7 '¿'C opyright, State Press. 1993 Tempe. Arizona Thursday, October 28,1993 An Independent Morning Dally Vol. 77 No. 124 Faculty, staff upset with health insurance B y M elanie K. S elcho State P ress Based on hundreds of complaints from ASU faculty and staff, the Arizona Legislative Oversight Committee on Health'Insurance is being asked for a rebidding of insurance contracts today. > Ruth Kolb Smith, chairwoman of the Benefits Committee for Arizona’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said Wednesday that she expects the Legislature to make a decision by December. The committee is asking for either the insurance contract to be rebid, or for the University to become separate and bid for its own insurance contractor. “We’re asking for rebidding of contracts,’’ she said, “Present contracts were rebid for very hastily.” Smith said she has fielded hundreds of complaints from ASU faculty and staff about the current contractor, Intergroup Health Care Corporation. “The contractor. Intergroup, is non-performing,” she said. “(Intergroup) is in violation of all performing standards that were required by contract and people are not getting adequate and satis­ factory care.” Intergroup was not available for comment Wednesday, but will have a presentation at today’s hearing. Frank W illiam s, d irecto r o f A SU ’s School o f H ealth Administration and Policy, and the representative of all three state universities on the legislative committee, said the committee was established by the State Legislature last April after a number of complaints and issues were raised regarding health insurance of stated employees, specifically University employees. Williams said it’s difficult to know what the committee will recommend because this is the first meeting, but it may have rec­ ommendations to make by the ne'xt legislative session in January. We’re open to hearing all of these things,” he said. “We’ll come up with a resolution to some of the complaints and problems we’ve been hearing.” Bill Arnold, president of ASU’s Academic Senate, said the Academic Senate had an open hearing with representatives of Cigna and Intergroup present. * “We heard some of the same sorts of complaints,” he said. “My sense was that Intergroup was not real responsive, but at least they listened.’’ Arnold said he hopes the Legislature will either give the T urn to I nsurance, page 2. The spiritual search is on Local church leaders agree: College years best time to seek out identity By G reg S exton State P ress It's a sunny fall day, with a little wind hinting of w inter. W hile ASU students hurry to class, the sound of busy chatter is suddenly pierced by a loud preacher singing the psalms of God. Walking by the MU, Cady Mall preachers bark their messages, telling students they are "sinners’’ and making students aware that “God bled for you.” Crowded around the fountain at Cady Mall, numerous booths are set up daily offering stu­ dents a veritable plethora of religious tastes. Campus Crusade for Christ and C atholic, Muslim and Lutheran groups are just a few of those sitting politely by, offering students friendship, community and religion. Another day brings a different preacher, but the objective remains the same. ASU students are constantly bombarded by religious mes­ sages. A simple walk around campus can reveal a religious influence at ASU. Most buildings are classrooms, but others — like the Danforth Chapel on Cady Mall — are religious edifices. There are numerous churches on ASU’s cam­ pus. and many more in the general area. College is a period of transition in the lives of most students. So what are students looking for when it comes to religion? “I think students seek religion for a variety of reasons,” said Gary Kennedy, director of the W esley F oundation, part o f the United Methodist Campus Ministry. "But I think guilt is the worst reason to get people involved. We encourage people to keep God and religion a personal priority ... it’s up to the individual. It is between them and God." « Whoever the relationship is between, cam­ pus religious leaders say college is a key period during which to develop a sense of religion. “In college, (students) are looking at more stability, and I think religion gives a sense of stability and adds d irec tio n ,” said A rshad M irza, presid en t o f the Muslim Students Association. “It’s a motivat­ ing factor, too. I think religion is a very impor­ tant part of college life and beyond college life.” Kennedy said he has seen an increased interest in religion on campus, adding that “there is an interest in spirituality,” and it is not always “through traditional means.” In .other words, it seems people are finding what works for them and using it. “I have about 75 students a week — not always the same ones — who come by for all types of reasons,” Kennedy said. “I think there is more of a renewal, an interest in God.” He added that tough social and economic times might prompt students to seek religion during college, since people might be interest­ ed in going back to values that might have got­ ten them through difficult situations in the past On the Search Anne Feldhaus, a religion professor at ASU, teaches an introductory course called “Religions of the World.” The survey course touches on Buddhism , Taoism , Islam and Christianity, among other religions. The classes have nearly 1,000 students each semester. Some, Feldhaus said, are probably searching — not only for knowledge, but also for a reli­ gion for themselves. “Religion is the way that people — in tradi­ tional w ays—- identify what the meaning of life is,” said Feldhaus, adding that sometimes students ask her. “Which religion is best?” “1 d o n ’t know how many o f them are T urn to Religion , page 6. Richard Komurek/State Press A sikh woman bows after giving an offering to the ever-liying Guru as Sat Jiwan Singh Khalsa uplifts energy by waving a horse ta il in a figure-eight pattern. The Guru Nanak Dwara, in Phoenix, is the largest Sikh gurdwara (church) In Arizona, and the only one in the Phoenix area. Khalsa estimates the gurdwara has about 500 members, among them several ASU students. A SU s $ 2 5 9 -m illio n d e b t ‘n o t a p ro b le m , re g e n t says B y M ark M . M acias State P ress A sem i-annual debt financing report from the A rizona Board of Regents reveals that ASU's outstand­ ing debt for 1993-94 rests at $259.7 million, of which $26,1 million must be paid by June 30. Regent Andy Hurwitz said ASU’s debt “looks like a big number,” but the amount the University pays out to its creditors is more significant. “The real number to look at, the number that we monitor, is the annual ratio o f debt repaym ent,” Hurwitz said. “As long as that number stays under 10 percent — which ASU is well under — it (the debt) generally is IN S ID E STA TE PRESS W eather Outlook Mostly sunny, not as windy today. High 84. low 58. not a problem. So I don’t think there is any cause for alarm.” Jennus Burton, associate vice pres­ ident for administrative services, said ASU shouldn’t have any problem paying the debt back to its creditors. Burton said ASU currently pays its creditors 6 percient o f its total debt bond service budget, •which is well ► A KAET poll reveals that average voters are undecided on NAFTA. Page 8 ► A source within ASU’s athletic department disputes allegations that two athletes were paid too much for menial summer jobs. Page 11 C -tA T E P R E below the 10 percent Hurwitz referred to — a financial rating companies pre­ fer. “The University has a double-A rating with its financial creditors,” Burton said. ASU’s semi-annual debt financing report will be presented to regents on Friday during the ABOR’s monthly x c World/ Nation Firefighters in California struggle to contain wildfires that have destroyed 200 homes. Q A Z I Î 4 ^ C e n te r s e c tio n Page3 m eeting in T ucson. The m eeting begins at noon today. Student Regent Spencer Insolia said the rate of the University’s debt increase worries him, because stu­ dents are the ones who will be affect­ ed. “My main concern is that our debt T urn to D ebt, page 2. Where To Find It Advertiser Index................13 Classifieds........................13 Comics............................. 10 Crossword...... .................. .8 Horoscopes ........ 15 Opinion.,....:................. ;......4 Police Report......,...............7 Sports............................... 11 Today’s Activities.............. 2 World/Nation................. :....3 Page 2 State P ress Thursday, October 28,1993 Insurance T oday C ontinued The Today section is a daily calendar o f M eeting, everyone welcome, 3 p .m .,M U events pruned as a service to the ASU commu­ Conference Room 1A, third floor. nity. Requests are pruned according to the ■ • Cam pos 'Crusade for C hitoJ/i* Thursday N ight U y d , 7:30 p.ni., Bateman Physical space available each day. Campus clubs and organizations may sub­ Science Building H-wing Room 150. m it written entries to the State Press in the j * B aptist S tudent U nion —• Noonday, free basem ent o f M atthew s C enter, Room 15, meal ami devotion led by Dennis Wood, aocm, BSU Center, 1322S,MiUAve, Requests w ill not be taken over the phone. E ntries m ust contain th e fu ll nam e o f the • S o ciety o f H isp a n ic P ro fe ss io n a l group, a description o f the event, date, tim e Engineers — General meeting, everyone wel­ and th e fu ll a d d ress o f th e lo ca tio n . A ll come, 4:45 p.m„ Classroom Office Building. requests are subject to editing fo r content, • College Republicans — Weekly; meeting, 3:30 p.m., MU REACH office, third floor. space and clarity. Deadline fo r entries is noon the day before • MUABitoerefetioii Committee —. Pumpkin bowling, 11 am ,- 1 p.m., West Lawn above publication, • Counselor Training C enter — Counseling Hayden Library^ for ASU students, provided by counseling and • Golden Key Honor Sodety -s- Pick up cer­ counseling psychology graduate students, tificates today through Nov. 5, 11 a.m.- 1 supervised by faculty, Payne Hall Room 402. p.m.. Honors College Activity Center. For more information or appointment, contact • U n iv ersity T o a stm a ste rs — Executive committee meeting, 5:30 p.m,, open meeting, Jan, 965-5067. • Alcoholics A nonym ous — Daily closed 6:30 p .ra„ everyone welcom e, MU P inal meeting, noon. All Saints Catholic Newman Room 211. Center, northwest comer o f College Avenue • Society o f P ro fessio n al Jo u rn a lis ts General meeting, yearbook group photos, 4:30 and University Drive, • ASU College o f E xtended E d u ca tio n ’s p.m., Stauffer HaU Reading Room. D ow ntow n C e n te r G a lle r ia — D uring • Chi Alpha — Weekly Bible study, book of October, “Patterns o f Life” exhibit by ASU Philippians, noon, MU, see monitor for roam. alumna Carolyn A. Zarr of original oil paint­ • C h ristian S tudents Fellow ship — Bible ings of significant people in Zarr’s life, Free study, “Partaking erf Christ as Life,” 12:30 • adm ission, $02 E. M onroe, second floor, p.m - 1:30 p.m., MU. see monitorforroorn, • Ja p an Association i - General meeting, 3 Phoenix. • N arco tics A nonym ous — Home sweet p.m., MU Gold South Room 203. home meeting, 5:30 p.m.. 1701 S. College • Canterbury-Episcopal Cam pus M inistry — This week at the State Fair, 5 p.m., St. j Ave., south courtyard. • MUAB S pecial E v en ts C o m m ittee — Augustine’s, 1735 S. College Ave. St a t e P ress Classifieds - w e're always in th e back. from page 1. University the opportunity to bid for its own insurance contractor or will give faculty and staff the opportunity for input into the next bid­ ding process. “One (option), is to see if the University could separate and do its own insurance with the monies available,” he said. , “I would like to see the process rebid with plenty of faculty and staff input,” he added. “We did not have that input at the right time.” Smith said the com plaints she has heard range from lack of treatment to not paying the medical bills incurred. She cited complaints she’s heard from ASU individuals whose children have died because of lack of treatment, who’ve been told they have cancer and need to be seen as soon as possible but have not been able to get an appointment for three weeks, and whose medical bills have not been paid by Intergroup for over nine months, “The way they make money is by denying treatment,” she said. Smith said some people at ASU are satisfied with their health care, but they tend to be healthy people without any serious problems. Smith said the insurance is adequate unless something seri­ ous goes