¿ Copyright, State Press, 1990 Vol. 73 No. 46 Tem pe, Arizona Arizona State U niversity’s M orning Daily Friday, November 2 ,1 9 9 0 Celebration kicks o ff Term inal 4 opening B y M ICHELLE ROBERTS S tate Press M ore than 500 guests gussied up to celebrate the opening of Sky Harbor Airport’ s $280 million Goldwater Terminal Four, the largest capital improvement p ro je c t in P h o en ix ’s history that is scheduled to open Nov. 11. The black-tie dinner, which cost the city of Phoenix an estimated $300,000, was held in the new terminal's walkway and paid homage to the building’s namesake, Barry M Goldwater. Guests at the dinner included government officials and persons involved in all stages of the terminal's development and construction. Goldwater, a form er U. S. senator and lifetim e Arizona resident, said he is delighted the new terminal bears his name. “ This is the greatest honor that has ever been given m e,” Goldwater said. “ I learned to fly out here 65 years ago when it was nothing but a big, white patch, “ This terminal will become vital to Phoenix’s future.” Phoenix M ayor Paul Johnson said the project nearly doubled in size during its construction, which was completed last month. Johnson said the terminal in its full operating stages will encompass 3 billion square feet and will possess 86 gates, eight concourses, a nine-level terminal core and 6.000 parking spaces. The new complex is centered around the existing main terminal building. Concourse buildings branch off on both sides and are connected by passenger bridges equipped with moving sidewalks. Planners estimate the new structure will serve the V alley’s air traffic needs for the next 15 years. T h e new te rm in a l w ill a llo w the retirement of Terminal One, built in 1952. Officials said its demolition w ill occur before 1992. Johnson said the new addition w ill enhance V alley economics. “ By the year 2000, the Phoenix airport system as a whole will serve over 40 million people per year, w ill directly employ close to 200,000 Arizonans and w ill annually generate a total economic impact for^the state of $27 billion per year,” he said. City officials predict that with Terminal Four in operation, Sky Harbor w ill pump $41 million a day into the state’s economy at no cost to taxpayers. Carol Hodel, communications manager for the Phoenix Chamber o f ' Commerce, said Valley businesses are optimistic about the new terminal’s economic potential. “ What w e are anticipating is more opportunity fo r tourism coming into our market, more importing and exporting market opportunities for existing (V alley) businesses and new businesses,” she said. H o d e l s a id th e ' n e w t e r m i n a l ’ s international flights will open new business markets. “ There are some flights that are pending into Japan and Europe which will help us to cure those markets specifically,” she said. win Kowenvsune pres» D a n c in s tre e ts Sonya Dass, 22, a senio r business m anagem ent m ajor, perform ed an East Indian dance on W est LaWn during C u ltu ral A w areness Day, Thursday. The dance w as p art o f th e Hom ecom eing festivities. A SU o ffic ia ls to lo o k in to p o lic ie s fo r th e b lin d By DIANE SANTORICO S ta te Press An official from ASU Disabled Student Resources said she will meet with officials from the Arizona Department of Economic Security this month to discuss problems involving aid to blind and visually-impaired students on campus, DSR Director Tedde Scharf said she w ill get together with E d House, manager of DES’s Services for the Blind and Visually Impaired, to analyze policies and funding for blind students, after a new staff member is hired at the ASU department. Scharf said only 200 of the almost 1,000 visually-impaired students at ASU are receiving any kind o f rehabilitation help from the state. “ We w ill see what w e can provide and see what they can do,” Scharf said. “ We want them (the blind students) to learn new skills so they can be employable and functioning members o f society.” While Scharf said she believes ASU has one of the best programs in the nation for the blind, she said Arizona is behind the times. “ Very often employers don’t understand the blind, so they erib up working for programs and doing workshops for others who are blind, and they don’t get integrated into society,” she said. House said the possibility for changes at ASU is really good. “ Tedde Scharf is increasing her emphasis on the blind and hiring new staff,” , he said, adding that there m ay be some policy changes at ASU. Meanwhile, the state chapter of the National Federation of the Blind recently named state-run services for the sightless as some of the worst in the country. The organization passed four form al resolutions Saturday criticizing the DES for denying equipment to the blind and for “ pigeonholing” clients into shelters rather than training them for marketable jobs. The state N FB chapter represents about 500 of the almost 50,000 blind or severely visually-impaired people in Arizona. Roselyn Butt, a form er ASU student who experienced problems with the DES, said she agrees that the state tends to pigeonhole blind students. “ liie y (the N F B ) are right on,” Butt said. “ Basically, the state stresses not what you can do, but what is open to you due to your blindness.” Butt, who graduated from ASU in 1980 with a m aster’s degree in speech communication, said she had some Turn to Blind, page 6. Satellite conference gives ‘rough’ political forecast By JEFF CONDORS S tate Press The next 10 years will be dominated by politics, not economics, a world-renowned economist said Thursday. At a live teleconference, P eter Drucker told an international audience of about 90 that the world is “ in a period o f pretty rough weather” after 40 years of predictable political behavior. More than 130 business and academic institutions across the continent subscribed Running wild: An ASU study reveals that long-distance runners burn fewer calories when they exercise constantly. Page 2 to the satellite down-link as Drucker described the social factors that have driven the m ajor European countries to form the European Economic Community scheduled to commence in 1992. The teleconference was broadcast live from San Francisco and was seen across Canada and northern Mexico, as w ell as in the United States. The event was held at Tem pe’s Westcourt in the Buttes and was presented by the ASU College of Business’ Center for Office American review: Performance artist W o lf G ow in presents “ American Culture. Why am I here?” at the Performance Art Center. Page 12 Automation Research. Tom Keller, a professor of management at ASU and director of ÇOAR, said the idea behind the teleconference and other COAR programs are to “ bring the educational and business communities together.” Speaking in a heavy German accent, Drucker, a 68-year-old professor, said the economy will be pulled in several directions. “ Which is not good for people who have to make decisions in thé business world,” he said. However, he said these forces have social, rather than economic, overtones. Drucker said the “ break up of the Soviet em pire” and the reunification of Germany w ere both m ajor reasons for the creation of the European Economic Community. He went on to say the inclusion o f Germany in the E E C was important because “ quite a few people in Eastern Europe remember the recent past (World War I I ) . ” Drucker also said European countries a r e ' Turn to Conference, page 6. Gnawing away: Today’s weather: Sunny with a high in the The Sun Devils, 2-5, take on the Oregon Beavers, 1-7, Satur­ day at Sun Devil Stadium. mid 70s. Tonight: Clear with a low in the Page 15 low 90s. Classifieds....... College Culture...........................--—- ...I ! Comics....................-.— — 1^ Crossword......-.—-.....»...........-..¿...-....-.8 H orosc op e s--— .— — ».—— — - — *.— 19 ... .'.».H ■S* Page 2 Friday, November g, 1990 State Piets ASU study explains athlete w eight gain, loss By ANITA CARCONE S tate Press How do some male distance runners and triathletes keep on the weight while eating less than other athletes? An ASU researcher found that the answer m ay lie in their ability to burn few er calories when on the go. Janice Thompson determined that while some male endurance athletes m ay be maintaining their body weights while eating less than other athletes, they are also expending less energy during exercise. Thompson, an exercise physiology graduate student, recently compiled the results of a 10-month study finished in April 1989, with the help of her advisor, James Skinner, and ASU nutrition professor, Melinda Manore. Thompson graduated from ASU with a bachelor’s degree in exercise physiology and a master’s degree in physical education and exercise science. She is currently working on her doctorate in exercise physiology and is using her research as part of her dissertation. Fourteen m ale endurance athletes, including triathletes and distance runners, volunteered as subjects for the study. Thompson said each athlete had to have maintained his body weight for at least two years in order to accurately study his metabolic rate and total caloric intake. Three-day diets and activity records indicàtéd that seven o f the athletes had a low calorie intake or did not expend the calorie intake from the meals eaten each day. On the other hand, the other seven had a balanced intake in which they were expending the calories taken in. Thompson said the study’s main intent was to find out how endurance athletes exhibit sim ilar aerobic power while eating food with a different number of calories. “ The low intake athletes are more weight stable and have a lower resting metabolic rate,” she said, “ They tend to expend less energy during exercise. Everyone’s resting metabolic rate uses up 75 percent of our energy every day.” According to research information, low-intake athletes may be able to maintain their body weight on a lower than expected caloric intake because o f their increased metabolic efficiency. The higher efficiency could be achieved via a lower resting metabolic rate, the effect of the meal and/or lower energy expenditure due to the total caloric intake over an entire day, “ The body doesn’t function rapidly with a low intake of food,” Thompson said. The study found that by eating less, the athletes’ resting metabolic rate was lower, which in turn required less energy expenditure, she added. “ The question is whether the athlete can adapt to lower caloric injake while their nutritional status is changed to eating less,” nutritionist Manore said. She said the evidence o f the study suggests the athletes losing weight are “ just not eating that much” and are exercising more, which makes them calorie deficient. Admitting there is a flaw in the study, Thompson said that Since athletes fluctuate throughout the week in their intakes and expenditures, ,eating and activity patterns should be monitored over a longer period of time, such as six days. Skinner, who is also director of ASU’s Exercise and Sport Research Institute, said some athletes have a naturally lower resting metabolic rate than others even though they are consuming the same amount of calories. “ Sometimes it is because the athlete’s system is more economical and they use less energy,” he said. “ When you starve someone their whole body shuts down, and as a result their metabolism will also go down.” Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Language and Literature Building. New members welcome. •Indian Students Association will be on Stadium Drive at 6 p.m. •Memorial Union will pick winners of the expansion celebration drawing at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Programming Lounge. Meetings MU Yavapai Room. •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •Campus Crusade for Christ will meet at 7:30 p.m. in LS 191. •Kayak Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the aquatic center. New members welcome. •D evil's Juggling Club will meet at 3 p.m. in front of the •AlESEC will meet at 4 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. •The Farce Side Comedy Hour will perform a free show at 12:30 p.m. in the Union Programming Lounge. Corrections In the Oct. 31 issue o f the State Press, Jim Jarrell’s name was misspelled in a story on page 18 about seatbelts. A remark in the Nov. 1 issue of the State Press Magazine was attributed to Joie Ann LaPolla. LaPolla denies making the remark. •ECKANKAR Students of ASU will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the •American Indian Students will meet at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. in the Student Services Building Multicultural Lounge. •Indian Students Association will meet at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Edna Vikel Activity Center on the corner of Rural Road and Southern Avenue. •Northlight Gallery will have an opening reception Sunday at 2 p.m.. in Northlight Gallery. $4.00 PIZZAS! m State Press Display Advertising 965-6555 11 Classified Advertising 965-6731 HV1 G et u p to fo u r 12” M ed iu m tw o-item pizzas for only $4.00 each w ith the purchase o f a P re se n ts 14” LA R G E PEPPERONI PIZZA FEAST Sand (o r any two-item s o f your choice) at the special price of M.S. Society O N L Y $ 7.99! O ur Pepperoni Feast featuring extra peppcroni and extra cheese is back at an incredible price! Order a 14” Large Pepperoni Pizza Feast o r any Large Two-Item Pizza for only 17.99 and get up to four more 12” Medium Pan or Original Pizzas o f equal or lesser value for only $4.00 EACH! Not valid with any other coupons or offers. Limited time only. Subject to all applicable state and k ra i tax. SERVING ASU SINCE 1980 HOURS: ll:0 0 a m -l :30am Sun.-Thurs. ll:00am -2:30am Fri.-Sat. f O N LY $ 3 .0 0 ! J O N L Y $3.00 for an additional Small pizza with the purchase o f another Small pizza o f equal or lesser value. N o limit. N o cou­ pon necessary. A t this location | only. I I 968-5555 University and Rural O N LY $ 3 .5 0 ! O N L Y $3.50 for an additional Medium pizza w i th the purchase o f another Mediumpizza o f equal or lesser value. Np lim it.^No coupon necessary. At this loca­ tion only. ' on ly > $ 4 .0 0 ! ■ Not vdM wNh any attar coupons or oflara. jSUojact to ail apptcatois state and local tax 8 pm .