S la te P re s s ' , • Voi. 75 No. 52 . ©Copyright, State Press, 1991 Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Friday, November 8,1991 Magic contracts AIDS virus ASU ties feel impact of NBAs role model By D a r r e n S tate Press urban ASU student Carlton Martin leaned against a wall in the Student Recreation Complex waiting to get into a basketball game when he first heard Earvin “Magic” Johnson tested positive for the AIDS virus. Martin, an avid Lakers fan, sat shocked with a distant gaze along with a stunned nation of basketball fans and Magic admirers upon receiving news of the megastar’s personal tragedy. With the attention called to Johnson and the virus, Martin said he hopes Johnson’s misfortune will “open eyes of the younger kids.” “This makes them stop and reflect that this is a very serious disease,” the 25-yearold psychology major said. “Hopefully, people will become monogamous and be honest in their relationships. ” Johnson, 32, retired from the National R elated story, page 20 Basketball Association’s Los Angeles Lakers Thursday, citing his contraction of the HIV virus, a precursor to AIDS. The three-time NBA Most Valuable Player discovered the affliction Wednesday only after taking a test required by life insurance. ASU community members expressed hope that heightened AIDS awareness would offset some of the shock stemming from Johnson’s revelation. “This is most important for young people, who will (listen to) Magic Johnson carefully about safe sex,” said Austin Jones, an ASU psychology professor and president of the National Parents’ Council on AIDS. “But it also helps the nation to stop avoiding thinking about (AIDS).” ASU men’s basketball coach Bill Frieder, who met Johnson while recruiting him for the University of Michigan, said he was upset by the news. “I’ve known Earvin since his days in junior high school and have been great friends ever since then,” Frieder said of the 12-year NBA veteran guard, who eventually Turn to Magic, page 11. M agic Johnson, shown here sitting out a gam e Tuesday, announced Thursday th a t he has tested H IV positive. M ill re o p e n in g c o n s id e re d b y T e m p e o ffic ia ls By JOHN YAN TIS S tate Press N u estra am iga Dulce de Leon o f the group “A m igos” dances on W est Law n Thursday as p art o f Hom ecom ing's C u ltu ral Pay ac tiv ities . Tempe officials are considering reopening Mill Avenue to vehicle traffic on weekend evenings in response to complaints from downtown businesses — but not without restrictions for those who “cruise” their automobiles on the street. On Nov. 15, Tempe City Council members will consider two ordinances drawn up by city staff that will monitor the number of times vehicles drive up and down the avenue on weekend nights and the loudness of car stereos. Council members decided to possibly open the avenue “after merchants requested we open up as soon as possible,” said Dave Fackler, deputy community development (director. Crowd size had decreased before last weekend, Fackler said, with the city attributing the decline to “the Arizona State Fair and cooler weather.” The police could close the avenue again if crowds become too large, Fackler said. The avenue was closed in October 1990 and reopened for a time in December and January. The city has maintained the need for a closure because of Tara to Mill, page 10. ASA lobbies for m ajor financial bill By KRIS MAYES and KEN BROWN S tate Press Members of the Arizona Students Association are increasing lobbying efforts on a congressional bill that could dramatically increase federal financial aid but said hope for success could be dashed by a conservative Senate. “There is going to be a significant increase in contacts (with Congress),” said ASA Director Randy Udelman. “It’s important for them to recognize why students think this is an important issue.” The Higher Education Act, which provides for all federal financial aid, was passed by the House Education Committee two weeks ago. It is slated for a House vote as early as this month, sending ASA into high gear as it attempts to see the bill through. Pell Grants, student loans and the State Student Incentive Program all hinge on the HEA’s reauthorization. The bill — which faces reauthorization every five years — does not guarantee funds for financial aid, but it makes the allocations possible. “It’s very significant for the students,” ASU President Lattie Coor said. “It sets the five-year tone for federal appropriations to take place.” Coor said that he expects a compromise between the two houses, adding that student lobbying is the “single most important voice” in the eyes of some lawmakers. If passed, the House bill would significantly increase federal aid to make up for current allocations which provide only a percentage of estimated financial need. The bill calls for altering the present “quasi-entitlement” to a full entitlement federal aid program, requiring anywhere from a $9 million to $11 million increase in governmental funding to the program. Monday is Veterans Day: veterans of theU. S. Armed Forces will be honored and ASU students will have a day off from the scholastic grind. Although there will be no classes, the MU will be open for those students who just can’t stay away. The Pizza Hut and the MU Market will offer munchies. For students who plan to catch up on projects and reports, Hayden and Noble libraries will be open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Librarians will be working from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Copy Service Centers will be closed. The State Press will return to the stands Wednesday. Phoenix Transit buses will run on the regular schedule, but there will be ho tram service on campus. The ASU Bookstore and the MU post office will be closed. Turn to ASA, p?ge 10. W e ird science: B eat poets: The ASU Department of Chemistry celebrates National Chemistry Week. Michael McClure, formerly of The Doors, will join others at Anderson’s Fifth Estate in Scottsdale Sunday for a night of entertainment. Page 7 Students o ff Monday Page 15 Today's, weather: Mostly sunny with a high Q uacking around: in the mid 80s. The ASU football team meets the Oregon Ducks Saturday in a Homecoming game. C o m i« ;s ............................2 ......................l8 Page 19 C l a s s i f i e d s . ..... ..........21 Crossword ...•.•••*••••?••••••»*••v*««*•••••••••••?••• 11 Horoscopes.........................»......^.....—.•23 Police Report.................. ...............................9 S p o rts.......,...............M ,M ......«.....M .........1 9 College. Culture...................................... 15 Page 2 State Pres« _Frida*^tovember^1922. Women’s commission defines mission By M ARSHA MARDOCK S tate Press ASU’s newly formed Commission on the Status of Women, a permanent policy advisory body to ASU President Lattie Coor, met Thursday afternoon to define its mission. “When Isay a policy advisory body, I mean that in a very broad sense,” said Anne Schneider, dean of the College of Public Programs and chairwoman of the commission. “We’re a group established to try and improve the climate on this campus. Our primary means are policies and procedures, educational programs, persuasion —all of these kinds of things.” The primary duty of the commission this year will be to submit a progress report on thè recommendations contained in the regents’ report on the status of women. “We’ll take all 50 of these recommendations and outline the progress that has been made on each and every one,” ; Schneider said. “I think that in some ways that should be very much a core of what we’re all about,” she added. The 22-member commission consists of students, faculty, administrators, academic professionals and staff. Erin Penniman, a junior business major and commission member, said the group will study the issues carefully before making any implementations. “It took two years for the Arizona Board of Regents’ commission on women to do the study, so it’s not something we should just start cranking out,” she said. “Some of those proposals are 10 years away, so it's a long-term thing. And we’ve got to carefully define exactly what we’re going to do.” Penniman added that the students will eventually benefit from the commission’s work. “You have to start at the administration level with these kind of things, and once you get that, the next step is to transfer that to the students," Penniman said. “Once you get the deans, the teachers, everyone behind you, that’s when you need to start attacking the women’s issues — the women students’ issues. That’s something I “ would definitely like to see happen,” Jeorgetta Douglas/State Preas The Com m ission on th e S tatus o f W om en m et Thursday to d efin e its m ission. Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous: closed meeting, noon, Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •Program for Southeast Asia: free film, “ Samsara: Death and Rebirth in Cambodia,” 11:40 a.m. to 12:30 p.m , BAC 216. y o u c a n f i n •Society for Creative Anachronism: calligraphy class, 7 to Room 101.. 