C o m m u n ity re a e ts to r e g e n t’s c la im .. . B y M elanie K . S e l c h o S tate P ress B y M ark M . M acias S ta te P ress ASU does not do enough to facilitate a four* year graduation rate for full-time students, offi­ cials and students said Monday in response to a claim by an Arizona Board of Regents member that a four-year diploma should be the norm. But o fficials also stressed that as a metropolitan, public University, ASU has a much different mission than that of traditional four-year institutions. ASU President Lattie Coor said ASU has an obligation to ensure students have the opportu­ nity to graduate in four years, and part of that obligation is to improve the academic advising. H ow ever, C oor said that R egent John Monger’s attack on students for their slow grad­ uation rate may be misfired, because ASU’s student body is diverse in its goals and needs. “When you have a large metropolitan uni­ versity like ours ... it is different than the his­ toric, four-year traditional college,” he said, ASU Provost Milton Glick said it’s difficult to pinpoint one problem as the reason for the low four-year graduation rate among the state’s three universities. “I think one reason for the long-term gradu­ ation rate — and everybody is uncomfortable with how long it takes — is that many of our students are working students and can’t take full loads,” he said. “It relates in some cases to academic advising, and in some cases to the inaccessibility of classes.” Glick added that a five-year graduation rate is not inherently a problem, it’s only a concern for students who need to graduate and can’t because of a bureaucratic Obstacle. “For those students who are fully prepared, we ought to make sure it’s possible to graduate in four years,” he said.“ But that’s not as impor­ tant as making sure they are well-educated when they graduate.” Glick promised that changes are being made to ensure that the University does not delay stu­ dents from graduating on time. “We can improve those graduation rates and that’s part of the outcomes that Dr. Coor has promised — that we’re going to improve the five-year graduation rate,” he said. Bill Arnold, Faculty Senate President, said Munger’s complaint about students- who drop Courses and take more classes than necessary is aimed at a small percentage of ASU students. “There are not more than 500 or 600 stu­ dents who’ve taken more hours than they need ; to graduate,” he said. Arnold said students at ASU do not repre­ sent a group with-the ability to devote enough time to school to get a four-year degree, based on financial and personal circumstances. “What I’ve found was this is not an institu­ tion where you go and devote all o f your ener­ gies to going to school,” he said. “What I found was a majority of students work.” Arnold added that students need more advis­ ing, and the University needs to assess where M em bers o f the A rizona S tu d en ts’ Association will take an official position today on past comments made by Arizona Board of Regents member John Munger that students should not take longer than four years to gradu­ ate from a university. ASA delegates will participate in a telecon­ ference at 5 p.m. today to discuss Munger’s com­ T urn to M onger, page 'J ' • •<« • ments and draft a proposal in response to them. Munger’s remarks were first reported in the Sept. 3 issue of the State Press, where Munger said taxpayers shouldn’t subsidize university stu­ dents who earn excessive credits, yet fail to grad­ uate in a timely fashion. The remarks have since sparked anger among several student leaders. Jennie Garcia, ASA delegate and NAU stu­ dent body president, said the “bureaucratic in nisn aone / i f of the m amain in rfi rea­ mess’’ of the government sons why students don’t graduate within the tra­ ditional four years. “The bulk of the reasons why students aren’t graduating are the fault of the institution or the fault of the federal or state government,” Garcia said. “W e’re taking a stance on that because it isn’t fair to punish students for things that are out of their control. T urn to ASA, page 7. 7. Cultural diversity needs to extend to faculty, report says •’ * -. B y J oy E. B ea son State P ress ASU needs to boost its minority faculty recruitment and retainment figures in conjunction with efforts to create campus cultural diversity, according to a report released by the ASU cultural diversity task force. Among the 20 cultural diversity goals named by the task force in its September report was an emphasis on the importance of a diverse employee base to promote diversity on the campus as a whole. The report states: “One of the important ingredients for suc­ cessful recruitment and retention of a diverse student body is a INSIDE STA TE PR ESS W e a th e r O u tlo o k Mostly Sunny and a bit warmer. High 93, low 68. diverse administration, faculty and staff. ASU has emphasized the hiring of a diverse employee base,- and ... hiring of staff, faculty and administrators from underrepresented populations remains a challenging task.” According to ASlTs Office of Institutional Analysis, as of fall 1992 there were 10 American Indian faculty members, 115 Asian, 31 black and 79 Hispanic, making up a combined 14.3 percent of the entire faculty population. Between 1982 and 1992, American Indian and black faculty have not seen any Substantial increase in numbers, Asian and Hispanic faculty have each increased close to 3 percent over 10 years. ASU scientists try to create new materials that can aid multi-million dollar projects like superconductor research. Page 9 ASU is formulating a program to assist juveniles who try to re-assimilate into society fol­ lowing a stay in jail. Page 8 W orld/ N ation Forces opposing Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide chase U.S. diplomats from shipping docks Monday. Page 3 . >■«■. * -l ■ T-*.Î..Î11 _ — o l l a n a r \f T ik a f Gretchen Bataille, associate dean■J of theCCollege of Liberal Arts and chair of the administrative task force that released the report, said there are several barriers faced in recruiting minority faculty. . “The most difficult thing was prior to the passing of the Martin Luther King holiday bill,” she said. “Hie passage of the holiday really helped in terms of the national perspective of the state. Arizona is still considered a conservative state. People do not feel the state is very hospitable.” She said University officials have less difficulty recruiting Hispanic faculty because of the Hispanic Research Center on T urn t o D iversity, S ports Former ASU women's basket­ ball standout Ryneldi Becenti has her sights set on Atlanta in 1996. P ag e 11, page 7. W here To Find I t Advertiser Index..,...,..........14 Classifieds.........................14 Comics.........V.,.,....,............. 10 Crossword........................... 6 Horoscopes....................... 15 O p in io n ....................................... 4 Police Report .......................8 S p o rts..................... ..I I Today’s Activities.:............. 2 World/Natipn...... ...............-3 Page 2 St a te P ress Tuesday, October 12,1993 Photos by Brian FHzgerald/State Proas The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed a s a service to the ASU corn’- ' munity. Requests are printed according to the space available each day. Campus clubs and organizations m a y submit written entries to the State Press f r the basement o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Requests wiO not be taken over d ie phones. Entries m ost contain the fu ll n a t0 '^ m e ^ group, a description o f the event, date, time and the fu ll address o f th e location. AM requests are subject to ed itin g fo r content, space and clarity. D eadline fo r en tries f t m e n th e day before publication. C o u n s e lo r C o a le r Counseling for ASU students, provided by counseling and counseling psychology graduate students, supervised by faculty, Payne Hall Room 402. For more tnfomation or appointment, contact Jan, 965-5067. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Daily closed meeting, noon, All Saints Cfe&tpiic Newman Center, northwest corner of College Avenue and University Drive. • ASU College of E xtendedE ducation's D ow ntow n C e n te r G a lle ria — During October, “Patterns of I J HP exM ritfcyASiJ alum na Carolyn A, Z arr o f original ;ofI Free admission, 502 E. Monroe, second floor, Phoenix. • Newman C enter Young A d d h Join the Catholic young adults in a “faith sharing group" to discuss faith arid beliefs and how to apply them to daily life, ?:3 0 p .m .* Newman Center Deporres Room. • ASU Symphonic Band — First concert of the season, 7 :3 0 p .m ., Gamm age Auditorium. • C enter fo r A sian S tudies — Japanese film festival presents the film “Makioka Sisters,” introduction by Professor Winston Kahn, 7:30 p,tn., Nursing Buildiag Room 101. • Sem ester a t Sea Video/information session, 7 p.m., MU Room 224. • Writing C enter — Seminar: How to Read and Think Analytically, 3:40 p.m.* 4:30 p.m., Language and tite ra tu re B uilding Room B 138. -, • C reative W riting Student Association — Fail Reading Series presents playwright Meg Halverson and her stage reading of n e w -1 th e atric al w ork, 6:30 p.m ., Btmdersnatch BreÿiPUb, Ï25 E. Fifth S t, • R e-E n try C onnection --¿¿Fall Lecture Series: “Taking the M ystety O ut o f the Library,” by Naomi Ledenr, librarian with Instru ctio n and Inform ation S ervices, Hayden Library, noon- 1 p.m., Adult ReEntry, MU lower level. • P ^ w s U p o f C hristian Athletes (FCA) Weekly meeting, everyone welcome for fun, food and fellowship, guest speaker John H ig g in s, 7 :3 9 p.m .. U n iv ersity Activity Center Room 35. | College Libertarians — General meeting, all students welcome, ? jpj&. $ f li CCfgmr Roma. • University H onors College — College Council meeting, nonrinarions for publicity |chairperson, Senate happenings Xnd m uch I m ore, -every o n e U tçlfiidte' McClintock Hall Study Lounge. *•_ • H illel U nion o f J e w is h S tu d e n ts — Tuesday Lunch,' 11:30 s a h * f 10& $, Mill Ave. • American Indian Institute Financial aid |p » rk s h o p by C a ro l C hi ago o f th e Student Flmmidri questions, 2 :3 0 p.m ., A m erican Indian Institute, Engineering Annex Room 109D. :• Chi Alpha Christian È eifo w sh ip '^^iiih ': service, worship, feilowship aad prayer, open to everyone, 7 p.m., Danforth Chapel. • Baptist S tudent Union — Tuesday P.M., w eekly c re a tiv e w orship, 7 p .m .,B S tJ Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave. • C e n tr a i A rizona C h a p te r Society fo r Conservative Biology — General meeting, guest speaker Noel Snyder o f W ildlife Preservation international, everyone wel­ com e, 7 p.m .- 9 p.m ., L ife S ciences Building ROomC496. During his slo t, th e u nclassified student spins a bizarre yet interesting jum ble o f heavy m etal, a lte r‘ native rock and disco tunes, interspersed w ith A lisky’s deep broadcasting voice. KASR m ay not reach a ll ASU students (cu rrent listen ership Is e s ti­ m ated a t m ore than 5,000), but stu d en t DJs like A lisky seem to love w hat they d o. KASR also broadcasts video show s via public access in hopes o f bolstering its audience and , som eday, Its pow er. A llsky, w ho has been Interested In broadcasting since grade school plans to spin his tunes a t least th a t lo n g,... 11 the alternative copy shop I C o m p lim e n t a r y P iz z a B I ' / u f f e t 915 S. M ill Ave. • Tempe, A Z 85281 (8 0 2 ) 8 3 9 -7 9 0 2 On th e com er o f M ill and U niversity in th e Tem po C enter World/Nation Page 3 Tuesday, October 12,1993 S t a t e P ress A rQ u n d z ik n z o n a Pili C r itic s sa y cu rfew ta r g e ts f i ¡É Wm ¡ü mÊM ¡■ a IPlilll ÉMll 1¡¡¡¡¡¡ m in o r itie s: ¡police d isa g ree PHOENIX ~ M o c h a n 60 percent of juveniles detained in the city’s curfew program this yam m er minorities, prompting some to ( police of racial bias. Almost 2,200 minors were demined from May to September for violating curfew — 51 percent o f whom were H ispanic, 9 percent black, 1 percent Indian and 39 percent A nglo, police statistics showed. T he num bers d o n ’t m atch 1990 Census figures that show Hispanics com­ prise 29 percent o f Phoenix residents under 18, blacks 6 percent, Indians 2 per­ cent and Anglos 60 percent. . Retiring Councilman Calvin Goode, who represents heavily Hispanic south Phoenix, said the discrepancy should be explained. Louis Rhodes, head o f the Arizona Civil Liberties Union, agreed “It's a troubling statistic,” he said “It clearly shows a racial bias that doesn't match the demographics of the city.” Police say the numbers are propor­ tio n a te in the P hoenix U nion H igh School District, the target group. In that district, Hispabics comprise 47.4 percent of students; blacks 12.8 per­ cent, and whites 33.6 percent, said Li. John A ugustyn, who runs the curfew f Kf HWt Woman hospitalized after 10 days in rugged canyon SED O N A (A P) — A C anadian woman hospitalized after being lost for mote titan a week in ragged canyon coe»try told o f being chased by lights and bounds during an ordeal that left her tired and i imftinmt N adia C ook, 65, o f B urlington, O ntario, disappeared O ct 1 when she went bating in Boynton Canyon in the Coconino National Hatea and was hospi­ talized Saturday when site emerged from * e cans on. While being interviewed Monday by detectives at a hospital in Cottonwood, N adia Cook told o f being chased by bounds and of building bonfires after t ie becam e lost, police Li Dana Schmidt said. . M cCain promotes GOP plan MECHANICSVILLE, Va. (AP) — Republican Sen. John McCain, and two other Republicans opened a senes o f town meetings cm health care Monday by agreeing with President Clinton that heafth insurance should be reformed. ■ B u t they quickly made clear that's the only point o f agreement between them and the Democratic president Sena. l*hil O raran otT exas and laid Coverdell Of Georgia joined McCain in d erid in g C lin to n ’s “m anaged com peition” plan as socialized medicine that would force Americans into "health col- toctives.” “Do you ward to socialize medicine in America?” Gramm asked health pro­ fessionals and local officials gathered at th e H anover M edical P ark. “T h a t's exactly what we’re debating ” *The only places I know in the world where collectives are sail in place am North Kama and Cuba." McCain said. 2 a lie n s fo u n d d ea d in desert TUCSON (AP) —- Two man whose bodies were found in the desert over the 'm O r n á apparently warn illegal d m desert heat two weeks who died i t the ■ ago, authorities said Monday Fhe bodies were found on a route jgrants who sneak into ;ona, B order P atrol McDonald said. . have tncd to light a fire They carded no ideatiwas unknown whether I with others, the Pima {MgNMhnMti add. tiy d u d o f exposure, ¿ s a id , ‘ September warn m the Associated Press Arm ed civilian s opposing H sitisn P resident Jean-B ertrand A ristide d rive aw ay from the Port-au-Prince dock entrance w here seconds before, an angry m ob chased aw ay U .S. Em bassy vehicles a fte r they refused entry to receive a U.S. Naval vessel carrying 200 U.S. sold iers. H aitian s bar U .S . w arship at port Arm y-supported m ob chases diplomats from dock PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Armybacked toughs, Warning o f another Somalia, wrecked plans for American troops to land as part of a U.N. peace mission in Haiti on Monday and drove away U.S. diplomats waiting to greet them. The band of 25 to 50 men, some of them armed, then beat up merchants in the nearby market and fired guns while roving through the capital, including near the seaside U.S. Embassy. No casualties were reported. U.S. and U.N. officials said the disturbances would not halt die overall peace mission. But it was yet another direct challenge by the military to the U.N. efforts to restore democracy to Haiti. Although the group was small, they clearly been violated. Monday’s landing was to begin in earnest thé had the support of the powerful Haitian army’s police division, which stood by or even helped peace mission to restore democracy and rebuild the gang. Haiti's army commander later defend­ the economy. About 100 other U.N. personnel — including 25 U.S. troops — are already in the ed the mob. In Washington, the Clinton administration country to do advance work. - A fter the disturbances,' the WMtesHouse demanded that the Haitian military explain why delay ed the deploym ent o f the nearly 200 the troops Were not allowed to land. Madeleine Albright, the U.S. ambassador to . American military medics, engineers and civil the United Nations, brought a complaint to the affairs sp ecialists ab o ard the USS H arlan Security' Council, which met to Consider endors­ County, an amphibious landing ship anchored ing it. A U.S. source at the United Nations said it 800 yards offshore. There was no word on when contained a “veiled warning” of reimposing the troops might dock. Following the killing of at least 17 American sanctions if Secretary-General Boutros BoutrosGhali reports that the Haitian peace plan has T urn to H aiti, page 7. Militia cease-fire holds in Mogadishu NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Following a show of force over Mogadishu by U.S. warplanes Monday, the.U.N. special envoy to Somalia welcomed a cease-fire by the militia of clan leader Mohamed Farrah Aidid. The comment by Jonathan Howe, a retired admiral, was relayed-to reporters at a briefing after Mogadishu ended its third night without attacks on fortified U.N. positions around the city . “We welcome all overtures of peace and stability in Mogadishu, as we have seen them in the rest of the country,” Howe’s Statement said. His spokesman, Farouk Mawlawi, said he would not elaborate oh the envoy's words. Fighting between U.N, peacekeepers and Aidid’s militiamen has been largely confined to the part of Mogadishu controlled by Aidid. Leaders of the other 14 main factions generally are cooperating with U.N. forces else­ where in rebuilding the nation after a devastating civil war and famine. Aidid reportedly announced the suspensiotyrf attacks in a radio broad­ cast Saturday. The move was timed for the Sunday arrival of President Clinton’s envoy, Robert Oakley, who is exploring a negotiated settlement of the con­ flict. Oakley met with Aidid’s representatives on Sunday, said a diplomat in Mogadishu. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he did not know specifics of the discussions. American F-18 Hornet fighters and A -6 Intruder bombers roared low over the seaside capital Monday, the thunder o f their engines rattling win­ dows and emphasizing Clinton’s decision to reinforce the U.S. peacekeep­ ing contingent. Before dawn, U.S. AC-130 aerial gunships fired their radar-guided canT urn t o Somalia , page Denny juror let go; panel told to start over w ith new member LOS ANGELES (A P) —- A ju ry was ordered to start deliberations over again with a new member Monday in the Reginald Denny beating case after the judge dismissed a juror who '’doesn’t use common tense.'’ S uperior C ourt Judge John O uderkirk removed a black woman in her 60s who had said in open court that; she Was struggling to understand issues in the highly charged c u e against two hlack defendants. The judge replaced the woman, identified only as juror 373, with an A&an woman who appeared to be in her 20s. chosen by lottery from three alternates The jury now has three blacks, four Hispanics, three whites and two Asians Attorneys for the two defendants, Damian Williams and Henry Watson, objected to the prosecution's request for the juror’s removal. The’judge denied their request to postpone his decision until they could appeal “This is basis for a mistrial or a new trial,” attorney Edi Faa) said outside court. ( • Prosecutors declined to com m ent.. In a note to Ouderkirk, the jury forewoman said 11 ju ro rs voted to h av e th e w oman removed because she was interfering with deliberations. The note said the woman “cannot compre­ h end any th in g th at w e 'v e been try in g to accomplish. W e tried patiently to talk and work with her, all to no avail. “It i$ unanimous and we feel she shouldn't continue in the deliberations This has nothing to do with her views on issues or her personal­ ly. She doesn’t use common sense. “Lastly, just when we’ve made progress- in final decisions she is totally oblivious to what were discussed or decided.” • Ouderkirk replaced the woman after sever­ al jurors were interviewed in a closed-door rarin g * The judge said he found that the woman “has been failing to deliberate as the law defines it.” 7. Opinion P itg e 4 1 ? _________________________________ ^ State P ress Tuesday, October 12,1993 gtuu,'< bu N t e P I o M w /t * P r e s i d e O w f v f l W Th é U d itorial pBoae _________ _j ^- S ta te ^PreSS P resid e ? w e u .,it 's K. NEVER. UMNO — JUST T M K TO TMDAONTV 46. a RADIO?? R A D IO Open mouth, insert foot A rizo n a B oard o f R eg en ts m em b er and apparent kook fro m lticso n John M onger has let loose die d ig s o f war and a lot erf hot .sir» Against sta d n ls. ." y t & a y y v "i On Sunday M onger, a regent, reiterated to local media what h e told a State Press reporter on Sept. 3. He believes —- check that — he knows that students who don’t graduate within four years are slackers. And since he knows so much about how stu­ dents’ lives revolve mound living it up and ta k -1 ing it easy while in college, he’s gone so far as to suggest that the state should yank its $5,200per-year subsidization o f in-state tuition if those students can’t get a degree before they exceed 150 credit hours. That’s right folks, you’re all a bunch o f slack­ ers. You’re all a bunch o f no-good losers who don’t deserve to have your education subsidized anym ore by the state b ecau se you can ’t g et through the system on time. So says Mr. Munger. The strange statements from the regent have coined a new phrase in Arizona politics -— “Munger Logic.’* Yet anyone who has actually gon e through Arizona’s universities in the last 10 years w ill tell, you that the system appears to be designed to actually keep people from graduating in four years. In addition, the rising cost o f a higher educa­ tion has forced many students to take on more jobs than a full class load w ill allow to provide basic sustenance and pay for classes. These aren’t just words from the State Press, either. Among those who'disagree w ith Munger ■ are AStJ President Lattie C oot, A SU Provost M ilton G lick, and a lot o f students and student leaders. D oes Munger think students are living high on the hog a ll this tim e hi school, running up the state taxpayers’ tab? The Top Ramea noodles in many students’ cupboards say otherwise. If Munger would realize what tífe for students is really like, be caaká quit flapping Itisjflswsapd put all o f his misdirected energy into fighting for increased funding o f Arizona’s three uiavcraities | to keep the cost o f tuition down and provide Jfl the clásses students need to graduate on tim e. That is the way a regent should talk. That is the way a regent shouldfeel. 1 • It’s no wonder the state’s universities are in such sad shape af and support from regents like Munger. ■ ■ ■ jfSfi imiKiMSé «ttmiM 1UW*Ii Uasifned Suae Press «atrasa whole. Baatd raaabera W o * 1 S. Talbott S a t* E ditor I f •■ , Smm&udm 1 s TAFF S TA T E PRESS j § í¡* « 1 3 O K , A DATE wrmpESnMV, SK IP THAT. £ u .th 0 * m e /M * v e A RENDEZVOUS iò t N N ltH tJ K T lN Y . iF lb u lW N K TW SÒ U N D S MORE HIP. I WORRY a b o u t iu a t BoY. NOW, B ill, tJO V O U Have, a D O G -? A irn tE DoG?,. Stepping forward in civil rights hard in ungainly platform shoes I love my platform shoes. The shoes not only make me look taller, they make me feel taller in a metaphysical kind of way. But when I walk on my shoes, I occasionally slow down or even stum­ ble because of the difficulty involved by the elevation of one’s feet from the ground. Sometimes I believe they made a com eback sim ply to slow women down. The same way that platform shoes slow a person down ~ and even occa­ sionally cause them to stumble or fall — many groups within society are purposefully slowed down even to the point of stumbling or falling — in attempts to keep them from moving forward in a positive and empowering direc­ tion. Okay, its not the most convincing metaphor for social injustice and discrimination ever Created, But it is true. Despite the fact that the American social system has been laud­ ed as one of the most progressive, forward-looking and equal sys­ tems ever —* usually by its chief beneficiaries — it has always been a System in which a few were privileged enough to wear sneakers while the majority tottered on their metaphorical plat­ forms. Historically, the statement in the U.S. Constitution “all men are created equal” implied “all white made property owners are created equal." It simply wasn’t envisioned as empowering any other part of American society as we know it today. It was not until the early 20th century when more people were incorporated into the “system” — and there was quite a lot of stumbling and falling along the way — that they were elevated to a new height. Finally, laws were created that allowed you to be a viable part of society if you didn’t happen to be a white property-owning male. Women were given the right to vote, Native Americans were acknowledged as citizens and the civil rights movement began to break down the barriers of segregation. So the underprivileged got back on their feet again, but they still find themselves wobbling a little and far from the eventual goal of trading in those platforms for the many different styles of comfortable “Nike Airs.” In other words, society has a long Way to go before it can be considered multi-cultural. The struggle for equal rights continues its uneven pace today, as many oppressed groups continue to attempt to move forward. One of the most important factors in this movement is unity; if forced to wear those ungainly platform shoes, it is critical to establish balance and unity of step. The homosexual community is one example of a group that takes unified, firm steps forward, even only to totter backwards by society’s shoves. But the movement toward equality continues to move ahead. The recent march in Washington D.C. by gay and lesbian groups brought issues-concerning their community to the forefront of media and society. Unfortunately, the homosexual Community has then been pushed over by American society and its government. Clinton’s “Don’ t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy allows the Unseen and unheard violence against them to persist rather than diminish, and changed a great stride forward into a stumble. On the other hand, he women’s movement is a group that needs a lot of balancing. Though women have striven to move for­ ward, they are continually pulled down to the ground by society’s socialization by the media and government, gender bias in lan­ guage, and division between women themselves on the issues fac­ ing their individual lives. The lack of consensus between feminists on such issues as abortion, pornography, child care and other such {»liticai issues facing society unbalances the women’s movement even as it takes tentative steps forward. One example is public breast-feeding by women. Recent con­ troversy in Maplewood, New Jersey adds new ammunition to a battlefield between factions in the women’s movement — at a time when women are dying in a system which discriminates against women. Women need to set priorities on the parts of society we need to change, such as the patriarchal society that oppresses us all, by bringing critical issues affecting women to the forefront. If women choose to work within the system, as many liberal feminists argue, women must become unified to change the sys­ tem which oppresses them. To take unified steps forward, women must rally behind key issues that affect them as individuals and upon which they can come to agreement. And by working together, eventually women can tear down the predominant hierarchical system which has dominated America for so long and pass out those “Nike Airs” to all. Society is a lot like a platform shoe. But, for all its problems, at least it isn’t a new pair 10-inch stilleto heels. Jessica K linger is a third year student in journalism and wom en's studies. H er column appears on Tuesdays. S. TALBOTT SMITH, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor JAKE BATRFM. ................ .'.:.....................CityEditor TAMMY MESA-SIERRA........... ANGELA BENOCHE.... JAMES FRUSETTA.. . . .......... BOB CASTLE............................ BRIAN FITZGERALD............... MICHAEL BRANOM..... . .... . Asst. Sports Editor JULiE REliV ERS.......... KRIS FRIDRICH.......... ... .... ..... TROY FUSS................ .............. lANFCOOK......................... ........ ..... Asst. Magazine Editor R E PO R T E R S: Joy Beason, Garin Groff, John Guzzon, M axwell H iggins, Mark M acias,M elanie Selcbo, Greg Sexton,- A CAT. SP O R T S R E P O R T E R S : Scott Davis, Paul M atthews, Shaun Rachau. C O PY E D IT O R S : Dave Proffitt, Jerem y Stein, N ick Bacon. C A R T O O N IS T S : B ryce M organ, G eorge O 'C o n n o r, Mateo Willis PHOTOGRAPHERS: Brian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Craig Macnaughton, Louis A. Porter. COLUM NISTS: Alan Holcomb, Michael Kantor, Jessica Klinger, Dayid Straw, Wade Swanson. PRO D U CTIO N : Jodi Goldblatt, Amie Madden, Britton Mauchline, Dawn Reisinger, Skip Schrader, John Tracey, Anna Ulinich, Evonne Vera, Dave Weber. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Kelly Adcock, Mike Aim, Sohia B enson, J d f B orgw ardt, Dan Ellstrom , Jennifer Hughes, Kate Martih, Lance Newman, David Thom. The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center* Room 15, Arizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not ans wer questions o f a general nature. * The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated chi the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff dr student body. State Press P hone N umbers Information.............. 965-7572 Newsroom........... ....965-2292 Magazine.................965-1695 Advertising.............. 