© Copyright, State Press, 1991 Voi. 74 No. 40 Tem pe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Monday, March 11,1991 ÂSUfreshman wrestler dies at party By LORENZO SIERRA Jr. State Press E ighteen-year-old ASli wrestler Bobby Janisse died Satur­ day night of a selfinflicted head wound w hile atten d in g a p a r t y in T e m p e , police said. According to Tempe police reports, Janisse was with friends at a Tempe apartment located at 1717 S. Dorsey Lane. Janisse allegedly went into the bathroom, locked the door and fired one round from a hand gun into his head, police said. Police reported Janisse’s friends broke into the bathroom upon hearing the gun shots. Police were called at 10:35 p.m. and Janisse was later pronounced dead at the scene. “It’s a real tragic thing,’’ said ASU w re s tlin g c o a c h B obby D o u g las. “Obviously, it’s torn a lot of people apart. “Bobby was well liked,” Douglas said of the justice studies major, “i t was a total surprise. No one saw it coming. “My greatest sympathy goes out to the fam ily. E veryone on the team is devastated.” Originally from Portland, Ore., Janisse earned first team All-America honors from Amateur Wrestling News after his senior year at Jefferson High School. He set the record for career victories in Oregon with a mark of 123-2. Janisse won three consecutive state titles after finishing third his freshman year of high school. He was a two-time GrecoRoman junior national champion as well as a freestyle junior national champion. Janisse, a redshirt freshman, was considered a top recruit in the 126-pound weight division. Freed prisoners retu rn hom e to families, cheers ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE, Md. (AP) - “Someday” finally came for 21 former American prisoners who returned Sunday to the embrace of their families, the praise of their military bosses and the cheers of ordinary citizens. Flags snapped in a stiff wind, the Air Force band played and hand-lettered signs proclaimed the theme of the day: Welcome Home. “Your country is opening its arms to greet you,” said Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and several thousand onlookers applauded. “Someday finally came and we’re glad to be home,” said Air Force Col. David W. Eberly, the highest ranking of the former POWs aboard the flight he dubbed “Freedom ZeroOne” from Bahrain. The reunion produced some remarkable scenes: Navy Lt. Robert Wetzel, his right arm broken, saluting the flag with his left hand. Army Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Stamaris Jr., propped on a gurney but still managing a regulation salute. Army Spc. Melissa Rathbun-Nealy rushing into her parents’ arms. An unidentified man throwing his arms around Eberly as tears streamed down his face. Calvin Zaun said later that his son, Navy Lt. Jeffrey N. Zaun and Wetzel “had a rough course in survival.” “Our children are home without too much damage to them,” hesqid, looking upward several times to maintain his . Turn to POWs, page 2;. A M odatad Pt m * photo Staff Sgt. Daniel Stamaris o f Boise, Idaho, salutes during the playing of the National Anthem at a ceremony for released prisoners Of war Sunday at Andrews Air Forcé Base in Maryland. Steinern claims sexism, racism ‘intertwined’ By JUDt.TANCOS State Press Joe Bam eson/State Press Steinern Sexism and racism are types of prejudice so intertwined they must be fought at the same time, feminist Gloria Steinem said last week. “It is simply not possible to uproot discrimination against women without also fighting discrimination against race,” Steinem told about 2,000 women and men of all ages gathered at Phoenix Civic Plaza Friday night. The event, which was co-sponsored by 12 Valley women’s groups, took place in celebration of International Women’s Day. Proceeds will go to a scholarship fund for needy women. “We can only succeed if we succeed t o g e t h e r , ” S te in e m s a id to th e p redom inantly fem ale crowd in a motivational speech designed to bring women together to fight for the same cause — equality. And the W inner is: The goal is the full social, economic and political equality of men and women, said Steinem, the co-founder of Ms. magazine, a national feminist monthly. However, Steinem said opposition to the movement has risen out of uncertainty about what feminism means and its threat to the sexual caste system in the United States. “It (feminism) really does mean a profound and very real change,” Steinem said. “ (But) patriarchy doesn’t work anywhere anymore.” Steinem also recounted the parallels between sexism and racism to frequent outbursts of applause. Before the concept of paternity was understood, women were the “worshipped gender” because they could bear children, Steinem said. But once men were connected to babies, the freedoms of women were restricted, and children became property — men became the “pure” ruling race, and women were like slaves, she added. “It becomes very important, if one is going to maintain a racist system, to —first and foremost — maintain the separation of races,” said Steinem, who for the past nine years was chosen one of the 25 Most Influential Women in America by World Almanac. Steinem said the parallels between racism and sexism go further to include racial myths. Popular stereotypes labeling people as passive, providing cheap labor and having s m a lle r b ra in s ap p ly to m in o rity populations, immigrants and women, she said. “Our consciousness about women is generally lower than our consciousness about race,” she said, adding that “in many ways, women are psychic immigrants. We are coming into the labor forcé for die first time.” Steinem said activist groups protesting Toni to Steinem, page 2. B ill Gets Bid: Zony Awards, Arizonans version o f the Tony, w ill award the best in local theatrical productions^ Page 11 rtilÊffijrv w W nT ' The ASU m en's basketball team will play Rutgers University Friday in the first round o f the NCAA championship. Page 13 Today’s weather: Sunny with a high in the mid 70s. Tonight: Clear with a low in the 30$. Classifieds........... J.. u.i.,,... C o m ic s ............ ^■NOMNAPtdi11 .... ;....,. ig 12 C ro s s w o rd . : :.. V:..... ......... h ... ;................ ’....... 17 Sports...... Page g Stale Press Monday, March 11,1991 POWs Continued from page 1. composure. “Hie prison was tough on them, but from all I saw, they seem like they’re all going to return to normalcy.” Kathleen and William Wetzel of Vero Beach, Fla., said their son survived captivity on prayer and mental games. Hé took imaginary strolls down every street in his hometown, Metuchen, N. J., remembering his friends there, the elder Wetzel said. “He said a ‘Hail, Mary’ and an ‘Our Father’ in front of every house in Metuchen,” Mrs. Wetzel said, her eyes filling with tears. “He wanted Metuchen to know he Will be the Grand Poobah of the Memorial Day Parade.” Air Force Col. Wynn Mabry, the flight surgeon who accompanied the former POWs back to the United States, said Wetzel Suffered “flail-like injuries” during thé éjection and had undergone surgery in Baghdad, Air Force Lt. Col. Jeffrey D. Fox of Fall River, Mass., was greeted by a friend, Audrey Murawski. Force Capt. William F. Andrews when he was shot down. Andrews, too, was taken prisoner by the Iraqis and he walked off the airplane on crutches. Stamaris’ parents had been told he was killed when the helicopter crashed, but they learned the next day that he was still alive but missing. Stamaris, from Boise, Idaho, was wheeled to the welcoming ceremony on a hospital gurney and sat Up clutching an American flag. He was in dress uniform, his red beret crisp against a white pillowcase. The others wore fatigues as they emerged from a blue-andwhite plane from the presidential fleet prominently labeled “United States of America.” Their flight, 21 hours long with two stops, was by all accounts a transcontinental party. The bulkheads were festooned with balloons and the former prisoners were served that most American of (fishes, pizza. “He sounded happy, he sounded glad to be back,” said Murawski, a real estatebroker from Alexandria, Va. “I think he is ready to get back to work.” “He has some torn ligaments, and a busted eardrum, but he sounded good on the phone,” said Rob Fox, the only one of Fox’s five siblings who couldn’t make the trip to this base just outside Washington. Families and invited friends of the returning POWs were the only ones allowed close, thousands of other welcomers were kept behind a fence. Yet distance did nothing to dampen their enthusiasm. Every one, it seemed, had an American flag. Yellow ribbons were the dominant clothing accessories. After he spoke, Eberly walked across the tarmac to the crowd and was hugged by a woman while others cheered. There were sobering notes that this was a scene of war. Stamaris, 31, was flown home apart from the others on a C-141 medical evacuation plane because of a broken leg and other injuries. He was on a helicopter trying to rescue Air Steinem Continued from page 1. prémarital sex, abortion and homosexual rights are trying to maintain a system that keeps women inferior. They are saying sex is only OK when it takës place inside patriarchal marriagé and ends in conception, Steinem said. _ “To restrict sexuality is like saying you have freedom of speech but only if you speak in one way,” she added. In addition, Steinem cited gender roles as the root cause of violence, saving that modern society polarizes sex roles, forcing men to prove their masculinity: “To uproot (the) cause (of violence) means to uproot gender roles,” she Said, adding that this may be the “key to stopping violence.” Steinem also questioned the use of military force by the United States and President Bush’s “long distance torture” of the Iraqi people during the Persian Gulf war, charging that “we fought for a country that does not vote.” “Would we have bombed a European country the same way in which we bombed Iraq?” she asked. “Would we call an ally a country like Saudi Arabia if it treated Jews like it treats women?” However, it will take another “75 to 80 years” before women are equal to men, Steinem predicted, saying that even though women have won a “legal identity as human beings,” there is still more to be done. “There is almost no one in this country who doesn’t feel different now about what women and men can do —what our sons and daughters can do,” she said. However, the idea of equal pay does not mean that there is equal pay, said Steinem, who also advocates shared parenthood, parental leaves and shorter work days for both parents when a new baby arrives. “ (But) we are struggling to make changes that will begin to make these new dreams real possibilities and real choices,” she said. Today T h e T o d ay sectio n is a d aily c a le n d a r o f even ts h a p p e n in g 'a t ASU th a t is p res en ted as a s e rv ic e to th e U n iversity co m m un ity. A n y cam pus clu b o r o rg an iza tio n can su b m it e n trie s fo r p u b lic a tio n to th e State Press, lo cated in th e b asem en t o f M atth ew s C e n te r, Room 15. E n tries m ust b e le g ib le , are su b je c t to e d itin g fo r c o n te n t, sp ace an d c la rity , and w ill n o t b e tak en o v e r th e p h o n e. D ue to sp ace re s tric tio n s , th e State Press cann o t g u a ran tee p u b lic a tio n . D ead lin e fo r th e e n trie s is 1 p .m . th e p revio u s b usin ess d ay. meeting at 4:45 p.m. in the MU Kaibab Room. •A m n e s ty in te rn a tio n a l will present Canadian poet Brock Tully at 5 p.m. in MU Room 211. •M U A B S p ec ia l E ven ts will have a meeting at 3:15 p.m. in the MU LaPaz Room. New members welcome. •C o a litio n F o r W o rld P eace will have a meeting at noon in the MU Mohave Room to discuss spiritual freedom. •A S U R eview will have a meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •S o c ie ty fo r C re a tiv e A n achron ism will have fighter practice at 3:30 p.m. on Hayden Lawn. Newcomers welcome. Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have a closed meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •A lp h a P hi O m eg a will have a pledge meeting at 6 p.m. and an active meeting at 7 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. •M U A B F ilm C o m m itte e will present “The Gold Rush” at 7 and 9:30 p.m. free of charge. •M U A B F ilm C o m m ittee will have a meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room. •M U A B F ilm S n eak P review C o m m ittee will have a HEADSHOTS A C O N T E M P O R A R Y P H O T O G R A P H IC STU D IO S p e c ia lizin g in W o m e n & B eauty ESTA MALL S.E.S. AND C.H.A.C. INVITE YOU TO • U pper Level N ear B roadw ay • 833-4597 IM ATCH T H E S E B E F O R E & A F T E R P H O T O G R A P H S " ATTEND A SAFETY AWARENESS SEMINAR ON WEDNESDAY MARCH 13th IN THE YUMA ROOM (211) OF THE M.U. FROM 2:30pm — 3:30pm. OUR FEATURE SPEAKER WILL BE OFFICER LINDA STROH OF THE ASU DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY. O u r s ta ff w ill help in s e le c tin g a new and e x c itin g im ag e you. Y o u r p h o to sh o o t in c lu d e s m a ke -u p , hair, a c c e s s o rie s and p ro o fs. H e a d sh o ts o ffe rs a s e le c tio n of p o s te rs, m u rals and p rin ts at a p rice you can a ffo rd . JUST ONCE—Let Us Capture Your Beauty and Preserve It Do it w ith a frie n d and h ave tw ic e th e fun! W orld/N ation Arabs endorse U.S. plan in Mideast ________ CAIRO, Egypt (AP) — Eight Arab governments Sunday endorsed President Bush’s proposal calling on Israel to relinquish territory in exchange for peace in the region, but Secretary of State James A. Baker III said he had not asked them for specific commitments. “We still have a long way to go and it is very early,’’ Baker told reporters as he flew here after meeting with Arab foreign ministers in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. “We are trying to get a process going.” Baker, on his first Mideast diplomatic mission since the allied victory over Iraq, met with die foreign ministers of Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Oman and Qatar. In a declaration issued after Baker left Saudi Arabia, the ministers called for “an end to the Israeli occupation of the Arab territories” and assurances of national rights for Palestinians. Monday, March H , 1991 While endorsing Bush’s peace proposal, the Arabs reiterated their desire for a Mideast peace conference. Baker rejected the request, saying, “This is not the appropriate time.” Israeli response to the Arab meeting was cautious. “If the Arabs come and tell us that territory is the primary objective of negotiations, it is a sign they not really aiming for peace,” said Yosef Ben-Aharon, who advises Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir on the land-for-peace question, “If they tell us they finally decided to recognize Israel’s existence and deal with it as an equal partner, (hen they can place on the negotiating table any issue they wish,” Ben-Aharon said. Another top adviser to Shamir said Israel would push a 2-year-old plan that offers Palestinians elections and negotiations on Israel’s autonomy offer. < “We have a good peace initiative of May 1989 and this is what we want to go ahead with,” Avi Pazner said on the eve of Baker’s arrival in Israel for two days of talks. Baker, who had offered to talk with Palestinians while in Israel, said there was “some indication” there would be such a meeting. But there were mixed signals from the Palestine Liberation Organization, with one faction saying such a meeting had been approved and another saying it had not. The issue has caused renewed violence between Palestinians and Israelis. In Jerusalem Sunday, an Arab man who said he was sending a “message to Baker” fatally stabbed three Jewish women and wounded another. After the attack, angry Israelis shouted, “Baker go home!” and anti-Arab slogans, In addition to promoting Arab-Israeli peace, Bush’s four-point proposal calls for economic cooperation, a slowdown in the Pogg 3 influx of weapons to the region and a permanent security force to protect Persian Gulf oil fields. Bush told Congress last week that any settlement should be based on an exchange of territory for peace. “We support this initiative,” Saudi Foreign Minister Prince SaUd said after meeting with Baker. “We had a very positive discussion.” Prince Bandar, the Saudi ambassador to Washington, agreed. “When you get these eight countries supporting U.S. policies . . , I think that is very, very important,” he said. Baker said he had explored with the foreign ministers steps they want to take toward peace with Israel, but sought no specifics. “We are not at the point yet and I didn’t ask them to commit themselves in the absence of knowing what might or might not Torn to Baker« p age 6. Palestinian stabs 4 Jew s to death as a sign to U.S. Associated Press photo Israeli border police stand by the stabbing scene in Jerusalem Sunday where an Arab assailant with a butcher knife stabbed four Jewish women to death. Police said the attacker, who was shot in the leg and arrested by police, wanted to send a terrorist “ message” to U.S. Secretary of State James Baker on the eve of his visit. JERUSALEM (AP) -‘-A Palestinian armed with a butcher knife stabbed four Jewish women to death Sunday in what police said was a terrorist “message” to Secretary of State James A. Baker III on the eve of his visit. The attacker, identified as Mohammed Abu Galla, 26, from the occupied Gaza Strip, was shot in the leg and arrested by police. Armed Jewish settlers went on a rampage in the West Bank town of Bethlehem to avenge the attack, beating Palestinian residents and smashing their cars. Jerusalem police commander Chaim Albaldes said the assault, at a busy intersection in Jewish west Jerusalem, was “definitely a terrorist, nationalist attack.” The assailant, a native of Gaza’s Jabaliya refugee camp, told police he was sending a “message” to Baker on the eve of the secretary’s visit here Monday, Police Commissioner Yaacov Temer said, Jabaliya, a crowded shantytown of some 50,000 people, is where the Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation broke out 39 months ago. Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kollek urged restraint in the aftermath of the attack, the worst in Israel since the Gulf War began. But he added : “If the Arabs of Jerusalem try to behave like the Iraqis, they’ll endup the way the Iraqis did. We won’t be able to tolerate this,” Police later decided to tighten security for Baker’s visit. Israeli radio said one measure planned was to deny entry to Jerusalem for several days to Palestinians living in the occupied territories. Angry Israelis surrounded the site of the attack in west Jerusalem’s Kiryàt Hayovel neighborhood, shouting “Death T u r n to Stabbing, page 8 / Thousands of protesters dem and Gorbachev’s resignation MOSCOW (AP) - Shouts of “ Resign! Resign!” reverberated off the Kremlin walls on Sunday as hundreds of thousands of protesters demanded that President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and his fellow Communists relinquish power. It was the biggest anti-government demonstration in Moscow at least since the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. People Waving flags and protest banners filled Manezh Square next to the Kremlin. Many shouted that they will hot allow a dictatorship to be restored in the Soviet Union. The crowd was estimated at 500,000 by journalists and one of the speakers. Pro-democracy activists had drawn 200,000-300,000 to Moscow rallies several times in the past year, but have never previously filled the huge square. The rally was one of at least 16 held in cities across Russia Sunday to support Russian President Boris Yeltsin in his political fight with Gorbachev. Yeltsin has called for Gorbachev’s resignation and on Saturday turned up the heat by “declaring war” on the Communist leadership. Yeltsin wants Gorbachev replaced by the Federation Council, which includes the presidents of the 15 republics. At Sunday’s protest in Moscow, several speakers called for an immediate election of a new president. Elsewhere, 70,000 people braved freezing rain in Leningrad, 15,000 met in Yaroslavl and 2,500 in Vladivostok. Demonstrations also were reported in Sverdlovsk, Irkutsk, Kazan, Syktyvkar, Ulan-Ude, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Omsk, Khabarovsk, Novosibirsk, Smolensk, Novosibirsk and Krasnoyarsk. Yeltsin did not appear at the rallies, but activists played a recorded speech he had made. In both Moscow and Leningrad, organizers collected sacks of rubles to support the nearly 100,000 coalminers who are on strike to demand Gorbachev’s resignation and higher pay. Speakers said miners in Kutnetsk and Vorkuta have dropped their economic demands to focus on the political ones. In Moscow, the crowd of mostly over-40 demonstrators yelled in satisfaction when Mayor Gavriil Popov called for “no” votes on the national referendum March 17. Popov said it must be transformed from a vote on the future of the union into an expression of no-confidence in the Communist leadership. “They’ve led the country to catastrophe,” he said. The national referendum asks if voters consider it necessary to preserve the Soviet Union. Six of the 15 republics have refused to hold it, and two others have added questions asking voters if they prefer independence. Moscow’s deputy mayor, Sergei Stankevich, told reporters reformers must vote “no” on what he called a badly written question. Approval, he said, may be used by hard-liners to crack down violently on rebellious republics. Gorbachev hopes the referendum will force republic leaders to sign a new Union Treaty expanding local power but retaining a strong central government. Opponents of the treaty want a looser confederation or no union at all. At the rally in Moscow, white-red-and-blue flags of pre­ revolutionary Russia fluttered in the sunshine with the brick battlements of the Kremlin in the background. Hundreds of people carried posters and banners supporting Yeltsin and condemning Gorbachev and the Communist Party. “We demand a government without Communists — we’ve had enough blood!’’ read a poster carried by 41-year-old Nina V. Antonyuk, an economist whose mother left the Communist Party last year. “Today we are trying to unite various democratic groups behind Yeltsin,” she said. “That will be the beginning.” “They have tanks. We have only the truth,” said Antonyuk, referring to the attack by Soviet troops and tanks on protesters in Lithuania in January. w , » Fro««, page 6. A supporter o f Russian President Boris Yeltsin holds his photo overhead during a massive anti-Communlst rally Sunday by about 500,000 people on Moscow. Opinion Page 4 State Press ^Monda^MarchjLlWi Friendship doesn’t cure racism. More than a game. Editor: (AMA) is the strongest professional, This is in response to “Education not a organization on campus. For the past 2^] game” by Chris Scurlock (the chemistry years the AMA has worked to b e n e ^ ^ H student, not faculty member). The purpose members, ASU, and the community through of this letter is not to argue, but rather to the United Way. The AMA was awarded The present the facts fairly concerning the Most Outstanding Business Organization of Nintendo Campus Challenge. the Year for 89-90; wedid not getto be thSjf The Nintendo Campus Challenge was way by being a detriment to education. brought to ASU on Feb. 21 and 22. ASU is The main edueatiwA benefit that AMA one out of 50 universities chosen nationwide members Bgeeived from hosting this event to host this event. ASU did not take one cent was expelHbe., Real-ftfe experience is from the students’ (or their parents’) tuition what students need, but cap’t get from dollars to fund this event. It was a free, textbooks, 1% members of fee AMA gained recreational activity open to everyone. Noa ifKal-life experience by: tH H M n g with a one was coerced to take part in the Nintendo I national promotion campaign sponsored by Campus Challenge. ¡jjiEO, a division of Generil MottKs and If you are so much against studenlfl m m erim i#% rporation; b) promoting an having recreational time, would you like to“' ■ H H T c) Iearnfclg public relations; d) see the video games, pool tables and developing people s k ills ; and, e) bowling alley removed from the MU? Surely advertising. this area could be used fm| study rooms. The Nintendo Campus Challenge was a What about the Student fteetfption Center? fun, recreational event and an opportunity If students were not intended to have | for fee students of ASU to win prizes and recreational time, then shouldn’t the SRCjj (pcWremic scholarships, and for the also be closed? I don’t think so. Students phembers of the AMA a change to gain realneed time for themselves, and time for fun life experience. and recreation. Now for your comment that JpPlosting Cliff Faraci organization is detrimental iireducation. President, American Marketing Association The American Marketing Association ASU Editor: Throughout the month of February there was a senes of letters written which addressed the issue of cultural sensitivity. Several of the articles stemmed froth the racial flier posted in Cholla Apartments, while others focused on the articles and comments about Carolyn Walker. It was very upsetting to me that racial incidents such as these occurred during the month that celebrated Black History. In many articles, the focus was racism. Many people were upset about the usage of blanket statements. This country was founded and built on racism* therefore everyone is a product of racism. Thfgig not to say that everyone is a r a c i s t J v r a a S K exists in each individual m fee United States. Many people haysjwritten and said, “I can’t be ra c te y |p fe B | lots d^fetoarity friends,” :T ^ 0 "'people p ro b ab l^ ^B k ’t . racist ar^ M ^ R b e culturally aw are^jutcan they really be culturally sensitive of another culture just because they have friends hram that culture? One thing I learned at a workshop, Leadership 2000, was that a person must know and appreciate his or her own culture before he or she can begin to appreciate another’s culture. This includes both positive and negative aspects of one’s culture. As an African-American, I can truthfully say that I have much to learn about my own culture. AMp. minority, I may be more culturally aware than others, but I am not alwaggjr culturally sensitive. I have stereotypes'^ other cultures as well as my own. Each day, however, I work on breaking down those*, stereotypes and becoming moire tolerant and sensitive of ||th e r cultures. P Cultural diversity iagpgoal that needs to J>e reached on thisjgplpus. This goal can a k f c jie accomplished with support from administration, Students, faculty, staff and ASU police. Makeba L. Grisby J u n io r, Business Painful experience SJigEfetor: . This letter is \J ^ ^ o n s e to Christine Herbranson’s article about pro-choice printed in the March 7 issue of the State Ptvss. I Have had a previous abortion experience. I am a 19-year-old full-time student at ASU and I found out a little over a month ago that I was pregnant. Unfortunately, it was an unplanned pregnancy. I can’t even describe the shock and fear I felt when I found out. I knew immediately that I had to get an abortion. The abortion was my biggest fear, but I also knew, without a doubt, that I was not ready to have a child. In the midst of trying to sort out my feelings, I decided to call a “Pregnancy Crisis Center” and set up an appointment for a free counseling session the next day. Big mistake. I went there with the hope of talking to an unbiased counselor who could give me accurate information about abortions. I left feeling more shook up than when I found out I was pregnant. All the women working at the center were pro-life, and wanted me to watch a video tape showing two abortions, which I refused to watch. By the time I was able to leave there, I had agreed to take one of their pamphlets. When I looked at it, I felt sick. The pictures and literature w ere not even based on factual information, rather, it was all opinionated from their point of view. After sorting out my own feelings and thoughts about the situation, I decided that what was inside of me was a group of cells that only had the potential of becoming a human life. Two weeks later, I went through wife fee abortion. Although I am not proud of what' I did, and fee emotional scarring will always be wife me, I do not regret it. Having a child would have meant dropping out of school, working full time, and being a single parent without fee love feat fee child would have needed. If pro-life activists do not- believe in abortion, fine, then they should never have one. But they have no right to take away my freedom of choice. Name witheld upon request Capitalism sacrifices peace. Editor: During a recent debate fee between fee Student Action Movement and the College Republicans, Republican spokesmen were asked to respond to reports of U. S. defense contractors currently closing deals to supply military equipment to Saudi Arabia at a time when the Bush adminstration claims to seek arms control measures in fee Middle East. The response given by fee College Republican’s panel revealed one of fee important contradictions between what fee Bush administration says and what it does. In a phrase, fee College Republican’s answer was, if we don’t arm them somebody else will. I am confident that more sophisticated representatives of the Republican Party would have cloaked the same answer in more discreet terms, but fee answer given by ASU’s representatives of that party show clearly that the College Republicans place higher values on the quick profit than serious efforts towards lasting peace. In trying to get fee College Republican’s argument straight, I’ve come up wife the following: Ideally, the Bush administration wants arms control in the Middle East. But due to human greed, this goal is unrealistic. Therefore, if there is a profit to be made, fee American military industrial complex had better get its fair share. Just who in this picture is so anxious to give into greed. Mightn’t it be the same people who seek a cut in capital gains taxes? Many of fee 100,000 people we’ve just killed are not even buried. Yet fee College Republicans appear to have already given up on serious attempts to create fee lasting peace this war was supposed to bring. The torching of Kuwaiti oil wells by both sides in this recent conflict promises to be an environmental disaster feat has fee realistic potential to cause more dieafe and suffering than our handiwork in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, And fee College Republicans want me to be realistic about the omnipotent marketplace. If the arms market, in which American is fee largest distributor, dictates that we must follow up this destruction wife a policy feat will no doubt lead to fee rise of another brutal dictator that needs taking care of, then fee market needs to be changed. Every American taxpayer has stock in fee American military industrial complex. We most Certainly have fee right to demand that our investment be put to work for real lasting peace. Re-arming the Middle East before the fires of fee last war are put out is hardly fee way to do this. In my view, a more sensible approach would be to demand that our government put our high-tech military contractors to work on large scale development of solar and wind power technologies. In 1975, fee Energy Research and Development Administration reported feat “Solar energy falling on about 3 percent of our land, if utilized at about 10 percent efficiency, could meet fee total projected U. S. energy requirements by fee year 2000.” I seriously doubt that anyone who questions the potential of solar power even understands how a steam engine works. Another point to consider is that nearly every dollar spent on solar energy here in fee U. S, winds up in the pockets of American workers, not fee pockets of some oil-rich dictator. Explain to me how this could’ve been bad for our economy. As for fee College Republican’s position on energy, they seem to be under fee deluded impression feat oil is good for us. I’m sorry but I do not see how any cost benefit analysis that takes into account