W M ore than 1000 children HAVE LOST THEIR PARENTS IN THE MASS EXODUS TO RW ANDA Horoscopes .. Opinion......... Police Report SEASO N S WITH A LOSS P age 13 S t u d e n t - t e a c h e r r a tio If it’s true that the number of stu­ dents per instructor indicates quality of education, ASU is in big trouble. ASU's student-teacher ratio of 28to-1 lags behind the national average ofl7-to-l Though have been slowly increasing in a program that C oor ASU President Lattie Coor calls "his­ torically underfunded undergraduate instruction,” the high­ er-than-expected enrollment numbers for fall '96 increased the statistic from 25-to-l in spring '% . Academic Senate President Tom Callarman said the University would like to have more professors, but the issue is out of their hands. “It's really more of a budget issue," he said. Classifieds.... Comics......... Crossword.... U ofA has ended A SU coach B ruce Snyder ' s last three Page 3 B y B ecky H ill S tate P ress I n s id e Sports o rld / N a t io n r a te s p o o r ly It is for this reason that Coor received the go-ahead from the Arizona Board of Regents to ask the state Legislature for a bigger budget in 1997-98 — the next budget request up for legislative consideration. Coor told the board at their November meeting that ASU has done everything it can to accommodate growing enroll­ ment including “distance learning and using the campus during non-traditional hours.” but the time has come to add faculty and staff. A ssociated S tudents o f ASU P resident M arc Baumgartner agrees with Coor and said being so far below the national average is “wrong.” “In the late 80s. the Legislature broke away from fund­ ing the University at 22-to-l. There is no reason whatsoev­ er that should happen. Everyone talks about engaging the student in conversation, and you can’t engage students at a 28-to-l.” ■ Blake Anderson, government relations analyst for the Office of Institutional Analysis, said the 22-to-l formula is not state law but simply a figure agreed upon between the universities and previous legislatures. “Recently we brought it up and none of the legislators really have an answer for it,” Anderson said. Coor doesn’t expect to bring ASU in line with the national average right away, but wants the next budget to fund the 22-to-l ratio by adding 38 full-time equiva­ lent faculty and nine or 10 more staff at a cost of about $2.65 million. “Increased enrollment translates to increased tuition rev­ enue,” Coor said, and it is this money that he hopes the Legislature will use to partially fund the request. Kathleen Wolk, assistant librarian for Institutional Analysis, said when instructors are counted, and not just professors, the ratio looks much better at 16-to-l. This is the number that is reported to surveys such as US News and World Report ann various college guides. Not everyone Closer to disclosure backs Macs; some students eyeing IBMs B y M elody M c D o nald S tate P ress Heather Russell was among many who gathered around a table in front o f the C ollege o f A rchitecture and Environmental Design Monday afternoon and scrawled their names across a petition that said: "There are no PC-based word processing or GIS com­ puter labs av ailable to students at the C ollege o f Architecture and Environmental Design.” The 24-year-old senior architecture major said the College of Architecture and Design is heavily equipped with Macintosh computers, which are becoming obsolete in their field. "PCs make up about 80 percent of what businesses use,” Russell said: "‘They don’t use Macintosh anymore. I’d say only about 20 percent use Macs, if that.” Without adequate training in PC-based word processing, students graduating from ASU’s College of Architecture and Environmental Design are “ill-prepared for the real world, ” Russell said. John Mcuneir, dean of the College of Architecture and Design, said he hears student concerns and the college is doing what it can to increase the use of PCs. However, he said lack of funding has made it a challenge. “There has never been a significant budget line,” he said. “We have been trying to broaden the base of our com­ puter resources, but we face a significant fiscal problem, “The only way We’ve been able to add com puter resources is with the accumulation of unexpended monies at the end of the academic year.” Meuneir said he wished students would have come to him directly with their concerns, but he has, “no prob­ lem” with the students making their views known out­ ride the building. “1 don’t mind them doing this,” he said. “It probably will have an impact.” l,ori Cain/State Press Associated Students of ASU President Marc Baumgartner clarifies the aim of publishing student evaluations Monday at the Academic Senate meeting in Pedrick Great Hall of the College of Law. Baumgartner has been working on the proposal for 18 months and looks forward to Its Introduction into the Senate meeting in December. The actual vote to make student evaluations public will take place in January. Student Health exec gets key assignment B y J ennifer N etherby State P ress ASU Director of Student Health. Dr. Dale Bowen was elected president last week of the Pacific Coast College Health Association for the 1996-97 academic year. The Association meets for at least one major conference a year to discuss the needs of college health clinics, Bowen said. The regional association is part of the national American College Health Association. Tom Jacobsen, associate director o f ASU Student Health, said Bowen’s election to president shows the respect he has earned from his colleagues. “It’s extremely exciting. It’s quite an honor to have him elected in that role,” Jacobsen said. “He is a very experienced and articulate individual who is respected by his colleagues.” Bowen had been vice president before being elected president. One of his major goals during his term is to cre- ate a pool of medical resources among the different experts who belong to the association. “One of the things that we’re trying to do is increase the awareness that people exist for expertise,” Bowen said. “It’s an enormous pool of resources and information.” Some of the issues that Bowen expects the association to discuss this year include: • How to deal with violence and substance abuse on college campuses. • Prevention of sexually transmitted diseases. • Campus pregnancy prevention programs. • How to more effectively schedule patients for appointments. Bowen has been on the ASU medical staff since 1983. During that time, he has developed a residency program with local hospitals to train physicians in sports medicine, adolescent medicine and gynecology. Prior to working at ASU, he was a pediatrician in Washington state. Sta te P ress Tuesday, November 19, 1996 P age 2 Tension rem ains after riot T oday Cam pus dubs and organizations m ay subm it w ritten entries to the State Press m the basem ent o f M atthews Center. Requests wiK not be taken over the phone o r via fax. D eadline fo r requests is noon the day before pu b li­ cation and entries w ill n o t be accepted m òre than three w orking days before p u b lica tio n . O nly one e n try p e r organization p e r day is perm itted. E n trie s m u st co n ta in th e fu ll nam e o f th e d u b o r organization, a description o f the event, date, tim e and the fu ll address o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space a n d clarity. Incom plete o r ille g ib le entries w ill be discarded. The Today S e ctio n is a d a ily c a le n d a r o f e vents p rin te d a s a service to th e A SU com m unity. R equests are accepted on a first-com e, first-served basis and are p rin te d as space perm its. • S o c ie ty fo r H um an R e s o u rc e M a n a g e m e n t — Guest speaker Robert Watters will talk at 4:30 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room 222. • A rizona O uting C lub — General meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. in tie MU Pima Room. • Learning R esource C enter -— Test Preparation and Text Anxiety workshop from 4 to 5 p.m . in, the M U Room 211. • A E D - P rem ed H o n o ra ry — G uest sp eaker Or. Campos from the University of Guadalajara. Begins at 6:30 p.m. in PSH 150. • W orld AIDS Day — Help organize World AIDS Day events. Begins at 5 p m . in the MU Havasu pai Room 206. • B aptist Student Union — Tuesday P.M. from 8 to 9 p.m. at 1322 S. MHI Ave. • P h ilo s o p h y C lu b M eeting begins at 3 p.m . in Physical Science Room A 546. • Sem ester at Sea — Video presentation about earning credits while sailing around the world begins at 9 p.m. in the Main Hall Cafeteria. • Sun Devils Men’s and Women’s Club Gymnastics — Open workout from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in the PE West Gym. • R esidential Life W ellness Program m ing C ouncil — Hold Me, Thrill Me, Thrill Me, Kill Me: How to Stay Safe on Campus. Open forum begins at 5:30 p.m. in the MU Programming Lounge. • M U A B S p e c ia l E v e n ts C o m m itte e — M eetin g begins at 3:15 p.m. in Conference Room 1 A on the third floor of the MU. • College R epublicans — General meeting begins at 3:30 p.m . in the MU Yuma Room 211. B y J eff S hain A ssociated P ress PHOENIX (AP) — Less than 24 hours after facing off against hundreds of angry inmates at his tent-city jail, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio found himself under attack Monday by critics who said his get-tough policies were the main cause behind the week­ end riot. “His attitude is that these people are throwaway people,” said D onna Hamm, director of the prisoner-rights group Middle Ground. “That attitude has bled down into the staff attitude. The staff feels it has license to abuse and humiliate inmates.” S tillness hung in the air at the Durango Jail complex south of down­ town Phoenix, where trustees began the process of cleaning up the damage caused by rock-throwing and fires ini­ tiated Sunday by angry inmates. Guards stationed at the access road nearest the military-style tents kept reporters at bay, ordering them to a parking lot across the street from the gate. Trucks o ccasionally rolled through the gates, presumably to col­ lect more debris from die courtyard. At the nearby Towers Jail, a sign was posted saying: “No visitation until further notice because of the riot.’’ A heavy silence also enveloped the sh eriff’s office, where em ployees remained tight-lipped throughout the day. Repeated phone calls to depart­ ment officials went unanswered. Arpaio himself issued the only com­ ment of the day, coming in a radio inter­ view with Phoenix radio station KTAR. “I’m not going to change things over some little disturbance,” the sheriff said. C ounty A ttorney Rick Rom ley, however, noted that a federal investi­ gation earlier this year warned that the county could be sued over excessive force and a lack of medical treatment at the jail. “ W hen you have a riot that has occurred, you have to find out why it occurred,” Romley said. “I hope Joe A rpaio steps up to the p late. He shouldn’t sweep it under the rug. It was a dangerous situation; we’re for­ tunate nobody was hurt seriously.” Arpaio, meanwhile, com plained that similar comments by Romley in the midst of Sunday’s disturbance had put jail staff at risk. “He’s supposed to be my attorney, did you know that?’ Arpaio said. “He’s supposed to be protecting me. But here he is blasting me while I’m having a riot and my employees are in danger.” Arpaio takes pride in his reputation as the “toughest sheriff in America,’’ built on such policies as revival of chain-gang detail and banning o f cof­ fee and pornographic m agazines. Inmates also are issued pink under­ w ear and fed bologna sandw iches instead of costlier meals. But while his policies have been popular among county taxpayers, they also have brought allegations of civilrights violations, including charges of abuse by jail staff. “I have no question that this is not something that initiated yesterday,” Hamm said. “Joe Arpaio has built his entire career as sheriff on the backs of humiliating people and taking away their human dignity. That kind of rage and anger takes a while to build up. Then when it explodes, it explodes irrationally.” The number of complaint letters M iddle G round has received from M aricopa County Jail inm ates has more than doubled recently to as many as 25 in a typical month, she said. In July, a preliminary investigation by the U.S: Justice Department found the sheriff’s office used excessive force w ith priso n ers and said the department could be sued over it. T hat rep o rt was pu b lish ed one month after the death of a Tempe man after a struggle with guards inside the Madison Street Jail. Scott Norberg, 33, died June 1 of positional asphyxia when officers wrapped a towel around his head to prevent him from spitting white they were trying to strap him into a restraint chair. A 2,100-page internal report exon­ erated jail staff of any wrongdoing, but R om ley has vow ed his own investigation. STATE P r e s s ONLINE — h ttp ://n e w s.v p sa .a su .e d u Y O U 'R E H IR E D ! H E A L T H C A R E T R A IN IN O Avg. Annual Start Salarv Class Start 2 Months $14,000 Jan. 6th 4 Months 2,5 Months $14,560 Jan. 6th Medical Secretary 5 Months 1.5 Months $14,560 Jan. 6th Dental Assistant 7 Months 1.5 Months $15,600 Nov. 25th Veterinary Assistant 7 Months Immediately $11,960 Jan. 6th Physical Therapy Tech. 7.5 Months 1.5 Months $13,520 Dec. 2nd Medical Assistant 8 Months Immediately $15,600 Jan. 6th Associate Degree Programs Program Lenath Avg. Place* Ment Time Avg. Annual Start Salary Class Start Medical Lab Tech 20 Months 2.5 Months $18,720 Dec. 2nd Radiologic Tech 23 Months 2.5 Months $23,920 May 5th Respiratory Therapist 25 Months 2.5 Months $22,800 Dec. 2nd Career Programs Program Lenath Avg. Place* Ment Time .Phlebotomy Technician 2.5 Months Hospital Unit Secretary • Day and Evening C lasses • Job Placement Assistance Financial Aid Available for Eligible Students Exceptional Results Haircut ft Dry Facials Body Waxing Manicure Eyelash Tint Brow Wax Colors Permanent Weaves Updo $ 8.00 $25.00 $12.00 and up $ 8.00 $ 5.00 $ 5.00 $ I1.00an d u p $20.00 and up $34.00 and up $10.00 AVEDA Carsten Utilizes Exclusively Aveda Products for Hair, Nalls, Skin Care ft Make-Up 3345 SOUTH RURAL ROAD 491-0449 TUE-FRI 9:30 - 6:00 SAT 8:30-5:00 20% Discount with Validated Student I D 'AM work