965-6555 Classifieds........... .....965-6731 Opinion S t a t e P ress P age 5 Tuesday, October 12,1993 Xetters to the editor S t a t e P ress TasMmsmums isimiaoa „ mx® Me®g H ie Stase Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. Ail letters must be typed» double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing am) major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone twsther. Only d g M d Id le rs wiU be considered fo r pobUcatfoa, Requests for anonymity will he granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors and prim space availability. Letters contain­ ing obvious factual m o rs will be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo £D. to the State Press from desk in the basement o f die Matthews Cerner, or addressed to State Press, IS Matthews Oman*, Arizona State TPoastvgtfratfïBiaflraB. University, Tempe Ariz., 85287*1582 Job o f TAs is education, not ‘PC ’ language police I am glad to sec that ASU has made such a fine choice in hir­ ing Lynda Ransdell as a teaching assistant. I am sure that the full professors in the exercise and wellness department were thrilled to see that she distorts the facts and believes that students need to be “enlightened.” • First, let me deal with her distortion of the facts before I enter the philosophical areas of her letter. She includes one sentence on the infamous University of Pennsylvania “water buffalo” casé, totally ignoring the fact that the case is not known as infamous because of the term used, but because of the outrageous handling of the case by Penn’s administration. However, that is but a minor point when compared to the rest of her letter. She says that she is “trying to enlighten students” by using “ethical backbone” and “population inclusive communica­ tion skills.” .Ethical backbone? Excuse me? I don’t believe trying to force ideas down students’ throats could be considered ethical. As I recall, universities are supposed to prom ote the open exchange of ideas, not censor ideas that T.A.s find offensive. There may be hope. Ransdell says that there is nothing wrong with “asking” students to be “population inclusive.” That’s true. The problem is that when many teaching assistants “ask” their stu­ dents to be “population inclusive”, they actually “require" it. This is Where I have a problem, as does Alan Holcomb. There are instructors on this campus who impose restrictions on what terms students can use, and these policies create a climate of' limited freedom of expression. It is not the University’s place to decide what is right and wrong. It is not the University’s place to tell students what to believe, When instructors Such as Lynda Ransdell “ask” students; to think or write in a certain way, they are pot being ethically cor­ “1 resent it,” yelled Slats Grobnik, rect. These actions, indeed, are severely unethical. They simply go taking a puff on his cigarette and sip­ M ic h a e l along with the current political climate, and thus are ideas promot­ ping his Polish vodka. R oyko Calm yourself and tell me what you ed for the simple reason that those pushing them onto students fol­ C o lu m n is t ■resent. low the current liberal orthodoxy . “Look- at this,” he said, thumping The current resistance to change that Ransdell implies is caus­ his new spaper. “It says h ere that ing unrest in society does not exist. Society is just resisting the P resid en t H illary is gonna partly type of changes Ransdell wants. Where I come from, this is finance health care with a sin tax. Get known as freedom, a concept that Lynda Ransdell may want to that? Sin tax”’ Yes, but so what? We all know that explore in an environment of open learning, which, incidentally, is smoking and boozing are not good for another concept Ransdell should explore. one’s health. So the logic is that those Patrick Kaser who engage in self-destructive behav­ Junior, political science ior should pay something extra. Maybe it will encourage them to lead cleaner lives. “OK, I can’t beef about that. But how come they call it ‘sin’? It’s legal, ain’t it?” Yes, but smoking is not exemplary behavior. The Clintons, being yuppies influenced by the ‘60s, would like to discourage, this vice to reduce health costs. “Sure. I ain’t gonna be no health club man of the year. But how come the only ‘sins’ politicians tax are smoking and drink­ ing?” What do you have in mind? The Stave Presg mmM “Well, what about those greasy hickburgers Clinton eats? Any like to hear from you on its Sound O ff doc will tell you they’re worster than a pop of hooch.” loa page will print a question of : True. In moderation, a word that is foreign to you, a drink or University W m t ¿sanity :interest, two. discourages heart aliments. B u t. . . a h n w M irfw k llto “Don’t give me no buts. I’m tired of being the only sinner in a day «965-4287. Wien leaving America. Why dop’t they tax greasy fast food that clogs up the a message, please leave your « u n e, major, class standing (or ticker?” any other affiliation with the Don’t be silly. Voting for a federal tax on the Big Mac would University! and a number where be the death of any politician. . yoo can b ; reached. All calls will “OK, then I got some other ideas for a sin tax program.” be verified, and responses will be Such as? published every Wednesday, start­ “Well, like Rostenkowski says, he don’t care if a smoker pays ing September.1. Responses may be edited for length and to ehmtnate pTOftBjty. Sony, the State Prats will $10 a pack. I think that congressmen should pay 100 percent of ffer ifflOjiyiftify oil tfw? SfliiyMt Off Line. not their graft.” Graft is a strong word. “Hey, they take big bucks — millions of dollars — from those outfits called PACs.” Yes, political action committees. “Right. Contributions. That’s another word for graft, because those PACs are just buying votes. So if we tax the graft.100 per­ cent, the politicians don’t get nothing, and they won’t have to vote ■ the way those big-buck PACs bribe them. They’ll have to vote their conscience. Of course, you! 11 have to spell ‘conscience’ for them.” But without the PAC money, they might not be re-elected. "Then let them go out and get legit jobs like the rest of us. I mean, where does it say in die Constitution or the Bill of Rights that a congressman has the right to be on the take big time?” You have a point. But that will not raise enough money to finance the Clintons’ health care program. “Course not. But I got other ‘sin’ taxes. Like my tax for getting ■■S Sin taxes beyond booze, cigarettes ready to be tapped by government S o u n d O ffT i 965-4287 This Week’s Question: “Should ASU maintain the married." You would tax people for getting married? “Sure, But if they stay married; after 10 years they get onethird back. Twenty years, they get another third. Thirty years, the rest” So this is a divorce tax. “You got it. Big expense, divorce. Ties up the courts. The,tax­ payers got to pay the judges and shrinks to be mediators because two goofs can’t agree on how many orgasms they should have and which ma or pa will make the kids most miserable. Let them pay a federal tax.” An interesting concept.- And? “The lawyer tax. Anything over $99,000, the lawyers pay 100 percent. Let the Clintons explain that one to all their lawyer pals.” I can’t object to that. What else? “We ought to have a president tax. No president should get paid more than ever made as a private citizen. 1 figure Clinton would make about $8 a week, which is about what he got when he worked in his grandpa’s grocery store, which was the last time he wasn’t living off the taxpayer.” That seems- fair. Of course, when they leave office, they get enormous perks. “No perks. Let them write dull books like Nixon does. And then I got the dumb sports goof tax.” Explain that: “Sure. The worst brain-killer in America sports. Ask the aver­ age American yahoo about the deal between Israel and the PLO and he don’t know zilch. But he knows the spread on all the foot­ ball games. So there should be a federal sin tax on every sports ticket, every phone call made to a sports call-in show, and every inch of every newspaper’s sports section- This sports stuff sucks out our brains. Pretty soon, we’ll all be as dumb as die athletes, and we’ll all have to hire agents, who ought to be taxed 99 per­ cent. And then there is this rap stuff.” What about rap? “Any time they use rotten language, they’re taxed 99 percent. But we’ll give them a write-off if they have their tongues cut off. And you want to hear about my gay tax?” Careful, I am professionally obligated to be politically correct and not offend. “Not me. Hey, in San Francisco you can’t smote in no public buildings and they are thinking of banning smoking In their restaurants and even their baseball park. And in L.A. ypu can’t even sm ote in a restaurant.” So? “So this: In San Francisco and L.A., they ain’t banned no hanky-panky in those gay bathhouses. And that kind of hankypanky is a fast way to catch a killer disease. And we’re all paying to find a cure for it. So I would put a $50 hanky-panky tax on everybody who goes into a men’s hanky-panky bathhouse any­ where in the United States. That ought to raise a few bucks for health reform.” But what if they don’t intend to engage in hanky-panky? “Then they should take their bath at home.” I don’t think I can print that. I might get picketed. “ Did I tell you about my idea for a stupid picket tax?*’ S ta te P ress Tuesday, October 12,1993 Page 6 W eekend carjacking leaves 1 in hospital B y J o h n G uzzon State P ress Two 15-year-old female gang members who carjacked three Tempe teen-age girls late Friday night were apprehended by Mesa police after they caused a pedestrian-vehicle accident in Mesa early Saturday morning. The two juvenile carj ackers asked the three juvenile victims for a ride while the car was stopped on Mill Avenue, near Monti’s La Casa'V ieja, 3 W. First St, The three victims granted the request, allowing them into the car. The two girls asked to be driven to Third Street and Beck Road. After arriving at Third Street and Beck Road, police said one of the suspects pulled a 9mm pistol from her purse and told the three victims to exit the car. After exiting the vehicle, the two girls fled in the car, leaving the victims behind. The two girls were found the next morning by Mesa police after smashing into a parked car, injuring a pedestrian and finally USED O.P BOOKS BOOKS R E stopping after colliding with a home. The victim’s car was badly damaged in the accident. They fled the scene of the accident on foot but were captured by Mesa police a short time later. After a search, police found the 9mm pistol used in the caijacking in one of the girls’ purse. The pedestrian injured in the accident is currently in critical I D E C Y Student Services Amphitheater R e sid e n c y Applications Available Aff ordable Tuxedo ASU”Special Rental Rate $ 33.95 T h e S u n D e v il S p a r k BUGIassicTuxedoInduckriqShoes Y e a rb o o k O rd er y o u r s to d a y fo r $ 3 6 .9 3 M a tth ew s C e n te r b a sem e n t, rm 5 0 3137 S. Mill Ave. (Southern & Mill) 784-4075 of S O L’ N D R E T I R E M K X I I N V Ë S T I X G Tr S M A D E A M A G M A M N E C R O S S W O R D v~ p R I X c I p I. K S N Every W ed. & Thurs. 2-3 p.m . condition at Scottsdale Memorial Hospital. Police said the two girls are self-proclaimed gang members. ’"They either say they are or are marked accordingly,” said Tempe police spokesman A1 Taylor. Taylor said while caijackings do occur in Tempe, they do not happen often. “They don’t happen frequently, but it does happen from time for time where people get their cars taken at gunpoint,” Taylor said. “It’s generally people being approached at supermarkets and apartment complexes.” S 1 T by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 42 Detect t IH IA IT IE l □ □ B O S Q Q B Q H Z H Z U O E IB D H 1 hon or gold 43 Alpine M S E EM C U T E warble 6 Fire on i c i a i p i e i r m o Iu Ip Ie Ip ] DOWN T t Without n v E r M f T T ib M 1 Thatcher's help successor 12 “Rocky* 1 N ■ dTUj E ■ a 2 Dodge actress L A M O jB R A V E s 3 Mike Shire E M A p i G R I A T and Liz, at 13 “Over the 0 E N t m E A R L S onetim e Rainbow* Y esterday’s Answ er 4 “— W ed­ singer 10 Firemen's 28 Test nesday* 15 Peculiar aids record 5 Amusing 16 Trevino’s 1 4 U k s some 3 0 Go biking hoax org. cheese 31 Homer 6 Valuable 17 Danson work fiddle, for 19 Mine yield or Koppel 22 Inkling 3 2 Stately short 18 Saved 23 Southwesthome 7 “2001* 20 Rink em Indians 3 3 Ford flop computer surface 24 Sign of 38 Agreeable 8 Joyous 21 Archaic correction answer state 22 Minute 39 Zodiac 9 Engraving 25 Knight hand’s roarer tvue 26 Fine sweep r~ 4. v r n r 23 Himalayan T~ r~ r “ T~ land n 26 Pub orders TT,1 f t . 27 Russia's — If7Sea i7 1& 28 Lair ■ 14 29 Kilmer of “Thunder- IT" , heart* 30 Franc part 2E 34 Cool — cucumber 7f~ 35 Songstress Sumac 24 L 36 Young 44 fellow “ p 37 “Both IT Sides Now* 44 singer M l 40 Bay 4 2 window W L 41 Make 10-12 sport of a IRONICALLY, THE TIME TO START SAVINGFORRETIREMENTIS WHEN IT LOOKS LIKE YOU CAN LEASTAFFORD IE an’t afford to' save fo r retirem en t? T he tr u th is, y o u ca n ’t affo rd n o t to. N o t w h en y o u realize th a t y o u r retirem en t ca n last s o to go y e a rs o r m ore. Y ou’ll w an t to live a t least as com fortably th e n as y o u d o now. A n d th a t takes planning. B y sta rtin g to save now, y o u ca n take advantage o f tax -d e fe rral a n d g iv e y o u r m oney tim e to co m pound a n d grow. C o n sid e r this: se t aside ju s t S ioo each m onth beginning a t age go a n d y o u can accum ulate o v er $ i 54 ,ogi* b y th e tim e y o u reach age 65 . B u t w ait te n y e a rs a n d y o u ’ll have to b u d g et $ s n each m o n th to reach th e sam e gold. H •jta r T /f s n n f u jj m r jfrfrr-r •jJjT Ja ■ H E v en if y o u 're n o t co u nting th e y e a rs to retirem en t, y o u c a n c o u n t o n TIA A -CREF to h elp y o u b u ild th e fu tu re y o u d eserv e— w ith flexible retire m en t a n d ta x -d e fe rred an n u ity plans, a d iv erse p o rtfo lio o f in v est­ m en t choices, an d a re c o rd o f p erso n al se rv ic e th a t sp an s 75 y ears. O v e r a million p eo p le in ed u catio n a n d re se a rc h p u t T IA A -C R E F a t th e to p o f th e ir list fo r retire m en t planning. W h y n o t jo in them ? C all to d a y an d le arn h o w sim ple it is to b u ild a secu re to m o rro w w h en y o u have tim e a n d T IA A -C R EF w o rk in g on y o u r side. o u r E n ro llm en t H o tlin e 180 0 8 4 2 -2 8 8 8 , 75 y e a rs o f e n s u rin g th e f u tu r e f o r th o s e w h o sh a p e it!