the destruction continuing at this moment in fee oil fields of Kuwait could possibly support fee Republican policies on energy and arms control. W, Russ Payne ' Senior, Philosophy are at ASU to accommodate students attending classes. I do believe that fee parking meters are here to accommodate students who choose to utilize them while eating lunch, going to fee bookstore, visiting their teachers during office hours, and many other reasons. Students who choose to use the parking meters while they are in class are preventing other students from using them for then: intended purpose — a convenient but temporary stop. Devoley states that the parking system abuses its students, "the very people it was created for,” by keeping the meter time limits at 30 to 50 minutes, feus forcing students to either arrive late to classes or to leave early. This is economically cheating the student if the student has to miss part of his or her class to attend to their vehicle. After all, it costs money to be educated. Also, if the student is a minute or two late on the meter, there will most likely be a 10 or more dollar ticket on his or her vehicle. We all know how efficient the meter maids are at ASU. In addition, parking meters are not cheap. A penny a minute might not sound like much, but for fee student who is taking more than three classes, meters could add up to about $120 per semester. In this case, a parking permit would be much more appropriate, However, for part-time students, there are other options available. There are séveral free twohour parking spaces and many other spaces surrounding the campus. Hie spaces may be a little farther from classes, but if these students are really interested in saving money, the extra distance should not matter. Overall, I feel that Devoley made many interesting points, but they were not based on fee purpose of metered parking. Hié main purposes are not for fee economical and locational conveniences of fee students, but merely for fee convenience for students who are running errands and making quick stops. Janelle Brannen Sophomore, Communications Meters not for class____ Editor: I am writing in response to the letter Renee N. Devoley wrote on Feb. 22 addressing fee metered parking problem at ASU. She states that meter time should be increased to 80 minutes to accommodate those students who do not have parking permits, and therefore have to use parking meters while attending class. She then continues by stating that it is economically difficult and ridiculous for part-time students to afford parking permits. I agree wife much of Ms. Deyoley’s opposition; however, there are a few points I disagree wife, and I have additional information I feel is important for many students. For instance, metered parking is generally for the quick stems on campus and economically adds up in numerous ways. 1 do not agree wife her viewpoint that fee parking meters should raise their time in order to enable students to attend class for the full period. I do not feel that the parking meters Opinion State Press J u s tif y in g a m is ta k e Editor: must everything be completely reduced to a dollars and cents issue? There are broader issues involved here. First, the legal issue. The law states that beginning Nov. 1 all state agencies must recycle 50 percent of its waste. Roberts’ article stated that 4,408 offices on campus are already recycling and that 3,000 pounds of paper are being picked up from ASU daily. It seems crazy that now that ASU has reached the hurdle it’s turning around and running the other way. Snyder says there is a proposed plan in the works involving custodians. Although the details are sketchy, it seems that the custodians Will be picking up recyclable goods three times a week instead of the current five times a week. Are these the same custodians that ASU so vehemently opposed last year for recycling aluminum cans that they salvaged from the trash cans in the process of doing their job? As I recall, certain ASU officials (for some stupid reason) didn’t want these hard-working people to supplement their incomes while helping the environment. And now some more brilliant ASU officials are going to ask the custodians the favor of doing ASU’s recycling for free? Another issue involved here is ASU’s im age^|ffi|.has I’m writing in regards to Michelle Roberts’ article about the recycling program on campus. It seems to me that instead of concentrating on finding a way to continue the successful recycling effort, ASU is content with justifying its cop-out attitude by comparing itself to other institutions that aren’t doing any better. Why, when ASU'has already taken a giant step forward in raising awareness about recycling and instituting an aggressive program, would it want to take two steps backward? According to the article, Gerald Snyder, ASU comptroller and treasurer, cites the decreased sale price of recycled paper as the basic problem. As a University with a great business school, I would hope that ASU officials realize that the business of recycling is like other businesses, in that the market fluctuates. This is not reason enough to bail out so soon after starting the program. Recycling is not something one does only when it benefits the recycler. It seems a little shortsighted for ASU officials to scrap most of the program just because of the unpredictability of the economy. Wouldn’t it be better to get some money for the paper, even if it’s less than what it was once worth, rather than none at all? Why A m Page 5 Monday, March 11,1991 e ric a n d o e s n ’t m Editor: In the March 8 issue of the State Press, Judi Tancos wrote the report “Stereotyping rises at ASU, professor says.” According to that report, Sociology Professor Rose Weitz has asked 400 sociology students to select five traits from a list of 83 to describe women of each ethnic group —white, black, Jewish, Mexican, Asian, Native American and lesbian women. Professor Weitz was quoted as saying “Almost all of the traits for American women in general are positive.” However, traits for other ethnic groups were only hatfg positive. Obviously, when Weitz said Am(sftS(|j| women she was referring only to white women. Black, Mexican, .Asian, Native 1 American and lesbiaa iSimen are also American women, if they are citizens. Unfortunately, many people, like Weitz assume that all white peOffesre Americans until proven otherwise a m .d p p b a ' ethnic ; groups are aliens until proven to be American. Recently, when I was driving through T exas! my p a rty was stepped by immigration officers at a road block. All the cars with white people were allowed to drive through without any checking. My friend is Chinese American and was asked to show e a n w received some unfavorable publicity in the recent past.. Becoming a leader in recycling is one area where ASU could redeem itself by taking the lead and setting the standard by which other institutions could be judged. ASU has already made great strides in its recycling effort, so now when it has the chance to score, ASU is fumbling the ball. All political issues aside, there is an issue of far greater importance here: the environment. There comes a time when sacrifices have to be made, convenient or not, out of concern for the world we live in. At a time when the oceans are filled with medical waste and hundreds of oil tanks are on fire in the Middle E a ^ ^ ^ ^ fc o u ld start scrutinizing our behavior. There are mgiiy environmental problems that are beyond our control, b f l e t ’s analyze those things which we do have some control qHpfsuch ^ r e e K |ing) and put forth the effort to make it wdtiL If ™ ^ r t i ||ttjch an issue, there are othfpr things to cut back on. After three years at ASU I can think 4§f several instances of frivolous spending and wasted dollaffeThe bottom line is that the ASU bureaucrats peed to re-evjpate their priorities. Junior, Broadcasting Iraqis behaved like animals h ite . identification. Like many Americans driving across state lines, he did not carraf his passport. The officer rejected his d{ng|f|| license saying that it was not proof of citizenship. Although my friend was released after some harasstnopt ($nd threat of jail) he was told always carry his parepog^gjposs state lines. No whites were »H W ^ I p n though not all whites are American. ' It is ,impigj|mt for a sociology professor not tOperpetiBte stereotypes and prejudice im ' college. Moreover^ ¡¡peatific studies should not have their condufons tainted .With prejudice if they are lb be of scientific jisdue. . Tancos is also guilty of IJj|p*American = white” mind set. J|g a journalist, she should be especially aw p li of the connotations in words and selfgpfler words carefully. To write an article using American to mean white onljP contributes to the growth of prejudice that Leonard Gordon, associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and ¡Sciences, described as the event she reported on. I hope that Tancos will be more careful in ensuring that her articles are objective and professional in. the future — likewise for Professor Weitz. Margaret Tang Senior, Computer Science Editor: ■ I hope all the peaceniks (who Uontinu&tO believe fairy hile peace stories) jHkhM TV last night and 'U ^^M U the fragtarm y did ¡¡¡p the helpless Kt&ialt Zoo animals. Anyone who finds pleasure in using caged animals for target practiqJfpKs not deserve any M | .' They le ftm o st of the animals wounded and in agony. A Kuwaiti man (who had heon smuggling food and water to the zoo animals for six months) reported that he witched an Iraqi army officer shoot one little monkey until it was only a small spot of hair and blood. The officer and his accomplices laughed while the little animal screamed until it died. They shot an elephant, but couldn’t kill it; it is barely alive and full of bullets. They beat a bear ’ until it could not longer do anything but moan. And they killed most of the other caged animals. . . now there are only few zoo survivors. The Allied forces should have marched through Iraq while they had the momentum and finished the Iraqi army off; most of the Iraqi troops would have surrendered. Hie war criminals could have been sifted out and tried by a Kuwait court of justice. We could have confiscated and destroyed all of Iraqi subhuman, antiquated war equipment and saved a lot of innocent people. Now, Saddam is going to do the same thing to his own people that his cowardly army did to the zoo animals. B. Baldwin Staff The State Press will reward ou tstan d in g letters to the editor that offer insightful commentary and /or unique points of view. The letters chosen will be tagged with the award logo a n d d o not n e c e ssa rily reflect the opinions of the State Press Editorial Board. S T A F E F S P t a t e TENNY TATUSIAN M anaging E ditor CO LUM N IST: D an N o w ick i CA RTO O N ISTS: Rob M inton, Julie Sigwart. A C o p y C hief.................................................... K R IS T IM M O N S N ew s E ditor KRISTEN JO H N S O N O pin io n E d t o Z Z Z Z Z Z I Z Z JU 1 C H E U E ROBERTS M A C A 2 IN J STAFF: C asebeer. M ichelle C roff, Vick. Culver, J00' Celpe, R andy H aw k in s, C hristine H erbranson, M ary Kose Lafrem ere, A aron Levy, L aurie N o ta ro C h a n d a R. Shahani. Photo Editor........................................................................T. J. SO K O L Sports E ditor - ................................................................. PAUL C O R O Asst. S ports E ditor....................................... ........ ........ D A N Z EIGER G raphics Editor..................................................... STEVEN KRICUN M agazine Editor................................................NICOLE CA RROLL M agazine M anaging E ditor............................ C A R IN C U M M IN S Assoc. M agazine Editor...................................... STEVEN K RICUN R E P O R T E R S : K e n n e t h B ro w n , A n ita C arco rv e, í’e e n a C had Well, A ndrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Kellye Kratchi Patricia M ah, Kris M ayes, D avid P u n d t, D iane Santorico, Ju d i Tañeos; K ram cr Welze1' PR O D U C TIO N : C assau n d ra Caviness, Celia H am m an-C ueto, H olly H jatt< Barry gelly, Jeffrey Lucas, M ark N othaft, Fran k N . Ranilla, Renato Salom one, Eric Zotcavage. SA LES R E PRESE N TA TIV ES: C olt D o d rill, Leo G o n z a le s. j o d d M a r tin , C h r i s t in e M illa n , L a n c e N e w m a n , N e il . Schnelw ar, D an T hom pson, John Vaccaro, D anielle W ebster. 1 The State Pres$ is published M onday th ro u g h F rid ay d u rin g th e a c a d e m ic y e a r, e x c e p t h o lid a y s a n d e x a m p e rio d s , at M atth ew s C entér, Room JS, A rizo n a State U hiversily, Tempe, A rizona 85287. N ew sroom : (602j-965*2292. We d b not answ er SPO R TS REPORTERS^ M arty M urphy, A m y Slade, Lorenzo q u e stio n s o f a g e n e ra l n a tu re . A d v e rtis in g a n d P ro d u c tio n : Sierra jr.V D arien Urban. ' . * ‘ '/ (602) 965-7572. ; P H O T O G R A P H E R S . J o e B a r n a s o n , I r w in D a u g h e r ty Jeorgerta D ouglas, Scott Troyanos, Taniara W offoni. COPY E DITO RS: Sonja Lewis, Tabitha Priyett-D rom iack. T O Suzanne Ross Editor C ity Editor............................. ............. ......... HO BA RT R O W LA N D Asst. C ity Editor..................... ............ ......................... KEVIN SH EH T° mhM O" M ark !“ • Ty nan- J ° n I R I A L B O A R D Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: r e s s SU ZA N N E R O SS Editor Asst. O pin io n td rto r................................M IC H A EL LA M A NTIA D T he State P ress is th e only n e w ap ap er exclusively p u blished ^ o r a n d circulated On th e ASU cam p u s. T h e n ew s a n d vieyra p ublished in th is n ew p ap ér are not necessarily those o f ASU a d m in istratio n , f ac u lté staff o r s tu d e n t body. Tenny Tatusian M anaging Editor Michelle Roberts Opinion Editor Hob art Ro wland City Editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. :■ .- Z All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing, and major (or any other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must be eithqr brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1502. State Press Monday, March 11,1991 Page 6 proposal that Israel give up territory poses a problem for Shamir, who wants to retain the West Bank and Gaza as a security buffer. Bush, in a comment directed toward Israel in his speech to Congress, said: “ Geography cannot guarantee security and security does not come from military power alone.” Prince Bandar shrugged off a question about whether Saudi Arabia was ready to recognize Israel. “It’s above my pay grade,” he quipped. Egyptian military sources said the permanent security force would be made up of 60,000 to 65,000 Egyptians, 20,000 to 30,000 Syrians and small contingents from other gulf nations. U.S. ground and air units and warships would supplement the force. Baken C ontinued from page 3. be passible on the other side of the equation,” Baker said. There was a clear difference between the United States and the eight Arab nations on a Middle East peace conference. “ Our objective is to convene an intern atio n al conference under UN auspices,” Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk Sharaa told reporters. “ There is a consensus on this.” Shamir and his senior advisers object to such a conference because they fear unfavorable terms for a settlement might be imposed on Israel. Even so, the gathering support for Bush’s Protest C ontinued from page 3. “Let Gorbachev resign and try to live on a pension of 115 rubles a month like me! ” said Emma Epifanova, a 63-year-old retired oil worker from Grozni who looked 20 years older. Kremlin officials receive pensions far higher than those of ordinary workers. Historian Yuri Afanasiev called on the crowd to form “ Democratic Russia” organizations where they work as a counter to the Communist Party and the start of a united front against hard-liners. In Leningrad, protesters in front of the tsar’s Winter Palace shivered under sodden posters that proclaimed, “Gorbachev is a liar,” and “Yeltsin is the hope of Russia.” R a d ic a l p a r lia m e n ta r ia n G alin a Starovoitova charged that the KGB is conducting illegal surveillance of reform legislators to compromise them. She called for a political strike on March 26 and said that voting “yes” in the referendum would wrongly give credibility to Gorbachev. Speakers in Novosibirsk called for a two-hour political Strike on March 28, Tass said. M ikhail Izium ov, co-chairm an of Democratic Russia, told the crowd his group was forced to call the public meeting because of an “information blockade.” ¡inmeesmne Mountain Bike Specialist 3 C i s S '- ì t E j c. X 4 .. I . S C O T T (m uddy FO X g ) $ 1 0 00 O F F T U N E -U P N O W $ 1 4 « , Reg. $ 2 4 « Very com plete tune-ups. FREE pick-up & delivery. I I I 644-1233 NO H A SSLES 644-1233 I .... C h a n g in g N O W $ 4 9 « , Reg. $ 6 9 « V ery com p le te overhaul. FREE pick-up & delivery. 