©Copyright, State Press, 1992 Tempe, Arizona Vol. 17 No. 2 Arizona State U niversity’s Sum m er W eekly Thursday, June 11,1992 As the nation gears up fo r another round o f presidential and congressional elections, women have arrived on the scene as new political players w ith a vengeance. Energized by a change in national agendas, angered by the Thomas-Hill controversy and motivated by the threat o f an anti-choice Supreme Court decision, women are sending a message to the w orld -— don’t underestimate the power o f a woman. B Y S O N IN A R O B E R TO A N D K R IS M A Y E S Flanked by an army of women fresh off the perception, confirmed at least in spirit by the campaign trail, and standing before a crowd of Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill controversy, that ■ ■ ecstatic, restless supporters, Karan English women are getting a raw deal. confidently stepped up to the microphone at a Throughout the nation, the consensus among recent national fundraiser. w om en is th at H ill’s charges o f sexual “I ’m mad and I ’m going to beat him ,” . harassm en t ag ain st then-S uprem e C ourt E nglish said o f her prim ary opponent in nominee Thomas would not have been so readily, Arizona’s race to capture the newly created dismissed if women sat on the Senate Judiciary District s congressional seat. “We are not tokens Committee. in this process, and we are going to be there in The widely broadcast spectacle o f m ale November.”’ Senate committee members grappling with the English, like hundreds o f other fem ale definition and implications of sexual harassment p o litica l aspirants, is riding high atop a trig g ered an anti-C o n g ress sentim ent and nationwide movement of, by and for women that illustrated for many women an intrinsic lack of has male p o litician s baffled and women understanding in governm ent o f w om en’s everywhere celebrating, * issues. The movement promises to toss much of the “H ill ig n ited the fire ,” said R ep, Bev old guard out of the consecrated halls of the state Hermon, R-Tempe, who, after nearly 10 years in and national legislatures, replacing them with the Arizona House of Representatives, will run women — Republicans and Democrats alike. for die Senate seat being vacated by Doug Todd, In an election that is now greatly defined by R-Tempe. women’s issues, and a year that has been coined “ What they (Women) saw was a judiciary The Year of the Woman, political pundits and committee comprised of all men.” government regulars arc waking up to a whole The anger a fte r the T h o m as-H ill new axis of power. co n tro v ersy , con cern ab o u t the p o te n tia l eradication o f Roe vs. Wade by the Supreme Court’s upcoming ruling on a Pennsylvania Igniting the fire Nationally, the popularity of the domestic abortion law and an overall lack of women’s agenda is being fueled by the contemporary perspective in lawm aking has unleashed an nature o f its issues — the Supreme Court’s unprecedented number o f female competitors im pending decision on abortion, and the onto the political scene. , A lthough Women have been.running Tor political offices for years, this time they have of better chance of winning — especially on the national front. Voters in state primary elections held so far have chosen 140 w omen as contenders for congressional seats, In November, 17 of those candidates will run for senate positions, which are considered to be prestigious and highly unattainable by women. Currently, there are two fem ale S en ato rs out o f 50 serving in Washington. T h e m ost grand show ing yet for women candidates occurred in the recent California primaries, in which 16 women Were elected to compete for House seats, and Dianne Feinstein and B arb ara B oxer handily cap tu red the Democratic Senate nominations. The 140 elected candidates for Congress mmcross partisan lines. Not all-female candidates are Democrats, despite thé fact that women’s issues have been traditionally touted by the Democratic Party. Of the 123 women candidates for the House, 45 o f them are Republicans, demonstrating a broad political agenda among fem ale h o pefuls. M any o f them are cam paigning on ai m ulti-issue platform that includes more than just “women’s issues.” iw s i v w m io iM riB N “1 don’t think this country is ready for just State Superintendant o f Public Instruction C. Henri Cohen/State Press one issu e,” said K it M ehrtens, Republican D ian e B ish o p says th e re is room fo r Arizona Rep. Bev Hermon, R-Tempe, keeps an eye on the state Capitol. The 10-year veteran of National Committeewoman for Arizona.im p ro ve m en t in A riz o n a ’s re c o rd fo r appointing women to high positions. T vratoM tk8,pige7. the Arizona House of Representatives w ill run fo r the Tempo Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Doug Todd in November. PHILIIMG IT IIP Universityofficialshavea contingencyplantoshut operationsdownintheevent that Gov. FifeSymingtonvetosthe statebudget. Tempe begins enforcement o f a new downtown gun-banning policy ASUgolferPhil Mickelson endsanextremelysuccessful collegiatecareerwithathird NCAAtitle. Page 3 Page2 Page 19 Classified8.......M.....^21 College Culture__ 15 Comics.............___ 18 Opinion_____ ___ .4 Sports___.......__.19 Pages Thursday, June 11,1992 State Press University braces for lack o f budget for shutting down their operations and submit them to his office by June 12. “It basically is to prepare for an orderly shut­ down as opposed to all of a sudden we find our­ selves on June 30 with no state budget,” Cole said. “What do we do the next day7 ’ University President Lattie Coor said ASU would review its plans with the state’s other uni­ versity presidents at a scheduled regents meeting in Flagstaff today and Friday. . “We can’t pay people when that happens (no state budget),” Coor said. “So what we have really tried to do is identify essential services and provide protection for the first session of instruction on the assumption that if there is any misfire {hey (state officials) will get it straight­ ened out and the budget will be adopted as quickly as possible.” The state House passed its proposed budget a few weeks ago and on Monday the state Senate By D J . BURROUGH State Press The University has plans to shutdown opera­ tion of all but the most vital campus services if a state budget is not in place by June 30, the last day of .the fiscal year, University officials said Wednesday. “They (the plans) entail shutting down the U niversity,” said A lan C arroll, director of ASU’s fiscal and planning office, who prepared the University’s plans. “We would complete summer sessions that are in progress tight now, but everything else would shutdown and there would be no second summer session. We’ve got no way to fund it. I don’t see how we could do it. There would be absolutely no support ser­ vices. None.”: Doug Cole, Gov. Fife Symington’s press sec­ retary, said the governor reguested, in early May, that all major state agencies prepare plaits passed its budget. On Tuesday, a joint House and Senate conference committee convened to reach a compromise that could be approved by both the houses and then sent to the governor. Suzanne Pfister, associate director of public affairs in the regent’s office, said the state always has had a budget by July 3 or 4. “They’re hoping to have a budget out within the next couple of weeks, which Would allow time for the governor to review and potentially veto it and have them go back and negotiate some more and them have him pass it,” she said. Carroll said he has seen plans from NAU but none from the UofA. Because the governor did not issue an official edict calling for the contin­ gency plans the universities may not be required to send him anything, he said. The plans allow for limited safety services to operate and for cooling of buildings to continue to protect heat Sensitive equipment inside. Pfister said the proposed House and Senate budgets both fell Well short of the $33 million rev ised tax -cu t package the governor had requested. The House budget called for about a $26 mil­ lion, tax cut and the Senate’s for a $4 million cut. Cole said the governor is serious about veto­ ing the legislative budget. “There are certain items that must be included in the budget before he will agree to it,” he said. Fred Amaro, president of ASU’s Classified S taff C ouncil, said the adm inistration has informed the council o f the impending shut­ down and has sought its input into the contin­ gency plans. “We will be out of work,” Amaro said of the 3,500 classified staff who are employed during the summer. “People will lose their homes. They won’t be able to feed their families. They’ll go broke.” Deans, directors brought aboard for 1992-93 said. The vice president of research will not only U niversity officials have concluded their oversee 1,800 faculty members and over $55 searches for new college deans and program million o f research funding, but will also be directors for the 1992-93 school year, but failed asked to manage sponsored research programs, to hire a permanent vice president for research. enhance relations with private industry and initiRobeit F. Barnhill will remain as the interim ate more major research programs, vice president of research for another year as the Barnhill was previously the chair of the ASU University launches a second nationwide search computer science department, to fill the position, according to Senior Vice Glick said Bette F. DeGraw, the interim dean President and Provost Milt Glick. of the College of Extended Education, will also Glick said that despite having a pool of more hold that position for a second year, than 100 candidates, University officials decided \ search to fill the position was not conducted to resume thé search in the fall semester with a mis year because the University was trying to revised job description for the position. find deans for four other colleges and a vice “As the search went on, the job began to president for research, according to Glick. He evolve, and we want to make sure we find the said that he was “very pleased” that DeGraw best person for the new job description,” Glick was willing to continue as interim dean and a By JONATHON BURSTEIN State Press We Aesept MasterCard A Visa an Delivery! --*--^-- a\i iMasiervara I ■ w ar Open Daily far Lunch! i| l É i S iK i ★ NOW SERVING * Tempe, Meta 1340 E. Apache Toppings: Pineapple Peppereni Sausage 6reua4 Beef Ham Baean Mushreams Onions Breen Peppers Tematees Black Olives Jalapenec Choice af Crusts: Original sr Whale Wheat Seda Available: Cake Plat Cake Sprite Pr. Pepper Sunday-Thursday 11am-1:30am Friday & Saturday 11am-2am FA ST, FR EE O E U V E R T i 829-0064 We Aesept NaeterCard I Vies aa Peliseryl LUNCHSPECIAL $1.99 I f Cheese Pina 11 am-4pm Menday-Friday » « F O R TW O! TWO I f g $6.25 j "«« j izza with 1 tapI A 2 free cedes . $ 9 .8 8 with tata tapping : ! T W 0 14" ! PIET D ILICHT J $6.99 $ 1 1 .9 9 arith ana tapping I w/ai many veggie' u t»ppi"t* •* M» search for a new dean will commence in the fall, was nam ed the dean o f the C ollege of Additionally, the University has named four Engineering and Applied Sciences, new college deans in the past two months. New He was the founder and the director of the deans have been nam ed for the College of National Science Foundation/Industry Research Education, College of Engineering and Applied Center for Microwave- and Millimeter-Wave Sciences, School o f Social Work and College of ■Computer-Aided Design at CU. Nursing and they are scheduled to be voted on Barbara A. Durand, a professor and chair of today by the Arizona Board of Regents. the Department of Maternal-Child Nursing at Leonard A. Valverde, the vice-president for Rush University in Chicago, was named the Academic Affairs at the University of Texas at dean of the College of Nursing. San Antonio, was named the new dean of the Valverde, Martinez-Brawley and Chang are College of Education. all scheduled to begin w ork on July 1 and Emilia E. Martinez-Brawley, a professor of Durand will assume her post on Jan. 1,1993. social work in the Department of Sociology at The University also ended another nationwide Pennsylvania State University, was named the search w ith th e appointm ent o f C olleen new dean of the School of Social Work. Jennings-Roggensack as the new executive David C. Chang, a professor of electrical and director of ASU Public Events, computer engineering at Colorado University, Thursday, June 11,199# S ta te P r e s s P age 3 C i t y o f f ic ia ls w a s t e n o t im e in e n f o r c in g g u n p o l ic y Police hope restrictions will help ensure safe downtown atmosphere B y DAN ZEIGER S tate Press T he new sighs are scattered all around Downtown Tempe, and the city certainly didn’t waste any time putting them Up. A t th e bottom