Slate Press Copyright. State Press, 1990 Voi. 16 N o. 18 Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Friday, S e p te m b e r 2 1 ,1 9 9 0 Total enrollm ent falls to 5 year lo w B y KEVIN S H E H State P ress A University report released Thursday in dicates the num ber o f out-of-state students has taken an upswing this fall despite a drop in ASU’s total enrollment for the first tim e in five years. This increase in out-of-state enrollment cranes on the heels of a $1,000 tuition hike for non-residents. The report stated that fall enrollment declined by nearly 600 students compared with the fall of 1989, which came as no surprise to ASU officials. “ The only surprise w e’ve had is the increase in non-resident tuition,” said Budget Office Director Alan Carroll, adding that the concerns about losing out-of-state students because of the tuition hike have not shown up in the statistics. This semester, 137 additional non-resident students attending seven or more hours of classes raised the number o f out-of-state students at ASU from last year’s total of 9,664 to 9,781. Arizona Board of Regents’ member Danny Siciliano said he hoped the increase is an indication that the fee hike did not scare out-of-state students away. . He said, however, that it was too early to make any definitive analysis. “ The w h ole situation needs to be investigated thoroughly,” Siciliano said. M e a n w h ile , A S U o f f i c i a l s w e r e encouraged by ASU’s decline in enrollment. ASU President Lattie Coor said the decline, which is sim ilar to other institutions ASU’s size, was expected — and welcome. “ It gives us a chance to begin to deal with (overcrow ding),” he said. “ It’s essential to e n s u r in g th e l e v e l o f q u a l i t y o f undergraduate education.” Last spring at his inaugural address, Coor called for a downsizing of the main campus to facilitate a quality undergraduate education. Officials at the registrar’s office reported ASU’s combined enrollment at the main campus, ASU West and off-campus sites to be 42,952. Coor attributed the decline to a dip in graduating high school seniors. “ The figures are down for (A S U ’s) freshman class,” he said, adding that he expected the trend to continue for the next two years. “ (W e’r e ) trying to use the time to consolidate and to get up to speed at ASU West (fo r the influx) that w ill begin in three or four years.” Regent Andy Hurwitz said the decline represented a recent pattern. “ It ’s not surprising,” he said. “ The trend (a t ASU ) was flat (o r on a ) small decline. “ It’s not a bad thing,” he said. “ It’s perfectly understandable.” Enrollment at ASU West is 4,150 — an increase of 351 compared with last fall — Irwin Daugherty/State Press Flippin’ Out Brian Hanna, a sen ior p hysical education major, executes a d iv e T h u rsd a y at the Mona P lum m er A q u a tics Center. T urn to Enrollm ent, p age 10. ASU organizations to share visitors center B y KRISTIE Y O U N G State P ress ASU’s Alumni Association and the ASU Foundation would share space with the visitors: center under a proposal to transform the futuristic dome-shaped Valley National Bank building on Rural Road and Apache Boulevard for University use. The two organizations currently are located in the same wing of Mariposa Hall, a form er hotel owned by the University on Apache Boulevard. “ It is too crowded in here,” said Don Dotts, executive director of the Alumni Association. Dotts said the association, in conjunction with the ASU Foundation, hopes to build a new building on the corner that would house both organizations, plus an ASU visitors center. Lonnie Ostrom, director of ASU’s development office, and Jennus Burton, associate vice president for business affairs, recently circulated a proposal to solicit support and suggestions fo r the new facility. The proposal states that a new structure would be built around the existing VN B building and all current occupants of the building would be relocated. According to the plan, the VNB building would then be demolished and new landscaping, sim ilar to that surrounding Gammage Auditorium, would be installed. Estimated cost for the project could range from $100 to $125 per square foot depending on the final architectural Specifications. The proposal states that the building would be ready for use in April or M ay 1995. “ It takes time to raise money and draw plans,” Burton said. Turn to VNB, page 10. ASU student joins reserve unitin call from M offord By TEEN A CHAD W ELL State P ress A rizona G o v . R o sa M offord sh a kes h a n d s with A rizona National G ua rd m em bers w ho were called u p to help with “ O peration Desert S h ie ld ” early T h u rsd a y m orning. It is not know n w here the units will g o , but their departure is im m inent. Minor problems: ASU police say the number o f violations for minors in posses­ sion o f alcohol has decreased from last year. Page 7 An ASU o ffic ia l con firm ed that a University student is a member of one of two Arizona units called on by Gov. Rose M offord Thursday to help the U. S. 'in “ Operation Desert Shield.” Bob Fain, supervisor o f ASU Veteran Services, said the reservist’s name and destination are classified, adding that the stu dent w ith d re w fro m his cla sses Wednesday to join his fellow reservists in the 2220th Transportation Company in Phoenix. Edward, a 19-year-old reservist whose waves: Boatless waterskiing, offered at Ski Springs in Gilbert, is destin last name was withheld because o f military policy, is a m ember of the same unit. He dropped out of his accounting classes at DeVry Institute in Phoenix this week, with only three weeks of classes left in the 14-week trimester. The two Arizona reserve units, including the 2221st Quartermaster Company in Claypool, Coolidge and Tucson, w ere officially “ alerted” Aug. 24 that they could be called to active duty. Edward said this brought out a torrent of emotions. “ You wanted to not believe it,” he said. Spark o f interest: A profile highlights ASU football’s starcormerback T n n t b i e i m M , page 10. Toda y’s weather: Sunny, w ith a high in the Jow 90s. Tonight: Clear, w ith a lo w in the lo w 70s. C ollege Culture.............. Comics...... H oroscopes....»....*......... S p o r t s . 15 State Presa FHHflv Ç*ntomher 01. 1000 KAET em ployee dies after lengthy illness who for a year shared a small, cramped office w ith , Lancaster. “ You would never hear a negative word from other employees about him. N ever.” Redmond went on to praise Lancaster’s sincerity and his willingness to listen to even the smallest of details. She recounted an instance when Lancaster bought her a signed poster of an artist she had just a day before mentioned enjoying. “ The thing that impressed me about that, was here I talk about all these different things, and he actually remembered what I would say to him,” she said. “ It was just really touching to m e.” B y K EN N E TH BR O W N State P ress Richard Lancaster, a 37-year-old ad­ vertising specialist for K AE T-TV, Chan­ nel 8, died at his home Sunday, succumb* ing to a lengthy pancreatic illness. “ Charm ing” was the word most co-workers used to describe the 1975 Uni* versify of Washington student who grad­ uated cum laude. His friends at Channel 8 reflected on the loss o f a dedicated, creative and en­ thusiastic team member. Lancaster’s broadcasting career began while he was still in high school with KLM H, a bootleg radio station he and a few friends ran from his own backyard. “ He was very supportive to other staff L a n c a s t e r members,” said Barbara Maack, man­ ager of creative services, as she tried to find the precise words for Lancaster. “ It’s hard to talk about this at all.” Lancaster’s mother, Doris Rowe, described him as “ quite a character” in his younger years. Rowe told of his mischief in his hometown of Moses Lake, “ He’s taught me a lot about patience,” said Joal Redmond, Wash., where he was a constant customer at the local gag shop. Black-staining soap, squirting toilets, and fake bugs became common household items. “ It wasn’t too long before my cigarettes started exploding,” she said. Still, the underground radio station topped it all. Lancaster, bored of the Moses Lake radio stations — a country western and an “ old fogey” channel — may have started a cultural revolution and in the process became a legend in the small town. “ I thought that the FCC might put us all in jail,” said . “ But I figured there w ere worse things (Lancaster and his friends) could do. And the young people loved it. They still talk about it.” But Rowe w ill miss his curiosity, devious as it may have been. “ He’s been out of the house for a while, but I always knew before that he was a phone call away,” she said. “ He’s going to be missed.” Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events •The Farce Side Comedy Hour will present a free show at happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the 12:30 p.m. in the Union Programming Lounge. University community. Any campus club or organization •Bible Christian Leadership will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Palo can submit entries for publication to the State Press, Verde Beach. located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. •AIESEC will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room for a Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for marketing seminar. New member information will be content, space and clarity, ahd will not be taken over the available. phone. Due to space restrictions, the Slate Press cannot •Campus Crusade for Christ will meet at 7:30 p.m. in LS guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. 191 Everyone welcome. ■Kayak Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the ASU Aquatic the previous business day. Center. Newcomers welcome. •Biomedical Engineering Society will meet at 5 p.m. at Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at Minderbinders for volleyball happy hour. Everyone noon at the Newman Center on College Street and welcome. •Devil’s Juggling Club will meet at 3 p.m. in front of the University Drive. •Hispanic Graduate Student Alliance will meet at 8 p.m. Language and Literature Building. Everyone welcome. in the Meridian Apartments party room, 1440 E. Broadway •Beta Alpha Psi will meet at 10 a.m. Saturday at Indian School Park, 4289 N. Hayden Road, Scottsdale, to play Road. •Alanon will meet at noon in Newman Center. volleyball with Valley firms. r COMPÜTÉR DEALS"] FastD ata386/SX o *469 o 1*1478 UPGRADE TO COLOR V G A M onitor & C a rd Corrections In the Sept. 14 issue of the State Press, the location where Henry Cisneros will be delivering his speech on Oct. 4 was misidentified. The correct location is the Hotel Westcourt, near Metrocenter. In the Sept. 20 issue of the State P ress, a story on overcrowding at the Student Recreation Complex gave the wrong peak hours. Peak hours are from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. In the same story, SRC Director Gerald Maas was quoted as saying the new phase of the complex would have to be approved. The correct body responsible for approving the new phase is the Campus Recreation Board of Governors. The State P ress regrets these errors. 1/2 Price Balcony Tickets for ASU Students! S m R IL G H T For Both WOW! FastData 386SX comesStandard with: 40mb28ma Hard Disk Monitor Inducted! Graphic* Card 1¿m b or 1.44 mb Floppy Driva Ü M É llé l Upgrade to color now to make all of your favorite programs I brighter and dearer. Get awesome deal on a Id Mt V G A card and a 14- color V G A monitor with a swivel base. HURRY! Keyboard > 1MB of 80na Memory • Parale!, 2 Serial Porta, A Gama Port • PhoenixBIOS > 200 Watt Power Supply • 1 Year Warranty O tto eA uto m atjo r^ V I Dot M atrix $ 2 9 9 Get 24 pin fetter .qufitytyp«. iptofontoand pit chao, and paper parking with a enty that may last tMyou graduate (2 years). 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The FastData 386/SX com bines 386 perform ance and software com patibility with 286 design and price. It com es with a VG A c o lo r m onitor and fast 16 bit VGA card com bined w itha high speed hard disk fo r tota l perform ace. Camelback 266-7873 3? Com ee with com mu oleation software end rune at 300, 1200 o r 2400 baud TEMPE Souftenl McClintock 638-1236 " 0 841-0202 jj (/) o> m c/> o m m 13 STU D EN T RUSH Don’t m iss this special 1/2 price offer for the opening show of the inaugural season of The Valley Broadway Series. G A M M A G E A U D IT O R IU M T h u rsd ay, S e p te m b e r 20 • 8 p.m. Saturday, S e p te m b e r 22 • 2 p.m. S u n d ay, S e p te m b e r 23 • 2 and 7:30 p.m. T ick e ts a v a ila b le at the G a m m a g e B o x O ffice only. 965-3434 for m ore inform ation. Co-sponsored by: MIZOnA STATE UNWCMITV mm W o r ld / N a t io n Page 3 Friday, September 21,1990 State Press Last treaty allow s fo r Germ an unity B O N N , W est G erm a n y (A P ) — ■ Lawmakers from both Germanys ratified a historic treaty Thursday that will end four decades of division and unite their nations in 13 days. They followed the votes with singing, shouting and handshakes. The treaty was the last one needing approval before the Germanys unite on Oct 3. In the Bundestag, West G erm any’s parliament, lawmakers loudly applauded their passage of the treaty and broke into a chorus of the national anthem. Members of the Volkskammer, East Germ any’s parliament, stood up, hooted with jo y and shook hands after their vote in East Berlin. The Bundestag approved the treaty by a 442-47 vote. I t w as passed by the Volkskammer 299-80. Just last week the four World W ar II victors and the two Germanys signed a document clearing away global obstacles to unification and forfeiting the Allies’ special rights, On July 1, a treaty merging the economies of both Germanys took effect, giving Blast Germans the West German mark and plunging them into the rigors of capitalism. The treaty approved Thursday acts as the form al unification document and reconciles the two nations' vastly different legal systems. It preserves East Germany’s liberal abortion law, guarantees some social programs for jobless East Germans, and gives investors first, claim to East German property. Experts say this is necessary to revive the nation’s moribund economy. But it leaves many of the specifics of reconciling the two G erm anys’ legal systems to a united German parliament to be elected on Dec. 2. The joy was not unanimous in the Volkskammer. A number of protesters disrupted the session, charging that some lawmakers had links to the now-disbanded “ Stasi” secret police. “ We are protesting because there are people voting for this treaty who worked for the Stasi,” said Reinhard Schult, one of the activists. Leaders of the two nations used the simultaneous parliamentary sessions to movingly evoke the rise of Nazi Germany 57 years ago and vow that the new Germany will be peaceful. “ United Germany must never again strive to lift itself to a European power center,” P rim e Minister Lothar de Maiziere said in the Volkskammer. In Bonn, West German Foreign Minister H a n s -D ie tr ic h G e n s c h e r den ou n ced Germany’s Nazi years as the catalyst of the Germans’ four-decade division. “ United Germany will have great weight. We w ill not strive for more power with this weight, but we a re cognizant o f the huge responsibility that emanates from it,” he said. Genscher reminded his countrymen of H itler’s rise to power and the tragedies that followed. “ W e lost first our freedom and then our peace after January 30,1933, when fascism descended upon Germany,” Genscher said, referring to the day when Hitler took power. “ Many Germans lost their lives, health, and worldly goods. And we all lost the respect and friendship of other peoples.” Genscher paid tribute to “ all victims of the w ar (World W ar I I ) and to tyranny” and said “ w e are agreed this must never happen again.” The foreign m inister m ade special mention of the Holocaust, in which more than 6 million Jews died, saying a united Germany will be “ cognizant of its special responsibility . . . to the Jewish people.” Anociated Presa photo Step by step M em bers o f the Soviet anti-nuclear “ N evada-Sem ipalatinsk” and the A m erican “ interna-, tional Peace W alk” organization m arch near K araganda, in the K azakhstan region o f the U .S .S .R . Milestone passed in cystic fibrosis research NEW Y O R K (A P ) — Scientists have corrected a crucial defect in cells taken from cystic fibrosis patients, a step called a milestone toward eventually treating the disease through gene therapy or new kinds of medication. The cells carried the abnormal