ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ¿Copyright. StatePress, 1994 Tempe. Arizona Thu rsd ay, O cto b er 2 0 ,1 9 9 4 An In dependent M orning D aily Voi. 79 No. 41 Nursing students rage over class availability Glick: Lack of money, building space to blame B y L o r r ie C o h e n S t a t e P ress Several of the nearly 60 nursing students who thought they would be graduating soon say they are sick and tired of battling with administrators to get into classes. “They lied to us and they are ruining people’s lives,” said Nicole Shireman, a nursing senior. “When we enter the pro­ gram, the welcome should be ‘Welcome to ASU arid then we’ll put the squeeze on you.’” All students in the program are required to take clinical courses to get a baccalaure­ ate degree in nursing. These courses are usually taken when all prerequisites are met and only allow for 60 students per semester, yet this year 117 students need them to graduate. “We are quite concerned about this,” Provost Milton Click said. “It’s unfortunate and right now we are in the process of look­ ing into it. It is not clear what these students were told in the past.” Click said there are no short-term solu' tions. ■. “The leadership in the college is very concerned,” Glick said. “We are going back to take a look to see if we can do some­ thing.” Glick said the obvious solution — to make more room for the students — is not feasible. “Given our salary scale, we have a hard time hiring more faculty,” said Glick, who added that building space and the number of hospital placements are also important fac­ tors. Upon entering the program in the early 1990s, students were told, based on their academic calendar, that they would be able to graduate by maintaining a 2.5 grade point average. But now students with 3.0 and higher GPAs are being turned away from the clinical courses. “They keep changing the rules on this kids,” said Edith Mumane, whose daughter Kathleen is a senior. “My daughter’s cata­ logue year has been discriminated against. I told my daughter not to give ASU one more red cent.” However, Jean Craig Stengel, director of student services for the College of Nursing, said students are confused. She said although the GPA has been raised from 2.5 to 2.75, that does not apply to the entrance for the clinical courses. The College of Nursing’s rules and poli­ cies have not changed, it is the competition that has increased. The college takes the 60 best students for the clinical courses with the highest GPA and that can change each year. “We have always said this, this is noth­ ing new, the students were just not listen­ ing,” Stengel said. “The competition now is great and before it was not as great.” Many students said they are not buying nursing administrators’ explanations. Gina Feletar, a senior nursing student, said “ASU has completely destroyed” her education. “They w ent back on th eir p o licy ,” F eletar said. “The guidance counselor promised me I would get in “Group A” (the group that has completed all prerequisites). T urn to N ursing, page 8. KASR beams signal to entire U niversity for first tim e B y L is a G o n d e r in g e r S t a t e P ress “It’s great to be heard!" • There is a feeling of excitement charging through ASU’s student-run KASR radio station during the first days of broadcasting its signal over the entire campus. “For better or for worse, people can hear us now,” said Bobby Barr, a senior broadcast management student who works at the station. “The DJs are all running around like crazy trying to find out just how far away you can hear us — it’s like a new toy." Up until Monday, the station’s signal could only be picked up in residence halls. But with the purchase of anew 16-foot, $3,000 tran sm itter that sits on top o f the Engineering building's F-Wing, KASR’s programs can now be heard within a 100-foot radius of the entire campus. KASR station manager Brent Milner said the transmitter was installed last week and Monday was the first day of official broadcast. “We have been trying everything we could think of for years and years to expand the system,” said Milner, also a senior broadcasting student. “We have run into so many brick walls it has been depressing.” Gail Kelemen. KASR programming director and senior business management student, said although there will not be a change in the format of the music, the increase in audi­ ence will require a few changes. “We will keep our em phasis on newer alternative music,” she said. “The only effect it will have on us in that T urn to KASR, page 2. Mark Kramer/State Press KASR Program Director G ayle Keleman b ro a d ca sts a c r o s s cam p u s T uesd ay afternoon. A new transm itter installOd M onday allow s th e station 's sig n a l to b e p icked up cam p u sw id e at 680 and 1260 AM. Police: H eaviest bicycle loss occurs in fall Thieves lured to campus in September, October by new bikes _ „ ___ 1 B y K a ryn R ied el l S ta te P ress Photo illustration by Craig Maenaughton/Stato Press ¡cording to ASU DPS, bike th efts at ASU usually in crease in iptem ber an d O ctober. T h ie v es apparently are e n tic e d by s large num ber o f new b ic y c le s o n cam p u s at th e beginning the sc h o o l year. INSIDE STATE PRESS Weather Outlook Sunny and wanner. High 84, low 53. October is one of the busiest months for bike thieves on campus, according to ASU Department of Public Safety officer A1 Phillips. “We’ve already had 54 thefts this month,” Phillips said. “That’s a lot” According to ASU DPS statistics from 1988 to 1993, the heaviest level of bike thefts have occurred in the months of September and October. During those months in the past six years, 356 bikes were reported stolen in September and 318 in October. The next highest total was for the month of February, which had 281 in the six-year period. This year, 66 bikes were reported stolen in September and 54 have been reported stolen so far in October. Phillips said ASU is “hit hard” at the beginning of the year because of all the new bicycles on campus. ASU DPS officer Charles Loftus said the number of bikes reported stolen is probably conservative because of the thefts that &e not reported. P |U E S .< ^ A g a z i t ^ 1 • Run away with the Moscow circus • SPMb second annual State Fair guide + A plethora of plays & Concert reviews «‘We t i r - „only „ I . . receive G,n!1c n l oabout h m it Aft p aactual rtiifl (calls non) 50 rworr-pnt percent rvf of th the thefts,” he said. No area of campus is safe from bicycle thieves, but Loftus said that the core of campus seems to get hit harder than other areas. “There are probably more than two to three groups doing it. ... One criminal could easily be responsible for 30 percent of the thefts. For some people, it is their only occupation,” Loftus said. In addition to early fall, right before Christmas and January are busy times for bike thieves, Phillips said. ‘They (bicycle thieves) know students will be gone for about a month and they’re looking for that window of opportu­ nity,” he said. “Bicycle thieves, like everybody else, do their Christmas shopping right before Christmas.” Phillips said bicycle theft is so common because the majori­ ty of people still use cables and chains. Even when people do use more expensive and reliable locks, such as the Kryptonite U-locks, they are often careless Turn to Bikes, S p o rts Ron Cnilds and the rest of the Cougars bring the Pac-lO’s No. l-rankeddefense ~ into Saturday’s nH game with ASU. jfl| - page 2. Where To Find It Classifieds..... .................... 17 Comics................................ 14 Crossword . ...f Horoscopes ............... .19 Opinion............................... ..4 Police Report......., ,.......... ..b Sports.................................. 15 Today’s Activities,,......... , 7 ..i World/Nation....... . $2^5® T oday S t a t e P ress T h u rsd gt October 2p, 1994 Pagie 2 IM The Today Section is a daily calendar oflevents printed as a service to the ASU commmury. Requests are accepted on cdfirst-c<^he, ftrst-setve'.basis and i |p printed on U spade - date, time and the fidl address of the location. AU requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded, Deadline for 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. • , • Alcoholics Anonymous — Closed A.A. campus meeting. Noon, Newman Center basement/Aquinas Hall. , t . . • Society of Professional Journalists — Freedom of Information workshop. Featuring Tribune reporter Mark Flatten, and Republic reporters Rich Robertson and Mary Jo Pitzl, 3:30 p.ra., Reading Room, Stauffer Hall. ' • Financial Management Association— General meeting. 4:30 p.m., MU Gold. • Hindi Jewish Student Center — Evening at die Improv. Space is limited, call Hillel for reser­ vations at 967-7563.7 p.m., the Improv, Cornerstone Shopping Center. • MUAB — Film screening: Evil Dead 2 .2:40 p.m.', Union Cinema, MU lower level. • Adult Development and Aging Program — Arizona Coalitionof Aging Presentation. The organization focuses on job opportunities and current issues in the field of aging. 7:30 p.m., MU Mohave, Room 222. _ • • Pd Chi National Honor Society in Psychology — Regular meeting. Guest speakers; Dr. Manuel Barrera on graduate school; and Dr. Sanford Braver, on the Honors College. Officer elections will be held. 5:30 p.m.. Psychology Building Room 205. • Intervarsity Christian Fellowship — Worship, Bible study and fellowship. Everyone wel­ come, check MU monitors fra confirmation. 7:30 p.m., MU 208D. • Canterbury-Episcopal Campus Ministry — Worship service, dinner and group discussion. 6:15 p.m., St. Augustine’s Church; northeast comer of Broadway and College. • Hawaii CluhTDa HuT — Time to pay up,” and discuss “grindage.” 6 p.m., MU Pinal, Room 215. • Student Environmental Action Coalition — Meeting, discussion .about Wounded Earth Summit, Environmental Day on campus, campus recycling, and more. 3 p.m., REACH offices, Conference Room 113, MU third floor. • r a m p .« C rusade for C h rist — Thursday Night l iv e . Open B ible study, music d id fun. 7:30 p.m.. Physical Science H -wing, Room 150. • Philosophy Club — General meeting: “Personal Identity; What makes a person die same per­ son across time.” 4 p.m., PS A546. • Asian Students Association — General meeting. 4:30 p.m., MU Pima, Room 218. • No on Proposition 300 — Election Day meeting. 1:30 p.m., Cady Mall Fountain. • Students Toward Educational Process — General meeting: “Life After Graduation with the Doc,” by Dr. Michael Young, Assistant Dean of Honors College. Everyone welcome. 3:45 p.m., MU Room 206. • Alcohol Awareness Week — Reid sobriety testing demonstration with the Tempe Police. 11 a.m.-2 p.m.. West Lawn. • KASR — Guest host: Laurie Notaro and Bobby Diablo, Explore Laurie s darker side. Contest/request line 965-4163.11:30 p.m., Channel 22. • Baptist Student Union — Noonday; free lunch and devotion. Drama, music and more. Noon, 1322 S. Mill Ave. . ' i • SnowdevOs Ski and Snowboard Club — Weekly meeting. 