©Copyright State Press, 1994 Tempe, Arizona Voi. 79 No. 13 Friday, September 9,1994 An Independent Morning Daily American Indian students face dim future Education on reservations ‘totally poor,’ student says By D avid P roffitt State P ress For many American Indian students, the future is as bleak as the Arizona desert. They’re faced with some of the highest poverty and unemployment rates in the state, and education may be the only way out of a downward spiral of lost opportunity. Unfortunately, education often may not provide a solu­ tion, either. Tradition, economics and politics pull young American Indians in different directions, and support for any of them is tenuous. Matthew Tafoya, facilitator on the American Indian Council and junior business major, took a long and winding road to ASU. His path is indicative of the difficulty many American Indians face when attempting to go to school out­ side “the rez,” or reservation. He said the lack of preparation for college-level work was common. “The education on the reservation is totally poor,” Tafoya said. He did not take any college preparatory classes in high school because no one thought he could go to college. American Indian graduation rates 20 .3 % W hite Bachelor’s Graduate/Professional Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Indian Health Service T urn to C ollege, page 2. A m e r ic a s M o s t W a n te d to air segment on Nilson B y C hristina B ailey S tate P ress Jim Poulin/State Press Missing ASU student Kimberly Nilson's best friend Becky Petersen is filmed by cameraman Michael Kellogg of A m erica’s M ost Wanted. Petersen, an ASU justice studies doctoral student, will appear on the television show Sept. 17. The popular telev isio n show America’s Most Wanted will focus national attention on ASU student Kimberly Nilson when it airs a seg­ ment next week on the continuing search for the missing coed. The show’s camera crew came to ASU Thursday to film a segment on Nilson, the 24-year-old senior exer­ cise major who has been missing for nearly three weeks. The story is. scheduled to air Sept. 17. Alan Millar, Kimberly’s brotherin-law, said he called the show in hopes that it would help spread the, word about Kimberly’s disappear­ ance nationwide. “We are trying to get the word out about (Kim berly) as far and wide as we can,” Millar said. Nilson’s close friends talked to the crew about the frustration and struggles involved with trying to find her. They said police have received hundreds o f leads on Nilson, but none have panned out. “At one point, they (the police) were getting 50 calls a day on tips; most of them they could just sort through and dismiss right away as not true,” said Brad Ravish, a junior political science major who is one of Nilson’s friends. “I think the thing that drew this case to the America’s Most Wanted attention was the com m unity response and how many different people Kimberly has touched in her brief time here,” said Cord Keller, a segment producer for the show. Keller, who spent three hours with Nilson’s sister and father, said he felt the pain the family was in. “These are the worst cases to come across because you just don’t know,” Keller said. “It is always such a tragedy when someone you love in your life is taken, abducted or has disappeared like this.” Waiting for news on Nilson has been difficult for her friends to han­ dle because of the amount of time and energy they have expended in their search. “It is very difficult to open up a book and concentrate on it all this is going on all the time,” said N ilso n ’s b est friend, Becky Petersen, who is getting her Ph.D. in justice studies. “You wake up, you think of Kimberly; when you go to sleep you think Kimberly. She is with you every waking moment.” Nilson’s friends who talked to America’s Most Wanted live in the same apartm ent complex as her. They said they are getting together daily at her apartment with Nilson’s roommate, Donna Zingaro, to try to remember anything that may lead to Nilson’s whereabouts. “Every night we were at Donna’s trying to com e up with leads, angles, who did she know, what has she been like lately and just going over everything that we know about,” Ravish said. He added that each day Nilson is m issing the odds of finding her alive decrease just a little bit. Regents OK tentative proposal for new ASU building B y L o rrie C ohen S tate P ress TUCSON — The Arizona Board of Regents Thursday voted 4-3 to pass a tentative plan for a new Liberal Arts/Social Sciences building on ASU’s main campus. ASU administrators now want the $38 million building to be built adjacent to the Computing Commons. They also want the proposal to be moved from Phase 4 of a four-year capital improvement plan up to Phase 1, giving it highest priority. This would mean ASU would have the money for the building in 1996 instead of 2000. “This is one of our highest priorities,” said Provost Milton Glick. “We want to have mediation classrooms just like in the Computer Commons, which has been very suc­ cessful.” The proposed building would use support services from the Computing Commons and include the bookstore, which would offer a one-stop facility for students. “Computer expertise can be shared. It will be a state-ofthe-art learning center,” Glick said. Some officials are opposed to a new building at ASU. They want money for buildings on their own universities. NAU President Clara M. Lovett said she wants money for a new building on the NAU campus in Yuma, and UofA President Manuel Pacheco wants money for another campus in Pima County. “Yuma is one of the fastest growing areas, not only in Arizona, but in the United States. Our demographics are different,” said Lovett, defending her request for $7 million dollars for the NAU plan. Pacheco said he wants UofA to get $16.9 million for its extended campus. “We are competing against each other,” Regent Andy T urn to B uilding , The T em pe C ity C ouncil discussed T hursday night the im pact the Fiesta B ow l and the 1996 World/Nation Sports T h ousands o f H aitians pro test­ ed the U nited States T hursday T h e Sun D evils as talk o f invasion grew louder. are g earing up to h o st the M iam i S uper B ow l w ill Page 3. have o n T em pe. A U S A ir 737 crash ed near H urricanes this w eekend. Pittsburgh, k illin g all 131 Page 11. Page 8. people on board. Page 3, page 7. Where To Find It C la s s ifie d s ............................... 14 C o m ic s .......................................10 C ro ssw o rd ...................................6 H oroscopes ............................. 15 O p in io n ....................................... 4 P o lice R e p o rt............................ 9 S p o rts......................................... 11 T o d a y ’s A c tiv itie s .......... ........ 2 W o rld /N a tio n .............................3 Page 2 College___ T oday Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f M atthews Center, Room 15. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the full name o f the club or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. All requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be dis­ carded. Deadline fo r requests in noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. • Asian Bible Fellowship — Weekly meetings on Friday nights. 7:30 p.m., MU Room 221. • MUAB — Marketing meeting, every­ one welcome. 1:45 p.m.. Conference Room 2, MU third floor. • Devil’s Juggling Club — Learn to jug­ gle or improve your skills. 5:00 p.m., West Lawn, across from Hayden Library. • School of Art/Step Gallery 9999 — Free opening reception for “ A ltered Traditions: New Perspectives on Ancient Techniques”; ceramic and fiber works by School of Art undergraduates. Show con­ tinues through Sept. 30. 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m ., C ornerstone M all; co rn er o f University and Rural. • Lambda League — Retreat; all gay, lesbian and bisexual students encouraged to attend. Noon-5:Q0 p.m., MU Yuma, Room 211. • U niversity L ibraries — R esearch Assistant Workshop: what every research assistant should know about using the libraries, including hands-on experience State P ress Friday, September 9, 1994 C ontinued from page 1. with the on-line catalog and CD-ROM databases. Call 965-3518 to sign up. 2:40 p.m.-4:30 p.m., Hayden Library Room C41; also Saturday, 1 p.m.-3 p.m. • Baha’i Club — Baha’i Club Fireside; an informal discussing on" religion and issues affecting today’s society. Everyone welcome. 2 p.m.-4 p.m., M il Havasupai, Room 208D. Weekly meeting on Sunday, 5 p.m.-8 p.m.; MU Havasupai. • Baptist Student Union — Sand volleyball activity. 7:30 p.m ., ASU Sand Volleyball Courts; outside the Student Recreation Complex. • Farce Side Comedy H our — ASlTs schetck comedy troupe performs. Special guest: Joey Scazolla. 12:40 p.m.. MU Programming Lounge. • Golden Key National Honor Society — Campus awareness week; last day to visit the table and talk with Golden Key members. 9 a.m.-2 p.m., North of Cady Mall fountain. • H ispan ic B usin ess S tu d en ts Association — Scholarship dance, every­ one w elcom e. C asual dress. 8 p.m ., Howard Johnson’s Frontier Room; 235 E. Apache. • Omega Delta Phi — Rush week for ASU’s only Hispanic fraternity. 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Cady Mall. • Sun Devil Spark Yearbook — Weekly meeting, mandatory for all new and pre­ vious staffers. Noon, Matthews Center, Room 59. Saturday, Sept 10: • SPICMACAY — Lecture and demonstratin of North Indian classical music on the sitar, accompanied by tabla; also a video on the organization. Admission free. 5 p.m., MU Pima. “My guidance counselors said, ‘OK, I guess you’re not college material. We’ll get you ready for vocational school.’” After spending three years in vocational school, he decided he w anted to get involved in business, but he didn’t have the education for that field. T afoya spent three sem esters at S cottsdale C om m unity C ollege and “bombed it big-time.” He said he was not ready for the basic courses he had to take. “My English skills were nowhere near what the course (English 101) required. Math — I had never been prepared for math because they figured I was just going to be an auto tech worker for the rest of my life.” After being put on academic probation, Tafoya tried to do better, but his efforts weren’t enough, and he was kicked out of the college. This also meant he was on financial pro­ bation and not allowed to collect financial aid until he paid back an emergency loan and received six credit hours on his own. It took him years to do both these things. “Five years of screwing around told me that can’t happen no more,” Tafoya said. He plans to work in W ashington on American Indian law and public policy after he completes his degree. Grayson Noley, associate professor at the Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, said reservation schools suffer from unqualified teachers, a lack of funding and cultural misunderstandings between stu­ dents and teachers. “Ail these things happen at the same place, and all of them could contribute to low performance,” Noley said. Elizabeth Brandt, associate professor of anthropology, said cultural misunderstand­ ings are the cause of many problems in schools with high American Indian popula­ tions. “It’s like being in a foreign country,” r Brandt said. “If they live on a reservation they are surrounded by people who are essentially just like them, people who know what they know, speak their language and know, culturally, exactly where they’re coming from.” For some, education does not mean an expanding of horizons, but a loss of roots. “Education was something this country used to erode traditional American Indian culture and lifew ays,” said Cal Seciwa, director of the American Indian Institute at ASU. He said traditional college-preparatory education is a two-edged sword. It has served to destroy the culture of American Indian tribes in the past, Seciwa said. But without it, people like Tafoya can­ not improve conditions on reservations, and dreams such as his are not possible. Seciwa said American Indians need edu­ cation that prepares them for college while still considering their values and cultural heritage. Issues such as native language preserva­ tion and American Indian history are not addressed in many reservation schools. According to Seciwa, this leads to a loss of interest from native students because they feel their culture is being denigrated. However, it is difficult to strike a bal­ ance between cultural enrichment and col­ lege-preparatory education. “As individuals, it’s our decision how we go about retaining our culture,” said Karen Francis Buday, a UofA anthropology teaching assistan t and m em ber of the Navajo tribe. She cited one of her students who attend­ ed Navajo College as an example. “She took a writing 102 class and it was all Native American literature. She wasn’t being prepared for comparative literature courses at the university level. She needed to study other types of books as well,” The Largest Selection of ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Clothing & Souvenirs ORJiZD !SI¡a A G E 1 M T - S H I R T S S — G & I F T S VS, ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY T - S H I R T ’S F R O M $ 7.99 Student Discounts GEAR Available F OR S P O R T S 725 S. Rural Rd • 602-829-1743 Cornerstone Mall _______ W orld/N a tio n _______ STATE P ress___________________________________________________________ Friday, September 9, 1994 _____ Pagg_3^ 737 crashes near Pittsburgh All 131 on board USAir flight confirmed dead AL1QUIPPA, Pa. (AP) — A USAir jetliner nose-dived into a field while trying to land near Pittsburgh on Thursday, killing all 131 people on board. It was the dead­ liest crash in the United States in seven years. Flight 427 originated at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport and was to stop in Pittsburgh before continuing to West Palm Beach, Fla. “I looked up and there it was,” said Tom Michel, who was at a gas station near the crash site. “It was just coming straight down. I was screaming for everybody to run. It looked like it was under full power and he just went straight in.” Air traffic controllers said they lost contact with the plane when it was about seven miles from the airport, said Pat B oyle, a spokesm an for the A llegheny County Department of Aviation. He said a report of an explosion before the crash could not be confirmed. Michel said there was a “big boom and the sky lit up. There