©Copyright, State Press. 1994 Tempe, Arizona Vol. 79 No. 25 ASA, ASASU to plug p lan for fixed-rate tu itio n in creases B y L orrie C ohen State P ress Frustrated with the unpredictable tuition hikes every year, the Associated Students of ASU and the Arizona Students Association will propose their own financial plans to make tuition increases more predictable. ASASU wants full-time students to be able to sign a five-year, fixed rate contract with the University. Tuition would not remain con­ stant, but increase at a fixed rate. “It is not realistic to keep it (tuition) at the sam e level every y ear," said ASASU President Alan Frost. A SA , a lobbying o rganization which includes student presidents from all Arizona universities, wants a capped 5 percent fixedrate increase set in the fall. If the universities need m ore m oney than the fixed tuition increases would provide, the state would have to appropriate the difference. M a k in g w a v e s Currently, in-state students pay $947 for seven or more credit hours per semester. Under the ASA plan, using this year’s full­ time tuition as a base means, students would pay an additional $47 per semester if the total 5 percent increase was implemented. “We m ust keep below 5 percent, and requests for m ore finances from the Legislature will be made to cover the entire increase over that 5 percent,” said Paul Allvin, executive director of ASA. For A SA ’s plan to work, A llvin said tuition must be set in the fall, as it was a few years ago. ASU President LattiS Coor said he wants to keep setting tuition each spring because set­ ting tuition in the fall is not practical. “Financial decisions have to be made on an annual basis,” Coor said. “I don’t think it’s wise to put tuition on a multi-year basis.” T urn to T uition , page 2. C om m ittee: C hanges n eed ed in evalu ation o f tenured p rofessors By L isa G onderinger State P ress A S U 's curren t system o f post-tenure evaluations is in need of a facelift, accord­ ing to University faculty and officials. The C om m ittee on the E valuation of Instruction, chaired by Jay Braun of the psychology department, will present a paper to A SU P ro v o st M ilton G lick la te r this sem ester callin g for changes in the way tenured faculty members are evaluated at ASU. including increasing the time between evaluations and placing less emphasis on student evaluations. C urrently, new faculty members work six probationary years before they can be granted tenure. After that, they are reviewed each year by a committee of their peers or department chairs who evaluate their teach­ ing. research and service. R esults from these evaluations determine percentages for pay raises. But annual review s do not encourage excellence at ASU, Braun said. “These evaluations look at one year at a time,” he said. “But every individual profes­ sor has different patterns of productivity. S c o t t T r im b le / S t a t e P r e s s Jennifer Burke, a 19-year-old A S U sophom ore, skim s the water during the A S U WaterSki D evils tryout M onday at C rystal Point in Gilbert. T he W aterSki D evils will com pete in the W estern Collegiate R egionals this w eekend in Bakersfield, Calif. T urn to T enure, page 2. O fficials: Legalese dulls Proposition 300 s point By E lizabeth A ppelen State P ress M a r k K ra m e r/ S ta te P r e s s With ¡ess than two m onths rem aining until the election, Steve Pickett (left) inform s stu­ d ents about Prop ositio n 300 at C a d y Mall. IN S ID E STA TE PRESS Weather Outlook Mostly sunny, warmer. High 101, low 75. rv ¿ sL V K A land control proposition facing voters in November is being fiercely debated, but offi­ cials say many of the Proposition 300’s points — whether good or bad — are clouded by confusing legal language. “It’s not any different than (existing) laws, but this is supposed to be for non-lawyers,” said Rob Melnick of the school of public affairs. “They (lawyers) don’t think in practi­ cal terms.” Proposition 300, the Regulatory Takings Act, was designed to require Arizona to mea­ sure the full impact a proposed restriction may have on property use before limiting land owners’ rights. It would mandate that the state government compensate landowners for the revenue they lost if the government placed restrictions on their property. Supporters of Proposition 300 say it will protect private property owners’ rights; oppo­ ► A committee is planning for the Super Bowl, and classes may even be moved. Page 9. ^ Tempe mayor Neil Giuliano discussed Rio Salado developments and the University Drive plans at a student forum yesterday. Page 7. nents of the proposition say it will limit the governm ent’s power to act for the public good. Sandy B ahr, a rep resen tativ e o f the Arizona Community Protection Committee, said the proposition is too confusing. She said the Legislature should clarify the proposi­ tion’s wording if it wants voters to understand it and cast educated votes. “Lawyers benefit from a confusing law,” she said. Melnick said that any proposition voters find confusing has a higher likelihood of fail­ ing because people are not sure what the pro­ posal’s implications are. “When people don’t know what they are voting on, they vote no,” Melnick said. If passed, Proposition 300 would allow a bill signed by Gov. Fife Symington in 1992 to go into effect. The law was challenged through petitions within 90 days of its signing, requiring it to face the voters in November’s World/ Nation Jury selection began M onday in the O.J. Sim pson murder trial, as media and specta­ tors crowded outside. Page 3. Sports Kori Davidson and the A SU w om en’s tennis team are preparing for a tough 199495 schedule. Page 13. general election. Mike Shirra, supporter of the proposition and director of information for the Arizona Farm Bureau Federation, said the proposition requires the government pay land owners fair­ ly when it restricts land use. “If the government is going to regulate ... they have to take into consideration the effects that the restrictions have with the land own­ ers,” he said. Louis Weschler, professor of the school of public affairs, said Proposition 300 incorrectly portrays itself as a proposition that would pro­ tect property rights. “It (Proposition 300) will reduce the ability o f public authority to regulate,” he said. “Officials will have more difficulty in protect­ ing public health.” Bahr, who is opposed to the proposition, said taxpayers will have to pay for litigation against the state when land owners try to sue for compensation. Where To Find It C la ssified s ............................. 14 C om ics..................................... 12 C rossw ord........................... 11 H oroscopes .......................... .15 O pinion.................................... ..4 Police R eport......................... Sports....................................... 13 T oday’s A ctivities .....\....... ..2 W orld/N ation......................... ..3 ..6 Page 2 Tuesday, September 27, 1994 S t a t e P ress Tuition T oday C o n tin u e d f r o m The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-com e, first-serve basis and are printed on a space -available basis. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Entries m ust contain the fu ll name o f the club or organization, a description c fth e event, date, time and the fid l address o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries witl be discarded 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. • Amnesty Internationa]— Human rights advocacy group. General meet­ ing. 5 p.nt, MUAB Conference Room 1A, MU third floor. • Giui Devils — Practical Pistol Shoot, Rio Salado. 4:30 p.m., meet at IHOP, College and Apache Trail. • Christian Science Organization — Weekly meeting. 5 p.m., Danforth Chapel. • Learning Resource Center — Test taking workshop: “How to improve your skills on essay and multiple choice tests.“ Open to all ASU students. 1 p m , MU Ventana C, Room 226C. • Alpha Zeta — Reception for Dr. Will Sherman, director of Arizona Agricultural Statistic Service. Lecture to follow. 5:30 p.m., Business Building, BAC 116. • National Press P hotographer’s Association — First meeting o f the year. Get involved, and learn from professionals in the community. 7 p m , MU Kaibab, Room 208E. • AISES — General meeting. Everyone, including all majors, is wel­ comed. 5 p m , American Indian Institute. • Society for Creative Anachronism —«• Weekly meeting a id workshop for new and old members. Everyone invited. 7 p m -9:30 pan., MU Gold North, Room 2Q3N. • Arizona Outing Club — Weekly meeting, everyone is welcome. 7:30 p m , MU Pima. • Northlight Gallery — Galiety talk by Eric Kronengold, photographer represented in “ASU Photo/Photo Studies Faculty Exhibition.” 11 a m , Matthews Hall. • Lam bda League — General meeting, discussion o f NCOW plans. 11 a m , Lambda League Office. • Baptist Student Union — Tuesday PJM., fun and fellowship. Tope: “Under What Authority?” 7 p m ., Baptist Student Union, 1322 S. Mill Ave. • W riting C enter — Seminar: “ ‘A ’ Papers and Essay Exams.” 3:30 p m -4 :3 0 p m ., Language and Literature Building basement, Room A46. fr o m A U T O M O T I V E 30 W • 10W 30 • 10W 40 I • Tires • Alignments • Brakes • Shocks/Struts • Custom Wheels FREE Delivery To Your W orker Home. p a g e federal deficit,” he said. If the state does not pay, the quality of education would suffer, Carroll said. Allvin said this excuse is among “classic threats” made by administrators. There are ways other than “cutting classes” to streamline finances, Allvin said, calling ASA’s plan “profound and innovative.” Regent Doug Wall said he feels if any new plan is adopted by ABOR, the agreement with students must come first, even if the state gives less money. “I think you go with the commitment to students and the universities will have to cut back programs and do with less money,” Wall said. 1. One professor may have a spectacular teaching year, but their research was weaker. Or someone else may focus on the culmination of a research project and not devote as much time to their teaching. Neither one will get a top-flight evaluation, yet they are both contribut­ ing valuable assets to the University.” Braun said administrators would get a better picture of faculty performance, the emphasis of which may change from semester to semester, by having evalua­ tions every three years instead of every year. Glick said he agrees with a more in-depth approach to evaluation. “Right now there is a lot of emphasis placed on stu­ dent evaluations,” he said. “But we need a more holis­ tic way of evaluating teaching. Every three years is fairer because it allows us to look at faculty members’ actions in a broader framework and see their progress and contributions more clearly.” The committee’s paper suggests the basis for the three-year evaluation should be a teaching portfolio that includes three sections: • The products of good teaching, including test scores, essays and published work of students; • Material from oneself, including list of course materials prepared for students and information of research conducted on one’s own teaching and; • Information provided by others, including student evaluations, statements from colleagues who have 1$ 1 1. Tenure C o n tin u e d ir LÜB£f "ÔfL F Í tfÉ R " 1 T I R E p a g e Alan Carroll, ASU’s director of fiscal planning and analysis, said that setting tuition in the spring “benefits the students” because the state will appropriate less money if it knows tuition already has been increased. Both groups began working on their proposals after the Arizona Board of Regents agreed to seek student input. Either proposal would have to be approved by the regents before it could be implemented. Carroll said he feels students are “wonderful” for their initiative in tackling the situation, but unrealistic. In both plans, the universities would have to rely on the state to make up any differences. “My guess is that future students would end up paying for expenses of present students, much like the ¡ Lubrícate your vehicle & chassis, drain old oil, add up to 5 qts. of new oil and ! install a new oil filter. Diesel extra. Most cars and light trucks. Includes a 17 pt. ! vehicle maintenance Inspection. Plus : $1.75 oil disposal charge. ^ Expires 10-27-94. observed teaching and statements from administrators or employers of students. Glick said once the final draft of the paper is sub­ mitted, making changes could be a multi-year project. “We need to have a broad discussion on campus,” he said. “We want to give students and faculty a chance to comment before we make any final deci­ sions.” Discussion of changes in tenure reach beyond ASU. The Arizona Board of Regents set the goal this year of examining national trends regarding faculty service, including the current tenure system in Arizona. Regent Rudy Campbell said the discussion about tenure began because it was recommended that faculty for the proposed Pima County campus be hired with­ out tenure. “Everyone got worried we were going to do away with tenure at all Arizona universities,” he said. ‘The truth is, there are some drawbacks to tenure and we just need to make sure we are aware of all sides of the discussion.” Campbell said one of the arguments made against tenure is that faculty members are not as motivated once they have the job security that accompanies tenure. Braun said he understands this side of the tenure argument, but feels that it is unfair. DON’T BE JUST A NUMBER! j rc b M P U T E R rZ E D “ ' 2 0 3 3 W. U n iv e rsity 644-1201 (D obson & University) ! 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Members of Delta Kappa Epsilon, representatives from DKE International, and the ASU DKE Alumni Association will be on campus this weekl If you're interested in making new friends, doing well in school, and being more involved on cam pus...Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity is looking for you! P le a s e c o m e to our orientation r PAI 1 L6¡5 0 -4 7 9 J v M L L QUEST BOXING WORKOUT * 114 S. Country Club Oust south of Main Street) 649-3224 TODAY 3pm -530pni Pinal Rm M em orial Union _______W orld/N ation _______ STATE P ress ______________________________________________________________ Tuesday, September 27, 1994 S i m p s o n T r ia l : D ______________________________ ay O ne Groups vying for publicity cause chaos outside courthouse LOS ANGELES (AP) — A radio station had promised the start of the O.J. Simpson trial Monday would be a cir­ cus. The acrobats and jugglers didn't make it, but the scene outside the courthouse was still, well, a circus. H aw kers offered Sim pson m em orabilia and barkers advocated causes ranging from religion to childrens’ pro­ grams at the YMCA. M edia trailers filled a nearby parking lot and hot dog vendors competed with caterers who delivered meals to some news organizations. On Sunday, KIIS-FM took out a full-page ad in The Los A ngeles Times featuring a picture of acrobats and promis­ ing a “Media Circus provided by Circus Vargas.” The station ended up not hiring the performers. “It was a last minute decision ... you can only be so irreverent. We wanted to be involved, but it’s not some­ thing that is totally congruent to humor,” said Steve Perun, program director for KIIS-FM. He said the ad had cost about $20,000. Simpson faces two first-degree murder charges in the June 12 stabbing deaths o f his ex-w ife, N icole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman. About 200 people, mostly reporters, crowded the down­ town street outside the block-long courthouse. They were kept at bay by orange pylons and rope that carved out an aisle for attorneys and potential jurors to walk down the stairs to the building’s entrance. “It’s very annoying,” defense attorney David Herriford said as he waited for an elevator inside the building. “In the attorney lounge it’s the main subject of discussion. ... Most are concerned about the extra five minutes at the elevator, about pushing through the crowds. It takes longer to get in and out.” Among those trying to get into the courthouse were 219 prospective jurors who were told to appear before Superior Court Judge Lance Ito. For those who couldn’t serve, Eddie Dee had a com­ memorative button for only $1. “O.J. Juror Reject, Didn’t Make the Cut,” it reads. Dee said he was drawn to the frenzy “for the money. That’s right — that’s the only reason I’m doing this.” He flashed a wad of bills from his pocket. Nearby, James Horton was selling “Free O.J.” T-shirts and caps embossed with “Shapiro vs. Clark’ ’ scrawled atop two opposing boxing gloves. In a m ore seriou s to n e, W om en A gainst V iolence draped long banners along a wall by the courthouse decry­ ing spousal abuse. “It so often leads to murder,” said Stephanie Boggs of West Hollywood. “I think this is an opportunity to get our voices heard and turn it around.” If their voices could be heard above the ruckus, that is. The onslaught of journalists from at least 75 news orgaT urn t o Slayings, page 11. Unidentified p eop le p o se with a card board cutout p hoto of O .J. S im p so n o u tsid e the L o s A n g e le s C rim inal C o u rts Build ing M onday. Media and spectators are creating a circus-like sce n e outside the building as jury selection in the S im p so n trial begins. Jury selection begins; 219 prospective jurors screened LOS ANGELES (AP) — O.J. Simpson faced his first wave of prospective jurors Monday, a group of more than 200 people ordered to fill out 75 pages of questions about their personal lives and their thoughts on (he murder case. Those reporting for jury duty had to-pass' a phalanx of news crews, demonstrators and entrepreneurs outside the courthouse hawking everything from T-shirts and caps to buttons reading: “ O.J. Juror Reject, Didn’t Make the Cut.” Before distributing the questionnaires, Superior Court Judge Lance Ito dismissed a batch of jury prospects that included at least one physically disabled person and others who said their employers would only pay them for up to 10 days of jury service. The trial could last up to six months. “ Five dollars a day doesn’t quite make it,” Ito said of the money the county will pay jurors to serve. The judge had potential jurors fill out so-called hardship questionnaires before even getting to the 75-page question­ naires. The m ore detailed questionnaire has not been released to the public. Of the first batch of 219 prospective jurors, 65 said they could endure a long trial and the possibility o f being sequestered away from their families. Ninety-one said it would be a hardship, and 63 said they weren’t sure if they could do it. Also Monday, prosecutors asked Ito to postpone individ­ ual questioning of jury prospects until after a crucial hear­ ing on the adm issibility o f D N A evidence. The judge scheduled a hearing Wednesday to consider that request. Ito has said he will decide whether to sequester the jury after hearing from the prospective jurors how publicity has affected them. Simpson, who was present as the jury candidates filled out the 75-page questionnaires, is charged with hacking to death ex-w ife N icole B row n Sim pson and her friend Ronald Goldman on June 12. Ito has proposed selecting 12 jurors and eight alternates, then sending them home during the DNA hearing. But prosecutors contend the hearing could take a month, during which jurors would be exposed to publicity and con­ versations that might prejudice them. They suggested having prospective jurors fill out the questionnaires, then go home until sometime in November, when they would return for personal questioning. T urn t o Scene, page 11. Clinton lifts some U .S. sanctions on H aiti trade, travel Other nations, U.N. urged to follow suit UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Citing “a m om ent o f opportunity” for democracy. President Clinton lifted travel, trade and most other U.S. sanctions against Haiti on Monday and urged other nations to follow suit. C lin to n to ld th e U .N . G e n e ra l Assembly that lifting the sanctions would hasten reb u ild in g o f the im poverished country and was being done “in the spirit of reconciliation and reconstruction.” He suggested the sanctions w ere no longer needed, with American and other forces firm ly in place in the C aribbean co u n try to e n fo rc e the U .S .-b ro k e re d agreement to restore exiled president JeanBertrand Aristide to power by Oct. 15. But Clinton said some sanctions would remain in force — including a freezing of bank accounts and other assets — against Haiti’s military leaders and their support­ ers. The U.S. government has a list o f 600 people with ties to H aiti’s military junta who will remain under the sanctums, offi- friends and not invaders” in Haiti, it is cials said. M adeleine Albright, the U .S. am bas­ critical that humanitarian aid begin flow­ sador to the U nited N atio n s, later told ing to maintain that idea. Taking note o f the violence over the rep orters th at leaving the san ctions in place on the m ilitary leaders and th e ir weekend in Cap-Haitien, Perry said that associates was designed to turn up the heat U.S. forces have been told to defend them­ selves and that the Marines involved in the on them to leave the country by Oct. 15. She said the United States would seek a shoot-out had acted within the military’s quick vote on lifting remaining U.N. trade rules of engagement. ’ He cautioned Congress anew about set­ sanctions on H aiti, even though it may contain a “trigger” that they would not be ting a specific date for a troop withdrawal, fully rem oved until A ristide is back in saying that would “complicate our m ili­ tary operations.” power. Clinton’s lifting o f the U.S. embargo The United States is encouraging exiled H aitian parliam entarians to return for a on Haiti came as more than 200 Haitians key session Wednesday in Port-au-Prince who had fled their hom eland boarded a to co n sid er am nesty le g islatio n — an C oast G uard cu tter at the U .S. base at important step in persuading the military Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to return to Portleaders to leave. U.S. forces will provide au-Prince. A ristide him self had urged an end to security for the legislators once the session the sanctions on Sunday. A trade ban was is convened. A w eek after A m erican soldiers and imposed by the Bush administration after M arines landed peacefully, Clinton said Aristide was deposed in a 1991 coup, and the operation demonstrates that “progress additional sanctions, including a ban on can be made when a coalition backs up 'c o m m ercial flights and the blocking o f financial transactions, were imposed earli­ diplomacy with military power.” At the Pentagon, meanwhile, Defense er this year. Critics have argued that the people hurt Secretary W illiam Perry cautioned that w hile U.S. troops are being greeted “as m ost have been the hungry populace —•% not the leaders — o f the poorest and most c ro w d e d n a tio n in the W estern Hemisphere. R egularly scheduled com m ercial air flights between the United States and Haiti were expected to be resumed in a matter o f days. Other travel restrictions and the freeze on financial transactions were also ended. Americans will be able to send as much money as they want to relatives in Haiti, instead of the $50-per-month limit now in place. And shipments of any food prod­ ucts will be allowed. Under the sanctions, only staples — wheat, flour rice and beans — were allowed in. “ I urge a ll o th e r n a tio n s to do the same” in lifting sanctions, Clinton said. “Essential civil order will be restored. Human rights violations will be curbed. ... The military leaders will step down, the democratic government will be restored, President Aristide will return,” Clinton said. W ith troops and aid from m pre than tw o do^ere: n atio n s; h e lp in g in H a iti, Clinton said the international community w as “giv in g th e peo p le o f H aiti th e ir chance at freedom .... All have contributed to this moment o f opportunity.” .................... ..- -..........-...... - O pinion Page 4 Tuesday, September 27, 1994 Y ou’ll p robably n ev er h e a r ab o u t A lan F rost and M elanie Sm ith in y o u r W estern civilization class. B u t they ju s t m ay go d o w n in history here at A SU — as the founding figures o f graduate stu­ d en t governm ent. F ro st and Sm ith, in th eir respective positions as p resident o f the A ssociated S tudents o f A SU and p resid en t o f the G rad u ate S tu d en t C ouncil — a n d , a c a d e m ica lly sp e a k in g , b o th g rad u ate students — are proposing som eth in g a little rev ­ olutionary: a separate branch o f stu d en t govern­ m ent to m eet the needs o f g raduate students. N early 26 percent o f A S U ’s stu d en t po p u la­ tio n a re g ra d u a te stu d e n ts — o v e r 1 0,000 o f w hom are rep resented through th e tw o senatori­ al chairs allocated to the graduate college. B ut it is q u e s tio n a b le w h e th e r o r n o t g ra d u a te p ro ­ gram s receive a p roportional am ount o f funding. D o n ’t tread on m e, indeed: th e issu e o f funding h as b een the c a ta ly st fo r se ssio n s o f g ra d u a te g o v e rn m e n t at d o z e n s o f u n iv e rs itie s in p a s t decades. B u t b ew a re th e re d c o a ts: o p p o sitio n seem s im m inent if m om entarily m uted w ith in the ranks o f the u ndergraduate rep resen tativ es in student g o v ern m en t. T h e lo ss o f o v e r a q u a rte r o f the current am o u n t o f funding threaten s m o re than o n e s a c re d co w an d sp e c ia l in te re s t — a n d a quarter o f those student fees w ould be lost if or w hen th e g ra d u a te stu d e n ts seced e. Ironically, tw o c e n tu rie s a fte r th e A m e ric a n R e v o lu tio n w e’re re tu rn in g to the issu es o f rep resen tatio n and taxation. B efo re g rad u ate stu d en ts d o n the w ar paint and start h u rlin g tea b ales in to the S alt R iver, there’s a cautionary note to be injected: w e have y e t to h e a r m u c h a b o u t th e s t r u c t u r e . Specifically, in term s o f size, p o sitions, relation­ ship to existing branches o f student g overnm ent and specific pow ers. (We have, how ever, heard about the salaries — a p ro p o sed tuitio n w aiver fo r e x e c u tiv e o ffic e rs a n d $ 1 0 0 fo r se n a to rs, roughly p ar to the am ount o f m oney a graduate assistant earns for exerting a sim ilar am o u n t o f tim e and effort in academ ic affairs.) Frost describes h im self as an “ideas m an;” w e n ow n eed to k n o w w h o w ill p la y A le x a n d e r H am ilton and T hom as Jefferson to his T hom as Paine. B ut if F ro st and S m ith can tran scen d th e gap from ideas to actuality, th en p erhaps som ething significant will be gained. It seem s fa r b etter to a c h ie v e a q u ie t a g re e m e n t th a n to c re a te th e equ iv alen t o f L exington a n d C o n co rd . A n d so, they plan to have a proposal read y b y the en d o f the sem ester. T he h o p e w e ’re o ffe re d is th a t o f a g re a te r voice fo r a heretofore q u ie t m inority. A nd isn ’t that w hat g o v ern m en t is about: rep ­ resenting the interests o f ev ery o n e? STATE PRESS JASON OWSLEY, Editor TAFF D™ S STATE PRESS iWCH THt LOQkL-rPU<£ pEfff TUBA T& P EK m p t U N ftS lE Tb INifcKvfcNE P O N P g g TW£ ft»Nl >o, y o u w a n t t o b e a w r i t e r . . . V f e w t n i n cr po tY » o T 7 I have always thought about it just in the back of my head. IM a r J o r y Heck, I’m a writer, I could do this. I could actually make some K a m i n s k i good m oney if I decided on Opinion writing a romance novel. Editor Now, don’t laugh please, I realized how degrading it may be, but it would be a good way of making some quick money and enjoying a piece of pub­ lished work. After all, Jackie Collins and Danielle Steel write this crap and they’re rich. It took a while for