SPECIAL SECTION: Indepth look at ASU West Campus. See page 13. V C opyright, S tate P ress, 1990 Voi. 16 No. 26 Tem pe, Arizona A rizona S tate U niversity’s M orning Daily Friday, October 5 ,1 9 9 0 ASU’s budget battle begin s By KEVIN SHEH State Press ASU needs a 26 percent increase in the m ain cam pus and a 48 percent hike in the ASU West operating budgets for the 1991-92 fisc a l y ea r, U n iversity o fficia ls said Thursday. “We realize that the Arizona econom y is e x p e r ie n c in g d iffic u lt tim e s ,'’ ASU President Lattie Coor said in his address to the Arizona Board of R egents’ Resources Com m ittee at the U niversity Downtown C en ter. “ But th e L e g isla tu r e m ust recognize the role of the universities in the future of the econom y.” ASU requested $310 m illion to operate the m ain cam pus and $42.6 m illion to run the w est cam pus. Last year, ASU asked for $228 m illion for the m ain cam pus and $33 m illion for the w est cam pus. In the end, the state Legislature allocated the U niversity $187.6 m illion and $28.8 m illion, respectively. ASU’s report to the com m ittee is the first hurdle in a m ulti-step p rocess. The U niversity’s presentation is the first of three budget hearings. A fter UofA and NAU present their budgets late next week, the regent ■com m ittee w ill review a ll three proposals and m ake a recom m endation to the full board next Friday in F lagstaff. The regents then w ill determ ine what the legislative budget request w ill be for the entire university system and forward the BUDGET COMPARISON ASU Main and West Campuses operating budgets for 1990-91 and requested amounts for 1991-92. request to the E xecutive Budget O ffice, a branch of the governor’s office. A fter review ing the request, the EBO w ill give its university budget proposal, along with the regents recom m endation, to the Joint L egislative Budget Comm ittee and the full Legislature for review . T he JLBC w ill g en e r a te its own recom m endation, and the law m akers w ill decide what portion of the budgetary pie the university system w ill receive. But Sen. John M awhinney, R-Tucson, said ASU’s request m ay be unrealistic, due to the sour state of Arizona’s econom y. Mawhinney, who serves as vice chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, $287,2 I m illion I $246.1 million I Main Campus West Campus I $42.6 m illion ______ $28.8 million □ 91 -92 90-91 90-91 Source: ABOR Resources Committee a 91 -92 Turn to B udgets, page 9. Portion of Ash bridge will be preserved By MICHELLE ROBERTS State Press Irw in D a u g h s rty /S ta ts P ress Hammer Time Workers continue construction of the Faculty/Administration building at the ASU West campus. See related stories, page 13. ASU West to improve cultural diversity By JENNIFER FRANKLIN State Press ASU West initiated a $60,000 project Thursday that U niversity officials hope w ill be the launching pad for building a culturally diverse curriculum to serve student needs in the com ing decades. Form er San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros told more than 300 ASU adm inistrators, faculty and other m em bers of the educational community of the need for “ASU W est’s 21St Century P roject.” The event w as held at the Hotel W estcourt in Phoenix. The project features six speakers who w ill address cultural issues facing ASU W est in the next decade. The program w ill end in April with a conference titled, “Culture and D iversity: Teaching, Learning and the Curriculum for the 21st Century U niversity.” Last night, Cisneros said the role of a new university should be to em phasize an environm ent that prom otes cultural diversity and prepares graduates for a world characterized by fundam ental dem ographic changes. “Students w ill have to understand that life w ill be culturally d iverse,” he said, adding that in a few decades, large U. S. cities w ill be populated m ainly by blacks and Hispanics. Cisneros said universities need to take actions to prevent the escalatin g number of racial incidents. “The first responsibility of a university is to create a m inimum condition of civility on cam pus and to respond to uncivil conduct,” he said. Turn to Project, p age 11. Tempe City Council m em bers decided Thursday that while the Ash Avenue Bridge m ust be dem olished before its deteriorating fram e crum bles, a portion of the structure w ill be preserved. At la st night’s work-study session, council m em bers opted to leave the south end abutm ent of 77-year-old bridge • standing above the Salt R iver Bed for historical purposes. O fficials said the bridge’s dem olition is slated for Jan. 7 and w ill conclude in m id-February. The city estim ates that the cost to wreck and dispose of the bridge w ill be $203,000. Councilwoman P at Hatton said the city ’s decision to tear the bridge down w as based on results of a structural analysis that determ ined the only feasible solution would be its destruction. The council is anxious to solve the m atter before any serious accidents occur due to the bridge’s instability, Hatton said. ■■ ■ . , ■ ■■ “The city is responsible for anything that happens because of that bridge,” she said. “It m ay appear w e are being unduly cautious, but the liability issues surrounding it are enough to drive you crazy.” But.with the dem olition im m inent, council m em bers stood together on the proposal to retain the bridge’s south abutm ent, a 40-foot supporting structure at the south end of the bridge. The bridge, com pleted in 1913 by prison workers, has not been used sin ce 1933, when it w as decom m issioned by the state due to structural flaw s. ' Public Works D irector Jim Jones said the city w ill advertise bids later this month for the opportunity to tear down the bridge. Jones said it is plausible to detach the south end abutment before the rest of the bridge is dem olished. The saved portion would rem ain fenced off and could be renovated later as a part of redevelopm ent for the Rio Salado Project. Jones explained the cost of renovating the bridge’s saved portion cannot be determ ined until council m em bers decide on how it w ill be beautified. Jones said suggestions include constructing a dram atic interpretive station on top of the rem aining portion or transform ing it into an overlook for the proposed Rio Salado reservoir. ■* Gerald D oyle, a historical preservation consultant for the Turn W r ite s tu ff: S ta rs tru c k : G o D e v ils h ASU E nglish P ro ­ fesso r R o n C a rlso n ’s a rtic le o n w o rld h u n g e r is p u b lish e d in N ew Y o rk er m agazine. L ocal b a n d B rian P age a n d th e N ex t to a p p e a r o n S tar S earch. ASU t o p la y U W S atu rd ay n ig h t. P age 16 Page 17 ‘ Bridge, page I I , T oday’s w eather: Sunny, w ith a high near 100. Tonight: Clear, w ith a lo w in th e lo w er 70s* Page 23 C lassified s...............................................2 5 C ollege C u l t u r e . . . . . . 17 C o m ics...........................................'.........2 2 C rossw ord ............................................. 12 H oroscopes.............................................2 7 S p orts.M.....................................................23 Pages State Presa Ffjda)^çtober5^990 ASASU ‘mad as h e ll’ about budget freeze By KENNETH BROWN State Press Members of the A ssociated Students of ASU are “mad as h ell” about a budget freeze they claim is punishment for an unexpectedly successful concert season last year, an ASASU official said W ednesday. “What the U niversity did is (say) ‘You did so w ell that w e’re taking $20,000 from this year’s budget,’ ’’ said Jeanette W iedmeir, ASASU executive vice president. “To be penalized for having an extraordinary concert season is ridiculous.” ASASU President Matt Ortega said the $20,000 in funds, because it w as generated from student dollars, belongs to ASASU. W iedmeir said ASASU could end up “$5,000 in the hole” because of the cut, but added that it w ill try to reduce adm inistrative costs to prevent students from suffering decreased services. The U niversity Budget Operations Comm ittee told ASASU last spring that, despite a federally-m andated raise for student governm ent em ployees, the organization would receive less money from tuition collections, leaving it with the sam e amount of m oney as last year. The freeze, coupled with the increased minimum w ages could have the effect of a $20,000 cut, W iedmeir said. The UBOC claim ed that withholding tuition funds was justified because m oney is distributed according to need. “All departm ents aren’t like A ssociated Students,” she said. “All departm ents on cam pus are set up for the students, but w e are the students. It’s not even sim ilar.” Lowell Crary, assistant to Student Affairs Vice President Christine W ilkinson, oversees the budget-m aking process and said W eidmeir m ay have a point. “I-think you could make an argum ent about that,” he said, referring to the fact that ASASU is°a representative crosssection of students. “It’s not really fair to ca ll ASASU a subsidized account. After all, you can’t really subsidize yourself.” He suggested that ASASU be allowed to take part in the budgeting process, but added that the group w as not singled out in the reduction. “It w asn’t like they picked on ASASU,” Crary said. “That’s just the w ay it w orks.” In addition, he said, ASASU w as able to keep part of the money. Still, ASASU finds the decrease ironic and w ill ask the Arizona Board of R egents to consider yeturning the $20,000 in Decem ber. “They’re asking us to support a greater student population with a sm aller budget,” Ortega said. “When it com es right down to it, they’re taking m oney away from the students.” W iedmeir agreed with the ASASU president. “It m akes m e furious, w hat they think they can get away with to take those student dollars,” she said. “Students are being flaked, and w e are outraged.” ASASU, officials said, had a greater capacity to fund itself because of the unexpected concert revenues. But ASASU is already beginning to feel the effects of a decreased budget, the execu tive vice president said. “The U niversity told us w e had to do this, the Legislature told us we had to do that,” W iedmeir said. “They didn’t give us the m oney to do it. That’s why w e’re having trouble.” W iedmeir expects ASASU, which receives 50 percent of its revenues from on-campus events and activities, to make substantially less than it did last year. She said this is due in part to a lade of “big nam es” performing at cam pus venues. During the 1989-90 year, for exam ple, singers Debbie Gibson, Paul McCartney and Cher performed on campus — bringing in an unexpected w indfall of profits to the U niversity. Jim Sliw icki, assistant director of the ASU BudgetO ffice, said the reduction cannot be considered a cut. “ I would not say that is accurate,” he said, “Those people knew months ago what they had to work with. The fact is that ASASU is a subsidized account. I would have a hard tim e classifying that as a cu t.” ASASU is labeled by the U niversity as a “subsidized” component because it receives about $640,000 of its $1 m illion budget from student tuition funds. W eidmeir, however, said she feels the title is m isleading and is particularly upset that ASASU w as not allow ed in any part of the budget process. T oday Language and Literature Building. New m em bers w elcom e. •K uw aiti Student Conference w ill m eet at 4 p .m . in the M U Pim a Room to watch videos of escapees from Kuw ait. •F arce Side Com edy Hour w ill perform at 12:30 p.m . in the The Today section is a daily calendar o f events Union Program m ing Lounge. happening a t ASU th at is presented as a service to the •H ille l Union o f Jew ish Students w ill m eet at 6 p.m . at U niversity com m unity. Any campus d u b o r organization 1012 S. M ill Ave. for services and a dinner. can subm it entries fo r publication to th e State Press, located in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter, Room 15. •B e ta Alpha Psi will meet at 5 p.m. in BA 297. Entries m ust be leg ible, are subject to editing fo r •M u sic Theory Club w ill m eet a t 1:30 p.m . in th e Music content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the . Education Lab. phone. Duie to space restrictions, th e S tate Press cannot •A SA SU Special Events w ill m eet at 11:30 p.m . in front of guarantee publication. Deadline fo r the entries is 1 p.m . th e M U. the previous business day. •K ayak C lub w ill m eet a t 6:30 p.m . at th e A SU Aquatics •C e n te r fo r Asian S tudies w ill m eet at 11 a.m . Saturday on the M U T errace to discuss anti-Japanese feeling in China in the 1930s. •B iom edical Engineering S ociety w ill m eet at 8 a.m . Sunday at Sun Devil Stadium for a clean-up and p izza party. •A lp h a Kappa Psi w ill m eet at 7 p.m . Sunday in the M U Room 218 to listen to a speaker from Arthur Anderson. C enter for pool practice. New m em bers w elcom e. Everyone w elcom e. •A lcoholics Anonymous w ill have an open m eeting at •C am pus Crusade fo r C hrist w ill m eet at 7:30 p.m . in LS noon at th e Newm an University Drive. 191. •Ju stice Studies S tudent A ssociation w ijl m eet at 6:30 p.m . Sunday in th e M U to listen to Tem pe P olice O fficers speak on career goals and objectives. Meetings C enter on C ollege S treet and , •D e v il’s Juggling Club will m eet at 3 p.m. in front of the ANY LARGE PIZZA FOR THE MEDIUM PRICE!! SHOP* 6 ° ' S S e o t ^ £ S 4 9 9 ° p O P * ? !L b e t ® \NeN® t°t O ctob er 1 thru O ctob er 1 4 ,1 9 9 0 , D om in o's P izza is o fferin g a Large p izza for th e M edium p rice! D on't m iss o u t o n th is great p rice sa v in g s, p ick u p th e p h on e and ord er you rs today! V alid a t A SU /T em pe lo ca tio n o n ly . N o t v alid w ith a n y oth er co u p o n s o r offers. S ub ject to a ll ap p licab l^ state an d lo c a l tax SERVING ASU SIN CE 1980 9 6 8 -5 5 5 5 U n iversity a n d R u ra l HOURS: S b o ^ s - s e a t® S ta r ti l:0 0 a m -l :30am Sun.-Thurs. l:00am -2:30am Fri.-S at. p o t a P ° n ~L - v a to o s * s t a d \u ta « r_ÔNLŸ $3.00! ’T I I ONLY $3.00 for an additional Small pizza with the purchase of another Small pizza o f e q u d o r lesser value. No lim it No coUpon necessary. At this location only. ONLY $4.00! $3.50! I ONLY $3.30 for an additional ONLY $4.00 for an additional ■ Medium pizza w ith the purchase I of another Medium pizzabf equal a or lesser value. No limit. No I coupon necessary. At this loca- pon necessary. At this location only. — _ | tion only. ■T H * e P » « * 'a s e \ i\ V \ A < s » ' K' ______ r - t e m p ® & SSZ a 7« B N o tv U ld w » i f , a * i« n u p m a t o tfw , ■ a r t lo c a l * < . N o t v a fM w U h a n y o tte r oo up on s o r o fte n . ■ S u b je ct to oN a p p tc a b te M ate an d lo c a l ta x . 1 N o tv M d w tih a n , o tw o o u p o n ^ r o flm . jS o b j. c t to « J l.p p lk a b l.a l« . a n d lo c a l u x m D EV IL'S’ I SPARKY'S iSllN DEVIL SPECIAL D ELIG H T U N C IA L , ONLY $11.49 for an Original ONLY $3.49 for an Original Medium three-item pizza and Small three-item pizza an a cone ■ two Diet oorr Classic ICokes. Diet o r Classic Coke. One coupon per pizza. O ne coupon per pizza. Expires: 10/31/90 Expires: 10/31/90 I I L N o t in B t o t to tin y o tte r cou po n» o f a lte n . ■ ^ S u b je c t to aM a p p k a b le » ta te a n d lo c te ta x . 52 | ^MrNiia|»«$riylaiMiiHMMB^^ N o t v a ffd w tt) a n y oB to ro o u p o n a o r o fte n . S u b je ct to a * a p p k a b te « la te a n d lo c a l ta x . ■ Large Sun-Devil Special or any three-item pizza anda 6-pack of Diet or Classic Coke. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 10/31/90 - N o t v a M wHh a n y o tte r co u p o n s o r o fte n . S U B joet to a * a p p lo o b te « to te a n d — 2 W orld/N ation Page 3 Peace talk s w ith Ira q is stepped u p \ . ■ " \ ... . By the A ssociated P ress A Soviet envoy carried a secret m essage from Mikhail Gorbachev to Baghdad and Japan’s prim e m inister m et with Iraq’s No. 2 leader Tliursday in new efforts for peace in the P ersian G ulf. F ive Europeans u$ed a 10-foot boat in a daring escap e from Iraq. The USS Independence — the first American aircraft carrier in the gulf in 16 years — left the waterw ay after a brief show of force. Two Soviet warships and an American supply vessel sailed through E gypt’s Suez Canal to the gulf region to help enforce a U. N. trade em bargo on Iraq. Iraq, hurting from the international sanctions following its Aug. 2 invasion of Kuwait, planned to argue its case before the United Nations. The world body, which has condemned Iraq’s invasion and placed a naval and air em bargo on the country, m ay consider stronger m easures. Iraq’s U. N. am bassador, Abdul Amir al-Andari, w as expected to respond to President Bush’s suggestion Sunday that an unconditional Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait could lead to “opportunities” toward a broad Middle E ast peace settlem ent. In the Middle E ast, other diplom atic attem pts to resolve the 2-month-old crisis continued. Y evgeny Prim akov, a senior adviser to Gorbachev, arrived in Baghdad carrying a m essage from the Soviet A u o c ia ttd P ress p h o to C ostly C onfrontation Neighbors carry the body of a form er Contra who was shot early Wednesday In Nicaragua by SamMnista police. The dispute started when former contras demanded land promised to them by the governm ent T o n i to Budget, page 8. B u d g e t a d v o c a te s p r e s s u r e d is s e n te r s to WASHINGTON (AP) — The $500-billion deficit-reduction plan cleared its first congressional hurdle Thursday night as the House m oved toward a late-night showdown over election-year tax boosts and spending cuts. Follow ing a week of intense arm -twisting by P resident Bush and congressional leaders of both parties, the House voted 339-94 to approve conditions for debate and began m oving toward the first direct vote on the budget com prom ise. H ie first votes w ere on an outline of the five-year plan that Bush and congressional leaders com pleted last weekend after four m onths of bargaining. Votes on specific spending cuts and tax increases were planned in two weeks. N onetheless, the m easure w as the subject o f in ten se criticism by lib era ls and conservatives angry over cuts in M edicare, higher gasoline and cigarette taxes, and other painful savings. “I don’t believe it’s a statem ent of our values to m enace our senior citizens by cutting M edicare benefits w hile keeping d efen se spending h ig h ,” said lib eral Rep. Nancy P elosi, D-Calif. Supporters responded that the five-year package of savings, though painful, is needed m edicine for d ie ailing U. S. economy. “It is the best thing that w e could do at this point,” Rep. Jam es Quillen, R-Tenn., said as debates began. “If we have to hold our nose and vote for this, let’s do it.” Even as debates w ere under w ay, votecounters acknowledged that they rem ained uncertain o f attaining their goal: m ajority support from m em bers of both parties. The problem w as especially acute am ong House Republicans, who, one official said, rem ained 11 votes shy of providing a m ajority of their 176 m em bers. The Senate planned to vote on the m easure Friday, and passage there seem ed likely, *‘We’re going to have a m ajority when we get there,” said Senate M ajority Leader George M itchell, D-Maine. Bush has threatened that unless Congress approves the outline by Friday, he w ill reject any extension of the temporary financing legislation that has kept the governm ent operating since the new fiscal year began Monday. That financing expires Friday night. As part of what adm inistration officials have called the Bush presidency’s m ost intense lobbying cam paign, die president brought 60 GOP lawm akers to d ie White House Thursday morning to press for votes. Bush sent a letter to House Republicans asking them “in the strongest term s possible” to support d ie m easure. “I am absolutely sure it is the right thing to do for A m erica,” he wrote. A second letter w as sen t to GOP lawm akers by ailing Republican National Committee Chairman Lee Atwater. “For the sake of your country and your party, I urge you to stand up for our president,” Atwater wrote/ M averick Republicans spoke of getting phone calls a t home from Bush, Vice c o n fo rm President Dan