“ L, *Assumingan interrjt rateof6.50%crtèdedto TIAA RetirementAnnuities. Tkùrateitused'solelytoAowtbepowerandeffectofcompounding. Lowerorhigherrata *ouD produceverydifferent results. CREFcertificatesart distributedby TIAA-CREFIndividualandInstitutionalServices. DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's h w to work It A X Y D L R A A X R Is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stntfe letters, apostrophes, the length and formation o fth e words ire all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 10-12 CRYPTO Q U O TE R E Z F A S G U M C N , RZ, X A A , E M D Z __ j D M M G I X S P Z F X l MI XZMYEZGI U M C N Z P • Y A N N C F I Y esterday’s C ryptoquote: IT IS BETTERFOR ONE’S REPUTATION TO FAIL CONVENTIONALLY THAN TO SUCCEED UNCONVENTIONALLY. — JOHN Tuesday, October 12,1993 St a t e P ress ASA________ _ _ _ C ontinued from page 1. “The issue right now is whether we want to penalize students for taking mote credit hours than they need to graduate. There are a lot more issues to look at rather than students who are graduat­ ing with extra credits.” Garcia said ASA is taking a stance now in hopes that the regents won’t implement Monger's proposal. Munger, who was unavailable for comment Monday, hasn’t officially presented any proposal to the board. However, he has discussed with fellow regents the possibility of cutting subsidies for students who have earned roughly ISO credit hours, but still haven’t graduated. Munger cited Arizona’s stringent budget as reasons for the proposed change. Suzanne Pfister, ABOR spokeswoman, said the regents will lo t* at the final outcome o f today’s vote because they want to hear both sides of the issue. “The regents w ant to keep an open mind ... and look at (ASA’s),documentation,” pfister said. “John has said in the past he wants to see the data that shows who. is at that level, and if there really is an abuse. He’s been going on his own intuition and Munger ________ C ontinued from page 1. and when the advising should occur and develop enhanced career advisement. “We can do more in the areas of advising, where should the advising occur? Should it be done at the University level or in the departments?” he said. “Another thing we need to do is look at career advising for students.” Some students blamed a lack of advising, changing majors and the necessity of working for their long stay at ASU. “ The size of the University and the lack of state support are at fault,” said Jim Hecht, a senior political science major who will graduate in his fifth year. “The University doesn’t have the resources to care about whether you graduate on time.” Joe Caracci, a junior nursing major, said he began as an engi­ neering major and switched three years later to nursing. '■v “I’ll be here seven years,” he said. “1 would have to blame it on me and not the University;” However, Caracci said even had he continued in engineering, he anticipated a five-year stay because o f how the program is developed, and because a five-year degree is the norm for most college students. “Very seldom have I met anyone who plans to do it in four years,” he said. “That’s not just with this University, it’s overall. Diversity______ C ontinued from page perception of what the situation really is. , “We’ll be doing more research on it and getting a better sense of the qualitative reasons of why students are taking longer. As with everything else the board has done, they will listen to the stu­ dents and at least take their concerns into consideration.” Statistics from the National Collegiate Athletic Association from 1985 to 1991 revealed that 44.8 percent of ASU students graduated within six years. The most recent research by the ABOR showed that only 17 percent of whites — the ethnic group with die highest graduation rate — graduated within four years in 1989, Reaction to Monger’s proposition has been mixed on the ABOR. Regent Andy Hurwitz has gone on record as saying he prefers offering incentives to students who graduate within an allotted amount of time, rather than cutting subsidies. ASA Executive Director Pat McWhortor said the ASA board will draft an official position on Monger’s comments and present it to the ABOR at its October meeting. If you look at the number of credit hours, it’s increased (through the years).’’ Caracci Said the University should develop a curriculum path for every department that isn’t too demanding but stilt allows for graduation in four years. Tom Gonzales, a junior psychology major, said he began as an undecided major and will take five years to graduate. He said the advising at ASU isn’t personal enough for most students. “They’re not outstanding,” he said.“ They have so many stu­ dents to deal With they can’t take time for personal (treatment).” Gonzales also blamed high school advisers for not preparing students for college. “i f anyone’s to blam e, it’s high school advising,” he said. “They didn’t prepare me for getting into college.” 1 Paul Jackson, associate director of the Academic Advising Center which advises undecided students, said he thinks the grad­ uation rate is probably similar to what it was 20 years ago, when there was no academic advising. Advisers cannot control what the students take and when they change their majors, he said. “What we try to do is to determine the student’s real Options and then try to tailor general studies courses we recommend that will apply toward their likely options,” he Said. 1. campus. Because the American; Indian population is small at ASU, Bataille Said officials find themselves “competing with Harvard and Stanford and Cornell” for American Indian faculty. She added that ASU’s inability to offer competitive salaries only adds to recruitment challenges. The report further states that current recruitm ent programs should be expanded as funds become available. Current programs include holding funds for minority faculty who are qualified and apply even when positions are not open, according to Bataille. Minority students agree that having minority faculty is impor­ tant, but some students said they want the administration to do -more.-, v “(Minority faculty) give a better perspective to white students and gives black students someone to identify with and ... use as a mentor,” said Lynn Bower, a broadcasting major and secretary of the Black/African Coalition. “I have never taken a class from a black professor. All of my professors have taught from a very Euro-centric point of View.” Bower added that an increase in minority faculty would result in a “more well-rounded education.” She said the administration should do more to bring minority faculty on campus. “There should be a certain amount of faculty each year, espe­ cially since they are increasing minority enrollment,” .Bower said. “They need professors, people can identify with.” Haiti___________ C ontinued from page 3. . Guards at the dock refused to let Vicki Huddleston, deputy soldiers in Somalia last week, criticism has been growing in the chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy, enter the gate, and police United States over participation in the mission, The docking ‘‘will not take place until we have a permissive stood by or blocked traffic while a group of shouting Haitians environment. That is, one that is safe for the men in the U.N. mis­ filed off a bus. Described later by a trembling Huddleston as “a group of sion,” U.S. Army Maj, Jim Hinnant, a mission spokesman, told The Associated Press. Hinnant, a member of the U.S. advance gangsters, a group o f thugs,” thé men shoved diplomats and team flown in last week, said negotiations were under way ' reporters gathered for the scheduled docking, then ptinched and kicked their cars as they fled. between mission officials and the Haitian government. “We don’t want foreigners coming here and trying to tell us Port officials supported by the Haitian military blocked the Harlan County’s docking by moving another ship to the pier what to do!” one man screamed. Another shouted; “We’re going where arrangements were made days ago for the U.S. ship to berth to do to them what they did in Somalia!” About a half-dozen men. made similar references to Somalia. at 10 a.m- Monday. alia from page 3. nons at mock targets in an unpopulated area near the city. It was the second time in three nights that the four-engine gunships test­ ed their weapons, the same kind used to blast Aidid’s home and' weapons caches in the first major retaliatory raids against the war­ lord in mid-June. Burtian Mohamed Nur, a spokesman for Aidid, described the overflights by the jets and the target practice by the AC-130s as a provocation. A three-ship U.S. Navy amphibious battle group carrying j,7 S 0 Marines moved through the Suez Canal on Monday head­ ing for Somalia. The force is part o f the reinforcements being sent to Somalia to give U.N. peacekeepers more fire power until the March 31 deadline set by Clinton for an American withdrawal. Oakley reportedly met with the commander of the Nigerian U.N. contingent on Monday. The United States and Nigeria each have one soldier being held by Aidid’s militiamen. Aidid spokesmen have said the American, Chief Warrant Officer M ike Durant, would not be released until the United Nations freed 32 Somali prisoners, including four key aides of Aidid. ■ Durant was captured during a battle Oct. 3 that killed at least 17 American soldiers and wounded more than 70. Aidid said 315 C ontinued Somalis were killed, many of them civilians, and the Red Cross put the figure of Somali wounded at 700, about a third of them women and children. Diplomatic sources said Oakley also planned meetings with the Italian, Ethiopian and Eritrean ambassadors to Somalia. Italy is the former colonial power and believes it still wields special influence in Somalia, and Ethiopia and Eritrea have been working for months on a peaceful settlement. Ethiopia was host to a meeting of leaders of Somalia’s major factions last March at which a cease-fire agreement was negotiat­ ed. The accord collapsed when the factions could not agree on how to share power. U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali said Sunday that African, Arab and Muslim leaders would meet with him on Oct. 20 in Ethiopia to seek a plan to prevent Somalia from col­ lapsing into anarchy after U.S. troops withdraw. Boutros-Ghali fears Clinton’s plan to pull American forces from Somalia will lead other countries to withdraw their U.N, contingents as well. There are 29,103 peacekeepers from 33 nations in Somalia, about 5,300 of them American. P age 7 Page 8 Sta te P ress Tuesday, October 12,1993 ( Chevron n FREE i TIRE R O TA TIO N W ith Purchase of a Lube, Oil Change and Filter - Only $ 1 2 . 9 5 + tax (with coupon) 1002 W. U niversity ^ IW Comerán Hard^ C u s to m e r I _ 8 9 4 -8 4 ¿ 8 j A p p r e c ia t io n T h én k V M o n th ] S p e c ie ! om 20 COPIES Limit 500 per customer. 8.5"x11* White Bond MAIL BOXES ETC' 1739 E. Broadway (at McClintock) T em p e* 829-3900 CHIC4GIE S 99C S an d w ich -BEST OF PHOENIXBuy any sandw ich and a m edium drin k an d receive a second sandw ich fo r 99c. C oupon valid through 1 0 -3 0 -9 3 . . - .. - - - - — ★ -a 825 W. University - C orner of Hardy 894-8387 Students, faculty to enhance skills by working with youth offenders m i 894-6852 INLINE SKATES Rental skates on sale ¿ ¥ $ 7 9 .9 9 until they are gone! TUNE-UP SPECIAL Í 15 I .W ith coupon only. Expires $1 OFF! ANY 10" SUB With coupon. Void with other offers. Exp. 10/26/93 ‘G o o d Fo od &. C o rn er o f L em on & R u ral C o d C o m p a n y’ 967-1114 I J CHECK OUT OU r | HAPPY HOUR ■ 4-6 p.m. 500 GAMES ' I M -F 10 a .m .-6 p.m . § f i r WEEKENDS 9 a.m .-6 p.m. By M axwell H iggins State P ress News Analysis Columbus Day came and went with little notice by most stu­ dents, who mig(jt not have realized Monday was a holiday unless they checked their calendars. Once the reason for a statewide three-day weekend, voters last year demoted Columbus Day to the same status held by .other unpaid holidays like Groundhog’s Day and Flag Day, In its plaice, Arizona received a paid Martin Luther King, Jr. Day in January and — some would say as a direct result of the vote — the 1996 Super Bowl. The switch came as a response from voters who had grown tired of accusations that Arizona is a racist state, supposedly evi­ dent in the choice of Arizona governors and previous lack of a King holiday. E arlier, ASU adm inistrators had created a Universitywide King holiday at the expense of President’s Day. ColUmbus Day had not warranted a day off in recent memoiy. Nevertheless, debate continues on campus and around the nation over the holiday celebrating the arrival of European civi­ lization in the Americas. In recent years, mainstream American culture has begun to acknowledge that Christopher Columbus was not quite the mag­ nanimous explorer depicted in grade-school history books. Instead, many Americans now see Columbus as a murderer and exploiter of native peoples and possibly the worst thing that ever happened to the New World. James Riding In, an assistant professor in the School of Justice Studies and a member of the Pawnee tribe of Oklahoma, said he much prefers Martin Luther King Jr. Day to Columbus Day. “Martin Luther King was much more of a humanitarian than Columbus and deserves to have a holiday. Columbus, on the other hand, was a force that propelled the injustices against American Indians,” said Riding In. “The continuing injustices are the legacy o f Columbus. To celebrate that is like celebrating H itler. Columbus was a genocidal butcher. I think Columbus Day should never have been celebrated in the first place.” Cal Seciwa, director of ASU’s Native American Institute, said he’s giad Columbus Day isn’t a paid day off. “I treat it like any other day, a day in which we as American Indian people remember those who came before us,” Seciwa said. Seciwa added that he wishes lawmakers would think about creating a holiday to honor the contributions of American Indians to the world. Ed Menon, a freshman business major, seemed representative of students who have been exposed to more recent versions of history. “If you have to compare Columbus and Martin Luther King, you should consider that Columbus accidentally landed on America, claimed it, and in the process slaughtered many natives. Martin Luther King stood for equality for all people. I think Martin Luther King is more deserving of a holiday,” said Menon. Trevor Hall, an assistant professor of history who teaches a course on Columbus and the Portuguese expansion in western Africa, said he doesn’t oppose Columbus Day, and thinks it was unwise to change the holiday on the 500th anniversary, because it sends other messages. . . . . . . ASU contributes to youth rehabilitation 99C D r a f t s E V E R Y DAY ★ Bob's Bicycle Barn Columbus Day passes by quietly, unrecognized by m ost o f Arizona B y S haw n Boyd State P ress A partnership between ASU and the Department of Youth Treatment and Rehabilitation will allow students and faculty to utilize skills they have learned to help juvenile offenders function in society, the dean of the College of Public Programs said Monday. “It expands the educational opportunities for ASU students and faculty,” said Anne Schneider, Public 1Programs dean. “It’S an opportunity for ASU students to expand the idea of education beyond the University.” The partnership, which began a year ago and received a $950,000 federal grant in September, is an attempt to help juve­ niles who have had run-ins with the law enter society after leav­ ing a rehabilitation facility, Joel Blumenthal, project director of DYTR’s portion of the program, said a wide array of services will be provided when the program is fully implemented in 1994. The program will provide offenders with counseling, group exercises, tutoring and, mentors, Blumenthal said. The staff administering the services will include DYTR personnel, ASU interns and volunteers. Schneider said that 50 undergraduate students will participate in community service and a three-hour service learning class as part of the program. G raduate students w ill also benefit from the program , Schneider said, as eight to 12 graduate students will be employed as part-time interns. S ervices are in the in itia l stages o f being developed, Blumenthal said. “A lot of programs are still in development because this hasn’t been done before,” she said. “We’re starting to prototype some of these programs already. Nowhere has there been a partnership with a University like this.” : Tom Schade, associate dean o f Public Programs, said both sides will benefit from the program. “I think it’s a terrific opportunity for the University anti the community to form what may be a unique partnership in meeting the needs of the community,” he said. ASU students involved in the program will play the role of mentors to the juveniles, Blumenthal said. “We’re going to be doing a lot of mentoring with students from ASU, who will be trained,” she said. ~ In addition to the students' relationships with the juveniles, faculty will be involved in program development,-research and support, Schneider said. Schade said he is happy about the experiences ASU students and faculty will get from the program. “My interest is a little parochial, because I’m interested in the opportunities it provides to ASU students,” he said. “We should use our talents to serve the public.” Dean of Student Life Art Carter agreed with Schade on the benefits of the program for ASU students. “I think it’s pretty exciting, because it does provide for a sub­ stantial number of students to work with juveniles in their area of interest,” Carter said. P o l ic e R e p o r t W A L K TO TEMPE BOWL .the dogjeasb law&after A SIJD PS saw her vid» her unleashed dog near Mitchell School at 8:45 a.m. Sunday. SM • A man unaffiliated with the University reported to police Sunday afternoon (hat his car had been damaged while it was parked in Lot 59. The damage was estimated at $300. 