Slate Press < Vol. 72 No. 50 Copyright. State Press. 1989. Tempo, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Tuesday, November 7,1989 Citizens drive seeks to limit city spending By DAVE THOMAS State Press A group o f Tem pe citizens is circulating petitions in an in itiative d rive e ffo rt to lim it the c ity ’s spending on professional sports and entertainm ent facilities. S im ilar to the recently passed Proposition 200 in Phoenix, the in itiative would require voter approval fo r certain expenditures o f m ore than $3 m illion, a group spokesman said. P rop osition 200 also requ ired v o te r approval fo r expenditures o f $3 m illion. “ Ours is an im proved version o f P rop 200,” said F ritz T u ffli, one o f the in itiative’ s fiv e sponsors. “ In effect, it gives a line-item veto to the voters of Tem pe but only over a very narrow a rea .” ' T u ffli said he believes the Phoenix Cardinals’ training fa cility is an exam ple of the Tem pe City Council supporting sports expenditures without voter approval or backing. “ The Cardinal training fa c ility was m oney in the garbage can,” T u ffli said. “ It had no p a rtin bringing the Cardinals to Tem pe. It didn’t benefit anyone except B ill B idw ell and the Tem pe C ity Council.” T o get the proposal on the next general ballot on M ay 8, 1990, the group w ill have to collect about 10,000 signatures from registered Tem pe voters. “ That’s a city charter requirem ent,” Tem pe city clerk P hoto b y Randy Thleben A rented U-Haul truck driven by Jam ie Lynn Sullivan, 18, of Mesa, collided Monday afternoon with an overhang at J B ’s Restaurant, 225 E. Apache Blvd. No arrests were made In the accident, a spokesman for the Tem po P olice Department said. N o injuries were reported. Tum to Initiative, page 7. Foes of planned store doubt projected earnings Say average market fails to meet projected gross S ta ff reports Opponents o f a proposed superm arket in south Tem pe say that the m arket w ill have to gross $55 m illion a yea r in order to gen erate the amount o f tax revenue city officals are p ro je c tin g .. M ario M artinez, an ASU com puter program m er who spearheaded a m assive petition d rive and initiated dem onstrations against the proposed Sm ith’s Superm arket on the northeast corner o f Rural Road and Southern Avenue, said such a high gross is unlikely because the average Sm ith’s store only generates $14.6 m illion per year. M artinez, who conducted a financial analysis o f the superm arket proposal, heads a group o f local citizens who oppose the cen ter because they fea r it would lead to tra ffic ja n rs an d o v e rc o n g e s tio n in su rrou n d in g T em p e neighborhoods. Sm ith’s Superm arkets has 95 stores nationwide, and its total sales w ere about $1.4 billion in 1968. Th e Tem pe C ity Council plans to vote Thursday night on w hether to rezone the land and allow the construction o f the m arket, which would be the largest in Tem pe. Th e fin an cially a ilin g Tem pe E lem entary School D istrict proposed developing the land as a superm arket ea rlier this y e a r in ord er to raise several hundred thousand dollars in tax revenue to benefit the district. Councilwom an B arbara Sherman said she cannot evaluate w hether or not the store w ill be able to gross $55 m illion each year. H ow ever, she said she has m et with representatives o f both sides o f the issue, and proponents have said inflation over the years w ill help the store reach its goal. Th e council was slated to vote Oct. W on whether or not the superm arket would be built at the form er Rural Elem entary School site, but the m easure was delayed because of a legal The Way It Is: W alter Cronkite The northeast com er of the Intersection of Southern Avenue and Rural Road Is the proposed site Of a Smith's Superm arket petition that requires three fourths o f the council to pass or reject the m easure. Councilwoman C arol Smith, whose absence from the m eeting m ade it d ifficu lt to obtain the required votes, said that the postponement was a technicality and she is w illin g to hear what the citizens have to say. The postponement by the council to m ake a decision on the fa te o f land at R ural Road and Southern Avenue has given opponents io the construction o f a superm arket m ore tim e to find support and gather additional signatures on petitions opposing die m arket. The exact number o f signatures w ill be announced at a press conference in front o f the C ity Council cham bers at 11 a.m . today. “ (T h e number o f signatures) is an incredible amount fo r a city issue,” he said. A t the last o ffic ia l count two weeks ago, the opponents had 1,000 signatures — the largest num ber ever gathered in Tem pe. Th e m ajority o f the council m em bers have expressed that they w ill vote to am end the c ity ’s m aster plan and rezone the land, allow ing the superm arket to be built. M artinez said M onday he thinks m any City Council m em bers m ay be reconsidering the issue. “ W e feel better that w e’v e applied a better effo rt,” M artinez said. B efore the council votes, there w ill be a public hearing. Turn to Market, page 1 1 . Bum Rap: Gama, Sat, Unmatched: N ica rgu a w a s right b estow s the sixth T h e m e n s tennis to s u sp e n d the a n nu al Aw ard of E x ­ team e a rn s th e N o . cease-fire with the c e lle n ce on M a lco m 1 sin g le s spot at a C o n tra reb els. C o d y Fo rb es. M in n ea p o lis S h e a re r colum n. tournam ent. Page 3 Page 4 Page 15 Today's weather: Mostly sunny, with a wind from the west at 5 to 10 mph and a high naar 00. Tonight should be dear, with a low in the lower 50e. C la s s ifie d s ..... C o m ic s .......... .....10 .....14 Police Report. Sporta........ .11,12 .....15 — ii^ — -— — State Pres» 2ii2221ii2222SS^^222i World/Nation Strike called by ousted general shuts down Beirut, spurs protests B E IR U T , Lebanon (A P ) — A strike called by Gen. M ichel Aoun, the Christian arm y com m ander, virtu ally closed down east B eirut on Monday, and his follow ers filled the streets to protest the election o f a Syrian-backed president. R ioting Aoun loyalists storm ed the residence o f Nasrallah S feir, the M aronite Catholic patriarch, who supported Rene Mouawad’s election as president Sunday, and forced him to kiss a portrait of the general. Mouawad, 64, and Aoun, 54, are M aronites, the m ain Christian sect in Lebanon. Aoun declared a “ w ar o f liberation” this year on the 40,000 Syrian soldiers stationed in Lebanon under a 1976 peacekeeping m andate from the Arab League. He issued a statem ent today urging supporters to “ lim it your protests to civilized and peaceful methods.” Schools, shops, restaurants, banks and governm ent offices closed in Christian east B eirut and m any parts o f the Christian enclave north and east o f the city. Patriarch S feir, 68, fled to his sum m er home in an area o f north Lebanon under Syrian control and said he would not return to his o ffic ia l residence “ until peace p reva ils.” A police spokesman said 100 supporters o f Aoun drove, to Bkirki in 30 cars shortly a fter m idnight Sunday and storm ed the w alled compound. A 40-man unit o f Aoun’s command assigned to protect S feir did not try to stop them, the spokesman said. U. S. agrees to return $567 million in frozen assets to Iran after talks W ASH ING TO N (A P ) — The United States has decided to return $567 m illion to Iran, retaining $243 m illion as insurance against further Am erican claim s, U S. o fficia ls said Monday night. The m ove follow ed talks in The Hague last w eek between the U. S. and Iranian officia ls. U. S. officia ls said the decision to return $567 m illion through the Bank o f Iran was unrelated to the plight o f eight Am erican hostages being held in Lebanon by a pro-Iranian faction. Iranian President Hashemi R afsanjani offered help last month in gettin g W estern hostages freed if the United States released billions o f dollars in frozen assets. W. Germans say many refugees will return home if reform com es SC H IRN D IN G , W est Germ any (A P ) E ast Germans crossed the border by the carload in a cold, ligh t rain Monday, including a young couple who cam e d irectly from their wedding, s till w earing form al attire. W est Germ ans who watched the stream o f cars entering W est G erm any from Czechoslovkia predicted m any refugees would return hom e if communist E ast Germ any introduced enough reform s. Last month, E ast Germ any announced an am nesty that appears to allow the return o f any o f the tens o f thousands who have fled without exit visas. AD N , the o ffic ia l E ast Germ an news agency, said late M onday m ore than 23,000 citizens had le ft through Czechoslovakia in the previous three days. They join m ore than 160,000 who have em igrated lega lly, escaped or failed to return from approved trips abroad this year. W est Germ an officia ls have had to requ isition tem porary shelter and demands have arisen that the flow o f refugees be ended. Today Meetings Room. •ASU Ski Devils will b e signing up new members from •ECKANKAR will meet at 11:30 a.m. in the MU Yavapai 10:30 a m. to 1:45 p.m. at a booth on the com er o f Palm Walk and Tyler Mall. W e also will be accepting $50 deposits for the Thanksgiving Utah trip and selling T-shirts. •Arizona State College Republicans will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. Louis Tam s will speak about Central America. •Alleluia Lutheran Church Bible Study and Fellowship at 7:30 p.m. at the Alleluia Lutheran Church, 1034 S. Mill Avenue. Students — bring a friend and join us! •Alpha Eta Rho Aviation Fraternity presents Northwest Airlines pilot John Copag at 7 p.m. in the MU, Room 211. •Baptist Student Union will m eet at 7 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center, 1322 S. Mill Avenue. Guest speaker will be Dr. Earl Stallings. The topic of discussion will b e “ Prayer Warriors.” Everyone welcome. •Beta Alpha Psi will m eet from 4 to 6 p.m. at Pranksters Bar and Grill, 1024 E- Broadway Road. •Circle K International will m eet at 7 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. Topic for discussion: “ Consciousness is the Only State Worth Consideration.” •Fellowship of Christian Athletes Prayer at 7:30 p.m. in the University Activities Center, Room 35. Everyone welcome. •MUAB Promotions Committee will m eet at 1:30 p.m. in the MU Apache Room. N ew members are welcom e. •Overtime will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room. Chris Slagle is back and ready to rage! •Progressive Self-Defense Club will practice martial arts and modern sport sparring at 4:30 p.m. in the Student Recreation Complex, Gym A. Drop by practice or call Tom at 967-4436 for more information, •Student Orientation Service will have a Career Services Seminar from 2 to 3:30 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. The seminar is designed to introduce students to Career Services before their senior year. All students are encouraged to attend. •Undergraduate Law Club will m eet at 4 p.m. in the Law School, Room 115. N ew member/new officer application will be taken. •Women Law Students Association (WLSA) will be having! a canned food drive for the homeless to benefit all major food banks in the Phoenix area. Donations will be accepted every day this week until 4 p.m. at the ASU C ollege of Law Rotunda, east campus at McAllister Avenue and Terrace Road. •Young Democrats of ASU will meet at 6 p.m. in the Social Sciences Building, Room 320 Guest speaker will b e Secretary of State Jim Shumway. Correction The Tem pe P o lice Departm ent in correctly identified the nam e, which appeared in M onday’s edition, of a priest whose car killed an ASU architecture student. The priest’s correct name is Father Daniel M cCready. • Join us at the tent by the fountain Wednesday, Novem ber 8th, from 9 to 3:30 and experience the Apple Macintosh™ personal computer first hand. • Representatives from Apple Computer and major software vendors w ill be available to answer questions. • Special Holiday Bundles (and special prices, too!) make it easier than ever to own a Macintosh. November 8th • At the tent by the fountain • Register to W in a Free Macintosh SE* * Macintosh SE includes 2 internal 800K floppy disk drives and 1 Apple Keyboard Sta«* Press Tuesday, N ove m b er 7 ,1 9 8 9 Malcolm Forbes honored with Cronkite journalism award By M ARK CRISMON State Press M agazine execu tive M alcolm Forbes on Monday becam e the sixth recipient o f the annual W alter Cronkite Aw ard for E xcellen ce in Journalism and Telecom m unication. The award, given at a luncheon a t the Arizona B iltm ore, is distributed annually by the W alter Cronkite School of Journalism and Telecom m unication a t ASU to recognize the journalistic accom plishm ents o f an a ctive m em ber o f the news m edia. Cronkite, who resigned in 1980 a fter alm ost 30 years as a CBS news correspondent, gave the aw ard to Forbes, saying that although he has given the honor six tim es, “ nobody has deserved it as much.” Forbes, chairm an and editor-in-chief o f Forbes M agazine Inc., spoke about journalism and its relationship to the “ superpower ra ce.” He said the com puter is what has brought communism to its decline, explaining, “ Nations cannot function without the fre e exchange and use o f inform ation,” and the need fo r this, “ has conquered (com m unism ) in a w ay that arm ies cannot.” Forbes, 70, said b igger problem s w ill com e from the collapse o f the U.S.S.R. than from its existence as a superpower because o f the “ fragm en t” com plications created. Forbes said the United States and U.S.S.R. a re vast areas With unlim ited capabilities that need a ll sorts o f resources. H e said that there w ill soon be a “ race to see who can supply the most needed goods to the w orld.” He said the United States would have an edge in the race to provide those needed goods because “ a ll these needs and wants play to the strengths o f this country.” F o r exam ple, 80 percent o f the w orld’s com puter softw are is produced in the United States. “ W e are on the threshhold o f the m ost excitin g era this country has e v e r seen,” he said, creditin