^Copyright, State Press, 1993 Tem pe, Arizona Vol. 77 No. 126 R e g e n ts u n a n im o u s ly a p p r o v e n e w c a m p u s 4-year liberal arts college to be created in Pima County B y M ark M . M acias S tate P ress TUCSON — Arizona students pursuing a liberal arts degree may get a much needed lift in the next few years. On Friday, the Arizona Board of Regents unanim ously approved a $2 million funding request for UofA to begin planning and developing a four-year liberal arts college in Pima County. Classes could be offered as early as the fall of 1995. Celestino Fernandez, UofA vice president for academic out­ reach and international affairs, told board members that the Col­ lege will be an independent campus and will carry its own name. “The opportunity has emerged for four temporary locations,” Fernandez said. “The IBM facility (in southeast Tucson), assum­ ing UofA acquires it, is one facility we are pursuing for thè tem­ porary campus.” Fernandez said the temporary site would be used for 2 to 3 years, of until a permanent location is designated. The Pima County campus approval Came after a Commission on Planning for Public Higher Education Enrollment Growth rec­ ommended that Arizona establish new four-year campuses in M arieopa and Pima Counties to accommodate the growing demand of higher education. The Commission report also urged ASU and UofA to lead the efforts of the new campus developments. The Pima County campus is expected to enroll 500 to 750 stuT urn to Regents, page 2. Students to join NAFTA discussion Quintessential d ow n Sandy Rotter/State Présa JeeNee Cam pbell, 63-year-old ASU tram driver, makes the rounds at Lot 59 in her Halloween clown costume Friday. Campbell dresses as aclo w n every year and won a first-place prize in a competition last year. She said she “loves to get surprised reactions” from riders, “The reaction of the students is something else," she said. B y M elanie K. S elcho State P ress About 100 ASU students are expected to participate via satel­ lite in a national town hall meeting to discuss the North American Free Trade Agreement today. Vickie Cooper, assistant to Associate Vice President for University Relations Alan Price and coordinator for ASU's role in the meeting, said the University is one of five statewide sites for the meeting. ' “It’s a satellite hook up with President Clinton, Lee lacocca. Governor Tommy Thompson, R-Wis., and small business own­ ers,” she said. Small business owners have also been invited to participate. Cooper said Friday that Arizona Gov. Fife Symington will partici­ pate, from either Arizona or Washington, D.C. Nearly '500 Arizonans from all statewide locations are expect­ ed to participate in the meeting, which is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in the MU’s Arizona Room. Cooper said. “They're- anticipating 100 (viewers) at ours, and probably that many at all our (Arizona) sites,” she said. Cooper said the room will be equipped with viéwing monitors, fax machines and phones for people to voice comments and ques­ tions about NAFTA to the national participants. The tow n hall is presented by the A rizona-M exico Commission, Arizona NAFTA, UofA, ASU and NAU. It is an effort to establish Arizona support for NAFTA, Cooper said. “It’s to mobilize a grass roots support for NAFTA,” Cooper said. Cooper said the meeting was planned on short notice because ASU named a site just over a week ago. Originally, participants were asked to call and reserve a seat, T urn to NAFTA, page 2. Federal grants to help reshape engineering college B y S h aw n Boyd State P ress ASU officials said three grants recently awarded to ASU’s College of Engineering and Applied Sciences will reshape the department's programs to meet current engineering and manu­ facturing demands. “Only 14 awards were announced in the first round of this, and we got two of them, which is really a high achievem ent for the faculty involved,” said Robert E. Barnhill, ASU vice president for research and strategic initiatives. “The fact we did so well is a leg up for us.” Two federal grants were announced Oct. 22, said David Chang, dean of the engineering col­ lege. A th ird grant o f $15 m illion was announced in September. “The Clinton-Gore administration is empha­ sising technology development.” Barnhill said of the awards. He said one part of improving technology is emphasizing manufacturing in education, which is the purpose of the first grant. Chang said the IN S ID E S T A T E P R E S S W eather Outlook Sunny today, though tempered high clouds. High 80, low 57. grant totals $2.7 million, half of which comes from the federal government and the other half from Intel and Motorola. The th ree-y ear program , called M anufacturing Across the Curriculum , will interweave manufacturing principles into the engineering curriculum. Chang said the grant will help make ASU a leader in engineering. “We expect to develop new models for other engineering programs to compare with,” he said. “I see no place in the country putting this kind of effort into an engineering program.” ASU President Lattie Coor spoke about all three grants at the Arizona Board of Regents meeting in Tucson Thursday. “(Manufacturing companies) are working to help us develop courses that emphasize design and the manufacturing process,” Coor said. “It is oriented around the notion of a team approach and of quality management.” Barnhill said, “The idea is to get some con­ cepts of manufacturing into current engineer­ ► The Valley Citizens League holds a forum on ethics in edu­ cation with James Hamm as a participant. Page 9 ► Tempe City Council members say the proposed juvenile detention center must also be a rehabilitation and treatment center. Page 8 ing.” The six-course program focuses on manu­ facturing through the graduate level. Chang said the $5.7 million, federal award announced last week will join ASU, UofA and NAU in the creation of a Joint Arizona Center for M anufacturing E ducation and T raining (JACMET). “This is the first time the three engineering schools are working together,” said Chang. Coor said, “The whole notion was, as these jobs (in the defense industry) decline in substan­ tial numbers, there needed to be ways to transi­ tion defense-related personnel in the economy for larger purposes.” Barnhill said the program would allow engi­ neers to make a smooth transm ission from defense to civilian manufacturing. He said the .program will “train people out there who need some retooling.” , JACMET, which is expected to include at least 2,000 people over the grant’s three-year period, will provide needed change, Chang said. “The-idea is we need to develop robust, agile programs.” Chang said -the program will begin by Jan. 1 and will deliver education through any o f a num­ ber of non-traditional methods, including week­ end scheduling, television, computer learning and group support software. The National Science Foundation awarded the third grant, which provides $15 million over five years to fund the Foundation Coalition. The Coalition consists of six universities and includes ASU. The M aricopa County Community College system will also participate. “The purpose is looking at the first two years of the engineering curriculum and to develop an integrated approach to revamp it,” Chang said. “This is something we are really excited about, (because) it is a pace-setting program for the rest of the country and really does provide a paradigm shift.” The program, which Chang said is currently underway, will develop an engineering curricu­ lum that features integrated courses and coopera­ tive learning. Sports W here To Find It Advertiser Index................13 Classifieds....................... 13 Comics.............. 10 Crossword...... .......... ...9 Horoscopes ......................15 Opinion............ ..................4 Police Report..................... 6 Sports............................... 11 Today’s Activities...............2 World/Nation.....................3 World/ Nation Victims of California’s wild­ fires are helping others cope with the trying times of recovery. Page 3 ASU’s victory over Washington signals a turnaround for the season’s final three games. Page 11 State P ress Monday, November 1,1993 BT(®ÂiBS^ï! r T.t The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are printed according to the space available each day. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f M atthews Center, Room ¡5. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the fu ll name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. V 'j i 3 Deadlinefo r entries is noon the day before publication. » Counselor Training C enter — Counseling for ASU stu­ dents, provided by counseling and counseling psychology graduate students, supervised by faculty, Payne Hall Room 402. For more information or appointment, contact Jan, 9635067. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Daily closed meeting, noon, All Saints Catholic Newman Center, northwest comer o f College Avenue and University Drive. • Clinical Psychology Center — Graduate students provide individual, couples and family counseling fix' students, staff and the community throughout the semester On die second floor of the Psychology Braiding. H ie program is supervised by state licensed psychologists and. fees are based on a slid­ ing scale. For information, call 965-7296. • ASU C ollege o f E x te n d e d E d u c a tio n ’s D ow ntow n Center G alleria —- Daring November, free “Portraits of a Sacred Maya .Cave” exhibition of photographic documents- j tion of cave paintings of Naj Tunich (“stone boose”), a cave aj in Guatemala which served as an ancient Maya shrine, 502 E. Monroe, second floor, Phoenix. • N arcotics A nonymous — Home sweet home meeting, 5:30 p.m., 1701 S. College Ave., south courtyard. • College R epublicans —- Weekly meeting, 2 p.m., MU Yuma Room 211. • Golden Key Honor Society —^ Pick up certificates today through Nov. 5, l l a.m.