VA R I Z O N A STATE UNIVE A n In d e p e n d e n t M o rn in g D a ily Governm ent exam ines gender sports equality Going for the ASU selected as ‘flagship program’ B y S haun R achau • State P ress Three individuals from the Office of Civil Rights will conduct interviews with ASU athlet!, ic department administrators, coaches and ath-' letes next week as part of a Title IX compliance study by the Federal Department ofE3ucation. ASU was one of eight universities selected to participate in the compliance review on gender equity, the State Press learned from a memorandum dated Monday and released by Athletic Director Charles Harris. * Harris said ASU’s athletic department was designated a “flagship program” by the federal agency and was selected to participate in the study based on the many NCAA sports it partici- pates in, the University’s large student body and because the Sun Devils compete in the Pac-10 — one of the nation’s most prominent athletic conferences. Harris said past research on gender equity in athletics has centered around smaller ipstitutions. “That’s really not the way to do it,” he said, “I t ’s not fair to com pare w hat we do with Northern Colorado.” T he three ind iv id u als rep resen tin g the Department of Education will be on campus Monday through Friday and will ask questions reg ard in g personal ex p erien ces at ASU. Interview s w ill be scheduled w ith all head T u r n t o A t h l e t ic s , p a g e 2 . N ew probe, same planet R ich a rd K om urek/State P re ss Mem bers of the women’s swimming team play a game of water polo after swim practice Thursday afternoon. B y G arin G roff * State P ress The principal investigator of a $28 million ASU research instrument is expecting NASA to announce todáy that there will be a two-year delay in the replacement for the defunct Mars Observer that carried ASU's Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES). “The head of NASA has already indicated that he doesn’t want to rush into a decision. He wants to take hitrUme to understand the problem and u nderstandN he b p tio n s,” said P h ilip Christensen, principal investigator for the ASU Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES) project. The TES was on board the Observer for 11 months on its way to the Red Planet, but NASA scientists lost contact with the $980 million spacecraft on Aug. 21 and have not heard from it since. The research instrument was designed to study the geographical makeup of Mars. Today’s announcement will reveal if the new probe will be built immediately for an August 1994 launch date or if NASA will wait for 1995, Christensen said. The craft takes about one year to reach Mars. Christensen said he wants the earlier launch date for the replacement — which would likely be built from spare parts for about half the cost of the original — because he believes it to be a quality craft. “The best option is to simply re-fly exactly the same spacecraft that they just had,” he said. “All in all, Mars Observer had far fewer minor problems than other planetary spacecraft.” However, the 1995 launch date is more likely, because a panel o f experts studying the Observer has not yet concluded what occurred to stop communication, Christensen said, “Until they know, I suspect NASA is going to be reluctant to proceed doing it again until they know what went wrong,” Christensen said. The largest impact of the delay will be on ASU graduate students who were counting on data for their Ph.Ds, Christensen said, “So for a graduate student who’s trying to finish up and get out of here, three-and-a-half years is a long time to wait,” Christensen said, “For someone like me who’s been working on this project for 10 years already, an extra three-and-a-half years is frustrating, but it’s not the end of the world.” Steve Ruff, a 30-year-old graduate student working on his Ph.D., said he hopes the craft will be built for a 1994 launch, but is expecting a later launch date, “My attitude has been that I’m being fairly pessimistic about it, just so that if it doesn’t T u r n t o M a rs, p a g e 2 . S tu d e n ts, fa c u lty h o n o r a n n iv ersa ry o f G a n d h i’s b irth in America is not new and not unique,” Jain said. “Violence has been with humanity in every society in the world. “But with Gandhi, his concept of truth is God. And for him, non-violence is the highest form of religion, truth, honesty and justice. They comprise his own commandments for religion.” Jain explained that Gandhi took his own personal struggles antr ■ B y G reg S exton translated them into a philosophy of hope and a righteous fight for S pate P ress . ' : On the 126th anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi’s birth, ASU peace. ■ ■ ■ “He sort of designed his own tailor-made religion and applied students and faculty will gather today to discuss his non-violent philosophy and how it has applied to the battle for civil rights in that to problems in the political arena,” Jain said. “He achieved a great amount of success.” the United States. During the discussion, Jain will focus on Gandhi’s personal Nemi Jain, ASU communications professor, will open the pro­ gram at 10:30 a.m. in the MU’s Cochise Room, speakitjg about philosophy while Bernard Jackson, director of ASU’s educational Gandhi’s life and non-violent philosophy. The session will contin- j support program, will lead the talk regarding MLK. Group discussions will follow both speakers. ue with a discussion of how Martin Luther King Jr. used the same Jain told of an experience that changed Gandhi’s life and, in peaceful methodology in his fight for civil iights. King, Jain said, borrowed Gandhi’s peaceful civil disobedi­ turn, advanced his compassion for individual rights. “(Gandhi) asked his w ife to clean the latrine ... he Said, ence message and ujjed it to fight for a just cause. ‘Everybody has to take a turn,’” Jain said. “His wife refused and “I will discuss how the culture of violence and discrimination Non-violence philosophy to be center of discussion ^ W eather Outlook Clear, sunny and hot with drier air. High 101, low 72. ASU scientists stabilize a $130,000 microscope with bungee cords, breast implants and a tripod. Page 6 >■ This week’s Career Fiesta has brought lots of federal govern­ ment recruiters with few jobs to offer. Page 7 W orld/ Nation said, 'I come from a high caste (system) and I am not going to clean the latrine.r “He said, ‘Look, here we don’t have those silly caste rituals,’ and she said, ‘I don’t have to have the high morals you have, can’t you accept that?’ “He realized that if he is truly non-violent... he must let her have her own goals and let her decide what she wants to do. That was an awakening.” Jain added that in today’s violent society, there is a strong need to revert back to and study Gandhi’s messages. “His ideas transcend time and space,” Jain said. “They are rel­ evant all the time, as long as humanity has respect for different cultures and different points of view.” Jain said Gandhi’s birthday is a major holiday in India, with many celebrations highlighting the observance. There is no charge for students to attend the discussion. Sports The death toll in the earthquake in south­ west India nears 17,000 asresc uers continue to search for the missing and the dead. The ASU football team begins Pac-lOplay Saturday at Corvallis, Ore;, when they take on wishbone-fueled Oregon State, Page 3 Page 11 Where To Find If Advertiser Index............... 14 Classifieds........................14 Comics................... 10 Crossword.......................... 6 Horoscopes ......................15 Opinion..............................4 Police R e p o r t ....8 Sports.™.......... ................12 Today’s Activities...............2 World/Nation............... 3 Page 2 State Press Friday, October 1,1993 Athletics_____ C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 . The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests d te printed according to A t pace available each day. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement $ M atthews Center, Room 15. R e q u d m w iB n rtb eta tm a ve'r^p ken e, Entries must contamdutJuH name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, dim and All requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. ¡Jr , ’j - \ ' ¿ v rjS w l Deadlinefirn entries is noon the : • Counselor Training Center — Counseling for ASU stu­ dents, provided by counseling and eo«i|»dite® psy A ‘ * & *1 • Alcoholics Anonymous — Daily closed meeting, norm. All Saints Catholic Newman Center, northwest comer o f College Avenue and University Drive. • Clinical Psychology C enter —- Graduate students provide individual, couples and family counseling forstudents, staff and the community throughout the semester on èie second floor of the Psychology Building. The program is supervised by state licensed psychologists and fees are based on a slid­ ing scale. Fbr information, call 965-7296. • MU AB Culture and A rts Committee —- Meeting, evetyone welcome. 3:30 p.m., MU Room 2, third floor. C • Students of Objectivism — General meeting, study group discussion, “Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand,” by Leonard Peikoff, Chapter 1 “Reality,” 7 p.m., MU* Yuma Room 211. • National International Student Association (NISA) — Mahatma Gandhi birth anniversary symposium “Gandhian .Perspectives on the Culture o f Violence in America,” 10:30 a.m., MW Cochise Room 212. • N ew m an C e n te r A ssociation — M editative musical prayer called Taize, all welcome for this spedai prayer, 6:30 pm ., Newman Center, Old St. Mary's Catholic Church. • RC1A Program - Newman C enter Association — Rite of Christian Initiation M A ^ s , ' o p C « . ^ Ì ^ M Ì | M l ^ ^ :': becoming a Catholic Christian, contact Sister Dominic Marie, All Saints Cadmile Newmaa C ^ e r , C t r t ^ A v e^5 r and University Drive, ■ *• ■ coaches, select ICA officials and two athletes from each sport, according to Harris. While Harris said it’s “almost statistically impossible” to appropriate equal funding to men’s and women’s sports because of football, he added that he feels ASU “has had a long-standing commitment to providing opportunities for women.” Title IX was passed by Congress in 1972 and prohibits sexual discrimination in physical education classes, scholarship dispersal and counseling practices. It'also bans bias treatment in profession­ al, vocational and graduate schools. The major function of Title IX is to ensure that spending on men’s and women’s sports programs is comparable to the ratio of male and female athletes in a given sport. Though the law has been in place for more than 20 years, many within collegiate ath­ letics feel it has fallen short of bringing about equality. “Not a lot was done in the past, because the old fellas said, ‘This will kill college athletics,”’ Harris said. Harris is a member of a Pac-10 committee — comprised of athletic directors and other male and female administrators from throughout the conference — which studies gender equity issues. He said the athletic department recently responded to a survey administered by the Office of Civil Rights, which led to ASU being selected. Also contributing to this article was State Press'City Editor Jake Baiseli. Mars__'■; • Pull! C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 . work out the way I’d like it to, I won’t be disappointed,” Ruff said. While Ruff said he is hot dependent on the Mars data for hisPh.D., he probably will be at ASU to work with it if the probe is launched'in 1994. The Observer’s failure could be the result of faulty transistors that caused both internal clocks to fail or because of the explosion of fuel tanks; Christensen said. Transmission stopped when transmitters were shut off for 10 minutes during the pressurization of fuel tanks connected to rock­ ets designed to slow the craft down so it could enter Mars’ orbit. Christensen said he suspects that the tanks probably exploded during the procedure, damaging thè craft. Associated Press Berkeley Breathed’s cartoon character, Opus the pen­ guin, shoots down flying toasters In a graphic from a new screen-saver program that pokes fUn at one of the m ost popular program s on the market for preserving com puter m onitors. Thé creator of the original-program has sued Breathed in protest of the new screen saver. ______ _______________ i WUISIll • MEBT NEW PEOPLE - MOT CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIE N ICEST LAUNDRY IN TOW N!!! WHITEWATER OASIS c # N Si i t z i & tIP APACHE APACHE â DORSEY We I < g ■ ■ ■ want YOUR I u x a a FREE LARGE C O K E W hen you bring your laundry t o Whitewater Oasis Limit one per customer, per visit EXPIRES 12-31-93 dirty laundry!! N W C O R N E R A PA CH E/D O RSEY — 1 2 5 0 E . A PA CH E BLVD. Weekly — Monthly NICBVT LAU N D RY AT A S U — Semester Laundry Plans IRTAINMBNT W orld /N ation ■ Page 3 Friday, October 1,1993 S ta te P ress roundi^i L tiz o n a M an convicted o f extorting M cD onald's in receipt cap er PHOENIX (AP) — A 65-year-old M cD onald’s custom er who got an obscene message instead o f a cheery computerized “thank you” with his Big Mac has been convicted of extortion for demanding $ 1,000 from the sums manag­ er. John Leo Laetch faces a maximum five years in prison after toeing convicted W ednesday by a M aricopa C ounty Superior Court jury. “We don’t know what to say,” said Laetch. “W e’re not very happy,” said his wife, Penny, 67, who was originally charged but then dropped from the case. When Laetch bought two Big Macs, a H appy M eal, frie s and d rin k s at a Phoenix McDonald’s on April 29, 1992, the “thank you” normally found on the printed receipt had been replaced by an obscene suggestion. A second receipt for an ice cream cone read the same way, according to testimony at Laetch's twoday trial. A disgruntled worker apparently had reprogrammed the computer that printed the receipt, said prosecutor Caroline Como. At a' May 14 m eeting with M cD onald’s m anager Ray Johnson, Laetch allegedly threatened to take his story to the National Enquirer tabloid and The Arizona Republic. R etired re p o rte r found dead