Facilities Management to buy own gas New purchasing plan will save more than $100K, engineering manager says By C hristina Bailey State P ress A S U ’s F a c ilitie s M an a g e m e n t h as devised a plan that it estimates will save the University more than $100.000. Ray T ena, e n g in e e rin g m an ag er fo r Facilities Management, said his department has now instituted a method o f buying its own natural gas for the Central Plant. The natural gas is used as a fuel source to gener­ ate steam and hot water for use at all cam­ pus facilities. “We were originally buying gas directly from Southwest Gas. but it was just whatev- er they gave us and it was very expensive,” Tena said. “Now we are joining the ranks of the more progressive universities by going out into the field and purchasing it our­ selves." ASU has a one-year contract for the nat­ ural gas with a company in Texas. It will start providing the gas this month. “We locked into a good price right now. and with gas prices on the rise, we stand to save at least $100.000 to $200,000,” Tena said. The decision to move from Southwest Indian residence program in works for ASU East site B y D a v id P r o f f i t t S t a t e P ress Gas to other suppliers began months ago, said Jennus Burton, associate vice president o f Administrative Services. “We have known about the spot purchas­ ing option fo r some tim e,” Burton said. “We didn’t want to be the guinea pigs going into this, so we waited, analyzing all the costs, to make sure it wasn’t going to be more expensive.” Burton said the process of ASU becom­ ing its own buyer was delayed because the U niversity is not a m ajor user of natural gas. Only 20 percent of the utility budget is spent on natural gas; the rest is spent on electricity. But that stands to change because the A rizona Board o f R egents has recently approved ASU’s proposal to build its own power plant, called a co-generation plant, which will use natural gas to generate elec­ trical power for the campus. “Co-generation is the method that seems to be the best way we can save the most money,” Burton said. Plans for the plant should be started within the year, Tena said. With the addi­ tion of the plant, he said ASU could save more than $1 million in energy spending. Burton stresses that these figures are just preliminary estimates. “The primary concept is that the co-gen­ eration plant is going to save ASU money,” Burton said. “How much, we won’t know until the project is completed, but at this point the plant seems to be where we ought to keep our focus on.” If I could be like Bill - ASU and the Gila River Indian Community are working to develop residences for American Indian students at the proposed ASU East site in an effort to ease the difficult transition from the reservation to college. According to tribal officials, the proposed residence pro­ gram at the former Williams Air Force Base site will help students adjust to their new surroundings. “Students living on the reservation are surrounded by family and friends; then, when they go to college, they are surrounded by complete strangers.” said Urban L. Giff, community manager for the Gila River Indian Community. “M any of the students and faculty don’t know who the Pima, the T 'hono O'odham or the Maricopa are, and many o f them don't seem to care.” G iff said the tribe and the University haven’t worked out the details of the plan yet. but that “we have an agreement to agree." The Univefsity likely will sign a preliminary lease with the Air Force for the former Williams Air Force base site within a few days, according to Harry Isaacson, administra­ tive officer at ASU East. Charles Backus, director of academic programs at ASU East, said the two groups were discussing land ownership and that they expect to reach an agreement sometime this month. “W e’ve been going back and forth with modifications,” T urn to C o m m u n it y , page Craig Macnaughton/Sut* Pratt A SU b asketb all co ach B ill F rie d « sh a re s a laugh w ith b asketb all legend and S co ttsd a le S co rp io n s b aseb all p layer M ichael Jo rd an T h u rsd ay afternoon. T h e Interview w a s taped for th e Bill F rttdtr Show, w hich w ill a ir Nov. 20 at 4 :3 0 p.m . on C h a n n e l3. : 1 2. Great Am erican Sm okeout support group eases q u ittin g habit Fresh Start classes to run in weeks before big day K a t h l e e n G il b e r t S p e c ia l t o t h e S t a t e P ress Pierre Beaulieu’s life would have been a lot easier if the stop-sm oking program Fresh Start had been around 18 years ago. The 47-year-old doctor quit smoking cold turkey on the first American Cancer Society’s Great American Smokeout, but he had to do it on his own. Now the society offers sm oking-cessation classes to help smokers follow through in their resolve to quit. Fresh Start offers support for both those attempting to quit smoking and to keep INSIDE STATE PRESS Weather Outlook Mostly tunny and cool. High 70, low 48. from starting again. The free program is a series o f four meetings facilitated by exsmokers. “Fresh Start facilitators can help people overcome so many pitfalls,” said Beaulieu, who is also a Fresh Start facilitator. The bim onthly c la sse s run by the American Cancer Society will take place this month. Scheduled for Nov. 8, 10, 15 and 17, they will conclude Nov, 17 in con­ junction with the Smokeout, a day devoted to encouraging people to quit smoking for 24 hours. Beaulieu said although there are no easy >■ The 12 members o f the O J. Simpson jury are selected and sworn in. Page 3 ► The new “fair market value” price list for campaign items is making life a little easier for ASASU. in spite o f some extra paperwork. Page 9 answers to quitting smoking, the classes are a tremendous help to people struggling to break the habit. A ccording to the A m erican Cancer Society, the Smokeout has enjoyed great su c c e ss. Last N ovem ber, 9 .4 m illion Americans stubbed out their cigarettes for the day. Ten days later, more than 1.7 mil­ lion still had them out. “We keep the day upbeat and goodnatured,” said Laurene Harrity, program director for the American Cancer Society. “Our goal is for 25 percent o f smokers to quit.” Harrity said the first day is often the hardest fen’ people trying to break the habit. W orld/ Nation The mother of two children who were allegedly kid­ napped in a car­ jacking is arrested and will be charged with murder. Page 3 Sports Jake Plummer and the ASU football team travel to Oregon to face the Ducks Saturday. Page 11 The American Cancer Society will provide a smoking hotline on Nov. 17 to “help peo­ ple make it through the day.” Volunteers will man the line from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 1800-ACS-2345. Although the Smokeout program has met with success, Harrity said its mission is far from accomplished, adding that 19 percent o f Arizonans smoke. “We’re starting to get down to the hard­ core now, those people who don’t want to quit no matter whist,” she said. The number o f smokers increasingly includes teens. According to Harrity, 3,000 T urn to Smokeout, page 2. Where To Find It Classifieds................... 14 Comics........................... 10 Crossword........................6 Horoscopes ......................... 13 Opinion..................................4 Police Report.................. ..8 Sports....................................11 Today’s Activities ..„...„¿.„,..2 Wortd/Nation........................3 State P ress Friday, November 4,1994 P a g;e 2 U 1• T oday Community. C o n t in u e d The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed a s a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, firstserve bads and aré printed on a space -available basis. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Requests will not he taken over the phone. Faxed entries will also not be accept­ ed Entries must contain the fu ll name o f the club or organization, a description o f the event, daté, time and the’fu ll address o f the location. A ll 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. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. • Alcoholics Anonym ous —• Closed A.A. campus meeting. Noon, Newman Center basement/Aquinas Hall. • Arizona Horizon Project/Electrlc&Solar Car T e a m — Formula Lightning and Solar Phoenix weekly team meeting. New members wel­ come, 2:40 p.m.. Engineering Research Center 593, • A IESEC — Informal presentation by “Arthur Andersen," all majors welcome, 4 p.m., BA 402. • Chicano/Latino Law Student Association — “Hispanics interested in law school,” an informative and encouraging program for Hispanic undergraduate students. Everyone welcome. 2:30 p.m., College of Law, Room 116. • MUAB — M arketing Com m ittee meeting, everyone welcome. 2 p.m.. Conference Room 2, MU third floor. • School o f Art — Opening reception for ‘C ritic’s Choice,” a juried competition at Step Gallery 9999. Exhibition was juried by a panel of Valley art critics. Works aré by graduate and undergraduate School of Art students. 7 p.m.-9 p.m., Cornerstone Mall, University and Rural. • Native American Business Organization — General meeting, guest speaker. Everyone welcom e. 3:30 p.m ., Am erican Indian Institute Conference Room. Saturday* Nov. 5 — ... • SPICMACAY — Movie: “Arth.” 1 p.m., Neeb Hall. • All Saints Catholic Newman Center — Catechism sale: purchase materials, including Bibles, after weekend masses; 10 percent discount with presentation of ASU ID. Saturday and Sunday, 230 E. University Drive; northwest comer o f College and University. fro m p a g e 1. he said. “Our main concern is that we (ASU) need ow nership o f all the houses and land there, and that’s been our bottom line.” The Gila Riyer Indian Community hopes to be ready to go ahead with the plans by the time the campus opens, Giff said. Tribal and University offi­ cials said the number of people in the program and its size depend on the amount of housing available. As a result of the huge cultural shift from reser­ vation to city life, many students suffer from isola­ tion when they go to school, Giff said. , A program like the one proposed for ASU East would help American Indian students maintain con­ tact with people from the same background and similar cultures. “T here’s a common thread that exists' before they get to campus, and that needs to be kept,” Giff said. “That lasts a lifetime.” If the students feel more a part of the campus, then graduation rates, retention rates and the num­ ber of American Indian students going on to gradu­ ate school will all increase, Giff said. Another need in the community is adult educa­ tion in math and science, according to Gilbert Innis, director of tribal education at the Gila River Indian Community. !1 He said the need for skilled technicians in th# area will skyrocket because o f a new Intel plant slated for construction near the Reservation. The ASU East campus would serve as an ideal residence for adult students because it is close to the reservation and the Ijitel plant. “They have a lot of extended family responsibili­ ties and tie s — it (the American Indian residence program) makes it a lot easier to get training, than to move to a job close by,” Innis said. He proposed a “two-plus-two" program, where students attend Central Arizona College for the first two years o f their degree, then they move on to ASU East. “It (the residence program ) is ju st a natural occurrence of people from similar backgrounds and lifeways coming together — it’s like a fraternity or a sorority,” Giff said. Smokeout__ C o n tin ued from pag e 1. teens start sm oking every day nationw ide. The American Cancer Society is focusing on reaching youth smokers to combat the increase. In December it will offer Fresh Start classes specifically for teens. ASU runs a stop-sm oking group through the mental health division of Student Health. Chief of M ental Health Jack C lark facilitates the group, begun two weeks ago, that meets weekly to exam­ ine the psychological dependency involved in a nicotine addiction. Clark said an important element of the group is support. “They listen to each other and offer each other their insights,” he said. The group is available to any ASU student inter­ ested in quitting smoking and carries a one-time fee o f $10. ISLAND JOBS Karen Moses, assistant director of health educa­ tion at Student Health, said she anticipates having material to distribute to students on the day of the Smokeout. , Fresh Start classes are held at the Am erican Cancer Society, 2929 E. Thomas Road in Phoenix. Call 553-7129 to register. C o r r e c tio n : A photo in the index o f T hursday’s State Press incorrectly identified football player Parnell Charles as basketball player Quincy Brewer. The State Prew regrets the error. FRIDAYS ARE FABULOUS IN NOVEMBER! COLLEGE FABULOUS FRIDAYS! at Turf Paradise DONT MISSTHIS UNIQUEJOBOPPORTUNITYONATROPICAL ISLAND! WeHireOver60 UniversityGraduatesAYear! WE OFFER A GREAT CAREER AITERNATIVF WITH THE EXTRA BONUS OF WORKING IN A FUN. ACT ION-PACKED DEPARTMENT AT A BEAUTIFUL RESORT. PACIFIC ISLANDS CLUB has full-service beach resorts in the Micronesian Islands that cater to guests w ho w ant to be active, entertained an d have the time of’ their lives. W e have openings in our Sports, Entertainment & Activities Department for... RECREATION COORDINATORS & ENTERTAINERS Persons to organize and instruct water & beach sports, initiate and direct games and guest activi­ ties, and sing & dance in nightly shows! Willingness to work and play hard is essential. Applicants should be HIGH ENERGY, EXTROVERTED, OUTDOOR TYRES. W e provide an opportunity of a lifetime: 6-month contract, salary, housing, meals, and additional fringe benefits, including roundtrip airfare and medical insurance. WITH V O W COLLEGE I.D. Throughout the month o f N ovem ber, you can enjoy Fridays at the races for ‘"FREE, when you come to Turf Paradise and show us your valid college I.D. Get your weekend started right with some fast fun at Turf Paradise. WE ARE INTERESTED IN AU MAJORS. ALL PEOPLE-COVING, ADVENTUROUS FOLKS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. W e will be showing a video and scheduling interviews for M onday, November 7th, and Tuesday, November 8th. Three video/question and answer sessions will be held at the Memorial Union; (You only need to attend one) • Monday, November 7th at 900am to 10:00am MU Room 211 (Yuma) \ . ♦ Monday; November^7th at 7:00pm to 8:00pm (MU Room 203N (Gold N) r • Tuesday , November 6th at lOrOOam to 11:00am _ MU Room223E It you are interested in this opportunity of a lifetime, please come to one of the pre-sessions for further informatioh and to sign-up for an interview. , Pa c i f i c L IS L A N D S : Cam BVRADEEl The other game in town. Gates open at 11:00 am. First race at 12:30 pm. Pacific Islands Club is an Equal Opportunity Employer and die U.S. laws apply. Proof of eligibility to work in the U.S. is required. 