o f each one reads: “PROHIBITED: Firearms or deadly weapons.” T he new signs are som ething R oger Egan considers welcome additions. “My feeling ’is that you need to do whatever needs to be done to have a good atmosphere here (during the weekends),” said Egan, owner of McDuffy’s Sports Bar, 230 W. Fifth St. “This should be a place where people want to come with their families. Guns have their place, but it definitely shouldn’t be here.” . The signs were put in almost immediately after the Tempe City Council on Thursday unanim ously approved a reso lu tio n that designates Mill Avenue as a special-event area in which weapons are banned. C ouncilm an Don C assano said that the resolution was enacted to help ensure a safe environm ent in the dow ntow n area, w hich accomodates crowds as large as 12,000 on some weekend nights. “It’s pot going to be a cure-all — I don’t think we can kid ourselves,” Cassano said. “But I think we have to enforce a zero-tolerance policy .to those who think that they have to carry or show off weapons to have a good time. That can be intimidating to some." The resolution prohibits weapons in a 10block area on Friday and Saturday nights from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. the following day. The area is bordered by First Street on the north, 10th Street on the south. College Avenue op the east and the Southern Pacific Railroad tracks on the west. In fro n t o f a near-packed cham bers on Thursday, the Council passed the resolution despite pleas from about six people speaking against restrictio n s on carrying guns. And although C assano said that he thinks m ost Tempe citizens support the resolution, some of the dissenters have been stubborn. “I promise you that I’m going to continue to carry my p ro tectio n reg ard less o f th is resolution,” Phoenix cabdriver Bob Howarth said at the council meeting, a semi-automatic pistol holstered on his right hip. “If you want, arrest me and take this to court, and we’ll see what happens.” True to his word, Howarth was Stopped by Tempe Police in the downtown area at about 10:20 p.m. on Friday with a pistol on his hip. When Howarth refused to secure the gun in his car, he was cited and his pistol was confiscated. His trial is later this month in Tempe City Cotirt. Other than that situation, the atmosphere along Mill Avenue this past weekend Was good, said Sgt. Al Taylor, a police spokesman. The only o th er in cid en t rela ted to the resolution was a bomb threat called in to the Tempe Police Department, 120 E. Fifth St., at 9:14 p.m. on Saturday. “ Y eah, because o f the fact th at y o u ’re arrestin g p eaceful citiz en s fo r carry in g protection, it might be a good idea to see if the Tempe Police Department starts looking for some bombs within the police department. Have a good night,” an adult male voice said. Although a report was filled out about the bomb th reat, T aylor said he had not heard anything about it. T he reso lu tio n -was b ro u g h t to C o u n c il. C ham bers fo llo w in g an in c id en t in th e downtown area last month, when two gangs exchanged gunfire in die area. Ohe of the shots narrowly m issed hitting a w oman who was sleeping in her home. But Cassano said that the resolution had been in the works for some time and resulted from a combination of incidents. Last October, a Mill Avenue riot had to be broken up with tear gas and resulted in $2,000 in damage and 23 people injured, including three officers. Cassano said that incident and a general increase o f weapons in the area during recent weekends also led to the resolution. Thè reso lu tio n o rig in a lly included a Hahri Cohen/State P ra ts Tempo did not waste any tim e in letting weekend visitors to the Downtown area sware of the behavior that w ill be expected o f them there. Signs like this one were put up alm ost immediately after the City Council unanimously approved a resolution that bans weapons in the area. restriction on the wearing of gang-affiliated saying that the sidewalks were too crowded, so clothing, including apparel bearing the logos of we should close the street. Then, we needed to selected professional and college sports teams. have entertainment out there because people But the Council removed that section o f the were just wandering around the streets. “Eventually, the street was re-opened to resolution before it was voted on, saying that the controversy surrounding it “distracted” from die tra ffic because some said th a t things were getting a little too rowdy. So, I think that will o rig in al goal o f elim in atin g g an g -related ■continue to be a difficult area for us.” violence in the downtown area. • But regardless of whether or not Mill Avenue Large gatherings and problems with cruising resulted in the Council in September closing is closed to traffic, Cassano said that there is still Mill Avenue to traffic on weekend nights, but it one major goal. “We want people to understand that it’s safe to reversed that decision in February. Cassano said deciding on whether or not to close Mill Avenue go downtdwn during the weekends,” Cassano said. “To do that, we have to let the people who in the future has been a difficult issue. “It’s basically been a no-win situation for us have a good time by having weapons around that there,” Cassano said. “At first, we had merchants it is not what we’re going to tolerate.” FREESHMBCMCERT WALT RIC H A R D SO N & M O R N IN G STAR ASU'S MEMORIAL UNION PROGRAMMING LOUNGE WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 from noon to 1:30 pm Feast on a w orld beat groove o f reggae, Latin and p op w ith on e o f A rizonaY prem iere groups. W alt R ichardson and M orning Star have opened for Z iggy M arley, T hird W orld, Steel Pulse and B lack U huru am ong others. June 24 July 1 ■ 1 July 15 The D u c k Deavillc Band Viva Jam Igor's Jam Cowboys % Pern P e a m » & T h e B kaSevifes July 22 Ted Allen Quam-c July 29 Small Paul 0c Drivin' Wheel August 5 T he Cowboy Legends Sponsored by A S U S um m er S essions and presented by A S U P ublic E vents Buy Any Medium Pizza at Regular Price, Receive Second Identical Pizza for $2. O F F E R M A Y E X P IR E W IT H O U T N O T IC E . N O T V A L ID W IT H A N Y O T H E R O F F E R . O p in io n State Prete Thursday, Juné 11,1998 Page 4 I ditonal state press afa' N o t very sporting L a s t w e e k , th e T e m p e C ity C o u n c il u n a n im o u s ly approved a resolution that designated a 10-block area in D ow ntow n Tem pe a special-event area, in w hich firearm s are b a n n e d . T he re so lu tio n w as p a sse d to h e lp p o lic e m aintain order during w eekend gatherings on M ill Avenue. ' A s o r ig in a lly p ro p o s e d , th e re s o lu tio n in c lu d e d a restriction o n the w earing o f clothing often associated with g a n g s , s u c h as th a t b e a r in g th e lo g o s o f c e r ta in professional and collegiate sports team s. B ut the Council rem oved that portion o f the resolution before it was voted on. It’s too bad Phoenix O sborn School D istrict officials — an d th e M a ric o p a C o u n ty S u p e rio r C o u rt Ju d g e w ho upheld their policy o f banning clothing em blazoned with the insignias o f selected sports team s — co uldn’t do the same. ■ ■■ U nder O sborn School policy, clothing bearing the logos o f eight team s — M ajor League B aseball’s Chicago Cubs, C hicago W hite Sox, L os A ngeles D odgers and O akland A thletics, the N ational F o o tb all L e a g u e ’s L os A ngeles R aiders, th e N ational B asketball A sso ciatio n ’s C hicago Bulls, the N ational H ockey L eague’s Los A ngeles Kings, and G eorgetow n U niversity — are prohibited because such a p p a re l, in th e e y e s o f th e s c h o o l, c o u ld in c ite g an g activity. L ost in the shuffle was Joel Burton, an O sborn M iddle School student who was sent hom e repeatedly for wearing a M icheál Jordan T -sh irt to class. B urton, a 5-foot, 90pound seventh-grader, hardly fits the prototype description o f a gang m em ber. In conjunction w ith the A rizona Civil L ib e rties U n io n , he c h a lle n g e d th e d is tric t’s p o licy in M a ric o p a C o u n ty S u p e r io r C o u r t, a r g u in g th a t h is constitutional right to expression had been violated. But Judge B arbara A. R odriguez upheld the decision, stating that “confrontations on cam pus could potentially increase” if such clothing were allow ed to be worn. E nsuring the safety o f both students and faculty is o f p a ra m o u n t im p o r ta n c e , b u t w h a t d o B u rto n a n d h is classm ates think w hen they are told about the principles co n tain e d in the F irst A m endm ent d uring civ ics class? S chool is supposed to broaden a k id ’s intelligence, not insult it. O ne can cite plenty o f case law that is inconsistent with the school d istrict’s position, but the one that stands out m ost is a decision by the U.S. Suprem e Court in 1969. T hat year, the C ourt ruled in T in ker vs. D es M o in es S c h o o l D is tr ic t th a t h ig h sc h o o l s tu d e n ts s h o u ld b e p e r m itte d to w e a r b la c k a rm b a n d s in p r o te s t o f th e V ietnam W ar — certainly a potentially m ore provoking situation than w hich team ’s logo is the m ost cool. But constitutional law isn’t the only issue. D eciding w hich logos w ould provoke gang-related action is an arbitrary process. Should the N B A ’s O rlando M agic and N H L ’s Sap Jo se S harks b e in c lu d ed ? B lac k is the p red o m in an t co lo r fo r b oth team s, b u t n e ith e r are v ery good — so are they less intim idating? I f the Portland Trail B lazers defeat the Bulls in the N B A Finals, should their apparel suddenly be deem ed as one that could incite gang activity? T he team represented on one’s apparel should b e a m oot point —- if tw o m em bers o f different gangs com e across each other, and they are truly rivals, is any sports insignia capable o f substantially increasing w hatever hatred exists betw een the tw o? In e lim in a tin g th e s p o r ts a p p a r e l p o r tio n o f th e r e s o l u t i o n , th e T e m p e C ity C o u n c il s a id th a t th e controversy surrounding it distracted from the original goal o f sim ply lim iting gang-related violence in th e city. M aybe the O sborn School D istrict w ill so o n fin d that out, too. H6f •’ OVER HERE—PWOIG O P ! WHO M A I ? T H IN K . ..WHO A M I ? R F K .R tó H T ? ' California cuts loom as harbinger “Thank you for callin g California State University. Please be prepared to htild for up to two minutes.” The cold, anonym ous voice announcing that I would again have to wait before talking to a real person came and went before I had had a chance to blink. Though I was mildly annoyed, this is what students attending any o f the u n iv e rsitie s w ithin the mammoth CSU system can look forw ard to d ealin g w ith when they call ad m in istrativ e headquarters in Long Beach. And they can look forward to more of the same. CSU officials announced last week, to the horror, of the university community in California, that a projected eight percent budget cut there w ill resu lt in the loss o f 2,200 employees, 40,000 students, and most incredibly, over 300 tenured and tenure-track professors. A single question looms large as rikembers of our own university cadre - faculty, administrators, and students alike follow the unfolding events in California. ., Will it happen to us? ■ ; So far, budget cuts have resulted in the elimination of only 100 people at ASU - all of them classified staff, and for the most part, departments have looked to trimming operations fat before Riffing (Reductions in Force). But indications that more pain is in store for A rizona’s universities arrive on ASU President Lattie Coor’s doorstep daily as the Legislature comes close to finalizing a budget. The most likely scenario has ASU losing $1.26 million from its operating budget. That doesn’t include the 2 percent “revertment” or take-back the Legislature made in M arch, resulting in a loss o f $3.6 million. W hat do our adm inistrators think about the trem ors o f financial collapse coming out o f California and about our own declining position? University officials, including ASU Provost Milt Glick, are presenting a united and brave front in the face of the impending cuts. STATE PRESS KRIS MAYES . Editor ' DAN ZEIGER Muia(iii, Editor ScaffWriter........................ .... Advertising and Production: .