©Copyright, Slate Pr»sS, 1.994 Tempe. Arizona : An Independent Morning Daily Vol. 79 No. 63 Tuesday, November 29,1994 Plan would penalize excessive credits with higher tuition O h , w h a t a f e e lin g ! the proposal at its monthly meeting Thursday in Tucson. Students who exceed the hours would be penalized by paying out-of-state tuition for future classes — $3,7X7 for 12 or more hours compared with $914 for residents. Also under the proposal, students would pay $20 per credit hour for classes they drop if they have dropped more than 10 classes. Therefore, a typical three-credit class would cost a student $60 to drop. B y L orrie C o h en S tate P ress Students who take more than 160 credit hours to graduate and those who drop more than 10 classes will have to pay a penalty under a new plan being consid­ ered by the Arizona Board of Regents. ABOR will vote on M u n g er Torn t o T uition, p a g e 7. Column alleging stoning at Western Wall fabricated B y L isa G o n d e r in g e r L o r r ie C o h en S t a t e P ress and Mark Kramer/Staie P ress Bill Frieder. coach of the 12th-ranked ASU Basketball team , tak es a mom ent to talk with r e p o r te rs a t Sky H arb o r In te rn a tio n a l A irport a fte r re tu rn in g h o m e from th e Maul Invitational. The team returned to the Valley Friday afternoon after defeating Texas A&M, #13 Michigan, and #7 Maryland to claim the cham pionship trophy. An ASU student who wrote a column two weeks ago about a stoning that killed a quadriplegic visiting the W estern Wall in Jerusalem ? adm itted Monday that the piece was a work of fiction, SUMMERTON said two officials from the ASU School of Journalism. Mary Leigh Summerton, a senior journal­ ism student at ASU, wrote the column as a partial fulfillment for an in-depth reporting class, which is team-taught by Bruce Itule, director of student publications and Doug Anderson, director of the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism. It was published Nov. 15 in the State Press to fulfill a publication requirement for a writing contest. Summerton confessed in a closed meeting Monday with Itule. Anderson and Nancy Tribbensee. associate general counsel for ASU. But on Friday, Summerton was quoted in the Jewish News o f Greater Phoenix as saying she never wrote the article. , Summerton refused to comment to reporters after the meeting, but said she would issue a written explanation early today. Tribbensee said she could not comment on what would happen to Summerton because of the Buckley Amendment, which protects a stu d en t's privacy. She did say that Summerton's case would be sent through dis­ ciplinary' proceedings outlined in the Student Code of Conduct and possible actions could range from probation to expulsion, depending which part of the code is violated. In her column. Summerton described an incident she allegedly witnessed while on a Turn to Column, page 2. D PS assesses A SU building vulnerability to reduce crime added. She said some campus buildings were designed without Certain campus buildings present potentially dangerous consideration of safety issues. areas that could attract criminals, according to the ASU “Awareness is important because there are buildings on Department of Public Safety. campus that were constructedbefore CPTED was even These vulnerable areas include the Nelson Fine Arts considered,” she said. “We need to make people more Center, the Farmer Building, the restroom area of Ritter aware.” School, the engineering complex and the agri-business Michelle added that buildings containing large amounts complex, said Radawna Michelle, ASU DPS crime pre- of computer equipment are also prime targets for crimivention coordinator. nals, regardless of their overall safety and design. So far this year, ASU DPS has conducted vulnerability On the positive side, the Student Services Building is assessments of 23 campus locations as well as 50 parking an example of effective environmental design, Michelle areas as part o f its Crim e P revention T hrough said. In contrast to other campus buildings such as Farmer, Environmental Design (CPTED) program. the Student Services Building provides natural surveilM ichelle said the Farm er Building is a problem lance and access control. In addition, because the bicycle because “it’s difficult to observe your environment and racks face office windows, employees would be able to the surroundings.” “observe a crime in progress”if somebody tries to steal a Because of its blind corners, the Nelson Fine Arts bike. Center is also a problem, she said. “Blind comers are a Michelle said CPTED is bawd on the idea that a crimiproblem in any maze-type building. You don't know what nal does not want to commit a crime where he o f she can you’ll run into.” be observed. Landscaping, placement of windows, even ASU DPS is just now completing its vulnerability placement of office furniture are all factors in the environassessment for the Nelson Fine Arts Center, Michelle mental design concept. CPTED can be as simple as placB y Karyn R iedell S tate P ress IN S ID E STATE PRESS W eather O utlook Sunny and cool. High 65alow 34. ► ASU is supporting plans to nar­ row or possibly close University Drive in conjunction with the opening of the Red Mountain Freeway. Page 6 ► The ASU planetarium is show ­ ing images from the Hubble Space Telescope twice a week. Page 8 World/ Nation B ihac’s m ayor vow s to fig h t “to the last m an" as B osnian Serb forces e n te r the city. Page 3 ing your desk so that it’s facing the door, Michelle said. Craig Emanuel, ASU chief of police, said the department’s adherence to CPTED is evident in the day and evening campus walks that are conducted every four to six weeks to inspect shrubbery, easements and lighting levels. Bill Bess, director o f ASU DPS, said the lighting improvement project in progress in Parking Lot 40 is another example of the department’s efforts to prevent crime though modifying the environment, * This August, Michelle and Andrea Hoekstra, a summer intern, evaluated 50 of the 66 parking areas at ASU to appraise the crime risk. Only the 50 in which criminal activity was reported in 1993 were surveyed. They coneluded that in many ways the parking areas provide a “safe environment” in that only 498 crimes were reported for all 18,307 parking spaces. Most of the crimes occurred in residence hall lots or parking structures, so they recommended development of a strong partnership between ASU police and Residential Life staff members, Their other recommendations include increasing patrol of all parking areas, establishing a schedule for replacing lights, establishing a regular schedule for checking foliage ' Turn to Crime, page 7. Sports T ailback C hris H opkins and the rest o f the A SU football team saw their season com e to a heartbreaking end in th e ir onepoint loss to UofA . Page 15; W here To Find It C la ss ifie d s ................................18 C o m ic s....................................... 14 C ro ssw o rd ............ ...... 6 H oroscopes ............ 19 Opinion................. ...... ...4 Police R e p o r t............. ............ .9 S p o rts.................................. . 15 T oday ’ s A c tiv itie s .......... ..,. ..2 W o rld /N atio n .............................3 S t a t e P ress Tuesday, November 29, 1994 Page 2 Column Today Continued from page 1. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis and are printed on a space available basis. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f Matthews Center Room 15. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Faxed entries will also not be accepted. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organi­ zation. a description of the event, date, rime and the full address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space arid clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. Deadline for requests in noon the day before publication and entries will not he accepted more than three working days before publication. Only qne entry per organization per day is permitted. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Closed A.A. campus meeting. Noon, Newman Center basement/Aquinas Hail. • Society fo r C reative A nachronism — Weekly meeting. Heraldry workshop and discussion of next semester's events . 7 p.m.. MU Chrysocolla. Room 206. • C om ing O u t Discussion G ro u p — Weekly meeting. 7:30 p.m.-9 p.m.. Multicultural Student Lounge, Student Services Building, second floor. • Phi A lpha D elta P re-L aw C h a p te r - Applying to Law School? The ASU and U of A law school admission directors speak about the application process. Everyone welcome. 3:15 p.m.. COB 150, • H onors College Council —•Weekly meeting: final preprations for Renaissance Day ‘94 this Thursday. Noon. McClintock Hall Study Lounge. • Asian Business L ead ers A ssociation — General meeting: nominations for Spring 1995 positions. 7 p.m.. MU Cochise West. • NATAS — Meeting. 4:30 p.m.. Stauffer Hall Reading Room. • B aptist S tu d en t U nion— Tuesday P.M.: everyone invited to a freshman-led fellowship. Topic: "God has something special for you.” 7 p.m.. 1322 S. Mill Ave. • College R epublicans — General meeting, everyone wel­ come. 3:15 p.m.. MU Gold North, Room 203. • C h ristia n Science O rg an izatio n — Weekly meeting. 5 p.m., Danforth Chapel. • Fellow ship o f C h ristia n A thletes — Christian musician Peter Oliva performs an acoustic'set. Everyone welcome. 7:30 p.m., University Activity Center. Room 35. United Nations-sponsored trip to the Middle East with 17 other college students. She told how an unnamed European Jew in an electric wheelchair was stoned to death on a Saturday for not observing orthodox rules of the Sabbath, which prohibits the use of electricity. The day the column was published, seven angry students protested the article, calling it anti-Semitic and demanding verification. It was then that Opinion Editor A. Marjory Kaminski said State Press editors began to question the validi­ ty of the story. "There was no reason in the beginning to disbelieve her,” Kaminski said. “I'm shocked it happened. I’m sorry it had happened.’’ Further questions arose on the column when Summerton said her Mesa apartment had been broken into and that she had received threatening phone calls because of the column, yet Mesa police had no record of the incident. Also, two stu­ dents on the trip, which was actually sponsored by the AntiDefamation League, said they did not witness a man stoned to death on the day they went to the wall with Summerton. State Press editor Jason Owsley acknowledged that the paper should have verified Summerton's story before publica­ tion. but added it is not a common practice for editors to veri­ fy every thing that goes into the paper. "We trusted her to provide a complete and accurate story as we do with all of our reporters," Owsley said. “We had no reason to believe otherwise. The red flags that should have gone up dicin’t, largely because of the trust we put in her and the recommendation we got from the school of journalism. I feel she has betrayed that trust. But I guess that’s always a risk you have to take when putting out a daily paper.” Jeffrey Ross, national director of the department of campus affairs and higher education for the ADL. said it was physical­ ly impossible for the incident Summerton described to occur. Ross accompanied the students on the trip and said they were at the Massada (a fortress built in the time of King Herod) and at the Dead Sea on the day Summerton claims to have been at the Western Wall. "On the day in question, I can assure you no one was throwing anything but good cheer,” Ross said. “She took something which had a gem of truth and changed it around and submitted it as her own. I assume she felt she could get away with it. The whole thing is so sad because when you read the piece it comes out as rather defamatory and antiSemitic.” ANDERSON'S FIFTH ESTATE $10FreeGift The holidays are here again and it is time to think of family and friends. A rizona State University students, faculty and staff have always been an important part of our business, supporting us for over 26 years. In this spirit we take great pleasure in offering you a gift and a sincere "thank you" for your continued support. Please bring this certificate to o u r Mill Avenue store and choose your $10.00 FREE GIFT in merchandise. No purchase required. Thank you again and m ay a b rig h t and prosperous holiday season bring happiness to you and your family. $10 Certificate ■S Please bring this certificate to o ur Mill A venue store and choose your $10.00 FREE GIFT in m erdiandise. N o purchase required. Exp. 12/24/94. , N ame A ddress . Both Anderson and Itule apologized for the column, and said they thought the reason the story initially got past them —• and State Press editors — was a lack of education about the Middle East. “I feel badly that along the way none of us ever saw any warning signs whatsoever,” Anderson said. “It was a very powerful first-person story — there was no indication that it was anything but what she said she observed.” Itule agreed. “I’m very sorry the red flags didn’t come up and I apolo­ gize to the people who were offended by the column,” he said. “I feel personally responsible for it because I did read it before it was published. I believed in the integrity of the writer and did not ask her to verify the column. For that I am sorry.” One Jewish activist said an apology is not good enough because he feels there was a lack of journalistic ethics. “I think it would be appropriate for the professors (Itule and Anderson), who perpetrated this blood libel to resign," said David Don. president of the Jewish Law Student Association. “This raises major questions of standards at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and the competency of these two professors,” Rabbi Robert Kravitz, area director for the American Jewish Committee, said the effects of Summerton’s column will reach far beyond the State Press. “There will be a ripple effect from this,” he said. “Those who publish hate literature and those