•Copyright, State Press, 1994 Tempe* Arizona Monday, October 24,1994 An Independent Mofnlng Daily Vol. 79 No. 42 2 g a y A SU s tu d e n ts h a ra s s e d , b e a te n i n ‘b i a s e d ’ a t t a c k By D avid P rofftit State P ress In what police termed a “biased incident,” another term for a hate crime, two ASU stu­ dents were assaulted early Thursday morning at a gay bar in Phoenix. As two men left the Nasty Habits bar, 3108 E. McDowell Road, after closing, six to 11 males drove into the parking lot and harassed the pair. “They Ju st jumped out of the car, called (them) ‘fags,’ hit them and drove off,” said BJ. Reynolds, co-owner of Nasty Habits. “It totally caught me off guard,” said sopho­ more elementary education major Braun Phifer, one of the men attacked. “We were just walking out to our cars and this group of seven to eight Mexican guys pulled up. It was literally 20 steps outside the door.” “ These guys pulled up and screamed ‘Hey, you gays faggots?’ Then they started whaling on us,” said Joel Ratner, a sophomore journal­ ism major who also reported being assaulted. Phifer said he and Ratner told the men to leave them alone, but instead, they jumped out of the vehicle and hit Phifer in the head. He said Ratner ran around to the rear of the building while Phifer tried to go back into bar. “As soon as I hit the doors, they took off,” Phifer said Some of the men followed Ratner behind the building and beat him, according to Phifer. The assailants did not have weapons, Ratner said, adding that most assaults he’s heard Of usually do involve them. “I was extremely lucky.” Ratner was treated at the Student Health Center for a cut above his eye, a strained jaw T urn t o Assault, page 2. C ounty rejects ASU bid for campus By Lorrie C ohen State P ress Continuing efforts by student leaders to establish a polling booth in the heart of the A S ti campus appear to be futile because die Maricopa County Recorder's Office rejects the idea The recorder’s office cites low voter turnout and poor accessibility as primary reasons for not accepting students’ request for a polling station. “When you have a small amount of student participation, as in the ’92 election, it is clear there is a lack o f participation,” said Jim Shumway, elections director for M aricopa County. “Part of the problem would be trying to find a place to park.” . Jennie Garcia public affairs director for the Arizona Students Association, does not agree. “It’s unbelievable that a place where there are 45,000 students, faculty and staff that there is not one polling booth within its boundaries,” Garcia said. “We are the size of small cify.” ■■* Shumway, however, said most people, on campus during the day could trot vote at ASU because it would be oat of their voting district The area surrounding ASU is made up of thè Temperi and the Tempe 10 voting districts. Tempe 6 is bordered on the south by University Drive, north by the Salt River, McClintock Drive on the east and Mill Avenue on the west Voters in Tempe 6 cast ballots at the First Congregational Church at Tempe at 101 E. Sixth S t Tempe 10 boundaries are University Drive on the north, Apache Boulevard on the south, Mill Avenue on the west and Dorsey Larie to the east Voters vote at the First United Methodist Church at 215 E. University Drive. Shumway said he feels students will just have to “walk die extra steps” off the campus to T urn to Booths, page Patsey Brock, wife of former A SU baseball coach Jim Brock, joins daughter Cathi (left) and son Jim Jr. during halftime at Saturday nigh t's Hom ecom ing gam e in accepting a plague com m em orating Jim Brock’s Induction into the A SU Hall of Distinction. The Hall of Distinction is reserved for former coaches and adm inistrators who made a significant contribution to athletics. Brock died June 12 at age 57 after a year-long fight with cancer. 2. Coor named ‘Man of the Year’ by Anti-Defamation League "These are always very intense encounters, and this group I creed and to put an end to discriminationT said Midge Stone, provides a framework wheneall the parties talk thingsthrough development director o f the Central Pacific Branch of the State P ress ADL “We look for people who really live with respect for so ,that everyone can understand one anQther,” Coor said ASU President Lathe Coer’s creation “This leads tom uch better resolutions o f situations because' our ideals, m i Lame has cleaiiydkme'ftiat,’’ of die Campus Environment Team has Com said he has turned most of die control of the GET .RTf about educating pecf®i¡|j»t silencing them. That’s what earned him die tide of Man o f the Year to tiro committee members, but he regularly checks to an educational institution is supposed to do.” from the Anti-Defamation League. mziee sure that they have enough space to operate. >Sume said each íegR riof1BteAfik awardsaperson fo r his ‘ Coor will be presented the ADL’s - “I told the ADL I would be happy to receive the award, but or her work, but not all of them will be honored with an award Jerry J. W isotsky T orch o f Liberty if I could d o it cm Award at a dinner Tuesday night at the as prestigious asjheone T am immensely proud about 15 other people in the country will receive the Wisotsky PhoenkáBB Resort in Phoenix. ASU s CET, which was started in Torch. Coor is iheonly one in Arizona. a $ protected by the First 1989, chaffed an anti-harassment policy C O O R ...Some past recipients o f the Arizona region of the ASSLíÍl ’ j I [ not punish or attempt to that has been declared a national model by awards include gubernatorial candidate Eddie Basha, Sen* J Wk the president o f the American Civil Liberties Uatoabecause it allows for diversity and respect while protecting both fetgT Colangelo. ¡ speech and academic freedom. Henman Charinen, dinner chairman, said he expects events and That diversity, pespect arid freedom were the m m ele­ 750. people for the d in nerif ments that led the ADL to recognize Coor. the |^ ® r i |* e s m t a i o n about the CETidisplays about ASU and | “We were established 81 years ago to secure justice and i entertainment f a i r i n g ASU É fiÉ y kind students. J a r treatment for all citizens regardless of their race, color CETbas By Lisa G onderinger INSIDE STA TE PR ESS Weather Outlook Variable clouds. High 85, low 60. ► Haitian Président Jean-Bertrand Aristide drops his top choice for prime minister. Page 8. ^ ASU’s child labs provide day care and an opportunity for researchers to study child behavior. Page 9. World/ Nation Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin orders security forces to hunt down and kill the military leaders of Hamas. Page 3. Sports The Washington State defense gave up a season high 21 points to, Uumoiya Glass and the ASU offense Saturday night Page 11. Where To Find It Classifieds ...!.................. 14 Comics....................... .10 Crossword........................ 6 ’■Horoscopes .......... „...13 Opinion..................—...... 4 Police Report ...... 7 Sports..... ...........—........ 11 Today’s Activities..............2 World/Nation.... .— ,.3 S tate P ress Mond#,. October 24, 1994 A s s a u lt Continued from page 1. The Today Section is a daily t ., events printed «J tm e r v ^ tb fm 'fip O community. Requests SreTUtcepm^oh a firstcotmt. first-serve basis and are printed on a space -available basis. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room IS. Requests will not be taken over the plume. Faxed entries will also not be accepted. Entries must contain the fu ll name o f the club or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and thefutt address o f the location. All requests are subject to editing fo r content space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. Deadline fo r requests in noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per orga­ nization per day is permitted. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Closed A.A. campus meeting. Noon, Newman Center basement/Aquinas Hall. • MUAB — Special Events committee meeting. 3; 15 p.m., Conference Room 1A, M U th ir d floor. Gallery committee meeting. 5 p.m., Conference Room 2. • Golden Key National Honor Society -— General meeting, all members welcome. Discussion of upcoming elections, refresh­ ments will be served. 3:30 p.m., McChntock Hadl Study Lounge. « L atin A m erican C en ter and the Ethronu Sociology Program —- Brazilian music: Singer Francisco da Costa. 9:40 a.m., Language and Utjgwaure Room 303. 7:40 p.m .,LLA i8. ... • • ASASU — InfoASU: Join Alan Frost and ASASU Election! Coordinatar Alex Shivers for a discussion ¡on the, upcoming ASASU elections. Noon, Hayden Lawn. • ASASU/CHAC — General meeting to discuss future events. 6:45 p.ro., Conference Room B, MU third floor, • American Indian Institute — Navajo Scholarship Representative Maxine Damon will be at the Institute. Noon, American Indian Institute. • O cotillo/M arip osa H all C ouncil — Weekly hall council meeting. Free pizza to the floor with the most representatives. 8 p.m., Mariposa Programming Lounge. and possible hairline fractures of the skull and jaw, he said. “I doubt (the police will) catch die; guys, because we didn’t get a license plate number, the car took off too fest,” Phifer sad. f | The same men allegedly broke a woman’s truck windows earlier Thursday, but Phifer saidhe was unaware the assailants harassed other people. "'X j U The problem with most gay tafs ftrtfr*. Valley, according to Phifer, is that they are in high-crime areas. He said the attack has made him more aware of personal security. “I definitely plan to defend myself,” he said. Ramer said the attack has “left a bad taste? in his mouth for bars. “I’m not going out to the bars at all— eyer,” he said. Police response was quick and the officers .were helpful, Reynolds said. • f,v 1 “Generally, the Phoenix Polioe d£.an OK job (enforcing hate cnmes laws), just as long as somebody ndes diem about it,” Said die Rev. Ted Com erford, chairm an o f the M edia W atch Com m ission for the Lesbian/Gay Public Awareness Project and itgnidqate student at AfiU. Phifer said there are 4,500 reported hate crimes in the Valley every year. This is lower than the actual number that occur, he said because only about half of such crimes are reported He said many times gays do not repeat hate crimes because they are not “out,” or haven’t revealed their homosexuality. Comerford blanted the media's portrayal of gays’as contributing to dieir victimization. “When die media... portrays gays and-lesbians as outcasts, or not nor­ mal or not totally human, that just gives license to the fringe elements to do violence,” he said Roth Rattier and Phifer are in Delta Lambda Phi, a gay fraternity on campus. Phifer said that the fraternity regtilarly gets crank calls during rush. Even before the attack, Phifer said he sometimes felt uncomfortable letting people know he was gay for fear of attack ‘I t’s really hard if I ’m dating someone. 1 For die strai^it person, they can hold hands or show affection withouffear,” PhifersificL B o o th s — __- i - ! _ . : C ontinued from page X. t. 1 - tf'* .* cast dieir votes. ‘ *4 J “These places are both spaccessible to students it’s not funny,” he said Shumteay’s records show that in the 19^prim aiy election, 1,054 peo­ ple were registered'to vote in Tempe people, or about 2.1 per­ cent, actually voted. Tempe 10 had 2,3524fpStered to vote, yet only 129 people voted about 5.5 percent. , ; Tempe 10 faired better in the 1992 general election with 1,272 people coming out of die 1,870 who registered traaling about 68 percent Tempe 6 la d 1,714 registered voters, but only 721 actually voted or about 42 per­ cent There are about 1,700 in-state ASU students who live on campus and are eligible to vote. Paul Allvin, director of ASA, said these numbers should show that the problem is not in voter inattention, but rather (lustration at inaccessibility. “No one is voting because they ca i’t find a place,” Allvin said “Why did 80 percent of the voters at NAU and UofA vote? It’s not student apa­ thy, but rather a stubborn county recorder’s uffice who do not respond to student requests." The UofA has one polling booth in the eenter of its campus for its 35,000 students. NAU just increased its number of polling booths to five for its 18,000 students. An additional polling booth, according to Shumway, costs about $2,000 to install and staff per election. Allvin, Garcia and several of Arizona student leaders just returned from W ashington D.C. after attending a conference called Register Once, a reg- \S \S l "Your Student Government" presents: P a u ly S h o re X »0 MOTMISS THE X most CONTROVERSIAL show in Arizona istration promotion campaign designed to, increase the number of student voters. Arizona student leaders were praised for their efforts in the SAVE, or Students Are Voting Everywhere, project Several students leaders said the county recorder’s office is detrimental to their efforts because they have been restricting the number of voter reg­ istration forms. -V “This is another one of our biggest frustrations,” Garcia said. “They (the recorder’s office) only allows as to take out 100 registration forms at a time because their supervisor said they are running out That puts students at a disadvantage.” Shumway said although he does not know about specific instances, he does acknowledge there must be a fixed amount of registration forms because of costs. “We can’t print for the entire world — our budget does not permit this,” Shumway said. “We don’t want to deprive anyone, but we don’t want leaders to take 5,000 (forms) arid then leave them on the shelf. I believe only 5 percent of the forms get returned that we give out” Allvin said he is fed .up with the county putting up “roadblocks” and plans to pursue the matter further. “ How are we suppose to increase voter turnout when we can only get 100 registration forms at a time when other universities get thousands?’he said. “They (the county register’s office) have a self-fulfilling prophecy. That is why we are going to the Legislature to change the law that now makps it very difficult for students to participate in the elections.” 