©Copyright, State Press, 1993 Tempe; Arizona Wednesday, October 27,1993 An Independent Morning Daily Vói. 77 No. 123 Coor aims to give ASU atmosphere o f small college B y J a s o n H ili. State P ress ASU President Lattie Coor told com­ munity members on Tuesday thatA SU ’s vision is to restructure classroom guide­ lines, create close-knit communities inside the main campus and predict possible enrollment numbers for the year 2010. Coor told a group of about 150 resi­ dents and local politicians at a Tempe City Council breakfast that one of his primary goals is to create programs which will C oor make ASU seem more like a small college, rather than one of the largest universities in the nation. “When I first came to ASU, I had never been at a university larger than 9,000 students,” he said. “1 was certainly sobered when I saw over 40,000. “1 was sobered by it because there seemed to be a sense that size meant something negative, that size meant crowding, that size meant impersonality, that size meant that if it was too large it couldn't really reach the individual. Yet, as 1 visited the campus, it was clear to me that size handled properly could be our greatest . asset.” The comments came at a breakfast at Pyle Adult Recreation Center held to inform residents on issues involving the mayor and council as well as changes in the community. Coor used the opportunity to address some of the successes of his administration such as a recently implemented program called "course match" that groups as many as 25 freshmen students liv­ ing in the same dormitories into introductory history and English classes together. The program has over 1,300 students involved. “What we've done now is to begin creating a set of communi­ ties to which every student can relate to when they come to the University." Coor said. He added that the creation of the Honors College five years ago has generated a small close-knit community on campus. "They (honor students) will have all the experiences that one would have if they were at a small liberal arts college.” he said. Coor also said an enrollment cap has lowered ASU’s popula­ tion from 43.000 to 40,000 at the main campus, with plans to cap enrollment at 39,000 next year. Coor called administrative attempts to prompt student involve­ ment in a lecture environment “revolutionary.” He said plans are already underway for colleges on campus to require students to give more presentations and the idea can work even in large classes. : Coor commended Paul Privateer, ASU English lecturer, on his efforts in an introductory humanities class to bring team effort and computer integrated software into the classroom. Brian Fitzgeraia/state rress “Crim e doesn’t pay” is the m essage convicted m aster crim inal John Stanley told a group of Ju stice Studies students Tuesday. “The secret of getting out of crim e is to get out of that environment - there’s no better environment than In co l­ lege," said Stanley, who is working on h is doctorate. I n th e lo n g r u n , c r i m e d o e s n ’t p a y Reformed life-long criminal says its not worth it B y G reg S exton State P ress John Stanley's life reads iike a novel — a career criminal for most of his 49 years, he started stealing at age 8 and quickly became “addicted to crime,” as he moved from petty theft to larceny, fraud, robbery, burglary and smuggling. Stanley, speaking to an ASU criminal justice class Tuesday, told aB interested crowd how he began stealing quarters as a kid, eventually refining his craft and bringing home “suitcases full o f $100 bills.” -Now, Stanley labels him self as a “retired career criminal” studying at the University of Texas, where he is working tow ard a m aster’s degree. He travels around the country, talking to people about crime, the U.S. justice system and prevention. And Stanley knows his stuff. He once had cars, money and houses all over the world. Now, he shops at Goodwill and gets through school on financial aid. Stanley told the class that he grew up in a dysfunctional family, stole his first car when he was 15 and quickly moved into major crime. The adrenaline rush of pulling off a crime was a major form of addiction, he said. “The greatest sex I ever had was after a big crime,” Stanley said. “I was addict-, ed to crime.” Paraphrasing a cliche, Stanley said, “Crime does indeed pay — if you’re will­ ing to pay the consequences.” While Stanley has done the crimes, he has also done the time. He has served in county, city and federal jails. He said it was during a stint in jail that he made the decision to change his life. He said he began reading Socrates and realized that material possessions would T urn t o Crime, page 2. to sink $750,000 into Rio Salado Project the valley.“ INSIDE STA TE PR E SS Weather Outlook M ostly sunny and breezy w ith some high clouds. High 84, low . ► The Arizona Board of Regents decide what will be done with an extra $250,000 left over form lowering the field at Sun Devil Stadium. Page 8 V ’ Internet, the wordwide comput­ er network touted by the Clinton administration as part of the information superhigh­ way, is profiled. Page 10 W orld/ Nation First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton presents the health-care package to Congress today.. Page 3 creations of 10,000 to 16,000 permanent jobs, within Maricopa County. The report also estimates the project will boost direct tax revenue by an additional $10-J6 million, and also assumes that at least seven million square feet will be developed in order to make these calculations feasible. M itchell said th a t when the A rizo n a D epartm ent of Transportation originally laid out plans for the Red Mountain Freeway to be placed on the north bank of the river, a problem arose, due to possible flood problems on its south side. However, Mitchell said arrangements were made with the Maricopa County Flood Control District to provide funds to chan­ nelize the south side of the river. The opening of the town lake and all o f its recreational ameni-, ties is slated for January 28; 1996, the day that Super Bowl XXX will arrive in the Valley, said Nancy Russell, President of the East Valley Partnership. The East Valley Partnership is an organization of 250 busi­ ness, civic, and political leaders dedicated to. strengthening economies in the east Valley and the greater Phoenix area. “The development of the Rio Salado project in Tempe will have an economic impact equal to the Super Bowl on the Valley every year,” Russell said. Sports The No. 19 Washington Huskies are turning this sea­ son's probation into a motivating force. Page 15 Where To fin d It Advertiser Index..................17 Classifieds...................... .„.17 Comics ....................14 Crossword..,,;...................... 10 Horoscopes .......................19 Opinion...................... 4 Police Report.........................9 Sports.....'.......... 15 Today’s Activities 2 World/Nation .............3 . M m ainna n w m n vo n m rra w Tempe Major Harry M itchell aaid.'The construction of the town lake w ill be a true dem onstration project that I think will excite B y J ason H ill State P ress The Army Corps of Engineers has agreed to invest $750,000 into Tempe’s Rio Salado project, Tempe Mayor Harry Mitchell announced Tuesday at a news conference on the ASU campus. The project is aiming to develop land along the Salt River into outdoor recreational facilities and to provide possible flood con­ trol measures for Tempe and the Valley. A 200-acre lake is also planned to support boating, swimming, and sailing recreations. : “Once this river was considered one of the most important goals of the Maricopa County area, and now the Rio Salado is fast becoming a reality,” Mitchell said at the conference, held at Parking Lot 59 just east of Sun Devil Stadium. Construction for the project will wipe out a part of Lot 59, though project officials have said that a new parking structure will be built to replace any lost spaces. In 1988, Maricopa County voters turned down a referendum that would have funded the project by raising property taxes. “Today, what you are going to see is the continuation of the Rio Salado vision, obviously in a brand new light,” Mitchell said. The Army will be conducting a study on flooding and water quality problems in the Rio Salado area o f the Salt River in Tempe and Phoenix. A report released from the project manager’s office estimates P a g e ji C rim e I ODAY Continued from page 1. The Today section is a daily calendar o f everyone w elcom e,3:40p,® ., MU Gldkiry events primed as a sendee to the ASU Com­ Room, p : * E n v iro n m en tal Issu e s D ep a rtm en t o f munity. Requests tare j ASASU — Meeting to discuss students local and glohaienvlronPm t«dconpras,ieadra'* mit written entries to die f t n e t o w t i i M r ship opportunities, 6 p.m., MU third floor. basement o f M atthews Center, Hoorn IS."] « A sian S tu d e n ts A ssociatfoi||p§!§ubH c Requests w ift n o tb e taken over the phond. speaking workshop, refreshments, everyone Entries m m stcontaih the fu tt w m s o f th e ,| welcome, bring canned foods to win prizes, group, addeeriptkm o f the cm d , date, rime 4:30 pm ., MU Ventana Room 226B. and the fu ll address o f the location. A » * l i i l R e c re a tio n C o m m ittee — requests are subject to oduuig fo r contm t, Spaceball, 1 1a.m .- l p .n ^ W p J ^ tp a h a y e Wfcydfa ijfcftfy. spoat and clarity. ’ » G o ld « 3Cey H p m S o t * ^ -—^RcpEpp cer­ tificates, 11 a.m .- I p.m., Honors College • Counselor ’ ;A * P to i5 p if e ‘J ' l ' r ?.’* •.-v * * 4' i f f A dult IK C hildren for ASU students, provided by counseling and * 12counseling psychology graduate students, l Alcohoites/Oysfunctional Fam ilies supervised by faculty. Payne Hail Room 102. step self-help support group meeting, noonFor more information or appointment, contact lp.m., MU Kaibab Rooffi2©8E* ‘ -« American Indian Institute — Pre-registrv • Alcoholics A nonym ous — Daily closed tion workshop for all Native American stu­ meeting, noon, M l Saints Catftolie Newman dents, facilitated by R o b e d C u tty from Registrar's Office, aooih J In d ian In stitu te C onference Room , Engineering Center Atmefc •' • Campus Republicans— Werfcly meeting, guest speaker Mark Killian of the sa te Hogae October, "Patterns Of l i f t of Representatives to address current state alumna Carolyn A. Zarr of issues, 3 p.m., * * u Pb*ai R b o iii;® i|g l3 ings of significant people 1 floor, • C ird e K International — Weekly meeting adm ission, 502 & of w a id ’s largest.sem ceoiganiratioa^S^C f Phoenix. * N arcotics A nonym ous — Home sweet p.m., MU Yuma Room. p mm, i1701S .C ollege ¡1 Eckankar Society — Discussion: ‘Tuning home meeting. ig, 5:§6 m into the Ltght aad Sound from God,” noon, j Aw., iB I lB MU Graham Room 216. ■• MUAB CORRECTION: A series o f m ug shots in T uesday’s State Press nu sid eu tifled viduals. A photo o f fresh m an Jacie H enri w as placed in a sp o t w hich id e n tifie d h e r a s fre sh m a n D evon N an carro w , w h ile N an carro w w as in co rrectly id en tified as g rad u ate stu d e n t A sish P ant. T he S tate P ress Wednesday, October 27,1993 State JPtt no longer bring him happiness. Intellectual stim­ ulation is what Stanley says he’s addicted to now. While Stanley said he wouldn’t divulge any particulars of his criminal expertise, he did allow the class a rare glimpse into the mind of a crimi­ nal. Much like a chemist would study molecules, Stanley would study crime. He went to Germany to learn how to make keys for Porches, BMWs and Mercedes. Stanley also would read books and magazines to learn his tricks. He studied money and printing machines to learn counter­ feiting. Still, being a criminal on the run does have many disadvantages, Stanley said. “It’s much more difficult being a criminal than being anything else,” Stanley said. “Being a criminal takes so much energy. For all the time I spent thinking how to steal, I could have four or five (college) degrees by now, and those can never be taken away.” S tan ley said the U.S. ju stic e system is flawed. “They are treating the symptom and not the cause,” he said. “We need more social programs for kids, more educational programs and not more pris­ ons. We have evolved into where our prison sys­ tem is not a deterrent” Stanley said he is writing a book about his life in crime. “I still carry a lot of guilty feelings about all the things I have done,” he said. “But I try to reduce those by all the good things I do.” Students in the class were generally surprised that Stanley could make such a turnaround. “It’s kind of amazing,” said 22-year-old jus­ tice studies major Arash Deimani. “You really don’t perceive criminals as being reformed, and he has made a 180-degree turn.” Ryan Baird, a 21-year-old senior, Was also amazed with the turnaround. “He’s making something good out of his life and showing it can be done,” Baird said, The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook — An investment in your lifetime O rd er yours today for $36.93, Matthews Center basement, Rm 50, 965-6881 regrets th e errors. TRY FRIENDSHIP, TRY SISTERHOOD, TRI SIGMA! F in d o u t w h a t b e in g G r e e k is 4 1 a b o u t! VJOV. 3RD Miller Cite "CÜJB EDGE KHGWT" S w fto Wrestling TONIGHT! 500 W e d n e sd a y , O c to b e r 2 7 th 6 pm - 8 pm Palo V e rd e M a in C o c k ta ils For M ore Inform ation Call 784-9126 O p in io n » State P ress Wednesday, October 27,1993 Pag'; e 4 ............