6:30 p.m., Cluck-U Chicken, 85S S. Rural Road. K A SR C ontinued from page 1. . - • respect is that now we will have to make three times as jure obscenitips don’t get out over the.air.” . ;. t ] , Along with being available to AM radios across campus, Kelemen said, people driv­ ing betw een A pache B oulevard, F ifth Street, Mill Avenue and Rural Road should be able to pick up the station on their car radios. When KASR was founded in ,l£ 8 2 , it was set up with a carrier current systen), which means that each residence hall on campus was equipped with tan AM trans­ mitter and the station’s broadcast signal was filtered into the building’s electrical system. Only radios in or very close to the buildings could get anything more than stat­ ic when they turned to 680 AM. The station currently can be found at both 680 and 1260 AM. The station’s 30-watt transm itter is weak in comparison to other, far-reaching AM stations, which typically broadcast at 50,p00,watts. But KASR’$ .transmitter is as strong as is ¡allowpdi by the Federal Communications Commission. FCC rules state that a campus radio sta­ tion doesn’t need to be licensed as long as its signal stays within the boundaries of the campus. Broadcasting at a higher power or on the FM dial is unlikely because of the huge cost involved, Said Fritz Leigh, faculty adviser for the station and associate director of the Cronkite School. Also, no FM frequencies are available now, Leigh said even if there were an open frequency, the station would most likely stay right where it is. “O u t m ission is to train students in broadcasting and to serve the student popu­ lation,” he said. “We are not in the business of serving the whole Tempe community.” Bikes C o n t in u e d fro m p a g e ! . and place the lock on the front wheel only, Loftus said. “The lock should go through the front tire, the rear tire and the frame,” he said. “It takes about 15 seconds to do it the right way. People tell me all the time they should have taken the extra few sec­ onds to do it right.” “Ktyptonite locks are what we use for our police bikes,” he added. Phillips recommended that bicyclists take the bicycle Safety class offered through ASU DPS as one way of fighting the problem. In addition to being more careful on campus, bicyclists also need to be alert when off campus, said Les Strickland, R e p o r t e d t h e f t s r is e i n f a l l Average number of reported bicycle thefts by month from 1988 to 1993. J F M A j :; j Source: ASU DPS crime prevention officer for the Tempe Police department He added that bicycle thefts a / s o n :p J a s o n O w sle y /S tate P re s s are more common around the University than in other areas of Tempe. _______ W orld/N ation STATE P r e ss _________ _______________ ______ Thursday, October 2 0 ,1 9 9 4 __________________________________P a g e _ 3 Bomb blast k ills 22 aboard Tel Aviv bus H opes for peace fade as furious Israelis clam or for revenge TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — The terror at the edges of the quest for Middle East peace exploded Wednesday when a bomb on a crowded city bus killed 22 people and turned a bustling street into a scene from a slaughterhouse. The attack, the worst in Israel in 16 years, wounded 48 people. Police blamed it on a suicide bomber. Some Israelis cried for vengeance against the Islamic radicals who have claimed responsibility for three major attacks in 10 days. Shouts of “Death to the A rabs!” were heard from bystanders on the seaside city’s main thoroughfare as sev­ ered aims and legs were gathered for burial, some from on top of four-story buildings. “It will end. It has to end. We will tear them to bits,” said President Ezer Weizman, who called for “extraordi­ nary action” to root out Islamic extremists. Police suspected a West Bank fugitive known as “The Engineer” of planning the attack, according to Israeli new s. reports. The attack sparked anti-government protests around the country and gave Prime M inister Yitzhak Rabin little choice but to retaliate against extremist groups who oppose Israel-Arab peace-making. In a dramatic television address, an angry Rabin said he would seek legislative backing for a wide-ranging crack­ down on the fundamentalists, while at the same time press­ ing ahead in peace talks with the Palestine Liberation Organization. Departing from his cautious approach to peacemaking, he stressed the need fo ra final political settlement that will divorce Israelis from the Palestinians of West Bank and Gaza Strip. “We need a separation between us and the Palestinians, not just for days but as a way of life,’’ Rabin said. The apparent suicide bombing reminded Israelis of their continued vulnerability to terrorism, even as the country prepares to sign a peace agreement with Jordan next week. President Clinton said he still would attend the ceremo­ ny on the Israel-Jordan border. Israel Radio said security would be tightened for Clinton’s visit. An Israeli p olice officer runs p ast a body which had fallen out of the w reckage o f a b u s ripped apart by a bom b in Tel Aviv W ednesday. The bom bing, w hich killed 22 p eop le and w ounded 48, w a s an apparent su ic id e attack by Islam ic militants. Also shattered was the peace of mind Israelis prize in Tel Aviv, a lively seaside metropolis that often seems a refuge from the bloodshed of the Arab-Israeli conflict. “It’s like Russian roulette living in this country,” said Ronny Levy. “Every day someone else gets killed.” Israel sealed off the Gaza Strip and West Bank after the mid-moming blast, claimed by the radical Islamic group Hamas in a statement read in Gaza mosques. The group also was blamed for a Sept. 10 shooting spree in Jerusalem that killed two bystanders. Militants then kid- CBS ignores Itos plea for silence on new Simpson book LOS ANGELES (AP) — The judge in the O.J. Simpson case asked broadcasters to delay airing interviews with the author of a sensational new book about Nicole Brown Simpson, but CBS and Maury Povich said today they will go ahead with the programs as scheduled. CNN, however, agreed to delay Larry King’s interview with Faye Resnick, who alleges that Simpson stalked his ex-wife and threatened to kill her if she slept with another man. In letters to the broadcasters asking for the delays, Superior Court Judge Lance Ito hinted he will sequester the jury . “I hope you will find it in your con­ science, corporate and otherwise, to cooper­ ate with this request and delay this pro­ gram's broadcast until after the jury in this case has been selected and sequestered,” Ito wrote. Ito’s letter was faxed Tuesday to both talk show hosts and to CBS News President Eric Ober. Povich, King and CBS’s Connie Chung all had planned to broadcast inter­ views with Resnick, a friend o f Nicole Simpson’s and the author of Nicole Brown Sim pson: The P riva te D iary o f a L ife interrupted. Povich said from New York he will air his show, taped last week, on Friday. CNN, which carries King’s show, said it would delay its broadcast. “In light of the court’s fair trial con­ cerns, in this case CNN has decided to ... delay telecast of the interviews,” CNN said in a statement. Ober said in a letter to Ito that CBS believes broadcasting Chung’s interview with Resnick is “fully consistent with responsible journalism.“ CBS spokeswom­ an Sandy Genelius said the show would be aired as scheduled Thursday. A court spokeswoman, who spoke with the judge after the letters were released, said Ito had not made a final decision on sequestration. Ito suspended jury selection Tuesday, telling potential jurors that the book may threaten Simpson’s right to a fair trial. He ordered the first group of potential jurors before him, roughly 80 people, not to read newspapers or magazines, watch TV or listen to the radio. He even told them to stay out of bookstores. Two other groups of prospects have yet to appear in court for in-depth questioning. Ito now may be forced to- sequester hot only the jury, but the entire jury pool. He said he would talk to the attorneys on the case and “other authorities” before decid­ ing what to do next, and called a private meeting today with the lawyers. Sequestering the jury pool is one of Ito’s most extreme options. He could delay the case to let the public­ ity die down, but that’s unlikely because of the intense coverage. He also could move the trial outside of Los Angeles, but that’s also unlikely because the publicity! has respected no borders. The most likely solution, some legal analysts said, is some sort of sequestration combined with aggressive questioning of potential jurors to gauge whether they have been affected by the book or the news accounts of it. Jury questioning resumes Thursday; opening arguments aren’t expected until November. napped a soldier, killing him just as commandos stormed their safehouse Friday. A commando and three militants were also killed. O fficials in dicated Israel m ight respond w ith an unprecedented blow against Hamas’ armed wing, Izzetiine al-Qassam. / . Rabin cut short a trip to London, rushing back to consult with security officials and Cabinet ministers. Dozens of demonstrators outside his Defense Ministry office greeted T u r n t o I s r a e l, p a g e 12. Aristide blames foes for Haiti violence PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — in the coastal town o f Gonaives, have President Jean-Bertrand Aristide blamed alarmed members of Haiti’s upper class, his right-wing foes Wednesday for street Extending an apparent olive branch to violence that has spread, fear among the wealthy, Aristide described a Cabinet Haiti’s elite, and he promised a new gov- that will include members of all classes.;', emment of toe “rich and poor.” There was no immediate word, how> D esp ite expectatio n s h e w q ü ï d . è - v e t , on a replacem ent; for caretaker announcesome key govermnent appretti-’ Prim é M in ister R obert M alvai. An ments, Aristide spoke only in general announcem ent had been expected terms of Ms plans for an administration Wednesday. embracing all Haitian classes and dediM alvai, a businessm an, never was cated to reconciliation. Aristide’s choice for the job, although he Speaking to reporters at the National was favored by U.S. diplomats who saw Palace for five first time sinee a U.S. Air him as a moderate to the long-runntog Force jet brought him back Saturday from conflict between the right-wing military titiee years in exile, he accused Msoppo- and the leftist priest-president toppled m n en tso fah ead y w o rk in g to o n d erm to c 1991. * T y * Political analysts say Foreign Minister “There is a cam paignj^jum iipulationf C lau d ettèW erleig \ is the leading e tw | aiming to tm âsfyÿie image oiçîtoe gov- £ tendetóió be M a lv a i*«.'.replacem ent emment,” Aristide said. * A rtid e "said it was “hot impossible” he He said Ms jibes hired armed agents *' would naraè a wommi as Ms new prime and contracted huses for thetoto go on minister. looting sprees.Which have been blamed Th e interim army chief, M aj. Gen. on A ristide sympathizers. Mobs havë Jean-Claude IMpervM ^ named just last attacked businesses and homes Of people week to replace copp lead er L t, Gen." linked to H aiti’s repressive army. Raoul Cedras, now in exile in Panama —“We oppose all acts o f violence and aH ' is also expected to be replaced acts of vengeance,” he said. ; Brig- G e n ^ B p ^ in foisson, promotThe violence has increased premure on ed T^sda.