(¿KZ) $65-7572, The Staff Prat is the only newpaper exclusively published ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Kelly Adcock, Sonia for and circulated on the ASO cunpm The news and view» Benson, Dan EJlscrom, Lori Guthart, Jennifer Hughes, Brittin published in this newspaper are nor necessarily dme of tfe Kasbowiky, Lance Newnum. Neil Scfandwr, Frank Smith. ASU administration, fecuky, staffor student body. The truth is, they are doing everything possible to deal with what they know to be inevitable at this point. Coor has asked ail academic units to brace for a 4 percent cut next year, while directing other areas to be prepared for up to 10 percent, Moreover, in the event that Gov. Fife Symington decides in . his infinite wisdom to veto the budget the Legislature hands him because it doesn’t include his pet project tax-cut, administrators have developed a contingency ¿plan to shut m uch o f the University down. Shutting universities down, m illions o f dollars in cuts, layoffs: it all translates into a'situation that bears frightening similarity to what is happening in California, only on a smaller scale. ; ASU Faculty President-elect Dickinson McGaw said that faculty are and will continue to be shielded from the heavy fall of the axe, and that universities traditionally assiduously avoid even talking about layoffs among faculty. McGaw said he doesn’t see the severity o f cuts being experienced by CSU on Arizona’s horizon because Arizona schools expect to see a greater demand for education - up to 50,000 new students are expected by the year 2020 according to one widely publicized report But that doesn’t explain why California’s state schools are in such a pinch, or choke hold depending upon how you view the matter. CSU has arising demand as well. The problem there is the same here: funding. Revenues are down, and Legislatures assign the dough elsewhere. W hile Provost Glick says that there are no plans at the present time to cut faculty or tenure-track faculty at ASU, he stops short of promising that “programs” will be safe in the future. T hat’s code for never say never to the possibility that someday the sacred cow o f tenure will turn into a regular old pasture heifer, and faculty will be fair game in the unpleasant termination process. Chances are die plight of the student won’t be bettered by the latest budget figures either. .^ j How long will it be before students here are subject to the level of inconvenience, inhumanity, and disregard, that students at a CSU school see daily? How long will it be before we’re told to be prepared for a two minute wait by a lifeless voice over the telephone? EDITORIAL BOARD U nsigned editorials reflect th e views o f th e editorial board. Individual m em bers o f th e etfttorial board write editorials and the board decides on their m erit. T h e editorials do not reflect die opinion o f the Sm e Press staff as a whole. Board members include: KrisMaycs EDITOR DanZdger MANAGING EDITOR Page 5 Thursday, June 11,1991 TELLING TALES Author Tony Hillerman captivates with a western flair B y CHRIS DRISCOLL State Press Room C 319 of thé Language and Literature building was packed to capacity and people were spilling out into die hall. The English department lounge, normally a quiet, Comfortable place to sit and read, or chat with a friend, was abuzz with die conversations of a diverse gathering. In the m idst of the crammed space were Navajo students, literature majors and their pro­ fessors, anthropology instructors and their stu­ dents. Many o f those assembled clutched books in theirs hands with titles like Talking Gods, Coyote Waits, Skinwalkers, and Thief o f Time. They all had one thing in common, they had come tp see, to hear, and to talk to novelist Tony Hillerman. Hillerman made a two day visit to ASU on May 7, and May 8 to attend the English department reception and another one held at the new University Club in his honor and to accept an honorary degree from the University. “For the faculty of a great University to rec­ ognize your work, well it’s a great honor, I’m very flattered,” he said. People were standing in line, waiting for the opportunity to get his signature inside their copies of his New York Times best sellers. “He was always a great story teller*” said Ioe Milner, an ASU professor of journalism and telecommunications who first met Hillerman at a conference of journalism educators in 1964. Hillerman recalled that the first time he met Milner “he invited me to dinner, bought me a steak, and we’ve been friends ever since.” Hillerman and Milner are both journalism graduates of the University of Oklahoma. After graduating Hillerman worked for the wire ser­ vice, United ¡Press, before it became United Press International, then for the Santa Fe New Mexican. “A t conferences, som e o f the O klahom a Alumnae used to gather and Tony would always hold us spellbound by telling us various things that happened on his assignments," Milner said. “This (1964) was long before his first book and I can remember some of us urging him to put all these (stories) down and put them in a book.” Hillerman, when retelling the stories he cov­ ered, “really made them come to life,” Milner recalled. “He made you feel like you were right along with him on the assignments.” The portly, self-described “country boy” who was raised in Sacred Heart, Oklahoma, has had the chance to pack a lot of living into his 66 years. After working first as a reporter, then as edi­ tor for the Santa Fe New Mexican, he quit the life of a working journalist, went back to school, attending the University of New Mexico, and ended up becoming a professor of journalism at the same university. He Was the advisor to The Lobo, the UNM newspaper and the director of the Journalism Deppartment by the time he retired to writing fulltime, “about five years ago,” he said. “I think I started that first book (The Blessing Way in ‘67 and I finished it in about ‘70.” Although he makes $1,000,000 a book now, he said it took a long time to get there. “I flew in on the wrong airline,” Hillerman said, confiding to one of his fans at the reception before the interview. “Somebody told me they came in on Southwest and I’m the Cover boy on their magazine.” Hillerman has written non-fiction books on the Southwest, Native American lore and histo­ ry, but he is best known for his novels located in the Navajo Nation, featuring Lt. Joe Leaphom and officer Jim Chee, two fictional figures who work for the Navajo Police Department. While Leaphom and Chee are challenged with solving crimes, aspects of the deep spirituality of the Navajo people, their ways and beliefs, are often artfu lly w eaved in to the fab ric o f Hillerman’s stories like the intricate patterns of a Navajo rag. If fact, Hillerman is so highly regarded by the tribe that he has been honored by their govern­ ment with the title, “friend of the Navajo peo­ ple.” On top o f his many other accomplishments Hillerman will be appearing on Thiefs o f Time, on KAET TV Channel 8, said John Wilson, pro­ gramming director for the ASU-based Public Broadcasting System station. The KAET produced show will be shown sometime on the evening of August 22. The time has not been set yet, Wilson said. “It’s a look at the current state of affairs with regard to rep atriatio n o f N ative A m erican remains,” he said. Last year the U.S. Congress passed a law that requires museums to return human remains to tribes that can prove ancestral connections. Hillerman addressed the issue in his book Talking Gods. Milner said that the only criticism he has ever heard of Hillerman’s novels was the charge that the books reveal too much of the mysteries of the Navajo religion. , The novelist said he first became interested in the Navajos when in 1945, soon after World War n , a war he is a veteran of, he happened to witness an “enemy way,” a ceremony conducted for two Navajos recently returned from the war. “I got a job driving a lode of oil field equip­ ment from Oklahom a City to Crown Point, N.M.,” he said. “The ceremonial group walked across the road in front of my truck so I stopped to let them by. “(The enemy way) is to cure people who have been exposed to alien influences. These guys had been exposed to Japanese mortar shells,” he said. Hillerman said he has been interested in the Navajos ever since. PIZZA & PASTA Beat The Heat At Sunny's! $2.82 PITCHERS 60oz.-B ud L ight, C oors L ight, M ic D ry ALL DAY. EVERY DAY. Sunny's Broadway McClintock Rural Guriy . University $200Off ANY P ■I T T A ■ 1 2 “ o r 16“ 1301 E. U niversity (N ext to Beauvais) 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 As Always- Sunny’s Delivers It. Free. C redit cards accepted o n deliveries! Page 6 Thursday, June 11, IM S ASU promotes upcoming community college bond issue By D J . B U R R O U G H S ta te P ress The Maricopa County Community College District, in the midst o f waging a battle to convince voters to pass a $340 mil­ lion bond initiative, has received the support of ASU in their endeavor. ASU President Lattie Coor said he “very strongly” supports the community college’s bond drive and has sent letters to other Valley leaders encouraging them to lend additional support to the June 23 bond election. “Maricopa Community Colleges have done a splendid job of growing as the demand for community college education in the Valley has grown,” Coor said “They’ve absolutely got to have this additional capacity in order to meet the growth in the future.” From 1980 to 1990 enrollment in the district, which includes Mesa, Chandler-Gilbert, Scottsdale and Phoenix community col­ leges, increased by 50 percent. The enrollment level, currently, estimated to be 177,000 students, is projected to reach 250,000 by the year 2000. The $340 million in bond money would provide for new con­ struction, remodeling and renovation on existing campuses, expansion of computing and telecommunications programs and for construction of an 89-acre full-service campus in northeast Mesa. Mary Vanis, an executive assistant in the president’s office at Mesa Community College, said some of the buildings on the dis­ tric t’s 10 campuses are more than 20 years old and were designed to accommodate far fewer students. “Some of our colleges are bursting at the seams,” she said. “They really need space they didn’t get from our last round of major construction. Wfe are already maxing out our facilities. We really need to deal with facilities issues for our growing enroll­ ment.” Coor, who is a member of the MCCCD’s East Valley board, said that as a research university ASU receives more transfer students from the community colleges than any other university. “We draw very heavily from the community college popula­ tion,” he said. “It is important to ASU and to all university level education, as well as to the community colleges, that it (the bond election) be successful. It is a partnership that requires the com­ munity college to be very strong as we both carry out our responsibilities.” According to district statistics, 48 percent of the upper divi­ sion students at ASU began their academic careers at one of the community colleges. Vanis said district officials choose to go forward with the bond election at this time because they felt that the economy had improved since February, when they had originally scheduled the election. Although the bond request has received some opposition from local anti-tax groups, Vanis said a poll conducted in late April showed that residents favored the initiative 2 to 1. “We are not taking anything for granted,” she said. “We are working very hard with a grass roots campaign.” If the election fails, Vanis said, there would be no expansion on any of the campuses and no new college in east Mesa. “It is the things we need critically over the next ten years," she siad. "It means we might have to look at not offering as many sections of courses that students need. It means we are not going to be able to grow and we may eventually turn students away.” W e’re m ore th a n h o t . .. U N IV E R S IT Y D IS C O U N T T H E A T R E 1 0 2 5 E . BROADTOKY R O A D • 8 2 9 -6 6 6 6 IW IT H IN 'W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E O F A S U W e're Cooll! ALL SHOWS Stop in & enjoy a cool, refreshing ICED TEA ALL AGES Half-Price w ith this ad Anytime Expires 6-17-92 ANYTIME WAYNES H I D C offee Roasters Tropical C offeehouse The m ost beautiful love story ever told. PICTURES & BeautyÆ B e a s t ) n*W aNPiMM*C—MT * C O F F E E * P L A N T A T IO N FEATURING ACADEMY AffAKIT WINNING ACTRESSES KATHY BATES AND JESSICA TANDY , O pen from 7 a.m. Lunch Daily H appy H o u r 4-7 p.m . M-F H a lf Price Drinks Live Entertainm ent C o rn e r 6 th & M ill 5 JEFF FAHEY _ TH E Ia w n m o w e r M an m RICHARD GERE KIM BASINGER |r | VALLEY ART 2 WEEKS 509 S. MILL T OURNEE 01 Û _• 7 - v l NOTFORYOUNGCHILDREN 990 Sí $1 5 0 LISTEN TO CHUCK E. BABY and the ALL STARS June 10-13 & Ju n e 17-20 9 PM-CLOSE THURSDAY IS THE DAY FOR U S MALE DANCE REVIEW 8:30-10:30 CALL FOR RÉSERVATIONS 1123 W . B roadw ay (behind M anual's M exican Food) Tam pa • 968-6224 (Scooplina) C RO SSW O RD by THOM AS JOSEPH ACROSS 1 Bridge feat 5 Valuable fiddle 10 "The Mikado’s" execu­ tioner 11 Flourish "apple" 13 Former White House occupant 14 Bike type 16 N ail type 20 Climb 23 Ogle 24 Rude fellows 25 Offering " plate 27 G o awry 28 Historic events 29 Sawbucks 32 Decade extent 36 Media mogul Murdoch 39 Tide ty pe 40 Arkansas range 41 Bit 42 Dunder­ head 43 Binary digits DOW N 1 32-card game Answers in today's classified section. 