASU’s tuition-paying population who are denied spots in classes, etc. And you can include all those faculty members who get more and more steamed every year that goes by without a pay raise. We all pay in some way or another. As a matter of fact, when it comes right down to it, it seems like a very bad joke. The regents, as Insolia said, do need to rethink the policy or at least attempt to explain what kind of good comes from the policy when so much else on Arizona’s campuses is being axed. Explain it to those law students who were denied waivers and tell them with a straight. face how the system works. Tell a biology stu­ dent who can’t get into her classes. Ad infini­ tum. And if they accept it without the bile rising in their throats, then the policy is OK. Unsigned editorials reflect the Views o f the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members, They do not reflect the opinion of tjie State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: S. Talbott Smith E d ito r Jason Owsley M anagin g E d ito r bTAFF STATE PRESS Ken Brown O pinion E d ito r Women’s problems not a result of feminism, but society at large Last week a colleague said to me, J e s s ic a K l in g e r “You women have gone too far.” C o lu m n is t Not sure why this comment was directed at me, I thought, “What an ignorant statement because that com­ ment is assuming that all women think and act the same way simply because of their sex.” The last time I checked, many dif­ ferent women had different opinions, values, morals etc. That is why there are many different types of feminism because many women have different wants and needs. But, apparently this person is not the only one feeling this way about women and the women’s movement. According to a nationwide Gallup poll of 1,065 adults, pub­ lished in last weeks Tribune, 48 percent of women and 41 percent of men think that the women's movement has made women’s lives harder. Also, 60 percent of women and 47 percent of men say that the movement has made men’s lives harder. In the same survey, 45 percent of women say it is better for society if, “the man is the achiever outside of the home, and the woman takes care of the home and family.” Forty percent of men agree. That is not all. Fifty-nine percent of men and 53 percent of women disagree with the statement that husbands should work and wives should stay home. It is not the women’s movement that has made lives harder, it is the economy. As changes in society occur, people must acclimate to the alterations in their society. With changes in society, people must change and adjust. It is not easy being a single mother or father or when both parents need to work in order to provide for the family and home. But, given current the economy, that is what some families must do in order to survive. Therefore, because of the recession, more women have had to work in order to support themselves and their families. The reces­ sion is obviously not a result of the women’s movement. Women’s opportunities have only improved outside of the home as a result of the women’s movement, not decreased. Secondly, the culture with regards to inside the home has not changed too much. Though men are doing more of the housework, it still remains the woman who does the majority. Just look at th,e media, the house cleaning products and other items on commer­ cials are directed towards the women. Because of hard economic times, women have become frus­ trated with the fact that they are probably working two jobs, one at their place of employment and one at home. Again, nothing to do with the women’s movement. Another problem that does not necessarily help either sex is the no-fault divorce laws. Anyone can get divorced for any rea­ son. Therefore, because some divorce is bitter and results in loss of custody and money, it may cause backlash from both sexes. The laws also were not the result of the women’s movement. The Reagan-Bush administration did not help the conditions for women and children by cutting funding on social programs that directly affected women and children. The Reagan-Bush administration did anything but help the women’s movement. In fact, the cuts in funding hurt women and children. Now the United States ranks 11th as compared to other industrialized nations in child heath. Also, rape, wife battering and child abuse has increased within society. It’s no wonder women are unhappy. This abuse is what the women’s movement is fighting against. Therefore you cannot blame the women’s movement for what men, who are doing the attacking, are doing to women. Another idea that the media likes to portray is that men are under siege. In other words, anything that men do can be taken the wrong way and can be used against them. The reality is that women are finally expressing discomfort with how they are treated in the workforce and elsewhere in order to make the environment that they occupy less hostile. , In response to the poll is that women are unhappy with the cur­ rent problems that they face and feminists are trying to solve the dilemmas that are placed upon them. But the women’s movement is not the cause of the problems, as the media portray it to be, it’s part of finding solutions to better women. And in response to the comment, women have not gone far enough because they are still being harmed by today’s society. Jessica Klinger is a senior journalism and women’s studies major. Her column appears on Tuesdays. S. TALBOTT SMITH, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor SPO R T S R E P O R T E R S : Scott D avis, Paul M atthews, JAKE BATSELL.. ••-CSty Editor Shaun Rachau. 1 TAMMY MESA-SIERRA..........*....... .......Asst. City Editor C O PY E D IT O R S : Dave Proffitt, Jerem y Stein, N ick ANGELA BENOCHE...!... ^...,..,....... News Editor KEN BROWN.. ........... ........................... ...Opinion Editor Bacon. BOB CASTLE....;..;..!................ „...¿.....«.......PhotoEditor CARTOONIST: Bryce Morgan, George O ’Connor, Mateo Willis BRIAN FITZGERALD.......................... Asst.Photo Editor PHOTOGRAPHERS: Brian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, MICHAEL BRANOM........................................Sports Editor Craig Macnaughton, Louis A. Porter. JULIE REUVERS.!*.......................... Asst.Sports Editor COLUMNISTS: Alan Holcomb, Michael Kantor, Jessica KRIS FRIDRICH................................................... Copy Chief Klinger, David Straw, Wade Swanson. TROY FUSS......!...—;...... ......... Magazine Editor PRODUCTION: Jodi Goldblatt, Amie Madden, Britton JANE COOK........................ ...............Asst. Magazine Editor Mauchline, Dawn Reisinger, Skip Schrader, John Tracey, R E PO R T E R S: James Frusetta, Garin G roff, M axwell Anna Ulinich, Evonne Vera, Dave Weber. Higgins, Melanie Selcho, Greg Sexton, John Guzzon, Mark SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Kelly Adcock, Mike Aim, Macias, Joy Beason. 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 the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature.. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on die ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Sta te P r ess Ph o ne N um bers Information............... 965-7572 Newsroom ......... ...... 965-2292 M agazine............. ,....965-1695 A dvertising...............965-6555 C lassifieds..................965-6731 Opinion STATE P ress _____ Tuesday, September 28,1993 . . Still m ore gripes from an g ry fans, people-w atchers Kantors affirmative action column belies his inherent racism The State Press welcomes and encourages written response fro® our readers on any topic. AD letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your fell name, clast standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. O nly signed letters will be considered for publication. Requests for anonymity wilt be granted only wife an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by fee opfeionpage editor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors wiB be rejected. All tenets must either be bruugtt in person with a photo II). to fee State Press front desk in the basement of fee Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, IS Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Terope Arte., 852871502 I , J ' BOO - to the State Press for printing Michael K antor’s supremist view'of affirmative action in Friday’s column. Kantor, by neglecting to include necessary background information on education in America, made blacks out to be stupid clowns who make it.to college based on their color, NOT their academic histo­ ry. He even has the gall to infer the need for affirmative action implies “certain minorities” are inferior. If Kantor had performed Press needs to locate their spine and take a definite stand on any in-depth research, he would have found the only inferiority minority issues! between minorities and whites is in the quality of education offered to them. I come from a poor, predominantly black neigh­ Tamika Hargrove borhood in Cleveland, Ohio. I attended an honors only junior high Freshman, Business Management school there. After migrating to the lily-white state of Arizona, my grades; fell. Why? Because the same things we were studying as ADVANCED 7th Graders in the poor, minority black schools, average 5th graders were studying here. Where Kantor finds the similarity between Jantes Hamm and affirmative action escapes me? Hamm committed a crime, went to prison and is now free of his debt to society. America has also committed a crime. Its crime being forbidding blacks to the right How do I begin to explain the excitement and encouragement to an education for 300 years! And unlike Hamm, America has yet to pay blacks in full for this atrocity. How Kantor thinks 40 or so I’ve received from a couple of your recent opinion editorials? years of affirmative action can equal 300 years of government Wade Swanson, a fellow student who sticks out like a Sore thumb enforced illiteracy and ignorance upon an entire race is preposter­ in the paper, has spoken with dignity, wisdom, and down right ous! I figure we still have 260 years of this so called "preferential good ol’ American stubbornness. Last week he stood stiff against our new surgeon general’s ide­ treatment” to go. He then goes on to say “Affirmative action programs are com­ als of complete freedom of sex. Dr. Elders has been strongly pletely unconcerned with giving preference to those who have attempting to get condoms distributed in the nation’s