©Copyright, State Press, 1994 Tempe, Arizona Tuesday, June 21,1994 An Independent Summer W eekly Voi. 78 No. 70 T ext by MARYifgEBft Summerton; Photography by W illiam L ynam Ì Y Y hen Jeanne Toller discovered she was pregnant at the age of 48, she wanted to rip the baby from her body. “I have never liked children, and 1 certainly never wanted to have any of my own,” said Toller, a vice president for an Albuquerque, N.M., finance company. Toller, who is not married, said she did not have a serious commitment to the man she was dating. “I have never been pregnant, but when I started feeling queasy, I knew there was no other explanation,” said Toller, a husky woman with curly, short brown hair. “And I knew immediately that no matter what, I was going to have an abortion.” ► New President-Alan Frost officially accepts ASASU presidency. Page 2. ^ Weekly Weather Outlook Mostly sunny with a few variable clouds. Slight chance of evening thunder­ storms, Highs in the low 100s. Lows in high 70s.' Brock laid to rest- Hundreds of friends, family and fans turn out to pay final respects to ASU's legendary baseball coach. Page 7 L ocal a rtists such as B rian M arsland are finding new places to d isplay th e ir a r tco ffeeh o u ses and bookstores. Page 11 Toller went to Planned Parenthood in Albuquerque in May and talked to a counselor who explained the abortion procedure by using a plastic model of a uterus. “It seemed to be a safe, sterile, medical procedure and I made an appointment to have the surgery done the following week,” said Toller, who had been preg­ nant for about seven weeks. Toller changed her mind, however, after she watched the 6 p.m, news. That’s when she learned about RU-486, the French abortion pill. On May 16, the Population Council, a New York City-based research organiT u r n t o R U -4 8 6 , page 4 . Films S im b a ’the cub stars in D isney's n ew est p roduction Where To Find It ....... 26 ....... 20 The Lion King, w hich hits theaters this w eek. Page 25 ....... 11 H oroscopes .................... ....... 27 O p in io n ............................ ....... 22 Police R e p o r t................. ....... 21 Page 2 Alan Frost accepts ASASU presidency O ffic e rs, se n a to rs s ta n d so lid ly b e h in d n e w c h ie f B y D a v id S t r o w S tate P ress Alan Frost has officially accepted the ASASU presi­ dency. filling the office left vacant by the disqualifica­ tion of Marci Hendrickson three weeks ago. Frost released a memo on June 14 in which he announced his acceptance. "I had no aspirations of being president of (ASASU).’" he wrote in the memo. “1 wanted to con­ tinue working in the office which I had been (elected to) in the spring semester.” Frost was elected as ASASU’s executive vice presi­ dent in the organization’s most recent elections. Although he had expressed hesitation earlier about accepting the office. Frost said he was excited to get started. A v e ra g e s a v in g s : $98 p e r year B y D a v id S t r o w S tate P ress Good news! Students’ pocketbooks will be a bit fuller August 16 when ASU changes health insurance carriers. What’s the catch? Students will lose a few health-care options covered by the current carrier. The University will be changing from Blue Cross/Blue Shield to Samaritan Health Group. “Our students are getting a tremen­ Frost “Bring it on." he said. “Fm excited that we have someone in the position now, and we just want to get the ball rolling. Now we can attack some issues dous deal here.” said Dale Bowen, direc­ tor of student health. “Students will be getting the best possible care at the low­ est possible price." Changes in costs will be: • Fall session (August 16-January 15): $247, down from $288 (savings: $41); • Spring/summer session (January 16August 15): $346, down from $403 (savings: $57). Changes are more significant in pre­ miums for dependents: • Spouse, annual: $1334, down from $1488 (savings: $154); • Children, annual (total for all chil­ dren): $1029, down from $1186 (sav­ for the students.” ASASU executive officers and senators stood solidly behind Frost’s new administra­ tion. “I am very supportive (o f F ro st),” said Jon Bartlett, senator from the college of engineering. “It’s probably one of the best things for the associ­ ation.” Brandy Aguilar, cam­ pus affairs vice president, agreed. “Now that we have someone in the position, i t ’s tim e to m ove fo r­ ward, to get things ready for the fall for students.” “It’s one of the best decisions for the student body,” said Card Peet, senator from the college of education. “So far we’ve all gotten along very well.” F rost’s prom otion raised a new problem — the vacancy of the executive vice presidency. Senator Bartlett was named by the committee as the interim executive vice president in a meeting of the executive committee last Wednesday. Bartlett, who immediately assumed the duties of the office, will hold office “at least until August.” “That’s when the selection process will start for a permanent vice president,” Bartlett said. ASASU bylaws state that the president has the responsibility of appointing a replacement for the exec­ utive vice president should the office ever become vacant. The appointee must then be approved by a vote' of the senate. ings: $157); • Spouse and children, annual: $1783, down from $2011 (savings: $228). Samaritan offers a POS (point of ser­ vice) plan for ASU Main students, simi­ lar to an HMO. Students under this plan must go to the Student Health Center for medical care before seeing any other doctor. If deemed necessary, students w ill be sent to a sp ecialist in the Samaritan network for attention. There is no deductible for referral to a specialist. However, the student will be required to pay a $10 co-payment. Form erly, referral carried a $100 deductible, Bowen said. Non-emergency medical care outside of the network carries a $500 deductible. After the deductible, the plan will pay 60 percent of costs, up to $50,000. Dependents of students under the plan will not be treated at the Student Health Center. Instead, they may be treated by any physician on the Samaritan network. Because of the HMO-like nature of the plan, several new features, such as maternity, have been added, according to Anna-Marie Shivers, insurance specialist for Student Health. Students would have faced a proposed 12 percent premium increase under Blue Cross this year. The dictionary has at least three definitions for “value.” So do we. PowerBook’ I45B 4/80. PowerBook* ¡65 4/80. Only $1,129.00. Only H & 900 PowerBook Duo"230 4/80 (with Macmiodf externalfloppy drwe and PowerBook Duofloppy adapter notB>oum). Only $ t j a m availablewithin yourbudget. Meaningyou get it all. Power Quality. And afford­ Givingpeoplemorevaluefortheir moneyhas made Macintosh" thebest-selling ability. It’s that simple. So, if that sounds like value personal computeron campuses and across thecoun­ A f f o r d a b le c o m p u t e r s fr o m A p p le . to you, visit yourApple Campus try for the past two years' And that!: a trend that A p p le t. Reseller today. And leave your dictionary at home. is likely to continue. Because there are Macintosh and PowerBook* models For more information visit ASU Bookstore Mon-Fri 9:00-5:00, Sat 10-2 or call 965-8963 '¡Mafie*, ¡994.01994/tfpk Computer, Ine. 4Mrfefe m en ti Appli, temple logs, Macmtoh, MocmtubQuadra m i PowerBookm natem itrademarkscfAppleOmtputr, ¡mí 4Mkœ,4tplil0dkrani4udkm m m tnám ufa 4 / & Computer, htc. P age3 Tuesday, June 21, 1994 S t a t e P r ess Simpson pleads innocent B y J o h n A n tcza k A s so c ia t e d P ress W riter LOS ANGELES — A somber, fatiguedlooking O.J. Simpson pleaded innocent Monday to murdering his ex-wife and a friend. But a prosecutor said Simpson was “ the sole m u rd erer” and she expected to fully prove the case against him. Simpson calmly said “ not guilty” whan asked his plea. A judge set a status hearing on the evidence for Wednesday and a preliminary hearing for June 30. Simpson, who spent Father’s Day under suicide watch in his jail cell, was arraigned as a source said a county grand jury met to hear testimony in the murder case against him. The former football star has denied involvement in the June 12 deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson, 35, and Ronald Goldman, 25,. They were found stabbed and slashed to death outside her home. Sim pson w inced slightly when Deputy District Attorney Marcia Clark read the charge involving his ex-wife. His attorney, Robert Shapiro, laid his hand on Sim pson’s left shoulder and squeezed it lightly. Shapiro requested a special type of pillow to help Simpson sleep, saying h e ’s been unable to. Sim son’s eyes drooped; at times, he closed them entire­ lyMunicipal Judge Patti Jo McKay said she would not issue a court order requir­ ing sheriff to provide such a pillow, but said the request could be made directly to the sheriff. A routine request by Shapiro for copies other evidence was granted. He was told the autopsy reports were not yet completed and they would be provided as soon as they were available. In a news conference after the hear­ ing, Clark said investigators believed Simpson acted alone — “ he is the sole murderer” — and had planned the slay­ ings at least a brief time in advance. “ We do expect fully to prove pre­ m editation,” Clark said. She did not comment on specific evidence. She wouldn’t say whether a grand jury was meeting but said if a grand jury returned an indictm ent, that would supercede the prelim inary hearing requested by the defense. Earlier today, Detective Tom Lange, one of the two lead investigators, walked into the office this morning where the grand jury meets. A court clerk who refused to identify herself said the panel was in session but wouldn’t reveal what the jury was discussing. However, a source close to the grand jury told The Associated Press the panel met to hear testimony in the Simpson case. The Los Angeles Times had report­ ed earlier that the panel also met Friday. The grand jury, which meets in secret, has the power to bring additional charges against Simpson and any other person involved in the case. If brought, such charges would supersede any charges brought by the district attorney or a pre­ liminary hearing where evidence is pre­ sented publicly to persuade a judge to proceed to trial. Prosecutors had not yet decided w hether to file charges against A1 Cowlings, Simpson’s friend and former teammate. He who was driving the Ford Bronco that led authorities on a dramatic freeway chase Friday ending in their arrests at Sim pson’s home. Cowlings was freed on $250,000 bail. At today’s news conference, David Conn, another prosecutor, said the flight could be used “ to show consciousness of guilt.” Associated Press Football Hall of Famer O.J. Simpson, shown in this August 1993 file photo, hired attorney Robert Shapiro on Wednesday, June 15,1994 amid reports that his arrest was imminent. A police source, speaking on conditions of anonymity, told The Associated Press the investigation has focused only on Simpson and that he would be arrested. $2 . 4 9 M A G N IF IC E N T 7 3 Buttermilk Pancakes, 2 Eggs Any Style, 2 Strips of bacon or Sausage Links •Offer expires Aug. 1 3 ,1994» Limit one coupon per person per visit at participating Perkins® Family Restaurants. Not valid with any other discount or coupons. Sales tax, if applicable, must be paid by customer. Please present coupon when ordering. ®1992 Perkins Restaurants Operating Company; L.P. $3 . 4 9 TREM ENDO US 12 4 Pancakes, 3 Eggs, 1 Order of Crispy, Hashed Brown Potatoes, 4 Strips of Bacon or Sausage Links •Offer expires Aug. 13,1994* Limit one coupon per person per visit at participating Perkins® Family Restaurants. Not valid with any other discount or coupons. Sales tax, if applicable, must be paid by customer. Please present coupon when ordering. ®1992 Perkins Reituff« Operating Company; L.P. Page 4 Tuesday, June 21,1994 State P ress R U -486________ C o n t in u ed from page 1. zation concerned with issues related to population and reproduction, announced that after 10 years of success­ ful use in France, the pill was going to be tested in the United States. The testing process will begin within the next couple of months. Because of its diverse population, Phoenix is expected to be one of the test sites. By the end of this year, women like Toller who are involved in the testing program will be given a choice: A surgical abortion or RU-486. “I never imagined that a drug like that existed,” said Toller, who took three weeks vacation from work and bought a plane ticket to France. "It doesn't seem fair that women in the United States won't have RU-486 as an abortion option for many years," she said. RU-486 is available in 20 countries including the United Kingdom, Sweden and China. The pill, in com­ bination with the drug Prostaglandin, which causes uter­ ine contractions and expels the fetus, has a termination success rate of more than 99 percent. According to statistics from the French Ministries of Health, one-third of the women seeking an abortion in France choose RU-486 over surgical abortions. Of these. 88 percent of the women said they would choose the method again to terminate a pregnancy. The pill can only be used on women who are less than eight weeks pregnant. "1 am glad that I choose to use RU-486, but it is not a little magic pill' that terminates a pregnancy without any pain or discomfort." Toller said. Some experts say that RU-486 will replace surgical abortions in the United States. Others think the pill will simply be another reproductive option for American women. The pill is not without its detractors. Anti-abortion organizations are saying the drug is dangerous and they will "take action" against any company manufac­ turing the drug in the United States. And feminist Janice Raymond, a w om an's studies professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, recently wrote a book detailing the dangers of RU-486. Raymond said the drug increases a woman’s chance of havinjpa future ectopic, or tubal, pregnancy because the uterus becomes a hostile environment for future embryos. Dr. Alastair Wood, one of the editors of the New England Journal of Medicine, said RU-486 is the most effective and safest means of medical abortion. "Mifepristone (the chemical name of RU-486) is so safe that it could be used as a monthly contraceptive by administering it each month to induce menses whether or not a pregnancy has occurred,” Wood said. RU-486 is an antiprogestin and works by inhibiting the action of progesterone. Without progesterone, a fer­ tilized egg is unable to implant in the uterus. "Progesterone is a hormone that is necessary to maintain a pregnancy,” Wood said. "The fertilized egg of a pregnant women who took the pill would not implant and form a placenta. Instead the woman would begin to menstruate and the pregnan­ cy would be terminated.” Wood added that RU-486 has other uses besides abortion. "It is a shame that we have not had RU-486 available sooner,” he said. "The drug causes cervical softening, which is highly beneficial because it allows easy access to the uterus for a variety of surgical procedures. It could also be used to induce labor after intrauterine fetal death.” RU-486 is also believed to help reduce cancerous tumors. Researchers in Oregon have found favorable results using the drug to reduce brain tumors in pri­ mates. “We are anxious and optimistic that the human abor­ tion trials will begin in the next few months,” said Mark Nichols, University of Oregon research director. Worldwide, more than 55 million pregnancies are terminated by abortion each year according the the World Health Organization of the United Nations. U.S. government data suggest that the death rate per 100,000 surgical abortions on women who are less than eight weeks pregnant is 0.4 percent. The death rate climbs substantially for each week past the eight week period. There has been one death associated with the use of RU-486. Four years ago a French woman bled to death after taking the drug. Roussel Uclaf, the manufacturer of RU-486, donated its U.S. patent rights on the drug to the Population Council in early May. The company will not receive economic compensation for RU-486 manufactured or purchased in the United States. A company spokesman said donating the patent to RU-486 was the only way of making the drug available in ■ 1 ° tes because public opinion has been ag if. ps have said they will boycott any For years,RU486 has been available to women throughout Europe. RU486 is not currently being used In the United States, but it has been approved for clinical trials. products made by the manufacturer of RU-486 and when in office, former Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush vowed to keep RU-486 out of the country. "In France I was told about Reagan and Bush, and it seemed very devious to keep a drug that has many ben­ efits away from American women,” Toller said. "I don’t think abortion should be a political issue." But abortion has become a large political issue, according to Robert Blendon of the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Harvard School of Medicine, and John Benson of the Harvard Program on Public Opinion and Health Care. The researchers collected data from U.S. public opinion surveys about abortion from 1962 through 1993. "For some, a personal, moral belief translates into a policy belief,” said Blendon. "For others, personal morality is not equated with sanctioning government regulation of a woman’s personal reproductive deci­ sions.” In a recent poll conducted by Time Magazine and CNN, a majority of respondents said the government should allow RU-486 to be sold legally in the United States. When asked if they would be in favor of such a pill if it were available, however, 53 percent would be opposed. “Without scrutinizing the data, many people assume (President) Clinton won the election because of his prochoice position,” said Blendon. “But look closer. In the 1992 election, 12 percent of the voters stated abortion was one of the top two issues influencing their voting decision. Of these people, 54 percent voted for former President George Bush, 38 percent for Clinton and 8 percent for Ross Perot.” Toller said abortion was not a concern when she cast her vote. “I think RU-486 and surgical abortion should be legal in the United States, but I would not base my vote on it,” she said. One group that is involved in the politics of abortion is the National Right to Life Organization. Jay Menninger, the director of the Arizona branch of the Right to Life, said there is no need to bring RU-486 to the United States. “Abortion is already legal in this country,” said Menninger. “RU-486 is another chemical that poses a danger to the health and welfare of the women in this country.” Menninger compared RU-486 with DES, a drug given to women in the 1960s to prevent miscarriages. The daughters of the women who-were given DES have high incidence of ovarian and cervical cancers. “We are m aking wom en chem ical dum ping grounds,” he said. “The long term effects of RU-486 have not been determined and the short-term effects are devastating. “Women sometimes expel a fully formed baby.” Toller said that although she was not devastated by her abortion, the procedure was difficult for her psycho­ logically. “After taking the drug, I thought I would just get my period and it would be over quickly and painlessly,” said Toller. “But it was far from it. “I took several pills and had to come back two days later for several more pills. After taking the second dose, I didn’t miscarry for several days. “I started getting massive cramping and sweated pro­ fusely. Large chunks of tissue came out of me. “The worse part was I had to take the tissue back to the doctor to make certain that the abortion was com­ plete.” The most common side effects of RU-486 are nau­ sea, vomiting, headache and breast tenderness. Menninger said Toller’s abortion illustrates that RU486 is not a private abortion as it has been depicted in the media. How RU-486 affects the uterus The P ro ce ss: 1. The ovary releases an egg. 2. The egg travels down the Fallopian tube and is fertilized by a sperm. 