Slate Press ff 1 * ., Copyright. State Press, 1990 V o i. 16 N o . 4 Tem pe. Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily T h u rs d a y , A u g u s t 3 0 ,1 9 9 0 O ffic ia ls: In addition, Ostrom has sent letters to certain individuals, asking for more than $75,000 and requesting the remaining funds be sent as additional contacts are made. Officials said requests for vendor bid proposals may be sent out as early as Sept. 12. But Coor said Club funding would have to be in hand prior to the request for bids. “We will not proceed with the project until the $500,000 is secure,” he said, adding that the schedule would be moved back if the cash was not raised. State Relations Director Robert Miller said he supports Coor’s firm stand on the issue. ' ‘Unlike former president J. Russell Nelson, I believe Coor approached the B y KEVIN SHEH S ta te Press University officials are confident that they can snag $150,000 in donations to fund the controversial University Club prior to the self-imposed Sept. 12 deadline. “We have made major strides,” said Lonnie Ostrom, president of the University Club board of directors. “We are feeling more and more confident.” The on-campus restaurant and bar was approved by the Arizona Bo%rd of Regents in July. However, ASU President Lattie Coor stipulated that $500,000 of the $1.9 million price tag has to come from private sources. Ostrom said $350,000 has been raised from individuals and corporations. matter with a fair hand,” Miller said, adding that he approved of Coor’s caution and his care in ensuring tuition funds were not used. Former ASU President J. Russell Nelson designated $885,000 for renovation of the Fine Arts Annex, the location of the University Club. The remaining $500,006 will come from ASU investments. Should the club require subsidies, revenue from the licensing of thé Sun Devil logo will be appropriated for the facility. Student leaders have criticized the club, claiming the venture would lose money and would eventually require student tuition money to subsidize the project. They also questioned faculty interest in the club. But Ostrom asserts membership will increase once funding is secure. He said the membership problem Stems from a current skeptical faculty. “They have talked about a University Club for 30 years,” Ostrom said. “ I have friends (on the faculty) that still don’t think this (opening) will happen.” Faculty Senate President Arlene Metha said she hopes membership will increase with the advent of the new school year. M etha said as of th is su m m er, membership was at 540. Faculty and staff members must pay a $25 initiation fee, a $300 renovation contribution and $12 each month in membership fees. Community members can join by paying a $200 membership fee and a $300 renovation contribution. Middle Eastern students recount attack on Kuwait By M ICHAEL J. LA M ANTIA S ta te Press Abdul, an ASU student from Saudi Arabia, was staying in Kuwait the day Iraqi troops swallowed the tiny country. “The morning was normal,” he said. “Then, in a matter of 12 hours, Kuwait was cut off;” Abdul, who asked that his last name be withheld, has relatives in Kuwait and was in the country this summer working for Getty Oil Company. “The day I left Kuwait, I was lucky because once the Iraqis were in control of the border, people had to cross the desert to get to Saudi Arabia,” Abdul said. “Before they did so, the Iraqis made sure no one had supplies, and that is why so many didn't make it.” . Abdul’s cousin Faleh, who, fearful of repercussions, also asked his last name not be used, was not in the Middle East during the invasion but said the two lost contact With their relatives in Kuwait after the attack. “It concerns me because there were so many people who tried to escape across the desert and never made it to Saudi Arabia,” Faleh said. Turn to Iraq, page I J. WIN Powars/Stata Praas Said Hayouna, le ft, and K halld K hattaly discuss the crisis in the M iddle East. Hayouna believes th at the Am erican rple In the Persian G u lf Is w rong and that m ore people are rallying fo r Saddam Hussein th an fo r the U nited States. Christian group prepares to renew fight for Danforth cross By CHRISTINA SCHROEDER and HOBART ROW LAND S tate Press A representative from a local Christian group said Wednesday that research is being conducted and further legal action is pending in an effort to return the cross to the roof of ASU> Danforth Chapel. “We feel we have a chance of winning the c a s e ,” s a id J a n ie T e a g a rd e n , a spokesperson for the Christian Biblical Group Teagarden fought with the campus group, formerly Christian Campus Aglow, to keep the metal cross atop Danforth. “We have a different lawyer and a different approach,” she said. Teagarden would not elaborate on the details of the lawsuit, saying it was still in the research stages. But Douglas McNeil, an ASU graduate student who worked with the Arizona Civil Liberties Union to have the cross removed, said Teagarden has her work cUt out for her. “The only legal action that will work is to ‘We fe e l w e h ave a chance o f w in n in g the case. ’ — J a n ie T e a g a rd e n change the state and federal constitutions,” McNeil said, adding that each prohibits the use of state funds for religious purposes. “They have absolutely no legal basis,” he said. “That is why they lost in the first place.” . Freefalling: M a k in g Student dow ning is to blame for freefall­ ing residence hall elevators. f o r its Page 12 Teagarden said her group is expecting financial backing from the Rutherford Institute, a national team of Christian lawyers, pastors and laypeople, to pay for what she said could, prove to be a costly court battle. -* Established in 1982, the Rutherford Institute is a nationwide organization that defends people whose First Amendment liberties are threatened by slate action. Teagarden’s group is in the final stages of bringing a chapter of the institute to Arizona. “A Christian friend suggested going to the Rutherford Institute, and they agreed to get involved,” she said. “The time has passed when we Can sit idle and hope for the better,’; After a six-month legal battle against the University, Teagarden’s group was unable a ru n The fourth in a series on ASU foot­ ball highlights the team's cunning backs. Page 19 to convince the state that the cross should remain. It was removed quietly early on April 18, after a Maricopa County Superior Court judge sided „with the ACLU’s argument that a religious symbol on state property is unconstitutional. “The judge couldn’t find any legal basis in their argument,” McNeil said. But Teagarden said the battle is far from over. “The cross issue has done much to prom ote co n stitu tio n al freedom in Arizona, ” Teagarden said, ‘‘because a community that was once asleep has' now been awakened to the dangers that many liberal organizations pose to their freedom of religion. We are no longer in a complacent mode but in a position to counteract — to walk in an offensive position.” Sounds g o o d!: Today’s w u ttw r: Sunny, with a high ot 109. The State Press Magazine features the Rave-lips and the KUKQ Fest. Tonight: Choncs of raht with a high tha mid M agazine ’80s. C laasifladi. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Sporta............ Com ica................................................... is Horoscopes..... .......„23 Slatti Preis ÏÏ2 L S ________________________________________ Media believes ‘happy faculty* creates happy students By KELLY PEARCE S tate Press Back when she was a student at the University, Metha said all of the faculty members knew each other by name and Faculty Senate President Arlene Metha now works in the regularly passed one another on the ASU malls. same building she lived in during her days as an ASU student However, she said today this is an impossibility because of in the late 1950s. the immensity, adding that increasing the faculty quality of “ It was so different then,” she said from Dixie Gammage life may bring back some of this uniqueness. Hall, a former campus residence hall. “Everybody knew ASU President Lattie Coor said Metha has already caught everybody else’s names. It was a glorious time.” his eye. Now Media, an associate professor of psychology in “She is really deeply dedicated to the University,” he said, education, is representing the University’s faculty in the best adding that the Faculty Senate president has been eager to way she knows how — service. get involved in all facets of campus. For example, she is on “I’m so intense about what I’m doing now,” said the the search committee to find a new ASU provost. Faculty Senate president, who received her undergraduate In addition Hal White, last year’s Faculty Senate degree in art and education from ASU in 1963. “ What president, said he is Confident Metha can fill his shoes. prompted me to run is that I have a tremendous vested “ I’m very high on her,” he said. “She is hard working, she interest in this place. I .am only limited to one year so this cares, she is a good administrator and she has good networks makes one tend to move on a fast track.” on campus.” As faculty salaries remain uncompetitive and high White added that she always went beyond her duties as turnover rates continue, increasing the quality of faculty life president-elect last year. on campus will be one of the Senate’s high priorities this Metha, who said her experience as an ASU student was a year, Metha said. definite plus when she began teaching at the University, “We have fallen behind peer institutions and it will, take a received a master’s degree from Ohio University and a number of years to remedy the situation,” she said, adding doctorate from the University of Southern California. that she has a plethora of possible solutions to help the The faculty president, who dabbles in water-color painting dilemma. and photography, said ASU’s full-time, part-time and For example, Metha, 50, said she would like to rethink the professional faculty groups are one big family with tenure process so part-time faculty could be considered for academic incredible potential. this opportunity and continue expressing the need for salary Although Metha is eager to make a difference, she hikes. In addition, faculty should be given the option of flexible admitted that “there is much to be done on campus.” When her year as faculty president draws to a close next spending accounts So members can have monies taken out of spring, Metha said she would rather have one of her policy their payroll for child care and similar costs. Metha, whose' genuine enthusiasm rings through in changes be remembered than her name. everything she says, explained that a “happy faculty” will “If one of my policies makes it into the manual, I will be have a positive snowballing effect on students. happy,” she said. . The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Tamara Wofford/State Press T his year’ s F acu lty Senate P resident A rlen e M etha says she w ants her w ork— not her nam e—to be rem em bered. M eetings •Shotokan Karate Club is offering s p ecial b eginners classes a t 5 :3 0 p.m . in R oom C of th e S tu d e n t R ecreation C o m p lex. •Public Programs College Council will h a v e a m eeting for n ew m e m b e rs a t 3 :3 0 p .m . in R oom A 2 3 7 o f S ta u ffer Hall. •Christian Students’ Fellowship will m e e t a t 1 2 :3 0 p .m . in •Episcopal/Angelican Campus Ministry will o ffe r a brief th e M U Y a v a p a i R oom for B ible study. series, “ G ro w ing a F a ith ,” a n d euch arist a n d d in n e r a t 6 p .m . a t the Lutheran C e n te r, 1 4 1 4 S . M cA llister A ve. •Baptist Student Union will o ffe r a fre e lunch and devotion •MUAB Film Committee will show “ F ield of D re a m s ” a t 7 p .m . and 9 :3 0 p .m . in the U n ion C in e m a for $1. a t noon at th e Baptist S tu d e n t C e n te r, 1 3 2 2 S . M ill A ve. •Gun Devils w ill m e e t a t 5 :3 0 p .m . in th e M U S a n ta C ru z •ASU Ski Devils will h ave a m eeting for n ew m e m b ers at 7 R oom . p .m . a t S u n n y ’s P izza, 1301 E . University Drive. TsüstmmJß&im FastData386/SX UPGRADE TO COLOR VGA Monitor & Card *469 Let’s not m ess around any m ore. G at dow n to som e serio us com puting w ith this super-pow ered 386SX. JOIN A SU ’S LARGEST SKI AND PARTY CLUB!!!! WOW! With 40mb and VGA C olor S K I legrada locator to make all of jour favorite 7 7 * FastData386/SX com bines 386 performancea and software compatibil­ ity with 286 design and price. 