PHOENIX (AP) —- A retired newspa­ per reporter was found dead in a street early Thursday after apparently being beaten and then run over by an automo­ bile, police said. The body of Carle Q. Hodge, 7 L was found about 2 a.m. near his home, said Sgt. K evin R obinson, a p o lice spokesman. Robinson said witnesses told police that Hodge was beaten by at least one man and then run over. Homicide investigators have “very little to go on,” according to Robinson. He said w itnesses gave co n flictin g reports on the color of the getaway car and w hether tw o o r three m en w ere inside the vehicle. Hodge was a science w riter at the A rizona Republic for I I years before j retiring in August 1990. t •’ V'• V ■:. ' , : - ■;- V,-,y ' • •: Senate panel O K s N apolitan , despite A nita H ill questions WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate Judiciary Committee approved the nomi­ nation o f Janet Napolitan as U.S. attor­ ney for Arizona on Thursday despite lin­ gering questions about how she handled the representation of Anita Hill. The committee voted !2-6to approve nomination o f Napolitano, a Phoenix lawyer and Demosktic party activist One o f the senators w ho voted against her said he did so because she would not answer questions about her representation o f Hill during the cosfirm ation h earings o f S uprem e C o u rt Justice Clarence Thomas. At issue was a private conversation between Napolitano and one o f H ill’s witnesses, Susan Hoerchner. Hoerchner, a workers compensation judge in California who rent Hill when both w ere law stud en ts at Y ale University, testified to the committee that HOI had told her in the early 1980s that rite had been sexually harassed by hear boss, Clarence Thomas. D uring H oerchner’s testim ony, Napolitano asked for a private conversa­ tion with the witness. After that conversation, Hoerchner said she was not certain of the date Hill told her of the alleged harassment. Sen. Alas Simpson, R-Wyo., said the conver­ sation “apparently changed die testimo­ ny,” and amounted to “quite an interfer­ ence with th e committee’s confirmation p m c e s s ,^ K Villagers sit on the debris of their dameged houses In Killari of Maharashtra, India, Thursday. An earthquake registering 6.4 on the Richter scale reportedly killed nearly 17,000 people. India quake toll nears 17,000 Rescuers continue to search wreckage for missing, dead UMARGA, India (AP) — A major earth­ quake shattered the dawn quiet Thursday, col­ lapsing mud and mortar homes onto sleeping families in villages across southern India. Nearly 17,000 died and many more cried for help front the wreckage. Authorities feared the death toll would rise substantially in India’s worst quake in a half century. Many villages were leveled so quickly as the earth shook violently and opened crevices that people were crushed inside their homes while sleeping, news agencies reported. “ The rising sun created darkness for us this morning, swallowed up our villages, and made o u r houses in to tom bs,” a su rvivor told a reporter. Some survived when frantic rescuers heard them shouting for help beneath toppled walls and roofs or saw a hand reaching out from the wreckageFriends, neighbors and police strained to lift stone, brick and wood by hand to free victims. Soldiers and policemen rushed to the remote area of southwestern India, bringing stretchers, tents, medical supplies, earth movers, bulldozers and mobile hospitals. But relief workers had trouble reaching some villages that recently lost their roads and bridges to heavy monsoon rains. The quake, which measured at least 6 on the Richter scale, ripped through southwest India at 3:56 a.m. It was felt at least 400 miles from the epicenterand caused a wide swath of damage. • The death tolls given by state officials and news reports varied from 6,200 to 16,000, and all appeared to be based on confirmed statistics and estimates. By nightfall the death toll was more than 6,200, said N. Raghunathan, chief secretary of Maharashtra, the hardest-hit state, adding that more than 2,000 bodies had been recovered. ' State-run Doordarshan TV raised the toll to more than 10,000 and said more than 12,000 people could still be trapped. The United News of India news agency later put the death toll at nearly 17,000. A bout 10,000 people were injured, said Raghunathan. Telephone, electricity and water lines were cut in many areas. The epicenter was near Maharashtra’s south­ eastern border with Madhya Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh states. Yeltsin O Ks talks on ending siege MOSCOW (AP) — President Boris Yeltsin agreed Thursday to churchmediated talks with hard-line lawmakers in an effort to break the siege of parliament and end Russia’s 10-day-old political crisis. Yeltsin’s announcement came after a meeting at the Kremlin with Patriarch Alexy II, head of the Russian Orthodox Church. The patriarch’s offer to mediate the power struggle underscored the church’s growing influence since the decline of Communism. The president and patriarch agreed that closed-door talks will begin Friday at a Moscow monastery . There was no immediate comment from the leaders of the 100 or so lawmakers who have holed up in the parliament building with a few hun­ dred volunteer defenders since Yeltsin dissolved parliament on Sept. 21 and called new elections; Earlier Thursday, Y eltsin’s rebellious vice president, Alexaiidef Rutskoi, toted a machine gun at a news conference and vowed no compro­ mise as long as Yeltsin remains president. Other hard-line lawmakers have said they were willing to negotiate if the church acted as mediator. Thousands of riot troops continued to ring the building, known as the White House. Power, water and phones have been cut off to the building, and food supplies were running low. Yeltsin said he disbanded the Soviet-era parliament to break 18 months of political deadlock in which the lawmakers slowed the president’s ffeemarket reforms and rolled back his powers. On Wednesday; Yeltsin gave lawmakers until next Monday to surren­ der their weapons and. leave the White House or face “serious conse­ quences,” Deputy Security Minister Sergei Stepashin told the Trad newspaper that militants in parliament had up to 800 firearms, including several machine guns. the fc s jlS o u u c e tl p lan s | W A S f te tiq r o K - < 4 f t . r r V ’t e g f t M l Monday to retire on Oct. 30 I Secretary Lloyd Bentsen - “Corrective steps are necessary,” Bentsen l 'foe Buremr of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms two field commanders i o n Thursday and suspended five other fop o&ir - tiHHC? m e n t^ -to th e ir su p erio rs and T reasury -.. He cials after a scathing report faulted the agency Jpiljp>i^»1l|[|>l% M tlf..llii:l altered foefrorilfr for the raid on a ,Texas religious cub JU which | ordered b y p re sid e n t C linton, that said the fatal planning document “in a concerted effort to ' ^ p ^ y ’S r |i t o & thei^ieretioa w a s “b88edon four agents died. J | | | Field commanders “obviously should not seriously flawed assumptions” shorn Koresh conceal their errors in judgment,” the report and bis followers. • " : have” *1 1 i ^ * %■ [ The Branch Davidian compound near Waco upon “And top ATE management, perhaps out # learmng titat çuh leader D t v U Î M M l i j A flawed decision making, inadequate intelli­ a misplaced desirfc to protect foe agency from gence gathering, miscommumcation, superviso­ they werccommg, Bentsen said. ; criticism, offered accounts based on those raid H e announced that he was imm ediately ry failures and deliberately misleading post-raid commanders’ riatements.disregardfaigeytdence statements about foe raid.” replacin g th e ag e n cy ’s d ire c to r, Stephen Three of Higgins’ top deputies were placed j that those statements Weie fatse,” the report H iggins w ith M agaw, w ho w ill serve as aciitig heâd of? o s paid administrative leave along with two said W SSSSB . O p in io n Page 4 • State P ress ■ Friday, October 1,1993 -; : STATE PRESS ■ J oos is Oravos B O O — to the A rizona L eg islatu re, for extending the mandatory insurance law through 1995 w ithout regulating p rices. Pow er le ft unchecked corrupts, ami to force the consumer to pay for a mandatory “service” without offer­ ing some sort of protection from abuses is quite a temptation for the insurance companies. It is entirely too easy for an unregulated industry to “bend” the rales. Many of these insurance com­ panies claim that they raise premiums in order to scrape by, despite the decreasing num ber o f highway fatalities per 100,000 people per year for the past few years, and despite w hat the companies' tax receipts indicate. BOO — to the U.S. Senate, for refusing to lift the ban on abortions paid for by Medicaid. By allowing the ban to continue, the Senate is telling women that they have control over their own bodies, as long as they can afford it. Additionally, if a woman or her partner take pre­ cautions and she still gets pregnant, she has no choice but to have the child, even if she does not want it BOO — to the Board o f Regents, for not dropping the Hamm issue when they should have. Instead, they tried to be diplomatic and please everyone, including those students who complained because Hamm beat them out on the LSAT. The Regents pushed the issue far past where it should have ended and asked the College of Law to re-evaluate their position on the law school’s adm ission policy. The law school returned with a new rule. The dean o f the College o f Law must now approve every formerly convicted felon before that person —- now considered rehabilitated enough by the system to be allowed hack into the public — can attend the program. If the Regents had any guts, they would have stood up to those who raised a stink about die whole Hamm thing in the first place and told them that he has served his tin » and has earned an equal shot to put himself to use in society. BRAVO — to President Clinton, for finally drawing the line on what U.N. misadventures the United States will undertake in the future, although he co u ld have p u t his fo o t dow n months ago and possibly saved American lives. BRAVO — to each o f g » Biospherans for doing som ething many thought could not be done — putting up with seven other people in the same enclosed place feu two entire years. M any m arriages today d o n 't last th at long. Although the Biosphere 2 project was not With­ out flaws, much beneficial information came out of the project (and a good sum o f money dame out o f the g ift shop, too). Besides, when ydu push the envelope in any situation, some things are bound to go wrong. IfasigMde£i........4„M.......r..... Asst. Magazine Editor R E P O R T E R S : James Frusetta, G arin G roff, M axw ell Higgins, Melanie Selcho, Greg Sexton, John Guzzon, Mark Macias, Joy Reason. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : Scott D avis, Paul M atthews, Shaun Rachau. C O PY E D IT O R S : D ave Proffitt, Jerem y Stein, N ick Bacon. CARTOONIST: foyce Morgan, George O ’Connor, Mateo Willis PH OTOGRAPHERS: Brian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Craig Macnaughton, Louis A. Porter. COLUM NISTS: Alan Holcomb, Michael Kantor, Jessica Klinger, David Strow, Wade Swanson. PR O D U CTIO N : Jodi GoLdblatt, Amie Madden, Britton Mauchline, Dawn Reisinger, Skip Schrader, John Tracey, Anna UUnich, Evonne Vera, Dave Weber. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Kelly Adcock, Mike Aim, Sonia Benson, Joe B otgw ardt, D an E llstrom , Jennifer Hughes, Kate Martin, Lance Newman, David Thom. The State Press ispublished Monday through Friday dur­ ing the a&tdemic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 13, A rizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1302. We do not answer questions o f 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 th is newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State Press Phone N umbers Information.......... ....965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising.............. 