3. The fertilized egg implants in the uterine wall, then RU-486 breaks down the unterine wall. 4. Prostaglandin starts uterine contractions. 5. The fetus is expelled. “Regardless of what the media portrays, you don’t just pop in a pill and have an abortion,” Menninger said. “The abortion requires four or five visits to the doc­ tor. And the woman must take her aborted baby to the doctor to make sure the abortion is complete.” Toller said she was alone in a French hotel with a “gorgeous view of a Paris” when she aborted. “1 walked back and forth from the bathroom to the window,” she said. “I was afraid to lay down on the bed or sit in a chair because I didn’t want to stain anything. “Every few minutes I would scrapie the blood clots and tissue off of my plastic underpants and put them in a glass container. “The container smelled so badly that at times I don’t know if 1 was vomiting because o f the RU-486, or because of the stench. “The hotel staff probably thought I was dying. I ordered room service a few times and after one particu­ larly bad cramp let out a scream that would stand your hair on end.” Toller said she although she was afraid at times, she was glad she was alone during the abortion. “I didn't want to tell anyone about the abortion until after it was over,” she said. She added that when she returned from France, her family was supportive of her decision to have an abor­ tion. Toller’s boyfriend was never told about the pregnan­ cy. Toller said her expenses topped more than $3,000 and added that in France. RU-486 is more expensive than a surgical abortion. There are currently no estimates of what the drug will cost in the United States nor are there indications that insurance companies will pay for RU-486. A spokesman for the National Blue Cross/Blue Sheild said RU-486 will be considered an “optional” drug because abortion is not a medically necessary proceedure. According to information from the New England Journal of Medicine, Methotrexate, a drug that was manufactured to induce abortions in the 1980s was not covered by insurance companies until researchers dis­ covered that the drug cured cancer. “Several decades ago, Methotrexate was proved to cure cancer,” editor Wood said. “It is still one of the most powerful chemotherapy agents available. “Although we are not sure what the future brings for RUj486, this drug could be the next big cancer breakthrtwgh.” Although many questions remain about RU-486, clinics, hospitals and physicians from across the country are submitting proposals to the Population Council requesting the opportunity to be a test site for drug research. Cheryl Swain, director of the Arizona Planned Parenthood, said she has submitted a proposal that details the methods the organization would follow in administering RU-486 research. “RU-486 may change abortion as we know it,” Swain said. Swain said many women will want to use RU-486. but added that surgical abortions will still need to be available. "There are times when the pill does no rk. When this happens the women will be required to ! rve a sur ­ gical abortion,” she said. RU -486 does not work 1 percent o f the time. Page 5 Tuesday, June 2 1 ,1 9 9 4 S t a t e P r ess ed intercourse, a woman takes two birth control pills,” Blackwelder said. “.Then 12 hours later she takes two more pills.” The pills are available by prescription through the Student Health Center and birth control clinics. Ovral, when used as a post-coital contraceptive, is 95 percent effective. It has minor side effects, usually nausea and vomiting. This method has been available since the 1960s. According to the Food and Drug Administration, doctors can prescribe Ovral as a post-coital contracep­ tive although the drug is manufactured primarily as a birth control pill. Toller said she was using'two contraceptives at the time of her pregnancy. “I was using birth control pills and my boyfriend wore a condom because I take birth control very seri­ ously,” she said. “But I still wound up pregnant.” Dr. David Grimes of the University of Southern California School of Medicine said RU-486 will reduce the number of abortions, both medical and chemical, because the pill could be used as a highly effective postcoital contraceptive. “RU-486 is best known as an abortifacient, but if it is used as a post-coital contraceptive there will be no need for an abortion,” said Grimes. “The conceptus, or unfer­ tilized sperm atid egg, would be discharged from the body. “RU-486 will be a safe, reliable method of contra­ ception and abortion. Unfortunately it could take many years before the drug is approved by the FDA.” Sandra Waldman, spokeswoman for the Population Council, said the organization is “working quickly” to get RU-486 research started in the United States. A company has not been selected to manufacture the drug, but Waldman said many drug companies are interested. She said the decision will be made shortly. After the company is selected, the drug testing will begin. “The test sites will not be publicly announced because we don’t want women traveling from across the country to the testing sites,” Waldman said. “We don’t do this to deny women the drug, but to keep the testing scientific.” Waldman said women who seek a surgical abortion from the test sites will be asked it they would like to participate in the drug trial and use RU-486. “The woman must give her complete, informed, con­ sent,” Waldman said. ’T he doctor will explain how the drug works and the side effects. “First, she will be given 3 tablets, or 600 milligrams of mifepristone, (RU-486) then she will come back two days later and be given 2 tablets, or 400 micrograms of Prostaglandin. “After the Prostaglandin, she will stay in the doctor’s office or clinic for 36 to 48 hours or until she- miscar­ ries. Ten days later, she will come back so that a doctor can determine if the abortion is complete. “If the abortion is not complete, arrangements will be made for a surgical abortion.” Gil Meza, the spokesman for the Phoenix Food arid Drug Administration, said the testing process is neces­ sary even though RU-486 is readily available in other parts of the world. “In the United States, every prescription must meet an established standard,” Meza said. “Before the drug can be prescribed here, the FDA must review the research data and make certain the drug will be safe for its intended use.” The drug testing and FDA approval process could take as long as six years. Toller said American women should not have to wait. “This drug works, and I felt great after ju st one week,” said Toller, scattering her vacation photos on the coffee table. Sometimes the drug is not effective because the woman who takes it is more than eight weeks pregnant. Other times the woman’s uterus develops an immunity to the drug or her contractions are not strong enough toexpel the fetus. There has been little research done on how RU-486 affects fetuses. In one study, researchers at the University of Southern California School of Medicine gave rabbits the drug, then prevented them from abort­ ing. The rabbits’ offspring were bom with skull defor­ mities. The scientists are not certain, however, if the defor­ mities are from the drug or from the various methods that were used to prevent the abortion. Swain also said there are overriding practical reasons why a women would choose to have a surgical abortion. “RU-486 requires several doctor visits, and women in the rural parts of Arizona might not be able to make all of those trips,” she said. “The pill could also be more expensive than a surgical abortion.” Planned Parenthood of Arizona charges women who are less than 12 weeks pregnant $260 for a surgical abortion. Swain said it is a one-day procedure and the process, including counseling, takes 2 1/2 hours to 4 hours. The surgery takes five minutes to complete. Toller, who visited the French countryside a week after taking RU-486, said the inconvenience of traveling was a small price to pay for avoiding surgery. “I can’t stand needles,” she said. “And I won’t donate blood. I can’t stand the sight of blood.” Currently, besides surgical abortion, there are several methods of terminating a pregnancy if they are used within 72 hours of intercourse. The methods include administering Ovral, a high dose estrogen and common oral contraceptive and inserting an intrauterine devise (IUD). Both are used in hospital emergency rooms on women who were raped. Dr. Anna Glasier of the Dean Terrace Centre in Edinburgh, Scotland, and an expert on early pregnancy termination, said the methods should not be considered controversial because they are different from abortion. H o w im p o r t a n t is t h e a b o r t io n is s u e ? “Post-coital contraceptives, or morn­ Proportion of voters by demographic groups who named abortion as ing after pills, work by not allowing a one of the two most important issues in their 1992 presidential votes. pregnancy to get started,” she said. Data from Harvard Medical School. “Many organizations are against • morning after pills because they say it All Voters 112% is the same as abortion. But pregnancy Men ■ 8% begins when implantation is complete. LEGEND Implantation does not begin until five Women 15% ■ BY GENDER or six days after fertilization. So, Ovral White ■¡13% ■ BY RACE and IUDs empty the contents of the ■ BY RELIGION Black ■ 5% uterus before conception takes place. Hispanic Ï B 9% “Because of the controversy, doctors don’t advertise morning after pills and Protestant (Total) 111113% few women and adolescents who have Regularly Attending Protestant M M 18% unprotected intercourse actually use Other Protestant i l 8% them or know they exist. Catholic (Total) Id 9% “The methods are underused. They Regularly Attending Catholic ■ 11% are mostly popular on college campus­ es.” Other Catholic ̧7% Dr. Theodore Blackwelder, a gyne­ Jewish — 17% cologist at ASU Student Health, said None — 14% college-aged women frequently use Born Again/Fundamentalist Christian i i l l l l 22% morning after pills. I I “As soon as possible after unprotect­ mm S t a t e P r ess Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Page 6 Vatican scientists fear population growth The Pope has criticized the U.S. administration for Conservative Pope is not moved by warnings of population crisis lobbying for more liberal abortion-rights language in the conference statement. VATICAN CITY (AP) — A Vatican panel of scien­ tists has w arned against unchecked population growth, leading to speculation that Pope John Paul II might modify his position on contraception and abor­ tion. But the Vatican’s radio network has distanced the Pope from the report by the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and urged listeners to keep in mind that the prestigious academy "is made up of scientists from around the world, who are not necessarily Catholic.” The report, released last Friday, made no specific recommendations on how to limit population growth and did not contradict Roman Catholic teachings against abortion and contraception. But it came as the Holy See and the United States head toward a confrontation over population growth at a UN. conference in Cairo, Egypt, in September. Vatican Radio responded to the academy report in a commentary on Saturday. “ Instead of seeing contradictions and a change of mind on the part of the Holy See on the delicate problem of demographic development, one at least should note that in the positions of the Holy See and the Pope himself ... there isn’t any lack of awareness of the data about the problem.” T he ac a d e m y ’s re p o rts and forum s h elp the Vatican and the Pope to understand various scientific issues. State Press File Photo Pope John Paul II received a report from Vatican scientists that the world population Is getting too big. The Pontiff does not have any immediate plans to alter Vatican policies on birth control despite the report. “ Science can say great things about man, but it certainly doesn’t have the last word,” Vatican Radio said. Fewer U.S. women are seeking abortions By Lauran Neergaard Associated Press Writer W ASHINGTON — The num ber of American women getting abortions has dropped to its lowest level since 1979, a decline researchers say shows no sign of ending. “ I think it’s not a blip on the screen,” said Stanley H enshaw of the Alan Guttmacher Institute. U.S. women received 1.53 million abortions in 1992, the lowest number recorded since the 1.49 million counted in 1979, according to an institute survey released Wednesday. The numbers had been inching down since the late 1980s, but the new data, the latest available, confirm a clear trend, Henshaw said. Doctors tell him the decline probably continued into last year — and could accelerate as women take advantage of more contraceptive options, such as the new Norplant implant and a female con­ dom, that didn’t affect the 1992 data, he said. “ But how long it’ll continue is hard to say,” he added. * The National Right to Life Committee used the news to attack P resident C linton’s plan to assure coverage of abortion in health care reform, saying it would cause the “ recent modest reduc­ tion in the number of abortions (to) be reversed.” The com m ittee’s Douglas Johnson cited Guttmacher figures showing the abortion rate dropped 15 percent in the District of Columbia after the local gov­ ernment stopped funding all abortions for Medicaid patients. But the federal governm ent has since ruled th at. Medicaid must cover abortions in cases of rape, incest or danger to the Another. * The institute, a Planned Parenthood affiliate that bills itself as a nonprofit research corporation, reported figures gleaned from its surveys of the nation’s more than 2,000 abortion providers. Its numbers, although about 200,000 cases higher than the C enters for D isease Control and Prevention reports, are gen­ erally accepted by government and other agencies as more accurate than .federal figures. Henshaw couldn’t say what caused the decline, but said it’s probably partly due to greater social acceptance of unwed m others and a sharp increase between 1988 and 1992 in the number of women taking birth control pills. State Press Police Reports- Real cops. Real reports. Real strange. r C am pus L C o rn er 712 S. College Ave.« 967-4049 (College & University) m m L * L¿ 6 0 9 S . M ill* 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 ( A c r o s s f r o m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n ) 2 LOCATIONS ; • l •Bett S, S»eli •Photo Developing •Health A Beauty Aida •Compact Pitot sk /• i ; S u iT r . ^>£L L L L llLl - Cc Ra U u iiCc i íiTi ft ct FREE 3 2 - O z . D i O n e coupon p e r custom er per visit. I Expires 7-5-94 CAR INSURANCE T & o fa r LOWER D O W N PAYMENTS f • Tires FREE •Alignm ents “ Work t 1?or Y0.99 Oí fflyíC -, W $3.29 y g Since 1977 (Dobson & University) ? [X] jarxg L u b ric a te y o u r v e h ic le & c h a s s is , d ra in I o ld oil, a d d u p to 5 qts. o f n e w o il a n d j in s ta ll a n e w o il filte r. D ie s e l e xtra . M ost c a rs a n d lig h t tru c k s . In clu d e s a 17 pt. v e h ic le m a in te n a n c e In s p e c tio n . P lu s $ 1 .7 5 oil d is p o s a l c h a rg e . ^ E x p ire s 7 -2 1 -9 4 . j i r ” b V lr t P U f E R iZ E O " "l WHEEL BALANCE & 4 TIRE ROTATION • Check inflation on all tires • Computerized balance on 4 tires • Four tire rotation • Most cars and light trucks *4088 I ■ WITH ■ ¡ ^ ■ coupon Not to be combined with another offer on same product/service or used to reduce outstanding debt. Expires 7-21-94. ' j j Tuesday, June 21, 1994 State P ress Page 7 B rock laid to rest H onored at m em orial service by hundreds c T H U R S D A Y , ¿ II© n°lllna, "«h « o £ » o % g i-O o J * I© rú> la tt ‘r i i © flip lili© ¿ II© ¿ II© HOUSEW RECKERS t i? 8 ■ 12am FRIIID/IT Free l oot! B ulfet starting at 4 p m H appy Hour 4 p m ~ 1 lp m = 3 .0 0 Pitchers of Beer G .0 0 P itchers of Teas 4*«** W nd 8 - 12am ' o (iS > ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© 2 fo r i at th e Bar fS9 s ¿ II© ‘rii© ¿ II© ON THE PATIO ¿II© ¿II© y Z 'N i g f i t ¿II© SATURDAY ¿ II© ill© >nú> Till© /W> II© 7~Upm s i ¡OOwel l f (everyone !) wine & Proper dress is required! dicift ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© ¿II© 430 N. Scottsdale Rd. •Tempe 894-0533 By the Associated Press Jim Brock, one of the nation’s winningest college baseball coaches, was praised last Wednesday as one of the best ever. Brock, who was 57, died Sunday of cancer. He was buried in a private cere­ mony Wednesday in Phoenix before the public memorial service attended by an estimated 700 people. And one of the strongest eulogies was voiced by University of Arizona baseball coach Jerry Kindall, whose teams often faced Brock’s from Arizona State. “ I spent time painfully across the field from Jim Brock for nearly 150 games, watching the strategy and moti­ vational techniques of one of the best coaches college baseball has ever seen,” Kindall said. A former player who was severely injured in an auto accident, Jim Henderson, said he received a call from Brock asking how to deal with long hos­ pital