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University - 3 * ■< S«” ‘ S M J Join ASU’s largest ski and party club. $18 membership fee includesdub T-shirt, activities, and party VIP card good for free admission to club parties and events! Ski Utah Thanksgiving. — Breckenridge over Christmas break ~ 800 members last year! O Broadway EVERYONE WELCOME! Meetings are informal, Stop by and check it out! KEG 93* Bottles of M iller Genuine D raft & MGD Light Tonight at Sunny’s AND POOL P A R T Y T O N IG H T A F T E R T H E M E E T IN G CLUB PA R TY 20 KEG S S A TU R D A Y C a ll f o r m o r e in f o r m a t i o n : F IR S T T R IP : S A N D IE G O B E A C H P A R T Y T R IP B r i a n .................................................. 8 2 9 - 1 7 0 4 V S e p te m b e r 2 8 , 2 9 , 3 0 , 1 9 9 0 $ 8 9 in c lu d e s e v e ry th in g !! D a v e .................................................. 8 2 7 - 8 3 8 3 K a r i e .................................................. 9 6 7 - 8 8 9 7 S J e f f o .................................................. 9 6 6 - 2 3 0 4 H o t l i n e ................... 9 6 6 -3 8 9 0 W orld/N ation S it e Press , Page 3 Thursday, August 3 0 ,19 9 0 Pregnant women, children now free to leave Iraq WASHINGTON (AP) — About 25 pregnant women and 60 small children are among (he estimated 1,000 Americans Who will be eligible to return to the United States under the new Iraqi rules governing foreign nationals in that country. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had promised that the exodus of foreign women and children could begin Wednesday, but there were no departures because of administrative delays, Said Iraqi Ambassador Mohamed AlMashat. Meanwhile, 36 members of the Iraqi diplomatic staff in Washington who were ordered out of the United States by the State Department were heading home today aboard a Jordanian airliner that left New York on Wednesday night. Galaxy Crash They had been given until this afternoon to leave U. S. territory. The State Department expelled them in retaliation for Iraq’s demand that all foreign embassies in Kuwait, including the American embassy, be shut down. That order has been widely ignored. State Department spokeswoman Margaret Tutwiler Said Wednesday that about one-third of the 3,000 Americans who have been barred from leaving Iraq and Kuwait are women or children age 18 and under. She also said that, i| implemented, Saddam’s policy shift was a “significant step in the right direction.’’ She refused, however, to say whether the new policy improves the climate for a negotiated settlement. A ssociated P ress photo U .S . service men and rescue workers Inspect the dam age after an A ir Force C -5 G alaxy cargo plane bound for the Persian Gulf crashed on takeoff at Ramstein A ir Base near Kaiserslautern on Wednesday. A t least 13 people on board were killed. Army issues common sense’ booklet to teach lessons of the Saudi desert FORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) - An Army unit on the Kansas plain has produced a booklet to help U.S. soldiers in Saudi Arabia learn the life-or-death lessons of the desert. “The desert can easily kill an unprepared soldier,” warns the new manual prepared for Operation Desert Shield. Filled with common-sense, plain-spoken language, the 25-page booklet is packed with a few basic rules of survival fra those unprepared for desert climate. “It’s a basic training document if you’ve not had any experience in the desert,” said Brig. Gen. James Lyle, the commander of the unit that put the publication together. Some of its faints: —You lose less water if you keep your clothes on . —Don’t play with snakes. —Before putting clothes on in the field, check for critters . —Wood shrinks in the desert — make sure axheads are secure before using. —Check your feet daily — change socks frequently. The Army has printed 250,000 copies of the little manual, and 5,000 were flown to Saudi Arabia this week, Lyle said. “It’s designed to fit in the pocket, right here,” the general said, slapping the thigh pocket on his camouflage uniform. Lyle is in charge of the Center fra Lessons Learned, the Army unit that gleans studies and reports from many Army exercises or activities + and then compiles a huge data base to help commanders teach their soldiers the best way to plan, organize and carry out their missions. Hie booklet, “Winning in the Desert,” was put together in four days. It uses information gathered from the Army’s desert training center at Fort Irwin, Calif., from joint U.S.-Saudi exercises held during the past 10 years and exercises conducted by the Saudi Arabian National Guard, Lyle said. The publication is brief and blunt about the dangers the desert can hold. But it also points out that men have waged war in those harsh environs for centuries, some more successfully than others. Knowledge of the desert is key. “Priorities may alter, techniques will v a ry ... but soldiers, leaders and units who are fit and well-trained to fight... will have little difficulty adjusting to desert war,” Lyle said. Small maps of Saudi Arabia and Iraq are accompanied by brief discussions of each country’s geography and climate. A section on the desert clearly points out the dangers of too much sun and too little Water —but it also tells soldiers not to lie or sit on the ground, since those surfaces can be 30 degrees hotter than the air . Don’t panic if you become lost, it says. Remember that the sun rises in the east, the booklet advises, offering a way to find one’s direction with a rock and a stick. “If you have water, drink it. ... If water is limited, keep your mouth shut. Do not talk,” to conserve moisture in your body, it says. _ ‘ The environment plays havoc with the military’s equipment, the booklet warns. On rocky deserts, “the M54 5-ton truck is prone to air hydraulic cylinder failure and power-steering leaks,” it says. Batteries don’t hold their charge in intense heat, either. “You must keep ammunition away from direct heat and sunlight. If it can be held by bare hands, it is safe to fire,” the publication says, One way to keep it cooler is to bury it at least three feet deep and in a shaded area. Weapons may become clogged, or missiles jammed on launching rails due to dust or sand accumulation, leading to early detonation. _ Driving in the desert is best on tracked vehicles, but success has less to do with mobility than the skill of the driver. “A relatively agile vehicle will sink up to the hubs if its driver insists on gunning the engine in soft sand,” the publication warns. Dust, Sand, rough terrain and temperature extremes cause a 50 percent increase in the repair parts needed to support a combat unit, it says. Lyle said his unit has been getting an average of 17 to 25 queries daily from U.S. commanders in Saudi Arabia, asking how to cope with such problems as conked-out batteries, tread life on tanks or operating helicopters in the desert. In Kuwait, there are about 500 American women, 25 of whom are pregnant; 350 are children between the ages of 3 and 18, and 60 are children under 3, Tutwiler said. She indicated the number of women and children in Iraq is less than 100 but she had no breakdown. Iraq is requiring all those wishing to leave to obtain exit visas. After meeting Wednesday with David Mack, a deputy assistant secretary of state, Ambassador Al-Mashat told reporters that American men would be free to leave if the Bush administration gave assurances that there will be no U. S. attack against Iraq. Al-Mashat seemed eager to call attention to the proposal. “This is ouT initiative,” he said. “But it is very little reported in your mass media.” But Tutwiler said Hie administration “rejects any notion that there should be any conditions attached to the immediate safe departure of all foreign nationals, including Americans who wish to depart froth Iraq and Kuwait.” She also noted, however, that U. S. forces have been sent to the region as a deterrent and not to attack Iraq. Tutwiler also announced that the State Department has identified the American whom the Iraqis say died of a heart attack ih Basra, Iraq, earlier this week. She said his idratity would not be disclosed, out of deference to his family’s wishes. The American was working in Iraq and was one of about 70 people who the State Department says have been taken into custody by Iraqi authorities since the beginning of the Persian Gulf crisis. Tutwiler said an autopsy was scheduled today and a Western doctor, who has been previously been employed by the U. S. Embassy in Baghdad, would be present. She said no American doctors were believed to be in Baghdad. In other developments: •The NBC and CNN television networks said U. S. agencies, particularly Army Special Forces troops and the CIA, were helping the Kuwaiti resistance in hit-and-run attacks on Iraqi occupiers, Kuwaiti fighters based on the Saudi-Kuwait border were reported to be getting intelligence, weapons, radios, advice and instruction from the United States. A U. S. diplomatic source confirmed the reports in general terms, saying, “We’re aware of their action and we’re supporting them.” •A White House official said a former high-ranking U. S. official recently delivered a secret message from Iraq offering to release hostages and pull out of Kuwait if certain demands Were met. Iraq demanded that U. N. sanctions be withdrawn and Iraq be guaranteed access to the Persian jGrulf and sole control of an oil field that dips into Kuwait, according to Newsday, which first reported theproposal. The White House said the offer was rejected. N ew s B riefs A rts e n d o w m e n t fait w ith th ir d la w s u it WASHINGTON (AP) — The National Endowment for the Arts faces a lawsuit charging that it supported “hateful, hostile and anti-religious expression” with a $15,000 grant for a New York artist’s controversial exhibition. The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court on Wednesday by the Rutherford Institute of Charlottesville, Va., a non­ profit legal services organization, on behalf of Los Angeles lawyer David Fordyce, who was described as a “devout Christian.” It was the third lawsuit filed in response to the NEA’s anti-obscenity policy. Fordyce accused the NEA and its chairman, John E. Frohnmayer, of displaying “ open and notorious hostility toward religion” in violation of the First Amendment doctrine of separation of church and state. The suit charges that the NEA-subsidized catalog for “Tongues of Flame,” an exhibit of works by David Wojnarowicz of New York, includes an image depicting Jesus Christ as an intravenous drug user. S u