965-6555 Classifieds...... .........965-6731 O p in io n STATE P ress Friday, October 1,1993 - State Press etter to the editor Swanson clueless about homosexuals, diversity, tolerance Whenever a thoroughly despicable character like Arafat shows the slightest hint, real or illusory, o f reform, many folks lose their rational thoughts in the rush fo r reconciliation. m s* A ten u o u s partnership: peace lovers h o p e for a la stin g calm The Israel-PLO agreement signed last week on the White House lawn D avid D on ranks among the decade’s most veri­ G uest table spectacles. But before celebra­ ( 'u lu m n is t tions begin, consider some of the participants. The Palestinian Arabs were offered their own country along­ side Israel in 1947. They refused it, vowing instead to destroy the fledgling Jewish state. In 1974, after failing to achieve its goal outright, the PLO adopted the “Phased Plan” for Israel’s destruction. Phase One: Establish an independent country on any land Israel will cede. Phase Two: Use that land from which to attack and destroy a weakened Israel. With last week’s agreement Phase One appears on the verge of realization. The question now remains: Have the Arabs forsaken their hundred year opposition to the idea of Jewish rule anywhere they consid­ er the Islamic world? The New York tim es put it more bluntly: “Is Phase Two dead?” As peace lovers, we pray it is, but the signs are disquieting. Earlier this month, PLO Chairman Yassir Arafat toured the Arab world to gain support for his agreement. On Radio Monte Carlo, speaking in Arabic, Arafat discussed the extent of the PLO’s ambition, “I do not forget the PNC resolutions of 1974 ... Aren’t these the resolutions on the basis of which we are doing what we are doing now?” Then Arafat’s Close adviser Abd Rabbo recently announced no end to the intifada or terrorism. And Libyan dictator Muammar Quaddafi openly declared, “The Palestinian state which is established in the West Bank and the. Gaza Strip is a mere stage; the Palestinians will take it as a base for liberating Tel Aviv, Acre, Haifa and Jaffa. Because the plan of the PLO is the liberation of [those areas].” With few excep­ tions, no major media reported these proclamations. Whenever a thoroughly despicable character like Arafat shows the slightest hint, real or illusory, of reform, many folks lose their rational thoughts in the rush for reconciliation. Five years ago, Arafat allegedly recognized Israel and renounced ter­ rorism. Since then he has called repeatedly for holy war and his Fatah PLO branch has conducted more attacks than any other terrorist faction. Now Arafat has became everyone’s favorite mtfAia guest, eliciting tears from some at his supposed transfor­ mation. Even American politicians, who now consider Arafat’s plea for financial assistance, overlook that he once ordered the ex ecu tio n o f tw o A m erican diplom ats held h ostage in Khartoum. Look what’s being offered. Assume the PLO and the Arab states are serious about peace, and not using the negotiations to gain land they couldn’t win militarily. Under this best case sce­ nario, the prognosis for regional peace remains poor. Most of the region’s conflicts will remain unaffected by an agreement with Israel. The Iran-Iraq War, the Gulf War, Saudi Arabia’s fight with North and South Yemen, and Libya’s conflict with Tunisia, for instance, have causes far removed from any Israeli action. Indeed, the poverty, totalitarian dictators, and religious fanaticism that cause those wars will remain the Middle East’s major problems. Note that, except for Israel, the region has been the final holdout to the democratic movements sweeping the world. Even Syria, while talking peace, last month import­ ed, with Russian and Iranian assistance, scores of ballistic mis­ siles from North Korea. For Israel, the security threat remains. Israel is now smaller than Maricopa county. Under the agreement, Israel may shrink to ten miles in diameter- roughly the distance from campus to downtown Phoenix. That increases the likelihood of terrorists, who attack Israelis, of escaping capture in PLO land. More seri­ ously, ten miles is all an invading army would have to travel to snap the country in two. So why is Israel risking its survival for a lottery chance at peace? Jordan is culturally, ethnically, and demographically already a Palestinian Arab country; there’s little compelling need for the de facto recognition o f a second one. But the Israeli government believes the region has changed enough to warrant bold moves. Dreams are pinned on the economic boon expected if peace succeeds. And most Israelis, according to the polls, agree on giving peace a chance. But knowing the historic Arab pledge of annihilation, the security risks of ceding territo­ ry, and the amount of incredulity needed to overlook the lead­ ers’ recent announcements, Israel’s courage in taking that chance seems to represent - not a step likely to bring peace- but amazingly enough, a fervent expression of their hope, or folly. D avid J. Don, a second-year law student, is co-President o f the Jewish Law Students Association. An open letter to Wade “I haven’t got a clue about science” Swanson: • I have brushed aside the ignorant rhetoric of many columnists before you for the last five years that I have been a member of this campus, but my threshold for assaults on reason by State Press opinion writers has been exceeded. Your article appearing in the State Press on Thursday, Sept. 23, is laughable for its misrepre­ sentation of the current evidence available regarding the heritability of homosexuality, and the broader issues of homosexual cul­ ture, and scientific pursuits. Unfortunately, it is sad that some readers will interpret your column as„gospel truth concerning the evidence, skip the disclaimer about compassion for people who hold the wrong preference with respect to sexual orientation, and perpetuate the attitude that “dem gays ain’t nacheral.” Therefore it is necessary to correct four points that were as close to idiocy as is possible for someone who appears to be operating from a shell of childhood biases manifested within the context of your religious studies major. (I will try to refrain from any further adhomenen argumentation.) Point One. “ ...natural selection for genes could never be possi­ ble.” You present this argument as a stance taken by anti-gays, yet you set this particular point Off in its own paragraph. The empha­ sis is clear. Aside from this sophistry, natural selection of a homo­ sexual gene is very plausible. The phenomenon of kin selection, also termed Hamiltonian selection after the scientist who formu­ lated the model. Essentially it states that individuals will perform acts for close relatives which will enhance the survival of the rela­ tive while reducing the individual’s survival. Because that relative shares some proportion of genes with the individual performing the beneficial act, the genes of that individual survive through the relatives. This theoretical argument is supported empirically in many species. One example is illustrated in the social insect where the worker males do not reproduce, yet the colony prospers because of the resources than these non-reproducing individuals provide. The standard reply to this statement is that humans are not bees. While this is" true except in some bad driye-in movies, the truth is that biological patterns and processes permeate the entire spectrum of the biosphere and we as scientists use species like bees, fruit flies, and fish as models to understand pattern and process. Point Two: “Science has yet to discover a gene responsi­ ble for determining homosexual behavior. False hopes and tenu­ ous claims are the only result of recent research.” While it is liter­ ally true that a “gene” has not been found, I think you should read the articles in the July 16, 1993 issue of Science concerning the identification of markers on the X-chromosome with linkage to homosexuality. The study identified a region that was associated with homosexual behavior on the tip of the X-chromosome with odds between 5,000:1 or 10,000:1 depending upon the model of inheritance used to calculate recombination fractions and map dis­ tances on the chromosome. The actual gene or genes responsible for this result are embedded in a region of approximately 2 mil­ lion bases. This puts the search for a. homosexuality gene in the same position the search for the Huntington’s disease was in ten years ago; the haystack is pretty small, but the needle may take some time to find. Technically, of course, the Huntington’s gene had not been found for ten years, but the linkage studies did demonstrate its existence and approximate location on the tip of chromosome 4. •Point Three: “It seems that the four ethnic coalitions that com­ prise the CDC do not consider lesbians and gays to be another racial group.” Thank God. Sexual preference does not claim to be a racial group. Variations in preference exist among all racial groups. What is important is that homosexuals do have a culture different from the WASP norm. I thought the name was cultural diversity committee, not racial diversity committee. ' Point Four: “Yet the search for a homosexual gene will contin­ ue as a consequence of good intentions ... and we all know what the road to hell is paved with, don’rw e?” Jerry Falwell once said that the only thing people should read is the Bible, but I don’t recall that passage about the road to hell in there. Anyway, I’m not a Bible scholar and I don’t want this response to deteriorate into another boring letter about fundamentalist rhetoric. I do how­ ever want to be clear on one point; if learning about how the world operates is putting me in league with Lucifer then I’ll take that chance, guided by the delusion that this brain in my head has some usefulness in acquiring knowledge to make the road much easier to travel. In case anyone is wondering I’m a heterosexual, with a young daughter who I am sure will be battling the igno­ rance our generation does noes not alleviate. There is so much moré to discuss, but l am sure I will already receive verbal abuse from department members for wasting my time away from my research, trying to explain that the search for truth is not a bad thing. Chris Armstrong Graduate student, zoology P age Sta te P ress Friday, October 1,1993 6 ASU scientists em ploy eccentric materials to stabilize microscope Breast implant, bungee, cords and tripod service researchers B y G a r in G r o f f St a te P ress When budget-constrained ASU scientists needed to find a steady surface for a $130,000 scanning microscope, they found stability in bungee cords, breast implants and a camera- tripod. With about S I20, scientists from ASU’s chemistry department stabilized the microscope and solved the vibration problems that interfered with the viewing of objects as small as atoms. “It all started when we had budget limitations, as everything else at the University,” said Daphna Yaniv, director of ASU’s Scanning Probe Microscopy Industrial Associates Program. The microscope, which Yaniv said can view objects at higher resolution and with better quality than almost any microscope, rests on a silicon pad and is suspended by three bungee cords which are held up by a used camera tripod. The microscope is suspended in this way because it is so sensi­ tive to slight vibrations, even those caused by talking, Yaniv said. To further reduce vibrations, the microscope is located in a base­ ment, Yaniv said. This bungee cord system reduces vibrations more than special tables that were previously used to eliminate vibrations, Yaniv said. Such tables cost as much as $5,000. With the vibrations virtually eliminated, the microscope relays images of an object’s surface to a computer screen. It is used to examine atoms and the surface topography of computer chips, drugs, proteins and corrosion. The high-resolution microscope scans objects with a probe that is a hundred-millionth of a centimeter away from the surface. “If you want to look at individual molecules doing whatever you are monitoring, you have to get this kind of resolution because this is the level that things are happening,” Yaniv said. ASU was first in adapting the technology used to develop the scanning tunneling microscope that won a Nobel Prize in 1986. ASU has about 20 of these microscopes on campus and rough­ ly 20 people who are trained in the technology, making the : University the largest center in the world to use this technique, Yaniv said. Potential applications for the technology are the altering of DNA. developing HIV treatments and slowing or preventing cor­ rosion, Yaniv said. The èlectronic industry is looking into various applications of the technology, including the possibility of making computer chips that are even smaller, Yaniv said. Some of the microscopes were bought from vendors, and oth­ ers at ASU were built by faculty members. The scanning tunneling microscope has several advantages over other instruments which allow scientists to view microscopic objects, such as the electron microscope, Yaniv said. It is simple to use, is small enough to fit be suspended from a tripod, can view virtually anything and is inexpensive when compared to other • instruments. J While the microscope is used primarily for research today, it will likely be used for quality control in about five years as corpo­ rations begin to accept and understand the new knowledge, Yaniv said. “Most of the reason that people don’t use it is because they don’t know the enormous capabilities (because) it’s so new,” she said. A course on the technique is scheduled for November. 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All o f that, together with being a Rockwell International company, enable us to offer you challenges and rew ards few high growth companies can match. Positions are available nationwide, beginning in January, 1994 in our Sales Engineer Training Program. ^ These opportunities are available for graduates with a BS in IE, EE, EET, M E or MET. A n Allen-Bradley Representative will conduct interviews Tuesday, O ctober 5. Contact your placem ent office to Schedule an interview or see our Recruiters at the Inform ation Session. Information Session Monday; October 4th 202 N. Alumni Lounge Memorial Union S -7 P m ____ _______ A L L E N - B R A D L E Y flb ALLEN-BRADLEY A ROCKW ELL INTERNATIONAL COMPANY An Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer m/^d/v. ».00 Off Learn t o 8500“ 1 SKY DIVE W ith P air-A -C h ute Inc. • S pecializing In T andem F ree Fall T raining C all T oday! ■ ot949¿9789^ 43Ì-9279 FAST FREE DELIVERY! HOURS: M -Th4Ptn-2am Fri. & Sat. 1 lam * 3am Sun. 1 lam - 2am 921-FAST m m IpI mpI □ B ram as A T OIM □ a c AmE HOT TŒ GE A 0 S WT T S 1 0 1A N A c A N Y ON ÏÏ F•F T T ÖD D Y R A R E MA L gN E O L_ I V E, R 1 T N O N CROSSWORD CAM HALE by THOMAS JOSEPH ACR O SS 1 Home of tha Bucca­ neers 6 Salesman of the theater 11 Lot units 12 Lacking sense 13 Set in 14 Theater area 15 Cargo unit 16 Chanted 18 Wrap up 19 Caviar 20 Like some martinis 21 Foes of the G O P 23 Clothing fasteners 25Seáncé sound 27 Workout site 28 Houston athlete 30 Just gets 43 Soda bottle size 44 Piglet’s creator 45 Post-fire remnants 46 Velocity DOWN 1 Sampled S T A wl iI p i e Ir 2 Play start Yesterday’s Answer 3 Hitchcock 17 Refusals 31 “Seinfeld“ comedy character (1 9 4 1 ) 22 Used a 32 Moved stool 4 For each like crabs 24 Zoo 5 Moving 33 Florida resident 6 Eaves­ city 26Cost drops determin­ 35 Bad parts 7 Aware of ers of town 8 “The Egg 38 Words of 28 Venus’s and P under­ love couple standing 9 Infuriates 29 — roll 42 Quick (doing 10 Impover- • drink Weil) ¡shed by 33 — bodkins! 340fficeholders 36 Yale backer 37 Amusing 39 Abe Lincoln’s youngest son 40 Ouzo flavor 41 To that timé 10-1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's h ow to work i t AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s, X for the tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation o f the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE 10-1 I X N X D J LN , G M K I KHXHR X Q D S KM T Y H H J D D S K T EJ T C N SJ Z E O D S K D X G K X H G M N K K Q X H O Q YT K. __ L Y E F S K G K L N JH A Y E O J Y esterday's C ryptoquote: DON'T EVER DREAM OF BECOMING A "PROFESSIONAL" COMPOSER UNLESS YOU HAVE PRIVATE MEANS.