National NAFTA forum raises hope, questions B y S hawn Boyd State P ress D uring a video forum a t ASH on Monday, President Bill Clinton said Congress must ratify the North Am erican Free Trade A greem ent to keep A m erica’s econom y alive, but NAFTA oppo­ nents said the confer­ ence was unfairly orga­ nized. About 65 students and citizens attended the pro-NAFTA conference that was received via satellite at the MU. The forum was also broad­ cast to four other sites in the state and other loca­ tions nationwide. Those who participated could fax and telephone questions to the forum head­ quarters in Washington. D.C. The conference — sponsored nationally by the IJ.S. Chamber of Commerce and in Arizona by the Arizona-Mexico Commission — was designed to bolster congressional support for the agreement, which would promote free trade between the United States and Mexico. Congress is expected to vote on the agreement in late November. “My job is trying to recover the economic vitality of the nation by working with the private sector,” Clinton said. “We cannot simply create a healthy economy by making changes here.” '• Clinton said the world has become so global­ ized that countries have to enter new markets to keep increasing the number of jobs. Stan Kohler, a retired manufacturing engi­ neer from Phoenix and member of Ross Perot’s United We Stand, called the event unfair. “It was just completely one-sided,” Kohler said. “I would have liked to have seen Ross Perot in this. He would have provided some good questions (for the president).” Ilia Gizela Terrazas, special projects coordi­ nator for the Arizona-Mexico Coalition, said the conference fulfilled an educational purpose because anybody was allowed to attend. “1 think it was a very successful conference,” she said. “The purpose was to provide educa­ tion.” Jim Barrett, a 25-year-old doctoral student in education, said the only choice America has is to buy into the agreement. "Basically, it’s the future,’’ he said. “We’re hr a global economy, and it’s not an option to turn T urn to NAFTA, p a g e 2. Residents protest conditions at local apartment complex B y J ason H ii .i State P ress A Tempe apartment complex predominantly occupied by Asian ASU students has come under the fire of its own residents, who claim the complex is plagued with sewage spills, roof leakage and crime. The residents and administrators of Fiesta Park Apartments, 1224, E. Lemon St., held their first tettant/owner meeting Sunday, with several City of Tempe officials also in attendance. The meeting sparked a heated discussion. “This operation is an embarrassment to me as a citizen of Arizona,” said John Acer, a Phoenix attorney present at the meeting. “I am ashamed of the living conditions I have seen here.” About 30 Fiesta Park tenants attended the meeting, along with two Valley neighborhood services employees, Tempe City Councilman D ennis C ahill and Tem pe policem an J.J. Morrell. Cahill, who previously visited the complex, said at the meeting that he feels that Fiesta Park’s ownership is taking advantage o f its pri­ marily Asian student tenants. Fiesta Park owner George Clancy, who also attended the meeting, did not respond to Cahill’s comment. Cahill also said there are health violations present at Fiesta Park. He said management has been negligent about cleaning up human feces splattered against a wall on the northeast side of the complex: Speaking directly to Clancy, Cahill said, “Your employees have seen the feces, and that is such a health hazard that you should consider seeking other management. There’s no excuse for it.” Clancy acknowledged the problem and said it would be taken care of swiftly, but added that no changes in management would occur. Fiesta Park holds nearly 200 residents, about half of which are ASU students, according to Jill Enright, who manages the complex With her hus­ band, Elden. Cahill added that trees which sag to block a walkway at the complex must be tom down, as well as the vast amount of dead bushes and trees that are in the area. Maty Ann Corder, coordinator of Tempe’s. neighborhood program, asked residents to con­ tact her if there are more problems at the com­ plex, specifically with landscape and mainteT urn to T enants, page Bob Caatla/Stata Press Junior history major Tony McBride concentrates on catching a whirling frisbee on his head while playing catch with some friends on Hayden Library lawn. 2. ASA to research prorated tuition system for Arizona students B y M ark M . M acias State P ress Should students taking seven credit hours a semester pay the same tuition as those taking 18 credit hours? D elegates o f the A rizona Students’ A ssociation w ill be researching a prorated tuition system this month, examining whether all students should be required to pay the same amount in tuition no matter how many credit hours they are enrolled in. Pat McWhortor, ASA executive director, said prorated tuition would be similar to a community college or ASU’s summer school system where students pay for each credit hour they take. “It’s possible that we could do different things with (tuition),” INSIDE STATE PRESS W eather Outlook Sunny and m ild today, some breezes. High 78, low 52. McWhortor said. “It may not necessarily be a straight credit-hour rate, like the community colleges, where you pay $60 a credit hour. We could also do it where if you take a full-time load or more, you get a lower rate for credit hours. “It’s really, at this point, just an idea that we have been kicking around.«We don’t know yet what the benefits or consequences would be for doing it.” Assuming ASA’s idea is met with positive responses from . Arizona university students, the lobbying group would need to convince the Arizona Board of Regents that the tuition system change would be a beneficial move. Regent Andy Hurwitz said changing the tuition fees to a pro- ► Tempe City Council members World/ allow an ASU student to open a Nation tattoo shop on the University’s doorstep, despite concerns from The Senate debates a historic motion to area residents. Page 8 enforce a subpoena for Sen. Bob ^ According to FBI studies of Packwood's “sex police reports across the diaries.” nation, crime is on the P age 3 decrease. Page 6 rated system might cause students to take fe,wer credit hours per semester, which could delay graduation for many students. “We do prorate it now in the sense that if you take less than a certain number of credit hours, you pay less,” Hurwitz said. “The opposite argument is that (the current tuition system) encourages people to take more credits, which is something that we want them to do. If you’re going to take eight, then you might as well take 10 or 12 (credit hours). “I don’t really have a strong opinion about it one way or the other. I would need to hear the details.” Currently, resident university students pay $93 per credit hour. T urn to T uition , Sports The ASU and California football .teams have a chance to go to bowl games, but don’t say that to the coaches. Page 11- pa g e 2. W here To Find It Advertiser Inde^................13 13 Classifieds............. Comics.......... - ............. -...10 Crossword.................. ........ 6 Horoscopes ...................... 15 Opinion..............................4 Police Report......................8 Sports................ 11 Today’s Activities.............. 2 World/Nation..............,.»>...3' P age 2 n n :— “ NAFTA — Today C ontinued The Today section is a daily calendar o f events pruned as a service to the ASU com m unity. R equests are p rin ted according to the space available each day. Cam pus clubs and organizations m ay subm it w ritten entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f M atthews Center, Room 15. 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 fu ll address o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Deadline fo r entries is noon the day before publication. • Counselor Training Center — Counseling for ASU stu­ dents, provided by counseling and counseling psychology graduate students, supervised by faculty, Payne {foil Room 402. For more information or appointment, contact Ian, 9655067.. • Alcoholics Anonymous —- Daily closed meeting, noon, All Saints Catholic Newman Center, northwest comer of College Avenue and University Drive. • ASU C ollege o f Extended E ducation’s Downtown Center Galleria —• During November, free “Portraits of a Sacred Maya Cave” exhibition of photographic documenta­ tion of cave paintings of Naj Tunich (“stone house”), a cave in Guatemala which served as an ancient Maya shrine, 502 E. Monroe, second floor, Phoenix. •^Narcotics Anonymous — Home sweet home meeting, 5:30 p.m., 1701 S. College Ave., south courtyard. • S o lis D iab oli C lassics C lab — L ecture, “F elix Hymenaeus: Greek and Roman Marriage,” by Dr. Cynthia White, University of Arizona, 5 p.m., MU Arizona Room A. • Arizona O uting Club — Weekly meeting to discuss upcoming trips, 7:30 p.m., MU Pima Room 218, second floor. • Fellowship o f Christian Athletes — Weekly meeting, open to everyone, 7:30 p.m., University Activity Center Room 35.. • European Discussion Club - Russia, a discussion of cur­ rent problems, 6 p.m.- 7:30 p.m., MU Kaibab Room 208E. • M inority A ssistan ce P rogram — C ircle M oving Awareness group, 3:30 p.m., Student Services Building Multicultural Lounge Room 262. • Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship — Meeting, worship, prayer and fellowship, 7 p.m., Danforth Chapel. • Baptist Student Union — Annual Mission Banquet, 7 p.m., Church on Mill Sanctuary, 1300 S. Mill Ave. • Golden Key National Honor Society —- Pick up certifi­ cates, 9:30 a.m.- 2:30 p.m., Honors College Activity Center. M State P ress Tuesday, November 2,1993 W BOOKSTORE 1. split, with a large number of undecided votes. “The pressures against NAFTA are enormous,” Clinton said. “I think if there was a secret vote in the Congress, we would win,” he said, referring to possible hidden support among law­ makers. Clinton said worries about NAFTA ruining the nation are unfoundeej. “The idea that America is going to shrivel up if we have this agreement is ridiculous,” he said. Jim Driscoll, state director of Arizona Citizen Action and a staunch opponent of NAFTA, said the pro-NAFTA movement is money driven and the whole conference was staged. “This is the best grass roots campaign that money can buy,” Driscoll said. “This is Astroturf. It is artificial grass roots.” T enants______ C ontinued from page 1. nance. “The landlords must keep the electrical, plumbing and sanitary conditions up,” Acer added. Tenants also voiced concern over leaking roofs and a faulty water system, which they said has a tendency to remain off for several days. “Some of these roofs can’t all be fixed because of economics, but they will be patched,” Clancy said. Clancy added that heavy rains in September led to the current roof damage. Donna Cahagan, employee of the Phoenix Neighborhood Services, advised Clancy at the meeting to seek federal funding for repairs to the roofs and Clancy said he would try. The owner said he was unaware of water difficulties and asked that all residents contact management swiftly so repairs can be made. T u ition _ C ontinued from page id Morrell, referring to a March shooting at the complex, said crime could be curbed by participation in community policing. Acer also spoke to the residents, advising them of their legal rights. He told the tenants if they complained to management and were asked to leave within the next six months, it could be consid­ ered a retaliatory action by the landlord, In such a case, a judge would likely disallow any decision by the complex’s management to evict a tenant or refuse to renew a lease. Ken Volk, a Fiesta Park resident who organized the meeting, said the neighbors need to work together to rectify the situation. “We have the potential to improve this place if we are willing and able to put a little effort into it,” he said. Volk is filing a complaint against Clancy, who he claims attempted to evict him last month. _ 1. However, tuition jumps to a flat rate of $889 per semester once a student registers for seven or more credit hours. Jennie Garcia, NAU student body president and ASA delegate, said members of the lobbying group will ask students later this month whether they would be in favor of a prorated tuition sys­ tem. “A person who takes seven hours shouldn’t have to pay as much as someone who takes 18 (credit hours),” Garcia said. “But I think there needs to be a limit of what full time is because there are some students who are trying to graduate in four years. I don’t think they should be penalized for taking more classes. Something does need to be looked into though, as far as creating equilibrium. Garcia said ASA delegates will research a prorated tuition sys­ tem this month and will present the new data at their Dec. 16 meeting. COMPUTER ZONE We w a n t to be y o u r bookstore® B L U E from page back.” Barrett said open markets in Japan and other countries have been sought for many years. Now, America has the opportunity to tap into tariff-free markets. “If we don’t get it (a trade agreement with Mexico), you can bet Japan and Germany are going to jump on it,” Barrett said. Kohler said the conference ignored important issues, including a potential influx of Mexican professionals into the country under NAFTA. He added that machinery entering America from Mexico would be serviced by Mexican technicians. He said NAFTA would cost the United States $30 billion to clean up the Mexican border and $30 billion in lost tariffs. “It seems the best voice we have now on NAFTA is Pat Buchanan or Ross Perot,” he said. Perot and Buchanan oppose ratification of the agreement. Early reports indicate congressional opinion about NAFTA is W E W IL L BEAT A N Y O N E 'S PR IC ES — GUARANTEED. WE W ANT TO BE YOUR COMPUTER STORE. B O O K o n ty a t Rother's Bookstore i M u s t p r e s e n t c o u p o n . L im it 1 p e r c u s t o m e r . ^ W BTmTrTFTr^ - - ^ ffl1g ^ 7 - -. £ Open 7 days a week pannm^M 62S E. Apache 967>S44S 904 N. SC O T T SD A LE RD. T E M P E -SO U T H OF CURRY 3 O ^ Q 1 F IN A N C IN G AV A ILA BLE Invitation to apply for „ Feeling sort of “far out"? Read th e Far Side ca rto o n o n to d a y 's com ic page. E X C E P W W Manicuri Eyelash Brow Wi Colors 1 Permani Weavea UMto ï I NI È 1 JM5 SOUTH «URAL ROAD O TUE-SAT « 30-5:60 A fto i i r s i f a t 28% S tu d e n t D iscou Æ m STATE PRESS EDITORSHIP The ASU Student P ublications A dvisory Board is now solicitin g ap plications 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 of journalism courses including news writing, reporting, editing