9 p.m ., MU Room 213. •Students for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws: meeting to discuss camping trip, 3 •Victory Student Fellowship: free rock/jazz concert by Jon Gibson, 7 p.m,, Palo Verde Beach. p.m., Ozzies Warehouse. •N atio n al Student Speech-Language & Hearing Association: meeting, noon, Language and Literature This Weekend Building Room A109. •P hi Alpha Delta: meeting and to u r of Shell & Wilmer, 12:15 p.m., MU fireplace. •D evil’s Juggling Club: meeting, 3:30 p.m., in front of Language and Literature Building. •AIESEC: meeting, 4 p.m , MU Mohave Room 222. •Kayak Club: guest speaker from British Columbia, 6:30 p.m., Mona Plummer Aquatic Center. •P hi Alpha Theta, History Honorary Society: lecture by professor Susan E. Gray, 3 p.m., Social Sciences Building d e v e ( ill 7//«#UdjoantM P “ ining RAW SPECIALS ALLÉ kiflkO#I B u s in e s s O P P FflmuTHimtumis- the copy center Pizz/T ACE Hardware B y « ft . IA1 ! A d v e rtis in g ¿ lililí (jfui'eV'ft&j in t h e S ta te P re ss 965-6555 iiAíitórx fire s to n e L in P O P Peroni s P IZ Z A P R O SPO R TS W EST ¿Everyuiing for the Sports Fani* : S P A R K Y ’S P IZ Z A APARTMENTS LIKE YOU DON'T WANT TO SAVE MONEY. J State Press Page 11 Friday, November 8,1991 •Pursue a Rewarding Career* •Ensure the Future o f Jew ish Life* •Find P rofessional Fulfillm ent* Wliguel’sììlu sic Continued from page 1. . Xn11o O jtu'x Wiinhoibc in tin Aitlu» v h w ttif Cinta REPAIRS GUITAR LESSONS SALES RENTALS ELECTRONICS €H #IC E IS YOURS at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion Cincinnati • New York • Los Angeles Jerusalem Programs leading to degrees in: Rabbinics • Cantorial Studies • Graduate Studies • Jewish Education Jewish Communal Service Magic ; CATERING T O YOUR MUSIC NEEDS • tlktrii • vb»//'> *• PtslflçliMi:0»ur>> Liabviin : : Eta 968-2310 130 E. U n iv ersity P r . Tempo • O p e n O ik y s 10 a m .-6 p.m . ; Cool Savings! o f f ! J l.unUo y P r| Any 10" Sub | Not good with other | offers. Exp. 11-20-91 . soda & CHIPS With purchase of a n y 6 " SUb. Not good with other offers. Exp. 11-20-91 Rabbi Sheldon Marder, Assistant Dean, Los Angeles School will be on campus Tuesday, Nov. 12 at Hillel (1012 S.MillAve.) Call Florence at 967-7563 for an appointment Corner of Lemon & Rural 967-1114 CROSSWORD U N IVER SITY DISCO UNT THEATRE 1 0 2 5 E. B R O A D W A Y R D . • 829-6666 by TH O M A S JO SE PH Every Tuesday Is Half-Price w ithin walking distance from A S U ACROSS S M A S H H I T O N L Y $ 1 .5 0 See it on the b ig BIG SCREEN! In the East Valley's biggest aiiditorium-550 seats T E R M IN A T O R 2 J U D G M E N T SCHW ARZENEG G ER It's Nothing Personal. ATRI-STARRELEASE S P E C IA L P R IC E O N L Y $ 1 .5 0 ! MICHAEL J. FOX DOC HOLLYWOOD DISCOUNT DOUBLE FEATURE $3 It a i n t n o M f a ir y t a le ^ * H) VANILLA ICE When a airl has a heart o r stone... Just add Ice. ; ... -m EXCLUSIVE DISC O U NT R U N $3 DOCTOR WILLIAM HURT j Ipq7»! V A LLE Y A R T TH EA TRE 509 S . M i l l A v e n u e • 829-6668 1 Market, for short 5 Saga 9 Tusk material 11 Physi­ cist's concerns 13 Dullplummaged songbird 14 Worth 15 Terminus 16 Cajole 18 Glowered 20 Bakery buy 21 Actor Zimbalist 22 Hiding whip 23 Central 24 Low sound 25 Landed 27 Fake sparklers 29 TV comic, for short 30 Safari partici­ pants 32 Trattoria dessert 34 Dove utterance 35 Complete 180 36 Top story 38 Martin­ ique volcano 39 Scandal­ ize 40 Clarinet need 41 Stretches of history attended Michigan State University. “It’s very, very difficult for me to talk about it because I ’m torn up inside.” Owen Morgan, who teaches Human Sexuality at ASU, said Johnson’s high profile — in and out of the sporting world should help AIDS prevention, “It makes us aware that a lot of people are at risk,” Morgan said. “Different people will react differently. For some people, this will be an alert. He’s held in very high regard.” Morgan said one AIDS specialist estimated that 1 million people do not realize they are HIV positive. “I hope this results in more people willing to be tested,” he said. “This doesn’t tell me about Magic Johnson —it tells me about AIDS.” Martha Jones, a nurse and case manager for Arizona AIDS Project Inc., said Johnson’s plans to become a spokesman will help in the fight against AIDS. “I think this is terrible,” she said. “I wouldn’t wish this on anyone. But for educational purposes, now that people can see anyone can get it, this is an incredible situation.” Speaking at his press conference, Johnson kept his trademark smile and good humor despite the gravity of the news. The NBA’s all-time assist leader stressed that he does not have the AIDS disease, only the HIV virus. “I plan on living for a longtime,” Johnson said. “I’m going on with my life.” Johnson added that his decision to speak out for AIDS awareness was the logical step in drawing something positive from his condition. “ You think it can never happen to you,” he said “But I ’m going to deal with i t . . . . It’s just another chapter in my life. The only thing I can do is have a bright side. If I’m down. .. it’s over — and I’m not like that,” For fans like Martin, who knew Johilson froth the excitement he produced on the basketball court, his absence serves as a reality check to the normally fantasy-based world of sport. “He’s a human being, and he’s made mistakes,” Martin said. “It’s too bad he has to pay for it this way.” m DOWN 1 Emulates Lougariis 2 Manifest 3 Festivities leader in Britain 4 Dudgeon 5 No longer feral 6 Suit to — 7 Cromwell title 8 Actor Estevez 10 Made mournful cries 12 Precipi- 1 i •3 Yesterday’s Answer tous 17 Design­ er’s edge 19 Legal paper 22 Expense ' 24 Fads 25 Misbe­ have 26 Blackout criminal 4 9 6 27 Bit of word­ play 28 Beetho­ ven work 30 Sharp­ ened 31 Wallops 33 Corner 37 Common article 7 8 10 i THE COMMITMENTS "There'sNo Resisting 'The Commitments'..A Film With a Sound So Potent It Could Probably Liberate The World" - Kenneth Tvron, LOS ANGELES TIMES TW fM TICTHCCNTU..-FO. Fri. 10:55 pm , Sat. & Sun. 4 :45, D aily 8:45 T h e St o r y O f B o y s A n d G ir l s J C/ A FEASTFOR LOVERS ( ■* Ntsussssta__________ ^ ^ H O W T IM E S S A T ^ ^ U N ^ O ^ A IL Y T ^ ^ J i s I m ■ 12 1 13 1 15 14 17 ■ 19 r 18 « y-i ■ 1 ■ E j 2Ì ■ i 25 26 22 w m 28 1 m ■ 3() 2d ■ 33 32 Y o u r 31 34 ■ 36 37 35 J 1 39 . 11 3Ö 4Ó 1 ■ ■ B u s in e s s 41 By AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W 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. 11-8 CRYPTOQUOTE . . . MW Z L Z YD V Y X Z T Z J H Y H K W Y D H m DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work i t 11*8 MA ¡8 iS ¡2 < S tu d e n ts O n ly $ 3 .0 0 w ith I D EVERY SAT. AT MIDNIGHT-ROCKY HORROR g HA Z O I Z S M T J H V Y X Z RHXAVNYHK TZJHYHK AX M WZ K Y C Z D FE WYD M W Z A d v e rtis in g - in t h e State Press SAGZLD. — Z L Y I W X L A T T Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te: MAN MUST ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY FOR HIMSELF. — ERICH FROMM C 1891 by Kina Features Syndicate, Inc. ’ 965-6555 Page 12 State Pre«» Friday, November 8,1991 iv ia n m i s s i n g r o r s c v c found suffering from amnesia n tin P X T fv / * n \ __ u ___Ai PHOENIX (AP) - Gerald Knox has been found after mysteriously disappearing for almost seven months, but in a real sense he is still lost. Because of a mental condition, the Apache Junction man can’t remember his wife or his life in Arizona and there isn’t an institution in the state that will help him. “We take him to mental health places and they all say they can’t see him for more than two months,” his wife Vernis Knox said Wednesday. “ I wished they had more help for people here so they could get straightened out,” Knox said she is trying to investigate her husband’s past to see if he was in the service and eligible for veterans’ benefits. It’s a task made difficult by his condition. The 51-year-old was diagnosed two years ago by a psychiatrist as having a recurring memory disorder, his wife said. But the uninsured couple was already dependent on thé state’s medical fund for the indigent and couldn’t afford extended psychiatric care. They also had $15,000 medical and loan debts. Gerald Knox, who was found in Florida by police last week, also suffers from emphysema, arthritis and heart and stomach ailments. But his m ental condition is more Jeorgetta Douglas/State Press Shan Tong, chairperson fo r th e Dem ocracy fo r China Fund, spoke Thursday as p art o f Hom ecom ing W eek fe s tiv itie s . Tong, 23, estab lish ed a student group to in itiate negotiations w ith th e Chinese governm ent during th e Tiananm en Square dem onstrations. H e escaped China and cam e to th e U nited S tates in June 1989. Tong attended Peking U niversity and is now a graduate stu d en t a t Boston U niversity. ass Siati;- Press Stete P a s s Stete Press fctete rasss Stete 1 * « r P r ö s s ^ i. iiö in o }<=» it d a ilv i T V « ;* Stai ^ K»* debilitating, characterized by attributes of multiple personality and amnesia. He can do something in one personality, awaken and fail to recollect what he did, his wife said. Last April 22, Gerald Knox, said by his wife to be stressed out by his poor health and problems at work, slipped into his past, leaving his future behind. He was found last Thursday in Panana City, Fla., a place he once lived with a former wife. He was living under his real name, but had forgotten his life in Arizona, said Apache Junction Police Sgt. Brian Duncan. He went to police to report his television set had been stolen and, in a routine check, police discovered a missing-person report in a national law-enforcement computer database and found a missing-person report. Duncan said the find closes one of the stran g e st m issing-person cases the department has handled. “He apparently had wandered away in the past and we felt this was the problem here again,” Duncan said. “The aspect of contacting relatives in various places and notifying those agencies to watch for him took a lot of time.” « I I I T H IS W EEKEND season send a card th a t leaves a lasting impression. A t Headshots your photo shoot includes everything: Your m ake-up, hair, accessories w ardrobe and color p ro o fs. i I ft I Buy a small Turkey Sandwich and a Medium D rink Get a second small Turkey Sandwich for just I 9 9 ft PLAN N O W < in order to receive your cards In tim e for m ailing. -A Headshots photo session makes a great graduation or holiday gift. Valid Sat. & Sun. Only. I ft Tempe Center I I 18 E, 10th Street Tempe 9 6 8 -0 0 5 6 Sandwiches • Soups ♦ Salads Good through 11/10/91 Not Valid with any other offer I ROCKY’S 1stAnniversary O u tra g e o u s S p e c ia ls A ll W eekend with V t* Live Entertainment 250 Draft; Beer $1.25 Longnecks $1.00 Well $2.75 Pitchers • > The Party Starts with v Karaoke! by First Productions « » Friday Night $2.00 Cover % The