State Press Copyright, State Press, 1990 Tem pe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 16 No. 31 Friday, October 12,1990 Task force divided on tuition form ula By KEVIN SHEH S tate Press , FLAGSTAFF A presidential task force disbanded Thursday still sharply divided on a tuition-setting formula and a financial aid plan. While it is not likely the Arizona Board of Regents will discuss tuition today at its monthly meeting, officials remain confident last year’s delays in setting tuition will be averted. “This will not stand in the way of a November tuition-setting, ’’ ASU President Lattie Coor said. “Tuition must be set in November.” : The task force is comprised of student leaders, administrators and financial aid experts from the three sta te universities. The group was formed earlier this year by the Council of Presidents — comprised of the three state university presidents — to investigate the cost of education formula and financial aid. The cost of education formula is a device cost of education with students paying a lower percentage of it. Another plan, supported by some administrators on the task force, would reduce the cost of education, but students would have to pay a larger percentage of the educational pie. Financial aid was another friction point among student leaders and administrators. Associated Students of ASU President Matt Ortega said the report provided to task used by the regents to determine tuition. In this formula, budget information — including cost of instruction, student services and institutional support — is divided by the number of full-time students. While the task force formally approved several items yesterday, it remained divided on two key issues. One was the method of determining the number of full-time students. Under one plan supported by student leaders, the formula would result in a higher Turn to Tuition, p age 12. D rivers w a d e through nightly s tr e e t re p a irs By HOBART ROW LAND S tate Press T, J . S okol/Stats Pro*» • Monkeyshines T he Phoenix Sun«’ G o rilla p ose* fo ra photograph during the N BA preseason m atch betw een the Suns and th e Denver Nuggets Thursday night In the U niversity A ctivity C enter. T he Suns routed the Nuggets 186-123. See story, page 19. -The intersection of Rural Road and University Drive will remain closed at night until Oct. 20 to allow the city to repair damages caused by last month’s messy water line break. After the evening closures, Tempe Construction Supervisor Rodd Whitt said the intersection will be blocked off all next weekend starting at 12 a.m. on Oct. 20, and reopened in time for morning rush hour on Oct. 22. This, he said, will allow a crew contracted by Tempe to replace damaged lines, install isolation valves, replace damaged U. S. West lines and apply most of the asphalt to the road’s surface. Whitt added that a crew will work “around the clock” on a number of tasks that will include replacing a damaged 14-inch water line. Crew members began work at the intersection last night to replace a cracked sewer line, he said. The water line burst Sept. 29, creating a gaping hole 30 feet wide and 10 feet deep in the asphalt and sending water gurgling onto the road. During construction, Whitt said traffic will be directed north on McCliiitock Drive to Curry Road and south on Mill Avenue to Apache Boulevard. Thursday night the intersection was partially closed with ■ traffic able to turn north or south from University Drive onto Rural Road but unable to proceed through the intersection of University Drive. “We hate waiting this long to get started. We picked next weekend because it will have the least impact on traffic,” Turn to' Repairs, page Aesthetic plan targets Orange Mall as University hub By KENNETH BROWN S ta te Press The Oct. 1 closure of Orange Mall is only th e b eg in n in g of f u r th e r cam pus construction and tram rerouting to create an identifiable focal point on campus, ASU officials said. A Universitywide committee responsible for the changes has begun the second phase in a five-step process to increase pedestrian safety and create an aesthetic east-west spine that, combined with Cady Mall, would give the campus a recognizable gathering point. “Cady Mall is the major north-south one,” said Richard Collins, ASU campus planner. “It went through its big growth and development in the last 10 years. Now its Orange Mall’s turn.” The committee, which is made up of B ed ev iled : C o lu m n is t “N ic o le C arroll a d d r e s se s th e c o n tr o v e r s y o f a th le te s r e c e iv in g p r e r e g istr a tio n p r iv ile g e s. P age 4 representatives from the administration, faculty and students, will submit its finalized recommendation to ASU’s Design and Review Board in November. If accepted, the proposal then will go to ASU President Lattie Coor. Although the committee has not yet chosen a plan, it has narrowed its possibilities to three alternatives and is currently “leaning” toward one that would make Orange Mall open to pedestrians only, Collins said. In addition, the plan would reroute tram service so it would go north of Orange .Mall and create an additional parking structure near McAllister Avenue. Before the closure, tram service previously extended to the MU cul-de-sac, stopping at the ASU Bookstore, Murdock Hall, and in front of Armstrong Hall. Despite an Associated Students of ASU resolution condemning what they believed was inadequate communication regarding changes in tram routes, it has since embraced the idea of an on-campus hub to improve the atmosphere of the campus. The resolution, passed unanimously by the ASASU Senate Tuesday, had originally opposed “any further demolition of the campus,” but was amended to disapprove only the abruptness of the change. ASASU’s University Affairs Committee, which authored the original resolution, said it was misinformed about the issue. “We want to become a world-class U niversity,” said ASASU Education Sen. Adrian Fontes, who sits on the committee. “We can’t do that with a bunch' of sprawled out scattered ugly buildings. “ASU doesn’t really have anything we can identify with as being the center of campus. A lot of people when they look at a university look for that.” Fontes told the ASASU Senate Tuesday that two students this semester have been hit by trams on Orange Mall, raising safety concerns among some committee members. Doug Bartosh, associate director of ASU Department of Public Safety, said safety on the mall has not been much of a problem, but clearing the street of trams is probably a good idea. “I think it’s been somewhat controversial for a long time,” he said referring to those who have objected to futher campus construction: “ I think the campus is ready to have quality development.” B o u n cin g back: B ear o f a tim e: T h r illse e k e r s par­ T h e Sun D e v ils p re p a r e t o m e e t th e G o ld e n B ea r s as C alifo rn ia ta k es o n tic ip a te in b u n g e e c o r d ju m p in g , th e art o f th r o w in g th e m s e lv e s o f f 2 0 0 - f o o t b rid g es. P age 13 th e ASU at Su n D e v il S tad iu m o n Saturday. Today’s w eather: Sunny w ith a high in the lo w 9 0 s. Tonight: Clear w ith a lo w in the m id 60s. C la ssified s................. ..................1 3 C om ici.»..».M ...oti...M »t.o.... P age 17 ........ ............2 3 S p o r ts................................. State Preis FrtdayOctobeM2^990 Page 2 Tempe redistricting considered at forum By LAURALYN BEATTIE S tate Press Citizens and candidates from Tempe’s District 27 said redistricting their section of the city should be a top priority during the next legislative session. At a forum held Thursday night for the Tempe/Guadalupe district’s legislative hopefuls, three of the four candidates agreed that when redistricting occurs next year, District 27 should be drawn to encompass as much of Tempe as possible. The event was sponsored by the citizen action group, Tempe Tomorrow. Bev Hermon and Gary Richardson, both R epublicans running for House of Represenatives seats, and Doug Todd, a Republican running unopposed for reelection to the Senate, agreed that the city of Tempe would best be served as one legislative district. “My driving ambition is to have most of Tempe as one legislative district,” Todd said. H o w ev er, D e m o c ra t P a t W alsh maintained that if elected to the House, he would like to see Tempe redrawn into two different districts. “ If Tempe were (redrawn) into two districts, our influence could be increased by three additional representatives in the Legislature,” he said. Richardson argued that such redistricting would result in “diluting the effect of representation.” Along with redistricting, the candidates tackled budget balancing, the environment and education. Monique H ollln/S tate Press Sen. Doug Todd, D -Tem pe, R ep. Bev Herm an, R -Tem pe, and Rep. P at W alsh, D -Tem pe, discuss issues from education to th e environm ent a t at Tem pe Tom orrow sponsored debate. All four candidates seemed to agree that balancing the state’s budget and increasing the quality of education were top priorities. Walsh suggested an environmental program focusing on two aspects. First, he said he plans to attack the quality of Arizona air by ensuring that vehicles do not continue to pollute. Secondly, Walsh said he hopes to educate businesses about environmental pollution. Incumbent Bev Hermon said she would wage her own attack on environmental problems. “The environment is one of the state’s most important issues,” Richardson said. He said the Estrella Point Arizona Hazardous Waste Management Facility in Mobile is an example of an “environmental need that got swept under the rug.” Richardson proposed that all construction at ENSCO be frozen until the public can come to a concensus opinion about what to do with the waste. “We all know what improves air quality,” she said. “Get out of your cars, folks. Certainly the Legislature will work on solutions, but each of us is going to have to take a personal responsibility as well. “Take the bus, guys. I’m going to.” Doug Todd cited water pollution and desert dumping as issues the Legislature needs to address. However, when it came to air quality, Todd agreed with Hermon. “We can reduce the source and increase; the penalties, but it’s going to take more than 90 legislatures down on Washington (Street),” he said. “It’s going to take all of us.” Today M eetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •Russian Club will meet at 2:40 p.m. in LL A201 to watch "Repentance." •ASU Baccalaureate Nurse Organization will offer health information from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the MU Arizona Room. •Campus Crusade for Christ wilt meet at 7:30 p.m. in LS 191. • AIESEC will meet at 4 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. •Kayak Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the aquatics center. New members welcome. •D evil’s Juggling Club will meet at 3 p.m. in front of the Language and Literature Building. New members welcome. •Beta Alpha Psi will meet at 3:30 p.m. in BA 297. •Eckankar will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Room 213 for a presentation on “The Music of the Spheres.” : •International Student Group of the Newman Center will meet at 5 p.m. at the All Saints Catholic Newman Center. New members welcome, •P hi Alpha Theta will meet at 4 p.m. in the Social Science Building Room 234 for a speech by a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship recipient on environmental history. •ASU Ski Devils will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Sunny’s Pizza, 1301 E. University Drive, for a trolley keg party. •The Farce Side Comedy Hour will perform a free comedy show at 12:30 p.m. in the Union Programming Lounge. •Sigm a OmicrOn will meet at 11:45, a.m. in Disabled Student Resources Center in Matthews Center Contact Jim Lucas at 967-7622. T H E V O L K S W A G E N C O L L E G E T R A D I T I O N ... T h is is n o w ! T h a t w a s th e n . ® Cabriolet N327 $14,995 The tradition hasn’t changed. It’s just been updated. The1990 VOLKSWAGEN Cabriolet. U è r d o n e Vo l k s w a g e n . w e m ake the Uferclone c o l l e g e r id e e a s ie r vo lksw äg en 15th Street & Camelback Road • 265-6600 ASU’S EXCLUSIVE DEALER World/Nation p m i ________ Page 3 Friday, O ctoberjj^ _1990 Soviet ‘spy* liftoff ends in disaster Am oc M w I Praw photo Train derailm ent W orkers rep air railroad tracks w here a CSX train derailed near M arahville, N .C ., Thursday. The train derailed afte r hitting a Hooded area on the track due to ra ilfa ll. There w ere no Injuries. MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union’s most advanced booster rocket, which an American specialist believed was carrying a spy satellite, exploded seconds after liftoff last week. . ' , The blast nearly, destroyed the launch pad and may complicate Soviet efforts to sell space hardware to the West. The official Soviet news agency Tass reported for the first time Thursday that a Zenit booster “broke up” at the Baikonur space port in the Central Asian republic of Kazakhstan on Oct. 4. Tass said no one was hurt and that a commission is investigating the accident. The three-sentence dispatch did not identify the payload or give any other details. It also did not say why the explosion was not reported for a week. James Oberg, an American aerospace engineer and expert on the Soviet space program, said he believes thé payload was a satellite the Soviet military hoped to use for electronic intelligence gathering. A spokesman for the Soviet space agency Glavkosmos told The Associated Press one of two launch pads the Zenit uses was “nearly totally destroyed” and that the satellite was ruined. T orn to E xplosion, page I t . Ethiopian expatriate sued for torturing past prisoner ATLANTA (AP) Kelbessa Negewo said he was just a “simple man” trying to raise his children, pursue ar-tootel management degree and forget being tortured in an Ethiopian prison when the past came back to haunt him. Another expatriate is suing him for $25 million, alleging he was the police official who tortured her in the interrogation in December 1978 and January 1979 during the “Red Terror,” a period of government intimidation in Ethiopia. The suit claims that during one eight-hour interrogation in January 1979, Negewo and several others tied up Hirute Abebe-Jira and whipped her with wire. “A stocking soaked with blood and vomit was stuffed in her mouth,” the suit said. “She was told she would be killed if she did not reveal the location of a certain gun, about which she knew nothing. “He (Negewo) directed his subordinates who participated in the interrogation and torture and he personally interrogated and tortured Abebe-Jira.” Negewo, who now works in an Atlanta hotel, denies having anything to do with that. “She doesn’t know me, I don’t know her,” he said in halting English. “ I was a civil servant all my life. I was never in the police.” Although Negewo refuses to answer many questions about his past, he said he.can prove that he spent the months mentioned in the lawsuit attending school in Europe and in prison. He says he also Was tortured by agents of Soviet-backed President Mengistu Haile Mariam in the period of government violence known as the Red Terror. The lawsuit alleges that Negewo was chairman of the Higher Zone 9, a police jurisdiction in the capital Addis Ababa. Ethiopian diplomatic sources said a Kelbessa Negewo was chairman of Higher Zone 9 during the Red Terror. The sources could not, however, say whether that man was in Addis Ababa at the time Abebe-Jira said she was imprisoned and tortured. A b e b e -J ira h a s d e c lin e d to be interviewed, according to her attorneys, but her lawsuit said she was imprisoned when she was an 18-year-old clerk-accountant for a business. Abebe-Jira, now living in Ontario, Canada, filed the lawsuit under the Alien Tort Claims Act, which allows aliens to seek House rebuffs strict laws on obscenity WASHINGTON (AP) — The House on Thursday rebuffed conservative demands for strict new anti-obscenity curbs on the National Endowment for the Arts and Voted overwhelmingly to let the courts decide whether federally subsidized arts projects are obscene. After an emotional five-hour debate, the House approved a bipartisan compromise sponsored by Reps. Pat Williams, DMont., and E. Thomas Coleman, R-Mo., that would penalize grant recipients if they are subsequently convicted of violating obscenity laws. Passage of the Williams-Coleman measure on a 382-42 roll call vote signaled a major reversal of congressional sentiment on the politically explosive issue of federal support for art that some lawmakers consider offensive, A year ago, in the heat of a controversy over support for exhibitions of works by photographer Robert Mapplethorpe and artist Andres Serrano, Congress approved explicit antiobscenity restrictions on the endowment at the urging of Sen Jesse Helms, R-N.C. On Thursday, the House rejected even more stringent curbs proposed by Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., and overwhelmingly defeated a separate proposal to abolish the $17i million federal arts agency altogether. Williams told reporters the House’s resounding approval of the compromise bill was “a bigger victory in favor of tolerance and freedom of expression than I had expected.” He predicted it would make it easier for the Senate to resist pressure from Helms and his allies for new restrictions on the endowment. Like a similar measure awaiting Senate floor action, the House bill would scrap the current Helms restrictions on the endowment and rely on the eourts to make determinations of obscenity. The House bill also would renew the endowment’s statutory authority for three years and order reforms in its grant­ making procedures with the aim of making the endowment’s decisions more responsive to the interests of the taxpaying public. At the request of Republican negotiators, the bill provides an increase in the share of grants allocated to state arts agencies from 20 percent to 35 percent over three years. Thé House planned to vote Friday on a separate appropriations bill that would boost the endowment’s budget from $171 million to $180 million in the current fiscal year. That bill, approved by the House Appropriations Committee, omits any content restrictions on works subsidized by the endowment. It also would ordfer endpwnient chairman John E. Frohnmayer to scrap a controversial requirement that grant recipients sign an anti-obscenity pledge before they can receive federal money. Before it approved the compromise bill, the House voted 249-175 to defeat Rohrabacher’s proposal to prohibit support for works that depict “sexually explicit conduct” or sexual exploitation of children, attack religion, défile the American flag or include “an actual human embryo or fetus.” House members also buried, 361-64, a proposal by Rep. Philip M. Crane, R-I1L, to abolish the agency because of its past support for what Crane called “obnoxious, perverted and sick” art projects. . Rohrabacher warned his colleagues that “the American people are watching this debate” on television, implying that House members who opposed his amendment would face the wrath of voters in the Nov, 6 congressional elections. He said the compromise bill was a fraudulent “political fig leaf” that would do nothing to halt the flow, of offensive art allegedly subsidized by the arts endowment. Liberal lawmakers denounced Rohrabacher’s tough proposed crackdown as a possibly unconstitutional attempt to intimidate artists and squelch freedom of expression. Williams said Rohrabacher’s proposal was “copperriveted, iron-clad censorship of the first degree.” Rep. James Scheuer, D-N.Y., called it “an offensive and misguided measure.” But Rohrabacher won support from several conservatives, includilng Rep. Ron Marlenee, R-Mont. “It’s a fix . . . that allows the junkies to continue to peddle their depraved, sadistic wares with impunity,” said Marlenee, who may be fighting the liberal Williams in 1992 for the single Montana House seat expected to emerge from redistricting based on the 1990 census. relief for human rights violations in other countries. She said she learned of Negewo’s whereabouts in May after a friend spotted him working at the Colony Square Hotel in Atlanta. Last week, Negewo filed a petition pleading indigence and asking for a courtappointed attorney. The suit is pending until a judge decides the petition, said Laurel Lucey, one of the attorneys handling the case for the Center for Constitutional Rights. An attorney is not required for civil cases. Negewo said he also has applied for help from the American Civil Liberties Union in case his petition is denied. N ew s Briefs This* M arin** «waring gaa mask* *n|oy a gam* of homsmads ch**a using various drinking contain*!