— FREDERICK DELIUS 0 1993 by King Feature» Syndicata, Inc. Page_7 Friday, October 1,1993 State P ress Cutbacks, freezes lim it chances for students to obtain federal jobs B y J ames Frusetta State P ress Although the federal government has been well-represented at the two-day Career Fiesta, ASU students may find that locating a job in the civil service is far harder‘than finding a recruiting booth. U.S. Office for Personnel Management representative David Simmons said he has no doubt it is more difficult to obtain a gov­ ernment position today than it was a few years ago. “It is absolutely more difficult, because of cutbacks, «¡inven­ tion of government and the economy,” Simmons said. “Agencies are reluctant to hire.” “ There will be 250,000 positions eliminated out of a pool of around 3 million — including the military — over the next four years,” Simmons said. Associate Director of Career Services Elain Stover empha­ sized that jobs are still available with the government for quali­ fied students. “I think the positions are available, but (the government) can be more selective (in hiring),” Stover said. “But that’s character­ istic of both the private and public,sectors at the moment.” KEGS TO GO Papago Liquor N e x t to B lu e Ig u a n a S W C o rn e r, S co tts d a le & M c D o w e ll 946-0715 Mon-Thur lOam-lOpm; Fri-Sat lOam-lam; Sun 12-8pm Although the U.S. Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Craps and Coast Guard had personnel recruiters on campus, officials acknowledged that the flip-side of the “peace dividend”1s fewer career opportunities. 1st Lt. Eric Peterson, an officer recruiter with the Marine Corps, said he only has four candidate slots available this year. “ The Marine Corps is being cut from 185,000 positions to 177,000,” Peterson said. “And we weren’t hit as badly as the other armed services,” Recruiters recommend that those serious about seeking federal employment begin looking as early as the freshman or sophomore year. “Students seeking jobs with the federal government need to do an awful lot of work,” said Simmons. “There are a lot of layoffs going on, hiring freezes in effect and dead ends in the hiring pro­ cess." Peterson also encouraged ASU students to investigate job opportunities throughout their academic careers, not just at the end. , “Most of the guys who talk to me are seniors or graduates,” Peterson said. “The people who should be coming up to me are freshman and sophomores.” ‘Sensory affront’ to benefit youth program Post-industrial pop band, others to play charity concert tonight . Quality Supplies, ASU Shirts, Shorts & Backpacks By M axwell H iggins S tate P ress Cyberpunkadelicists and other future-oriented, alternative or otherwise curious people can have an evening’s entertainment tonight and help children in crisis at the same time. Tlie Tumbleweed Benefit Concert, beginning at 9 p.m. at the Congo Java Bar & Grill at 2515 N. Scottsdale Road, will feature an audio-visual “sensory affront” from the new local post-indus­ trial pop band FigureHead. ' ' Also scheduled to perform are local acts ZeroPoint and elec­ tric violinist Barry Smith, with a possible special appearance by a yet-to-be-revealed local DJ. Seating is limited to 170 people inside the venue, with tickets selling for $10 in advance and $15 at the door. Fliers circulating A lot more than just books! 966-6226 704 S. College IO Jniversity say the concert is for ages 21 and over, but Congo owner Mike Moorewood said anyone 18 or over will be admitted. Proceeds from tickets, food and bar sales will benefit the Tumbleweed Center for Youth Resources, a downtown Phoenix non-profit agency that provides programs for youths and families experiencing problems with drugs, poverty and mental and physi­ cal abuse. The Center’s services include counseling, crisis intervention, substance abuse prevention and outreach programs. There is also temporary and permanent housing available for runaways, abused and homeless youths and their families. ' Byron Rupp of Rupp Technologies, which is sponsoring the concert, said his company wanted to start promoting concerts and’ other artistic events that would benefit charities. He said he chose the Tumbleweed Center because of its convenient location and because donations are matched by the state and federal govern­ ment. This is the first concert sponsored by the Phoenix-based computer software company. a SUBS & SALADS LA D IES DAY Every Sunday in October! N o Coupon Necessary • N ot Valid on Delivery Receive a Free Lg. D rink & a Free Cookie w/ purchase o f a 6" Sub. OR Buy O ne 6" Sub & Get O ne Free (Of Equal or Lesser Value) Scottsdale Galleria 6" C hicken Breast Sandw ich, Bag o f C hips & a Sm all D rin k Fall Sandwich Special! $249 OTHER LO CATIO N S: Beverly H ills • Los Angeles • New port Beach • Santa Barbara San Francisco • Pasadena • Palm Desert • San D iego (Solana Beach) • H onolulu Atlanta • Chicago • St. Louis • Las Vegas (M irage & G olden Nugget Hotels) W ashington D .C. (Tyson's Com er, V A & Bethesda, M D ) 20% OFF for ASU students. W e D eliver ! Nf SCOTTSDALE GALLERIA BROADWAY 921-9222 B roadw ay & R ural, T em p e BUMPE CLEANERS OFFICE ACE FASM0N MAX HARDWARE GAL Scottsdale Rd./5th Ave. • Free Valet Parking Take-Out Available • (602) 949-3020 « O pen Daily at 11:30 am Excluding alcohol, tax & gratuity • StudenttD required May not be combined with any other offer «Expires 12-19-93 State P ress Friday, October 1,1993 P olice R eport ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday: • A stolen IBM typewriter was found by an ASU employee Wednesday between the B and C wings of the Physical Sciences Building. • An ASU employee accidentally knocked over a light pole Wednesday on the northwest side of Parking Structure Two, caus­ ing $1,000 in damage. • An ASU student was stopped by police Wednesday after he was seen carrying a “David Clark” communications headset. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was told to leave the area of Stabler's Market after police determined he was “panhandling.” • A student was cited and released Wednesday at Palo Verde West for possessing alcohol and Causing damage. • A Schwihn exercise bicycle was stolen Wednesday from the wrestling room at the University Activity Center. • Police received a report Wednesday that a pair of “Marklin” driving lights were stolen from a student’s car while it was parked in area 17. Tempe police reported the following incidents Thursday: • A transient and a Mesa man were arrested at 1330 W. Broadway Road-Tuepday, after police received information that they were selling'rifugs. Police found the 29-year-old homeless man with o vefan ounce of methamphetamine and an ounce of marijuana. The 26-year-old Mesa man was carrying a smaller amount of methamphetamine and other assorted drug parapherna­ lia. • A 35-year-old woman was cited and released Wednesday for shoplifting at ABCO, 1737 E. Broadway . Road, last week. Police contacted the woman after obtaining her driver’s license from her purse. She had dropped the purse in an attempt to get away. • A “very intoxicated” 30-year-old Tempe man was arrested in the 3700 block of South Mill Avenue Wednesday after his yelling “disturbed residents in the area.” When police arrived, he slapped an officer on the arm and shoved other officers before being restrained. • A homeless man was arrested in the 3400 block of South Mill Avenue last week after an investigation showed he had stolen a customer’s purse from Jack-in-the-Box, 3102 S. Mill Ave. The man admitted to police that he had taken the purse but said he thought the purse had been left behind. • A 33-year-old Tempe woman was beaten and robbed last week in the'6300 block of South Maple Drive by a male youth described as 14 to 16 years old. The woman was grabbed from behind and thrown to the ground where she was punched, kicked and sprayed with her own mace. ASU police force operating at 80% capacity Chief: Hasty hiring will compromise departm ent quality By J o h n G uzzon S tate P ress Six full weeks into the fall 1993 semester, ASU’s police force is operating at just over 80 percent capacity. And though just 31 of the 38 police line posi­ tions are currently filled, ASU DPS Chief Craig Emanuel said he does not want to compromise the quality of his agency by rushing to find replacements. “We are committed to bringing only the highest quality police services,” Emanuel said. "We could fill those positions in a week, but we want quality people.” Emanuel said that promotions within the department must be decided on before new offi­ cers can be hired. He said that while anyone who can complete training at the A rizona Law E nforcem ent Training Academy (ALETA) is. qualified to become an officer, to serve on a college campus requires further skills. “Anyone can work in an autocratic police style ... but to work in a University environment, it takes a higher-skilled person,” he said. “We are looking at those who like to teach.” Filling the positions is a month-long process that involves job capability testing, psychologi­ cal and medical testing and a comprehensive background investigation, Emanuel said. “It takes between three and four months to run the process,” Emanuel said. The current hiring process has been adjusted from past years by adding new tests, such as a video which puts candidates into common onthe-job situations, said Lanny Standridge. assis­ tant director for ASU DPS’ staff and auxiliary division. “We evaluate their judgment, self control, communication skills and if they are sensitive to State Press Crosswords For the crueiverbalist in you. those on the screen,” Standridge said. “And these are real-life situations that our officers see everyday.” . : v ■: • ■ Standridge said the process is divided into three phases of testing and evaluation and after each process, one-third of the applicants are eliminated. “We make those preliminary cuts so we get the best of the bunch,” Standridge said. “We are not looking for the officer who will arrest you in a minute. We can teach that.” He said that the h irin g pro cess is very detailed because the responsibility that accom­ panies the badge is a critical one. An officer must be trustworthy because the power they have can be abused if a improper officer is cho­ sen, Standridge said. “These are people who —- if hired — in court could lead to your conviction,” he said. “We need an individual who is trustworthy.” Standridge said that a prime ingredient in the process is the Basic Skills Evaluation (BSE), which consists of a board of five officers and residents. He feels that the ethnic mix which the board has had in the past donates an alternate view to some of the candidates. “We guarantee ethnic representation on the board,” Standridge said. “The last board consist­ ed of a female, Hispanic, black and a white. We do that because we have learned we need the perspective of ethnic groups.” Emanuel said that ASU DPS currently has four new officers in ALETA and that a lateral transfer is in the works. The new lateral officer has attended ALETA and currently serves with the state Department of Corrections. Many current and former ASU students have also ap plied fo r the vacant p o sitio n s and Em anuel said th is show s a grow ing bond between the police and the community . “We are excited that we get a lot of ASU applications'. It’s something to have our own stu­ dents applying,” Emanuel said. a picture is worth 1 ,0 0 0 words... and a prize. The Sun Pevil Spark yearbook s t a f f incites all A S U stu d e n ts to enter in the 1 9 9 3 -9 4 Photography Competition. Color or black-and-white entries m ust be received by November 19 a t 5 p.m. Photos should center on the theme, "O N T H E O U TS ID E, LO O K IN G IN." All winning entries will be featured in the Gallery section. Prizes will be announced on Pecember 1. Entry form s are available a t the Spark o ff ice, located in the basement of M atthew s Center, room 50. For more information, please contact Tim Gibbons, Gallery Editor, a t 965-6SS1. ‘. ‘ :e 9 Pag Friday, October 1,1993 St a t e P r ess Hispanic Heritage Month celebrates United States’ 2nd -largest minority One of the year’sfew trae blue Originals.” - Mike Cidin, NSE RADIONETWORK INSIDE' i MONKEFt ZETTERLAND / By J oy E. B eason State P ress The soon-to-be largest minority in America is celebrating its contributions to the nation and the local community during Hispanic Heritage Month, which spans from September 15 to October 15. According Santo Vega, director o f community documentation program at the Hispanic Research Center, national Hispanic month was “inaugurated” by President Lyndon Johnson in 1968 “for the nation to celebrate the contributions that have been made by Americans of Hispanic descent, which goes back to 1541.” He said that contributions of Hispanic in American range from the founding of Southwestern and Midwestern cities to Nobel Peace Prize winners. Tucson, San Francisco, San Antonio, Santa Feas well as many other cities were founded by Americans of Hispanic decent. Vega added that economic contributions including their work in mines and the railroads as well as bringing in the first cattle and horses should be recognized. Vega said that it has been projected that by the year 2010, Hispanics, who currently make up 19 percent o f the population, will be the largest minority in America. “Today, you^vill find them in every aspect of life — music ... comedy... and writers.” “The United States is enriched culturally due to the heritage of Spanish-speaking people,” he added. Often, members of ethnic groups are discouraged that time has to be set aside to celebrate their history, contributions and culture. Many have said that their people should be celebrated and learned about every day. . Showing Exclusively at H a r b i n s C a n t c l v l e w 5 S h o w s dally a t f 2 :3 5 . 2 :4 5 . 5 :0 0 . 7 :1 0 . 9 :2 0 TTTÜ JTlTilH M tt P O TH E R 'S BO O KSTO RE asE - 3LEÍPLEÜM AGE OF INNOCENCE flBftSS' --- :30i 7:30. 