¡■EÉfy lüS P I ito ria l tate ress L attie’s w o rld * An ASU political statistics class, which is broadcast over Valley cable systems, was coaducted Tuesday on location: Son Devil Stadium. Planting to s tongue firm ly in cheek, the course’s instructor said he was holding the «toy’s class in the m onster stadium , with an audience o f 70,000-plus statistic-weary students. Thanks to some video wizardry, the stadium filled up and 1» began conducting class from the south end zone, A s h e began his lecture, ihe said stu­ dents with questions could waye a gold pom­ pom , and he would do his best to respond. Later, he paused in his lecture and asked M there were any questions. The eam era panned to a section o f the crowd, and all o f die “students” were frantically waving their pom-poms. The parody the professor made o f his own class and its b u ig ^ u n g size was not that tor town the truth — every student knows tin sfe e t One m ight expect that freshman biology courses soon w illb e taught in die University Activity Center — standing room only. And this University’s leader, ASU President Latde Coor, knows there are problem s too. His adm inistration is doing what it can to cover for the lack o f a high-quality, personal education at ASU. A t a breakfast TOesday with local leaders, C orn stressed w hat he is doing to make A$U into a group o f sm all comm unities, rather than one big glob of40,000 students w h o feeliik e they are so many dandelion seeds in a stiff wind. The {nogram for freshmen, for example, where students town die same dorm have toe same introductory classes, is a good one. It helps young, hew students make those allim portant connections with others who w ill help them survive the arduous process that a five-tosix-year degree has become. The special-interest comm unities being established in dorms are another great idea. Bid, in reality, all these programs a te ju st a bunch o f bells and whistles, clicking and chirp­ ing in hopes that students will forget that die state is sticking them with a substandard college education. W hile Corn’s heart is in the right place, toe whole need for these cute ideas stems from toe fact that students feel like they are on an assem ­ bly line, being pushed, prodded and poked by j j ASU for five or six years until they graduate. I The University can be likened to a junked car propped up ject I» editing b y the opinion page editor lo r factu­ a l errors mid p rin t space availab ility. Letters tsmtantmg obvious factual taxors w ill be rejected. A O letters m ust either be tp i£ Ìp ìft Q uotables “We can’t continue to deep fry our children’s health.” — Agriculture Secretary M ike E spy releasing a report that says school cafeterias give students too much salt and fat, setting them up for cancer, heart disease and other ailments. “It sounds like a w ho’s who o f the go vern o r’s re-election committee.” — A rizona A ssistant Senate M inority Leader Pete Rios, regarding a state econom ic developm ent report w hich is accused o f paying too m uch attention to the opinions o f A rizona business executives. ASU bureaucracy reform desperately needed now I am suie I am not alone when I say that my college experience at Arizona State has not been the most rewarding. In terms o f edu­ cation, I feel I have grown tremendously in my six years advanc­ ing towards my B.A. in English education. However, when it comes to the bureaucracy of ASU, I will be leaving in May with a terrible taste in my mouth. The University needs to make a con­ scious effort in reducing the amount of political bureaucracy that plagues it’s 40,000+ students. I realize the enrollment at this University is high, reducing it may be the first step. As a frustrat­ ed senior, allow me to share with you my heart-wrenching story. My initial plan was to graduate in December of 1993, but as a result of some rather unfortunate events, my graduation date was postponed until May of 1994. One more semester may not seem like a big sacrifice, but it seemed like the end of the world to me. This simply meant one more month away from making the big bucks as a middle or high school English teacher. Early registration rolled around for the spring semester of 1993 and I was sure to get my wish list of classes in by the registration deadline. I was shocked to find that I had only been successfully enrolled in 30 percent of my classes. This meant I had to attempt the override (or professor suck-up) method to get my remaining classes. I arrived to my first class early hoping for an override; the professor arrived early as well and promptly marched to the board and in all capitals printed “no overrides” large enough so that God could read it. I approached the professor and she pointed to the board. In distress I went to my next class searching for an over­ ride, but again I-was denied. Ironically this semester, the same thing occurred. Fortunately, my professors were sympathetic enough to let me in their classes. An end needs to come to die bureaucracy that exists at Arizona State University. Overrides into a specific class seem so petty to an outsider, but to a graduating senior it is imperative. Lattie Coor has implemented a freshman program where most 100 level class­ es at ASU are limited to 35 students or less to prevent freshman failure rate. It would seem to me that this limit would result in larger upper division classes. Another solution might be for the University to make use of those programs of study each junior is required to complete. The programs of study could be used to decide how many students plan to take a specific course during a specific semester. A policy should be passed at ASU that seniors should be granted enrollment into classes that are required for their majors. 1 have had to deal with a lot of red tape but, unfortunately, probably no more than any other senior at ASU. If it weren’t for the budget cuts that Mr. Symington has implemented since he took office, classes would not be cut and seniors would not be concerned with enrollment into classes required by the University for graduation. Michael T. Henderson Senior, English and secondary education S o u n d O ff: 9 6 5 - 4 2 8 7 The S to tt P ro a would like lu hear from you on us Sound (XT Line. Each Monday, the opinion page will print a question o f University Or eommnmiy internal, tak­ ing answers all week, 24 hours a day at 965-4287. When leaving a message, please leave your name major class asniiinÿ (or any other «ffihanoo with the University) and a number where you cao be reached. AU calls will be veri­ fied. and responses will be published every Wednesday, starting September 1. Responses may be edited for length and hi eliminan, profanity Sony the Siam P m r will not for nap«) mug on die Scowl Off U ne This W eek’s Question: ‘«Do you feel the past use o f m arijuana bv candidates (such as Eddie Basha and '^ ‘ T n n rrrr r c ~ r State P ress Wednesday, October 27, 1993 Page 6 T h e H i s t o r y of the Citibank Classic Visa card and the Age of Credit Card Security. In the 67th year o f the 20th C entury A.D., Citibank introduced a credit card aptly titled the Citibank Classic Visa® card. Established on the premise that a credit card should offer—24 hours a day—w arm , personal service, the Citibank Classic Visa card marked the end o f the Ice Age. A nd it ushered in a new era. U W ith the introduction o f the first Photocard, the credit card bearing one’s own photo and signature on the front, it soon becam e evident th a t M an was entering the Post Paleolithic Period. First, M an was no longer looking like a N eanderthal, as one often does on more primitive cards such as the Student ID. He or she could now T h is ta b le t, d a te d 1358 B ,C . w a s th e fir s t know n attem pt to p u t one's photo on a cred it ca rd -h u t not w ithout draw backs. Photography h ad not yet been invented. It w eighed over 50 pounds. A nd. it d id mu fit e a sily in to , a w allet choose his o r her own photo. Second, by deterring other anthropoids from using the card, M an was helping to prevent fraud. Surely this was a sign o f advanced intelligence. H The subsequent rise o f services was nothing less than an American Revolution. So as you might expect, Citibank would be there for you, even if your card was stolen, or perhaps lost. The Lost Wallet™ Service could have a new card in your hands M o n a rc h N o te s® V e rs io n : usually within 24 hours. (\b u can alm ost hear Paul Revere crying, “T he card is coming! The W ith the Citibank Classic Visa card, card is com ing!” ) H W hen the G reat Student Depression cam e along, C itibank introduced you can build a credit history before New D e a ls —special student discounts and savings. Hence, today’s student can enjoy a $20 you reach your middle ages. And, A irfare D iscount for dom estic flights! (ushering in th e Jet Age); savings on m ail order receive special student discounts. purchases, sports equipm ent, magazines and music; a low variable interest rate o f 154%2; and, C all today 1-800-C IT IB A N K no annual fee. U Finally, comes the day you enter the Classical Age (i.e. w hen you charge (1-800-248-4226), extension 19. your purchases on the Citibank Classic card). \b u receive Citibank Price Protection to assure you o f the best prices. Just see the same item advertised in print for less, w ithin 60 days, and C itibank w ill refund the difference up to $1503. \b u receive Buyers Security™, to cover those purchases against accidental dam age, fire o r theft, for 90 days from the date o f purchase3 A nd Citibank Lifetim e Warranty™, to extend the expected service life o f eligible products up to 12 years4. Together they give you com plete coverage; and w ith everything e lse ...th e Age o f C redit (ilih u n k ('/ im s w V isa c u rd w ith its Lo st M ullet Service, he .w o u ld 1n o t. h a ve b e e p . com - Card Security. H It’s credit history in the making. W ith the help o f Citibank’s . , _ , _ ~ services and savings, you earn some o f the credentials needed later on to purchase a car or even a house. H So call to apply. Students don’t need a job or a cosigner. Call, also, if you’d like your photo added to your regular Citibank Classic Visa card. The num ber is 1-800-C IT IB A N K (1-800-248-4226), extension 1 9 .1 1f after reading this chapter describing the prosperous condi­ tions set forth by a Citibank Classic Visa card, one feels that he or she has left forever the D ark Ages and has entered upon a new age, the Age o f Enlightenm ent, then your time, as they say, has come. Destiny is calling. A nd so should you. Not just Visa. Citibank Visa. 'Offer expires 6/30/94. Minimum ticket purchase price is $100. Rebates are for Citibank student catdmembers on tickets issued by 1SE Flights only; 'The Annual Percentage Rate for purchases is 15.4%as of 8/93 and may vfry quarterly. The Annual Percentage Rate for cash advances is 19.8%. If a finance charge is imposed, the minimum is 50 cents. There is an additional finance charge for each cash advance transaction equal to 2% of the amount of each cash advance transaction: however, it will not be less than $2.00 or greater than $1000. ’Certain conditions and exclusions apply. Please refer to your Summary of Additional Program Information. Buyers Security is underwritten by The Zurich International UK Limited. ‘Certain restrictions and limitations apply. Underwritten by the New Hampshire Insurance Company. Service life expectancy varies by product and » at least the minimum based on retail industry data. Details of coverage are available in your Summary of Additional Program Information. Monarch* Notes are published by Monarch Press, a division of Simon St Schuster, a Paramount Communications Company. Used by permission of the publisher. Citibank credit cards ate issued bv Citibank (South Dakota). N. A. ^ 1993 Citibank (South Dakota). N.A. Member FDIC. S tate P ress Page 7 Wednesday, October 27,1993 Woman found dead in home went undiscovered 4 years WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) — One neighbor had Adele A. Gaboury’s lawn mowed for her. Another took care of a pile o f mail. A utility company was called to tend to her broken pipes. All the while, the 73-year-old recluse lay dead, probably for four years, in trash on the kitch en floor. A uthorities found her body Monday with a phone nearby, as if she had been trying to make a call when she died. “She didn’t want anyone bothering her at all,” said ah old friend, June Tsiokas. “She just wanted to be left alone. I guess she got her wish, but it’s awfully sad.” Neighbors had inquired about Gaboury about four years ago, after they noticed she was miss­ ing. But .one of her brothers, with whom she w asn't close, told police-site had gone into a nursing home. “A brother had located a woman with the same last name and assumed it was his sister. It wasn’t,” said police Capt. James Gallagher. With the search for Gaboury ended, neigh­ bors began to tend to her two-story house that stood out in its decay in a middle-class neigh­ borhood of the central Massachusetts city. T he m ailm an kept d elivering her mail thro u g h a slot in the door, until neighbor Michael Crowley noticed a pileup. He opened the door and hundreds of pieces of mail fluttered into the yard. Crowley notified police, who got the deliveries stopped. Subsequent mail was stamped return to sender. Next-door neighbor Eileen Dugan, assuming Gaboury was in a nursing home, started paying her own grandson $10 twice a month to mow Gaboury's lawn because the property was such an eyesore, A utility company was called to shut off the water when Dugan’s son noticed Gaboury’s pipes had frozen and sent water spilling out the door. No one could imagine Gaboury was. inside. Even when police searched the home Friday, after a neighbor complained about it as a health hazard, they missed her badly decomposed body in 6 feet of trash. Authorities still suspicious returned Monday for another look and found the body. Police said they believe Gaboury died of nat­ ural causes four years ago, when her bank trans­ actions ended. The state medical examiner’s office was investigating. A brother, Joseph G aboury, 70, o f East Brookfield, said the family hadn’t been close since their mother died in 1979. But he told the W orcester Telegram & Gazette: “Someone should have noticed something before now.” Gaboury apparently had worked at a nursing home and had been living with a male compan­ ion until he died Six years ago. Florence Stearns, Associated Press N eighbor Dianna Crow ley points to A dele G ab ou ry's house in W orcester, M ass., Monday, where earlier in the day authorities found G aboury’s body. Authorities said the 73-year-old recluse probably had been dead for four years. administrator of the Anna Marie Rest Home, said Gaboury worked there as activity director for about two years, leaving in 1986 after prob­ lems aidse over her absenteeism. Steams said she knew little about Gaboury except that she had formerly worked on a cruise ship. “She was rather a private person,” Stearns said. “She kept her own affairs to herself.” And few others knew much about Gaboury, who lived on the street for 40 years. “My heart bleeds for her, but you can’t blame a soul,” said Rose Girouard, who lives across the street. “If she- saw you out there, she never said hello to you.” H e a lth Continued f r o m page 3. “Most manufacturers are going to save money on this. If they want to look a gift horse in the mouth, that can be their decision,” the president said. Leon Panetta, the White House budget director, said Clinton had taken pains to avoid creating new “open-ended entitlements” in health care, “particularly when we’re trying to discipline the rest of government spending.” Panetta said Clinton has built in a mechanism to cap the enti­ tlements. A 239-page draft summary of Clinton’s original proposal that leaked but almost seven weeks ago has been a lightning rod for complaints from businesses, hospitals and others with worries about the so-called Health Security Plan. The plan proposes to pay for the reforms with cigarette taxes, big savings in Medicare and Medicaid, a one percent levy on large corporations and a requirement that all employers and employees buy insurance. Some lawmakers have voiced fears that Clinton was concen­ trating too much power in the hands of an independent National Health Board and the regional alliances that would form a new insurance-buying marketplace. ‘ Under the final plan, the health board would be an executive agency, not an independent board like the Securities and Exchange Commission, the sources said. And the regional health alliances would accept virtually all health plans with no limits on the number of plans offering tradi­ tional, fee-for-service medicine, the officials said. States, not the alliances, would certify each health plan. But Lee told the Association of American Medical Colleges that even the fee-for-service plans would receive flat amounts to provide care