wrong. Although there are a few employees pleased with insurance from health maintenance organi- zations, Smith said faculty and staff should have the option of an indemnity policy which allows them to choose their own doctor and still only pay about 20 percent of their medical costs. Carol Bernstein, the president of Arizona’s AAUP, said the money the state spends on insur­ ance is adequate, but people don’t get what they pay for. “It’s an extremely poorly bid policy,” she said. “The amount of money spent is good, but what they bought was extremely poor.” Bernstein said both ASU and UofA faculty have voiced complaints about the insuranceprompted lobbying for a legislative oversight committee which was approved in April. NAU privately contracts its own insurance and has not contracted the same complaints. The com m ittee w ill hear from both Intergroup, the Benefits Committee, and people pleased with and displeased with the service. Bernstein said the condition of insurance pro­ vided to state employees, most particularly fac­ ulty and staff at state universities, is not what the state of Arizona should be providing. “There are extreme cases of bad practice being forced or urged on people by insurance from the Department of Administration,” she said. Debt_______ C ontinued from page 1. drives tuition increases,” Insolia said. “Last year, one of die main reasons for a tuition increase atthe UofA was because we had to start debt ser­ vicing a new engineering building. I have a con­ cern because students that are paying for the tuition increases aren’t necessarily going to reap the benefits of it.” Hurwitz said he doesn’t think ASU will incur any more debt in the near future, since it has no bonds left. Gale Tebeaus, assistant finance director for the ABOR, said there are no reports listing UofA and NAU’s outstanding debt, because state uni- versities aren’t required to draft a semi-annual debt financing report. UofA and NAU compile their debt figures through other reports, Tebeaus said. Tebeaus added that after this year, ASU will not draft a debt financing report. The ABOR, therefore, will determine the University’s out­ standing debt from other reports, in a manner similar to how UofA and NAU compile their debt figures. The sem i-annual debt fin an cin g report showed ASU West’s outstanding debt at S49.6 million. ET IN THE Silk, thong panties *695 THURSDAY & FRIDAY OCTOBER 2 8 ,2 9 / S T V rN T a R ttftS M E ! Lingerie • N ovelties • Lotions » T -Shirts • C ard s ASU Bookstore HOURS: MONDAY-THURSDAY 8-6 FRIDAY 8-5 SATURDAY 10-2 119 E . Southern 9 2 9 -0 4 6 9 SE Com er Of Southern & M ill ‘Regular priced items W orld /N ation S t a te P ress Page 3 Thursday, October 28,1993 Clinton delivers new health plan Anti-execution protesters say state not fair in mock hanging PHOENIX (AP)— State fair officials say it’s all in fun, b at death penalty opponents are demanding they cancel plans for a mock hanging on Halloween. “T his is a p p a llin g ,’' said D onna Hamm, executive director o f Middle G round, a group that opposes capital punishment ‘I t looks like a cheap publicity stunt It’s die height of insensitivity to the fam­ ilies of the ISO people on death row in Arizona,” said Hamm, whose husband, Jam es, w as convicted o f m urder and heed after serving a prison term. James Hamm also is a graduate law student at ASU. The hanging is a spinoff of the fair’s haunted house. A doctor character who tortured mental patients in the haunted house is to pretend to be hanged from .a special 20-foot gallows. Martin Dickey, director of marketing and advertising for the fair, defended the act. “The point is to scare people,” he said. “It’s a performance. There are all kinds of things depicted in performance. It’s meant to entertain and scare people.” Dickey said mock hangings are often staged in Tombstone. Hamm says the event is tasteless and could contribute to what she called the public's insensitivity to executions. She also questioned whether the event was appropriate for the fair. ■“I think it’s appalling that this stunt is being used to entice people to attend a family-oriented event,” she said. Survey: M ost Arizonans support Indian gaming FLA G STA FF (A P) — M ost Arizonans support Indian gaming but many don’t think slot machines should be allowed off reservations, a survey released Wednesday said. Fifty-eight percent o f Arizonans said casino gambling benefits Indians, while 25 percent said it’s not advantageous, according to the Arizona Poll conducted by the Social Research Laboratory at Northern Arizona University. Six p ercent s a id they saw both advantages and disadvantages, and I percent stud they saw neither. Ten percent didn’t know or refused to comment The poll has a potential margin o f error o f 5 percentage points. O f th e 812 A rizo n an s random ly polled by telephone Oct. 4-8,411 live i l northern Arizona. Arizona voters undecided about NAFTA, poll reveals PHOENIX (A P ) — W hile m any Arizona voters are undecided about the North American Free Trade Agreement, support is higher among more educated people than am ong tho se w ith less schooling', a poll released Wednesday said. Thirty-two percent of Arizona voters favor NAFTA, while 26 percent oppose it, and 42 percent are undecided, con­ cluded a poll sponsored by public tele­ vision station KAET at ASU and the U n iv e rsity ’s C ro n k ite School o f Journalism and Telecommunication. Only 18 percent o f respondents with a high school diploma or less education : favored N A FTA compared to 47 per- ' :*cent uflhow college-educated vqiefs,- f “People with a high school education are most in competition for the jobs l : that w ill be tea(,” 's#id pD&*ter Bruce Merritt of the Cronkite Scfc^ j Eighteen percent o f college graduL „j ates opposed the treaty, and 34 percent i wljjppalrrir’rr* Thirty-four percent of w ith le ss education opposed i, and 47 percent hadn’t derided, the poll said. ' The study was conducted Oct 2 0 4 4 and was based on telephone interviews — with 592 o f error a t 4 perhas a ■ \ - , WASHINGTON (AP) Promising a “new era of security for every American,” President Clinton hand-carried his revised health care plan to Congress on Wednesday and urged passage within a year. Lawmakers of both parties applauded, then predicted major changes. C linton w on’t “get the full b ite o f the ap p le,” said House Republican Leader Bob Michel. He added that there are “substantive and profound policy differences” over many elements in the plan assembled by first lady Hillary Clinton. “Oh, it’s so complex and convoluted, we’ll probably go through it section by section and change it,” said Democrat Pete Stark, a House Ways and Means subcommittee chairman who, after months of criti­ cizing Clinton’s efforts, finally agreed to be a cosponsor. Democratic Sen. Dennis DeConcini said although he will push for changes in the details, he supported the plan in general and praised President Clinton for forcing the issue. “It’s courageous,” he said. “It may have some political benefits but it definitely has some political risks.” He said, he was pleased Republicans had already joined the debate with health care plans of their own, signaling their intention to change the health care system. “That is encouraging, rather than being just against it like the deficit bill,” he said. Sen. John McCain; a Republican, said the plan still has fundamen­ tal flaws and the proposal introduced by he and Sen, Phil Gramm, RTex., will accomplish reform without damaging the economy. “The last thing our country needs is a new open-ended entitlement program. The Clinton program is precisely that type of program,” he said. “It is based on government coercion of business and government determination of benefits and providers.” Clinton presented the plan in the Capitol’s ornate Statuary Hall — to the cheers of more than 70 congressional supporters — in an effort to regain the momentum lost in the last month after the original unveil­ ing of the broad proposal last month. But delivery of the 1,300-page plan — the legislation itself won't be introduced for another week or 10 days — reignited the debate o v er. Clinton’s approach. It sparked little fire fights Wednesday in a preview of the big battles to come between the president’s hard-core supporters and foes on Capitol Hill. It could be August 1994 or later before Congress acts. Despite much talk of Republicans working with Democrats, there were plenty of negative comments. “Circus fanfare” was how House Minority Whip Newt Gingrich, RGa., described the president's ceremony, noting there still, wasn’t an official bill. According to a White House list, 29 senators and 43 House mem­ bers are cosponsoring the president’s plan. But the list includes critics who plan on making big changes, such as Stark and fellow California D em ocrat H enry W axm an, chairm an o f a H ouse E nergy and Commerce subcommittee. Conservative Democrats and moderate Republicans, who are trying to form a “middle ground” coalition, still complain that Clinton’s plan is too costly and bureaucratic. Clinton gave a shortened, repeat performance of his speech to the" nation Jive weeks ago when he outlined a nfced to reform the nation’s $900 billion health care system. Wildfires raze 200 California homes B y M IC H A E L FLEEMAN A ssociated P ress W riter W ildfires driven by searing desert winds devoured more than 47,000 tinder-dry acres in Southern California on Wednesday, destroying at least- 200 homes and forcing hundreds to flee in terror frotp wealthy suburbs and rural hamlets. Fourteen firefighters were injured, three critical­ lyAmong the evacuees were elderly people car­ ried on gurneys from two convalescent homes and patients at a hospital. One lire threatened the Wild Animal Park in northern San Diego County, where zookeepers evacuated 26 endangered California condors and four Andean condors. By late afternoon Wednesday, 12 large fires fanned by hot, dry Santa Ana winds gusting up to 70 mph were burning from Ventura County to the Mexican border. The fires fed off vegetation baked to a crisp in the rainless summer. “We have what we call a blow-up condition at this time,” said Norm Plott, a Fire Department spokesman in Ventura County, where a 15,000acre arson fire, the first to erupt in the region Tuesday, was raging out of control. Shortly before noon, a fast-moving fire raced 10 miles down an Orange County canyon and, within minutes, destroyed an estim ated 100 homes overlooking the Pacific Ocean in exclu­ sive Laguna Beach, Emerald Bay and Newport Cove. Gov. Pete Wilson declared a state of emer­ gency in Los Angeles County and prepared to make similar declarations for other counties. Firefighters came from as far away as Northern California to battle the blazes. Amid the confusion, overwhelmed firefight­ ers ran out of water and called for reinforce­ ments, and helicopters made daring water drops in futile efforts to douse burning homes. Smoke and ash eclipsed the sun over down­ town Los Angeles, freeways and schools were closed, and w ind-borne em bers picked out homes at random, quickly engulfing roofs in flame. The fast-moving, 2,500-acre Orange County wildfire started in Irvine and raced down Laguna Canyon, destroying an estimated 100 pricey homes and buildings, said Orange County fire spokeswoman Emmy Day. The fire shut down that section of the Pacific Coast Highway, knocked out power and tele­ phone service and forced schools to close. Air tankers dropped fire retardant ahead of the fire, only to have flames jum p blanketed areas and continue their lethal march. Flames stopped only when they reached the cool waters of die Pacific, and residents jammed local highways as they tried to flee. “W e’ve been standing here watching the homes o f our friends burning,” said Laguna Beach resident Jackie Hetchings, surrounded by burning homes. “Your friends are standing there with you and th ey ’re w atching oth er people losing th eir Los Angelas County flrsfigM sr Mike Alves dips water on M s head'from a swimming pool to cool off as a home btgns in the background in Altadena, Calif., Wednesday. homes. And w e’re all crying on each other shoulders.” Earlier, as many as 75 homes and buildings were destroyed or damaged in Altadena, a sub­ urb northeast of Los Angeles in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, where houses easily fetch $500,000. “They said, ‘It’s coming up the canyon! It’s coming up the canyon!’ so we just got oiit of there as fast as we can. I have nothing but what I’m wearing,” said Sandra Bohlen, whose threebedroom Altadena home burned. ■* In that blaze, a homeless man identified as Andres Z. Huang, 35, was arrested Wednesday and booked for investigation, of unlawfully start­ ing a fire. Bail was set at $7,500. Authorities said he started the fire because he was trying to keep warm. Though firefighters had difficulty getting crews and equipment to the scene, Los Angeles County Deputy Fire Chief Paul Blackburn said the winds were so. strong that added manpower wouldn’t have made much difference. The Santa Ana wind condition occurs each fall when wind becomes superheated and dry as it blows across deserts east o f Los Angeles through Southern California. “We would have needed one fire truck at every house and there aren’t that many fire trucks in the state o f California,” said Blackburn, adding it could take a week to contain the blaze. As the 4,000-acre inferno advanced, at least 500 homes were abandoned. But some residents stayed behind to hose down roofs. O p in io n P a ge 4 I L f State P ress Thursday, October 28,1993 fSutate t a P ress 111 Bringing Hell to themaB In the beginning, there was silepce. \ Then came the words. Lots of tbetni in loud, strident and offensive tones. They brought a message o f hellftre, dam nation and all-round condem nation to any unfortunate student in earshot. Mall preachers. At the m ention o f the w ords, skin can be heard crawling all over campus. A plague far worse than the frogs, bugs and blood sent upon Moses’ least favorite Pharaoh. What hath ASU wrought to bring such disfa­ vor upon us? On any given day, students walking through the intersection at Cady and Orange Malls will see earnest, spiritual, and quiedy religious peo­ ple peddle their beliefs at booths near the foun­ tain. In addition, they will attempt to avoid at least one crazed yahoo with a Bible, an angry dem eanor and a crusade to save the damned masses; the religious equivalent of a PCP-crazed hitman. In the past, the preachers have been accused, of following students to class, spewing verbal insults and threats o f a first-class ticket to the bigH . Do the preachers’ First Amendment rights to free speech override students’ rights to freedom from harassment? The answer, apparently, has been ‘.‘yes.” L ast sem ester, the Cam pus Environm ent Team maintained that designating a “free speech area,” in which preachers and other wackos could sp ill th e ir g u ts, v io lates the F irst Amendment right to free speech. The group said the preachers have as much right as any other group to gather and spew the bulk That’s how it should be. Aside from their duties o f pissing students off, warning us that Satan exists in our class­ room s, textbooks, m usic, scientific theories, shorts, halter-tops, TAs, food, etc., and creating carbon dioxide for ASU’s many trees and flow­ ers to enjoy, mall preachers provide service by representing the epitom e o f w hat the F irst Amendment stands for: that, ip a “free” society like the United States, even the most outrageous, offensive and outright idiotic ideas can be vom­ ited ford) without fear of government interven­ tion or restraint -— with the exception of those threatening a substantial government or public interest, such as national security or the teaming environment of a classroom. Besides, ASU m all preachers serve a final, ultimate pptpose. They provide those students at ASU seeking an education an example of what happens if they remain ignorant. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a maiority voted among its members. They do not refleettbe opinion of the Slate Press staff as a whole Board members include: S. Talbott Snudi E d ito r J w o Owsley M a n a g in g E d ito r s TAFF STATE PRESS James Frasetta FAMOUS1UALK-OVERS FO O T0AUV- DO 0 RMAT 5 TO D ESTIN X Control over fates o f life, death insidiously infects our society Indisputably, she was extremely sick. The 72-year-old woman had been battling amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, for four years. She could no longer speak. She was being fed through a tube in her stomach. And she wanted to die. Although her name was Merian Frederick, the world will remember her as the 19th assisted suicide of Dr. Jack Kevorkian. Last Friday, at a Royal Oak, Michigan, apartment owned by Kevorkian, Ms. Frederick released a clamp on a tube that allowed a flow of carbon monoxide gas into a mask that she was wearing. As we havebecome desensitized to hearing, a relatively painless and planned death soon followed. Perhaps such a demise was appropriate. Without argument, Merian Frederick was incredibly ill. But while Lou Gehrig’s disease destroyed her nervous system, Ms. Frederick suffered from another dreadful disease that is far more prevalent in society today. You may not find it written about in high-brow medical journals. You probably won’t be able to treat it with overpriced prescriptions. In fact, your family physician may not even recognize the symptoms. Simply put, the disease that killed Merian Frederick is the dis­ ease of control. It is a sickness that has tun rampant through American culture. And the classic symptoms were present in the handwritten expla­ nation of the disease’s most recent victim. “I want out,” Merian Frederick penned in a statement released after her death. “The quality of my life is now that I have no enthusiasm for solving the new level of problems.” In short, Kevorkian’s “patient” simply stated that she no longer wanted to face the challenges inherent to the experience of life. But don’t think that the disease of control is confined to termi­ nally ill medical patients. Similar symptoms of this sickness can be observed when people attempt to control how and when life begins, not only how and when it ends. The teenage girl who gets an abortion because she “doesn’t want to be pregnant” is sick with the disease of control. The young married couple on birth control who wants children, “but not right now,” have the illness of control. The professional woman who uses prenatal diagnosis because she only has time for “a completely healthy baby,” suffers from die sickness of control. There even are parents who are so ravaged by the disease of con­ trol that they are spinning sperm and cloning embryos to assure that their next child is of the desired sex. Some will immediately assert that these examples prove that contemporary medical technology has outstripped traditional moral structures. As expected, this argument is continually for­ warded in an attempt to cloud the deeper issue. Our present culture of radical individualism has rejected the idea that there is a moral authority exterior of, and superior to, an autonomous person’s will and desire. Similarly, society has also rejected any corresponding external control over the use of newly discovered medical technology. And this technology is the germ that spreads the disease of control. This technology allows people to manipulate the two events that challenge humankind to question meaning. This technology gives people dominion over the two events that are the true mys­ teries of our existence. This technology enables people to control the two events that are unique to the experience of being. These two events are, of course, birth and death. Even though the disease of control has afflicted untold scores of people, there still exists poignant moments in individuals’ lives that are seemingly random and mysterious. The birth of a retard­ ed child or the diagnosis of cancer are just everyday examples of the chance and uncertainty inherent to life. . Experiences such-as these not only prove that the advance of medical Technology and the rejection of a moral authority above the will of the individual do not truly give people control of deci­ sions about birth and death. They also expose the sickness of con­ trol as the true delusion that it is. Newly rediscovered, the most effective treatment for the dis­ ease of control is to accept the mysterious randomness and uncer­ tain chance endemic to humankind’s existence. Our culture must begin to embrace the beauty of unharnessed birth and death. Only then will the epidemic of control, that so effectively deludes society into believing that the individual has ultimate con­ trol over how and when life begins and ends, he treated as a seri­ ous sickness. Before it claims any more lives, the disease of control must be /cured, For Dr. Jack Kevorkian didn’t murder Merian Frederick. Nor did Ms. Frederick commit suicide. The real killer was the disease of control. Wade Swanson is a senior religious studies mqjor. His column appears on Thursdays. S. TALBOTT SMITH, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor ........................ ...City Editor’ JAKF BATSP1 1 TAMM Y MFS A- SI F.RRA....... ANGELA BENOCHE............. I AMES FRUSETTA;................ BOB CASTLE.-......... BRIAN FITZGERALD. . . . .... . M ic h a e l b r a n o m .......... JULIE REUVERS......... ........ KRIS FRIDR1CH.......... ........ TROY FUSS.... ............... .. . lA N F m O K .... R E PO R T E R S: Joy Beason, Shawn Boyd, Garin Groff, Maxwell Higgins. Jason Hill, Mark Macias, Melanie Selcho, Greg Sexton. SPO R T S R E P O R T E R S : Scott Davis, Paul Matthews, C O PY E D IT O R S : Dave Proffitt, Jerem y Stein, Nick Bacon. C A R T O O N IS T S : Bryce M organ, G eorge O 'C o n n o r, Mateo Willis P H O T O G R A P H E R S : S am antha F eldm an, B rian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Craig Macnaughton, Louis A. Porter. COLUMNISTS: Alan Holcomb, Michael Kantor, Jessica Klinger, Dayid Strow, Wade Swanson. PRODUCTION: Kenneth Collins, Jodi Goldblatt, Amie M adden, B ritto n M auchline, Dawn R eisin g e r, Skip Schrader, Anna Ulinich, Evonne Vera, Dave Weber. SA L ES R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dcock, Sonia Benson, Joe Borgwardt, Dan Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes., Arlinda Isaías, Alisa Jellüm, Kate Martin, Lance Newman, Luther Peters, David Thorn. I n state Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The Stale Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information............. 965-7572 Newsroom...............965-2292 Magazine..... ........ ..965-1695 Advertising..............965-6555 Classifieds................ 965-6731 O p in io n Page 5 Thursday, October 28,1993 S tate P ress Interventionism ’s spectrum Security prim ary factor in American missions abroad M orality demands U.S. intervention in foreign affairs Franklin Roosevelt must be turning K r is M ayes over in his grave and if Harry Truman E d ito r S were alive today he’d blanch with j e m e ritu s : shame. After all, it was under the resolute leadership and unflinching certitude of both these men that the United States found its niche in the World as thé nation that wouldn’t shy away from 1 moral prerogatives, the one nation the world could look to in its sometimes desperate search for regional peace. But suddenly, with the widely seen pictures showing an American G.J. ^ being dragged like a rag d oll through the dusty streets of Mogadishu and the vision of a ragtag group of Haitian bullies flouting and daring American troops to come ashore, the United States has turned from, the great protector to the wayward coward­ ly lion. In two months, we have managed to drop the idea of peace­ keeping like a hot potato, convincing ourselves that, as Bob D ole put it on the Senate floor last week, Haitians aren't “worth one drop of American blood.” Funny, isn’t it, that in the past ten years, Kuwaitis; Grenadans, Lebanese and Panamanians, have all been worth American blood? But not Somalis, and now, definitely not Haitians. Somehow, the American people have come to expect that the price of peace h as. hit bargain basement levels. Unfortunately, as any veteran of Vietnam or the World Wars will tell you, the price of peace is death. And now, when the world needs us most, when our unique position as a leader among nations has never been more pro­ nounced. we have decided that the price of that leadership is too high. What we fail to see in our knee-jerk reaction to the horrible scenes in the horn of Africa and the seas to the south is that the cost of recoiling from our challenge will be much higher that that of meeting it. Who among us, especially among those who lived out the lessons of history, can forget in good conscience what happened when America turned inward? When we turned the other cheek in the early years following World War II. we watched China and Eastern Europe fall to Communism, and most horribly, when we wrapped ourselves in the shroud of isolationism after the first World War we