©Copyright. State P ress, 1993 . Tempe. Arizona T u e sd ay, November 16,1993 An Independent Morning Daily Vol. 77 No. 135 Report: Athletics should focus on grades B ig money sports show lowest GPAs B y M e l a n ie K . S e l c h o St a t e P ress . ASU's athletic department should become more responsible for ensuring that its studentathlete recruits perform, at respectable academic levels, according to a report issued Monday by the Faculty Athletics Representative. In his annual report to the Academic Senate. Intercollegiate Athletics Faculty Representative Jerry Kingston : said athletes who entered the University in their freshman year have a gradua- tion rate of 43.1 percent over the past four years. ASU’s general student body population Over the same time period graduated at a rate of 44.7 per­ cent. ' In making his recommendations, Kingston pointed out that ASU’s men’s basketball team accumulated a 1.4 grade point average (GPA) during the spring 1993 semester — down from a 2.37 average in the previous semester. “A 1.4 GPA — whether for a team of four or 50 — should have significant impact on the type of students you can recruit into the program,” he said. “(Coaches) should be accountable for aca­ demic performance, as well as success on the field.” : ' ' The combined GPA for ASU’s football team for the spring 1993 semester was 1.96. ASU baseball registered in at a GPA of 2.09 for the spring 1993 semester. Since 1989, baseball, men’s basketball and football are the only ASU sports whose athletes have registered average GPAs below 2.0. ASU’s women’s diving, women’s gymnas­ tics and women’s tennis teams all earned GPAs above 3.0 in spring 1993. The overall average GPA for all sports at ASU was 2.37 in spring 1993. Figures for non­ athletes were not available for that semester, but fall 1992 num bers show th at students not involved in athletics had an average GPA of 2.73. The figures were provided by Kingston’s o ffice and A SU ’s O ffice o f In stitu tio n al Analysis. However, Kingston’s report also said that by last year, athletes who entered the University in the 1986-87 academic year had a graduation rate nearly 7 percent higher than the student populaT urn to A thletics, page 2. Regent funds excess credit accumulation ‘insignificant’ abuse Sporting weather By Shaw n Boyd S t a t e P ress Regent John Munger said Monday that partial information from a study indicates an insignificant number of Arizona univer­ sity students are earning excessive credit hours. Munger said that according to data given to the board by NAU, only 22 students currently enrolled at the school have more than 160 credit hours. “It is an insignificant number,” Munger said. Munger added that it appears unlikely that the state’s universi­ ties are facing a great number of students who waste taxpayers' money by taking more classes than needed for graduation. “With the figures from NAU, it doesn't appear that it will be a problem,” he added. Munger said NAU’s figure is the first he has seen among data currently being collected at all three state universities. He said he is expecting the numbers from ASU and UofA at any time. In September, Munger said a possible solution to the problem of in-state students collecting excessive credit hours would be to require them to finance their own educations. The cost to the state for each in-state student’s yearly educa­ tion is $7,000, of which students pay $1,700, Taxpayers cover the rest. In an Oct. 26 letter to the State Press, Munger wrote that if the jSSslfi S lip l Ï . T urn to M unger , page 8. ASU student in 8-car pile up B y M a x w e l l H ig g in s St a te P ress Richard Komurek/State Press Rainfall over the weekend made for a muddy playing field as freshman C h ris Herren tries to evade a tracker at the ASU practice field on Monday afternoon. Deferring building maintenance could cause ‘crisis’ in future B y M a r k M . M a c ia s / , S t a t e P ress ASU has deferred $44.6 million in campus maintenance work, a move that one administrator says could cause a “crisis”\in the near future. Alan C arroll, ASU director o f fiscal planning, said'the University has deferred maintenance work because it doesn’t have the money to pay for the upkeep of some buildings. “Buildings are scheduled for regular maintenance every so many years,” Carroll said. "What happens (now) is we don’t get them scheduled because we don’t have the money. If you put It off for a year or two or three, then there’s a crisis.” Carroll said a recent collapse of the roof at the Activity Center is proof that you can’t delay maintenance for too long. Brian Gregory, assistant for finance and budgets for the IN S ID E S T A T E P R E S S W eather Outlook JUKI Morning fog. mostly sunny afternoon. High 68, low 43. fg*» Arizona Board of Regents, said maintenance deferment is a prob­ lem for universities across the country, not just in Arizona. The Arizona Board of Regents released information that UofA has deferred about $85.6 million in repairs this year, while NAU has deferred about $16.6 million and ASU West about $632,000. Gregory said the ABOR determined that ASU needed $44.6 million in maintenance work by walking through every ASU building that is state owned. . ASU President Lattie Coor said the deferments are just one of numerous results that can be attributed to declining education funds. “ There are always major unseen problems that result from a declining budget,” Coor said. “The effect of deferring building maintenance is just one of the many problems that have resulted The state’s recently passed clean air bill will affect students and their cars. Page 7 )► ASU’s cultural diversity task force releases its report to President Lattie Coor next week. Page 9 T urn to M aintenance, page 2.‘ World/ m m m • * » « '% « Mmw Nation K A N P resid en t C linton m eets w ith law ­ m akers and sm all business ow ners in a final pu sh for N A FT A . ¡ ¡I m p e t i M5 f f % Page 3 i :i f Heavy rainfall is being blamed for causing an eight-car pileup that closed down a mile of McClintock Drive for about two hours during Monday morning rush hour. Five motorists — including at*least one ASU student suffered minor injuries in the wreck, and two people received serious injuries. All injured persons were trans­ ported by ambulance to Scottsdale Memorial Hospital. ASU sophomore Janelle Ramos, a psychology major, was listed in fair condition late Monday night for unspeci­ fied injuries. The accident occurred at 7:20 a.m. in the flooded Tintersection of McClintock and Curry Road, beginning when a northbound car in the curb lane of McClintock drifted left for unknown reasons into another northbound car. Both cars swerved into oncoming traffic, and each struck a southbound car in the intersection. Four more vehicles became involved by either sliding into the pileup or being hit by other cars as they spun on the slick pavement. All the vehicles involved were travel­ ing on McClintock, and the accident was almost entirely contained in the boundaries of the intersection. Police arrived on the scene and closed off McClintock for two hours, with detours set up at McKellips Road and First Street. No arrests or citations were made, and any potential police action awaits further investigation. Sports G ra ss grow s at S un D evil S tad iu m thanks to A S U ’s T om Sadler. Where To Find It r R ' .........6 r Page 11 * 1 A dv ertiser I n d e x .......... .......13 .......14 .......10 ____________ i H oroscopes ................... ...... ..15 O p in io n ............................ .......... 4 P o lice R e p o rt................. .........6 S ports ....................... .......11 T o d a y ’s A c tiv itie s ....... ..... ;..2 W o rld /N a tio n ................. .......... 3 P age 2 m S t a t e P r ess Tuesday, November 16, 1993 Athletics .......... ..... T oday C ontinued The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU commu­ nity. Requests are printed according to the space available each day. Campus clubs and organizations may sub­ m it written entries to th e State Press in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter, Room 15. Requests w ill not be taken over the phone. E ntries m ust contain the fu ll nam e o f the group, a description o f the event, date, time and the fu ll a d d ress o f th e lo cation. 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 students, provided by counseling and counseling psychology graduate students; supervised by faculty, Payne Hall Room 402. F or more information or appointment, contact Jan, 965.5067. • Alcoholics A nonym ous — Daily closed meeting, noon, All Saints Catholic Newman Center, northwest comer of College Avenue and University Drive. • ASU College o f E xtended E d u catio n ’s D ow ntow n C e n te r G a lle ria — D uring 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, S02 E. Monroe, sec­ ond floor, Phoenix. • College of Fine Arts Master o f Fine Arts Program — Master of Fine Arts Exhibition, “It’s Ail About Money,” by Sharon Seggi, reception, 7 p.m., Harry Wood Art Gallery, Art Building. Exhibition runs today through Nov. 24. • N arcotics Anonymous — Home sweet home meeting, 5:30 p.m., 1701 S. College Ave., south courtyard. • FON343 Nutrition Students — M&M and oatmeal cookie sale, fresh baked, proceeds donated to St. Mary’s Food Bank, 10:30 a.m.1 p.m., Cowden Building, near College and University streets, north of Hayden Mall and south of Nursing Building. • NASA Pageant — Mr. and Ms. Indian ASU Pageant meeting, 1 p.m.- 3 p.m,, American a ilA 2 Indian Institute Conference Room. • H illel U nion o f Jew ish Students — Tuesday lunch, 11:30 a.m.- 1 p.m., 1012 S. Mill Ave. • Re-Entry Connection — Fall lecture series: ‘liv in g on a Budget,” by lulie Turner, pub­ lisher o f “Smartsaver” newsletter, noon- 1 p.m., MU Adult Re-Entry Cent«, lower level. • Golden Key Honor Society Pick up Cer­ tificates, 8 a.m.- 5 p.m ., A dm inistrative Building Room ADM 201. • F ellow ship o f C hristian A th letes —Weekly meeting, fun, food and fellowship, everyone welcome, 7:30 p.m., University Activity Center Room 35. • Students Towards Educational Progress Honors Society — Resume writing work­ shop, everyone welcome, 4:30 p.m ., MU Navajo Room. • European Discussion Club — NAFTA, video of A1 Gore vs. Ross Perot, free trade or isolation and protectionism? 6 p.m.- 7:30 p.tn., MU Kaibab Room 208E. • A m eric an In d ia n I n s titu te — W hite Mountain Apache Tribe Higher Education D irecto r to m eet w ith W hite M ountain A pache students, 2:30 p.m .- 3:45 p.m ., American Indian Institute. • U niversity Honors C ollege - C ollege Council — Weekly meeting, discussion and planning for fall semester’s “Honors Day,” everyone welcome, 3:15 p.m., McClintock Hall Study Lounge. • Students for Choice — Calling on all prochoice supporters to help protect Valley-area clinics, show support far the “Bubble Zone” policy by showing up at the Phoenix City Council chambers to help end the harassment, 3 p.m., 200 W. Jefferson, Phoenix. • Cam pus A m bassadors C hristian Fellowship — Open Bible study, 7:3)0 p.m., MU LaPaz Room 223. • Alpha Phi Omega — General meeting, 6:30 pjn., MU, see monitor for room. • ASU Art Museum — Gallery Talk, “Too L ate fo r U topia,” by M useum D irector Marilyn Zeitlin, in conjunction with multi­ media exhibition “Too Late for Goya: Works by Frances Torres,” 12:15 p.m. and 7:15 p.m., ASU Aft Museum Nelson Center. from page 1. tion. The student-athlete graduation rate for that year was 52 percent, compared to 45 percent from the general student body. In the past two years, ASU’s student-athlete graduation rate has jumped 20 percentage points. The rate for the 1984-85- enteriiig class was 32 percent. Jill DeMichelé, ASU assistant athletic direc­ tor for academic services, said the increase in graduation rates will be a pattern. “It’s a definite trend that the student athlete graduation rate is improving,” she said, “It has showed steady increases after the development of many, many factors including NCAA rules, the development of a plan of study for student athletes and increased monitoring.” Kingston said that low GPAs coupled with the 43.1 student-athlete graduation rate indicates a need for the implementation of recommenda­ tions his U niversity Committee on Student Athletes made in a report to ASU President Lattie Coor. T hat com m ittee recom m ended that the University commit to recruiting stronger stu­ dents and place" more emphasis on recruiting freshman athletes rather than junior college transfers. “(We need to) encourage the athletic depart­ ment and coaches to place greater emphasis on athletes’ academic preparation rather than athlet­ ic preparation,” Kingston said. Academic Senate President Bill Arnold said the senate is currently considering how to put in place the recom m endations made in the September meeting. “The recommendations made to the president you heard in September have been accepted, and we have com mittees in place to implement them,” he said. DeMichelé said her department anticipates the student-athlete graduation rate to increase over the next two years. “Ôur prédiction for the next class would be 56 percent and our prediction for the class cur­ rently in their fifth year as seniors is 59 percent,” she said. DeMichele said new NCAA rules increasing the requirements for test scores, GPAs and sub­ stantial academic courses will also contribute to improving the quality of recruits and their aca­ demic performance. M ost academ ic services resources, DeMichele said, are directed toward students with low GPAs. . “We really focus on the students,” she said. “Most of our resources are directed to students who have a GPA of 2.5 or lower, because (their GPAs) limit their choices for a major.” Kingston also said that women athletes con­ tribute more to the graduation rate than men. Over the last four years, women have had a graduation rate of 62 percent compared with a 32 percent rate for men. DeMichele said the academic success of women in athletics represents the national aver­ age and added that there are fewer female ath­ letes. M aintenance C ontinued from page L from a declining budget. “That’s why we are always arguing for big­ ger budgets.” Val Peterson, director of physical plant facili­ ties management department, said ASU will never be able to completely pay its deferred maintenance. * ) “You’ll always have some deferred mainte­ nance. There’s no way to have every building 100 percent up to shape,” Peterson said. “There are components in buildings that wear out on different cycles, so you don’t normally build into your operating budgets money to take care of those kinds of things. “But we’re not attacking the problem like we should be in reducing that (maintenance budget) amount.” P eterson said he thinks the ABOR is announcing the deferred maintenance budget because it wants to make state legislators aware of the fiscal woes currently plaguing Arizona’suniversities. “We have a serious problem on our campus, and if something isn’t done, we may have to close some of our buildings,” Peterson said. ASU hasn’t closed any buildings yet as a result of the deferred maintenance work. IU A H C jU flV d l NOVEMBER 18-21 STUDENT SEA SO N TICKETS 15 G am es - $30 TICKETS ON SALE NOW Coach Bill Frled er and the Sun Devil Basketball team BRAZILIAN ENTERTAINMENT - BRAZILIAN COFFEE SPECIALS BRAZILIAN