- 1p.m ., Honors College Activity Cent»1. • National Society of Black Engineers Organizational meeting, 7:30 p.m.. Student Services Amphitheater. • Students for Choice a t ASU — Counter protesting discus­ sion with Joseph Feldman, 4:40 p.m., MU Santa Cruz Room 213. R egen ts C ontinued from page 1. dents beginning in the fall 1995, growing to 5,000 students by the year 2000. Fernandez told the regents that $500,000 of the funding will go to hire planning personnel, many of whom could come from out­ side Arizona. Dissent among regents was evident once Fernandez brought up the idea of bringing in outside help. Regent Rudy Campbell asked Fernandez whether the state could.save money by using UofA faculty at the Pima County cam­ pus. “Don’t we hive qualified people on this campus (UofA) with­ out having to pay this kind of money to out-of-state experts?” Campbell asked. “We should take professors from UofA and save money.” However, Student Regent Spencer Insolia said outside advis­ ing is needed because the Pima County college will not be a branch campus of UofA. “We have to bring in outside faculty to do a lot of the advis­ ing,” Insolia said. “You can’t have UofA faculty telling how NAU should be run or ASU faculty telling how UofA should be run, because they’re different institutions. That means we can’t have UofA faculty used to run that institution (Pima County campus).” Insolia said the regents are attempting to keep the Pima County campus and a proposed ASU branch campus in the E a s ty alley in “parallel fashion,” even though the ASU East campus is about one year ahead of schedule. “These two campuses (Pima County and ASU East) are not related in any way,” Insolia said. “They are both enrollment growth issues, but’they aren’t going to be interacting.” In September, the ABOR approved $2.1 million to develop the ASU East campus at the now-defunct Williams Air Force Base. ASU President Lattie Coor said the $2 m illion that was approved for the Pima campus shouldn’t affect the development of ASU East. “We’ve been (developing ASU East) for three years arid they have just begun this process,” Coor said. “We have asked for the official establishment of the ASU East campus and we’re ready to actually start academic programming. “This is all part of a larger plan that the regents adopted to have one additional campus in Maricopa County and one addi­ tional campus in Pima County.” Before the Pima County campus and ASU East campus begin offering academic classes, state lawmakers must approve funding. ASU East is expected to begin offering classes in the fall 1994. NAFTA C ontinued from page 1. but as of Friday, only about a dozen had confirmed their atten­ dance, Cooper said. Cooper said those interested will probably be able to come without a reservation. “At this point, I don’t know what the problem would be with showing up,” she said. S tate P ress You d o n 't e v e n h a v e to ta k e notes. ARIZONA STATE the business vM INO R/ It's been a longtime coming, but it's finally here. The minor in business. See how it can work for you. "it is im portant fo r engineers today to understand managerial skills forgreater effectiveness irt the m arket place. “ ¡j (David Chang, Dean, C ollege o f Engineering and A pplied S ciences). “This Is a very attractive option to r students seeking the breadth o f the liberal arts degree but with specialized busm jjm courses thM provkle a 'iifp o re ready entree Into 0 0 ^ 0 0 ^ world, f p ^ * ^ * ' * ' (S v y Kieheniw(U,Deen, B n College of IJbeiM Arts and Sciences) .M p i BA 123 £ 5 965-4227 , World/Nation S tate P ress ___________________________ A round il n z o n a Babbitt: We need to stop living In pathw ay o f danger ALTADENA, Calif. (AP) — Like the sum m er floods in the M idw est, the Southern California wildfires {Move the folly o f building homes in the path of natural disasters, says U.S. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt. “The lesson o f these fires is w e’ve got to keep the people away from the fire hazard,” Babbitt said Saturday during a short stop at a Los Angeles County fire station. "All over thè West, people are m oving into the w oods tó live. Firefighting is getting more expensive, more hazardous. “It suggests we have to walk much more intensively with local government” to deal with the problem seriously, he said. The wildfire that erupted in this Los Angeles suburb Wednesday, one ó f a series of blazes scattered from Ventura County to the Mexican border, destroyed 118 homes and burned 5,700 acres of chaparral in the San Gabriel Mountains. Damage was estimated at $58.5 million. The fire burned to within 10 yards of the front steps of the fire station, turning shrubbery into blackened skeletons before firefighters pushed it back. They used garden hoses because the firefight­ ing gear was all out of the station. V ictim s o f child abuse m ay eventually testify on video MESA (A P) — V ictim s o f child abuse in Arizona eventually could give their testimony on videotape rather than in formal court proceedings. The U.S. Justice Department gave' ' Arizona and other states $38/)00 each to set up videotaping sites, said Cindi Nannetti, spokeswoman for die Maricopa County Attorney’s Office. T aping sites w ill be set up in Phoenix, Tucson and Flagstaff and possi­ bly Yuma, Nannetti said. Child advocates say the program lessens effects of having a victim repeat allegations. “Young victims of child abuse have a hard time telling about their abuse. This way they won’t have to go through it over and again,” said Marti Lavis, direc­ tor o f th e G overnor’s O ffice fo r Children. Personal-injury law suits not alw ays decided by Jury PHOENIX (AP) — Ah increasing number of personal-injury disputes me being resolved through negotiations rather than in front of a jury. Discussions are cheap, quick and pri­ vate, said Brice Buehter, president o f U .S. A rbitration and M ediation o f Arizona. “It's win-win,” he said. The court system also benefits when costly jury trials are avoided, said Stan Marks, a lawyer who heads the alterna­ tive dispute section o f the State Bar of Arizona. “That’s one of the reasons our system Is working so well. A lot of cases that otherwise would clog the system are out of it and settled to the satisfaction Of ail parties,” he said. L aw suits in M aricopa C ounty Superior Court involving $50,000 or less go through arbitration, said presiding judge, C. Kimball Rose. Those valued above $50,000 may have alternative dispute resolution, but it isn’t mandatory, he said. One negotiation avenue is for a m i ­ trai third party, rather than a jury, to m ake a b in d in g decision about how m uch m oney should be aw arded. Another option is for mi arbitrator to help the parties settle their differences with a non-binding opinion. PagejJ Monday, November 1,1993 Cleaning up in California Victims help victims to recover after fire LAGUNA BEACH, Calif. (AP) — Jack and Elaine Lund lost their home, clothing and 25 years of memories when a wildfire leveled their house near Emerald Bay. But when they went to church Sunday in newly purchased clothes, they volunteered one of their few remaining possessions to help others left homeless in last week’s firestorm, They offered the use of their pickup truck to carry vic­ tims’ belongings. “There may be people worse off than us,” said Lund, who retired from the Army in 1968 and ran a golf cart distributorship afterward. “We lost all the material things of the house, which means nothing.” At St. Catherine of Siena Roman Catholic Church in Laguna Beach, and at churches and homes around Southern California, people like the Lunds were stepping forward to help. And they were counting their blessings that, despite the destruction wrought by fires that flared-up with a blast of Santa Anas, nobody was killed. Thirteen major fires in a 200-mile stretch from Ventura County to the Mexican border torched 167,700 acres, damaged or destroyed 787 buildings, including at least 650 homes, and injured 62. A preliminary estimate from the state Office of Emergency Services put damage at $500 million. The Laguna Beach fire, which destroyed 366 homes and businesses and charred 16,680 acres of brush and suburban landscape, was contained within a line of bare earth. A destructive 5,700acre blaze above Altadena was 60 percent con­ tained but burning away from homes into the m ountains northeast of Los A ngeles and a 39,000-acre fire in Ventura County was 90 per­ cent contained. High clouds drifted over most of the region, maintaining cool, moist weather that helped fire­ fighters get the upper hand on the fires.