for all their customers — regardless of whether they paid physicians a salary or a fee for each procedure or service. Mountain Bike, 18 speed, all Shimano com ponents C o m e see us tod ay. W e’ve s o t a lo t o f th ese b ikes and w e n e e d to make room fo r the ’94s. This is a great tim e fo r you to get a great bike fo r this lo w price. j *15 Off ! ! *6 Off j Any Helmet I ! U-Locl 11/7/93 • 9 68-8011 Your collegiate bike shop 968-8011 * t Layaway 2010 S. Rural Rd. Tempe, AZ Apache Rural IT O pen 7 days a week ■ N Broadway ASU BOOKSTORE Page 8 State P ress Tuesday, October 27,1993 ASU officials push for excess funds from stadium project to repay bonds Adm inistrators to ask regents to filter money into debt service B y M ark M . M acias State P ress For a second time, ASU overestimated the cost to lower Sun Devil Stadium, but administrators say they will ask the Arizona Board of Regents on Friday to filter all unused project funds into ASU’s debt service. Jennus Burton, associate vice president for ASU administra­ tive services, said the school originally requested $2.7 million for the project in September 1990, but; $1.75 million was the final cost of the project. “We made quite a few changes during the scope of the pro­ ject,” Burton said. “As we were going through construction, there were a lot of cost efficiencies we found, so we were able to reduce the total project cost.” ASU downgraded its request to $2 million in July 1991 after a schematic design refinement and reductions in the original pro­ grammed project. Burton said if the regents agree on Friday to transfer $247,788 into the University’s debt service, ASU will be able to pay off a portion of the bonds that were sold to fund the project. About $2 million in bonds were sold to the public in January 1991 for renovations to Sun Devil Stadium’s football field. Henry Mortarotti, director of the planning and construction for the stadium renovations, said no one should notice the minor revi­ sions that were made. “The major revision in reducing the cost was that instead of reducing the field by 3 feet, which was the original design intent, we reduced it to 2-feet-6-inches,” Mortarotti said. “We took about 6 inches of rock expedition out of it and that was a savings and a Sta te P ress Po State P ress Fite Photo For a project designed to renovate A S U 's Sun Devil Stadium, University officials originally requested $2.7 m illion. The final cost of the renovations w as $1.75 m illion. Adm inistrators say they are going to request a transfer of the unused funds to repay bonds sold to the public. half. No one knows the difference between 2-foot-6 and 3 feet.” M ortarotti said ASU also saved money by opting not to upgrade the telecommunications and power lines program and by removing the bleacher modification from the construction plans’. Tom Saddler, ASU director of stadium management, said the renovations that were made on Sun Devil Stadium football field will pay fdr itself within a few years. “1 think ultimately, at the end of this year, it will pay dividends for the Fiesta Bowl and the University,” Saddler said. “It was fair­ ly evident at the conclusion of last season that the field was hot in the condition that we wanted it to be in. We were trying to create a situation that would get us through a 20-event season. To do so, we were trying to make some adjustments in field maintenance that aren’t normal practices around the country. “We’re now half way through the season and we are in better shape now than we have ever been at this point. That to me is a direct result of the field system and the installation.” l ic e R epo r ts- R eal c o p s . R eal r e p o rts . R eal s tra n g e . S e n io rs , S c h e d u le y o u r p h o to s e s s io n a n d get a F R E E Y E A R B O O K ! OCT. Seniors, CALL DAW N NO W to set up an appointm ent for your photo session: 965-6785. IS C u s to m e r A p p r e c ia tio n M o n th T h a n k You Specials FAX S ending & Receiving, d o m estic transm issions only, p er p ag e. Phone charges may apply. Limit 500 per customer. 8.5"x11" White Bond MAIL BOXES ETCr 1 7 3 9 E. B roadw ay Rd. T em p e • 8 2 9 -3 9 0 0 FAX 602-829-0611 0 »ncNteslndeperxtentVC>Mied& Operated ©1992 Mail Boxes Etc. Oiler redeemable only M participating Mail tones Etc. Centers The photographer w ill be in our photo trailer on Cady M all 2 0 ft. north o f the m ain fountain NOVEMBER 1-12. Photos in tim e for resumes. One free back issue of T h e Su n Devil Spark yearbook to ell who come in for a photo sitting while supplies last! (1989 to 1993 available) •N o sitting fee. •Photo is printed in the 1994 ASU yearbook free o f charge. •Proofr w ill be m ailed to you for selection. Purchase is optional. •Photography by Yearbook Associates. PHOTO HOURS: Mondays: 9 a.m .-lp.m ., 2p.rn.-6p.rn. Tuesdays: 9 a.m .-lp.m ., 2p.m .-6p.m . Wednesdays: 1 la.m .-4p.m ., 5p.m .-8p.m . •Thursdays: lla.m .-4p .m ., 5p.m.-8p.m. Fridays: 9 a.m .-lp.m ., 2p.m .-6p.m . Underclass and upper degree photos w ill be taken on a w alk-in basis (no need for an appointm ent). Seniors, Call Dawn at 965-6785 W here ca n you p ick up a S ta te P r e ss? If you d id n ’t get a “re cycle d ” S ta te P r e s s in o n e o f your c la s s e s , you ca n p ick yo u r cop y up at: ON C A M PU S Administiation Building Alum niCenter ASU Bookstore A SU Visitor Center Business Buikfng, east side Cam pus Police ChollaHall Community Center Engineering Research Forest M at kiosk (by Payne) Gammage Auditorium Hayden Ubtaiy Law Library M ail Services Manzanita Hall Manzanita kiosk Mariposa Had Memorial Union Info Desk M urdockH al Nobel Library North Cady Mall North Cady M ai kiosk North Forest M a i O coH loH al Orange Malt (by MU) Orange M all kiosk (by fountain) Orange Mall kiosk (by MU) Palo Verde: east, west, and main Palo Verde kiosk (between P V east & P V west) Physical Plant P S 3 ,4 Sonora Hall South Cady M a i kiosk (by Business buiking) South Cady M all at Lemon South Forest M ai (by Farmer) Sun Devil Stacium Student Health Student PubfcaVons Student Recreation Center Student Services Building Tyler Mad, Cady M all kiosk Tyler Mad, east Tyler Mad, Forest Mad Tyler Mad, Palm W ak kiosk University Activity Center University Club University Relations O FF CAM PU S Associated Biosdence BaiboaCafe Bandersnatch Brew Pub Beauvais Gym Bdmpie Sandwiches A Subs Cambridge Square Apartments • Cam pus Com er Cart's Jr. Restaurant Changing Hands Bookstore Chris'Chevron Chuckbox Cinnamon Tree Plaza Coffee Plantation Codege Street D e i Com eistoneM ad Express Yogurt Grooming Hum ans Salon Gumby’s Pizza Jam ’s Restaurant K b b /s Com er Pocket Long Wong’s v Mam a's Pizza McDonald's on Rural M esa Community Codege, Acdninislratton Buddrig M esa Community Codege, Kirk Center Mid Avenue Shops M nderB nder's O zzie’s W arehouse D e i Peridns Restaurant & Bakery R othefs Bookstore Schiotsk/s Sandwich Shop South Mountain Com m unty Codege < Start's Metro D e l Sub Stop S u rry ’s Pizza The Commons Towers Apartments Tow erReootds Wendy’s Whorehouse 5th Avenue & M l, northwest comer 6th Street Newstand . Page 9 Wednesday, October 27,1993 State P ress P olice R eport ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesday: • Unknown persons criminally damaged a wall on the north­ east side of Physical Sciences H-wing at about 2 a.m. Tuesday. Damage is estimated at $10. • A Pepsi vending machine at McClintock Hall and another at Payne Hall were criminally damaged at some time between Friday night and Tuesday morning. Money was also taken from one of the machines. Damage is estimated at $1,600. • A bicycle was Stolen from Manzanita Hall over the weekend. • tw o male students each reported losing three ASU keys on Friday. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: • An 18-year-old ASU student and an 18-year-old California woman were arrested for crim inal trespassing at Tri City Raceway, 808 N. Scottsdale Road. The pair were found jumping on the trampolines at about 2 a.m. Monday. Both were reportedly drunk. • A 30-year-old Tempe man was arrested Sunday afternoon after trespassing on several adjacent properties and breaking the back window of a van near 1700 W. 10th Place. The suspect fled on foot when an officer spotted him inside a fenced area. The offi­ cer then called out his K-9 unit, who trapped the suspect as he hid ip a tree. •x « An unknown person trespassed at First Interstate Bank, 1415 W. Third St., over the weekend after snipping the wires atop a fence around the bank’s commercial yard. Once inside, the intrud­ er took a copy machine toner cartridge from inside an unlocked van. The cartridge was dropped near the fence, and no other items were missing. . .A n auto theft reported by a 21-year-old Tempe man Saturday turned out to be unfounded after the car Was found Sunday. The man told police someone stole his father’s car Friday night while it was in his care. When the car was found in a parking lot with no signs of forced entry, the man was puzzled. He then told police that he was drunk Friday night and he does not know how he got home or how the car got to its location. • A 36-year-old man was hit with a metal bar, then stabbed in the chest by his girlfriend Saturday night, The man managed to drive himself from 5505 W. Baseline, where the attack occurred, to Guadalupe and Alma School roads, where he was contacted by Mesa police. After being taken to Desert Samaritan Hospital, he was questioned by Tempe police. He was reportedly extremely drunk and high on cocaine, but he was able to stand up and walk around. Police found cocaine in the man’s belongings, and he admitted to buying it at a bar he and his girlfriend had visited ear­ lier. He was not arrested and neither was his girlfriend, since he did not wish to prosecute. • A 25-year-old Tempe woman said she was sexually assaulted by a photographer as she posed for him at his studio Thursday afternoon. The assault involved the man touching her genitals, but intercourse did not take place, reports said. Because the woman did not report the incident until days later, the suspect has not yet been contacted by police. • A 15-year-old Tempe girl told police Saturday that her step­ father molested her repeatedly between June 1990 and December 1991. • An 11-year-old Tempe girl was knocked off her bike and sprayed with water by two 10-year-old boys in her neighborhood Wednesday afternoon. Both boys admitted their guilt to police, but they were released because the girl’s parents did not wish to prosecute. • Two 17-year-old McClintock High School students, male and female, were briefly threatened Thursday night by a another minor with a gun. As the pair stood on the girl’s doorstep, an acquaintance pulled up in a car, got out and began arguing with them. After growing angry, he went back to the car and came back with a semi-automatic pistol stuck in his waistband. He con­ tinued arguing with the others, occasionally bringing the gun out and clicking the safety on and off. The girl finally went inside the house, and the boy left in his car. The victims did not wish to prosecute. Compiled by State Press police reporter Maxwell Higgins. State P ress Sports - We write from the field, the floor and the locker room. We Carry Engineering & Electronics Supplies. S tate P ress Read all you w a n t... th ere's n o quiz afterw ards. SUPPORT HALL COUNCILS! RHA Meetings: W ednesdays @ 5p.m. in the M.U. 965-5809 "The Unified Voice o f the Residence Halls. " W hether y o u need b read b o ard s o r sem iconductors, capacitors o r resisto rs, com e see u s a t E lectronic M aterials & C om puters. We carry a w id e line o f electronic a n d en g in eerin g supplies. We also b u y an d sell new an d u sed com p u ters, a n d do all ty p es of co m p u ter rep airs an d installatio n s. C om e see u s to d ay for all y o u r com p u tin g a n d electronic needs. ELECTR O N IC M ATER IALS & CO M PU TER S Y o u r C o m p u te r m m ■ ■ S u p erM ark et “There is a difference!” TEMPE 825 S. RURAL RD 929-9440 S. E. CORNER OF UNIVERSITY & RURAL Í N J V Unhmraitv ^ ) e !m.c. ENORMOUS SELECTION OF CALENDARS BOOKS O N TAPE GAMES GREETING CARDS PUZZLES POSTERS NOVELTIES O u r lÉgU ? trs tiie * stú in stru cto rs, aging AVE ö u r services In provide an unheard-of p rice. J Now fe a tu rin g an A B í r M í n é n t w ith « s c h B C4RSTEN EXCEPT BOOKS & PERIODICALS TEMPE CENTER University & Mill • 967-1111 *AU wont perii Page 10 S tate P ress Tuesday, October 27,1993. C om pu ter n etw ork allow s users to access in fo rm a tio n w orld w id e Internet service keeps ASU, students in touch at no cost Bv M ike A mbri C ontributing W riter Imagine being able to communicate with the president any­ time you wanted or visiting the Smithsonian Institution with­ out leaving the house. And imagine it being free. By accessing the Internet, a super-network linking over 10,000 computer networks worldwide, anyone with a comput­ er can retrieve fast-breaking new s stories from around the world, gather economic and political data, access files from universities and corporations in over 65 countries, and send and receive messages from any o f the other 15 million people linked to the network —- including the president of the United States. ; . . . ASU Information Technology Program Coordinator Skip Brand, who oversees a $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation to link A rizona’s rural community col­ leges to the Internet, said that by 1994 over 1 billion users are expected to be linked to the Internet. “It’s not ju st for science and engineering anym ore,” he said. “Information ranging from ASU phone books to U.N. press releases is available.”, For ASU students, an account on the Internet from ASU’s Computing Services is free. Originally established in 1969 by the U.S. Department of Defense as a way for researchers to swap technical data quick­ ly, the Internet has become the largest information community CRO SSW O RD in the world as other smaller networks attached themselves to the electronic web to increase the availability of information. B ra n d ’s p r o je c t, c a lle d th e A riz o n a S ta te P u b lic Information Network, is part o f a federally funded program under the Clinton administration to establish connections to the Internet. T he purpose o f the federal project is to give everyone access to public information, Brand said. The Internet is analogous to the interstate highway system, allowing people to travel within a vast array of road-like con­ nections to computers, Brand said. And new connections are being added to the network every day. Last week, MTV made its file available on the Internet. Anyone can look up the lyrics o f that song they never quite Understood, Brand said. - The Smithsonian Institution is preparing a video and textu­ al tour o f its exhibits for Internet users, and a direct communi­ cation line to President Clinton has already been established. By using the Internet, “you don’t have to be present to take part in things,” Brand said. The Internet enables people to communicate directly with government policy-makers who are linked to the network. “You can actually have an eye on government, rather than w ait until the décision is made to