2 Finish last 3 Related 4 O gre 5 Flock members 6 Barter 7 Equip 8M arilU ,on "Evening Shade* 9 Study 11 Tendency IS Corrals 17 Catches 1 8 Yeltsin’s denial 19 Longings 20 Help out 21 Ticked off 22 Succo­ tash half \ 1— s *r time 34 Velocity 35 Health resorts 36 Director Howard 37 Terrorist's weapon 38 Rave’s counter­ part 25 Feel sorry lor 26 Hall of fam e 28 Computer type choices 30 Somber 31 Chipper 33 Long, long s~ r r— r~ j 1Ö r« 1 U it 20 17 10 19 21 a j 24 - ■ 8 27 25~ 30 31 . 32 33 ■ T JÁ i * 37^ ■ 4Ó it i j ■ 6 -1 1 C R YPTO Q U O TE The new LSAT course. For the new LSAT. iTake Kaplan Or Take \bur Chances I NTERNATI ONAL CHECK OUT OUR WEDNESDAYS-7 to Close O n e le tte r s ta n d s fo r a n o th e r. In th is sam p le A is used for th e th re e L's, X for th e tw o O 's, etc. Single letters, ap o stro p h e s, th e le n g th a n d fo rm a tio n o f th e w o rd s are all h in ts . Each d a y t h e c o d e le tte rs are d ifferen t. 829-6668 $ 5 .0 0 F E S T IV A L \ A XYD LB A A XR is L O N G F E L L O W O N L Y $ 3 .0 0 H E LD OVER! •. D A ILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to w o rk i t ssra ROHEMMIMMIEHM ■ ilU M ì 12A — New Times - Best of Phoenix Since 1989 n u lllaugh. W fS m [■¡■T FREE D iagnostics & T uition A ssistance A vailable Gasses beginning June 23 for the Oct. LSAT. ENROLL NOW! 1000 E. Apache Blvd. Suite 211 • Tempe 1 Block East of Rural 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 O Z L M Q Y H D R O Z J X L D D L Q Z Q F H X L H R H X L L B Z T L M F R Q L D H X L H C N K Y N M T Y E Z H H Y M L H X Z M J X L D D Q Z B Z M C Z W R Q Q R Q W . — G Y X Q Q Z U E L Q Answ er in today’s classified section. ■l . —.J I Thursday, June 11,1998 Politics. Continued from page 1. * “I think people are tired of tunnel vision,” Mehrtens said, adding that female candidates “had better know the answers to all the problems that face the state and nation.” However, the ball remains in the court of th o se women who are focused m ainly on women’s issues. Recent polls show that to many A m ericans, both men and women, the most important problems facing the nation today are co nsidered to be w om en’s issues, such as abortion, child-care, health-care and education. A m ericans are looking for leaders with answers to problems that truly hit home. Dom estic agenda As the Cold War dissipates into little more than a debate over who will get the proceeds from the sales of unneeded military equipment, the nation has turned its attention inw ard focussing on what is referred to as the domestic agenda. th is latest storm On the political front is far from new - domestic issues like health care, Child support, and abortion rights have been around for years, but were relegated to the back burner in favor of the foreign and m ilitary agendas. But increasingly, women across the country are seeing their chance to take the lead in an area that they feel belongs to them, and are beginning to grab the reigns of a sleeping giant. “Political mobility is alive and well and I love it,” proclaimed Hermon. “Women are simply seen as fresh attitudes and fresh problem solvers.” ; ;• Hermon said women often com e to the statehouse better prepared to deal with the issues that impact their lives. “I think we're more patient and take more time with problems,” she said. “Women seem to care about issues related to women.” The Tempe Republican pointed to recent state legislation in the area of child care and education as evidence of the movement catching fire locally. Hermon added that an expected rise in new legislators in the fall - 30 of the 90 members of the House and Senate are not seeking re-election to their posts — will result in even greater reform and change. “There is going to be a massive turnover of legislators," Hermon acknowledged. “I ’m a reform er and I think th is is a m arvelous opportunity for change.” Hermon recalls that when she first began her tenure in the Arizona House, no women served on the prestigious Ways and Means Committee. Today, a woman, Leslie Whiting Johnson, RPhoenix, serves as the committee's chair, and Hermon said she can think of no committee that has yet to see a female at its helm. The Arizona experience If the recent flood o f women into state politics across the nation doesn’t seem to have the sam e affect in A rizona, it is probably because so many women already populate the state’s lawmaking body. Coming in first nationally for the number o f female legislators elected, (this year 31 percent), A rizona boasts a long trad itio n o f fem ale involvement in the elective political process. Many in the state, including Superintendent of Public Instruction C. Dianne Bishop, attribute the exem plary voting record to the sta te ’s pioneering roots. “The Old W est atmosphere is still here,” Bishop said, adding that residents hang on to the notion that women, as they did a hundred years ago, can work right beside the men. But according to the state’s top education official, Arizona women will find it considerably more difficult to snare the state’s appointed positions. - - “W om en have alw ays been able to get elected in Arizona,” Bishop said, “But if you look to appointments you’re going to look far afield.” Bishop points to the overwhelming lack of female superintendents in Arizona — only 3 of the 220 local school district superintendents serving the state are women, and none of those women serve in a district with high schools. “I t ’s a tougher sell to get women in an appointed process,” she said. “A lot of people still think the best person for the job is a man.” Doing battle D ays after the p o litica l fu n d ra ise r in Washington D.C., Karan English, speaking from her state Senate office in Phoenix, recalled an infuriating statement made by her opponent in a county political race 12 years ago. “He introduced me as the ‘little woman,’” the Democratic senator from Flagstaff said. E n g lish , who ev en tu ally d efeated her opponent and went on to serve two terms in the House before moving to the Senate, said that Henri Cohen/State Press U.S. Senate hopeful Claire Sargent is confident that her stand on domestic Issues and an antincumbent sentiment w ill allow her to overcome her powerful opponent, Sen. John McCain, Rt Az. although the disparaging comment made her mad, “it gave the public an opportunity to see how women were treated.” Since that tim e women have made great strides in A rizona politics. The num ber of women in the Arizona Legislature increased from 17 out of 90 in 1980 to the present 31 out of 90. One legislator, Rep. Polly Rosenbaum, DDistrict 4, is now serving her 21st term in the House. But the progression of political careers for women in Arizona stops at the state capitol building. The doors to the nation’s capitol have been virtually closed to Arizona women. The one and only female member of Congress for the state served from 1933-37. In the face o f this longtime absence o f a woman from the highest levels o f A rizona government, English prepares to do battle for the newly-created District 6 seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. “ I have a very good chance o f winning,” English said. “I represent rural values and 1 represent a change in the status quo in Congress. “We (wom en) process things a little bit d ifferen tly th an men, m aybe n ot q u ite as adversarial; I have an inborn need to see if I can find a compromise, kind of like you do when you’ve got children. How do you make all the T U C K E R - B R A M S E N T IR E LUBE-0 L! Lubricate your vehicle & chassis, drain old oil, add up to Sqts. of new oH and install a new oil filter. Diesel extra. Most cars and light trucks. Includes a 17 pt. vehicle maintenance inspection. (Bargain Pitstop 1Brakes USA IW M e a M M e ^ i iM | Dobson Rd. 1 £ Evergreen j expires 7/31/92 University children happy at one time without sacrificing your values? “I think that’s something that women are always trying to do,” she said. However, English , who has three children and w ill m arry in a few w eeks, said more importantly than adding a Woman’s perspective, she w ould bring to C ongress the ru ral perspective of her potential constituents in District 6, which encompasses much of eastcentral and northeast Arizona. She said a muchneeded champion of rural Arizonans has been absent in Congress sincej Morris K. Udall left the House in 1990 for health reasons. E n g lish ’s opponent for the D em ocratic nomination said he is not intimidated by the wave of female primary victories rolling over the country. “People run for offices and whether they are men or women, people judge them on their q u alificatio n s and the issues th a t they are addressing in th e cam p aig n ,” said A lan Stephens, D-Districf 6. “T hat’s the way this nom ination w ill be 2 0 3 3 W. University, M esa (In the Auto Center between Evergreen & Dobson Rd.) « 4 4 -1 2 0 1 J decided.” Stephens, the Senate M ajority leader, is serving his fourth term as an Arizona senator,: He said a large number of women in California p assed the prim ary hurdle becau se th e ir opponents were anti-choice. But he said his strongly pro-choice stance evens the score in his race with English. “Karan and I have similar positions on a lot of issues,” Stephens said. “There are some differences but most of those have to do with issues within the district as opposed to general issues like health care. Although Stephens contends that voters do not base their decisions on gender, English, like most other female candidates, said Americans are w aking up to w om en’s p o te n tia l as lawmakers. “Women are trained different from birth, we’re sensitive to different issues and the very nature of those experiences gives us a different perspective,” she said. In the bid-for-S enate cam p, com m unity ac tiv ist C laire S arg en t, echoed E n g lish ’s confidence that the voters’ demand for change will translate into a demand for more women lawmakers, A rizona p o litical observers have hailed Sargent as one of the strongest challengers to Republican Sen. John McCain. McCaip, whose reputation suffered in the Keating Five scandal, was previously thought to be an untouchable incumbent. “This election, is about integrating change,” Sargent, a Democrat, said. “He (McCain) Can’t afford change because he is tied to the status quo and the past.” Resources increase An increase in financial resources has also propelled women to the forefront of American politics. Both English and Sargent are now backed by heavyweight donor organizations. Both English and Sargent are backed by the National Women’s Political Caucaus and the W o m en 's C am paign Fund is also behind English. In addition, English said she Will be receiving another “very good endorsem ent” Monday. Kim Kahn, assistant professor of political science at Arizona State University, said that in th e past, big-m oney supporters have been reluctant to back female nominees. “Traditionally, women are less likely to have prior political experience and resources have been a problem in terms of raising money for running for office. W om en have been less successful than men in doing that,” said Kahn, who studies trends of women in politics. An increase in donations and support to p o litica l netw orks fo r w om en has been fundamental to the success of recent campaigns. O ne o f th e la rg e st and old est fu n d raisin g organizations, The National Women’s Political Caucus, boasts of considerable success in the past year. ' The non-partisan group has endorsed 66 can d id ates, o f w hich 32 have w on th eir respective Congressional primary races. Linn Shapiro, the executive director of the pro-choice female Republican’s Political Action Committee, WISH List, said her organization conducts a thorough screen in g pro cess to determine the viability o f a woman’s bid for office, and her ability to raise money effectively. The process, Shapiro said, is very similar if not identical to the traditional Washington PACs. She added that the level of support for her organization and the candidates it backs has been “phenomenal - it has come from every end of the country.” WISH List has endorsed five candidates, two of which have prevailed in their primary races, and another active female PAC, Emily’s List, w hich supports pro -ch o ice dem ocrats, h a s backed 30 candidates with 14 winning their elections. Shapiro predicts the Year of the Woman will be extended far beyond 1992: . “I think it will go on,” she said. “Women are really