Quayle, White House Chief of S taff John Sununu and even form er Presidents Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon. “The president called m e at a quarter to seven in the morning, and Sununu called two hours later,” said Rep. Gerald Solomon, R-N.Y., who opposes the plan. “They’re not threatening m e, and they.better not.” Rep. Ralph R egula, R-Ohio, said that because he opposes the m easure, the White House took away six tickets he w as going to use W ednesday night to sit in the president’s box at' the Kennedy Center. He and his w ife had planned to use them with two couples from h is Canton, Ohio, district, who had won a trip to Washington at a charity auction to help a hospital there. Regula said that he later bought six tickets on his own. Pressure w as applied in the.C apitol as w ell, with Commerce Secretary Robert M osbacher am ong those roam ing the halls. F o le y and o th e rs em p h a sized th a t lawm akers could support the outline now Torn to Gulf, p age 6. Dartmouth accused o f anti-Semitism Dartmouth College students cheer during a rally Thursday on the college campus denouncing an anti-sem itism quote in an off-cam pus publication. HANOVER, N.H. (AP) — About -2,000 people rallied at Dartmouth College on Thursday to denounce the publication of an anti-Sem itic quotation by Adolf H itler in The Dartmouth Review, a conservative off-cam pus weekly. Before the rally, the R eview held a news conference to apologize for the quote, which it says was included in the paper’s m asthead through sabotage. Dartmouth President Jam es Freedm an called the quote an egregious expression of “anti-Sem itism ” and “appalling bigotry.” “For the last 10 years, these sham eless voices have ranted that Dartmouth is for som e but not for others,” he said, “These voices have preached exclusion from the Dartmouth fam ily and have expected us to heed their words. What kind of people did they think w e w ere?” Dartmouth Religion Professor Arthur Hertzberg, who also is vice president of the World*Jewish Congress, called the latest controversy an act of “hooliganism ” peipetrated by “m isguided young people.” He also attacked supporters of the Review, which include syndicated colum nists Patrick Buchanan and W illiam F . B uckley and the New Y ork-based John M. Olin Foundation. “My quarrel is with those who put up hundreds of thousands of dollars with which to contam inate this cam pus,” he said. At the paper’s news conference, Review trustees Dinesh D’Souza and Wendy Stone said the appearance of the quote w as “sabotage” by an unknown person. D’Souza said1the trustees w ill Contact the Jew ish organization B ’nai B’rith to help investigate the incident. The Review, published since 1980, has been vilified through the years for its view s on wom en, hom osexuals, blacks and Indians. W illiam Cole, a black m usic profpssor, resigned in August after the Review attacked him for seven years in print, belittling him as a m ediocre teacher. Cole said his effectiveness w as com prom ised by the attacks. Review staff m em bers also w ere involved in a 1986 sledgeham m er attack on shanties erected on the campus green as part of a protest against segregation in South Africa. Several staff m em bers w ere suspended. • In 1988, the Review ran a colum n likening Freedm an, who is Jew ish, to Hitler' and the effects of his cam pus policies to the Holocaust. D’Souza said the 1988 colum n w as “sophomoric and in bad taste.” He said newspaper trustees apologized for it at the tim e. The latest edition of the R eview w as distributed Saturday, on Yom Kippur, the Jew ish D ay of Atonement and Judaism ’s m ost solem n day. The quotation, from H itler’s “Mein Kam pf,” w as inserted unattributed into the statem ent of principles on the R eview ’s m asthead: “Therefore, I b elieve today that I am acting in the sense of the alm ighty creator: By warding off the Jew s, I am fighting for the Lord’s work.” The quote infuriated m any, including som e congressm en. On Thursday, 84 representatives signed a letter from Rep. Chet Atkins, D-M ass., to Freedm an denouncing the quote. D’Souza suggested the quote w as “surgically im planted.” He pointed to an apostrophe in the quote that is different from the type used by paper , suggesting it w as typed by som eone T u rn to R ev iew , p ag e 6 . Opinion S tate Press Friday, October 5,1990 Pge4 Hate Americans must not ignore prejudice in any form C ody S h e a re r N o rth A m e ric a n S y n d ic a te INDIANAPOLIS — H ie talk at dinner parties on the chic north side of Indianapolis of late has not focused on the crisis in the Persian Gulf, rising gasoline prices or a declining rea l esta te m arket. It has concentrated on a m ore mundane irritant that never really seem s to vanish from our lives — the struggle against hate. The other day an article about the husband preacher of a black policewoman appeared in the local newspapers here. In the story, the preacher was quoted as saying som ething outrageous like policem en should think tw ice before shooting their guns. When a copy of the article circulated at the local police department, it was placed on a bulletin board by the front door. It was no big deal until som e little mind scribbled an Ugly racist epithet across the face of the blhck preacher. Now Indianoplis’ Public Safety director Joseph Shelton wants to investigate the incident. O f c o u r s e , su ch h a r r a ssm e n t is intolerable even though it occures a ll too freq u en tly in our w orld . S in ce th e Department of Justice in Washington is now keeping track of crim es involving hate, thanks to an act of Congress, Americans w ill soon have a better idea of how persuasive hatred is in this country. As much a s som e of u s would prefer to ig n o r e th e o b v io u s , h a te c r im e s , particularly those initiated along racial, ethnic, religious and sexual lines,, are as com m onplace as ever. R ecent incidents at such p restigiou s in stitu tion s a s Y ale U niversity Law School underscore the point. One wanders how far out society has progressed in the past 20-plus years since the Kerner Commission report stated this country operated in two worlds, one black and one white. So, why do people hate one another? An international conference on hate la st month in Oslo, Norway m ay offer som e clues. According to news reports, 70 of the world’s greatest minds w ere in attendance, including Nelson M andela, Vaclav Havel, Francois Mitterand and Jim ipy Carter. While m ost of the speakers discussed antiSem itism , racism and war, when it cam e to why individuals hate, few ventured into the nature of evil. President V aclav Havel of Havel warned that people in Eastern Europe m ight grow frustrated with the slow ness of change in the region and vent their anger “on substituting victim s who w ill stand as proxies for the m ain, and how liquidated, offender of the totalitarian system .” M ost o f th e co n fe r e n c e sp ea k er s L We're studying for a test .n H u m a n Sexuality clas officer, 1 swear f #r \ /H r " ■ ■ 1 Trecia Canty, president of Dartmouth’s Afro-American Society, questioned why students protested the quote while other attacks on m inorities haven’t been publicized. “ This rally represents the first tim e Dartmouth . . . has com e together and rallied against hatred,’’she said, and then work for changes in details during the next two weeks. “Foley has been pleading and pleading and pleading,” said one D em ocratic aide. Opposition within Bush’s own Republican P arty cam e from conservatives, who com plained about the package’s $134 billion in new taxes, and spending cuts they considered too shallow. But the package, which would save $40 billion in the new fiscal year, has som ething for a ll lawm akers to dislike, including tax increases and spending cuts that would affect virtually every American. M edicare would be slashed by $60 billion over the five years, with half the savings resulting from reduced benefits — and higher costs — for the 33 m illion elderly and handicapped people who use the program . Taxes would increase on gasoline, hom e-heating oil, alcohol, cigarettes, expensive jew elry arid other luxury item s. A 1.45 percent tax to support M edicare would for the first tim e be taken from A m ericans’ incom e between $51,300 and $73,000. Deductions would be lim ited on the earnings of people who m ake m ore than $100,000 annually. M ilitary spending would be reined by $10 billion next year and perhaps $200 billion over five years. Agriculture, student loans, civil service and Veterans benefits and aid for the unemployed would also be hit. D ro v e of liberal Dem ocrats expressed displeasure with the plan, com plaining that its taxes and spending cuts cam e down too harshly on the poor and frail. They railed m ost bitterly about its M edicare reductions and som e $11 billion in sm all business tax breaks that they said w ere m erely tax shelters for the rich. “This package represents the wrong valu es,” said Rep. Thomas Downey, D-N. Y. “Dem ocrats have m ade an art form of explaining to the American voter how the rich aren’t taxed, and then we produce a package that doesn’t hit them .” EASY COME. 1Beer and Soda 1Photo Developing 1Health & Beauty Aids 1Compact Discs Now we’re making it easier than ever for you to buy a VOLKSWAGEN. W e’ re offering NO MONEY DOWN on approved credit to ASU students who finance with VOLKSWAGEN. 712 S C O LLE G E A VE — NEXT T O C O LLE G E STRE ET DELI M-F 7 :3 0 a m .-10 p ,m . Sat 9 a m -10 p .m . S un 11 a m 10 p m P h o n e :9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 CD «10.99 Tape $6.88 EASY GO.... GT! 16V SOUL ASYLUM ANDTHEHORSETHEYROK MON CD «10.99 a m taCkâtaK VMNBi EASYSTREET. MOUNDED X and Wk Of TEARS Tape $6.88 RECORDS 0 to 50 in just 5.7 seconds!! That’s the performance you get with VOLKSWAGEN G T I16V . Gome down & test drive one today. Because at prices like this, they’re really going fast!! N375 $10,995 THi ROBERT CRAY BAND MIDNIG HT STROLL FEATURING ' THE FORECAST (CALLS SOI M IN I". "WALK AROUND TIMI". “ MV M OSLEM " ANO "TMCSf THINGS" CD «10.99 Tape $6.88 M l R L ò t i CH R Q N IC L l S * m NO LIMIT I Tape $12.99 t h e U & rd o n e V o lk s w a g e n 15th St. & Camelback • 265-6600 : thru k m w e m a k e C O L L E G E R I D E E A S IE R CD «23.99 Sa l e U & rd o n e Vo l k s w a g e n . 4-90 ASU’S EXCLUSIVE DEALER THIS WEEKEND SH iffilK W EEKEND This Friday and Saturday Tem pe’s newest Post Modern Nightclub welcomes ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY to an exclusive SNEAK PEAK at the future. Tonight and Tomorrow you are invited to hear a new DANCE MIX of and for the 90’s, see the DANCERS and ENJOY NO COVER ALONG W ITH N O N -S TO P 250 cocktails from 8-11 PM. Friday, October 5,1990 P«3C S U r t r f t iw Gulf. ■%mi HMhfr C ontinued from page 3. president, Soviet diplom atic sources said. Its contents were not disclosed. Tass quoted him as saying in Baghdad that a negotiated solution was needed “to avoid a m ilitary explosion.” Prim akov’s peace m ission began W ednesday in Jordan, where he m et with Jordanian officials and with Palestine Liberation Organization ch ief Y asser Arafat. In Moscow, Gorbachev said Thursday he saw no reason to send Soviet troops to join the U. S.-led m ultinational force in the gulf. In response to a query, Gorbachev told reporters: “I think there are already more than enough troops there.” In the Jordanian capital, Amman, Prim e M inister Toshiki Kaifu of Japan m et with Iraqi Deputy Prim e M inister Taha Yassin Ramadan. Ramadan, considered No. 2 to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, rejected a negotiated settlem ent to the crisis as long as foreign troops rem ain on Arab soil, Baghdad’s official Iraqi News Agency reported. Kaifu insisted on Iraq’s withdrawal from Kuwait first, said Shigeo Takenaka, Kaifu’s spokesman. Kaifu, m eeting later with Jordan’s King H ussein, granted $250 m illion in developm ent loans to Jordan, which has been hard-hit by the em bargo of Iraq. In Saudi Arabia, King Fahd m et with French President Francois M itterrand, Whom Saddam has tried to engage in separate peace talks linking the invasion with Israel’s occupation of the Gaza Strip and West Bank and Syria’s, m ilitary presence in Lebanon. There w as no im m ediate statem ent on the Saudi-French discussions. In Saudi Arabia, three Britons on Thursday said their fear of Iraq sustained (hem during their daring escape. The three Britons and two Frenchm en cram m ed aboard a 10-foot boat and spent 25 hours — much of the tim e being tossed in 10-foot sw ells — before being rescued W ednesday by the Saudi coast guard, they told reporters. “It’s a trip I wouldn’t like to do again, but it was w ell worth it now that I am here,” Mike Teesdale, 40, told a news conference in the Saudi border town of Khafji. “My fear w as of Iraq, not of the trip.” It w as the first report of W estern men escaping Iraq since August. The British escapees said they had taken the 10-foot boat through the m arshes of southern Iraq, into the Shatt-al-Arab w aterway and then the gulf. T eesdale said the men had only a com pass to guide them and got lost several tim es. The Britons said they had been working on a key oil installation near the Iraqi port of Basra, and the two Frenchm en w ere barge m asters. They w ere among a sm all number of Europeans living on dwindling food supplies and denied perm ission to leave. Iraq is holding about 2,200 W esterners hostage in Kuwait and Iraq, som e at strategic installations to discourage attack by the U. S.-led m ilitary forces that began m assing in the region after Iraq seized Kuwait. The United States now has about 170,000 troops in Saudi Arabia and -on ships in the area, m aking up m ost of the estim ated 200,000-member international force. The Pentagon says Iraq has m assed 460,000 troops in Kuwait sin ce the invasion. .f ' \ The USS Independence left the gulf two days after entering the w aterway in a show of strength to Iraq. In W ashington, a Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Cmdr. Edward Lundquist, said the independence had “com pleted its operation there.” Few details had been given on the training m ission of the Independence, which carries m ore than 70 warplanes. Nine of those hostages — a ll Frenchm en — returned to P aris on Thursday after being freed by Iraq. Also Thursday, 173 Brazilians arrived home after Brazil negotiated their release from Iraq. T he State Press M agazine A Call for daily specials W E E K L Y C O L L E G E T O W N MX.ÌÓ4MVS coin 941 W . Elliot Chandler • 8 2 1 - 5 4 2 8 U R 1042 N. Higley M esa • 9 8 5 -8 8 2 3 M E N U IN C L U D E S : X •S w e e t & S o u r P o rk » L e m o n C h ic k e n » E g g R o ll « S e s a m e C h ic k e n •S h rim p w ith A lm o n d D in g •T e riy a k i B e e f *B B Q S p a re R ib s •S p ic y C h ic k e n » S m o k e d F is h » B e e f w ith G re e n B e a n •V e g e ta ria n •A lm o n d T u rk e y » M o o G o o G a i P a n : *B B Q P o rk » H a m F rie d R ic e « C h o w M e in , e tc . VC B E E R A L s i «h > ALSO —WintQr' Eqq Flower Soup and Summer: Fruit C ocktail O FF ALL YOU CAN EAT CHINESE BUFFET SUPERBAR! BUSINESS HOURS (S a tu rd a y an d S u n d a y O n ly) •LUNCH* $ 3 .9 4 15 Years Experience N Want* ' Chinese Buffet 1125 E. Apache Btvd. Tem pe • 9 6 8 -3 5 2 2 J O 1 1 -9 S un .-T h urs. 1 1 -9 :3 0 F ri.-Sat. •DINNER* $ 4 .7 9 E x p ire s 1 2 -3 1 -9 0 Rural and A pache (1314 S. Rural) WTO 'S CRN V «- - U" ~ y \ \ / \ Grand Opening this huck, the original PartyLizard, invitesyoutodiscoverTemposnewest oasis— acivilizedwateringhole forfunand frivolous pursuits! Withall thefeatures asophisticatedchuckawallaexpects: a 24-footwall ofvideoplayingthe hottest newmusicandsportingevents. Karaokeentertainment that letsyousing withthestars. AnexcitingnewmenuofhousedrinksliketheSlipperySalamander andIguanaIce. Andeven—whenthe eveningheats up—aspecial appearance byyourhost, Chuckhimself! Don’t missthewall-to-walla funat ChuckawaM! C / ^ 'W tS T O O U K T N V TH E BUTTES 48thStreetsouthofBroadway ^ Page'9 £JdQ£OctaberS^J990_ B udgets__ _ C ontinued from page 1. said the Arizona econom y has taken a drastic downturn. He added that ASU’s budget request represents more of a w ish list. “People are suggesting we spend 20 to 30 percent more? The new Legislature w ill h ave a tough tim e funding ex istin g program s,” he said. “ To ask for a 20 to 30 percent increase m ay be too m uch.” In a cco rd a n ce w ith a C ouncil of P residents’ recom m endation this month, ASU presented its request in four priority groupings, which include: •Group 1 — additional equity studies for fa cu lty and c la ssifie d sta ff sa la ries, enrollm ent growth and new facility support. •Group 2 — inflation, faculty salary market equity and equipm ent replacem ent. •Group 3 — program changes and ASU West funding. •Group 4 — unfunded portions of various program s. ASU officials said the universities could accurately convey the needs of the three sta te cam puses w hile recognizing the sta te’s fiscal realities. By prioritizing, Coor said the bottom areas could be dropped if needed. He added that faculty salary w as on the top of his list. “Highly talented people have accepted offers elsew here at 30, 50, 60 percent increases,” Coor said. “Faculty salary m ust be at the top of our list “ The regents on the com m ittee expressed satisfaction with the organization of ASU’s budget report Thursday. “The (priority system ) is a positive developm ent for the entire budget p rocess,” Student Regent Danny Siciliano said. “It’s a very practical approach.” He said that in the face of Arizona’s deteriorating econom y, fiscal responsibility should be shown by the universities. Siciliano added that by prioritizing the requests, the universities are taking a step in the right direction. regents have supported, but the Legislature has failed to fund. “The budget request has already been endorsed by the Board of R egents,” Lattin said. He said he expected the budget requests for the w est cam pus to eventually stabilize. “We’re buildinjg a new cam pus,” Lattin said. “The costs w ill increase over five years before w e level off.” JLBC analyst John Lee and EBO analyst Ann Burtin w ere both in attendance at the presentation. They said ASU’s presentation w as good, but declined to com m ent on the numbers, saying it w as too early to determ ine the U niversity’s budget. “We need to be perceived as responsible,” he said. ASU W est funding w as also high on the priority list. ASU W est’s Provost Vernon Lattin said the requested 48 percent budget increase w as m isleading. “The funding request looks large, but it is a m inim al request for a new cam pus to operate under,” Lattin told the regent com m ittee. The regents w ill consider the three universities’ budgets and w ill make a recom m endation to the EBO at its m eeting next Friday in F lagstaff. He said much of the increase represents past requests by the U niversity that the v T :.:- ; y fn A Y D E N S DELTA G A M M A , ^ What does it take to get your first book published? Find o u t in... H ayden’s Ferry R eview 's F E R R Y ANCHOR X m . S P L A S H R E V I , S y m p o siu m o n first b o o k s. ISSU E 6 E W O N SU M M E R 1990 S A L E N O W !!! .... , V . J I Q U llR R lM S im ERIC B060SIAN BEST KNOWN FOR...TALK RADIO, DRINKING IN AMERICA AND SEX, DRUGS, ROCK & ROLL •THURSDAY — Af Letter Day •FRIDAY — V olleyball T ournam ent •• 3 p.m . A Court ASU REC CENTER 1 P.M. SATURDAY OCTOBER 6th Excerpt from 1 o f the-10 m onologues Of SEX, DRUGS, ROCK ft ROLL. Compact Disc Cassette 11.99 7.99 Listen to th ie , m an, the governm ent is spending billions of d ollars to build the biggest com puter ever, a super-com puter, lig h t? Huge, bigger than anything they b u ilt before. W hen they finish th is com puter, man, w e’re a ll gonna be dead. They’re gonna hook th at com puter up to e ll the TV sets in everybody’sTiouse, right? And they re gonna reverse the TV sets so th at they can w atch you in your house doing your thing. And if you don’t do w haH he com puter w ants you to d o, it’s gonna send a m essage to the TV set. And the TV set i t gonna send a m essage to the m icrow ave oven. Door’s gonna pop open end you’re gonna be ashes, men! SALE ENDS OCTOBER 9. 