find out about it,” Brand said. Because the network uses existing telephone and television cables as well as satellites to transmit data, the cost of estab­ lishing a link to the network is minimal, Brand said. “You don’t have to spend an arm and a leg to buy this stuff,” he said. “That’s one reason why it’s growing so quick­ ly.” Share your O p in io n Use the State Press sound-off line 9 6 5 -4 2 8 7 . SERENDIPITY ARTS & CRAFTS FAIR AN D FALL FESTIVAL -----------------TODAVSACTiVmES---------------'H o w -T o ’ C lip s & T ra ile rs 11 am -1 p m F R E E H A I R C U T S b y H a ir 101 11 am -1 p m RAFFLE ALL DAY C h a d N e e ly , A c o u s tic R o c k 1 1 :3 0 am -1 p m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ S p a c e b a l lU am -1 p m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26-FRIDAYi OCTOBER29^ 8:00 am-5 pm West Lawn Memorial Union Arizona State University | M em orial U nion Activities Bo*no M A L A G A■ P A L M A S 1 MO V O B O E T H E AME R 1 C AN ■ ■ 2 E ROS AT O 2 ■ DO N T S E AN■ R N O 1 R AS s ■ T 0 O■ L E O MO T L E Y ■ UN P E E L ■ i! T E P S LOp E D A 1 S Y M 1 L T. E R AL 0 O 1 N L0 V E M E A N I1 T E A M E D by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS creation 1 June 6, 2 Covering 1944 with a 5 Pants round top feature 3 Fly 9 Was a 4 Longing nomad 5 Like 11 Line dance lemons 12 Acid type 6 R e q u ir e 13 External 7 Bureau 14 Actress 8 Borgnine Y esterd ay's A nsw er Farrow movie 15 Search 10 D epres­ jargon shooter need sing topic 23 Acted 2 9 Like 1 old 17 Reception seductive (si) jjeans improver 11 Mrs. 24 Swiss city 30 Take it Ieasy 19 Frigid Dithers 25 Stag’s 20 Playwright 16 Dove’s pride 31 Highposition 27 Pablo schoolers Jean Picasso's 33 Sly signal 21 Tissue 18 Terminates daughter 37 Chemist’s layer 21 Criminal, in police 28 Ftooftop 22 Place for a milieu computer disk 24 Balloon fill 26 Becomes twisted 29 Marsh 30 Wide­ spread 32 Belgium port 34 Deceit 35 Sandwich shops 36 Wed secretly 38 Occurrence 39 Women, in Wiesbaden 40 PoorN Ht 41 Prohibits DOWN 1 O'Neill 10-27 T~~7—à 4èr~ó 6 rs 11 j:r tjf! ■ i7 IP ■* w 1p j ■ ■ i 1 ■“ 1 üîv 32 Ì4 ■ j 5 J1 51 36 4Ò J J 1*jii IF YOU THOUGHT COLLEGE WAS EXPENSIVE, TRY PUTTING YOURSELF THROUGH RETIREMENT. A t TIAA-CRER we not only under­ hink about supporting yourself for stand the value o f starting early, we twenty-five, th irty years or longer can help make it possible—with flexiblein retirem ent. It might be the greatest financial test you’ll ever face. Fortunately, retirement and tax-deferred annuity plans, a diverse portfolio o f investment you have one valuable asset in your choices, and a record o f personal favor. Time. Time to take advantage o f tax-deferral. service that spans 75 years. O v er a million people in educatiori Time for your money to grow. B ut starting early is key. C onsider this: and research are already enrolled in America's largest retirem ent system. if you begin saving just $ioo a m onth at age thirty, you can accumulate $ 154,031* F ind out how easy it is to join them . Call today and learn how simple it is to- p u t by the time you reach age sixty-five. W ait ten years and y o u ’d heed to set aside yourself through retirem ent w hen you $811 a m onth to reach the same goal. have time and TIAA-CREF on y o u r side. ■ DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work i t AXYDLBAAXR 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. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE 10-27 V R VG T I EL — RB R T HO X B H Z R MD X AD O G «, ^ O D I T B V T KL Q DD HL I G HL X DD A V B X B AV S ta rt planning yo u r fu tu re . C all our E nrollm ent H otline 1800 842-2888. I R F R B I Y esterday's C ryptoquote: BETTER BY FAR THAT YOU SHOULD FORGET AND SMILE THAN THAT YOU SHOULD REMEMBER AND BE SAD. — CHRIS­ TINA ROSSETTI 0 1999 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. 75 y e a rs o f e n s u r i n g t h e f u t u r e f o r th o s e w h o s h a p e it!" O - .~V ■ ^ ..... —..... ............. ^ *Assum ing a n interest rate o f 6.50% credited to T IA A R etirem ent A nnuities. T b it rate is used sotely to show th e power atJ effect o f compounding. Low er o r higher ra ter would produce very different results. C R E F certificates are distributed by T IA A -C R E F Individual ano In stitu tio n a l Servicer. P a g e ll Wednesday, October 27,1993 S tate P ress The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook Order yours today for $36.93 M atthews Center basem ent, Rm 50 Looking For A Job? ARE Y O U ... ENTHUSIASTIC, OUTGOING, ARTICULATE? W e need 70 people to make calls to alumni and parents of ASU students to raise money for academic programs. flexible evening and weekend hours $ 5.00 per hour plus bonus 3 hour shifts close to campus Rural & University great resume builder G e t in v o lv e d • M e e t n e w p e o p le Staff m em ber attacks in ten tion s behind A S U ’s transportation plan { \ \ CA LL T O D A Y 9 6 5 -6 7 5 4 tram service will continue until July 1994 when the circulator route begins. O ’Connor said ASU will have access to federal operating money and the City of Tempe will gain access to ASU’s oper­ ation funds. Swayze said he was concerned about a reduction in.service and not enough planning for student needs in the new system. “I think these guys are trying hard to railroad this through,” he said. “They were ending tram service and didn’t have a contract for the busses (and service).” Besides anger over the circulator route, officials fielded questions and concerns about the safety o f the parking lots, the oversell o f Parking Structure 4 this semester and the lack of information about parking services. Bess also presented im provem ents in parking services including a marked decrease in the number o f people cited and vehicles towed this year. “This year citations have decreased by 10 percent and tows by 41 percent,” he said. The decrease can be attributed to an increase in the sale of decals and a change in the citation policy, according to Anil Singh, field operations supervisor. More warnings are being issued in lieu of tickets and ASU now tickets instead o f tow ing from the Tem pe Center, the shopping center on the west side o f campus on Mill Avenue and University Drive. “This year we’ve sold more decals,” he said. “If you can do that, we get less people that park where they wouldn’t be able to park (legally).” Julie S nyder, th e appeals su p erv iso r, said the tow ing decrease has made parking services more “user friendly” and improved customer relations. B y M elanie K. S elcho State P ress T he circ u lato r ro u te — an A SU /T em pe C ity creatio n designed to replace the current tram system — came under fire by a classified staff member attending Tuesday’s open parking forum. The forum was the last in a series of three offered Monday afternoon and evening and Tuesday afternoon by Parking and Transit Services to address student concerns and introduce the circulator route. Only about two dozen members o f the ASU community attended the three forums. B ill Sw ayze, a classified staff m em ber from the dance department, said the new bus system is an attempt by the City of Tempe to get people into the downtown area to boost busi­ ness. “It seems to me that they’re trying to bus people downtown to Tempe to get them to spend their money and the University is going along with it,” he said. The new route will go from the University Activity Center up M c A llis te r A v en u e to A p ach e B o u le v a rd , th ro u g h Gammage Parkway, down M ill Avenue to Fifth Street and back to the Stadium Drive in front o f the UAC. Bill Bess, A SU ’s director o f the D epartm ent o f Public Safety, said the route is not firm, especially the southeast cor­ ner o f the route. M ary O ’C onnor, transportation planner fo r the C ity of Tempe, said the new bus system will incorporate the positive aspects o f the trams with the exception that the route does not extend as deeply into Lot 59. “W e’re trying not to be any worse than the tram system,” she said. O ’Connor stressed that the system w ill rem ain free and ¡5 MIGUEL'S MUSIC CENTER ! ►METRONOMES • ACCESSORIES • ETC. ►ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS ►AMPS • ELECTRIC EFFECTS • SHEET MUSIC ►LESSONS (Rock • Contemporary « Folk • Classic Guitar) ►REPAIRS > On All Instruments! ...and much MORE! Next to Ozzie's Warehouse In The Arches Shopping Center 130 E.. University Dr. 960-2310 im i c u n iversity ur. a w w i» a I n 9 * u n • ☆ ONLY 2®cover 1® ®with costume 9 * o c d • ☆ HOURLY SHOT SPECIALS 2 fo r M 25 H allow een Tooters *1®®all n ig h t You could win a vegos weekend courtesy of Milt Ave. Travelo r a Snow Bowl Ski Package.l The howling begins at 6 p m Contest starts at 10 p.m. S C A R Y O K .E Road Runner H ockey Ticket Giveaw ays. a , Dom estic n e W itches Tea For Further H ow lings C a ll The V ineLine 894 Page 12 S tate P ress Tuesday, October 27, 1993 B u b b le , b u b b le , t o ll a n d . .. f r y b r e a d Richard Komurek/State Press Nursing student J. Shirley, right and others form the Native Am erican Student Association make fry 1 bread near the MU on Tuesday afternoon. The students sold about 300 fry breads to raise money for their group. Shirley, who learned to make fry bread at the age of 10, said that it can be eaten with every meal and topped with everything from oatmeal to hamburger. w/Student, Faculty, or Staff I.D. EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT 8 3 0 W . B ro ad w a y T am pa W eather worries? See the forecast on the bottom o f Page 1. W e e k ly m a g ­ a z in e . T h e a te r ad s. P o lic e R e p o r t. O p in io n s . D a ily h o ro s c o p e s . E v e n ts s c h e d u le . C u ltu ra l a c tiv itie s . S tate P ress WithitesBC «15** St Loris Chteafo $1W* I1M* Stank Miami $141* s ir r •fares arc each vwy based onaroundrtp pcjchose. tearictions appV and fares are subject to change without notice. Seas may be limited, so book new. CsItfortFKE Student Twreh msgtzlne! Coundi Travel IF GOURMET COFFEE IS YOUR THING, READ THIS: T H E Y SAY A PICTURE IS W O R TH A T H O U S A N D W ORDS. Imagine sipping a freshly brewed mug of gourmet coffee every morning while reading the State Press .... for only 350! A m uch b etter option than tryin g to stomach “office coffee” that was brewed hours ago, right? Well, stop imagining and make it a reali­ ty by buying a coffee mug that offers 350 refills of the gourmet blend of-theday from eith e r of the two M em orial Union locations of Cafe Italia D’Oro. TU ITIO N . d e t y o u r m u g to d a y ! B eau tifu l m aroon p orcelain m ugs are a v a ila b le fo r $3 e a c h at th e S ta te P re s s C lassified advertising office, lo cate d in the south b a se ­ m ent of M a tth e w s C e n te r between 9am and 5pm daily. G R EA T C O F F E E . ___________ ;_______ I r» A il v THE SUN DEVI L SPARK YEARBOOK IS NOW ACCEPTING ENTRIES FOR THE 1993-94 PH OTOGRAPHY COMPETITION. C o lo r or black an d w h ite p ho tos sh o u ld reflect the them e "O n th e O u tsid e L o o k in g In" a n d m ust be su b m itte d by N ovem ber 19 at 5 p. m . In a d d itio n to o n e sem ester's tuition, other prizes in clu d e gift certificates to Lew is Cam era. A il w in n in g entries w ill also be featured in the G allery section. G R E A T NEW S. ■- WE SAY IT S W ORTH N EXT SEM ESTERS I E n try fo rm s a re a v a ila b le in th e b a se m e n t o f M a tth e w s C en ter a t the Spark office (room 50) an d Student Publications inform atio n (room 15). Fo r m ore inform ation co n tact Tim G ibbons, G allery Editor, a t 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1. SPO N SO RED BY D O M IN O 'S PIZZA & LEWIS CAM ERA State P ress STSTE P ress The only free thing at ASU | Police seek suspect in parking lot assault By M SPECIAL STUDENT FARES R o u n d t r i p f r o m P h o e n ix TOKYO........................... $629 HONG KONG,............. $729 SEOUL....... ............. $749 MANILA...... ...........„.....$799 FRANKFURT.............. ......$498 LONDON....:............... ....$484 PARIS..... ...................... .$478 AMSTERDAM..... ........... $598 NEW YORK......... ........... $318 CHICAGO.......................$260 DENVER.......................... $180 MINNEAPOLIS............... $298 BOSTON..........i....;........$328 SAN FRANCISCO............$148 ST. LOUIS. ......................$158 NEW ORLEANS...............$219 V IE N N A _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ $ 5 9 « H O U S T O N ......... .:. . . . . . $ 24 4 ROME........................ ....$598 ATLANTA........ .............. $309 O ther C ities A vailable MILL AVENUE TRAVEL 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 Discounts Also Available To Faculty & Staff Restrictions Apply. Subject to Availability. a xw ell H ig g i n s St a t e P r ess ASU police on Tuesday said they have,no leads in an investi­ gation of a mysterious assault on a parking ticketer that occurred on campus last week. • At approximately 9:30 p.m. Thursday, a parking services aid was struck on the back of the neck while checking vehicles in Lot 52 on the west side of the University Activities Center. The 22year-old man, who is also an ASU student, told police at the scene that he didn't know who or how many attacked him. The victim said he was bent over looking for a parking decal in the window of a purple Volks wagen bug, then the next thing he knew, he was waking up on the ground and calling on his radio for help. When firemen and police arrived, he complained of a pain in the back of his neck. He was taken to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital, but no visible injuries were found. The man said he didn’t see or hear anyone in the parking lot before he was attacked, and police didn’t find anyone when they arrived. The victim didn’t know how long he was on the ground, but ASU Police Chief Craig Emanuel said it was probably on the order o f a few minutes. Emanuel said it was unusual that the attacker was not seen, but there is no reason to doubt the validity of the victim’s story. “We’re going to proceed with the investigation, go over evi­ dence, try to reconstruct what happened, and we’re asking for help from anyone who m ight have seen som ething,” said Emanuel. In the next few days, police will conduct a second interview with the-victim to see if he can remember anything else. Emanuel said the original interview took place right after the assault, and the man still may have been dazed. „ Police seek any information about the incident from people who were near the UAC or Parking Structure 5 around 9:30 p.m. Thursday. Anonymous calls can be made to 965-TIPS. K M 1 FdtYIILY HdIR CUTTERS" Free Shampoo w/Cut ONLY ^^P(Reg. $8.*) Flat Tops & Artwork $1.°° extra Exp. 11-17-93 REDKEN HAIR COLOR W a r e h o u s e P r ic e s 2 0 % O F F A L L B R A N D NAM E P R O D U C TS — Einia Paul Mitchell Sebastian REDKEN N EX U S Exp. 11-17-93 Designer Perm $ 95 2 4 (Reg. $34”) Shampoo, Perm, Cut & Style included. Long hair, piggy back or spiral wrap extra. j^Mhisot mm as sa Exp. 11-17-93 University & Rural Cornerstone Center Coupons not valid with any other specials. 