2 M ONTH S SNìO mC m È^ RBA CI THS Under New O w nership M u st Show A SU ID Offer Expires 11/5/94 You need a ticket and two cans of food io oilier. «& s e a u v a is r w v October 27, Thursday JR , in th e A S U A c tiv ity C e n te r ||J v l i P ick up F R E E tickets today • v * JR , 1j iii G am m agc lk>\ O ffice • 965-3434 '' * 921-9551 1 3 0 1 £ mmmmm A R IZ O N A U n i v e r s i t y rive•D Univöf$ay • A r iz o n a 8 5 2 8 1 ^ State P ress W o r ld /N a tio n ____________ ___________________ ________ Monday, October 24,1994 ^ -f P age 3 Rabin: Israeli forces w ill kill Hamas chiefs Shoot-to-kill policy comes as nation expands peace efforts JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel is approaching peace with an olive branch in one hand and a gun in the other. Prime M inister Yitzhak Rabin gave security forces the green light to hunt dow n and kill military leaders o f the Muslim movement waging a war o f terror against Israelis, officials said Sunday. But the policy, a response to public anger at the bomb­ ing of a Tel Aviv bus, is matched by official approval of a p e a c e tre a ty w ith Jo rd a n a n d re n e w a l o f ta lk s w ith Palestinians on self-rule. Even Rabin’s main opposition, the conservative Likud faction, said Sunday it would support the Jordan-Israel pact. The Israeli parliament is expected to ratify die treaty T u esd ay , and P re sid e n t C lin to n w ill jo in Israeli and Jordanian officials Wednesday for the official signing. Meanwhile, security officials reported to the Cabinet on Sunday that they had rounded up dozens of activists from th e fu n d a m e n ta lis t M u slim g ro u p H am as sin c e la s t W ednesday’s bus attack. Hamas took responsibility for the bombing, which claimed its 22nd victim on Sunday when a 61-year-old woman died of her wounds. F earing reprisals fo r the bom bing, about 30 Ham as activists in the Palestinian-ruled Gaza. Strip and the Israelio ccupied W est B ank are spending nights in hiding, a Palestinian source said, speaking on,condition of anonymi­ ty- . C abinet ministers spoke o f new steps against Hamas, although they would not confirm Rabin’s decision to order the killing of Hamas military leaders, which received ban­ ner newspaper headlines. E conom ics M in ister Shim on S hetreet said security forces had identified “dozens” o f activists involved in the kidnap-murder of an Israeli soldier by Hamas last week. “We will find them and no one will go unpunished,” he told reporters. The military has long had a list of most-wanted activists it is authorized to kill on sight, including 27 Hamas opera­ tives, but R abin's new authorization covers more senior military leaders, a security official said. The security services have “carte blanche” to pursue wanted people, said the official. But, he added, many offi­ cials draw the line at assassinating political leaders of Hamas who are not directly involved in violence. G raffiti sig n ed by Islam ic m ilitan ts was scribbled throughout Gaza City on Sunday promising more bomb­ ings, and Israeli troops shot dead an Arab after he stabbed a soldier in the West Bank town of Hebron. The army said the man was a Hamas member released from prison six weeks ago after signing a statement dis­ avowing violence. Palestinian residents of the city, howev­ Associated Prass A s Israeli Defence Force soldier watches cars p assin g through a check point between the W est Bank and Jerusalem. All cars with Palestinian plates are being turned back due to Israel’s indefinite closure of the W est Bank and the Gaza Strip. er, said Nidal Tam im i belonged to PLO leader Yasser Arafat’s mainstream Fatah faction. Hebron’s Fatah faction angrily condemned the death and distributed a leaflet warning it would step up confrontations with Israeli soldiers in the city. The Palestine Liberation Organization’s chief negotiator, Nabil Shaath, discussed the violence with Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres in Cairo, where talks on expanding Palestinian self-rule in the W est Bank are set to resume Monday. Peres urged the PLO to join in a common battle against Hamas. But Shaath said Israel^ “procrastination” in giving up all the occupied territories; was undermining the PLO’s control. He.also said Israel’s closure o f die territories put proponents o f peace in an even tougher spot by increasing support for extremists. Israel’s Cabinet decided Sunday to bring in 19,000 for­ eign workers to replace Palestinian workers barred from entering Israel since the W est Bank and autonomous Gaza Strip were closed in the wake of Wednesday’s bus bomb­ ing. Shaath said he also wanted to discuss with Peres the Israel-Jordan peace accord being signed on Wednesday, which many Palestinians fear is an attempt by Israel to hand over the West Bank to Jordan’s control, leaving the PLO with only Gaza. Israel prides itself on pursuing its terrorist enem ies | beyond its borders. The precedent was set in 1972 when lie ) Mossad intelligence agency was ordered to assassinate (je Palestinians responsible for the massacre of 11 Israeli ai lletes at the Munich Olympics. i B ut the M unich terro rists cam e from the Palestii e Liberation Organization, which had a clear structure, hi^ V archy and known addfesses. Hamas, Arabic for fervor cr zeal, is a broad p o litic a l m oyem ent w ith m em bers in Jordan, Sudan, Iran and Lebanon as well as the Gaza Strip and W est Bank. . ■ It has a spiritual leadership of clerics, a political leader­ ship of academics and activists; and a military wing. The relationship among the three is murky. Its military wing, the Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades, is intensely secretive, operates in small cells of two or three members and is virtually impossible to infiltrate. Steven Emerson, a Washington-based author and expert on Islamic fundamentalism, said Hamas’s 15 or 20 main leaders move around constantly “and Israeli intelligence has had great trouble tracking them.” Clean-up operations to close Lock-up looms for OJ. jury Houston port into next week HOUSTON (AP) — The Coast Guard worked against a strong current Sunday to clean up more than a million gallons of oil and gasoline that gushed from pipelines ruptured by floodwaters. One o f the nation’s busiest ports could remain closed through the week to nearly all traffic while crews work on the gooey mess. Flooding that began Oct. 16 has killed at least 19 people. R ushing w ater from the sw o llen S an J a c in to R iv e r is b elie v e d responsible for at least four pipeline breaks that sent at least 1.2 m illion gallons o f g a so lin e a n d c ru d e o il in to th è riv e r Thursday, igniting fires. A blotchy ribbon o f black crude, some p atch es s till b u rn in g , flo a te d fro m the river’s mouth through the channel and into the G u lf o f M exico. O il-reco v ery ships worked to suck the oil in to storage tanks and barges with booms and skimmers. “I think a week is a good woiking figure for resolution o f the oil spillage.' We may be longer in resolving some o f th e other issues,” Coast Guard Capt. Richard Ford said. “It’s too early to predict exactly what type of problems we are dealing with and how long it’s going to take.” The Houston Ship C hannel is open to some barges during daylight. Ford estimat- ed th a t b u sin e sse s alo n g the P o rt o f H ouston w ill lose $1 m illion each day ocean-going vessels are kept out. Oil-collecting ships bobbed Sunday in 6 mph currents that slowed their progress. “They’re not particularly effective, nor are they designed to be, in that type of cur­ rent,” Ford said. A private salvage boat worked to raise a large object — possibly an unmanned tug­ boat reported missing last week — sunk in the channel near the San Jacinto’s mouth. Five U.S. Army Corps o f Engineers ves­ sels scanned the channel and a portion of Galveston Bay with radar and metal detec­ tors for cars, mobile homes or other large o b stru c tio n s p o ssib ly c a rrie d th ere by fioodwater. A lead in g th eo ry about the p ip elin e breaks, near where the San Jacinto empties into the channel, is that flood debris crashed into die fiiel lines. Murky brown fioodwater carried tons of sedim ent that has settled in the -40-footdeep ship channel, reducing the depth in some places to 30 feet. But the runoff isn’t expected to affect shipping once the chan­ nel is reopened. •Ijtfaagouid te& iyM ioaif at a hotel, LOS ANGELES (AP) — The judge who said ted id B ’t w a n th e n ^ tsà sjjH ^ ^ inctadwg dad) ng*4 service .a s d restau* dow i side is what s not : m the 0 J . Simpson trial has sent strong .one j hints lately that he plans to sendthe panel thing. All calls would be censored, as into a cloistered existence. would TV shows, radio, newspapers and But for how long? , “I’ve been looking forward«* question­ any othermass media. The search for a jury, which will decide ing you," Ito told a prospective ju ro r whose written questionnaire showed she whether Simpson is guilty of killing his was a flight attendant, flying routes around ex-wife and her friend, began Sept. 26. the world. “You've stayed in many hotels, when prospective jurors were told to stay away from news reports and conversations haven’t you?” “Yes, I have." said the woman who about the case. When potential panelists acknowledged it wouldn’t be a hardship returned for a second round of question­ ing. Ito told them he wasn’t looking for for her to spend six months sequestered. A nother woman was quizzed about hermits and would be suspicious of a “Rip Van Winkle” who knew nothing about the tin» spent away from home. • ::;y . “What’s the longest stay you've had in case. But when Ito halted jury selection for a hotel?” Ito asked last week. two days » decide How to deal with pub­ ‘Tw o weeks," she replied “How do you feel about six months’"' licity over it sensational book about the Simpsons, he demanded that prospective he asked. jurors S ta y away from all media and out of [' . T could doit if I have to," she said. Others, however, were not as adapt­ When prospects returned to court for a< able One woman said she was very active new (process of private, one-on-one ques­ and fdimd it confining just waiting in die jury .-room to be called for questioning. tioning late last week, Ito quickly learned o f widespread exposure »p u b licity . ■ . "This isjawftilj she said. -.. Prosecutors are seeking sequestration.. A man said he couldn't do it because ■ he would miss Hit lodge meetings and The defense'opposes it for myriad reasons, ' other aétivifiés. And pne woman said Her including th e belief zhar jurors who are husband has a weak heart and can't be left cooped up might rtjsh to a verdict just to get o u t ■' . ;V- O p in io n P age 4 Monday, October 24, 1994 State P ress d it o r ia l B A bitter poll to swallow ■.i. - - ' . v ; ‘vi-; ■■ ' *'\'< . STATE PRESS TAFF T T W ,STATE ME55 JWCES HEATS ~ jn ‘Trap’ o f marriage changes man Marriage sucks. Now, don’t get me w rong, I think com m itm ent IKE and the continued growth of love betw een two hum an beings are STEVENS great things — if you’re a woman. Columnist As a man, marriage presents sev­ eral concerns pertaining to person­ al freedom. O h, I ’ll com e a ro u n d . As I mature, I ’11 understand that love does need to be validated with the c h u rc h , sta te and co m m u n ity . W ith age, I’ll begin to see mar­ riage as a great institution, and not just some feminine right of passage. Eventually, I’m sure I’ll meet the “right” wotiian, and realize that marriage is much more than a status symbol. Yes, someday — with the will of God and a good lawyer — I, too, will say “I do,” or more appropriately, “I never will again.” How ever, as for now, this line o f logic escapes me. Nope, take me back to the good old days when a woman, a club and a cave to drag her back to was all I needed. Instead, I live in the 90’s, where I’m expected to drink Evian, steer clear of meat and give a damn about the suffer­ ing going on in Zimbabwe. In short, I’m expected to lie to you. Get real, I’m a man (?). I, and others with testosterone, wear the label o f pigs, and live in a society where we’re constantly belittled because we pressure women, yet no one ever mentions the enormous pressures put on men to marry. Women spend their entire lives preparing for their wed­ ding day. After the wedding day, those same women spend the rest of their lives castrating the thing they spent so long to capture. My married friends used to be proud, hapless men. Now, they’re broken down, with no spring in their step and no zeal in th eir speech. They resem ble some Lovecraftian abominations, devolving back to the lurking fear waiting for them at home, in catacombs of dirty diapers and empty ice cream boxes. They weren’t this way before they married. Come to think of it, their wives aren’t exactly the same, either. These once kindly women have becom e the Alpha and Om ega o f wedlock. T hey’re m eaner than before, more dem anding than before and, frankly, they’re larger than before. Their previous dispositions were nothing more than a red herring. Sadly, m ost men d o n ’t understand that women have laid all sorts o f traps to lure them in. Compassion. W illingness to share. Beauty. These are just tricks. The proverbial wedge o f cheese in the mouse grinder of life. Weight control is one of the effective lures. Women go on Ghandi diets to present a petite appearance. It seems the m om ent th ey ’re m arried, the girdle com es off and the Twinkies come out. Women are constantly on that ticking biological d o ck crap. They’re running out of time all right, but not to have a baby. They’re ticking bombs and if they don’t get a Ho-Ho soon, they'll explode. You are probably thinking, “Gee. this guy is out of step with the times. Hasn’t he heard about women’s liberation?” Yes, I have, and don’t buy it for a minute. No passing trend of social awareness will ever override generations of moral instruction. I. can’t think o f a single relationship I’ve been in, know n o f or w itnessed where after one m onth, the woman wasn’t already talking about marriage. If one month signifies a lifetime o f commitment, then, by these same standards, isn’t a good dinner worth an hour or so in the sack? i Yes, that is uncouth, and I am speaking in broad general­ izations (pardon the pun). However, it is the root of our problems. W omen want a security blanket and men just want to get under the blanket: The basic treaty of love. The guy submits to cries of marriage and the woman pretends to enjoy “if.”'T his is our nature, and unfortunately, women hold all the cards. O f course, I’m young. I haven’t seen or lived through enough to truly understand my older male counterparts. I still don’t want to get married. I’m not against love and I do care what women have to say. M en tend to live in the moment, and this is why so many of us are hung up on sex. We crave it, we need it and we’ll do just about anything for it. This has condemned men. Society is led to believe that heterosexual sex is immoral and unnatural, and to want it is a sign of deviance. No. Sex, like hunger, is a need. This need and honesty in declaring it has become a social no-no. Thus men are paint­ ed as barbaric pigs. Well —: yeah. I won’t argue that one. I am a pig. But the second I nibble at the slop women are throwing in my trough, I’ll be cooked. M ike Stevens is sophomore journalism major. JASON OWSLEY, Editor > DAVID STROW, Managing Editor KRIS FRIDRICH ..