and jour­ nalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. Applicants must also: * submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; , list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those courses, submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story or editorial written for the State Press or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State Press or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the State Press office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline for receipt o f applications will be noon, Friday, November 12,1993. Bruce; D. Itule Director, Student Publications Matthews Center, Room 133 Phone 965-7572 when you buy this mug. 1 Enjoy the freshly brew ed gourm et blend of-the-day from either o f the tw o M em orial Union lo ca tio n s o f Cafe Italia D'Oro for just 350 with the purchase of this beautiful porcelain mug for $3. Pick up your mug a t the State Press classified advertising office located in the south basement o f Matthews Center between 9am and 5pm daily. World/Nation Sta te P ress Institute receives 100 tips on fixing government PHOENIX (AP) — It may not win an aw ard, but one man thinks employing both a man and a woman for every state and local government job would reduce bureaucracy. The Goldwater Institute, named for former Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, received about 100 submissions for its “Reinventing Government Competition” c o n te st, about 20 o f w hich arrived Monday, the final day, said the center's executive director Jeffrey Flake. The institute launched its contest Sept. 8. It Offered $15,000 for ideas to restruc­ ture state and local government so as to improve efficiency and save tax dollars. At least five finalists will receive a $2,000 research grant to develop detailed plans by Jan. 31. The winner will receive $5,000, the institute said. One suggestion came fropi a prisoner, who said he could slash millions of dol­ lars in the prison budget and other areas, Flake said. How he would do so wasn't clear, and n e ith e r was how having a man and woman do every job and have every valid decision be made by both of them could be expected to help. “Some people say that won’t do much to end gridlock,” Flake said. M esa mayor to be moved to neurological hospital MESA (AP) — Mayor Willie Wong was in serious but improved condition Monday after being admitted to die hos­ pital because o f a mass found on his brain. Wong, 45, was scheduled to be trans­ ferred Monday to Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix where doctors will perform a biopsy, said Rob M inton, spokesman for Mesa Lutheran Hospital. Wong was hospitalized O ct 26 becasue he was fatigued. Court rejects inm ates’ minimum wage demand PHOENIX (AP) — The state will save millions of dollars a year because of a U.S. Supreme Court rating that it does not have to pay inmates the federal mini­ mum wage for work they do in prison, an official said. W ithout com m ent, the high court M onday rejected inm ates’ arguments they should be considered state employ­ ees co v ered by th e m inim um wage requirement. About 300 inmates who work for the prison industries program sued the state between 1986 and 1988, contending die federal Fair Labor Standards Act requires die state to pay them minimum wage. A ll A rizona prison inm ates are required to work 40 hours a week. Some are assigned work such as yard mainte­ nance, but about 660 inmates last year w orked in . A rizona C orrectional Industries’jo b s , where they do tasks such as data processing and making mat­ tresses, said Department o f Corrections spokesman Mike Arra. These employees earn about 40 cents to 80 cents an hour, compared to other prison laborers who earn 15 cents to 25 cents an tour, Arra said. Woman dies la Ttacson fire TUCSON (AP) — Neighbors were d riv e n back by flam es and sm oke Monday when they tried to enter a burn­ ing house in which a woman’s body was found later. Three men who lived nearby broke windows and doors and tried to extin­ guish the fire with a garden hose but were unsuccessful. A fire fig h te r found the w om an's body in a living room char. Her identity was not released immediately. Cause of the fire was under investiga­ tion. ■ . Tuesday, November 2,1993 WASHINGTON (AP) — A nervous Senate, debating sex, allegations of possible criminal conduct and the right to privacy, wrestled reluc­ tantly Monday with a historic motion to enforce a subpoena for Sen. Bob Packwood’s “very, very personal” diaries. “The Ethics Committee cannot turn a blind eye” to potential violations of criminal law and standards of conduct. Sen. Richard H. Bryan, the panel’s chairman, said in asserting a need for the diaries. PacKwood had said earlier that his more than 8,000 pages of writings include entries on the sex lives o f fellow law m akers. He added Monday that the diaries included references to history-making events and matters that “are very, very personal.” Even as he offered a last-minute compromise to a hushed Senate, Packwood described how he had put his innerm ost thoughts to w riting, including “family heartaches, disappointment, irritation with the car repairman.” V ' He said a deal might be worked out if the committee would describe to him the potential criminal conduct it said it recently discovered in the diaries. • All eyes were on Packwood in the crowded yet hushed Senate chamber as he made his case. By turns com bative and accommodating, he accused his colleagues on the ethics panel of act­ ing as “prosecutor, jury and judge,” but told the rest of the Senate the matter could be settled short of a showdown vote. The debate focused on the clash between the ethics: committee’s determined inquiry — which began with allegations of sexual misconduct and intim idation against Packw ood — and the Oregon Republican’s assertion of his constitu­ tional privacy rights. ■ B ryan, D -N ev., spoke o f the S en ate’s unprecedented moment when he told senators, “No member of the Senate, under investigation in any form by the Senate Ethics Committee, has T urn to P ackwood , page 7. . P age 3 Associated Press Sen. Bob Packwood, D -Ore., talks to his staff director Elaine Franklin In his Capitol Hill office Monday. Packwood has ifefused to surrender his diaries to the Senate Ethics Committee. Fire official calls Phoenix death ‘classic cocaine overreaction’ LOS ANGELES (AP) — River Phoenix lay dying on the sidewalk while his brother pleaded with a fire department dispatcher to send help for the actor, who collapsed outside a nightclub. “You must get here, please, you must get here, please,” his brother said. “I’m'thinking he had Valium or something.” First, the 23-year-old actor was writhing on the sidewalk. Then he lay motionless, as if sleeping, Within an hour, Phoenix was pronounced dead early Sunday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. An autopsy Monday was inconclusive, said coroner’s spokesman Scott Carrier. Results of blood and chemical tests will take weeks, he said. But paramedics were told the actor had been taking drugs, county fire Capt. Ray Ribar said. “It was the classic cocaine overreaction — it just nails some people and stops the heart,” he said. Phoenix, who received an Academy Award nomination for the 1988 movie “Running on Empty,” collapsed after partying with his brother, Joaquin “L eaf’ Phoenix, 19, and actress Samantha Mathis at the Viper Room in West Hollywood. The club is owned by actor Johnny Depp. “After eight minutes of seizures, arms flopping, his knuckles hitting the sidewalk, his head banging back and forth, his feet flopping up and down, after about eight minutes of that, he finally became still, completely still,” witness Ron Davis told “Hard Copy.” Several yards away on a pay telephone, Phoenix’s brother was franti­ cally trying to get help. The dramatic four-minute 911 emergency call pro­ vided a chilling account of the actor’s final minutes. “Where is the guy? (paramedic)... Please, ’cuz he’,s dying, please!” the actor’s brother told the dispatcher. “Where’s your brother right now?” the dispatcher asked. “He’s laying on the cement,” Leaf Phoenix said. “Is he breathing?” the dispatcher asked. “I don’t know. The last I checked they said he was breathing,” he said, yelling to a companion. “Is he ... breathing? (back to dispatcher) I don’t know if he’s breathing. Please, you got to get over here! Where’s the ambulance?” Moments later, a calm Leaf Phoenix told the dispatcher “He’s not hav­ ing the seizures anymore. He’s just passed out. ... He just looks tike he’s steeping.” Phoenix had been in the midst of filming' the movie “Dark Blood” with Judy Davis and Jonathan Pryce. Work on the Fine Line Features film was suspended Monday and it probably won’t be completed, the producers said. . Salmonella bacteria Eirst lady fires back gene altered to make at insurance industry birth control vaccine ST. LOUIS (AP) — Salmonella bacteria have been genetically altered to pro­ duce an oral birth control vaccine that primes the immune system to reject sperm before conception, a researcher reported Monday. The vaccine causes a harmless, temporary infection in the intestine that triggers antibodies against genetic components of sperm that have been spliced into the bac­ teria, said Roy Curtiss of Washington University in St. Louis. Unaltered salmonella bacteria cause 4 million cases of food poisoning each year in the United States and are a major source of diarrhea worldwide, Curtiss said. Curtiss is using the genetically engineered forms to produce vaccines against hepatitis B and malaria. Human trials of the hepatitis B vaccine have begun, and the Army plans to begin tests of the malaria vaccine this winter, Curtiss said. Tests of the contraceptive vaccine have been done only in mice so far. But the results suggest that a single dose of the vaccine might prevent conception for sever­ al months or longer. And the effect would be reversible, Curtiss said. “The idea now would be you don’t get your booster, and within a year or so you can conceive again,” he said at a meeting of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing. ...........................j _____________ „ _______ ____________ ____ __ B ir t h ,, p x r j.7 .- W A SH IN G TON (A P ) — H illary"R odham C linton accused insurance companies Monday of waging a deceitful campaign against the Clinton health plan to protect profits | and preserve the ability to cut people off when they get sick. : “It is time for you and for every American to stand up and -«ay & ifismaoBe «sough.We want1 our health care system back,’” she told more than 2,000 pediatricians. 5 ~ „ * S i ~ «' t But the industry said it was the first lady who was guilty of deception and promised to press its $6.5 million advertís- : ing campaign that raises questions about President Clinton’s L -$É É $pin ;»* * M ¡ u | Mrs. Clinton’s voice was fraught with emotion as she spoke o f rite “struggle” for health reform and praised the American Academy of Pediatrics for fighting for children. • The group’s n e w president pediatrician Betty A. Lowe, ' once treated Chelsea Clinton in Little Rock. | | | | f : i C.: The first lady castigated the “Harry and Lpuise” television • ads run by die Health Insurance Association of America th a t. ■ ‘■ 1 Tt^rojjpyA RV j RAGS Opinion Page 4 Sta te P ress Tuesday, November 2,1993 Su s s P ress W itorial W G ooO n k s - America needs NAFTA It is am azing what lengths opponents o f NAFTA will go to in their quest to nix a poten­ tially positive trade agreem ent in N orth America. On the anti-NAFTA side, there is Ross Perot, America’s latest demagogue. Then there’s his ^anti-NAFTA p al and fellow crackpot, Pat Buchanan. Buchanan is a man who as a presi­ dential candidate proposed putting up an enor­ mous barrier along our border with Mexico to keep illegals from com ing into the' United States. NAFTA opposition has got a lot o f people scared, and some arguments against the agree­ ment seem to be taking on a semi-racist flair: Keep the Mexicans out and keep them poor, opponents seem to be saying. One member of Perot’s political group said the national forum, of which ASU was a part, ignored important issues such as an influx' of Mexican professionals into the United States. God forbid. What is so bad about Mexican pro­ fessionals? Is it die Spanish accent that spooks Perot and his band of merry monkeys? This is no longer a world where a country can stand on its own without any support or ties to the rest of the world. And with Europe creating its own trading bloc, it is essential that North America reduce the intra-continental trade barri­ ers that have been erected over the years. NAFTA can only help the horrid environmen­ tal nightmare along Mexico’s border towns. The agreement will generate money that can be used to clean up tbe toxic dum p the border has become. NAFTA would create jobs for Mexico. Jobs — good jobs — would bolster its middle class. A strong middle class means a more stable country with a more stable government. In this country, NAFTA will be a boon to consumers. Goods from Canada and Mexico would become cheaper because of reduced tar­ iffs. It will be easier to trade goods physically with tbe infrastructure improvements slated to go along with the plan, further reducing costs. But the most important thing about NAFTA for Americans is that it will open up markets in Mexico to goods produced in the United States — goods like foods, manufactured iteras, heavy industrial goods and countless other products produced throughout the country. How can NAFTA opponents say opening up new markets to American goods cost jobs? It isn’t as simple as they would have voters believe. If NAFTA is passed by Congress this winter, as it should be, the only way die United States can lose out is if it fails the test of competition. After all, our entire economy is based on com­ petition — intense, cutthroat competition. If tins country can get beaten at its own game, then there is really something wrong. Unsigned editorials reflect the views « f the editorial board, decided by a ’ majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion o f the Start fre ts staff as a whole. Board members include: S. Talbott Smith E d ito r i I Jason Owsley Managing Editor A Jamee Fruaetta Opinion Editor W ? AND1ÀKÉ AWAY VÍ1SOPTIONS IN W e K EA UY ttUST f U a fAoRE D e a u n G w i t h Fo r e i g n r m » G S ? w w A f ik w iN p y y IDEA! IJ jW K O N TOE ■ pD W E R O F AMMíífWF W AlOKNTtë . «*l>WTO>AflNCS LET MfM use £ * £ , lO K D A M K C Y ! H o w û ü Y x jÇ M m r ? H e m s to o m u c h f b m ? , W G & i l f 'M S w Q & r Y E f, y .