stays. “ I told him there was no secret for­ mula, just strength, determination and perseverance,” Henderson said. Brock had hoped to see his Arizona State team win the College World Series at Omaha, but the Sun Devils lost on the Thursday before his death to the eventual champion, Oklahoma. Brock compiled a 1,100-440 record in 23 years with A rizona State during which the Sun Devils won two College World Series titles and finished second four times in 11 other trips to the nation- UofA baseball coach Jerry Kindall speaks during the memorial service for ASU base­ ball coach Jim Brock Wednesday June 15. Brock, who died Sunday, won 1,100 games and two national titles during his career. al tournament. A pamphlet distributed at the service said the Brock family thanked the 1994 team for w inning its regional in Knoxville, Tenn., and ‘‘taking coach Brock to Omaha, Neb., for his final and most meaningful World Series. The team’s spokesman, second baseman Todd D elnoce, said B rock had “ showed so much determination. His players could see that and work harder because of it.” State P ress Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Page 8 GI Bill is 50-years old EDITOR’S NOTE — It was 50 years ago, just days a fter the D -D ay invasion o f Norm andy, that Congress passed the GI Bill. Millions o f veterans returning from World War II were given an opportu­ nity to get an education and buy an affordable home under one o f the most significant pieces o f legisla­ tion o f this century. B y J im A bram s A sso c ia t e d P ress W riter WASHINGTON — Dan Inouye returned from World War II with his right arm lost to a German rocket grenade, his dream of becoming a surgeon shattered. He was determined to go back to school in his native Hawaii, but his father, a clerk who worked as a waiter in the evenings, couldn’t foot the bill. But Inouye, like 15 million other veterans from the war, had a new source of help, the “GI Bill of Rights,” that would change many of their lives, and, in doing so. 1 P L E A S E change the face of America. It’s been 50 years this month since President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the GI Bill into law, and Daniel K. Inouye, now the senior U.S. Senator from Hawaii, says with conviction that it’s “the most signifi­ cant bill Congress has passed in this century.” “I can say I would have made it without the GI Bill, but that’s bravado,” said Inouye, who put him self through the U niversity of Hawaii and G eorge Washington University law school on the bill. “This made it a certainty.” The education program has cost $70 billion over the years, but Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., another of the hundreds of national leaders who benefited from the bill, says it “may be the best single investment the United States government has ever made.” Bumpers said his father, a small-town merchant, N O T E : E ffe c tiv e J u ly 1 t h e S t a t e P ress w ill c h a n g e c o l u m n w i d t h s iz e s : 1 co lu m n ........................ 1-9/16" 2 c o lu m n ........................ 3-5/16" 3 co lu m n ........................5-1/16" 4 co lu m n ...................... 6-13/16" 5 co lu m n ........................8-9/16" 6 co lu m n ...................... 10-5/16" Doubletruck.................. 21 -7/16" For classified column widths, call 965 -6735 . Q U E S T IO N S ? C A L L T urn t o GI B ill , page 9 . 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BjS M M SSSM JZ € » l€ spinning Hard House, Techno, & Breakbeat spuming 1ranee, & Progressive OPEN AT 10, D Js at 5, CLOSED AT ??? 9 6 8 -8 0 0 8 I I I I I Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-7 Sun 10-5 insurance, but you need a m onthly paym ent you can afford.” N o problem... 95 $ B E A U T Y T H R O U G H S C IE N C E L„ BjS iftlfM d ’ “ J ’S i j J Sunday Juni- dt, I aY o u gotta have car Includes: Blow Dry & Style 181 AcWFa,K,n Saturday, Juno (Reg. $8 .® ' Exp. 7-12-94 W a re h o u s e Prices 1 0 % OFF * MUSH &£% $7 95 f Shampoo, Perm, Cut & Style included. Long hair, piggy back or spiral wrap extra. " liP S ta ia tF BjS © » fi iBAtNeses ui s p i n n i n g H ip I l o p P e rm T hurs, Jiinc • B.UJ3.6N t€$l SOSfiCH MfX@D€N DflJW @0V SHUT OHM ©J0J IHM39MS imene D e s ig n e r II Bj% I I I I I I I I I I • L o w dow n-paym ent • E asy paym ent plans • Im m ed iate coverage • M oney-saving deductibles • 2 4-h o u r cou n tryw id e c laim service • Free rate quote Just stop by our office or call: 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 I f you’re a student with a good driving record... Call State P ress Page 9 Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Total Training Expert Teachers FREE Personal Tutoring G M A T M C A T M aximize your score Call n o w to enroll. 1-800-KAP-TEST G R E KAPLAN L SA T WE'VE MOVED! Visit our brand new center at Hayden Square, behind Kelly's Cafe. 1 RULES We will miss Jyou this summer. We can't wait until fall. GI B ill C o n t in u ed from page 8. “would have stolen to get an education for his sons.” Instead, the GI Bill helped pay for his way through the University of Arkansas and then Northwestern law school, and got his brother through Harvard. In all, 7.8 million World War II veter­ ans received training, with more than 2 million going to college, under what was form ally called the “S erv icem en 's Readjustment Act of 1944.” What's more, one-fifth of all single­ family homes built in the two decades after the war were financed under the GI Bill loan guarantee program, a financial impetus that changed the national land­ scape by moving millions into the new world of suburbia. In the beginning, though, it was fear, not fo resig h t, that drove C ongress toward support for the bill. Still fresh in the minds of many was the post-World War I recession, when millions of unemployed vets were on the streets living off handouts and charity, and the 1932 Bonus Army march when thousands of jobless vets descended on Washington demanding help. Twice as many vets would be returning from World War II, and widespread depres­ sion was predicted. It was the American Legion, led by former Illinois Gov. John Stelle, that came up with the concept of sending vets back to school and crafted the legisla­ tion. With strong lobbying support from William Randolph Hearst and his news­ papers, the bill sailed through Congress, passing both chambers unanimously in the spring of 1944-. . • But the bill nearly died in the HouseSenate conference to iron out differ­ ences. A ccording to w riter M ichael Bennett, who is publishing a book on the GI B ill. Rep. John R ankin of Mississippi, a chief sponsor, suddenly withdrew his support in a dispute over the "52-20 Club,” a provision of the bill that gave unemployed vets $20 a week for up to 52 weeks. Bennett said Rankin saw the benefit as a threat to the double wage scale pervasive in the South that favored whites over blacks. With the conference committee dead­ locked, Rep. John Gibson was roused from bed in his G eorgia home and rushed to Jacksonville, Fla., where a plane was w aiting to take him to Washington. Gibson, in casting the tie breaking vote, said there could be no other decision when American men at that very time were dying on the beaches of Normandy. President Roosevelt signed the bill into law on June 22, 1944. The original bill provided up to $500 a year for tuition and other educational costs, and gave the single veteran an allowance of $50 a month. The program ended in 1956, but new versions have been enacted after the Korean and Vietnam wars. The current plan, the Montgomery GI Bill named after House Veterans Affairs Committee C hairm an R ep.. G.V. “ Sonny” Montgomery, D-Miss., is a voluntary plan where participants have their mili­ tary pay reduced by $100 for 12 months and are eligible for benefits of up to $400 a month for 36 months. Many educators worried that the orig­ inal bill would seriously erode educa­ tional standards, overburdening colleges with millions of ill-prepared students. A leading critic, University of Chicago President Robert Hutchins, warned that “colleges and universities will find them­ selves converted into educational hobo jungles.” They were right about the overcrowd­ ing. “It was alm ost like being in the Army. There was very little privacy,” said Bumpers, recalling the barracks converted into housing at the University of Arkansas. Sorrv, but we've filled up for the summer. You'll have to wait until fall to enjov all of the great things The Commons has to offer. To be certain you're not left out again, make your fall reservations today! ■ Suites are spacious, two bedroom , two full baths ■ ■ Large kitchen with microwave, dishwasher & disposal ■ ■ Fully furnished plus Washer & Dryer in each suite ■ • ■ Racquetball, volleyball & weight room ■ ■ Large heated pool &jacuzziB ■ Roommate matching service ■ ■ Planned social activities ■ PRICES ARE THE HOTTEST! S IZ Z L IN ' DINNER SP E C IA LS served after 3 p.m. Mondays 7oz. FILET MIGNON $6.25 Tuesdays PORK CHOPS (2PorkChops) $5.25 . OR B E E F KABOBS (bem llupsehpropoem rs,s,to onm ioantos)es, $5.99 Wednesdays 6-7oz. SIRLOIN $5.99 All Entrees Served with Our Special Hot Rom an Bread and Tossed Salad. Honey Mustard, Garlic, 1000 Island, Ranch or French Dressing. Baked Potato or French Fries or Spaghetti or Rice. 1111 E. Apache Tempe, AZ OQMMCNS T MEMBERS ONLY T 2 blocks from campus 8 2 9 -0 9 3 3 MONTI'S La Casa Vieja Serving Today's Finest Foods in the Romantic Atmosphere of the Old West • 1 3 W est First Street, T e m p e (a t First & Mill) "967-7594 Open Sunday through Thursday 11 a-m. to 11 p.m. • Friday and Satir jo y 11 a.m. to Midnight \ \ S t a t e P r e ss Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Page 10 TB from new infections hits more people than expected B y D a n iel Q . H a ney A P S c ie n c e W riter BOSTON— Two studies show a surprising number of people with active TB suffer from new rather than reactivated infections, reinforcing the urgency of iden­ tifying and treating people with tuberculosis before they spread it. Doctors had thought 90 percent of people with active tuberculosis were experiencing flare-ups of infections that they acquired years or even decades ear­ lier. However, researchers using DNA fingerprinting to look for genetic similarity between TB bacteria are finding that 30 percent to 40 percent of people with active cases caught the germ recently. Drs. Margaret A. Hamburg of the New York City Department of Health and Thomas R. Frieden of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta commented on the significance of the finding in an editorial published with the studies in Thursday’s New England Journal ofMedicine. “That a substantial proportion of cases are due to recent transmission is an indictment of the current health care system,” they wrote. “But it is also a mes­ sage of hope, because it implies that improved treat­ ment could rapidly decrease the number of active cases.” In one study, Dr. Peter M. Small and others from Stanford Medical School reviewed 473 TB patients and found that nearly one-third resulted from recent infec­ tion. In the other report, Dr. David Alland and col­ leagues from Montefiore Medical Center in New York looked at 104 cases and found that about 40 percent were new infections. The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook Order yours today for $36.93 Matthews Center basement, rm 50 MoreThanJust ASU CLOTHING T-Shirts • Shorts • Sw eats 966-6226 704 S. College University Read the Far Side cartoon on today's comic page. E u ro p e this Sum m er! Paris Amsterdam London Brussels Madrid Frankfurt Athens mm $326* $391 * $395’ $413* $435* $459* $549' •faresareeachwayfromPhoenixbased on a roundlrip purchase Restrictions applyandtaxesnot included Cali for otherworldwidedestinations. Council Trave 120’E. University, Ste. E Tempe, AZ 85281 Located at Forest and University (directly across from ASU.) 9 6 6 -3 5 4 4 t / EURAILPASSES issued on-the-spot j W an t $ 23,500 fo r c o lle g e ? The Army Reserve* can help you take a big bile out of college expenses. How? If you qualify, the Montgomery (11 Bill could provide you with u p to $6,840 for college or approved vo/lech training. Well also pay you over $105 a weekend to s tart. Training is usually one weekend a m o n th plu s two w eek s’ Annual Training. By a d d in g th e pay for B asic Training and skill training, y o u ’ll e a rn over $16,750 during a stan d ard enlistment. So, if you co u ld u se a little financial h e lp getting th ro u g h school—the kind th at w o n ’t in te rfe re with sch o o l—sto p by o r call: 967-1161 BEAU YOUCANBE. ARMY RESERVE 9*7 E. B roadw ay • 2501 N. S cottsdale Rd. • 3823 E. Thom as Rd. • P a rk C en tral Mall Tempe 966-4004 Scottsdale 941*1688 Phoenix 275*0277 3 1 2 1 N. 3 rd Ave. Phoenix 274-1668 S iz z lin g E n te r ta in m e n t Tuesday, June 21, 1994 S t a t e P ress P ag e 11 CheapThrills__ Music: AH is quiet on the Tempe front as we gear up for monsoon sea­ son. While it’s still nice out, head out to Hayden Square to check out Dead Hot Workshop. They are the featured act at this F rid ay’s free concert. Brent. Brian, Steve and Curtis have been putting the Gin Blossoms to shame for at least five years now, and if you haven’t seen them, shame on you! Keeping Cool: Close and comfort­ able, the MU Gallery offers an ever changing panoply of Art Stuff. The current ex h ib it, “Form s and Furnishings: Protean Concepts by Arizona Designer Craftsmen,” is full of neat householdy items that some­ how are far more intriguing than any­ thing in my house. Personal favorites: David Crofcheck’s spaceship-shaped bird cage; Martin Hahn’s dancingfeet stools; and Paula Cooperrider’s luscious, hand-carved vanity table. The gallery often has someone playing piano inside, and the chairs and couches are very comfortable. It’s a great place to wait out the heat of the day and even catch a few Zs. (Once again, this is the voice of expe­ rience speaking.) Free movie: At 8 p.m. Wednesday, June 22, you can catch Mighty Ducks for free on the west side of Kiwanis lake. It’s about hock­ ey, so maybe watching it will cool you off. Get Smart: You probably now think I ’m a Phoenix Art Museum fanatic, but I can’t let you miss an Evening Near the Pyramide by Ernest Ashton. opportunity to gain knowledge for free. Yes, at 7 p.m. Wednesday, there will be an Art Talk at the museum. This week’s lecture explores the rela­ tionships Stieglitz had with some of the artists Ire exhibited at his gallery 291 — as well as their art. Entry to the museum is, of course, free on Wednesdays, and you can catch the keen Cam era N otes show w hile you’re there. Video Vault: As I become poorer, Tower Records looks more and more like the entertainment bargain, at least as long as Channel 8 insists on showing Russian language movies on its foreign language cinema. Besides, it’s embarrassing to hang around on the sidewalk in front of Long Wong’s ‘cause you can’t afford to pay to get in. This week I urge you to check out How to Get Ahead in Advertising. No, it’s not a dopey inspirational speech or tire story of one man over­ coming the odds. It’s a sick little comedy that Tower Video employees recommend to each other. You will be surprised, you will laugh very hard, you will buy Clearasil. — C heap T h rills is com piled by State Press E ntertainm ent Editor 'Tonnvane WiswelL m u m m L y iia in / o ia ie r i e S S Kicking back at Java Road, artist Brian Marsland discusses his art which is hanging on the walls behind him. Marsland is a graduate of ASU and a Tempe resident. Hangouts that hang artists Artists showing private parts in public places B y E v e l y n S h ein k o pf S tate P ress Original art isn’t just hanging in the galleries anymore. From coffee houses to nightclubs, up-and-com ing artists are finding newer and more public places to show their work rather than the established downtown art galleries or Scottsdale’s hallowed Gallery Row. While gallery exhibitions are looked upon as a hallmark of artistic recogni­ tion, young artists are not sitting around waiting for that moment to hap­ pen. Doing their own leg work and publicity, they have taken the initiative to get their art into more public venues. By showing work in bookstores, record stores and cafes, artists gain the free­ dom to hang whatever and wherever they want. Plus, their art reaches audi­ ences that would not otherwise make the effort to see it. You C an ’ Lose W ith These Art Spaces A ccording to artist Eric Scott Bloom, when it comes to hanging work independently, there are no negatives. “More people go into a bookstore and see my work in one day than would in a gallery,’’Bloom said . “I love the idea of alternative spaces — bookstores scratch the surface. It's going to be a challenge to break down the barri­ ers.” ........ Bloom, who is primarily an abstract artist, has his work hanging in three area bookstores: Borders at Biltmore Fashion Park; Bookman's on Country Club; and Bookstar on Southern Avenue. His inspiration to search out the book­ stores came from Bob Dylan. “He said galleries are ‘graveyards for art work’," Bloom said. “He felt it should be shown in bookstores, gas stations and restaurants so it can be accessible to a larger public.” Though Bloom’s works have found a satisfactory if temporary home, the green light to hang them was hard to attain. “It’s not the idea of artwork in alternative space th a t’s so out of the ordinary,"Bloom said . “It’s original art work in a place that doesn’t normally have it that breeds controversy. It is a risk for big business to let you hang work because they are taking responsibility for it. They think people won’t understand it or will be offended by it.” Kathleen Cronin, manager of the Mesa Bookstar, was the catalytic force in get­ ting Bloom’s work into her store. Shortly after she had taken the position and begun rearranging, Bloom approached her and asked her to display his paintings. “The consideration here was having original art in a public place - you don’t want to offend anyone,’’Cronin said. “His stuff is pretty abstract , so I asked the employees’ opinions and no one found it offensive. The reaction to the art has been positive, so far.” According to Cronin, the district manager liked the idea of getting peo­ ple in the community involved with the store. And fortunately, she adds, “the customers think it’s interesting." But Bookstar is far from endorsing original art as a company policy. “It’s up to the individual store to put art up,” she said. “It’s something I ’m interested in.” Bloom admits that he has not tried displaying in the coffeehouses yet because he is busy working on current exhibits and other projects to make a living. “I haven’t really showed my work all that much besides the bookstores I’m doing now.” he said. “I’Ve tended to stay away from the galleries, partly from fear of rejection.” O riginal A rt C reates Playful Atmosphere Brian Marsland is another young painter who is taking advantage of blank walls outside of the traditional gallery. His vivid mock-portraits and large comical paintings are currently hanging on the walls at the Java Road coffeehouse, giving it the feel of a Far Side cartoon home. With its bright creatures and colorT urn t o A rt , page 12T. Actress arrives w ith Wyatt Earp B y E v e l y n S h ein k o pf S ta t e P ress Kevin Costner stars as legendary lawman Wyatt Earp in Warner Broa.' epic saga of the American West, Wyatt Earp. Wyatt Earp Producer: Lawrence Kasdan and Jim Wilson Director: Lawrence Kasdan $$$$ (of 5$) When Joanna Going learned that she had won the part of Josie M arcus in Lawrence Kasdan’s epic tale of the west­ ern legend Wyatt Earp, she cried. The part of Josie, Earp’s third wife and sec­ ond true love, is nothing to sneeze at when it’s your big screen debut. “My agent told me over the phone,” said Going. “I was very happy — this is a big deal, I thought, but I’m not a very extroverted person and it took me a while before I let myself walk around with a smile.” Although an already experienced stage and television actor (Going starred in the TV. sh^w “Going to Extremes” ’ and American Playhouse’s “Women jjnd W allace”), she recalled feeling a bit intimidated tp be joining people at top of her field. Nonetheless she got straight to work. “As an actor, your job is to get on intimate terms, you become familiar,” she said. “It was a dream, now I have standard to which to hold everything up to, I don’t know if it gets better than this.” In her first feature-film role, Going plays a nineteen year old girl from San Francisco who’s earmark is her inde­ pendence. The first glimpse of Josie’s character is in an all male review, a scandalous venture for a woman of the late 1800s. Her hair falls out of her hat as she dances, giving away her identi­ ty. But the scene also serves to catch the eye of Wyatt Earp, setting her up as a woman of stature equal to his. In researching the ch aracter, Going’s main source became Josie M arcus’s autobiography, I Married Wyatt Earp. “It talked about a lot of things and I realized th at what Turn to E a r p , page 16. Page 12 Art ____ C o n t in u ed from page 1 1 . ful scenarios, Marsland’s exhibit has been one of the most appropriate for Java Road, according to owner Alex Stephens. “Brian has created a more of a play­ ful atmosphere,’’Stephens said . “While his art is high quality, I think it appeals more to the coffeehouse culture than any other artist’s because he paints issues that this culture faces.” Stephens features local artists at the Java Road coffeehouse monthly and sees the practice of hanging art in a coffeehouse as a benefit to both the artist, as a free place for the artist to exhibit, and for the coffeehouse, as a way to create and change an interesting ambiance. “Hanging art in here contributes more to the atmosphere,” said Stevens. “We want a changeable atmosphere, we can do that with art by changing the exhibit every month. “This is a chance for artists to work with people who maybe wouldn’t nor­ mally go to see a gallery show. You’re creating art aficionados where they’ll have seen Brian’s art in the coffeehouse and want to see the opening in a gallery.” A Painter By Way Of ASU Ceramics A recent graduate of ASU with a B.F.A. in ceramics, Marsland got his start in painting two and a half years ago when he began glazing the plates he made for ceramics class. “I always did drawings and it seemed easier with painting, and that’s how I ended up doing painting,” he said. “I started painting with pieces of paper that were lying around. I have note­ books and boxes full of drawings. Most of these are jo k es,” said M arsland, referring to his Java Road works, which have meaning on multiple levels. M arsland has also illustrated the pages of several underground publica­ tions and album covers. Most recently, he has agreed to do the album covers for the forthcom ing efforts of two S t a t e P r e ss Tuesday, June 21, 1994 underground bands, Polvo and New Radiant Storm King. Marsland said album covers are his favorite commercial illustrative ven­ ture. “They do all the work for you. That’s why I like it. I get T-shirts made from the drawings, so my work is seen more, and I don’t have to pay for it.” On top of illustrating for others, he publishes his own photocopied booklets of drawings and prose. Paying for the booklets entirely on his own, he has been toying with using pull-out ads to fund them. “I’m going to put the ads on removable paper so they’ll tear right out and people will be left with the books.” His most recent, The King, is still available at Java Road. “It’s a joke, like Elvis,” Marsland said, laughing. “But also, Elvis Presley was a celebrity. In his day, he had such public focus, he really was a king. He had all this money and everything he wanted. But the ironic tragedy is with all of that money and power, people are still going to flip you off in traffic.” Nightclubs Get Into The Art Scene Too After seven and a half years of paint­ ing and showing in Phoenix, Rose Johnson is the most established of the three artists and a gallery veteran. Originally from Coventry, England, Johnson saw Arizona as the perfect place to relocate because the arid land­ scape was so different from the green of England. “When I first moved here, I wanted to capture the flavor of what I found,” Johnson said . “My work was whimsi­ cal and cartoony and light and it helped me get away from the pain I was feel­ ing when I left England.” A recent participant in the CrashArts artist exchange program with a gallery in Mexico City, she got her start showing in a local nightclub. She had been w orking at C huy’s (now Gibson’s) and asked them to hang her art work. “I got out there and made a splash,” Johnson said in a telephone interview from Portland. “Then I started showing in Phoenix, moved there, and found studio space. I started to get my name around and my style became recognized.” Although Johnson recently had work exhibited in decompression Gallery, she is not opposed to showing in the alternative spaces she started in. Currently, she is exhibiting at the Congo Nightclub and Coffee Bar, which invited her to show after the artist who had been there skipped town, taking his art with him. Her feature piece shows a tree that is rooted in the grave and stretches upward. Though the pieces are very personal, she chose to show this series because it fit the art space. “I did it after a boyfriend of mine died of a heroin overdose,” she said, describing her work. “This set was part of the loss and it helped me through the grief. I recognized that loss was synonymous with growth and that as a tree I could root m yself to the grave and grow up from there.” Having proven herself as a painter, Johnson is exploring different ways of self -expression, such as performance a r t . “It’s about searching for my own identity. We have to struggle with the overcoming of our ego,” she said. “You get that into per­ spective and realize that you are one insignificant voice.” And, she adds, “painting is no longer my main focus. I consider myself more of ‘an artist’ than ‘a painter’ - if that makes any sense. I don’t need to produce con­ stantly in order to prove to myself or any­ one else that I am an artist. Now I’m feel­ ing that the art is a consequence of life and not something I put on a pedestal anymore. It’s the final chapter in that process.” Yet after seven years in Phoenix, Johnson is ready to move on. “After hav­ ing built my career to the point where I feel a real sense of belonging, I need to remove myself again. I’ve been through a lot there and it’s been a fruitful time in my life. I did what I set out to do.” Pricing Pieces Is The Hardest Aspect When it comes to pricing the pieces, these artists say it’s one of the hardest aspects of being an artist. Although Bloom and Johnson would rather not sell their personal pieces, Marsland has no problem with letting his paint­ ings go. His view of the art world is a p ractical, if unrom antic one. For Marsland, an exhibition is a means to an end and he has no problem with selling. “The only reason to show is to sell,” he said. “To me it’s a necessary evil. I ’ve been avoiding the real gallery scene. I’d like to show in Scottsdale, but you have to be known before you show there. I’m trying to do it backwards.” Similarly, Bloom sees galleries as a place where business comes first and art comes second. “It has to be that way because the people who own them have to make a living,” he said. “I’ve written many nasty letters to gallery owners when their product plays a secondary role, and there’s a lot of nepotism involved.” Johnson feels- disc0fmected“with the importance of selling art as well. To support her fine art she prints tshirts and ilustrates for the New Times and other national and local publica­ tions. But Johnson said she is at the point where the commercial and non­ commercial aspects of her art are start­ ing to merge into one. She tries not to let her flexibility as an illustrator affect w hat she wants to com m unicate through her art. “I ’m disgusted with ev e ry th in g ,’’Johnson said. “I ’ve always thought I had a commercial aspect and non-commercial aspect to what I’m doing, that they were totally separate things. Now I see them merg­ ing. As an illustrator, I’m flexible and that affects what I do as a person and as a fine artist, but sometimes the very corruption is food for com m unica­ tion.” Johnson sees alternative art spaces and methods of showing art as posi­ tive, but knows that when showing and pricing the artist must beware. “A lot of artists get into trouble because they don’t know what they’re getting in to.” SAY GOODBYE TO POCKETS FULL OF CHANGE. Heavy Metal is out! You don't need quarters, dimes and nickels anymore to make a long distance call Now there’s a new currencv in circulation. It’s MCI PhoneCash. tjiow y o u can prepav tor all the calls you make from anywhere in the I S to anywhere in the world' With Heave Metal out, Coinless Calling must be in. PfïoneiiîA BUY THE CARD. CALL THE WORLD. KEEP THE CHANCE :;y .'V ÀViilicìblé j t BANKÊO NE /ìn d ia * Page^£ Tuesday, June 21, 1994 S t a t e P ress ifarGuide June 21 - June 2 7 , 1 9 9 4 ^ ^ _______ _ ; : . . ^ -------- x ----------- n > ■ t E S B l the vine E f H ü $ 2 3 4 oz. Vinesteins all domestics $ 5 .0 0 Anymini pitcher j IO C 921-9431 T h e s e ci r e LIVESUPERFUNK PimpDoddeez gib sons w / 540-0875 pUHys 1 8 2 6 N . S c o tts d a le R d . 946 6666 congo 945-3778 dub 411 966-2020 club rio 894-0533 p ranksters 967-8865 gators 968-9953 p h ro g g's 967-2422 fum bles 968-9190 light Night! Domestic Light longnecks $1.75 TwisterTuesday Winthegame, getafreemeal B l u e C a r d ONE w / Shut Eye Smile ImportBottles$2.25 Pool,Doris, GiantScreens GREEKLETTERNIGHT WearyoutpartyT-shirtstor S2.50pitchersofanything / fini d o u t / DEADHOT ! w/HR^ h^ enR ^ in Hayden Square AlHKgn-Eat Pork Ribs Long Istond/Long Beach $2.00 Phiily's Fish Fry A IR K o n ia t Laset Karaoke! NEW TON FLATHEAD 25C Well, Wine Sliced Roast Beef-$4.95 3 Soft beef ot chicken tocos-$3.95 lla m -6p m REACH FOR THE BEACH $ 1 .5 0 WeH, wine, draft Bikini Contest 1 0 pm W IN CASH! rm u tP A Q i V H T h o w s m m I I M m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 9-rtnse $6.00any Entreeor pizza (j j e t y o u r ' --------------------i i i u i n n I i i i J B l u e DEAD HOT w / Piersons BOOGIE KNIGHTS PhiHy's Feeding Frenzy! Beef Ribera . Cheese Steaks $4.95 Bar/Restaurant appreciation night 9pm-lam Everyone Welcome One Free Bar Appetizer per Blue Card C a r d . & Draft (8-11 pm) No Covet w/CoKege ID 2 for 1 drinks (4pm -10pm ) Complimentary buffet (6pm -7:30pm ) before 1 0 p m Happy Hout 4*7pm: 2 for 1, $3.00 beer pitchers, $6 tea pitchers 7pm-l 1pm: 25< Drafts $2.00 Teas & Monsters Live Musk The Refreshments and April's M otel Room S.O.S. Nightschnapps$1.75 HappyHourMon-Fri 3pm-7pm FREEFOOD! POETRY NIGHT ladies N ight-N o cover before 1 0 for Indies $1 well, wine & draft for ladies all n ig h t ! 99c Longnecks for everyone (8pm -l0pm ) Under 21 Night (8pm-l 2am) Doors open at 6pm $5.00 Cover CLOSED CLOSED Open (or lunch Every Day at H am 1/ 2 lb. Cheeseburger $3.55 Chicken Strips $ 4 .9 5 . Happy Hour 4pm 7pm : FREE Food . $ 2 cover (7-8) $ 4 cover (8 -12) 4pm -l lp m :2 for 1 , $3 beer pitchers, $6 Tea pitchers, live musk, after hows til 2om for 21 Bolder R&B Night 7-1 I p $1 well, wine & draft $ 2 cover from 7pm-8pm, $ 4 cover from 8 p -close wings ALL DAY 15CwingsALLDAY |PIZZASUNDAY$4.50 $6.50 15C Hour 3-7, $3.75 pitchers HappyHout3-7, $3.75 pitchers i first2toppingsfree ALLDAY Happy Sandwichspecials HappyHour3pm 7pm Buy 1st drink get 2nd for 50C LADIES NIGHT ClassicAlternative, NewWove $1 anylhingtil 10 pm 69< longnecks 8-10 pm Hoppy Hour 3-7 Hour 3-7 Techno, House $4 Happy Disco w/DJ Chia R&BHipHopw/ DJChia $4 Coors Lightpitchers Alternativedancemusic Alternative Coors Light pitchers w/ DJChia 69C anything til 10 pm for ladies CLUB COURTESY NIGHT No Cover til 8 pm 10( drinks hi 10 pm LADIES NIGHT NoCovertil 8 pm All Drinks $1 Special appearances by $10,000 Contest coming soon CLOSED 50( Well, wine, draft for ladies Hourly DrinkSpecials Phrogg Leggs Contest Phrogglnator SPhock U Man Hops 75C, Schnapps $1.25 No Cover for ladies MILLERMONDAY Friday Afternoon Club 23oz. Killian's Red Fosters 5 0 C Cisco Shots $ 1 .0 0 bottles til 8 :0 0 pm $1.25 Schooners ALLNIGHT $1.00bottles, $2.50 pitchers $1.00 bottles only$1.75 allnight ALLMillerproducts 2 for 1 Cisco shots til 6:00 pm 15< Wings all day Happy Hour 3-7 daily, Buy 1st drink get 2nd for 5 0 (, Rtchers $3.75 Happy H o w 3 7 , 15C W ings 6-ft screen TV, 1 0 TV's, 3 satellites, 2 for 1 m eals (w / student ID) Come watch your favorite gom es here! Happy Hour 3 -7 ,15C wings, 6 ft. screen TV, 10 TV's, 3 satellites Watch the playoffs at Pranksters • & - 1 ■ $1 anything til 11:30pm No cover for ladies & Becom e a Resident Assistant Signs of a true HERO 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 » W. Hot Summer Specials Do you Like to help other students? Do you ufant to matte a difference? Do you like to plan programs and facilitate groups? Do you enjoy working as part o f a team? n H ospitality N igh t Happy Hour prices for all restaurant employees. Dart Tournament. No Cover. 9pm-Close. Coors Light Scooter Races 'Do you have 2 5 credit hours com pleted (by sta rt ofjoó, Resident A ssistants are the mast 6 o f w hich m ust befrom A SH unless you have previous important component o f the Resident R fl experience)? L ife experience a t A SU - A s a “ R esident Assistant, you u itl he respons&tefo r * :Vo you have a 2 .5 ÇTA? (R A 's m ust have a 2 .5 QTA providing socialand educational a t tim e o f application and m ust m aintain a 2 .5 semester opportunitiesfo r the students o f your and cum ulative (JPA w hile employed). floor, yo u u n it help provide a safe and 'W illyou be enrolled as afu ll-tim e stu d en tfo r J a il1994? (12 credit hoursfo r undergraduate, 9fo r graduate) students and as people, you w ill learn more Are you looking fo r a jo b th a t can w orkaroundyour aRgut yourselfand other people class schedule? than you ever knew, yo u to ill make a difference! . O pen M ic N ig ht W e're lo o kin g for a fe w g o o d HEROES comfortable doing environmentfo r I FAKE M cC O YS . PUT YOUR BAR ON THIS PAGE • CALL KIM FOSTER students., prom oting their developm ent as H New H appy H our M - F , 3p m -6p m 2 for 1 Gold Margs, P rem ium W ell & Long Islands & Drafts $ 2 Pitchers icehouse to r H 75C Domeslic drafts, S I .00 well drinks BBQ Beef Ribs—$4.95 BBQ, Teriyoki or Nuclear Chicken-$4.95 Happy Hour 3-7 $ 4 Coors Light pitchers a n d O pe n d ally 6 p m - 4 a m CLOSED Happy Hour 3-7, $3.75 pitchers Come watch the playoffs at Pranksters! 6 ft. screen TV, 3 satellites, 10 TV's in What’s EatingDavidSwafford w / S Son/ H ap p y H o u r 6 p m -8 p m M -f LADIES NIGHT No cover for ladies ail night $1 any drink in the house (6pm-dose) lla m -6 p m C o n ne s p e c i a l s . T $1 AssortedShots 2for 1 Pizza $1 AssortedShots 2for 1 Pasta bat $5.95 Wild Karaoke 9-dose Glass Night WingDing wings old d ik a g o H $ 2 Pitchers icehouse 9-close $ 2 34 oz. Vinesteins All domestics 9-close 894-2662 w Prizes! Coors Light pitchers $2.75. DJ Nutt. No cover. 9pm-Close. w Modem Oldies Music by DJ Mick of the 60's, 70's & 80's. • 69* drafts, $1.29 premium cocktails, $2.79 domestic pitchers. No cover. 9pm-close. jU tm T Krazed Karaoke Bud & Bud Light pitchers $3.25., No cover. 9pm-close. Are you looking fo r a comprehensive leadership Live Music opportunity? If this d escrib es you, th en b e c o m e a HERO A M O N G US. B e c o m e a RESIDENT ASSISTANT for Fall 1994 . T ick up an application a t the O ffice o f Residential Life between June 15 and June 24 hy noon. >Turn in the completed application to the Office o f ¡ResidentialL ife hy June 24 a t noon. 1 Interviews o f qualified candidates w ill he held on June 27-29,1994. ■Contact ¡ResidentialLife a t 965-1532 i f you have any questions. Inform ation M eetings: June 22,1994 a t 5:30pm in the Student Services •Building Amphitheatre F S S Tao Overstreet & Shut Eye Smile Foster's Pitchers $3.99. Oil Cans $2.99. LI Teas 99«. 9pm-Close Live Music Tired Son & Stoma Open Jam Session Open Jam Session, Upstairs 9pm-Close. Burger Madness all day and all night. :C U N T O C K • TEA M m m H g I» I ÜB Page 14 S t a t e P r e ss Tuesday, June 21, 1994 "First Class Entertainment' the JH eU o w cr end o f ¿ M ill S tfvenue 1/2 PRICE ESPRESSO DRINKS 4-7 Weekdays y . * ’ / •1 ♦Best Cappuccino in The Valley ♦Live Entertainment Thurs.-Sun. Night "LADIES NIGHT1 310 S. Mill Ave. 968-2737 N O C O V E R F O R L A D IE S A L L N IG H T ! ! ANY DRINK IN THE HOUSE 1 /2 P rice FROZEN MOCHAS! •6p.m.-Close» ANY DRINK IN THE HOUSE •7-8p.m.* COMPLIMENTARY BUFFET •6:30-8pm* W ith t h is ad. Exp. 6 /2 8 /9 4 . 411 S. Mill Ave. • Downtown Tempe • 966-2020 COOL PRICES NEED A G00L BHLAK? FREE TANNING Session First Time Clients for June/July CLEARAN CE • 0 S80 S. College I Tempe, A Z 966-6754 Tanning & Swimwear 580 S. College ■ Tempe ■ 966-1676 Many Items WOLFF SYSTEM 50% m $ 5.00 OFF! 2 FO R I •Jackets ICE CREAM or yogurt •Hats Toppings Extra 10 oz. cup or smaller I O FF A N Y SW IM SU IT Ì 't í 6 T A N N IN G SESSIONS w ith coupon expires 7 /1 /9 4 •Purses $ 17.95 FR EE ice COFFEE OR CAPPUCCINO OLD TOWN TEMPE 6th Street & Mili* 894-0499 THE ARIZONA CENTER 3rd Street & Van Buren ».253-8949 5th ST. : ■* W ith purchase Of 99% FAT FREE MUFFIN w ith coupon expires 7 /1 /9 4 & o z University Espress Spring Break 1 M O NTH & G e t 1 W eek FREE Page IS T u e sd a y , J u n e 2 1 ,1 9 9 4 DEVIL DEALS PH O TO M ARK Best coupon book on A.S.U. campus 1 7 It ’s our Kodalux Kolor Photo Karnival! 