gene that causes cystic fibrosis, and researchers fixed the defect by giving them a normal copy of the gene. “ It ’s a milestone,” said Paul Quinton, a cystic fibrosis researcher at the University of California, Riverside, who was fam iliar with the work. While the notion of gene therapy for cystic fibrosis was science fiction only a few years ago, the new work has “ pressed the fiction closer to reality,” he said in an interview. Combined with research into gene therapy for other diseases, the new results “ give us tremendous hope that gene therapy is going to become a reality in cystic fibrosis patients,” said Robert Beall, the Cystic F ib ro sis Foundation’s ex ecu tive v ic e president for medical affairs. “ W e’re not talking decades, w e’re talking years, a few years,” said Beall, whose organization helped pay fo r the new work. Two teams o f scientists corrected the cell defect in the test tube by using s harmless News Briefs C r a s h s c e n e (ABOVE) O ne of the four engines from a crashed Boeing 707 lies in front of the main wreckage Thursday, at Pinal Air Park, 15 miles north of Tucson. Only three people were onboard the jet that crashed during a take-off attempt. (RIGHT) Jim Carlberg, of Roseville, III., takes a swipe at Saddam Hussein by printing his picture on thousands of rolls of toilet paper for use around the world. Though the effort is fueled by capitalism, not patriotism, he has shipped "quite a few" free rolls of Saddam paper to soldiers and their families. W ip e o u t virus to inject the normal gene into the cells. One group describes its results in Friday’s issue of the journal Cell. The other will publish its results in next week’s issue of the British journal Nature. C ystic fibrosis affects about 30,000 children and young adults in the United States. Their lungs produce a thick, sticky mucus that sets the stage for fatal lung infections. Keating attorneys: Past record shows banker w on ’t flee LOS A N G E LE S (A P ) — The $5 million bail for Charles H Keating Jr., a central figure in the nation’s S&L crisis, should be reduced because he is broke and won’t flee criminal charges, his attorneys argued Thursday. A parade o f character witnesses, including a nun, sought to persuade a judge to reduce bail fo r Keating andl his three co­ defendants, held on $1 million bail each. Keating is form er chairman of Am erican Continental Corp. The Arizona developer is $4.5 million in debt and has only $355 in his checking account, his personal accountant, M arilyn Marszowski, testified. Prosecutors cast doubt on her knowledge of his finances. The hearing was scheduled to resume Friday after recessing without a ruling from Superior Court Judge Gary Klausner. I f bail is posted, the defendants must prove the money did not come from criminal activity before they could be released from the county jail. Keating, already a target of numerous civil lawsuits stemming from the $2 billion collapse of Lincoln Savings & Loan, surrendered Tuesday to face a 42-count state grand jury indictment. Lincoln, based in Irvine, Calif., is owned by Am erican Continental Corp., based in Phoenix. The fraud indictment alleges that Keating and three of his top employees misrepresented the safety of American T u rn to Keating, p a g e 9. Opinion Pggg_j; ______________________________________ Friday, September 21,1990 _________ S la te P i « » T u itio n fru itio n Students should push fo r an early battle The G overn or’s o ffice and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee both crunch these numbers fo r a few months before spitting out recommended budgets for the Legislature to fight over when it convenes in January. Last year when the two departments didn’t have any solid numbers from the regents on how much tuition revenue the u n iversities w ould ra ise, the offices guesstimated a revenue number for th em ,, The figures were printed and people began to look at them as fact. Including our Board of Regents. Regent Capin publicly summed up the entire tuition-setting process last year when explaining her vote to raise in-state tuition by $112 and out-of-state by $1,000. “ We have been told by the Legislature that w e need to raise $25 million, to not do so would be irresponsible,” she exclaimed. So it didn't matter when sophomore Mike Young stood before the board last year, physically shaking with anger, to ask them to consider the impact the enormous hike would have on students. “ I have holes in m y shoes, I have holes in m y shirts, but that doesn’t bother m e,” he said. “ What does bother m e is that each and every one o f you is taking away my education.” It wasn’t important when junior Shon Flake told them he was tired of having to work two jobs just to stay in school. “ There are days when I don’t see my N ic o le C a r ro ll C o lu m n ist ___________ JhB K P * M i l l Here we go again. It’s tuition time and the Arizona Board of Regents is beginning to make the customary rumblings o f actually pinning down a tuition hike number. The regents have squinty-eyed old men cloistered away in dark offices mumbling exotic encantations over rows of numbers in hopes of creating a tuition formula. They’re holding meetings to pick a place to meet to decide when they w ill meet to discuss meeting about tuition. Regent’s executive director Molly Broad has even been spotted in the Borgata shopping for a new Italian leather purse especially for the gala event. But don’t let it all fool you. . All the signs were there last year, too, And it was February before the blow was finally levied. Over the summer, Regent President Esther Capin assured all who would listen that, yes, tuition would be set by November. Nbw just a few weeks into school, she’s already pushed it back a month. What’s the big rush, you ask? It has to do with a great big headache known as the state budget. children. I urge you to put yourself in our situations,” he pleaded. And they didn’t care that hundreds of international students signed a petition begging the regents to exempt them from such a large hike because they are not Each year at this time, departments all over Arizona are scrambling to turn in their requested budgets to bigwigs at theCapitol. L E T T E R minute to put it in writing. At February’s tuition meeting, there were so many proposals on the table, and so much confusion in the a ir that aton e point Regent Andy Hurwitz suggested setting tuition at $500 “ just because it is a round number.” Last spring, hundreds o f students filled the Student Services building to protest the tuition hikes, a week after they were finalized. And while the stunt got plenty of press, it was just that — a stunt. E ffective activism happens before an event. And if we have any hope of softening the blow of tuition hikes, that time is now. S Jesus is a hippie Disappointed democrat Editor: Is Jesus a Christian? He taught and lived the G old en R u le , he ta u gh t about forgiveness and love and he taught about living a good and righteous life. He spoke of the same principles upon which every world religion is based. Jesus referred to everyone as children of God. They speak of love in one breath and damnation, in the next. One told m e that Judgment was like tax court. (Oh no! Not m ore bureaucracy — haven’t w e all suffered enough at ASU ?). They carry their bibles as if they were weapons. They have appointed themselves judge and jury and they would also be executioner except that bonfires for heretics is illegal. (A little fire at the stake is better than eternal fire, isn’t it?) Intolérant and self-righteous, they bear a striking resemblance to the Pharisees that Jesus argued with in the Temples. Ironic, terribly ironic. Our small world is filled with enough prejudice, intolerance, and hate without so much originating under the guise of religion. Either we w ill learn to live together or w e w ill die together. So where does that leave Jesus? In Birkenstocks and long hair, preaching about love, tolerance, forgiveness, and peace, and rebelling against the Establishment. No, Jesus is not a Christian. Jesus is a hippie, Rhonda Diskin Junior, History \ F F STATE PRESS SUZANNEROSS Editor N IC O L E P E R R O N Managing Editor City Editor.-------------------------- ---------- .HOBART R O W L A N D Asst. City Editor.____ ...._____________________ KELLY PEARCE Copy Chief.-------------------------------------- K R IST E N J O H N S O N N ew s Editor.___ _________ - -------------------- T E N N Y TATU S IA N ________ — D A N N O W IC K I ______________ — .T. J. S O K O L Technical Editor.- .. eligible for federal or state financial aid. H ie Legislature hath spoken and the regents dutifully followed. The fact is, no m atter when tuition is set, it’s going to be raised. Inflation in the cost of education demands it. But students should not be required to swallow arbitrary hikes dreamed up by the Legislature to balance the state budget. Student leaders have been working this summer to come up with a method of determining tuition with some kind of consistency. But all the negotiations are worthless if the regents wait until the last -----------------------STEVE K R IC U N Magazine Editor.-...,--------- ---------------— M E G H A LV E R SO N Assoc. Magazine Editor....................... .ROBYN P IN K S T O N Asst. Magazine Editor— ...........----- ----- ....CARIN C U M M IN S R E P O R T E R S : Kenneth B ro w n , A n ita Carcone, Teen a Chadwell, Jeff Concors, Joseph Crawford, A ndrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Patricia Mah, Michelle P a u i Michelle Roberts, Girth Sheh, Christina Schroeder, Kristie Young. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : D arren U rban , G re g Z è le , Dan Zeiger. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Irwin Daugherty, Jeorgetta Douglas, Monique Holliiv Will Powers, Tamara Wofford. C O P Y E D IT O R S : Kellye Kratch, M ichael LaMantia, Jill Tibke. C A R T O O N IST : Rob Minton, Julie Sigwart. CO LUM NIST: Nicole Carroll. M A G A Z IN E STAFF: Michelle Cruft, Vicki Culver, Christine Herbranson, Lori Lapp in, Deborah Nemko^ Jon Whbv Kramer Wetzel. P R O D U C T IO N : Cassaundra Caviness, Dane Christ, Holly Hiatt, Jeffrey Lucas, M ark Not haft, Iynne Senzek, John P. Smith, Eric Zotcavage. A D V E R T IS IN G REPRESENTATIVES: Dan EUstronv Todd Martin, Christine Millan, Mike M orris, Terri Smith, John Vaccan* Bill VanZanten. The State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academic year; except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, A rizona State University, Temp«, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. W e do not a n sw er questions o f a general nature. A d v ertisin g an d Production: (602) 965-7572. The State Press it the only n e w sp a p e r exclusively published for and circulated on the A S U campus. The news and views published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of A S U administration, faculty staff or student body. Editor: I am very pleased to say that the Young Democrats of ASU and USA for Choice have managed to register approximately 700 students to vote. I am disappointed that we couldn’t register more students. According to our observations, the number o f registrants was low due to the fact that we didn’ t have the human resources necessary, not due to thé fact that there is profound apathy at ASU, as stated in a recent State P ress editorial. I am surprised, however, that the substantially larger human and material resources of the entire ASASU w ere only able to register a total o f 2000 students. Considering the fact that registering voters here on campus was a stated goal and priority o f all candidates running for ASASU offices, I, along with many other students, are left disappointed, at best, with ASASU’s efforts. Howard Andari President, ASU Young Democrats Senior, Political Science Strip makes her day To Julie Sigwart: M y husband attends ASU — so I have access to the S ta te Press. I love your ferret cartoons. I share m y home with four of the little beasties. Your “ Rainey Days” cartoon really hits the mark. “ Rainey D ays” really makes m y day. Krista Collins Opinion Page 5 Friday, September 91,1990 State Press “P rix F ixe” ' Today’s sophistication is just to o hard to sw allow Mike Royko T rib u n e M ed ia S yn d ica te Opinion E d ito r’s n ote: M ik e R oyko is on vacation. W hile he is away, we are re p rin tin g som e o f h is fa v o rite colum ns from the past. While browsing through a restaurant directory, I suggested to the blonde that we might try a place that' Was newly listed. She asked if it was expensive and I said it had a “ prix fix e ” dinner. “ A what?,” she said. I repeated,“ Prix fixe.” “ How is it spelled?” I spelled aloud and again said: “ Prix fixe.” “ You’re not pronouncing it correctly,” she said. “ Why not? I ’m pronouncing it exactly the way it is spelled. “ No,no. If you say it that way, it Sounds, well, it sounds obscene.” L E T T E R I said it again, “ P rix fixe,” the way it is spelled. And she m ay be right* It did sound like it might be a phrase describing some sort of male surgical procedure. “ The proper pronounciation,” the blonde said, flaunting her refined upbringing, “ is pree feeks.” Then why isn’t it spelled pree feeks? “ Because it is French. And in French, pree feeks is spelled ‘prix fixe.’ ” How stupid of me. I had forgotten that the first rule of the French language is that almost nothing is pronounced the way it’s spelled. When the French invented their language, they rigged it that way just to make the rest of us feel inferior. They also thought that if they had a language that was almost impossible to learn, Germans might not invade them. “ P ree feeks,” the blonde said. “ It simply means fixed price.” I already knew that much. The question is, why do newspaper and magazine restaurant listings in the United States, where most of us speak one form of English or another, insist on using ,“ prix fixe,” which is pronounced “ pree feeks” and means “ fixed price,” instead of “ fixed price,” which means fixed price and is pronounced “ fixed price” ? M y guess is that the vast m ajority of Americans do not even know how to pronounce “ prix fixe.” And a great many don’t even know what it means. Why, if you went into some restaurant in Arkansas or Tennessee and asked if they had a “ prix fix e ” dinner — pronouncing it the way it is spelled — it’s likely that the w a ite r w ou ld b ellow , “ Y a low dow n preevert,” and hit you with a catfish. M y newspaper, I ’m sorry to say, is no exception. We have “ prix fixes” scattered all through our restaurant listings. I asked a few copy editors, who are experts in such matters, why w e don’t say “ fixed price.” They weren’t sure. One of them said that he thought we did it when reviewing French restaurants. I f so, w e’re being inconsistent. We may even be discriminating. F or example, when w e list a German restaurant, w e don’t say “ fester preis,” which is German for fixed price. Fester preis. It has a pleasant, homey ring. It sounds like the name of somebody who lives deep in the Ozarks. “ Howdy, I ’m Fester Preis and this here is m y brother Lester Preis and m y uncle Chester Preis.” In our listings fo r Chinese restaurants, we don’t w rite “ Gu din jia ge,” which I was told by a Chinese acquaintance means “ fixed price.” Of course, he might have been pulling m y leg. F o r all I know, it means: “ The person who wrote this column is a geek.” But I ’ll take his word for it. I was going to include the Greek version of “ fixed price,” but Sam Sianis, who owns Billy Goat’s Tavern, said: “ F eex price? You crazy? In Greek joints, we got no feex price. We charge what we can get.” Another copy editor told m e that “ prix fixe” is used so widely that it had become the accepted, common meaning for “ fixed price.” That doesn’t make sense to me, either. I ’ve never picked up the financial pages and read a story that said: “ Three steel companies have been accused by the antitrust division of the Justice Department of prix fixing. The companies engaged in the fixe, sources say, to drive up the prix of steel.” : Years ago, when Chicago was strictly a meat-and-potatoes town, w e didn’t have such linguistic problems. I suppose that as w e became more sophisticated, this was the prix we paid. S Article was misleading statistics do not indicate a general decline in academic performance of our studentathletes. I also wish to cla rify the rem ark attributed to me that the Faculty Academic C ou n cil w ou ld “ e x a m in e re c ru itin g practices.” The context of this remark w as. that the recruitment of student-athletes is a n d s h o u ld b e a u n i v e r