¿...........NightEditor Readicker. GARIN GROFT.....................................................City Editor PH O TO G R A PH ER S: Theresa Boettcher, Mark Kramer, GREG ZEMEIDA— . . . . ¿ . . . . . . ¿ . i . . . . . . * ..............Asst. City Editor N. Scott Trimble. DAVID L A S P A L U T O . N e w s Editor UNSIGNED EDITOR: James Frusetta A. MARJORY KAMINSKI . . . ............ Opinion Editor CO LU M N ISTS: Brian Anderson, James Frusetta, Barry CRAIG M A C N A U G H T O N . Photo Editor Kelley, Diana Lopez, James Mahin, Mike Stevens, Chris Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whitlach. JEREMY STEIN................. CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. DAWN WAGNER............ GRAPH IC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. KEN CO LLIN S...... PR O D U C T IO N : Aaron B ratcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth ANNA ULINICH . . ... .. .... .Asst. Magazine Editor French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, R E P O R T E R S : M ika A k ikuni, E liza b e th A ppelen, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. C h ris tin a B ailey , T im B axter, L o rrie C o h en , D aw n S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : E m ily B erg er, D an DeChristina, Lisa Gonderinger, Christine Granados, Dave Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Megan Owsley, Proffitt, Karyn Riedell. Jennifer Pittman, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten, Marc Wolfe. SP O R T S R E PO R T E R S: Todd Kelly, Dan Miller, Lee Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, Newmhn. decided by a majority voted among its members. They do C O P Y E D IT O R S : N ick B acon, K im H erm an, Lynn i §mn MARKETINGMAYHEM: . _•■ ■■V" C o n » election day, A SU w ill once m ore be silent. O f the three state universities, A SU has the low est voter attendance rate. A bout 1,700 stu­ dents live on cam pus, are A rizona residents and ate eligible to vote — and even m ore students live nearby, off-campus. But student leaders argue that not enough o f those students vote — and local election offi­ cials are disinterested in reversing that trend. The A rizona Students A ssociation has con­ cluded that there might be, at least, a few hun­ dred-odd voters at ASU who aren’t able to vote under the current system o f polling booths. To c o rre c t th is, th ey h av e lo b b ied fo r a p o llin g booth to be placed on the ASU m ain campus. A fter all, the other tw o state universities have them. UofA, a cam pus o f 35,000, has a polling booth; NAU, a cam pus o f 18,000, has five. With a p o p u latio n o f 4 3 ,0 0 0 here a t A SU — even w ith large percentages o f those students b eing out-of-state or com m uter students not eligible to v o te o n c a m p u s — it s e e m s r e a s o n a b le to request a polling booth. U n f o r tu n a te ly , th e M a r ic o p a C o u n ty R e c o rd e r’s O ffice has, it seem s, given up on attem pts to get students to vote. Polling places cost $2,000 to operate on voting day, and the few votes that m ight be gathered are sim ply not cost effective. For that m atter, county officials point out that there is a polling station at 215 E. U niversity D rive for Tem pe voting d istrict 10 (on the edge o f cam pus), and 101 E. Sixth Street for Tempe voting D istrict 6 (not particularly far, either). Students can w alk it o r lum p i t ... But would a polling place really be all that difficult to install? It’s not ju s t a question o f “UofA has one, we want one” (although that very w ell m ay enter into the picture). It’s also w hether o r not an illheard m inority will get a chance to express its views. College cam puses provide a forum fo r candi­ dates to debate, a few problem s to dispute and so n » state em ployees to court. But voting? Few candidates care about the student vote. tudents are still citizens. ■ . a r e citizens o f the U nited States; m any are citizens o f A rizona; and a m inority — but still, no few — are residents o f Tempe. A nd, perhaps ASA is right — perhaps one o f the reasons students d o n ’t vote is the trek to the First U nited M ethodist Church. In which case, it seem s hardly reasonable for M aricopa C ounty to refuse, particularly i f ASA a n d A S A S U a re k in d e n o u g h to a s s is t w ith underw riting die project. A SU stu d en ts w ould g e t a b ig g er v o ice in state politics; voter turnout would increase. T he noble ideals A m erica was, theoretically a t least, b u ilt up o n , a re all in tra d e fo r base money. W hat m ore could you ask for? ■ ■ S tate P ress not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY ÒAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editer Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 15, A rizona State University» Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of die ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information......... . .965-7572 Newsroom........... .. .965-2292 Magazine................965-1695 Advertising............ ..965-6555 Classifieds............... 965-6735 O p in io n STATE P ress Monday, October 24, 1994 ___________________ P a g e rs Spirit o f rituals cultivates us all Every day the rational, m od­ em human being takes part in a T ori mythical, primordial experience. EVANS The magic of ritual is this experi­ Guest Columnist ence that perm eates o u r culture daily. This ritual begins from the moment we awaken to the moment that unconscious sleep begins its reign. After reading a quote by sociologist Tom F. Driver, “To take a critical look at our relation to ritual is to call into question our existence in the world,” I began pondering the rituals in my life and concluded that my pool is shallow in this area. The word “ritual” gives spiritual meaning to seemingly menial tasks. Rituals transform the ordinary procedure into the extraordinary act, while simultaneously exposing the animalistic qualities that define every humanbeing. A return to the world of ceremony is sensibly simple and comfortably child-like, A child has the ability to transform an everyday task into a seemingly religious rite. I realized this after spending a few days with my 9-year-old brother. His weekend mornings consisted of careful couch rearrang­ ing, preparing comfortable spots for the: 8:30 The M ighty M orphin P ow er Rangers. Next was the everyday power breakfast o f Com Pops and scrambled eggs, followed by a day of play with his neighborhood pal. As I w atched his early-m orning preparations for the school day, I witnessed repetition of the events in the same sequence. Every grown-up can surely remember the com­ fort in following a structured morning regime in their child­ hood. Hastily throwing on the garb for the day was void of extensive thought. Next, a mad dash to the TV; Wallace and Ladmo were handing out those Ladmo bags that only the g o o d , little c h e ru b ic -fa c e d B oy and G irl S couts received. Breakfast was more than the caffeine-rich jolt of brown liquid energy. Cheerios was the everyday staple. The big, yellow kiddy cab or th e BM X were those reliable forms of transportation Signaling the simple beginnings of a school day. What happened to the birthday parties? This is the epito­ me of ritual. The party dresses, the celebrating, the costum­ ing with the party hats and the noise makers, and the real birthday cakes, they aH disappeared, leaving behind an adult to form his or her own ritual. There is no substitute for answer to that free-spirited, childhood liberation, nor do I the real birthday bash. Today the daily rashes of getting to class on time, infi­ intend to proclaim a solution. However, begin thinking nite tests and m aintaining a respectable social life take ab o u t ap p ly in g m eaning to thè acts u n ju stly term ed precedence over practicing rituals. As I watched the young “habits.” Psychotic hand washing or daily sunrise prayer buck, I took special note of the contentment he expressed hailing in your house is not the practice I speak about. Begin listening, watching and maybe even enjoying the with the reliability of the rituals in this life. Establishing rit­ uals modeled after a 9-year-old is the answer for a bit o f sequence of events that compose your early morning rites. Try removing the ever crucial step of taking a shower. If stability in this unpredictable world. The childhood schedule is probably envied by most. The you try to rearrange your sequence of events — brush your unadulterated schedule could be counted on, clothes would hair before your teeth — the entire day feels disjointed. not disappear, Wallace and Ladmo were reliable and the Take the same route to school and watch others also partici­ school bus was more prompt than mom; it is just an expect­ pating in their ritual cross your path daily. Relish in the ed part of being a kid. Birthday parties, well, they are an consistency and reliability created through the recognition elementary outline for the celebrations necessary in main­ and practice o f simple acts. The after-school rite of hanging taining the art of ritual. o u t w ith n e ig h b o rh o o d bu d d ies Whether every kid had a sched­ The loss o f ritual is a loss o f should continue today. Congregating ule like this is irrelevant. Instead it’s the feeling of safety associated m oral fib e r which is a step with the local cronies after a tough with uniformity, structure and relia­ closer to the mentality neces­ day o f institutionalized education is bility em phasized through early sary to continue the dehuman­ a d e fin ite form o f cerem o n y . H o w ev er, c o n stru c tin g an a fte r childhood ceremonial structure. M aintaining a sense o f consis­ izing, irrational and horrific school service of content solitude is the answer for some. This is an art tency and order is crucial in the real 20th century warfare. form created for the individual, by world o f adulthood. Clothes seem to get up and walk out the door, Ladmo died and that yel­ die individual. By learning to appreciate and recognize this art of the most basic, instinctual type, all human beings are low bus, well, we’re just too big to fit into those seats. As a child the w orld was predictable, as the sim ple placed on an equal plane. The loss of ritual is a loss of moral fiber which is a step accomplishment of tasks proved. Then why can’t rituals do the same today? Time does not warrant an enjoyment of rit­ closer to the mentality necessary to continue the dehuman­ uals Time does not always allow for the establishment of izing, irrational and horrific 20th century warfare. Children do not fight wars, they are consumed in con­ ritual. In a hasty waste o f tim e, acts o f inertia are per­ formed, not movements- of meaning. We move but do not structing a life of artful rituals so they can understand thie world, not extinguish it. This is precisely why ceremonial feel it, nor enjoy it. Just performing these customs is much different than significance is an ageless necessity. Whether it be the wed­ recognizing and appreciating the meanings that transcend ding or birthday, or early morning monotonies and coffee all of mankind. The function of a ritual is to transform the talks, the gift of human ritual should be acknowledged and overw helm ing m acrocosm into a personal m icrocosm . fostered. Making this world become your world is like finally having To be fu lly alive and whole we need to engage creatively your own bedroom. This personal space makes sleeping, studying and living easier. Through an attempt to under­ in ritual perform ance. stand the world on a personal and instinctual level, man has — Tom Driver an opportunity to relinquish childhood simplicity. This is the simplicity that allows for communication in the world. W atching cartoons and eating Fruit Loops is not the Tori Evans is a junior jounalism major. Pay raises? We don’t need no stinking pay raises Money from Prop 200 tax should clean up litter As a strong conservative person I oppose most taxes, although I do realize some are necessary. This November a small portion o f the Arizona community will go to the polls in order to decide whether a tax increase on cigarettes will be imposed. I believe smoking should be a privilege as long as it is done in conjunction with the law. I would not like to be taxed heavily for soda. Wait, I do not see my soda cans lit­ tering the streets. The accumulation of cigarettes butts on the ground is repulsive! Just look down and around yourself while walking and you will see what I mean. I am not say­ ing all smokers are too lazy to be responsible, but as you will see most are. Littering is both laziness and disrespect for their peers and the environment. I know the plan for the money raised by higher taxes will not go to litter removal; a small portion of the money will go to education to deter children from starting the detrimental habit. The higher cost of cigarettes will help sway people who can not make up their minds on whether to stop or not. I know the higher tax on cigarettes will not solve all of our pollution problem; it may keep the butts o ff our streets. Donald E; Tramp Junior Environmental Resources Arizona minions follow fair weather This letter is in response to the Oct. 12 article by Dawn Wagner on fair weather fans. First off, let me state that I am 100 percent behind Wagner on this topic. I have never seen more “fake fans” (except of course all those people who wear Michigan apparel and don’t even know where the state is!) than here in Arizona. It isn’t just with the college teams either. It ranges from the State Press Ssetters to the editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing, major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters will be consid­ ered for publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opin­ ion page alitor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors will be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo I.D. to the Store Press front desk in the basement of the Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, Box 871502, Arizona State University, Tempe Ariz., 852871502. No faxes, please. Sun Devils to the Suns, the Firebirds to the Fall League, and even high school teams. What ever happened to fan support? If you have seen me around campus, or if you know me, you will see that I am the biggest Iowa Hawkeye fan in Arizona. I tty to see the games on TV or listen on the radio,, but they just don’t seem to reach this far west. Itt fact, I support my team so much that I flew back to Iowa City to see my Hawkeyes battle Michigan- Everyone thought that Iowa was gonna lose. I got news for you, they hung in there with the best of them. Despite a defeat (and a losing record) I still am I wanted to take this opportunity to enlighten Kay Winn according to what she was quoted as saying about how things work*around ASU when wages are at issue here at the University. ( ‘Staff Council: Pay System Stinks’ by Lisa Gonderinger, Oct. 10.) 