$3 d o n a tio n s fe a tu r in g and ISLAND MICHAEL EAR TH NITR O W in n e r s o f A r iz o n a Sounds W I N S P E C IA L P R I C E S O N L Y $4.00 for an additional Large pizza with the purchase o f another Large pizza o f equal or lesser value. N o lim it N o cou­ pon necessary. A t this location only. E m . Not valfed wHIt any otior coupons or alters Subjact to aWappacabia a>a>aand local f a . Mot valid wMhany otior coupons or after*. ^ 8 ubjsct to aNappicablselato and local lax. B ’ DEViL'S” SPARKY'S SUNDEVIL ! DELIGHT SPECIAL SPECIAL I a I | O N L Y $5.49 for an Original Small three-item pizza ana one Diet or Classic Coke. One coupon per pizza. Expires ,11-15-90 O N L Y $8.49 lor an Original Medium three-item jrizz a and tw o Diet or Classic Cokes. One coupon per pizza. E x p ires 1 1 - 1 5 * 9 0 O N L Y $11.49 for an Original Large Sun-Devil Special or any three-item pizza and a 6-pack o f Diet or Classic Coke. One coupon per pizza. Expires 11-15; it any attar coup LSutyoctto at ^pppôaM ttmtoand locai tax 52 Not valid wlti any ottar coupons or gitati . ■ ■ Mot vdMwHh any otior ooupons or otora. Subject to aN applcabto «tola and toed toa. 77« Subjact to ad appioahts stats and toed tax Our drtoora«any toaathan taO OO. Ijnitod dsivsiy araas to onoura satoy Our t rtuarsam mm panM n ii tor tala datturiaa. d it t o Domino's Pizza. Inc. W ith S p e c ia l C u ests ★ z z x O P T IC K E T * MILLER GENUINE DRAFT 99* $049 \ ß P itc h e r Sp on sors: I I S a t., N o v , 3 BACARDI RUM SPECIALS I Jam CoidweH Banker Lo C a sio Itn. Restaurant Tangibulls Silkscreen M alibu G ran d Prix Arlington Lim ousine Don (C h a r lie s M ichael / Anthony's Salo n B ackstage C hin a G ate Z ach ary's Alpine Ski Keller _ 715 SOUTH HAYDEJÏ ROAD, TEAVPE, A Z 85281• 966-1911 W o rld / N a tio n S tg jg _ P jg M _ Friday, November g, 1990 ' _______~ _____________________________ Pflgg_3_ GOP charged with voter intimidation W ASH ING TO N (A P ) — Democrats charged Thursday that Republicans are trying to intimidate minority voters in North Carolina and Texas, and asked the attorney general to step in to protect voting rights. The Democrats said postcards the GOP mailed to voters in heavily black sections of North Carolina and East Texas contained misleading or outright false information. “ W e stopped the Republicans in 1982 and in 1986 from conducting these despicable activities. Democrats stand ready to do it again,” party chairman Ron Brown said in a statement from Chicago, where he was on a campaign swing. In a hand-delivered letter to Attorney General Dick Thornburgh and John Dunne, the assistant attorney general fo r civil rights, Brown asked for an immediate investigation into possible civil rights violations. “ The need for speedy action is obvious,” Brown said. He added that the activity reported this year in North Carolina and Texas “ m ay be just the tip of the iceberg. ” In addition, Brown wrote to all 50 state Republican chairmen reminding them of a 1982 consent decree he said bars them from conducting “ ballot intimidation and ballot security activities.” The letter also reminds the chairmen that the Orange County (C alif.) Republican P arty last year paid a $400,000 settlement after being sued for intimidating Hispanic voters in 1988. The party hired armed, uniformed security guards to Minority votes are critical in North Carolina, where threeterm GOP Sen. Jesse Helms is in a tough fight against Democrat H arvey Gantt, the black form er m ayor of Charlotte. Minority votes also are important in the Texas governor’s race, where polls indicate Democrat Ann Richards has pulled even with Republican Clayton Williams. Among the evidence the Democrats presented Thursday: —A copy of the postcardm ailed to voters in heavily black North Carolina precincts, saying people m ust contact the Board of Elections if they recently moved and must have lived in a precinct for the last 30 days or they can’t vote. Brown said the postcards contained fraudulent, information. —Copies of postcards sent to elderly Texans in G regg County who had requested absentee ballots. The cards urged them to ‘throw that m ail ballot in the trash” and “ walk proudly into the voting place . . . in honor of the many who fought and died for your right to walk into the polls.” Brown said that in Texas, once someone requests an Turn to Democrats, page 8. Stalling econ om y forces top em ployers to lay o ff N E W Y O R K (A P ) — Citicorp, General Dynamics, Aetna and General Motors are only a few o f the m ajor employers that announced layoffs in recent days. Many economists say it could be just the start of a widespread job scaleback as the economy stalls. “ T h e re w ill be m ore la y o ffs , the unemployment rate will rise, job market conditions w ill deteriorate for the next six months or longer,” said Bruce Steinberg, an economist at M errill Lynch & Co. “ W e haven’t had a recession for so long that people forget what happens.” Some economists said service jobs may be hit hardest. That’s due partly to the 1980’sboom in the banking, finance, advertising and other service industries, which allowed these companies to grow fat. Finance and banking companies “ were basically taking anyone who could walk through the door,” said Robert Dye of the W efa Group, an economic forecasting firm in Bala Cynwyd, Pa. But in the face of increasingly grim e c o n o m ic fo r e c a s ts and fig u r e s — compounded by the economic shock from the P e rs ia n G u lf s ta n d o ff — these companies have been letting go of workers in droves. Citicorp, for one, said it will elim inate 2,000 jobs by the end of next year. “ They grew too fast and this is the consequence of growing too fasti a shakeout if you w ill,” said Kenneth Goldstein, an economist with the Conference Board, a New York-based business research groupé The slowdown among financial companies began with the W all Street crash of October 1987, but has since intensified as small investors have ' grown more cautious and avoided the stock and bond markets. The crash, along with the end of the real estate boom and the spread o f the savings and loan crisis, also hurt banks and insurers. Aetna L ife & Casualty Co., for example, plans to eliminate 2,600 jobs through layoffs and attrition. Manufacturing companies have fared somewhat better because they learned from the last recession eight years ago to keep operations lean, economists said. But the recent sluggishness has prompted many of them to lay off workers as well. In perhaps the largest such cutback, General Motors Corp. said it would close four plants and idle others temporarily, affecting thousands of workers. Experts say GM was responding to excess carmaking capacity as well as to the economy. State and local government jobs also are facing cuts due to withering tax revenues. Reductions are planned by Massachusetts, Virginia and the city of Pittsburgh, among others. D efen se cutbacks Also a re h ittin g employment. General Dynamics Corp. said it w ill lay o ff 700 to 1,000 workers in January because o f budget cuts and declining demand for the F-16 jet fighters. In all industries, middle-management jobs have been particularly hard hit. Economists say companies are cutting jobs not deemed crucial or revenue-producing. Regardless o f the cause, employers should view layoffs as a last resort, said Martha White, a Chicago-based consultant who helps troubled companies reorganize. “ Because the victim s go away during a downsizing or layoffs, people tend to think the problems go away. But that’s not true, there’s always residual fallout in the organization” in the form of morale and loyalty problems that can hurt productivity, she said. News Briefs Fatal Crash ABOVE- Investigators search through the debris front a single engine airp lane that crashed into a freeway embankment Thursday morning ih the Solatia Beach suburb north of San Diego. A traffic reporter and pilot were killed in the crash. R IG H T - In Dover, Oenver, Navy servicem en carry a casket with a U.S. flag draped around it for a ceremony held to honor the servicemen who lost tlw ir lives on the USS Iwo Jima. USS Iw o Jima ceremony An u niden tified youth is attended to a fte r being h it by a m ilitary tea r gas canister th at w as throw n by tw o m ales on m otorcycles during a dem onstration by a T exas evangelist in San Francisco, la te W ednesday. Hundreds protested th e th ree-h o u r revival. Human life span may reach 85 years, researchers say W ASHINGTON (A P ) — Humans m ay soon expect an average lifetim e of 85 years, but probably not much more, even if medical science defeats all o f the m ajor killer diseases, researchers say. An average life expectancy of four score and five m ay be the upper lim it because the human body by then is slowly deteriorating from a cascade o f aging effects, University of Chicago researcher S. Jay Olshansky said Thursday. And science, he said, has yet to find a way to overcom e this apparent design of nature. “ Even if w e found a cure for most fatal diseases, such as heart disease and cancer, the natural degeneration o f the body puts a cap o f about % years on the average age of death,” Olshansky and two co-authors report in the current issue of the journal Science. Other experts on human aging, however, strongly disagree. “ I f w e keep making progress as we have made in the past, then a baby born today can expect to live 100 years,” said James Vaupel of the University of Minnesota. “ There m ay w ell be some biological barriers, but w e are spending a lot o f money on biomedical research and the sciences are poised to make some really significant breakthroughs.” Olshansky said that most o f the m ajor advances in life expectancy have already been achieved. The average life span in the United States went from 47 years in 1900 to 75 years today. But this came about, he said, because of advances in infant and maternal death. “ This trend is not likely to continue,” he said. “ The easy advances have already been made.” Death rates fo r the young and those under age 50 are now so low that even if all dying in that age group was eliminated, the life expectancy at birth would increase by only 3.5 years, said Olshansky. The m ajor killers — heart disease, cancer, stroke and diabetes — usually strike after the age o f 50. “ In order to increase the average life expectancy o f the population to just 85 years, w e would have to achieve the equivalent of the elimination o f all deaths from heart disease and cancer,” he said. “ There are very few people around who argue that is realistically possible.” Opinion _______________________________ StH * Pft»8 U ndercover journalist U nderw ear rep orter is a royal pain to Princess D i M ike RoykO T r ib u n e M e d ia S y n d ic a te Although I pay little attention to the English royal fam ily, because most of them seem a little dim, a recent'news item caught m y e y e ..' . i An English journalist has written a bode about Princess Diana, and he goes into great detail about how much she has spent on clothing since she married Prince Charles in 1981. He meticulously lists the number of evening gowns she has bought (95), dresses (176), pairs o f shoes (350) and so on. None of that seems unreasonable since Princess Diana has to attend a lot of dinners and tea parties, and it wouldn’t do for her to look like a frump. But the journalist also revealed that since 1981 she has spent $22,950 on underwear. Two things struck m e about that bit of information. v First, I felt sadness for that journalist* who is said to be England’s leading royaltywatcher. He spends most o f his time gathering all sorts of tidbits, crumbs and dibs and dabs about the royal fam ily. I can’t criticize him for making a living, but 1 have to wonder how he must feel while snooping out how much someone spends on their underwear Since the royal fam ily shuns him, I assume that he goes to the Princess’s fa v o r it e u n d erw ear shops and says something like: “ Past, here’s five bob, girlie, how’s about telling m e how many bloomers Di bought this week?” E ven Sam D onaldson wouldn’t do something like that, although Geraldo might. When this English journalist was just a tot, his parents surely bounced him on their knees and wondered what he would be when he grew up. A barrister? A member of Parliament? Possibly the prim e minister? I doubt if they would have imagined that he would someday revea l how much the Princess of Wales spends on undies. They would have probably said: “ Better the lad becomes a humble blit honest chimney sweep.” But I suppose a job is a job, and if the world demands to know how much Di spends on her. underwear, somebody has to do it, and he has. Because I have a nerd wristwateh that has a calculator mode, I ’m constantly punching in numbers. And when I saw the figures $22,950, and nine years, I immediately worked it out. That’s $2,550 a year. Or $212 and odd change a month. Or about $7 a day. A startling figure. As I said, I can understand her buying all those gowns, dresses, shoes and other outer garments. She never knows when photographers will jump out from behind a hedge and snap her for People magazine. So she can’t go around looking like a bag lady or, even worse, thé Queen Mother. But assuming that she doesn’t do handstands or back flips in public, her underwear isn’t going to be seen. Snobby sorts aren’t going to sniff: “ Pm m f! She wore that very same underwear at last week’s cucumber sandwich and tea for the Homeless Cockney Waifs Society.” Besides, after She wears a gown a couple of times, she can always give it to a lessprivileged relative, a servant or donate it to some charitable organization. But I would think that even thé poorest relative or humblest downstairs maid would be offended if she said: “ Would you care to take home some of m y used underwear?” Using m y calculator, I ’ve also determined that in m y entire life, which is considerably longer than the princess’ , I haven’t spent anything close to $22,950 on underwear. Even if I live to a ripe age, I don’t project spending that much. And, unlike the princess, I have to shovel the walk in the winter so I ’m required to spend a certain amount extra for long Johns. (Th ey’re also worn as outer garments when I attend social events in Wisconsin) . I was pondering the princess’ underwear bills when I bumped into Slats Grobnik. T o m y surprise, he didn’t seem at all surprised. He said: “ it just shows that she had a good upbringing.” How do you com e to that conclusion? “ Her mudder gave her the same advice that m y mudder gave me and your mudder gave you.” T o spend $212 a month on underwear? “ Nah, her mudder wouldn’t have told her that. But I bet she said: “ Always w ear clean underwear in case you get in an accident and go to the hospital and you don’t want to be embarrassed in front of all the nurses.” That’s true. M y mother did tell m e that. Everybody’s mother told them that. So that explains it. How would it look if there was a' headline that said: “ Princess Di Jarred in Car Crash; Nurses Titter at Tattered ■Undies.” / p i “ Sure,” Slats said, “ that’s why I always get the best khaki boxer shorts that they sell at the A rm y and N avy surplus store. And I g e t ’em for m y w ife too.” You buy your w ife the same kind of boxer shorts you wear? “ Of course not. She wears one size bigger.” Give poor Julie a break Editor: Morons. It seems to be a fairly descriptive term for a number of students on this campus who have nothing better to do with their time than to complain. About a cartoon. Yes, a cartoon. You would think that these people would at least have some flies to tear the wings o ff of, but they are more concerned with the quality (o r perceived lack o f) o f “ Ram ey Days.” Now, pardon me if I ’m wrong, but aren’t w e supposed to care more about the world situation? I guess Julie Sigwart’s creation takes precedence over the oil crisis. She should be flattered. Perhaps w e should send troops to her house. I ’m not saying that “ Rainey Days” is the greatest cartoon of all time. It’ s not. However, it’s not that bad, and I don’t see any o f the people that are complaining writing and drawing their own strip. I f these people can produce one that’s bettor, then they Should. It’s a simple m atter of putting your money where your pen is. L e t’s give poor Julie a break. Her last name is not Trudeau, Breathed, or Watterson. Not even Ritter. But, once upon a tune, these guys w ere young, struggling cartoonists trying to figure out what was funny to everybody else. M y hunch tells m e that Julie is doing toe same. Can’t people find better things to do than complain about toe comics? I f not, then it’s a sad settlement about our campus. (O f course, .1always felt the same way about people who write letters to toe editor in g e n e ra l. . . but I digress.) Why don’t w e just leave Julie alone and get back to reading what w e really care about in toe State P ress — the police report. Marc Mason Junior, Justice Studies \ F F STA TE P R E S S SUZANNE ROSS Editor NICOLE PERRON Managing Editor City Editor..... ....».»» .»