was black smoke everywhere and that was it.” Witnesses reported a gruesome carnage in a clearing on a heavily-wooded ravine. “All we saw was body parts hanging from the trees,” said Denise Godich, a nurse who was one of the first at the scene. “There were people everywhere. You could just see parts of them.” Another eyewitness said pieces of plane and baggage were scattered throughout the area. The plane’s black box, which records cockpit conversa­ tions and flight data, was recovered, said Jim Eichenlaub, manager of Hopewell Township and coordinator of emer­ gency services at the scene. “We have done a fairly extensive search of the area and there are no survivors,” he said. The Boeing 737 was carrying 126 passengers and a crew of five, said Dave Shipley, a spokesman for die airline. The plane went down shortly after 7 p.m. in a field about seven miles from the airport, which is 20 miles northwest of Pittsburgh. “The engines just went dead,” eyewitness Sandra Zuback told CNN. “It just blew up.” Shipley said the weather was clear. “There’s no indica­ tion at all as to what caused the accident,” he said. “/ looked up and there it was. It was ju st coming straight down. I was screaming fo r everybody to run. It looked like it was under f u l l p o w e r and he ju s t w ent straight in ... (there was a) big boom and the sky lit up. There was black smoke everywhere and that was it.” — Tom Michel, eyewitness to crash Linda Jones said she was standing on her porch when she saw the plane turn to the right, turn over once or twice, and go down behind some trees. The plane was at 6,000 feet when it went off the radar, Boyle said. He said the plane went down at 7:19 p.m., 10 minutes after it was due in at the airport. Several doctors who were first told to go to the scene were later told not to bother, hospitals said. There were 20 emergency vehicles on top of the hill, and a medical helicopter hovered above. Fire hoses snaked through the trees to try to douse the area. Because the terrain near the wreckage is so rugged, res­ cue crews were having to build a road to the crash site. No attempts to remove debris were expected before Friday. A temporary morgue was being set up at the airport, said Arthur Gilkes of the Allegheny County Coroner’s Office. “We were told the prospect of survivors is very slim,” he said. People who had been waiting at Pittsburgh International Airport to meet passengers were taken into a private area and counselors were being brought in. The crash was the worst in the United States since Aug. 16, 1987, when a Northwest Airlines MD-80 went down while taking off from Detroit Metropolitan Airport, killing 156 people. A 4-year-old girl was the sole survivor. It was the fourth fatal USAir crash in the past five years. On July 2, a USAir jetliner' crashed in a thunderstorm near the Charlotte-Douglas International Airport in North Carolina, killing 37 of the 57 people on board. A USAir plane crashed March 22, 1992, on takeoff in a snowstorm at La Guardia Airport in New York. Twentyseven people were killed. On Feb. 1, 1991, a USAir plane and a commuter plane collided on Los Angeles airport runway; 34 were killed. Pittsburgh International Airport has had only one previ­ ous fatal accident. In 1956, a TWA Martin 404 propeller airliner went down, killing 22 people and injuring 14. Jerry Johnson, a spokesman for Boeing Commercial Airplane Group in Renton, Wash., said the plane that went down was a 737-300 that was delivered to USAir in October 1987. Pentagon continues preparations for Haiti invasion Thousands rally against U.S, in Port-au-Prince PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Thousands of sup­ porters of Haiti’s military-backed regime rallied Thursday against a U.S. invasion that Clinton administration officials have described as a certainty. The army barricaded roads near police headquarters and the Presidential Palace with concrete sewer pipes, a sign it is taking the invasion threat seriously. The pipes replaced piles of sandbags that had washed away. Many supporters of the ousted elected president, JeanBertrand Aristide, and even some formerly pro-military busi­ nessmen believe a U.S. invasion would be the only way to put their economically devastated nation back on track. The protest, which drew 2,000 to 3,000 people, was called by the far right. Many participants said they belonged to the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti (FRAPH), a pro-army group blamed for many political slayings since the army ousted Aristide three years ago. Wearing straw hats to protect them from the sun, the demonstrators shouted in unison, “Aristide is a criminal! Aristide is a Communist!” Many waved the fliers that bade them to come out and demonstrate. The Creole-language flier passed out among passersby proclaimed “mobilizations to the four comers of our country.” Several top Clinton administration officials in the past week have said intervention is a certainty. U.S. Marines who would take part in any invasion launched military exercises Wednesday on an island off Puerto Rico. At a regional summit in Brazil, the U.S. undersecretary of state for Latin American affairs said an American-led force will invade “without any question” unless the generals cede power. “Haiti’s rulers should not fool themselves into thinking the international community is not serious,” the undersecretary, Alexander Watson, said. The invasion was expected to be “very short, a few days,” he said. But multinational forces would remain several weeks or months to retrain Haiti’s army and ensure that democratic institutions are free of military pressure, he said. Most Latin American leaders have opposed a military solution to the crisis. In Port-au-Prince, demonstrators also shouted their oppo­ sition to the international trade embargo that has failed to force Haiti’s military leaders to cede power to Aristide. “Down with the embargo!” chanted participants to the rhythm of drumbeats. “Down with Aristide! Up with democracy!” A 55-year-old Port-au-Prince accountant who refused to give his name said the embargo has crushed the economy. He insisted he has no ties with the military. “Children are dying from the embargo. W e’re against intervention. We don’t want the Americans to touch this soil here,” said Philippe Astrel, 49, an unemployed former Associated Press Demonstrators hold a rally near the U.S. Embassy in Port-AuPrince Thursday. Haitians rallied by the thousands, shouting their opposition to a U.S. m ilitary intervention that Clinton administration officials describe as a certainty. import-export dealer, now a member of FRAPH. “We don’t want Aristide to come back,” said Jacques Fernand, 37, another member of the paramilitary group. On the sidewalk, hundreds of bystanders looked on curi­ ously. Vendors took advantage of the crowds to hawk sugar cane, glazed nuts and flavored ice. The demonstration at times seemed like a spectacle put on for the benefit of foreign journalists, as groups of several hundred men screamed into cameras and surrounded print reporters. “Don’t touch the army — you’ll get burned,” they chanted in unison. The demonstrators, almost all of them men, walked along the waterfront to the U.S. Embassy before dispersing after an hour and a half. Also Thursday, the U.S. Coast Guard brought into port 71 Haitians from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where about 14,000 Haitian boat people intercepted by the Coast Guard have been housed in a tent city. WASHINGTON (AP) The Pentagon added to the chorus of sab er-rattlin g in Washington Thursday by announcing it was activating seven supply ships as “part of prepa­ rations for potential operations in Haiti.” The ships, at five ports on the eastern and southern coasts, will be ready to sail within four days to “carry just about anything in the U.S. Army and Marine Corps arsenal,” Defense Department spokesman Col. Doug Kennett announced at a Pentagon briefing. “We obviously are prepared to go into Haiti one way or another to return democracy there, and we’re ready to carry out whatever orders are pre­ sented to us by the president,” Kennett said. Asked about the Pentagon’s preparations for such an operation, Kennett added, “Obviously, prudent planning continues at all levels of the military and the government. Patience is obvi­ ously running out with the senior leadership of the country.” Rarely is such overt language used in connection with potential military operations, but such a tone has been prevalent in Washington in recent days. On Wednesday, Secretary of State Warren Christopher warned the Haitian military leaders their days are “definitely numbered,” and that they will be evicted by military force if they don’t step down voluntarily. As preparations for a possible invasion mounted, so did criticism. “The administration has spent plenty of time in the last few weeks lobbying the United Nations and the Caribbean Community, but they have yet to make a convincing case to Congress or the American people,” Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole said in a ¡statement. “In my view, there ought to be full congres­ sional debate of the proposed Haiti invasion — even if President Clinton chooses not to come to Congress on his own,” Dole said; Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, cam­ paigning for rerele,ction before a group of retired generals in San Antonio, drew applause by saying “I do not think it is in our interest to spill one drop of American blood in Haiti.” Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, speaking in his home state, predicted an invasion within days and added; “I think there will be some American blood shed if we invade.” The seven ships being activated normally are maintained in a reduced operating capacity. Three are located in Jacksonville, Fla.; the others are in Baltimore, W ilmington, N.C., Beaumont, Texas, and Orange, Texas. O pinion Friday, September 9, 1994 Page 4 State Press State P ress I Boos & Dravos B O O — To the inadequate educational system a v a ila b le fo r N a tiv e A m e ric a n s liv in g in Arizona. Only 20 percent o f Native Americans in A riz o n a m eet th e SAT o r A C T e n tra n c e requirements for ASU, NAU or UofA, and there are claims that Native Americans attending the state’s universities have difficulties due to poor preparation in secondary schools. C onsidering the centuries o f conquest and oppression that Native Americans suffered as a result o f European colonization and Am erican expansion, it seems only fair that in this, at least, the nation and the state can give som ething back. Educational levels are often low due to low local funding and inadequate supplem ents from the Bureau of Indian Affairs; it is up to the people o f A rizona to right such an education discrepancy by creating new educational initia­ tiv es, refo rm in g high schools and above all increasing funds for Native American schools. B O O — To ASU, for raising the price o f foot­ ball tickets for select gam es this year. If you w ant to see the A SU Sun D e v ils b a ttle the Miami Hurricanes or the UCLA Bruins this sea­ son, prepare to pay a little extra — $11 for each student ticket, up from the standard $8.50. The two “big” gam es, it seem s, will be used in an attem pt to boost revenues. S till, B RA V O to ASU for having some o f the lowest student tick­ et prices in the country: student athletics are (usually) easily within the budget o f the average student. B O O — To ASASU, for the presum ption that student program m ing funds exist to fund new wardrobes. In a m easure defeated 10 in favor, 10 against, 2 abstaining and 2 absent, the attempt to procure $500 to purchase polo shirts fo r ASASU failed — and deservedly so, since ASASU in the past has refused to fund t-shirt subsidizes for stu d ent org an izatio n s. T he attem pt has been labeled a “m istake” — let’s ju st hope we don’t see another mistake like this again. BRAVO — To Pope John Paul II, for remaining true to his values in recent global debates con­ cerning the role o f abortion and birth control in m aintaining population levels. A lthough many A m eric an s d isa g re e w ith th e P o p e ’s v iew s regarding abortion and birth control, there can be no d en y in g th a t th e c u rre n t h e a d o f th e Roman C atholic C hurch is a m an o f firm and sincere convictions. Still, we aw ait the day when a reconciliation between ideals o f choice and the Catholic faith may be achieved. B O O S — For Fife Symington, Republican can­ d id a te fo r g o v e rn o r, a n d T e rry G o d d a rd , D em ocratic ca n d id a te for g o v ern o r. N e ith er S y m in g to n o r G o d d a rd a tte n d e d the d e b a te jointly held and televised by the state universi­ ties, sen d in g “re p re s e n ta tiv e s ” in ste a d . B ut BRAVO to the 70 attendees who gathered here at ASU to listen to the candidates, involving themselves in the dem ocratic process. STA TE P R E SS i L L S A I checked out the wonderful Lion King over the summer, and was touched by the endearing p L i n d a ElO W D E N story line and dazzling array of special effects. It was only a few Guest Columnist days later that I learned that the innocent, uplifting tale recently became the center of the ever-popular debate surrounding the mumbo-jumbo of political correctness. This fairy tale is the most recent addi­ tion to the critical “blacklist” of political correctness groups, aside such literary classics as Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn and The Catcher In the Rye, to name only a few. On the surface, the tale appears pretty standard and straightforward: lion cub is driven into exile after his father is killed by the envious uncle. Cub grows to manhood in exile, finally returning to claim his rightful kingdom, driving out the envious uncle and his nasty entourage. With evil now out of the way, lion king and his clan live happily ever after. Standard, run-of-the-mill fairy tale, don’t you think? Unfortunately, even fantasy tales are no longer free from critical scrutiny. The crusaders of political correctness have recently targeted this fictitious tale, charging that it is racist, sexist and homophobic. PC critics claim that the film’s female roles reek of male dominance, while the evil uncle has gay affectations. The pack of hyenas, dark in color, reside in a gloomy, barren environment, symbolizing blacks from the ghetto. Obviously, when the time has come that fairy tales are being philosophically analyzed and