g the dissem ination o f inform ation with bringing the U.S. to this point. “ It is an inform ation a ge,” he said. B efore presenting the award, Cronkite said o f Forbes, “ He has honored us by com ing here to le t us honor him .” Cronkite said Forbes b elieves that people learn m ore from failu re than success, and that “ success does people in.” Cronkite praised Forbes fo r his b elief that a university’s purpose is not to fill the m ind but to open it. Cronkite pointed out that one third o f Forbes’ subscribers are m illionaires. Forbes has been honored m ore than four dozen tim es with honorary degrees from colleges and universities nationwide. Additionally, he has received numerous philanthropic, le a d e rs h ip and com m u n ity s e r v ic e a w a rd s fro m organizations worldwide. Howard W all, president o f Post-Newsweek Cable and m aster o f cerem onies at the presentation, said the aw ard is given in the “ tradition of W alter Cronkite.” Cronkite Secretary of state to speak By K ELLY JAIN State Press The ASU Young Dem ocrats w ill bring incumbent secretary o f state candidate Jim Shumway to campus tonight to speak on changes in the election law and youth in volvem en t in the p o litica l process. Shumway, who w ill speak at 6 p.m . in the Social Sciences Building, Room 320, also is expected to address the changing role o f the secretary o f state. D ick Mahoney, Shumway’s opponent fo r the office, recently spoke to the Young D em ocrats; and group president I Avantage 2 8 6 \ *1295 Includos lililí 40MB , 1 (Set the 286 m achine that's priced right. Includes 40Mb Jfard disk. M onochrom e Monitor, 640K, std. keyboard, 1.2mb drive and more. TO SH IB A T1000 LAPTO P D o yo u r hom ew ork st horns, s t the llb a rs iy , s t the A S U gam s, sn y w h srsl T h is 7pound w onder ru n s 1000's o f P C *639 software AvantageXT program s. C o m e s w ith 512K W alter R ich ter said this m eeting w ill g iv e Shum w ay an o p p ortu n ity to “ express his v ie w s ’ ’ G o v . R o s e M o ffo r d a p p o in te d Shumway to the o ffic e q f secretary of state on A p ril 13, 1988. Shumway succeeded in bringing the National Association o f Secretaries o f State to Arizona fo r its 1991 annual summer m eeting, which w ill be held in F la gsta ff July 23-27. B efore servin g as secretary of state, Shumway served as elections o ffic e r fo r the state o f Arizona fo r eight years. He served as the Pim a County election director between 1976 and 1980. o o "U *499 Many A SU .Professors own an Avantage. Get one for less! Includes floppy drive, keyboard, and monitor. m Dot M atrix Printer *179 EPSON Fall Rebatas! Equity 1* NEW! Com piste System *699 Final Coat Equity LT Laptop I I ■ I I Incfcid— : Monitor, Keyboard, 64QK, M at 10m t a p rocessor. 5.25" disk driva. D O S. B arie »><»•• KXP1180 Partaci tar pipava and program M m *. M u d a a fa c to rA fnedonfaada and front . .1 l. t il. m a - -*-N M.Cn lH ie A fypU BlJflSi. J3 (/) (/) •4 0 K , 10mhz, battery power ad, dual d riv e , and D O S in a battery poweredpackage! Borland Tiirbo Languages Q I Turbo C 2 o - 8 9 Your choice “ or Turbo Pascal 5.0 •Word Proceaaing -Databa ae -Spreadsheet »R Q -Com m unications -Graphics •Free "Q uicken" P h o e n ix i J T ........... ...... 1st Prize - $3,000 Scholarship 2nd Prize - $2,000 Scholarship 3rd Prize -$1,000 Scholarship Each week throughout the 1989 football season, w inners will be drawn for two tickets to the next hom e gam e at each of Arizona’s 3 universities - Enter w eekly contest o f school o f your choice. MAIL ENTRY TO: $100 Rebate for a college-eligible Arizona Resident* RightWriter $^Q Write BetterWithout Cheating! Qat Rightwritar and turn In battar (Mpart. It anaiyzoe style, grammar, raadablMty, punctua­ tion. and 4m much more. Works with moat word procoaaoral CARDINAL 1200 Baud Internal Modem Get On-line Instead Of Inline. 2400 Baud*99 Hntock 35Ui Ave. & _______ ____________ m CO o m “FIESTA BOW L SCHOLARSHIP SW EEPSTAKES” at one of the following post office boxes. A S U - P.O. Box 470, T em pe, A Z 85281 N AU - P.O. Box 1390, Tem pe, A Z 85281 U o f A - P . O . Box 1440, Tem pe, A Z 85281 W inners of w eekly draw ings w ill a lso receive a pair of ch o ice seats for the FIES T A BO W L Football Gam e New Year’s Day w here 3 o f the 33 fin a lists w ill win sch o larsh ip s. Enter as often as you wish (no purchase necessary). One entry per envelope. Each entry must include the name o f an eligible Scholarship recipient" and the nutrition information panel (or facsimile) frorti any size carton o f milk. P L E A S E PRINT N AM E, C O M P LE T E A D D R ESS , AND T E LE P H O N E N U M BER ON P IECE O F P A P ER AN D INCLUDE WITH NUTRITION INFORM ATION P A N EL. m 30 'Scholarship nominee must be an Arizona resident eligible for 1990 term or be currently enrolled at any Arizona College or University. (Em ployees and fam ily members of Arizona milk producers are not eligible.) E n t r ie s m u s t b e re c e iv e d b y N o v e m b e r 2 1 ,1 9 8 9 . Opinion Page 4 StttiPit» Tuesday, November 7,1989 Editorial Letters Danforth cross Council deaf on stadium issue It must come down E ditor: From reading the State Press, it is obvious that m any people at ASU are concerned that the construction o f a stadium w ill h ave a detrim ental e ffe c t on the U niversity. D arrin H ostetler w rote an excellent editorial on the m atter, and ASASU President Pau l Larson has spoken with Tem pe C ity Council m em bers about it. A t present, city council m em ber Carol Smith is saying that die Council is “ only exp lorin g options” in regards to the stadium. This sounds v e ry fam iliar. As someone who is a ctively opposing the establishm ent o f the Smith Superm arket at the Rural School site, I wish to point out that d ie “ exploring options” explanation is what w e received about eigh t months ago. Now the Council is m aking it clea r that they w ill allow the store to be built. This is in spite of the fa ct that a record number o f Tem pe It ’s easy to understand. The cross that sits atop Danforth Chapel is a stark sym bol — perhaps the most recognizable em blem in w orld history. The sign o f the cross, tow ering over a clea rly m arked place o f worship, means only one thing to people around the globe: Christianity. And that’s what the cross means to students at ASU. E veryone seem s to understand this . . except, iron ically enough, fo r a sm all m inority o f campus Christians. The presence o f the religious sym bol on this tiny campus building has been defended diligently in recent days by this group, which m aintains that the cross is m erely a traditional part of Danforth Chapel. They reason that to rem ove the cross would be to tam per with the building’s original design and that a cross on the chapel is m erely an historical ornament and should not prevent students from freely using the chapel to pursue their own individual faiths. This thinking, at best, indicates an a v e r s io n to r e a lit y . A t w o r s t, it d em on stra tes th in ly v e ile d re lig io u s intolerance. The ju ry is s till out on whether the cross was an original component o f the chapel. Sincere people can debate the intentions of the chapel designers and the aesthetic and historical value o f the cross. What is not debatable is that there are students, many o f whom have spoken up since the cross controversy erupted, who are reluctant — or actually forbidden by the tenets o f their religion **■ to use a building m arked by the Christian sym bol. The Facu lty Senate, the Associated Students Senate and the ASU Interfaith Council have a ll endorsed rem oving the cross. These groups understand that the cross is an unnecessary b arrier to some students — a barrier that should not be tolerated on a state-sponsored building. The controversy over the Danforth cross is most lik ely headed fo r court, as the Arizona C ivil Liberties Union has filed suit, seeking to force ASU to rem ove the religious sym bol. The outcome o f this action seem s fa irly predictable: The U niversity is supporting a building on state property — with state funds — that features the universal symbol o f Christianity as its capstone. On its face, state subsidy o f a religious fa cility that, by its very nature excludes those o f other faiths, is clea rly unconstitutional. But regardless o f the lega l outcome, ASU has a higher authority to which it must answer — the students. A sta te-fu n d ed u n iv e rs ity has an obligation to provide an environm ent that can accom m odate the needs and beliefs o f a ll students. This does not m ean that ASU must squeeze out a ll things that represent the unique nature o f w orld cultures or religion s, as som e have charged the U niversity would be doing by rem oving the Danforth cross. What it does m ean is that ASU must do aw ay with a sym bol that prevents or discourages students from expressing their own diversity or practicing their own beliefs. E ven m ore im portantly, the U niversity must rem ove a ll signs that it prom otes or encourages one group o f faith over another. T o that end, the cross should com e down. That action is the p rice w e must pay for freedom o f thought and worship at ASU. And that is the cross the U n iversity must bear. voters have signed a petition exp licitly S ta tin g th a t th e y do n ot w an t the superm arket established. Council m em bers have repeatedly said that they fe e l that the petition signers a re ignorant. Therefore, it did not surprise m e to find out that Larson also fe lt that the Council m em bers did not take his concerns seriously. Tem pe does not need C ity Council m em bers who hold th eir constituents’ opinions in such low esteem . There is a Tem pe City Council election com ing up in M arch. I f the “ ignorant” people o f Tem pe, including ASU personnel, do not fe e l that the C ity Council represents them v e ry w ell, they should “ explore” their dem ocratic options and vote accordingly. M ario M artinez U nclassified, Graduate Student Pro-choice E ditor: Tim e and tim e again voices are raised above the din seeking to dissuade wom en from the inalienable righ t o f their own bodies. Tim State Press has published m any letters by people who b elieve that it is their duty to im pose their m oral values upon women, especially ASU women. These people display an arrogant disregard fo r the rig h ts and p riv a c y o f w om en. Th is disregard carries w ith it a blatant lack of knowledge and a gross in ability to see the facts. Some im portant facts w orthy o f mention are that pregnancy is not lim ited to those college co-eds who are single or co-eds who seem ingly cannot control them selves when it com es to sex or co-eds who run the consequential risk which m ay result from fau lty contraception- W hy must those people, opposed to abortion, continually place the burden upon wom en? H ave they never heard o f the term “ date rape” ? What about that certain irresponsibility that som etim es accom p an ies the h eat o f passion? A re there no provisions fo r m istakes? T h e p u r it a n ic a l v ie w r e g a r d in g abstinence is sham efully outdated. You people cannot preach m orality fo r the sake o f our nation by condemning the actions o f the wom en who attend our U niversity. In a ll cases it takes at least two to tango, but only one pays the piper. Som e brazen souls, both m ale and fem ale, w ill even decry that these “ careless, th ou ghtless, and/or o th erw ise w ea k ” women do not need abortions. “ Women should be strong and able to accept the m e n ta l an d p h y s ic a l co n seq u en ces associated with pregnancy.” Statements such as these appear as feeb le attem pts at tellin g us that men and wom en are considered equal. As long as those people opposea to abortion continue to try and subjugate those who desire to exercise their rights, there w ill n ever be an equality. The u n d erlyin g ’ fa c t that rem ain s to be understood is that abortion has far-reaching consequences; nevertheless, wom en should have the righ t to accept those consequences without harassm ent or prejudice. D avid G. Auerbach Senior, Secondary Education Nancy E . M ork Junior, Social W ork Removing cross changes little E ditor: Just to prove that a university can broaden your outlook, the recent flap about the D anforth Chapel is the first tim e I ’d heard that the cross wasntt a Christian sym bol. F o r m ore than 20 years I ’v e been visitin g and attending ASU ; some o f m y classm ates (and, by now, som e o f their children) w ere m arried in Danforth, and it never dawned on m e that I m ight actually be w elcom e there m yself (except, o f course, as a p roselyte). The claim s I have heard that the cross on Danforth is somehow gen eric, a sort o f least common denomination, strikes m e less as b igo ted as p a ro ch ia l. Just as m ost Am ericans are monolingual, w e are also so monoCultural that it would never dawn on most to wonder whether em ergency food sent to K orea, India or the Sahel should include cheese, b eef o r spam. Charm ing innocence, that. The sam e attitude causes m e a grea t deal m ore trouble when m anifested as m y children’s elem entary school Christm as and E aster program s. (These are also, somehow, nondenominational.) So, if the cross com es down from D a n forth , it w on ’ t a ffe c t m e much personally. Perhaps from habit, I still won’t go in ; but also, just perhaps, there w ill be one less factor reinforcing the attitude that somehow Christianity and religion are synonyms. D .C . Sessions Senior, Com puter Science S TA TE PRESS Quotable DARRIN H O ST ET LE R Editor ’ “ The government o f the United States is not in any sense founded upon the Christian religion.” — John Adams C A R O L Y N HOFIG Managing Editor Editor... Asst. City Editor... . . . Opinion Editor....... Assoc. M agazine E d ito r.. ..... Asst. M agazine Editor........... EDITORIAL BOARD Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual m em bers of the editorial board write editorials and the board decid es on their merit. T he editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board m em bers include: D arrin H o stetler E D IT O R M arty S a u e rzo p f C IT Y E D IT O R C a ro ly n H üfig M A N A G I N G E D IT O R B rian T a ssin a ri O P IN IO N E D IT O R Photo Editor..... ... .........M ARTY S A U E R Z O P F ........ ...TYRO NE M EIGHAN M AGAZINE STAFF: Scott Seckel. F R E E L A N C E W RITERS: Sharon Kaney, Francine Stahl, Mish ................BRIAN TASSINAHI Tell, Richard Vigil. ............ ....... b e n M c C o n n e l l ... M ATTHEW U N D E N B U R G CARTOONIST: M ike Ritter ..... ............... ..................... ..................... M EA GSH ER SOVavreck N EDITORIAL SA T LV .: Lynn ....... . M IC H E LLE C R U F F PRODUCTION: Daniel Donley, Steve Kricun, Nancy Ness, .......................SUZANNE R O S S M ark Npthaft, Deborah Prewitt, Lynne Senzek, Jason Silver, ..... G A R Y 'JA C K S O N ........ .... . P A U L C O R O Eric Zotcavage. ' .... M IC H E LLE ALLM AN ..... .......... ...W ENDY ST R O D E ......... .....¿.......JACK B E A S L E Y R E P O R T E R S: Mike Burgess, Nicki Carroll, Mark Crismon, 'E lise Elsberry, Kimberly Harris, M ichelle Henry, Adriane Hopkins, Kelly Jain, Joie Ann L a Polla, Sonja Lewis, Kelly Pearce, Tenny Tatusian. AD VERTISING R E P R E SE N T A T IV E S: Frank Culver, Ja y Eekhardt, D an Ellstrom, Lysa Fitzhugh, L is a Horn, John Leathers, Paul Lee, Karen Lisiewski, Brook Mullen, Terri Smith, Ray Zickel. The State Pre ss is published Monday through Friday during the academ ic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. W e do not answer S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S: Vicki Culver, Jo el Horn, Tomi M cE l­ questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602)965-7572. roy, Larry Newell, Keith Rosenhagen. The State P re ss is the only newspaper exclusively published P H O TO G R A P H E R S : Jam ie Lytle, Sundi Kjenstad, Brian for and circulated on the A S U campus. The news and views O'Mahoney, Scott Troyanos. published In this newspaper are not necessarily those of the A SU administration, faculty, staff or student body. . C O P Y EDITORS: Kelly Ettenborough, Nicole Perron. Opinion P a g es Tuesday, November 7,1989 State Press Elections Nicaragua not to blame; U.S. broke cease-fire Cody Shearer North American Syndicate W ASH ING TO N — I am no buddy o f the Sandinistas in N icaragua. In July 1987, the incom petent Sandinistas threw m e in ja il for a day with seven other W estern journalists. It was a m istake, w e w ere told, because a m em ber o f our group didn’t have proper papers to be in a w ar zone. I o ffe r this background because, despite m y m istreatm ent, I think President D aniel O rtega has been gettin g a bad rap fo r suspending the cease-fire agreem ent in N icaragua. He is, a fter a ll, not acting outrageously i f one considers the current situation. Just ask yourself, how would you react if your neighbors w ere being slaughtered by a foreign-financed operation? O rtega has been called every name in the book in recent days President Bush says O rtega is “ an anim al at a garden p arty,” which is a bizarre country club expression. Other m em bers o f Congress have labeled him “ the skunk at the picnic” and “ a true crim in al.” Sen Orrin Hatch (R .-U tah ) claim s he is “ absolutely outraged by O rtega and his governm ent . . . who are suspending their com m itm ents to the peace process.” M eanwhile, Sen. John M cCain (R .-A riz.) has called upon his colleagues to “ resum e m ilitary assistance to the Nicaraguan resistance. ” How ill-inform ed can our governm ent’s leaders be? Don’t they realize the Contras are the ones who’v e been unfaithful to the cease-fire and not the Sandinistas? The cease-fire agreem ent was signed in February 1988. But, a fter June 1988, the Contras failed to renew th eir com m itm ent to the agreem ent, whereby the Sandinistas u n ilaterally reinstated the cease-fire, at grea t personal risk, for the next 16 months. ‘How ill-informed can our government’s leaders be? Don’t they realize the Contras are the ones w ho’ve been unfaithful to the cease-fire and not the Sandinistas?’ President O rtega alleges the Contras have killed m ore than 1,000 civilian s since the cease-fire agreem ent w as imposed. H e appears to have been particu larly angered by a rebel attack on a truck o f civilian s, prior to the latest sum m it in Costa R ica, in which 19 people w ere shot dead. Latin Am erican diplom ats I ’v e spoken w ith on the phone in Nicaragua during the past w eek confirm there has been a notable increase in Contra assaults, and they speculate that they a re supported by the U. S. to force the Sandinistas to take oppressive m easures in rural areas during the election cam paign. W hile our governm ent engages in insulting, im m ature and highly personalized language, there is evidence to suggest O rtega’s suspension o f the cease-fire is a result o f file shortcom ings in the Bush Adm inistration’s policy in Central A m erica. Our governm ent’s decision to m aintain the Contras in the field , through a $49 m illion hum anitarian assistance appropriation, is what is behind the m ost recent outbreak in hostilities. U nfortunately, this actionw as taken last M arch, a month a fter the Central A m erican presidents had agreed that any aid directed to the insurgents should be fo r their dem obilization, not fo r the m aintenance o f an arm y. A s a result o f U. S. policy, the Contras have been able to ignore international law and ca rry forw ard w ith their brutal w ar. In past weeks, Contra rebels even h ave abducted hundreds o f children and pressed them into service as serfs and com batants despite guarantees to the U. S. Congress that the Am erican-backed gu errilla force is solely a volunteer arm y. One 13-year-old boy at the Contra base in Yam ales, Honduras, along the Nicaraguan border, told B ritain’s Independent newspaper reporter, Claris M cG real, how he was seized from his fa m ily o f peasant farm ers at gunpoint. “ The patrol cam e when I was in the field ,” be said. “ Th ey, said I had to go w ith them, and they would te ll m y parents. I could not go back. They m ade m e ca rry som e o f th eir things and told m e about the w ar, and w e w alked until w e got here. Those who accom panied the join t United Nations and Organization o f Am erican States com m ission on their recent v is it to the rebels’ base cam p in Yam ales, overw helm ingly agreed that the Contras have no interest in dem obilizing. The com m ission was received coolly by the Contras. When its m em bers presented Contra com m anders w ith an agreed upon list o f steps tow ard disarm am ent — safety from acts of re p ris a l fro m th e S an din istas and am n esty a fte r dem obilization — they w ere told to g et lust until a fter the Feb. 25 elections. A t this point, the Contra leadership said it would decide whether to la y down its arm s or not. The key to President O rtega’s current gam ble is to o ffe r to reinstate the cease-fire only if Congress redirects $4 m illion a month jn “ hum anitarian’ ’ Am erican aid aw ay from the Contras. The Sandinistas want the m oney to go the th eU .N . to dism antle the Contras, L a ter this month, Congress w ill decide w hether to continue in its present form , use it to disband the Contra force, as the C entral A m erican presidents want, or to further subvert the peace accord. B y withstanding a public relations disaster in the U. S., O rtega has taken a risk to em barass his fellow Central A m e ric a n p re s id e n ts in to g u a ra n te e in g th e fu ll im plem entation o f th eir agreem ent to disarm file Contras by toe first w eek o f D ecem ber. But there is no voucher fo r such a course. I f the Contras do not disband and the forthcom ing elections do not take place in N icaragua, everyone in the W estern Hem isphere w ill lose. Bush administration lacks entertainment value Joseph Sobran Universal Press Syndicate NEW Y O R K — A Danish journalist — one o f D e n m a r k ’ s m o s t d is tin g u is h e d journalists, in fact — rem arked the other night: “ W e don’t get any news stories from A m erica anym ore. A ll the news is from E astern Europe now.” She m ade this observation to a group of distinguished A m erican journalists in one of New Y o rk ’s fin est restaurants, over a plate o f pate de foie gras aulait, I think it’s called. It — the observation (one o f the keenest observations I'v e heard la te ly ) — called for a w itty rejoinder, so I said: "W e don’t get any news from A m erica eith er.” N ot strictly true, o f course. I mean, w e s till have earthquakes, hurricanes and things lik e that. But Samuel Johnson, one o f E ngland’s m ost distinguished w its, once said th at when you’re m aking w itty rejoinders it’s O K to cut a few corners here and there in the interest o f concision, or words to that effect. What I ’m gettin g at it is that A m erica is laggin g behind the rest o f the w orld in news production. And le t’s put the blam e w here it belongs: squarely on the shoulders o f the president o f the United States — G eorge Bush, if m em ory serves. During the eigh t years o f the Reagan adm inistration, the United States led the w orld in headlin es: g a ffe s , scandals, astrologers — you name it. Ronald Reagan could flick o ff a big story effortlessly. “ W e bomb Russia in fiv e m inutes," he’d ad lib , and the fun would begin: a w eek o f shocked r e a c tio n s , fo llo w -u p s to r ie s , a n g ry editorials, indignant op-ed pieces and Soviet concessions. O r he’d drop a phrase lik e “ e v il em pire,” and the whole cycle o f shocked reactions, etc., would begin anew. M r. Reagan didn’t do it alone, o f course. H e was the star, but he had a tremendous supporting cast. Th ere w as his fa m ily: M rs. R e a g a n , w ith h e r c h in a w a r e an d soothsayers, got her own fu ll share o f shocked reactions. His children w rote em barrassing books and pranced around in th eir underwear. And M r. R eagan could boast som e o f the m ost colorful and newsworthy appointees in Am erican history: Jam es “ Tw o Jews and a C ripple” W att, Clarence “ Looney Tunes” Pendleton, A l “ I ’m in Charge Now ” H aig, E d “ Crim inals’ Lobby” M eese, Charles “ W ireta p ” W ick , D a vid “ W oodshed” Stockman and m any, m any m ore. It was the e ra o f Cap W ein b erger and Jeanne K irkpatrick and W illiam Casey and Anne Gorsuch Burford and Lyn N ofziger and M ichael D eaver and R ay Donovan and O llie North and Faw n H all. Th ere w ere giants in the earth in those days. ‘He doesn’t know any jokes. He has no Hollywood anecdotes. He never talks about his war experiences. ’ Other wonderful characters, not strictly m em bers o f the adm inistration, w ere also part o f the scene: J erry F a lw ell, R obert Bork, John H inckley. Any journalist who tells you he doesn’t m iss those days is lying. L e t’s not fo rget the big sleeper (no, not the presiden t): Sam uel “ Silent Sam ” P ierce, whose low p rofile disguised his role as the R eagan adm inistration’s tim e bomb, lyin g in w ait to liven up the Bush adm inistration in absentia. And the Bush adm inistration does need liven in g up. M r. Bush is not only colorless in him self, but the cause o f that colorlessness is in others. A ll his subordinates seem to be, as one distinguished journalist put it the other night, “ pastel copies o f h im self.” I f M r. R e a g a n s le p t th rou gh h is own adm inistration, a ll o f us are in danger o f sleeping through M r. Bush’s. P a rt o f the problem is to e Bush fa m ily. It is one o f the m ost wholesom e, well-balanced fam ilies in A m erican history ■— and there is nothing w rong w ith that. Nbthmg, except that, as the distinguished Russian novelist G eorge H erbert W alker Tolstoy put it, happy fam ilies a re a ll alike. They a re not interesting. Sophocles couldn’t w ork up a good one-acter out o f the w hole Bush clan. Recent firs t fam ilies have spoiled us. But the heart at the problem is M r. Bush him self. W e elected him without su fficien tly considering that he had uniquely failed , as an eigh t-year m em ber o f the Reagan a d m in is t r a t io n , t o e s t a b lis h h is entertainm ent value. H e doesn’t know any jokes. H e has no H ollyw ood anecdotes. He n ever talks about his w ar experiences. E ven when be m isspeaks, he just sort o f dribbles o ff unintelligibly, without leavin g a decent sound bite behind. How long do w e have to put up with this? Four years? E ight? L et the House see if there are any grounds fo r im peachm ent, before journalism is destroyed. The biggest news o f the Bush adm inistration to date has been Ronald R eagan fa llin g o ff a horse. Page 6 S tttrP re w Tuesday, November 7,1989 Women urged to be assertive to avoid AIDS Health Briefs By SONJA LEWIS State Press m em ber o f the ASU Task F orce on AID S, said students are slow to change their behavior despite knowing the dangers of AIDS. “ Students re a lly 'fe e l in vincible,” Erickson said. “ W e’ve (ASU AID S Task F orce and Health Education) done a good job o f educating. But one o f the things w e have discovered is that students have a great deal o f inform ation, but it isn’ t changing their behavior.” Health educators acknowledge that it is often d ifficu lt to ask a partner to use a condom or disclose his or her sexual history. “ It ’s tough,” Erickson said. “ But when you think about the alternatives, it is better to be uncom fortable and risk the relationship than end up w ith the disease.” Danae Brow nell, health educator in the Student Health Center and m em ber o f the task force, often speaks in classroom s on com m unicating about AID S with a sexual partner. “ W e g iv e the sam e m essage to men as women, and that is that w e a ll need to com m unicate b etter,” Brow nell said. B row nell rem inds wom en that they do not have to be in the traditional “ risk groups” (hom osexual m en, bisexual men or IV drug users) to be in danger o f acquiring AIDS. “ Too m any people are taking risks because they don’t fit into those groups,” Brow nell said. “ R isk behavior is how they can get A ID S .” The ASU Task F orce on A ID S and M aricopa County health o fficia ls are advising college women to be m ore assertive when facin g a sexual situation by asking their partner to w ear a condom. The Center fo r Disease Control in Atlanta recently reported a 75 percent increase in AID S-related deaths o f wom en between the ages o f 15 to 44 from 1966 to last year. The study found that shared needles and sexual intercourse with intravenous drug users are the leading causes o f AID S in women. How ever, health o fficia ls said these statistics do not apply to Arizona. But they warn that wom en in this state, specifically college-aged women, need to becom e m ore assertive when it com es to protecting them selves against AIDS. “ B asically, the problem is that wom en aren’t being a ssertive,’ ’ said Linda H elm stadter, health services counselor at the M aricopa County Health Departm ent. “ They are so afraid that (a partn er) Won’t lik e them that they don’t insist on him w earing a condom.’ ’ H elm stadter said that using a condom is a m ust fo r college women who choose to have sex, especially if she knows little about her partner’s sexual history. Lenna Erickson, assistant to the dean o f Student L ife and Educational program focuses on steroids, performance The Student Health Center and Student Recreation Com plex w ill sponsor an educational forum titled, “ Steroids and Other Perform an ce'E n h an cers” on N ov. 15. The program , which begins at 7 p.m . in Sm all Gym C o f the recreation com plex, w ill focus on the pros and cons o f steroids and aggressions, drug testing, sports nutrition and safe, proven approaches to perform ance enhancement. The presentation is free and open to a ll Student R ecreation Com plex m em bers. F o r m ore inform ation, ca ll student health at 965-4721. Nutrition education program will help calorie combatants The Student H ealth Center w ill sponsor a special nutrition education program called “ H oliday Survival S kills” on N ov. 14. This one-hour program is designed fo r those hoping to com bat a ll those extra calories floatin g around during the holiday season. The program w ill be from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m . in the lobby of the Student H ealth Center. N o registration is required. F o r m ore inform ation, ca ll 965-4721. Student Health seeking help for AIDS canned food drive T h e St a t e P r e s s M \ w v. K k l. y c o 1. 1, i: p 7 o \v a g a z in e j o Save up to 60* with this coupon I Ì I I \ r u n a i. Student Health is s till looking fo r area coordinators fo r the canned food d rive fo r agencies servin g people w ith A ID S . I f you would lik e to coordinate a collection site in your o ffic e or organization, please contact Danae B row nell, 965-4721. The canned food d rive w ill run through N ov. 17. A ID S education program s also can be scheduled fo r your group by callin g 965-4721. *10” HAIRCUT ! G IA N T G O U R M E T M U F F IN I BEVERAGE I (milk, coffee, or soda) L im it o n e c o u p o n gvash/cut/btow dry 20% OFF Nail Services (With ad, first time clients only) Expires: 11-20-89 p e r p erso n . D-E-L-i-C+O-U-S N-U-T-fl-i-C-l-O-U-S G E T Y O U R B U N S IN H E R E ! YBUYOO NEGGETU2ndR T FREE I An Q lL ^ 1 HAUUtSklN CARf W O O iC Isj INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT? YOU SH O U LD KN O W YOUR LEG A L R IG H T S! Buy any small, medium or large size yogurt _ and get another same size FREE Toppings •F R E E Kn&a KS wf fl lI' J ' “ " , . ..Hardy■ T Baseline & 1 ^ r3 T » I R k g : > - l (Next to ABCC Raispymir o r6M *SE~~ ~ ~ l • P ¿SAT Consultation to students and faculty •Auto Accidents •Motorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •Wrongful Death •Faulty Products •Slip &Fall •Dog Bites •Insurance Disputes • R E D U C E D percentage fees fo r cases of clear liability or serious injury •Home, evening & hospital appointments available L . The LSAT, GRE and GMAT can be tough, but we can make them a w hole lot easier. The Princeton Review has helped thousands o f students dramatically raise their scores. Small classes (8 to 12 students) geared to your strengths and weaknesses and a detailed computer analysis throughout the program make us tire most effective, efficient and enjoyable way to dramatically improve your scores. You’ll s a x e more wlren you know how. And w ellteach you how. nco oocn 952-8850 TH E P R IN C E T O N ^ R E V IEW jâ 1 We Score More. BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COM PANY CALL BAKER&M ARCUS Personal Injury Lawyers DON’T GET HURT TWICE 4 3 8 -1 2 1 2 (4625 S. Wendler Dr., Suite I I I, Tempe) S ta ti Plias Initiative with R E A D IT Coottnuad from paga 1. STATE PRESS an d CLASSIFIEDS j REAP f 11 THE BENEFITS n Pagc7 TuextayjNcrvembwJjJW? ! 965-6731 -------------------- Th e International Advantage ^ L E A R N § *' Basic Spanish, French, Arabic, Japane|e, or Russian in just 3 weeks! Mew intensive conversational “ W e actually facilitated the passage o f Prop 200,” T u ffli said. “ When it passed, w e had a celebration party at the border o f the tw o cities w here they (th e Prop 200 backers) cerem oniously passed the baton to us.” Van Doren said he does not know how m any signatures have been collected so fa r because supporters are circulating petitions on their own. H e said he has gathered 500 signatures so fa r. H e said his personal goal is 1,000. MGOum s $ . D a y and E a rn in g THE $47-4404 | ^ By Appointment OntipS ......~ Ifîite Helen F ow ler said. “ You have to have 15 percent o f the number o f registered voters in the last general election.” That number represents a la rger hurdle than the requirem ents that faced the Prop 200 supporters, but the Tem pe group said it is determ ined to collect the necessary signatures. “ It ’s a lot o f signatures,” said Ken Van Doren, another o f the sponsors and M aricopa County chairm an o f the Libertarian P a rty. “ But the success o f Prop 200 didn’t hurt our chances.” “ You can bet it (th e required number o f signatures) scares m e,” T u ffli said. “ It ’s 10 tim es, proportionally, to what Phoenix had to com e up w ith.” Phoenix requires in itiative supporters to gather signatures equal to the number o f voters who actually voted in the last election. T u ffli said his group worked w ith the Proposition 200 supporters and gained experience that w ill benefit the Tem pe effort. J “ I p refer not to have the public involved with an ASU stadium fo r a professional baseball team ,” Van D oren said. “ I f the U niversity has the space and it does not amount to a subsidy, given that they g et fa ir m arket value fo r it, then I wouldn’ t think it’s to o bad.” T u ffli said the revenues from a baseball stadium would help students. “ The issue is whether students want their tuition raised or low ered. It ’s a m atter o f utilizing income-producing fa cilities,” he said. “ H ie (current Packard Stadium ) site is a p erfect location, fn the process o f expanding the stadium, there would be an increase o f parking by triple-decking Lot 59.” I f the stadium is going to be built, Van Doren said his group w ill support it only if the Tem pe C ity Council (kies not use tax m oney to finance it. “ W e don’t want the c ity in the business of supporting professional sports,” he said. “ I object to the use o f force by the governm ent to extract m oney from m e and you to g iv e it to someone who hasn’t earned it and doesn’t need it.” F ow ler said the group is fighting an uphill battle because history and public opinion m ay not be on their side. “ Th ere has never been a successful in itiative drive in Tem pe, at least not in the m ore than fiv e years I ’v e been here,” she said Although he opposes governm ent m oney spent on professional sports, T u ffli said a p rivately financed stadium fo r professional baseball could be built at ASU. “ M y opinion is Tem pe has a lot o f sports-minded people who would be in fa vor of a baseball stadium if the dem ographics and location a re righ t.” M iriam M organ, a foreign language instructor a t ASU who is circulating petitions, disagrees. “ It is econom ically and philosophically ju stifiable fo r ASU to build the parking necessary and benefit from a stadium ,” he said. “ I would not b e opposed to a statew ide bond.” “ I f this continues, it w ill turn the campus into a big jock area,” she said. “ H ie re are a number o f people in Tem pe upset that the city is spending m oney so fre e ly .” 50 Lon9 ■ICE T E A S Island taumt $c eatery $250 PITCHERS B E S T LU N C H IN T H E PAC-10 Rural & Apache We’re having technical difficulties. D o n ’t s t a n d b y . If you’re getting ready to graduate with a BS/MS in Materials/ Logistics, Quantitative Business Analysis, Computer Science, Electri­ cal Engineering, or with ,an MBA matched with a technical undergraduate degree, come to our presentation. See how your degree translates into opportunities in Materials/Distribution or Product Sup­ port. We’ll also explore positions for our Southwestern Operations. So don’t just stand by. Stop by. 2 PC. 2.20 3 pc. 3.10 4 PC. 3.85 S H R I M P & C H I P S ............. S C A L L O P S & C H IP S . . . . O Y S T E R S & C H I P S ................... C R A B E T T E S & C H I P S ............... 4 p c. 1.95 1.95 1.95 1.95 7 pc. 2.95 2.95 2.95 2.95 10 p c . 3.95 3.95 3.95 3.95 IS p c. 5.40 . 5.40 / 5.40 5.40 ' C H IC K E N N U G G E T S & C H IP S 5 pc. 1.95 8 pc. 2.95 11 p c . 3.95 18 p c . 5.40 F IS H & C H I P S 1 pc. ............................. .1 .2 5 <;\X‘ Thursday November %1989 f ' t S pc. 4.65 - £ ;0 G - & 0 0 p .m ; Bell Memorial tarn Bldg., NorthPtoal, Room215 All orders include a cup of Pete's Special Sauce F R E N C H F R I E S ------------- -------- .65 - .90 O N I O N R I N G S ............................. . . 7 5 - 1 .0 0 F IS H P e r P ie c e .1 .0 0 F IS H S A N D W I C H ............................. 1.05 C H I C K E N S A N D W I C H ........... 90 S T E A K S A N D W I C H ..................................... 1.00 P E T E ’S S U P E R B U R G E R ............................ .75 w ith c h e e s e ........ .............................................. 85 SINCE 1947 P tio n a In o rd e rs — 9 6 8 - 6 2 6 5 (T a x is ex tra o n all o rd ers.) P E T E 'S M O N S T E R B U R G E R .................. .90 (S o rry , n o c h e c k s .) with c h e e s e ........... ..................... ............ 1.00 P E T E ’S S P E C I A L S A U C E P E T E ’S D O U B L E M O N S T E R B U R G E R . , 1.70 2 oz. - .10 4 o r .- .20 8 o z. - .40 with c h e e s e ____ ___________________ .1 .9 0 P E T E 'S T R I P L E M O N S T E R B U R G E R , . . 2.35 D R IN K S w ith c h e e s e ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.65 14 0 2 . - . 2 5 2 0 o r . - .4 0 32 o r . - .5 5 B U R R I T O ...................................... . . . . . . . . . .80 4 4 o r . - .70 C O R N D O G .................................................... .80 (Pepsi, Root Beer, Mountain Dew, Diet HOT D O G ...: . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50 Pepsi, Slice Orange, Lemonade, Ice Tea) JA LA P EN O S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ea. .10 C O F F E E . . . . . . . . . . .20-.40 C O L E S L A W .................... .35 - .70 D AVE FOSTER . M AN AGER [£ ] To contact us about summer internships, work-study programs and entry-level positions, send your resume to: Apple Computer, Inc., College Relations, MS 39ACR, 20525 MarianiAve., Cupertino, CA 95014. Apple Computer has a corporate commitment to the principle of diversity. In thatspirit, we welcome applications from all individuals includingwomen, minorities, veterans and disabled individuals. The power to be your best.™ Pages Tuesday, N o vem ber 7 ,1 9 8 9 S ttteP ies* Anthropology museum, school buildings store 2 million ancient civilization artifacts By KEITH RI0LER Contributing Writer F iv e centuries ago, the bowl With the faded, zigzagged lines and sym m etrical decorations was used by N ative Am ericans livin g in the V alley to hold corn and m esquite beans. Today, the bowl is one o f 2 m illion artifacts from ancient civiliza tio n s the ASU Anthropology Departm ent has collected and stored in various buildings at the U niversity. But most o f it is garbage. To study past societies, we have to collect their trash. ’ — Michael Barton “ To study past societies, w e have to collect their trash,” collections Adm inistrator M ichael Barton said. “ From what people threw away, (anthropologists) g et a basic idea of what people did.” The collection includes about 7,000 item s from around the w orld with shelves o f pottery dating back 19 centuries. There are artifacts o f pharoah-like figurines from E gypt to intricately decorated ceram ic bowls found in the V alley. The pieces range from 100,000-year-old flin t stone tools used by Neanderthals to ceram ic bowls recently made by N ative Am ericans on reservations. lîïï< W < B f t D I ? Some o f the artifacts are on display in the ASU Museum of Anthropology in the Anthropology Building. Barton, who teaches a geoarcheology class, said most of the artifacts cam e from site collections and that less than 1 percent w ere donated to ASU. He said the donated item s had little scien tific value because the context in which they w ere found is unknown. Anthropologists can learn m ore about an ancient society if they know w here an a rtifa ct originated. Barton said that when archeologists dig at a site, they carefu lly map and catalog everything. “ That’s why archeologists dig square holes,” he said. Some o f the artifacts w ere once used by Hohokam Indians at what is now called Spur Cross Ranch, about fiv e m iles north o f Cave Creek. Barton said the designs on the bowls a re studied to get an understanding o f the social organization am ong those who used them. Barton said there are about 20,000 known sites in Arizona. But he said there are even m ore undiscovered sites. “ Archeology is a young enough science that there is s till a lot to do,” he said. Barton said that during an archeological survey, the ground is searched for clues, which could be anything from a stone ax to a stain on the ground. How ever, Barton said archeology is m ore than just finding artifacts. “ It ’s alw ays fun to find stu ff,” he said. “ Actually, it’s a lot m ore fun to interpret what you are finding.” YO R K ER R E ST A U R A N T ano N IG H T C LU B Serving Tempe Since 1977 * WE DELIVER! The Finest Pizza and Italian Food in the Valley * C a ll A h e a d f o r T a k e -O u t O rd ers * D in e -in o r T a k e -O u t * WE DELIVER AFTER 5:00 P.M. * H a n d m ad e N e w Y o rk S ty le P iz z a * H o m e m ad e Italian D in n e rs * L arg e D in ifig A rea New Times Best o f Phoenix 1989 Best Inexpensive Italian Restaurant "..aft the good things an Italian restaurant should be: friendly, informal, comfortable, sincere & reasonably priced. O f course, it doesn't hurt that it se rve s a righteous pizza and a red sauce th a t you could consum e by the _____ - ' , ■ quart." T R Y O U R A L L -Y O U -C A N -E A T S P E C IA L S F e a tu rin g in;.Our L ounge.. Rhythm & Blues w ith Small Paul & D rivin’ W heel Features the Best Blues Bands in the Valley Tempe’s Home for Blues 99* Happy H o u r 7 Days a Week 151 New Yorker Wings All Night 96 7 -3 0 7 3 107 East: Broadway, Temps 967-2941 1OO yards east of Mill Avenue STATE PRESS Classified Advertising Ä i > W T O N Y ’S EW ¡News Sports Entertainmfiii ’ Advertising Me»?’