me to dodge the critical words of my acquaintances once I told them what I was attempting. They kept saying things such as, “Don’t do it,” “You’ll make a bad name for yourself,” “You’re much better than that,” blah blah... I had to agree with that. I didn’t want to be known as the socalled journalist who writes smut I also didn’t think I wanted to be attending book signings with Ivana Trump. Not wanting to min what little reputation I have, I decided to go with a pen name and write the story. I was going to put aside my studies and write it this past summer. I set aside my work and started research in the skill of writing sleazy novels. Ugh, reading the constant mushy novels with some picture of the over-publicized Fabio on the cover, (He’s not that great! I just don’t get it). I still plowed on throughout the summer, I read con­ stant stories, studying the technique until I believed that I was actually ready to do this. I hopped onto my computer desk and stared at the terminal. On the pea-green screen, I had typed my “sultry pen name”, Tamara McKinnley, and the tide, Seductive Passions, under­ neath. Well, it was a typical name. Don’t those romance books get chosen off the shelves by the tide and the author anyhow? I now need to find my subjects to base my characters on. The woman was easy, me. Naw, I’m just kidding. I chose my semiintelligent friend, Janine, who has graced these pages before. Her husband wasn’t going to cut it for the male counterpart, so I had to look on. I couldn’t find much. My friend Rod offered to be the male model for the picture, but seeing that he had put on 40 pounds as of late, I told him that I’d call him .... someday. I started looking into the detail of the romance scenes, dealing with the historical ones and the more recendy based ones. I just started typing about a woman named Marie and despite the fact that she was gloriously beautiful, she couldn’t get a date A: t i 1 r * n until the man, Frank shows up. It was ridiculous. Frank, was starting to be like a Renaissance man who only wore puffy white flowing shirts with ruffles to boot, even though he worked in a downtown law firm. It was getting dumb, but I pressed on. Heck, I had nothing else to do that summer. During this time, I started hating Marie and Frank. They kept doing things that were so wrong and silly. Frank cried too much and Marie wouldn’t let herself be kissed. This kept extending the book but all I kept reading was the same scene after another. Sure, I had about 250 pages already printed out, but what was on them stunk. I started getting so bitter toward those writers of Harlequin and Silhouette books, because to my humiliation, I could not write like them! Yes, it was true. All these years thinking that if my career ever backfired I would be able to rely on the talent of being able to write sleaze and I couldn’t have been more wrong. I had felt so proud back then. This past summer, I was just humiliated. Desperate, I called my best friend Randall, who usually has some decent advice for me when I’m down on my writing. He laughed when he heard what I was doing. After I shut him up, I asked for some help. He was silent for a few minutes then said, “I don’t know, really. If you want I could give you a history of my romance.” I said no, already knowing the details and not wanting to hear about them again. I was destitute and I wasn’t going to get any help. I sat in my apartment, smoking Camels, eating Whoppers and watching Days o f Our Lives and the other steamy soaps that fol­ lowed it After a couple weeks of remaining in the same melancholy, vegetative state, I suddenly glanced at my computer and saw the printed-out junk hanging out of it I thought for a second. Should I? Could I? Yeah, I bet I could, but not then, not there. While “use your imagination,” has been my credo for writing, my mind seemed to run a blank — whether it be because I was too embarrassed to write about these things, or because of the fact that romance novels were just not for me, I couldn’t get into it. Temporarily giving up, I grabbed my pile of smut and threw my sheets of printed-out crap into the garbage. For a few minutes, I stared at he garbage. I thought about it, then took the papers out and put them in a file. Perhaps I could try it again sometime, maybe when I 'm ready to let my imagination g°But for now, I think I’ll just write on reality; it makes things much more interesting. A. M arjory Kaminski is a seniorjournalism major. STROW, Managing Editor Readicker. KRIS FRIDRICH............................................................. NightEditor P H O T O G R A P H E R S : T h eresa B o ettch er, N. Scott GARIN GROFF.................................................................. City Editor Trimble. GREG ZEMEIDA................ ,....................... Asst. City Editor UNSIGNED EDITOR: James Frusetta DAVID LASPALUTO.....................................................NewsEditor C O LU M N ISTS: Brian Anderson, James Frusetta, Barry A. MARJORY KAMINSKI........................................Opinion Editor Kelley, Diana Lopez, Jamies Mahin, Mike Stevens, Chris CRAIG MACNAUGHTON............................................ Photo Editor Stroud, Bill Tiemey, David Whitlach. JIM POULIN............................................ Asst. Photo Editor CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. JEREMY STEIN.................................. Sports Editor GRAPH IC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. DAWN WAGNER...................................Asst. Sports Editor PR O D U C T IO N : Aaron Bratcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth KEN COLLINS.........................................................MagazineEditor French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, ANNA U LINICH............................... A sst Magazine Editor Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. R E P O R T E R S : M ika A kikuni, E lizab eth A ppelen, S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : E m ily B erger, Dan C h ristin a B ailey , Tim B axter, L o m e C o h en , D awn Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Megan Owsley, DeChristina, Lisa Gonderinger, Christine Granados, Dave Jennifer Pittman, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten, Marc Wolfe. Proffitt, Karyn Riedel 1. SPO R TS R EPO R TE R S: Todd Kelly, Dan Miller, Lee Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, Newman. decided by a majority voted among its members. They do C O P Y E D IT O R S : N ick B acon, Kim H erm an, Lynn 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 The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room IS, Arizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 8S287-1S02. 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. Thç news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S tate P ress P h o n e N um bers Information........... ....965-7572 Newsroom ................ 965-2292 Magazine...................965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds..................965-6735 O pinion STATE P ress ___________________________________________________ Tuesday, September 2 7,1994 _____________________________________________ Womens studies advocates: Holmstedt s words don’t hold up E d i t o r ’s N o t e Due to the high volum e o f response to Stacy H olm stedt’s column, on Sept. 20, titled "Women studies d o e s n ’t hold up to its n am e” w e could only p rin t excerpts o f the letters sent in. We *4 like to thank you a ll f o r the overwhelm ­ ing respon se an d w e a p o lo g ize that w e cou ld not g e t them all in. I am a women’s studies minor. I am also a man. I am writ­ ing in response to your opinion piece “Purpose of women’s studies doesn’t live up to its purpose.” If you think I’m going to give you a “party-line” defense of women’s studies — as I take it this was your objectic republic — you’re wrong. Listen. In the article, you seem to imply that women’s studies needs to be “defended” on the basis of its marketability or its direct application to a “real world” profession. I think this is a mis­ take. When Oscar Wilde said, for example, that “all ait is quite useless,” he didn’t mean that art was worthless. By the same token, not every major teaches its students how to do something although the noble study of journalism is one exception — but they are quite worthwhile pursuits nonetheless. The women’s studies student is, in my opinion, one of the most capable to be found on any college campus. The reason is this: she is accustomed to thinking from a perspective that run contrary —that quite literally subverts — everything that soci­ ety, the media, the church and the educational system has taught him/her to believe. That is: that women are important; that their uniqueness, their power and their contribution to human society are worthy of not just our “nodding apprecia­ tion,” or even simply our intellectual consideration, but that those things are also worthy of our celebration. Four years of mental gymnastics like that are bound to builda powerful, expansive mind. And that such a mind is valuable in the marketplace is a premise that requires no defense. Aaron C. Schepler Senior English (Women’s Studies Minor) In the 1960s, when I was very little, my sister and I played a board game — the name of which cannot remember — that provided girls with an introduction to what they could be when they grew up. The categories: Mother, Nurse, Teacher, Model, Actress and Secretary. My mother hated that game. Bras were expensive and necessary, so while other women burned their underwear, my mother threw that game on the bonfire, and stirred a bonfire in me and my sister. I suppose I’m one of those left-wing, liberal women Stacy Holmstedt is looking for. Do I have a sense of humor? I think so. I also have a sense of the history of women in America. You have to admit it hasn’t always been funny. Majoring in women’s studies is no more related to becom­ ing a woman than majoring in journalism is to becoming a journalist. Education is not about employment. Education is about learning what has come before us and using that knowl­ edge to better prepare ourselves for the profession of living. Tina Porter Classified Staff Computer Science and Engineering D ept As an assistant professor of women’s studies here at ASU, I would like to offer a few answers to Stacy Holmstedt’s guest column of Sept. 20. First of all, over half the people on earth are w om en; that alone is reason enough to study them. Secondly, back in the ’60s, faculty and students in U.S. univer­ sities realized that women were not being studied; that is why they started women’s studies programs. Now, thousands of students take WST courses every semester at ASU, good evi­ dence that many find the study of women worth their tuition. In addition, the administration of ASU consistently affirms the importance of women’s studies by approving our courses, hir­ ing new faculty and providing an adequate operations budget; clearly they see the value of the study of the lives and accom­ plishments of women. Finally, most employers in this country are now beginning to recognize that awareness of women’s needs will be essential as women gain equity in the workforce; thus, jobs for women’s studies majors are on the increase, unlike those for many in liberal arts majors where a B.A. or B.S. is insufficient for employment. Perhaps women’s studies will eventually “go away.” But if it does, it will be only because all the disciplines have finally begun to fulfill the mission of a liberal education — providing information and encouraging critical learning skills that honor us all, not the limited tradition with which we are so familiar. Annis H. Hopkins, PhJ). Assistant Professor Women’s Studies : o f w o m en ’s stu hold up to it’s n k jT A C Y H o lm sted t Guest Columnist a g a in s t the N a tio n a l vid hurling the stone at a female, had launched a »vement in her biweekly response was watching er’end the wom en's studve them c re d it, fol-ks. defend. After all. what s studies degree? o m e n 's stu d ies m ajor • far. in my opinion. My est but I have to live on isn't available there, ^a B.S. tuisands of >:nen' s The cover is decorated with pictures of with catchy slogans such as "T rust Provide.'' Provide what? A better slogan writer' Inside the cover we loam that lesbii against male slavery! and that abortion ness. It's true. According to the author their unwanted babies face huge emoc risks, while women who abort "simulta; guiitv and very relieved and happy." Ft Go have one. Great feminist literature aside, the r suggest that the law- professor w ho spok would not have her job i f it w eren't for • ment. Oh. how we owe them such a debt. ! admit, the right to vote and the right workplace are the good outcom es of ment. But it should have stopped the demand the right to leave their fam iiiJ lovers, to cut off their husbands* geaitaii for it. to have '.