energized by this issue, and they Will continue to participate.” Over the top A recent poll taken by the Gordon S. Black polling com pany show s th at 72 p ercen t of Americans believe Congress is moving in the w rong d irec tio n , and 69 p ercen t b eliev e incumbents in Congress will never reform the process. Given the presence of such figures, and the undeniable call for change resonating throughout the country, it is no wonder that women, in Arizona and elsewhere, are feeling empowered. As the weeks tick off like minutes toward what promises to be a historic general election, all that remains to be seen is how many women will realize that power: U niversity W om en's Clinic, Inc. E xperienced Nurse P ractioners providing professional, confidential, and personalized Women Caring for Women 8 3 1 -5 5 3 2 21 W. Baseline Rd. Tempe ■Banali p i i u o o a u u j o u t u u i i Q i iy o W hy wait to be safe? Prom pt, frie n d ly service w ith appointm ents usually available the sam e day o r evening. I i I I State Press Thursday, June 11,1998 P agcS P o lic e R e p o r t ASU Police reported the following incidents this week: • A glass topped umbrella table at Sun Devil Stadium was apparently blown over by the wind. Damage is $120. • One hundred and twenty-two abandoned bicy­ cles were impounded from various locations on campus. • Three men, not affiliated with the University, were asked to leave the East Practice Fields after police observed them drinking beer. Tempe Police reported the following incidents this week: • A Hispanic man, about 2 5 ,5-foot-6,150 pounds, with straight black hair, wearing a dark khaki green crew neck T-shirt with blue jeans. and described as well-groomed and polite, robbed Jerry’s restaurant, 1?50 N. Scottsdale Rd, Employees of the restaurant told police the man sat at a booth next to the south door, ordered his meal and ate part of it before he approached the waitress at the cash register. He approached with his left hand in his pocket and demanded money telling the waitress that he had a gun. He would not show the gun, refusing sev­ eral requests by the waitress. He then reached over tbetop of the open register and grabbed all of the $5 and $10 bills. He fled out the south door and headed west on foot. • A 19-year-old Tempe resident was arrested after police heard him yell “white power” and “nigger” from the right passenger window of a 1979 Pontiac station wagon at the corner of University Drive and Mill Avenue. • A white man, 6-foot, 170 pounds, 17-21 years old, wearing a light blue ski hat, light blue mechanic shirt and slacks attempted to rob . Burger King, 6402 S. Rural Road. A 22-year-old employee of the fast-food restaurant told police the man walked up to die drive-thru window and pointed a black BB gun at him, demanding money. The employee told pólice he then grabbed the gun after a struggle and the suspect fled across the parking lot. The employee said he did not know the weapon was a BB gun when he grabbed it and was not scared or intimidated during the incident. “I just reacted,” he told police. • A man phoned Domino’s Pizza, 903 S. Rural ’Road, and ordered a pizza. He then asked the 37-year-old employee who answered the phone to pick up some beer along the way, and police said he threatened to beat the employee up he refused to do so. • A 34-year-old Tempe man was arrested and charged with misdemeanor assault and disorder­ ly conduct in connection with an incident at Taco Bell, 936 E. Apache Blvd. Police said the man yelled and cursed at employees and threw a bag of food at a 20-year-old employee, striking him in the face, after complaining he received the wrong order. Compiled by State Press reporter Richard Ruelas. MOVIE BUFFS and ART COLLECTORS "DISPLAY IT AGAIN, SAM!" MOVIE POSTERS • LOBBY CARDS MOVIE STILLS T h o u s a n d s o f title s ...fro m th e la te s t film s to th e c la s s ic s ...a ll a t a ffo rd a b le prices! Join S carlett a n d Rhett, S pock and C aptain Kirk, Astaire, Nicholson, th e Beatles, the B lues Brothers, H annibal th e Cannibal, T h e lm a a n d Louise to help c eleb rate Rick a n d E lsa's 50th! D IS P L A Y I T A G A IN , S A M JUNE 1 -1 9 8 a .m .-5 p.m . in t h e M e m o r i a l U n io n F in e A r t s L o u n g e C all 9 6 5 -6 6 4 9 fo r fu rther inform ation S e n s a tio n a l P ric e s F o r B r o a d w a y 's M u s ic a l S e n s a tio n s ! OFF ANY SHOW, ANY SEAT FOR ASU STUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFF THE BROADWAY TOUR OF AMERICA Miserables |E M U S IC A L S E N S A T IO N SYMPHONY HALL Wednesday & Friday, July 8 & 10 7:30 pm Thursday, July 9 • 2 & 7:30 pm Saturday & Sunday, July 11 & 12 2 & 7:30 pm SYMPHONY HALL Tuesday-Friday, June 16-19 • 8 pm Saturday, June 20 • 2 & 8 pm Sunday, June 21 • 2 8c 7:30 pm Tickets: $22, $31, $34 ($24, $33, $36 Fri./Sat. Eve.) VISA Tickets: $15, $30, $40, $43 (7:30 pm Wed.-Thu.; 2 & 7:30 pm (Sun.) $15, $25, $36, $40 (2 pm Thu. & Sat.) $30, $40, $45 (7:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat.) IT'S EVERYW HERE YOU W ANT TO BE. Discount offer available at the ASU Activity Center Box Office only. Not valid with prior purchase Or with any other discount offer. Good with current ASU I.D. only. Limit 4 tickets per order. For more information, call 965-3434. Sponsored by ASU Sum m er Sessions and presented by ASU Public Events in association w ith PACE Theatrical Group, Inc. 1 Thursday, June 11,1992 Page 9 P IT C H E R S ' EVERY WEDNESDAY/ 6 9 0 ^ B ottles tu i 1 1 \ 0 .1 1 1 . Specials on Malibu Rum Drinks & Giveaways! Hawaiian Pizza * ■ / B IK IN I i /C O N T E S T llX 1st P la c e $ 5 0 / 2nd Place $ 2 5 B R IN G A ^ BANANA FO R FREE > CO VER! / or $ 4 Cover / / Full Tilt / Banana f Wrestling in the Chequita p its y 1216 E. APACHE BLVD. 968-2446 Pag« 10 StatePress Thursday, June 11,1998 VZSA'> mm p íS Í: CH A R G E Your classified ad! C all us a t 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 . (MasterCardj (Minimum$6purchase.) Tempe Bicycle's PRICE ROUND-UP& Ever'thin1 in The Coral 1/2 Price Com e in and lasso yr's e lf som e savings. * 7 7 ' I > v / v 3micm w r i t e HBY VALPURXocrcHÉS Yo u r f il l y HAYDEN’S FERRY REVIEW A S U 's N ational L iterary M agazine * YB&H JACK On Sale thru June 17, 1992 * ★ ★ ★ 1 /2 o ff list prices. Bicycles ★ Tubes Accessories ★ Com ponents Clothing ★ Thrillers T i r e s _________ __________ _ Matthews Center Basement 965.-1243 TEMPE B IC Y C LE TE M P E B IC YC LE P A V ILIO N S T E M P E B IC Y C LE On P im a Road n e x t to H om e D ep o t in th e S c o ttsd a le Pavilions 3 3 0 W . U n ive rsity U n iv e rs ity & F a rm e r (4 blocks w e s t o f M ill) 998-2219 966-6896 Watch for our next issue in August. California Casualty CARES ^3* In a recent C.A.R.E.S. (Customers Always Receive Excellent Service) survey, our cus­ tom ers questioned, “ Why d o n ’t you offer more convenient payment options?’’ Last spring our C.A.R.E.S. Committee imple­ mented our new E-Z Pay Automated Payment Plan. 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College Culture Stert P it« Thursday, June 11,1999 f Gin Blossoms coming around again By RICHARD RUELAS State Press After parting ways with founding guitarist Doug Hopkins during Memphis sessions for their full-length major label debut, the remain­ ing Gin Blossoms stepped into a scene straight out of the classic rock parody This is Spinal Tap. “The day that we knew that we Weren’t going to be playing with Doug anymore, we went to Graceland and we stood there at Elvis’s grave taking in all the perspective. Believe me, the irony of that situation bit me right in the ass,” Singer Robin Wilson said. With former Feedbag Scott Johnson hired about a month ago, bassist B ill Leen said, “W e’re just happy to have that all behind us because there were about two or three weeks where it was just mental chaos.” Johnson, who works at a Mesa record store. Said he “even had people I didn’t know come up at work and they’re like, ‘hey, you’re in that band aren’t you? What’s going on?’ I can imag­ ine these guys, living in Tempe, how much s— they had.” The band has been practicing every night for the past few weeks in an East Tempewarehouse. “It’s been a four or five hour rehearsal, so it’s pretty gruelling,” Johnson said. “But we needed to do it to work me in and they’ve been really Cool about giving me time and letting we work in a song at a time.” During a break in one of those practices, Leen said the addition of Johnson has not had a dramatic effect on the group’s sound. “We just played an old song just now and it sounded like us.” . ■' Johnson said, “Doug definitely had his own guitar style, so it’ll be somewhat different, but the arrangements are the same so it won’t be a whole lot different — except for maybe the gui­ tar solos. “I'm bringing in my own style, but 1 don’t think it will be anything drastic.” One of the most drastic changes Blossoms fans will notice is that no Hopkins-penned tunes, including “Hey Jealousy,” “Keli Richards” and “Angels Tonight” will be played anymore. "We’re not doing of Doug’s songs,” Johnson said. “If he starts (another band), it’d be kind of rough if w e’re playing his songs, you know what I mean.” Wilson said he was recently interviewed by a label representative, working On press material for the new album. “The guy asked mg, ‘Well you guys are a live band, right, I mean, how does it feel writing material or whatever being a live band?’ I’m like, I don’t know what the f— kind of band we are. We haven’t played on stage in four months. We were in the Studio for a long time and now we have a new guy, I have no idea if we’re a live band anymore.” “I ’m terrified o f playing again actually,” Leen said. Johnson played his la s t show w ith the .Feedbags at Edsel’s Attic last month, but the Blossoms 'haven’t perform ed on stage since February, when they were at C huy’s before heading to Memphis. “What’s really ironic is the Feedbags did the f last gig with these guys. We opened up for them the last gig they did before they left,” Johnson said. Any fears Wilson, Leen, Johnson, guitarist Jesse Valenzuela and drummer Philip Rhodes Henri Cohwi/Stato Press may have had were not evident during Friday’s A sweat-soaked Robin Wilson stands before the packed throng at Hollywood Alley Friday dur­ show at Hollywood Alley. The Blossoms started ing the Gin Blossom’s first show in four months. out playing older material, but seemed comfort­ Ska version of “Don’t Fear the Reaper” have and Crumbling is still selling well at his record able with the new songs they worked in as well. store and the new album, which was recorded Actually they didn’t have any choice in play­ been retired for the most part. “We don’t want to take it easy and just go with Hopkins, is even better. ing the new songs. “They gave me a rough mix o f the new “Since we’re not going to be playing any of through the back catalog. I mean we’re tired of record, and it’s really good, and I can say that Doug’s material, Jesse and I have written four that stuff anyway.” The Blossoms have less than two months to because I’m actually unbiased here,” he said. new songs since we got back from Memphis,” Johnson said it’s good that the record ranges Wilson said, adding that even with those they work the kinks out before they are sent on a national tour to promote their new album New from tracks like “Cajun Song” to the countrybarely had enough songs to fill Friday’s show. influenced “Cheatin’” “because the listener gets “Hopefully by our next show, (this Friday), Miserable Experience, due out August 4. “They ’ll probably send us out a couple of tired of the same stuff for 40 minutes.” we’ll have some more songs ready.” “Any Pearl Jam fan will tell you,” Wilson The well of songs ran dry about 20 minutes weeks after it comes out,” Leen said, adding that until close, but, even though Hopkins’s kicks a West Coast tour in July might precede the said. Wilson is very happy with the new record. and guitar flailing were missed, Johnson did a national outing. This will he the band’s second tour, follow­ “I t’s the record I alw ays though the Gin great job and the band was remarkably tight. A few new cover songs were tossed in, ing the Please God, D on’t L et Us See Our Ex- Blossoms could make under ideal conditions,” he said, adding “and these weren’t ideal condi­ including “Soul Deep” — spun off the version Girlfriends on the Road tour last Fall. On that tour, “we had some shows where we tions.” done by Alex Chilton’s old band The Boxtops. Johnson said the mood in radio and retail is The Blossoms also have joined The Guess Who, played ghost towns, then we had some really The Who and MC5 in the: line of bands who great shows, because there'was like a little bit of right for the Blossoms to release their album. “It’s definitely turned to guitar. It’s definitely in have covered