- But the forecast-lent urgency to efforts by hundreds of firefighters who rushed to the area from across California and the West. The National Weather Service said the Santa Anas -— hot desert winds from the east or north­ east in Southern California — could begin blow­ ing again Monday night and Tuesday. The winds are expected to blow at 20 mph to 30 mph with gusts up to 45 mph — milder than the winds that spread the wildfires. Out-of-town crews were handling the heavy work of snuffing hot spots with hand tools, said Capt. Michael Wilson, a California Department of Forestry firefighter in Riverside County. “If we get the hard winds, we’re looking at Associated Press Sue McGough fills out an Insurance inventory Sunday for the belongings she and her husband lost when their house was consumed by Wednesday's firestorm in Altadena, Calif. everything happening all over again,” Wilson said. “We need to get everybody fed and rested.” In the tourist center of this affluent town of 24,000, there was little sign Sunday of the dev­ astation that occurred nearby. Tourists packed shops and espresso bars near the Pacific beach, An occasional Red Cross truck drove by. At St. Catherine, the view was of green lawns, brilliant red bougainvillea vines and ocean. But the smell of smoke hung in the air and parishioners traded stories of their losses. Actor River Phoenix dies Protesters outside Hollywood club march to get LOS ANGELES (AP) — River Phoenix, whose natural intensity as a youthful star of the 1986 film “Stand by M e” launched a career, col­ lapsed outside actor Johnny D epp’s Sunset S trip nightclub early Sunday and died. He was 23. Friends reported that P h o e n ix Phoenix was “acting stran g e” as he left the Viper Room in West Hollywood about 1 a.m., said sheriffs Deputy Diane Hecht. Paramedics were called when the actor col­ lapsed and he was rushed to C edars-Sinai Medical Center. He was pronounced dead a f 1:51 a.m. “At this time the cause of death is under investigation. The exact cause will be determined at autopsy by the coroner,” Hecht said. The autopsy w ill'probably be perform ed Monday, she said. Sheriff’s detectives were han­ dling the case, as a matter of routine. “It’s not a homicide investigation at this time,” Hecht said. “It comes as a total shock that this extraordi­ narily talented young man’s life would end so abruptly. It’s just tragic,” said his publicist. Sue Patricola. P ho en ix ’s fam ily was gath erin g in Los Angeles, Patricola said. She had no other infor­ mation on his death. Depp’s Viper Room is popular with young celebrities, providing a stage recently for a listen­ ing party for Concrete Blonde and an impromptu tuneup show by Pearl Jam. Depp, the heartthrob who starred in the old Fox television series “21 Jump Street” and the movies “Edward Scissorhands” and “Benny & Joon,” took over what had been Club Central, a trendy dive. Phoenix was in the middle o f filming the movie “Dark Blood,” a Fine Line Features film which was nearly complete, Patricola said. Phoenix, who also sings w ith the band Aleka’s Attic, was to have appeared in the film version of novelist Ann Rice’s “Interview With a Vampire.” : A y ear after his 1985 film debut in “Explorers,” Phoenix showed his star potential in director Rob Reiner’s “Stand by Me.” Phoenix portrayed Chris Chambers, the tough kid in a group of boyhood friends who learn about themselves on a hike in the woods where they find a corpse. In his brief career, Phoenix played a male hustler in Gus Van Sant's 1991 film “My Own Private Idaho” and portrayed a youthfol comput­ er hacker in the Robert Redford-led ensemble cast of 1992’s “Sneakers.” His other films include “The Mosquito Coast” (1986) and “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” (1989), both with Harrison Ford, “Little Nikita” (1988) with Sidney Poitier, “A Night in the Life o f Jimmy Reardon” (1988), and “Running on Empty” (1988). Aristide nixed -. PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — I Buoyed by the failure of a U.N. plan to -- retara President Jean-Bertrand Aristide . to power on schedule, about 200 chant* ing rightists marched Sunday to demand his replacement. . Other rightists considered a “constiÍ. - tutional coup” that would bar Aristide ; from office and replace him w ith a 1-I Súmeme Court justice, although a lead- ■Kig official in. the former -Duvalier diets ; lo rsh ip em erged Sunday to dem and ' ’ ; - power within the Aristide-backed transi- I tion government. '*A rrest M alvjdi A rrest M alv a!' ¡ Aristide’s in deep trouble!” the demon- S I strators chanted, referring to Aristide’S - ' premier, Robert Malvai. They stood outside the vacant National Palace, chanting to the tune of “Fanner in the Dell.” ; One protester carried a black-and-red Du vai ieri st flag the sta tu e tp the , Unknown Slave. Three older women carried color photographs of Francois a s tte p ro te s te rs marched toward the Normandie Bar, a - ’, ' hangout for army-backed civilian gangs known as “attaches.’^ | l ■ ‘ ■■ *- ■* - Opinion Page 4 S tate P ress Monday, November 1,1993 State P ress ■ Campus solution ditorial Tlie Arizona university system seems ready to expand once «igain. Approval was given on Friday by the Arizona Board of Regents to begin the planning, for even­ tual construction of a new four-year liberal arts college in Pima County. This $2-million facility is not to be confused with UofA President Manuel Pacheco’s dream project o f integrating his university with Pima, Com m unity College to form “D esert Vista Campus.” This is a whole different ball o’ wax. As such, the new school comes as a welcome relief to the existing, overcrowded universities, which face ever-increasing enrollment. By 2010, there will be an estimated 55,000 additional stu­ dents for Arizona’s state universities. Previous recommendations to handle the influx have included night courses and offering more televised courses, as well as the addition of branch campuses. These may be fine substi­ tutes, but they are just that — substitutes. They are substitutes for the campus environ­ ment students enjoy at the three main universi­ ties, and they are substitutes for the college experience. They are substitutes that by their very nature isolate students from each other, which divide faculty and which turn campuses like ASU into three-bodied entities (Main,' East and West). With the huge expected influx of students, such substitutes are no doubt necessary. But it is discouraging to see college communities like ASU fragmented. This fragmentation divides students among several campuses, or keeps them at home with bleary eyes, strained from their televised college experience. The new university approved by die regents for placement in Pima County, on the other hand, will provide a complete traditional learn­ ing environment of a size comparable to ASU East. And it will be a complete environment, a campus independent of ASU, UofA and NAU. Previously, Arizona and ASU were both taken by surprise by the enrollment boom of the 1980s. The regents apparently have the foresight to recognize the next enrollment wave, and are making decisions to offer the best state educa­ tion possible. Because the best possible solution is not gorging the three current campuses to the point that there are branch sites all over the state. It overworks administrators, faculty and staff and completely destroys the idea of what college is all about — being a part o f an independent, unique and cohesive community that promotes learning. It is good to see that the regents are finally realizing this. " -■ ' ' .' • :' y 'WANNA SEE AAYDIARIES?' Florida’s death row may become culm ination o f parental failures activity? What are you doing hanging out with 16year-olds7 His brown eyes were cast wide D eborah Where was your Mama, your Daddy, on the day, at the hour in under brows drawn up by confusion and fright. question? M a t h is A sprig of his kinky, curly hair, he I’ll bet, as a newborn, Cedric was all the rage. A little choco­ C o lu m n is t twirled between fidgety fingers. late drop of love and happiness. Doted on. Photographed. Dressed His sm all chest heaved from a in a teeny sailor outfit with a crotch that snapped across the fresh heart chased by panic. diaper. Soft, sweet cheeks that smelled like only soft, sweet baby T hirteeh years old. Looks 10. cheeks can. • Charged with murder. I bet he lost a little of that magic appeal as he grew older, big­ This was who I saw on national ger, hungrier, stronger, more adventurous. No more picture-tak­ television last month, one of four boys ing, cute sailor suits and sweet lotions. charged in the cold-blooded killing of Maybe by age 5, when he could dress himself and pour his a British tourist on a Florida highway own cereal, he was pretty much on his own, sent out into each in September. new day with a mere admonition to stay out of trouble, but nò He looked different from the other more than that. No caring, grown-up eyes fixed on his every boys — and, at 14, 16 and nearly 17,” move. No one to tell him to get some socks on those feet. N o’adult they are only boys. One had a steely countenance, as in, “you to step in when the bully started shoving. No one asking about don’t scare me,” though I suspect it was largely a put-on. homework or brushed teeth. No one telling him he’d better be in Another had an inscrutable look and a third actually grinned the house before d ark ... and meaning it. like a fool. Other 13-year-old boys could be in his place, but their Mamas But the one who got me was the shrimp of the group. He’s the one who represents the violence epidemic; the ticking of the time and Daddies ruled with an iron hand, albeit a gloved one. A glove bomb; the vulgar absurdity of choosing punishment over preven­ that cushioned every lick across the haunches, every pounding of the table, every accusatory point pf the finger so that, after all was tion. A little statue of Things Gone Wrong. His name is Cedric Demond Green — a name that would not said and done, you sfili knew you had been touched by love. Now, the glove is off and there is no tender hand inside. It’s have been made public considering his age, except for the fact that Cedric Demond Green, like his three co-defendants, is being the law, the state, the society reaching for Cedric now and it will not be merciful. Right off the bat, it’s made a grab for his young charged as an adult. If the prosecution has its way, Cedric Demond Green will also soon be a name on Florida’s death row head. Defendant. Indictment. Arraignment. These words are too hard roster. Seeing him there, in court Friday, threw me into sinking ; and heavy for the young. Or so it used to be. despair. I wanted, at once, to slap him'silly and hug him hard. Cedric Demond Green is just one of the names now. There are Furious over his alleged crime. Heartbroken that a young boy had many more. Some belong to other 13-year-olds who look only 10. fallen into such hands. Cedric’s attorney says the boy wasn’t there when Gary Colley Some belong to 10-year-olds who look only 8. What brings anyone, especially children, to this dread cross­ was shot to death at the highway rest stop. A truth, I hope, and one the lawyer can prove. roads? "J . Even so, there will be unfinished business with Cedric. Other Not a single highway, nor a single evil idea on a single questions bum. September day. ' Just what is your story, child? How did you get, at 13, to this The charge, the trials — these will be the culminating events to awful, awesome place? What have you done to make authorities trouble that started long ago. The day that some parent stopped even think you may have had something to do with such heinous paying attention. ■ i ■. . ' Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: S. Talbott Smith E d ito r Jason Owsley M a n a g in g E d i t o r Jam es Frusetta O p in io n E d i to r Due a W STATE PRESS TAFF S o u n d Off: 965-42 k w eek’s responses will be run Tuesday, Nov 2, “IsA SU ’s athletic department toohardor too lenient on athletes who commit crimes?” S. TALBOTT SMITH, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor TAMMY MESA-SIERRA.... . ..Asst. City Editor ANGELA BENOCHE...