« at a Marina baa* In Saudi Arabia Thursday. Gl*n Sflwrman, a taaldanl ol th* Marina dMrict of San Francisco, «arrias hit baga last Oct. 19 a* ha walks past a buildlng deatroyed by tha Oct. 17 sarthquaks. A ysar latsr touriata ara mtumlna to San ________ _ _ Francisco, bul many rapaba naad toba doña. P u n ch dru n k H ot tem p ers o b scu re real p rereg istratio n issue Punches are flying over the proposal to give student athletes registration priority, just behind disabled and honors students, on hard-to-come-by class seats. But the actual premise of the issue has all but been tossed out of-the ring. Instead, the early-early registration fight has regenerated tired debates over athlete scholarships, grades and recruitment. And everyone is getting bruised. Agitated non-athletes have been quick to jump oh the meals, money and special attention ASU athletes receive, while letters from student athletes have hurried to point out that “there are no cars, no fixed grades, np extra spending money, just students who receive room and board, tuition and books." Whoa! Back to your corners. Student athletes are employees of the athletic department, the scholarships and free rent is their pay. That’s justifiable. T u to r in g a n d s t r i c t a c a d e m ic requirements are just the company’s way of protecting its investment. Also understood. But the current proposal to give this university employee advantages over th o u san d s of o th ers is ju s t plain masochistic. Opposing factions are gathering support. The ASASU Senate recently passed a resolution opposing the proposal while ICA Board chairman Milton Schroeder has sent a memo“ to ASU President Lattie Coor to gain support for the athletes’ “dilemma.” With the tension on this campus over student athletes strung so tightly, the approval of such a blatant act of favoritism w ould p ro m ise a com m unity-w ide explosion. track. Just think of the uproar if greeks were allowed to register first to conform to their house academic eligibilty rules. Or student government officers who must meet requirements to stay in office. Or financial aid recipients whomust have à certain amount of hours or lose their biannual checks. So, why want to try it with student athletes? The section marked “rationale” in the Intercollegiate Athletic Board’s proposal, states it vëry simply: “ (Student athletes’) enrollment is often accompanied by scholarships, fellowships or other stipends . . . . The institution has a special and vested interest in the academic success of these groups and should support their academic progress accordingly.” Like most things on our campus, it really boils down to money. To keep the till full, the Athletic Department must keep its students on An understandable concern: But if student athletes are having a hard time getting the classes required on their programs of study, other students must be having trouble, too. 4* And instead of changing the rules so one group can beat the system, how about Changing the system so that everyone can follow the same rules? The ICA proposal states that giving preferential treatment to student athletes will show “the institution’s commitment to the academic progress and graduation of student athletes.” But it skips over the part about the wedge that will be driven between student athletes and non-athletes. And it doesn’t even consider the disgust of 40,000 “average” students, who would be justified in feeling that the only honors that matter to ASU — are those won by students with numbers on their backs. L E T T E R S Fairness vs. First Amendment Editor: At a time wlién our campus is growing toward a greater sensitivity to the evils of invidious stereotyping of specific groups, it is particularly deplorable that the State Press invokes ugly stereotyping to impugn those whose commitment is to evangelical activity. As responsible journalists surely know, there are many kinds of evangelists, most of whom are honest, dedicated, sober and respectable, th e State Press cartoon (Oct. 1) bespoke an intolerance unworthy, of this academic community. If particular persons, even individual clergy or evangelists misbehave, they should be fair game for your cartoonists’ ire. But a general slur on a group or profession violates the canons of tolerance, fairness, and academic responsibility we have a right to expect from the State Press. Campus Interfaith Council.: Rabbi Barton ti. Lee Ilillel Student Center,President Paul R. Petersen Lutheran Campus-Center, Vice-President Ann Hardt (Quaker Friends) Pàm Taylor (Christian Science) Thomas Peterson (University Lutheran) James Standiford (United Methodist) Gary Kennedy (United Methodist ) Rick Foss (Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship) ■ Geoff Volker (The Whitefield Society) Lee Meyer (Alleluia Lutheran Student Ministry) Staffan Berg (C.A.R.P.-Unification Campus Ministry) Paula Rusk (Campus Ambassador Christian Fellowship) Bryan Eastin (Chi Alpha Christian'Fellowship) Richard Pyke (U.C.C.M.) Wayne Ray (Episcopal Campus Ministry) Carol Sue Morgan (Campus Crusade for Christ) E D I T O R I A L STATE PRESS SUZANNE ROSS Editor NICOLE PERRON Managing Editor «.HOBART ROWLAND K EL L Y PEARCE • —KRISTEN JOHNSON - ........... TENNY TATUSIAN DANNOWICKI Aast Opinion Editor................ __ ___„JULIA GOODRUM _______ X J. SOKOL _ _____ PAUL CORO r K M TIMMONS ........ ........ STEVE KRICUN ..... JILLTIBKE City Editor— .— Aart. City Editor....................- Asst. Magazine Editor— ___ ...MEG HALVERSON ........ ..... ...ROBYN PINKSTON ^CARIN CUMMINS R E P O R T E R S : K enneth Brown> A n ita Carcone, Teena Chadwell, Jeff Concors, Joseph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Patricia Mah, Michelle Paul Michelle Roberts, Girth Sheh, Christina Schroeder, Kristie Young.'. SPORTS REPORTERS: Darren Urban, Greg Zele, Dan Zeiger. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty, Jeorgetta Douglas, Monique Hollin. Will Powers, Tamara Wofford. COPY EDITORS: Kellye Kratch, Michael LaMantia. CARTOONISTS: Rob Minton, Julie Sigwart MAGAZINE STAFF: Michelle Cnaff, Vicki Culver Christine Herbranaon, Lori Lappin, Deborah Nemko, Jon Whiz; Kramer WeheeL PRODUCTION: Caaaaundra Ca vines», Dane Christ, Holly Hiatt, Jeffrey Lucas, Mark Nothaft, Lynne Senzek, John P. Smith, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Dan EUatronv Todd Martin, Christine Millan, Mike Morris, Terri Smith, John Vaocara; Bill VariZanten. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year; except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not answ er q uestions o f a general nature: A dvertising and Production: (602) 965-7572. ~ T he State Press is the on ly n ew sp ap er ex c lu siv ely published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. B O A R D Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include. S u za n n e R o ss E d itor N ic o le Perron M a n a g in g E ditor D a n N o w ic k i O p in io n E ditor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. . _ All letters must be typed, double-spaced and.no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. • Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1502. Opinion Page 5 Friday, O ctober 1g, 1990 Strie Press Stupidity Angry sportsw riter should know jocks lack brains M ik e R o y k o Tribune Media Syndicate “If you ask me,” said Slats Grobnik, “that woman sportswriter got what she deserved when the guy waved his whatsis at her in the locker room.” I didn’t ask you. “Then ask me and I ’ll, tell you. ’’ You already did. “Oh yeah. I guess I did. What I mean is, she brought the whole thing on herself. If she hadn't been there, it wouldn't have happened, would it?” , ¿If we weren't sitting here having a beer, we wouldn't be sitting here having a beer, would we? “I don’t understand what that means.” I don’t either, but I thought it might shut you up. “You still don't understand. So what was she doing in that locker room?” She was there doing her job, as the laws permit, as the football league rules permit and as simple deceney should permit. There is nothing new or novel about female sportswriters going into locker rooms. It’s been going on for years. “You still don’t understand why it was her own fault.” Then please enlighten me. “I seen her on TV. She sounds like a nice, intelligent, respectable girl. Good education and all that. So why would she do such a terrible thing?” What terrible thing? “Why she’d become a sportswriter?” Ah, I’m beginning to understand. “Didn’t you do that for awhile? Write about sports?” Very briefly and many, many years ago. “Why didn’t you stay with it?” Well, I found that most of the people I came into contact with were . . I’m having trouble finding the appropriate word . ... they were .. . how shall I put it? . . . uh . ... > “Stupid?” Ah. that’s precisely the word I was groping for. Thank you. “You’re welcome. Yeah, I listen to these mopes on TV and I read what they got to say. And I never heard a worse bunch of moaners. They moan about not making enough millions. They moan that the coach don’t appreciate them. They moan that they gotta go on TV or answer a question. They moan that they gotta take a drug test. They moan that they don’t like their contract. Then when they get a new contract, they moan that they don’t like* that one either. You got more cheerful people in a hospital emergency room?’ Yes, they do tend to be self-centered and take a narrow view of life. “I listen to some of these jocks talking on TV and I ask myself how they got through four years of high school. This guy Dingleberry on the Mets.” Strawberry. * “Whatever. I read that he got offered $3 million a year to play baseball. He said it was an insult. He’s 28 years old. After one year, he pays his agent and his taxes and he’s got $2 million left. He puts that in bonds, and he’s got $150,000 interest a year for the rest of his life. And he’s insulted. If somebody would insult me like that, I’d kiss their galoshes.” They do tend to get a bit spoiled. “If I got caught doing dope on my job, or getting sloshed, I’m out. With these guys, the manager says it’s so sad and tragic and we should all.be understanding, and they go away to a clinic to get their noses cleaned out, and when they come* back the fans stand up and clap like trained monkeys. Then when the fan wants an autograph, he’s got to pay a ten-spot before the mope will scribble his name.” Yes, they seem to be profit-oriented. “They’re making all this money, and getting all this attention, but they’re too dumb to put on a bathrobe? When .the neighbor lady comes over in the morning to have coffee with my wife^I don’t runout of the shower and jump in front of her telling her, ‘Take a look at this!’ She’d call the cops. No, my wife would call the cops. No, my wife would stab me. I put on a bathrobe.” You’ve always been a gent. “So what I want to know is why that woman would take a job like that? I mean, can an editor force somebody to be a sportswriter?” ’• No, there are alternatives. “That’s what I figured. She could be the kind of reporter who interviews normal people. Like when there’s a tornado or a flood, and you ask somebody how bad their house got wrecked, they don’t take off their underwear and wave their privates at you.” I’ve never seen that. “Or if you cover a school board meeting and ask somebody on the school board how big the budget is going to be, he don’t unzip his pants and ask if you wanna peek?” That would be unusual. “So she decided on her own that she was going to be a sportswriter, even though she knew that she’d have to go in and talk to a lot of palookas who don’t know nothing except you hit a ball, kick a ball, throw a ball and maybe break somebody’s leg.” I assume that was her own decision. “Then, it’s like the old saying goes, you lay down with dogs you get up with fleas.” But the athletes take showers, so they don’t have fleas. “Yeah, you’re right, so I take that back. Besides, most dogs have better manners.” G erm any plus G erm any adds up to one big m ess Cody Shearer North American Syndicate WASHINGTON — This week 41 years of national division ended in Germany. The black, red and gold flag of a united Germany was hoisted atop the Berlin Reichstag and 17 million easterners joined their brethren in the West. So why isn’t the world celebrating? I’ve been on the phone during the past few days chatting with young friends in East and West Germany. And on this historic occasion, most seem quite nervous about the future.* For starters, my friends in West Germany are sick of hearing news about their brothers and sisters in the East. For the past year the west German media has reported on everything —that East German women have an orgasm more often than women in the West and that East Germans would rather continue working slowly as they did during socialist times. There have also been disturbing news reports about the extent of racial hatred in East Germany. During the Honecker era, solidarity with the people of Mozambique and Vietnam was compulsory. But most East Germans resented foreigners who worked there when full employment prevailed. Now the fear is that East Germans will resent anyone nqt German, particularly the large numbers of Turkish im m igrants living in West Germany. Naturally most of my West German friends look at unification from a personal perspective and they see they have little to gain in the short term. There is already 25 percent unemployment in East Germany and they are flooding to the West, causing higher rents and increased taxes, that stand at 45 percent. What can East Germans bring to us of any value, my friends ask. “This country was leveled in the second World War and my parents rebuilt it,” explains one law student in Frankfurt. “Now we have to start all over again with another country, paying more and more bills. Who needs it?” The notion that West Germany will remain unchanged by the absorption of 17 million people is pure fantasy. The East Germans are a different breed. For example, only 6 percent of East Germans are Catholic, compared with 43 percent in the West. Lifestyles and expectations are also different. More than half of the women in East Germany are employed outside the home. Less than one-third of the women in West Germany work. What concerns many in East Germany is that their half of a united Germany will soon become a wasteland. Unemployment is expected to rise to nearly 50 percent of the working population within the next year. Already the consciousness of being poor has triggered a state of paranoia in East Germany. So do those of us in the West have anything to fear as far as instability in the eastern portion of a united Germany? I wish I could share the feeling that the new Germany is practically harmless. But when I think of the process of German unification during the past year, it arouses all kinds of fears. Come now, I say to myself, the Germans are not all that dangerous. They have just managed to get themselves in a hell of an economic and political mess. And they will have to pay for it for decades to come. If anything, history has taught us that those who are socially deprived inevitably wrap themselves in the flag of nationalism to conquer their fears. It is not difficult to make the case that crippling economic. conditions in the eastern section of Germany will sooner or later precipitate a call for economic expansion. How will a hungry state of 80 million people, with such an irrepressable expansionist past, avoid devouring a country like Poland, that is on the verge of bankruptcy with no big brother to support it? Could disappointment and rage in the eastern half of Germany turn into uncontrolled hatred of Poles? People who are frightened of the future always choose security. Given this, isn’t there ample evidence in German history to suggest a quick unification of German states is a poor idea? ‘ My German friends spy they do not find much security in their lives and are often spooked by immigrant Turks and arriving easterners. They are so apprehensive that they too have reason to fear for themselves and unification. What happened in Berlin last week may explain the dangers in unification. During a first division soccer game, team Hertha had a home game against Hamburg’s FC St. Pauli, a club with a liberal image. “Unemployed, unemployed,” chanted the 25,000 Berlin fans. “Taxpayers, taxpayers,” shouted the St. Pauli supporters. as$uredly offended a good segment of the more righteous and Christian portion of its readers. Good job, State Press! As for Ms. Gibbons, you missed your calling. You should have been an English major. That letter was one of the most humorous writings I’ve read in quite a while. Which national comedian do you write for? He’s going to go far! I know you probably attempted to write your letter in a serious vein, and I sympathize with your plight, but really dear, did you actually expect your letter to be read and not be laughed at, with all of its comical written portraits of an average ASU fan? You’ve seen those shirts and I have too. They’re all over campus glorifying these doggy rapes on the backs of your average overzealous ASU fans. Have you seen those “I love cats . . . DEAD ONES!”, shirts? Just between you and me, I think we should call the N.S.P.C.A. and report those animal murders immediately! Better yet, maybe you and I could start our own campus “shirt patrol,” scouring the campus and reporting these capital offense violators to the ASU police, who do nothing but harrass students anyway. Really, Bobbie baby, what are you doing running anywhere where you might encounter college boys who would catcall at you? No matter what you looked like or were wearing, you can definitely expect college boys to catcall. This is a learned behavioral trait passed down by our fathers and their fathers before them. And come on, darling, do you think that women have not been guilty of catcalling at some shirtless jock out jogging? I think not. Lighten up, honey. These college guys meant no harm and did nothing but