19th Ave. and Bell Road. Call 942-1101 for more information, *Genctal Admission ONLY. W orld/N ation State P ress P age 3 Friday, November 4,1994 Jury o f 12 selected for Sim pson trial LOS ANGELES ( A P ) — Twelve jurors w ere seated Thursday to hear the m urder case against O.J. Simpson. A total o f 15 alternates must still be seated. Immediately after the panel was selected, jurors stood, raised their right hands and took an oath. L aw yers settled on a p an el w ith eig h t black s, one white, one Hispanic and two people o f mixed races. Their ages range from 22 to 52. Eight are women and four are men. Both sides must agree before a jury is seated, and they did so on the first day o f the crucial perem ptory chal­ lenges. In this stage — the final stage o f jury selection -— potential jurors can be excused for any reason except gen­ der or race. Each side exercised 10 o f their 20 challenges. After nearly every challenge, lawyers huddled with the judge for private discussions. The exact nature o f the sometimes lengthy talks was unknown, but defense attor­ ney Johnnie Cochran Jr. said at a break that the defense objected to any prosecution attem pt to exclude jurors, particularly blacks, on the basis o f race. O f the 10 challenged by the prosecution, eight were black and two were white. The defense challenged five whites, one black, one Hispanic, two American Indians and one person o f mixed race. R ace h a s e m e rg e d as an im p o rta n t is s u e in th e S im pson case. P ublic o p inion p o lls have show n that blacks are more likely to believe Sim pson’s innocence and are more open to suggestions he was framed, possibly by police. Superior Court Judge Lance Ito said W ednesday that he wanted 15 alternates, instead o f eight, and he had indi­ cated a full panel won’t be seated for another month. The search for 15 alternates begins Tuesday, when indepth questioning o f another group o f prospects begins. Jury selection began Sept. 26 with hundreds potential jurors filling out a lengthy questionnaire. The next phase involved detailed questioning in person at which time Ito dismissed jurors for legal cause, such as having a bias in the case or being exposed to media. Opening statements aren’t expected Until early January. Mother of carjacked boys arrested for murder UNION, S.C. (AP) — The mother who reported her twó boys m issing after a carjacking was arrested Thursday when the car was found in a lake with two bodies in the back seat police said. Susan V. Smith, who had made tearful pleas on national television for the boys' return, will be charged in their mur­ der. Union County Sheriff Howard Wells said. Mrs. Smith told police a gunman forced her from her car Oct. 25 before driving Off with her sons. Michael. 3, and 14-month-old Alex. The car was found in John D. Long Lake, near where Smith Said the abduction took place; Divers had searched the lake several times during the pdst few days, and police, cordoned Off the area around the lake Thursday, The identities o f the bodies in the burgundy Mazda would have to be confirm ed through an autopsy. W ells said. He said Mrs. Smith was in custody at an undisclosed location. He would not take questions and did not discuss a possi­ ble motive nor how investigators were led to the lake where the dar was found. However, there had been several reports before the news conference that Mrs- Smith confessed ' Dozens o f people crowded around the outside of the county courthouse and many gasped as W ells said she would be charged with murder. Several people sobbed. On W ednesday, investigators searched Mrs. Sm ith’s home and took away Several bags. Authorities had refused to comment on what they were looking for. There also had been reports that M rs. Smith had taken a lie-detector test and that the results were inconclusive, Mrs. Smith told authorities an armed man jum ped into her car while she sat at a stoplight in a sparsely populated area at the edge of town. She said the man ordered her to drive several miles, then forced her out and took off with her two sons still strapped in their safety seats. “Our lives have been torn apart by this tragic event,” she said, her estranged husband, David, by her side. “I can’t express how much they are wanted back hom e.” David Smith asked people to pray for the boys. The couple filed for divorce in September. Wells had said he didn’t believe that had anything to do with the inci­ dent. Mrs. Sm ith had been on her way to visit her friend. S u sa n and David Sm ith talk to rep o rters during a new s co nferen ce W ednesday in U nion, S .C . S u san Sm ith, w ho reported that a ca rjack e r had kidnapped her two so n s, w as arrested Th u rsd ay and w ill be charged w ith m urder, p o lice sa id . Mitch Sinclair, the night the children disappeared. Wells said earlier in the week that he was not a suspect. The boys’ disappearance prompted an interstate search and an outpouring o f community sympathy in the north- western South Carolina mill town. Hundreds of volunteers helped look for the boys and staged prayer vigils. M rs. Sm ith was scheduled to be arraigned Friday in York County, Solicitor Thomas Pope said. Jury suggests electric chair for abortion clinic killer P E N S A C O L A , F la. (A P ) — A ju ry today recommended the electric chair for an anti-abortion extremist in the shotgun slay­ ings o f an abortion doctor and his body­ guard. Paul Hill, a 40-year-old former minister, w as c o n v ic te d by the sam e ju ry on Wednesday after just 20 minutes of deliber­ ation. The jury took nearly four hours to decide on a sentencing recommendation. Circuit Judge Frank Bell is not bound by the reco m m en d atio n and co u ld in stead impose a sentence of life in prison. A sen­ tencing date was not immediately set. During a hearing earlier in the day, Hill told the jurors weighing his fate that “righ­ teousness will prevail” even if he is sen­ tenced to death. Barred from arguing that the slayings were justifiable homicide to save fetuses. H ill offered no defense during his trial, putting no witnesses on the stand and ask­ ing no questions of the prosecution’s wit­ Hill was convicted Oct. 5 o f violating nesses. . “In an effort to suppress this truth, you the new federal law ensuring access to a b o r tip n may mix my c lin ic s and b lo o d w ith could get up the blood of th e u n b o rn “You may mix my blood with the blood o f to life in p riso n fo r and th o se the unborn and those who have fought to that offense. w ho have In both fo u g h t to defend the oppressed ... truth and righ­ tria ls , H ill d e fe n d the teousness will prevail.” served as his o p pressed,” — Paul Hill, addressing the jury own lawyer. H ill said , In h is speaking c 1 o 's i n g directing to the 12-m em ber ju ry fo r the first tim e. statement during the sentencing phase, Hill “However, truth and righteousness will pre­ told jurors today, “You have a responsibili­ ty to protect your neighbor’s life and to use vail.” ;:,v W ie ld in g a 12-gauge sh o tg u n , H ill force if necessary to do so.” The judge overruled an objection by the ambushed Dr. John Bayard Britton, 69; his b o d y g u a rd , Jam es H. B a rre tt, 74; and prosecution and allowed Hill to continue Barrett’s wife, June, 68, as the three arrived with his statement. Assistant State Attorney James Murray at the Ladies Center clinic on July 29. Mrs. told the jury it had a responsibility to rec­ Barrett was wounded. ommend death for Hill. “The defendant had been telling the doc­ to r fo r the p a st six m o n th s: E x ecu te Abortionists,” Murray said, referring to a p o ste r H ill u sed d u rin g a n ti-a b o rtio n demonstrations. Mrs. Barrett testified today she and her h u sb an d had been in m any com m unity groups since m oving.here in 1992 from A nnapolis, M d., including the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship church, and Parents and Families o f Lesbians and Gays. “We thought well we can make some changes. We can impact on this community and make it a safer, better place to live,” M rs. B arrett said. Since her h u sb a n d ’s death, she testified, she had to drop out of their dance club. “I said, ‘I can’t come back without my dancing partner,” ’ she said. H ill is a fo rm e r m in iste r in the Presbyterian Church in A m erica and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. j O pinion S tate P ress Friday, November 4, 1994 Page 4 State P ress ■ I K MAY X oos & Oravos YOTE? BOO — To Francisco Martin Duran, for his assault on th e W hite H ouse th is w eek. Although his shooting spree with a Chinese SKS did not injure anyone, it is still a fun­ damentally disturbing act: a possible attack on the president; evidence o f the violence which seems to come to die fore so often in the American system; and, as the weapon used was an assault rifle designed for mili­ tary applications, inevitably it will cast a shadow on already-beleaguered gun owners. BRAVO — To ASU’s new capacity to become a direct lender of student loans. Considering how many students rely on such loans to make their way through ASU, it comes as a welcome surprise to hear that the process of obtaining a loan may be abbreviated. BRAVO — to Angelo Caipinelli, whose rev­ olutionary lap-top computer that displays in Braille, provides a major breakthrough in allow ing the visually-im paired access to modem media. With the rise o f computer integration into education, such an invention will come as a welcome breakthrough. BR A V O — To the m em bers o f A S U ’s Greek system involved in this year’s AllGreek Philanthropic Event Forty-one disad­ vantaged children w ill be escorted to the Phoenix Zoo, then treated to two gifts o f their choice and a lunch for their families. This kind o f selfless endeavor is exactly the kind of spirit that ASU needs to see more of. BRAVO — To the eventual end o f this year’s election season- Finally, no more ridiculous ads to interrupt our pleasure in TV watching, the constant mudslinging (can we say, Kyi and Coppersmith ads?) and no more o f the endless politicizing from candi­ dates who just can’t seem to quit O f course, now w e have the 1996 election s to start looking forward. BOO — To Susan V. Smith, who admitted to the slaying o f her two children only after weeks o f searching for them. There are few crimes worse than killing your own ch il­ dren; although the deliberate deception she invoked is certainly a candidate. Her reason­ ing for killing her 3-year old and 14-month old sons are inexplicable; w e have yet to learn exactly what her motives were. BRAVO -— T o the justice system , which decided to give Paul Hill the chair for his assassination o f Dr. John Britton, Britton’s bodyguard, retired Air Force I f . Col. James Barrett. Reportedly the jury came up with the verdict in no time, which is exactly what should have happened. Religious prejudices aside, there is simply no excuse for the mur­ der o f those who do not hold your own per­ sonal beliefs. America has little need for “holy warriors” — and Hill’s verdict should help to emphasize this. STATE PRESS TAFF YCS. \ X c u r in e * a b so T O DUC PROCESS? Ll/TELY. a m M A Y X SPEA K O U T A 6A D TST h ie G om N nan?t l L / O f ' c o u n se. V7 lx M A Y X R EM A IN S IL E N T WHEN A SK ED SE LF IUCTUMMATÌHG o u m sn o o s? Vnu ™ ¡L ,****• (, MAYHE GET MARR1EP? u a NO. WE CA9S m oreno n ia r r s j / WW*?'.. Monitored Prop 187 may end siesta Today I saw a group of men, gardeners, lying on a lawn — their machines, nearby, were idle. They were there when 1 drove by the first time and they were there when 1 returned, about half an hour later. Five or six men, rest­ ing in the shade, one man face down on (he grass, several more leaning against a tree and a cou­ ple o f men sitting quietly alone. It was probably lunch tim e for them. But who knows? Perhaps they were tired or maybe their equipment had broken down. I truly envied their serenity — relaxing next to a busy street, in the middle of the day, not a care in the world. It seems an attractive alternative, a better way to approach life. But not everyone shares my view. Some people, my compan-. ions on the road, probably saw five or six shocks of dark hair and brown skin, wasting ¿heir time on someone else’s money. On the basis of a single glimpse, nobody — nobody at all — could possibly have discerned whether those men were native bom or foreign nationals. But assigning nega­ tive values to cultural differences adds up to nothing more and nothing less than plain old prejudice. Immigrant bashing is nothing new. Every major ethnic influx has had its share o f detractors — people said the Jews were greedy, the Italians were hoods and the Irish were lazy good-for-nothing drunks. But getting tough on immigrants makes for smart poli­ tics, especially in California especially during the cam­ paign season. Governor Pete Wilson, now running for a second term, has strengthened his position by rallying his party around Proposition 187 — the “Save Our State,” or ’■“S.O.S.” initiative. Basically, Proposition 187 promises to save California taxpayers billions of dollars by restricting government aid to the nearly two million illegal aliens who live and work in California. An estimated 300,000 immigrant children could be expelled from public schools. The initiative is popular — at last count, 61 percent of the registered voters in California supported Proposition 187. Given California's sagging economy and disastrous infras­ tructure, voter hostility toward immigrants is-pot surprising. Americans like to think of themselves as generous peo­ ple: “Give me your tired your p o o r...” The words inscribed on Ellis Island are in marked contrast, not only to the cur­ rent political climate in California, but also to the history of immigrants in the United States. The Standard Reference Work, published by the Minneapolis and Chicago Education Society in 1921, includes the following under a section titled Immigration: “The population of the colonies at the time of the Revolution was of mixed blood, and it was good blood. One-third of the whole population in 1775 had been bom in Europe ... In the earlier years of the republic, a lib­ eral policy of selling lands ... drew a very desirable class of immigrants, chiefly from northern Europe and the British Isles. |T]he more immigrants of this sort, the better for our country. Of late, however... a less desirable class of people, attracted by the opportunity to earn wages, has flocked to our shores.” This “educational treatise” goes on to quote Teddy Roosevelt: “As for immigrants, we cannot have too many of the right kind, and we should have none of the wrong kind. I will go as far as any in regard to restricting undesirable immigration. I do not think that any immigrant who will lower the standard of life among our people should be admit­ ted ... The need is to devise some system by which undesir­ able immigrants shall be kept out entirely, while desirable immigrants are properly distributed throughout the country.” I don’t really know what kind of immigrant would suit Teddy Roosevelt’s high standards, but I do know that his sentiments are alive and well today. Most poll-watchers expect Proposition 187 to collect an easy two-thirds of the vote this upcoming Tuesday. Perhaps not surprisingly, most of the opposition to the initiative has been voiced by high school and college stu­ dents — persons who have yet to enter the'work force, per­ sons still tainted by high-minded ideals. A student protest last week prompted a tactical alert by riot-ready officers. At least one student was struck by a police baton, others were sprayed with pepper spray and still others were detained by the police. The California National Guard is warning its commanders statewide to prepare for possible civil unrest in the weeks ahead. The scenario is not pleasant. Arizona politicos are watching Proposition 187 closely. If it passes muster with California voters, it might do well here. Although appealing, it is an initiative originating in economics and propagated by oceans of hate. But when its tides have run their course, who will remember my friends on the lawn, in the sun? Diana Lopez is third-year law student. JASON OWSLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor KRIS FRIDRICH....................... GARIN €®OFF...... GRJtXj ZEMLIDA...................... DAVID LASPALUTO................ A MARJORY KAMINSKI.... CRAIG MACNAUGHTON....... ........................Photo Editor JIM POULIN............................... JEREMY STEIN . DAWN WAGNER . . . . . . . . . REN COLLINS ........Asst. Magazine Editor ANNA lU .l.M CH .................. R E P O R T E R S : M ika A k ik u n i, E liza b e th A ppelen, C h ristin a B ailey , Tim B ax ter, L o rrie C p h en , D aw n p e C h ristin a, L isa G onderinger, Dave P ro ffitt, Karyn Riedell. Marshall Woods. SPO R T S R EPO R TE R S: Todd Kelly, Dan Miller, Lee Newman. C O P Y E D IT O R S : N ick B açon, Kira H erm an, Lynn Readicker. ’ / . *4 - .i I PH O TO G R A PH ER S: Theresa Boettcher, Mark Kramer, N., Scott Trimble. UNSIGNED EDITOR: James Frusetta C O LU M N ISTS: Brian Anderson, James Frusetta, Barry Kelley. Diana Lopez, Janies Mahin, Mike Stevens, Chris Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whitlach. CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, GRAPH IC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. PR O D U C T IO N : Aaron Brutcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth French, Adrianna Garcia,.Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Leqz, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Em ily B erger, Dan Ellstrorit, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Cameron Kemer, Megan Owsley, Shane Siren, Bill VahZanten. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority 'voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor ' Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews C enter,'R oom 15, Arizona 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 the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers I n f o r m a tio n ..............9 6 5 - 7 5 7 2 N e w s r o o m . . . ............ 9 6 5 - 2 2 9 2 M a g a z i n e .................. 9 6 5 - 1 6 9 5 A d v e r tis in g ............. .9 6 5 - 6 5 5 5 C l a s s i f i e d s ................ 9 6 5 - 6 7 3 5 ,, O pinion S tate P ress ' ^ Page 5 Friday, November 4, 1994 Love, marriage follow through from ripe t o rotten, if it s right ing a relationship. The over-zealous social single fails to I h ear “ T he w edding recognize the patience necessary for love to “happen.” march." Yes, here she comes, Everybody seems to live by the impatient maxim, “You the virginal beauty in white. only live once." Marriages are failing because time is not Much to my dismay my pes­ allotted its due course: nobody knows the person they simistic id is simultaneously eat meals with, share sheet covers with and snore beside. humming a funeral procession. How many men today could find joy and excitement, My futile attempts to cease this sound are overridden as I leap from the pew and scream, “Don't do it! it will kill as my grandfather did, in the moments o f wait, let alone you!” The ogling guests turn to stare at me, silently mar­ admit it to the woman? Waiting for love today is only demonstrative of superior self-control. In a world where veling at my courage to recognize the reality of the 90s. Marriages fail and people are saddened and disillusioned moral boundaries are set by Sharon Stones and Madonnas, self-discipline is definitive of wearing underwear on the by diis tear in the certificate of mythological tradition. M arriage holds extrem ely negative connotations first date. Heck, my grandmother would get as many dates today. Therefore, to increase my fading hopes o f ever as Marge Simpson in the 90s courting world. Today, love reminds me o f a fruit we are all familiar fulfilling my maternal instincts, I turned to the past. I imagine the past bred visions o f commitment, meaning­ with, a banana. A banana is purchased while still green. A green banana is unripe and still immature. However, ful vows and vintage love. W hile rum m aging through a wooden chest in my the following day, the banana is a vibrant, bright yel­ grandmother’s house, I found a piece of paper definitive low, waiting to be plucked from its peel. Optimum taste o f everything marriage used to be and something that it and quality are experienced from “nature’s most perfect food” only within a brief time allowance. W ithin two will once again become: patient. My grandfather wrote a letter to my grandm other days, the young yellow has turned to a rotten, dark with eloquent passion of true love and the pure patience brown. The once firm, sweet fruit has now become soft and mushy, while emitting a foul, pungent odor. Just o f a priest. He spoke of his endless moments without her. He days ago it was a perfectly edible piece of fruit and now described how the second hand on his pocket watch had it must be thrown to the birds. You see, once the young beauty and the youthful surely slow ed to a tw o second pace. The sun in his world set later and rose earlier. Thus his days were excitement of planning a life together is over, the fruit le n g th e n e d , sh o rte n in g h is tim e to d ream o f her. spoils. The fruit continues to rot rapidly because noth­ ing is done to stop the However, the beauty in aging. Once fruit spoils this love resides in his unw illingness to ab an ­ To in crease my fa d in g hopes o f ever it m ust be throw n out d o n th e m e m o rie s o f fulfilling my maternal instincts, I turned quickly. So, out into the trash can the vows are th e s e m o m en ts, th ro w n , aw ay w ith savored every m om ent to the past. g ro w in g o ld to g e th e r because during this time * his thoughts were transcended with an immeasurable and tossed commitment. Marriage today is made of the wrong fruit. Just like beauty — a beauty of an imagined permanent union. the banana, it ripens fast and is easily replaced. People He was dreaming o f marriage. He would wait indefinitely, because he lived in an era fall head over heels for die vibrancy of youth and tire when marriage breached the complexity o f tíme. He heard excitement o f a ceremony, proclaiming a “love made in Ihe wedding bells for that moment, and the sum of moments heaven.” When things get sticky, exiting the commit­ ment is done in tire same fashion as it was on tire first in the permanent partnership his life was to become. As I watch new budding relationships unfold and date and the wedding day: fast and void o f patience. develop into marriage, I cringe with skepticism. The I h e time span in which both a banana and marriage can men and women today are lacking this patient passion be enjoyed is brief. My grandmother and grandfather have taken the old, breathed by the written words o f my grandfather. We want, we think we need, we get. We do not wait for sex, “rotten” bananas and made bread. They always said that the discolored fruit makes the sweetest m ost tasteful for love, or for tattered ends to be re-woven. banana bread. 1 can smell the aroma o f ageless passion Marriages lust, lie and divorce. lire courting of first dates, the “olden days” shyness sm o ld erin g fro m the ov en and ta ste the tim eless o f meeting a new companion and tire slow road to love patience with the first bite o f their fresh baked bread. are absent in our culture. Courting, or an extended form o f dating, is about discovering boundaries and cultivat- Tori Evans is a junior journalism major. * Think about it: Prop. 101 should be passed I am a political science major and have been working this semester as an intern on the campaign to win passage o f Proposition 101. Through this internship, my awareness o f the political election process has been raised. I have wit­ nessed first-hand the difficulty o f passing a proposition with little funding. Last election, I wouldn’t have looked twice at an election commercial, but after working in this internship I pay much closer attention and am more in tune with the election process. November 8, election day, is fast approaching; Arizona voters are being bombarded with political propaganda in the hope that this or that candidate or proposition will win. Voters often have difficulty deciding what is best for them and their future because they have little or no information on which to base their decision. Proposition 101 is just such an issue and it concerns me because, if passed, it will par­ ticularly benefit students. Sim ply put. Proposition 101 will am end the Arizona Constitution to allow the state to make land exchanges with other government agencies and private land owners. Last year, the State Land Trust contributed $92 millionto public schools, colleges and universities in Arizona. However, to increase this amount o f money for schools, the Trust needs to be able to trade state land. Allowing and exchanges will increase the value o f state trust lands that were given to Arizona by tire federal government for the sole purpose o f generating revenue for education, through sale or leases to toe highest bidder. Much o f the trust’s land than Pauly Shore You know, a while back someone wrote in about the junk you guys have been printing in the State Press this year, and come to think of it, they were right. I think it’s about time you put this Pauly Shore issue to rest. The show has been over for a week now and yet peo­ ple can’t seem to stop talking about it. I’m no Shore fan myself, and it wasn’t right for him to lie about his plans for the money, but I think all of us have lied about something pretty serious at one point or another in our lives. Let’s just drop this issue, OK? You have been writing about it and criticizing it for a week, and what have you accomplished? He is' still doing whatever he wants to with the money; you’re not going to change his mind. I think you should worry a little more about your own lives than the life o f someone who will hopefully never appear here again. Dean C ron Ju n io r C om puter Science & Engineering Opinion pages not a waste o f time at all I have read so many negative comments about the State Press opinion pages lately. I just had to comment myself. I love the opinion pages. In fact, it is usually the first thing I read in the paper. Granted, 1 am often disgusted by the stupid things that some people think, but it gives me the opportunity to define why 1 disagree with them (or why I might classify them as ignorant or blatantly obnoxious, as in Mike Stevenws’ column about men and marriage). But I would hardly quit “wasting my time” on pages 4 and 5! E rin J . Simon Ju n io r Accounting Debate turns into lampoon of real dilemma is scattered around the state in small parcels that are inter­ mingled with both private and public land, making it less valuable. By allowing toe trust to exchange land, they can consolidate these smaller parcels into larger parcels, making them more valuable. This will increase funding for educa­ tion without raising taxes. This issue has been endorsed by both gubernatorial can­ didates Eddie Basha and Governor Fife Symington. It has no organized opposition and has been widely endorsed by the League o f Women Voters and educational organizations including the Arizona Board o f Regents, Arizona School Board Association, Arizona Education Association (AEA), and Arizona PTA. As an intern working directly on Proposition 101,1 believe that it is a good idea and urge you to vote Yes on 101. I was among Tuesday night’s standing-room-only crowd at the Memorial Union in the hopes of seeing a debate on the subject o f God’s existence. Unfortunately toe debate wasn’t; it was instead a lampoon of the real dilemma. I, as a member of the scientific community, was completely embarrassed by the arguments that Dr. Dietz gave as evidence against. His 20-minute opening argument was the most illucid, irrelevant, and disjointed piece of work I’ve ever heard on the subject. Each one of Dr. Craig’s five points of evidence for was easily addressable but none of which did Dr. Dietz cover properly. There isn’t room within the confines of this letter to expose the fallacies in Dr. Craig’s logic. However, I could have, completely unprepared, stepped up to the stage and given a discussion far more cogent than that of Dr. Dietz. Those stu­ dents and faculty who did not attend can use former vicepresidential candidate Admiral Stockdale as an good example of my point. There are intellectuals out there with valid reasons for their atheism, none of which were represented with any clarity. It’s sad that a person with the credentials of Dr. Dietz could so thoroughly botch the scientific side of the debate. I certainly hope that the organizers of the event were as appalled as I at the lack of showing on the part of Dr. Dietz. This letter then, is an apology to Dr. Craig, in that our poorly represented side of the argument didn’t even put up a good fight. It also is an apology on behalf of the scientific community to the predom­ inantly theist audience, and is my hope that they were astute enough to realize that there exist serious intelligent people with logical and convincing arguments in rebuttal to Dr, Craig’s points. I would like to see a genuine redebate on the subject. Lisa Street Senior Political Science Eric J. Ostrander Senior Physics f e t t e r s to the (Editor EPU- In te rn e t IC JB O @ A S U V M .IN R E .A S U .ED U E-m ail ICJBO@ASUACAD M ailin g A d dress State Press Box ¿ 7 Í5 0 2 Arizona State University Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 Page 6 St a t e P ress Friday, November 4, 1994 Staff voices concern on winter closure B y L is a G o n d e r in g e r S ta te P ress A lthough most classified staff m em bers support the first-ever winter shutdown as a whole, some employees expressed reservations at T h ursday’s C lassified Staff Council m eeting about how the details of the plan will affect individual employees. The University will be closed from Dec. 24 to Jan. 2., which includes three holiday days and four weekend days, with only a few necessary departments staying open the remaining three days. Discussions about the shutdown were initiated % the staff council last year and the shutdown was later approved by ASU President Lattie Coor. One of the main purposes of the shutdown was to raise staff morale,; but