4 x6 Prints a t 3x5 Price AND The second set is FREE! SUMMER FUN BEGINS AT TEM PEBICYCLE! DOWNTOWN TEMPE Where Good Friends M eet!! 8 9 4 -8 3 3 7 204 E. University TUNE-UP (Behind Chuckbox, Comer of Forest and University) Offer good through June! Adjust Gears, Brakes, Hubs, Bottom Bracket. Headset, Minor Wheel Truing Complete Lubrication & Cleaning $14” - (Reg $29.95) with this AD - through 7/15/94 1STA N N IV E R S A R Y H C U ER V O B LO W -O U T t •Jazz U p -C O L D SH O TS -1 8 0 0 SH O TS -C O L D M A R C S y o u r b u sin e s s. F R ID A Y (6/24) 7 P M -1 A M Place an ad in the 49 State Press T E M P E 8 C Y C L E . 330W. University (4 BocksWest of Mill) Call Alisa Jellum, 965-6555 < D RA FTS SU N -T H U R S 4-9 PM H A P P Y H O U R 4-7 P M to place an ad on these pages. 6 4 0 S. M I L L A V E . • 9 2 1 -8 0 1 1 966-6896 M on.-F ri. 9 : M « . m . - 7 : 1 0 p jn . S a t. 8 a .m .-6 p .m . S u n . I la . m . - S p . m . M O R N IN G MUFFIN SPECIAL • Cappuccinos DAILY TIL NOON • Espressos • Cafe Lattes Reg. Coffee Muffin and 7 Lowered Fat Varieties $1 50 SUB STOP IMPORTED BEER (MijSlCi/ JAZZ SALADS GOURMET COFFEE AT THE COFFEE PLANTATION O pen 6am - 12pm Daily Tue. June 21. 8-1 lpm Axeman HAPPY HOUR 3-6 pm SpEßlALS! "The O ne M an Band" Wed. June 22. 8-1 lpm Dawn Bowman 50* M ONDAYS FREE ICE TEA OR COFFEE w ith k itc h e n p u r c h a s e 1 lam -8pm Thur. June 23. 8-1 lpm Lynn Linton TU ESDAYS $1.25 ICE COFFEE MOCHA 1 6 o z .-O u r m o s t p o p u la r drink! V ocalist/G uitarist r* £Hpife to fast fo r d e c a d e s, o r untif g ra d u a tio n , w h ic h e v e r com es jr r s t. ^jCoupon applies towards TevaS also! Sun. June 26.2-5pm Lisa Dilk $1.00 SWEET ITALIAN SODAS 16 o z .- N ew Flavors! Jed Allen Jazz and Blues Pianist ^ THURSDAYS $1.00 CAFE AU LAIT (10 oz.) Mondav-Fridav 4&3Qpm T H E S H O E M IL L $1.00 HOT CAPPUCCINO (8 o z.) V ocalist/G uitarist Vocalist/G uitarist 398 S. Mill, Tempe • 966-3139 • 9-9 M-S • 10-6 Sun WEDNESDAYS Sat. June 25. 2-5 pm Frank Mackie | SUNDAYS FREE COFFEE w ith a n y d e s s e r t p u rc h a s e V ocalist/G uitarist 222 E. U niversity Dr., T em pe 967-7744 on Univ. betw een C ollege/Forest Hours: Mon.-Fri. 7am-10pm Sat 9am-8pm Sun 9:30am-8pm JUNE CALENDAR OF SPECIALS * FRIDAYS ■ COFFEE 0 PLANTATION HAPPY HOUR 1/2 P rice d D rinks 5.7pm M onday th ru F riday SATURDAYS 10% O FF ALL WHOLE BEAN COFFEE IN OUR BEAN STOUT sk for a I KI I SAMPf .i: . •! . air iit'W di ink' AT TEMPE CENTERPOINT 829-7878 J S t a t e P ress Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Page 16 E a rp ________ Gangsta rap does Spinal Tap C o n t in u ed Th o m page 11. became the gunfight at the OK Corral is just one small event that took place over the years." said Going. “She loved this man and life passionately and unconditional­ ly-” Although it was one of the sources for the script, the events of the film were not seen through Josie's eyes. Hmmm, maybe an interesting viewpoint for next time? Rather, this western fixes it's gaze on the men of the West, and most importantly on the controversial figure of lawman and outlaw Wyatt Earp (Kevin Costner), his brothers, and his only friend Doc Holliday (Dennis Quaid. who’s performance borders on genius). Kasdan and crew also make an effort to illustrate the settling of the West. Time and detail are spent with the buffalo trade of the plains and the building of the transconti­ nental railroad. The long sweeping shots that chronicle these events are used to keep the pace of the film, but at times unwittingly add a bit of tedium to the three hour fifteen minute feature. The ambiguous treatment of Wyatt Earp’s legend and the shoot out at the O.K. Corral is an important aspect of this film version. Kasdan lets the audience decide whether the Earp brothers were villains or heroes. The ambiguity carried over to the portrayal of the Earp’s wives as well. There was little distinction in the film between good girl and bad girl, two of the broth­ er’s wives worked upstairs in the town saloons, includ­ ing Earp’s second common-law wife Matty (Mare Winningham). All of the Earp women had to put up with the will of their men, which eventually meant watching them fight away their lives. St a t e P ress L etters t o t h e E d it o r Diversity o f o p in io n and response. 2 Next to Ozzie's Warehouse In The Arches Shopping Center v968-2310 oo-¿o iu i130 JU c n iv e rs ity u r. E.. uUniversity Dr. B y D a v id S t r o w S tate P ress Fear o f a Black Hat $$$1/2 No one has ever accused “gangsta” rap of being humorous. Yet Fear o f a Black Hat, an irreverent spoof of the most controversial facet of the music world, will have you rolling in the aisles with laughter. Just be careful not to block the aisles— this film’s copious use of profanity is sure to drive away the more sensitive members of the audience. FREE LUNCH HOUR SUMMER CONCERT SERIES! .¡ MIGUEL S MUSIC CENTER « ►METRONOMES • ACCESSORIES • ETC. ►ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS ►AMPS • ELECTRIC EFFECTS • SHEET MUSIC ►LESSONS (Rock • Contemporary • Folk • Classic Guitar) ►REPAIRS > On All Instruments! ...and much MORE! Fear of a Black Hat-N.W.H. tips their hat to the audi­ ence Billed as “a rap version of Spinal Tap,” the film follows the exploits of hard-core rap group N. W.H. A small-time group, the rappers are soon propelled to super-stardom by a series of obscenity-related arrests (a la 2 Live Crew-style). N.W.H. moves into national prominence, and becomes the focal point of controversy on the “Monsters of Rap” tour. Controversy sells, and their album Fear o f a Black Hat quickly goes plat­ inum. The rappers, now m ulti-m illionaires, try to blend into the world of wealthy white suburbia without much success. This unsuccessful venture provides some of the film ’s m ost hilarious moments— band leader Ice Cold (Rusty Cundieff) finds himself getting pulled over by a triggerhappy security guard for the crime of driving a Mercedes. Meanwhile, band member Tasty-Taste (Larry B. Scott), shunned by his neighbors, goes deep into isolation, all while building up an arsenal of weaponry ranging from fully-automatic Uzis to a bazooka. Tasty-Taste then shows how he relaxes after a tough d ay— by shooting up pop-up Klansmen targets with his AK-47. Guess fortune has its benefits. The film is delightfully irreverent, sparing no one from its barbs. Director Cundieff unloads lib­ erally on everyone from rappers to their white, middle-class groupies. While Cundieff turns in a strong performance as Ice Cold, the star of the film is Scott. His portrayal of the angry Tasty-Taste is not only convincing, but downright hilarious as well. Î } Tuesday Tunes featuring the acoustic/folk rock sound of j t \ 1 { $ S Serving Lunch and D inner 7 Days a Week Spice up your life with: - Traditional Sonoran Style Mexican Food - New Vegetarian Selections - Daily Specials - Happy Hour Buffet $ 1/2 PRICE DINNER $ With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Tempe location only. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 6-27-94. CELEBRATING 30 YEARS OF BRINGING FINE MEXICAN FOOD AND FRIENDS TOGETHER 960 W. UNIVERSITY - 966-0852 S P E C IA L S T U D E N T F A R E S Round trip from Phoenix C HICAG O ............. $258 NEW YO RK........... $342 M IA M I................. $345 BOSTON.............. $328 DENVER............... $180 SEATTLE............... $198 GUATEMALA CITY ....$493 MEXICO C IT Y ........ $318 MINNEAPOLIS........$295 ST. LO U IS............. $298 NEW ORLEANS....... $270 H O U ST O N ........... $179 SALT LAKE CITY...... $ 98 SAN JOSE, C O STA RIC A..... $517 CABO SAN LUCAS ....$100 BUFFALO.............. $354 The Mollys Tuesday, June 21 • 12 Noon ASU Memorial Union Programming Lounge (Lower level, southeast corner, below the information desk) “Tuesday Tunes” is a series of free lunch hour concerts held each Tuesday at Noon during summer (May 31-August 2) in the Programming Lounge Other Cities Available M ILL AVENUE TRAVEL 966-6300 Discounts Also Available To Faculty & Staff Restrictions Apply. Subject to Availability. Sponsored by ASU Summer Sessions Next Tuesday: Peggy Murphy’s R&B Revue Tuesday, June 2 1 ,1 9 9 4 S t a t e P r ess Spore, Offspring at Boston's By J ason Meininger Special to the State Press Offspring/Smas/t Medical Records Offspring will be playing at Boston's this Saturday. Skaters and snowboarders of the world beware! Skate rock is about to be the next big thing. Smash, the new album from Southern California’s Offspring has already sold nearly 100,000 copies and has produced KROQ’s number-one most requested song, Come Out and Play (Keep 'Em Separated). Smash features every­ thing you always loved about thrasher punk, from the slow moments to give the pit a breather to the anthemic “hey-ey’s” and “whoa-oa’s” a la Seven Seconds. The grooves are driving and disturbingly catchy. The lyrics are straight edge all the way, railing against the Los Angeles gun culture in Come Out and Play (Keep 'Em Separated) and Bad Habit , and ranking on a druggie friend in What Happened to You? “We’re not the ones who leave the homeless in the streets at night / We’re not the ones who’ve kept women and minori­ ties down....We’re innocent / but the weight of the world is on our shoulders” is but a sample from Not the One. Punk as they may be, these guys have something to say and they are going to make sure you hear it. Unfortunately, musically and lyrically, the punk world has heard all of this before. These days Rocket From the Crypt, Drive Like Jehu and The Meices are among the voices defining punk; Offspring are just re-hashing it. By J ason M eininger Special to the State P ress Sporc/Giant Taang! Records These guys have been called the bastard children of X. The comparison is valid, but it is also limiting. It’s too easy to write off Spore as a knockoff band because their vocalists do, sometimes, sound like John Doe and Exene. Even X never made music this pounding and noisy. Spore comes from the school of “make every­ thing louder than everything else” and favor that big, fuzzy bass sound rather than something cleaner and more coherent. But they kick butt with big sound while driving home acidic lyrics like “tastes like age/pink and raw/like a quivering vein/underhard.” Now that Suicidal Tendencies and Henry Rollins and X are “legitimate” mainstream artists, bands like Spore are at the forefront of the truly alternative scene. While few tracks stand out, the album as a whole is hard- driv­ ing and powerful. There is angst, anger, more angst, hopeless despair, and still more angst just oozing out of this album. It is just as good as anything you’ll hear on so-called alternative radio, but unless you buy it you’ll never know. Spore will be one of the bands opening for Offspring at Boston’s this Saturday, June 25. It’s not the best place for a show, but they get the good bands, and this one is all ages (bar with ID, but no pitchers, which sucks). Battery Club and Teeth are also on the bill. Spore will be playing at Boston's this Saturday. ASU CLOTHING T-Shirts • Shorts • Sweats I* * 'COMPAN' Back Packs 8 966-6226 ? 704 S. College University Sdenf* Book? Page 17 Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Page 18 fsCULPTURÎBrfllAliis| f f m i X iÄMtefXnfmm \ ME: 104 S*.: M r p i | Cs ^ $1 OFF A N Y 10" SUB You may recognize this band from The Crow movie soundtrack. This EP features six songs from Medicine’s diverse pharmacy of sounds. Time Baby 3, which was on the Crow release, is a Cocteau Twins reworking of an earlier Medicine song. Cocteau’s Robin Guthrie and Liz Frazier both pitched in on the remix and the influ­ ence is obvious. The song is very radio-friendly — a Flintstones chewable compared to the rest of the album. Medicine switches gears for Little Miss Drugstore, which is an incredible minute or so of white noise and feedback that disappears into the loopy bass and drums of the next song. Singer Beth Thompson's voice is a drug in itself, sometimes a harsh and megaphone-dis­ torted upper, and other times a lilting and enchanting psychedelic, like a siren luring sailors to their doom. And so it goes, injecting noise into a groove that rattles the walls, combining equal parts of Sonic Youth and Zooropa with a little chaos for good measure. Too bad the Sound o f Medicine prescription runs out after only six songs. It’s an addiction. —JM W ith coupon. V oid w ith other offers. Exp. 7/5/94. I I ‘Good Food &. Cool Company’ Comer of Lemon & Rural 967-1114 FREE COPIES Buy 1, Get 1 FREE No Limit - 8 7: x 11 White Paper Expires 8-1-94 MAIL BOXES ETC. it's N o t W hat We Do. It's H o w We Do It. 1739 E. Broadway (at McClintock) Tem pe *• o ¿ V -Í7 w Temp« 829-3900 im a jSccnhoo oo il n a. 1i 1i 1iw 0 33.. M A lm Rd M esa * 9 4 ^ 1 0 0 1 N ew bands dem onstrate a variety o f sounds, talents We now have some sort of ratings system together so you can have a standard by which to gauge our taste (or lack thereof). Considering that we're all dealing with college-sized budgets, ratings include an opinion of when to buy. Please note that on albums we dis­ agreed on. the more enthusiastic of us did the review. **** Supreme, excellent, mind-expanding! You need it right now. *** Mighty, mighty good — trade for it and feel good about it. ** Has its moments — if it’s used or a gift. * Phew! Hard to justify owning even if it was free. Ashtray material. Since we are backlogged with promo material, you lucky readers will be able to get at least one example of each rating as we sound off this week.... Medicine/5o«nds o f Medicine American Recordings (oCJ¡ual oc ¡er va 4 Summer CD releases B y J a s o n M e in in g e r AND TONNVANE W lSW ELL S t a t e P ress i x » St a t e P ress Photo Credit: Merlyn Rosenberg Medicine’s latest CD is the cure for your ills. Seated left to right are Jim Goodall, Beth Thompson, and Brad Laner. Medicine was featured on the soundtrack of the movie The Crow. Their latest album, Sounds o f M edicine, is short but sweet. rustJrust Atlantic Records (*) San Diego’s rust has fallen into the all-too-common trap of making music that would have been very cool metal about ten years ago. What is happening is that there is- a whole group of musicians who’ve been influ­ enced by everyone from Metallica (“but they’re too metal” they say) to Danzig (“but they’re too evil" they say), and now are unable to synthesize anything origi­ nal out of their past. I blame it all on Stone Temple Pilots. —JM ■ OCE4NSIDE ICEAREN41 The State Press in the near future will be doing a story on justice and injustice at ASU. Please call with your stories of cases of student and employees who have found justice or injustice while at\ASU. Call 965-2292 'Stay Coor 2 f o r 1 PASS I •1st person pays admission •2nd person skates FREE! •Skate rental only J1.25 1 5 2 0 N . M cC lintock • 9 4 7 -2 4 7 0 I Feeling sort of "far o u t”? Read the Far Side cartoon on today's comic page. e • (next to Big Surf) I_ _ _ _ _ E xp ire s 8 -13 -9 4 'C Ë IC M IÏŸ 'I I I -BEST OF PHOENIX- I I♦ 825 W. University • Corner of Hardy University 894-8387 \ ROTATIONI (F or M o s t Cars a n d Trucks) With Purchase of a Lube, Oil Change and Filter - only | $ jj 4 9 5 + t a x w ith coupon I . 1002 W . University N W ftO A -A A S fil Comer on H a r d y MEMORIAL UNION'S SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT SUM M ER PRO GRAM CONTACT: MIKE PERKINS, BRENDA/TOM HLUSAK. (602) 264-2481 T U E S D A Y T U N ES te ^ im m e r u J UAVPY HOUR I $ 1 .5 0 G a m e s 9-11 pu» M F I $1.00 Shoe Rental I (Tax Not included) $5.?5 Pitchers $1S0 Watt I - , I TEMPE BOVWLÎ W A LK TO ¿ 1100 E . A pache ' Just Bast o f R ural 967-1656 ANY 6-PACK OF IMPORTED BEER Ov e r 7 0 L imit A R T E X H IB IT IO N br a n d s to c h o o s e f r o m . 6-pack per coupon corner S c o t t sd a le & Mc D o w ell Daily 8-5 MU Gallery FREE "Forms & Furnishings: Protean Concepts from Arizona Designer/Craftsmen" May 31 -July 29 • with coupon only 9 4 6 -0 7 1 5 M IN I-V A C A T IO N C E T A W A Y D A Y T R I PS JEROME TOUR SAT., JUNE 25 C TOUCH ZEANERS Visit historic mining town and see Douglas Mansion*, tour Ghost King Mine* and enjoy the aura of this famous artists colony. SAT., JULY 16 Breathtaking red rock coupled with great shopping, Jeep tours*, and a brown bag lunch along the cool waters of Sedona. ‘ Fees for tours are the responsibility o f the traveler $8 each trip for transportation FOR MORE INFO CALL MUAB 9 6 5 -6 8 2 2 Sponsored by Summer Sessions * 4 StmJ one Papago Liquor MU Cinema, Noon June 22 "The Movies Today” SEDONA REDROCK TOUR 1 9-11 pm M .