s i t y - w i d e responsibility. The F acu lty A cadem ic Council is cooperating with the Department of Athletics to find additional ways to emphasize the quality of our undergraduate program to prospective student-athletes and their families. President Coor has p l a c e d a v e r y h ig h p r i o r i t y on undergraduate education at ASU, and we believe that this emphasis should be communicated clearly to the studentathletes we are attempting to recruit to ASU. We are very proud of our new Honors College, and w e hope to be able to incorporate this high quality undergraduate program into our recruiting activities in even more effective ways. I believe this cooperative emphasis between the faculty and the Department of Athletics to be positive and appropriate, but this view clearly was not captured in the phrase “ the Faculty Academic Council will examine The Board of Regents’ report also recruiting practices and attempt to change contains information on cumulative G PA the glaring statistics that shadow ASU.” values for student-athletes in the sports of Finally, I wish to place the final quote of football and men’s basketball. In these two the article in its appropriate context. I sports, G P A values have deebned over the explained that a quality athletics program past year, and this is a matter of concern to ■; has at least three dimensions: (1) complete me as Faculty Athletics Representative. compliance with NCAA and Pacific-10 However, for this result — in two sports — to Conference rules; (2) competitive success; be portrayed in the article as a “ declining and (3) a quality education and a university academic record of University athletes” is degree fo r our student-atheletes. There is no inaccurate and misleading. In fact, the room to compromise on the first dimension. cum ulative G P A values fo r studentF o r th e r e m a in in g tw o , it is m y atheletes in all sports (including football r e s p o n s ib ility as F a c u lty A th le tic s and men’s, basketball) did not change from Representative to identify and recommend the 1988-89 academic year to the 1989-90 those practices or programs that could academic year. Similarly, average hours increase both competitive and academic earned by all student athletes w ere success for our student-athletes. unchanged from the fall semester of 1988 to Jerry L. Kingston the fall semester of 1989. Overall, these Editor: The Sept. 19 edition of the State Press carried a front-page story about the academic performance of our studentathletes at ASU. I believe the Story was misleading or inaccurate in several ways. The story indicates that Ï6.3 percent of the student-athletes in the sport of men’s basketball w ere ineligible because of failing grades at the end of the last academic year. This was not the case. The information reported to the Arizona Board of Regents relates to the percentage of student-athletes in the two sports that did not meet the university’s definition of “ good academic standing” In most instances, students in this category are placed on probation for the fo llo w in g s e m e s te r . E l i g i b i l i t y fo r intercollegiate competition, however, is based on the number of hours earned from the beginning of one fall semester to the beginning of the next fall semester. O f those who w ere reported to be not in “ good academic standing” at the close of the spring semester, many went to summer school to improve their academic record, and nearly all returned to ASU this fall and w e re e lig ib le fo r in t e r c o lle g ia t e competition. Faculty Athletics Representative QUOTABLE "She was great...I haven't nothing bad to say about the girl except she wasn't a girl." - Betsy Acree, leader of die of Coronado High School spirit squad in Colorado Springs, on the 26-year-old man who attended her school for eight days as a female student. "I feel Charles Keating should stay in jail until the bondholders can get their money back. He's taken everybody else’s money. H e should have to suffer a little too." _ Evangeline Ivy, a bondholder from Glendale, Calif., who lost her life savings to Keating. Page 6 State Prêts Wdg2894-1797 fax 894-1986 University & Hardy • 921-0168 fax 894-2038 R E S T R IC T ED MESA LOCATIONS 'Southern & Dobson • 969-3326 fax 461-8442 Main &\Stapley • 833-0036 fax 833-0972 "Open 24 Hours! STARTS FRIDAY, S E P T E M B E R 21st l i S la te Friday, September 21,1990 ^ — — — ^_£522-I Num ber o f underage drinking citations fell B y M IC H E LLE P A U L State P ress ASU students said minors have little problem tossing back a few cold ones in campus residence halls, while ASU officials claim incidents o f underage drinking on campus have declined. ASU Associate Director o f Public Safety Doug Bartosh said his officers have issued few er citations to minors so far this year than in past years. “ Actually, what w e ’re seeing is not near the number of citations we issued in the past,” he said. Bartosh said the number of violations for minors in possession of alcohol has decreased steadily since 1988. “ W e Were having 20 to 25 (citations) a weekend,” Bartosh said. “ That number has dropped to about 10 citations a weekend.” . . Minors caught with alcohol are cited and usually released on the spot, he said. Violators then must appear in court, and Bartosh said judges can sentence violators to community service, send them to education classes or fine them. But while Bartosh said he believes residence halls are doing “ a pretty good job” of keeping alcohol out o f the dorms, students living in residence halls said it is relatively easy to sneak alcohol past the residence hall staff. “ It’s too easy,” said Chris Grasso, a senior broadcasting major, who lives in P alo Verde West Residence Hall. “ I don’t think they could possibly be aware (o f how much alcohol is in the dorms), because they’re not here on the weekends.” Other students said they also think school officials have no idea how much alcohol actually makes it into residence halls. “ I think it is larger than the administration thinks it is,” said Matt Killeen, a freshman Palo Verde West resident, “ If students want it (alcohol) they’re gonna find ways to get it.” Bill Bess, director of ASU/DPS, said police cannot enter and search residence hall rooms without a warrant or unless students give police permission to enter the room. But he said students should expect strict enforcement of underage drinking laws to continue. “ There is not a focal point on campus, except continued enforcement,” Bess said. Debra Sells, assistant education director, said Residence L ife has developed a new program for first-time, alcohol-rule offenders called “ On the Rocks.” Sells said the program helps students determine if they have an alcohol problem and aids them in finding referrals for help with drinking-related problems. Bess said another problem police contend with is minors asking those 21 and over to purchase alcohol for them. In this case, Bess said, vendors are doing their jobs illegitimately. He also added that if police find someone purchasing alcohol for a minor, he or she w ill be pursued. Meanwhile, popular student watering holes near campus have stepped up efforts to make sure underage drinkers are not entering their establishments. A t Fat Tuesdays, 680 S. M ill Ave., doormen carefully check identification. “ W e’re pretty strict at the door,” said mananger Cliff Avaiit. Doormen accept only four types of ID — a state-issued driver license or identification card, a passport or a m ilitary ID. ' Avant said his doormen take fake IDs and turn them into the liquor board. Matt Clunk, manager o f the Spaghetti Company, 414 S. M ill Ave., said there are many types o f fake IDs in the area. “ Oncampus you know there are a ton o f fake IDs out there, and you’re not going to get them all,” he said. -C B M B B 4$ ¿ r¡B F A R M ^ E T Y W EEK .cr & *o > 7 12 S . C O L L E G E A V E — N E X T T O C O L L E G E S T R E E T D ELI M -F 7:30 a .m .j 10 p .m . L ong •TH IN - W ILD - OR TO TA LLY W E D O IT A L L I 966-HAIR OUTRAGEOUS CO M E S E E US TODAY ! 1032 S . T E R R A C E RD. 50% B R IN G T H IS C O U P O N ! OFFALL SERVICES First time customers only EXPIRES 10/4/00 HOT VA LID WITH O TH ER O FF E R S S a t 9 a .m .-10 p .m . 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C o m p a d re S ta d iu m Page 8 Stele Près« Frjdaj^^lenijber^JW O ^ Young Democrats to host state convention “ Goddard has brought new light to the Democrats,” he said. Andari went on to cite Johnson’s efforts to reorganize the Young Democrats statewide as instrumental to the group’s present level o f activity. Johnson, with the help of Dan Denofski, a senior political science major, reorganized Arizona Young Democrats two years ago following the Dukakis presidential bid. Andari hopes tomorrow’s convention w ill further advance the Arizona Young Democrats’ regrouping by providing "a m ore coordin ated p o litic a l e ffo r t b etw een college campuses.” campaign manager, Jim Howard, as keynote speaker. Secretary of State hopeful Dick Mahoney, Executive Director of the State Democratic Party Melody Jackson, and several candidates bidding for positions in the Arizona Legislature also will address the convention. Johnson said he believes there will be “ a good, solid showing front party candidates,” and estimates the turnout of Young Democrats w ill be equally impressive, adding that he expects the number of attending representatives to reach 200, up considerably from past conventions. Howard Andari, president of the ASU chapter of Young Democrats, attributes increased student involvement to the leadership of Terry Goddard. B y KRIS M A Y E S State P ress The Young Democrats of Arizona are set to host their annual state convention tomorrow at the MU, amidst what they see as growing public support for the Democratic party and their candidates. “ Now is the time to get involved,” said R. D. Johnson, president of Arizona Young Democrats. “ We have a lot of good Democratic candidates running, and we have a really good chance of taking three of the four major state offices up fo r grabs.” The event, slated to begin at 10 a.m. and conclude at 4 p.m., w ill feature gubernatorial candidate Terry Goddard’s NEUI WINDSHIELD NO COST TO V0U!* Police Report | J 7 4 8 W . U n iv e r s it y , M e s a TUE ( E x t e n s io n & U n iv e r s it y ) S ftN D f' 8 2 7 -1 2 6 2 Ir <) i» AT THE vPU fin tW S TAJ MAHAL DEC 20-JAN 8 Tour India with Dr. Mahar and Receive '/ L W A Y 1-5 C R E D I T S From $2945 s i: H ÍU H Í* kftzis (Can be tax exem pt.) ic t ,ct t e CALL COLLECT FOR MORE INFO «»Her M.50 M‘ ÇE/Vl/1/Vç *s * 1 .7 5 lM)R\nuF(HJUTirH .Il JLY d iiA fr India Travels (602)326-2973 8 A true story of innocence lost and courage found. *1.75 ■•/ÿ p .M . TO cSeptember - L - u - l i19-22 n OO CloSE is the deadline IH N ^ 1 € 1il U i XMAS NOON *lf your co m p re h e n siv e d e d u ctib le is betw een $0-$100, w e w ill pay your d e d u ctib le and co llect the b a la n ce from your in su ra n ce carrier. Y O U P A Y N O T H I N G ! C a ll for details. (C ertain restrictions and lim itations apply.) •A bag filled with money was stolen from a man who was repairing a Pepsi machine. Loss is estimated at $100. Tem pe police reported the following incidents Thursday : •Two men w ere observed by several witnesses robbing an apartment at 1500 E. Broadway Road. The men left in a Toyota Corolla and w ere stopped at E l Dorado Boulevard and Broadway Road in Mesa. The two men ran from police. One of the suspects was later found in a nearby yard, but police were unable to locate the other man. C om piled by State P ress re p o rte r M ich e lle Paul. ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday : •A thief stole a student’s automatic teller machine card from 609 Alpha Drive and used the ATM card to withdraw $295 from the student’s account. •A student was injured while getting off a tram near a parking area. Tem pe F ire Department treated the student for cuts on both knees and an injury to his right shoulder. •The Tempe fire department rescued three students, from an elevator in Manzanita Residence Hall. No injuries were reported. -*-THé UH * 0 U í íflM H Y i.1 A M ovie P a s s is your ticket to a se m e ste r’s worth of great entertainm ent. P a s s e s ca n be p u rch a sed at the Ty p in g C e n te r o r at the C in e m a during show tim es for only $6— a $14 value!! M k L il-í: M fA A , * 1 3 2 0 e a g & r COMING NEXT WEEK: M Yv. AilVEBALRELEASE »iVtlBuunSTlW“I 7 p.m. and 9:45 p.m ., U nion Cinem a, L o w e r Level O N L Y $1 South End o f the M U or a Movie Pass * 6 RPprfÇ Alf£fiUAllv£ £ S á ü : ÍA É H 0 T :: /q& q-M B ün & YnnvrüüMi ci"c. M emorial Un io n A ctivities Bo a r o M OUNHUNBIKE y o K o ra NOW Redwood C ity * to get a §4 7 0 »Shim ano Index Shifting »12 Speed Hyperglide »City B ike W ith M ountain Tires . W a s $229 NOW S a n ta F e Coyote 21 Sp eed M ountain Bine S h im ano 300 L X Com ponentry Rapid Fire Shifting G el Seat W a s $429 StatePress classified ad in the following day. Don’t miss it. A LP IN E p r L .P I N E Sonora Pass • 1 8 S p e e d City Bike • Full Shim ano 200G S Com ponentry • C h ro m e M oly Fram e • D arkened A lloy Rim s Travis Pass W a s $309 • Shim ano D eore LX Com ponentry • FuH C ro-M o ly Fram e • O versize Tubing • G e l Seat Press Classifieds M a tth e w s C e n te r B a se m e n t, R o o m 15 965-6731 • Huge Selection of Parts & A cce ssorie s mmm *1 Year of F R E E M aintenance _ _ _ _ la f f f c p e lf i P u A I A V v v i IQ V | V lV • All B icycles Not Available in A ll Stores _ _ _ f I Q f J Q liC • M ost M ajor Credit C a rd s A ccepted __ C H A U Q R Q |# • Lay-A-W ay Available « C h e ck s With Prop er I.D. Spoke Shop 937 E. Broadway Rd. #5, Tem pe............... ...(602)921-3486 Spoke Shop 3711 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix . . ...... (602) 224-0307 world Cycle 1660 W. Southern Ave. #A1, M e sa ..................(602) 461-1875 State Press Page 9 Friday, September 81,1990 Keating Continued fro m p a g e 3. Continental junk bonds sold at Lincoln branches. More than 20,000 investors, many elderly, are believed to have lost $250 million on the securities. Lincoln has been seized by regulators, Am erican Continental is in bankruptcy court and the bonds are virtually worthless. Evangeline Ivy, a bondholder from Glendale, Calif., who lost her life savings, was unmoved by appeals on Keating’s behalf. “ I feel Charles Keating should stay in ja il until the bondholders can. get their money back,” Iv y said outside court, choking back tears. “ He’s taken everybody else’s money. He should have to suffer a little too.” Keating, 66, sat quietly at the hearing with co-defendants Judy E. Wischer, 42, form er president o f Am erican Continental; R ay C. Fidel, 32, form er president of Lincoln; and Robin S. Symes, 37, of Malvern, Ohio, form er chief executive officer of Lincoln. Each faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted. the alternative copy shop at the comer of Mill and University in the Tempe Center Self-Service Macintosh System • Macintosh Laser Writer • Desktop Publising • Word Processing • Spread Sheets • Data base • Graphics Full Service Layout and Design Also Available Open Monday thru Friday 7am to 9pm Saturday and Sunday 10am to 5pm i ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ at m m m m ■ ■ us i $ 5 . 9 5 S e lf Service V- Computer time does not include laser prints. 