m m it focuses o n substance in itia tiv e GALLUP, N.M. (AP) —The Navajo tribe cannot deal With Indian alcoholism alone, interim chairman Leonard Haskie told a substance-abuse conference. “The Navajo Nation, in many instances, is helpless in coping with these problems,” he said Wednesday. Haskie was among several speakers at a luncheon to kick off a three-day Regional Substance Abuse Summit Conference at Red Rock State Park near here. Summit coordinators hope the meeting will result in an outline of a plan to deal with substance abuse problems in northwestern New Mexico and northeastern Arizona. New Mexico Gov. Garrey Carruthers asked the some 206 people attending the invitation-only summit to make sure p re v e n tio n e ffo rts a r e a m a jo r p a r t of th e ir recommendations. O p in io n Page 4 E D State Press Thursday, August 30,1990 I T O R I A L ASU n eeds to get serious about cam pus ch ild care No other issue in recent ASU history has been studied, looked at, rummaged through, poked at, prodded, peered at and plain beat to death like campus child care. And all the studies, surveys, polls and student body votes have all come to one basic conclusion: We have a problem. With 6,100 student and 1,725 faculty parents on campus, it would seem natural for an institution the size of ASU to provide services and facilities to help them meet their day care needs. But it doesn’t. There is no child-care facility on or near campus solely for the use of ASU students, faculty and staff. Only very recently has there been any organized system of child care literature and referral. Our administration just needs to look five miles in any direction to find excellent role models of the way things should be done. All of the Maricopa County community colleges have been providing day care for their students and faculty members for 15 years. The Tempe High School District provides child care, counseling and even transportation for its teen parents. The obvious and embarrasing oversight on the part of the ASU administration to facilitate even the most basic child-care services can only be attributed to a gross insensitivity to die needs of a large portion of our campus. But now it has an opportunity to change. For a year, ASU’s child care coordinator Maureen Duane has been surveying the studies and studying the surveys, liie result is an innovative and comprehensive 10-point campus day care plan. Today, ASU President Lattie Coor will announce his decisions on the recommended package. The options he is considering include: •Developing educational materials to assist ASU parents in their search and selection of child care programs and services. •Developing a computerized child and elder care information and referral service. This would allow anyone in the ASU community to use the CARL library computers system to look up day and elder care information. •Developing evening p rogram s for elem entary-age children, while ASU parents work on campus or attend classes. •Implementing a pretax personnel benefit for child and elder care expenses of faculty and staff. This service would assist ASU employees in setting aside money from each paycheck for child or elder care. •Reviewing and expanding personnel policies to meet the needs of families through options such as job sharing and flexplace. •Developing a voucher plan to subsidize child-care costs of ASU students. This would subsidize part of students’ day care costs based upon their income. •Developing an educational training program for certified group home day care providers in the community for ASU fam ilies to use. This would certify individuals to provide day care in their homes. •Developing a program to address the sick child care needs of faculty and staff. This would subsidize the cost of providing inhome care for sick dependents of employees. •And the biggie: Establishing an on- or near-campus child care center. The package is ambitious and the price tag — $1,900,000 over five *years — is high. But consider the costs of not implementing the plan. In 1988, a study commissioned by the ASU Childcare Steering Committee found that 73 percent of ASU parent-employees had missed days of work because of child care problems and 67 percent had to leave work early or arrive late at least once. How much did that cost the University? A 1989 survey of students found that because of child-care difficulties, 44 percent of ASU’s student-parents find it difficult to take required classes, 62 percent have to take early morning or evening classes, 68 percent have trouble studying and 76 percent say they are just plain stressedout. What price-tag do you place on peace of mind? 'There is no child care fa cility on or near campus solely fo r the use o f ASU students, facu lty an d staff. ’ Nearby community colleges, high school districts and peer institutions have been successfully implementing the ideas that ASU is just now beginning to consider for years. The homework has been done, the plans have been laid, the need has been more than established, There are no more excuses — it’s time to get to work on campus child care. Yes, Mra Smith., we finally have daycare on campus for little Joey... yea I'm aware .you've been waiting a long time... ... wiiat'e that ?.... yo u say Joey graduated from AST/ last year? (fM r u »TAT Wanted: Student voters N ic o le P e r r o n M anaging E ditor As the semester cranks into motion, time becomes an increasingly precious commodity. Balancing work, school and' the ever-important social life leaves little time for the number of groups on campus' vying for student attention. Registering to vote sits somewhere between watering my plants and changing the oil in my car on my list of things to do for the day. Because my plants have long been a collection of dried leaves in various sized plastic containers, it is safe to say it is further down on the list. Voting, however, is similar to changing my car’s oil. I do it every once in a while, usually at someone else’s prodding, to make it run better. This month, prodding is being done by SAVE ’90. Organizers of SAVE ’90, a program aimed at educating student voters about the issues that effect them, have set up sites around campus to register students to vote. Although it is too late to register to vote in the Sept. 11 primaries, students can still participate in the Nov. 6 general election. The SAVE ’90 committee is bringing the issues to campus, beginning Tuesday with a debate between the candidates for governor, including Barnes, Koory, Steiger, Mecham (a reason in itself to register to vote) and Symington. Other forums and debates are scheduled through Sept. 17. It is imperative that students register to vote, for as a collective voting body we can have a voice in electing lawmakers who are supportive of education and students. And the first step toward utilizing that voice is to register to vote. With tuition at ASU and UofA raised by $116 for in-state students and $1,000 for out-of-state students last spring, we can’t afford to revive the time-worn excuses used not to register L ast sp rin g approxim ately 800 students protested the tuition hike — screaming voices and hostile faces were captured in the local media — but now the voices are muffled and their faces have faded. Spurts of protest, although a wonderful way to channel frustrations, give us only a short-term hold on Arizona lawmakers’ attentions. The most effective way to keep their attention and have a say in our educational future is to show we have an impact on their political future. It is crucial that, as students, we register to vote and know the issues. For the same amount of time it takes to bemoan class overcrowding or tuition hikes we can be registering to vote. As one overheated, passionate protestor screamed from the sidewalk on Cady M all la s t sp rin g , “ 42,000 hemorrhoids up the Legislature’s a--” is going to make them stand up and notice. Q U O T A B L E STATE PRESS SUZANNE ROSS Editor NICOLE PERRON Managing Editor STEVEN KRICUN A sat/led in ical Managing Editor .NOSART ROWLAND City Editor... Aast. City Editor..... ..........._______________ KELLY PEARCE Copy Chief.................. „............... __ __ KAYLEE JOHNSON News .................................. ______TENNY TATUSIAN _____ .NICOLE CARROLL Opinion Editor-........ ....... Asst. Opinion Editor....... .... _________DAN NOWICKI Photo F^d*toy.............. ........ ____________ X J. SOKOL ____________ PAUL CORO Sports Editor.... ........... ____..KRIS TIMMONS Asst. Sports Editor............ COPY EDITORS: Kellye Kratch, Michael LaMantia, Jill H bke CARTOONIST: JuUe Sigwart MAGAZINE STAFF: Michelle Cniff, Vicki Culver, Christine Heibranson, Lori Lappin, Deborah Neniko, Jon V^lz, Kramer Wetzel PRODUCTION: Cassaundra Cavines», Dane Christ, Holly H iatt, Jeffrey L ucas, Lynne S enzek, Stacy Towar, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Dan Ellstronv Todd Martin, Christine M ills n, Mike Morris, Terri Smith, John Vaccara. Magazine Editor.......... ..... Assoc. Magazine Editor... Asst, Magazine Editor...... ....M EG HALVERSON ....ROBYN PINKSTON ......CARiN CUMMINS REPORTERS: K enneth Brow n, A nita C arcone, Teen a Chadw ell, Jeff Condors, Joseph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Sonja Lewis, Patricia Mah, M ichelle Paul, M ichelle Roberts, Girth Shell, Christina Sduoedei; Kristie Young. SPORTS REPORTERS: Darren Urban, Greg Z ele, Dan Zeiger. . .> ' PHOTOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty, Jeoigetta Douglas, Monique Hollih,WIU Powers,tamara Wofiord. v The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not answ er questions o f a general nature. A dvertising and Production: (602)965-7572. The State Press is the o n ly new sp ap er ex clu sively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of ASU administration, faculty staff or student body. "The time has passed when we can sit idle and hope for the better." ■C hristian Campus A glow Co-Director Janie Teagarden on w h y her group is threatening to resurrect the D anforth Chapel cross legal battle. E D I T O R I A L B O A R D Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides on their m erit The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: N icole Perron Managing Editor Suzanne Ross Editor Steven Kricun A sst M anaging Editor N icole Carroll O pinion Editor Dan Now icki A sst O pinion Editor O p in io n Stete Press Thursday, August 30,1990 Page 5 Blood drive U S. troops may die to support our driving habits E llen G o o d m an Washington Post Writers Group As I first turn the pages of the newsmagazines, I barely notice the ads. The cover stories are what I’m after, sober accounts of the near-war in the Middle East, grim details about the buildup to protect “our way of life,” uneasy projections about oil and the economic future. But gradually the subliminal messages in the ads come into focus as an odd and unsettling counterpoint to the news. They are selling cars, the symbols of “our way of life.” Cars are a central character in this conflict that threatens that other American freedom, the freedom to drive. This is what one carmaker promises in the tense summer of 1990, “That last-day-ofschool feeling of ex h ilaratio n and independence you may have been missing for quite some time.” This is what another boasts while we send 50,000 soldiers to protect our supply line: “It not only looks like fun, it is fun. The undisputed king of the pleasure cruise.” This is what a third sells as we ship protective gear to guard against Iraq's chemical weapons : “ In some ancient cultures, an Eclipse called for a sacrifice. Today it only calls for $10,919.” These m essages already seem as anachronistic as the ads that once showed doctors recommending Camels. There is not a single mention of gas mileage. The words used are cofnfort and performance, power and luxury. There are no warnings that cars may be hazardous to our health. If the ad-makers are caught in a time lag, what can we make of our leaders? In these same weeks, the President has issued no s ta te m e n t ab o u t our four-w heeled dependence. He has uttered only the most casual words about conservation as he races his boat off Kennebunkport. Not one of his men has asked Americans to car-pool or even change our road map for Labor Day. The only concerted action in the nation’s capital has been anger at the rising gas prices. Bush is more at home in the uniform of a commander-in-chief than in the sweater Jimmy Carter donned in the oil crisis of the ’70s. This oilman may not want to remind us that he was part of the problem during the deregulated decade, when the country was allowed to forget about energy and put our pedal to the metal. Now, as e n v iro n m e n ta list B arry Commoner puts it, “We have a military policy instead of an energy policy.” America has driven itself into this desert conflict. We may make war over what we waste. The ads before me are emblems of the era in which the all-American movie ends in a car chase and the all-American rite of passage is registering to drive, not to vote. They are emblems of an era in which we still believe what we were once told: What’s good for General Motors is good for the country. Today the United States uses 40 percent of the oil being produced in the world. Over 60 percent of that is for transportation. Our cars travel some 1,250 billion miles a year, almost as far as all the cars in the world put AHgQWAM IU, Wind BttWS NOBáW AW Gù(ft>, AS1H0/SAŸ.' together. Half of the trips are made by a driver alone. We built our suburbs for cars, deserted our cities by car, paved some 2 percent of our land for them and polluted the air for them. As the ad puts it: “Some cars make a s t a t e m e n t . T h is o n e m a k e s a n exclamation.” When Americans are also being asked to die for oil, that is indeed an exclamation point. In the days since the young troops landed in Saudi Arabia, some have called for more drilling off our own shores, and others for 'nuclear energy. One would have us choose th e p o llu tio n of o ur s h o re s ov er conservation; another is sure we would prefer the dangers of nuclear waste to sacrifice. It seems that Washington is still stuck in the stagnant, feel-good ’80s, when we wasted time as well as energy — human and fossil. We knew the importance of cars that use less gas, cars that use renewable resources from crops to sun, cars that run on entirely different engines. We knew the value of mass transit. But our government behaved as if the oil would run forever. The bugle from the Mideast sounds an unhappy wake-up call. Half a world away on desert sands, our men and women are expected to fight for access to inexpensive oil. But at home, our leaders still remain reluctant to ask Americans what they can do and do without for their country. So, “heartbeat of America” has a very different meaning these days. It’s beginning to sound like cardiac arrest. L E T T E R S W acky look into future Editor: The extensive coverage of the Persian Gulf in the State Press’s semester-debut issue confirmed my suspicion that the subject has taken an uncommonly tenacious grip on the ever-elusive American psyche. I suppose I shouldn’t have been surprised, considering that lately even the most determinedly uninformed have taken to citing the chemical assault upon “his own Kurds” (one shudders to think what he is capable of doing to others' Kurds) as proof of Saddam Hussein’s Hitlerian dastardliness. Going through drop/add today, trying beneath a punishing sun to resolve in my vision a schedule line number, I dozed off and had a prophetic dream. I’ve decided to share my vision with your readership, hoping to allay their suspense and anxiety, and feeing that I alone should not have to bear the burden of knowledge of our terrible and ludicrous future. Soon it will become clear that the American goal of a kinder, gentler Iraq requires us to postpone our own moral Renaissance and we will conquer, occupy and get down to some serious nation building. In UN supervised elections Dr. Fazood al-Bazamdooni, who had lived in London exile and edited, the quarterly “Free Iraqi Podiatry”, sweeps to victory. The futile protests of his opponent — who had stuck out the dictatorship in Baghdad —. at the use of photos showing him in intimate embrace with Saddam Hussein (“Those who did not cower in the shadow of Big Ben need not apologize for licking a boot or two to save their families from fiendish torture.") prove that negative campaigning is everywhere equally deplorable and successful. Most Iraqi men, not yet appreciating the new democratic order and conditioned to the cult of personality, shave off their Saddam mustaches and cultivate al-Bazamdooni goatees; many younger men go so far as to dye theirs white in order to emulate the septuagenarian doctor’s hoariness. In 1992, the Bush/Quayle ticket is re-elected in a record landslide; a fortnight after the inauguration the defeated Democratic candidates appear in an American Express commercial, and even after names have been typed onto their cards, most, people still can’t quite place them. Ronald Reagan, for an undisclosed but reportedly exorbitant sum, travels to Kuwait to emcee a posthumous celebrity roast of Saddam Hussein. In 1994 reports surface that Bush had not only accepted illegal gifts (an honary membership at the Baghdad Country C A R T O O N S C UON.To UÍNPlE A toTennAL S e A i N V t o L V i N O V O uR iCN ANP THE SW ^SbÖP HAND BEH*ND')bUREW? L'K&TU«$... ôfcKWWJ- .y, ( W m F .F T H T C• v - v * ! OBÖ OFF W a c © * '^ possible scientific cal­ culator. A n d now that’s an easier deci­ sion than ever. Texas Instrum ents scientific calculators are designed to spe­ cifically m atch your m ath and science course needs, w ith just the right functions and features for faster, easier results. W hether you require a general, intermediate or advanced scientific calculator, T Ihas your number: T he easy-touse TI-30 STAT. T he TI-35 PLUS w ith statistics and computer conversions. A nd, the engineeringoriented TI-60, as well as many other hard-working m odels. M ore students depend on TI cal­ culators because we’ve got the right functions and fea­ tures down to a sci­ ence. To find the calculator that’s ideal for your courses, check with your near­ est TI calculator dealer. © 1990T1 IH00077 T e x a s '^ * In s t r u m e n t s State Press Thursday, August 30,1990 Page 13 Iraq.____________ I Contiitued from page 1. Among other problems, Faleh said, the Arabs are intolerant with outside intervention. This, he said, can be linked to the favorable relationship between the United States and Israel, adding that Israeli aggression towards Arab nations has been largely ignored in America. But while Abdul and Faleh support the U. S. decision to send troops to protect the Arabian border, ASU student Said Hayouna, an Algerian, said the American role in the Persian Gulf is wrong. “The U. S. solicited the invitation from Saudi Arabia to bring American forces, ’’ Hayouna said. Khalid Khattaly, a Libyan, agreed, adding that he feels the United States finally got what it always wanted — the green light to establish military bases in the Middle East. Khattaly described both the United States’ protection of its oil interests and Hussein’s reasoning behind the Kuwait invasion as profit motivated. Hayouna said by putting troops in Saudi Arabia, the United States has abandoned its hopes of garnering support from the other Arab nations. “The Arabs have a saying,” he said, “ ‘Me and my brotheragainst my cousin, and my cousin and I against foreigners.’ ” ‘‘The media and the government want Americans to think there is wide Arab Support for the U. S. military, but they are wrong,” Hayoun said. “There are more people rallying to Saddam than to the U. S. side of the issue.” Khattaly and Hayouna said national sovereignty has always been an area of dispute in the Arab world. “The. borders were not created by the Arabs,” Khattaly said, “They were created by the countries that held them as colonies then gave them independence with small borders, so they could control them in the future. ” The former country of Arabia, Hayouna Said, included the countries of the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, Oman, Israel, Syria and Jordan. Hayouna said the countries concerned about Iraq action are the ones with something to lose. “That is why they (Saudi Arabia) want the protection of the U. S. — to protect their wealth,” he said. Abdul, however, did not agree. “ This is scary,” he said. “Saddam must be stopped, and the U. S. is the only threat that can do it.” State Press W e’re more than just TEXTBOOKS! We carry: ASU merchandise that includes: shirts, shorts, caps, sweats, tanks, date books, garbage cans, bumper stickers, squeeze bottles and infant-wear. We also carry a full line of backpacks, folders, binders, pens, pencils, hi-liters, office supplies, dictionaries, calendars, condoms, Cliff Notes study aids and much, much more!!! {¡ O T H E R 'S BO O K STO R E Proudly Serving the Valley of the Sun Two A.S.U. Locations 625 E. A pache : * N C 0 -' 7 th St. n University e 9 e R u r i Apache “ T T “ This morning, ASU President Lattie Coor will address the Faculty Assembly during its fall semester meeting at ASU’s Memorial Union. His remarks are expected to include announcements about university reorganization, the search for a new provost, faculty salaries and economic development. If you can’t attend this morning, Channel 8 will be there for you! 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 620 S. C ollege 8 2 9 -1 1 2 8 Wouldn’t you rather go to ROTHER’S? W atch tonight a t 10 pm Y our p le d g e c o u n ts ! PartofArizona State University HU Page 14 State Press iJhjflBda^Augi^^í922i p ro fe sso r ADVERTISE publishing WHERE THE I ads--* ' f e r t I'E s M COLLEGE MARKET II la w ? F m r| SS® > ** : p • Free Copyright Perm ission Assistance • No Cost to Departm ent • Low Cost to Students • Past Turnaround • Campus Pick-Up & Delivery • Convenient Hours & Locations • Service You Can Depend On • Kinko’s Features the Xerox 5090 Copier LIVES. PLAYS AND LEARNS k in k y ! copies p rofessor p u b lish in g S ta te P re ss I I I ‘ U niversity & Forest A 894-9588 fax 894-6457 E ‘ University & Rural i U 894-1797 fax 894-1986 ^ University & Hardy * 921-0168fax 894-2038 ‘ S o u th e rn s Dobson 969-3326 fax 461-8442 M a in & S ta p ie y 833-0036 fax 833-0972 Open 24 Hours! N O CROW DS, N O LINES * N O H ASSLES! At the award-winning Western Reserve Club, you will enjoy the benefits of the Southwest's premier health and fitness facility and the privacy of a sports country club. No crowds to fight. No lines to endure! FINE ART, ARCHITECTURE, E N G IN E E R IN G & G R A P H IC D E S IG N STUDENTS: SHOP FOR YOUR ART SUPPLIES FROM THE VALLEY'S MOST CO M ­ PLETE SELECTION THROUGH SEPTEMBER 29th A N D RECEIVE A SUBSTANTIAL 25% DISCOUNT! * (OUR STANDARD 10% STUDENT DISCOUNT APPLIES AT ALL OTHER TIMES.) FINE ART MATERIALS: f?Free Weights 1Lifecycles ■Cybex Keiser Cam II Nautilus 1Suntan Beds 1Olympic Swimming Pool Co-ed lacuzzi , ; Steam/Sauna Cafe/Lounge ■Aerobics 1Stairmasters 1Basketball ■Indoor Volleyball 1Sand Volleyball 1Racquetball 1Walleyball Martial Arts Tennis Diet Center D R A FTIN G SUPPLIES: PARALLEL RULES, TRIANGLES, TEMPLATES, LEADS, DRAWING BOARDS, TECHNICAL PENS (ALL BRANDS) A N D MORE. ALSO : AIRBRUSH EQUIPMENT A N D SUPPLIES, GRAPHIC ARTS MATERIALS A N D BOOKS. UNIVERSITY ASU I Áid If * L . • i CANVAS, PAINTS, STRETCHER BARS, BRUSHES, FRAMES, PAPER, ETC. APACHE BROADW AY I SOUTHERN »ÜPERSITONFWV . ., tN (15th O F AUGUST THROUGH SEPTEMBER 29th) Open 7 Days a Week Call Now! 968-9231 Bring this ad with you to receive a one week free trial. Student lifestyle memberships available at no initiation fee. O ffer expires Oct. 15, 1990 A W A R D -W IN N IN G S P O R T S C E N T E R BY D A V E B R O W N Broadw ay W est o f Price «Tempe, A Z • 968-9231 JEFFERSON HOURS: MON.