some employees Worry it may actually Worsen it in some cases. “Some people who have to stay and Work are disgrun­ tled th at others are being allow ed vacation tim e,” said Ramos Medina, a buyer in the Purchasing Department and member of the council. “I would suggest maybe allowing those people who do have to work time off the week after the break when all the others come back." Another potential problem is that since the normal pay­ day falls during the break, it is being moved up to Dec. 23, the Friday before the break. Some sta ff m em bers had expressed concern about the resulting three-w eek gap between paychecks, Susan M alaga, assistant vice p resident for Human Resources, said it should not be a problem because the checks issued on Dec. 23 will pay through the end of December. The \m IR House , “There might be a misconception that by moving payday up people will get less of a paycheck, but (they’re) actually getting paid ahead of time,” she said. “The only concern Would be budgeting that money over the three-week period.” The three non-holiday days o f the break will not be “free” days off. Non-exempt staff members can use accu­ mulated vacation or compensation time, while exempt staff members who can’t accumulate compensation time must use vacation time. If either group of staff members has used up their vacation or compensation time, they must take three days of unpaid leave. "We would like to see if we could eventually change it so we can transfer three days of sick leave to three personal days to be used for the break,” said Donalea Robertson, vice president of the council. Another concern was that new employees, who can not accumulate vacation time until they have worked for six months, have no other options but taking an unpaid leave for the three days. Malaga said it has become part of the hiring process to let new employees know about this when they are hired so it won't come as a surprise later. A survey of all faculty and staff on the effects of the clo­ sure will be conducted in January to help decide if future winter closures are worthwhile. Robert Curry . Classified Staff Council president, said he still feels positive about the closure despite the reservations expressed. "The way I look at it, if you wait for everything to be perfect before you try it you'll never do anything new,” he said. ♦Tara China ♦Irish Crystal ♦Celtic Jew elry TJbtlfjue fffisfo r off occdsionsf 731-9755 1335 West University, Tempe (S E Com er ol Priest & University) ■■ w REAL P EO PLE W EA R F A K E N O S E R IN G S (W e carry real o nes, to o .) Sterling Silver: Ankle Bracelets Tempe Senior Celebration to honor grads B y M ika S dsana A k im S tate P ress ni For the first time at ASU, graduat­ ing students will be able to relish in their academic milestone by attending a celebration held for them in down­ town Tempe. The Senior;Celebration, a day filled with special events for graduating stu­ dents but also open to underclassmen, will be organized by the ASU Alumni A sso c ia tio n at th e end o f ev ery semester. The event was proposed to express the appreciation the organization has toward those who have attended the University, Said Jeff Lowe, Marketing C o o rd in a to r fo r the A lum ni Association. • Several downtown merchants will also participate in the event, giving $12.95 Oil/Filter Change and Safety Inspection ’Up to S qts. oil d iscounts to those w ho show th eir seniors graduating from the University this semester. ASU ID, Lowe said. “We are not encouraging them to The first Senior C elebration wi 11 take p lace D ec. 2 fro m C o lleg e ; party, “ Lowe said, adding that the cel­ Avenue to Farmer Avenue and from ebration will last from 7 a.m. to 1 a.m. "We want to be in control and have University Drive to First Street.. "We are big into making sure that lots of fun events.” Rod Keeling, executive director of graduating students have a good expe­ the DTC, said his organization will be rience," Lowe said. According to Lowe, the celebration helping the Alum ni A ssociation by will be tied to the downtown Tempe asking downtown Tempe merchants to F estival o f L ights, in w hich about participate in the event and to publi­ __ 40.000 Christmas lights will be draped cize it. ; Keeling said the DTC is working to on buildings frormNov. 25 to Jan. 8. S p o n so rs fo r the fe stiv a l are bring street musicians to the celebra­ . <: M aryland Bank and the Downtown tion. “We want to promote business in Tempe Community Inc., a non-profit m anagem ent group that serves 250 downtown Tempe, and we would like downtown Tempe businesses, Lowe people to go to ASU,” Keeling said. “This is going to be a special celebra­ said. He also said there are about 3,600 tion during the holidays.” s 1836 E . 6th ST ¿ S tc U l ¿ S i Since 1984 U niversity Dr.: • Foreign And Domestic Repair And Maintenance. • Below Dealer Prices. • FREE Shuttle To Campus. :fS ifb S . M ft < Stxtei, iUe.mfic. 840-STAR (7827) People Who K now Use Valvol In e , O rd er your copy of The 1993-94 Sun D evil Spark Yearbook today! Matthews Center basement, Rm 50 965-6881 T h e 1994 P r o fe ssio n a l L ea d ersh ip C o n feren ce "Building A Foundation Today, M Sponsored by: The Hispanic Business Students Association M eet a n d e sta b lish c o n ta c ts w ith c o rp o ra te A *KTHUR A NDERSEN ni re c ru ite rs fro m v a rio u s c o m p a n ie s. A rthur A ndersen &. Ca S c D ev elo p p ro fe ssio n a l le a d e rs h ip cap ab ilities th r o u g h sp eakers, w o rk sh o p s, d iscu ssio n p a n e ls a n d re c ru itm e n t se m in a r. A ssociate w ith o th e r successful a n d m o tiv a te d f j F irst s tu d e n ts su c h as y o u rself. B&ic I E N T E R P R IS E ! REN T-A -C A R GroupHeadquarters \ THE COOL JEWEL • 414 S. Mill Ave. #121 L CROSSWORD Sj(behind The Spashetti Company) • 829-1127 / ^ g jl. b y T H O M A S JO S E P H ACROSS 1 Spon fish 5 T ress 9 Moreno and Rudner 11 African grazer 13 W ear down 14 Concur 15 Koppei's network 16 Togs 18 Minnesota neighbors 20 Under the weather 21 Playwright Jean 22 Shuttle launcher 23 Struck out 24 U se the track 25 Snap­ shots 27 Cut off 29 Post-fire waste 30 Museum bigwig 32 Virgulbs 34 Regret 35 Aunt, in Arles 36 Thrill 38 Wrath 39 Alpine trill 40 Bruce’s wife 41 Hospital units DOWN 1 Moolah 2 New car feature 3 Trader's place 4 Blue 5 Bounds 6 Gymnast Korbut 7 Wealthy cu s­ tomers 8 Prepares " to propose 10 Not standing 12 Perry’s helper 17 Butter N o a tte n d a n c e fee fo r a ll ASU stu d e n ts, fa c u lty a n d staff P ro fessio n al dress req u ired : R esum es re c o m m e n d e d All C u ltu ra l B ack g ro u n d s a n d all C ollege M ajo rs are W elco m ed ! Yesterday's Answer 27 Take to court 28 Beat soundly 30 Darling, in Dijon 31 Staggers 33 Goblet feature 37 High hit serving 19 Small bills 22 Science series 24 Sports garb 25 Trattoria specialty 26 Key 1 2 3 4 6 7 ■ 8 ■ 5 9 10 12 11 1 13 15 17* “ ■ “ 19 20 18 J ■ 22 m _ ■ 23 ■ w 25u 3T | ■ 29 30 3T^ 33 32 34 35 36 37 .■ 38 39 40 41 ■ ■ 11-4 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AX Y D L B 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 two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 11-4 CRYPTOQUOTE K Z B K , r v i RS t t Toe Rings, J Hoops, Cuffs, I -y Studs and i y Lots of I ^— ■ j Single / Earrings! TPLCOKLILP f Saturday, Novem ber 5, 1994 9:00am - 5:00pm Registration: 9:00am, BAC Rm. 116 ♦Apparel * T-shirts ♦Tapes • Books ♦Ctaddagh Rings ACTC BA PZ Q O U C A COHLAJOECOK, RJ 1J A V B A U RJCT TZJ VT L U C O K L P B Y JO C VZLYC EBO V. LYY B O JK Z C A D BP G V B A U . — VLYYLBE AJTT Yesterday's C ryptoquote: EACH YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL BEING SHAPES AROUND IT EVENTS THAT ARE THEMSELVES YOUNG, BEAUTIFUL AND HAPPY.— M. MAETERLINCK O t994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Page7 Friday, N ovem ber 4 ,1 9 9 4 S t a t e P ress A SU Greeks host benefit for homeless children B y M a rsh a ll W Sta te P ress oods Saturday will be a fun-filled day o f clowns, magicians, animals and toys for dozens of homeless children across the Valley because of an event sponsored by the fraternities and sororities of ASU. M embers of A SU 's Greek system will chaperone 41 children to the Phoenix Zoo and a toy store, and then pre­ sent a barbecue lunch and carnival party in which their par­ ents will join them, said Gamma Phi Beta sorority member Kristi Brown. These activities were organized to benefit Save the Family Foundation of Arizona (SFFA). a Mesa-based non­ profit organization that aids homeless families. The group was chosen for the ASU Greek system's annual All-Greek Philanthropic Event, Bfown said. Each ASU Greek House will be donating $100 to the SFFA which covers: two $25 gifts from a toy store for each child, one S25 care package for each family and S25 for transportation. The day begins when each child will be paired off with a sorority or fraternity member for a morning visit to the Phoenix Zoo. The children will then be taken to a local toy store where they will pick any $25 toy of their choice, said Brown. “Most of the children have almost nothing, so it’s a way to make them feel better (by giving them a toy),” said Brown, a sophomore physical education major. She, said the children will be returned to ASU following the toy store visit for a barbecue and carnival party that will be held at 620 Alpha Drive in front of the campus fraternity houses. About 20 homeless parents of the children are expected to attend the barbecue and carnival that will feature clowns and magicians, said Amy Gustafson, a spokeswoman for SFFA. Gustafson said the SFFA is grateful that the ASU frater­ nities and sororities are helping the homeless parents and children for their annual All-Greek Philanthropic Event. “I t’s a luxury for these children to go to the zoo,” Gustafson said. SFFA receives their funding from federal, state and local agencies as w ell as private funding from businesses, churches and private individuals, she added. SFFA provides transitional housing for homeless fami­ lies with children. Their goal is to stabilize family units and help them regain a self-sufficient lifestyle thereafter, Gustafson said. The organization helps more than 85 families and more than 225 children every year end their welfare dependency, said Janice Parker, executive director of SFFA. She also expressed gratitude to the ASU fraternities and sororities. “Our limited budget cannot afford those ‘special extras' that the fraternities and sororities are giving, like a trip to the zoo or a carnival,” Parker said. Muslim, Croat forces seize Kupres from Bosnian Serbs BUGOJNO. Bosnia-Herzegovina ( AP) — Bosnian Serbs lost at least part of a strategic town Thursday to the first major combined military offensive of the war by Muslimled government troops and their Bosnian Croat allies. U.N. officials could not confirm the fall of Kupres, a tow n of 3.5ÍX) in central Bosnia that has been under joint Croat-Musi im attack since last week. : But Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic admitted his troops had pulled back, and media of all factions involved in the war reponed at least part of Kupres was in the hands of Croat or Muslim troops by nightfall. : “Òur forces have tactically withdrawn to new positions and have prepared for defense and a counteroffensive." Karadzic, wearing military fatigues instead of his custom­ ary suit, told Bosnian Serb television. Karadzic threatened to “break the spine of the Muslim army" if international mediators are unable to persuade the Bosnian government to stop its offensive. “We have to crush any Muslim force to force it to accept (peace) negotiations." he said. However, there was no suggestion Bosnian Serbs were ready to accept a peace plan already agreed to by Bosnia's Muslim-Croat federation. Croatian TV reported the Bosnian Croat militia “liberat­ ed" Kupres. capturing a huge amount of ammunition and equipment and leaving the bodies of Serb defenders lying on the road leading into town from the south. It showed what it said was footage of. Bosnian Croat militiamen in the town, some holding a sign ripped from a building that said "District Court of Kupres." It said 22 militiamen died in the fighting. Muslim-run Bosnian radio said both Croat militia and government troops entered Kupres. And Bosnian Serb TV news announced the loss of part o f the town. U.N. military observers and journalists were being kept away from the fighting. U.N. officials, who refused to be named, said army units from Croatia had been spotted in the Kupres area in support of the Bosnian Croats. Earlier in the day. Bosnian Croat forces reportedly were poised on the tow n’s southern edges, while the mostly M uslim Bosnian government forces were reported to be just 1.2 miles north of Kupres. U.N, officials reported heavy shelling -— 3,400 explo­ sions over the last 24 hours — and intense infantry fighting north of Kupres. They also reported steady shelling to the south. Thousands of civilians fled Kupres in anticipation of the assault, the first time the government and Bosnian Croats A B o sn ian Croat tank and so ld ie rs m ove on the road for K u p res after they conquered about 150 sq u are m iles of Serb-held territo­ ry north of Livn o W ednesday. M uslim s and Croat fo rce s took o ver K u p res in a rare coordinated a ssa u lt that could m ean a new p h ase in the w ar. have joined forces against Bosnian Serbs. The town, 60 miles west of Sarajevo, sits on a plateau linking Serb-held territory in northwest Bosnia and neigh­ boring Croatia with Serb land in central Bosnia. Muslim-Croat control of the plateau could allow their forces to push north and link up with government troops to try to cut Bosnian Serbs off from Serbs in Croatia. Serbs call the- plateau “the gates of Bosnia.” It was one of the first regions they captured after war began in April 1992, when Kupres was 51 percent Serb, 40 percent Croat and 8 percent Muslim. The success of the offensive bolstered spirits 30 miles away in Bugojno, a garrison outpost where the government began its offensive last week, strengthened by Bosnian Croat militias from the south. Bosnian army trucks unload­ ed jubilant soldiers bound for the front Thursday. The capture of Kupres could mean a turn in the 2 1/2year war. Bosnian government troops have been hobbled by the w eapons su p eriority o f the Serbs. But w eapons from C roatia started com ing in after M uslim s and B osnian Croats patched up relations in March. And the Bosnian Croat militia is well-armed, though relatively small. Serbs control 70 percent of Bosnian soil but are lacking supplies. Yugoslavia, long the Bosnian Serbs’ main arm s and oil supplier, ended its support in August in hopes of getting crippling U.N. sanctions lifted. Paid Political Advertisem ent ED Co ntreras M \ i ( i < o i » \ C o n n i 'n it y C o i .i .e o k s B o a k » — I I is i k u t shampoo & conditioner 1 w W e believe in Ed C o n treras — his integrity, his expertise as a CPA specializing in au d its of g o v ern m en tal agencies — h is concern for b o th the taxpayers a n d th e n eed