kindergarten suffered actual adversity. What was slavery? A job? What was classes on up. Yes, kindergarten! Has all reason escaped Elders? segregation? A social choice? Excuse me, take the White cone off If this is the path for our children then let’s go ahead and supply your head and look at a history book sometime! Blacks have suf­ the motel rooms and post-sex cigarettes to complete the process of fered mote actual adversity than the amount of any other minority, teaching them that anything is fair game. There isn’t right from squared! And contrary to popular belief, not all blacks are at ASU •wrong — rather whatever seems to feel good. This week, he did it again. In the battle o f pornography, because of affirmative action policies. I am a black, 19-year-old freshman.’' I receive no scholarships or financial aid. I pay my Swanson stood with the unpopular minority. He refused to yield tuition by running a business and working full time at another job. to the concept that posing naked is alright. The focus, of course, is So please, céáse with the “poor white boy” routine and tell him to this year’s Playboy and the ASU women in it. They say it’s a “good experience” and that nobody gets hurt. What 1 want to work for his education like I do! Affirmative action is a necessary policy in our society, know is what happens when dad gets this issue, and he probably It balances out the difference between black and white education will if his daughter is so inclined to be so open, and sees his by offering blaeks an opportunity they might not receive Other­ daughter exposing herself to the world? Will he take it to the wise. NOT because of lack of intelligence, but because of the poor office to show with pride or wiil he fall on his face with shame? education provided for them by inner-city public schools. It also Think about it. integrates minorities into schools and businesses where usually we I thank Wade Swanson and the State Press for being a well round­ ed publication. I look forward to many more stiff-necked articles. * would be ostracized. Not only has the State Press disappointed me by even printing th'is racist fallacy, but it had the nerve to print it next to a repri­ Kyle Johnson mand to AT&T for depicting African as monkeys! The State Senior, Mechanical Engineering Swanson provides refreshing change G ripes C olum n III, R elax, M É X E O f iP K O there’s only one more to go. “Doctors whose first act is to C h ic a g o weigh you when you come in with a broken toe.” ÙÊÉBKÊÈÈ Ï ' “People that don’t have any . children of.their own but feel compelled to tell you how you should raise yours.” “An empty mailbox.” “When 1 accidentally start singing the Barney song out loud in public.” “Journalists such as Robert Novak and George W ill who constantly criticize President Clinton but have neither the brains or the guts to offer possi­ ble solutions.” “I dislike having people change the entire meanings of famous quotations by saying that ‘money is the root of all evil’ and ‘ignorance is bliss’ when they should say, ‘the love of money is the root of all evil’ and ‘when ignorance is bliss, ‘tis folly to be wise:”’ “Rock music critics. For the most part, they’re a bunch of burned-out, aging hippies who are completely out of touch with the music and with rock fans as well.” “New-age-isms like, T m perfect exactly as 1 am,’ and ‘You create your own reality’ and ‘You’re exactly where you’re supposed to be.’ Translation: ‘Hooray for me. And if you have a problem, it’s your fault.’” “Rappers who say their vicious, trashy lyrics are just ‘repotting on the truth.’ Child molesting, the KKK and sca­ bies are also ‘truth,’ but no one’s glorifying them.” “These d— feminine movements. Stay home and take care of your kids.” “What would the media do without the words ‘basically’ and ‘meanwhile’?” “I wish these doves turned hawks would go to Bosnia and fight for their beliefs and quit trying to send my kids and your kids to fight there.” “Speaking as an Indiana driver, I’d like to share my gripe: speeders. Anybody can speed. All it takes is a big foot and a little brain.” “People who say ‘he goes’ or ‘she goes’ when they mean ‘he said’ or ‘she said.’” “Why do those stupid parents take their babies to the ball park? Don’t they know the baby could get hit with a ball or a bat flying in the stands?” “People who spout off their political opinions but do not 1) vote, or 2) avail themselves of all, or even some, of the facts which might possibly be learned by listening to an occasional news broadcast or picking up a newspaper every now and again. ‘Duh, who’s Hillary Clinton?”’ “People who complain about the way older people drive, yet do not consider that they, themselves, will one day be in that boat.” “The check-out lady who seems to hold me personally responsible for the fact that something I’ve purchased will not ‘read’ on the scanner. She’ll keep running it across the scanner with a more disgusted look every time it fails to register.” » - ' “It gripes my butt no end to see grown men sitting in an eating place with their caps or hats on. One of the basic lessons I learned in good manners when I was growing up was to remove my cap when I sat down to eat, no matter whether it be in a fast food place or a more expensive restaurant. When I see men wearing their caps or hats while eating in a public place I automatically label them, in my mind, as being dumb.” “People who cough or sneeze into their hand and then reach to shake yours.” “People who drive around with a ‘Honk if you love Jesus’ bumper sticker, and then when you honk, they shoot you the finger.” Everwanted to be the editor o f these Opinion pages? ^ Now may be your chance. The State Press is now accepting applications for | Opinion Editor at 15 Matthews Center, north base­ ment. Journalism and page layout experience a plus. Page 6 State P ress Tuesday, September 28,1993 Texas senator indicted on misconduct charges AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —- Just 16 weeks after her election to the U.S. Senate, Kay Bailey Hutchison was indicted Monday on charges of misconduct during her 2 1/2 years as state trea­ surer, Mrs. Hutchison, a Republican, was accused alo n g w ith two aides of using her treasurer office for personal and political use and destroy­ ing records as part of a coverup. She denied any wrongdoing and called the charges the product of a politically motivated investigation by Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle, a Democrat. “I will win in the end," the senator said. “I think the citizens of Texas see through this. ... They see that this is sleazy politics.” Mrs. Hutchison became the second U.S. sen­ ator under indictment. Sen. Dave Durenberger, a Minnesota Republican, faces federal trial in January on charges he illegally claimed reim­ bursement from the Senate for a Minneapolis condominium he secretly owned. He announced less than two weeks ago that he wouldn't see reelection to a fourth term next year. Mrs. Hutchison is the 10th sitting U.S. sena­ tor ever indicted. Mrs. H utchison, 50, defeated appointed Democratic Sen. Bob Krueger in a June 5 spe­ cial election for U.S. Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen's former seat. The victory made her Texas' first woman senator. Days later, a grand jury began looking into misconduct allegations. The five-count indictment accuses her of using state employees, facilities, equipment and supplies for “her personal b enefit” and of destroying computer records from the treasury. Also indicted were Michael Barron, former deputy state treasurer, and David Criss, the agency's planning director, Barron was charged with official miscon­ duct, tampering with governmental records and tampering with physical evidence. Criss was charged with official misconduct. Mrs. Hutchison is allowed to remain in the Senate while she fights the charges. Texas GOP executive director Karen Hughes called the charges politically motivated. “I am sickened but franidy not surprised that a grand jury made up of Democrat primary vot­ ers is trying to win through the judicial process what they were unable to win in the last elec­ tion.” she said. “This is a new low for partisan double standards in state government.” In a statement he read in court, the grand jury’s foreman. Saadi Ferris, said that “the grand jury has deliberated on each and every occasion with independence of politics and political per­ suasion.” Ferris is a Republican former candi­ date for sheriff in Travis County. Earle’s office raided the treasury June 10 and issued more than a dozen subpoenas for current and former agency wofkers. More than 30 for­ mer treasury aides and Hutchison campaign operatives went before the grand jury. Earle said the investigation began when he received information that crucial evidence was being destroyed at the treasury. Mrs. Hutchison has said that because she would be at the top of the State’s Republican ticket in 1994, Democrats were stooping to the lowest level to keep her from leading a strong GOP showing next fall. ' Earle said Mrs. Hutchison’s claims that his office was leading a partisan attack was a stan­ dard rebuttal from a public official under inves­ tigation. “Every one of them says it’s political, C lin to n Continued from page 3. “ responsibilities are,” the president said. “Then we would have to know that others would do their part as well.” Elaborating on his speech, Clinton said none of the current peacekeeping missions was “ill founded" but that "there are limits to what we can do” in the future. “I want to see us go into these things with our eyes open," he said. Clinton, in proposing curbs on mushrooming international peacekeeping ventures — there are now 17 involving 80,(XX) troops — appeared to be looking for a practical way out of a growing dispute with members of Congress who are questioning American intervention in foreign conflicts. “The United Nations simply cannot become engaged in every one of the world’s conflicts,” Clinton said. Still, he said, the U.N. must have “the techni­ cal means to run a modem world-class peace­ keeping operation." And he pledged that the United States intended to “remain engaged and to lead” in post-Cold War world affairs. He offered to pay within the next few weeks a $4(K) million U.S. debt for peacekeeping, but he also said the United States was paying too heavy a load. A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the idea was to scale back from 30.4 percent to 25 percent and have Germany and Japan, among others, make up the difference. Clinton said the United Nations must “weed out waste” and he suggested the appointment of an inspector general to investigate any abuses. The more than 1.000 delegates who listened in the cavernous General Assembly hall gave the speech restrained applause. During the day, Clinton crossed New York’s First Avenue several times between the U.N. and the U.S. Mission, causing street closures that stretched 14 blocks and tied up traffic. Inside the U.N., he reminded the delegates that 32 years ago President Kennedy had warned that humanity lived under a nuclear sword of Damocles. “We have begun to see the doomsday weapon of nuclear annihilation dismantled and destroyed,” Clinton said. But while lining up with his predecessors in paying homage to the United Nations, Clinton also declared: “If the American people are to say ‘yes’ to U.N. peacekeeping, the United Nations must know when to say ‘no.”’ In Washington, Senate Republican leader Bob Dole of Kansas said Clinton’s speech failed to address the increasing gap between U.S. interests and U.N. operations. Specifically, Clinton did not spell out what U.S. interests are in the operation in Somalia, Dole said. Auociatad P m t Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, show n here in a file photo, w as indicted Monday along with two former aides on charges of m isconduct during her tenure as Texas state treasurer. a picture is worth 1,000 words... and a prize. The Sun Devit Spark yeafbook s t a f f invites all A S U students to enter in the 1 9 9 3 -9 4 Photography Competition. If we d o n 't h a v e it, we'll g e t it for you. •Hardware •Housewares •Phone & TV Cable »Lumber «Paint •Plumbing Supplies •Tools «Balsa Wood •Model-making Supplies »Plus Special Orders Apache Broadway Rural bi™* EySLa [humhouM I W Record* Color or black-and-white entries must be received by November 19 a t 5 p.m. Photos should center on the theme, " O N T H E O U T S ID E , L O O K IN G I N / All winning entries will be featured in the Gallery section. Prizes will be announced on Pec.ember 1. Entry form s are available a t 968*4544 the 5park office, located in the basement of M atthews Center, room 5G. For more information, please contact 9 2 9 E. Broadway Tempe Tim Gibbons, Gallery Editor, a t 965-6<3S>1. M -F 7:30a.m . • 8p.m. Sat. 8a.m. - 7p.m. Sun. 9a.m. - 5p.m. (S.E. Cornar of Rural A Broadway) State Press Pa»e 7 Tuesday, September 28, 1993 TCAF.T ‘looking for a few good men’ and women Telethon to provide volunteers for Arizona public schools By M e l a n ie K. S e l c h o S t a t e P ress Nearly 50 Arizona school districts will be supplied with vol­ unteers Wednesday night when KAET Channel 8 broadcasts a three-hour “volunteerathon." Patti Jay Anderson, manager of creative services for Channel 8. said instead of asking viewers to call and pledge their money, the 7 p.m. program will encourage donations of time. “We are the educational television station and we were look­ ing to do.something fof the educational system," she said. The volunteerathon began after KAET sent questionnaires to the school districts in northern and central Arizona asking what help they needed from the station and received a “very loud cry” for help recruiting volunteers, Anderson said, “We didn't invent this, we kind of copied it from Maryland,” she said. “Theirs encompasses more than educational work, but we've limited ours to public schools because we’ve found the demand was so great.” Anderson said the volunteerathon, now in its second year, gen­ erated 125,000 hours of service last year and hopes to increase to 200,000 hours of volunteering this year. The volunteers can do a number of things from monitoring playgrounds fr> bilingual tutoring, she said. “What we want to get across is that you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to volunteer at a school,” she said. “Some people are a little leery —- they think they’re not qualified to volunteer, but that’s not the case.” The telethon is hoping for more University support front stu­ dents this year, Anderson said. “I want to encourage the ASU community to volunteer — we're 40.000 strong,” she said. Susan Carlson, Community liaison specialist and volunteer coordinator for Mesa Unified School District, said the volun­ teerathon was essential to Mesa schools last year. “The volunteerathon generated 75 to 80 responses for Mesa schools which I think is excellent,” she said. “We always recruit volunteers, this has not replaced that, but it’s a nice addition,” Carlson said the volunteers, which included many ASU stu­ dents, spend time with students who need additional help to grasp the materials. “Most folks who called in wanted to work with students who need additional time and personal attention to learn the material,” she said. “The impact on the student is that there is one more meaningful other Who cares about him or her.” The volunteers also help teachers by relieving a lot of anxiety from needing to spend a lot of one on one time with students. The volunteers can also do some grading or copying to enable teachers to spend more time with students. Carlson said volunteers are screened by checking three charac­ ter references to ensure the safety of die students. S i ate P ress P olice Reports T o o b iz a rre to b e a n y th in g b u t re a i. T he World Beer T our M E X IC A N F O O D Serving Lunch and D inner 7 Days a Week Enjoy 115of tho World’s Moot Distinctive Brews Spice up your life with: - T raditional So n o ra n Style M e x ic a n Food - N e w V egetarian Sele ctio ns - D a ily Sp e c ia ls - H a p p y H o u r Buffet f/iU G H T DATE SCENE $ LOCATION FREE DINNER 25 Draft Beers 90 Boms Beers a»—*— $ With p urchase of equal or g reater value. Not good with any other offer o r discount. \ L T em pe location only. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 10-4-93.. OPEN AUDITIONS fSÉBÉBi celebrating ”30 yiARi "o f b r in g in g for Bud Light Com m ercials FINE MEXICAN FOOD AND FRIENDS TOGETHER Tonight 9-11 p.m. 830 W. Broadway Tam pa 960 W. UNIVERSITY - 966-0852 The BUD LIGHT FILM CREW will be AUDITIONING for Bud Light Commercials IN TERESTIN G! tonight at the TIM E ZO N E from 9-11 pm r ■ ■ T .. ' /./ Tv- 2 2 -0 7 » b o t t l e s RI D Uin U Ü o c RUH d u i / LffìHT L iv irii till 11 p .m . ÉpPJ Well, Wine & Draft $1 * Well, W ine & Draft A L L N IG H T stim ulating, pixwocative, appealing, thought-ìnspìrì tantalizing, alluring, exdti fascinating, riveting, spicy engrossing, absorbing, con arresting, captivating, eng ENTRIES: sx MB.S r ssH 'e w S a wM zS S É & s. 34th Street & M cDowell Easy Access off the 202 231-0123 A .S.U . Student , O w ned and O perated IÓITBD A t Yo u r C o l l e g e B o o k s t o r e ! PH arperR eferençe Alio available from H 4UÙ, r State P ress Tuesday, September 28,1993 P ag e 8 State P r e s s P olice R eport ASUpolice reported the following incidents Monday: • An ASU student reported to ASU DPS Friday that a spandrel panel was damaged in the Physical Sciences E-wing. The damage is estimated at $600. • A student had her license plate stolen from her vehicle Friday while it was parked in Structure Five. • The Cushman cart which was stolen last week was found Friday on the south side of thè footbridge by an ASU employee, • An “Ana Company” candy machine was stolen front the lobby in the Palo Vérde East Residence Hail Friday. • Two Manzanita Hall residents had marijuana and other assorted drug paraphernalia confiscated from their room Friday night. • A Cholla Hall resident was arrested in his room Saturday for possession of marijuana. • The fire alarm was set off by a firecracker at the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house. 701 E. Alpha Drive Saturday. • Two ASU students were told to leave the area of Parking Structure Four after police saw them laying on top of their car naked looking at the stars. • ASU police charged nine juveniles for possession of alcohol ; over the weekend. Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: • A Tempe police officer was contacted at Fifth Street and Mil) Avenue Saturday night by a man requesting help for his girl­ friend whom he said had passed out in a van nearby. Police found the 37-year-old woman unconscious. She was transported to Tempe St. Luke's Hospital where she was pronounced dead. No visible cause of death was observed and the investigation has been turned over to the medical examiner. ?.. A "very intoxicated ' Scottsdale man was arrested Thursday after he would not stop, yelling profanities at par/k-goers and police at Kjwanis Park. When police arrived, the 37-year-old man was passed out. When police woke him up, he began yelling obscenities and told an officer he would, “kick my ass." The offi­ cer said he was going to give the man a ride rather than arrest him. but the man would jitst not stop cursing. • A 23-year-old Tempe man was arrested Thursday after he exposed his penis to three juveniles in the laundry room of the Grove Tree apartments. 806 W. Brown Street. He was arrested at the scene without incident for flashing the two 14-year-olds and the 15-year-old. ' • A 39-vear-old man was arrested on two counts of sexual abuse Friday after he fondled the breasts of a 13-year-old neigh­ borhood girl in the 1(K) block of East Duke Street. He told police he had drank seven to eight beers during the evening and that his arm may have slipped and came into contact with her breasts. He was booked into Tempe City Jail. • A 23-year-old Mesa man was arrested Friday night after he broke a glass door with his butt. The man, who police described as “intoxicated” became angry at Taco Bell, 2602 W. Southern Avenue after he was not allowed to enter the closed restaurant to see his brother. A friend attempted to restrain him and during the scuffle his rear slammed into the glass door causing it to shatter. He was charged with criminal damage. • A 19-year-old Tempe man was arrested Saturday after police saw marijuana in his apartment. Police were sent to the man’s residence in the 1000 block of East Lemon after a fight was reported. Thé man invitéd police into his apartment to discuss the brawl when they saw the marijuana in plain view. • A 37-year-old Tempe man was the victim of a burglary Thursday when someone entered his trailer in the 1300 block of South River Road and stole a chainsaw from his bedroom while he slept in another room. • Suspects unknown stole a $6000 copy machine from UniCopy. 