SPECIALTY DRINKS l|LTft0|{ M |I0 N M il NOVEMBER 18 NOVEMBER 1 9 NOVEMBER 20 NOVEMBER 21 - Zûm-Zûro-Zûm (8 -1Opm) Brasilia (8-11 pm) Brasilia (I-4pm) Zóm-Zóm-Zùm (8 -10pm) n eeds you to be the Sixth Man and create DESERT HEAT for opposing team s. Memorial Union First floor near information desk November 15-19 Sun Devil Stadium Ticket Office Monday * Friday 10am - 2pm 8:30am - 4:00pm For more information call 965-2381 tiM sW i I iitm o k Fashion Pam Tem k C enthfomt S cottsdale Fashion * 553-0203 829-7078 Square • 990-8920 NOVEMBER 18 - Brasilia (8 -1 1pm) NOVEMBER 20 - Zûm-Zûm-Z*m (11-2pm) NOVEMBER 21 - Brasilia (8 -1 1pm) first Game November 19 vs* S I Melbourne World/Nation State P ress Tuesday, November 16,1993 round snzona ■ Phoenix council considers law protecting clinic visitors PHOENIX (AI^ — Tire City Council will consider an ordinance that prevents demonstrators from approaching people at abortion clinics. The ordinance would establish a 100foot zone outside abortion clinics, family planning offices and health, care facili­ ties. In that area, demonstrators would have to stay at least 8 feet away from people entering o r leaving the buildings. The Council is scheduled to consider the ordinance Tuesday. M ayor Paul Johnson and Council members Craig Tribken and Kathy Dubs coauthored the ordinance. “This ordinance is intended to protect the rights o f all citizens whatever their personal beliefs might be on family plan­ ning issues,” they said Crash probe includes number of people on plane; 9 hurt PHOENIX (AP) — Federal investi­ gators looking into a plane crash that injured nine Utah residents, including five adults and four children, are looking into whether the six-seat, single-engine plane Was overloaded. ■'The number caught our attention,” said Fred O ’Donnell, a Federal Aviation A dm inistration spokesm an in Los Angeles. “W e’re not prepared to say there was a violation.” He said federal regulations permit infants less than 2 years old to sit on adults’ laps instead of having their own seats. On the single-engine Beechcraft 36, three children ages six months to five years were seated on adults’ laps, the Pinal County Sheriff’s Department said. < The plane, flying from Heber City, Utah, to Tucson, beliy landed during a storm Sunday night in the desert about 10 miles east of Florence. Officials nonplussed by plan to bridge canyon with bras G RA N D CANYON NATIONAL PARK (AP) —- A California artist’«'plan to b ridge the G rand C anyon w ith brassieres is getting the cold shoulder from park officials, who say their objec­ tions are based on aesthetics, not prud­ ery. Park spokesm an Jim T uck said Monday that officials had beard news reports beginning a few m onths ago about the plan. But they’ve never actual­ ly gotten a call from the artist, who calls himself Nicoiino. I f the one-nam ed artist does get around to seeking permission, the answer is no, Tuck said. “The park was established for it$ scenic beauty,” Tuck said. “A string of A m erican flag s — w ell, anything stretching across the canyon —»would be inappropriate.” The 53-year-okl artist told the Rocky M ountain N ew s he hopes to collect 10,000 bras from women around the country, and has already received 1,300. He said he hoped to string the line of lin­ gerie across the canyon in 1995. “It’s about the puritanical obsession with the breast,” Nicoiino said. “I t's about breast implants and victimizing the health of women. It’s about connecting a woman's self-identity to the size of her breasts. *• “I’m trying to-keep it on the humor­ ous side.” Luke AFB workers to lose 293 jobs In aircraft swap LUKE AIR FORCE BASE (AP) - r . Luke Air Force Base wifi lose 293 mili­ tary mid civilian positions under plans to move aircraft and training units to and fro m o th e r bases, base o ffic ia ls announced Monday. In late 1994, the 58th will begin los­ ing all 33 of its F-15E fighter-bombers when a program to,provide pilots with their initial F-15E training is transferred from Luke to Seymour-Johnson AFB, N.C. Pag C linton pushing for NAFTA votes WASHINGTON (AP) — Struggling for votes with time running out, President Clinton leaned on Democrats opposing a trade agree­ ment with Mexico Monday and tried to hold Republican supporters. The White House tried to pick up farm-state votes with a wheat deal. Two days before the showdown, the outcome rested with 42 House members who said they were still undecided. Both sides contended they would have the votes to win. Clinton argued there was nothing to Ipse by giving the agreement a chance. “If all the nay sayers turn out to be (correct), the treaty gives us a right to withdraw in six months,” he said. “Why don’t we just wait and see whether we’re right or they’re right?” Clinton said in a speech to owners of small businesses. “Ring the phones up,” he implored, seeking to increase pressure on fence-sitting lawmakers. The White House claimed to have picked up 15 votes over the weekend. An Associated Press count found 206 law­ makers saying they would vote against the agreement or were likely to do so. On the other side, 186 lawmakers said they would vote for it; 42 said they were undecided. Clinton needs 218 votes to win. Congressional sources said the administra­ tion struck a deal with several congressmen from Oklahoma and Texas to take action against Canadian wheat imports in exchange for their votes. The administration agreed to impose quotas on durum wheat if Canada does not change its pricing policies within 60 days, the sources said. Rep. Larry Combest, R-Texas, cited that agree­ ment in announcing his support for Clinton Monday. “They've done a deal with everybody but working people,” charged House Whip David Bonior. D-Mich., a leader of the anti-NAFTA forces. But he added, “I think we’re going to win." On the Capitol’s West Front, several hundred civil service union members, mostly from New York state, rallied against the trade pact. “Dump this NAFTA,” the crowd chanted. Many carried placards depicting an oversized monkey labeled “NAFTA” perched on the shoulders of a frowning, hardhat-wearing work­ er. AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland lashed out at Clinton for his extraordinary promise to defend Republicans who are attacked in con­ gressional races because they voted for the trade agreement. “The president has clearly abdicated his role President Clinton tells sm all b usiness owners and operators Monday in W ashington that they should tell lawmakers before W ednesday's vote that the North Am erican Free Trade Agreement will open markets for Am erican bu sin esses. as leader of the Democratic Party,” Kirkland declared. The labor leader also dismissed the notion that a loss would wound Clinton’s presidency — a frequent argument by NAFTA supporters in recent days. “That is nonsense,” Kirkland said. “I think the best thing that could happen for the Clinton administration is for this agreement to be voted down.” He said that would allow Clinton to focus on issues “to put people first for a change.” U ndecided law m akers w ho dined with Clinton Sunday night told him there had been “a sea change-out in their districts” and that public opinion is moving toward support of the agree­ ment, White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers said. Buttafuoco case ‘finally put to bed’ The midday drama provided a certain closure to the MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) — The saga that began in a Long Island auto I case that has provided grist for countless talk-show body shop ended Monday in a courtroom where a handcuffed, smirking | jokes and three made-for-TV movies.Joey Buttafuoco was led away to the same fate that befell his former lover, Mrs. Buttafuoco, 38, who has steadfastly stood by her Amy Fisher— jail time. I husband throughout the chain of events, did not attend Buttafuoco’s expression never changed as he was sentenced to the I the sentencing. maximum six months in prison, $5,000 fine and five years’ probation for But prosecutor Fred Klein spoke of her outside court: statutory rape. “She was victimized twice. Once by Amy Fisher and Only minutes earlier, Fisher, now 19, faced Buttafuoco for the first | once by her husband. time since she shot his wife, Mary Jo, on May 19, 1992. In a nervous, “With Joey Buttafuoco going to jail,” Klein said with­ barely audible voice, she spoke of the ill-fated relationship that began out a trace of irony, “we can finally put this case to “when 1 was a 16-year-old with braces.” “This man took me to expensive restaurants and cheap motels,” she B uttafuoco bed.” A year ago in the same courthouse, Fisher had been said softly. “1 am sad to say that he taught me well. He taught me to disre­ spect myself and to deceive my parents. Unfortunately, these were lessons sentenced to five to 15 years for shooting Mrs. Buttafuoco, who still has a bullet lodged next to her brain. Buttafuoco Wanted justice. that I learned too quickly.” Lack of money to blame for proliferation of tuberculosis, health organizationsays WASHINGTON (APj — Tuberculosis, the “world’s most neglected epidemic,” could be killing 4 million people a year within a decade unless Western countries come up With$10G m illion to fig h t it, tb e W p r 'ld H ealth Worse, the agency wanted: drug-resistant strains are increasing so rapidly that without fast action, a once easily cured disease is on the verge ofbecoming incurable. “The world proerastutated on AIDS. Don’t let the same thihg happen with tuberculosis,” said Richard Bumgarner, deputy director e f WHO’sTBprogram. Tuberculosis kills more people 3 million ; a year —- tig n ai! other infectious diseased combined. About a third o f the wbrfcPs popula­ tion is infected with the TB germ and 8 million people get sick every year. Yet just $1 of every $30 spent on infectious diseases g o es to the deadly lung infection, W H O s a id .i ' The world gave developing countries $16 million in a id to com batTB in 1990, a year that 1.9 million died from TB. But the w odd came up with $77 million to fight leprosy, which .■killed 2,000 people that year,and$185 million I for AIDS, which kjlJed200,00&. > “Something is seriously wrong,” said ite. Arata Kochi, WHO’s TB chief. Devejopiiiig 'coha&it# ' need Ç10O million .a I year to fight TB successfully, WHO estimated. Witi» that money, TB’s tóU wGwÌd ditip iO t.6 million deaths annually by the 21st century. Bumgarner raid. Without it, the toll will rise to 4mdlIioh annually; he said. Bumgarner, traveling the United Stares to ra ise aw areness o f the TB problem , said, “There is a mi sal location o f priorities. Rich countries think it’s not theur problem.... But TB will never be controll«! in the United States unless it is gotten under conttol in the rest of th e world," ■Indeed, U.S. officials had virtually stopped funding TB work in the early 1980s because the disease had bepome so i ^ here. But it is rebounding, with 2 (0 6 3 cases here last year, a 20 percent increase from 1985. AIDS, which wipes o ut the immune sys^ tern’s protection against TB, and immigration are to blame, doctors sayM } Opinion Page4 T ? Tuesday, November 16,1993 State P ress State ta P ress Hditorial Athletics: Somethings rotten Something stinks in ASU’s athletic department. OK, so everybody already knows that. It’s old news after all the athlete arrests last year and this year’s report from two past University presidents that said Athletic Director Charles Harris is causing problems in the depart­ ment due so a lack of leadership. But academic figures from the spring semester show that — surprise — there’s something else wrong in die department: Student-athletes may not be doing such a good job in their classes. ' The bad news came in thUronn of a report issued to the- ; Academic Senate Monday by Jerry Kingston, ASU’s facul­ ty athletic representative. But the good news first. Many studpnt-athletes are doing well at ASU. Since the NCAA began compiling graduation rates three years ago, the rate for ASU’s stu­ dent-athletes has risen steadily from 32 percent in the ini­ tial survey to 52 percent in the most recent graduating class. Smaller sports, particularly women’s sports, are doing quite well. Women's diving, women’s tennis and women’s gymnastics all had average GPAs above 3.0 last spring: However, the big money sports — baseball, men’s bas­ ketball and football — are bringing in grades that most stu­ dents and professors would consider very poor. Football: 1.96 GPA for spring ,1993. Baseball: 2.09 GPA for spring 1993. And here’s the kicker — m ot’s basketball: 1.4 GPA for spring 1993. ’ Maybe they just had a bad semester? Not quite. Men’s basketball has had just three out of the last eight semesters above the 2.0 mark. H ie same holds true for the -■ football team. Baseball players, on the other hand, have only dipped below 2.0 two times in the last eight semesters, ranging from a low of 1.65 to a high of 2.56. Cumulative GPAs from fall 1989 through spring 1993 rank these three Sports dead last out of all sports at ASU. Baseball registered a 2.2, men's basketball a 2.17 and foot­ ball a 2.12. All sports had a cumulative GPA of 2.44. By contrast, the average ASU non-athlete earned a 2.73 in fall 1992 (figures were not available for spring 1993.) Non-athletes' cumulative GPA from fall 1989 to fall 1992 was also 2.73. What does all this say about sports at ASU? Figures don’t he. Though graduation rates for studentathletes have risen markedly over the last few years a statistic much trumpeted by ASU President LattieCoor and die athletic department — GPAs have not Since 1989; 15 out of the 21 ASU sports team? studied' by Kingston have bad their cumulative GPAs drop d r stay about the same. , m ,, Is this "satisfactory academic progress" for ASU’s administration? Is ASU graduating student-athletes who shouldn't be graduating just to make the department look good? How can GPAs be decreasing en masse while gradu­ ation rates jump by astounding percentages? Figures like these only perpetuate the stereotype that schools are in big money sports to make money, screwing studeat-aditates out o f an education to foe process. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board, deckled by a majority voted among its members. Tbey do not reflect the opinion of the Stale Press staff as a whole. Board members ioclode: S. Talbott Smith Jw o n O w d e y Jam es Frusetta F d llo r M anaging T itltn i O pinion Ed ito r STATE PRESS s TAFF Bobbitt case illustrates society’s fascination with male genitalia This past m onth everyone and J essica K linger their dog has heard about the case in Co lu m n is t which a woman cut off her husband’s — as the media so eloquently calls it — sexual organ. For purposes of this column I’ll call it what everyone else calls it, a penis. Anyone who has either not read about the case or who has passed it by with faint heart (or good taste), the sp e cific s are as fo llo w s: L orena Bobbitt removed her husband John’s penis with a kitchen knife after what she said was an incident o f rape by her husband, then proceeded to throw it from a speeding car shortly afterwards. Police officers later recovered the penis, which was reattached to John Bobbitt. This case has been so publicized that it has made every male in America cross their legs with discomfort. I, too, am discomforted by the massive publicity and the acquittal of this man aforementioned — and no, it is not because I have penis-envy as some critics of my articles might argùe; it's because throughout history not only have women had their geni­ tals removed without their permission, but marital rape (as took place in the case mentioned above) is not recognized as a crime in many states’ law codes. Women who have been victims of genital removal receive no media compensation for their mutilation, thereby illustrating that it is OK for women to be sterilized without their consent, but for men it the most horrifying crime that can possibly occur. Throughout American history, Nativè-American women — even in recent times — have been the victims of sterilization without their permission. However, we are rarely taught about this in our American history classes. We find ourselves afraid to admit this part of history, so we simply avoid the subject rather than confronting that some of our ancestors believed that only certain races were fit to breed. Also, in some cultures, w omen’s clitoris have been involuntarily removed. Although women have been subjected to the same tor­ ment that the now-infamous Bobbitt suffered, it has largely been ignored. , Some may argue the case is making so much news because it is an unusual occurrence, but losing sexual organs is not so unusual when one looks at the history of genital removal in women. Perhaps it is making so much news because men’s identity may be defined by the penis. You would probably never find a woman who loses her breasts to cancer define herself as less than a woman or if she has a hysterectomy she probably will not worry about her sex appeal. But when a man loses a penis, it will probably harm his self-esteem and most likely may not v iew ' himself as sexually attractive. And it is also uncommon for women to brag about how big their breasts are, as some men brag about their penises. Instead, they complain about how their big breasts cause future hack problems. The fascination with Bobbitt’s severed male member is dis­ quieting in and of itself. But what is truly alarming is that the media has largely ignored the fact that John Bobbitt (now with organ reattached) was acquitted of marital ra p e — rape which lay at the heart o f his w ife’s action — because the state of Virginia does not consider rape between spouses to be “rape” in a legal sense. Apparently, some states still believe that marriage is a license for rape and abuse. Mr. Bobbitt said that his wife cut off his penis out o f jealousy and that she was dissatisfied with his lovemaking. Ms. Bobbitt said, sobbing to the jury for two hours, that she had repeatedly been forced to have sex with her husband. After she had been raped she went to the kitchen, grabbed a knife, went back into the bedroom where her husband was sleeping and “cut it off.” Now if she is unsatisfied with his lovemaking, why would she “cut it off?” That probably will not make the sex more grati­ fying. Like any abused woman, she probably was going through trauma, not realizing what she was doing. Granted that is no excuse for harming an individual, but it is just as baict as acquit­ ting someone for rape. : The trouble with this case is that it has had to much publicity because when we look at history it is not that uncommon for unwanted sterilization to occur. Also, states need to recognize marital rape for what it is, an act of violence that deserves pun­ ishment. S. TALBOTT SMITH, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor JAKE BATSELL__ ________________ ____ „...City Editor TAMMY MESA-SIERRA......... .... ............Asst. City Editor ANGELA BENOCHE...... JAMES FRUSETTA............... BOB C A STLE. ............ ........ BRIAN FITZGERALD.. . ......... ............. ..Asst. Photo Editor MICHAEL BRANOM............ JULIE REUVERS..... ...... KRIS FR1DR1CH............... TROY FUSS'. .............u. .......... JANECXXJKl... .... ...... . ...... ........ Asst. Magazine Editor R E PO R T E R S: Joy Season, Shawn Boyd, G arin Groff, Maxwell Higgins, Jason Hill, Mark Macias, Melanie Selcha, Greg Sexton. SPO R T S R E P O R T E R S : Scott Davis, Paul Matthews, Shaun Rachau. C O PY E D IT O R S : Dave Proffitt, Jerem y Stein, Nick Bacon. C A R T O O N IS T S : B ryce M organ, G eorge O ’C onnor, Mateo Willis P H O T O G R A P H E R S : S am antha F eldm an, B rian Fitzgerald, Richard Komurek, Craig Macnaughton, Louis A. Porter. COLUM NISTS: Alan Holcomb, Michael Kantor, Jessica Klinger, David Strow, Wade Swanson. PRODUCTION: Kenneth Collins, Jodi Goldblatt, Amie M adden, B ritto n M auchline, D awn Rei singer, Skip Schrader, Anna Utinich, Evonne Vera, Dave Weber, SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly Adcock, Sonia Benson, Joe Borgwardt, Dan Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes, Arlinda Isaías, Alisa Jellum, Kate Martin, Lance Newman, Luther peters, David Thorn. The State Press is 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, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of*die 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 State P ress ______________ ; ' Tuesday, November 16, 1993 Page 5 State P ress etters to the editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. Ail letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your frill name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with die University) and phone number. Only signed let­ ters wifi be considered fo r pubficafion. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by die opinion page edit«' for factual errors mid print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors will be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo IJD. to the State Press front desk in die basement o f the Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, |5 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe Af&> 85287-1562 ' ^ ‘F e m i n i s t ’ a t e r m w ith n e g a tiv e lo a d e d m e a n in g I would like to play the see-saw, and respond to the response I received about a letter to the editor I wrote earlier, I feel the need to explain to Janice Stamps why I do not label myself a “femi­ nist.” First of all, I stay clear of labeling myself as anything, because 1 feel that it robs me of my individuality. Before 1 am a woman, I am an individual. Before I am a writer, I am an individual. Before I am anything, I am an individual. Yes, I am proud to be a woman. Yes, I am proud of the history of the women’s movement which finally opened many people's eyes to the unjust treatment women were receiving. I acknowl­ edge that the feminist group has done a lot for women every­ where. I want to play a part in helping women. Believe me, I know that injustice is still being done in our society, today. Women are still being treated as inferior objects. I just don’t want to be a part of some people who label themselves feminists today. This comes to my second point, that feminists today have sur­ passed the realms of what feminism is supposed to stand for. Instead of claiming their individuality, they instead adopt a malesuperior attitude and take on the defensive. 1 am not saying all feminists are like this, but what the public is hearing are these types of feminists. All I’ve been hearing from feminists since 1 came here for school is male-bashing. Who is going to listen to this? ■ All of this is hate. The word feminist has a bad connotative meaning attached to it. Maybe this isn't fair, but feminists them­ selves have given to this bad connotation. I am a woman that would like to bridge the gap between genders instead of spreading them further apart. I am an individual, and 1 will always be one, but there is no reason why men can’t realize that women are their equals. There is no reason why we can't talk intelligently, maybe even respect each other. If there is a new word you want to tack on me, go ahead. If it bothers you that much, go ahead. No, 1 am not a “feminist in denial," no. 1 am not a baby machine, no, 1 don't need a man to complete my life, but neither do I need anyone. I am completely confident in who I am (the right to choose, the right to say no, the right for equality), and that just doesn’t include the word “femi­ nist.” Suzanne Sanders Freshman, English T h e v e ry first S u n s le tte r o f th e b a s k e tb a ll se a so n 1 agree with about 90 percent of Mike Branom’s NBA predic­ tions in the Nov. 10 issue of the State Press. First, I’d like to say that everyone should root for the home team, in this case the Suns. I missed last year’s excitement during the NBA playoffs because I recently moved here and am therefore anxiously looking forward to Sunsmania and the upcoming season. Anyway, here’s where I get to go out on a limb. Atlantic Division — Unfortunately, New York is unchal­ lenged to win-its division. However, I am picking the Nets over the Orlando Magic and the Boston Celtics over the Heat. Central Division — Charlotte will win the Central due to the acquisitions of Eddie Hohnson and Hersey Hawkins. So far their presence seéms to have been motivated Johnny Newman and Dell Curry. And finally, I’m picking the Atlanta Hawks to make the playoffs based on the additions of Craig Ehlo, Andrew Lang and head coach Lenny Wilkens. Midwest Division — How can you dismiss the Jazz? They never have problems making the playoffs, their problem is in the playoffs. I’m picking the Mailman and Company to squeak by the Rockets and Spurs to take the division. The young breed in Denver should win 40 games and make the playoffs because they aren't lucky enough to just miss the playoffs, make the lottery, and get the first pick. However, they may be lucky enough to win a playoff series by drawing Utah in the first round. Just kidding! Pacific Division — If the Suns can get healthy, they can take care of the Seattle Supersonics. The Trailblazers, lead by Clifford Robinson’s defense and Clyde Drexler’s rebounding, should be a close third. The final team to make the playoffs: The L.A. Lakers. Coincidentally, the Lakers are also my pick for Rookie of the Year (Yes, the whole team!) Finals — Phoenix over New York in a seven-game series! Charles Barkley is named finals MVP, A.C. Green gets Most Improved Player and Paul Westphal gets coach o f the year. Kevin McMahon Freshman, undecided N igh t owl student’s schedule ruined by insistent phone calls Anybody who has worked a night M ik e R o y k o shift can sympathize with Dave Gault. T rib u n e At night, he goes to his job as a Media bartender-waiter at a restaurant. When Service he gets home, he studies and grabs a nap. Then he gets up and goes to col­ lege, where he is w orking tow ard becoming a teacher. After classes, he returns home and tries to grab a few hours o f sleep before heading to his job. He tries, but sleep isn’t always pos­ sible. There is the dreaded enemy of all night workers: the telephone. Gault, 35, doesn’t get many calls from friends or relatives because they know his schedule. But for the past year, he’s been getting calls from bill collec­ tors, collection agencies. They are after a deadbeat who happens to be Gault’s neighbor. “I don’t know the guy,” Gault says. “I don’t know anything about him, except he fives in the same, building,” which is a 14unit apartment complex in Chicago. “ The guy doesn’t have a listed phone number. But I do. And I guess they can look in some kind of directory and get my name and number because I’m listed. “So they wake me up and ask me if I know him. And I tell them, no, he lives in the same building but I don’t know him. “They say something like: ‘Would it be possible for you to leave a message for him or go to his apartment and ask him to come to the phone?’ : “Have you heard of anything that crazy? I’m supposed to go get him on the phone. I don’t know if he’s a nut or what, just that he doesn’t pay his bills. I could be putting my life at risk bother­ ing him. “And what’s the point? If the guy is a deadbeat, that’s none of my business, except that they’re making it my business.” “ When the calls began about a year ago, Gault would just tell them to go away and not bother him. “They were about once a week. But then they started calling more often. And there is more than one company after him. There’s one in the suburbs. There’s another in Ohio. “And for the past few months, I’ve been getting calls almost every day. It’s really starting to drive me up a wall. “I told one woman that if she wanted me to chase him for her, I’d send her a bill for $500 as a consulting fee. She got huffy and said I didn’t stand a chance in hell of collecting a cent. “Then I decided to change my tactics. When they’d call, I ’d talk to them very politely. Then I’d get their names and the names and phone numbers of their companies. That way I’d know who was harassing me. “One of the worst was this woman, Janet, in Ohio. She’s a supervisor there. After her people kept calling me, I asked to talk to the supervisor. After I got her full name, I told her there was nothing I could do for or her company and asked her please not call me again. “She yelled how it was my own fault because I don’t have an unlisted phone number, and if I don’t like being called, all I have to do is hang up. How is that for logic? “And she told me. that they have a perfect right to call me because I’m listed in the phone book.” Gault thought about what'Janet said: Because he’s listed, she has a right to call him. “So I decided that if she felt that way, it ought to work both ways.” He tried a long shot, calling information for her company’s area code in Ohio and asking if there was a listing for Janet’s home phone. Bingo, there was. “I finally got even,” Gault says. “A few nights ago, I got home at about 1:30 in the morning. That’s 2:30 Ohio time. “I was feeling a little spunky, so I called. My wife was morti­ fied. ■ “Her husband answered the phone. I asked to speak to Janet. “He asked me what this was about. I told him that it concerned her company. He said: ‘She’s getting a call from work at this hour of the night?’ “So I told him what the situation was, that they are always calling me when I’m trying to sleep, so I was calling to let her know that I couldn’t help her with that deadbeat neighbor of mine. “I wasn’t rude or obscene. I just explained the situation. And I said: ‘I trust that you are as irritated by my call as I’ve been by all the calls I’ve been receiving.’ Then I said goodbye and hung up.” We called Janet in Ohio at her office, and she was highly indignant about having her sleep interrupted. “If he calls me again, I will file charges. You tell him that. Making harassing calls in the middle of the night! It’s unethical, it’s against the law. I am doing my job, but he has no right to call me at home.” But your company calls him at home when he’s trying to sleep. “All he has to do is hang up.” Actually, he can do more than that. There are federal and state laws against what these collection companies have been doing. We’ve researched them for Gault, and he’s going to pursue them. The indignant Janet might learn that she isn’t the only one who can file charges. S o u n d O ff; 9 6 5 - 4 2 8 7 11» State Press would like to hear from you on its Sound Off Line. Each Monday, the opinion pagew illprin) aquesfiotfof U triversityi^ atfw <*k,24hours a day at 9 0 4 ^ Z “ W»ea i e a v ^ yew name, major. c te s standiim (or any other affiliation with the Umvemityj aad » ^ yoa can bertaehed. AUealls wiH be veri­ fied, and responses wiil be published ^vesD* Wednesday, starting September 1. Responses may be edited for length and to eliminate profanity. Sorry, the S tm Press wiil not grant requests for anonymity on the Sound Off Line. .y * “ V* *" s : O u e s t io n w ) o y o u s u p p o r t n o fa n A S U ili JÿSiSSÈiËBBi Page 6 State P ress Tuesday, November 16,1993 Police R eport A CT Tempe police were called Sunday morning to contact a man whose van had been in the parking lot of the Safeway at 926 E. Broadway for three days. The" officer found the 42-year-old man asleep inside the van with a dog and two girls of ages 12 and 14. The man said he had arrived three days earlier from Idaho with his daughters. A records check revealed the man had an outstanding warrant for kidnapping the girls, who were not related to him, 17 days earlier in Sandpoint, Idaho: The man was immediately arrested, and a subsequent search of the Van produced à bag of marijuana, a pipe, a 9mm semiautomat­ ic pistol and an AK-47 semiautomatic assault rifle. The girls, were unharmed, and arrangements were made to return them to their homes. The dog was taken to Animal Control, the guns and mari­ juana were impounded, and the man was jailed to await extradi­ tion to Idaho. ASU polite reported the follow ing incidents Monday: • Tfib weight room in Cholla Apartments E-wing was damaged by a fire Sunday afternoon. The State Fire Inspector’s office is investigating the cause of the fire, but police have no suspects. : • A woman not affiliated with ASli reported that an unknown man exposed himself to her at Hayden Library Sunday evening. •Unknown persons spray painted graffiti on a wall at Tempe Center some time before Sunday morning. Damage is estimated at $100. : • A male student called police from Ocotillo Hall after cutting his finger w hile o ff cam pus. He was treated by Tem pe paramedics, then taken to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital. . Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Monday: • A 27-year-old Mesa man was killed while driving his motor- çycle westbound near the 1600 block of East Southern Avenue Friday morning. He was hit on the right side by another vehicle as the driver, a 79-year-old Mesa man, made a left turn from a pri­ vate road onto Southern without yielding to traffic. After the ini­ tial collision, the motorcycle crossed the center line and,ran headon into another vehicle at about 45 miles per hour. The driver of the motorcycle was not wearing a helmet, and was pronounced dead at Scottsdale Memorial Hospital because of massive head and chest injuries. Police made no arrests and did not issue any citations. • A 26-year-old Tempe man was arrested for forgery after he signed a former co-worker’s name to a $500 purchase order at Grainger, Inc., 2223 S. Wilson. Police later discovered the man had forged checks at three other Tempe businesses. The man admitted his guilt, and the property was recovered. • A 19-year-old Phoenix man and a 28-year-old Guadalupe man were arrested Wednesday night at Denny’s for trying to sell .30 pounds of marijuana to undercover detectives for $19,500. • Police found a 40-year-old man passed out behind the wheel o f his truck at 1300 S. M cClintock Drive Saturday night. Investigation revealed the man had been involved in a hit-and-run accident minutes earlier at 800 S. Hacienda. He was arrested and taken to jail. Apparently upset in his cell, the man kicked and banged the door, then punched and spat in the face of the jailer who came to calm him down. • A 29-year-old woman was arrested at 1701 E. Don Carlos Ave. late Wednesday night for soliciting prostitution. Compiled by State Press police reporter M axwell Higgins. CO M PU TER CO R N ER * Q. m0 I've heard the word« I've aeen it, but what is MULTIMEDIA? A. Multimedia refers to the integration and manipulation of SOUND and IMAGES as DATA on a P.C. The computer becomes a tool to create, store, edit, and finally present to the user the finished product Q. W hat kind of computer is necessary for MULTIMEDIA? A. A 386 o r 486 computer is the minimum necessary to start with. And good news, the additional hardw are needed has come down in cost this year and is still dropping. Software and it's required hardw are will be covered more in next weeks Q&A. Give us a call, we sell our systems to both Students & Faculty at our ASU contract price m m B R IN G T H IS A D F O R F R E E M S W IN D O W S 3.1 S O F T W A R E W IT H S Y S T E M P U R C H A SE ! A CT PERSONAL COMPUTERS C L H INTERNATIONAL, IN C. 1341 E . UNTVERSITY D R..TEM PE 731-7180 or 829-1350 CROSSWORD S t a t e P r e s s S p o r t s - g 1] P s] E [TIÂ1E E X 1 ÇJ m IÂÎN"m □ R 1C H □□□□m a P I A N T EE ■ g p a S E N O R Am ■ r 0 Pfl ■ O 1 r ■ |H|A Ls i \E\11IClKl O lÄitämmui m [DJÖ1ffi■ D a d s Ea a u □ a H an N A □ c B m m fflm A MU L E T UEÜ0 B L A T T N O a u ffl[El ■ N VE R 11tu B by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS S h a r e a n d in t h e t h e g lo r y a g o n y o f v ic t o r y o f d e f e a t . 43 Reps. counter­ 1 Belfry critters . parts 5 Com ­ DOWN puter1 Cooking phone link herb 10 Heart 2 M akes am ends cham bers 3 C la ss 12 Cam e up 13 Movie cutter Yesterday’s Answer 4 Religious music wrong records harmony 19 Com ­ 15 O ne — 5 Store 29 Delphi poser’s $ "... man — million answerer creation 30 Dining mouse?" 20 Hockey 16 Dog doc 1 7 “— folly to 7 Hospital need or golf worker be wise" 24 Antisocial 33 Nui­ 18 Telescope 8 Igloo sances ones builder parts 35 Bookie's 25 Explo­ concern 9 D is­ sions 20 Any 38 Fresh ordered 21 Movie 26 Becom e 39 Good stand-in's 11 Arrival depleted times 27 Bring into 14 Will deed 22 Goad r - r— r~ 5“ j— r~ T~ 23 Writer ■ -m. Calvino TT^ rit 25 Rotten kid 1 id 28 Idiot 31 Old i5 stringed _ ■ à ■ 16 instrument 18 32 Catch Ji ■ a f 21 34 Hill insect 35 Sm all bill 7■ w 36 King R m m a Kong, e.g. 2Y TT37 Mobile i ■ ■ St-,’ advertis­ 1 1 ers w 40 Turned ; ■ 3 ■ “ the dial 38 d7 41 Bowling 4Í 4Û problem 42 Meat-and1 ■1 4d 4¿ potatoes s R E S I D E N C T U E S D A Y N IG H T Y IN F O R M A T IO N S E S S IO N D IS C O N IG H T E v ery W e d . & T h u rs . 2 -3 p .m . 1.75 DRINKS! AT 9 :3 0 p m -1:00 a m S tu d e n t S ervices A m p h ith e a te r iia iu fS L iio m m R e sid e n c y A p p lic a tio n s A vailable 7 0 5 S. Rural ( a t University) T e m p e • 829-8617 COMPUTER ZONE $20 Point 2 Valvoline .0 0 O ff! Lube, Oil & Filter Service LEIGHTON’S W E W IL L B E A T A N Y O N E 'S P R IC E S # G U A R A N TEED . (R e g . $ 2 1 .9 5 ) TEMPE MESA 1355S. M c C lin to c k 894-2798 1355 S. C o u n try C lu b 898-8211 W E W ANT TO BE YOUR CO M PU TER STORE. 9 0 4 N . SC O TTS D A LE RD . T E M P E - SO U TH O F C U R R Y O ^ Q O Î ,7 4 J1 ‘ U * Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8-6, Sunday 10-4 G ood only with coupon. Not valid with any other offers. Add SI .00 Environm ental Fee. F IN A N C IN G A V A IL A B L E j aa ■ W R A N T E D : e c i p e s , C & o o k i e s , O t h e r P a s t r i e s , S w The Annual Holiday Coffee is one of the oldest ASU tradition —37 years. Last year, the budget crunch took away the Holiday Coffee. But with the help of all of you, we kept it alive!! This year, we are asking you to do the same. Please fill out the coupon below, and send it to MUAB by Nov. 17. Please use plastic-wrapped disposable plates. | N am e ____________ Dept* Mall Code. Deadline: November 17 Mall th is coupon to 0901 - S usan Sutliffe or deliver In person to the MUAB Office, Third Floor, Memorial Union. Phone. L .Z Z ____________________i A X Y D L B A A X R is L O N G F E L L O W e e t s C e le b ra te !! th e 8 8th M U I agree to provide ___ dozen cookies, pastries ^ I or other sw eets for the 38th. A nnual Holiday I Coffee a t 9 to 11 a.m . Dec. 1. My recipe is attached j (Optional). diSh8S 11-16 D A ILY CR YPTO Q U O TES — Here's how to w ork i t PLEASE H ELP US TO K EEP T H IS TRADITION ALIVE! For more info, please call 965-6822 MMMM. Unii Acirates 80MB O n eletter stands for another. In th is sam ple A is used for the three L's, X for th e tw o 0 's , etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ation o f the words are all h in ts. Each day the code letters are different. 11 -16 CRYPTO Q U O TE • • ,W Y F H y- G W ZM T M , P Y V Z N W T Y V B Z Y T P D N H H W Z O B M L O W YVWEYYOH N D N O W T M 1 W F V H W W Y Y V I W Y O N W NKFANQ. — LONI JM Q Y G F W C Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I'M NOT THE TYPE W HO WANTS TO G O BACK TO THE LAND; I'M THE TYPE W HO WANTS T O G O BACK TO THE HOTEL.— FRAN LEBOWITZ 0 1993by King Faamrcc Syndical*, Inc. Tuesday, November 16,1993 St a t e P ress A u to em issio n s test m ore stringent; co st dou b les; repair fees increase B v J a s o n H il l S t a t e P ress Last week’s passage of the new clean air bill will double fees for vehicle emissions tests, but students who are eligible for food stamps can obtain financial aid, according to an Arizona legisla­ tor, „ Arizona Rep. Lela Steffey, R-Mesa, said, “You don’t actually have to be receiving food stamps, but if you are eligible then you can get assistance.’* The bill, passed Friday, raises emissions testing fees from $5 every year to $20 every two years. Steffey said she is not satisfied with the clean air bill and said she felt that the increase in prices of the emissions test were unfair to citizens. Tempe Vice Mayor Neil Giuliano said he was happy to learn that the bill will enable low income families and students in-the Same bracket to receive financial aid, but he said he felt that not all students should be included. "I don't think it should blanket all students, because some stu­ dents aren't low income,” Giuliano said. Repair costs for vehicles that don't pass emissions tests will also rise by 50 percent as a result of the bill. Drivers who own vehicles from 1967-1974 will have to pay a minimum Of $100 in repairs;'models from 1975-1980 must pay a $300 minimum; and cars from 1981 to the present Will jump to $450. People with low incomes will be able to receive assistance up to half price by virtue of waivers. The money will come from a f fund set up as part of the clean air bill. The new emissions test, called the IM/240, will be in full effect by 1995 and will include both governmental and commer­ cial vehicles to pass stringent tests which search for broken hoses and faulty canisters. Jim H uling, special program s director for Tem pe City Projects, said that though Tempe has not had air quality problems iti the past to the extent that Phoenix has, the recent addition and future expansion of the Red Mountain freeway is cause for con­ cern. Huling said he believes that the passage of the clean air bill was a difficult decision for all the legislators involved, but the threat of losing potential federal highway funding would have been detrimental to Arizona. “It’s like going to the dentist — the worse it gets if you put it off,” Huling said of the bill. Also included in the clean air bill is a mandate which requires burning wood in the fireplaces to be banned on days when pollu­ tion is high in the Valley. Steffey said that if everything works right, the clean air bill could have a positive effect on air quality. ASU parking decals are not currently issued to students or fac­ ulty unless they provide sufficient proof that their vehicles have passed emissions. ASU parking spokesman Gary Bums said that decal prices should remain the same for at least two years, despite the increase in emissions testing fees. W hat can you do w ith a S:fC 7 Political Science Degree? Find out w h at yo ur options are follow ing graduation, MAKE AN INVESTMENT IN YOUR LIFETIME Topics of discussion include: G ra d u a tio n School * Law School in te rn s h ip s * C areer O ptions O rd e r y o u r copy C areer Services will be present to offer suggestions for the job search. to d a y ! o f T h e 1 9 9 3 -9 4 S u n D e v il Spark Y earbook M a tth e w s C e n te r b a s e m e n t, rm 5 0 Refreshm ents Provided N o vem b er 18, 1993 - T h u rsd a y 2 :0 0 p .m . S o c i a l S c i e n c e 1 01 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 Sponsored by the G o o d G uys at P i S ig m a A lp h a National Political Science Honor Society “ Funded by ASASU** K a p la n fin d s m a g i c f o r m u la . A g a in . P ro o f that no one knows tests like Kaplan: Kaplan has found a pattern behind GRE Pattern Identification questions—a way for you to get them right nearly every time. In seconds. Even if you don't understand the question. And because the method works best on harder questions, you have more time to work on the easy ones. And, with the largest staff of researchers in the industry—spending $2 million a year analyzing the tests—you have to expect this sort of thing. Kaplan has "broken the code”on three other question-types since 1982, contributing to the removal of those questions fromthe tests. All of this means you score higher. It's just one aspect of Kaplan's Total Training method for raising your score—part of the world's greatest arsenal of test-taking techniques, reasoning skills, content review, and practice tests. r With Kaplan* help, you could know the tests better than the test-makers. To learn how we did it, call 1- 8 0 0 - K A P - T E S T . L S A T M CA T G M A T G R E KAPLAN T h e an sw e r to th a te st question Page 7 Page 8 State P r e s s Tuesday, November 16, 1993 Munger. HURRY! C ontinued ONE WEEK ONLY. 1000 Haircut & Consultation C ALL , I DAW N I I I Fla/thÂ4%00 90S E. Lennon HAIR AN D N AIL DESIGN 966-1391 I - - - J B o b 's B ic y c le B a rn I NEW, USED, BU Y, SELL, TRADE from page 1. numbers are significant, he would propose incentives for students to graduate within 160 hours, such as improved counseling and required courses that are more readily available. Munger said he believes that figures from the other two universities won’t be much different from NAU’s. “1 would be surprised if they weren't consistent with (NAU’s numbers),” he said. Regent Rudy. Campbell agreed with Munger, saying the number of ÑAU stu­ dents who have collected over 160 hours poses no problem. "T hat num ber d o esn ’t am ount to much,” he said. “If it’s that small of a number. I don’t think it’s being abused.” Campbell said he will have to see all of the data to make a final judgment on the issue. But he said regular students are “In my opinion, that shows how ludi­ crous the whole accusation is,” he said. “It would cost 10 times more for the state to go and collect the money than to just pay for the classes.” Guile stressed that less than 1 percent of NAU’s 15,000 students have collected over 160 hours. He said he believes ÀSU and UofA will have similar percentages. “Overall, the figures statewide won’t be much higher,” he said. Guile said he hopes that he will be able to contact the 22 students. “We’re going to find out if it was the system, rather than them abusing the system,” he said. Steve Jordan, deputy executive director of planning for the ABOR, said the data is compiled from numbers the universities are collecting to fulfill a request by state, auditors. • being hurt if the figures turn out to be high at ASU and the UofA. “It’s not fair having students want to stick around six years,” he said. “If it's being abused, that’s at the expense of other students. “I don’t like to have students calling me and telling me they can't get classes.” Munger said reactions to his sugges­ tions have been overblown. “All of the students are excited that something is happening, but I’m just ask­ ing questions,” he said. He added that the rest of the ABOR knows that he is only looking for facts. “They all know that I am just asking ques­ tions,” Munger said. Andrew Guile, an NAU student on the Arizona Students A ssociation board of directors, said the figure disproves the idea that students arc abusing the system. X-MAS SHIPPING &STORAGE AVAILABLE! • I Q Û 4 C O C O O c JH - O O O Z IN TH E CO RN ERSTO N E & u n iv e r s it y Arizona ótate University rural C a m p u s Dining FREE LARGE SODA & CHIPS I I 967-1114 I I Weekly m agazine. J r$ 2off D p s Comic strips. 