performed by students under the supervision ot Licensed Instructors. « 2 W o r l d Sta te P ress___________________________ _______________________________ /N a t io n Tuesday, November 19, 1996 P ag e 3 Feds release chilling Valujet tape at hearing B y C atherine W ilson A ssociated P ress M IAM I — Passengers screamed “Fire! Fire! Fire!” and a flight attendant warned, “We can’t get oxygen back there” during the final terrifying moments before ValuJet Flight 592 plunged into the Everglades, killing all 110 people aboard. The chilling eight-minute tape from the cockpit voice recorder ends with the cockpit and cabin falling silent, leaving the sound of rushing air, perhaps from a cock­ pit window that had been opened to let the smoke out. A transcript of the recording was released Monday as a hearing opened on the mistakes that led to the May 11 crash. Federal investi­ gators believe that 144 oxygen­ last recorded voice from the plane generating canisters carried in the was that o f a crew member telling DC-9’s cargo hold either ignited the tower, “We need the, uh, clos­ est airport available.” or fueled a fire. The plane crashed 2 minutes, Six minutes after takeoff from Miami International Airport, the 22 seconds later. While the flight pilot can be heard telling the co-pilot: See related storÿ attendant warned th a t passengers “We got some electri­ could not get oxy­ cal problems. ... We’re PAGE 9 gen, N ational losing everything.” A few seconds later, the voice T ransportation S afety Board recorder picked up scream s of investigator Greg Feith said there passengers in the cabin, including was not enough information to say several women shouting, “Fire! what may have happened to the oxygen masks that drop down in Fire! Fire! Fire!” O ver the next 51 seconds, front o f passengers during an shouts were heard from the cabin emergency. Relatives of the victims hope twice more and a flight attendant said only, “Completely on fire” the hearing will tell them why before the cabin fell silent. The their loved ones died. “I dreaded coming here, but this is something that I have to do in order to have closure," Said Gwendolyn Marks, a nurse whose 23-year-old son died in the crash. “It may be painful, but it was my child and I want to hear what was going through his mind, what was going oh in those last minutes.” Investigators did not release the recording itself out of concern for the feelings of family members. That decisio n upset R ichard Kessler, an Atlanta lawyer whose wife, Kathleen, was killed. “I’m going to Washington after this to try to get them to change the law,” Kessler said. He said he wanted to know if one of the voic­ es repeatedly shouting, “Fire” was his wife’s. By the time passenger screams were heard inside the aircraft, the decision had been made to try to return to Miami. The tower controller, who was listening on a separate circuit and could not hear the commotion in the plane, asked what the problem was and was told, “Smoke in the cockp ... smoke in the cabin.” The tower instructed the crew to return. Maria Rivera said accounts of her m o th er’s final m om ents aboard the plane were painful. Holding a picture of her mother, Cecelia Cabrera, she referred to the passengers’ screams. “I imagined it was my mother,” she said. “I didn’t think of any­ thing else. I just cried and cried and cried.” Child refugees lost and found on trip to Rwandan homes B y H rvoje H ranjski A ssociated P ress NKAM1RA. Rwanda — The exhausted young mother, barefoot, stepped inside the tent and began scrutinizing the faces of hundreds of children playing on the dirty floor and eating cookies. Suddenly, she reached into the crowd and grabbed out her 8-year-old daughter by the arm. E sco rtin g the ch ild out o f the tent, M arceline Myiramzbrimba broke into a smile of relief. “I was hold­ ing her hand yesterday, and then suddenly she disap­ peared. 1 am so happy she is with me." Myiramzbrimba is among 200 lucky parents who found their sons and daughters at a temporary camp on the Rwandan border. There are still hundreds of lost children here, separated from their parents during the confusion of a half-m illion Hutu refugees streaming back to their Rwandan homeland in the past four days. These Hutu refugees fled into eastern Zaire two years ago, fearing retribution from the Tutsi government for R w anda’s genocide; Hutu m ilitias had killed nearly 500,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus. The Hutu militiamen fled, too, and lived among the refugees in Li.N. camps, using the civilians as human shields for their cross-border attacks on Rwanda and using intimidation and violence to keep the refugees from going home. Last week, Zairian rebels routed the militiamen from the camps and freed the refugees to begin a journey back to Rwanda. The exodus started Friday. The initial flight emptied the camp at Mugunga, which during recent fighting between Zaire’s rebels and its army had swelled into the world’s largest refugee outpost. A half-million refugees choked roads Monthly on both sides o f the Rwanda-Zaire border. They trudged east along the scorching tarmac from the Zairian border to the transit camp at Nkamira, 20 miles. Aid agencies say up to 700,000 refugees remain in the eastern Zairian mountains near Lake Kivu, mid their situa­ tion is not clear. A iJ.N. assessm ent team was heading for the area A Rwandan refugee child site on the side of the road from Mugunga refugee camp after losing his family in the hundreds of thou­ sands who streamed to Rwanda on Saturday. More than 1000 children have been lost in the mass of refugees. Many parents resorted to tying their children to their clothing to keep them by their side in the exodus. Tuesday, and the U.N. refugee agency was sending local aid teams into the Virunga forest to find those left behind, spokesman Ray Wilkinson said. Some of those are children. “The number of new separations is still higher than unifications,” said Marie de la Soudiere of the U.N. chil­ dren’s organization, UNICEF. “We hope to unite them all soon.” As the column of tired refugees snaked along the road, Rwandan aid workers shouted through megaphones for parents to hang on to their children and told diem where to look if their youngsters were lost. Worried parents waited at the gates of the interim bor­ der camp; aid workers let them in gradually. Lost children were put into die huge tents there, divided by hometown. Am azingly calm , the children ages 2 to 16 — played or talked about their high-protein cookies, about the only food returnees get until they reach their homes. “No child will stay here longer than 48 hours. Parents are moving on the way home, so that means we will have to take the children to their home communes if the parents don’t show up.” explained Fred Kasozi from the Save The Children agency. Children wore coded bracelets to help parents rind them. Those younger than 5 were photographed, their snapshots posted at the camp, for parents to inspect and distributed to Red Cross offices throughout Rwanda. If a child’s parents or relatives cannot be found, aid agencies will try to find foster parents, said Claudete Murekatete of the U.S.-based World Vision relief agency. CIA official charged w ith selling Russia secrets, agent ID s B y M ichael J . Sniffen A ssociated P ress WASHINGTON — A onetime CIA sta­ tion chief was charged Monday with selling top secrets to the Russians for more than $120,000. The FBI suspects that the high­ est-ranking CIA officer ever charged with espionage sold the identities of all new CIA agent trainees in the past two years. The 16-year CIA veteran, H arold J. Nicholson, 46, of Burke, Va., “betrayed his country for money. He was not motivated by ideology but by g reed,” said U .S. Attorney Helen Fahey. “He had access to a great deal of very damaging information.” An FBI affidavit said that Nicholson had access to the biographies and assignments of every new CIA agent trained from July 1994 to July 1996, when he taught at the CIA’s secret Virginia framing site, and that evidence strongly indicated Nicholson sold the material to the Russians. “As a result of this disclosure, it will be difficult, if not impossible, for the CIA to place some of these newly trained case offi­ cers into certain sensitive foreign postings for the rest of their careers,” said FBI Agent Michael Lonergan’s affidavit. Nicholson was arrested by FBI agents at Dulles International Airport in suburban V irginia Saturday afternoon as he was about to leave for Switzerland, where Fahey said he intended to meet his Russian han­ dlers. In a rare news conference w ith FBI Director Louis Freeh, CIA Director John Deutch said, “Thus far, we have no infor­ mation that any CIA or FBI assets were killed as a result o f Nicholson’s spying.” No U.S, agents or sources abroad appear to have been arrested either, o fficials said. Until a damage estimate is completed, there is no way to “determine how many operations he may have compromised, but it seems unlikely that the damage he caused in any way approaches th at done by (Aldrich) Ames,” Deutch said. The worst turncoat in CIA history, coun­ terintelligence officer Aldrich Ames plead­ ed guilty in 1994 to selling Russia informa­ tion over eight years for more than $2.5 million. U.S. officials attributed the death of 10 Western agents and the compromise of dozens of operations to Ames. Fahey said there was no evidence of a connection between Nicholson and Ames and no indication that other U.S. citizens worked with Nicholson. Freeh and Deutch said he was arrested much earlier in his alleged double-agent career than Ames because of reforms and new FBI-CIA cooperation undertaken after the Ames case. The Ames case revealed that CIA officials had paid inadequate attention to Ames’ unexplained cash, fre­ quent foreign trips and failure of polygraph tests. “There has been an exchange of highlevel personnel between the agencies,” Freeh said. “ Their analytical efforts led to today’s surest.” Opinion S tate P rçss Tuesday, November 19, 1996 P a»e 4 J lltp f 'Eaitom i Catholic Church m issin g w orld starvation roots Just w hen you thought the R om an C atholic C hurch was inching into the 20th Century, the church takes a drastic and unrealistic jum p back into the p a s t * Although the church recently adm itted evolu­ tion m ay have some actual merit, the Vatican still has trouble seeing the forest because o f the trees. At the recent “Pood Summit’* sponsored by the. United Nations, the Pope declaró! world starva­ tio n w a sn ’t th e re su lt o f o v erp o p u la tio n , b u t rath er a d isparity betw een “rich natio n s” and “poor nations.” This line of argument helps rein­ force the Catholic C hurch’s ban on artificial birth control and fam ily planning. Unfortunately, in a m odem world,' this argu­ ment will lead to even more tragedy. Is it a coincidence that “rich” nations have a Iowa- birth rate than “poor” nations? O r a coinci­ dence th at countries w ith sm aller populations have less strain on their resources than countries with large populations? There are more than 840 million hungry people in this world, most of them in Third-World coun­ tries. A hundred years ago, many people world­ wide had large families, mainly because disease and deatii limited the number of children who actually reached adulthood. The problem now is many people world-wide still have large families. Modem medicine and improved diets have rock­ eted life-spans, creating more adults who, in tent, create more children —~ children they can’t feed. In 1930, the world population was estim ated at two billion. la 1970, the population was estimated at 3 6 billion people. In 1995, the world popula­ tion was more than six billion people. But the world hasn’t changed size along with its population. There are only so many resources on Hus planet, and as the world population con­ tinues to grow, these resources will become oapae and more stressed. There is only so ir a ta a a W e land in the vrtxtd. la d much o f &i t threatened ¡py desertification as crude farming practices deplete \ . L o ck in g the re so u rc e s o f in d u stria liz e d nations, many jo É m tm S Waáái&jr« n t a f f i e a to provide dio social services so d i ss day-care and elder cate that are lacking in their country. Large t a f f i e s also make d iv is ta o f labor caffi»; with w m «ad daughters pitching in to support dÉ^dÉÉMM^; ■■■■ v ’' *^pi pMl l o f fam ilies are doomed. A s they scram ble for few er and few er resources w hile com peting against more and more other hungry people, food will become less ami less available. Until the Pope and the Catholic Church recog­ nize the re la tio n sh ip s b etw een p o p u latio n , resources and starvation and support family plan­ ning, world hunger will be around for a t a g time ’to come. s TAFF STATE PRESS A rm y sex scandal n o t surprising Well, the military's had itself quite a week. RYN As of Sunday. 