1100 E. A pache Just E ast o f Rural 967-1656 j VO U K N O W Y O U N E E D A PR O FESSIO N AL H A IR C U T W H E N ^ Julia Roberts mistakes you for her husband! FOR A FREE C O N S U L T A T IO N CALL e® 9 0 5 E. L em on DAWN fib H A IR A N D N A IL D E S IG N r f0 % Ö F F ’ " a“ 966-1391 s” "1 SPORTING G O O D J SKI ■ H O C KEY ■ SN O W B O A R D RENTAL & REPAIR BASKETBALL • W E IG H T E Q U IP M E N T • FOOTBALL Í I L * a n d leave w ith CASH! 1 9 5 4 I . B ro ad w a y . NE Corner of Broadway & Dobson | 834-0005J and ft» marijuana w e » found so the vehicle « p * *:AL7-fear-aid Temps arrested Saturday after he was caught taking automotive tools and bicycles from Bob’s Tire Coral, 1945 E. Apache-BlvdL Police apprehended the boy .* I A 33-year-old Peoria man was arrested by Tempe police Thursday after he misled police about the identity o f his broth­ laws by er who was wanted on an outstanding felony warrant He was A$UDPS booked ,/ ♦ Six people were engaged in igi $ $66 • A (arty in the 1300 Modi; of Bast Don Carlos Avenue Devil Stadium and parking Lot 59 over an alleged pair of Saturday jsigfet resulted in 8» attest o f the host for disorderly ;stolen binoculars, * conduct. Police said the 19-year-old woman had been warned • An ASU student reported to police Sunday night that approximately one month ago to cease throwing “disorderly someone stole a spark plug wire from his vehicle while *it was parties.” When police arrived, party-goeft threw bear bottles in T h e u t a t c i t t a e , T h f less Is estim ated# $5. at them and would not open their doors. The woman’s neigh­ • A $50 tire was stolen from a bicycle on the south side of bors called police. the New Architecture Building Sunday. § S • A 21-year-old Tempe man was arrested Sunday after he Si Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Monday: entered an apartment in the 800 block off West Pina Street and • A 28-year-old homeless kicked a dog- and a man. Police had no information available Sunday after being found by a K-9 unit in the 1109’block a f on the reason for the incident, and the man was apprehended a East Apache BoutevaM Pt^ice said the man entered the apart­ short time later in a residential yard in the 300 block of South ment of a 21 -year-old woman anti molested her while she 2*»» ska«. After losing the suspect in a short foot pursuit, police set Camay Rond, y 'An "intoxicated” man was maced, subdued and arrested up a perimeter and found the man hiding in ti» bushes. • Two 19-year-old men were arrested by police Sunday by police Thursday after screartang obsceinties at ‘‘¿group of coHege-age kjtdS” and a potice ctiftcer; Police said ih e scream­ after an officer found two marijuana cigarettes ages of cocaine in their car. When an officer pulled into the ing could be heard from over a block -away. He’followed the parking lot at 2800 S. R u raiR oadto begin checking vehicle ’I d d ^ in the 600 block o f South College Avenue, shouting speed with radar, he saw them en’s vehicle parked in the dark obscenities sad asking for mqney, When police approached area o f the lot. Upon investigation, the officer noticed, “the the man, he continued to scream and brought his hands close subjects mack several suspicious moveB»nts.’’ He raB warraijt j to the officer’s face, th e officer (heft maced and subdued fh£ checks on the two men, confirming an outstanding wareanton Compiled by State Press police reporter John Guzzon. one of the men. The cocaine, totaling one-eighth of a gram. P age 9 Tuesday, October 12,1993. Sta te P ress A S U research group seeks to create substances Pressures 250,000 times higher than normal used to explore new materials Bob CastWState Prass C hem istry professors John H ollow ay and Paul M cM Illian pose w ith th e m u lti-an vil high pres­ sure device w hich w ill eventually be able to apply pressures 250,000 tim es higher than norm al in ord er to enable th e synthesis o f new m aterials. DISCOVER THE EXCITING WORLD OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Unique travel/study opportunity Learn about international business from business leadersl interact with top executives of well-known organizations! Travel the world's greatest cities and earn academic credit! in f o r m a t io n a l m e e t in g s October 1 4 ,1 9 9 3 3-4 p.m. Room BA 463 Contact : Dan Brenenstuhl in Management 965-5031 Greg Moorhead in Management 965-4566 Jim Spiers in Marketing 965-3621 or International Business Seminars 830-0902 By G arin G roff State P ress An ASU materials research group is Working toward new technological advances by creating new materials under pressures 250,000 times greater than normal. The group — which works at the Materials Research Science Engineering Center— is iri its second year of research funded by a $ 1.88 mil­ lion gran t from the N ational Science Foundation, according to. Paul McMillan, an associate chemistry professor who heads the group. “There’s been a growing realization that in America, w e’ve been working with the same materials for too long,” he Said. “There are few groups in America which are in the business of making new materials.” / For this reason, the group of seven principal investigators and about 20 graduate and under­ graduate students has Set out to make materials that can be used to improve substances such as steel, telegraph cables, conductors, glasses, optic fibers and ceramics, McMillan said. These new materials are synthesized by mak­ ing them in a high-pressure environment, so that high amounts of energy are stored in the materi­ als, he said. When alterations in chemistry, temperature or. pressure are made to the materials, new com­ pounds with different properties can result at each level of change. “We are trying to explore pressure as a gen­ eral variable in designing material synthesis,” The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook — A n in v e stm e n t in y o u r life tim e O rder yours today for $36.93, M atthews Center basement, rm 50,965-6881 19 93 AS U Fa If Prole s sional Leadershi p Co nference m u I L D 1 N G R t B Ci m S F U McMillan said. “This is all just chemistry at high pressure.” The group chose high pressure, McMillan said, because it felt that the field of geochem­ istry has not been explored enough. “W e are developing new philosophies of how to go about making new things,” McMillan said. These changes are made in three laborato­ ries. The fust'is a computer lab, where experi­ ments are simulated before any physical experi­ ments take place. If it is determined that an experiment would be worthwhile, it is conduct­ ed in one of two other labs, McMillan said. The lab in which most compounds are made is a steel container in w hich m aterials are crushed at pressures as high as 250,000 times more than normal pressure. “This is allowing us to explore chemistry in a pressure range which hasn’t been accessible before,” McMillan said. This type of process has the potential to man­ u factu re m aterials as hard as diam onds, McMillan said. Man-made diamonds could be used to cut hard materials and for producing new colors of lasers, he said. The other laboratory, called a diamond cell lab, is a hand-held device that crushes materials between the tips of two diamonds. “The beauty about doing this with diamonds is th at diam onds are th e hardest m aterial known,” McMillan said. “So you can use dia­ monds and get to extremely high pressures with­ out breaking.” Materials are usually observed rather than created in the diamond cell lab, because only small quantities of a material can fit between the two diamonds. R I A N D ER SO N 'S FIFTH ESTATE Tuesday O c to b e r 12 THE O R IG IN A L ALTERNATIVE TUESDAY CLUB EDGE O ii: O R R o o m w o * t N a tiv e A m e ric a n B u sin e ss O rg a n iz a tio n T m t i m i w tt J o i n 1 0 3 . 6 D J A l l i s o n S t r o n g • C D 's & T a p e G i v e a w a y s i m :S 750 DRINKS ALL NIGHT W ednesday, O c to b e r 13 A S IA N coalition A Statewide Ethnic — Minority Event O c t o b e r 15 - 1 6 , 1 9 9 3 2nd F lo o r in the M e m o r ia l Union A r izo n a St a t e Univ e r s it y For More Information Contact: Viola Fuentes or David Tung at the Memorial Union Activities Board on the 3rd floor of the Memorial Union or Call at 9 6 5-6822 T ru SH An evening o f | f i £ . 70's disco music s2 ANY DRINK & S1 DRAFT ALL NIGHT vr UPCOMING CONCERTS Sunday 10/17 Tiny Tim (yes. the Tiny 71m!), 8 pm M w id a £ jQ /1 8 J 5 a ^ 6820 E. Fifth Avenue, Scottsdale 994-4168 Comics S ta te P ress Tuesday, October 12,1993 Page 10 by Bill Watterson Calvin and Hobbes THIS 6VN DlDNT UKE H\S JOB, 30 HE QUIT, AMD H0*l HE. CLIMBS ROCKS ’ SEE, HE'S HtSOWN MAW.’ HE GRABS UfE BH THE THROAT AMD LIVES OH H\S OWM TERMS) HA1BE WS ff HE QUIT VUS JOB, I monder How he affords THOSE etfENSNE. A M £flC SHOES MES AWERT\S\HG. : v T H E P A R S ID E mom Bought I By GARY LARSON m e era B tssR S em THEM FOR m . BY GARRY TRUDEAU D o o n e s b ü ry WEMEETHEREIN THBWARE 600P AFTem m , eetm m eu . ÎM tf. COMMANDER. TRIPIER., NAVY CHAPERONEPORTWS YEYVCSTAtlWOR ASSOCIA­ TIONconvention... / of dozens of wreckep Ca ­ reers and ruined u ves . i PONTHAVETOTEIEYOUHOW importantnrt ¡SWAT THIS CONVENTION BETHEMOPED OFPECORUMI “Most interesting, ma’am— you’ve identified the defendant as the one you saw running from the scene, i take it, then, that you’re unaware that my client is a wa/k/ng stick?” PEOPLE NASHVILLE, Tenn, (AP) — Skeeter Davis SYDNEY, Australia (AP) — Toss another has only bad words for her ex-husband: He was • shrimp on the barbie for Madonna. The pop queen may add an extra Sydney an adulterer. He drove another woman to try sui­ concert to her schedule, filling a void created cide. And he didn’t like country music. The Grand Ole Opry singer says in her hew when Michael Jackson canceled the Australian leg of his tour. But she’s not in it just for the autobiography, “Bus Fare to Kentucky,” that during their 1960-64 marriage, Ralph Emepr concert. “I am coming to Australia and, damn it, l am fathered a daughter by another woman who in going to have a good time,” Madonna was quot­ desperation slit her wrists. -Emery, 60, who is retiring this week as host ed as telling television interviewers. “I have heard about the surfers. I want to see o f the “N ashville Now” country music-talk kangaroos. And 1 want to hear everyone say show, “openly confessed to me his affair," she said. The woman, whom she does not identify, ‘G’day’ to me.” T he A ustralian part o f Jack so n ’s survived, she said. Davis, best known for her 1963 pop hit “End “Dangerous” world tour —- Sydney on Dec. 3-4 and Melbourne on Dec, 7 —- was canceled last of the World,” said Emery hated country music week, with promoters claim ing it would be when he was a disc jockey 30 years ago and logistically impractical for the tour to be brought made snide remarks about country singers dur­ ing their marriage. here. Not so, says Emery. Madonna’s Australian promoter, Michael “I love country music and I’ve spent a lot of Chugg, said Monday that talks were under way to fill at least one of the two Sydney dates, years in it. I let my career speak for itself,” he ' _• ■ adding it to dates already set in Sydney, ' . s a i d . . \ Emery, who later remarried, also denied in a Brisbane, Melbourne and Adelaide. telephone interview that he had been unfaithful. “I did love her very much,” he said. “It broke my heart to divorce her or have her divorce me. This has been a long time ago and a lot of water has gone over the dam. I’ve got my life back together and been happily married for 26 years.” MIDDLEFIELD, Conn. (AP) — She may be the first daughter, but she can still get some time on her own in relative privacy. Chelsea C linton w ent largely unnoticed Saturday at the spraw ling Lyman Orchard, where she picked a bag of Golden Delicious apples, “She Was just another kid, as far as I knew,” said P hil M erriam , who w orks part-tim e at Lyman’s. “She was as friendly and pleasant as anyone. When I found out later who she was, I said ‘Holy Moses!”’ Chelsea’s parents, President Clinton and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, spent the day at Yale Law School for their 20th reunion. After paying for her bag of apples, Chelsea agreed to pose for pictures but turned down requests for autographs, said Diane Macala, a Lyman’s employee. By the time word of her visit had spread, Chelsea had already left. NEW YORK (AP) — Some advice from Betty Friedan: Live life to the fullest, no matter what your age. "Denial of age is lethal,” the feminist author said in Glamour magazine’s November issue. “To the degree that women are still caught in a definition of themselves based on a juvenile sex­ uality, they can’t appreciate the glamour of their own maturity.” “I have more glamour at 72 than I ever had at 32.” i\ .Friedan, author o f the recently published “Fountain of Age,” was asked what a woman in her 20s should do to ensure a fabulous old age. “I’d tell her to live her life to the fullest at Whatever period she is in,” she replied. “But live it knowing it’s going to Change, The important thing to remember is that, regardless of your age, you will always have adventures, unexpect­ ed joys and unexpected sorrows.” • PLAYOFF LINEUP: DOMINO'S PIZZA& WINGS S E R IE S S P E C IA L BASEBALL PARTY A S U V a lu e M e n u 10" Cheese Pizza............. ......