644-12313 U ST PIC K UP TH E PHO NE 1530 N. C O U N TR Y CLUB 1 /4 lb . S in g le T$ 0 # # • (u nlim ited offer) R u ra l & A p a c h e (1 3 1 4 S. Rural) I 111 A H ands BOOKSTORE Browse through our 3 floors of: • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette • Sell or Trade your Books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no texi.books, please) we pay 30% o f our resale .price in cash of 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in die store. ■ • , •. (Sorry, no tra d e -in s on Sat. o r S un.) M -F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 S u n . 12-5 414 M ill A venue • T em pe • 966-0203 Cheek oat the Night Planner on Page 7! f CIULAMY • fEANUT UTTER Third Annual Conference May 2 2 ,2 3 & 24 Phoenix, AZ The Pointe Resort on South Mountain O M igntd fo r Mon onS Women: • Ovor 30 D ic tln in M ie i Speakers • Unlim ited Networking Possibilities • Meet E ve rte in the fie ld e l Sports • Job Interview Opportunities Sign up iww far Bird Spsdsl irli 20,1191 «Mil 20tb: $350 Students $450 Non-Students Yoor Resource to a Conor In Sports CALLNOWt Space Is Limited! Ybu may not be sure how, or when, it started. The pressures of exams, of fitting in, of succeeding all becam e too much to take. So you’d eat because it made you feel better. Then you’d vomit because you’d feel guilty. So you’d eat because it made you feel better. Somehow, it made sense at first. Now it’s a daily part of your routine. Homesick? Binge and purge. Broken relationship? Binge and purge. Alone on the weekend ? Binge and purge. Ybu feel great. And you feel terrible. There’s a name for this kind of behavior. It’s called 1-800-776-7877 ♦ Student Discount Only For the Most up-to,date Job Leads call: ■ Sports Careers Jobline Nl -900-420-3005 s2/mw « C A M E L B A C K _______ H E A L T H bulimia, a vicious cycle of over-control and loss of control that quickly can become overwhelming and, in fact, life-threatening. It’s tim e to get help from people who understand what you’r e going through. Camelback Hospital’s Eating Disorders Program has a short-stay tract for students during the sem ester break. You can break the binge-purge cycle and create hope for recovery. Call our 24-hour Eating Disorders Helpline for information on how you can gain control of your life again. 1-800-845-5212. B E H A V I OR A L S E R V I C E S _______ An Affiliate o f T he Samaritan Foundation i *■ V, N igh t Planner * The Valley’s Best Night Life E 1 MONDAY TUESDAY G ory G a lla g h e r 0U /E5M Y IVC SM Y 967-CIIU Y w / Spin ttocfar? 4 1 0 S . M ill AkCOVTEE^ PLANTATION C om er of $ 6th » Mill ^ 968-6666 S T O 3 — ) 1301 E. University ( P IZ Z A & PUB » (Next to Beauvais) S p o rts R e s ta u ra n t NMM Sy* R u ra l &A p ach e 8 9 4 -2 6 6 2 > » Ü K H 1320 E . B roadw ay T em p s, AZ 829-7 777 ¡¡NjNL ^ 430 N. S co ttsd ale Rd. T e m p e ,A Z C 6U B R A TE O U R 2 Y E A R A N N IV E R S A R Y ! THURSDAY FRIDAY t Wt S o n ja Jason S in B fe*$»m $4 te s tlu g g a g e FREE coffee or Ice Tea ALL RAY! (No strings attached) HAPPYHOva Vie PWce Prinks offen't il close FREE PLANTATION Z fo ri Meals Lunchsowed llant'Tpwf UGOMVOS to the let looocvstewrrs 'NightMenu'. served Spin-midnight orderinganyHOTtmvrage ECHOT9W w/ jumpingSenes SATURDAY er.PATRlCKfcpAY weeteew EXTKAVA6AH2A 7 like 0*ntls II-70AM- f.’OOAM FREE PIZZA! 0vy 3/4 OFANY Piz z a g etV V TANK* VP IVES. |2 J 0 60oz. Pitchers PREEROO! d ill for details 9604666 TVtMSiyiMURS. a iU M z.M H « $ 1 .2 5 HAPP/HOURF-G y ifln c e AH drinks $ Seer REVERSE H A W , hour lopnt* $2 20 .. f j * 1 60 on. pitchers OPEN MIC NITS $ 2 4 9 Pitchers ceors Light $i.29LoHgnecfcs pavBRsa HAPPYHOUR U |:it*l:00AM CRAB RACES $l.29Lengnecks Bud Light 92.49 pitchers WHITE WEES. $1.19 L.I. Ice teas $2.99 Pitcher» HI/MAN BOWUNG ■ $1.29litetGenuine Longnecks $2.49 pitchersLite no covert HAPPYW VR 4-B $1.19 Prinks $249 pitchers uvoRint# LAPIES NIGHT $i.29 Prinks 29$champagne FREEftwvBrsfst Sovwmen fr ee 016PRINKSPEOAIS MARGARITAA40NCAY 25CPRAFT5 $ 2 9 PITCHERS CLOSER HAPPY HOUR Z fe rl 0-7P M Surger$ Fries $2.95 BUYYOUR ST. PAROYs RAYSHIRT ALL VCANEAT1 PI2ZA$2.95 * domestic Pfachers $270 : nocover iiitiM m l. So4 Pint Drafts $l.§?lonoX$Jands $l.«eMi»gs sing with karaofce 2S$PRAFVS $ 2® PITCHERS 7piN*dese AIRLINE NICHT $Z.oq prinks with airline ip . JIMI HAU. 9PM to a v fr .*0 Si anything O'$2 Pitchers NYcHoirefroj OjHnrAMar HAPPY HOUR5-7 STUPYHALL0-11 $1*® Prinks $goe pitchers CHECKOUTOOP PATIO 9 NCAAA open io am ladies Nite $l«t Prinks ¿I.SOlenglsUMrfs $i.ooMargs Sing with Karaoke LAPIESWI6HT " S-W.» .anyeM naM ydnnK> 4 5 4 0 n r f t * S 'ii!» fo re w ry e n e k l B eers ii: W -dese LAPICSeNLV TK/OUKKITCHENt WE SERVEGREAT FW ! zs^BeerT-iipm mbcover SUNDAY 9 NCAA# open loam 2 Sort welldrinks 6 LIVE 0 4 N P J H A M - 10 N M th a n k ytH i» LATE NIGHT FROMHELL/ $ 2 .» shots lOpm-midnighf 9r. PAT$PAYSASH OMEN8fCR$9.99 Pitchers Press Liken leprechaun PRIZES! NOCOWBR. AZ. GREATEST St. Pats Sash Green Soar open lo am ST. PATS WEEKENP #N C A A # open loom 7r close ._i g g f f S S K B ’i*P6l 3 .9 5 Ruben z.sopitchers $3.9 5 corebeef $sandw ich greenbeer, , \p ia tie r $ «Kargt $ l.« e g re e it pints ?*• 50 green I.9 S 0«*i»n ess H erp | 99$praftS 99$anger P rrw 9 -ia m 994 Schnappsnefs $Sgp PsLtr.iongIslands TnJzemWes f (Sin Blossoms) HAPPY HOUR 2fo r | 4 - 0 pm A Z2IZZ evervwrp? FAVORITE! COUNTDOWN Starts n t 0pm CLOSER £f. Ratfyi Bay BREENSPRINGFUNG poorsopenat loam "I9L9H Orink Special' ■*> Monday, March 11,1991______________________ __ ______________ __ ________________ 715SOUTH HAYDEN ROAD, TEMPE, AZ 85281 Sam Taylor And a sam foufedsam WEDNESDAY rook h roll iver?. alternative Style 4 f0 Page 7 Stale Press Monday, March 11/1991 “Suddenly he flashed a knife . . . There was somebody on the floor and he was really pushing with the knife, he gave several stabs,” Ravivo said, The victims were rushed to nearby Hadassah Hospital, where officials reported three dead and a 20-year-old woman in serious condition. She later died on the operating table. All the victims suffered multiple stab wounds to the chest, Jerusalem police spokeswoman Anat Granit said. One was 32 years old, another 57 and a fourth had not yet been identified. No names were given. A 13-year-old girl suffered a broken leg while fleeing the attacker. An off-duty detective identified only as Sgt. Moshe said he chased and shot the assailant, wounding him in the leg. “I fired into the air. He looked at me but kept running with the knife in hand. He reached another bus stop a n d . . . from about five or six meters away, I aimed toward the lower part of his body and fired,” the detective told Israel army radio. Stabbing. Continued d u c 3. V C ontinued from page to the Arabs!” and hurling stones at Arab cars until riot police intervened. Others chanted: “Baker, go home,” “He can give them (Palestinians) land in America, we don’t have a state to give away,” an elderly man screamed. Baker is visiting the Jewish nation to discuss ways of solving the Arab-Israeli conflict. President Bush has said he wants to base a solution on trading occupied Arab land for peace. The attacker stabbed his first victim near a bus stop by a playground. He continued running along the pavement, stabbing other victims until he was shot, witnesses said. Taxi driver Asher Ravivo said that when he saw the attack, he swerved his car to try to hit the Palestinian, but missed him. C WAIST - C MANAGEMENT o r 712 S. C O LLE G E AVE M-F 7:30 a m .-10 p .m . It’s a dirty job, but somebody’s got to do it. And you’re the only one who can! n e $499 EVERY DAY 24 Exp. Color Pfints 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU Tempe/Next to ASU Gilbert/Chandler (Behind Minder Binders) 892*9042 894-1331 - C o p u s i r n Sat 9 a m .-10 p .m . r S un 11 a m .-10 p .m . - P h o n e :9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 ■DM1NIB ESODIMB!! P h o n e :9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 IliB H R i A SU Sweatshirt $ 5 °° O F F or s2 00 O FF A ny T -S h irt UMit 10 patkS l l l l l i i i 3 -2 3 -9 1 Bri L im it 1 E x p i r e s 3 -2 3 -9 1 w /c o u p o n . d o e s n o t in c lu d e s a le ite m s expires 3/24/91 Limit 1 I t O t l O m m m l l Jostens announces i n i i l i l i i i i ! WEAR NOW (small monthly payments) Use a credit card and get it fast. Charge your Jostens ring order and eliminate the credit card interest with small payments posted monthly. So CHARGE! — fast, while this offer l a s t s e 712 S. CO LLEG E A VE — NEXT TO C O LLE G E STRE ET QELI M-F 7:30 a .m .-10 p .m . r S u n 11 a m .-10 p .m . DOUBLE PRINTS »No contracts 'Student rates normally $25 a month. - a m NEXT TO CO LLE G E STRE ET DELI S at 9 a m .-10 p .m . P H O T O 1/2 O F F F I R S T M O N T H •No initial fees a m p u s C J ® * « o r V iv a n n 1 6 's S Î - ? 9 L im it i »■»» E x p i r e s 3 -2 3 - 9 1 [W m m ! ^ $ i° ° — 14K Scottsdale Community College for its production of Our Town. Local Valley critics from New Times, The Arizona Republic, The Phoenix Gazette, Scottsdale Progress, East Valley Tribunes, Phoenix Resource and also KJZZ radio station were called to vote on the categories. Awards will be presented at a gala ceremony at the Herberger Theater Center’s Stage West. The celebration begins at 8 p.m. and will feature excerpts from all of the nominations for musical theater. Tickets are $10.50, including a ser­ vice charge. The Herberger Theater Center is located at 222 E. Monroe St. in Phoenix, 252-TIXS. Page 12 Slate Press Monday, March 11,1991 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill W atterson THI FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON I KIND Of RESENT THE MMWFACTURE&S IMPLICIT ASSUMPTION THAT THIS WOULD AMUSE. ME. t 7v lr D oonesbury by Garry Trudeau THISIS ASININE! NO MAY THEBESANYBOPY STUMHOUsPVPIN THESE BUNKERS! <=> “D o n ’t w o rry, Jim m y — th e y ’re ju s t a c to r s . an d th a t’s n o t re a l k e tc h u p .’’ - Rainey Days by Julie Sigwart ííí? ! a il m am , m M /A S à H B R E ^ PET REST AREA -¿ M ut S iv -J -'C iin i by Ford M. Lattie’s Dog O p e n D a il y F o r lunch! li™ [ñJÜ r i ÜüSpœ rin Hours: Monday - Thursday 11:00 AM-2:00 AM 1340 R n o ri Friday - Saturday 1:00 AM-2:30 AM EAST APACHE ^/¿ C feùidLA ikfW ^ A MEAN ■ NEW IBERIA, La. (AP) — A policeman whose hobby is re-enacting Civil War battles had no trouble deciding where to get married: on the porch of an antebellum mansion near what was once a Union army settlement. Jeff Wilcox and Sandra Rodriguez exchanged vows in a wartime-style ceremony Saturday in front of the stately Shadows-on-the-Teche historic house in Bayou Teche, which winds about 90 miles through south­ central and southeastern Louisiana. . “By virtue of the authority vested in me by President Abraham Lincoln, the United States Congress, Gen. N. P. Banks — and the state of Louisiana — I hereby pronounce you man and wife,’’ declared Judge Robert Fleming, looking spiffy in a Union uniform. “I knew I would get married, but I never figured it would be like this,” said Wilcox, also dressed as a member of the 114th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment. “This is where we met, a year ago, at last year’s re-enactment.” “I loved the idea,” said his bride. Wilcox and about 25 other men camped around the mansion over the weekend to re-enact life as lived by the Union regiment during its three-year occupation of the Bayou Teche region, said a participant, Thomas Flynn. After the ceremony, the mock 114th broke out its tin cups and passed around champagne. One soldier found himself holding a modern wine glass. He took one sip, looked around, said, “I’d better go get my cup, so I can look authentic,” and ran off. Discover Kinko's ^ and you're bound to impress. Sunday- :00AM t-T.30AM Put the finishing touches on your next report, manual of proposal with professional bindings from Kinko's: Choose from a wide variety of styles and colors for a fast, affordable touch that's bound to make a great impression. FASTER, FREE DELIVERY 829-0064 #1 AT ASU 99tf Binding Offer We Accept Mastercard & VISA on Delivery 1-------------- T ------------- T 1 LATE NITE 1 BUDGET| DOUBLE j SPECIAL 11 PLEASER1 DELIGHT | J 1 j $ 5 99 11 $4.25 j $ 9 88 1 | i 16” 1 item pizza 1 12” cheese j 2-12” pizzas 10-close 1 with2 toppings pizza 1. ï? î“ o- ' n' r Asó ngn ogo 'hV ll ’ I Choose from VeloBind* or spfral binding on documents tip to | one inch in thickness with card stock cover for just 99* each, I Offer good at listed locations only. Does not include copies. One coupon per customer. Not valid with any other offer. Good through March 31,1991 $A .50P ® _ I "University 8c Forest • 894-9588 | "University ¿cRural • 894-1797 ■ University &cHardy • 921-0168 966-6111 *Open 24 Hours! kinko's State Press Monday, March 11,1991 Page 13 ASU to bask in euphoria o f NCAAs By PAUL CORO State Press Two years ago this Friday, Bill Frieder was taking the job as ASU head basketball coach and, as a result, being denied the opportunity to take his Wolverine team to Atlanta on its way to an eventual NCAA championship. On F rid ay , although there is no championship scenario, F rieder will definitely be coaching jn Atlanta as his Sun D evils re c e iv e d th e ir f ir s t NCAA tournament bid in a decade Sunday, a Southeast Regional pairing with Rutgers. “Unless (Athletic Director Charles) Harris loses his mind, I’ll be coaching my team this time,” Frieder said. “Let’s see if Harris has got as much guts as (former Michigan AD Bo) Schembechler.” While the Wolverines are NIT bound this season, ASU (19-9) is one of four Pac-10 teams to be Selected to the NCAAs and joins USC in the Southeast. As the region’s eighth seed, the Sun Devils’ opening-round game with the Scarlet Knights (19-9) will produce a winner that will probably play top seed Arkansas in the second round Sunday. The NCAA will announce Friday’s game time today. ASU senior Tarence Wheeler was among the celebrators Sunday as the team gathered with coaches and boosters in the University Activity Center to watch pairings. Wheeler, a carryover from the program’s previous mediocrity, said he was not sure if would ever see the day the Sun Devils went to the big dance. “I hoped like hell it would come, man,” Wheeler said. “It just didn’t come fast enough, but I’m glad it did come. Good things come to those who wait.” Frieder said he expected an eighth or ninth seed, but was hoping for a 10th seed to avoid a team like Arkansas in the second round. ASU gets a plus by being placed in the Southeast because of the travel time a Thursday game in the East would have caused. “I’ve been through this stuff before, but it’s a big thing for (the players),” Frieder said, “It’s well-deserved, They’ve done a lot of unique things this season. Let’s hope we can do some more,” Rutgers, who was upset in the first round of the A tlantic 10 to u rn am en t by St. Joseph’s (Penn,), will come into Friday’s game still having won 12 of its last 14 after beginning the season at 7-6. The Scarlet Knights beat Big Eight champ Missouri, 68-60, and WAG champ BYU, 85-78, this season and has notable losses to Princeton (58-45), Seton Hall (98-76) and UNLV (115-75). “We don’t know a lot about them this second, but in 30 minutes we’ll know a lot,” Frieder said. Wheeler and