4,000 women CHANCELLOR!! have telephoned an Army hotline Columnist with complaints of inappropriate sexual conduct. Four thousand women. The calls come in the wake of sex scandals involving female recruits and their drill instructors at the Army’s Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland and at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. In the Maryland case, four drill sergeants and a captain were charged with raping or sexually harassing at least a dozen female recruits. At Fort Leonard Wood, four noncommissioned officers were charged with violating the Army’s absolute ban on per­ sonal relationships with trainees. That is, at least in one case, instructors were having “consensual” sex with their female, subordinate recruits. Now that’s some code of honor. God bless America. You know die worst part about these latest revelations? I’m not in the least bit surprised. I am horrified, nauseous, so furious I could spit my teeth out— but not shocked. Not after Tailhook, die Naval sexual harassment incident Not after the rape of a 12-year-old girl by three Marines in Japan. Not after the behavior of those charming Citadel boys. Is anyone shocked, really? I mean, we’re talking the mili­ tary hoe, the granddaddy of all patriarchal institutions. Sexism may as well have been poured into the foundation right along with the concrete at those training grounds. If those damn women hadn’t been there in the first place, this never would have happened, right? Kinda like if you didn’t wear that short skirt or put yourself in that situation, honey, then you never would have gotten yourself raped. That’s the way things go in the good ol’ U S. of A. A little ass-grabbing in the military? Well, of course. In the most insulting comment to date, Defense Secretary William Perry said on Meet the Press that women considering military careers should be confident their commanders will have “greater sympathy, greater support for dealing with these problems than you will find anywhere in society.” Yeah, they’ve done a fantastic job so far. Bravo, gentleman. IE I suppose that’s why Joy Paulsen, a trainee involved in the Fort Leonard Wood incident, asked a judge, “Who was I sup­ posed to report this to? Who was going to believe m eT And, once again, it comes down to who we’re gonna believe. The thousands of women at Mitsubishi Corporation who file a massive lawsuit with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, or the men who say they’re overre­ acting? Anita Hill or Clarence Thomas? Now that the military has been caught in the act, so to speak, the hammer will come down. People will be keeping their eye on military actions. And that’s a good thing. That’s a step. I just have to wonder where the hell all those steps are tak­ ing us. For each step women take forward, it’s like they’re kicked down a flight of stairs in return. We can monitor behavior, change it even, but will the atti­ tudes change? How about the conditions that allow for some men, before they get caught, to think it’s OK to rape and harass women — will those change? I would be surprised if they did. That’s the thing about sexism. You can’t just overturn a hierarchical, institutionalized system of oppression by taking care of individual incidents. Like, voila, and things are fixed. (That’s why, incidentally, “reverse’’ sexism, racism, classism, etc., are the biggest lies on the planet.) The reason, of course, that I’m not shocked about these military charges is that we see this every day of our lives. Women being raped and harassed in America? Well, no freakin’ duh. I mean, this is a country who pays Mike Tyson, a convicted rapist, $10 million to lose a fight. This is a country Where Bob Packwood, sexual harasser extraordinaire, has slipped back through the revolving political door and is working on Capitol Hill as a lobbyist This is a country where Hooters is considered a fun place to have lunch. This is a country where I walk down any given street, any given day, and have to fight not to cross my arms in front of my chest when passing a group of nudging, whisper­ ing men — men who are brothers, fathers and friends. Sexual misconduct in the military? Like I said, I’m not surprised. Bryn Chancellor is a master’s student in English literature. ANGELA MULL, Editor BRIAN ANDERSON, Managing Editor KEVIN J. ADEY .............:v , TIM BAXTER ........ AI^DRE A HEALEY ............ KELLY WENDEL. ......... TIMOTHY TAIT............... TIM HACKER ......... .... JIM POULIN............. ......... JEREMY STEIN .. . . .... . LIZ MONTALBANO.......... I F.SI f i .INDGREN............. AARON BRUTCHER..... ...Night Production Supervisen* REPORTERS: Bill Bertoliao. Kennes Bolig, Sara Bush, Deanna Darr, Becky Hill, Melody McDonald, Jennifer Nedierby, Jeff Owens, Ray Stern, SPORTS REPORTERS: Doug Cook, Josh DeFamio. Percy Ednalino Jr., Randy Jones, Dustin Krugel, Ed Odeven. COPY EDITORS: Christo Cerrentono, Theresa Valles. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Lori Cain, Pat Shannahan. COLUM NISTS: Bryn Chancellor, Mark Cohen, Tim Elizondo, Steve Forsberg, David Galantowicz, Tina Holder, Rick Liljegren, Joshua Solovskoy, Vivi Sienberg. Theresa Valles; CARTOONISTS; Carrie Behrens, Brian Fairrington, Jonathan Inge, Steve Tansley, Kristi Thompson. PRODUCTION: Adrianna Garcia, Diana Kessinger, John Kestner, Jeremy Meyer,.Eric Noland, Corey Saunders, Shellie Scott, Kai Risely. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Can Dewaki. Dan EUstrom, Spencer Frame, David Goodwin, Nickelle Kastein, Brandon Mudd, Jess Rankin, Simon Roberts, Mark Santiago, Shane Siren, Jesse Sletteland, Leslie Vegter. CLASSIFIEDS: Lisa Bayless, Heidi Heister, Wayne Hoover, Stacey Thayer. Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of t|ie editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: ANGELA MULL Editor BRIAN ANDERSON Managing Editor KELLY WENDEL Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur- % ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room IS, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is die only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information............. .965-7572 Newsroom..... ...965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising.............. 965-6555 Classifieds................965-6735 h ttp : //n e w s .v s p a M s u .e d u < _________ Opinion _______ __ STATE P ress - Tuesday, November 19, 1996 ________ P^gC 5 Sim ple p lan t creates divisive issue for A m ericans Inside my clo set, I keep one single m arijuana plant. H im Just one, no more no less. It ELIZO N D O really is a fascinating plant. L Columnist Such a simple weed. That one plant, dazzling in the illum i­ nating grow-light in my closet, contains so much power in society. We are taught as children to fear it, “re-edu­ cated” by some to embrace it, and in the meantime never even hint to our elders the fact that some of. us have — dare 1 say — smoked it. According to a statistic in Newsweek magazine, my gen­ eration has “out partied” every other generation to date. That translates into the notion that we have loaded more bowls, rolled more joints and packed more pipes than even the famed “Flower Children" of the 1960s and 70s. So for those of who have done your part to help achieve that goal, congratulations and thank you for your support. I am not sure if that is something I really want my gen­ eration to be noted for. but if it helps me when I put that lit­ tle fact on my graduate school applications, then that's fine w ith me. W ould that go under “ special aw ards” or “extracurricular activities?” Oh yes, let's pat ourselves on the back and confirm a job Well done- After all, if someone has to earn the “most pot together that many conclude marijuana and a person’s char­ acter are somehow connected. I can recall thé numerous times I have been asked if I smoked pot by a person I had just met. I would give my answer and wait to see if the answer I gave matched theirs. It’s odd, but friendships live and ¿ie based on the answer to this one Simple question. Despite the fact marijuana is breaking new political ground and has been entrenched in commercialism for some time, it is still one of these issues which can divide us. A drug that symbolized peace and freedom years ago symbolizes separation and now gives cause to division. Where one stands in relation to marijuana has become a defining character issue for how people gauge us as human beings. When I say I have a pot plant in my closet, I would! assume there are some, if not all, readers who would immediately place some sort of value or judgment upon my character for simply mentioning the fact that I grow an “illegal controlled substance.” I might be judged as “liber­ al,” or maybe one of those “party” types and then the con­ notations of good or bad would .follow. Truth is, I don’t really have a plant growing in my closet. But the fact that value is placed on the image of if I do or don’t, says some­ thing about how we let marijuana become what it has never been before. Personal. Tim Elizondo is a senior studying communications. A m erica n lead ers la ck w isd o m u o ta B ie s Q: smoked” award, it might as well be us. But to say that we have ONLY smoked more pot than our predecessors would be to neglect all the marijuana-related issues we have raised. Why, my generation has transformed thé meaning of what “Doobie” now represents. We have given a simple lit­ tle weed a life of its own. It is our generation which has been able to establish that marijuana can be an “image.” Here I am, a fifth-year col­ lege student with no degree to speak of and yet, there I sit watching Dazed and Confused, listening to an album full for Dr. Dre’s pro-marijuana lyrics, wearing my brand new $30 marijuana leaf logo shirt, and holding my new, $200 spiffy bong from the newest, hippest head shop. For the small price of about $400,1 can be the “anti-establishment” incarnate. Can you imagine that? Twenty years ago they had to actually go and protest or something to be “anti­ establishment." But nowadays, I can just buy the look and save myself the hassle. Marijuana is a curious oddity to the “children of the 80s” generation, which Still hasn’t really come to terms yet. It’s rather ironic the first group of children to come out of Ronald Reagan’s “Say No to Drugs” program would have such a materialistic view of what marijuana has come to mean. Marijuana and imago have become so closely woven “I n th e o ld d a ys, a ll y o u n e e d e d w as a h a n d s h a k e . N o w a d a y s y o u n e e d fo r t y la w yers. ” — Jim m y H offa in Hoffa: The Real Story, 1975 C ollege Republicans happy w ith adviser In the Nov. 8 edition of the Stale Press, a bit of intel­ lectual defecation composed by Roger Axford appeared on the op-ed page. H as defecation is disturbing on two accounts: (be first is that my views as stated in my Oct. 14 tetter to the State Press concerning comments made by Dalgieish, who is the faculty adviser to the College Republicans, were intenfionallymisrepresented; and the : second is that this structureless letter, written by a Professor o f (Education, is littered with grammatical errors. • T o ad d ress the form er account, the C ollege R epublicans never disassociated them selves from Dalgieish as Axford stated in his letter. If we had truly disassociated ourselves from Dalgieish, we would have dumped him as our faculty adviser and sought a new adviser. This never occurred, (hi die contrary, we are proud to have Dalgieish as our adviser, should he ever vacate that position, finding a replacement of his caliber would prove a difficult task. / As for die latter account, it is rather discouraging to read a letter written by a “Professor o f Education” that lacks proper structure and is riddled with grammatical errors. Such a bastardization o f the English language is completely unbecoming o f an academic professional. Hopefully, Axford’s educational shortcomings are not endemic to the faculty and staff of the College of Education. Perhaps if Axford had misrepresented my views is a grammatically correct fashion, we could have a "modicum o f respect" for this iconoclastic prodigal son of an ass who calls himself a professor. * In the future, 1 hope Axford will not find himself so compelled to misrepresent another’s views. If he does however, it would st«ely he to the benefit o f all if he had someone proofread his material before it is cast before the pablic eye. " R o b ert K errigan C h airm an College -- -----------1 As a fledgling political sci­ entist, an am ateur historian and a theological philosopher, I have experienced many teachings, doctrines and opin­ ions. I have sought to be fair and open-minded to all types of beliefs and non-beliefs. What I have discovered isthis: w isdom is divinelyinspired. Yet to a lesser degree, some w ould argue whether it is a gift such as a revelation or the gift to exer­ cise reason and rationale. For example, King Solomc God. By far he was the wisest man ever to live. This result­ ed in wealth that is unmatched even today. On the other hand, the founding fathers of the United States of America sought wisdom from revelation but tended as a whole to lean toward history, theology and prayer with their contem­ poraries to find “her.” Both of these examples are of great men that led great nations. So what is the cause of wisdom today for our lead­ ers? Unfortunately, the most commonly used method to obtain wisdom is the public opinion poll. This foolish method is flawed because it removes the principle source of wisdom from the decision process and places that authority in the hands of men. Tragically, history reveals moments in time when men set aside their potential for wisdom and followed after vanity, pride, false doctrine, lust, greed and hypocrisy. Those times have all been hallmarked with great suffering and death. During the Inquisition, people were persecuted for their religious beliefs. Over time, the persecution escalated to execution. Because of a lack of wisdom among the follow­ ers, the leaders continued on a path that was unwise. This same lack of wisdom was manifested in Germany during the genocide of the Jews while World War II rolled across Europe, for it was the lack of wisdom in the people that allowed the Holocaust. Even on American soil, this lack of wisdom seeped into the gene pool as the slaughter of American Indians during the westward expansion contin­ ued after countless pleas from those that saw this as wrong. It has been said “a fool finds pleasure in evil conduct, but a man of understanding,delights in wisdom." If our leaders sought to truly understand, to truly know wisdom and to lead with this fundamental precept there would be no voodoo sessions with the spirit of Eleanor Roosevelt or an open invitation to the spirit of infanticide. Our liberties would not be trodden upon and our future would be a sure foundation that would be the guiding light into the 21st century. For neither a house nor a bridge can withstand the stress­ es of a generation the has lost its sense of direction by turn­ ing away from the cornerstone of wisdom. As Solomon said, “For lack of guidance a nation falls.” Therefore, by setting aside wisdom and seeking truth in opinion, our leaders — Bill Clinton and his administration — have fought and struggled with the ideologies of tradi­ tional America. For example, they issued a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy for the armed services, they continually promote the homosexual lifestyle in public education, they reinforce dependency on government in those who receive welfare and, like the leaders of the past that neither sought wisdom nor listened to those that did, they are engaged in a modemday genocide. This is indicative of leadership without wisdom because they