cater to their macho images, trying to win peer approval. Is that so wrong? Do you think there are many students here who enjoy pulling a Huskie’s backend toward them, hiding their penis somewhere? And what did you mean when you said you’d make sure Bubba was “much BIGGER than you so you don’t miss out on any of the fun?” Are you thinking naughty thoughts? That’s a no-no, Bobby. We won’t have any of that! Oh, by the way, an early alert. Let’s be on the lookout for those inevitable Bear, Duck, and Wildcat molestation shirts that will rear their ugly heads when we play our Pac-10 rivals. You know what, Ms. Gibbons? We better instruct our young college boys to put a Trojan on! Wake up and smell the coffee! Freedom of speech and press (and shirts, I think) is guaranteed. It’s people like you making a mountain out of a molehill that will send our country back thousands of years into the dark ages. Do you really want that, Ms. Gibbons? If that would happen, you could not write about penises anymore in a respectable newspaper like the State Press. Thurston Hanson Sophomore, English major L E T T E R S That darn P-w drd E d ito r: It all started Wednesday morning when I got up groggy, late for my 7:40, and had clumps of duck-butter dripping from the corners of my eye sockets. I wormed my way through the throng of other tardy ASU students, clutching my books loosely as I went to snatch my beloved State Press. What’s the morning without the many varied opinions confronting me every day on page four? Anyway, as I opened it up, I began to read the letter from Roberta Gibbons, campus “Huskie.” Lo and behold, what did I find in paragraph three but references to genitalia, namely a PENIS! Needless to say, these bold and graphic descriptions of bestiality amused me in that on an extremely conservative campus such as ASU they were actually printed by the cam p u s n e w sp a p e r. Not th a t I ’m disappointed by any means. On the contrary, I’m joyous that the State Press has the guts to print a letter that most State Press Friday, October 18,1990 Page 6 ASU student dies in car w reck By LAURA SCHM IDT S tate Press accident at 1:40 a m., twenty-eight miles south of Holbrook, Ariz. good.' ” Stewart, a freshman engineering student and a member of the American Indian Science and Engineering Society, died in an automobile accident Sept. 29 on her way to visit her family in Fort Defiance, Ariz. “I last saw her Friday afternoon around 1:30 or 2 p.m.,” Stopper said. “ I watched her pack her stuff.” According to police reports, 18-year-old Stewart and her 21-year-old boyfriend, Myron Endischee, died in a one-vehicle * Before ASU student Tammie Lynn Stewart left to go north last month, she reminded her friends to finish their homework before attending weekend parties. ‘‘She was funny,” said Karen Stopper, a sophomore undeclared major and Stewart’s close high school friend. “She always made me laugh. She was always telling me, ‘Do your homework. Have fun this weekend. Be Endischee was driving with three passengers in his 1984 four-wheel-drive pick­ up when the vehicle veered to the right side of Route 377 northbound, police said. Reports indicated that the driver over­ corrected the steering, causing the vehicle to roll 3% times off the left side of the road. The police report stated that all the passengers were ejected from the vehicle. S te w a rt Turn to StrPart, p age 8. Police Report •Police contacted a student at 701 Alpha Drive, because someone at 609 Alpha Drive said the student was making too much noise. Police confronted the student who was involved in an altercation with an unknown person. The student was extrem ely intoxicated and was warned of disorderly conduct. •A student reported that a man not affiliated with ASU has been harassing him over the phone in his room at Mariposa Residence Hall. released. •A 15-speed Trek bicycle, valued at $475, was stolpn from the west side of the Language and Literature Building. •An employee’s purse was stolen from the first floor restroom in the Administration Building. Loss is estimated at $7. •A female student claimed a man she did not know made sexual advances toward her on Cady Mall. The student did not wish to file charges, and the man was not located. ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday: •An employee backed an ASU vehicle into another University vehicle in the Mail Services parking lot. Damage is estimated at $450. •A student was injured when his raquetball partner hit him in the face with his racket at the Student Recreation Complex. The student was tran sp o rted to Tempe St. Lukes, where he was treated and Tempe police reported the following incident Thursday : •A m an en tered a C ircle K, 2115 S. McClintock Drive, and placed a candy bar and'a dollar bill on the counter. When the clerk opened the register, the man took out a gun and demanded all the money. The clerk gave the man all the money, and the man fled southbound on foot. Police checked the area, but were unable to locate the man. Compiled by State Press reporter Michelle Paul. FOOTBALL WEEKEND SPECIAL This weekend get Oregano’f AU-You^ sn-Eat plzza.pasta % and salad bar buffet plttS AH-Vpu-Can-Drink Pepsi for lunch o r dinner for only S3.7& But hurry, It’s for three THE ~CORNERSTO 1 FO R P resent coupon w hen o rd erin g. N o t valid w ith o th er o tter». P u rc h a s e a n y s m a ll, m e d iu m o r la ttje y o g u rt a n d re c e iv e a n y s m a lle r s iz e fo r V; F R E E . ■ Topping Extra P I2 Z A ÍU F F E T Expires 10-19-90 Computer Systems Center J a m tra k Macintosh Plus Friday & Saturday $ 200 Sex on the Beach $ 250 Monster Mugs $ 200 Coyote Tequila *699 INCLUDES: ✓ 800K Disk Drive ✓ 1mb of Memory ✓ Full Keyboard ✓ M ouse M acintosh pow er and ea se o f u se has ✓ Multifinder never been this affordable before. It runs 1000's o f M acintosh applications ✓ HyperCard Software and is com pact enough for any desk. B rand new [fa cto ryfresh w ith one-year warrantees. « I PostData 286112 INCLUDES: ✓ 40mb Hard Disk ✓ 12mhz 286 Turbo ✓ 101 Keyboard ✓ Mono Monitor ✓ 1 mb of Memory * 799, Sunday Night — End Zonie Party! E vasa/m t SN A K E EY ES LIVE ■ ■ ■ illlll Add $299fo r VGA Odor 286pow er, high resolution m onitor and a big 40m b hard disk com e a t this greatprice ! Plus w ith Com puter System s C enter's great local service and support, you can't go wrong. Everydm^ to Make Your Conm derjim m i p* a * s & * 1 6 9 ra siu a ia D o t M 2 4 0 0 B G e t o n lin a M odem SÌs : - . iiV T ' ru n s a t 300. 1200 o r 2 4 0 0 b au d an d la h illy c o m p a tib le , Computer Systems Center *399 For Both », m ultale tonto and peche», ana paper perking wdh • g m a m m u m n ib ìm “Systems Is Our Middle Name" MK»li TE co m e* w ith s o f tw a r e , 1■ VGA Monitor&Card a trix P rin te r ßj iSSSmMaì Incton leed» and front eeleclebUMjpe 199$ STORE PHOENIX HOURS: itti St t IlnnJilSfi !□ =■ Camtowk Cameiback 266-7873 Sat. 10-5 Upgrade to color now I to make all of your fa­ vorite programa look brighter and dearer. Get m awesome, deal on a 16 bit VGA card and a 14" color VGA monitor with a swivel [ bam. HURRY! TEMPE I 1f i ® 8 Î L iv e Southern* McClintock * I 838-1236j W ■ ■ ■ starts at 8:00 p.m. Siate Presi Page? Frida^OctobeM^990 Il This Friday and Saturday N ight Tem pe will flock into the Future inside over 10,000 square feet of PURE R /W DANCE ENERGY. Beginning a t 8:00PM enjoy 25c cocktails till 11:00PM plus w e will throw open the doors to A RIZO NA STATE UNIVERSITY fo r ABSOLUTELY N O COVER until 9:00PM . This w eekend you and your pals can hear, taste and sm ell the future in POST M O D ER N M ADNESS. This w eekend it is all about DANCE. O pen till 3:00AM both Friday and Saturday night Also tonight, M XZ is proud to host IE and XN VIP BASH!! a newdance environment bom from the Imagination of the future and out of the past. Don’t stop tin you get enough. Dance now. • D ra fts w h ile frie y la s t w ith w ris tb a n d a n d invite. > A ll s o ro rity w o m e n w ith w ris tb a n d a n d invite • N o c o v e r w ith w ris tb a n d a n d in v ite 3 919 EAST APACHE BLVD.TEMPE.AZ.921.9776.602 S b rttP m i Friday, O ctober 18.1990 Proposed shuttle to connect ASU campuses By DIANE SANTO RICO S tate Press A shuttle service between ASU West and the main campus could be a possibility in the future, but University officials claim it is not feasible at this time. Ron Cantrell, senior buyer in ASU Purchasing, said the University cannot give students vehicles to drive back and forth between the campuses. “ The policy for using University vehicles is that the driver has to be a University employee and it has to be for state business,” he said. “We have to find the funding for this (the shuttle).” Cantrell added that his hands are tied until further research is completed. Jim Rosendaul, a therapeutic recreation major who has epilepsy, is one of the students who is hoi able to drive to ASU West. When he was told the last two classes he needed for certification were only offered at ASU West at night, he notified University officials that something needed to be done. He said he pushed for a shuttle service for people who are without transportation or who are handicapped. According to C antrell, prices for purchasing seven-passenger mini-vans are approximately $15,000. Rent fees from ASU Garage/Motorpool range from $25 a day for a five-passenger vehicle to $50 a day for a 15-passenger van. Leon Shell, dean of Student Life, said he has spoken to Rosendaul on several occasions about the shuttle, but the idea is still on the drawing board. “This has only recently been brought to our attention,” Shell said. “It is still in the preliminary stages.” He added that money is the key issue at this point. “We have to find out how costly this would be, whose budget it would come out of and if students would have to pay some kind of a fee,” Shell said, Clyde Jasmin, a senior management major who takes most of his classes at ASU West, said he has to depend on carpools, adding that it is frustrating to commute to the main campus. “I had a hard enough time working out a schedule at the west campus,” he said. “When you have fairly early classes (on the main campus) you have to compete with quite a few people on the freeways.” When consulted, Doug Bartosh, associate director of ASU Department of Public Safety, said he believes the idea has some merit, but the demand for the shuttle must be analyzed. “There is no indepth study at this point,” he said, “Although it would complement the Travel Reduction Plan.” The Travel Reduction Plan would reduce employee single-occupancy travel by classes have moved, and the sections Will be 5 percent. Stephanie Oliver, an Associated Students closed because of a lack of enrollment. But Xathleen Church, assistant vice of ASU senator from the College of Public Programs, said the University has not been president for academic programs and up front and honest with students who are services, said the classés will be open. “We will make sure the classes are open,” just entering the University. “ASU has to develop a policy of notifying she said. “Even if there is low enrollment.” incoming students and letting them know if Rosendaul said he is also concerned about classes they need are only offered at ASU . other students who are having trouble West,” she said. • getting to the west campus. Tedde Scharf, associate director of “The administrators told me that my Disabled Student Resources, said federal problem was solved,” he said. “But what law requires Disabled Resources to about other students? They will continue to accommodate its students in the most run into problems.” reasonable way. “ It’s a very broad law,” she said. “ It does Church said she would send a memo to not necessarily include transportation.” other deans on campus asking them if they Scharf said the law means disabled have had students complain about access to students cannot be prevented from taking ASU West. classes that any other student could get into, adding that there are other things that could “In all my time at ASU, no one has be done such as moving the classes to the complained to us about getting to ASU main campus or offering video courses. West,” she said. A fte r m e e tin g w ith s e v e ra l administrators in the College of Public Rosendaul said he originally considered Programs, Leisure Studies, and the Student utilizing carpools until he realized how Affairs office, Rosendaul was successful in undependable they can be. getting the two classes he needed — REC 364, Recreation for Special Population and “You can’t depend on carpools because REC 400, Therapeutic Recreation — moved what if the driver decides not to show up?,” to the main campus for the spring semester. he Said. “There is no public transportation Now, Rosendaul said he is concerned that at night, and the Dial-a-Ride stops at 6 recreation students will not be aware the p.m.” while Stewart was pronounced .dead at 5:10 a.m. at Holbrook Hospital from internal and head injuries. “She never woke up from the time of the accident,” Heape said. “She was never awake or spoke to anyone before she died.” Shannon Platero, a freshman nursirig major who graduated from high school with Stewart last year, said Stewart and Endischee were heading home for the weekend to comfort their best friend, who had lost his older sister in an automobile accident two weeks earlier. “It was really hard for her father because that was his girl, his oldest daughter,” she said. ' Platero said those who attended Stewart’s funeral on Oct. 3, had to stand in the aisles and outside of the chapel. “The whole high school was there,” she said. - ■ Leon Shell, dean of Student Life and acting associate vice president for Student Affairs, said the associate director of Residence Life notified him of Stewart’s death on the evening of Sept. 29. “When we get those inquiries, we a rt ‘ appreciative of privacy of the family during Stewart.____ C ontinued from page 6.; Legine Begay, a 19-year-old from Window Rock, Ariz., and 20-year-old Leonard Nez of Manuelito, N. M., survived the accident. Highway Patrol Officer Kelly Heape said it had not been determined if alcohol was involved in the accident. “I have no actual proof,” he said, adding that seatbelts were worn by some, but not all of the passengers. “There would have been no fatalities had the seatbelts been worn,’' Heape said. Police said Endischee died at the scene of the accident from massive head injuries An y this critical time,” he said, adding that Stewart’s death is the first student death this semester. As Stopper slowly copes with the loss of Stewart, she said she deals with the loss by confiding in close friends. “My friends and I have been sticking together,” she said. . Jamee Inghram, a sophomore liberal arts major and Stewart’s suitemate, said she did not know how to react to the whole ordeal. “I didn’t know what to say,” she said. l a r g e p iz z a FOR THE MEDIUM PRICE!! MORE October 1 thru October 14,1990, Domino's Pizza is offering a Large pizza for the Medium price! Don't miss o u t on this great price savings, pick up the phone and order yours today! Valid at ASU/Tempe location only. Not valid w ith any other coupons or offers. Subject to all appiicabl^state and local tax. The M otivational Series SERVING ASU SINCE 1980 968-5555 presen ted by U niversity and Rural A N 'D A S S O C I A T E M ore in B u sin ess O ctob e r 23,1990 10 am - 4 pm Lunch included M ore in l i f e O ctob e r 24, 1990 7 p m -1 0 pm Red Lion La P o sa d a 4949 E. Lincoln Dr. S cottsdale, A rizona for re serv atio n s a n d inform ation call ( 6 0 2 ) 2 7 4 -9 2 5 2 W h o s h o u ld a tte n d ? $ HOURS: l:0 0 a m -l :30am Sun.-Thurs. l:00am -2:30am Fri.-Sat. r onLY"' $3.00! ONLY $ 3 .0 0 for an additional Small pizza w ith the purchase o f another Small pizza o f equal or lesser value. N o lim it. N o cou­ pon necessary. At this location only. r d ¡3 l?J §2 tot v«M « M i an y odierooupjnd onaotoe* rafter», jSubjecUo $3.50! NLY "v $4.00! ONLY $ 3 .5 0 for an additional ONLY $ 4 .0 0 for an additional M edium pizza w ith the purchase of another Medium pizza o f equal or lesser value. N o lim it. N o coupon necessary. At th is loca­ pón necessary, A t this location only. tion only. M o ZA ■1 1 3 nm iuy 5o aa a Not v«Md «Mi any odiir coupon« or after» Subject to ell epplcable «tele and local tax. NotvaMd «Mi any ether coupon» or offer». Subject to ad applicable alato and tocto tax. SPARKY'S SUNDEVIL SPECIAL DELIGHT ^ i/o ijin a l d e v il s " 3NLY $5.49 for an Original Small three-item pizza ana one am ^’’IamaZa Z'«l aa . D iet or Classic Coke. O ne coupon per pizza. Expires: 10/31/90 0m M edium three-item pizza and tw o Diet or Classic Cokes. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 10/31/90 ONLY $ 1 1 .4 9 for an Original Large Sun-Devil Special or any three-item pizza and a 6-pack of D iet or Classic Coke. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 10/31A » Not valid «4*1 any odiar ooupona or aflora. Subject to all appioabto alato and local lax. «idi any odiar o 8NcivaNkf Subject to ad appleabto 0 P h oen ix ( 6 0 2 ) 7 7 6 -9 9 2 1 N o r t h e r n A r iz o n a vdM «Mi any other coupon« or after*. Bitot Subject to ell epptceMe »tele and local tail. Y O U ONLY ^Friday^OctobeM^JWO^ S to tt Press /> V SH O P Pfl3g 9 ^ 1 *5 $ The ^ ie r f ^ e rs W * SW? Avenir»ond ^ , d « » s iie S ' thry phoenl^ c o rd,n°'i Ph0^hand,se m of S o o * < ‘ A v o n e^ an d ^ Selected * * • $ & * off' 12 0 , m o f e P u ' . . t>e , (> o > S » - 0w « sa 'e * * 0 00 C O tO ® ’ * e d \ o 'W V r . ^ S A 0'9 V.OC® V —■ vto0 *8 * - d © p lA l O «9 4 3 - l / ^ S M tP R U Friday. October 12,1990 Program s seek to involve foreign students By CHRISTINA SCHROEDER S tate Press ' Many oif ASU’s foreign Students fail to interact with their American counterparts despite efforts to get them involved in campus activities, a University official said. “It is a gross generalization, but it is usually most likely that the foreign students seek out other international Students from their part of the country,” said MaryLee Garter, program coordinator for the International Students Office. “ Older (foreign) students who are already familiar with the University are anxious to take them under their wings, and so they are less likely to associate with other American students.” Carter said more than 2,200 foreigners on student visas attend ASU, 60 percent of which are graduate students. She said students from East India and Asian countries, who represent a large portion of foreign students on campus, have their own organizations, adding that these students also will seek out Phoenix communities of the same nationality. ISO, Carter said, has instituted programs designed to in c re a se in te rc u ltu ra l communication between students and the community in and around ASU. ■“Pen-Pals in Person” unites American and foreign students, and “Speakers Bureau” allows international students to talk to community organizations about their countries, she said. Students' also have opportunities to join h o st f a m i l i e s for C h ris tin a s and Thanksgiving through formalized programs organized by community volunteers. But ASU student Parichat Jung said that with jobs and schoolwork, foreign students don’t always have the time to assimilate. “I used to get involved (in campus life) more, but now I am too busy,’*said Jung, a fine arts graduate student from Thailand. “It is sometimes hard to be part of the group and fit in,” she said. “In reality, you never belong until you look and talk like an American. “But America is becoming* a multi;' cultural society, and in the future things will change for the better.” Jung said that when she arrived in Arizona, she found it difficult to adjust to the weather and found transportation to be a problem, adding that she also worried about paying the bills. Carter said *the U. S. Immigration and Naturalization’ Service requires foreign students to prove they have financial resources to cover their expenses while studying in America. “This comes to $14,000 per student, and if they bring a spouse it is another $3,000,” she said. “Every child brought to the United States is an additional $3,000.” Financial aid is not plentiful for foreign students because they are not allowed to apply for aid that is U. S. Government sponsored, Carter added. “Undergrads can apply for the Arizona Board of Regents International Student Scholarship which is awarded for two years,” she said. “Grad students, however, may apply for benefits offered to American graduate students.” Like many U. S. students, foreigners may try to work while studying in America. In order to work in the U. S., Carter said they must apply for working visas that are not always granted. Jung said that instead of being valued by potential employers for their knowledge or ability, foreign students are considered worthless if they don’t have a visa. Survey to reveal students’ opinions on cam pus life BY M ELISSA W OOLVERTON C ontributing W riter ASU officials said a student opinion survey that will reveal how 1,500 students feel about stress, student health, campus violence and the environment will help administrators make University decisions. “A concrete example of the survey impacting the decisions of the administration is the Student Recreation Center,” said S. Leellen Brigman, coordinator of ASU research. “In 1985, there was the issue of funding the SRC. We did a survey on what students were willing to pay and what kind of facilities they wanted. A lot of what students wanted is there now." Today, students pay a $25 student recreation fee each semester so they can utilize the facility that houses a weight room, raquetball courts, swimming pool and other exercise services. Leon Shell, acting associate vice president of student affairs and dean of student life, said the 1990 Student Opinion Survey that will be conducted in November is a vital gauge for ASU officials. “We take a serious look at the results as to levels of satisfaction in certain areas,” he said. “If we are looking for justification for a certain program, we look at the survey to see if there is a need by the students.” Charles Peters, a University management research analyst in the Student Affairs research and evaluations office, explained each of the survey’s sections. “We are doing a section on student health, which will be an inventory of specific health concerns ahd problems,” he said. Peters said the section on the campus environment will focus on three areas. “First, we will ' ask students to rate the physical appearance of the campus,” he said. “For example, what they think of the buildings and the grounds. Second, we will ask students to rate the environment in terms of friendliness in the different colleges and agencies. Third, we want to know how students perceive the campus — like do they think it’s big or small. “We want to get. an image of how students perceive the campus as a whole.” _ Peters said the stress category will consist of a list of factors that students will have to raté in terms of stress, adding that the campus violence section will survey students about'their experiences and attitudes toward violence. Brigman said the cost of the survey is difficult to determine because of all the different offices and staff that work on it. Get down to business. . Advertise in the State Press Classifieds! mm rm lini la m i F re e T e e -S h irts w h e n yo u b u y s tu d e n t s e a s o n tic k e ts 18 g a m e s fo r $ 2 0 , in c lu d e th e T R IB U N E C L A S S IC UPS Packing & Shipping STOP, DROP and ROLL AT • FAX Service • U S. Mail • Resumes • Word Processing & Typing • Mail Box Rental • Money Orders • Full Copy Services 7-13, J9 9 Ó EVERY FRIDAY 12:30-1:30 p.m. Union Programming Lounge ALWAYS FREE! and much more!! 24 HOUR MAIL ACCESS 8 2 4 S . M ill A v e . { S W c o r n e r o f M ill & U n iv e r s ity ) Today’s Special Guest: GHOS 9 6 6 -0 0 7 6 Presented by R IM IR I!1 9 6 6 -1 7 5 9 » G. E. Howard COMEDY HOUR Who Is Button Man? Find out November 9th. Com edy Committee / huck, the original Party Lizard, invites you to discover Tempeis newest oasis— a civilized watering hole for fun and frivolous pursuits! W ith all the features a sophisticated chuckawalla e x a c ts: a 24-foot wall of video playing the hottest new music and sporting events/Karaoke entertainm ent that lets you sing with the stars. An exciting new menu of house drinks like the Slippery Salamander and Iguana Ice. And even—when the evening heats up—a special appearance v. by your host, Chuck himself! Don’t m iss the wall-to-walla fun at Chuckawallak! C m / W E SB D U m N THE BUTTES 18th Street south o f Broadway \ m Page 12 S t ik P m i Friday, O ctober 1g, 1990 Tuition C ontinued from page 1. force by mejnbers by financial aid experts paints a rosier picture than what actually exists. He added that the report, fails to account for all students with financial aid needs. “It doesn’t include those students who are intimidated by the financial aid process and never apply,” he said, adding that the report also fails to account for students who were approved for financial aid, but declined to accept it. However, the task force did agree on several issues: •the elimination of a five-year plan that increased the percentage of the cost of education for students by .5 percent each year. •the adoption of a full-time equivalency formula that would consider enrollment over a three-year period. Under the form ula, if one of the universities experiences a drastic drop or increase in enrollment, this would be weighted and averaged over three years so the number would be more accurate. •the Use of actual budgets in the tuition­ setting process. The Arizona Students Association last year claimed that the use of projected budgets is not always accurate and can result in inflated statistics. “Students have been pushing for the use of actual budgets for two or three years,” said Larry L’Heureux, ASA executive director. “We have achieved our goal to make the cost of education formula more accurate. That’s a victory.” The COP will meet today to discuss the tuition-setting issue and the financial aid dilemma. Later, the regents will convene to decide a budget for Arizona’s three universities, which will be passed along to the Arizona Legislature. Fajita Prima r ? Strips  j ofl Tmarinated  r - beef B Eor - E F W ( f H l C K f N “ T chicken served in a flour tortilla with sour cream and grilled onions,.tomatoes and green chilies. Served with prima salsa and fresh fried tortilla chips. O NLY REG. $3.79 $ |9 9 one per custom er — expires 10-19-90 IN T H E C O R N E R S T O N E C o rn e r o f R u ra l & U n iv e rs ity 921-1230 Fajita Prima I R epairs C ontinued from page 1. Whitt said, adding that the lack of football games that weekend will make things easier. Businesses should not be affected by next weekend’s closure, he said, adding that he personally informed local businesses that the intersection would remain open to local traffic. . Officials claimed the repairs will be just about finished after next weekend. Assistant Public Works Director Judy Greenberg said she was “not aware” of any more lengthy closures to repair the intersection Whitt said workers hope to have all the base asphalt down by Oct. 22 so the road can be sealed one lane at a time on a later date. Whitt said he does not foresee any problems occurring when workers redig the hole to make repairs next weekend. “The only thing that could jump up and bite us in the rear is if we go down there and find something we don’t know how to deal with,” Whitt said, adding that snags are unlikely. Support tile Devils ASU vs. U o f A Saturday, November 2 4 ,1 9 9 0 at U o f A Stadium, Tucson $A A O O Price Includes: Call o r stop by: • Round trip bus transportation •One night RadissonSuite Hotel •End Zone seat at the game •Happy Hour after the game • Full buffet breakfast Sunday morning •Taxes and baggage handling C arlson Travel Network 707 S. Forest Tem pe, AZ 85281 Or ca ll Bob at Space is lim ited. s lo w ? Let us help. STATE PRESS Classifieds Matthews Center Basement, ASU Per person, based on double. occupancy 967-9403 FREEALL DAY CONCERT Reggae! 965-6731 T h e State P ress M a g a z in e A W E Ê k L Y GO L LË G E TOWN JO U KN A L 410 S. Mill 967-CHUY NEW & RECYCLED FASHIONS B U Y S E LL TRADE Sunday, Oct. 14 only *5°° Proceeds benefit St. Mary's Food Bank The Bone Mama's Birthday Bash ALL AGES! ECOTOUR fe a tu re d a t Q -F e s t Alcohol will be served w/proper ID Special Party Favors to the First 35 Guests BONE M AM A T-Shirts, Plus—KYLA HEARTW OOD - Singer, Songwriter from Stealin' Horses Plus—MACA DANG DANG Plus—The Bone Mama's Poetry and FREE Polka Lessons at 7 p.m. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL... 7 2 4 E. G l e n d a l e . P h x . 2 2 7 W . U n i v e r s i t y Dr., T e m p e 8 7 0 -8 5 0 7 9 6 8 -2 5 5 7 Gin Blossoms TONIGHT! with The Fishermen from L.A. Concert starts at 9 p.m. State Prest Frida^OctobeM 2(1990 Page 13 The country's latest daredevil craze p lu n ges into Arizona by Jen n ifer Franklin photos by Irwin D augherty T here is a new breed of thrillseekers in Arizona, and their catch words are freefall, the unchecked fall of a body through air, and vertigo, a subjective sensation of dizziness in which an in­ dividual feels that he, or his surround­ ings, is whirling about sickeningly. The week before my first bungee jump, Chris Schneer, one of those thrillseekers and co-owner of a newly-formed Tempe bungee company, Freefall Bungee, tried to explain the feeling of hurling off a 200-foot bridge. However Schneer, 26, said he can’t really explain the feeling. “It’s just something you have to experience,” he said. Schneer, who works for a Valley tour company, said he has tried everything he can think of that is dangerous and prefers bungee jumping, His list includes parachuting (Several times), skiing, snowboarding, scuba-diving, surfing (since he was three) and skateboarding (professionally for years). “ I’ve done all the crazy, stupid things — all there is to do that requires risk, and I’m telling you, there’s nothing like bungee,” the California native said. “But don’t tell your mother,” he warned as he handed me the directions to the secret jump site. Part of the thrill of jumping is that you have to sneak around to do it. Jumping from bridges is illegal in the United States, he said. . “We mainly go in the early morning, to keep a low pro­ file,” Schneer said. “ If we are seen, we’ll get kicked off the bridge.” •. Thoughts of my miniscule paycheck kept crossing my mind, and I kept thinking there was absolutely no way I was going to throw myself off a bridge. Sensing my skepticism, he tried to assure me. "The chances of (the bungee chords) breaking are about the same chances of getting struck by lightning on the eighth hole with a golf club while you’re in your backswing.” - For a moment, in the safety of the noisy restaurant around us, I thought it might be a reasonable thing to do. The sun had risen an inch above the horizon the following Saturday morning when I arrivedat the jump site, located about a two hour drive away from Phoenix. Rocky, treacherous canyon walls burrowed into the ravine beneath the bridge. There was no water, only the earth threatening to swallow us into its muddy innards. It took more than an hour for Mike Stine, veteran jumper and owner of Vertigo Bungee in Lake Tahoe, California to set up the equipment. Stine, 29, said he takes every precaution to ensure the , Douglas S m ith, a 29-year-o ld graphic designer from Phoenix, contem plates the re lia b ility o f his bungee chord as he plunges o ff th e bridge a t th e secret Jumping place. Jim P h illip s sw an dives his w ay tow ard th e rocky ravine bottom w h ile fello w bungee Jumpers look on. safety of the jumpers. “It’s pretty important not to slam the clients into the bridge,” he said. Stine and Vertigo employee Robert Hatcher joined Schneer and his Freefall co-owners Barrett Rinzler and Matt Engstrom, both 22, for the weekend jumps. After a brief safety lecture detailing how to avoid rope burns, the jumping began. “Who will be my first victim . . . I mean client?” Stein asked. Jumpers must, by sheer will, step into the full-body harness that will be their lifeline to the bridge. Then, in order to climb out onto the bridge railing, they have to force themselves to ignore the blinding terror that shakes their bodies and severs their vocal chords. It is not a physical challenge to jump,off the bridge, but it is possibly the most difficult mental challenge known to man. “That’s the hardest part,” Schneer said. “The guy who’s ready to go is nervous as hell, he’s sweating and then he has to actually climb over the railing of the bridge,” he said. “I’m still not sure what makes me jump,” he added. “It’s just an incredible feeling.” Stine summed it up as he double-checked the harness for the first jumper. > “Your mind cannot reconcile what your body is about to do,” he said. “It’s just not rational.” The jumper hooks four bungee chords to his harness. The chords are essentially just big rubber bands, made by en­ casing hundreds of continuous length rubber strands in a nylon sheath. ’ The chords, which are tied together, have a minimum static breaking strength of 4,500 pounds and are used by the military to attach tanks and other heavy equipment to parachutes when dropping them from airplanes. All of the other equipment including the seat harness, chest harness, webbing, steel carabiners and the hooks at­ taching the chord are rated at over 4,000 pounds, Schneer said. The group gives the first fearful thrill-seeker, who is now posed to dive, a countdown from five. “F iv e.. . four.. . th ree .. . two. . . one,” they yell, and then there is a second of silence before the plummeting person can gasp enough air in his lungs to scream. After throwing himself off the bridge in a swan dive, the jumper freefalls for 50 seemingly endless feet at about 40 Turn to B u n gee, page 14. “ l can't walk, I think I need to change my underwear and I need a beer. ” -Tres Henderson's •post-jump comment Page 14 State Press Friday, October 18,1990 Bungee State Press * C ontinued from page 13- m.p.h. For added terror, the bungee chord streches another 50 feet before stopping him completely in a seated position. Now he rebounds up about 80 feet at an eration of 4 G’s. Finally, after bouncKout five more times, the jumper slows to a swing. Thè jumper’s uncontrollable screams echo throughout the canyon. Once he stops and realizes he’s still alive, loud, wicked laughter peals out of him. again without his control. A rope is lowered to him from the bridge, and after he attaches it to his harness, he is pulled up by the other members of his group. A group is usually no larger than 15 peo­ ple, Schneer Said. Any larger and the group would be too conspicuous. “Everybody in the group has a different fall. It never feels the same for anybody,” he said. Some fall in the swan dive, some do backdrops and some do both. Douglas Smith, 29, a graphic designer from Phoenix, said it was the most incredi­ ble thing he’s ever done. “ Yee-haw,” he yelled. “Whew, wow, oh my God, I’m going to do it every weekend,” he said breathlessly after being pulled back up to the bridge. ASU travel and tourism major Très Henderson's first comments after jumping were, “ I can’t walk, I think I need to change my underwear, and I need a beer.” Then it was my turn. When I stepped out onto the railing the only thing I could think was that I must be out- of my mind. Robbert Hatcher, 19, an employee of Vertigo Bungee, double-checked my harness and helped me onto the bridge. His last words to me before the countdown were, “Have a nice flight.” ^ „ My body said to my mind. “You can • jump, the rest of us are staying.” To say the plunge is dizzying would be an understatement. I knew I was screaming, but I couldn’t hear myself. And whoever said terror is blinding lied. I saw everything — including the bridge as I dove past it, and the rocks and vegetation on the earth below, which I was approaching without any feeling of control. There were trillions of tiny white stars bouncing in front of my eyes. I was scared out of my mind. Desperately I tried to cl­ ing to the ropes, to air, to anything. The bungee caught me with a sudden but comfortable pull, not a sharp jerk as I had expected. When I started to rebound, my stomach felt as if it had pushed up through my esophagus and was preparing to leave my body, but the bounce had sprung the the stars out of my vision and I could see clearly again. " It’s simply not graceful. My arms and legs seemed to flail in the space around me until the bouncing ended. And then there was instantaneous relief and breathing began again. Moments later, back on the bridge, I was greeted with pats on the back, high-fives, and continuous laughter. “It has to seem dangerous,” Stine said. “That’s what the thrill is all about.” Stine entered the rubberband-testing profession two years ago, but first saw the sport on the television show Thài’s Incredible eight years ago. “Then I found out about California Bungee four years ago,” he said. “Now here I am. Welcome to my office (the bridge).” . The sport is quickly gaining popularity in California despite the fact that jumping from public or private bridges can violate public nuisance and trespassing laws. Stine said Vertigo Bungee takes from 50 to 100 jumpers a week, adding that so many people want to jump again that he has a “frequent flier program” giving se­ cond time jumpers a discount. Jim Phillips, 26, was still thinking about falling off the bridge two days later. “ It’s like reliving the fall over and over,” he said. “On the bridge I kept thinking of all these sayings like, ‘There’s no turning back and there is nothing to fear but fear itself.’ “As soon as I get the money, I’m going again.” Freefall Bungee is the first and only bungee company in Arizona, and thrill- ■ seekers pay $75 for two jumps. In Califor­ nia, the cost of two jumps is $100 or more. “The price is nothing for the ex­ perience,” Schneer said. Space is limited and people sometimes need to make reser­ vations up to two months in advance, he added. “Once people jump, they get so stoked,” he said. “They say, ‘This is the most in­ sane thing, I would have driven six hours to do it. I would have had an arm cut off. I can’t wait to do it again.’” Schneer said there has never been an ac­ cident reported in the United States, but there have been three deaths in France. “The system we use, compared to the one in Australia and some other places, is so much more sophisticated,” he said. In Australia and New Zealand a jump called a toe drop is popular as well as dangerous. The jumper attaches a single chord to his ankle before jumping. Schneer said that most American bungee companies will not let their clients per­ form toe drops. q O O - w W e ’v e g o t it c o v e r e d S a t u r d a y a n d S O u n d a y n l y Buy Any Regular Size Sandwich and Get the 2nd of Equal or Lesser Value FREE Different is better chlotzsky’s ■ l _ . . . . . . TTWV Tempe Center 18 E. 10th Street .Tempe 968-0056 Sandwiches ♦ Soups ♦ Salads Tempe Village Square Priest and Southern Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer per visit. Tèmpe 966-7672 O VERTIM E p r e s e n t s . . . A D D IC T IO N S A program designed to help you recognize, understand and deal with a personal addiction or that of another. CO-DEPENDENCY October 10th and SEX ADDICTION both with Or. Greg Crow, co-author of Lonely All The Time: Recognizing and Understanding Sex Addiction. FOOD & FITNESS ADDICTION October 17th October 24th w ill) a special professional panel to discuss issues and answer questions. A nother day, ano ther 200 fo o t fa ll, C alifo r­ n ia’s Vertigo Bungee em ployee Robbert Hat­ cher doesn’t flin ch as he falls backw ard into th e ravine. OVERTIME meets every Wednesday, 7:00pm, Cochise Room of the ASU Memorial Union. C a ll 894-2201, ext. 219 lo r m ore In fo rm a tio n In the seven months he has been jump­ ing regularly, the worst injury he’s seen has been a rope burn the size of a quarter. Even rope burns are uncommon thanks to a foot-long tootsie roll-shaped nylon air­ bag Stine developed. The bag covers the inch-thick chords so if they hit the jumper, he is protected from what are called “bungee kisses”, or rope burns. Stine takes 50 to 100 people a week to locations in Northern California and has supervised more than 1,500 jumps. His oldest client was a 63-year-old grandmother. Stine said almost as many women jump as men. . The bungee companies in the U. S. will not take clients younger than 18, Schneer said. All clients must sign a detailed form releasing the company from liability in case of death, injury, or personal loss. A problem facing the companies is in­ surance: they can’t get it. “Maybe Lloyd’s of London would insure us, but we couldn’t afford it,” Schneer said. “It’s just like parachuting,” he said. “When people started jumping out of airplanes everyone thought they were com­ pletely insane. Now thousands of people jump from planes everyday and it’s insured.” Meanwhile, the adventurers who freefall seeking the feeling of vertigo will continue to jump without it. Freefall Bungee is located at 155 W. 3rd S t, Tempe. For more information call 921-2214. B R O A D W A Y S O U T H W E S T , S E A R S 4 7 5 S P E C IA L T Y S H O P S , LO S A R C O S F O O D C O U R T A N D T H E LOS A R C O S M A R K ETPLA C E / SC O TTSD A LE & M C D O W ELL RO ADS l O PEN M O N D A Y TH R O U G H F R ID A Y 1 0A M U N T IL 9 P M /S A T U R D A Y T O A M tlN T IL 6 P M /S U N D A Y 1 2 P M U N T IL 5 P M F (6 0 2 ) 9 4 5 -6 3 7 6 St«4c Press Friday, O ctober 1g, 1990 Page 15 Shake your ValleyArt Thang Local artists o f all genres com e together at midnight o n ca m p u s w ith th e RO TH ER'S BOOKSTORE Proudly serving the Valley of the Sun {-C a m p u s -, ■-Co r n e r - 1 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e GREEK D A Y PHOTO Customize Your Greek Shirt 1/2 OFF Lettering! Greek Drops are now in!!! , 625 E. Apache $499 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 ■ g ffif: : :■/ DOUBLE PRINTS EVERY DAY 24 Exp. Color Prints 620 S. C ollege 8 2 9 -1 1 2 8 712 S. COLLEGE AVE — NEXT TO COLLEGE STREET DELI M-F 7:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Phone:967-4049 A L L S IN G L E CD’s 12.99 or le ss E V E R Y S IN G L E D A Y R e g . 1 5 .9 8 L is t P ric e C h a n g in g H ands BO O KSTO RE B ro w se th ro u g h o u r 3 flo o r s o f: • New & Used B ooks • • C alendars & C ards • • B ooks on C assette * Sell o r Trade yo u r books a t C hanging H ands: For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books. please) we pay 30% o f our resale price ip cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may lx used topurchase anything in the'store.- .■ . (Sorry, n o tra d e -in s o n S at. o r S un.) M -F 10-9 S at. 10-6 S u n . 12-5 414 M ill A v e n u e • Tempe • 966-0203 By AARON LEVY S ta te Press I’ve been to two Valley Art Thing shows, and the fully credible advice my good friend from L. A. gives me while pointing to my receding hairline echoes a bit in my thoughts. ‘‘Hey man, you just gotta ride the waves.” Right. You just have to ride the waves. I understand. OK, but let’s get out of L. A. because its hard’to breathe sometimes, and besides, we have to stay mobile. Let's go to a scary place like Tran­ sylvania, because this whole Valley Art Thing is a giant A rt Experiment, and host Lora Heinemi is Dr. Frankenstein. Allow me to be Egor hunched over an ancient typewriter. ‘‘Egor!’’ Excuse me, she’calls. “As an artist I feel very free and that’s essential to good performances,” Heinemi said of performing at the Valley Art Thing. “ It’s a great place to see shows because the focus is on the stage, the acoustics are good and it’s an intelligent alternative to the bar scène.” The Valley Art Thing is a potpourri of creativity dropped on the Valley Art Theatre’s stage like a deck of cards thrown on the floor for a game of 52 pick­ up. You never know what’s coming at you, so don’t hesitate to wear your pretend 3-D glasses. Last week I saw a modern day Carol Burnett in Patti Pi Nelson’s own comedic mixture of monologue, poetry, and music including an original song, “Can Opener.” Following her was the fusion band Out To Lunch. Two weeks before that I saw Jeremy Grace, a top actor in the-Valley, do his own Lars McKalister monologue. Following him guitarist/soloist Joe Myers stepped on the stage at about 2:00 a.m. and literally gave a tired but surprised au­ dience a second wind. “Why should you come? ” Heinemi ponders. “You should check it out because every' show is different, and it’s interesting live art on the cutting edge. But especially because it’s history in the making, and it’s more fun for the artists to perform when there’s people there.” This whole art experiment begins at midnight on the second and fourth Friday of the month for five bucks at the Valley Art Theatre, and starting in November it will only run the second Friday of each month because of low attendance. But the strange scientist, Heinemi, doesn’t just throw anybody on the operating table. “I don’t have to personally like it,” Heinemi said, “ but are they coming from the heart, the soul? That’s so important. I don’t care if they have a following or sell a lot of booze at a club. But are they good enough to create a following? It doesn’t have to be musical, or theater or dance. It can be anything. Be creative. Be yourself. Use your imagination. That’s what I look for.. Truth.” Heinemi herself is a singer, songwriter, musician, storyteller, producer of the future arid — get this — she sells futons in the daytime. Currently she is one third of The All Night Parcheesi Club(with Joe Myers and Casebeer) who are cutting their first album, Life Is A Pickle Factory, that should be out in December. I have to know where this mad scientist finds the time to promote and host Hie Valley Art Thing. “Krista Griffith, who owns University and Valley Art Theaters, and Hans Olson (musician) did the first Valley Art Thing about four months ago and there were 25 people there and I felt bad because I thought the theater should have been Lora Heinem i is helping a rtists do th e ir thing a t th e V alley A rt T heatre. packed.” Heinemi gave Griffith her phone number in case she needed help with the shows or bookings, and a crafty Griffith called her and offered her the whole thing. “I want to be true to my art, and also be successful enough to produce and promote other artists in the future,” Heinemi said. “I’d like to be able to invest in other arlists being able to follow their dreams. That’s it plain and simple. I believe dreams come true.” Somewhere, (come on, sing with me) over the rainbow . . . Alright, we’ll save the singing for the real artists tonight at the show. Tonight Heinemi has what they call in generic promotion lingo, “an all-star lineup.” G. Freeman Brown, the founder of Nonsense Voice and Prophecy, Sarge Lintecum, a Vietnam vet sharing his ex­ periences in a variety of art forms, Tree Cody, a moving storyteller and dancer, Sill Pudi, playing spirit music, and Space Boogers, a Jazz Fusion trio, will all be con­ tributing to the art thing. Heinemi tells me, “I love Yoko Ono and my dad’s a pro wrestling promoter.” I tell her to get back into the lab good doctor while I sit in the audience and ride the waves. Comic book gurus head fo r valley By KRAMER W ETZEL S tate Press Passport Photos T he p izza c h o ic e o f 13 m a jo r universities n a tio n w id e — N O W SE R V IN G A S U — OPEN LATE, LATE Gumby loves parties. Call for special rates. FAST FREE DELIVERY 921-FAST O pen fo r Lunch H our*: S u n -W e d 1v a m -2 * m T h u r -S a t 1 1 a m -3 a m 2 for $6.57 FHm Developing 2 FOR 1 Monday & Wednesday on Develop & Print Orders ILFORD Photo Paper 25 — 8x10 $11.08 100 — 8x10 $38.48 tiU Î-S Y ÿ SUNSET CAMERA Tempe Center — Mül & Univ. 829-0424 The One Book Shop, a specialty shop that has been serving the comic book, science fiction and fantasy crowd since 1975, is celebrating its 15th anniversary with legendary authors from the field Saturday. “We came up with the idea of inviting people from, both the science fiction/fantasy field and the comic book field since that’s pretty much the motif of the store,” said Mike Palma,, store manager. “I don’t know if it’s worth it anymore,” he said jokingly about the upcoming weekend event that involves such luminaries as Terry Austin. Just what sort of stuff has Austin done? ‘ “Legends of Dark Knight, Cloak and Dagger, X-Men,” said Palmer. “He’s primarily an inker. He’s known for his inking. “Anybody who’s really into comic books will know Terry Austin. Anybody who read comic books as a kid and has been reading them as an adult.” Who else is going to be there? “A1 Gordon. He’s another inker, but he also co-plots Legion of the Super Heroes,” said Palmer. “He’s also done work on Justice League.” Some of A1 Gordon’s work dates all the way back to the 60’s. Like Austin, Gordon is a legend amongst the comic book crowd. Since the bookstore also has a large ... selection of speculative fiction, in addition to the racks of graphic novels, there is ' some diversity in people who were invited. “Dennis McKiernan? Well, his most re­ cent book was Dragondoom for Bantam. He’s from Ohio, his big seller was the Iron Tower series. Very similar to Lord o f the Rings»He admits that straight up,” said Palmer. Good versus evil and sword and sorcery fantasy. Who else is in the the line up? “Mike Stackpole, he’s been around for years. Primarily with the gaming in­ dustry, with Flying Buffalo doing Tunnels and Trols. Mike is like a designer on stuff like that. ” There are four creative individuals that are going to be at the One Book Shop on Saturday, from noon to 4 p.m. The.One'Book Shop is located in the Ar­ ches shopping center at 120 E. University Drive. For more information call 967-3X1. Comics Page 16 State Press Friday, October 12,1990 by Bill Watterson Calvin and Hobbes GIME ME A NICE SMILE TVIMS GOOD. NOH OONt MMfíE A FMLE, O< ? RENDI ? ONE... TWO... THREE.. t h e f a r s id e by Gary Larson CLICK -y cue** f *> by Garry Trudeau D oonesbury OKAY.RÉADY, BOOPSIG?.. BoopaeHomTwro n* &ve m m e e m e e , ^ mops pen A nce..' c u rh popemees are trying totese turn TOURMYOFUFe,ANP You'Renot e a rn to take m a neuem TH IG API5 ABOUT NATIONAL HONOR! TPS A B O U T OGNTTY, HTTB6RÍTY, 60...ANP ACTION! . VALUES! BIGHT, MIKE? \ Rainey Days CUnSOMBBOPY • SPRITZ. HGR VAIWY OFINTEREST! ACTION! by Julie Sigwart y ou inflated PUT THIS BACK O N H IM W H EN H E 'S DONE/OK? w/m, , BEM EM BEJZ? I UNSTUCK F E R R IS WITH YOUR VALVE O IL ÿ \ . v O U !THEN ENE S S W * leVEB J, / m in d J! *5 STATE PR ESS Classif ieds are like a good hot dog. 2 FOR 1 NO BOLOGNA! EAT LIKE A PIG LOOK LIKE A FOX W ith less than % the calories of ice cream , Penguin’s frozen yogurt fills you up, not out. So pig out at Penguin’s. And outfox everyone else. Coupon good for a small, m edium or large cup of yogurt. 945-8850 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. Tempe Penguin’s Place 3rd & Mill Hayden Square Sputfï QfMCKellipS (One mile Norm o f university) Expires 10-29-90 Flavor line: 966-4414 VERY LOWCALORIE FROZEN YOGURT 2 FOR 1 Call for daily specials AMIDON, N.D. CAP) — Brenda Selinger is pulling out of the race for state’s attorney in Slope County. That should be a relief for the incumbent — her husband, Bruce. The Selingers lived happily under one roof while both ran for the job. Selinger said it was never a-grudge match between the two lawyers. Mrs. Selinger even admitted her husband was doing a finé job as prosecutor. “We couldn’t decide which of Us wanted the job, so we both took out petitions,” Selinger said. Mrs. Selinger, with a 2-year-old child at home and a full-time job in Dickinson, wanted her husband’s job because of the part-time hours. But she has since arranged to work part-time. Selinger got 205 votes in June’s primary to his wife’s 133. Though Mrs. Selinger is quitting the race her name will appear along with her husband’s on the Nov. 6 ballot. “There were a lot of questions on people’s faces,” Mrs. Selinger said of the months she and her husband were political opponents. “ We just laughed and said we were trying to keep things interesting in Slope County.” . WE AL$0 OFFER • ca lzo nes , § su b s •SALADS «PASTA •SOUPS •• «BEER & WINE •LUNCH SPECIALS MIKE»CWArt’5 OPEN 7 D A Y S A W EEK COIN Chinese Buffet 1125 E. Apache Blvd Tempe • 9 6 8 -3 3 2 2 941 W . Elliot Chandler • 8 2 1 -5 4 2 8 ' 1 0 4 2 N . Higley Mesa • 9 8 5 -8 8 2 3 T w o 1 0 " O n e ite m 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 r im 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 r e e n B e a n • V e g e t a r ia n « A lm o n d T u r k e y « M o o G o o G a i P a n • B B Q P o rk « H a m F r ie d R ic e « C h o w M e in , e tc . t/uc c c o i / e a r e a WE SE R V E BEER P iz z a s w ith O n e L a rg e P e p si ALSO - Winter: Egg Flower Soup M--- O 'u._M tut HI ‘r A Mt PLANTATION U niversity of Colorado School o f Dentistry M i 6 H i* S I.75 U-C aU I t Dr. Bomberg, Chairman Dental Student Admissions Committee V i p ilÌC E A p p E T ÌZ E R S 8 will be at the Arizona State University Date: Tuesday, October 16,1990 Time: 10:30 A.M. - 3:00 P.M. For appointment, please contact Ms. Sherry Peterson, 965-2365 or in Pre-Health Professions office, SS-111 p .M . TO C LO SE * THÉ UM 0 RPPi/IÇ I* TAÉM0Y Tt f MHY' / - A^ÊftM/ûTlVÉ/iylpVHTfî ia M * 132a w. 'lÔ VKHÇ-RM ! / q & q - M B D O PR ESEN TS MON TUES W ED THUR FR I *5 » SAT REFUSE TO PAY MORE 99« ANYDRINKORLONGNECKINTHEBAR! (Single Shot Drinks) AND CROSSWORD by TH O M A S JO SE PH 39 Man of ACROSS 1 Remain­ der 5 Teutonic cries 9 Spring sign 11 Regatta entrants 13 Com­ puterphone hookup 14 “Cats’ lyricist 15 Pindaric poem 16 Blow up, as a photo 18 Gets comfy 20 Knightly " title 21 Joined the bee 22 Store door sigh 23 Miserables” 24 Airline in the news, 1983 25 Acquire 27 — Day 29 Curator’s concern 30 Rode the sled 32 Football pass 34 "The Way” 35 Tolerate 36 Apart 38 Burn a bit Madrid 40 Archaic 41 Breakfast staple DOWN 1 Actor Novarro 2 Wears down* 3 Hilarious 4GoH need 5 Name­ sakes of Adam’s son 6 Fizzy drink 7 Extremely picky 8 Cheap cigar 10 Aromas 12 Aft end 1 2 9 à Yesterday’s Answer 17 Fishing peninsula aid 27 Edmond 19 Adoles­ O ’Brien cent film 22 Crew 28 Old sailor needs 30 Tenet 24 Eucalyp­ 31 Active tus eaters ones 25 Festive 33 Advan­ parties tage 26 Mideast 37 Envision 4 ■ Ì5 18 ■* : 5 « 6 J * ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■ ■ ;■■ ■ 19 * _ _ * 25 • j & 35 35 3Ó j g 44 3d *5~ DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s how to work it: 10/12 AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW THUR FR I One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE 10-12 E Q *1"Pitchers SAT NO CO VER — EVER SU N Noon Til We Close SD N C orn er o f 6 th & M ill » C O F F E E S G M ZZ A D B R K M Z PD O J Q INQJ MFQ LQJ U MP F J PZ G Q BRKMZ EQ AW A R F - H QP Z Y J . Rural & University in Tempe 967-3192 —M I H Q F D Q P Z J D Q P Z Y esterd ay ’s C ryptoquote: HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF, AND THAT’S ONE OF THE THINGS THAT’S WRONG WITH HISTORY. — CLARENCE DARROW M ike, Bid, Cathy, go tor broke. C M S S O By King F a a iu fe r S y n d ic a ie . In c ? State P m » Page 19 Phoenix debuts at UAC routs Denver, 186-123 (AP) — Denver coach Paul Westhead’s run-and gun-style that he used at Loyola Marymount backfired as the Phoenix Suns routed the Nuggets 186-123 in the NBA preseason opener for both teams Thursday night at the University Activity Center. Rookie forward Cedric Ceballos, who made all 12 of his field-goal attempts, scored 28 points for the Suns while Eddie Johnson added 27, Kevin Johnson 21 and Dan Majerle 20. Ceballos, a second-round draft pick out of Fullerton State, scored 18 points in the fourth quarter. ' , It was the most points the Suns have ever scored in any game in their 23-year history. Their regular-season team record is 160, set against Portland on March 21,1972. "You play according to the style of the o p po n e n t , ” P hoeni x coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said. “If we had been playing a slow, deliberate team, it might have been a different game. This was a brand new team, trying to get it together with a brand new system. Paul will get it going. Don't you worry about that." Denver made only 48 of its 126 shots from the field and committed 23 turnovers to spoil Westhead's debut. “There’s always a risk in a new system,” Westhead said. "What I want is something that can be very good and is not easy to accomplish. At Loyola, we always were kind of suicidal for the first three or four or five games. We beat ourselves, so I know that pattern. It’s just something you try to overcome through games.” Phoenix, whose regular-season team record for points in one half is 91 set Nov. 1, PHOENIX 186, UTAH 123 P h o e n ix 22 35 22 35 - 114 U ta h 29 34 21 25 - 106 PHO ENIX (186) Cham bers 5-1 4 4-6 14, Rambis 1-2 7-8 9 , W est 7-8 1-2 15, K: Johnson 6 -9 9-10 2 1 , Majerle 8 -12 4-5 2 0, Battle 2-7 1-3 5, Ei Johnson 11-14 5-6 27, Hom acek 5-8 6-7 16, Blanton 0-2 0-0 0, Ceballos 12-12 5^7 2 9 , Perry 4-5 1-2 9, Nealy 4-6 1-1 9, Lockhart 2-4 6 -1 2 1 0 : Totals 67-103 52-71 186 DENVER (123) Allen 2-8 0-0 4, Lane 3^9 1-2 7, Rasmussen 5 -12 0-0 1 0. Davis 4-18 i-1 9, G aines 3-5 2-3 8. Woòlridge 11-15 1 1 - i t 33, Jackson 4 -17 0-0 8, Lett 1*3 0-0 2, Lichti 1-8 3-3 5, Farm er 0-2 3-4 3, Dunn 2 -3 1-2 5, Liberty 3-7 2-3 8 , Thompson 4-5 2-4 10* O ldham 0-0 1-2 1. Wolf 5-14 0 4 ) 10. Totals 48-126 27-41 123. 3-point goals — Phoenix 0-1 (M ajerle 0-1), Denver 0-2 (Jackson 0-1, Farm er 0-1).. Fouled Out — Rasm ussen, Perry. Rebounds — Phoenix 6 3 (Lockhart 11), D enver 65, (Lane 8). Assists — Phoenix 49 *lf your comprehensive deductible is between $0-$100, we will pay your deductible and collect the balance from your insurance carrier. Y O U P A Y N O T H IN G ! Call lor details. (Certain restrictions and limitations apply.) 