90 (15 min. M inim um ) _ G *the alternativecopy »hop N o t valid with any other offer. G ood until 11/30/90. Applying for Graduate Study Workshops for Juniors/Seniors Graduate College • Have you ever thought about attending graduate school? • Do your career goals require advanced study in a graduate professional program or advanced research program? • Do you know how to finance your graduate study? The Graduate College is sponsoring informal workshops in the Arizona Room o f the MU. Each addresses a different subject. S e p t e m b e r 24: 3 :1 5— 5 :0 0 G r a d u a t e E d u c a tio n — W h a t is it? H o w d o es sele ctin g a graduate progra m d iffe r fr o m sele ctin g a u n iversity fo r undergraduate study? H o w d o y o u m a k e the righ t ch o ic e? S e p t e m b e r 2 5 : T h e A p p lic a t io n P r o c e s s — W h a t are the procedu res to fo llo w ? W h a t are som e 3 :1 5 — 5 :0 0 gu id elin es to fo llo w ? W h a t d o graduate program s w an t to k n o w (that y o u r undergraduate u n iversity n e v e r ask ed )? W h e n is the best tim e to a pply? S e p te m b e r 26: 3 :1 5 — 5 :0 0 F in a n c in g G r a d u a t e S tu d y — W h y is fin a n c in g graduate study so d iffe re n t fro m undergraduate study? W h a t d o yo u n eed to k n o w ? State Press Friday. Seotember 21.1990 Enrollment Continued fro m page i(. with nearly 40 percent of ASU West students also attending the main campus. “ The population is mobile between Tempe and ASU West,” Hurwitz said, adding that students attending the main campus are beginning to take classes at ASU West. H e said it was difficult to discern what the figures meant, because it was unclear which student groups were experiencing declines. Hurwitz said tuition increases for resident drop, she also was not surprised. students probably did not affect the decline, since the in-state hikes w ere consistent with previous years. The regents increased resident tuition by $116 last year. Faculty Senate President Arlene Metha said while she was encouraged with the But, she said, die trend would not be permanent. “ On the horizon is another spurt,” she said. VNB Continued fro m page 1. “ We are hoping that the memo w ill gel up some additional ideas,” he added. “ It will be helpful to us to understand how big the new building needs to be.” The architectural study, though in its preliminary stages, was designed to research the possibilities of utilizing space for the new building. “ The study w ill probably take half a year,” Dotts said. Meanwhile, the ASU visitors center, to be housed first in the VNB building, is planning renovations to the dome­ shaped ediface. Frank Hidalgo, assistant vice president for University Relations’ special programs, said he would “ go with a minimum number o f dollars” to give the building a face-lift. the bank with land adjacent to Cholla Apartments for its new branch in exchange for a cheaper mortgage to be paid over time. “ M y personal goal is to complete it within four to six months,” he said. “ Ideally I ’d like to see it completed by the Christmas holidays, but that is not very realistic.” Bill Kaukol, manager of the Tempe branch at Mill Avenue and University Drive, said the bank and the University had a good working relationship. Valley National Bank moved from the site 2 years ago when the University purchased the land for $1,143,134. “ (The bank) worked with ASU to accommodate their longrange goals,” he said. “ We always knew w e would move. The progress was needed to take place for ASU.” H obart Row land contributed to this rep ort. Karen Kloc, coordinator of purchasing, said the land was originally appraised at $1,941,884, but the University supplied Reserves Continued from page 1. “ Now it’s a reality.” Edward said leaving everyone behind, especially his new fiancee, is the hardest part. “ I just got engaged three weeks ago,” he said. “ It almost leads you to believe you should get m arried before you leave.” He had a chance to visit his fam ily in Minnesota before being shipped off, but he said it still hurts to leave them. “ Everything w e’ve been planning is going to be put off by this,” Edward said. “ But, their jobs by going overseas. nobody put a gun to my head to join.” did from Vietnam,” Edward said. “ I want everybody to know w e’re just doing our job. “ I don’ t want to come back like the people He stressed that he wants everyone to I ’m proud to be in.” understand that the soldiers are just doing T H A N K YO U T h e M en o f Sigm a N u w ou ld like to thank the sororities fo r h elpin g to raise o ver $6,000 fo r C h ild H elp U .S.A. at Relays ’90. $5 OFF with this co u p o n R e g u la r P r ic e M e n $ 1 5 • W o m e n $1 7 KKX 968-5946 709 S. Forest A ve. M onday-Friday 9-9 IK III AAA Saturday 9-5 Call for daily specials KA0 XQ AXÛ N o rth o f U n iv e r s ity A v e . FOB A An ATA A 4 ». Ar FIB Ó (Parti ci pati ng Stylists Only) H IM , KIM GDÜÆ0 COIN Chinese Buffet 1 1 25 E. Apache Blvd. Tempe • 968-3322 941 W . Elliot Chandler • 821-5428 1042 N . Hlgley Mesa • 985-8823 MENU INCLUDES: Sweet & Sour Pork «Lemon Chicken «Egg Roll «Sesam e Chicken •Shrimp with Almond Ding «Teriyaki Beef •B B Q Spare Ribs •Spicy Chicken «Smoked Fish «Beef with Green Bean •Vegetarian «Almond Turkey «Moo G oo Gai Pan •BBQ Pork «Ham Fried Rice «Chow Mein, etc. c c d i /c d c c o ALSO - Winter. Egg Flow er Soup WE SERVE BEER anc/ sum m er: Fru it C o ckta il A L L Y O U C A N E A T CHINESE BUFFET B U S IN E S S H O U R S •LU N C H » 15 Years irtence $ 3 .9 4 S a t u r d a y a n d 11-9 Sun-Thuts. 11-9:30 Fri.-Sat. S u n d a y » D IN N E R * $ 4 .7 9 O n l y Buy Any Regular Size Sandwich and Get the 2nd of Equal or Lesser Value FREE Different is better I Tem pe Center 1 8 E, 10th Street Tempe 968-0058 L chlotzsky's Sandwiches ♦ Soups ♦ Salads Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer per visit. Tem pe V illage Square Priest and Southern Tempe 966-7672 J College Culture Page 11 Friday, September 21,1990 State P r tu W aterski fanatics have n ew boatless alternative B y CHRISTINE H E R B R A N S O N S tate P re ss You might say that boatless waterskiing is the “ w ave” of the future. Y o u might, but / sure wouldn’t, for fear of being pelted with rotten tomatoes and raw eggs for using such a stinky pun. I w ill say, however, that boatless waterskiing is destined for great success. It ’s sure to become a popular sport that's more than just a passing fancy (like, say, hackisacking) judging from the new Arizona Ski Springs in Gilbert. The first waterski park to use a cable system instead of a boat was constructed in West Germany almost 30 years ago. Currently, there are 63 cableways in 19 dif­ ferent countries. Arizona has the honor of being one of the Jeorgetta Douglas/State Preis Florida native Marc D ouglas operates the cab les and instructs the skiers at Ski Springs. seven U. S. locations chosen as a site; Arizona Ski Springs held its grand opening this past Independence Day and has since played host to hundreds o f waterski fanatics practically every day. Arizona Ski Springs presently features a ski-side cafe, volleyball courts, picnic areas, barbeques, an exercise path, video games, pool tobies, and not to mention a 350-by-1167 foot man-made lake equipped with a cable system designed to pull skiers along as would a boat. The dif­ ference is that the cableways can accom­ modate hundreds of people in one day, while a boat can only tow about 30. Many experienced skiers have, however, found themselves humbled after ignoring advice to work up to skis after first feeling out the cableway on kneeboards, The cable system takes get­ ting used to — and that goes for the pros as well as the novices. One main difference is that you’re now working with corners. The unexpectedly sharp 90 degree turn takes some master­ ing. General Manager K ai Fusser said that Arizona Ski Springs w ill be constructing a second lake in the park; this one would have five corners instead of four, which would lessen the severity o f the angle. The second lake’s cable system would be designed for the average Joe, running at approximately 18 miles per hour, while the first one would run from 25 to 45 mph for slaloming, jumping and barefooting. Admission is charged on an hourly basis; one can expect to get about four to six turns in one hour, depending on the crowds. Weekly, monthly and seasonal passes are also available. Free use of dou­ ble and slalom skis, kneeboards, skurfers, shoeskis, trick skis and lifejackets is included. Tuesday night is Students’ Night; you get three dollars off from five to 10 p.m. with a current college I. D. (A fully lit park makes night skiing available till 11 p.m .). Wednesday night is Ladies’ Night, granting females a whopping 50 percent off of admission. I f you’re a guy and you wear a skirt, you can get 50 percent o ff too, but Jeorgetta Douglas/State Press Eag er skiers wait their turn at the new A rizona Ski S p rin g s in Gilbert. you have to wear the skirt while you ski. Arizona Ski Springs also boasts profes­ sional ski shows every Saturday and Sun­ day at 5 p.m. For the next couple of weeks, the shows w ill be free, but a $2 charge will be forthcoming. A rizona S k i Springs is located a t 537 N , M cQueen Road, a t M cQueen and Guadelupe. F o r m ore inform ation, ca ll 892-7868. ‘Starlight’ rolls into tow n in w ake o f ‘Cats* By S H A R O N K A N E Y State P ress When the S ta rligh t E xpress tickets arriv­ ed someone suggested hocking them and winging the review (they w ere a $75 value) . Indeed, since you could easily coin S ta rligh t "C a ts on wheels,” it wouldn’t be altogether difficult to regurgitate last season’s Cats review and just change the • names. Although Andrew Lloyd Webber’s two works do share a great many traits. S ta rligh t has one distinct advantage. It has a story line. The rather thin story line could easily be described as The L ittle E n gin e That Could who has hitched up at the latest dance bar. Our little protagonist steam engine is pit­ ted against newer, faster diesel and elec­ tric trains in the big race. The ‘trains’ are well balanced performers who roller skate on a track that extends forty feet into the house. The skating is accompanied by an im­ pressive (if not at times obnoxious) light show, complete with holography and flashy lycra costumes. The whole of the story takes place in the imagination of a little boy, which certainly helps the suspension of disbelief. Lloyd Webber’s score is interesting, and he strikes nice contrasts between ballads and full-blown rock and roll. Although a vast improvement over Cats, the S ta rligh t score is still not up to par with Lloyd Web­ ber’s best work Jesus C hrist Superstar. Richard Stilgoe’s lyrics define the characters well, although they are all too often stereotypical. This particular road show is well mounted, especially when one considers the limitations of taking such a technically complex production on tour. Such limita­ tions are evident in the skimpy set, a mere shadow of the original design. The limited ‘track’ space poses the greatest problem during the race sequences. The m ajority of the races are done via a pre-recorded pro­ jection. Although this is an understandable alternative, it still feels like a cheat. Aside from fancy roller-skating, the cast gives excellent performances. This is not surprising considering their impressive bio T u rn to ‘Starlight’, page 12. Photo by Kun Howard E ric Claused a s Electro surroun ded by c a s t m em bers from the N orth A m erican T o u r o f ‘Starlight E x p re ss’ Page 12 State Press Friday, September g l, 1990 Starlight-— Continued from page t i . credits — a good third o f them boast Broadway and/or Off-Broadway Credits. Jim m y Lockett gives a wonderful vocal performance as the inspirational Poppa (one almost expected him to say ‘M ay the force be with you’ ) . R eva R ice and Sean McDermott are exceptional are the lead couple Pearl and Rusty. But, as with Cats, the big star of the show is spectacle, and that sort of puts it right up there with the circus; the Ice Capades and a Las Vegas revue. This is hot to say that something that does no more than entertain has no value. It may not be art, but it is not without value. After all, who doesn’t have fond childhood memories o f the circus? I f nothing else Lloyd Webber m ay well be remembered for his genius at producing ‘consumer art,’ much along the same aesthetic lines as Patrick Nagel (as if one could rea lly classify N agel’s work as art). Unlike Nagel, at least Llyod Webber has the good graces to vary his subjects. ^ ' □ C o S a t 9 a .m .-10 p.m . I f k I Y < O h I. K C. I T O W \ 1 O L' H N A L C ^ S u n 11 a .m .-1 0 p .m . P h o n e : 967 -4 04 9 Browse through ou r 3 flo o rs o f: • New & Used Books • Calendars & Cards • Books on Cassette * FOR I . . . t il l m id n ig h t \ S b í 99e P m U u S aEi g Soft Drinks w/purchase of 1 lb. of Fajitas (Chicken Beef or Combo) Exp. 1/1/91 ¡75« doors Ule 59« B reakfast T a c o , (Bacon & E gg ! i 99» Pancakus o r ! 99« fo r C o ffee $ I Cinnam on RoU| O THER COUTONS NOT P A T IO C A F E A N D D R IV E -T H R U O P E N 24 H O U R S BROADWAY SOUTHW EST, SEA R S & 75 SPECIALTY SH OPS, LO S AR CO S FOOD CO URT AND THE LO S A R C O S M A R K E T P L A C E / S C O T T S D A L E & M CDO W ELL R O A D S / O P E N MONDAY TH RO UGH FRIDAY 10AM UNTIL 9PM /SATURDAY 10AM UNTIL 6PM /SUNDAY 12PM UNTIL 5PM /(602) 945-6376 S . W . C o r n e r o f M ill a n d U n i v e r s i t y 9 6 8 -3 7 4 7 State Fresa Pase 13 _Fr¡0to^Septemb«^21t2990 ‘GoodFellas’ changes mafia image His first experience in the clan started when Paul hired him to work in his taxi stand in 1955. Of course the main business G oodFellas is a film that only Martin Scorsese was capable was not taxis or taxi service, but Henry Caught on very quick­ ly. Through the business, Henry was able to meet several peo-| of making. It is a stunningly powerful portrait of thirty years in the life pie who were to become life-long friends, James Conway (Robert D eNiro) and Tom m y DeVito ( Joe of a small New York City mafia clan, and can be seen as the third segment in Scorsese’s ‘journal’ about life in and around Pesci) take Henry under their collective wing and help in­ the mafia. His first two segments w ere Who’s That K nocking troduce him tb all the important people and pull him deeper into the business of the mafia. a t M y D oor? and his landmark film M ean Streets, Tom m y DeVito, as played by Joe Pesci, is the best It seems that any film about the m afia requires Contrast character to be created for G oodFellas. He is a fast-talking, and comparison with Francis Ford Coppola’s 1972 epic The G odfather, because virtually all other mafia films wilt in com­ fast-cussing little guy who is unable to take any bull from B aY W w' anyone. By the end of the picture, Tom m y leaves a trail of parison with it; especially in terms of the way the mafia is V rfffíS IIS a k blood and bodies so long that his existence is in constant presented. danger. Mr. Pesci’s performance in this role is outstanding The G odfather presented the mafia as a group of cold, and has "B est Supporting Actor” written all over i t . . . in calculating businessmen whose organization is very struc­ blood, no less. tured and very, very formal. A godfather ruled each “ fam i­ Henry Hill is played by R ay Liotta, making his first ap­ l y ” , and each member of that fam ily had a specific title with pearance in a title role of a film. Throughout the film , Henry specific duties to carry out. is always ambivalent about the direction of his life. He wants G oodFellas, on the other hand, requires no comparison to to be a gangster really bad, but is only on the edge o f being The G odfather, and makes no apologies for itself. The film is based upon Nicholas P ile g g i’s book “ Wiseguy” , able to handle it. He loves the money that the career supplies a true story about one man’s involvement in the New York C i­ as well as the freedom that it provides, but the murders and ty mafia between 1955 and 1985. It presents the mafia not as a the witnessing of his friends breaking down forces him. to question his career and take steps to save himself from the simple gang of murderers, but as a group a men united in a living hell that he has created fo r himself. quest for free money, GoodFellas is a tough film to watch. It is graphically violent Mr. Scorsese pointed out in an interview that “ What people Th u rsdayand will not be appreciated by those with a weak heart or don’t understand is that a gangster’s job is not to go around killing people. A gangster’s job is to make money. That’s the weak mind. With the public service announcement aside, it is fair to say that Mr. Scorsese has added another masterpiece main thing . . . everyone makes a lot of money. “ Someone gets out of line, and it ruins that money-making to his collection. There is a lot to love in this picture, but the script in particular is the highlight. for everybody. So he’s got to go. It just happens to be their The screenplay is. written by Mr. P ileggi and M r. Scorsese, line of work.” That’s a nice way of putting it. and is able to effortlessly combine uproarious humor with The finest aspect of GoodFellas is the way Mr. Scorsese tough street dialogue. This helps present the characters as a presents the gangsters as real people who actually laugh, bunch of fun-lovidg men who are in a rough line of work. love, and play practical jokes on one another. by THOMAS JOSEPH The camera work by the fabulous Michael Ballhaus and the You won’t find anyone sitting' behind a desk in a tuxedo giv­ 38 Shake­ ACROSS editing by Thelma Schoonniaker keep the two and one-half ing orders, either. The “ fam ily” is a loose organization with 1 Prickly speare’s hour film a t a fast pace, allowing Mr. Scorsese the opportuni­ general, mutual ties between members. Each individual Athenian plant member is basically egocentric and would go his own way if it ty to develop his characters in his typically blunt manner. The 40 Man— 6 Highwould promote the more efficient taking of money. They stay last forty-five minutes of the film do tend to drag a little, but talk stepping the adrenaline-high first half easily makes up fo r it. together because it promotes a higher level of money42 Dodge aid G oodFellas is one of the best Am erican films of 1990, but on­ 11 Tennis’s grubbing. The godfather character is Paul Cicero (Paul Sor43 African ly tune w ill tell if it will be considered a great one. It took 10 vino). He pulls the strings, but stays in the background. antelope Dr. years for critics to proclaim Mr. Scorsese’s R a gin g B u ll the The film, follows the life of Henry Hill as he grows from a Richards 44 Broad­ best film of the 1980’s, so by the turn of the century w e will high school student into a career in the mob. His dream has casts 12 Glory always been to become a gangster. It represented everything know for sure how G oodFellas stands. ★ ★ ★ ★ 45 Fender 13 Goaded ra tin g is on a fiv e 's ta r scale good about life: easy money, power, sex and drugs. Scars 14 Go fishing By JO N W A L Z State P ress f CROSSWORD 20% ) AH Items C am pusHealth & Beauty Aids I - C o r n e r 712 S . C O L L E G E A V E — N E X T T O C O L L E G E S T R E E T D ELI M -F 7:30 a .m .