party continues Saturday The Taylor Brown Band‘y $ 2 .0 0 C o v er (Drawing for Prizes) “H ottest Wings Coldest Beer Warmest Friends* 'A ll Our Food is Slow Smoked 1212 E. APACHE BLVD. TEMPE, AZ 85281 1 (602)967-8835 r OR caras • . v envelopes Cards Measure 6 1 3 /1 6 'X 3 1/2' Gift Certificates HEADSHOTS • FIESTA MALL Upper Level near Broadway • 833-4597 í s t i n * PICTURES V ' . presents Beast , D e a u t y a n c i the W alt D isn ey P ic tu re s a n d ASASU S pe c ia l E v e n ts w ill h o s t a n e x clu siv e p r e s e n ta tio n e n title d "Beauty and the Beast: A B ehind th e S c e n es Look" a t N eeb H all o n T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 12 a t 7 :0 0 p m . t h e p r e s e n ta tio n w ill b e g in w ith a view o f th e h is to r y o f D isn ey a n im a tio n u s in g s lid e s fro m s e v e ra l o f W alt D isn e y ’s c la ssic film s. T h is u n iq u e a u d io v is u a l p re s e n ta tio n , s p o n s o r e d b y W alt D isn ey P ic tu re s a n d ASASU S pe c ia l E vents, w ill th e n ta k e th e a u d ie n c e b e h in d -th e -s c e n e s o f W alt D is n e y 's 3 0 th fu ll-le n g th a n im a te d fe a tu re Beauty and the Beast; th e m o s t b e a u tifu l lo v e s to ry e v e r to ld . T h e film fe a tu re s six n e w s o n g s b y th è a c c la im e d s o n g w ritin g te a m o f H o w ard A sh m a n a n d A lan M enken, w h o re c e iv e d tw p A c ad e m y A w ards fo r th e ir w ork on D is n e y 's 1989 a n im a te d b lo c k b u s te r The Little Mermaid. It w ill tra c e Beauty and the Biast, th ro u g h th e v a rio u s s ta g e s o f p ro d u c tio n - p e n c il s k e tc h e s , to ro u g h a n d fin a l a n im a tio n , p a in tin g , cei s e t-u p s , a n d p h o to g ra p h y . T h e p r e s e n ta tio n w ill c o n c lu d e w ith a v id e o ta p e o f b e h in d -th e -s c e n e s a n d a c tu a l fo o ta g e fro m th e u n fin is h e d film . A q u e s tio n a n d a n s w e r s e s s io n w ill fo llo w th e fo rm a l p re s e n ta tio n . V ario u s p riz e s w ill b e a w a r d e d to s e le c t a u d ie n c e m e m b e rs. Tuesday, November 12 7:00 - 8:30pm Neeb Hall Call 965-3161 for more information. w ith I ^ State Press Page 13 Friday, November 8,1991 soicen cm Call for daily specials Great Food, Great Prices Chinese B uffet 1 1 2 5 E. Apache Btvd. Tempe • 9 6 8 -3 3 2 2 941 W . ElHot Chandler • 8 2 1 -5 4 2 8 10% Discount for ASU students and faculty 1 042 N . Htgley Mesa » 9 8 5 -8 8 2 3 MENU INCLUDES: •Sweet & Sour Pork »Lemon Chicken »Egg Roll »Sesame Chicken •Shrimp with Almond Ding »Teriyaki Beef »BBQ Spare Ribs •Spicy Chicken »Smoked Pish »Beef with Green Bean •Vegetarian »Almond Turkey »Moo Goo Gai Pan •BBQ Pork »Ham Fried Rice »Chow Mein, etc. A LSO - W inter: Egg Flow er Soup WE SERVE BEER and Sum m er: F ru it Cocktail ALL YOU CAN EAT CHINESE BUFFET BUSINESS HOURS •L U N C H $ 3 .9 4 17 Years Experience 11-9 Sun. Thurs 11-9:30 Frf.-Sat. •D IN N E R * 5 4 .7 9 Syndicated columnist W ill receives Cronkite award The university gives the annual award to recognize outstanding contributions to journalism and telecommunication. Past recipients have included Ted Turner, president of Turner Broadcasting System Inc., and Katharine Graham, chairman and chief executive officer of The Washington Post Company. CAP) — Syndicated column­ ist George Will is this y ear’s recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award from the Ariz­ ona State University journalism school. Cronkite, the retired newscaster for whom the school is named, will present the award W i l l Tuesday at the Phoenician Resort in Phoenix. Will, who won a Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 1977, is a regular panelist on ABC’s “This Week With David Brinkley.” He writes essays twice monthly for Newsweek. ROCK □ What is SANDWICH ROCK? C all Z ions B ank F o r Y our S tudent Loan... The Sandwich Shop that brings together both great food and low prices in a Rock & Roll atm osphere. That you will find som ew here... A t Zions First National Bank of Arizona we understand that a quick response to your student loan application allows you to plan wisely for the upcoming academic year. However, planning early doesn't mean a thing if you don't have the right team behind you. 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Sale th ru 11-10-91, A f t e r H o u r s U n til 2 a .m . Arizona’s #1 D .l. Randall Spinning Alternative, Progressive D .O.R. Mix SATURDAY L A D IE S N IG H T LADIES-NO COVER TILL 1 0 P.M . S A 50 U-CALL-IT ALL NIGHT ■L (Ladies Only) DOMESTIC L0NGNECKS ALL NIGHT A f t e r H o u r s U n til 2 a .m . $ 1 . 0 0 O FF COVER t with this coupon until 10 p.m. I I Friday, November 8 or Saturday, November 9 , ■ Page 14 S to f Pres« Friday, November 8,1991 Soviet Continued from page 3 • visiting memorials to Russia’s royal family and meeting with supporters. Across town, about 2,000 Communist supporters rallied near the docked cruiser Aurora — a symbol of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution — and chanted: “Leningrad! Leningrad!” The mostly older men held red banners proclaiming “ Glory to the Communist Party.” “I am a Communist 100 percent,” 61-yearold Yuri Tirentev said, a red Soviet flag fluttering behind him. “We don’t need Czar Boris (Yeltsin) or Duke Sobchak. I defended Leningrad during the war and will never accept St. Petersburg.” In Moscow, the 5,000 pro-Communist marchers denounced Yeltsin’s decree Wednesday banning the Communist Party on the territory of the Russian republic, which encompasses two-thirds of the Soviet Union. ~ . Standing around a Statue of Lenin that is one of the few in the capital not scheduled to be torn down by the reformist City Council, the demonstrators said life was better for them under the hard-line Communists. “It was never like this before, when you had to stand in line for 200 to 300 meters just to buy bread,” said Alexander Myasnikov. “When we had socialism all the shops were full.” But the anti-Communist marchers said there was a different cost exacted by the old Soviet leadership. “ Tens of millions of people were destroyed by an anti-human regime that ca rried out genocide,” said Viktor. Aksuchits, chairm an of the Russian Christian Democratic Union, speaking to a rally near the KGB headquarters. In the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, pro- and anti-Communist demonstrators scuffled briefly, and 10 men were arrested and one hospitalized with minor injuries. Small crowds of elderly people and World War II veterans laid flowers in front of statues of Lenin at rallies elsewhere in the country, including the Pacific port of Vladivostok and the Byelorussian capital of Minsk. In the Armenian capital, Yerevan, shoppers searching for increasingly scarce bread attacked a bakery and had to be dispersed by Interior Ministry troops, Tass said -Thursday, In the rampage^Wednesday, the shoppers seized freshly baked bread, trampled on other loaves and damaged some bakery equipment, Tass said. The shortage in Yerevan is due to the closure of a pipeline that supplied gas for cooking and heating throughout Armenia, TasS said. Hie pipeline was closed by the neighboring republic of Azerbaijan. Armenia is engaged in a bloody territorial dispute with Azerbaijan over the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is inside Azerbaijan. K ennedy Continued from page 3. her from the jury pool, which the judge did Wednesday. Smith, nephew of Sen. Edward M.'Kennedy, D-Mass., said he had worked with older people in hospitals and found “anybody of any age can be incompetent.” “The way I feel today ... I’d say Moira is walking proof of it," Smith told reporters outside court. When he left the courthouse at day’s end, Smith tried to walk quickly past reporters and joked that his lunchtime comment about Lasch had been off the record. “My mother told me not to say anything bad about anybody, so if she finds out I said that I’ll get in trouble,” he said. Earlier, Lasch complained to Lupo that while defense attorney Roy Black claims that publicity is threatening Smith’s right to a fair trial, “he’s doing everything he can to pander to it.” “Mr. Black and his entourage have press conferences at noon and at night,” Lasch said. Orbach also had a few things to say Thursday, appearing on a talk show on WJNO radio in West Palm Beach. “The Kennedys couldn’t care less about us nobodies,” she said. “It’s the Kennedy magic. It pollutes the world. It polluted and hurt me.” Lupo revealed that Orbach had called her Wednesday to complain that she had been besieged by calls from reporters around the country and offered “a gift” by the tabloid televifiori show “Hard Copy.” ’ .'•‘7 . > ;./•» “Hard Copy” said in a statement late Thursday that it KEGS TO 60 ConsxQmtnt W a n fr o ije H mm 9 4 6 -0 7 15 Mon-Thur 10am-10pm; Fri-Sat 10am-1am; Sun 12-8pm W e C a rry : G u e s s - E s p r i t - L i z C l a i b o r n e —C a r o l L ittle - C a lv in K le in -A n n e K le in -E v a n , P ic o n e - E lle n T r a c y -& M a n y M o re ! ► SIZES 2 -2 0 , P E TIT E , J R ., M IS S Y ►Also carrying designer shoes, jew elry and accessories HOURS: Mon.-Frl. 11:30-5:30 Sat. 10:304:00 32 S. MacDonald • Mesa 461-3339 THE COALITION FOR WORLD PEACE AT ASU presents JEANNE A. BUTTERFIELD, J,D. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, PALESTINE SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE and CHAIR, NORTH AMERICAN COORDINATING COMMITTEE for NGO’s on the QUESTION of PALESTINE (NACC) " A H U M A N IT A R IA N P E R S P E C T IV E O N T H E P A L E S T IN IA N D IA S P O R A " M s. Butterfield, who recently returned from the W EST BANK where she led an emergency United Nations NGO delegation on a fact-finding m ission, w ill present a humanitarian perspec­ tive o f life under occupation- TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 7:00-9:00 PM EDUCATION LECTURE HALL (Near Farmer Education Building, across from Grady Gammage Auditorium) P L E A S E JO IN US! $ 2 O FF lADIES’NEWANDNEARLYNEWDESIGNERFASHIONS Papago Liquor N e x t to Blue Iguana SW C orner, S cottsdale & M cD ow ell contacted Orbach to request an interview, but she declined. “At no time did ‘Hard Copy’ offer money, gifts or any other incentive to Orbach,” the statement read. The judge said most reporters covering the trial have been cooperative. However, she said, “The problem here is not the honesty of the jurors, it’s the unscrupulous conduct of certain members of the media.” The judge refused defense attorney Roy Black’s request to start jury selection without cameras and to dismiss the 20 people who remained in the jury pool after the first five days of questioning. However, she said Orbach’s call prompted her to take steps to shield jurors. Among other things, the judge dropped her practice of calling prospective jurors by their names. Grease ’n Go's V a lv o lin e L u b e , O il & I 1355 s. M cC iintock F ilte r S e rv ic e | Tempe, 894-2798 | Hours: Mon-Sat 8-6 Sun 10-4 Reg. Price $21.95 ^ 3 o o d only with coupon. Not valid with any other offer. A TTEN TIO N ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY JU N IO RS AND SENIORS D eadline for Subm itting the A pplication is TO D A Y WHO’S WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES & COLLEGES Submit Applications to the Associated Students Offices on the 3rd Floor of the Memorial Union. Slate Press Page 15 Friday, November 8,1991 by Ken Orman Ray Manzarek and Michael McClure Sunday, Nov. 10, at 8 p.m. . Anderson’s Fifth Estate, Scottsdale It isn’t a confessional for the neo-’60s drug culture. Nor is it classic poetic verse. Sunday evening at Anderson’s Fifth Estate will feature ’90s storytelling, comedy, poetry and music with Michael McClure, Ray Manzarek and Mary McCann. McClure, a playwright, is considered one of the original “beat poets.” He has been touring die United States with Manzarek, former keyboardist and co-songwriter for The Doors. Their show consists of heavy-hitting social and political critcism, anecdotal humor and stories of friendships that have past away. Beat poet M ary M cCann also w ill perform . M ichael M cC lure (le ft) and Ray M anzarek, form erly o f The Doors, w ill bring th e ir exotic com bination o f m usic and w ords to A nderson's F ifth Estate in S co ttsdale on Sunday. One such friendship is McClure’s with Jim Morrison, the self-destructive free spirit who supposedly was an apprentice of McClure. Manzarek accompanies McClure on almost all of the pieces with an acoustic piano, following a copy of McClure’s lyrics instead of sheet music. On the bill with Manzarek and McClure will be former KUKQ-AM morning queen Mary McCann. She will open the show with her ’90s version of poetry and prose. McCann, who has been writing for more than 12 years, says she has “found her voice as a writer.” “I’ve been in a real transition stage since I’ve been writing so much,’’ she says. “I mean, after 12 years I’m finally getting the hang of it.’’ P art of finding her niche as a writer has included being a judge at the National Poetry Slams in Chicago last summer, which gave her time to tour 4,600 miles of America’s highways on her new Harley Davidson motorcycle. In August, McCann was a featured performer at the Bisbee Poetry Festival. She also opened for performance artist Tim Miller at the ASU’s Kerr Cultural Center in Se» Port», pag» 17 T h e O v e r c o a t c o v e r s '6 0 s o b s c u r it ie s '9 0 s - s t y le by Dan Nowicki The Overcoat Tonight, at 10:45 p.m. Tony’s New Yorker Club, 107 E. Broadway Road. The performance is part of the Arizona Music Conference & Showcase. A lth o u g h th e O v e rc o a t w ill be p articip atin g in the Arizona Music Conference & Showcase at Tony’s New Yorker in Tempe tonight, the Tucson-based rock outfit would probably fit in better at a 1966 Battle of the Bands competing against such Arizona ’60s legends as the Spiders, the Grades and the Dearly Beloved. But despite the group’s clear ’60s influences, Overcoat keyboardist Debra Dickey shuns the “revival band” tag. “We don’t consider ourselves a revival band — we don’t dress the part like other bands,” Dickey says. “There’s a lot of neat music from the ’60s, but there’s also a lot of neat music from the ’80s. ‘‘We sort of combine the two and bring the ’60s into the ’90s.” Dickey, who has been with the Overcoat “three or four years,” prefers to label her band “punk.” “I would say that we could be called a poppunk band,” she says. “We’re not ‘punk’ in the sense that we dress in black or wear spikes, but we’ve definitely got that speed and intensity.” Dickey added that ’60s-era musicians have told the band members they would have never made it the three decades ago because their style is too aggressive. The Overcoat, formerly known as the “Marshmallow” Overcoat, was formed by lead singer Tim Gassen in 1986 and has released four albums, the latest being Three Chords and a Cloud of Dust! on the independent Dionysus Records. The Overcoat has developed a unique sound that combines the swirling keyboards and fuzztone guitars common to the garage bands of 1966 with modern-day punk sensibilities. Gassen is the only original member still with the group. Besides Gassen on vocals and Dickey on keyboards, the rest of the Overcoat consists of guitarist Mike Panico, bassist Greg Rupp The O vercoat and drummer Ernie “Killer” Mendoza. The new LP finds the Overcoat reaching a new level of musical sophistication and strikes a perfect balance between Gassen originals and obscure ’60s covers. Three Chords and a Cloud o f Dust! runs the entire gamut of mid-’60s stylings, from fuzz-punk (“Season pf the Witch” ) to folkrock (“Echoes” ) to Seeds-influenced acidSea Overcoat, peg» 17 Page 16 State Press Friday, November 8,1991 Making the ordinary extraordinary In Oils M arine Corps officer's program , you follow y o u r m ajo rb efo re you fo llo w ours. A college m ajor leaves you little time to m inor in anything else. So how do you become an officer in the United States Marine Corps, if you want to concentrate on your m ajor before you devote your undivided attention to one o f ours? Join the Marine Corps' PLC (Platoon Leaders Class) program, where a llyour training takes place in the summer. The kind o f training th a t w ill really testyour ability. If you want to become an officer in the M arine Corps, join the PLC program. And this summeryou can change majors. Jaca A lexander (le ft), Todd G raff and V in cent S p a no s ta r In Sam uel G oldm an C om pany's C ity o f Hop«. by David Allen Pundt City o f Hope Starring Vincent Spano, John Say les and Tony LoBianco Written and directed by John Sayles ★ ★ ★ • rating is on a five-star scale. Movie reviewers are a rather jaded but romantic lot, cynical and difficult to impress, munching through their popcorn and jujubes. We get very excited when a decent flick flashes across the screen, but that doesn’t happen that often — unless the simple art of storytelling is accomplished and executed extremely well. Like in City of Hope. Everyone has lived through parts of this story . We have all lived in cities and towns in which strange things happen. The mayor’s kid gets pulled over for doing 110 in a school zone and has a half-empty quart of Cuervo Gold on the seat next to him. Six months later he’s on probation. Six months after that, it’s wiped off his record. Or the city council votes through a development project that will wipe out low-income housing in spite of protests and votes to the contrary. Or the governor hires a woman who looks good but can’t do her job. The fix is in, and City of Hope is a story of the fix. A Japanese developer wants to spend millions on a chunk of property but doesn’t want to clear the old buildings there now. The mayor wants the property cleared and wants the jobs that will go with the development projects. The council members are split. Perhaps there is something that can be done behind the scenes to help the process along, to help sway votes, to pull the strings that need pulling. Not bribery — nothing so crass and tacky. Just strings. Like an inverted pyramid, John Sayles has written his story from viewpoints in all segments of the tale. From the guy who owns the construction company to the guy who owns the building to the council member whose constituents will be out of homes when the project begins. There are 35 main characters in City o f Hope. As the movie begins, there are five main story lines which cross each other and then combine to form one story as the end credits roll. But to describe the film as a feat of writing technique and skill is to rob it of its ease and accomplishment. John Sayles is not some ivory tower experimentalist making films for 14 of his friends; he makes movies for all of us. This movie would have been difficult to conceive, let alone make, by mere mortal filmmakers. Sayles is an incredible director and writer, as well as an actor. Everything we need is here —car chases, gun shots, goodlooking women, young guys going to ruin and more. M a rin e s Hère looking fora &wgood men. The Officer Selection Team, Capt. Bontell and SSGT Brasley will be on campus Nov. 12 from 10:002:00 p.m. at Cady Mall. Or call (602) 257-0310. A5U HOMECOMING ‘M W H E R E : W H E N : M IL L A V E N U E 7 :3 0 P M - F R ID A Y NOVEMBER ® * G R A N D jh l ^ ^ .l I A 1 ■I I M A R S H A L L • 'Harr y M & t f a s ■a J o e I A y f ^ G a r a g io la \Y o f th e 403* 8t h T O D A Y S h o w m REET FESTIVkt W H E R E : M IL L A V E N U E 4M, W H E N : 8 :3 0 P M - F R ID A Y N O V E M B E R B A N D • W A L T 8 th R IC H A R D S O N §tre ie Page 17 Friday, November 8,1991 State F reu Poets Continued from paga 15 September. McCann describes her poetry as “one womans vision of the world.” “My material is a lot like storytelling in that it deals with things that happen to me and my interpretation of them. And you know me. I’m slightly skewed,’’ she says, laughing. McCann says that developing her program has hot been a chore, and it definitely does not suffer from a lack of material. “Well, so much sh-- happens to me. So, it’s not that tough to find material,” McCann says her talks refrain from filling the audience with “the doom and gloom.” She describes her material as a cross between stand-up comedy and poetry. “I started writing and performing stand-up comedy back in 1980,” she says. “And I just kept writing and writing, and more and more people called what I was writing poetry. So, F r id a y HAPPY HOUR 2 5 t Tacos rr 4-8 p .m . $3 Pitchers Overcoat — ——— — Continued from page 15 punk (“The Mummy” ) to psychedelics (“The Garden Path” ) to straightforward garage rock (“Getaway Girl, Getaway World” ). Each song serves as a showcase for Gassen’s moody vocals. Of the album’s 12 tracks, five are non-originals: The Balloon Farm ’s “A Question of Temperature,” the Fabs’ “That’s The Bag I ’m In,” the Hamilton Streetcar’s “Invisible People,” the Who’s “The Good’s Gone” (from an Italian Who tribute album called Who Are Them) and the Thirteenth Floor Elevators’ “Tried to Hide.” “What we try to do is find the most obscure song we can find, one that not many people have ever heard,” Dickey says. “The best example would be a song on our last album called ‘The Woods’ — people would come up to us and say, ‘That’s a great song that you wrote,’ and we’d say, ‘It’s 30 years old.’ ” r'The latest album shows the Overcoat maturing without forsaking its roots. “A lot of the so-called (new) ’60s bands have turned heavy 1Bud, Bud Light, Bud Dry A L L NIGHT LONG 990Domestic Beers Juan's has lunch specials every day. Come try them all! - T u a n ’S \3 CANTINA 855 S. Rural Great Food & Good Value University TemPe 966-1914 Terrace 10:30 a.m.-12 a.m. W eekdays; 10:30 a.m.-2 a.m. F r i & Sat. M S m " U ta m I’m like, ‘Okay, it’s poetry then,’ ” she laughed. “There’s a lot of humor (in my poetry) — just because I’m a humorous person. I tend to see the funny part of something,” McCann adds. “That seems to always come out first for me.” Originally, MeCann says she never intended her material to be considered poetry, adding that the word poetry “excludes so many people.” “A lot people just automatically turn-off when they hear the word poetry. But my stuff’s very universal,” she adds. But McCann says she cannot see isolating herself from radio forever, adding that leaving KUKQ was one of the most difficult: decisions she has ever made. But extenuating Circumstances dealing with her family provided no other alternative. “There was no tragedy. Nobody was dying or anything. It was just something that I had to do,” she says. metal,” she says. “It’s pretty depressing.” The band recently completed a video for “The Mummy,” which has been scheduled for a mid-to-late November airing oh MTV. “They’ll probably put it on (the alternative music show) 120 Minutes because that’s where they put the video we made last year,” Dickey says, alluding to the Overcoat’s debut video, “Thirteen Ghosts.” Dickey says the Overcoat’s future plans could include a European tour and a live album, as well as continued local shows in Phoenix, Tucson and Los Angeles. The follow-up to Three Chords and a Cloud of Dust! is already in the works. “We’ve already made some demos — we’ve recorded five songs and are working on some others. We’ll probably start recording again in the spring.” Dickey adds that the group is happy with its current record company. “Every band wants to be on a major label, if only because they can provide the money that will allow you to do what you really want to do. “But if we have to stay on an independent label, I hope it will be Dionysus because they’re based on the West Coast and can give us more support.” m WM m W i? / 1 . m m Tempe's Newest Upscale Niteclub mm m m C h a n g in g H mÜ Ü a FRIDAY NIGHTS ands BOOKSTORE Browse through our 3 floors of: -V 4 • New & U sed B ooks * • C a le n d a rs & C a rd s • • B ooks on C assette • S e ll o r T r a d e I ■ your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. MHH Looking for Student Publications? SA TU RD A Y M U » i t M J W ine, W ell & Drafts 7*8 p.m . 25« m 8-9 p.m. 5j&te Pnsgs SfeleJires .IW jv , Page 21 Friday, November 8 , 199t M ___ _ S--T H in a H i a a i i v i Ü _. . . ___________________ Pr*' THERE AR E TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMT. A nd they’re both repre­ sented by the insignia you wear as a member o f the Army N u rse. Corps. The caduceus on the left ] means you’re part of a health care j system in which educational and | career advancement are the rule, not the exception. The gold bar! on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. Ifyou’te earn­ ing a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, PO. Box 3219, Warminster, PA 18974-9845. Or call toll free: 1-800-USA-ARMY, ext. 438. ám ARMYNURSECORPS. BEALLYOUCANBE: Classifieds A N N O U N C EM EN TS^ APARTMENTS CHRISTIAN ROCKERS! New newslet­ ter ju st for you! W rite: Thunder, PO Box 8544, Scottsdale, Arizona 85252. IN T ER N A T IO N A L L E A D E R SH IP Seminar. Cultural and Educational Trip to USSR one week. Late October and Mid November. Most expenses paid, op­ portunity not to be missed. For infor­ mation, call 967-0811. $200 O FF W alk to ASU. Q uiet, s p a c io u s , 1 b e d ro o m , fu rn ish e d , A/C, p oolside apartm ents. $280/month George Ann Apts 894-2935 W h at’s N ew win do wonders for your image Buy • Sell • Trade N IC E 2 bedroom , w alk to ASU/Downtown $370 pool, BBQ, laun­ dry, microwave 1014 Farmer 966-4797. Forest & University 966-2300 TA K E OVER my lease. Sublet at re­ duced rate. Second semester at the Com­ mons on Apache: Denise 829-0933. LOVE T O dance? Hate the bar scene? You'll love the all singles dances, Fri­ days a t be tte r valley h o tels. $4.50. Recorded information 946-4086. U N FURNISHED ONE bedroom du­ plex, 10 minutes from ASU, graduate students preferred, $265 utilities paid except electricity. 964-^352. RUMMAGE SALE Sixth Annual W inter Rummage Saleone day only: Saturday, November 9, 7am-3pm. Come to the Newman Center C ourtyard, corner o f U niversity and C o lleg e and brow se th ro u g h item s priced 50? t$50. SINGLES' EVENTS,advice,personalsArizdna Single Scene newspaper. Free sample, 990-2669. Super Quiet Faculty/Staff/Graduate Students L o v e ly 1 b e d ro o m apartment. All amenities. Plus beautiful pool and covered parking. $370. H id d e n G le n A W V R T M E N T j^ ~ ^ 8 1 8 W. 3 rd S t., Tem pe (H a rd y & 2n d S treet) 2 BEDROOM furnished/unfurnished duplex, laundry, pool, south Scottsdale, reasonable rent, utilities. 941-8049. 9 6 8 -8 1 8 3 2 BEDROOM , 1 bath, cute red brick duplex apartm ent w ith fenced yard, quiet neighborhood, east of ASU. Good deal $385 plus special. Call Jeannie and Brian 929-0382. Decorator Apt. Apartment Locating Service GREAT MOVE-IN special. Cute, dean, u n fu rn ish e d one bedroom . C lose to ASU/America W est. Other amenities. 894-6468. NEWLY DECORATED 2 bedroom, 1 bath, no pets. 1857 East U niversity. 961-1798. HOMESFORRENT^ COUPLE ON sabatical looking for tena n t/h o u se s itte r for tw o year term . W ould prefer graduate student family with handy person. Pleasant house with nice yard, four blocks from Gammage. Negotiable. 967-3391. TOWNHOMESfCONDOS F O R R E N T ^^^. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath townhouse, Mc­ Clintock & University; $525. Covered parking, 899-9050. LAKES CONDO, Rural/Baseline area, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, spacious, garage, washer/dryer. $525 monthly. 820-4)056. LUXURY 2. bedroom townhouse, Rural/Broadway area, energy efficient, all appliances, double garage. $750/month. Corona Realty, 390-1028. 2 FEMALES for furnished 3 bedroom condo, pool, washer, dryer, air. Near canyua. 953-1159. LARGE 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, close to ASU, $330 includes utilities. Share w ith c o n sid e ra te roomm ates*. C all 990-4751 ■■■• ; - Roommate matching service also available. 437-1048 W alk to ASU. Spacious 2 bedroom apts. A/C, furnished or unfurnished available. From $ 39 5/m o nth . B e au tifu l p o o l a re a , la u n d ry facilities available. FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS 1224 EAST LEMON 894-2935 1 block from campus •1 BED $365 •2 BED $500 ™— ■ 966-8540 437-1048 FR E E U TILITIE S ! BEAUTIFUL NEW large 1 and 2 bed­ room s. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry room, 1 block south of University on 8th S tre e t. C ape Cod A partm ents, 968-5238. Terrace Road Apartments 950 S. Terrace CLEAN ROOMMATE wanted. Share 3 b e d ro o m h o m e w ith 2 students. 1/2/ASU. $225 plus 1/3.968-0253, $200 OFF! 894-1041 Beautifully furnished, huge 1 bedroom, 1 bath; 2 bedroom, 2 bath apart­ ments. All bills paid. Cable T V , heat ed pool, and spacious laundry facilities. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t . St op by today! W e pay you S S S to use usl S o u th B a n k A p ts . 1007 W. 1st St., Tempe (1st St. & H ardy) E N JO Y T H E Q U IE T ! 1/2 B lock From Campus RENTALSHARING^ ASU AREA, studio, 1 and 2 bedrooms fo r re n t. $260 and up. 967-4908 or 966-8838. Secluded 2 bed apartment Id e a l fo r th e se rio u s s tu d e n t or fa c u lty m em ber looking fo r a quiet home. All amenities included. APARTMENTS LOOKING FOR an easygoing room­ mate to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apart­ ment on Universtiy & Hardy. $218 plus 1/2 utilities. Marcee 968-0713. MASTER BEDROOM and bath avail­ able in K iw anis Park house, Female grad student preferred. 10 minute bike to ÀS U. $228 plus 1/3 utilities. Call M eg, 83fr-7667. M ASTER BED RO O M /B A TH . Nonsmoker female. Washer/dryer, pool, jacuzzi, fireplace, furnished. 68th Street and T hom as, 10 m inutes form ASU. $307 ♦ 1/2 utilities. 941-9174. ROOMMATE WANTED, female nonsmoker, own bedroom and bath. Pool, Jacuzzi, volleyball, close to campus, leave message 921-2920. ROOMSFORRENT^ 1 BLOCK south of campus. Have to see to believe. 