■ N N U sae? f o w œ . ISINMAHTí m ABOUT! LET EK <ÉB> « ; m Society disregards, mythicizes true realities o f dom estic abuse Domestic abuse is increas­ J e s s ic a H u n g e r ing in th is country, yet we C o lu m n is t hear little about it. In the early 80s conserva­ tives w ithdrew funding for b a tte re d w o m e n ’s sh e lte rs because they “wished to pro­ tect the family,” and believed thes'e shelters w ere “hom es for runaway wives” and that they “ interfere w ith fam ily life.” The irony is that the only thing interfering with family life was the men who abused the women and children o f the relationship, sometimes to the point o f killing the women and their kids. Society has been unable to come to copes with abuse; the clear sign o f this has been the creation o f myths and stereotypes that conceal the realities o f domestic violence. This type of violence is not taken as seriously by the courts, family, friends and the community as some other vicious crim es like stranger rape and murder. The media portrays only middle-class, women as being the victim s o f abuse. The m edia also perpetuates the image that women see ways out o f the relationship and that there is a prosperous life for them once they are free. But in the real w orld, 50 percent o f all hom eless w om en and children in this country are fleeing domestic vio­ lence. B ut such convenient m yths are shattered by facts like: • Every 15 seconds a woman is battered. • Abuse is the single major cause o f injury to women surpassing rape and car accidents. • 40 percent o f w om en killed are killed by their partners. • 2 to 4 million American women are abused each year. • A buse happens to w om en in every social group; it cuts across ethnicity, age, education and class. A student still could be a victim o f abuse. • More than 50 percent o f women will suffer some form o f violence from their spouses during marriage; Last m onth the M aricopa County Task Force Against Domestic Abuse announced that October w o u ld be re c o g n iz e d as D o m e stic V io len ce Appreciation Month. The group held a vigil at the capital, created a haunted house in Phoenix to educate the community concerning domestic vio­ lence and passed out lavender ribbons for the police force and the community to wear in recog­ nition o f the victims. B ut how many people w ill actually take the trouble to educate themselves about the myths of domestic abuse? Physical abuse is about control over another. The image that most think o f when we envision an abuser is a psychotic male that is out o f con­ trol. But in reality, it could be your boyfriend o r a member o f your family. Haye you ever been shoved around or hit in your relationships with people you love? It is not easy to rationalize that as abuse, but it is and it could get worse. S. TALBOTT SMITH, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor JAKE BATSELL.....Editor SPO R T S R E P O R T E R S : Scott D avis, Paul Matthews, TAMMY MESA-SIERRA... ........................Asst. City Editor Shaun Rachau. ANGELA BENOCHE... . . . . . ..........News Editor C O PY E D IT O R S : Dave Proffitt, Jerem y Stein, N ick JAMES Opinion Editor Bacon. BOB CASTLE.......*........... Photo Editor C A R T O O N IS T S : B ryce M organ, G eorge O ’C onnor, BRIAN FITZGERALD..............................Asst. Photo Editor Mateo Willis MICHAEL BRANOM................................. ...Sports Editor P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Sam antha F eldm an, B rian JULIE REUVERS.................. ..................Asst. Sports Editor Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Craig Macnaughton, Louis A. KRIS FRIDR1CH......................................... .......Copy Chief Porter. TROY FUSS........................... Magazinf Editor COLUM NISTS: Alan Holcomb, Michael Kan tor, Jessica JANE COOK................................. Asst. Magazine Editor Klinger, David Strow, Wade Swanson. R E PO R T E R S: Joy Beason, Shawn Boyd, Garin Groff, PRODUCTION: Kenneth Collins, Jodi Goldblatt, Amie Maxwell Higgins, Jason HiH, Mark Macias, Melanie Selcho, M adden, B ritto n M auchline, D aw n R eisin g er, S k ip Greg SextOn. Schrader, Anna Ulinich, Evonne Vera, Dave Weber. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dcock, Sonia Benson, Joe Borgwárdt, Dan Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes, Arlinda Isaías, Alisa Jellum, Kate Martin, Lancé Newman, Luther Peters, David Thom. The State Press js published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, A rizona State U niversity, Temper 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 the ASU campus. The hews 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 Opinion P age 5 Tuesday, November 2,1993 Sta te P ress Feminisms foundations equality, peace, fairness Inaccurate articles warp debate on graduation rate I was surprised and dismayed at the misrepresentations made in your articles by Melanie K. Selcho and Mark Macias entitled “Community. Reacts to Regent’s Claim” dated Tuesday, O ct 12. In both of those articles you leave the incorrect impression that I would require students to graduate in four years. Indeed, Mr. Macias' article incorrectly states that I have made “past com­ ments made by Arizona Board o f Regents member John Munger that students should not take longer than four years to graduate from a university.” I have never said anything of the kind and have repeatedly made it Clear to members of the press that that was not my position. * Indeed, I have not yet made any proposal and ani simply investigating whether a large number of students are remaining at the university after achieving 160 units, (far more than necessary to graduate). I f that were that case, which our studies have not yet demonstrated, then I have indicated I might make a proposal. As I have expressly stated many times to anyone who would listen, my concern is not that students graduate in four years but that, recognizing that they are being subsidized by the state for 80 percent of the costs to their education, (cost to the state per stu­ dent is $7,000 per year and resident students pay $1,700 of this — the taxpayer pays the rest) students should try to graduate in a reasonable period of time (measured in units, not years). At some point, the students are beginning to use up other stu­ dents' fair share of valuable and limited state resources, making it impossible for the state to make an inexpensive university educa­ tion available to the most number of students. For example, if the normal number of units required to graduate is 126, and a student has obtained 160 and still has not graduated, then that student may be perceived as beginning to use another student’s share of state subsidies and resources, which are not unlimited (e.g., both ASU and UofA are currently trying to cut costs by $10 million each this year alone, due to shortage of resources). This has nothing to do with graduating in four years. It has to do with a number of units that a student may take over any num­ ber of years required for the student's graduation. I am most sym­ pathetic with the position of students who work and, thus, need more than four years to graduate. Indeed, I would respectfully suggest that it is most likely that students who are working their way through college are the least likely to take excess units. Further. I have repeatedly explained that, while the regents must work hard to make a four-year degree possible for any stu­ dent. graduation in four years is not a requirement as far as I am concerned, especially since one must recognize that students have families or must work. If, after the regents’ studies on this subject are finalized, it becomes evident that a significant number of students are failing to graduate even after taking 160 units (which you must admit allows a student plenty of opportunity to sample courses, change majors and otherwise enjoy the benefits of the university’s educa­ tion) then I might make a proposal. Further, I have tried to make it clear that the proposal would be along these lines: 1) that we would devise some type of incen­ tive to encourage students to graduate by the time 160 units were obtained; 2) that we would have to improve the counseling sys­ tems at the universities, which in my opinion are woefully inade­ quate, so that students would be better advised about what cours­ es they needed to take and in what order; and 3) we would have to make absolutely certain that required courses are more readily available for students, a task that we are not performing very well right now in my opinion. As written, and based as they are on wrong information, your articles unnecessarily raise the decibel level of the debate. As inaccurate as they are, they do not contribute toward rational dis­ cussion of the issues at hand nor to reasonable resolution thereof. John F. Munger Arizona Board of Regents m ember S tate P ress etters The Slate Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic- All M e re trend be typed, double-spaced and no kmger than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters win b e considered fo r publication. Requests for anonymity will be p a n te d only with an appropriate reason. {¿Mere sre subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters eonUiining obvious factual errors wifi he rejected. All letters must either be brought in permit with a photo LD. to the State Sress fioat desk in feqbasemeBt o f tile Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State U itivnshy, Tetnpe Ariz., 85287-1502 * > I was very disturbed by a comment Suzanne Sanders made in her Oct. 22 letter to the editor. Her letter was about rape and I agreed with most of what she said, but one comment stood out from the rest of her letter. Ms. Sanders stated, “l am certainly not a feminist, for I am not superior to any gender, but I do believe in equality.” My dear, what do you think feminism is? The foundation of the feminist movement is equality. The feminist movement does not w ish to establish the superiority o f women over men. Feminists are fighters for the equal rights of all minorities, not just women, Feminism is older than is realized. Suzanne, you would not have the right to vote if it weren’t for the feminist movement. If you read any civil rights history book you will see that the feminist movement stood behind Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. History also shows the feminist move­ ment provided the momentum to start child labor laws to protect children. Also Suzanne, you attend ASU. If it weren’t for the feminist movement who knows were you would be now, and what you would be doing? . Thefeminist movement is also fighting to spread the. aware­ ness of rape and to open people’s eyes about date rape. Feminists wish to empower women and minorities and boost thè low self- v esteem many of them are burdened by. *' Ms. Sanders’ comment illustrates a frightening trend among young women everywhere. Why is it that women are becoming afraid to call themselves feminists? Why is it that everywhere I turn I hear women say, “ I ’ m not a feminist, but...” Society is biased against the word feminist; it has become a dirty word. Even Ann Landers, who advises women to stand up for their rights, fight for their equality, and achieve happiness, claims that she is not a feminist Women everywhere who believe in equality, peace, and a fair opportunity should proudly call themselves feminists. If a woman does not agree with a point that certain other feminists are push­ ing, (like abortion), it does not negate her feminism. I am not saying that all women are feminists. If a woman believes that men are superior and should be obeyed, and that women should shut up and be cooking/cleaning baby machines then that’s her business and I wish her luck. But any woman who believes in equality and the right of a woman to say “no” yet claims that she is not a feminist, is simply a feminist in denial. - Janice Stamps . Freshman, journalism Deluge o f attacks on Klinger serves no purpose This letter is in response to the letters written by Edwin N. Acosta, Charles Wilcox, and Dean Meunier of the College of Architecture and Environmental Design in defense of the Law Library. . Mr. Acosta begins by writing, “One could easily speculate from the introduction that Jessica is a very bitter person.” By the same token, one could easily speculate from the content and tone of his letter that Mr. Acosta is a condescending little thug with delusions of psychoanalytic skill. But w hat d ifferen ce would it make? Neither Ms. Klinger’s nor Mr. Acosta’s mental state is in any way relevant to the merit or lack thereof of the Law Library. Stick to the subject Mr. Acosta, and leave the psychoba­ bble to a more qualified practitioner. Mr. Acosta says that he’s not going to “tell Jessica about everything she overlooked” because she is guilty of “ignorance” and of making “superficial observa­ tions.” This type of hypocrisy is rarely so boldly open. Mr. Acosta’s letter is nothing more than an ad hominem assault on Ms. Klinger, and can be summed up as “Ms. Klinger is a petty, bitter, fright­ ened woman, therefore her views are false.” A piece of advice, Mr. Acosta: take a long look at yourself and tty to understand why you think an ad hominem argument is relevant — and what that says about you. Mr. Wilcox opens with the rhetorical question, “Who asked your opinion about this structure anyway?” One could easily ask him who exactly he thinks will be interested in his unsolicited opinions on her unsolicited opinions, but this is beside the point. Clearly Mr. Wilcox has either forgotten or failed to learn that writing unsolicited opinions is an opinion colum nist’s job. However, at least one can .give Mr. Wilcox credit for doing what Mr. Acosta failed to do •— write about something which is not only relevant, but which he is qualified to discuss; his own opin­ ions of the Law Library. He asserts that “a little bizarre and shocking architecture is good for us.” Why this is so is a question he does not answer explicitly — but the answers implicit in his remarks make it clear that no rational human would want any part of what he considers “good.” Last and perhaps least, Dean Meunier weighs in with his opin­ ions. Of the three, he is the most reprehensible; a man with his education in his profession should have known better. According to Dean Meunier, “it is in the nature of good art that it should challenge preconceptions about the way the world is, or should be.” But what if those preconceptions are correct? The preconcep­ tion that a building like the Law Library challenges is that the uni­ verse makes sense. Like most committee conceptions (Dean Meunier lists no fewer than five architects responsible for it), the Law Library is a clear example of a senselessly wasted effort, a building which never should have been built. Only the views of its defenders pre­ sent a better illustration of the reasons for the wretched state of our culture. Brian R. Sealey Sophomore, English m o m t d Off: 9 6 S-4 2 8 7 I believe (hat as we grow, as we get further into the R esp o n ses to lo s t i week’s Sound-O ff question, future, tile generation that “D oes the use o f m arijuana when it became popular 20 o r 30 years ago, its gofug to 1« political figures like Bill inevitable that w e're going to have candidates who have n ton a n d lE d d ie B ash a i smoked marijuana. The true test of whether affect your opinion of them?”statesman on our hands is whether they admit M it e r try to ■ : ,t . To told a candidate responsible for ever smoking : marijuana in the past is fidicUlous. The credibility o f:a candi­ date should be determined from their actions and decisions in thepresent time, not the decisions they made in their youth. cover it tip. .1 think it’s immaterial that they actually smoked fT jfe-sfamte of limitations ran out on these candidates long ago, No, my opinion of Eddie Basha : marijuana, but the fact that they’re fillin g to admit that they why should I hold them responsible when the law doesn’t? and Bill Clinton is not affected by their did stow s character, which is really what a good politician choice to inform the public of past uses o f G ardner Kay marijuana. However, my opinion o f Eddie Basha is higher than ■taaldhtw-- | ,j Ted C urran , ■Sophomore, engineering that of Bill Clinton because Eddie Basha had the gifts to admft Freshnutn,Jotirnalis8i that he inhaled where Clinton, on the other hand), said he tried S. ^ marijuana but didn’t inhale. Who's he trying to kid? Everyone B te iM o jiw 'if e d toft the past use of marijuana affects T his w eek’s qu estion : “Is A SU ’s ath letic knows that would be a complete waste of hemp. If youtook a r. I think what people do ’'t o survey o f people in high political positions you'd be surprised done in the past, and using marijuana is usually p « t-o f grow- departm ent too hard or too lenient on a liiat the number o f people who tried hemp and ha ve inhaled. : of trying to find out what’s j& n L f-i Brandon Acker > Ttorpny Fletcher 111 Senior, communications 1 iiaiaiomaunii Tuesday, November 2,1993 S t a te P ress FBI statistics show decrease in crime A CT COMPUTER CORNER since violent peak during last decade * m * Q. A. By M axwell H iggins State P ress In an age when the evening news sounds like a tally of the day’s random shootings and gang violence, it’s not hard to imag­ ine that America is caught in the grips of a terminal Crime wave. Nevertheless, the most recent crime statistics, compiled from local police records each year by the FBI, show a decrease in crime over the last decade. While there is more crime now than 20 years ago, the highest numbers of murders and other violent and non-violent crimes were recorded in the early 1980s. The major national trends revealed by the statistics are for crimes to increasingly involve teen-agers, guns and drugs. Crime in the inner cities seems to get worse, but in the suburbs burglary is only half as common as it was in 1973. In Arizona — with the fourth-highest rate of major felonies in the country, trailing only Washington, D.C., Florida and Texas — the trend more or less follows the apparent national decrease in crime. Property crimes, such as theft and arson, were down 9 per­ cent from 1991 to 1992. That beats the national decrease of 6 per­ cent for property crimes. However, in the area of violent crimes, Arizona matched a national increase of 10 percent over the last six years. In Tempe, with its suburban/college-town profile, police say it’s hard to compare niational statistics to local realities. “Statistics have a very valuable play in public safety, but you shouldn’t let an evaluation stand on that alone,” said Sgt. A! Taylor, Tempe Police’s public information officer. “Tempe is very different from a place like Detroit.” Tempe’s population doubled over the past two decades, Taylor said- The police force doubled, as well, but the crime rate tripled. Since the 1980s, though, crime in Tempe has declined much as it has in the rest of the nation. Between 1987 and 1992, Tempe’s rate went from 84 to 79 crimes per 1,000 people. There was a major decrease in property crimes, saidTaylor, but burglary is up 38 percent this year. Taylor said statistics can be misleading, particularly when the actual number of cases is small. Compared to the same period last year, Tempe’s murder rate is currently down 42 percent. But the percentage is less impressive when one realizes the actual number of murders is seven for 1992, and four for 1993. Despite the recent decrease in crime, Taylor said it doesn’t feel like the crime rate has gone down. More importantly, he said, there has been a major increase in crime over the last 20 years, Taylor thinks this trend coincides with society’s more ready acceptance of violence in general. “Thirty years ago, was crime a major issue in a presidential campaign? W e’re willing to shoot each other over traffic inci­ dents, Aggravated assault used to mean a punch on the nose, now it’s gunshot and knife wounds,” said Taylor. “This degree of vio­ lence concerns the hell out of me.” ASU Police Chief Craig Emanuel said ASU police are getting more calls for service, and he thinks the public grows more con­ cerned over safety every year. “Whether or not'specific crimes are rising is irrelevant,” said Emanuel. “What matters is that die community’s concern is ris­ ing, I think people are sending the message that they want more police on the street.” Q. A. What’s better; MAC or PC Compatibles? Better is in the eye of the beholder. P in t time Mac user’s like Mac. Mac’s have an operating environment that’s easy to use, but does not allow a lot of flexibility for advanced users. DOS (Intel) based computers are less proprietary, which allows greater flexibility and more sophisticated access. Which is easier to add to? PC Compatible computers have more than 10 times the amount o f software to choose from than Mac based systems. Overall, DOS based computers and software are cheaper to buy and easier to add parts to. Give us a call, ’we sell our systems to both Students & Faculty at our ASU contract price * m BRING THISAD FOR FREE MS WINDOWS 3.1 SOFTWARE WITH SYSTEM PURCHASE! A C T PERSONAL COMPUTERS CLH INTERNATIONAL, IN C 1341 E. UNIVERSITY D U , TEM PE 731-7180 o r 829-1350 CROSSWORD B~s T s T 1 A A R 1] t ] A H Jj 0 1 E ü B T A P S L E A B ET s O H3 B R R A N 1 □ S E A E 0 A V T A R s Q U E 1 K s 2 U R T 1 I SB R 1Ai m sm [si a t ila m □ □ □ □ □ □ □ IN E 1 [A G A 1 s i R LË S T t R E si OW S1 T E 0 S ■ b y TH O M A S JO SEPH I 0c Ó DOWN ACROSS 1 Propuls a 1 Treaty a gondola 2 Orchestra member 6 Mistake B 11 Let up 3 Turner of □ n 12 Was film u □ under the 4 Greek H a o weather . vowel 13 Late night 5 Graduation HI s ¡8 host participant Yesterday’s Answ er 6 Features of 15 Pekoe or oolong Hawthorne’s vessel officer 16 EvU house 20 Scrooge 35 Historic 7 Broadcast 17 Sch. org. cry canal 18 Methods 8 Comic 36 Drifting 21 Had 20 Storybook Wilson dinner 38 Angel ~ elephant 9 Drag one’s 22 Spar topper 23 Out­ — (act 24 Skilled 39 Sailor’s pouring slowly) 25 Golf need . saint 27 The gamut 10 Writer 26 Terminus 40 Wing Ferber 28 Start the feature 3 0 Uses up bidding 14 Archaic 42 Shade 31 Pointers 29 Spells 18 Labyrinths 33 ’ Exodus tree 31 Played a I ff Enterprise hero 43 Box office part science 34 Finn’s success 32 Flint 1 2 à 4 i T ~ 8 9 10 product * rr 34 Stephen of "The * Crying Game* »7 ,4 37 GO awry 38 "Playboy* founder, 21^ 22 for short 41 Late night i7 ÏShost 2Ö 44 Left, right or center 32 45 Rudolph of ¿7 39 40 track fame 34 35 36 j 46 Cowboys Ài 42 and 44 45 Indians, ■ e.g. 4Ö Ï7~ 47 Front steps ■ IF i ■ P ■ ■ ■ P 1 11 11-2 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's h o w to work it: Collecting inform ation on trends and current events abroad ¡sift just a job for a secret a g en t If youfe planning to attend college, or are presently a full-tim e or graduate student you could be eigible for a CIA 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 sta rt on your career AX Y D L B A A X R is L O N G F E L L O W One 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 th e words are all hints. Each day th e cod e letters are different. 1 1 -2 CRYPTOQUOTE Z Q L P C C Q Y M internship and tuition assistance. Ybu inform ation networks— because an R dorft have to be an aspiring missile warhead specialist or Kremlinologist W e experience like this doesrtt only happen in th e movies. D G X D S G U G G S V G need knowledgeable dedicated m en and wom en from a Variety o f backgrounds and fields. R U V G L Join one o f th e country!» largest C V X L N ; X P K FJ S K F R V G W G L O u r B u s in e s s Is K n o w in g T h e W o r l d s Xi B u s in e s s . Leading engineers, com puter far Mormotkn «tout studentt Ip ra n ro ■ *! cjraer opportunities write to: OA Employment Conta; RO. Bor 12727, Dept AS , Arfngton, \ A 22209-8727 A l «ppfcant» m uri be US. c tia n i »ml succestfidy complete a meded and »acuity background Investigation, inducing a polygraph iiln iikiim fin fiy a l flppnilnUIji rui|i>ijiii H T H fu rti 8 tiSâu»» n fl|» « li Q C F X I S P Y ' V R C M F U LG G V L G N R Q Q Y Y C V X V FG N ? — L X C G E G Y Y G PJ Y esterd a y 's C ry p to q u o te : I MIGHT GIVE U P MY LIFE FOR MY FRIEND, BUT HE HAD BETTER NOTASK ME TO D O U P THE PARCEL — LOGAN SMITH e 1993 by King Feature» Syndicate. Inc. State P ress T uesday^íovem ber2jl993 P ackw ood C ontinued from page 3. ever in the history of the committee, refused to comply with a document request.” The com m ittee has been investigating allegations that Packwood made unwanted sexual advances to more than two dozen women and attempted to intimidate some of the accusers to keep them quiet. Monday’s debate, however, focused on the committee’s dis7covery of entries outside those areas, which Bryan said could involve criminal conduct. When the committee requested those entries, Packwood’s lawyers — who had been copying committee-designated pages — refused to provide them. The committee, having reviewed the diaries from 1969-89, then voted to subpoena the diaries from Jan. 1,1989, to the present. The full Senate now is deciding whether to vote to enforce that subpoena request. Packwood, who has argued the committee has violated his right to privacy, spoke in his own defense. He paced the floor as he spoke, describing the diaries as so personal that even his for­ mer wife and children have not seen them. Aware of the distress that several senators said they felt over the issue, Packwood said. “I know that no one wants to vote on this, and I know that no one wants to go to court, least of all me, least of all the Senate.” He said that if the committee “would tell me specifically what these other things are” that the committee discovered, “we might be able to work out some arrangement.” “But I can't make that agreement because I don’t know what they are and I’m not going to guess at what they are,” Packwood said. . Bryan disputed that position, saying, “I think it’s clear that Sen. Packwood’s counsel knew the nature of the concerns.” While the committee, equally divided among Democrats and Republicans, voted unanimously for die subpoena, a crack in its unity appeared during the debate. Vice Chairman Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., criticized Bryan’s disclosure last week that the committee had discovered what it believed was possible criminal misconduct. “It said more than the facts supported in my personal view,” McConnell said. “Perhaps something will prove to be a criminal violation, perhaps not,” McConnell said. “Any information we may have today ... is inconclusive at best. It struck me as injudi­ cious and inappropriate.” :; But McConnell as well as Bryan accused Packwood lawyer James Fitzpatrick of making misleading statements that made it seem the Oregon Republican was far more accommodating than he was. They also blamed Fitzpatrick for issuing a statement — one repeated by Packwood — that the diaries included writings on the sex lives o f lawmakers. “Suddenly this took on all the trappings of a lurid political side show,” McConnell said, adding that Fitzpatrick tried to make the committee “look like a group of teen-agers prowling around for pornography.” “W e’re not the Senate Select Committee on voyeurism,” said Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., a member of the panel. Bryan said the subpoena was necessary because “there is no assurance... the committee will ever have access” to the material. B irth .