¡legitimate children and ot That, to me. is no debt. As far as job inequality goes, look percent of cartoonists are male. Want to i something iike this: to be a good carte have a sense of humor. Most women :n liberals. If you know a iiheral wort ^ N ^ m ro d u c e her to me. I’d love to ; program is in>fl ^Lwomen m their' ^ ^ ¿ > ld-giil’* >ysi Holmstedt goes on to show an even greater level of igno­ rance when she voices her opinions on feminism. She takes extreme examples of the feminist movement and applies them to everyone, calling all feminists lesbians who desert their fami­ lies, chop of men’s penises and have illegitimate children. I am not a lesbian. I don’t have any children. I’ve never even held a knife to a man’s genitals, let alone gone as far as hacking them off. In addition, a few w eeks ago the S ta te P ress ran a “Generation HeXed” cartoon by Stacy Holmstedt that depicted women’s studies students as bald-headed militants who punch out any man that has the nerve to ask them for a date. I have plenty of hair and none of it is under my arms or on my legs, which is another stereotypical image of feminists that I am sure Holmstedt would have you believing is true of all of us. I never have and never would k.o. any man who approached me in a respectable way. I am a non-gay, non-violent, non-criminal, non-hairy woman. I believe that women and men should have equal opportunities in this world and that gender roles are restrictive for both sexes; therefore, I consider myself a feminist So much for Holmstedt’s stereotypes. I do not claim that women’s studies is flawless;, feminism, too, has its defects. As a woman of color with working class roots, I am painfully aware of the problems and oversights of the women’s movement I never hesitate to call attention to the mistakes of the movement. It is certainly fair to criticize, as long as the criticism is responsible. I try to know what I am talking about when I offer a critique. According to Stacy Holmstedt, ASU should get rid of the women’s studies program. I hope that the next time around, this columnist and cartoonist gets the facts straight before she decides to bash any program. Otherwise, she is an irresponsible journalist and the State Press should get rid of her. Tigress A. Obom Junior Interdisciplinary Studies Ignorance has apparently caused your blind attack women’s studies. Women’s studies is quite a new field, and is bom from our new awareness of the importance of women. Of course, some people may doubt the necessity of this study and its use­ fulness. As you pointed out, what people do after they graduate with a degree in women’s studies causes one to wonder. But most people do not work in their field after they graduate. Your ridiculous example of “I want to be, um, a woman” exposes only your ignorant view toward your shameful understanding of females. Then because you cannot find any answer to this question or look at it from a different perspective, you resist looking and complain instead. Aren’t you too self-centered and narrow minded? Aren’t universities ideally places to provide more awareness of any field? Why can’t you accept that learn­ ing is painful yet basically harmless and give others enlighten­ ment? I wrote these words from my heart because I could not allow you to harm women’s studies with ignorant words. My advice for you would be to make close-friends with someone in women’s studies so you can learn more and show more com­ passion to other people. I thank you, my good friend, for your honest opinion. I respect your courage to speak up. I would like to hear other opinions about women’s studies, so that people can be more informed. Hwang-Hye Chenn Senior Broadcasting Holmstedt stated, “If you know a liberal woman with a sense of humor, introduce her to me. I’d love to see what one looks like.” If a sense of humor and liberalism are an unattainable goal for a woman, I have clearly been living a lie. I am so grate­ ful that Holmstedt exposed the “truth” about women’s studies. Now that I realize the differences and conflicts between women, men and society aren’t worth investigating, I can rest easy and concentrate on finding the sense of humor that a gen­ eralizing, narrow-minded editorial assumes I lack. Mindy Adams Junior Humanities I hardly think feminism “should have stopped there.” I can personally attest to what happens to women who refuse to back down from the “old-boy” network in Phoenix, Arizona, and I assure you that your assessment of the “95 percent male” pro­ fession you have chosen is a gross oversimplification. Need I remind you that you are working in the protected environment of a “liberal” college community? Judging by the tone of your rhetoric, it seems obvious that you have never really stopped to consider the very real inequities against which feminism fights tirelessly in behalf of all women, including you. Feminists are individuals of diverse opinions who can nei­ ther be summarily defined nor neatly categorized. Your attempt to paint us as a crazed mob of man-hating lesbians who relish the idea of abortion and have no regard for the welfare of our children is ludicrous. Clearly, a few courses in women’s studies would be of great benefit to you, providing, of course, that you can tear yourself away from “Uncle Rush” long enough Kelley O’Toole Junior Religious Studies OK, Stacy Holmstedt, you did your job. You got a reaction from me. Forget a journalist working for the greater good of society, let’s make a profit. Reaction from the readers is what we work for. First, Moody-Jennings’ point was that N.O.W. does not speak for her and that women everywhere should know what N.O.W. says before they commit the mortal sin of admitting to be feminists. Did you read the article? Second, Melcher and Ferraro wanted to remind MoodyJennings and readers that N.O.W. is not the spokesperson for all feminists. Our women’s studies programs offer one way to edu­ cate the masses and leaders of tomorrow about the contributions women have made to society. Have you taken WST 300? Personally, I will take my degrees and create newscasts that acknowledge more women’s issues, especially since women’s issues affect everyone. If women stop having children the whole human race suffers. Feminism is the act of celebrating women’s unique abilities and not penalizing them. Finally, do your degree justice. Research before you write and edit before you send it to print. Jacqui Edwards-Pagel Senior Women’s Studies/ Broadcasting Stacy Holmstedt is bitter. Bitter about her long drive to school. So, how does she relieve herself from this bitterness? Write a classless, biased and poorly researched piece of journal­ istic crap. She does this to vent her frustration by using women studies as a scapegoat for her long drive to school. Yeah, that’s the ticket! As a student here at this fine learning institution, at one point, I was skeptical about the program. It wasn’t until I had the fulfilling experience to attend and participate in courses relating to women’s studies, that the skepticism disappeared and I learned that the stereotypes I held were false Women possess talents to help benefit and further the world we live in. Unfortunately, throughout history, the ability to express these talents were limited and, in some cases, prohibited by the dominating Euro-centric male society. It is clear that Stacy Holmstedt is a talented writer in perpet­ uating negative stereotypes in a society sick and tired of being labeled. What a shame! James Edwards Senior Sociology Page 6 S t a t e P ress Tuesday, September 2 7,1994 P o l ic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents Monday: Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: • A male employee reported that someone stole four memo­ ry chips from the Computing Commons. • Three male students were contacted at Manzanita Hall while acting suspiciously. They were advised of ASU poli­ cy on loitering. • A male student was arrested for theft at Sixth Street and Stadium Drive. • A m ale student was contacted at O cotillo Hall while shouting obscenities. • A male student reported that someone removed a portable CD player from his room at Palo Verde West. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was arrested on an out­ standing warrant for failure to appear in court and provid­ ing false information to law enforcement. • A male student and two men unaffiliated with ASU were contacted at the Fine Arts Annex for rollerblading. They were advised of University policy, and they left the area. • A 23-year-old man was arrested for felony shoplifting and criminal trespass at Mega Foods on 1140 W. Elliot Rd. He had been observed concealing a bottle o f tequila in his pants. He had been warned one week prior for shoplifting and trespassing at the same store. • A 46-year-old Tempe man was arrested for aggravated assault, resisting arrest and misdemeanor assault. He hit his sister on her ear with his hand. When arrested, he punched two police officers and injured the hand of a third officer. • A 43-year-old man was arrested for indecent exposure to someone under 15 and urinating in public. He allegedly uri­ nated on the second floor o f a balcony, then turned and exposed his penis to a 13-year-old girl. • A 31-year-old Tempe man was arrested for possession of dangerous drugs, possession of marijuana, and possession of drug paraphernalia. A search warrant was served at the m an’s house in the 1500 block o f East D onner St. His It'S It's It's It's it's It's ltJS Its It's It's 9¿¡i-Xer' It's - VT It's It's It's It's It's It's It's Methamphetamine and marijuana were found in the bed­ room. • Two men, 18 and 19, were arrested for disorderly conduct after righting outside of the Native New Yorker restaurant at 1301 E. Broadway Rd. • A 37-year-old Tempe woman was arrested for possession of marijuana. While investigating a domestic violence call, an officer noticed a plastic bag down the front o f the woman’s shirt. A search revealed that the bag contained the suspected marijuana. • A 29-year-old Tempe man was arrested for driving on a suspended license and for delaying and obstructing justice. The man abandoned his vehicle in an alley, and the officer went to the suspect’s address, where the man arrived with h is dog. The m an is also w an ted on an o u tsta n d in g Washington warrant for robbery, but Washington will not extradite. Compiled by S ta te P re s s reporter Karyn Riedell free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. tr e e . free. free. free. free. f r ee. f r ee. free. f r ee. D L D F E P ress P a r is $931' Amsterdam London Costa Rica Caracas Auckland Tokyo $311* $249* $189* $239* $478* $299* ALWAYS COSTS L E S S THAN 1 - 8 0 0 - C 0 LLECT. H e l l o ? Want t h e L o w e s t L o w e r t h a n Because THE CODE a l w a y s t h a t o t h e r c o s ts p r i c e f o r number? Less a Th e n than coL l e d d i a l t h i s c a l l ? one. 1 - 8 0 0 - C O L L E C T . *Fares are each w ay from Phoen ix based ori-VrO undtrip purchase. Restrictions apply.^nd taxes not included. Call for oift&f W oridwide destinations \txirlhje Voice. Council Travel / Drop by f a a FREE Student Travels magazine 1£0 E. University, Ste: E T£m pe, ftZ 85281 j rotated at Forest and University X&rectly acbss from ASU.) 966-3544 Eurailpasses issued on-the-spot! ©1994 AT&T FO R A LL IN TERSTA TE C A LLS . A ot »o CT P ag e 7 Tuesday, September 27, 1994- S tate P ress Giuliano: city plans development for Rio Salado B y M ika S usana A kikuni S tate P ress C om m ercial and m ulti-fam ily developm ents will be built on the waste land along the Salt River as part of the Rio Salado P roject, Tem pe M ayor N eil G iuliano said Monday. According to Giuliano, the city is also planning to con­ struct a 2-mile-long and 80-feet-wide lake and a golf course on the property in the future. "The Rio Salado Project is not only going to be benefi­ cial to Tempe, but also to Arizona," Giuliano said. “It is going to bring in hundreds of millions of dollars.” The project was created to improve the nearly 5-mile stretch of undeveloped land north of campus. Giuliano talked about the Rio Salado Project and other to p ics in the M em orial U nion prog ram m in g L ounge Monday afternoon as part of InfoASU, an informal forum sponsored by Associated Students of ASU. Giuliano, an ASU alumnus and a former ASASU presi­ dent, said the Rio Salado Project has been on Tem pe’s drawing board for nearly 25 years. Randi Bilbo, a junior broadcasting major, questioned why Tempe needs another golf course since most students will not be able to afford to play on one. Giuliano said the golf course will not be located near ASU but near Price Road. The mayor also spoke about the city’s preparations for the 1996 Super Bowl. Tem pe’s Super Bowl committees are studying how they will handle traffic during the game week, which will take place when school is in session, he said. Although no construction will be necessary in Tempe for the Super Bowl, Giuliano said that Sun Devil Stadium will undergo some lighting and sound modifications before the game. “W e are trying to be proactive in the Super Bowl (prepa­ ration),” Giuliano said, adding that the city is planning a block party to take place in downtown Tempe before the games so everyone can get a flavor o f the Super Bowl even if they do not have the tickets. The m ayor also discussed possible im provem ents to University Drive. “I don’t think anything will be happening to University D rive im m ed iately ,” G iu lian o said. “B ut it is a good J i m P o u lin / S t a t e P r e s s Tempe mayor Neil Giuliano talked with students Monday at InfoASU, a forum designed by ASASU to bring issues and key figures to students. Giuliano talked about plans for the development along the Rio Salado, as well as plans for the Super Bowl and the redesigning of University Drive. concept to be looking into.” He said the city would like to improve University Drive from about the Southern Pacific Railroad tracks to College Avenue. Tempe hopes to reduce traffic on the street, mak­ ing it more pedestrian-oriented, Giuliano said. BE DISCOVERED C a stin g D irecto r Je n n ife r M iller from the O R IG IN A L M odel S e a rch M agazine will be in T E M P E this Thursday O N LY! For the past 8 years, Model Search Magazine's listings have appeared in major movies, TV shows, commercials, conventions and selected by some o f the top 10 modeling agencies in New York and LA. FREE SCREENING M o d e ls & A cto rs, Amateurs and professionals, m en , w om en a n d c h ild r e n (4 yrs & older)* *Under 18 must be accompanied by parent. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29TH 7:00 P.M. Embassy Suites Hotel 4400 South Rural Road D O N ’T M ISS IT C A LL 230-5376 FOR MORE INFORMATION D O N ’T M ISS IT Tuesday, September 27, 1994 S t a t e P ress Survey calling dorm s “dungeons”was unscientific O FF A N Y regular priced ASU Champion T-Shirt J B y K im W atson S pec ia l t o t h e S tate P ress taOKIA ! I M A G E S 725 S. R URAL R D. TEMPE COR N ER STON E * 82 9 -1 7 4 3 EXP. 10-11-94 \Mà OCE4NSIDE ICE 4REN4 S k t t o o r D ie r 1 PASS •1 st person pays admission •2 n d person skates FREE! •Skate rental only $1.50 1520 N. McClintock • 947-2470 (next to Big Surf) Expires 12 17 9 4 ¡99«SKATERENTAL! o* Oxygen In-Line | PER HOUR z, Register W to w in a FREE PAIR < 4 of O xygen Blades a* P age 8 i, The co-author of a national guide that ranked ASU’s res­ idence halls among the worst in the country admitted that students were asked only one question about their rooms. “The question asked students if their dorm room was comfortable,” said Ed Custard, co-author of the Princeton Review Student Access Guide to the 306 B est Colleges. Custard said dorms were rated from a “palace,” which meant excellent, to a “dungeon,” which meant they were awful. He also said the guide did not refer to any of die res­ idence halls as the worst in the country, since it only sur­ veyed 306 of the about 1,200 colleges nationwide. “We do not survey all the colleges in the country, simply because that would be impossible. We do survey the most students (about 48,000) of any college guide,” Custard said. “This was never intended to be a scientific survey.” The review is an annual publication that provides infor­ mation on colleges throughout the country. When the survey was released earlier this month, Valley media reported that the survey said ASU’s dorms were like “dungeons.” “It is important to remember that the survey is from stu­ dent opinion only,” said Cynthia Brantley, director of pub­ lishing for the Princeton Review. “Schools are not ranked according to set criteria.” Interviewers conducted the surveys at each college in a one-to-one setting, Custard said. He added that the survey takers did not go to the halls and ask residents how they felt about on-campus housing. “The survey is conducted in a common area, such as the 4400 NORTH SCOTTSDALE ROAD Across from the Galleria (602) 994-4945 I came, I saw, I worked... FREE LARGE SO D A & CHIPS (for the State Press) with purchase of any 6" sub Status Pressum With coupon. Void with other offers. Expires 10/17/94. I C o m e r o f L em on & R ural ‘G o o d F ood C ool C om pany’ 967-1114 I $1.50 G am es I $1.00 Shoe Rental Caesar the moment Work for the State Press Bowl 3 Games -P ay 2! r 9 .7 l pin M . 7 h T " ’ The State Press is currently hiring reporters to cover various beats and write three stories per week. Applicants should be reliable, highly m o tiv ated and able to w rite on d ead lin e. Experience from journalism classes or writing ♦4 A P P Y HO UR 9pn.-mW.M-F I (Tax Not Included) student center, or a dining hall,” Custard said. “We want to ensure a diverse population is included in the survey, so we go where there will be many different students. “We try to give people insight into what they don’t usu­ ally find in most college guides.” Debra Sells, associate director of Residence Life, said she felt the survey was highly subjective. “I was most pleased about the response from students who came to me or other staff members and said they are having a good experience,” Sells said. “That means more to me than these random surveys.” Custard said he has worked at four different colleges over an 18-year span. He said he used his experience in admissions, staff input from colleges, money guides and college resource guides to determine what colleges would be included in the survey. Some ASU residents felt the lack of standard criteria did not take into account all aspects of the residence halls. Nathan Sylves, a freshman civil engineering major, said halls he looked at in Delaware and Illinois were much small­ er than ASU dorms, and did not have as many services. “The other places did not have 24 computer labs in each hall, movies, VCRs, cleaning equipment and cooking uten­ sils for students to use,” he said Maggie Pitts, a freshman secondary education major, said facilities and services in the dorms compensate for not having private rooms. “Living in an apartment is more expensive and not as safe,” she said. Residents cited security, convenience and a community atmo­ sphere in the halls as reasons why they enjoy living on campus. W ALKTOZAHN’S TEMPE BOWL for other publications is preferred but not required. A pplications with clips or writing samples are being accepted in the basement of the M atthew s C enter. C all the S ta te P ress today at 965-2292 for more information. 1100 E. Apache Just East of Rural 967-1656 H ave N o Reg r ets - R eserve N ow f" “ T i S f T E G S T S E K V iC lT “ SPECIAL 69 ^ f/ïïïïjïïfm Expires 1641-94. Rent 3 months - get 1 month at 690 Not valid w/other offers. New service only. | ..................— It's How We Do........ It." Y(>u " “)ve’ b u t y o u r m a il w ill a lw a ys be there. 903 S. Rural (south of University) Tempe • 967-1414 . . ..a. School Rd. 1110 S. Alm Mesa • 946-1001 1739 E. Broadway 1 (at McClintock) Tempe • *29-3900J j D m o u s in e s Elegance For The Driven Few 602 941-9340 "YOUR CHAUFFEUR IS WAITING - ♦ A ll M ajor Credit Cards A ccepted ♦ ir ü ü ë c o r e " h o ir " ! I HAPPY HOUR * Buy any food item at the regular price and receive the second item of equal or lesser value FREE! 82S W. University ♦ SE com er of Hardy 894-8387 ji I uNwenoiTY £xp. J0-20-94 * Valid between 4-8 daily and all alt day S Sunday. QUALITY HAIR CARE - AFFORDABLY PRICED J Ij 1 I scoa SEMESTERUNLIMITEDTANNING DAILY LUNCH (Weekends 0495 E fim e * 403 W. University Dr. • 829-7774 ■ (Next to Tops Liquors) Coupon valid 9/24/94 - 9/30/941 Lm m ¿es Specializing!!! mhh mm mm mm mm mam warn mam aam mm mmi mm bmI Including South IndJfi Lunch 11:3W D inner 5-10p: dian Cuisine ter Entree upon tdlng alco ho lic ¡verages) E xp. 1 0 -26-94 1845 E. Broadway (a t SE com er & M cClintock) » 967-5284 Tuesday, September 27, 1994 S tate P ress Page_9 Com m ittee preparing for Super Bowl; ASU may move classes said. One proposed solution to the parking problem, he said, is running shuttles from area hotels and resorts. Parking is only one o f the problems students will face. There is some concern over the viability of holding classes. Miller said an informal suggestion to delay the start of class until after the Super Bowl was discarded, but the Super Bowl committee is investigating other solutions. “W e may take one or two days off and add them in later,” said Linda Van Scoy, assistant to the provost and head of the Super Bowl com m ittee’s academic planning subcom m ittee. V an S co y ’s subcom m ittee w ill decide whether classes should be held as scheduled, postponed or dismissed. should have a clear plan in November, and final decisions will be made in January or February, Miller said. Im provem ents will be made to Sun Devil Stadium ’s lighting, sound system and power supply because the cur­ rent systems are “below an acceptable standard,” said Tom Sadler, director of stadium management. The N ational Football League will help pay for the changes to Sun Devil Stadium, Sadler said, but what por­ tion it would pay is unknown. He said the concourses may be repaved and the stadium repainted as well. Parking around the stadium will be filled by television mobile production trucks and the rest of the Super Bowl media circus, making parking difficult in Lot 59, Sadler B v T im B a x t e r S ta te P ress Sun Devil Stadium facilities, parking and academic life will undergo big changes in preparation for Super Bowl XXX in January, 1996, but exactly what those changes will involve is still unclear. The ASU Super Bowl XXX Planning C om m ittee is overseeing these changes, as well as others that will affect the ASU community. “There has to be a fairly comprehensive operating plan,” said Steve Miller, committee chairman. A cad em ic p la n n in g , co m m u n ity re la tio n s, special events, stadium facilities and public safety are a few of the areas that will make up that operating plan. The committee Bosnian Serbs stage ‘training exercises’ at U.N. weapons compound SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — U n d ersco rin g th e ir contem pt fo r the U n ite d N a tio n s , S e rb s e n te re d a U .N . w eapons com pound and staged “training exercises” w ith an ti-aircraft guns stored there, officials said Monday. “O bviously the situation is tense,” Lt. Col. Tim Spicer, a U.N. military spokesman in Sarajevo, said of the Bosnian Serb action Sunday at a w eapons depot in Lukavica. “We believe this is a direct result o f the airs trike.” NATO jets strafed and bombed a Serb fo r it s o r ig in a l 7 - o u n c e b o t t le and tank near Sarajevo last Thursday in retalia­ tion for Serb attacks on French peacekeep­ ers. It was the fourth NATO strike on Serb ground positions this year. But Bosnian Serbs, hobbled by newly tightened U.N. sanctions for rejecting a peace plan, seem only to have dug their heels in deeper. They increased the pressure on U.N. peacekeepers Monday by: • D enying perm ission fo r U .N. h eli­ copter flights or convoys. • A nnouncing a new requirem ent that "U p" re fe rs to it s b u b b ly (0 n a tu re . U.N. military vehicles get clearance three days in advance of any movements through Serb-held territory. • Making a veiled threat to shoot at any U.N. planes landing at the airport, dealing a setback to hopes o f resum ing Sarajevo’s vital aid airlift. Spicer said “a strong protest” was lodged w ith B o sn ian S erbs a fte r they w arned Sunday that they could no longer guarantee safety of planes using the Sarajevo airport. A similar threat prompted Pope John Paul II to cancel a planned pilgrimage to Sarajevo this month. The airlift has been mostly suspended as a precaution since T hursday’s airstrike. U.N. aid spokesm an Kris Janow ski said flights probably w ould not resum e until next Monday. U.N. relief officials based in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, also said they were suspending aid shipments through Serb-held areas of Bosnia after receiving a letter from Serbs warning that they “cannot guarantee safety” of convoys. Sta te P ress Classifieds - the bargains are in the back. T3 C ID P • • • • • ID G re a t food at g re a t p ric e s B u rg e rs • S te a k s • S a n d w ic h e s F re sh b a k e d g o o d s D a ily s p e c ia ls S e n io r C itiz e n d is c o u n t ■ O p e n 11am M o n -F ri ÜIIMD 4 3 0 N. S co ttsd ale Rd. ■ r a r a E liilE M C A R A C U R A l S P E C I A L I S T S IN D EP EN D EN T S E R V IC E • F R E E Estim ates ■Com plete Parts •Fair Prices Departm ent •One D ay 1Factory- Service T rained on Most R epairs T ech n ician s Y m o fte P e o p le W h o K now U s e V alvoline - OIL CH AN GE & OIL FILTER $ 1 4 .9 5 (Includes up to 4 quarts) Check Our Low Price on 15,000 & 30,000 Services 2 .9 9 968-5989 TWO LOCATIONS TO S ER V E YOU 954-7923 1820 E . A P A C H E B L V D . One-way trips to A S U 3039 E . T H O M A S R D . TEM PE P H O E N IX 12 c a n s r" ASASU Associated. Students of Arizona State University ’’Your Student Government” Now accepting applications for the paid position of ELECTIONS COORDINATOR fo r 1994-95 elections > L 0 4» 0 - Save on the original Un-Cola as well as Diet 7-Up, Cherry 7-Up and Diet Cherry 7-Up. D e a d l i n e is F r i d a y , S e p t e m b e r 3 0 ™ a t N O O N u Pick up applications at ASASU, front desk. Memorial Union, 3rd floor 0 « c 3 • £ K F o r m o re EXPECT MORE M Y less : 3U in fo r m a t io n c a ll 9 6 5 - 3 1 6 1 ■ai S tate P ress Tuesday, September 27, 1994 D O YO UR PARENTS A B IG F A V O R . Send them the S ta te Press every day. Let them know what's happening on your campus SIGN UP NOW FOR YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO ASU’S MORNING DAILY NEWSPAPER (Talk about brownie points!) ---------------------------------( I T S YOUR N E W S P A P E R ~TE» ARIZONASTATEUNIVERSITY DO IT NOW AND SAVE! ) Fill out this form and mail it with payment to: State Press Subscriptions, Box 871502, Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 TT^k S tate P r ess A S U 'S M o r n in g D a ily N e w s p a p e r S e rv in g A S U sin ce 1 8 9 0 SUBSCRIPTION □ □ □ FALL SEMESTER only $35 (65 issues) SPRING SEMESTER only $35 (67 issues) FALL, SPRING & SUMMER $65 (142 issues) For first c la s s mail, add $30 per sem ester to above prices. PARENT NAME Address . City State. Phone (____ ) Zip. □CH ECK ENCLOSED Charge my □ Visa □ MasterCard □ American Express Card Num ber___________________ Expiration D a te _________________ Signature_______________________ NEED MORE INFO? CALL OUR SUBSCRIPTION DEPT. AT (602) 965-7572 Tuesday, September 27,1994 State P ress ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I— „ - P a g e 11 1 ' "I" r . . ..... -------- 1 Health care reform issue declared dead for 1994 W ASHINGTON (A P) — Health care reform , m oribund fo r w eeks, w as p ro ­ nounced dead Monday for this session of C o n g re s s b y S e n a te M a jo rity L e a d e r George J. Mitchell. T h e M a in e D e m o c ra t b la m e d Republicans, saying he had been unable to fin d th e 6 0 v o te s n e e d e d to e n d an inevitable G OP filibuster. “ It is clear that health insurance reform cannot be enacted this year,” Mitchell told a news conference. S e n a te M in o rity L e a d e r B ob D o le denied the Republicans were to blame and said it was overwhelming public opposi­ tion, not parliam entary roadblocks, that undid the Democrats’ health plans. “ They never had 50 votes for any o f their plans,” die Kansas Republican said. In New York, where he was attending a United Nations session, President Clinton said o f the defeat o f his major domestic initiative: “ I am very sorry that this means Congress isn’t going to reform health care this year. But we are not giving up on our mission to cover every American and to control health care costs.” “ Although we have not achieved our goal this year, Hillary (his wife) and I are CROSSWORD 1 Like molasses 7 Feathery wraps 11 Montana city 12 Brook 13 Coward 15 Actress Barkin 16 Track star Lewis 18 Genesis name 21 Grant of “North by North­ west" 22 Infamous Russian 24 Gorilla 25 Mayday call 26 Low bill 27 Lease signer 29 Exhibit 30 Ernst's art 31 In the neighbor­ hood 32 Blunder 34 Award for wounds 40 Leave off 41 Dipping treat 42 Luggage IDs 43 Norway neighbor DOWN 1 Timid 2 Golf need 3 Under the weather 4 Lowcalorie snack 5 Rounded hill 6 Sailing vessel 7 Starr of the comics 8 O PEC concern 9 The works 10 Foxy 14 Trounces 16 Like Batman 17 Bowl 19 Hilo hello 20 Unimpor­ tant 1 2 A G E N E X 1 L E R E L A X B A N T E R R O 1 D S U N 1 C T E N A N A R A N D S O N B A X U D E L I E Ni F ! E ¡ A j S I T~| Order yours today for $36.93( Matthews Center O H T O IT A L C L A R A H E X E O 21 Socks in the White House 22 Drunkard 23 Fresh 25 Traffic tie-up 28 Skilled ones 29 Peaceful 31 Absolutely not 33 Sports judges, for short 34 Cook's need 35 Actress Thurman 36 Equip 37 Put two and two together 38 Regret 39 Decimal base 5 6 11 8 9 19 20 10 7 13 MEASURE YOUR TOE AT 4 THE ... f COOL JEWE T o e R ings A n k le B ra c e le ts N o s e R ings (F a k e N o s e R ings) H o o p s, Cuffs, S tu d s a n d Lots o f S in g le Earring s________________ 14 15 16 17 ■ 2^ 23 ■ 24 26 ■ 28 27 ü . 