7 4 8 W . U n iv e rs ity , M e s a W TV® (E x te n sio n & U n iv ers ity ) SttNDt 11), D enver 26 (Lane, Gaines, 1984 against Portland, led 89454 at halftime despite missing 22 of their 50 field-goal attempts. Denver commited 48 personal fouls and the Suns made 52 of 71 free-throw attempts. Kevin Johnson’s 11 points put Phoenix ahead 47-33 after the first quarter. The Suns led 74-49 before Ceballos came off the bench to score 11 points in a 1:54 span late in the second quarter to make it 89-58. Eddie Johnson had 10 third-period points for a 139-90 bulge. Orlando Woolridge scored 33 points for Denver while Blair Rasmussen, Joe Wolf and rookie guard Stephen Thompson all had 10 apiece. A crowd of 13,632 watched the game at the 14,300-seat UAC. NEW WINDSHIELD NO COST TO vour yVNDf* (K. Johnson Jackson 5). Total fouls — Phoenix 3 8, D enver 48. A —■ 13,632. 827-1262 MANDATORY FACULTY AND STAFF MEEDNG NOVEMBER3 700 PM T .J. Sokol/State Press Phoenix Suns guard J e ff H om acek goes fo r a reverse layup in Thursday n ig ht's gam e against th e D enver Nuggets a t th e U niversity A ctivity C enter. ^ ■ ^ ^ ^ ÜMVERSAlSTlIOIOSHOUYWQÖO^^co^r FROM TH E DIRECTOR O F “TH E UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS O F BEING” COMPLETELY U N C U T IN ITS O R IG IN A L VERSION. ' > ' ■. ■1■ ' ' '■ ' . ♦ 1 ■. ■ ; • V " •1 ■■ “AN EROTIC MASTERPIECE. Philip Kaufmanhas done something remarkable. He has made a genuinely erotic film that celebrates a womans sexual awakening with unabashed enthusiasm. Fred Ward has great humor, Uma Thurman is fascinating and Maria de Medeiros is ravishing, a major discovery."-- 'trpkn faffcev. VKAIEL1NEMAI AN EXCEPTIONAL WORK. Gorgeoo» and tremendously enm aim ng, «ridi fahwl— ly talented acton. Th» funny. large-spirited beauty is seductively compelling. Engulfingiy romantic. Henrv k Jane » the years most satisfying film.“ -THE MOST INTELLECTUALLY SEXY MOVIE SINCE ‘LAST TANGO IN PARK'.* )id i U M , UM ANGELES TIMES -A 10. AN EXQUISITELY EROTIC FILM. A BEAUTIFUL PRODUCTION." -A WONDERFUL FILMEXCITING. Philip Kaufman gets cars miraculously intelligent performances. - Terremo Kaffem. TMENE» YOBKEt -EROTIC. VOYEURISTIC AND FASCINATING. / Fred Ward a perfect and Maria de Madeir a » tepetk* -jack Ganur. GANNETT NEWSPAKtS ffi “THUMBS UP." - Bapr Skat. àtSKELA EBEKT ATRIE AWENTURE MORE EROTIC Tha n any Fantasy ./r.. Homecoming fiame Discount ticket Offer 1RHUIIU'moitS s te ra m M laa * «pun* H P ? 1 1 \ tB M i cum icmifttt! J m k .' "UiwtsHiiiJUH L «UJAMi SHvii 14» UilV ,u * ™ mm . "Baaw.ua fitxi» ¿ S M iM MVWBILffIAIFILVSi nr IDS! IUnt^MMIRTlt UHUlS •aau— wr —fw m untu B Includes: •U p to 4 quarts of oil •O il filter •C heck transmission & differential •C heck battery fluid •Lube chassis •Labor O ffe r valid o nly w ith th is ad. FULL SERVICE CAR CARE SINCE 1976 STARTS TODAY A M C LAKES 6 A M C BELL P L A Z A 6 A M C G A T E W A Y V IL L A G E 1 0 965-2381. B aseline a t O ural 838-0606 | 7 Q Tickets m ust be purchased by Friday, October 26. U N IT E D ARTISTS P A V IL IO N S H A R K IN S A R C A D IA 0 In d ia n B en d A P tm a Od 991-4200 THX STEREO 4 0 th St: A Thom as 273-7777 p q oo ourno* m o h m m . IMT1B1! flClUf>nw-> ^ . W t f B k i S W C W B ITDmmm The Department o f Intercollegiate Athletics is offering a faculty/staff discount ticket package tor the Sun Devil's homecoming gam e on Novem ber 3. A $5.00 discount per ticket (regular price tickets-lim it 4) is being offered to all university faculty and staff members. For additional information, please contact the Sun Devil ticket ofBce at juu j o m h a u . ^ OIL CHANGE $o 3 2n d S t A B e t Od. 971-8888 STEREO g y 6060 W est B e ll R o a d 439-6000 STEREO M A N N P O C A RESTA 4 1020 W. S outhern 836-0404 STEREO CHECK DIRECTORY FOR SHOWTIMES NO PASSES ACCEPTED FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT TEMPE IMPORTS 966-6680 1836 E. 6th Street Page 20 C lassified s Volleyball Continued from page *?• USC will rely on the talents of senior outside hitter Lonise Norfleet on attack. The 6-foot-2 Norfleet paces the Trojans with an average of 4.3 kills per game. Snyder said the key to the match will be to keep USC’s attack off-balance with strong serving. Saturday’s match-up should be more one-sided, according to Snyder. Unfortunately with the Bruins’ winning streak at 12, the advantage will be decidedly theirs. “If UCLA plays its best and we play our best, (UCLA) is going to Win,’’ Snyder said. “They get the top recruits every year and they are very good^’ Snyder said ASU does have a chance because the Bruins may be overconfident UCLA came in overlooking the Sun Devils last season and had to battle back from the brink of defeat after ASU jumped out to a two-game advantage. The Bruins eventually won that, match in five games. Snyder hopes to avoid a repeat of last year through aggressive play and exploiting the matchups at the middle. Berg leads the Pac-10 with 2.01 blocks per game, but UCLA sophomore middle blocker Marissa Hatchett is a close second, averaging 1.8 per game. On offense, the Bruins are led by sophomore hitter Natalie Williams, who averages 4.47 kills per game. Junior hitter Jenny Evans has been a major force, going both ways with an average of 3.84 kills and 3.64 digs per game. ■•‘Natalie hits as hard as anyone in the country," Snyder said. “They have a tremendous amount of depth on their team.” Snyder said she is optimistic about the Sun Devils' chances for two Wins this weekend because of the home-court advantage. Both matches will take place in the University Activity Center. Friday’s contest will begin at 7:30 p.m. and the first 300 fans receive “Dressed to Kill” posters, featuring the ASU volleyball team. Saturday’s match will take place at 6 p.m. and everyone With an ASU football ticket will gain free admission. Cross country__ C o n tin u e d 'fr o m page 17.... D evils will be more familiar with the route than their guests. “We did run on the course last year and we’ve used it a few times this year," ASU distance coach Ken Lehman said. “ It’s not necessarily our home because we don’t train the same course all the time. But we will have an edge in that we’ve seen it three or four more-times than the teams Coming in.” But any advantage the Sun Devils receive from familiarity with the course could be more than made up for by the fact that they Will face their stiffest competition of the year today. The women’s field is highlighted by 12th-ranked Kansas State, 18th-ranked Baylor and defending NAIA champion Adams State. Lehman said he also expects Southern Illinois to be a factor. The Sun Devil men should find the going a little easier but will still have to contend with Houston, Adams State and Utah, who finished first at last year’s ASU Invitational. One luxury; ASU cârriès into the meet is that the team is the most injury-free it has been all season. With the exception of a minor hip flexor to Ertn Scroggins, a freshman on the men’s team, the Sun Devils are relatively healthy. The ASU women’s team has risen to success a sa result of a total team effort, which Lehman said stems from cooperation in meets and practices- From thé rotation of seniors Dawn Arrigoni and Jill Sieniki, junior Kelly‘Cordell, sophomores Shannon McKay, Michele Sosnowski and Huffmaster and freshman Kristen Wellman, Lehman said no one really stands out above the others. , “We’re looking for all of our women to move up a little bit, Lehman Said. “You can’t pick out one clear-cut top three runners because they’re all so close. We seem to have the finishing position change almost every meet, so I guess all we could hope for is the whole pack to move up.” But the Sun Devil men would like to find consistent runners „to compleihent Kendall Fink, Mike Frick and Tony Hernandez, who are the team’s best and most experienced competitors. : “We’re looking for some of the men to fill in and be a really good fourth or fifth runner for us,” Lehman said. “I think our top three, Hernandez, Fink and Frick, are solid. We need consistency at the other positions.” The leading candidates to solidify the fourth and fifth spots are Scroggins, junior Troy McKay, sophomore Dave Harkin and freshman Gerald Fougner. Lehman said he feels an impressive effort today will be the springboard for a strong performance at the Pac-10 Championship in two weeks. “What we really need to do is build confidence,” Lehman said. “A really good showing will be a good builder for us but we also realize that we haven’t been that fast so far. We’ll have a couple of weeks to prepare for the Pac-10s and I think its good when you have a home meet to put on a good showing” STATE PRESS Classifieds Visa • MasterCard • Sorry, no billing State Press Friday, O ctober 12,1990 ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS $ 20 0 R E W A R D for information leading to A S U AREA. 2 and 3 bedrooms , for rent. HELP! the positive identification of the person $ 32 5 and up. 966-8838 or 967-4908 1 BE D R O O M , 1 bath, Papago Park I. who knocked over a red Kawasaki 600 An Ninja at the Vine Tavern on night of ASU look at music 1 and 2 room. 1 block south o f University on 8th Street, C ape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for specials. a G R E A T DEAL: 1 and 2 bedroom apart­ m ade graining-hill. S afe and exciting. Fly all day. WindSports, 897-7121: large s e g m e n t o f H i g h w a y s O c to b e r on Tim Ault • 965-5747 HAN G G LIDE! Our gently sloping m an­ NEW , bedrooms. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry litte r 2 0 . If y o u a r e in te r e s te d , c a ll: section!! '-v B E A U T IF U L , h e lp up to is tw d -m ile p ic k PLEASE g ro u p lo o k in g fo r v o lu n te e r s Tuesday, 10/9. 273-6001. G UITARISTS: n o n -p ro fit ments. Q uiet neighborhood. Free rent, LO V E T O dance? H a te the bar scene? move-in special. 894-6468 You’ll love the All Singles Dances, Fridays KD A LU M N I invited to Founders Day, at better Valley hotels. $4.50. Recorded TAKE LEASE at Hayden Place, studio on O ctober 20th, 1 -3pm, at the Arizona Club information: 946-4086. 3rd floor. 6 weeks left. Call 9 97 -4 95 0 for information. in Scottsdale. Call Linnea Maxwell at R E W A RD! 8 38-3653 for details FO R any information on persons involved in a fight at the Rockin’ T E M P E ’S FAIRE S T rates. 2 bedroom/1 Freddy’s parking lot (Mill Avenue), approx­ bedroom/studios. $ 4 2 0 to $260. 926 East Spence. 370-2366: im ately three years ago (October, -87). TENT SALE 50% off Call Griff or leave m essage at (914) 428-4628. Y our call will be reimbursed. S IN G L E S ’ E V E N TS , advice, personals — Arizona Singles Scene newspaper. Free sam ple, 990-2669 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT U N F U R N IS H E D 1 bedrooms and studios, utilities included.* C lean, quiet, ground level. Close to A S U M arianna Apart­ m e n ts . 9 6 6 - 8 5 9 7 . E q u a l h o u s in g opportunity. W asher/dryer, pool. No deposit. 921-0516. $450/m onth. 2 BE D R O O M , 2 bath furnished condo. W alk to ASU. $ 4 9 0 . W ym an 3 45-7977 or Dean, 820-4602. 2 B E D R O O M - loft. Papago Park. $900. Rosemary/Realty Executives, 998-2992. 2 M A STE R suites, Q uesta Vida. $650. Call Bob Bullock, Realty Executives, 998-2992. 3 BE D R O O M , 2 bath condo, ASU 2 miles. Covered parking, washer/dryer, vaulted ceiling. 961-1707, $650/m onth. 3 B E D R O O M ,, 2 bath condo, close to campus. W asher/dryer, fireplace, covered parking, pool. 967-2344, FO R SALE or rent. Luxury H ayden Square 2 be d ro o m , 2 refrigerator. 940-1762.- b a th , V ery w a s h e r/d ry e r, h,ice. $850/m onth. ■■■ “ STO P O IL W ar!” tyow! Come Teach-In, 19, Mem orial Union- 10 4 p m . 9 6 5 -2 2 0 0 . October (S tu d e n ts F a c u J ty , Community). 'r e a d READ READ READ READ READ Arizona Shorts 5th & Mill personal (p e r’so n -al), a . P e r­ ta in in g to a p erso n . T W O BE D R O O M , two bath condo. 68th Place/Thom as- Scottsdale. W asher, dryer, fireplace. 15 minutes to A S U . Bob Morris, 948-Q550. read read' READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ ^HAYDEN'S FERRY R E V IE W , ADVERTISERS! R E A C H 4 5 .0 0 0 R E A D E R S D A IL Y IN TH E S T A T E P R E S S ! RENTAL SHARING 1 O R 2 fem ale students, nonsmoking for Spring semester. Furnished condo, large ¿>edroom/private bath, washer/dryer, pool. Did you know that you can get a free 15-word personal ad on your birthday? If you have a student i d., a driver’s license, someone special to send a message to and a birthday this month, come down to the basement of Matthews Center to get your free personal. $250 U TILITIE S paid. Tw o bedroom at 1 A N D 2 bedrooms, $ 1 9 9 special move-in, Broadway/Price. Prefer graduate. French Covered parking, fireproof, pool, very near AS U , quiet. 1 bedroom: $316, 2 bedroom: doors, patio, am enities. 967-5079. $ 38 0. 968-6926 or 967-4568. 2 R O O M M A TES wanted, 3 bedroom, 1,800-square-foot hou s e . with pool. 13th/ 1 BE D R O O M apartmpnt. $250, furnished, Hardy area. Call Chris, 894-8140; no pets. 1339 South Sunset Drive, apart­ ment; no. 9, 1 block south o f Apache, 1 A V A IL A B L E block west of Rural. 9 68 -7 01 2 after 1:30, fem ale nonsmoker. Private room/bath in or 967 -3 65 6 split-level condo. Room has vaulted ceiling 2 B E D R O O M special: $367/m onth. A S U , 4 blocks, 1014 South Farm er. Pool, laundry. w ave, fireplace. $265/m onth plus 1/a SRP. So, if your birthday is coming up this month, have a friend help you celebrate — send them a 15-word personal — for FREE! IM M E D IA T E L Y — M a le / and fan. Includes washer/dryer, microCall 649-0779. 829-7137 J E M A L E /M A L E 2 Remember, the key w ord is personal. Your personal can be to your best friend, your, boy­ friend or girlfriend or any s p e c ia l person or persons in your life. (Advertisements o f club meetings, rushes, etc. do not qualify as personal ads.) Close to AS U . $250/m onth. 966-8035. APARTMENTS BEDROOM, 1 bath. dishwasher in unit. 6 $400/m onth. 967-6429. Washer/dryer/ blocks to ASU, RO O M M ATE needed!! Uniyersity/Evergreen, w asher and dryer, $225, % utilities. Call Ali, 962-5992. FEM ALE NONSMOKER— Own * room. 2 BE D R O O M fourplex, $ 26 0 per month or Papago Park 3 bedroom townhouse. All $65 appliances. $300, VS utilities. 966-9168. per w eek. Refrigerated, covered parking. 966-5596, FEM ALE R O O M M A TE needed! Second sem ester Q uadrangles. $ 18 8 per month plus utilities. 967 -2 88 3 . 1 block o ff campus M A LE/FEM ALE. M A TU R E . 3 bedroom, 2 bath, am enitiesj’ pool. Close to University. $250/m onth, includes utilities. 9 9 4 4 2 9 1 . 1 and 2 bedroom s $160 m ove in Call Today! Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache 1 block east of Rural S 6 8 -6 3 8 S M A LE/FEM ALE- 3 bedroom, 2 bath apart­ ment. W asher/dryer, fireplace, cable. 345-0444. 8:30-5pm, or 838-2969: M A LE/FEM ALE R O O M M A TE : Share large two bedroom apartm ent, South Scotts­ dale. Fireplace, pool, jacuzzi. $260/m onth. 423-0903. MALE R O O M M A TE w anted to share 1 bedroom condo in Hayden Square, v ery close to campus. $ 37 5 including utilities. Call 829-9234. N O N S M O K IN G STATE PRESS Classifieds FEM ALE room m a te, Papago Park II. Fully furnished including washer/dryer; $200/m onth plus VS utilities. 968-2262. R O O M M A TE W A N T E D , 1 bedroom in Cholta Dorm. M ale. Call Joe at 784-0789. Matthews Center LINER AD RATES: ROOMS FOR RENT CONDO 15 words or less: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10+ days 15* each additional word The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Personals are only $1.40! Must show ID to place a personal ad. $ 100 (N O N S M O K E R ). deposit, utilities $300/m onth, included. N ear McClintock/University. Rich, 877-2048. FEM ALE, O W N room, share bath. Nice condo one mile from AS U . Washer/dryer, fireplace. $ 225 plus VS utilities. $ 50 depo­ sit. 784-4725. ROOM FO R rent—• need peace/quiet? Furnished, laundry, own pool. bath, $ 26 0 share kitchen/ includes utilities. 968-1309. Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). ROOM W a s h e r /d r y e r , u tilitie s in c lu d e d . CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: $ 2 2 5 /m o n th . (213)824-1254. S e r io u s s tu d e n t. . 1 time: $7.85 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. inch 6 or more times: $6.50 per col. inch IN large Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10 a.m). CALL NOW 965-6731 house. N ear ASU. HOMES FOR SALE 1 0 -M IN U T E By Phone • 965-6731 Realty, CO M M UTE to ASU. 3 bedroom, quiet cul-de-sac, great yard, fir e p la c e , d ouble 968-3206. . g a ra g e . $ 8 2 ,5 0 0 . DO R M LIVIN G got you down? N o qualify­ ing loan m akes it easy to buy! 4 bedroom tri-level, no pool. W a lk to campus. Call Mickey at Coldwell B anker — 997-4950. -------------------------------------------- ,— _ State Press TOWNHOMES / CONDOSTOR SALE 3 BE DRO O M , 2 bath condo. Close to ASU. Low down, no qualifying Assume. JEWELRY TRANSPORTATION CASH FO R gold, diamonds. MHI Avenue AAA DRIVEAW AY. Free cars to most BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Jewelers, 4 1 4 S. Mill, Suite 101, Tem pe. major cities. Gas allowances available. 21 968-5967. or older. Call 4 6 6 1 7 3 3 . 968-6595. 24th Street and ENGAGEM ENT R IN G S P E C IA L IS T Papago Park 3 bd TH A ll appliances included, fresh paint. $88,000. Camblback. $ 30 9 9 8 -2 9 9 2 Hawaii, Europe, etc. You can leave today. A lso b u y in g tra n s fe ra b le c o u p o n s / states, $ 2 8 5 -4 0 0 . A laska, $ 500-600 vouchers. Top prices paid. Travel Tips, MOBILE HOMES 9 6 6 7 28 3 (YO U-SAVE) 10th St. & Camelback LO W E S T The Southwest’s largest diamond importer. quiet, peaceful. Sm all dogs, indoor caté okay. Call 986-0384 between 8am and 5pm Let State Press Classifieds w ork fo r you! You say U. we'll display ill Only in Stale Press Classifieds. AUTOMOBILES C H E A P F U R N ITU R E ifl great condition. 1981 ACC O R D, 5 s p e e d , airnronditioning, Must sell. Kitchen table, couch chairs, end A M /FM cassette. Good tires, excellent tables, V C R . stereo, pots/pan, pictures, condition! Call Bob, evenings, 9 9 6 4 5 2 1 . clothes, lamps, bookcase. 894-5360: $2,200/offer large 1983 M E R C E D E S 380 SL, mint condition, capacity: $250; large solid pine rocker: convertible, sitver/dark blue interior. Built- 2 electric original oil dryer, paintings, miles appreciate: $250 each; pair of twin beds with bookcase headboards: $200; JV C 870-0664? - , All items excellent condition conditioning, sunroof, 5-speed, good air- w aterbed. 5 0 % ■ motionless ; headboard m attress V ;;; ; . . .' T W IN B E D corner group, double bed set, couch, chair. Best offer. 968-9922 N ew tires. $3,600/offer. ’81 New & Prfe Owned VW e x e c u t iv e ! (Office) I SUITES I Rabbit, diesel. W hite, 4-door, factory air, excellent condition. $2,800. 1 0 % D is c o u n t w / A S U ID *45; 546-1655, S un City W est. : All types of. fu rriiture for student's needs at sfudeiit prices. 8 6 TO Y Ó TA 4x4 Turbo, runs great« too much to list- Call Mark, 945-3273. leave 2077 E. University 829-7259 C O M P A T IB L E PC $$$$ Tandy IN S TA N T CASH fo r your v eh icles! $$$$ 1000 .printer« software. . 649 -0 32 0 . : Receptionist Answering Services | ^ Utilities Use of C onference Room j S ecretary Service Available f \ A ll m akes & conditions. 6 40 k. /Color : monitor, 2 . floppy /drives, upgraded to 256k. D M P 105 dot matrix I ’ll come to your location! U s a 4 8 4 -7 0 5 5 All-, för .