10:2000) A We want to be your bookstore. 1 :00. 3 :1 0 . 5 :2 0 . 7 :3 0 . 9 :4 0 . MMniQht (fQL is. aaa'MR, aäB.S«>. 7:30.1000. 1g:20s»nW)sA A BRONXT A IS m > 7 1(1 0 :4 0 M idnight f lU - e:sa. Mart B E JU R A S S IC PA R K 1:30 4:30. 7 20. 945, M<0 w m 8 :1 0 . 7:40. ftflp . M M niaK ffO l» m s IN O SU N 1 20. 4:15. 7:00. 8:35 MidniflM (B) L ^ 4/ 1»AO. 3-. to. sao, 7:60. 10.20 12:30 S» (W) 1 * 0 6 . 2ÆS. 4:55. 7:20. 9:SS. 12:20 suffi» f tà iJ P O U R 1206 235 5 OS 736. I Q « , 122S«mffil MAN WITHOUT A FACE 12: I S 2 :4 S S :1 S 7 :4S 1Cf 1 5 12:30 am (TO13I T E S T f o R M only at ROR LOVS O R MOWSY 1:00,3:10.630.730.9:40 bve MeachcGllKKn Fri 29th WEEKLY SPECIALS SUNDAY: il i Diicevw n.v (II a.m. - 10p.m.) Reg., Dry & Light *7.99 Limit 1 per customer. Open 7 days a week 625 E. Apache 967-5445 12.36,9 S 0 . S O 6 .7 J0 .S 3 6 Cam pus Corner J l (used for all math courses) »Sÿ SUN - O p e n Pool Tourn. $100 Top Prize • i M O N - M on. Night Football w/iingerieshow Û HALF PRICED DESSERTS >* I l»TI TUES- Karaoke Night W ED - English Entertainer Barry Mills THURS - Ladies Night Please show ASU Student, Faculty or Staff ID m i* IP i-m -y tin e* Á T c n a t m \ fv. . a w W i. =; », . VJW "\o ° ° $¡£ *é ¡ i4 ^ v t i g » *»« « tTa v . , . 3300 S, G ilb e rt 649-1650 NW Corner of Broadway & Gilbert Comics S t a t e P ress Friday, October 1,1993 Page 10 Calvin and Hobbes CALVIN, lOUR TEST WAS Disg ra ce ? ITS OBVIOUS vou HAVEN'T READ ANV OF THE MATERIAL. an absolute by Bill Wattèrson TH E FA R SIDE By G A RY LA RSO N OUR FIRST PRESIDENT WAS HOT CHEF BOW-CEE AND iOU OUGHT TO BE ASHAMED TO HAVE TURNED IN SUCH PREPOSTERÓOS ANSWERS ! BYGABBYTRUDEAU D o o n e sb u ry HI, OUTTHEFE, ' TT5 ME, THE TMAFVEL0U5 0 NB, AHPWEFETALK1N6 TOMR. j/w ee THUPPUCKEF... “ It’s Jim Vlfllkins, Dave. Sam e a s the others. Trussed up like a Christm as present with h is hunting licen se stuffed in h is m outh. ...I want th is bear, Dave. I want him bad.” PEOPLE* ST. LOUIS (AP) — Clarence Thomas says he has resisted the temptation to hate. “I have had many, many reasons to hate and to resent: poverty, racism,- segregation, discrimination, unfairness,” the Supreme Court justice told a gathering of lawyers Wednesday night. ■‘With God’s help, I have been able to overcome the tempta­ tion to do so.” The hotel where Thomas spoke to about 1,000 people at the Missouri Bar Association convention was picketed for several hours by the National Organization for Women. Thomas dismissed criticism that bitterness over his “life’s experiences” has spilled into his court opinions. “I have seen many who have suddenly become experts on me. ... They all tend to be consistently and unanimously wrong.” Thomas’ confirmation hearings in 1991 became a television spectacle after a former aide, Anita Hill, accused him of sexual harassment. FRANKFURT, Germany (A P)— A politician said Madonna’s stage show wasn’t fit for young eyes, but in the end it was techni­ cal difficulties that scotched her performance. Norbert Geis, spokesman for Chancellor Helmut Kohl’s con­ servatives in parliament, said the show “exceeded the bounds of decency” and should be off-limits for children under 16. foc«eflq4eAHgn/«l f e f o M f c , It turns out Madonna won’t be singing, stripping and slinking around her topless male dancers on Saturday night because her set was too complicated to put up in time, concert organizer Marek Lieberberg said. Setting up the pyrotechnics would take at least 21 hours and there wasn’t enough time, so 12,000 tickets will be refunded, he said. The show sold out twice last weekend at London’s Wembley stadium, where critics said it was “raunchy as usual,” but not as brash as some previous tours.. to leave the hospital Friday. In addition to his syndicated newspaper column, Grizzard has ATLANTA (AP).— Writer Lewis Grizzard spent an extra day in a hospital Thursday as he recovers from minor surgery. The humorist was to be discharged Thursday, but doctors decided to keep him a little longer for observation, said Emory University Hospital spokeswoman Lee Jenkins. On Wednesday night, doctors removed a pouch they put in Grizzard’s chest in March, when he had heart surgery to replace an aortic valve, Ms. Jenkins said. The pouch and some wires were implanted in case he later needed a pacemaker, but an infection developed in the chest area and doctors removed the pouch since a pacemaker wasn’t neces­ sary. \v . Grizzaid’s artificial valve has functioned well. He was likely things all the time, “Your hearing problem is yours,” Fabray told a Town Hall written several books and recorded comedy albums. NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (AP) — More than 50 years ago, when celebrities were supposed to be pérfect, Nanette Fabray acknowledged she was going deaf. The actress and former dancer said she began using hearing aids after friends confronted her about having to shout and repeat crowd Wednesday during a lecture. “Don’t make other people responsible for it.” Fabray was a teen-ager when she was diagnosed with otoscle­ rosis, which causes the bones in the ear to calcify. “I’m now literally wired for sound,” she said, referring to sur­ gical procedures that replaced the bones with wire and restored her hearing. Until the procedure came about, she wore hearing aids to help discern the orchestra’s sound during musical performances. N/r MAKE DOMINO'S PIZZA s r PART OF YOUR WEEKEND! The Late-Nfe MundnTef chenfe PIZZA FOR PARTYANIMAIS. i *»■--it now J■iGcanlLi cpmg: 9 6 8 -5 5 5 5 FANTASTIC FRIDAY! $10.95! For a Large Cheese Pizza & 25 Wings. Value at this location only. Ns «dad « a « s other ods oder, coupon or spend, O a t t M p m allaB tiiaU .ad .slB . Delivery m u limard u>canne safety. Our driven far hte ddiveriM. sassy lass dual tIOjffli O B d m ao aasam r pallatisedfalsa* H e a le r C u d , V ita . D iscover M arrio tt M aroon & G o ld HOURS: l l : Wsn M fc n Sun-Thtir ll:M a n s-2 d tn FrFSat ^pec*l5(£ > CALL 9 6 8 -5 5 5 5 903 S. Rural SUPER SATURDAY! D O M IN O 'S PIZZA LATE-NITE SPECIAL $10.99! L A R G E C H E E S E P IZZA & For 2 Large Pepperoni Pizzas. V a lid a t th i s lo c a tio n o n ly . Not valid with soy other offer, coupon or cpccial. easterner pey* sU sppticebk talcs tax. Delivery u t u limited«) ensure safety. Oar drivers cany ^enthsn$»J00^JJn driven 2 5 W I N G S O N L Y $ 1 0 .9 5 ! O flferValid 10:(K)pm-close only. Valid at this locationonly. Limitedtimeonly. ceasow pm uispiecsM « '•also Isa. Oar ddMmcanr ks*U"> *20.00 sod m acssr p ta d B d fc r lass dtl«ailas. Sports Friday, October 1,1993 State P ress C p o r ts « 3 B riefs W omen’s golf wins tourney Picking up its sixth victory in a row, the ASU w om en’s golf team took 1st place at the U SA /TO PY C ap in Fukishuma, Japan, marking Coach Linda Vollstedt's longest winning streak in her 14 years at ASU. ASU beat out closest competitor USC by six strokes, with a three-round total of 911 (304-305-302) in the three-day inter­ national tournament. Son D evil ju n io r W endy W ard received 3rd place medalist honors at the event. The San Antonio, Texas, native shot a par-73 to finish the long course with a plus-6. Freshman Heather Bowie, competing in {per second collegiate tournament,finished in 6th place: Senior Tracy Cone took 10th place. Swim team assistan t nam ed The ASU m en's swimming team has named former all-American Rick Graves as its new assistant coach, head coach Ernie Maglischo announced Thursday. Grave», a two-time NCAA Division 0 individual champion in th e 4 0 0 -m ete r individual medley, was a graduate assis­ tant with the NAU men’s swimming team before coming to ASU. At the high school level, Chaws coached the East Bakersfield (Calif.) High sw im team .H e also coached at the (told Medal S pots Clinics and was a consultant to the National Swimming T eaB dfH SM er. ______ E Ë S Ê -jj. Sun Devils open Pac-10 schedule Sun Devils aim to break Oregon State’s effective wishbone By Shaun Rachau State P ress Still feeling tired late Sunday afternoon after the Sun Devils’ 12-10 victory against Oklahoma State, Coach Bruce Snyder put a tapé of Oregon State’s 33-0 loss to UofA into his VCR to pre­ pare for Saturday’s game in Corvallis, Ore., with the Beavers. After watching a few minutes o f the tape, Snyder’s eyes widened and he straightened up in his chair because o f what he saw from the Beavers (1-3,0-2 Pac-10). ‘Í watched them against Arizona, particularly in the First half, and that woke me up,” Snyder said. “They played very hard. I think we ju st need to show our team how hard those kids play and téll them it isn’t going to be easy.” One, thing that scares Snyder and the Sun Devils most is OSU’s wishbone offense. Last week against Oklahoma State, the Cowboys sec­ ond-string quarterback Toné Jones gave the ASU defense problems when he ran the wish­ bone. And OSU Coach Jerry Pettibone, a student of the wishbone as an assistant at Oklahoma and Nebraska, hopes the Beavers’ offense will cause the same problems for the Sun Devils Saturday at Parker Stadium when ASU (2-1) faces its first Pac-10 opponent of the season. “I was raised on option football at Oklahoma, and I know what the option can do and what kind of pressure it puts on defenses when you execute it correctly,” Pettibone said. “It’s a real frustrating offense to teach because of all the execution and ball handling. But I really feel in my heart that it’s the most positive yards-percarry offense that’s ever been devised.” As an assistant at Oklahoma SUN DEVIL FOOTBALL • GAME 4 and Nebraska before coming to OSU) Pettibone benefited from the use of a wishbone offense. In his 17 years at the two Big Eight schools, Pettibone played a p art in eig h t conference %«%%«%%%%% championships, appeared in 1! Saturday, Oct. 2 bow l gam es and w on two Parker Stadium national championships. Much of the S o o n ers’ and 1:00 p.m. Cornhuskers’ success can be • T he Sun Devils (2-1) play their first Pac-10 game o f attributed to the effectiveness of the wishbone offense. the season and are faced w ith the test o f stopping the But in the pass-happy PacBeavers’ wishbone offense. 10 and throughout most of col­ lege football, the wishbone, or « ASU leads the series w ith O SU 14-6-1. T he Sun option as it is often referred to, Devils have won the last three meetings, including a has become obsolete. However, Pettibone believes it can be the 40-13 victory last season at Sun Devil Stadium. key to the beginning of a suc­ cessfu l fo o tb all program at * Latest line: Sun Devils by 15. OSU, despite an overall record o f 2-19-1 in his two years as head coach. Last season, before sustaining a season-end­ “I’m going to stick with it and I believe it ing knee injury at Nebraska, Bates had amassed will hold up,” Pettibone said. “I feel strongly that it can be a big part o f us being successful 441 yards on 66 carries and was third in the here at Oregon State, The secret of it is to just nation in running. In each of his three games last stay after it and to recruit to it and to ingrain it in year, Bates rushed for more than 100 yards. these players and be patient and bring them “It’s com ing,” Snyder said about Bates. along.” “There was some velocity and some physical­ Offensively, the Sun Devils are hoping for a big rushing game — especially from tailback ness there that we had not seen in the first two M ario Bates. In three gam es,'B ates has 244 weeks. I see that thing improving, I really do. I yards rushing on 58 carries and has not yet bro­ certainly saw the other things that I remember ken the 100-yard barrier in a game. seeing a year ago.” ARIZONA STATE VS. OREGON STATE T he 1990 g raduate o f C a l S tateBakersfield helped the Roadrunners claim four NCAA Division II championships (hiring his swimming campaign. He was voted the CCAA Conference Swimmer of the Year in 1987. Spikers m eet U O , O SU on hom e turf Softball clinic begins F riday By Paul J. M atthews State Press ASU Softball coach Linda Weils wiU conduct a three-session softball clinic at Sun D evil C lub S tadium F riday and Saturday, Oct. 1-2. The clinic begins Friday with a pitch­ ing and catching session from 6-9_p.ni., fe a tu rin g indiv id u alized in stru c tio n . Session II begins Saturday with a hitting clinic from 9 aum.