-FRt. 8:30-5:30 SAT. 9-5 1 FLAX 1 X : M ARICO PA FREEWAY 16TH STREET WESTERN RESERVE CLUB FLAX C O ., IN C . 1ÖTH STREET & JEFFERSON 25441840 •DISCOUNT APPLIES TO UST PUCES ONLY ITEMS ALREADY O N SALE ARE NOT SUSJECT TO FURTHER DISCOUNT. SOME RESTRCTIONS APPLY V: State Press Page 15 'J h u r s g a ^ A u s tB r ï^ /1 9 9 ^ P h ysical Science a d d itio n to o p e n despite d elays By KRISTIE YOUNG S tate Press An ASU construction official said Wednesday that the Physical Science addition will open its doors later next month, following delays that have plagued the project since its inception. “We are very optimistic that the new building will work out great,” said Arlen Solochek, a construction administrator. “It’s got a lot of nice renovations.” The facility, located on University Drive across the street from the Palo Verde residence halls, was slated for completion in July but encountered construction and money delays. The $17.5 million, 128,000-square-foot building will consolidate current labs and classrooms and provide room for offices. The six-floor structure is being funded by a 25-year bond issuance that will be paid off primarily with income from tuition and fees. Construction for the new facility began in March of 1989. The building will provide room for the replacement of existing laboratories and classrooms that do not meet current safety standards or student needs. An official building grand opening will be held in the spring. Until then, building occupants will have time to move in furniture and machinery, prepare laboratories and offices and “get used to the new building/’ Solochek said. Other renovations on campus include changes to the existing Physical Science Building, wings B, C, D and F in June 1991. “We will be converting and upgrading laboratories and faculty offices,” said E. L. Cortez, ASU design project manager. He said the 14-month construction period will force the closure of certain portions of the building, but the facility will be open for classes. “Work will go on while students are in class,” he said, adding that students will not encounter construction hazards/ “The project is on schedule and in the budget.” One of the main renovations to the building will produce upgraded facilities for the chem istry, geology and physics departments and the Center for Solid State Science, “We are looking forward to beginning work,” he-said. The State P ress Magazine A Mm L \Y E E K E Y I E G E T () \Y \ f O U H \ A 1 S tay in Touch w ith V o ice M all CYCLE INCLUDES: **'rf85Sn *«*■-'■** .- m M i i l i i l Hair Studio ►'High Pressured SoapI Best Price Best Wash j control box w¡ remaining wash time C H ECK U S O U T ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ Wb m B b m Pre-Soak Bubble Brush H o t Turtle W ax Tire/Englne Cleaner Rinse I j 25* Pow er Vacs (1 block east of Rural) 5TBËST | - Use your credit card or bank draft for hassle free installation! R eg u la r P n ce $ 1 5 m e n . $ 1 6 w o m en ' a n d P erm s $ 5 0 e n ti u p Touchless Automatic * 2 Terrace & Apache Coupon expires 9-8-90 967-3900 1905 E. Apache Blvd. Tempe, AZ 85281 Located Next to the Warehouse. Forest & Univ. Hours 9 a.m -8 p.m M on thru F ri A ‘S at 9 a m -5 p m SHOW US YOUR CURRENT STUDENT I.D .* YOU’LL GET A DINNER $ 498! •G reat on Gas •Low Insurance •Easy Maintenance •Easy Parking •Bring in Your ASU I D. for Discounts •First Time Buyer Plan for College Students “ Bring us your best deal & we’ll beat it ” % To«»' •Freight & Set-up Additional SAME DAY FINANCE Monday-Friday...... 8-9 Saturday.. ......8-6 Sunday.............. 10-6 This year we’re doing it againUEvery Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday), M ike Pulps of the S paghetti Com pany w ill give you one FREE dinner* fo r each dinner you order! It’s o tir 2 -fo r-l SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL A rid it’s good fo r the w hole school year at both our Tem po and Phoenix locations. Any day of the week, fo r lunch o r dinner, The Spaghetti Com pany is known fo r a great m eal at an affordable price. But the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL makes W our already te rrific prices even better! O ur dinners include a fu ll course m eal w ith a ll the trim m ings—from salad to dessert. So, d o llar for d o lla r, when you’re hungry and you need a break, you can’t beat the Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! W ith 2 dinners fo r the price o f 11 * But you MUST have your curre nt student I D. card w ith you to take advantage o f th is offer. 15% gratuity added to a ll discounted checks (except senior citize n discounts). Open at 11 a.m . to 11 p .m . Sundays Enjoy nightly drink specials on our patio. T h t ‘ASU’s Closest Dealer” ;,.Get Quick & Easy Service at S w estern Honda o f Scottsdale Com e ride w ith us! 6717 E. McDowell fcd. 994-8400 •Private. •N ever a busy signal. •24-hour service. •Prices start at only $1495/mo. For more information, call our voice mail box at 420-1260. 888-5462 ALL MODELS ON SALE from •Not an add-on to your phone, you don’t even need a phone. •Nothing to rent or buy. •Callers hear you. p a g e t t i (p m i» a n j^ R estau ran t M cD o w ell Phoenix R w estern Honda CO ^ ASU South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 2 5 7 -0 3 8 0 Chicken Cordon Blue. Steak p i Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala and orders to go ARE N O T IN C L U D E D in the 2-for-1 special. in OlcLTown Tempe 4th Street and Mill 966-3848 Page 16 State Press Thursday, August 30,1990 T elescope C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 8 . justice into their own hands.” Both said there would be no violence. Hughes argued that Congress unmistakably intended that the Arizona-Idaho act adhere to requirements of the Endangered Species Act, which provides for a new biological study of an endangered species under certain conditions. He also contended that the 1988 biological opinion, which concluded that an observatory could be built without unacceptable risk to the Squirrel, clearly included such a provision. But Marquez noted that Congress had received a report early this month from aU . S. Fish and Wildlife Service team recommending reinitiation of consultation — bureaucratic language for conducting another biological opinion —but has not acted on it. “The bottom line is that it’s up to Congress,” Marquez said. On March 26, Marquez granted Hughes’ request for a 120-day injunction, but a San Francisco appeals court overturned it in May. Marquez also had urged Congress to re-examine the 1988 biological opinion, resulting in the General Accounting Office telling Congress in June that the opinion was flawed and needed updating, with the squirrel’s fate increasingly precarious. The 30-day Fish and Wildlife review followed, recommending a new study, but the U. S. Justice Department interceded, and with Agriculture lawyers concluded that under the Arizona-Idaho act, biological study requirements concerning the first three telescopes had been satisfied. IN JU R E D IN A N A C C ID E N T ? YOU SHOULD KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS! •F R E E 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 for cases of clear liability or serious injury •Home, evening & hospital appointments available BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY CALL BAKER & MARCUS P e rs o n a l In ju ry La w y e rs D O N ’T G E T H U R T T W IC E State Press Advertising... We help you find it! I Æ Rest easy... the State Press will be on the stands when you get to campus. 4 3 8 -1 2 1 2 4 6 2 5 S. Wendler Dr., Suite III, Tempe u s TO THE TEST. put • LSAT PSYCH • NDB FLEX • • G M A T • GRE • M C A T • DAT • GRE • • G R E B IO • O A T • T O E F L • N M B • N C L E X -R N • M SK P • F M G E M S • C G F N S • C PA • BAR EXA M • N TE I t 's T i m e If y o u ha v e to ta k e o n e o f th e s e tests, ta k e K a p la n first. O u r s tu d e n ts g e t th e h ig h e s t sco res. W e 'v e p ro v e n It to o v e r o n e m illio n s tudents. L e t us pro v e it to you. IKAPLAN T o P la y ! T a k e K ap la n o r T a k e Y o u r C h a n c e s Free gift at time of enrollment, while supplies last. 967-2967 IN A SSO CIATIO N W ITH CARPET AR IZO N A STATE UNIVERSITY RECREATIONAL SPORTS You D on't Have To Be Rich To C arp et Your Derm All You Need Is S45 [12 ‘x9’] Many colors and patterns 6 2 4 W . Broadway Mesa. Arizona 8 9 0 -1 1 5 2 DIVISIONS SPORT u tilitie s . Pool, w asher/dryer, dishw asher, ceiling fans; m aster room . Own bath. 423-8027. 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C all 491-9546. Let S ta te P res s C la ss ified s w o rk fo r you! A PAPAGO Park II condo fo r sale. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, upgraded everything. A ll a p p lia n c e s s ta y . M odel c o n d itio n . Assum e, no qualifying w ith $3,500 down. S cott. 967-0518. W est USA. CONSIDERATE, DULL graduate student seeks nonsm oking room m ate; 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. M ill/A lam eda, $177 plus u tilitie s . P refer graduate or law student, w ill consider seriou s undergraduate. M ark, 965-5606 DOBSON RANCH, room in house on lake. A ll am enities. $275/m onth, V i u tilitie s . M ale/fem ale. Steve, 491-0242. FEMALE NONSMOKER, not allergic to c a ts . $170/m onfh p lu s V i u tilitie s ,. U niversity/E vergreen. 3 bedroom . Contact Sunny or Laura, 844-1424. RESPONSIBLE FEMALE to share 2 bedroom /2 bath furnished condo at W orth­ ington Place. Own room , pool, jacuzzi, volleyball. $330/m onth plus V i u tilitie s . H alf o ff firs t m onth’s rent. Available August 1. 921-2920 ONE BEDR O O M , one bath condo, w asher/dryer, refrig era tor. W alk to ASU. $325/m onth. C all Karen, 345-1919. Personals are only $1.40! FEMALE/MALE ROOMMATE fo r beauti­ fu l, q u ie t 3 bedroom p a tio hom a. Dishwasher, m icrowave, w asher/dryer, pool/jacuzzi. Bedroom w ith double closet, own bath. No sm oking, pets. $220/m onth, V3 u tilitie s . 831*2939. GAY MALE, share lu xury apartm ent. Pool, ja cuzzi, a ll am enities. Freeway/Dobson. $212 plus V i; 437-1048. 2 BEDROOM/1 bath townhouse. R efriger­ ator, w asher/dryer hookup, covered park­ in g , com m unity poo l. A t U n iv e rs ity /' M cCKntock- $425/m onth—unfurnished; $485/m onth—furnished. 968-9948. c c 's C lo se r C la ssic s 3 BEDROOM houses fenced yard, extra parkin g, sm all pets okay. Sneezing distance from ASU. $250 plus V i u tilitie s . C all 921-9683. CLEAN 3 bedroom . Q uiet neighborhood, large fenced yard. P erfect fo r students. $675/m onth. $500 special, firs t m onth. 890-8409. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, fireplace, washer/ dryer, dishw asher, garbage disposal, sto v e , re frig e ra to r, sw im m ing po o l. $550/m onth. 965-3850 (8-5); 945-7919, after 6 (leave m essage). THE HOTTEST CASUAL WEAR Guess, Levi's and o th e r g re a t labels FEMALE FOR furnished 3 bedroom , 2 bath condo. W asher/dryer, pool, tennis. N onsm oker. $225. 992-0088, days. 953-1159. FEMALE STUDENT to share very nice 2 bedroom , 2 bath townhom e near cam pus. Q uiet, m ature nonsm oker. Baseline/H ardy area. $250 plus V i u tilitie s . 345-7701. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, near ASU. 510: W est U niversity. Q uiet, pool. From $500/m onth. 966-0962. NEED CLOTHES? CASH? BUY • SELL ROOMS FOR RENT 4 BEDROOM, 2 bath, large fenced yard. W alk to ASU. $750 a m onth. 829-1859. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT ANNOUNCEMENTS RENTAL SHARING ROOM IN 4 bedroom house. $175/m onth, s p lit u tilitie s , 965-3850 (8-5); 945-7019, after 6 (leave m essage). W ALK TO ASU. Furnished house except bedroom . W asher/dryer, a ir conditioning, com puter! A va ila ble now . $170-240. 966-8478. HOMES FOR SALE AAAA $54,900. B lock 4 bedroom , 2 bath. $1,350 down plus $489/m onth. Principle and in te re st (10% APR— 30 years). Paul Pastore, 756-0000, R ealty Executives. AAAA W ALK to ASU. Sharp 4 bedroom , 2 bath. 1,570 square fe e t. $'2,100 down plus $625/m onth. P rinciple and interest (10% APR— 30 years). $69,900. Paul Pastore, 756-0000, R ealty Executives. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE CHEAPER THAN rent. N icely furnished 1984 condo overlooking pool. $59,900. C liff W inn-S onja, 964-2200. ONLY $100 down fo r Los Prados 2 bqdroom , 2 bath townhom e w ith in w alking distance to ASU. Save over $25,000 at only $40,000! W hy rent th is sem ester? G re g A s k in s , R e a lty E x e c u tiv e s , 966-0016. SHARP 2 bedroom . Ideal fo r ASU student. Close to pool and other am enities. C all Frank C lonts, C entury 21 Plaza, 831-1300 o r 838-2650. FURNITURE 1A QUEEN-SIZE set, brand new, never used. P erfect: m attress, box spring and fram e. S acrifice; $175. D elivery available. 275-8177. AAA DESK, 5-drawer, wood. Excellent condition. $75. 967-7514. BRAND. NEW custom -m ade sofa and loveseat. $499/both. Also, satin quilted, o riginal wrappers, never been slept on fu ll-s iz e box sp rin g and * m attress— $ l0 0 /s e t. Q ueen-size, $175. King-size, $220. U sually hom e, can deliver. Lim ited quantities. 839-1493. OFFICE FURNITURE sale! Desk from $39.95, chairs from $4.95, bookcases from $19.95. Com puter furn iture , file s and m ore. Arizona O ffice Liquidators, 5064 South 40th S treet (on 40th S treet, south of Broadway). 437-2224. OFFICE FURNITURE sale: Large inven­ to ry o f used desks, chairs, file s. % m ile from cam pus. Tem pe O ffice Furniture, 1370 East 8th S treet (1 block south o f U niversity between R ural and M cCtintock). M onday-Friday, 9-5pm ; Saturday, 10-3pm . 921-2695. ' QUEEN-SIZE NATURAL wood futon sofa, like new. $325 o r best offer. 786-1498. SEVEN-PIECE PLUSH sectional sofa, lig h t brown velour fa b ric in exceptional condition. $400/best o ffe r. 391-2476. USED FURNITURE store, 1950 North S cottsdale Road, 1 block north of M cDowell. 990-3364. USED FURNITURE, kitchen and baby item s fo r sale. S tudent prices. 730-9291. W o o d e n p ed esta l DRAWING/ D R A FTIN G TABLE TW O ROOMMATES wanted: lu xury 2 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished condo. 1 m ile to ASU- $350 includes a ll u tilitie s , phone, w asher/dryer, pool/jacuzzi. Nonsm oking, m ature fem ale. C all 829-7251. Available im m ediately. E x ce lle n t co n d itio n ! TWO ROOMMATES needed to share three bedroom house, very close to ASU. $200 per m onth plus V i u tilitie s . P refer fem ales. 941-5155 30” by 42” $75/OBO C a ll Page 82 FURNITURE TICKETS MOTORCYCLES BRAND NEW fu ll apartm ent furnishings. Q ueen, sofas, tables. M agnavox in-home stere o, 100-w att. N egotiable. Jason, 966-6023. RO UND-TRIP TIC KETS P hoenix to Newark, New Jersey. $150. Andrea, 969-9581. 1987 HONDA 'ELITE 80. Like new, only 6,000 m iles. $700/offer. M ust.sell. Andrea, 969-9581. COMPLETE 7-PIECE bedroom set w ith fu ll-s iz e bed. $210. In pine or oak finish. Can deliver. 973-3409. JEWELRY 1989 YAMAHA Riva Jog m otorscooter. Brand new, $750 o r offer. Cash only. 246-4194, after 4pm. CONTEMPORARY STYLE, full-size hktea-bed. Ivory/tan/m ocha-blended Herculon. V ery good condition. $80. Can deliver. G reg, 898-0284. D ELUXE FU LL-SIZE m attress sets, stored, never usisd. $90. Can deliver. 973-3409. DELUXE QUEEN-SIZE m attress sets, stored, never .used. $125. Also, 5-drawer chests. $39. Can deliver. 973-3409. D ELUXE TW IN -SIZE m attress sets, stored, never used. $75. Can deliver. 973-3409. FOR SALE: queen Size w aterbed/t.v., $50; com puter desk, $50. Prices negotiable. C all Amy* 921-1331. FOR SALE: Sofa and sofa sleeper, good condition. $75 each. C all 759-0272. FUTON BED/COUCH — Double S cott ò ,, 921-2843 $75. NEW STEREO cabinet. Oak finish with glass door fron t. $25. 968-8188 WEBB’S FURNITURE N e w & P re O w n e d 10% D iscount w /ASU ID All types of furniture for student's needs at student prices. 2 0 77 E . University 829-7259 Mattress Sale • • • • • Twin sets from $4895 Full sets from $5895 Queen sets from $8995 Lamps from $18** Seven Piece bedroom set from $1 BSP5 • Sofa and Loveseat from $ 1 7 9 « PLUS MUCH MORE! Furniture Depot-East 1240 W- U niversity,. Mesa. AZ 898-1456 . 3332 Furniture 3332. W. M cDow ell. Phoenix. AZ 233-2236 CASH FOR gold, diam onds. MHI Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. MHI, S uite 101, Tempe. 968-5967 B u y it. s e ll it, f i nd i t . tel l i l . S t d t e P r e s s ( l.is s if ie d s MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE CALCULATOR — SCIENTIFIC program m ­ able HP-41 CX. Advantage Pack m ath program s, extended m em ory, m anuals. $400-plus lis t. $200. K ürt, 554-8850. EASY A! Botony 108 notes, typed, w ith sketches. Took last sem ester, so notes are yours before the le cture! $25. Call 784-8142. ELECTRIC W HEELC HAIR E xce lle nt condition, make offer. M ust s e ll. 491-2549. TRANSPORTATION 1977 BMW 320i. Tan, sunroof, am /fm , air, a u to m a tic ! 9 4 ,0 0 0 m ile s . $ 3 ,0 0 0 . 951 3405 1978 TOYOTA C orolla Kftback, 2-door, 5-speed, no a ir conditioning. O therw ise, great car, one ow ner, runs well« $950. 990-3579. 1987 CAMARO. B lack, t-tops, V6. autom a­ tic , a ir conditioning, a ll options, excellent condition. $6,500. 431-1759. 1967 CRX S I. Q uick, red, 5-speed, sunroof, cassete, a ir, 33,000 m iles. P erfect. $87,700/offer. 943-6685! 1988 SUZUKI Sam urai convertible, red/ w hite. 23,000 m iles, a ir, AM /FM /cassette. $5,995/offer. 482-1016. COMMODORE AM IGA500, 1 Meg RAM, color stereo m onitor, dual floppies, extras. $1.200/offer. Robyn, 345-2007. 1990 MAZDA 323, 5-speed, a ir, AM/FM cassette, w arranty. Low mHes. 964-8183, $7,70Q/best offer. IBM COMPUTER, 286 tu rb o , 1 meg RAM, 33 meg hard drive, 5.25, 3.35 hard-disk drive, VGA m onitor, m ouse, softw are included W ord Perfect-5.1 plus m ore. Dan, 966-9383. $800— Dependable, cheap transporta­ tio n . Good tire s and brakes. 1979 Toyota. S uzanne, 965-3145 (day). 784-4756 (evening). IBMC0MPATIBUCOMPUTERS From $449 1985 CHEVY S-10 pickup. 35,000 m iles. V ery dea n. 967-3392 days, 967-5682 evenings. $3,750. REMOTE CONTROL auto alarm system w ith m otion detector, sta rte r k ill. Interior red, LED panic in dicator, new in box. M ust se ll. $79. 898-1195. 640 K, Monitor, Keyboard, Software $ $ $ $ T h e C o m p u te r Concern IN S T A N T C A S H fo r y o u r v e h ic le s ! 1 0 0 0 E. Apache. # 1 1 9 Tem pe. 9 2 1 -1 1 2 9 Buy & sell new and used computers, printers, and software. 225 W. University Next to Buffalo Exchange M,!SS Financing Available AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most m ajor citie s. Gas allow ances available. 21 o r older. C all 279-2000, then 4530. TRAVEL FLY ANYW HERE USA. In you nam e! 48 sta te s , $285-400. A laska, $500-600. H aw aii, Europe, etc. You can leave today. A ls o b u yin g tra n s fe ra b le co u p o n s/ vouchers. Top prices paid. Travel Tips, 968-7283 (YOU-SAVE) BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES SPORTS MARKETING internship. Sales assistant needed to help unique sports career developm ent organization w ith daily activities. Send resum e and cover le tte r to: Sports Careers, P.O. Box 10129, Phoenix, Arizona 85064. A tte ntion: Jeff W asson. C losing date: 9/7/90. HELP WANTED— GENERAL NOW HIRING a ll positions. Bartenders, bar backs, cocktail, w aitresses, doorm en. A pply in person between 10am and 4pm. 919 East Apache, 921-9776. GLAMOUR SHOTS. Paradise V alley M all. Now h iring. Do you lik e to be surrounded, by beautiful women? W anted: Energetic, outgoing persons w ith in terest in photo­ graphy. E xciting w ork environm ent. Parttim e, fle xib le hours. C all 946-7507. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTORS needed. A rizona's to p dub lo oking fo r enthusiastic, new teachers. C all 941-3496. GYMNASTICS COACH needed, 40th S treet and Thom as. $6 to $10 hourlyweekdays. R obin, 244-8922. IN N O V A TIV E M A R K ETIN G program needs sales representative fo r Arizona S tate m arketing. Excelent money oppor­ tu n ity . Local a d ve rtisin g experience necessary. G ary, 1(800)874-5005. RESEARCH ASSISTANT for business consulting firm in Tem pe. M ust have Lotus 1-2-3 experience. H ours variable, up to 20/week. Rate negotiable. 764-1617, ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT needed by Scottsdale accounting firm . C om pletion of basic accounting courses required. Flexi­ ble hours. S alary plus incentive. C all for appointm ent, 483-1477. Com prehensive Business Services. Call Joan, 998-5673 CAT LOVER wanted. Upperclassm an needed to clean house, run errands,. do occasional cooking, m iscellaneous odd jobs fo r w orking couple w ith cats. Car and references required. $6/hour plus errand m ileage. M onday-Friday, 3-6pm . R ural/ Southern area, Tem pe. C a ll Stephanie, 838-1643 o r 897-3044. CONTACT PERSON needed. C ontacting cuistom ers to see if further services are needed. 4-5 hours/w eekly. 437-1.048. CO-WORKERS NEEDED to sta ff busy Tem pe copy center. Full-tim e, graveyard and day positions available. M ust be outgoing and enjoy w orking w ith people. Please apply at K inko’s o f A rizona, 1130 East U niversity no. 209, Tem pe 85018. KW IK STOP h irin g im m ediately fu ll- and part-tim e cashiers. F lexible hours. Bene­ fits after probationary period. 12 valley lo cation*. Apply: 4801 East E llio t Road, Ahwatukee. MAKE OVER $25/hour. Sell T -shirts in dorm s and apartm ent’ com plexes w ith absolutely no finan cial obligations. C all 966 - 0608 . NEEDED— MOTIVATED person to work poolside a t area resorts sellin g suncare and sunw ears. Full-tim e positions avail­ a b le . O w n tra n s p o rta tio n re q u ire d . 941-2751. NONSMOKER w ith strong secretarial, m ath and gram m ar to w ork fo r finan cial planning firm . W ork Tuesday-Friday, 9-3pm , Ahwatukee area. 496-6402. PART-TIME M OBILE DJ, weekend work. Train ing available. M ust have dependable vehicle. 820-8220. PART-TIME LAB techs needed. WHI train. Apply: N orthland Research, 2308 South R ural Road, Tem po, Arizona. PERFECT STUDENT jo b, fle xib le hours A pply at: Aaron’s C ar W ash, Terrace/ Apache, o r c a ll Sky, 964-8941. PRESCHOOL STAFF, full-tim e, part-tim e, fle xib le hours, M onday-Friday. O utgoing, caring. M esa: Pam, 839-9590; Tem po/ C handler: T e ri, 899-4664. Noteiakers Wanted (Hilton Village) 965-4169 1985 SILVER Honda E lite I5 0 c c Fantas­ tic deal. M ust se ll, only $495. 