limit life, promote liberty at the expense of another and encourage the pursuit of happiness to those engaged in unnatural behavior. Yet it is not solely their fault, for they are but a reflection of those they represent. These men and women seek only to appease public opinion and by doing so commit violations against what is natural and wise. Joshua Solovskoy is a senior studying political science and can be contacted at solovskoy@msn.com Band member says thanks to team Thank you Devils, first of all, for a wonderful season! And not just Plummer, Poole and Roque, whose names are tossed around like buzzwords, but to the whole team for an out­ standing job. Secondly, thank you for consistently proving wrong the naysayers and all the reporters and “fans” who were ready to pounce and say, “HA! I knew it wouldn’t last! See, I told you they would lose!” You know who you are, and you can do all of us a favor and stay home come Jan. 1. The true fans never backed away or picked an outcome other than ASU winning.; ' %:. ' l never lost faith, and I’ve been there every home game for the last three years cheering you guys on till the end. And thank you Devils, lastly (but not least) for a once in a lifetime chance to take a trip to Pasadena and be on the inside of the Tournament of Rosés. I and the rest of thé Sun Devil marching band will be there every moment cheering you guys on to an awesome end of an awesome season. Now let’s get ready to feast on Wildcat for Thanksgiving! Kurt R. Schedler Junior A$U SDMB Trombone Section State P ress Tuesday, November 19y 1996 P a g e jS Bereavement program helps kids cope w ith loss o f parent B y J o nathan In g e S pecial to the S tate P ress Children distraught over the death of parent haye hope in coping with their grief. The Family Bereavement Program is lending support to children from 8- to 16years-old who have lost a parent within the past two-and-a-half years. “There is a surprisingly large number of bereaved children out there, and there are not many resources to go to,” said Irwin S andler, d irecto r o f the Program for Prevention Research. Tim A yers, project d irecto r o f the Family Bereavement Program, said two programs are offered to families, both of which run for 12 weeks. “We have a guided-reading program where individuals are provided a series of books on issues that affect their lives,” he said, “It's really a self-paced, guided-read­ ing program. “And then we have the group program for children, adolescents and parents where we address difficult issues that families confront.” 'T. ' There are no limits on the number of families the program will help, but groups are limited to 10. The program employs a dozen profes­ sional counselors and collaborates with school districts and community agencies, receiving referrals from schools, hospices and hospitals, Sandler said. -For families who also have children under 8 years of age, the program will pro­ vide activities for children too young to participate. The Family Bereavement Program is fu n d e d by a grant from the N ational Institute of Mental Health for $286,232 in the event year, and $2 million over the course of the program. According to J. Jay Braun, chairman for the psychology departm ent where the Program for Prevention Research is housed, the U niversity is one of four federally-funded prevention centers in the nation that research mental and physical health and prevent problem s that stem from death. Sandler said, “Children need to under­ stand their feelings and come to terms with (the parent's death). They and their families need assistance, to learn how to build a strong family that copes well following the death of a parent. "In the long run, we learn from families about how they feel about programs and what helps them deal with this situation.” For more information on the program, call Diane Mignella at 965-5401. H W r The State Presi is u now hiring a qualified ^ I student to work ^ days in%he ? State Press production Experience with QuarkXpress,Adobe Photoshop, ancf Aldus Freehand in a^ Macintosh environment . J P * required. Stop by the State Press offices in the basement of Matthews Center to pick up an application today or call the production department at A 965-2097 for A ■ more information. Æ There is more to life than news and sports. ARIZONA STATE Check out the Ç 0 f/J 1 & R e s i g n i n g Get Creative S u c c e s s f u l Get Published ^ ^ u f ú r e 1996 ASU Fall Professional Go ahead. Make our day. The 1996/97 Spark Yearbook is accepting entries for the Reflections section — you know, that cool part of the book where there are no rules? We're accepting pretty much ei/erything this year, so gii/e us your best shot! We'll make ya famous! Ethnic Leadership Conference Native American Business O rganization Arizona State University O p e n in g R e c e p t io n V e n ta n a R o o m A 6 p.m .-9 p.m . Friday N o v e m b e r 2 2 ,1 9 9 6 (r second floor \ ^Memorial U nion/ m Poetry - 3 0 lines or less P ho tog ra phy Art Arizona Public Service n r n m a m aba s u M BAHKBONE S h o rt stories - 8 0 0 words or less Jap an ese Drum Group D errick D avis (W orld C ham pion H oop Dancer) C hinese Lion Dance/M arrial Arts H opi D ance Group D errick D avis (World C ham pion H oop Dancer) Hula H alau P ili Hana (Polynesian D ance Group) Sponsors: I J a p a n e s e S t u d e n t O r g a n iz a t io n C o n fe r e n c e L u n c h e o n V e n ta n a R o o m C 11 a .m .-l p .m . S u n d a y N o v e m b e r 2 4 ,1 9 9 6 AS!AN c oalition ^ U n w in s J M m* ¿ « M til Questions? Call 965-8044 H ayden 's Ferry Review and Borders Books T u e sd a y n ig h t re a d in g series. - Fall calendar programs— T O N IG H T r B o o k p u b lish in g : T h e W riter's P e rsp e c tiv e (F e a tu rin g a u th o rs B a rb a ra N e ls o n & V irginia S u tto n ) Programs are free to the public and held at Borders Books and M usic 2402 E. Camelbatk Road, Phoenix (in the Biltmore Fashion Square) at 7:00 p.m. Please include this form with your submissions I Name: J Student ID: J Major: ^ __ I I Year: '____ (form may be photocopied) jfeage 7 'TiKAUay, November 19, 1996 S tate P ress P olice R eport • Two males students were arrested for being in possession of marijuana at Palo Verde East. • Three adult males not affiliated with ASU were arrested, cited and released for burglary of three vehicles at Parking Structure 5. A S U p o lice reported the follow ing incidents over the weekend: • A male student reported that someone damaged a wooden prop in Lot 3. • A male student was arrested on an outstanding warrant from Tempe Justice Court. • A male student reported someone broke into his vehicle and stole stereo equipment. • A male not affiliated with ASU reported someone removed his bicycle from the Architecture Building, where it was secured with a lock. • A male was arrested, cited and released for trespassing at Best Hall. • A male student was arrested, cited and released for being a minor in possession of alcohol at Hayden Hall. • Four male juveniles not affiliated with ASU were arrest­ ed, cited and released for burglary and possession of stolen property at Lot 63. • A male not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for being a minor in possession of alcohol. Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: « A 40-year-old man was arrested for loitering and panhan­ dling at 2730 N. Scottsdale Road after he stood in front of a business for 30 to 40 minutes and begged people for m oney. His actions in front o f the store reportedly caused several people to leave. He was booked into Tempe City Jail. • A 34-year-old man attempted to flee in his 1972 GMC truck from a marked police car, which had it’s lights and sirens activated. The suspect drove the truck into the park­ ing lot of 1975 E. Wildermuth, where he struck a wall and disabled the vehicle. The suspect then crawled out of the driver’s side window and climbed over a 10-foot wall. He failed to stop running on Wildermuth, and police had to strike the suspect with an expandable baton and spray him State P ress Online http://news.vpsa.asu.edu g i bóm e to KAPLAN and get the most effective trailin g in academ ic English. • Programmi*«, Appiedi»* • NetworV Tedwology - with pepper spray to take him into custody. He was trans­ ported and booked into Tempe City Jail. The suspect had a warrant for his arrest from Mesa City Court. • A 36-year-old female was arrested for delay and obstruct and urinating in public at Hardy Drive and Rio Salado Parkway. The suspect was contacted in a suspicious vehicle and could not produce identification. The information she gave to the .policé officer came back as no record. The suspect then proceeded to pee in front of the police officer, even after he told her she would go to jail if she u rinated in p u blic. The suspect was booked into Tempe City Jail. • A 44-year-old man was arrested for unlawful imprison­ ment after an investigation revealed he refused to let his girlfriend leave his house. He physically placed his body on the staircase and refused to let her travel, beyond the upper level of the apartment. The suspect also unplugged the phone and threw it down the stairs so the woman could not dial 911. Compiled by State Press reporter Melody McDonald. •A C om prehensive A cadem ic Program •C o m p u te r A ssisted Feedback P rofessionally Trained a n d E xpert Instructors • A F lexible C ourse Schedule • A n Individualized A ssessm ent and S tudy Plan Network certification exam ready • ta to rm tA p p tra ti»«C o o stra c t»« Highly demandedand compensated ikilk m «o ffo rio otaamatar i f etc mM M m im / Vklaal Rutty, Digital Ammelmi t Fraéattìoa gad CAD Tedwology U N I Kaplan is authorized to Issue I-20 documentation for F-1 student visa status V E ,R S I T ClM saeearefilling fast. 1 I: Call 1-800-KAP-TpST to reserva your space in cla ss Y Advancing Com puter Technology muaauDwmm Call Today 6 0 2 .4 3 7 .0 4 0 5 • 4100 last Broadway * Phoenix, Ariiona 85040 1SEEITTONIGHT (IT'S OUR TREAT.) JZmtmr ti a t e LUBE • OIL • FILTER *9 Aino« orivi . 2 0 3 3 W. 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ROSEBOW L B O U N D Cactus Sports w il be ca rryin g a huge selection o f ASU Rosebowl M erchandise and over 2 5 different ASU Football T-shirts! Looking for GOLD items to show your support a s ASU beats UofA? We have one o f the LARGEST selections o f gold t-shirts, sweatshirts and golf shirts in the vaHeyll G et your adm it-2 com plim entary pass today a t The State Press in room 4 7 of M atthew s Center. Hurry! Offer g o o d while supply lasts! SCREENING IS TONIGHT • HARKINS CENTERPOINT S t a t e— P' r e s—s ' _ . 7 :3 0 ? M , Opens November 22 at Theaters Everywhere STATE P r e— ss .' — 1 ' C h a m p io n is th e o ffic ia l o u tfitte r o f S u n D e v il F o o tb a ll! t 9 21 -1 ASU 40T S. Mill Ave. • Across from the Spaghetti Company Sta te P ress T uesday. N ovem ber 19. 1996 N ixon weighed resigning year before he quit STRIP R ip O u t T h e s e Coupons an d Save! FREE PERSONAL AD Buy one 3-line personal, get one free! Must run both ads in same issue . . . share it with a friend! Offer expires 12-4-96. State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement • 965-6735 Must place ad in person w/coupon. COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — In a midnight conversa­ tion more than a year before he resigned as president* a dispirited Richard M. Nixon talked about giving up his office and said his vice president, Spiro Agnew, was “just panting to get at it.” But Nixon quickly allowed his chief of staff, Alexander M. Haig, to talk him out of quitting. Haig told Nixon that his resignation “would be the greatest shock this country ever had.” The telephone conversation is included in 201 hours of Nixon tapes — many hard to understand — made public Monday by the National Archives after a 22-year fight by Nixon and his daughters to keep them secret. Last April, Nixon’s estate finally gave up. The tapes offer dramatic glimpses into Nixon’s mood as he fought to keep the Watergate scandal from consuming his presidency. On May 1, 1973, he was begging Gerald R. Ford, then House minority leader, to rally the Republicans to his side. “Tell the guys” to start fighting back, he told Ford. • To which Ford replied, “Any time you want me to do anything, under any circumstances, you give me a call.” But only three weeks later, Nixon was talking to Haig about quitting. With criticism coming in a torrent, “the Congress being Democratic, the Republicans being weak, wouldn’t it be better for the country to just check out?” he asked his newly installed chief of staff on May 25, 1973, in a call between 12:58 a.m. and 1:25 a.m. “Agnew’s just panting to get at it,” Nixon added. Haig’s reaction to the idea of a presidential resignation was a choking noise, a snort of surprise. Nixon went on, “No, no, seriously, because you see, I’m not at my best. I’Ve got to be at my best.” While trying to do his presidential duties, he said, he also would have to be battling the Watergate allegations, dealing with “people running in with their little tidbits,” rumors that he would “make a deal to pay off this one or that one and. the other thing.” Haig: “I’ll tell you sir, if you ever conceived of leaving this — Listen, look what it would have done to those peo­ ple” “ an apparent reference to supporters. Nixon: “Yeah, but they’re such a small group, AL” Haig: “No, sir. That’s not so. They’re all with you. It would be the greatest shock this country ever had.” Nixon: “Well, Al, we’ve got to take a hard look at it because — you see, what really counts is the man. And goddamn it, the man’s got to be doing his job and I’m not really doing the job because I’m so wound up in this sonof-a-bitching thing. ... And you know, you’ve got Dean out there, you know, ready to scream about this and that — Ahhhh!” At that time, White House counsel John W. Dean III was talking to federal prosecutors about the coverup of White House involvement in the 1972 break-in at Democratic headquarters in the Watergate office buildings In the summer of 1974, a subpoenaed tape revealed Nixon’s attempt to have the CIA tell the FBI to drop its investigation on national security grounds. That tape became known as the “smoking gun,” and Nixon’s support in Congress evaporated with its courtoidered release. A few days later, on Aug. 9, 1974, Nixon became the first president to resign, saying he had lost a vital base of support in Congress. ■_ Nixon had the taping system secretly installed in the White House as well as in his hideaway in the neighboring Executive Office Building and at .the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md; CROSSWORD 2 0 % o ff by THOMAS JOSEPH DOWN UPSShipp -F R E E S S “ 2 C C o p ie s (I Months«i 6 No«tns Rental) (M i in. Of 2S0 B/WPenCustomer) 9*1 * . R m i R*. • 947-1414 1719 i . BR6MMV • I29 -Î9 00 t i t * t. 