$ 3 .9 9 Your favorite toppings $.69 each. $ 9 .9 9 ! $ 1 9 .9 9 ! Medium Cheese Pizza...........$ 4.99 MEDIUM ONE-ITEM PIZZA, A DOZEN HOT WINGS & 2 MEDIUM CLASSIC OR DIET COKES. TW O LARGE CHEESE PIZZAS & 50 HO T W ING S TWIsty Bread».........,.......,.$ 1-59 968-5555 CO Ò o -- IB z < SN O N Q a 903 S . Rural Rd. Specials Valid at this location only, rp N ow A ccepting: D iscover C ard M aster C ard/V isa M arrio tt M aroon A G old C a n t •MMmsn* QoMordmamwbjiettoa sm* iwahwga Your favorite toppings $.99 each. Large Cheese P iz z a .............. .$ 5 .9 9 Your favorite toppings $1.19 each. Zzesty Tomato Sauce available on request. Garden Fresh Salad............... $ 1 .9 9 Dom ino's O riginal Hot W ings A Dozen W ings...$3.99! 25 W ings...$6.99! 50 W ings...$11.99! Cool, crisp lettuce, red cabbage, carrots, green peppers and cherry tomatoes plus ranch dressing. Classic or Diet Cokes 16 oz. Medium...79$ 32oz. Large...990 Domino's Super Subs Roast Beef & Cheese • Turkey & Cheese Ham S Cheese* Club Sub •Zzesty™ Italian FOOTLONG $4.99 6" $3.29 Sports STATE P ress 1 8 Tuesday, October 12,1993 ports • Briefs B a rk ley re tu rn s to p ra ctice ______E ë SÉ-Î2. former Sun Devil closes one chapter, looks ahead to Olympics Charles Barkley returned to practice with the Phoenix Suns nn Monday after the team stud his recent collapse was Caused by fatigue. Barkiey was 'restricted to riding an exercise bicycle, running and shooting by himself. He aaid he w orid not acritnange or run drills “ fo ra couple ot d ays/' * The bft^jae’t ICVP last season collapsed during wind sprints and lay still for 30 minutes Saturday night following a ' two-hour practice. Barkley complained of numbness in his legs, and a bulging disk in his back— first detected in August — was suspect­ ed . H ow ever, team d o cto r Ralph Emerson said Monday it was caused by “ muscular and respiratory fatigue.” Sy3 Reynolds talks about ban Butch Reynolds, the wcrld recordholder who ran in last year's Olympic tri­ als under a Supreme Court order, returned to New Orleans on Monday to discuss die $27 3 million he is to receive from the fd ttm tm s il A m ateur A thletic t o deeattefr. •‘It was hell, redly hell for over two years,” he said. “ But new it s behind me and I feel l eleared my name and showed other athletes they can stand up for them­ selves.” Reynolds, the record-holder at 4ft) meters, was banned by the IAAF after a meet in Monte Carlo in August 1990. The IAAF said Reynolds tested positive fur an andbolic steroid in a random test v , Reynolds denied the charge and after- , ward tested negative. He was unable to p t l k e IAAF to act aside toe ruling, how­ ever, and turned u> the courts. Speaking to the International Bar Association conference, Reynolds said the compensatory and punitive damage* * aw arded.by U.S. D istrict Court Judge Joseph Knmeary did more than just set him up for life finant. tally. He M id it cleared his reputation and restored his pnde • T i l probably never be all the way oner ft,” ftftyaiflUft said. " It coat me my i best years as an athlete But I feel 1 showed athletes, not just trank and field athletes, but all sports, that the only way things wiB change is if they don’t back down when they're Tight.” ■4gj'\ v<>'*"' ' ' ' *Vvr ^ 'vp'iSfe M a r in o o u t fo r se a so n D an M arino underw ent successful surgery Monday to repair a completely ruptured tight Achilles’ tendon, and he'll require four to six months of rchifbihta don. That, rules out a return this season, even i f d ie M iami Dolphin* make th e . p la y o ffs . “We'll grab the artiiathm and go with ft.” conch Don Shuts said, “ft's toe hand we're dealt with, and we have to make (be best of ft.” T he injury w as as serious as first feared when Marino left Sunday’s 24-14 ; victory at Cleveland in the second quarter. . K a m i, 32, h a s n 't m issed a f i because of injury since his rookie year in i m f f i s s t r e a k c t f 145 c o m x a i ^ m m (exc*uding the 1987 strike) is the iongtolutj ; by any quarterback since the NFL merger f * 1» » B a seb a ll R o u n d u p «dladelphia leads NT - N F L R oundup Ip. b®®*138«8Nwb»| NHL Roundup hiMdreto i, B o ^ j r a Ynanñir«er4, Ddmnn] m AP Richard Komurek/State P rats Form er ASU w om en’s beeketbeH standout Ryneldi B ecenti, w ho participated In the 1993 U niversity Gam es la s t sum m er on Team USA, has her sights set on m aking th e 1996 O lym pic w om en’s basketball team . B ecenti, w ho played fo r ASU from 1991 to 1993, is a tw o-tim e all Pac-10 selec­ tion . She also holds the ASU career record fo r assists In one-season, w ith 201. B y J ulie R euvers State P ress Two major differences will be evident this November when first-year women’s basketball coach Jacqueline Hullah takes the floor to lead the Sun Devils in their first game. The first is just that. The team will be under the direction of a new coaching staff headed by H ullah, who came to ASU in A ugust from Dartmouth University. And for the first time in two years, the Sun Devils will be without the services of two-time all-Pac-10 and all-America honorable mention point guard Ryneldi Becenti, who used her final year of eligibility last season. Although Becenti, a Native American from northeastern Arizona’s Navajo Reservation, has turned in jersey No. 21, she said she still has strong intentions to stay involved with women’s basketball at ASU, and with the world basketball scene as well. “There’s still more for me in my future play­ ing basketball,” she said. “I still have more goals.” Becenti said she wants to concentrate on developing her coaching skills and making the 1996 U.S. Olympic women’s basketball team. But first and foremost, Becenti plans to cheer for her former team during games this year. “I don’t want to sit on the bench, I almost want to be a spectator and actually be a fan of it now ,” B ecenti said about w atching A SU ’s games this year. “Stacey (Johnson), Crystal (Cobb) and the rest of the team and the incoming freshman, I think they’ll see that I’m willing to help them out if they need help individually or if they need me to ruirthe floor with them. I’m going to be behind them 100 percent.” Becenti, who pfimsTto graduate in May with a degree in sociology, said she will go into coach­ ing after college. When she is ready to return to the Reservation, she said she wants to coach a .high school team and also counsel young kids. “As in our tradition and the background I grew up with from my parents, it’s something very special that you always return to your roots.” she said. “Basically I’U return back to the Reservation, but it won’t be right after I get my degree and it won’t be anytime soon. I want to wait a while because I still have a lotto fulfill.” For someone who has achieved so much in such a short period of time, Becenti is not ready to sit back and reminisce about old times at ASU, even though that would not be difficult to do. - - The 1991 tran sfer from S cottsdale Community College established herself as an T urn to Becenti, page 13. A SU w atching bow l dreams crumble Snyder says margin for reaebing bowl game vanished, team chemistry lacking B y S haun R achau State P ress The Sun Devils’ backs are against the wall. Their record is 2-3, they’re in last place in the Pac-10 and they’re in jeopardy of not achieving their only goal — playing in a bowl game for the first time since 1987. “We’ve eliminated our margin (of playing in a bowl game) and they’ve (the team) got to understand that,” Snyder said after the Sun Devils lost to Washington State 44-23 Saturday in Pullman, Wash. “We’ve got to get the right players in the right positions, practice properly and they’ve got to make> plays, and then we’ve got a better chance of winning.” When the Sun Devils departed for preseason practices at Camp Tontozona in August, many believed this would be the year the Sun Devils would return to a bowl game. And many were predicting that ASU would get off to a fast start by going 6-0 into the Stanford game Oct. 23, because of its so-called “weak” schedule for the first half of the season. But the Sun Devils season to date has been . Snyder said it has been difficult for the Sun anything but a fast start. Their defeat to Oregon State was the first time an ASU team lost to the Devils to come together as a team because they Beavers since 1971, and all areas of its team are so diverse. have not played up to expectations. This season, there are fifth-year seniors with “I think they’re kind of stunned as a group,” no experience that are starting, there aré fifthSnyder said. “With the publications this summer, with the high profile players that were recog­ year seniors that are recognizable throughout nized, with the talk o f 6-and -0 — all o f that college football, there are walk-ons that are start­ ing and there have been four different quarter­ makes it even more of a mystery.” The signs of the Sun Devils getting better do backs in the Sun Devils’ last 16 games. not look good for the remainder of the season. “I’ve never had such a diverse team,” Snyder After Saturday’s game vs. Oregon at Sun said. “You go back through and see how many Devil Stadium, the Sun Devils must face the new faces and how many guys that are in differ­ Pac-lO’s elite teams — Stanford, Washington, ent positions, maybe there’s something to that. Cal, UCLA and UofA. I “Its a really, really mixed bag. It doesn’t “One of the things that I’ve said all along is that every game that we play will be counted mean you have to lose because it is that way, but towards a bowl game,” Snyder said. “Therefore, I think the cohesiveness of it, or the understand­ every game has that kind of importance. ing, is not there. “We’ve cut so much into the margin, certain­ “The chemistry isn’t there yet for us to be a ly in the postseason competition, that we don’t real dynamic force from a team unity standpoint. have any margin, and from that standpoint we’ve Not that we’re disunified, but I don’t think it’s got to win the football game (against Oregon) to , really come together.” keep those kind of hopes alive.” Page State P ress Tuesday, October 12,1993 l2 A S U so ftb a ll lo o k in g new , im p roved finally ready,” she said. “I’m looking forward to i t When you’re young, it’s good to have someone to look up to.” ASU’s lack of experience will be most felt in the pitching, rotation, where senior Mona Nard will anchor a staff that will have a sophomore and two freshmen. Nard is coming off athroscopic Surgery in her pitching shoulder, but should miss any prac­ tice time. “It will be pivotal what Nard does,” Wells said. “She needs to have a great year and not get hurt.” Kelly comes to the Sun Devils from the University of Toledo, where She was an assistant for a season. She has head coaching experience, w ith three seasons at both M iami (Ohio) and Livingston (Ala.) universities. “I wanted to come back West, being from California,” Kelly said. Wells said that the chemistry between her and Kelly is good, and should mean quality coaching. “It’s like we’ve been coaching together a long time, but we haven’t,” Wells said. “That’s always good when you feel that comfortable with your assistant.” Wells says 6 freshmen, assistant make for better team; pitching thin B y M ike B ranom S tate P ress The ASU softball team lost six players and two assistant coaches from last season’s top-20 squad that fell to UofA in the first round of the NCAA playoffs, but have gained eight new players and an assistant coach in the interim. Coach Linda Wells is looking forward to managing the 1994 team, which she called “improved” over last season, and to coach­ ing with new assistant Liz Kelly. “I think (the team's) attitude is improved, they’re improved in experience, they’re physically improved,” she said. The Sun Devils will be a young team with six freshmen and five sophomores. Although Wells has not named her team co-captains yet, senior catcher Wendy Johnson knows that some leader­ ship responsibility falls on her shoulders. “I was put in training camp for it last year and I think I’m Share your O pinion - Use the State Press sound-off line 965-4287. INCELEBRATIONOFNATIONALCONINGOUTCAY • Rev. Or. K a y K eller P a s to r o f A u g u s ta n a L u th e ra n C h u rc h ALL CRIMINAL • DUI CASES When? Wednesday October 12 at 12:30 Where? Danforth Chapel E XPER IEN C ED , A C C R E S S IV E T R IA L A TTO R N E Y S PAYMENT PLAN AVAILABLE S E R V IN G A .S .U . & E A S T V A L L E Y C O U R T S Sponsored by: FREE INFORMATION, FREE CONSULTATION CALL 24 HOURS A L e c tu r e b y th e 258-8888 PHILLIPS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. LAW FIRM Bicycle Wheelers » 2010 S. Rural » Tempo » 968-8011 Phoenix 11w111ri i ■r 11 1 11ni E § GM WE ARE FREE, INDEED! AGayandLesbianChristianStudentOrganizatioo TO PLAY ©1990 Flag Football G olf 5-K Run Mens/Womens divisions Enter from Oct. 4 - 1 8 Play begins Oct. 24 Mens/Womens divisions Enter from Oct. 2 - Nov. 2 Takes place Nov. 10 Flag Football Tournament Mens/Womens divisions Enter from Oct. 4 -1 4 Play begins Oct. 25 A R IZ O N A S T A T E IN T R A M U R A L SPO R TS 3 on 3 /2 on 2 Basketball Wrestling Mens/Womens divisions ateoCo-Rec Enter from O c t 4 - 2 1 Play begins Nov. 1 Mens division only Enter from Oct. 4 - Nov. 15 Takes place Nov. 22/23 State P ress Recenti C ontinued from page Local sportis h it bottom 11. immediate team leader at ASU. She led the Pac-10 in assists in her first season, with 201, and in steals (85). In addition, Becenti boasted / the nation’s only triple-double in 1991-92. During her senior season, Becenti contin­ ued her dominance on the court. She broke the ASU record for individual assists in a single game (17) on Dec. 5, 1992, against Marquette. On the ASU career list, Becenti ranks second in three-point field goals, with 90, and in career assists (396). P articipating in the World; U niversity Games for the USA Team last Summer was the perfect opportunity for Becenti to keep her game at a competitive level. She said that she saw the games, held in Buffalo, New York, as a Chance to make a name for herself among the nation’s basketball elite. She feels it has helped her get one Step closer to her goal of making the 1996 U.S, Olympic women’s bas­ ketball team. “I had a chance to display my talents, and the bottom line was that a lot of people real­ ized that when they see me, first they see me as a basketball player,” she said. ‘Then they realize that I am a Native American Indian playing basketball. It was a great feeling for me and also for me to represent my tribe.” The deep feelings Becenti holds for her tribe are mutual and have been returned to her many times over. Attendance at the women’s games soared during Becenti's two seasons at ASU, largely because o f the hundreds of Native Americans who made the four-hour drive from the Reservation to watch her play in Tempe. “A lot of fans started to