* * ‘ : ^ h olograp h y < }ie v with crim e... read the M ietit *.;■ Y/jincv* The toughestp a rt o f getting into college m ight be easier than you think. :• - fto . •. é ," : y .t fv State Press Police date, press You have a great m ind. A n d a great plan. N o w all you need is a great loan. STATE PRESS Claaalfted Advertising Matthews Center South Beeement 965-6731 That's w here First Interstate Bank com es in. O u r guaranteed student loan allow s you to choose alm ost any school. You can even go half-tim e and still qualify. Godfathers Round trip from Los Angeles Pizza- San Frandsce Honolulu New York Costa Rica London Tahiti Rio . Auckland Nairobi Johannesburg V $300 $ 2 0 0 OFF LARGE PIZZA OFF MEDIUM PIZZA W e want to make it easier for you to get an education. So w e'll loan you up to $2,625 per year as an undergraduate, up to a total of $17250. W ith low fees and interest, and a $ 5S $ 999 $ 999 $ 379 $ *99 $ *59 $ 969 $1996 $1976 $13*9 decade to pay it off. A nd First Interstate's fast approval makes it easy to get that loan quickly. If you co uld use a college loan that really m akes thé grade, contact your school's financial office. Ask to apply for a guaranteed student loan through First Interstate o f Arizona. O r call us directly for an application. C all 1-800-221-7043 toll free, in A rizona only. O r call (602) 271-1771. O r you can request an application by com pleting the coupon and returning it to us. W e h a v e e x a c t ly w h a t y o u w a n t. Restrictions apply. Add-on fares available to LA . W e i do everything by mail!! C a l for FREK student travel catalog! (w ith th is ad ) O p e n t ill M id n ig h t F ri & S a t t ill 2 a.m . First Interstale Bank Council Travel FR E E D E L IV E R Y FIRST INTERSTATE B A N K O F ARIZONA, N A M em ber F.D.I.C • Federal Reserve System Equal O pportunity Employer 14515 VENTURA BU> #250 SHERMAN O A KS, C A 91403 921-2222 800-888-8786 Y o u ’v e G o t W h at It T a k e s ! BLO O D P LA S M A Your blood plasm a goes to accident and bum victim s and is used for hem ophiliacs who would otherw ise suffer front uncontrolled bleeding. You are a life-saving source . . . it's healthful, safe and easy. P lu s your can earn *115 plus a month. Enjoy watching m ovies w hile you donate. PLEASE C ’ M O N IN r 1 Return to: First Interstate Bank of Arizona Student Loan #823 P.O .Box 53427 Phoenix, A Z 85072-9870 Please send me an application: □ Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL) □ Parent Loan for Undergraduate Student (PLUS) Nam e • . ■■--■ - ■ (Please print) □ Supplemental Loan for Students (SLS) Social Security N um ber Address TODAY AND PICK UP YOUR 95 BONUS BY MENTIONING C ity ;' School . ' . ' ' State _ : _______ Z ip C o d e ■City Phone N um ber (. . ; ■./ : State THIS AO I am a perm anent resident o f the state of (Hum Donor» Ontf) (May Not 8 a Used With Other Bonuses) TEMPE PLASMA a 933 E . U niversity a n oo 8 9 4 -1 3 3 8 HOURS Mon-Thur 8 am-6 pm Fn & sat e anv4 pm ______ ______ Phone N um ber t _J Stale «VMS Tuesday^NovwrjbwTjIÍW Week of events held to increase environment aw areness at ASU By KIMBERLY HARRIS State Press A panel w ill discuss the topics o f global w arm ing and acid rain today as the second part o f a weeklong series o f events to increase awareness o f issues affectin g the environm ent. H ie panel discussion w ill take place at 11:30 a.m . in the S ocial Science Building, Room 101. The events are being coordinated by the A S U S tu d e n ts fo r E n v ir o n m e n ta l Awareness, a group that hopes to address issues such as erosion o f the ozone layer, the im p o rta n ce o f r e c y c lin g and g lo b a l warm ing. The w eeklong cam paign is called “ The H eat Is On — The Greenhouse E ffect, E nergy Choices and Y ou .” The cam paign started Monday with an introduction to the various topics that w ill be conveyed during the week, said Ron Hardert, professor o f sociology and co­ sponsor o f the cam paign. On Wednesday, Jim Arwood from the state energy o ffice w ill discuss energy alternatives fo r society. The discussion w ill be at 11:30 a.m . in the F arm er Education Building, Room 202. The conference w ill wind up Thursday with a panel discussion with m em bers o f the ASU adm in istration , the Tem pe c ity recyclin g departm ent and a local recycling firm . The discussion w ill convey the possibility o f a recycling project to be implemented on ASU’s campus, Jim Allen, a member o f the Environmental Awareness organization, said. The group also plans to go “ dumpster d iv in g ” W ed n esd ay n igh t to c o lle c t newspapers that w ere thrown aw ay during the day, A llen said. A llen said the group w ill create a display o f the old newspapers fo r Thursday that w ill provide the campus with an insight o f how much paper is wasted in a day. “ The week is designed to raise people’s consciousness about Uie issues o f global w arm ing and acid rain ,” H ardert said. H ardert said one thing society can do to help stop the greenhouse e ffe c t is to Stop using aerosol sprays. H e added that controlling leakage o f freon from airconditioning system s would also help. A t a 68-nation conference Monday, the United States and Japan declined to endorse a com m itm ent to stabilize emissions of carbon-dioxide, a m ajor contributor to the depletion o f the ozone layer. W illiam K . R eily, head o f the U. S. Environm ental Protection Agency, sàid the United States would withhold further action until research w ork on clim ate change is com pleted. STATE PRESS C la ssified s. . .u n lo ck th e d oor to h ew a n d excitin a aven u es. 9 6 S - 6 7 3 I or 9 6 5 - 6 7 3 (5 1 Large Pizza with 2 Toppings & 2 Large Sodas — $ 4 . 8 9 2 Large Cheese Pizzas & 2 Large Sodas — $ 6 . 9 5 Toppings $1.50, Covers Both Pizzas The studies a re presently being conducted by the Intergovernm ental P an el on Clim ate Change, a forum tryin g to com prise a solution to the greenhouse e ffe c t dilem m a. Traveling’s easier with STATE PRESS Classifieds! TUESDAYS Your Oasis in the Desert ■via Classifieds Sell v®- BURGER FR IE S & D RAFT Soy Good-Bye To Your Glasses... After Radial Keratotomy Woodshed I Baseline & Mill 831-WOOD Enjoysports W oodshed II on our 2 Satellites Dobson & University and9Screens 844-SHED Jr < PIZZA&PUB > Tank-Up Tuesday $1.78 60 oz. Pitchers 968-6666 1301 E. U niversity • Tem pe H OURS: 11 am-1 am Sun-Thurs 11 am-2 am Fri-Sat 8 1 submit at least two letters of recommendation from univer­ sity faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles o f all journalism courses completed and the grades earned In those courses; subm it at least two examples of a news stoty. feature stoiy or editorial written for the M ate Press or another newspaper and describe on the application form the functions and re­ sponsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the i or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the office. Matthews Center North Basement The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline fo r receip t o f applications w ill be Thursday, N ovem ber 16 at noon. Bruce D. Itule Director, Student Publications Matthews Center, Room 133 Phone 965-5937 'X ¡rry . ‘ f RITÍ^ TERRACE & APACHE • 731-9182 Aggeli, j^2äSÜ !2!222££LijJ22ä ASU Police Report < M U Sunday night a fter police found him sleeping on a couch. He has been arrested several tim es before fo r crim inal trespassing. •A student was arrested in the 900 block o f South Rural Road and charged with d rivin g with a suspended d river’s license. H e was pulled over fo r riding a m otorcycle without eye protection. •A vandal shattered the rea r window o f a student’s car that was partied behind Sahuaro Residence H all with an unknown object, causing $150 in dam age. •A th ief stole a student’s bicycle, valued at $50, from the south side o f the UAC w here it was locked with a cable lock between noon and 5 p m . on Sunday. •A th ief stole a student’s bicycle, valued a t $200, from the north side o f Hayden H all w here it was locked with a U-lock between 5:45 and 7:45 p.m . Sunday. ASU police reported the follow ing incidents that occurred between 7 a.m. Sunday and 7 a.m . M onday: •A th ief stole a student’s car that was parked in Parking Structure Tw o on Sunday. The fem ale student later called police saying that she received an anonymous phone call tellin g her where the car was parked. She found the car parked in a lot in the 2100 block o f E ast Alam eda Street. •A grease fire caused $100 in dam age to a second-floor lounge in P alo Verde E ast Residence H all. The fire started on a stove and was put out by an extinguisher. •Tw o men not a ffilia ted with ASU w ere arrested at Sun D evil Stadium Sunday a fter throwing plastic cups and seat cushions over a stadium ra il into the exitin g crowd. One man was released on his own recognizance and another man was booked into M aricopa County S h eriff’s O ffice fo r two outstanding M esa warrants. •A m ale transient was arrested in the basem ent lounge o f the Compiled by State Press reporter Tenny Tatusian. Market Co ntlntM d from page 1. M artinez said he anticipates a large turnout fo r the hearing. “ W e need at least two votes fo r it to go down,” M artinez said, adding that there must be a 6-1 vote to pass the m easure. H ie effo rt to increase awareness about the possibility Of NOW OPEN J D o n ’t the store’s construction has tw ice prom pted M artinez and other residents to picket on the sidew alk in front o f the site. “ Our support is accelerating trem endously,” he said, adding that 10 people participated in the firs t dem onstration w hile 20 w ere present fo r the second. le a v e w it h o u t It! 4 S u n g la sses b y B au sch & Lom b The W o rld 's Finest Sunglasses SEE-n-THINGf ¿ 6 0 S. MSI. • C e n t e r p o in t • n ex t t o C o f f e e P la n ta tio n tine e y e w e a r and a c c e s s o rie s 968-9912 8 1 8 W . Broadway Road • 9 6 6 -5 0 0 6 # O N CAMPUS Kimo Ford E m bry-R iddle U niversity The Fords hove always driven Volkswagens. Ask Kimo Ford w hy he bought a Volkswagen and get ready for some family history. "Everyone in my family has driven a Volkswagen at one time or another. M y dad had a M icrobus in the Sixties. M y mom and sister both drove Beetles. And my brother, who's also a student drives an '83 Volkswagen Rabbit. "S o when \ saved enough money to buy a car there was only one logical choice. A Volkswagen. M y car's a '7 9 Rabbit; W ith 145,000 miles on it. Ten years old and all those miles and it's still running great. "If you ask me, it's the perfect student's car. Good on gas. Fun to drive. A nd big enough to carry four friends." Even so, Kimo is already thinking about his next car. Another Volkswagen? "Absolutely. A GT1. White. Gotta have white." It's time to think about Volkswagen again. tf y o u d r i v e a V o lk sw a g e n a n d w o u ld like to b e fe a tu re d iria n ad, s e n d y o u r s to ry a n d a p h o to to : V o lk sw a g e n Testim onials 1 8 7 S . W o o d w a rd , S u ite 2 0 0 • B irm in g h a m , M l 4 8 0 0 9 Page H Tuesday, November 7,1989 Tempe Police Report Tem pe police reported the follow ing incidents that occurred between 7 a.m . Sunday and 7 a .m . M onday: •A 29-year-old m an robbed D airy Queen, 3730 S. M ill A ve., of $205 by pretending to have a gun. The m anager and a witness chased the man down M ill Avenue w here another suspect was w aiting in a car. The man in the car drove o ff before the robber could g et in, but both men got aw ay. The d river o f the car la ter turned him self and his accom plice — who was his brother — in to police. •Three 17-year-old boys d rivin g astolen car fled from police who w ere trying to pull them o v e r because th e to y s looked suspicious. A fte r a chase daWh M ill Avenue, the boys crashed the car into a guard rail. They tried to take o ff on foot but w ere caught by police. They adm itted to stealing the ca r from Avondale. •A 28-year-old man was arrested a fter he ca m e b ack to h is a p a rtm e n t, 1975 E . U n iv e rs ity D r iv e , in to x ica ted and started destroying furniture. H e becam e angered w ith his neighbor’s loud party, stepped out on his patio and fired turn rounds from a revolver. H e stepped back inside and cam e out fiv e minutes later firin g six rounds from a sem i-autom atic gun. 