1) ASU will never deal with staff in good faith. Instead of adding the m erit pay into the general budget request, President Coor adds a separate request asking for funding from the Legislature. 2) The Legislature cancels all special funding request!, claiming budget cutbacks, astrology conflicts, o r some other form o f economic “voodoo,” thus cutting “unnecessary ’ costs from the budget to pander voter approval. The result? The staff gets shafted again. Why should any­ one care? Because, my fellow students, we are in an extremejly competitive job market. To successfully find meaningful employment, a substantive and quality curriculum must bp maintained, which in good part is the responsibility of the staff here at ASU. The administration pay s lip Service to the salary problem, evident by disproportionately high rate of turnover which slowly erodes the overall quality of service which does in turn affect us all. This in turn places a handicap on our efforts to compete for better positions in the work world during interview time. there fo r’em. Which brings me to my next point qf interest, the rest of the 70 or more thousand people who also joined me for the game and the pre- and post-game tailgate parties. Where else can you find so many people getting together to have fun, BBQ and just plain party? Not here. Yeah, sure, there are a few of you out there who do tailgate. I guess what I am trying to say is that, in this city the name of the game is acceptance. Sure I get a lot of criticism for who I support, but that’s the key, I support them throught thick and thin. So next time there’s a home game, break out-the Dennis Friel Graduate Undeclared little grills, throw on a couple of hamburgers, add some ketchup and pickles, toss the football around and have some fun. Then, take a minute and look through the program to identify who plays offense and who plays defense. When the game is over stand tall for a victory, or support the players for their valiant effort in a good defeat. Christopher Whalen Junior’ Engineering Sta te P ress Monday, October 24,1994 P age 6 High court to decide on beer labeling WASHINGTON (ÂP) — Ever wonder what caliber the buy high-alcohol-content products because they are harshSilver Bullet really is? The Coors Brewing Co. would like tasting and are loaded with calories.” to be able to tell consumers how much alcohol is in its C oors filed suit against the T reasury D epartm ent’s products, but federal regulators claim this would lead to Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, seven years ago “strength wars.” because it was concerned about talk that its beer was weak, This suds opera goes before the Supreme Court next Lyford said. month, with Coors asking for the right to print aicohol con­ “There was industry gossip, if you would, that Coors tent on its béer labels. b e e r... was watered-down beer,” he said. “We wanted to be But the Bureau o f Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms has able to put the content on our beer to say, 'Look, our beer is asked the Supreme Court to uphold a law that bans beer m akers from putting that inform ation on labels unless just like everyone else’s beer. It’s not watery. It’s just like required by state law. our competitors’.” C ongress passed the law in 1937 to put an end to Since then, the issue has evolved into one concerning strength wars that broke out among brewers after the repeal the consumer’s right to know, Lyford said. of Prohibition. Regulators wanted to discourage beer mak­ “We see it as very consistent with that whole approach ers from trying to boost sales by claiming their products that people are sensitive and concerned about what it is were stronger — or contained more alcohol — than their they’re consuming, either eating or drinking. And we want competitors’ beers. Coors challenged the law in 1987, saying it improperly to give them that information,” he said. “To us it seems like restricts commercial free speech. The company eventually the government’s approach to this is that they need to pro­ won a favorable appeals court ruling in August 1993. tect consumers from themselves. They don’t want to give Arguments before the Supreme Court are scheduled for people this information.” Nov. 30. N ot true, said the C enter for Science in the Public "We think that this is information that people have a Interest, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case. right to know, should know,” said Willis Lyford, a Coors “I think the record demonstrates quite clearly that Coors spokesm an at com pany headquarters in G olden, Colo. wants to list alcohol content on its labels in order — for "And if you’re talking about people making decisions about drinking, people are entitled to know what sort of alcohol marketing reasons — in order to help dispel Coors’ image as a weak beer,” said Bruce Silverglade, the center’s direc­ content is in the product that they’re consuming.” Coors has refrained from putting alcohol-content infor­ tor of legal affairs. mation on most of its labels pending the court’s decision, “And with all the concern about drunk driving and teen­ Lyford said. , age drinking, we believe that Coors’ actions are plainly The alcohol content of most Coors beers varies from 3.5 wrong for the times and not protected by the Constitution,” percent to 4.5 percent. Coors Light is 4.15 percent alcohol, Silverglade said. and the Coors Arctic Ice is 5.5 percent. The good-government group Public Citizen has sided The government estimates the average alcohol content of all beers at 4.5 percent, said Phil Katz, spokesman for with Coors. In its own friend-of-the-court brief, Public Citizen defends commercial free speech, saying while the the Beer Institute, a trade group. Coors believes there’s no evidence that the law prevents courts may restrict it in some cases, this is not one of them. strength wars. “Truthful, non-deceptive inform ation that empowers “There have been no beer strength wars in other coun­ consumers to make informed choices that directly affect tries such as Canada, where beer labeling is required,” the their health and well-being and the safety of others may not com pany said in a brief filed with the Suprem e Court. be suppressed absent the most compelling o f reasons,” it “Further, there is no incentive for brewers to engage in said. strength wars because mainstream consumers do not like or p o sM ® P MEXICAN FOOD A S ervin g L u n ch a n d D in n e r 7 D a ys a W eek W E P R O U D LY USE O N LY * Non-Cholesterol all vegetable oil for frying * The finest lean beef and skinless chicken * Produce delivered fresh daily * Flour tortillas made w ith canola oil * W e use no preservatives or additives "Y O U R B O D Y W ILL T H A N K Y O U " C O M IN G S O O N TO ROSITA'S: A M E N U DESIG NED W ITH NUTRITIONALLY ANALYZED HEALTHY C H O IC E OPTIONS. W ATCH O U R A D FOR DETAILS. •9 With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value, Not good with arty other offer or discount. 1 Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 10-31-94. M esa 2023 W. G uadali'"“ (Southwest Corner D obson & Guadalupe) “ 897-941 Tempe H ap p y H our B u ffe t 960 W. University .! 4-7 p.m. MondayFriday 966-0852 (Northeast com er University & Hardy) CRNA S c h o la r sh ip s After December, there's no paper-and-pendl GRE until April. That's too late to send schools your scores to apply for next fall. Take the GRE now! And this is your LAST CHANCE to take Kaplan's course tor the December GRE. Final classes starting November 5. Consider becoming an Air Force CRNA through the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program. For more information, contact an Air Force health professions recruiter near you. Or call 1-800-423-USAF. G et a higher score 1 -8 0 0 -K A P -T E S T KAPLAN Health Professions COMBO I MU M a r k e t B a g e l w /C h e e se , i6 o z . S o d a / C o f f e e M e g a M u f f in , i6 o z . R e g . A p p le 1 . 8 9 1 , 4 9 C o ffe e F r it t e r , 1 . 3 9 i 6 0 Zv R e g . C o ffe e C in n a m o n F ry , 16Q Z. R e g , C o ffe e 1 . 3 C o ffe e 1 . 3 9 B ig 9 C o o k ie , l6 o z . R e g . T h e M e m o r ia l U n io n F o o d C o u r t W indy CHy Foods, M U M arket, Pizza Hut, Coffee Shoppe, O n The G o, W oks, Chick-fil-A, Subcity, Sizzling Salads, P asta Express, Taco Bell, M arico p a Room . CROSSWORD c O R A N I D E C H R O A E R R B A D A L B U M A R E N T S T O H 1 N by TH O M A S JO SEPH iC R O S S 1 Nasty remarks 6 Smears 1 Banish­ ment 2 Quartet doubled 3 Hima­ layan land 14 Prepared 15 Chowder ingredient 17 Spell 18 Discredit, in a way 22 Writer Oz ¡3 Sign up ¡7 Jazz style 29 Puccini opera 30 Follows as a result 32 Applaud 33 Semi drivers 35 Con­ ducted 38 Pod veggies 39 Perfect 41 Damp 45 Highway entrance sign 46 Blender setting 47 Building wing 48 Declare DOWN 1 Hoss’ pa 2 Woods- A S K E D U E; S s 5 7 4 Loses conscious­ R ness G E 5 Vends 1 N 6 Inactive N jr 7 Top card S 8 Nevada E R neighbor N Y 9 “Adam— •” G E 10 Under­ Friday's Answer world river 35 Peru’s 16 Had chow 24 Tropical site . capital 18 Paul 36 Utopia Buhyan’s 25 Wound reminder 37 Actress ox 26 Lights-out Laura 19 Hymn tune 40 Mature finish 28 Baffle 42 Writer 20 Corn 31 Take to Levin holders court 43 Collec21 Plans 34 Summer tion stage sites for 44 Golf move­ some : gadget ments 1 \ 3 2 9 10 24 25 2 ^ ■ ■ ■ B 5 1 11 1 13 14 1 w 21 20 _ 22 z ■ 27 17 16 15 18 12 28 . -. ;■ 29 1 ■ 30 31 ■■ 33 36 32 ■ 34^ 38 3 ^ 40 39 43 44 ‘ V 46 45 1 47 man'e tonl 1 ï DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to w ork it: AX Y D LB A A X R is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the tw o O's, etc. Single letters, • apostrophes, the length and form ation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 10-24 CRYPTOQUOTES C T R M C B K B W L Q U W BRKM R Y M O S Q S S J F K ; BI G BS M BL O GR M B L CT RM CB H BYBF RW W N T RG G BYK . — L O K F R B W O F rid a y 's C ry p to q u o te : PEOPLE WHO LIVE IN GLASS HOUSES HAVE TO ANSW ER THE BELL. -B R U C E PATTERSON ©1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. There is m ore to life th a n news, w eather and sports. Check o u t th e comics. p special core hoir $Q95 oks P age 7 Monday, October 24,1994 S tate P ress QUALITYHAIRCARE - AFFORDABLYPRICED J reg. *24.95 403 w. university ne)dto tops (or 10 sessions *” 8297774 mon-fri 9-9, sat 9-6, sun 11-5 Expies10-28-94 h* À tiM I *77 LASTW EEK Maximiurti threeperperson 0ktira ? L E Y Y^ killer brands Z ap p earin g daily... S U N • S U R F » VOI P o l ic e R e po r t A SV p o lite reported the follow ing incidents Sunday: • A male student was arrested for attempted theft at the Computing Commons. • Three bicycles were stolen. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Sunday: • A 32-year-old woman was arrested for criminal damage and making threats after she threatened to cut off her live-in boyfriend’s penis. Holding a large butcher knife, she told him, “P m going to cut off your d— .” She broke down his locked bedroom door and confronted him inside the bed­ room . She also prevented him from calling police by unplugging one telephone and cutting the cord on the other. • A 4-year-old boy accidentally shot himself in his little fin­ ger with a .38-caliber revolver. He also burned his right ring finger. His mother was cooking dinner, and the other occupant of the apartment was asleep on the couch at the time of the accident. The boy got the gun from a low shelf in the entry closet, and the gun discharged when the boy removed die weapon from the holster. • Two Tempe women were robbed at gun point. The sus­ pect approached the victims when they pulled into the park­ ing lot at 3232 S. Mill Ave. He took their vehicle after pointing a handgun at them and telling them to get out of the truck. A purse was also in the vehicle when it was stolen. • A 29-year-old Tempe man w as arrested for being a fugi­ tive from justice. The man was a passenger in a vehicle involved in an accident in the 3100 block of McClintock IT’SYOUR MOVE... d o n Drive. • A 21-year-old man was arrested for carrying a concealed weapon; He was arrested after running from the police dur­ ing an altercation with his ex-girlfriend. The police had been warned that the suspect had a knife. When officers ordered him to remove his knife, he pulled out a hunting knife from underneath his rain coat. He was also wanted on three outstanding warrants for domestic violence. • A 25-year-old man was arrested for arson, three counts of kidnapping, burglary, aggravated assault and theft. He removed a cordless phone and backed his vehicle into the open garage in the 1300 block of W. Lisa Lane. He then forced entry into the residence by breaking a window of the residence and attem pted to enter the locked bathroom , where the victim and her children had fled. He struck the bathroom door several times with a machete. When police, entered the residence, he set fire to the mattress while stay-. ing inside die office located in the residence. He kept the officers at bay waving the machete and striking it against; the door jam of the office. He was eventually overcome by/ smoke. Because of the heavy smoke, the three officers had to be transported to the hospital for treatment. • A 37-year-old Tempe man was arrested for disorderly conduct and criminal damage. He became disruptive at the drive-through window at Jack in the Box at 721 S. Mill Avé. because the employees would not serve him. Com piled by State Press reporter Karyn R iedell for l<£ tsettle 1 thantn b e st l§ • H a r b in s •$300 * L u x u r y W h e n t r e s ' Gourmet Snack Bar • Stereo Surround Sound 3227 Love Affair Mon-1Thun) 12:40. a-SO , 700, 10:10 mrnm HIUPHCttBgir IWon-thunl amn* 1200.230. soo.rao, 1000 ptoshtiuai) tie puppet mastersfhUn-Thun)12:16,2:46.8:1». 736. »21» . UmeOMJrTYHtfi S fcllLTOO■****■--* .10:18 atoh-num)1:40. 430. 730.1030 ßtOH-Ttum) 200.800. 0:16 . atan-Thnl12:46.400. TUO.WOO W ES CRAVEN'S . rowwesT qumpwj (ito^Thun) 130. am 7O0, wap NEW NIGHTMARE • dUMIMXI PW taC M T D A N Q B H rum PAm-Thu^Tiit.4-»f. Tri«,MfK> >.306.830. BOO.10:25 . MBKMK R0KMR*. ¿StSfc ♦ M ffiiblindi ^ V ytfcai bBnds with y a&mxs f i ♦ .ìw 'W tìB fS V ***f® ♦ Walk-in closets available ♦ Pri vate balcony/patio ♦ Security alarm systems available ♦ Free hot "water 8 ♦ á poòls, 2 yçta ' " basi tn xl irrm | ♦ Covered parking ¿ r*>v' ^ ^ h S I k i s 1255 E. ♦ L arge ex ercise ro o m Tempe, Arizona 85281 S P1:10.4:10.7:10.10:10 ® , jmo-mmt E xitwEden. RM bb-TImW2:16.430. 