come in, and now in this time or during the summer a lot of peo­ ple Say, ‘You guys play a really good game. I’m gonna come out and watch you guys play again,’” Becenti said. “If 1 could thank every one of them for coming out, I would,” she said of those who The Cardinals have Steve Beurelein, Gary Chicago may have Clark, and Garrison Héarst on offense. Chuck had it rough with the Cecil and -Ken Harvey head the defense. These loss o f M ichael COLUMNIST guys have seen and will continue to see Pro Jordan and the White Bowl time. Sox trailing thé Blue Do you blame it on the coaches? Jays 3-2, but these Not really. Bruce Snyder and Joe Bugel events took , place b leed fo o tb all. They g iv e th eir all. over an entire week. Unfortunately, for Joe, his “all” will end in 11 If Chicago’s week games. long activities were What about their bosses? sad, then A rizona’s This might be the answer. Charles Harris is weekend affairs were useless for ASU, Bill Bidwiil is useless for the traumatic. Murder in Cardinals. the first degree. Harris will be gone soon. Maybe, then, ASU On the am ateur will begin to smell the roses. level, don’t you just Bidwiil is a different Situation. He’s going love Sun Devil football. W here did they go nowhere. He’s as secure with the Cardinals as wrong? Another embarrassing beating from a Pac-10 Nolan Ryan is with the Hall of Fame. As long as Bidwiil is around, I don’t even weakness. Certainly, Washington State is no Rose Bowl contender, b ut the way the Sun know if the Cardinals could reach the Ròse Devils performed, the Cougars must have felt Bowl. Barkley collapses like national champs. Bring on Florida State. If all of these football losses aren’t enough, WSU quarterback Mike Pattinson threw for 407 yards and three touchdowns. Deron Pointer thè Suns received some temporary critical news pulled down 10 receptions for 255 yards, and all when Charles Barkley collapsed Saturday after his legs went numb while doing wind sprints. three touchdown strikes. It isn’t known how soon Barkley will return Bledsoe helps in P atriot win Bledsoe, the former No. 1 draft pick out of to the Suns. It is known, however, that the Suns without WSU, took the cue from his alma mater and helped his Patriots defeat Joe Bugel and the Barkley are worse than the Bulls without Jordan. If Barkley goes, can Kevin Johnson take Phoenix Cardinals. over? He’s been griping about the amount of See you later, Joe! Bugel and. the C ardinals are done. Their publicity he gets. Maybe this is the break he’s looking for. respective forks are grinding at their hearts- A Point b la n k — Kevin Johnson is the best .500 season? Not in your wildest dreams. The Patriots don’t win. They aren’t in the point guard in the NBA, recognition or not. No easier next week league for that purpose. They make bad teams Hopefully, Arizona sports will take a turn for look better. On Sunday, they made the Cardinals the better next week. look like the Sun Devils - pitiful. . H ave fe a r, though. T he W ashington NoSolutions You can’t blame it on the talent, because it is Redskins will want revenge, and the Oregon Ducks are a better team than WSU and Oregon there: ASU has Mario Bates on offense and Shante . State. Let’s just hope Barkley doesn’t decide to fol­ Carver on defense. Those two guys will spend low his buddy from the Bulls and call it quits. some time in the NFL. made the long trip. “For me, I think I show my appreciation by talking to th eir kids and attending basketball camps.” Attending and giving basketball camps on the Reservation last summer has confirmed for Becenti her decision to one day coach a high school team there. She has accepted the status that many on the reservation have given her of role model and semi-celebrity. But Becenti admits that the limelight, she has been cast in by her people came as a shock at first. She was shooting baskets back at home on the Navajo Reservation last summer when five young girls approached her as she shot bas­ kets. “We really want to be like you, because we see you on T.V. and in the papers,” the girls told Becenti. “D o n ’t you w ant to be like M ichael Jordan?” she asked them. “No,” the girls said, “We want (p be like you.” Regardless of Becenti’s accomplishments on and off the court and her future in basket­ ball, she feels herself at a turning point. The Olympic hopeful, coming off a couple of stel­ lar collegiate seasons, knows she has what it takes to reach her dream - Atlanta in 1996. But she will never be quite ready to close the ASU Chapter in her life. “When the game is ready to begin, it’s going to be hard for me just to sit there and actually.watch ASU play,” Becenti said about this year’s first game. “It’s going to take time for me to adjust to it. Every time I walk into the gym it always hits me - I’m done here. It is kind of hard for me to get over. “But I think when the ball goes up, I’ll be somewhere in the front row, watching every step and realizing that I used to be on that floor.” State Press Letters to the Editor Diversity of opinion and response. TEMPE M OTEL • • • • Page 13 Tuesday, October 12,1993 Rooms from_s22%& up • W alk to ASU Air co nd itio n ing »King-size beds Pool • Satellite TV Telephone • Free movies HAIRCUTS A $ _ _ _ MEN & WOMEN 8.99 If the hair color you dreamed of having is now a color nightmato, give us a call. W e can correct any do-ityourself hair color disaster, le t our professionals color your hair correctly. A M atrix Essentials analysis is fast and free. -.■ QUIET NON-SMOKER to share modem 3bd 2ba home, 3 mi from ASU, $250 util inch 929-9148 NOEBOOK, EPSON 386SL/25 4mb RAM, 40mb hrd drv, ser/ par/VGA ports $795. 837-0483 RESPONSIBLE MALE, neat & tidy, 21 years or older, own room in 2 bd, 2ba. $255/mo, 829-7815 JEWELRY ROOMMATE WANTED, 2bd, $225 + util, close to ASU, pool, Indry, must like cats, 829-1625. ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu.: gold, ster, pearls, antiques, gems, etc: Rare lio n , 921 S Mill Ave, Tempe Center 968-6074 FIND IT daily with State Press Classifieds! AUTOMOBILES- RO O M S FOR RENT 1973 C A D ILL A C E l D orado Chop-top. Runs excellent. The ultim ate party m obile. $800. Sean 542-5624. NON SM OKING female share south Tempe home, 4 mi ASU, no strings attached, w/2 young exec bachelors. No pets, w/d, pool, HBO cable, micro. $300/mo includ utils. 820-2774, leave mes­ sage. . 88 SUZUKI Samurai 4x4-fully customized. 438-9309 lv msg. CAR REPAIR Mobile Mechanic 839-5398 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE .. MG M ID G ET 1978 o rig in al miles 56,000. Good condition. $2200. 893-2002. HUD SALE!! Mesa, Tempe,' Scottsdale. 3% down. H urry! C all T .J, C arty R ealty Executives. 8314)322, Q UESTA VIDA 1 m ile ASU, 2br, 2ba, w/d, pool, racquetball court. Interested? 921-3944. REAL ESTATE BY OWNER 3bd 2ba ranch 1 mi w est ASU many ex tras, com ­ pletely remodeled. 921-7352 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE BIG SCREEN, small price, 45" RCA color TV. $475, 957-6761. TRAVEL AIRLN TKTS FREE couriers needed, .outrageous int*l trips, call PTG 310-514-4662. CRUISE INSTEAD. 4 and 7 day Spring Break cruises to Mexico mi Princess and Royal Caribbean from $516 all-in clu siv e. C all Judy 967-7855 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 WANTEDGENERAL AUTOMOBILES « 1975 VW C am per/bus. R uns good. New starter, battery; tires. Clean body. $1200 obo 858-0189 J CAR A TRUCK » PARTS v* LESS \ ATTENTION ■ chedfusout 7^^ ; PV5 269-5640 3623 W . Lower Buckeye Rd. pust off 1-10) YOUR DAILY »0SE Liberals and conservatives basically want the same tilin g for the country. It's ju s t that the liberals want the conservatives to pay for it. A G G R E SSIV E, SE L F- M oti­ vated salesperson needed to mar­ ket Bodyguard Defense Pepperspray. Pager 2 1 7-3502 or 548-1222. Hrs: noon - midnight APPT. SETTERS needed. Hours 5:30pm-8:30pm M-Th. Top pay + bonus. S cottsdale m ortgage company. Contact Jonathan Class or Gary 481-9791. ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chndlr needs p/t clean-up & vet a sst Exp pref. (eve & Sat). 963-2341 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES _____ DANCE INSTRUCTORS Even­ ings. Ballet Tap Jazz advanced levels. 840-9006. Start now PROF. & Conscientious person needed FT aft. & eve. Sales/Mktng. w/nations leading test prep co. Sales exp. & exClnt phone skills a m ust 967-2967 A A SA LES R ép F/T C areer Minded, will train, 24K-50K 1st yr. Call Marty 275-8555. DOCUMENTATION/ TECHNI­ CAL Writer needed for local software/automation company. Will be responsible for producing tech­ nical documentation & developing & delivering training courses & customer presentations for pack­ aged & custom software. Experi­ ence in design/ development of user interface softw are a plus. Please mail resumes to 2429 W. D e se rt C ove A v e., Phx, AZ 85029 or fax to 331-1101. FEM A LE D RIV ER w anted to drive van for disabled woman in Tempe. $5/hr. Must be over 21 T, Th & wknd availability needed. Call 968-6284. ASU, MCC & SCC E njoy the sun w hile e arn in g m oney. G o lf photographers & managers needed. No exp nec. am/pm hrs avail, 7:30am-3pm, noon-7pm. Golf courses thruout the Valley. Call 952-9171 today. COMMERCIAL REALestateexecqtives seek w ord processing spread sheet abilities, $6/hr, 15 hrs/w k. g u a ra n te ed . F inance major preferred. College credits available 650-1990 COMPUTER PROGRAMMER/ Softw are Engineer needed for rapid prototyping and product de­ velopment at a local automation company. Requirements Include experience in C++ and Windows/ Windows NT development, pre­ ferably in the area o f real-time control. Experience in cross plat­ form development; relational da­ tabases, or packaged software a plus. Please mail resumes to 2429 W. Desert Cove Ave., Phx» AZ 85029 or fax to 331-1101. ★ EARN $7.50/HR!^ M -Th 4 -9 ; S at, 10-4] S ettin g appts for free health sves. (Hrly & comm.) 470-1828, LOOKING FOR a part time job? A SU T e lefund is s till hiring. Earn $5/hr + bonus to raise $$$for ASU.Telefund. For more info call 965-6754 MARKET RESEARCH phone in­ terview ers. N o sales. Tem pe. Evenings/Weekends, Susan 9674441 ■ P/T SALES, L adies Boutique, eve. & wkends,outgoing person, Scottsdale, call Kim 941-8629 PHOENIX SYMPHONY needs enthusiastic, articulate, dynamic people- sell tickets via phone! Management potential! Flex p/t Su-Th 3 to 9:30pm 265-0417. PRE-LAW STU DEN T to help fill seats fo r LSA T fe v ie w course. $'s free class. Dave 619488-2075 THE BEST TELEMARKETING JO B IN THE VALLEY IS O N LY 15 MINUTES FROM A SU •FB/HR GUARANTEED WAGE TO START •PART-TIME ft FULL TIME SHIFTS •VERY FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES (80-33 H o un W eekly) SEEK IN G A PPLIC A N TS for Page positions at AZ. House of Representatives for upcoming ses­ sion. Jan. - April. $5.95/hr., Full time. 542-3656 TELEMARKETING P/T 10am2:30pm or 3;30-pm , M -F now hiring mature, enthusiastic, relable people for phone work in Tempe & Gilbert areas $5-6/hr + bemuses. Call 894-0036(Tempe) or 926-8661 (Gilbert). TUTORS NEEDED Atop Academy, in reading, math, & writing. $4.50-$6.50/hr, MonS a t 9am-8pm. Call 276-5559 or 5548, ask for Cheb Jackson. WALK FROM ASU! No selling, telephone survey research, flex hrs av ail m rng, aftrn s, e v es/ wknds. Start at $5/hr. Wkly pay, frequent raise reviews. Higgin­ botham Asso., 829-3141. ADVERTISING INTERNSHIP: Get the experience today that’ll you'll need when job hunting t o morrow. Learn thè rewarding ca­ reer of advertising sales at ASU’s State Press newspaper. You will receive, professional training and the prestige of being a part of an award winning daily newspaper. You should be outgoing, self-mo­ tivated, a creative thinker and have personal integrity. You will need a reliable vehicle;, a classload of 13 hrs. or less, professional dress and a positive attitude. You must not be graduating before 12-94. Commission only. If you want to have an internship that pays with money and experience, call today and get ready to sink yóur teeth into a real experience. Call Jackie E ldridge noW. 965-6555. A ll majors welcome. :• HELP WANTEDGENERAL DATA ENTRY SPECIALISTS MICROAGE, INC. MicroAge Computer Centers Inc, the leading reseller o f informa­ tion technology and services in die world, is seeking 2 part time data entry specialists for 20-25 hours per week. These positions will bp involved with the invoicing & clerical functions of our Tempe distrib­ ution center. Microage is seeking candidates who are computer-liter­ ate and have good telecommunication skills, ip key a plus. If you are a qualified candidate, please send your resume with salary history to: MicroAge Attn: Human Rcsoufces, HR/Data Entry ... PO Box 1920 Tempe, A Z , 85280-1920 EOE * These positions pay $6.50/hr. Step Right Up! I f you’re low o f funds, the University Plasma Center may just be your answer. You can earn $30 a week by donating critically needed plasma. It's easy, safe and, best o f all, you can now watch TV/movies while you donate! T o p p e o p le earn $15-$20/h r. W e have a b eau tifu l, stateb f-th e -a rt telem arketing fa c ility a t C am elback an d 44th Street and invite e x p . salesw om en an d m en to call fo r a personal In terview . Please ask fo r Joyce at: 952-0106 SCOTTSDALE FAMILY TREASURES Yes, you can survive with only a part-time job! Construction Supply Co. Sell tools nationwide. Tem pe based company, will train. $5-$8 guaranteed PT. Joe, , 20% Savings HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL 894-1257 after 2 p.m. ■wild a p a rt-tim e w ork schedule a ro u n d y o u r class sched ule w ith C reative N etw o rks. W e co ntract w ith D E S /D D D to p r o v id e in - h o m e s u p p o r t s e rv ic e s t o fa m ilie s in all areas o f M a ric o p a C o u n ty . A t t e n d o u r f r e e T r a in in g Seminar & qualify to work as a personal care attendant, a pro vider fo r sitter services, o r tutor assistant in personal living skills: For m ore details Call 494-1214 M-F 8-5 Ask for 'fOB HOTLINE' Part-time • $8 per hour • Across from ASU • Here's a terrific job that fits into your schedule and allows you to make enough money to Survive! W e're a 36 year, old telephone marketing com pany and we talk to people about the best trial book pre­ views, magazine renewals; sponsor marketing, non-profit fund-raising and other outstanding programs. • Flexible schedules - short (4.5 hour) shift - Early AM , Mid-AM , Early Afternoon, Mid-Afternoon, Early Evening, & Weekends • Average $8-$10/hour • $ 10-$ 20 /h o u r for our top producers. • Paid, complete training; N ice offices, fully autom ated • Reps call prequalified leads nationwide from a computer-dialed data base. C a ll t o d a y f o r a c o n f id e n t ia l in t e r v ie w ( 6 0 2 ) 8 9 4 - 0 2 6 4 DIALAMERICA MARKETING. IWC^TOulf" Sta te P ress HELP WANTEDSALES APPT SETTERS needed, flexible schedules, $5/hr. + comm p/t. 481-9200 NEEDED M OTIVATED Jr/Sr students, fem ale preferred, to market on campus, personal safe­ ty system. Small Investment re ­ q u ired . C all 623 -0 3 3 0 fo r on campus interview. R O SE SA LES p /t e v es-F /S at $ 15/hr + night club setting. Must project classy image 964-2062 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL EXPORTING COMPANY needs PT receptionist, must speak Span­ ish. Apply in person 1801 W. 4th Street Tempe 829-9480 OFFTCE HELP p/t mornings pre­ ferred. Data Entry; w ord pro­ cessing, filing, etc. 345-2444 HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE COUNTRY GLAZED Ham Co now interviewing for full & p/t energetic individuals for morning & afternoon positions. Flexible schedules, job opportunities avail­ able at Scottsdale, 6107 N. Scot­ tsdale RdTHilton Village & Phoe­ nix; 2501 E. C am elback Rd./ Camel back Espianade apply in person after 2pm. . ; HELP NEEDED for night and weekend shifts. Apply in person. Taco John's: University & Rural. HONEY BEAR Bar-B-Q hiring fro n t counter, service. 