who are hateful people will usd the column and disregard the second one (this one): It will be used to promote vicious anti-Semitism and bigotry.” Some m em bers of the Jewish com m unity agree Summerton’s column has caused irreparable damage. However, Rabbi Barton Lee thinks some good can come out of the situation. _ “I hope everyone has learned that you have to check your facts first and that with any reporter there can be a problem,” Lee said. “The positive thing that can happen, judging from the response of (Owsley and Itule), is that we will put in place some mechanism so we can alert people as they come into their positions at the State Press as to what should set off those red flags.” ’ .' Owsley said as a result of the incident, the State Press will scrutinize more closely all future stories, especially those that are controversial or have far-reaching implications. ►THE RUSH 75$ WELL, WINE & DRAFT ALL NIGHT Featuring DJ Soulman spinning a dynam ic mix of d an ce, alternative & house music The Original Trash Disco An Evening of 70's Disco Music $1 AN Y DRINK 8-10 $2 AN Y DRINK 10-1 University Sporting G oods 1038 S. M ill A ve., Tem pe AZ 968-7725 UPCOMING CONCERTS University sp o r tin g g ood s 1 0 3 8 S . M il l A v e ., T e m p e , A Z 9 6 8 -7 7 2 5 Tickets a t Dillards Su n d ay 12/4 MOUNTAIN - Leslie West, Corky Laing a n d Jim m y Hendrix E xperience bassist Noel Redding Su n d ay 12/11 JOHN STEWART 6820 E. Fifth Avenue, Scottsdale 994-4168 W orld/N ation STATE PRESS Page 3 Tuesday, November 2 9,1994 West concedes Serb victory in Bosnia W hite House: U.S. troops will not intervene in ground combat WASHINGTON ÍAP) — With the Serbs blatantly ignoring the United Nations and NATO in their war against Bosnian Muslims, the Clinton administration said today it isn't prepared to send U.S. troops into combat but would consider a request to help evacuate United Nations forces from the region. As President Clinton's senior advisers prepared to meet today at the White House to discuss the crisis, officials said their options were limited, and that the 2.0(H) Marines sent to waters off Yugoslavia would be used only to help evacuate peacekeepers if they were withdrawn. Defense Secretary William Perry, speaking today at a photo session in the Pentagon, said the U.N. peacekeepers in Bosnia — a variety of forces from several nations — are providing a “very valuable function in mitigating the violence” and he would not like to see them withdrawn. However, he added. "If any coùntries ... need some assistance in moving, and come to the U.S. for help, we would seriously consider that request.'’ Queried about the prospects for U.S. troops entering the ground war there. Perry said there was no way “of forcing peace" in the region short of putting in “very large num­ bers of ground troops” and that neither the United States nor NATO was interested in taking such a step. On Sunday, Perry said the Muslim enclave of Bihac, a U.N. "safe area” in northwest Bosnia, appeared doomed even if NATO renews air strikes. “They can punish the Serbs, but they cannot determine the outcome of the ground combat," Perry said. And White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said today: “I don’t think this country is prepared to deploy our forces in a civil war." “It's obviously a deteriorating situation and our only , hope is that at sonie point the parties recognize that there' s no use in continuing the kind of carnage that is going on there.” Panetta said in making the rounds of morning television talk shows. “It’s not an optimistic situation. There are not a lot of good choices here." Panetta added “There’s no question from a military point of view, the Serbs have got 70 per­ cent of the land, they’re continuing to move aggressively around Bihac and it doesn't appear that even the use of air strikes can deter them. So it really is a situation that right now is in control of the Serbs." Perry, speaking on NBC’s Meet the Press, gave one of the administration's most pessimistic assessments yet of the situation in Bosnia. “It seems that the Serbs have demonstrated military superiority on the ground." Perry said. He saw “no prospect" of the Bosnian government winning back any of the 70 percent of the country held by Serbian forces. ■ Senate Republican leader Bob Dole. R-Kan., also said on NBC that the international effort to end the strife in Bosnia had failed, and said it was time the 24,000-member U.N. peacekeeping force and its leaders withdraw. “It may be time to get the U.N. protection forces out of Associated Press Rebel Bosnian Muslim troops fire a mortar toward Bosnian government lines three miles west of Bihac. Serb forces, supported by the rebel Muslims, entered the city of Bihac Monday, engaging Its defenders in hand-to-hand combat. Fighting in Bihac hand-to-hand SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — Serb forces were reported in hand-to-hand combat with Bihac defenders today after pounding the U.N, safe haven in northwest Bosnia with heavy artillery and mortar fire. Serb fighters from Bosnia and neighboring Croatia control about one-third of the U.N.-declared “safe area” in Bihac and its immediate surroundings. Their forces reportedly shelled the Bihac regional hospital, which is overflowing with 2,000 patients and running dangerous­ ly short of supplies. The Serbs’ war gains have embarrassed the interna­ tional community. Three NATO air strikes on Serb posi­ tions last week were ineffective and repeated interna­ tional appeals for a cease-fire have been ignored. The Bosnian commander in the region and Bihac mayor reported Serb forces 250 to 500 yards from the Bihac town center and moving house to house in the last government stronghold in northwest Bosnia. They claimed hand-to-hand combat occurred in some cases but there was no independent confirmation. “We don't know how long we can hold out,” Bihac Mayor Hamdija Kabiljagic told foreign journalists in a conference call. About seven hours earlier, he told reporters in a ham radio hookup that city residents “have nothing else to do but to fight until the last person.” “Defenders have decided not to retreat.” he said. ‘The front line is really strong now and defenders are not retreating.” The Bosnian commander of the 5th Corps, Gen. Atis Dudakovic, reported 94 government soldiers killed or wounded Sunday, and 114 casualties today. There was no confirmation immediately available, nor casualty fig­ ures from the Serb forces. Dr. Bekir Tatlic of the regional hospital told reporters an explosive device from the Serb side struck near the entrance of the hospital today, blowing out most of the windows and forcing Bangladeshi peacekeeping troops to take refuge behind the building. Tatlic said staff had run out of bandages and plasma to treat the injured, including 64 children. Bandages were being washed out and re-used, he said in a confer­ ence call from a hunker near the hospital. Villages where Muslims lived have been set ablaze by Serbs from Bosnia and the Krajina region of Croatia. The Bihac offensive has sunk hopes for a negotiated set» dement in a war that over 31 months has left 200,000 Turn to Yugoslavia, page 10. Turn to Ú.S. Response, page 10. Jeffrey Dahmer slain by inmate in W isconsin prison M ADISON. Wis. (AP) — Jeffrey chocolate factory worker. The extent of his depravity soon became Dahmer. who confessed to murdering 17 men and boys and cannibalizing some of clear. In 1978, he began preying on men them , was attacked and killed Monday and boys ranging from age 14 to 33, luring them with the promise of a good time. Most while cleaning a prison bathroom. never left. A fellow inmate was taken into custody Dahmer drugged, strangled and dismem­ at the prison, said Michael Sullivan, the state corrections secretary . A bloody broom bered his victims, having sex with one handle was found at the scene, but Sullivan corpse and eating parts o f others. He flushed brains down the toilet, kept skulls didn’t know if it was used to kill Dahmer. “There was a great deal of blood in the and other body parts as mementos and area of the attack,” corrections department saved one or two hearts — “to eat later,” he spokesman Joe Scislowicz said. Dahmer, once said. His crimes came to light when a hand­ who had extensive head injuries, died at a cuffed man flagged down police and led hospital, Scislowicz said. “Oh my Godt My son! How could this officers to the renking apartment. happen?” Dahmer’s mother. Joyce' Flint, , Dahmer. 34. was cleaning a bathroom at said when TV’s Hanl.Co/iy informed her of the Columbia Correctional Institute when his death. "Jeffrey’s dead. They killed he was attacked. An inmate who beat his him." she sobbed on the phone from her wife to: death in á parking lot was injured in the assault. The suspect was working with Fresno, Calif, home. In July. 1991, a horrified nation watched them. Sullivan said, adding that it was pre­ ’ on TV as police lugged oil drums packed mature to discuss a motive. A guard overseeing the three inmates on with body parts from the one -bedroom apartment of the sands -haired, brown-eyed clean-up duty had just left the basketball court adjoining the bathroom when the attack occurred, Sullivan said. He did not know the whereabouts of the other guard assigned to watch the prisoners. Dahmer’s body was found in the staff’s bathroom-shower area. The injured inmate, Jesse Anderson, whose murder case drew wide attention in Wisconsin, was found in the prisoners' bathroom across the court. Dahmer. convicted in all but one of the sex killings in Milwaukee and Ohio, said he sometimes killed to keep the men from leaving him. He was serving 16 consecutive life sentences at the maximum-security prison in Portage, about 40 miles north of Madison. -', The lawyer who represented Dahmer at trial, Gerald Boyle, wasn't surprised. , “Dahmer had a death wish, and I know that he didn’t have the gumption to do it himself, so I had predicted that the day would come when he would be killed in prison," Boyle said. And the district attorney who prosecuted Dahmer said he was distressed and that authorities should have known Dahmer’s life was in danger. “T hat's not justice. This was murder. I’m hoping that whoever did it doesn't emerge as a folk hero,” prosecutor Michael McCann said. Today’s attack at the 600-inmate prison w asn’t the first time D ahm er had been assaulted there. In July, an inmate tried to cut his throat during a chapel service, but the razor blade on the prisoner’s homemade plastic knife fell off before jt could hurt Dahmer. At the time, Sullivan said it appeared to have been an isolated incident and that Dahmer was not believed to be in imminent danger. Dahmer told police he killed his first victim on June 18, 1978, at his childhood home in Bath Township, Ohio. Steven Mark Hicks, 18, was a hitchhiker Dahmer had brought back tb the house for a couple of beers. Dahmer said he choked Hicks with a bar­ bell, smashed the body with a sledgehammer and scattered the pieces in his yard. O pinion "T j State P ress Tuesday; November 29, 1994 Pag»e 4 State Press TA JCiditorial S ta te P r e s s r e p e n ta n c e The State Press would like to apologize to the ASU community. On N ovem ber 15. the colum n “ H ear no evil, see no evil, report no evil: M iddle East terrors not always part o f new s" was run on the opinion page as a guest editorial. The story presented was gripping and wellwritten. But it wasn’t true. As far as the State Press can determine, the incident described — the stoning of a Jewish man in a electric wheelchair by a group of Hasidic Jews, due to his use of electricity on the Sabbath — simply did not occur. After independent research was conducted concern­ ing the facts, people and events involved, this is the only conclusion that the editorial board can make. This came as a shock to the State Press staff, which had published the article fully believing the author — a former reporter, assistant city editor and managing editor o f the paper — had substantiated the material involved. The State Press is firmly committed to the highest quality journalism, and does require that any information in an opinion column be substantiated. By these standards, the column should never have been published. But the State Press, like any news periodi­ cal, relies on a measure of trust and responsi­ bility in its writers. No daily newspaper has the resources to check every fact in a column or article. When a trusted, well-respected for­ mer staff member brings a column of this nature —- and when faculty members of the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism recom­ mend its publication — we trust that writer. We could not be on a plane to Israel with her; could not walk the sheets of Jerusalem at her side; could not see the Western Wall that day. We had to look through her eyes; and we did not know those eyes held a false vision. When claims were made that the column contained inaccurate information, we automat­ ically began the process of verification — and were surprised when we found our trust betrayed, our ethics ignored and our credibili­ ty tarnished by a reporter we trusted. As of this date, we formally retract die column. Though that alone isn 't enough, for the , damage has already been done — with the best of intentions, perhaps. But the road to Hell is paved with such intentions, and it is our fault that a work of fiction was pasted off on our reading public as lie t; l l r ltMe ? We can only apologize, take interna! action, and promise that, to die best of our efforts, this w o n 't happen again — that we never meant for it to happen in the first place. | Ami we hope that, as our readers, you am find it in your hearts to accept this, and to rebuild a partnership with us. STA TE P R ^ S 9 I | A L L Nothing beats the incredible attractiveness of Santa Claus “ Santa C laus is so sexy,” I mumbled under my breath as my om friend and I passed the velvety T figure upon his throne in thé mall. EVANS “You really are desperate,” she Guest Columnist said as she laughed hysterically. “Think about it, what is there in Santa Claus