-12 p.m. far grades 8-11, and th e c lin ic concludes w ith a high school session from 2-5 p.m. for grades 9-11. R ider d ie d on 2 counts Isaiah “ J.R.” Ridar, die former UNLV star and top draft pick o f the Minnesota Timberwolves, was arraigned Thursday on two counts o f (Riving with a suspended license. Rider, 22, was cited Wednesday night and ordered to return Oct. 14 to enter a Pie* He was previously cited Sept. 13 for failing to appear Aug. 26 on k speeding charge. H e posted $5,000 bail and was released. C g B q je F w M I M ta p UCLA 52, San Deigo State 13 B aseball R oundup . Late Games Not Included Minnesota 4, California 3 Toronto 6 Baltimore Detroit 7 Boston 4 Seattle 2, Chicago 1 Texas 6, Oakland 2 Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE r jL g Late Games Not Included Montreal 5, Florida 3 Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 0 New York 3, St. Inputs 2 | l j Houston 10, Attenta 8 ■j '■ San Francisco 3 Los Angeles 1 Only games scheduled Compiledfrom AP and stqff reports. , Craig Macnoughton/StatePraaa ASU ’s Leanne Schuster sets the ball during a match last season. The Sun Dsvil v o lle y b a ll team ta k es on O reg on and O reg on State th is w eekend a t the Univarsity Activity C m tar. ASU’s battle for Pac-10 superiority continues this weekend as the Sun Devil volleyball team (8-2 overall, 2-2 Pac-10) hosts Oregon and Oregon State at the University Activity Center. The Ducks (3-8, 0-3) have tost all three of their conference matches so far this season, but the losses came against No. 2 UCLA, No. 6 USC and to Oregon State. “The Pac-10 is a dogfight,” said ASU Volleyball Coach Patti Snyder. “That (record) is not reel indicative of what kind of team they can be in the Pac-10. It doesn’t matter what your record is. Everybody at some point kicks into high gear and plays a great match.” The Ducks run a- swing offense in which there is a lot of movement, with the hitters approaching the ball from the inside, of the court to set up hits on the outside. “They don’t quite have the athletes to run it as efficiently as they would like,” Snyder said. “It’s nothing that we can’t handle.”By Paul J. Matthews State Press ASU’s battle for Pac-10 superiority continues this weekend as the Sun Devil volleyball team (8-2 overall, 2-2 Pac-10) hosts Oregon and Oregon State at the University Activity Center. The Ducks (3-8, 0-3) have tost all three of their conference matches so fa r this season, but the tosses came against No. 2 UCLA, No. 6 USC and to Oregon State. “The Pac-10 is a dogfight,” said ASU Volleyball Coach Patti Snyder. “That (record) is not real indicative of what kind of team they can be in the Pac-10. It doesn’t matter what your record is. Everybody at some point kicks into high gear and plays a great match.” The Ducks run a swing offense in which there is a lot of movement, with the hitters approaching the ball from the inside of the court to set up hits on the outside. “They don’t quite have the athletes to run it as efficiently as they would like,” Snyder said. “It’s nothing that we can’t han­ dle.’' Oregon State (9-3, 2-1) is having a solid year. Last weekend the Beavers scored the first big upset of the Pac-10 season, when they shocked sixth-ranked USC 3-1 in Corvallis. ' “I think we are waking up people a little bit,” said first-year Beaver coach Jeff Mozzochi. “Teams will probably prepare a lit­ tle more for us.” Mozzochi spent the last nine years as head coach at Portland S tate w here he w on four NCAA D iv isio n II N ational Championship titles. His wife, Marty, was his assistant for all nine years at PSU and is an assistant on his staff at OSU. The hiring of Mozzochi was part o f a change in policy by the athletic department of Oregon State. The OSU athletic depart­ ment has vastly increased funding to the volleyball program in the hopes of improving recruitment and becoming more competi­ tive in the Pac-10. “We wouldn’t have taken this job if it wasn’t a solid job,” T u r n t o V olleyball, pa g e 1 3 . State P ré« Friday, October 1,1993 P ag e 12 M en’s g o lf begins play son would be his recurring back problems. Demsey’s.back flared up on Wednesday, after nearly a month without any problems at all. “ I t’s nothing m ajor,” L ein said of Demsey’s current back problem. “It’s a little bit of a scare for him to have any problems at all.” If Demsey’s back causes him serious prob­ lems, Barber w ould be counted on as his replacement. However, Lein said he is ecstatic with the recent play of Stone, the No. 3 Sun Devil, and wouldn’t be surprised to see him put on a stel­ lar performance this weekend. “Cade will be a very strong part of our team this year,” Lein said. “He’s making a lot of putts which he never made last year. He’s shooting in the 60’s quite regularly.” * Lein is also expecting tremendous things from his redshirt freshman, Johnson. Johnson led the Sun Devil junior varsity squad earlier in the month at the CU/Fox Acres invitational by tying for 18th place with a three-over score of 219. Johnson knows his role for the varsity squad will be slightly different. Rather than be a leader. Johnson will be used as a contributor. When asked what he hopes to achieve in his first varsity competition, Johnson gave the obvious reply. “Post good scores and help the team,” he said. With so much talent, Lein is optimistic for the season as a whole. “Potentially, this could be one of the better teams ASU has had,” Lein said. “1 think every­ one thinks we’re the team to beat.” No. 5 Sun Devils look to improve in rankings By Scott D avis State P ress If the A SU m en’s golf team is upset with its No. 5 ranking in the first G olf World poll of th e season, the Ping/Golfweek Preview in D allas, Texas, will provide the perfect set-, ting to i mprove on its current standing. L e in The Preview, which begins today and contin­ ues through the weekend, will have 18 teams competing, all of which are currently ranked in the Top 20. Included in the tournament are the top four team s in the country Florida, Oklahoma State, Texas and North Carolina — plus the fifth-ranked Sun Devils and No. 6 Georgia Tech. “All of our top competition will be there,” ASU coach Randy Lein said. “Whoever wins this Weekend will likely be ranked No. 1 in the next poll.’’.'. ASU will have a good amount of experi­ ence and depth for its first tournament of the year. The Sun Devil lineup consists of return­ ing NCAA champiod Todd Demsey, seniors Cade Stone and Chris Stutts, junior Larry Barber and redshirt freshman Scon Johnson. Demsey will be expected to be the leader beginning today and continuing throughout the remainder of the seasdn. The only thing that could slow up Demsey’s domination this sea­ , D arryl W ebb/SUrte P re ss Oregon State strong safety Michael Hale gets ahold of Sun Devil tight end Bob Brasher during last year’s 40-13 ASU victory. Hale had 6 tackles and a fum ble recovery In the game. ASU leads You don*t even h a ve to ta ke GRÉ Forum on Graduate Education notes. JUN IORS AND SEN IO RS.-.. W HERE DO YOU GO FROM H E R E? W e have a suggestion: the G R É Forutn o n G raduate Education where you can: • A sk representatives of graduate sch o o ls CA SEY AT t h e presents...... BAT TURN BACK THE CLOCK DAY! TOMORROW '! 10a.m.- 6p.m. MAKE AN INVESTMENT IN Y O U R LIFETIME about their program s and obtain catalogs and application form s • Attend special workshops on various graduate disciplines • Learn about preparing for the G R E Exam • Attend special workshops on financial aid for graduate school • Participate in workshops for minority students and returning students • M eet other prospective graduate students O rd e r yo u r copy The 1993-94 Sun D e v il Spark Yearbook A ll fo r $5 per student. of 14 PITCHES ** 254 H O TD O G S »» 504 HITTING CONTESTS ALSO! 1605 N,Hayden Rd. Acrossfrom BjgSurf 990-7742 today! M atthew s C en ter basem ent, rm 50 W HERE AND WHEN IS THIS FORUM ? • Saturday, O ctober 2 ,1 99 3 at the Ritz Carlton Hotel 2401 E. Cam elback Phoenix, A Z / For more information, pieuse call Sally Bryant at 965-9347, A S U Graduate College. 965*6881 désigner vintage leather unique I jeans P h i K appa P h i n v ite s all members of the ASU Chapter * * of the National Honor Society tothe Monthly Breakfast Meeting at the University Club Thursday, October 7, from 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. John M eunier, D ean a n d Professor o f the College o f A rchitecture arid E nvironm ental Design, w ill speak on The Role o f Design in a C ultured Life. 227-229 W. University, Tempe 968-2557 •724 E. Glendale Ave. 870-8507 PLEASE RSVP BY MONDAY, OCTOBER 4 • PHI KAPPA 965-0022 Page 13 Friday, October 1,1993 S t a t e P re ss P en n a n t fever ... catch it VolleyballC o n t in u e d fr o m pa g e 11. Mozzochi said. He added that OStJ had made “definite financial and philosophical approach­ es” to make volleyball a “priority sport.” Mozzochi runs an offense similar to the one used by ASU. His offense is anchored by junior outside hitter Shelly Smith, a player that Snyder believes is one of the best in the conference. Mozzochi will be ready for the Sun Devils’ big gun, sophom ore C h ristin e G arner. He coached G arner this summer on the United States National B Team and he speaks highly of his former player. “She is a phenomenal athlete,” Mozzochi said. “She has a lot of potential. There is no limit to what she can do.” Garner said that Mozzochi was a good tech­ nical coach but showed too much favoritism to the players that he brought from his Portland State. “Tam looking forward to playing him and hopefully pulverizing him just to remind him who I am, ” Gamer said. Oregon State (9-3, 2-1) is having a solidyear. Last weekend the Beavers scored the first big upset o f the Pac-10 season, when they shocked sixth-ranked USC 3-1 ih Corvallis. “I think we are waking up people a little bit,” said first-year Beaver coach Jeff Mozzochi. “ Teams will probably prepare a little more for us.” Mozzochi spent the last nine years as head coach at Portland State where he won four NCAA D ivision II National Championship titles. His wife, Marty, was his assistant for all, nine years at PSU and is an assistant on his staff atOSU. The hiring of Mozzochi was part of a change in policy by the athletic department of Oregon State. The OSU athletic department has vastly increased funding to the volleyball program in the hopes of improving recruitment and becom­ ing more competitive in the Pac-10. “We wouldn’t have taken this job if it wasn’t a solid job,” Mozzochi said. He added that OSU had made “definite financial and philosophical approaches” to make volleyball a “priority sport.’’ Mozzochi runs an offense similar to the one used by ASU, His offense is anchored by junior outside hitter Shelly Smith, a player that Snyder believes is one of the best in the conference. Mozzochi will be ready for the Sun Devils’ big gun, sophom ore C hristine G arner. He coached G arner this summer on the United States National B Team and he speaks highly of his former player. “She is a phenomenal athlete,” Mozzochi said. “She has a lot of potential. There is no limit to what she can do.” Gamer said that Mozzochi was a good tech­ nical coach but showed too much favoritism to the players that he brought from his Portland State. N B A m o v in g in to C an ad a Atlanta Braves righthander John Sm oltz w ipes his face during a talk on the mound with pitching coach Leo Mazzone, left, catcher Greg O lson, third baseman Terry Pendleton and shortstop Jeff Blauser. Sm oltz was relieved later in the game against the Houston Astros. SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU I.D.* or FEE RECEIPT, YOU'LL GET A DINNER NEW YORK (AP) — The NBA Expansion cited: the arena and the group’s strong financing. C om m ittee unanim ously recom m ended “ We’re excited about the ownership, the city Thursday a Toronto group for the league’s 28th of Toronto, and the country of Canada becoming franchise — and it wasn’t the one that included a part of the NBA family,” he said. Magic Johnson. Johnson was one of 12 partners in a group A group headed by John Bitove Jr. was cho­ sen by the five-member committee and now will led by music promoters Michael Cohl and Bill be voted on by thè 27-m em ber Board o f Ballard. The former Los Angeles Lakers star Governors. A three-quarters vote is needed to was most visible, though, as he repeated his make the franchise eligible for the 1995-96 sea­ dream to own an NBA team. ' son, and approval is fully expected for the The third Toronto group was backed by league’s first team outside the United States. Bitove, who oversees his family’s food ser­ • Labatt’s, the brewery that owns baseball’s Blue vice business, is part o f a group that plans a Jays, 22,000-seat downtown arena that w on’t be The committee said it has not yet decided shared with the NHL’s Maple Leafs. The team whether to recommend a Vancouver group led ;is expected to play its first season in SkyDome by Canucks owner Arthur Griffiths for a second as the arena is completed. NBA deputy com m issioner Russ Granik expansion franchise. COME MEET W ITH US AT THE CAREER FIESTA!! e You may have noticed the beautiful Chase BankCard Services building across the street from ASU. • You may have noticed other students enjoying our varied shifts while keeping their school schedule in line, e And you may notice our Booth at die Career Fiesta! So stop l>^and tadd toitloar R epnsenM fa/ / UV.OSÌ m This year «ye're doing it again! Every Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday), M ike Puios of The Spaghetti Com pany «Kill give you one F R E E dinner* for each dinner you order! It's our 2-for-1 SU N D A Y ASU SP E C IA L. And it's good for the whole year at our Tem pe, Phoenix and Scottsdale locations. Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner, The Spaghetti Com pany is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the SU N D AY A SU S P E C IA L m akes our already terrific prices even better! Our dinners include a full-course m eal with all the trim­ m ings - from salad to dessert. So, dollar for dollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you ca n t beat The Spaghetti Company! E S P E C IA LLY ON SU N D AYS! With 2 dinners for the price of 1! "But you MUST haw your cuvrcnt student U ). card or too raoatpt wtth you to trica advantage dt tMa offer. 1S% g^ulty added to aedtocountod checks (except senior cftUan dtecounts). Chicken Cordon Blue, Slaak Di Jon, Shifted Fket of Sots, Tenderloin, Chicken Morsala, Vest Marsala, Three Paato Opera and orders to go ARE NOT Included in the 2-for-1 apodal. OPEN A T 11:00 A M TO 11:00 PM. SUNDAYS! ' Cotfiectors Part-time, 20 hours per week Morning, Afternoon or Evening Shifts available!! Experienced and entry level collections professionals who exhibit assertive negotiation skills are welcome to apply! Previ­ ous telephone collections experience is preferred. *' You must possess excellent interpersonal skills, and thrive in a fast-paced, dynamic environment! Take this opportunity to grow with a proven leader throughout your college years. W e offer excellent training programs, attrac­ tive salaries, and a generous benefits package. O P E N A T 10 A .M . O N G A M E D A Y S ! .n p i | o W e’re devoted to finding the most enthusiastic arid dedicated employees to provide our VISA and MasterCard customers thie highest quality service possible. W e currently have opportunities ion Stop by our booth for the fed! details!! '' §pagl)^ttí Company* RESTAURAN T P H O EN IX S C O T T S D A LE S outh on Contrai Ju st P a s ta M cD ow ell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ju st North of Indian Band 287-0380 483-5669 O LD TOW N TEM PE 4th St. A'MiU 966-3848 C H A S E MAN H A T T A N . P R OF I T FROM THE EXPERIENCE. Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V P age 14 S tate P ress Friday, October 1,1993 A dvertiser Index Name Page Allen Bradley............................... .... ................ 6 Bicycle Wheelers........................ ........ . „... 