1990 O PEN 9 A M TO M ID N IG H T • 365 D AYS A TEAK ALL WELCOME TO JOIN IN THE FUNN Good luck to all the teams! \wm r a w w i i CHRISTOW N ! PHOENIX 5617 N. 19th Ave. Christown Plaza Proceeds Benefit Aid to die Blind & Sight Conservation I 40th S T hom as S.W. Cornor TOWER PLAZA OUTLET MART TEM PE 6218. MM MESA at University MUSIC VIDEOS * VIDEO SALES ft RENTALS! Page 10 Friday, October 5,1990 State Press Tem pe fire fig h te rs P o lice R eport to h o ld open h ou se By LAURA SCHMIDT State Press M ost of T em p e’s re sid en tia l fire s originate in the kitchen, a fire department official said. In an effort to com bat these and other b lazes in the city , the Tem pe F ire Departm ent w ill kick-off National Fire Prevention Week Saturday w ith an open house at F ire Station No. 3. “We are teaching what to do,” said Beverly Burns, education sp ecialist in fire prevention for the department. “In a sense, w e are teaching fire survival. ” Burns said this year’s them e “Make Your P lace Fire Safe: Hunt for Home Hazards,” is targeted at kindergarten- and thirdgrade-age children, who tend to hide within a burning house rather than escaping from it. “They are the age group of kids that play with m atches,” Burns said. “M atches and lighters are very dangerous in sm all hands. They (children) are the ones that can die in m ost fires.” " _; T h e T em p e F ir e .D e p a r tm e n t is sponsoring F ire Prevention Week next week in conjunction with the National Fire Protection A ssociation, schools and civic organizations across the United States and Canada. “We really don’t have a lot of fires in Tem pe,” Burns said. “A lot of people put sm all fires out and don’t call u s.” She added th at 80 p ercen t o f fire departm ent calls are m edical-related. F ire Prevention Week w as initiated by President Warren G. Harding in 1922 to com m em orate the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 in which 250 people w ere killed, 100,000 w ere left hom eless and more than 17,000 buildings were destroyed. Burns said ASU students should use battery-operated flash ligh ts instead of candles during power outages, adding that a sm all fire in January occurred in Manzanita R esidence Hall because a lit candle w as left unattended. The fire departm ent’s open house w ill include a city-w ide poster and fire hydrant painting contest, sprinkler system s and kitchen safety dem onstrations, and two clown fire safety shows. Burns said all participants in the fire hydrant painting contest w ill win a fam ily pass to the Hall of Flam e, 6101E. Van Buren Street, which houses firefighting equipment and restored fire trucks from the 1800s. “We open up the station so people can see what a fire station is lik e,” she said, adding that visitors w ill be able to observe fire gear and equipm ent during a tour of the station. “ M ost fir e d ep artm en ts h ave fire prevention as their m ain thrust before the effect,” said Mike D eV irgilio, a Tempe firefighter and param edic. “The benefit is the aw areness.” DeV irgilio said two firefighters w ill dress a s clowns for the fire prevention shows in an effort to teach children not to play with ASU. police reported the follow ing incidents Thursday: •A student suffered a seizure and injured his back when he fell off a chair in the Social Science Building. He w as taken to Tempe St. Lukes Hospital where he was treated and released. •A thief stole $19 from a cash box stored at the reception desk in B est Residence Hall C-wing. P olice have no suspects in the incident. •Two Valley National Bank cards and an ASU identification card w ere stolen from a desk in the Payne Education Building. •A w allet w as stolen from the computing services office in Hayden Library. Loss is estim ated at $100. •A thief stole a w allet from the Student Recreation Complex. Loss is estim ated at $47. •Another w allet, valued at $18, was stolen from the Student Recreation Complex. P olice have no suspects in either case. •A thief entered an unlocked room at 418. m atches, to craw l under sm oke and “stop, drop and roll” if engulfed in flam es. “They’ve (firefighters) gone through som e serious training,” he said. “It’s not just clowning around.” Burns said, the Tempe F ire Department w ill spend the month visiting Tempe elem entary schools to teach fire prevention, adding that the firefighters lecture to junior Adelphi D rive and stole an 18-speed Alpine bicycle valued at $550. •A U niversity em ployee w as injured when he fell.in the orchestra pit at Galvin Playhouse. The man w as taken to Scottsdale M emorial H ospital, where he w as treated and released. •A 26-inch Nishiki 15-speed bicycle, valued at $370, w as taken from the Business Adm inistration Building. •A 21-speed bicycle, valued at $500, was stolen from D ixie Gam mage H all, where it w as locked with a cable and lock. Tempe police- reported the following incident Thursday: •A man w as arrested after he broke the window of Domino’s Pizza, 903 S. Rural Road, and rem oved several different food item s. P olice searched the area and found the man hiding in the bushes near Orange Street and Terrace Avenue with cheese and m eat in his possession. The m an w as booked on burglary charges. Com piled b y S ta te P ress reporter Michelle Paul. high students early in the year about careless sm oking habits. “Big fires start sm all,” she said. Burns said there have not been any firerelated child deaths in Tempe this year, but a woman in her early forties died in March during a careless cigarette-sm oking related fire. “ You ca n ’t be a ll-seein g and a ll­ knowing,” DeV irgilio said . THE SPHINX NEEDS A FACE LIFT! A G A IN A N D A G A IN COM EDY HOUR T H E 8TH W O N D ER O F TH E W O RLD! T h is W eek’s S p ec ia l G uest: DAN W EDEKING Presented by • Honolulu « Los Angeles • A C ontem porary Photo Studio METROCENTER L A . Tim*« "Thay »ah in looking Oka Kata and Aha, and thay walk our looking ¡ha Alaxis and KrytUa Oct. IM S 9 4 4 -0 3 0 2 Spacsalúdng ir woman and baauty. G lam o u r Photo Session $55.00 1 d** «A * •Com plete Makeover •Hair Styling •Wardrobe ft Accessories • G ift C ertificates A v a ila b le • * SPECIAL COUPON * H E A D S ^ O T S M l CROCIMI I I Bring A Friend 2 for 1 Two Make Over/ Photo Sessions Fix The Pries Ot One ! C a li For en epp eln in w n t »44-0302 Em ir»« : 10-21-90 ! 12 :30 -1:30 p.m . U n io n P ro g ram m in g L ounge A lw ays FREEI The Shoe M ill 3 9 8 S O U T H M IL L • T E M P E 9 6 6 -3 1 3 9 Friday, October 5,1990 Page 11 B ridge______ __ C o n tin u ed fro m p ag e 1. city, said before the bridge can be extracted, proper documentation m ust be gathered for the A rchives of the Library of Congress. The bridge is registered in the National R egister of H istoric P laces. O fficials said the city is looking for w ays to defray the estim ated $52,000 cost of documenting the bridge.. In addition to the published docum entation, the council m em bers said they are considering producing a historical video scrapbook, constructing outdoor exhibits and creating other bridge renderings. Councilman N eil Giuliano said bridge m em orabilia should be placed in m useum s and be included as a part of history classes in Tem pe’s schools. Pr o je c t_;____ __ 18C X)E. Apacl (Corner McClintock & Apache) EAT IN & DRIVE THRU SERVICE < 6" R o a s t B e e f 18 02 . P e p s i „ with this ad ____ 968-5470 Goodthrough10-14-90 OPEN: Sun-Thursuntil 1am. Fri &Sat until 3 a.m. C o n tin u ed fro m p ag e 1. U niversities can set a higher standard by im plem enting cam pus codes that prohibit racial discrim ination, by giving human relations training to staff and by offering m ulticultural events for the entire student body, he said. Charles Connell, academ ic director of ASU W est’s Arts and Sciences College and head of the 21st Century Project, said the proposal w ill give the com m unity an opportunity to get involved in the planning of ASU West. “In the long term , we hope that the project w ill act to launch a group or com m ittee to continue in the planning for the cam pus,” he said. Connell said project funding for this year is budgeted through the U niversity, but added that he is soliciting additional funds from Phoenix industry. ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin said he stood behind the program ’s intentions. “The project w ill serve to help us rethink our role in the community and in the university,” he said. e x c lu d in g s a le ite m s sandals* 50 MEN S AND LADIES' STYLES NARROW THRU WIDE WIDTHS UP TO SIZE 15. IN | PREFERRED COLORS LOSE YO U R PUPPY? Find it...FREE! Haven’t you gone without them long enough ? 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 great looking $500 The Shoe Mill Basem ent 965-6731 3 9 8 S O U T H M IL L • T E M P E 9 6 6 -3 1 3 9 A VARIETY OF MUSICAL SAVINGS BMES FUNDRAISING S T A D IU M CLEANUP S U N D A Y, 10/7 7:45 A M THERE WILL BE PRIZES DRAWN AND FREE PIZZA AFTER THE CLEANUP AT SUNNY’S PIZZA . PRIZES ARE AS FOLLOW: 1 8 T -> $ 5 0 CASH 2N D ->2 IM PROV T IC K ET 3R D ->B M ES T -S H IR T i& Sf "ISLA N D S H iss CASSETTE dæ&ï Funded by ASASU -¿«■ »S ii. COMPACT DISC HOTHOUSE FLOWERS ■ INCLUDCS HOME 'G IV I IT U P ” , ” t C A N S II C LIA R IV N O W " A N D "M O V IIS" ■ ■s i t A 9) i Ki □ SALE PRICES GOOD THRU OCT. 14, 1990 TO DRUGS W e ’re E n te rta in m e n t!^ ^ M esa • T ri City M a ll f o r m e r l y e u 's P hoenix • M e tro C e n te r f o r m e r l y b il l ' s Base 12 Friday, October 5,1990 Travel show to exhibit w orld vacation spots By ANDREW FAUGHT State Press Proceeds from the travel show w ill go toward finishing the MU expansion. Critchfield said a number of m oney­ saving trip packages have been form ulated and w ill be sneak-previewed at the show. Students who have far-away excursions and European treks on the mind should' m ake a trip to a show today that travels the globe. The inaugural AIT “Travel Trade Show ’90” w ill feature 70 national exhibits in an effort to highlight vacation opportunities, said Nancy Critchfield, AIT Travel regional vice president. “We live in a com m unity of 65,000,” she said. “1 think people are interested in travel and w hat’s available to their fam ilies and them selves.” . “W e’re packaging one week trips to H awaii, the Carribean, lots of trips to M exico, along w ith different bus, train and air trip s,” she said. “For the Christmas holidays, w e’re packaging ski trips to Europe for under $1,000.” Critchfield said a lot of planning went into the show, adding that students ffom the tourism and com m ercial recreation portion of ASU’s Leisure Studies program helped to put the travel show together. ‘‘Everything is going to be really upscale, like it’s being done in the m ost professional w ay you could possibly do it,” she said. Admission is $1 for ASU students with a valid ID and $2 for the general public. Those in attendance w ill be eligib le to win one of SO door prizes worth a total of $15,000, Critchfield said. “1 think it sounds beneficial,” said Will Selva, a freshm an architecture m ajor. “ It’s im portant to be able to talk one-on-one and find out the rates.” You can charge your classified ad o ver th e phone! M asterC ard 965-6731 STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS Victor Teye, a leisure studies professor, said travel shows are a unique feature of the tourism industry. “It'should be a very rewarding and very im portant resource m aterial for m ost students here on cam pus,” he said. Chuck C astlem an , an a ero n a u tica l m anagem ent technology m ajor, said the exhibition w ill be an educational endeavor. “It sounds interesting because I’m going to Europe next year,” the 22-year-old junior said. “I’d like to find out a little about where I’m going to go.” The show runs today and Saturday from 10 a m . to $ p.m . V ISA • Wfrwk:?®' STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS CROSSWORD T Q| T A □BH Q L o V JÜ EJ E s E § A G E D □ R1 A H BO Ri E Q Ai a A VU[A] B A V T □ D El S B M A I li] E E E B « A N M [fi E 1s N E P□ s E P A G o B E RT B E R DE L E T E A A V O E' R A S E D 1 >R 1 N WA G E R1 S L A by THOMAS JOSEPH S a t u r d a y a n d S u n d a y O n l y Buy Any Regular Size Sandwich and Get the 2nd of Equal or Lesser Value C h a n g in g H a n d s BOOKSTORE FREE Browse through our 3 floors of: D ifferent is b e tte r • New & Used Books • #• C alen d ars & C ards • • Books on Cassette • S e ll o r T ra d e your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books. please ) we pay 30% o f our resale price in cash o r 50% in traderin credit w hich play be used tp purchase anything in the store. T em p e C e n te r S an d w ich es Soups Salads 16 E. 10 th S tre e t Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer per visit. Tem p e 968-0056 Tempe Village Square Priest and Southern Tempe 966-7672 ACROSS 41 Sample 1 Ensnares 43 Solitary 6 Michael of 4 4 Steer tennis ctearof 11 Skater 45 W ards off Sonja 46 Monopoly 12 Venerapayments tion DOW N 13 Senior 1 Magnum’s 14— first name McDowell 2 Tell tales 15 Damage 3 7th 16 Dunk president 1 8 Pigged 4 Slapstick out ¡tern 19 Watch 5 Letter attachstroke merit 6 Room 20 "It’s a 7 Sharpen mouse!* 8 1 7 th 21 Stitches president up 9 Sounds 23 Catty r ~ s— comments 25 Canning nneed 13“ 2 7 Rule in India 28 God­ desses of î r ~ destiny 5T 22 30 Post-bath wear Bp 33 Snap 34 By way of 36 Dress 33 edge 37 3 7 Prank­ ster’s 41 place for apigtail 43 30 Collar 4 40 Light beam F■ OCTOBBRFEST F r id a y , O c t. tf 5, • 3-11 p . L A Y A R T Y 1 N K Y Yesterday’s Answ er 10 Athenian, RSVP e.g. 31 Michael 17 Tattoo Jackson honoree hit 22 Convened 32 Encloses 24 Sculling 33 Rice dish need 35 Church 26 Venerates feature 28 Closing 3 8 Goes number one’s way 29 Part of 4 2 *— Maria* n ■ ■ tr ~ 7 r ~ w~ g Í3IT- Tí- P SST" ¿3 26 27 29 ■ W 3Ô ü1 S2 ■ mm tEi S5 ST" ST ” D A IL Y CRYPTOQUOTES— Here’s how to work it: 10/5 AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW xm $ 1 . 7 5 Jaeg erm eister S* $ 1 . 7 5 St. Pauli G irls Rum plem inze S h o o ters $ 2 . 9 5 B rau t w /K raut an d French F lies Featuring the S t Pauli 6l Rumpleminze Girls • Rural and Apache One letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for the three L’s, X for the two O’s , etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ationof the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are différent. C R YPTO Q U O TE 1M K E A . ATW N S P O TA I Y X J , A E X U C , EN S W G I H NSC G Kl R Y A AT W ATW AT W Q P S I N S E X J NES S E Q . — XT P K WH W B U E DW U R Y e ste r d a y ’* C ry p to q n o te : AN EXTRAVAGANCE ; IS ANYTHING YOU BUY THAT IS OF NO EARTHLY U SE TO YOUR WIFE. — FRANKLIN P. ADAMS 0 19M by King Fm Iw m Syndic*., Inc. , State Press Friday. October 5.1990 ASU West C a m p u s c o n tin u e s to g ro w , As ASU West continués to grow, U niversity officials claim its identity crisis is slow ly being resolved. A memorandum sent by ASU President Lattie Coor last June put the finishing touches on what he hoped would be the last effort to clear up any confusion as to w here the adm inistrative responsibilities o f ASU West and ASU Main lie. This leaves Coor and ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin with other issues to contend w ith, such as accreditation, budget considerations for the budding cam pus, and w ays to m eet the needs of its adult and com m uter students. While Coor and other officials say the future looks prom ising, underneath the positive facade som e concerns exist. In this special section, the S tele P ress has attem pted to capture the optim ism of officials involved at the highest U niversity level while still addressing the pressing issues that face a cam pus still in its infancy. T .J . S o k o l/S ta te P ress E n ro llm e n ts , b u d g e t r e q u e s ts o n th e ris e By KEVIN SHEH State Press ASU West enrollm ent is growing by thehundreds as budget requests for the infant campus continue to increase by the m illions. / Last fall, &Ï99 students attended ASU West, according to ASU R egistrar’s O ffice. This sem ester, 4,150 students are enrolled — a 9 percent increase. Y et, ASU officials requested $42.6 m illion to fund ASU West this year — a 48 percent increase. D espite the apparent disparity between growth and funding, ASU adm inistrators defend the request, arguing that past,funding shortfalls and future population projections justify the dollars. ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin told the Arizona Board of R egents’ R esources Comm ittee Thursday that w hile the funding request seem s inflated, thé dollars were necessary to operate the fledgling cam pus. Lattin said there were other factors connected with the inflated proposal. For instance, when the campus was built, Lattin said it was forced to provide courses to students before full-tim e adm inistrators, faculty and staff w ere hired. He also said the upper-division configuration of the campus is also partially responsible. According to the ASU West Office of Institutional Planning and R esearch, more than 91 percent of the cam pus’ student population w ere juniors, seniors or graduate students in 1989. Lattin said these students are more expensive to educate. Lattin said, however, that he did expect the budget requests to eventually stabilize, adding that they w ill level off after five years. “ (W ith) the cost of West in conjunction with the com m unity colleges, we are a good buy,’’ Lattin said. Sen. John Mawhinney, R-Tucson, said he believes pulling the funding rug out from under ASU West would be a m istake. “You got to prim e the pump,” he said, adding that to ensure quality returns, a good investm ent m iist be m ade. Mawhinney, who serves as v ice chairman of the Senate Appropriations C om m ittee, said it w as too early to determ ine if the cam pus is a su ccess or failure. “We won’t know that until the;trends play out,” he said. “We’ve got to give the cam pus a little m ore tim e. The worst decision would be to start ( funding) som ething and then stop >- that would be governm ent by panic.” But Mawhinney said that the 48 percent increase asked for yesterday by ASU officials m ay „be unrealistic, considering the sad state of the Arizona econom y. “The bad (econom ic) tim es of la st year? They did not go aw ay,” Mawhinney said. He added that ASU West would be fortunate to receive half that amount. ‘W est a success* The idea of a cam pus serving the V alley’s w est side has been kicked around for decades. P aige Mulhullan, form er U niversity executive vice president, is one of the people credited with bringing the cam pus from a dream into reality. Mulhullan, now the president of W right State U niversity in Dayton, Ohio, said that for m any, the idea w as hard to swallow. “There w as a flurry of activity in the 70s,” he said. “But by the late 70s, it w as dead.” M ulhullan said m ain cam pus adm inistrators at the tim e feared a third cam pus would detract from Tem pe’s growth and prosperity. “U niversity adm inistrators never supported the concept strongly,” he said. “The state Legislature d elegates w ere nearly a s strong. The tim ing w asn’t right in the 70s.” M ulhullan said the concept gained momentum again in the early 1980’s because of growth rates on the V alley’s w est side and transportation hassles involved in com m uting to the Temfee cam pus. “We w ere convinced there w as strong enough support,” he said. There w as really a need for it. We began concentrating on our own adm inistration.” Further feasib ility studies w ere drafted to research the issue, but som e still w ere not convinced. O fficials from the regents, UofA and NAU w ere “suspicious” of the concept. “But the regents grudgingly agreed to let us get started,” Mulhullan said .