that you would not die for in a than?” 1 asked her, She just sat there, silently gazing at me, either contem­ plating my sanity or unable to dispute my solid claim. I highlighted a few of Santa's credentials for her and realized that neither of us would ever find a date for the party with this check sheet in hand. Santa loves children. His patience with the little cherubs perched on his lap is remarkable. As they yank at his snowy white beard, punch him in the gut and spit in his face ram­ bling off wishes, Santa continues his jolly HO, HO, HOing. Witnessing innately maternal qualities in a man is not only profoundly endearing, but innocently romantic. Santa could he the icon for fatherhood Santa is daring and strong. Lift weights and indulge on steroids, he does not. His omniscient power is purely “au natural." The strength required to carry that bulging sack of gifts and the power in those biceps to hoist himself through the chimneys is magnificent. Santa displays knightly courage as he jeopardizes his life with each delivery. He risks getting lodged in chimneys and surprise attacks by house pets. I can only imagine this man sweeping me off my feet and placing me upon his sleigh. The strength, the power, the bravery... oh, if only! Santa is reliable. A no-excuse kind of man, who stands true to his word. His annual pilgrimage across the country is a timeless tradition. Christmas Eve marks the night of delivering his faithful pledge to little boys and girls. Rain or shine, the fellow slides down chimneys delivering surprises. Santa is rich, Anyone capable of clearing out Toys-R-Us in a single night carries a few gbld cards. Money does not make a man, the man makes the money, is what 1 believe. However, in the instance of Mr. Claus, the way in which he chooses to expend his limitless funds is heroic. Santa is married. This s|mple obstacle provides the ele­ ment of challenge necessary for beginning a new relation­ ship. Any truthful woman will admit that because Santa is “taken” by Mrs. Claus, the quest for his love becomes an exciting chase. Santa loves animals. He feeds, cleans and loves eight tiny reindeer. Santa trains the boys-year round in prepara­ tion for the tiresome flight. Simply imagining this burly fel­ low coddling his prized Rudolph weakens my knees. Santa provides moral fiber. He adheres to the high stan­ dards of a father figure. He does not reward liars, pouters or criers. He makes a list and checks it twice, to find out who is naughty or nice. He knows if you have been bad or good, “... so be good for goodness sake” — if you expect more than reindeer droppings under the tree. Santa embraces morality by refusing to reward mean, lying, non-believers. Santa is not prejudiced. He employs small elves with shady green faces and pointy ears. They are the sweat and grind behind the big man. Without their munchkin crafts­ manship, Santa would not be where he is today. He is an equal opportunity employer. Santa loves food. Santa gloats in the romantic pastime of eating. He obviously steers clear of bean sprouts and rice cakes. His jello-belly symbolizes his zest for life and unin­ hibited quest for pleasure. He must anxiously anticipate the freshly baked sugar cookies I leave for him every year, because never a crumb is left. Does Santa give truth to the assertion of a good eater being a good lover? This I will never know. A romantic dinner with Mr. Claus at the North Pole is only possible in the dreams of my long winter’s nap. Santa may not be available to escort me to Christmas parties, but I will get as close to him as possible before he heads home to pack up the sleigh. In fact, this year I will sit on his lap, not when I accom­ pany my little brother, but by myself. Tori Evans is a junior journalism major. j a SON OWSLEY. Editor DAVID STROW. Managing Editor KRIS PRIORICH.............. ....................... Night Editor Readicker. GARIN GROFF......................... „.......„................ City Editor PH O TO G R A PH ER S; Theresa Boettcher, Mark Rràmer. GREG ZEME i D a ........ Am i .C ity E d iter N. Scott Trimble DAVID LASPALUÏT).................................... News Editor UNSIGNED EDITOR; lames Frusetta A. MARJORY KAMINSKI..................... .......Opinion Editor C O LU M N ISTS; Brian Anderson. Janies Frusetta, Barry CRAIG MACNAUGHTON........ ........„....„.PhotoEditor Kelley, Diana Lopez; Jamea Mahin, Mike Stevens, Chris JIM POULIN.... ......... ................................ Asst. Phpto Editor , Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whitlach. JEREMY STEIN ............. „.„.„„Sports Editor CARTOONISTS; Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. DAWN WAGNER „...... ...........Asst. Sports Editor GRAPHIC ARTIST; Yamini Prabhakara. KEN COLLINS......................... „...Magazine Editor PR O D U CTIO N ; Aaron Brutcher., Stacey Devlin, Beth ANNA UL1NICH................................Asst Magazine Editor French. Adnunna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, R E P O R T E R S ! M ika A k ik u n i. E lizab eth A ppelen, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader. Dave Weber. C h ristin a B ailey . Tirn B axter. Lorrte C ohen, D aw n S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S '. Elilily B erger, D an D eC hristinai Lisa G onderinger. Dave Proffitt. Karyn Ellstrom. Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Cameron Kerner. Riedel!, Marshall Woods. Megan Owsley, Shane Siren. Bill VanZanten. SPO R T S R EPO R TE R S; Todd Kelly. Dan Miller. Lee Newman. v Unsigned editorials reflect the view» of the editorial board, C O PY E D IT O R S ! N ick B acon, Kim H erm an, Lynn decided by a majority voted among ita 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 Stine Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room IS. Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The Stale 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 o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S t a t e P h o n e P r e ss N u m b e r s Information........... ...965-7572 Newsroom................965-2292 Magazine...................965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds..................965-6735 O pinion Page 5 Tuesday, November 29, 1994 State P ress GATT, Free Trade, Adam Smith and Hookers The hydra of economic isolation­ ism once again threatens the eco­ [ARRY R. nomic equilibrium of the past fifty years. What grew out of Dick, KELLEY Gephardt’s failed presidential bid in 1988 and festered into Jerry Brown's campaign against NAFTA, now menaces the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. When the House of Representatives votes later today, and the Senate on Thursday, to rati­ fy the GATT’s Uruguay Round agreement, the margin of victory will be closer than one would have hoped. During the 2(X)th anniversary of Adam Smith’s The Wealth o f Nations, the grand paradox is that having become more accustomed to international trade in the global village we. live in. we are less likely to recognize it. : Economic agents, be they nations or individuals, engage in trade for the same reason: to employ the greatest number of available resources in the most productive fashion. Everyday individuals, and nations, forego production opportunities in fields where they are less efficient to produce goods and ser­ vices where they are most prolific. For example. 1 did not manufacture the laptop computer 1 am composing these words on. Nor did I make the mattress that 1 am laying on or the television set Fm watching. I traded for them. How many readers of this column actually made the clothes they are now Wearing? According to Ross Perot. Jerry Brown and Pat Buchanan, a nation is poorer if it doesn’t produce all the goods and services it purchases, so by extension 1 am a ptxirer man because I don’t distill all the Bushmills that I drink. For them, trade is a zerosum game: that which your neighbor has prevents you from obtaining the same. Just as Canadians cross over the St. Lawrence Seaway to procure goods in upstate New York. Tempeans cross the Salt River to shop in Scottsdale. Is Tempe any poorer because 1pur­ chase a shirt at Fashion Square Mall rather than the Price Club? Be it cross-town, cross-country, or across the seas, trade is all the same: consumers desiring to improve their standard of liv­ ing regardless of transparent geographic boundaries. Economic isolationists cannot rebuke the benefits or com­ parative advantage of trade, so they appeal to the dreaded "trade deficit." which has become a synonym for America’s manufacturing decline. However, in the dynamic world econo­ B my, looking at only one side of the trade ledger is telling only half the story. I run a constant trade deficit with McDuffy’s Sports Bar. Day after day I buy from them, while the management purchases nothing from me. McDufiy's in turn runs a con­ stant trade deficit with their liquor distributor, which in turn runs a constant deficit with its gasoline supplier. Are we all worse off from trading with each other? Of course not — we are more produc­ tive by specializing in a spe­ cific industry, maximizing output and human welfare. If the "trade deficit” is a negative, conversely a trade surplus must be a positive. If so, then the government should entice more women into becoming hookers. Ladies of the night have a constant trade surplus since they sell a product while having to purchase no raw materials and having no out­ flow of payments. ("Johns" usually pick up the tab for the motel room.) If a trade surplus was symbol of economic pro­ ductivity, the world economy would evolve around Bangladesh, not the United States. From 1983 until 1990, America ran a billion dollar — sometimes hundred billion dollar —- trade deficit, yet in that time the domestic economy grew by a third, equivalent to growing a whole West German economy. Employment increased 19.5 percent, creating more than 18 million jobs. In 1991. the last year this nation came close to balancing its trade account with a deficit of only $7 billion, unemployment increased while the economy actually contracted two out of four quarters. As the vote on GATT nears, the fear-mongering grows more intense. Opposition claims that GATT will lead to an exo­ dus of American jobs to the Third World are equally baseless. In determining whether to relocate, companies do not look at wages, but at productivity. If low labor costs were the soul determinant of export power, Bulgaria, at 63 cents an hour, would be the export pow­ erhouse of Europe, not Germany with its labor costs of $24.87 per hour. If poverty was a factor in productivity, Somalia would be an economic superpower, not Japan. The United States has the world’s largest gross domestic product, with the 10th highest hourly labor costs. Despite this handicap, the nation accumulated nearly a half trillion dollars in exports, making it also the largest exporter in the world. If there is one country set to prosper with the removal of trade barriers, it is ours. Transposed, if the global trade pact collapses, there is no country whose people will feel more pain. Surely, GATT is far from perfect. A truly free trade agree­ ment would have only once sentence, while GATT is more cumbersome, leaves many trade barriers untouched and takes far too many years to fully realize its $700 billion tax cut. Despite these flaws, if one is for free trade, by necessity one must be forfreer trade. Any pact that emancipates the econom­ ic energies of free people and diminishes the power of govern­ ment must be embraced without hesitation. David Hume proclaimed to his countrymen that he prayed for the “flourishing commerce of Germany, Spain, Italy, and even France itself, not as a man, but as a British subject.” Let us do more than pray for our neighbors or for ourselves: we should ratify GATT. Barry R. Kelley is a graduate student studying Asian history. Let’s put differences aside and please let our friend rest It is with absolute regret that we feel the need to write this letter, but it seems there are those who insist on reminding us of the pain we face each day and only wish we could put to rest. This letter is addressed to those who responded to the tribute of our friend, Tyler Regan, who we tragically lost on Oct. 19, due to AIDS. Although we hoped the original article would have served as a final tribute, the seemingly growing argument over the cause of his death has created the necessity to address several issues. It is with our hopes that this article will be the last reminder of this unnecessary pain. First, in regards to the article written by Greg Nigh on Nov. 2, not only were we surprised in the inconsistencies of his work, but furthermore by the blatant pronouncement of his disrespect and obvious ignorance in both his knowledge of Tyler’s life and illness, as well as his medical expertise. As he stated, the loss of Tyler was just: “another senseless death attributed to AIDS,” so why was he trying to make sense out of it? To all of us who knew Tyler (of which Nigh was obviously not one) it was just senseless, period. And like all of his friends and family, we did not care how or when he contracted AIDS, because this was truly irrele­ vant. What was relevant was how we were to face each coming day without him in our lives. It seems that while Nigh spends nights questioning Tyler's death and seeking “Sound scientific backing” in uneducated guesses, he for­ gets that we too lie awake reaching for answers, but not in whether AIDS claimed the life of our truly “vibrant" friend, for we know without a doubt what claimed his life. Neither is it in questioning whether his experience was an exception to a "normal” encounter with AIDS, because we all remain ignorant to what is and is not an exceptional case. Rather, we question just how someone with so much life, could be taken from us so suddenly. We are all unaware of the defi­ nite origins of the virus, the time frames of the illness (that, in contradiction Nigh stated, “vary widely”), and the paths of the AIDS virus (yes, even after thé $22 billion spent in research as Nigh again, confirmed). In