-T h. *laoOFF W E D N E S D A Y FREE FILM t ir e " »Chevron 7th Street & Highland TODAY IN THE MU PROGRAMMING LOUNGE LOWER LEVEL 11AM-2PM FREE FOLK ROCK THE MOLLYS Buy any sandwich and a medium drink and receive a second sandwich for 99c. Coupon valid through 6-29-94. I PONTIAC - GMC -MAZDA • • GRAB A FRIEND AND COME O N OVER! a a a a H a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a |l 990 Sandwich • SHOWCASE ASU Public Events $ S * O f f 1 ; A n y D r y C le a n in g M e n 's R e g u l a r « j 1 W ith O rder o f $10 O r M ore | S h lr t s ^ r ^ j ' Not Valid With Other Discounts j e HT ! i One Coupon Per Visit t O n H a n g e rs Expires August 13.1994 | Expires August 13 1994 [j PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER fg PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER | Dress • 946-7587 • Scottsdale Rd. & McKellips • •• • • • (In the ABCO Shopping Center) M o n - F ri. 7 a m - 7 p m S a t 8 a m - 5 pm S t a t e P r e ss Page 19 Tuesday, June 21, 1994 W oodstock again! B y D a v id B a u d e r A s s o c ia t e d P r ess Associated Press Scott Anderson and Heather Ellis look at the plaque marking the site of the original Woodstock Festival. Two rock festivals commemorating Woodstock are in the works. SAUGERTIES, N.Y. — Santana, Joe Cocker and Crosby, Stills and Nash are heading back to W oodstock — and they’re coming with Nine Inch Nails and Alice in Chains. The graying veterans are on a partial lineup of 22 musical acts for the two-day festival in upstate New York on Aug. 13i 14. Tickets for Woodstock ’94 will cost $135 apiece, or about $135 more than m ost people paid at the original Woodstock 25 years ago. J h e eclectic mix o f artists also includes Aerosmith, Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan, Peter Gabriel, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Spin Doctors. “ It appeals to a wide range of age groups,” promoter John Roberts said. “ The original lineup in 1969 tended to appeal to a more defined age group.” So far, the event includes only two rap acts, A rrested Developm ent and Cypress Hill. Promoters say about eight more acts will be announced in the next two months. The concert is one of two separate shows promoters are organizing to mark the anniversary of the fabled 1969 con­ cert. Besides the one at Saugerties, which is being put together by the original Woodstock promoters, a second concert would be a nostalgia-fest geared to older fans on the Bethel farm where the first Woodstock took place. That one is con­ sidered less certain to take place. R E S I E> E N C Y IN F O R M A T IO N S E S S IO N Every W ed. & T hurs. 2-3 p.m . Student Services A m phitheater Residency Applications Available blackcywhite SUCKS 77t 8 '/ 2 X 11 regular price 9 9 ( Also on sale: 11x17 color copies T-Shirt Transfers Color Transparencies the alternative copy shop 915 South Mill* Avenue Tempe ■«Phone 829-7792. O f f e r E x p ire s J u n e 3 0 , 1 9 9 4 . N O W Y O U C A N HAVE PEA C E O F M IN D ! •Designed for Students-Faculty-StafF-Dependents •One Million in Comprehensive Benefits •Benefits at Student Health Center will be reimbursed •Worldwide Coverage at any Medical Provider •Very Affordable to fit your budget •Your Choice of any Doctor or Hospital •Top Rated "A" Excellent • Since 1938 CUM PLES: IB -2 4 M A LE FEMALE 25-29 M A LE FE M A LE FA LL 5124 (1 6 0 $144 5172 SUMMER « 93 SP R IN G $ 188 $240 « 21 8 ' S258 YEA R 5372 5480 3 432 S516 « 12 0 SUM C all to r Quotes on O ther Ages a n i Dependents 1 I I HPrated ons Since 19^6 / \ I I C : I 2121 South Mill Ave., Suite 206 • Tempe. Arizona 85282 “ I - i I I I I I. J C o m ic s State P ress Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Page 20 Calvin and PLAJtNG A RECORD? I'L L ' SHOW VOLI T by Bill Watterson Hobbes SOMETHING IN TERESTIN G . compare a BUT THE POINT O N THE Po i n t o n t h e LA BEL WITH A POINT ON THERECORD'S OUTER. EDGE. TUET RECORD'S EDGE HAS TO MAKE A BIG G ER CIRC LE IN TH E BOTH MARE A COMPLETE SAME TIME, SO IT GOES BS1ER. CIRCLE IN THE SAME AMOUNT O F T IM E , SE E, TWO PO INTS O N O NE DISK. MOTE AT TWO SPEEDS, ) RIGHT ? By GARY LARSON TH E F A R S ID E . ETEN THOUGH TUET BOTH MAKE THE SAME REVOLUTIONS PE R . MÍMATE' te l (Æ 2^ D o o n e s b u ry BY G ARR Y TR U D EA U D o o n e s b u ry BY G ARRY T R U D E A U s ir , p o n t ‘Yeah. I remember Jerry. Good friend of mine. ... You know, I never understood a single word he said, but he always had som e mighty fine w ine.” youHNprr fi ßH STRANGE TORE­ RUNNINGFOR. THFSAMP C0N6RB9S yOUHJPRB COHVICTWOFWN6 TO? Share your O p in io n - Use the State Press sound-off line 965-4287. M o nday - T hursday $1 Well And Draft! 3 :0 0 - 7:00 RM. F r id a y $1.25 Well And Drafts! 3 :0 0 - 7:00 RM. D ID Y O U GET THE CLASSES Y O U NEED? W ednesday C O M M CLASSES STILL OPEN $1.25 Drafts And Specially Drinks! • 3 :0 0 - 1:00 A.M. i Sum m er Session II p la y e r s JL ñ m arW CrtH 5th Street And Van duren • At Arizona Center • 252-2502 B ic y c le B a r n Student Discounts!! Ive Accept Competitor Coupons!! COM 100 (SB) Intro to Communication COM 110 (SB) Intro to Interpersonal Communication COM 207 Intro to Comm unication Inquiry COM 225 (LI) Public Speaking COM 230 (SB) Small Group Communication COM 259 *9.99 U LOCK w/coupon While supplies last! Exp. 8-2-94. ■ - _ * 8 9 4 -6 8 5 2 * j: Rural & University (In the Cornerstone) V //; ! i' ■ COM 263 Comm, in Business & the Professions (SB,C,G) Intro to Intercultural Communication COM 316 Gender and Communication COM 320 Communication and Consumerism COM 363 (SB,G) Intercultural Comm unication Processes P a g e 21 Tuesday, June 21, 1994 St a t e P ress P olice R eport ASU police reported the following inci­ dents this week: • Two men who are not associated with the U niversity were approached by police at Lot 59, where they had been observed launching a bottle rocket. The subjects were warned against trespass and possession of fireworks, and left the area. • The fire alarm at the Education Lecture Hall was activated by an overflowing toilet. The area was secure, but the alarm could not be reset. An electrician and a plumber were called in to deal with the problem. • A green, 21-speed m ountain bike belonging to a male ASU student was stolen from the bike racks at the south side of the Physical Science Building, Fwing, where it was secured with a Ulock. Loss is estimated at $400. • A man who is not associated with the University was observed by police on Cady Mall drinking out of and washing his feet in the fountain. He was warned against trespassing and left the area. • A man who is not associated with ASU reported the theft of his purple, men’s mountain bike from the Social Science Building, where it was secured with a Ulock and a cable lock. Loss is $499. • A vending machine in West Hall was criminally damaged by unknown per­ sons. Damage is estimated at $200. • Two juvenile males were approached by police in the northeast parking lot, where they had used a 911 call box. They were warned against improper use of emergency call boxes and left the area. • A male ASU student was arrested at Cholla Apartments, Room B801, for underage consumption of alcohol. He was cited and released. At the same scene, three male ASU students and one female ASU student were observed on the roof of the Cholla Apartments, B-wing. They were warned against trespassing. • A man employed by the University struck a Chinese elm tree, located on the northwest comer of Noble Library, with an ASU vehicle. Damage is estimated at $400. • A male ASU employee backed an ASU truck into a window on the southeast corner of Stauffer Hall, shattering it. Damage is estimated at $500. • Unknown persons broke into a soda vending machine located at 620 Alpha Drive. A kitchen door and boiler room doors were also damaged. Damage is estimated at $600. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents last week: • Two construction workers were seri­ ously hurt when a 16-foot high, 800-lb. wall fell on them at a house under con­ struction, 7189 S. Hazelton. The wall was being lifted onto the second story of the house when it fell on the men. One, a 26-year-old Mesa man, was tran sp o rted by h elico p ter to Scottsdale hospital in critical condition. He was admitted to the hospital with a fractured pelvis, and was reported in sta­ ble condition. The other man, whose age and address were not released, was trans­ ported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital with facial lacerations. He was later released. • A Tempe man was arrested for aggra­ vated assault after pointing a handgun at another man during an argument at a parking lot, 1130 W. Broadway Road. The men were involved in a verbal argument when the suspect reportedly pulled out a 9mm handgun and ¡jointed it at the victim ’s head. The victim fol­ lowed the suspect back to his apartment, where Tempe police arrested him. The suspect was taken to Tempe City Jail and booked on charges of aggravated assault. • A 1986 blue Audi 4000 was stolen while parked near Harkins Centerpoint Theatre, 690 S. Mill Ave. The c a r’s ow ner, a 19-year-old Phoenix man, lost the only set of keys to the vehicle at the theater the night before the car was stolen. The case remains under investigation. Compiled by State Press reporter David Strow. Tri City Mobil is #1 in service for Ijul hundreds of ASU students, faculty and ™ staff. For a safe, enjoyable sum m ersee Tri City Mobil first! The July 4th holiday weekend is almost here. Is your car ready? See or call us today. AP Photo New York Rangers captain Mark Messier, surrounded by teammates, triumphantly hoists the Stanley Cup during a ticker tape parade held in New York Friday. The Rangers defeat­ ed the Vancouver Canucks last week to capture the Cup, their first since 1940. S p o r t s B r ie f s Pac-10 penalizes, censures ASU football SHOW YOUR ASU I.D .G E T AN EX TR A 10% O FF! Mobil Tri City Mobil Scottsdale Rd. & McKellips (Southeast Corner) 947-9655 N Just a few minutes from ASU! McKellips INCLUDES: • Up to 5 quarts o f Mobile Super HP 10W30 Motor Oil • New Oil Filter • Chassis Lubrication • 10 Point Safety Inspection Most Cars & Light Trucks $29 • F u ll & S e l f S e r v i c e G a s We accept: * * COOLING SYSTEM FLUSH INCLUDES: R e p a ir s T r a in e d T e c h n ic ia n s ASU L U B E • O IL • F I L T E R • Pius $1.50 E PA Charge • C o m p le t e A u to m o t iv e V e h ic le s Tri City Mobil MONEY-SAVING COUPON 95 D o m e s t ic & F o r e ig n it MONEY-SAVING COUPON $11 ASU football reprimanded— ASU’s football program was publicly censured and reprimanded by the Pac-10 Monday for violating NCAA recruiting regulations. The conference penalized the univer­ sity for making "excessive" recruiting contracts and telephone calls to potential ASU recruits. The violations occurred in the 1992-93 season. ASU has been placed on one-year probation as a result of the violations. ASU recruiters will not be allowed to call recruits from July 1 to July 21. Compiled by sports editor David Strow. Pac-10 medal winners crowned— The Pac-10 conference honored two ASU athletes this week with the Pacific10 Conference Medal. This medal is awarded annually to each Pac-10 mem­ ber’s outstanding male and female senior student-athlete. A SU ’s two sports-m edal winners were basketball star Steven “Hedake” Smith, and golfer Tracy Cone. According to Pac-10 officials, the cri­ teria used in determining the award-win­ ners is “the greatest combination of per­ formance and achievement in scholar­ ship, athletics and leadership.” 95 • Chemically Back Flush Cooling System Under Pressure • Check Hoses. Thermostat & Radiator Cap • Pressure Test Hose For Leaks • Coolant, Parts Extra • Install Rust Inhibitor & Water Pump Lubricant M ost Cars and Light Trucks V a lid w ith C o u p o n th ru 7 /1 8 /9 4 V a lid W ith C o u p o n th ru 7 /1 8 /9 4 TRI CITY MOBIL TRI CITY MOBIL MONEY-SAVING COUPON ir it li il li h il il it il il il h il it il H H JL MONEY-SAVING COUPON A/C SERVICE E N G IN E T U N E -U P $2995 ^ $3995 $4995 INCLUDES: $14195 4 CYL. • New Spark Plugs • Scope Adjustment • Check Starting and Charging Systems • Inspect Filters. Belts, W ires & PCV • Additional Parts Extra Most Cars &Light Trucks • Valid With Coupon thru 7/18/94 TRI CITY MOBIL * Freon and P ads Extra INCLUDES: • System Performance Test • Inspect Hoses, Belts & Pulleys • Check For Leaks ' M o s t C a rs & L ig h t T ru c k s V a lid w ith C o u p o n th ru 7 /1 8 /9 4 TRI CITY MOBIL Opinion Page 22 T ? Tuesday, June 21, 1994 S t a t e P r ess St tate a P ress ito rial Not in my name In North Carolina’s gas chamber last week, the life of David Lawson ended. It ended before a small audience of witnesses, approved by the state. Had Lawson had his way, his life would have ended before an audience of m illions on Donahue. It is likely that he would have preferred to have died another way, rather than painfully suf­ focating to death in a cloud of colorless cyanide gas. North Carolina offers death row inmates the choice of death by gas or by painless lethal injec­ tion. But he had a point to make, and he wanted a nation to see it. The United States, unlike the rest of the civi­ lized world, still sees nothing wrong with execut­ ing its citizens. That is a practice long ago aban­ doned by our allies and friends. Americans still remain gruesomely proud of their backward ways. In their quest for revenge, Americans are willing to do anything— even engage in state-sanctioned murder. Yet Americans are blatantly hypocritical as well. We are still uncivilized enough to kill in the name of justice, yet we claim we are too civi­ lized to put the killing on public display. The result? Americans are numbed to the spectacle of execution. We remain blissfully unaware of the gravity of our actions. We seem like the mother telling her child not to hit his sister— then slapping him hard across the face to make her point. Murder is wrong— so don’t do it, or we’ll have to kill you. Americans, if they insist on continuing their backward practices, must come face-to-face with what they are doing. If the state insists on executing murderers, then the state should allow its citizens to see what it is doing. Would America be as eager to gas its crimi­ nals if it had to watch the gassing on TV? If it had to watch the criminal thrash around painfully, desperately fighting for air while his lungs bum with poisonous gas? The Supreme Court knows full well the effect that this would have on the American populace. And so, to keep public support for the death penalty, the Court turned Phil Donahue and Lawson down. Yet America may soon have to come to grips with tire impact of the death penalty, like it or not. The N FL’s all-tim e leading rusher, O.J. Simpson, awaits trial in a sensationalized double homicide. If convicted, Simpson is a prime candidate for execution. And California offers no choice—* you die by lethal injection. America has no problem executing the flotsam o f society. Is America ready to execute the beloved Juice, one of its most revered sports heroes? "Forgive them, fo r they know not when they do.” Though spoken 2,(XX) years ago, these words were never truer than today. s THE ONLY OTHER DIFFERENCE.... ABOUT 7% MONTHS jija '■1 C' ©STATS. pR&SS Choose role models carefully D As I sat, along with most of M A m erica, w atching O.J. IANE Simpson’s white Bronco lead a B oudreau dozen police cars through Los Angeles Friday night, I kept Guest Columnist hearing TV announcers repeat the same phrase over and over: “American Hero.” It seems that O.J. Simpson qualifies as a member of that elite and mystifying group of people known to us as American heroes. Which makes me wonder, what does it take to be a hero? O.J.’s qualifications? He has the ability to play foot­ ball and even act. He also had the ability to beat up his wife and we may find out he had the ability to kill her. When Kurt Cobain killed himself we found out that he too was an American hero, as flannel-clad teens all over the nation contemplated knocking themselves off. Kurt’s qualifications? Musical talent, depression and drug addiction. I’m not saying that celebrities are all undeserving of our admiration. Anyone who works hard enough to become a professional athlete, m usician, or actor deserves some measure of respect. But sometimes it seems like public idolatry is directly proportional to air time and nothing else. We don’t know anything about these people, and yet we have such incredible faith in them! We have taken our admiration for the things they have done (that best­ selling novel, that home run) and extended it to their entire lives. I’m glad that O.J. Simpson was never my hero, although if I had been younger at the time, Kurt Cobain might have been. Fortunately as I’ve gotten older, I’ve gotten choosier about my role models, and my qualifications have got­ ten stricter. They have to be people whose lives I can see through my own eyes, not through a television set. They have to be people who have a reason to set a good example for me because they know me. They have to be people who take responsibility for every aspect of their lives, and if they don’t score touchdowns or win Emmys, they also don’t snort coke or beat up their wives. My heroes are my parents, my instructors, my closest friends. They are the people who have been there for me on a daily basis, who have earned my respect. While I may try to write like Ken Kesey or sing like Tori Amos, I try to live my life like the people I know. Kids are always going to grow up with heroes they see on TV or in the movies. They are always going to mistake the celebrity image for the real thing. I guess I just hope they can be as lucky as I was - that when their heroes disappoint them they have some real role models to fall back on. We can’t rely on the media to give them that. iJ^ A * t M E N T O F C H ÏS ^ p a i n s WTWTÒXW5 ASPlMH.WtÚ V'tí/U.CMJ.'ÍOU. i 'Normaux madam.'Töu Should Go tö The DefakîMîn Tof coughs and coids For treatment Howeve Your Apostate examination was favorable, so we can treat Nbu under fkkt b . subsection 32.,. STATE PRESS TAFF CHRIS DRISCOLL, Editor M ARY LEIGH SUMM ERTON, Managing Editor DAVID STROW.............................................................. SportsEditor Hughes, Shane Siren. EVIE LYN SHEINKOPF............................................FeaturesEditor Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, TONNVAINE WISWELL.....................Entertainment Editor decided by a majority voted among its members. They do BILL LYNAM...................................................................PhotoEditor not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. KRIS FRIDR1CH..........................................Travel Columnist Board members include: PR O D U C T IO N : Donna Bowring, Joe C orrao, Vicki Editor Carroll, Teresa Szymanski, and Dave Weber. CHRIS DRISCOLL Managing Editor MARY LEIGH SUMMERTON SALES REPRESEN TATIV ES: Dan Ellstrom. Jennifer The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, A rizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. St a t e P r e s s P h o n e N umbers Information................................ 965-7572 Newsroom............................ .....965-2292 Magazine................................... 965-1695 Advertising................................ 965-6555 Classifieds................................. 