968-8008 Hours: Moa-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-7 Sun 10-5 Com ics St a t e P ress Wednesday, October 27,1993 P age 14 Calvin and Hobbes MlSj WORMWOOD, I'D LIKE Hoy TO S16N THIS CONTRACT. by Bill Watterson ITS AW ASPEEMEMT THAT HOUU COMÇEWSATC ME TOR AWH LOSS OF J08 INCOME I MM SUFFER AS AW ADULT „ BECAUSE OF A POOR FWSTI GRADE EDUCATION IF HOU SET A POOR FIRSTGRADE EDUCATION, ITW IL BE FROM YOVR LACK OF EFFORT. NOT MINE. GET BACK TO HOUR PESK . BH SOLLT, S O M B M OUGHT TO PM ME IF I Dont learn mmtvuns. By GARY IARSON T H K F A R S ID E BY GARRY TRUDEAU D o o n e s b u r y 20NKBK HARMS* THE tonkerharp&îh e k îm AO6FAN0F WR TANNING WORK, MAN! •/ THANKS.ACTUAL­ LY, i rev rep FROMCOMPEVWE TANNING YEARS V AGO. HEY, YOU KNOWUHO JUSTGOT CAUBPFOR JURYPUT/? EEORGEHAMtr TON'.THETANM e tsm m - WOU... YOU GUTA im OFCELEBG INHERE? \ ARE YOU /IK E S ! RIPPING? UPYTOMUN, POOR K/RKP0U6LAS, BEHINP ANP6UNS I Som e anthropologists believe that the discoveries of fire, shelter and language were alm ost sim ultaneous. PEOPLE! sion o f assets be w orked out by a retired California judge. Reynolds wanted those issues decided in Florida, where the couple lived with their adopted son. “What I’m trying to do is get these people to sit down somewhere, whether it’s in Alaska, California or Florida,” Cianca said Monday. Cianca set a 45-day period for the two to work out an agreement in California. Anderson and Reynolds agreed in A ugust to allow a California judge to decide custody of their 5year-old. - PIERRE. S.D. (AP) — A Ted Nugent tip: Drags lead to drooling. The rocker took time out from a hunting trip to tell schoolchildren that drags aren’t cool. “Drags make people drool,” he said Friday during' his Visit to Jefferson Elementary School, “Drooling isn’t cool.” Nugent, an avid hunter, lives in Colorado w hile not touring w ith his band the Damn Yankees. He told the students he doesn’t allow alcohol or drags at his hunting camps. Although Nugent’s solo career in the 1970s would be more memorable to their parents, the students were impressed with him, “Well, he’s got really long hair and a pony­ tail and he plays the guitar really, really loud,” one youngster said. “And he doesn’t drool.” DALLAS (AP) — Judd N elson got two years’ probation for one kick. The actor pleaded no contest Monday to a misdemeanor charge of assault. He Was accused of kicking Kim Evans in the head after some people began heckling him and actress Shannen Doherty outside a Dallas restaurant. Criminal Court Judge Phil Barker didn’t rule on Nelson’s guilt, meaning that if Nelson com­ pletes probation the charge will be wiped from STUART, Fla. (AP) — California. Florida. No, California. No, Florida. The divorce of Loni Anderson and Butt Reynolds just won’t stay put. ■C ircu it Judge M arc C ian ca granted Anderson’s request that alimony and the divi­ R E S I D E N C Y M EX ICO CITY (A P) — It looks like Michael Jackson will be there: visiting Keiko, the ailing killer whale of “Free Willy” fame. USED O .P B O O K S B O O K S P 1 A ii Every Wed. & Thurs. 2-3 p.m. RARE B O O K S ' / TEMPE 1355 S. McClintock 894-2798 A R IZ O N A A N T IQ U E G ALLER Y 1126 N. Scottsdale Rd, ■ Tempe N.W. Corner o f Scottsdale & Curry Rds., Just W est o f Drug Emporium • AZ Republic vyj • New Times • Tempe Mag. MEXICAN FOOD BYBLOS! Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week A u th e n tic M id E a ste rn C u is in e & P a s try Specialties such as delicious charbroiled lamb, chicken kebabs, as well as hommos, falafels, vegetarian dishes, steaks and fresh seafood, and also homemade pastries. - T raditional Sonoran Style M exican Food - N ew Vegetarian Selections - D a ily S pecials - H appy H ou r Buffet $ i With purchase of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Tempe location only. Offer good after 2_p.m. Expires 11-1-93. ' CBLEBRATI NG~30 yI a RS OF ¿¿ ¡N g I n G FINE MEXICAN FOOD AND FRIENDS TOGETHER 960 W. UNIVERSITY - 966-0852 9Ö KI SIRI 25% OFF W /ID Toall students, professors, teachersAstall ONALLITEMS»LUNCHftDINNER (Excluding alco h o l beverages) N ot valid on holidays or with other sp e d a i offers 3332 South Mill A venue • Tem pe » 894-1945 Southwest com er o f M il & Southern (Reg. $21.95) « J CREASE nG Œ MESA 1355 S. Country Club 898-8211 H o u rs : M o n .- S a t . 8 -6 , S u n d a y 1 0 -4 G o o d only w ith c o u p o n . N o t v a lid w ith a n y o th e r offers. A d d SI .00 E n v iro n m e n tal F e e . Color Changes Everything! S A V E $ 5 !* r es ta u r a n t : S p ice u p y o u r life w ith : a O ff! LEIG HTO N’S in the Residency Applications Available F R E E DIN N ER $ 2 .0 0 ■ ' '' ' ' H fm i l m J S pi CAMPBELL BOOK BOOTH Student Services Amphitheater $ Jackson, in Mexico City for six concerts, plans to pay a call on Keiko at an amusement park criticized for keeping the whale in a toosmall tank filled with too-warm water. Keiko is underweight and suffering from a skin disease and said to be depressed. Pinky Morris, a spokeswoman for the Nuevo Reino Aventura park, said the park plans to allow thousands of poor children join Jackson. The entertainer will visit with the whale this week or next. Jackson, who has a menagerie of exotic ani­ mals, used Keiko in his latest video, “We’ll Be There,” the theme song for the movie about a whale freed by a boy from a tank that’s too small. “Michael Jackson knows ail about Keiko and wants to help,” Morris said. Schoolchildren were smitten with Keiko after his movie appearance and have begun raising thousands of dollars on his behalf. WÊSÊÊÊÊÈÈR IN F O R M A L IO N S E S S IO N i his record. Ms. Evans said she has suffered headaches and,dizzy spells since the May 16 confrontation. Nelson didn’t testily and had no comment after the court hearing. The scene: Nelson and Ms. Doherty were seated on the patio at the Greenville Bar and Grill. Ms. Evans and some others were on the porch of an adjoin­ ing restaurant. Witneses said someone at Ms. Evans’ table called Nelson a derogatory name. Witnesses said Nelson approached the table where Ms. Evans and her friends were seated. Some said Nelson accidentally struck Ms. Evans as he attempted to jump over a low metal railing separating the two restaurants. S ecurity guard Jam es W alkinshaw said Nelson delivered a karate-style kick to the back of Ms. Evans’ head. O PEN Tue-Sun 11-2:30 LUNCH 5-10 DINNER K I N K O ’S M A K E S T - S H I R T S ! B rin g in y o u r f a v o r it e p h o to a n d t h is c o u p o n fo r $ 5 .0 0 o ff o n e c u s t o m c o lo r t-sh irt! University & Rural • 894-1797 Main &Stanley • 833-0036 Southern ¡4 Dulisun • 969-3326 Open 24 hours a day! k in le e rs th e c o p y c e n t e r Southern ! ! F ra n n y 1 9 V A L L E Y L O C A T I O N S : C A L L 1- 8 0 0 - 7 4 3 - C O P Y ! j S p o rts State P ress Wednesday, October 27,1993 . ____________ Page 15 ports M - 1 H u sk ies use m isfortu n e as m o tiv a tio n ■ W Briefs I S Florida fin s swimming coach T he U n iv ersity o f F lorida fire d women’s swim coach Mitch Ivey amid a planned television report alleging sexual misconduct with his swimmers. Ivey denied the charges after ids firing M o n d a y n ig h t, saying th e u niversity Would rather avoid bad publicity than »and behind its coach. “It’s real unfortunate,” Ivey told the G a in e sv ille S on in a story published today. **I was told that putting my arm around a girl and using foul language was deemed reason enough..» . : “Rather than saying they’re pleased with my performance and standing behind me, they’re saying they can’t have the bad publicity, ft shows you bbA aft t f Outtalk about Team Florida is ju st baloney. It leaves me feeling pretty nauseous.” The university began its own investiga­ tion after ESPN reporters showed up on cam pus three weeks ago to work on a story for the program “Outside the Lines: C oaching in the ’90s.” It is set to air Friday. The program’s host, Bob Ley, told The Associated Press Monday the show will contain allegations of sexual misconduct against a “world-class coach who has 8 history of marrying his athletes and also of having sexual relationships with them.” Fans ‘eggstra’ m ad Tw o teen-agers were charged with petting the home o f Htiiaddphia Phillies iehef pitcher Mitch Williams with eggs to show their displeasure with lus perfor­ mance in the World Series. H ours afte r W illiam s gave u p th e series-winning home run against Toronto on Saturday, police said about 30 young­ sters armed with cartons of eggs arrived a Williams’ house. WH&ams was not at the house — after leaving Toronto, he flew to his home in Arlington, T u o u where he lives during much o f the offseason. W hen police arrived, m ost o f the youths fled, but two were taken into cus­ tody — a 17-year-old from Gwynedd, Pa. and a 16-year-old from Moores town. Both were released to their parents and could G ee harassment charges, polk* said. H eat fines Bol $25,000 The Miami Heat fined center Manure B ol $25,000 for missing tw o exhibition games to attend meetings in Washington concerning the civil war in his native ; Sudan. The money w ill be donated to % Sudanese relief fund. Heat officials didn’t know where Bol was until he returned to practice Monday. m . "The mistake I made was 1 didn't call, but I didn’t think they would firm me that money — $25,000,” said Bol, a 7-foot-7 shot-blocker te his first season the -- Bol attended peace talks between rebel leaders ft&m Sudan and sem iasrs spon­ sored by file congressional subcommittee on Africa, chaited by Rep. Harry Johnston The subcommittee sponsored the semi­ nars to “discuss different proposals for peace la Sudan.” said Brian Geiger, an aide to Johnston. A 10-year civil war has resulted m a major refugee and hunger cnsis m th e southern region o f A frica's largest country. I t i s i ? Ü A k iau lsix i püip iif "A pi"^ ^ Philadelphia 4, Quebec 2 N.Y. Islande» 7. Los Angeles 0 Washington Media Relations Husky defensive lineman Jam al Fountaine's play this season is part of the rea­ son W ashington figures among the national leaders in defense. He has 44 tack­ les th is season along with 3.5 sacks. B y S haun R achau State P ress Although it has a new head coach, Washington has not veered off the path to reach its lone preseason goal of a fourth-consecu­ tive Pac-10 title. However, after a two-year probationary sentence handed down from the NCAA in August that includes no bowl appear­ ances and limited scholarships, the Huskies (5-2 overall, 3-1 Pac10) are disgruntled that a panel of conference administrators with representatives from each Pac-10 school voted not to allow them a chance to return to the Rose Bowl for the fourth straight year. : “We use a lot of rallying points,” said Coach Jim Lambright, w ho replaced longtim e Huskies coach Don James after he resigned in August to protest the probation sentence. “One of them has been the fact that the vote was 9-0 against us. And yes, we’ll keep using that as a motivating factor that there was not one team that was on our side,” The No. 19 Huskies will be able to vent their frustrations at the Sun Devils (3-4, 1-3) in front of a regionally televised game Saturday at Sun Devil Stadium. Lam bright said he is pleased with the way his team has responded this season while playing on probation. The Huskies would be tied with UCLA and USC for second place — one game behind UofA (7-0) — if they were eligible for the Pac-10 title this season. But Washington is content on sending the Pac10’s “second-best” team to Pasadena on New Year’s Day. “I’m very pleased with the way the program is coming under certainly a huge change in emotional swing with the probation and then Don James leaving and my taking over,” Lambright said. “It’s a pride factor for our young men to have done what they have done in the last three years, in particular with the Rose Bowls and a national championship.” The transition between a new head coach and the probation sentence has been smooth, as no players in the program have asked to transfer to other universities. Lambright said he made it a one-on-one challenge immediate­ ly after the probation announcement to approach the players and answer any questions they had. He said he first met with the freshman class and then with each one of them individually because “they were the most important class that we’ve got.” T u r n t o Fo o t ba l l , p a g e 1 7 . Trip to San Fran proves w orthw hile sports ou tin g Valley teams learn both good, bad lessons 1 am very glad that I w ent to the F ran cisco area cover last weekend’s A S U -Stanford and Phoenix-Sa Francisco, fo o tb all games. I say th is because my working vacation gave me a chance to see some old friends and not because I ate some heavenly linguine with clam sauce in Little Joe’s, but because I things. You see, the entire point of life is learning new stuff, experiencing new things and generally expanding your horizons of knowledge. A mind limited through ignorance or fear of the unknown isn’t much of a mind at all. In any case, I returned to the desert with some things that I did not know before I left If I may, I’d like to share them with you. If you looked at the Sun Devils’ schedule back before the season started and let your high hopes carry you away, the Stanford game looked like it would be huge in determining the Pac-10 championship. It didn’t turn out that way. Instead, it was a battle to see who got the con­ ference cellar to themselves. As it turns out, the Cardinal are now alone at the bottom thanks to ASU’s 38-30 win. The Sun Devils proved a lot of things to me. The first was that ASU’s offense can work very well when everything clicks. Sure, it scored against the worst defensive team in the Pac-10, but it’s a lot better than not scoring against the worst defensive team in the Pac-10. The offense was everything that ASU fans had hoped for. M ario B ates and G eorge Montgomery alternated at tailback to the tune of 100 yards each. Q uarterback Jake Plummer looked solid and d id n ’t force anything that wasn’t there. He does have a tendency to lower his head when there’s pressure from the pass rush, but he's doing that less and less each game. The defense needs work, though. It. has an infuriating style of stuffing the small plays, then surrendering a big one. The Sun Devils might be able to get away with this against Stanford, but teams like Washington and UofA will be a differ­ ent story. The Cardinal showed m e something, too. They don’t make many mental mistakes, as one would expect from a Bill Walsh-coached team, but they simply don’t have the size and speed to compete. Smarts will only take you so far. Speaking of smarts, Stanford does have a well-deserved reputation for being a hot-bed of intellectualism, but the fans there do like to have fun at the football games. Before the game, there was a certain joie de vivre in the air. There’s less of a sense of urgency than- what you feel walking around Lot 59 before a SunD evil kickoff. Our team may lose, Stanford fans seem to think, but damn if that’s going to spoil our good time. The Cardinal-49er game was a different story. There was a real sense of urgency in the air around Candlestick Park. When the red and gold starts a season 3-3, it’s just about time for the San Francisco faithful to start panicking. Four Super Bowl trophies will do that to you. Thankfully