scrutinized in the name of political correctness, this annoying crusade has gotten way out of hand. First, I will need to demonstrate how confusing and petty this issue has become. Do we use the term “Native Americans” or “American Indians?” What about the many choices to choose from here: Hispanic, Mexican, Mexican-American, Chicano, Latino. Of course, the annoying political correctness campaign has not stopped at defining the proper terms for different races, but also at identifying physical and mental condi­ tions. A person with “physical difficulties” is no longer handi­ capped, nor disabled; they are “physically challenged.” And, I bet you didn’t know that someone who cannot see is not blind or sight-deprived; she is “visually challenged.” Of course, if you’re following along that line, you will cer­ tainly understand that someone is now “mentally chal­ lenged,” not “mentally handicapped.” And, these, of course, are only the latest terms among only a few sam ple item s. Who know s what new euphemisms may have been created while you read this article to replace those considered unfit by the do-gooders of political correctness. This crusade has not only gone too far, it has entirely missed the issue. Of course, it is true that some terms are used to stigmatize, stereotype and name-call other groups. However, that is not the fault of the said word, but of the person using it! Remember, a word is only a word. It doesn’t mean anything by itself until we attach a meaning to it, which can be good or bad, depending on the way in which it is used. Obviously, deeming what terms are OK to use is only a superficial and trivial change. Each word will only have a neutral meaning until it is then twisted and tainted by racists, homophobics and other groups. Then we will have to find a new, untarnished term to replace the old one. So, the cycle repeats itself, and the campaigners for political correctness find themselves very busy in changing words for almost everything, including fault with the color of an animal’s mane and the intonation of a lion’s speech. Unfortunately, this campaign continues in vain, because while they go about their PC tirade, the real issue is contin­ ually being ignored. Sanitizing speech will not change minds. Sure, it may make things neutral for a while, but the ugliness of racism, sexism and other social scourges will soon rear its ugly head once again. It will keep on doing so until we bear down and turn our efforts away from changing speech and toward changing minds. You cannot change the connotation of a word until you change the mind of the person who speaks it. Real change will occur only by educating people and opening their minds. The words will then follow. Linda Bowden is a junior English major. JASON OWSLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor KRIS FR1DRICH.................................................. Night Editor GARIN GROFF.................................................... ...City Editor GREG ZEMEIDA.........................................Asst. City Editor DAVID LASPALUTO..........................................News Editor A. MARJORY KAMINSKI.............................Opinion Editor CRAIG MACNAUGHTON.................................Photo Editor RICHARD KOMUREK.............................Asst. Photo Editor JEREMY STEIN ................................. ............ IS porteE ditor DAWN WAGNER.................................... Asst. Sports Editor KEN COLLINS............................................ Magazine Editor ANNA ULINICH................................Asst. Màgazine Editor R E P O R T E R S : M ika A kikuni, E lizabeth A ppelen, C hristina Bailey, Sh,eryl Bottner, Lorrie Cohen, Dawn DeChristina, Lisa Gonderinger, Christine Granados, Dave Proffitt. Karyn RiedeH. SPO R TS R EPO R TE R S: Todd Kelly, Dan Miller, Lee Newman. C O PY E D IT O R S : N ick B acon. Kim H erm an, Lynn L Got the politically correct blues Readicker. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Theresa B oettcher, Jim Poulin, Scott Trimble. UNSIGNED EDITOR: James Frusetta C O LU M N ISTS: Brian Anderson, James Frusetta, Barry Kelley, Diane Lopez, James Mahin, Mike Stevens, Chris Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whitlach. CARTO ON IST^: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. GRAPHIC ARTÏST: Yamini Prabhakara. PR O D U C T IO N : Aaron Brutcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Em ily B erger, Dan Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Megan Owsley, Jen n ifer P ittm an , K aryn R ied ell, Shane S iren , Bill VanZanten, Marc Wolfe. . decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor ■Thfc 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 of 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 the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information.............. 965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine...................965-1695, Advertising................. 965-6555‘ Classifieds................ 965-6735 * Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, J Imiitosbn J gimsMUjini iioiiiKitrjiti O pinion S tate P ress Page 5 Friday, September 9,1994 P e o p l e , n o t p o l it i c s : Down with the extravagant beauty pageants Tuesday is primary day. Do you know who your candidates are? Up to now, most of our atten­ tion has been focused on the Arizona gubernatorial race. And o f course, the people with the most to gain (or lose) on Tuesday are our candidates for governor: Republicans Barbara Barrett and incum bent J. Fife Sym ington, Democrats Paul Johnson, Eddie Basha and Terry Goddard, and Libertarian John Buttrick. During the months leading up to the primaries, the debates, political posturing and televi­ sion commercials are strictly of beauty pageant quality. The candidates strut from one end of the state to the other, fluffing and puffing, deflating only when the finalists are announced. Then, and only then, do the candidates take off the white gloves, drop the pretty poses and engage in an allout fist fight. The winner is announced in November. The method is more than a little archaic. Our gubernato­ rial candidates are acting like teenage prima donnas — and not only do we expect such behavior ... we encourage it! And where has it gotten us? Each candidate has made a strong stand on the issues facing Arizona, especially crime and education. Their platforms are uniformly impressive and mostly well thought out. But if you can believe what the local media is saying, the public’s strongest reaction has been: “Yeah, but how much money does he have?” Much has been made of the fact that at least four out of the six candidates for governor are certifiable millionaires. (Paul Johnson is barely a thousandaire and, apparently, John Buttrick doesn't count.) The general preoccupation with the candidates" financial status shows that the public has some misgivings about ... what? The integrity of the candidate? His or her dedication to a life of public service? C overage o f e-m ail p o licy w a s good to alert students The adm inistration's new policy allowing electronic mail invasion is equivalent to the post office casually rip­ ping open and browsing through our letters. In the first place, the policy violates our constitutional rights. The Fourth Amendment guarantees protection from unreasonable search and seizure. By allowing college offi­ cials to circumvent the need to attain a court warrant, our right to due process is effectively being denied. The power to approve specific circumstances for a search is taken out of the hands of an impartial judge and given to the discre­ tion of, well, just about anyone who wants to page through our mail, or as they put it, monitor it on a regular basis. Secondly, e-mail accounts belong to those who use them. Students pay tuition, and a portion of this tuition, in turn, is spent on computing facilities. In exchange for this allocation, we are leased computer accounts. Our money buys us a link to the net. The account is not the property of ASU, but is instead a service which we pay for, just as we pay 29 cents to conventionally mail a letter. Our accounts are not “theirs” to do with as they like. The editorial board of the State Press is not selling us “sensationalist, unsubstantiated hype.” They are merely try­ ing to alert the naive student body as to how Big Brother is trying to pull the wool over their eyes. Being less than financially comfortable is nothing to be his or her political agenda? In a democracy, no one has the ashamed of — but to make it a gubernatorial qualification? power to unilaterally impose his political agenda on anyone. Tom Fitzgerald of the New Times, among others, has practi­ The future of the state of Arizona is no more in the hands of cally deified Johnson for his “poverty.” And why, exactly, one person than the future of the United States. Nobody has do we think that a lower middle class income has value in that much power. And no one wants it that way. terms of our political candidates? The average citizen cer­ It makes a lot more sense to vote for the individual you tainly has no love for the condition, especially in terms of feel capable of truly effective leadership. Exclusive focus his own financial statement. Poverty is simply not some­ on a partisan political agenda only leads to division and thing for which we strive, but oddly enough, we seem to apathy. Inspired leadership, on the other hand, creates the value it in our political candidates. passion to set and meet goals ... which is exactly what From a third-party perspective, glorifying a lesser everyone claims to want. income is not only odd, but So my next question is: at odds w ith our whatever happened to truth, m eltin g -p o t culture and ju stice and the Am erican consumer-oriented lifestyle. The thinking goes: if you have to subsist way? Why didn’t I hear any On the other hand, it sounds of our gubernatorial candi­ rem arkably like the on less, then you only value what is truly dates waxing poetic about A m erican D ream them e. valuable. Thus a person o f poverty is a the death of Edward Mallett? We like to believe that hard­ If nothing else, M allett’s ship affords an insight into person o f the people and understands unfortunate and untimely the “real” bottom line. The what they want and how to care fo r them. death by choke hold pro­ thinking goes: if you have to vides a soapbox stand of subsist on less, then you monstrous proportions. The only value what is truly can d id ates’ silence isn ’t valuable. Thus a person of poverty is a person of the people coincidence. Tragedy has no place in a beauty pageant. and understands what they want and how to care for them. The real issue is leadership, which is a matter of personal May I suggest the word, “horseshit”? It may be true that substance over political form. Ask yourself what kind of a particular candidate is of less importance than his issues, personal attributes you value and respect. Then apply that but then, his issues are probably of less importance than his standard to each of the candidates. or her essential attributes as a human being. To do anything else is to be as guilty of bipartisanship as The fact of the matter is, a person who is poor has no the Congress itself. In my experience, leaders do what more of an inside track on the pulse of the general public needs to be done. Rich or poor, young or old, male or than a person who is rich. What does guarantee an inside female, they have the integrity to speak the truth, take a track, however, is a person with compassion, a conscious stand and ride out the certain firestorm of controversy. You awareness of the world around him and a healthy dose of can’t ask for or expect more than that. realism. And even then, those qualities hardly guarantee Don’t forget to go to the polls. that such a person will be an effective administrator. So why vote for a candidate just because you agree with Diana Lopez is a third-year law student. f e tte r s to th e (Editor I EDU- I n t e r n e t ! C ) B O @ A S U V M .IN R E .A S U E - m a il C JBO @ A S U A C A D M a ilin g A d d re s s S ta te P ress Box 8 7 1 5 0 2 A r iz o n a S ta te U n iv e r s it y T e m p e , A Z 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 02 M iller’s h o ck ey rep o rt appreciated, needs w o rk Do you know which ethnic group in New York City has the highest proportion of its members on welfare? It’s not blacks, and it’s not Hispanics. It’s immigrant Russian Jews! One wonders what other unpalatable facts Barry R. Kelley left out of his manifesto on Cuban immigration on Sept. 1. I’m not going to go P.C. on him and knock him for char­ acterizing ethnic groups, as long as he has the statistics to back up his facts. But he must be veiy familiar with that phrase that frequently pops up in small type in ads in his beloved Wall Street Journal: Past performance cannot guar­ antee future results. I was extremely pleased to see Dan Miller’s article enti­ tled “Hockey won’t be the same without Lemieux” in the Aug. 31 issue of the State Press. However, my pleasure evaporated after reading the article. Unfortunately, Mr. Miller is sadly lacking in any knowledge of hockey aside from the ability to regurgitate the names of six of the sport’s most prevalent stars. I would like to point out a few of Dan’s mistakes so that he may avoid such errors should he choose to write about hockey again. First, Mario Lemieux’s decision to hang up the skates is hardly a surpass. Even casual hockey followers have known of Super Mario’s fate for quite a while now. Next, Miller asserts that Wayne Gretzky should “be spending more time with Janet” and that “his time has passed.” This utter drivel is laughable. The Great One snatched yet anoth­ er regular-season scoring title in the 1993-94 season. As if this isn’t enough, Miller then takes a cheap shot at the Anaheim Mighty Ducks by insinuating that they lack mar­ quee players. It is obvious that he has never heard of Hobey Baker Award-winner Paul Kariya, who also represented Canada in the Winter Olympics. Finally, he states that a Mario-less Penguins team will probably never advance out of the second round of the playoffs again. Hmmm. Seems to me that a lot of teams would love to have a core group of forwards like Jaromir Jagr, Martin Straka, Kevin Stevens and Shawn McEcheam, all of whom have speed, scoring ability and size. D on’t get me wrong; I’m glad that M iller made an attempt at writing about hockey. It just seems that it