1420 South Collège. Alan 731-9251 . •; ,:y ' BEA U TIFU L TOW NHOUSE, 2 bed­ room, 2 bath, 1,600 square feet, Hayden/Chaparral, w asher/dryer, covered parking, pool, storage, fully furnished. $300 plus utilities. 970-2723, leave message. ROOM IN house. $200 includes utili­ ties. Share use o f house. Pool available. Near campus. Call Kathy 829-7031. Apache Terrace HOMES FOR SALE 1123 E. Apache (1Ä T CALL US TODAY 968-6383 &ûl!!0 biô:Xœts I palmas • Student Living • 1 & 2 Bedrooms • Great A m enities Less than 1 Mile From ASU 1249 B. Spence, Tempe 829-9607 Buy of the Week 4 bed house, pool, spa, 2,500 sq. f t Near ASU. $184,000. B o b B u llo c k R e a lty E xecutives _______ 998-2992 TOWNHOMES/CONDOS F O R ^ U — _ ZERO DOW N for 2 bedroom, 2 bath Questa Vida unit with fireplace and red tile roofs. Save over $20,000 at only $54,000 and stop renting! Greg Askins, Realty Executives, 966-0016. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call 965-6731 today to place your ad! m\ Page 22 State Press Frida^NovembwajWI^ REAL ESTATE ALUMNI STUDENTS PARENTS FURNITURE m otorcyc^ B E D S- B RA N D new : T w in m attress/box $50, full $60, queen $90. Free delivery. 540-8785. HONDA ELITE 80cc. 1987 model 7400 miles, blue, good condition. $450/offer. Call Alex 935-6293. BLACK SOFA set $350, black dinette $135; black coffee table set $85, mat­ tress set $75. More in Southwest colors. 352-6067. SC O O TE R W ITH pep! H onda 250 E lite , ru n s p erfectly , body dam age drops price to $650.784-9603. BICYCLES B U Y IN G or S E L L IN G a FUTON with frame Townhouse or C ondo near ASU? D U RA C E CANNONDALE bicycle, red, SR 2000,58 centimeters, excellent condition, $850.954-6429 or 956-3661. $139 D o ttb le -s iz e , T t h i c k TRAVEL Futon Factory Outlet 7 8 9 -9 7 4 7 C a ll the ASU CONDO SPECIALIST! COUCHES: WE have his -n- hers, want ours. Dual reclining pillow back, brown $150. Beige with oak trim $100. Call 460-0205 after 5pm. GARY GREENACRE DOUBLE DRESSER/MIRROR and 2 n ig h tsia n d s, $200. S ingle b ed , box spring/frame and headboard, $50. Pad­ ded oak bar/2 matching stools, $200. R ow ing machine, $65. Exercise bike, $25. All good condition. 967-5617 or 829-0527. 483-3333 RE/M AX Excalibur MOVING SALE. Students, need quality furniture cheap? Lamps, leather recliner, solid wood desk. Must sell. Brian, 596-1065. Realty M O B IL g H O M E S ^ COMPUTERS NO MONEY down!!! 1982 Dartmouth mobile home, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths; cen­ tral air conditioning; great South Moun­ tain view in quiet park. Will discuss ad­ ding in 1982 Z car to deal!!! Call Vada (202)387-6513 or Doug (602)244-9609. L A P T O P 286, IBM c om patible, 12 megaHertz, zero wait states, CGA dis­ play, 1 meg RAM, 40 meg harddrive, 1.44 floppy« 7 pounds, carrying case, new with warranty, must sell, first $899 cash offer gets i t 966-4909. , DIVORCE SALE: very clean '86 Bron­ co, antique furniture, bunkbeds, guitar, bikes &. more. Fabulous bargains, must sell, 929 East W ildhourse. 963-2113. D ates: Friday thru Sunday, 8-5. » Find it in the Classifieds . MISCELLANEOUS FOR S A L E _ ^ _ _ C A R ST E R E O eq u ip m en t. K icker speaker box $250. Pioneer 400 watt amp $250. Pioneer 200 watt amp $100. Pioneer Equalizer $50. All prices nego­ tiable. Call Cory at 921-0584. CORPORATE ABUSE - Powerful new book defining corporate abuse including sexual harrassment in the workplace. A must for every student preparing for a corporate career. Local writer and ASU graduate. $20. G eorge Anerson, Box 27721,Tempe, Arizona 85285-7721. 40% O FF Health Food •Vitamin Supplements •Herbs •Food •Cosmetics 10-20% off recorders Super Nutrition N W Comer Hayden • Chaparral 1 Block N. o f Camelback JEWELRY A LW AYS B U Y IN G je w e lry o f all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South M ill A venue, Tem pe C enter, 968-6074. CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Ave­ nue Jewelers, 414 South Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967/ A U T O M O B IL E S _ ^ 1972 SEMI automatic Bug, mechani­ cally sound. New struts, shocks, brake pads, etc... Anna 829-0102. $1,700. 1979 RED VW Bug convertible, 48,000 miles. E xcellent condition. Stored 4 years, recent tune up.;$7,195f 831-5790. 1988 PONTIAC LeMans, red, AM/FM caseete, 5-speed, 39,000 mile$, excellent condition. $4,000/best offer. 878-8405. 1990 NISSAN S entra air, AM/FM cas­ sette, $8000 o r best offer. 1-800-4841025, access #7386. CA SH PA ID fo r your vehicle, running/not. Free tow /notary. C all any* time. 921-3048. CASH TODAY for youir d e a n used car or truck. Call Al, 267-1820. *86 EL IT E 80« ex ce lle n t cond itio n , 6,800 miles, red. $650 negotiable. Call Brian 596-1065. MARTIAL ARTS and self defense sup­ plies. Save St Special inatructor rates. Leave message, 545-8736. '89 HONDA Elite 50 cc. Excellent con­ dition. $500 negotiable. 784-0498. STEREO/SPEAKERS- SONY receiver with Bose 360 seriesü, S375. Microsoft Word version 4.0, $50. Call 921-2892. 1991 HONDA CBR 600 F2. Red/white. B ra n d new - less th a n 450 m iles. $5200/offcr. Contact John- 423-5122. CHARGE IT! YOU CAN use your Visa, MasterCard or American Express to place your classified ad over the phone ($6 minimum credit card charge)! ( i l l 965-6731 today (personal ads excluded)! State Press Classifieds really w o rk -le t them work for you now!! AMERICA WESX. round-trip nonstop to Kansas City for Thanksgiving. Leave 11/26, return 12/1. $222.497-9393. AMERICA WEST, round-trip to JFK non-stop for Thanksgiving. Leave late 11 /2 6 , re tu rn la te 11/30. M ale, $275/offer 829-3759. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places USA. Also worldwide. I also b uy tra n sfe ra b le Coupons. 968-7283. 1991 YAMAHA FZR 600, perfect con­ dition, low miles, with helmet, lock & four months insurance. Need money, $4,500/offer. 998-0703. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE MOVIE O Send S.A.S.E. fo r current listing: AD REPS WANTED! The State Press is hiring advertising sales representatives. We're looking for energetic people who are interested in preparing for a future in the advertising/marketing field. The ideal candi­ dates will be dependable, dedicated, selfesteemed, self-motivated, able to work . independently, have sharp communi­ cation skills, b e som ew hat creative, enjoy a challenge, have a vehicle and be graduating no earlier than D ecember 1992. (Freshmen, sophomores and ju ­ niors strongly encouraged to apply.) If you have the desire to give yourself the best possible chance of securing a topnotch position upon graduation, this is a job for you. The position includes sell­ ing, designing and creating advertising strategies for local retail businesses. In­ terested in joining a great team? Call Jackie Eldridge today, 965-6555. Let's talk! ■ '; . : AIRLINE Now hiring to fill many entry level po­ sitions. Starting salary range to $24,000 with travel benefits. (303)441-2455. APPOINTMENT S etters: g u a ra n te e ★ com m ission + bonus + benefits + vacation. Experi­ enced only. Call 350-9518. HAYDEN TRAVEL Discount prices on vacation packages. Lowest airline fares. Free delivery. Call 759-5402. C R U IS E J O B S PHOENIX TO Dallas/Ft Worth, roundtrip ticket Delta Airlines, 11/27-12/1. $200.894-1384, Paul. PHOENIX TO New Y ork K ennedy. Round-trip« TWA -December 30-January 6. $200. Kate, 921-8034. for America W est gift certificates or Southwest coupons. Leave message 461 * 0054. Mobile 1-602/376-7876. ROUND-TRIP, PHOENIX/BOSTON, nonstop, 11/20-11/30. $280 firm. Fe­ male. 585-4242. * TICKETS TO Chicago or South Bend, Indiana. M ale or female. Leaving No­ vember 28, returning December 1. Call 831-0911 or leave message. TW O ROUND-TRIP tickets, PhoenixO klahom a C ity , O klahom a, 12/2012/29, $210 e ac h . C all G ene (602)299-9588. U .S.S.R.-TOUR -M OSCOW , $ t. Pe­ tersburg, 5 golden ring Cities $1,999, 4/25-5/7 Dr. Axford 965-2200. HELP WANTED_ g e n e r a l $5-50-$6.25/HOUR Guaranteed! Need to abut making more money right now? Neodata is looking for mature, dependable'students to fill several part-tim e evening telephone sales representative positions. $5.50$6.25/honr guaranteed, depending on number o f hours worked per week, plus a commission structure that will allow you to earn up to $94iour. Neodata off­ ers a close, convenient location, flexible scheduling, paid tra in in g and a fan work environment Qualified applicants need only possess a clear speaking voice and good communication skills: Call' today for an interview, 967-0066, ask for Sbaron Peterson. Neodata, Broadway A Mill. (EOE). AAAA EXCITING perfume-gift shop needs friendly, energetic C hristm as sales staff. Part-time, all shifts. Apply at Potions and Lotions, Fiesta Mali cart. ADVERTISERS! REACH ASU, ASU West A M C C is through the State Hess! ★ H O LID A Y C A S H * Com pletely autom ated donor plasmapheresis. Discover how easy, safe and fast it is to: E a rn $ 3 0 + a w M k ! while donating much needed plasma. Mention tt»w ad for a $5 bonus on your first donation (M o n d a y -S a tu rd a y ). O n ly center in Valley paying: $10- 1st donation, $20- 2nd donation in same week. Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 South Rural Road, Tempe 8 9 4 -2 2 5 0 Cruise lin e s N o w Hiring. Earn $2,000+ per month working on cruise ships. Holiday, Summer arid F u ll-tim e em p lo y m en t a vailable. For Employment Pro­ gram call 1-206-545-4155extC211 COMMUNITY DEV. Community D evelopm ent Specialist, $16,000-$22,000. Requires knowledge o f urban planning, econom ic devel­ opment, market feasibility studies, residential/affordable housing. Mac PC ex­ perience necessary. Forw ard resum e and 3-5 page w riting sam ple by N o­ vember 15: Urban Coalition West, 4645 North 12th Street, Suite 250, Phoenix, Arizona 85014. HELP NEEDED to serve Thanksgiving d in n e r. $8 per hour. C all L ynn CL: home 443-1375, work 996-4411. HOLLYWOOD CASTING referals for Arizona/California film and movie pro­ jects. CEEC Entertainment, 274-6362. JOB OFFER for spring sem ester. 