gave silent approval to the demons of Naziism and watched them find fertile ground in Europe. Each time our ene­ mies rose up around us all with unforeseen strength and each time : we were nearly devoured. “The United States An are we really prepared to jettison all the principles of peace­ ... cannot afford to keeping and nation-aiding that have been so hard and so long in the coming? If we do, how should we explain our decision to the abrogate its responsi­ families of the American men and women who have already died bilities in the flippant, in the struggle to bring peace to the nations of the world? These careless ways it has are questions that have been pushed aside by present leadership, which seems more interested in forging a cut and dry formula for been o f late.” peacemaking ventures than in finding a coherent and consistent — ------. ■■■ way to fulfill our obligation to the world community. ; The emerging yardstick by which Congress and Bill Clinton are to judge the feasibility of inter­ vention is whether the mission falls within our “national interests.” The kowtowed politicians on Capitol Hill argue that Somalia and Haiti are not in our national interests. One is too far away, the other is a festering pool of political chaos. It is a dangerously limited definition Of interest, I believe. How far away is too far. and how chaotic is too chaotic? Are suffering and hunger, racism and corruption, ethnic cleansing that threatens to spread across central Europe not sufficient reasons for our attention? Since when did America get so callous? Indeed, today we are confronted by the haunting specter of regional and ethnic conflict — a thou­ sand flashpoints of angry, seething nightmares that no one in their right minds wants to deal with. But deal with this new phenomenon we must, or risk being caught woefully unprepared once again. The United States, while it admittedly cannot command center stage in each of the problem areas, cannot afford to abrogate its responsibilities in the flippant, careless ways it has been of late. Whenever American leaders have faced a new world order, they have stepped to the front of the line and dealt their hands with aplomb. Woodrow Wilson did so with his proposa] for a League of Nations after World War I and Harry Truman did it with the Marshall Doctrine after World War II. We must do the same today. We must face down our fears rather than allow them to dominate us. Peacekeeping js not a lost art, it is an emerging one and we must define how it is to be operated into the twenty-first century. This is not to say that the United States is going to have to be the world’s policeman; it is to say that America is going to have to contribute a few of the beat cops. The sooner we come to grips with the new world disorder and our role in making it safer and healthier, the sooner we can Step into die future. Now, instead of welcoming policies like greater participation in world affairs and greater responsibility in staging world security, we remain rooted in the past, paralyzed by our fear and uncertainty. The answer lies in a stronger, not weaker, United Nations, and in making our presence known as a major weave in the world fabric. In the end, our strength as a nation is not measured by the number of nuclear weapons we have sitting idly by in silos or by the number of troops we can muster against foes domestic and foreign or by the great warships we send out to cruise the oceans of the world. It is measured by the level of moral leadership we assert at home and abroad, by our desire to become involved where we can, and by our willingness to pay the price in blood if we must. fm I ^8^ 1 For fifty years, the United States has helped maintain world order and stability. Not necessarily well. Over 50 wars, civil F rusetta O p in ion ed ito r wars, guerrilla actions and border skir­ mishes currently rage across the globe. American governments have stood by in disinterest or tacit approval when the Khmer Rouge scythed the killing fields, China stormed through Tibet and South Africa kommando savaged dissidents to maintain that state’s own peculiar form of feudalism. And not necessarily for the best of rea­ sons. The United States has propped up regimes just as bloody and cruel as those m of its avowed enemies at the time, as long as they pledged to further “America’s interests,” For good or for bad, the consensus for 50 years has been that the United States must intervene economically, politically and militarily abroad in certain circumstances .to maintain its interests. To be fair, this perception of an anarchic world in which the United States has to further its own interests is one which has come under increasing attack in recent years. Political scientists like to debate whether or not the world is a brutal, anarchic battlefield of nations in which America looks out for itself, or a potentially happy place where political leaders could dance in linked arms singing “Kumbayah,” tossing posies in the air and cooperating instead of conflicting. Whatever the validity of either argument, it is instructive to note that most government officials in any state assume the former and haven’t begun dismantling standing arm ies.. In short, if the United States doesn’t look after the United States first and foremost, who will? What’s particularly interesting about the recent spate of iso­ lationism, then, is that although isolationists like to proudly claim to be “looking out for America” they simultaneously proclaim “that stuff abroad doesn’t concern the United States,” and that “America first” means hiding behind the oceans and occasionally bullying our neighbors. f „ To be blunt, this is idiocy. World affairs are integrally important to America. True, not every Serbian offensive directly undermines American security, nor each Kuwaiti oil well annexed by Iraq an earth shattering blow to the United States’ industrial base. But what isolationists seem to fail to realize is that the world, particularly the world economy, is interconnected to a degree largely undreamed of a generation ago. Crises abroad affect the foreign trade, resources and politics America is interdependent on. Many who proudly claim isolationist leanings also seem to fail to realize the potential of world events to “snowball.” What seem to be inconsequential events at one point —* a German reoc­ “I f the United States cupation of the Saarland, a coup by an obscure communist group in 1918 Leningrad or a dispute Over oil field rights — can climax is to reap the benefits in World War II, the Cold War or the Gulf War. Particularly iron­ ic is the fact that in each case, early intervention could have fore­ o f its size, pow er and stalled eventual conflict. wealth, it also has to And we can anticipate a future filled with conflict. One of the pay penalties to m ain-- most significant features of the post-war period was the global bipolarity between the United States and the Soviet Union. Each tain them .” feared the consequences of a war which neither side could win, -— ■■ ■■■. and each attempted to forestall conflicts which might lead to gen­ eral war. But the Soviet Union is history, and many of the restraints which were once exerted on states are relaxed. If the United States cowers in isolationism, it is uncertain which — if any — other nations will be able to maintain the shackles on conflict. Like it or not, the United States is one of the most powerful countries in the world. And if the United States is to reap the benefits of its size, power and wealth, it also has to pay the penalties to maintain them. Sometimes the price of that nifty Security Council veto is the lives of American ser­ vicemen. This is sad and tragic, but true. To preempt the obvious arguments, this is not to say that the United States must intervene in every country’s business, or immediately traipse across the world with aid in hand every time a drought hits an underdeveloped nation. It is, rather, to say that each crisis and conflict must be care­ fully evaluated to see how it may impact the United States, and appropriate actions taken. The complaint that intervention in foreign affairs “weakens America” is oft uttered, but little proved. Logically, if President Clinton puts the welfare of citizens of states like Haiti or Somali ahead — or even at a par — with that of Americans, he would probably never achieve re-election; he’d be lucky to avoid impeachment. Ergo, he is unlikely todo so. Moral or immoral, for good or for bad, if one approves or disapproves, this is the way the world works, and it seems unlikely to change any time soon. Democrat or Republican, the mechanics of foreign policy have remained eerily similar through history; Eisenhower endorsed illicit overthrows of Iranian and Guatemalan governments, Roosevelt bypassed Congress to okay the naval convoy “shooting war” with Nazi Germany in the North Atlantic in 1941. “Interventionism” is a policy which transcends simple political boundaries. Ironically, the final conclusion may be that the best way to ensure security and prosperity for the United States is to guarantee them world-wide; brutal as it may sound, it is better that 50 servicemen die in Somalia now than 50,000 later if die chaos continues òr spreads. Ultimately, the argument that the United States must be alert and aware to world events to pro­ mote its own interests — as well as, in concert, humanitarian and gjobal issues — may be unpalat­ able to some and cursed vigorously by others. But, until swords are beaten into plowshares it seems to be the only way to guarantee our security. It is not simply the military muscle, industrial strength or political savvy that determines that sta­ tus and position of the United States; it is the foresight to be able to use those resources in intelligent ways to promote domestic and foreign security. And, in a world as small as ours is today, this means we cannot simply pay homage to the idol Of isolationism. It requires military and political leadership asserted at home and abroad, by intervention when and where necessary, and by a willingness to sacrifice blood to ensure security if need be. Counter- P O IN T S J am es . Religion C ontinued S ta te P ress Thursday, October 28,1993 P ag e_ 6 from page St a t e P ress 1. SPORTS — We cover b ig s p o r t s , sm all sports, rich s p o r t s and po o r s p o r t s . Cracks Your Tubet A S U 's O w n V id e o S h o w Thursday Nights @ 11:30pm Dimension Cable Channel 22 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 4> ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Brian FHzgorald/Slato Press Heather Lambert, A 22-year-old ASU Graduate Student, sings praise In Old Church Slavonic, a virtually dead language, at St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Church, 4436 E. McKinley St., Phoenix. Lambert, Who is one of the youngest members of the choir, converted to the Eastern Orthodox Religion from Lutheran almost a year ago. “I liked the music — and I fit in a little better than where I was before,” she said. » ^ searching. But when they do ask me which reli­ gion is best, I oftent don’t tell them what to do. I think they should decide for themselves.” Mirza agreed. “I guess for a lot of people this is a period of searching, especially after the freshman and sophomore years,” he said. And if a student is looking for the religion that fits them like a glove, ASU is probably a good place to stmt. ASU’s campus is a conglom­ eration of cultural diversity. Students from all over the United States and the world come to the University for an education. But some are seek­ ing much more. “I think all students are dealing within the spiritual realm ,” Kennedy said. “There is a curiosity. What I encourage students to do is know who they are and who they, believe in. I encourage people to test all things. “There is no harm examining any philoso­ phy. My Hope is people can become grounded in their own faith to where they can explore others’ things, and still not see that as a reason to give up the faith, but rather to enhance it.” Looking for Answers Many students, it seems, are just looking for a few answers to life’s basic questions. And reli­ gion is one of the biggest questions of all. Many think the University environment is the perfect place to offer students a forum to ask such questions. “The questions are wonderful,” said Paul Petersen, ASU’s Lutheran campus minister. “I believe that for faith development, it’s critical to ask questions.” Sometimes, though, the answers are difficult or impossible to find, he added. “For Christians, there come many times in your life where you are going to ask the big­ gies," Petersen continued. “‘Why did Jesus die? Is there a heaven? Do we believe there is life after this life?’ Those are the biggies. “If someone asks me, ‘Is there a heaven?’ I ask them, ‘What do you think?’ I keep probing with them and invite them to keep doing that questioning.” While ASU has a heavy Christian influence, Mirza said the non-Christian organizations on campus don’t view religion as a point of con­ frontation. “We don’t look at it as competitive,” he said. “We want to teach students about our culture. about Islam in general. We’re not out there to compete, we’re out there to convey information. If somebody likes i t ... there’s all kinds of activi­ ties they cart participate in.” An easy way out Today, students choose many ways in which to escape. Drugs, alcohol and depression are. common. But there are also other forms of cop­ ing, and many believe religion could be an answer. Kennedy pointed to statistics showing suicide rates, occult dabbling, crime rate, murder — all rising- And granted, people need an avenue to find some peace. “With all the things out there people can turn to, many of them destructive, I would just hope th at people w ould at least try .G od firs t,” Kennedy said. Petersen agreed. He said he has had people come to him seeking solace from a substance problem, but he can’t help them. He said he will not abandon them and, in fact, he will help them get assistance and even walk with them in that search. Most of all, however, Petersen hopes students don’t take the easy way out. “It’s a lot harder to look for answers, and a heck of a lot easier to walk over to die 7-Eleven and buy a six-pack and get blitzed," he said. Religion as a Culture Many grow up believing and worshipping the same religion as their parents did. Most say that is OK, but there is common agreement that ques­ tioning and critical thinking are healthy. Feldhaus challenges students to think both ethically and truthfully about the religions she teaches. Most agree that finding out what you want and need is not easy. “ASU is kind of amazing,” Petersen said. “ASU has an aging population, but the search goes on. Especially for the younger students.” ■What religion at ASU offers, Petersen thinks, is much like what some o f the other student organizations like fraternities and sororities, stu­ dent clubs and others offer — opportunities for learning, sharing and helping others. “Our philosophy is simple,” Kennedy said. “We offer a lot of things, but knowing that the student is busy and knowing the student has pri­ orities is a big part of our understanding- We do offer students a positive message arid today, that is what many students are looking for,” ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ m ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Arizona State University's Leadership Retreat Jan u ary 13 -1 6 ,1 9 9 4 P rescott, A rizon a L eadership 2000, a n In tergrou p R ela tio n s P rogram fo r A rizon a S ta te U n iversity S tu d en ts Applications Available at: O ffice o f S tu d en t U fe , B228 S tu d en t S ervices B u ild in g or at the R each D esk, 3rd Floor, M em orial U nion . Submit Applications to: Jesús Treviño, Assistant Dean of Student Life, B228 Student Services Arizona State University, Tempe 85287Building, Office of 0512(602) 965-65 A p p liça tio n D eadline: Friday, N ovem ber 1 2 ,1 9 9 3 , 5:00 p .m . T H E Y S A Y A P IC T U R E IS W O R T H A T H O U S A N D W O RDS. WE SAY IT S W O R TH NEXT SEMESTERS T U IT IO N . T H E S U N D E V IL S P A R K Y E A R B O O K 1$ N O W A C C E P T IN G E N T R IE S FO R T H E 1995-94 P H O T O G R A P H Y C O M P E T IT IO N . ague Presents Color or black and w hite photos should reflect the theme "On the O utside Looking In" and must be subm itted by November 19 at 5 p.m. A N * Regarding the Military« In a d d itio n to one semester's tu itio n , o th e r prizes include g ift certificates to Lewis Camera. A ll w in n in g entries w ill also be feature d in th e G allery section. 8 :0 0 in t h e P r o g r a m E n try fo rm s .are a v a ila b le in th e b a se m e n t o f M a tth e w s p m C enter a t th e Spark office (room 50) and S tudent Publications M U m L o u n g e in fo rm a tio n (room 15). For m ore in fo rm a tio n contact Tim G ibbons, G allery Editor, a t 965-6881. in g Former Staff Sargent T H O M A S P A N IC C IA V SPONSORED BY DOM INO'S PIZZA & LEWIS CAMERA JPag;e 7 Thursday, October 28,1993 State P ress 5TÂTË P ress P o l ic e R e po r t The only free thing at ASU. ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Wednesday: • A male student was arrested for reckless driving and criminal damage in Parking Area 9 Tuesday afternoon. The driver hit a parked vehi­ cle, pushing it into another parked vehicle, then hopped a curb and knocked against a palm tree and a parking meter. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested Tuesday afternoon for stealing loose change from two ears in the University Towers parking structure. • Unknown persons criminally damaged the handicapped button box at the west entrance to the Anthropology Building at some time prior to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. Damage is estimated at $25. • An underage male student was arrested for possessio n o f alcohol at M anzanita H all Tuesday afternoon. • Police were called Tuesday morning to stand by while a min not affiliated With ASU reclaimed his property from a resident of Cholla Apartments. Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Wednesday: • A 21-year-old ASU woman was the victim of a date rape in her apartment two weeks ago. After she and a girlfriend brought home a man they met in a bar, the victim passed out in bed. The suspect went into her bedroom for a half hour, during Which time he had sexual inter­ course with her. The suspect was leaving and she tried to stop him, but he refused to talk to her. All he said was that she couldn’t prove any. thing because she had passed out. • A 34-year-old Tempe man was arrested for assaulting his live-in girlfriend at their apart­ ment complex Monday night. The man wanted to take the woman’s car from the parking lot, but she kept trying to take the keys from him. He got her in a choke hold and threatened to break her neck, then threw her in some nearby bushes. She was treated at Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital for several cuts and abrasions. • A man drove down Broadway Road shout­ ing obscenities at his ex-girlfriend Saturday night. He has not yet been contacted by police for the disorderly conduct, but the woman wants him prosecuted. • A 26-year-old Tempe woman was assaulted r L Ô B E '- 'Ô Î L F r L f Ë R ' Ænomrmiï TIKE K. 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HONT 2 4 2 ■w wtow 20: ) ODO RUNDGREN Broadway West of Price • Tempe, AZ • 968-9231 Page 8 Thursday, October 28,1993 S ta te P ress Survey: Voters uncertain about NAFTA By S haw n B oyd State P ress A survey conducted by KAET-TV and ASU’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism indicates that a large number of Arizona voters are still undecided about the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The poll, released W ednesday, found that 42 percent of Arizona voters are undecided on the issue of NAFTA, which would create a free trade zone among the United States, Mexico and Canada if ratified. ‘There is a great deal of confusion over the treaty,” poll con­ ductor Bruce Merrill o f the Cronkite School’s Media Research Program said in a press release. “This Confusion has left many people undecided regarding NAFTA, and those who have made a decision are split over the issue.” . ■ ■ ' Thirty-two percent of the 592 registered voters — polled by telephone statewide from Oct. 20-24 — indicated that they sup­ port NAFTA, while 26 percent said they are against the agreement. Eighteen percent of high school graduates polled favored NAFTA, while 47 percent of college graduates said they were against it. The poll found that 34 percent o f high school graduates oppose NAFTA, while 18 percent of college graduates are against Wt Aeeapt M iftarC trd & V ili •« Deliveryl Open Daily far Liaakt Open 11am-2am Daily! How 592 registered voters in Arizona feel about NAFTA: FAST, FREE DELIVERY DAILY! Source: KAET TV/ASU Walter Cronkite School o f Journalism 829-0064 the agreement. - The poll, which had a 4-percent margin of error, also found that 52 percent of registered Voters favor tougher auto emission tests. Forty-three percent said they are opposed to such a change. More Arizona voters support banning the use of fireplaces on high pollution days, the poll found. Sixty-eight percent favor tougher standards, while 27 percent oppose stiffer restrictions. CARDINAL'S PIZZA LATENÌ6HTSPECIAL 16" l-ltan Pizza aftar 10 pm State P ress O pinions- Your passport to a magic kingdom, including Adventure Land, Tomorrow Land and Fantasy Land. 20” " w/one topping + 4 free sodas PARTY PIZZA 16" ONE-ITEM PIZZA & 2 GARDEN SALADS $ |Ì 9 9 SÇ 99 I CROSSWORD B 1 s a S3 ra ra n ra n rasa a r a ra n □ a a a n n n i Vtfg □ H A N m T Ca □ n E NN□ □ L Y ra n N E T D R 1V E 1 0 A S ■ WA R P S B E N■ R AM P AN T L 1I A N T wE R P E Oj P E 0 E L 1 S E V E N T1 0 A M E N B A R S 0 A R KH m ra n □ A M A by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 1 Hornot’s kin 5 Personnel 10 Madonna's “La — Bonita* 11 Suit maker 12 Astronaut Armstrong 13 Infamous cow owner 14 Player 16 Truck driver 20 Hansel's 3 4 5 6 7 Slender Paint board Witch town Layers In the s ty le d 8 Supporting 9 Make schnitzel , a ! 11 Wreck beyond repair Yesterday's Answer 33 Ocean 25 Tool 15 Water­ motion repository melon 34 Satanic 26 Confec­ part 35 Film unit tioner 17 Grow 36 Garden Milton weary 28 Doesn’t area 23 Swearing- 18 Utopia 37 Be in budge 19 Arguments in oath the red 30 th o u 20 Sailor's 24 Talked 38 Haber31 Tin Pan quaff incoher­ dashery Alley 21 — avis ently buy output 22 Level 25 Shake­ speare's r ~ T~~r - r y r~ rKatharina r r 27 Mine yield 1Ô h . 28 Glosses 1 5 17“ 29 Capofre or 1 Dillinger 1T“ 32 Open car Wm18 19 iè of yore 36 Florist's 21 zP È forte • 39 Worker’s W home a ■ " TT 40 “Dallas’ ■ family 3V 29 41 Actress 1 34i l « McClurg 42 Monopoly 55^ cards ■ “ 43 Shout 4Ô DOWN i 1 Building i addition 2 Drifting 1 0 -2 8 Collecting information on trends and current everts abroad isrft just a job for a secret agent If youte planning to attend college, or are presently a full-time or graduate student, you could be eligible for a CIA internship and tuition assistance. Ybu don't have to be an aspiring missile warhead specialist or Kremlinologist We need knowledgeable, dedicated men a id women from a variety o f backgrounds and fields specialists, economists, foreign area experts and intelligence analysts are just a few o f the professionals you'll get hands-on experience working with...and a head start on your career Join one o f the country^ largest information networks—because an experience like tfris doesn't only happen in the movies. Leadhg engineers, computer Bar Inten t io n d w u trtu d M itp ra g u » tni a n ts opportunMet write te CIA Employment Cw tet BO: Be* 12727, D ip t A S , Arfngtnn, VA 22209-8777 A l appicants must be U S. dttoans ana su cce ssM y complete a medfcal and security backpouid investigation, inducing a polygraph jntervtaw: An Equal Opportunity Em ploy* C1993 Canbal IntaHs inra Agency DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for th e two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 10-28 CRYPTOQUOTE C D IC U Z K A U P O C OK C K YCIMK . . . O P Z N O M V U O G KC YG Q YR1WRK KR VU M G ZOJ, D A KAO K GPAOTTJ. — Y I O P D U M P RJ U M A O I K Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te: ... WE DO NOT AL­ WAYS L1KEWHATISGOODFORUS IN THIS WORLD. — ELEANOR ROOSEVELT 0 1883 by K ing Features Syndicate, Inc. Sta te P ress Thursday, October 28,1993 JPage9 ASU experts: Drugs fuel violence, minor handgun ban not effective C om m unity feeling encouraged, shift o f gang activity will net good results W h e re c a n y o u p ic k u p a S ta te P re s s ? If you didn’t get a “recycled” State Press in one of your classes, you can pick your copy up at: ON CAM PUS Adm inislralion Building Alum ni C enter ASU Bookstore ASU Visitor Center Business Building, east side Cam pus Police ChoHaHall Com m unity C enter Engineering Research Forest Mall kiosk (by Payne) G affim age Auditorium H ayden U biary Law Library M ail Services M anzanita H al M anzanita kiosk M ariposa Hall . Memorial Union Info D esk M urdock H a l Nobel Library N o rth C a d yM a l * N orth C ady M a i kiosk N orth FDrest Mall O oo H oH al O range M a i (by M U) O range M a i kiosk (by fountain) Orange Mai kiosk (by MU) Palo Verde: east, w e k , an d main Palo Verde kiosk (between PV east & P V w est) Physical Plant PS 3 ,4 S onoraH all S outh C ady M a i kiosk (by Business building) South C ady M a i at Lemon South Forest M a i (by Farmer) Sun D evil Stadum Student Health S tudentP ubficalons Student Recreation C enter Student Services B ulking T yler MaH, C ady M all kiosk Tyler M a i, east Tyler M a i, Forest M a i Tyier M a i, Palm W alk kiosk Universky Activity C enter U niversity Club U niversity Relations * O FF CAM PUS Associated Bioscience B alboaC afe Bandersnatch Brew Pub Beauvais Gym B im pie Sandwiches & Subs Cam bridge Square Apartm ents Cam pus Com er C arfs Jr. Restaurant Changing Hands Bookstore C hris'C hevron Chuckbox C innam on Tree Plaza C offee Plantation C oleg e Street D ei Cornerstone M a i Express Yogurt G room ing Hum ans Salon G u m b /s Pizza dam’s Restaurant R oby's C om er Pocket Long W ong's Mam a’s Pizza M cDonald's on R ural M esa Com m unity C olege, Adm inistration Building M esa Com m unity C olege, K irk C enter M i Avenue Shops M n d e r B inders O zzie's W arehouse D e l P eririns Restaurant & Bakery R o lle r's Bookstore Schlotsky’s S andwich Shop South M ountain Com m unity C ollege S ian's M etro D e i Sub Stop Sunny’s Pizza The Com m ons Tow ers Apartm ents Tow erR eootds W endy’s W hetehouse 5th Avenue & M l, northw est com er 6th Street Newstand B y S haw n B oyd State P ress Ending the country’s drug problem and creating better com­ munity programs for gang members would slow gang violence more effectively than banning youths from carrying handguns, two ASU experts on gangs and com m unity issues said : Wednesday, “It’s not enough just taking a gun away from a gang member,” said Professor Santos C. Vega, director of the Hispanic Research Center’s Community Documentation Program. Preventing youths under 18 years of age from having hand­ guns is one o f 13 proposals Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods announced Monday . T h e proposals w ere drafted to strengthen Arizona laws and crack down on what Woods said is a growing gang problem in Arizona. Vega said gangs would simply resort to weapons they used in the past, such as knives and bats, to protect their turf. Professor Dennis Palumbo,.an ASU justice studies professor who has researched gangs for four years, said gangs are getting a bad rap because of the drug problem. “ The problem isn’t gangs,” he said. “Gangs have become a scapegoat. . “Drugs are crim inalized such that the amount o f money involved in drugs is huge.” s Palumbo said the lure of money from drugs is driving gang violence. Drugs should be reclassified as a health problem rather than a criminal problem, he said. Woods’ plan also proposes tougher sentences for gang mem­ bers arrested for criminal activities, and includes a task force to help prosecute gang members. “Gang violence is a real problem ,” said Steve Tseffos, spokesman for the attorney general. “It traps people in their homes and leaves kids bleeding in the streets. “The problem is escalating. The violence Is increasing. Anything that takes guns out of the hands of juveniles is a posi­ tive step.” Before becoming law, the proposals have to pass through the Arizona Legislature. Tseffos said the Attorney G eneral’s Office has received numerous calls in support of the proposal, and newspapers across the state have reacted positively to the announcement. "I think the support is there and will build over time. We have had overwhelming support.” Palumbo said a problem with Woods’ proposal is attempting to decide if a person is a gang member for the purpose of deter­ mining punishment. ‘T o be able to prove that someone is a member of a gang is ridiculous,” he said. Gang members don’t walk around with hand-held signs, proclaiming their affiliations, the professor said. He added that the Constitution does give people the freedom to associate with groups, and increasing sentences because of a gang affiliation could be unconstitutional. Vega said the real solution to the gang problem plaguing the country’s streets is creating a healthy atmosphere in gangs and on the streets. “Until we make a concerted effort to make our streets positive, gangs are looked at as being negative.” Vega said organizations such as Kiwanis and other groups that assist the community are positive ‘gangs,’ and that street gangs can have a similar influence. “If we then look at the situation realistically and honestly and try to be with them and not against them, then we can- turn the gang into a positive,” he said. “Give them pride in having a gang that’s really contributing to society.” Vega said greater cooperation among community-based orga­ nizations, schools and churches with gangs can lead to changes in gangs, making them more socially responsible. GRE? I t 's n o t t o o l a t e ! Youcanstill enrol1in Tempe'sbestGRE|prep course. 967-1480 H ie b e s t course lo r the best THE PRINCETON REVIEW We Score More! scores! The Princeton Review is affiliated with neither Princeton University nor the College Board LOOK GREAT THIS FALL WITH OUR 1st TIME CLIENT INTRODUCTORY OFFER. •SHAMPOO CONDITION* •CUT STYLE* 50Í .....150 MEN 'WOMEN 1st TIME CLIENTS • NO COUPON NECESSARY FOREST 4 UNIVERSITY (In The Arches Plaza) H o ir S tu d io 966-5462 m -t h m FRI 9-6 *TW Invitation to apply for STATE PRESS EDITORSHIP The ASU Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the State Press editorship fo r the Spring Sem ester 1994. 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 2.30 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 notth basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Friday, November 12,1993. Bruce D. Itule Director, StudentPublications M atthews Center, Room 133 Phone 965-7572 Com ics Page 10 Thursday, October 28,1993 Calvin and Hobbes W SUSIE' X wooio'! YOU 'X e —LJ" JUSTEXEMPTED MAXUMETT, ¡m t o w n T ccm ciß T K \ TOTHO \ M Ü STANSf . | I' ¿dHOBLSB i S jeto j )W a tT œ JUWCVTf? , ' MOSTOFTHOmG /esJuuAM eem OUST/NHOFFMAN, e&TTTY.IONCB BXBMPTBPJOHN ■ m ncTA som OH,MY GOP...PIP T O um m TKJUBIS* I NAH,I PmrfMUCH MANAGBPTO am R M f TRACKS. fflE Z “Well, I’ve got good gnus and I’ve got bad gnus.’ PEOPLE« LOS ANGELES (AP) - A former cook for Elizabeth Taylor isn ’t taking the rap for making her fat. L a d o ris Ja c k so n file d a lib e l la w su it Tuesday against the N ational Enquirer over a ; story that said she was fired by Miss Taylor’s h u sb a n d , L arry F o rte n sk y , b e c a u s e she couldn’t cook low-calorie food, “There is information in publications that clearly documents the fact that Liz Taylor was gaining w eight long before my client was hired,” said Ms. Jackson’s lawyer, Kenneth Kazan. The lawsuit seeks .more than $1 million in dam ages and lost wages. Ms. Jackson was Miss Taylor’s cook for less than two months, ending in October 1992. She quit, Kazan said. The Nov. 10, 1992, story said Ms. Jackson “whipped up huge plates o f fried chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy, calorie-rich lob­ ste r d ish e s and p o rk ro a sts fo llo w e d by mouth-watering desserts.” Iain C alder, the president and editor in c h ie f o f th e E n q u ire r, h ad no co m m en t Wednesday. ■ N IC O SIA , C yprus (A P) — O ne o f the richest men in the world left “a small token of a p p re c ia tio n ” f o r th e s ta f f o f a h o te l: $170,000 in cash. T hat’s chum p change for Sultan H assan Bolkiah of Brunei, whose fortune is estimated at more than $33 billion. He spent five days at the F our Seasons d u rin g a m eeting o f the C o m m onw ealth. Before leaving Monday, he sent an emissary to the hotel’s general manager with the bag-omoney and a note that said: “A big thank you. ... This is a small token of appreciation.” All 320 members o f the hotel staff will get a sh a re , a h o te l sp o k e sw o m a n sa id Wednesday. LOS ANGELES (AP) — B arbara Bain, w ho a p p e a re d in th e 196 0 s “ M issio n : Impossible” television series, is helping actors read their lines — to youngsters. T h ree y ears ago, she sta rted PALS — Perform ing A rtists for Literacy in Schools. “Libraries are closing and TV is so accessible — that’s my concern,” Miss Bain said recent-. iyThe performers read to youngsters at 100 schools every week. M ore than 850 actors have participated. M iss B a in , w ho p o rtra y e d C in n am o n Carter on the TV show, said the idea came to her w hile she was playing a game with her daughter, actress Juliet Landau. The board game called for players to rate randomly selected phrases by order o f prefer­ ence. When Miss Bain drew “reading to chil­ dren” and gave it a low ranking, her daughter was shocked. “My daughter said she thought I liked to read to children,” Miss Bain said. “I told her I used to, but I didn’t do that anymore. But then I got to thinking: ‘Why don’t I?’ ” BOSTON (AP) — John F, Kennedy’s old­ est grandchild is 5, about the same age of his daughter, Caroline, when he was assassinated. A nd th a t, said C a ro lin e Schlossberg, is why the K ennedy Library needed a little updating. “W e were finding more and more visitors weren’t alive during that time or participants in it,” she said Tuesday. “The museum had to do a better job o f putting president Kennedy in the context of his time,” A new $6.9 million exhibit will be dedicat­ ed Friday with President Clinton and other dignitaries scheduled to attend. It will open to the public Saturday. ARCHER DANIELS MIDLAND CO. A mw WILL BE RECRUITING AGRIBUSINESS MAJORS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1 8 , 1 9 9 3 AND FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 9 , 1 9 9 3 self-respecti FOR THE POSITION OF: GRAIN MERCHANDISER CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT CENTER FOR DETAILS o n from them selves? .ä SSSbäS Imagine an environment where a dozen people are talking at once, phones are ringing constantly, and you're carrying on three simultaneous conversations. If you're the sort of person who can thrive in such an environment, let us welcome you to the world of grain trading, where you'll spend much of your day on die telephone, talking with elevator managers, buying and selling cash grain, and arranging for the transportation of the grain. During this 6*10 month training program, you'll spend dme at our Decatur headquarters, a processing plant, our traffic and transportation department, a country elevator^ a river terminal, our accounting department, and on die floor of the Chicago Board of Trade. Afterwards, you'll take a trading position In either our grain division or our processing division. Advancement opportunities are exceflent: many ADM managers, as well as the president of die grain division started as merchandisers. selfresteetn. r»4*!.!TS-H^b00k A m ene8 8 F o u n d a tio n 2U8 3 3 -0 6 1 0 _I K en n ed y Sports STATE P r e s s Si»0B,*?, r ie fs kJ Thursday, October 28,1993 ______ _ P g g g _ ll_ Kaufman™ Bates Women’s golf team to be honored D uring halftim e of the ASU/Washington football game Saturday, ASU women's golf coach Linda Vollstedt and her team members will receive the 1992-93 GotfweekJT&y\ TNs guy has studied useless facts for so tong he's become one. APARTMENTS Don't delay, call today! 9 6 8 -0 8 8 6 5th & Mill • 966-9199 Broadway & McClintock In the ABCO Plaza APARTMENTS ASU AREA 1 & 2 bedroom apts. $300 up + u til. 8 2 9-1963 or 966-8838. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 & 2 bed­ rooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laun­ dry room. On East 8th Street bet­ ween Rural & McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. BEAUTIFUL, VERY quiet and safe, 2 large bedrooms near ASU, pool, laundry. 