“ We also did g et approval and subm itted budget request separate from the m ain cam pus.” Mulhullan said need dictated an upper-division form at. “There are plenty of com m unity colleges doing a super job,” he said. “Unm et need w arrants an upper division cam pus.” Mulhullan said the difficulties of raising enrollm ent w ill soon be a thing of the past. “ (W est) w as held back by governance argum ents,” he said, “The new president’s (ASU President Lattie Coor’s) policy w ill m ake possible size increases and pfogress. In due tim e, (people) w ill see (the cam pus) becom e com parable with other m ajor institutions.” “There is alw ays a problem in a new place. West cam pus is com ing along — it really does serve a need.” ASU W est a ‘boondoggle* While popular, the concept of a w est side cam pus is not em braced by everyone. Rep. Peter Goudinoff, D-Tucson, said he never supported the ASU West concept. “We can’t afford the three universities w e have got,” he said. “It’s a god-awful m ess.” He said the campus was a “boondoggle” — the decision to build if was more a factor of politics than one of need. “Certain politicians wanted that cam pus,” h e said. “It w as Turn to E nrollm ent, p age 14. A S U W e s t R a je T ^ State Press Friday, October 5,1990 Lattiti keeping an eye on future o f campus 100 degrees.” ASU President Lattie Coor described Lattin a s “an interesting, diverse person.” “He has a deep com m itm ent to the job,” Coor said. “H e’s been very active in b rin g in g com m u n ity le a d e r s to the cam pus.” Lattin said his fam ily has established deep ties with the Southwest, “I ’m from an old, Hispanic fam ily that settled in New M exico in the 1720s,” he said. The raspy-voiced provost w as bom in W inslow, tiie youngest of three boys. His m other m oved the fam ily to Albuquerque after his father died and Lattin w as nine: By TEENA CHADWELL State Press Vernon Lattin is a man of contrasts. On one hand, the ASU W est provost stays in touch with the past by reading 19th century rom antic poetry. On the other, he enjoys m oving to the groove of modern reggae m usic w hile w eightlifting. Most im portantly, though, he keeps his eye on the future of ASU W est, hoping to bring a distinct character to the cam pus. “ We m ust be a u n iversity of the com m unity and the city ,” Lattin Said. The Arizona native acquired the top ASU West position in January 1989 after leaving an associate vice president-for academ ic a ffa irs position in the U niversity of W isconsin System . Lattin, 51, said he did not actively pursue the provost position at ASU W est, but after being nominated and learning m ore about the Glendale cam pus, he decided to accept it. Since then, Lattin said he is com m itted to building high-quality program s at the fiveyear-old cam pus. ; 7 fe e l like I ’m back a t home , ' — V e r n o n L a ttin While academ ic concerns are his top priority, Lattin’s attention does focus on other tilings. “1 think the environm ent is one of the serious issues that we as a university face, ” he said, adding that he plans to develop a landscape plan that reflects the desert environm ent surrounding ASU West. The provost said the desert fascinates him. Irw in O a u g h e rty /S ta le P ress ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin is hoping to bring a distinct character to the west campus. “I love the heat, so it doesn’t bother m e,” Lattin said. “ I go out jogging when it’s over “I’m one of those people who believe Arizona and New M exico ought to be one sta te,” he said. After receiving his doctorate in 1970 from the U niversity of Colorado, Lattin held faculty positions at several universities, including the U niversity of Tennessee and Northern Illinois U niversity. He has been m arried to P atricia Hopkins for 17 years and has five children ranging in age from 15 to 32. As Lattin guides ASU West in its search for an identity, he continues to feel com fortable with the tasks at hand. “I feel like I’m back at hom e,” he said. E nrollm ent C ontinued from p age 13. - pure politics to build it and pure politics to keep it.” Goudinoff said there w ere other m ethods that could have been explored, such as raising academ ic standards at the m ain cam pus and developing the com m unity college system . “We can’t afford to be w asting education dollars," he said. But Rep. Bob McLendon, D-Yuma, said the branch has taken pressure off of the main cam pus despite the low number of full-tim e students exclusively attending ASU West. In 1990, only 635 of the 4,150 students at ASU West took 12 or m ore credit hours, according to the ASU R egistrar’s Office. “It has accom plished both — by taking the pressure off of the m ain cam pus and servicing the w est sid e,” he said. But McLendon said an additional cam pus, such as one in the E ast V alley, m ight not be econom ically feasible at this "time.: ' Too early for ASU E ast Though not totally opposed to the idea, Regent Donald P itt agreed that it would be prem ature to com m it to an ASU E ast, adding that ASU W est should be allow ed to m ature. But he said he did believe the w est cam pus is serving a need. “The dem ographics indicate that the growing population w ill take off,” P itt said, adding that UofA and NAU have experienced more rapid growth than ASU. P itt said ASU is justified in its d esire to use the w est cam pus to downsize the m ain cam pus. “ (ASU President Lattie) Coor has m ade it abundantly clear if ASU wants to pursue a research institution, it has to downsize,” he said. “ (ASU) population m ust be shifted elsew here.” P itt said the m ain cam pus could serve the w est Valley, provide an outlet for m ain cam pus overpopulation and provide an outlet for the anticipated growth in 1994. This growth is also a concern of form er Arizona Board of Regent m em ber Donald Shropshire, “I think (ASU W est) serves a very tea l need,” he said. “It is a good thing We have it with 20 to 30 thousand students arriving here. We m ust take dram atic m oves to deal with if.” Shropshire, a regent from 1982 to 1990, said the cam pus is valuable because it serves as a m odel for future satellite cam puses. “It gives us a chance to see how it works,” be said. r Shropshire said he thought the project w as rushed at first, adding that the Legislature approved the project “before we had our homework done.” “The regents voted m erely to refihe planning,” he said. “The Legislature voted'to establish the cam pus.” But Shropshire said his skepticism m elted away, adding that the cam pus has m atured nicely., “I think the U niversity has taken the challenge and run with it,” he said. “It has been an econom ic shot in the arm to the residents of the area.” » ASU West budget vs. enrollment ASU West wants to increase its operating budget but its total enrollment isn't rising as fast Discrepancy between the percent increase in enrollment versus budget for ASU West Shropshire said any enrollm ent problem s ASU West m ay be experiencing are due to the slashing of the cam pus’ budget. 4 \ “The Legislature has continued to interfère with the budget in m id-term ,” Shropshire said, adding that ASU has experienced budget cuts in the m iddle of the year six out of the eight years he served as a regent. “That indicates to m e that there is som ething wrong with the tax structure,” he said. “The Legislature has to take responsibility.” $42.6 m illion 47.8% 4150 3799 students students $28.8 m illion The form er regent said ASU adm inistrators m ust be flexible enough to change the cam pus’ direction if the com m unity requires it. He added that in any cam pus’ infancy, there w ill be rough tim es in the beginning. “You have got to start som ew here,” Shropshire said. “You’ve got to tackle som e inefficiency in the beginning years. I’m far m ore worried how to accom m odate 20 to 30 thousand m ore students than a little in efficiency,” he said, adding that to cut funding to thé branch cam pus now would be “an absolute d isaster.’’ ASU President Lattie Coor said ASU West is “on target,” adding that enrollm ent is steadily increasing each year. Coor defended the cam pus’ upper-division format. “The concept of an upper division (cam pus) calls for a close partnership with the com m unity co lleg es,” Coor said. “I find the partnership notion a very attractive one.” E ast V alley residents trek to ASU W est Overall, m ore than 25 percent of w est cam pus students live in the E ast V alley and take cla sses at ASU W est, according to ASU West Office of Institutional Planning and Research. 8.2% 1990 1991 percent requested increase Operating budget percent increase 1989 1990 Enrollment Source*: Joint Legieletlv* Budget Office end ASU Registrar* Office Steven Kricun/State Press Other statistics reveal that alm ost 35 percent of the students in the ASU W est’s College of Arts and Sciences com e from the cities of Tem pe, M esa, Chandler, Scottsdale and Paradise Valley. Coor said east side students traveling to ASU West do so on their own free w ill. “We don’t direct students w here to study. It (clearly) is the choice of students,” he said, “Arizona is the fastest growing state in the nation. The demand for higher education w ill be there. The demand is inescapable.” State Pres* Friday, October 5,1990 Page 15 West campus aims for accreditation By KELLY PEARCE State Press U niversity officials cite ASU W est’s responsibilities to older com m uter students and its accreditation efforts as the key to establishing the branch’s autonomy and academ ic reputation. “We have a m ajor responsibility to serve the w est V alley,” ASU President Lattie Coor said, adding that the prim ary clientele at the branch cam pus is com m uter and adult students. “The basic character must be m ade. We want to m eet the needs of M aricopa County.” But in order for ASU W est to possess credentials, its graduates can brag about and be eligib le for federal grants, ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin said it m ust sustain institutional and program accreditations. “ Institutional accreditation is essen tial,” he said, adding that it w ill take place overa year tim etable. L a ttin sa id ASU W est’s g o a l for accreditation is spring 1993. In the interim , he said the cam pus is preparing itself for on­ site evaluation in fall 1992 by North Central A ssociation, an accreditation organization that has approved other program s at the m ain cam pus. The w est cam pus set the w heels of accreditation into motion three months ago after Coor released a list of his objectives for ASU West. In the June report to the Arizona Board of R egents, the ASU President loosened his reins on the cam pus by giving it full responsibility over hiring, firing, retention, evaluation and promotion of a ll faculty and staff. In addition^ the Glendale cam pus w ill be in charge of its own adm issions and financial aid processes, Coor said. Budget, m ission, quality control and program approval, however, w ill continue to be in the hands of the president. Coor said his m ission for the branch cam pus has been to clarify what past ASU presidents have established for the w est cam pus. “It has been an evolution,” he said, adding that the m ain focus of the cam pus w ill be teaching. “My decisions have been in line with them .” Because graduate students m ake up onethird of ASU West’s population, research is also part of the agenda, Coor said. In an effort to monitor what transpires on the other side of the V alley, Coor spends one day each week at ASU W est, m eeting with cam pus and com m unity officials. Brian Foster, dean of the Graduate College and ASU’s accreditation officer, said because ASU W est’s m ission is different from the m ain cam pus, it m ust succum b to the accreditation process. Foster w as appointed three years ago by form er ASU President J . R ussell Nelson to m onitor the accred itation process — throughout the University. “It is appropriate that they m ove towards separate accreditation,” he said, adding th at the cam p u s’ program s have a “different flavor.” Foster said the purpose o f accreditations is to find out if a m iiversity or program has m et the goals it originally outlined. “The m ission states what the university tries to do, and the accreditation w ill determ ine if the objectives have been m et,” he said. Coor said the accreditation is vital as ASU W est m atures into its personality. “It should create an identity, and define its role,” he said. Regent Andy Hurwitz said he believes ASU West is finally com ing into its own. “But it is still early,” he said, adding that the cam pus only consists of five buildings and it w ill be a w hile before it can sustain 20,000 students. “I think that one of the things that w ill m ake it attractive is getting its own signature.” T .J . S o k o l/S ta te P ress ASU President Lattie Coor loosened the reins on the west campus by giving it full responsibility Over hiring, firing, retention, evaluation and promotion of all faculty and staff. East campus depends on ASU main, w est sites By KENNETH BROWN State Press ASU officials who support a proposed ASU sa tellite in the E ast V alley believe the su ccess of a third branch could depend on the perceived relationship between ASU West and the m ain cam pus. “We have a much clearer understanding of the relationship between (ASU and its West cam pus),” ASU President Lattie Coor said, adding that initially the two cam puses’ roles w ere not clear-cut. “ASU West really gives us a substantial advantage in creating (the proposed third cam pus). Now w e can learn from that experience.” Coor’s clarification of the adm inistrative relationship between the m ain and west cam puses in a June 1 m emo outlining the responsibilities of each, w as thought by officials to be the final effort needed to clearly define ASU West’s identity. “I think President Coor is on the right track to avoid the problem s we had with ASU W est,” said ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin. “ I think the best way to avoid m istakes is to not look at the m istakes, but to look ahead to the future.” D espite past hesitations on the part of lawm akers, Coor sa id he is enthusiastic about the sta te’s ability to build and fund what he called “ASU III,” the third in s ta llm e n t in h is “ m u lti-c a m p u s university” concept. But som e officials who Contend Arizona has already learned a hard lesson through the 20-year battle for ASU W est, said w a itin g too lon g to sta r t se rio u sly considering “ASU III” could be disasterous. P aul B arberini, director of student fin a n cia l a ssista n c e , sa id ed u ca tin g tom orrow ’s stu d en ts requires looking beyond today’s needs. “ You can’t w ait until 1999 and say ‘Oops, you better m ake this cam pus four tim es as b ig,’ ” he said. “ I think d ie real issue is what is the need of the people.” The idea for an iipper-division ASU cam pus in the W est VaUey began in thé early 1970s when the w ife of form er legislator Sterling R idge proposed an ASU branch cam pus a s part of a cla ss project at G lendale Community College. “There w as a great need,” said Ridge, one of the«original lawm akers who pushed for the extension. “You couldn’t get to ASU (from the West V alley), especially with kids or a job.” . . The idea soon becam e a “grass-roots effort” m ade up of working parents, Vietnam veterans and 7,000 other Valley residents who did not fit the traditional college student stereotype but wanted an education. Not a ll officials, however, w ere eager to fund the effort. Ann Lindeman, R idge’s fellow legislator and another driving force behind the West V alley cam pus, said the idea w as “pretty m uch forced down the Arizona Board of R egents’ throats.” “ (The Board of R egents and ASU) w ere afraid they’d lose students,” Lindeman said. “They had the m entality then that bigger was better. It w as a period of m ajor growth.” But despite opposition, form er ASU President J. R ussell Nelson threw the first shovelful of dirt in 1986'to break ground at ASU West. Confused campus responsibilities exchanged for autonom y By JENNIFER FRANKLIN State Press F ive years of adm inistrative confusion involving the responsibilities of the ASU Main and West cam puses has been sorted out, U niversity officials said. “There was som e confusion in the beginning,” ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin said. “That’s now on track.” H ie process of im plem enting the satellite cam pus’ individual responsibilities is “running sm oothly,” he added. +* . Lattin said ASU Main’s goals in m aking the branch cam pus more autonomous are being m et on or before their target dates. The goals include approval of ASU West’s own a c a d e m ic a d v isem en t and co u rse r e g istr a tio n transactions and the branch having its own input on U niversity library decisions, he said. Lattin said he is currently working closely with m em bers of the Tempe cam pus in revising the w est cam pus curriculum and its m ission statem ent. “I think w e’re working it out very w ell,” he said, adding that it would just be a m atter of tim e before all problem s are ironed out. ASU West Vice-Provost Jacquelyn M attfeld said things becam e much clearer after ASU President Lattie Coor defined what was to be Accomplished by each cam pus. Coor sent a m em o to ASU West adm inistrators on June 1 in an effort to sort out the relationship between the West Campus and the U niversity. “When I cam e to ASU it becam e clear to m e that this was som ething that needed to be done,” Cdor said. M attfeld agreed the m em o w as needed. “The m em o he sent w as very helpful,” M attfeld said. “It really clarified the positions of each (the U niversity and the w est cam pus). That had not happened before.” Coor attributed the delay in defining the role of the cam pus adm inistrations to dissenting opinions among adm inistrators and the fact that the cam pus w as new. “Just toe nature of it being new would lead to varying opinions,” he said. While there w as som e role confusion, Coor said he doesn’t think it hurt the quality of toe education students a t ASU West received. He added that toe once awkward relationship between the cam puses is now a successful one. M attfeld also stressed the increasingly sm ooth working relationship between the two cam puses. “Any stress or tension there w as before on toe cam pus is gone,” she said. Coor said toe m ain cam pus is responsible for ASU W est’s m ission, budget, quality control and program approval, w hile the branch cam pus itself is responsible for a ll other functions. The tasks include hiring, retention, annual evaluation and promotion of cam pus faculty. Coor said w hile it is his b elief ASU W est should have a s m uch independence as possibtei it still m ust work within toe standards required by to e U niversity. “Quality control m eans that the U niversity is the final ie v e l for decision-m aking,” he said. Page 16 Jftoto^OctoberS^lW ^ S tate P en s New Yorker publishes ASU professor’s work By JEFF CONCORS State Press ASU professor R on | Carlson has m ade it to i the literary big leagues! with a short story pub-| lished to help the hungry. ! Carlson, an associate! English professor ancj d i-l rector of the ASU Crea-[ tive Writing Program . I recently donated a short! sto r y to S h a re O url Strength, a Washington C a r ls o n D . C .-based o rgan iza­ tion, that found its way onto the pages of The New Yorker. Carlson said it w as the first tim e h is work w as published in a literary m agazine. “I think it w as great to be in The New Yorker,” he said. “Thé way I look at is, SOS gets the money and I get the credit.” The story appeared in the July 9 issue of the m agazine and raised $2,500 for the non­ profit organization, established in 1984 to battle worldwide starvation. Carlson said he was working on his story before SOS approached him. “I w as contacted by them and they asked m e to do som ething for them ,” he said. “At the tim e I w as working on an experim ental pjece, and that’s the one I gave them .” f He said the piece w as experim ental because of its «(tended metaphor about a single-parent fam ily. “ It’s a really off-the-wall story for me, unlike anything I have w ritten,” he, said. “Picture a single-parent fam ily and they live on an aircraft carrier.” The story w ill be republished for use in SOS’s second com pilation book, published to help raise m oney for foodbanks, hom eless shelters, literacy program s and overseas relief efforts. “There are a lot of people who want to help' (the hungry), but they don’t know how to use their talen ts,” Carlson said. The SOS book w ill be the follow-up to the organization’s 1989 anthology, Louder Than Words, said B ill Shore, SOS’s executive director. “One hundred percent of the proceeds of the (second) book Will g o to the literacy and hunger groups,” Shore said, adding that his organization donates about $1.5 m illion a year to these causes. Shore said SOS got the idea for the book when the organization received literary donations from novelists Stephen King and Sidney Sheldon. “That’s what gave us the idea to ask w riters to w rite som ething for us other than checks,” Shore said. Debbie Shore, assistant director of SOS said the organization tries to find creative w ays to raise money. “Our prim ary Junction is to work with creative people like chefs, artists and w riters,” She said S h ore ad ded th a t SOS p rev io u sly p ub lished a ch ild ren ’s book and an architectural book for charity. HAPPY HOUR 4 p .m . F r id a y s ! 