..HOIART ROWLAND Asst. City Editor.--- ----------- ■».».,,»»».----------KELLY PEARCE Copy Chief....—..»»»»..—»»» » » » . .............TENNY TATUSIAN .... ______ D A N N O W IC K I Asst. Opinion Editor.»...».»»»»»»_______ JULIA COODRUM ______________ .T. J. SOKOL ______________ PAUL CORO _____ KRIS TIMM ONS ................ STEVE KR1CUN JILL TIRKE Asst. Copy CWef.»».....M~.....-.^.~. Magazine Editor._____ .»„ »»..._______ .MEG HALVERSON Assoc. Magazine Editor. — .... »...ROBYN PINKSTON Asst. Magazine Editor»...;....—.... —........GARIN CUMMINS REPORTERS: Kenneth Brown, A^ita Carcone, Teena Chadwell, Jeff Conoors, Joseph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Patricia Mah, Michelle Paul, Michelle Roberta, Girth Sheh, Christina Schroeder, Kristie Young. SPORTS REPORTERS: Darren Urban, Greg Zele, Dan Zeiger. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty, Jeoigetta Douglas, Monique Hollin, Will Powers, Tamars Wofford. COPYEDITORS: Kellye Kratdi, Michael LaMantia. CARTOONISTS: Rob Minton, JuUe Sigwart. COLUMNIST: Nicole CanolL M AGAZINE STAFF: Michelle Cniff, Vicki Culver Christine Herbranaon, Lori Lappin, Deborah Netnko, Jon Y M z, Kramer WetzeL PRODUCTION: Caaaaundra Cavinesa, Dane Christ; Holly Hiatt, Jeffrey Lucas, Mark Not haft, Lynne Senzek, John P. Smith, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Dan EHatron\ Todd Martin, Christine Millan, Mike Morris, Terri Smith, John Vaccara Bill VanZanten. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602) 965-7572. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated oh the ASU campus. The news and views published in' this newpaper ate not necessarily those of ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Form er frien d W ashington, Baghdad in cahoots b efore invasion Cödy Shearer North American Syndicate W ASH ING TO N — A special investigative report in (lie London Sunday O bserver the other day contends our government actively and secretly connived with some of President Saddam Hussein’s aides in the early part of this yea r to push up oil prices and thereby rescue his crisisendangered economy. The story alleges that a form er Am erican ambassador, who is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, “ and still used by Bush on foreign policy missions,” m et an Iraqi minister in New York in January to help Baghdad co-ordinate a campaign with OPEC to raise oil prices. Furtherm ore, in early July, the O bserver says, Sadoun Hammadi, Iraq’s Vice Prim e Minister began to advocate an aggressive oil price policy around the Gulf, amounting to a $25 a barrel figure. In a discussion with Saddam Hussein im m ediately following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait, Which supposedly occurred because that later wouldn’t cooperate with Baghdad, Joseph Wilson, the U. S. chargees d’affaires in Ira q , complained to the Iraqui leader that his actions were going to trigger “ unrest in world markets.” Whereby Hussein reportedly responded by saying, “ You did this. We accepted $25 per barrel. ” Saddam was emphasizing, according to the O bserver, that the $25 per barrel formula was an American position supported by Iraq. The newspaper offers further evidence of an understanding between Baghdad and Washington on higher oil prices by underscoring a conversation between Saddam Hussein and April Glaspie, the U. S. ambassador to Iraq, a few days before the invasion. In this exchange, Glaspie said that there were many Americans from oil states who wished for oil prices in excess of $25. Did any form er U. S. government officials encourage the Iraqis to push for higher oil prices with the understanding of the Bush administration? Could this be possible? Did Am erican support and or neutrality on this question encourage President Hussein to fight for higher oil prices and even invade Kuwait? In a new disclosure last week, the Washington Post reported that President Bush personally intervened with the Iraqi leader on July 28, four days before the Iraqi invasion was launched. In his conversation with Hussein, President Bush reportedly issued no specific warnings about the consequences of U. S. m ilitary action against Iraq even though Iraqi troops were already massing on the border with Kuwait. As a result of such sloppy diplomacy, the current Gulf stand-off is crushing poor nations. United Nations economists are now saying that a protracted m ilitary situation will devastate the world’s poorest economies. Financially hardpressed states like Poland, Brazil and Pakistan could pay an extra $32 billion in higher oil prices next year if toe base price returns to $40 a barrel. It m ay be cynical if not downright malicious to suggest L E T T E R favoringcontainmeiit, Mr. Bush,waits patiently. ■int 'd > n /fo STATE P f* ß * S some individuals and nations are profiting from this-crisis. Certainly some o f the President’s associates in Texas and Louisiana are raking in the dollars, (Rem em ber, as VicePresident, George Bush, travelled to Saudi Arabia to persuade King Fahd to pressure OPEC to raise oil prices). And so are three of toe five permanent members o f toe United Nations Security Council — Britain, the Soviet Union and China. They are earning billions of dollars from higher oil prices, as in Canada, Norway, M exico and Venezuela. Since toe United States stands to lose about $46.5 billion a year with oil selling at $40 a barrel, the Bush Administration m ay want to do everything in its power to secure a face­ saving settlement out o f the current conflict. In toe meantime, Congress has an obligation to uncover the extent of pre-invasion contact between Washington and Baghdad, and many of its representatives. With toe delivery of heavy U. S. arm or to Saudi Arabia three months behind schedule, Washington has decided to redistribute 400 tanks from Germany to reinforce its troops in toe Gulf. This means U. S. forces w ill be up to combat strength by early January. We should have 1,000 tanks on toe ground by then. But. w ill they all work? P art of the problem with some of bur tanks today is that they are always breaking down. One tank, the Abrams, consumes more than 12 gallons a m ile and has an average range of under 100 miles. How long can President Bush fudge reality? With a Gulf p olicy that has descended into a drift, the Bush A d m in istra tio n seem s caught b etw een ad voca tin g confrontation and Containment. If containment is our policy, how do we intend to make it stick? ' ' • •• A large proportion of toe U. S. m ilitary effort in toe Gulf consists of supplying bored soldiers with enough Coca Cola, chewing gum and hamburgers to maintain their lifestyle. . •’ . A Louis Harris survey of U. S. teenagers last week found that m ore than half had witnessed racist acts, 25 percent said they have been victims of bias and 30 percent believed they would be likely to commit racist attacks. So much fo r racial tolerance. S No understanding, no peace Editor:. A couple of thoughts on the Gulf Standoff: I f President Bush wants peace, he should be working for justice and freedom in all nations, not just toe nation of Kuwait. While it is certain that Kuwait and Israel deserve to live within secure borders, it is also true that toe people o f Palestine and Tibet also deserve to live within secure borders, but with Israel and China it is mostly business as usual. I f Mr. Bush is serious about justice and not what is simply expedient or economically important, he’ll stop speaking out of both sides of his mouth. Finally, the U. S. needs to get behind its cultural blind spot when it comes to toe Islamic world. Without understanding, there w ill be no peace. Kalle Hunsaker Junior, Geology organizations here at ASU do a lot more for their people than hold hands; they serve a useful purpose. Also, people here at ASU have more intelligence and common sense than to go crying to their specific ethnic organization just because they did not get along with their roommates. However, once again, a disturbing thought occurred to me: A ll of the ethnic organizations are nonEuropean oriented. And what would happen if someone were to start a GermanA m erican , Swedish-Am erican, ItalianAmerican, or English-American support group? Would it be recognized as a legitim ate ethnic support group? I don’t think so; I believe people would look at the group as either a joke or as a new incarnation of a racist organization such as the Ku Klux Klan or toe White Aryan Resistance. Racism is very subtle and points in all directions. I f a person of one race can do something or say something, then people of all races should be able to do toe same thing. Perhaps one example o f this is thé choice of T-shirt decorations. Walking around toe campus, I see many black people who are demonstrably proud o f their heritage; after all these people are wearing T-shirts that have been imprinted with an outline of A frica colored in with green, yellow , and red bars, that says something to toe effect “ I am black and proud” (N ote: This is a generic èxample; I have seen variations on this theme.) However, if a white person w ere to wear a sim ilar T-shirt, imprinted with a map of, say, the United States and that says “ I am white and proud,” toe first reaction would probably be that that person is a racist. A fter all, in our current society, whites are not supposed to be proud of toe fact that they have less melanin in their skin than other people nor are they supposed to be proud of their history and what their forebearers have done. Racism is evil, insidious and abhorrent to right thinking people. Racism cannot be legislated out o f existence; a racist attitude is very individual. Each person can only eliminate racism for himself or herself. However, in implementing a personal antiracist outlook, one factor o f which we must be aware is that the principle of equality applies to everyone and everything; the standards that apply to one person must apply to all others. I f one person or group is allowed to break the rules, then is not that person or group saying, “ The standards that apply to you do not apply to us; w e are better than you” ? Racism works both ways Editor: Wonder of wonders? A new Campus V oice was posted on toe wall in the lobby of Palo Verde West. Upon reading one of toe articles in it, I learned that Boston College has lumped all of their ethnic support organizations in a house the College bought fo r them. Th is w as so the support organizations w ere not scattered all over the campus, and so people could easily find their way to the house. However, some of the wording in the article disturbed me. F o r example, the author interviewed a young black woman who said that she had come to the house because she was having problems with her white roommate, but the problems w ere not described. The insinuation created by the author is that the problems were racial. A fter reading the article, I heaved a sigh o f relief. A fter all, the ethnic support Jim Emmons Junior, Computer Science '' Pag« 6 State Preis We¡a¡^Novemb«J^1990 P o lice R ep o rt ASU police reported thé following incidents TTiursday : •Someone reported that an ASU student was wearing a gas mask and carrying a gtlh. Police contacted the student and found that he was carrying a water gun He was asked to put the gun away. •An ASU employee reported that $900 was stolen from a Marriott concession stand during the Sun Devil football gam e on Saturday. •A n unknown p erso n d a m a g e d the concession stand on the upper level o f Sun D evil Stadium’s west side. Estimated damage is $500. •Light poles w ere damaged by an unknown person on the southwest side of the U niversity A c tiv ity Center. Estimated damage is $500. •An unknown person rem oved a m irror from a golf cart and broke the front window. Estimated loss and damage is $350. •An ASU student injured her tailbone when she slipped and fell down three steps in a P alo Verde East Residence Hall stairwell. She was transported to Tem pe St, Lukes Medical center for X-rays. •A white nylon cover was stolen from a University Student’s vehicle parked at Cholla Apartments. Estimated loss is $53. •A blue Fuji mountain bicycle, valued at $125, was stolen from the bike racks in the courtyard of Cholla Apartments. Tem pe p olice reported the follow ing incidents Wednesday: •An 18-year-old California resident died early Thursday in a traffic accident at the intersection o f Ash Avenue and University Drive. The accident occurred when a 1989 silver Nissan pickup was traveling southbound on Ash Avenue. The driver allegedly failed to halt at a stop sign and collided with a 1971 blue Datsun pickup. Eduardo Garcia, a passenger in the Datsun pickup, was killed. The drivers of both vehicles w ere injured and taken to Maricopa County Hospital. A second passenger in the Nissan pickup was not injured. According to police reports, the occupants o f the Nissan pickup had been drinking. No arrests have been made. •At Papago Park, 715 N. College Ave., a man exposed himself and masturbated in front of three fem ale ASU students. Seven hours later, a man who police believe is the same suspect, fondled himself in front of one fem ale ASU student at a pool at 819 N- College Ave., and then exposed himself. He then went to another area of the pool and pulled down his shorts and masturbated in front of two other fem ale ASU students. The suspect is described as a Hispanic or white male, 25 to 32 years old, 5-foot-3 to 5-foot-6, 130-140 pounds. He was last seen wearing green shorts and a blue T-shirt. C om piled by State Press re p o rte r Teena Chadwell. B lin d _______ Continued from page 1. difficulties. “ One person from the state told me to go into special education because it is a suitable job for someone who is disabled,” she said. Connie Hernandez, another form er ASU student, said the state is unresponsive to the needs and abilities of blind students. “ The state (has) a tendency to tell students how to run their lives, and they (tend) to underemploy them,’ ’ she said. Jim Sohl speaking on behalf of his Wife, NFB President Ruth Swanson, said more could be done for students. “ In the point of view of DES, if students are passing from grade to grade with A ’s or B ’S, then everything must be doing O K ,” he said. “ And they just stop there,” Sohl said when blind or visually-impaired students reach the point of “ closure,” or