for the Bay Area, Phoenix came to town. After die Cardinals’ 28-14 loss, I walked away feeling that this franchise is doomed no matter who is coaching or playing. Turn to Branom, pag e 16. Golfers rally for season’s best finish B y Scott D avis State P ress Using an injury-free team for the first time this season, the fourth-ranked ASU men’s golf team edged closer to proving itself worthy of its preseason ranking dur­ ing the Jerry Pate Intercollegiate Monday and Tuesday in Birmingham, Ala. The Sun D evils had th eir strongest showing of the season, finishing fifth with a three-round total of 878 *— 14 over par. The Intercollegiate marked the return of Sun Devil All-American Todd Demsey into the lineup. Demsey and senior Chris Stutts led ASU during the two-day tournament. They both finished at one-over par 217 and tied for 11th place. ASU coach Randy Lein said he was glad to have his star player back in the rota­ tion. “Todd was a little rusty,” Lein said. “One over par, 217, isn’t a bad score. We know he can do better.” Lein was even more enthused about the play of Stutts. After the first day — in which the Sun Devils played 36 holes — Stutts was tied for second place, behind Wake Forest’s Ron Whitaker. Stutts posted scores o f 74 and 67 to put him only one shot behind Whitaker. On the final day, Stutts ballooned to a 76, but it still was good enough to allow him to finish tied with top honors for the Sun Devils. “Chris Stutts had a great second round and was even through 13 holes (Tuesday),” Lein said. “He had a couple of loops com­ ing in to shoot 76.” ASU also received steady rounds from Cade Stone and Chris Hanell. Stone finTurnto Men' s Golf, page 17. Page 16 St a te P ress Wednesday, October 27,1993 B r a n o m _________ Senator: Coalition I breaks trust laws I I r Continued from page 15. Nothing goes right for the Cardinals. This is a measure of skill, to be sure, but luck also has it in for Phoenix. Losing teams have one thing in common — they never catch breaks. If they did, they’d win more. It also didn’t help that Phoenix had to play the ’Niners, either. I am now convinced that Steve Young is the best quarterback in the NFL, Troy Aikman be damned. Young is just as good a hurler as Aikman and he scrambles in ways that his Dallas rival can only fantasize about. Here's an example o f how Young can kill you: San Francisco was inside the Phoenix 20 early in the fourth quarter when Young dropped back to pass. The Cardinals didn’t pressure much all day, so he had plenty of time to coolly scope things out. Young drifted right, then discovered he had room to run if he wanted to. He brought the ball down and scooted forward a few yards. At this point, everybody thought Young was going to run. 1 did, the fans did and the Cardinals did. The Phoenix linebackers and secondary abandoned their coverage and went for Young, who then threw a perfect hook-shot to Jerry Rice in the back of the end zone. SF-21, Phx-0. Game over. I learned a lot over the weekend. I learned that you can win by executing your game-plan well or by simply being more skilled than the other team. I learned you can lose because you may have the heart, but not the body, or because it isn’t in the stars for you to win. But most of all, when I heard the cheers of the Sun Devils in their locker room and I saw an exhausted Chuck Cecil sitting in front of his locker, looking like a limp dishrag because he left everything he had on the field, I learned what the true essence of sport is. At Little Joe’s, an acquaintance asked me if the Cardinals took the attitude of ‘Well, win or lose. I’m still getting paid.’ I told her no, because they knew that they had failed to win. They could take pride in their effort, but still, they lost. The purity of sport lies within its demand that an athlete give all she or he can for victory. When we are presented a lesson so clearly, we should learn it. The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook Order yours today for $36.93 M atthews Center basem ent, Rm 50 By D avid Kligman A ssociated P ress W riter LO U ISV ILLE, Ky. (AP) — U .S. Sen. M itch McConnell, upset that Louisville will be shut out of all New Y ear’s Day bowl games, asked the U .S, Justice Department on Tuesday to investigate whether a college football bowl coalition violates antitrust laws. McConnell, a Kentucky Republican who graduated from Louisville, said he didn’t bring up the issue to improve the Cardinals’ chances to get invited to a presti­ gious bowl. The 17th-ranked Cardinals are 7-1 this season. “ What I want is for any team in America to be able to benefit, whether they’re in a conference or out of a confer­ ence,” McConnell said from Washington, D.C. “I hope they’ll reach the conclusion that it’s not fair for.aqy team in America to be punished for success.” Louisville coach Howard Schnellenberger said he shares McConnell’s “concern about the fairness of the cur­ rent bowl setup.” “Many coaches, players, fans and even some bowl com­ mittees feel the same way,” Schnellenberger said. “To exclude teams from the chance to play in the very best Jan. 1 bowls before even a single game is played is of concern to all of us.” In a letter to Ann Bingaman, the assistant attorney gen­ eral of the Antitrust Division, McConnell calls the bowl coalition the “ghettoization” of independent teams shut put of the major bowls. “We’re not just talking about prestige,” he said. “We’re talking about money. Television contracts, recruiting, How could you possibly recruit if you said to your recruits, ‘We may never got a major bowl, even if we win 11 games.’” A coalition was formed two years ago between five conferences (A tlan tic C oast, Big E ast, Big E ight, Southeastern and Southwest) and independent Notre Dame. The alliance guarantees invitations from those conferences to all the major bowls, including the Cotton, Fiesta; Orange and Sugar on New Year’s Day. The Rose Bowl has a separate alliance between the Big Ten and the Pac-10. In the four-page letter, McConnell says the alliances between conferences and postseason games — including the bowl coalition —- amount to an “unreasonable restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman Act.” A iitn R n ilir D a n o i r Auto Body R epair You may not need paint or repairs today, but when you do, call us. Student, staff & faculty discounts. CH ARIO T AUTO B O D Y L £ |A J ‘Show us a body we can't fix.’ Established 1910 4346 E. University Dr., Phoenix 470-0399 3 miles from A S U ^ J j COLLEGE NIGHTS V . FREE General Admission to College Students Y $1,00 Draft Beer All Night All Ages Welcome > Anyone 18 Or Over Can Wager PtIOfNIX • 7 ^ GREYHOUND ¿ fï_ Ï E _ 3801 E. Washington • 273-7181 Nightly at 7:30 PM. aRacing Tuesdays at 2:00 PM. jo in th e FLOCK a t Ducks W ED N ESD A Y IS SPAGHETTI DAY! $495 ENJOY A MID-W EEK BREAK W ITH O U R PO PU LAR "ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT" SPAGHETTI DEAL. • • • • ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT PASTA MEATBALLS GARLIC BREAD STICKS SOFT DRINK OR GLASS OF BEER SERV ED FRO M I t A .M .- 10 P.M . ASU ACTIVITY CENTER FO R IN F O R M A T I O N C A LL: ' ULSIAUHAN I AN» SPOHTS IQUNGF Rural Road at Apache « 968-3451 96S -2381 Phoenix-Tempe/ASU Si x te Page 17 Wednesday, October 27,1993 P ress F o o t b a lls Sta te P ress O pinion Life in the "fussed" lane. 15, ‘T tried to settle them down and just resell them on the reasons they came here to begin with,” Lambright said. “The same/coaching staff is here, with the exception of the head coach ... the only thing that has been removed is two Rose Bowl appearances. “We’ve been real happy with the way they have answered the challenge.” C o n t in u e d fr o m p a g e M en 's G o lf Continued from page 15. Invitation to apply for STATE PRESS EDITORSHIP The ASU Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the State Press editorship for the Spring Semester 1994, Washington Madia Relations Applicants for the position of editor: must be a full-time student at ASU in good standing (not on academic or disciplinary probation): must have a cumulative grade index of 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the State Press; must have completed a minimum of 15 hours of journalism courses including news writing, reporting, editing and jour. nalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. Applicants must also:. submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those courses, submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story or editorial written for the State Press or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State Press or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the State Press Office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. c The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Friday, November 12,1993. W ashington defensive linem an D’M arco Farr has been putting up im pressive numbers for the Huskies all season. Farr has 34 tackles in seven games, includ­ ing eight solos against O hio State and seven against California. Bruce D, Itule Director, Student Publicatioiis Matthews Center, Room 133 Phone 965-7572 r s h l ö ii il ÚJ SNOWDEUffiS IL ► ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ished tied for 23rd and Hanell tied for 33rd. The other Sim Devil in the lineup — Laity Barber — struggled during the competition and finished in 59th place, 23 over par. After firstday scores of 75 and 79, Barber posted an 85 during the final round. Lein felt that Barber shot as high as he did because of the overabundance of trees on the course. “The fairways are wide, but if you’re off the fairways, you’re in the trees,” Lein said. “On the first hole (Tuesday), he hit his ball right in the trees, lost his ball and made double bogey, It never got better.” “When we get it going low, we have to able to bring it in (through 18 holes), rather than let it get away from us. That’s something I have to address. H opefully, i t ’s som ething w e’ll improve upon next spring.” -4 DEPOSIT DUE 0CT.21ST FINAL PAYMENT DUE NOV. 11TH • Round Trip transportation on Deluxe Motor Coaches with all the beverages you can handle. Three (3) nights accommodations at the Residence Inn, Salt Lake City. 1 Four (4) full day lift tickets for SNOWBIRD, ALTA, BRIGHTON and SOLITUDE. Sun Devil Liquor * All Shuttles to Ski Areas. Happy Hours and Bar Hopping. * Snowboaders welcome. C L U B M E E T I N G S AT M I N D E R B I N D E R ’ S O N T H U R S D A Y S AT 6:00 P . M A dvertiser Index Name Page ........................7 ............... .7, i l Blue Iguana........................................................2 ........................ 9 ...... . ....... 14 fam phellsB ooK . . ............. ......................14 . .....................9 rfiarint Auto....... ................. . ................. 1A ...... 6 Commons on Apache................................. .....13 Name Page ..........................12 ...16 Electronic Materials.............. ............................9 Fajita Prima............... . ..20 .......................... 14 -■..... ..........-...,.20 Honda D r.................. . ...................... ....16 ICA...,.............. ................ Kinko's C opies.................... .........»................14 .....8 Miguel's Music Center..... .......................... 11 Page Name ............. „13 Mill Avenue Travel............... . ............. .13 No Appointment Necessary ..... .........12 Old Chicago...... ...................... . Pacific Group.................................... ...............11 Papillon's..................................... . ...............20 Pinke's............ ......................... ............... i r Phoenix Greyhound Park.............................. „16 ..„...,.„....14 Registrar's Office.... ..... ........ ...............14 Rother’s University Bookstore......... ...............17 Name Page Saban's Rent-a-Car..................... .... ......„...20 Snow Devil Ski Club..................... ...............17 State Press Coffee M ugs;......... . .................12 State Press Editor.............. „„„„„,„ .................17 Studebaker's................. ................... .................20 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook............ .............8,12 TLAA.........*•.................................... .................10 Tri Sigma:..,.... .................. ............. ...... ...2 Vine Tavern.................................... .................11: Western Reserve........ ............... „„„...... „20 C lassifieds N o tice to o u r readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in Our classified section. For more infonnation and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721- A N N O U N C E­ MENTS COSTUME RENTAL M-F, 3-8; S/S. 12-8. Fielder Studio, 824 S. Mill. 966-8343. SKANDINAVIAN STUDENT Faculty Party and Grieg Festival. For info call 965-6281. A N N O U N C E­ MENTS XAVIER PREP grads! XCP 50th Anniversary events aw ait you! Nov. 6 & 7. Call 241-0213 FLANNELS Stata Siati CtauHMi MaHhtwt Statar Battm at • 96S-67Î5 ) YOttR MIIY BOIE When m en are pure, laws are useless; when men are corrupt, laws are broken. -Benjam in Disraeli ■ $ s ii ( A c 5th & Mill • 921-7456 APARTMENTS BEAUTIFUL LARQE 1 & 2 bed­ rooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laun­ dry room. On East 8th Street bet­ ween Rural & McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. FREE Apartm ent Locating Service APARTMENTS 1 MONTH FREE Move to the Commons by Noy and get 1 month free. Great stud­ ent living 2 blocks from ASU. Cal) for details or see State Press ad today. ASU AREA 1 & 2 bedroom apts. $300 u p + u til. 829-1963 or 966-8838. "Speciaâzinfl in Student tiousing' BEAUTIFUL. VERY quiet and safe, 2 large bedrooms near ASU, pool, laundiy. 9664797. GREAT LOCATIONS RENTAL.SERVICES FURN 2BD 2ba, close to ASU $225/mo, 829-7815 D o n t d e la y , caH to d a y l 968-8886 B ro a d w a y & M c C lin to c k In th e A B C O P la za CLASSIFIEDS WORK! HOMES FOR RENT 3BD 2BA.W/D, d/w, refrig, ga­ rage, SRP util, priv. yard, $700 w/rebate 331-8176 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 1BD 1BA n e ar M ill & U niv. refrg, w /d, pool & spa. W ater paid. $350/mo. MGM 345-1919. 2BD 2BA condo walking distance to campus. Available now. w/d, ref, $600/mo. short term Occu­ pancy thru December available. Call John at 285-2748. CONDO 2BD 2ba kitchen, lvg rm, Fp, 2 car pkg, 400 yds form ASU. $51(Vmo (206) 568*7237 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT H A Y D EN SQ U A R E 3bd 2ba overlooking pool, refirg, w/d, fjp. $120Q/mo. MGM 345-1919. M/F NEEDED to sublet lease. 2 blks. from cam pus. Fully fur­ nished, util. incl. $270/mo. Move in 2nd sem.. Alicia 968-7852 SELL IT in die Classifieds. RENTAL SHARINGassaa_ MASTER, QUIET home, 2 min ASU. No: Smokers, pets, partiers. Yard, laundry, big/screen, equip kitchen. Nov 1. $300 + de­ posit + 1/3. Elin/Eddie, 966-3913. P ag e 18 State P ress W ednesday, O cto b e r 2 7 ,1 9 9 3 RENTAL SHARING ROOM IN exchange for p/t child c are, re a lly n eed co m panion/supv. for boy 11, girl 9, 10 nights m onthly from 5:30pm 8am. Alma Sch/Elliott area. Con­ tact Kelly at 491-2722 o r 4912881. ^ y , ■. UNDRGRD MALE needed: 2bd 2ba condo, w/d, $300/mo + 1/2 m il Near ASU. Dave 839-2178 WANT FÉM, mature, friendly. Room avail Dec 1. Nice condo w/ fp & pool. Univ/Price. $250/mo. lv mes 240-2429, 9am-3pm. WANTED 3 F Grad/Doct student share house n/s, no pets, util inc. $3Q0/mo, $200 sec d ep . u n f 921-8682 leave message. ROOM S FOR RENT FEMALE W ANTED: 3bd 2ba w/pool, must be clean/reliable. 