s of p riv ate citizens for affordable ed u catio n . W e are p ro u d to lend o u r su p p o rt to E d C ontreras. Jamie Sossanian, FormerSpeaker of the House Sue Sossaman, Chair of Citizens for Community Colleges Mark Killian Speaker of the House of Representatives Rots Farnsworth Former MCCCD Board Mendrer/DiSt. 1 Dwight Patterson, First MCCCD Board Rep./Dist. 1 Dr. Giant Christensen, Current MCCCD Board Member/list. ] Rudy Campbell, Treasurer of the State Board of Regents Carol Smith, letnpe City Councilman Linda Spears, TempeOtv Councilman Ben Arredondo, Tempe City Councilman Harry Mitchell, Former Tempe Mayor Maricopa Community College District Faculty (PAG Maricopa Community CollegeDistrict Faculty Association Gilbert k Sally Orantia, Retired Mesa Educators MCCCD Chapter, Maricopa Council on Black American Affairs Gary Yazwa, President, East Valley Boys & Girls Gub MCCCD Chapter, Arizona Association of Chicanos in Higher Education Arizona State Association of Chicanos in Higher Education T. Farrell Jensen, Vice Mayor of Mesa Jerry D. Boyd, Mesa City Council Member Willie Wong, Mayor of Mesa jTheo J. Heap, Former Mesa Community College President Phil Austin, Former Asst Attorney Gen./Civil Rights Division " E d u c a t i o n is o u r f u t u r e " Julia McCleeve, Gilbert School Board Member Frank Hidalgo, Assistant Vice Pres, for University Relations at ASU Glynn Gilctease, Attorney atlayy Carol Royse, Realtor , Gary Bird, Risk Management Director, Phelps Dbdge Joseph Spiacele, Tempe City Councilman Charles S. Harris, Director Of Athletics, ASU Associated Students of Chandler-Gilbert Community College Ralph Goitia, Former Superintendent Tempe Elementary Schools John Waters, Former Superintendent, Tempe High School District Associated Students of Mesa Community College, Executive Board V o te N o v e m b e r 8th P a i d f o r b y C i t i z e n s F o r E d C o n t r e r a s , t o r m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n p l e a s e c a ll 8 9 9 - 8 6 2 j reg. '9.95 Expirât 11-13-94 tuo c o re h o ir QUAUTY HAIR CARE - AFFORDABLY PRICED 403 w. university next to tops ^8297774 mon-fri 9-9, sat 9-6, sun 11-5 reg. ’24.95 (or 10 sessions Eqwfll-13-94 Maximium three per person P age 8 St a t e P ress Friday, N ovem ber 4 ,1 9 9 4 Discusses merits of Sign Ordinance B y M ik a S u sa n a A k ik i S t a te P ress ni In its Thursday night issue review session, the Tempe City Council encouraged people to vote to approve funding for the Maricopa County Community Colleges District’s capital devel­ opment plan, which is on die Nov. 8 general election ballot The plan includes approximately $123 million, plus a portion of the $29,5 million Rio Salado package, for new construction, remodeling and upgrades in parking, lighting, instructional equipment and laboratories for East Valley community colleges. The bond would raise a total of $486 million for the MCCCD. In addition, a new campus and centers will be established for an East Mesa Campus, William Education Center, Sun Lakes Education Center and Northeast Scottsdale Education Center under the bond funds, said Tempe Mayor Neil Giuliano. D istrict officials said funding M aricopa Com m unity Colleges is important, explaining that 62 percept of ASU upper division students transfer credits from a Maricopa Community College District College, according to district statistics. It also said that roughly 45 percent of Maricopa County’s high school students attend a community college or center within a year of graduation. “I’ve already voted in favor of it,” said Councilwoman Carpi Smith. She also said that community colleges provide students “wonderful” training. Likewise, Giuliano recommended that the Council members support the bond. The Council also saw a slide-show presentation that described how Tempe has improved the looks of its free-stand­ ing business signs since the passage of the Zoning Ordinance 808 in 1976, which encouraged a “low profile” sign program for die city. Prior to the so-called “Sign Ordinance,” free-standing signs were permitted up to 24 feet in height, said Terry Day, commu­ nity development director for the City of Tempe. The new regu­ lations limited the total height to 8 feet, measuring from the top of curb. Day said that there were more than 1,300 non-conforming signs in the city at the time die ordinance took effect However, today there are fewer than 30 signs that are too tall. Apache Boulevard experienced the largest amount of sign changes compared to other streets in the city, Day said. “ The sign program has been extremely strong,” Giuliano said. “It has changed the look of the city.” Councilman Joe Spracale said, “When I was a kid, the bigger the sign, the better it was. But I really feel that signs don’t have to be big (for businesses) to provide good service to people.” According to Day, the city will go to court in December regarding a lawsuit against The Vine Tavern, which is located on Apache Boulevard and Rural Road. He said the business’ sign is overhanging the city’s right of way and is encroaching into its property. P olice R eport ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday: • A male student reported that someone stole his handgun from his vehicle while it was parked in Parking Structure 1. • A male employee reported that someone criminally damaged the men’s restroom in the basement of the Memorial Union. . • A man unaffiliated with ASU reported that his backpack was struck by an ASU vehicle. The backpack was on the man’s right shoulder at the time. . .< • A man unaffiliated with ASU .was arrested for disorderly conduct at Sun Devil Stadium. • A male student reported that his vehicle was criminally damaged while it was in Area 16. Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Thursday: • A 29-vear-old Tempe man was arrested for DUI and driving on a suspended license. He was involved in a single-vehicle accident in which he drove o ff the road into a brick planter in the front yard of a house. He said he was taking methadone under a doctor's pre­ scription. • A 36-year-old man was arrested for strong P ress aim robbery and possession of drug parapher­ nalia. He was arrested at 1406 W. Broadway Road for robbery after admitting he robbed the victim at O ld C hicago P izza, 530 W. Broadway Road, one hour earlier. The robber was positively identified by the victim, whose stolen gold cross was recovered from the sus­ pect's pants pocket. • A 37-year-old man was arrested for criminal trespass. He had been previously warned to stay away from the Coffee Plantation because he was harassing customers. He returned later that evening and was contacted by a security officer. • A 47-year-old man was arrested for DUI and possession o f narcotic drugs after he ran through a police barricade at the intersection of Rural Road and University Drive. • A 21-year-old Tempe woman was arrested for disorderly conduct. She got upset at her former boyfriend when she arrived home and found him sitting with his girlfriend on a couch in the living room. She began yelling and told the boyfriend to move out. The man left with his girlfriend and then returned 10 minutes later. The suspect had begun moving You don't need a decal to use it. his personal belongings out on the lawn, breaking a large picture in the process. She continued to argue and show disregard for his belongings. • A 35-year-old Tempe woman was arrested for domestic violence assault after she stabbed her live-in boyfriend in the chest and finger with a 12-inch barbecue fork. • A 19-year-old Tempe man was arrested for disorderly conduct and for delaying and obstructing justice. He verbally abused offi­ cers for giving his four friends jaywalking tickets. Police told him to “keep his mouth shut,” and he said, “F— you. This is freedom of speech.” The officer told him again to “shut his mouth” or he would be arrested for disor­ derly conduct. The man then raised his arm in the air and yelled, "This is freedom of speech, mother f— er.” Approximately 20 to 30 peo­ ple had gathered by this time. The officer grabbed his arm, and the man pulled away. He refused to put his hands behind his back, so the officer sprayed a one-second burst of mace into his face. He was finally taken to the ground and transported to jail. • A 50-year-old man was arrested for trespass at the Centerpoint complex in Tempe after dis­ turbing the Coffee Plantation business. He had received previous warnings about trespassing. • A 26-year-old Tempe man was arrested for criminal trespass. Police arrived at the ABCO at 1737 E. Broadway Road because of a call concerning a suspicious person. The manager said that the suspect had been wandering around the store for about an hour. When the manager asked the man to leave, he said, “If you want me to leave, call the police.” • A 26-year-old Tempe man was the victim of an assault and caijacking. The driver pulled into the Circle K at 2916 E. Apache Blvd. to make a purchase. As he exited his car, he was approached by two black males with shaved heads. One of the men struck the victim four to five times in the head with a metal pipe. The victim then fell to the ground, where he was kicked. The suspects then stole the car, a 1992 Honda Accord, and left heading eastbound toward Mesa. Compiled by S tate P ress reporter Karyn Riedell Schedule now Don risk your group not being included! Whats worth fighting ELIJA H W O O D • K E V IN <30 ®W m HMmillik il/ffimlH» H iim iü D H W B I ’llilB M in iH iS Contact the Spark Yearbook office at 965-6881 to schedule your group shot. U S ] sfO N frW M I Opens FridayNovember4th M T heatre NearYou. Q n o rlf es i \ L fe a z ljo o l Croup photos will b e taken weekdays betw een noon and 6 p.m. in November. Once the month is gone, so is your organization's opportunity to b e in the 1994-95 A6U 6park Yearbook! Friday, N ovem ber 4 ,1 9 9 4 Sta te P ress Campaign item list well received by ASASU candidates B y D a w n D e C h r is t in a St a t e P ress C a n d id a te s ru n n in g fo r A sso c ia te d Students o f ASU executive positions this fall gave generally high marks to a recently released campaign items cost list. T he lis t, w hich in c lu d e s 41 item s, quotes the “fair m arket value” price for each item. Candidates must use the prices stated on the list when calculating their campaign expenses. The list was designed to elim inate the problems created in the spring when fortner ASASU president Marci Hendrickson was removed from office for improperly report­ ing the costs for some campaign items. At the time, there was no clear definition of what every campaign item should cost. If an item they use is not on the list, can­ didates must file a request with the elec­ tions com m ission in order for th e proper price of the item to bC determined. Campus Affairs Vice President Brandy Aguilar, w ho is running for re-election, said the list will help prevent candidates from overspending on campaign items. She said the list provides the basic items needed in à campaign and that candidates can appeal an item 's cost if they find it for a lower price. “I don’t think it will be too much extra paperwork,” Aguilar said. “We do so much paperwork anyway, in general.” Sen. Robbie Wellman from the College o f Business, who is running for executive vice president, said even though the list will result in extra paperwork for him, it will help the election process. “It puts all candidates on the same play­ ing field so no one has an unfair advantage o v e r any o th e r c a n d id a te in term s o f money,” he said. Terence McBride, a senior history major also running for executive vice president, BE $T B U Y $ x , 2 4 4 -2 4 4 6 LONDON . . 485 TOKYO.... ............... 579 CHICAGO...... ..........208 FRANKFURT 495 TMPEf .....L ..... .650 MINNEAPOLIS.......... 318 PARIS/MUNICH-.......500 SEOUI/HONGKONG. .755- ATLANTA ......... ...... 267 MADRID.... . . 555 , BANGKOK/SINGAPORE.819 NEWARK............... 328, SHANNON,DUBUN ...520 JOHANS/IAGOS. ....... 1.595 DALLAS¿l..-;...:...,T82 ' ATHÉNS/Pi!AGÜ£.;.,..„875 TEtAWV/CAIRCT;:.,.,,a..!.900 HOUSTON,;.,...^ L;.,J8 à . ROME/MILAN 655 KARACHi/DELHl........ t TÌ5 HONOLULU 35? VVARSAW/BUDAPEST...,.775. SOMBAY/MADRAS ..1100 MEXICOCITY..........772 BR'JSSELS/ZURCH... .600 SPECIAL FAXES TO S. 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S U O .tm mTwìÌJÌÌMmNk (F*Su*1:60,430.»30,1030 M iU U W 'W iii0 *a ra . „ MARY SHELLEY S m.jun) 1130, 230. 6:10.630 /1130pmM Ifn-km) 130. 4307730.1030, H2J«tfl(glf. A641236.X0.636. '♦ ’H e tm FbAff130,4:t0,738. 630.VÌ33CN «3 double (R NW12:10,«36,6D 3ragon 0,736,»30,(12-:1«—At«3 130,431,7M, WD Nili. 4:1«.714.10:10 i n i ) } ! i -g B 0 3T2rTBEL ™ & M X A TE’ 12:»,»:46,«30, «16 amima FRANKENSTEINIH)330.6:10.630 1130am...... ” atM Lov1e230A ffaii .m 436,73'0,#3«.(1238aufttN* M THE ROAD TO WKL.L.VlL»ft.K- QVOffl1:1f.«ag.M§,«:t0 jQ U A N lt) THÌ «HAWHAMKUgOOffTlOllilm »130,>16,630.«30 736°fSfintMm «W&ür ■ ‘—s ¡f5tlentRlL irttml1230,>30.