have become independent and employed for at least six months, they cannot receive any further services from DES. He said the Social Security Administration reimburses the DÈS fo r all costs of bringing that student to closure status, including tuition costs. “ I f they can get it back from the the Social Security Administration, then why are they so reluctant to use their funds?” Sohl Said House labeled the N F B ’s complaints as prim arily political. “ I ’ve asked (the N F B ) to give me names,” he said. “ They have only provided m e with two names, and I have taken action to check out any allegations.” House added that if there are problems in agency policies, it’s the responsibility of the policy-makers to fix them. “ M y supervisors w ill check out m y work,” House said. “ Maybe we do need to make changes — m aybe some laws need to be changed.” House said the state uses an economic needs examination to determ ine what aid blind and visually-im paired individuals can receive. The eligibility for economic support depends on whether the blind person is completely disabled, needs additional learning skills to get a job or has a reasonable chance to gain employment. House said if the individual does not fall into a category of need, he or she would have to buy academic equipment and m ay not be eligible for support from the DES. C o n feren ce C o n tin u e d fr o m p à g e i . economist said. “ A fter that, the only place China w ill be able to turn to for help is Japan.” As for North Am erica, Drucker said M exico’s economic revitalization will play a key role in the future of the U S. economy. He said M exico’s application for a customs union with this country “ is one of the greatest political reversals in recent history.” “ scared stiff” of Japanese competition, adding that protectionism will be the E E C ’s only way to prevent Japanese domination. Drücker predicted sim ilar economic communities w ill spring up in North Am erica and thé F ar East in the coming years. . “ liie r e is an 80 percent chance the government in Red China will collapse,” the Members of thé Tem pe audience, who paid $75 a piece to see the teleconference, represented a broad spectrum of Valley businesses and included two members of the Phoenix F ire Department. Doug Tucker, a Phoenix firefighter, said he was impressed with what Drucker had to say. “ We are trying to keep up with current economic trends,” he said. “ We are service industry, and w e need to know what’s going on.” . A a r o n C a r r e o n -A in s a , a P h o e n ix prosecuting attorney, said the conference, fo r him, was m ore o f an academ ic experience. “ I come to these things to try to get a feel for what’s going on in the world, so I know what I ’m doing when I cast m y ballot,” he said - 1QU11RRtCQRQSlMHM * TWO OF THE BEST * * ALBUMS OF THE YEAR* 1 . 9 9 compact disc 7 . 9 9 cassette :* * * * * S r / \ W ORLD PARTY THE CURE “ M ixed U p” G O O D BYE JU M BO Featuring The S ingle NEVER ENOUGH “...Uka a super session that never happened, (bringing together the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, Van llortison, Boh Dylan, the Band, Buffalo Springfield, Sly Stone, the Byrds, the Beech Boys end, through the magic of anachronism, Prince)" “Are you okay?” Is the place w here deadly dance grooves meet pop hooks and floating Jazz riffsthe Interracial Interm usical agora o f the future. -L A . TIMES -MUSICIAN SEE W O R LD PARTY SATURDAY N IGH T LIVE NOVEM BER 10TH "MIXED UP" consists o f 11 o f 1 The Cure's m ost classic tracks, extensively rem ixed o r re­ recorded in a conceptual p a rty" album th a t is m ore than m erely a greatest hits co lle c­ tio n . Included is a brand new I ^single/> 111 ONE COUPON P Professional . H H a ir D Banner Pass is another abstract piece in the show, choreographed by M argie Rom ero Wolf. The dancers in Banner Pass dance inside bright color tubes. Besides being an evening of heart-stopping dancing, Saturday’s concert w ill help fund Dance F ree, Drug Free, a program with the East V alley Boys and Girls Club Dance Free, Drug F re e is an attempt to keep children off drugs by exposing them to other forms of recreation — in this case, dance and music. Designers F rid ay N igh t 9:00 Tanning Sessions $10 down $1.50 each visit pppREAPPEÄKANCEATm 933 E. University : 1 Tempe Towne Plaza E y ela sh es & E y e b ro w s SE corner ai Rural T in te d $ 1 2 & University 966-6111 ONE COUPON DONTWAIT DOIT NOW!! S a t u r d a y N ig h t It’s A H O M E C O M IN G !! O IL C H A N G E HOMECOMING is a party at the $1995 New York’s Hottest D J /s & Crazy Drink Specials!!! Includes: • U p to 4 q u a r ts o f o il •O il filter •C heck transm ission & differential •C heck battery fluid •Lube chassis •Labor O ffe r valid D o n ’t f o r g e t N F L S u p e r S u n d a y s ! N o C o v e r , $ 2 .0 0 M o n s t e r M u g s 100 wings and much, much more!! o n ly w ith "■ th is ad. FULL SERVICE CAR CARE SINCE 1976 N UNIVERSITY ♦ A.S.U Q DC _J < TEMPE IMPORTS 966-6680 1836 E. 6th Street DC Z> DC ‘1 pc s A m 1320 E. Broadway Tempe ___ B RO A DW A Y___ W e'll ^ c fy o a r world! 829-7777 State Press Friday, November R 1990 Page 14 by Bill Watterson THEFARside Calvin and Hobbes THE. MAR0 PNRT TOR US AVANT-GM®t TOST-VWDERN ARTIST'S IS DtQDlNG WHETHER Oft. NOT TO EMBRACE COMMERCIAUX ¿5^ h DO ML ALLOW OUR WORK.10 BE WIPED AND EXPLODED B1 A MARKET THATfc SIMP« WNQW ftR TUE NEXT NEWTHING? DO WE. PARTICIPATE IN A SHSTEM 1MAT TURNS HIGH ART INTO LOW ART 30 ITS BETTER SUITED TOR MASS CONSUMPTION? /v y t ? : j OF COURSE, WHEN AN ARTIST GOES COMMERCIAL, HE MAKES A MOCKERS OF HIS STATUS AS AN OUTSIDER ANO FREE THINKER. HE BUIS INTO THE CRASS AND SHALLOW SALUES ART SHOULD TRANSCEND. HE TRADES THE INTEGRITI OF I HIS ART R*. RICHES AND FAME . By GARY LARSON • 1990 Universal Press Syndicale -¿5Á no! Wouldn't you / Ki'\o\w ; + H c i l U l i p 1 HELLLLLLLUP/ \ Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau YOU SHOULDHAVESEEN THE v QISTRJCTOFFICE, BOSS'. ITS THANK VOO, PE A R , M AKE M E SO UN PUK B M U S50LIN I. you racked w ith your former CONSTITUENTS, SOMEOFTHEM[ REFUSINOTOLEAVEUNTIE YOUAGREE TORUN , , , AGAIN' \ LACEY, THEY LOVE YOU! LET THEM VOTE FOR YOU! H Far away, on a hillside, a very specialized breed of dog heard the cry of distress. Rainey Days KYLE SURE. GOT FRIENDLY WITH TH AT K EG! V by Julie Sigwart VEAH-ME , FEELS good ! LOOK AT H IN VANCE ON , THE TABLE / 1 6 IA) ! , I I DIDN'T KNOW HE oO^ BABV/ WORE SNAKE-SKIN UNDERWEAR... WHAT A R E THOSE CLUCKS DOIN’? LOOKS LIKE THE V HAVE BLACK. MARKERS.., POOH! HE'S GONNA BE HATE'M LIFE TOMORROW ! Mil mms by Ford M. Lattie’s Dog P IC K * U P S AND 1Î + D U NED IN, New Zealand (A P ) — Registering children as sheep is one w ay New Zealand families might be able to afford to bring up children, an economist told a conference Thursday. As sheep, their food, accommodation and other expenses would be tax deductible, Brian Easton told the conference on child-rearing. “ The mother might even be eligible for shepherd’s wages,” he said. Easton was critical of New Zealand’s claim to being “ a great place to bring up kids.” H e said parents are required to make great sacrifices to raise children and . their financial struggles are largely ignored. N e w Zealand, dependent on a rural economy, has some 60 million sheep and 3.3 million people. AT N £W R O W O L D R O W /// S h o w whir S orority TATTOO AND RECEIVE A 10% DISCOUNT/ SURP.' , O K •' StatePress Classified Advertising SATURDAY AM O W e work to help you find work. SUNDAY/ r&Vi W HO SAYS INEXPENSIVE HAS TO BE CHEAP? fo r th e h olid a ys ftoundtrip from Los Angeles Mexico City $331 Hoag Hoag Paris Saaghok SM S I M SS $609 $638 $719 Restrictions apply. Fanes based on! departure dates and student status may be required. C a l fo r o th e r w o rid w d e destinations. Let us custom ize your around th e w o rld itinerary. G o u id Travel 1 4 5 1 5 V e n tu ra S M . M 5 0 S h a m a n O a k s , CA 9 1 4 0 3 8 0 0 -8 88 -87 86 Well you can be sure o f one thins. Whoever said it, obviously never drove a VOLKSWAGEN Jetta. You set all the performance, luxury and style of a true European road car without payins the high price. Test drive a Jetta today. We think you’ll be surprised. l/fe r d o n c V o l k s w a g e n , w e m ake the C O L L E G E R ID E EASIE R S T O P B Y O U R N EW O N -S IT E O FFIC E IN THE S T U D E N T R EC C EN TER LO B B Y . 9 Lardone V o l k s w a g e n 15th S tre e t & C a m e lb a c k 2 6 5 -6 6 0 0 ■ Jetta N371 0,695 Sports S t l« P m » P a y 15 Friday, Novem ber 2 ,1 9 9 0 Sun Devils look to halt 5-week skid GAM E 8 By PAUL CORO S tate Press ^ ASU (2-5) VS USC (1-7) \V g 1 Kickoff: 7 p.m. Site: Sun Devil Stadium J Expected Attendance: 58,000 Series: ASU leads 11-6-1 C h e c k in g It O u t ASU OSU //i / • QUARTERBACKS RUNNING BACKS OFFENSIVE LINE /Ö WIDE RECEIVERS/TIGHT ENDS V DEFENSIVE LINE LINEBACKERS / SECONDARY SPECIAL TEAMS ✓ v - y . / AD VANTAG E To many Sun Devil fans, the day the ASU and Oregon State football teams had more in common than their conference allegiance would not edme until they actually had something to play for. Well, here it is. But it is not the Beavers’ ascent that has brought these teams together, it is the Sun Devils’ descent. When Saturday’s gam e kicks o ff at 7 p.m. in Sun Devil Stadium, final ownership on the Pac-lO’s basement could be on the line. F o r ASU (2-5 overall, 0-4 Pac-10), an embarrassing loss to OSU (1-7,1-3) would put this team in the record books as one of the worst ever. Already off to their worst start in their Pac-10 history, the Sun Devils could tie the school record of six consecutive losses set in 1929. “ Obviously, it’s something you wouldn’t look at with pride,” ASU coach L a rry M arm ie said. “ The thing that concerns m e is just trying to win. I don’t go around thinking in the back o f m y mind, m y goodness, w e’re going to tie a school record for lo s s « . ” The past fiv e weeks have been brutal for the Sun Devils. Tliey have been outscored by an average of 17 points and outgained by 148 yards a game. Despite ASU’s drop to the P ac cellar, OSU coach Dave Kragthorpe maintains that the Sun Devils are not as bad as their last-place standing. “ I think Arizona State is a much better football team than their record,” Kragthorpe said. “ They’re a lot like us in that regard.” The Beavers also m irrored the Sun Devils’ five-gam e losing streak to open the season, but broke it when they shocked UofA three weeks ago. With that game, OSU’s offensive focus shifted to the rushing game. Last week, the Beavers rushed 49 times fo r 191 yards. This week, the Beavers w ill probably keep it on the ground against ASU’s inexperienced defensive line and rush defense that ranks eighth in the conference. Without any prem ier running backs, OSU’s main offensive threat is its quarterback, Matt Booher. In the two teams’ 1717 tie in Corvallis last season, Booher almost singlehandedly beat the Sun Devils. With his passing and scrambling, he accounted for 82 percent of the Beaver offense. “ The guy that scares us the most is Booher,” M arm ie said. “ He really hurt us up there last year, probably more with his scrambling and running ability than his throwing. “ He makes you pay attention to your pass rush lanes and containment. He will not hesitate to take the ball and tun with it. Maybe our gam e last year was the one that showed him that,” But defense has not been ASU’s main problem of late. The Sim Devil defense has surrendered just two touchdowns in its last nine quarters. The offense is another story. Last week, the offense could not sustain any effectiveness for most of the gam e while quarterback Paul Justin returned at less than 100 percent. Turn to ASÜ-ÔSU, page 16. V o lle y b a ll d ro w n s D ucks; h o p es fo r N C A A b id alive By DARREN URBAN S tate Press The ASU v o lley b a ll team kept its N C A A tournament hopes alive Thursday as the Sim Devils cam e from behind to stop Oregon, 9-15, 15-6, 15-9, 15-12. ASU (15-12 overall, 6-8 Pac-10) came into the match needing four victories in their final five matches to even hope to receive a NCAA bid. “ Right now, w e’re not looking past anybody,” junior outside hitter Mindy Gowell said. The Sun Devils jumped out front 4-0 in the first game, but allowed the Ducks (14-10, 5-8) to Scramble back to a 6-6 tie and then a 15-9 victory. “ It was so easy at first,” ASU coach Patti Snyder said. “ Oregon looked so bad. We let them back into it, and you chn’ t give them that opportunity.” , “ We didn't get as excited after we got into the lead,” (Jowell said. “ We had to refocus.” The SUn Devils controlled game two from the outset as Gowell Served an ace to begin file game. Leading 13-6, ASU got a big point o ff 5-foot-7 junior Tricia Joliff’s block and put the gam e away. Despite winning the game, Snyder said the Sun Devils were somewhat weak on their serves. “ We were rushing,” Snyder said. “ W e’ve worked a lot on serve in practice. Sometimes we were serving even before the whistle blew.” Game three was an up-and-down affair with the SunDevils bursting out to a 6-0 lead before faltering. The Ducks pulled to within 13-8, but Gowell made a block for a 14-9 lead and senior middle blocker Tina Berg stonewalled the following Oregon kill attempt for the gam e’s victory. ASU continued the night’s theme o f quick starts in gam e four pulling to a 7-1 lead. Oregon coach G erry Gregory, upset with the officiating all night, received an unsportsmanlike-conduct call early in the gam e and the Ducks responded by closing the gap to 8-7. “ When m ystery calls a re being made, you have to wonder, ‘Do w e even need officials?’ ” Snyder said. “ It took the wind out of their sails.” “ It shouldn’t have bothered them, but it did,” Gowell said. The Sun Devils remained sloppy, allowing Oregon to tie the score at 12. Junior middle blocker Debbie Penney halted the Ducks’ momentum by serving an ace for a 13-12 lead and B erg’s gentle tip over the net sealed a 15-12 win. , “ Oregon honored Penney in the middle all night even though w e weren’t setting her,” Snyder said. “ It allowed Gowell and (senior outside hitter) K elly Plaisted to have one-on-one’s.” “ I felt like the sets w ere there for m e,” said Gowell, who finished with 12 kills and 15 digs. “ I was able to In t r a s q u a d Turn to Volleyball, page 16. g a m By PAUL CORO S tate Press Taman Weffwd/Stat* Pnaa ASU freshm an D w ayne Fontana goes fo r a tip in o ver senior Isaac A ustin. SCOTTSDALE — The offense m ay need to work out a few glitches and the players m ay not be up to Coach B ill F r ie d e r ’ s conditioning standards, but the ASU basketball team that played an intrasquad gam e Thursday was a far cry from teams of recent past. With a recruiting class full o f true athletes, Frieder unveiled a faster, younger squad at Saguaro High School in a four eight-minute-period scrimmage. “ I think We’ve got better athletes than a year ago,” the second-year coach said. “ But w e’ve got a long way to go, don’t w e?” That was evident as the new group sputtered and spurted its way along to the end. F or those keeping score, senior center Isaac Austin’s 5-footer at the buzzer gave the white team a 69-68 win. D ie score means little though as Frieder interchanged players between quarters in search of a lineup that w ill click. He said Austin and senior guard Tarence Wheeler are the only players with set starting jobs. “ I didn’t see any unit that I could say is a starting lineup and that’s what I was looking e W ill Powara/State Press ASU Junior m iddle b locker D ebbie Penney puts a k ill p ast O regon Junior setter M olly M cG rath’s block attem p t in the Sun D evils' w in Thursday night. s h o w s t e a m for,” Frieder said. Frieder was hoping the three-guard lineup of Wheeler, freshman Stevin Smith, junior Lynn Collins at point, with Austin and freshman forward Jam al Faulkner would get in synch, but the team struggled to a four-point advantage in the second quarter. “ I think we w ill probably go to three guards,” F rieder said. “ Simply because that’s where the strength of the team lies.” The first quarter was highlighted by the play of the rookies, excluding frosh forward Ian Dale; who w ill miss six weeks w ifi) a stress fracture in his left foot. A fter helping outscore the veterans 16-12 in the opening quarter, Faulkner was impressive with a 20-point, eight-rebound and five-assist game. Faulkner netted the play o f the gam e when he took a full-court pass from senior guard Matt Anderson in the fourth quarter and slammed a 10-foot leaping dunk while fouled in stride. “ It was a nice feeling,” Faulkner said. “ It’s just younger guys getting comfortable with older players and coaches. Once w e do that, w e’ll be a fa irly competitive team.” Austin was the gam e’s high scorer and ’s f la w s , t a le n t s rebounder with 22 points on H-of-20 shooting and 10 boards. Returning from a redshirt season because of knee surgery, Wheeler dished out fiv e assists while scoring 20 with three 3-pointers. “ This was m ore of an offensive show than the real team ,” Wheeler said. “ When you have this kind of scrimmage, it gives us something to shoot for. W e can see the light.” Although he played some point, Wheeler spent most of the night at off-guard and at the No. 3 slot in the three-guard lineup as Collins and Smith handled point duties much of the night. “ Basically, it’s the same thing as the other side,” Wheeler said. “ We have a smaller, quicker lineup. It allows us to do things offensively and defensively that give us an advantage.” F rie d e r said no Sun D evil played consistently over four quarters, adding that it is understandable because of their youth and physical condition. “ W e broke down offen sively a lot tonight,” Frieder said. “ W e didn’t run plays and deviated.” Swim m ers bet o n Vegas w in s By DARREN URBAN S tate Press The ASU swimming teams travel to Las Vegas this weekend, but the trip is anything but a gamble for the Sun Devils. A S U m ee ts D iv is io n I I C al-S tate Northridge today and tangles with NevadaLas Vegas Saturday. The Sun Devil men (1-0) heat up on the Rebels last season 86-54, while the women (0-1) totaled a 89-60 win. “ They’re not the caliber o f California, Stanford or the teams we (regularly) swim against,” men’s coach Ron Johnson said. “ They’re good teams, just not where we are. I f they were to beat us it would be a real big upset.” Johnson said m eets against lesser opponents gives him some flexibility in the lineups. “ It gives us a chance to rotate some people,” Johnson said. “ We can give guys a Chance to swim in events they usually don’t swim- in and maybe discover some hidden strengths.” -'..V; A S U -O S U C o n tin u e d fro m page 15. Women’s coach Tim Hill, his team beset w ith injuries, said he is cautiously optimistic about the competition. “ Last year was the first time (w e beat U N LV badly), ” Hill said. ‘ ‘E very other year it’s been a close meet. U N LV is a good team . . pretty much in the top 25. Northridge Was second last year in their national championship.” H i l l a d d e d t h a t he has c e r t a i n expectations of the initial r6ad trip of the season. “ It’ll be our first real test of the season,” Hill said. “ I ’m looking forward to something better. . . . more consistent than our last meet. We should be going into this weekend more serious. A fter losing last week (38-30 to U ofA ), we need to pull together and focus. I f w e don’t, I ’ll be disappointed.” Johnson said the back-to-back meets should not have a big effect on the team. “ W e’re in pretty good shape,” Johnson said. “ W e’re probably a little tired because w e’re training really hard. W e're not anywhere near our physical peak yet. . . but two meets in two days isn’t uncommon for us.” “ Our first m eet is a little easier than our second meet,” Hill said. “ Overall, I ’d rather have it like that. It means you have to have better preparation on the second day . . . you know you’re going to feel the results of the first (day) and you know the competition w ill be a little better.” Hill said the tim e between competitions is important with two meets. “ It affects us in terms of recovery,” Hill said. “ In terms of the workouts w e do, what w e eat and our mental approach.” Both Hill and Johnson a re keeping an eye on the team as they descend on Las Vegas.. “ For our freshmen, it w ill be their first trip, so they are excited,” Hill said.“ Las Vegas can be a place to do a lot of things, but I have things to keep it in control.” Johnson laughed as he explained his plans. “ I ’m going to tell them not to bring too' much money,” Johnson said. “ They’ll get out enough to get a flavor of the place.” said. “ They hit smart.” “ T h ey’re a grea t defensive team ,” Plaisted said. “ We need to find a way to put the ball away-” Beaver coach Guy Enriques said he is not concerned with anything but his own team. “ W hat w e need to do is prepare ourselves,” Enriques said. “ If we take care of the things w e have to do, the chips will fall for ms W e can’t w orry about what they’re doing on the other side o f the net . . . we have to concentrate on executing our game plan the best we can,” V o lle y b a ll Continued from page l 5. hit around the blocks.’ ’ Plaisted and freshman outside hitter Nancy Christian added 12 kills apiece. Berg " had two solo blocks and seven block assists. The Sun Devils return to the University A ctivity Center tonight to play Oregon State at-7:30. The Beavers (18-7,7-5) beat ASU in three games earlier this season. “ Oregon State is really scrappy,” Gowell Enriques added that the effort ASU has demonstrated a fte r suffering multiple injuriés is admirable. “ I give them a lot of credit in light of all the tragedies they’ve suffered,” Enriques said. “ They’re doing a fantastic job.’’ C H U Y ’S With Jeff Simoneau’s departure and George Montgomery probably out for the season because o f shin splints, ASU’s starting backfield of Leonard Russell and Kelvin Fisher accounts for all but seven of the present backs’ 1990 carries. “ I am impressed with the rushing ga m e o f A S U ,” K ra gth orp e said. “ Russell is a very, very fine player. Certainly, anytime you have a back with that much size and speed in combination, that’s tremendous potential.” OSU’s Esera Tauolo’s presence at nose tackle m ay force thè Sun Devils’ rushing game, averaging 132 yards a game, to the outside as well as causing havoc in the pass rush. “ At that particular position, he’s one guy that can disrupt a lot of things,” Marmie said. “ H e’s right there where the play starts.” Injurywise, split end E ric Guliford should be at full-speed after an ankle sprain limited his mobility against USC. With Jeff White out, Bob Robertson will start at strong guard. On •defense, Brett Wallerstedt will m ove to the other inside linebacker position to re p la c e in ju red Scott Woodford. Drew M etcalf steps into his old inside linebacker starting position. Strong safety Floyd Fields probably will not play because o f his ankle bruise. With ASU ’s season-long string of injuries, Kragthorpe said he knows the Sun Devils are not a 2-5 team. But M arm ie is not so sure. “ I don’t know whether w e are or not;” M arm ie said. “ I guess that’s all speculation. Woulda, coulda and shoulda — the maybe brothers.” R O SE’S L IM E JUIIC E JJ UU NN GG L C E L E E JJAM A M Friday Nov. 2nd A F E A T U R IN G R EBEL ROCKERS S a t u r d a y a n d S u n d a y O Hayden Square —. ALL AGES 5-11 p .m ., N o C o v e r n l y u n til 8 p .m . / $ 5 a ft e r 8 p .m . Reggae & Buy Any Regular Size Sandwich and Get the 2nd of Equal or Lesser Value C o lleen C a lla h an & T h e Sm oke Rock Steady A Revolutionary Party FREE 5-8 p.m . A portion of the proceeds will benefit Rain Forési preservation. Different is better Sch loizsky’s wmm Tem pe Center 18 E. 10th Street Tem pe 988-0056 Sandwiches • Soups ♦ Salads L Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer per visit. Tempe Village Square Priest and Southern Tempe 966-7672 Sidewinders J Gin Blossoms fairwell party Nov. 10th 410 S. Mill 967-CHUY A A A DELTA DELTA DELTA ALL FRATERNITY MEN UP TO BAT TO STRIKE OUT HUNAN EXPRESS “ ...e xcellen t food, generous p ortions, super-quick service, low prices and a cheery a tm o sp h e re ."— A rizona R epublic CHILDREN'S CANCER HOURS: M on-Thurs 1 1 am -9:30pm F riday 11 am -10pm S aturday 12 noon-10 pm C losed Sunday AT THE 8TH ANNUAL SOFTBALL T O U R N A M E N T • HOMECOMING SPECIAL • Buy One Hunan Express Combo And Get: I □ FREE CRAB PUFFS (Reg. $1.35) AND OR I □ $1.00 OFF HUNAN EXPRESS GOLD T-SHIRT I “ GOLD FOR THE TE AM ” (Reg. $9.95) Exp. 11-15-90 D e li SUNDAY NOV. 4,1990 1 1 1 Pm fb s k m m . Doc J ockcy EmcRVunncrrr For Am OccASton Vau s y W im ^ m m .. / Bfl Bwtt«? TÑqtJÑham Page 17 frjda^Jövember^1990 LOSE YOUR PUPPY? Find It...FREE! W ith a Lost an d Found Classified ad in th e S ta te P ress! B ring in thi$ coupon for a F R E E 2 0 word Lost & Found ad! Classifieds U N E R A D RATE S: , State Press Classifieds M atthew s C enter Basement, Room 15 State Press Classifieds» Basem ent, 965-6731 965-6731 15 w ords or less: $3.00 per day fo r 1-4 days $2.75 per day fo r 5-9 days $2.50 per day fo r 10 ♦ days 15* each additional word The firs t 2 w ords are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Personals era only $1.40! CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 time: $7.85 per col. Inch 2-5 Mmes: $7.00 per col. inch 6 or more times: $6.50 per col. inch HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: Liner ads m ust be canceled before noon, 1 day p rio r to pub lica tion. No refunds w ill be given. WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? State Press Errors: C lassified display ads can begin 2 days a fte r they are placed (if placed before 10 a.m .). C heck your ad the FIRST day it runs. C ali 965-6731 w ith any corrections before C lassified lin e r ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). noon. The State Press is only responsible fo r the firs t day the ad runs in correctly. C orrected ads w ill be extended one day. Changes called in a fte r the firs t day w ill not qua lify fo r a m ake-good. Ads m ay run fo r any length o f tim e. Canceled ads w ill be credited to your ac­ count. Sorry, no refunds. CUP THIS COUPON AND SAVEI lM llt U / ih llb lb | r ANNOUNCEMENTS A D M IT 2 - ONLY $1 .00 APARTMENTS APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING November 2, S I 4,1990 yMh IN» coupon Good of ttieae theofiM * WESÎ91DGE DOLLAR.CINEMAS * BELL DOLLAR CINEMAS TEMPE DOLLAR CINEMAS * SCOTTSDALE DOLLAR CINEMAS * MARYVALE DÖLLÄR CINEMAS WESTWOOD DOLLAR CINEMAS * N O T IC E * ^ O H in tH H X c r A F F O R D A B L E M O V IE PR IC ES! The Classified Office will be closed from 12-1 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 7. BAD BOY DJ— G uaranteed to rock your p a rty— B irth d a ys, form ats, com plex parties, etc. Tom , 921-1708. HANG G LIDE!. O ur g en tly sloping man­ made trainin g h ill. Safe and exciting. Fly alt day. W indsports, 897-7121. ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE M O VIE FOR ONLY $ 1 .0 0 * * * * * ' WESTRIDGE DOLLAR C IN EM A S BELL DOLLAR C IN EM A S TEMPE DOLLAR C IN EM A S SCOTTSDALE DOLLAR CIN EM A S MARYVALE DOLLAR C IN EM A S W ESTW OOD DOLLAR C IN EM A S IT S COMING! Tucson 17 Science F iction C onvention, A uthors, film s, dealers, art show, m asquerade dance. Novem ber 16-18 at th e E xecutive Inn, 333 W est Drachm an, Tucson. O nly $25 fo r a ll three days! For inform ation, c a ll 881-3709 or 296-4706. ZOth anniversary WANTED On 1 & 2 bedroom apartments in newly remodeled complex, Westridge Apartments 330 S. Beck, Tempe 894-6468 VOLUNTEERS WANTED NEWLY REMODELED B ro th e r to B ro th e r 1 & 2 beds Perfect location for ASU students. 1700 S. College, Tempe "Free cable TV ” Call and ask for our specials- W ORTHINGTON PLACE— 2 bedroom , 2 bath. Pool, jacU zzi, volleyba ll. Close to cam pus. Furnished o r unfurnished. A vail­ able January 1.921-2920, leave m essage. In t e r n a t i o n a 1, Tempe based relief agency currently working on Romanian orphans project, in need of volunteers for data entry and general office work. C a ll967-7871 PUBLIC PROGRAMS!! This is it!!! Homecom ing parade is here!! Don’t forget to pick up a t-s h irt at our booth Let's M arch!!! SINGLES’ EVENTS; advice, personals — Arizona S ingles Scene newspaper. Free sam ple, 990-2669. APARTMENTS $900, 4 bedroom , 2 bath. Pool, fireplace. Pets. R ental sharing. 267-8720. 9 6 7 -7 2 1 2 BEAU TIFU L, NEW, la rge 1 and 2 bedroom s. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry room . 1 block south o f U niversity on 8th S treet. Capfe Cod Apartm ents. 968-5238 fo r specials. COME JO IN us at Hayden Terrace A part­ m ents. Spacious 2 bedroom units. Call now fo r our new students m ove-in special. 967-7335. COMMONS ON Apache. Také over lease. Roomm ates available. Don, 968-4619. NEAR ASU! O ne and Two bedroom s. Pool, laundry, dishw asher. $330-400; m ove-iri special. 1014 East Spence. 968-6947. $200 OFF! Walk to ASU. Spacious 2 bedroom apts. A/C, fu rn is h e d or u n fu r­ nished available. From S395/month. Beautiful p o o l area, la u n d ry facilities available. F IE S T A P A R K APARTM ENTS 1224 EAST LEM ON 8 9 4 -2 5 3 8 i T U IT IO N * ANNOUNCEMENTS ORGANIZATION GROUP SHOTS TO W NHO M ES/ CONDOS FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, furnished, w asher/ dryer, poolside, V i m ile from cam pus. $570 K elly, (303)431-4772. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, spacious condo. A ll am enities- A vailable Novem ber 4- $545 per m onth. 940-0518. 3 BEDROOM 2 bath, firepla ce, w asher/ d ry e r, a la rm s y s te m a n d p o o l. $615/m onth, 1 year lease. 834-9288. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath Condo, ASU 2 m iles. Covered parking, w asher/dryer, vaulted c e ilin g . 961-1707. $650/m onth. Q U ES TA V ID A c o n d o . U p s ta irs 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th , w a s h e r/d ry e r, $ 5 7 0 /m o n th . C a ll J o h n E lls w o rth , 926-3400; after 5pm , 829-9039. ANNOUNCEMENTS III Spark Spark Spark FEMALE NONSMOKER, share townhouse. W asher/dryer, own bathroom , pool, Jacuzzi, firepla ce. 969-4975. FEMALE NONSMOKER— Papago Park townhouse, own room. Bike to ASU $ 3 0 6 /m o o th . S h a re u t il it ie s . A ll appliances, fireplace. 966-9168. M ALE/FEMALE room m ate, 2 bedroom condo. Furnished, pool, volleyball. $260 plus u tilitie s . 