6 8th/T hom as. Jill 9 9 0 -2 2 9 2 $192/mo+ 1/3 utilities. HOMES FOR SALE BY OWNER 3bd 2ba ranch 1 mi w est ASU many e x tra s, com ­ pletely remodeled. 921-7352 CLOSE TO campus & Los Arcos Mall, South Scottsdale area, 3bd, l-3 /4 b a, upgraded k itc h e n & baths, ceiling fans, mini blinds & upducts throughout, sprinkler system w/timer, screened patio, double carport, lrg storage rm, 9x10 metal shed, above ground -18x4ft pool, new roof & paint Reduced $76,000. Call 945-7292 FOR SALE by owner, 3bd, 2ba* ' lrg sitting rm off tiistr bd, lrg cvid patio, formal living & dining rms, white wash cabinets, kitchen eating space, familyrmw/fhepiace, glamour ba w/sepa-tænub/SKowhç, 2 car garage w/opener, stucco, tile roof, Gil-bert area, priced at $119,900. For more info c all926-4220. TOWNHÔMËS/ C O N D O S FOR QUESTA VIDA I m ile ASÜ, 2br, 2ba, w/d, pool, racquetball court. Interested? 921-3944, MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE DBL BED and headboard, $280; stereo and speakers, $300; IBM compatible computm with printer, $800. Call 569-1152, HOME BREWING SUPPLIES B rew ers G o rin e c tio n 839-1171 J 1847 E. Basdine Rd. ( S E C o rn e t o f B a s d in e /M c C lin to c k Behind BaselinePub) T - F 4 -9p m , Sa* 10-6pm ,.Su n 1-5pm ScaitteKhs far $35,95 FURNITURE TRAVEL SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. Cheap. 352-7249. 1 RNDTRIP ticket 4 female Pta. to Spokane, W a Nov. 11-14*200 obo Call 413-0018 COMPUTERS A1RLN TKTS FREE 386SX 40MHZ w/4 meg RAM, 100 meg hdd, 1.2 fdd, 2400 mod­ em, 101 kb, VGA mono in mini tower case. $875. 945-7292. IBM ANNOUNCES new com­ puters and printers for students, faculty, and staff at special dis­ counts. Visit die IBM display at the Student Book Center, 704 Ccdlege. PANASONIC KX-P1180, 9 Pin, Qual. printer, w/stand & paper. Used 4 6 nton. $125 obo 833-4099 AUTOMOBILES1980 MGB, good cond, new tires, 61,000 o rig m iles, $3900 obo 834-5136 : 75 VW Camper/Bus, runs well, good c o n d itio n . M ust sell by : 10/29. Any offer!! 858-0189 82 FOARD Punirà, 75,700 mi New transmission. Water pump. Great for school. $500 obo Call Bait 962-0981 91 MAZDA M iata convertible MX5, less than 3000 mi. $12,900. Excellent conditimi 838-0521 PLYM OUTH HO RIZO N ; a/c, new tires, tags. Very clean in/ouL $500 obo. Call Jim, 820-7469. M OTORCYCLES 1984 N IN JA 9 0 0 lo o k s/runs great, under 10,000 mi, incl 2 helmets+trailer. $2500 267-8704. 85 ELITE80 new seat, 9K miles, Great for school, runs excellent, $475/obo 497-9008 90 SUZUKI GS500E Black/Gray 4200 mi. M ust sell $2300 obo Helmet inc. Tracy 921-7183 BICYCLES MOUNTAIN BIKE, 22-inch, 21speed, Shi mano Deore LX, 1year-old, $395 obo. 482-7496. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE couriers needed, outrageous in ti trips, call PTG 310-514-4662. BEACH CONDO, South Padre Is­ land, Texas. Sleeps eight, 20 yds from beach, pool & jacuzzi. Con­ sidered hottest beach resort by Current Affairs & 20/20; 27 mi from Mexico. $1300 per week. 1800-253-1469. Deposit required. BER M U D A A N D C aribbean Summer School Programs for up to 6 ASU credits. Call 965-4630 for 1994 info packet. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. m A ssist people with special need s, pt/ft, eves/w eekends, paid training. COUNTER HELP in Sandwich shop. P/T days only M on-Fri. Call between 8-12.921-9139» CaN TCH lob Hotline 730-4123 EXPERIENCED GYMNASTICS in s tru c to rs w an ted , teach in g children 3 to 14 yrs. o f age, p/t position only. Apply at Chandler YMCA, 398 W. Ray Rd., Chandler, 899-9622. FIDDLESTICKS FAMILY Fun Park requires P/T evening/weekend help. Have fun, make mon­ ey. Apply in person 1155 W. El­ liot , Tempe HELP WANTEDSALES ATTENTION BUSINESS finan­ cial majors, p/t opportunity in fi­ nancial services industry. Call Kathy Jean, 898-6613. COMPUTER ZONE -Aggressive self-motivated sales person need­ ed. Flex hrs, 829-6126; Tempe. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs full/part-tim e front/back office help. Must type, will train. Apply in person. 4020 N. Scot­ tsdale Rd. #108 M OD ELS/A C TO R S, W F , all types, for int'l music videos & nat'l commercials. Pays $1600+. No exp nec. 602-266-6537. NEED EXTRA $ ? F/t, p/t sales flex, hrs., unique consumer elec­ tronics co. No exp. nec., will train. 839 t8645. ' "v y . ;■ N EED 80 p e o p le now , train w/our co. to earn $5K/mo. in 94. P/t avail. 966-8799. BUY IT, sell it, find it, tell it with State Press Classifieds! Call 9656731 for rates and information. RED ROBIN o f Tempe has im­ mediate openings for experienced waitstaff w/ daysideavailability and dishers w/nightside availabil­ ity. Apply in person-1375 W. El­ liott PINKES IS accepting applications for all positions - 93 E. Southern Tempe. No phone calls please. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL " SEEKING APPLICANTS for p/t w arehouse position. Flex hrs. Call Donna, 244-0885. STUDENTS NEEDED to assist quadriplegic with personal care. AM/PM 966-2059 ASST TO real estate broker in Scottsdale who specializes in cor­ porate relocation. Need good typ­ ist, Macintosh exp helpful, hours flexible. Junior or senior only, business major pref Call Dick, 951-8666. THERAPEUTIC WORK, excel­ lent pay, flex, hours, will train. Call 844-9000. CITY -W IDE PLUMBING- p/t office help 2 aftms & alternate wknds. Close to ASU. 966-9571. A ER O B IC IN ST R U C T O R S Would you like to learn how to become certified? Seminars up­ coming, call for details 225-8053. A G G R E SSIV E, SELF- M oti­ vated salesperson needed to mar­ ket Defense Pepper-spray. No ex­ perien ce n e ce ssa ry . C all 54&-1222. Hrs: noon - midnight. ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chan­ dler needs p/t cleanup & vet asst. Call 963-2340 ARE YOU articulate, enthusiastic, and outgoing? Then the ASU Tele■fund has a job for you! Enhance your communication skills, build your resume & work in a great student environment for $5/hr &. bonus! Call now, 965*6754! MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 6 0 s Coffee Shop &( Memorabilia •Gourm et Coffee »Tie Dyes •Desserts •jewelry •M usic »Hemp Seed •Poetry Readings «Crystals . 9 4 9 -9 6 5 7 HELP WANTEDGENERAL P/T C L E R K 15-20 hrs/w eek Typing, filing, d a ta entry. M ust type 40wpm. M ust be flexible with hours. Must be able to work Friday 9-5pm. Apply Monday-Friday. PhoenlxFIrebtrds Baseball is recruiting, for n e x t s e m e s te r , c re a tiv e , m otivated students/individu a ls for p h o n e s a le s a n d who a re interested in learn­ ing sports marketing. 12-20 hours/w eek, January-M ay. $4.60/hr + bonus. 1725 W. University Suite 114 Between Priest/52nd St. MERCURY’S ULTIMATE Deli/ C osm ic Pizza now hiring deli clerks, flyer distributors, experi­ enced p izza m akers, delivery drivers & managers. All shifts. Apply- 1523 E. Apache Blvd. M-F; 2-5. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE NEW RESTAURANT opening! 7373 Scottsdale Mall (Scottsdale Civic Center) Hiring waitresses & cooks. Apply in person. SW EN SEN ’S TEM PE has im ­ mediate openings for wait staff, sandwich cooks & counter help. Days & nights avail, full or P/T. A pply in person M -F 4-5pm , Price/Baseline HELPWANTEDCHILD CARE CHILD CARE needed for week of Nov. 1-6, flex hrs., need own tram, Scottsdale. 941-28%. NANNY'S P/T days eves or wee­ kend h rs. m ust h ave re lia b le transportation call 345-2433. JO B OPPORTUNITIES CRUISE SHIPS N ow h irin g - E arn up to $2000+/m onth + w orld travel. Summer and career employment available. No experience neces­ sary, For more information call 1206-634-0468 e x t C5918. State Press back issues can be picked up at the Information Desk in the Basement of Matthews Center HELP WANTEDGENERAL cÇ&ttfnÿ TU Standard Defining Excellence in Education FACULTY POSITIONS A t M aricopa Com m unity C o lle g e s in Phoenix, we define e xcelle n ce in m any w ays. • W e a re th e la rg e st s in g le p ro v id e r o f h ig h er e du cation in A rizo n a an d the n a tio n 's se co n d largest m ulticoliege com m unity co lleg e district. • Tw o out of every five ad ults in M aricop a C ounty are en rolled in at least o ne o f our cla sse s. • D istinctly a teaching institution with m ore than 950 fu ll-tim e fa cu lty and a student enrollm en t expected to be around 200,000, the M aricop a D istrict has nine co lle g e s and one center locat­ ed throughout the m etropolitan Phoenix area. 966-0709 ORIENTATION SESSION A re Expenses Going Up W hile Funds Go Down? Arizona State University Tuesday, November 2,1993 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Memorial Union, V entana Room 226 C Call 990-9359 || Corporate Job Bank «PT m Sterile, Disposable Software ★ Automated Equipment ★ TV/Movies While Donating ★ New Donor Bonus D id you know you can earn $30 a week by donating desperately needed plasma?' It's easy, safe and best of all, your wallet will be grateful! UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER 1015 S. Rural Rd. (m e t to Sew O a sis} , 994-2250 STA TRAVEL Yes, you can survive with m only a part-time job! STUDENT TRAVET 966-6300 We Compare Student Fares and A ll Q ther Discounte DOMINO'S PIZZA. Come & join the #1 pizza deliv­ ery team for the ASU area. We need f/t & p/t drivers. No experi­ ence necessary: up to $50 cash ' bonus for experienced delivery drivers. Drivers make $7-$10 per hour including mileage & tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can also be earned. We are very flexi­ b le & can w ork aro u n d your school schedule. Apply in person after II am at 903 S. Rural, Tem­ pe, o r call 968-5555. EOE. IMMED APPS taken, Victoria's Secret, Biltmofe Fashion Park, 957-4516. p/t holiday hrs. (£ ) Robin's Nest 1m PEACEEMP0PIUM 1 <# HELP WANTEDGENERAL EMPLOYMENT OPPS DAY DELIVERY driver needed 1 lam-3pm shift Apply in person atBlimpies, Broadway & Rural. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 1•800*777*0112 TH E W ORLD'S LARGEST STU DEN T & YOUTH TRAVEL ORGANIZATION ATTN-&7/HR Tempe business now hiring warehouse/m anufacturers rep/sales help, 3-7pm, no exp nec. Call Jim, 820-8408 CORK'N CLEAVER Hiring eve. cocktail servers. Will train. Apply in person M-TH 35pm. 5101 N. 44th S t Phx. (44th St & Camelback) FRONT DESK person, f/t, must work weekends. Apply in person. Inn Suites H otel 3101 N. 32nd St on Scottsdale Road, n orth o f Thom as STU D EN T TR A V E L TRAVEL SHIPS! Sunchase Ski & Beach Breaks is accepting appli­ cations for Spring Break Campus Reps. Earn top $$$ and free trips. 1-800-SUNCHASE. APPT. SETTERS P/t, f/t, a.mVp.m., weekly pay & bonus. 858-0830, ask 4 Jay. HELP WANTEDF O O P SERVICE COMMISSION SALES Rep want­ ed. Work your own hours, good $ potential. Call American Ban­ ner & Sign Co. 980-5274, MAYA WIRJADI Still interested in the 2 for 1 airfare on SW Air on Veterans weekend. Pis call I lost your # Debi 829-8311 P L A Z A 777 TRAVEL HELP WANTEDG EN |R AL___ HELP WANTEDGENERAL Mitt AVENUE TRAVEL Part-tim e • ^8 per hour • A cross from A SU Here's a terrific job that fits into your schedule and allows you to make enough money to survive! We're a 36 year old telephone marketing company and we talk to people about the best trial book pre­ views, magazine renewals; sponsor marketing, non-profit fund-raising and other outstanding programs. 4 Flexible schedules - short (4.5 hour) shift - Early AM, Mid-AM, Early Afternoon, Mid-Afternoon, Early Evening, & Weekends • Average $8-$10/hour • $10-$20/hour for our top producers. : * Paid, complete training; Nice offices, fully automated • Reps caU prequalified leads nationwide from a computer-dialed data base. Call today for a confidential interview (602) 894-0264^ A p p lica tio n s a re currently being accep ted fo r an tici­ pated fa c u lty p o sitio n s fo r d ie follow ing d iscip lin e s: ACADEM IC Anthropology, B iology, C hem istry, C om m unications , C o u n s e lin g * * , (S p e e c h ), C om i Language, E c o n o m ic s a lism , L ib ra ry G eog rap hy, S + + , M u s ic , S c ie n c e ( U P h y sics, Nursing++, P o litic a l T h eatre Arts. A c a d e m ic m ia s re q u IM b m in im u W b f a M a ste r's D egree w hich in clu d e s 24 sem ester nours o f upper d iv is io n a n d /o r g rad u ate c re d it in th e fie ld to ber taught. +*P le a se note th e se d iscip lin e s have m ini­ m um requirem ent exceptions. OCCUPATIONAL Com puter. Inform ation System s/D P. O c c u p a tio n a l a r e a s re q u ire a m in im u m o f 6 4 'se m e ste r h o u rs OR a n A s s o c ia te 's D e g re e + 5 y e a rs of directly related occup ational experience in the fie ld to be taught, OR a B a ch e lo r's D egree + 3 ye a rs of d ire ctly related O ccupational e xperien ce in th e fie ld to b e ta u g h t, OR m e e t th e A c a d e m ic R equirem ents. S A LA R Y R A N G E $31,944 - $54,848 If unable to attend the O rientation S e s s io n , c o n ta c t o u r E m p lo y ­ m ent O ffice at ( 6 0 2 ) 7 3 1 - 8 4 9 1 or 1 -8 0 0 -2 5 - T E A C H . ■ M ARICOPA PIALAMERICA MARKETING, INC l ! M | AA/EOE Women and Minorities a n Encouraged to Apply COLLEGES S tate P ress RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS POR A good tíme any day o f the week, check out the State Press Classifieds! ANY COIN Any Drink Night at L o co 's. 8 - 10pm T h u rs 10-28 only. 1120 E. Apache (cmr Ap­ ache and Terrace); 10c W INGS a * » $1 D R A FTS S R » in iS c S * Bud. Bud Light Mon-Thur 3-7 p.m. Sat 11 a.m.-5 p.m BANDERSNATCH 5th St & Forest BREWPUB -A L L Y OU CAN EAT - Monday-Friday K StudentLD, Required p Great Sandwiches & Pizza! Great Prices « Free Delivery 968-4884 PRANKSTERS AR & RILL 500 Drinks Buy o n e drink a n d get 2nd drink for only 5 0 e (excludes pitchers) M USiC WE BUY CDs * l - $6 C A S H CAMPUS CORNER 7 1 2 S. College FREE :fOJMC.piiwirtwiiy mÈËÊÊÊÈÊÊÊÊÈÈÊÊ: C | \ \ y « Where AS U Goes for Pizza WEDNESDAY MUG CLUB PERSONALS .A DOZEN roses delivered $20 also balloons; Call AfterHours Flowers 894-3419. A A A -K IN K O 'S COPY center makes the g rad e! G et reports, resumes & flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & m uch m ore! O pen 24 hours! Rural & University, 966-2035. AO STEPHANIE H. Congratu­ la tio n s on I1KA D ream G irl! Love your sisters. A FA - W E hope to. see you to­ night! Take care and w ell see you there. -AKE. AMY- YOU put him on crossword _ probation and he still uses a pen! I think it's time you grounded him. 968-6666 1 3 0 1 E. U niversity JULIE ANN Oh sexy girlfriend! ; What can I say about you? Not enough. Sedona m ay be post­ poned but I will see you in the Windy city forX-Mas. I love you Bella. Jeff MARK T. Its only 2 weeks away! I'm so excited! 