694 Opinions. 44ozAny Fountain Sòda in AAU Market n i i i I Ground, 2-Day or I Overnight ■ Sc All Other UPS Services? Special advertising I Per custom er, per day. _ ÍMBE M AIL BOXES ETC ¡g|gjg¡¡jj 1739 E. Broadway (at McClintock) Tempe • 829-3900 I I I ★ !_L r i i Nov 15-19 Only Its free. ♦ — o ♦ • 2 SPORTS I Bring in your used sports! equipment and leave with CASH! 1 9 5 4 E. B ro a d w a y ! NE Corner of i Broadway & Dobson | ..... Crispy B eef Hardshell WE BUY FROM YOU. | j 1 TACO TU ESD A Y! 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B e a s o n S t a t e P ress M a tth ew s C e n te r b asem en t, rm 5 0 A ll P ageJ? Tuesday, November 16, 1993 Sta te P ress ~~ *..«mUmrnukmmm Open 7 d i p a iiie k oiicert* 6 2 5 E . Apache 967-5445 An administrative task forcé has completed a report listing 20 ways to improve the learning environment for an increasingly diverse campus and will present its findings to ASU President Lattie Coor next week. “Our committee met last week and reviewed the final draft of the report," said Gretchen Bataille, chair of the Self-Assessment for Quality and Diversity committee and associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts. The committee held several hearings over the past few months in an effort to garner feedback on the report from students, facul­ ty, staff arid administrators. As a result of thé feedback, clarifications'hàvé been made to the report rather than major changes to the content. Bataille said. According to Bataille, the last addition to the report was a clar­ ification on the différence between diversity and Cultural diversi­ ty. As a result, Bataille said the committee has planned to add sortie paragraphs clarifying the difference. Last month, the task force received negative feedback that its definition of di versity was too broad- At the time; Bataille said the definition would not change. Other modifications have included clarifying the classification of “under-prepared students” and adding recognition of minority faculty Who advise minority students on top of their normal Work­ load. A rough draft of the report was released in late September, composed by a group of faculty and administrators from various departments throughout the University. It details 20 points “recommending a strategic framework to guide future actions aimed at improving the learning environment for an increasing diverse student clientele.” The information for the report was compiled as a result of committee members’ answers to 64 study questions on the “as-is state” of ASU and ASU West. The committee validated its find­ ings — which are archived in the Hayden Library — in focus groups. t Bataille said that the committee will present-the report to Coor by Thanksgiving, meeting pre-established target dates. Coor could not say when he would be able to respond to the report, but said he Would attend to it as time allows. ; “I will try to move as quickly as I can on the report,” Coor said. “I hope to give them some feedback by the beginning of the (spring) semester.” “First Class Entertainment" Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week Spice up your life with: - Traditional Sonoran Style Mexican Food - N ew V egetafian S elections ■. - Daily Specials - Happy Hour Buffet $ F R E E D IN N ER $ With purchase of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. L Tertipe location only. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 11-22-93. "CELEBRATINC 30 YEARS OF Br Fn g Tn G FINE MEXICAN FOOD AND FRIENDS TOGETHER 960 W. UNIVERSITY - 966-0852 CASEY a t t h e BAT B aseball & S cftball B attin g R an ge ONE FREE "1 I I ROUND! R eceive fre e rou n d w hen I I y o u bu y 2 rou n ds. 1605 N. Hayden Rd. Acrossfrom Big Sutf 990-7742 FR EE 1 0 -1 1 Every w eekday, w e give you the State P ress absolutely free. G reat news. G reat features. Even a magazine. C rossw ords and horoscopes. Not to m ention the huge savings from all the coupons. We do all this for you every day. W ill you do som ething for us today? G ood ¡ T h a n k s! The State Press has special inserts in it today. A nd they tend to flop to the ground and create a safety hazard as well as an eyesore. W ould you be so socially correct as to bend over and pick up the insert that m ay have been the one that slipped out o f your State Press? Thanks. We appreciate your help. A nd so does th e earth. W cll/W ine & Draft 1 1 p .m * - d o s e DJ JO E spins your favorite DISCO and ALTERNATIVE music from the late '70 s and early '80 s COMPLIMENTARY Pizza & N acho Buffet 5 -7 p .m . 2*4*1 Drinks 4 -sp .m , SUNS vs. Golden State Game Starts at 4:30 p*m. 411 S. Mill Ave. •Downtown Tempe •966*2020 Comics St a t e P r ess Tuesday, Novem ber 1 6,1993 Pag e 10 by Bill W atterson C a l v i n and H o b b e s HELP ME. THIN K O F AU ■IS S U E TO D EBA TE FO R TH IS DUMB P A P ER . W E IL , WHAT ISSU ES Do XOU CARE AKW T? I DONT CARE ABOUT ISSUES.1 w e g o t b e t t e r t h in g s t o T H E F A R S ID E DO THAN ARGUE EMEPS WRONG-HEADED CRACKPOT WITH AN IGNORANT OPINION ' I'M A BUST MAN' ,___> poonesbury i m ow a u rrœ youhave Bern asking youfseives, By G A RY LARSON BY G A R R Y TRU D EA U I/JEIC, I'M MANY THINGS,OF course, BUTMOSTCFAU-,I'M . ..... A SURVIVOR., AFTER A 98-countm c n m rr <3&BOWORKS! CF1M&IWS! ffiW B O W w e s m PEOPLE L O S A N G E L E S (A P ) — M ic h a e l Jackson didn’t check into an overseas drug treatm ent program as an excuse to avoid returning to thè United States to face child m olestation allegations, his attorneys said today. The entertainer's civil attorney, Bertram Fields labeled as "flatly false” suggestions that Jackson's claim that he is seeking help with an addiction to painkillers is an excuse to avoid returning home. “ If M ichael Jackson wanted an excuse to stay out o f the U nited States all he had to do is stay on his tour,” Fields told a news conference. The attorney said Jackson w as “barely able to function on an intellectual le v el” because o f his addiction to painkillers. T h e d ru g tre a tm e n t p ro g ra m w as n o t re v e a le d . F ie ld s s a id J a c k s o n ’s p riv a c y c o u ld n o t h a v e : b e e n p r o te c te d in an A m erican in stitu tio n , b ut he in sisted th e p r o g ra m w a s a c tu a lly ch o se n b a s e d on m edical advice. A sked about reports that Jackson was in France, Fields Would only say that extradi­ tion laws had nothing to do with the coun­ try w here Jackson w ent for treatment, The tour cancellation led to a parting of w ays betw een Jackson and Pepsico. T he soft drink giant canned its backing o f the superstar on Sunday, tw o days after Jackson backed out o f the tour claim ing he was addicted to painkillers. Ja c k so n has said he b ecam e ad d icted after corrective surgery seven m onths ago for injuries suffered when he was burned by a fire on a Pepsi com m ercial set in 1984. The Pepsi endorsem ent was scheduled to e n d a t th e sa m e tim e th a t J a c k s o n ’ s “ D angerous” tour ended. Jackson called a halt to the tour Friday. “T h e c a n c e lla tio n o f th e to u r re a lly e ffec tiv e ly can cels o u r rela tio n sh ip w ith M ichael right now,” Pepsi spokesman Gary Hemphill said Saturday. “W e ju st hope he is able to resolve his problem s.” Jackson, 35, has been hounded by accu­ sations that he m olested a C alifornia boy. No form al charges have been filed. Ja y C o lem a n , w ho b ro k e re d the deal betw een Pepsi and Jackson, told The N ew York D a ily N ew s today th at th e en d o rse­ m ent had sim ply “run its course.” M eanw hile, Jackson rem ains in seclu ­ sion. / “Jacko: You can’t hide!,” headlined the Sunday M irror o f London. H is w hereabouts w ere n ot announced. V a rio u s re p o rts p u t h im in L o n d o n o r Sw itzerland, and the director general o f a hotel in the French Alps said today he was there. J a c k s o n ’s sta y h ad b e e n k e p t se c re t b e c a u s e th e p o p sta r “n e e d e d a c e rta in am ount of d is c r e tio n ,” s a id A lb in M a rc h e s s e a u . H e is d ir e c to r o f th e M a rc h e sse a u h o te l g ro u p th a t ru n s th e H otel Les D rom onts in A voriaz, a resort town. The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook — An investment in your lifetime O rd e r yours today for $ 3 6 .9 3 , M atthews C e n te r basement, rm 50, 965-6881 d esig n er rLÜBE“ 0fLFÍLfERÍ Ænamrmiï vintage $, leather T I II E 1 A U T O M O T I V E unique 30W • 10W 30 • 10W40 • • • • • T ire s A lignm ents B ra k e s Sh o cks/Struts C u sto m W h e e ls . .F R E E Delivery To Your Work or I je a n s Home. 2033 W. University 644-1201 (D obson & University) £l Ii „ i o n —11 I t Lubricate your vehicle & chassis, drain old oil, add up to 5 qts. of new oil and install a new oil filter. Diesel extra. Most cars and tight trucks. Includes a 17 pt. vehicle maintenance inspection. Plus $1.50 oil disposal charge. Expires 12-16-93. TRbNTorREAR'' BRAKE SPECIAL " • D isc brake pad or brake lining • Turn drum or rotors • Repack w heel bearings, if applicable • Add brake fluid • Road test • Sem i-m etallic d isc pads $20.00 extra • M ost cars & light trucks. Not valid with any ofter offer or discount. Offer valid with coupon only. Expires 12-16-93. j | 227-229 W. University, Tempe 968-2557 * 724 E. Glendale Ave. 870-8507 Sports State P ress Page-I l Tuesday, November 16,1993 p orts Briefe Lúeas named Player of Week ASU linebacker Dan Lucas has. been named one of four Pac-10 Players of the W eek, along with quarterback Steve Stenstrom o f Stanford, Eric Zomalt of California and punt»' John Stonehouse of USC. All four were involved in upset victories overthe weekend. Lucas, a junior from Oroville, Calif., keyed ASU’s defensive effort and scored the only touchdown in die game in the Sun D evils’ 9-3 upset of 10th-ranked UCLA. He returned an interception 31 yards in the fourth quarter for die gamew inning touchdown. Lucas also was credited with 11 tackles (six unassisted), caused two fumbles, recovered one fum­ ble and had one pass deflection. Smith makes Wooden Top 25 ASU guard Stevin “Hedake” Smith was one of 25 players named to the pre­ season poll Monday to receive one of college basketball's most coveted honors —- the Classic Games John R. Wooden Award. The top 25 candidates for the 1994 Wooden All-American team were select­ ed based on their performances last sea­ son and on the performances o f their teams. A second group of 25 players was recognized as having received serious consideration for the award. Ten players from the top 25 will be chosen to the Wooden All-American team, and one will be named “Collegiate Player o f die Year” on April 8,1994, E arly frontrunners fo r the aw ard include Duke’s Grant Hill, Vanderbilt’s Billy McCaffrey, Eric Montross of North C arolina and G len R obinson o f Michigan. O ther P ac-10 candidates are California’s Jason Kidd and UCLA's Ed O ’Banrion. M ark H endrickson o f Washington State, Lamond Murray of C alifornia, D am on Stoudam ire from UofA and Shon Tarver of UCLA made the second team. Geiger, Davidson top Wildcats Richard Komurek/State Press Tom Sadler, director of Stadium Operations, sa y s the Sun Devil Stadium field is “light years” ahead of the poor condition It w as In last year and is excited about showing off the turf at the upcoming Fiesta Bowl. Field flourishes at Sun Devil Stadium B y M ik e B r a n o m S t a t e P r ess A week from Friday, the eyes of the state will be upon Sun Devil Stadium, watching UofA and ASU write another chapter in the story of their heated football rivalry. On New Year’s Day, the Fiesta Bowl may host the national championship with a rematch between Notre Dame and Florida State. An audience of millions around the globe would watch. If all goes well for D irector of Stadium Operations Tom Sadler, the field will be a lush carpet of green for those games, a far cry from the sandbox that was passed off for turf a year ago. By all accounts, last season’s field was a mess. Scheduling and the elements combined to kill the grass and make playing conditions gener­ ally miserable. Consider that the turf had to sur­ vive these assorted punishments: • Betw een ASU and the NFL Phoenix Cardinals, 14 games played in 17 weeks, includ­ ing two back-to-back games in a weekend. • U2 played a concert in the stadium in late October. . , • Two Arizona high school championship games at the stadium were played in a driving December rainstorm. • The hot-water heating system built below the field caused the grass to destroy its root sys­ tem in a desperate attempt at survival. A SU ’s M eredith G eiger and Kori D avidson defeated cross-state rivals, U ofA ’s M ichelle Oldham and Celine V erdier 7-5, 6-7, 6-4 for the doubles championship at dm Rolex-ITA Southern C alifornia W om en’s Tennis Regional Sunday. Geiger/Davidson were unseeded in die doubles competition and upset a num­ ber of seeded teams before defeating the UofA duo. _ y v V :.v Pittsburgh 23, Buffalo 0 NBA R o u n d u p « Houston 88, Philadelphia j | | | | NHL Roundup Montreal A l S i w a 2 Edmonton 5, Toronto 5 (tie) - H Calgary 7, Winnipeg 2 QrmpiM pram A P end n a ffreport* T urn to Stadium , page 12. O ly m p ic sports deserve 2 n d lo o k T o p -n o tc h m e m o rie s ASU’s golf coach to be honored ASU w om en’s g o lf coach L inda Voilstedt will be honored today at the Women’s Golf Summit in Petóle Beach, Calif., for her continuing contributions to the sport. Tim award will be presented by Dinah Shore to the ten recipients along with master of ceremonies Kathleen Sullivan. Voilstedt, who is lit her 14th year at ASU, coached the Sun Devil squad to NCAA Championships in 1990 and 1993. The ASU graduate swept all coaching honors l a s t . se a so n ’ w ith Pac-10 Conference Coach of the-Year, Far West Region coach o f the year and national honors as well. Also receiving awards will be ASU Hall of Famer latte Bastanchury-Booth, Patty Berg, Kellee Booth, Y trii Goetze, Nancy Lopez, Carol Mann, Carea Peek, C s n l Sem ple-Thom pson and Shirley The management system resposible for the stadium’s upkeep resulted in too much compro­ mising and not enough action. The result of all those forces made the field look terrible and play as it looked, as there was no wall-to-wall grass, but a homely mix of sand and turf. Cardinals’ kicker Greg Davis took the brunt of the ragged sod, hitting on only four of ten field goal attempts at Sun Devil Stadium. On the road, his accuracy improved, nailing nine of 16 tries. In Phoenix's last game of the season, Davis and Tampa Bay’s Eddie Murray combined to miss six field goals on the