5012. E. Van Buren (near ASU). 273-9148 RED ROBIN o f Tempe has im­ mediate openings for wait-staff, host/hostess and bussers with dayside availability. Apply in person 1375 W. elio tt. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT Now hiring lunch servers, lunch cooks and lunch hostesses. Apply in person M-F 10am-3 pm, 5001 E Washington SU N N Y ’S P IZ Z A Delivery drivers needed. Earn $5$10/hour. Flexible hours. Great w orking conditions. A pply at Sunny's, 1301 E. University. THE LANDMARK Restaurant is looking fo r p art time and full •time food servers -with a friendly and outgoing personality. 809 W. Main Street., Mesa ,962-4652, W AITRESS W ANTED Sports restaurant & bar, 4-5 shifts/wk. Woodshed II 430 N. Dobson. Restaurant Now H iring 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-6pm, 730S. MiHAve. Bldg. H, Suite 104 or • 11801 N. Tatum, Suite 247 P a g e 15 Tuesday, October 12,1993 M USIC PERSONALS FEMALE SINGER needed for Tempe based alternative band. Practice 4 times/week 967-3584 CHI-O CORTNEY: We re still 2 sexy! Not to mention da s-^—For­ mal was a blast - Greenbank LOOKING FOR the #1 Rock & Roll expert on campus. Win cas­ settes, C D 's, and up to $1000 cash. Take the 10 question Rock trivia quiz. Call 1-900^344-9335 $2.99/minute, must be 18 J A Z Z LEG END M O S E A L L IS O N FREE ~ ' L O S jy F O U N D _ AXA Nick A, B, C, D , E, F, G, H, I...L?L?L?M ?0?P?S? Love, . Aimee FOUND: PRESCRIPTION glass­ es found in Lot 59. In an Eyemasters case. Call 964-7557 to claim. nBd> The men o f TIKA would like to thank you for an outstand­ ing Happy Hour. 23 oz. Super Tanker Drafts Ladles Drink 23 oz. Drafts Tuesday, Oct. 12 ft Wednesday, Oct. 13 Two. Shows Each Night a t 7:06pm fc 9HM>pni BALBOA CAFE * DILLARDS XAT Nissa - 1 had a blast at your form al Saturday. S top by fo r lunch today. Thumper RAISE $500 in 5 days..Groups, clubs, motivated people. Call 1-800-775-3851 ext. 101. SIGMA KAPPA Amy W. Thank . you for a great time at Formal. Love Travis 705 S. Forest SERVICES C A R R E P A IR Balboa Café ^ 4 0 4 S. Mill Ave., Ste. 101 V SIGMA KAPPA ZK Snakey K's S ig m a K appa ZK Snakey K 's S igm a K appa ZK Snakey* K 's Sigma Kappa ZK Snakey K's at ASU .. V PERSONALS ~ A DOZEN roses delivered $20 also balloons. Call AfterHours Flowers894-3419. TO THE supposed cutest of roo­ mies: I miss you & hope to spend m ore tim e with you. Loye the real cutest o f all! 60 oz. Pitchers Bud Light Coors Light -A L L YOU CAN E A T - AO Kim R. Congratulations on KX Sweetheart! Monday-Friday ' Mic Dry Student ID . Required A LPHA PH I lo v es th e ir new member class! Get psyched for I~week ladiesV 98< Furr*« , at T ri City Mall • Mesa Pitchers o f Soda S P O R TS ( i W IN G S ! 4 S a te llite s IS S c re e n s "W e s h o w a ll N FL, Io w a & N e b ra s k a G a m es" 1-800-600-LENS (5367) FAX ORDERS 1-800-FAX-4774 •Exact same brand name lenses your doctor prescribes (contact Rx required) •No membership fees! •Your favorite designer sunglasses Rayban • Vuarnet • Serengeti ...and more Kiftgima ara» WOODSHED II 1 3 0 1 E. U niversity NW C o rn e r D o b so n & U n iv e rs ity 844-SHED Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State 2p Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. A subsidiary o f p. Chart House Ent., a 30-Year Publicly Held Restaurant. E qual O pportunity Employer PERSONALS P Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad toe firs t day it appears-the liability o f the State Press shall not exceed too cost of the ad and credit may be given fo r (he firs t insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods: No refunds wW be given, but if you need to earn cei your ad a credit w ill be hekf on account for future advertising. “ A T - Private Parly 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day ■ Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1.00 per line, per day 3 line minimum. 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Sheri Patrick 961-1411 MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS A SA P E X P E R T ON REPLACEMENT CONTACT LENSES AND DESIGNER SUNGLASSES STATE P ress Classified Ad Order Form □ COMPUTER HELP - Custom­ ized solutions to programming and hom ew ork a ssignm ents, study aids, tutoring. 649-8703. p lu s ta x RESTAURANTS/ BARS Ad> Heidi - Y ou are the best little sis. I can't wait for you to go ac­ tive. AOE Karie ^ TUTORS TEA CH ER W A NTED for unique, multi disciplinary learn­ ing center specializing in reading/leaming difficulties (elemen­ tary thru adult students) well groomed, creative, and detail ori: ented. G ood com m unication skills. East and west Ideations, part/full .time, credentialed. 4830711 Tracy APA/MLA EXPERIENCED ty p -' ing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. TANK UP TUESDAY SAVE $ 2.25 TO 70% T & A: Don't worry about midtoms. In the grand scheme of things they really don't matter. AAH Colleen M. Get psyched for Diamond Days!!! Love, your Big Sis _. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. W hen you can't: fin d th é rig h t w o rd s to te l I someone something they need to hear. W E SAY IT FOR YOU TACTFULLY, w ith no intent o f malice. Select a message from 6 categories.. Send via the tele­ phone. 5 2 choices. If desired, send anonym ously. 18+, use touch-tone, $ 2 .2 5 /m jn . aver­ age caH 4/m in. JAZ Productions Portland Oregon. m AAll Alphas - Get ready! Dia­ mond Days begin today. It’ll be a w eek y ou'll never fo rg e t!! Pi love and ours □ QBS TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING 1 -9 0 0 -8 9 6 -0 9 9 * . ZK MELISSA - Please don't be mad at me... vamy. AAA-KINKO’S COPY cen ter makes the grade! G et reports, resumes & flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh IBM rental & m uch m ore! O pen 24 ho u rs! Rural & University, 966-2Q35. W P/ TY PIN G . Term papers, theses, resumes, reports. MLA/ APA; Quick service reasonable rates. M aureen 274-3891 or 955-0969 FLIG H T INSTRUCTION all ratings. Low rates. Call David 996-4239 Mobile Mechanic 839-5398 CLASSIFIEDS WORK for you! For a Good Time Call 966-1300 I W A N T IT N O W ! D esktop P u b lishing. T yping, term papers, resumes, charts, the­ sis, quick service. N ear ASU. 966-1984 INSTRUCTION RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2. 1-800351-0222. V PLUMBER, HAD a great time this weekend! Love, Aimee FA ST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. WRITE STUFF Specialty word processing/desktop pub. B usi­ nesses; faculty; students. Beth 963-3537. A llT heT tm e TICKETS ONSAUE NOW AT Hope you remember it! Love al­ ways Lisa, Raise up to $1,000 in just 1 week! For your fraternity, sorority & club. Plus $ 1,000 for yourself and a free t-shirt just for calling. 1-800-932-0528, ext. 75. BREWPUB 1-800-545-8158 x3740 n K A Jay J. Happy 21st birthday! G R E E K S /C L U B S L 'O réal In tern atio n al is coming to Phoenix and we are looking for special faces for our HAIR SHOW on O c t 17 & 18. Models will receive FREE salon services, such a s haircolor and haircuts. If you a re w illing to have a complete make-over, please call and leave a message: BANDERSNATCH 5th SI S Forest KKT The men o f n K A w ould lik e to th an k you fo r a g re a t Happy Hour. FU N D R A IS IN G " BECAUSE YOU’RE WORTH m Jlill S1’25 MIC DRY KELLY S. TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING SERVICES HOT WINGS & •jgfcj COOL JAZZ 10c WINGS D on't forget lunch Today. See you about 1:30. My treat, you pick the place. J S Versatile & reliable, needed for band; based aro u n d NY song writer. Sense o f humor a must. Serious inquiries only. Call Dom­ inic 468-6552, leave message. MONICA T is 24 today...YouH be collecting S.S. before me. Ha Ha. Happy Birthday!! Les RESTAURANTS/ BARS U v e a tB a lb o a C a f e \ O IK GREG & Josh: Here's the personal you've always dreamed of! Thanks fo r a great dinner Sunday night. AAA Dana M /F B A SSIST ALPHA PHI New Members, IWeek is here! Get excited for a *p e a t week! RESTAURANTS/ BARS wo ca nn o t a ccep t p erso n a l ads through th e m ail. " ' ! , WÈ. æÈ% , l i l i Homes for Sale Housedeaning Inetruction Insurance Jewelry Job O pportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous MisoeHoneous for Sale M obie Homes 063 062 060 064 110 097 047 036 060 037' Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms for Rant . 100 061 ’ 058 031 041 060 067 106 106 116 . Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Condos for Rant Townhomes/Condos fo r Sale Transportation Travel Tutors TypirçyW ord Processing Wanted j Tour Individual Horoscope .... ,, francésDrake— — For Tuesday , Oct. 12,1993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) The morning hours m ay bring mixed signals, but later you are productive and efficient on the jo b . Friends and partners are supportive o f your best inter­ ests. . TAURUS (Apr. 20 to M ay 20) C ouples w ill be enjoying fun tim es together now. N e w Under­ standings are reached with lov­ ing ties. Y our status improves today. Recognition comes from superiors. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Creative types meet w ith com­ m e rc ia l c h an c e s fo r su cc e ss to d a y . Y ou a re on th e b a ll where domestic and w ork inter­ ests are concerned. Advisers are quite helpful. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Ÿoü express y ourself to good effect today. Creative interests and dating are favored. A fami­ ly member helps p u t. Financial backing becom es available t a you. ' LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) This is a good day for signing contracts and reaching agree­ m e n ts w ith o th e rs . Y ou are ready now to m ake im portant changes a t hom e. B uying and selling are favored. VIRGO > (Aug* 23 to Sept. 22) Exercising initiative is favored today. G o after what you w ant Com m unicative skills are tops now* Opportunities for financial gains arise in business. LIBRA (S ep t 23 to O c t 22) A p riv a te d is c u s s io n to d a y bodes w ill fo r y o u r financial in te re s ts. B eh in d -th e -sce n e s moves are favored now. A solu­ tion is found fo r a long-standing concern. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) , You will be making your mark socially today; New friendships enter your life. Talks with oth­ e rs a re s tim u la tin g . H om e developm ents are also fav o r­ able. ' SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) A p roject on the back burner gains new life today. Business insights are on the m oney. A friend is an inspiring and uplift­ in g in flu en c e . R ese arch is a plus. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) A raise, promotion, or new job offer is likely for some o f you. A chance to m ake im p o rtan t business progress com es now. T ravel and friendship are also highlighted. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Signing up for a course o f study how w ill lead to greater selfconfidence. It's a good day fo m eet w ith business associates and fo r sched u lin g jo b in te r­ views. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Today brings im portant fman+ cial developm ents and a sense o f inner peace. Couples are in agreem ent about mutual inter­ ests. Plans for travel are in the works. YOU BORN TODAY are per­ sonable and charm ing, b u t at times high-strung. You must be careful not to let temperament get in the w ay o f your overall . progress. Y ou have advanced ideas a nd are capable o f making an original contribution in your field. A t the sam e tim e, you m ust g u a rd a g a in st la z in ess. B oth artistic and literary, you w ill succeed in creative fields. Birthdafie of: Joe Cronin, base­ b a ll p la y e r-m a n a g e r; S u sa n A n to n , a c tre ss; an d L u ciano Pavarotti, opera singer. St a te P ress Tuesday, October 12,1993 Page 16 Tie Would Beer Tour Enjoy 115 of tho World’s Most Distinctive Brows e g jS ï *$# 28 D raft B eers 00 B ottle B eers W ith FREE S m R S O n ili (WMiiwfeH») 530 W. Broadway 3-lb. barrito filled with red atnd i f e J j f l fornaio & Tempo______ « 6 -9 3 B Tempe: 216 E. University - just east of Forest • 829-6026 P h o en ix L o catio n s: 12 th S t. & V a n B u re n , 2 5 3 -1 5 1 1 « C e n tra l & S o u th e rn , 2 7 6 -7 5 3 1 3 2 n d A v e . & V a n B u re n , 2 7 2 -3 2 3 9 S tate P ress Po lic e Reports - a “ATTENTION RACE FANS” COME SEE PAT AUSTIN TOP FUEL DRAGSTER OCTOBER 15TH, 11am - 4 pm. walk on the weird side. THE HONDA DOCTOR VISIT OUR S H O W R O O M & SEE T HE D I F F E R E N C E Tempe Location 24H R . AVAILABILITY ON ALL SYSTEMS 486DX2-66 *1895 486DX-50 *1795 I486DX-33 *1595 486SX-25 U395 130 MB H/D, 4 MB RAM 386SX-40 $ 995 _5A f AÜSTÍÑ Top Fuel Dragster 1.2& 1.44MB Floppies 14" SVGA Color Monitor A Adapter MS Dos 6.0 A Mouse NOVELL Network Authorized SERVICE PRINTERS Carry In/On Site Network Service & Support Maintenance Contract 5229 $239 $289* $445 $499 Call cs&s 968-8585 "After Retale EVERY CAST RO L OIL CHANGE SPECIAL! UPGRADES fla s g o j M O TH ER B O A R D S 386SX-40 386DX-40 486SX-2S 486DX-33 486DX-50 486DX2-66 $119 $159 $249 $439 $599 $679 The ONLY leading motor oil that in every grade exceeds the world's f toughest requirements i for viscosity breakdown. $189 $229 $249 $329 2090 E. University Dr. 967-7282 In Scottadale Airpark Auto Care Center EVERY THURSDAY oMeteose % ce 9C21C N I T E C a d ie s N ig h t 25 $ C o m e w a tc h your fa vo rite shows w ith us! or Specials for Ladies: DispUy youR G reeIl Letters on ANyrhiNq you wear & qET.. $ 2 5 0 : TAILS c o íns , p I ease Good on: coo ts UQHT n ™ JA q w m rs $1 $1 KAMIKAZEES D R A F T S 40567 W ATCH FO R O UR W EST CHANDLER LOCATION O PEN IN G SO O NI WEDNESDAY FUP . University EVERY TUESDAY up to 4 qts of Castro) Syntec SCOTTSDALE 7333 E. Butherus Dr., Suite 100c TEM PE SAT 11-3 . HEAPS A full synthetic motor o il that provides protection and perfonnance upto4qts that far surpasses ol Castro!GTX(GradeI.D.) conventional oils. TH E HO NDA DO CTO R H A R D D R IV E S 130MB-IDE 213MB-IDE 24SMB-IDE 340MB-IDE 1515 W. U niversity. #104. Tempe *N o " 2 'lif/w k d “ O rig inator o f th e $14.95 C a s tro lO il& F ilte r C hange. 130 MB H/D, 2 MB RAM Intel CPU, VESA LJ3. 128KCache,4MBRAM 213 MB HardDrive 1.2 & 1.44 MB Floppy SVGA Accelerator w/1 MB 14" SVGA Color Monitor (.28) MS DOS 6.0 A Mouse MS Windows 3.1 Panasonic 2123 Citizen 230 Canon BJ200 Okidaia590 Okidata 400 HP Printen casfjL 386DX-4011195 1826 N. SCOTTSDALE RD. IN TEMPE 9 4 5 *7 7 3 4 14 OZ domestics for