-1 0 p .m . S a t 9 a .m .-10 p.m . S u n 11 a .m .-10 p .m . P h o n e :9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 KEYSTONE 735 E. UnhrorsHy Pf. • For FREE Delivery 931-9000 — 1 2 C o u p o n E x p ire s 9 -3 0 -9 0 the alternative copy shop at the comer of Mill and University in the Tempe Center W e F e a tu r e : •XEROX 9500 w ith C om p u terized collating. • XEROX 1038 s $3.49 No Limit « NO coupon necessary • Sale ends 930-90 Y P E A M 1e 1G o N A s TU P A S c E N T 1A N O A CU P E L S A 0T M 1L 1 R E D H M E D S L E E N A M E R s N E E. 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D XL z Y P F G N P D W X PCP o Z Y P L V N U T - Z Y P Z O IZ Y M PU V P C P Q D C T l O L V S P . -- Q D S V U U T Yesterday's Cryptoqnote: DREAMING PERMITS EACH AND EVERY O N E OF US TO BE QUIETLY AND SAFELY INSANE EVERY NIGHT OF OUR LIVES. — CHARLES DEMENT © 1990 by K ing Features Syndicate, Inc, Comics by Bill Watterson Calvin and Hobbes D O N T T ft< T O H A . 'V I U O N S K . copy im wy S A TUAE, c a l m in IU . , answös* I L L BET 1 S E T ANSW ERS M Slate Press Friday, September 21,1990 Page 14 w?/ y Y w in B E IN E I'll 25 you I G E T A H IG H E R m: BETTER b e t CENTS GRADE. ON. y O U W IG H T A S W E L L M A T B E W D G W IE M E T H E QUAR TER L IK E NOW ANO T E A H ' LETS DCW8LE I T AND MAKE \x3Scm, TUE T SOU 0 0 . TEU. N IN C R 9 S E THE W A G E R , 5 M E yCW RSELE TO By G A R Y L A R S O N H U M IL IA T IO N L A T E R ! SCO RE THAN o r to ur e th e f a r side 4 !yv " V / - Doonesbury g Y'T—' l S î - • .# : by Garry Trudeau m e ,1 GUESS THEBIGGESTIBSSONME LEARNEDFROMTHOSE OPERATIONS IS HOWEASYm s TO NEUTRAU2ETHEPRESS..., perm , i 'm somewhere in the MIPEAST, TALKINGTOARMYCAP­ TAINBPlATOUR. CAPTAIN, ^ m a t lessons m m the GRENADA ANDPANAMA INVASIONS HAVBYOU BEENABLE TO APPLY HERB? WEFOUNDTHAT¡BECANCONTROL THEPRESSPOOL, GIVE THEM basically squat, and there ISN'TA DAMN THINGTHEY y~\ CANDOABOUTIT! §Èà UM,..1 SEE. ANY OTHER LESSONS? Y% 'Æ .. W Z M c . CLASSIFIED. 9-2.V © 1983 Chronicle Features Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate jr ' Rainey Days COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (A P ) - A 26-year-oid fem ale imperspna tor posed as an llth-grade student at Coronado High School and even became a cheerleader , at which students said he did a good job. Student reaction ranged from amused to angry or scared. Parents, w ere just plain angry, school officials said Thursday. “ The students, they’re ail laughing,” said a female; student who asked not to be identified. “ The cheerleaders, they’re just mad.” Charles Janloyames Daugherty, a 5-foot-9164-pound man, was arrested at the school Tuesday on suspicion of third-degree forgery and criminal impersonation. He was released on a $750 bond and ordered to appear in court Oct. 1. Daugherty was only in school eight days. School officials said they discovered the masquerade within two or three days, but waited while police built a case. Jay Englen, assistant principal at the school, said parents and students “ feel very hurt and embarrassed. They feel betrayed.” He said there was no evidence any student was taken advantage of sexually. A teacher at the school who asked not to be identified said several girls befriended Daugherty and told him personal things — “ you know how girls talk to one another,” the teacher said. Tracy Cooper, a spokesman for School District 11, said there is very little the school can do to prevent similar incidents. by Julie Sigwart GRAB . H IM L UNAW ARE OF, A \ REMEMBER! , J T R A P , F E R R I S ■ . D O N 'T G E T , ] l S ID E T R A C K E D ./ IS O V E R C O M E W I T H C U R IO S IT Y & JlÉpt ^ I p i IM I S 17STATE PRESS Classifieds are like a good hot dog. . NO BOLOGNA! 945-8850 R O T H E R 'S 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. Tempe S o u th o f M cKeiiips; B O O KSTO RE (O m mite North o f university) Proudly serving the Valley o f the Sun m ALSO OFFER •CAL20PÆS «SU8S •SALADS »PASTA •SOUPS «BEERfcWME •LUNCH SPECIALS O P C N 7 DAYS A W EEK , GREEK D AY Custom ize Y o u r G re e k Shirt 1/2 O FF L e t t e r in g ! G reek D ro p s are n o w in !!! ONE 16” E X T R A C H E E S E W IT H y # • ■ # O N E L A R G E P IZ Z A i A 5 7 TthSl. □ î in c lu d e s FR EE D e liv e r y Extra for additional topping 1 T 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. m ile north o f university MSA Expires 9-28-90 945*850 625 E. Apache 'MasterCard T O P P IN G 967-5445 L 620 S. College 8 2 9 -1 1 2 8 Lim it one coupon p e r person, p er day. n o t good w ith any o th er offer. W o u ld n ’t you ra th e r go to R O T H E R ’S? State N u Page 15 Friday, September 21,1990 Sparks flies fo r Devils, give s his all By PAU L CORO S ta te P ress As the minutes to gam e time wind down, Phillippi Sparks winds up. Leaving the ASU locker room, he enters the dark, narrow tunnel that escalates to the Sun Devil Stadium field. His anxiety rises as he peruses his pad-cladded teammates that surround him, and the human sea of maroon and gold that colors the stands. y “ When you’re in the tunnel, your adrenaline is so over­ whelming and I get so tense that a tear comes out,” Sparks said. “ It feels so good.” With just two major collegiate starts under his belt, Sparks said he still gets nervous before the gam e “ but with the first contact« boom, it goes away and then I ’m very confident.” With good reason. The 6-foot, 192-pound junior has met lofty expectations as ASU’s starting left comerback. The form er strong safety is off to a respectable start in his first two games at corner, recording 13 tacldes and being graded at 96 percent for a Colorado State game that saw much of the defense. “ I thought I played terrible, but what I was thinking and what coaches thought was totally different,” Sparks said. “ I didn’t make any spectacular interceptions, punt blocks or kickoff returns. So that makes me feel like I didn’t, do anything.” Sparks felt better about the Baylor gam e because of his punt block, which picked up the Sun Devils’ momentum and set up a score. “ He gets disappointed if he doesn’t make big plays,” secondary coach Tom McMahon said. “ I keep telling him to keep working hard and those things w ill happen *-r can’t make them happen.” A fter two all-America seasons' at Glendale Community College, Sparks cam e to ASU in 1969 accustomed to making his presence known. At GCC, Sparks made five interceptions, returned three kickoffs for touchdowns and a 49.8-yard average, and punts for one score and a 21.9-yard average. “ When I first cam e over, I didn’t know what to expect,” Sparks said. “ I was kind of lost in the shuffle. Here is a bigname, big-time player in Arizona, I get out here and, wow, it’s a big world. I felt lost.” Sparks’ situation did not get any easier. In the third gam e liwln D n g h«ny/StM « P t» m Ju n io r Phillippi Sparks, the Su n Devil*’ starting left com erback, works o n h is kickoff returning skills In p ractice Thursday. of last season against Houston, Sparks injured his hand and was forced to redshirt the season. “ When I first cam e here, redshirting was the farthest thing from m y mind,” Sparks said. “ But unfortunately, I was injured and im mediately I wanted to redshirt because if I can’t give 110 percent, I don’t want to play at all.” Sparks said God helped him through that “ lonely” time last year, but he found positives in the setback. He said sitting out helped him develop his technique to make the switch from strong safety to comerback. Because last year’s starting corners, Eddie Stokes and Lawerence Hubley, are departed, McMahon said Sparks’ m ove was m ore by necessity than anything. “ I ’m really impressed by the w ay he has started out,” McMahon said. “ He looks like he has been out there forever.” F or Sparks, the spring switch was much more than using T u rn to Sparks, page 16. ASU volleyb all takes on U W , W SU in N o rth w est By GREG ZELE State P ress Considering the dry spell, the Washington and Washington State volleyball teams are currently enduring, the V alley’s recent rainfall could not possibly be from there. However, it could be a foreboding sign of ASU’s road trip to the Great Northwest this weekend. The Huskies (2-6 overall, 0-2 Pac-10) are in the midst of a six-match losing streak while the Cougars (4-6 overall, 0-2 Pac-10) are currently enduring a three-match skid. The Sun Devils (7-4 overall, 1-0 Pac-10) play UW tonight and WSU Saturday. “ I feel really good about our chances of going up there and winning both matches,” Coach Patti Snyder said. “ We’ re not going to take either team lightly.” Snyder characterized UW as a team that “ could unload at any moment.” Snyder said the Huskies have some great athletes and, if they get good setting, their tall outside hitters could present a real problem. * On UW ’s downside, the team is lacking ball control. Its passing and defensive skills are not quite up to par, according to Snyder. “ W e’re a developing team with good offensive potential,” Husky coach Debbie Buse said. “ Our ball control skills are developing.” Buse said a key reason fo r UW ’s poor start is the injury factor. The Huskies do not have a true setter and had to m ove sophomore outside hitter Diane Flick to the position. F lick ’s progress has been hindered by T.J. Sokol/Stat* Press constant injuries, but she continues to ¡day. Ju n io r o u «tide hitter M indy G ow ell leads the A S U volleyball team Into th is w eek’s road trip to the “ We have some real question marks in W ashington sch o o ls. our lineup,” Buse said- “ There is not a single aspect of the team that stands out.” Buse said the starting lineup w ill not be known until gam e time. Snyder said she is more concerned with WSU because they have several veteran players, The Cougars boast three of the top 10 hitters in the Pac-10. In addition, junior outside hitter K elly Hankins plaçes third in the conference in kills, averaging 4.58 a game. “ They lost a lot o f matches last year and they’re probably sparked and ready to go and have a lot better attitude in wanting to win m ore matches this year,” Snyder said. Controlling the pace of both matches will be something ASU w ill concentrate on this weekend, Snyder said. The Sun Devils have had problems with pacing lately, thus causing them difficulty in overcoming weaker opponents. In practice, ASU has been concentrating on moving the ball toward the net quicker to help speed up its attack. “ Hopefully, we can just w orry about what w e’re doing on our side of the net and not w orry so much about what those guys are doing,” Snyder said. “ That just comes with experience. “ W e’ll probably use the 6-2 (offense) both nights because w e need to block m ore balls against big Pac-10 opponents.” Thus far, the Sun Devils have been able to count on senior middle blocker Tina Berg to come up with the big block when necessary. Berg currently tops the Pac-10 with 2.28 blocks per game. On defense, outside hitters K elly Plaistad and Mindy Gowell lead the conference in digs, averaging 4.79 and 4.56, respectively. Page 16 State Pres» Friday, September 21,1990 Sparks. UofF gets 2-year probation Continued from page 15. McMahon said his ability m ay allow him to do. McMahon, who has coached 11 defensive backs that w ere either All-Americans or N F L draft choices, said Sparks m ay prove to be the best he has ever coached. “ I know God has blessed him with an awful lot of talent,” McMahon said. “ After two ball games, he’s right up there.” his athletic ability and speed to his advantage. “ There’s more money in the pros,” Sparks said. “ Oh Lord, it’s a big challenge, being in front of 80,000 screaming people, one-on-one with the fastest guys in the country. I think I ’m pretty good at accepting challenges though.” ; He should be. He has had enough practice. He had another monkey wrench thrown in his life this year, albeit a pleasant one. His wife, Jodi, gave birth to his daughter, Jordin, who will be nine months old Saturday. “ It’s a lot of weight I ’m carrying,” Sparks said. “ You really don’t have time to take a break from it all.” Hus summer, Sparks juggled his time to fit his fam ily, summer school, a job and lifting weights. Sparks said it has not gotten much easier since the semester started. “ H e’s growing up,” McMahon said. “ He just has to'do it a bit faster than others. It seems like everything is working out fine. The reality has already set in.” , Sparks guarantees that he will get his criminal justice degree, but he would rather not have to use it. With his fam ily in mind, Sparks wants to play in the N F L, something ' • • • ' •A knee sprain to backup center Jim Watson puts Coach Larry M arm ie in a bind at center. Freshman Toby Mills is next on the depth chart, but M arm ie wants to redshirt him. Watson’s questionable status for the Missouri gam e may force starter Paul DeBono to play the entire game. Marmie said starting strong guard Bob Robertson could play center. •Defensive tackle Bryan Hooks missed practice Thursday after suffering an ankle sprain Wednesday. M arm ie said he expects Hooks back next week. As a precautionary measure, Shante Carver is working out at Hooks’ position. •Defensive lineman Arthur Paul has not practiced the last two days because of stomach pains. •Tailback George Montgomery has been limited in practice with something similar to shin splints. S tâ tC P re s s Classifieds i-C a MPUS-i l C orn erj G A IN E S V ILLE , Fla. ( A P ) The University o f Florida was placed on NCAA probation for the second time in six years on Thursday, and school officials w ere upset the punishment included a postseason ban for this y ear’s football team. The NCAA chose to impose less than the minimum prescribed penalties in a case of m ajor violations. The bowl ban for this season was the only punishment of the football program, and there was no ban on television appearances for either sport. The Gators also will not be eligible for the Southeastern Conference football championship because an SEC rule prevents teams that are ineligible for a bowl gam e to win the conference title. The basketball program ’s scholarships will be restricted, and it must repay at least $287,000 in revenue from the 1988 N C A A tournam ent because guard Vernon M axwell played while he was ineligible. The Gators will be permitted 13 scholarships in 1991-92, two few er than the maximum, and 14 scholarships in 1992-93. F ir s t-y e a r fo o tb a ll coach S teve Spurrier said the bowl ban Was a more severe penalty than Florida deserved. “ This has been a clean-run program in the last four or five years,” Spurrier said. “ There’s been no cash payments, n m STEVE’S 712 S. C o lle g e no buying tickets of players, no falsifying of transcripts.” As part of the ruling, the N CAA cited form er basketball coach Norm Sloan and form er football coach Galen Hall, both fired last October, fdr unethical conduct. I f either takes a new coaching job in the next five years, his hiring must be approved by the NCAA Committee on Infractions. Hall is now an unpaid graduate assistant at Penn State, while Sloan is coaching a professional team in Greece. Chuck Smrt, director o f enforcement for the NCAA, said the case was unique because the school took significant corrective steps after the investigation was disclosed. F or that reason, Smrt said, the five-m em ber Committee on Infractions did not impose the minimum prescribed penalties. The minimum penalties could have also included restrictions on postseason basketball, recruiting in both sports and television appearances. F lo r id a e v e n f a c e d the rem o te possibility of having its football and basketball programs shut down by the death penalty. But even though the sch ool e s ca p ed s e v e r e sanctions, University President John Lombardi took exception to the postseason ban on this year’s football team, which is 2-0 and ranked No. 19. mini. . n m , market PHOTO I DOUBLE PRINTS ! $499 BUD $499 MILLER COORS EVERY DAY 24 Exp. Color Prints each When you buy 2 or more packs 12 pack 12 oz. cans E N T E R T A IN M E N T S H O W C A S E LIVE M U S IC ORIGINAL MUSIC. ALTERNATIVE M USIC LOCAL A NATIONAL BANDS 7 NIGHTS A WEEK. FOR THOSE WHO WANT TO KNOW single 12 pack $5.99 each. O F F E R V A LID S E P T . 