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P lus w ith Com puter Systems C enter's g re a t lo c a l service and support, you can’t go w rong. Everydan^toMake FastDala *69 P,*9S2£&*169 Dot Matrix 2400B Gat on lino instead of in Uns. It comas w ith softwars, runs at 300, 1200 or 2400 baud and Is fully comp«tibia Printer YofaC| VGA M onitor & Card UNIVERSITY *399 For Botti G tM n e a r te tte r q u n l^ p o . Modem * A-S.U. Upgradetocolornow tomakeall ofyourU- arite program» look I on a 16 bit VGA cud and a 14" color VGA | monitor with a vwivcl ( baro. HURRY! C om puter System s sas. Center “SystemsIsOurMùkBeName" Satio-s Moti-Fri 9*6 ? 16 TVs & 10° Wings ALL NIGHT! IS PHOENIX M l SU Craback 266-7873 E I ■ 1320 E. Broadway Tem pe, AZ 829-7777 bhoaoway TEMPE I Soutien1 ! MoQMock I 838-t236j W e ll w o rld ! C o lle g e C u lt u r e M d iy ^ O d o b cr^ rà Page 17 The Next on Saturday prime time By RANDY HAWKINS State Press How does one get to m eet Ed McMahon? If you’re Brian P age and the Next, a local pop-rock band, you get to appear on Star Search this Saturday. There’s an interesting story behind their national televi­ sion debut. It seem s that Chuy’s m anager Debbie Bruzzese, w ife of N ext drummer Gary Bruzzese, m et die Star Search talent scouts when they cam e into Chuy’s for a few beers several m onths ago. Thinking quickly, she grabbed a Brian P age and the N ext ea ssetteo u t of her car and g a v e it to the scouts. Two months later, they called back and set up an audi­ tion with the band (and with several other local bands a t the sam e tim e) at a local recording studio. Of th e bands (hat tried out, Brian Page and d ie Next w ere selected along large screen TVs. Follow ing the show, at 7 p.m ., the band w ith one other local band, Unity. w ill play a liv e se t featuring about 90 percent original The show w as film ed in Hollywood a few w eeks ago. The m aterial with one or two cover songs thrown in. Some of band performed a two-minute version of one of their the songs w ill be from the band’s previously released in­ original songs, “If You L eave.” dependent cassettes, and som e w ill be new m aterial. So, did they win or lose? Brian P age and the N ext started their m usical career as W ell Brian and the band know, and they told m e, so I a four-piece band four years ago, playing cover songs in know. But if yoil’d like to find out, you’ll have to watch Star local clubs. Search on Channel 12, Saturday at 6 p.m . Since then, the band has released two independent Or you can watch it on a large screen TV at Chuy’s. They cassettes of original m aterial, “Brian P age and the N ext” are having a Star Search party this Saturday in celebration and “B elieve in M e” which can be purchased at Zia Record of the band’s appearance. There is no cover charge at the Exchange and Tower Records. door and there w ill be a free buffet. The band has also had songs aired on the la st two The festivities start at 5 p.m . with an anti-drug m ovie, volum es of KDKB’s Arizona Sounds com pilations, a “K illing T im e,” that the band wrote m usic for and appears spotlight on local m usicians. The radio show also helped in. Funded by an ASU grant, the m ovie tells the stories of Brian P age and the N ext enter the 1969-90 Budweiser B attle four teens who’v e been involved with drugs in the past and of the Bands, w here they won first place by beating out learned to “just say no.” The band’s m usic is used during over 5000 bands across the nation. the transitions between the four stories, and their song In February 1990, the band decided to change its em ­ “K illing T im e” ends the show. The m ovie w as written and phasis aw ay from cover songs to original m aterial. “We’re directed by theatrical director Joe Rassulo. trying to get aw ay from the cover band im age,” said Ron At 6 p.m . Chuy’s w ill be showing Star Search on their fHck, the band’s m anager. This change w as accom panied by a change in lineup; the bass player and the keyboardist parted w ays with the band, and new bass player/vocalist Jim Simmons w as add­ ed to the band’s core of drum m er/vocalist Gary Bruzzese and gu itarist/vocalist Brian P age. In addition to Star Search and playing local clubs, Gary and Jim performed the them e song for the new Burt Reynolds TV show, “Evening S h a d e/’ After the Star Search party, the band w ill play at Chuy’s Oct. l l at 10 p.m ., after Tucson’s Sidewinders, and Oct. 13 a t ll.p .m . Both appearances are part of Chuy’s weeklong ninth anniversary celebration. A possible Arizona State F air appearance is also in the works. So with all this under their belt, how com e they don’t have a record contract? W ell, it m ay not be long. An inside source close to the band said, on condition of anonym ity, that “labels have been biting.” Brian P age w as m ore to the point. He said the band has an offer from C hrysalis Records, and is currently in con­ tact with Polygram . They plan to “ w ait and see” what happens. All this, and Ed McMahon too! C om plaining rich kids plague ‘M etropolitan’ By JON WALZ State Press Metropolitan is a film that, in concept, should have been very enjoyable, due to its subject m atter. It is, however, sim ply a Woody Allenesque look at a phalanx of rich, snot-nosed, upper-eastside, socially elite Manhat­ tanites who return to their city from their New England preppy college of choice. They are in town for Christmas Vaca­ tion, which allow s them the opportunity to rekindle the so-called Sally Fow ler Rat P ack, or SFRP, for a short tim e. The acronym refers to the fact that the group m eets at the apartm ent o f w ealthy partier Sally Fow ler (Dylan Hundley). The SFRP gang goes from form al social party to social party, and has plenty of tim e along the w ay to whine and bitch about virtually every problem known to m an. These actions are a mammoth black hole for the picture, because listening to rich kids talk is about as exciting a s slowly cutting off body parts with a rusty chainsaw . W riter/D irector /Producer Wilt Stillm an does not allow any space for his actors to do anything but sit in form al clothing and pontificate about agrarian socialism , Tolstoy, Lionel Trilling, surrealism , Jane Austen, social cla ss w ars, and the death of the UHB (urban haute-bourgeoisie). . . am ong other pressing issues of the day. H ie kids have plenty of m oney, so the biggest “real” problem they face is the lack of qualified m ale escorts to attend the parties with the nose-in-the-ozone ladies (perhaps girls or brats would be m ore ap­ propriate) in the group. To alleviate this m ortifying problem, Charlie (Taylor N ichols), the dogm atic leader of the group, pulls a guy off the street and com ees him into becom ing an escort. Is it just m e, or does this action go com pletely against every principle sup­ ported by the upper-class? The true upperclass in Manhattan w ill not even be seen with people who: a ) have not been men­ tioned in the social colum n of the Times; b) have not subm itted the proper papers and urine sam ples with the social party bureau; is the w alking, tux renting w estsider whom the group picks up along Fifth Avénue. Tom does the party thing with the group, and is able to bitch, m oan and whine with the b est of them . Due som e coincidental m ixup, Tom discovers that he has m utual friends w ith m ost of the partiers. He m akes a m ove on an earthy socialite named Audry (Carolyn Farina) and they continue the snooze-button pon­ tifica tions for the rest of the picture. Rich kids and their self-obsessive, neurotic problem s are sim ply not a com ­ pelling topic for a m ovie. The average American audience, first of a ll, is com ­ pletely desensitized to the so-called pro­ blem s of the rich, and refuse to sym ­ pathize with them . I wanted to care about the characters, but they did not say or do anything that has not already been covered or forced down our throats before. There are a handful of truly wonderful m oments that save the picture. Unfor­ tunately they are spaced throughout the film in such a w ay that a wonderful m o­ m ent or a funny line appears exactly every ten m inutes like clockwork. So w e get about nine good happenings, and then w e g e t to go hom e. One m om ent that really brought the house down is when Tom inform s Audrey, quite seriously, that he doesn’t really feel the need to read novels. He said he prefers literary criticism because he gets both critical analysis and a sum m ation of the work . . . a ll in one quick article. What M etropolitan tries to do, it does w ell. The one-sided perform ances are pret­ ty good all the w ay around, but lack the punch that they really needed to succeed. The cam era work by John Thom as m akes , the Manhattan of M etropolitan appear as beautiful and rom antic a s the Manhattan that Woody Allen has been showing us for years. The script contains som e of the m ost intelligent dialogue this sid e of Woody, but the film 's own sty le of pseudo­ .to intelligence g ets to the w ay Of the “hap­ penings” on the screen. If you want an intelligent, beautifully photographed and exquisitely scripted film about M anhattan, you m ight a s w ell,rent Woody Allen’s Manhattan. If you want to listen to rich kids whine and pontificate, hang out at PV Main m ore often. And if you don’t feel the need to see a sem i­ original film about SFRP’s and UHB’s, read this article . - v M etropolitan is a film to which the words attributed to Sam uel Goldwyn m ay apply, “If I want a m essage, I’ll go to W estern Union . . ,” ★ ★ ★ rating is on a five sta r scale Photo courtwy o< N n Um Cinema Following another society gala, Cynthia (Isabel Gillies), Charlie (Taylor Nichols) and Sally Fowler (Dylan Hundley) relax at one of SaHy’AafteipartlM . Page 18 Friday, October 5,1990 T r ia l o n o b sc e n ity ju d g m e n t c o n tin u e s CINCINNATI (AP) — The defense rested its ca se Thurs­ day at the obscenity trial involving Robert Mapplethorpe’s photos, and closing argum ents in the case are expected today. Mo6t of the day w as taken up with legal argum ents over the qualifications of a rebuttal w itness for the prosecution, prompting an expression of frustration by defendant Den­ nis Barrie. “I just wish som ething would happen,” said Barrie, who could go to jail if the jury finds him guilty of the m isde­ m eanor charges of pandering obscenity and using children in nudity-related m aterial. Barrie, 43, is director of the Contemporary Arts Center. A Hamilton County grand jury indicted Barrie and the art gallery April 7 because of seven photographs in a 175-picture exhibit that day. F ive of the photos depict sexually explicit acts involving m en, and two show children with their genitals exposed. If convicted of both charges, Barrie could be sentenced to one year in jail and fined $2,000. The gallery could be fined $10,000. Although the jiffy could get the case as early as Friday, Hamilton County Municipal Judge David Albanese told the eight-m em ber panel he felt no pressure to speed things along. “If we have to recess over the three-day weekend, we w ill,” Albanese said. The court won’t be in session Monday because of Columbus Day. The defense contended the exhibit was legitim ate art by a nationally known photographer and that the display was part of the art gallery’s cultural m ission. In testim ony W ednesday, Barrie said som e of the acts depicted in thè show were “tough, brutal, som etim es disgusting,” but part of the photographic challenge Map­ plethorpe accepted in trying to create a work of art. “As difficult as the subject m atter m ay be, you see the ability of the man working through. He was brilliant with a cam era,” Barrie said. D efense law yers Thursday challenged the credentials of proposed prosecution rebuttal w itness Judith Reisman of Arlington, Va. They said she was not qualified to offer ex­ pert testim ony regarding the seven photographs. Ms. Reism an listed among her qualifications having prepared educational videotapes and slide presentations for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington. She said she also has been a consultant for television’s “Captain Kangaroo” show, form er Attorney General Edwin M eese’s com m ission on pornography and for the conservative American Fam ily Association. Albanese allowed the testim ony. Ms. Reism an, who practices what she called content analysis of im ages, w as asked to testify about the five photographs on which the obscenity charges are based. “Do you see in them any expression of human feeling?” A ssistant City Prosecutor Frank Prouty asked. “No, I do not,” Ms. Reism an said. “There is no expres­ sion of joy, anger, fear, sham e, happiness, sadness, intent or. d istress.” State Press Classifieds c S By displaying sexually exp licit photos that lack human em otion, “one receives the information that that is an ap­ propriate activity,” Ms. R eism an said. She said that displaying nude photos of children “is a standard technique for getting children into a child abuse situation.” Art experts testifying for the defense have described the exhibit as a retrospective of the career of Mapplethorpe, who died of AIDS in March 1989 at age 42. As the trial recessed for the day, Albanese cautioned jurors to ignore about 40 dem onstrators in front of the Hamilton County Courthouse. Most of the protesters w ere dressed in black, som e wear­ ing death m asks as they staged a “funeral” for the B ill of Rights. It w as the first such dem onstration at the trial since jury selection began Sept. 24, when about 150 gay rights and anti-censorship dem onstrators m arched outside the > courthouse. The exhibit drew 80,000 people during its. seven w eek run, an attendance record for an art exhibit in Cincinnati. The show closes this w eek in Boston, where 103,000 tickets have been sold. The exhibit w as canceled at a Washington museum because of controversy over the photographs. — • : /& }■ ■ ■ i S » fü f ’.«gägmSQpr A L L T H E rH E B E S T IN T E S T fr B E F . STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. IS THE BIGGEST AND BEST TEST PREP ORGANIZATION IN THE WORLD. COURSES IN: SSAT, PSAT, GMAT, GRE, GRE PSYCH, LSAT, INTRO TO LAW SCHOOL, BAH REVIEW, MCAT, DAT, TOEFL, NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS, MSKP, FMGMS, FLEX, NCLEX-RN, CGFNS, NATIONAL DENTAL BOARDS, CPA, NTE, SPEED READING, AND MORE. f KAPLAN IH h h MI Sell your ’puter Under “ Com puters in the State Press Classifieds [ C a m p® u s • Photo Oevelopmg • Health &Beauty area, tel H B B B t e ’ Compact Oiscs i J U O R N E R ___ 712 S. C O LLE G E AVE — NEXT TO C O LLE G E STRE ET DELI M-F 7:30 a m .-10 p .m . S at 9 a .m .- t0 p .m . S un 11 a .m .-1 0 p .m . P h o n e :9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 A L L S IN G L E Associated Press photo Contemporary Arts Center director Dennis Barrie shows the strain o f his two-week-long trial on obscenity charges concern­ ing the Mapplethorpe photos in Hamilton Municipal Court Thursday. We’re at your service! SERVICES C D ’s 12.99 or lo s s INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT? E V E R Y S IN G L E D A Y R e g . 1 5 . 9 8 L is t P r ic e YOU SHOULD KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS! •F R E E C onsultation to stu d en ts a n d faculty •A uto Accidents •M otorcycle Accidents •Bicycle A ccidents •W rongful D eath •F aulty P roducts •Slip & Fall •D og Bites •In su ra n ce D isputes •R E D U C E D percentage fees for cases of clear liability or serious injury •H om e, ev en in g & hospital ap p o in tm en ts available PIZZA T h e p iz z a c h o ic e o f 13 m a jo r u n iv e rs itie s n a tio n w id e BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY —NOW SERVING ASU— .. c a l l BAKER & MARCUS Personal Injury Lawyers DON’T GET HURT TWICE 4 3 S -1 2 1 2 4 6 2 5 S. W endler Dr., Suite 111. Tempe OPEN LATE. LATE Gum by loves parties. C all for special rates. FAST FREE DELIVERY 921-FAST O p e n fo r L u n c h H o u rs : Sun-W ed H am -2am T hur-S at 11 am-3am S ta te P rm Page 19 Friday, October 5,1990 ‘‘And to think it all began with a State Press Personal!” BUNDLE’S LIQUORS ft MKT. 1324 W . U niversity (just east o f Priest) M eister Brau B eer 12-pk...... $ 3** M onterey Vineyard 750m l White 2nfandet......'u...... .....3** S tate Press C lassifieds 965-6731 M atthew s C enter Basem ent Barr, Arnold fight tabloids with $35 million racketeering lawsuit Volska Vodka 750m t....<;...... 8 ** Used Playboy M agazines 94c Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 imported Beers. 967-9079 B R O A D W A Y S O U T H W E S T , S E A R S * 7 5 S P E C IA L T Y S H O P S , L O S A R C O S F O O D C O U R T A N D TH E LO S A R C O S M A R K E TPLA C E / SC O TTSD ALE & M C D O W ELL R O AD S / O PE N M O N D AY TH R O U G H F R ID A Y 1 0 A M U N T IL 9 P M /S A T U R D A Y 1 0 A M U N T IL 6 P M /S U N D A Y 1 2 P M U N T IL 5 P M / ( 6 0 2 ) 9 4 5 -6 3 7 6 LOS ANGELES (AP) — Roseanne Barr and her husband filed a $35 m illion federal racketeering law suit Thursday against the National Enquirer and Star tabloids over publication of purloined, personal love letters. The suit against th e National Enquirer and Star tabloids w as filed under federal racketeering statutes charging copyright infringem ent, conspiracy, invasion o f pro­ perty and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The U. S. D istrict Court suit seeks $10 m il­ lion com pensatory da­ m ages and $25 m illion punitive dam ages from the National Enquirer, Star and the publica­ tions’ owner, News Am erica Publishing Inc. Just la st week in Los Angeles Superior Court, Elizabeth Taylor filed a B arr $2o m illion libel law suit against the N ational Enquirer for alleged false statem ents. What m akes the suit by M iss Barr and husband Tom Arnold unique is that it w as filed in federal court seeking relief under the R acketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, known a s RICO. The couple’s law yer, Theresa M. Marchlew ski, wouldn’t com m ent on the suit. The racketeering activity, according to the suit, involves the Enquirer’s alleged “participation in a schem e to obtain the private papers and effects of celebrities by inducing and paying persons and entities to stea l such inform ation and transport it in interstate com m erce.” The couple also seeks return of Miss Barr’s “private, written letters and out­ pourings of love and affection to Arnold embodied in four w ritings . . . purloined and-or published by defendants.” Excerpts of the stolen letters were published in the Feb. 6,1990, issue of the Enquirer and the Jan. 30,1990, edition of thé Star, the suit said. Exhibits subm itted with the suit included copies of a National Enquirer cover headline reading, “Roseanne Wedding F iasco — Plus Amazing Honeymoon Swim­ suit Photos.” National Enquirer editor Iain Calder said from his Lantana, F la., office th athe hadn’t seen the suit so he couldn’t respond to specific allegations. “Any legal action against this publica­ tion under RICO is so ridiculous that it is clear this is just another pathetic publicity stunt by Roseanne,” Ci lder said. “She is trashing the National Enquirer, but we are in good com pany. A few weeks ago she w as trashing the national anthem .” Star editor Dick Kaplan said from Tarrytown, N. Y ., that he would have no com­ ment because he hadn’t seen the suit. “The law suit speaks for itself,” M iss Barr and Arnold said in a statem ent released by spokeswoman Cathy Spears. M iss Spears said the couple believes strongly in the justice system and feel the case should be tried in court and not in the m edia. “According to Barr and Arnold, they have suffered grievous injury and w ill look to the courts to decide the issues in­ volved,” she said. The suit said the tabloids operate “a vast network of underground operatives and includes, but is not lim ited to, agents, em ployees, friends, relatives and