___ C ontinued from pa g e 3. Thè method also might be used to pro­ ducè a male version of the vaccine, intend­ ed to disarm sperm and make the men temporarily infertile, Curtiss said. Paul Prim akoff. a b iologist at the University of Connecticut who is working on a more conventional injectable birth control vaccine, said Curtiss’s approach was promising, but that considerably more research is needed. “We’re trying something simpler, and if what we try doesn't work, maybe we • w ould take an approach like h is,” Primakoff said. Curtiss expressed some concern about what he said was the potential for abuse of the salmonella birth control vaccine. “You could put it in the milk or water and immunize everybody," he said. “You could think of government or some other entity misusing that,” perhaps by secretly Sterilizing an entire population. Because of the temporary nature of the vaccine, how ever, “this is som ething someone might be able to undo,” he said. The salmonella vaccines might prove especially useful in developing countries and rural areas because they don’t require refrigeration and are cheaper to produce than the bottles that would contain them, Curtiss said. Similar vaccines also are being tested to prevent the salmonella infections in chickens and pigs that can lead to food poisoning, he said. The human vaccines are produced from salmonella bacteria that have been altered in two ways. Parts of the bacteria that cause disease have been removed, and genetic codes from sperm —- or hepatitis B virus or malaria parasites — have been inserted. These altered bacteria cause an infec­ tion lasting perhaps two weeks. The for­ eign genetic components trick the bacteria into producing proteins normally found only in sperm or hepatitis B virus or malaria parasites, as the case may be. The body then m ounts an immune response to whatever proteins have been in serted into the b acteria, bolstering immune defenses against an infection, or against sperm. A further advantage of the salmonella vaccines compared to other vaccines is that they lead to production of immune defenses in m ucus. T hat provides enhanced protection in places where infec­ tious organisms enter the body, such as the mouth and vagina, Curtiss said. H illary_______ C ontinued from page 3, question key features of the Clinton plan. “One of the great lies that is currently afoot in this country is that the president’s plan will limit choice. To the contrary, the president's plan enhances choice," said Mrs. Clinton. She referred sarcastically to the “homey kitchen ads” that end with a woman sighing, “There must be a better way.” “What you don’t get told in the ad is that it is paid for by insurance companies who think their way is the better way,” said Mrs. Clinton. “They like being able to exclude people from coverage because the more they can exclude, the more money they can make,” she charged. Charles N. Kahn III. the health insurers’ executive vice presi­ dent. called Mrs. Clinton's attack on the ads “a total misrepresen­ tation of the facts.” “It’s just another example of the administration trying to paint us as the black hat to somehow help their cause,” Kahn said. The ads by the industry-created “C oalition for H ealth Insurance Choices” state at the end that the Health Insurance N U C LEA R EN G IN EER IN G Graduate level nuclear engineering training is now b ein g offered to exceptional college graduates and students with backgrounds in math, p h y sic s, chem istry, en g in eerin g . Training leads to positions in such areas as nuclear reactor operations and m a in ten a n ce, research and teaching. Good pay, benefits and bonuses. Monthly stipend available for college juniors and seniors. Call N aval M anagem ent Program s at 1-800-354-9627, Mon-Fri, 9am-4pm. Association of America provided “major funding.” An earlier ad warned that Clinton would force people “to pick from a few health care plans designed by government bureau­ crats.” The latest warns that Washington would cap spending on health care and say “that’s it.” Kahn said the ads may have prompted the White House to abandon an earlier proposal to limit the number of fee-for-service plans in each health alliance. He said health insurers support comprehensive reform, includ­ ing doing away with exclusions for pre-existing conditions and allowing all Americans to keep coverage when they change jobs or take ill. The health insurance industry trade group’s 271 member companies sell 35 percent of all private insurance. Five major companies — Aetna, Cigna, Metropolitan Life, Prudential and the Travelers — have defected from the trade group. Page 7 Page_8_ CHECK OUT OUR" HAPPY HOUR 4-6 p.m. ¡" 500 GAMES M -F 10 a im 6 p.m. I State P ress Tuesday, November 2,1993 I *1* WEEKENDS 9 a.m.-6 p.m. You should be in pictures Fine arts education major Andrea Formato sits still as the yearbook portrait photographer hastily fixes her hair and poses her. The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook w ill be taking portraits on Cady Mall until Nov. 12. One free back Issue of the yearbook w ill be aiven to everyone who comes out for a ohoto sittlna. Bob castia/stats Press W A LK TO TEMPE BOWL 1100 E. Apache % Just East o f Rural 967-1656 Bob's ! B icy cle B a m R O A A 4M M M IN t h e c o r n er sto n e 8 wJ h ," O Ö D Z rural & U N IVER SITY R EN TA LS A V A IL A B L E B IK E S & ROLLERBLADES STA RT AT $ 1 0 PE R DAY i l^ f D v $ 4 - 3 HRS $ 1 0 - 2 4 HRS ' 'f ] NEW, USED, BUY, SELL, TRADE 1 With co upon only. Expires 11-7-93. ~i ¡■’2'off UPS | G round, 2 -D a y o r J O v e rn ig h t ■ & All O th e r UPS Services; , I Per Customer, per day MAIL BOXES ETC P olice R eport 1739 E. Broadway (at McClintock) Tempe • 829-3900 j ni FRFF It LARGE SODA & CHIPS with purchase of any 6 ‘ sub W ith c o u p o n . V oid w ith o th e r offers. Exp. 1 1 /1 5 /9 3 ‘Good Food &. Cool Company’ C p m e r o f L em on & R ural 967-1114 ADD10% " t o a n y e q u Ip m e n t I WE BUY FROM YOU. I SKI • HOCKEY • SNOW BOARD RENTA! & REPAIR BASKETBALL • W EIGHT EQUIPMENT • FOOTBALL Chevron ---------- 1 FREET RE ROTATION 29S+ t a * with coupon .If. 0 0 2 W . University j emjm e c u |NW Corner on Hardy " I I I " r7 “ I W ITH CO U PO N I MONDAY-FRIDAY CALL I ^ DAWN I ^ n" SIGNATURE HIGHLIGHT WITH I HAIRCUT I I I M~ I ^ 905 E. Lemon Lem on HAIR AND NAIL DESIGN 966-1391 said he brought the gun to show to other students. Another student was found to have possessed the gun the day before, and police warned both for misconduct involving weapons. A 21-year-old transient was arrested for theft and fraud Wednesday. He had stolen his mother’s credit card in June and ran up 56,000 in purchases on it. He also sent away for a second card in his name on his mother’s account. He admitted his offens­ es when arrested. A 21-year-old Tempe man was arrested for assault and disor­ derly conduct at Club Rio early Friday morning. A bouncer inside the bar had told the man three times to stop causing fights. When he tried to kick him out; the man punched the bouncer in the fore­ head and began to yell obscenities. A 26-year-old Mesa man was arrested early Sunday morning for smashing the glass door at Lotions and Potions near Fifth Street and Mill Avenue. Upon arrest, police discovered the man had an outstanding warrant for possession of marijuana. Two men were arrested after a fight early Sunday morning. The two men, along with several others, had hit and kicked anoth­ er man at 619 S. Mill Ave. The suspects said they were provoked. A 22-year-old Tempe man was arrested Saturday for sexual conduct with minors. The man had allegedly touched the breasts of two 14-year-old girls at different times on the night of Oct. 19 at his house. An officer responded to Maricopa County Hospital on a report of sexual conduct with a minor. The victim, a 16-year-old girl, had voluntarily left her family in Mexico several months earlier to move to Tempe with a 58-year-old man. She said she knew when she decided to move that she would be living and sleeping with the man. She did not want to file charges. A 21-year-old Mesa man was arrested for urinating in public at 619 S. Mill Ave. late Friday night. A 23-year-old Tempe woman called police because a man had exposed himself to her at her apartment complex’s pool. An 8-year-old boy was allegedly molested by his mother dur­ ing a visit to her house Wednesday evening. Nineteen people were arrestedover the weekend for driving under the influence of alcohol. Compiled by State Press police reporter M axwell Higgins. I W ith Purchase o f a Lube, O il Change and Filter - only ■ J I A SU police reported th e follow ing incidents Monday: Three men not affiliated with ASU were warned of weapons laws Friday night at Tempe Center, after an officer spotted a gun in their car. \ At Sunday’s Phoenix Cardinals-New Orleans. Saints football game, police ejected five fans — two for possession of alcohol, one for extreme drunkenness, one for fighting and one for throw­ ing ice. Over the weekend, four underage students Were arrested for possession of alcohol in separate incidents. Eleven minors not affiliated with ASU Were arrested for pos­ session of alcohol in several incidents over the weekend. Ten fire alarms and intrusion alarms in school buildings were activated over the weekend. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Monday: At Saturday’s ASU-University of Washington football game, a fan was arrested after verbally abusing the visiting team. The 31year-old man was standing against a fence, provoking the Huskies to the point that one player wanted to fight him. An officer told him to stop, but the man kept yelling. He was escorted out of the stadium, then gave false information to the officer. The man also tried to flee, but was caught by another officer. Two 14-year-old males and a 13-year-old male were arrested for criminal trespass Friday night after an officer spotted them jumping over a backyard fence. The boys fled when they saw the officer, and one was quickly apprehended. A perimeter was set up, and the other two boys were soon located by a K-9 unit. An 11-year-old boy was hit by a car as he jaywalked near 400 W. Baseline Road Saturday morning. He was listed in fair/good condition with no major injuries at Maricopa County Hospital. An officer observed a reported stolen 1994 Jeep Cherokee being driven near Broadw ay Road and P riest D rive late Wednesday night. He called for backup, then followed the vehicle onto Interstate 10. The driver exited at Elliot Road, but got back on the freeway when the officer tried to stop him. The officer gave pursuit, following the Jeep until it rolled over while trying to exit at Ray Road. The driver was caught at the scene, but the pas­ senger escaped into a cotton field. A Fees Junior High School adm inistrator called police Thursday to investigate a 13-year-old student who brought: a gun to school the previous day. The boy admitted having the gun, and police later found a .38 Derringer two-shot pistol at his home. He Tattoo shop to open next door to campus B y J ason H ill State P ress ASU will become a neighbor to a tattoo shop approved by the Tempe City Council to be placed in a vacant building near Dairy Queen at Mill Avenue and Tenth Street. ASU student Lisa LeCuyer, a tattoo artist for Living Canvas Tattoos, acknowledged that tattoo shops have a negative image with the general public, but the store’s clientele will consist main­ ly of ASU students. A number of residents spoke out against the proposed place­ ment of a tattoo shop next to their homes, claiming that property values Would diminish. Some participants said the area would no longer be safe for children to visit Dairy Queen without adult supervision. , “Families with children are also welcome to come in, it's not just 18 and over that can come in through that door,” LeCuyer said, defending the establishment. D espite a 6-1 vote allowing the shop to open, council mem­ bers voiced concerns regarding health safety. LeCuyer answered the council, saying the same sterilization used in the medical field when dealing with needles would be used at the shop. Merle Loftus, a community activist, demanded that the Living Canvas Tattoos not be allowed to conduct business because the ait o f tattooing is not regulated in the state o f Arizona. He said a lack of specific codes could promote carelessness with the nee­ dles and lead to a spread of diseases lite hepatitis and M D S. y S tate P ress Tuesday, November 2,1993 PageJ? Study says culturally aware needed to teach H ispanics TEMPE (AP) Arizona teachers aren’t all up more than a quarter of all pupils in the state, embracing results of a national study that says don’t necessarily need Hispanic teachers. Hispanic students are better off with Hispanic Irene Serna, á multicultural education expert, teachers. said her student teachers learn how non-English Although those in education say a great deal speaking children learn English, so they can help more Hispanic teachers are needed, all educators even if they don’t speak the ch ild ’s native must better relate with their minority pupils by tongue. “‘When you share the children’s language, understanding their culture and language. A study released last Week by a national" you can facilitate that child’s learning and litera­ institute for policy studies says Hispanic chil­ cy,” Serna said. “But most of my students them­ dren with Hispanic teachers do better academic selves are not bilingual. They have to understand work, have less chance of being labeled as learn­ how the children develop their bilingualism, and ing disabled and have better odds of being foster it.” Educators in Tucson concurred. labeled “gifted.” Fewer also drop out of school. “Good role modeling goes beyond being of But an education professor at Arizona State University says Hispanic students, which make the same culture,” said Ernest Fimbres. superin­ tendent o f the Sunnyside U nified S chool District. “But being a good role model of the same culture is certainly a plus.” Relating to students Was illustrated by Norma G arcia, a teacher at M arcos de N iza High School, who said she knows when she is scold­ ing a Hispanic boy, his refusal to look at her face is not a sign of contempt but of reverence. She agreed that not just more Hispanic teach­ ers are needed. “This is a multicultural society. We need a variety of people,” she said, adding that Anglos and Hispanics can learn more about fighting prejudice and respecting others by having a black male as a role model. The national study, conducted by the Tomas Rivera Center in San Antonio, showed 11.8 per­ cent of students nationwide were Hispanic in 1991, com pared with 3.7 percent Hispanic teachers, In Arizona last year, 27 percent of the state’s students were Hispanic, and 8 percent of teach­ ers were Hispanic, The study suggests state and federal pro­ grams to encourage Hispanics to go into teach­ ing. “For the young students, particularly, to see someone of the same Culture provides them with a certain amount of comfort and identification,” Fimbres said, “... and for the older students, 1 think it provides a certain amount of aspiration to become professionals.” St a t e P ress P o l ic e R epo rts - R e al cops. R eal re p o rts . R eal stran g e . Charges dismissed against 3 men in case o f stolen painting Moving now makes a lot of sense. Just think, you’ll already be settled for the holidays, finals, winter break and the spring semester. All your apartment searching and moving will be behind you and you can concentrate on finals, family, friends and just plain relaxing. Call us and let us tell you about our specials, or come by today, we'd love to show you around. • fully furnished • large kitchen with microwave, dishwasher & disposal • washer & dryer in each suite • large heated pool withjacuzzi • regulation sand volleyball court ( p\ • spacious 2 bedrooms, 2 full bath suites • racquetball court, weight room & sauna • planned social activities • roommate matching service • walking distance to campus HI THE ISI COMMONS ^ M E M B ^K SC m Y TEMPE (AP) — Arizona teachers aren’t all embracing results of a national study that says Hispanic students are better off with Hispanic teachers. Although those in education say a great deal more Hispanic teachers are needed, all educators must better relate with their minority pupils by understanding their culture and language. A study released last week by a national institute for policy studies says Hispanic children with Hispanic teachers do better academic work, have less chance of being labeled as learning dis­ abled and have better odds of being labeled “gifted.” Fewer also drop out of school, v But an education professor at Arizona State University says Hispanic students, which make up more than a quarter of all pupils in the state, .don’t necessarily need Hispanic teachers. Irene Sema, a multicultural education expert, said her student teachers learn how non-English speaking children learn English, so they can help even if they don’t speak the child’s native tongue. “When you share the children's language, you can facilitate that child's learning and literacy,” Serna said. “But most of my students themselves are not bilingual. They have to understand how the children develop their bilingualism, and foster it.” Educators in Tucson concurred. “Good role modeling goes beyond being of the same culture,” said Ernest Fimbres, superintendent of the Sunnyside Unified School District. “But being a good role model of the same culture is certainly a plus.” Relating to students was illustrated by Norma Garcia, a teach­ er at Marcos de Niza High School, who said she knows when she is scolding a Hispanic boy; his refusal to look at her face is not a sign of contempt but of reverence. She agreed that not just more Hispanic teachers are needed. 