$65Q/0ffér. 998-4040 i upen weekends \ \ 1 12121 South Mill Ave. ■Tem pe. Arizona 85282 i l (Mill one block south of Broadway)( \ J * LASl Broadwav j ' Ill(J 5I*ExecutiveSuites ♦ I ; i|| F */ -• BICYCLES f—r~C •! MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE __________ DIA M O N D B A C K A P E X mountain bike, 1 C O M P L E T E D A R K R O O M — O m ega Color TAKARA M E N ’S E nlarger with Nikor lens Plus 25 dark­ room items.. $350. 224-5902, David, leave Nice bike. New tire, tune-up I Superstition Frwv ' month old. $400: 968-0549 P h x (n e w lo c .) 10-speed 2 2 " frame Receipts. $145 Ann, 9 6 6 8 6 1 1 ; 3625 N . 1 6 th S t. <2 blks s/o Indian Scbool/Eastside, Near Squaw Peak Expressway) m essage CUSTO M R U N N IN G boards and four good tires for Ford Bronco II: First offer takes delivery 894-0861 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE UNSTOPPABLE! STIMULATES THE GLANDS TO ENHANCE PEAK PERFORMANCE ir Increases energy & endurance it Increases m e n ta l alertn ess ★ Reduces body fa t ★ Increases body tone FOR MEN AND WOMEN, WORKS SO GOOD IT’S GUARANTEED! To O rd e r: Send $ 2 4 .9 9 plus $ 2 .0 0 s h ip p in g and handling: To: Raw Power, Iric., P.O. Box 2 3 6 5 8 , Tem pe, AZ 8 5 28 2 M oney O rd e rs Allow 3-5 Days fo r Delivery A v a il a b le a t G e n e r a l N u t r i t i o n C e n t e r s a n d o t h e r F in e S t o r e s GENERAL NUTRITION CENTERS months office experience. W e offer excel-, lent benefits and growth opportunities for a motivated self starter. Take charge now by sending your resum e with salary history to: General Office, P .O . Box 1 4 0 0 3 ,. Scottsdale, Arizona 85267-4003. sales rep. Call collect (4 0 1 )4 3 6 4 6 8 3 , 6pm G raduate Services, East Som e c o lle g e Provi­ A N S W ER IN G S ER V IC E , part-time. Tele­ phone, typing experience required. Scotts­ dale. 947-7351 Earn $120 + a month w h ile d o n a tin g m u c h n e e d e d p la s m a . M e n tio n th is a d fo r a $ 5 b o n u s o n y o u r firs t d o n a ­ tio n . (M o n d a y -S a tu rd a y ) ★ FREE HAIRCUTS ★ Models needed for c reative “ hand s-o n ” training at Adam Pink Salon’s advance workshop. UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER atm osphere. W e guaran­ te e $ 5 /hr. w ith potential o f $600/w k w ith in 12 w ks. W hy w ork fo r m inim um ? 2 sh ifts available. Call ★ ★ EASY CASH ★ ★ C o m p le te ly a u to m a te d d o n o r p la s m a - p h e r e s is .. D is c o v e r h o w e a s y , sa fe a n d fa s t it-is to: p re fe rre d . at P ete 921-1851 N a tio n a l c o m p a n y n e e d s 6 people to schedule appts. $5/hr. g u a r , p lu s c o m m is s io n . G o o d w o r k e n v i r o n m e n t , n o h ig h pressure sales. W ork hrs.: M-F 4-9pm , Sat. 8:30am -2pm Mill & Broadway Call anytime 829-3910 \ (largest selling com patible), expandable to with computer operations and have six Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe. Friday night at 6 p.m. Must call for an appointment. 491-2660 894-2250 F ilin g F o r D o lla rs ! Special projects!! We need your general clerical skills for filing, photo copying and microfilming. These positions are trainable. We 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 East Valley Office Mill/Baseliné 831-1131 ADIA The Employment People Rent indudes. message. COMPUTERS for VAX and the 68020. To apply, call Ticketm aster at 968-2323. hour. Part-time campus No experience Necessary $600. 9 6 6 4 8 4 6 . WEBB’S FURNITURE IB M P ER TELEM A R K ETIN G beautiful but runs Well. Cheap, reliable. part-time. multi-user operation systems applications condition: ‘81 C ITA TIO N , four-door, A M /FM , air. Not PROGRAMER, is looking for students with strong math message. 9 9 4 -^ 6 1 . 9664009 math skills, pleasant telephone manner. aptitude to write software for R eal Tim e RO CK & RO LL Contact T*J., venture. Close to AS U . Rapidly growing company HELP WANTED— GENERAL cal, and m aintenance. Top pay and bene­ ing; good condition, sunroof, electronic. 1 joint Qualified individuals must be comfortable fits . 1987 HYU N D A I E x c e l. Red, air condition­ $80 for 8 9 6 7 5 3 3 , extension 377. A S S E M B LY $7,700, 786-1614. S IN G L E physiques 10024-0539. customer service, Bight attendants, cleri­ recoded service player with professional attitude, good Great tim es. Must sell. Laura, 784-0191. 24-hour Custom er fem ale Chicago 12/ 21 , return to Phoenix 1/4. incom e. dperations. Mor Enterprises, P.O? Box 751, Planetar­ ium Station, N ew York, New York. A IRLINES H IR IN G immediate entry-level E N TR E P R E N EU R S W A N TE D . Fantastic Call responsibilities will include all aspects of extremely important. You must be a team to recorded message. Scottsdale al interested in growing with an expanding office Chicago 11/22, return to Phoenix 11/25; to CRA ZY CO LLEG E entrepreneurs. Have North ARTIS T FO R pencil/ink drawings-of male/ dence, Rhode Is la n d -02914-4249. United O FFIC E . 212-874-1493, departm ent LOT. O r write; time). on Auto' required. opportunity appointment, 8:30am to 4pm. Lerhon Street, TIC K E TS Excellent deta ils . (602)894*5128, or com e by 1046 East product. Great part-time job for’ students. re d , reveals to 9pm Tuesday, W ednesday, Thursday; 8am to 5pm Monday o r ‘Friday (Eastern BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ./ PRELUDE, Do it all in this one person office. Your recording women. able' Contact American Youth Hostels, U nlim ited 1986 company. Position open early November. 8 92-2125 - for free­ VjfA Y D E N 'S FERRY R E V IE V ^ 852-0830. Call Jason, 966-6023, for need packs and other travel items also avail­ Bruce, sell, leaving country. $4,700/offer leave message. • firm: commission. C O M P A N IE S $ 15-$20 tint, sunroof, excédent condition, must 946-7864, N E W , Q U E E N -S IZE bed: $125, love chair: and $ 30 ,00 0 excellent opportunity for dynamic Individu­ both issued on the spot! Student-fare flights, student identification cards, travel fun, m ake iotsa money. 994-2101, 24-hour leave message. ■9 24 -3 9 1 7 (garaged). individual with good communication skills. Excellent training program. S alary plus (303)441-2448. 1986 T O Y O TA Corolla G TS , 5-speed, red, Stereo cassette deck-, fine older unit: $75 SUPER and READ READ READ READ READ READ in radar detector/security system. 43,000 gallery fram es, landscape design- must s ee to $ 75 , desk: $ 7 5 Eurail passes 1975 V W Rabbit, good condition. $800. 644-9863, leave message, or after 6pm. $ 125; C O S T— R O U N D -TR IP FURNITURE KENMORE 966-8336. with international youth hostel memberships— 279-4034 Need mature, responsible tenant. Very m anufacturer and distributor offers an A m a zin g FLY A N Y W H E R E US A . In you name! 48 On private lot, beautiful desert landscape G EN ER A L student? W e are looking for an energetic W ork lance readers. Read books for pay! Earn $ 1 0 0 o r m ore for each book you read. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 1 BEDRO O M trailer in East M esa for rent ARE Y O U a marketing senior or graduate money. P U B LIS H IN G TRAVEL HELP WANTED— GENERAL ASU BIG per month. 955-2047, after 6pm. HELP WANTED— GENERAL students making $5,000/m onth. Call Mark, MAKE NEEDED: A FTE R N O O N ride to A SU from Buy o f tho W e e k NEW Page 21 Friday, O ctober 12,1990 Dealers Inquires Welcome 1-800-544-951 I Walk to Work PART TIME $8®o to $10°°/hr Full Training $5.50/hr Guaranteed • NEW LOCATION • Walking distance from ASU (Univ. & Rural) • NEW OFFICES • • NEW EXPANSION • • NEW HOURS • e arly m orning, m orning, aftern oon, eve n in g , w e e k e n d As our Telemarketing Representatve, you would work in a fun professional envi­ ronment contacting customers nation­ wide for major clients earning great part time money on a schedule that you set up. For confidential interview, please- call extension #33 at: DIALAMERICA 894-0264 A s k fo r e x te n s io n #33 SSM£ eût* State Press F rjda^O cto ber1fcJ990 Page 22 HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP W A N T E D GENERAL AT&T, S P R IN T, M C I. O w n your own 1-900 E N TE R TA IN E R S W A N TE D for national marketing publication. .CEEC Entertain­ P H O N E S O L IC ITO R S . $6-$15 per hour. W O R LD CY C LE is looking for individuals Call Duane, 921-2831 or 470-1527. with good mechanical abilities and retail sales experience to work flexible hours. m. C O M P U TE R G R A P H IC S artist— Part- time for M esa print shop. IBM: W ordPer­ fect, Pagem aker, Windows, Corel Draw. MUSIC HELP WANTED GENERAL number. M ake $1,500, $2,500 month. Information: 968-2367, Pete. ment, 274-6362. P R IC E S A VER S W holesale W arehouse is Call A TTE N TIO N S TU D E N TS ! Earn $15/hour G Y M N A S TIC S IN S TR U C T O R S needed. opening its newest warehouse in Phoenix 461-1875 E A R N EXTR A money for Christmas and working in your spare time on campus. 10 minutes from cam pus. Afternoons and at 3 17 South 48th Street and is now hiring gain excellent retail experience. Perfect Flexible hours. 800-688-4733 evenings. Cad Desert Devils. 941-3496, for the following positions: Cashier assis­ Mark, 835-8976 tants, Inventory Auditors, Skaters, Receiv­ opportunity to use your creative energy Chris at 9 21-3466 or G UITARISTS: T H E Rain Convention is Randy at HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE and interpersonal skids as a sales associ­ ate in our store. Now hiring for Amy’s HAR KIN’S ARCADIA 8 Theater is now position hiring a part-time assistant manager. Ideal ers, Stockers, Cashiers, Bakers, Market­ ing Representatives, M aintenance, exper­ Hallmark at Fashion Square in Scottsdale. largest ticket service, if you are mechani­ job for student, flexible hours. Apply in ienced Apply in person Monday, 10/15. cally inclined, personable, enthusiastic person: 40th Street and Thomas. Mem bership clerks, Vault clerks. W e offer CO RK’ N tions for evening cocktail waitress and Ticketmaster, America’s and have transportation, you m ay be the C igarette T ax S tam p Clerk, CLEAVER accepting applica­ EARN G R E A T money! W ork fud- or part- candidate that w e a re looking for. To IM M E D IA TE O P E N IN G S . $5.25/hour plus competitive salaries, excellent benefits, bonus incentive plan, and opportunity for time. Set your own hours. 968-0631, ask apply, cad Ticketm asVlP at 968-2323 or commission. Work evenings and Satur­ advancem ent. For immediate considera­ Monday-Friday, 2-4pm , or by appointment: tor Brian. apply In person at 2 3 2 3 West 14th Street, days. No selling. C a ll-N a ta lie , tion please apply in person at P rice Savers 5101 North 44th Street, Phoenix (44th and no! 501, Tem pe, Arizona. 892-1639, or stop by 1817 South Horne, W h o le s a le Cam elback). 952-0586- . suite 3 , Mesa. Washington, No. 108, ■ a a M iim w H iM iH M B B » 2-7pm, BUFFALO E X C H A N G E , a growing young EXPAN DING M A RKETING research firm now accepting applications for late after­ noon and early evening shifts. No sales, close to campus, $4.50/hbur., Apply siasts to train as buyers in our recycled noons and evenings available, no selling Rent-A-Car is hiring rental and service clothing store. $4.25/hour to start plus involved. Professional and friendly envi­ agents. Hiring immediately part-time and full-time employees. W ill work around your school schedule. Apply in person, 204 ronment. Cad 731-6505, leave nam e and number, EÔE. Apply: 2 27 East University Drive, Suite 103, Tempe. W est University, Monday-Saturday, 10-5; 829-3282 Sunday, 12-4. PART-TIME COLLECTORS Seeking self-assured individuals with excellent com­ munication skills & ability to effectively deal with customers. Collection experience is not mandatory as we will train motivated candidates. Positions pay $7 per hour and offer a competitive benefits package through N A T IO N A L M A R K E T IN G firm seeks outgoing, part-time individual to imple­ m ent special m arketing projects on C a n tu s . Flexible hours and excellent pay. Call Amy (800)592-2121. Ov e r se a s jo b s Sum m er, year round. All countries, all fields. Free info. W rite: MG, P.O . Box 52-AZ03, Corona Del The world’s largest jewelry retailer. If you’re energetic & can work in a fast-paced environment, we invite you to find out more about these opportunities. Apply in person, Monday - Friday, 9 AM - 4 PM JEW ELERS FINA NCIAL SERVIC ES ■n w w r r ’ ’W f ' 1221 N. College Ave. (College/Curry) Tempe, AZ 85282 829-5800 Equal Opportunity Employer Mar, California P ART-TIM E CH ILD care and general assistance to ASU faculty family. Flexible hours. $4 50/hour. 968-9922 TMI CORP. Ranked in the “ to p 10" by the telem arketing industry’s trade magazine for the past 7 years is now hiring. $5.50/ hr. guaranteed. Realistic earning potential to $10/hr. Flexible scheduling — set your own hrs. around classes! Paid profes­ sional training. Contests, prizes, fun, friendly faces; Call today for a professional training. Call today for a professional inter­ view: 96 7 -0 0 6 6 Ask for Sandi Dillon TM I 3 Blks from ASU • (EOE) commission + bonus ★ ★ E X P E R IE N C E D w a itre s s / Job Hotline. Teach, c are and assist disab­ h LET'S M A K E A HIT TO GETH ER !! N Singers, songwriters mail or qp bring us your cassettes! • REASO NABLE RATES • Call 8 3 8 -3 1 9 6 for more details! p S S tar Music. I n c . S a g u a r o R e c o r d in g & P u b lish in g PETS Part-time/folltime. 820-9898. B U R M E SE P Y TH O N babies, $150; Boa PAPA J A Y ’S has im m ediate openings for Constrictor babies, $ 100. Leave message counter help, delivery drivers, and cooks. at 986-9457, Mesa. Evening hours. 990-2279. F R E E AKC G old lab. Active 8 year old, South 24th Street, Phoenix— 2 blocks T E M P E C E N TE R for the Handicapped call well trained, needs good home, perm a-, RESTAURANTS/ BARS nerit o f until X-m as. Fem ale. Call W endy, 966-8758, leave m essages please. day program. Part-time, full-time, varied FREE LOST/FOUND shifts O ther professional and paraaprofessional positions also: Call 894-2704. LO ST: E O E .- - ■ sapphires and diamonds. Reward. Please W H IT E gold ring with small TE M P O R A R Y HELP needed for one w eek $600/hr + a* NEEDED- cocktail to work a t a sports bar-in Mesa. south o f Jefferson and 24th Street. writing, recording and performing in this call 833-3204 92625: GUARANTEED! ★ lunch hostess. Will train. Apply in person, led adults and children. Group home and $9oo-2,ooo/month. ZA LE C O RPO RATIO N ★ 85034. È O É P U T Y O U R career in gear! Advantage benefits and bonus plan. A ton place to »- Phoenix, Arizona nent part-time research positions. After­ work with growth potential. 1130 E ast LO CAL RA D IO station hiring tor perma­ ment. Associates, 5025 company, seeks full-time and1 part-time, energetic, people-oriented, fashion enthu­ 5pm -7pm , Tuesday-Friday or by appoint­ Higginbotham W a re h o u s e , for our unique, original project. O ur sound is progressive/rock and roll. If interested in established original band, please 897-9373. Serious inquiries only. AVAILABLE NO W : Part-time technician with auditioning creative, m otivated guitarists U.S. Vanguard will hire over 100 telemarketers IMMEDIATELY. The opportunity fo r 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 Call Mr. Stitzer U.S. Vanguard for installation of A m y's Hallm ark store in M IS S IN G : Scottsdale, Fashion Square. Earn extra Electrical and Electronic devices, Circuits cash for Christmas. C all 4 23-9349, ask for and Instruments). Please contact Lisa, Ms> Swan. 839-1861. Thank you!!! T H E R O S E Company is now hiring for L O S T 10/1/90. GokJtone earring. ‘‘S word” rose sales in nightclubs and restaurants.. shape, hanging from small ring with post. Call Tor interview, 921-8855. Please call 784-4908. Thanks! ECE 333 Text (D eM assa’s W A N TE D : 5 ambitious students, Network­ ing. Call Jim , 464-8919. PERSONALS W E E K E N D P O S ITIO N selling auto acces­ sories at Phoenix Greyhound Swapmeet. ADA-M ARIE. Must berries, hot spots, and our friendship be oriented. reliable, Base people- and pay plus detail- commission.! GREASE Lightning, wild forever! Good luck. Monday. Sandi. $5-$7/hour. 967-2678. ADPI AM YB — T o n ig h t will be a m emorable night for both of us— our first pledge presents! G et psyched— l am . Pi H arriott «Suites love, your big sis. AD P I KIM , Erin, J aim ie, Jen, Seryna. and everyone else— thanks for putting up with is hiring for the following positions: m e this week! Sorry I’v e been a grouch! Pi •Night Audit Clerk •Sales Secretary •Servers •Dishwasher . •Cook •Bartender •P M Room Server •Host/hostess AD P I Lillian— You are the best! Hove you. S uperior benefits: a unique suites concept. E x c e lle n t dow n to w n S c o tts d a le - lo c a tio n . Close to ASÜ and MCC. Nicole. Presents!! You’re the best big sis! Love Apply in person: glad you’re here for m y last formal. W e are going to have a blast tonight! Love, love, Nicole. Enjoy Formal. Y our lil sis, Michelle. ADPI M A NDY, can hardly w ait for tonight. Lots of Pi Luv, Lil Sis Wendy. AD P I M IC H E L L E W . Y our big sis loves you and has not forgotten about you. Pi luv. AD P I NICO LE— Tonight I can’t wait to present the most studly pledge! P i Luv— A D P IN IC O LE I ’M so excited for Pledge Nicole. AD P I P ARE NTS Bud and Barb— I’m so Michelle. 