freshman Jam al Faulkner both have friends from prep all-star camps that play for thé Scarlet Knights, including Syracuse transfer Keith Hughes. “This is just great,” Faulkner said. “Last year, I was watching the tournament and this year, I’ll be in the tournament. “ (Before the season) I thought next year we’d be in the tournament. It just gives you more hope and more possibility for greater things to happen in the future.” Another advantage of thé Southeast site will be exposure for a rising West program that is relatively unknown on the East Coast. With that, however, Frieder said he fears the very thing that made him leave Michigan — expectations. Turn to NCAA bid, p age 14. Sun Devils cinch bid against OSU By PAUL CORO State Press As ASU’s guards go, so goes the Sun Devils to the NCAA tournament. If the NCAA committee had not already been convinced of ASU’s worthiness, the Sun Devils made sure there was no doubt as they used a nearly flawless run-and-shoot game Saturday night to gain redemption on Oregon State, 84-69, in front of 11,326 at the University Activity Center, The Beavers went into a 2-3 zone from the tipoff and would not come out until ASU, on the strength of senior Tarence Wheeler’s 24 points, punished them thoroughly for the 91-69 beating they took in Corvallis last week. Wheeler nailed six of 12 3-point attempts as center Isaac Austin kicked the ball out from the crowded interior to open men on the perimeter repeatedly. “It was an outside game because they were playing zone and we got guys like me and Matt (Anderson) who can produce in those situations,” Wheeler said. “They were so conscientious of Ike inside that they were willing to give up the open 3-point shot and we put them down.” The guards kept this game put away, but it was perhaps the best team effort of the season early that made the Beavers look more like NAU. The Sim Devils scored the first 14 points of the game as they rolled out to a 30-9 advantage with 7:05 remaining in the first half. ASU made just one turnover in the entire half and a season-low four for the game. Turn to ASU-OSU, page 17. Irw in D augherty/S tat. Prana Senior Tarence W heeler end his mother, Yvonne, celebrate with senior »««*«• Austin and his father, Alex S r., after ASU’s home win over Oregon Stats Saturday. Baseball continues roll with comeback win against Cal By DAN ZEIGER State Press All season long, the ASU baseball team has attempted to send the message to its opposition that intentionally walking Mike Kelly to avoid a possible big hit could be flirting with even more danger. Perhaps feeling a little flirtatious, California tried such an approach in the eighth inning on Sunday but the excecution was dangerous and it cost the Golden Bears in a 9-7 defeat to the Sun Devils in front of 2,738 fans at Packard Stadium. Kelly, who had also been intentionally passed in the first, came to the plate with no one out after ASU took an 8-7 lead when third baseman Jim Austin nailed a two-run triple off the left-field wall. Cal catcher Mike Harrison stood up with his right hand out to receive the first intentional ball, but watched in horror as the first pitch from reliever Eric Ludwick went over his head and to the backstop. Austin then came home from third with the run that insured the Sun Devils’ eighth win in thenlast 10 games. “I’d have to say we’re on the schedule I had set at the start of the season,” ASU coach Jim Brock said. “The play has been acceptable and I don’t think we are in any troublé. I think that in the league we have to average two wins a weekend while at home and one win on the road, and that’s what we’ve done.” The Sun Devils ( 18-11 overall, 4-5 Six-Pac ) came back from a 5-0 deficit in typical anything-can-happen-and-usually-does SixPac fashion, as the contest featured six errors, six wild pitches and one passed ball. Brock added to the hijinks by penciling pitcher Gary Tatterson in the lineup as a designated hitter before the game. While Tatterson never did bat, the move allowed Brock more time to select Doug Newstrom to hit in the spot without the risk of losing a position player. The decision marked the first game this season that Newstrom both pitched and was the DH. Although he was 0-for-2 before being replaced in the fifth, Newstrom Was the winning pitcher and improved his record to 5-1 by tossing ASU’s third straight complete game. “It was very meaningful,” Newstrom said. “In the past, I wasn’t able to go nine innings. I’d be able to pitch about five or six strong ones and then lose it. What also helped was the fact that it wasn’t very hot today.” Cal (13-10, 3-6) scored two runs in the Second and three in the fourth and was threatening again when Newstrom received some big defensive help in the fifth. The Bears had runners at the corners with one out when left fielder Reid Newmann laced a line drive to left-center field. What appeared to be a RBI single turned into an outstanding play as left fielder Scott Samuels made a diving shoestring catch. The Sun Devils got the double play when second baseman Bill Dunn appealed to third and Harrison was called out for leaving the bag too soon on his tag-up attempt. “When I doVe, the ball hit me in the wrist and rolled into my glove,” said Samuels, who also had a RBI single to increase his hitting streak to 12 games. “I have a bump from it, so I don’t think I trapped it. I was a little dizzy after the catch and I just wanted to get the ball to the infield.’’ Miscues hurt ASU again in the seventh when a throwing error by Dunn and a wild pitch contributed to another pair of Cal runs. The Spn Devils got one back in their half of the inning, but still trailed 7-5 heading into the bottom of the eighth. ASU led off the four-run inning with three straight singles off reliever Dave Ahern to Cut the lead to one before Austin hit his twoRBI triple to score Dunn and Samuels. “ It was three and two, so I knew he was“ going to try to throw me a strike with runners on first and second,” Austin said. “We .were probably in double figures in pitches to take, even on 3-1 counts, but he just happened to throw me a fastball right down the middle and I hit it.’ Malone sets indoor record at indoor cham pionship By MARTY MURPHY State Press On Feb. 16, ASU junior Maicel Malone ran the fastest 400 meters ever by a female college athlete indoors with a 51,90. Take out the eraser. In Saturday’s NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championship in her hometown of Indianapolis, Malone rewrote the record book with a 51.05. Malone’s time was an NCAA record, a meet record and an American record (surpassing Diane Dixon’s 51.77). Dixon re­ broke Malone’s American record Sunday by running a 50.67 in Spain. “The 400 did not surprise me after seeing how easy she ran the trials,” ASU coach Tom Jones said. “She ran a very good technical race. She could have run maybe five-tenths of a second faster had someone really pushed her.” Malone also contributed to another American record by anchoring the first-place 1600-meter relay team. The team of senior Toinette Holmes, senior Dana Jones, freshman Shanequa Campbell and Malone ran a 3:32.46 to thrash the previous mark of 3:34.66 set this month by the national teamHolmes ran a personal best in the open 400 meters to finish fourth with a time of 52.95. “Toinette knew it was her last race and put everything into it,” Jones said. “She ran an unbelieveable trial race and beat some quality kids. She was not going to be denied making it to the finals.” In the long jump, junior Tesra Bester qualified as an AllAmerican with her eighth-place mark of 19-feet-llV4. The women finished in a sixth-place tie with Tennessee while Louisiana State won the meet. For the men, senior Ed Lovelace finished eighth in the 200 Turn to Track, page 15. Page 14 State Press M o n d a ^ W a r d fiJ i^ lW I ^ ^Tuiirfeiinpi^c NCAA bid W w Oregon guard Terrell Brandon was selected the Pac-10 Player of the Year while Washington State’s Kelvin Sampson was picked as Pac-10 Coach of the Year. •After previous commitments, ASU will have 70 tickets •Senior center Isaac Austin was named to the 10-member All- remaining for the ASU-Rutgers game that will be made Pac-10 team Sunday while Faulkner picked up Pac-10 available to Slam Dunk Club members and all season ticket Freshman of the Year honors in joining Dwayne Fontana on holders on a first-come, first-serve basis. If interested, call the ticket office (965-2381) this morning at 8:30. the All-Freshman team. Continued C ontinued fromfrom pagepage 13. end up 5th at Pac-10s By DARREN URBAN State Press With an eye on the NCAA championship, the ASU men’s swimming team went into the Pac-10 Championship with a win as its secondary priority. The Sun Devils did not get a win, finishing fifth, but the No. 1 goal of NCAA times never materialized either. “We partially did what we set out to do,” ASU coach Ron Johnson said. “We got a few more standards, but not as many as we wanted.” Freshman David Holderbach and junior David LeBlanc grabbed NCAA qualifying times in the 200-yard backstroke and the 200 breaststoke, respectively, but Johnson said he had hoped for a better showing by the non-qualifiers. “We talked about having to take our lumps,” Johnson said. “The other teams were prepared, but we wanted to look beyond the Pac-10. We’ve got people who figured to qualify who haven’t yet.” ASU’s 425 points, 376 by the swimmers and 49 by the divers, was well short of champion Stanford’s 877.5. “It’s difficult to go through a championship meet without your head honchos,” Johnson said. Sun Devil senior Troy Dalbey, already well entrenched in all his events for the NCAAs, set a Pac-10 meet record of 1:35.58 in the 200 freestyle, while ASU’s 800 freestyle relay of Dalbey, junior Richard Tapper and sophomores Willy Landmark and Emmanuel Nascimento took first with a time of 6:29.66. Johnson said that despite the lack of NCAA times in the meet, the squad is nearing the limit for nationals. “Right now we have 11 individuals and 16 people, including the relays, that are valid qualifiers,” Johnson said. “We can Only take 18.” The Sun Devil qualifying squad is one of the larger Contingents in the nation, Johnson said. ‘‘It’s one of the bigger groups,” Johnson said. ‘‘It’s right up there with USC, Texas and Tennessee. You want to go with the most you can have.” Here we go again,” Frieder said, “At least it’s been fun for these two years. As long as it’s fun/ I’ll hang with it.” S om ething Special . . ■\\otuîcuj â v u e harbor view Drug Enforcement Administration SPECIAL AGENT AIN OFFER OF A CHALLENGING CAREER aw enforcement is a rewarding and challenging career. It offers upward mobility, domestic and foreign L assignments. The DEA is the Federal government’s leading (619)239-6171 SAN DIEGO O verlooking th e San D iego H arbor in th e H eart o f D ow ntow n Ju st M inutes from the B each $60.00 p er room per night plus tax *Y ou m ay book in advance o r bring th is ad A sk fo r o u r Spring B reak Special 1617 First Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 agency in the fight against drug trafficking! EA Special Agents conduct criminal investigations and prepare for the prosecution o f major violators o f the D drug! laws o f the United States. The minimum qualifications for the Special Agent position are: • Be a U.$. citzen. • Be at least 21 years o f age and not older than 34 at appointment. * Be in excellent physical condition. • Have a valid driver’s license and ability to drive a vehicle at maximum highway speeds. • Be willing to relocate to another city in the U.S. • Have uncrorrected vision o f not less than 20/200 in both eyes, corrected , 20/20 in one eye and 20/40 in the other. • A college degree in any field and one year o f experience conducting criminal investigations or comparable , experience. OR: • A college degree in any field and One o f the following: • 2.95 overall grade point average (GPA). • 3.5 GPA in major field o f study. • Standing in the upper '/> o f class Or major subdivision. • Membership in scholastic honor society. . • One year o f graduate study. O ffer good thru A pril 15, 1991 Call Our Reauiting Dept, at 602-640-5700. —You Cm» Moke the Different*!— AND PYRAMID PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS Saturday AND Sunday, March 16th AND 17th Sunday Saturday Gates Open at 11 a m. Music Starts at 11:30 a m. with The Axe Man, LG B Band, Chuck Hall & The Brick Wall Lost Luggage, The Gin Blossoms Gates Open at 10:30 a.m. Music Starts at 11 a.m. with Hans Olson Trio, The Bailey Brothers, Maca Dang Dang, Brian Page & The Next iri m and Major Lingo and Morningstar featuring Walt Richardson SATURDAY ONLY From 11-1, Housequake inside Chuy’s or enjoy great food at Balboa Cafe. Portion of the Proceeds to Benefit MDA Mill Ave. &3rd St. \U //, For M ore In fo , 967 -2 489 Os ip ip B u d w e ise r 93 FM ROCKS ARIZONA ó ^ *=■ L Don’t forget to visit these Hayden Square merchants: YAZ DELI • ESPRIT • PENGUINS • H O ROMANCE • AMERICA WEST » MAZAR FASHIONS » MAZAR BAZAAR » DUCK SOUP • KELLY’S BAKERY State Prêts Monday, March 11,1991 Page 15 M en’s tennis sw eeps 3 ranked team s in Penn Invitational By DARREN URBAN Stata Press and what we need to work on.” The Sun Devils sandwiched easy wins over KD (6-0) on Friday and USD (5-1) on Sunday with Saturday’s meet with Tennessee. No. 1 Sun Devil Brian Gyetko lost 6-0 in the first set, but rebounded to win the last two 6-2,6-0, as ASU took a 4-2 lead after singles. A doubles victory allowed UT to close the gap, but senior Dan Marting and junior Ross Matheson captured the win with a 7-5,6-4 triumph. “I felt we could’ve beaten Tennessee at the indoor,” Belken said. “They were 34-0 at one point last year and part of that is getting lucky. The thing about them is that they still expect to win.” Finnigan was the MVP of the tourney, winning all three singles matches and losing only eight games in six sets. ASU men’s tennis coach Lou Belken headed into this weekend’s Penn National Collegiate Invitational with the hope that the No. 9 Sun Devils could sweep three matches at home. While Belken got his wish, the Sun Devils still have work to do to reach national-championship level. ASU (13-3) beat No. 20 Kansas, No. 4 Tennessee and No. 25 San Diego in the second annual Penn tourney. The Sun Devil women lost at Stanford (8-0) and California (5-2) this weekend. “We’re happy we won,” Belken said. “We’ve proved to ourselves we’re a good team, but we’ll look at the good stuff T ra ck Continued frompage 1). with a 21.44. “For a guy who sat out last year to come back and make the finals of the NCAAs is great,” Jones said. Lovelace also ran on thè 1,600 relay team, which set a BIG SAVINGS ON DIAMOND BACK BIKES, PARTS&ACCESSORIES M- . .. school record of 3:09.38. Joining Lovelace on the fifth-place relay squad were freshman Michael Sulcer, junior Thomas Koech and senior Robert Rucker. Junior Todd Lewis finished fifth with a time of 7:55.45 in the 3,000. Freshman Nick Hysong borrowed poles to finish sixth I Good only with coupon. Not valid with .Many c other offer. vs. PADRES Cactus Leag u e B a s e l « # at ASU's Packard G rease 'n G o's 1355 S. McClintock Tempe, 894-2798 in the pole vault with a 17-feet-8%. Koech also finished 14th in the open 400 with a time of 47.87. The men finished in 39th place as Arkansas won. Out of the 12 athletes ASU sent to the meet, 11 returned as All-Americans. ANGELS $2.00 O ff Valvoline Lube, OU & Filter Service “Joel did a phenomenal job,” Belken said. “The glamour courts are the first two, but good teams are made at the five and six positions.” Belken emphasized that the regular season is a learning process. “We hope we learn everyday — all the way up to the first day of NCAAs,” Belken said, adding that he felt good about the tournament as a whole. “We were very happy and Penn was very happy. We had some pretty good crowds and I hope we can continue it in the future.” The ASU women (9-7 overall, 2-4 Pac-10) won only one set in eight matches versus the Cardinal. Seniors Barb Thompson and Jennifer Rojohn collected the only two Sun Devil wins of the weekend against thé Golden Bears. V Valvoline People who know use Valvoline! ill V j TODAY 1:00 PR* Reg. Price $21.95 jj . »gw ? T IC K E T S AT T H E G m m /A . S Box $7 R eserved $6 G e n M r $ A ^ ^ c Call 267-1246 for information a » •k Diam ond B ack ‘Traverse’ Mtn. Bike 21-Speed 1991 Model $ 3 Q f ) 0 0 W r it* * * F R E E U-Lock w/guarantee ($26.95 value) F R E E Helmet ($49.95 value) YOU SAVE $76.90!! Ends 3-17-91 ¥ U-fOCKS ®5®° OFF I Exp. 3-17*1 CYCLING SHOES !