«30.730,1030,(1 236m>mÜ3• tlepyGG EfrnaslBTS Yo to fi23omtiFum & WWiapBiàWÙ.n,(ftH& ¿qH j14:46«5.4,4»4).7:10,PMOpnÆaO G o o d to r Ir id a i y . N o SS said the list “is not that big of a deal.” “I guess they have to do this to get rid of the gray areas,” he said. “They are trying their best to make it easier for the candi­ dates. I guess that’s cool.” Hendrickson said the list put together by ASASU is incomplete. “Everything from last election should be the bare minimum for the list,” she said. “Anything less is a mockery Of even chang­ ing the election code.” Despite this, Hendrickson said the differ­ ent types of paper copies listed are helpful. The price she had listed for copies during her campaign was ruled inaccurate and ulti­ mately led to her ousting. “The copies will eliminate the problems that We had last year,” Hendrickson said. ASASU President Alan Frost said the list should clear up any confusion over tab­ ulating campaign expenditures, but it will create additional paperwork for both candi­ dates and election officials. “I think you can make a list eight miles long, but you’re still going to make changes,” he said. Frost said now is a good time to see if the list w orks because only h a lf o f the ASASU positions are up for re-election, so it won’t affect too many candidates. “If I ever hear the words ‘fair market value’ after 1 graduate, I will puke,” he said. Kim Dem archi, chair o f the Elections S creening C om m ittee, said she d o esn ’t anticipate any problems with the list. “Everything is running smoothly so far,” she said. Demarchi said it is necessary to have the list so there are no questions as to whether candi­ dates have gone over their campaign budgets. “If we require candidates to list the cam­ paign item s on their financial statement, which also asks for the fair market value, then it’s essential that we have a list that makes it clear what that is,” she said. Islamic militants eject Arafat from mosque GAZA CITY, G aza Strip (AP) — Islam ic m ilitants knocked off Yasser Arafat’s headdress, called him a traitor and threw him out of a mosque funeral Thursday in his worst polit­ ical embarrassment as head of the Palestinian government. Enraged mourners fired guns wildly into the air as a phalanx of police guards whisked Arafat away from the chaotic service for Hani Abed, a militant leader killed by a car bomb the fundamentalists blamed on Israel. : “A rafat is a collaborator!” shouted members of the extremist Islamic Jihad movement as Arafat was shoved out a back door of the Omari mosque and into the pouring rain. The scene underscored the growing extremist opposi­ tion Arafat has faced in the Gaza Strip since Palestinian self-rule began in May. The PLO leader is wedged between Israeli demands to crack down on Muslim fundamentalists responsible for deadly attacks on Israeli civilians, and the need to win their support for self-rule. Arafat, who had just returned from a regional economic conference in Morocco, came straight from the border to pay his respects at the funeral of Abed, 35. Abed died Wednesday after a bomb exploded when he opened the trunk o f his car. He had been detained by Palestinian police for 18 days in June on suspicion of help­ ing plan an attack at the Erez border crossing into Israel in which two soldiers were killed. It was the first attack on Israeli soldiers after autonomy began. Islamic Jihad leader Sheikh Abdullah Shami said only Israel could do such an expert job of rigging the car bomb that killed Abed. He demanded that Palestinian police pro­ tect Islamic leaders and threatened swift retaliation. “Our bullets will find a way to hit settlers and soldiers everyw here,” Shami told reporters at a wake in Gaza City’s Sheik Radwan neighborhood. At the mosque service, militants blocked Arafat from reaching A bed's body, wrapped in a blanket on a large wooden board. His trademark black-and-white headdress was pulled off, and bodyguards then rushed Arafat out a back door. Features Pagelli) St a t e P r ess Friday, Novembers, 1994 C a lv in and H obbes by B ill W a tte rso n Doonesbury HEAPS UP. PEOPLE m COLONECS taking mo a ■ THEMEPIA ' ■ THE FA R SIDE By G A RY LARSON B Y G A RRY TRUDEAU ...A N P TODAt IN AN IMPROMPTU PRBSSCÒNFERENCEfifA 6UÑ FACTORY, M R; NORTHPÈN IEP Re m a p m o m th a tso m e o f ~-h i---- m OPERATIVES I - fr Ì V /N ?/,. W BRESUS- | FECTEPPRUS S j Q ^ J S J ä TRAFFICKERS... By secretly working out for many months, Irwin became the envy of all the 98-pound weaklings. ' A nasty debate has erupted o v er how A m e ric a n h isto ry should.be taught. A committee of educators has dev eloped new , gu idefines that would focus more on the lives of o rdinary people and m inority groups than on famous individuals. One of the directors of the pro­ ject complained that the tradition­ al way of teaching history is “very top heavy ... hero driven ... the only history makers are the select few; the generals and the great politicians and the few inventors and scientists and so forth.” By teaching about ordinary people, he said, the students might see "themselves as history makers ...’” But critics o f the plan say it discrim inates against famous white guys, panders to the politically correct crowd, distorts history, and is anti-American and really stupid. Actually, it is not an original idea. Several years ago. Dr. l M. KQokie. the renowned expert on lots of stuff, wrote just that kind of history book. It dealt with the role of obscure Americans in many of the great moments of our history'. At the time. Dr. Kookie explained his reasons for taking such an unusual approach. “If you go to any good cowboy movie, and the hero yells that the drinks are on him, who rushes to the bar? Ordinary guys, that’s who. You could not have that scene without them. If nobody rushed to the bar. the hero would look foolish, so they are very important.” "When Columbus crossed the ocean blue in 1492, who yelled: ‘Yoo, hoo, land ho!’? Some ordinary guy, because Columbus was too smart to climb way up in the bluebird nest and maybe break his neck before he got famous." "When Teddy Roosevelt yelled, ‘Charge!"and went up San Juan H ill, who was behind him ? O rdinary guys. W hat'ya think, he’d bring all his rich relatives?” "So I wrote about ordinary people to give them overdue recognition. Also, there are a lot more ordinary people than famous ones. So if they all bought my book. I’d cash in.” Unfortunately, the publishing company burned down after only a few copies were printed, so the book didn’t achieve widespread recognition. But I have one of the rare copies and it is still valuable for its unique historical perspective. For example, there is a section on Zebadiah Stump and his wife. Thelma Stump, who were farmers at the time of the outbreak of the.Revolutionary War. The book describes the wrenching ordeal they endured when Mr. Stump decided to join u p . “Fare thee well, wife, it be time for me to go do my patriotic duty.” “Patriotic duty, pshaw,” Thelma said. “You just want to get out of clearing the rocks on the north 40.” “Never you mind, woman, you just be sure to feed the pigs and the chickens, milk the cow, and I have counted the exact num ber o f children we have. So if there are any extras when I return, they will not be mine, and I will take a stick to you, hear?” “And you stay out of ye olde roadhouses and keep your hands off trollops, chippies and other women of ill repute, because 1 know w hat a lecherous man you be, and I wouldn't have married you myself if someone with teeth had come along.” “A pox on you, woman, and I don’t want you nipping at my keg o f spirits while 1 am gone. You know it makes you giddy, then you forget to feed the pigs.” The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook - An investment in your lifetime O rd e r yo u rs tod ay fo r $ 3 6 .9 3 , M atthew s C e n te r basem ent, Rm 5 0 , 965-6881 "Be off with you then. sir. and good riddance. By the way, who is your commander?” “1 will serve under some General George Whatzis or some­ body. White wig, wooden teeth. They all look alike to me." ' The book goes on to tell how Soldier Stump took part in the crossing of the Delaware, fell out of the boat and died of a massive head cold. His last words were: “I'll never know if the blamed woman fed the pigs." But the book follows several generations of the Stump fam ily, all very o rdinary people, and d escribes how Ebenezer Stump, a great-great-grandson, left his home when the Civil War broke out. It describes his weeping wife, who said: “If you are killed, what will become of me?” To which Stump replied: “If I’m dead, I don't give a squirrel’s toes what becomes of you, so stop your blubber­ ing because I am not going to be killed.” “How can you be sure?” his wife said. “Because I am heading straight north to Canada, where I intend to remain until the hostilities are over. Just because that danged fool President Abe Whatever wants to make a fuss over a few states going their own way, doesn’t mean I have to risk my hide, besides, he reminds me of that tall, skinny, ugly lawyer named Abe who used to have an office up the road a piece. Never liked him. Charged me one. whole dollar when they took me to court for illegally park­ ing my mule by the village hall.” “I think they are one and the same Abe,” his wife said. “You don’t say? Well, I didn't like him then, and I don’t like him now. So good bye, dear wife, and Twill drop you a postcard.” “Don’t bother. I am going to find someone who has bet­ ter prospects than an ordinary lout like you.” “Suit yourself. But remember, like I always say, ordinary is as ordinary does. Say, I might write a book and use that line.” But he never did, or he might have made more history books. THE ARM Y NURSING CHALLEN GE* You’ve worked hard for your BSN. You’d1like to continue the challenge. That’s what Army Nursing offers...professional challenges. H us new study op­ portunities, continuing education, travel. And you’ll have the respect and prestige accorded an officer in the United States Army. If you’re working on your BSN or already have a BSN, talk to your Army Nurse Corps Recruiter. 1-800-USA-ARM Y 1-800-235-2769 EXT. 321 ARM Y NURSE CORPS. BE A LL YOU CAN BE.” Sports STATE P ress ________________ Friday, November 4, 1994 P a g e lT ASU football travels to Oregon for Duck hunt Sun Devils confront UO in high-stakes showdown C ra ig M acnaughton/State P re ss Q u arterb ack Ja k e Plum m er w ill have h is h an d s fu ll w ith th e “G ang G reen" O regon d efen se Saturday in Eug ene. O re. « au sn cT By T odd K eli.y State P ress 1:00 p.m. at Autzen Stadium Both ASU and O regon have a lot at stake in this Saturday’s game, but for very different reasons. ASU is attempting to salvage a winning season and get into contention for a bowl game. While Oregon, ranked No. 21 in this week’s AP Top 25 poll, has a shot at the biggest bowl of them all — the Rose Bowl. ASU and O regon m eet S aturday in Autzen Stadium in Eugene, Ore. The Ducks (6-3 overall, 4-1 Pac-10) are listed as eightpoint favorites over the Sun Devils (3-5,2-3). Oregon is trying to reach the Rose Bowl for the first time in 36 years. ASU, while out of Rose Bowl contention, is striving for a winning season and an upset on the road for the second straight week. “C ertainly last w eek’s win m ade the Pac-10 race interesting for everyone in the conference,” Oregon Coach Rich Brooks said, referring to the fact that three other teams are tied with the Ducks at 4-1 in the conference. Earlier this season, though, few Duck fans were thinking roses. After defeating D ivision I-AA P o rtlan d S tate, O regon d ro p p ed tw o stra ig h t to W AC team s, Hawaii and Utah. All was not well in Eugene. T hings started to turn around w hen Oregon went on the road Oct. 1 and'defeated Pac-10 co-leader USC 22-7. The other Pac-10 co-leaders include UofA, which has never been to the Rose CH.3 at 10:35 p.m. (tape delay) KTAR 620 AM Oregon by 8 ASU - Bruce Snvder 15-15 at A SU (3rd Season) 83-76-5 Overall (14th Season) Oregon - Rich Brooks 88-108-4 at Oregon (18th Season) S e rie s R ec o rd 10-4 ASU leads series Last A S U wjn in Eugene 21-20 in 1988 - Yamini Prabhakara/State Press Bowl, and Washington State, which hasn’t gone since 1931. “l think this team has responded very well,” Brooks said. “We’re a young football team. We at least have learned what we need to do to prepare ourselves to win. Now whether we go out and execute and do those things on a weekly basis remains to be seen.” P erh ap s w hat keeps B rooks feelin g uneasy is the fact that so many of his play­ ers are young and still learning. Brooks sh o u ld n 't w orry for too long. Many of his players are coming along just fine, and redshirt freshman Kenny Wheaton is a great example. T urn to D uck hunt, page 12. 6 Devils to wrestle in pro tournament Event gives ASU opportunity to test itself against best in world By D a w n W State P ress agner The ASU wrestling team has gone professional. At least for this weekend, when six of the Sun Devil wrestlers will take part in the Sunkist Kids/lntemational Open. The tournaments, which will be held at various sites on the ASU campus, will host a world class field of profes­ sio n al w re stle rs, in c lu d in g G o o d w ill gold m ed alist Townsend Saunders. C o m p e tin g both S atu rd ay and S u n d ay , the ASU w restlers w ill use this tournam ent to prepare for the upcoming collegiate season and to qualify for the USA wrestling developmental tours to Europe. “We have a few Wrestlers that are national team material and are of national team caliber." ASU Assistant Coach Zeke Jones said. “This event will test them at the elite level. This is a good opportunity for them to com pare themselves to the professionals.” ASU will enter some of its top wrestlers in this tourna­ ment including 1994 All-American Steve St. John and Eric Albarracin who is ranked No. 2 in the nation in freestyle wrestling. Also competing for the Sun Devils are Rottom Tal-Shahar. Paul Gagich, Matt Suter and Casey Strand. For Suter. a redshirt freshman, this competition is right up his alley. “I started freestyle wrestling when I was in sixth grade,” Suter said. “I’ve probably had just as many freestyle tour­ naments as I’ve had scholastic matches, so it won’t be that hard to adapt.” ■ However. Suter said he is expecting very tough competition. “1 don’t think this will be above my head, but I’ll be wrestling guys a lot better than me and I realize that,” Suter said. “But that also presents me with a good opportunity to maybe come out with the big upset and make a name for myself that way.” The competition will host teams from over eight countries including Belarus, Mexico, Canada and Japan, all of which arc considered to be the top wrestling nations in the world. T urn ro W r estu n g , pagf. 12. Craig Macnaughton/State Press 1994 A ll-A m erican Steve S t. Jo h n is am ong the six Su n Devil w re stle rs sch e d u le d to co m p ete in th is w eeken d ’s S u n k ist Kids/lnternational O pen. Volleyball faces W SU , U W in ‘m ust-w in’ situation B y L ee N ewman State P ress T ed C o x and th e A SU volleyb all team hope to b e eetabtatin g th is w eeken d w hen the S u n D e v ils h o st W ashing ton and W ashington State. After failing to meet their expectations in the first half o f the season, the I6th-ranked ASU volleyball (earn is now facing a must-win mentality as they await their final six games. ASU’s opponents this weekend, Washington State and Washington, are also in a must-win predicament The Sun Devils battle the Cougars tonight and the Huskies Saturday at the University Activity Center. “W e’re all in that unenviable position that we. must win.” ASU Coach Patti Snyder said. “We need to go 5-1 over oar final six games. If we go 4-2, we’re going to be on the tournament bubble.” ' Seeing how ASU still has to face top-ranked, undefeat­ ed Stanford in Palo Alto, Calif., the Sun Devils realize they have to beat the teams they should beat to be assured o f an NCAA tournament berth. “We need to win both matches,” redshirt freshman Hilary Clark said. “We could beat both o f them, and we should beat both o f them.” ASU (12-8 overall, 6-6 Pac-10) is one game behind b o th team s in the P a c -1 0 . T he S un D e v ils b eat W ashington State in Pullman, Wash, on Oct. 8, but the night before were beaten by the Huskies in a match that included a 15-0 drubbing in game four. “We made a 1 i e Jeremy Stein Dawn Wagner Sports Editor AsstSports Editor record: 12-12 Arizona at Philadelphia A l ■ J zy ASU at Oregon Now over to the land of little talent, no competition and overpaid, whiny players — the Eastern Conference. Who will be the contenders this year? New York and Indiana. These are the only two teams that have any sort of talent. OK, I guess we can look at Orlando, but can Shaq carry an entire team on his shoulders? I doubt it. The Eastern Conference doesn't deserve much more attention than that. All of the talent is in the west this sea­ son as it was last year. Enough said. Finally, there arc a couple of teams and players who deserve a little e*tra recognition. • The team w ith the best attitu d e: The New Y ork Knicks. Any team that refuses to abide by the new handchecking rules the NBA has set