associates of celebrities as w ell as persons and entities who provide goods and ser­ vices to celebrities, including plaintiffs.” The com plaint accused the tabloids of racketeering for paying m oney and goods over a 10-year span “in exchange for steal­ ing photographs and-or special effects of celebrities and their fam ilies.” Every m em ber of the tabloids’ alleged underground enterprise “conspired with each other to com m it the m ultiple viola­ tions of RICO,” the suit said. s lo w ? Let us help. STATE PRESS Classifieds Matthews Center Basement, ASU 965-6731 HOME OF THE "KILLER" CALZONES Myrtle Forest College Cfreat Italian fo o d 894-MAMA 106 E. U niversity Dr, WALTDISNEY’S “FANTASIA” WITHLEOPOLDSTOKOWSKI ANDTHEPHILADELPHIAORCHESTRA S O I 'N D T K A C K A V A I L A B L E O N C A S S K T T ü A N D C O M P A C T IM S C F R O M N O W P L A Y IN G Retords B u y a S p a g h e tti E n tr e e a n d R e c e iv e R efills o f P a s ta IF CR 0 1 H 9 —• In c lu d e s T o s s e d S alad a n d G a rlic B r e a d — 994 M ille r L ite ALL DAY — AIVY DAY 994 M ille r Lite Page go Stile h ü ! Frtday, October 5, 1990 Murph’s has big sandwiches at little prices By KRAMER WETZEL State Prase In the ever increasing effort to forage for cheap and fill­ ing food, our stom achs and taste buds venture forth once again in search of m eal deals. Previous forays have included several oriental palaces of fine dining, and what to do with Top Ram en, a distinctly oriental food. More than one sta te P ress sta ff m em ber wonders if I ever eat with som ething besides chopsticks. Sure I do, I use m y hands when I dine at Murph’s Food Market and D eli. Murph’s has two locations, but I can only recommend one of them: The other is unknown quantity since it is fur­ ther away than m y poor feet can haul m y tired carcass. But the food is great, it’s plentiful, and it’s exceedingly in­ expensive. That com bination m akes it one of the best kept lunch secrets around. On the outside, Murph’s looks like any other convenience store. And, to a certain extent, it is just that: An over­ priced convenience store. Like the rest of the big chains, the retail prices are rem iniscent of what oil com panies do when there is a Middle F ast crisis. But on the flip side of that price structure, there is the wonderous deli food. Unlike so m any fast food chains, the food at Murph’s is prepared after you order it. That’s a nice touch to start with. There is also a veritable plethora of choices. But the best kept secret is w hatever the daily special is. Specials are typically Murph-sized sandw iches costing som ewhere between $1.89 and $2.29. Combine that with-a medium sized fountain soda and you can leave with a real m eal for less than three dollars. In the wake of exponen­ tially rising costs, a m eal for less than three dollars is sw eet. And the food is good. D eli m eats and cheeses are displayed in the counter ca se. As another nice touch, and owing to sanitary regula­ tions, the em ployee preparing toe food never fa ils to wash his or her hands before fixing a sandwich. The choices for sandwiches are the usual stuff one would expect from a deli: cheese, egg salad, ham , roast beef, turkey, pastram i, corned beef, bologna, hard salam i, dry salam i, cotto salam i, tuna salad, chicken salad, pepperoni, braunschweiger, cappacolla, Genoa salam i, and honey •Or. Iri addition to using VISA and M ASTERCARD, now you can use your A M ERICA N EXPRESS to place a classified ad. You can do it over the phone or in person. State Presa Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 M atthews Center, South Basement 0* ham, Choice of bread. Choice of toppings. All sandwiches custom fabricated. What this m eans is that you can get a custom built sandwich for cheap. H ie counter staff and cooks are alw ays helpful and friendly, another unusual phenomenon in a convenience store. Murph is a real person, too, although his nam e isn’t Murphey as one m ay suspect. He’s Bob Murey, an ex-D etroit cop. When queried about why be left h is job, he replied in a Sonny Rhëin waits fo r his Murph’s special. jovial tone, “ I thought they w ere trying to kill m e.” He also indicated that he preferred the “less aggressive clien tele.” Murph’s Food Mart and D eli is a fam ily owned operation. “We’re not trying to gouge anybody,” Murph adds. His nam e, actually a nicknam e, com es from the fact that toe D etroit people kept confusing his nam e. He w as eventually known as “O fficer Murphey.” Curbside dining at its best; Murph’s deli food is one of toe best deals on m eals. Chopsticks are optional. J e o rg e tta D o u g la s /S ta te P ress We’ve added another convenience to our classified advertising department. AM ERICAN EXPRESS. S M M fr m Friday, October 5,1990 Page 21 ‘Im a g in e ’ to b e b ro a d c a st n a tio n w id e This w eekend get Oregano’s AM-You-Can-Eat pizza, si for funefc # c IfjftSlisfo r o n ly $ 3 * 7 0 . B u t h u rry , i f l l r thre« days o n ly ; FRI. 1 0 /S, SAT. 10/6 & SUN. 1 0 / 7 . ||| wNO0M coupon wtwn ordering. Hot wfld yrtth other offer*. ‘ W M ^m ÊÊÊ Olwftor spm-$j JUST ABOUT PERFECT...marvek)usly literate, comic and romantic ” -Peter Traversi Rolling Storie “★ ★ ★ ★ h il a r io u s a n d w o n d e r f u l I absolutely loved it.” NEW YORK (AP) — A global Celebra­ tion is planned for John Lennon’s 50th bir­ thday next w eek, with the slain rock star’s peace anthem “Im agine” played sim ultaneously in 130 countries for a poten­ tial audience of 1 billion, Lennon, who w as gunned down outside his Manhattan apartm ent house in Decem ber 1980, would have reached the half-century mark on Oct. 9. The occasion w ill be marked by a liv e worldwide broad­ cast from the United Nations. “This idea appealed to m e, because not only w ill we cover the whole world, but also there’s som ething that’s very sm all,” said Yoko Ono, who w ill speak briefly before the song is played. _ “It’s not a pandemonium. And I thought . that was in John’s spirit in a way — we didn’t believe in pandemoniums. We believed in just an honest kind of com m unication.” * The event; w ill last about 10 m inutes, and Will include a short introduction by M arcela Perez de Cuellar, w ife of the U. N. secretary-general. A taped m essage from Lennon w ill then air before “Im agine” is played. As of Thursday, m ore than 1,000 radio stations and networks from 50 countries had signed on for the satellite broadcast. U. S. Armed Forces television and radio ■Rex Reed. At the Movies win hit a t lea st 80 other countries. The event also w ill be televised by MTV in 25 countries, said Andrea Sm ith of the network. “There’s no com m ercials. There’s no sponsors. It is a pure, sim ple, very touching event,” said Jeff PoUock, the radio and television consultant who cam e up with the idea. Pollock, head of the California-based Pollack Media Group, said the idea Came to him after an April m eeting with Ono , w here they discussed possible tributes for the 50th birthday. “1 w as riding around in a cab in New York City, and then ‘Im agine’ cam e on the radio. It just flashed: What if w e played this song around the world?” Pollock said. He m ade the proposal to Yoko, who gave it the go-ahead. Ono believes the recent events in Germany, Eastern Europe and particularly the Middle E ast point up the im portance of Lennon’s m essage of peace. “ When this w as discussed, w e had no knowledge of what would happen in Iraq and Kuwait, you know. And now it seem s very appropriate that this 1« sung a ll over the world,” said Ono. “It’s going to be sung in the P ersian Gulf.” “I don’t know, the tim ing is incredible. It’s beyond m e . . . It’s beautiful.” M M 9 1 . MmÊSÊM “A DISARMING AND DELIGHTFUL COMEDY” -D avid Ansen, Newsweek AnrLc/all/ìuf /al B n SJ 273-7777 S A oohhq ! exclusive!s H A R K IN S C IN E M A .-4 0 th S tre e t a n d T h o m a s R o ad J NEW WINDSHIELD NO COST TO YOU!* 'If your comprehensive deductible is between $0-$100, we will pay your deductible and collect the balance from your insurance carrier. YOU PAY NOTHING! Call for details. (Certain restrictions and limitations apply.) *i 748 W. University, Mesa ! » t® „ S ttN P E (E xtension & U niversity) 8 2 7 -1 2 6 ? ROTH ER’S BOOKSTORE Proudly servin g th e V alley o f th e Sun GREEK D A Y Custom ize Your G reek Shirt 1/2 OFF Lettering! G reek D rops are n ow in/// rm St. □ 6 2 5 E. Apache " 967-5445 i. 6 2 0 S. C ollege 8 2 9 -1 1 2 8 Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Ex-Beatle John Lennon works in his home recording studio in W eybridge, England In 196?. SAVE 20-50% ASU T S • TA N KS » SW EATS « SHO RTS •HOT NEW DESIGNS •T-SHIRTS •TANKTOPS •SWEATS [ «SHORTS With Coupon Only Expires 10-7-90 Ä^acific £yes &Ts ^ The*Catifarnia Attitude Cornerstone • 966-5560 725 S. Rural Road Across from ASU in Tem po C o m ic s Page 22 Friday, October 5,1990 Calvin and Hobbes a la te R i l l by B ill W atterson mmbe hoo should r i DM) SW O ONE. TV IN TUE NO O SE W AS BAO EN O U G H , ANO WE PREFERRED TUE ONE WITU TUE VOLOME CO N TRO L. 90 CABLE. jfa \ u t h e f a r s id e :,w . ine qov AN IDEA FOR A SVT-COiA CALUED ‘FATHER KNOWS ZILCW f by Gary ¿arson TEe glass Is half empty- t is ' V © 1990 Universal Press Syndicate by Garry Trudeau D oonesbu iy rrs bggn VO LONG, RIDDO... VUARB? RGAUY? OH.HIKBY.TM SOGXCITGP ABOUTDOING TUGAD! A «Wife OFCOURSE!I MGAN.THG a m a thing ts ju s rs o KARM/C- IALWAYSKNGWTHATONG HW YOUANPIWOULDMORRON ACRBAmVGPROJGCnOGBTHGR! ANDNOWHBRBWGARB-ABOUT V COLLABORATEONA MAJOR TV. AD! ' ITS JUST ím BAD Tf WGLL,I THINRWG Ä & © 1990 Universal Press S^ndiçat^ T h e fo u r b asic p erso n ality typ es b y Julie Sigwart Rainey Days V0UVÉ ©0T US, w e ALL HAVE CREDIT CARDS YÖUR N A M E . AND M A JO R IN MM$G0AMyj]! Z n n n R -: "ZNNÑK?! w 'THERE’SU* PLACE HZt ««"‘r™!? p iV kC £ U K Í i rwev STATE PRESS Classifieds are like a good hot dog. NO BOLOGNA! HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — When som e kids get slapped on the w rist these days, they like it. Toy m akers have a new hit — the “Slap Wrap,” a low-budget bracelet kids across the country are snapping up by the m illions . “Most of . the people in m y class have them ,” said 6-year-old P eter M arinelli, a first-grader at the W addell Elem entary School in suburban M anchester. “I like them because they are neat.” “They’re cool,” added 11-year-old K atie Sweeney, also a sixth-grader, who w as w earing a pink wristband with black polka dote. “The rage for this thing is absolutely unbelievable,” said Gene Murtha, president of Main Street Toy, the Sim sbury-based com pany that m akes Slap Wraps. What exactly is this thing? W ell, it’s a flat, 9-inch long steel spring resem bling a ruler wrapped in eye­ grabbing neon fabric. But when you slap it against your w rist, it grabs on and wraps around: instant wristband. Don’t laugh. At $2.49 each, Slap Wraps are taking the m all scene by storm and quickly becom ing the hippest fashion accessory for kids. Murtha’s com pany has shipped nearly 1 m illion Slap Wraps since production started this sum m er. The com pany is now shipping about 200,000 of the toys each w eek, and still Can’t keep pace with orders. Interview ing with High Tech Firms? "Your Interviewing Guide to the Inform ation Industry" can help. Researched by form er "Big 6" consultant. 60-m inute video ($39.95), 70-page text ($34.95), both ($69.95). Send check o r money order to: Bolick Productions P.O. Box 8594 Red Bank, NJ 07701. 9 4 5 -8 8 5 0 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. Tempe south o f McKeilips tone mile North of university) H U N A N EXPRESS 1 -C l C a M P U S -i o r n e r j ‘ ‘...excellent food, generous portions, super-quick service, low prices and a cheery atmosphere."—Arizona Republic HOURS: 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e Mon-Thurs 11 am-9:30 pm Friday 11 am -10pm Saturday 12 noon-10 pm Closed Sunday PHOTO! PT EVERY DAY 24 Exp. C o lo r P rin ts •SQUPS •P A S T A R & W INE OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK H H unan I E x p re s s Broadway n DOUBLE PRINTS I $499 W E ALSO OFFER •CALZONES •SA LA O S t w o 1 0 ” O n e ite m P iz z a s w ith O n e L a rg e P e p si G O L D F O R T H E T E A M SP EC IA L B uy O ne H u n an E x p ress C om bo A nd Get: I D FREE CRAB PUFFS (Reg. *1.35) AND OR ! □ *1 .0 0 OFF HUNAN EXPRESS GOLD T-SHIRT | I "GOLD FOR THE TEAM” (Reg. *9.95) Exp. 10-30-90 j | l _____ ________ _____________________ — J 4 for * 7 .9 9 in c lu d e s F r e e D e liv e r y 1420 N. Expires 10-13-90 Scottsdale Rd. I mile north o f University 945-8850 Limit one coupon per person, per day. Not good with any other offer. State Press Friday, October 5,1990 Page 23 ASU opens Pac-IO play against UW By PAUL CORO S tate Press quarterback Kurt Lasher’s shoulders. He w ill likely be harrassed by an already aggressive Husky defense, which A fter ASU w as knocked to the canvas by Missouri last Marmie said is sim ilar to, Baylor’s yet better. w eek, a revenge-driven Washington team would like to take “I don’t think there’s any question they’ll try to com e after an opportunity to kick the Sun D evils w hile they are down. Kurt,” Marmie said. “They’d have tried to com e after Paul In its first conference gam e of the season, ailing ASU (2-1 too if he w as playing, particularly since w e gave up five overall, 0-0 Pac-10) w ill host the 17th-ranked Huskies (3-1, sacks last week. ” 1-0) at 4:07 p.m . Saturday in Sun D evil Stadium. Jam es said Colorado was the only team this season to W ashington rem em bers last season as clearly as last week. really test h is defense on the ground. However, heW t r m i Page 25 ^Frtda^ October 5,1990 ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING HOMES FOR SALE COMPUTERS BAD B O Y D J— G uaranteed to rock your W E W O U LD be g ratefu l if, like us, you 5 B ED R O O M , pool, d o s e to A S U . Assum ­ IB M C O M P U TE R gam es: K ing's Q uest 4 , could respond to this request to help C raig O N E B E D R O O M , furnished , nice. 1 block to A S U . $ 3 8 5 /m onth 9 48 -7 83 3 , evenings PAPAG O PARK II. nonsm oking fem ale p a rty — ro o m m a te n e e d e d . F u lly fu rn is h e d including w asher/dryer. $200/m onth plus ab le , no qualifying, low interest. Huge Leisure S uit Larry 2 and 3 , m ore. $ 20 p lace. L et's m ake a d e al. 8 97 -9 13 8 ow ner/ each. G reg, 3 45 -9 04 1 . TE M P E ’S F A IR E S T rates. 2 bedroom /1 bedroom /studios. $ 4 2 0 to $ 2 6 0 . 9 2 6 East V i utilities. 9 68-2262. agent. O w ner wiH carry. S pence. 3 70-2366. P R IVA TE R O O M , furnished , fre e w asher/ LO W DO W N— no q u alify. Y ou live in 3 m onitor, m ouse, D M T p rin ter, and soft­ dryer. Lovely patio, yard. W alk M C C . bedroom /2 bath hom e. P ay $ 6 7 5 per w are. $70Q /offer. 7 84 -0 51 5 . B irth d a y s, fo rm ats, com plex p a rties , e tc . Tom , 921 -1708. ShergokJ. C raig is a seven-year-o ld boy F IE L D H O C K E Y - W om en’s Field Hockey tim e le ft to live. It is his dream to have ah w ho has a brain tum or and has very little C lub now form ing on cam pus. W atch entry in the G uinness Book o f W orld TA N D Y 1000 S L , 5% floopy drive, color S ta te P ress Today S ection for tim e and Records for th e larg est num ber o f g et w ell p lace o f O ctober 10th m eeting. U N F U R N IS H E D 1 bedroom s and studios, cards ever received by an P lease send a card to: C raig ShergokJ, 38 utNities included. C lean , q u ie t, ground lev e l. C lose to A S U . M arianna A part­ RO O M M A TE Shelby R oad, C arishetton, S urry S N B 1 m e n ts . house, $200 plus V i u tilities . Pool, laundry, S U P ER B H O U S E . M any am enities. T hree LD , U nited Kingdom . opportunity. 15 m inutes to A S U . 4 37 -2 53 7 , John, P aul. bedroom plus den. N e ar A rizona Country H A N G G LID E ! O ur g en tly sloping m an­ m ade train in g hid. S a fe and exciting; Fly a ll day. W indsports, 8 97 -7 12 1 . individual. 9 6 6 -8 5 9 7 . E qual h o u s in g m onth P ools. $ 2 2 0 . 8 9 3 -2 5 7 7 , 965-2814. Vt for ow nership. W hy rent? BMCOMPAIMHf COMPUTERS 3 45-2150, evenings. W A N TED : 3 bedroom From $449 640 K, Monitor, Keyboard. Software C lub. Low cost m aintenance. M ust seU. KD A LU M N I invited to Founders D ay, O ctober 20th , l-3 p m , a t thé A rizona C lub in S cottsdale. Cad U n n e a M axw ell at 8 3 8 -3 65 3 for d etails. LO VE T O dance? H a te the bar scene? S H A R E C O N D O . $ 3 2 5 a m onth. Pointe Co-Ed Ultimate FRISBEE LEAGUE $1S Y ou’ll lo v e th e AN S in gles D ances, Fridays SUNDAYS 6 p.m. Oct. 7-Dec. 9 at b e tte r V alley hotels. $ 4 .5 0 . R ecorded 986-8584 inform ation: 946 -4 08 6 . 1 Mock o ff campus TW O FE M A LES to sp lit m ove-in expenses on n ice 3 bedroom house. W asher/dryer, 1 and 2 bedrooms $160 move in Call Today! S IN G L E S ’ É V E N T S , advice, personals A rizona S ingles S cen e new spaper. Free APARTMENTS “ S T O P O IL W a ri” Now ! Com e Teach-In, O cto b er 19, M em orial U nion* 10-4pm . 9 6 5 -2 2 0 0 . (S tu d e n ts , F a c u lty i' 1 A N D 2 bedroom s, $ 19 9 special m ove-in. Re a d TW O 1-805-682-7555, ext. H-2003 Jew elers, 4 1 4 S . M ill, S uite 101, Tem po. fo r repo list In your area. 9 68-5967. RO O M M A TES needed to share r e a d r e a d READ READ READ FURNITURE ROOMS FOR RENT A C A LIFO R N IA king m otionless w aterbed 5-speed, a ir conditioning, A M /FM , casset­ w ith accessories $ 1 0 0 , queen bed $ 50 , 9 'B ria n TR C w ater ski w ith case $ 1 0 0 , golf te , sun-roof, new tire s , p erfect running condition. M oving, m ust s ell. i$1 ,40 0 /o ffe r. d u b s $ 1 7 0 . C a ll 951 -5 80 6 . Frank, 965 -7 23 5 or 967 -7 34 8 . C O N D O N E A R U niversity and M cC liritock. \HAYDEN*S FERRY R EV IEW / or $59/w eek. C overed parking, refriger­ deposit, utilities included. R ich, 8 77 -2 04 6 . ated. 2 locations. 9 66 -5 59 6 . ‘ 2 * BEDRO O M , 1 •________ b ath. - ; s ’ . { -j W asher/dryer/ dishw asher in unit. 6 blocks to A S U . $400/m onth. 9 67-6429. A P A R TM EN T FO R re n t. M ove in special: TEN T S A LE 50% o ff $ l9 9 /m o rith . O ne bedroom apartm ents. $280/m onth. C all 894 -5 20 4 . ONE MONTH FREE . FR E E S200 0 F F ! blocks, 1,014 South Farm er. P ool, laundry. 8 29 -7 13 7 . and board to graduate to/possibly from school. 9 91-0612. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE personal (p e r’son-al), a . Per­ taining to a person. Walk to ASU quiet spa­ cious. 1 bedroom, fu r­ nished. A/ C. poolside apartments. S 2 7 0 /m o n th Did you know that you can g et a fre e 15-word personal ad on your birthday? If you have a S tu d en t i d ., a driver’s license, som eone special to send a m essage to a n d a b irth d a y th is m onth, com e down to th e basem ent of M atthew s C enter to g et your free personal. Rem em ber, the key word is personal. Your personal can be to your best friend, your boy­ friend or girlfriend or any s p e c i a l p erso n or persons in your life. (Advertisements of club meetings, rushes, etc. do not qualify as personal ads.) So, if your birthday is com ing up this m onth, have a friend help you celebrate — send them a 15-word personal — for HOMES EOR RENT w ith firep lace. A ll appliances. Large - FA LL S PEC IA L: 2 bedroom , 1 bath C ute closets, pool, covered parking. N ear A S U . red brick duplex apartm ents. G rea t loca­ $ 49 5 9 67-8877, G eorge. 2 bd/2 ba, d o se to pool. Low down, assum able loan. $67,000. Bob Bullock Realty Executives h ouse. FO R R E N T: Three bedroom apartm dht, a ll m onth. bath furnished tow n- W a s h e r/d ry e r, m ic ro w a v e . $600/m onth. S outhem /H ardy. No Security or c le a n in g d e p o sit re q u ire d . In e z , 968 -9 38 7 . C lose to AS U . 9 66-2748. IM M E D IA TE O P E N IN G !!! Com m ons on 3 B E D R O O M , 2 bath condo, A S U 2 m iles. A pache. N o d 4fx)sit necessary. Ask about C overed parking, w asher/dryer, vaulted Frank W .’s vacan cy-C aH 8 29-0933. ceHing. 9 6 1 -1 70 7 $65Q /m onth ENJOY THE QUIET! 1 /2 B lo ck F ro m C a m p u s B e autifully furnished, huge 1 bedroom. 1 bath; 2 bedroom. 2 bath apart­ ments. All bills paid. Cable TV. heated pool, and spacious laundry facilities. F rie n d ly , c o u rte o u s management. Stop by today! W ran g ler, hardtop/softtop ’8 6 Y U G O , air-condition ing, good condianytim e next 10 m onths. R estrictions do ‘8 7 CAM R Y LE, 1 ow ner, 4 3 ,0 0 0 m iles, apply. C all Laddie a t 7 84-0543. lo ad ed , 10/5 to 1 0/7 . Thè best tim es. sunroof, a ll pow er. $ 9 ,6 0 0 . 