would befit him to get his facts straight so that he can write intelli­ gently. Accuracy needs to be of paramount importance for a writer so that die audience is properly informed. Gregory Annlnos Senior Mechanical Engineering J. Austin Schmid Sophomore Undeclared Harley J. Goldstein Senior Broadcast Journalism Kelley’s perception of immigration needs categories Student ap ath y has becom e too com m on o f an e xp ressio n at ASU Once again the “State Mess” has accepted the burden of taking to task all of the apathetic ASU students. How lucky the rest of us are to have a newspaper staff that really cares about us. Let’s ignore the fact that last year the paper refused to run stories about ASASU because of some bitter vendetta. Let’s ignore the fact that the paper rarely provides information on campus activities and events. Let’s ignore the fact that students are free to be apathetic if they so choose. So what if ASU students prefer Lollapalooza, Suns games and partying to a gubernatorial debate? (Incidentally, the debate was placed in a room so small that no more than 18 people could attend.) So what if the majority of students don’t vote in elections? Neither does the rest of society. The editors of the “State Mess” must be extremely frustrated that the rest of us aren’t as responsible and enlightened as them. I suppose it would be too much for the editorial staff to try writing about something that really matters to the stu­ dents or, dare I say, take a real position on something of importance. The Boos ,and Bravos column has become such a joke that I expect to see in next week’s column: “Boo to the Holocaust; Bravo to Human Rights.” On one of the largest college campuses in the nation, there should certainly be something controversial happening, right? You’d never know it. But the rest of us can take solace knowing that the stu­ dent newspaper is waging the battle against student apathy. Buddy Early Senior English E dito r’s Note In the Wednesday, Sept. 7 column by Bill Tierney enti­ tled “Official ‘Good Candidates to Vote for’ Guide, Tierney erred in stating that Congressional candi­ date Chuck Blanchard was opposed to the death penalty. Blanchard does, in fact, support the death penalty. The State Press apologizes for the mistake. Page 6 State P ress Friday, September 9,1994 Step in the right direction GM AT Students set up artwork at the Step 9999 Gallery for an opening tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. The exhibit, “Fibers and Ceramics,” fea­ tures work by students of ASU’s School of Art. The Step 9999 Gallery is run by ASU stu­ dents and features new exhibits every month. (Right) Tracy Hart, a senior interme­ dia major, carries a piece into the gallery, which is located at the Cornerstone Mall on the corner of Rural Road and University Drive. (Bottom) Glovely artwork, being hung by sophomores Tony Zeh and Arron La Ritchie, will be on display. Would scoring 72 more points on your GMAT score improve your chance of getting into Business School? - You bet it would! Princeton Review students see an aver­ age score improvement o f 72 points on the GM AT (verified by a Big Six ac­ counting firm). Take the course that can push you past 1/4 o f the nation's GMAT takers. 9 6 7 -1 4 8 0 THE Photos by Theresa Boettcher/State Press Classes start Sept. 10! We Score M itre Princeton Review is not affiliated with Princeton U or GMAC CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH S I G N- U P T O D A Y ! S P A C E IS L I M I T E D ! JCPenney Feel like a fashion model as our beauty consultants develop your personal M A KEO VER and HAIR DESIGN. Our professional photographer will then create your fashion PORTRAITS as you try a variety of wardrobe looks. Tc $29.95* yoccLL • • • • * UPCOMING FASHION PHOTOGRAPHY DATES AND LOCATIONS: JC Penney, Tri City Mall 1900 W. Main St. Mesa, AZ 85201 (Corner of Dobson & Main) (602) 835-0990 A487901A-19 700334_________________________ _ MAKEOVER HAIR DESIGN PHOTO SESSION $25 WORTH OF COSMETICS • 10X13 PORTRAIT • INSTANT VIDEO VIEWING AND THE OPTION TO PURCHASE ADDITIONAL PORTRAITS setting ACROSS 40 Turn 1 June suddenly honorees 41 Waiter’s 5 Stow need cargo 9 Orchestra DOWN 1 Day in the members movies 11 In the 2 Homes midst of 13 Composer 3 “Peyton Place” Ned actress 14 Bed on 4 Envision board 5 Cabinet 15 Altar depart­ promise ment 16 Magne­ 6 Hymn tite, for close one 7 “Road" 18 Home­ film steader actress 20 Decade 8 Menu 21 Cote choice critters 10 Shows 22 Sharpen amuse23 Toady's answer 2 |3 1 24 Has a 9 permis­ r sion I 25 Traffic snarls ■ 27 Fancy car *• 19 29 Can.-Mex. 18 go21 I between ■ 23 30 Hold up ■ 32 Quandary 26 H 34 — culpa 35 Dean 29 Martin ■ 33 32 topic 1 36 Sikorsky 35 1 and Stravinsky 38 ■ 38 Actress 40 Braga ■ 39 Match Yesterday’s Answer attendee 26 “I, Robot” author 27 Mai-tai base 28 Western range 30 Campaign tactic 31 Mean 33 American lake 37 Under­ stood ment 12 1814 treaty site 17 Sen.'s counter­ part 19 Casual tops 22 Cartoonist Kelly 24 Tiled art 25 Last Supper ■ ! 10 16 5 16 17 _ J ____ I J ■ ■ ¡8 ■ 12 . 14 1 17 - ! 20 • ■ 22 ■ 24 _ ■ ■ 30 a ■ 28 ■ 1 131 — 36 ■ ■ I 39 ■ ■ 1 9-9 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 9-9 Q CRYPTOQUOTE C G I Q F A ZQIQHO YUKFA MKP FKZAZM XUK Y K YK OK KH AH VC O A CVA LCMQHO MKPV C HHP QYQAF . — 1KZYCQVA LuvU i& cL, c& L L io c L c u + l *D oes n o t in c lu d e ta x , s h ip p in g and h a n d lin g o r a d d itio n a l p o rtra its . Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te: NEVER BE HAUGH1Y TO THE HUMBLE. NEVER BE HUMBLE TO THE HAUGHTY.—JEFFERSON DAVIS P age^ Friday, September 9, 1994 State P ress ABOR approves Arizona Western facility By L orrie C ohen S tate P ress NFL and NCAA TUCSON — The Arizona Board of Regents voted 5-2 Thursday to approve a new classroom facility at NAU’s Arizona Western College Campus in Yuma. “Arizona Western College is providing the total environ­ ment for student services,” NAU President Clara M. Lovett said. “All we want is one small structural facility.” NAU wants $7 million for the facility and they say they’re worth it. AWC at Yuma turns out graduates at a cost of 25 per­ cent less than at NAU, Lovett said. Regent Doug Wall said the building would be money well spent. “There is not any place that justifiably deserves space but Arizona Western. NAU has used and worn out their facilities,” Wall said. “I don’t think we can delay on this.” Regent John Munger hesitated but finally agreed to the proposal. “I will vote yes, but with some trepidation,” he said. “This item is out of procedural order. However, there are extenuating circumstances. Lovett was not on board (to meet the earlier deadline for the procedural order).” Regent Hank Amos is hesitant about granting NAU’s request after a deadline because other smaller campuses could start asking for funds. “We may be opening Pandora’s box,” he said. Although passed, there is one snafu in the approval for ABOR to go ahead and add this plan on the agenda for Legislature: This proposal must be conceptually approved and this has not been possible because of Lovett’s recent induction as NAU president Lovett assured the regents she will meet the Oct. 1 deadline. B uildin g_____ C ontinued from page 1. Hurwitz said. “This is absurd. We can’t have it all. This is our wish list.” Regent Hank Amos, who communicated via telephone, said universities should concentrate on rebuilding the old and not starting the new. “We should focus on building renewals. There is money in state funds and we are grabbing for it,” Amos said. “Let’s take that money and take care of home.” Regent John Munger questions the merit of any new buildings or any new universities. “I have a problem with this,” he said. “How do we justi­ fy to faculty we can’t give them a raise? I can’t do that. These are huge projects. We have no evidence this is need­ ed. It could be a bad idea. I cannot justify going for $38 million and no money for faculty and then raise tuition for students.” One regent pointed out ASU’s proposal should stand on its own merit and not be influenced by other building requests. “This project has been in the works since 1989. Let’s not stop this one just because others want to get on the band­ wagon,” Regent Rudy Campbell said. The proposal for a new building started in 1989 at an estimated cost of $16 million but ended abruptly when funding ceased. Regent Doug Wall said he feels that rebuilding old facil­ ities does not adhere to the needs of the students. “Students deserve a proper place to learn,” Wall said. “I’m convinced they (classrooms) are overcrowded. We need the technology of a new building.” The fight for the new facility is not over. The Legislature must first approve the funds in January, and the building may not be completed for several years. W E G O T IT A LL! S tate P ress O pinions 1Block West o f M ill, Corner 5th & Ash Your passport to a magic kingdom, including Adventure Land, Tomorrow Land and Fantasy Land. OPEN 9AM SAT. AND SUN. 230 W. 5th St., Tempe 966-5600 To Whom It May Concern N Ford Motor Company representatives will visit your campus for one day during the week of September 12, 1994, to examine paint finishes on vehicles parked in the student and faculty parking lots. The purpose of this examination is to determine the effect of the Arizona environment on the durability of the paint. During this examination, the representatives will not attach sales or promotional literature to the vehicles^ We will not mark the vehicle nor will we record license or tag numbers. We will record only that portion of the Vehicle Identification Number necessary to research the nation of origin, the manufacturer, the model year, the assem­ bly plant and the build sequence. We may also measure the thickness of the paint with a nondestructive electronic instrument which will not scratch or mar the surface in any manner. Ford Motor Company Dearborn, Michigan •• NO W PLAYING S tate P ress Friday, September 9, 1994 Page 8 Tempe getting ready for Super, Fiesta Bowls By M ika Susana Akikuni State P ress A football sat in front of Tempe Mayor Neil Giuliano as the Tempe City Council discussed ways to make the upcoming Fiesta and Super Bowls more appealing during Thursday night’s review session. Laura Kajfez, coordinator of Super Bowl XXX for the City of Tempe, updated the council on the activities of the Tempe Super Bowl Committees. She said that a group of Tempe community members, called The Super Bowl Charette, met in February to brainstorm ideas on how to plan details of the event. Charette members represent the diversity of interests that would be touched by the Super Bowl in some manner between now and January of 1996, Kajfez said. In the last Charette meeting, officials involved with the planning of the Super Bowl advised the group to keep six points in mind when proceed­ ing its plan for the games, Kajfez said. They were: cut the plan down to size, inform the com­ munity fully about the event, involve the commu­ nity, seek new effective means of planning, dress Tempe up, and make plans simple and feasible. Kajfez said there are 10 Super Bowl commit­ tees in Tempe, each planning activities related to the Super Bowl. Entertainment-oriented events taking place prior to the game day are also under preparation. The number of jobs the Super Bowl will cre­ ate for Tempe is still unknown, Kajfez said. The council also chose the 1995 Fiesta Bowl mascot, an 18-foot-tall stork delivering a giant foot­ ball to Sun Devil Stadium, said Linda Arters, com­ munity relations manager for the City of Tempe. The stork will be part of a float which will be used in the Fiesta Bowl Parade in Phoenix on New Year’s eve. The float will also appear in the yearly downtown Tempe block party. “I like the stork because it is not only delivering football to the stadium, but also bringing it to Tempe (the bird stands on a Tempe logo),” said Giuliano. A ccording to A rters, the float will cost $30,000. “We are proud that we are the home city of the Fiesta Bowl,” Arters said, adding that nearly 125,000 people came to last year’s block party. Since the Fiesta Bowl recently joined in a coali­ tion with the New Orleans Sugar Bowl and Miami’s Orange Bowl, it will have a chance to host the national championship in 1996, Arters added. Phoenix buses replace FLASH shuttles under repair By C h r is t in a St a t e P B a il e y ress City of Phoenix buses will be replacing four FLASH shuttles within a few weeks while the trou­ blesome air conditioning units are repaired on the shuttles. The replacement buses are need­ ed because the busses are being repaired in New York after attempts to repair the air conditioners on campus were unsuccessful, said Linda Riegel, assistant director of ASU parking and transit services. Repairs are not expected to take long, she added. The four regular Phoenix transit buses will be loaned to ASU at no cost while the shuttles are being repaired. In other FLASH changes, routes for two express shuttles that cover Parking Lot 59 will be extended starting Monday. The shuttles will run all the way to Rio Salado Parkway, instead of just stopping once in the middle of Lot 59, said Carlos de Leon, transportation coor­ dinator for the City of Tempe. Officials made the change after students requested extending the 1 STATE P ress Crosswords - For th e cruciverbalist in you. route, de Leon said. Extending the route will make the pick-up time between the bookstore and Lot 59 a little longer, de Leon said. FLASH express runs from 7 a.m. u n til 8 p.m. M onday through T hursday, and until 6 p.m. on Fridays. A second express bus runs during the peak hours of 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Monday through Friday. the Vitascope Hall in New Orleans. It screened its f ir s t film in the summer of 1 8 9 6 CUT YOURSELF A DEAL S te P E e v e r y th in g from FriedGTeenTomatoe^ OEM^ A devil deal. ASU’s coupon book. Saving you money all over town. I Ssale *99 Store up to 20 video cassettes with this stackable system. M ad em o iselle m a g a zin e in vites you to v o ice your opinion a s a m em ber of the C ollege M arketing Board. M adem oiselle is actively seeking interested college students to share thoughts and opinions on fashion and beauty products. C areer am b ition s. R elationships. M oney. And m ore! A s an a ctiv e member of M adem oiselle's College Marketing Board, you'll not only answer questionnaires about your buying and lifestyle habits - you'll be eligible to receive product sam ples and information from a variety of M adem oiselle advertisers. You may even have the opportunity to te s t new products and to assist M adem oiselle in coordinating an event on your campus. t@Rgd Mot Chill Peppers. 