829-9281. MALE>FEMALE NONSMOKER. Share com fortable 2 -bedroom apartm ent. Newly furnished, V/z m iles from ASU. $220 plus u tilitie s . 921-0455. ROOMMATE W ANTED to share Hayden S quare cond o— C a ll fo r d e ta ils — 829-9234. ROOMS FOR RENT 2 ROOMS available*. House 4 blocks from ASU. $195, $210 (m aster). U tilitie s shared. 948-3285, 2-5:30pm . “ COMMONS ON Apache” room fo r rent fo r second sem ester. Anyone can rent! C all Am y, 894*2643. ROOM IN large house. Near ASU. W a s h e r/d ry e r, u t ilit ie s in c lu d e d . $ 2 2 5 /m o n th . S e rio u s s tu d e n t. (213)824-1254. ROOMMATE W ANTED to share m odem and spacious 4 bedroom hom e in Chand­ le r. D obson/W arner. Nonsm oker. 15 m inutes to ASU. G arage, m icrowave, w asher/dryer, large yard. $350 per m onth, includes a ll u tilitie s . C ontact Jodee, 786-1701 HOMES FOR SALE IMMACULATE PATIO hom e, 1,175 square feet. G reat location near M cC lintock/ G uadalupe. 4 m iles to ASU, in lo vely, quiet 48-unit com m unity w ith pool, RV parking. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, den, firepla ce, double garage. Low m aintenance yard, vaulted ceilin gs, m ore. $85,000, a ll offers consid­ ered. 968-8875 TO W NHO M ES/ CONDOS FOR SALE 3 BEDROOM 2 bath condo near ASU. 9% assum able, no qua lifyin g. $452 paym ent, $7,000 dow n. Leave m essage, 968-0678. HAYDEN SQUARE condo for sale. 3 bedroom /trM evel. Cam elback M ountain view s. A ct now fo r January occupancy. 940-0518. Buy 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath house, private room , p riv a te b a th , q u ie t n e ig h b o rh o o d . $250/m onth, free u tilitie s . 820-5799. 2 BEDROOM, m aster $250, lo ft $195 plus u tilitie s each in lu xury condo. Q uiet atm o­ sphere. 461-1023. o f the Week P a p a g o P ark 2 bd., im m aculate. Assumable, no q u a ! loan at 10.5% . $75,000. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992 2 FEMALE nonsm okers, second sem es­ te r. C oral P oint A partm ents. 2 bedroom , 2 bath. $162— share u tilitie s . 835-6378. FURNITURE FEMALE 3 bedroom , 2 bath, w asher/ d rye r, G uadalupe/D obson. $175 per m onth, V* U tilities. 839-3763. SECTIONAL AND recliner, earthtones. G ood condition. $300 both. 894-9123, leave m essage. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS L a s t M o n th F R E E on 7 M o n th L e a s e • Quiet Professional, Atmosphere • Close To A m erica West And ASU THE HOTTEST CASUAL WEAR Guess, Levi's and other great labels • Spacious Studios, 1 bedroom, 2 bdrm/2 ba CC's C lose« Classics ASK ABOUT OUR 12-MONTH LEASE SPECIAL 4 9 1 -2 0 2 9 Fry's Plaza southern & McClintock \ \ , i „ ,, , ,, 11111 |f 1 n • Covered Parking • 2 Pools • Jacuzzi HAYDEN PLACE «Saj S U N DEVIL S P A R K YEA R B O O K 009-6681 FEMALE NONSMOKER— share quiet 2 bedroom apartm ent. 5 m iles to ASU. $200 plus Vfe u tilitie s . 969-3446. RENTAL SHARING N E E D CLOTH ES? C ASH ? B U Y • SELL It's not too late to get your organization’s picture in the 1990-91 edition of The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook. Just check your box in the REACH office for an informa­ tional packet or stop by our offices in the basement of Matthews Center, room 50 and pick up your packet. Call 965-6881 for details. HOMES FOR RENT FR E E U T IL IT IE S ! October 18 N o v e m b e r 21, 8 a.m.-Noon, 1-6 p.m., Monday enoughI IFriday D o n ’t let you r organization b e left out! S U BLE ASE CO M M O NS A p a rtm e n t. Decem ber free. One room w ith bath available. M ove in approxim ately Novem­ ber 17. C all B rian 967-0729 fo r m ore inform ation. THE COMMONS, 2-4 spaces available in sam e u n it. G rea t fo r frie n d s . C a ll 829-7323, 829-8238. Photo M at*« located on Cady M ol next to Dantorth Chapel A ll students who gist th e ir portrait taken are autom atically entered in the Sun D evil Spark/Dpm ino's Pizza tuition giveaway Best of a ll there is no cost to enter. Just get your picture taken. It's that easy! Call the Spark offices at 965-6881 for details. 8 9 4 -2 5 3 8 ASU AREA. Studio and 1 bedrooom for rent.$260 and up. 966-8838 or 967-4908. STUDENT PORTRAITS e « E a U * n . FREE RENT TH E COMMONS on Apache. Take over lease at second sem ester. C all Lyndee at 829-7323 ALL ASU STU D E N TS a n d C A M P U S O R G A N IZ A T IO N S lU U B B 'W f n E H I lf U E n n E S 2 7 0 /m o n t h G e o rg e A n n A p ts A S U A R E A . .2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th . $35 0/m onth, $125 s e c u rity d e p o sit. 967-4789. No pets. PARK PLACE presents A H oliday Bazaar, Saturday, Novem ber 3 from 9am to 4:30pm (rain date is Novem ber 10), at 1501 W. Jerom e, M esa (N orth o f Baseline between Alm a School and Longm ore) in the pool area. is coming. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, w asher/dryer in e a c h u n it. 5 b lo c k s fro m A S U . $400/m onth. 967-6429. TEMPE’S FAIREST rates. International students welcom e. $420 to $260. Devon Apartm ents, 926 East Spence. 370-2366. KEY VALUE Auto insurance. Good rates, low down, m onthly paym ents, ¿ I drivers, DW I’s. 230-1900 o r 939-1900 LOVE TO dance? H ate the bar scene? You’ll love the A ll S ingles Dances, Fridays at better VaHey hotels. $4.50. Recorded inform ation: 946-4086. kinko's 2 BEDRO O M N o rth Tem po. P ool, dishw asher, self-cleaning oven. 1007 W est 1st S treet. 894-1041. $ 20 0 OFF Walk to ASU quiet spa­ cious. 1 bedroom, fu r­ nished. A/ C. poolside apartments. ANIM AL LOVERS, 2 bedroom 1Vie bath townhouse. C eiling fans, covered patio, 44th S treet/P alm Lane- near park. Sm all pet w elcom ed. $495/m onth. 863-4066. , SEE DIRECTORY FORSHOWTIMES & LOCATIONS 1 BEDROOM apartm ents, $250. Furn­ ished, Swimming pool, laundry room , 2 blocks from ASU. 967-3658, o r c a ll after 1:30* 968-7012. 1 S2SW. 1st Street • Between Hardy & Mill - 968-5444 a i Page 18 State Pneu Frid*£Novefnber^1990 COMPUTERS BICYCLES W ORDPERFECT 5 1 , $135. Educational discount d ire ct from W ordPerfect. C all 582-1700. M INT CONDITION Peugeot St. Lausant 18-speed m ountain bike, fu ll Shim ano. Saddle bags. $450. M ark, 966-3550. ★ N O T IC E ★ The Classified Office will be closed from 12-1 p.m. on Wednesday, n o v . 7. TICKETS BILLY JO EL, Indigo G irls and O ingo Boingo A ll shows, sports and theatre. T icket Exchange, 829-0196. PUCH MOPED— excellent condition. $250 o r best offer. CaH 451-3542 TRANSPORTATION AAA DRlVEAW AY. Free cars to m ost m ajor c itie s. Gas allow ances available. 21 o r older C all 468-1733. TRAVEL HELP W ANTED— GENERAL HELP W ANTED— GENERAL HELP W A N T E D GENERAL ASU TELEFU ND ...is ca llin g , on you! Are you looking fo r part-tim e evening, oncam pus em ploym ent and w ant to earn up to $10/hour? G ain valuable work experi­ ence w hile w orking in a friendly, fun, no "h ig h pressure" environm ent w ith other ASU students. If you have a positive attitud e and good com m unication skills, pick up jo b no. 6665 at the Student Em ploym ent office. For m ore inform ation, ca ll 965-6754 a fte r 1:00pm . D on't d e la y h irin g now! LIM ITED EXPRESS a t Los Arcos M all is looking fo r energetic associates. To set up an interview , c a ll G ayle, 941-4867. TRAIN TO be a weekend m obile disc jockey. Good incom e, vehicle needed. 820-8220. MARKET RESEARCH interview ers. This is your charice o t fin d out w hat m arket research is a ll about. M arket Survey G roup, a subsidizing o f M arket Solutions G roup. A leading research and consulting firm specializing in th e service industries needs several m otivated students who can w ork during early evenings and weekends, on o ur CRT interview ing system . No experience is needed; we w ill tram - Start­ ing salary $5 per hour plus bonuses, w ith salary review every 4 m onths. Call 483-8214 or 483-7544 to arrange an interview . URGENT: SALESPEOPLE needed, make $10 to $15 per hour a t school. M ust start now. C all Larry, (213)746-2078. Cocktail Waitress R O U N D -TR IP TIC K E T T h a n ksg ivin g weekend. To Las Vegas. 11/21, back to Phoenix i 1/25. Fem ale only. 784-6120. 2 TW A round-trip ticke ts to St. Louis Leave 11/15« retu rn 11/25; 2nd one: leave 11/21, return 11/25. $219 each. C all B everly, 942-6063: JEWELRY D ISC O U N T TR AVE L! U S A - A laskaH aw aii- International. W e buy/seil awardsbum ps and unused ticke ts. 921-1102. M, Th, & Sat nights Dr. Feelgood’s, Scottsdale 867-4436 • 947-3304 ALW AYS BUYING jew elry of a ll kinds, in cluding gold, sterling , gem s, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South M ill Avenue, Tem pe C enter, 968-6074. EUROPE NEXT Sum m er? Save up to 16 percent- buy purchasing your E urail Pass (issued oh the spot) by 12/31/90. Contact Am erican Y outh H ostels at 602-894-5128. CASH FOR gold, diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S; M ill, S uite 101, Tempe. 968-5967 FLY ANYW HERE U SA. In your name! 48 sta te s, $285-400. A laska. $500-600. H aw aii, Europe, etc; You can leave today. A ls o b u y in g tra n s fe ra b le c o u p o n s/ vouchers. Top prices paid. Travel Tips, 968-7283 (YOU-SAVE)! ENGAGEMENT RING SPECIALIST 10th St. & Camstback 279-4034 The Southwest's largest diamond importer. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE SEARS UPRIGHT freezer, lik e new, $300 S alt aquarium , 55 gallon w ith stand, $250 899-1954 SKIS FOR sale. H art 190, Solom an 727 b in d in g s G re a t shap e! $ 1 2 0 /o ffe r. 273-0966, leave m essage GOING ON vacation? Home for the holidays? D iscount trave l, ca ll 491-0501. Alaska $499. LOW EST COST— E urail passes and in ternational youth hostel m em berships— both issued on the spot! Student-fare flig h ts, student id entification cards, travel packs and other tra ve l item s also av&iT able. C ontact Am erican Youth H ostels, (602)894-5128, o r com p by 1046 East Lem on Street. ONE ROUND-TRIP to M iam i 11/20-11/27! $390. C all Sara at 784-9813. ONE-W AY AIRLINE tic k e t (m ale) to W est Palm Beach $99. 431-0871 ONE-W AY TO to M inneapolis to M adison, W isconsin, N orthw est A irline s. M ale, 12/20. $150/offer. 947-1704. 'r e a d READ READ READ READ READ read read READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ READ ' ATTENDANT, DAYCARE school, Tempe. 1pm to 6pm , $4 per hour. 966-9643. C A N V A S E R S N E E D E D , 9am -1pm , M onday-Saturday. $6 per hour guaranteed plus bonuses. C all 830-5084. CHRISTMAS $$$, $5.50/hour guaranteed, up to $10/hour. Earn Spending money for C hristm as now. TM I C orporation, One of the n atio n’s m ost successful d ire ct response m arketing firm s, is now in ter­ view ing fo r phone agent positions. Q uali­ fie d candidates need only to possess a cle ar speaking voice and professional attitud e. W e provide com plete paid train­ ing program . Earn $5.50/hour guaranteed w ith bonus structure to $10/hour. Flexible w ork schedule. N ig h tly contests; fun, frie n d ly environm ent. C ali today fo r a personal interview . Positions begin im m e­ diately. 967-0066 and ask fo r C hristopher S tatner. 3 blocks from ASU cam pus (EOE). TELEMARKETING N o e x p e rie n c e ne ce ssa ry. N ational com pany needs 6 people to schedule appts. $5/hr. guar, plus com m ission. A fter 2 wks: $6/hr. Good work environ­ ment, no high pressuré sales W ork hrs.: M-F 4-9pm, Sat. 8:30am-2pm M ill & Broadway ' C all anytim e 829-3910 >H A V P E N 'S FERRY R E V IE W , CONCESSION STAND food handler. Prepare fast food and operate food concession in park setting. Experience preferred. Fulltim e, parttim e, weekend s h ifts . $3.85-$4.25/hour. 2720 South Hardy. No.3. 894-8740. EOE. 1977 FORD C ourier pickup. Standard tra n sm issio n , a ir c o n d itio n in g , sport w heels $1,800 C all 64B-9604. PH O E N IX TO M em phis, round trip . $40Q/offer: Novem ber 17 to Novem ber 25 438-8063, leave m essage. C R U ISE LIN E JO BS h irin g now fo r C hristm as/S pring break. No experience needed 1(900)990-5621, ext. P117. 99« per m inute. 1983 RX7,red. New tire s , AM /FM stereo, a ir cond itioning, excellen t condition. M ust se ll. $3,150/offer. 838-6216 PLANE TICKETS, round-trip from Phoenix to O ’ H are, A m e rica W est. Leaves 12/19/90, returns 1/3/91. D inner m ovie and free drinks. $265, w ill separate. Call E ric, 966-3644 AUTOM OBILES 1950 CHEVY 2-door sedan. G reat project car. Best reasonable offer. C all 730-9632 ‘60 G HIA coupe— F orest green, chrom e w heels, dark tin t, new rubber, runs good. Frank, 269-9205 ‘83 N ISS AN S tanza, 4-door. G ood m echanical condition. New clu tch. M ust see $2,500/offer 990-0762. ‘86 SHELBY C harger turbo, o il cooler, im m aculate cond ition, custom in te rio r, loaded plus sunroof and cruise control. $3,975. 443-8305. ROUND-TRIP TIC KET to P ittsburgh, Pennsylvania, US A ir. Novem ber 20-26. $250/offer. 966-6838. ROUND-TRIP TICKET from Phoenix to F ort Lauderdale. Leave 11/14, return 11/19. $200 each/offer 941-8609 BUSINESS O PPO RTUNITIES $ $ $ $ IN S T A N T CASH fo r your veh ic les ! $ $ $ $ A ll m akes & c o n d itio n s . N a tio n a l A u to M art Lisa 484-7055 MOTORCYCLES 1986 HONDA E lite 150. Loaded, good condition, w ith cover. $950/offer. Cal A delle, 829-8238. 1988 KAW ASAKI EX500— Very dean. Recently tuned. Fun Fairing. Yoshim ura pipe. New tire . $ 2 ,5 0 0 /o ffe r 968-8582, leave m essage. PUCH MOPED— excellen t condition. $250 or best offer. C a ll 451-3542. BICYCLES 1990 RALEIGH Technium 2 0 " m en’s m ountain b ike , b ra n d new , extra s. $36G/offer. D arius, 921-2853, Tem pe. 2 5 " SCHW INN S upersport road racer, excellent condition. C ost $475 in ‘86, se ll fo r $200. 894-9123, leave m essage ‘90 CANNONDALE 3.0 fram e, Shim ano 105, Look pedals, com puter, 58 centim e­ ters. $600/offer 3500514. FU JI CRUISER. Good bike in great shape w ith new tire s. $65 o r best o ffe r. 921-9535. ATTENTION ALL businesses and m arket­ ing services: A new way to elim inate additional telephone lines. Local or 800 voice m ail, only $9.50/rhonth. C all Don at (800)395-7249 JO IN OTHER ASU students m aking big m oney. One student cleared $6,400 last m onth! G all M ark Hansen— 966-8336. LOOKING FOR aggressive, m otivated people w illin g to work hard. D ouble your im eom e in one year w ith out leaving your p r e s e n t p u r s u its . C a ll s o o n . (602)423-7698. SKI FREE, live cheap in C olorado! For inform ation on 32 page book, w rite: Shred P ublishing, Box 3082, Vale, C olorado 61656. HELP W AN TED— GENERAL AIRLIN ES HIRING im m ediate entry-level custom er service, flig h t attendants, c le ri­ cal, and m aintenance. Top pay and bene­ f it s . S o m e c o lle g e p r e fe r r e d . (303)441-2448. APARTMENT MANAGEMENT— M ainte­ nance. M arried couple fo r 26-unit com plex in Tem pe. O utside em ploym ent neces­ sary. SmaH salary plus 2-bedroom apart­ m ent. 943-8977. ASSISTANT, DISABLED m an, his Para­ dise V alley hom e. S aturday, Sundays, approxim ately 16 hours. C all Dave, 966-6873. DISTRIBUTORS STUDENTS needed fu ll­ tim e and part-tim e. G ood earnings. C all for inform ation. 1(800)879-1534. EARN ADDITIONAL m oney to your parttim e job. $20-$40 hour. Set own hours. C alf Larry , 892-4347 ★ FREE HAIRCUTS * Models needed for c re a tiv e “ h and s-o n ” training at Adam Pink Salon's advance workshop. Friday night at 6 p.m. Must call for an appointment. 