■ 2 Avenir-Cycling Touring & Cfeated |fjÉ| $500 OFF •Som e R estrictions Apply Prices MN«ct U fhaaQf ttfcM t—He«. Options and other brands available at additional charge. "Your Factory Authorized Diamond Back Dealer" B roadw ay S.W . C orner o f Rural A Broadway 2 0 1 0 S . R u ra l R d . Tem pe, A Z 9 6 8 -8 0 1 1 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK nationw ide vi/b n center In clu d in g : T em pe - 9 3 3 E. U niversity, 9 6 6 -4 9 9 1 M esa - 4 3 7 S. G ilb e rt R d., 8 4 4 -7 0 9 6 Page 16 Slate P ros Monday, »torch 11,1991 S o f t b a ll s w e e p s d o u b le h e a d e r s f r o m “I feel like we really came back and played well,” Sun Devil coach Linda Wells said. “We did a good job to struggle back.” Junior Terri Camicelli gave up five hits in going the full nine innnings. In the nightcap Dawn Wood pitched a fivehitter in ASU’s 4-1 victory, in which shortstop Ann Rowan injured her left hand diving into second. By LORENZO SIERRA Jr. State Press T h e ASU s o f t b a l l t e a m s w e p t doubleheaders this weekend in its last home stand until April 19'. ASU (23-6) began the weekend with a twin-ill against unranked Utah, who took the Sun Devils to extra innings in the first game before falling 6-5. U ta h , W N M U “I was going for the outside bag and she came Qut and stepped on my hand,” Rowan said. “She was wearing spikes and my hand got chewed up.” Rowan, ASU’s all-time hits leader, returned the following night. In the first game, the Sun Devils used a different lineup in demolishing Western New Mexico 15-0. “We got to play some people and hopefully rest some people,” Wells said. “It was a good series for us. We stayed intense tonight, so I’m pretty pleased.” WNMU stayed close in the second game but could not overtake ASU in losing 3-2. “This last game wasn’t easy and we had to work for it,” Wells said. thealternative INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT? co p y sh o p YO U SH O U LD K N O W YL E G A L at the comer of Mill and University in the Tempe Center •Auto Accidents •Motorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •Wrongful Death •Faulty Products •Slip & Fall •Dog Bites •Insurance Disputes W e F e a tu r e : •XEROX 9500 with Computerized collating. • XEROX1038 •FR E E Consultation to students and faculty s with R eduction/ Enlargem ent capabilities (64% to 156% in 1% increments). •XEROX 2510 copies u p to 36" wide any length. •R E D U C E D percentage fees for cases of clear liability or serious injury •Horae, evening & hospital appointments available • Varrtronics Poster Printer P lu s enlarges from 8 1/3" x 11" to 24" x 36" in ju s t seconds. BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY, CALL • Wide variety o f paper BAKER & MARCUS more th a n 70 colors an d sizes to choose from. Open Monday thru Friday 7am to 9pm Saturday and Sunday 10am to 5pm P e rs o n a l In ju ry Law yers W m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m J Q 1/ /. Self Service a%M 2Y Copies alternative copythop 91 4 - 3 8 - 1 2 1 2 N o L im it. | on 8*4" x 11" white bond — N ot valid w ith any other offer. Good until 4-15-91 4625 S. Wendler Dr., Suite 111, Tempe ^ B W e sfe m States ¥ 1 :t i r 6 S ;» 1 1 1 M I ' ' ^ ^ s e r v ic e o e o e if^ E A R l “We’re rotting back prices with students, faculty a n d ^ s ^ ^ ^ ^ id . We appreciate and ward the opportunity to serve you. ” Compare these speclalSm WHITEWALL SIZE P155/60R13 P165/80R13 P175/80R13 P185/80R13 P185/75R14 P195/75R14 P205/75R14 P205/75R15 P215/75R15 P225/75R15 P23S/75R15 Air Conditioning S ervice VALÚE PRICED $27.95 $33.40 $35.50 $38.55 $36.55 $37.60 $38.05 $40.70 $42.00 $44.90 $47.00 Includes: •5 qts. PENNZO IL 10W30 Motor Oil •Chassis Lube •N ew PENNZO IL Oil Filter •C heck All Fluid Levels •M ost Cars & Light Trucks •*1“ EPA Waste Free Oil Expires 4-20-91 Includes: • 1 lb. of Freon • Leak Check • Fan Belt Adjustment y y W M M m S M lM Expires 4-20-91 Salt River F R E E Shuttle to Campus! ;TIRES ANO A y TQ SERVICE ri t $ft88 $ 1 0 9 5 All Goodyear tires wholesale to the public. This location only. W' P E N N Z O IL O il, L u b e & F ilte r Prices good at this location only. it i Rurai All-Am erican Decathalon Radial 2 I 1 DON’T GET HURT TWICE 11 1 D e v il (Stadium^ 101 S« M cClintock, Tem pe DOG T A flfl O fa > V f “ w v HOURS: Mon.-Ffl 7 « M M t p m • Sat. 7:30 a.m.-3 p.m. m ZDH - 1st Street . A8U ..*; 5 ■ ..... Ñ Course -* Western 5 .P I States m ..... I i Wm ‘ .*... V ,o f j Minder I Z L J Binders > University Stole Frese Monday, March 11,1991 Sun Devils finish year w ith defeat against Cougars G y m n a sts c la im s c o r in g r e c o r d By MARTY MURPHY State Press The ASU women’s gymnastics team set a school record by scoring an all-time school record in defeating Nebraska 194.05-189.75 Friday night at the University Activity Center. The women broke their own mark of 192.10 set on March 1. Senior co-captain Michele Colavin won the all-around with a 39.05, finishing second in all four events. “ This was the best meet of our lives,” Colavin said. “I’m so glad we did great in our final home meet. Everyone came together.” That feeling was echoed by junior teammate Jessica Tudos, who finished sixth on the balance beam. “We never gave up,” Tudos said. “I loved the leotards.” Tudos was referring to the new black uniforms that the Sun Devils sported. “We were going to bring the new uniforms out for regionals,” assistant coach Lisa Zeis said, “but we decided to wear them tonight. It helped psych up the team.” Junior Kelly Cyskiewicz won the uneven bars (9.80) and the floor (9.85) as well as taking second in the balance beam (9.70), an event she injured her rib in over a month ago. The men were in Lincoln, Neb., on Sunday, coming up short to the defending national champions. Nebraska defeated ASU by a score of 279.40-277.40. Seniors Christian Rohde and Licurgo Diaz-Sandi, along with freshman Geoff Eaton, led the Sun Devils. Rohde placed first in the pommel horse with a score of 9.7. DiazSandi and Eaton tied for top honors in the all-around at 55.90. CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 1 Made perfect serves 5 Syrian president 10 Gon­ dolier’s aid 11 Noted New York opera house 13 Actor Thicke 141962 John Wayne film 15 Volcanoshaped 17 Comedian Conway ts Touchdown location 19 Adam's mate 20 Yore 21 BurrHamilton event 22 Bouquet 25 Late 26 Cargo units 27 Great happiness 28 Business name abbr. 29 Made bales out of 33 The Name of the Rose’ wrfter 34 Etch 35 Debt medium 37 Buffalo’s water 38 Coined money 39"— Lang Syne’ 40 British river 41 Army meal DOWN 1 Rapidly 2 Time punctua­ tion 3 African grazer 4 Native creatures 5 Close 6 Sedimen­ tary rock 7 Go down SNonpro 9 Traced R A S C A L J E T S E T T a m a n W o ffo rd /S ta te Press Senior Michelle Colavin swings on the high bar Friday night. E S E T A L S A B L T A R B E L L A T A T E N E A P S O B IA w f P A S R I S I R I C E O N DO N G N A T ■ T E N S p jo T ■ O H N L IT H E R R E HO G E L I A B Ew E F A "d L A T E O V A T E L C I D N I C E R Y K E S S E E D S 'Great Qreat Italian IFood' ‘F ood” '** 894-MAMA 106 E. University Dr. Yesterday’s Answer the source society of 27Political 12 0pportrip tune 29 Daho16Western may’s firearm new name 21 Reverie 30 Western 22 David star Lash Ogden— 31 Contents of of Pando“M’A’S’ H’ ra’s box 23 Idea 32 Gary 24CryptogCooper rapher, at role times 36 Rink 25 Secret surface MONDAY KILLER CALZONE ONLY $3.74 In clud es: A d r a ft b e e r o r 1 4 o z . so d a, ice crea m c o n e . « m DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to work it: 3/11 AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 3-11 CRYPTOQUOTE G FT B W X W V X N By AMY SLADE State Press GTESB I X L R S CL I X LRSCL GSML; il ]LSA l r IG lRE 1 J The Test Is When? Classes Form ing Now. Call 1-800-KAP-TEST Although the ASU women’s basketball may not have been as fortunate as the men’s team was to receive a NCAA tournament bid, it did manage to finish the season at a respectable .500 despite weekend losses at Washington and Washington State. “I’m disappointed we aren’t going somewhere,” Sun Devil junior guard Michele Cherry said, adding that the 69-58 loss to WSU Saturday was especially frustrating because ASU (14-14 overall, 5-13 Pac-10) won the first meeting in Tempe. “It hasn’t set in yet that the season is over.” Cherry, who finished with a game-high 19 points and five rebounds against die Cougars (18-10,10-8), said she had more than 30 people from her hometown of Wallowa, Ore., watch her play in the season finale. “Having everyone there helped, but it doesn’t really matter how good I do if the team doesn’t win,” Cherry said. “I just wanted to end the season on a good note.” ASU was only down by five at the half even though it shot 46 percent from the field in comparison to WSU’s 37 percent. Personal fouls were nearly deadlocked, but ASU missed several one-and-one opportunités. Overall, Cherry said the Cougars did not play that well, but took advantage of ASU’S 35 turnovers, most of which were unforced. WSU “lived at the line,” connecting on 81 percent of their free throws while turning the ball over 33 times. Sun Devil junior guard-Crystal Cobb finished with 13 points and five rebounds while sophomore forward Lisa Salsman added 11. Sophomore forward Jovonne Smith contributed a game-high eight rebounds. “It was a frustrating way to end a frustrating year for us,” Cherry said. “We béat some good teams, but there were also some games we lost that we should have won. “It’s disappointing to see those teams get invited to the tournament.” : 'X ASU-OSU. C ontinued from p age |3 . OSU coach Jim Anderson said the Sun Devils ridded themselves of any NCAA bid pressure with their win over Oregon Thursday, but ASU coach Bill Frieder did not see it that way. “1 think there was a lot of pressure because I’ve been screwed by the NCAA before,” Frieder said, referring to his 1984 18-10 Michigan team that was not selected in favor of Dayton, who the Wolverines had beaten by 32. Freshman reserve Stevin Smith handled the point guard chores most of Saturday night, making no turnovers in 30-plus minutes while racking up eight points and seven assists. “Coming into the game, we felt we owed them something,” Smith said. “Last week, they embarrassed us and hurt our pride so this week we said we’re going to go out there and hurt their pride. We wanted to knock them off their feet and just beat the hell out of them.” It was not as bad as Smith hoped, but it looked pretty impressive with the help of freshman Jam al Faulkner, who was more successful in his second shot at containing the Beavers’ Teo Alibegovic. Despite Alibegovic’s 21, the OSU forward was not the factor he was last week as Faulkner denied him outside and got help when he went to the block. “The people try to make it seem like he could come in and manhandle us and I just wanted to say that wasn’t the case,” said Faulkner, who scored 14. “It wasn’t like we put forth the effort last week that we put forth (Saturday). We came out with the idea that the pressure wasn’t off and that’s why we blew them out the way we did.” For ASU seniors Wheeler, Austin; Anderson and Emory Lewis, it was their last game in the UAC as well as Alex Austin Sr., Isaac’s dad. Papa Austin took a victory lap around the arena during a time out and even signed autographs with the team after the students’ orderly procession onto the court ended the game. “It was great to go out on a winning note,” Wheeler said. “I came in on something negative and left on so m ething positive.”- ' Bring ’em ’round «STANLEY H . KAPLAN L R S C V RL LRSCVRL G F T B W X W V X N HFBXGSCN. —ZSWQCZXCN Y esterday's C ryptoquote: MAKE IT YOUR BUSI­ NESS TO KNOW YOURSELF, WHICH IS THE MOST DIFFICULT IN THE WORLD, — CERVANTES e 1M1 by King FeaturM Syndicats, Inc. mmTake Kaplan O r Take Your Chances OTHER COURSES: M CAT, DAT, NCLEX, NTE, CPA, BAR REVIEW, GRE, PSYCH, INTRO TO LAW SCHOOL, TOEFL, N A T IO N A L M E D IC A L B O A R D S, M SKP, FMGMS, FLEX, CGFNS, NATIONAL DENTAL BOARDS, SPEED READING A N D M O R E 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 State Press Classified 965-6731 State Prêt» Monday, March 11,1991 Page 18 ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS E M P LO Y E R S LO O K IN G TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS EOR SALE tor help? 2 B E D R O O M , 1 bath, Only $320/month. Place a State Press H elp W anted ad. W e Rural/Broadway area. Clean and quiet. 2 BE D R O O M 2 bath condo. W alk to ASU. have Westridge Apts. 968-2279. Lovely, comfortable, spacious Fireplace, appliances. By owner, $49,900. three — Ap a r tm e n ts Help W anted sections— G eneral, Clerical and Food Service— to help you keep your business growing! 2 BLOCKS from ASU. O ne bedroom, pool, laundry, M ILITARIA A N D G un Collector Show, March 23 and 24, K FC Hall, 644 East Chandler Boulevard, Chandler. Saturday 8-5, Sunday 9-4. Information, 844-8737. (Proceeds go to C handler's . Retarded Children's Home) dish w asher. $ 33 0; move-in special. 1014 East Spence, Sunrise Apart­ ments, 968-6947. 991-6992. 2 bed, 2 bath apts. Close to ASU. Available now. 330 S. Beck, Tempe. Com e down to the basem ent of Matthews Center. If w e have what you need, it’s yours! 894-6468 laundry, covered parking. $350; move-in Springtree condo. S ave over $ 30 ,00 0 with S T U D IO APA R TM EN T tor rent. Spacious Apartments, 967-7212. Scottsdale guest house available now. 10 OUT WITH L'IMÄCE & IN WITH .MTM. Model andTalent Management 1 block o ff campus 1 bed: $385 2 bed: $595 Also, 3 bed available John Casablancas In tro d u c in g a ll new ow nership, m anagem ent and agency faces. Call today fo r models and talent. miles. New tires, radiator, brakes! Runs your gain. $3,000. Call John at 965-6555 (work) or 784-8939 (home). 1983 D O D G E 600: Automatic, air, A M /FM . Executives, 966-0016. m iles. utilities. Now That You’ve Made It Papago Park Village 3 cruise control, power, tinted windows, new 1985 N IS SA N 200S X — This sporty coupe is loaded with pow er everything! Power Automatic. 60,0 00 miles. Need to sell a m /fm room, 1 block south of University on 8th Street. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. s te re o . 4 5 ,0 0 0 968-0713, m iles. Wendy, leave matic, 16,000 miles, air conditioning. Avoid sales tax. Call Kévin now! 821-6838. *87 V W Cabriolet convertible. W hite on white, standard, loaded, 10K miles! Excel­ S T U D E N T PUBLICATIO NS: State Press, Sun Devil Spark Yearbook, returning 3/24. SAN DIEGO ! Spring Break. Round-trip, Southwest. Fornaio. $ 60 or best. 784-6079. S P R IN G BREAK! Am erica West $ 10 0 gift certificates for $70. Hurry while supplies last. Gordon, 831-2666. sleeps lent condition. $10,000/offer. 463-2790. eight. Close to clubs. Available 3 /16-3/24. O nly 3750/offer. Call 838-3492. S P R IN G BREAK: Round-trip to Aspen via Denver. 1989 JETTA , white. Power steering, auto­ 838-3492. 3 /1 6 , condo, liner. $ 12 5 or best offer. Must sell. Trary, 437-1048 Roommate matching service also available. 437-1048 Departing $168/offer. 786-8037. S P R IN G BREAK in M azatlan. Beach front message. KING -SIZE W A TE R B E D with heater and land. Leave message, 834-1481. 1985 SILVE R Renault Encore, standard FURNITURE M arch 18 to March 2 3. Discounted to $ 350. 955-5548. can have it for $ 4 ,8 0 0 firm. Call today. s h ift, Locating Service Fem ale only. $260/offer. 894-9539. 3 /15-3/24. immediately! It Blue Books for $6,500. You Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992 You can fly anytime you want until June. R O U N D TR IP TIC K E T, Phoenix to Port­ 1984 P O N TIA C TransAm. 71,000 miles, locks, windows, sunroof. Great stereo! bd former model. It's beautiful! $92,000. 