1 ■ 31 ___ 30 ■ 1 34 ■ ■ S3 32 ■ 3b 29 ■ m 36 40 m m 37 38 39 41 ■ 42 43 9-27 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to w ork it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W O ne letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for th e three L's, X for th e two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation of the words are all hints. Each day th e code letters are different. 9-27 CRYPTOQUOTE B L C Q B X L P D O PSQDLTVXSD U The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook Yesterday’s Answ er 4 3 a year ago,” Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass., said in an emotional speech on the Senate floor. He vowed, “ I will never give up the fight.’ H o u se M a jo rity L e a d e r R ic h a rd Gephardt, D-Mo., said, “ Reforming our health care system is one issue that will not go aw ay.” He vowed to “ press the fight for guaranteed, affordable health care in the coining Congress.” In pulling toe plug, M itchell ignored advice from liberals who wanted to push fo rw ard a stripped-dow n b ill covering children, if only to force Republicans to vote against i t The action came one year and four days a fte r C linton w ent before C ongress to unveil his vision o f “ health care that’s always there” — guaranteed insurance for all Americans regardless of their health or wealth. H illary Rodham C linton helped d ra ft th e p lan and w as its fo re m o st saleswoman. Clinton ran into a wall o f opposition fro m sm all b u sin e sse s, the in su ran ce industry and others alarmed by his 1,342page p ro p o sal. It fe a tu re d m an d ato ry e m p lo y e r c o n trib u tio n s , co m p u lso ry health insurance purchasing alliances for IH R 1 N S 1 R A O by TH O M A S JO S E P H A CR O SS proud — and our allies should be proud as w ell — that we were able to bring this d e b a te fu rth e r th a n it h as e v e r p ro ­ gressed,” die president said. “ There is just too much at stake for all the American people and we have come too far to just walk away now,” he added in a statement. The battle over health reform now will be played out in the November elections. Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, who led toe conservative opposition to the C linton plan and its descen d an ts, said he was ’ ’g ra te fu l th a t th e p re s id e n t an d th e Democrats have now abandoned their cru­ sade for governm ent-run health care, at least for this year.” He said voters should “ express their opinion on health care in the November election by election o r rejecting Clinton allies at the polls.” O ther D em ocrats echoed M itch ell’s charges o f R epublican obstructionism . They said the problems o f the 39 million Americans without health insurance won’t d isa p p e a r and th ey w ould fig h t fo r changes next year. “ The health care crisis has not disap­ peared. The situation is worse than it was RXPDO DC PQ DC EX CS WO US “\o u gotta have car insurance, but you need a monthly payment you can afford.” No problem... • • • • • • L ow down-payment Easy paym ent plans Immediate coverage M oney-saving deductibles 24-hour countrywide claim service F ree rate quote Just stop by our office or call: SCD 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 JCLQKPBBXR. I f y o u ’r e a s t u d e n t w ith a g o o d d riv in g r e c o r d ... EX TQXR, —Y UW HPS YCCWPRZX Y esterday's C ryptoquote: ABSTRACT ART: A PRODUCT OF THE UNTALENTED, SOLD BY THE UNPRINCIPLED TO THE UTTERLY BEWILDERED.— AL CAPP C 1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. C a ll G E IC O t ........................ .... ......................... .... m ost A m ericans and standby price con­ trols on insurance premiums. L ast January, during his State o f the Union address to Congress, toe president waved his pen and threatened to veto any bill that failed to guarantee private insur­ ance for aU Americans. But Clinton later softened the rhetoric. By July, he was telling toe nation’s gover­ nors that 95 percent coverage m ight be good enough. He made clear his willing­ ness to compromise. D em ocrats pushed four separate bills th ro u g h co m m ittees in the H o u se and Senate, but they were unable to m aster a clear majority for any o f them. Mitchell produced his own compromise in August, seeking to get 95 percent o f Americans covered through subsidies and insurance reforms. 1 H e w ould have forced businesses in states that failed to meet that target to pick up half their workers’ premiums in 2002 and beyond. But in 2 1/2 weeks of desultory debate, R epublicans skew ered M itch ell’s plan with the same charge o f big government and bureaucracy that had brought down the W hite House proposal. Slayings______ C ontinued from page 3. Some 1,000 people have received summonses for the trial; they are being brought into court in smaller groups for lack of space. Identifying prospective jurors by number only, defense attorneys and prosecutors reviewed those the judge initially planned to excuse and offered their own suggestions. In one case, Ito was going to drop a woman who said she is diabetic and cares for her 85-year-old mother and a husband with heart problems. But defense attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr.; asked that the woman be questioned further, dhd Ito agreed. Ito also amended his decision on how jury selection would be covered by the media. He first said only one reporter and no TV cameras would be allowed. But he let three reporters cover M onday’s session and said that as seats become available he will allow up to five reporters in. TV cameras were still barred. Throughout jury selection, a closed-circuit audio feed will pipe some o f the proceedings to a courthouse press room, but the feed cannot be broadcast. Also Monday, Gov. Pete Wilson signed legislation to make a crime for jurors or witnesses to sell their stories before or during a criminal trial. The legislation would also increase penalties for domestic violence and impose tighter standards on lawyers making potentially prejudicial state­ ments outside court. The measures were prompted by the Simpson case. ‘ ‘This legislation will ensure that witnesses and jurors are a force for justice, not fodder for tabloids, and that attorneys will represent their client, not lead a media cir­ cus,” Wilson said. Scene_________ C ontinued f r o m page 3. n iz a tio n s p ro m p te d R ad io and T e le v isio n N ew s Association, coordinator-of the trial coverage, to rent a parking lot across the street that is now home to 40-plus satellite tracks and air conditioned trailers. Straddling the vehicles are massive wood and iron scaf­ folds built to allow TV networks and their affiliates to tape their reports away from courthouse crowds with downtown as a backdrop. “It’s like a city in itself. There’s so much media here, m ore so than if the president w ere h ere,” said Frank Adelman, a security guard watching over the area. Cam p O.J. is not w ithout am enities, including: five portable toilets (cleaned daily), four 24-hour security guards, daily trash pickup, 600 phone lines and, for some, catered lunches. Comics Page 12 St a t e P r ess Tuesday, September 27,1994 G e n e r a t i o n He X e d by S t a c y H o lm s te d t BUT NO T FO R WHEELER AND KIPPER, TH E BROTHER/SISTER R E P O RTIN G T E A M - RELIGIOUS VIOLENCE on c a m pu s: By GARY LARSON T H E F A R S ID E 1 W E'RE GONNA B E A T UP T H E MALL. PREACHER! I WONT EVENR5K. I GOT GOTA FRONT PAGE STORY, b o s s ... T fiE o v m 1 « L i f 3! / Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson S IH C t EV ERSO N E KNOWS M E, EVERHTUlNG r DO NOW \S NEW SW O RTVrt. I'M A CULTURAL IC O N . D o o n esb u ry ][? ]£ /$ BAUS,5P. O FH & 30S r SU N D RIES. T A K E S O N THE M A N FR O M M A L-M A R T ... H O W S' TH E LO C A L M E R C H A N T SU PPO Se T O S U R V IV EIN TO UR SH A D O W * i I < 0 I THINK ^ WATCM, I U TOUR ANTENNA NEEDS ADJUSTING. USE M l PRESTIG E TO ENDORSE A PRODUCT/ YO U 'LL KILL OFF OUR DOWN­ TO W N ' T H A T 'S O U ST A M Y TH , H E R B ' O N CE TH EY A D JU ST, LO CAL B U S IN E S S E S W ILL FLO U R­ IS H A S x YOU S E E , B EC A U SE O F O U R O BVI­ O U S A D V A N TA G ES, W E'LL FO R CE LOU TO RUNA SHARPER O PERATIO NM UCH M O R E FOCUSED A N D R E SPO N SIVE TO YOUR C U S T O M E R S ' - H ECK, Y E S ' ¡V S A L L P A R T W ELL, 6 0 S H I 0 F0U R T 0U 6H YO U 'D DO LO VE PRO GRAM T H A T FO R FO R M A L RE­ M E? TA ILER S! \ NEVER Call 784-0172 c o n g r e g a t io n a l CHANNEL 2 C h i l d C A I€ • Flexible program for 3-5 year olds • Full-time $70.00/week • Part-time $55.00/week • Student/Staff ratio 7:1 • Open year-round 7am-6pm • Near A S U and Downtown Tempe • 1 block north of A S U on Myrtle 101 E a s t Sixth St., Tem pe 967* 2211 rC A M PU S-| LC o r n e r -! 712 S. College 967-4049 n e x t t o C o lle g e S t r e e t D e li 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 858-0567 C o f f e e P la n t a t io n Everyday Low P ric e “Oh my gosh! You know what that is, M o oky?... My dad had one when I was a kid!” BY G A R R Y TRUDEAU We need students to direct, film, & edit "Student Programs" a c ro s s fro m HaflifePT Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week W E P R O U D L Y U SE O N L Y * Non-Cholesterol all vegetable oil for frying * The finest lean beef and skinless chicken * Produce delivered fresh daily * Flour tortillas made with canola oil * We use no preservatives or additives ■ DOUBLE PRINTS C olor C -41 P ro c e ss B e st P ric e in Town (Southwe st C om er Oobson A G uadalupe) Òsti 897-9411 Happy Hour B u ff e t 4-7 p.m. Monday-Friday Tempe 960 VV. University (N ortheast C om er U n iversity & H a rd y )____ 966-0852 lia $ TO KYO ..............................5 79 C H IC A G O .................... 208 FRANKFURT..... ........... 765 TAIPEI................................ 650 MINNEAPOLIS..............3 I8 PARIS/MUNICH............765 S E O U l/H O N G K O NG ....775 ATLANTA...................... 267 MADRID..................... > 95 BANGKOK/SINGAPORE.869 N E W A R K ........ ............ 328 SHANNON/DUBUN....... 785 JO H AN S/LAG O S............. I595 DALLAS......................... 182 ATHENS/PRAGUE.........875 TELAVIV/CAIRO................. 995 H O U STO N ....................184 R O M E/M ILAN ..............775 KARACHI/DEIHI............... 1115 HONOLULU...........:„..;,359 WARSAW/BUDAPEST..... 820 BOMBAY/M ADRAS..........1100 MEXICO CITY............... 272 BRUSSELS/ZURICH...... 775 S P fC U U . FAK ES T O S . A M !R I C A A N D M ID D LE EAST Restrictions A pply • O ther Lo w Fares A vailable FALCON WINGS FOR TRAVEL Membership open to all ASU students O f f e r g o o d a ft e r 2 p .m . E x p ir e s 1 0-4*94. Mesa Y L O N D O N ....................6 50 N o t g o o d w ith a n y o t h e r o f f e r o r d is c o u n t. 2023 W. Guadalupe U • 14:5% APR VISA* Credit Card w ith n o annual fee available to sudents w ith good or n o credit history • Low -cost ch eck in g accounts to su it your needs • W orldw ide ATM netw ork • 24-hour account access by p h on e • A uto loan s as lo w as 6.25% APR and m ore A MENU DESIGNED WITH NUTRITIONALLY ANALYZED HEALTHY CHOICE OPTIONS. W ATCH O UR A D FOR DETAILS. 