2249 W. Fairmont Road, after breaking a window to gain entry. • Police are investigating possible child abuse after the mother of a one-year-old child noticed that her child had sustained brais­ es on his outer thigh. The mother believes the bruises were inflicted while her child was in the care of a babysitter. • Two McClintock High School students were arrested for smoking marijuana in an alley behind the school last week. The juveniles were caught by a school security guard who had been watching them for some time. • A Tempe woman was arrested for “possession o f a vapor releasing substance and inhaling it” in her home in the 4500 block of South Grandview Avenue Thursday. Police said the woman was inhaling the fumes from a spray can of battery protector and sealer. • A 19-year-old Tempe woman was arrested after stealing a One Step pregnancy test and a one ounce bottle of Vap-O-Rub from Fry’s, 2700 W. Baseline Road. • A 21-year-old Tempe man was arrested at Smith's, 3255 S. Rural Road, after he allegedly attempted to steal two bottles of Budweiser beef by sticking them down the front of his pants. • Tempe police arrested fifteen people over the weekend for driving under the influence of alcohol. Police also arrested four juveniles for possession of alcohol. Compiled by State Press police reporter John Guzzon. ANDERSON'S FIFTH The only free thing at ASU. 1ERE DO YOU GO FROM HERE? We have a suggestion: the GREyCGS Forum on Graduate Education. A sk representatives of gradu­ ate schools about their pro­ grams and obtain catalogs and application forms. I The Ritz-Carfton I 2401 ECam elback I Saturday I October 2,1993 In addition, you can attend special workshops on various graduate disdplines, finan­ cial aid, and preparing for the GRE exam. There are also workshops for minority and returning students. Registration begins at § am . Best of all, the adm ission fee is only $5, which makes the GRE Forum the smart place to go. I PHOENIX GRE For more information call (609) 951-1562. FORUMS Individuals w h o a re h earing im paired a n d w ish to re q u e st a n in te rp rete r m u s t c o n ta c t ETS a t least four w e e k s p rio r to T he F orum Sponsored by the ORE Board and the Council o f Graduate Schools. EDUCATIO NAL TESTING SERVICE, ETSk the ETS logo design and GRE are registered tradem arks of Educational la stin g Service. DON'T BE A ESTATE Tuesday, THE ORIGINAL B IS » ALTERNATIVE TUESDAY GLUB EDGE • ' Join 103.6 DJ Allison Strong CD’s & Tape Giveaways 7 5 0 D R IN K S A L L N IG H T $2 Frozen Sex On The BeaCH fcy Frozen Become a member o f Delta Kappa Fraternity! . Members of Detta Kappa Epsilon, representatives from '|p | tHQSInternational, and the ASU OKEAlumnf ij Association wil be on campus (Me Week! x H ft you're interested in making new friends, | i. cfo/rtg we// /n 5 c;/7po/, and being more involved on campus. ..Deità Kappe Eipsilon Fratamlty A ó ^ e n jh g d g l ÌS 7 0 !» d i s c o m u l e 9 A J W D f M & I Í D R A FT ALL N .» lim a s ■ 10/10 Nfootetieiaraoii, 8 pm IJjo/17 Tiny Tim ( yes, tos T m y jm ß , 8 pm . MorKl^^O /18 0 anH icks& the Acoustic Warriors, 8 pm Fifth Avenue, SCcjtedqle 994-4168 ì cometo our orientation R Page 9 Tuesday, September 28, 1993 S tate P ress E S I D E N C 2 2 -y e a r-o ld m o to r is t k ille d a f te r a r g u m e n t Y Every Wed, & Thurs. 2-3 p.m . Student Services Amphitheater Residency Applications Available REVERENDHORTONHEAT B y J o h n G uzzon State P ress / Tempe police said Monday the shooting that claimed the life of a 22-year-old Tempe man over the weekend was the result of a vehicular argument that progressed into murder. “This (the shooting) is an argument that went out of control,” said Tempe police spokesperson Al Taylor on Monday. Taylor called the argument “heated on both sides” which aggravated the situation to its fatal outcome. "Both parties were being very aggressive and (after the inci­ dent) each one (party) was blaming each other,” Taylor said. “The victim of the shooting was actually being very aggressive.” William Hall Curtis II, 24, was arrested and charged with sec­ ond degree murder Sunday in connection with the murder of Eric Scott Voepel, 22, earlier Sunday. Curtis was arrested in his resi­ dence on West Carter Road without incident and admitted to the shooting. A .38 caliber semi-automatic handgun was seized from his home With the assistance of a search warrant. AUNPEH &INP£3£§ with spedai güests P S Y C L O N E R A N G E R S THIS THURSDAY ■ 8:30 PM SEPTEMBER 30 ■ TH E ROXY Tickets available at the At approximately 1:25 a.m. Curtis was the passenger in a white Nissan pickup truck owned and driven by Chris Jaramillo. The two men were stopped at the intersection of Priest Road and Washington Street when police said a vehicular argument began leading to Voepel and a friend breaking the driver’s side window of the pickup. Curtis pulled out his pistol, fired two warning shots at the men and told them to stop and leave them alone. The two men did not heed the warning and Curtis delivered the fatal shot to Voepel. “There were two warning shots, and then one shot at the vic­ tim (Voepel),” Taylor said. Police were able to track down Curtis after a witness got the license number to the pickup truck as it fled after the shooting, Taylor said. Voepel was pronounced dead at Scottsdale Memorial Hospital upon arrival. Curtis was the only person charged in the incident, but the investigation is continuing. WEEKLYSPECIALS Roxy and at all —L ZIA ■WHEREHQUSE TTCKeUffiT^«rrr?v>» 10WIR - ROBIKSONS-MAY t — 602/784-4444 . CROSSWORD mm 1 N S E Tl ¡N E H R U Is T A 1 N T WE E ON R US T S M c E- E E ■ BAN ME N T S AR 1S L E T N 1 E C E [e X T O L R O A N si D ils U P S L O M° ■ i ■ BU DE L E T O D0 R■ R J GO R ATO N E E L A F A7 A R R A ÿ1 S L AT E T O YE D by THOMAS JOSEPH period A CRO SS 1 Takes the 4 Try 5 —T. Firefly wheel 6 Thin cut 7 Heed 7 Thing 11 Bit of 8 Sheep gossip comment 12 Cotton 9 Shade tree bundle 10 "Certainly I" 13 Driver’s 14 Coffee annoy­ additive ances 16 Sem inar 15 Bizarre group 16 Averages 17 Make 18 Canyon am ends sound 21 Cartoonist 19 Bart Sim p­ son 's dad Groaning 22 C rocs' km 20 Make a speech 24 Numero —25 Overactor 21 Pie in­ gredient? 26 Noted 22 G uy’s Chinese date chairman 27 Tooth1 • ... 2 y ■4 ; related 29 New York 11 team 13 30 Som e 15 July births 31 Used 16 17^ to be 32 Solem n 34 Jazz gettogethers ■ 40 Writer 20 Jam es 41 Souchong 3Ô brewer 32 42 Make one's way 36 43 Cantan­ 40 kerous DOW N 1 Collection 42 2 S a ib r 3 Historic DRAFTS at half tim 23 Mayday call 25 Swiftness 28 Prepared the salad 29 Highway dividing strip 31 Mdre sagacious 33 Concern- 6 5 ing 34 Mandible 35 Longevity 36 Crew members, sexistly 37 Make ajar, in poetry 38 And not 39 Pig’s digs i I 8 *2.75 PITCHERS SOt HOT 906 $ Millar 4 Caaaiaa Draft Millar iita Z Caara Light 1HERMITCRABRACES 1 -'g ’pÎAt3 CV?J l at 9:00 PM ■Weekly Prizes! j $ £ .7 5 * B u d L ig h t Longnecks Bud Ü Bud Light S b b t ~& U / I U O ) W E O N E S D fiY S %2& C WET T-SHIRT CONTESTI $100 CflSH PRECO «PHj j ä s B S S i2 M IG H T 1 U ■ 14 J■ i i ■9 1■ Ì A U M m W y ^ 23 ^ V - - 33 ■ ■ P A Z e n ts , Z lm a s , ^ II „B a c a r d i. T a n q u e ra y J K N W G D L W G T R A V T K R T W U L0NQ ISLAND 7 J > ICEDteas 1 M A ASU APPRECIATION WEEK! M onday, Sept. 27 - Sunday, Oct.3 è' W ith sin ce re thanks to A S U Students, Faculty and S taff for the ir loyal su p p ort. $ % i TODAY: B I? Vici JO« HAPPY HOUR 'Jz m ALL DAY Si M HALF PRICED DRINKS I & * 9-28 J W E m sîs Foftaritf : ■¿4 D EAD HOT W O RKSHO P ALL *3M Fosters Oil Cant NIGHT 9PM R. $1.00MALIBURUN DAE N W D L M G T K G H J C N W M A K . - Q W NJ J T S m ir n o f f , M a lib u J FR EE K I S S E S F O R T H E LADIES! . j CRYPTOQUOTE 9-28 m k m ill 1 iô 5 » . COFFEE # PL A N T A T IO N $ f .5 0 ^ * 4 P itc h e rs Yesterday's Answer DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s h o w to w o ik ib AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW O ne letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for th e three L's, X fo r th e tw o O 's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation o f d ie words are all h ints. Each day th e code letters are different. FA MONDAY I6HT F00TBAI G K W G T 7 1 5 B Aj j A LO M e C l I N T O C K Y esterday's C ryptoquote: YOU CAN'T BE HAPPY WITH A WOMAN WHO PRONOUNCES BOTH D'S IN WEDNESDAY. — PETER DE VRIES 01M 9 by Kino Fa*»«** Syndicate. Inc. 1 S O U T H T E M P E , A Z R D .. 8 5 2 8 1 9 6 4 -1 9 1 1 \ . ê B iti A I P$ï _ J# R£&! W EDNESDAY: HALF PRICED BAKED GOODS Please show ASU Student, Faculty or Staff ID 6 .1 m Pag in State P ress Tuesday, September 28, 1993 Tempe receives Outstanding Achievement Award decay, to concept, to plans, to tangible reality.” When a citizen's committee was appointed in 1973 to work with the City on the project, the four following objectives were identified: • Preservation of “old-town character" B y J o y E . S ea so n ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I • Enhancement of a “pedestrian realm” S t a t e P ress • Attraction of shoppers with convenience and safety The In ternational Downtown • Encouragement of diverse uses throughout the downtown A ssociation (ID A ) has recognized j | area. Tempe's downtown area by awarding the Council members said that the objectives presented 20 years city its highest national award. ago are still being met. The Washington D.C.-based associa“We are m eeting them (th e o b je ctiv es),” said Tem pe tion presented its annual O utstanding T A Councilwoman Carol Smith. “The downtown is not finished; we A chievem ent Award to M ayor Harry meed more housing in the downtown, among other things.” She M itchell at last w eek's convention in said she is pleased with the award, but added that the downtown Richmond. Va. is not finished. Tempe's downtown revitalization proM uC H ELL “I was pretty excited that we were recognized by an interna­ ject competed against the rest of the nation ' tional organization — an association of downtown professionals as well as Canada and abroad. The appli­ cation from the IDA asks for a description of the city’s concept, who know what is going on and how everything works,” Smith project participants and the funding and impact the project has said. Downtown merchants said they are pleased that Tempe was had on the community. A report from the IDA. an association of development and being recognized because of its extensive work on the project. “I think it is good because this award is from their peer management professionals "dedicated to urban revitalization at the local level,” said that Tempe’s downtown redevelopment group,” said Frank M acGuire, director of the Mill Avenue efforts afe "an excellent example of a downtown area that has Merchants Association. “It is excellent that Tempe has finally been recognized as one been revitalized through, public/private partnership and extensive community participation and today represents an evolution from of the finest downtowns in the nation.” In tern atio n al organization shows appreciation for 20-year project Mlilatrix’ H A IR C U T S ESSEN TIA LS M EN & W O M EN (NEW C LIE N T S) PERU* FOR A CHANGE Bored with your hoir style? W ant a change? Soft W aves? Bouncing body? O odles of conditioned'curls? Lots o f options. A M atrix Essentials Perm can make the difference. A whole new look — a new you. W ALK-INS W ELCO M E W lZ Z A R D S HAIR STUDIO TEMPE MOTEL INSTANT LONG DISTANCE FOR LESS It outdates and replaces all other calling cards. ACJ TELECARD AT&T .80 NONE .25 .25 L55 J7S : 52% MO .75 .24 L47 49% R e ad all you want... there's no quiz afterwards. 