addition, it is incon­ ceivable that of the "tens of thousands of scientific articles written about HIV," he has taken the time to read more than a handful of them. With this in mind, how can he confident­ ly state that any case, and Tyler’s in particular, could be “inconsistent with virtually all of them,*Mnat his death “defies every established pattern of the course of HIV infection” (just what has been "established” Dr. Nigh?), and that although Tyler’s case may have been rare, it is in his “expert” opinion that it would have been “highly unlikely.” Nigh, rather than spending valuable time questioning the deaths of others’ loved ones, maybe your time would be better invested in improving your own expertise. Until you have experienced, and we hope you are never that unfortu­ nate, the loss of a loved one due to any fatal illness, please ... either indulge yourself in more research, or keep opin­ ions based on ignorance to yourself. Either way, try to be a little more compassionate. We, on the other hand, would like to assume that you have been misinformed in both aspects of Tyler’s life, as well as in medical knowledge, these being the reasons behind your truly insensitive opin­ ions. Secondly in response to the article written by Dave Brown dated Nov. 15, all we have to say in regard to his malicious attack on Tyler’s lifestyle, is that it is obvious he had based his opinions on ignorance, speculation and hearsay of previous so called acquaintances of acquain­ tances. His statements simply cannot be validated, are plainly full of hatred, homophobia and hostility, and are therefore, pointless. To state that Tyler was a “promiscuous homosexual” was clearly in poor taste and irrelevant. How dare he publicly “out” Tyler by making such accusations when he cannot be here to defend himself? It is obvious that Brown had no idea of the aspects that lead up to Tyler’s death. Additionally, we find it unfortunate, and undeniably frightening that he has found credibility in his misconcep­ tions (and obvious misinformation) of the staggering reali­ ties of the HIV virus. Yes, it is increasing in the heterósexu. al community, and in every community for that matter. Clearly, his spurious assumption that certain populations are not equally considered “risk groups” shows genuine ignorance and should caution all of us to question the credi­ bility of his “sources.” Additionally, this may create an opportunity for Brown to reconsider his own promiscuity. Maybe he should take time to read up on those “big name AIDS researchers,” he referred to, instead of depending on the opinions of other students, or even a few of the 60,000 articles that he contradictorily noted as remaining inconclu­ sive. How can he be so certain of anything in regards to this disease? Again, until he has had experience or become edu­ cated on this or any other fatal disease, his secondhand opinions and virulent thoughts are better left unsaid. In conclusion, it is amazing that due to an article which was intended to be a tribute to a dear friend, the specifics of his death and the phenomenon of AIDS itself has become such a debate. Even after years of research on AIDS, the only definitive answers that have been found, ironically remain inconclusive, while people of all walks of life con­ tinue to die at its hands. What is there to debate? It is also astounding that people have the audacity to write commentaries so insensibly and even more that the State Press could even think of printing them. Really, does anyone have anything better to do? The intention of this let­ ter is not to initiate more controversy, but to ask for a little compassion, sensitivity and understanding as we try to look back on good memories of the life and the true loss of a good friend. It is also a reminder of just how fragile life can be and how suddenly it can be taken from any of us. It has become clear, the only things truly incongruent with the reporting of Tyler’s death are those false presump­ tions and misguided pieces of information that have sur­ faced from mere speculations of this life. The Regan family and his friends finally laid him to rest on Nov. 7, which would have been his 26th birthday. The last thing we all need are those who have nothing better to do than debate his death and remind us of our sorrow. Apart from the obvious tragedy in the loss of our friend, the other tragedy will remain in the misfortune of those who will never have the chance to know the honesty, integrity, and true vibrancy of Tyler Regan. Denise Klein Senior Pre-med Craig Valenzuela Graduate Justice Studies John Tsoutis Sophomore Pre-med Tony Velasquez Alumni Communication Sarah Drummond Junior Nursing Rob Bateman Senior Communication Ken Kloss Senior Geography Adam Borchardt Sophomore Media Communications Page 6 S ta t e P ress Tuesday, November 29, 1994 B urton: U n iversity D rive plan w o u ld h elp A S U B y L isa G ò n d e r in g e r S t a te P ress Proponents of the much-discussed plan to narrow and possibly close University Drive say all members of the ASU com m unity w ill reap b en e fits if th e plan is approved. ; Jennus Burton. associate vice president for adminis­ trative services, said the scheduled opening of the Red Mountain Freeway in May or June of 1995 will provide a prime opportunity to make any changes to the busy street and redirect traffic away from campus. , "If we don’t take advantage of this opportunity now, we. will never have a chance like this again,’’ Burton said at Monday's InfoASD forum on Hayden Lawn. The plan was originally proposed in 1992 as part o f thè Campus Master Plan, which outlined a vision for the campus for the next 20 years. : The intent was to draw the: north and south parts of campus together so that pedestrians could walk from one side to the other without encountering traffic, One of the original solutions proposed Was to build pedestrian tunnels under University Drive, similar to tun­ nels that imn under SpeedWay Boulevard, a major thdr-? oughfare that borders the University o f Arizona. Since then, other proposals have included building overpasses similar to the bridge . that crosses. Uni versity 'Drive between Col lege Street and Mànzan ita Hal 1, harrowing the street to one lane in each direction between Mill Avenue and Stadium Drive or even to close the street entirely to ail cars except service vehicles, e Burton said the Tempo City Council '.is still discussing ali options, but has recommended a six-month trial peri­ od for narrowing the street down, to two lanes. The rec­ ommendation has not been voted on yet. One of the main worries of opponents is that narrow­ ing University Drive will only increase gridlock on the : already busy street, making access to campus for stu­ dents even more difficult. But Burton said if the street is narrowed at the same time that the Red Mountain Freeway is open, traffic near campus will actually lessen. * "People's travel patterns are governed by which route is less im peded for them .’’ he said. “ If we narrow University at the same time the Red Mountain Freeway is opened, there will be a new option right there for trav­ elers," v ; ; . • Burton said students in the College of Architecture found from a study that most o f the tra ffic using University Drive is through traffic. He said a group in the College of Engineering, the Center for Advanced Research in Transportation, will be doing a similar study and if it comes up with similar results, the argument can be made that traffic should be tunneled to the Red Mountain Freeway. Richard Jacob. ASU professor of physics, said a reduction of traffic on University would improve the > research conditions for other professors in the physical sciences buildings. "There are many professors who do experim ental research that requires a low level of external vibration.” he said. But large trucks traveling down U niversity have forced lab space in the physics and chemistry depart­ ments to be moved to the side of the building furthest from the street. “But we’pe running out of space for labs,” he said. “If it was reduced to two lanes, large trucks would have a more convenient route to take and would reduce all the traffic. And classrooms in the H-wing are also affected by all the noise.” Besides reducing traffic. Burton said the plans to nar­ row or even close University Drive will bring more busi­ nesses and services to the immediate area around ASU, and will change the character of the street, including wide shaded sidewalks, increased landscaping, benches and longer time frames for pedestrians to cross the street. "Basically, the goal is to make the area more pedestri­ an-friendly,” Burton said. É T ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY .. 1 ^ : S tate P ress ^ BARTENDING ACADEMY Ü " Read all you want... there's no quiz afterwards. S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T O F F T U IT IO N TO STUDENTS WITH SCHOOL I D; • fu ll'o r Part lim e • Personalized Training • Flexible H ours • Days and Evenings JOBPLACEMENTIN2WEEKS M Seri'itig Lunch and D inner 7 Days a Wéek - - J WE PRO U D LY USE O N LY * N on-C holesterol all vegetable oil for frying * The finest lean b e e f an d skinless chicken * P ro d u ce delivered fresh daily ' * Flour tortillas m ade w ith can o la oil * W e use no p reservatives o r additives "YOUR BODY WILL THANK YOU" COMING SO O N TO ROSITA'S: A MENU DESIGNED W ITH NUTRITIONALLY ANALYZED HEALTHY CHO ICE OPTIONS. WATCH OUR AD FOR DETAILS. 1/2 PRICE DINNER l With Withthe thepurchase purchaseofofone onedinner dinnerofofequal equalororgreater greatervalue. value. * |P Not good with any other offer or discount. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 12-5*94. Mesa E . A pache #108 Jim Pdulin/State P ress Bridges like this one could be part of the University Drive plan being considered by the Tem pe City Council. There might also be tun n els under th e road, which are used near UofA ini T ucson; another possibility is that th e ro a d could be closed to traffic alto­ gether. ''"'.U T ' x.'i'UU. H appy Hour Buffet 2023 W. Guadalupe {Southwest Corner Dobson & Guadalupe) Si! 897-94t t • 4-7'prn. Monday-friday ■ Tempe 960 W. University (Northeast Comer University & Hardy) 966-085? s T T s E N 1 S ÑJ E C R O SSW O R D by THOMAS JOSEPH A CROSS 1 K idded 6 C ook’s w ear 11 T h e Yokum boy 12 D epart 13 W hiskey with a beer ch aser 15 C ollection 16 O w l’s q u estio n 17 T erm in ate 18 Detroit te a m 20 S aucer pilot 23 T he sam e 2 7 W arble 28 H onolulu's island 2 9 Prisonrelated 31 TV part 32 P aint ingredient 3 4 T ow ard th e ste rn 37 W ee c a p 38 B urglarize 41 R eady-toprint copy 44 Hourm inute divider 45 Linda of “Alice” 46 C au g h t so m e Z 's 47 Live DOWN 1 Boxing punches 2 O ne w oodw ind 3 M ake s w e a te rs 4 Slippery one 5 E nticed 6 C andyb a r nut 7 S h o o te r am m o 8 Y ard tool 9 Pizzeria need lO G e e k y one 14 G reek letter 18 P erm itted 19 D akota 2 0 Nile viper 21 D eceit 1 2 3 i OB N. S O E;E E T o E W ns B O N m |y G A LET CO In O L DW E R E L A X ■E' R E C T D O D o 4 |M E W MI L E IN S E D lE lE f D 34Fundam en tals 3 5 Ninny 36 S crab b le piece 3 8 Sitarist .S h a n k a r 3 9 S in g er R edding 4 0 C rooked 42 C ut off 43 Lenient 7 5'B 24 25 26 38 39 40 17 18 21 10 12 16 15 9 6 6 S 1 14 13 19 23 22 27 26 : M 3Ô J 29 32 34 e W ednesday's Answer 22 T raveler’s stop 2 4 Work leath er 2 5 C om m on article 26 W ilder's “— Town" 30 H idden 31 H o u se of w orship 33 R o ad goo 11 20 M p JRj I G c Ft Oj TT Ê Ö U T Dj Ó d 1m A U D T m É y] m E m P E 35 33 36 41 i ■ 31 37 42 43 44 45 ■ 46 47 _ j 11-29 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: A X Y D LB A A X R is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints, Each day the code letters are different. 11-29 ' WJ E CRYPTOQUQTE F Q FT G HJZWBT KZB HKSY B F WE KSG Z K T H B XJ F Z HQB Z FZ KW Q BT . — ATK1BTR Wednesday's Cryptoquote: "THERE’S NO SUCH THING AS BAD FOOD," MAMA USED TO SAY. "THERE ARE ONLY SPLOILED-ROTTEN CHIL­ DREN." - SAM LEVENSON 0 1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. State P ress Page 7 Tuesday, N ovember 29,1994 Tuition_____ Continued from page 1. Regent John Munger, who initiated this discussion for possi­ ble action, said he has been working on this proposal for a cou­ ple of years. “I have concluded that we need to have a more efficient way of using our higher education assets,’’ Munger said. “They need to recognize that students are not receiving adequate counseling on their course selection. They need to recognize that their attendance at the University is subsidized by the taxpayer by about 80 percent of the student’s cost of education.” According to Munger, the cost of education is $7,000 per full-time student per year. If the student is paying $1,828 in tuition, taxpayers are paying about $5*300 per year. This sub­ sidy occurs whether the students is ori financial aid or not, : “At some point, the student (who uses more than 160 credit hours to graduate) is beginning to take up space and subsidies that Should be available to another student. Regent David Tung said he feels that, although Munger has a good point, he would like to see how many students have taken more than 160 credits. Tung did say that some courses like engineering and nursing require more credits to graduate. Munger said that waivers would be issued in these cases. Tung however, did not agree with limiting the number of classes allowed to be dropped to 10. “I do not agree with that," Tung said. 'That would be too tight and restrictive,’’ Munger said it is necessary to charge students because most register for classes and then drop the day before the semester begins, resulting in classes that are two-thirds full. “Professors have complained to me that their classes are not full, but the waiting lists are long,” Munger said. “By the time a student drops, most students on the waiting list have made other plans.’’ Regent Rudy Campbell said he wants to hear both sides of the issue, and wants to see "statistically if we are unnecessarily high or low nationwide." Munger said he will propose that revenue generated from the plan, which would start in August, 1995, if approved, be used to improve counseling. Crime_______ C ontinued erom page 1, and educating the public. Dick Steely, crime prevention officer for the Tenipe Police Departm ent, said ASlJ’s parking lots are Well designed in several Ways: the stairs are open, the areas are well-lit. the landscape does not interfere with surveillance, and call boxes are available. But he thinks that the surveillance cameras Would be more effective in preventing crime if they were used with strobe lights instead of being clandestine. “ASET just spent $300,000 to $400,000 on Cameras to view the parking lots, Everybody thinks that’s good, but all it does is report the crime, not discourage the crime,” Steely said. Michelle emphasized the importance o f individual responsibility in preventing crime. “The thing that we would really like to address campus-wide is the awareness level of our community. By that, I mean raising people’s awareness and assisting them in understanding that they need to take some responsibility for their own safety and security.” MCAT R e v ie w 6/'kxpert Instructors ✓ Personal Attention ✓ The Most Current Materials ✓ Sm all Classes ✓ Complete Review of MCAT Science ✓ Testing Taking Strategies ✓ ta rty Enrollment Option Available Start your review as early as Dec. 17! THE PRINCETO REVIEW W t S co n M o n ! Call m 967-1480 C am pus C o rn er 712 S. C o lle g e j w0 ( C o l l e g e & U n iv e r s ity ) U 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 LOCATIONS • Beer £ Soda •Photo Developing •Health 8> Beauty Aids 609 S Mill ( A c to s s h o m C o f f e e P la n t. 858-0567 Everyday Low Price THE ULTIMATE SKIING ADVENTURE! THIS SATURDAY! A . S. U. GAMMAGE AUDITORIUM DECEMBER 3 • 8 PM PHOENIX SYMPHONY HALL DECEMBER 3 • 6 & 9 PM IRCI LIFT TICKET! Everyone attending 'Vertical Reality' will receive a certificate for a. FREE early season lift ticket to Arizona Snowbowl! Its OFF HUtCHASI! 24 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS co lo r C -4 1 p ro c e s s B e s t p ric e in to w n . Everyone attending "Vertical Reality' will receive a coupon for $95 OFF any regular priced purchase over $900 at SkiPro A SkiChalet! Offer expires 19/11/94 Dillard’s 678-2222 Tickets available at Dillard's Ticket Outlets, Ski Pro, Ski Chalet and the Theater Box Offices. DISCOUNTS for groups of 10 or moro 944-1717 SK IPR O SKI CHAfcET M THFiN OeN i Page 8 Planetarium displays examples o f Hubble Telescope photographs OCE4NSIDE ICE ¿4REN4 S k a te o r D ie 2 fo r 1 PA SS •1st person pays adm ission •2nd person skates FREf ! •Skate rental only S 1,50 1 5 2 0 N . M c C lin to c k • 9 4 7 -2 4 7 0 (next to Big Surf) «(»¡n s 12 17 9 4 I__________ f S t a t e P ress Tuesday, November 29,1994 By Mika Susana Akikuni State Press L . _______I S A N T A " S P E C Ï Â L “! FR EE IN -L IN E SKA TE REN TA L w im v a lid ASU 1.0. < ■ ( 1 hrc*c*-d l irr> l7 -< > -9 4 if. j j . îI l1Fc xi A iü ü É 1 tT tn iu rim 1 »B K JP M K Ck * x) only al: ^ RDS1«tlv DES 'kx allemht Tempe Blinde V T I f ^ 330W.Urvlversltu " 9 6 8 -2 3 9 9 ^ ASU students who are tired of going to the movies can walk to the ASU Planetarium and observe stellar objects photographed by the Hubble Telescope during the past two years,.; The 10 images, which were acquired by ASU from NASA through electronic mail, are some of the best exam­ ples that show the power o f the telescope, said Dan Matlaga, planetarium coordinator. "We selected what we think are the top ten photographs taken by the Hubble Telescope," Matlaga said. “They demonstrate the telescope’s power, and that wherever it points, we find new structures," The Hubble show has been running throughout most of the semester and it has been well received by spectators, Matlaga said. About 35 to 40 people attend each show, and most of them come from outside the University. Color images presented in the show include photographs of star explosions and zoom-ups of different galaxies. Matlaga said it was his idea to start the show with the Hubble images. The show runs at 7:30 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday at the Planetarium, which is located in the B atem an P hysical S ciences C enter, Room B 350. Admission is $2 per show. Starting Jan. 31, short presenta­ tions about the Milky Way will follow. “Unfortunately, many people think that telescopes belong only to the scientific community,” Matlaga said. “But they are everybody’s. This show is like a progress report we are presenting to the people. After all, they are the ones who foot the bill for the Hubble.” The Planetarium has given presentations to numerous classes at the U niversity, including English classes, Matlaga said. "We did a presentation about Mark Twain and his inter­ est in astronomy,” he said. “We have given shows on topics nobody else would touch." Past presentations included topics such as extra terrestri­ al life and the star of Bethlehem. Matlaga said he plans to give another series of presenta­ tions about the Hubble two years from now, but with a new collection of images. One of the improvements Matlaga would like to make at the Planetarium is to change the dome’s night sky, so that stars will look more clear to spectators, He said the University will know by the end of next spring when the change will take place. Small earthquakes shake up north Arizona FLAGSTAFF (AP) — Three small earthquakes shook a remote area north of the Grand Canyon over the weekend, an event one expert said Monday is fairly unusual. The magnitude of the quakes ranged from 3 to 3.5, and they occurred in an area about 80 miles northwest of Grand Canyon Village and 56 miles southwest of Kanab, Utah. They occurred between 11:30 p.m. Saturday and 5:30 a.m. Sunday, said David Brumbaugh of the Arizona Earthquake Information Center at Northern Arizona University. No damage or injuries were reported. Pennzoil 10-Minute Oil Change ■P e r f o r m a n c e I P r o t e c t io n Q u a li t y . ' “ I . I S A V E Full S erv ice H Q 9 5 M O O B eg. $ 2 2 .9 5 2014 S . Rural Road • Tempe • 921-9695 250 W. Guadalupe Road «Tempe • 730-8001 Arizona averages about a dozen small quakes a year statewide, so the event is fairly unusual, Brumbaugh said. That doesn’t make it significant or indicate more shakipg is on the way, he said. “They could be precursors, but they don’t have to be,” Brumbaugh said, “Sometimes we have swarms of events of this type to release stress.” The quakes occurred near the Hurricane earthquake fault system, he said. Up to 5 quarts • 10130, 30 wt.» fxlo appointment necessaiy- Most cars I One coupon per visit • Not valid with any other offor ■ Expires 12/31/94 R E S I D E N C Y IN F O R M A T IO N S E S S IO N ir u3© cor®" hoir Q U A LIT Y H A IR C A R E - A F F O R D A B L Y P R IC E D . EveryWed. & Thurs. 2-3 p.m. $ 1 0 9 5 ONE MONTH ! Student Services Amphitheater A t > r UNLIMITED TANNING 1 N e w G u id e lin e s for Fall ’9 5 I "GET READY FOR THE H O LIDAYS" I | 403 W. University Dr. • 829-7774 | |JN ext to Tops Liquors) Coupon valid through 1/18/94J JOINASASU’SCOMMUTERDEVILS FORAQUESTION/ANSWERFORUM WITHAGUESTSPEAKERFROM PARKING&TRANSIT. “2 FOR 1” 6 “ SUBS BUY 1— GET 1 FREE! Purchase any 6' SUB and get the second of equal or lesser value FREE Edward D. SzmuC/ M.D., OB/Gyn is pleased to announce the addition of Elizabeth M. Markwalder, R.N., N.P. With coupon. Void with other offers. '.'Exp; 12/26/94. 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UNIOR fMM • OZO-iOOO^J ■ *'r*“■nER 30TH vm m «■ pINTCIWWW i l l iWtITHi THCVAt *. ■ Pm Thu/wli 40 230 616 m trauamr— INTERVIEW W ITH T H E VAMPIRE VENTANA ROOM 2ND FLOOR - MU BROUGHT TO YOU BY COMMUTER DEVIL'S AND OFF CAMPUS STUDENT SERVICES OF ASASU SurfingArnoldS4c/iw »r»»«0u»' Oarm, Dovilo S T AR GAT E MIRACLE fM t^ iv rA ? CLALIS c * iTim Tjiyil) 12.06. l?3P230loQ.446 ß3Ò7M,#90..»» IÓJ0 n*i**s* M NIÀRŸ S H C L l IiV , S '■ ■ ’* . / F R A N K E N S T E I N »» — T h u rsd a y . D ece m b er I Page 9 Tuesday, N ovember 29, 1994 State Press Police Report YOUR HIGHEST PRICES PAID BOTHERS BOOKSTORE 987-6448 628 EAST APACHE ( GOOD. 1 3 TNOUGHT SO, TOO. KNOW ^ ANY SPANISH? BLACK FLAG. GREAT AfTTRSHAVT. MANLY. ..AND . NOT A BUB IN SICHT. WHAT . IH) VOLI THINK? drinking alcohol at the time of the incident. When he began to try and “get close” to her, she objected and punched him three times in the face. He punched her back. • A 33-year-old Tempe woman was arrested for aggravated assault, assault and disorderly con­ duct. She assaulted her husband at their residence during a domestic dispute. She struck her hus­ band in the left eye, causing a minor bruise, and threatened him with a butcher knife..She yelled loudly enough to awaken her next-door neighbor, who called the police. She said her husband had raped her, and she was taken to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital fora sexual assault exam. • A 23-year-old Tempe man was arrested for public sex indecency. He was observed mastur­ bating in the kitchen window of his residence located in the 600 block of South Hardy Drive. He admitted to standing by his window naked, but denied masturbating. He said that he has a problem with exposing himself and that he is seeking counseling. Compiled by State Press reporter Karyn Riedell St. After entering the business, an officer paid a cover charge and he observed a nightclub atmo­ sphere with numerous people inside. The suspect was cited for operating without a city, sales tax permit. Charges aré pending for fire violation, zoning violations and use-permit violations. • A 22-year-old Tempe man \yas transported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital following a fight at Phrogg’s, located at 919 E. Apache Blvd. A records check revealed three outstanding war­ rants. • A 34-year-old woman was arrested for disorder­ ly conduct and criminal damage. During an argu­ ment with her live-in boyfriend, she backed out of the driveway in her car at a high rate of speed. Once out of the driveway, she squealed her tires and almost hit her boyfriend with the car. Her car did strike another vehicle that was parked in the drive, causing about $500 in damage. • A 36-year-old Tempe man and a 34-year-old Tempe woman were arrested for disorderly con­ duct after a fight in which they were hitting each other. The couple, who are married, had been ASV police reported the following incidents Monclay: • A female student reported that someone stole her blue and w hite 1983 Honda P assport (AZ/K5HUMC) while it was parked at the north side of Cholla Apartments. • One bicycle was stolen. Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: • Five male minors were arrested for unlawful flight. Thé vehicle used, a 1984 Chevrolet Camaro. was reported stolen from Tempe. An officer attempted to stop the car after it was reported for racing. The car's occupants failed to yield at Kyrene Road and Ladonna Drive, and the officer pursued them to Rural Road and Lakeshore Drive when the car ran out of gas, and the occupants ran. All five were arrested. • A 23-year-old man was arrested for operating a business without a license. For the past two weeks, 16 TEAM members investigated a report that a night club was being operated without prop­ er licensing in a warehouse located at 2015 E. 5th michael geena KEATON DAVIS SPEECHLESS A new romantic comedy from MGM. Opens December 16 at theatres everywhere. A romance that ¡ doovied... from the beginning. to lastforever. A nd destined... MEffiMMtMffiR«eraiFORCEmkikmRONIMBWOODfu - ■málBTO'i CEBAD»-SPEECHLESS'. • ■■ • . . ' ‘ BOSNIE8EDELUïRMEHÎDSONCHASLESMtRILVSITIHGMDSARI®« CllSTOfSERREÈŒ ''M ARCSKAMAV«. AM UMl ì HAMCOLO.®',r?ROBERTRI® ■ .REWUAitóMCBADAAlS -ROHMBOOD gas «e i___ y __ Fri.-Sat.-Sun. Dee. 2, 3 , 4 GRAND OPENINGS PERFORMANCE FOOTWEAR & THE JUICE STOP HAVE TEAMED UP FOR A GRAND OPENING SPECTACULAR! 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Our specially trained staff Is eager to help! Come experience the difference of SCIENTIFIC FITTING. Page 10 S t a t e P ress Tuesday, November 29, 1994 U.S. Response C ontinued from page 3. Bosnia becomes untenable. Perry repeated the administration position that it would “consider more substantial actions” against the Serbs, including use of ground troops, if the war spreads beyond Bosnian borders. A small U.S. force is already on the ground in Macedonia monitoring its border with Serbia. The U.N. Security Council has refused to approve a repeat of last week’s NATO air strikes on Serbian positions despite the Serbs’ advance on Bihac, a U.N.