2 transportation. $ 1 ,200/offer. Call 784-0928. $1,100/offer. and Good O N E R O U N D -TR IP ticket to N ew York. R O U N D -TR IP , DELTA ticket to Orlando, $3,000. Will, 731-9848. includes block from ASU. Pool, laundry. 968-7012, after 5pm. 968-6383 1 been in family since new. 73,000 original Sapphire Blue paint job, power steering. 1 block east o f Rural la rg e you! Call 965-6731 for information. protecto-plate, minutes from campus. Fresh paint, new Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache NEW L E T STATE Press Classifieds work for automatic, carpet. $250/m onth 946-3547, Shirley. T E M P E 1 and 2 bedroom, furnished. 1 bedrooms. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry (602)941-4838 only $1(j0 down! G reg Askins, Realty $160 deposit call Today! B E A U T IF U L 1967 C H E V R O LE T Cam aro, factory air conditioning, 8 3 ,0 0 0 O N L Y $ 38,900 for 2 bedroom, 2 bath special. 1700 South College, University TRAVEL great! Must sell to pay for school. M v loss, N E E D A back issue of the State Press? Call or see Cody 2 BLOCKS from ASU. O ne bedroom, pool, AUTOMOBILES Leaving 3/18, returning 3/25. $189/offer. 968-6597, Nancy. TR A V E L C H E A P in y o u r name. I special­ ize irt quick departures. Most places USA. $28 5-45 0 , round-trip. Alaska, $550-650. Also worldwide. I also buy transferable coupons. 968-7283. Hayden's Ferry Review, Student Handbook. Matth­ S T U D E N T PUBLICATIO NS: State Press, ews Center basement, 965-7572. Sun Devil Spark Yearbook, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Hayden’s Ferry Review, Student Handbook. Matth­ ews Center basement, 965-7572. G IR L N E E D E D to take over my lease at COMPUTERS The Commons on Apache. Reduced rate. Call Torey, 829-0933. O N E BE D R O O M apartments, half off first APARTMENTS month! W alk to school. Washer/dryer. Call today, $ 19 9 M O V E-IN Special! 2 . bedroom, Butterfield Park, 1215 South Ddrsey, 966-6755. covered parking, cam pus area. Clean, STATE PR E SS Production Department quiet. 966-2485. p rovid es 1 AND 2 bedrooms- Student Special. $150 CO M P LE TE V G A systems with hard drive, p a s te-u p and Appliances, carport, washer/dryer. Tem pe $999, 386SX: $1,199, 386/25: $1,399. 962-1509. 800K R O CKY P O IN T— Spring Break 8 bedroom house 965-7572 for rates and information. Showers, air conditioning. Call 678-1391. available for responsible d is k d riv e s , c a rry in g case. $700/offer. Call 941-5195. for real! 967-4568, Don. ’A month free. barbeque, Grande pool, TH R E E BLOCKS AS U. three bedroom E N J O Y T H E Q U IE T ! m a r k e t. house, furnished, many trees, quiet neigh­ borhood. $595. Hansart, 258-6839. 1/2 B lo c k F ro m C a m pu s 1987 H O N D A Elite 8 0 scooter. Needs little looks good. $ 6 0 0 /o ffe r. private patios. 1855 Casa East Don Carlos, Tem pe. 968-8926. NEW LY REM O DELED 1 bedroom 2 blocks from ASU Pool, free cable TV, covered parking, laundry facilities. B e a u tifu lly fu r n is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m . 1 b a th ; 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th a p a rt­ m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le T V . h e a te d p o o l, a n d s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s . Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S to p b y to d a y ! 1700 S. College, Tempe Terrace Road Apartments 9 5 0 S . Terrace 967-7212 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 Ask for specials for ASU students. TOWNHOMES / CONDOS FOR RENT 1 M ILE from AS U- nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Air-conditioned, dishwasher, w asher/dryer, and pool. $610/m onth. 921-0279. 8 -5 , M o n d a y -F r id a y , T H O M A S N E LS O N Com pany interviewing C all now 820-6036. for selective sum m er internship. Highest paid interns in country, travel, gain college credit and resume experi­ 1987 H O N D A 150 Elite scooter. Runs ence, 3.0 or above, active and positive: Call 894-5283, Michael. N E E D A back issue of the State Press? COMPUTER MULTI-SYSTEMS Com e down to the basem ent of Matthews U N IQ U E G A M E /P O O L roorn^- Heart of Center, If we have what you need, it’s A S U at University/Rural. $ 3 ,5 0 0 required. yours! 955-4956. Covered parking, gas Apartments, C a ll 277-8856. great, looks great. $1,100. Rob, 962-5175. girls. total r e n t., Believe it! Fireproof, sound­ 2 A N D 3 bedroom apartments from $395, MOTORCYCLES w o rk, M A C IN TO SH PLUS: 1 m egabyte RAM, 2 ne, 396-2699. process cam era services. Call Donna at proof, pool, very near ASU, quiet. This is G U A R A N T E E D N O -R U N pantyhose. Ground-level, multi-level marketing. Huge software, mouse, and warranty. 286/12: LIKE N E W , 3 bedroom, 2 bath house. area. Available immediately. $595. Laver- unfurnished. Washer/dryer hook-up, pool, ty p e s e ttin g , HOMES EOR RENT Buy & sell new and used computers, printers, and software. IMAGESINTERNATIONAL BICYCLES 225 W. University S P E C IA LIZE D STUM PJUM PER has ground floor oppor­ tunity fo r independent Distributors to market revolutionary personal care product line. Set your own hours, excel­ lent income potential. For more information, calk Team 1990, Prestige frame. Shimano Deore X T with Hyperglidè. New tires, new saddle. Excellent condition plus extras. $700. Next to Buffalo Exchange 966-13 8 8 0p8n9*,“ 496-6115, leave message. 32N D S TR E ET and Cam elback area, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 2-car carport, communi­ Financing Available ty pool. Near Safeway. $ 65 0 unfurnished, (602)878-7314 TRANSPORTATION $800 furnished. Alice, Jacobson Realty, 949-5281. N E E D RID E to Telluride, Colorado, or P R IC E /S O U TH E R N . 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. Fireplace* security system, spa, n ear- Spring Break. W ill drive and pay half TICKETS HELP WANTED— GENERAL gas. Brett, 784-0060. pool. Available 4/1. 831-5628. IN X S , S TIN G , Scorpions, David Copper­ field, Nelson, Frank Sinatra, Neil Young, ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS G rand Hotel, Les Miserables. Call Ticket RENTAL SHARING remodeled, 5 bedroom hom e with pool. 499-2029 S TIN G TIC K E TS , great seats. March 29, Desert Sky Pavillion. $50/offer. 968-7859. A M E R IC A W E S T/A M E R IC A West. 3 0 % off anywhere they fly. Call 220-9559. A M E R IC A $ 260 each, 1/5th utilities. Available 3/8/91. $70/offer! Good for round-trip continental JEWELRY certificates— A M E R IC A W E S T, round-trip. Phoenix to bath patio home with garage. $250, !£ A LW A Y S BU Y IN G jewelry of all kinds, utilities. Close to AS U. Debbi, 946-0368. including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, Hawaii. Leave 3/17, return 3/21. $250. 968-5092. M A LE T O share 2 bedroom townhouse, antiques, etc. Rare- Lion, 921 South Mill Avenue, Tem pe Center, 968-6074. HAW AII! I have a ticket to Hawaii I will sell Hayden/Osborn. V ery sharp. $300, utilities. All am enities. Brian for $ 30 0. H as to be used over Spring Vfe (days, C A S H F O R gold, diam onds. Mill Avenue Jewelers, weekends), 990-2220. 4 14 South Mill, Suite dryer, NEEDED to share dishwasher, parking. $ 200 plus fireplsice, Vi covered utilities. 952-1577, 8 94-5128 or visit our travel center at 1046 CLOTHING Y outh Hostels at East Lemon Street, Tem pe. S U ITS — 8 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 time: $7.85 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. inch 6 + times: $6.50 per col. inch Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10am). 965-6731 HELP WANTED— GENERAL 391-3308. serious student. $ 2 2 5 /% utilities. 968-0253. Available 3/21. B RA ND N E W queen size boxspring. $85. Metrocenter home. Park-like yard with Michelle, 967-1616. pool. Fireplace, microwave, dishwasher, washer/dryer. House privileges. $265 B U Y IT, sell it, find it, tell it in the State Press Classifieds. M IN O L T A E L E C T R O N IC E W 501. fe m a le . memory. Options, original $995. Best over S q u a re a re a . $150/m onth, includes utilities. 945-0502. Excellent, never ty p e w rite r, LAR G E R O O M in lovely private home, F a s h io n Alaska, Box 33839D, A M E D IC A L office in Scottsdale needs part-time/fuH-time help. Must have good clerical and typing skills, train for will medical. 941-3812. and personality are important. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 2-5pm used. With $ 35 0 takes. 993-3102, message. R O O M FO R rent in 2 bedroom, 2 bath, N IN T E N D O FANS!! Collection of arcade partially furnished condo. Available imme­ gam es compatible for Nintendo on one diately! $ 21 0 month plus half utilities ($200 cartridge! 52/$159, deposit). Worthington Place. Call Dennis, Visa/M astercard 921-3995. 968-7823! 8 2/3 22 9, accepted. 110/9249. Call Sean, F O R T U N E !!! CORPORATION If you are a positive, enthusiastic person who likes to haveftm and make money, WE OFFER: •Flexible hours •Guaranteed Salary l|p p |ÌR |p horms p i m i •Group Medical »Paid vacations •Rapio (Mfray f f f Huf Mesa 831-0356 or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street (44th and Cam elback). 952-0585. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE F U R N IS H E D RO O M , private bath- lovely includes utilities. Sm all deposit. 931-3343, leave message. TR for lunch waitress, lunch hostess. Will train. Concern with appearance, reliability famous m aker ROOMS FOR RENT nonsmoking, addressed, stamped envelope for more C O R K *N Cleaver accepting applications Matthews Center basem ent, 965-6731* B U S IN E S S expanding! employm ent and living in Alaska, plus books and maps. Eurail passes, youth hostel memberships and international Am erican is employm ent areas with facts on finding today! Com e down to Matthews Center N O O N IS the deadline to get classified CLEAN H O U S E , m ile/ASU. Needs d e a n , ECONOMY Annual empolyment report detailing all information: 4 0R . Cost $ 35 0 each, now $ 60 each. 15 words or less: $3.00 per day for 1-4days $2.75 par day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 1 0 + days 15S each additional word. The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Personals (15 words o r less) are only $1.751 «Personal ads must bs placed at the Classifieds Office In Matthews Csntsr basement, and must show student ID to pises personal. * Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). A LA SKA’S Juneau, Alaska 99803. student ID cards — all issued on the spot! UNER AD RATES: train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. Phone (303)441-2455. flights, travel backpacks and accessories, 966-4783, liner ads in the following day. Don’t miss it! A IR LIN E S H IR IN G . Seeking students and grads to fill m any positions. Airline will one-stop student travel shop. Student-fare Contact Full-tim e, daily in the State Press! S E N D Y O U R significant other a personal basement. skills. numerous resume addresses. Send self- LO W E S T C O S T — Y our best bet is our 3 bath townhouse. W asher/ Break. Call 894-0333. 101, Tem pe. 968-5967. bedroom, 2 CALL NOW $100 United States through 12/8/91! 829-3874. FE M ALE W A N TE D to share 2 bedroom/2 NONSMOKER STATE PRESS Classifieds W EST and com m unication $7/hour. 946-8860. A D V E R TIS ER S! REACH 45,000 readers Includes all appliances. Close to ASU. 969-4480 ___________ company. W ord Perfect, excellent writing Exchange, 829-0196. 5 S TU D E N TS w anted to share large, THE HOTTEST WEARS . Levl-cuess-Gap-and others A D M IN ISTR A TIVE AS S IS TAN T, art tour TRAVEL LOCATIONS Temp, 966-7164 Stott Press Monday, March 11, f 991 HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL RESTAURANTS/ BARS Page 19 ADOPTION DEAR B IR TH M O TH E R : Let’s help each COUNSELORS. Berkshires, M A P R E S T IG IO U S sum m er cam p co-ed seeks S E R V IC E skilled college juniors, seniors and grads. part-tim e 921-1103. W a te r Safety Instructor, Tennis, Sailing, W aterski, C anoe, Athletics, STATIO N Reps. fo r students. Archery, S TU D E N T S — LO O KING for work? Check Crafts, Photography, Silver Jewelry, Musi­ the State Press Help W anted sections daily! Aerobis, Golf, Arts c a l D ire cto rs , P ia n o A ccom panists, S cie n ce , R ocketry, Cam ping, Video, New spaper. H ave a rewarding and enjoy­ able sum m er! Salary plus room and board. C all Cam p Taconic, (800)762-2820. C R U IS E LINE positions. Land-side and on-board entry-level positions available. S eason al/p e rm a n e n t. (303)440-6933, ext 7 Travel benefits. S U M M E R JOBS! Cam p .Sequoia, New northwest of New York City). D R IV E R N E E D E D to pick up and take tb after d a y s /w e e k , 956-6222. school activities, $ 5 .5 0 /h o u r , p lu s 3-5 ga s. w oo d w o rkin g , room and board. campus. For more information, applica­ 1045, Woodstock, New York 12498. S U M M ER JOBS available near Glacier National park. The Park Cafe and Grocery year lady. Non-smoker, own transporta­ in St. Mary, Montana, east entrance to tion, Ahwatukee area. Salary/hours very Glacier, has positions open in the cafe, gift negotiable. Little care needed, c 6 m pa ny a t nig ht . 9 21 -7077/966-0795 mostly L y n.d a , nurse, want to provide a loving h om e for Word Processing: $ 1 .5 0 bn disk, $ 2 laser BANDERSNATCH your white newborn. Call Jim or Susan at output, rapid turn around; page layout available. Call 276-1230. BREWPUB Food Servers • Bussers Job Training Seminar and EMPLOYMENTASSISTANCE IF »You are thinking about entering the food services industry... •you want to increase your tips... •you want to move to a higher quality food'serviee establishment... ...This seminar is for YOU! If you want to get your application into the hands of the people who are going to hireyou... Interviews on 914-679-5291 or Write to Sequoia, Box FE M ALE LIV E -IN companion for lovely 80 P H O E N IX MAKE MORE MONEY m aintenance. W ork can start as early as 5/1. Competitive camp salary, travel allow­ have sections— SCO TTSDALE C O U P LE , physician and 483-6946 or 222-6436 (office). and grocery store, and gas stations. Call kathryn, 406-587-1816 for information and applications. CALL 9 4 8 - 7 6 3 1 NOW! SERVICES Call anytime Ginnie Monroe, ACSW 8 9 7 -0 4 4 4 E LE C T R O L Y S IS — Student discounts. Call for more informa­ tion: 969-6954. at TR IE D depends on experience. Please submit didn’t tike it? G ive us a try! Telephone work without the pressure of sales. Work resume to IÇB, Inc. 1702 East Highland in a comfortable atmosphere gathering Avenue, 85016; people’s opinions from across the country. suite M A R K E TIN G 310, P ay Phoenix, MAJORS: - Gain scale Arizona valuable and practical experience, at a leading in d u s tria l diam on d tool distributor: TE LEPHO NE work before p e d a l, dual headphones. but Close to campus. Flexible evening and BAR NEY, 4 month old Cocker Spaniel needs hom e. 731-9409. Become a National Account Representa­ and speaking Skills. Interested? Apply in person, 4-7pm, Tuesday-Friday, or by tive for American Tool and Supply Inc., appointment. Higginbotham Associates, and.have flexible hours, paid training, high Inc. 1130 East University Drive, suite 103, Tem pe, Arizona 85281 (602) 829-3282. commissions and great benefits. No expérience preferred. For interview, call PETS weekend hours. Train at $4 50/hour, earn up to $5.50/hour. W e provide complete training for individuals with good reading 3 50-2260 a n d ask for ext. 33, T V. P RO G R AM M IN G /M A RKE TING trai­ M ID N IG H T S UN! Sum m er employment Numbers-oriented individual, Macintosh experience. 