up to stop rough play deserves some credit. Why should a team that’s made it this far with its tough defense be forced to stop it? If you can't stand the fouls, stay off of the court. • The teams who will once again fail miserably despite the hype surrounding them: Orlando and Golden State. For anybody who watches basketball on a regular basis, these two choices are self-explanatory. • The “we-need-to-do-som ething-about-the-w ay-ourplayers-look” team: The San Antonio Spurs. Would some­ body please tackle Rodman and do something about those tattoos and fluorescent hair. He attracts more attention than the game itself. Come on Miss Clairol, get a clue. You’re a basketball player not an international trend setter. game with a good friend of mine who is nuttier than I am about basketball, which is very, very rare. He and I were both amazed at how well the team worked together and how every com bination on the court was effective and exciting to watch. The Phoenix Suns bench could match up against any starting lineup in the NBA and be able to hold its own. What a bonus for a team that may be without Barkley for the first couple of games. Their raw talent alone will be able to bypass any compe­ tition this season. Add in some great coaching from Paul Westphal and we have a world championship team in the making. For the rest of the Western Conference, look to San Antonio to put up a good fight. Dennis Rodman and David Robinson are two of the best players in the NBA, and they should really light it up this year. That is, if Rodman can stay out of trouble long enough to actually play. As usual. Seattle will give the Suns a run for their money in the Pacific Division, but Shawn Kemp can’t lead a team all by himself. That and the temper of George Karl are the only two things holding Seattle back from the Western Conference title. One last note about the Western Conference. Golden State will not manage to rise out of the pit of despair it has been in the past couple of seasons. The amount of advance praise the Warriors havè received is way overblown. record: 14-10 1 k c Dan Miller e Lee N ew m an Todd Kelly Cardinals Reporter ASU Fo'otball Sports Reporter record: 13-11 record: 11-13 record: 8-16 m Philadelphia 21 A rizon a 14 Philadelphia 27 A rizon a 24 A rizon a 21 Arizona 17 Philadelphia 10 Arizona 16 Philadelphia 21 Philadelphia 17 O regon 24 ASU 24 ASU 26 ASU 20 ASU 26 ASU 10 Oregon 22 Oregon 24 Oregon 10 Oregon 14 Syracuse 24 T am pa Bay 24 G reen B ay 34 Ball State 2 0 T exas 2 0 Miami 21 C hicago 23 Detroit 24 M iam i,O hio 14 Texas A&M 13 rprh 41 JM ■ m J • 'mmÊÊÊÊÊÊf'. Underdog Pick fH ©J Sta te P ress Police Reports- Real cops. Real reports. Real strange. Y our Individual H oroscope Frances Drake CLASSIC NON «CONFORMITY MEN'S AND WOMEN'S CLOTHING SHOES AND ACCESSORIES featuring: BIG STAR • DIESEL • LUCKY • BRONX TOM TAILOR • BETSY JOHNSON AND MUCH MORE 522 S. MILL AVE., TEMPE 968-9080 PRESENT THIS AD AND RECEIVE 10% OFF ANY REGULAR PRICE PURCHASE OFFER G O O D ONLY AT MILL AVE. STORE 1 "— SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You'll enjoy increased self confidence. Things should go pretty much your way. Exercise initiative and originality. Romance may be iffy after dark. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You have a sense of inner peace. You successfully complete a project. Don't let a family member's prob­ lems get you depressed, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) At times, you worry too much, and tonight might be one of those times. However, you have much to be thankful, for. You'll receive some benefits of friend­ ship. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18). (Jitne 21 to July 22) You'll have good news about a business venture. You You’ll be invited someplace special. A loving tie sur­ might be receiving praise for your work. A difference prises you in a delightful manner. Don't let a work might arise with a friend about money. delay get you down tonight. Think positively. PISCES LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) TiioSe looking f o f d « e w place to live will obtain You’ll be hearing from someone you haven't seen in a valuable leads. A family, member has some great while. Happy news might come about a legal or edunews. At night, home life is favored. , ' .....rational concern. At-night. rise above feelings-of selfVIRGO > ” T '* * * , 1 (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) 1 YOU BORN T Q D A Y »é a hard wofleer w ith* good W eekend getaways are favored now. Iji' love, be ' sense of responsibility. You work well wiyj groups spontaneous and open. Some might take up a new and often are creatively talented. You have good hobby. A family matter may concern yoii after dark. insights into others. Some are drawn to a counseling LIBRA : i or teaching career, Njedicjne might appeal to you: (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You gre more sensitive than you sometimes let on. You might be making a major purchase for the home. Birthdate of: Art Carney, actor; W alter Cronkite, The day's financial developments Jare positive; It news broadcaster; and.Markie Post, actftss. might be slow going where job interests are coitr ; cemed. v /(, ■ '" ©1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. For Friday, Nov. 4, 1994 ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr. 19) You'll be receiving some good financial news, and you also might meet with new chances for business success. Avoid worrying too much at night. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) , A partner will share some good news with you. Social plans are likely to be made on the spur-of-themoment. Stay away from depressed types tonight. GEMINI . (May 2 1 to June 20) You might receive a raise, promotion or fortunate new assignment. In some way, it will be a great day for job interests. Some might buy a pet. CANCER . - 4 ^ '.r '?■ r , ' v Y - : V ó # . , ; i Y ' : C lassifieds Pa»e 14 S t a t e P ress Friday, November 4, 1994 Notice to our readers:« B efore responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-172f. ' ---------------------- \ Home ia a place you can scratch any place you itch: -Henry Ainsley RENTAL SHARING M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 3BD 2B A h o u se, U n iv e rsi­ ty/Priced $330 + 1/2 ut. incl mo. Maid serv., n/s. 921-9421 David. AVAIL NOW! 1 rm in 2 bd, 1 ba apt. M cClintock & Broadway. Rent + util negotiable. Call Les­ lie, 350-91^^ M/F, RESPONSIBLE, neat but not anal. $275 incl. all util, but phone, w/d. 730-1989. RM TE N EED ED 4 2bd 2ba @Coral Point, wlkin closets, fire pi, nice! N/s, m or f, mve in 121, $250/mo 4 util 644-0567. STILL LOOKING- female rnimte Tot 2bd mobile honré, quiet, stud­ ious, $275/mo. 894-5386. ROOM S FOR RENT AN N O UN CE­ MENTS WE BUY & SELL USED LEVI'S! We pay up to $15 for 5 0 1 s BBHJEAN BUYER C all for D etails 947-8245 •1810 Scottsdale Rd (between Curry & McKellips) 5 minutes from ASU! SPACIOUS 1 bedroom room for rent! includes full bathroom. Util­ ities included in rent! Close to campus and only $l00/mo. Call Scott for more inform ation at 784-9674. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE 2BD;2jBA. Í1Ó0 sf condo, 400yd from ASU; $55K. pg# 205-3063; Jean, at Dan Schwartz Rlty. CLOSE TO ASU. 2 master bdrm suites, f/p, ail appl.. poóL Spá. tennis court, $64 K; Peggy Pearson Re/Max 838-7772. ''•;. . * .>■' ENJOY' THE lifestyle at Hayden Square.; Fabulous 2bd. 2bacohdq. fireplace, pool, spa. exc cohd. neyer rented. S93K. Call Karen Bolwar Realty. 951 -8578. PRINTER RIBBONS! $2.50/ea, 6/box. Apple Imagew rite r, Epson L Q 800, Epson LQ1000. Guaranteed. 641-5058. SWEATSHIRTS L-XXX. various beer logos.Call Jeff or lv msg 1-800-US1-LOGO M OTORCYCLES MAC PLUS and Imagewriter IL G reat fo r w ord p rocessing, games, you name it. $500. Call Melinda, 941-5960. 80 HONDA CT110 trail bike. 900 original miles, very nice. $475 obo. 838-4573. MACINTOSH COMP Complete system including prin tef only $500. Chris, 1-800-289-5685. ROCK GARDEN WOMENS BLADES, size 7-1/2. never used, worth $290, asking $150. Call Linda, 921-3523. 40 line monster BBS w/20,0004 files, chat, games, Internet mail, online pizza, more! 602-220-0001 25‘ & 27" color console TV, remote, w/stereo sound, $150 & $175.19* remote $100.19‘ $65, 495-1273. JEWELRY MACK: THE GATHERING Arizona's Largest Selection of Single Cards Po p C ulture C lassics 35th Ave/Bethany Home Rd. (Behind Smitty's) 841-2301 ALWAYS BUYING jeweliy. Inclu: gold, ster., pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill , Ave. Tempe Center 968-6074. HERITAGE DIAMONDS. Cus­ tom quality, lowest price. Com­ pare our prices & service to an­ yone's! Price/Southem 820-0833. AUTOMOBILES SCASH TODAY!$ FURNITURE KINGSIZE SOMMA bed - Best sle^p you can get! Retails around $800 - yours for only $400. Call Melinda, 941.5960. KlTCrtEN TABLE, 42“ octgn, 4 chairs, alm ond contem porary w/oak trim. 661-7292. $ 150: SOFA- SET, dinette, bed, futon, -day bed, sleeper.entertainment ctr/Cheap! 962-0749. I buy all used cars, trucks, mist, items. Cal) AL 994-4369. ; BICYCLES CANNONDALE MTN. bike, xInt shape, DX 8XT equip., $475, . ready 4 mtns. Rob 838-5860, N1SHIKI BRAVO Mtn bike XInt shape, Shimano gearing, in­ cludes U-lock. $ 130.784-9463. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES? . DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE POSITIONS FULL & PART TIME AVAILABLE AT: PAPA G O PA R K y iljá g é . 2 story 2bd/2ba. loft, park view . Assume. $5000 CTM. 968-9955' ? EXCELL AGENT SERVICES Y O U N EE D ■3208 W. Glendale Ave. B oy O f T he Week COMPUTERS . Göod Communications/Customer Service Abilities; Type -25WPM,.Excellent.Grammatical Skills . • B e s e e r f! . APARTMENTS ASU AREA 1 bedroom ap art­ m ents fro m $ 3 If) & u p per month hot incl. util; 966-8838. At Papago Park V illag e. 2bd. new carpet, clo se to pool, ready for you! $69,900. B o b B u llo c k R e a l t y E x ec u t iv e s TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT FOR RENT 3 bd 2ba TH, 1 mi to ASU.. New carpet, new paint, 1 car garage, plus carport, back­ yard. $650/tnp. 899-1954. PAPAGO PARK Village 1 - 2bd, w/d, upstairs, 2 pools. $70Q/mo. Greg, 906-0085 WHY RENT? You can buy using FHA'S Student Home Loan Pro­ gram , c all f o r d e ta ils, P eg g y Pearson. Re/Max 838-7772. LEARN TO fly from a FAA Cer­ tified flight instructor. $20 Intro Flight 921-0986. TRAVEL 1 ROUND trip, Phoenix to De­ tro it, M I. N orthw est A irline. Thanksgiving wknd, Nov. 23; re­ turn N ov, 27. $411. A sk fo r Sharon, 967-2083 or 491-5247. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. 1 also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. ROCK CLIMBING guided trips 209-4913. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CHRISTMAS HELP for cheese store in Tempe. Call 966-7211 ext. 250. EUROPEAN HEATH Spa hir­ ing, receptionists, spa attendants, p/t & f/t, flex hrs, need person­ ality plus. Need ambitious quali­ ty indivduals. 496-0554, 2468530. COPY SHOP - Opening for re­ sponsible & organized indiv. Du­ ties incl operation o f copiers & com puter grap h ics work. Day/wknd hrs. Contact Rob or John, A lternative Copy Shop, Tempe Center, Mill & University. CUST SVC REP Maestro Communications, Inc. is a travel publishing enterprise that is looking for one customer serv­ ice rep to work the Phx area. This opportunity is part-time, requires your own vehicle, and takes less than one hour a few times per month. You'll make $25 per serv­ ice call. Fax resume o r letter to Mike Masters, 51 (£735-2443. DELIV DRIVERS, flex eve hrs, $ 10+/hr incl tips. N Scottsdale: Takeout Express, 494-9974 days. HELP WANTEDGENERAL EARN SUBSTANTIAL money ■ & free trips by .prpmbting Spring Break. IÇP, 1-800-327-6013. $363.60. SELL72 funny cpllegeTshirts-Profit $363i.60. Risk-free, Choose from 19 designs. Free cat­ alog 1-800-700-4250. EMBROIDERY MACHINE operator, day shift, will train. 24th St. & University; 437-3505. ; $7.45 7 START, 10 retail open­ ings. No exp. req, flex hrs, schol­ arships. AH m ajors, call 12-4, 968-4797. KENNEL WORKER needed p/t. Must be neat, dependable. 7311 E. Thomas, Scottsdale 945-7692. ♦EARN $7/HR!* S etting free appointm ents for health services. Fiesta Mall area. : 470-1828 anytime, 10 PACKERS & shippers needed p/t & f/t, No experience needed. Flex hrsi: $6 & $7/hr. Autoiti,,’| 5226 $; 3,1st PI. Phx, 243-5200, Mr Cook, ANSWERING SERVICE, grave­ yard. Wed & Thurs. Scottsdale.. 947-7351; ‘ . A SU A lu m n i lo o k i n g f o r ju n io rs, seniors, o r co n tin u in g students for p /t security work. Starting wage based on experi­ e n c e . M u st h av e p h o n e a n d reliable tra n sp o rta tio n . H ours available 2 4 -h r basis including weekends. O n e location 2 miles fro m ca m p u s. C all 9 6 1 -1 1 6 1 ext. 3 9 4 , ask fo r G reg C laus, 7 am -5 p m , M -F o r leave m es­ sage at 420-1193 anytim e. EX PER IEN C ED PR O FE S­ SIO N A L te le m ark eter, ID S/ AMEX Financial Advisors. $7$9 /h r DO E. C all T ony 8331809, . IRRIGATION SYSTEM M ain­ tenance Worker- Two part-time temporary positions available. November thru April, minimum 4 hrs per day , m prning/afternoon. $7 per hour. Apply 16838 E. Palisades, Fountain Hills, or call 837-9660. LEASING POSITION, f/t, ex ­ perience in sales, personable & professional appearance. Apply at 1255 E. University, Tempe. A medical office in Scottsdale needs p /t fro n t and back office person. W ill train . Good advancement potential. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. Suite 108 Please apply in person. N O SELLING Telephone Research Survey Flex hours available Tues-Fri .2-9:30pm & ‘Sat. 9-5 Start at $5.50/hour plus bonuses Higginbotham Associates 829-3282 $ 7 .0 0 PER HOUR - FULL BENEFITS Zales Regional Credit Center is seeking motivated individuals for. Compétitive Salary.. Great Benefits Package, Bonuses. "'• Team Orientated-Environment : P/T COLLECTORS HOURS: M-F 5-9 p.m.& 2 Saturdays per month 9-lp.m. I f interested apply in person: 998-2992 iJESER T PALMS, lease take­ o v er D ec, M ar. L g . . 