-declared safe haven. Countries with personnel in the U.N. peacekeeping force in particular fear that NATO attacks wifi lead to Serbian retaliation against the lightly armed peacekeepers. “This is a classic failure where NATO has been tied in knots and they’ve almost become irrelevant,” Dole said. Dole said that he supported NATO and “we can’t let the United Nations in effect have a veto, even on air strikes.” there,” Dole said, adding that Yasushi Akashi, the top U.N. official in the former Yugoslavia, and Lt. Gen. Michael Rose, the commander of the U.N. forces there, should be replaced. Dole, a harsh critic of the U.N. role in Bosnia and the ad m in istratio n ’s support o f that, role, said the new Republican majority in Congress will take a “hard look” at cutting U.S. financial support for the international body. The Pentagon has moved 2,000 Marines aboard three U.S. warships into the seas off Bosnia, but Perry empha­ sized that no U.S. ground troops Will be Sent into combat situations in Bosnia. He said the Marines were there to help in rescues of downed NATO pilots and other “contingency” events. He did not address the possibility of participation in an evacua­ tion of U.N. peacekeepers if their continued presence in I came, I saw, ;; I w o r k e d . . . St a te P r ess) (fo r the m' Status Pressum Caesar the moment Work for the S ta te Press The State Press is currently hiring reporters to cover various beats and write three stories per week. Applicants should be reliable, highly m otivated and able to write on deadline. Experience from journalism classes or writing for other publications is preferred but not required. Applications with clips or writing samples are being accepted in the basement of the Matthews Center. Call the State Press today at 965-2292 for more information. people dead or missing and caused increased bickering among allies. British Defense Secretary Malcolm Rifkind said today ,it is^ disgraceful for ,U.S. senators to blame Britain fbf the debacle in Bosnia, and fkulted America' for contributing no soldiers to the U.N. peacekeeping force. “I think when we have thousands of brave British soldiers, some of whom have lost their lives, in Bosnia ... it ill becomes people in countries who have not pro­ vided a single soldier on the ground to make that kind of criticism,” Rifkind said on BBC Radio. Senate Republican leader Bob Dole said Sunday “the British and French, and primarily the British” were to blame for “a complete breakdown” of NATO over Bosnia. The remarks by the U.S. and British officials were the angriest public exchanges yet in the disagreement between the European Union and the Americans over Bosnia. The EU, whose foreign ministers were meeting today in Brussels, have blocked U.S. moves to lift an arms embargo against the Bosnian Muslims. The capture o f Bihac, 90 m iles northw est of Sarajevo, would be the strongest indication yet that the United Nations cannot stop die war with peacekeeping troops or NATO airstrikes. • O f the six U.N. protected safe areas — Bihac, Sarajevo, Gorazde, Srebtfenica, Zepa and Tuzla — all but Tuzla are under siege. . .. U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry went as far Sunday as to suggest that the Bosnian government has lost the war. The commander of U.N. forces in Bosnia, Gen. Sir Michael Rose, said the 24,000 peacekeepers may with­ draw if fighting escalates. U.N. officials have been pressing the Muslim-led government to accept a peace settlement offered by the Serbs on condition they keep the 70 percent of Bosnia they now hold. The United Nations previously brokered a plan that would have reduced Serb territory to 49 percent of Bosnia. The Serbs have repeatedly rejected the plan. The Bosnian government last week proposed a three-month cease-fire, but the Serbs rejected it. The American Institute d is co ve r e x c e l l e n c e PARALEGAL, ABA a p p ro v e d p ro g ram • Projected job g ro w th for P araleg als is excellent a cc o rd in g to key indicators COURT REPORTER, N C RA a p p ro v e d program - Job o p p o rtu n ities • e x p a n d in g u tilizin g R ealtim e a n d C ap tio n in g Technology MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST, L earn M edical term inology, h u m a n anatom y, office pro ced u res, w ord-processing, keyboarding a n d tran scrip tio n PARAPROFESSIONAL STUDIES, Secretarial cu rricu lu m w ith sp ecially o p tio n s in Legal, M edical Office a n d B usiness G e t y o u r h o l i d a y g if ts e a r ly . ’ Excludes sale items. E m p lo y m en t assistan ce av ailab le to o u r g ra d u a te s. Financial aid a v ailab le to th o se w h o q ualify. D ay a n d ev en in g classes. POTHER'S 252-4986 „ • ... • 3443 N . Central,. Phoenix, A rizona 17th &; 13th Floors N .E. C o m e r o f O sborn & C entral BOOKSTORE Providing Education and Training . ■■■•;, . , ° 6 2 5 E. A p a c h e • 9 6 7 - 5 4 5 4 Rem em ber us w hen you n eed to sell your books. Highest prices paid. SlflCC 7,974 Low on funds? Join Desert Schools and save Phi K appa Phi n v i t e s all members o f the ASU Chapter [: o f the Honor Society and special invited guests I With your limited funds, why worry about high-cost checking accounts, credit cards and loans? Join Desert Schools and take advantage of our wide variety of low-cost financial services, including: totheMonthly Breakfast Meeting at the. University Club Thursday, December 1, f t o m 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. jf ■ • }:. . i n • 14.5% APR VISA* Credit Card with no annual fee available to ^udents vyjth good or no credit history • tow -cosf checking accounts to suit your deeds • Worldwide ATM neWzork;U£TiT • 24-hour account access by phone • Auto loans as low as 6.50% Ap A and more •’•VO if»';-.".' t< -f E s T ' :Si‘Ti ; .',v< o n - - -ae Membership open to all ASU students and employees. D r . E u g e n e S . S e h n e U e r, C o y n s le o r f o p H e a lth P r o fe s s io n s E d u c a tio n , O ffic e - o f th e P m v o st', w i l l s p e a k o n " D e v e lo p m e n ts i n H e a lth P r o fe ssio n s E d u c a tio n . " PLEASE RSVP TODAY, NOVEMBER 29 • PKP 965-0022 Desert Schools representatives are on campus today — visit the information booth on Cady Mall. C Call 433-7000 for more information t ^ T5 ¡03rf'i: ■r v v . < Desìi schools ■ edemi z'redit V is it o u r T e m p e B r a n c h a t 1223 E. B r o a d w a y R o a d Page 11 Tuesday, November 29,1994 S t a t e P ress International student growth rate fails to rise for first time in years B y D a v id P r o f f it t S t a te P ress For the first time in 20 years, the number of international students at ASU failed to grow significantly, according to University officials. “The growth rate has gone flat,” said Lloyd Brimhall, student life program coordinator. He said every year for the last 20 years, the growth rate has been at least five percent, occasionally reaching 10 to 20 percent. The current number of non-immigrant international stu­ dents is 2,492. This is only an increase of 5 people from the previous year. Asian students constitute more that 70 percent of the entire international population at the University. India has the greatest number with 387 students and China is second with 242. Suzanne Steadman, coordinator for International Student Programs, said the decrease in the growth rate results from a change in the classification of many Chinese students. Following the 1989 Tiananmen Square uprising in China, the U,S. government made it easier for Chinese citi­ zens to get permanent residence status. Since then, many students’ status has changed from foreign national to that of immigrant. “The students are still there, the faces are still the same — they just have a different status,” Brimhall said. The number of immigrant students increased this year to 1,495 from 1,245 last year. Indians form the largest group of international students on campus, but their numbers dropped by 50 students from last year. Steadman said this may be due to more stringent visa requirements for international students. According to Zohreh Sotoodh, assistant director of inter­ national admissions, up to 60 percent of all Chinese stu­ dents applying for student visas are denied. solutions from your branch office,..klllko'S there are moments that you wish would last forever. photo calendars by kinko’s keep those memories alive! GRADUATING IN DECEM BER? TECHNICAL SALES POSITIONS AVAILABLE Otis Elevator Com pany is looking for Decem ber graduates in EE, ME. or a BA in Marketing If you are interested in learning about employment opportunities in technical sales, please attend oUr "G et Acquainted-General Information Session." gift w rap yo u r m €m 0n€$ Your photographs are too special to be tucked away in some album. They’re meant to be shared with others. And there’s no better way than with a color calendar from Kinko's. Just bring in your favorite shots, and we ll turn them into a personalized gift calendar that reminds people of a lot more than just the date. Tempe: Rural& iniversity 8941797» Scottsdale Scottsdale Rd. & 1st Ave. 946-0500 N o v open in A bw atutee: Ray Rd &Y-lO 8934)700 Open “You have to convince the consulate ... that you won’t stay in the U.S.,” she said. “It’s quite a tough examination you have to go through they just want to discourage people from staying in the U.S. (permanently).” Another reason may be the improving Indian economy, Steadman said. She said, this means that fewer students will leave the country to go to school because they can get jobs at home. Sotoodh pointed out an anomaly in the downward trend — the percentage of admitted students who actually attend­ ed the University was unusually high, she said. This year’s attendance rate is 48 percent, according to Sotoodh. Brimhall said the results of the study are difficult to interpret. “You can't tell by one year whether this is a fluke or if it is a significant trend,” he said. W ednesday, November 30,1994 7-8:30 pm Memorial Union #213 (Santa Cruz) kinko's the copy center 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. 10 Valley locations, call I- 600- 743-COPY. 'Interviews, in accordance with the normal Career Services sign-up process, will be held on Thursday, Decem ber 1. MicroA ge IS RECRUITING NEW players! MicroAge is a $2 billion information technology leader that is ranked by Fortune Magazine as one of the largest and fastest growing service companies in the nation. To keep pace with our rapid growth we are seeking a wide variety of talented individuals in the following areas: • Configuration Technicians (2nd and 3rd Shifts) ’’ • Customer Sales/Service • Data Entry • Human Resources • Inside Sales • Finance & Accounting • Marketing - Account Executives and Vendor Relations • Material Handlers (2nd and 3rd Shifts) • Technical Support/Help Desk - Apple and IBM (Full- and Part-time, All Shifts) • Telemarketing (Full- and Part-time, 1st and 2nd Shifts) • Warehouse - Shipping and Receiving FRIDAY ' DECEMBER 9 • 7:00 PM SHARP M ESA A M PH ITH EA TRE Tickets available at the Mesa Amphitheatre and all Dillard’s Outlets. To charge call 678-2222. NOCAMPING• NOVENDING• NOCAMERAS /VIDEO Planning to take the April M C A T? Meet with MicroAge representatives and find out about ail these opportunities at our Job Fair. M icro A g e J o b F a ir Tuesday, November 2 9 ,1 9 9 4 11:00 am to 2:00 pm & 3:00 to 6:00 pm Radisson Tempe Mission Palms Hotel 6 0 East 5th Street (N.E. comer of Mill and 5th, downtown) Tempef AZt it < ;m. Competitive salaries, comprehensive bene^ts that include excellent paid training, retire­ ment plan, educational assistance and outstanding opportunities for career advancement . , . yew’ll find aU this and much more at MicroAge. If you are unable to attend our job fair, please send your resume to: MicroAge, Inc. ATTN: HR/Job Hair, P.O. Box 1920, Tempe, AZ 85280-1920. MicroAge supports a drug-free environment and is and equal opportunity employer. M icro A g e ■Mt - K? il 1-800-K À P-TEST KAPLAN H a y d e n S q u a re 310 S . M ill A v e A 103 Tem pe Page 12 State P ress Tuesday, November 29, 1994 C ollegiate conference assem bles com m unity service groups B y K en n es B o l ig S pec ia l t o t h e S tate P ress More than a thousand college students from across the nation will come to ASU next spring for the 1995 COOL Conference to share their experience and knowledge about community service. Dawn Hutchison, the national meetings director fòr the Campus Outreach Opportunity League (COOL), came to ASU two months ago to set üp thé conference, which will be held on March 23-26. A reception is scheduled for Wednesday at thé Tempe Radisson Mission Palms Hotel to discuss the conference. ASU President Lattie Coor and Tem pe M ayor Neil Giuliano, along with various volunteer organizations, are scheduled to attend. Hutchison said college students are beginning to “take responsibility for what is going on in the world” and through COOL they can learn what they can do. “There is a misconception that college students just hang out, drink beer and play volleyball,” she said. “We are breaking that stereotype. Students are taking responsibility for their families and communities, and we need to let peo­ ple know that. We are educating and feeding each other and building a more equitable world.” • Anthony Chavez, a sophomore journalism major, is the public relations and media committee coordinator for the conference. He said he hopes COOL will help bring out the “potential” of the University. “ASU has always had great potential, but something has been lacking,” Chavez said. “There are tons of people at ASU and the city has so many needs. Sadly, A SU 's response to these needs has been minimal.” The COOL conference consists of four days of booths and workshops informing students about opportunities to serve their community, Hutchison said, adding that many of the different community service projects are even started by students. “The COOL conference is great because it shows stu­ dents what is possible when people get together and work toward a singular goal,” she said. One student at ASU who has discovered this fact is Chad Redwing, a senior inner disciplinary humanities major. Redwing, along with a few other ASU students, cre­ ated the non-profit organization Citizens of the World two years ago. Citizens of the World works with the homeless in ASU’s surrounding communities at least four times a year. The group also travels to Mexico for one week in the sum­ mer to build houses for the homeless there. Redwing said he decided to create the organization S t a t e P ress Crosswords - They aren’t harsh words. They're just across-words. j (We carry real ones, too.) '' M 130 E . U niversity Dr. 968-2310 / D o n 't ris k y o u r g r o u p 1 Sterling Silver: Ankle Bracelets Toe Rings, I y -> N ex t to O z z ie 's W arehouse In The A r c h e s S h o p p in g C enter \1 S c h e d u le ^ ►METRONOMES • A CCESSO RIES • ETC. ►ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS ►AMPS • ELECTRIC EFFEC TS » SHEET MUSIC ►LESSONS (Rock • Contemporary • Folk • C lassic Guitar) ►REPAIRS *- On All Instruments! ...and much MORE! Turn your CD's^Tapesj, Records into 829-1659 REAL PEOPLE WEAR FAKE NOSE RINGS MIGUEL S MUSIC CENTER UNUSED? UNWANTED? UNLOVED? $ $$$$$$$$$ W ■ QCQCOCCCO —^ because he was dissatisfied by the lack of possibilities to get involved in community service on campus. “I found that on campus there were plenty of opportuni­ ties for campus issues but not many for community issues,” he said. “Through creating Citizens of the World, I chan­ neled my satisfaction.” Leon Li, an industrial engineer graduate student, is the meal coordinator for the COOL conference. He