Johnny Kidd and the P irates’ rad io airp lay or th ere was some press. In Chicago we were the Pick of the Week or the our favor,” he said. “Shakin’ All Over.” Leen said older Gin Blossom covers, which Month or whatever,” Leen said. Turn to Gin Blossoms return, page 16, Johnson said the band’s five-song E.P. Up included “Dead Skunk,” “Dead Flowers” and a W riter, d ire c to r Jim Jarm u sch takes audience o n slow , cereb ral tax i rid es in latest m ovie —‘N ight o n E arth’ Night on E arth . woman. A lthough the dialogue som etim es floats Starring: Winona Ryder, G iancarlo Esposito, towards the cliches of blindness, again it is the Rosie Perez and Gena Rowlands perfo rm an ces, by Issach de B ankole and W ritten, D ire cte d a n d P ro d u ced by Jim Beatrice Dalle, which save the segment. Jarmusch Each story has a twisted ending, which is ’ ★ * * 1/2 . unfortunately pretty predictable. The worst case of this comes in the opening Night on Earth is a serious, artsy movie with segment which takes place in Los Angeles, star­ a message, but you’ll probably end up forgetting ring W inona R yder as a tough cabbie w ith that and just watcing the movie. Egraj dreams of becoming a car mechanic, and Gena The idea is simple enough. Show five cab Rowlands as a casting agent looking for a young rides, in five different cities around the world, tough actress with no experience. each going on at the same time. The characters Sorry if I gave too much away. bring the idea to life. Most of the movie is dialogue, with three of Each ride is a contrast of types. There is the the stories told in subtitles. For those o f you wild, irreverent cabbie in Rome who picks up a studying foreign languages, this will be a great priest and begins to confess his sexual sins to way to learn how to curse in Italian, and French. him while showing him the underside of the city. The stories take a long time to get started. In Helsinki, Finland, three drunks stumble The meat of each segment is buried underneath a into a cab, where at least two of them hear a very lot o f irrelevant exposition. Whether this was sobering story from their driver. intentional on Jarmusch’s part to add to the real­ But New York is the setting for the best of ism, is not clear. But what is clear is that it is not . these vignettes, featuring Giancarlo Esposito, very entertaining. ’ who played Buggin’ Out in Do The Right Thing, By writing each of the stories, Jarmusch has as the passenger trying to get home to Brooklyn, kept a constant tone throughout, unlike other ending up in a cab with a German immigrant'' anthology movies. who is struggling with his first day on the job. But the messages Jarmusch is trying to get The perform ances of Esposito and Armin out are simplistic. Mueller-Stahl as the immigrant Helmut,'rise this Once the audience figures out where the story above the typical fish-out-of-water story. and moral are going, there is nothing left ot do Physical and cultural barriers are explored in but just sit back and enjoy the ride. the Paris segment, featuring a cabbie from the Where Jarmusch does succeed is in making Ivory Coast picking up a beautiful, exotic blind seemingly ordinary people in ordinary situations C ollege Town Calendar 6/12 - Course of Empire, Sun Club i 6/15 —Chainsaw Kittens, Chuy’s 6/16 —Harry Connick Jr., Desert Sky Pavilion 6/16 —Babylon A.D., The Roxy 6/19 —Ozzy Osbourne, Desert Sky Pavilion 6/19 —The Cure, America West Arena 6/20 - Rhythm of Summer Music Festival with Momingstar, Azz Izz —Mesa Ampitheater 6/23 - Ritch Shydner, Improvisation 6/24 - Paula Abdul, Desert Sky Pavilion 6/24 -- Pantera, Celebrity Theatre 7/1 —Natalie Cole, Desert Sky Pavilion 7/2 --The Samples, Chuy’s 7/3 —James Taylor, Desert Sky Pavilion 7/5 —Iron Maiden, Compton Terrace 7/7 —Robin Hitchcock and the Egyptians with Alex Chilton, After the Gold Rush 7/7 -- The Levellers, Sun Club 7/14 -- They Might Be Giants, TBA 9/2 - Lollapalooza ’92, Desert Sky Pavilion KASR’s Top 10 album s Artist photo courtesy FlneLine Features Jim Jarm usch, w rit« and director of "Night on Earth." interesting. Jarmusch has used them to make a movie that is definitely not ordinary. N ig h t on E arth is p la yin g exclu sively a t Cineplex Odeon Scottsdale Galleria 7 Theatres. Album ’ Soundtrack 1. 2. 3. The Cure Material Issue 4. 5. Tori Amos Pooh Sticks 6. 7. : 8. Spent Poets Stray Cats Pale Saints 9- Lemonheads 10. Beautiful South • fo r week ending 6/8/92 Encino M an Wish Destination Universe 1• Crucify Great White Wonder • Spent Poets Elvis on Velvet Throwing Back the Apple Shame About Ray Beautiful South State Prass Hwwdiy, J u tx H , 19W Ü H Ü Gin Blossoms return H tnrl C ohtn/State Pt«m Scott Johnson, the newest Gin Blossom whips through a solo Friday night at Hollywood Alley. The crowd responded well to the form er Feed beg stepping into the four-year-old Tempo band's lin eu p . Johnson replaced founding g u itarist Doug H opkins w ho le ft th e group d uring reco rd ing session In Memphis fo r a full-length album. Continued from page 1. “The kind of poppy Paula Abdul thing has dropped,” he said. ‘T echno’s Rowing, but the guitar bands have definitely taken over the charts.” The cover art for New M iserable Experience ,• a bug-filled radiator grill, was photographed by Dennis Keeley, the same man who worked on Up and Crumbling. “They’ll look great next to each other,” Wilson said. T he new album , w hich in clu d es old ies such as “L ost Horizons” and “Found Out About You” alongside newer tunes like “My Hands Are Tied” and “Hold Me Down,” was produced by John Hampton. “Hampton’s a great guy,” Leen said. The relationship between producer and band led to the record being finished ahead of schedule. “We’re the hardest-working lazy band in the world probably, but I think we were always ahead because maybe we just felt real comfortable,” Leen said. The album is called New M iserable Experience because “it’s what it was. It's die best way to describe being a Gin Blossom,’’ Wilson said. “It just fits almost anything we do — other than Scott’s presence which is far from miserable.” “Most people think being in a band is always fun, but it’s damn tough,” Johnson said. One o f the new songs written since' the return from Memphis is about the tough side o f band life. “T hat’s exactly what “Undone” is about,” Wilson said. “There’s that line in the song, ‘it’s not so easy, it’s not even fun.’” Among the upcoming tasks that come with a major-label release is the inevitable music video. “Everytime I bring up the concept — ‘we’re gonna make a video aren’t me?’ — they all say, ‘yeah, yeah we’re gonna make a video,”’ Wilson said. “And I’m like, ‘Well, probably before the summer’s over right?’ and they’re like ‘yeah, yeah/ and I'shy, ‘well what are we gonna do?’ and they say ‘well, let’s worry about that whenwe choose the single.’ “So probably in a week from now, we’re gonna have to Start worrying about what we’re gonna do,” he said. “Start worrying—■good way to put it,” Leen said. The band’s choice for a locale is the warehouse where they’ve practiced since their creation, since they’ve spent a lot of time there and not a lot of money would be spent on exotic locations. “Plus, if we do it there, we could probably get the record com­ pany to buy us a bunch of fancy stuff that we can hang on the walls,” Wilson said. The band has already spent some time dealing with the visual aspect of recording — spending hours upon hours in photo shoots. Leen said, “It’s the worst man," adding that after ten hours of posing for the last shoot he does not envy anyone in the fashion industry. “It’s gonna look like it took ten minutes, but it took ten hours,” he said. Part of the reason for the lengthy shoots is the fickle, but pow­ erful British press. Johnson said, “in the UK, they want six differ­ ent shots of the band for promotion.” “In different outfits too,” Wilson added. “So the lady in charge of the art, she brought us like $300 worth of shirts from The Gap and we were supposed to change clothes all day long,” Wilson said. “Basically all we did was change T-shirts all day long.” Gin Blossoms play Chuy's, 410 S. M ill Ave., Friday, June 12 at 8:30 p.m. with Brilliant Fools. Proper l.D. required; $5 cover. mt mm H6 ¥ MIGUELSMUSICCENTER ► IBANEZ • ALVAREZ • OVATION ELECTRONIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS ► AMPS • ELEC TR IC EFFEC TS • SH EET M USIC V LESSO NS (Rock • Contem porary • Folk • Classic guitar) ► REPAIRS ► On A ll Instrum ents! N e x t to Q z z le 's W a r e h o u s e In T h e A r c h e s S h o p p in g C e n te r 1 3 0 E . U n iv e r s ity D r. 9 6 8 -2 3 1 0 BUDWEISER REP Position Available iis B g ü iiia g j IR b a h m H R ide a Tube Hwi SaltR Iviw v - TU B E RENTAL AND SHU TTLE B US SERVICE. 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S t T e m p e 3549- A P A B T M E .N T S wm__ HelpW antcdOcncral HttoW anM -SUcs Help WantedOcrlcal HcbW antedFoodservice ¡7 7 featotvOpportunRIeR I «0 RestaurantsAars |8 8 Music ' |R 4 Rets 166 Free Lostfound I SO hsrsonah 1 95 Chid Care a 97 toeinancyCounseRnR ¡9 6 Adoption ¡100 Services {101 HoaRh and fitness ¡i0 5 iy p in s f BEAUTIFUL QUADRANGLES ^ V IL L A G E *2 BED $500 ¡7 0 ¡7 1 ¡7 8 ¡7 3 Faculty/Staff/Graduate Students Lovely 1 bedroom apartm ent. Beautiful pool a n d covered parking. FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS 1224 EAST LEMON 8 9 4 -2 9 3 5 ,1 BED $365 *As^ about ° ur 3 bedroom ¡67 Travel Super Quiet f a c ilit ie s a v a ila b le . 437-1048 2 BEDROOM condo $500; 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo $675. Pool, washer/dryer, near ASU/downtown, Hermosa Place. Two bedroom duplex with enclosed backyard on Weber $450.9664)987. 2 BEDROOM townhouse for rent. McCiintock & University, $450/month with $250 deposit. 899-9050. u n fu r­ 1 block from campus l i t ) Announcements 120 Apartments 130 Homes fo r Rent i |31 Townhomes/Condos | fo r Rent |3 5 RentalShcrinj ■37 Rooms fo r Rent ¡4 0 Homes to r Sale ¡41 Townhomes/Condos to r Sale ¡45 Mobile Homes ¡4 7 Real Estate ¡ 50 Miscellaneous tor Sale Is s Furniture IS 4 Computers 156 Jewelry ■ 158 Tickets 160 Traraportatlon 161 AutomobNcs 1 63 Motorcycles ■64 Bicycles that you can usé Visa, MasterCard or American Express to place your classified? Don't delay—call 965-6731 today! . ÇÔNDO, 700 West University #235, ex­ cellent condition, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, washer/dryer, pool. $350/month. 491- H O M K J O R jy jN T ^ TOW NHOMES/ CO NDO S FOR RENT n is h e d a v a ila b le . F ro m R o o m m a te m a t c h in g se rv ice a ls o a v a ila b le . I OR 2 bedroom. $250 move-in. Pool, laundry, hike to ASU, quiet. Call 967-4568/894-8143. ‘ a p t s . A 1C, fu r n is h e d Terrace Road A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. Terrace 968-8540 ONE BEDROOM furnished house oh acre, ID minutes to University, Quiet, will rent to single/person 1st summer se­ mester. $285 mont& plus deposit. In­ cludes utilities. 268-9030; 425-4834. DID YOU KNOW... W a lk t o A S U . S p a c io u s 2 b e d ro o m Walk to ASU. Quiet, spa­ cious, 1 bedroom , fu r­ n ish e d , A/C, p o o ls id e apartments. $280/m onth G eorge Ann Apts 8 9 4-2 9 3 5 $200 OFF! 2 BEDROOM, 2 bathroom condo, 1100 square feet, 2 car parking, fireplace, balcony, porch, living room, kitchen $530/month, $500 deposit. (206)347‘ 6124. y BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom, walk to ASU, 615 West 3rd Street, available imme­ diately Call Tim 894-0288. $200 OFF FREE U TIL ITIE S ! S e rv ic e ANNOUNCEMENTS ADVERTISERS! The best way to reach ASU* ASU West, MCC and SCC is through the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 toddy for rates and information! STUDIO, POOL, jacuzzi, tennis, dish­ washer, etc. ASU area. $250.437-1048, Apartment Locating HAVE A BEGINNING. — CARDINAL JOHN NEWMAN -— SUMMER RENTAL, 1 bedroom fur­ nished apartment across from ASU, $318 plus u tilities. C all Carol at 967-2817. ' •' . . ", y -- NEED ROOM for summer? Art stu­ dios, within one mile of campus on S co t-. tsdale Road. Call Mitra 860-1665. Low prices. FREE FEAR N O T THAT YOUR LIFE 1 894-1041 Pool, spa, free cable TV, covered parking, laundry facilities. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bed­ rooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laundry room, 1 block south o f University on 8th Street. C ape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. CRYPTOQUOTE 1/2 Block from Campus Beautifully furnished, h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 bat h; 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b ath a p a r t­ m e n t s . All b ills p a id . C a b le TV, h ea te d pool and sp acio u s laundry facilities. Friendly, c o u r t e o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S to p b y to d a y ! 1 0 0 7 W . 