967-9137. Assistant to help m aintain household Answer phones, clean, iron, som e shopping, cooking and misc. duties. CANVASERS NEEDED. Fun part-tim e jobs. M ust be 17 o r older, able to work 5-9pm , M onday th ro u g h T hu rsda y. $4/hour plus bonuses. C all M r. Baker, 894-0110. All graduate students eligible. Undergraduate upperclass­ men with a 3.3 GPA or above eligible. All undergraduates with a 3.3 G P A . or better registered in a class with an enrollment larger than 100 are eligible to be a notetaker for that course. 1965 HONDA Shadow 700 18,000 mHes, black, ve ry good cond ition. $1,650. 423-0606, TELEPHONE INTERVIEW ERS needed fo r m arketing research. Evening and weekend sh ifts. N o sales. W alk from cam pus. $4.50 an hour to start. 829-3282, Higginbotham Associates. HOUSEHOLD MANAGEMENT BUSINESS/MARKETING MAJOR needed 3 hours per day« $6 per hour, to nationally telephone m arket and book speaking engagem ents for personalities. Scottsdale and Cam elback Roads location. 941-0572. Experienced only. “Country Glazed Ham” 1984 KAWASAKI 750. G ood condition. M ust'se ll, m oving out o f state. $700/offer. Andrea, 969-9581. STUDENT ORGANIZATION needed to represent bank on ASU cam pus. Excellent opportunity to raise m oney for your organi­ zation. For m ore inform ation, c a ll Mark Field, (602)446*8773. F U L L /P A R T -T IM E C O U N TER h e lp wanted. M ornings best. Class Q uotes, AS U B o o k s to re S e rv ic e C o u n te r, 965-4170. ASU IS ca llin g on y o u ..!to jo in the Telefund team ! Convenient on-cam pus loca­ tio n , Sunday-Thursday shifts available, 5:30-9:30pm , earn up to $10/hour speak­ ing w ith alum ni nationw ide If you have a positive a ttitud e and w ant to gain valuable experieh^e, pick up jo b refe rral no.6665 at the Student Em ploym ent o ffice o r c a ll us at 965-6754. H iring now !! Growth oriented specialty restaurant is currently accepting applications for the following positions: • Retail sales clerks F/T, P/T AM • Food service clerks F/T, P/T Lunch Flexible hours. Competitive salaries. Apply in person; 6107 N. Scottsdale Rd. 1983 YAMAHA m oped fo r sale. $150. M ust sell! C all Jenn ifer a t 894-9130. SPORTS-MINDED: HIRING im m ediately, ASU office. $8-10/hotir. P art-tim e/full-tim e. P erfect fo r students, day/evenjng. C all 921-6282. ENTERTAINERS W ANTED fo r Jeature film s, TV com m ercials. Photo sessions. CEEC Entertainm ent, 274-6362. ASSEM BLY PROGRAMER, part-tim e Close to ASU. R apidly grow ing com pany is looking fo r students w ith strong math aptitude to w rite softw are to t Real Tim e m ulti-user operation system s applications fo r VAX and the 68020. To apply, c a ll Ticketm aster at 968-2323. $ $ $ $ MOTORCYCLES SPOKE SHOP is looking fo r part-tim e sales and m echanic help. M orning hours and weekends. C all C hris at 921-3466. HELP WANTED— GENERAL ANIM AL HOSPITAL in Chandler, prim arily clean-up and som e vet assistance. A fter­ noon, evening, weekends. C all 963-2340. A ll m a k e s & c o n d itio n s . I ’ll com e to y o u r lo c a tio n ! U s a 4 8 4 -7 0 5 5 COM PUTER M ULTI-SYSTEM S TW O SONORA 26 inch 18-speed moun­ ta in bikes. O nly used three tim es. Have purchase receipt. M ust sacrifice, $275 per bike. 994-4126: ROOMMATE. NEEDED. Free room in "T h e Towers” in exchange fo r personal assistant to handicapped student. C all B rian at 350-0535. SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS and s ch o o l, nurses needed fo r M esa P ublic Schools. Teacher/nurse and/or substitute ce rtifica te required. C ontact C arol G. in Personnel O ffice at 898-7723. NISHIKI TOURING bike, $250, blue, 19-inch, 15-speed. C ruiser bike, $100, green, 19-inch, 3-speed. Neal, 966-0801. a u t o m o b il e s 1wM JEEP W agoneer Ltd. G old, leather, loaded. Excellent cond ition, one owner. 88,000 m iles. $7,500. 951-3405. XT, MONITOR, m ouse, modem , pnnter, softw are, surge protector $990. Velu, 965-2518 (day), 968-5872 (evenings). MOUNTAIN BIKE, 1989 specialized Rockhopper. Good condition. $325! Dave, 921-7589. SCHW INN 27-INCH 12-speed street bike. Have purchase receipt. $100. 994-4128. HELP WANTED— GENERAL STUDENTS W ANTÈD to hand out sam ples o f lecture notes in fro n t of auditorium s on cam pus. W e schedule you to w ork in between your classes. $3 fo r T5 m inutes’ w ork. A pply in person at thé ASU Bookstore service counter or 965-4169, Class Q uotes, fo r inform ation. GREAT DEAL. Like new cam pus cruiser, $100 or best offer, c a ll Tina, 968-0125. M ust se ll. STURDY WOOD crates— four sizes. $3, $2. Perfect shelving and storage units for students, 264*7774. 1971 VW Bug, shiny red paint, everything new, no dents. Runs excellent. M ust see and d rive . $1,900/offer. 968-7363. $100 SIGNING bonus. TM I C orporation, ranked in the ‘T o p 10” by the telem arket­ ing industry’s trade m agazine fo r the past 7 years, is now h iring to r fa ll. $5,50/hour guaranteed. R ealistic earning potential to $ l0 /h o u r. Flexible scheduling— you set your own hours around your classes! Day and evening hours available. Paid, profes­ sional trainin g, C ontests, prizes, fu rij frie n d ly faces. Receive a $100 signing bonus (a fte r 60 days em ploym ent) by applying now. Call today fo r a personal interview : 967-0066. Ask fo r Stacy Iriand. TM I C orporation, Broadway and M ill Avenue, Tem pe. (EÔE). 1989 SCHW INN ten-speed, used one sem ester. Red, 27-inch, lik e new. $110, Dan, 829-1544. RALEIGH' 10-SPEED, A ustrian 10-speed, w om an's R aleigh 10-speed, wom an's m ountain bike. Bob, 968-9589. Also 5-speed Tandem. USED VACUUMS, a ll reconditioned and guaranteed. Perfect fo r dorm s, etc. B ill’s Appliance and F ixit, 7515 East M cDowell, Scottsdale. 946-7487. HELP WANTED— GENERAL BICYCLES MOVIE POSTERS— D ie H ard, A ir Am eri­ can, Young G uns, W ild at H eart, Flatliners, Robocop, Darkm an and m ore. 829-1245 1984 HONDA CRX, a ir conditioning, stereo, cassette. G ood condition, 82,000 m iles. 829-7497. $3,300. BRAND NEW IBM com patible 286 com plete system . Includes 40Meg hard drive/floppy, 14-inch VGA color m onitor and printer. $59/m onth, 2-year w arranty, parts/labor. 966-3004. SCOOTER; HONDA E lite 250cc, freeway legal, gold. Runs great, near ASU. Asking $900? M atthew, 894-0683. PANW O RLD /ITO H 10-SPEEDS, both ready to ride, w ill d eliver to ASU- $50 each/offer. 956-7351. 1980 CHEVETTE. 5-door, 4-speed, new brakes, 82,000 m iles, a ir conditioning, radio. $1,200/offer. 968-5918. COMPUTERS '89 SZR Yam aha. B lack on black. P erfect * cond ition. 4,000 m iles. A ll receipts. R ecent tune-up, rear M etzler. $4,200. 820-8702 _______ . ■. HUGE MOVING sale! Com er o f 15th S tre e t and C o llege. B ikes, dishes, bedroom , dining, and Irving room fu rn i­ ture. This Friday and Saturday, 8-4. 1978 TOYOTA C o rolla. G ood tire s , brakes, d u tch and a strong engine. 200-w att Pioneer stéréo cassette. Some body dam age, p a id $1,100, asking $795/ofter. C all Ed, 784*8739. 966-1388 0P" State Press Thunday^i3urt3^222^ Applications available at: Class Quotes ASU Bookstore Service Counter PART TIME $8«to$10Mflir Full T rain in g $ 5 .5 0 /h r G uaranteed • NEW EXPANSION • • NEW OFFICES • • NEW LOCATION • W alking d istance from ASU • NEW HOURS • early morning, morning, afternoon, evening, weekend As our Telemarketing Representatve, you would work in a fun professional environment contacting customers nationwide for major clients earning great part time money on a schedule that you set up. For confidential inter­ view, please call extension #33 at: D IA L A M E R IC A 894-0264 Ask fo r extension #33 State Press HELP WANTED— GENERALEARN MONEY offe rin g service around cam pus. Your hours. Even w ork around other job. N ot Amway or NuSkin. C all for inform ation/interview . 234-3000. ENERGETIC, OUTGOING person needed fo r outside printin g sales. Part-tim e, fle xi­ b le h o u rs , e x c e lle n t c o m m is s io n . 968-7771. ENGINEERING TECHNICIAN, fu ll o r parttim e. One year m inim um M echanical Engineering o r Technology. Some job experience required. Phone 956-8200. THÉ NEW outdoor Phoenix Desert Sky PayiHion is now accepting applications for u s h e rin g s u p e rv is o rs . E x p e rie n c e preferred. O ver 18 w ith good organization­ al sk ills , s ta ff m anagem ent, and a b ility to m otivate others. D uties to include schedul­ ing and p ayroll preparation. Pick up application at 7611 W est Thomas, no. 109, Phoerax (W estridge M all). THE NEW outdoor Phoenix Desert Sky P avillion is now accepting applications for box o ffice personnel. Box Office experi­ ence preferred. O ver 18/ W ork w ell w ith pub lic P ick up application at 7611 W est Thom as, no. 109, Phoenix (W estridge M all) THE PRECIOUS PETAL is now h irin g for rose safes. For interview , c a ll A lisa, 844-9492, m essage. THE ROSE Company is now h irin g for rose safes in nightclubs and restaurants. C all fo r interview , 921 -8855. W ANTED: RESPONSIBLE person for property m anagem ent position. $6/hour 20 hours/week: Kevin, 967-8284. W ESTERN RESERVE C lub C ourtside C afe now hirin g fo r m orning and afternoon positions. Free m em bership for good w orker. Apply 2140 East Broadway, Tem pe. Ask fq r M ark. EOE. REALTOR’S ASSISTANT V a rie d a n d challanging position! N e e d o rg an ized in d iv id u a l to a n s w e r p h o n e s , d o re s e a rc h , w o rd p ro ce s s in g , etc. w ith active realtor Call Joan, 998-5673 HELP WANTED— CLERICAL $5/HQ UR TYPIST, cle rk for drug store in Phoenix Close to ASU. C all fo r interview , 956-8540 A DOCTOR’S o ffice in Scottsdale needs fu ll- and part-tim e help. M ust type well. 941-3812. HELP WANTED— GENERAL Page 23 Thursday, August 3 0 ,19 9 0 HELP WANTED— CLERICAL CRT PHONE operators. Requires a clear speaking voice, basic typing s k ills (20 w ords/m inutes) M orning, part-tim e hours available. D uties in clu d e :'ta kin g incom ing phone calls, accessing com puterized data file and data entry. $4.75/hour. Located in Tem pe, near ASU. C ontact personnel, 9 -1 1am o r 1-3pm , M o n d a y-F rid a y. 894-1800. EXCELLENT O PPORTUNITIES. Good ben efit plans fo r fu ll-tim e em ployees. Executive housekeeper, $16-18,000; fron t desk supervisor, fro n t desk, fu ll-tim e and part-tim e. Q uality Inn, E llio t and 1-10,5121 East La Puente Avenue, Phoenix, 85044. PART-TIM E SEC R ETAR Y/C LER IC AL, H il'e l Jew ish S tudent C ènter, ASU, Tem pe. W ordP erfect, database s k ills n e ce ssa ry. H o urs: 3*6pm , M onday through Thursday. C all 967-7563, V icki. HELP WANTED— EOOD SERVICE $5 PER hour. Rocky’s Subs. Part-tim e, weekdays. Across from Sky Harbor, 40th S treet and A iriane. BITS’N PIZZAS now h irin g cooks and bus. Apply in person at 3030 N orth 68th S treet, Scottsdale. HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE STÔCKŸARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch w aitress. A pply in person: 5001 East W ashington, 10-11:30am , and a fte r 1:30pm. A C C E P T IN G A P P L IC A T IO N S for drivers & counter help. Earn up to $8/hr. SAMMY B ’S 945-8850 RESTAURANTS/ BARS 6 EAST LOUNGE 6 E. 7th St. Tempe 25$ pool Music Happy Hour M -F 3-6 966-2111 ARE YOU a student? Is it your birthday? B ring your valid college ID to the State Press cla ssified departm ent in the south basem ent o f M atthews C enter and you’ll get a free 15-word personal ad! Happy B irthday!! BAOW : HAPPY anniversary, Sweetie! Thanks fo r the best 12 m onths— I love you! Love, Bunny. CHRIS, THE num ber is 967-6645. C all th is w eekend! E ric. DELTA SIGMA P i. For business students. For a fu tu re See us next Week a t the Dean’s Patio. FOOTBALL FANATICS: Fantasy Football League form ing now! D raft NFL players and m anage your own team . B ig prizes! C all and ask fo r Thé Com m issioner at 966-5997. G L A S S H O U S E E N T E R T A IN M E N T im ports New Y ork’s hottest DJ fo r your party. House m usic a ll night long; By G reg F. 24 hour hotline. 