903 S. Rural Rd., Tempe 9 6 7 - 2 3 6 0 AC\ DOMESTIC TELECARD SURCHARGE RATE/MINUTE 3 M INUTE CALL PERCENT SAV ED A sculpture depicting three large rabbits is popular am ong patrons frequenting the Centerpoint com plex's sh o p s and restaurants. Centerpoint is the latest addition to the remodel­ ing effort targeting downtown Tempe.The downtown. Tempe area earned an O utstanding Achievem ent award from the International Downtown Association. • Rooms from s22* & up • W alk to ASU • Air conditioning • * King-size beds • Pool • Satellite TV • Telephone • Free movies SPRINT .75 .24 IS O 50% EXPERIENCED, AGGRESSIVE TRIAL ATTORNEYS PAYMENT PLAN AVAILABLE SERVING A.S.U. & EAST VALLEY COURTS FREE INFORMATION, FREE CONSULTATION S S ^U p9 10% DISCOUNT FOR ASU STUDENTS C a ll t o c o n firm r a te s CONTACT: DALE FLOWERS, 602-939-7278 ALL C R IM IN A L • DU I CASES 947 E. A p a c h e • 894-0909 im CALL 24 HOURS 2 5 8 -8 8 8 8 PHILLIPS & ASSOCIATES, P C. LAW FIRM Phoenix A A A ***t t S S S 4 G re a t T a stin ' S H 6m t4f1i»‘K tlk r,C*hs: Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona, a Phoenix-headquartered health insurance provider. Recipients with between 100 and 499 employees: • Childress Buick, a 33-year-old Phoenix dealership. • Rio Salado Community College, a Phoenix-based unit of the Maricopa County Community College District. SonicAir, a Scottsdale-based air transportation and ware­ housing distribution network. • Varían Tempe Electronics Center, a manufacturer of printed Circuit board assemblies. Recipients with fewer than" 100 employees: • Boise Cascade Office Product’s Phoenix distribution center. • CartridgeCare Inc., a Scottsdale company which remanufac­ tures toner cartridges for laser printers. CartridgeCare President Irene Conlan said the 4-year-old com­ pany knew right from its start that it needed to focus on quality to distinguish itself from competitors. “We started out saying we had to do it the best,” she said. That effort, which was aided by a management consultant, has included extensive product testing on the premises, followup vis­ its to customers and extensive performance analysis, she said. Keds pays $7.2 m illion in price-fixing case WASHINGTON (AP) — The Keds Corp. won't demand that its shoes be sold at specific prices and will donate $5.7 million to women’s and children's charities to settle a pice-fixing case, federal and state authorities said Monday. The settlement, totaling $7.2 million, conies after an investigation by the Federal Trade Commission and the New York attorney gener­ al into retailers' complaints that Keds prohibit­ ed discounts on certain styles. In Phoenix, Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods said the state was given its choice of five charities to receive Arizonia’s $85,484 share of the settlement. W oods chose the M esa Boys and G irls Club. “The Boys and Girls Club is one of the best organizations there is at providing a posi­ tive and safe environment fear children,” Woods said. He added that the Mesa club “is in a dilap­ idated building and this money will help in our efforts to build a new facility.” Last September, “in order to protect the long-term image of the brand,” Keds told retail­ ers to hold to certain prices for six women’s styles, including the popular w hite canvas sports shoe id $19.99 and a similar leather ver­ sion at $39.99, said K eds treasu rer John Kelliher. The company does not believe it violated any antitrust laws and “continues to believe its pricing policy was entirely lawful,” said a com­ pany statement. But it decided to resolve the issue to avoid any business disruption. Under an agreement with the FTC, Keds will refrain from fixing retail prices, pressuring any dealer to adhere to any resale price, trying to get dealers to commit to a certain price, and requiring or even suggesting that dealers report others who sell any Keds product below the suggested retail price. “Right now, we don’t have suggested retail prices,” said Kelliher. The agreement with the New York attorney general’s office on behalf o f all the states also requires Keds to contribute $5.7 million to five charities and $1.5 million in adm inistrative costs related to the case. The amount reflects what consumers likely w ere o v erch arg ed , said R ichard B arr, spokesman for New York Attorney General Robert Abrams. ~ * . V ENTREES w/Student, Faculty, or Staff I.D. H * n H WEDNESDAY NIGHT 530 W. Broadway Tampa jR I N i 5 0 C DRAFTS $1 JAGER & CUERVO $1 “ LONGNECKS & ZIMA ’»ppm» ' Ìì\ FREE VALET PARKING il D IS C O + HIP H O P + HOUSE + TEGH NO & ALL THAT @1 BE A PART O F THE FUTURE New York Caracas Costa Rica Tokyo London Aacklaad •Fares are each way based on a roundtrip purchase. Restrictions apply and fires are subject to change without notice. Seats may b e limited, so book now. Council Ikawd Located a t Forest and University, directly across from A.S.U. "JW .Q . 9 Ì / 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, A Z 85281 966-3544 Call for a F R E E Student Travels m agazine! Comics Page 12 State P ress Tuesday, September 28, 1993 by Bill Watterson C a lv in and H o b b e s THE FA R SID E D o o n e sb u ry YOUKNOW, J.J., DONTBO I think n s siu r. you TIMÉI GOTOUT HAVEN7B&N OF YOURHAIR,.. ANY TROU­ L BLE, MARK.- By GARY LARSON BY GARRY TRUDEAU um -T iznuH A ve T06ET BACK I'M GOING TOMISS NEW YORK, THOUGH. I FEEUUKGÏ BE­ TONÒ WHY? THERE'S A GAY COMMUN­ ITY IN ÜC. WELL, OFCOURSE THEREIS. GAYSUVE EVERYWHERE. ITS JUST.» UM... / ns JUST WH/KT? WELL, THE SELECTION. / I KNOW, ITS FABULOUS, ns THESAME WfTHTHE SHOPS. r “OK, Bill. Tuesday night, 8 o’clock, over at the sheriff’s office where they’re holdin' your brother's killer.... You want that with extra hollerin’? ” STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — Nearly everything’s: turning up Brown in this western ski resort. Since the dedication of the James Brown Soul Center of the Universe Bridge; merchants have cashed in with James Brown Roast coffee, James Brown Ale, James Brown T-shirts and even chewy James Brownies. *T m interested in seeing if there’s going to be a pilgrimage to the bridge,” said Brandt Vogt, wholesale manager at Mocha Molly’s Coffee Saloon, “so people can stop in for a cup of James Brown coffee.’’ Despite the controversy over naming the bridge for Brown, a convicted felon who had never been in Steamboat Springs before the Sept. 15 dedication, his appearance charmed many townspeople, inspiring food spirits in a fèceptive segment of the community. “Much of the controversy has died down, and people are having fun with it,” said Sharon Roman, who serves up the James Brownies at what she now calls Sharon’s Soul Center of the Universe Cafe. The bridge replaced a span across the Yampa River that had been used for cattle drives from ranches west of town to stockyards along the Rio Grand Railroad. Many old-timers wanted the replacem ent to be called the New Stockbridge f—or at least a name that honors the community’s ranching and mining heritage. The name James Brown Soul Center of the Universe Bridge was proposed as a joke, but caught on and outpolled other names in a community vote. ATHENS, Ohio (AP) — Diana Ross’ sister TRUE O R FA LSE? Phoenix Greyhound Park is a college student’s Best Bet in ____ the Valley for fun. r r W ednesdays are college nights with $ 1.00 drafts and free adm ission with student I.D. After a few visits to Phoenix Greyhound Park, you’ll be so rich that you w on’t need school. (Maybe not, but you w ill have a great time trying!) is supreme, too. ■Dr. Barbara Ross-Lee, dean o f the Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, is the first black woman to lead a U.S. medical school: “I should make a movie about her life,” Diana Ross said. In a speech Friday, Ross-Lee, 51, recapped the hardships of growing up with five siblings in Detroit. She entered medical school in 1965 as a divorced parent. :, She graduated in 1973, was in private prac­ tice for 10 years in Detroit and was assistant dean of Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine before moving to Ohio University. R oss, form er lead sin g er o f M otow n’s “Suprêmes,” said the speech reminded her how much her sister has accomplished, “When we talk, ,we don’t talk about work as much as about family issues,’’ Ross said. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Joey Lawrence of “Blossom” knows he’s the latest heartthrob of the bubblegum set, but he doesn’tknow why. “I can’t explain it,” Lawrence said. “I still can’t get over girls screaming and chanting and fainting.” ' 1 The 17-year-old launched his career at age 5 w ith a ren d itio n o f “Give. My R egards to Broadway” on the “Tonight Show.” He went on to do TV commercials and was a “Gimme a Break” co-star for four years. He now plays dim-witted Joey Russo on “B lossom .” H is first pop album;, “Joey Lawrence,” came out in February. BUSINESS SENIORS W ill you have the job you want when you graduate? . . . Improve your odds .. . attend the FREE Job Hunting Seminars! Seminar 2: The Resume & Interview Employer Panel September 28th BAG 316 3:15 - 4:30 p.m. PHOENIX GREYHOUND PARK East W ashington at 38th Street 273-7181 Sponsored by the College o f Business and Career Services Sports STATE P ress _____ C ports J B r ie f s Pac-10 names week’s back Southern C a l’s Rob Johnson« Johnnie M orton and M ike Salmon, as w elt as UCLA’s Marvin Goodwin, were named the Pacific-10 Conference Players of the Week on Monday. Johnson completed 21 of 26 passes for a sc h o o l-re co rd 392 yards and three touchdowns. Morton had-eight receptions for a USC-record 229 yards, Salmon, filling in fen injured Southern Cal piacekicker Cole Pend, converted two of three field goal attempts. He also led the Trojans with six tackles from his usual strong safety position. G oodw in recovered tw o fum bles, . returning one o f them 46 yards for a touchdown, in UCLA's 28-25 upset victo­ ry over Stanford Saturday. He also had an interception. Sheffield seeks high pay Florida Marlins third baseman Gary Sheffield is close to an agreement with the team on a contract that would pay him more than $20 million over the next four years. The Sun-Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale quoted unidentified sources as saying the contract would pay Sheffield an average of $5.63 million a year, a $22.5 million total, making him the Marlins’ best-paid player. At those num bers, Sheffield would have the ninth-highest salary by average annual value. He is making $3.11 million this year and is eligible for free agency after the 1994 World Series. Nevitt to back up Admiral Chuck Nevitt. a 7-foot-5 journeyman center, was signed Monday by the San Antonio Spurs. N ev itt, Who w ill back up D avid Robinson, played in the CBA last season, averaging 5.2 points and 6-4 rebounds a game. Nevitt, 34, has played 154 games over seven seasons fo r four N BA clubs: Houston, Los Angeles Lakers, Detroit and Chicago. He was with the Lakers’ 1985 championship team. He was H ouston’s third-round draft pick in 1982 out o f North Carolina State and played only six games for the Rockets that season before beh^; waived- Panthers name interim coach * Tom W ebster w ill fill in fo r C raig Ramsay as assistant coach of the Florida Panthers w hite Ramsay recovers from surgery, foe team announced Monday. W ebster, form er head coach o f the D etro it Jr. Red W ings o f the O ntario Hockey League, will remain with the team until Ramsay is given medical clearance to . ; resume coaching. "Ram say underw ent surgery: in late A ugust fo r a b le ed in g u lcer. H e w as expected to leave ins home in Buffalo on W ednesday to jo in the team in South . Florida, where hie has been givenpennis' sioa to coach through video analysis as be ' m o a p s i i **. c v " NFL Roundup Pittsburgh 45, Atlanta 17 Baseball Roundup AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit at Boston, ppd., rain New York 9, Baltimore 1 Minnesota 1!, California 3 Chicago 4, Seattle 2 Toronto 2, Milwaukee 0 Kansas City 6, Cleveland 5 Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE Late Games Not Included Riiladelphia 6, Pittsburgh 4 Florida 3, Montreal I . St. Louis 4, New York 3 Chicago at Los Angeles (n) San Diego at San Francisco (u) GMt?fMMaudufoMtad ' C o m p iled fn m A F amt i ftijff report*. Tuesday, September 28, 1993 ____ ; PagC _13 Spikers see room to improve By P aul J . M atthews State P ress With 10 matches under their belt, including four against conference opponents, the Sun Devil volleyball team knows where its strengths lie and what they will have to change if they are to make a run for the Pac-10 title. ASU entered last weekend ranked 17th in the country in the American Volleyball Coaches A ssociation poll. They split their weekend matches with No. 5 Stanford and California, , improving their record to 8-2 overall. 2-2 in the Pac-10. The Sun Devils have played well at times, w inning on the road ag ain st then-N o. 23 University of New Mexico (3-2) Sept. 11 and against California (3-1) on Friday. They have also looked bad - losing at home to then-No. 20 Washington State (0-3) Sept. 18. ASU’s strengths thus far seem to lie in the team’s passing game and its ability to get digs. "O ur passing is very good,” Snyder said. “Our passing is what is winning matches for us.” The recipients of those passes are usually the team ’s outside hitters, Leanne Schuster and Christine Gamer. Gamer leads the team in kills, averaging 5.59 per game. Schuster is second on the team in kills with 3.59 per game. Unfortunately, errors have brought their hit- • ting percentages down to .266 for Gamer and .229 for Schuster. “I’m not that impressed with our hitting per­ centages.” Snyder said. "I think we’re making a lot of attack errors. The team is hitting below .200 in our past three matches and that is just not Craig Macnaughton/State P ress A SU outside hitter Christine Garner blasts the ball with authority as a Northern Arizona player attempts to block. Gamer leads the Sun Devils with 5.59 kills per game and is a big contributor to A SU ’s 8-2 record. an impressive stat.” If ASU is to compete with powerhouse teams like UCLA, USC and Stanford, the Sun Devils will have to make fewer errors and get better blocking from its two middle blockers. Senior Nancy Christian has been the team’s most consistent middle blocker, leading the team U.S. win shuts up Europe Im agine ; the H atfield s and the McCoys as friendly, neighborly hillbillies. Im agine B ird and M agic as nothing more than two -guys out to make a living in the NBA. Imagine ASU and UofA play­ ers smothering each other with hugs and kisses during a foot­ ball game. Impossible, right? Not so. All of the above are babies wearing diapers compared to the granddaddy of all rivalries, the Ryder Cup. The Ryder Cup, golFs version of the best of the United States vs. the best of Europe, took place this past weekend at the Belfry in Sutton Coldfield, England. The rivalry between the two sides has always been big, but nothing compares to the war of words that took place between the two captains prior to the start of this year’s event. ' To say that U.S. captain Tom Watson and European captain Bernard Gallacher didn't get along would be quite an understatement. A typical conversation: “Your team is no good.” “Oh yeah, well your mother wears combat boots.” ; “So what, at least she can put on her own shoes.” This all started after the last Ryder Cup, played at Kiawah Island, S.C., in 1991 and won by the United States. This marked the first time the United States had won the Ryder Cup since 1983, and Germany’s Bérnhàrd Langer was to thank. ■ Langer, one of the world’s premier players, has always struggled with his putting. How bad has he been? Let’s just say the fortner Masters champion has changed his putting grip more often than Madonna has changed her hairstyle. On the final day of last year’s Ryder Cup, all the Europeans had to do was tie the Americans and they would reclaim the cup, as a tie means a victory for the returning champ. Faced with a four-foot putt to bring home the bestowed trophy, Langer blatantly choked. Here was one of the world's best golfers missing a putt that any Joe Blow public golfer could have drained. From that day on, the U nited States has owned the Ryder Cup, and the opposing captains have been like Batman and the Penguin. Arch-enemies. Crude lines and harsh com­ ments. If offered weapons, there may have been a World War III. But when last Friday strolled around, the cap­ tains apologized to each other, and it became more of a Batman and Robin scenario. It was secretly decided between the two, that whoever wins the Ryder Cup would have the mother who can put on her own shoes. The first day found the Europeans with a slight 4 1/2 - 3 1/2 lead. The first team to compile 14 points would win the Ryder Cup. Day two left the American optimists smiling. The U nited States rem ained tig h t w ith the Europeans, still down by a point, 8 1/2 - 7 1/2. What a.surprise. On Saturday, the United States was down by two points with one four­ some left to play. The United States had Chip Beck and Ryder Cup rookie John Cook on their roster. The Europeans had Colin Montgomerie and Nick Faldo, the world’s top dog of golf. Pessimists were basking with glory. They knew Faldo wouldn't lose. Wrong! Faldo missed a 10-foot putt on the 18th hole, giving Beck and Cook the victory. So came the final day of the Ryder Cup. The day began w ithout the serv ices of America’s Lanny Wadkins, who couldn’t play because Scotland’s Sam Torrance withdrew with a sore foot. Rather than give the United States a full point, the judges gave each team half a point. Maybe a European ploy. Wadkins is the god of pressure. He would be a great fourth-quarter field goal kicker. He thrives on making the big putts for the big bucks. And something more important was on the line Sunday — his country’s pride. No w o rries, though. The rest o f the Americans responded. Beck, Fred Couples and Davis Love III all scored comeback victories, and Paul Azinger fought o ff a Faldo hole-in-one to halve his match. In all, the U.S. players were able to surge to victory and upend the Europeans 15-13. So Watson has the mom who can tie her own shoes and the optimists score one over the pes­ simists. Pessimists unite! When a good thing happens to your country, accept it. You will enjoy your life much more. 1 with 1.38 blocks per game. Snyder is still trying to find the right chemistry at the other middle position, where she has juggled Holly Sones and Kirstin Mattson. “We’ve gotta be just a little bit more efficient in our technique, I guess,” Snyder said. “It’s nothing dire, we’re 8-2. We’re doing well.” W om en’s ’g o lf set fo r Japan, T O P Y Cup B y S c o tt D avis State P ress With last season’s national champi­ onship and a season-opening win at the Oregon Fall Preview last weekend, the No. 1 ranked ASU women’s golf team is in Japan this week to compete in the TOPY Cup. The Sun Devils and USC are the only NCAA women’s golf teams to compete in Japan’s highly touted collegiate tour­ nament. Japan will send four of its top college teams to compete in the tourna­ m ent at T an ag u ra C ountry C lub in Fukushima, Japan. “It’s your typical college tournament where you count four out of five scores,” ASU coach Linda Vollstedt said. “This isn’t the U.S. vs. the Japanese. This is their intercollegiate golf tournament that they host.” Although the Sun Devils are in no jeopardy of losing their top billing, they still hope to make a statement on the dominance of female golf in America. “We’d like to show (the Japanese) the powerhouse we have,” Vollstedt said. “We’re hoping to be in our best form and we’d like to make a real statement while we’re there.” ASU will be without the services of preseason all-America Emilee Klein. A ’sophom ore from Studio City, C alif., Klein will remain in Tempe to concen­ trate on her schoolw ork. She m issed classes earlier in the semester in order to compete in an LPGA tournament. Klein’s replacement will tS; freshman Heather Bowie, who competed in the Oregon Fall Preview as an individual and brought home a second place finish behind teammate Wendy Ward. “It was nice for her to play as an indi­ vidual because there wasn’t any pressure on her,” Vollstedt said of Bowie. “Boy, we sure found out how good she is. “I think (the TOPY Cup) is an oppor­ tunity to feel what it’s like tp be on the team. She wants to play on team compe- tition.” Page 14 State P ress Tuesday, September 28, 1993 A d v er t iser I n d e x Name Page Anderson's Fifth Estate .........................1.......8Blockbuster Video.............................................. 