25 year o ld quadriplegic A S U stu d en t needs personal care assistance, weekday m orn in g s, 1-2 ho u rs p e r m orning, $8/h0ur. Stephen 784-0538. ^ UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER M ovie P oster Co. P.O. Box 55632 Sherm an Oaks, CA 91413 HELP WANTED -GENERAL CHILD CARE attendant needed in our Tempe office. One to three small child­ ren. Hours: M onday, Wednesday, Fri­ day- 8am to noon. $4.25/hour. C all Cindy a t 829-8741. QUICK CASH M O T O R C Y £ ^ S ±^ 4 2 3 -0 1 2 0 AIRFARE FOR $99 round-trip to Ha­ waii, Florida, Bahamas, New Orleans, Atlantic City, Mexico, Las Vegas, Ja­ maica, Colorado, Los Angeles. Open date travel certificates good for 4 years, one week minimal hotel stay required, 30 days advanced reservations required Limited offer call travel agent, 1-800927-9605. ON E ROUND-TRIP ticket to Omaha, Nebraska. Leaves December 19, returns January 5. Dawn, 921-9158, leave mes­ sage.______ ' G A R A G E S A LE ^__ Authentic Posters Only $12.00 each Top Quality Great Prices Fast Service ^ s TELEMARKETERS •$5/hr. •N o high-piessnie sales •Worte hrs.: 4pm-9pm, M -F Sat: 8:30am-2pm Call Anytime! 829-3910 MAKE BUCKS! Need to make some extra cash? Sell ad­ vertising for the award-w inning Sun Devil Spark Yearbook during Christ­ mas break. Begin training in November an d 're a c h sales goals by Christm as! Earn 15% commission. Must have ve­ hicle. This is an excellent opportunity for business/marketing majors to obtain preprofessional experience as well as a great addition to any resume! Sales ex­ perience not necessary but helpftil. I f you are outgoing, friendly, dependable and goal-oriented, please call Gwen Lawrenz to set up an interview. 965-6555. N A TIO N A L NEW SPAPER carriers (12) needed, 22-34 hours a week, very early A.M. hours, will train, own de­ pendable auto, good pay, call for interview 320-3675, PART-TIME, NEED responsible indi­ vid u als to d is trib u te A rts F e stiv a l posters in Tempe and Phoenix area for the 1991 Old Town Tempe Fall Festival o f the Arts. For more information, call Francesca at 967-4877. RECEPTIONIST With good phone and office skills, great personality wanted for local video pro­ duction company. $5/hour. 966-0523. STATE PRESS Classifieds work. Call 965-6731 for rates and information ! HELP WANTED -GENERAL RESTAURANTS/ BARS SH O E SH IN ERS w anted $6-$ 10 an hour. Full or part time evenings, flexible hours 336-8202. SPARKY’S PIZZA Inside help and delivery people wanted immediately! Drivers average $6-$10 an hour. F le x ib le sc h e d u le s. C all 894-6666. WESTERN RESERVE Courtside Cafe now hiring for foil or part timé posi­ tio n s AM /PM . Free m em bership for good w ork«. Contact Mark, 2140 East B roadw ay R oad, Tem pe. E.O .E. No phone calls please. WRESTLERS WANTED. Athleticallyinclined, 18 or over, 110 to 160 pounds to work part-time as pro-style wrestling workout partners. NO experience nec­ essary, $8 per hour. Send name, ad­ dress, phone, age, height and weight to: W. Dunn, 4409 North 16th Street, Suite A130* Phoenix, 85016. H E L PW A N T C D 45^E S DELIVERY PEOPLE, need economy car or motorcycle and insurance. Flexi­ ble shifts, cash paid daily. 894-2822. GREÁT EARNINGS F le x ib le p art-tim e sh ifts t o fit your schedule, 9am to 9pm. Telemarketing popular dinner club for T he Buttes Re­ sort Tempe office, cash paid daily, no experience necessary. M ust be upbeat with pleasant phone voice. Call Chuck, 894-2822. IMMEDIATE SALES help needed, full and part-time positions. Must have ex­ perience, proper attire, own transpor­ tation. $5/hour. Please call 254^4100. MARKETING M an a g e m e n t tra in in g . L oo k in g for highly motivated, ambitious key lead­ ers. Work on your own time. Great op­ portunity for the college student, will train. Earn extra income. Call for in­ terview: 827-0408. NEW INVESTMENT banking firm ih Arizona. Willing to train young, enthu­ siastic people to become leading stock­ brokers in the Valley. Will trade stocks in the NYSE & OTC markets. Prefer college degree but personal interview deciding factor. Call David Kramer at Franklin-Lord, 423-7773. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL PART-TIME CASHIER needed at deal­ ership. Experience helpful. Monday 76, Tuesday-Friday 7-4. Please apply at 2412 North Scottsdale Road. HELP WANTED-FOOD S E R V IC r ^ _ ^ HAPPY HOUR All Mixed Drinks & Beer 1/2 P r i c e ! 60 oz. Pitchers $225 Rum & Coke. Vodka Lemonade $ 1 25 1/2 Price Munchies Frid ay 3pm -6pm 1301 E. U n iv e rs ity FR E ¡¿0g¡yF0U N [) GREY KITTY adopt. Beautiful grey & white stripes, very friendly female spad­ ed, indoor. Call 926-9169» LOST 11/1: Puppy, Rural/Broadway. M edium-sized, short hair, male, beige with white paws, wearing a yellow col­ lar. 968-2546. LOST: B IG brown envelope with Girl S cout C alendars. Please return, my Brownies are saving for camp! Reward! Call Lisa,947-5901. PERSONALS BUSTER'S RESTAURANT is now hir­ ing experienced food servers. Please apply in person: 8320 N orth Hayden, Scottsdale. 951-5850. "WEVE GOT what it takes!" To the most excellent Homecoming team AKE, AX, XQ, £O E, ILL, Fiji luv the women o f Alpha Phi. •'/••• ; JOHNNY ROCKETS A DOZEN red long-stem roses deliv­ ered, $20. C all A fter Hours Flowers, P art-tim e, fa ll-tim e, day/night shift cashier/foantain people. Fashion Square Mali, 423-1505. RED ROBIN’S TEMPE has immediate openings for experienced w ait staff & cooks. Red Robin, 1375 West Elliot, Price Chib Plaza._________ STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers and dinner bussers. Apply in person; 5001 East Washington betw een 1 0 :3 0 -1 1 :30am and after l;30pm Y O U SAY it. w e display it! Only in the State Press Classifieds! SPO R TS & W INGS 12 screens W ood sh ed ... ' . A SU M EN swimmers: Hope rubbing yourselves felt good. Next tim e w ipe that white goo off your chests. It looks ■ bad ./" ATTENTION GREEKS Bungee Jump­ in g discounts are available for A SU stu d en ts. O v er T h e E d g e B ungee 967-1744. , BELLY W ATSON, Happy 2 1 st Birth­ day! I hope you have a great weekend! Love, Alisha CARRIE HAUPERT is 21 on Saturday. DEAR ASU faculty and staff- Sigma Kappa thanks you for all your help hope you have a great weekend. RESTAURANTS/ BARS 4 satellites . 894-&19. II Northwest corner of Dobson & Univ 844-S H E D We show all Bears, Vikings & Packers games. D EK E S A N D ATA: T h a n k s for the happy hour Tuesday. Let's do it again sometime soon! Love, AAA DELTA CHI: The ladies of AAA want to thank you for an excellent western even­ ing last Friday. RESTAURANTS/ BARS ~ ¡ÉESrfWHSR «*3 d n h w tÄ Ä W Ä -’fi WB o * 1 m JL • w J U j l l l U f Sparky's Pizza W ÊÊÊÊÊÊr n a e v n i B r n A 4 .< n n n n •I" 2 Subs " f 16” Pizza I 2 Sodas 1 Pizza $3.99 J. - $ - 9 L J J 4 .9 9 12” Sut* Press PERSONALS DO YOU think you have the stuff to be a CD A m em ber? Fi nd o u t at our next meeting Wednesday, 11/13 in Gila 214 M .U .3pm sharp. A1 JIM: Looking forward to tonightFormal will be a blast! But why dress warm at 3:00? Love, Tara. GAMMA PH! Carrie Haupert I hope your 21st B-day is as fun as you helped mine to be, you deserve it! Happy Birth­ day, love H. Alyceson. GAMMA PHI Mom, Carrie H, your die b e s t' H appy Birthday. Thanks for the long walks and for picking up after me. Love always Cali. Page 23 PERSONALS SHE'S BAAAAACK! MGT463. Execu te. D on't h e sitate . A lm ost tim e to graduate. Naked ladies and more, S IG EP- the seren a d in g was great! w e're looking forward to Saturday's barbeque. See you then! Love, ADR. SIGMA PI Matt, thanks for being there w hen I need you. Som e things never change! Deltalove and mine, Michelle. I K ANN you're the best mom ever! Thanks for everything. Love your Dot Jen. TYPING/ WORD PROCESSING TYPING/ WORD PROCESSING C REA TIV E TY PIN G , term p ap ers, resum es, essays, laser p rin te r, re a ­ sonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. ____________ OK. ASU... Where do you go to get something typeset? S T U D E N T PU BLICA TIO N S right here on campus!! m >B TARA J.- It all starts this after­ noon a t 3:00. So come that time, be sure to stick to o u r theme, "Who Cares!"c Love ya, Jim. In the basement o f Matthews Center lies a complete Graphics Services Department where versatile professionals are eager to help with your special projects. I K MEGAN: good luck Sat! W e are very proud o f you! Love always, the gang! D E SIG N • LAYOUT TYPESETTING • PASTEUP • CAM ERA W O R K » R E PR O D U C T IO N S I l l MINDY Sue- Congratulations on Panheilehic President! You are awe­ some! Smack) Sigma love, Donna Sue. Call D O N N A BOW RING Production Manager TH E DÈLTA G am m a's are psyched about Homecoming 1991 ! T H E T A D E L T S, K appa S igs, and Gamma Phi's thanks for a great happy hour! Love, the Alpha Chi's. 965-7572 RATES RATES State PfeSS Matthews TO ALL the studs. Y.I.T.B.O.S. W e 're all in the basem ent of M atth ew s C enter! S ta te Press Sun Devil Spark Yearbook Hayden's Ferry Review U N ER AD RATES: ADOPTION ADOPT We know this is a difficult time for you. May we help by promising to give all th e lo v e. W armth and s ec u rity you would want yew new baby to have. Will pay your medical/legal expenses. Call Judy or Hunter collect anytime. <718) 472-1344. SERVICES Student Handbook 965-7572 GREEKS: COME join in with the floats, parade, and festival! IN TH E end only one team will remain. We know A.S.U. will rock the staduim S a tu rd a y n ig h t L u v th e w om en of Alpha Phi. IT’S DEVILTIME!!! ' Homecoming 91 Street Festival tonight following the parade in Old Town Tem­ pe. Be títere for rides, street perform­ ers, food and live music featuring Walt Richardson and the M omingstar Band for Sun Devil Fun. C ongrats to Zuly Naegele, Richard Ramos, and commit­ te e Great job! IT'S DEVILTIME!!! Homecoming *91 parade tonight on Mill A venue a t 7 :3 0 p m. Jo in th e G rand Marshall Joe Garagiola, student organ­ izations, floats, the Sun Devil Marching Band, Homecoming Royalty, and more fo r a grow ing tradition. C ongrats to LaD an H elsing and com m ittee for a great job! JULIE SHAW girl Of my dreams and creator o f beauty will you be my date at formal. It will be "A Night To Remem­ ber" love, KA Marvin. K K F JAYM E Happy 20th Birthday! Only one more year! Love always, your Dbt,Darci. LITTLE CAESAR'S at University and Hardy now delivers! Call us for deliv­ ery on the double 966-4181. M e l i s s a - a n o t h e r formal?!?! This time, it's mine. So sit back, relax, a wal­ low away with me into a night o f pure excitement Love James. PIKE, SIGMA N u and Kappa- Get out those Boxers and Blazers and well see ya after the game love, the Alpha Chi's. PIKES - WE had a great timé last night! ft was nice to meet you. Love SDT. PIKES: WAY to play last Sunday in the AAA so ftb all tournam ent. We had a g re a t tim e ! D e lta lo v e , M ich e lle , Michelle, and Marni. RUM OR HAS it- A lav alier's to be given at the Delta Sig formal tonight... Things that make you go# "Hrnmm?" 