966-4797. FURN 2BD 2 H , close to ASU $225/mo. 829-7815 TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 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. H A Y D E fr SQ U A R E 3bd 2ba overlooking pool, refrg, w/d, fp. $120QZmo. MGM 345-1919, WHY PAY motel rates. Fum 2bd 2ba including w/d, avail thru Dec. «$750/mo 831-9573 FIND IT in the Classifieds! TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING 1BD 1BA n e ar M ill & U niv. refrg, w /d, pool & spa. W ater paid. $35tVm6. MGM 343-1919. $270/MO UTILS included split level apt. W alking distance to ASU 12/15 - 5/15. Michele 858r 9595 RENTAL SHARING LAID-BACK RM needed for hse 1mi from ASU. $250 + 1/2 Util fo r huge yard, garden. C all Rachel at 966-8370. N /S, OW N roO m /bath in TH ouse. $300 m o. + 1/3 u til, first/lást mo. rent + $100 deposit. Pools & spa, Braodway & River, M cC iint/Price. C all C hántele, 858-9004. No psychos! Avail: Nov.5. ROOM IN exchange for p/t child c are, re a lly need com 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 or 4912881. UNDRGRD MALE needed: 2bd 2bá condo, w/d^ $3O0/mo + 1 /2 util. Near ASU. Dave 839-2178 7 State Press Thursday, October 28,1993 Page 14 COMPUTERS RENTAL |H A R IN G _ _ WANTED 3 F Grad/Doct student share house n /s,n o pets, util inc. $300/m o, $200 sec d ep . u n f 921-8682 leave message. RO O M S FOR RENT .. FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share large Tempe home. $175 + 1/3 util. Guad/McClintock area w/d, pool. 730-5527 COMPUTER - - ZONE486 System s S X -3 3 .......................... .$1299 D X -40.......................... .$1399 .$1629 D X -2 6 6 ............. 212 M eg H D ......... ...$219 340 M eg H D .............. ...$299 15" SV G A M o n ito r. ...$369 14-4 Fax/M odem ...... ...$149 Sound B laster P ro A SP $219 FEMALE W ANTED: 3bd 2ba w/pool, must be clean/reliable. 68th /T h o m as. Jill 9 9 0 -2 2 9 2 $192/mo + 1/3 utilities. 829-6126 Tempe JEWELRY HOMES FOR SALE _ _ BY OWNER 3bd 2ba ranch 1 mi w est ASU m any e x tra s, co m ­ pletely remodeled. 921-7352 CLOSE TO campus & Los Arcos. Mall, South Scottsdale area, 3bd, l -3/4ba, upgraded kitchen and baths, ceiling fans, mini blinds & upducts throughout, sp rin k ler 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 T in o ff m str bd, lrg covered patio« formal living & dining rms, white wash cabinets, kitchen eating space, family rm w/fireplace, glamour ba w/separate tu b /sh o w er, 2 c ar garage w/opener, stucco, tile roof, Gil­ bert area, priced at $119,900. For more info call 926-4220. TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inchi.: gold, ster, pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S Mill Ave, Tempe Center 968-6074 , TICKETS PEARL JAM both nights for sale. W ill go fast. 994-4914 Leave message PEARL JAM Great price! Tick­ ets for both nights 968-2242 leave message. A U T O M O jy y r ^ 1980 MGB, good cond, new tires, 61,000 brig m iles, $3900 obo 834-5136 75 VW Camper/Bus, runs well, good co n d itio n . M ust sell by 10/29. Any offer!! 858-0189 82 FOARD Furura, 75,700 mi New transmission, water pump. Great for school. $500 obo Call Bart 962-0981 86 MAZDA RX7 GXL loaded, exc condition. 67K Must sell. Call Erik 784-8648 QUESTA V ID A 1 m ile ASU, 2br, 2ba, w/d, pool, racquetball court. Interested? 921-3944. MISCELLANEOUS 10 DESIGNER womens busings suits. Sizes 4 ,6 ,1 0 ,1 2 and 14. New $185-$325 each. Sacrifice $45-$ 125 each. 940-1545, DBL BED and headboard, $280; stereo and speakers, 8300; IBM compatible computer with print»’, $800. Call 569-1152. K EG FR IG w /hkup, great fo r parties, q w/bed, sofa & love seat, organ. Call for prices. 257-1001 86 REN A U LT 1.7 lo m i, gd cond, 59K, 40mpg, silver, good rubber. $995,831-9573 91 MAZDA M iata convertible MX5, less than 3000 mi. $12,900. Excellent condition 838-0521 PLYM OUTH H O RIZON, a/c, new tires, tags. Very d e an in/out $500 obo. Call Jim, 820-7469. MOTORCYCLES 1984 N IN JA 9 0 0 lo o k s/ru n s great, under 10,000 mi, in d 2 helroets+trailcr. $2500 267-8704. 85 ELITE80 new seat, 9K miles, (beat for school, runs excellent, $475/obo 497-9008 90 SUZUKI GS500E Black/Gray 4200 mi. M ust sell $2300 obo Ifclmet inc. Tracy 921-7183 BICYCLES P o e tr y R e a d in g T O N IG H T MOUNTAIN BIKE, 22-inch, 21speed. Shim ano Deore LX, 1year-old, $395 obo. 482-7496- MTN. BIKE $209 Giant Mtn. Bike, 18-speed, SIS, all sizes. M ust make room for *94s. Bicycle Wheelers, 968-8011 TRAVEL FURNITURE SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser: Cheap. 352-7249. COMPUTERS 386SX 40MHZ w/4 meg RAM, 100 meg hdd, 1.2 fdd, 2400 modo n , 101 kb, VGA mono in unni to w » case. $875. 945-7292. IBM ANNOUNCES new com ­ puters and printers for students, faculty, and staff at special dis­ counts. Visit the IBM display at the Student Book Center, 704 Col­ lege. AUTOMOBILES 1RNDTRIP ticket 4 female Phx. to Spokane, WA Nov. 11-14 $200 obo Call 413-0018 TRAVEL MAYA WIRJADI Still interested in the 2 for 1 airfare on SW Air on Veterans weekend. Pis cal) I lost your # Debi 829-8311 HELP WANTEDGENERAL A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs full/part-tim e front/back office help. Must type, will train. Apply in person. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. #108 _________ A ER O B IC IN ST R U C T O R S Would you like to learn how to beconte certified? Seminars up­ coming, call for details 225-8053. A G G RESSIV E, SELF- M oti­ vated salesperson needed to mar­ ket Defense Pepper-spray. No ex­ perien ce n ecessary . C all 548-1222. Hrs: noon - midnight. ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chan­ dler needs p/t cleanup & vet asst Call 963-2340 APPT. SETTERS P/t, f/t, a.m7p.m., weekly pay & bonus. 858-0830, ask 4 Jay. ARE YOU articulate, enthusiastic, and outgoing? Then the ASUTelefund has a job for you! Enhance your communication drills, build your resume & work in a great student environment for $5/hr & bonus! Call now, 965-6754! DEPENDABLE FEMALE per­ sonal care attendant. Assist disa­ bled professional woman in personal care & house cleaning. Location 7th St/ Washington. Exp preferred, ref req. hours 6:30 am -9:30 am. EXPERIENCED GYMNASTICS in stru c to rs w anted, teaching children 3 to 14 yrs. of 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 FRONT DESK person, f/t, must work weekends. Apply in person. Inn Suites Hotel, 3101 N. 32nd St IMMED APPS taken, Victoria's Secret, Biltmore Fashion Park, 957-4516. p/t holiday hrs. M OD ELS/A C TO R S, M /F, all types, for int'l music videos & nafl commercials. Pays $1600+. No exp nec. 602-266^6537. N EED 80 pe o p le now , tra in w/our co. to earn $5K/mo. in. *94. P/t avail. 966-8799. PINKES IS accepting applications for all positions - 93 E. Southern . Tempe. No phone calls please. SEEKING APPLICANTS for p/t w arehouse position. Flex hrs. Call Donna, 2144-0885, THERAPEUTIC WORK, excel­ lent pay, flex, hours, will train. Call 844-9000. TRAVEL SHIPS ! Sunchase Ski & Beach Breaks is accepting appli­ cations for Spring Break Campus Reps. Earn top $$$ and free trips. 1-800-SUNCHASE. B ER M U D A A N D C aribbean Summer School Programs for up to 6 ASU credits. Call 965-4630 . for 1994 info pack». STATE PRESS Classifieds help you get where you're going! AUTOMOBILES PARTS V'LESS W M **"* 15-20 hrs/w eek Typing, filing, data antry. M ust type 40wpm . M ust be flexible with hours. M ust be able to work Friday 9-5pm . Apply M onday-Frlday. ■ 2 0 % S avin g s | Corporate JobB ank check us out 1725 W. University Suite 114 w /ad 2 4 9 -5 6 4 0 - ‘^ ¿ ^ 1 3623 W. Lower Buckeye Rd. (Just off HO) COMMISSION SALES Rep want­ ed. Work your own hours, good $ potential. Call American Ban­ ner & Sign Co. 980-5274. 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. COMPUTER ZONE -Aggressive self-motivated sales person need­ ed. Flex hrs. 829-6126. Tempe. NEED EXTRA $ ? FA, p/t sales flex, hrs., unique consumer elec­ tronics co. No exp. nec., will train. 839-8645. HELP WANTEDc m n c A L ^ ^ CITY-W IDE PLUMBING- p/t office help 2 aftms & alternate wknds. Close to ASU. 966-9571. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDF O O D H ^ rc ^ CORK'N CLEAVER Hiring eve. cocktail servers. Will train. Apply in person M-TH 35pm. 5101 N. 44th St. Phx. (44th St & Camelback) RED ROBIN o f Tempe has im­ mediate openings for exp waitstaff w/dayside availability & dishers w/nightside availability. Apply in person 1375 W. Elliott HELP WANTEDGENERAL THE BEST TELEMARKETING JO B IN THE VALLEY IS O N LY 15 MINUTES FROM A SU • $ 8 M t GUARANTEED W A6E T O START •PART-TIME A FULL TIME SHIFTS •VERY FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES (90-35 Hours W eekly) HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE DOMINO'S PIZZA NANNVS Pf t days eves or wee­ kend h rs , m ust have re lia b le transportation call 345-2433. 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 m ileage & tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can also be earned. We are very flexi­ b le & c an w ork a ro u n d your school schedule. Apply in person after 11am at 903 S. Rural, Tem­ pe, or call 968-5555. EOE, JOB 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. MERCURY'S ULTIMATE Deli/ C osm ic Pizza now hiring deli clerks, flyer distributors, experi­ enced pizza m akers, d e livery drivers & managers. All shifts. Apply: 1523 E. Apache Blvd. M-F; 2-5. LOST/FOUND ads are flee! RESTAURANTS/ BARS ANY COIN Any Drink Night at L oco's. 8- 10pm T hurs 10-28 only. 1120 E. Apache (cmr Ap­ ache and Terrace). 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 G et paid while you sleep/study after kids go to bed. Fri. 4pm lam. $3/hr. 649-0451 £ W E'RE LOOKING for the ul­ tim ate sports nut! If you’re on top o f your game, a great pool player, and can hold your own in any sp o rts re la te d argum ent, we've got the ideal sports job for you. You m ust be image con­ scious, unbelievably outgoing and possess the enthusiasm to bring a crowd to it's fe e t Reply with re­ sume & cover letter to Tom @ 2228 E. Campbell #106; Phoenix, 85016 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDC H IL D _ C A R E _ _ CHILD CARE needed for week o f Nov, 1-6, flex hrs., need own trans, Scottsdale. 941-2896. Top p e o p le eam $15-$20/hr. W e have a be a u tifu l, stateo f-th e -a rt telem arketins fa c ility at C am elback and 44th Street and in vite exp. saleswom en and m en to c a ll fo r a personal inte rview . Please ask fo r Joyce at: 952-0100 SCO TTSD ALE FAM ILY TREASURES Yes, you can survive with only a part-time job! Part-time • $8 per hour • Across from ASU H ere’s a terrific job that fits into your schedule and allows you to make enough money to survive! W e’re a 36 year old telephone marketing company and we talk to people about the best trial book pre­ views, magazine renewals; sponsor marketing, non-profit fund-raising an d other outstanding programs, • Flexible schedules - short (4.5 hour) shift - Early AM, Mid-AM, Early Afternoon, Mid-Afternoon, Early Evening, & Weekends • Average $8-$ 10/hour • $ 10-$20/hour for our top producers. • Paid, complete training; Nice offices, fully autom ated , • Reps «all prequalified leads nationwide from a computer-tlialed data base. DIALAMERICA MARKETING, IIN C .(lñ fr Do You LOOk At MUSIC VIDEO As A / M a rria g e ( A N D DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. CAR £ TRUCK HELP WANTEDCLERICAL Between 8 dll That Has Significantlychanged The Map Of American Culture? AIRLN T K tS F R £ £ couriers needed, outrageous infltrips, call PTG 310-514-4662. P/T CLERK nt HELP WANTEDSALES ___ Between Priest/52nd S t 966-0709 D O Y O U H A V E A C A Ft ? ) Applications for Fall of ’93 arc now being accepted for the position of College Video Promotion Representative at Columbia Records. This is your chance to get invblved in the promotion of music videos. A background in radio, retail, marketing and/or sales is helpful, but not necessary. Hard work, a love of music videos, a brain, and your own set of Wheels are th e m ost im p o rtan t requirem ents. T he position is p a rt-tim e for fu ll-tim e co lleg e stu d e n ts, p referab ly w ith tw o years remaining. Here is an excellent opportunity to gain first-hand experience in the record industry and in the' world of music video. Don't miss out. Please send a resume with address and phone number to: GARY FISHER Sony Music 550 Madison Avenue 26th floor New York, NY 10022-3211 SPORTS & RECREATION FREE LOST/FOUNP m S P O R T S & W IN G S ! NO HO BO BAND Every Thurs. H S a t e llit e s 15 S c re e n s "W e s h o w a ll N F L , Io w a HANG GLIDE 2-for-l ASU sperial! Gently sloping hill. Safe & exciting. Call 897-7121 LOST: PAGER, in Neeb Hall O ct. 19 pm . $20 rew ard. 929-0859. SPORTS LOCK line. College/Pro Football. Get advice from the ex­ perts. 1-900-772-3944 ext 614. $2/min. 18+. P E R SO N A L S' (iR A TE Fl L DEAB m i l l m un‘ I & N e b ra s k a G a m e s " BOSTON'S! BOSTON'S ■ M< Clintock & C u rry • 921-7343 WOODSHED II NW C o rn e r D o b so n ii U n iv e rs ity 844 -SHED JAZZ! - B U D D IM O C K ¡H 8:30-11 p.m . NO COVER S BANDERSNATCH 5th St & Forest M USIC Y A M AHA 12 s trin g g u ita r w/case. Never been used. Asking $80. 