ÿ;fr9|h ^ d fiM ||s the front-ruir-. Aristide to eo&tfnpt góvemroeito *igr fo r toe jo b ,^ i^ n m # ? sources said;, quickly and p ^ il ^ id b ?M (â itt control ’fdisSC^ ^ t f t i t e FfehélMrained ctoef o f o f H aitii which has b ^ ^ i É e r and is considered an stewardship o f the H ^ p |i t o r y Hncè. apolitical professional. The fire depart*. Sept 19. mfcntM lsip klérarin yjurisdiction. *„ ; h im has already begun blame fear .toe violenceat ite feet (if ■ m eeitoty.w ith m ilitary leaders; ab o u t right-wing foes, his supporters appear reshaping the army, long criticised for nespMisible for a( least some of the many brutality and human rights abuses, gttljgfc«- £5 "t The- ; army ousted Aristide jn y The violence, including M onitori# September 1991, seven months after he ¡¡■ ■ ■ IB ;to te rim » y c $ ^ State P ress Thursday, October 20,1994 Page 4 KASR gets extension KASR is in die air. ASU’s radio station has been on the air for 11 years — but now, for the first tim e, the station w ill be broadcast over the airwaves on the local campus area (100 feet from die sta­ tion) instead o f being limited to the previous “closed-circuit/cable” dorm audience. Now, anywhere on the main campus, ami nearby on Apache Boulevard, Fifth Street and M ill Avenue you should be able to twirl the dial over to 1260 AM. Those o f us not living in the dorms, even if we still can’t get it in our h om es, can at le a st brin g a Walkman™ along with us to campus. A ll in a ll, it’s a chance to shun die more dreary com m ercial sta tio n s in fa v o r o f a new opportunity to sam ple som e o f KAS R *s playlist o f alternative and college music. W hich, w e’re told, w ill remain roughly the sam e form at — an o a sis tn the AM desert o f angry Christian sermons, wailing country western music and decrepit, linger­ ing-on undead oldies stations. Finally, some­ thing on the dial that’s worth listening to. Granted, colorful metaphors (obscenities to us non-linguistics majors) w ill be a thing o f the past (the Federal C om m unications Commission frowns on that sort o f thing), but trading four-letter words for a fartherranging broadcasting seem s a fair trade. It’s something w e’re happy to see — but it’s about time. KASR receives about $25,000 from ASU each year; located on campus, the radio sta­ tion is not only the affiliated station but1is also part of the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism. As such, it provides an unequaled opportunity for students to encounter first­ hand the process of radio journalism — much as the State Press offers the same privilege to print journalists or Channel 8 offers to broad­ cast television majors. C onsidering the fact that m ost major, nation-ranked, Research I institutions have broadcast FM stations (let alone AM sta­ tions — and some have both), perhaps ASU is not giving o u r cam pus rad io statio n enough money. ■• KASR w ill also, attempt to obtain money from ASASU (which, if it has $15,000 to hand over to Pauly Shore, should'be'able'to find something, you?d think), and the increased broadcast range will hopefully make the sta­ tion a better prospect for local advertisers. But that doesn’t excuse the fact that many a modem major degree program are treated like ugly stepchildren, in favor o f more pres­ tigious programs. We’re happy to see KASR finally reach a new level o f radio; but w e’re left wondering whether or not ASU’s doijng enough for the .station., • - , -o-. ,**> - >># i ■' - i-' >i. . STATE PRESS TAFF Get outta my way, Fm driving With cooler weather knocking on the door, outside activities are becoming commonplace. O n ^ such undertaking involves get­ ting into our cars and cruising the town. Our love affair with the automobile causes us to be happy even if we are driving to no p articu lar place! This euphoric trip comes to an abrupt halt when we realize that our concrete and tar playgrounds in the Phoenix area are severely deficient. If you have driven anywhere in Tempe, Scottsdale, Phoenix or Mesa recently, you have probably figured out that our freeway system is lackluster. This is not even to mention (yet) the dummkopfs that operate our steel and rub­ ber gods. Of course many of you have your horrific stories of traffic, bad drivers, dangerous intersections and so forth. However, 1 would be willing to bet my failing statistics grade that my tales of trepidation are worse than yours. “Why?” you ask. I am an expert on driving because I sit in my car every traffic-clogged day twitching and groaning and swearing and sweating as I make my way to work. I have to travel 12 miles to get to work on these 18th century wagon trails. Those 12 miles usually take me 30 minutes, or one episode of the Brady Bunch, depending on your per­ spective. That’s an average speed of 24 whopping miles per hour. I believe that’s slower than the line at the financial aid office. Nah, that would be nearly impossible. One dark and-stormy January afternoon, my northward trek ended up consuming more than the usual 30 minutes. The rain had been coming down all day, so I planned for many delays. You know, because people in the Phoenix metro area can’t seem to drive when U rains. Minutes after leaving my swamp-like parking lot, I came upon the mon­ ster that regularly consumes entire cement trucks. This beast is more widely recognized as what we call traffic. As I slowly continued north on Scottsdale Rofkl in the congestion and the rain, the hideous monster reared its evil head as it stared deep into my soul. I quivered as I came closer and closer like some mythological dragon slayer. With the smell of blood, oil and overheating cars in the air, I drew my mighty lahee and' plowed in (not literally, of course). My initial contact with the dolt was not very pleasurable, so I made a 180-degree turn and headed for the hills of safe­ ty. I crissed and I crossed street after grueling street. To no avail, there was no gettin’ through this mess. My will to fight drained from my body as 1 stared mind­ lessly into its blood-red eyes. My face was pale, my hands sweaty and my legs sore as I realized my fate. I felt confi­ dent and proud shortly before the monster consumed me and my four-wheeled friend. I had put up a good fight, and almost won on several occasions. However, this was not to be my victorious day. As I sank into the pit of the beast’s belly, my screams could be heard for miles. It took me three hours to get to work that day. I sit and look back at that traumatic time in my life, as tears of anguish well up in my eyes. I think about the others who were not as fortunate to make it out. The skeletal remains of their autos continue to cloud the shoulders of “the road.” Such a senseless tragedy could have been avoided if we had an adequate freeway system that all of the meatheads could utilize. Time after time, as 1 check my patience at the car door and put on my driving suit, I wonder what my adventure will entail. A rental from the devil himself, my driving suit is red and black with little horns on the head. You know, like Sparky, but scary. It even comes with a little pitch fork to stab people who drive slowly in the left lane.’ “Hey you going 15 mph over there! Get outta the way before this pitch fo rk com es through your window and greets your face!” In reality, my driving suit is the personality that I adopt when I go out on the Oregon Trail. Once it goes on, it’s no more Mr. Nice Guy. There’s no smiling, laughing, singing or whistling while I’m behind the wheel. Doing so may cause your immediate ejection from the vehicle. It’s my way or the highway, baby. All that I’m asking is for you to use your noggin when you’re behind the wheel. Driving can be fun if you use a lit­ tle bit of common sense. By the way, why don’t you Arizona Department of Transportation people get off your, keisters and build me a freeway before 2006? Brian Anderson is a sophomore journalism major. JASON OWSLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor Readicker. KRIS F R ID ^ rà i.r , ,..,,,„ ,.,,.r . ......................... NightEditor PH O TO G R A PH ER S: Theresa Boettcher, Mark Kramer. GARIN G ROW .......!.............. ...................City Editor ■N. Scott Trimble. ■ , GREG ZEMÖDA CityEditor UNSIGNED EDITOR: James Frusetta DAVID LA SPALUTOi.J£i..... Editor COLU M N ISTS: Brian An^er^on. James Frusetta, Barry A. MARJORY KAMINSKI ........ Opinion Editor Kelley, Diana Lopez, James Mahin, Mike Stevens, Chris ' CRAIG MACNAyGHTON..... . Photo Editor Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whittavh. jtM to ü L iN .,i!.!;..* ..:....‘.!...r 'i:!.'-.:r.,.Asst. >hoto Editor CARTOONISTS: Stacy HoUnSedt, Btyce Morgan. JEREMY STEIW ..,..',..,.. a. . . ......Sports & M r GRAPHIC ARTIST: Yamini prabhakara. DAWN W AGNER.,............¿.Asst, Sports Editor PR O D U C T IO N : Aaron B ratcher. Stacey Devlin, Beth KEN COI4-INS .......... y...................... .....Magazine. Editor ANNA ULINICH.... !......................... Asst. Magazine.Editof ' French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader,' Dave Weber. R E P O R T E R S : M ika A k ikuni, 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, D an C h ristin a B ailey , Tim B ax ter, L o rrie C ohen, Dawn Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Megan Owsley, DeChristina, Lisa Gonderinger, Christine Granados, Dave Jennifer Pittman. Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten, Marc Woife, Proffitt. Karyn Riedell. SPO R T S R E PO R T E R S: Todd Kelly. Dan Miller, Lee Unsigned editorials reflect the v ie w so f 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 hot reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DA.VIQ S-pRpW , A. MARJORY, KAMINSKI 1D A V to LASPALUTO Editor . Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor ' T h e State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing thé academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s.Center; Room 15,, A rizona State University,,. Tempe, Ariz. 85287,1502. We do not answer questions q f a ..general nature. Thé StateiPress is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper arc not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers j information......*.....965-7572 ' Newsroom..............965-2292 Magazine................965-1695 Advertising........... .965-6555 Classifieds...............965-6735 Opinioni Thursday, October 20,1994 State Press Page 5 Geffen walks while gay com m unity talks Katzenberg, former dhief executi ve o f Walt Disney j Reagan years wanted an androgqpic postef-boy,; it ¡would be If circumstances ever present­ Studios, is a multimillionaire and the pauper of the group. David Geffen. # ed a dichotomy betweien rhetoric In 1988 Geffen made his debut on the Forbes 400 list of Spielberg, the best known of the three, is a mere billionaire. and results, last week was the America’s richest individuals. At the time his net worth Yet it is Geffen who is the richest and perhaps most intrigu­ magnum opus. was estimated to be around $240 million. What launched ing of the triumvirate. He is a homosexual. Last Tuesday was Coming To quote the man, Geffen is “completely gay.” Yet sur­ him into the financial stratosphere was selling his record Out Day in Phoenix. The local rounded by the international media during their press con­ label in 1990 to MCA for ten million shares of MCA stock. gay community took to the steps Recall the spur of foreign investm ent coming into ference, there were no questions regarding the sexual pref­ of the Arizona Supreme Court erences of. any of the partners. There were no questions as America at the time, and the criticism it brought. British building to protest the lack of and Dutch investors poured to how many lesbian pro- . : ■ ; .. • legal protection from em ploy­ onto our shores, gobbling ducers they would employ ment discrimination. As usual, or how many homosexual G e f f e n w a s a b e n e f i c i a r y o f t h e D e c a d e up com panies and real even a few politicians showed estate with their overvalued directors they would hire. up to present their sympathies, o f G r e e d ; o f c o r p o r a te ta k e o v e r s , f o r e i g n , currencies. Sony bo u g h t What matters is merits, not press the flesh and pander for i n v e s t m e n t , a n d t h a t m o s t h i d e o u s , CBS Records and TriStar mates. votes. . Pictures, and a Japanese This presents the riddle: s y m b o l o f t h e ’8 0 * s — j u n k b o n d s . The purpose of such rallies is to gain attention, shout syndicate acquired how does a hom osexual