6.99 d o 4 v tm is& (u U /(m /tn i£ 'e {< u M in (y 0 fifiO 4 lu n iiy /. Sale. Store 72 CDs with this stackable system. If you would like to be considered for membership on M adem oiselle's College Marketing Board, please complete this form and return to: The Flip Disc storage wallet holds 12 CDs. Made of durable nylon with a heavy-duty metal zipper. Daria Fabian, College Marketing Board, M adem oiselle, 3 5 0 Madison Avenue, 6th Floor, New York, NY 1 0 0 1 7 . F a x :(2 1 2 ) 8 8 0 -8 1 6 5 . 5.99 Sale] name'____ • college'name' school adtUe&& zip c it y (faff dosa dale' 2.99 Sale. Browse through up to 20 CDs in the Flip File. kata' o fte n do* tjau/teaA m adem oiselle^ O m o n th \ (ZJ 6 -1 2 issu es' D 3 -5 O le&atJuuv 3 issues* 2.99 Sale Sale. Protect audio cassettes with one of these portable cases. Choose from three styles: 10-, 20- or 36cassette capacity. d a ifou* puicAa&& m ademoiselles? □ n ew ssta n d \ O su b scrip tio n (U olk&v if ipuc k a w access* la e/-nuut, co u ld w e/co n ta ct/yo n u sin p yo u * address^ □ yea a - m a il^ f fifg CDno> fff'___________ __________________________________________________ •Advertised sale prices good through Monday, October 31,199' 1 ! ) 1 State P ress Friday, September 9,1994 ï 1 ARIZONASTATEUNIVERSITY ■ ^ State Press R e a d a ll y o u w a n t . . . t h e r e 's n o q u iz a f t e r w a r d s . MEASURE YOUR TOE AT THE COOL JEWE Police Report ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday: • A fem ale student was injured at the Life Science Building. She was treated on the scene by the Tempe Fire Department and transported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was contacted at the Ritter Building while sleeping on the men’s restroom floor. He was advised of trespassing and loitering and he left the area. • A female employee reported that someone damaged a 4foot program booth, the “garden state” sign and the Sun Bowl sign in Sun Devil Stadium. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was contacted at Lot 59 Northeast while acting suspiciously. He was advised of STACY SO NG i f t I i i i if •Beer ASeda •Mtl* Developing •HealthABeautyAidi L Corner . 712 S. College (College & University) 967-4039 Winner of the State Press Bike Giveaway at the MU Open House 609 S. Mill 2LOCATIONS (Across from Coffee Plantation) 858-0567 Call Jackie Eldridge at 965-6555 to pick up your bike! K EG S C o o rs L ig h t G e n u in e D ra ft M ille r L ite Ic e h o u s e plus deposit KEYSTONE No Limit 24 pack cans Sale ends 9-11-94 While Supplies Last. trespassing and campus weapons policies and he left the area. • Three men unaffiliated with ASU were arrested for a minor being in possession of alcohol and furnishing alcohol to minors at Physical Education East. • A male student was contacted at Manzanita Hall after the odor of marijuana was reported coming from his room. He was advised against the smoking of marijuana. • A male student reported that someone criminally dam­ aged his vehicle in Area 37. Tempe police did not report any incidents Thursday. Compiled by State Press reporter Karyn Riedell C O N G R A T U LA T IO N S Toe Rings __ Ankle Bracelets Nose Rings (Fake Nose Rings) Hoops, Cuffs, Studs and Lots of Single Earrings r Ca m p u s P a g;e 9 It'S It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's It's free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. "STATi Press r^> TRIBECA __ _ _ ' _ Zn *rr* c IDance• (Bittiards “F R Í D V SI Á W in a trip for 2 to S a n D ie g o or a 6 -m o n th m em b ersh ip to LA F itn ess ANY DRINK IN THE HOUSE ’til 10:30 p.m. L0NGNECKS NOCOVER ’til 10:30 SW C o rn e r Scottsdale 8i M cDowell Roads before 10 pm 4 2 3 -8 4 9 9 Features P a g e 10 Friday, September 9, 1994 State P ress Generation HeXed EXCUSE ME, CROCUS, H E £ T M V EXCUSEHE,Dim, EXCUSE DCTZI /\Hp TIPZI I ’M p m SORoRtTVStSTEfSDfPZ), SHE’S POHgz/. surs ditziahd OITZJj /\ND & W composed. S H C S PUABZI. \m OH WEIL Í J - / S 6C GETDMMK! JJ I \ & 8S Calvin Hobbes and by Bill Watterson IS B B S S PURSUED ACROSS THETRE GA1R IN G S P L F F s ONLH CHANCE TO LOSE THEM THE GAL A M \S TO RELEASE A G \A N T We fearless spacem an spiff DREADED SMOKE CLOUD BEVWHD W S SPACECRAFT1 OUR HERO THRONS THE LEVER SCUM BEINGS ■ TOO AGAIN? ) * SIGHHHH'H HEH UEU... JUST UH, CLAPPING THE ERASERS, I CANT 8EUEVE) ITS NOT EVEN 8 3 0 VET. HEH HEH.. (COUGH) M¿:¡ _VK\, èsp •»C'4. D o o n e sb u ry WELCOME TOW ALEEN, SO N ! BY GARRY TRUDEAU THANK YOU, G IR .600P TO BB HEBE! L * PICKED YOUB COURSEE y p j? r T£5 S S I! I'M IN REMEDIAL MATH, REMEDIAL HISTORY, REMEDIAL BIOLOGY, AND PRE-REMEP/AL EN6USH‘ UT W ELL, 2 GOODLUCK UPTOYOU.SON. THANK YOU. G IB ! YOU, TOO! J _ / TTG FINALLY HAPPENED— 1M RUNNINGA H ßH SCHOOL. BU TA DAMN FINE ONE, GIB1 / \ «Tr (SBYlOu&a D o o n e sb u ry BY GARRY TRUDEAU A GOWHffT W ELL, I . V MADE YOU WANTED 10 ) CWOGEWAL- AQUAUTY DEN.GON? EDUCATION, I WENT V A GELE-ESTEEM ACADEMY IN CALIFORNIA, AND FRANKLY, IU /A S A LTTTLE UNPEBCHALLEN6EP... GIB... \ IH 6U R E P TT WAG TIM E V PUSH MY5ELF, FINPANEUTE, H /6HLY COMPETITIVE COLLEGE WHERE IC O U LP REALLY PUR­ GUE M Y ACADEMIC INTERESTS ! 1 w WELL, LIK E , I'M TOTALLY INTERESTED IN LEARNING HOW V REAP. K------ Post office delivers another stupid idea ► A I T-,_ _____ IKE ^ Let us once again consider the strange workings of the bureaucratic mind. Royko There are many businesses, big and small, that require prompt mail delivery. Some live Columnist or die by it. One such company is Iroquois Industries, on Chicago’s South Side, a label printing firm. It advertises in catalogs, promising 24-hour order-filling, and most of its business comes through the mail or by fax. We depend on it,” says Marvin Gordon, who started the company 40 years ago. If mail is delivered late or it is lost, we lose the order. If a customer sends an order and he doesn’t get the mer­ chandise promptly, he cancels the order. So slow mail or lost mail could ruin us.” Considering the bleak reputation of Chicago’s mail delivery, it’s surprising that Gordon hasn’t been eaten by ulcers or been plunged into poverty. No, I saw what the problem might be from day one, or at least 10 days after I opened. Right in the beginning, I saw how the mail delivery didn’t work very well. It was being delivered late or not at all. We found some mail all burned up under a viaduct. Well, I couldn’t survive that for long, having our employees sitting around all day and twiddling their thumbs until 3 o’clock when the mail and our business orders might or might not arrive.” So to prevent the early collapse of his business, Gordon quickly started using something called Firm Holdout Service.” This means that as mail is being sorted at his local post office, his mail is put aside and he has it picked up in the morning. We pay a messenger service to pick it up at the post office and bring it in every day. We’ve been doing this, as I said, since we started about 40 years ago.” Currently, it costs Gordon about $4,000 a year in messenger fees to get his mail. So in today’s dollars, he’s probably spent about $160,000 to get prompt mail delivery over four decades. It’s a fact of life for us, and we deal with it as best we can,” Gordon says. But a few weeks ago, Gordon found himself reading a letter and sputtering as his blood pressure jumped. The letter was from the Postal Service. It was notifying Gordon that if he wanted to continue picking up his own mail, he would have to pay an annual fee of about $400. What is incredible about this,” Gordon fumed, is that we make their job easier. They don’t have to deliver our mail because we deliver it ourselves. You would think they would thank us. Instead, they want to charge us.” We called a Postal Service spokesman, and he confirmed what Gordon said. Yes, their job is made easier. Nobody could tell us which bureaucrat’s daffy idea it was to charge people for delivering their own mail. The spokesman said: It is now a moot point since the status quo remains.” Somewhere, there is a person with considerable authority who thought something like this: These businessmen pick up their own mail. That saves us work, which saves us money. So why don’t we charge them a fee for saving us work and money.” A brain that works like that should be thoroughly examined by sci­ entists. But then it should be disposed of. We wouldn’t want a hunchback named Igor stealing it and causing even more trouble. • H a r k in s Got The Computer Blues? Rent Your Own System! 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(9:10gnfit ILQVET1K>jBLAp»R(a^im230,&0a74),(1Q06pmfi(S^ SPfcED* MAVEHCKrea fiSi|1:1S, 4:10,730,(958 pmFit,SN) ftaqUOO, 425,7:10, (9:45pmfit SiQ THEFUNTSTONËIm ft&nH230.240 S10,72ft (ftGOpmfiiSal Showtimes Good for Fritfov. September 9 — Sunday. September I I .S i IJÜ F M , . 1 1 / H Y i I . I o V O T V iH U i s n o i t s t iv f t l 19Í ë i H fc rfè b id ô H ; Sports STATE P ress Vports kj norts Women’s golf begins season The reigning NCAA Cham pion ASU women’s golf team will begin its 1994-95 season today in Las Cruces, N.M., at the Roadrunner Invitational hosted by New Mexico State. Eighteen teams will compete in the event at the New Mexico State Golf Course Sept. 9-11. The Sun Devils will compete against such teams as the University of Texas-El Paso, North T exas, K ansas S tate, Texas Tech, Nebraska, Hawaii, New Mexico and Baylor. Leading the Sun Devils will be recen tly crow ned U.S. W om en’s Amateur Champion Wendy Ward. The senior management major had a busy summer with appearances at the U.S. Open, Curtis Cup and U.S. Amateur. F iesta Bow l announces new sponsorship agreement The Fiesta Bowl and The Dial Corp announced Tuesday a m ulti-million dollar sponsorship agreement which will continue the Fiesta Bowl’s growth as it prepares to host top games in the Bowl Alliance. The Fiesta Bowl also announced that it received approval from the Bowl Alliance to host the top Bowl Alliance game in 1996. which provides the state o f Arizona the best possibility for a National Championship game on Jan. 2, 1996. Manning signs with Suns Former Atlanta Hawks star Danny Manning signed a one-year contract with the Phoenix Suns for $1 million, according to a newspaper report today. Manning’s agent. Ron Grinker. told The Phoenix Gazette that M anning signed Wednesday for $1 million, the slot available under the salary cap when the Suns traded center Mark West to Detroit last month. “It's not very complicated," Grinker told the newspaper from his Cincinnati office. “It’s simple when you tell peo­ ple what you’re going to do and then do it." The Gazette said Suns’ president Jerry Colangelo confirmed the contract had been received and forwarded to the league office, but the Suns’ public rela­ tions staff had not been advised of the deal this morning. Compiled from staff and AP reports P a g e 11 Friday, September 9, 1994 No calm before the storm for Sun Devils Hurricanes blow into town for Saturday’s showdown By T odd K elly S t a t e P ress They are the No. 5 team in the nation. They have won three national championships in the 1980s. They are the Miami Hurricanes, and only the Miami Hurricanes “rebound" from a 9-3 season. To the “One Day at a Time” ASU football team, Miami is more than just its next oppo­ nent. "Whenever you play maybe the single most premier team, the other being maybe Notre Dame... (the most) celebrated team in America, for the last ten to fifteen years, I mean, your blood better be running pretty fast,’’ ASU Head Coach Bruce Snyder said. A SU ’s preparation adjustm ents, from Oregon State last week to Miami this week, have taken place this week in practice, but the mental adjustments kicked in as soon as ASU defeated OSU last Saturday. "I think as soon as we walked into the locker room, the kids switched, which is a pretty good sign because we played well late in the game against Oregon State,” Snyder said. Switching mental states will be important because the Hurricanes have not only a tradi­ tion of great teams, but also of physical, quick and punishing teams. Defensively, Snyder wants ASU to put pres­ S co tt Trim ble/State Press Senior defensive back Kendall Rhyne will have his hands full trying to contain the potent sure on Miami senior quarterback Frank Costa Miami receivers Saturday when the Sun Devils host the Hurricanes. early and often. "If we can get him a little bit out of rhythm, Saturday, prestige will clash with history as the game in Sun Devil Stadium. In the 1985 Fiesta Bowl, Miami lost to Hurricanes and the Sun Devils meet on the if their quick gam e is not in sync... his UCLA 39-37; in the 1987 Fiesta Bowl, Miami (Costa’s) decision making, like most quarter­ football field for the first time ever. Miami will look to alter their history because lost to Penn State 14-10; and in last season’s backs. starts to become a little bit more sus­ the Hurricances have never won a football Fiesta Bowl, Miami lost to UofA 29-0. pect," Snyder said. “Those teams are gone,” Miami’s defensive Costa is a fifth-year senior tackle W arren Sapp said. “This is the ‘94 who started Miami’s first five Hurricanes. W hat are we supposed to be games last season before riding scared?” pine behind junior quarterback The ‘94 Hurricanes stress the fact that they Ryan C ollins. This spring, are a different team. Costa returned to the starting “We’re here to play,” wide receiver Chris T. post. KICKOFF 7 p.m. at Sun Devil Stadium Jones said. “We still got that nasty taste in our Miami's offensive coordina­ gut.” tor said Costa’s decision-mak­ ESPN The pain from last year’s Fiesta Bowl still ing has improved greatly dur­ stings because that loss kept the Hurricanes ing the spring practice, and KTAR 620AM from posting yet another 10-win season. From th a t's an area where Snyder Radio 1985 to 1992, Miami won at least 10 games, w ants to attack the Miami and went 12-0 twice: in 1987 and in 1991. But offense. Miami by 11 Latest Line it was a shutout, too. Miami had not been shut On the offensive side of the out in a bowl game since the 1935 Orange ball for ASU, Snyder knows Bowl when Bucknell shellacked the Hurricanes the key to success rests on pro­ Coaches ASU - Bruce Snyder 26-0. tection of its quarterback, Jake 13-10 at ASU (2 years) So what does last year’s 9-3 record mean? Is Plummer. 