sandy sod. , By the time Colorado and Syracuse met on Courtesy ASU Sports Information ASU cro ss country runner Erin Scroggins races to the finish line In the ASU Invitational at Karsten G olf C o u rse on O ct. 15. Scrog g in s com peted in the NCAA Region VIII C ro ss Country meet Saturday and finished In 23rd place. A S U s S cro g g in s races to 2 3 r d -p la c e fin ish F rom Staff R eports ASU junior Erin Scroggins capped a fíne season Saturday with a 26th-place fin­ ish at the NCAA Region VIII Cross Country meet in Woodland, Wash. Scroggins, the lone Sun Devil to compete in the Regional meet, covered the 10,000 meter course at Lewis River Golf Course in 30:50.7 Scroggins grew up in nearby Vancouver, Wash., and competed as a prep at Vancouver’s Mountain View High School. Washington State’s Josephat Kapkory claimed the men’s individual title, finish­ ing in 29:20.5, while sixth-ranked Portland took the team championship with 56 total points. The Pilots, along with runner-up Washington (71), earned a trip to the NCAÁ Championship, Nov. 22, at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa. UCLA’s Karen Hecox won the women's title with a time of 16:41.6 over 5,000 meters. UofA won the team title with 59 points, followed by Stanford with 65. A S U a t h l e t e ’s c r e a t e th a t w ill liv e fo re v e r I missed the Florida State/Notre S c o t t D a v is Dame game on S aturday to an Sports C olum nist attend an ASU swimming meet, and I think I got the better end of the deal. The Sun Devil swimming pro­ gram is one of ASU’s lesser known sports that deserves more attention. O ther sports include volleyball, golf, wrestling, tennis and softball. All of these teams are always in the top 20 of their respective sport, yet they get as much attention as the beloved campus preachers who stalk the Memorial Union fountain area everyday. It’s a shame these teams don’t get the fan support that the baseball, basketball and football teams land. In terms of talent, there isn’t a lick of difference. Last season, the women’s swimming team finished ninth in the nation, while the men popped in at 19th. This season, they're a combined 6-0 and have more talent than last year. Together, the two teams have five foreign Olympians. Why not head out to the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center and watch these past and future Olympians tread through the water? It will give you something to tell your children come 1996 or 2000. And what about our volleyball team? It is currently ranked 11th, but is arguably the hottest team in the nation. They upset No. 2 Stanford earlier in the year and have been nearly unstop­ pable since. The Sun Devils are led by outside hitter Christine Gamer. She is ranked numero uno in the Pac-10 and fifth in the nation in kills. Unfortunately, only 500 people come and see her play at ASU. T u r n t o D a v is , p a g e 13. St a t e P ress Tuesday, November 16, 1993 P a g e 12 Stadium ___ _____ FSU, Nebraska N o .2 in polls C ontinued from page 11. Jan. 1, the game looked less of a showdown between two college powerhouses than a twisted version o f The Sands o f Iwo Jima. “That was a very long period in my life, from the beginning of December to the end of the Fiesta Bowl,” Sadler said. This year, though, the held is in great condi­ tion, Sadler says the turf is ‘light years” ahead of what it was a year ago. The dominant reason for the field’s revival is S adler’s use o f a d ifferen t m anagem ent approach. Instead of hiring out groundskeepers on a contractual basis, the system last year, care­ takers were hired directly through the university. “What we’ve done is eliminate the different layers of management with all their different opinions;” Sadler said. “This year, we have two consultants and one guy taking care of the field. By cutting some o f the fat, you save the University some dollars and streamline the turfmantainance process.” v The Sun Devils play one more game On the, field and the Cardinals play three more. With the Class 4A and 5A high school championships being held once again at Sun Devil Stadium, Sadler has six games in the next month and a half to worry about. He is concerned, but not worried, about the turf. Sadler believes that the groundskeeping methods are correct and all is well for the poten­ tial Fighting Irish-Seminole Showdown. “We feel real good about where we’re going and look forward to the possibility o f a national championship,” Sadler said, “We feel pretty good about th at" B y R ic k W a r n e r A s s o c ia t e d P r e ss Once again, the polls have become a source of controversy in college football. Who should get a chance to play No. 1 Notre Dame for the national championship, Florida State or Nebraska? The two major polls disagree, fueling bar­ room arguments, raising questions about the bowl selection process and putting pressure on the voters who play a key role in determining who gets to play for the title. “Hey, it beats talking about NAFTA," said ESPN commentator Beano Cook. “I’d rather lis­ ten to Bowden and O sborne than Perot and Gore.” No one knows Where Ross Perot and Vice President A1 Gore stand on the great Florida State-Nebraska debate. But every hard-core fan knows Where the Seminóles and Comhuskers stand in The Associated Press and USA Today- CNN polls. The AP media poll ranks Florida State sec­ ond and Nebraska third. The USA Today-CNN coaches’ poll has them reversed. The bowl Coalition, which combines the two polls to deter­ mine the major bowl matchups, has Florida State No. 2 and Nebraska No. 3. So who’s right? “Nobody’s right arid nobody’s wrong — it’s just a lot of opinions,” said Cook, who votes in the AP poll. “It’s a great outlet for people who want to talk about college football, and it doesn’t hurt anybody. Nobody’s getting mugged over this — yet." Bowl coalition officials acknowledge the system isn’t perfect, but they believe voters tty to be fair. “We’re not talking about brain surgery with laser beams,” said John Junker, executive direct .fttor : . of ' • the Fiesta • . .Bowl. ■, “You-•/look • *• aat-• all the.. T u r n t o P o l l , p a g e 13. Weather worries? See th e forecast o n th e b ottom o f Page 1. St Loris Seattle Chicase NewYork MtfaddpHa Washington Slot* S1M* S140* $139* $170* $170* •fares areeachwaybasedonarandtop puchase. Resttcbonappiyandbesaes^^ notice. SeatsmaybeImited,sobooknew. OH ter a fK B Student Trerels megexine! Council Travel i There’s no lower price for a collect calk' You don’t have to be an Eco­ nomics major to see that AT&T could save you up to 44%+ over basic MCI collect calling rates. Just dial 1 800-0-P-E-R-A-T-0-R Save up to 44 % and your call will be carried by AT&T. You can use it from any phone on or off campus. But remember, if it’s not 1 800-OPERATOR, it’s not AT&T Dial 1 800-OPERATOR (1 800 673-7286). w/Student, Faculty, or Stali I.D. EV ERY W ED N ESD A Y N IGH T m BSO W. Broadway Tampa •Based on long distance collect calls. Exdudes other companies' discounts limited to calls between their own customers, fending tariff effectiveness. ♦Versus MCI operator-dialed three-minute interstate calls. © 1993 AT&T. State P ress .Pag:e 13 Tuesday, November 16,1993 Davis C ontinued from page 11. It amazes me that 46,344 people will go out and watch the ASU football team slither by Oklahoma State, but only 500 people will watch a young woman who may join some of the ASU swimmers in Atlanta in three years. Right now, npbody can touch the ASU women’s golf team. And the men aren’t too shabby either. It’s hard to cheer for them since they only have one home match per year. But get out there during that one time. This season offers another story to tell your children in the future. Emilee Klein is leaving at the end of the season to hit the LPGA. Why not go to her home finale? Besides Klein, numerous others are bound for the pro tour. The women have Pac-10 Champion, Wendy Ward. The men have NCAA champ, Todd Demsey. Who does this compare to? , A young lady named Brandie Burton and a young man named Phil Mickelson. Both mil­ lionaires. Can’t you just see your child’s eyes now? Sports such as wrestling, tennis and softball do n ’t kick into high gear until the spring. Consider this a two-month notice. The ASU wrestling team finished fourth in the nation last season. So what did Coach Lee Roy Smith do during the off-season? He brought in the third highest recruiting class in the nation. Some young blood mixed with some hungry veterans will provide plenty of success. Both tennis teams are also looking impres­ sive for the upcoming season. The women fin­ ished last season ranked seventh and will carry an alm ost identical team this season. Kori Davidson plays with so much pizazz on the court that she makes John McEnroe look boring. The men struggled last year, but that was without the Armenian wonder, freshman Sargis Sargsian. Coach Lou Belken feels Sargsian could be one of the best, if not the best, in Sun Devil ten­ nis history. Why not be at his first ASU match? When he beats Jim Courier at Wimbledon in 1999, you could once again overwhelm your child. The softball team is also on the upswing. After making it to the regionals of last season’s NCAA tournament, Coach Linda Wells made some vast improvements. She added a lethal battery in pitcher Carrie James and catcher Sandra Langston. This could. be the final piece to an NCAA Championship puzzle. NCAA Championships don’t come to ASU athletics too often. When your child is about to select UCLA or Notre Dame over ASU because of their greater number of NCAA titles, sit him or her down and say, “Did I ever tell you about the tim e...” ■ Poll C ontinued from page 12. teams, you do your homework and you list the Top 2 5 .1 think the voters do a conscientious job.” The Florida State-Nebraska question is cru­ cial because the team that finishes second in the coalition poll will get to play Notre Dame for the national title if both teams win their remainingregular-season games. SUNDAY If Florida State (9-1) beats North Carolina State and Florida, the Seminóles would get a Fiesta Bowl rematch against Notre Dame, which beat FSU 31-24 Saturday in South Bend. But, if Florida State loses and Nebraska beats Oklahoma on Nov. 26, the Comhuskers (10-0) would play Notre Dame (10-0) in the Orange Bowl. MONDAY TUESDAY sm 7s • U n d er 9 S a il T o u rn am en t HIP NIGHT! 5 Roundtrlp Tickets a n d A c c o m m o d a tio n s for 2 to SIN CITY giv en a w a y ev e ry T uesday plus $1.00 Stiff. D 's a n d B.Js. $1.50 D om estic L ongnecks $3.00 Entry fe e - Slg n-up sta rts a t 7 :30 To u rn am e n t sta rts a t 8:0 0 1st 8c 2n d P la c e • $100 A d d e d M o n ey 3rd P la c e - C u e stic k • 4 th - C u e C a s e FREE P O O L 7- C lo se $2 .0 0 c o v e r H A PPY HO UR PR IC ES FO R A LL H O SPITALITY INDUSTRY PEO PLE 93 E. SOUTHERN WEDNESDAY (S.E. Comer ofSouthern &Mill) TEM PE SIM PLY IRRESISTIBLE M l M l M i p 8 2 9 -1 8 2 2 $ 1.00 c o v e r for m en - NO co ve r for ladies • 250 WWD for ladies ALL NIGHT All of the ladies will b e given a num ber from 8-10 pm Later that night there will b e five $100 winners I 75« >DRAFT BEER j ALL NIGHT THURSDAY FRIDAY FUN K N IGHT! ASU/UA Pre-gam e Blowout! | SUNDAY-THURSDAY I WITH THIS COUPON with Ed d ie W ebb from 98 KURD fro m 4-6 pm HAPPY HOUR BUFFET ANYTHING GOES! C o m e see us for funky nightly specials. EXP. NOV. 30 SATURDAY 25« WWD FREE POOL 11 a m - 6 pm & $1.00 c o v e r starting a t 7. A dvertiser Index Namg Page .......................13 AT&T...:......,..—...................... .......................12 Bob's Bicycle Bam................... ....u... ........f;.,¿8 .......................10 Buffalo Exchange........... Casey at the Bat.................. ........... „...,.......9 Chicagie's........................... ...... ..................... ............8 CLH International.................... .........................6 Club 411.................................... ........................9 Coffee Plantation................... . .........................2 a s a s u ............................. ...... Name Page Commons on Apache................. .....................16 .... .................6 Computer Zone...»............. Council Travel,........................... .....................12 Flamingo H air............................ ................... ........88 G eico.................... ...................... ........... ........16 Grease N G o............ .. .......... ...............6 Grooming Humans.....:..... . ...................16 Holiday Coffee ..................... . .......................6 Honda Doctor........ :.... .......... ... .. . . .16 N otice to our readers: B efore responding to any advertisement requesting money be senior invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press BIG THIGHS? cannot assume responsibility for _■ Get the patented creme thats guar­ the validity of the offers advertised anteed to reduce thighs! Call any­ in our classified section. For more tim e-(916) 898-1058 information and assistance regarding the investigation o f an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. ANNOUNCEMENTS $$ CASH $$ UP ANNOUNCEMENTS FLANNELS TO *15 for. Levi's 501's •All C o lo rs •All W a s h e s Levi Jackets.,.up to$15* ‘Restrictions Apply CALL FOR DETAILS- H U B JEAN BUYER 966-9320 805 S . Farm er 5th & M ill • 9 2 1 -7456 <4 blks w est o f M ill on University) Hours: M on-Fri Noon-6pm Sat. 10am-3pm What is the difference between a taxidef and a tax collector? The taxiderm ist takes only your skin. -M ark Twain Name Page Rosita’s ............................:..................................9 Rother’s University Bookstore........................... 9 Sno Oasis.................... ........................................8 Studebaker's...... ............................................. .....6 Taco John's..........................................................8 Tempe Bowl...................•.....................................8 Tucker Bramsen Tire............... .-....................... 10 State Press. Display Advertising * 965-6555 Classifieds AN N O UN CE­ MENTS MUSIC THERAPY Awareness week!! Find out what music ther­ apy is! A booth will be open in front of the music building from 9 to 1 on 11/15 thru 11/19. Check it out and learn something new! RESUMES, INTERVIEWING, networking; and job search tech­ niques available from an experi­ enced Fortune 500 company re­ cruiter and manager! Work one on one with a Fortune 500 re­ c ru ite r! C all 7 5 2 -1 0 9 5 fo r info/appts. APARTMENTS 1 BD 1 ba, kitchen (off house) walk to ASU, $425/mo utilities included. 966-7061. 2 BDRM Apt All new appliances $400 per month walking distance to ASU, Call 759-762$. Dec Free Apache Terrace 1 bedroom, 1 bath available January 1st YOUR DAILY DOSE Name ‘ Page Inman Chevron...................................................8 Intercollegiate Athletics.....................................2 Kaplan.... ................. :................................... 7,16 Mail Boxes Etc.......... ........................................8 Marriott Corporation ................................................8 Pi Sigma Alpha................................ ........... ,......7 Pinke’s ..... '................................................. .......13 Callfor reservations now! 1123 E . Apache 968-6383 APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 & 2 bedrooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laun­ dry room. On East 8th Street bet­ ween Rural & McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. SPACIOUS 2BD, 2ba, near ASU. $250/mo, take over lease. Call 858-9740. HOMES FOR GREAT LOCATION, 12th/Mill, 2 bd, 1 ba, living rm , kitchen, co n v erte d g a ra g e (e x tra rm ). $575/mo + dep. Call 902-0718. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR R | N T _ ^ _ = 2 STORY townhomes, 2br, w/d, $600. C all K elly for details at 921-3586. CONDO 2BD 2ba kitchen, lvg rm, Fp, 2 car pkg, 400 yds form ASU. $525/mo (206) 568-7237 CONDOS FOR rent, 2bd, 2ba, W/d hook-ups, pets ok, $525/mo. Call Kelly for details, 921-3586. HAYDEN SQ U A R E 3bd, 2ba w/d balcony over looking pool, refrig. w/d. Balance o f Nov free. $H50/mo. MGM 345-1919. CliiillMa I hU CAMERON CREEK, own bd/ba, ; nicely furn luxury' apt, cable, alarm, m/f, move in asap. $380 in d util & basic phone (negoti­ able). David, 829-9212,390-7152 FEM A LE R O O M IE needed Dec. 1. N/S, no pets, grad student preferred. Nice quiet 2bd 2ba. Call Lisa or Elaine 756-1560. FEMALE: 2 B D, 2BA apt, pool, cln, quiet, 1 1/2 mi ASU, $295 + l/2uti|. 894-4601 lv msg. ROOM M ATE W ANTED: m /f $195/mo 2bd/2ba apt. Get own room’ w/bath. Call John ASAP 894-6349. UNIV/ MCCLINTOCK female pref-share 2bd/lba apt, cln cmplx w/pool. $193 + 1/2 util 468-6575 W ALK TO ASU 2bd, 2ba apt. A/C furn, w /d, cvrd p arking, pool. $27Q/mo utils inc. 921-8897 ROOM S FOR RENT R ETIR EE/STU D EN T NEEDS low -cost o r n o-cost h ousing within 6-8 mile radius of ASU. Can work for all or part of rent. Good with pets, (no child care, please.) C all Lyn at 993-4301 leave message. Call 96S-67JS to pltet y,ur id. ROOM S FOR RENT M ISCELLANEOUS FEMALE: 3 b d2ba house w/pool $ 192/md + 1/3 utilities. 68th/Thomas. Clean reliable. Jill 990-2292 BALLY’S PREMIERE member­ ship prig. $1500 asking $750 obo. Call 468-0099 leave message. SHARE ROOM $200 mo. Plus , util negotiable. Avail. Jan. Close to ASU Heather 968-8290 MORROW SNOWBOARD, race board, brand new, not drilled. Must sell - $300 obo. 443-3920. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE PULSESTRIDER TREADMILL 8 functions, less than 1 yr old: $300 (obo) Call 9294)494. \ C H EA PE R fH A N rent. 3bd tow nhouse at 48th/B roadw ay, completely remodeled, low 20's. American ERA C liff491-4406 QUESTA VIDA - 1 mile from ASU. 2bd, 2ba, w/d, pool, sau­ na; Interested? 921-3944; Buy of the Week Q uesta Vida 3 bd, 2 ba townhouse just reduced to $75.000. C all Bob Bullock • Realty Exec. 998-2992 Everyone ìeedsa PAAL. Stay protected with the PAAL, w Quorums Personal Attack Alarm that blasts 103dB (min.) when you simply pull the pin. Choose either the standard or sports model. C any it to school, the mall, the park, wherever you go. PAAL lets out a cry for help whenever you need it. And only Quorum gives you that kind of technology f lf a O f li W and security, SeoHrigLih E rnie C ipollaro p a a L 1 - S3« 516-8118 PAAL 2-541 FURNITURE M ISCELLANEOUS F O R & \^ _= _ AAA QUEENSIZE w aterbed, m irro red h eadboard, padded rails $50. Computer workstation with printer stand $25, loveseat $25, 381-8044 ext. 665 message. FULL* SIZE bed, mattress, box spr., frame, $125; tnetal shelves, $25; w ood 5-d raw e r dresser, $99. All 6 mo. old. 902-0718. $ LEE PER SOFA & Loveseat. $300 Or best offer. Call 759-4830 after 6pm. 1 FURNITURE TRAVEL SOFA, SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. Cheap. 352^7249. 2 D/FW airline tkts to sell. Leave Nov. 24 - return Nov. 28. Call Lanie 834-6634. WHITE- WASHED wicker dress­ er, desk, & stool. $200 Shasta Mtn bike $50. 968-4358. couriers needed, outrageous int’l trips, call PTG 310-514-4662. AIRLN TKTS FREE COMPUTERS BERM UDA AND C arib bean Summer School Programs for up to 6 ASU credits. Call 965-4630 for 1994 info packet. A PPL E PO W ERBO OK 160, 80MB hard chive, 4MB Ram, carry casé, sty le writer II, lots of software, cheap! Call 966-8340 Iv / msg 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. CO RO N A D O B EA CH , San Diegp - Rent condo week of Dec. 12-19 Sleeps 4, loaded 846-6639 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places World, wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. : EURÀ1L PASSES. Discounted. Travel Europe by train. Richard 953^6690. COMPUTER ----- ZONE-----486 Systems S X - 3 D X 4 0 .. . 5 829-6126 NEW YORK La G uardia, one Way, male/female, departs Dec. 18th, $15Q/obo. 661-8533 lv msg. Tempe PLA NE TICK ET to C hicago: Leave Nov! 24- return Noy. 28. $275. Contact Derek at 929-0743. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu.: gold, ster, pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S Mill Aye, Tempe Center 968-6074 STUDENT TRAVEL 9 66-6300 TICKETS W e C o m p are S tu d en t F ares a n d All O th e r D iscounts PHX TO LAX Leave Nov 24 6 :15pm return Nov 28 lpm. Fe­ male SlOOobo 921-1421 MILL AVENUE TRAVEL AUTOMOBILES- ARE YOU forgetting something? You need to work for the ASU . Telefund! If you are articulate, enthusiastic, and goal orierited, call us today - 965-6754. 1983 FORD Escort. Super clean, red, runs g reat, ac, cc, ps, pb. Asking $1000: Call 496-8772. ARTLOVERS! TRAVEL $5-2p/hr. earning potential for phone reps selling tix pkgs to Phx Symphony! Immed openings, p/t Sun 3 -9 ;30pm , M -T h 5 0 Û - • 7:30pm. 277-7291 exit 315. TRAVEL FOR FREE!! Local travel agency is looking for enthusiastic and motivated stud­ ents to sell Spring Break trips on cam pus. Earn free travel and cash incentives. Call: Patrick at 962-1999 BUFFALO EXCHANGE: The largest resale clothing chain in the southw est has im m ediate openings for p/t & f/t. employées; Looking for energetic individ­ uals. Must enjoy working with people. Apply in person M-Sat 10-5pm at 724 E. Glendale. G ET THERE with the Classifieds! STU D EN T T R A V EL 1»800*777«0112 Wl STA TRAVEL C H R I S T MA S B R E A K S LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES JANUARYMl, 1M4 *M w7NIGHTS STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER(REEK TELLURIDE I CLERKS WANTED 2nd & 3rd shift; Apply 7-Eleven 1405 N. Scottsdale Rd Tempe or 2025 W. Warner Chandler^. ÇUST. RELATIONS need asst, flex p/t wknd/wkday hrs, 4010 S. 36th St., Phx 85040,437-0786. C U SÎ. RELATIONS- need asst, flex p/t wknd/wkdy hrs. Apply at 4010 S. 36th St., Phx 85040. DATASOURCE H IRING p/t telephone survey interview ers. Requires good reading skills and 30 wpm typing. $5 per hour to start w ith first in crease a t 90 * days,' 7-2:30 shift ©r 3:3.0-9:30 shift. Bilingual a plus. 4515 S. McClintock Suite 101; Tempe. 831-2971 EOE; ~ DELIVERY DRIVERS needed, nights & weekend shifts. Apply in person, Biimpie, Broadway & Rural. TOU.FRIEWFOMIATIONfRESERVATIONS EARN W HILE you learri! Ex­ panding Looking fdr individuals to train in Sales. 966-8799 1»800*SUNCHASE AUTOMOBILES HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE LEASING AGENT: Exp. in sales, personable, professional ap­ pearance. P/t position. Apply in person: 1255 E, University Dr., Tempe. No phone calls» please. ROCKY MOUNTAIN Chocolate Factory is opening in S cotts, Fashion Square. Need reliable, friendly sales help. A ll shifts avail, call Mark 947-2225 BABYSITTER, P/T afternoons, own transport nec, $6.50/hr, near 60th St/Grfeenway. 494-4392. MACINTOSH EXPERTS, pro­ grammers. Small business needs assist, in makiijg their programs more effective. C ontact Chris: 945-2068, leave message HELP WANTEDF O O D J g R V jC ^ MALE QUADRIPLEGIC seek­ ing p/t attendants for personal care Rural/University, David 7319113. -.y / . V BARRO'S PIZZA: F/t days & p/t evening positions now avail­ able for delivery d rivers and c o u n te r help. Please c a ll 8 2 0 -9 2 8 2 . A sk fo r B ill or Brian. MANAGER TRAINEE w ith 1 year o f A ccounting fo r Steel Business. Full tíme, wages nego­ tiable 391-3168 M ILL AVE! Scoops-N -Bagels now h irin g p a rt-tim e. F le x .1 hours. Apply in person, 505 S. Mill. MARKET RESEARCH phone in­ terview ers. No sale s. Tem pe. Evenings/Weekends. Susan 967• .4441;. " ■*'; ' ’■}:% MODELS/ACTORS, LOCAL ad agency seeks M/F, all types, for Spring catalog. Pays $1000+. No exp necessary. 602-266-6537. MUGGER SLUGGER Self defense Pepper Spray w/key ring. Used by T em pe SW AT team. Featured on CBS News w/Dart Rather 5-11 -93! G reat $$$'s especially for women! Call Bill Cole (602) 553-8016. ’ NAIL TECH, wanted. Must have clientele. Busy downtown Tempe salon. 966-6650. Ask for Jeannie P/T FOREIGN Exchange student $1500 - $4000 by X-mas no exp nec. for free info & packet call (602)351-8617 PHX RADIO station seeking p/t telephone researchers (tem po­ ra ry ). No exp. nec. E xclnt. comm, skills a must. Please call Becky @ 258-8181 btwn:8-5pm. Looking for energetic and outgo­ ing people available Monday-Friday for photography and sales in Scottsdale/PV area. No experi­ ence nec. Call Ann or Vic for an interview now 998-5866 STRONG, TALL students needed to assist quadriplegic in weight room in the evening, 966-2059 UP TO $10/hr giving away frée services. D ay or Evening hours. 413-0215 ■! :-■ x WALK FROM ASU! N o selling, telephone survey research*, flex h rs avail m rng, a ftrn s, e v es/ wknds. Start at $5/hr. Wkly pay, frequent raise reviews! Higgin­ botham Asso., 8 2 9 - 3 1 4 1 ,. PA R T S«* L E S S . auto 2 0 % S a v in g s w /ad check us out <5f > P V 5 2 6 9 -5 6 4 0 3623 W. Lower Buckeye Rd. (Just off I-10) I JO B O T P g g U N m |g _ CRUISE SHIPS hiring - Earn up to $2,000+/mo. on Crusie ships or Land-Tour companies. World travel, summer & full-time em­ ployment available. No exp nec­ essary. For info, call 1-206-6340468 ext. C 5918. IN T ER N A T IO N A L EM ­ PLO YM EN T- M ake up to $2,000+/mo. teaching basic con­ versational English abroad. Ja­ pan, Taiw an, & S. Korea. No previous training required. For more information call: (206)6321146 ext. J5918. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers & din­ ner busboys. Apply in person MF 10am-3pm, 5001 E Washington WINTER SKI resort jobs. Up to $2,000+ in salary & benefits. Ski/snowbaord instructors, lift op­ erators, wait staff, chalet staff, + other positions. Over 15,00 open­ ings. For more infomation call: (206)634-0469 e x t V5918. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HAVE FUN- Give away 5 free hrs of long distance calls,. Real savings! No quotas-no fees. You earn bo­ nuses & lifetime income. P/T 9498325. > ■: , ■ SPRING BREAK '94 - Lake Havsu, AZ, America's newwest hot spot, is actively seeking respon; sible, e nergetic cam pus reps. Earn $$$ + free trips! Call Nikki (602)968-1158 or (800)4Havasu. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES PROFITABLE AND great P/T job, 39 counter top snack vending machines, $500 each/obo. 25 al­ ready located. 488-5151 Statt Pratt Clattifiada 965-67$$ HELP WANTEDGENERAL ENGLISH MAJORS $7.05/HOUR S co ttsd ale F am ily T reasu res, an ex p a n d in g publishing com pany, is hiring 8 literate indi­ viduals to proofread o u r books, prior to publi­ catio n . Flexible, p a rt-tim e h o u rs av ailab le, in c lu d in g w eek en d a n d ev en in g h o u rs. N o ty ping required. 44th St. & Camelback. Call 952-0100 and ask for Ellen city of scottsdale recreation division THE B EST TELEM ARKETIN G JO B IN THE V ALLEY IS O N LY 15 M INUTES FROM A SU •$8/HR GUARANTEED WAGE TO START •PART-TIM E& FUU TIME SHIFTS •VERY FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES (20-35 Hours W eekly) Top people earn $15-$20/hr. We have a beautiful, stateof-the-art telem arketins facility at Camelback and 44th Street and Invite exp . saleswomen and men to call for a personal interview. Please ask for Joyce at: 952-0100 SCOTTSDALE FAMILY TREASURES WANTED: COACHES & OFFICIALS BoyS Girls Basketball Basketball $6.36 - $8.49 per hour For application inform ation contact the Student E m ploym ent Office, Job referral # 5345-J A pplications w ill be accepted until Friday, D ecem ber 31. 994-2408 Cash for the holidays Part-time • Across from ASU $ 7 .5 0 /h r m in . guaranteed first 2 pay periods in clu d in g train in g . Here's a great, flexible job, close to ASU that will give you cash for the holidays. We're a 36 year old telephone marketing company and we talk to people about the best trial book previews, maga­ zine renewals; sponsor marketing, non-profit fund-raising arid other outstanding programs. • Flexible schedules - short (4.5 hour) shift - Early AM, Mid-AM, Early Afternoon, Mid-Afternoon, Early Evening, & Weekends i • Average $8-$ 10/hour • $ 10-$20/hour for our top producers. _ • Paid, complete training; Nice offices, fully automated • Reps call prequalified leads nationwide from a cbmputer-dialed data base. C all to d a y fo r a c o n fid e n tia l in terv iew (6 0 2 ) 8 9 4 -0 2 6 4 . DIALAMERICA MARKETING. I N C A 1 S M Fast • Easy « Fun No Experience Required Start Now H E6AF00D S C a ll n o w ! 602*678-1958 FR EE TRIPS AND MONEY!! Individuals and Student Organizations wanted to pro­ mote the Hottest Spring Break Destinations, call the nation's leader. Inter-Campus Programs 1-800-327-6013. The Rose Company CAR A TRUCK i SAGEBRUSH CANTINA now hiring food servers & cocktail servers, Apply in person: 8111 E. McDonald, 1-4p M-Sat, 998-1987 NANNY'S P/T days eves or wee­ kend hrs. m ust have re lia b le transportation call 345-2433.- JO B O P P O ^ N jT jl^ $$CA»nUBBJULY$$ HELP WANTEDSALES AUTOMOBILES RED ROBIN TEMPE Has immediate openings for ex­ perienced w ait staff with some daytime availability. Apply in person: 1375 W. Elliot. SPORTSHOTS Clatiifitds Warlc! -------------------- Ap' HELP WANTEDSALES NEED IMMED for nat'l jean co., 6-9 hrs/week, 4 local dept stores, inventory m aint sp ec ia list. $7.50/hr. 821-1774 HELP WANTEDGENERAL 86 CHEVY C avalier Z24 Exc Cond In/Odt, Runs great. New Tires. New Brakes, New A/C, V6 at Below Avg Mi's, AM/FM Ster­ eo Cass: $3450 OBO 967-0699 THE WORLD'S LARGEST STUDENT a YOUTH I TRAVEL ORGANIZATION HELP WANTEDGENERAL GOING AWAY for the Holidays? Call for low fares. Spring Break MESA CPA firm is seeking, Special: cruise the Mexican Ri- . intern thru tax season. Approx. 20 hrs/wk, possibly more during viera from $549. 4?7~1788. tax season. Bring resum e to IN-HOUSE TRAVEL: "Let us 1103 $: Mesa-Dr,; M-F 9-4. get you outahere." Lowest fares. Wholesale Asia & Europe. Free MILL AVENUE BEER deliv ery ! 7 d ay s-H rs vary. Company is now accepting appli­ G roups w elcom e. Andy: 867cations for all positions. Apply in 0548 • - y.'..; . person: 605 S. Mill Ave, . ^...$1299 „....,$1399 ......$1629 ...... ..$219 212 M eg H D 340 M eg H D ...... ........$299 15" S V G A M o nitor....$369 14-4 Fax/Modem........$149 Sound Blaster Pro A S P $219 I S tate P ress Tuesday, November 16,1993 P ag e 14 M o tivated , resp o n sib le , well groom ed Individuals needed for part-tim e rose sa le s Frid ay & S a tu rd a y evenings In som e of th e V a lle y 's fin e st re so rts, re sta u ra n ts a n d n ig h t c lu b s. C a ll to sch e d u le first Interview: 921-8855 Tues.