965-6731 Opinion S t a t e P r e ss Tuesday, June 21, 1994 P a ge 23 State Press flooded with angry letters Readers respond to A S U en g in eerin g stu d en t w h o bashes sorority w o m e n I am writing in reference to the article, “Freshman Finds ASU Greeks Snobby and Arrogant,” written by Margarito Blancas. His letter seems to be an opinion on the basis of a bad experience or formed from the typical stereotypes placed on sorority women. Mr. Blancas, In reading your article, I was dismayed. The fact that you depict women in general as pretentious is bother­ some. You must realize there are stereotypes about all sorts of people, but that they do not necessarily hold true for all nationalities, all religions or all organiza­ tions. You then go on to speak about women in sororities. You depict them as stuck up sluts, dirty dogs, spoon fed, etc. Before going on any further in my response to this article, I would like to make something definitely clear. I myself am not in a sorority and would not care to be in one. I personally do not like sororities, but .this is not due to any of the things you have mentioned. My reasons have to do with the type of person I am. It is something that has never appealed to me. So, as you can see, it doesn’t benefit me at all in standing up for a group of women that I have no association with. However, I have a problem with the ignorance that you seem to demonstrate so well. Why are you so angry, Mr. Blancas? Is it because these girls wear “tight shirts?” Is it because they are so well off? Or is it because you feel they don’t pay you any mind? That is the impression I got from this quote, “She’s the one who walks around and when she sees a ‘normal’ guy looks at him and quickly gives him the shoulder, whereas if she saw a ‘handsome’ guy , she would willingly give him ‘something else.’” Roxane Ruiz Sophomore Justice Studies G re e k s a re m o re th a n T -S h irts sluts whose Mr. Blancas: First of all, it seems to me that stereo­ parents pay typing is what you base your opinions on. their way. You do, in fact, have the right to your M a n y own opinion. However, basing your opin­ s o r o r i t y ions on stereotypes can offend many peo­ w o m e n ple. I am curious about the number of don’t have women on which you base your stereo­ cars either. Since types. It seems to me the number is small. are Second, I am very sorry that your are you upset about having to attend a school o b v io u sly with so many “pretentious” women. ignorant as as However, I am upset that I have to attend w ell school with someone who is so narrow­ m i s i n ­ minded. Maybe if you'd stop feeling f o r m e d sorry for yourself and whining because about the ^o u h*ve to pay for school, you’d enjoy Greek sys­ I ’ life more. I know paying for school is tem , difficult, I do it myself. Complaining and would like to point out blaming resolve nothing. fact Third, it is convenient that you can see the sorority letters because if you couldn’t that being 'M AN, I GANT WAIT TD GET TO COLLEGE AKfl> START PRINKING.' those “sorority bitches” as you so elo­ G r e e k quently put it would blend in with all the m e a n s S t e r e o t y p i n g is d a n g e r o u s t o e v e r y b o d y a t A S U other women at ASU. As for the "match­ quite a bit more than simply wearing let­ H ere’s an open letter to M argarito ones who may be supported by their par­ ing outfits with the name of their sorority tered shirts. Being Greek means main­ Blancas, who wrote the letter slamming ents, but this fact also fell by the wayside. written on their tight shirts," matching T- taining high grades, participating in phi­ Of course, pretentiousness, bitchiness, sorority “bitches:” shirts come from4various functions and lanthropies and intramurals, and much prom iscuity and everything else you I ’m sure there will be plenty of usually one T-shirt is designed per func­ more. I hope that before you go publiciz­ accused “Greek” women of do not have responses in the State Press from not tion. Women everyw here w ear tight ing your narrow-minded, stereotypical sorority membership as a prerequisite only sorority women but fraternity men shirts. It’s obvious that you were looking opinions you will educate yourself on at the “tig h t sh irts" for a purpose. ALL the facts because your letter only and fem inists as well. I im agine you either, which you completely ignored. Speaking o f promiscuity, I don’t see proves your own point. You are a won’t pay them any attention since it was Wonder what that was? apparent from your letter you have no how anyone’s sexual activity is the con­ Yes, it's true. I am a sorority woman Freshman who doesn’t know anything. respect for these people. Furthermore, cern of another, except that person’s part­ who also pays her own way through col­ Cortney Antonson lege. Amazing though it may seem, NOT Junior some individuals will try to psychoana­ n ers) when it comes to pregnancy and all sorority women are. pretentious bitchy Political Science lyze you (you harbor repressed hatred STDs. So you have no right to condemn a against your mother, or you are bitter large number of sorority women for their because of your disappointing social life,- sexual appetites unless you have actually for example) and if previous responses slept with all those women— a highly from “Greeks” are an indication, they unlikely feat for any male— and have As an active member of a sorority at nor do you know any of your generaliza­ will resort to tit-for-tat name-calling and been misled into contracting STDs from hasty pointing to their philanthropic and/or impregnating them. Besides, as ASU, I feel com pelled to respond to tions about my sisters and I to be true. the cliché goes, it takes two to tango. Margarito Blanca’s June 14 letter to the To set the record straight, I pay my activities. (I’ve placed “Greeks” in quotes Similarly, how does the fact that other to differentiate these social groups from editor in which M argarito states that own tuition and my own living expenses. people enjoy the luxuries you c a n ’t ethnic Greeks, of which I am one. I mean sorority women are “stuck-up, brainless, My parents, economically speaking, give no slight to them; I’m just being precise degrade your life? Not in any substantive dirty, dog-sick, spoon-fed bitches.” me next to nothing. The used 1990 Ford in my use of language.) These tactics will way, but it makes you painfully jealous, Margarito, such outrageous, uneducat­ Escort I drive was a hand-me-down from fail to counter your argum ents. obviously. Is that their fault, or yours? ed generalizations can be made about any my grandfather., I do not wear tight shorts Therefore, I’d like to address your points. Only you can control, your thoughts and organization, gender, or race. Based on because I know my body isn’t perfect. I could contest almost every sentence in emotions, not they. True, some rich peo­ what little information I know about you, The Greek shirts I wear bearing the let­ your letter individually, but I’ll stick to ple may think they’re better than others I can say that you are just plain jealous of ters of my sorority are hardly tight either. because of their wealth, but so what? Just your themes. women who have the benefits you do not. The “short sleeves” hang down to my First of all, it needs to made clear to ignore them. (Unless of course, they try (a paid education, a new model car, a elbows and the shirts are often long everyone that making assumptions about to take advantage of you, which involves covered parking spot, etc.) Based on the enough to wear as a dress! Also, I do not someone: on the basis o f his or her more than just conspicuous consump­ ethnicity of your name (Hispanic) I could' throw myself at any “stuck-up prick” I appearance or affiliation(s) with others is tion.) And true, too large a gap between say that you are a dirty, tortilla eating, meet. Very few women in their right DANGEROUS. (O f course, perfectly the rich and the poor can be detrimental tequila slammin’ spic who drives a low­ to a society, but that’s something that minds do so regardless of their affiliation obvious conclusions are exceptions. For ered pickup truck with black tinted win­ requires large-scale collective action example: If a person is a member of a with a sorority. And if you actually knew dow s and attends the U niversity by sorority, that person must be female.) I’d through economic policy and can’t be any sorority women, you would see that I means of self-support because your par­ say almost everyone but you knows that blamed on select individuals. ents (who can’t speak a work of English) am not alone. For your sake, I hope someone used a not all-sorority wom en even faintly Your closing statement summed it up resemble ^ caricature you 0ffer_heck, fake I.D. to submit that letter to the State came here illegally yet still expect the United States Government to provide Margarito. You are just a stupid freshman maybe not even the vast majority, barring Press with your name on it in order to them with health care, education, and who doesn’t know anything! Why don’t a scientific survey showing otherwise, slander you. If it’s really your own, I feel employment despite the fact that they are you hope for an education at ASU that You did use the words “m ost” and sorry for you, and not just because of all not tax-paying citizens. But I would gives you the common sense to think “some” in your letter, but your seething the condemnation and harassment you’re hatred removed the distinction from the bound to receive. never publicly proclaim any of this as before you speak! minds of those who read your letter. You Gregory Anninos Tara Teichgraeber true because I do not know you or know also did note at the beginning of your let­ Senior any of this to be true. And coincidentally, Sophomore, ALPHA PHI ter that sorority women aren’t the only Mechanical Engineering you do not know me (a sorority member) Interior Design It is easy to make generalizations about any ethnic group, religion, race, gender or organization Page 24 c \ o o n Tuesday, June 21, 1994 S t a t e P r e ss Tuesday, June 21, 1994 S t a t e P r ess OFF one of the following: G ro o m in g 1. Shampoo, Conditioner, Cut & Style (Reg. M-16.50 W-18.50) 2. Color (Reg. $40) 3. Full Set Nalls (Reg. $30) H um ons ans Hair Studio N ot v a lid w /a n y o th e r offer. $ 966-5462 T| 2 O o o — (D C (O D ■ University M-TH FRI SAT P a g e 2 £ 9-8 9-6 9-5 10 OFF PERM (Reg. $55) QUALITY FROM PEOPLE WHO KNOW HOW (LONG HAIRSLIGHTLYHIGHER) Exp. 7-S-94 ARCHES PLAZA W HAT YOU D O N 'T K N O W ABOUT THE M IN D W OULD FILL A BO O K. Europe this Sum m er! Pans Amsterdam London Brussels Madrid frankfurt Athens W ith over 16 million copies sold, Dianetics is the "owner's manual for the human mind." O nly $ 6 .0 0 . Send check or money order to: Foundation 2 l 11 W . University Dr. Mesa, AZ 85201 (602) 833-0610 H u b b a r d ' D ianetics * $326* $391 * $395* $413* $435* $459* $549* ’ Fares are each w ay from Phoenix based on a roundtrip purchase. Restrictions apply and taxes not included Call for other w orldw ide destinations •9MCSt All Right«n—r ert DnucncsandHumanoaretrademark»andaarvtoamark» owned oyRattgtouaTachnotogyCantar andarauaaderfth1aparmiaaJor Nam»2894 Council Travel 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, AZ 85281 j I Located at Forest and University (directly across from ASU) 966-3544 E U R A IL P A S S E S issued on-the-spot The Walt Disney Co. As a curious cub and heir to the throne, Simba (left) is seen as a major obstacle by jeal­ ous Uncle Scar (right) in the new Disney movie The Lion King. Lion King rules: Friday by T o n n v a n e W S t a t e P r ess isw e l l The Disney studios seem to have hit a peak with their latest work, The Lion King. Returning to the days of animation as a fine art, this movie, franldy, leaves nothing to be desired. It is beautiful to watch, has a good story, and is entertain­ ing for all ages. The story line is an o rig in al— D isney’s first. Sim ba, son of King Mufasa, is destined to inherit his father’s position as ruler of Pride Rock. This has made Simba an object of hatred for his uncle Scar, whom Simba displaced as heir the throne. A good thing, too; for Scar (who bears an uncanny resemblance to Aladdin’s Jafar) is an evil, cunning creature. The result of Scar’s scheming is that Simba must fight to regain his rightful position as an adult, with pre­ dictably happy results. Although the story is itself interest­ ing. for many adults the lavish animation will hold equal interest. The multi-plane scenes of flocks of birds flying over one another are w orthy of a N ational Geographic special, and a panorama of the veldt creatures makes Jurassic Park look like a terrarium. In addition to being a treat for the eyes, The Lion King is also quite funny. There are jokes about body odors that are right out of Ren and Stimpy, and a bug eating scene that will have you craw ling in your seat. And Sim ba’s friends, in addition to providing comic relief, seem as fully-realized in animated form as they would have been had they been played by live actors. Despite some scenes that could fright­ en young children (and some tear-jerk­ ers), this movie provides more bang for your movie-going buck than anything else this summer will offer. So pull out—, the wallet and head out to see The Lion King now. It’s the one movie you won’t want to miss. C R O SSW O R D P U Z Z L E n 2 !9 ■ _i 1 13 ñ i 12 1 ■ 18 19 4 5 6 71 u 8m ■J ■ 1 É j■ 2 1 ■ ■ I 16 ■,4 ■ ■ 17 2 2 2 1 ■ *2 ■y rj ■ 2 ■24 jj 25 1 H i 25\ ■r ■ 1 ■ i 2 B ■ ■ 1 jI29 ■ r 3 0 ■ ■ I . Happen again (5) 5. T h ick soup (5) H. N u llify (5 ) 9. T e n d e n c y (5) IO. Sufficient (5 ) I I . Satire (5) 12. Calorie-control led eating (4) 15. Sheen (6) 17. Nautical (5) IS. He victorious over (6) 20. L o fty (4) 25. Burial place (5) 26. Pledge; promise ( 5 j 27. Suave (5) 28. T w o fo ld (5) 29. Corroded (5) 30. Wary (5) " 2Ö % Ö f" f ” " BODYW EAR ) « > 's V d n S c t o i e 0 _ . CLUES ACKOSS G EN ERA L NUTRITION CENTERS ("LUES DOWN 1. Impede 16) 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. Invent (6) Wireless ( 5 1 Pry (5) frolicsom e (7) Reiterate (6) Appear (6) f rozen water (3) Headgear (3) Slack (3) Mat (3) Disobedient <7) GLOVES-BELTS-WRAPS Good at Tempe Center GNC only. Void with other offers. Exp, 7-8-94 J REMEMBER: M o s t G N C P ro d u c ts a r e Buy 1 G e t 1 h a lf o ff! 913 S. Mill Ave. ♦ - University Tempe Center Tempe • 967-2060 M o n . - Fri, 9 to 9 • Sat, 10 t o 6 • Sun. 12 t o 5 Recycled Fashion 18. M edical man (6 ) 19. 21. 22. 23. 24. Renowned (6) Mad; crazy (6) Barely (6) Custom (5) Insurgent (5) A n s w e rs a re in th e C la s s ifie d se ctio n . TEMPE 227 W. Univerjity PH O EN IX 724 E. Glendale Classifieds Page 26 Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or in v ested , you may w ish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more in fo rm atio n and assistan ce regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 2641721.______________________ APARTMENTS BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 & 2 bed­ rooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laun­ dry room. On East 8th Street bet­ ween Rural & McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments, 968-5238. CHARMING NEW studio apt. in residential Phx neighborhood. Peaceful, n/s tenants sought w/ refs. Laundry privileges. $350 mo. Call 840-7615 or 954-0511. STUDIO APARTMENT, walk to ASU, $350/month, utilities in­ cluded. 966-7061. F a ir pla y is verfication by the heart; confession by the tongue; action by the limbs. SUMMER DISCOUNTS! Reserve Now for Fall 1/2 Block from Campus B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d hug e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 b a th ; 2 b e d ­ ro o m , 2 b a th a p a rtm e n ts . A ll u tilitie s p a id . C a ble TV, h e a te d p o o l, a n d s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s . F rie n d ly , c o u r t e o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S top b y to d a y !!! ANNOUNCE­ MENTS Terrace Road Apartments 950 S. Terrace 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 Uioppy lu th ¿Anniversary Can you imagine eating 23 tons of pasta? ASU students have. And it's been free! At the Spaghetti Company! $200 OFF! FREE UTILITIES! W a lk to ASU. Spacious, 2 b edroom apartm ents. A/C, fur­ nished o r unfurnished available. From $ 4 4 0 / m onth. Beautiful pool area, laundry facilities M otivation Tips You deserve a good Perk today! To hear A ffirm a tio n s e s p e ­ c ia lly to m o tiv a te you call 1 -9 0 0 -4 2 0 3 709 ext 140. $2 per min, avg call 3 mins, avg cost $6. M in im u m cost $ 2 , m a x im u m cost $ 8 . T o u c h -to n e p ho ne re q . U n d e r 18 g e t parents permission. Cust. Serv., Strauss Com m ., Carmel, CA (408) 625-1910. available. FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS 1994 E. Lemon 894-9690 HOMES FOR RENT LARGE 5 bd house, pool, jacuzzi. washer/dryer. dishwasher, etc. Hardy/13th St. $1300.437-1048. LARGE 5BD house, washer/dry­ er, dishwasher, a/c, etc. $995. Apache/Rural. 437-1048. APARTMENTS ASU AREA, studios, 1 & 2 bed­ room apts. from $280-$360/mo not including utilities. 966-8187 966-8838._________________ TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT $200 OFF HAYDEN SQUARE condo- 2 bd, 2 ba. Ideal student location. Covered parking. 831-1337. W alk to ASU. Q u ie t, spacious, 1 bedroom , furnished, A/C, p o o lside apartments. IMMAC. 1 OR 2 bd. furnished, incl. dishes, linens, w/d, tv, util & phone. N ear Univ/Dobson. Avail, short term, $600-$800 mo. 838-6621. $980/month George Ann Apts. 894-9690 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd, 2ba, w/d, pool, fans, park light, re­ serve July/Aug. $575.966-0987. RENTAL SHARING 2 ROOMS for rent, each w/private bath & phone, in beautiful QuestaVida condo. Pool, spa, bike to ASU. $285/$300 per mo. Joey 966-5458. 2BD, 2BA house in Old Town Tempe. Looking for grad, student roomate, non-smoking $350/mo. + util. 921-4268. ATTRACTIVE RESORT life­ style. Master $265; Loft $215 + util ea. Terrific value. 351-8683. RESPONSIBLE, GRADUATE student needed to share 4 bed­ room house in Chandler. Pool, spa, AC, washer & dryer. $350 per mo. Call Peter at (h) 8141457, (0)413-5037. APARTMENTS RO O M S FOR RENT MALE TO share 3bd. 2ba house w/pool. Must be clean & reliable. 68th St./Thomas. $194/mo + 1/3 util.Avail now. Call Jill 990-2292. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE $2000 DN. + take over payment. Imi from ASU. 2bd 2 ba. 714582-9148. 2BD, 2BA, 1,100 sf condo, 400 yds/ASU. New app, ac. Asm. In $55K. Jean ,pg 205-3063 or 8335879. Dan Schwartz Rlty. QUESTA VIDA: Never rented, 2 master suites, assumable loan. West USA, Betty A. 820-3333. SCOTTSDALE - MCCORMICK Ranch condo, Ibd/lba at Villa Vallarta: btfl & exclnt location w/ lighted tennis & pools; quiet & se­ cure. A steal at $48,900 - com­ pletely furnished! A no lose in­ vestment. 831-7000 ext. 600. TOWNHOUSE FOR sale. 2bd, 2ba, Mesa/Gilbert. Fenced yard, nice. 1 mi from schools, shop­ p ing, post o ffice , parks. $39,900. Call after 6pm, 8920991. FURNITURE BLACK FUTON frame w/matress for sale, $250 obo. Call Ni­ cole 966-2024, before 10am or after 6pm. 2077 E. University • Tempe 968-3478 2334 W. Main • Mesa 964-4773 COMPUTERS 486 SX/25 4MB RAM 170, hard CD rom, soundboard SVGA monitor, external speakers, joy­ stick, Windows 3.1 and more. $800. Call 968-0548 ask for Niels $100.00 OFF FIRST MONTH’S RENT* \ ____ L Ï • 2 B edroom $430 B J £ ¡ - , ^ *3 Bedroom^75 1 ■— l| * 1 block to A S U 1855 E. Don Carlos . Laundrv Facaitv PHOSE TODAY! ***» ® *» J J 414 S. Mill. Suite 101 Tempe, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICE JEWELERS* Custom Design & Remounts Jewelry & Watch Repair Gold/Diamonds/Silver Pulsar Watches/Pearls TRANSPORTA­ TION FREE CARS to most major cities. First tank free. You drive. Gas al­ lowances avail. 