80-71-5 Overall (14 years) < Miami football dead? "They c a n 't get Jake The Hurricanes opened its 1994 season by UM - Craia Erickson Plummer hit. I think if I were steamrolling Georgia Southern 56-0. playing Arizona State, if you 54-7 at Miami GSU is a good division I-AA football team, eliminate Jake, you’re probably 104-38-1 Overall but was probably in over its head against going to win the g am e,’ Miami. Snyder said. 0-0 (first meeting) “I hope Georgia Southern is not very good,” Individual matchups aside, Series Record Snyder said, with a hint of humor. one thing is certain . This Yamini Prabhakara/State Press ASU takes on No. 2 Huskers Volleyball looks for 7-0 start at Nebraska tourney B y L ee Newman S tate P ress uraign M acnaugm on/^iate Kress Holly Sones (12) and Jennifer Snyder, along with the rest of the ASU volleyball team, must come up big this weeaend if they went to upSfcffhe No.2 Cornhuskers in the Nebraska FirsTier Invitational. t The 4-0' ASU volleyball team will face its first big test of 1994, when it battles the No. 2-ranked team in the nation, Nebraska, in the Nebraska FirsTier Invitational this weekend. However, the true test for the Sun Devils will be to stay focused and defeat the two teams they face prior to N ebraska, W yom ing and Bowling Green. “We know that we have to stay focused and take one game at a tim e,” said Coach Patti Snyder. “Any one team can beat any other team if they’re not focused. That is something we learned last year.” The Sun Devils have only played Nebraska two other times in their history, with each team snatching a victory. The Cornhuskers also started the season 4-0. The team breezed through the Fifth Annual Mortar Board Purdue P rem ier beating O regon State, K entucky and Purdue. Snyder knows the match with Nebraska is going to be a good one. “It’s going to be a great match. Both team s have very different styles. It’s going to be Nebraska’s size against our quickness,” Snyder said. ASU’s season started in dominat­ ing fashion last weekend when they swept through the Phoenix Airport Hilton/Sun Devil Challenge with four straight victories, losing only one game in the four matches. The Sun Devils’ first opponent of the season was New Mexico State. The team controlled the ball and the Aggies as it won the match, 15-8, 15-3, 15-12. Senior Leanne S chuster and ju n io r C hristine Gamer led the team, combining for T urn to V olleyball, pace 12. P a g e 12 Friday, September 9, 1994 St a t e P ress Manning key for Suns success Volleyball C ontinued from page 11 . Danny Manning. The Phoenix Suns’ knight in shining armor. Finally a power forward without back prob­ lems. drug problems or a criminal record. The Phoenix Suns have gotten their act together by signing Manning. Well, almost. They still have a lot of worthless baggage ready to get on the Suns plane when D aw n the season starts. Need a few W a g n e r exam ples? How about Asst. Sports Editor Jerrod M ustaf, C edric Ceballos and Oliver Miller to name a few. At least Jerry Colangelo will be taking a huge step in the rig h t direction if he refuses to match D etroit’s offer for Miller. Good rid­ dance-let the overweight, so-called center take his “O Zone” someplace else. Now if only the Suns’ organization would just swallow their pride and waive Mustaf. What a disgrace to the entire team. Anybody who was under suspicion of murder doesn’t belong in the NBA; they belong on America’s Most Wanted. Hopefully, M ustaf will just become another name in the Suns’ long list of bad trade decisions. Speaking of trades, I can think of two possi­ ble ones where the Suns could do no wrong. First, anything to get rid of Ceballos. For someone who was labeled the “point-a-minuteman" a couple of seasons ago, he sure has come up short. Way short. Even a high pick in next year’s draft would be better than keeping our star “trash time” player. The second couldn’t-go-w rong-ifthey-tried trade is obvious. Who is the most consistent, reliable, talented white man currently playing in the NBA? This one’s easy: Jeff Homacek. If the Suns could get him back, we would have the consistency of the three-pointer (Majerle doesn’t hold a candle to Homy), the perfect back-up point guard (with the exception of John Stockton) and one hell of a good player. But with the start of training camp about a month away, the big question still remains: What is going to happen with Barkley this year. Will the Suns’ “superstar” overcome his bad back, his obsession with golf and his couch-potato attitude in time for the start of the season? Or will he be in miserable shape when he plays, only managing to endure 20 minutes of the game? My only guess is to expect disappointment. If Barkley was as dedicated to his job as he was to his golf game, and if the Suns’ manage­ ment made some decent decisions, we might actually have an excellent shot at a World Championship this year. 26 kills. ASU then beat George Washington, 15-13, 15-8, 17-15. Although the team flew through the first two matches, Snyder wasn’t com­ pletely happy with her team’s perfor­ mance. “We were very sloppy the first two matches,” she said. “I was disappointed in our serve receive.” Snyder felt the Sun Devils played much better in their next two games, when they defeated Texas Tech and Minnesota. “We played much better as the tour­ nament went on,” Snyder said. “The players settled down and came into their own.” Schuster was named Most Valuable Player of the tournament. Everytime it looked like ASU was losing its momen­ tum, it was Schuster that made the key play to help preserve the Sun Devils’ dominance. She led the team with 63 digs and also notched 64 kills in the four games. She also had a career high of 26 kills and 20 digs against Texas Tech. “S h e’s so stead y ,” Snyder said. “She’s a very emotional and physical player. Day in and day out she gets the job done. We’re lucky to have her.” Led by Schuster, ASU received con- DO YOUR PARENTS A BIG FAVOR. Send them the G re a t Pum pi ReSentS„ e studenadtn»ttin& s . w ith deficiencies State Press every day. Let them know what's happening on your campus. A torney H a llo w e e n , SIGN UP NOW FOR YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO ASU'S M ORNING DAILY NEWSPAPER (Talk about brow nie points!) ■( IT'S YOUR NEWSPAPER I M *1 11110*1 ITOTI mill Olili ASU'S Morning Daily Newspaper Serving ASU since 1890 S U B S C R IP T IO N O FALL SEMESTER only $ 3 5 (65 Issues) □ SPRING SEMESTER only $35 (6 7 issues) □ FALL, SPRING & SUMMER $65 (1 4 2 issues) o o ty * r o '. 'j '" 1' For first class mail, add $30 per semester to above prices. PARENT NAME O CHECK ENCLOSED Charge m y Address O Visa Q MasterCard □ American Express I City----I Phone (_ S (0 ^ I ^ i tSiÀTÈ P ress I B DO IT NOWAND SAVE! Fill out this form and mail it with payment to: State Press Subscriptions, Box 871502, Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 State J Card N u m b e r __________________________ Z ip . Expiration D a te _________________________ S ig n a tu re ______________________________ NEED MORE INFO? CALL OUR SUBSCRIPTION DEPT. AT (602) 965 7572 — i tributions from everyone to win the tournament. Garner led the team with 65 kills and was second in digs with 55. Senior Tiffanie Johnson-Gates contin­ ued to be one of the top setters in the nation, averaging 15.67 assists per game in the tournam ent, and senior Kathy Culbreath was tops on the team in hitting percentage, with a .337 mark. She made only seven errors in 83 total attacks. The freshman on the team were also key in the Sun Devils’ success. In the New M exico State game, Terri Cox contributed with 12 digs, while Jennifer Snyder also had a good game with seven kills and six digs. Also, redshirt freshman Hilary Clark had eight block solos in the four match­ es. “She put on a blocking show ,” Snyder said. If ASU wants to match last year’s 7-0 start, it will have to sweep through the FirsTier Invitational. To match their 8-0 start of 1992, the team will also have to beat Oregon State in its first conference game on Sept. 16. The Sun Devils continued their streak of opening game wins. The team has not lost its .season opener in the past five years. State P ress P a g e 13 Friday, September 9, 1994 Ryan confident Cardinals can conquer NFC East rival B y D an M iller State P ress Craigh M acnaughton/State Press Quarterback Steve Beuerlein will look to spark the Cardinals offense Sunday, when the New York Giants come to Tempe. e' W MIAMI AT ASU NY C m I A NT S A T CARDINALS UN DERDO(j PICK J e r e m y S tein D aw n W a g n e r S p o rts E d ito r A sst. S p o rts E d ito r The Arizona Cardinals will square-off with their divisional rival, the New York Giants, at Sun Devil Stadium Sunday at 5 p.m. in what already appears to be a mustwin game. The Cardinals dropped their opener 1412 to the Rams, and their sluggish offensive performance raised many questions con­ cerning the Cardinals’ ability to live up to the preseason hype. The offense gained only 230 total yards and committed two turnovers that led to the 14 Rams’ points. C ardinals quarterback Steve Beuerlein completed a mere 18 of 40 passes for 158 yards and one touchdown. Despite the poor showing, Buddy Ryan still feels confident with the line-up he fielded last week for Sunday’s game. “We’re not going to make any changes,” Ryan said. “We have a great chance of beat­ ing them. We’re just as good as they are.” The two teams have split their season series in each of the last two years, with the Cardinals winning the most recent contest on Dec. 26, 1993, 17-6. The Giants are 3-3 against the Cardinals in Arizona. Last week, the Giants defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 28-23 to kick-off their season. They have a new face under center in Dave Brown, who made his first ever NFL start last week en route to a 10 for 20, 171-yard, one-touchdown performance. “They have the same offense that they had last year, except Phil Simms is gone,” Ryan said. “I think they probably upgraded that position.” Former Arizona C ardinals’ offensive lineman Lance Smith is one exception to last season’s Giants’ starting front. He will h k/ i r* k 1 D an Miller* C a rd in a ls R e p o rte r • Sunday’s game will be nationally tele­ vised on TNT, but will probably be blacked out in the V alley. On T hursday, the Cardinals’ ticket office reported they were still 14,411 tickets away from a sellout. • Former ASU Sun Devil cornerback Phillippi Sparks is listed as “probable” (eye) for Sunday’s game. • Cardinals’ injury report: CB-Chris Oldham (knee) - out WR-Gary Clark (groin) - out SS-Andre Waters (hamstring) - probable ' e m L ee N e w m a n Todd K elly A S U F o o tb a ll R e p o r te r S p o rts R e p o r te r ASU 28 A SU 25 Miami 27 Miami 22 M iam i 31 M iam i 3 6 ASU ASU ASU 14 G a m e n otes 14 M ia m i 31 24 be in unfamiliar territory when he lines up on the other side of scrimmage Sunday. “It’s going to be exciting,” said Smith, a nine-year NFL veteran who signed with the Giants in the off-season. “I haven’t been in Phoenix for a while. It will be different. I’m used to always going to the Phoenix side.” Smith acknowledged the new Cardinals’ defense is rapidly gaining respect through­ out the NFL, but he said all the talk doesn’t bother the Giants. “They have some good quality players, especially on defense,” Smith said. “But we don’t pay too much attention to all the hype.” Another threat facing the C ardinals comes from the explosive running back and kick returner David Meggett, who recorded the second two-touchdown game of h is , career last week. “Meggett’s a good guy coming out of the backfield and h e’s their third down guy,” Ryan said. “We’ll take care of him.” Defensive tackle Bryan Hooks summed things up when he revealed what Ryan has been telling the Cards all week. “Basically, that we should beat them,” Hooks said. Cardinals 17 Giants 17 Cardinals 20 Cardinals 18 Cardinals 28 G ia n ts C a rd in a ls G ia n ts G ia n ts G ia n ts 10 13 13 IO N e w M e x ic o S t. M ic h ig a n use C h ie fs 17 31 30 30 U o fA 16 N o tre D a m e 28 P e n n S ta te 24 4 9 e rs 24 14 New M e x ic o St. 21 U o fA 20 We need students to direct, film , & edit "Student Programs" - Over 4500 Viewers - Gain Experience -Express Yourself! $$ Fast$$ T h e S tu d e n t A ffairs R e s e a rc h O ffic e is looking fo r A S U students to cond uct te le p h o n e s u rve y s from S e p te m b e r 1 8 , 1 9 9 4 through S e p t e m b e r 2 2 , 1 9 9 4 . S u r v e y s w ill b e c o n d u c t e d fr o m 4 :3 0 p m - 9 :0 0 p m (s o m e a ftern o o n s ). $5.50/hour T o a p p ly s to p b y S t u d e n t A f f a ir s R e s e a r c h lo c a t e d in th e M e m o ria l U nio n R oom 1 1 0 o r call 9 6 5 - 4 0 7 0 for m o re inform ation. I Do! I Do! Wedding Center P resents... Bridal Extravaganza '94 B ridal Gowns, D resses for P rom & S pecial O ccasions, T uxedos, an d Accessories: 90% OFF ram ada dow ntow n 5 6 6 5 W e s t B e ll R o a d & 5 7 t h A v e n u e / 7 5 0 0 S o u t h P r i e s t - N W C o r n e r O f P r i e s t & E l l i o t 401 N orth 1 st S tre et O ctober 3 2 ,1 9 9 4 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. WHY RENT WHEN YOU CAN BUY! C lassifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. climbing a greasy pole for $10 and ruining trousers worth $15. RENTAL SHARING F TO share 3bd 2ba w /p o o l, must be clean/reliable $194mo 1/3 util. 68th/Thomas Jill 9902292 MATURE FEMALE roommate needed, Price/E lliot, w/d, own ba. garage, $350 incl util. Even­ ings, 786-3338. MATURE M/F roommate wanted to share 2bd, 2ba apt Squaw Peak & Osborn area. $300/mo, utilities & amenities included. Leave mes­ sage. 954-8337. ROOM AVAIL in 3 bd house w/d, pool table, yard, 1/3 util on $235 rent. M/F. Call 491-8776. ROOMMATE TO share 3 bd/2 ba near campus. Wanted: cool, re­ laxed m/f to pay $300 + $40-60 for util. Call Dave at 894-6895. AN N O U N C E­ MENTS AVON PRODUCTS, buy or sell. Call 970-0965. HAIR MODELS needed. Matrix hair show, free hair services. Call W E BU Y & SELL U SE D L E V I'S ! We pay up to $15 for 501s ¿¡¡^EBQJEAN ®BUYER Call fo r Details 947-8245 • 1810 Scottsdale Rd (between Curry & McKellips) 5 minutes from ASU! ROOMMATE WANTED $350/ mo incl util. Nice Tempe house. 820-8408, ask for Jennifer. HOMES FOR SALE 2 GREAT 5 bedroom homes- 1 has 2-1 bd apts attached- 4 blks from ASU- G reat investm ent! Call Pamela Ferguson, Realty Ex­ ecutives, 831-0322. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE IM M ACULATE 1 bd, Papago Park Village upstairs condo. Ask­ ing $59,000. 