-Frl. 8:30am -2:30pm PERFECT FOR STUDENTS „Come jo in one o f the FA STEST G RO W IN G com panies in the U nited States p er F ortune Magazine. N ow accepting applications for o ur new stores in Tem pe & Scottsdale: 4141 N. Granite R eef Road 1140 W . Eliott Tem pe Scottsdale F or the follow ing positions: ♦ Frozen F ood Personnel ♦ Cashiers ♦ B ack up Bookkeeper ♦ M eat Cutters ♦ Courtesy Clerks ♦ B ack up Scanner ♦ D airy Personnel ♦ Bakers ♦ C ake D ecorators ♦ Produce Personnel ♦ V ideo Personnel ♦ Stockers ♦ V arious Lead & M anagem ent Positions All employees must be able to work weekends and holidays!!!! We offer: El 171 GZ3 171 an exciting work environment great benefit package (health, dental & life fo r em ployees and dependents) vacation & holiday benefits growth & promotional opportunities Megafoods is an equal opportunity employer. Megafoods promotes a DRUGFREE woik environment S t a t e P ress RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS SPORTS & WINGS! ^ B alb o a C afe p re se n t? LIVE 4 S a te llite s IS S cr ee n s "We s h o w a ll NFL, Io w a & N eb ra sk a Games" S lA ji WOODSWEE II HOT WINGS & b COOL JAZZ n 10c WINGS r a $1.25 MIC DRY Lee Rocker from the Stray C ats W ednesday November 17 at 9:00 p.m. C a ll now fo r re se rv a tio n s! SBANDERSNATCH 5th St. & Forest PERSONALS 2 QSC 1500 watt amps, MX-1500 model, $50Q/ea or both for $900. Call David, 829-9212, 390-7152. BUMP, SET, spike - It’s Phi Sig we like! From the delta Gamma team and coaches WE BUY CDs DG'S - Best o f luck this week w ith v o lley b all. The victory comes on Saturday. Love, your Phi Sig coaches. DG'S - Let's get it going for Phi Sig V-Ball CAMPUS CORNER 712 S. College featuring Great Sándwiches & Pizza! Great Prices • Free Delivery 968-4884 M USIC $ l - $6 C A S H NW C orner D obson & U n iv e r sity 844 -SHED BREWPUB FRATERNITY MEN ! Are you ready? Grand Prix is ready for ; U! Get psyched for a furi week! WILD HARE - Records - JASON K. - Thanks again for a great time lust Wednesday, I really do enjoy your company ! Target Girl. CD's & Tapes 1250 E. Apache Blvd. FCÀ ROBBEÉ I had alot of fun at your formal, especially the scenic drive! H ey, sm ile! L ove yaQ.Cammy Free Beer in Héoyen SPORTS & RECREATION HANG GLIDE 2-for4 ASU spe­ cial! Gently sloping hill. $afe & exciting... Call; 897-7121 ■■■-£■ ■ _________________ PRANKSTERS AR & ©RILL GOUWf*SSK*Cr v l? | -ESTABLISH ED 1080-________I Buy one drink arid get 2nd drink lor only 50c (excludes pitchers) Fo r a Good Tim e ; call 966-1300 3-7 p.m. Mon-Fri Balboa Cafe 404 S . Mill A ve ., Suite 101 1024 E. Broadway Tempe • 967-8875 s in s The Legacy Continues . . . P IZ Z A & P A ST A REWARD: A diamond & sapphire ring lost 11/6/93 at Bandersnatch. Great sentimental value. Please call 969-9018. Bud Light Coors Light Mic Dry 8 -9 p .m . W ell, W ine, Draft 50 < 98 < 9 -1 0 p .m . W ell, W ine, Draft 75< Pitchers of Soda W ell, W ine, Draft 968-6666 $1 1301 E. University 11 p .m .-C lo se For a good time DJJOE Spins yo u r favo rite eheek out the Disco ft Alternative m usic Stato Press SUNS vs Golden State Game starts at 6:30 p.m. 411 S. Mill Awe. 966-9090 HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL Classifieds! HELP WANTEDGENERAL N E # D A 3 A has the perfect position for college students. Look at these advantages! T h e W rite R esu m e Broadw ay /M ill •Close to campus/Mill/Broadway •No cold calling - call only existing customers •Set your own schedule •Guarantee based on hours worked - not sales We need people with positive attitudes and a willingness to learn. So call today and start to earn some extra Christmas money! Ask for Al Simpson at 967-0066 EOE 9E ~~ EL EC TR O LY SIS BY D egna Perm, results, the blend method. Rural/Southem area 921-1146 RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2. 1-800351-0222. honest. W hen you , can’t fin d th e rig h t w o rd s to tell, someone something they need to h e ar; W E SAY, IT FOR YOU TACTFULLY/ w ith ho intent 6 f malice! Select a message from 6 categories/ Send via the tele­ phone; 52 choices, if desired, send anonym ously.. 18+, use touch-tone,. $ 2.2 5 /m in , aver­ age call 4/m in!. 1- 900- 896- 6996 . JAZ Productions Po rtland O rego n.; ATTN FALL Pledges. AEÌJ will challenge any Fall 93 pledge class. Any sport any time!! Call Chuck 968,8819 : A T r a d it io n E xcellence The members of Alpha Kappa Psi the professional fraternity in v ite y o u to a tte n d a casual in fo rm a tio n a l meeting on TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G TUTORS COMPUTER HELP - Custom­ ized solutions to programming and hom ew ork assig n m en ts, study aids, tutoring. 649-8703. . Funded by ASASU SPORTS & RECREATION SPORTS & RECREATION & Supplies I J f ^ Accessories » Hunting « Cam ping ^ ★★★★ fi THE COMMAND POST Army Navy Paintball Supply »Tempe 1448 N. Scottsdale Rd. 970-6329 Q g tte r to S a n t a (Contest Ho-Ho-Ho. It's that time of year again! Christmas is sneaking up on us.. .before you know it, Santa will be wiggling down your chimney and filling your home with gifts of joy (if you've been good and if you still believe in. Santa!) Anyway, the State Press is having its annual "Letters to Santa Contest." All you have to do is write a letter to Santa. It can be funny, creative, political, socially correct, sad, touching, senseless, inane, insane, vivid, col­ orful, cold...you get the message. There will be three winners. We will award a $25 cash price for first place, $15 dining gift certificate for second place, and a coffee mug for third. All entries will be published in the December 7 issue of the State Press. The three winners willhave their letters pub­ lished "larger than life..." large enough to cut out and magnet to the fridge as a joyous reminder of the festive season, not to men­ tion large enough to cut out extra copies and give to everyone you know. So. Dust off your keyboards, sharpen your pencils and begin your letters today. This is your chance to (finally) tell your parents that you "got published." Bring your type­ written letter to the State Press in Matthews Center basement by noon, Wednesday, December 1. Include your name, phone number and ASU ID#. Students and staff are encouraged to enter. WANTED K O REA N 18Y R S. A dopted under lyr. for MA. study, confi­ dential. Call 602-577-7509 Mess. JW N EED B ER LITZ E spañol II (book Sc cassette) Call Kris at 222^ 0046 .'y \r,.= R ETIREÉ/STU D EN T NEEDS low -cost o r rio-cost housing within 6-8 mile radius óf ÁSU. Can work for all or part of rent. Good with pets. (no. child care, please.) Gall Lyn at 993-4301 leave message. M ISCELLANEOUS I WANT IT NOW! D esktop P u b lishing. T yping, term papers, resumes, charts, the­ sis,, quick service. N ear ASU. 966-1984 M ISCELLANEOUS WRITING/ ENGLISH, improve writing skills/grades all majors. Review current project 813-0890 High sucess rate! Laser print & same day service, reports. Near ASU, A Perfect Image 967-09071 All p o te n tia l business majors welcome. M odel V M 68 - M agnum 96W»211 H $15 RESUMES Wednesday, November 17 at 6:30pm in the MU La Paz Room. M ilitary Surplus with purchase of 1 Page Resume - $50. (Includes private consultation.) ; 894-2112 SERVICES A L T ER N A TIV E CO PIES rule!!! Say "Scott" sent you & get 2 for 1 recycled self-serve copies until January 1st. The Alternative Copy Shop, 915 S. Mill Ave. 8298178 V i” RESUMES W ITH RESULTS! "We do the writing for you!" ADOPTION- 3YR old Michael and his mom and dad wait with open arms and loving hearts to welcome your baby into our fami­ ly. Call collect, Tom and Camille, 207:76^5668, NE#DA3Ä Guaranteed $7.50 W RITE ¡STUFF Specialty word processing/desktop pub. Busi­ nesses; faculty; students. Beth 963-3537. For appointment call AEFi Jeff- Congrats on VP! Love Amy of 10-11 p .m . PA PER S T Y PED fa st and cheap! Laser printed. Near ASU. Call Mark: 491-5931, 24 hrs. O pen till 2 a.m. ADOPTION A DOZEN roses delivered $20 ailso balloons. Call AfterHours Flowers 894-3419. 60 oz. Pitchers FA ST TURNAROUND Term papers, theses; resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741, "Best Wingers™ in the Valley" FUNDRAISING PERSONALS plus tax ASU GRADUATE will profes­ sionally type papers, notes; class assgn, etc. APA/MLA. Fast turn around. . Theresa 924--1976. Free Basic Cover Letter 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, e x t 75. W ell, W ine, Draft APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/ word processing; Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. PAPERS FAST* Proofed. U se r $2/pg. Desk top publishing avail. Near ASU, Brian 967-5987. LOOKING FOR an Ex-Eldorado HS cheerleader who goes by Alli­ son H.. I need to talk tô you. Call 409-5429 Lv msg pis. M ISCELLANEOUS AAA Q U A LIT Y W /P L aser printer. $2/double spaced page. Quick service Sandy, 838-0107 LIFELINE GREEKS/CLUBS T u e sd a y N ig h t Fev er C o u n td o w n 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typings laser, fax. Walkable/ASU. Diane 829-1602. Looking for a place to grow spiritually and to fellow ship? C om e to L ifeline at Bethdny Community Church. ■897-1538. TO TH E m en o f FIJI Get psyched, get hyped Grand Prix is almost here Love your coaches FREE LOST/FOUND TYPING/WORD P R O C E S S IN G ^ NEED HELP with papers? ASU grad offers research, proofread­ ing, editing, and typing of your p apers; C all M ike 8 4 8 -6 5 8 9 leave message. T1KA Pré Rush dinner. Don’t set­ tle for Second Best! 6:00pm at the Pike House 620 Alpha Dr. Ques­ tions, contact Mike at 784-0618 500 Drinks u< Page 15 Tuesday, November 16, 1993 Every w eekday, w e give you the State Press absolutely free. G reat new s. G reat features. Even a m agazine. Crossw ords and horo­ scopes. N ot to m ention the huge savings from all the coupons. W e do this for you every d ay. W ill you do som e­ thing for us? Good! T h in k s! W hen the State Press has inserts, they tend to flop to the ground and create a safety hazard as w e ll as an eyesore. W ould you be so so cially correct as to bend over and p ick an insert that m ight slip out o f your State Press? Thanks. W e appreciate your help . And so does the earth. Tour Individual Horoscope .francésDrake For Tuesday, November 16,1993 AWES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19} A friendship may reach a critical juncture today. In business, you will meet with new opportunities to get ahead. Talks with those in high places are favored now. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Though a business setback or delay is possible now, you will have luck in reaching agreements with others. A partner is under-, standing, supportive, and affee; donate. GEMINI (May. 21 to June 20) . S tudents may have to buckle down today; Travel plans may be changed. Talks relating, to busi­ ness arid financial interests are favored now. Be alert for oppor­ tunity.;. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Extra expenses may arise in con­ nection with child-rearing. It's a poor time for financial risk-tak­ ing, Tonight brings happy devel­ opments in roijiance and partner­ ships. LEO (Juiy 23 to Aug. 22) You will have to be willing to compromise to make a partner­ ship work today. Clear thinking and good judgem ent bring job successes now. Tonight favors family talks. 1 VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You may meet with delays or set­ backs in b u sin ess today. Patience, though, will win out. L ater, th e re 's an accent on romance and relaxation through leisure interests. LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) You may be faced w ith extra expenses now . H om e-based activities are favored over out­ side entertainments. Real estate d ealings are a plus today. 'I g p ' :v ,• ;ï y ¡' ' Tonight brings insights. SCORPIO ; (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21 ) Extra responsibilities may come now through family. A relative may hoi see things your way. The afternoon arid evening bring good news, Tonight you are com­ municative and SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec, 21) \ A relative may need yoUr support and encouragement today. You will receive information now that . will be a help to you financially. A private discussion goes well.: CAPRICORN (Dee. 22 to Jan,19j Money may be an issue between you arid a friend today. However, tonight brin g s happy social •developments. You will be mak­ ing a wonderful impression on those you meet. Aq u a r iu s (Jan, 20;to Feb. 18) T ry not to sell y o u rse lf short today.'' K eep aspirations high. Extra study or research will make you more c o n fid e n t ab o u t a career concern. Do your home­ work. PISCES (Feb, 19 to Mar. 20) Morning hours will be given to worry. However, a social engage­ ment will get you out of yourself. Be sure to accept invitations. Good time are speciàl tonight.. YOU BORN TODAY may have an interest in politics and public service. You have strong beliefs and often serve the community in sòme advisory c apacity. You enjoy c hallenges and bounce back readily from setbacks. You have philosophic and literary interests, which you should culti­ vate. Also, you have intense feel­ ings, which you shouldn't let get in the way o f good judgm ent, B irthdate of: D w ight Gooden« b a seball p la y e r; B urgess Meredith, actor; and William C. Handy, songwriter. self-expressive. ■ P ag e 16 Tuesday, November 16, 1993 U v Sfilili • I l i S d iti Crii Sfilili • Business Sfilili The Honda Doctor’s Helpful Honda Hints Tip# THE HONDA 6, D O C TO R r ” 1 M a ste rC a rd lj Want to get rid of that black muck on your front wheel rim s? That's brake dust coming from your pads and rotors. W ash it away, when the c a r is cold, by ju st ho sin g down the inside of the rims. 967-7282 S t a t e P r ess Free M ils s liis S c a lili IR A S I C i i p i s M E D IC A L S C H O O L - R o c h e lle Rothsteln K a p la n D ire cto r of M CA T Pro g ram s Tuesday, November 16 at 6:30 p.m. LA W S C H O O L - Ron K o ssa ck , J .D . Where “Blue Ribbon Service” means honest, quality repairs at fair prices—and student discounts. Near ASU at 2090 E. University, Suite 115, Tempe (University at River, just west of Price) Service by Appointment 7:30AM - 6:00PM. Mon-Fri • Thursday nights til 8PM La w S c h o o l A dm ission C o n s u lta n t & Barry M arkson, K a p la n LSAT Instructor W ednesday, November 17 at 3 p.m. Call l-tll-IAP TEST Ti Reserve Yiir Sut Also in the Scottsdale Airpark • 998-5966 State P ress Sports - We write from the field, the floor and the locker room. Move Now, Relax Later. LOOK GREAT THIS FALL WITH OUR 1st TIME CLIENT INTRODUCTORY OFFER. SHAMPOO • CONDITION • CUT • STYLE • Moving now makes a lot o f 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. $4050 X X MEN X w WOMEN 1 st T I ME C L I E N T S • N0 C 0 U P 0 N N E C E S S A R Y Groomina . H u m an s FOREST &UNIVERSITY (In The A rch es Plaza) Hair Studio 966-5462 M-TH 9-8 FRI 9-6 S A T 9-5 i “I w ant car insurance with a good price... and great value.” fully furnished • large kitchen with microwave, dishwasher & disposal • washer & dryer in each suite $4150 -; • large heated pool with jacuzzi It’s Easy... • regulation sand volleyball court spacious 2 bedrooms, 2 full bath suites • racquetball court, weight room & sauna • • • • • • Low dow n-paym ent E asy paym ent plans Im m ediate coverage M oney-saving deductibles 24-hour countryw ide claim service F ree rate quote • planned social activities • roommate matching service • walking distance to campus THE MEMBERS ONLY 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 6402 W. Glendale Ave, Suite 9 • Glendale • DO COMMONS f Î Call us today or stop by our local office: I f you’re a stu d en t w ith a good driving record... 829-0933 1111E . Apache Tempe, A Z 2 blocks from ASU Call