'N o one Was injured. •A 20-year-old ASU student was arrested and charged w ith drunken d rivin g a fter he was involved in a ca r accident at 800 S. Ash St. . •Three ASU students w ere arrested a fter they w ere seen knocking down a lam p post in Hayden Square on M ill Avenue. One student was charged with givin g officers false inform ation a fter he ga ve them a fake d river’s license. •A 21-year-old ASU student w as arrested and charged w ith drunken d rivin g a fter he ran a red ligh t in the 600 block o f East Apache Boulevard. •A m an was arrested in fron t o f the F am ily Planning Institute, 424 W . Broadw ay Road, a fter he yelled “ Blood M oney” and “ Baby K ille rs ” to w orkers and clien ts o f the clinic. Compiled by State Press reporter Teimy Tatusian. in o it t . il $2°° Pitchers $ 1 oo well Drinks $160 Bowling/per game oun. Come on and take a break after class or the library. We’ve got special prices every Mon­ day thru Thursday from 9 p.m. to Midnight. So roll in, roll some strikes, roll some gutters, or just roll up to the bar. M O N -T H U R S ^ O S i o r y R eg. *1300 9 PM -M ID N IG H T to p o ASU S tu d en ts Always *10 w/I.D. Closed ' Sunday & Monday - . • 1100 E. A P A C H E • 967-1656 llfM lI lâ m V Æ S P ***^ Jp W te Z A R D S 1041 E Lemon i M ake M on ey b T e s tin g Slid $ $ PAID IN CASH / $4.50 PER HOUR $ $ Need to wear jeans, long sleeve shirts and soft shoes. H w elcom es individuals, groups, fraternities, sororities, etc. CALL DIANE A T 2 4 3 -2 2 0 0 To place your name on the list. Yotrwffl be called as tests are scheduléd. I I Length of tests vary between I— I a few hours to all day. Must be available periodically. Great fund raiser. B. F. GOODRICH AEROSPACE & DEFENSE DIVISION 3414 SOUTH 5TH STREET PHOENIX, ARIZONA85040 State Pres» ★ Page 13 Tuesdayj^Jovemb^T^lWV ★ ★ LIMITED ENGAGEMENT NOV. 8-11 ★ ¿ o » * Ä f i - ★ G Q $ ★ % 50 $ <9 Q ü 4* / Q % / d u c ^ o n ^ H o « 'e C ° " ä ° % p 5 0 0 9- 0 7- 1 8 -0 7- 2 7- 2 : 7*1 7- 1 ■' 7 -2 7- 1 6-1 6- 2 6 -2 5- 1- 1 8 -2 7- 2 8- 2 . 8 -2 8 -2 -1 6 -2 7 -2 . 7- 2 6* 2 0 -0 8 -3 1. Notre Dime (56) 2. Colorado (4) 3. Michigan 4. Alabama 5 Florida St 6 Nebraska 7 Miami, Fla. 8 Illinois 8. Southern Cal 10. Arktneas 11. Tennessee 12. Auburn 13. Perm St. 14. Pittsburgh 15 Houston 16. Texet AIM 17. Clemson 18. Virginia 19 West Virginia 20. Florida 21 ■Brigham Young 22. N. Caroline St. 23. Texet Tech 24. Fresno St. 26. Arizona RTS. 1,496 1,441 1.343 1,310 ' 1,220 1,180 1,147 1vt04 1,042 921 902 829 829 683 610 500 557 436 412 317 193 156 145 140 124 Z-286-LP/12 is a 12 MHZ 80286 »ero wait state, small footprint desktop with a 20 MB harddisk, 1MB RAM, one $ 1 9 9 9 3.5" floppy drive, a MOUSE, parallel port and 2 serial ports f 8 mhz version ''j and 14" FTM COLOR monitor. With MS DOS and v ' $1799 j Microsoft Windows with Write and Paint. Smhzmonosys. LOW COST, YET POWERFUL, WITH A MOUSE $1549 PREV Tv 2 4- ' 5 6 3 7 8 9 11 10 12 12 Z-286/25 is a 8 M H Z 80286, small footprint desktop with a 20 MB harddisk, one 5.25" 360Kfloppy drive, 512K RAM, a MOUSE, parallel port, a serial port, and a 14" FTM monitor. With MS DOS and Microsoft Windows with Write and Paint. Í4 17 20 21 24 13 19 23 18 $ 1 7 4 9 with V G A m onochrom e monitor $1449 An upgrade to 640K RAM and 3.5" 720K disk drive are available at a spedai bundled price of $ 175 !! 25 15 Supersport 286 is an 80286, switchable 12/6 Mhz, zero wait state laptop with 20 MB harddisk, one 3.5” 1.4 MB floppy drive, 1 MB of RAM, parallel port, serial port, and a full size bacMit supertwist LCD screen. Software in­ cluded is Microsoft DOS. Other receiving votes: O hio St. 11?, Hawaii 105, Michigan St. 58, Oklahoma 52, Air Force 41, Washington St. 23. Duke 21, Texas 21, A riso n « State 11. Georgia 7. L S U i. Syracuse 1. V P «P FAST, POWERFUL AND PORTABLE!! $ 2 3 9 9 -. | with 40 mb harddisk L $2699 | J M ONDAY’S R ESU LTS (Manto 114, Nm Yo* 110 TU ESD A Y ’S SCH ED U LE Charlotte to Saarta, 0 p.m, to n a rti ■ Loa toigetee Laken, 5:30 p m Loa Angelas (Xppen to Golden Stala, 8:30 pm. DaOae to Saoamarto, 8:30 pm Marni al Na« tonar, 5:30 p m Washington al Atonia, 5:30 pia. Datroit al Chicago, ( pm. Beaton al MMaitoaa. «30 pia. Portan) to Ncuaton, 0:30 p.m. Zenith offers a complete line of powerful 386 com­ puters that run at 16,20,25 and 33mhz. complete COMPLETE SYSTEMS WITH FTM VGA MONITOR AND 40 MG HARDDISK START AT: 20 mhz system S P E C IA L s o f t w a r e o f f e r MICD030FTW0DD AND EXCELBUNDLEWffl ANY rSYrSTEM ¡¡¡S I m M ONDAY’S R ESU LTS Toronto 2, M m w t t 1 Calgary 5, Edmonton 1 to. Lotto 3, Montreal 3. lie N w York Ranger, 8. Detoni 1 Prices subject to change without notice. Other systems available. For information cad (602) 274-9877. $ 3 3 9 9 $ 1 0 0 20 mb Supersport Laptop 80C88.................... $1799 20 mb HR Laptop 80C88.................. ....... ......$1699 Dual Floppy Laptop 80C88.................. ...........$1149 TU ESD A Y ’S SCH ED U LE Waaltmglon to New York Islanders, 5:36 pm. ZENITH R E P W I L L B E O N C A D Y M A L L W E D . & T H U R S . 10 A M - 3 P M a la le I T C H „wg*J2, T u « d a y ^ J o v e m b « r T l% 9 _ Crowd assists Icecats as they sweep Ice Devils, 8-4,10-4 By TOM i Mc e l r o y State Press The ASU hockey team was unsuccessful in breaking its ongoing losing streak against U ofA by dropping two gam es last weekend, 8-4 and 10-4, in front o f an estim ated 4,000 fans at the Tucson Community Center. “ The crowd makes it hard to p lay in that stadium ,’ ’ .senior K evin Galassini said. ‘'‘ It’s a key factor fo r them .” In the locker room before the series, Head Coach Jim Manguso said he told the team not to let the crow d and the arena a ffect them. But the atm osphere did intim idate the players, and Manguso said they m ay not have been concentrating on the things they needed to. ASU sophomore Abel M oreno scored the first Ice D evil goal with 1:16 rem aining in the first period o f Saturday’s gam e. But ASU s till trailed, 3-1 — Icecat K elly W alker had scored two goals, 43 seconds apart from each other, follow ing U ofA ’s T ra cy Link’s opening goal. The short-handed Icecats scored tw ice in the second period before Ice D evil K evin Hicks scored his firs t ASU goal, unassisted. But John W egener tallied a point a fter scorin g a goal o ff the skate o f an Ic e D evil, givin g U ofA a 6-2 lead after two periods. In the third period, ASU cam e out with a differen t strategy: man to man. Manguso said he was happy with the team playing man to man and w ill stick with that gam e plan in the future. ASU junior Doug Horst scored another point fo r the trailin g Ice D evils, 6-3,1:18 into the third period. Thé Icecats follow ed w ith two goals and boosted th eir lead, 8-3. Starting goalie Cory Zurowski was then replaced by Don Carlson. W ith 8:55 le ft in the third period and two Icecats in the penalty box, ASU senior Rob Wasson scored the fourth and fin al goal to boost the Ice D evils score, 8-4. U ofA scored two m ore goals to increase its advantage over the Ice D evils, 10-4. 'The Diet Center helped me look like a million too." “ I could say that I ’m disappointed in this weekend, but I think it turned out fo r the best,” Manguso said. “ Now they know they have som ething to w ork fo r.’ ’ Manguso added that both goalies played very w ell and the Icecats scored m ostly on their second or third shots. Oh F rid ay, junior M att M alec saved 42 shots on goal; and on Saturday, junior D erek Chaif saved 46. Manguso said ASU lacked experience and the Icecats took advantage o f it. “ They (Ic e c a ts ) w ere able to control it (th e g a m e),” Manguso said. ‘ ‘Som etim es there w ere two (Iceca ts) on one (Ic e D e v il) or two on none,” A positive aspect about this weekend, Manguso said is that the team is gettin g together and is showing potential. “ I b elieve w e can play an excitin g gam e o f hockey and a gam e that the fans can enjoy,” Manguso said. H ie Ice D evils next m atches a re at hom e (T ow er P la za ) against Stanford, F rid ay a t 7 p.m. and Saturday at 5:30 p.m . $900 F R E E R E N T F R E E B IK E You’re a bike away... AM "The best gift that I’ve' given to myself was the Diet Center Program. Twelve p ou n d s really m ates a difference! N o more stretched jeans for me. College — here l am." Laura Hatch - Tem pe, recom m ends Diet Cen ter t o all her friends. Diel«» Center 2430 S. Mill Spedai ASU Discount 967-1371 l 2246 S. McClintock * 3 The weight-loss professionals'? A G E N E R O U S V A R IE TY OF M M yrte ' F■ M 1 i /Cotegs Y o u r H ost "T h e F a m ily " ‘ ‘ Ç r e a t I t a iia n J o o d ” 8 9 4 -M A M A AM ENITIES & FEA T U R ES ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ EVENING SPECIALS "KILLER C A L Z O N E " 14 o z . S o f t D r i n k o r D r a f t lc-e C r e a m 9 0 9 -7 :3 0 p.m . TUES 5:30-7:30 im « . WED 9" £ ihurs 5:30-7:30 p.tn. |fRI 5 :30-7:30 ' : ..eft. \ _ _ Cone PERSONAL PIZZA 1 FREE T O P P I N G = 14 o z . S o f t D r i n k o r D r a f t Ice C r e a m C o n e SPAG H ETTI DINNER W i t h S alad & G a r lic B r e a d £ 14 o z . S o f t D r i n k o r D r a f t 5:30-7:30 p.m. _ Ice C r e a m Cone C H IC K E N PARM 1G1ANO D IN N E R w ith S p a g h e tti, B read 14 o z or D ra ft s id e S alad , S o ft of G a rlic D rin k Ice C r e a m C o n e 14" PIZZA PITCHER OF BEER OR SODA, 2 FREE ICE ' CREAM CONES ^ _ _ Arizona State University Apache _ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Private o r Sem i-private Entry Way W ood B urning Fireplaces Frost-free Refrigerator D ouble insulated G lass W indow s Plu s M any Energy Saving Features D esigner M ini B lin d s Tw o Contem porary C arpet Selection Private Patio Optional; 1000 S q . Ft. ★ W asher/D ryer $595 to $625 ★ C ab le T.V. ★ M icrow ave Oven ★ C eilin g Fan Close to Arizona State University & Shopping s : ■o cc > < S 3 Broadway CC 2430 South Mill Avenue INDIVIDUAL HOMES FEATURES W A T C H F O R O U R L U N C H S P E C IA L S MON T w o Sparklin g Sw im m ing P o o ls & Spas V o lle yb all C o urt Exercise Room Reserved Covered Parking & B ic y c le Racks C lub ho u se with Kitchen, G am e Room , Etc. C en trally Located Laundry Facilities University Southern To see: Call Manager, Ed 968-6322 (Some restrictions apply.) CÌassìfìeds Page 18 Tuesday, N o vem ber 7 ,1 9 8 9 CLASSIFICATIONS: 1 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8 9. 10 11. 12 13. 14. 15 16. Announcements Autos for Sale Trucks for Sale Motorcycles for Sale Bicycles for Sale Furniture for Sale Tickets for Sale Miscellaneous for Sale Computers Real Estate for Sale Apartments for Rent Town homes/Co ndos Homes for Rent Rental Sharing Roommate Services Business Opportunities LINER A D RATES: 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23 Help Wanted Instruction Jewelry Free Lost/Found On-Campus Personals Pets 15 words or less: $3.00 per day for 1*4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days . $2.50 per day for 1 0 -f days 15* each additional word The first 2 words are capitalized. N o bold face or centering. 24. Restaurants/Bars 25. 26. 27. 28 29. 30. 31. Services Transportation Travel Typing/Word Processing Wanted Adoptions Miscellaneous VISA 965-6731 ANNOUNCEMENTS !f£5» S tate" Press g g IS ^ 965-7572 U h ■ K In Person: Cash, Check (with guarantee card), VISA or MasterCard. W e're located in the lower level of Matthews Center, room 46H. O ffice hours are 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. on your course request form during early registration to reserve your copy at the Tall discount price. B y Phone: 965-6731 Payment with VISA/M C only, $6 minimum on ail phone orders. A ds may run for any length of time. Canceled ads will be credited to your account. Sorry, no refunds. HANG-GLIDE! O ur gently sloping man­ made training hill. S afe and exciting. Fly all day. Wlndsports 897-7121. 1981 H O N D A CM400. Very few miles. Excellent condition. Many extras. Must sell! $475/best offer. 829-9017. LIFE IN S U R A N C E ideal for students. Term life insurance at reasonable rates. CaH M anny Ellsworth, 2753410. 1984 KAW ASAKI G P Z 750, top condition! Corbin seat, fairing, custom grips, supertrapp. $2,000/best offer. Chris- 464-2514. W HO S A Y S you can ’t buy a balloon boquet for under $20. O ur price $18.00!!! 273-9710 1968 H O N D A Hurricane 600. Black and grey, flawless condition. 2,200 miles, $3,700. Ron, 838-6977. M ODEL SEARCH screening 389-6618. '85 H O N DA Elite 250. Runs great. $750. Must sell. 276-7886, Bill, leave message. A S U C O L L E G E Republicans Meeting, 7:30 pm, M il Pim a Room. Louis Tams, guest speaker. M a g a z in e - F r e e RETIRED U S U couple from Logan, Utah win house sit or rent furnished apartment in Tempe January and February. House exchange possible. C a ll November 6-8, 942-8430 evenings. SA FA RI R ESO RT , Scottsdale/Camelback Road, offers $49 Sundeyil Rate for A S U fans. CaH, 945-0721. Hi! I’ m B o b W alker, y o u r A T & T S tu d en t Campus Manager h e re at A rizo n a S tate. I w ou ld like to tell you h ow A T & T ca n low er y o u r lo n g d is ta n c e bills. I c a n a ls o a n sw er any o f your long d i s t a n c e q u e s t io n s . T h e b e s t tim e to reach m e is b e tw e e n 3-5 p.m . (M W F ) and 4-6 p.m . (T T H ). Y o u ca n call anytim e at 968-5837. Beginning Wednesday, N ov. 1, 1989, the Measles Clinic at Stu­ dent Health w ill have new hours. The new hours will be: Monday, Wednesday & Thursday from 8 a.m.-Noon & 1-4 p.m. AUTOMOBILES 1976 O LD SM O BILE engine great, high miles, ugly, reliable. $600 or best offer, R ob 966-3254. 1980 M G B Roadster, maroon, black top and inferior. Mint. 35,000 miles, $3,500. 991-0329 BICYCLES B E N O TTO 800 12-speed. Shim ano aero components, mavic strapless pedals. Great shape! $300 Jo hn $20-5282. BIK ES, W H Y pay more? Moving super sale, used bikes, new bikes. ’88-’89 models. Discount for cash. Bicycle Store, 1034 East Lemon. 966-6070. TICKETS 1 W A Y ticket to Palm Beach, Florida for D ecem ber 22nd, 1989, $175. C a ll 784-8220. FO R S A L E , plane ticket to Oakland, California. Leaving 1 i/22, return 11/26. $110 Ca ll 784-0443, Nichole. M U ST S E L L, plane ticket to England, round trip, 12/23 to 1/8. $580/offer. 439-8630. P LA N E TICKET, Phoenix- Des Moines and return. 12/21 and 1/10. $238/offer. Ca ll collect, 515-277-6901 , TW O RO UND-TRIP tickets, Phoenix to Providence, 'R .l. Leave 11/17, return 11/25. $175 each. 257-5258. 1980 S U B A R U DL, blue, looks great, excellent mileage, runs perfect. Must sell, $1,450. Ca ll 990-8045 MISCELLANEOUS EOR SALE 1984 PO N TIA C Sunbird, turbo, fuel injected, new transmission, new interior, low miles. $3,400 negotiable. 274-2467. CA LC U LA TO R . C A SIO FX795P. Alphnumeric, 16k memory. Like new. Paid $120, $70/best offer. W es, 345-2594. 1988 M AZD A 323 hatchback air condition­ ing, AM /FM cassette, tinted windows, under warranty, $5800/offer 921-4355. F R E E NAIL demonstration o f a new natural nail bonding product you can do at home in minutes! N o more destroyed nails wife acrylics or giue-ons! No more high costs for fill-ins and repairs! For more information, call Denei, 831-5366. 