7 .....7 .2 17 Buffalo Exchange........ ..... .... California Pizza Kitchen.............. ....................7 Name Page Campus Comer............................ ......................9 ..„12 13 Club 411 . 16 ...................... 9 Coffee Plantation....... ........... Domino's Pizza............. .............. ....................10 Page .... ...............12 ' : ;. . . 6 .................. ...8 ..............9 Pair-a-Chute................................ ...... ..............;6 Papago Liquor............................. ......................7 Name Graduate College............... . Page Name Phi KagpaPhi.................................... - ............12 ..... 9 Rother’s University Bookstore.......... Spaghetti Company....... ................... .............. 13 Student Book Center....................... .... ........... 7 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook............ ................8 White Water O asis...... ................ . ................ 2 C lassifieds N otice to o u r readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. • AN N O U N CEMENTS GUN SHOW - Oct 2nd £ 3rd at: K. d f C. Hall 644 E. Chandler Blvd, Chlder Sat. ^ 5 / Sun: 9 % $3 admission, free prkg. Buy-selltrade- sporting goods, amo & militaria collectables. Info call 8448737. Proceeds to charity. HAIR MODELS needed. Matrix Hair show , free h air Services. Call971r848l SPRING BREAK on the Lake -r Havasu in '94. Book your boats now» 1 (800) 242-2628; APARTMENTS $199 MOVE-IN, Ibr, $325/mo. 2br $375/month. close to ASU. Apartment Renters 831-5900. 1 BD p o o l, W/d h o ok-ups $419/month Apartment Renters. 831-5900 -2 BD 1 ba 4-plex, 809 W. J st street from $305. Evaporative cooling 966-5596 .2 BD.- 2 ba, 900 square ft, pool, w/d . ho o k -u p $ 4 9 9/m onth. Apartment Renters. 649-0077. 2 BD, 2 ba, pool, close to A&U $400/m o. A partm ent R enters. 6494)077. DUPLEX APARTMENT; 2bd lba, immaculate, quiet & safe. Lvg room , w/d hook-up, prvt. patio - 316 S. Hardy. 894-0178. MUST BREAK lease. Willing to pay someone to take it over. 1 bed apt the Peaks 275-4879 SPACIOUS 1 bedim 1 ba, walk to- ASU, nice park across, quiet. $310/m o. 1600 S. C ollege, Tempe. 898-3409 or 891-5027 HOMES FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE NEED 5 students for nice 5br home near; ASU. w/d, dshwshr, $250 ea + 1/5 utfi. 788-0467 HP-41CX SCIENTIFIC calcula­ tor plus extras $200 obo, 4310662 RURAL/ BROADWAY 3br, 2ba w /d, dshw shr, g rg e , SRP util, prvte yrd. $725 w/ibt 331-8)76 PION EER 5-D ISC CD p layer $100, MTX 8" 2 way box speak­ ers for auto, orig $300/pair ask­ ing $125. Call 230-7404. WALK TO ASU. 4 bd 2 1/2 ba, large yard, pets ok. $1000 per month 966-7061 TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2BR 2B A H i, deck, pool, jacuzzi, ow n w/d & more. Short/long term lease. Univ/McClintock Papago Park II. 968-6609" SO NY STER EO Receiver $375,10 disc CD $299, Dbl cass. $225, JBL LX55 spkrs $599, JBL surround spkrs $ 190 leave msg. 681-4751. , BEAUTIFUL 2BD lba, great lo­ cation, PapagoPark I includes w/d, frig, etc. Call eve 759-7868 CONDO 2BD 2ba kitchen, lvg rm, Fp, 2 car pkg, 400 yds form ASU. $510/mo (206) 568-7237 ” |H A m N ^ _ _ _ FEMALE GRAD student to share nice, large 2br, 2ba Scottsdale a p t $285 + util 945-0450 GRAD STUDENT; nice 2bd, 2ba apt, Scottsdale, $270.+ 1/2 util, n/s 994^-4473. M/F NEEDED to share beautiful 2bd 2ba apt. w /d, m icfo, plus m ore. Broadw ay/D obson area $275 + 1/3 util. 844-7063 M/F TO share spacious 4 bd tOwnhouse, $200/mo+l/4 util, 4711 S. Mill, 838-6045. ROOM IN 4 bd house, $295/mo, Oct. 1/2 price. Call Jim at 9675029 or Todd at 345-8517. ROOMMATE NEEDED asap, 4 bd house w/pool, n/s, no pets, $226/mo + dep/util. McClintock/ Southern area. 838-7487 lv msg. ROOMMATE NEEDED to share TAILGATE RECIPES! HELP WANTED- G g N jjR A ^ ^ ^ ^ FURNITURE $ SALES Reps wanted, f/t or pA. No exp nec, will train. Earn $200$500/week. Call 835-1544. $ AAA BED sets in factory wrapp­ er: twin $69, fulls $79, queen $99. Free fram e, can deliver. 256-7675. $7.50 AN hour giving away free services, no selling. M-S, day and eve. CaU 820-5922. SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. Cheap. 352-7249. SELL IT in the Classifieds. Cull 965-6731 for rates and info. COMPUTERS IBM PS/2 Model 25 8Mhz, 8086 Inte) processor, 512 KB expand­ able to 640 KB, 3,5 inch disk drive + hard drive, space saving keyboard $500/obo 759-4462 R O C K G A R D EN 20 line BBS with chatting, games, and on-line pizza! 24 hours a day! 602-220-Ó001. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Ink clu : gold, ster, pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S Mill Aye, Tempe Center 968-6074 A U T O M O g iy ^ 67 MUSTANG for sale. Rebuilt engine, was aw esome. Needs some repairs. $1000 cash, no d eals. Please leave m essage .921-1913 82 PONTIAC J2000, great cond. 1 ow ner, 63k, 5yrS in storage* fWd,at* very depend. 947-7636. 87 CAMARO RS- White T-tops cold AC, tinted, low mi. very nice cond. $5500 call 994-3494 C H EVY PA R TS Small block, all new (still in box): TRW forged flat top pistons, 9.5 to 1, w ith sealed pow er moly rings, paid $200+, sell for $165;; Edelbrock performer intake manifold, $70 obo; Erson cam, TQ20, 292-449, $40; Erson cam kit (lift­ ers, valve springs & locks, re­ tainers, push rods, lube, shims), paid $120, sell for $70. Will sell all for $300.967-2705. BICYCLES UNI VEGA MTN bike with ac­ cessories, $200. Call 470-0079. TRAVEL 1 WAY direct, Pbx to Newark, male only, lv 8:30am Sat 12-18, arv 4:40pm. $150 obo. 829-3759. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap* in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. INVEST $10 save $100 on two round trip, all airlines. (800) 210-2331. HELP WANTEDSALES HOME LIKE care givers needed part-tim e, all shifts including weekends. G eriatrics dementia experience helpful. C all 9244073 or apply at Mesa Senior Vil­ lage 5037 E. Broadway Mesa. AA SA L ES R ep F/T C aree r Minded* will train, 24K-50K 1st yr. Call Marty 275-8555. MARKET RESEARCH phone in­ terview ers. N o sales. Tempe; Evenings/Weekends. Susan 967444'1 *FREE* 265-4392 HELP WANTEDGENERAL LOOKING FOR a part time job? ASU T elefund is s till hiring. Earn $5/hr + bonus to raise $$$ for ASU Telefund. For more info call 965-6754 BOOKS 2BD , 2BA , $500/m o,. unfur, pool, cvd pkg, w/d hkup,lnd rm, no pets, 1/2 mi/ASU* 921-3995. RENTAL TRAVEL ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chndlr needs pA clean-up & vet asst. Exp pref. (eve & Sat). 963-2341 APPOINTMENT SETTING, Re­ search & record keeping. Flex hrs. salary + comm. Call Marty 275-^8555. ; > APPT. SETTERS needed. Hours 5:30pm-8:30pm M-Th. Top pay + bonus. Scottsdale m ortgage company- Contact Jonathan Class or Gary 481-9791 , ART SHOP looking for p/t sales* help, M -F. A pply a t 655 W. Warner #114 Tempe. ASU TELEFUND needs two very enthusiastic & spirited students to help with recruiting. Call now, 965-6754; CAMPUS CHEVRON: Attendant/Sales must have auto exp; Apply in person comer o f Rural & Apache C A SH -D A N C ER S Female students needed fw wheel c h a ir b a ch e lo r p a r tie s .: C all; David "Only the Classiest" 9662p59 C H R ISTM A S $$ Data Source P/T employment for telephone survey interviewing. 8am - 2:30pm M -F beginning 10/18 - 11/24. Req. good reading skills & some computer keyboard exp. $5/hr Apply in person: M-F 4515 S. M cC lintock Ste. 101; Tempe 831-2971 EOE 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, Btimpies at Broadway & Rural. GLAM OUR INDUSTRY For-; tune 500 Company. Sales&marketing. P/T $10-25/hr Call Elise 756-0553 ¿EARN $7.50/HR! ★ M-Th 4-9; Sat. 10-4. Setting appts fo r free health sves. (H rly & comm.) 470-1828. A JA X R S M T A -C A R is now accepting apps for rental agents. Must be personable, outgoing, & depend­ able T O P D O L L A R , generous bonus paid: 267-1001 BUFFALO EXCHANGE, the lar­ gest resale clothing chain in the Southwest, has immediate open­ ings for. p/t employees. ‘Looking for energetic, fashion minded, hard working individuals. Must enjoy w orking w ith people. Apply in person Mon-Sat, 10am. 5pm at 724 E. Glendale. DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED, on campus, ensmr electronics: Own hrs, unlmtd income. 839^8038. NEED MONEY? Interested in AZ politics? Make your own hours. Call now ! 952-1797. F/T P/T looking 4 sales reps 4 new MLM, 100 k possible no ex­ perience nec. Call 650-4986 NEW MAGAZINE needs sub­ missions. Any topic fine, fiction or noti-fiction. Send SASR to: Spike* 3104 E. Camelback Rd., Suite410,Phx, AZ 85016. NATL CO seeks tq hire 20 qual­ ity people who qualify under ADA for new Tempe office. Wp offer ft/pt shifts, flex hrs for ASU students, paid training, weekly pay (hrly + /or comm), daily cash bonuses taps to pros, friendly at­ m osphere. I f you w ould like more info, call today for personal in te rv ie w , 437-8057 Thurs or 921-3663 Fri. PA R T TIM E H ELP VB Cosmetics has immed. open­ ings for cosmetic bottling: 12-24 hrs/w k, starting $4.50/hr With raise after four weeks. Located at ASU Research Park. Call Pa­ tricia or Vivian at 752-2000. PETSL A N D IN G LOS A rcos Mall is now hiring. Cashier, sales people, anim al care. Apply in person. PHOENIX SYMPHONY needs enthusiastic, articulate, dynamic people- sell tickets via phone! Management potential! Flex p/t Su-Th 3 to 9:30pm 265-0417. PT POSITIO N S fo r o n -call & wknd relief staff in group homes for DDH Adults. AZDL & clean MVR needed. East Valley 9410690 RELIABLE TEAM needed for Senior Community. Furnished housing provided. Full time land­ scaping and maintenance o f 1 of­ fice and phone part time of the other. No smokers/drinkers. 8-4 M-F. 275-2853 close to ASU. RESEARCH ASSISTANT for au­ thor, 5-20 highly adjustable hours m onthly. N eed c assette tape recorder. Right person probably doctoral candidates spouse. Work­ ing more for fun than measly $5 hourly beginning pay. Telephone 831-3120 between 3-5pm Satur­ day and describe yourself in 1 minute to answ er machine. In­ clude name and return phone #. SHOE SHINERS $8-10/hr , 3-4 nights C.W. bars, will train, ladies/men. Apply 992-2597. STAPLES OPEN interview ing sessions. Full $ PT time positions. C ashiers, m erchndsng assocs, copy ctr/svc desk assocs. Mgmt oppty. Mon. Oct 4 & Tue O ct 5 ,9 - 1 2 & 1 - 6 4350 W Glendale Glendale TENNIS CLUB attendent in Scot­ tsdale Friday 4:30-10pm, Sunday 7:30am-2pm. Call Bonnie, 9485990 for appointment. VALET PARKING attendants for special events 3-4 nights/wk avg $5-7/hr incl tips must have no more than 1 traffic ticket last 3 yrs must be at least 20’yrs old* must be willing to drive to C en­ tral n ix , PV, & Scottsdale. 8619384. W HO N E E D S $$$? Earn money while you exercise. Tempe co needs 4 reliable people + 2 supervisors to collect water samples. Hours: 3pm-8:30pm MF and Saturday 8:30am-1:00pm. Flexible. F arn $ 150-$300 per week base + bonuses. Call Tom immediately at 243-1515. Stati Praia Claiiifladi Mattkaari Cantar Baiamant 96S-67Î5 HELP WANTEDP /T R EC E P T IO N IS T -O ffice cleric needed. Strong phone, org. & grammar skills. Reliable trails. Resumes only to 1433 N. 1st S t, Phoenix 85004. Organized, responsible & cheerful person to answer phones & per­ form office duties. Apply in person, 9am-5pm, at Islan d s R estaurant 1 1 8 0 1 N. Tatum , S u ite 247 HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BU STERS RESTA U RA N T is now hiring friendly, experienced food servers. A pply in person: 8320 N. Hayden Rd., Scôttsdale 951-5850 CORK'N CLEAVER Accepting applications for lunch food servers & lunch hostess, will train, p/t. Fun atmosphere, fast pace. Concern w /a^earance, re­ liability & personality are im­ portant. Apply in person M-F 25pm , 5101 N o rth 4 4th S treet (44th & Camelback). D O M IN O ’S p i z z a Come & join the #1 pizza deliv­ ery team for the ASU area. We need f/t & p/t drivers & inside help. Drivers make $7-$10 per hour including mileage & tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can also be earned. W e are very flexi­ ble & can w ork around yo u r school schedule. Apply in person after 11am at 903 S. Rural, Tem­ pe, or call 968-5555. EOE. HONEY BEAR Bar-B-Q hiring front counter service. 5012 E. VanBuren (near ASU). 273-9148 Restaurant Now Hiring 2 Locations Islands Restaurant Exceptional opportunities are currently available for: Servers, Bartenders, Dish/Maint.* Hosts (m/f), Line Cooks, Prep Cooks. Successful candidates will receive, immediate training. Apply in person Monday-Friday 9am-^>m, 730 S. Mill Ave. Bld^. H, Suite 104 ; .‘-7v/: • or ■ 11801 N. Tatum, Suite 247 A subsidiary of Chart House, Em,, a 30-Year Publicly Held Restaurant. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE INCREDIBLE SUBS, lunch time sandw ich m aker and delivery driver, M-F, 48th St/Southem. 438-2995. MCDUFFY’S NOW Hiring hostess/cashiers, ft/pt wknights/wknd, days & nights. Apply in person: . 5th & Ash between 2:00 & 4:00, M-F v ". PIZZ ER IA UNO Announces the opening of their „ second location in Tempe. We are currently seeking energetic, out­ going people to dill the following positio n s: lin e c ooks; prep s=cooks; dishwashers; food serv­ ers; server assistants; host/hostess. FT/PT shifts available, apply in person at 690 S. Mill Ave;. M-F 9am 5pm STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT Nbw. h iring: lunch serv ers & lunch cooks* Apply in person MF 10am-3 pm, 5001 E Washington HELP WANTEDCHILD_C/y|!___ NANNY'S P/T days eves or wee­ kend hrs. m ust have re lia b le transportation call 345-2433. JO B OPPORTUNITIES Bartenders- want to make $ but don't have exp? Get our video, for info send SASE to: Bar Video Box 1417 Flagstaff AZ. 86001. GRAN OPORPUNIDAD de negocio! Propio! Productos electronicos para el cosiimidor. 