1 bd : $415/mo. 829-8186; Y O U W ILL RECEIVE AIRPLANES HELP WANTEDGENERAL 4250 E. Camelback Rd., Sie 300K, Phoenix, AZ 85018 M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 8am-5pm, Mon-Fri. A-A-ACHOOO! D O YOU SUFFER FROM ALLERGIES? CABLE BOX - All channels 1- year warranty. W ill deliver. $150.285-9052. > Statt Statt ClutHMi NS4HÍ ALL POSITIONS offer excellent paid training and a competitive salary and benefits package through: ZALE CORPORATION 6 0 ” LE C LER C Jack Loom w/bench & supplies. $600 obo. . Like new. 963-1622 lv tnsg. HIGHRIE>GE SPO R T SM A N backpack. Rugged, durable 600 denier polyester, water resistant foam padded strap, reinforced : corners for school/hiking. Send check or money order for $19 4 $2 s&h to KDI. 2121 S. Mill. Ste 102, Tempe, AZ 85282. EOE M/F/H/V Qualified candidates who are allergic to cats, ragweed, or grasses are needed tor a tour-visit study in testing a new eye drop. ✓ Must be at least 18 years old ✓ Must experience red Itchy eyes during allergy attacks the world's largest jewelry retailer. If you would like to become part of our success, we invite you to find out more about these opportunities. Apply in Person « u n i, jew elers 9a.m. - 4 p.m., m -f 1221 N. College Ave. #101 r a ir r ' ■ Financial Services Tempe, AZ 829-5804 Equal Opportunity Employer U p t o $ 3 0 0 .0 0 financial re im b u rse m en t upon co m p letion o f stu d y APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Call 2 5 2 -9 8 2 5 CLINICOS Phoenix, AZ SUN DEVIL STADIUM '94 Football Casa Grande A DA *>«*» i f 1? AJ T* G i 3 I....... ■ fO>ElSLFoiT A r A R l M C / l T J FIRST MONTH S RENT* Football u a s b n for the Cardinals and Sun Devils has begun I W e have the following part-time and fuH-time posi­ tions available at Sun Devil Stadium : Catering/ Skybox • Banquet Servers • Skybox Attendants • Runners Kitchen • Assistant Storeroom Clerks • Cold Preps • Utility Stew ards Maintenance Private Club Part-time. Must have general m aintenance knowledge. • Banquet Servers Warehouse Clerks Apply in person Monday - Friday, 8 a.m . to 1 p.m. or 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. at: Fine Host, Arizona State University, Activity Center, Room 188, (602) 96S-6607. e e o m/f /w d y fZ*"Í LET’S TALK TURKEY •$8-$ 10/H our Average $ 7 .50/H o u r G uaranteed Paid T raining •P leasant W orking E nvironm ent Part-tim e Shifts ; E arly AM, AM, AFT, EVE •W eekends Shifts Available •C onvenient Location N ear ASU D ialA merica M arketing In c . is Looking for A rticulate, M otivated Individuals. Gall T oday HELP WANTEDGENERAL LOOKING FOR hew faces. Dynam ic E n terp rises M odeling Agency. We need movie extras: 8 girls, 5 giiys. Also accepting ap­ plications for m o d els.C all8 6 l2116 for appts. MARKET RESEARCH positions. Computer assistant (1) and phone interviewers (2). F/t, p/t. days or eves. Tempe. 967-4441. M O D E LS/M O V ÍE EXTRAS All types needed for music ,video. Pay $300 per day ; 266-6224. PHÓNÉ SURVEYS, ndt 'sales. Market research co located near II O/Baseline needs help, p/t shifts MvTh 5-9pm & Sat 9- 3pm; Must be dep & enjoy phones Qfc exp desired; $5/ft7 Emily; 438-2800. SKI RESORT JOBS Cal} for a job at nation wide ski resorts! Ski Venture 619-683-2300, HELP WANTEDFOO D SERVICE C O R K 'N C L E A V E R Acc. apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t, concern W/appearance, reliablility & personality are important. Apply in prsn. M-F 2-5pm. or by appt. 5101 N . 44th St. 9524)585. COSMIC PIZZA now hiring exp pizza cooks, del drivers, daytime sandwich makers & nighttim e flyer distributors. We offer flex hrs, com petitive w ages, a fast track to mgt & great working conditions. Apply 1523 R Apache Blvd. (No phone calls please). D RIVERS W ANTED fo r sub shop; ft/pt, own car. $5/hr + tips. Munch-A-Lunch.-Too. .4640 E. Elwood, FTtx. 968-6775. ; FLA KEY JA K ES, hom e o f A m erica's b e st;b u rg e r & the Greeks home away from Home now hiring cooks, prep cooks, counter help & bussers: Stop by for application between 2-4, NE corner o f Rural & U niversity, Temps... 'START WORKING oow! Work until finals, leave for the holiday break & return back to work. The ASU Teiefund: understands stud­ ent schedules & offers flex hrs. FOOD SERVERS W é contact alumni & parents to. Scottsdale Embassy Suites' 4th update info, info'rm about a d ­ vancements at. ASU & look for ft- . Floor Grill, .is currently, hiring exp'd food servers, h.rly rate of náncial support. Call 965H67.54. S3.09 + tips, uniforms, provided., great work atmosphere' Apply in STUDENTS-$6+ O ur com pany;is expanding its ; person to Human Resources. 5001 current marketing force in both N . Sctsdi Rd M/T/Th/F. 8:30surveys;& sales. Flex hrs. I blk !0:30am ¿2-4pm , east of campus. Exc compensa" lion.package. 784-2270 M-F. FOOD S ER VERS, varied shifts,, TAKE MY car tb NH. no charge ; 7 day x. great tips. Apply 10-5,. plus 1 pay gas DriA'ing record. 850 S-, Ash; Tempe, or call 968required. 24iO-.-3510. 9935. TAKEOUT EXPRESS Order taker, flex eve hrs. $5/hr. td... Vtart; .,;N: Scottsdale 494-9974; 9*1-9 »44 (eves). , THE-PEAKS at Papag© Park has a porters position availabk. flexi­ ble hours, weekends a ;must. C alf 275-4466 o r stop by at 52st & McDowell. WRESTLING Perfect p/t job. Flex hrs. Need . athletically inclined people to work as p ro -sty le w restlin g partheis. No exp nec. must be at least 1.8 yrs old. 110-160 tb s ;: SlO/hr to start. Send name, ad­ dress, phone, age. height, weight & exp to: W: Duna, 4409 N: 16th St., A -130, Phoenix, AZ 85016 HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE BLIMPIE SUBS And Salad s. 18-24 hrs, m ust work Sat 8t Sun. Apply in per­ son. Broadway/Rural. CARDlNAL-S PIZZA now hiring cooks; Also delivpiy drivers, $7-$ 10/hr. Apply in person. 1340 E. Apache Blvd. P age 15 Friday, N ovem ber 4, 1994 S t a t e P r ess H O ST/H O STESSES. FT/PT. Apply; after 11 am a t Monti’s,: 3 W. 1st S t. Tempe: 967-7594. HOSTESS/HOST: DAY & night s h ifts , apply at 8 5 0 S. A sh, Tempe or call 968-9935. NOW HIRING: serv'ers, bussers. dishwashers, exp not req. Native New Yorker. Alma School/Wamer, Chandler, or Gilbert Rd./Freeway. Mesa. PART-TIME DAYS. 10:3(^3:00. Must work week days & week­ ends. Apply in person. Blimpie Subs S: Salads, 9 1I E. Broadway ♦ATTENTION* Phi 11y fee has ju s f opened & is. now hiring for irnmed. openings in mngmt, sales. & counter help. Fun working atmosphere & great advancement potential! FA & pA. Call 968-6766 or apply in person btwn 9-5 at 1301 E. University #128. next to Beauvais Gym-; p T DA YS, 10:30-3:00 M ust ; work days/wknds. Apply in person Blimpie Subs & Salads. 91.1 . E. Broadway. THE PICNIC COMPANY GOURMET CAFE “N ew Times Best of Phoenix" O pening a new location in Scottsdale. H iring full tim e & part-time: Sandw ich M aker, C ounter and Delivery. RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES WAIT STAFF needed for busy breakfast/tunch cafe M -F, hrs 10am-2pm (flexible.) 967-6610. DRIVE A Mercedes, earn $ 10,000 a month income. 24 hour. msg. 351-3189 PETE’S 19TH TEE L 2 fo r 1 H A P P Y H O U R WANTED: HOST Mon,'EH, Sat, $5/hr +■ tips. Call Theresa, 9987487- Baby Kay’s Cajon, $cotts. Buy any food item at the regular 1 price & receive the second item i of equal or lesser value FREE! Valid 4 8pm daily, all day Sunday CMICACilE'S j ATA G IT A . Y ou’are the' best Dot! I'm so glad you'll be active tom orrow . C o n g ratu latio n s! Love, Mom. CASH FOR college. 900,000 grants avail. No repayments ever. Qualify imme^. 1-800-243-2435. AFA KACTE* W ell, it's here! . The darkest of all nights will pre­ pare you for the brightest of days in Alpha Gam! Way to go! Hope you are Wearing all white and are psyched for toinght! 8am will come sooner than you think! Loy­ ally iti; Efl - Donna. 1 825 W. University • 894-8387 HELP WANTEDSALES SERVICES AFA JAIME I'm so excited for you! Tomorrow is going to be the best day of Alpha Gam. Cher­ ish it always! Love, Aimee. RESTAURANTS/ BARS ACCEPTING APPS for pA bev­ erage cart attendants, wait staff & cashiers. Apply at 1405 N. Mill Ave.. 1 mi N. of Mill Ave Bridge at Rolling Hills Golf Course?. PERSONALS SE Corner of Hardy C H RISTM A S C A RO LER S! Quartet of professional singers available for Holiday gatherings. Accepting bookings now. Call 947-4585' ; DEMOTAPES! Recording studio offers quality & . reasonable rates for musicians. 252-2813. ; DISSERTATION. THESIS, pro­ posal help. C an à ssist With Write, rewrite, edit, stat analysis. Call Gail after 4pni. 671 -3238. BUSINESS MAJOR: In ti securi­ ties firm. Teiemrktng/admin opp, p/t flex hrs. $5/hr, 443^5723. AFA KERSTIN Tomorrow you will' be active pay attention to w hat is said I am so proud of you. Loyally in ell, Amy . SMALL ALLSTATE Insurance office heeds dedicated full time person. Will license. 483-9010. North Scottsdale location. AGD LEIF- The moment has ar­ rived! Black Friday awaits you! . EPi. Nicole, ' STATPRO CORP - Statistical analysis - Free estimate. Call tis at 837-1999. : AFA NOVITIATES, get ready for tonight and beware! We love you! 'Tomorrow is the big day! Love; the Actives. TERM PAPER trauma? Our ex­ pert w riters help you ace your next term paper. Worlds igst reséàrch resource. 1-800-243-2435 ; STU DEN TS - C ascade A uto Glass -growing, local company-; seeks outside sales reps; PT/FIV G ood m oney - reí axed .envi­ ronment, 92 Í -2255. ask for Jeff. DMS PAYS EVERY FRIDAY! S9 p/h guaranteed; We are DMS, located at 64th St. & East Thomas Rd. DMS is .looking for outbound customer service reps to make c a lls on b e h a lf Of SEA RS, TEX A CO ; CHEVRON; & many major bánks acróss the Ü.S. to their own cardholders. . Full time reps - give us perfect attendance and get $9 per hour for your first 3Q days!; _;r • . . Hiring 100; reps. CALL NOW. 994-9903 F r id a y " ^ f SATELLITE AGD SH A N N O N - yriur Mommy luvs you ! Congrats òn Iweek! Tmw's the big day! Enjoy • your ceremony & Feast of RosestfSAV ■".. .■ Saturday SPINNING ^ JEN N Y j AFA TR A C IE to n ig h t's the night! Georgia will .be watching! Morn. 99# BROTHERS OF AXA: Be at the . house at 7pm for a special chaptr er meeting!!! TALL BEERS til 9 p.m . 99# TQ HOT SHOTS ; Baiboa Cafe : . \404S- Mi« Aw., SuttO 1 0 iy HELP WANTEDCLERICAL {5 DATA entry positions avail-; able., No experience needed, ft/pt flexible hours,; $8/hr + bonus. Apply at Autom, 5226 S 3 1 s t PI, Phx Pam, 243^5200: REAL ESTA TE secretary, N. Scotts. office. Soph, o r Junior. M ust know M acintosh. A fter­ noons; M-F. Call Dick 951-8666 H a ppy H o u r M-F 3 TO 6 i Cuervo M argi Domestic D ppts Prem ium W ells tIW h HELP WANTEDC H J ^ ^ R |_ _ _ EX PER IEN C ED C H ILD care provider wanted for home care p/t daytime hrs, Ahwatukee area, references required. 759-5473. JO B OPPORTUNITIES A A CRUISE ships hiring! Earn big $$$ + free travel! ('Caribbean, Europe, etc !) No éxp nec. Staff needed for busy holiday/Spring/ summer seasons. Guaranteed sue- ; cess! Guide. 9 19-929-4398 e x t ; c3 p o i. EASY HOLIDAY cash! Make your own hours! Set your own pay rate! Fun! 350-9Q73..Uniim,$ Tt f i l R) A sso rte d S h o ts «J Cuervo M args Prem ium LI T s N O C O V ER Rural SKI RESORT jobs- Hiring for many positions for winter quar­ ter. Over 15,000'openings! For more information call: (206) 6340469 ext V59181 7337 E. 2nd St., Scottsdale 941-7070 'or 1415 E. U niversity Dr., Tempe 968-7740 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES HAVE A great idea but no mon­ ey? New capitol for expansion, inventory purchase, new ideas, concepts, and inventions. 5 lend­ ing sources guaranteed. 820-1629. TO PLEDGES- Initiation is right afoUnd th e .córner!; O nly One more week! Know your stuff! The Actives V you all! 24 HOUR turn arpundi $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ASU. Diane 829-1602. AXA - IS something or someone m issing? F ind out at to n ite ’s chapter meeting!!! AÀÀ TYPING/ word processing. $i.50/page. 15 years experience. Fast turnaround. Call 962-8075, LEGAL DRINKING age is 21! Should it be 18? Make your voice heard! Results will be sent to AZ State C apital. 1-900 988-8845. (18+, $1.49 pér min. DS Ent, 602-. 75(kÌÒ 2t) ; .'.y;--;... ACCURATE TYPING, reason­ ab le rates, quick turnaround, close to ASU 968-0305, ADOPT : LOVING childless cou­ ple Wishes to share w ith your White newborn a lifetime of love, happiness & financial security filled with music & hobbies. Medical/legal paid. Please call Claudia Eddie, 1-800-538-9934 A p p ly M onday-F riday, l-3 p m a t FRIDAY NOV.4 FREE LOST/FOUNP PUPPY FOUND on University. G erm an Shepherd mix. Needs owner or new home, very loving. Please call Amy 835-6341 asap. Join The Health Wave A national' nutritional company expanding in Arizona, Seeking leaders for manager's position,• Outstanding products great income potential. Work direedy with. M.D., consultant. Call 944-7076 PERSONALS A A lt TRACEY Thanks for my song a t form al you’re the best f l v Brown Eyed Girl. 1250 L A p a c h e 8 9 4 -2 0 2 1 AGD ACTIVES love their novi­ tiates! We hope you have 9fun IWeek! Love, the Acti ves. A FA ASHLEY, only one more night until initiation! Mommy is proud of you! TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G $2/PG, $15 résumes. Proofed. L aser. Fast, Same day. DTP, Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. j ADOPT: A happily married cout pie wishes to share a wonderful life With a newborn. We can pro­ vide á loving home, financial se­ curity & a good education; Medical/legal paid. Please call Sandra & Paul, 1*800-648-2229. A pache 894-2662 NON TOXIC envirohihentally safe cleaning products! ! ! ! Safe enough to drink !! !! Safe-Tee Pro­ ducts,; 437-4245. 4001 E. Broad­ way,vl 2A, Phx. GAMMA PHI Plèdgesr The ac­ tives love you!: You're the best! SPARK YEARBOOK is looking for students whose cars are truly unique. I f your c a r is o ld e r, faster, sexier, wilder or has more horsepow er than anyone else does; cal| us so we can interview you. 965-688 Í. 9-Close HOUSECLEAN IN G $ i ,50 PAGE indudes proofing & editing. Daily ASU pick-up & de­ livery. Phone/fax 256-0424; REACH: FOR Fun, Friends, and Success. Join now for a lifetime of experience. Applications avail­ able at the REACH Desk, 3rd floor, MU. Deadline is November 11th! Apply now! 965-2255. 1 càre ok; Mike, 965-3214. CULTURAL DANCE Of India & Music at Arts & Crafts Fair Hay­ den LaWn Today 4 1- i MÜ AB. 9 p jn .- 1 a .m . Fot a GoodTims caS 966-1300 HOUSE SITTING: Visiting prof, spring semester. No pets, lawn HAPPILY MARRIED couple are eager to adopt a baby. Adoption can be a loving option that offers a solution for the baby you love so much. It can make a tough choice less painful if you know w here & w ith who your child will be raised. Give us the chance to talk to you about the opportu­ nities & lifetime love we are. able to provide your child! C o n fi­ dential. Call anytime. Marianne/ Sam, 1-800-826-7070. NATION’S TOP resumes * Don’t pay high fees. R eceive the na­ tion's 10 leading resum es, use these to create your own. Send $9.95 to: Network Resumes, 6524 San Felipe, Ste 368, Houston, TX 77057 H AI K $ ^ Off «2 D E S I G N F ir s t T im e H a ir c u t reg u la rly S U S 16 5 th & Mill 968-9539 APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/w ord p ro cessin g . N eed it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744, ASÜ AREA typing, w/p, editing, transc'rptn, W ordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741.. ; I4VANT IT NOW! Desktop Publishing.: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. On campus ! 966-i984, TERM PAPERS, thesis, resumes, manuscripts, etc. Accurate With money-back guar. Judy, 345-9015 W /P R ESU M ES. Papers, Spreadsheets, Laser. Quick tur­ naround. Tempe/Sue 921-7715. TUTORS ~ COM PUTER HELP - Serving ASU since 1983; 838-5966; 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. TU TO R NEED ED fo r Q uark Xpress and Photoshop 4 9 1-3869. WANTED NEED CASH? We will buy your used musical instrument. Top $$ paid, Paul 548-1114. M-Sat 10-6. Is today a good day to fe ll your mother about the other night? Read your Horoscope on page 13 and find out! Friday, November 4,1994 P a g e ló > < Z A O cz 3 n * c ■< o e n o o .25 H Ul O o > State P ress