491-2660 ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY recruiting perform ers fo r stage show s, photo sessions and work opportunities. CEEC E n terta inm ent,-274^6362. JAPANESE TRANSLATORS and interpre­ ters wanted. C all 867-1799 Japanese Com m unication Consultants. JO B HOTLINE- Tem pe C enter fo r the Handicapped. E ntry le vel positions teach­ in g , ca rin g , and assistin g m entally/ physically handicapped adults and child­ ren. G roup hom es and day program s. F ulltim e, part-tim e, a ll sh ifts available. Call 894-2704. EOEMORNINGS ONLY, answ ering service. Telephone, typing experience required. Scottsdale, 941-4890. N A N N IE S , F U L L -T IM E p la c e m e n t available— A pply now! Live w ith a fam ily in the W ashington DC area. Excellent sa la ry p lu s room and board. C a ll 981-6329. Mom and Tot Nanny Agency. N A N N Y O P P O R T U N IT f E S $150-$400/w eek. L iv e -in c h ild care positions w ith fam ilies on East Coast. A rlene Streisand, 1(800)443-6428. M ini­ mum 1 year. is hiring fbr the follow­ ing positions: •N ight Audit Clerk •Pool Attendant •Servers •Lead Cook •Bell person NEED M ORE M O NEY? 961-0919 Apply in person: 732 5 E . 3rd A ve. S cottsdale NEED 5 part-tim e people to tra in for environm ental products sales positions. 5-8 hours a week. Can earn $1,000/m onth o r m ore. CaH (602)468-0465. PART-TIME APARTMENT cleaning for T e m p e a p a rtm e n t c o m p le x . C a ll 224-9095. PERFECT STUDENT jo b , fifte e n flexible hours per week. Inquire at Aaron’s Car W ash, 1201 East A pache o r call 964-8941 a fte r 5pm. 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. ATO’S GET psyched fo r T ri D elt softba ll! Y our coaches are ready to lead you to victory. - ATTENTION SIGEP alum ni your ODD coaches are psyched to see you w in our softba ll tournam ent Sunday. BETAS LET’S play b a ll! W e’re stoked to w atch you guys w in. Love, your coaches. BILL N .H. W hen you’re ready to have som e fun, you know where to fin d me. How w ill you get hom e? USC. : T O N IT E ; L IV E ! * * * M a rc o n ia s P lays G u ita r * S at N ite l Live * J e ff Ja va : 9pm — 1am * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ : BANDERSNATCH : * 5th St. & Forest BREWPUB * FREE LOST/FOUND FO U N D : VA LU A B LE ite m a t M XZ nightclub; found around O ctober 24. T o identify, c a ll 967-7429. PERSONALS AAAAAAAAA: ANDI, cham pagne, trolley, the Pointe; Lam bda C hi W hite Rose Form al and you: P erfect together! Love, M ark. •Cash Bonus paid nightly •Cornerstone Mall location •Flexible Hours •W eekly pay AAAAA ATTENTION Pre-Rush barbeque. Friday, Novem ber 2 a t Delta Sigm a Phi, 714 Alpha D rive. Festivities begin at 3pm. A ll interested should attend. For-m ore in fo rm a tio n , c a ll K irk , 784-0672 or 967-9905. CALL AEPI! AEPI! That’s w ho w ill Win fo r the D elta Trt’s! G et psyched to play b all! I For an interview ASU GENTLEMEN— ZBT w ill be holding an inform al rush dinner tonite at 5pm . A ll interested are w elcom e. C ontact E ric at 966-3190. ATTENTION ALL P hi Sig’s- Pi Phi’s are ready fo spike it ju s t the way you like it! THE ROSE Com pany is now h iring for rose sales in nightclubs and restaurants. C all fo r interview , 921-8855. 9 6 8 -4 4 5 7 ARE YOU a student? Is it your birthday? B ring your valid college ID to the S tate Press classified departm ent in the south basem ent of M atthew s C enter and you can w ish yourself o r som eone else a happy day w ith a fre e 15-Word personal ad! Happy B irthday!! ATTENTION ALL G reeks: O rder o f Omega applications are due by 5:00 in the G reek Life O ffice. Be a part o f the G reek honorary. 8 94 -2 25 0 $550 Guaranteed A-PHI MARRISA. Hope you have an asom e B irthday. Y our a great dot Love mom. ATTENTIO N ASU G reeks— M ake a d iffe r­ ence! A pply fo r 1991 G reek W eek com m it­ tees today! Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe IN C . 5 0 0 Company needs PH Help to Fill 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Shift ALPHA PHI K iki: Hey hon lets get together soon. M iss a ll the great tim es. Your an asom e friend!! Dawn. RESTAURANTS/ BARS UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER TELEMARKETERS W ANTED Easy sale. F lexible scheduling, Scottsdale Airpark location. C all Becky d r Ed, 13951 North Scottsdale Road, S uite 214. 948-7873. C all startin g Thursday. ALPHA ALPHA A lpha A lpha Alpha Alpha A lpha Alpha A lpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha A lpha Alpha. ATO TOM: B lackfoot W hitefoot is going to be the best night ever, i can’t w ait! I love you. Jeanette. w h ile d o n a tin g m uch needed pla sm a . M ention th is ad fo r a $5 bonus on y o u r firs t don at i on. ( M o n d a y - S a tu r d a y ) O n ly center in Valley paying: $10 — 1st donation, $20 — 2nd donation in same week. SUMMER JO BS outdoors. O ver 5,000 •openings! N ational parks, forests, fire crew s. Send stam p fo r free details. 113 East W yom ing, KaJispell, M ontana 59901. ALEXA: HAVASU was great! W e d id n 't even burn, thanks to our pre-tan at U-Tan! How did we get so sm art? — B rittany. W AITRESSES W ANTED. Apply in person between 11am and 5pm at W oodshed II, 430 N orth Dobson (corner o f Dobson/ U niversity). Earn $30+ a week! H irin g im m e d ia te ly , A S U o ffic e . $8-10/hour. P art-tim e/full-tim e. P erfect for students, day/evening. C all 921-8282. AGO ERIC— Psyched fo r "G oofy G olf­ in g ", thanx fo r being an awesome friend!! AGD M elissa. ATO’S- TOM C hris C hris Torry Ross and Janette Tania Katy Annie I hope you guys have a great tim e tonig ht. I 'll be thinking about you a ll! Love Jojo. C o m p le te ly a u tom a te d d o n o r p la sm a -p h e re sis. Discover how easy; safe and fast it is to: SPORTS-MINDED: NO T telem arketing. AGD PLEDGES— S m ile! The sun is shining on you becuz you're the best pledge cla ss!!! Luv U— DaWn N. HELP W ANTED— FO OD SERVICE ★ ★ EASY CASH ★ ★ PUT YOUR career in gear! Advantage Rent-A-Car is h iring rental and service agents. H iring im m ediately part-tim e and full-tim e em ployees. W ifl w ork around your school schedule. A pply m person, 204 South 24th S treet, P h o e n ix-- 2 blocks South o f Jefferson and 24th S treet. AGD AMY— Thanx fo r everything! Your an awesmoe mom and frie n d ! Lotsa Love, A pril. ALPHA ALPHA A lpha A lpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha A lpha A lpha A lpha Alpha Alpha A lpha Alpha. v Superior benefits: a unique suites concept. Excellent downtown Scottsdale location. Close to ASU and MCC. •S200-S400 weekly •Inbound phone reps •2 shifts available PART-TIME CUSTODIAN. C utter Aviation at Sky Harbor, a leader in G eneral Aviation services, has a part-tim e opening to r a custodian. 15-20 hours/week, evenings and weekends. R eliable transportation a m ust. $5.25/hour to sta rt. Apply MondayFriday, 9-11am o r 2-4pm . 2802 O ld Tower Road, P hoenix. No phone inquiries please. EOE/AA. PERSONALS AEPI: YOUR T ridelta coaches can’t w ait to see you take firs t place on Sunday! Fire u p l! BLACKFOOT CLIVE, thanks fo r helping set up the gam e and fo r being a good sport. Have a great form al. W hitefoot Stove. P.S. Lim o? W hat lim o? BLACKSON WE are sorry we d id n ’t do the reading. Hope it d id n 't ruin yo u r day from E thics Class and the W atcher. . BR ^D AND M att (Papa’s). No helm ut... no strudle, G uns arid bu tte r Dos Liebschen’s. CHI-O AMY P urvis have a good day I love ya Carolyn. CHIO KAREN W ait, how m any guys was that again? You’re awesom e! And don’t w orry, your dog w ill have a great tim e at Barndance! Jenne. C H I-0 PLEDGE Suzy! Have a great birthday! P.S. Is th is correct? Love ya, Barb. CHI-O RHO Beta G houles— You know what we fear— B lindfolds and doughnuts! V irg il is a d e fin ite Barndance date!! We love you!! Us chain m em bers: CHI-O SUZI Happy 20th B irthday! You’re the best! Love ya C arol Anne! V CHI-O SUZI hope your day is fille d w ith happiness ju st lik e the happiness you .bring the people around you. Y o u're a great lil’ sis! I love you! Happy 20th B irthday! Jen. CHI-O SUZI you are not a teenager anym ore you m ade it to the Big 20! Be proud! I am! S isters by chance! Best friendss by choice! You can touch this! H appiest B irthday! Love always C ristina. FREE EARRINGS, honoring your, b irth ­ day. C lothes Peddler, Forest and U niversi­ ty , in the Arches. DELTA SIG K irk Only tw o to go! Keep your dream s afloat. Love-M ary. DELTS, ALPHA P hi’s, Pikes, AGD’s and Theta D elts, your flo a t is the best. Signed, the G reek System . DG AMARA— Happy B irthday! D on't pass out in the bathroom th is tim e! Love you, Jenny. D G . EM ILY and G retchen: Y our pledges love and appreciate a ll that you've done fo r us— you're th e best! Love the pledges— upsilon. State Freu PERSONALS FU IS— GET psyched fo r ODD softba ll tournam ent! You’re th e best! Love, your coaches. G AM MA PHIS. Sunday w ill be a day to rem em ber! To our pledges we prom ise our tru s t and love! In P ike, your big sisters! GAM MA PH IS. How about som e V-ball action? Let’s w in P hi S ig tournam ent! GAM MA PH I is psyched fo r Phi Sig V o lle yball! Let’ s w in g irls ! PERSONALS MOM AND Dad Lyons— W elcom e to Sun D evil C ountry! The Beavs are history!!! W e 'll have a great tim e! I love you guys! Bonney. PHIDELTS GOOD lu c k in the T ridelta softba ll tournam ent. W e know the trophey is yours. Love, your coaches. PHI PSI’S, you guys don’t have a snow­ b a ll’s chance in Phoenix at w inning our banner. S incerely, the Delts. DELTS, SADDLE up in your W ranglers and boots. Barndance is upon us! HEY COLLEGE students! Did you know th a t personal ads are only $1.40 per day to r 15 w ords? W hat a great (and cheap) w ay to le t th a t special som eone know just how special they really are! PHI SIG Chester: Thanks fo r dinner the other night I'm looking forw ard to our date tonight! S B. HEY SIGS! G et ready to doninate the T rid e lt S o ftball Tourney! PHI SIG— Chio’s ta k in ’ it a ll in Phi Sig volleyball! W e love y o u V Chi Omega! JEFF KAP1S: Good lu ck on Friday. I’ll get you your own straw . -S now . PHI SIG Clay, C llayey, Kway, C layita, or w hatever! Anyway, here’s your personal! Are you happy now? Now w here’s mine? Love you, K risty. P.S. I s till th in k you're coaching the wrong team ! JEN N Y KILG ARD! Happy, Happy B irth­ day! The B ig 19! Have a good day! Love ya! K ari. JEN NY KILG ARD! Yes you! Today’s you’re birthday! Yeah! Have an awesome day! Love, Barb. JO HN: CAN’T w ait fo r tonig ht! Pickm e up at UTan. They ju st m ove to the Arches on U n iversity. New lo cation, new bulbs, it’s rad! See ya there! —Stephanie. KAPPA ALPHA Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa A lpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush. KAPPA ALPHA O rder is rushing! Can Paul C hekal at 794-9540. Join us! Be a K A ! KAPPA ALPHA is opening its doors to the gentlem en o f ASU! Interested? C all Paul 784-9540. KAPPA ALPHA Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa A lpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa A lpha Rush. KAPPA ALPHA is rushing good men. Interested? G ive Paul Chekal a c a ll at 784-9540. KA! KAPPA ALPHA Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush. KAPPA ALPHA is having a rush! Come see what KA is about. C all Paul 784-9450. KAPPA ALPHA Football are you horny to w in. Then le t's do it KA Cruz. KAPPA ALPHA Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha Rush Kappa Alpha. KAPPA KAPPA Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa KAPPA KAPPA Kappa Kappa Kappa. Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa. ADVERTISERS! REACH 45.000 READERS DAILY JN TH É STATE PRESS! KAPPA SIGS— You guys are awesome so th e re ’s no doubt y o u 'll win Tri-D elta S o ftball Journam ent! KAPPA SIGS- here's to a winning flo a t!! Let’s celebrate!! See you guys tonight. Love, the wom en of Sigm a Kappa. KATY, HAPPY B irthday to the best room ie e ve r!!! I love you Norm a, D elta love, Leah. KRISTEN: FORMAL is com ing and w e’re gonna look great! See you at U-Tan around 3! —Jess. LAMBDA CHI Wes- C a n't Wait to see perfection wrapped up in a tux. Get psyched. Love and hugs Jen LAMBDA CHI Jim and Craig— Be prepared to throw som e elbows tonight. Form al w ill be a blast! Love, Dana and N adia . LAMDA CHI tw o m ore day to prove your the best. Get psyched love your coaches! LAST CHANCE to see the Lady Devils V olleyball team in action at the A ctivity C enter tonight at 7:30 against the OSU Beavers. Adm ission is free w ith student lb , $3.00 for others. Come out to support your team and Go D evils!! LM P THANKS fo r everything. There’s no one as special as you. I love you! WGC. LO ST: A gorgeous, golden, sexy tan fro m ; sum m er vacation. LOST BUT found: A gorgeous, golden, sexy tan. Thanks U*Tan.(! MARTA OWSLEY is the room m ate of most high coolness. Love. Anney-bear MARTA THANKS fo r supporting Kappa Alpha F ootball you're awesom e! Can you serve punch at the gam e? KA Jeff. MICHAEL JACOBSON, Happy 21st B irth­ day! I love you too. H. MISTRESS, IN th is broad earth o f ours, am id the m easureless grossness and the slag, enclosed and sate w ith in its central heart, nestles the seed o f perfection. I haps you see th is. Love, M oi. Page 19 Friday, November 2 ,1 99 0 PHI-SIG COACHES- The ChiO ’s are ready to win Phi S ig V olleyball! You guys are awesom e! PHI SIG Coaches Jason, Sean, and Phil: the P j Phi’s hope you’re excited because we Want to w in! PHI SIG Craig- I thought you’d like a personal so here it is. Love M ichelle. P.S. I love you. Thats not p illo w talk. PHI SIG C urt: Thanks fo r m aking my birthday so special. Y our one in a m illion. A jl my love Dawn. Get VmoHali PHI SIG coaches fo r C hrO — You guys are the best! Thanks fo r everything— W ord!!! PHI SIGS: Alpha P hi is phyched for VoHeybal Torunam ent W ere gonna win! PHI SIGS. Get psyched to take S oftball Tourney Sunday. W e know youtl do great. D elta love your coaches. PHI SIGS— Pi Phi’s are ready to spike it— ju st the way you lik e it! PH I S IG S t - T h is w eek has been awesom e, e xcitin g and fun and we truly believe you are num ber one. For M ock' Rock, Serenade, and V olleyball too, Sigm a Kappa would ju 8 t like to say Thank You. PH I SIGS. T ri deft can’t w ait for Volleyball Tourney on Saturday. W ere gonna win! PHI SIGS -Y our coaches are psyched to see you play Sunday. L e t’s rage at S oftball T ourney. D e lta lo v e Sandy Tracey M elinda. PI KAPPA Alphas w ill take firs t place in T ridelta softba ll tournam ent. PIKE 212 (Om ar from Peru and D evil) long liv e Leitosis! A not so naive Sigm a Kay. PIKES GET fired up to w in T ridelta softball tournam ent— A gain; Love your coaches. PIKES— GET ready to win T ri Delta softba ll again!!! Love, your coaches. PI PHI Denise— You’re the coolest mom. Thanks fo r a great sem ester thus far. Get ready for,pledge mom present. Your Theta C hi son. PIPHI JODI- I’m glad your my blackfoot w h itefo ot date once again. Looking forw ard to tonight! Love Rob. PERSONALS SIGM A KAPPA V olleyball players G ina, Denise, R obbi, Ann, Lisa, M ichelle, and Suzanne: Good luck in the Phi S ig Tournam ent. Y o u're awesom e! Love, your sisters. SIGMA KAPPA C hristy- thanks so much fo r the signs! You are so cute and I love you! Love your mom, K risty. TRI DELTS^- The Phi