1968 RE D Chevy mini-blazer, great AM/ F M sterio with high quality sound, cool air conditioning, red d o th interior wife velve­ teen seat covers and matching dash mat, top rack wife tilt steering. Sharp looking!! Need someone to take over payments with transfer of ownership. CaH 966-2449 after 3pm. 7 1 BUG, excellent interior/exterior. Good t i l e s , r e b u ilt e n g in e / lo w m ile s . $2,200/offer. 966-5621. A U T O INSU RA N CE. Low rates, monthly payments, near A SU . Free quotations, caH Phoenix I n y a n c e Agency, 829-3070. F O R S A L E , 1973 Chevy Nova, good transportation. 350, auto, air, $395. 431-0951. Daniel. BICYCLES G O L F C L U B S . W ilson XP300 matched set. 3-PW, 1,3,5 woods. Bag included. Excellent condition. $125/best offer. Wes, 345-2594. M A R Y K A Y Cosmetics. All products 30% off. Sun Essentials 40% off. Call now. 967-1875. U N B E L IE V A B L E !! N O R M A L looking sunglasses that allow you to see behind. Ideal for riding bicycle. Send $9.95 to the Juggernaut Company, 1389 East North­ ern, suite 904, Phoenix, Arizona 85020. COMPUTERS 24-PIN L Q Toshiba P 321SL Printer. Qual­ ity as clear as a laser printer. $40Q/offer. 491-9212 C O M M O D O R E 128 c o lo r m onitor, keyboard, two hard drives, printer, modem, joysticks, 300 disks, $600. 921-8839. IBM C O M P A T A B L E PCX T, 640K ram, hard d isk, monitor, 101 keyboard, M SD O S. $600/best offer. 730-1422. IBM C O M P A T A B L E XT-turbo, 640K, 20MB, 5VkDD, monitor, printer, modem software, game board, more. $1,100/offer. 990-2495. T U R B O /X T Com p uter— 512K, Am ber monitor, Graphics, keyboard, 12-mdnth warranty...Only $489! Pro Image Compu­ ter. 921-1129. BICYCLES 2 B E D R O O M condos, Papago Park Village, $575 fo $700/month. Bob Bullock, Realty Executives, 998-2992. V E R Y LO W down, beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath Tempe townhome. Too many extras. No qualifying, must see! 966-6310. APARTMENTS 2 B E D R O O M 4-plex available now, $249. Furniture available. 966-5596. BEAU TIFU L L A R G E 1 and 2 bedrooms. Walk to A SU , pool, laundry room 1 block south of University on 8th street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for special. D ESPERATE!!! T A K E over lease, no deposits. $219 each, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. E l Diablo Apartments. 967-7727. I’j-L P A Y half your deposit and $200 rent rebate. 926 East Spence. 968-5630. Used Bikes — New Bikes Discount for cash! Visa • MasterCard • American Express Financing with no down payment on OAC Bicycle Store •Lemon & Terrace 966-6070 C ustom er Errors: Corrections must be made before noon. Compensation will not be given for customer error. APARTMENTS O N E B E D R O O M furnished, $230 plus utilities, pool laundry faculties. Studio, $250 including utilities. Rental sharing, $210 including utilities, furnished,, colored T.V. 1339 South Sunset Drive (one block west of Rural, one block South of Apache), apartment 9. U P T O one m onth free! One, two bedrooms, $330 to $400. Sunrise Apart­ ments, 1014 E ast Spence, 968-6947. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS 2 B ED RO O M , 2 bath, washer/dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher, pool. Close to A S U at Papago Park Village, Curry/ College. Ready to move in. $600/month. C a ll P hil or Patty at 671-5550, 947-7132. H A Y D E N S Q U A R E deluxe condo. 3 bedroom tri-level. Available January 1. Reserve now. 940-0518. HOMES FOR RENT S M A L L 2 bedroom house, 5 blocks from campus. Graduate couple preferred. No pets. $400, water paid. 967-4059. RENTAL SHARING 3 B L O C K S to ASU . Graduate student wants quiet Christian roomates. Large, lovely home, 2 bedrooms available now. Share bath, 2 separate phone lines. $175/mohth % to !4 utilities. 987-4267 leave message. \ • D E P E N D A B L E F E M A L E non-smoker, share 2 bedroom, 1% bath apartment. $217 plus VS utilities. Quiet complex, convenient location. Available immediate­ ly. Heather, 921-8419. F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R to share 2 bedroom/2 bath condo. Own room/bath. Nicely furnished, washer/dryer. $210 plus % utilities. Lynn. 894-8189. F E M A L E N O N -SM O K E R own room/bath at Quadrangles by Decem ber 1 or Spring semester $25Q/monfe plus utiHties. Call Teresa 921-3523. F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R to share 2 bedroom/bath apartment. Own room/bath, $260/monfe plus Vi utilities. C lose to ASU. Available immediately! Michelle, 897-2994 or Nancy , 829-0969. F E M A L E R O O M M AT E to share beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. C lose to ASU. Fireplace, security, pool, washer/dryer. $235/monfe, own room. 966-3051. F E M A L E R O O M M AT E needed: Steadily employed non-smoker. $225/monfe. Call 420-0221, leave number, press no. key. F E M A L E RO O M M AT E needed for spring. Non-smoker. $250 plus % utilities. Furn­ ished, own room and bath. CaH Debbie/ Gina, 731-4751. $200 O FF FREE UTILITIES! WHY PAY MORE? State Press Errors: Check your ad the FIR ST day it runs. Call 965-6731 with any corrections be fore noon. The State Press is only responsible for the first day the ad runs incorrectly. Corrected ads will be extended one day. Changes called in after the first day will not qualify for a make-good. . $165/MONTH REN T ! Fem ale to share one bedroom apartment. Pools, Ja cu zzis, sa u n a s, b a lco n y , cov e re d parking. 921-8839. REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS WORKI Tires from $4.90 Oakley-like glasses $9.95 965-6881 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE H E R P E S . SH IN G LE S, cold sore “ break out etemination” tape. Proven effective. Confidential. For more information, Rove’ Center, B ox 40781, Tempe, Arizona 85274. Moving — Super Sale! Tke Classified display ads can begin 2 clays after they are placed (if placed before 10 a.m.). A d v ertisin g P o lic y : The State P ress reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy submitted. ACCO M O D A TIO N S F O R Homecoming week visitors. Cametback Mountain Adobe B e d a n d B re a k fa s t a v a ila b le and reasonable. 941-8367. R-R-R-RING C H EC K YES Liner ads must be canceled before noon, 1 day prioM o publication. No refunds will be given. Desk (foil and spring semesters only), between the hours of 9 a.m -2:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri. H O T AIR Balloon rides, $60 for V i hour, or $100 for 1 hour Hillary, 921-2269. A ll these and more arc between the covers of T H E S U N D E V IL SPARK yearbook. Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). MOTORCYCLES H A R VA R D BU S IN E S S School wants you! Proven tecmques for acceptance to a top ranked M B A program. For more informa­ tion, send self-addressed stamped enve­ lope to: Business Success, Department 103, P .O . Box 1044, O rem , Utah 84059-1044. juniors. history. seniors. academics. graduates. trends. people. nightlife. events. faculty. graduation. friends. memories... B y M ail: Send your ad (with payment) to: State P re ss Classifieds Matthews Center, Rm 15 Tempe, A 2 85287-1502 ANNOUNCEMENTS FASHIO N M O D E L S needed. CaH Linda at (602) 242-7870 for more information. news. HOW TO CO R R ECT OR CA N CEL YOUR AD: ANNOUNCEMENTS D O N ’T F O R G E T that sp e cia l day. 273-9710. Send a balloon boquet with a dozen cookies. $20.00. tradition. students. sports. freshmen. clubs. sophomores. WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? HOW TO P LA C E A CLASSIFIED AD: You can also place your ad at the North M U Information M asterCard State Prcas F E M A L E R O O M M A T E non-smoker to share large 2-bedroom condo. Pool, washer/dryer. $160 plus V* utilities. 921-2261. W a lk to A S U . S p a c i o u s 2 b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t s , a ir c o n d it io n e d , f u r n is h e d o r unfurnished From $380/ Beautiful la u n d r y available. m onth. pool facili ti es area, a v a il­ a b le . FIESTA PA R K APARTMENTS 1224 E A S T L E M O N 8 9 4 -2 5 3 8 F E M A L E R O O M M AT E wanted. House Baseline and 1-10. $100 month plus % utilities. Len, 438-9717,12-5. M A LE /F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed in house. $250 plus V i utilities. Brand new home, very very clean. M ust see! 892-0492. NO N-SM O KING R O O M M A T E wanted for 2,000 square feet house. Washer/dryer, microwave, etc. $210/monfe plus utilities, 838-6743. R O O M M AT E N E E D E D . Large 3 bedroom at Sand Tropez. Fem ale preferred, call John, 994-8406 or 921-1196. State Press Page 19 RENTAL SHARING HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PERSONALS PERSONALS R O O M M A T E N E E D E D for 3 bedroom house near Loe Arcos Mall. $200/month plus utilities. CaN 9476688. ESPRIT. W E are looking for enthusiastic, energetic sales associates, full and parttim e p o s it io n s . S a le s e x p e r ie n c e preferred, retail background a plus. Please call 894-0647 Tuesday to set up an interview. PART-TIME. L A R G E S T com pany of its kind in the Southwest. Afternoon and evening shifts available. Pleasant working conditions. Ca ll Mr. Wellington at 381-0477. A X O ST A C Y, R oses are rad, violets are yellow, for the past two years you've been going out with foe same follow. A ll my love. Curt. TR t SIG M A Balloon Ascension Friday, November 10fo. Buy your balloons on Cady Mall by foe fountain. O ne dollar per balloon. Prizes for balloons traveling the farthest! BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES IF Y O U are looking for an Opportunity that will allow you to earn an exceptional large income while helping people call T.J., 821-9481, Fendy. 431-1134 M A K E $750 this weekend! Guaranteed books gives instructions. Receive free information, write: Nozie Publications, Box 24537, Tempe, Arizona 85285-4537. TIRED O F working for someone else? O wn your own business with breakthrough nail product!. Earn up to $50K a year, with under $200 investment. Call Denei, 831-5366 E X PLO S IV E CALIFO RN IA Company look­ ing for people in Arizona. Earn substantial part-time, fuH-time income. People desir­ ing sales position and entrepreneurial m inded preferred. C a ll 963-5539 or 391-1851. F R I D A Y / R E C E P T I O N lS T fo r a u d io Company, Secretarial, data entry skills a must. 969-8660. • 24-hrs p e r Week An exciting breakfast and lunch restaurant is accep­ t i n g a p p l i c a t i o n s f or waitress positions. Apply in person after 2 pm • Evening hours • W eekly pay • Cornerstone Mall location C all today , 968-4457 1660 S. Alma School Rd. Mesa C O R K 'N C L E A V E R accepting applica­ tions for evening cocktail waitress and evening hostess. WIN train. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 2 6 pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street (44th and Csmelback). 952-0585. Personality and co n cern with a p pe a ran ce are important. DRAFTING STUDENT: Bishop LO F Glass Center’s is looking for a drafting student to sk e tch several schem atic drawings. P a y m e n t d é p e n d s on e x p e rie n c e Contact : Steve Nelson, 267-0561 between 7:30-4.30 D RAM A STUDENTS: Positions available for Youth Teatro Program. Call 839-2926, Lisa Bazan. 5-10 hours weekly. C A LLIN G ALL BASKETBALL COACHES \ The Tem pe YM CAJ n eed s c o a ch e s anp re fe re e s fo r b o y s / a n d g ir ls y o u t h / ba s k e tb a jp e a g u e . C ajT 73 0-0 240 ____ / _____________ SALES REP NEEDED E a rn monthly in co m e plus u s a g e fe e s o n financial p ackage. S e rio u s inquiries only! v Part-time jobs: Eggingtons SA N TA ’S AND Photo helpers for Park Central Mall photo operation. Car neces­ sary. Thanksgiving through Christmas. Instant promotions. 921-7363. FULL/PART-T1ME marketing manager for fast growing company. N o experience, will train. Hours to fit your schedule. Call 464-6546, ask for Ben. $5,50 PER HOUR G U AR A N TEED ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ . HELP WANTED RE D RO BIN now hiring experienced line pantry pre positions. Apply at 1539 North Scottsdale Road. Monday-Friday, 9 am-11 am, 2 pm-4 pm. 997-1124 -r S E C R E T A R Y /R E C EP T IÒ N IST . Typing, organizational, and phone skills neces­ sary. Excellent chance for growth. Apply in person, Financial Associates, 9832 North Hayden Road, Suite 106. S T O C K Y A R D S RESTAU FIÂNT now hiring dinner hostess' and lunch waitresses. Apply in person, 5001 East Washington. ST U D E N T JO B S . Full-time, $30Q/week; p art-tim e, $ l5 0 /w e e k . O p e n in g s in customer service and retail. Scholarships available. Call 10 am to 3 pm 242-9677. S U M M E R J O B S outdoors, over 5.000 openings! National parks, forests, fire crews, Send stamp for free, details. 113 East Wyoming, Kalispeli, MT 59901. TH E T E M P E Y M C A gymnastics center is hiring for boys and girl’s gymnastics coach’s. Call 894-2090 or apply at 2420B West 14th Street, Tempe. G A M E RO O M attendant, must be able/to wom unsupervised Honest and depend­ able. $3.75/hour. Able to work Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, 11 am to 6 pm. Apply in person at Player's C ho ice in the Cornerstone Mall. LIKE M O VIES? See all you want for free when you join the C in e' Capri staff. Now hiring for all staff positions. Flexible scheduling makes this job perfect for students. 2323 East Cam elback Road. M A RK ET IN G A SS IST A N T wanted Good Communication skills, Computer expert ence, detail-oriented, professional appear­ ance Real estate license a plus. 20-30 hours/week minimum, flexible. Salary D O E . 222-5011 M A RK ET IN G R E P , country d u b atmo­ sphere, great opportunity. Call 396-2100, ask for Scott or Chris N E W HO TD O G restaraunt across from Sky Harbor Airport- weekday lunch hours. 244-1022, P A R T -T IM E C O M M IS S IO N s a le s at Robinson's P V mall, M en’s shoe depart­ ment Sales experience preferred. Cad 996-0990, ext . 