«____ ............................News Editor JAMES FRUSETTA................ BOB CASTLE...................... BRIAN FITZGERALD.... .................. Asst. Photo Editor MICHAEL BRANOM............. JULIE REUVERS............... i................ Asst. Sports Editor KRIS FR1DRICH...................... TROY FUSS.............................. JANE CO OK ............................ R E PO R T E R S: Joy R eason, Shawn Boyd, Garin Groff, Maxwell Higgins, Jason Hill, Marie Macias, Melanie Sefcbo, Greg Sexton. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : Scott D avis, Paul Matthews, Shaun Rachau. C O P Y E D IT O R S : D ave P ro ffitt, Jerem y Stein, N ick Bacon. C A R T O O N IS T S : B ryce M organ, G eorge O ’Connor,. Mateo Willis P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Sam antha F eldm an, B rian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Craig Macnaughton, Louis A. Porter. COLUM NISTS: Alan Holcomb, Michael Kantor, Jessica Klinger, David Strow, Wade Swanson. PRODUCTION: Kenneth Collins, Jodi Goldblatt, Amie M adden, B ritto n M auchline, D aw n 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 Thom. The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews C ra te r, Room 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on die ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ÁSU administration, fe u lty , staff or student body. S tate P ress P h o ne N umbers Information.!............965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising..............965-6555 Classifieds.............. 965-6731 Opinion S tate P ress Monday, November 1,1993 Page 5 Legalization only sane alternative to America’s unwinnable drug war argue their position. Rather, Several weeks ago, I called they reso rt to ad hominem for the legalization of drugs. attacks and brainless propa­ I would like to apologize. ganda. No, not for voicing the idea! When Shultz proposed a For not doing it justice. Three study into legalization shortly paragraphs was much too brief. after going to Stanford And so today I dedicate University to teach, response this expanded colum n to a from the W hite House was m ore detailed argum ent for childish and unprofessional. legalization. Marlin Fitzwater, Bush’s W arning: If the following press secretary , quipped,! idea scares you, please don't “H e’s been out on the West read any further. I wouldn't Coast too long, hasn’t he?” w ant to be responsible for And d ru g 'czar W illiam emotional trauma. Bennett had the gall to claim Having said this, let's look that Shultz’s position affected at six commonly held fallacies his performance in office. about drugs: “It might have been nice Fallacy #1: The drug war to have known at the time...” can be won. said Bennett. “T his might No, we h av e n ’t lo st the explain Why we w eren ’t drug war yet. Neither had the putting as much pressure as United States lost the Vietnam we should have on some of War in 1969. But the drug war, thqse [drug-producing] just like that war, has taken a nations.” serious turn for the worse. Low blow , Bill. Real The American people have low. n ev e r been able to accept Our courts and prisons are overloaded already. Gan you imag­ The real reason that politicians attack drugs so fiercely is defeat. R ather that cutting short a ine throwing 30 million people into the mix? Are we really pre­ because they think that even mentioning the idea of drug legaliza­ D a v id S tro w futile effort, the United States contin­ pared to incarcerate 15 percent of the U.S. population? Co lu m n is t tion is political suicide. Or is it? ued to devote m assive am ounts of Fallacy #3: Illegal drugs are more dangerous than alcohol Could it be that crime has become, so bad that people may be money and manpower to the Vietnam or tobacco. willing to consider alternatives? conflict. In 1988,390,000 Americans died from smoking. The case of Mayor Schmoke certainly seems to suggest this. Today, in 1993, we are once again In that same year, 100,000 Americans died due to alcohol In 1987, Schmoke did something that no active politician had fighting a futile, bloody war. And just abuse. In addition, another . 100,000 people died due to alcohol- ever done, He Went before the U.S. Conference of Mayors and like in 1969, we refuse to swallow our related accidents. called for a public debate on the issue of decriminalization. pride and throw in the towel. How many Americans died in 1988 due to illegal drugs? Schmoke was a former federal prosecutor. During his career, I admit that this war is different Only 6,000 people died even though 5.5 million Americans (a he was responsible for sending many drug dealers and users to than Vietnam. This war is bloodier conservative estimate) regularly use hard drugs. jail. Finally, he realized that it was hopeless. than Vietnam ever was. Drug overdoses are big news, particularly when the victim is So Schmoke did something that took a great deal of courage. It The Department of Justice reported well-known (such as Len Bias). When Joe Blow kicks off from paid off. In 1991, he was re-elected. in 1991 that more than 24,000 cirrhosis of the liver or lung cancer, it isn’t big news. Fallacy #6: D rug legalization leads to drug use. Americans were murdered. The only Cocaine, heroin and mari­ If we treated the illegal other war that had taken this many ; ju an a, taken in clean, low ‘ drugs like we treat tobacco lives annually was the Civil War. potency doses, are no more and alcohol, I would not doubt Our inner cities are ruled by gangs of criminals. The situation dangerous than the legal drugs. the above statement. has become so bad in Washington, D.C., that the city’s mayor M ost o f the time, opponents o f legaliza­ Most deaths from cocaine But I am not suggesting a asked President Clinton to send in the National Guard. result from an allergic reaction tion w ill not logically argue their posi­ completely free drug market. Day in and day out, a bloody war is waged in America’s cities. to the drug- They also occur Proposed regulations: This war has terrifying consequences. Homicide has become the due to the inconsistency in the tion. Rather, they resort to ad hominem • Labels on drugs report­ number one cause of death for young African-American males. potency of street drugs. The ing purity and potency. And in recent years, the Army has trained its surgeons in battle­ worst effect of heroin, other attacks and brainless propaganda. • Bans on all advertising. field surgery by sending them to Los Angeles hospitals. than the physical addiction, is . .; » Limits on drug potency. Why are young men so eager to kill and be killed? One simple constipation. (Not th a t the • Ban on drugs linked reason; drug profits as high as 2,000 percent. addiction is trivial. Heroin with psychotic behavior (i.e. Ghetto youths feet trapped in a cycle of poverty. users must inject themselves every four to six hours or go into It is easy to exhort these young men to go out and get an hon­ agonizing withdrawal.) There are an estimated 20 million regular PCP or crack). • Ban on sales to minors. est job. But try putting yourself in the shoes of one of those young marijuana Users in the United States Not a single one of them has • Extension of BUI laws to drug Users,: m en Drug dealing jobs which pay $2,000 a day are literally limit­ ever died of an overdose. • Ban oh use by pregnant women. less. To those who have been deprived of basic needs for all of Of course, more than a few might acquire lung cancer due to • Sin tax cm all drug sales. their lives, the lure of quick money can be tempting indeed. the toxicity of the smoke. But our government has no problem The sin tax could be a tremendous boon to our nation. A tax of ■ What will happen if we legalize drugs? James Ostrowski, pres­ with toxic smoke, provided it comes from Southern tobacco, 100 percent, imposed on the sale of any drug, could supply bil­ ident of Citizens Against Prohibition, has a promising vision: Fallacy #4: Drug legalization = Drug endorsem ent lions of dollars to our nation’s coffers. And such a tax could fund. “How about those slick young drug dealers who are the new By citing the above figures, I am not endorsing drug use or a greatly expanded national rehabilitation program for drug Users role models for the youth of the inner cities, with their designer trivializing its effects. Rather, I am trying to make two points. who wanted to stay clean. We could also fund our advertising clothes and Mercedes convertibles, always wearing a broad, smug First it is sheer hypocrisy to ban some substances while allow­ campaign against driigs with these taxes. smile that says crime pays? They snicker at the honest kids going ing the free use of others which are just as dangerous. And sec­ Not only would we be taking in billions in taxes, we would be to school or to work at the minimum wage. The day after repeal, ondly, I hope to show the sheer dangers o f using and abusing our saving billions currently used in the drug war. the honest kids will have the last laugh. The dealers will be out of legal drugs. If I thought prohi­ It is unlikely that drug use would become as commonplace as ajob, unemployed,” bition worked, I would endorse smoking or drinking. As long as drugs are illegal, ■• ■' ■/ ■/ a ban on all recreational drugs. Tobacco is popular for two reasons. One, its use has been drug prices will be extremely Hell, ban cigarettes and booze! romanticized by tobacco companies and teenagers for generations. high. T hese high prices are 30 million Americans have used drugs Save 590,000 lives a year! Two, the psychoactive effects of nicotine are very subtle, so the another cause o f crim e, this However, our government drug can be used anywhere. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that nico­ time from the users’ side of the at least once. Our courts and prisons are has d ecid ed th at you are tine is one of the most addictive drugs on the planet; nearly as equation. Users will do any­ allowed to pollute your body addictive as heroin. overloaded already. Can you im agine thing to get drugs, despite huge with certain legal substances if Alcohol is the most popular recreational drug on the planet prices. And so users will con­ throwing 30 million people into the mix? you are so inclined to. If you because it is contained in beverages. tinue to steal, rob and murder are an adult, you are capable of Americans are well aware of the negative effects of drugs, so it to pay for their exorbitantly Are we really prepared to incarcerate 15 making decisions about your is unlikely that legalizing them will convince m illions of high-priced habit. This brings own body . Americans to try them. percent o f the U.S. population? us to our second fallacy... Why should illegal drugs Even if it did, consider what Ostrowski writes: “To prove that Fallacy #2; A m erica can — —— ■■■■■■ ...... ■ ■ .... ------- '— -------1 .... ... ” be any different? prohibition saves more lives than it destroys, one would have to “ be drug-free. Users of these drugs, in a show that legalization would result in more than 6.5 million addi­ If we can, we’ll be the first legal market, would only be harming themselves. We do not need tional heroin users and more than 65 million additional cocaine society in all of human history to attain that goal. People have, to be incarcerating ordinary drug users. Taking the drug is pun­ users.” since the dawn of time, sought the euphoric effects of drugs. ishment enough. O f course, there are no guarantees. H alf the nation may Virtually every society developed the fermentation process Fallacy #5: Drug legalization is a radical idea. become addicted, given the chance. early in its history. The urge to get smashed on Saturday night is Who are these radicals? But the situation right now demands action, demands change. hardly unique to Americans; people drank in the Bronze Age. The Advocates include: William Buckley, conservative columnist; We have to gamble. At the very least, the subject of legalization natives o f South America learned very early the effects o f the George Shultz, secretary of state under Reagan; Kurt Schmoke, should not be considered taboo. It should at least be given consid­ coca leaf. To this day, Bolivians of all ages will chew coca leaves mayor of Baltimore; Milton Friedman and Thomas Sowell, senior eration. like gum. Marijuana, that great enemy of civilization, was used economists at the Hoover Institution; and Patrick V. Murphy, for­ As a resident of urban America, I am tired of being a prisoner thousands of years ago in parts of India and South America. mer New Yotk police commissioner. in my own home, tired of Watching my neighborhood become a Since the dawn of time, man has used whatever was available Our nation faces one of the most serious problems in its histo­ battle zone. to get high. This is an intractable urge in mankind. ry. Reconsidering our prohibition against drugs is not the radical We have too much to be afraid of right now. How strong is the urge for drugs? Richard Dumas, one of the idea. . Let’s not be afraid of ideas. Suns’ most promising rookies in years, threw away a $9 million What is radical, and stupid, is to act like the three monkeys contract for a few white lines. D avid Strow is a ju n io r jo u rn a lism m ajor. and completely shut ourselves off to different ideas. Thirty million Americans have used drugs at Jeast mice, ■■ Most of the time, opponents of Tegalizationwilf not logically ' Page 6 S tate P ress Monday, November 1, X9g3 P olice Report ASU police logs fo r the weekend were not available a t press time. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Friday: • A woman called police Thursday afternoon because she feared her 33-year-old son would attempt suicide. The man was despondent because he is unemployed and was recently turned down for a bank loan. Police contacted him at home and took him to be evaluated at the county mental hospital. • An unknown suspect entered a Tempe dentist’s office after hours and urinated in a drinking water container. While police have no leads, the dentist said he will fire an employee he thinks did it. • A 35-year-old man was arrested for driving under the influ­ ence and hit-and-run Thursday afternoon. An officer stopped a car matching the description of one leaving the scene of an accident at Apache Boulevard and Dorsey Lane. The driver admitted to the hit-and-run, and said he fled because he had been drinking. • Thè menu board at Rally’s, 1410 W. University Drive, was set on fire last Saturday night, Causing minor damage. Ah assis­ tant manager put out the small blaze with a fire extinguisher after being tipped off by a customer. The assistant manager questioned a man who was seen holding a lighter, but the man denied setting the fire, • Two Mesa Community College students driving near 7500 S. McClintock Drive last Friday night were threatened by a man in a van flashing a handgun. Police contacted the van’s owner, who said a relative took the van without permission that night and has not yet returned it. • A Tempe man turned himself in early Wednesday morning after learning he was wanted for assaulting his wife and 15-yearold stepdaughter earlier that night. The woman Called police after her husband pushed her to the ground and hit her daughter in the face, causing injuries that .were treated at Tempe St, Luke’s Hospital. Neither the woman nor her daughter wanted to prose­ cute. • Police caught a car thief during a routine traffic stop early Thursday morning. Two men in a 1978 Oldsmobile with a flat rear tire were seen cutting through a gas station to avoid a red light at Mill Avenue and Baseline Road. When police stopped the car, the occupants got out and ran in opposite directions. The pas­ senger escaped, but the driver was caught by a police dog named Thunder. The man fought the dog, receiving bites on the legs, and struggled with officers before being taken into custody. He was arrested for felony theft and interfering with a working, aninial. • A 35-year-old Tempe man was cut on the wrist during an argument With his girlfriend early last Saturday morning. After the woman slashed him with a steak knife, the man went to a pay phone to call police, who took hint to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital for treatment. • A 22-year-old Tempe woman was arrested for aggravated assault Wednesday afternoon after cutting her boyfriend with a steak knife. An argument escalated to a pushing match, during which the woman scratched and bit her boyfriend several times. The woman then went to the kitchen to get a knife. When she returned, the man tried to grab the knife and twist it out of her hand, sustaining a 2-inch cut on his back in the process. •T w o 9-year-old boys threw a rock through a window at Thew Elementary School last Friday evening. The incident was witnessed by another 9-year-old, who identified the boys as fel­ low Thew students. • A man punched a mother and her adult daughter in their mouths during a dispute at their workplace Tuesday morning. The man fled before police arrived and has not yet been contacted. Compiled by State Press reporter M axwell Higgins. State P ress Crosswords - For the cruciverbalist in you. The World Beer Tour Eajaf 111 of On Wm U ’s Most Distinctive Brews 25 Draft Beers 90 Borne Beers m 0Ssm 530 W. Broadway W it h F K E t'S I iii S D R t N K i 3-tb. tw rrilo llHiif »Wi rrdiW rf In fredt tortjhas, lettuce, . C M r Of'dlklMn s i M rf, * 1 | | § § | 0 - One coupon per customer p et veil. | tom ato & tiow» i l - l r t î baa _ _ mm a * lM _ _ _ a _ _ B • » mm m d 'm i mm Tempe: 216 E. University - just east of Forest - 829-6026 Phoenix Locations: 12th St. & Van Buren, 253-1511 • Central & Southern, 276-7531 32nd Ave. & Van Buren, 272-3239 Invitation to apply for STATE PRESS EDITORSHIP The ASU Student P ublications A dvisory B oard is now solicitin g applications for the State Press editorship for 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 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the State Press; must have completed a minimum of 15 hours o f journalism courses including news writing, reporting, editing and jour­ nalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. Applicants must also: Submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; . list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those courses, submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story or editorial written for the State Press or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State Press or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the State Press office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Friday, November 12, ¡993. ^ Bruce D. Rule Director, Student Publications Matthews Center, Room 133 Phone 965-7572 FREE? E v ery w eekday, w e g iv e y o u th e State P ress a b so lu tely free. G re a t new s. G reat featu res. E v en a m ag azin e. C ro ssw o rd