947-2189 by SI II Great Sandwiches & Pizza! Great Prices • Free Delivery 968-4884 WE BUY CDs BREWPUB $l - $6 C A S H CAMPUS CORNER SPORTS & RECREATION WOULD YOUR golf swing be better served for chopping wood? If so, call the K arsten G o lf Course at ASU. 921-8070. TONIGHT RESTAURANTS/ BARS £ $2 12-oz. Im port y MkmCM* . V .4 W S . M l Aw«., Sulle 101 / A A A -K ÍN K O S COPY center . m akes the grade! G et reports, resumes & flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & m uch m ore! O pen 24 hours! Rural & University, 966-2035. A4> STEPHANIE: The Men of TOCA would like to congratulate you on becoming our Dreamgirl. Love, The Men of IIKA. ALPHA GAMS love their football coaches! Thanks!! F,r ■ good timi cheek out the CliitifUd*! DKE - Thanx 4 a great happy hour! And for the cheering!! Luv the ladies of AGD RESTAURANTS/ BARS FRIDAYS U V E JA Z Z 4:30-7 p.m . on the patio SUB STOP P IZ Z A & PASTA A DOZEN roses delivered $20 also balloons. Call A fterHours Flowers 894-3419. 712 S . College Happy Hour Specials Pitchers - Michelob $3.50 » Imports $5.50 For »G o o d Tone can 966-1300 I ADO PTIO N RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS f Page 15 Thursday, October 28,1993 State P ress ARE -PUGSLY dies playing with i t Suffocates in giant prophylac­ tic. \ THIRSTY THURSDAY Monday-Friday Happy Hour 3-6 p.m. All Coffee 50c - Coffee of the Day Changes Cappuccino * Espresso 2 2 2 E . U niversity M-Th ....7am-12pm Fri......7am-10pm Sat..7:30am-10pm Sun .:8:30am-MW 967-7744 $125 Bud Am stel Sam Adam s St. Pauli Heineken Becks Coors Light M olson Bartles & Jaym es A SOFT Touch Electrolysis, per­ m anent h a ir rem oval. C areer training in electrolysis available Rural & Southern 829-7829. EL EC TR O LY SIS BY D egna Perm, results, die blend method. Rural/Southem area 921-1146 G R A D U A T IN G ? Get yourself exposed in a resume book distributed to over 200 com­ panies in M etro Phoenix! Only $15 per resume. Call Hode, 8979683. RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2. 1-800351-0222. .^ SC U LPTU R ED NAILS Full set $15. Nails by Lisa. Scot­ tsdale Salon 947-6606 ED & Jay , th an k you!! We couldn't have done it with you! Love, the ladies of ATA. h o n e s t. W hen y o u can't f in d t h e r ig h t w o r d s t o t e ll som eone som ething they need to hear. WE- SAY IT FOR YOU TACTFULLY, w ith n o in te n t o f malice. Select a message from 6 categorie s. Send via th e te le ­ p ho ne. 52 choices. If desired, se n d a n o n y m o u s ly . 18+, use to u c h -to n e . $ 2 .2 5 /m in , aver­ age call 4/m in. GREEKS ! BE at the Dash tonight and win the Greek Steering raf­ fle. Go Greek Week *941! H A P P Y 24TH ! Arthur, I love yóu w ith all my heart. And the rest of me is all yours, too. This is only the be­ ginning. F o rev er yo u r sw eet­ heart Angie. 1 - 9 0 0 - 8 9 6 -6 9 9 6 . JAZ Productions Portland O regon. KRISTIN HAPPY 21st birthday! Toó bad you are not showing up to meeting. See ya soon. B-day card SPORTS & RECREATION SPORTS & RECREATION SERVICES AKE Louie - Hope you get well soon. We're with you. IMPORTED BEER • JAZZ " SUBS « SALADS • GOURMET COFFEE Where ASU Goes for Pizza HA PPILY M ARRIED profcsr 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. Expenses paid. Legal and confidential. Call Pat anytime 1 (800) 237-0058. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. STATE P ress Classified Ad Order Form □ C h e c k # ,___j Q OB I I I I I I I I I £3.. ■ — — Pnce per Day ■ Name on Cant Adoption Airpianos Announoaments Apartments Automobiles Btcydas Booka Business Opportunes« Computers Free Lost/Found 2 lines. iflB Ë fl Bank Gaitf Nimbar 096 065 010 020 061 064 061 077 064 066 Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1,50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.00 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of Dates you wish your ad tonni:------ ...... . Drivers May 20) Yon may be coping with a tpuchy có-worker today. Partners will go along frith you, as long as you are not bossy. Upsets may occur regarding afternoon and evening engagements. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You are super efficient on the job today and will make excellent progress. However, social life may not meet up with yopr expectations. Others may be out of sorts:. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) This is an excellent day for work on a creative project. You seem to have all the answers now. Dealing with the moods of close ties, however, will require adroit handling. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Y^ju, will be making important domestic decisions today. Your, judgment is excellent now. However, appointment changes on the job throw you Off sched­ ule. • - 1 *• I % \ fr ' VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You have a razor-sharp, intellect today« but must be careful not tò be too critical. Guard against excess spending.. In romance, you may be overly impressionable. LIBRA (S ep t23 to Qst. 22) Shopping is a plus now and your judgment is astute when it comes to financial interests. Buying and selling 9 2 1 -9 2 2 2 are favored. A close tie, though, wants more attention. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) . You are quick-minded today but guard against barbed remarks which could hurt others. Things seem unorga­ nized at work and accomplishments may be less than expectations. ' SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Research and study give you important insights, today^ Unexpected expenses may arise in connection with pleasure interests. Stay afray from financial risk-taking. CAPRICORN (Dec^ 22 to Jan. 19) You will impress others with what you have to say at a group meeting. Guard against an inclination to let home duties slide. You are in an independent mood after dark. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You are quick to act on your ideas today. Remember,’ though, to be tactful In dealings with higher-ups. Others; are unpredictable tonight and hard to pin down. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar-20) You will speak out on matters that you believe in today. Mental interests are favored now. Money could easily slip;away, if you are not careful Stick to budgets. YOU BORN TODAY are a difficult person to convince once your mind is made up. You do well in fields which allow ybu to use your fine intellect. You are like­ ly to be found in both the arts and sciences. Your ener­ gies come in fits and starts. A stretch of hard work may be ■followed by a period of indolence. You are more inclined to the arts and professions than to business.' Birthdate of: Jonas Salk, polio vaccine developer, Edith' Head, designer, and Whitey Ford, baseball player. 81993-King Features Syndicate,Inc, Page 16 Allegations Battle C ontinued S tate P ress Thursday, October 28,1993 from page C ontinued 11. slow start this season, not breaking the 100-yard barrier until two weeks ago against Oregon. “In the gam es against W ashington and Louisville a year ago, I remember how fresh and explosive his legs were," Coach Bruce Snyder said. ‘T in not real sure wo're seeing that yet. "1 think he feels better about how he’s play­ ing and he's practiced so much better in the last two weeks.” Why Bates got off to a slow start is a mys­ tery to Snyder. : "I’m not sure what it all is," Snyder said. “T h ere’s certain ly a psychological issue involved. T here’s a physical issue. I think there's a lot of different things going on inside. “I’ve stopped trying to figure the dang thing out and just try to coach and get better at what w e're doing. I feel like I ’m a shrink some­ times.” Along with the psychological factor of play­ ing with a surgically repaired knee, Snyder believes high expectations from Bates himself and from national and local media may have contributed to the slow start. “I’ve never gone through trying to get a pre­ miere back ready to go after having missed eight or nine months of being with the team,” he said. “On the Outside there was this, ‘He’s going to break loose and h e's going to be like he was before.’ There was national media, local media and probably in Tucson also— it was all over the place. “That probably placed an extra burden on his shoulders that he didn’t need. It’s hard to come back from all of that.” ARCHER DANIELS MIDLAND CO. mmmmm «»A D M ■■ 11. athlete must be paid “only for work actually performed and-at a rate commensurate yvith the going rate in that, locality for similar services.” ’ All sources agree that Smith, the Pac-lO’s leading returning scorer w ith 20 points per game, worked at the station before beginning classes at ASU in the fall semester of the 199091 school year. The source could not say if Bennett, a junior center who will miss the first half of this season due to knee surgery, and Smith worked for the station at the same time. State P ress Crosswords - For the cruciverbaIist in you. 24H R . AVAILABILITY ON ALL SYSTEMS * 486DX2-66 486DX-50 486DX-33 486SX-25 * THURSDAY, NOVEMBER IS , 1 9 9 3 AND FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 9 , <993 *1895 *1795 *1595 *1395 Intel CPU. VESA L.B. 128K Cache. 4 MB RAM 213 MB Hard Drive 1.2 & 1.44 MB Floppy SVGA Accelerator w/1 MB 14" SVGA Color Monitor (.28) MS DOS 6.0 & Mouse MS Windows 3.1 FOR THE POSITION OF: PRODUCTION ASSISTANT CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT CENTER FOR DETAILS page VISIT OUR SHOWROOM & SEE THE DIFFERENCE WILL BE RECRUITING CHEM ENG MAJORS This position entails on-the-job training in the area of soybean crushing or com wet milling, so there's no question It can be a hot; dirty job. It's similar to the position of a foreman or front line supervisor, and It generally leads to a career in plant management. Training lasts 6-12 months, and in that time, you will schedule work for employees, set production schedules, develop cost-saving measures, and much more. You'll frequently be called on to use your technical background to solve problems. This position is a good biend of supervision, management, and engineering. fr o m “(The statements) are complete junk,” said the source, who did not want to be identified. The source also claim ed that Bennett only worked two days at KDGE-FM and that Smith worked a summer and was paid less than $1,000 for his time. “Smith worked in the office doing filing* taking put the garbage — you know, gofer work,” the source said. The NCAA, the governing body for college athletics, has ruled that a university is permitted to arrange employment for a recruit, but that the PRINTERS ' t- 'c ^ ' T ''V * Panasonic 2123 Citizen 230 Canon BJ200 Okidata 390 Okidata 400 HP Printers $229 $199* $289* $445 $499 Call 386DX-40 ‘ 1095 110 MB HID. 4 MB RAM 386SX-40 * 895 130 MB H/D, 2 MB RAM - NOVELL Network Authorized SERVICE Carry In/On Site N etwork Service & Support Maintenance Contract cs&s 968-8585 1.2 & 1.44 MB Floppies 14" SVGA Color Monitor & Adapter MS Dps 6.0 & Mouse UPGRADES MOTHERBOARDS 386SX-40 $119 386DX-40 $159 486SX-25 $249 486DX-33 $439 486DX-50 $599 486DX2-66 $669 HARD DRIVES 130MB-IDE $189 213MB-IDE $229 245MB-IDE $249 340MB-IDL $329 1515 W. U niversity, #104, Tempe win A FIESTA BOWL SCHOLARSHIP for a college-eligible Arizona Resident* 1st Prize - $3,000 Scholarship 2nd Prize - $2,000 Scholarship 3rd Prize - $1,000 Scholarship T h ree w in n ers w ill be selected each w eek b y random draw in g . T h ey w ill rece ive a p air o f tic k e ts to th e next hom e gam s o f A S U , U o f A o r NAU - d ep en d in g on w hich p o st o ffic e b ox th e w in n in g en try is m ailed to . W in n e rs o f w e e k ly d ra w in g s w ill a ls o re c e iv e a p a ir o f c h o ic e s e a ts fo r th e FIE S TA B O W L F o o tb a ll G am e N ew Year's Day where 3 of the 33 finalists w ill w in scholarships. Enter as often as you wish (no purchase necessary). One entry per envelope. Each entry m ust include the nam e o f an eligible scholarship re cipient and the nutrition inform ation panel (or facsimile) from anv size carton of milk. PLEASE PR IN T NAM E, CO M PLETE A D D R ESS, AND TE LE­ PHONE NUMBER ON PIECE OF PAPER AND INCLUDE WITH NUTRITION INFORMATION PANEL ‘ Scholarship nominee most be an Arizona resident eligible for 1994 term or be currently enrolled full time at any Arizona College or University. (Employees and fam ily members of Arizona m ilk producers are not eligible.) Entries must be received by November 9,1993. ASU U of A NAU MAIL ENTRIES TO: “Fiesta Bowl Scholarship Sweepstakes” to your choice of the following post office boxes. * ASU - P.O. Box 520, Tempe, AZ 85280 NAU - P.O. Box 1448, Temps, AZ 85280 U of A - P.O. Box 560, Tempe, AZ 85280 Sponsored by United Dairymen of Arizona