'This is a multicultural society. We need a variety of people,” she said, adding that Anglos and Hispanics can learn more about fighting prejudice and respecting others by having a black male as a role model. The national study, conducted by the Tdmas Rivera Center in San Antonio, showed 11.8 percent of students nationwide were Hispanic in 1991, compared with 3.7 percent Hispanic teachers. In Arizona last year, 27 percent of the state’s students were Hispanic, and 8 percent of teachers were Hispanic. The study suggests state and federal programs to encourage Hispanics to go into teaching. “For the young students, particularly, to see someone of the same culture provides them with a certain amount of comfort and identification,” Fimbres said. "... and for the older students, I think it provides a certain amount of aspiration to become profes­ sionals.” You'll never know unless you read your horoscope. 1111E. Apache 829-0933 2 blocks fromASU In the classified section. Comics State P ress Tuesday, November 2,1993 P age 1 0 by Bill Watterson C a lv in and Hobbes a pEm SHOULD BE SAFE FROM PREDATORS IHSIDE H\S ONlAWOWSE/ D o o n e sb u r y if r hm> REFLEXES ÜKE TOURS. ID BE GLAD tor. the THE FAR SID E By GARY LARSON 0fTORTOHimo IMPReME THEM. BY GARRY TRUDEAU Fortunately, even the Boy Scouts who fail knot-tying get to go camping. PEOPLEJL LONDON (AP) — Tibet's exiled spiritual lead­ er. the Dalai Lama, was clearly pleased Monday as he unveiled a likeness of himself at Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum. He laughed and then put his hands together and bowed before the statue. “It’s quite similar,” said the man Tibetans wor­ ship as a “god-king.” The 58-year-old Buddhist monk and Nobel Peace Prize recipient gave the exhibitors a pair of glasses for the statue, which is dressed in maroon and yellow robes and stands in a room with past and present world leaders. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (APj — Crystal Gayle will sing a song specially written for the occasion when she performs in Washington on Veterans Day at the dedication of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial. The memorial, a bronze sculpture of three woman and a wounded soldier in Vietnam, is set near the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. The song, “’Till The White Dove Flies Alone,” was written by Rod McBrien and John Linde to honor the 265,000 American women who served in the armed forces during the war. Public Relations, got as far as the reception area at Limbaugh’s WABC Radio studio. “He never really agreed to be here,” Rakowitz said. “We just thought it’d be a nice gesture.” NEW YORK (AP) — Don’t bother looking for blue jeans in Rush Limbaugh’s closet. He doesn’t own any. They make a political stateriteht he doesn’t agree with. “ The generation I grew up with wore T-shirts, tie-dyes and jeans. Peace signs all over them,” Limbaugh said. “At my little college, we had our contingent of antiwar protesters on campus, and they were all blue jean clad.” Playboy magazine, which published a lengthy interview with the pugnacious commentator in its December edition, tried to change his wardrobe. Magazine officials tried to present him with a pair of size 44-longs. Playboy's Cindy Rakowitz, Vice President of LOS ANGELES (AP) — Andrew Dice Clay has signed a deal with the Fox Broadcasting Co. to create a pilot for a television series. The Diceman and Fox executives are searching for a writer and executive producer for a half-hour sitcom starring the abrasive comedian. “It’ll take on various social issues, relation­ ships, social commentary seen through the eyes of Andrew’s character. It won’t be the Dice character, but an ordinary guy with an attitude,” Clay publi­ cist Robert Pietranton said in a statement Monday. Clay also is working on a “No Apologies” con­ ceit video and a comedy album, both to be released this month, the publicist said. R E S ID MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (AP) — Ross E N C Y I N 1-0 R M A T I O N SESSI O N Every W ed. & Thurs. 2-3 p.m . Perot helped induct his former vice presidential running mate, retired Adm. James Stockdaie, into the Carrier Aviation Hall of Fame aboard the USS Yorktown. Perot told a crowd on the flight deck of the World War II-era aircraft carrier that Stockdaie “would not bend and he would not break” during 7 1/2 years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. Later Sunday, Perot stood by Stockdaie as a red, white, and blue cloth was removed unveiling a bronze plaque with Stockdale’s likeness that will be displayed on the flight deck. Stockdaie led the first bombing strike on North Vietnam in 1965 and flew 201 missions before he was shot down. He was released in 1973, and became Perot’s vice presidential running mate in last year’s election. “I can’t express the feelings in my heart,” Stockdaie told the audience Sunday. “It seems unbelievable I’m in your presence, let alone to have a plaque like this.” TUESDAY NIGHT DISCO 8NIGHT 1.75 DRINKS! AT 9:30 pm-1:00 am Student Services Amphitheater Residency Applications Available 705 S. Rural (a t University) Tempe • 829-8617 BP^ M EXICAN FOO D Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week Spice up your life with: RHA-ASU 965-580 9 KEGS TO GO P a p a g o L iq u o r " We do more by 8 a.m. thon most politically correct orgainzations do all day." J O IN N e x t to B lu e Ig u a n a $ W C o rn e r, S c o tts d a le & M c D o w e ll 946-0715 Mon-Thur 10am-10pm; Fri-Sat l Oam-lam; Sun l 2-8pm - Traditional Sonoran Style Mexican Food - New Vegetarian Selections - Daily Specials - Happy Hour Buffet ¡JP ^ |P ^ F R E E D IN N E R With p urchase of equal o r gre a te r value. Not good with any o ther offer or discount. T em pe location only. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 1 1-8-93._ J CELEBRATING”30 YEARS~OF~iRINGTNGFINE MEXICAN FOOD AND FRIENDS TOGETHER 9 6 0 W. UNIVERSITY - 966 -0 8 5 2 Sports S tate P ress Tuesday, November 2,1993 P age A l Bnefs ASU football coach G arn er n am ed P la y er o f Week Bruce Snyder gives A SU ’s C h ristin e G arn er h as been named the Pac-10 Women’s Volleyball Player o f the Week for O c t 25-Nov. I, I Commissioner Tom Hanson announced I Monday. G arner, a 6-foot sophom ore from I T ustin, C a lif., had th re e outstanding m atches again st No. 12 N otre Dame, I Oregon and Oregon State. Gamer led the Sim Devils to three vicI tones with 37 d ip , four service aces and I four blocks. She hit .231 for the week. I Against the Irish she had 2$ kills — just I narrowly sussing her fourth 30 kill game I — and 21 digs. She hit .345 against Notre I Dame. G arner posted 17 k ills and six digs I against Oregon State and 16 kills and 10 I digs against Oregon. Both matches were I can the road. ASU (16-4 overall, 9-4 Pac-10) is curI rently third in the conference. orders during Saturday’s game against W ashington. “W e’ve only won tw o (P ac-10) gam es,” he said in a press conference Monday. “It w ill b e a tragedy if we start w allow ing around In som e other thoughts and end up not playing w ell again." I Bates, Baker honored by Pac-10 ASU tailback Mario Bates and {dace kicker Jon Baker have been named Pac-10 Players of the Week. B ates, a sophom ore from T ucson, keyed ASU’s offense in die Sim Devils' 32-17 u pset victory o f Ì9th ranked Washington. Bates carried 27 times for 163 yards and two touchdowns of 1 and 29 yards. It marked Bates’ third consecutive 100-yard rushing game. In A SU ’s win against W ashington, I Baker, a junior from Bakersfieid, Calif., I was perfect on three field goals from 32, I 34 and 48 yards. I I I I I I I Bonds baseball’s MVP I I I I I I I I I I I I I T Barry B onds, w ho led the San j Francisco Giants to their most wins since 1962, on Monday became the first player to be vexed The Associated Press Baseball Player of the Year in consecutive seasons. Bonds received 73 votes in nationwide balloting by sportswriters and broadcasters. Chicago W hite Sox first baseman Frank Thomas was second with 17 votes, followed by Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Lenny Dykstra, who was third with six votes. Toronto Blue Jays first baseman John O lerud receiv ed three votes. S eattle Mariners outfielder Ken Griffey Jr. and Atlanta outfielder Ron Gant got one vote o ffk I U.S. Lagers asked not to boycott ii I “There could be nothing worse for us than a boycott.” said Hartmut Goebel, [ mayor of Oberhof, die winter sports capi| tal o f former East Germany I Oberhof has not been spared the eco- -i I norme troubles afflicting all o f eastern I Germany, ami Goebel worries that tourists Ijp U N ) t o frightchBn9tvMdx3ut nobet Sealsmaybe tamed, sobooknoe. to ll fors FREE Student Trevelt m agulnel Council Trave OPER A-T-O-R There’s no lowerprice fora collect call' For long distance calls from public phones. You don’t have to be an Economics major to see that AT&T’s new 1 800-OPERATOR service is lower priced than anyone else’s standard operator service rates for long distance collect calls. Use it from any phone.on or off campus. When you call, just spell it out. Dial 1 800-OPERATOR (1 800 673-7286). AT&T fending ta riff effectiveness. © 1993 ATÄT. S tate P ress State P ress P a g e 13 Tuesday, November 2,1993 3 U W athletes arrested EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — Three University of W ashington ath letes face burglary and attempted rape charges after a U niversity Of O regon student told police the men walked into her dorm room and exposed themselves. Police arrested S helley C harles D ouglas Barnes. 20, Jason Paul Shelley. 19, and Prentiss Perkins, 21. all o f Seattle, after a chase Sunday and placed them in the Lane County Jail on $50,000 bail each. Shelley, a sophomore wide receiver, and Perkins, a senior guard, were suspended from Washington’s football and basketball teams, respectively, after their arrest 28 days earlier in connection with a car chase in Seattle. Barnes is a third-year sophomore defensive; end on Washington’s football team. The woman, 18, told police that she and her roommate were in their room Sunday afternoon when three men entered through their open door. The men refused to leave .when asked and began snooping through the women’s belong­ ings, officers said. When the woman/. roommate left the room, one of the men locked the door and closed the curtains, and the men exposed their genitals and made sexual comments and threats, police said. Police w o u ld n 't say w hether the men touched her. though they said neither woman was physically injured. ■t. The men left about 2:20 p.m. and returned while a police officer was interviewing the alleged victim in the dormitory hallway at 2:42 p.m.. police said. The men ran. leading 12 police officers on foot, bicycles and in cars on a chase for more than 10 blocks. One of the men was caught by an officer on foot, police said. Two were caught on the bike B y H ank Low enkron A P S ports W riter IND IA NA POLIS (AP) The Indiana Pacers traded forward Detlef Schrempf to the Seattle SuperSonics on Monday in exchange for forward Derrick McKey and swingman Gerald Paddio. Indiana general manager Donnie Walsh said the Pacers were trading Schrempf, an All-Star last season, for both basketball and financial reasons. "Detlef was a great player for us. He came here from Dallas as an unheralded player. He became the Sixth Man of the Year twice, was an All-Star last year,” Walsh said. The trade had been rumored for some time, but Walsh said he held off making it until new coach Larry Brown had a chance to evaluate his team in training camp and the exhibition sea­ son. Schrempf can become a free agent at the end of the upcoming season. path by an officer on a bicycle. Sunday’s incident was Shelley’s third run-in with police this year. In June, he was charged with assault for allegedly punching another stu­ dent during a pickup basketball game. His trial was postponed last week. In an Oct. 3 incident in Seattle, Shelley and Perkins were arrested on a charge of obstructing a police officer after a car in which they were ridin g led police on a ch a se through the University District near the UW campus. Shelley reached a pre-trial diversion agree____ _________ ment in Seattle Municipal Court on Oct. 19 in which H i the o b stru ctio n charge would be dropped if he paid a $75 fine and didn't accrue any more criminal charges for 90 days. Both Shelley and Perkins had recently B a r n es signed “contracts” with Jim Lambright and Bob Bender, UW football and basketball coaches, respectively, that would allow them to return to their teams if they com­ plied with certain stipula­ tions, including staying out of further trouble with the law. V “It’s quite believ­ able when you look at what we’ve been through with Jason,” Lambright said Sunday night Upon learning of the latest alle­ P erkins gations. “You just want to cry because of the poten­ tial that will never b e .... It’s something I’ll deal with when we get all the full details.” Lambright and Bender said they didn't know why the players were in Eugene. “ To keep Detlef here. I had to feel real deep in my heart that we were going to have him here next year, or else we stood a very difficult chance of losing him for nothing,” Walsh said. “ With the recent signings in the NBA, and the one-year out rule, that just enhanced the fact that this was going to develop into a bid­ ding war. It was either going to put us in a diffi­ cult position as a franchise, or we were just going to lose Detlef because he chose to go somewhere else.” “ W e’ve ju s t added an A ll-S tar to our team ,” Sonics president Bob W hitsitt said. “ Any time you can do that, I think you can’t help but become a better team.” The 6-foot-10 Schrempf averaged a careerhigh 19.1 points last season. Schrempf, the eighth overall pick in the 1985 draft by Dallas, was acquired from the Mavericks along with a second-round draft pick for Herb Williams on Feb. 21, 1989. The only player in the NBA to rank in the top 25 in scoring, rebounding and assists last year set a franchise record with 570 Associated press University of W ashington Head Football Coach Jim Lam bright talks with reporters Monday about Jason Shelley and Doug Barnes, who were arrested in Eugene, Ore. Sunday on suspi­ cion of burglary arid attempted rape. Both players w ere kicked off the UW football team. A member of the school’s basketball team, Prentiss Perkins, was also arrested with the pair. defensive rebounds last season. His 653 free throws also set a club single-season record. McKey, a six-year veteran, averaged 13.4 points and 4.2 rebounds as a starter for Seattle last season. In six seasons, he climbed to the top 10 on Seattle’s all-time list in 12 different categories. He’s ninth in scoring with 6,179 points and 10th in rebounding with 2,299. In five years with the Pacers, Schrempf averaged 17.0 points per game on 51.1 percent shooting, 8.6 rebounds and 4.1 assists. He has career averages of 13.3 points, 6.5 rebounds and 3 .1 assists. r “ I felt it was opportune for us when we had a chance to get a player of Derrick McKey’s caliber, and also Paddio, who has the ability to shoot the ball, that we go ahead and do the deal,” Walsh said. Schrempf is expected to assume the starting role being vacated by McKey, the ninth overall pick in the 1987 draft out of the University of Alabama. ' The 6-7 Paddio was a third round draft pick of the Boston Celtics in 1988 from UNLV. He was cut by the Celtics before the season began and played in the CBA and Europe before sign­ ing with Cleveland for the 1990-91 season. He averaged 7.2 in 70 games with Cleveland and then returned to the CBA for the 1991-92 sea­ son. He played in 41 games for Seattle last sea­ son, averaging 3.9 points and 1.2 rebounds. “ We all agreed that this would probably be the best thing for our team in the long run,” Brown said. “ I’ve gotten to see Derrick play a lot over the years.... 1 don’t think the transition is going to be that severe. I would like to think that with a young kid like him ... good athletes, we could put people in their normal position and go from there.” Brow n had expressed concern about Schrempf s ability to fit into the offensive and defensive style of basketball he wants from the Pacers, a team that has never advanced past the first round of the NBA playoffs. Name Page Mail Boxes Etc....................................................8 Mama's Pizzeria...... 7 Muslim Students Association...........................16 Papago Liquor.................................................10 Play It Again Sports.... ..................................... 8 Phi Kappa Phi................................................... 16 Princeton Review..... ......... 16 Registrar's Office............................ 10 Name Page Rip-A-Strip..... ............ :..7 Rosita's.......................................... 10 Rother's University Bookstore...................... .,..2 Sno Oasis..............:............................................. 8 State Press Coffee Mugs....................... 2 State Press Editorship........................................2 Studebaker's................................. 10 .’.8 Tempe Bowl................... A dvertiser Index Name Page AT&T................................................................ 12 Bob's Bicycle B am ..... ......................................8 Campbell's Books.................. 10 Carsten........ ........................................................ 2 Chicagie's................................................ 8 CIA............................ :........................................ 6 CLH International................................... 6 Club 411........................................ 16 Name Page Commons on Apache............................. 9 Computer Zone................................ 2 Council Travel...................................................12 Desert Schools Federal Credit Union.............. 16 Electronic Materials.......................... :.............16 Flamingo Haircutters....... .................... 8 The Gerard Company.............................. 7 Inman Chevron..................................... 8 The current issue of Devil Deals is now available and full of great deals from: Ace Hardware Arby’s Bicycle Wheelers Blimpies Campus Comer Cardinal's Pizza Christopher Steven's Electronic Materials Gumby's Pizza Fajita Prima Kinko's Copies Mailbox Superstore Minder Binder's Paradise Beach Tanning Paul's True Value Perkin's Pete's Fish & Chips Pop Peroni's Rookies Scott Toyota Sno Oasis State Press Classifieds Sub Factory Subway Sunny's Taco John's Tempe Bicycle Shop Terrace Deli Tucker Bramsen Tire . Tony's New Yorker University Sporting Goods FREE copies can be piejeed up in the basement o f Matthews Center Classifieds P age 14 Tuesday, November 2, 1993 N ptice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE TRAVEL AIRLN TKTS FREE couriers needed, outrageous int'l trips, call PTG 310-514-4662. QUESTA VIDA 1 m ile ASU, 2br, 2ba, w/d, pool, racquetball court. Interested? 921-3944. BER M U D A A N D C aribbean Summer School Programs for up to 6 ASU credits. Call 965-4630 for 1994 info packet. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE ANNO UNCE­ MENTS STUDENT TRAVEL 966-6300 Everyone leeds a PAAL. XAVIER PREP grads! XCP 50th Anniversary events aw ait you! Nov. 6 & 7. Call 241-0213 - Stay protected w ith the P A À L , Quorum 's : f ^ M ILL AVENUE TRAVEL Pcreonàl A ttack A larm that blasts ÎÔ 3dB (m in .) when you sim ply p u ll the pin. T r a v e l A b r o a d T h is Choose eith er the standard o r sports m odel. C arry it to school, the m all, Inform ation meeting: Thursday 11-4-93 M emorial U nion Rm 226C from 9 a.m -4 p m need it. And o nly Q uorum gives you that kind o f technology f l f f f l f f S e a rtn U k E rn ie C ip o lla ro P A A L | . $36 S Ì6 -8 I1 8 P A A L 2 - $41 S TU D E N T TR A V EL 1»800*777»0112 COUCH, BLACK, overstuffed $100; Queen wtrbed $ 100: MAC SE30 $600; 921-4268 SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. Cheap, 352-7249. 1BD APT (o ff house). Walk to ASU. $400/mo util incl. Kitchen, bath, pets OK. 966-*706I. COMPUTERS THE WORLD’S LARGEST STUDENT & YOUTH TRAVEL ORGANIZATION , HELP WANTEDGENERAL 1 bedroom , 1 bath available January 1st COMPUTER SX-33....................... $1299 DX-40..... ................. $1399 DX-266........... $1629 212 Meg HD..,;’ ....... .,$219 340 Meg HD............ ..$299 15" SVGA Monitor.. ..$369 14-4 Fax/Modem...... ..$149 Sound Blaster Pro ASP $219 RENTAL SHARING , Tempe FRONT DESK person, f/t, must woric weekends. Apply in person. Iim Suites Hotel; 3101 N. 32nd St JEWELRY 2 BD, 2BA apt w/cvrd pkg, pool, 1mi ASU. Fein, n/s, quiet, neat. $250 + 1/2 util. 966-6357. ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. In* cju.: gold, ster, pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S Mill Ave, Tempe Center 968-6074 M /F NEED ED im m ed at The Point. 2, bd up/down. Killer pad. Only $300. Jason 949-8381; C ARDS VS Eagle football! 4 sea­ son ticket holder seats Nov. 7. Call 7564)434; PEARL JAM both nights for sale. W ill go fast. 994-4914 Leave message NOW AVAIL m/f, fu lly furn apt/th, $270/mo, util, incl, 2 blks ASU. Chrys' 968-5246 price/neg. P/T NANNY care for infant twin boys & do light housekeeping. Flx/hr ref req. 496-8742 WALK FROM ASU! No selling, telephone survey research, flex hrs av ail m rng, a ftrn s, eves/ wknds. Start at $5/hr. Wkly pay! frequent raise reviews. Higgin­ botham Asso., 829-3141. WORK W/DD adults in group home. V aried shifts + live-in. 252-5064 ATTENTION Construction Supply Cp. Sell tools nationwide. Tem pe b a se d com pany, will tram. $5-$8 g uaranteed PT. Jo e, HELP WANTEDF O O t y |R V r c |_ MERCURY’S ULTIMATE Deli/ C osm ic Pizza now hiring deli cleric«, flyer distributors, experi­ enced pizza m akers, delivery drivers & managers. All shifts. Apply: 1523 E. Apache Blvd. M-F; 2-5. " HELP WANTEDC H IU T C A R g ^ . GET PAID while you sleep/study after kids go to bed. Fri. 4pm lam. $3/hr. 649-0451 NOW HIRING full & part time clerics, flex hr$. Apply at 2501 E. Camelback, Camelback Esplanade NANNY'S P/T days eves or wee­ kend h rs. m ust have reliab le transportation call 345-2433. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL FRONT DESK AGENT PBX OPERATOR Scottsdale Inn Suites is now accepting appli­ cations for a front desk agent ($5.75/hr) & PBX Operators ($5.50/hr). Please apply in person to: Human Resources 5Ó01N. Scottsdale Rd. . M, T, Th, F, 8:30-10:30am & 2-4pm N o te ta k e rs W a n te d All graduate students eli­ g ib le . U n d e rg ra d u a te u p p e rc la s s m e n w ith a 3.3 G PA or above eligi­ ble. A ll undergraduates with a 3.3 G PA o r better registered in a class with an e n ro llm e n t la r g e r than 100 are e lig ib le to be n o te ta k e r f o r th a t co u rs e . U p to $ 1 2 .5 0 / lecture. C lass Q uotes LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS S6.70/HOUR O PPO RTUNm g|_ IN TER N A T IO N A L EM ­ PLO YM EN T- M ake up to $2,000+/mo. teaching basic eon* versational English abroad. Ja­ pan, Taiw an, & S. K orea. No previous training required. For more information call: (206)6321146 ext. J5918. S portsw ear com pany seeking ~ graphic artist to produce designs for T-Shirts, etc. Earn good $. C all Team m ate Sportsw ear at 827-8745. Ask for Mike. HANG GLIDE 2-for-l ASU spe­ cial! Gently sloping hill. Safe & exciting. Call 897-7121 Scottsdale Fam ily T reasures, an ex p an d in g publishing company, is hiring 15 literate indi­ viduals to help com pile ,inform ation for our publications. Flexible, part-tim e hours avail­ able, including w eekend and evening hours; Com puter typing skills a must. TENNIS LESSONS with a certi­ fied pro conveniently located at Tem pe H igh School. $20 per hour. Contact Nick, 491-7853. WOULD YOUR golf swing be better served for chopping wqod? I f so, c all the K arsten G o lf Course at ASU. 921-8070. 44th St. & Camelback. Gall 952-0100 and ask for Ron. I S I“ «1 GOLFERS BLSS FREE GREEN FEES ENGLISH MAJORS $6.70/HQUR K^âOOftCOUfHèfwdHWoftl.•Over SOIn Arizona &Sun Valley Ö£$Te»SCQÖ#TiQÖtl'WtOQlUWBNa >> y & j , Scottsdale Family Treasures, an expanding publishing company, is hiring 15 literate indi­ viduals to help compile information for our publications. Flexible, part-time hours avail­ able, including weekend and evening hours. Computer typing skills a must; ' 921-0968 M U SIC IBANEZ SOUND Gear Bass for sale, perfect coiid. Under 1 yr old. $600 obo, Call 968-9768. R A N D A LL H A LF stack Bass Amp, 500 watt head, two 15 inch cabinets, like new. $650/obo 8977343 or 838-6343. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED* GENERAL COLLECTIONS HELP WANTEDC L g f lC A L ^ ^ w e /m e t ie sckednie uovl n e e d // • Have you noticed the brand new Chase BankCard Ser­ vices building across the street from ASU? • Have you noticed other students enjoying our varied shifts while keeping their school schedule in line?! • So what’s your delay? Apply now to find out all the details of a pan-time job with Chase! Part-time, varied shifts We’re seeking experienced and entry level collections profes­ sionals who exhibit assertive negotiation skills. If you thrive in a fast-paced, dynamic environment, then we want to talk with you! Top people earn $15-$20/hr. We have a beautiful, stateof-the-art telemarketing facility at Camelback and 44th Street and invite exp. saleswomen and men to call for a personal interview. Please ask for Joyce at: Take this opportunity to grow with a proven leader through­ out your college years. We offer excellent training programs and attractive salaries. 952-0100 SCOTTSDALE FAMILY TREASURES / O titi AUTOMOBILES DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. 1 also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. AUTOMOBILES &TRUCk | wmCAR PARTS LESS J V YOUR DAILY ROSE II Please apply in person (Mon-Fri 8:30a-4:30p) at: Maricopa Community College District, Economic Development Of­ fice, 2 4 1 1 W est 1 4th Street, R oom 114; T em pe, A Z 852 8 1 (North on 52nd Street from Broadway , west on 14th Street). ■ AUTO 20% Savin as w /ad check Lis out c5r 2 6 9 -S 6 4 0 M - 3623 W. Lower Buckeye Rd. (Just off I-10) I T- ^ v . (CBttftmmRaqulreth : 44th St. & Camelback. Call 952-0100 and ask for Ron. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Inside C am pus C om er a t College/University JOB SPORTS & RECREATION 894-1257 after 2 p.m. •$8/HR GUARANTEED W AGE T O START •PART-TIME « FU U TIME SHIFTS •VERY FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES (40-35 Hours W eekly) 5.0 LX Mustang '85, tags gd til 9/94. Clean in/out, white, tinted \ windows, rims, 5-spd. Graduating, must sell. $3000 obo! ! 921-1120, An arguer doesn't have to worry about getting lost. There w ill always be somebody who's willing to te ll him where to go. RED ROBIN o f Tempe has im­ mediate openings for experienced waitstaff w/ dayside availability anddishersw/nightside availabil­ ity. Apply in person 1375 W. El­ liott v THE BEST TELEM ARKETING JOB IN THE VALLEY IS O N L Y 1 5 M IN U TE S FRO M A S U 1982, VW, Quantum. Good cond; new tires, radio, etc. 76,000 mi $1500 obo. Call a 894-3487. TRAVEL COMPUTER ZONE-Aggressive self-motivated sales person need­ ed. Flex hrs. 829-6126. Tempe. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 1980 MGB, good cond, new tires, 61.000 prig m iles, $3900 obo - 834-5136 B u y of the W eek SEEKING STUDENTS to r p/t evenings to market memberships. $8/hr. + com m ission to start. Comm skills req. Flex hrs. Call 921-8282 NEED 80 pe o p le now , train w/otir co. to earn $5K/mo. in *94. P/t avail. 