s an d h o ro sco p es. N o t to m e n tio n th e h u g e savings fro m all th e co u p o n s. W e d o all th is fo r y o u ev ery day. W ill y o u d o so m eth in g fo r us to d ay ? G o o d ! T hanks! T h e State P ress h as special in serts in it today. A n d they te n d to flo p to th e g ro u n d an d c rea te a safety h aza rd as w ell as an ey eso re. W o u ld y o u b e so so cially co rre c t as to b e n d o v er an d p ic k u p th e in sert th a t m ay h av e b e e n th e o n e th a t slip p e d o u t o f y o u r State P ress! T h an k s. W e ap p rec iate y o u r h elp . A n d so d o es th e earth . W h e re c a n y o u p ic k u p a S ta te P r e s s ? If you d id n ’t g et a “re c y c le d ” S ta te P res s in o n e o f yo u r cla s s e s , you can pick yo u r copy up at: ON CAMPUS Administration Building Alumni Center ASU Bookstore ASU Visitor Center Business Building, east side Campus Police ChollaHall Community Center Engineering Research Forest Mali kiosk (by Payne) Gammage Auditorium Hayden Lbraiy Law Library MaHServices Manzanita Hall Manzanita kiosk Mariposa Hall Memorial Union Info Desk Murdock Hall -Nobel Ubrary North Cady Mall North Cady Mall kiosk North Forest MaH OootHoHan 4 Orange Mall (by MU) Orange Mai kiosk (by fountain) Orange MaUkiosk (by MU) Palo Verde: east, west, and main Palo Verde kiosk (between PV east &PV west) Physical Plant PS 3,4 Sonora Hall South Cady Man kiosk(by Business building) South Cady Man at Lemon South Forest Man (by Farmer) Sun Devil Stadium Student Health Student PubScations Student Recreation Center Student Servioes Building Tyler Mall, Cady MaHkiosk Tyler Man, east Tyler Man, Forest Man Tyler Man, Palm Walk kiosk UniversityActivity Center University Club r-*"5'! University Relations OFF CAMPUS Associated Bioscience BaboaCale Bandersnatch Brew Pub r Beauvais Gym Bimpie Sandwiches &Subs Cambridge Square Apartments Campus Comer Cart’s Jr. Restaurant Changing Hands Bookstore Chris’Chevron Chuckbox Cinnamon Tree Plaza Coffee Plantation College Street Deli Cornerstone Mall Express Yogurt Grooming Humans Salon Gumby's Pizza Jam’s Restaurant Koft>/s Comer Pocket Long Wong’s Mama’s Pizza McDonald's on Rural Mesa Community College, Administratiori Building Mesa Community College, KirkCenter MinAvenue Shops Minder Binders Ozzie’s Warehouse Den Peridns Restaurant &Bakery Rothers Bookstore Schlotsky’s Sandwich Shop South MogntahCommunily College Stan’s Metro Deli SubStop Sunny’s Pizza The Commons Towers Apartments Tower Records Wendy’s WherShouse 5th Avenue &Mi, northwest comer 6th Street Newstand St a u P ress P age 7 Monday, November 1,1993 Zoology department earns $250,000 Program to target 1st-, 2nd-year undergrads By G arin G roff State P ress ASU’s zoology department has received a $250,000 grant to prom ote undergraduate research in ecology and boost'minority represen­ tation in the field of environmental biology. The four-year program is somewhat unusual because it calls for research to be conducted by students who are in their first or second year of college, said Nancy Grimm, program director of the Research Experience for Undergraduate Program in Ecology (ECOREU). “They’ll be doing projects that are designed to answer questions that we don’t know the answers to,” Grimm said. “It’s not all that radi­ cal a concept when you think about it, but itV pretty different than die way that science is usu­ ally taught.”: Minorities are “grossly underrepresented” in the fields of ecology and environmental biology, something which ECOREU wants to change, said James Elser, one of six faculty members who will work with ECOREU students. Elser said he hopes the program, builds stu­ dents’ desires to learn more about science by allowing them to conduct research as soon as they start college. “It’s an experiment. It might not work, but it might be really a great way to attract students and get them excited about science,” Elser said. . Students in other research projects said allowing students to conduct research at an earli­ er stage in their education will enhance what they learn because they are more actively involved with their education. Rick Wattier, a 34-year-old zoology major, said he changed his m ajor afte r he began research because he was able experience things in the laboratory that he couldn’t see in the classroom. “It just brings a whole new dimension to the educational experience,” Wattier said. “I love research. I had no idea I was even into science until I started doing this. It ju st com pletely changed my whole way of thought.” Victor Luevano, a’ 19-year-old psychology pre-med student, said research benefited his edu- cation because he is able to use what, he has learned in his classes. . “It makes everything seem more worth­ while,” Luevano said. “You get to see the appli­ cations of all the classes that yoii’ré taking.” ECOREU will begin next semester with a group of eight undergraduate students. A second set of eight students will enter the program in fall 1995. Funded by the National Science Foundation, it is a year-round program that pays $5,000 per year to participants. Grimm said the program is open to under­ classmen who are independent, motivated and have an interest in science. While minorities are targeted, non-minorities are eligible to apply, Grimm said. State P ress Sports - We w rite from the field, the floor and the locker room. ATTENTION ’93 GRADS FestD evil 93 Thursday, Nov 4 ANNOUNCEMENT GOW NS CAPS C ultural Day 9i)0 am on West Lawn Day-long cultural celebration. NOW AVAILABLE ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE Hom ecom ingBash 8:00pm - 12.f)0arnMnder Binders Over &Under. Featuring Lemon Krayola&THC. Cafl 965*5276 for more info. W E WANT TO BE YOUR BO OK STO RE 6 2 5 E . A p a c h e • 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 Friday, Statt Press The only free thing at ASU. L antern W alk/U ^iting the "A " 7:00 pm at 'Ä Mountain 8:00 pm in 0WTown Tempe Saturday, Nov 6 1993 Penn/ASU Homecoming Tennis Classic Sat-Sun. Student Recreation Complex Last Courts Registration Oct 1- Nov 1. $8/singles; $12/doubles. Ça! the SRC at 965*8911 for more information. G anie Tailgate fiesta/ ^ ofFam eInduction 4:00 pm outside the University Activity Center IS THE STRATEGY G A M E WHERE Y O U PREDICT THE PLAYS D U R IN G UVE TELEVISED NFL. CO LLEG E A N D CFL FOOTBALL A C T IO N . PLAYED WITH LIVE TELEVISED FOOTBALL G AM ES M onday N ight F ootb all NFL Sunday F o o tb a ll Thursday & S atu rday C o lle g e F ootb all M ost Bowl G arries NFL P layoff G am es OBI IS EXCLUSIVELY LICENSED, BY THE NFL S upeibow l Sun Devil Football vs. Cal 7.00 pm Sun Devil Stadium 4 M O N D A Y-FR ID A Y A lumni A ssociation 5 P M -7 P M C O M P L IM E N T A R Y HAPPY HOUR BUFFET Tempe I Tribune Par more info or to p ártese i FestDevil 93 T-shirt, call ASASUat 965-3161 or the ASUAIumd Association at 965*3566. M STAUW ANT »N O S f* Q B T S LO U NG E R ural R oad a t A pache Blvd. • 968-3451 W o&day S W P h o e n ix • Tem pe/A SU State P ress Monday. November 1.1993 Groups o f kids help thieves break robbery records, prosecutors say LOS ANGELES (AP) — Robert Sheldon Brown has made the nation’s previous bank-robbing record holder look like a petty thief, engineering at least 175 bank robberies with the help of legions of youngsters, prosecutors say. Brown and Donzell Thompson persuaded so many disadvan­ taged youths to join them that prosecutors compare them to Fagin, the Dickens character who horrified Victorian readers by exploit­ ing children. “Fagin trained young pickpockets, lived off their spoils, and avoided the hazardous business of sticking his own hand into someone else’s pocket,” Special Assistant U.S. Attorney John S. Wiley Jr. wrote in his sentencing memorandum to U.S. District Judge Stephen V. Wilson. “Brown and Thompson just added high powered weapons and freeways to the mis.” On Monday, Brown, 23, and Thompson, 24, members of the notorious Rollin Sixties faction of the Los Angeles Crips gang, will be sentenced to at least 25 years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy, five robberies and two carjackings. “Robert Brown has robbed more banks than anyone in the his­ tory of the United States,” FBI special agent William J. Rehder, the agency’s bank robbery coordinator in Los Angeles, wrote to the judge. The previous record was set by Edwin Chambers Dotson, known as the Yankee Bandit because of his baseball cap. He was arrested after 64 holdups in 1983 and 1984 and is still in federal custody, Wiley said. Brown and Thompson were accused in their indictment of conspiring to protect themselves from bank cameras and pursuit by recruiting and training gang members and drug users who took the fall for them again and again. “They robbed as many as five banks a day. They’d start at one end of Los Angeles and go all the way to the other side. They even went to Las Vegas,” Wiley said. One pattern was to have two bagmen and a gunman take over a bank, flee in a stolen car, then trade it for another car a few blocks away to escape detection. Thompson and Brown would drive off in a third car once the robbery was under way, then join up later to divide the loot. “Boys do not rob banks unless someone shows them how,” Wiley wrote. “Brown and Thompson showed them how.” ■ Brown, accused of masterminding holdups since 1989, and Thompson, his accomplice since at least 1992, were arrested by FBI agents on May 28. Facing mandatory sentences of more than 100 years if convicted of conspiracy, bank robbery, carjacking and using guns during violent crimes, they decided to plead guilty in a pica bargain. Brown’s bargain contains mandatory prison time of 25 to 30 years. Thompson faces at least a 25-year sentence. With time off for good behavior, they’ll still have to serve 85 percent of that time before qualifying for release. ASU S w e a tsh irts Sweatpants • T-shirts • Hats A lo t more than ju st books! You'll never know unless you read your