Psis w ill take the tournam ent th is S aturday! O ur coaches are the best! SIGMA P I’S good luck in DDD softball tournam ent! Love your coaches: M ichelle, Julie, Laura. TR ID ELT SO FTBALL psyched fo r Sunday!! SIGMA P I’S w ill dom inate T ride lta softball tourney, Novem ber 4 ! Love your coaches. SK BABY Snakes, get ready fo r Sig Kap “ week o f g iv in g ." Love, the actives. SK BABY Snakes, study hours have com e along way! Keep it up! Proudly, a grown up snake. SK JO DI "G eek” W ylie, Happy B-day!! You’re fin a lly 19yrs!! You’re the best room m ate in the w hole w orld! I hope you B-day is the best one o f a ll!! Let’s party our butts o ff!! I love ya —H eidi. SK JO DI “ G eek" W ylie, w hat’s Zest? I don’t know yet!? IS it absences or absti­ nence th a t m akes the heart grow fonder? W ho has the m ost points now? (I think D ockers has the m ost points!) Love H eidi. SK JO D I— Happy B irthday sis! Are you in to S and L? Me too. Love, your blueberry tw in. SK JO DI, oh my God can I ju st te ll you...H appy B-day! Sorry it’s not one of my "ta le s of adventure.” But others read th is section, follow me? Cool! Have a good one and le t's rage! SK M .L. SK JO D I— You are the (second) best! Love, Duckers. P.S. I love your feet! SK SISTERS, it’s th a t tim e o f year and our week o f giving is alm ost here. Sunday w ill kick it o ff so till the n ....p a rty your butts off! Sigm a Alpha Omega! o n « « S0N' 1 SK STEPH, keep up the hard w ork. You’ll make it! Love, your mom. SORORITY WOMEN Listen clear, cause Phi S ig V olleyball Tourney is fin a lly here! Bum pin S pikin and aH hands in a ir, w hich lucky sorority w ill take it th is year? STEFANlE MATTHEW S I had the tim e of my life la st night. Thanks fo r p u ttin g up w ith me over the years. I love you your dude to be David THETA DELT Vince: H ere’s the personal you never got G et ready to have your butt kicked in tennis today. Love Laura. THETA DELTA C hi the team to beat at Tri Delta S o ftb a ll Tournam ent. THETA D E L T S -T ri D elta S o ftball Tourna­ m ent is Novem ber 4th G et ready to claim victory! THETA DELT- your T ri D elta coaches think you are awesom e Let’s party! THETA TIF — You are soo sweet and the best mom. Thank you so m uch! One of these nights I’m ta lkin g you out. Love, . Krissy. SlGEP ALUM NI: T rid e lt softba ll tourna­ m ent Sunday 11:00 E l Dorado Park vs. Sigm a Nu your coaches know you w ill dom inate. SlGEP ALUM : Are you ready to take T rid e lt so ftb a ll tourney?! AH com e to cheer on!! SIG EPS: W e know you’H slide in to the Cham pionship Sunday! Good lu ck! Love your coaches Stacey, Jean; and Shelly SIG KAPS love th e ir Phi Sig Volleyball coaches M ike, Pete, Chad, and B rian. You guys are Awesome! Love, the ladies of Sigm a Kappa. SIGMA CH I— Good luck at the T ridelt so ftb a ll tournam ent. Love, C herryl, Hope, and Kellys. SIGMA KAPPA Ann*-* Prepare to get s m a s h e d fo r B la c k fo o t/W h ite fo o t sym pathetically yours— Travis. TRIDELT BRONWYN Benz- awesome job oh Hom ecom ing! Y our sisters love you and are so proud!!! SIGMA NU W es — You’re the best and I love you! Really looking forw ard to Friday night. Love, K ristin. ROBBY; HAPPY 8 m onths! Just wanted you to know now happy I am. Savsou Kirnm y. SAE D .C.t- Happy B irthday! O nly 20? SUch a youngster! A re we gonna “ rage” again like Oni-O 21st? A t least we don 't have to w ait until m idnite! Luv— G phib C.K. TRI DELTA coaches KeHy, Jen, Joni— Theta Chi wiH blast the way to victory Saturday! TRIDELT BRONWYN: This is your week, you stud Hom ecom ing D irector!! Your s iste rs love you! Delta love. Dawn. THETA LISA L. He’s the one w ho blew it, so why the long face? G ive your other guys a chance and m ove on. The other L- RUSH RUSH Rush Rush Rush.Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush R ush Rush Rush Rush Rush. TRlDELTA COACHES, Ju lie , Laura, and M ichelle, are flip p in g fo r Sigm a Pi success! TKES — ' GET ready to win Tri-D elta softba ll tourney! W e w ill dom inate! Luv your T ri-D elt coaches! T ourney!!! Get TRI DELT’S Jenny Paige and Jane w e’re psyched for softba ll w ith you coaching us w e h a ve to w in — K a p p a A lp h a G entlem en. TRISIGMA PLEDGES— You are going to be awesome actives. The question now is when? ' . . VO LLEYBALL VO LLEYBALL V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball VolleybaH V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olle yball Volleyball V olleyball V olleyball V olleyball Volleyball V olleyball V olleyball. Good lu ck to a ll sororities tom orrow - Phi Sigs. ZBT HERSH, W ednesday night you said you were tapped, we a ll knew you were fu ll of crap. The m oral of the story isn’t deep; Hersh, you’re pretty dam n cheap! C H ILD CARE BABYSITTER W ANTED— Part-tim e, near P a ra d ise M a ll. O wn tra n s p o rta tio n needed. $6/hour. 494-4392. GOVERNESS/PART-TIME TO pick up 13 year old from school and drive to various a ctivitie s. O ccassional weekend. H ourly wage plus gas allow ance. Send le tte r to S helly, 9357 N orth 87th W ay, Scottsdale, 85258. . A D O PTIO N ADOPTION: PHYSICIAN, w ife and 2% year old adopted son hope fo r a second baby to com plete our happiness. W ill you h e Ip u s ? , C a ll A b b y , c o fle e t: (718)279-2985. H A PP ILY -M AR R IED PRO FESSIO NAL couple w ant healthy in fan t to adopt and love. O ur attorney is v e ry understanding and kind. Pleae call him co lle ct, anytim e, Larry Siegel: O ffice, (415)457-6313; hom e, (415)456-2495 LOVING COUPLE seeks to adopt infant in to th e ir country hom e; Lots o f nieces and nephews nearby. Legal and related expenses. Please answ er our prayers. C all D iane and Bob, collect, anytim e: (508)822-9959. PHYLLIS AND Paul w ish to adopt in fan t in to th e ir M assachusetts hom e. Lots of fam ily nearby. C all co lle ct after 6pm , (508)649-3177, C onfidential and related expenses. SERVICES ELECTROLYSIS— PERMANENT hair rem oval. Remove unw anted hair forever. Student discounts. C all fo r m ore inform a­ tio n : 969-6954. HAIR REMOVAL — Both electrolysis and w axing. Safe, s te rile , effective. Spider, veins, also. U niversity and Country Club. 962-6490. Invitations by Kathleen TO CHUBBS: W ell the tim e has come again. I m ust return the favor. To talk about your w eight and fa t is som ething I can savor. The sidew alks that you walk upon— they crack beneath your feet. And when you com e to class to s it— four chairs become your seat. B ut never fear, dear friend o f m ine. D o n't le t fat jokes offend. P iles o f broken scales don’t m ean your w orld has com e to end. So dose you eyes and try to forget your em barrassing little earthquakes. And dream your all-tim e favorite dream — A world fille d w ith Hostess cupcakes!!! —Supersonic. MALE/FEMALE GROUP w ork psychother­ apy group form ing fo r m ales and fem ales to resolve old issues (i.e . childhood trau­ m a, co-dependence, death, assault, relo­ cation) to create im provem ent fo r today! PhD wHI lead. $35, 2 hour weekly session; fo r m ore inform ation: 998-0900. TRI DELTA KeHy Kennan— Happy 20th Birthday to the m ost awesom e pledge daughter!! Sm ile— its your day!! Delta Love, Beth. C over Y ou r A ssets TRI DELTA C heryl, being w ith you is a birthday everyday fo r me! Happy birthday Happy B irthday: Love your soorv'to be tw enty-one boyfriend. TRIDELTA DAWN. Lets get ready-to rage th is weekend at V olleyball Tourney I love ya Sandy TRIDELTA CARISSA— Please d o n 't think I’m a weirdo because of th is game (I thought it m ight be fun). To learn more about me, keep reading here. From your secret adm irer. I nvi t at i ons disc o u n te d . Monthly specials. 786-6041 with Renters Insurance From $ 800/month Protect Your Valuables 345 - 952 5 Ask for Tom ¿ fV L Get Met. T A T It Pays. TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING SERVICES SIGMA KAPPA Kim bèrty, thanks for being an awesom e g irlfrie n d . The form al is fin a lly here, one w hich w ill never be forgotten. Love, Steven. P.S. , Yes, the suite does corné w ith a refrig era tor..... P i PHI’S good luck a t the Tournam ent tom orrow. Y ou're doing a great jo b so far, you’ve got the sp irit to take it a ll! Love, your coaches- Sean P h il and Jason. RUSH RUSH Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush. PERSONALS PERMANENT H A IR R E M O V A L NEED TIME to study? W e do APA/MLA form ats. $1.50, double-spaced page. C all Joanne, 966-1516 o r B obbi, 968-9166. by PRO-SCRIBE TRANSCRIPTIONS. U tape it o r w rite it, we type it. P ickup/delivery. Tem po’s finest. 838-1159. E lectro lysis * Student rates * 998-0343 R E SU M E S— $15 . H igh-R es Lase r Im ager. Also g re a t. fo r highest quality theses, dissertations. C all Joe, 839-2770. TYPIN G /W O R D PROCESSING TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING. $1/page. Laser printin g included. You deliver and pick up. Alm a School Road/Baseline. Jan, 897-1744. $1.50 AAA W ord Processing/laser printer. 35 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. M arion, 839-4269. WORD PROCESSING, reasonable rates. Fast, dependable, accurate. Term papers, business le tters, m ail outs, etc. 839-7527. $1 50/PAGE. TYPING service run by profession al w rite r. E d iting included, gram m ar corrected, w ritin g im proved, no extra charge. ASU location. 894-6768. WORD PROCESSING— resum es, term , papers, le tters, reports* m anuscripts, m ail­ ings. H ighest qua lity/low est prices. Karen, 833-5563. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, le tters, resum es, etc. A t Y our Service W ord Processing, Linda, 839-6167. WORD PROCESSING, resum es, papers, W o rd P e rfe c t tra in in g ; S c o tts d a le / Cam eiback area. C a ll to discuss your needs, 945-4770. £ 1 .7 5 AND up, professional word proces­ sor arid fo rm e r'E n g lis h teacher. Laser printer. C laudia, 964-6012. ACCURATE RESUMES com posed and typed ($25); guaranteed. C all Carol, 924-8064, evenings and weekends. East Mesa. A KINKO’S paper m akes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resum es, flie rs, etc. Self-serve M acintosh com puters and la ser printers, too. 933 East U niversity, c a ll 966-2035. 960 W est U niversity, ca ll 921-0168. Open early, open la te , open 7 days! ALL PAPERS, resum es, le tters, docu­ m ents, transcribing, editing, m ailings. C ollege graduate using IBM com puter. M ike, 964-0994. APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need it fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. TUTORS ACCOUNTING AND finance professional in struction, study aides and exam ination strategies. Rates from $6/hour. 497-2097, G il. ENGLISH TUTOR, paper editing. A ll s u b je c ts , p ro fe s s io n a l e x p e rie n c e . Reasonable rates. 829-6712. TROUBLES W ITH m ath? Call the Math Doctor — P rofessional m ath instruction. C all 897-8993. PREGNANCY COUNSELING ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. C all anytim e. P rice s are c o m p e titiv e , ne g o tia b le . 966-2186. Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. A TERM paper special— $2.75/page laser p rin te d . Resum e package sp e cia l— $19.95. Dr. Copy, 968-7771. FLYING FINGERS has M aclntosh/laser qua lity and now Fax-a-Shirt. C all 945-1551 fo r details. LETTER QUALITY w ord processing for your typing needs. AM A/M LA, fast turnar­ ound. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825. 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 W ANTED PHI101, 9:15, Tuesday/Thursday, Kapus. • W ill pay fo r good notes. C all 829-1889, Je ff. Your Individual Horoscope Frances Drake IF YOUR BUSINESS WOULD LIKE TO SPO NSOR THE HOROSCOPES, PLEÂSE C ALL 965-6555. FOR SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1990 AR IES « (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Stay away from ' financial risk­ taking today. A conservative course is your best route to business gains now. Accent self-discipline and good organization. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) W There’s a need to meet close ties halfway now. Don’t let a small matter ' escalate into something bigger. Travel and dealings with advisers are favored today. G E M IN I »g (M ay 21 to June 20) TO Indecisiveness hampers work progress today. You may be asked to help someone out financially. Low key activities are your best for relaxation now. CANCER (June 21to July 22} H05 Couples will be sharing responsi­ bilities today. You may not see eye-to-eye with a child. Your taste in entertainment runs to the familiar and the nostalgic now. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) A difference in opinion occurs between family members today. You may want to devote some o f this day to a work project Concentrative powers are excellent VIRGO « a (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) Morning hours could find you overjy concerned with detail. Try not to squabble about a minor concern. A child m ay' want your participation at a school-related activity. SCORPIO d ie (O c t 23 to Nov. 21) Some minor bickering could mar the ajn., but later together you’re both working together harmoniously on a project that needs to get done. Accent teamwork. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) S lv You’ll have to ward o ff escapist tendencies to accomplish the things you want to do today. A little extra time devoted to job interests will reap benefits later. CAPRICORN — * (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) . Though romance and dating are favored, you Could be slightly irri­ tated with a friend today. You have a strong sense o f responsibility where parental duties are concerned now. AQUARIUS ^ (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You’ll get bogged down on minor details, if you try to explain your position to a friend now. It’s better to keep working on the project than to ask for immediate feedback. PISCES ^ (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Not everyone will agree with you today. Still, you’l l enjoy getting together with old friends now. Some mix-ups in communications are pos­ sible. YOU BORN TODAY are more versatile than the typical member o f your sign, blit also, more inclined to scatter your energies. Usually, you’re naturally talented with words, but need application to become the consummate w riter’ or public LIBRA speaker. You're adventurous and may (S e p t 23 to O ct 22) be inclined at times to settle for what Couples may not be in agreement chance throws your way. Advertising, about the use o f joint assets today. theater, and brokerage may appeal to You Seem to know just how to handle you. Birthdate of: Bob Feller, baseball a problem that arises at home. Others star; Vincenzo Bellini, composer; Monica Vitti, actress. appreciate your help. Copyright 1990 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.- Page 20 Friday, November 2 ,1 9 9 0 Slate Press Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-6 in Phoenix at M etrocenter, Paradise Valley, F iesta M all, ChrisTbwn, Scottsd ale and Superstition Springs. Shop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-6, Sunday 12-6 at Park C entral and W estridge. We welcome your D illard’s Credit Card, The American Express0 Card, Diners Club International, Mastercard? Visa? and The Discover Card.