2 Club O ne........... 1............................................. II Coffee Plantation................................................ 9 College of Business..,......... .,..................,.......12 Council Travel................................................ 11 Name Page Dale M. Flowers.............................. 10 Delta Kappa Epsilon..........................................8 Educational Testing...........................................8 Graduate College..................;.......................... 10 Harper Collins.....................................................7 IMM A uto........ ......................;......................... 2 Registrar's Office.......... .................. ,....,.......'.9 Name Page 6 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook.... ........... Taco John's........................................................ 10 Tempe M otel..................... 10 Time 2 ! o n e ........7 The Vine.............................................................. 2 R Wizzard's Hair.......................... Name Page Mama's Pizzeria........ .......................................10 Minder Binder's............. .....9 Phillips and Associates..................................... 10 Phoenix Greyhound P ark.......................... .......12 o S i t a ' s . .7 10 Classifieds N otice to bur readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested! you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility; for the validity of the offers advertised . in o u t classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement; please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721.: HOM ES FOR RENT LARGE 4BR house, w/d. dish­ w asher ^garage. m aid service, Çurry/RÙral, $895. 437-1Ò48 RURAL/ BROADWAY 3br. 2ba w/d. dshw shr, grge. SRP util, pryte yrd. $725 w/rbt 331-8176 !.. TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT A N N O U N C E­ MENTS A TTEN TIO N LAD IES In tro ­ ductory offer Sunday only. Foil, weave, highlighting $25. Ricar­ do's by Appointment 265-0206 , 2BR 2BA TH, deck, pool, Jacuzzi, own .w/d & m o re . Short/long term lease; Univ/McCtintOck Papago Park II. ;968‘-^609. CONDO 2BD 2ba kitchen., Ivg mi; Fp. 2 car pkg, 400 yds fonti ASU $510/mo (206) 568-7237 ' GUN SHOW - Oct 2nd & 3rd at: K. o f C. Hall 644 E. Chandler Blvd, Chlder. Sat. 8.5, Sun 9-4. $3 admission, free prkg. Buy.selltrade- sporting goods, amo & militaria collectables.: Info call 8448737. Proceeds to charity. RENTAL SH ARIN G FEMALE GRAD student to share nice, large 2br, 2ba Scottsdale HAIR MODELS needed. Matrix h a ir show, Tree hair services ’ - apt $285 + util. 945-0450 Call 971-8481. ■• LARGE 5BD/3BA house in S Scot­ tsd ale. 1 room a v ail, all priv PS SST . !HAY DEN L A W N.. . $220/mo + 1/5 Util Sdott 946^7205 Wednesday. 12:45. Be there!: M/F. NEEDED to share beautiful SU PPO RT G R O U P for those . who have Left a high demand :. 2bd 2ba apt, w /d, m icro, plus m ore. Broad w ay/D obson area group (cults). 970-8133, PO Box . $275 + 1/3 util. 844-7063 . . 354.1, Scottsdale 8527 i? • ' v TM TECHNIQUE students doing TM or interested in Ayur-ved call 954-9292 to start club, , ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2 bed/2 bath condo in Scottsdkle. Call Eric 275-4879, APARTMENTS ROOMMATE WANTED. 2bd, $225 + util, close to ASU, pool, Indry, must like cats, 829.-1625 $.199 MOVE-IN, lhr, $325/mo; ; 2hr $.375/ii»onth. close to ASU; .THERE'S T W O room m ates at Apartment Renters 831-5900.. . each others throats? Cool, I gotta ' see that. . [• BD p o o l, w/d. b o ok-ups $4i9/rnon.th Apartment Renters. 831-5900 • RO O M S FOR RENT 2 B D i ba 4-piex, 809 W 1st street from $305. Evaporative cooling 966-5596 . /. ROOMS AVAILABLE for, rent Trails at Scottsdale, 10 minutes from ASU. 945-558 L 2 B D, 2 ba, 900 square ft, pool, : .-.w/d ho o k -u p $49 9/m onth. Apartment Renters. 649-0077. HOM ES FOR SALE 2 BD, 2 ba. pool. close tb ASU $ 4 0 0 /mo. A partm ent Renters., 649-0077. FOR SALÉ by owner, Broadmor Estates, 3br, 2 1/2 ba, tiew roof, fenced pool, near ASU. 968r-5323 ASU AREA. 1 and 2 bedrooms, pool. Starting at $295, piu$ utili­ ties. 829-1 963 966-8838. SELL IT in the Classifieds! Call 965-6731 for rates & info. TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR S A £ _ _ _____ BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 & 2 bed­ rooms; Walk to ASU, Pool, laun­ dry room. .On East 8th Street bet­ ween Rural & McCliniock. Cape Cod Apartments; 968-5238. Call for move-in special.. ASU STUDENT special! Lg 3bd, 2ba w/fireplace, $44,900. Judy Pierce, Realty Experts, 820^2114. MUST BREAK lease. Willing, to pay someone to take it over. 1 bed apt the Peaks 2754879 968-4967 Frank .Bertriett Realty, 969 -1.818 GALLEON APT. 1920 E. Hayden Lane (Near McClintpck/University) •2 bedroom $390. C all N o rm a at: 9684967 Frank Bennett Realty, 969-1818 Stata frati CliitifiMt M iH h tw i C intar I i i i m m I 945-67} 5 TRAVEL FULL SIZE bed for sale. Brand new mattress! box springs, and frame $75. 894-3447. ., DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize; in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968^-7283. KING SIZE mattress, excellent condition, stain free. $135: 9483461; 941-9133 after 7:30p.m.; SOFA & chair $275, sofa & love seats starting at $300. Southwest + contemporary fabrics 997-9568 COMPUTERS 20 line BBS with chatting, games, and on-line pizza! 24 hours a day! 602-220-0001. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ALWAYS BUYING jewelry, Incl'u.: gold, stef, pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lioit 921 S Mill Ave, Tempe Center .968-6074 $ SAJ-ES Reps wanted, f/t or p/t. No exp nec, .will train. Earn $200$500/week. Call 649^8130. $ $$ PAID For: gold jewelry - diamonds gold & silver coins - watches r . broken je w elry OK. "N obody pays more." call Bill 784-8881. AUTOMOBILES 1985 MAZDA RX7, red, 5spd, exc cond. 80k miles, cold ac, 1sit". $3500 takes it. 839-3596 eves. . . 67:MUSTANG for sale. Rebuilt engine, was aw esom e. N eeds some repairs, $1000 cash, no d e als. P le a se leave m essage 9 2 i- i9 i3 ;;; ■ 86 VW Cabriolet convertible, at, ps, ac, white/tan top, 76!000 mi, . runs-great, new eng. 464-2045. M O TO RC Y CLES" N ICE 2 bd, 1 ba Papago Park Call G ruendér Properties, Inc. for info, 840-9518. . PAPAGO PARK Village 1 bd, 1 ba, new paint, uH; appl, $57,500. Carol Koyse Realty Executives, 831-0322, . ^ MISCELLANEOUS FO RSAy____ HP-41CX SCIENTlHC Calcula­ to r plus extras $200 obo, 4310662 TRAVEL I WAY direct, Phx to Newark, male only, lv 8:30am Sat 12-18, arv 4:40pm, $ 150 obo. 829-3759. "There is no appeal from the Supreme Court. If you lose there, you finally have to pay your attorney. ‘ s p o r t s m in d e d CONSTRUCTION FIRM Recep­ tionist. Typing 50wpm, W ord­ Perfect, radios, filing, answ er :phones, 222 S. 52nd St. Tempe. NEW M AGAZINE needs sub­ missions. Any topic fine, fiction or non-fiction. Send SASE to: Spike,: 3104 E.: Camelback Rd., Suite 410, Phx, AZ 85016: PART-TIME WAREHOUSE, I6r' 20 hrs/wk, lifting and drill press. TayM ac Cqrp. U niv/Hohokam area. 966-4443. ASU TELEFUND n&ds two very eiithusiastic & spirited students to help with recruiting; Call now, 965-6754: • PHOENIX SYMPHONY needs enthusiastic, articulate, dynamic people- sell tickets via.phone! Management potential! Flex p/t Su-Th 3 to 9:30pm 265-0417. BROADWAY DC is accepting ap­ plications for merchandise pro- . cessing Flex shift. Apply M -F 10 am to 4 pm. 1524 W. 14th St., Tempe. CLERKS NEEDED at 7-Eleven Stores: Apply 1405 N. Scottsdale Rd., Tempe or 2025 W. Warner, Chandler COUNTER HELP needed for day shifts. Delivery drivers needed, night and weekend shifts. Apply in person, B.limpies at Broadway & Rural. • EA RN $i0v$40/H R . p/t on wk/ends. Top:ntoWle.DJ co. look­ ing for responsible people to DJ ASU & private parties. Exp. pre­ ferred, 966-^9900, M-F, 3-6jMn, GLAM OUR INDUSTRY For­ tune 500 Company. Sales&marketing. P/T $10-25/hr Call Elise , 756-0553 ; ;; National marketing firm hiring 5 motivated individuals for flexible p /t e m ploym ent. $ 8 /h r g u a r­ anteed to start. Energetic, moti­ vated salesperaon earn $l8-24/hr. C all M ike fo r interview . 921-1103. ; HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BUSTERS R ESTA U RA N T is VALET PARKING attendants now hiring friendly, experienced for special ¿vents 3-4 nights/wk food servers. Apply in person: !-;avg $5-7/hr incl tips must have no 8320 N. Hayden Rd., Scottsdale more than 1 traffic ticket last 3 ' • 951-5850 ', v - ' . yrs must be at least 20 yrs .old, CORK’N CLEAVER must be willing to drive to Cen­ tral Phx, PV, & Scottsdale. 861Accepting applications for lunch 9384. food servers & lunch hostess, will train, p/t; Fun atmosphere, fast pace. Concern w/appearance, re­ liability & personality are im­ portant. Apply in person M-F 25pm , 51 0 ) N orth 4 4 th S treet (44th & Camelback). DOMINO'S PIZZA NEED MONEY? Interested in AZ politics? Make your OWn hours. Call now! 952-1797. , P E T S L A ^D IN G LOS A rcos Mall is now hiring, Cashier, sales people, anim al care. Apply iii person: HELP WANTEDSALES DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED, on campus, ensmr electronics. Own hrs, unlmtd income. 839-8038. F/ t P/T looking 4 sales reps-4 new MUM, 100 k possible no ex­ perience nec. Call 650-4986 , TUX & Tails is currently hiring for p/t morning positions, 3 loca­ tions close to campus. Training , provided, o pportunity for ad­ vancement with growning com­ pany. Call Mr. TpWne 264-2579. WE NEED students to sell con­ sum er electronics on Campus. Products are effective and a f­ fordable. Demonstrate the pro­ PT POSITIONS fo r on-call & ducts and they sell themselves, wknd relief staff in group homes . C all Synergy Electronics 948for DDH Adults. AZDL & clean 1512;-! '•■•';•!