8398038 MUSIC COM PACT DISCS & tapes at Wholesale prices, delivered to your door. Call 483-5336* LOOKING FOR the #1 Rock & Roll expert on campus. Win cas­ settes, CD 's, and up to $1000 cash. Take the 10 question Rock frivia quiz. Call 1-900^344-9335 $2.99/minute, must be 18 PETC ALBINO BURMESE Python ba­ bies $100! Boa Constrictor babies $50! Cash only lv mess. 986-3302 FREE W ^TO U N D _ REWARD - Lost gold & stone bracelet in V and X shape- great sentimental Value - no questions asked - i f found call 784-8084 P ¡R S O Ñ A L ^ ^ A DOZEN roses delivered $20 also balloons. Call AfterHours Flowers 894-3419. „A G P FO O TB A LL C o n g ra tu ­ lations on Wednesday's 19-0 vietory and becoming undefeated di­ visión champions! Keep up the hard work, hustle, spirit, and en­ thusiasm throughout the playoffs! Love, your coaches AFA KATHRYN. I can't wait to spend an exhilarating and exciting evening with you at formal! T ie times we spend together just keep getting better and better! All my love, Ed. . AGD MONICA - UR the best dot! Have a great tim e a t your first formal. Love Michele AFA N EW M em bers G et psyched for formal 2night Luv Fergie ALADDIN GIRL-1 can't wait to go over the alphabet with you to­ night. Can you say a whole new world? -Love No Pillow Boy. AMY WITH the nine inch nails, have a great time tonight! PERSONALS A LPH A G A M C hanon w e’re going to have a great tim e to­ night! Did you find a daté yet? Love, Aimee / ,-.4 ; AX A TONY - AGD Formal to­ night will be perfect. I'm glad your going. I'm excited.' Love Tami. ALPHA PHIS - Get psyched for formal!! MIKE FAEGRE - Hope you en­ joyed die flowers! Can't wait til Saturday! Kristin - _____ ATTN: KARA R. form Colorado have not seen you in a year. We were bom on the same day so you know who I am: (12-18-70) I'd like to talk to you, but your phone # is unlived. I'll be at Ozzies all Saturday night Find me! J.W. ! BABY SNAKES. Get psyched for Pledge Presents tonight! The Actives love you! PAUL- W ORDS can't express how much you m ean to me. I love you so much and I want you to know I'm always here for you! Love- Donna. AT Judges Remember, Pikes are at home in the water. We will win Anchor Splash . y- ; - e X AT Theta Chi will be unstop­ pable at Anchor Splash. DONNA - thanks for all the sup­ port. If you’re good maybe you'll get something. Tonight will be groovy! AL's will dominate the competi­ tion during Anchor Splash! FORT ITKA "Bro o f die Rose" Brian, Get ready for a "so there wé were, laughing and drinking beer'- time. Oh, and wear those sexy boxers from Vicky’s for the ■pi pants drop. Honey, don’t for-, get the vèlcro. Love AGD xensterwoman. GAMMA PHI Carrie, only two days left. I am so excited to be your big sis! - GAMMA PHI Heidi ! Can't wait until Big; Sis revealing ! Love your Big Sis. GAMMA PHI Pledge Cindy - Can you guess who’luvs U? Hint: I'm taller than you! Td> Angela Yes I like Pina Coladais, and I love Champagne. Meet me Sunday at 8, and we’ll plan our escape! Love in TIKE, your Big Sis! a f ex a f ex a f TO Jenn T. H ope you had fun Sunday! Watch out - initiation is around the corner! V Jill Td>B JODI, I'm so excited to be your big sis! Only 2 more days till revealing! Love, your Big Sis." F«PB KAMERON! Two more days. I'm so stoked, I bet you'll never guess who I am. Luv your Big Sis. ; ; ; y.- •;' rB K risti- C lue # 2 ... I ’m blonde, I live off campus, and I'm very short. Can you guess who I am? Lové Your Big Sis!: . FOB LIL Sis Jenny Looking for­ ward to having more fun in the sun! Guess who Luv your Big. Sis. r * B M ELA N IE H ave you guessed yet?? Two more days and no m ore s ec re ts!! Love ; "• ■: r X-tSii S F I EEE Mom Thanx fo r spoiling me. Can't wait till Monday!! Ew Terri THANKS TO all the people who went out with me on my birthday, Lisa, Erim Rubie, Travis, RD, Jen, Belfer, and especially Sharon and D anise-Plum ber : ' / . MATH I DAY turnaround- Most papers, prof w/p, papers, resumes. Laser. Reasonable. Caroline, 892-7022. II YR./LEGAL sec. to do typing. 100+ wpm, (WP 5.1, Tex.I lazer p tr., m any p rin t o p ts!) $ 12 hrV$1.50 pp. Call U sa at: 897-2740. 110 WPM. Theses, longer docu^ m ents (20 + pages) preferred. Competitive rates. Lisa 460-2156. 24 HOUR tum 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. D esk to p P u b lish in g . T yp in g , term papers; resumes, charts, the­ sis, quick service. N ear ASU. 966-1984 PROFESSIO N A L W ORD pro­ cessing: Papers, $2.50/page. WP, Laser!; Resumes $15/page. Call Andre 345-9216 R E V I E W S E S S IO N S F O R T E S T #2 In M AT 1 0 6 ,1 1 7 ,1 1 8 ,1 1 9 , 210 forming NO W . G ill MIRACLE TUTORING« ■(967-2226. •Spaces fill quickly, so call early. ★ FREE SAMPLE TESTS * Private tutoring also available in Math, Chemistry, Physics and Writing MISCELLANEOUS KING-SIZE WATERBED, bm. oak, 6 drawer, headboard, 1 can set-up, $150. Brad, 834-1231. State Press back issues may be picked up at the information desk in the basement of Matthews Center RURAL/ UNIVERSITY. M ore for your $$. Exp. editor. Fast, ac­ curate. Try me. Jim, %7-2360. SQ U A R E O N E R esum e k its, d e a n professional resumes start­ ing at $35.00. Choice o f styles or designed for your ^)eciflc needs. Call 970-4110 for rates & info. W P/ TY PIN G . T erm papers, : th e se s, resu m es, re p o rts. MLA/APA. Quick service reasonable rates. Maureen 955-0969 • :• SK SNAKES and baby snakes, as usual party like rock stars!! SK. love Alumni Snakes TYPING/WORD PROCESSING I W A N T IT NO W ! EK MELISSA Thanks for all your help with my ladndry this ■■ fU T O R NEEDED -If you have strong background in Quantum mechanics. Flexible hours, c d l 967-0701 Live Ja zz & B lu es with SIGMA KAPPA - Keri W. Hope you had a great week, I know you. are excited for tonight! I can't wait to party With you! Love-Se­ cret Sis. . " ; ■■. week...vamy Tour Individual Horoscope TUTORS SIG KAP Headier Thanks for all your hard work! Your football team loves you! - . ; SIGMA KAPPA - Anne Hey mom! I know you've had a hard week, but tonight is the night to get crazy and have fun! See you at 1:00! Love - Erin. Matthews Center Basement 965-6735 Beginner golf lessons every Wed­ nesday $30 - 4 lessons. Women's session 12:00-1:00; Men's session 1:00-2:00. Maximum 15 people per session^ Sign up now. Shalimar C.C. 838-0488. SIG KAP Amy W - Your secret Sigma hopes you have a blast at Formal tonight! •SIG’KAP Rocky - It's finally tune to party With the "bugs"! Love, Stidtsie. ad fo r t h e n e x t day. INSTRUCTION I4»E - we're so psyched for to­ night! C an't w ait to see those tuxsf Love, Your Fd»B dates. SIG KAP Pledge Jen R. We are going to have a blast at Formal! I can't wait to see you presented. Love; your Secret Sigma S ta te Press lin e r W RITING A Bbok2 W ordpro­ cessing at home. Laseijet printer, fast typist Evelyn 961-4000 ex Af rm PLEDGE Becky: The count down is on- only two more days I K Jen M- Our hot spot is await­ ’o f suspense ! Hint: I'm not a ing us. Three surprises left! Love "b ro w n eyed girl.". Guess who? •Craig.. : Lové, Ÿ.B.S. ; .: " / ;' SK KATIE (RT) Have an incred­ T4»B -DEANNA E. I can hardly ible weekend!! ¿K love ML wait! Only two more days til re­ vealing! Luv, Y.B.S., EK KATIE C. - 1 know its been a long week. W aiting is such a FOB ANGIE: I'm younger than pain We roomies w ill have a you... can I have you I.d .? ? blast tonight! yamy Your Big Sis. ■ EK LARA - Y our m om and r 0 B JACQUE I can't wait until grandma are looking forward to Big Sis Revealing! We are going seeing you be presented!! EAQ to have a blast! Get psyched for EK LAUFMAN - We appreciate Sunday ! Your Big Sis ail th e w ork y o u 'v e put in to Pledge Presents! Tonight will be fantastic! EAfl e e WRITE STUFF Specialty word processing/desktop pub. B usi­ nesses; faculty; students. Beth 963-3537. PAUL- ENOUGH o f the cheese, please!! Tonight will be a memo­ rable one! Formal is only 5 hours away! Alh! Love you - Donna! ex Noon is t h e d e a d lin e to p la c e your TYPING/WORD PROCESSING PERSONALS ■YBS P a g e l5 Friday, October 1,1993 S tate P ress I TrancesDrakeI (Oct. 23 to NoV. 21) Business affairs may be muddled and you could get lost in paper work. R ise above distractions and guard against daydreaming. You’re better organized late in the day. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec, 21) You’re sometimes the social but- . terfly and you must guard against wasting precious time today in idle chit-chat; M ental and cre­ ative work gobest after dark. CAPRICORN (Dèe, 22 to Jan. 19) You may feel an acquaintance has Ulterior motives. Be closedmouthed about business interests. Stock Up on necessities and deal With other domestic priorities. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. Ì8) , It’s hard to get a straight answer today. Som e people you deal with now exaggerate or misrepre­ sent the truth. Tonight favors m ental and creative interests. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Either you ex a partner may tend to personal extravagance. Try not UEO to let m oney slip aw ay today. (July 23 to Aug. 22) M ake a p oint o f saving. Stay Sli^itiy deceptive trends in busi­ clear o f quick money proposiness mean that you’ll have to be tions. on the ball today. You'll be busy sorting fact from fiction. Aim to ' YOU BORN TODAY are inde­ pendent a n d id e a listic: You get tiie facts straight would make a good leader for a VIRGO c au se and m ay be draw n to (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) reform and government service. Make a point of sticking to bud­ Though you are self-reliant, you gets today. A void extravagant also have a strong need for part­ spending^ and financial risk-tak­ nership. Usually, you’re best at ing. Im proved c o n ee h tratio n getting your plans into motion ; powers lead to, a productive work w hen y ou’re c ooperative and day. ' ' diplom atic. Y ou’re at home in LIBRA front o f audience, but may be (Sept. 23 to O c t 22) slow in taking others into your Don’t idly make promises that confidence. Birthdate of: Jimmy you w o n ’t b e ab le to fu lfill. C a rté r, U .S . p re sid en t; R od D isarray a t home m eeds to be tidied up. It’s a-time o f greater ■ Carew, baseball player, and Julie Andrews, actress. closeness in matters of the heart. C l$ 9 3 K ing Features Syndicate, Inc. SCORPIO For Friday, October 1,1993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) U nexpected developm ents are likely now in connection with b u sin ess in te re sts. Follow through on promises. Tonight, you may fulfill a social obliga­ tion. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) There could be a mix-up in com­ munications today with someone at a distance. Though you’re eas­ ily distracted now, concentration improves late in the day. •GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) F in a n c ia l risk -ta k in g is not favored today . You could go a bit overboard now when partying. Tonight brings sensible and help­ ful advice from a good friend. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) G o e asy on spending fo r the home today. Though it may take you a While before you get on tra c k w here b u sin ess is c o n ­ cerned, tiie day ends on a productive note. PERSONALS S t a t e P r e s s Classified Ad Order Form Nam e . - Address Hom e Phone Business Phone City, State zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. TKE AT TKE AT TRE AT t k e at .;. ■ ;; ' V ■ /•' TKE'S LOVE our four AT coach­ es... Casey, Becky, Lisa, Stepha­ nie. ; y. ^ ■. TO OUR PIKE dates, Get ready for formal! Hope you are up for it! Love, Your A t Ladies. TODD - HAVE fun on the safari! TODD -W HERE'S your Garth B rooks sh irt? N ow We don 't match. - Y.C.P. Pleas« be auie to chock your ad. Make auio it roods exactly as you wish rt to appear in the S tale P re ss, including punctuation. Please «hack your ad the fin t day M appears-the liability of the State P ress shall not exceed the coat at the ed end credit may be givendorthe first ktteftkm only. Minor spelling errors d o n o tq u t» fy k> rm * » g o o d e .N orotunds w t> be given, b u ilt you need to canc e l your a da ctedK w ill be held on account for future advertising. _ 5 A T Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per »ne, per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 1Ö+days, $1.15 per Une, per day s Com m ercial • 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1 .SO per line, per day 5-8 days, ¿1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.00 per line, per day 3 lin e mWmum. Add a bold headline tor the coat o l 2 lines. TRASHCAN-MAN - Can't wait to see you on Wedding Cake Is­ land tomarrow! Love Slavegirl V T t Jenn T. Do you know who I am? Huh? Huh? D o ya? Well you will soon!, See you Sun.! B ready to party ! * YBS ATA-DOT Jamaica, get psyched for formal! Love, your mom Sho. ATA-Dr. Die & Amy F.- Can you say formal? Get psyched! From your homie Sho Snoop! ZELLMANN - How 'bout a macaroni & cottage cheese combo? 096 066 010 020 061 064 061 077 054 066 Adoption Airplanes Announoomsnts Apartments AutomobHet Bicycles Books BuskiaM Opportunities Com pote» Free Loet/Found 068 062 049 101 074 072 073 070 071 030 Fundraising Furniture Q anigeSaiee Health AFMnee# Help W anleW Chiid Cere Help W anted-Cierical Help Wanted-Food Service Heip W anted-Generkl1 HeipW anted-Saiee Home* for Rent 040 102 107 103 066 076 015 120 060 045 H om eeforSale Houaedeaning Instruction Insurance , Jew elry Job Opportunities Legsl Notices MisceHaneous MWcetaneous forS e le MobNe Homes 003 062 090 064 110 097 047 035 000 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Reriauranta/Bars Rooms for Rent 100 081 068 031 041 Q60 067 106 105 116 Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Condoe for Rent Townhomes/Condoe for Sale Transportation Travel Tutors TypingfWord Processing Wanted State P ress c L1LLLa Watch Your Favorite Sporting Event O n Our I BIG SCREENS 12 27" TELEVISION MONITORS friday HAPPY HOUR 5:00 -10:00 p m 9*4*1 Drinks Complimentary Buffet 5:00-8:00 p.m. FREEPOOL Saturday COLLEGE FOOTBALL SATURDA/S $3*00 64-o*. M onster Pitchers A LL DAY FREE POOL $2°° Hamburgers $100 Hot Dogs Doors O pen at 10:00 a.m. ■ / i V. . friday 2*4*1 DRINKS 8:00-10:00 p.m. DJ«Cliris McSpadden Spins the Hottest Progressive Dance M ix in the Valley Saturday LADIES MIGHT No Cover for the Ladies until 10:00 p.m. $ 1.00 Sunday W ell, Wine ft Draft NFL SUNDAYS for the Ladies 8:00-10:00 p.m. $3*00 64-o*. M onster Pitchers A LL DAY FREE POOL $2°° Hamburgers $T°° Hot Dogs Doors O pen at 10:00 a.m. $1.50 IcejtCafd for EVERYON E 8:00-10:00 p.m.