20 ■S E P T . 30, 1990 AT T H E F O L L O W IN G LO C A T IO N O N LY: 908 E. B R O A D W A Y , T E M P E MEAL DEAL PEPSI FRIDAY SEPT. 21 D EA D HOT W O RKSHOP 6 pack/12 oz. cans WITH T H E M O R T A L S • 2 HOT DOCS • 12 OZ. FOUNTAIN DRINK SATURDAY SEPT. 22 T H E V O IC E WITH T H E 8 CIRCUIT M O D E L 99 SUNDAY SEPT. 23 DOW N B O Y WITH SP IR A L S C R A T C H MONDAY SEPT. 24 A C O U S T IC NIGHT TUESDAY SEPT. 25 T H E GIN B L O S S O M S *159 M e a c h " .... " ' . ■ When you buy 2 or more WITH T H IS C O U P O N O N E C O U PO N PER CUSTO M ER W H ILE S U P P L IE S L A S T O F F E R V A LID S E P T 20 SE P T . 30, 1990 A T T H E F O L L O W IN G LO CA TIO N O N LY : oose broadw ay , tem pe WEDNESDAY SEPT. 25 O F F E R V A L ID SE P T.20 • SE P T. 30,1990 AT T H E F O L L O W IN G LO C A T IO N O N LY : 908 E. B R O A D W A Y , T E M P E IN T H E R A W nm market mini. \ p m •CO UPO N - M ULTI-BAND J A M FE A TU R IN G T E N B A N D S CIGARETTES $ 4 ® ® 3 packs A if N nm Broadw ay pm 3» •C: ' <•5. - . .. 1 .- O F F E R V A LID S E P T . 20 - S E P T . 30, 1990 AT T H E FO L L O W IN G L O C A T IO N O N LY: 908 E. B R O A D W A Y , T E M P E S U R G E O N G E N E R A L ’S W A R N IN G : S m okin g By Pregnant W om en M ay R e su lt in Fe ta l Injury, Prem ature Birth, A nd Low B irth W eight. 908 E. Broadw ay O ffe rs v a lid S e p t 20-SepL 30,1990 at the fo llo w in g lo c a tio n only: 908 E. Broadw ay, Tem pe Page 17 Friday, September 21,1990 Stete Prete LINER AO RATES: 15 words or Jess: $3.00 per day for 1*4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10+ days 15* each additional word The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: In Person: Cash, Check (with guarantee card), VISA or MasterCard. W e’re located in the lower level of Matthews Center, room 46H. Of­ fice hours are 8 a.m.-5 p,m. MondayFriday. By Phone: 065-6731 Payment with VISA /M C only. $6 minimum on all phone orders. Personal* ere only $1.40! HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: Liner ads must b e canceled before noon, i day prior to publication. No refunds will be given. State Press Errors: Check your ad the FIR ST day it runs. Call 965-6731 with any corrections before noon. The State P ress is only responsible for the first day the ad runs incorrectly. Corrected ads will be extended one day- Changes called in after the first day will not qualify for a make-good. Customer Errors: Corrections must b e made before noon. Compensation will not be given for customer error. Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10 a.m.J. Advertising Policy: The State Press reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy submitted CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 time: $7.85 per col. Inch 2-5 times: $7,00 per col. Inch 6 or more times: $6.50 per col. Inch By Mail: Send your ad (with payment) to: State P ress Classifieds Matthews Center, Rrh 15 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING A D V E N T U R O U S F E M A L E / M A L E for Colorado River rafting trip. Only miss three school days M essage— 921 -9308 2 B ED RO O M special: $367/month. ASU, 4 blocks, 1014 South Farmer. Pool, laundry. 829-7137. FA L L SPECIAL: 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Cute red brick duplex apartments. Great loca­ tion, fenced yard. Q uiet graduate student preferredt 829-7675. N EED A N apartment for Spring semester, 1991 ? Complete with two. bedrooms, two bathrooms, and all furniture included. Close to ASU. If interested, call 968-6402. 2 BED RO O M , master $250, loft $195, plus utilities each in luxury condo. Professional atmosphere. 461-1023. L O V E T O dance? Hate the bar scene? Y o u ’ll love the All Singles Dances, Fridays at better Valley hotels. $4.50. Recorded information: 946-4086 A 2 bedroom, one bath, six blocks from A SU . Washer/dryer, dishwasher in unit. $400/month. 967-6429. FE M A L E N E E D E D to live at Comm ons on Apache N o deposit needed. Furnished. Washer/dryer. Walking distance to ASU. Pool, jacuzzi, weight room, raquetball, and volleyball courts. Contact Rhonda at 967- t478. Occupy now! O N E B ED RO O M , one bath. Pool, jacuzzi, c o v e re d p a rk in g , so m e fu rn itu re . University/Rural. P erfect for couple. 381-1710 N E E D Q UICK cash? W e’ll buy your basebiall, football, basketball, hockey card s Bob: 345-8799, Angelo: 451-8425. A S U A R E A , 2 b e d ro o m , 2 bath. $350/month, $250 first month. 967-4789. No pets. 965-6731 N E A R ASU ! One and Two bedrooms. Pool, laundry, dishwasher. $330-400; move-in Special. 1014 East Spence. 968- 6947. S IN G L E S ' E VE N T S, advice, personals — Arizona Singles Scene newspaper. Free sam ple, 990-2669 O N E B E D R O O M , furnished. A S U 1 block. Pool, laundry room. $375/month, includes utilities. Quiet! 966-4079. $200 OFF! Desperately seeking... Home for a Lab-mix puppy! It strayed into our lives on Tuesday and our cats are not pleased. I DON’T want-to turn it in for extermination. If interested, please call 941-5155. F R E E U T IL IT IE S ! W a lk t o A S U . S p a c i o u s 2 APARTMENTS b e d ro o m f u r n is h e d n is h e d a p ts. or A/C, u n fu r­ a v a il a b le . F ro m 1 A N D 2 bedrooms. $199 special movd-in. Covered parking, fireproof, pool, very near A S U , quiet, 1 bedroom: $310, 2 bedroom: $380: 968-6926 or 967-4568 S 3 9 5 / m o n th . B e a u t if u l pool la u n d r y B E A U T IF U L , NEW , large 1 and 2 bedrooms. Walk to ASU . Pool, laundry room. 1 block south of University on 8th Street. Cape Cod Apartments. Great sum mer rates. 968-5238 fbr specials. F IE S T A P A R K APARTM ENTS 1224 E A S T L E M O N 8 9 4-25 38 a re a , f a c i l i t i e s a v a il a b le . S a n M ig u e l A p ts. L a rg e 2 bedroom . 2 bath. Next to A S U . TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT U tilities in c lu d e d . 910 E . Lem on $150 O F F move-in! 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. 10 minutes from A S U . A ll conveni­ e n ce s, fireplace, pool. $438/month. 265-2066! 966-8704 ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS 1 B ED RO O M , 1 bath plus loft. All appliances plus washer/dryer, garage. $600/morith. 926-4757. NEED CLOTHES? CASH? BUY • SELL THE HOTTEST CASUAL WEAR Guess, Levi's and o th e r great labels 4 9 1 -2 0 2 9 Fry's Plaza southern & McClintock ACTION Apartment Rental Service 649-0077 2 B ED RO O M , 2 bath furnished condo. Ideal for 3 or 4 roommates, near ASU. 892-3497. 2 BED RO O M , 2T>ath condo. Fireplace, washer/dryer. $525/month. P e ts ‘ okay. Available October f . 967-8462. 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo, A S U 2 miles. Covered parking, washer/dryer, vaulted celling. 961-1707. $650/month. F O R RENT, 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo, near A SU . Washer/dryer, microwave, covered parking, pool. $650. 967-2344. IM M A CU LA TE 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Washer/dryer, covered parking, pool. Less 1 mile ASU . 464-0093. E N JO Y TH E QUIET! LO SE YOUR PUPPY? 1/2 B l o c k F r o m C a m p u s L U X U R Y H A YD EN Square 2 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer, refrigerator. Very nice. $850/month. 967-3245 B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d , h u g e 1~b e d r o o m , 1 b ath; 2 b ed ro om , 2 bath apart­ m e n t s . A ll b i l l s p a id . C a b l e TV, heated p o o l, and s p a c i o u s l a u n d r y f a c il i t i e s . Friendly, courteous m an ag em en t. Stop by to d a y ! T O W N H O U SE , 2 bedroom, 2*4 bath. 1 car garage, Dobson Ranch. $550 monthly. Available 9/1. 638-2120. T e rra ce R o a d A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra ce 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 2 B ED RO O M , 2 bath. W alk to ASU. Fu rn ish e d tow nhouse, w asher/dryer, microwave. $250/month. 944-4997. Males only. RENTAL SHARING 1 R O O M M A T E , w asher/dryer,' dishwasher. $225. John, 965-7497 day, or 968-6911 evenings/weekends. APARTMENTS • Quiet Professional Atmosphere • Close To America West And ASU With a Lost and Found Classified ad in the State Press! Bring in this coupon for a F R E E 20 word Lost & Found ad! State Press Classifieds Basem ent. 965-6731 A ds may run for any length of time. Canceled ads will be credited to your ac­ count. Sorry, no refunds. L e t S ta te P r e s s C la s s if ie d s w o rk f o r y o u A RO O M in 3 bedroom, 3 bath townhome. Male or female non-smoker. Private jacuz­ zi plus many extras. $250 plus V5 utilities. 829-6702. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE A P P R O X I M A T E L Y $5 ,0 0 0 down to assum e FH A no qualifying loan. 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Includes all appliances. Great recreational facilities: C lose to A SU . $72,000. Ca ll Darrellyn, Century 21 Anderson Group, 837-1331, A.H. 837-0187. A SU FE M A L E roommate. McClintock/ University. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, own washer/dryer. Built-in appliances, microwave; refrigerator; pool, furnished. $275 plus share utilities. 967-8073 or 897-2076. O N L Y $29.9001! 3 bedroom, 1 bath. D e b b ie S h ie ld s , C o ld w e ll B a n k e r, 376-7101 or 991-3100, leave message. F E M A L E N O N SM O KE R , own bedroom, own bath. Washer/dryér. $300/month plus, % utilities. Call 968-1582. FURNITURE F E M A L E S H A R E 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. All the luxuries, furnished, unfurn-. ished. 820-7341, leave message. F E M A L E W A N T E D for furnished 3 bedroom condo. % mile from campus. Fall semester only. 921-1177. 8 ’ SO FA , loveseat, chair, hassock. Rich chocolate brown. Like new. Call Kathy, 965-1050 or 897-9120 after 5. BE D S, TWIN: $70; Full size; $85. Never used, still in factory wrapper. Will deliver. 256-9245. HAYQ EN S Q U A R E roommate wanted. Private bedroom/bath. Call Jeff, 554-2427 (before 6pm); 921-8253 (after 6pm). C O N T E M P O R A R Y M E T A L-T U B IN G bunkbed, barely used. Tw o mattresses included. Enhance your decor. $300/offer. 966-7779. H A Y D E N SQ U A R E condos. Furnished, 3 bedroom condo. Looking for 2 male roommates. Call today! 967-4327. FA U X ST O N E dining table. . Custom upholstered chairs, $850. Sofa, beautiful ; new condition, $400. 967-5271. L A R G E B E D R O O M in 2 bedroom apart­ ment. $242 including utilities. Pool, laun­ dry, September free. Carmen, 894-2992. FU T O N S — Queen-size convertible. $125, 969-8873. M A LE R O O M M AT E wanted. 1 bedroom in Cholla dorm. Call Joe, 784-0789. SOLID M A PLE dresser/mirror, $50. Chest, $20; night stand, $5; brass-plated queen headboard, $10; 967-8170, O W N RO O M , huge house. Southern/ McClintock. Pool, utilities. 3250/month p lus 1/5th utilities. Tim , 966-3431, 966-5039. S U P E R SIN G LE waterbed, dresser with mirror, accessories. Dark oak, excellent condition. $400 for both or best offer. 833-0335, leave message. Q U A D R A N G LE S V ILL A G E apartment. Fem ale roommate needed, 9/26-1/25. Own bedroom/bath. $225, Vfe utilities. 966-1758, RO O M M ATE W AN TED. N ice 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. Washer/dryer, fireplace, tennis, racquetball, jacuzzi. 10 minutes from A S U $250/month. Brad, 890-0150. R O O M M AT E N E E D E D , share 2 bedroom apartment. $240/month plus utilities. 966-0618, leave message. RO O M M ATE W AN TED for beautiful Papago condo. Walking distance to school. 2 bedroom/2 bath, all amenities. M ale proffered. $l84-$234, negotiable. Sean, 731-4857 (leave message). ROOMS FOR RENT A L A R G E room for rent. Classy south Tempe home. Spa, washer/dryer, security, pool and tennis. A ll bills under $400 a month. Can be furnished. Nonsmoking graduate student. C a ll 838-7562. "C O M M O N S O N A p ach e" take over paym ents- volle yb a ll, pool, ja cu zzi, barbeques, racketball- room above pool, must move home! Male-female. Matt Ross, 829-0933. HOMES FOR SALE R E P O S S E S S E D VA and HUD HOMES available from govern­ ment from $1 without credit check. You repair. Also tax delinquent foreclosures. Call 1-805-682-7555, *xt. H-2003 for repo flat In your area. COMPUTERS A A A A A C O M P U T E R time in exchange for your typing skills; John; 967-8369. W A R R A N T Y NEW ! Le ad in g Edge-D (IBM). Expert configuration: 3.54nch, 5.25-inch floppies; 2400 internal modem; monitor; keyboards; etc. Word Perfect 5.0. $825.967-2535. TICKETS ST AR LIG H T E X P R E S S , Sedona J a zz Festival, Basia, Linda Rondstadt, Cat bn a Hot Tin Roof, Les Miserables. All 1st 10 rows. Ticket Exchange, 8294)196. JEWELRY C A S H F O R gold, diamonds. M ill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 101, Tempo. 968-5967 AUTOMOBILES 1964*41 M U STAN G , white with red interior. Excellent restoration, new tires. $6,200. Taun, 978-1608. 1979 M G B . Blue, excellent condition, 56.000 miles, new tires. $2,500.921-4338. TIRED OF NOISY NEIGHBORS? Find it...FREE! WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). • Spacious Studios, 1 bedroom, 2 bdrm/2 ba TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE 3 B ED RO O M , 1 bath unit In Tempe 4-plex. Excellent location, 10 minutes from ASU, 15 minutes from Airpo(t. Mint condition and priced well below market at $49,900. New financing. C a ll now! 266-4453 or 9264)456. • Covered Parking • 2 Pools «Jacuzzi ASK ABOUT OUR 12-MONTH LEASE SPECIAL Buy o ! the W eek HAYDEN PLACE- TH, lg.master bdrms, walk-in closet, poolside. $88,500. 62$ W. 1st Street - Between Hardy ft M ill-968-5444 2 P a p a g o P a rk Bob Bullock Realty Executives 9B8-2W2 1980 T O YO T A Célica G T liftback, white, 5-speed. Ice cold air conditioning. Must sell. $800. 967-7837. 1982 FIR EN ZA coupe, white, 4-speed, 70.000 miles, AM /FM cassette, no air conditioning. $2,500/offer. 496-9072. 1984 B M W 318i. Blue, only 47,000 miles. Autom atic, Air-conditioning, sunfroof, perfect condition. $8,950. 759-7530. 1986 M AZD A R X 7 GXL, red exterior, leather interior, sunroof, luxury package. 36.000 m iles, im m aculate. $10,950. 926-2760. 1987 OLDSMOBILE Calais, excellent condition. Sole owner, must sell. Upgraded stereo, air-conditioning. $6,195. 892-0145 or 3704)270. AUTOMOBILES 1988 C H E V Y Baretta. excellent condition, air-conditioning, 24,000 miles, AM/FM cassette. $7,500. Call 838-3492. 1988 HO N D A Civic LX , gold. A ir condition­ ing, AM/FM/cassette, tinted, 40,000 miles, excellent condition. $8,000. 979-5957. 1990 FO R D Mustand GT, 5 0; 17,000 miles, perfect condition in and out. AM/FM cassette, air conditioning, power locks/ windows! $13,000/offer. 988-1528 1990 M AZD A M X 6 LX, fuHy loaded, automatic. 11,000 miles, like new. Asking $12,750/offer 829-7203. ‘88 F O X G L for sale. Air conditioning, AM /FM cassette, sunroof, 4-door, gray, tinted windows, 4-speed, very clean car. S te a l this beauty fo r $6,700. C a ll 497-6541 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE F O R SALE; K2 Super Elite skis, Saloman bindings, Nordica boots and Scott poles. $475. 967-9132. M A C E ? F O R information, write: Box 967, Stonybrook, New York 11790. NAKAMICHI car stereo. Sacrifice $300. 180-watts power amp, $50. 831-8959, leave message. SPO IL Y O U R S E L F with personalized gifts that sharpen your im age and organize your household. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send for free catalog to: J W F 4949 East Van Buren, Department 67064, Phoenix, Arizona 85082. T Y P E W R IT E R S MANUAL electric. $20-65. 