8 60 -0 91 0 . , C all $ $ $ $ 4 23-9587. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE________ IN S T A N T C A S H fo r y o u r v e h ic le s ! $$$$ All makes & conditions. I ’ll com e to y o u r lo c a tio n ! L isa 4 8 4 -7 0 5 5 966-5051 $ 5 0 each. LIQ U O R S IG N S - m irrors have M ilter, M ichelob, Coors, others. R ange $15-$30. C o n tad T - 9 47-2943. HOMES FOR SALE o ffer. CaM S teve, 381 -0 83 0 . tO -M IN U T E C O M M U T E to A S U . 3 bedroom , q uiet cul-de-sac, g reat y ard , ab le joysticks, AH S ta r B aseball, Double S E IZ E D C A B S , trucks, boats, 4-wheelers, motorhomes by FBI, IBS, DEA. Available in your area now. Call 1-805-682-7555, ext. C -1669. N IN TE N D O E S . In d u d es Z ap p er, attach­ fire p la c e , d o u b le g a ra g e . $ 8 2 ,5 0 0 . 968 -3 20 6 . o ffer. M ike, 8 98-7007. garage, com pletely M ountain D ribble, Lee Trevin o 's G olf and S uper M ario/D uck H unt. E verything: $ 75/b est landscaped. South contem porary hom e, neutral colors. 15 m inutes from A S U . $568 m onth­ ly paym ent, m int condition. 2 78-1506. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE MOTORCYCLES 1971 H O N D A 350cc. G reat shape! Runs O FFIC E S U P P LIE S . 2 m icrofich read er/ o rinters, 8-foot conference ta b le , assorted weU. Needs m aintenance. $37 5/o fte r. C all Doug a t 8 2 9 £ 1 5 9 . o ffice Chairs. 8 3 8 -3 9 9 1 ,4 9 1 -0 1 2 2 . Ask for 1982 H O N D A S cooter, sky b lu e, good S tephanie. condition, needs carb cleaned- otherw ise SPE A K ER S , E N G LIS H m ade, fla t to 5 0 H z. S uperb sound stage and im aging. Asking $275 w ith black m etal stands. 3 head cassette and other pieces. 268 -7 45 7 , 2 76 -7 34 3 , C ornell. p e rio d . $22S /offer. CaH B ret, 9 67-8486. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 3 B ED R O O M , 2 bath condo, close to cam pus. W asher/dryer, fire p la c e, covered UNSTOPPABLE! parking, pool. 967*2344. TW O B ED R O O M , tw o bath condo. 66th P lace/Thom as- S cottsdale. W asher, dryer, fire p la c e. 15 m inutes to A S U . Bob M orris, 948 -0 55 0 . RENTAL SHARING 2 B E D R O O M , 2 bath condo. 844 -7 80 8 , leave m essage. $ 2 3 0 p e r m onth. U niversi­ Terrace Road Apartments 950 S. Terrace 966-8540 2 B ED R O O M , 2 bath tow nhouae. 1 .5 m iles from A S U . AH am enities. $ 27 5 m onth plus V i u tilities . 3rd-year-ptus student. Nons­ m oker, fem ale p re fe rre d . 8 31 -7 64 4 . A R O O M in 3 bedroom , 3 bath tow nhom e. M ate o r tom ato non-sm oker. P riv a te jacu zz i plus m any extras. $ 2 5 0 plus Vs u tilities. FEM A LE NO NSM O KER, STIMULATES THE GLANDS TO ENHANCE PEAK PERFORMANCE outgoing person. 2 responsible, bedroom /2 bath. Rancho M u rie tta . $270/m onth plus Joe Wethoncourt W ttcfiet’ Bart JE E P ty and S tapely. ANNOUNCEMENTS L ure a t th e 1987 9 9 8 -2 9 9 2 829 -6 70 2 . FREE! m essage. sizes 4 /5 . O nly worn orice. Like new ! Judy, m ove you in . 2 bedroom , 2 b ath, 2 -c ar 3 BEDROOM , 2 p referred. 8 29-7675. per appreciate! $ 6 ,9 0 0 . C a ll 7 30-6968, leave and lin er. No holes or patches. W ith heater F O R SALE: tw o black form al dresses, ZE R O D O W N . $ 1 ,5 0 0 d osing cost w ilt tion, fenced yard. Q u iet graduate student $ 560 installed, d e a n inside and out. M uSt see to LIK E N E W , queen w ater bed, m attress, w ith m arker M 48 bindings. $ 275 or best 2 B EDRO O M ,« 2 b ath. Large Living room 1987 G R A N D -A M LE . G rey w ith m aroon in terio r. Pow er: steerin g , brakes, w indow s, A M /FM cassette, tin te d glass, new a ir just 7 59-8807. N E V E R S K IIE D on! E lan Com prex 185 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT $325 and up 9 6 6 8 8 3 8 or 9 67-4908. furnished- sofa ch airs, reasonable. Papago Park east H ardy/U n ivefsity. $ 3 7 5 . 9 68-9331. ASU AREA- 2 and 3 bedroom s for rent. u tilitie s , sleeper couch, re d in e r, Sony 19” rem ote Buy o f the W eek H U G E 5 bedroom , pool, d o s e to A S U . yard. P ark across th e s tree t. O ne block 8 9 4 -2 5 3 8 S aturday, O ctober XT 8.-00 p.m . - 1.-00 a.m . t9 fat advance $10 a t tfaa door u tilities . P ool. iacuzzL Vt gate. 784 -0 76 6 o r 831 -8 22 2 . AndreaFEM A LE NO NSM OKER— Own room . P apago P ark 3 bedroom tow nhouse. AH appliance s . $ 3 0 0 ,V* u tilities . 9 68 -9 16 8 . FEM A LE R O O M M A TE w anted S hare 2 bedroom condo in H ayden S quare. $400 The Pagtm Arizona Network im ita you to Join the Valley’s own beloved bard, rncontn r mtd banfo picker exnna dtnnln fo r a Hallowe'en party yom won't forget, with folks who remember what the holiday's realty about. plus Vfc u tilities . 829-3701 • Tlcfaeta plus u tilities . 0 67 *28 6 3. Fantaria, 7J* E. McDowell — Now A*c Emporium, Town ft Canary Center, 20th S t 4 Ctmrfharfr P A N , r.O. Bax 17933, Phoenix, A riana (3011 security ★ ★ Increases energy & endurance Increases m ental alertness ★ ★ Reduces body fa t * Increases body tone FOR MEN AND WOMEN, WORKS SO GOOD IT'S GUARANTEED! To O rder: Send $ 2 4 .9 9 plus $ 2 .0 0 sh ip p in g and h a nd lin g fo : Raw Power, Inc., P.O. Box 2 3 6 5 8 , Tem pe, \Z 8 5 28 2 Money Orders \llow J-5 Days for Delivery FE M A LE R O O M M A TE needed! Second sem ester Q uad rangles. $ 18 8 per m onth Available at General Nutrition Centers and other Fine Stores H A Y D E N SQ U A R E condo. N eed 2 m ales to s h are 3 story. 3 bedroom , furnished condo. 7 84 -4 71 0 , leave m essage._______ firs t E XC ELLE N T C O N D IT IO N , lea th e r couch, O N E O R tw o roundtrips to Los A ngeles. down on fu lly furnished 2 bedroom , 2 bath TW O B EDRO O M house, nice front/b ack G e o rg e A n n A p t s asking tio n .'$ 1 ,50 0 or best o ffe r. 9 68-9423. • 'V S T U D E N TS — P A R E N TS . G olden oppor­ tu n ity. S eller w ill carry w ith extrem ely low p r iv a c y . invested, HAW AII! C H E A P airlin e tickets. U seable ; ••'' 9 68-6595. $ 1 ,250/m onth. 8 97 -9 13 8 . O w ner/agent. $ 15 ,00 0 $ 1 0 ,0 0 0 . For d etails, 464 -0 74 3 , also. $ 8 ,7 5 0 . C all fo r d etails. 7 84-4936. A S U . Low dow n, no qualifying. Assum e. 89 4 -2 5 3 8 1984 TO Y O TA 4x4 S R 5, black- dayglow g reen. TICKETS . 3- B E D R O O M , 2 bath condo. C ktee to 1224 EA ST LEM O N and w ith P ools, ja c u zzi. tennis, raquetbaH. Lee, APARTMENTS space co u ch n o q u a lify in g , a s s u m e $ 3 8 ,5 0 0 , $465/m onth, includes association toe. 8900677. F IE S T A P A R K C e le b r a tic b e ig e and padded side rails. $ 5 5 . 941 A 5 7 5 . C arolyn. 8 92 -6 64 3 . W est U S A , 8 20-3333. $200 O FF LEA TH ER hkfeabe d -$ 80 0. 7 84-4995. 2 B E D R O O M , 2 bath condo. $ 5 ,0 0 0 down, condo near A S U . H urry. C all C het or Arizona Shorts 5th & Mill A LL T V , assorted Walk to ASU. Spacious 2 bedroom apts. A/C. fu rn is h e d or u n fu r­ nished available. From S395/month. Beautiful p o o l a re a , la u n d ry facilities available. W e s trid g e A p a rtm e n ts 3 3 0 S . B eck, T em p e 8 9 4 -6 4 6 8 RO O M student in exchange fo r driving children FREE UTILITIES! On 2 bedroom apartm ents in newly rem odeled com plex. . AUTOMOBILES tie s . Lori, 9 46-5997. C hristian/nonsm oker. $300/m onth, $ 10 0 2 B EDRO O M special: $367/m onth A S U , 4 CASH FO R gold, diam onds. MiH Avenue 1964 REN A U LT A llian ce, 6 0 ,0 0 0 m ites. A S U , q u iet. 1 bedroom : $ 31 0, 2 bedroom : 2 B ED R O O M fourplex, from $249/m onth, /ItEA D READ R E A D \ READ READ READ JEWELRY m ent from $1 without credit check. You repair. Also tax delinquent foreclosures. Call $ 38 0. 968 -6 92 6 or 9 67 -4 56 8 . C om m unity). REPOSSESSED VA and HUD . HOMES available from govern­ d a le . N ew ly rem odeled kitchen and bam , sem i-furnished. $200/m onth plus V» u tili­ 1 block east o f Rural Covered parking, firep ro o f, p o d , very near 1000 E. A pache, #119 Tem pe, 921-1129 yard, space! S p lit 3-W ay. A pproxim ately $25Q /m onth. Tem po. N ico le, 946 -3 86 7 . th ree bedroom , tw o bath condo in Scotts­ Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache sam ple, 990 -2 66 9 . T h e C o m p u ter Concern $ 12 5,0 00 9 49-7259. South M ountain. Vs utilities. Covered parking, p o d , ja c u zzi. 4 38-8252. GENERAL NUTRITION CENTERS Dealers Inquires \\ ek ome 1-800-544-951 I Page 26 Friday, October 5 ,1990 MOTORCYCLES 1979 V ES P A P 200E . $ 80 0/o ffe r 2 7 4 4 5 4 9 . c o n d itio n , HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL BEST R ebuilt engine. : 1967 H O N D A 150 E lite scooter, w hite, m in t BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES o n ly 3 ,3 0 0 m ile s . FA S IO N „JEW ELRY sales person. FuIV LO O K IN G FO R a frie n d ly and professional M agazine). N o buy-in o r perm anent inven­ part-tim e caking on existing accounts. person fo r light w arehouse packaging and to ry, no bookkeeping. Just h it 6-year 8 31-7214. shipping. 2 0 4 0 O P P O R TU N IT Y (M oney breakaw ay (m om entum stage). H ave fun $ 1 ,5 0 0 /o fle r G reg, 345 -9 04 1 . helping people look and fe e l younger. 1967 HO NDA E lite 150 . w hite, great F inancial gains beyond dream s. 8 2 9 6 5 4 2 . Can 9 67 -5 75 9 « HELP WANTED— GENERAL BICYCLES te rs. U sed tw ice. Im m aculate. $27 5/o ffe r. 7646119 1990 O IAM O NDB ACK Topanga, underbar grips, M ENS 23-inch 21-speed . 10-speed fram e. S chw inn O rig inal V arsity leather seat. CYC LEPR O 2 0 ” aN terrain bicycle. 15 966-9155 (3 0 3)4 4 1-24 48 . condition, 15 speeds, 2 1 ” fram e, perfect fo r girt 5 ’4 ” to 5 ’8 " . $ 15 0. C a ll 9 4 0 0 5 1 8 . a m arketing N IS H IK I C R U IS E R S . 2 (m en and w om en) p ro je c t M ust be organized and hard­ b lu e, alm ost new . $ 10 0 a piece Or best w o rk in g . o ffer. Evenings, 829 -9 68 7 (8 0 0)5 9 2-21 21 . S ELD O M U S E D . G iant brand m ountain BUFFA LO E X C H A N G E , a grow ing young C all S teve, C a ll J e a n in e or A m y, com pany, seeks fu ll-tim e and part-tim e, en erg etic, people-oriented, fashion e n th u -. S PE C IA LIZE D S IR R U S 14-speed racing siasts to train as buyers in our recycled clothing store. $4.2S /hour to s ta rt plus 9216282. ' 894‘13°k and COACH T h o m a s. 40th TE M P E V E N D IN G com pany looking for hourly: person to prepare sandw iches and gener­ need ed . $ 6 -1 0 “ H ave Fun, M ake Lotsa M oney” 24-hour recorded message pa y . 9 6 6 6 4 7 8 . IM M E D IA TE O P E N IN G S . $5.2S /hour plus days. No selling. C a t N ata lie , 2-7pm , 8 92 -1 63 9 , o r stop by 1 81 7 S outh Hom e, IM M E D IA TE P A R T-TIM E bosses help needed. W ill be w orking w ith accounts recievable and custom er service. Hours: 2-5pm , M onday-Friday. $5/hour. H inckley and S chm itt, 5 5 0 W est 3rd A venue. M esa. 8906190. O VERSEAS JO B S. $ 90 0-2,000/m onth. W est U niversity, M onday-S aturday, 10-5; Sum m er, year round. AN countries, aN S unday, 12-4. fie ld s. F ree info. W rite : U C , P .O . Bine TRANSPORTATION V A LE T P ARKERS. 1 1 6 . 3 days/w eek. HELP WANTED— CLERICAL sec retaria l w ork. P rofessional appearance unpublished jobs. C a ll 1 (9 0 0 )5 3 5 6 8 0 0 , and depend ability a m ust. C a ll Y vonne, or ext. 6 1 0 . $ 2 per m inute, 2 4 hours. S tacy, 2 86 -1 71 4 . HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE J t a rrriott r <5h i is hiring for the follow­ ing positions: •Servers •Dishwasher •Bartender •N ight Audit Clerk •Sales Secretary evenings. Apply a fte r 4pm . S alt C e lla r R estaurant, 5 5 0 N orth TRAVEL $ 5 0 0 -6 0 0 . R oad. PAPA J A Y 'S has im m ediate openings fo r w eekends. S co ttsd ale and R oads. 4 2 3 6 0 0 9 . RESTAURANTS/ BARS : TONITE : : LIVE! *! * * * M a r c o n ia s P la y s G u it a r * : * * * * * S a t N ite L iv e Je ff Java * * * * * 9 p m — 1am : BANDERSNATCH: P A R T-TIM E B E V ER A G E c art arid w ait­ ! 5th Si BREWPUB * S Forest Superior benefits: a unique suites concept. Excellent downtown Scottsdale location. Close to ASU arid MCC. Apply in person: M id A venue bridge. PERSONALS Karsten Golf Course a t A .S.U . N ow hiring f/t— p /t service people for food and bev. dept. W e seek depend ab le, w ellgroom ed people who would enjoy working |n a great environ­ m ent. Please apply M -F 9-12 or 1-4 a t Karsten G olf Course Club House. R ural & 1st » Tem pe AAAAA— S A M M YS a re psyched to w in D e lta G am m a Anchor S plash. A E P I M A TT K atz g et read y fo r an incredi­ b le tim e a t th e A -Phi form al tonight. Love you, M elissa. m..- A G D B A R R IE- g et excited for R ed Rose Form al! Y our m om loves you. A G D C H E R Y L, you’re th e best daughter! I love you! G et psyched for Form al. Love, Daw n.. HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL coupons/ vouchers. Top prices p a d . Travel Tips, 968 -7 28 3 (Y O U -S A V E ) CO ST— EuraM passes NEED A JOB? and international youth hostel m em berships— both issued on th e spot! S tudent-fare flig h ts, student iden tification cards, travel packs and other travel item s also a vail­ $6®®/hr + able. C ontact Am erican Y outh H ostels, (602)694-51.28, or com e by 1046 East Lem on S treet. R O U N D -TR IP T IC K E T to San Francisco for 12/20 through 1 /1 4 , only $85. P lease can T e ri, 784-8054. TIC K E T TOS yracuse— C om m ission bonus . ; leave O ctober 10 noon, com e back O ctober 15 m orning. B est offer. M elissa, 9 21-1464. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MAKE BIG m oney. W ork w ith ASU students m aking $ 5 ,000/m onth. C all M ark. 9666336 5pm -7pm , Tuesday-Friday o r by ap p o in t-' P U B LIS H IN G C O M P A N IE S need fre e ­ m ent. Higginbotham A ssociates, 1130 lance readers. R ead books fo r pay! E arn E ast U niversity D rive, S u ite 103, Tem pe. $ 10 0 or m ore fo r each book you read. 8 29-3282. A m azin g re c o rd in g re v e a ls d e ta ils . 2 1 2 6 7 4 -1 4 9 3 , departm ent LO T. O r w rite: M or E nterprises, P .O - Box 7 51 , P lanetar­ ium S tation, N ew Y ork, New Y ork. 10024-0539. IM M E D IA T E Jo b O p p o rtu n itie s MORNING & AFTERNOON POSITIONS AVAILABLE 'GREAT PAY "SAME WEEK PAY 967-0066 966-0709 ★ 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 12:30-9:00 p.m. Monday-Friday 8:00-2:00 p.m. Saturday TM ICORP. Ranked in th e “Top 10” by th e telem arketin g industry’s trade m agazine (or the past 7 years is now hiring. $ 5 .5 0 / hr. guaranteed. R ealistic earning potential to $ 10 /h r. Flexible scheduling — s et your own hrs. around classes! Paid profes­ sional training. C ontests, prizes, fun, friendly faces. Call today for a professional training. Call today for a professional inter­ view: Ask for Sandi Dillon TMI 3 Blks from ASU (EO E ) F ilin g F o r D o lla rs ! Special projects!! W e need your general clerical skills for filing, photo copying and microfilming. These positions are trainable. W e offer: • Pay day every Friday • Referral Bonuses • Long-term Assignment • 8am to 4:30pm & 4pm to 12:30am • $5.05 per hour Call today — Start tomorrow Central Phx Office .............. 333 E. Osborn St. Suite 370 246-1143 831-1131 ADIA The Employment People * R olling HtNs G o lf C ourse. 1 m ile north o f H aw aii, Europe, e tc . You can leave today. LO W E S T and M cD ow ell E vening hours. 9 90 -2 27 9 . ress. Apply in person. P ete’s 19th T e e , Tu 10:30 a.m .-2 p.m. and 3-7 p.m. FLY A N YW H ER E U S A In your nam e! 48 H ayden .. counter help, delivery d rivers, and cooks. M /W /Th/F 9 a.m.-12 p.m . and 1:30-4:30 p.m. or o ld er. C all 4 68-1733. tra n s fe ra b le S cottsdale, A rizona 8 52 54 . TU C S O N JO B L in e . S ave tim e, m any m ajor cities. G as allow ances available. 21 b u yin g H A P P Y A TM O S P H E R E , g reat sub shop w in train fo r w eekdays, 11 to 2 7119 E ast S hea B oulevard, S u ite 1 0 6 4 1 9 , IN T E R IO R D E S IG N firm needs fuN-tim e 7 3 2 5 E . 3 rd A v e . S c o tts d a le AAA D R IVEA W A Y. F re e cars to m ost A ls o about yourself to: V a le t P ark internatio nal, 9 47 -1 96 3 . com m ission. W ork evenings and Satur­ benefits and bonus p lan . A fun p lace to A la sk a, needed. appearance. S end resum e o r a lette r H O S TE S S P O S ITIO N availa b le . P art-tim e, w ork w ith grow th p o ten tial. $ 2 8 5 -4 0 0 . attendants out flyers door to d oor. D aily pay. C all receptionist to answ er phones and fo r light C R A ZY * ENTR EPR EN EU R S bike- perfect condition. Also com es w ith s ta te s , PA R K IN G G ood driving record, flexib le hours, neat a l kitchen duties on S aturdays. 9 21-7183. CaN 8 to 5 . accessories. C all E ric, 9 6 8 6 2 2 6 . $ 35 0 or best offer. Apply: 227 V A LE T FLY E R IN G P O S IT IO N S a vailab le. Pass Todd a t C ardinal’s P izza , 8 2 9 6 0 6 4 . 8616182. su ite 3 , M esa. 3 81-0830. S u ite 3 . Tem pe. 8 9 4 6 7 4 0 . E O E . P erfect fo r students, day/evenm g. Can H A V E Y O U com pleted S ociology 101/D r. one-w eek on-cam pus 6 :1 5 . _ 11th H our Tem poraries, Tem pe location, 994-2101 zatio n th at w ould like to e arn $50 0-$1 ,00 0 to Also night shifts. A verage $5-$6/h o u r. C a ll for a fratern ity, sorority or student organi­ for 2 :1 5 S P O R TS -M IN D E D : H IR IN G im m ediately, P hoenix. C a> C indy, 257 -1 95 8 . B E S T FU N D R A IS ER on cam pus. Looking AN * functioning ASU o ffic e . $ 8-10/h o u r. P art-tim e/fulM im e. P agenet, 4 6 0 2 East U niversity, su ite 100, program . C a ll (602)465-9411 drivers. CaN 8 2 0 6 2 8 2 . ch ild ren . M onday-Friday, m any m ore. For m ore inform ation, call Snow . N eed one hour, o f your tim e. WiN N IS H IK I CRESTA touring bike. E xcellent offer. dale interview ing 1 0 -1 , Saturday-Tuesday. 8 22 0 N orth H ayden R oad- E l P ueblo MaN. p a rt-tim e A R IZO N A C O M PA N Y seeks students to s ell educational study guide cassette handicapped G R E A T P A R T-TIM E jobs: c le ric a l, light industrial, d a ta entry, w ord processing and 2 44-8922, evenings. $ 6/h o u r, com m ission. C lose to cam pus. M E N S 12-SP E ED SR bicycle- G ood condi­ resses, doorm en. C lu b B abalu in Scotts­ custom er service, flig h t attendants, cleri­ A P P O IN T M E N T tion. $75 or best o ffer. 8 94-2444. com m ission, fle xib le hours. 2 80-2108. NO W . H IR IN G bartenders, cocktail w ait­ S tre e t c a l, and m aintenance. Top pay and bene­ f i t s . S o m e c o lle g e p r e f e r r e d . evening counter help and evening delivery $6-$9/h o u r. Apply: 2 7 2 0 S outh H ardy, person: P layers C hoice in the Cornerstone A IR LIN E S H IR IN G im m ediate entry-level SETTER S H onest and BA R R O ’S P IZ Z A is hiring daytim e and and im plem ent afterschool activities for M ust b e readt-to-go! C a ll Jodi o r W endi a t T otal FuNfiNm ent. 7 31-9225. $ 3 .8 5 per hour. F lex ib le hours. Apply in G Y M N A S TIC S Jim , 8 2 0 0 3 1 9 . FO R SALE: 16” blue C annondale m oun­ atten d an t. R E C R E A TIO N LE A D E R . C oordinate, plan levels. N E E D H E LP d istrib uting quality and popu­ RO O M M a ll, R ural and U niversity. speeds, good com m uter b ike. $ 15 0. C all ta in bike. G reat condition! $600 or best o ffer. Judy, 966-5051 hours, M onday-Friday. HELP W A N TED v FOOD SERVICE S tarting $S/bour. F a st paced environm ent. depend able. Able to w ork unsupervised. Earn $ 5 0 0 a w eek, p/t p ay tra in in g . F lexib le hours. $5 0 em ploym ent bonus. $ 25 0. $100fo ffer. 8 6 0 6 6 4 6 b ike. $ 275 or best M errill lar skin, h a ir, nutrition products. H igh 9 67-7239. A at Lynch needs skilled com m unicator for GAM E $25 per Deal 1969 TREK 1000 road b ike, 52 centim e­ new C O N S U LTA N T 4 81-2711. 1969 HO N D A E lite , 50cc L ike new . $500. shifting, F IN A N C IA L telem arketing. Hours flexib le . C a ll Iris , condition, runs g reat. $70Q /offer. J eff, 7 84-0629, leave m essage. HELP W A N T E D GENERAL Call Mr. Stitzer. U.S. Vanguard 1232 E. Broadway, Suite #218 Tem pe, Arizona \ 784-1599 PERSONALS PERSONALS PERSONALS AGO D A W N -R . nothing com es easy, but in th e end it a il works out fo r the b est. Form al w ill jam random guys? Luv ya- C hristy and M elodi. BRA D D O C TO R , h e re's your personal! D o n 't forget th at phone c all on Sunday! , T in a . ; B R E TT M .