■;, -••'/!:;:■ ' : MVR needed.. East Valley 941 0690 V ; / ■ FIND IT in today's State Press Classifieds. We work fo r you ! ... SA LESPER SO N S FOR Body Gaurd 2000 Pepper Spray, Call now Gold Enterprises 548-1222 pgr 217-3502, HELP WANTEDGENERAL Come & join the #1 pizza deliv­ ery team for the AS]LJ area. We need f/t & p/t drivers & inside help. Drivers make $7-$10 per hour including mileage & tips. Safé driving cash bonuses can also be earned. W e are very flexi­ ble & can w ork aro u n d your school schedule. Apply in person after 1 lam at 903 ¿. Rural, te m ­ pe, or trail 968-5555. EOE. HONEY BEAR Bar-B-Q hiring front counter service. 50.12 E!.. Van Burén (near ASU). 273-9148 RESTAURANT/BAR HIRING various positions. Interviews held Wednesday 9?29 3-6pm or Thurs­ day 9/30 5-8pm. Loco's 1120 É; Apache Blvd. Tempe STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT Now h irin g lunch serv ers & lunch cooks. Apply in person MF 10am-3pm, 5001 E Washington THE MONASTERY Cocktail waitress, p/t ) *2 nights per week, No experience. Fun beer & wine pub. Must be 21 or older. 28th St. & Indian School. Call l lam-3pm, 840-7510. , Restaurant Now Hiring 2 Locations Isla n d s R estau ran t; THE BEST TELEMARKETING JOB IN THE VALLEY IS ONLY 15 MINUTES FROMASU •$ 8/HR GUARANTEED W AGE TO START •PART-TIME A FULL TIME SHIFTS •VERY FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES (20- 3 5 Hour* W eekly) T o p p e o p le earn $15-$20/hr. W e have a beautiful, stateof-the-art telem arketing facility at Cam elback a n d 44th Street and invite exp. salesw om en and m en to call for a personal interview. Please ask for Joyce at: 952-0100 Exceptional opportunities are currently available fori Servers, Bartenders, Dish/Maint., Hosts (m/f), Line Cooks, Prep Cooks, Successful candidates will receive immediate training. Apply in person Mon.-Fri. 9-6pm, 730 S. Mill Ave!, Bldg. H, Suite 104 E qual O pportunity Employer HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE G y m n a s t i c s t e a c h e r to work with .5 to 10 year olds, exp necess. p/t $ I0-$ 12^ir. 955-7805 7th St & Glendale area. SCOTTSDALE FAMILY TREASURES BABYSITTER, P /T afterns & wknd eves, own trans. nec, near 60th St./Greenway 494-4392 ★ EARN $7.50/HR!W INTERNSHIP HUMAN RESOURCE CLERK FOR INFANT in Tempe home MTh 8:30-3pm, light housekeeping, refrences a must. 491-2161 RENALWEST seeks entry level clerical support for busy Hum an Resource D epartm ent. Successful applicant should have minimum one year clerical support exp./or must presently be enrolled (9+ credit hrs.) In college or university, majoring In B uslness/or H.R. Management. Must also possess computer exp., knowledge of Word Perfect 5,1, .spreadsheets, and type 40 wpm. Working hours are 5 days per week/4 to 5 hrs. a day. Starting pay $5 to $5.50. NANNY'S P/T days eves or wee­ kend hrs. m ust have re lia b le transportation call 345-2433. AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES CAR A TRUCK i PARTS v* LESS ! . 20% S a v in g s ! •JsK 30 AM hrs/w k TáyM ac Cdrp. U hiv ersity -H o h o k am area. 966-4443 A R IZO N A LEA G U E of Conservation Voters firing can­ vassers. Help change AZ law & policy towards our environment. 966-5485 for interview. M-Th 4-9; Sat. 10-4. Setting appts fo r free h ealth sves. (H rly & comm.) 470-1828. FURNITURE YOUR DAILY 1081 APPT SETTERS needed, hrs 5:30pm4J:30pin. M-Th. Top pay + bonus. Scottsdale mortgage co. Contact Jonathan Class, or Gaiy 481 9791 BER M U D A AND C aribbean 1994 for up to 6 ASU summer credit hours. Info meeting Thurs­ day 9/30/93, ED 206 (Farm er Educ ), 2 p.m. C an't make if? Call 965-4630f6r info packet AAA BED sets in factory. wrapp­ er: tw in $69, fulls $79, queen $99. Free fram e, can deliver; 256-7675! SHOE SHINERS $8- 10/hr , 3-4 nights C.W. bars, will train, ladies/men. Apply 992-2597. MILL AVE BEER JEWELRY 89 FO R D M ustang G T 5.0. F u lly loaded, k in t cond. $7700. Leave msg. 968-0941. HOME LIKE care givers needed part-tim e, all shifts including Weekends. G eriatrics dementia experience he 1pfu 1.. C al1 9244073 or apply at Mesa’Senior Vil­ lage 5037 E. Broadway Mesa. Company is now accepting applications for all positions. Apply in pereon 605 S. Mill Ave. ROCK GARDEN 88 SUZUKI Samurai, fully cus­ tomized inside & out. $4400 obo. 438-9309, leave message. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL LOOKING FOR a part time job? ASU T elefund is s till hiring. Earn $5/hr + bonus to raise $$$ for ASU Telefund. For more info call 965-6754 MAC SE 4/20. Good condition; • Comes w / tons o f software and printer. $750 obo B.C. 350-9549 87 CAMARO RS- White T-tops cold AC, tinted, low m i. very nice cond. $5500 call 994-3494 HELP WANTEDGENERAL KFC BROADWAY/BECK hiring p/t eves hrly pay doe 967-0858 IBM PS/2 Model 25 8Mhz, 8086 Intel processor, 512 KB expand­ able to 640 KB, 3:5 inch-disk drive + hard drive, space saving keyboard $500/obo 759-4462 top HELP WANTEDGENERAL INVESTMENT BANKING firm' seeks part-time telemarketer to assist in merger/acquisition trans­ actions. Flexible hours, $8/hr plus bonuses. $100,000+ poten­ tial. Dinan & Company, 8433. N. Black Cahyon Hwy #100, Phx, AZ 85021. 864-6311- SOFA SET, dinette,: bed, futon; day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. Cheap. 352-7249. IT'S A beauty! Honda CB900, 1980, 10,900 miles only, original NEAR ASU; 3-2TH, fp; all apppl, owner, $1500.844^3899. carp« $. $50,900. C-2T All Star Diaire L. 831-2221 : D e s e r t W in d s 2 2 2 0 W. Dora, Mesa M ain /p p b so n area Large 2 bd, 2 ba, $425 . No Pets Call N orm a at " FURNITURE cheSTSout " , 269-5640 3623 W. Lower Buckeye Rd. (Just off 1-10) Apply at 952 E. Baseline # 102, Mesa (N-W com er of Stapley & Baseline) or call Mary/Lisa at 926-0790. EOE/MFDV NANNY: 2 school age children. Afterns & approx 6 nights/mo. $450/m o, 483-7818, 450-3618 pager JOB OPPORTUNITIES GRAN OPORPUNIDAD de ne­ gocio! Propio! Productos elec­ trónicos para el cosumidor. 8398038 Stata Fran MitthMt Cuitar Baramint 965-6735 JOB OPPORTUNITIES M A N A G E M E N T PO SITIO N available BS/BA May 93 or Dec *93 grad preferred. Mkty Com,; Mgt m ajors lo o k in g for career with fun, growing Co. Call 966-9900. Responsibilities include sales & personnel management. GO GO GO GQ MU AB Special e v e n ts G am e Show . H ayden Cawn. Wednesday . PERSONALS A DOZEN roses delivered $20 also balloons. Call AfterHours Flowers 894-3419 PLUMBER (H EE hee) Happy birthday! Have a great time in lab! Love Aimee RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2. 1-800. 351-0222. ; A NEW tradition will start when the A l’s repeat Anchor Splash. I N W ILL shake AT A nchor Splash. TEM PE FA M ILY G uidance Short-term therapy. Stress, anx­ iety, dépression. Ins welcome st rates. 491-2755, R. David MED IN WOULD like to thank all so­ rorities who participated-in Sigma Nu Relays. TO OUR Kappa Sigma pledge present^ dates: Formal is 3 days aw ay ! Are you ready to party w ith the snakes? Love, J.J.M L.D.L.A. ÁCA Shaw Looking forward to form al an d seeing you in that dashing smashing gown. RMS RESTAURANTS/ BARS TODD: BE nice to the reifs 2-nite. BART WANTED* »WANTED i- Greek Steering wants you to ran fo r a Greek Week Committee. Appli­ cations came but Oct. 4. If you want your, paddle, we want a song! ALove C.T. and sisters CONGRATULATIONS A t upon winning relays -The Men of UN. SPORTS & WINGS! k Satellites IS Screens "We show all NFL, Iow a & N ebraska Games" SERVICES A t Come sail with us* Luv ICE A f AT AT - J3KA is ready for Anchor Splash, are you ready for WOODSHED II . ti ka? ? ; /' - AT KL, is overboard for Anchor Splash ; . H O T W IN G S & C O O L JAZZ 10c WINGS S1.25 MIC DRY c l A t IN . A t I N AT I N AT IN -AEm-'-. \ : Mobile mechanic, student rates, work guaranteed 839^-5398 • A l's Will dominate the competí-, tion during Anchor Splash! 5th St & Forest B R E W P U B GET REA D Y D elta G am m a. Sigma Nu is gonna Snake Anchor Splash. .\ •'■¿■■it HEY YOU! What's, this I hear about a Roommate Game? Isn’t it on Wednesday at 12:45? COFFEE T o 4U y '( A S U S p e c ia l KKG ALISON-Happy 20th births day. Love, The Four Corners UAJPFY H O U R K I ROULETTE King. I'll takeu on 1 condition, I don't choose "red o r b la c k !”-H ow ’s O ct 8? 9BÓO iv: Fec«ltjrSt*H«r - " sK ■•‘'ptuimtpf- S0¡ C^tmr » Mftt V ___£2222.___s AXA Plumber woooooqó! Love Sharon PIKES - Dutton & Lund - Con­ g rats-. you met the challenge!.! Looking forward to a rematch!! Luv. Denise & Ali M U SIC COM PACT DISCS & tapes at ’ w holesale prices!; delivered to. your door. Call 48375336. SERVICES LOOKING FOR the # f Rock & Roll expert on campus. Win.casseries, C D 's, arid, up :tp $1000 cash. Take the 10 question Rock trivia quiz. Call 1-900-344-9335 ... $2'99/mihute, must he |8 $ 2 .0 0 V isit .the Tem pc Wherehouse .on Broad .way & Rural or call: 1-800-825-2000 fo r.the nearest Wherehouse W RITING A Book? W ordpro­ cessing at home. Laseijet printer, fast typist. Evelyn 961-4000 ALBINO BURMESE Python ba­ bies $ lOO! Boa Constrictor babies $50! Cash only Jv mess. 986-3302 110 WPM. Theses, longer docu­ m ents (2 0 .4: pages) ^preferred. Competitive rates. Lisa 460-2156.. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ASU, Diane 829-1602. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. COMPUTER HELP- Customized solutions for homework and pro­ gram m ing assignm ents, study aids/tutoring. 649-8703 ASAP EXPERT M ATH Secy, services* desktop publish­ ing, resumes, APA/MLA expert. Sheri Patrick 961-1411 R E V IE W S E S S IO N S FOR TEST #2 FA ST TU RNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741• EL EC TR O LY SIS B Y D egna Perm, remits, the blend method; Rural/Southem area 921-1146 W P/ TY PIN G . T erm papers, theses., re su m es, reports, MLA/APA. Quick service rea­ sonable rates. Maureen 955-0969 Memory is $0% of your talent scores. Did anyone ever,teach you how to maximize yours? Learn vocab, formulas, dates, essays, etc; fast. Free class. Holiday Inn on Rural Wed., 7pm, Or call 8387239. U-deserve and A. PERSONALS ♦FREE* TAILGATE RECIPES! 265-4392 z •Spaces fill quickly, so call early. ★ FREE SAMPLE TESTS ★ Private tu to rin g also available in M ath, Chem istry, Physics a n d W riting 0 in ■' Typing term papers, resumes, charts, thesis; quick service. Near ASU 9 6 6 -1 9 8 4 SERVICES '* y g r IU Art-a-ma-bobs ara only $3! Z IMcClintock 894-2798 (V CO u. eo O n u. «3 JS > m C °? oo TJ ^ ” V) ai 4 -» - C- .bz »- 0J ^ CL O >< (U -t- r\ C UJ s iu O $ m 5 « T3 (O q3 c CT (U Q a. ■ © I'B o ~o c «j 8 F ® e g a> jc h Æ ÌSÌ JS 4Vm)» O ,D a> tu g ® 3 Mi "a jj— — > ARLENE HAS MOVED