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University 12 Longstem Roses f o r ■FREEDEUVERY FOR ASU STUDENTS ‘wnHNDESIGNATEDAREA' 1804 E oP uE TH BtZ N85282 R oad,S uite5 T.ES M , A 777-7444 H ap p y H o ur B uffet 4-7 p.m. Monday-Friday Tem pe 960 W . U nive rsity (Northeast Comer University & Hardy) 966-0852 MasterAdobe Photoshop In ONE FREE MONTH! When You Buy One LOCK-IT« LOCKERS S e lf S to ra g e HARDY C lose to C am pus! 9 6 6 -2 6 2 2 1 1 3 5 W. B ro a d w a y Get Out O f The HEAT And On To The Q@Ü • 1st person pays admission • 2 nd person SKATES FREE • Skate rental extra O c e a n s id e Ic e A r e n a • 941 -0 9 4 4 1520 N. Mc C untock, T empe - Expires 12/31/96 MA R e H 3 P R A Y 5 HA R A KOA L A M Ay A N Y E ME N A S K tc Ö lo L M A 1C K 1 N A C A L 1 E 1" R R o R S REA DS K AB U L S Co U T S NO NO P A n A K E :E T N i T 1E S P A T a P A Z -il D A H O O p E RA A U G E. 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ScottsdaleRoad Scottsdale, AZ85251 6 0 2 - 4 2 3 - 5 0 5 6 ACROSS 1 Jeweler’s units 7 Close up 11 Member of the fauna 12 Sax type 1 3 ‘ Romeo must not livespeaker 15 Shake­ speare's Athenian 16 This's partner 18 Station niery-store buys 21 Painter Miro 22 The Prado, tor one 24 Go astray 25 Cooiio’s music 26 Lingerie item 27 Al's wife 2 9 Gigantic 3 0 Fast-food drink 31 Kismet « 3 2 Church feature 3 4 -Out, damned spot!” Speaker 4 0 Fencing weapon 41 Illinois city 42 Look after 43 Leave high and - dry 1 “East of Eden" brother 2 Literary collection 3 Disen­ cumber 4 “The Joy Luck Clubauthor 5 Unspoken 6 Bridge coup 7 Steam baths’ cousins 8 Building wing 9 Had a bite 10 Dealer’s place 14 Like some kids' books 16 Donut1 2 3 4 shaped 17 Arthur Marx 19 First appear­ ance 20 Sudden rise 21 O’Hare sight 22 Damage 23 West of Hollywood 25 King’s domain 28 Filled the ;5 8 11 13 role of 29 Docking site 31 Gem side 33 Ughts- out 34 35 36 37 music Permit Mimic Study Historic time 3 8 Light metal 39 Pos­ sessed f t 127 i■ 14 8 10 15 16 17 71 24 J 27 j ■ 26 1 28 J 30 34 35 40 ■ 33 ,8 19 _ 29■ 26 20 23 1 31 37 36 ■ 42 ■ 22 39 38 41 43 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR 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. 11-19 O FX ME CRYPTOQUOTES W LG EO LYO MJ S O F YO EGD D X E E W MO O FX A N X EJ ' O O FMJ S V X R O N YZ CYRE R N G L M SJ M O M N J . L N S X L K X RX L ». Yesterday's Cryptoquote: METALLURGY: THE STUDY OF HOW TO KEEP PEOPLE FROM BEING ALLERGIC TO METAL.—SOURCE UNKNOWN 6 1 9 9 6 b y K ing F eatures S yndicate, Inc. ~Pâgè_9 TtffiMay, November 19,1996 Sta t eP r e ss Transcript o f cockpit tape in Valujet crash ( AP) — T ra n sc rip t released by the N ational Transportation Safety Board of ValuJet Flight 592 cockpit recordings. (“Critter" refers to ValuJet’s smiling-airplane logo): 2:04:09: Takeoff. 2:09:02: (Sound of click.) 2:10:03: (Sound of chirp heard on cockpit area micro­ phone channel with Simultaneous beep on public address channel.) 2:10:07: Pilot: What was that? 2:10:08: Co-pilot: 1 don't know. 2:10:15: Pilot: We got some electrical problems. 2:10:17: Co-pilot: Yeah. That battery charger’s kickin’ iri. Qoh, we gotta. 2:10:20: Pilot: We’re losing everything, 2:10:21: Tower: Critter five-nine-two, contact Miami center on one-thirty-two-forty-five, so long. 2:10:22: We need, we need to go back to Miami. 2:10:23: (Sounds of shouting from passenger cabin.) 2:10:25: Female voices in cabin: Fire, fire, fire, fire. 2:10:27: Male voice: We’re on fire. We’re on fire. 2:10:28: (Sounds of tone similar to landing gear warn­ ing horn for three seconds.) 2:10:29: Tower: Critter five-ninety-two contact Miami center, onc-thirty-two-forty-five. 2:10:30: Pilot: (Unintelligible) to Miami. 2:10:32: Tower: Uh. five-ninety-two needs immediate return to Miami. Critter five-ninety-two, uh. roger, turn left heading two-seven-zero. Descend and maintain seventhousand. 2:10:36: (Sounds of shouting from passenger cabin subside.) 2:10:39: Tower: Two-seven-zero, seven-thousand, five-ninety-two. What kind of problem are you havin’? , 2 :10:42j (Sound of horn) -• 2:10:44: Pilot: Fire. 2:10:46: Cockpit: Uh, smoke in the cockp ... smoke in the cabin. 2:10:47: Tower: Roger. 2:10:49: Pilot: What altitude? . S t W e *r é a X E X * R E S S th e re w h en S 2:10:49: Co-pilot: Seven-thousand. 2:10:52: (Sound similar to cockpit door moving.) 2:10:57: (Sound of six chimes similar to cabin service interphone.) 2:10:58: Flight attendant: OK. We need oxygen. We can’t get oxygen back there. 2:11:00: (Sound similar to microphone being keyed only on interphone channel.) 2:11:02: Flight attendant: (Unintelligible) is there a (unintelligible) way we could test them? (Sound of clear­ ing her throat.) 2:11:07: ToWer: Critter five-ninety-two, when able to turn left heading two-five-zero. Descend and maintain five-thousand. 2:11:08: (Sound of chimes sim ilar to cabin service interphone.) 2:11:10: (Sounds of shouting from passenger cabin.) 2:11:11: Cockpit: Two-five-zero seven-thousand. 2:11:12: Flight attendant: Completely on fire. 2:11:14: (Sounds of shouting from passenger cabin subside.) 2:11:19: Co-pilot: Outta nine. 2:11:19: (Sound of intermittent horn.) 2:11:21: (Sound similar to loud rushing air). 2:11:38: Cockpit: Critter five-ninety-two, we need the, uh. closest airport available ... 2:11:42: Tower: Critter five-ninety-two, they’re going to be standing by for you. You can plan ... 2:11:45: (72-second interruption in recording.) 2:12:57: (Sounds of tone similar to power interruption to recorder, loud rushing air, repeating tones similar to recorder self-test signal starts.) 2:12:58: Tow er: (U n in tellig ib le ) co n tact M iam i approach on, correction, you, you keep on my frequency. 2:13:11: (Interruption on recording.) 2:13:15: (Sounds of repeating tones similar to recorder self-test signal starts and continues, rushing air.) 2:13:25: End of recording. 2:14:00: V alu Jet F lig h t 592 crashes into the Everglades. W > OD Ü B I T SB y ou i c a n ' t fc>< (AP)— If fewer people in Arizona are smoking, the credit may go to the 40-cents-per-pack tax voters approved two years ago. A study commissioned by the American Cancer Society showed an 8 percent drop in cigarette sales in the year after the tax took effect, which pleased anti­ tobacco activist Bill Pfeifer. “We’ve got die tobacco industry on the ropes,” said Pfeifer, chairman of the Coalition for Tobacco-Free Ariiioaaw 'f *v « ® '1 The study was done by economist Tim Hogan, an economist at Arizona State University. He used tax data from the Department of Revenue from December 1994 to December 1995, the year after the 40-cent-per-pack tax took effect, and compared it with sales data from the ■previous year. The 8.4 percent per capita decline in sales translates to 16 million fewer packs of cigarettes sold in the state in the year after die tax went into effect. . The study was released at a news conference Monday and timed to coincide with the annual Great American Smoke-Out, which will be Thursday. However, at least one tobacco lobbyist said evidence *in other states indicates that higher tobacco taxes have led to increased cigarette smuggling. . Phil MacDonnell, a lobbyist for R.J. Reynolds Inc., said the key to whether the tobacco tax is working is whether people are buying their cigarettes elsewhere, and whether smuggling has occurred. He said states that have high tobacco taxes have had increases of up to 25 percent in smuggling. However, Hogan’s study found that has not hap­ pened. It showed per-capita cigarette sales in nieghboring states also had dropped and that sm uggling of cigarettes from neighboring states with lower taxes has been minimal. So far, the tobacco tax fund has amassed a $27 mil­ lion surplus. 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Home of the ‘Kitter* Calzone Environmentally Friendly, Daytime Delivery To Any Building On Campus - FAST! $10MinimumOlder ^ 1 block East of Mill Ave. on University 894-M A M A MAMA KNOWS BEST The MAMA-MOBILE is back! S ports S tate P ress P age 13 Tuesday, November 19,1996 Sun D evils vs. W ildcats no ordinary football game Snyder looking for wins N o. 2, 100 vs. UofA B y D ustin K rugel State P ress UofA linebacker Amon Williams collides wttti UCLA quarterback Cade McNown during their game Saturday In Tucson. UofA’s 35-17 trouncing of the Bruins caught the Sun Devils’ attention. UofA can make, break season In »970. IR E N T IC E R ¡ch ard W ILLIAM S Nixon was the president, ASU linebacker Muhammad 1967-70\ Ali had ju st beaten Gerry Quarry on his com eback to be the World Heavy Weight Championship and the Six-Day War was two years old. And, the biggest question on ASU’s campus was who’s number will come up in the national lottery to see who would go to Vietnam. The campus population at that time was 25,000 and there were women everywhere. The draft threatened to take some 12 to 18 guys off of our football team and put them in uniform. ASU’s football team was 9-0 and we Were nationally ranked in the top 10. Frank Kush was our coach at that time. He has since gone on to be inducted into the NCAA C ollege C o a c h ’s H all o f Fame, but at that time he was still work­ ing on his overall coaching record at ASU of 176-54-2. My senior year we were undefeated. T urn to W il l ia m s , p a g e DAYS’ 14. Four years ago, ASU head coach Brucé Snyder did the impossible. He led ASU to a improbable 7-6 vic­ tory over arch rival UofA in his first year as the Sun Devils’ general. ASU stumbled into that contest with a 28-1 record vs. UofA since 1982, Four years later, Snyder is still looking for win No. 2 over the Wildcats. The UofA (5-5, 3- 4 Pac-10) hosts ASU (10-0, 7-0) at 4:30 p.m . on S aturday at A rizona Stadium in Tucson in the 70th meeting between the two schools. L ast se a so n , victory No. 2 o f the Snyder era was stolen, after ASU blew a 28-14 lead with eight minutes to play and lost 31-28 at Sun Devil Stadium. “A major part of this team felt they should have won it last year,” Snyder said at his Monday press conference. “They are going to win the game, that is what (the players) are planning.” Twelve months and 10 games later, sophom ore o ffen siv e tackle Grey Ruegamer can’t rid the bad taste that still lingers from that last meeting. “T hat was really tough,” he said. “W hen (UofA defensive tackle) Joe S alav e’a picked Up the fum ble for a touchdown, our offense just sputtered. We kind of gave it away. That was really frustrating. We’ve been thinking about it all year.” A win this Weekend will catapult ASU into the Rose Bowl against No. 2 Ohio State with an undefeated record and an opportunity possibly to play for a nation­ al championship. Snyder said the rivalry, how ever, takes présidence over any talk o f an undefeated season. “The in-state rivalry between the two T urn to Sn y d e r , p ag e 14. Sun Devil basketball falls to Marathon O il 71-70 in overtime By R andy J ones S tate P ress A last second three-point shot by Marathon Oil’s Greg Butler spoiled ASU’s last exhibition game, handing the Sun Devils a 71-70 overtime loss. The 6-foot-10 center had taken only one shot the entire game, but the former Stanford Cardinal (1984-’88) said he knew he could make the shot, which Came from deep in the left comer with 5.9 seconds remaining. “I knew they Wouldn’t expect me to shoot (the three),” Butler said. “I can pretty much hit that shot. I knew if I just floated around out there, especially at the end, that (ASU) would be keying on other players.” ASU freshman guard Ahlon Lewis missed a final shot from 17-feet out in a last gasp effort to win die game. Head Coach Bill Frieder said the Sun Devils must shoot much better if they expect to get wins this season. “This team is not going to survive as small as we are (and) as limited as we are if we don’t shoot the basketball better,” he said. “We’ve got to find a way to shoot better and to do a better job at the free throw line.” ASU lit up the nets in the first half shooting 58.9 percent (17 for 29), however the percentage fell to 29.6 (8 of 27) in die second. The Sun Devils had chances to put Marathon away in the overtime, but junior Jeremy Veal and senior Quincy Brewer both missed key free throws down the stretch. “It killed us,” Frieder said of the missed free throws. “You' ve got to go to the line and make them. (There is) no one to blame but yourself on that one.” ASU jumped out to a 10-5 lead in the game’s first three minutes, but Marathon was able to get the lead at 16-14 a few minutes later. The score see-sawed the remainder of the half, until Veal hit a jumper with two seconds left to give the Sun Devils a 37-36 halftime lead. Veal led the Sun Devils in with 26 points. Brewer had 19 points along with 10 rebounds and four assists. Marathon opened the second half with a 6-0 run to take a 42-37 lead. ASU didn’t manage a score until senior for­ ward Rodger Farrington tipped in a Veal miss with 14:44 left. With the score 44-39 in Marathon’s favor, it appeared that the Sun Devils were ready to fold to the team which had defeated teams such as Michigan State, UMASS, St. John’s and Villanova coming in. But, a lay in by a boxed-in Brewer with eight minutes remaining seemed to spark ASU. Down 61-59 Veal sent the game into overtime with a bucket at 29.2 seconds left in the game. Frieder credited his squad for coming back after getting down. . “I thought when (Marathon) took the lend, we hung in there and got back in the game,” he stud. “We continued to work defensively. They didn’t quit and they stayed at what we tried to do defensively. That was a positive.” D entist’s note: Sophomore Gee Gervin had a front tooth knocked out by the ball in the middle of the first half and did not return the rest of the game. He will be back for Friday’s game against Jacksonville. ASU Junior Jeremy Vsat puts up a shot first half of ASU’s gams with Marathon Oil on the UAC. Page 14 S tate P