392-3197. THE DEKE Lawn and Tennis Club has started another season o f tournam ent play- G et ready fo r the M exican Open th is weekend. CHILDCARE BABYSITTER NEEDED— Friday and Saturday evenings, approxim ately 3-6 hours/night. $3.50/hour. Transportation needed (C entral Phoenix). 840-7447' PART-TIME W AITRESS and daytim e bartender for W oodshed II, 2-3 days a week, $8-12 per hour. Flexible hours. A pply in person: U n iversity/D obson. 844-7433 FEMALE STUDENTS! Need ch ild care for 2 children. W ill re n t roam fo r services or pay by hour. Evenings, 5:30pm -12am ; T u e s d a y th ro u g h T h u rs d a y . C a ll 926-0271 PETE'S 19TH Tee is now accepting a p p lic a tio n s fo r p a rt-tim e p o sitio n s: cashier, w aitress, cook and beverage cart. Apply at 1405 N orth M ill Avenue (R olling H ills G olf Course), 1 m ile north o f M ill Avenue Bridge. FUN-LOVING NONSMOKER needed to care fo r toddler and newborn, part-tim e. Scottsdale area, references required. 990-0377. PETS DALMATION PUPPY, AKC, m ale, 8 weeks. Shots. Cham pion line. $350. 921-9268, leave m essage. FREE LOST/FOUND FOUND: BRACELET on Palm W alk last Friday. C all and identify. 965-4512. FOUND: SUNGLASSES on cam pus, August 8th, Student Services. C all to claim , 946-9421. PERSONALS Today! AM ELIA— SEPTEMBER 8— M cD uffy's— to w atch the D evils? C all me— Kim. HAVE YOU Heard about TKE’s “New M em ber” program ? W ell, stop by our table on the m all to fin d out m ore. NOW HIRING w aitresses and W aiters, m orning and evening shifts available. Full and part-tim e. B etter than any startin g pay. Q uality Inn, E lliot a n d l-1 0 , 5121 East La Puente Avenue, Phoenix, 85044. HELP WANTED— GENERAL ALL TAKE heed. .. The Dragon is back!! GOOD LUCK to the Deke pledges- carry on th e tra d itio n of excellence. NOW HIRING a ll positions. Bartenders, bar backs, cocktail, w aitresses, doorm en. A pply Tuesday, 8/4, between 10am and 4pm . 919 East Apache, 92V9776. TACO CABANA is h irin g students, 1fpm -7am s h ift. $4/hour to start, parttim e. Apply: 25 W est U niversity. AARON LAW TON: Read the personals for future enlightenm ent! ; DELTA SIGMA Pi. Don’t ju st s ta rt a sem ester, sta rt a future. CORK ‘N Cleaver accepting applications fo r lunch W aitress and lunch hostess. Short shifts. Convenient hours. Fun atm o­ sphere. WiH tra in . Concern w ith appear­ ance, personality and re lia b ility are im por­ tant. A pply in person, M onday-Friday, 2-5pm or by appointm ent 5101 N orth 44th S treet, Phoenix (44th Street/Cam elback). 952-0585. SW ENSEN’S TEMPE has im m ediate openings fo r cooks, w aitresses, counter help and bus/dish. Day and night shifts available. F ull- o r part-tim e. G reat hours fo r school schedules, interview s: M ondayFriday, 4-5pm : P rice/B aseline. PERSONALS HEY COLLEGE students! D id you know th a t personal ads are only $1.40 per day fo r 15 w ords? W hat a great (and cheap) way to le t som eone special know ju s t how special they really are! LIVE-IN NANNY fo r 2 school-age children, 2 -6 p m , M o n d a y -F rid a y , o c c a s io n a l weekends and evenings. Room and board plus salary. 2 blocks from cam pus. 967-3392 days, 967-5682. SERVICES ELECTRO LYSIS— PERMANENT hair rem oval. Remove unw anted hair forever. Student discounts. C all fo r m ore inform a­ tio n : 969-6954. HAIR REMOVAL — Both electrolysis and w axing. Safe, ste rile , effective. Spider vains, also. U niversity and C ountry C lub. 962-6490 PH IL MICKELSON— C ongratulations on the U.S. Am ateur! You d id great Sunday! PI PHI Laura Booth— Not long u n til you w ear your fetters. G et excited! Love, Lacy. REMEMBER, “ Be a TKE, not a pledge.” RICK— THANX fo r everything! W ithout you, th is sum m er w ould d e fin ite ly been trom odic!! Love— Ted. SK STEPHANIE- thank you fo r being my heart sister. You are the greatest. SK love, Annette. APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need it fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. C all anytim e. P ric e s are c o m p e titiv e , n e g o tia b le . 966-2186. FLYING FINGERS hps_ M aclntosh/laser qua lity and now Fax-a-Shirt. C all 945-1551 fo r details. IM PROVISATIONAL MOVEMENT and theatre classes. C hallenging your m axi­ mum level o f expression. Classes bagin O ctober 1. A ctors W orkshop, Jam es, 966-9423 TUTORS ACCOUNTING AND finance professional in struction, study aides and exam ination strategies. Rates from $6/hour. 497-2097, G il. ACCOUNTING 211 tu to r needed! O ne on one in struction— rate is negotiable. O nly fo r afternoo ns/e venin gs. Pleasé c a ll G retchen at 829-1338 (leave m essage). ENGLISH TUTOR for International and ALCP students. Rates negotiable. A vail­ able weekends. C a ll T raci, 983-0607, leave m essage. LET ME do your typing/w ord processing. $1.50 per page. Fast/accurate service. C all M aureen, 955-0969. MATH TUTORING by m ath professor. In d iy u d u a l ra te s and g ro u p ra te s. 990-0492. MESA SECRETARIAL Sérvice, com puter­ ized, laser printer, fu ll graphics. 15 m inutes from ASU. N ortheast corner, M esa Drive and Brown Road. 844-1876. MATH TUTORING: MAT106, 117, 118, 119, 210, plus. Form er m ath teaching assistant w ith degree in m ath. C all Tony, 249-2267. TYPING SERVICE run by professional w rite r. G ram m ar c o rre c te d , w ritin g im proved. Neat, fa st, low est rates. ASU location. 894-6768. TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING, $1/page. Laser printin g included. You deliver and pick up. Alm a School Road/Baseline. Jan, .8 97-1744; ; V / . W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c re ta ria l ' services. 23 years experience. Student discounts. Southw est corner, M iller and C haparral. 994-8145. NEED. STATISTICS tu to r. Paula, 968-3541. AERO BIC INSTRUCTO R c e rtific a tio n workshop in Mesa. W eekend: O ctober 5-7, by N ational A erobics T raining Association. C all 963-9415; A SCOTTSDALE learning center: 20 m inute drive from cam pus needs 2 teach­ ers. Choose any 8-20 hours, M ondayThursday, 1:3Q-8:30pm. You need to speak eithe r French, Spanish, o r both and be able to teach 1 o r 2 o f these subjects at H igh School level: C hem istry, Physics, A lgebra, G eom etry, C alculus. $8-$10 per hour. Gas m oney w ill be covered. M ust have own transportation. P refer' grad Student. 953-3070. 10% Coupon good for é J & N Automotive .Mustl Ken’s Mobile Auto service receive ^ 1501 E. Apache * 967-5843 E xp ire s 12-11-90 Please c a ll NEED TUTOR fo r R eading Com prehen­ sion, speed-reading s k ills and outlinin g. C a ll 968-3541. HOTELS/MOTELS at The Hospitality Suite Resort Scottsdale INSTRUCTION only 1 V i m iles north o f cam pus! Rates effective 'throug h 9/15/90 IN C L U D E S : Full B re a k fas t Daily, Complimentary Cocktail Hour Daily, Daily Maid Service. Weekly Rates Starting a t $149 IN C L U D E S : C om p lim e n ta ry Cocktail Hour Daily, Twice Weekly Maid Service. Suites with FUJI Kitchens Three Pools & Jacuzzi Two Lighted Tennis Courts Restaurant & lounge Call today and ask for the ASU “ Suite” Special 409 N. Scottsdale Rd. TENNIS INSTRUCTORS wanted to fill part-tim e positions. C all Scott Hoyt, 784-1586 Your Individual ÆÎM Horoscope ^ 0 INS E C U R IT Y P A C IF IC B A N K ARIZONA Stop in mnd nembn your ttrtt o r ttf o f student checkt FREE! 619 S. M ill, Tem pe FOR FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1990 ARIES __ (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Moré travel will be on your agenda in the coming months. It’s a good day to schedule interviews and to meet with higher-ups. Career progress is assured now. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) r® T E’ttra energy will be devoted to making money in the months ahead. A new source of income is likely to arise. This is an excellent time Tor dealings with agents. . GEMINI ^ (May 21 to June 20) Iw You’ll be more self-assertive in the coming weeks and will be beginning several new projects. Talks with bankers, brokers, and real estate agents are favored now. CANCER ^ (June 21 to July 22) HK A research project will soon be on your agenda. Partners will be sharing responsibilities now, yet there will also be time for a special evening outing for two. LEO SERVICES • Convenient location — 3 blocks from ASU Tempo’s largest and friendliest H U S Telemarketing Center. Call for personal interview and ask for Samantha Patterson: ALL PAPERS, resum es, le tters, docu­ m ents, transcribing', editing, m ailings. C ollege graduate using IBM com puter. M ike, 964-0994. INSTRUCTION Frances Drake= JAKE— Your “ little sis te r” is psyched to see you!! C aH lier. • Paid professional training • Enhance your communications skills $1.75 AND up, professional word proces­ sor and form er English teacher. Laser prin te r. C laudia, 964-6012. MORNINGS, EXPERIENCED w ith infant (5 m onths). References and CPR required. W alk to cam pus. K atherine, 345-8442, days; 921-7929, evenings: IF YOU are interested in jo in in g a social fra te rn ity, Tau Kappa Epsilon in vites you to a Phoenix F irebirds baseball game Thursday. S top by our table on the M all for tickets. • $5.50 an hour guaranteed • Earn up to $10 an hour • Set your own schedule around classes TYPING/WORD PROCESSING (July 23 to Aug. 22) tW l Social life picks Up in the next few months and you may find yourself involved in some group project. Career endeavors meet with success today. Money talks áre favored. VIRGO »a t Aug. 20 to Sépt.22) SC You’ll have more-than one iron in the fire as far as your career is concerned. in the immediate future. You'll enjoy a talk with a child today. Recreational interests áre a plus! LIBRA a, (Sept.23toOct.22) x Yoti'll be hiring a new agent, lawyer o r representative in the hext month or so. Travel too will be on yojUr agenda. Today theaccent is on family ánd domestic decisions. - Copyright 1990 by King 431 -4705 , WE W ANT TO BE YOUR BANK FOR LIFE. SCORPIO ^ (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) HR You'll be making important invest­ ment decisions in the next month or so. Today, creative endeavors are highlighted. Important communica­ tions are favored. SAGITTARIUS ¿ tA (Nov. 22 to D**r (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) The coming m onths find you making important changes at home. Visits with old friends are favored now. Partnership interests too are happily highlighted;'' YOU BORN TOpAY have perfec­ tionist tendencies and will work long hours to perfect your skills. Although both creative and practical, you sometimes have difficulty reconciling these qualities. You have a strong ego and are at home in front of an audience. Businesses allied to the arts often appeal to you, though you yourself may also be creatively talented.. Birthdate of: Arthur God­ frey, TV star; Ted Williams, baseball star; and bore Schary, playwrightproducer. Features Syndicate, Inc. Making the grade in college fashions. You'll score an A+ when you wear these ultracool fashions From Granite. Made of pure rayon, our novelty jackets, pants and skirts pass the campus best-dressed test. Double-breasted jacket available in eggplant and black. Crested jacket available in black. 48.00-80.00.