1st S t., T e m p e CLO SE TO A SU LARGE STUDIO, pool, dishwasher, etc. Southern/Mill. $325 all utilities paid. 437-1048. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath duplex with fenced yard. University and Priest, 1424 W est 5th Street. No pets. 940-9152;-;-\ SUMMER DISCOUNTS! Reserve now for fall SouthBank Apts. 967-7918 CROSSWORDS 0 S e c lu d e d 2 b e d r o o m , Id eal for the sprious student o r faculty m em b er looking for a quiet hom e. University Apts* 1700 5.College, Tempe 829-7059 -T R A D R 1V E A G A N Just use our free apt. locating s e rv ic e to find y o iir next rental. QUIET ANSWERS TO TODAY'S ■ S H R¥ E E N p D p F j O T N Y T ■ s ■ Decorator Apt. S tu d e n t S pecial Rates Financial com pensation L A M■ O K O S 1Nf E N S P T E S C E N O O R S R R E N 8 P T E U P E R z A R K I N N v MOVING VAN ASUAREA Summer S pecial, 1, 2 b e d $285 to $365, laundry, covered park, ing, pooL Call b e fo re 5pm . — — — —— - 2 blks south o f campus TOW HOMES/ CONDO S FOR RENT APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Mark • 3 7 0-7815 F o r further Inform ation, call: s K A T Page SI Thursday, June 11 968*8 U 8 1255 University 968-6383 ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS C resenT a Students, A dults & Families Furnished o r U nfurnished ANNOUNCEMENTS A ll U tilities Included Quiet Living Near ASU Campus State Press Classified Liner A d Form - -- - Name : ’ ■: Phone . _— y 9 6 7 -8 2 0 3 • • Address City/St/Zip Run Dates Summer '92 Rates (10 Issues) Classification ____ ; Tempe 1025 East Orange SHORTTERM Liner A ds, 15 w ords o r less 1-4 Issues 5-9 Issues* 10 Issues* $3.00 per Issue $2.75 per issue $2.50 p er issue 154 cadi additional word • No abbreviations, bolding or centering • Please write dearly! • ONE WOBD PER Ub£ - t ----- - M ethod o f Payment □ Cash . □ Check (Include guarantee # j on to p of personal checks) j □ Visa/MasterCard/American Express Lt6 m ini | -same ad, no copy changes LEASES AVAILABLE 1855 E. ¡Don Carlos, Tempe CALL N Q W Name on Card Card No. — 968-6926 Exp. date —— Start vour ad here: j 2 bedrooms from $375 L , Casa Grande A P A R IM EN T S San Miguel Apartments «6 hr Large 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 19 19 81 87 A tta in s or mal your ad In on thb form to the Matthews Center basement. Ifs quick...It's easy) We're open 8am-3pm, Mon-Fri. Please make sure your ad leads EXACTLY as you want It to appear In the State P re*, Induin g punctuadont DeadUne la noon, one burina» day prior to publication. A I acfcertiring k subject to approval by the State Prest. We reserve the right to cdk or refect copy- NO W W H Any questions? Cal M S-4731. ** Milling « k t o s Stale Press Classifieds D e p t 1502, A SU Tem pe, A Z 85287-1502 U tilitie s Included! 910 E. Lemon 9 6 6 -8 7 0 4 Page 2 2 RENTAL SHARING ROOMMATE NEEDED for mer in a 3 bedroom house. month. Please contact Kathy at 968-3590. 10 minute bike asu. : TOWHOMES/ CONDO S FOR SALE this sum­ $200 per or Sheryl ride from ZERO DOWN plus good credit! ROOMMATE NEEDED. Own room in 3 bedroom, 2-stoify house in Marlbor­ ough Park. Community pool (College and Curry). $335/month plus 1/3 utili­ ties. Available 6/15.966-1054. N ear A SU , 5 list­ ings available. Each 2 br, 2 ba in nice complex. O ne unit furnished. ROOMS FOR RENT FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. Pri­ vate bedroom, garage, pool, washer/dryer. Pretty house. $250/month, 1/3 utilities. 831-5606. C arl W h ite 7 8 6 -6 7 7 8 FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. 3 bed­ room townhouse, McDonald/Hayden. $210 plu s1/3 utilities. Call 991-5540. Coldwell Banker FEMALE, NON-SMOKER, responsi­ ble, needed fen: 3 bedroom condo in Papago Park, $230. 967-0126, leave mes• "■ - • . . ''' - IN V E S T M E N T TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE 2 MASTERS with full baths, walk-in closets. Private, light, bright, vaulted ceiling, fireplace. $72,900. Call Gwen,, The Prudential, 951-1010 or 947-3899. 3 BEDROOM, 1 bath tow nhouse, Broadway/48th Street. Must sell, price reduced $19,999 Call A1 258^9040, 486-5079. V State Press Classifieds work. 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 A J ASSUME NO qualifying, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, condominium, fireplace, washer, dryer,, refrigerator; stay. V ery low down 967-4784. ADVERTISERS! The best way to reach ASU, ASU West, MCC and SGC is through the State Press Classifieds’ Call 965-6731 today for rates an«J information ! MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 2 o r 3 bedroom s available STUDENT DISCOUNTS FREE DELIVERY! 450 E. SOUTHERN AV„ MESA COMPUTERS IMAGEWRITER 2 for sale with single sheet feeder and thunderscan. Ideal for Mac/IIgs! Prints color! With ribbons, paper, and more. Must sell $375/offer. Rob at 835-0495(hom e), 9 6 5 -4 9 8 0 (woik) JEWELRY CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Ave­ nue Jewelers, 414 South Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. LARADA'S ARMY Surplus has all your camping needs- inexpensively. A lso more weird stuff than you can im agine. 7 6 4 W est Main, M esa 834-7047. A JE W ELR Y o f a ll kin d s. Including gold, sterlin g , gems, pearls, antiques, etc. TOYOTA COROLLA 1980, good con­ dition, new clutch; air conditioning AMFM radio 5-speed, $1200/offer, 968-4237. * YOUR OLDER car will really shine, and your new car will dazzle all when you use space age Super Gloss. One easy step restores color and provides a hard poly siloxane glass finish^ Call Eric at 966-5075 for amazing détails. No obli­ gation. SU N G LASSES Ray-Bans, Seren g eti, Vuarnet. 50% to 60% o f f retail. N e w w ith warranty. (6 0 2 ) 2 5 1 -6 6 6 6 RACQUETBALL RACQUET: Ektelon Mirada, new, improve game with this intermediate/advanced racquet, $90/offer. Dave 967-2294/ SHAMPOO, CONDITIONER Refilling Station ¡at 1/2 price, Soibie, Nexxus, etc. Grooming Humans Hair Studio 966-5462. BOOKS RECYCLE FOR $$$ TIREP OF THE DORM? LOWEST AIRFARES guaranteed, 24 hours. (602)261-6002. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ADVERTISING SALES representa­ tives needed, high income potential, call for interview, 966-3351, 2:30-5:30pm. ANIMAL HOSPITAL KNH in Chandler needs cleanup/vet assistant position. Also, vet technician position. Please send resume and introductory let­ ter to: Office Manager, 7 West Knox Road, Chandler 85224. AUTO CENTER ART STUDENTS •Full S ervice G a ra g e •O n S ite F ra m e R e p a ir 966-6090 •¿ » * a*w* * 3 •Oil Change •Filter (Reg. $19.99) Earn $ 5 ,00 0 + / month. Free tra n s p o rta tio n ! Room & Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male or Female. For employ­ ment program call Student Employment Services at 1-906-545-4155 e x t 9069. NOW HIRING at Cornerstone Mall. Weekly pay $5.50/ hour guaranteed. Call 968-4457. V CEEC E ntertainm ent SAVE $10°° 9 9 ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT -Fisheries. : N O W in te rv ie w in g ta le n t fo r m ovies, com m ercials, p rin t and photos. LU BE,"oiL"& FILT ER Q NEED SOMEONE to critique^ complet­ ed graduate thesis. Prefer composition experience in thesis work. Hourly or flat rate. Fernando 276-3874. 274-6362 1868 E. SIXTH ST. TEM PE, AZ 85285 ^Coupon MODELS Print * TV for gals & guys. Experience not necessary. Part-time OK, En Avant A gency 8 3 9 -1 9 6 9 , 4500 South Lakeshore Drive, Tempe. Dependable, creative individual to work part-time in Scottsdale art gaUeiy/frame shop. Must have excellent color and design sense. Weekends a must. Call Larry 951-8907. •C o m p lete Body & Pain t C HELP WANTEDGENERAL BEO NT.V. “ * . Many needed for commercials. Now hiring all ages. For casting information: (615) 779-7111, extension T-1465. •Up To 5 Qts. Of 30 wt. DELIVERY DRIVERS, must have a good driving record and insurance,. 966-3351,2:3Q-5:0Qpm. __________ M ost C ars. rT 5 % O F F Q T H E R "“ SERVICES WITH SCHOOL I.D. PART TIME Enjoy sports/fitness environment! Of­ fice work/sales. Car needed. Fitness Plus Magazine 945-9402. PART TIME PE coach for small private sch ool in M esa to work Monday through Friday, approximately 5 hours a day for the 1992-93 school year. 969-0226 between 9am and 3pm. HELP WANTED, flyer distribution, flexible hours, good pay, 966-3351, 2:30-5:00 pm.. GUYS & GALS CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVES Gréât Western Screen Door Co. now hiring; ALWAYS BUYING Rare Lion • 9 6 8 -6 0 7 4 TOWHOMES/ CONDO S FOR SALE 968-0917 LOW PRICES OH AU Q UALITIES SOFAS • LOUNGES CHAIRS & OTTOMANS COVERS «MATTRESSES TABLES » ETC. CAR STEREO, Rockford Fosgate Punch 45amp, Punch 6" woofers, Punch 10" boxed woofer, Sony 100-watt tweet­ ers, Sony CD pull-out. Like new, $650 or best offer. Mark 7 5 2 -0 0 0 1 or (602)397-7850. Sell your books; for cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit towards the purchase o f anything in the store. Choose from 3 flodrs of new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers welcomed Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue, 966-0203. HARDEN SQUARE CONDO **FOR SALE** FANTASY FUTONS FANTASTIC INVESTMENT 9 6 7 -2 6 1 1 9 6 7 -2 6 1 1 SCOTTSDALE USED Furniture, 7620 East McKellips, 2 miles from campus, 949-0380. Desks, dressers, beds, book- a r a i F A N T A S T IC 2 blks/A S U , 2 c h a rm in g homes, duplex behind both. Buy one or both! COMPUTER DESK with pullout draw­ er $50. 2 file cabinets $20 each. Futon $50, call 968-4237. • ». AUTÔMOgjL|Sj|Y__ TRAVEL REAL ESTATE 2 b lk s /A S U , 2 c h a rm in g h o m e s , d u p le x b e h in d both. Buy o n e o r both! HOMES FOR SALE FURNITURE (NE comer of Southern & Mesa Dr.) ROOM FOR rent* (Rural/Elliott), in new South Tempe home, pool, hot tub, washer/dryer, garage utilities included. 838-1411. (T Stale Press Thursday, June 11 921 South Mill A ve, Tempe Center MOTORCYCLES KAWASAKI NINJA 250 with 2 helmets 6,500 miles, 1990 model $300.00 or best offer. Call Gerry 381-1505. BICYCLES A UTCW O glL|S_= _ CHEAP! FBI/U.S. Seized. 89 Mercedes $200, 86 VW $50. 87 Mercedes $ 100; 65 Mustang $50,.,, Choose from thousands starting $25. Free 24 hour recording reveals details (801)379-2929. Copyright #AZ10KJC. YOU SAY it, we display it! Only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information! • B A D C R E D IT ? BANKRUPTCY? N O C R E D IT ? N EED W H E E L S? YES!" In te rn atio n al A u to S a le s m in. 20 wpm and have prior ■ $ 15/h r. g uaranteed custom er service experience. SCtiWINNS, OTHER top brands; re­ conditioned, most under $75.00; w ill buy bikes; cash Brian 350-9320, 225-7550. S ta rts a t $5.°°/Hr., long term com m itm ent. MUST WORK SATURDAYS C all fo r Appointm ent TRAVEL 838-8405 BUDGET TRAVEL •Student flights •Eurail passes •Hostel cards •Int. student ID’s •Travel equipment •Lots more! 4 ft A ih k a m n u n Hostels W e like t o sa y 20-30 hours per week. Type 1046 E; Lemon St. Tempe • 894-5128 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Not An Agency Never A Fee Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/H plus bonus. ■M-F 3-8pm ■Sat & Sun i0 -7 p m S e tt in g a p p o in tm e n ts , d o o r t o d o o r f o r s o la r s c re e n s . C a ll 2 7 8 -6 1 8 8 FOOD INDUSTRY ($600-180Q/wk. avg.) ($30,000-60,000/yr. avg.) •Skip the hype... •M eet people easily? •Results based on your efforts! •Part-tim e/Full-tim e, 21 yrs. or older •Apply in person M -F 10-2:00 1 7 7 5 W . University, # 1 2 2 Tem pe 2 1 2 6 W. Main, M esa 2 blocks west of Dobson 964-9044 Cornerstone Mall Near ASU YOUR CREDIT IS G O O D HERE FEEL LIKE YOU'RE THROWING. AWAY YOUR RENT MONEY? C ali th e Cheap Sax ASU C O N D O S P E C IA L IS T ■..'■Y. •Weekly Pay •Cash Bonuses •Flexible Schedules •Evening & Saturdays •Referral Bonuses •M odern Office oVl/3 T o k p AD VA N TA G E OF OWNING instead o f renting. GARY CRE EN AC RE 483-3333 1- 800 - 535-6619 RE/M AX Excalibur R ealty Positions Available $5*® p er h r G uaranteed G o t som ething' c o lle c tin g dust in yo ur clo se t! Sell it th ro u g h th e S ta te Press Classifieds! 965-6731 G et ou t o f the H eat Midwest Publishing, Inc. Call Mr. Jensen 9 6 8 -4 4 5 7 s Page S3 Thursday, June 11 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL PHONE INTERVIEW ERS, day or evening, legitimate research, no sales. Advancement potential. Tempe. Susan, 967-4441.-' VALET PARKERS needed, must be athletic and in shape, male or female, 966-3351,2:30-5:30pm. SPORTS MINDED Hiring immediately 6-8 individuals for our Tem pe office, full or part-time. Flexible hours. Perfect for students. $8$lt) per hour. Call 921-8282. THE ST ATE Press advertising depart­ ment is how hiring student advertising sales representatives to create design and sell advertising and marketing cam­ paigns to local retail businesses. If you would like to gain excellent experience that will make your resume shine call me today. You need to have a vehicle and be in school at least through De­ cember 1993. If you thrive on chaos, are creative, dependable and competi­ tive, please call Jackie Eldridge today at 965-6555. WANTED: AUTOMOTIVE detailers to work Saturday and/or part-time weekdays. $6 per hour. 759-8856. WANTED: PART-TIME dependable maintenance person with reliable truck or van for replacing lights and air filters at several retail locations. Call 834-/ 8453. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL ..PART-TIM E OFFICE help, record keeping, posting, filing, lite-typing, 2-3 afternoons/week; Industrial shop 1/2 mile from AJ5.U. 966-7810. HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE JOHNNY ROCKETS Scottsdale now hiring grill cooks, cashiers, expediters. Apply in person, 9:30am-5pm. Located Fashion Square Mall- Palm Court Cafe level. GROCERY/ M ERCH AN DISIN G Work Every Day! MUSIC Mon-Sun, Up to 40/Hrs Wk 5:15 A M -2:00 PM : or 2:15 P M -11:00 PM GUITAR COACH available. Many styles, levels. $12/hOur or $36 for four. Transportation available. 921-7398. $4.3(VHR + .200 PER MILE Stock Grocery Stores with Soda Pop. REQUIREMENTS: 10c WINGS DRAFTS 70c Please call to schedule appt. or apply In person. Bud. Bud Light Rio Salado Bank Bldg. 1400 E. Southern #940 Tempe (W. of McClintock) 3-7pm. M-Th All day Sat & Sun BANDERSNATCH ; - 8 3 8 -8 4 0 5 Equal Opportunity Employer Not An Agency Never a Fee M/F/V/H - BREWPUB HELP WANTEDGENERAL fJ o R D O N ^CHWENKMEYER. INC. T E L E M ARK E T I N G Political Fundraising Guaranteed wage $6/hr. + bonuses. We offer. •Paid .training •Quarterly raises •Flexible hours ADOPTION LOST SAND-CAST ring with 3 stones. High sentimental value. Lost by Student Services building on 6 /2. Reward 969-1668. PLEASE LET us help you. We are searching for a newborn baby to cherish and adopt. Financially secure California couple, happily married 11 years, promise your baby a lifetime of happi^ ness. Expenses paid, legal. Call Leslie and Dan collect (408)294-2229. LOST: RED Shoei RF200 motorcycle helmet on 5/7 at Hayden Library book drop. P lease return it, c all Brian 990-9157. Reward! PERSONALS CHANAD. I received your message that you called on Thursday, May 21st'. I would have called back but I don’t have your number. I hope summer school is going well for you. I am looking forward to hearing from you very soon. Best Wishes, Kirk Hagen 831-2851. FITNESS TRAINING by Bob. For women and men. •Bodyshaping •B o­ dybuilding •N utrition 9 68—4416(home). 223-7674 (pager). -Professional management team •Career advancement Call now fo r an interview a t 921-2882 M -T h 9-5pm , ask for Personnel Departm ent YOUNG, HAPPILY married, finan­ cially secure, childless couple looking for infant to adopt. Help us give love and happiness to a child and we can help you through a d ifficu lt tim e. Call 1(800)374-4453. SERVICES BANKRUPTCYDivorce- starting from $50. Evening and weekend appointments available^ 839-5961. T h o rb e c k e 's Gym 966-6691 $12 per month plus $50 one­ time member­ ship fee. PAT FOGLER TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING HAPPY BIRTHDAY! WE LOVE youii $1 PAGE, all typing, experienced, reli­ able, accurate, free editing, rush jobs accepted. 897-7670, Gail. ??Guess who?? DID YOU KNOW... that you can use Visa, MasterCard or American Express to place yourclassified? Don't delay —call 965-6731 today! RESTAURANTS/ BARS •Have own transportation •Well groomed •Reliable & detail oriented FREE LOST/FOUND CHILD CARE $1.25 AND Up. Professional word pro­ cessor for papers/resumes. Laser. Rush jobs accepted. Caroline 892-7022. NEED CHILDCARE in my home, 1:30 to 4:30/5:30. $3 an hour. Responsible and energetic. 431-8730. 1-DAY TURNAROUND- for most pa­ pers- Typing. Reasonable. Close/ASU. Laser. Faculty/Students. Diane 966-5693. RESPONSIBLE BABYSITTER for en­ ergetic one-year-old. Approximately 20 hours per week, $4.00/hour. Will con­ sider live-ih (salary negotiable). Nonsmoker. References required. Call Patty at 946-8347. Arcadia area. ACCURATE, EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. WP5.5. Reports, resum es, charts graphs. Laura 820-0305. ADOPTION A WIFE, who was adopted herself as a baby, and her loving husband, are long- . ing to become parents. We w ill give your baby a full-time devoted mother whose love is overflowing for a child. We are financially secure, and can pro­ vide your child with everything it could possibly ever need or want Please call x us anytime, David and Stacey: 1-800. 669-0515. • : /• . - ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186. STATE PRESS Classifieds work! Call 965- 6731 today for rates and information on how to place your classified ad! PACKAGE $ 3 5 " Includes: •Original Resume Composition •Cover Letter (Basic Format) •Follow up Letter (Basic Format) •10 Copies o f Resume & Cover Letter •5 Copies o f Follow up Letter sent to Interviewer •10 Envelopes Addressed to Companies OPEN ADOPTION We aré looking for an open, long-term relationship with our child's birth par­ entis). We are state certified and haVe adoption counseling and education. We have many years o f love and friendship that we wish to share with a child. Call collect! Mark or Cheryl at (602)7590173 Or our adoption couroelor Vivian (602)248-0416. OL ^WxÜEezfftiumi (602)966-9211 2121 S. M ill Avenue Suite 206 M Tem pe, AZ. 85282 NEED A back issue of die State Press? Come to the basement of Matthews Center to the Front Information Desk MondayFriday, 8am-5pm. If wehave the issue you need, it’s yours! 894-0864 ★ $8-$10/HOUR Morning, Afternoon, Evening $5.50/Guarantee/Hour • ★ Nation's most experienced, largest Telemarketing Co. HELP WANTEDSALES Hundreds of dollars in cash, bonuses given out weekly ASU GRADUATE will professionally type your reports, term papers^ etc. Rush jobs no problem. Theresa 924-1976. r High sucess rate! Reports- best prices, editing. Laser printing, same day. Near ASU 967-0907. CREATIVE TYPING, term papers, resum es, essays, laser printer, rea­ sonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. TYPING ASSISTANCE. Experienced & helpful. Reasonable rates. P.O. Box 16803 . Phoenix, Arizona 85011. 265-8364. ' S h e ri P a tric k - 961-1411 Freelance Sec'y. Services Desktop Publishing Term Papers/Newsletters Resumes/Graphics Laser Printing Notary Public 1 Day Serv/7 Days Week Discount Student Prices WORD PROCESSING, secretarial serv­ ices. 23 years experience. Student dis­ counts. Southwest corner, Miller and Chaparral. 994-8145. R E S U M E S $15 WORD PROCESSING- Laser print, spelling/grammar check, $2 per page. 945-1551. INSTRUCTION EDITING/TYPING Research papers. Reports, Manuscripts. Dissertations. Resumes. Letters; Com­ puterized. Experienced editor. Accu­ rate. Jim. 945-6793. FORMER A SU E nglish instructor. Word processing, editing, proofread­ ing, tutoring available for all class pa­ pers. Susan 897-1822. LEARN TO fly! Private through com­ mercial. Peter Schnur and Steve Barlow , CF11. All instruction $15/hour. 957-1442. TUTORS ACCOUNTING TUTOR: 211, 212, 321; ASU grad student, 6 years experi­ ence, private or group. Bruce 957-0357, leave message. STATE PRESS Classifieds - 965-6731! PAPERSTYPED $15" HOUR OR $3" PAGE Preparation of Documents for Presentation $10“ Interview Counseling g ^ HOUR & Career Testing I SERVICE available . L —“ “ “ ^Vl/K ike. < sJ\.e.s.u/rté (602)966-9211 2121 S. M ill Avenue Suite 206 M Tem pe, AZ. 85282 MATH 2 IQ. Electrical engineer with 9 sememsters' experience. Guaranteed A or B w ith m y program. C all Mark 345-7616, leave message. MATH TUTOR: Algebra, basic math and calculus. For Understanding, per­ sonal help call Sandy at 731-4886. NEED HELP? Summer school moves fast, so be prepared by getting help while it still matters. We offer tutorial in: MAT 106, MAT 117, MAT 119, MAT 210, MAT 270, PHY 111, CHM 101, QBA 221. Call Matrix Education Center- "Simort" 968-4668. TUTOR FOR chemistry (up to organic chem istry), m icrobiology, biology, genetics. 3 years experience graduate with/chemistry & microbiology de­ grees. Call Wil 968-9029, please leave message^ 1 DID YOU know that you can place a personal ad for as little as $2? Come down to the basement of Matthews Center for details. And remember to bring your student ID! ” .... S tate Press i« « " Center MS-6731 classifieds Basement, U N E R A D RATES: 15 words or less $3.00 per issue (1-4 issues) $2.75 per issue (5-9 issues) $2.50 per issue (10+ issues) ' 150 each additional word. No abbreviations. The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering, no type size changes. Rm, 46H Personals (15 words or less) are only $2.00. You can also add Greek symbols to your persona! to r only 50c p er set (3 sym­ bols max. p er set). S EM I-D IS P LA Y RATES: A bold, centered, all caps headline can be added to your liner ad fo r an additional $1.00. Headline cannot exceed 15 characters (all letters, punctuation m arks and spaces count as one character each). Liner, personal and sem i-display ad deadlines are 12 noon, one business day prior to. publication. C LA S S IFIE D D ISPLA Y RATES:: (per column inch, per insertion) ' 1 tim e: $6.50 2-5 times: $6.10 6 or more tim es: $5.90 A ll classified display ads have borders. Type can be bold face, centered, etc. An average of 15-20 words can tit in one column inch. Pack In Mail M arketing Group of Arizona C lassified display ad deadline Is 10am, tw o business days p rio r to publication. is lo o k in g fo r a d v e rtis in g /m a rk e tin g m a jo rs o r som eone w ho is d ed icated , hard-w orking an d look­ ing fo r a jo b . S e llin g a d v e rtis in g ca n b e a v e ry rew arding exp erien ce- an d p rofitable, tool If inter­ ested , p lease call: Cash, check (with guarantee card), Visa, M asterCard or American Express ($ 6 minimum on all credit card orders). W e're located in the basem ent of Matthews Center, Room 46H . O ffice hours are 8am -5pm , Monday-Friday. Tim Orscheln ★ TYPING/WORD PROCESSING ONE PAGE RESUME FINANCIALLY SECURE infertile cou­ ple seeks baby to share midwestern Christian home. 1(800)484-1017, after beep (2398): HELP WANTEDSALES TYPING/WORD PROCESSING or Alex Clark at 951-0930 betw een 9am & 12 noon, M onday-Friday HOW T O P LA C E A C LA SSIFIED AD: In person: Personals are accepted In person with student I.D . By phona or fax: Paym ent with V isa, MasterCard or American Express only. $6 min­ imum on alt phone orders. State Press fax num ber is 965-8484; please include your credit card number and expiration data on ta x .; Please call beforesending fax so we can anticipate the fax. Persónate ere not accepted over the phone o r b y tax! By Mail: * C a ll on great program s like: •Magazine Renewals »Telephone Services •Trial Preview Book Clubs •Non-Profit Representation SERVICES Touchless Automatic Jet Wash Only $2.00 -GREAT ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNlTIES- •Management staff committed to your success. •Part or full time, flexible scheduling. •Lots of sales made hourly. DIAL AMERICA SERVICES Apache & Terrace Spot Free Rinse Open 24 Hours S end your ad (with paym ent) to: State Press Classifieds D e p t 1502, ASU Tem pe, A Z 85287-1502 (if sending a personal check, please include your check guarantee card number.) Personals are not accepted through the m all. TEA R SHEETS Tearsheets will be forwarded by request for 50c and full copies of the paper for $1.50. H O W TO C O R R EC T O R C A N C EL YOU AD: U ner ads must be corrected or cancelled before noon, one busi­ ness day prior to publication. NO REFUNDS YflLL BE GIVEN. CHANGES: There m ay be a change fee for any changes m ade on classified ads. The minimum fee is the cost one one m ore day's run (m ini­ mum fee on changes m ade by phone is $6. Page # 4 M U flM I Thursday, June 1 1 ,1 9 9 1 Dr. O'Neal is proclaiming deceive a CWRopractic Examination fit X-Ray for Charge! ' (Good m% scheawleiepppolritments June 29*)uly 3) This exa m in a tio n n orm ally costs S 1 0 0 -S 1 5 0 .1 w ill include an o rth o p e d ic test, a neurological test, a spinal a lig n m e n t check, an exa m in a tio n fo r restricted o r excess m o tio n in th e spine, x-ray a n d a private consultation to discuss th e results. M A N Y PEOPLE EXPERIENCE RESULTS T H R O U G H C H IR O P R A C TIC W /O D RU G S O R SURGERY. •A lle rg ie s •E a r In fectio n s •M e n s tru a l Problem s •N e c k a n d Back Pain •D is c Problem s •H e a d a c h e s /M ig ra in e s •P re g n a n c y Pains •A s th m a •S in u s T ro u b le • S to m ach D isorders •S coliosis •L e a rn in g D isorders •P a in fu l Joints •A rm /L e g /S h o u ld e r Pains •N u m b n e s s •’NEAL CHIROPRACTIC Dr. Richard L. O'Neal, Palmer Graduate O ur office is designed to keep w a itin g to an absolute m inim um ! 491 -1242 CELEBRATING 1 2 YRS. O F PRACTICE 1 0 7 0 E. Baseline Rd., Tem pe Team Physician Sport and Fitness Council W orld Olym pic Chiropractic Committee