24 exposure B W ith your lim ited funds, w hy w orry about high-cost ch eck in g accounts, credit cards and loans? Join D esert Schools and take advantage o f our w ide variety o f low -cost fin an cial services, including: "Y O U R B O D Y WILL TH AN K Y O U " C O M IN G S O O N T O ROSITA'S: W it h t h e p u r c h a s e o f o n e d in n e r o f e q u a l o r g r e a t e r v a lu e . E $ T Low on funds? Join Desert Schools and save ■ p v k MEXICAN FOOD P B DESERTSCHOOLS Desert Schools representatives are on campus today — visit the information booth on Cady Mall. 8 C a ll 4 3 3 -7 0 0 0 fo r m o r e in fo rm a tio n Visit our Tempe Branch at 1223 E. Broadway Road Sports STATE P ress________________________________________________________ Tuesday, September 27, 1994 P a g e l3 ASU tennis singles out doubles as key to success B y D a w n W agner S tate P ress C r a ig M a c n a u g h t o n / S ta te P r e s s Se n io r Kori D avidson is one of five returning players for the Sun Devil w om en's tennis team, w hich begins play on Oct. 14. Alter finishing with a record of 4-6 last season in the Pac-10, the ASU women’s tennis team is looking to gain an edge this season. Their doubles game might just be the key. “I think we are going to have really strong doubles (this year),” Coach Shelia Mclnemey said. “It was sort of our Achilles’ heel last year. We had two very good teams (in the beginning of last year), but then we struggled for the rest of the year.” Mclnemey added that the key to a successful college team is the doubles game and this will work as an advan­ tage for the Sun Devils this year. The team returns five of its players from last season, including its No. 1 and No. 2 singles players, Kori Davidson and Joelle Schad. The squad has also added three new players, including one transfer student from Poland. Anna Moll, a sophomore transfer from Lodz, Poland, competed for the University of Alabama- Mobile last year. Moll said she heard a lot about ASU’s team before transferring and looks to have a good season with the Sun Devils. “I know they are a very good team, and for years they have been in the top ten in the NCAA,” Moll said. “I don’t really know any of the other teams, and without seeing our opponents it’s hard to say how we’re going to do.” But for the returning players, the competition they’ll be facing carries a long tradition of top-ranked teams. The Pac-10 will prove to be the toughest competition, said senior Kara Schertzer. “Our Pac-10 schedule is really tough,” Schertzer said. “Stanford and Cal are both really good. Stanford, USC, Cal and UCLA will probably be our toughest competi­ tion.” The Pac-10 is not the only tough competition for the Sun D evils said M cln em ey . T h eir non-co n feren ce matchups might also prove to be a challenge. “We play a great out-of-conference schedule with Texas, who was pretty much ranked number one all last season,” M clnemey said. “We have a brutal schedule, but that’s good because that’s how we get better.” However, the Sun Devils still have not set definite player positioning. Mclnemey said the team is in the pro­ cess of testing out different doubles combinations and will continue to do so this fall. Overall, she thinks they have a promising squad. “I think we’re actually a little more athletic than we have been in past, years,” M clnemey said. “We have a good nucleus with five girls returning. “W e’ve got three new girls ... and I th ink that m ight be a bit o f an u n certain ty , but they are all very good players. W e’ve got som e talen t, so i t ’s going to be fun. W e’re looking forw ard to the sea­ son.” The team opens its season on Oct. 14 when it hosts the three-day Apani Fall Classic. Run for college crown still foggy despite upsets The 1994 college football season is only four weeks old and it’s shaping up to be one o f the most compedtive and exciting campaigns in years. The race for the college title is in full stride. W hat w as o n c e an E lite Eight of college football is now six, as two members o f this pre­ mier group lost over the week­ en d , b le ss th e ir so u ls: the M ichigan W olverines and the M iam i Hurricanes. Both have fallen , both v ictim s o f home lo s s e s to te a m s th e y w ere favored to beat. T hat le a v e s F lo rid a , N ebraska, Florida State, Penn State, Colorado and UofA as the best of the best. I feel bad for Miami and Michigan. Well, not Miami. But poor Michigan. Big Blue finally beats Notre Dame, its worst nemesis, only to lose to Colorado in Ann Arbor. Its national title hopes have fluttered away like a tipped pass. And don’t tell me Colorado got lucky. Remember, CU quar­ terback Kordell Stewart fumbled at the Michigan goal line. 1 ju st hope R alphie (C U ’s crazed buffalo m ascot) doesn’t get as excited as Texas Tech’s horse and ram into a wall. Not until the Oct. 29 Nebraska game anyway. Speaking o f the Buffaloes, Colorado might have the best team in the country. Their again, so might Penn State, based on strength o f schedules for these two teams. But consider the possibilities for the climax of the season: W ith the six teams that are left in contention, only Florida State has no ties to a bowl game. The Seminóles could end up in the Orange Bowl, ver­ sus either Colorado or Nebraska. If it is the Comhuskers, that would mark three straight years that those two met in the Orange. (Shoot, if that happens, we may as well petition the NFL for one more installment o f Buffalo - Dallas in the Super Bowl.) The only other uncontroversial m atchup would be a Penn State-UofA game in the Rose Bowl if both teams can ascend to the No. 1 and No. 2 spots. Nah. I want controversy. I want as many teams as pos­ sible clouding the title picture. Let’s create enough con­ flict so that a playoff appears to be the only clear-cut way to settle everything. Picture the following: suppose Florida beats Florida State later this season, goes undefeated and ends up in the Sugar Bowl. Also, suppose Nebraska wins the rest of its games and heads to the Orange Bowl. Penn State and UofA also win all of their games and UofA wins the Rose Bowl. Does UofA win the national title? Now, what if Florida and Nebraska win their bowl games? Does the UofA-Penn State winner claim the title too, as one of three teams with perfect records? What then? A three-way split for the crown? I h a d a h a rd en o u g h tim e w h en C o lo ra d o and G eorgia T ech had to share the national title in 1990 an d th e n M iam i and W a s h in g to n d id it th e n e x t year. How about this? What if UofA loses one game this year (I can see it now. On Oct. 8, Colorado State contin­ ues its dream season with an upset o f the W ildcats in Tucson), heads to the Rose Bowl and beats Penn State, while Nebraska and Florida also lose? Four teams with one loss ? How about a four-way split? Ugh. What I want to know is this: can Colorado State rise above this whole mess and claim at least 1/12 of the 1994 NCAA championship? That I want to see. Ryan decides to keep Word on running game Cardinals ink 1-year deal with former Viking back 105 yards. Word started in eight games. But to his surprise, his contract wasn’t renewed, forcing him into free agency. Still, Word remained confident that he would be invited to some NFL camps before the start of the 1994 season, but the offers never came. B y D an M iller S t a t e P ress Form er M innesota Viking running back Barry Word happened to be in the neighborhood of a winless football team last week so he decided to drop by for a visit. After being granted an unexpected tryout, Word became the newest member of the Arizona Cardinals after signing a one-year deal Monday. The 30-year-old back was actually in town visiting his son, but the b urning desire to play pro football again sparked him to ask Buddy Ryan to try out with the club. Ryan obliged and Word is a rejuvenated man. “It w asn ’t w orking sitting back at home w aiting for someone to call me,” said the 6-foot-2-inch, 245- pounder from Virginia. “The worst thing that could happen was for som eone to tell me to get outta here or if Buddy Ryan looked at me and said ‘you don’t have it anymore; you c a n ’t play fo o tb a ll a n y m o re ,’ then at le a st som eone would’ve said that. “But that wasn’t the case. They gave me the opportunity and I’m just gonna come out here and make the best of it.” W ord played in 13 gam es with the V ikings in 1993, rushing for 458 yards on 142 carries, with two touchdowns and nine pass receptions for The w orst thin g th at cou ld happen was f o r som eone to tell m e to g e t outta here o r i f B uddy Ryan looked a t m e a n d sa id “you d o n ’t have it an ym ore ” ... — N ew est C ardinal Barry Word “I was very frustrated about that, but I’m not the only one,” Word said. “If I would have been the only person out there who had been a starter and didn’t get invited to camp, well then I would have said ‘Barry you don’t-have it any­ m ore,’ but there me lots of guys that pre sitting at home right now who were starters for people last year and all o f a sudden there’s no room for them, “...From what I’ve seen, a lot o f teams don’t have what they need right now.” If Word was referring to the Cardinals’ non-existent run­ ning game, he hit the nail right on the head. Through three gam es, the C ard in als have 208 ru sh in g y ards on 65 a tte m p ts, fo r a d ism al 3.2 y a rd s-p e r-c a rry av erag e. Quarterback Jim McMahon was the Cardinals leading rush­ er w ith 31 yards during the C ard in als’ last outing in C lev elan d . T hose stag g erin g num bers so lid ifie d the Cardinals’ NFL ranking of 28th in total offense through week three. But whether or not Word can lift the Cardinals out of the doldrums remains to be seen. “Well, were gonna see what he can do,” Ryan said. “We didn’t get a chance to look at much of him today (at prac­ tice), but (we’ll) see if he’s still got what he had last year.” W ord’s colorful career began with the New Orleans Saints in 1987 where he was a third-round draft choice (62nd overall). A fter W ord left football for nearly two years from 1988-89, he returned to action with the Kansas City Chiefs in 1990 where he made his mark with a 1,015 yard season as a backup to Christian Okoye. W ord has 2,897 career rushing yards. He isn’t sure what his role will be yet, but his contribu­ tions may be felt as early as Sunday’s game against the Vikings. v “I know they expect me to do some blocking and come in on some goal-line andshqrt yardage situations, but hope­ fully I can get out there. in d show them What I have,” Word said. “It depends on how long it takes me to get in shape.” , In Ryan’s make-it-or-break-it system, W ord realizes he can’t take forever to reach his physical peak. “Hopefully not too long,” he said of the time he needed for condition­ ing. “Otherwise I won’t be here very long.” Classifieds P age 14 N otice to o ur 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. V ictory is d e fe a t- in the atom ic age. -A n o n y m o u s RENTAL SHARING COMPUTERS F R O O M M A TE, 2bd condo. $300/mo + 1/2 util. Papago 1.9683318 or 554-2506. Let me custom-build a brand new computer suited to your needs 4 less than any store! I repair/upgrade systems too. Call Mitch 602-731-9450. HI-TECH AT LOWS FEMALE, NO smoking, to share 4bd, 2ba house. Hot tub, pets ok, at Chaparral/Hayden. $300+1/3 util. 990-3038. FEM ALE, SHARE rm $155 + 1/4 util. 968-2030. H ouse on University/Hardy. Avail. Oct. 1st. ROCK GARDEN 40 line monster BBS w/20,000+ files, chat, games, Internet mail, online pizza, more! 602-220-0001 FREE ROOM & board in exch for domestic help, 6 yr old girl. C all K evin, 840-8188. 10 min/ASU. APARTMENTS MATURE ROOMMATE, close to ASU. pool. M/F. $240 + 1/2 util. 945-6225 (lv msg). 1BD 1BA. $375/mo, 700 W. Uni­ versity. Call Chamberlin & As­ sociates. 731-9901. MUST SEE. lg 2bd, 2ba apt near Pointe S M tn. Pool, tennis, gym. $299+ 1/2 util. Sean. 5929058. 3BD. 1-1/2BA. pool, clean, new ap p lia n ce s & paint. C lose to ASU. $450/mo. 438-7141. NURSING STUDENT has 2 bd very quiet trailer to share within walking distance. 894-5386. RENTAL SHARING SHARE MY 2bd 2ba house. Quiet F, ns. South Scottsdale. $325/mo. 994-4526. 1 ROOM in lg house. Walk to ASU. $300/mo. util paid. Avail Oct 1.966-7061. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 2 RO OM S fo r rent in house, $300 ea + part util, lblk ASU. Avail. Oct. 1,966-7061. F RMMT to share my 2bd home, evap, great if Chinese speaking, nr G atew ay C om m . C o lleg e. $130/mo. 829-9455, 947-2881. B uy O (oyao* i f J i.tf i n ! y Video/Information Sessions: W ed, Sept 28, M U 208D M on, O ct 3, M U 208D Thurs, O ct 6, M U 213 All sessions are at 6pm. WE BUY & SELL USED LEVI'S! We pay up to $15 for 501s T he W eek r e a d y f o r y o u ! $ 6 9 ,9 0 0 . B ob B ullock R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, sleeper, entertainment ctr. Cheap! 962-0749. ASPIRING ACTORS JEWELRY The V a lle y 's la rg e st haunted house is taking applications for actors. 829-7300, 2010 E. Uni­ versity, #23. Tempe. ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu: gold, ster., pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave. Tempe Center 968-6074. ASU FULL service salon, hair de­ signers needed. Tanning, large retail, ft/pt. Many benefits. Call Eric, 970-6536. TAG HEUER- Mens sel watch, two-tone silver, never worn still in box-Got as a gift. $500 obo. Call 966-4095. Lv msg. ATTENTION BUSINESS Conumunication majors: Teichert Mar­ keting is hiring individuals inter­ ested in running promotions for Phx area businesses. Exc com­ p en satio n pkg. G reat exp for those interested in sales/marketing c aree rs. Flex schedules. Please call 921-7755 bet l-4pm. AUTOMOBILES 68 VW Bug, tan. New rebuilt en­ gine. brakes, tires. Original own­ er. needs interior. $2200 obo. 946-5502 eve/weekends. 77 RA BBIT, $850, 113K mi, white 4-dr, auto, a/c, sun roof, runs good, exc cond. 730-9834. 79 JEEP CJ5 red, great shape! $4000 833-7347, must sell!! BIKINI BIKE Wash, 10 positions open, Saturday, Oct. 1, 10am3pm, $20/hr. Apache Honda Mo­ torcycles, 973-5111. CASHIER & island attendant, p/t flex hrs. Chevron service station. Call Mr. Martin, 941-8899. CONCERTS 6X3 AIR hockey table! Only 1 year old, $200: Full size bed, incl sheets, comforter, eggcrate, dust ruffle, $100 obo. Call 962-8339, leave message. 86 HONDA Accord Lxi for sale. Light blue ext., blue int, very good cond, tinted windows, fully loaded, autom atic. $4900 obo. Call 784-9683. CONCERTS! NOW hiring event staff. Become a part o f this excit­ ing business. Starting $4.75. 2105 S. Hardy #17. 820-7060. ART TABLE 86 RED Pontiac F iero 5-spd, fm /am , 79K m iles, xlnt cond, runs great. Only $2200.967-1210 DEL D R IV E R S, p izza/w in g s rest, $8-$10/hr, Mesa/Chandler. 730-6894; 732-1860 after 3 p.m. 88 SENTRA 2-dr blue, 4-spd, ac, tint, new paint, 1-ow ner, 89K, exc cond, $3950obo. 971-3993. DELIVERY DRIVER 10:30am 1:30. Good tips, come in person to Sacks at Mill & Univ. SE cmr. 94 JEEP Wrangler, 4.0 litre V-6, w hit, tan in t., m int cond. $14,995. 921-3369. DRIVERS, PT/FT, local moving co., clean MVR, top dollars, 829- M O TO RCYCLES" F /T A U TO C A D 12 o p e ra to r wood frame constr in arch ofc. 35 yrs exp residential & hotel. Call 275-1185. D raftin g light table for sale, heavy duty- solid oak. Glass area 26"X36". $600. Call 491-1263. FREE SKI boots, poles, totes w/purchase of skis. OTA AuthierF 175's $250. Rossignol 160's $225, K2 150's $100. Call after 3pm. 838-4573. HAMILTON VR20 drafting table 3’x4'. Vemco V-track, fully elec, $600 obo. 788-1190 (lv msg). MATTRESS SET, full, w/frame, like new, $85. Soundesign stereo dual cass, phono, spkrs, eqlzr, remote, $145.921-9980. COMPUTERS 92 KAW EX 500, b lue/w hite, 9400 mi, tank bra, minor cosme­ tic , $1995 obo. Jon pg. 2093556. BICYCLES FOR SALE GT mtn. bike, less than 6 hrs. use $350. Call 9084212 or 967-7359. TRAVEL NFL, ASU Football event staff needed. 