738.006 m theRIVER WILD«4.JÁ I 4 A' «A4 ßton-Thun) QUADDANGlfô L U X U R Y A P A R T M E N T FEA T U R E S : ' —* ■ — University te Rural fc1Q.,to40.1030 THE S P E C IA L IS T . Mon. NMThun)12:15.2:4 TM TOOy MM ia&lSt6.2:46. 1030 _ P 444ÓaOO ONL YYOU. ÄBäStlSBSÄSS peswVwm fT**».*26.430.7:15. »06 o y iz s H o w .—• « a ncomPHi TRUEUES Triff ttS riT n » TuM.Thun) 1:00. 400. 700. 1QOO: 100.400.1000 If y o u e a rn less t h a n $2 4 ,0 0 0 * p e r y e a r, y o u m a y q u a lif y to g e t a m o n th ly r e n ta l d is c o u n t! C a ll N ow ! IK S5®S i R estrictions A pply 11) A PROGRAM HEALTH CAREER OPPORTUNITIES C L IN IC A L PSYCH O LO GY If your college degree is listed above, you have the opportunity to take advantage of a unique medical career in the Navy Medical Service Corps. Benefits include excellent pay, 30 days paid vacation earned each year, plus FREE medical/dental care, world­ wide travel, continuing education, and a secure retirement package. Make the m ost of your degree. Find out more about enriching and diversify­ ing your medical experience. It could be ju st w hat you’re looking for. For more information call 1 -8 0 0 -3 5 4 -9 6 2 7 NAVY OFFICER F u ll Sp e e ^ l A lie a d . ASU CHEER TRYOUTS OCTOBER 24th-26th Information packets are available in the Memorial Union, SRC and Residence Halls '- /A " mm t S tate P ress Monday, October 24, 1994 Page 8 Aristide drops first choice for prime m inister P O R T -A U -P R IN C E , H aiti (A P ) — U nder pressure from political opponents and the b u sin ess com m unity, P resident Jean -B ertran d A ristide dropped h is top choice for prime minister and was consider­ ing on Sunday a more moderate candidate. T he fro n tru n n e r, in te rim F o re ig n Minister Claudette Werleigh, Was ruled out because of her leftist beliefs. Aristide was leaning toward a prominent businessman to replace caretaker Prime M inister Robert Malval, a source close to the government said on condition of anonymity. Such a choice could placate business leaders and many in the middle and upper classes who feel threatened by the return of the populist priest. A ristid e w as sw ep t in to p o w er in Decem ber 1990 by H aiti’s poor, and his selection of cronies and inexperienced peo­ ple for his Cabinet then earned him stiff opposition. He was overthrown by the army after seven months in office, and restored with the help of the U.S. military on Oct. 15. There was no word on when the presi­ dent might announce his choice. Aristide was expected to meet with the leaders of Haiti's upper and lower houses, C ham ber o f D eputies p resid en t F rantz Robert Monde, a political opponent, and Senate president Firmin Jean-Louis, a sup­ porter. In other developm ents, a M iam i man working as a translator for the international p o lice force in H aiti w as e le c tro c u ted Sunday, and a special U.N. envoy arrived for talks on a peacekeeping force and other matters. Elder Rousseau, 42, was killed when he accidentally came in contact with a live e le c tric a l w ire ab o u t 3 :3 0 a.m . as he patrolled with U.S. m ilitary police and Haitian police officers, said Paul Browne, deputy director of the monitoring force. Rousseau, o f North M iami, was hired Sept. 24 by Dyncorp, a Miami personnel firm providing translators for the interna­ tional police monitors under a contract with the State Department, Browne said. The p atro llin g team w as ch ecking a report of shots fired in the Carrefour section of the capital when a local resident told them there was an electric wire down. “At some point Rousseau approached the wire, came in contact with it, and was elec­ trocuted,” said Browne. An em ployee o f Haiti Electric said a cable broke and fell on the man. Browne said Rousseau was pronounced dead after being rushed by helicopter to the U.S. 28th combat support hospital. Associated Press A boy carries food scrap s in a wheel barrow away from a downtown market in Port-au-Prince Sunday. Life h as returned to norm al little more than a week after form erly exiled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, w hose im age is on a banner in the background, returned to power. The only previous deaths since U.S.-led forces arrived in Haiti on Sept. 19 have been three American servicemen who took their own lives. Special U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi arrived in Haiti on Sunday to begin a week of meetings with Haitian government offi­ cials. At the airport. Brahimi described his visit as “the first contact to touch base with the government” and said he was optimistic about the reinstatem ent of dem ocracy in Haiti. Sri Tanka opposition leader among 50 killed in bombing COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — A suicide assassin deto­ nated a bomb at an election rally outside Colombo late Sunday, killing the opposition candidate for president and about 50 other people, including top leaders of his party. The assassination o f Gamini Dissanayake came less than three weeks before the election and just before peace talks were to resume with Tamil Tiger guerrillas. The 11-yearold civil war has killed more than 34,000 people. Dissanayake was an outspoken critic of the talks that began this month, and the governm ent had warned him three weeks ago that the Tigers would try to kill him. The talks scheduled for Monday were called off, said gov­ ernment delegate Navin Gunaratne. No new date was set The bomb ripped through the rally on the outskirts of Colombo shortly before midnight. Dissanayake had just finished speaking and was stepping off the stage to greet supporters at his last stop of the day. “ Police believe this was the work of a suicide bomber,” said Brigadier Gemunu Kulatunga, the military spokesman. Metal pellets peppered the stage and surrounding area at It's Flu Season again... Don't get sick... get "shot"! Partners In Health •> the rally site. One police officer said Dissanayaka’s waiting car was in shreds. “ The bomb was apparently at the front of the stage,” said W eerasooriya W ickrem a, cam paign m anager o f Dissanayake’s United National Party. “ It was a very pow­ erful bomb.” There was no immediate claim of responsibility, and police said it was too early to say who might have set the blast. But the Tigers have a long history of assassinations and suicide bombs. N o M a tte r W h e r e Y o u A re O n Halloween Y O U ’L L N E E D A C ^ W ho? ASU Students, Faculty & Staff W hat? Flu Shots W here? W hen? • Student Health Specialty Clinic M ondays and Thursdays 9-11:30 a.m . & 1:30-4:30 p.m. • C a d y Mall, west of the Fountain W ednesday, O ctober 26th 9 a.m . 4 p.m. W hy? To prevent yourself from getting the flu (3 com m on types). C ost? $8.50 by ch e ck or billable to your ASU account. has EVERYTHING you®need for the one niebt of the year you can be whomever or whatever you want to be. bver 4000 Quality Rental Costume: 1000’s of Accessories-^-. ^ Animated Hats Props Masks NEW! Halloween Wtés Beards Full Lineof Jewelry Prosthetics PartySupplies Snakes Bats Make-Up Bugs Tatoos HOURS: MON.-W ED.-FRI. 8-5 TUES.-THURS. 9-5 IN FO RM A TIO N LINE: 965-3346 All students are eligible for services. Fees may apply. New Location — ASU Student Health Just south of the University Bridge on Palm W alk . 933 E. Broadway Rd. • Tempe • 9 6 6 -7 6 1 5 S.E. Corner Broadway Sc Rural near Office Max Page 9 Monday, October 24,1994 State P ress Seen and heard— Child study labs provide win-win situation for researchers, children, parents, students By G reg Z em eid a State P ress N ineteen-m onth-old A lyssa carefu lly eyed the two stuffed animals her mother was holding in front o f her. She took a few tentative steps forward, but her path was blocked by a 4-foot-wide cardboard box sitting on the floor in front of her. Her mother, who Was kneeling on the other side of the box, waved the Tweety Bird and teddy bear playfully in front of her, calling out for Alyssa to come to her. ta ilin g '‘mommy, mommy,” Alyssa reached over the box, but Still couldn’t grab the toys. Frustrated, the little girl inspected the box carefully and then discovered that she could get to her mother and toys by walking around it. She made her way quickly around the box, grabbed the animals and gave her mother a triumphant hug and a wide smile. Alyssa had just successfully completed today’s test. A lyssa, along with about 210 o th er preschoolers, is enrolled in one of the two child laboratories on campus. A lab that’s fun The Child Study Laboratory, located in the Psychology Building, and the Child Development Laboratory, in the Cowden Family Resources Building, not only offer day care for children between the ages o f 15 months and five years, but also provide a unique environment for faculty and students to study children’s behavior. ASU has two other day care facilities, but neither of them are used for research. Bill Fabricius, an associate professor in the Psychology Department, is currently working on the experimental pro­ ject that Alyssa is involved in. He said the test she took part in is used to examine young Children’s problem -solving abilities. Researchers examine how children make decisions to get around the barriers placed in front o f them, he said. “Parents are very cooperative in doing the research,” Fabricius added. “They agrée with it and support it.” In order to make the testing less stressful on the chil­ dren, he said researchers and student assistants meet with the children before any research begins. This allows them to introduce themselves and let them know what will be going on in the future. If a child decides not to participate in a particular experi­ ment, he or she doesn’t have to, Fabricius said, but “a great majority of the time they are very cooperative,” Zita Johnson, coordinator of the Child Study Laboratory, said because the preschool was originally designed as a lab school, the classrooms were built with observation rooms. She said this set-up allows researchers to study the chil­ dren without disturbing them. “It is handled very carefully so adults don’t overwhelm the children,” she said. Johnson said the Child Study lab has ho restrictions on which children may enter the program, but she said they try to balance for gender. She added that child care fees vary, but said they are in the middle of the price range for Similar facilities in the community. According to George Knight, director o f the graduate R o sa Castillo« a student assistant, spends time at the Psychology Department’s Child Study Laboratory with, Sarah Kokotoff, 3, left, and Lauren M cGill, 4. A S U 's labs provide an interactive environment where researchers can unobtrusively observe children involved in various experiments, while also providing day care to help parents. program in developmental psychology, faculty members, along with student assistants, learn about children by both observing and interacting with them. Knight said they study children’s social interactions, their spatial problem-solving abilities and their cognitive abilities. About 35 to 40 students assist the faculty with their research, Knight Said, adding that some students work inde­ pendently on research projects! Bob W eigand, director o f child laboratory programs, said the activities the children participate in are non-threat­ ening and open-ended. He added that the lab obtains the parents’ permission before any experiments take place. “Most of the activities which they (children) participate in are set up to be enjoyable activities,” he said. He said an o th er type o f ex p erim en t With ch ildren involves their ability to guess what an object is when part of it is hidden from view. For example, they would show a child the handle of a feather duster, Concealing the feathers, and see if they can figure out what it is. Weigand said when research is completed, it is usually published in professional journals dealing with child devel­ opment or family studies. Labs help students, also The labs also serve as a training ground for students who are planning to enter either die child care or child research fields. "*. “They (students) learn a variety of interactive skills that will help them in a variety of human service professions,” Weigand said. H e ad d ed th a t m any m a jo r u n iv e rs itie s , su ch as Stanford, Purdue and some Ivy League schools, have child laboratory schools like ASU, Rosa Castillo, a senior psychology major, is taking a directed child study class that has her teaching children at the Child Study Lab how to be more independent and solve their Own problems, Castillo, who plans to be a child psychologist, said she likes the way the lab environment is constructed. “I think it’s very well set up,” she said. “Everything is well prepared.” Castillo said her experience at the lab will prepare' her for her future career by the time she is finished. “I’m going to have learned a lot about kids and how they interact with other kids and adults,” she said. Weigand said students like Castillo are guided by pro­ fessors who are experts in their fields and that the Child lab­ oratories are set up to insure the best learning atmosphere for both researchers and students. “That’s something you can’t get out in the community.” The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook^ An investment m yourlifetim e O rder yours today tor $36.93£ Matthews Center basement, Rm 50,965-6881 ie h e ih b I a c u r a i STUDENTS...EDUCATE YOUR PALETTE CAR SPECIALISTS ■Coffee Roasted Daily in House IN D E P E N D E N T S E R V IC E ENTERTAINMENT •FREE Estimates •Fair Prices •One Day Service on Most Repairs • Complete Parts Department •FactoryTrained Technicians V P eople W ho K now Use Valvoiine- $ 1 4 .9 5 OIL CHANGE & OIL FILTER (Includes up to 4 quarts) Check Our Low Price on 15,000 & 30,000 Services 968-5989 TW O LO CATIO N S TO S E R V E YOU 954-7923 1820 E. A P A C H E B L V D . TEM PE One w ay trips to A SU 3 0 3 9 E. T H O M A S RD. P H O E N IX - *Over 40 Types of Gourmet Coffee *Sit at Roasting Bar and Learn Coffee fromThe Roastmaster OCT. 23 JOHNSAVOY 7-9pm *Mention this Ad and Receive OCT. 29 & 30 OPENMIC TRICKORTREAT FORCHILDREN 2 FORI on Your Purchase ) Coffeebar & Roasting Co. OPEN DAILY 6AM-9PM «FRI & SAT 6AM TO 11 PM 602-491-1443 1040 E B A S E L IN E R D . (Located next door to the Book Island in Lake Country Village Shopping Center,between Rural & Lakeshore on Basline) C om ics Calvin and Hobbes OLNlH, HW LET ME BACK IHTME HOUSE tm /fis n w r s Calvin and by Bill W atterson tW R PMEUnPS ABOUT N o » let w e w i WOI By G A R Y LA RSO N PONT W0RR.N, ROSAOM.' THERE'S ONUt A 50%OUNCE OF RNN TONIGHT.' HA HA! Hobbes CALV1H, rw m U N S tw s: S tate P ress Monday, October 24,1994 Page 10 PIPE DOWN, NULL NAROZ? HOBBES AND I CAMHARDEN HEAR THE TV.' by Bill W atterson HEI.lFtWGO RENT US ANCR TO B E AND A MOVIE, •WATCHING NEU W THE TOJEVISWN! TV NEAR A TW'RENOT SUPPOSED ■ A ARE NOW 18? V0Ü COULD GET US ’VENUSIAN VAMPIRE VIXENS’.' Fortunately for Sparky, Zeke knew the famous “Rex maneuver.” T H E F A R S ID E D o o n e sb u ry ' UH-OH!CHARACTER W &K & ALM O ST OVER ,M P P B 5T IU H five TW 0PIU ARST060IG U & 5 w eU -H Ave. T05K!PFAmeS6! By G A R Y L A R S O N BY G A R R Y T R U D EA U THATJUSTIOAVE6 OTIZeNSHIP, THATMORAL QUALITY 5 0 & 5EN TIAL TOTHOFUNCTION­ ING OFA W GUCCeSOFUL u h a t s e irn sN SH ip rirsp a N S t o u r sh a pb , ee m N O M xu a?, VOLUNTEERING GERVICE, CON­ SERVINO peg o u rceg - a l l t h e -m /n n in kiA i i/A / / /TP ALTHOUGH YOUD IP m vou 1HE6.0.PAL50 GOT H M tr EMBRACEG N O G G IN ' THOSE VALUES! ■ \ in fa ir n e g g , “And I say we go outside and we play with this balll" Professor Clark uses every formula in applied physics. With one simple formula, he tan calculate his life insurance needs. This formula m eans a lot to his family. To learn m ore about 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. 