said the main reason he is working with COOL is because it is a good opportunity to get involved in community service. “By working with COOL, I have the opportunity to learn a lot through meeting people from schools across the country,” Li said. “I also have the chance to meet my peers and to learn what my school and surrounding community has to offer.” Hutchison said through past COOL conferences, she has seen a transformation in people. “Two years ago I watched a guy I knew get upset at the problems he saw around him,” Hutchison said. “COOL helped him to challenge himself. He ended up changing his major to social services. You never know the effect the conference will have on people.” ... COOL holds orientation meetings every Wednesday at 6 p.m. on the third floor of the MU. They are open to anyone who would like to help, Hutchison said. J THE COOL JEWEL • 414 S. Mill Ave. #121 j g f e v (b eh in d The Spaghetti Com pany) • 829-1 1 2 7 now ! n o t b e in g Hoops, Cuffs, Studs and Lots of i Single Earrings in c lu d e d ! Need a little 2 *\ m ore tim e to pay tuition? The AMS Monthly Payment Plan at Arizona State University allows you to spread payments over four months All photo*» will be. taken in front; o f the libraty lighthouse. C o n ta c t th e 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 ike ^ u n to S p a rk Y e a rb o o k .s c h e d u le o ffic e y o u r g ro u p IN T E R E S T F R E E . a t « s h o t. Group photo» will b e taken : weekday* between 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 A&U Spark ; Yearbook!. * . . . . . . . . . . . . Enrollment forms are available in the Student Financial Assistance Office or call AMS toll-free at: 1-800-635-0120 PageJB Tuesday, November 29, 1994 S t a t e P ress Symington signs passed propositions into law Revenue Department ready to collect cigarette tax PHOENIX (AP) — State tax collectors put the finishing touches on an implementation plan Monday for Proposition 200, the 40-cent-a-pack Cigarette tax approved by voters in the Nov. 8 general election. The tobacco tax was one of three successful ballot pro­ posals. The others are Proposition 102, which exempts live­ stock from the personal property tax, and Proposition 201, which restricts animal trapping on public lands. Symington signed a proclamatioh Monday allowing all three to go into effect. The proclamation came as the Secretary of State’s office certified all the results of the election. Symington opposed Proposition 200 and acknowledged there was talk of his possibly vetoing the measure. "B u t when it came to me, the answer was simple: uphold the will of the people," Symington said. The tobacco tax will raise an estimated $90 million a year, the bulk of which is to be used to expand the state’s indigent health-care system. It also will pay for anti-smok­ ing programs and for research into smoking-related illness­ es. : The Revenue Department released details of its imple­ mentation plan Monday, saying the tax increase would take effect on Tuesday at the wholesale level. It will be up to retailers to decide whether to pass the tax along to their cus- tomers. The tax will be applied to sales on Indian reservation, which are exempt from the state’s regular 18-cent-a-pack tax. Tax collectors will use different colored tax stamps to keep track of sales to tribal members — which are exempt from the new tax — and non-members, which are not. Cigarettes sold by reservation smoke shops to tribal members will have green tax stamps and those sold to nonIndians and members of other tribes will have red stamps. Cigarettes sold by non-Indian retailers will have blue stamps, signifying the entire 58-cent state levy has been paid. Roger Smith, president of the Arizona Indian Business Association, said he has no idea how to tell the difference between members and non-members of his tribe who buy cigarettes at his J-R Convenience Store on thè Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Reservation near Scottsdale. "There’s really no process'! can think of,” Smith said. "We may have to have a line for tribal members and a line for non-members.” Smith said the state’s 21 Indian tribes still are contem­ plating a lawsuit to block collection of the tax on the reser­ vations and that "they probably will do something in the near future.” The Revenue Department said each tribe will be allocat- ed 53 packs of tax free cigarettes per year for each man, woman and child enrolled in the tribe. The figure is based on a state Department of Health Services study of average cigarette consumption. The implementation plan is based on regulations devel­ oped by the state of New York to collect a similar tax on Indian reservations, the Revenue Department said". The New York regulations have been upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. Officials said they will have fewer problems implement­ ing the other two voter-approved propositions. The trapping ban will be enforced immediately, although "there are still a lot of things that are going to have to be dealt with,” said Dave Daughtry, assistant director of the Arizona Game and Fish Department. . But he said the department has been advising people that "as soon as it’s signed into law, leg-hold traps cannot be used on public lands." ' The proposition also bans the use of snares, "quick kill” traps and poisons, except under certain circumstances, such as protection of public health or safety. Proposition 102, the livestock tax exemption, treats farm animals like property that is part of a manufacturing pro­ cess, which is exempt from the personal property tax. The Revenue Department estimates the tax will cost the state $1.5 million a year in lost revenues. Local jurisdic­ tions, including school districts, will lose a similar amount. P h oen ix gets season’s first w arn in g on air p o llu tio n level PHOENIX (AP) — The state’s largest city got its first smog advisory of the season Monday on a relatively clear and cloudless day, reminding residents that special gasoline and fire restrictions can't dispel the brown winter cloud. The advisory is effective from 4 p.m, Monday to 10a.m. Tuesday throughout the metropolitan Phoenix area, said John Godec, spokesman for the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality. It means carbon monoxide and par­ ticulates may reach unhealthy levels. It was relatively clear when the alert was issued Monday morning, but Godec said smog tends to build up through the rush hour. : “ It’s very disgusting,” said Gayle Doss-Allen, who works on the 17th floor of a Phoenix high-rise. “On some days, I know it affects the way I feel because I’ll come downtow n and start sneezing or my throat w ill get scratchy.” The advisory to encourage residents to reduce driving and other activities that add to the smog. Godec said Maricopa County environmental officials, who issued the warning, were urging drivers to avoid cold starts and unnecessary trips and “telecommute as much as p o s s i b le take the bus or carpool.” The alert also kicked into effect a new rule restricting homeowners from using wood-burning stoves or devices not approved by the Environmental Protection Agency. It happened on a bad night for those who love to curl up before a glowing fireplace — the National Weather Service predicted unseasonably cold weather. Godec said rush hour is a critical period on a heavy smog day, especially when there is little wind, because pol­ lutants tend to get trapped close to the ground, “You get that huge bulk of automobile traffic late in the afternoon and the stuff has no where else to go and it con­ tinually builds and builds,” he said. Jeff Stires, a chiropractor, said he wasn’t surprised to hear about the city’s pollution level Tuesday. ”1 see it every morning when I drive into town, just a big brown cloud.” he said, TOMORROW P erm anent H air R em oval Everything you want to know about cars and car care. F re e C o n s u lta tio n E v e n in g s / W e e k e n d s R em oving U nw anted Hair from: Bikini Line • Back • Neck UpperUp• Cheeks • Chin Eyebrows • Underarms • Abdomen ABSOLUTELYPERMANENT Specializing Exclusively in thé Insulated "IB. Probe" .. . M ethod o f Perm anent H air Rem oval (Individual Insulated Probe) R ecom m ended N ationw ide by Physicians & D erm atologists Since 1988. 941-8936 READ IT State Press Car Care S p e c i a l Issue o n Nov. 30 1080 N. C ïyiç C enter, *29 (1 block N o) Thom as & E. o f Scottsdale Road) SU PER STO R E O n Mil l A v en u e UPS-FEDEX-Postal-Notary-Money Orders-FAX-Western Union Keys-Cards-Cellular & Pager Sales S6ip, *)t ^(M tc TOttA* K& 1 I I I Ma k e s a n E x c e l l e n t I C h r is t m a s G if t I I 4 M onths Airiim o I a n d Activation Raquirad I (No restrictions apply) F r e e Pa g e r SELF-SERVE CO PIES 8Hi x 11 only. Expires 11»3094 th e a lte r n a tiv e 9 1 5 S. M ill A v e . In T e m p e C e n t e r c o p y s h o p 602*829*7992 FAX 6 0 2 » 8 2 9 •8 0 0 9 ü í WÊÊÊk. J !■' $ 3 .0 0 O F F Any ups P arcel shipment We Will Pick Up Your Shipment a t Your Dorm or O ffice on Cam pus FREE WRAPPING f t PACKING AVAILABLE (N o . restrictions apply) : Home of the $.25 / Minute Calling C ard We WILL NOT Be Undersold - - W e Honor Most Competitor's Ads 717 $. M ill A venu e, Tem po, A rizona Phone: 966-1203 Comics Page 14 State P ress Tuesday, November 29,1994 C a lv in a^d Hobbes ' ViPï! pVt ¿ By GARY LARSON NELL I DIDN'T MEAN RIGHT THIS :SECOND;.7 ■/ MAW. M i IDIOT CAN BE FAMOUS. I FI60R.E I'M MORE THE LEG EN D ARY I'VE DECIDED I DONT NAHT to b e Famous THI f AIK SIM by Bill Watterson ~ r: 1V ú o ?}■_ -VC- vV C a lv in and Hobbes by Bill W atterson I DONT KNOW WHETHER TCWR GRASP OF THEULOGV OR METEOROUÄT IS THE MORE APPAIUNG , f BUT HOW CAN WE APPEASE THE MIGHTS SNOW DEMONS IF WE DONT SACRIFICE ANT IEAMES ? ! WEU WAVE A WARM WINTER. .' CAN NE BORN \ THESE LEAVES? I S ix T GUESS Î. U. GO UGttT SOME CANDLES ARooND THE TOBOGGAN AND BEG FOR MERCT "Y —JD By •Imply attaching the new ACME WlngtMby, airlines can significantly improve their passengers'overall comfort. \ Ì THI FAR SID I D o o n esb u ry By GARY LARSON BY GARRY TRUDEAU n 'S SOKT OFA SUBURB O F O .J. C n Y -A P R IV ILS6B D en c la v e o Fm co tiP tn o N !N6 ANDCAPERED BU FFETS.. 1 FOREIGN 1 \ herr\ R journal.- P AN- ! CHOR! R ISTS-AU, HERR M STARVED H ERE.WE'VE GOTA L L THE PROBLEMS OF ALNlC ITY-N O ISE, POLLUTION, POOF. SANITATION-EVEN BE66A RS! \ \JQRLEADS m AN­ CHOR!] \-. poolside. Call 956-4$$ 1. 5 D ays 6 N ights Fly ' SOFA $ET, dinette, bed. futon, day bed; sleeper, entertainment Ctrl Cheap! 234-5729. ; 486SX COMP. CD/ROM, soundblaster card, 4mb RAM, lots o f software. Andréa, 839-3043 J LUXURY 3BD 2ba lease: AH ap­ pliances plus fans, pool., jacuzzi, cov'd parking. $8$5/m 6. .9553335. Secluded area. S n ow d evils FURNITURE 3 B D 2B A eon dp. Uni v /P rtc e ,. . pool, Jacuzzi, cyrd pkg; $750/mo; Call 861-205^ ,y ■ -.:v ~ e r pd.L201 E. Weber @ Scoval. 1.5 mile to ASLL$545;966^0987 j S k i L a k e T ah oe w it h t h e HELP WANTED0 |N |R A L ____ JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu: gold. ster.. pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave. Tempe,Center 968^6074. TRANSPORTATION MICHIGAN ^ Drive car back to Tempe after X-mas break. Gas & stipend. R efs req. 810^349-0851. M O TO RCYCLES" ALL PO SITIO N S av ailab le, ft/pt. great growth potential. Cof­ fee house bistro; Java Brew ing Co., 4400 N. Scottsdale Rd. #12; 945-5282. Contact Todd or Jeff. ARE YQU looking for a job dur­ ing holiday break? ASU Telefund is hiring now! Start woriting now to insure those holiday gifts; Call ■.963-6254. ! ;; ASU STUDENTS wanted. Short surveys & sales. Easy. $6 per hour base + bonus. Start now. 1 block east of ASU. 784-2270 or apply 1000 E, Apache. Suite 212, $$ CASH now $$ ¡Bp . r v 3 Shifts/Top Pay Tempe Location 966-0709 RECEPTIONIST: GROW ING Tempe based, high tech co. near \ ASU ; needs p /t receptioriist: good phone voice & professional appearance: a must: $6/hr: Call . Rie at 829-8300. HELP WANTEDF O O D J iR V jC i^ ACCEPTING APPS for: b riy ers,; & corihter help. $ 5 ^ r + tips: Sammy B’s Pizza, 945-8850. C O R K *N C LEA V ER Acc. apps:; for lurich host(ess), lunch food serv er & evening cocktail. Will train, p/t. Concern w/appearance, reliablility & per­ sonality are important. Apply *n person, M-F 2-5pm or by appt. 5 1Ò1 N. 44th St. 952-0585. to U N T E R HELP wanted. No exp nee. for New York Bagel Works in Scottsdale. 970-6165. DOMINO’S PIZZA Cóme join the excitement with the #1 food delivery team for the Now hiring 6-8 individuals for ASU area. With the addition of iriimediate emp. $8 guaranteed to subs & riot wings, this Domino's start at 15-30 flexible hrs/wk; is one o f the top campus stores in ; Call Mike for int, 921-8282: thè country. We need more' f/t VALET PARKING attendants p/t drivers to help us safely defor. Christmas season. Dec l-Jan : liver all these orders. D rivers 15. Must be willing to drive to make $7-$10 per hour including Phx, Scotts, etc. & avail to wprk mileage & tips. Safe driving cash thru Dec, Avg $8/hr. $61-9182; :bonuses can also be earned. We are very flexirile & can work ar­ YQU OUGHT to be in pictures. ound your school schedule. We Motion pictures, commefcials, support a drug free work énviinformercials, videos. Casting all ronment. Apply in person after types for quality productions. 306^ 1442 or 306-2850. Be the best • Mam at 903 S. Rural: Tempe; òr call 96$-5555. EOE: ’ ; you can be and don’t dò it for free. A bsolutely NO SELLING or APPOINTMENT SETTINO W ork for The b e st m ar­ k e t, r e s e a r c h firm In Arizona. We offer $ 6 /h r to s ta r t & b o n u s e s . s c h e d tiled raise reviews, a new s p a c io u s office, flex ib le shifts & guaranteed hours. C o n v e n ie n t lo c a tio n o n b u s lin e & excellent c a r­ pooling program. EXTRA XMAS CASH 50 M erchandisers N eeded 2 shifts available 6 a.m.-2:30 p.m . 2:00 p.m.-10:50 p.m . M u s t h a v e ovvn v e h ic le . 