inflated statistics and generally to make a nuisance of your­ R o ck efeller C enter. As self to bystanders in order to gain sympathy. What precise­ who has become a billion­ downtown Los Angeles real estate and Hawaiian beach­ have a hand in starting the aire listed on the Forbes 400, ly is accomplished by such action is dubious, but what the first major Hollywood studio in over 70 years with discrim­ front property were consumed by Japanese investors, cries i hell — you still get your name in the paper! citing this as hazardous to our economic health began to If you were unfortunate enough to get caught in this ination as pervasive as the gay community claims? arise and Washington followed with attempts to restrict for­ The answer is greed. More to the point, capitalist greed. spectacle, you would have heard the usual speeches that homosexuals and lesbians Suffer from employment discrim­ Geffen became a multimillionaire in 1969 at the age of 26. eign investment. On the other side of the investment coin are the individ­ ination. According to the gay community, if an employee You don’t fall into fortunes by attending rallies in the park uals who sold to-the Japanese. Less than a year after Geffen or protesting legislation. : i < y 5’ of a different lifestyle is fired, the singular cause is that the ijtecoids-was sokf toM CA, Matsushita came in to buy. out _ _ J S W hat! am sure Iriks titfe individual is gay. : . . -.1 - ■¡«1 " : . n” - f —— gay community is the fact MCAJS.ooin aftefMat&usjúta’s X H 1S J Y H W R O R H J R , E Y ¥ ZSG R G am m age 40 42 10-20 STEAK • CHICKEN • SEAFOOD 39 YW Q X RQ W Y Y E X IZ F ZR O R D M jF X Q R SI W . IJ YFF WXFl.TROSEQ Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te: IF THEY FRYTO RUSH ME I ALWAYS SAY I'VE ONLY GOT ONE OTHER SPEED AND IT'S SLOWER.—GLENN FORD 0 1994 by King Features Syndicate, W f / Page.; 7 Thursday, October 2 0 ,1 9 9 4 S t a t e P r ess B enefit planned for m issing student B y T im B a x t e r S t a t e P r e ss The search for missing ASU student K im berly Nilson w ill be aided by a benefit concert on campus Friday night featuring Liquid Steel, a local rockalternative band. N ilson, a senior ASU exercise science major, was N il s o n reported missing Aug. 22. She was last seen by her roommate sleeping in her apartment that morning. The concert will be held at Palo Verde Beach, which lies between the Palo Verde East and Palo Verde West residence halls, from 7 to 10 p.m. Donations will be accept­ ed, all of which will go to the Kimberly Nilson search fund. Rick Olson, a lab stores controller in ASU’s zoology department and a guitar player for the band, originated the idea. “I have a daughter the same age, and I wanted to do something positive/’ he said. The response to the idea has been overt whelmingly positive, Olson said. “We got a good response from the (Residence) Hall Council when we took it to them.” S tate P ress P atrick B aker, / A ssociated Students of ASU special events coor­ dinator, is also helping with the event. “I knew (Nilson) when I worked with the Residence Hall Association,” Baker said. “There’s a lot of people here that knew her. We’re trying to help out with promoting the event.” Sandra Nilson, Kimberly’s sister, said she thought the event was a “great idea” and that it would help fund the search for Kimberly . “I’m real excited about it,” she said. “We’re working on national distribution of flyers arid posters,” Nilson said. “We’re obtaining a mailing list of hotels, restau­ rants, and other businesses to post flyers.” Olson said he doesn’t know how much money the event will generate because it will raise funds only from donations. “I hope there’s a good turn-out,” Olson said. “H opefully we can raise a lot of money.” Olson described Liquid Steel as having a “Soundgarden or Pearl Jam” kind of sound. Tempe Police spokesman Tom Ryff said officers are still searching for Nilson. “W e’re still receiving tips, we’re still following up on tips, but we don’t have anything significant.” , The only free thing at ASU. s k j Lc z Since 1984 • Foreign And Domestic Repair And Maintenance, • Below Dealer Prices. • FREE Shuttle To Campus. Ihc 18 .3 6 £ . 6 d c v 4p n O 2 » O N E -B LO O D I V RESIDENT ASSISTANTS reggae fo r1 $ 3°° PITCHERS OF BEER $ 6 ° ° PITCHERS OF TEAS Parts Available for Spring Semester 8 * 12am Com e to an Informational Meeting on: October 25 , 6:00 PM at the M.U. Room 208 D/ October 26 , 5:00 PM at the Sonora T V Lounge. \ U 7 ' 11Pm : ^ K 1 $-|.oo Well, Wine & Draft for Everyone! PicK up application at Residential Life $ 5 Cover Turn in application and sign up for an interview VM S A T U R D A Y ----------------- — c 3 JV > o ^ i f vp. 4 3 0 N . S c o tts d a le R d - T è m p e 8 9 4 -0 5 3 3 Prepare for your interview! 1 965-1532 State P ress Thursday, O ctober 2 0 ,1 9 9 4 P age 10 Parking services to make $ 900,000 move to Towers By L isa C ary Special to the State P ress Parking services is trekking to the Towers Dec. 15, moving but o r the termite-infested Campus Inn, and mov­ ing into what was once first-floor retail store space in the eight-story apartment building. ‘T he space we are currently occupying falls short to properly operate,” said David Robertson, parking and transit manager. The northern end of the Towers, at Fifth Street and Forest Avenue, is being remodeled for parking services, except for one space that is being leased by Alexander’s Pizza. “The west end of the parking structure is also being renovated into office space, locker rooms and showers (for ASU Department of Public Safety officers),” Robertson said. This area will mainly be Used as a night location for parking services and DPS to work out of. The first floor of the structure will contain metered vis­ itor parking spaces and state vehicle spaces. Robertson said he is hoping that Lot 55 across the street will also have metered visitor parking spaces. Robertson said the remodeling will be completed no later than Jan. 15. He added that the $900,000 for the renovation and move was taken from decal sales and citations. “We have set aside money each year from parking rev­ enue funds,” he said. DPS will move into the new parking services quarters temporarily, but will return to the old location, which may be tom down, Robertson said. The University has proposed building two similar buildings on the Campus Inn , site to accommodate DPS and its support services and Risk Management, said DPS D irecto r B ill B ess, ASU w ill ask the Arizona Board of Regents at its Oct. 27 j and 28 meeting to fund the buildings. R obertson said parking services has been moved further and further south sev­ eral times over the years to older buildings. “I t’s a com m on joke among veteran em ployees to w alk across cam pus and point at buildings and say ‘I remember when we used to be there,” ’ he said. Robertson also said he hopes to negoti­ ate with the FLASH transit system to add a stop in front of the Towers so parking ser­ vices will be easier to access for on-campus students. N. Scott Tfimbie/Statc Press The Towers complex is owned by ASU Don’t look to th e old C am pus Inn to pay your parking tick ets and buy d e c a ls and will go through three phases before it anym ore. The o ffic e s are h eadin g to th e T ow ers apartment com p lex o n D ec. 15. will be ready to be moved into: • Renovating the retail store spaces into pus vehicles have to be moved. offices. Towers staff said the construction has been going on for • Remodeling the west end of the parking structure. • M oving the telecom m unications system to the three to four weeks and they received noise complaints from residents during the dem olition, but now it has Towers. " The Towers isn’t hooked up to the on-campus phone calmed down. “It was very noisy at first, but it is a lot quieter now,” system, so phone wires have had to be trenched from Lot 51 and connected to the offices. Also, gate arms for cam­ said Sandra Lynn, a resident of the Towers. W o r ld new s. Far Side cartoons. S ta te new s. Classified ads. ^ S p o r t s .; Coupons.' ASU new s. Crossword puzzles. W e e k ly m a g a z in e . ^State P ress » ■ « ■ 1 z Wondering how you'll do on a real ■ MCAT? Alpha Epsilon Delta w ill offer a ■ free practice MCAT Saturday, October 1 I I I 1480 is I limited. Call for reservations. |- T T h e C L U T C H P ro * T h e B R A K E P ro ” FRONT OR REAR t m M Q C 'S e r n ^ M e ta tl i c H ig h e r y W WP ■ W A ! *275°? 8 POINT DIAGNOSTIC CHECK • P r e m iu m P a d s / S h o e s « R e s u rfa c e P a d s /D ru m s UP i*f r e e I CLUTCH REPLACEMENT ■ P re s s u re P la t e is c ■ W§ P ■Friction A f lDiSTofcf 'R e l e a s e B e a r in g E x p i r e s 1 1 /3 0 /9 4 ■ I | M M tp M i ■ wF A UP « R e le a s e B e a r in g «LL aab o r E x p i r e s 1 1 /3 0 /9 4 nic CluTchs Brakes Tem pe 7 3 1 -9 4 9 0 W est Phoenix East Phoenix N orth Phoenix 8 6 4 -8 3 3 8 9 5 5 -1 9 9 6 3310 E. Thomas Rd. 17209 N Cavé Creek Rd. 8820 N. Black Canyon Hv P a y m e n t P lan o n A p p ro v e d C re d it 7 8 8 -5 4 4 3 P ' ^ 1] ASK ABOUT OUR LIFETIME WARRANTY ON COMPLETE CLUTCH & BRAKE REPAIRS. Professor Smith ton speak seven languages. Now he's fluent in life insurante. Today, every educator should get an education in life insurance. Call the TIAA Life Insurance Planning Center. Weekdays, 8AM to 8PM, E.S.T. 1800223-1200 This offer is available to faculty, staff, administrators and their spouses. Ifeachers Insurance and Annuity Association 730 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017/3206 Ensuring the future fo r those who shape it. * P ag e 11 Thursday, October 2 0 ,1 9 9 4 S t a t e P r ess Homecoming weekend kicks off today with “Cultural Day” B y T im B a x ter S tate P ress ASU H om ecom ing activities kick o ff today with Cultural Day on Hayden Lawn and continue through this weekend, climaxing Saturday with the ASU football game against the W ashington State Cougars at Sun Devil Stadium. Brandi Irvin, Associated Students of ASU director of homecoming, said she expects a good turnout for the festiv­ ities. “Cultural Day always draws a lot of people,” she said. “T here w ill be food, m usic and dancing, and the Homecoming court will be presented.” Cultural Day begins at 9 a.m. The day-long event will also feature campus and Community groups representing various cultures. The Homecoming King and Queen will be crowned tonight at the Holiday Inn at Rural Road and Apache Boulevard during the “Hoe-down at die Sun Devil Saloon.” The “Hoe-down” is a dinner and dance sponsored by the Alumni Association. Arlene Chin, the Alumni Association Homecoming and student relations coordinator, said it would be an “informal bash.” ' “ This year we decided to go with a theme,” Chin said, “so we had a hoe-down.” Friday at 7 p.m. the traditional Lantern Walk up “A” M ountain w ill begin, follow ed im m ediately by the Homecoming Light Parade at 8 p.m. The parade will start at fifth Street and College Avenue and run down to Mill Avenue. It will then turn south until reaching University Drive, follow University Drive east toward College Avenue, and finish back at fifth Street. “We’re expecting 75 entrants for the parade,” Irvin said. The parade will include floats, walking entrants and Hall Of Fame nominees. Chin said she expects about 7,500 people to watch the parade. About 6,500 attended last year. “We’re just building and building,” she said. On Saturday, the pre-game fiesta and Hall of Fame induction ceremony will take place at the University Activity Center at 4 p.m. The football game will follow the ceremony, beginning at 7 p.m. Tom Sadler, director of stadium management, said peo­ ple come to the homecoming game not only for the festivi­ ties, but to renew old acquaintances. “You see people coming to the game, they want to take part in the festivities, and they want to see old friends.” “It’s a really big weekend for us,” he said. ASU only spends about $10,000 all together on student and alumni events during Homecoming, Chin said. “It’s pretty pitiful compared to what other schools spend.” The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook— An investm ent in your lifetime O rder yours today for $36.93, Matthews Center basement, Rm 5Q, 965-6881 O tE /alU A M f \ Ì k J j S U N • S U R F • V 0 l killer brands Zp a pearing daily... I Do! I Do! Wedding Center Presents... Bridal Extravaganza '94 B rid al Caowog,, Presses- fby db Special j 90% O FF RAMÄDA d o w n t o w n 401 North 1st Street October 28,1994 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. WHY RENT WHEN YOU GAN BUY! C O N G R A TU LA TIO N S TO THE 1994 H O M EC O M IN G RO YALTY CO U R T D e A n n F ra n k R ic h a r d G o ld e n A n d r e w K ra is F re d Lund S o n ja M e r k l e _ : R ic h a r d R o jo C o r e y S e e m iH er B r e n d a W a lla c e R o b e rt W e llm a n A n g e la Z e m la _____ ___ * L E Y S t a t e P res s Israel. There is more to life than news, weather and sports. Check out the comics on page 14. C o n t in u e d h io m » age 3 . him with chants of “Rabin Resign.’ ’ Angry demonstrators also gathered at Dizengoff Square near the scene of the blast, in Jerusalem and throughout die country. The attack came as Israeli and PLO officials sat down in Cairo, Egypt, to talk about expanding the 5-month-old Gaza-Jericho autonomy to the rest of the West Bank. The talks broke off early Wednesday because of die blast. In an unusual statement, PLO leader Yasser Arafat said the Palestinians are “fully cooperating with the Israeli gov­ ernment to search and arrest the perpetrators. But there were no reports of arrests by Arafat’s police in Gaza. “Pushing forward with the peace process . . . is the only way to respond to the enemies of peace who are getting their support, their training and financing from well-known outside parties,” Arafat said, alluding to Iran’s fundamen­ talist government. A suspect in planning the bombing reportedly was Yehia Ayash, nicknamed “The Engineer,” from the West Bank village of Rafat. Ayash is a fugitive wanted for involvement in three ear­ lier bombings, including suicide attacks this year in the northern Israeli towns of Hadera and Afula. Israel maintains the PLO has done too little to rein in Islamic groups that in recent days have shaken the fragile reconciliation declared in the Sept. 13, 1993, autonomy pact. Arafat supporters say they want to avoid civil war in the autonomous areas. Israeli opposition leaders, meanwhile, saw the recent upsurge of violence as an example of the government’s folly in allowing Palestinians to have self-rule. Benjamin Netanyahu, leader of the right-wing Likud, said such policies had opened the doors for terrorists to attack the heart of Israel from their autonomous enclave in the Gaza Strip. Israeli authorities said they believed a suicide bomber carrying up to 44 pounds of explosives boarded the redand-white bus No. 5 as it headed up tree-lined Dizengoff Street, tiie city’s main shopping drag. Around 9 a.m., as the bus approached the cafe-lined central stretch parallel to the beachfront, the explosion ripped it apart. Shattered glass and pieces of metal mixed with pieces of flesh scattered in the street. Members of Israel’s official religious-run burial society labored for hours to remove dozens of bags of bodies and body parts from the scene. Some in the crowd of thousands that formed shouted “Death to Arabs!” over the din of police helicopters, ambulance sirens and the shouts of rescue workers. Hospital sources said two of the 48 wounded were in critical condition, Police said the 22 dead included nearly all the people on the No. 5 bus. Tel Aviv police commander Gabi Last said dozens of Arabs were detained by police after the attack, in part to help them avoid lynchings. It was the bloodiest attack since a 1978 bus hijacking in which 37 Israelis were killed. In 1975, three Palestinians seized hostages at the Savoy Hotel in Tel Aviv, and 11 Israelis and seven Palestinians were killed. 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W A LK -IN S W ELCO M E | 5 T A N N IN G S E S S IO N S 4 95 a 1 MONTH U N L IM IT E D 1 * 3 3 " 1 ..................................................................................................................................... ^ “I want car insurance with a good price. . . and great value.” 8 9 0 Ftallyburger® • • • • • • Low down-payment Easy payment plans Immediate coverage Money-saving deductibles 24-hour countrywide claim service Free rate quote Call us today or stop by our local office: 931-0766 When you’re living on a college budget it’s good to know that 89« w ill get you a R allyburgei^-a 100% USDA beef pattie fully dressed w ith crispy leaf lettuce, fresh tom ato and ringed o n io n made fresh to order fo r you. Now, if only the cost of tuition would drop. Hey ASU students, stop at any one of Rally’s nine convenient Phoenix locations. If you’re a student w ith a good driving record... Call Y o u s t o p p e d a t t h e r i g h t p la c e . G H CO P a g e l3 Thursday, October 2 0 ,1 9 9 4 State P ress I* G o o d as A S U G o ld B elieve it or not: the “A” on A Mountain h a s to b e repainted eigh t to 1 5 tim es every se m ester , at a c o s t of $80 a coat. Another “b elieve it or not” fact is that a paint sto re actually carries “ASU G old” a s a color. Every tim e s o m e rival team , fraternity, sorority or inventive stu d en ts paint the A to su it their n e e d s, m em bers o f the Student Alumni A ssociation labor with their rollers and so m e elb ow g rea se. Julie G ans (left and a b o v e right), president Of the a sso cia tio n , even g o e s s o far a s to cam p out overnight to protect th e A before g a m e s against rival team s, particularly UofA, “It really g e ts m e m ad w hen ASU stu d en ts paint th e A different co lo r s b e c a u se the A is a sym bol of our pride,” s h e said . In preparation for H om ecom ing, G ans, alon g with Todd Trickel, a so p h o m o r e c o m m u n ic a tio n s m a|or,: a n d S u sa n B ow lb y, a so p h o m o r e u n d e cid ed major, (b elow right) all m em b ers o f th e Stu d en t Alumni A sso c ia tio n , sp e n t W ed n esd ay afternoon c h a n g in g th e A from p u rp le b a c k to ASÜ G old . P u rp le is th e c o lo r o f th e U n iv e r sity Of W ashington, w h o se football team played ASU Saturday. Various groups d on ate m oney to cover th e e x rp e n se ;■ ASASU rpicked u p th e tab th is tim e. „ . „ „ „ -, , „ Photos by Jim Poulin/State Press U n d e rs ta n d in g th e B ib le There is more to life than news, weather and sports. Check out the comics. A Thursday N ight B ible Study Sponsor: Christian Students Fellowship Place: Tempe Woman's Club 1290 S. Mill Ave. (Across from Gammage Auditorium) POTHER'S BOOKSTORE ¡J W e w a n t to be Subject: Galatians & Ephesians Time: 7:00 p.m. Speaker: Bill Freeman Galatians and Ephesians y o u r b o o k s to re . | Date Subject Book & Chapter O ct.20............... Escorted to Christ.................... Gal. 3 27...;..,,.... ...Christ Formed In U s .......... ..Gal. 4 Nov. 3 .............C hrist Growing in U s ........... ....... Gal. 5-6 1 0 ................SeeingWhatWaWSre Made For.. Eph. 1 BLUE BOOK only at R o th e r ’s B o o k s to r e M ust present coupon, lim it 1 per customer, Open 7 d ay* a w eek « 6 2 5 E . Apache 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 C h r is tia n S tu d e n ts F e llo w s h ip m For further information call 948-4488 F THE- b e s t " t h a t C Ü ÎS ÏN Ë I I NEW TIMES READERS CHOICE 1984-86-87-88-89-90-91 -92-93 ARIZONA REPUBLIC 1991-92-93 PINK/^PEPPER T H A l C O LUNCH B t f p F f e - $ 1M O F P fe PLUS FREE ICED TEA . „ • Lunch H 3O am r%3O0m -** Phoenix 245 E. Bell Rd. 548-1333 Mesa 1941W. Guadalupe 839-9009 I S I N E D IN N E R 50% OFF fpRCHASE pF SECOND ENTREE 1 Dinner Pally from 4 :30pm Scottsdale N. Scottsdale 2003 N: Scottsdale ' 40155 E. Via Unda 945-9300 391-3339 I Comics -for- .'V; :;V;';;.-'.-J Page 14 - ____ by Stacy Holm stedt Generation HeXed Calvin and THE FAR SIDE By G A R Y L A R S O N by Bill Watterson Hobbes 1 TMuOWT i v m \ hear AKKTUIN6. i heard IT W > KIND Of A THUMP. WIU. I ' l l CHECK, BUT i M W 'fOOGQ LOOK, HEAR «CMS THUMP. (kKO MAKE. » IT * MÙT AKT- TUlNfc SC.MC<’ h « . V T t S . ’ GO V EXE7 THERES OUT THE DOOR! \ N bTH iN ö TWO MORE STEPS' I OUT HERE OH PUEASL.OH r ^ PLEASE.' TES, íes, íes* Life in the S tate P r ess BY G A R R Y T R U D E A U D o o n e s b u ry &SPtCr.œaXJflât:lIS50M£‘ TWN6THAVS EARNEP. l£ T ï> LOOK A7AN INSTRUCTIVE EP/SOPEETOURP'S BASE... H ttU JE (UEREPOUJNBY TEN. BUT U/ECAfCB BACK M P KtCKBT U m HE W M f-P CHARACTER! WEFORCEPT itM TORESPECTUS! S o m e th in g to re a d w ith o u t using CENERAI. 1NUTRITIO N CENTERS ^< yv 7~ ie& £tfc, ONLY Basketball « Tennis • Cross Training • Streetwear M e n ’s Sizes 7-12 andudM ws mzm) W om en’s Sizes 5-9 cmciud** 1/2 *iz«$) A vailable A t High Q uality Leather Lettering & Logo in M aroon & Gold 712 S. C ollege 967-4049 C A __M P__ ; U •Photo S ^Developing t“ C o r n e r -«-m"*"»** (next to College Street Del) 609 S. Mill 868-0567 Introducing CHOLINE COCKTAIL™ NOW 3 0FF Leave it to TWINLAB to develop the "drink of the decade." New Choline Cocktail Energy t Drink. A highly potent, state-of-the-art mixture of choline synergistically com­ bined with DMAE, ginkgo biloba extract and key vita­ mins, minerals, antioxidants and W /COUPON M PÍM ;, NOT VALID W/OTHER OFFERS. EXP. 1 1 -3 -9 4 herbs. REMEMBER: 1 TäNCProducts are Buy 1, G et 1 Half O ff! (across from Coffee Plantation) ; 913 S. Mill Ave. ■ Or O rder By Mall M ake checks & m oney orders p ayable to SLD & Associates for $59.95 fo r each pair. Specify sizes. A dd $5.00 fo r C.O.D. 3 da y delivery. SID & Assoc. P.O. Box 363. Scottsdale, AZ 85252 (602) 954-245^ Tempe • 967-2D60 M o n .i-# il..9 J p 9 • S pt. 10 tp 6 • S u ry l^ -fo S ¡ University Sports STATE P r ess ______________________________Thursday, October 2 0 ,1 9 9 4 Cougars’ defense to toy with ASU W S U allo w in g mere 6.5 p oints per game Deion Sanders and Andre Risen were fined $7,500 each by the NFL on W ednesday for their weekend fight in which they traded slaps and punches in the middle o f the field. The skirmish came during the sec­ ond quarter o f the San Francisco 4 9 ers’ 42-3 ro u t o f the A tlanta Falcons at the Georgia Dome. The game was Sanders’ first against his form er team since jo in in g San Francisco as a free agent Sept. 15. Though game officials penalized Sanders as the fight’s “instigator,” the league found both players at fault. A gent arrested for attem pting to sign FSU players An unregistered sports agent was arrested Wednesday for trying to sign several Florida State football players as clients, campus police said. Steve Endicott, 44. was charged with failing to 'register as a sports agent and appeared in court shortly after his arrest. He pleaded no contest to the charge and was sentenced to one year’s probation and fined $3,000 for court and investigative costs. Duke ends UNC’s 101-gam e streak One o f the lo n g est unbeaten, streaks in co llege sports ended Wednesday when the women’s soc­ cer team at North Carolina was beat­ en 3-2 by Duke. The unbeaten streak of 101 games dated to Sept. 23,1990. It was only the Tar Heels’ second loss in 206 games. North C arolina’s previous loss was a 3-2 defeat to