7325 E. 3rd Ave. Scottsdale AD P I PLED GE Class— I hope you all have a great time tonight at Pledge Presents! Pi M/W/Th/F 9 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1:30-4:30 p.m. Tu 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m. and 3-7 p.m. love, Nicole Á AD P I SARA W ebb— I ’m so proud to be HELP WANTED— GENERAL presenting you tonight! Love your Sig Sis. A D P I’S CO STA and Belger. Your big sis loves you both. L e t’s party hard tonight. Pi Luv, Michelle. Failure A n a ly sis Associates. If you’re the best in your class, your career should be one failure after another. Failure is our business. We are the largest and most experienced engineering consulting firm in the nation specializing in the analysis and prevention of mechanical, structural and materials failure. W e offer some of the most challenging and interesting engineering work available anywhere. W e’re currently seeking bachelors and masters level engineers in mechanical or aerospace engineering for our Test and Engineering Center in Phoenix, Arizona, one of the most comprehensive automotive test facilities outside the automotive manufacturing industry. If you’re an academic standout and a hands-on problem solver, we invite you to join us for an interview. ADPI TIÑ A — Just w anted to say I haven’t forgotten what a "great” big sis I have! ». Love, Nicole. A G O CO ACH , the 14th is around the corner and I w anted to say thanks... for 8 great montos, all the roses, and the best formal I’ve ever had! I love you! Love your Alpha G am . ALP HA G A M S .., You are awesome! You are doing a great job and I’m so proud of you! Love, Cathy A M Y B — W H A T happened to the big, tall geek with glasses? I love you, ? A S U M E N - AEPi is haying their second annual .Mid-fall Rush this month. O ctober 13 there will be an informal Pre-rush Dinner. Parents and Rushees are invited. Contact M arc Oppen, 784-0648. ; A S U VOLLEYBALL team takes on U S C tonight at 7:30 and UCLA Saturday a t 6:00 at the U A C . T h e Devils are real tuff at hom e, and it’s free to students! ASU Volleyball—ft’s Awesome!!! BE TA P LED G E S are bad, when you reach Wooglin Irish' will be yours. B U N S, G E T ready to rage at Pledge Presents tonight. D on’t forge! to shave!! We are conducting on campus interviews Friday, October ,12. Please contact Career Services to 1232 E. B roadw ay, S u ite #21 8 T e m p e , A rizona schedule an interview. If you are unable to schedule an interview, please send your resume with a cover letter to: Failure Analysis Associates, Inc., Test and 784-1599 Engineering Center, Attn: GHS, 1850 W. Pinnacle Peak Road, Phoenix, AZ 85027. Equal Opportunity Employer Lisa. "Tke S u n G tv il ORDER YOURS TODAY 965-3881 State N u Page 23 Friday, O ctober 12,1990 PERSONALS PERSONALS C B — 8 plus 1! Tim e to have som e fun. We'H potty till the m orning light. I love you ARE Y O U a student? Is it your birthday? Chuck— see ya tonight! Your small person friend. Press classified departm ent in the south C H l-O JEN H, You are a teVrific mom and a great friend. Congrats on sterling com m it­ tee! Shall we Dash-it this w eekend? Love, Ann. . Bring your valid college ID to the State PERSONALS ADOPTION HOME SERVICES S TU D E N TS - Do you want to know how to TH A N K H E A V E N for little ones. Wanted: a P EA CE O F mind. Let m e care for your fcpot Elvis? Call 965-6822. very special baby for a child-adoring home house, pets, plants, etc. while you are away. Lyn, 993-4301. in Southern California. Ultim ate outcome: basem ent of Matthews Center and you can wish yourself or someone else a STU- I ’M realty looking forward to tonight. devotion, Bring the happy day with a free 15-word personal chocolate sprinkles, whipped cream , and ad! Happy Birthday!! P le a s e c a ll ( c o lle c t ) a t t o r n e y : (213)854-4444 or Ginny, (213)208-1308. a tape of yoUr choice. I love you. Lillian. following: 3 feet of string, security unlimited love. P RE G N ANCY ? We that personal ads are only $ 1.4 0 per day for 15 words? W hat a great (and cheap) TH E TA C H I Mark Stull. You lucky man! m any loving couples w ho have been court You’ll be with m e a t Presents tonight. certified and wish to adopt your baby. Law universe. Y our finally 21 and let m e tell way to let that special someone know just Love, Dancia. Offices of John W . Matlock, 834-4544. you, your plane is definitely gonna land how special they really are! cause you deserve it! 0 -K Bye: Laura. OOOOO'. even though it’s the same boring date! I to sweat and roll up your sleeves and love you, L in d a .. plunge both hands into Life up to the C H I- 0 S TE P H P. O nly 1 3 days to go! I c a n ’t wait to see you in m y shoes for once! Love, Ann. C H R IS - Y O U Like ’5 0 ‘s music, right? Well m eet me in the new M U programming lounge at 1 1 :40-1:30. It’s a free event as part of M U AB Special Events committee’s '5 0 ’s day. W e can call 965-M U AB to find out more. -Leslie. elbows." So say yes!-Lupus. K.A. AQAM— From Stoli and Moonlight to Walks in the park and “ Powder Puff” excursions^- tonight the best is yet to come!! Love, Nicole. KATIE O F McClintock, I forgot to ask for your number. How 's your arm ? Tony, 829-7945 W es. Tim and George— W e ’re Definately ready to Party with you at formal tonite!! W e ’re Delighted to be taking you to Pledge Presents! — Your G am m a Phi dates. D A R LIN G , I ’M really really looking forward to 100 more ye^rs W h o are those people? ;. M uy mucho, Caya. D D D M A U R E E N , P ledge Presents is*just the beginning, you will shine like a pear! Tonight! Dèlta love, Jane. D D D M ELINDA: dancing, dining, drink­ ing... who could ask fo r more?!! Have a super tim e tonight! Deftaluv, Mom: D D D S HELLY and Lisa, you’re last Pledge Presents! List’s party! I Delta lové you guys to D elta Death! Jane. D E LTA C H I’S ... Thanks for an awesome tim e last night! See you soon! Love, Alpha G am . D E LTA G A M M A Pledge Presents!!! Just a week away, get psyched! D E LTA GAMMA coaches Carrie and beast! C uz “ W e so hom ey!” -W ild OnesT O M Y Sonny. I love you sp much, that I think I’ m gonna burst .Sparky! if they could only see you in sequins ..let's TRl D E LTA Kelly Kennan— Pledge 966-5683 SERVICES M EL S TEV E N S : D ude . BG’s 8 hours?! Tired of m ai-iai's not I! Ready to. rage at format?!! Love Tiff, Steph. M O M A N D Nana, glad you’re here this weekend. The gam e will be fun. Love Missy and Eric. M O M , DAD, Tam , arid Tiff: W elcom e to ASU! W e ’re going to have a blast! I love you .'T ra c e . O U R CO ACH ES , Christie, Christa, Dana arid Missy. Phi Delts thank you on a great jo b !, PAT- MUAB Special Events committee is showing that great movie about the ’50’s G rease ih the M U Cinem a for free! Let’s go together- Kelly. PAUL EDW ARD: La caridad. New York City a year ago. Mm rri...it's boon delicious. M aria Claudia. ■. wait to see you presented tonight! And Hey, you get to m eet “ Dad” as well! Delta Love Kiddo! TRl D ELTA Kelly Klumpp: I ’m excited to see you presented tonight! I’m psyched you’re my dot! Delta Love Mom. TRI-D ELTA KELLY Sm oot-1 can’t wait to see my baby presented! You’re going to steal die stage! Delta love, mom. believe you're already wearing Have a PERMANENT hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. tion: 969-6954. great time. Love your big sis. SAE D C Last Friday was so m uch fun— P S . I don’t care w here you work!! SAE FR O M U .S .C . Jeff: W elcom e to ASU. AD P i formal will be hot! Luv y a. Holly. happy! Love in PKE, Lara. CHILD CARE I W ILL take care of your child like my own. Reasonable rates. Mesa, Southern and “ KID S IT T E R ” who would enjoy playing with two very active Sports-minded boys, 5 You should reevaluate what a sorority is all about. Are you here for fraternal reasons or “ Fraternity” PART-TIM E BAB YSITTER wanted. Own transportation needed. N ear Paradise Valley M all 494-4392 ADOPTION H A P P IL Y -M A R R IE D love. O ur attorney is very understanding and kind. P leae call him collect, anytime, Larry Siegel: Office, (415)457-6313; home, S A M M Y S C O TT, w hat does one room 12 people, 3 beds and a hangover Saturday P H Y L U S A N D Paul wish to adopt infant equal? G et ready for tonight. into their Massachusetts country home. ing you soon!!! The M e n of Z 8 T . THA NKS for the past few weeks. This tim e w hen I go home, I can S CO TT, T H E R E ’S a southern girt who's a wantin’ to go dancin’ . Com e to room 231 Love your Big Sis Steph. today at noon! G A M M A P H I Kerry, to m y special little sis! S IG M A NU Alba— G et ready for the time Tonight is the night for fun and laughter! of your Hfe! (This formal is going to rage!) after! Love your big sis, Anna. GAMMA P H I Pledges— You are the best, see ya tonight! Love ADPi Michelle The day has S IG M A N U G W. (soon to be Dr. Walker), finally com e, tonight’s the night to have good luck tomorrow! Hugs and kisses, fun!! Pledge Presents will be great, hope is Ber. ■ Was worth the wait!! Y our actives love you and can’t w g t to present you tonight SK KERRY and Jodi— How many more days tiU your B-days? Twenty-two and C AM M A P H I Missy! H a ve a great tim e at fourty-two! G et ready to party. SK Love pledge presents. This is your day! Love in Heidi. PKE, Elle S PU NKY (OARLY)— A real friend: some­ H A P P Y B-DAY Suzy Sorority! D ead Tick­ ets R on m e Sorority. LoVe Y o u r Bud X — Suzy related expenses. you. -Charlene, G et psyched! C an't w ait to m eet the man! You'll be presented and have lots of fun Lots of fam ily near by. Call collect after 6pm- 1-508-649-3177. Confidential and promise you forever and believe in it. I love G A M M A PHI Am anda. T onite is your nite! one who knows all about you and still loves you. Don’t let the sm oke get in your eyes. The Spank. ($25); guaranteed. Call Carol, SERVICES TUTORS 924-8064, evenings and weekends. East Mesa. ° A C C O U N TIN G A N D finance professional A strategies. Rates from $6/hour. 497-2097, KIN K O ’S paper makes the grade. GH. - MISCELLANEOUS W A N T E D : B O Y S co u t m em orabilia. National Jam boree items; O rder of the transcribing, editing, mailings. Arrow, rank patches, 893-7582 (message). etc. Call Gary, College graduate using IBM computer. Mike, 964-0994. W A S H ER /D R YE R RE NTALS. $ 40 month A P A /M LA for students. 969-3204. E X P E R IE N C E D typing/word Need it fast? Call Jessie, Chaudoin’s; Office Space AREA. Typing, word processing, (near ASU) S m a ll S u ite s fr o m $ 1 5 5 , fr e e u til. 966-2186. B U S Y B’S Word Processing. No job too big or too small. G uaranteed. Lakeshore R ealty 820-2402 First-time customer discount. 962-9768. Literary Services Manuscript evaluation. Grant proposals, reports, newsletters, brochures. Complete project development Your Individual Horoscope ..- = Frances Drake = Made With strong bonding organic polymer resins. Doesn’t yellow or turn brittle like acrylic. Will not damage natural nail. Back to School Specials* FuU Set $22 Fills $17 Tanning: 1 Month Unlimited $20 Located near Scottsdale Rd. & Indian School 423-5504 — C O U PO N — P R O F E S S IO N A L nia Friday night. Kim says she's stronter! S CO TCH! warm welcom e. W e look forward to m eet­ Online search and retrieval. Business, technical, professional, academic. I Bibliographies, abstracts, full-text. Interpretation, statistical analysis. *one service perfirst-time clients only. S AM M Y S C O TT, get ready for wrestlema- reasons? G A M M A P H I Beta— Thank you for your Information Services Cactus Nail Company and 7. 893-3078. Professional native speaker. Linda, 831-0349. ACC U R A TE R E S U M E S composed and editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. P ric e s a re . c o m p e titiv e , ne gotiable. Thin and Natural Sculptured Nail (415)456-2495. G A M M A P H I'S Tel/Fax, 994-4460 or 9 66-8754. processing. 945-5744. Tempe 897-8019 Visa/MC couple want healthy infant to adopt and Love K and M. . available. service/transcribe tapes. C all after 1pm, ASU m en of ZB T. INSTRUCTION AAK URIT T Y P IN G - Short papers, prompt ments, S A M M Y S C O TT, Saturday I Want break­ didn't she. accounting, ALL PA P ER S, resumes, letters, docu­ dates are so excited for tonight. Love G am m a Phis H.G . C K N.S. L D C.C. lists, Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, -Dettalove and all mine!! Tracey. Lindsay. 832-0772. can’t wait till tonight! G am m a Phi N.S. mailing etc. Self-serve Macintosh computers and W e took forward to a great sem ester. The a re $ 1 .50/page. instruction, $tudy aides and examination TRl D E L T S -r Thanks for your personal! c o o k ie s Processing. Student discounts. Call for m ore informa­ blast arid Deltaluv- Jen. YOUR W ORD days! tonight! formal num ber 3!!! C a n ’t wait! Let’s rage!!! fast in bed. Your Mom raised you that way, wait to see you presented tonight. Were going to have a blast! Remember: Be pick up. Alm a School Road/Baseline. Jan, 897-1744. V ..... ;. rem em ber that your mommy loves you! PSE P M Kim Kull. A long time ago, ip a S A E ’S B M . B.S. & C . C C . B .M — Your G A M M A P H I Adrienne: Your big sis can't Service Word presented love you! Alicia. RO YCE, T H E night is here. G et ready for a sky. Love in P KE Heidi. Laser printing included. You deliver and etc: At Y our 921-0168; O pen early, open late, open 7 TRI-D ELTS G ABY and Beth- here’s to fun and surprises! Pi Luv, Wendy. That is if w e m ake it after our trip to the T Y P IN G /W O R D P R O C E S S IN G . $1/page. resumes, call 966-2035. 9 60 W est University, call going to have an awesom e weekend- I blue, tonight is Pledge Presents, and I I’m so $ 1 .5 0 PER page. Terrn papers, letters, TR ID E LTA DANCIA-1 can't w ait to see you presented! Let’s rage!!! Deltaluv- Jem. ROB GATTIS: Be prepared for a night of liT sis Rebecca. M K T 3 51, Nursing, Theses, Dissertations. LEARN T O speak Arabic, translation is presented! Delta love, Jenny: your night! Your m om can’t wait to see you D T D S LlM E R — Roses are red, violets are PHI processing, $2/page. Janet, 834-0893. laser printers, too. 9 3 3 East University, TR I-D E LT S TEP H A N IE Benke- tonight's blast a t formal! Jam es. excited for you to be presented tonight. WORD microcassette transcribing. Legal briefs, extra charge. ASU location. 894-6768. ÀSU. 829-7829. Presents tonight! I can’t wait to see you Phoenician... so don’t be late. Love, K.C. Loring. GAMMA P R O F E S S IO N A L gram m ar corrected, writing improved, no 649-0320. TR l D E L T A Tonya- get psyched for Pledge arid Lara. REBECCA— G et ready for a blast! by hair removal. Free initial treatment. N ear black! Presents!! W e luv you guys!! awesome! Thanks! W e ’re going to have a the Alpha G am 's are psyched for tonight! run included, desk-top publishing, etcetera. Low prices. Happy Pledge Presents! Deltaluv, Kim. formal is tonight, so let's get psyched! to do with, our parting. Seeya around F IJ I’S ... AS the sun sets, you can bet that service Editing A S O F T Touch Electrolysis- perm anent TR ID E LTA HALLIE: boy, time dies...can’t see you in white! G et psyched for Pledge w hatever happenend at B G ’s had nothing yourself and stop rushing me, X1X2. writer. typed TR I-D ELT PLED G E S - Actives can 't wait to Lush, love, patience is the: key, so stimulate TY P IN G professional documents, E L E C T R O L Y S IS — P H I P S I’S Mike and Tom:. G am m a Phi prepare to In intrigue, as in $ 1 5 0/P A G E. Double-space, wills, contracts, technical vitch, O RNA, 956-4028. TR l DELT: Lesley c a n ’t wait for tonight! galaxy far. far aw ay.. can 't take the blam e Joanne, 966-1516 or Bbbbi, 968-9166. Fast, dependable, accurate. Term papers, business le tters, m all outs, etc. 839-7527. PIKE DO U G W - Happy Birthday!! W e ’re tiring of the gam e. In this m atter however, I formate. $1.50, double-spaced page. Call Robyn, 996-3911. AAA , E R IC 1ER IC 2: I ’M dism ayed to hear you're N E E D T IM E to study? W e do APA/MLA charts, resumes, etc. 1(5 years experience. more. M aster Key hypnosis. Lillian Simo- Dining and dancing is what it takes, at the w ant you! Love, Scooter M esa Drive and Brown Road. 844-1876. awesom e pledge daughter and I cannot D È LTA S IG Jeff Davis: Form al tonight will such a 15 Love, Boner arid Kat. Congrats! Delta love, your mom. I'm graphics. Northeast corner, $ 1 .7 5 A N D up, professional word proces­ ATO Thom. SORRY full ASU. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , reasonable rates. Keep your dream alive. Love rape down at U Of A. Sincerely Axl Rose and Laser printer. Class papers all types, Processing, Linda, 839-6167. DELTA S IG Kirk. O ne down— now there's D E N IS E — printer, sor and former English teacher. Laser your Pledge Presents this Friday. Love Banshees, laser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. TR l D E LT Kelly W . Looking forward to UNRULY and tion, memory. Elim inate mental blocks. Increase self-confidence, self-esteem and not afraid of Heights! Heidi. DELT pickup A M A ZIN G R E S U LTS Improve concentra­ the G am m a Phi form al tonight. I hope your D E L T T O D D , how's yer’ backstroke?; On-cam pus delivery. Daily or FAX direct to me. W P5.1 Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. - 24-hour Hotline D ELTA S IG M ark D W e 'll be flying high at. the fruits of pleasure. Don't miss it! ized, minutes from you there! Deltaluv, Mom. DE LTS , RAFFLE season is in the air, win M E S A SEC RETARIAL Service, computer­ APA specialization. Marion, 839-4269. with you tonite!! Delta Love; Beth. time a t Pledge Presents! Can’t w ait to see I love you! Chris. ound. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, T R l DELTA Jenny Diminno: Y ou’re an TRl DELTA Patricia— Have a fantastic been able to spend so much time together! your typing needs. A M A/M LA, fast turnar­ 35 years experience. T heses, dissertation, $1 50/P A G E. Presents is here! I’m so excited to rage Bropké: Thanks for all your help and be most memorable! I ’m glad w e have LE TTE R Q U A LITY word processing for 966-2825. PREGNANCY COUNSELING rage tonight! Planning this formal? P.S. a horror love- your wealthy roommate. s u p p o rt-- The M en o f F U I. only five M ary. .. for details. TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING some serious room m ate bonding tonight! LEE S H E R W O O D Happy 20th! Let's do S tev e K . TH E TA G R E EN : get set to ride the blue Opening: $ 1 .5 0 AAA Word Processing/laser printer. DDD Pledge Presents. You’re awesome! Jane. T O TH E winner o f the S H S Scoop AWard- LAMBDA C H I'S Happy Birthday! TH E TA DE LT Pat- Let’s rage tonight at G rand FLY IN G FIN G E R S has Maclntosh/laser TH E TA C H I Rob- get excited for formal, “ IT IS easy to say no. To say yes, you have RESUMES Resum e package for only $ 14.95. Expires 10/31/90. Call Dennis, 438-7341. have O H I-O JILL D em ane. T o the roomie of the soon. I hope it’s your best B-day ever CAR EER quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. Call 945-1551 U N W A N TE D H E Y CO LLEG E students! Did you know arid TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $ 5 .0 0 O FF ^ r^z-rr. IF YOUR BUSINESS W OULD LIKE TO SPONSOR THE HOROSCOPES, PLEASE CALL 965-6555. FOR SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1990 ARIES ■ • (Mar. 21 to Apr 19) iP i Your tendency today is to put work before pleasure. Indications are how­ ever, that today is better spent in the company of a loving companion. Togetherness comes first now! TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) iW You’ll make things h&ppen for you in business today and may be in for som e extra revenues. Company right now would place too much o f a strain on family members. GEMINI ■W ’ (May 21 to June 20) W It’s hot a good day for business negotiations. Agreements would be hard to reach. Put that extra Creative energy of yours to good use, Don’t let inspirations slip away. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) - HR Shopping is favored now and you’ll be making some positive changes at home now. A partner though m iy not go along with one of your ideas, if too much money is involved. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) W t Either the work pace is tiring or you don’t accomplish as much as you'd like. You’re adept however at expressing yourself today. You’ll shine at a group activity. VIRGO J fA (Aug: 23 to Sept.22) S& There’s a tendency to worry or to dwell on problems now. You’re on the right track about a career matter and you’ll soon be seeing an increase in income. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct.22) E 8® The demands that others make of you can interfere with som e of your social plans for today. It’s a good time for self-promotion. Ideas are plentiCopyright 1990 by King ful. SCORPIO olIC (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) v Though working on yoiir own time on a project will go well, it's a poor time to present business ideas to others. - New insights com e about investment concerns. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) S fv Get-togethers with friends are highlighted now. Som e o f you may travel now. Get more than one estim ate for h ou sehold repairs. Accent partnership interests tonight. CAPRICORN ^ (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You may have difficulty making up your mind about a financial matter, but you’re decisive and on the ball when it comes to career. Proceed frill steam ahead. AQUARIUS ^ (Jan. 20 to Feb. IS) V rk It’s not a good idea to hold things in. A heart-to-heart talks will erase doubts and clear rip the potential for misunderstandings. Travel is a plus right now. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20)