486-0971. and F O R S A L E 1974 BM W 2002,4-spped, air, new interior, runs great. Call Tom, 966-9528. $ $ $ $ INSTANT CASH fo r y o u r v e h ic le s ! $$$$ A ll m a k e s & c o n d itio n s . I 'll c o m e to y o u r lo c a tio n ! L is a 4 8 4 -7 0 5 5 IBM BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES C O LD CA SH ! Pay tuition, buy new clothes, earn thousands a month while studying! Call 420-1997. U N BELIEVABLE!! IT only takes a phone call to discover this incredible opportunity. C a ll 230-5306 for 24-hour recorded message. CARS, tru ck s, boats, 4-w heelers, motorh om e s by FBI, IRS, D E A . Available in your area now. C a ll HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL C A S H F O R cars or trucks. 24 hours, 7 days a week. 953-3680. SEIZED State Prest Friday, September 21,1990 Page 18 A S S E M B L Y P R O G R A M E R , part-time. Close to A SU . Rapidly growing company is looking for students with strong math aptitude to write software for Real Time multi-user operation systems applications for V A X and the 68020, To apply, call Ticketmaster at 968-2323. I’M LO OKIN G for hard working, enthusias­ tic, athletic, energetic, people-oriented young men and women to help me sell a new sporting good product. You will work weekends at resorts, conventions, and swap meets. Meet me on the northend of the University overpass walkway at 4pm sharp on September 21st. Look for the orange cable between 2 trees. If you can’t make this meeting and are sincerely interested, call me at 786-4814. LE A D G E N E R A T O R design/architectural firm Commission, part-time, will train, may develop into full-time sales. Send resume or complete application to: 6031 South M aple, Tem pei 85283, Attention; C.W C H R I S T M A S , Spring B r e a k , s u m m e r tra v e l F R E E . A ir cou riers needed an d cruiseShip jobs. Call 1-805-682-7555, F-1423. ext. Telemarketing N e a r-N erd less work envi­ ronm ent. W illing to hire local sororities. R o c k & Roll & A riz o n a 's ea sie st job! S c h e ­ d u le appointm ents. W ork hrs.: M -F 4-9 p.m ., Sat. 9-2 p .m . $5/hr + com m . C all D an , 2-4 p .m ., an d tell a friend. E Ò E . 1-805-682-7555, ext. C-1669. MOTORCYCLES 8 2 9 -3 9 1 0 1985 HO N DA 250 Elite scooter, $350 or best offer. 860-8919 after 6pm weekdays; anytime weekends. ACCOUNTING STUDENTS!!! G e t a head start on your ca re e r a s a n A cco u ntin g A ssista n t for A S U P u b lic Events. '82 SUZUKI GS550 Katana. Runs/looks excellent. Sport bike, black, must sell. $1,350/offer. 968-9162, leave message. Bo o k kee pin g & accounting, d a ta entry , com puter ex pe rien ce preferred. H O N D A ELITE 150, pop-up headlight, runs great, new tires, battery, red. Leave message. $800. 968-5336. P ick up application at G a m m a g e S ta g ed o o r O ffice room 101 or C A L L 5-5062. BICYCLES 1990'/2 NISHIKI Ariel mountain bike, 19-inch. 2 weeks old. Deorde-dx compo­ nents. Accessories. Cost $750, must sacrifice $520/best offer. Immaculate. 829-0445. BIKE BONANZA: 60-centimeter Takara, Shimano T05, like new, $250; 49-centime­ ter Bianchi, Shimano 105, great shape, $250; 21-inch Bianchi, Shimano/Suntour, low mileage, $200; 56-centimeter Shogun Tim e Trial, Shimano 600, $325. 730-6333, after 3:30. F E M A L E CR U ISER , blue huffy, good condition, with or without basket. $40 or best offer. 967-3859. M O UNTAIN BIKE— 1989 Specialized Rockhopper, 20-inch frame, Mountain— LX, some extras, $325/offer. Call Dave, 921-7589 NISHIKI C R U ISER S, 2 (men and women) blue, almost new. $100 a piece or best offer. Evenings, 829-9687. R A LE IG H TECHN IUM mountain bike. 18-inch frame, has best features, list $599, ste a l at $300. D ave, 894-6317 or 921-1397. TRANSPORTATION A A A DRIVEAW AY. Free cars to most major cities. G as allowances available. 21 or older. Call 478-1733. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 19-INCH C O L O R Magnavox. 1% years old. $210 or best offer. 829-1039, leave message. 2 1 -cubic-fdot sid e -b y-side autom atic cuber/water; 18-cubic-foot open front auto­ matic cuber; washer/dryer 966-1015. F O R SALE; Kenwood carousel C .D play­ er. Brons, new, still in box. Going for $225. ‘‘5 ” year warranty included. Must sell. CaH Tricia Taylor at 921-9547, leave message. M ARKET. R E S E A R C H Interviewers. This is your chance to find out what market research is all about. Market Survey Group, a subsidiary of Market Solutions Group, a leading research and consulting firm specializing in the service industries, needs several motivated students who can work in the early evenings and weekends on our C R T interviewing systems. No experience is needed, we will train. Start­ ing salary is $5/hour, plus bonuses, with salary reviews every 4 months. Call 483-8214 or 483-7544 anytime after 1:30pm to arrange an interview. O r stop by at 8687 East Villa D e Ventura, Suite 309, Scottsdale (McCormick Ranch Area). N A N N Y O P P O R T U N I T IE S S a la rie s $150-$40Q week. Jo in our successful Nanny Network and experience growth with a great family on East Coast. Call A rlene Streisand, 1(800)443-6428. Mini­ mum 1 year. HELP WANTED— GENERAL 100 P E O P L E needed for inventory for weekend of September 29. Bring a friend and work as a team. Apply today at Apple One, 20 East University (University and Mill). .. . ' • • ' . A M ER ICA N G R A D U A T E School of Inter­ national Management, looking for U K citizens to participate in market research to be held this weekend. Please call 957-4109 if interested. B A N Q U E T S E R V E R S , w aitress and waiter experience acceptable. W e ’ll work you around your-schedule. M ust have own transportation. Apply immediately at Apple One, 20 East University (University' and Mill). B E S T FU N D raiser o n campus. Looking for a fraternity, sorority or student organi­ zation that would like to earn $500-$1,000 for a one-week on-campus marketing project. M ust be organized and hard­ w o r k in g . C a ll J e a n in e o r A m y ;, (800)592-2121. C R U IS E S H IP JO B S . Now hiring for Christmas/Spring Breaks. No experience n e c e ssa ry . D on’t d elay. C a ll now! 1-900-990-5621, Extension C l 17. 994 per minute. D OW NTO W N Y M C A child care needs you! 2-6pm, Monday-Friday, no weekends! The perfect college job! 2257-5161. E A R N $700 part-time selling widely used female products. This is an instant hit with no competition and fun to sell. Set your own hours. Ca ll Diane, 947-2910, 9-5pm. EN G IN EER IN G TECHN ICIAN, full or parttime. O ne year minimum Mechanical Engineering or Technology. Som e job experience required. Phone 956-8200. E N TE R T A IN E R S W A N T E D for feature films, TV commercials! Photo sessions. C E E C Entertainment, 274-6362. FR A TERN ITY AND sorority members. Earn extra money. National party favor company looking for sales associatesHigh Commissions, work your own hours. 1(800)444-6484. G L A M O U R SH OTS. Full-time, part-time, weekends. Photographers, custom er reps, make-up artists. Apply in person; Glamour Shots, Paradise Valley Mall, 4550 East Cactus Road. P R O G R A M AID ES fdr before/after school program. 3-4. houte daily. Start $5/hour. 4309 East Belleview, Phoenix. SPO RTS-MINDED: HIRING immediately, A S U office. $8-10/hour. Part-time/full-time. Perfect for students, day/evening. Cali 921-8282 PART-TIM E T E LEM A R K E TIN G W e have 15 immediate openings, training provided to offer extended warrantees on G M and Ford vehicles. $5 per hour, Monday through Thursday, 3pm to 9pm; Saturday, 8-1 pm. Call today, 831-1131: PH O N E SO LICITO RS. $6-$15 per hour. C a ll Duane, 921-2831 or 470-1527 INC. 500 Company needs P/T Help to Fill 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Shift 55s®Guaranteed ★ ★ EA SY CASH ★ ★ Completely automated donor p la sm a -p h e re sis. D isco v er how easy, safe and fast it is to: while donating much needed plasma. Mention this ad for a $5 bonus on your first dona­ tion. (Monday-Saturday) •C ash Bonus paid nightly •C o rn e rsto n e M a ll location • F le x ib le H ours •W e e k ly pay 1015 South Rural Road, Tempo CALL 968-4457 894-2250 For an interview UNIVERSITYPLASMACENTER Associated Bioscience, Inc. HELP WANTED— GENERAL T E M P E C E N T E R for the Handicapped Hotline: teach,' care, and assist disabled adults and children group homes and day programs. Part-time, fulltime. All shifts available. Other positions open. Call 894-2704. EO E. : .■ TU T O R FO R high school student. Approx­ imately 12 hours/week. Up to $7/hour. 894-9364. W A L K E R D A T A S O U R C E now hiring 6-10:30pm shift. Need enthusiastic, reli­ able individuals with average reading skills and good speaking voice for tele­ phone survey interviewing. Starting wage— $4.50/hour. Apply in person 10am to 4pm, Monday-Friday, 4515 South M cClintock Drive, Suite 101, Tempo. 831-2971. EO E. Male/female. W RITER S W AN TED for internship. M usic writer, theatre critic, cultural happenings and events, restaurant reviews, short sto ries. Fo r more inform ation, call 274-4858 between 12 and 5, , YO U T H E M P L O Y M E N T C ouncilor. Parttime, temporary. $7.84/hour. City o f Tempe has an opportunity for a Youth Employment Councelor. A Bachelors in Education, Social Work, or related field is preferred. Apply ih person at City of Tempe Library, Social Services Depart­ ment, 2nd floor. 3500 South Rural Road in Tempe. . ' ■- • , - HELP WANTED— CLERICAL N E E D TR AN SC R IB E R immediately. Price negotiable. Lisa: 965-3387 days, 921-0789 evenings and weekends. R E C E P T IO N IS T - P R E F E R S p a n ish ­ speaking. 20-30 hours per week. Flexible schedule. Light paperwork arid bookkeep­ ing. 10 minutes from A SU . $5/hbur to start. 244-1383, ask for Lisa. RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST. FULL- or parttime for Tempe Construction Company. Ca ll Dan or Kim, 967-0000. S C O T T SD ALE B U SIN ES S looking for receptionist/typist, also filing, to work 8:30am to 2pm Monday through Friday. 949-8899. HELP WANTED— GENERAL NEED A JOB? $ 6 00Ahr + commission + bonus ★ U.S. Vanguard will hire over 100 telemarketers IMMEDIATELY. The opportunity for advancement is excellent. ★ We offer paid training and a professional office environment. ★ Market Long Distance service for the nation’s 3rd Largest long distance carrier. ★ Shifts still available 4:30-9:00 p.m. Monday-Friday 8:00-2:00 p.m. Saturday 968-6666 .Marriott (Suites M/W/Th/F 9 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1:30-4:30 p.m. Tu 10:30 a. m.-2 p.m. and 3-7 p.m. PR IC E S A V E R S W holesale Warehouse is opening its newest warehouse in Phoenix at 317 South 48th Street and is now hiring for the following positions: Personnel Specialist, inventory Auditors, Reception­ ist,* R e c e iv e rs, S to cke rs, C a sh ie rs, Bakers, Marketing Répresentatives, Main­ tenance, experienced Cigarette Tax Stamp Clerk. W e offer competitive sala­ ries, excellent benefits, bonus incentive plan, and opportunity for advancement. For immediate consideration please apply in person at Price Savers Wholesale W arehouse, 5025 E ast Washington, No. 108, Phoenix, Arizona 85034. EOE. NINTENDO G A M E B O Y players- earn money for writing down your tips and techniques. 998-1430, leave message. 1301 E. U n iv e rs ity is hiring for the following positions: •Servers •AM Room Servers •Dishwasher •Cook •AM Banquet Aide •Front Desk Clerk •Front Desk Supervisor •Sales Assistant •Host/hostess Superior benefits: a unique suites concept. E x c e lle n t downtown S c o tts d a le location . Close to ASU and MCC. Apply in person: 7325 E. 3rd Ave. Scottsdale P R E S C H O O L : D IR E C T O R , assistant director, staff. Part-time, full-time. Mesa. Experience preferred. Must be over 21. 926-7045. S E G A G E N E S IS players- earn money for writing down your tips and techniques. 998-1430, leave message. D R IV E R S NEED ED up to $8/Hour No funky uniform s No s illy hats Fun atm osphere C lo se to A SU A GREAT P L A C E TO W O RK P R É S C H O O L T E A C H E R S needed tor part-time or full-time. W ill train. East location. Amigo Preschool, 267-1539.. N EEDED : M O TIVATED persons to sell sunwear and suncare products poolside at area resorts. Need own transportation. C all 941-2751 DU TIES INCLUDE: 83 HO N D A CX650C. New tires, extras. $700. 258-9310 M O N S T E R SC O O TE R ! 1985 Elite 250 O nly 5,800 miles. Clean, quick, reliable. Steal for $1,000. Warren, 968-7991. G R O U N D FL O O R opportunity. Earn $200-$1200 part-time talking to your peers. Call 92443499. Earn $120 + a month 1987 HO N DA Elite 150. Low mileage, sky blue, recently tuned up. Purchased for $2,300, you can drive it away for $1,200. Original owner, rarely used it. Call 379-0101 day or 379-1707 night, ask for Michael. H O N D A TRAIL 110, on/off scooter. 1982. 1,100 original miles, runs great, will trade for video camera. Call 829-6925. HELP W ANTED GENERAL Call Mr. Stitzer U.S. Vanguard 1232 E. Broadway, Suite #218 Tempe, Arizona 7 8 4' -1 5 9 9 _______ : HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE S5/HOUR. R O C K Y ’S Subs Part-time, weekdays. Across from Sky Harbor, 40th Street and Airiane. 267-7464. FREE LO ST/FO U N D PERSONALS PERSONALS LO ST S E P T E M B E R 8 or 9, 13-year-old, unkemped 3-5 pound white female peeka poo, needs care. Elder's companion. 966-6087, please call. D G S — G O O D luck in Delta Sig V-ball tourney! TA M EE: Y O U ’R E attractive, intelligent and fun to be with but are you available and interested? Su amigo. LOST: S E T of keys with blue dancing bear keychain, between University Towers and M usic Building. If found, please call 350-0237. B U S T E R ’S R E S T A U R A N T in Scottsdale is ndw hiring waiters and waitresses, bussers and hostesses. Please apply in person: 8320 North Hayden (Mercado del Lago). Pull- and part-time positions available: PERSONALS C L U B U.M . is accepting applications for waitress arid janitor. Apply in person, 1-4pm, Friday, Tuesday and Wednesday. 415 South Mill, Suite 203. AA A A A G A M M A Phi Women— Waterme­ lon Bust!!! Starting next week!!! What more needs to be said? A K A ’S- G E f psyched to meet your coach­ es on Sunday!!' It's been a long time, Watermelon Bust has missed you! C O R K ‘N Cleaver accepting applications for lunch waitress and lunch hostess. Short shifts. Convenient hours. Fun atmo­ sphere. W ill train. Concern with appear­ ance, personality and reliability are impor­ tant. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 2-5pm or by appointment’ 5161 North 44th Street, Phoenix (44th Street/Camelback). 952-0585 A L P H A PHIS: Get ready to win Delta Sig Nite-Lite Volleyball!! HIRING F O R all kitchen positions. Both shifts— day and night. Apply in. përson, Rio Salado, 430 North Scottsdale Road, Tempe. A M Y TH E Minnesota usher, Brad the security guard is looking for you! I spend most of my time in the M U basement or library. Hope to see you again. PIZZA C O O K wanted. Experience a must. Room for advancement and good day. Call Todd at Cardinal's Pizza, 829-0064. AN A NCIEN T grudge Romeo seeks to ignite, in this first act I’H begin the fight. Wit and wisdom both intertwine, yet for safety's sake I’ll be Rosaline. Lend some charm through a written parry, I’ll fence with the best through knowledge of old. And we mean well in going to this mask, but ‘tis no Wit to go. A L P H A G A M M A Deltas are going to destroy their competition at Watermelon Bust. Love your coaches. PIZZA D E L IV E R Y drivers wanted Daily pay, flexible hours. Immediate positions. Call Todd at Cardinal’s Pizza, 829-0064. S T O C K Y A R D S R E S T AU R A N T now hiring dishwasher/busser, lunch waitresses, and hostess/epektait. Apply in person: 5001 East Washington, 10am to 11:30am and after 1:30pm. ATQ ;RO SS: Mr “ M oles" is watching you! Let’s make dinner soon. Love, Princess. ATTENTION A L L Greeks: Gam ma Phi Beta is having a B B O Sunday, September 23, from i-6pm. Tickets are available through all Gam m a P hi's. Price of ticket includes food and fun. All proceeds benefit our Philanthropy fund. RESTAURANTS/ BARS + *•* + * * • * * * * + * : TO N ITE : : LIVE! I * * * * * Marconias : * piays I * Guitar 1 r * ★ ★ : 9 pm — 1am * * 5th St. &Forest BREWPUB * • * * * • * ♦ * * • * • * ■ * •» * I PETS B A B Y B O A constrictor. Great markings, good pet for apartment or dorm. Paul, 948-4076 B URM ESE. P YTH O N babies, $150; Boa Constrictor babies. $100 Leave message at 986-9457, Mesa. F R E E C U T E puppies! Chow/Lab mix, all black, 9 weeks old, very smart. James. 