968-0305. GREAT FOR students, no down, no closing costs, 2 bd. 2 ba, fire­ place, ground floor condo near pool, excellent M esa location w/quick freeway access. Assum­ able with qualify. 892-0281. ONLY $42,900! 10 min from ASU! 2bd, 1 1/2 ba condo, incl. refrigerater, new carpet, new paint, new dishw asher & new fence! Dana H ubbell, Re/Max Anasazi 838-7772. • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. Buy Of The Week APARTMENTS FIRST MONTH free! 2 bd. 1 ba, new appliances, $430. Call 7597104 or 921-0517. B e seen! At Papago Park Village. 2bd, new carpet, close to pool, ready for you! $69,900. B ob B ullock R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 ATTENTION Newly remodeled 1 & 2 bd apts. $375-$450. Ceiling fans in bds. Also avail: older style 1 & 2 bds, $325-$400. Laundry fac, pool, basic cable, water, gas. Walking dist./ASU. 600-840 sq ft (great for roommates). 967-7372. BEAUTIFUL LG 2 bd apt. Very safe, near ASU. Free cable, laun­ dry , pool. Call 966-4797. WHEELCHAIR Central M esa 2bd lb a duplex w/carport $475 + dep. 844-7880. HOMES FOR RENT LARGE STUDIO, 115 W. Broad­ way, $260/mo. Old Town Tem­ pe, 3 bd, 1 ba, w/addition, $775/ mo. Tim, 894-0288. SM HOUSE, $250/mo, 2 min fm campus. Suitable for serious up­ perclassman. 268-1508 after 6pm. TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2BD 2BA duplex near ASU. Pool, nice front yard. $450. 7319901, ask for Patty or Dave. NEAR ASU- lbd t/h. $675. Pool, cvrd prkng. 731-9901, ask for Patty or Dave. RENTAL SHARING FEM A LE W ANTED to share lovely hom e in S c o tts. N /s. M ust like anim als. $550+util. 998-4367 HAYDEN SQ M/f, n/s, w/d. Free cable (HBO/SHO) 2 blks ASU $360mo+l/3 util. Eric 784-2256. M /F TO share 3bd 2ba house, yard. Pool, tennis. R ural/R ay. N/S. 961-5145. State P ress Friday, September 9, 1994 Page 14 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE AQUARIUM 75G A L. acry lic hexagon, fresh or salt water, with every accessory possible. $650. Shawn 829-0202. DESIGNER PLUS by Plan Hold drawing board, 42x30, like new, $100 w/stool. Small kichen table, 4-chairs, $50. 866-1744. DRAFTING TABLE 32Mx 48" all wood, fully adjustable. $100 820-6239. KING SZ so ft side w aterbed, $300; end table, $15; wedding dress size 10-12 w/train, $500; CD player, $50; kitchen table, $20; high ch air, bum per seat, rocking horse. 966-3203. KING SZ so ft side w aterbed $300, end table $15, wedding dress sz 10/12 w/train $500, CD player $50, kitchen table $20 high ch air, b u m p er seat, ro ck in g horse. 966-3203. SCALES, LIKE new. Ohaus Tri­ ple Beam ounce/gram scales. Sell or trade. Afternoons or evenings. Call Bart, 966-4320. SECURE YOUR life, home & auto with the latest high-tech se­ curity products. Top quality bat­ tery operated protection at low prices. Call Linda, 661-9794. WIN IN Vegas. Learn systems for blackjack & roulette. $6.95 ea. / $9.95 for both. Ch or M/O to: S y stem s, PO Box 26091, Tempe, AZ 85281-6091. FURNITURE WHITE QUEEN headboard $30, w hite 6 draw er dresser $45, 2 white nightstands $25ea., vacuum cleaner $25, w hite floor lam p $10. 970-4788 lv msg. FURNITURE COMPUTERS FURNITURE SALE- Must sell im mediately. Brand new black couch, mattress, table w/chairs, & more. Call 921-9618. XERO X M EM O R Y W RITER word processors, Lotus 1-2-3/ Windows 4.01. 837-9036. NEW QUEEN mattress and boxsprings used for only one month, new price $500, selling for $275 obo. Call 804-1225. QUEEN SIZE futon w/2 frames & 2 covers and curtains. $150 obo. 483-5679. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu: gold, ster., pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave. Tempe Center 968-6074. TICKETS STUDENT DESKS and chairs, 2100 S. Rural Rd. Arizona 1 Re­ alty, 8:30am-4pm Mon.-Fri. CARDINALS VS. New York Gi­ ants Sunday 5pm. Great lower level seats, $30. Steve, 678-0316. WE HAVE it! Used furniture, mattresses, linens, kitchen ware, vacuums, TVs, lamps, shelving, tools & more. 966-7021. PHANTOM OF the Opera, Sat. night, center balcony seats. $35 each. Call Steve, 678-0316. C A R P ET Y O U R ROO M ! $CASH TODAY!$ Inexpensively!! W holesale d is tr ib u to r is liq u id a tin g 1000's o f yards. Call fo r app o intm en t: 966-0683 • 835-0802 1700 S. M cC lintock FURNITURE SALE •M attress S ets Twins $ 4 9 Fulls $5 9 Queens $89 Kings $ 1 1 9 •Sofa S ets from $199 •7-P iece Bedroom S ets from $199 •5-P iece D in ettes from $ 1 1 9 •5-Drawer C hests from $3 9 •Day Beds (Complete) from $117 Plus M uch More!! F u rn itu re D ep o t 3332 W. McDowell 233-2236 In M esa 4434 E. University 830-5708 AUTOMOBILES I buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call Al, 994-4369. 1986 CHEV Cavalier Z-24, a/c, am/fm, new battery & alternator. $3200. 838-2294, Jaime. 69 JAG XK2, 2+2, fast, excellent condition. Call Vic, 264-i 200, 553-8047 eve. 83 NISSAN Sentra. Tan, low ­ ered, stereo system w/Alpine CD, fender trim, custom wheels, runs great. $2500 obo. Call Todd, lv. msg. 519-0044._______________ 84 CELICA GTS, red, fully load­ ed, all elec, sun roof, stereo w/graphic equalizer, custom tires w/locks, very low mileage, mint cond, $4200 obo. 494-0420. 88 SU B A RU Ju sty , 5spd, 35m pg, am /fm cass., 72K mi, xlnt. cond. $1950. 731-9852. 89 TOYOTA Tercel EZ, std, a/c, fm cass, 2-dr, orig owner, tint wind, exc cond, 105K. 460-3431. M OTORCYCLES" 83 YAMAHA CV 80K, only 2400 mi, lobks & runs like new. $800. 380-6170.____________________ HONDA ELITE 150, 87, red. Perfect condition. Runs like new. $775. Call 894-0616. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. ROCK CLIMBING, rappelling, guided trips. Kelly. 209-4913. HELP WANTEDGENERAL A H W A TU K EE FO O TH ILLS YMCA is currently accepting ap­ plications for recreational super­ visors for school-age children. Perfect p/t position for college students at ASU, MCC, etc. seek­ ing exp in a school setting. 3233 E. Chandler Blvd., Suite 6B. APPT. SETTING Pt/ft, $8-13/hr, training/benefits. Call now, immed. openings in W. Tempe office, afternoons/evenings. Call Jane 966-0098 AZ EXPLOSION! Secure a position in a growing company. We just expanded into Tempe to capitalize on a booming market. Call now! 829-8105. AZ REPUBLICAN Party needs telem arketers. $6+/hr. Contact Max Fose 957-7770. BUSY HEALTH Club needs ft/pt help. 1465 N. H ayden. W orld Gym. 945-6060. CHEVRON STATION, p/t island attnd/ maint. 2:30-8pm & wee­ kends. Call Mr. Martin 941-8899. COPYWRITING INTERN. Earn a wealth of experience (but no salary) and start building a port­ folio at this hands-on shop with a wide variety of clients. Convince us in writing that you're the best person for this gofer/writer posi­ tion. Jo u rn a lism background helpful; transportation required. A ttn: K aren G ray, The H ired Pen, Inc., 1366 E. T hom as, Suite 203, Phoenix, AZ 85014. CUST SERV, no selling, flex hrs, guaranteed hourly plus bonus up to $10/hr possible. 949-7615. DANCERS/CASH Now hiring females for bachelor parties. No exp nec, must be dep, serious inq only. C all Randy, "Only the Classiest," 997-6698. DELI HIRING sandwich makers, counter help, delivery drivers. P/t, M-F days. 921-7827._______ DELIV. DRIVERS, flex eve hrs, $10/hr incl tips. N. Scotts. Take­ out Express. 951-9144 aft 5pm DRIVERS & HELPERS at TriRentals, Tempe. All hrs avail.ft/pt, flex schedules. Apply at 1895 S. Los Feliz. 966-3474. EXTRA INCOME opportunities. The AZ Republic/Phx. Gazette have immed. opportunities avail, in the distribution of newspapers. Early morn or afternoon deliv­ ery. Call for details 497-7992. HI-TECH AT LOWS FREE LA NCE Editor w /solid exp. creative/fiction writing. For a m etaphysical/religious book. Flextime. JohnZ erio978-7158 Let me custom-build a brand new computer suited to your needs 4 less than any store! I repair/upgrade system s too. Call M itch 602-731-9450.________________ IART LOVERS! COMPUTERS M AC PLUS SC 20 com puter. Great com puter for college pa­ pers! Software: Microsoft, Pagem aker, Excel and Superpaint. $450, must sell soon. Call Teri at 929-9578.____________________ MACINTOSH COMP. Complete system including printer only $500. Chris, 1-800-289-5685. NOTEBOOK COMP, NCR 3170, never used. 386 4M B RA M , 120MB hard drive, 14,400 baud V.42bis and MNP-5 data com ­ pressio n fax m odem c e llu la r ready. Comes with Windows, bat­ tery pack, external drive, carry­ ing case and warranty. Valued at $3,000. Will sell for $1,200. Call Julie at 965-0982 M-F. ROCK GARDEN 40 line monster BBS w/20,000+ files, chat, games, Internet mail, online pizza, more! 602-220-0001 STATPRO CORP We do statistics, send us your data. 2 hrs data entry, computer analysis (basic stats only). SPSS output on your disc. Student rate $85, 837-1999. HELP WANTEDGENERAL FRIENDLY, OUTGOING, en­ ergetic people to work at Fid­ dlesticks, 1155 W. Elliot. GYM NASTICS OR dance in­ structor. E xperienced, enthu­ siastic teacher, ages 5-12. 7th St./ Glendale, $9-11/hr, M-Th 2:455pm. 955-7805.______________ HELP DISABLED student 5-7 hrs/w k. Exp. not req'd. $5/hr. Near ASU. 858-0464, lv msg. IMMEDIATE POSITIONS avail­ able in Tempe. Custom er relations/telemarketing. Permanent part-time, up to 35 hrs/wk. Hours negotiable, no weekends. Friend­ ly voice w/good speaking abili­ ties, experience preferred but not required. W ill train. C all Jon Evans at 967-2678. IN SU R A N C E R EQ 'S fem ale driv ers fo r disab led w om an's van. Must be 21 or over, good driving record, must be available early a.m . and mid-p.m. Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur & Sat or Sun. Pay negotiable. Call 968-6284. MARKETING/BAR MANAGER Flakey Jake's Tempe. Prefer 3rd year marketing student with fra­ ternity or sorority affiliation. Call 967-3192 for appt. Ask for John or Bill. P/T SYSTEMS Analyst. Knowl­ edge in DOS, Windows, Paradox, Basic prog & have Novell exp. Please send resume to 4410 N. Saddlebag Trail, Scottsdale, AZ 85251, Attn: Steve Longshore. P/T: COMPUTERIZED digital video & audio productions. MSDOS / Windows experience re­ quired. Professional env iro n ­ ment, flexible hours. Mr. Parks, 990-3323. (Scottsdale) PART-TIME MARKETING rep­ resentatives to work promotional events for AT&T. Must be very reliable, outgoing and have a flexible schedule. $7/hour + bo­ nuses. Contact J.P., 209-4636. POLL W ORKERS needed for Dem candidate on Election Day. Tues, 9/13, $J>/hr. M orn/afternoon, all day shifts avail. Earn up to $70 in one day. Call 2754878._______________________ R E C EPTIO N IST FO R busy Scotts./Indian School Rd. office. 8am-4pm M-F. Must be respon­ sible & organized. Phones, cleri­ cal & computer duties. 994-9188. SECURITY WANTED- Mostly weekends. Pay depends on exp. P.R. exp a must. Must smile at all times but ready for business. Call Sharks Nite Club, 970-4930. OUTGOING, FRIENDLY peo­ ple! P/T work is available for you a t R ed R iv er O pry. D ay/evening shifts avail. Cash handling and customer service ex­ perience req. 730 N. Mill Ave., Attn: Tristin. SPORTS COUNTRY club look­ ing for pool cleaner. Work 8-12 hrs per week. $6 per hour + free membership. Will train right per­ son. Apply in person only, West­ ern Reserve Club, 2140 E. Broad­ way Rd., Tempe, 85282. EOE. P/T WAREHOUSE help, heavy lifting, flex hrs, close to campus. $7/hr. Call 966-0643.__________ TEACHER ASST, needed. Ahwatukee Preschool M-Th. 12-3 $245/mo. Elem. Ed. major pref. 893-2531________________ ' THE STATE Press is hiring de­ pendable students to pick up in­ serts that fall out of the State Press and land on the ground creating an eyesore and safety hazard. We need students to fill blocks of time from 8am to 3pm on the days there are inserts in the paper. This is a job where you will be bending over and picking up inserts all over campus. The compensation is excellent! This position is on an as-needed basis and requires dependable people. Come by room 47 in Matthews Center today and drop off your class schedule, indicating when you w ill be available M onday through Friday. Include your phone number. Questions? Call Jackie Eldridge, 965-6555._____ A m e d ic a l * o f f ic e in Scottsdale needs p t/ft fro n t a n d b a c k o f f ic e p e r s o n . W ill train. 4 0 2 0 N. S cottsdale Rd. Suite 108 Please apply in person. UNLIMITED POTENTIAL: Na­ tional company, new to area. We need 8 top performers who need to. make unlimited wealth. Our reps set appointments for Lake Tahoe resort. Guarantee + com­ mission. We pay top. Only above average people need apply. Call 894- 0730 today, start tomorrow. Ask for Dawn. Tempe Wholesale Bakery needs •Delivery drivers pt/ft •Office help pt/ft •Artist (drawing skills) Must be available to work during school holidays. Call for interview between I0am-1pm & 4-6pm: 967-5441 O pportunity to Earn $ 2 0 0 -$ 3 0 0 per week! 10 Telemarketers Needed A ssertive? Sales O riented? Articulate? Have fun selling tick et pkgs. via phone for the Phoenix Symphony! P /t eves. Sun.-Thur. 5:30pm-9:30pm MAC PLUS, ext drive, software incl. Mcsft Word, Excel & draw prog. $450obo. Nancy, 967-3489. MAC SE w/hd & printer, excel­ lent cond. L oads o f softw are $550.00, 941-3595.___________ HELP WANTEDGENERAL 222-3875 HELP WANTEDGENERAL $363.60. SELL 72 funny college Tshirts-Profit $363.60. Risk-free. Choose from 19 designs. Free cat­ alog 1-800-700-4250. SOUTH MOUNTAIN $300+ A WEEK Local company needs 6 people to distrib u te bo ttle s to hom es in local area. Must be in good phys­ ical condition and available to w ork M on-Fri 3-9pm . For in ­ terview call Brenda, 966-0093. Tempe location. $7.45 TO START 18 retail openings. No exp req. Flex h rs. S c h o la rsh ip s. A ll majors. Call 11-3, 968-4797. ♦EARN $7/HR!* Setting free appointm ents for house services. Fiesta Mall area. 470-1828 anytime. D.J. Looking for experienced D.J. fo r ou r N ig h t/S p o rts C lub. Candidates must be outgoing & mature. Wide format variety is a plus. E x p e rie n c e d only ap p ly in person. 