965-6731 C lassifieds B^ | rJ E L E C T R O L Y S IS— PER M A N EN T hair removal* Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discounts. C all for more information: 969-6954. T ALENT NEEDED Movie extras, television, commercials, voice-overs, etc. Call for an interview, 957-7434. G entle T ouch Hair R em oval »Bodywaxing* G entle organic wax rem oves h a ir from legs, arm e, chest, etc. .01 ) ' back, . »Electrolysis» 1L , Perm anent h a ir rem oval, fre e . / consultation, beensed electroiogist. Private. Confidential. A • P lu s Electrolysis GKnic 340 W. U niversity #21, M e tt 962-6490 ' H E A ^ H A N D F jT N E S S LOSE EXTRA pounds before Christ­ mas vacation. Safe and affordable. No contracts and no pills. 100% nutritional. S ara-831-5790. TYPING/WORD RlTt 46H 15 words o r less $ 3 .5 0 p e r issue (1 -4 issues) $ 3 .2 5 per issue (5 -9 issues) $ 3 ,0 0 p e r issue (1 0+ issues) 15$ each ad ditional w ord. N o ab breviatio ns. T b a firs t 2 words a re capitalized. No bold face o r centering, no type size, changes. P ersonals (15 w ord» o r lose) a re o n ly $2.00. You con aleo a d d G reek sym bols to y o u r p erson al fo r o n ly SO t p o r so t (3 sym bols m ax. p e r eat). SEM I-DISPLAY RATES: 15 words o r less $ 4 .5 0 p e r issue (1 -4 issues) $ 4 .2 5 p e r issue (5 -9 issues) $ 4 .0 0 p e r issue (1 0+ issues) 15$ each ad ditional w o rd T h e first w ord(s) a re 10-po int bolded, centered type (1 5 ch aracters m ax,). R e s t o f ad is regular justified lin er ad type. - C LA S S IFIE D DISPLAY RATES: (p e r colum n in ch , p e r insertion) 1 tim e: $ 8 .5 0 p.c.i. 2 -5 tim es: $ 7 .7 5 p.c.i. 6 + tim es: $ 7 .3 5 p.c.i. A ll classified display ad s have borders. T yp e can be bold face, centered, etc. An averag e o f 15 -20 words can fit in one colum n inch. HO W TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: Hi person: C ash , ch eck (w ith g u aran tee c a rd ), V isa, M a sterC ard o r A m erican E xpress. W e 're lo c a te d , in th e b a s e m e n t o f M atth ew s C enter, Room 4 6 H . O ffice hours a re 8a m -5 p m , M onday-Friday. P ersonals a ré accep ted In person w ith s tu d en t l.D . . P R O C E ggN G ^^ B y phone: . A+ TYPING/WORD processing service avaiable, plus English tutoring and cus­ tom resumes. Call Nancy, 964-7501. ACCURATE, EX PER IEN C ED typing/word processing. Word Perfect 5.1. Reports, resumes, etc. Laura, 820-0305. P aym en t w itti V isa, M asterC ard o r Am erican Express only. $ 6 m inim um on all phone orders. Personals a re n o t accep ted o ver the p ho ne! B y M ail: Send your ad (w ith paym ent) to: State Press Classifieds RESUMES $29.95 1-page resume, 10 pies, 10 blank sheets, 10 enveloped & 1 MAC diskette. 24-hour delivery. A L P H A G R A P H IC S , 122 E. Univeisity, Tempe 968-7821 D e p t 15 02 A rizona S tate University Tem pe, A Z 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 if sending a personal ch eck, p lease in clud e yo u r ch eck g u arantee card num ber.) Personate are n o t accep ted through the m ail. HO W TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: L in er ad s m ust b e can celled b efore noon, 1 business d ay prior to publication. No refunds w ill b e given. A PA /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D typing/word processing. Need it fast? CaU Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186. CLO SEST TO ASU. A ccurate, fast, reasonable word processing With laser p rin te r. G rap h ics. S tu d e n t/fac u lty w elcom e. A utom ated S e c re ta ry , 829-8854. STATE PRESS ERRORS: C heck your ad the F IR S T day it runs. C all 96 5-67 31 with any corrections before noon. T h e S tate P ress is on ly responsible fo r th e first d ay th e ad runs incorrectly. C orrected ads w ill be exten ded on e d a y o r cred it w ill be held in th e C lassifieds O ffice fo r on e (1 ) year. Changes called in afte r the first day will not qualify for a make-good. M ake-g o o d s w ill not exceed th e co st o f the original ad . RUNDLE’S LIQUORS & MKT. LETTER QUALITY word processing for your typing needs. APA/MLA, fast turn aro u n d . $1.5 0 /u p . R oxanne, 437-8830. New location! New Location 1324 W. University (Just east of Priest) RESUMES, REPORTS, presentation, more. Call Documents, Etc,, 961-7924. Quick turnaround time. Ask for Linda. Sutter Home Wht. Zinfandel.... $4.93 Natural Beer-12 pk....................$4.93 TECHNICAL WORD processing with graphics and formulas, dissertations, theses, resumes, letters, free pickup/deli very. 961-4443. Volska Vodka 750ml................. $5.96 Used Playboy Magazines-........ $1.25 Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, MISCELLANEOUS Wines, Over 40 Imported Beers 9 6 7 -9 0 7 9 IM iS S ilil 'lIliiB Ä I because we do. :: : : THETA DELTS- The Alpha Chi's are ready to rage Friday night! AXA THOS: just a note to say that yes, you did win the bet! Congrats oh your new job ! Maybe you can pay for all of my parking tickets now! Love ya, R ent FREE CATALOG: Unique Gifts Amer­ ica, Gary G. Enterprises, 7206 W estwood Drive, Tamarac, Florida 33321 S S E S S 5S S S H S 95E 9E S 33S S S 9S S S G W STEVE. Good news- trojans now com e in extra large! Who's down wit 114? Yeah, you know us! Looking for Student Publications? M j^ELW NEOyS_ TYPING/ WORD PROCESSING : i A V / V ; . j : : : : : : ¿(*?:•':: : : V'.•{•X.*': STATE PRESS Ï3 MATTHEWS CENTERi iiflÜüSI ¡ « i l i l S B l i PUBLISHED EVERY w e e k d a y M o r n in g ; Your Individual Horoscope : Frances Drake IF Y O U W O U LD LIKE TO SPO N SO R THE H O R O SC O PES, PLEASE C ALL 965-6555! FOR SATURDAY, NOVEM BER 9, 1991 A R IE S (Mar. 2 t to Apr. 19) Y ou'll have good news from a dis­ tance. Y ou're anxious to get going on a work project and will com e up with valuable ideas now. Avoid getting upset about trifles tonight. TA U R U S (Apr. 20 to M ay 20) Fortunate developments occur now affecting your financial picture. Take the initiative in romance. You w on't be disappointed. Accent fun and - leisure ' tonight. G E M IN I (May 21 to June 20) Work about the house should keep you happily occupied. You may be in­ v ite d to an e le g a n t g e t-to g e th e r. Benefits come through friends. Avoid petty bickering tonight. ’ CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Y ou'll meet with an important career opportunity now. Local travel proves romantic. Sports, exercise, and creative activity bring you contentment today. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Intuition is an asset for business inter­ ests, Y ou'll be busy shopping for the home. A lovely travel invitation arrives. Children give you reason to be proud. V IR G O (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Rise above those little things in life and you're sure to have good times now. Y ou're forceful, energetic, and self-e x -; pressive. Romance and travel are for­ tunate. LIBR A (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Behind-the-scenes* hours are devoted to money-making projects; A partner brings good news. Com m unications w ith others improve. D on’t secondguess yourself tonight. S C O R P IO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) . Y ou'll be the one hosting a party n o w .. Leadership qualities are to the fore. A lucky chance to improve income and Status comes today. Overlook a minor concern after dark, SA G IT TA R IU S (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Y ou'll certainly have good times now, but y ou'll also be doing im portant work on a business project. During evening hours, though, watch carelessness in speech. C A PR IC O R N V (Déç. 22 to Jan. 19) Benefits come through family. Visits w ith friends are also fa v o re d . Not everyone you meet today Shares your o u tlo o k on Hfe. R em em b e r to be tolerant/ • A Q UARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Partners are in agreement about the use o f joint funds now, but a small quar­ rel could occur w ith a friend oyer money. An optimistic attitude attracts benefits: PISC ES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Y ou're in tune with partners now and will have happy times together. An op­ portunity to get ahead may drop in your lap today. See the big picture. YOU BORN TODAY have a natural interest in public affairs and may be drawn to a political career. You dislike playing second fiddle and are happiest when in a position o f leadership. You have strong feelings and often seek an emotional outlet for them in creative work. You can succeed in research and also work well in partnership. Writing, psychology, and the theater are som e o f the fields which promise you fulfill­ ment, Birthdate of: Florence Chadwick, swim m er; Ed W ynn, com edian; and Tom W eiskopf, golfer. Copyright 1991 hy King Features Syndicale, Inc. Page 24 Friday, November 8.1991 Stateness 99