150 miles! AllezBaby Love you, Becky ALPHA GAMS get psyched for tonight's championship football game vs KKT 6: 30 at the SRC , Bud L ig h t, . ODK! Do you know*where your composite is? KIMBROFRO: HAPPY 20th! You are a raw friend!' Ich liebe dich! Love, Schwinglet • ATA- TH E gentlem en o f AKE look forward to your presence at this evenings social event. We hope yo u r anticipation equals ours. C o o r s L ig h t DK E -HE. is com ing w ith the clouds, and all the chimes o f the earth w ill w ail on acco u n t o f Him. Death will be your glory . LOST: PAGER, in Neeb Hall O ct. 10 pm . $ 2 0 rew ard. 929-0859. AGD FOOTBALL team, best of luck in tonight's championship game. Keep up the undefeated streak! We're proud o f you! -Ed and Jay. 990 25-oz. MUGS AKE -GET well soon Luis. Hang in there. KAPPA SIG Over the Top iscoming November 10 1993 AGD -LADIES, it was a pleasure meeting you on Monday evening. Hope you have a great time at happy hour...from the men o f DKE. P IZ Z A & PASTA DEKE LOUIE W ell all miss you tonight! Get well soon! You still owe me! Chicago K O T F O U N I^ . A EG M ID Fall Rush- Tonight 5pm at die house 717 Alpha Dr. Come down & hang out with the Bro's. For more info call Mitch at 784-0643 o r D oug at 8942844. Come down few some Ex­ otic fun. 3-7 p.m. Mon-Fri C O N G R A TS TO S igm a Chi Sigma Nu Delta Sig on placing 1st 2nd and 3rd in Last years Over the Top Armwrestling Tourney Hope to see you this year. WOULD YOUR g o lf swing be better served for chopping wood? , If so, c a ll the K arsten G o lf Course at ASU 921-8070. W O O D S H E D II NW C o r n e r D o b so n & U n iv e rs ity 844-SHED CONGRATS TO Chi Omega IA T And Gamma Phi Beta on their 1st 2nd and 3rd place finish in last years Over the Top. Hope to see you this year HANG GLIDE 2-for-l ASU spe­ cial! Gently sloping hill. Safe & exciting. Call 897-7121 S P O R T S ( i W INGS! 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 r a s k a G a m e s" PERSONALS SPORTS & RECREATION F u r r 's Family Dining at Tri City Mall • Mesa M ic D ry , ANY COIN Any Drink Night at L o co 's. 8 - 10pm T h u rs 10-28 only. 1120 E. Apache (cmr Ap­ ache and Terrace). PIKE - A R Eyou missing someth­ ing? Love, the ladies o f ??? RIP CHELSEA - Died from the m agic m ark er d isea se - face turned orange and exploded. Bad. RIP SON M elde - Four! Died from a flying golf ball when i hit his head, Deer ran away. S P T NEW members: H ang in there because Activation 93 is al­ most here! We love you! SHRIEKS AND lamentation will be the fiendsh cal for those who cheat Deke. It will mean death for all. . .. • . . V / . • - PERSONALS XXX New M em bers- A re you ' ready? Do you know w ho our je w e le r is? Ha! W e love you guys! 2 v your sisters TODD - We’ve hidden the pens. TR I SIG M A New M em bers! Hope you all had a blast at Bam Dance! Get psyched! Good luck on nationals! You will shine like pearls! X t Joy ADOPTION ADOPT - Catholic couple assures loving home and secure future for your newborn. Stay at home mom. Nancy and Brian, 1-800525-3507. Medical/legal paid. H A PPILY M ARRIED profes­ sional couple certified for adop­ tion, desire to provide loving Christian home for white new­ born. Financially secure, offer­ ing love, happiness & education for your baby. E xpenses paid. Legal and confidential. Call Pat anytime 1 (800)237-0058. SERVICES A SOFT Touch Electrolysis, per­ m anent h a ir rem oval. C areer training in electrolysis available Rural & Southern 829-7829. E L E C T R O L Y S IS BY D egna Perm, results, the blend method. Rural/Southem area 92 M 146 GRADUATING? Get yourself exposed in a resume book distributed to over 200 com­ panies in Metro Phoenix! Only $15 per resume. Call Hqde, 8979683. RELAX... Licensed massage professional offering jntro. special, full 75 min session. C all for info. Hm. 833-3983 or p/vm 219-2767. RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2- 1-800351-0222. . C o n tin u in g y o u r S t u d i e s in SIG KAP Amy W- Have you fig­ ured out tiiat spin cycle yet? Just kidding! Luv, Melissa. 2K AMY W .-Check the list! ZK MEYER I bet you thought I didn't exist! I love you and I wish you all the best! XAfi Secret Sis. XK Stultsi Be ready to meet the u n d e rta k e r on F ri. F o r'd e a th knows no bounds B-A.D, SOUPER SALAD Steph - Would it be too bold o f me to ask for your phone#? Ten, we could have conversations that transend mere salad. -"M r. salad and Ice Tea please thank you," XXX Chandra-Dot Mommy is so proud o f you! Good luck on your national exam . Hugs n' kisses Sigma love, Mom XXX Jessica -We sure had a wee­ kend to remember between Peikins and Rio. Too bad our dates feu barndance weren't what we ex­ pected but it was all worth it for how much fun I had Saturday! Heidi C o u n s e lin g , P s y c h o lo g y , S o c ia l W o r k & R e la te d S tu d ie s ? O u r extensive database con­ tains inform ation on over 1,000 schools, and 5,000 concentration areas. We elim inate the hours o f researching graduate programs, and', the time-consuming effort o f con­ tacting graduate schools for more information. W e can provide the following from our four different databases: □ Catalog? from more than 5,000 graduate concentration programs. □ L ite ra tu re a n d ap p lic a tio n materials for m ore than 300 ere- dentialling programs. Q Information on more than 500. professional organizations. Q Information on counseling net­ works and expert referral services. por more infinm ation, XXX New Members! Good luck on your national exams! Initiation is sooo close! Xv your sisters RESTAURANTS/ BARS SPORTS & RECREATION C anter Netw ork Associates 2210 Mt. Carmel Avenue Suite 110 Glenside, Pennsylvania 19038. Ï (215) 572-7670 Complimentary Buffet m i pool 58pm no com S. M ill A ve. • Downtown Tem pe • 966-2020 SCULPTURED NAILS Full set $15. Nails by Lisa. Scot­ tsdale Salon 947-6606 iM iM s t . W hen you can't fin d th e rig h t w o rd s to te ll som eone som ething they need to hear. W E SAY IT FO R YO U TACTFULLY, w ith n o in te n t o f m alice. Select a message from 6 categories. Send via th e tele­ phone, 52 choices. If desired, send anonym ously. 18+, use touch-tone. $ 2 ;25/m in, aver* age Call 4/m in. I4 0 0 4 N 4 9 N . JAZ Productions Portland O regon. TYPING/WORD P R O C | « IN G _ 1 DAY turnaround- Most papers, prof w/p, papers, resumes. Laser. Reasonable. Caroline, 892-7022. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/pag£. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ASU. Diane 829-1602. BiaifMätii Call Today to See What Everyone is Talking About. HIST 649-3224 Volunteer Egg Donor Needed FA M O U S PAIRS Green eggs and ham. Heckle and Jeckle. Hillary and Bill. Macaroni and cheese. Milk and cookies. Donald and Marta. Hotdogs and mustard. PB&J Love and marriage. Meat and potatoes. S ir Charles and B-ball. Tea and crumpets. Beavis and Butthead. Laveme and Shirley. Bacon and eggs. State Press and coffee. Professional couple requires the services o f a female to act as an oocyte donor. A ll m edical expenses paid plus fe e p aid to donor. •Donor must be from Indian Subcontinent •20-32 years o f age •In good health, with no hereditary disease factors. For more information, please call Weyland at (602)956-7481 MISCELLANEOUS G etyour famous pair today. See the display ad in today's paper for details. U N C LE SAM IS A F R A ID OF HIM! Tom P a n iccia S pe a ks O ut o n G ays in th e M ilita ry V Thurs., October 28. 1993 8 pm Memorial Union Programming Lounge ADD COLOR! Full color laser printing, fast tur­ naround. Resumes, charts, typ­ ing. Near ASU. Rubicon designs, 921-8189. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA typing, w/p, editing, transerptn, W ordPerfect, làser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime FA ST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. ML A/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. I WANT IT NOW! D esktop P ublishing. T yping, term papers, resumes, charts, the­ sis, quick service. N ear ASÚ. 966-1984 PAPERS FAST! Proofed. Laser. $2/pg. Desk top publishing avail. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987. W P/ TY PIN G . Term papers, theses, resumes, reports. MLAJ APA. Quick service reasonable rates. M aureen 274-3891 or 955-0969 WRITE STUFF Specialty word processing/desktop pub. B usi­ nesses; faculty; students. Beth 963-3537. RESUMES W ITH RESULTS! 1 Pg. Resumes w/private consultation $50. *We do the writingfor you! " The W rite Resum e Broadway/Mill For a p pointm ent call flg 966-9211 INSTRUCTION COMPUTER TRAINING manua ls fo r W ordP erfect, L otus, DOS, ask about our book "How to Prepare C ollege Papers using W ordPerfect. " Private instruc­ tion also available. Ju st Y our Type, 998-7310 TUTORS SPORTS & RECREATION MISCELLANEOUS WANTED AAA Q U A LIT Y W /P L aser printer. $2/double spaced page. Quick service Sandy, 838-0107 PROFESSIONAL FLIGHT In­ struction. Single- and m ultien­ gine. $18/hr. Call for info: Peter Schnur, CFII/MEI, 778-9566. IS FUN, EXCITING, AND TEACHES SELF DEFENSE. Pitchers Long N ecks Zim as 8-11 p.m. • SERVICES w rite or ca ll us today! XXX N ew M em bers - G et psyched for the coming weeks. Good luck on the national exam. I love you all! X * Heidi ATTN G REEK S! T his Thur. night at the Dash. Greek Steering will raffle o ff the cover o f the Greek Review, Bungee jumping, T-shirts etc. Don't miss i t W ILD W ED N ESD A Y 411 Page 19 Wednesday, October 27,1993 COMPUTEfc H ELP - C ustom ­ ized solutions to programming and hom ew ork a ssignm ents, study aids, tutoring. 649-8703. EASY MONEY helping h/s stud w/history/healti) hmwrk + Eng conversation. $8/hr. 461-8089 TUTOR MENTOR C program­ ming. Please call Frank Emery 838-6983 or 838-2106. TUTORS NEEDED Interview ing n o w for J a n ­ u a ry for p rivate Scottsdale school. Steady & secure posi­ tion. All levels of high school m a th & science, including h ig h s c h o o l c h e m is tr y & physics. M ust b e o u tsta n d ­ ing in both science & m ath. Must have h ad experience in tutoring. G ra d u a te stu d e n t preferred. Spanish & French sp eak in g s tu d e n ts e n c o u r­ a g e d to a p p ly . 2-4 d a y s / Week, S8-$ 10/hr. P ill 9 S I - I 0 7 0 Almost Everyone at ASU Reads the State Pressi Your Individual Horoscope : Iraners D ratrl Mon.-Sat. 8am-12am Sunday 9am-9pm B r o a d w a y & R u ra l WE DELIVER! 9 2 1 -9 2 2 2 You will opt for time for just the Fór Wednésday, Oct. 27,1993 tw o o f you rather than outside ARIES socializing now. A work project (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) today will take more time than Loved ones will be feeling espe­ you had anticipated. cially close to each other now. SAGITTARIUS Don't let others pressure you into m aking a fin a n c ia l d e cisio n . (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Exercise discrim ination about Take time to think tilings over. whom you date now, or else you TAURUS will find yourself entertaining a (Apr. 20 to May 20) person with whom you have little You could be nursing a real or in common. Home life is a plus, imagined hurt in private. To save CAPRICORN yourself further aggravation, why not have a heart-to-heart talk? (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Y o u r social graces w ill be an You will feel so much better. asset in business today. Others GEMINI . w flt lik e ' y our Stylé; It's not a (May 21 to June 2Ó) good time for entertaining guests. Work priorities may take prece­ A friend may be difficult. dence today over social interests. Aq u a r iu s Y oíi m ay feel y o u are being asked to do too much. You will (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) have time for romance later. You will meet with game playing CANCER ta c tics in b u sin ess today. Be leery o f those who would take (June 21 to July 22) advantage. You will be hearing Couples will be making plans for some time away together. You some good dews from a person at a distance. are at a disadvantage if yóu mix b u sin ess and p le a su re today. PISCES Family life is rewarding tonight (Feb. 19 io Mar. 20) LEO Though.extra money w ill come in now,, it's up to you to hold on (July 23 to Aug. 22) to it. Double check costs in con­ Y ou should get more than one nection with travel plans. Avoid estimate for home repairs: Plans unnecessary expenditure. for weekend travel o r socializing YOU BORN TODAY thrive on fall into place npw . A relative challenges and don't know the may be a bit demanding tonight meaning o f the word "defeat,* VIRGO You haVe leadership abilities and (Aug, 23 to Sept 22) Romance is a definite plus today. usually make an impact o n the Couples Will m ake plans fo r a world as a person who does his special outing. T h e re m ay be or her own thing. You also have some disagreement now about a strong literary and philosophic business or financial concern. inclinations. You are sometimes set in yoùr beliefs, but are very LIBRA (S ept 23 to Oct. 22) loyal to your supporters. You are Your churning personality will sympathetic and would do well be a factor in today's successes. in medical fields. W riting and Exercise care in financial deal­ teach in g are o th e r sk ills . ings. There are those who would B irthdate of: T heodore love to take advantage. R o osevelt, p re sid en t; D ylan. SCORPIO . Thom as, P oet; and T eresa (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) Wright, actress. Page 20 Sta te P ress October 2?, 1993 The Honda Doctor's Helpful t i» H onda Hints Tip THE HONDA D OCTOR I^ 967-7282 i d i Màster Card I __ " k When your rear view mirror starts ! to get loose, come see us right * away. We'll adjust it for free. But if you let it get too loose, it must be replaced -- for as much as $85. ^ A "Blue Ribbon S ervic lonest quality repair ■ ices—and student di. Near ASU at 2090 E. University. Suite 115, Tempe (University at River, just west of Price) Service by Appointment 7:30AM ■6:00PM. Mon-Fri • Thursday nights til 8PM Also in the Scottsdale Airpark • 998-5966 i Fajita Pruna jj Corner of Rural & University in T he C ornerstone DAILY COM PACTS MIDSIZE WBElTIV • FULL SIZE «EEIU.I •LUXURY & CONVERTIBLES MONTHLY F a j it a P r im a • LUXURY ‘ MINIVANS .7,9,12,15 PASSENGER Takeout available 921-1230 SPECIAL MONTHLY RATES UNLIMITED MILEAGE AVAILABLE WE FEATURE GM PRODUCTS I M AJOR CREDIT CAR D S •OPEN 7 PAYS m 15 free with every 10 purchased I L w /coupon 1 1 /3/93 • . takeout available • 894 2021 expires 3625 W. INDIAN SCHOOLED, • 2934 E. McDOWELL RD. > ° NO CROWDS, NO LINES i ]NO HASSLES! Friday & Saturday At the award-winning Western Reserve Chib, the finest sports and fitness facility in the Southwest, we take pride in knowing our success depends on your satisfaction. In doing so, we are committed to giving you: *2 .5 0 Pitchers 9p.m.-11p.m. *1 .0 0 Sam Adam s D rafts 1250 E. APACHE •TEMPE* 1. C lea n , w eU -m a in ta in e d fa c ilit ie s 2 . F rien d ly , p r o fe s s io n a l s ta ff 3 . Q u a lity p ro g ra m m in g •DRAFT •KILLIANS ON TAP! •SH O T SPECIALS •ONLY $1 Bring this a d with you to receive a free oneweek trial, (One per person, non-members only.) Student Lifestyle Memberships avail­ able, only $39.00 per month — no Initiation fee required! 5 MIN FROM ASU UNNMmmr ASU EVERY W EDNESDAY! 'm a m .: ' 1 I I « li Offer expires O ctober 3 1 ,1 9 9 3 1 1 l ! m «KM I anoMmiw •OUTM iA N $1.75 Longnecks! ™"" : n WESTERN RESERVE CLUB AWARD-WINNING SPO RTS C EN TER BY DAVE BRO W N Broadway West of Price • Tem pe, AZ * 968-9231 V , IN THE CORNERSTONE RURAL & UNIVERSITY c0 i D O r 829-8495 % , ;