'nachera Insurance and „ Annuity Association 730 Third Avenue. New York, NY 10017-3206 Ensuring the future fo r those who shape it, * W ashington State’s offense catches ASU by surprise Snyder proud of Sun Devils’ 3 touchdowns despite loss B y T odd Kelly State P ress Jim Poulin/State Press Uumoiya G lass, a freshm an walk-on wide receiver, hauls in a 12-yard touchdown p a ss horn Jake Plummer against W ashington State in A S U 's 28-21 lo ss Saturday night. It w as G la ss’ first career touchdown. Washington State’s defense, Tanked No. 1 in the nation heading into Saturday’s game versus ASU, was everything it was advertised to be. WSU’s offense, however, which was last in the Pac-10, was apparently more than anyone expected. The Cougars scored 28 points, their highest output of the season, en route to a 28-21 victory over the Sun Devils. “They’re very, very good,” ASlJ Co^ch Bruce Snyder said. “I’m proud of the three touchdowns (we scored) ... nobody else had done that.” The WSU defense was limiting opponents to an aver­ age of 6.5 points per game and 202.2 yards per game. The ASU offense, while gamering only 12 first downs, picked up 289 total yards, including 253 passing yards by quarterback Jake Plummer. j Plummer’s three touchdown tosses marked a personal careeir high. “I don’t even care (about the stats),” Plummer said. “We lost the game. We could have won it in the end. We didn’t do it “All that, the stats, it doesn’t matter at all.” For three quarters, with only seven points, six first downs and 165 total yards, ASU appeared to be just anoth­ er victim of the blanketing Cougar defense. In the fourth quarter, though, the Sun Devils turned it on, scoring two touchdowns and threatening to score a third. A fourth-down sack of Plummer ended the comeback. According to Snyder, the Sun Devils never quit or lost composure, but just didn’t win the game. ‘T m proud of the team from the standpoint that they contin­ ued to play, to play hard and eventually gained some momen­ tum and was able to make a threat at the end,” Snyder said. “I also, though ... just told the team the idea is to win the football game and not come close. So we can’t get used to losing.” ASU senior flyback Parnell Charles, who caught four passes for .71 yards, including a-, tw o-yard touchdow n \ T urn to Sun D evils, page 13. A S U ’s D a v id s o n fa lls to to p se e d at c h a m p io n s h ip s B y D awn W agner State P ress A S U 's top-ranked tennis player, Kori D avidson, trav eled to the A ll-A m erica Championships in Pacific Palisades, Calif, this weekend with only one goal in mind , “I wanted to win it,” Davidson said. However, Davidson, who is ranked as the No. 6 women’s player in the nation, fell to top-ranked Lucie Ludvigova of Texas 76(3), 6-0 in the quarterfinals on Saturday. The tournam ent, which hosted the top 32 collegiate women’s players, is consid­ ered to be one o f the toughest collegiate tournaments o f the season. Davidson, a senior, said the competition was very tough. “It’s really tough, and by the time you get to the quarters you have the top eight girls in the nation,” Davidson said. “ I t’s just bound to be tough by that round.” Davidson .blew her way through the first two rounds, defeating Jennifer Atkerson of Kansas 6-2, 6-3 in the first round and top­ ping Pam Nelson of California 6-0, 7-5 in the second round. However, Davidson was disappointed with the way she played. “I didn’t play as well as I felt I could have,” Davidson said. “I was gone for the two weeks prior to the tournament. I was playing in some pro tournaments, so I real­ ly didn’t get a chance to drill and work on T urn to D avidson, page 13. Craig Macnaughton/State Press Senior Kori Davidson made it to the quarterfinals of the All-Am erica Cham pionships, which were held in Pacific Palisades, Calif, last week. ASU golfers return from tournament By D aw n W agner State P ress Dallas 28, Arizona 21 Detroit 21, Chicago 16 San Francisco 41, Tampa Bay 16 LA Raiders 30, Atlanta 17 Kansas City 38, Seattle 23 Washington 41, Indianapolis 27 Pittsburgh 10, NY Giants 6 Denver 20, San Diego 15 New Orleans 37, LA Rams 34 o M onday N ight: Houston at Philadelphia ^ Practice was the m indset that ASU golfers Todd D em sey and C hris H anell took w ith them th is w eekend to the S av an e C o lle g e A ll-A m e ric a Tournament. The tournament, which hosted all of last season’s All-Americans at S av an e C o lle g e in E l P aso , Texas, was very competitive said Demsey and Hanell. Demsey, who finished seventh in the two-day, three-round tourna­ ment with scores o f 71-71-73, was DEMSEY focusing on improving his game. “I am just looking to get my game back in shape,” Demsey said. “It’s supposed to be a fun thing too, but I wanted to play well. 1 played decent but hot great. I’m happy because it was a step in the right direction, but it’s far from where I want to be.” F o r H a n e ll, th is co m p e titio n w as a chan ce to experiment. “It’s an opportunity to do stuff that you normally wouldn’t do in competition,” Hanell said. “You might try stuff that you w ouldn’t try in team com petition where you have a little bit more at risk. “It gives you the opportunity to really get to know your game and know where your weaknesses are.” H anell finished w ith a three-round total o f 224. Although he said he wasn’t satisfied with his rounds of 71-76-77, Hanell did have a good time. “It was a good tournament,” Hanell said. “I didn’t play that good, but it was a lot of fun. It was kind o f a relaxed tournament and there wasn’t really any pressure. Everybody was just out there having a good time.” Pag S tate P ress Monday, October 24,1994 12 Cowboys shoot dow n Cards in 4 th quarter for win B y D an M iller State P ress The Arizona Cardinals went toe-to-tOe with the twotim e d efen d in g S uper B ow l C h am p io n s fo r m ost o f S u n d a y 's NFC E ast bo u t, hut in the end, the D allas Cowboys were the team still standing as they roped a 28-21 victory before 74,500 fans at Sun Devil Stadium. “It was like a 15-round heavyweight fight and all I know is we won,” Cowboys receiver Michael Irvin said. “We won by split decision, but I'm taking it.” The Cowboys staged a nine-play, 79-yard drive in the fourth quarter highlighted by Emmitt Smith’s six-yard gal­ lop into the end zone for the game-winning touchdown. “Apparently, we don’t belong with the big boys right now.” Cardinals Coach Buddy Ryan said. Cardinals linebacker Wilbur Marshall leveled Cowboys quarterback Troy Aikman eight plays into the game's open­ ing drive, but a woosy, disoriented Aikman responded with a 15-yard touchdown strike to Alvin Harper on the next play. Aikman was later diagnosed with a concussion and never returned to the game. “I knew that I had busted my lip open and I had bit through my tongue,” Aikman said o f the collision that forced him to leave the game. “I think it was clean, at least within the rules of the game before the whistle. It wasn’t late by any means. I saw him coming.” Cardinals quarterback Steve Beuerlein (18 of 31, for 231 yards and one touchdown passing) sneaked in from one yard out to tie the game at seven with 2:48 left in the first quarter. A fter Cardinals running back Ronald Moore gave the T urn to C ardinals, page 13. Craig Macnaughton/State Press D allas Cow boys receiver Alvin Harper escapes the grasp of Arizona Cardinals cornerback Jam es W illiam s. The 13-yard com ple­ tion set up the gam e-tying score two plays later. State P ress Police Reports- Real cops. Real reports. Real strange. S tate P ress "I told you, you should have stayed in bed." - S t a t e P re ss H o r o s c o p e s OPPOrtl,nity for colleie 5 with mental retardation to b*0 " i FOREIGN STUDENTS MEASURE YOUR TOE AT THE COOL JEWE Are you In Status? Want to change your Status or V IS A ? Are you Graduating? Thinking of working? STENDER & LARKIN W e can also help with Criminal C ase s and DUI. Toe Rings Ankle Bracelets Nose Rings (Fake Nose Rings) H o o d s , Cuffs, Studs an d Lots of N EW TIMES READERS C H O ICE 1984-86-87-88-89-90-91-92-93 A RIZO N A REPUBLIC 19 9 1-92-93 PINK/^PEPPER LUNCH BUFFET D IN N E R PLUS FREE IC ED TEA Lunch ! 1:30am -2:30pm PU R CH A SE O F S E C O N D ENTREE D in n e r D a ily fro m 4 :3 0 p m 50% OFF M esa 1941 W. Guadalupe 8 3 9 -9 0 0 9 Scottsdale 2003 N Scottsdale 9 4 5 -9 3 Ò 0 N . Scottsdale 10155 E. Via Unta 3 9 1 -3 3 3 9 S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T $100.00 OFF TUITION G O TO OFFICER TRAINING SCHOOL. F the "BEST- THAI- CUISINE 1 P h o e n ix 2 4 5 E: Bell Rd. 5 4 8 -1 3 3 3 g BARTENDINGACADEMY IM M IG RATIO N / C R IM IN A L A T T O R N EY S (602) 257-8420 I | NOW RECRUITING NEW MEMBERS! Tues., Oct. 25 • 5:15 pm • MU 2nd Floor • Check monitors for room #. For more info call Kara. 225-0720. O n p a g e 13. I I Put your college degree to work in the Air Force Officer Training School. Then, after graduat­ ing from Officer Training School, become a commissioned Air Force officer with great starting pay, complete medical and dental care, 30 days of vacation with pay per year and management opportunities. Learn if you qualify for higher education in the Air Çôrce. Call Air Force O pportunities T oll Free 1 -800 -423-U SA F AIM HIGH. AIR FORCE T O STUDENTS W ITH SCH O O L I.D . • Full or Part Time • Personalized Training • Flexible Hours • Days and Evenings MB PLACEMENT IN 2 WEEKS 1250 E, Apache #180 P age 13 Monday, October 24,1994 State P ress V olleyball loses to U CLA , U SC State Press You don't even have to take notes. Y our In d iv id u a l H o ro sco pe = = = = = = F rances D rake = = = = = favored. Communicative skills are tops, For Monday, Oct, 24, 1994 SCORPIO ARIES (Óct. 23 to Nov , 21) (Mar 21 to Apr. 19) You'll know your own mind today and Morning hours áre your best time for what your next step should be. A matter making important phone calls and reach­ that had perplexed you is now clarified.. ing agreements with others: Dealings Business talks should be productive. witE bankers and real estate people are SAGITTARIUS. also favored. (Nov. 2¿ to Dec. 21) TAURUS Both friends and partners will be very ( Apr. 20 to May 20) supportive o f yóur best interests now. i' Talks o f a business nature will go very You can count on full support from fami­ '' well today. You'll meet widi new mon­ ly, friends and associates. Agreements ey braking opportunities. Yoii’re able to are easily reached with others, . sell both yourself and your ideas now. CAPRICORN [ GEMINI 4D ec. 22*to Ja*. 19) I (May 21 to June 20) %* i f t # : You ihay find one friend a bit meddle­ v You have the gift of gab now and others some, but otherwise it’s, a good day for •w ill be impressed with yon. Creative you. Dealings with those in high places interests are highly favored. Tonight, the áre favored. Career interests prosper. accent’s on fun pursuits! AQUARIUS CANCER (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) (June 21 to July 22} You may feel that one person ih business You’ll be devoting time to mental inter* has ulterior motives. However, it’s an ests today. Studying, family talks and excellent time for creative work and for answering correspondence are favóred getting together with advisers. now. Tonight, enjoy the com forts o f PISCES domesticity. (Feb. 19 to Mar, 20) ••LEO'/ ;. , Though you may not cotton to the idea of (July 23 to Aug. 22} entertaining guests, it’s still a good day You and a friend are definitely on the for home-based activities an d family same wave length today. You’ll make a matters. Money interests look promising. grand impression at a group activity. One YOU BORN TODAY often serve the family member may not see your, point group in some advisory capacity. You o f view. • • have good insights into others and would VIRGO make a fíne teacher or counselor. You (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) have an investigative mind and are some­ It’s a good day to meet with higherups. tim es found in a scien tific career. Financial negotiations are also favored. Though you have a good head for busi­ Your business sense is at its best today. ness, it is important to you that your Now’s^Uie time to make your move. work reflects your ideals. Your inclina­ LIBRA tion is to put your whole self in what you (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) do. Birthdate of: Pteston Foster, actor; You’ll be talking to someone who lives Y.A- Tittle, football player; and Denise at distance today! Some will be making Lertov, poet. travel plans. Talks with advisers are From Staff Reports The ASU volleyball team saw its Pac-10 record drop below .500 for the first tim e this season after losing at UCLA and USC over the weekend. ASU (10-8 overall, 5-6 Pac-10) suffered three-game sweeps at the hands of both the Bruins and the Trojans to start the second half o f their Pac-10 schedule. Friday against UCLA, the Sun Devils committed 37 hitting errors as they lost 15-8, 15-9 and 15-9. ASU posted a mere .015 hitting percentage, including -.061 in the first game, as compared to UCLA’s hitting percentage o f .240. The Bruins also came up with 15 blocks, while ASU only managed eight. The Sun D evils im proved their play Saturday night against USC, but still fell 15-13,15-10 and 15-12. ASU cut its hitting errors by more than half from the night before, committing only 18, and raised its hitting percentage to .265. USC was lead by the duo of Kelly Kuebler and Vesna Dragicevic, who combined for 29 kills. Dragicevic also lead the Trojans with a .478 hitting percentage. One o f the few bright spots for the Sun Devils was