829-1784 Desperately seekingsee Home for a Lab-mix puppy! It strayed into our lives on Tuesday and our cats are not pleased I DON’T want to turn it in for extermination If interested, please call 941-5155. TRAVEL ADVERNTIIRHI155 FFMAI F/MAI C */>F A D V E N T U R O U S F E M A L E / M A L E fo re Colorado River rafting trip Only miss three school days M essage— 921 -9308 F L Y A N Y W H E R E U S A In you name! 48 States, $285-400 A la ska, $500-600. Hawaii, Europe, etc. You can leave today A ls o b uying tra n sfe ra b le cou p on s/ vouchers. Top prices paid. Travel Tips, 968-7283 (YOU^SAVE). LO W ES T C O S T — . Eurail passes and international youth hostel memberships— both issued on the- spot! Student-fare flights, student identification cards, travel packs and other travel items also avail­ able. Contact American Youth Hostels, (602)894-5128, or com e by 1046 East Lemon Street. ROUND-TRIP TICKET from Phoenix to JFK , Thanksgiving break Leaves Novem­ ber 21, returns November 25. $320. CaH 431-8961 for more information. ROUND-TRIP AIRLINE ticket from Phoe­ nix to St. Louis. Leave October 5 in afternoon and return October 7 in evening. $186 Call Barbara at 820^4920. Leave message if not home. FREE LOST/EOUND LOST: B L A C K lab puppy, wearing blue collar. Last seen Lot 57. Please call for reward. 784-8818. IF IT’ S a duel you desire, to your ad I must inquire. But first a warning (to be fair)— when I write romance none compare. But if you think you can compete, then Romeo, sweep me off my feet! K A LLE: I’M glad you finally made it to A SU . Hope you're as excited about formal as I am. Let’s rage! Love, Angel. K A P P A K A P P A Gam m a Tempest, please stress down. I’m worried about you! I'm always here for you if you need me. I love you!!! Your better half, Barbara. K A P P A K A P P A Gamma: It's not too late to participate in Watermelon Bust!! K S A LLEIR B A G - ereh si ruoy tsal eulc. I semitemos gnab touta s ’gb tub m’l ton 12. teG deheysp rof thginot!! LADIES O F Sigma Sigm a Sigma— Get psyched for an excellent time at Waterme­ lon Bust. Let’s do it again! Love, your coaches. LADIES O F Alpha Gam m a Delta: Get p sych e d to re pe a t a s W aterm elon Champs. Love your coaches Andy Thos and Dan. LA M B D A CHI Dr. Feel Good— Date Party was great— How about formal? Love, Studebecha. LA M B D A CHI coaches, we are psyched for Bust! Love ÿa Gam m a Phis! LA M B D A CHI Chris Lavoie (the pumpkin driver). Do we know zoot or what? LA M B D A CHI Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, F U N, fun!. Chris Chris Chris Chris Lavoie, Lavoie, Lavoie, Lavoie, TRI D ELTS, get psyched for Watermelon Bust. Your coaches, W es, Mike, Craig and Steve. TRI SIG M A S. First place last year, second to none. Let’s do it again and have lots of fun. Love, your coaches. W A T E R M E LO N B U S T Watermelon Bust Watermelon Bust Watermelon Bust for m .s : W A T E R M E LO N B U S T Watermelon Bust Watermelon Bust Watermelon Bust for MS. W A T E R M E LO N B U S T Watermelon Bust Watermelon Bust Watermelon Bust for m s : W A TE R M E LO N B U S T Watermelon Bust Watermelon Bust Watermelon B ust for M S. CHILD CARE CHILD C A R E needed, before and after school. North Scottsdale: Reliable trans­ portation and references required. Call 998-8513 J - - •' M A T U R E B A BYSITTER wanted for baby and toddler and to supervise teens. After­ noons and evenings. Dobson/Broadway area. 962-7466. BIRD LADY: Don't look here for chirping. Just d o se your eyes and listen. Pooh. L A M B D A CHI Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, Chris Lavoie, I can’t wait til tomorrow! ADOPTION: H APPILY-M ARRIED couple wants a healthy infant to adopt and love. Please call our adoption attorneys, 24 hours, collect: (408)288-7100. C O N G R A T S T O the 90-‘91 Alpha Phi Bordeaux Beaus Troy McKay, Tom Feeley and Christian Houssiere. D EE G E E 'S — Get ready for Watermelon bust next week. W e will dominate. D ELT A SIG— Alpha Phi is psyched for night light; D ELTA SIGS, this week has been great! W atch out for us at volleyball. Love to all of you. Gamma Phis. D ELT A SIGS: Thank you for inviting us to your sorority exec, dinner. W e had a fantastic time. Love, the A-Phis. LAURA- L E T me make this simple. Ti voglio monté bene. Tommy: O H RO M EO , dear Romeo, your challenge I accept! But I must warn you, here and now, I've not been beaten yet. S o try your best to confound me, with romance, verve, and Wit. But be prepared to yield defeat. Your loving Juliette. C H ILD LE S S LOVING couple, married 7 years, longs for baby to share our secure, happy home. Confidential, legal adoption. M edical expenses paid. C a ll Kari and Bob collect, (818) 989-2369; attorney at (213) 854-4444. C O O P E R A T I V E A D O P T IO N Loving couple; state certified, with the best of everything to offer, seeks birth mother who would like to meet and have open contact with the parents she chooses for her. Baby. For more information, call Char, collect, (602)297-2487. PHI SIG Losie— SK Mary can’t wait for formal Saturday. Love you! SERVICES SIG M A K A P P A Lissa, cari’t wait until toriite! Love, your Mom! A S O F T Touch Electrolysis- permanent hair removal. Free initial treatment. Near A S U 629-7829. SIG M A K A P P A — G e t psyched for “ Water­ melon Bust!” Love, Chris, John, Wade, Mark and DeWitt (your coaches). SIG M A K A P P A Suzy — I mean Sam — I think you will be real surprised to find out who I am! Have a great day! Love, your mom." SIG M A K A P P A Pledge Presents!!!! E L E C T R O L Y S IS — P E R M A N E N T hair removal. Rem ove unwanted' hair forever. Student discounts, C a ll for more informa­ tion: 969-6954. HAIR R E M O V A L — Both electrolysis and waxing. Safe, sterile, effective, Spider veins, also. University and Country Club. 962-6490. D ELTA SIG M A Pi pledge class: W atch for your nam es in print this M onday! Congratulations! SIG M A K A P P A Pledge Presents!!!!. D ELT M A LT ES E Falcon, thanks for stop­ ping by Friday. How ‘bout a free sub? SIG M A K A P P A Hope— Do you know who I am ? You’ll find out tonight! Love, mom. HAVING DIFFICULTY studying or taking tests? You may be ‘ ‘switching off” one hemisphere of your brain. New hypnosis triggering technique helps with studying, sports, money, etc. C a ll 860-8111:. SIG M A NU Kerry Christopher (or is it Guido?) Homework, books— what are those? Just rest up for a wild weekend! Oh yeah— whatever dude! Your S K chick, TIRED O F being ripped off on auto repairs? M echanic of 20 years can save you money. Free estimates. Dennis, 892-7813. D ELT P O N YK E G , would 5 valiums do the trick? D ELTS, G E T ready to hit the hills of San Francisco Trolley. DG A N D R E A — Congratulations on finally going active. I'm proud of you. Byron. D G HAN N A S— W e love you! Can’t wait ‘til you're in black. D.G. M A R Y A — Hope this semester is going Well for you. I miss you! Love, Megan. G A M M A PHI Adrienne: Surprise! l am so excited to be your Big Sis! Last night was a blast, and much more. .. Have fun tonight! Love your Big Sis, Lara. G A M M A PHI Rebecca G. A s lil’ s is ’s go your the tops! Love in P K E your Big Sis' Heidi. G A M M A PHI Paula. I’m so happy you're my little sis! Please keep me away from furry animals with long ears next week and w e'll have a great year! Love, your Big Sis V icky .. V ;V . SIG M A K A P P A Pledge Presents!!!! S K HEIDI Fairbanks, you light up my life! S K JODI, sometimes it is hard to show but I truly love you. S K K E R R Y — Excuse me, where would you like to jump? (Can’t wait for raspberry by the Pointe pool!!) S K K E R R Y — Who do oui non? O ui non zutl (Have an even better day!) SK: KIM Garret, you’re the best baby snake! Get psyched for this weekend! Be prepared! Love M om ??? S K M A B A N TE — O k, s o now we can have an awesome formal! Yes, even without the "DJ M an” ! Future plans for that one, right? Your "hungover forever” room­ mate, KY. G A M M A PHI Missy! I’m so glad you’re my little sis! You’re awesome. Love in PKE, your big sis Elle. S T A C Y B U R G E S S — I enjoyed our time together Wednesday morning. Let’s do if again next week. Sodas and brownies are oh me. R S V P . Pete. G A M M A PHI Pinner Adrienne, watch that first step getting on the trolley tonight, Delt TO M Y Tri Sigm a Mommy: i can’t wait to find out who you are. Love, Raechel. Scooby ■ ’’ : ’’ ■ .. • HEM A! Y E A P you see correctly this is for you, my good friend: Happy Birthday!! Lunch Saturday, the usual place? The SwiSs Miss. H E Y RO M EO , always remember— more today then yesterday— but not as much as tomorrow. Saturdays just aday away. I can ’t wait. Luvya honey, Laura. TRI D ELT A Jenny Diminno: Can’t tell you enough how proud I am to have a daughter as cool as you! Get excited for Retreat this weekend! Delta Love, Hallie. TRI D E L T A S remember 1988? Let’s do it again! H 2 0 Bust. TRI D E L T A Pledges, it's your first Bust, get ready to rage! Your coaches. $1.75 AN D up, professional word proces­ sor and former English teacher. Laser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. AAKURIT TYPIN G- short papers, prompt service, transcribe tapes. Call after 1 pm: Linda, 831-0349. A C C U R A T E R E S U M E S com posed and typed ($25); guaranteed. Call Carol, 924-8044, evenings and weekends. East Mesa. A KINKO’S paper makes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, etc. Self-serve Macintosh computers and laser printers, too. 933 E ast University, call 966-2035. 960 W est University, call 921-0168. O pen early, open late, open 7 days! A L L P A P E R S , resumes, tetters, docu­ ments, transcribing, editing, mailings. College graduate using IBM computer. Mike, 964-0994. AP A /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D processing. Need it fast? 945-5744. typing/word Call Jessie, FLYIN G FIN G E R S has Maclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. Call 945-1551 for details. N O R T H E A ST V A LL E Y word processing for your typing needs. Reports, resumes, term papers. 996-5564. TYPIN G S E R V IC E S- 24 hour turnaround available. 10 years experience. $1.50 per page. 998-7261.. TY PIN G SERVICE: Fast, accurate, profes­ sional. Discounts available. $1.75 per double-spaced page. Diane: 820-9324. TYPIN G/W O RD P R O C E SSIN G . $1/page. Laser printing included. You deliver and pick up. A lm a School Road/Baseline. Jan, 897-1744. W O RD P R O C E S S IN G serving Phoenix and W est Valley. $1.50/page. C a ll Marji, 979-8907. $2599 Nail Special Full Set / $1529 Fill In Crimpers • 5th & College Ask for Darlene or Pam 966-5192 PERM ANENT H A IR R E M O V A L by E le ctro ly sis * S tu d e n t rates * 9 9 8 -0 3 4 3 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.50 A A A Word Processing/laser printer. 35 years experience. Theses, dissertation, A P A specialization. Marion, 839-4269. $1,50/PAGE. O n-cam pus pickup and delivery. Daily or F A X direct to me. WP5.1 and Laser printer. C la ss papers all types, charts, resumes, etc. 15 years experience. Robyn. 996-3911. •*M E S A SE C R E T A R IA L Service, computer­ ized, laser printer, full graphics. 15 minutes from A SU. Northeast comer, M esa Drive and Brown Road. 844-1876. INSTRUCTION A E R O B IC IN S T R U C T O R certification workshop in Mesa. Weekend: October 5-7, by National Aerobics Training Association. Call 963-9415. P IA N O L E S S O N S fo r b e g in n e r s . $5/lesson. For more information, call 829-6943. TUTORS A C CO U N T IN G AN D finance professional instruction, study aides and examination strategies. Rates from $6/hour. 497-2097, G ii. / . ENG LISH TUTOR, paper editing. All s u b je c ts , p ro fe s s io n a l e x p e rie n c e . Reasonable rates. 829-6712. MISCELLANEOUS LIQ UO R SIGNS- mirrors. Miller, Coors, Michelob, others. Range from $15-$30. Contact Michele, 947-2943. N E E D CSC180 cla ss notes (Reinert, Monday/Wednesday). Wilt pay $7.50 per class for good notes. Call immediately, 957-0519, leave message. V ISA O R M ASTERCAR D ! Establish credit, guaranteed or double your money back. Call 1-805-682-7555, ext. M-1201. PREGNANCY COUNSELING Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G for your typing needs. Fast turnaround. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825. 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 Your Individual Horoscope -— Frances Drake= f ig » S E C U R I T Y PACIFIC B A N K ARIZONA Stop In and rmcehmyour tint ordor of t t iic t o n f checks FREE! 619 S. Mill. Tempe 431 -4705 --—— —■ WE ' W ANT TOSE your BANK F O R LIFE FOR SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1990 standing domestic concern. SCORPIO (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) J ffi You could be a trifle extravagant (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) with money today, but you’ll be Make sure new career plans are pleased by today’s career develop­ practical. You sparkle now in group ments. You may do some rethinking activities. One who has been a friend about your Overall investment piccould now become a romantic inter­ est. SA G ITTA RIU S TAU RU S (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Sfv (Apr. 20 to May 20) Keep spending down for home You'll be holding discussions today that pertain to your long term career improvements. Feelings grow deeper now in romance and couples are busy interests. Some receive a gift from a making happy plans together. Travel relative now. Financial prospects are on the upswing. and leisure bring fun. G E M IN I CAPRIC O RN > (May 21 to June 20) nA (Dec. 22 tq Jan. 19) Travel could lead to an important You may get a late start today and then are busy playing catch up later. new romance. Creative types gain ideas now for nevr projects. Talks Home developments are positive. Those looking for a new place to live with advisers prove helpful and social have luck now. life is a phis. CANCER an AQ U A R IU S «A (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) (June 21 to July 22) Thera could be a slight change in You could be a bit extravagant now spending in the pursuits o f pleasure. career ambitions today. Some receive financial backing for a project. Be A real understanding is reached now between you and a close tie. Accent sure to follow through on commit­ ments made to close ties. togetherness. PISC E S ' LEO ' (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) R tte (July 23 to Aug. 22) . Company could drop by at an Either it’s a romantic introduction inconvenient time. A breakthrough or an important new friendship that is formed today. Something piques your comes now re a work project. Shopping for the home is a plus. interest o f a philosophic nature. Make important domestic decisions Accent social life tonight ..now, - ;. ’. »■ YOU BORN TODAY are inventive, but may be nervous and high-strung. VIRG O «A (Aug. 23 to Sept.22) S f M ore* visionary than the typical One o f your friends tends to member o f your sign, you should exaggerate today. In love, couples learn to trust your intuition. You’ll grow closer now. For some, it’s a time succeed in both the arts and sciences. o f reconciliation. Inspiration comes You do best in a job that allows you plenty o f freedom o f expression. You for creative work. L IB R A >JDhe' do not fare well in dead end jobs. You (S e p t 23 to Oct22) E 8© have progressive ideas and high A private talk bodes well fo r your ideals and these will be the corner­ financial interests, but still, guard stone o f your success, birthdate of: against wasteful spending today. A Scott Baio, actor. Paul Muni, actor; solution comes now for a long and John Houseman, actor. Copyright 1990 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. m Kelly. S K ANITA Wright, yeah! Today is the day! N E E D TIM E to study? Let us do your typing/word processing of your paper so you can. A PA/M LA formats. $1.50, double­ spaced page. Call Joanne, 966-1516, or Bobbi, 968-9166 (please leave message). C U ST O M TYPING. Fast and accurate! Term papers and resumes. $1.75/page and up. Connie, 969-6618. LA M B D A CHI C hris Lavoie, I think that you are a totally cool gorgeous dude. OHI O 'S: It's not too late to participate in Watermelon Bust! $1.50 P E R page. Term papers, letters, resumes, etc. At Yo ur Service Word Processing, Linda, 839-6167. 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Love always, Mikki (Mahayana). * : BANDERSNATCH : * Page 19 Friday, September 21,1990 State Press Page 20 Frida^SeptemberSI^IP^O Stete Press T .w . C o m m e r c i a l B.C. EINSTEIN S W AN TS YOU TO BE HERE ON SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 a t NOON FOR THE TAPING OF THE FIRST OF A SERIES COM M ERCIALS FOR C H AN N EL 3. BE A STAR! BE THERE! BEACH ATTIRE, PLEASE. AVOID WHITE IF POSSIBLE. STAY FOR THE PARTY AFTERW ARDS. SIMPLY THE BEST. FREE DELIVERY TO ASU AREA. fjP l M e K e llip s 968-6666 1301 E. University •■¿C ' "<5 cc U n iv e rsity 1 •S' Ö o . B ro a d w a y '■Delivery Area*' SUNDAY A N Y COIN A N Y DRINK 9-11 p.m. $1-99 Every Day Tape Rentals $4.99 2 Tapes Delivered Popcorn, Coke & Refreshments Available G R A N D OPENING 9 PM CORNER OF RURAL & UNIVERSITY, TEMPE 829-8617