ress Tuesday, November 19, 1996 Young tennis team turns in im pressive sh ow in g at invite B y D o u g C ook S tate P ress ASU men’s tennis head coach Lou Belken was over­ joyed after his team won the championship matches of all four flights of singles competition in the ASU Invitational Sunday at Whiteman Tennis Center. It should come as no surprise that he was either, consid­ ering the squad’s nine-man roster is composed of six fresh­ men and played without its most experienced player, senior Sergio Elias. Elias was unable to compete because of NCAA date limitations. “It was a perfect ending to our fall practice season,” Belken said of the Invitational. “It was a very good tourna­ ment for us in that it was an event designed so everybody played a minimum of five singles matches.” The tournament, which also featured players from the University of Tulsa and NAU, provided a good test for ASU’s inexperienced team. Sun Devil freshman Alex Osterrieth ran away with the invitational’s singles title. Osterrieth won all five of the matches he played over the weekend, including a straight sets 6-4, 6-4 victory over T ulsa’s undefeated Nenad Toroman in the championship final of the first flight on Sunday. That flight pitted the tournament’s top-four winningest players against one another after the two matches each con­ tender played on Friday and Saturday, respectively. Belken praised Osterrieth’s play, including his perfor­ mance at ASU’s Thunderbird Invitational last month, where he advanced to the semifinals. “Alex has had two very good tournaments here (in Tempe),” Belken said. “We expect good things from him and he’s shoived some. He’s going to be one of the out­ standing freshmen in the country.” Osterrieth said he liked the way he competed and felt confident in his chances of taking the crown before he even stepped on the court. “I set my goal to win the tournam ent,” he said. “I acheived that, so I can take a step up now and see what I did wrong in it and try to improve on that. I’ve still got a long, long way to go.” ASU freshman Tim Hammond won the second flight — a matchup of the next best contingent of competitors by record. He defeated fellow Sun Devil freshman Chris Biorkman in the flight’s final, 6-2,6-2, finishing invitation­ al play with a 3-2 record. “I had a lot of tough matches,” Hammond said. “I got better with every match. It was tough because you have to play other ASU guys.” ASU sophomores Casey Was and Hiroshi Nagashima won the third and fourth flights, respectively. W illia m s C ontinued fr o m .pag e Snyder 13. but at that point in time, we were 9-0 and our eyes were on the UofA, which we all hated with a passion thanks to Frank. We finished the season 11 -0 with wins over the UofA and North Carolina. Beating the UofA was Frank Kush's spe­ cialty. We beat them when we wanted to and as much as we wanted to. Those were the days They hated Frank Kush at the UofA. It was a total trip being a football star at ASU because I loved every moment of it. It was all beautiful and I took time out to savor the moment. 1 even loved and enjoyed the sacrifice and the process that we all went through for ourselves and Frank. And when anyone makes a sacrifice for ASU’s football team ala Frank Kush, you have done something and it isn't small. This is all background for what is to fol­ low, For the message I would like to leave this football team with is this. 1 know the pain and hardship it takes to be a champion and my message to all the ASU ball players comes from somone who has been there: IF YOU WIN ALL 10 GAMES AND LOSE TO THE UofA, YOU HAVE HAD A LOSING SEASON. CONSEQUENTLY IF YOU LOSE ALL 10 GAMES AND The Sun Devils did not fare as well in doubles play, however. Osterrieth and Hammond paired up and were defeated in the semifinals by Tulsa’s Toroman and Joel McGregor 9-7. Was and Nagashima also advanced to the semifinals, but fell to a pair from NAU 8-6. Belken said his doubles pairs performed poorly because they have not practiced much together. “We have not played well in doubles all fall,” he said. “We have not spent the time working on doubles, per se, that we need to. That’s just because we’re so young and we had so many other things to take care of, but I fully expect that to come around second semester.” Hammond said he knows the Sun Devils’ doubles play will get better once the season rolls around. “As a team, we really haven’t worked a lot on doubles,” he said. “It’s the first time me and Alex have actually played together, so it was a new experience for both of us.” Belken, now in his 14th year of coaching at ASU, said his new players are fast learners and he expects them to grow from die tournament experience. “As a whole, we’ve done a lot of teaching,” Belken said of his coaching staff. “It was pleasantly surprising to see everybody incorporate die things that we’ve been working on. The guys did a good job of being very intense as they played, and overall, the play Was good.” BEAT THE UOFA, YOU HAVE HAD A WINNING SEASON THAT WAS TRUE THEN AND IT IS ALSO TRUE NOW. That is how important this game is. I am saying this to this team because I Want you to know how it is and I do wish you guys “good luck.” I also want Coach Snyder to know that 1 wasn’t to be his “good luck charm” and his link to a former player who has beaten thé UofA in the past and one who was on ASU’S first undefeated untied football. I w ant to be his “Good Luck C harm ,” because when it comes to beating the UofA, coach is going to need it. The 1996 ASU football team is a good team on their way to being a great team to match that of 1970 (the team that I was on) and the one in 1975. This team seems to have the talent and the DESIRE to be win­ ners and I know of which I speak because I played against this team two years in a row. No, I'm not crazy , I played in two spring games where Jake was the QB and we (the alumns) almost beat them. -PRENTICE WILLIAMS, THE CLASS OF ’73, SAYS DON’T LET THE UOFA DO IT TO YOU. EARN UP TO $950 C ontinued erom page 13. univerities. Bragging rights. How you spend your w inter. R ecruiting. That comes first and foremost. That’s it,” said Snyder, who will be gunning for his 100th career coaching victory Saturday. “There is a different spin on this one because we would love to go to Pasadena undefeated, That game obviously will take on its own importance,” After last week’s bye week, Snyder said the team, energy-wise, hit a season “low,” but it received its wakcup call when UofA trounced UCLA 35-17 last Saturday. After Saturday’s practice most of the ASU players watched the game on TV together. (That woke us up,” Snyder said. When asked who he and the players were cheering for, Snyder joked, “We always root for the UofA, don’t we?” Snyder said keeping em otions in check will be key. “It’s such a tremendously important game for everybody, our state, both com­ m unities, both universities,” he said. “Both teams will have a lot of energy and emotion. The players want to play so well in this game. I think the key in play­ ing a big game is to corral your energy properly and focus properly to where you can play well. So it’s just not being a rav­ ing maniac.” j. Caught ftpse ¿Fever? Seek treatment in the special Fpse (Bowl Issue Coming in your State Press December 6 m War Preview Friday's State Press A S U vs. U ofA FOR THE HOLIDAYS You can earn up to $ 9 5 0 by participating in a m edical research study at H arris Laboratories. It you are in good medical condition and meet the criteria below, call us at 1 - 8 0 0 - 5 9 8 - 1 3 6 0 u> find out more. YOUR FINANCIAL AID MAYTNOT COVER YOUR CHRISTMAS EXPENSES. ■ men and women ■ 18 to 55 years old ■ smokers and nonsmokers ■ availability: weekend stays plus returns Call 1 -8 0 0 - 5 9 8 - 1 3 6 0 today! S 3 HARRIS p rovides essential services fo r off-cam pus students, including housing, ondi public tra n s p o rta tio n . ploaso c a ll 9 6 8 -0 3 4 6 _____ Sp o n so red by AS ASU Your student government :HECK THE CLASSIFIEDS FOR AN ASSORTMENT OF JOBS AVAILABLE. S ta te P ress S tate P ress Page 15 T u e sd aw N ove m b eM 9 ^9 9 6 B o n io ls 7 field goals give D allas 2 1 -6 w in over Packers IRVING, Texas (AP) —- The Dallas Cowboys have beaten the Green Bay Packers in some notable shootouts the past three years. Chris Boniol’s foot was the only weapon they needed Monday night. Boniol, who was in bed with the flu for two days last week, tied an NFL record with seven field goals as the Cowboys beat the Packers 21-6, their seventh straight win over Green Bay in four seasons — all at Texas Stadium. Boniol’s first five field goals came on Dallas’ first five pos­ sessions. The last two came in the second half, the final one a 29-yarder with 20 seconds left in the game to tie the mark shared by Jim Bakken and Rich Kariis. Right before the record-tying kick, Dallas quarterback Troy Aikman took a knee and thè Cowboys called timeout to get Boniol onto the field. After the kick, die teams milled around, with the Packers apparently angry about Dallas adding a needless score. Reggie White appeared the most upset as he jawed with Cowboys receivér Michael Irvin. “I feel good, it's something I'm proud of,” Bohiol said. “I’m not excited about what happened after thè fact, but how many times do you get to kick seven field goals?” The Cowboys (7-4) pulled into a second-place tie with Philadelphia in the NFC East Dallas trails Washington by one game, and has two games left against the Redskins. Green Bay (8-3) lost for the second straight week, but remains in good shape in the NFC Central, two games ahead of Minnesota. But the loss meant more to Green Bay than just a game in the standings. , Since losing 38-27 here in the NFC title game last January, the Packers had been pointing to this game as a chance to demonstrate that they had passed the three-time Super Bowl winners at the top of the conference. Instead, they lost by dou­ ble digits for tite seventh time in seven games in Texas. The Packers came in severely handicapped on offense — without Robert Brooks and Antonio Freeman, their top wide receivers, and tight end Marie Chmura. All were injured and sorely missed against the NFL’s leading defense. In the first half, the Packers never got beyond the Dallas 45. In the second half, they had one good drive, and that ended when Chris Jacke missed a 32-yard field goal attempt. ' That was the kind of frustration the Packers encountered all night *— in the fourth quarter, a sack by White was aborted by a defensive holding call against George Koonce that led to Boniol’s sixth field goal, a 39-yarder with 8:36 left that gave him a Cowboys single-game record. Green Bay finally scored with 1:53 left on a 3-yard pass from Brett Favre to Derrick Mayes. The Packers avoided their first shutout since 1991. After the touchdown, Dallas recovered an onside kick and drove to set up Boniol’s last field goal, “I’ve been laying in bed for 2 1/2 days,” Boniol said. “I didn’t feel right (in warmups), but I came out in the game and felt fine.” Boniol, who had made 17 of 21 field goal attempts this sea­ son, was 7-for-7 against the Packers. The Dallas defense was a team effort led by Tony Tolbert, Chad Hennings, Fred Strickland, Jim Schwantz, and Kevin Smith. The secondary blanketed Favre’s receivers and rarely gave him a target, leading to four sacks. The defensive line and linebackers «hut down tite run. rCA M PU S-| L C o r n e r -I 7 1 2 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n ext to College S tre e t D eli 6 0 9 S. M ill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 across fro m C offee Plantation 7.99 E V E R Y DAY si Welcome j lb U S WEST | Telecard C h a n g i ng The Shape Of Money The U S WEST Telecard. It's like money. Only better No more scrounging for spare change. Use Telecards at any U S WEST pay phone with the yellow card slot. Local or long distance, you'll get ) S WESTs best rotes. So get Telecard And save your change for a semester's worth of notes. US WEST TELECAKP* A t! AVAHAUf èh W .OM W S UCI BUILDING ~ MAIN CAMPUS BUS. AWING * STUDENT SERVICES BLDG. * V NOME SCIENCE LIBRARY m HAYDEN LIBRARY COMPUTER COMMONS MEMORIAL MVA ROAD y COfFEE W HOUSE ■ 11 E. T* ST. S tate P ress Tuesday, November 19, 1996 State PressCrosswords ItOAHEADDOITHE!MININK ■PÌBS On paPF(I. C Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent ór invested, you may wish to investigate, the company and offer, The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of mi advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau.at. 2644721. More T riv ia ... The oldest U.S. covered bridge in continuous use it the Heverhili Beth Bridge completed HO M ES FOR RENT RENTAL SH A R IN G GREAT DEAL: *bd 2ba $900/mo..;, ;4bd 2ba w/po'ol $975/mo. 894-0288: RMMTE NEEDED for 3bd/2ba. w/d, workout fac:. 2 pools. Í 0 CONDO FOR sale. $75.000, mins from ASU. For Dec: - Ján, ■ 2bdrm/2ba. Very close to 1st. Contact Linda 921-9016. ASU Call 921-7432. ROOMMATE WANTED for 3 COMPUTERS bedroom. 2 bath apartm ent. Walk to ASU. Large room, cool HP DESKJET printer top cond. roommates. $268 a month. Call $225 IBM TC com patible irf9664203. Move in Dec. 1. cludes m onitor. Complete w/ ROOM M ATE WANTED ! to WordPerfect, Lotus, & Resume move in to a 3 bed 2 bath softwares. $250. Call 491condo in Papago. ,Jail. 1st. 5931 921-9016, HOUSE FOR rent- 1 block from ASU.. Huge yard. 2hd/2ba. Great neighborhood. 448-1T44 WONDERFUL FACULTY home, lyr. lse. Jan 1 Scotts, 3bd, 2ba. study, poal, frplc,. furnished.. iS^OO .+ .util; 423- 93|4 \ TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT LUXURY 3 BD 2ba condo Questa Vida. w/d. pool, avail. 12/1. $70G/mo: 714-673-3122 TEMPE ONE mile from ASU. Modern bright 2 bd/2 ba. Faces pool: W/D. $675/mo. 35D9046: ' APARTMENTS 1214 E. ORANGE. Marianna Apts; remodeled studios. $50 off move in w/ad. 966-8597. 2 PEOPLE NEEDED to assume leases at the Commons on ApacherCall 303-7125 , 2BD/2BÁ 2 MILES from cam­ pus. $600/m o.: Lease starts Jan. 1st. Very good deal. 8346402. RENTAL S H A R IN G 3BR HOUSE, pool, w/d, own bthrm $300/mo + utils. Call Erin at 730-1987 or 967-8898 LIVE WHERE it s at! Scot­ tsdale's .o w n San Marquis. Need F muriate for 3bdrm asap Dec 1. $330/mo ($l50dep) 874-1776 : UTILITIES PAID, 1.-2BDR, pool, covered parking, laun­ dry, Mill & > Broadway, $475/$5T5. 