Connecticut on Sept. 22, 1990. That game ended an unbeaten streak of 103 games for the Tar Heels. L. Compiled from AP reports B y T o d d K elly S ta te P ress W hen A SU ’s offense clashes with Washington State’s defense this Saturday, something will have to give. The Sun D evils are averaging 20.8 points per game, which ranks them eighth in the Pac-10. However, the Cougars are allowing only 6.5 points per game, first in the conference as well as the country. Pac-10 statistics also show that the Cougars rank first in the following cate­ gories: total defense, passing defense, rush­ ing defense, first downs allowed, third down conversions allowed and quarterback sacks. “They’re No. 1 in every defensive cate­ gory,” ASU Coach Bruce Snyder said. "And that’s unique in college football." According to Washington State defen­ sive end Dwayne Sanders, who has four sacks and seven tackles for a loss, the Cougar defense doesn't feel any extra pres­ sure from their No. 1 ranking. > “There is no pressure at all. We set a Courtesy of Washington State Media Relations goal at the beginning of the season (to be ranked first in defense). We are right at Ron Childs (31) and his W ashington State d efen sive team m ates have plenty of rea so n s to c e le ­ brate th is se a so n . The C ougars are No. 1 in th e Pac-10 in every d efen siv e category. where we want to be." On the offensive side of the ball, howev­ While the ASU defense may be able to potential A ll-A m erican defensive end er, the Cougars (4-2) are far from where hold Washington State to only seven or DeWayne Patterson. they want to be. Through six games, Patterson has 10 1/2 The 1994 WSU offense ranks last in the nine points, the challenge for A SU ’s sacks, 21 total tackles and two forced fumbles. offense will be trying to get to the 10-point conference in total offense and rushing Snyder compares the ‘94 Cougar defense offense, ninth in scoring offense and eighth mark. “I think the issue is when you do have an to the ‘91 Washington defense or the ‘93 in passing offense. “I think it’s frustrating for all of us right opportunity (to score), you’ve got to come UofA defense. ‘They put a tremendous amount of pres­ now. It’s a frustrating time,” said Cougar away with points,” Snyder said. Snyder hinted at possibly using more sure on offensfSj” He said. “They’re fumfej Coach Mike Price of his offense. In the Cougars’ twd losses this season, trick pìày;s,'nicteasitlg thè frequency of the watch. They’rd iheart, they,re;Fa&:They*vei the offense has scored a com bined 16 shotgun and the need for an effective quick got two big thug tackles (Chad Eaton and Don Sasa) that are difficult to move. Their points. On Oct. 1,'the Cougars lost at passing game. Snyder said it was the trick play that middle linebacker (Mark Fields) is 240 Tennessee 10-9. Last week they lost at saved the day for both T ennessee and (pounds). home to UofA 10-7. “T hat secondary basically has been Despite the offense’s poor showing in UofA. " together for four years. (The defense) has “When you’ve got a shot, you’ve got to the Cougars’ two losses, Sanders said no take it,” he said. “Nobody drives on them had early success and they’ve just capital­ one on the defense is pointing any fingers. “We (the defense) don’t think about it (the Cougars). That methodical 12-play, 15- ized on ¿hat.” The defense sports eight seniors and (the offensive woes). We just go out and play drive and put the ball in the end zone three juniors, making the it unified as well have fun,” Sanders said. “We’re like a fam­ ... nobody does that.” The Washington State defense is led by as deep. ily and a family wouldn’t argue.” Linebacker presents up‘H ill’ battle for opposing offenses *• ¡Tty«. )icki|p, ex­ cellent condition. Leave message, 590-0463. ; j ^ QUALITY PA U LY SH O R E- C o m in g to ASU Oct. 27. Oct your free tick- ■■ Complete autt? care at American Care Center, 1900 N. M e -. e ts at G am m age B ox O ffice Cflntock. 4 2 jf 9 9 7 /. From oil w/valiriASU ID! r ' change to tune-up, engine analy­ sis to computer diagnosis. 10% discount with (dudent ID onregularly priced lat|6r rates. CLAPTON B ea prices & seats in town! W (7 0 8 ) 317-0 2 0 8 BICYCLES Stai* Fruì C liu ifltd i NiHfcwt Cm Iw Binnint TRAVEL HELP WANTEDGENERAL SPRING BREAK 95 Lake Havasu. Book your house­ boat now - $100 holds your boat. 1-800-242-2628. HELP WANTEDG |N |R A ^ _ _ 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. seeking exp in a school settjng. 3233 vR/ Chandler Bivd., Sfiiite 6 |L . ; $7 45 '/ 3TART%10 retail open.hrgs. hi9 exp. req, flex hfs, schol- j APPT SETTERS wanted, $6/hr arships. A ll m ajors, call 12-4, : guar + comm,; everting hours in 968-4797. • i nice Scottsdale office.. Call Kim between 4-8pm at 970-6390, ♦EARN $7/HR!* Setting free appointm ents fo r health services. Fiesta Mall area. 470-1828 anytime. 1ASU TELEFUND is now hiring associate callers* This is a great way to networic with hundreds of alum ni and have a very flex, A PPO IN TM EN T SE T T E R S/ work sched. We contact alumni, Surveyors,' $7/hr p/t, l-5pm M-F or 5:30-8:30pm M-Th. Mesa Dr./ • update info., and ask for financial support. I f you are interested .in a Southern Avq., AmeriWest Mtg Corp, Jonathan, 144. | .position cai!>965“6754 . MAKE MSÖrVEY PLAYING V ID E O G A M E S r NINTENDO isjooking ■.h 'for enthusiastic, reliable individuals to promote their prdducts' *" in retail outlets T H R O U G H O in g r H E „ ' NATION. . during this holiday . . ■_ season.’' / . V ' . Call Gretdfen .' 1 -8 0 0 -2 2 9 -5 2 6 0 Care Providers Part-time flex jits cóhven ient to class schedule working 1-on-l w/htdividual w/special needs in p riv ate fam ily 4iom e close to you. :No exp req’d/free training. ‘After exp up to $10/hr poten­ tial. Call J o b H o tlin e for more info 9-5 M-F M g ONLY! 494-1234- . CREATIVE NETWORKS Page 18 State P ress Thursday, October 20, 1994 HELP W ANTED’ G |N |R A L = _ = HELP W ANTEDGENERAL APPOINTMENT SETTERS, So. Scottsdale flex sched., salary & comm., part-time. 481 -9200. NOW ACCEPTING applications for Christmas help as Customer Service Reps. Flex, hours, flex days. Starting pay $5.50. For more info call Lori at 967-2678. BUSINESS* MAJOR: Career op­ portunity! Person needed imme­ diately to demo/detail/coupon pro­ duct at pet stores. Also, conduct store audits, rotate arid merchan­ dise product. 15-20 hrs/wk flexi­ ble. $7/hr start. Must have trans­ portation. Send resume to: Don­ ald Ulrich, The lams Co., 419 E. Hardford Ave., Phx, AZ 85022. Or call 602-548-8424. C O M M U N IC A T IO N S A S S T , p/t 20 hours plus benefits. Re­ sponsibilities: Print prod & dis­ tribution, writing, proofreading & admin, duties. Requires 2+ yrs coursework in journalism, com­ munications, or related field. Pro­ fic ie n t in w ord p rocessing & spreadsheet software. Fax resume by 10/24/94 to 602-640-1818. DON’T BE a waitress, don't be a stewardess, don't be a seamstress. Be a professional. Have a future with Space Age -Paints. Flourish in a drug-free work-place. All shifts available. 707 S. Country Club, Mesa. ENTHUSIASTIC, SALES ori­ ented, happy person, needed for wknd food demos. $5/hf; Judy 947-5434; Start immediately. EX E C U T IV E A N SW ER IN G Service has immediate openings for p/t operators, must type 45+ wpm, know 10 key, call 2644000 GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR M-Th, 2:30-5. Experience neces­ sary. Ages 5-12. Call 955-7805. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR M-Th, 2:30-5. Exp. nec. ages 5f 12. Call 955-7805. , INTERESTED IN politics? Con­ gressional campaign phone bank. $5/hr. Steve, 955-7338. LIV E-IN C O U PLE , p /t p o o l/ yard; fit- iianny/hsekpr. Child ok. References & drivers lie req. Sep­ arate apt + salary .952-1151. LOVABLE SCOTTSDALE fam­ ily seeks student to help with Thanksgiving Dinner. $8/hr. Call Lynn 443-1375. M ANAGEM ENT COMPANY needs drafting student or art stud­ ent to draw a basic building ele­ vation. Call 962-6222. MODELS REQD for an upcom­ ing womens catalogue. Please contact between 12-3:30 at 967-4257. PRESCHOOL HIRING for after school position, 1-6 p.m. M-F. 835-8004. : BABYSITTERS & NANNIES Set your own schedule o f days, ev en in g s or weekends. S4.25-S6.70 per hour. M ust have reliable transportation. Call Parent's T im e O u t (but only if you truly love children) PARTY RENTAL firm has open­ ings for part-time CDL drivers & help ers. Flex ho u rs & days. A pply at 1895 S. Los F eliz, Tempe M-F. 8-4. PHOENIX ZOO Gift Shop Cashier & Childrens Birthday Party Host, $5.35/hr, p/t, includes wknds & holidays. Apply 455 N. Galvin Pkwy, M:;F,/9-3V,y • V; .; SEEK IN G A PPLIC A N TS fo r page positions at Arizona House of Representatives for up-coming session. $ 5 .9 5 /h r. F u ll tim e. Call Rob or Shannon 542-3656. 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 significant dollars; so be proactive 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 of 13 hours or less and graduation no earlier than D e­ cember 95. STUDENT WANTED for live-in apartment mgr position, Hrs 36pm M-F, 9-6 Sat. Free lbd apt, free util & S300/mo. Tempe lo­ cation. Call Mami, 957-9661. TELEREPS Separate openings for surveys and sales. $6/hr plus. 1000 E. Ap­ ache, #212, Tempe. 784-2270; or 5540 E. B roadw ay, #6, M esa, 830-9008., ; TENNIS HOST/HOSTESSES, a t least 19 y rs old, answ er 4 phone lines, operate cash reg­ ister, work snack bar & pro shop, reserve court times. $5/hr. ap­ prox 12-17 hrS/wk. G ainey Ranch Estate Club, Susan or Ja­ son, 951-2879. LAWN CARE Ultimate Lawn Care is hiring f/t & p/t, $5.50/hr to start. Exp nec; own, trans req. Early moms., flex 20-40 hrs M-F. Call M arlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. WARM BODY? I need more than a warm body to demonstrate retail items. Outgo­ ing & aggressive to work Satur­ days. Daryl, 926-7197. 1_ CLASSIFIEDS WORK! DMS PAYS EVERY FRIDAY! $9 p/h guaranteed 1- 800- 229-5260 AMERICA'S LARGEST insurer, the Prudential, is seeking profes­ sionals for sales career. Exc train­ ing. Compensation to $20,000 + com m issions, + benefits. C all Cindy W oodring at 955-7371. EOE/M/F/V/H. . DEVELOP YOUR m arketable skills nOw! Entertel, Inc. needs f/t and p/t telephone sales represen­ tatives immediately. No cold call­ ing; fully automated; pleasant en­ vironm ent; guaranteed hourly rate plus incentives and bonuses; medical/dental/life and paid vacations/holidays availab le (f/t); great hours, advancement opps and location. Call Alicia at 9414240. 8010 E. M cDowell, Ste. 218, Scottsdale (NE corner o f Hayden ami McDowell) EXC OPP for students who want to gain exp ih both marketing & entrepreneurship. Learn the way to be successful in the 90s while earning an above avg paycheck. Send resume to: 3600 N. Hayden, Suite 3314, Scottsdale 85251 LOOKING FOR an indiv to learn & grow with à co. selling promo m aterials & printing services. Flex hrs. Comm. Joe, 443-8733. ■ P/T SALES position to represent m anufacturers. Salary negoti­ able Theresa 1-800-982-0917. P/T SALES, U set hrs! Security products. Career positions possi­ ble. 963-86%, Mr. Gendron. PHONE CLERKS - no exp., free long distance calls flex shifts, hrly + bonus, benefits avail. Rural/Southem. Bob, 350-9336. HELP W A NTEDACCTS RECEIVABLE clerk p/t w/opp for fit. Call Milan for in­ terview, 945-2925. P/T EN TRY lev el positio n w/clerical responsibilities. Fax re­ sume and salary history to 8398727. ... T / ~:-r PA R T-TIM E SECRETA RIA L for Freelance Golf Photography Co. Duties include: typing-transcribing-filing with exceptional : téléphoné and o rg an izatio n al skills. Some knowledge o f golf and photography helpful. Com­ pany growing and office manag­ er needs help! Please call 4933099. SURVEYS, NOT sales. P/T eyenihg shift:,M-Th 5-9pm & Sat 9am3pm. $5/hr. I-10/Baseline area. Emily, 438-2800. HELP W A N TED SALES DMS is looking for outbound customer service reps to make c alls on b e h a lf o f SE A R S, TE X A C O , C H EV R O N & many m ajor banks across the U.S. to their own cardholders. Full time reps - give us perfect attendance and get $9 per hour few your first 30 days! Hiring 100 reps. CALL NOW. 994-9903 NINTENDO is looking for enthusiastic, reliable individuals to promote their products in retail outlets THROUGHOUT THE NATION during this holiday season. Call Gretchen _ HELP W A NTEDF O O D J |R V IC g _ ACCEPTING APPS for: Driv­ ers, & counter help. $5/hr + tips. Sammy B's Pizza, 945-8850. BARTENDERS & cocktail, busy E. Phx. sports bar/rest. Must be honest, hardw orking, good ap­ pearance w/reliable trans. P/t or f/t. Call 82D-7731, for interview. BLIMPIES SUBS and Salads. 