28* p e r m ile - Lots of vari^ e ty •+; T r a v e l in v o lv e d A pply now! Call Stivers 966-1100 EOE Call Manny at No Fee 9 4 6 -7 S S S Great New Location The Valley's BEST plasma donation center just got even better! ABI has moved td a great new facility at 1334E. Broadway! We now have MORE MACHINES to serve you better! This is your perfect opportunity to. perform $ vitally needed service | and earn SI50-S185 per month at the same time! It couldn't be easier! New donors eahi $25 CASH thelrfirstdonatton! Open 7 days a week for your convenience ! Boys Girls Basketball Basketball $6.49-58.66 per hour r n Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1334 E. Broadway, Building A, Tempe Broadway & Dorsey (Across from Native New Yorker) 968-6139 i AGENT SERVICES ~ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE AGENTS KLT.L ANI) PART TIM E AVAILABLE GREAT OPPORTUNITY • FtT L 'R K EXPANSlON ExceH Agent Services is now hiring DA Agents to :assistclients in professional, inbound operations center., R EQ U IREM EN TS: ' C ustomer S ervice Ô rie n te p , TY pé 20 wpvi, G o o d C om munications , T kaM F l a v er IU 3209 S. 38th St. (3 blks S of University) * •« -a Full/Part-TIme 600 P O S IT IO N S !!!!! ’ S tudent Discount 10% discount on labor 100 Openings 994-2408 4-cylinder », Emissions CheckDiagnostics Read-out 437-3970 Earn extra $$$ For application information contact the Student Employment Office, Job referral #98524 Applications will be accepted untill Friday. December 30. RENEGADE AUTOMOTIVE $ 50.00 Customer Service COACHES & OFFICIALS .CLASSIC 64 VW Bug, white, for sale in good condition. $1500 firm. Call 921-8624. $ 29.95 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY Lot Attendant. V arious hpursv call Dan at7$4-5995. W AN TED: 1977. BMW 5301 .$1500 o b o .; New transm ission,, new paint, runs great. Call 922-9362; *Tuhe Up Special M O D ELS/ M QV IE EX TRA S, All types needed for music video. Pay $300 per day. 266-6224, SPORTS MINDED EXECUTIVE ANSWERING Svc - has i mmediafe p/t positions for frien d ly operators startin g at $6/hr. Must have computer exp, type 45+ wpm & knpw 10-key* Call 264-4000 for appi. !. : ; ' city of scottsdale recreation division Any car pr truck, running or riot! Cash paid to; you in 1 hr! Brian; 246 3147. iv msg 24 hrs. TDG. Performance Service MGMT POS open, AZ Fundrais­ ing. Transp a m ust, Eyng-p/t. Earn:$12.50/hr. Call 2 i0-3373; CHRISTMAS MONEY! Eritertel, Inc. needs sales reps fo r new pt/ft day and evening shifts. No cold calling, fully automated environment- Hourly base +: bo­ nuses, benefits package available. Start on Monday. Call Joe at 9414240. 8010 fe. M cDowell, Ste 218:, Scottsdale (NE corner of Hayden and McDowell). 1990 KAW ASAKI N inja 250, great bond. B lack-Y osh Pipe. Tag* till Dec. $1500.921-7654 AUTOMOBILES INSTRUMENTATION MANU­ FACTURER'S Rep in Tempe has immed. opening for p it office help. M-F, 20r25 hrs/week, flexi­ ble. PC exp. req. 967-2234. SODA STOCKERS needed im­ mediately! Two shifts avail to stock grocery store w/beverage products. $5/hr plus 28é/mile. If you are reliable, detail oriented, have good math skills, & own transportation please call today ! 838-8405; We encourage a d i­ verse workforce. Kelly Services. Never an applicant fee. EOE,. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL • C ompetitive S alary a n p B oni . s P lan , . G reat B enefits P ackage ' . • Apply.in person MrF Tam^prii, -. Exeel) Agent Services 4250.É.CamelbUÉçk Rd, #300 BldgX EOE M/F/H/V ; Camel Square Atr.iurn, Phoeni x, AZ 85018 3 In tern sh ip s Available! F u ll-se rv ice p u b lic re la ­ tio n s , p u b lic a ffa irs; a n d a d v e r tis in g firm is s e e k ­ in g q u a lifie d a p p lic a n ts fo r 3 t o 5 m o n th In te rn ­ s h ip s s p e c ia liz in g in th e a r e a s p i p u b lic re la tio n s , g o v e rn m e n ta l re la tio n s , a n d a d v e r tis in g . 20’h o u r s p e r w e e k , $ 5 .0 0 /h r. P le a s e fo r w a rd r e s u m e w ith fab-: ultyrecommendation(s) a n d w ritin g o r p o rtfo lio s a m p le s to : . % Nelson, Robb, DttVal & DeMenna ‘ Attn; Rita Derke 355Q N. Central Ave. Suite 1200 Phoenix 85012 Ph: 264-5707 M adison School D istric t is looking for energetic, creative people majoring in elementary education, carlv childhood development or recreation to work in th eir quality after school programs. Positions curlently available for . ■ r C L U B LEA D ER ' Hours, are 2:30 p.m.-6 p.m .. Fay. Rangé is $5.87-$5.98 per h r .M ust have at least one year experience working with school age .children ..and. be able to relate positively to ch i Id ten, Staff, and parents. Applications arc available Monday-iTiday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. at the. Madison School District Office ,a t $601 N. 10th St„.Phoenix Visit us on the mall November 20th St 30th **'. between ! 1 ir.m.-1 p.m.! ■ HELP WANTED* FOO D SERVICE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES H O ST/H O STESSES, IT 7PT. Apply after | lam at Monti's., 3 W. 1st S t, Tempe. 967-7594. AMAZING MONEY making se­ cret o f a dèsp erate nerd from NY. Free info 24 hrs. 280-7639, HOSTESS/HOST Salt Cellar Restaurant now hiring for -hostess/host positions. Apply in person after 5pm at 550 N. Hayden Rd.. Scottsdale. MARILY N'S M EX ICAN Rest needs host & wait staff, cocktailers, bussers & bartenders ft/ph Apps avail at 7001 N , Scottsdale Rd & 12631N. Tatum Blv- NOV. 30th m eeting at 1:1am and 6pm' in Pima Room. Please don’t forget to bring your ■reCyclables. : TOUCH-FONE NEWS Phoenix Branch We are DMS* located at 64th i St.:^ East Thomas Rd, DMS is looking: for outbound customer service reps to make c a lls on b e h a lf o f SEA RS, TEXACOV C H EV R O N & many m ajor banks across the to thieir own cardholders. Full time reps - give us perfect attendance and get $9 per hour ;for your first .30 days! SPINNING JENNY 990 TALL B EER S til 9 p.m. 990 TQ HOT SHOTS 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Hiring fOO reps. CALL NOW 994*9903 For a Good Tim©.call 966-T300 ■ «34 JOB OPPORTUNITIES AA ÇRU1SE ships hirrng! Earn big $$$ rt free travel! (Caribbean,: Europe, etc.!} No exp née. Staff heeded; for busy holiday/$pring/ summer seasons. Guaranteed suc­ cess! Guidé; 919-929-4398 ext. Ç3Q01 A TTEN TIO N A L L S tu d en ts! ; Over ¿5 Billion in private sector g ra n ts & sch o larsh ip s is now available. All students are. eligible . regardless o f gradés, income,. Or parent's income.. Let us help. For m ore inform ation call:, L 800959-1605 ext. F59182. NEED EXTRA $ for College & .' have fun at the samé time? Help us distribute our catalogs around • campus* Ü get commissions on each order, There's no selling re-, ijuirèd;. Call Stuff Catalog at 8Q(^STUFF-OKl Balboa Cafe S. y « A v e ,. S u ite 101 > Tonight $2 ° ° 3H0z. V ine Stéin all domestics NOCOVER S tatt Sfata C laitifia d i Matthews Cantar Basement M S+TO A LA S K A JO B S F ishing Industry. Earn to $3,OO0-$6,OOO+ per month. Room & Board &L . Transportation! Male or Female. • N o experience necessary! (206) 545-4155 ext. A59182 C R U I S E S H IP S N O W H IR IN G Earn up to $2.000+/month working on Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies. World travel (Hawaii, Mexico, the Caribbean, etc.) Seasonal and FullTime employment avail­ able. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C59183 Rural & Apache 894-2662 There will be th re e win­ ners. Judges will .award a $15 : dining gift certificate to the first place winner, $10 in . “movie money” from H arkins Theatres to th e second place w inner and a State Press coffee mug to the third place winner, All entries will be pub­ lished in the December 6 State • Press. The three w inners will have th eir letters published in .'large type, large enough to cut out and magnet to th e fridge as a joyous rem inder of the festive season, not to mention large enough to cu t out extra copies to give to everyone you know. D ust off your keyboards, sharpen your pencils and begin your letters today. This is your chance to (finally) tell your par­ ents th a t you “got published.” Bring your typewritten letter to the State Pres», M atthews C enter Basement, Room 47, by noon Thursday, December 1. Include your name, phone number and ASU ID#. Students and staff are encour­ aged to enter. FIND ¡T in the Classifieds ! , APA/M LA expert, laser printer, dieses, papers» presentations & class notes from your handwrit­ ten copies or from your tapes. Theresa • 924-1976 COM PUTER HELP - Serving ASU since 1983.838-5966, TYPING/WORD PROCESSING MATH REVIEWS! Test 4 and final. Gei that grade you need! Free sample test incl. Math Masters 491-3363. SPANISH TUTOR $150 PAGE includes proofing & editing. Daily ASU pick-up & de­ livery. Phone/faX 256-0424. . E xperienced w ith a BA. Gall Mark at 966-6867.. CAPRICORN ■“ ÄSU 50787150271 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 s ta te P re ss Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Classified Ad Order Form Name Address . . . * - Homo Phone Business Phone City, State Zip - Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, includrig punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the S tale Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first Insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising Please ktdude Driver’s license # r* ^ i XX U C h eck # Q Q B >□ H J B 064 Bicycles 051 Books . * 077 054 086 B usiness Opportunities Computers F re e Lost/Found T s 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. "■ ; # of Days , X ................... . Total = $ ' Classification Name/Number: Expiration bate Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles •’ A Commercial : j day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1,50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.00 per line, per day Private Party 1*4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5.9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day Price per Day ; $ Name on Card 098 065 010 020 061 _ J Dates you wish your ad to rum Bank Card Number ADOPTION ADOPT: LOVING childless cou­ ple w ishes to share w ith your white newborn a lifetime o f love, happiness & financial security filled w ith mtisic & h o b b ie s, M edical/legal paid. Please call Claudia & Eddie, 1-800-538-9934. WHY TYPE IT YOURSELF? TUTORS HOUSE KEEPER needed for one month. Dec. 15rJan. 15. Close to campus. 966-4918. (Oct. 23 to Nov. 2 l j I t’s a better day for finishing pending projects than for plung­ ing into something new. Today y ou’re lo w -k ey , but tOrtight you-’re effervescent and chantir ing. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21 ) The plans you make today may, include, travel. It’s not thè best , time for mixing friendship and business. You’ll be especially effective in; stating ÿour views tonight. (Dec,22;t6 Jan. 19) Don’t hâve too many irons in the Firè today. Concentrate B SENIORS- Happy Senior Celebratidii: W eek ! We a re sp proud of all of you! Have a great week! v in PKE»!! PRE RUSH DINNER Wed, Nov. 30 starts at 5 p.m, at the D elta Sigm a Phi House;, 714 A lpha . Dr, Don’t miss it! SALES ENGINEER •Contract.mánufactú ripg/engmeeriiig firm seeks BS engineering graduating Fall 9 4 or Spr '95 for . career opp. Send resume to: InteSys Technologies, 1300 N. Fies­ ta BlvdL. Gilbert,; AZ 85233,. Attn: Paul Ford, Fax: 497.7070; - GET YOUR 1.995 Entertainment Book that saves you big bucks all •over town on travel, dining,; shop- pirtg. sporting events, "theatres* etc.! What a great gift idea too! Still only $35., Get yours in the Re-Entry office in the lower level of the M l) (across from pool ta­ bles) Of call 965-2252 for more info. AU proceeds benefit th e . ASU Re-Entiy Connection Scholarship-Fund.'. AAA- KINKO-S C opy C enter m akes the grade! G et reports, resumes, & flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & m uch m ore ! O pen 24 hours ! Rural & University, 966-2035. TERM PAPERS, thesis, resumes, manuscripts; etc. Accurate with money-back guar. Judy, 345-9015 FREE MOVIE posters while sup­ plies last! State press Classified Advertising Dept: Matthews Cen­ ter Basement; TONIGHT! AAA TYPING/ word processing, $1.50/page. 15 years experience. Fast turnaround. Call 962-8075. FAST TURNAROUND. Term ' papers, thèses. MLA/ ;APA, laser, f a x . Pat, 897-1741■ DEKE PLEDGES - G ood luck with I-Week. $9 p/h guaranteed S2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. L aser. Fast. Sam e day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. ASU AREA typing; w/p, editing, transerptn, W ordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs; 966-2186 anytime W AIT STAFF needed, no/exp nec.. will train right people. P/T avail. Dirty Drummer, 967^2622. D M SPA Y S EV ERY FRIDA Y ’ _Page 19 Tuesday, N ovember 29, 1994 S t a t e P ress Sony, m cannot accept personal ads through the matt. Q40 102 107 103 056 070 073, Help Wanted-Food Service 015. 120 070 Help Wanted-General . 050 . 07.1 Help Wanted-Sales 045 030 Homes for Rent 088 052 049 : 101 ,074 072. Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health. & Fitness Help Wanted-Child Cpre Help WantedrClericai Homes for. Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes . 063 082 090 Q84 i 10 097. 047 035 080 : 037 Motorcycles . Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing . . Restaurants/Bars Rooms for Rent 100 Services 1 Ö81. Sports & Recreation, 058 Tickets . . 031 . TQwnhomes/Cpndps for Rant . 041. Townhomes/Condos for Sale 060 Transportation . ' 067 Travel 108. Tutors 105 Typing/yvord Processing . . T Í5 Wanted - Page 2 0 S t a t e P ress Tuesday, November 29,1994 • • • • • Great food at great prices Burgers • Steaks • Sandwiches Fresh baked goods Daily specials Senior Citizen discount 4 30 N. Scottsdale Rd 8 9 4 -0 5 3 3 C a c tu s S p o r ts \virufs Just f or ‘Ite ^iofidays^__ any purchase o f $25 òr m ore CACTU/ /PORT/ A SU • Cardinals • Suns -Apparel and Souvenirs— 401 S. Mill É (across from the Spaghetti Co.) 4| am 921-1A SU SB I I I I I I I t I I I I L FREE 20oz. COFFEE WITH THIS COUPON THRU 12-5-94 AT THESE LOCATIONS ONLY: Pick up your State P re ss at any of th e s e locations: •Dobson & Southern •Apache & Price •University & Ash •University & McClintock •University & Hardy •Terrace & Apache •Rural & Lemon THANK YO UFOR SHOPPING AT CIRCLE_K J