517-1518 RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE 2bd 2ba $34Q/mo, + 1/2 util. Call Mike 894-8654. H O M E S FOR RENT APARTMENTS 3BD 2BA w/poOl $lG00/mo. 894-0288 Others’houses avatlable also. APARTMENTS ROOMMATE WNTED m or f 1Í2 mi from AS U $255 =1/2 util own. Bedroom nice. Place call. Kelly 303-8363 leave mes­ sage. 1 block from A SU One bedroom apt. available Can 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 MACINTOSH 15 inch color monitor, brand new,: $35,0 Call John 966-9577 ext. 1268 TICKETS WALK TO CLASS 1 bedroom: $375 Studio: $325. 3 blocks from campus. Call Jeff 967-3037 APARTMENTS S339/MONTH Walk to ASU. Quiet, spacious, 1 bedroom, u nfurnished or fu r ­ nished, A/C, poolside apartments Experience the quiet and walk to school! 1 bedroom apt, furnished, util. pd. $500/month 8 2 9 -6 8 3 8 Apartments TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE ROOMMATES WANTED. Fe­ BUY/SELL males pref. to share big, beauti­ ful house w/pool. $330 mo + ' ROSE Bowl tix. Top $$ paid. util. Avail Jan. 1. Call Allison 800-916-9589. / home 829-7198 or work 441 -. 82 i& ; .; -y v : y: V BUYING ROSE Bowl tickets. Top dollar paid; Confidential. WALK TO ASU own bd & ba Western States ticket service^ in 2bd apt. All amenities fur-, 3rd Ave. & McDowell Rd. 254nished, util's paid, Male prefd 3300. avail now., Nov. rent free. $400 bonus + sec dep, $541.42/mo OPERA TICKETS - Magic Call Ed 303-7148 Flute. Nov. 21.. 2 tickets, $44 each o.b.o. .443-9520: George Ann Apts. Apache Terrace l a s s if ie d s plus tax. T e rra c e R d. a p a rtm e n ts 9 5 0 S. T errac e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 ITS YOUR MOVE... APARTMENTS $100 Off FREE UTILITIES! Walk to ASU. Spacious, 2bedroom apartm ents. A/C f u r n i s h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d avail­ a b l e. F ro m S525/ m o n th . Beautiful pool area, laundry facilities available. FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS 1224 E. Lem on Mini blinds Vertical blinds with valances Brass ceiling fans European cabinetry Walk-in closets available Private balcony/patio Security alarm systems available ior 1the ’t s e t t l e 'than the best! ^ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Free hot water Free cable TV! 3 pools, 2 spas Barbecue areas Covered parking Laundry facilities Large exercise room QUADRANGLES VILLAGE APARTMENTS 12SS E. University Drive Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-8118 S.E. Corner of University fit Rural If you earn less than' $ 2 4 ,0 0 0 * per year, you may quality to get a m o n th ly rental discount! < all Now! AUTO M OBILES TRAVEL PHOENIX SUNS vs Chicago Bulls Nov. 20. $45. and up. Call Steve 678-0316 90 NISSAN SENTRA 2dr grey autom atic, ac, airbag, pb. ps, tint, am/fm, now brakes & tires, great car, $3700. 848-1700 or 961-0563 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your.nam e. I specialize in quick departures. Most places worldwide. I also buy traiisferable • coupons/awards. 968-7283 y'...'- WE HAVE 2 tickets to ÀSÇ vs U o f A. $100 obo. Call 520322-0913. A U T O M O B IL E 1992 DODGE Colt 62500 miles 35+ mpg blue-green w/grey int. O nly’$4500. Josh at 967 9235; 85 BMW 325E red, 4dr. 5spd, sunroof, lthr, g o o d . cond. $3680 obo. Call Ann 5028639 Iv msg; Classifieds COMPUTERS M O TO RCYCLES" 1991 KAW Ninja 600R low miles, runs ext, great stdnt trans, Vance & Hines pipe W/heim. Must sell $1800pbo. 303 8346 TRAVEL 1ST CLASS Fla. cruise pkg for 2! 4 nights in Ft; Lauderdale + 3 night cruise to the Bahamas $1100, Travel before July. Air­ fare not incl'd. Call Mark 8148182. ; COMPUTERS WANT TO travel? Set Up affordable travel packets, tick­ ets, hotels, touts?; C a ll.491 3445, y y ' V-... WINTER BREAK Mazatlan De­ luxe bi-level condo on best beach- Sleeps 6, 2 bedroom» kitchen, pool, TV, maid, avail­ able from Dec. 15-22. $600. (415)381-2884 Find it FAST ¡n .the C lassifieds CO M PUTERS OFF-LEASE COMPUTERS • • • • Laptops starting a t . . . $749 w /color screen! 386‘s starting a t . . . . $199 w /color monitor! 48 6‘s starting a t . . . . $449 w /color monitor! Mac’s starting a t ___ $299 w /color monitor! Plus a large selection o f printers, monitors and other computer equipment Ask for Bill or Tom Computer Warehouse O utlet (602) 780-0500 2021 W. Melinda Lane * Phoenix Call for Appointm ent 829-6838 LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: • • • • • • • TICKETS HELP W A NTEDGENERAL \ HELP W A NTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL S tate P ress .Pag;e 17 Tuesday, November 19, 1996 HELP W ANTEDG |N |^ L _ _ HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL SiOOO'S POSSIBLE Reading books. Part Time. At borne. Toll free 1-800-218-9000 Ext R-1676 for listings. ASSISTANCE HELP: We need 8 people now. Easy job, easy bus., easy $ We train 8293711 $500-900AVKLY ASSISTANT FOR outdoor fur­ niture showroom. Good organ­ izational skills needed. Tasks to include; cutting fabric sam­ ples, maintaining sample area and photocopying. Flexible schedule, 10-15 hrs./wk $7/hr. 994-1060 CLUB LEADER positions available, working directly with children. Shifts available in school-based programs between the hours of 6:3 0 -6 :15pm. Begin work now and work through winter break for our holiday camp! Complete ap­ plication in person with 3 ref. letters and resume at Kyrene School District 8700 South Kyrene Rd. Tempe (Corner of Warner and Kyrene). Call 5987308 with questions. $10/hr guar. 2:30-9pm M-F or Sat & Sun. only, pd tmg., com­ puter dialing, close to ASU, learn & perfect sales & comm, skills, pd weekly on Fri. 3509336 ACCOUNTS PAYABLE gener­ al office clerk, Construction exp a plus, p/t flex, hours; Please fax resume 921 -9456 APPOINTMENT SETTERS needed; P/t evenings M-Th & some Sat. $8/hr. + bonus. -Call Doreen at 545-0050 ATTENDANTS NEEDED for non-personal care of quadri­ plegic. Tues. & Thurs. 12-5pm $7/hr. Craig 966-2059 > dSffijjSb Evwy Thursday C la s s i fia d s S G G -G Z 3 5 COMMERCI AL REAL estate of­ fice seeks assistant to office manager. Phones, computer exp, various duties, 8-5pm. Apply 244 N; Country Club Dr. #101 Mesa or send resume by fax 461-0674. DANCERS NEEDED imme­ diately for talent referral. Dream Higher 840-5990. HELP W ANTED*l ^ ^ HELP W ANTEDGENERAL g e n jr DELIVERY DRIVERS Wanted. Full or p/t. Apply at Black Jack Pizza 818 W. Broadway or call 967-2121. ■ ; *___- DELV. & SETUP person w/truck w/shell, or van. Lifting reqd. 1-800-288-8824. DO YOU have lots of energy & love working w/people? We are looking for you to twist bal­ loons at restaurants & parties. We will train you. All you need is reliable transportation. Pt/flex hrs. Great money. Call 486-5879. FITNESS WORKS FUN PEOPLE Athletic Club. Center/M ckellips-M esa now hiring highly motivated, energetic, fun-spirit­ ed, customer service team mem­ bers. p/t, all shifts $5.50/hr to start. Apply in person MonThurs between 10am-7pm. 6441901 Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits. $6-10/hr. C all Carrie at 777-1054. ♦♦FULL-TIME OR Part-time** You choose the m ost conveni­ ent schedule & we’ll offer you extra income in a congenial en­ vironment with America's lead­ ing confesstonaiy company! Godiya Chocolatier, Inc. Biltmofé Fashion Park, 24th St & Camelback 602-468-0682 FAST GROWING company is adding new shift to meet sales groiyth. Needing: money moti­ vated minds needed to hustle $7r50/hr. + bonuses. Benefits. Excellent opportunity 9665765 This should be you r ad C all 965-6735 TRAVEL TRAVEL Telemarketing f&r the Image Conscious O ne M arketing Services, Inc. O W H IR IN G •Mark One is now accepting applications for our dynamic, new Tempe Center. 00 ITIONS F ull-tim e a n d P art-tim e HELP W ANTEDG E N E ^ U ^ GROUP HOME stuff needed in Tempe to work with boys with behavioral problems. Evening hrs. avail. Must be min. 21 yrs with clean AZ drivers license. 864-1139. HEŸ YOU! How many hours do you need? ORCA Intn'l works with stud­ ents & their schedules. You may work 20-22-24-26-28-30 or even 36 hfs/wk. Starting pay is 36.50/hr + bonuses. Average pay for avail; positions: $8.75$10.50/hr. No exp. nec, paid training, Tempe location. Call 438-8095 IN HOME providers; Ft/pt workers needed to provide care to developm ental 1y disabled persons; living in natural family settings; Salary $7-7.60/hr. College tuition reimbursement program, health, dentaL and op­ tical coverage for f/t, B.R.I.T.E. Inc. Call Chris 254-2785 & 1 9 7 7 R o s e B o w l G a m e !! Jan. 1 ,1 9 7 7 • Round trip transportation from your hotel in the LA or Anaheim a re * & reserved parade side seats. Calf fo r more details A d v o r t iM y o u r In t e r n e t D u e in e s a o r W e b s it e In t h e C la e e lfle d a . Call 9e 5-6731 fo r m o re In fo rm a tio n HELP W ANTEDGENERAL MALES WITH paraplegia need­ ed for research study of body composition, bone density and metabolic rate. $145 cash bo­ nus. Requires 2 night stay on research unit. Call Mary Beth Monroe 965-7524 ASU. MALES WITH spinal cord in­ jury needed for research study, Effects of exercise on fat metab­ olism. Stipend of $200 for par­ ticipation. National Institute of Health & ASU. Call Mary Beth 965-7524. MECHANICAL TECHNICIAN ft/pt some mechanical exp. de­ sired.. Some tech school ór col­ lege desired. Starting pay $610/hr. w ì advancement. Day time 956-8200, evenings & weekends 955-8514 ■ MODELS/ACTORS. In ti scouts want you for music vid­ eos and local print work. 9416922. P/T DATA Entry. Mon.- Fri. Start immediately: Call 7360034. PAULS HARDWARE is seek­ ing cashiers & sàles people p/t. We offer competitive salary & benefit .package. Apply in peri son at 1153 W. Broadway, Tempe. Oskar I's Tours • 1 (800) 458-t388 >Health & Dental Benefits >Paid Vacations 1Paid Holidays • Flexible Schedules ’ Professional Work Environment ’ Promotion From Within No Experience Necessary 1Paid Training Advancement Opportunities $ 6 .0 0 An Hour Plus Commission (Top Reps Can Earn $ 1 2 .0 0 + Hourly) Relocation Opportunities • Call Today to Set Up An Interview • 7 7 7 - 0 8 7 7 • Or stop by at 3 1 3 6 S . McClintock Ste 7, Tempe < 'P ro M ark O ne is th e 166th F a ste st G row ing C om pany in A m erica* - IN C 500 M agazine W e are th e 6th L arg e st, and 3 rd F a ste st G row ing T e lem arketing F irm in th e N ation EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER HELP W A NTEDGENERAL II HELP W ANTEDGENERAL of Tempe C ity SANTA'S HELPERS For Scottsdale Fashion Square mali Full-time o r Part-time shifts available Mon. thru Sun. Detail o r CSQ exp erien ce preferred, but not necessary. For more information or appointment call 604-6120. KID ZONE Before and A fter School Prosram Positions' WESTERN STAFF SERVICES 202 East Eaitl #175 Phoenix, AZ. $6.75 - $7.84/hour. Hours vary. A pply at: City o f Tem pe S o cial S ervices D ep t Put tie pedal _ r0 ME METAL 3500 S. Rural Road, Tempe (602)350-5400 TDD (602) 350-5050 NEED SO M E $ $ GASH $ $ For the Holidays LET'S MAKE A DEAL WE WILL G IVE YOU $7.0Q/hr + BONUS!!!!! Equal O p p o rtu n ity/ Reasonable Accommodation employer At Bank One you can go full speed ahead in your career. If you're looking for a company that’s focused on superior Customer service, look no further. Join the team at our Bank Card Center in one of the following opportunities: Part time positions (flexible hours) _ .. , Paid Training “ ' Casual Dress t e a m e f f o r t .! paid Days Off Relaxed Environment No Cold Calling W a lkin g D istan ce fro m ASU Y ou G ive U s A C a ll 8 94 .98 1 6 These integral positions require strong problem resolution expertise and the ability toiaci&ate incoming telephone calls efficiently and effectively. A minimum of 6 months experience in a telephone customer service center or bankcard/credit resolution environ­ ment is a must Salaries starting at $8.53/hour. A -Q S M 1310 E. Broadway Rd. Suite 103 Tempe, Az 8S282 Job HQOO0398LK Candidates will assist our customers with issues regarding the fraudulent use of their charge accounts. A background in a customer service role within a telemarketing or call center environment is required. Salaries start­ ing at $8.53/hour. Job D0000256LK Our Collectors are responsible for con­ ducting professional negotiations and credit resolutions via telephone. Full and part-time positions are available for individuals with varying levels of experience. Salaries starting at $8.00/hour plus incentives. Job 00000288LK Our compensation is excellent, with exceptional benefits to include medical, dental, life, disability, 401 (k) plan and tuition assistance! Stop by our Bank One Hiring Center located at 201 N. Central Ave., Concourse Level, Monday - Friday, 8am-5pm. Or send your resume, referencing Job Code indicated above, to: Bank One, Dept. A306, RO. Box 71, Phoenix, AZ 85001. Fax: (602) 221-1407. Job Hotline: 1-800-344-JOBS. Pre-employment drug testing and fingerprinting required. ___________ .4— EOE M/F/D/V. Member FDIC. Create Your Own Schedule $900 Hiring Bonus Come be a part of DIcildmenca's diverse team! • • .• WE OFFER: / N ow A Linna) • G uaranteed Paid Training /— '\ • G reat Pay S8-S12 average per hour • Flexible Hours to work w ith your school schedule • Bonuses... S • Professional/Com fortable Environment • Sharpens C om m unication/ C areer Skills/Resume Builder • Nearby Location a t M il Ave. and Baseline Rd. DmlAmihca Marketing, Inc. CALL 345-9509 FOR INTERVIEW The road to success begins here. Join Heart to Heart, Scottsdale's leading dating service located in Old Town Scottsdale. Have fun call Metro Phoenix singles to invite them for a free tour of our center. NOSELUNG D ey/Night/W knd Shifts Flexible Scheduling Exp. n o r re q 'd b u t h e lp fu l W om en Excel Casual Dress A u to m a te d D ialing System Fun A tm osphere Page 18 State P ress Tuesday, November 19, 1996 HELP W ANTED- HELP W ANTED- G E N |j ^ L _ ^ _ _ PROGRAMMERS Students wanted for pt posi­ tion. Visual Basic required, other programming experience a plus. Fax resume to 929-9611. PT DRIVER needed, courteous responsible, neat appearance. Flex, hours, pays $7/hr. 9669929. RECEPTIONIST/VET ASST,, people skills a must. No exp. nec. p/t M T 7 :30am-noon. Contact Dr. John Clark <§> 9976313 fax 371-1936. REDRIVER Now hiring part time help for front of house and daytime box office Flexible hours. Fun en­ vironment. Apply in person at 730 N. Mill Ave 829-6779; STUDENT CLASSIFIED Ad­ vertising counter clerk-p/t, must be familiar with Macintosh, we will train and w o rk . around your schedule. See Pat, base­ ment o f Matthews Center, State Press reception desk,, for ap­ plication. TELEMARKETING SALESHELP the handicapped. $9.00/hr + comm. 813-1000 ext. 208. TELEPHONE OPERATORS. 