— I'm glad you fin a lly looked AG O D IA N A Kwong- tonight is your night! I’m so proud o f youi A G D love, M om . A G D D O T Jacky tonights the night! It’s ju st tor you! I am so proud of you. Form al under the right rock and found m e. Tom orrow night is going to be spectacular! B R IA N KALAKIE- hey, you sexy thing- I can’t w ait to see you in your m onkey suit! N ice inseam ! -S teph. w ill rode. Love your m om m y AG D DO T K ris, g et psyched for R ed Rose C H I-0 KELLY T I so glad th at your m y big sis. Y ou’re aw esom e. Love ya Kim . Form al! S ee you to n ite. Love, E rin . A G D JA N E T G . T o n ig h t’s th e night. C an’t w ait to present you. Love Y our M om , C H I-O PLED G ES! H ave an aw esom e tim e hopping around tonight! Karen— be care­ fu l! Love, Barb R obin. ; A G D JE N H . W hat m ore could you ask for? Friends sisters m om -n-dot! Y ou better be ready fo r a ragger cause you say he’s ju st a frien d . Form al w it! shred. Love m om. A G D JILL: Top G un! Q ueen of th e over the shoulder boulder holders! C a n 't w ait for tonights m ain event. S traig h t jackets and ic e c u b es Page 27 Fridoy^Octobe^IWO State Press re q u ire d (fo r in su ra n c e D D D M A U R E EN , you’ re an awesom e Dot! H ave you found another date? D e lta love, Jane. D E E G E E S ! G et excited to raise m oney for th e B lind foundation! D ELTA G AM M A— T h e Phi Sigs are ready to sw eep Anchor S plash for the second year! Splash this w eekend. Love, A -Phi. A G D U A N E , C an 't w a it to reveal m yself! D ELTA S IG Perry: another A-Phi Form al. A re you sure you have to be hom e by 11?? A G D P O LLY: Tonight is your night! W ish I could be th ere! H ave fun! Love, M elinda. AG O S A M A N T H A -F o rm al is here! Try to I love you. Teri. D ELTA S IG S . g et ready to drop Anchor. Love your coaches. forget about your "w e ek from h e ll” and g e t psyched to cut loose tonight- Red DELTA S IG S w ant Anchor Splash! are ready to give it a il w e’ve got! A A LPH A G A M M arla C a rey : g et psyched for D TD C R A IG --- Trolleys cham pagne the live it up! T ry not to use our bathroom this E VE R Y B O D Y tim e! Y bu’re ah aw esom e dot! Luv, Mom w inning Anchor S plash is alm ost here! G o C hristy. Phi Delts!, you ask for? H appy B -day! Love, T .L .B . new born. Legal, m edical expenses paid. las e r p rinters, too. 9 3 3 E ast U niversity, P lease c all c o llect, A ngela and M ike, c a ll 9 66 -2 03 5 . 960 W est U niversity, call LAM BDA C H I C hris Lavoie, have an incredible, exciting, splendiferous, w ay (718)746-9082. 9 21 -0 16 8 . O pén early, open late, open 7 cool, and to tally aw esom e day! P H Y LLIS A N D P au l w ish to adopt in fan t days! A LA S T m inute rush? C a ll Teresa fo r w ord ' Lots o f fam ily near by. CaH co llect a fte r processing. Evenings and w eekends at front o f the M U from 11:30am to 1:00pm . 6pm - 1 -5 08-649-3177. C onfidential and aw esom e. Form al w ill be a blast! C-ya tonight. Love, M elodi. P I B ETA P hi- w e have arrived and can ’t w ait to m eet you. Thanks for the personal! th e m en o f Z e ta B eta Tau. 7 86 -1 02 2 (C handler). PSE PM Kim R ull h ere’s your next d u e .' W hen yo u 're w ith th e band, I don’t have to stand. M ore to fo llo w ... R IC H A R D C; G eisler-1 love you w ith a ll of m y heart arid a ll th at I am . Love, Erin. A LL P A P ER S, resum es, letters, docu­ TH A N K H E A V E N for little ones. W anted: a m ents, very special baby fo r a child-adoring hom e C olleg e graduate using IB M com puter. in Southern C alifo rn ia. U ltim ate outcom e: M ik e, 9 64-0994. devotion, security and unlim ited ad o ptio n — H a p p ily m a r r i e d c o u p l e want a healthy infant to raise and love in our M t. home. C all our attorney at: (408)288-7100 n o . 321 C H E E R ! The A P A /M LA Phi Delts SERVICES need to fond and w ild m em ories o f last sem ester, P hD student can help you m ake effective TU T O R N E E D E D : For S tatistics Q B A 221. If just as fun and w ild. Love, R ab S abi. d ollars p a id /H in terested , contact M a tt at MISCELLANEOUS 8 93 -7 58 2 (m essage). ASU W A S H E R /D R Y E R R E N TA LS . $ 40 m onth AREA. Typing, w ord processing, ed itin g . F ast, P ric e s a re accu rate. C all anytim e. C o m p e titiv e, n e g o tia b le . fo r students. G uaranteed. C haudoin’s, 9 69 -3 20 4 . RESUM ES G rand O ffice Space (near ASU) O pening: Smalt Suites from $155, free util. L a k e s h o re R e a lty 8 2 0 -2 4 0 2 VISA OR MASTERCAROI 9 66-2825. Establish credit, guaranteed or double your money back. E L E C T R O L Y S IS — PER M ANENT h a ir rem oval. Rem ove unw anted h air forever. _________ P IC K U P /D E L IV E R Y m oving s e rv ic e s . TH E TA D E LT P at S ,- Jan e says form al w ill A LPH A G A M Layla, tonight is your night to G R EEK S PRIVA TE Way! shin e. Y our Mom is so proud to present Studebakers on S unday, O ctober 7th, ypu love G ayi 8pm . Com e rock w ith a ll your brothers and “ TH E W A Y Life ought to be is the w ay it by sisters w hile raising m oney for charity. really is .” R ichard Bach said it firs t, and Electrolysis A LPHA P H I T iffany Thom as. G et psyched and have a w onderful tim e a t form al H EY A NC HO R: W hen th e Phi D elts w in! tonight. Love, Mom , To you he w ill be tru e. laser and O ffic e : graphics. Call 1-805-682-7555, ext. M-1201. 15 m inutes fro m . A S U . N ortheast com er, M esa Drive and Brown R oad. 8 44-1876. N E E D T IM E to study? W e do APA/M LA form ats. $ 1 .5 0 , double-spaced page. C ali PREGNANCY COUNSELING P R O FES S IO N A L T Y P IS T . Type papers, Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. 24-hour Hotline form s, large o r smaU. R easonable, neat, PRO G R AM O F S tudies w ord processed, PERMANENT H A IR R E M O V A L $5. A lso, specialized applications in D B ase, S uperC alc (C IS 200T A ). Low rates. 9 68 -3 40 2 /9 2 1-89 91 , lea v e m essage. 966-5683 ‘T Y P IN G : LASER and o th e r p rinting. Fast turnaround on cam pus drop o ff. C all Cathy, 759-0862. 9 9 8 -0 3 4 3 HOM E SERVICES T Y P IN G /W O R D P R O C E S S IN G . $1/p a g e tu novia. M y loss? How am I suppose to L aser printing included. Y ou d e liv er and work? Fellow hom ew recker C .L . (E .D .O .) .pick up. A lm a School R o ad/B aseline. Jan, house, pets, plants, e tc . w hile you are 8 97-1744. aw ay. Lyn, 8 66-2289. H EY CO LLEG E students! Did you know le : Thanks a re proud o f you. S ee you .tonight Love, th at personal ads are only $ 1 .4 0 per day P ledge T rainers! Love, T ri-S ig m a Pledges! for being such w ay to let th at special som eone know ju s t W H O 'S T H A T g irl, on 1 0 /3 about 10:45am , how special they re ally are! you w ere w alking upstairs from M cDo­ Yourladividual Horoscope nalds w earing brow n shorts and a ' w hite H EY JU D G E S! Tom orrow night is our t-sh irt, our eyes m et, but I need m ore! night. Love the m en o f Phi D elta Theta. PleaSe w rite back if interested. — M ike. w elcom e! Looking forw ard to m eeting you JE FFR E Y - R O SES a re red, violets are Y O A M Y Potato! Congrats! You m ade it to a ll soon- T h e m en of Z e ta B eta Tau. blue, the AG D Form al w ill be aw esom e, 21 Trances Drake warm and s till haven’t because I ’m going w ith you! I love you! “ a p ee l.” S h ellie Y :H .B . gang. PEA C E O F m ind. L e t m e care fo r your Aw esom e for 15 words? W hat a great (and cheap) lost any of your IF YOUR BUSINESS WOULD LIKE TO SPONSOR THE HOROSCOPES, PLEASE CALL 965-8555. Ha! H appy b-day. Love, the instincts” point to the fact th at "In your Now I'm calling your IO U . P ay up- B eaker. fu ll quick service. C all 6 44 -0 36 4 . * Student rates * A LPHA P H I P ledges- your active sisters JU U E T - 1 covered you w hen rent w as due. p rin ter, Joanne, 9 6 6 -1 51 6 or B obbi, 9 68-9166. T R I-S IG M A ’S A L IC IA , Jackie and M ichel­ have a b last tonight I can ’t w ait to see you -' - ound. C lose to A S U . $ f .50 /u p . R oxanne, 8 29 -0 71 7 , d ig ita l beeper: 2 51-4862. M io trab ajo en E n g .L S - R .M . Sorry about ■' " hair rem oval. F ree in itial treatm ent. N ear G ood luck! I love you! Kathy. TO M Y H .R .S , Friday n ig h t-m o re victim s! CaH G ary, ASU 8 29-7829. a p a rtm e n t lab p artner Ivoes you! patches, e tc . LE TTE R Q U A LITY w ord processing for F U R N IT U R E day to you! Happy Birthday to you!” Y our rank your typing needs. A M A /M LA , fast turnar­ T H E LS A T is nothing com pared to you! how true it realty is. — Lupus. m e m o ra b ilia . A S O F T Touch E lectrolysis- perm anent tion: 9 69-6954. "H A P P Y B IR TH D A Y to you! H appy B irth­ S co u t A rrow , fo r d etails. S tudent discounts. C all fo r m ore inform a­ A LPH A G A M Amy H im i, Red Rose Form al BOY ing o f papers and resum es. 8 78-3355. M E S A S EC R E TA R IA L S ervice, com puter­ ’= at W est. S p ecialize in typing/w ord process­ ize d , be aw esom e! Let’s "D o it up” the D elta Ed N ational Jam boree item s; O rd er o f the m ore. M aster Key hypnosis. L illian S im o- anniversary. Five m ore to go! I love you- att G reek party a t contact TU TO R N E E D E D for S tatistics 226 . Top W A N TE D : but he is not in his co ffin. H e is a t large! Travis. p lea s e A S E C R E TA R IA L service serving ASU -N o Feds. .. in te res te d , vitch, C R N A , 9 56-4028. Saturday! The Ladies o f D elta G am m a. E yes” Sam m y's w ill w in Anchor Splash. C all Jessie, FLY IN G F IN G E R S has M aclntosh/laser Form al, cuz w e’re going to rage! Y ou're our typing/w ord N eed it fast? quality and now F ax-a-S h irt. C all 945-1551 th e best! Luv, M om m y- Christy. "A ll O vercom e the fe a r o f public speaking. 921 -1 52 2 . Increase self-confid ence, self-esteem and enthusiasm and effo rt this w eek. S ee ya Judges: m ailings. A M A ZIN G R E S U LTS Im prove concentra­ tio n , m em ory. E lim inate m ental blocks. the day to party trM augh style! And I must A LP H A G A M Dot Jennah- get psyched for SPLASH presentation, o r give a speech in class? Resum e package for only $ 1 4 .9 5 . E xpires SIG M A KAPPA . A nn- H appy one year say th at G eno, C .J . and G reg are hot!! your D O Y O U have to m ake an im portant C L is s i f i e d s \ \ o r k f o r \ o u ! the blonde in the second row who $rays for FR A TER N ITY M EN : Thank you for your for ed itin g , E X P E R IE N C E D processing. C A R EER SAM M Y— B R IA N , good luck on the LSAT P lease ta lk to m e!!! -r-F a n . thanks 649 -1 61 1 . K V 3 1/9 0. C a ll D ennis, 4 38-7341. K IN D O R S K I, t and 9 66-2186. R O G ER - W H A T m ore could I ask for!?! R U P P A D IN G transcribing, 9 45-5744. Tw o w eekends in a row ! Thanks for last w eekend! It w as aw esom e. Let’s m ake my form al even better! W ho loves ya baby!?! IB M love. P le a s e c a ll ( c o lle c t ) a tto r n e y ; (213)8 5 4-44 44 o r G inny, (2 1 3)2 0 8-13 08 . — on 9 68 -1 94 1 . P lease lea v e m essage. M IK E W E S T- G rade A, thum bs up, four star, fu ll erect! H appy B irthday! T U TO R IN G A pple. C a ll Becky fo r m ore inform ation: presentations. CaH C hris a t 4 38-8675. M A G IC , M A G IC and m ore m agic! Today in FAR CE S ID E — You guys are so hot! I ’m ANCHOR Kinko’s typesets papers, resum es, fliers , e tc . S elf-serve M acintosh com puters and into th e ir M assachusetts country hom e. on S aturday. W e a ll hope you a ce it. P H I- grade. SA E’S - PADDY M urphy has been dug up, Love you lots, G. going to be aw esom e! It’s your night, so A LPHA the w ith m uch love to give seeking to adopt P hoenician and m e. A re you up for it? presented. Love ya, M elissa. m akes LAM BDA C H I G .E ., Cham pagne, S tars, H aw aii, M ax’s, the Com m ons. Chuck; can A LPHA P H I Lisa B eiskin. Hey ‘Ijjttte dot’ paper dinner, presents and m e. W hat m ore could ' GUV C O M P U TE R K IN K O ’S H A P P ILY-M A R R IE D C H ILD LE S S couple I say fun for 1,000? Thanks for being my best frien d . M ay our future sem esters be th e A ctives. C arol, Pam . Splash because w e love our coaches. V m e ab o u t the "R eed of CaH M esa. Sdm m y’s w ill kick A — — at Anchor to n ig h t.... Ask guaranteed. 924 -8 04 4 , evenings and w eekends. E ast S hellie. T ru th !" Love, Tina. strateg ies. R ates from $ 6/h o u r. 4 97-2097, ($ 2 5); collect, (8 1 8 ) 9 89 -2 36 9 , attorney a t (2 1 3 ) 8 54-4444. D G ’S B O N N IE , K ristie,- and Shannon— G tirn * 0" ' instruction, study a id es and exam ination typed M edical expenses p aid . C a ll K ari and Bob psyched to r Form al! Dawn R. Robin M . A LPH A G AM . T am i- surprise! Form al is A C C O U N TIN G AND fin an ce professional A C C U R A TE R E S U M E S com posed and LAM BDA C H I Sam m y: G et ready to ta k e a speak w ith your supervisor. H e re's to the love you a ll! G et tonight! I ’m so proud o f you!! Love, mom. years, longs for baby to share our secure, ' happy hom e. C onfid ential, leg al adoption. d rink on the W ild side a t A -Phi Form al! D G , A N C HO R Splash is tom orrow . ATO ’s m ake it m em orable! Love, S tephanie. C H ILD LE S S LO V IN G couple, m arried 7 A lpha G am C hristy. R ose only happens once eacy year- let's A G D S IS T E R S , w e psyched for B ar H oppin’ on Friday nite! PETE M Y Tutor- good luck on ACC! U r D ELTA G AM M A- best of luck With Anchor G e t excited for Form al! Love, mommy! KAPPA S IG S C h i-0 pledges a re totally TUTORS related expenses. purposes). Love alw ays, your M an o f the R abid S quirrel. TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING ADOPTION CHILDCARE A -P H I K IM B ER LY M cR oy H ave a great tim e at Form al. I can ’t w ait to see you; KAPPA JE S S IC A , th e re it is! Thanks for presented. Love, M om m y Tiffany. being such a bud! Love, G am m a Phi E lle. Tem pe. V ariable w eekday and w eekend hours. Nonsm oker, ow n transportation. A -P H I SU SA N : Your w eek is alm ost over!! I c an 't w ait to party w ith you and P ete a t GREEK PARTY! form al. Y ou’re a g reat friend. Love, Teri. ARE Y O U a student? Is it your birthday? Bring your valid college ID to the S tate O c t. 7 th , 8pm S tu d e b a k e rs 8 31-0554. W A N TE D - S TU D E N T for light housekeep­ ing and childcare. W ill w ork around school schedule. R eferences required. P lease call 9 6 7 -7 05 5 fo r m ore inform ation. Press classified departm ent in the south basem ent o f M atthew s C enter and you can w ish yourself o r som eone else a B e th e re ! PERSONALS happy day w ith a fre e 15-word personal ASU M E N ’ AEPi is having th e ir second D inner. P arents and R ushees a re invited. C ontact M arc O ppen, 784-0646. A TTE N TIO N ASU G reeks!!! S tudebaker’s is having al a ll G reek party on Sunday, O ctober 7th . $2 pitchers, $ 1 .7 5 anything, $1 Kam m i shots. O nly a $1 cover, with proceeds going to M ake a W ish Founda­ tio n P hilanthropic points!!! A TTE N TIO N w ildest ALL fantasies ASU w in 423-5504 HAPPY BIRTHDAY com e tru e your TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING $1w50 AAA W ord P rocessing/laser printer. 35 years experience. Theses, dissertation, $ 1 .50 /P A G E . this so g et m e w hile the g e ttin g 's good- Jason H . P S . you know you w ant m e! A X O D IV N D V L, Thanks for everything. Y o u 're the best mom ever. Love, Kim . A X O M O M Alison: you’re the' best! W e’re going to have an aw esom e year! Love, Trace. DAVE CARP! O n-cam pus pickup and d elivery. D aily or FAX d irect to m e. W P S . 1 and Laser p rin ter. C lass papers a ll types, charts, resum es, e tc . 15 years experience. R obyn, 996-3911 $ 1 .50/P A G E . T Y P IN G p rofessional w riter. service E diting run by included, gram m ar corrected, w riting im proved, no e xtra charge. A S U location. 8 94-6768. $ 1 .5 0 P E rt page. Term papers, lette rs, TH E M a s ter of M agic and Illusion!! Today in fro n t of the M U ! Com e see!!! BJ D O C , th is personal is for you. Show the <5 ^ (Apr. 20 to May 20) Make sure you follow through on commitments to family members. It should be a day of notable achieve­ ment for you on the 'job. Meet a partner half-way tonight. *one service perfirst-time clients only. resum es, e tc .. A t Y o u r S ervice W ord Processing, Linda, 8 39 -6 16 7 . $ 1 .7 5 A N D up, professional w ord proces­ sor and form er E nglish teach er. Laser w orld!! Love, Erin. p rin ter. C lau d ia, 964 -6 01 2 . B O B, S Q ID , potato- thanks to r m aking my A A K U R IT T Y P IN G - S hort papers, prom pt B -day the greatest! S ee you S aturday. service/transcribe tap es. CaH a fte r 1pm , Love, B. Linda, 8 3 1 -0 3 4 9 ’ SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Behind-the-scenes developments are in your favor financially today. Defer to the wishes of a partner now. Be less self-insistent and more willing to cooperate. SAGITTARIUS -■■¿A (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) S v Intuition leads to financial gains today. Singles could m eet with romantic introductions. Take advan­ tage of today's lovely prospects for happy get-togethers. CAPRICORN G E M IN I ‘(Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) (May 21 to June 20) You’re ready now to begin a new You're in a pleasure-seeking mood today and will be taking the initiative project or to make important busi­ in romance. Sports qnd exercise ness decision. Despite^ an envious prove ei\joyable. Do remember to do friend, the day favors romance and recreational interests. necessary bookkeeping. CANCER V tfflfi- AQUARIUS 0% (June 31 to July 22) HKS (Jan. 20 to Feb. IS) You’ll finish some tasks at home This is an excellent day for making today, but there’ll be time for an new starts at home. You could overspend now while socializing with enjoyable outing with loved ones. others, but interpersonal relation­ Creative types get important new leads today. ships are happily accented. PISCES *** LEO (Feb, 19 to Mar. 20) (July 23 to Aug. 22) W The .day may begin on a lazy note, Tried and true methods are best in b u sin ess today. Avoid over­ but you’ll make progress now with a expansion and solidify your existing domestic m atter Visits w ith : old position. Evening hours are great for friends prove enjoyable. Tonight should be special. planning a party. YOU BORN TODAY would make a V IR G O jw a good adviser to a group. You get (Aug. 23 to S ept 22) Your extra drive opens doors for along well with others, but part of you in business now and financial you is a loner. You have a good p ro sp e c ts accordingly improve. intuition, which you should learn to s Travel and visits to familiar haunts trust. You have a natural, interest in culture and may be drawn to an afford, you pleasure. artistic or literary career. Teaching, LIBRA . * psychology’, arid the law are other (Sept 23 to O ct 22) Some happy-go-lucky friends possible fields of. interest A home is tempt you to overspend today. You’ll important to your happiness. Birth. be excited now about a creative date of: Jennie Lind, opera singer; endeavor. It's a fine day for travel and Carole Lombard, actress; and Thor Heyerdahl, explorer. leisure interests. Copyright 1990 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. TA U R U S APA sp ecializatio n . M arion, 8 39-4269. w om en- w eekend. I ’m in tow n only for a short tim e- B A N D IN I— (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) fP C Collaborative efforts are favored now. Avoid spending too much on the pursuit of pleasure. You’re on the right track in business. Perseverance will pay off! Made with strong bonding organic polymer resins. Doesn’t yellow or turn brittle like acrylic. Will not damage natural nail. Back to School Specials* Full Set $22 . Fills $17 Tanning: L Month Unlimited $20 Located near Scottsdale Rd. & Indian School annual M id -fall Rush th is m onth. O ctober inform al Pré-rush A R IE S Thin and Natural Sculptured N ail Cactus N a il Company ad! Happy Birthday!! 13 th ere w ill be an FOR SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1990 C H ILD C A R E for 6-m onth-old boy in South m- Pasc 38 Friday, October 5,1990 State Press SPO NSO R ¿M A IT Drove! MEMOriuu. Union Activities Board ON CAMPUS TRAVEL TRADE SHBW1 Iæ FRIDAY & SATURDAY^^^OCTOBER 5 & 6 1 0 A M V T 0 6PM ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY MEMORIAL UNION -- VENTANA BALLROOM t’s never happened before! Leaders in the travel and tour industry— gathered together in one place on the A.S.U. campus! Stop by. W atch the videos. Pick up their brochures and give-aways. See the world of travel options that they have to offer. I >4Y Ng EL \K ble ble 7 0 NATIONAL TRAVEL EXHIBITORS TO VISIT AAffordable America Vacations, Inc. 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