7776 S. Pointe Parkway #138 Phoenix, AZ 85044 Mon-Thurs 8am-Noon W e support a drug-free work environment thru pre-employ­ ment drug testing. — Part-time — Tempe Office • Walking Distance from Campus $6-$ 12/hr, Evenings & Weekends Come in or call Dine America O ffice Hours: Mon-Fri 5-9pm; Sat 10am-2pm 966-1 861 610 W. Broadway, #115 State P ress HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDFO OD SERVICE THE RESTAURANT Delivery Co: Phone personel: must know IBM W indow s. A lso delivery drivers must have good ins., use own car. Excellent pay, call 2200000 b/t 9am-4pm only. NOW HIRING: servers, bussers, h o sts, c ash ie rs, co o k s, prep cooks, dishwashers, exp not req. N ative New Y o rk er, Alma School/Wamer, Chandler; or Gil­ bert Rd./Freeway, Mesa. LAWN CARE P/T BEVERAGE cart salesperson and p/t kitchen help. Apply in person: Pete's 19th Tee, 1405 N. Mill Ave, 1 mile north o f Mill Ave. Bridge. Ultimate Lawn Care is hiring f/t & p/t, $5.50/hr to start. Exp nec; own trans req. Early moms., flex 20-40 hrs M -F. C all M arlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. HELP WANTEDSALES P/T SALES AZ Center evenings / weekends, call 495-1048, 10-3. YOUR HOURS. Unique oppor­ tunity. Gold, silver jewelry busi­ ness. % 1-5145. ATTENTION BUSINESS COM M UNICATION MAJORS: Teichert M a rketin g is hiring individuals interested in run­ ning prom otions fo r Phoenix area businesses. Excellent com­ p en sa tio n package. G reat experience for those interested in s a le s/m a rke tin g careers. Flexible schedules. P lease c a ll 921-7755 betw een 1-4pm . DMS PAYS EVERY FRIDAY! $9 p/h guaranteed We are DMS, located at 64th St. & East Thomas Rd. DMS is looking for outbound customer service reps to make c a lls on b e h a lf o f SEA RS, T E X A C O , C H EV R O N & many m ajor banks across the U.S. to their own cardholders. Full time reps - give us perfect attendance and get $9 per hour for your first 30 days! Hiring 100 reps. CALL NOW. 994-9903 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL JAPANESE FLUENT secretary/ receptionist, good English, grow­ ing professional service corp., flexible 6-10 hours/week, start $7.50/hr. Will, 829-4941 P/T 15-20 hrs/wk for property mgnt co. $5/hr. Typing, filing, etc. C ham berlin & A ssociates 731-9901. W EEKEN D RECEPTIO N IST, Sat/Sun only, busy phones, light clerical, energetic, positive per­ son required for exciting compa­ ny 10 S. o f ASU, fax resume to L. Muncey 602-796-0660. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE ACCEPTING APPS for: D riv­ ers, up to $8/hr incl tips; Counter help. Sammy B's Pizza, 945-8850. AZ COUNTRY Club hiring p/t pm food servers, bartenders. No exp nec. Must work wknds. 5668 E. Orange Blossom, Phx. EOE. BLIM PIES SUBS and Salads. A pply in person. B rw y/R ural. Tempe. Help wanted p/t, 18-24 hrs/wk, 10:30-2:30 or 11-3. CLUCK-U-CHICKEN NOW hir­ ing cooks & delivery drivers. Earn top $$$. Apply in person, 855 S. Rural Rd., 1 blk S. of Univ. CO RK 'N CLEAVER Acc. apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t , concern w /appearance, relia­ b ility & personality are import­ ant. Apply in prsn. M -F 2-5pm. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 9520585 _____________________ COSMIC PIZZA, is now hiring exp. pizza cooks & del. drivers. We offer flex. hrs. competitive wages, a fast track to m anage­ m ent & g re a t w orking c o n d i­ tions. Apply @ 1523 E Apache Blvd. (No phone calls please). jet z & STIXX Hiring all pos. door staff, bussers, wait & host staff, barbacks, bar­ ten d ers. A p p ly W ed. l-4 p m . 7077 E. Camelback, Scottsdale. No phone calls. JOHNNY ROCKETS Now hiring cashiers, asst, mngrs, f/t & p/t. Fashion Square Mall. Apply in person. 423-1505. State Press Classifieds 965-6755 Page 15 F riday, S e p te m b e r 9 ,1 9 9 4 PRESTIGIOUS PRIVATE Club located in the heart o f campus seeking prof, enthusiastic indiv. w/1-2 yrs fine dining exp. flex hrs, competitive salary & benefit pkg. Qual. candidates may apply in person between the hrs o f 810am & 2-4pm M-F. University Club is located adj. to Student Health Center, comer of Normal Lane & University. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers and din­ ner bussers. Apply in person M-F 10am-5pm, 5001 E. Washington. WAIT STAFF, evenings/days, 4 shifts/week. Must be able to work weekends. Apply in person, 430 N. Dobson, Mesa. WILLY WONDERDOG is now hiring for counterhelp. Apply in person. Call Millie 784-4040. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE BABYSITTER WANTED- Mon or Wed moms when needed. Rural/Elliot. Call Ellen, 897-1618. NANNY, LOVING & exp. for 14 mo old boy. Ahw atukee. 3 nights/wk. Lv msg. 496-8968. WORKING COUPLE needs help w/child care & housework, eves. Trade for free room. 345-2969. PERSONALS IK NEW members - you guys are the best! Get psyched for a phenominal semester! ZAQ Katie f NATIONAL PARK employment. Over 25,000 openings! Excellent benefits & bonuses. For infor­ mation call: 1-206-545-4804 ext. N59181. INTERNATIONAL EMPLOY­ M EN T- M ake up to $2000$4000+/mo teaching basic con­ versational English in Japan, Tai­ wan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For info call: (206) 6321146 ext. J59181. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES GOLD, THE investment o f the future. Network m arketing the business of the future. Together they spell success! You can turn $150 into $3000 in Gold. Page Donna 310-0073. Friday * \ CHIMERAS Saturday STROLLING l 885 J TQ HOT SHOTS 9p.rn.-1 a.m. MATH REVIEW- Test 1. Learn what you need to know to get that g rade you w ant. Free sam ple exam. Sat-Wed. Call Math Mas____________ ters, 491-3363. PRIVATE ART Teacher wanted. Pen & ink, 2 hrs. / every 2 weeks, $10/hr. Ask for Lynda 644-1291.. = $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. L aser. Fast. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. SERVICES B O TTLED W A TER costs $l/gal. on average. I can get it to you for pennies/gallon. Stop pay­ ing too much! Call for free dem­ onstration 784-2274 or 9687312. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. N eed it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA. APA /M LA , free editing. Low cost resumes. Trans­ cription. Laser. 966-2186. ELECTRO LY SIS BY Degna. M ulti-probe & blend methods. Rural/Southem area. 921-1146. FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses. MLA/ APA, las­ er, fax. Pat, 897-1741. BECAUSE YOU'RE WORTH m I WANT IT NOW! L 'O réal In tern atio n al is com ing to P h o en ix an d we are looking for special fa c e s fo r o u r H A IR SHOW on S e p t. 24-26. Models will receive FREE sa lo n se rv ices, su ch a s haircolor and haircuts. If you are willing to have a c o m p le te m a k e -o v e r, p le a s e c a ll an d leave a message: by MARCONIS -NO COVER- BANDERSNATCH 5th St. & Forest BREW PUB T o n ig h t H appy H our Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. Near ASU. 966-1984. TY PIN G - Term p ap ers, re ­ sumes, letters, flyers, thesis. Gail 481-9427 or 1-602-810-0427. TYPIN C. E x p e rie n c e d e d ito r. S e rv ice in c lu d e s full editg ig. Im prove your g r a d e s . F a s t. A c c u r a te . Rural Rd./University area. Call )im. 1-800-545-8153 x3740 2^1 967-2360 Cuelvo Margs Domestic Drafts Premium W ells State Press Classifieds 965-6735 ; SERVICES $ Assorted Shots G NO COVER $ 1-800-TALK-USA SUBS & SALADS $ 1 O f F ANY S A N D W IC H D ELIVER _ ___ _ _ _ __ J The m ore yo u save Mom & Dad, the m ore they have to send you Cuervo Margs Premium LI T's $ $ For Friday, Sept. 9,1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) It should be a productive workday for you. You’ll finish up with a project now. Tonight brings good financial news and finds you busy with domestic interests. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You’ll be helping a friend out with a project. Take the lead in co n ta ctin g o thers now . I t’s a happy time fo r couples. Some will be making marriage plans. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Self-discipline com bines with opportunity to put you a step ahead in business. Exercise your initiative today and im portant doors will open for you. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) This will be a day when you get fun out of life. There’s a special accent now on sports and leisure interests. Romantic rapport is spe­ cial tonight. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You’ll be making a major pur­ chase for your residence today. If seeking a new place to live, you’ll get valuable leads now. Home is where the heart is tonight. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You’ll be receiving good news by phone or letter now. Partners w ork w ell to gether as a team today. It’s a good time for getting your ideas across to others. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You’ll have extra incentive to get ahead in life. Y our drive and determination will open important doors today. Financial prospects definitely improve. D America's inexpensive way to call collect *2 [” S t a t e P ress C la s s ifie d s I St A p a c h e 8 9 4 -2 6 6 2 SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You may be helping a child out w ith a school project. Things should go pretty much your own way now. Your confident manner attracts the support of others. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21} It’s not the best time to have com­ pany over, as you’ll want time now to pursue various interests. It’s a day when your accomplish­ ments match your aspirations. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You’ll want more time to reflect on a business matter. Socially, it’s a grand day for you. You’ll be receiving a special invitation: Partners are supportive. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Important breakthroughs come now, and you’ll have greater con­ fidence in your ability to reach your goals. It’s a dynamite day for business interests! PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Students may meet with romance at an extracurricular event. You’ll be receiving welcome news from a distance. T ogether-ness is tonight’s happy theme. YOU BORN TODAY are more univer­ sal in outlook than the typical m em ber o f your sign. Y ou’re likely to be drawn to politics and hum anitarian concerns. O ften, you find yourself in what you do for others. You have leadership qualities and do well in adminis­ trative positions. You have good critical judgm ent and may be draw n to a w riting career. B irthdate of: M ichael Keaton, actor; Otis Redding, singer; and Leo Tolstoy, author. ©1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. A S U B ox 8 7 1 5 0 2 M a t th e w s C e n te r, B a s e m e n t 1 Ru r a l NINTENDO, SUPER Nintendo and Sega games. We will pay $5$10 for those games you don't use anymore. Call Sean or M att at 929-9435 or 894-2272. F rances D rake = TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING Balboa Caie 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. ASU SPORTS FANS! HONEST FEMALE, single par­ ent, unemployed, needs financial aid. Can supply resume. Write: 454 S.Hill St.#C. Globe,AZ 85501 Y our In d iv id u a l H oroscope Fbr a GoodTkne cat 986-13D0 LIVE MUSIC! SPORTS & RECREATION D on't you m iss a gam e! C all today for scores/point spreadsm uch m ore!! 1-900-884-9204 ext. 5509. $2.99/min. Must be 18 yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954-7420. I NEED a Japanese tutor for JPN 101. Please call Erin at 829-6336. Can only pay $10/hr. 921-9222 ADOPTION & LI f t C SE 180 N O TES, T/Th 4:40, Riden (IBM ). W ill pay $5 per class for a copy of your complete, accurate class notes. Need asap! 970-0237.____________________ 99# .404 S . Mill Ave., Suite 101 * COM PUTER HELP - Serving ASU since 1983. 838-5966. Personal Training is yo ur answer! Qualified Trainer fo r ?'s and appts. call John 858-9275 TALL BEERS Sponsored by: Delta Lambda Phi Fraternity, Lambda League and the Campus Environmental Team. « PAST CREDIT problems? Start a new credit file. 100% legal. Call today 994-4722.__________ 0 U £ A H £ 1 U 1 I? unDCBwctonT? QQ ¿ PROJECT SAFE PLACE RESTAURANTS/ BARS WANTED Sunday Need someone to talk to...so m e on e you can trust? Look fo r these pink and green magnets around cam pus to fin d a trusting, frie nd ly face pre­ pared to g e t you in the rig h t direction. ADOPTION: NORTHERN Cali­ fornia college sweethearts with adorable, gentle yellow lab wish to adopt newborn. We are eager to share our beautiful home, our cabin in the mountains, and a life time of love, laughter and secur­ ity. Please call Liz and David an­ ytime 1-800-606-4686. TUTORS HEALTH & FITNESS REFRESHMENTS DO YOU THINK YOU’RE CAY? SERVICES RESEA RC H S P E C IA L IST S , need help w/research, thesis, or term paper? Let us do the leg w ork for you. C om plete info, sum m ary w /supporting docu­ mentation 2 to 3 weeks. Medi­ cal, legal, scientific, business, lit­ erary, theatrical, music. Satis­ faction guar, or m oney back. Call Kristy at Harte Enterprises 978-6813. WANTED: TEAMMATES (co­ ed) for foot/floor hockey league. No experience required. Steven, 897-8587, message. JOB OPPORTUNITIES CRUISE SHIPS now hiring- Earn up to $2,000+/month working on cruise ships or land-tour compa­ nies. World travel. Seasonal & full time employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206-6340468 ext. C59181. RESTAURANTS/ BARS Tem pe, A Z 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 C la s s ifie d A d O r d e r F o r m Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. MUSIC REGGAE BAND- Talented nine piece with strong playbook avail­ able for hire. Dave, 956-7904. PERSONALS 4 GUYS from Miami coming in town for ASU/UM game. Look­ ing for dates to hang out with & party. Call Mike 1-305-220-0810. A DOZEN roses, $20. We also d eliv er after hours. C all 8943419._________ • ATA WOULD lik# to congratu­ late everyone on a successful rush. AAA CO URTNEY - C o n g ratu ­ lations on initiatiop! I!m so proud of you! Wish I was thr »Mom. EN H A N C E YOUR love lif e , roses 99e each. The Rose Place. 1835 E. University. 96$-7804. SUNNY'S DELIVERS. $1 OFF ANY PIZZA 12" or 16" 1 C oupon Per Pizz? D ine-ln, Pick-Up, D elivery Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the lia b ility of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the firs t insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds w ill be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit w ill be held on account for future advertising. f~ï /hL «' LI Check # □ QSD.. Bank Card Number ... R A T E S Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 104 days, $1.00 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold heàdline for the cost of 2 lines. Please Include fVivftffîfitferme# ci H # of D ays Price per Day $ X Total ."=* •$ Name on Card JIM: HAVE a great weekend! 968-6666 I K DOTTIE - Thanks for being the best Dot! IA Q Mom 1301 E. University Expiration Date S o n y , w e c a n n o t a c c e p t p e rs o n a l a d s th ro u g h th e m a ll. Page 16 Friday, September 9, 1994 Happy Birthday Bash! PRE-FOOTBALL BUFFETS ® ASU vs. Ml ^ Cards vs. Giants Tickets T-Shirts Prizes Giveaways 411S. Mill Awe. * 966-2020