894-6768 $125. C all Krista at DALMATIAN AKC pups. Hearing tested. Parents O FA clear. $ 35 0 each. 921-9268, message. FR E E P UPPY, Black Pointer, female. Cute and very friendly. Call 894-5210. Will go to pound if not taken nee, week of Spring Break, part-time; • --A la s k a — W om en/M en. to $600/w eek. . Airfare plus room/board provided. Hiring through April, Call now! 1(900)988-5152, e x t. 1 7 0 ( $ 3 /m i n u t e - r 4 m in u te s maximum). W ANTED: SALESPEO PLE to time hours, full-time pay Adam, 966*5765. Call G ene or Y O U R CAREER... W hat are you doing this sum m er to prepare for it? Find out why IBM, Proctor and Gamble, Xerox FREE LOST/FOUNP s e ll construction tools and equipment, part- are interested in graduates of our Summer Program. If you’re interested in developing your resume, call 821-8213. HELP WANTED— CLERICAL _______ FO UND : BLACK 894-5210: E M P LO YE R S LOOKING for help? Place a State Press Help Wanted ad. W e three Help Wanted LE T STATE Press Classifieds work for you! Call 965-6731 for information. Specialists: PERSONALS All team sports, cooking, W R ESTLERS— Nationals, hope its even better than Pac-10! (“Wrestlerette”) Erin. DEKES BRENT, Jeff, Morgan, Russ— person for customer service/order taking. let’s start rocking through the ages! Show Wednesday, Thursday and Friday;w ill be some spirit...Call your coordinators for times and locations. needs Personnel, 831-1131. GET PER SO NA L — Send someone special a State Press personal ad. A 15-word personal is only $ 1.75! Com e to place your ad today! And remem ber to bring your student ID! HE Y ! ERIKA — Happy belated 19th birthday! Let's party chjca! You’re a great friend. Christy. rollerskating, rocketry, ropes and cam p KAPPAS STEP H A N IE C. and Vanessa: craft; all waterfront activities (swimming, skiing, s ailin g , w indsurfin g, c a n o e / 1 H ave a great week! W e love you and are behind you i0Q4 Love, the Actives. 190 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, New J ers ey 0 7 0 2 8 . C a ll 1 (8 0 0 )7 5 3 -9 1 1 8 . Danbee (girls), 16 HorSeneck R oad, Montv ille , N e w j e r s e y 1(800)776-0520 07045 C a ll O R D E R CLERKS! 12 persons needed for our inside sales order department. Aver­ age $ 7 -1 1/hour base. Bonus plus rapid ' advancem ent. Call M att, 966-7262. PLA N N IN G IN T E R N —* Temporary, part- PIZZA & PUB March 1 st, Friday, Michigan, Architecture, FREE PIZZA Buy 3A G et 1/4 FREE time, not to exceed 12 months. Requires D in e in o r D e liv e ry P le a s e m e n tio n s p e c ia l w h e n o rd e rin g related field) masters program. baccalaureate Proficiency in or word processing, database; spreadsheet, and M o n day only graphics software bn IBM PC. City of Chander application forms required. Apply City of Chandler Personnel Department, 2 5 South Arizona P lace, Suite 201, Chand­ ler; Arizona 85225. 786-2290. K Y LE - W H E R E are you? I searched all the Broadway’s Rom an's gone. Fat Tuesdays, current enrollment in C ity Planning (or closely LONELINESS AND RELATIONAL SKILLS GROUPS Are you feeling alone and isolated from others? This six-week, free group for students will provide you with skil Is for understanding yourself and others and help you form better relationships. 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 1301 E. U n iversity Tutoring: able. Reasonable rates. Message phone: 438-9288. $AM AZING W E S T CAM PU S area for all your typing Europe« doctor endorsed. Need dieters/ advisors. Trem endous opportunity. Call needs Andrea, 984-1680; Meggie, 981-8477. by mail. Send self-addressed stamped envelope for rate sheet: B and B Business Associate, 6914 W est Acoma P R O C E S S IN G , P R O C E S S IN G . “ R iz” : Diet$. New from Y O U S AY It, w e display It! Only in the State Press Classifieds! Drive, Peoria, Arizona 85345. WORD M IC R O s e c r e t a r ia l •Relationship Difficulties •Dysfunctional Families •Sexual Abuse •Stress Anxiety $ 1 /p a g e . 9 64 -3 36 1 , leave M ost ihsuranceis accepted for full payment. Call Leslie Metellus, PhD HEALTH AND FITNESS 261-0340 or 966-1174 H igh I m p a c t • Low Im p a c t C om bo • B o d y T o n in g • S te p S tu d en ts & F a c u lty 20% OFF A E R O B I C S 1301 E . U n iv e rs ity , Tem pe 894-6543 Gall: BenMcWhirter, M.C. 829-6728 If necessary, please leave a. message. Times a n d locations of group: to be announced. These groups are part o f a research study. Your Individual Horoscope : Frances Drake: IF YOUR BUSINESS WOULD LIKE TO S P O N SO R THE H O R O SC O PES. PLEASE CALL 965-6555. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $ 1 .5 0 PER page. Term papers, letters, resumes, etc. At your service word processing. Linda, 839-6167. T Y P IN G /W O R D P r o c e s s in g experience. Call Linda, 962-8075. AAK URIT TY P IN G — Prom pt service, tran­ scribe tapes. 831-0349. Call after 2pm: Linda, A CC URATE, REASO NABLE, fast turnar­ Sewing, kayaking). Inquire: Mah-Kee-Nac (boys), Sun-Devil 962-6490 ound word processing with lazer printer, tra n s c rip tio n . S tu d e n t/fa c u lty , University. 829-8854. A C C U R A TE , FA S T word M ill/ processing, typing, graphics. Free pickup and delivery. Sharon, 892-0281. down to the basem ent of Matthews Center RESTAURANTS/ BARS at TY P IN G S ER VICE, fast, accurate, reli­ W ORD $ l.5 0/p a g e . Fast turnaround. 2 0 years’ Best of luck at part-time C O M P ANY include perform ing arts, fine arts, news­ photography, by •Bodywaxing* Gentle organic wax leaves skin soft for weeks. * •Electrolysis* Permanent hair removal, free consultation, licensed electrologist. Private. Confidential. A * Plus Electrolysis Clinic AAA P H O EN IX weights/fitness and biking; other openings paper, training 1(800)441-5867, M ath Doctor, 921*2211. LOST: M ICH IG AN driver’s license— on campus Thursday, February 28. If found, please call Tim , 835-7277. W elcom e on board. D anbee for girls. Counselor positions for especially baseball, basketball, field hock­ Call DEKE, TRI Delt. Pi Phi. Phi Sig, Phi Delt- Massachusetts. Mah-Kee-Nac for boys/ e y , softball, soccer and volleyball; 25 tennis openings; also archery, riflery, Pointer. help you keep your business growing! full-time June and July only. 8am to 5pm, $5.50/hour. Call for an appointment: ADIA N E W ENG LA N D Brother/Sister Cam ps— puppy, sections— Genera), Clerical and Food Service— to Program discounts, FO U N D : RING . Call Cecilia, 833-5662. Must identify. ASU have to place your ad today! And remem ber to bring your student ID! HEALTH AND FITNESS__________ discounts. Southwest corner, Miller arid Chaparral. 994-8145. Student sound, need motivated, creative bass. 966-4871. F L U E N T FR E N C H and English speaking W e s te rn 15-word personal is only $1.751 Com e typed. tures. BASS PLAYER needed fo r new, almost hookup, reports services. 2 3 years’ experience. Student working band. 9 0 % originals, alternative $550/best offer. Jennifer, 784-0810. Eldridge and SKYDIVE TO D A Y at Skydiving Adven­ MUSIC Questions? 965-6555. Jackie P A P ER S N e ar A S U . message! TW O W EEK old Roland keyboard- amp C all someone down to the basem ent of Matthews C enter Resumes. Graphic design. Quick service. when you get back from Spring Break. tour guides needed for the Eastern and S ta te s. hair Return your application to the same place 8 2 9 -3 9 1 0 U n ite d PERMANENT removal. Rem ove unwanted hair forever. graduating until after Spring 1992, please between 8am and 5pm for an application. Send TR O U B LES W ITH m ath? I can help you! C la ss if ie d s Work for You sales representataives to begin training now for next semester. If advertising/ Stop by the State Press information center in the north basement of Matthews Center — All courses including Q BA. Call Josh, The p a ste-u p Private, confidential counseling. Insurance accepted. There is a solution! THE BEST OF TASTE. IN C apply today. You must have a vehicle, too. P ER SO NA L special a State Press personal ad. A and ty p e se ttin g , Discounts on 50 or more pages. Reason­ able rates. Call 998-4424. H O T EL a RESTAURANT TR A IN IN G marketing interestes you and you w on’t be GET Typing/ process cam era services-. Call Donna at 965-7572 for rates and information. TERM TH E STATE Press is hiring advertising $5/hr. No highpressure sales. W ork hrs.: 4pm to 9pm , M -F. S at. 8:30am -2pm . Inc. B U L IM IA skydiving champions. (602)723-9595. To register for March 12 seminar. Get Vmimt! Telem arketers M C S Y S TE M S , examination strategies. State approved tutor. 9-212-211, Sun-Devil Tutoring, Gil. STATE PR E SS Production Departmènt Additional positions available in all facets of kitchen, dining room, secretarial and tion, appointment, call Camp Sequoia, Wanted collect, provid es english E M P L O Y E R S — LO O K IN G for help? Place a S tate Press Help W anted ad. W e three . H e lp ound. Close to A S U- $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825. Call Cabin ming (water safety instructor/lifeguard training), tennis, waterskiing, theatre, art, ance, G eneral, Clerical and Food Service— to help you keep your business growing! your typing needs. APA/MLA, fast turnar­ paid. Legal/confidential. (212)249-5840. Bud. Bud Light 3-7pm. M-Th . 5th St. & Forest Counsellor and Specialty Instructor posi­ tions available in all team sports, swim­ p h o to g rap h y , A C C O U N T IN G , F IN A N C E , and M ath professional instruction, study aides and LE TTE R Q U A LITY word processing for opportunities you’d hope for. Expenses York state Catskill Mountains (90 miles riding, outdoor education and many more. Student your newborn. Secure future with all the 10CWINGS ’ DRAFTS 70C Call and G ym nastics, TUTORS other. W arm , loving fam ily eagerly awaits $6-$8/hour. Hiring immediately for Tem pe area. Pull or Perfect TYPING/WORD PROCESSING don’t remem ber much else except you're beautiful. W here are you? Are you there? Scott. S heri P a tric k - 961-1411 f r c t k m c « S e c 'u . S ervflees Desktop Wbiihh g T erm P om r i / H a w r i t t f r i R e s u m e s /G r a p h i c s L a se r P rin tin g N o ta ry Pubfec 1 D a y S e r v / 7 D a y s W eek D isc o u n t S t u d e n t P r ic e s APA/M LA processing. 945-5744 E X P E R IE N C E D typing/word Need it fast? Call Jessie, ASU AREA typing, word processing, edit­ ing and transcription. Call anytime for fast service, 966-2186. N O O N IS the deadline to get classified ASU W E S T is only one m ile from Precision liner ads in the following day. Don’t miss it! M atthew s Center basement, 965-6731. Typing and W ord Processing. Call M ary at SK KELLI and M egan. Sorry it’s a day late. C O N V E N IE N T T Y P IN G ! 3 blocks to ASU B ut we still love you just as much! W ere excited you're our dots! WordPerfect 5 .1 . Diane, 966-5693. T H E W O M E N o f Tri Sigm a sincerely thank E D IT IN G /R E T Y P IN G , the men of Kappa Alpha and Delta Tau scripts, large documents. WPS. 1/5.0 disks Delta for ail their help with Teeter Totter accepted. Experienced editor. Optim ize Spring Break. 9 45-6793 You did a great job and we love you for it! 978-8686 for student d iscount. Laser. Any s ize job. reo rts, m anu­ TRIDELTA, THA NKS for all the memories. FLY IN G FIN G E R S h a s - Maclntosh/laser I ’ll miss y'ali, hopefully I ’ll be back. Love Holly. quality aind now Fax-a-Shirt. Call 945-1551 for details. FOR TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1991 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) An old friend may ask a favor of you. Social life is a plus now, -but you’re easily agitated. Avoid extre­ mes in seif-indulgence and watch spending. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) if®? You may meet with extra responsi­ bility on the job now. A disagreement could arise over a money matter. You could go overboard on spending on the home today . GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) nA Students may find it necessary to work a little harder now. Some you deal with today tend to exaggerate. You’ll receive some good financial advice from an unexpected quarter. CANCER.,^ (June 2 i to July 22) HK You could be pennywise and pound-foolish today. It’s not a good time to establish credit Despite extra expenses, you still tend towards extravagance. LEO'.. (July 23 to Aug: 22) Couples will be sharing a responsi­ bility together today. Make sure you follow through on commitments made to others. Someone's offer of help should be accepted. VIRGO «fa (Aug. 23 to S ept 22) . After a very productive ajrn., you may slacken efforts. A surprise luiu heon invitation could come now or you run into an old acquaintance unexpectedly. LIBRA , yy . (Sept. 23 to O ct 22) ffi® Responsibilities come through chil­ dren today. Later, you’ll be in a partying mood but your tendency will be to overdo. A relative surprises you in some way. SCORPIO rtilC (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) Hlfc There seems to be a lot to do at home today. A more realistic and practical approach may be needed in yotir career right now. Don’t ride a willing horse to death. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) fiv You'll work hard, then party later. Serious mental work is favored early in the day. However, watch the tendencies to exaggerate and pro­ crastinate later oh. CAPRICORN — (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Money that comes in easily could quickly go out, unless you're prudent Judgment may be off when it comes to shopping today. Avoid taking any financial risks at present AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) E ra Your moods fluctuate right now. You may • be taking yourself too seriously as. the day begins, but later oh you verge towards silliness and inappropriate behavior. p is c e s > W i; (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) «ofe*< You could be a bit withdrawn as the day begins. Though you may not be in a workaholic mood, do the best you can to stay on top o f current assignments. YOU BORN TODAY have an enter­ prising spirit and are drawn to both art and literature. Your ability to organize, promote and sell is an asset to you in all that you do. You would succeed in teaching, advertising, publishing and sales. A home is important to yourhappiness and you ei\joy beautiful surroundings. If not in a creative occupation, then you’re liable to be found in a professional career. Birthdate of; Jack Kerouac, writer, Elaine de Kooning, painter, and Liza Minnelli, entertainer. Read yo u r ho ro ­ scope dally in the state P r ess Classifieds. Copyright 1991 by King Features Syndicate,The. Page 20 State Pres* Monday, March 11,1991 •Cards Ubetcha •C arrs Jr. •Clothestime •Color Creations •Fairy Godmothers •Fajita Prima •Fast Foto •Flakey Jake’s •The Gap •The Improv •Le Cornerstone Salon •M ann’s Theatre •Mediterranean Gourmet •Mr. Ship N ’ Chek •No Appointment Necessary •Pacific Eyes & T ’s •Player’s Choice •Pro Sports West •Robert Black Agency •Studebaker’s •th e Tan Line •T icketExchange •Travel more •U -Shop •Ujena •Yogurt O asis 1 -M O U R 12 exp ’ -.- S IN G L E P R IN T S 15 exp 24 exp ... 56 exp . 99 A 9 9 CL 9 9 CO LO R r 1 r E EXTRA ktIr ENLARGEMENTS 5E T! SETS I t 25%2E£ 5X7 • sk ip *11X14 9 9 9 €m . r FÍÍS s a l e ” ! FOTO. 4?*_6 X 3 xo PER I P urchase any sm all, m edium o r large yo g u rt and receive any sm aller size FREE » .., OP0™ *A SU M EM O R IA L U N IO N * b u h 1739 E Broadway : , . 967-7590 The Cornerstone Mall .968-0027 3228 S Mil 930W. Broadway. . . 968-8593 Expires 4-15-91 « y — Toppings Extra I w u •UPS •Airborne •packing & Shipping •Check Cashing •Money Orders •Postage stamps •Fax service •key cutting •Mailbox Rental I I I 8 I $1.00 off UPS Shipping THE 'S H O P I Must present coupon. Expires 4 -1 5 -9 1 . 968-9512 $500 OFF 8 m iié % E xpires 3/30/91 N o Cash V alue with purchase of $25.00 or more With Coupon. E xpires 4/15/91 I 965-6656 i Void on sale items and with other offers. 8 2 9 -1 7 4 3 IflHnWlMMHi.l O LO R Fajita Prima. T he V alley's B e s t F a jita s $2.99 c We put y o u r photoon: •T-shirts •Calendars •Sweatshirts »Gaps •Mugs »Buttons •Teddy Bears Fajita (Chicken or Beef) with this coupon! GornerstonE U l IL i PRO SPORTS WEST jf . : {WHBBWpi|Bpwpww. ^ All Champion Sweatshirts 966-1378 I C o b m rtftc E S i '{ ¡m Tou art a spedai! pason $19.99 l Reg. S28.99 Look good. Feel good. $2.80 on state of the art color copies! NO LIMIT NO MINIMUM AT i "Everything For The Sports Fan" save We also offer copies and < enlargements without a negative. I Excludes reverse weave Nobody beats our quality! Must present coupon. Expires 4-15-91. Expires 6/1/91 Lim it one per customer 990 COLOR COPIES 'R E A H O N S Expires 3/30/91 1 I I I I j i _____ 20 % OFF 9 6 8 -0 5 3 7 L a d ie s Formalwear R e n ta l 9 6 8 -0 2 3 8 $ 5QQ off any service E xpires 4/15/91 4** Expies 3/30/91 first tim e clients please ONE SALON Nails • H aircuts • Perm s • Colors t