2010 E. University, #23. 829-7300. 8888. IT'S ELECTION TIME AND THE AZ REPUBLICAN PARTY NEEDS YOUR HELP. $6-r/HR. S fe MAX FOSE V57-7770 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. Call for Details 9 4 7 -8 2 4 5 •1810 Scottsdale Rd (betw een C u rry & M cK ellips) ANNOUNCE­ MENTS Delta Sigma Pi Professional Business Fraternity ^ ß o n g M U u /c d e A Ashley Aldridge Ulysses .Mvarai Aaron C^K n Jason Oooomvytew Matthpw Dafcy BerinEJffSFEfa Jill Jackson Nimal Jayawardena FURNITURE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE BUYER • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. 8-5 RECEPTIONIST wanted for busy ofc. mult, lines & greet cli­ en ts. Lgt. typing-M ac com p, team plyr. energetic. 275-1185. 84 MITS. Montero 4x4, $3600 obo; 69 Volvo 1800S, exc cond. All records for both. 391-9518. QISliJEAN 5 m inutes from A S U ! $7.45 TO start. 14 retail open­ ings. No exp. req, flex hrs, schol­ arships. All m ajors, call 11-3, 968-4797. A H W A TU K EE FO O TH ILLS YMCA is accepting applications for recreational supervisors for school-age children. $5-$10/hr. Perfect p/t position for college students at ASU, MCC, etc. seek­ ing exp iij a school setting. 3233 E. Chandler Blvd., Suite 6B. A t P a p a g o P a r k V illa g e . 2 b d , n e w c a r p e t , c l o s e t o p o o l, AN NO UN CE­ MENTS SEMESTER AT SEA f B e seen! HELP WANTEDGENERAL A G G R E SSIV E P/T stu d en ts needed. Approx 10 hours/weekly. Outside sales can generate $10$30 per hour. 922-0419. F TO share 3bd 2ba w/pool. must be clean/reliable. $194/m o+l/3 util. 68th/Thomas. Jill, 990-2292. . S t a t e P ress Tuesday, September 27, 1994 Brent Larson nm TW Sdows Glen Rgletree Jcjfe Perez arcjjftbivers Jonathan Starkey Jason Wolf TRAVEL THE world's greatest cities & leam about international business. Inform ational m eet­ ings: 9/28 in Room BA 257 & 9/29 in Room BA 265. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $5-$12 PER HOUR Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Universal Portraits. Call Rachel or James, 496-0255. FUNDRAISING C hoose from 3 d ifferen t fu n ­ draisers lasting either 3 or 7 days. No inv estm en t. Earn $$$ fo r your group plus personal cash bo­ nuses for yourself. Call 1-800932-0528, ext. 65. IN SIG H T D IR EC T, In c., a Tempe based direct marketer of com puters and perip h erals is seeking 12 individuals for posi­ tions in the shipping, receiving and inventory control depts. We are looking for service oriented individuals w/high quality work habits. Ability to lift 50 lbs. Prev­ ious exp helpful, but not req'd. Apply in person or mail resume to: 1912 W . 4th St., Tem pe, 85281 M -F 8am-5pm. 2 shifts avail: 3rd shift- M/W/F 4-9pm: 4th shift- T/Th 4-9pm, Sat 9am3pm. Starting pay $7/hr. IN SU R A N C E REQ 'S fem ale drivers for disabled woman’s van. Must be 21 or over, good driving record, must be available Tues & W ed, 2-5pm . Pay negotiable. Call 968-6284. LAB TECHNICIAN for Tempe Pharmaceutical Manuf. Chemis­ try & Biological Science back­ ground. P/t, entry level. Call 921 2012. Ask for Maury. LIV E -IN , FEM A LE, hom e health care, some lifting. Room plus salary. 968-7314 after 2pm. MARKET RESEARCH positions. Computer assistant (1) and phone interviewers (2). F/t, p/t, days or eves. Tempe. 967-4441. M O D ELS/ G LA M O U R g irls, 18+, for classy mens magazine. 1800-993-6711. OUTSIDE SALES National marketing firm is guar­ anteeing $8/hr to start for fun and easy selling. Ambitious reps earn $15»-20/hr. M otivation and de­ pendability required. Part-time, flexible hours. Call 921-8282. RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Friendly and outgoing, day/eve shifts. James, 496-0255. RETAIL STORE detective. Im­ mediate openings, ft/pt, exp'd & entry level positions avail. Flex hrs, exc growth potential. Good oral/w ritten comm skills req'd. Must have own trans. Drug-free work environment. Paid training & benefits avail. Fax or send re­ sume to: Secureco, Inc., 7170 E. McDonald Dr. #4, Scottsdale, AZ 85253. Fax: 602-596-1797. SEEK IN G A PPLIC A N TS for page positions at Arizona House of Representatives for up-coming session. $ 5 .9 5 /h r. F ull tim e. Call Rob or Shannon 542-3656. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES STATE PRESS is hiring 5 ASU students to intern in its advertis­ ing sales program. This is an in­ credible learning experience that also-allows you to earn signifi­ cant d o lla rs; so be pro activ e about your future and call Jackie Eldridge today at 965-6555 for in­ formation & interview. The re­ quirements to enter this intern­ ship are: The desire for personal development, a reliable vehicle, a class load o f 13 hours or less and graduation no earlier than De­ cember ’95. PHONE CLERKS - no exp., free long distance calls flex shifts, hrly + bonus, benefits avail. Rural/Southem. 350-9336. THE STATE Press is now hiring one incredibly dependable person to deliver newspapers off campus Monday through Friday during the academic year. Successful ap­ plicants will have a reliable ve­ hicle that can hold 2400 newspa­ pers & no 7:40 am classes. Your day w ill begin approxim ately 5:00am to deliver the papers. Ex­ cellent com pensation for a de­ pendable person. Begin imme­ diately. Call Jackie Eldridge today at 965-6555. RECEPTIONIST - Commerical real estate office. Salary + bene­ fits, good opportunity, students ok. Send resume to: PO Box 118, 1025 E. Bell Rd., Phx, 85022 VALET PARKING, 3-4 nights/ wk. M-F, avg. $6-$7/hr (tips incl in avg). No more than 1 traffic ticket in past 3 yrs. Must be will­ ing to drive to Scotts, Phx, etc. Apply at 34 W. D unlap (Central/Dunlap), Phx bet 1:30-4:30 M-F. 861-9182. WARRIORS GYM is looking for aerobic instructors. Qualified, en­ ergetic and looking to work in an upbeat, positive environm ent. Contact Dana, 401-4005 (pager). HELP WANTEDSALES INTERNSHIPS - SALES. Lead­ ing Scotts. insurance agency. Can earn $250+ /wk. 945-5444. LA D IES B O U T IQ U E, S c o t­ tsdale, p/t sales, days/eves/wknds. Call Kim, 941-8629. P/T HRS * F/T PAY Area reps. $7/hr guar, advance to $30/hr. Service Advertising Co. 1-800-227-7782. We are DMS, located at 64th St. & East Thomas Rd. DMS is looking for outbound customer service reps to make c alls on b e h a lf o f SEA RS, TE X A C O , CH 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 ATTENTION Roch-N-Roll Telephone Research Survey Flex hours available Tues-Fri 2-9:30pm & Sat. 9-5 Start at $5.50/hour plus bonuses Got your attention? Air conditioned office needs holy evenings, p/t, close to A SU . Construction supply company - sell tools nationwide - will train. 8 2 9 -7 3 2 6 CASHIER, GENERAL office, 10 key & computer exp a plus, af­ ternoons, p/t, $5/hr. 893-6884. PART-TIME DAY clerical posi­ tion. Word processing a plus. $6$9/hr. 953-1830. HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE BLIMPIES SUBS and Salads. P/T days, 4-6 hrs/day, m ust work w eekends. A pply in person, B road way/Rural. BUSHOPS NEEDED, apply after 11am. Monti's La Casa Vieja, 3 W. 1st St. 967-7594 BUSTERS RESTAURANT Grill & Bar is now hiring exp. food servers & bussers. Please app. in person 8320 N. Hayden, Scotts. (Mercado De Lago) 951-5850. DELIVERY DRIVERS needed! KFC is now hiring 50+ drivers to deliver orders in the Tempe area. Drivers make up to $10 an hour including mileage & tips. F/t & p/t positions + benefits after six months. Hours are very flexible. Apply at 705 W. Base­ line Rd. Tempe, or call 820-6685. GUMBY’S PIZZA Looking for: •Managers, exp nec •Inside kitchen help •Delivery Apply in person, 2107 S. Rural Rd. HELP WANTEDGENERAL DMS PAYS EVERY FRIDAY! $9 p/h guaranteed NO SELLING Higginbotham Associates HELP WANTEDCLERICAL $S.SQ/hr + eammisiioni (guaranteed) 894-1176 Jet COURIERS/ SERVICE TECHS As a leading provider in home health care, Homedco is seeking qualified individ­ uals to be responsible for the pick up/delivery o f patient equipment and for providing emergency delivery service using company vehicles. Qualifications include a minimum 1 year related experience, current CDL and successful completion o f all DOT requirements. Knowledge o f the Phoenix area is a plus. For immediate considera­ tion, please apply in person Monday-Friday from 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. at Homedco, 2202 E. University, Phoenix, AZ 85034. No phone calls, please. EOE/M/F/D/V. HOM EDCO $ 7 .0 0 PER H O UR - FULL BENEFITS Zales Regional Credit Center is seeking motivated individuals for: P /T C O L L E C T O R S HOURS: M-F 5-9 p.m.& 2 Saturdays per month 9-lp.m. ALL POSITIONS offer excellent paid training and a competitive salary and benefits package through: Great New Location The Valley's BEST plasma donation center ju st got even better! ABI has moved to a great new facility at 1334 E Broadway! (acrossfrom Native New Yorker) We now have MORE MACHINES ta serve yen better! This is your perfect op{M>rtunity to perform a vitally needed service pnd e SI50 - $185 per month at the same time! It couldn't b e easier! New D otson earn S25 CASH their fir s t donation! Open 7 days a week for your convenience! Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1334 E Broadway, Baildiag A Tempe (Acrossfro m Native New Yorker) ■ROADWAY A DORSEY 968-6139 T h e ‘94 Fall P le d g e C la s s HELP WANTEDGENERAL Z A LE C O R P O R A T IO N the world's largest jewelry retailer. If you would like to become part of our success, we invite you to find out more about these opportunities. Apply in Person ■ I 'i B i 'r i J e w e le r s 9a.m. - 4 p.m., M-F Financial 1221 N. College Ave. #101 ’IT Services Tempe, AZ 829-5804 Equal Opportunity Employer Sta t e P ress HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE DOM INO'S PIZZA Come join the excitement with the #1 food delivery team for the ASU area. With the addition o f subs & hot wings, this Domino's is one of the top campus stores in the country. We need more f/t & p/t drivers to help us safely de­ liver all these orders. D rivers make $7-$10 per hour including mileage & tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can also be earned. We are very flexible & can work ar­ ound your school schedule.W e support a drug free work envi­ ronment. Apply in person after 1lam at 903 S. Rural, Tempe, or call 968-5555. EOE. PERSONALS FREE GOOD COOKIES RESTAURANTS/ BARS Have a cookie & a Coke when you do your laundry at Whitewa­ te r O asis, 1250 E. A pache, Tempe HOT WINGS & C 0 0 L JAZZ 10c WINGS $1.25 MIC DRY ! K£ DAN- Sat. was a blast! I got my wallet back too. Lets do din­ ner, no beer! Heather WHAT DO the following men have in common: Theodore Roosevelt-US President, Tom Landrycoach, Dallas Cowboys, Eugene Pulliam-Publisher, Arizona Re­ public, Jonathan Winters-Comedian, Ryan Eaton- ASU Sopho­ more? They are all members of Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity. "Be a lead er, not a num ber." Open House today 3-6pm. MU. For more info call 650-4793. WITNESS NEEDED- Someone who witnessed accident on Mon, 9/19 8:10am at comer o f Stadi­ um / 6th (b eh in d M anzanita dorm s). Leave m essage, 8943492. HONEY BEAR'S BBQ, 5012 E. Van Burén (close to ASU), 2739148. Days/eves, mise duties. RESTAURANTS/ BARS 5th St. & Forest L os S o m b re ro s Hippy Hour 3-6 Tues-Sun IS t Drafts • Si.SOMaigaittas t/Z Off Appetizers/ 15% off the most extensive database avail­ able, and we even m ail you the catalogs from the schools you choose. Inform ation packets are available for students and Resource Centers. Caraer Network 2210 M t. Carm el Ave. Suite 110 Clenside, PA 19038 ( 215 ) 572-7670 Fax: ( 215 ) 576-8354 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 liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. P lease include Driver's license # □ Check#___ □ ■ R A T E P riv a te P a rty C o m m e rcia l 1-4 days, $ 1.3 0 p e r line, p e r da y 1 d a y $2.0 0 p e r line 5-9 days, $ 1 .2 5 p e r line, p e r da y 2-4 da y s, $ 1.50 p e r line, p e r da y 1 0 + da ys, $1.1 5 p e r line, per d a y S 5-9 days, $ 1.3 0 p e r line, p e r d a y 10+ d a y s, $ 1 .0 0 p e r line, per d a y 3 line m inim um . A d d a bold h ea d lin e for th e co s t o f 2 lines. Dates you w ish your ad to fun: _ _ □ Price per Day $ Bank Card Number # of Days Total X Classification Name/Number Name on Canti Expiration Ostie S o n y , m cannot a ccep t personal a d s through the mail. 098 Adoption 088 Fundraising 040 H o m es for Sale 063 Motorcycles 100 065 Airplanes 052 Furniture 102 H ousecleaning 082 M u sic 081 Sports & Recreation 010 Announcem ents 049 G a ra g e Sa les 107 Instruction 090 P ersonals 058 Tickets 0 20 Apartments 101 Health & Fitness 103 Insurance 084 P ets • 031 Tow nhom es/Condos for Rent 061 Service s ' Automobiles 074 H elp W anted-Child C a re 056 Jewelry 110 Photography 041 Tow nhom es/Condos for S ale 064 Bicycles 072 H elp W anted-Clerical 076 Jo b Opportunities 097 Pregnancy Counseling 060 Transportation 051 Books 073 H elp W anted-Food Service 015 Leg a l N otices 047 Real Estate 067 Travel 077 B usin ess Opportunities 070 H elp W anted-General 120 M iscellaneous 035 Rental Sharing 108 Tutors 054 Com puters 071 H e lp W anted-Sales 050 M iscellaneous for S a le 080 Restaurants/Bars 105 Typing/Word P rocessing 086 Fre e Loet/Found 030 H o m es for Rent 045 M obile Hom es 037 R o o m s for Rent 115 W anted l_____________ __ j y Page 16 St a t e P ress Tuesday, September 27, 1994 The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook An investment in your lifetime — Order yours today for $36.93, Matthews Center basement, Rm 50, 965-6881 'MON-FRI2-5 pm • 59i Drafts Bud & Bud Light, •99( Bottled Beer Rolling Rock Henry Wienhard's • 99