junior Christine Gamer. Gamer finished the weekend with 31 kills and 12 digs. Against the Trojans, Gamer posted a .357 hitting percentage, committing only three errors ASU’s next match is Thursday night at UofA. The Sun Devils defeated the Wildcats in a three-game sweep earlier this season. Sun D evils____ C ontinued from page 11. reception, said die offense wasn’t producing until late in the game, “I think we waited too late to realize we can do it,” Charles said. “Definitely it was a game of field position and we knew that. ... we just couldn’t get anything generated until late, and that’s when we realized we could move die ball on them.” The Cougar offense, behind the passing o f sophomore quarterback Chad Davis, stormed the Sun Devil defense. Davis found 11 receivers to spread around 28 passes totaling 355 yards. WSU tight end Eric Moore caught five passes for 101 yards, including a 63-yard touchdown catch on a five wide receiver set that gave ASU’s defense fits on many occasions. “We felt like going into this game we could throw the ball,” Davis said. ASU’s defense, according to senior inside linebacker Jason Kyle, was not on the field too long, it just didn’t do the job. “1 think in the second half we picked it up a notch,” Kyle said “But we need to play that way in the first half also.” “It was a lot of things,” ASU’s junior rover Harlcn Rashada said. “We had a few assignment errors. It all comes down to making plays. We didn’t have enough of that.” C ardinals C ontinued from page Cardinals the lead on a four-yard burst, Kevin Williams’ 46-yard kickoff return, combined with a 15-yard facemask penalty, gave the Cowboys the ball at the Arizona 48-yard line. Five plays later, Irvin made a circus catch on a fiveyard touchdown pass from back-up Rodney Peete (12 of 19, for 186. yards and two touchdow ns .passing) for a 14-14 tie. “You can’t play a chess match with those guys,” mid­ dle linebacker Eric Hill said. “T hey’ve got too many weapons. They’ll bum you every time.” Ricky Proehl grabbed a Beuerlein offering and dóve into the endzonc to give the Cardinals a 21-14 lead on the first play of the fourth quarter. But not for long. Three plays into the ensuing drive, Peete drilled a pass to Irv in , w ho blew by C ard in als c o rn e rb a ck Jan ies W illiam s and high-stepped 65 yards to knot thè game at 21. “I was just out of position,” Williams said o f the play. “1 guess I just pick the wrong games to go on the tank.” “I don’t know how many passes he gave up, but appar­ ently, he didn’t do too well over there,” Ryan said of W illiams, who was the target o f several Dallas passing plays. The Cowboys’ (6-1) win was their ninth straight over the Cardinals (2-5). “This was tough, but this one hurts a little deeper because we had some opportunities to win this game,” Cardinals running back Larry Centers said. Pac-10 All Games Arizona U SC Washington St. Oregon 'W ashington California ASU Stanford Oregon St. UCLA W 6 5 5 5 5 3 2 2 2 2 W L T 4 0 0 4 10 3 1 0 3 10 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 3 0 1 3 0 1 4 0 0 5 0 L T 10 2 .0 2 0 3 0 2 0 4 0 5 0 4 1 5 0 6 0 •ineligible for Pac-10 championship and postseason competition Continued from page 11. my shots. I went from one tournament to the next and really didn’t practice.” D avidson said there is one m ajor difference between the pro circuit and collegiate events. “Sometiise^ in cqjBegiateiteniri%yqu gl* going to have one or two easy rounds,” Davidson said. “In the professional tournaments there is never an easy round." otate P ress Something to read without using a highlighter. mm WIN ASU/UCLA FOOTBALL TICKETS t h e r e a re Cham pion USA and Student Book Center are giving away a pair of loge seats for the ASU/UCLA gam e Nov. 12. N o purchase necessary, forms at Student Book Center. Hurry and enter, drawing held Tuesday; Nov. 8 , 12:30 p.m. moments t h a t y o u w ish w o u ld last forever. p h oto c a le n d a rs b y k in k o ’s keep th o se m e m o r ie s alive! half off 1photo calendar -dÜ ¡¡¡J*, ' /4 í, a i ¡ipil ■ l-l f — f t — - kinko'S Tempe: Rural &University894-1797* Scottsdale: Scottsdale Rd. &1stAw. 9464)500 the copy center % ''3 * p O d k ' * 1836 E. 6th St. $ 12.95 Oil/Filter Change and Safety Inspection *Up to 5 qts. oil Bring 1 photo for a yearly outlook calendar, bring 13 photos for a 12 month-deluxe. Please allow 24 hours. Ve cannot reproduce copyrighted photos. Not valid with other offers. One coupon per customer. Offer expires November 7,1994. 966-6226 704 S. College .S.A. Bring this ad & your favorite photos into Kinko’s and we’ll make a custom photo-calendar for half off the regular price. «mam ¿ S t'-à. a xï < ^ £ X ( 7 L C £ Since 1984 • Foreign A n d D o m e stic Repair A n d M aintenance. • Below D ealer Prices. • FREE Shuttle T o C am p u s. 1S36 S . 6 tfi ¿Street, ^em fie 8 4 0-ST A R (7 8 2 7 ) ___________ Omen M hour» i dnr. 7 5 Now open AtAbumtukee: RayRd. &1-10893-0700 v University Dr. *0 .i .2 I PC h b /m fm e People Who Know Us e Valvoune; C la ssified s S tate P ress Monday, October 24,1994 Page 14 Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent dr invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE DORM REFRIG R, 2,5cf $110; Daybed $75; Piano + keyboard; Formats sz 5 $50.494-9884. G OLF CLUBS 2 iron - Sandwedge, 1 g o lf bag, 3 woods, 1 putter. $165 Jason 967-2639. FURNITURE SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, sleeper, entertainment ctr. Cheap!962-0749. One o f these days is none o f these days. -H enry G. Bohn COMPUTERS MACINTOSH COMP. Complete system including p rin ter only $500. Chris, 1-800-289-5685. A N N O U N CE­ MENTS COSTUME RENTAL JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jeweliy. In­ d ù : gold, ster., pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave. Teiiipe Center 968-6074. $15-535. I larm-8pm, 966-8343. Fielder Studio, 824 S. Mill. MODELS WANTED for Look of AZ Contest at C lub 411 - win $250 & other prizes. 941-4838. APARTMENTS 2BD 1BA four-plex, refrig er­ ated, 600 sq ft, Apache/McGlintock, from $289. 345-8390. : ASU AREA 1 bedrOOm apart­ m ents fro m $310 A up p e r month not »nel. util. 966-8838. FOR SALE Coop Studio Apt., just remodeled, close to ASU, shopping, $ IT ,700/nego. C all 924-1916 leave message. . FREE FURNITURE + you keep deposit, 1 bed, poolside, w/d hookup. Take over lease in Nov. Lv msg, 969-7654. HOMES FOR RENT 1 BD. 1 BA in 5-pleXy M ill/B roadw ay, walk to ASU, $305/mo. Tim 894-0288: RENTAL SH ARIN G AVAIL NOW! 1 rm in 2 bd, 1 ba apt. M cClintock & Broadway. Rent + util negotiable. Call Les* lie, 350-9:130; •/ TICKETS PA ULY SH O R E- C om ing to ASU O c t 27. Get your free tick­ e ts at G am m age Box O ffice w/valid ASU ID! AUTOMOBILES $CASHTODAY!$ I buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call AI, 994-4369. MOTORCYCLES 87 RED Honda Elite 150, very dependable. $750. C all 9412217 lv msg. HONDA ELITE 250, gold, like new, low miles, Kenwood Ster­ eo, $1500 obo. Rob 968-3001. BICYCLES USED BIKES-Mountain, road & children's. More than 30 bikes. Prices from $50. Bicycle Wheelers. SW comer of Broadway & Rural. 968-8011 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. FLY FOR L e ss. . . . . . 582-9699 Advance & open 1 way/rt travel. 1 buy air awards, bumps, tickets. ROCK CLIMBING guided trips 209-4913. CLAPTON Best prices & seats in town! (7 0 8 )3 1 7 -0 2 0 8 AU TO M O M y^ 84 FORD LTD, V6, pb, ps, at, runs great, wholesale a t $1900 obo. Cali Rick, 858-9833. 85 JEEP CJ7, 57K mi, exc cond, needs nothing. $5750.494-4754. 88 LEBARON com/ertible 5spd. Mint cond. Perfect for student. For more info call 804-1513. : QUALITY Complete auto care at American C ar Care Center, 1900 N. Mc­ Clintock» 4 2 3 t9977. From oil change to tune-up, engine analy­ sis to computer diagnosis. 10% discount with student ID on regu­ larly priced labor rates. / TRAVEL HELP WANTEDGENERAL $363.60. SELL 72 funny college Tshirts-Profit $363.60. Risk-free. Choose from 19 designs. Free catalog 1-800-700-4250. ADULT CO-REC soccer officials needed im m ediately. $25 p e r game, two games per. night, two nights p e r w eek. G am es held Mon A Weds 6:30pm-10:30pm. Prior adult soccer officiating ex­ perience very helpful. Season un­ derway now and w ill continue until the end of Nov. *94. Apply at City of Tempe Recreation Di­ vision, 3500 S. Rural Rd. (top floor of Tempe Public Library). Office hrs Mon-Thurs 8am-7pm, and Fri 8am -5pm , O pen until filled. For more information, call Mike Armfield at 350-5233. ♦EARN $7/HR!* S etting free* appointm ents for health services. Fiesta Mall area. 470-1828 anytime- TRAVEL MCCLINTOCK & Hwy 60- Med size room in Ig tri-level 2360 sq ft home. 4 bd, 3-1/2 ba, n/s, $250 incl util. John. 730-907Ò. ROOMMATE NEEDED. M/F, 3bd house. $250mo +1/3 util., 5min. from ASU. 968-7306. R O O M S FOR RENT ROOM W ITH a view . A lm a School/8th St. 2 room s av ail­ able, kitchen, w/d, pool. $300 + 1/3 util. After 6pm. 844-0244. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $300+ A WEEK •5Local company needs 6 people’to s trib u te bottles to- homes in local area. Must be in good physical condition and available to work M-F 3-9pm. For interview call Brenda, 966-0093. Tempe lo­ cation. • / • ' .' $7.45 / START. 10 retail open­ ings. No exp. req, flex hrs, schol­ arships. All m ajors, call 12-4, 968-4797. A H W A TU K EE FO O TH ILLS YMCA is accepting applications for recreational supervisors for school-age children. $5-$10/hr. Perfect p/t position for college students at ASU, MCC, etc. seek­ ing exp in a school setting. 3233 E. Chandler Blvd., Suite 6B. A PPO IN TM EN T SE T T E R S/ Surveyors, $7/hrp/t, l-5pm M -F or 5:30-8:30pra M-Th. Mesa D tJ Southern Ave., AmeriWest Mtg Corp, Jonathan, 389-2144. APPT SETTERS wanted, $6/hr guar + comm, evening hours in n ice Scottsdale office. Call Kim between 4-8pm at 970-6390. Telephone Research Survey Flex hours available Tues-Fri 2-9:30pm & Sat. 9-5 S tart at $5.50/hour plus bonuses B uy O f T he W eek Boe B ullock R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 MISCELLANEOUS FO R SA CABLE BOX - All channels, t-y e a r warranty. Will deliver. $150.285-9052. SWEATSHIRTS L-XXX, various b e e f logos.Call Jeff or lv msg 1-800-U i 1-LOGO CHRISTMAS CASH? Used Air Jordans 85-91 ed, and late 70's to early 80's Nike running shoes, up to $200.1-800-873-3538 e x t 3. M AN A G EM ENT COM PANY needs drafting student or art stud­ ent to draw a basic building ele­ vation. Call 962-6222. DELIVERY DRIVER needed for b u s y cafe M on-F ri 10:30am 1:30pm . U p to $12 p e r hour. Call Kudo's Cafe, 967-6610. MARKETING ASSTS needed to put out flyers door-to-door, p/t, flex hrs, $5/hr. Greg, 910-2116. ENTHUSIASTIC, SALES ori­ ented, happy person, needed for wknd food demos. $5/hr. Judy 947-5434. Start immediately. FUN & easy flower sales. Week­ ends & evenings, car necessary. Call Rose Magic, 649-0451. INTERESTED IN politics? Con­ gressional campaign phone bank, $5/hr. Steve, 955-7358. LIV E -IN C O U PLE , p /t p o o l/ yard; f/t nanny/hsekpr. Child ok. References A drivers lie req. Sep­ arate apt + salary, 952rl 151. NEED A JOB? W e need 5-10 people fo r part time work from 2-6pm. We sell tools nationwide A w ell pay you $7/hr to start. No weekends & no exp. nec. Call Alex 820-8408. PARTY RENTAL firm has open­ ings for part-time CDL drivers & h e lp e rs. Flex ho u rs & days. A p p ly a t 1895 S. L os F eliz, Tempe M-F, 8-4. RE M A JO E /F IN m in o r p ref. Show properties, c o llect info, must know CAP rate. 820-6432 PHOENIX ZOO G ift Shop Cashier & Childrens birth d ay Party Host, $5.35/hr, p/t, includes wknds & holidays. Apply 455 N. Galvin Pkwy, M■F’ 9“3 SEEK IN G A PPLIC A N TS for page positions at Arizona House o f Representatives for up-coming sessio n . $ 5 .9 5 /h r. F ull tim e. Call Rob or Shannon 542-3656. $6/HOUR Shipping Cleric needed, evening hours and/or Saturdays, p/t flex hrs. Call Ron, 241-1443. SKI RESORT JOBS Call for a job at nationwide ski re­ sorts! Ski Venture 619-683-2300. $6-$12/HOUR I need survey & sales people now!!! 1 block east of campus. Flexible, can work around school schedule. Call 784-2270. LAWN CARE Ultimate Lawn Cate is hiring f/t & p/t, $5.50/hr to start. Exp nec; own trans req. Early moms,, flex 20-40 hrs M -F. C all M arlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. Great New Location The Valley's BEST plasma donation center just got even better! AB1 has moved to a great new facility at 1334 E. Broadway! We now have MORE MACHINES to serve you better! This is your perfect opportunity to perform a viiatfy needed service | and eam $150-5185 per month at the same time! It couldn't be easier! New donors earn $25 CASH theirfirst donation! Open 7 days a week for your convenience! n i e n t t o c la s s s c h e d u le w o rk in g l :o n - l w /in d ivid u al w /special n e ed s in p r i v a t e f a m ily h o m e c lo s e t o y o u . N o e x p re q 'd /fre e tra in in g . A fter e x p u p to $ 1 0 /h r p o te n ­ tial. C all J o b H o tlin e for m o re in fo 9 -5 M -F ONLY! 4 9 4 -1 2 3 4 CREATIVE NETW ORKS Associated Biosdence, Inc. 1334 E. Broadway, Building A, Tempe Broadway & Dorsey (Acrossfrom Native New Yorker) 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 8 2 9 -3 2 8 2 M arriott's Mou n ta in Shadow s Resort is lo o k in g to fill tw o tem ­ p orary p o s itio n s in th e ir a c c o u n tin g office. If y o u h av e a c c o u n tin g b a c k ­ g r o u n d a n d a re a b le t o w o rk d a y h o u rs a n d w eekends, please a p p ly a t t h è H u m a n R e s o u rc e s O ffic e M o n -T h o rs 9 a m N o o n & l:3 0 -4 p m . 5641 E . Lincoln Dr. Scottsdale HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL M arriott's proudly supports a drug-free w ork environm ent EOE Y ou’ll Go Further. Providing an ideal work environm ent has been one o f SAFECO’s main objectives since its inception in 1923. W e feel that by creating an atmosphere where your ideas matter and every em ployee is respected and rewarded, you have the opportunity to go ais far as your talent and drive w ill take you. A t SAFECO, integrity, decency and honesty are words w e live by and they are qualities w e seek in the em ployees w e hire. Don't be tricked by other telem arketing com panies...Discover w hy it'* a trea t' to w ork at DialAmerica! • N ation 's o ld e st & la rg est telem ark etin g firm • T horough o rien ta tio n an d p a id tr a in in g , $ 7 .5 0 /h r . • E xcellen t b a se-p a y gu aran tee • C on ven ien t T em pe lo ca tio n (near ASU) Immediate openings for goal-oriçnted Individuals with good communication and people skills. Call, today b r a confidential interview. 