1824 hrs, must work Sat. & Sun. Apply in person, Broadway/Rural. BUSHOPS NEEDED, apply after 1lam. Monti's La Casa Vieja, 3 W. 1st St. 967-7594 HELP W ANTEDF O O D S |R V jC g _ CLUCK>U Join th e .Cluck-UrChicken team, N ow h irin g d e liv e ry d riv e rs, c o u n te r p e rso n n el & cooks. Apply in person 855 S. Rural. « LITTLE CAESARS Pizza now accepting applications for delivery drivers. M ust have proof o f ins; & reliable trahsp. Day/night position. Hrly wage + tips + commissions. Apply at our University/Hardy location or call 991-3406 for more information. RED ROBIN Tempe has immed. openings for wait staff w/daytime availability. 1375 W. Elliott. HELP.W ANTEDF O O D S |^ C ^ _ HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE JOHNNY ROCKETS PHOENIX ZOO Now hiruigTcasMers, asst, mngrs, fit & p/ts Fashion Square M all. Apply in perspn. 423-1505. Food Service, p/t, $5/hr. Wknds & holidays, flex wkdy sched. Apply 455 N. Galvin Pkwy, M- NEW. HACIENDA style restau­ rant in North Scottsdale now hir­ ing wait staff, host(ess), bus, bar­ tender. Apply id person 3-5pm, W, Thi E. LonV At The Herinosa Inn,* take 44th St. 1/2 mile past Camelback. Left on Stanford. 1 mile to-Palo Cristi. f ,9-3. RED ROBIN cooks receive top wages, paid vacations & bonuses. A pply to d ay 1375 W . E llio t, Tempe. • -; Care Providers Part-time flex hrs conve­ n ient to class schedule working 1-on-l w/individual w/special needs in p riv a te fam ily h o m e clo se to y ou. No exp req'd/free training. After exp up to $10/hr poten­ tial. Call Job H otlin e for more info 9-5 M-F ONLY! 494-1234 CREATIVE NETWORKS IS S Great New Location The Valley's BEST plasma donation center just got even better! ABI has moved to a great new facility at 1334 E. Broadway ! • We now have MORE MACHINES to serve you better! This a your perfect opportunity to perform a viialh needed service | and cam 5150-SI 85 per month at the same time! It couldn't be easier! Apply in person, 2107 S Rural Rd CARDINAL’S PIZZA now hir­ ing delivery drivers, Earn $7$ 10/hr. Apply in person, 1340 E. Apache Blvd. FLA K EY JA K E S, hom e o f A m erica's b e st b u rg e r & the Greeks home away from home now hiring cooks, prep cooks, counter help & bussers. Stop by for application between 2-4, NE corner o f R ural & Uriiyersity, Tempe. Are You the Best? ■Houston's Restaurants, considered p rie o f trie best operators In the country. Is pleased to announce em ploym ent opportunities a t our newest location In Scottsdale HOUSTON’S ■ » J A H IM B IH Known nationally fo r our consistent high qu a lity fo o d and professional service staff. We offer: •extensive training 8t developm ent •com petitive wages •high standards/ high volume •from scratch cooking •quality work environment If you have high energy... a positive a ttitu d e ... and are w illing to do w hatever it takes, D on't be trick ed b$r oth er telem arketing com panies.. .D iscover w h y it's a tr e a t’ to w ork a t DialAm erica! • Nation's oldest & largest telem arketing firm • Thorough orientation and paid training, $7.50/h r. • Excellent base-pay guarantee • Convenient Tempe location (near ASU) Imm ediate openings for goal-oriented individuals w ith good communication and people skills. Call today for a confidential interview. 829-6392, ask for Ext. 110 DialAmerica DialAmerica Marketing 1100 E University, Suite 111 Tempe, AZ WE WANT YOU ON OUR TEAM! Host « Server Bartender • Kitchen APPLY IN PERSON 6113 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85250 M onday-Saturday 9:00 a.m .-6:00 p.m. HELP W A NTEDSALES Nfwdtmon earn $25 CASH theirfirst donation! Make up to $12 an hour. (You must have been very, very good this year) This holiday season, the best place to make . money is definitely Circuit City Express. As a new twist on the Circuit Gty concept, our small­ er stores offer close customer contact and an abu nd ance o f opportunities for seasonal sales positions at our SCOTTSDALE FASH­ ION SQUARE and FIESTA MALL stores. Working through the holidays, you'll sell the latest home electronics equipment directly to our customers— making big sales and bigger commissions. If you don't know electronics, don't worry. You'll get all the training you need - from product specifications to proven sales techniques. Asaociittd Btascience, Inc. 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 It is these qualities that has made SAFECO one o f the leading diversified financial corporations in America. Our success gives you the foundation for your own success. If you are interested in a position in our Information Systems Department, SAFECO representatives will be on campus for an To take advantage of this great opportunity apply in person with the Store Manager atthe following locations: Information Session Wednesday, October 26,7:00 pm MU, La Paz Room j . 1192 FIESTA MALL Cf ■ i g a n H R K E fe ' • - Ope» 7 days a week for your convenience! 1334 E~ Broadway, Building A, Tempe Broadway i t Dorvry (Across from Native New Yorker) objectives since its inception in 1923, We feel that by cresting an atmosphere where your ideas matter and every employee is respected and rewarded, you have the opportunity to go as far as your talent and drive will take you. At SAFECO, integrity, decency and honesty are words we live by and they are qualities we seek in the employees we hire. We're looking for outgoing, energetic individuals who have an interest in sales. Along with great pay, w e also offer flexible schedules, employee discounts, and a great bonus program. . SCOTTSDALE SASHION SQUARE 7014 E. CAMELBACK RD. SCOTTSDALE, AZ (602) 990-3995 : Circuit City Express prom otes a dojg-free w orkplace. An EOC. circuit ernr m B 3 3 3 sw •;_ fiUMBYS PIZZA .\ t o l t i l a liti". •Managen, cap nec •ImRfe idtchcnhclp •Oeftvory SALES ASSOCIATES Full- o r Part-Tim e f \ FIND IT wMi a Stale Press Classified! We are DMS:, located at 64th St: & East Thomas Rd. at 3 4 5 -2 4 3 3 MAKE MONEY PLAYING VIDEOGAMES HELP W ANTED-- S A y s_ _ For more information regarding SAFECO, please contact your Career Planning and Placement Center. We are an equal opportunity employer committed to employing a diverse workforce. HELP W ANTED- C H IU J C A g ^ ^ RESTAURANTS/ BARS NANNY for 2 boys; 4 & 2 yrs old. nr 68th St./Indian Sch. Must have own transp. & exp. work­ ing W/children. R ex. hr$. 949. 5573. Jo b 10c WINGS p, DRAFTS S1 B H N “7 “ A A CRUISE ships hiring! Earn big $$$ + free travel! (Caribbean, Europe, etc.!) No exp nec. Staff; needed for busy hoiiday/Spring/ summer seasons. Guaranteed suc­ cess! Guides 919-929-4398 ext. C3001. CRUISE SHIPS now hiring- Earn up to $2,000+-/month working on cruise ships o r land-tour compa­ nies. W orld travel. Seasonal & full-time employment available. No ex p erien ce necessary. For more information call 1-206-6340468 ext. C59182. (206) 632-1146 ext, J59182 A LA SK A JO B S 5th St. & Forest Sub Stop Jazz Q uartet Every Friday Evening The Sea o f Galilee Skin and Body, Treatm ent7'- combines m odern technology with ancient secrets o f royal y: . bearin' to offer the fipest skin care available. Enjoy the dynamic benefits o f using o u r products and then earn extra income bv sharing if with others. Call yotir Independent Representative today; (6 0 2 ) 2 5 6 -0 4 2 4 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES R ogu e Beer $3.50 22-oz Bottle RESTAURANTS/ BARS FIND FUN ¡a tha Classifieds! SUBSTOP IMPORTED BEER JAZZ SAUDS GOURMET COFFEE 222 E. University Dr„ Tempe on Univi, between College/Forest 967-7744 HOULIHAN’S, D isc o Thursdays $ 1 .2 5 W ell Drinks & D raft Beer 8pm -Close Fiesta Mall Mesa with E X T R A T I C K E T Featuring Don Young ^5^' ^ Ver^ Thursday! BOSTON'S M c C Iin to c lC f t i C u r r y • 9 2 1 -7 3 4 3 PA U LY S H O R E --C om ing to ASU Oct, 27. Get your free tick­ ets at G am m age: Box O ffice w/valid ASU ID! TERM PAPER trauriia?* Our ex­ pert w riters help you ace your next term paper. Worlds lgst re­ search resource. 1-800-243-2435 FUNDRAISING~~~ FUNDRAISER - $500 in 5 days G reeks, C lubs, Anyone (800) 775-3851 eXJt.33. " CYCLE FROM L. A. to Boston arid make a difference in the fight against AIDS. West-East 95 is a bicycle trek across the. U.S. by a team o f highly motivated indi­ viduals who will be delivering messages about AIDS awareness. Presently, West-East Foundation is trying to find an A SU stud­ e n ts ) to join the trek either a s i cyclist or support staff. These po­ sitions offer valuable experience in business, public,relations and public speaking, as well as direct contact with major corporations. Pick up an application at MIJAB on the 3rd floor or at the State Press inform ation desk. Entry deadline is Oct. 25. ■=• TONIGHT! COURTNEY, great job on formal We appreciate all your work! Av Your Sisters. AAA KELLY- You got a little "salty" to Jeff. I thought it was hinny! Thanks for being so nice.Scott. MATH AND Computer Science tutoring. 5+ years experience. S lO/hr, Royce. 438-0252. M ARK 'S TY PIN G Services. Fast, professional, affordable, laser printed. Tempe, 491-5931. PASS MATH! Raise your math grade fast! We can help you fix that rough start! Call Math Masters, 491-3363. . TERM PAPERS, M anuscripts, and M ore. Resumes, mailings, databases. Q uick turnaround. Competitive rates for ASU stud­ ents. Call Barbara 966-0278. WANTED I NEED CD's, you need cash!! Any ;condition - will comt to. U . : 1-800-551-3907 or 1-800-8357712 TERM PAPERS, thesis, resumes, manuscripts, etc. Accurate with money-back guar. Judy, 345-9015 State Press back issues can be picked u p a t th e In fo rm a tio n D esk in th e Basem ent o f M atthew s C e n te r AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS cer­ tifica tio n w orkshop in M esa, Nov. 18-20 by National Aerobics Training Assn. Call 963-9415. Y o u r I n d iv id u a l H o r o sc o p e s = s = = = s F r an c e s D rake = HEALTH & Corporate scholarships & grants. No GPA or income requirements. No pay back. Money back guar. Call 1-800-645-3525 for info. CASH FOR college. 900,000 grants avail. No repayments ever. Qualify immed. 1-800-243-2435. DISSERTATION, THESIS, pro­ posal h elp . C an a ssist w ith write, rewrite, edit, stat analysis. Call Gail after 4pm. 671-3238. PAPERS, PROJECTS, research. Before collecting your data call Sigm a Research. F or research design, methods and statistical analysis. Applied, scientific, an d ; survey research. (602) 491-6815. SPELLS, TAROT & guidance when you're ready for change; S acred C ro ssro ad s, PO Box 20445, Mesa, AZ 85277-0445. ST U D E N T SP E C IA L Perfect Scents Aromatherapy ac­ cording to your aura! $12 per dram bottle. 