1229hrs/wk morns., eves, & wkends. Close to ASU. $6.50/hr + raises. Efficient typ­ ing, spelling, cust. serv. skills a must. Fam iliarity of Metro Phx & Tucson a +. Bilingual helpful 966-8798 TICKET AGENT part-time af­ ternoons & weekends. Tempe Greyhound 967-4030 TRADER JO E’S p/t clerks & stockpeople want­ ed. flex hrs. good pay. Scot­ tsdale 948-9886 X-MAS CASH Cellular phone co.seeking asst, to help with holiday rush. Big $$$ 868-0729 to interview. Find it FAST in the Classifieds HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE HELP W A N TED SALES HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL FAST GROWING company is adding now shift to meet sales growth. Needing: money moti­ vated minds needed to hustle $7.50/hr. + bonuses. Benefits. Exc. opportunity. Bill 9665765. AN 11 YR old co. needs peo­ ple to call our customers. Great $, 10 min from ASU, nice envi­ ronment, hours 4- 8pm M-F, Call Cornerstone 244-8720, PHONE REPS, call exist, cust. base. Top pay! 4-8 p.iij. M-F. Start immed. 736-0034. SALES/ MARKETING person wanted for unique lighting pro­ ducts. We sell & rent to the en­ tertainment industry. P/t, hour­ ly & commission- Spectrum 968-5002. Tempe. SALES/M ARRETING POSI­ TION, salary + comm. Insideoutside sales. Resume req*d. Job avail Jan ’97. Call 9669900. w il d APPOINTMENT SETTER. Fun, friendly dental office seeks peo­ ple person. Mon-Thurs. 6p.m.8p.m. S7.50/hr + bonus. Up to $40/day. Scotts & Shea. 4838822. EXECUTIVE ANSWERING service (a Tempe co.), has 2 p/t operator positions. Second shift/Wkends. Must type 45+ wpm, 10 key hy touch, com ­ puter exp, $7/hr. Call 2644000. CORK'NCLEAVER Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are im portant. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101N. 44th S t 952-0585. DOC & EDDY’S Hiring 4 p/t waiter/waitress. Must have exp., flex work schedules. Apply in person at 909 E. Minton Baseline/Rural Tempe. 831-0635 HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE MR GOODCENTS Subs & Pas­ tas is hiring for ft & pt posi­ tions. Drivers, make up to $8.50/hr & more. Managers & inside help also needed. Please apply at 528 W. Broadway, Tempe, 894-6065 NOW HIRING all positions. Please apply in person Tues. & Wed's from 2^-5pm at Red Lob­ ster, 3360 N. Scottsdale Rd. & Osbom. NATIVE NEW Yorker, 1301 E Broadway, Tempe. Now accept­ ing applications for bartending. Exp needed & must know li­ quor laws. 921-2556 NEW UPSCALE gourmet deli seeks counter help pt/ft. Pay DOE. Mark's Cafe 13802 N. Scottsdal 1 '5 T ravel A broad & Work! UNIVERSITY & RURAL Make $25-$45/hr. teaching basic conversational English abroad, japan, Taiwan, & S-Korea. M any provide room & board + other benefits. No teaching background Or Asian languages required, 9 9 0 A n y Drink 9pm - close Customer Appreciation Night - Live Band PERSONALS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES RETIRE WHEN you graduate! Fellow ASU students are well on their way to retirement al­ ready! Call 440-3561 for more information. Just call! LUIS A. HEREDIA - Happy 21st b-day e your ASU familia. SERVICES UNLIMITED INCOME. Work from home. For free infti, rush sase to: Freedom Enterprises, 1630 30th Sir. Suite #501, Boulder, Co. 80301. ARE YOU WOKING FOR GRANTS OR SCHOLARSHIPS? Read this first. ASU Student Financial A ssis­ tance can help fin d money fo r you w ithout charging a p ro ­ cessing fee. Call 965-3355. I f you choose to use a private company to obtain grants or scholarships, be sure to get verifiable references before re­ mitting. RESTAURANTS/ g A R S _ _ _ _ CROCODILE CAFE is now hir­ ing bussers and hosts. All shifts.;Apply 525 S. Mill Ave­ nue. FU N D R A IS IN G - W R IT IN G H E L P FAST FUNDRAISER -Raise $500 in 5 days-Greeks, clubs, motivated individuals: Fast, easy-no financial obligations. (800) 862-1982 Ext. 33, 423-3434. Essay/dissertation. HEALTH & FITNESS F |j^ N £ y 5 _ _ WILL POWER in a bottle. Lose fat w/o exercising. All natural, Dr. recommended and Herbal based products. Call Doris/Vicki at 649-7215. ANOREXIA/BULIMlA SELFHELP, M, W, Th 6:30-7:30 pm, $5. Call 994-9773. G O N G R A T U L A T ION S NEOPHITES on your court Sat­ urday! We wish you the best for your active semester to come! T Y P IN G /W O R D PRO CESSING $ 1 99/PG, $15/RES. Proofed. ÀPA/m L a . Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987 ; rA O PA'S + Actives - family picnic was great! Thanx to all who helped! APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast7 C all Jessie, 945-5744. Editing services available. 9 6 5 -^ 7 3 5 (206) 971-3570 ext. J59181 ASU AREA. APA/MLA exp. IBM/laser, WP5/6; transcription Chart s/graphs 966-2186 any­ time. • SERVICES Media Center Technician Entry level position. Set up, tear-down and operation of audio visual equipment Applicant must be a hard worker and willing to gain corporate audio visual experience. PM shift. /MicroAge Excellant opportunity w ith MicroAge Database Services Specialist I Database Services is a new department that supports the Purchasing organization by handling all contact with customer service, suppliers, accounting, warehouse and marketing areas. We have full-time'-entry levelpositions for someone with good Organizational skills, attention to detail, ability to prioritize objectives and work well under pressure. Advancement opportunities include transfers to Customer Service, Purchasing, Accounting, Business Development and other departments at MicroAge. The ideal candidate will possess good customer service skills, communication skills, computer industry knowledge, Microsoft Word, Excel, Access, and DOS computer literate. Please contact Whitney Smith at 366-7828, fax - 366-4931 or forward a resume to: MicroAge 2400 MicroAge Way Tempe, AZ 85282-1896 RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS ¡ • 1 //.A «i PASTA Where ASU Goes for Pizza TANK UP TUESDAY *2.81 PITCHERS .60 o i. Coors Light • Bud Light Honey Brown $3.27 98< Pitchers of Soda 968-6666 1 3 0 1 E. U n iversity Students Needed! Earn u p to $2^XK)+/mo. working for Cruise Ships o r Land-Tour companies + World Travel Seasonal and Full-Time employment available. Call: (206) 971-3550 ext. C59188 Fresh Beers Brewed Here! BANDERSNATCH Slh^ ü est ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST Please apply in person a t The Scottsdale Conference Resort 7700 E. McCormick Parkway Scottsdale, AZ 85258 No phone calls please. Drug testing required. CRUISE JOBS A R IZO N A ’sI st MICROBREWERY BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES I 10am-3pm Tues. & Thurs. Women $15 Reg. $21 Men $10 Reg. 14 SHEAR8 HAIR/NaIL I 907 E. Lemon 829-0649 1 CREATIVE, PROFESSIONAL Tuesday, November 19,1996 Resumes fo r jobs, internships & career fairs. CVs, cover tetters, ■ updates A salary histories. ARIES (March 21 to April 19) A close relati ve brightens your day with some welcome news. Before making any major pur­ chases, be sure that you and your mate are in sync about how much to spend. Cultural pursuits are favored in the evening, TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Y ou and a loved one have a minor falling but about a money matter early in the day. Don’t allow this to escalate. Evening hours favor get-togethers with friends. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) C ouples enjoy sòm e sp e c ia l time together. Howevdr, be sure that, all tasks are com pleted before going o ff for any roman­ tic outings. Events that occur in a child’s life are very favorable for die entire family. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You need to take some time (nil to be by yourself and meditate. Some times,others distract you from your primary goals. The afternoon is best for completing a project LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Finances are looking up. Keep on this track for additional suc­ cess. YoUr personality comes to your aid while negotiating a business deal. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Anything you do as a group activity is favored. The accent is heavily placed on teamwork. If you’ve been waiting for finan­ cial backing, this is the time to attain it. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Be sure to take advantage o f that special opportunity that comes your way. Something occurs at work that su rp rises you. However, this ultimately devel­ ops into future gains. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You’re personality-plus but it’s best to follow tip on your inde­ pendent urges. Business deals are pulled off only if you can utilize tact An intriguing invita­ tion comes your way . SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 22 to Dec. 21) What occurs behind the scenes benefits you greatly financially. However, don’t rush out on that tempting shopping expedition. Keep certain plans private. ' CAPRICORN (Dec; 22 to Jan. 19) Self-confidence is the key to help you achieve what you want a t work. Later in the day, news you receive cheers you up. At night, com m unicative skills come to die fore. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Try not to be put out when some one shows up at your doc»' unexpectedly. This person has an interesting revelation. Be p atjen t w ith a cantankerous loved one. PISCES {Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Your bookkeeping has been a bit sloppy lately and needs to be corrected^ If o ut shopping, som ething very unusual cap­ tures your imagination. Singles find dating very rewarding. YOU BORN TODAY are at the mercy of your somewhat jealous nature early on in life. While this causes some problems, once you learn how to control this, your relationships succeed. You have your feet firmly planted on the ground and are a pragmatist of the first order. Some find this irritating as you are not one indulge in fantasy or what-ifs. You are at home in the sciences and with all things of a mechan­ ical nature. Mathematics also is a field that appeals. Banking and the stock market are favored. Ie r s T em pe W ANTEd © 1996 King Features Syndicate Inc. l< supported by R U R A LI. BROADWAY TICKET INFORMATION SUBS & SALADS 340-0001 TUTOR:ALL MATH& comp. sci. d rèat prices, Co.#/private éxt. 784-1008 ext; 4 M ISCELLANEOUS STEEL BUILDINGS (for custom factory orders) canceled enroute. Must sell for invoice bal­ ance by 11-21. 30x48, 35 x 62, 45 x 80 and 54 x 98. Buy­ ers only. 1-800-606-8424. 9 6 8 -7 7 3 5 Moti.-Sun. 8am-8pm Em m $ 1 5 10 $ 5 0 Per .how* Earn M oney , H ave F un ■ (You cam stari bxmENdtNq V M AQE 1 9 ) . BARTENdilVq A cA dE M y 921-9.925 $199 with ASU ID Hi Rough Nov. 15ih RESTAURANTS/ BARS INTERNET URLS nH A N C U L A ID AVAILABLE CHECK OUT your student g o Y e r n m è; n t . h ttp ://w w w .asu .ed u/stu d e n tlife/ASASU M illio n s o f d o lla rs in p u b lic & p riva te se cto r scholar­ ships a nd g ra n ts are n o w a vaila ble . ALL STUDENTS ARE EUGIBLE. S tudent F inancial Services' prog ra m w ill h e lp y o u g e t y o u r fa ir share. C all 1-800-263-6495 Ext F59 I8 7 v P 'N LOW A LOW COST Made for ASU students, by ASU students to save you money •all over town! HEALTH INSURANCE * • Lowest Cost Plans I per semester or m onth | • Most pre-existing ■ conditons OK ¡•In te rn a tio n a l Health I Plans | . D ependent | Health Plans T Y P IN G /W O R D PRO CESSING T H E W R IT E S T U F F | Call now for your PrehulsMl Word Pranuiag L Disktgp Publishing Survies FREE En ro llm en t Kit! > 5 % 9 6 3 -3 5 3 7 Tim Papan>Thun * Dbitrtotions APA/MLA/Gradualt College Formats Rasamas * Graphics Western Health Services to S I DEVIL HOCKEY 921-9222 a r t e n c TUTORS RESUMES FROM SCRATCH by Frances D rake B EXCELLENT APA/MLA typirig/wp & editing. Accurate, quick. Steve & Leah, 831-1384 1 SERVICES TONIG H T LIVE! | Keltic | [Cowboys] $1 r a Off AH Drafts Open 2 4 hours, Rural & University 966-2035 - ' j f i J -. Balboa Cafe 404 S . Mill Ave. 966*1300 k i n k o ' s * makes the grade! G et reports, resumes & flyers fast! Color prints, Mac & IBM rental, scanning & more! y • ZJL D o n 't r o ly o n lu c k t o m a k e y o u r a d v e r t is in s w o r k - S ta te P re s s C la s sifie d s m a k e it h a p p e n ! C ell PoyW a o o d w tn ■ $ M ^ 7 M « •r \ P age 2 0 State P ress Tuesday, November 19, 1996 COMPLIMENTARY PASSES TRICKY EXCLUSIVELY FOR AMERICAN EXPRESS8CARDMEMBERS. WHEN & WHERE. November 20, 7:3Qpm Harkins Center Point Theatre WHAT MILLENNIUM TENSION Cardmembers get twfi compli­ mentary passes to a pre-release screening of Universal's block­ buster Daylight. THE N E W A L B U M HOW. OUTT O D A Y i Just bring the American Express' Card or Optima’- Card and your Student ID to the location listed below to pick up your passes. NOW. If you’re not yet a Cardmember and would like to take part in our exclusive previews, it’s easy to apply for the Card. Just call 1-800-942-AMEX, ext. 4114. MORE TO COME. D aylights one in a series of five major motion pictures to be previewed on your campus J this year, compliments of Produced by Tricky American Express. PICK UP YOUR TICKETS HERE. CLIFF N O T E S F O R THE F U T U R E ... I n front o r A SU B ookstore N ovem ber 1 8 -N o vem b er 2 0 h t t p :/ / w w w .p o ly g r a m .c o m / p o ly g r a m Entertainment © 1 9 9 6 i s l a n d R e c o r d s L td . -1996American Express Travel RelatedServices Company Inc ‘^PPilianstF' • ’ s-i- ■- U niversity & Rural The Cornerstone 9 6 8 -8 0 0 8 vVi '■ _______ p COUPON FREE SH AM POO WITH CUT 7 WAREHOUSE PUCES DESIGNER PERM % OFF $>095 fcwhi<«i Vi—piio, CMmà N m. ■MEN r f o r I l i t s e rv ic e . cSPPwiWrtSlP" P JB | ^ n ■ HBiLMTOdRI. Sebastian 1 Ujg mtm * i&PnslMMF lO M I^ — m m B8L I nth**. ^H nsW S IP ThePowerMoanlosi’7200/120 DOSCompatibleruns MS-DOSand Windows3-1 directly; other Power Macmlmb models requireSoftWmtlows software. 91996 - reserved.' Apple, ' Ibe ~ Apple m ' logo, Mac, Macintosh and PowerMacintoshare registered ~..................trademarks rbmartt«fAE6s( ■ • • Inc. MS-D06 AppleComputer, Inc. All-rigpis ofApple Computer, t by insigniajm n Microsoft Corporation. do/Microsoft Corporation, andSoftWindows è a ¡É R 11800-600*78081 orTTY800-755-0601. 1 to be accessible to individuals with disability, lb learn more (U.S. only), calls AUMacintosh computers are a