horoscope. $ 2 .0 0 O ff! 20 Point Valvoline Lube, Oil & Filtér Service (Beg. $21.95) LEIGHTON’S MESA 1355 S. C ountry C lub 898-8211 TEMPE 1365 S. M cC lintock 894-2798 ^ Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8-6, Sunday 10-4 Good only with coupon. Not valid with any other offers. Add $1.00 Environmental Fee. L o o k in g F or A J o b ? ARE YO U ... ENTHUSIASTIC, OUTGOING, ARTICULATE? W e need 7 0 people to make calls to alumni and parents of ASU students to raise money for academic programs. flexible evening and weekend hours $ 5 .0 0 per hour plus bonus 3 hour shifts close to campus Rural & University great resume builder G et involved • M eet new people University In thè classified section. CALL TODAY 9 6 5 -6 7 5 4 j | State P ress Page 9 Monday, November 1,1993 T h è S u n D e v il S p a r k Y e a r b o o k Order yours today for $36.93 Matthews Center basement, rm 50 W INTER BREAK IN ISRAEL! Spend two weekaaaaacudentvalUnteer working and living on an army bare. m m INCLUDES ROUNDTWP AIRFARE. ROOM, KOSHER BOARD A TOURS Departing from Los AngcksDeccxnber 13,29 Mew Y o rk D c p a a ta e * tn m 9649, C a ll fo r o rk e r dates a a d cfcfes Contact: VOLUNTEERS FOR ISRAEL James H am m jo in s education group by speaking at sch ool ethics forum cate ethical citizens and instill a sense of public responsibility.” Steve Mack, chairman of the ethics steering committee and member of the board of directors for the league, said, “Our goal today is to define the role in education in creating ethical citizens as well as to identify the areas that should be included in such education,” / Hamm was asked to serve on the panel for several reasons, according to Mack. “First of all, as an adult learner-— he fits that bill.” He .said the league was striving to have the “full spectrum” represented on the panel, including people who know others that were left out of the system. “These issues do not stop when you graduate from College,” Mack said. “(Hamm) can provide specific insight on the success and failures of the education system and insight into alternative means of getting an ethical education.” According to Mack, the league received a grant from the Arizona Community Board to study ethics in the areas of politics, government, mass media and education. Saturday’s forum was the last of four studies started Over a year ago, By J oy E. B eason State P ress James Hamm, convicted murderer and ASU Jaw student, joined in with the Valley Citzens League on Saturday in a forum regarding ethics in education. “We are creating criminals,” Hamm told the crowd. He added that the “people in charge,” such as principals and other administrators create the environment for learning. “We are at the mercy of internal criteria. The keepers treat the kept more illegally than the prisoners treated their victims — there is a problem here.” He said if parents want ethics in classrooms they must see to it that the people in charge are ethical. “Unfortunately, we have made some lousy choices,” Hamm said. The forum focused on educators creating ethical citizens from 'elementary school to the college level. League member Joan Westlake said the group brings the opin­ ion of citizens to bear on the decisions made by politicians, gov­ ernment agencies and the rest of community. She said the public was invited to meet with “educational pro­ fessional and public policy experts to discuss how they can edu- 1722'Wfesrwood Blvd , Suite 104 Los Angeles, CA 90024 010)470*1316 Hopetoset yousoon. 639 14th Avenue San Francisco, CA 94118 (415)752-8554 Lrtt,kr»¿L 42ND STREET • SUtTE 1818 UNTEERS 3JNEW0 WEST YORK. NEW YORK 100364902 ISRAEL 212 443-4048 • PAX 212 443-4855 k h i BA T H S A C H O O S T E E, L T 1 P A R E V A S E T H H1A T A F L A AM 1 L 0 E N T U O L 0 A S P •I E C E T A R T S C R O SSW O R D by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS C O C S K A P 0 1 T T AG R E L 1 O A T E R S H E A H E R 1 E 0 I N ■ e L Y C E Y o R o S L O L A S A M P A Y E R R E N E 1 R T Y Kennedy DOWN 1 Rough 1 Radio an­ guess noyance 5 Lights2 Harangue out tune 9 Stairs over 3 Without help a fence 4 Mercedes 10 Helps out partner 12 Baseball's 5 File folder Hank F r id a y s A n sw er feature 13 Baseball’s 28 High6 ‘ Honest* 15 Lets off Yogi president 1 9 Emanation school 14 Poom part students 7 Iran, once 20 Dog doc 16 Baring or 29 Molecule 8 Winning Arabian 22 Aching part spell 23 Intimidate 17 Conceal 30 W ander­ 16 Fancy can­ 9 Mitchell 24 Town ing calf of T V s ape topper squares 25 Matador's 33 Dagger ‘ Step by 21 Top card handle Step* foe 22 Mouse 35 Original 11 Coal 26 Chicken sound 36 Superman region of 27 Warring 23 Lawyer's symbol Germany groups milieu 24 Illinois city 7 B 2 4 6 3 26 Manx or ■ E ] 7 ■ 11 9 Siamese I * 29 fn error it 30 Illustrator 14 Gustave “ 31 Make lace 19 ZD ^ It 32 Mis­ J ■ 16 sourian's 21 demand 1 m W 34 Contents 1 of a news­ ■ 76 27 28 25 worthy p J layer ■ 37 Once more li 36 Stallions' n :a mates 36 34 ii 39 Gives the ■ 39 3Ô ax 40 Plants 41 seeds * 1 ■ 1 41 Koppel and TH IS W EEK 'S S P E C IA L S W & B C o o A C T IO N o k n s t o n e c H r e t i o n E iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin MAIN LEVEL N Q N T M A e n o r Y G A S D A o d j M R X U P T N B R q h G K Q H o j n r S V > M X V Q R AD Y R A A R J V D V Ö E M R E Y T C O M 2 C > % H v o id w ith R E C R E A T IO N C e i T E R I N I f s i< 3 O O T= Y= IN T ‘1 - t h r u N o v . H E S T N o v : s r s ____ H m i-tc d o t h e r o f f e Watch the Redskins Play The B ills!, Play Pool $l.50/hour O P E 3 -to s t o c k ,on h a n d TAKE A STUDY BREA K 8 BOWLING LANES • 15 POOL TABLES BOW L FOR ONLY 750/GAM E AND 5 0 0 /SHOES! Come down this weekend and plav games and watch your favorite teams play football! W E 'R E Y O U R O N - C A M P U S 'F U L L - S E R V I C E ' T R A V E L A G E N C Y A N D C A R P S E R V IC E S FULL SERVICE TRAVEL AGENCY AND CARD SERVICES 965-8410 LOWER LEVEL SLEVEL • O N “ f t C A M P U S- A ^ ~ v 965-0600 ■We accept VISA, MC, V a lle y w id e Opening of “Bridging the Gap” all week in the MU Gallery. Build aMUAB Float for Homecoming! We need your help! 3 111 i | 1 I P M * UNITED I U W parcel W GROUND ■ SERVICE U r ASU MAIL SERVICES ANNEX LOWER LEVEL Join MUAB! We havejsix programming committees that offer somethng for everyone. Stop by the . Third Floor of the MU! Free Movie! “Highlander” in the Union Cinema, Lower Level of MU, 7 pm A IR BO RN E EX PRESS PACKAGING SUPPLIES . Express and Pis cover /M g D o n a ic rs * % O F AS U " C O M E O N O U R G K We have . balloons,; plants and .stu ffe d animals! Milton Bradley College Tour 10-5 pm in the Programming Lounge Ldwer Lever MU. »Free Movie! “Highlander” Lower Level of MU in the Union Cinema, 12:40 pm UPS GROUND SERVICE Take care of all WE SELL your mailing BOXES needs here! stamps • envelopes and boxes • overnight ENVELOPES deliveiy $ tO F F P O W N A N D B U R G E R O F C H E C K T H E : Weekly “ Deadly Amaz” MU Programming Lounge 11:30 to 1pm • Free M ovie!/ ‘Highlander’’ Union Cinema, 2:40 pm Gallery Reception 3a5 pm in die MU Gallery in excess of $5 QVERNIIE DELIVERY . American Anywhere!! - : P e l ¡ v e r y :0F F CAMPUS! 9 6 5 -6 8 2 2 i FTP DELIVERY WE DELIVER Memomm. OhonActwTKs Bom« H WATCH F O R A S U TRAVEL SHOW COMING JA N . 2 7 .1 9 9 4 ! r T ra v e l O ffic e Hours 6-5 _ : . WE DELIVER! ONCAMPUS OR 11-1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's h ow to w ork it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W O ne letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for the three L’s, X for th e tw o O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation o f the words are ali'hints. Each d ay th e code letters are different. 11-1 CRYPTOQUOTES F R IP A ^ T U E S D A Y We d n e s d a y ; 1HJR5PAY F a rc e S id e show, 12:30 pm in the Programming Lounge. O U T M O N T H ! LOWER LEVEL AM R K XJ F R E . — E D T X S UQ N A M F r id a y 's C r y p to q s o t e : FO R T H IR T Y -S E V E N Y E A R S I'V E PR A C T IC E D (V IO L IN ) F O U R T E E N HOURS A D A Y A N D NOW THEY CALL ME A GENIUS. - PA BLO SARASATE e 1093 by King Feature* SyndkaM. Inc C A M P !U S P IN I N c r featuring: Taco Ben* Pizza Hut sttrtiy «pasta chicken • salad sandwiches gourmet coffa«m . i SUBCITY (Every Wednesday) SIZZLING SALADS ! (Every Wednesday) WOK'S (Every Thursday) 6" Deli Sub & 16oz Pepsi Greek Salad and 16oz Pepsi Teriyaki Chicken, Steamed Rice and 16oz Pepsi _____ _____ I i7 ? SATELLITES TACO BELL (Every Wednesday) (Every Thursday) Burrito Supreme, Small Chef Salad Taco and & 32oz Pepsi lóoz Pepsi $3.29 State P ress Monday, November 1,. 1993 Page 10 C a lv in and H o b b e s in by Bill Watteraon T H E P A R S ID E BY GARRY TRUDEAU D oonesbury boops/e ? s m get down HERE,BABE! i New wu TOTAKEA MEET! * i cant, s ip . 20NKB&0N JURYPUTY, ANDI'M GET A SITTER - THIS IS 016! YOU'RE UPFOR A LEAP IN A NBWBIOPIC- YUP. YOLfD BE PLAY­ SIEENT ING ROBIN THEGP09B QUIVERS, HIS P.J.* SYCOPHANTIC \\ SIDEKICK. houjarp "PM VATE RÛRT3 : THE alone w ith 5AM... By G A R Y LAR SO N jI •> The entire parliam ent fell dead s ile n t F o rth « first tim e sin c e anyone could remember, o n e of th e m em bers voted “aye.” NEW YORK (AF) — Matt Dillon admits he isn't fond of tooting his own horn. “I find talking about myself really boring,” the actor told The New York Times in an inter­ view published Sunday. In some new spaper stories, critics hâve questioned his intelligence and his humility. He blames his own awkwardness when faced with personal questions. “I do get bottled up in interviews,” he said. “Y ou’re thinking about what you’re saying, and suddenly you get tangled. “ So people think I’m sullen, or that I don’t have much to say. But my friends will tell you: A lot of times I talk too much.