829 -6 3 9 2 , ask for b t-d fO . , vij Ü IÜ It is these qualities that has made SAFECO one o f the leading diversified f in a n c ia l corporations in Am erica. Our success gives you the foundation for your own success. If you are interested in a p osition in our Information System s Department, SAFECO representatives w ill be on cam pus for an . / ;-Vv’ ’f* ^ 1" D ialAm erica M arketing 1100 B. University, Suite 111 . Tempe, AZ - ' Information Session Wednesday, October 26,7:00 pm MU, La Paz Room 223 For more information regarding SAFECO, please contact your Career Planning and Placement Center. W e are an equal opportunity em ployer com m itted to em ploying a diverse workforce, SA FECO SELF-DEFENSE Spray, stun gun, baton, ID Kits, 1 etc. Free catalogue. C all 8172184 . ; 'GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR M-Th, 2:30-5. Exp. nee. ages 512: Call 955-7805. H igginbotham Associates CLOSE TO ASU- 3bd, 2ba, 2 car g a ra g e . R em odeled kitch en . $79,500. Call Bonnie, C-21 All Star, Realtors, 831-2221. Hayden Square...If you dareI 2bd, plush carpet, white plantation shutters, vaulted celling, all appl. $97,500. BUSINESS MAJOR: Career op­ portunity! Person needed imme­ diately to demo/detail/coupon pro­ duct at pet stores. Also, conduct store audits, rotate and merchan­ dise product. 15-20 hrsAvk 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. _______ Care Providers H O M ES FOR SALE TOW NHOMÈS/ C O N D O S FOR SALE _____ HELP WANTEDG|N|RAL= G REAT P/T jo b w /N at'l auto­ motive distributor 10-30 his/wk, . M -F b e t. 2pm -8pm . S ta rt ASU TELEFUND is now hiring 35.75/hr. Apply in petson: APS associate callers. This is a great Inc, 2324 E. University Dr. Phx, way to network With hundreds o f Z 85034. EOE -M/F/V/H alum ni and have a very flex, work sched. We contact alumni, update info., and ask for financial support. If you are interested in a position call 965-6754 P art-tim e flex h rs c o n v e ­ NO SELLING HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Page 15 Monday, October 24,1994 State P ress HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDSALES A PEA in th e P o d , B iltm o re Fashion P ark , is s ee k in g p /t sales associates. Call 957-2414. PHONE CLERKS - no exp., free long distance calls flex shifts, hdy + bonus, benefits avail. Rural/Southem. Bob, 350-9336. 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 a v aila b le (f/t); great hours, advancem ent opps and location. Call Alicia at 941 4240. 8010 E. M cD ow ell, Ste. 218, Scottsdale (N E c o rn er o f Hayden and McDowell) EXC OPP for students who want to gain exp in 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 P/T C LE RICA L / analysis, flex hrs after school, $5/hr. Gall for appt. P. DiGizonni, 243-5200. P/T SALES position to represent m anufacturers. Salary negoti­ able. Theresa 1-800-982-0917, DMS PAYS EVERY FRIDAY! $9 p/h guaranteed W e are DMS, located at 64th S t & East Thomas Rd. DMS is’ looking for outbound 'customer service reps to make cdiife on 'behalf o f SE A R S, T E X A C O , C H EV R O N & many m ajor banks across the U.S. to their own cardholders. Full time reps - give us perfect attendance and get $9 p e t hour for your first 30 days! iHiring 100 reps. CALL NOW. 994-9903 HELP WANTEDGENERAL SMALL ALLSTATE Insurance office needs dedicated full time persoh. Will license. 483-9010. North Scottsdale location. TEAM SALES- No experience required. Business-business/doordoor. Flex hours. Fast moving dine program . Salary o r com ­ mission. Cash daily. 952-1065. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL ACCTS RECEIVABLE clerk p/t w/opp for f / t 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 839' 8727.’ V/ : ■' / ... PT RECEPTIONIST Admin Asst WP exp. Sctsdl insurance agency. Diversified Concepts, 945-5444. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE ACCEPTING APPS for: Driv­ ers, & counter help. $5/hr + tips. Sammy B's Pizza, 945-8850. BUSHOPS NEEDED, apply after 1 lam. Monti's La Casa Vieja, 3 W, 1st St. 967-7594 - CLUCK-U Join the Cluck-U-Chicken team. Now h irin g d e liv e ry d riv ers, c o u n te r p erso n n el & cooks. Apply in person 855 S, Rural. COUNTRY KITCHEN Restau­ rant now accepting applications for servers; host/hostesses, p/t nights Sc dishw ashers p/t. Cali 438-8408 o r stop by; 4230 Sv 48th (48th & Broadway) FLA KEY JA K E S, hom e o f A m erica's b est b u rg er & the Greeks home away from home now hiring cooks, prep cooks, counter help St bussers, Stop by for application between 2-4, NE corner p f Rural Sc U niversity, Tempe. p h o e n ix zoo Food Service, p/t, $5/hr. Wknds & holidays, flex wkdy sched. Apply 455 N. Galvin Pkwy, MF, 9-3. N EED ED EVENT STAFF LABOR/SECURITY A i s fastest grow ing co. E. V alley-C entral Phx. All shifts - P t/F t Flexible Schedule S tart im m ediately H o m e p h o tic o r pager R eliable tran sp o rtatio n A dvancem ent oppty. Pay D .O .E . Apply Uam-6pm, Mon-Fri. 414 S; Mill Ave. #209 ★ BANQ U ET SERVERS ★ ★ CALL TO D A Y ★ ★ W O RK TO M O R R O W ★ E arn $5.50-$6 for yo vx expertise. W ork a t som e of d ie nicest resorts in the valley! Training available for qualified candidates! A pply in p erson betw een 9am -3pm M on-Thurs. HELP WANTEDF O O D j^ R V IC ^ LITTLE CAESARS Pizza now accepting applications for delivery drivers. M ust have proof o f ins. & reliable transp. Day/night position. Hriy wage + tips + commissions. Apply at our University/Haidy location or call 991-3406 for more information. P /T C O C K T A IL serv er, w ill train, references req. The Rewoik Lounge, 5064 E. McDowell. RED ROBIN looks receive top wages, paid vacations & bonuses. A pply to d ay 1375 W. E lliot,. Tempe. RED ROBIN Tempe has immed. openings for wait staff w/daytime availability. 1375 W. Elliott TGI FRIDAYS, Scottsdale, now accepting apps for all positions. Apply M -F bet 2-4pm. 949-3800 W AIT STAFF- R eliable team, work lunch weekdays. Good tipsincentives. Salads Sc More, 112 N. Central, downtown Phoenix. Apply 7 -10am Weekdays. W ORK ON cam pus! C ashiers and food service workers needed for fast-food outlets in MU Bldg, between 10:Q0am-3:00pm MonFri. Apply in person at Campus Dining in MU Bldg, Room 138. Are You the Best? Houston's Restaurants, considered one o f the best operators in thè country, is pleased to announce em ploym ent opportunities at our newest location in ' Scottsdale HOUSTON’S Known nationally for ; pur consistent high quality food and professional service y staff, we offer: •extensive training & development •competitive w ages •high standards/ high volume •from scratch cooking •quality work environment If you have high energy.., a positive attitude...and are willing to d o whatever It takes, WE WANT YOU O N OUR TEAM! STIVERS AA CRUISE ships hiring! Eam big $$$ + free travel! (Caribbean. Europe, etc.!) No exp nec. Staff needed for busy holiday/Spong/ summer seasons. Guaranteed suc­ cess! Guide. 919-929+398 ext. C3001. D R IV ER A M ercedes, earn $10,000 a month income. 24 hr msg. 351-3189. o p raT U N m n . Make up to $2,000-$4,000+/mof teaching basic . Conversational English abroad. Japan, Taiwan, and S. Korea. For more inform ation call: RESTAURANTS/ BARS I U n t il 1 0 p.m . = ; BANDERSNATCH HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE W O O D S H E D II - Sports view ing in a n upscale atm osphere 3 satellites 18 screens "We sh o w all N FL & College pay-per-view gam es" 1/2 price appetizers d uring happy hour N W Corner of Dobson & University 844-SHED^ PRANKSTERS VAR & RILL Must be friendly, enthusiastic and enjoy w orking with public. Work Monday-Friday, 3pm-9pm and Saturday, 9am-3pm. No selling. For a personal interview call Tom O'Rourke 268-2580 / Resorts Renili S O U T H M O U N TA IN : I WANT IT NOW! J)esktop -Püb!ishlng: Typirtg, re­ sum e service, charts & graphs. % eyA Slfe96(5-1984. ^ A R K ’S TYPING Services. FfSt,p ro fessio n al, affordable, laser printed: ¿Tempe. 491-5931. TERM PAPERS, M anuscripts, a n í M o if. Resumes, mailings, databases. Q u ic k turnaround. Competitive rates for ASU stud'énts.TíSirTwbara 966-0278. FUNDRAISER - $500 in 5 days G reeks, C lubs, Anyonfe (800) 775-3851 ext.33. TÉRMPÁPÉr S, thesis, resumes, mánuscnpts, etc. Accurate with money-bgck guar. Júáy, 345-9015 PERSO NALS"- W ORD PROCESSING, secretárial services, fax, 28yrs exper. Smdent discounts. S/W corner, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. A DOZEN roses, $20. We also d eliver a fte r hou rs. C all 894- ' 3419- Any Meal on the Menu 60-oz. Pitchers $3.75 3pm-close Thursdays V- ■ - ■ : ATA JAIME, good luck on your pledge test tonight! Congrats on being the first to finish your four­ teen p earls! Y ou're the best! Love, Mommy. . Miller Promotion Coming Soon! CARA, WE met at B.H.J. in LA 10/9/94, didn't get your #, but would like to talk to you, Tom 310-455-3624 please call 1024 E Broadw ay Tem po «967-867$ CHRISSY - Happy Birthday ' We y our California Black Sheep PYour Roomies T o n ig h t M onday AAd> JAMIE: You can’t nip, you can't hide. All you can do it pray, because soon you'll be our prey. The Epsilons. l/F O D tp A L i) H PA U LY SH O R E- C om ing to ASU Oct. 27. Get your free tick­ e ts at G am m age B ox O ffice w/valid ASU. ID! STORY O F LOVE Bom in different countries, we found our way to each other. We met at Flakeys, 7 years ago. She was the beautiful cashier, I was the shy cook. And how we will be getting married in only 2 months. Isn't lift wonderful? Forever and a day. Luis Sc Jenn 8 Burger or Hot Dog Basket N O C O V ER WHAT DOES the Minority Asst Program have to offer? 12-1:00, Oct 25, Lower Level MU, Rm 14. SERVICES $$ FOR COLLEGE: Corporate scholarships & grants. No G PA or income requirements. No p ^ back. Jvloney ba?k guar. Call 1-800-645-3525 for info. / ^ Rural Sr A pache 894 -26 62 CLASSIFIEDS WORK! NAILS (but only if you truly love children) )The Pointe TUTORS SUNNY'S DELIVERS. 0 0 $ 1 1!.! $5 OFF I I - O R ANY PIZZA i!$22 5 0 COM PUTER HELP - Serving ASU since 1983.838-5966. PASS MATH! Raise your math grade fast! We can help you fix that rough start! Call Math Masters, 491-3363. ADOPTION LOVING, SECURE couple wants to share otir warm, happy home with your baby. Please call so we can help each other. Debbie and Sal, 1-800-680-1997. N O W H IR IN G ALL PO SIT IO N S • Great Pay & F lexib le Schedule • P aid V acation s • T u itio n A ssistance • Insurance A vailable • M eal D isco u n ts Prerequisites include A Great Attitude and a Hearty Appetitefor Fun F /T & P/T, 18+ yrs old, some experience helpful. Please apply in person M on-Thurs 8-N oon . 7776 S. Pointe Parkway #1,38 W e support a drag-free work environment thru pre-employment | drug testing E O E M/F/V/H T o A p p ly in person com e by: M on d ay - Friday 8am -5p in 12031 N . T atu m B lvd. ju st S ou th o f C actu s o n T atum Stete Freu Cltiiifitdi Mittheen Cietir Biumint 96S-67Î5 968-6666 1301 E. University i MISCELLANEOUS $2/PG, $15 resum es: Proofed. L aser. Fast. Sam e day. /DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. f 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. T o d a y 's AAA TYPING/ word processing. $1.50/page. 15 years experience. Fast turnaround. Call 962-8075. H o r o sc o pe s are o n AAA- K iN K O 'S C opy C enter makes the grade,! G et reports, resumes. Sc flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & m u c h m ore! O pen 24 hours! Rural & University, 966-2035. Pa g e 13. TUTORS TUTORS ANYONE CAN CLAIM TO BE THE "BEST" BUT OUR REPUTATION SPEAKERS LOUDER THAN WORDS... We offer tutorial for the following classes: MAT 106, MAT 114, MAT 117, MAT 170, M AT 119, M AT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271, PH YT11, PHY 112, PHY 121, QBA 221, PSV 230, CHEM 101, CHEM 113, CHEM 1.15, and many more! W e're currently taking nam es for S p rin g Semester. Call toda y a n d g e t 8 6 u r nam e o n o u r h o ld in g list. M a trix Education Center " S im o n " : C ornerstone M a ll 968-4668 •. ft . - S '. SERVICES • >; .. -• « ¿S s : SERVLCES FREE T A N ! ( w ith a n y t a n n i n g p u r c h a s e ) TAN FULL SETS ¡ (Regularly i TUTOR NEEDED on H.S. cam­ pus daily M-F, noon-5pm. Mtist be Junior or above in Education Program. Starts at $9. Near ASU West, Call Joyce 866-8226. $1.50 PAGE includes proofing & editing. Daily ASU pick-up Sc de­ livery. Phone/fax 256-0424. O F F FILLS 12" or 16" 1 Coupon Per Pizza Dine-ln, Pick-Up, Delivery SCIENCE HELP- Small person­ alized programs covering the bas­ ics of Physics, Biology, General Chemistry and Organic Chemis­ try. Call the Princeton Review, 967-1480. TYPING/W ORD PRO CESSIN G (with coupon) C H IL D C A R E ATTENDANTS ASU AREA typing, w/p, editing, transerptn, W ordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime FOUND: FEMALE Airdale puppy, about 4 mo. old, near Bate­ man Physical Sciences.;957.-0411. Parent's Time O ut at 3 4 5 -2 4 3 3 APA/MLA EXPERIENCED fyping/w ord processing. N eed it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses. MLA/ APA, lasqiVfluirTat, 897-174Í. FREE LOST/FOUND AXQ AM ANDA A.- I'm so proud of you. I'm excited to call you my sister. Formal will be awesome. vY our Mom. 2 for 1 C ollege Night BABYSITTERS & NANNIES Set your own schedule o f days, evenings or weekends. $4.25-$6.70 p e r hour. M ust have reliable transportation. Call TERM TAPER trauma? Our ex­ pert w riters help you àce your next term paper. Worlds Igst re­ search resource. 1-800-243-2435 AXO NEW Members- i-Week is finally here! We love you all. vThe Actives. TEM PO RARY PERSONNEL $250 PER WEEK PLUS 6 People N eeded Im m ediately TH E U LT IM A T E a d v en tu re Spend winter in N. Zeal. & Aust. Raft climb; diye etc. Eaqi college cred. for info- Katie 784^9447 FUNDRAISING 5th St. & Forest B R E W P U B APPiY ON CAMPUS AT OUR TABU BY THE FOUNTAIN ON CADY M A LI W EDNESDAY,9AM-SPM 6113 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 86250 DISSERTATION, THESIS, pro­ posal help. C an a s s is t w ith write, rewrite, edit, stat analysis. Call Gail after 4pm. 671-3238, BO RD ER C O L L IE pup 3 months, to good home, call 8946978. v / * MONDAY NIGHT! FOOTBALL 3 » ¡ 10c WINGS DRAFTS S1 m SPORTS & RECREATION AFFORDABLE Secretarial-DTP, Resumes, WP S p read sh eets, P/U & D lvry, Graphs, Tables & Charts. 7 Days Sc Eyes, Color 921-8328. 2 PYHTON snakes: 1 male 9", 1 female 6", 2 cages $200. Jason 967-2639. ' (206) 632-1146 ext. J59182 - — CASH FOR college. 900,000 grants avail. No repayments ever. Qualify immed. 1-800-243-2435. PETS Host • Server Bartender • Kitchen C a ll S tiv e rs 966-1100 HOE M/F/D/V BUSINESS •INT'L EMPLOYMENT* TYPING/W ORD P R O C ¡S S M G _ SERVICES JOB OPPORTUNITIES I $35.00) (with coupon) N a ils b y G a b rie lle 9 41-1415 O N U N IV E R SIT Y J u .v t 2 B l o c k s E a s t o f R u r a l 1301E. University (Next to Beauvais) 8 2 9-1 73 7 Page16 Monday, October 24, 1994 STATE PRESS MONEY-SAVING COUPONS