423-5903. Stat*.Pratt Classifieds 965-6735 « SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) , C ouples make decisions new regarding a child’s welfare. In business, there’s a need to stress cooperation. Tonight brings major insights through research .and study. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You’ll have success now with a domestic endeavor. On the job stay clear of conflicts with co-workers. Social life is highlighted in a big way after dark. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Some will be making revisions oha creative project today. There’s a need to watch credit card spending. It’s the perfect day for furthering your business affairs. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) A matter involving home could upset you today. Maintain harmo­ ny with family ties: Meetings with advisers and cultural interests are highly favored. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) ; It’s a good day for making long range financial plans. Consult with accountants and investment coun- . selors. One matter at work could ' try your patience', • ' YOU BORN TODAY have the tact and diplomacy. You would make a good diplomat and & . patient teacher. You have a need for partnership and are creatively talented. Your gift for self-expres­ sion is an asset to you in both busi­ ness and the arts. You like to build on small beginnings and are not inclined to large ventures. Often, you have a talent for fiction writ­ ing. Birthdate of: Melanie Mayrpft, actress; Mickey Mantle, baseball player; and Dr. Joyce Brothers, psychologist-writer. For Thursday, Oct. 20, 1994 ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr. 19) You may be inclined to spend impulsively when shopping or in W olff System the search for fun times.- Signing contracts and reaching accords 8 9 4 -5 5 7 0 with others are highly favored. 1126 N. S cottsdale Rd. TÂURUS (Apr, 20 to May 20) ' You’ll value, the support you TYPING /W O R D receive from a friénd now. However, you may become impa­ PROCESSING tient with a family member; At work, it’s a day of efficiency and $2/PAGE - Éxcéllerit typing, fast sound thinking. : turnaround, Rural & Guadalupe GEMINI Rds.Mary Jane, 839-5003. (May 21 to June 20) . You may be in too much of ahurry $2/PG, $15 resum es. Proofed. early in the day ..Slow down and do L aser. F ast. Sam e day. D TP. a good job. Creative work, hobbies Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. and activities with children are highlighted now. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. CANCER Professional typing, laser, fax. (June 21 to July 22) Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. YoiiTl be receiving sound advice : nowv However, a quarrel may arise AAA TYPING/word processing. with à friend about money. It’s a $ 1.50/page. 15 years experience. great day for mental, work and Fast turnaround. Call 962-8075. domestic decision making. LEO ACCURATE TYPING, reason­ (July 23 to AUg. 22) ab le rates,, quick turnaround, Consolidate existing gains in busi­ close to ASU 968-0305. ness, but refrain from forcing issues With higher-ups. Tonight AFFORDABLE brings ¿'wealth of new ideas and a Secretarial-DTP, Resumes, WP creative burst of energy. S p read sh eets, P/U & D lyfy:, . VIRGO Graphs, Tables Sc Charts. 7 Days (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) & Eves. Color 921-8328: Partners work well as a team today. You couldn’t find a better APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typday for Shopping and for making ing/w ord; p rocessing. N eed it important financial decisions. The fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. accent’s on buying and selling. LIBRA ASU ÁREA typing, w/p, editing, (Sept. 23 to Oct'. 22) transerptn, W ordPerfect, láser. You’ll dispense with routine tasks Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime effectively today. A friend may be cantankerous. Howe veri it’s an W ORD PROCESSING, secre­ excellent time for getting your tarial services, fax. 28yrs exper. ideas across to others. Student discounts. S/W comer, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. LOVING* SECURE couple wants . to share our warm, happy home with your baby. Please call so we can help each other. Debbie and Sal, 1-800-680-1997. ANITA- No hard feelings. Let's be friends - Scott. COM PUTER-HELP - Serving ASU since 1983.838-5966. , FA ST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses; MLA/ APA, las­ er, f a x .,Pat, 897-1741. INSTRUCTION HAPPILY MARRIED couple are eager to adopt a baby. Adoption can be a loving option that offers a solution for the baby you love so much. It can make a tough choice less painful if you know . where & w ith w ho your child will be raised. Give us the chance to talk to you about the opportu­ nities & lifetime love we are able to provide your child! C onfi­ dential. Call anytime. Marianne/ Sam, 1-800-826-7070. AAA a td ilia /d s A DOZEN roses, $20. We also FITNESS d eliver after hours. C all 894-3 4 ^ .fe • V; ■■•'' ;. WANTED: 100 students. Lose 8100 lbs. New membolism break­ AND WHEN Upon the wooly goat through. I lost 15 lbs. in 3 weeks! they gently mounted me... RN assisted. $35.1-800-579-1634 CARA, WE met at B.H.T. in LA 10/9/94, didn't get your #, but SERVICES would like to talk to you, Tom 3 10-455-3624 please call. $$ F O R CO LLEG E: A£4> will take Frats-AtBat. Can you say back to back champs? . o ZOTfti* ADO PTIO N 844-SHED TUTORS g Q g H jN G ^ TONIGHT COME see the Return o f the Dating Game. Be at the Im agination C afe (M anzy) at 9:30...Don't miss out! SPORTS & RECREATION PERSONALS SERVICES Come meet the brothers of Lamb­ da Chi Alpha tonight at 6pm at the AX A house. For info or if you need a ride, call 965-6128. W O O D S H E D II - Sports vie w in g in an upscale atm osphere 3 satellites 18 screens "W e show all NFL & College pay-per-view games" 1/2 price appetizers d u rin g happy hou r NW Corner of Dobson & University TYP1NG/W ORD PERSONALS P R E R U SH D IN N E R Tues, Wed, Thurs ' during October : 705 S. Forest AAA - AAA SATELLITE 99# TALL BEERS til 9 p.m. • «RATEFIL HEAD NIGHT Pitchèrs T H E U LT IM A T E adventure Spend winter in N. Zeal. & Aust. Raft climb dive etc. Earn college cred. for info1 Katie 784-9447 -f D RIVER A M erced es, earn $10,000 a month income. 24 hr msg 351-3189._______________ HAVE A great idea but no mon­ ey? New capitol for expansion, inventory purchase, new ideas, concern^, and inventions. 5 lend­ ing sources guaranteed. 820-1629. ~W 4 :3 0 -7 :0 0 p.m . (206) 545-4155 ext. A59181 Y o u r S k in Rjtw BREWPUB Fisheries. E arn u p to $ 3 ,0 0 0 -$ 6 ,0 0 0 + p e r m o n th . R o o m + B o ard + : T ra n sp o rtatio n ! ... M ale/Fem ale. N o experience necessary! Cannery B ud. B ud Light M on-Thur 3-7 p.m . S a t 11 a.m .-S p.m . S u n 12-9 p.m . •INT'L EMPLOYMENT* M ake u p to $ 2 ,0 0 0 -$ 4 ,0 0 0 + /m o . : tea c h in g basic conversational E nglish abroad. Ja p a n , T a iw a n , a n d S. Korea. . ; F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n call: RESTAURANTS/ BARS ■ BANOERSNATCH OPPORTUNITIES R efresh Page 19 Thursday, October 2 0 ,1 9 9 4 S t a t e P ress 994 TQ HOT SHOTS 9 p m » f aum. . For a Good Tme call 966-1300 lt«Mma Cete V « 0 4 S. M4I Ave., Sute W ^ / ” ' “ S tate Press Classifieds ” " “ S i i BÒ ” 3 7 1 5 0 2 T em pe, AZ M atthew s Center, Basement 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 Classified Ad O rd er Form DID YOU hear about the Live Field Sobriety Testing today? They will be on the West Lawn from 11:30-1:30! DO YOU like to save money? ‘95 Entertain Discount Books are only $35!! In die Adult Re-Entry Cntr, MU Bsm t Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. AZd> "THE Firm" will repeat as AAA Frats-At-Bat champs. A* your coaches. PS W allace- We want Mr. Roboto. FRATERNITIES, GET ready for Frats-at-Bat. AAA is excited to see who will win this year! See • you soon, Tri Delta. CHICKCN CO. Are We Open Late? Cluck Yeah! GINA I hope I see you at the Dat­ ing Game tonight at Manzy in the Imagination Cafe at 9:00. It’ll be fun. J, KA MEN, your coaches can't wait to see how. you swing your bats! A*Jen, Lara & Robin. •E a t In •Take O u t •Free Delivery KASR 1260AM is proud to an­ nounce the debut of new music from Pearl Jam. Listen on Friday m orning from 6- 10am on ‘ 1260AM or ASU C able Ch. 2 with "T-Roc." TILL 2a.m. M EN OF KA: We know you’ll ' strike the competition out at Frats "at Bat! Av Coaches. 894-2112 8S5 5. Rural Rd, (1 Blk S of University) NEEDED: PRE-NURSING stud­ ents who have been deferred from clin ic als tw o sem esters. Let's take some action and change the system. Call Kathi 994-0112 if interested. im m m □ CBS a ra w e ***» Private Pady 1-4 days, $1:30 per line, per day 5-g days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day I s Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.00 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. O rtM yptf wW lyouf Otf to iW ... ............... i . i f r u M e W Q 1- G WÊÊ H D A ■J P lease b e sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly a s you wish it to appear in th e S tate Press, including punctuation. P lease check your ad the first day it ap p ears-th e liability of th e State Press shall not exceed th e cost of the ad and credit m ay b e given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will b e given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit will b e held on account for future advertising. Price par Day « 0 $ L . ® Classification Nama/f4 àttùW ÌL»fr., >t •' 'Ì W 020 Apartments 008 062 049 101 061;/ Automobiles 074. 064 Bipyose 072 073 070 071 030 096 Adoption 065 Airplanes . 010 Aoppuncpment* 0 5 V .Books 077 'B u s in e s s Opportunities. 064. CorM uters 066 F ree Loet/Found. M Sònf, tra cannot oceaßpersorml arts through tho man. -........ --------------- 040 Hornee for Sale 102 Housecleaning 107 Instruction 103 Insurance Help Wanted-Child Care 056 Jejpeky 076 5 Jot) Opportunities Haig Wanted-Clerical' HelpW anted-Food Service' 015 Legéá,Notioes 120 MiscMianeotis Help Wanted-General 050 Miscellaneous for Sale Help Wanted-Sales M S . Mobile Horneé . H om eeforR ent Fundraising Furniture G arage Sales I ludUi & Fitness 063 082 090 084 110 097 047 035 080. Motorcycles Music Personals Pets. Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate ■ t Rental Sharing Reefauranta/itare .. ; l^ ^ b ih s '.fo r-w p ' 100 Services 061 Sports & Recreation 058 Tickets 031 . Townhomes/Condoe for Rent 041’ Townhomes/Condos for Sale 060 Transportation 067 Travel . 108 Tutors .105 Typing/Word Prçcessing w ^ i l S W anted Page 20 S t a t e P ress Thursday, October 20, 1994 Homecoming Weekend Schedule of Events, October 20 - 22 GHnm I FosUqo Slww Wednesday, October 19th on West Lawn. itaWen WA Friday, October 21st, 7:00 pm. Join students and alumni for the traditional walk to the top of A-Mountoin. CrikmJBiy Thursday, October 20th. 9:00 am through late afternoon on West Lawn. Celebration of ASU culture includes food and entertainment. Come out and spend lundi with us! it A t Sub Dovfl S A n Thursday, October 20th at the Holiday Inn of Tempe. Join students of past, present, and future. The barbecue and free country dance lessons start at 7:00 pm. Contact 965-5276 for ticket information. Friday, October 21 st. 8:00pm. Parade route goes down 5th Street and turns on to Mill Ave. Come and see the lighted floats and help ASU get psyched for Homecoming Week! Pro C n H istim d M of Fame hdoctioo Saturday, October 22nd. Three hours before kick-off outside UAC. Get ready for the game at ASU's largest tailgate party. Sm Dovi Footkfl ___ »■« »• - » CftflU VS* VlM HgVM -aPM Saturday, October 22nd. Come cheer on the Sun Devils as they take on the Washington State Cougars.