966-8799. AUTOMOBILES TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE HELP W ANTEDCH ILD C A R E M OD ELS/A C TO R S, M /F, all types, for int'l music videos & natl commercials. Pays $1600+. No exp nee. 602-266*6537. PEARL JAM Great price! Tick­ ets for both nights 968-2242 leave message. ROOM S FOR RENT HELP WANTEDF O O D S E ^ IC E EX E C U T IV E A N SW ER IN G Service has 2 p/t positions avail­ able. 1st: T-W-Th, 3-7pm & Sun 2:30-7:30pm. 2nd: T-Th, 3*8pm & Sat l-7f>m. M ust type 40+ wpm, have team player attitude, reliable transportation. Call 2644000 for appt IMMED APPiS taken, Victoria's Secret, Biltmore Fashion Park, 957-4516. p/t holiday hrs. TICKETS N /S, OW N ro o iii/b ath in- TH ouse. $300 mo, + 1/3 u til, first/last mo. rent + $100 deposit. Pools & spa, Braodway & River, M cClint/Price. C all C hantele; 858-9004. No psychos! Avail: Nbv;5. 9 9 8 -2 9 9 2 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. $6.50/hr. Call 252-9345 829-6126 S270/MO UTILS included split level'apt. W alking distance to ASU 12/15 - 5/15. Michele 858; 9595 ||§ Bob Bullock • Realty Exec. AR TLO VERS! $5-20/hr. earning potential for phone reps selling tix pkgs to Phx Symphony! Immed openings, p/t Sun 3 -9 :30pm , M -Th 5 :3 0 7:30pm. 277-7291 ext 315. 486 Systems 1123 E. Apache 968-6383 No qualifying, poolside condo, $81,500. ARE YOU articulate, enthusiastic, and outgoing? Then the ASU Tele­ fund has a job for you! Enhance your communication skills, build your resume & work in a great , student environment for $5/hr & ~bonus! Call now, 965-6754! -------- ZONE- C allfor reservations now! COMFORTABLE HOME in S. Tempe. Furnished, kitchen privi­ leges, Ideal for working girl/st. $250 includes utilities. 838-6224. ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chan(Her needs p/t cleanup & vet asst. Call 963-2340 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. Apache Terrace 571 STA TRAVEL 386SX 40MHZ w/4; meg RAM, ASU AREA 1 & 2 bedroom apts. . 100 meg hdd, 1.2 fdd. lots of soft­ $ 3 0 0 up + u til. 82 9 -1 9 6 3 o r ware ,1 0 1 kb, VGA mono in 966-8838. mini tower. $750/obo. 945-7292. BEAUTIFUL, VERY quiet and safe» 2 large bedrooms near ASU, pool, laundry . 966-4797. HELP WANTED- Spomered by Youth in Action FURNITURE APARTMENTS HELP WANTEDGENERAL S um m er ! A ustralia o r Eu r o p i thé park, w herever you go. P A A L lets out a cry fo r. h elp w henever you and security. <0> We Compare Student Fares and All Other Discounts St a t e P ress C H A S F- M A N H A T T A N . P R O FI T FROM THE E X P E R I E N C E . Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V M USIC RESTAURANTS/ BARS WE BUY CDs $l - $6 C A S H CAMPUS CORNER 712 S. College SPORTS & WINGS! 4 S a te llite s IS S c re e n s "W e s h o w a ll N FL, Io w a & N e b ra s k a G am es" WOODSHED II NW C o rn e r D o b s o n & U n iv e rs ity RESTAURANTS/ BARS 844 -S H E D PRANKSTERS (§Aft4rSRJüL -A L L YOU CAN E A T M onday-Friday tjg U J StudentLB, Required F u r r ’s Family Dining at Tri City Mali • Mesa c HOT WINGS & COOL JAZZ 10c WINGS l S1.25MIC DRY SBggBS RÛNnPRSMATDH 5 th St. & Forest P a g e 15 Tuesday, November 2,1993 St a t t P r e s s BREWPUB 500 Drinks PERSONALS A DOZEN rose? delivered $20 also balloons. Call AfterHours Flowers 894-3419. AXO NEW members- Get excit­ ed for iniation week! Your active sisters love you! A£6> Danny V. Congrats on your initiation. Thanks for including me in your celebration! Love, Tanya G R EEK W EEK com m ittee members must all attend the meeting tonight in the PV Main Cafeteria at 9:30. Buy o n e drink an d get 2nd drink for only 50e (excludes pitchers) GREEK WEEK AH committee meeting Wed. Nov. 3 in PV Main cafeteria. All committee mem­ bers be there at 9:30 3-7 p.m. Mon-Fri GREEK WEEK and Sing reps, chapter presidents and treasurers be in the PV Main cafeteria tonite a t 9 :3 0 fo r m andatory G reek 1024 E. Broadway Tempe « 967-8675 Tuesday Night Fever Week meeting. K A PPA S- BARB S treisand, Mary Ann, Lup, Lear, Miss Lau­ ren, B ridge, Paxt, and all you o th e r h ip re tro s- y o u a re my sunshine- thanks for the great weekend. SIB, Rhoda. P ffl S IG M A K A P P A #1 «C oV »~ Great Sandwiches & pizza! Great Prices • Frèe Delivery 968-4884 swws I tort sports bar P IZ Z A & PASTA TANKUP TUESDAY $ 2.25 p lu s t a x 60 oz. Pitchers Bud Light Coors Light Mic Dry 98 « Pitchers of Soda 1 3 0 1 E. U n iversity 96S-67Î 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2. 1-800351-0222. 966-2020 I W P/ TY PIN G . Term papers, theses, resumes, reports. MLA/ APA. Quick service reasonable rates. M aureen 274-3891 or 955-Q969 FA ST TURNAROUND, Term papers, theses, resumes. Ml^A/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. I W A N T IT NOW ! D esktop P u b lishing. T yping, term papers, resumes, charts, the­ sis, quick service. N ear ASU. 966-1984 Tour Individual ITorostope I frantes Drake I Mon.-Sat. 8am-12am WRITE STUFF Specialty word processing/desktop pub. Busi­ nesses; faculty; students. Beth 963-3537. TUTORS PAPERS FAST! Proofed. Laser. $2/pg. Desk top publishing avail. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987. M ISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS ff For Tuesday, Nov. 2, ¡993 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Mix-Ups in business commu­ nications are par for the course today, it's not a good tim e to get your thoughts across to others. Friends and money don’t mix tonight. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) It's a day to get moe than one estim ate for household repairs. Extra self-discipline w ill be needed to handle today's work load. Partners are in Sync tonight. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Pay extra attention to details on the job. Don't skim the surface. Avoid hurried judg­ m ents about investm ents. Tonight your intuition brings you valuable answers. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Try not to let daydreaming interfere with accomplish­ ment; buckle down, Though pleasure interests aren't espe­ cially favored, couplej are on the same wave length. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Unexpected developments at work may cause a change in evening social plans. Responsibilities'arise in con­ nection with partnerships. Tonight you are inspired. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Distractions may be a morn­ ing problem. Patience will be needed if faced with delays at W ork. Tonight finds you in a romantic mood. Dating and creativity are pluses. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You and a relative may not be on the same wave length today. Guard against misun­ derstandings. Keep spending w ithin affordable lim its. Tonight is best for you. SCORPIO (Oct, 23 to Nov. 21) 135« Gourmet Blend Coffee? Check out the ad on page 2 for details! HURRY! Supplies are limited. TYPIN G /W O R D PROCESSING E t WE DELIVER! 921-9222 B road w ay & Rural COMPUTER HELP - Custom­ ized solutions to programming and hom ew ork assignm ents, study aids, tutoring. 649-8703./ . When you can't fin d th e rig h t w o rd s to te ll someone something they heed to hear/ WE SAY IT FOR YOU Ta c t f u l l y , With n o intent o f malice: Select à message from 6 categories. Send via th e tele­ phone, 52 choices- If desired, send anonym ously. T 8 + . use. touchstone. $ 2:2 5/m ln. aver­ age call 4/min. 1- 900- 896- 6996 . JAZ Productions Portland Oregon. __ _ __ _ 9am-9pm SERVICES ALL NIGHT Spins your favorite Disco and Alternative Music from the late 70's and early 80's APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. H A PPILY M ARRIED profes­ sional coupler certified for adop' tion, desire to provide loving C hristian home for white new­ born, Financially secure, offer­ ing love, happiness & education fo r your baby. Expenses paid. Legal and confidential. Call Pat anytime 1 (800) 237-0058. E L E C T R O L Y S IS BY D égna Perm, results, the blend method. Rural/Southem area 92 L I 146 DJ JOE TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING AD O PTIO N Any Drink in the House 411 S. Mill Ave. 968-6666 SteM tn n ClatiifiiSi Mettbew* Cuitar I u m m Drinks OEK Mid-Semester Rush Week. Last opportunity to rush a New Row house this year. Mon-Wed d in n er and activities at house 5:30pm. Thursday activities at 8:30pm. Call Adam, 784-7721. TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING You may have difficulty mak­ ing up your mind about a financial concern today. Fam ily m em bers make demands on your time now. However, late night finds you quite creative. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) D on’t let a sm all concern interfere with partnership har­ mony today. A backlog of paperw ork needs handling now. Private pursuits bring happiness tonight. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You seem a bit scattered today and may not accom ­ plish as much as you would like in your work routine. Stay on top of bookkeeping. Tonight favors social inter­ ests. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Romance has a problematic quality about it today. In busi­ ness, you may be trying too hard and stifling your intu­ ition. Relax, and then ideas will comqto you. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Friends who drop by can upset your domestic routine. For a while, you may tend to be withdrawn and given to w orry. How ever, you will snap out of it before day’s end. YOU BORN TODA Y are Creative and practical. It is important that you like your work or you won't put forth the effort required for suc­ cess. You are cooperative and w ork w ell with others. Sensitive and im aginative, you may be drawn to writing, acting, dance, and art. Both financial and emotional secu­ rity are im portant to you. Birthdate of: Burt Lancaster, actor; Shere Hite, writer; and Johnny Vander Meer, base­ ball player. ©1993 King Features Syndicate, Inc. $15 R ESU M ES £ U N D R /y H N < j ^ _ GREEKS/CLUBS Raise up to $1,000 in just 1 week! For your fraternity, sorority & club. Plus $1,000 for yourself and a free t-shirt just for calling. 1-800-932-0528, ext. 75. Laser. print & same day .Type, e dit & com pose reports. N ear ASU, A Perfect Image 967-0907: STATE P ress Classified Ad Order Form 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602, FIND IT in the Classifieds! A A A Q U A L IT Y W /P L aser printer, $2/double spaced page. Quick service Sandy, 838-0107 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip P le a se print one letter p e r box, le a v e a blank box b etw een words. GUARANTEED EMPLOYMENT AFTER GRADUATION PLUS $2000/yr SCHOLARSHIPS PLAN NOW! È Please be sure to check your ad . M ake sure it reads exactly as you wish it/to appear in the State Press, including punctuation, P lease check your ad the first day it appears-the liability o f the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit m ay be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for m ake-goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ed a credit will be held on account for future advertising. r i „• I p Private Party Commarcial ** A I 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5*9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day ' 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 s 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. . MMM taMM tav JL □ ŒD FOR DETAILS CALL AN AIR FORCE ADVISOR AT: 965-3181 M e s per Day WÊ |p > % Bank C ard Number Career opportunities with the United States Air Force through the Air Force ROTC 2 Year Program. •Starting salary $26,000/yr. ($40,000 after 4 years) •Free Medical •30 days vacation per year □ # of Days ' " v : r - ,* * . TdW z jß ” N aw m C n Expiration D ale 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 066 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Lost/Found rm T J)) w i 088 Fundraising 052 Furniture 0 48 G arage Sales 101 Health & Fitness 0 74 Help W anted-Child C are 072 Help W anted-Clerica! . 0 73 Help W anted-Food Service 070 Help Wanted-General 071 030 Help W anted-Sales Hom es fo r Bent 040 102 107' 103 056 076 015 120 050 045 Sony, w canner e p a p f p a rso n e /a d * m è r i # th e m a * Homes for Sale Housedeaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices M iscellaneous M iscellaneous for Sale M obtieHom es w a r w p iM rü R rM n n w f 063 062 090 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling R eal Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bare Rooms for Rent K B 100 Services 081 0 58 031 041 0 60 067 108 105 115 Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomea/Condos fo r Rent Townhomes/Cohdos fo r Sale Transportation Travel Tutors Typing/W Ord Processing W anted State P ress Tuesday, November 2,1993 Page 16 Phi Kappa Phi da The Muslim Students Association invites you to a guest lecture on 1 | nvites . all m em bers o f the ASU C hapter The MuslimAgendainNorthAmerica o f the N ational H o n o r Society and special invited guests by Siraj Wahaj tothe Monthly Breakfast Meeting at the University Club Thursday, November 4, from 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. A renowned Islamic scholar At Memorial Union, Arizona Ballroom (#207) Wednesday, November 3,1993,.6:30 PM Dacia Charlesworth an d Carl M awhinney w ill speak on H IV education. Please RSVP By TODAY, November 2 • Phi Kappa 965-0022 We Sell Used Computers Mac.’s IBM’s & More. W hether you are looking to buy a new or used computer, sell your existing system or just trade u p equipm ent, come see us at Electronic M aterials & C om puters. We d o all types of com puter repairs and installations and we carry electronic and engineering supplies. Come see us today for all your com puting and electronic needs. TODAY YOU NEED A CREDIT UNION Nè Minimum Baiane« ar Monthly Service Charge Cheek Guarantee and V IS A * Debit Cards PLUS* System ATM Card Unlimited Use of A ll Desert Sch oolsA T M ’s Cactus* Paint ef Sale Network Overdraft Protection and 24 -Hour Phone Access 413-7000 GSL E fl Œ E 3 B J S . E L E C T R O N IC M A T E R IA L S & C O M P U T E R S A Your Computer Sup«» TEMPE 825 S. RURAL 929-9440 S. E. CORNER OF UNIVERSITY & RURAL ■;W Get an early start on the best MCAT prep available! dance club T h e P rinceton R eview announces the MCAT Early Enrollment Option. G et all th e benefits o f our standard courses plus: • Take a full-length diagnostic M C A T a s early as N ovem ber. • R eceive an individualized pre-co u rse study plan based on th e a n alyzed results o f your diagnostic. • S ta rt w orking with Caduceus, M C A T softw are. To find out more, call The Princeton Review or attend our free MCAT Pizza Preview on November 15,6:00 to 7:30pm. Be sure to call for reservations. p r in c e t o n ^ 4 ^B ’ The best course for the best - ------------ scores! 967-1480 REVIEW We Score More! -W The Princeton Review is affiliated with neither Princeton University, ETS, nor AAMC. ^mygjgrIflprite Disco and Alternative music from the late '70s and early '80s