-’ D illon, 29, rem ains a solid H ollyw ood com m odity. H e is th e s ta r o f “M r. Wonderful,” a rom antic com edy in theaters nationwide. “The Saint of Fort Washington,” in which he plays a hom eless m an, opens Nov. 17. H is film c r e d its in c lu d e “D ru g s to re Cowboy,” “The O utsiders,” ‘T h e Flam ingo Kid,” “A Kiss Before Dying” and ‘T ex.” RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (A P) — Pop music fans weren’t th e only ones waiting for Madonna to get here. '■ Religious fundamentalists planned protests against what they Called M adonna’s “sado­ masochistic garbage.” The pop star’s risque “Girlie Show” world tour in clu d es B razil p erform ances in Sao Paulo on Wednesday and in Rio on Saturday, The singer and her entourage were to arrive Monday. Protests have accom panied various tour stops. In Brazil, a Gospel Power Festival was sch ed u led fo r S atu rd ay to co m p ete w ith Madonna’s show in Rio. . But Rosangela Lem os, one o f hundreds w aitin g in line th is w eekend fo r the few remaining tickets, said the often scantily clad star should feel at home in Rio, the city that gave the world the bikini. NEW YORK (AP) — For Oscar-winners Anthony, H o p k in s and E m m a T hom pson, playing unlikely screen lovers is getting to be • old h at. r Last seen together in “Howards End,” the British actors play lead roles in “The Remains o f the D ay,” a dram a about repressed love between a housekeeper and a butler that opens Friday. “The film is about the bone-aching loneli­ ness of life, the tedium of going on and on: Is that all there is?. T hat’s very heartbreaking,” Hopkins told the New York Daily News in a story published Sunday. Thompson, 33, who won her best acting Academy Award for "Howards End,’’ chal­ lenged any simple description of the conflict­ ing emotions in the film. “How do w e know w hat love really is? Love is a deeply abused word,” she said. “I think an attraction of sorts is eminently there between the two of them.” Hopkins, 55, an O scar w inner for “The Silence o f the Lambs,” says his character’s stuffiness is just a mask. “I think he’s frightened by her,” he said. “H e’s not capable of giving anything.” NEW YORK (AP) — M eredith B axter, who played a TV mom on “Family Ties,” is enjoying real-life parenting these days. Baxter, 46, says she’s reluctant to tackle another series because she wants to spend as much tim e as she can w ith her 8-year-old twins. “I w ant to be there to tu ck them in at night,” Baxter said in an interview in the Nov. 22 issue o f For Women First. “I love my kids to distraction and feel a sense o f anguish when I’m not home for them,” She recently took them on location while filming an upcoming movie for CBS, “For the Love of Aaron.” DOMINO'S PIZZA DAILY SPECIALS HOT WINGS! k M ONDAY M ADNESS! ^ A Dozen W ings $3.99 25 W ings $6.9 9 50 W ings $11.99 O N L Y $6.99! For a Large Pepperoni Pizza and two Medium diet or Classic Cokes. >k TE R R IFIC T U E S D A YK ^ O N LY $5.99! Fora Medium Pepperoni Pizza and two Medium diet or Classic Cokes. 2 «ip(a Umitad w o u ld -b e a d m ire r. Agreements are easily reached w ith others tonight. LEO -(July 23 to Aug. 22) A d if f e r e n t a p p ro a c h w ill • bring you success w ith a busi­ n e ss e n d ea v o r. Y ou m ay be m aking sw eeping changes at hom e today* N o d o u b le y o u w ill g et rid o f som e clutter. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) N o t o n ly a re y o u c r e a t iv e today, but you are also deter­ mined. You w ill do everything in your pow er now to make an e n te r p r is e s u c c e s s fu l. Perseverance pays off* , LIBRA (Sept. 23 to O ct. 22) Though you are shrew d today, rem em ber that the people you are dealing with are also adroit in financial dealing. New ideas com e now about hom e d eco ­ rating projects. 921-9222 SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Noyv 21) Y o u r stro n g w ill an d fie rc e d riv e are m u c h in e v id e n c e today. Y ou w ill be going after w hat you w ant out o f life now w ith vigor. T onight, y ou are less: intense. SAGITTARIUS (Nov* 22 to D ec. 21) You may be receiving a bene­ ficial financial tip today . An attic or garage m ay be receiv­ ing special attention now . You w ill be getting rid o f unneeded item s.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan* 19) You will certainly speak out at a group meeting today, but do try to avoid unnecessary con­ fro n tatio n s, S u rp risin g new s com es from a friend. Y ou are intuitive tonight. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 1 8 ). Y o u w ill b e d e a lin g w ith p o w e r b ro k e r s in b u s in e s s today* B e a g o o d o b s e r v e r now 8nd Watch for Subtleties. S o m e o n e m ay in a d v e rte n tly tip his or her hand* PISCES (Feb. 19 to M ar. 20) Y ou have p a ssio n a te b e lie fs now, but do try to avoid argu­ ing about them . Som e useful b u sin ess in fo rm a tio n co m es fro m an un e x p ec te d q u a rte r.. Travel is a plus. Y O U BO RN TO D A Y have le a d e rs h ip a b ilitie s a n d are very much the individual. You o ften choose a creative m edi­ um through w hich to express y o u r u n iq u e n e s s . Y o u are m ulti-talented and more versa­ tile than the typical m em ber o f y o u r s ig n . Y o u r s e n s e o f h u m o r ¡also k e ep s y o u fro m taking y ourself too seriously. You can succeed in business, a s w ell as the arts and profes-: sions. Y ou dislike bein g in a subordinate position. Birthdate o f: G a ry P la y e r, g o lf e r ; G rantland R ice, sportswriter* and Betsy Palm er, actress. ©1993-King Features Syndicate. Inc. S t a t e P r e s s C lassified Ad O rd er Form Name Hom e Phone B usiness Phone Address c ity . S tate ¿P Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. FIND IT in the Classifieds! 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 Tour Individuai Horoscope Counseling D esktop P ublishing. T yping, term papers, resumes, charts, the­ sis, quick service. N ear ASU. 966-1984 PAPERS FAST! Proofed. Laser. $2/pg. Desk top publishing avail. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987- SERVICES SERVICES 15 RESTAURANTS/ BARS 1 3 0 1 E. University Monday Night Football Every w eekday; w e give you th e State Press absolu tely free. G re a t new s. G re a t features. Even a m agazine.-“ Crosswords and horo­ scopes. N o t to m en tion th e huge savings from all c Lu b sports b a r , th e coupons. W e d o this for y o u every d a y . W ill you d o som e­ Please be sure to check youp?d- Make sure it reads exactly, as. you w ish it to . appear in the State- Press, including punctuation. Please check yo u r a d the first day it appedrs-the liability o f th e State Press shall not exceed the cost o f the ad and credit m ay be given Tor the first insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. . Ç A ■ 1-4 days. $ 1 3 0 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 1Ò+ days, $1.15 per line, per day s Comm ercial • 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 p er line, per day' 10+ days, $1.00 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. , Pleaseinclude thing fo r us tod ay ? Buffalo Bills ¥ ! ♦ Washington Redskins G o o d ! Thanks! T h e State Press has spe­ cia l inserts in it today. During the Game MO Long Hecks All Night safety h a za rd as w e lt as an eyesore. W o u ld you S. M ill Ave. • Downtown Tem pe • 966-2020 BankCardNumber If NameionCard . exptiWi>nO#te:i Sorry, mo cannot accept personal ads through the mall. be so socially correct as to be n d o ver a nd pick up th e insert th a t m ay have been d ie o n e that slipped o u t o f y o u r State Press? Thanks. W e a ppreciate your h e lp . A n d so does the 411 pnceperDay ||||L #o«Days *1^ ?. '"*44, 1 A n d th e y tend to flop to th e ground a nd create a Complimentary Buffet ■□ Qffl a ÉttË ' □ BS earth. 098 Adoption 065 Airplanes 010 Announcements 020 Apartments 061 Automobiles 064 Bicydes 051 Books 077 Business Opportunities 054 Computers 066 Free Lost/Found 088 Fundraising 052 Furniture 049 G arage Sales 101 ' Health & Fitness 0 74 Help Wanted-ChHd Care 0 7 2 Help W anted-Clerical 0 73 Help W anted-Food Service 070, Help W anted-General 071 Help W anted-Sales 0 30 Homes for Rent 040 102" 107 103 056 076 0 15 1 20 0 50 0 45 Homes for Sale Housedeaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous M iscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes 063 082 090 064 110 097 047 035 080 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling R eal Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms for Rent 100 061 058 031 041 060 067 106 105 115 Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Condos for Rent Townhomes/Condos fo r S ale Transportation Travel Tutors Typing/W ord Processing W anted Page 16 Sta te P ress November 1,1993 WHEREHOJUSE A BIIN SU R A N C E LIL DEVIL TANNING CAFE ITALY PHONELAN HAIR-1 S-MA BROADMQR STYLISTS LO G A IE D A P TIÆ SOUTHEAST CORNER APOLLO KWIK COPY IS iÄ S itÖ iÄ ^ Ä GUMBY’S RURAL & BROADWAY FAST HOURS FREE DELIVERY! ^ NOW ON SALE! 11" CD or 7 " Cass Pearl Jam -U S Rush - Counterparts Nirvana - In Utero Meatloaf - Bat Out of Hell II W e treat you as someone special. Ydu can see it in the .friendly smile that greets you at the c o u n te r., You know it in the cheer­ ful. way we handle special requests. You 11 notice the difference in o u r first-class drycleaning, too. C om e in today : . , let us spoil you. BRING W ILL RECEIVE A "RENT 2 VIDEOS, GET A TH IR D FREE*' C O U P O N R P IZ Z A S : (’expirés I T-31-93) fiotto- 2 Large 2-Item Pizzasma$10 — Any $20 or more order / Sale prices good through 11/4/93 Norm al Rental Requirements Apply - % fiii ß A eeu ten A Sìr 966-0793 Sarti© Day Service 5 TANS Hardware • Hardware • Housewares • Phone fit TV Cable • Lum ber • Paint • Plum bing Supplies • Tools • Balsa W ood • M odel M aking Supplies • Plus Special O rders LIL’ DEVIL TANNING AND NAILS 968-5258 O pen 6 D a y s a W eek 9 6 8 -4 5 4 4 937 E. BROADW AY 929 E. Broadway Tempe EXPIRES 11-21-93 A FULL SERVICESALON 9 6 7 -7 4 6 3 (S.E. 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