3528 Failure Analysis Associates. Failure Analysis Associates. Inc, a national engi­ neering and scientific consulting firm that spe­ cializes in the analysis and prevention of engi­ neering system and product failures, is seeking engineers with outstanding acdemic and profes­ sional credentials for three openings in our Pho­ enix, Test and Engineering Center. Our center is a 160 acre proving ground with extensive fabrica­ tion, vehicle preparation, instrumentation, data acquisition, and data reduction capabilities. These facilities provide the capability for design­ ing and conducting a broad range of tests that support our engineering services. Our present openings are for two Mechanical Engineers and an Instrumentation Engineer. Failure Analysis Associates, Inc., offers a com­ pensation and benefits package that exceeds industry standards, including three weeks vaca­ tion, a company-funded pension, and medical, dental, and life insurance. A Failure Analysis Asssciatas, Inc, representative will be on campus Tues­ day, November 7. If you are interested in talking to us please contact Career Services at 965-2350. C A R M E X , TW ISTER, two wheelin, hikin, puttin, and Club Troon, it just doesn’t get any better than that. Thanx, Pouncer. CHI-O LORI K, it’s not often in one’s life that he discovers someone so close to him. Someone who shares almost identi­ cal views, has a comparable personality, and can lift his spirits from the most extreme depths. It’s amazing that two people can be fo b similar- but then we did grow up together. I can think of no lady more suited to be my sister and friend. I love you. Happy Birthday! Love, Kurt. D ELTA SIG Kirk Zapp, thanks for every­ thing. You truly are the best. Luv ya, Mary. DTD U N C L E Bob, The busride, hayride and you made it a perfect night. Thanks, Lara. HO M ECO M IN G ’89-A salute to Holly­ wood! Com e see the crowning of A S U ’s. King and queen on November 9th, 9 pm to 1 am at Sheraton Tem pe M ission Palms! IT’S TO M O RRO W . It’s M ock Rock, and it’s gonna be great. Better than just a talent show, ’cause it’s the exciting begin­ ning of A S U ’s Homecoming week. Be there at the Palo Verde Beach at 8 pm for the biggie-M ock Rock! LA M B D A CHI Alpha is inviting every Greek brother, sister, mother, and daught­ er to get together at their house Friday night! Live band. JO BS AVAILABLE NOW for dependable receptionists, clerical, or data entry personnel. TOP WAGES SAM E W EEK PA Y •Tem porary •Perm anent •Full T im e •Part T im e 966-0709 TH E VINE Tavern is taking applications for floormen and cooks, part-time/full-time. R e fe re n c e s re qu e ste d . A p p ly 11-4 Monday-Friday, 801 E. Apache. V A LE T PARKIN G attendents, day shifts 11:00am-3:00pm and 11:00am-5:00pm. Night shifts 5:30pm to close. Full-time and part-time. Must work holiday season and must have clean driving record. Call for appointment 861-9384. American Valet and Limosina Company Incorporated. W AITER/W AITRESS and hostess needed immediately for part-time employment. Apply in person, Chopandaz, corner Of Scottsdale Road and McKeUips. W O R K IN beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheley Colorado Camps summer program. Cooks, R.N .’s, drivers, office, wranglers, nanny, kitchen, riding, h ik in g , b a ck p a ck in g , sp o rts, crafts counselors. Cam pers pge 9-17. Room and board, cash salary, travel allowance. Our 70th summer! Must be at least 19 to apply. Interviews on cam pus Decem ber 10. Send letter to Cheley Colorado Camps, Box 6 5 2 5 , D e n v e r, C o lo r a d o 8 0 2 0 6 . 303-377-3616. JEWELRY C A S H F O R gold, diamonds. M ill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. C A S H PAID, jewelry of all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. M ill Ave, Tem pe Center. 968-6074. PERSONALS ADPI A LLIS O N Walters, thanks for the effort and time that you put into retreaL We had a great time! P i love, your sisters. ADPI A M Y M. You did an awesome job with McSkate- and w e all had a blast! Thanks again, your sisters. A D P I 'S , V I O L E T S t o t h o s e th a t participated in retreat and M cSkate this weekend. P.A.T.A. and P i love sisters. 82.00/PAGE. Q uick turnaround. Call Bob, 839-3305. W AN TED- G O O D home for great cat. 6 years, neutered male. Has shots, extreme­ ly mellow lap fiend. 893-9412 evenings. A A A Q UALITY typing/word processing. $1.50. Call Linda, 962-8075. A C C E N T S IN Typing. SpeH-check, proof­ read, editing, all included. Q uick turn­ around. Call 894-6074. SERVICES ATTENTIO N FR ATERN ITIES, sororities! Throw your next social gathering with Eclipse D J . productions. Very reason­ able. 461-3655. E L E C T R O L Y S I S - P E R M A N E N T h a ir removal. Rem ove unwanted hair forever. Student discount. Ca ll for more informa­ tion, 9696954. B U L IM IA P riv a te , c o n fid e n tia l c o u n s e lin g . In s u ra n c e a c c e p te d . T h e r e is a so lu tio n ! 468-3850 FA€€ RENTAL SERVICE Apartment Anders PIKES- CONGF1ATULATIONS on winning Tri-Dett Softball! You guys are the great­ est!! Luv, your coaches. N. W. Phoenix 841-5055 SIG M A K A P P A Patti, you're an awesome person and a great friend. Hope you’re back next semester cause A S U wouldn't be the same without you. W ish we could get together more often. I sure miss that beautiful smile. Luy, An Old Friend. T H R E E C R A Z Y Chi-O’s- troon w as most excellent dudes!!! Never forget patio danking, up the river, down the river, breaking the barrier, the security guard, the scaf­ folding, hats, M ichelob dry, and the twelve days of college. Flagstaff can't compare. Let’s do it again before X-mas. Most triumphantly yours: Twister, Carmex, and Pouncer. FULL SET $25.00 Rag. (45.00 SM00THC0AT is designed to create a very thin and natural sculptured nail, also perfect for natural nail overlays. • Fills without nipping, without fill lines, without nail damage. • You have the flexibility of wear­ ing your nail naturally, no polish, only buffed to a shine, will never yellow or become brittle like acrilic. ; • Smooth coat flexes with your natural nail to prevent lifting / will not pull away from edges, even after extended wear/made with strong bonding fiberglass resins. CACTU8 NAIL COMPANY Scottsdale 423-5504 T O A L L fraternity men: Please attend the Greek week Committee meeting in PV Main, tomorrow night at 9:30. TO A L L sorority women: Please com e to the First Greek week 1990 Committee meeting in P V Main, tomorrow night at 9:30 TO T H E nice person who returned my gray bookbag on Friday: Thankyou, Thankyou, Thankyou! It’s nice to know there are people like you in the world. Tin) Springston. T R A C Y BA BEL- We can ’t believe you’re finally 21! Get ready to rage tomorrow, you never know what's in store! Your roomies, Karen and Jill. C LA S S IF IE D S W O R K RESTAURANTS/ BARS W AITRESS/CASH IER, part-time. Apply in person at Pete’s 19th Tee, 1405 North Mill Avenue (Rolling H ills G olf Course). A FF O R D A B L E W O R D processing. 34 years experience, Term papers, resumes, books, theses. Income taxes. Donna, 464-9064. A KINKO ’S paper makes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, flyers. Self-serve Macintosh also. 933 East University. Call 966-2035, or 960 West University, Call 921-0168. A P A /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D processing. Need it fast? 945-5744. typing/word Call Jessie, A S U A R E A , typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. G in n ie M onroe, A C S W 897-0444 M A R K P. Thank you very much. Jenny. P R E M IE R E ’89 have a great time at A S U ’s 3rd annual Homecoming. D ance to music by ritual from 9pm to 1am at Tempe M ission Palm s November 9th! Tickets $5. S1/PAGE D O U BLE -SP A C ED , $2 singlespaced. Fast turnaround. A S U student. WordPerfect. Laser. Transcription. Free pickup/delivery. Training atoo. Margaret, 833-2133. PETS Tempe/Mesa 894-1391 P R E M IE R E '89- This year’s 3rd annual Homecoming Ball! Featuring ritual at Tempe M ission Palm s Nov.9th 9pm to 1am. Tickets on sale for $5 on the mall! Don't m iss this year’s production! IN S TR U C T O R S N E E D E D , Tap and Jazz dance, self-defense, gym coach.- Tower P la za Mall 946-9493 JANITO RIAL PART-TIME evenings, flexi­ ble hours, Friday-Saturday nights off!! Bonuses and advancement! Scottsdale and M esa locations. Ca ll 945-4994. B LA C K F E E T - Y O U R crushing defeat has left you in the archives. Sunday's w ar left the flag with the Golden Serpent waving defiantly- Hey, good luck to you. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING FLYIN G FIN G E R S Offers typeset quality with a M ac H and laser printer. Call Susan, 945-1500. r L E T T E R P E R F E C T Word Processing. $1.75/page. Spellcheck, grammar, punc­ tuation included; fast and reliable. CaN Lauri, 899-1236. P R O FE S S IO N A L TYPIN G. $1.50 page, Baseline/Alma School in Mesa, editing service available. Ca ll 897-1038. P R O FE S S IO N A L W O R D P R O C ES SIN G of anything you need. Fast, accurate, reasonable. S atisfaction guaranteed. Centred Phoenix, 274-5531. P R O F E S S IO N A L W O R D processing. 10 years experience. Legal secretary. High quality, reasonable rates. 963-5650. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G for your typing needs. Fast turaround. Close to A SU . $1.25/up. Transcription available. Roxan­ ne, 966-2825 W O RD P R O C E S S IN G — $1.50 per page. Resumes, design, editing, & laser printing available. Call 921-3770 evenings & weekends WANTED W ILL P A Y big $$ for ASU - U of A Football game. Need 4 tickets together. Call Richard, 9656297 or 784-4724. W R I T E R S ! A R T IS T ! C o n trib u te to Expressions. W e need stories, poems, essays, and illustrations. Send A S A F to Box 2429, Mesa, Arizona 85214. Subscrip­ tions, $14 for 4 issues. ADOPTION TRANSPORTATION A A A DRIVEAW AY. Free cars to most major cities. G a s allowances available. 21 or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530. TRAVEL F L Y ANYTIM E continental U S A $350 roundtrip. Leave today! NW U SA $250! Alaska-five weeks notice $450. Other destinations. W e also buy transferable coupons! 968-7283. F L Y F O R less, discount travel. Domestic and international, package fours to the Holy Land/lsrsel. 491-0501. SKI UTAH , fully furnished condo at base of mountain. 20 minutes to 7 major resorts. Sleeps 6, fireplace, jacquzzi. Great loca­ tion. All dates available, $700/week or $120 anig ht. CaN (801) 261-5543. S P E N D 8 weeks in Spain, Spring 1990.. Share American culture with teachers and students. Contact International Internship Programs, 1-800-869-7068 for details. S T U D Y IN Japan this summer. Learn about Japanese culture, business and society. Live with a host family. Other special features. C a ll International Intern­ ship Programs, 1-800-869-7066 for details. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $ 1 25/PAGE. Advanced, reliable typing, letter quality printer, spelling. Rick, 834-9279. $1.50 A A A W ord Processing/Laser printer. 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation, A P A specialization. Marion 839-4289. $19.95 R E S U M E Special, 1 page compu­ ter typeset, laser printout with 20 white bond copies or 10 copies on select resume papers. All 8W x1Ì’\ Dr. Copy« 1032 South T e rra ce . C a ll 433-4688 for w eekly specials. LOVING SO U T H E R N California couple (College Professor and Engineer) looking for baby to adopt. Financially secure, active, love children and animals. Friends* laughter, warmth to share with baby. W e can help with expenses. C a ll collect, Joe and Mary, (619) 943-7016. W ANTED, B A B Y to love. Loving couple wish to share their life and love with newborn. Call Karen and Dan at 994-4181. W E KN O W adoption is not an easy choice. But if you have made that choice, please choose us to give your baby a lifetime of love, happiness, and security. We, in turn, will help your child to understand and respect this difficult decision. Expenses paid. Ca ll Rhea and Roger collect, (914) 639-9158. MUSIC D R U M M E R W A N T E D . K a leido sco pe Groove. Ca ll Geoff, 894-8708. TUTORS E N G LIS H TUTO R, paper editing. Eight years professional writing experience* A S U English degree. Rates negotiable. 8296712. N E E D H E L P with A C C 212? I have taught and written exam s for this course at ASU. CaH Todd at 836-7336. PHOTOGRAPHY J A S O N SILVER/KID-M AN -Photoworks C o m m e rc ia l P h o to g ra p h y M o d e ls ’ , actors’ , and artists', portfolios. Profession­ al work. Reasonable rates. 946-2475. PO R TRAIT P H O T O G R A P H Y is out of fashion. Today, are want fashion photogra­ phy in our portraits. Custom Fashion Photography by appointment. You keep the negative. Prices start at $60. Call P ic tu re s Photography in Tem pe at 9686610. Page20 State Pic i » Tu^da^tovwnbwTjJÇBÇ FASHION UAL CK OUTBACK • RED POINTELLE SWEATERS $ These comfortable ramie/cotton sweaters are accented with cable-stitching on the neck, cuffs and body. (Misses S-M-L) VALUE $39 $099 WATCHES V em ee Coke' VALUES $21-35 THRU SUNDAY ONLY! $1 0 9 9 I ■ ^ W OUTBACK RED SIGNATURE TURTLENECKS SIGNATL & SPLIT-1NECK TEES (Misses S-M-L) VALUES $22-24 A T H E N T IC SPO RTW EAR SIGNATURE TOPS (Misses S-M-L) VALUE $28 THRU SUNDAY ONLY! TAKE AN ADDITIONAL 25 0NTEM P0RAR H ISSES % 0FF WITH N AM ES LIKE: LIMITED EXPRESS,® BOOM,® DETAILS® & OTHERS! O U R EVERDAY LO W PRICES! ENTIRE STO CK O F VESTS R AYO N SHIRTS & R AYO N RANTS) (Junior & Misses' S-M-L, 5-14) VALUES $22-40 (M arkdow n taken a t checkout.) EVERYDAY »«V IN O S OF UR TO N R ON FIRST QUALITY NAME BRAND FASHIONS FOR JUNIORS S MISSESI PHO ENIX Phoenix West Plaza. 4344 W. Indian School Rd, 247-0196; 19th Awe. & Thunderbird, 866-1690; 35th Ave, & Northern, 841-2951; 7th Awe. & Bethany Home, 265-4760; 28th St. & Indian School, 955-7804; 32nd & Shea, 867-2964; T EM PE Tempe East Shp. Ctr, 935 E . Broadway, 966-4987; M ESA Fiesta Village Shp. Ctr, (Alma School & Southern) 835-9089; Alta M esa Plaza, 5257 E. Brown Rd, 981-8999; M esa Shores Shp. Ctr, 2154 E. Baseline, 497-6806; SCOTTSDALE Fountain Plaza, 7750 E. McDowell, 949-8067 CALL THE LOCATION NEAREST FOR STORE «O U R S . Advertised styles representative of stock— occasionally, specific styles may not be available. Layaway/exchange. ,1« « ; i LIMITED TIME SPECIALS AVAILABLE WHILE QUANTITIES LAST. - '>