468-1733. AUTOMOBILES" !! NEED A CAR!! Use our buying service to save thousands$ on any vehicle, new or used. Call for free quote. Brian 602-501-9536. $ CASH TODAY! $ I Buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call A1 994-4369. $$ CASH NOW $$ MOTORCYCLES Quality, affordable new & used furniture. J ------ MILL AVENUE JEWELERS ROOMMATE WANTED. Own room, pool, BBQ, w/d, alarm, lmi. ASU. Non smoking, M/F. $240 + 1/5 utils. Greg or Tanya 894-6418. Family owned & operated since 1960. A P A R T M E N T S HELP WANTEDGENERAL For any car or truck running or not! Cash paid to you in 1 hour! Roy 966-8961 TDG. Chucker's Furniture Casa Grande JEWELRY — — ROOMMATE NEEDED, 3 bd condo 2 mi/ASU. Avail July 1. Call after 5pm, 496-8930. CONDO 2BD, 2ba, f/p, all major appl incl, $700/mo. Questa Vida, 714-582-9148. FIND IT in the Classifieds! — I S t a t e P r ess Tuesday, June 21, 1994 T E A C H E R S/P R O FS RAMGRADE is the best spread­ sheet for grades/roll on DOS PC’s. For 2 day delivery send $10.00+2.90 (s/h) to: Dedicated Systems, Box 9548, Fresno, CA 93793-9548. S t it t P r in C littifie d i 965-6735 89 KATANA 750, low miles, custom paint, new clutch, $3000. 655-0082. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ Apartment Locators has an on campus pos. avail. Flex hrs. Real Est. lie. req. 992-1300, Ed. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale seeks pt/ft permanent front & back office help. W ill train.. Apply in person . 4020 N. Scot­ tsdale Rd, Suite 108. ATTN - $7/HR Tempe business now hiring warehouse/manufacturers rep /sales help, 3-7pm, no exp nec. Call Jim, 820-8408. CA SH D A NCERS, students needed for wheelchair bachelor parties. Pg Eric at 202-9285. DASH DESIGNS now hiring customer service/data entry for summer help. Previous experi­ ence helpful. $5.50 - $6 per hour. Call Shirl 967-2678. DILLARD S DISTRIBUTION Center now accepting applica­ tions for shipping and receiving. Full and part time positions. H ours betw een 2 :30 pm to 12:00am. Experience a plus. Base wage and bonus program. Apply in person at 396 North WM Dil­ lard Drive in G ilbert (M ajor cross streets are Elliot and Coun­ try Club Drive) Monday thru Fri­ day 8:00am -4:00 pm. HELP WANTEDGENERAL EXTRA $$$ SPORTS MINDED Nat’l research/marketing com­ pany needs motivated people to help with expansion. 829-8105. Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flexible hrs/wk. Call Mike for int, 921-8282. FIDDLESTICKS FAMILY Fun Park requires p/t evening/wknd help. Have fun, make money. Apply in person 1155 W. Elliot, Tempe. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for: D.E. Operators/10 Key, Recep­ tionist-Secretaries, Phone Sales Assembly, Warehouse. Top pay and excellent benefits. Call 381 3830 for appointment. EOE. Val­ ley Staffing Services, 3923 S. McClintock #404. LOOKING FOR a summer job that will enhance your resume? Apply today at the ASU Tele­ fund. Improve your communi­ cation skills, make alumni con­ tacts & have a flexible sched. $5 + bonus. Apply today! 965-6754. MARC CENTER Looking for dedicated caring people to work with individuals who are DD in home setting. For more info call 962-4838. MIRACLE TUTORING is in need o f experienced tutors in most subject areas. Earn $6 - $ 12 per hour 967-1236. PERSONAL ASST for male wheelchair user in Tempe. P/t, $7/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lifting req. 784-4929. PHYSICIST, CHEM E or Elec E, to conduct tests on multi-channel analyzers. Set up system. 15-20 hrs/wk; $6-$10/hr DOE. Urgent need! Express Personnel Servic­ es, 11 W. B ase lin e , Tem pe 85283,413-1200. R E SE A R C H A SST. Commercial real estate firm needs part time research assistant with good grade average, basic com­ puter Skills, and own transporta­ tion. Hours flexible. Near cam­ pus. Please call Yolanda at 9674483. SENIOR & Junior advisor needed for Young Judaea youth group in Scottsdale. Exp w/children, knowledge of Judaism and Israel. Call collect, 1-303-321-8013. SPACE ENTHUSIAST, gain practical exp. while making a dif­ ference in the future.Several vol­ unteer pos. avail, will become salaried over the next few mo. and many will become perm, payed positions upon graduation. We need marketing/business ad­ ministration, computer ops., ap­ plied sciences, journalism, legal, mechanical/CAD design. Rex. sched. Working to extablish pri­ vate space program. Habit One Research Engineering and Devel­ opment 581-6978 or 581-6958. TELEMARKETING P/T 10 am2:30pm or 3:30 - 8 pm. M-F. Now hiring mature, entusiastic, reliable people for phone work in Tempe area. $5-$6/hr + bonus. Call 894-1092. M-F only. ULTIMATE LAWN Care is hir­ ing p/t employees. $5/hr to start. Exp nec; own trans req. Early mornings, flex 20-40 hrs M-F (days can vary). Call Marlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. Setting reservations-resorts. 8:30-1:30/3:30-9:00. N ear Fiesta Mall- Unique compen­ sation package. Must work well with people. No selling. 8 9 7 - 1 6 7 6 • A lis o n HELP WANTEDSALES CHEM. MAJOR wanted for p/t retail lab. chemical and apparatus sales. Must have retail sales exp. & a good knowledge of chemis­ try. Call 220-9011 for details. GREAT OPPORTUNITY, very difficult to find, opening avail­ able in commercial real estate. Rexible hours, unlimited com­ mission income potential. Look­ ing for a hard working, finan­ cially motivated person desiring to leam the business. 13 year old Tem pe based com pany. Call C.P.I. 966-2301. Ask for Lori. PR O D U CT D EM O N STR A ­ TORS, wrk July 1 & 2 area gro­ cery stores. Must have depend­ able transp. & a card table. $35 per day. 381-1 ¡42.___________ TEICHERT MARKETING is looking for 5 people to join suc­ cessful sales team. Responsi­ bilities will incl marketing video rental pkgs to the general public. O ur program consists o f 78 movie rentals for $34.95, valid at 18 of the valley's largest video stores. Your compensation will incl a sal + comm. Avg earnings of $250-$400/wk (2 sales people earned over $1000 last week!) Please call Tom at 921-7755 bet­ ween l-4pm to set up a personal interview. S t i t i P r in Classifieds Matthews Center Basement HELP WANTEDGENERAL BONUS: Work over 200 hours for us this sum­ mer and be eligible for a $250 scholarship. For more information call Mohave County Personnel & Risk Management PO Box 7000 Kingman, AZ 86402 9 2 1 -9 4 4 2 A & M Personnel Services COSMIC PIZZA, is now hiring exp. pizza cooks & del. drivers. We offer flex. hrs. competative wages, a fast track to manage­ ment & great working condi­ tions. Apply @ 1523 E Apache Blvd. (no phone calls please). NAT L FRANCHISE new to AZ. Friendly, hard-w orking, great personality. All positions & shifts. Call 827-7864. 528 W Broadway. PART TIME wait staff, days/ nights, experience helpful. Apply Tues-Thurs, 2:30-5 p.m. Minder Binders, 715 S. McClintock. |ECCINGTONS | §An exciting breakfast j i & lunch restaurant is | (interviewing fo ri | waitress positions, j | Must be available j j two weekdays plus j | weekends. Apply in j j person: i 1660 S. Alma School [ Mesa HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE BABYSITTER WANTED: Nonsmoker, reliable car, references, CPR certified. Gilbert area. One aftemoon/week, some weekends as needed. 813-0371 or lv msg. JOB OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA SUMMER employ­ ment - Fishing industry. Earn up to $3,000-$6.000+ per month. Room & board! Transportation! Male/female. No experience nec­ essary! (206) 545-4155 ext. A5918. SUMMER RESORT jobs- Earn to $12/hr.+tips. Hawaii. Florida, Rockies, Alaska, New England, etc. 1-206-632-0150 ext. R5918. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BE YOUR own boss - Get out of the rat race! I will teach you the concepts of leverage that will tri­ ple your income. Call 860-4999 between 7-9 p.m. RESTAURANTS/ BARS MOHAVE COUNTY, ARIZONA We are hiring for a variety of temporary clerical positions. If you are skilled at word processing, typing, reception, switchboard or general office, please call for an appointment. SUMMER JOBS CLUCK-U- CHICKEN Rest. Now hiring Delivery Drivers. PT/FT. Apply in person, 855 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, 894-2112. CO M M UNITY N U TRITIO N SPECIALIST I H ealth and Social Services Departm ent is establishing a hiring register for a full time Com m unity N utrition Specialist I for an expand­ ing W IC caseload. Responsibilities include counseling high risk WIC participants and presenta­ tion of nutrition educa­ tion programs targeted to various com m unity groups. This position is in Kingman, Arizona and requires a bachelor's degree in nutrition or a closely related field. Salary: $10.31- $10.94 per hour DOQ. Benefits eligible. Submit complet­ ed Mohave County appli­ cation to: ASU A lum ni looking for juniors, seniors, or continuing students for p/t security work. Starting wage based on experi­ ence. M ust have phone and reliable transportation. Hours available 24-hr basis including weekends. One location 2 miles from campus. Call 961-1161 ext. 394, ask for Greg Claus, 7am-5pm, M-F or leave mes­ sage at 420-1193 anytime. HELP WANTEDFO OD SERVICE (602) 753-0736 T D D # (602) 753-0726 A/EOE CHICKCN C O . is proud to present the CARVIN JONES BAND - i i u 'e , / / - EVERY (o L e'g d a .c jr • 9 p.m . * 855 S. Rural Rd. (1 blk S . o f Univ. Dr.) 894-2112 Page 27 Tuesday, June 21, 1994 S t a t e P r ess RESTAURANTS/ BARS HEALTH & FITNESS LOST & Found ads are free in the State Press! Call 965-6735 or come to the basement of Mat­ thews Center to place your ad. WANTED: 100 students to lose 10-29 pounds. No hips, thighs, or butts about it. P.S. I have the thigh cream. 1-800-200-3896. EVERYDAY! SERVICES 10« Wings 7 5 < Drafts CREDIT CARD (Bud & Bud Light) No credit or poor credit, we can help. Minimum savings account $100. Credit line 150% of sav­ ings account. No application or processing fees. Free call/info. 1-800-229-7691. Mon-Thurs: 3-7 p.m. Sat: 11 a .m -5 p.m. Sun: 12-9 p.m. TUESDAY JAZZ NIGHT! 8 p .m .-1 2 a .m . START YOUR credit history, one of the lowest annual rates. World wide purchasing power, instant cash.Call 407-5940, ask for Visa application. WEDNESDAY IRISH MUSIC! 9 p.m.-1 a.m. ST AT PRO Corp.- Computer (SPSS), statistical analysis, con­ sulting. research help. 837-1999. THURSDAY 10« Wings 7 5 « Drafts PERSONALS FRIDAY LIVE MUSIC! by MARCONIS MARCUS. MEET me by the rabbits at 7 p.m. I can't wait to see you again. Let's hope for more of the same. Mrs. Welby. R fiL le l- 5 th S t. & F o r e s t • 9 6 6 -4 4 3 8 T ifr i SPORTS & RECREATION Try h earing som e e x c e lle n t Stress Relief Tips especial­ ly for you! Call 19 0 0 -4 2 0 -3 7 0 9 ext. 1 3 9 . $2 p er m in , avg call 3 m in s, avg co st $6. M inim um cost $2, maximum cost $8. Touch-tone phone req. Under 18 get p a re n t's p e rm is ­ sion. C ust. Serv., Strauss C o m m ., C arm el, CA (4 0 8 ) 62 5-1910. WANTED: TUTOR/COACH for advanced accounting course. Mrs. Hoff, 952-9292. ASU AREA typing, w/p, editing, transcrptn. WordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime Diet Tips M ISC. FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat. 897-1741. W ould you like to hear some excellent Health/Diet/ W eig h t-lo s s Tips th a t really work? Call 1 -9 0 0 -4 2 0 3 7 0 8 ex t 11 6. $2 per min, avg call 4 mins, avg cost $8. M inim um cost $2, maximum cost $10. Touch-tone phone req. Under 18 get parent's permission. Cust. Serv., Strauss Comm., Carmel, CA (408) 625-1910. NEEDED: ROOMMATE for sum m er. N ice, big apt, $268/m o. U til incl. C all Wayne, 921-3817 or 968-5555. I WANT IT NOW! Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. Near ASU. 966-1984. W H Y T Y P E IT YOURSELF? If you'd rather spend your time doing something besides typing, let an ASU graduate help you make the best impression possible. APA/MLA I expert, laser printer, rush jobs no problem! Theresa • 924-1976 Noon Monday is the deadline to place your liner ad for Tuesday's paper. State Press TUTORS TYPING /W ORD PROCESSING FRIENDLY ENGLISH Ph D student and ASU instructor can tutor any English class. $8/hr. Flexible schedule. 967-1050. $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. Laser. Fast. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. • No Cover • SPANISH TUTOR, exp. grad student, all levels, group rates. Also proofing & typing. Call Doreen 966-5972. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ADOPTION HAPPILY MARRIED but child­ less Calif, teachers hope to adopt infant. Reasonable expenses paid. Please call our attorney Suzi Tanguay 1-800-845-0242. TUTORS________ TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING FREE LOST/FOUND Classifieds TUTORING 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. Matthews Center Basement 965-6 735 $10-$25 per hour English • Math Music • Proofreading WORD PROCESSING, secre­ tarial services, fax. 28yrs exper. Student discounts. S/W comer, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. Sue or Paul TUTORS 9 2 1 -4 1 8 7 W ant more than just typing? ★ EARN BETTER GRADES ★ in Math • Physics • Chemistry Biology • English • French Spanish • Russian • And More! Call S e rv ic e inclu d es check for grammati­ cal errors, spelling and syntax errors. Graphics available. F a s t tu rn a ro u n d . Experienced editor. Best rates in town. Call Jim: MIRACLE TUTORING® Y our Individual H o R05COPE = F rances D rake = For Tuesday, June 21,1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) A cycle begins today that is fav o rab le to your dom estic interests. Expect to do a lot of entertaining at home. Tonight favors romance and recreation­ al pursuits. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Travel will definitely be on your agenda in the com ing weeks. A downhearted friend is not much fun. Family interests are e sp e c ia lly rew arding tonight. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) * The com ing w eeks should prove favorable to your finan­ cial interests. New sources of income will arise now. Career may be slow today, but romance blossoms tonight. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) It is a m ixed day regarding c aree r in te re sts. Finances improve now, but work may be somewhat tedious. The coming w eeks w ill be a tim e of renewed self-confidence. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) A project on the back burner gains new life in the coming weeks. Today brings a minor tif f in business, but tonight should be very rew arding socially. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Your circle of friends widens in the coming weeks. You may decide to join a club. Company may be a bit draining now. Opt for family and personal inter­ ests tonight. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Your business prospects will certainly improve in the com­ ing weeks. Small details and delays lim it your progress today. Tonight brings romance! SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You will be traveling more in the weeks ahead. Minor expen­ d itures today could prove annoying. You shine now, but you may not be in the mood for socializing tonight. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Today brings improved finan­ cial prospects. Home life could seem confining now and a plea­ sure outing tonight will be just what the doctor ordered. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) P a rtn e rsh ip in te re sts and romance are highlighted now. Little things going wrong could leave you feelin g dow n. However, money interests pros­ per. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You will feel'recharged where work interest» are concerned; -Ar financial matter weighs on you now, but joy com es through romance and friendship. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You will be going out more often for good tim es in the coming weeks. A career meet­ ing today goes b e tte r than anticipated, so there is no need to feel anxious. YOU BORN TO D A Y have leadership abilities and crises' situations seem to bring out the best in you. You are less flighty than the typical m em ber o f your sign and are capable of indepth thinking and profound insights. You are very much at home in intellectual areas arrrf may also have artistic and liter­ ary talents. Universal in out­ look , you are public spirited and have an interest in the larg­ er issues that affect mankind. B irthdate of: Jan e R ussell, a ctre ss: M ary M cC arthy, writer; and Rheinhold Niebhur, theologian. 4 1 4 S . Mill A ve. # 2 0 6 , T e m p e 967-1236 $ 6 -1 2 /h r W e otter the BEST in private & group tutoring! 967-2360 r n STATE P ress Classified Ad Order Form Nam e H om e P hone B u s in e s s P h o n e A d d re s s C ity , S ta te Z ip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. Q Please include Driver's license i Check #___ a S B 6 -9 d a y s , $ .9 2 p e r lin e , p e r d a y C o m m e rc ia l 1-4 d a y s , $ 1 .2 5 p e r lin e , p e r d a y 5 -9 d a y s , $ 1 .1 7 p e r lin e , p e r d a y 3 lin e m in im u m . A d d a b o ld h e a d lin e fo r th e c o s t o f 2 lin e s. Price per Day $ Bank Card Number _______ # of Days X Total J f i ______ _ Classification Name/Number: N am e on Card Expiration Date 098 Adoption 065 Airplanes 010 Announcements 020 Apartments 061 Automobiles 064 Bicycles 051 Books 077 Business Opportunities 054 Computers 086 Free Lost/Found » E S P riv a te P a rty 1 -5 d a y s , $ 1 .0 0 p e r lin e , p e r d a y Dates you wish your ad to run:____ □ □ jf Ç Summer 1994 issue of Devil Deals is now available. Look for your FREE copy on campus, or com e to the basement of Matthews Center Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Sorry, we cannot accept personal ads through the mail. 088 Fundraising 052 Furniture 049 Garage Sales 101 Health & Fitness 074 Help Wanted-Child Care 072 Help Wanted-Clerical 073 Help Wanted-Food Service 070 Help Wanted-General 071 Help Wanted-Sales 030 Homes for Rent 040 102 107 103 056 076 015 120 050 045 Homes for Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes 063 Motorcycles 082 Music 090 Personals 084 Pets 110 Photography 097 Pregnancy Counseling 047 Real Estate 035 Rental Sharing 080 Restaurants/Bars 037 Rooms for Rent 100 081 058 031 041 060 067 108 105 115 Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Condos for Rent Townhomes/Condos for Sale Transportation Travel Tutors Typing/Word Processing Wanted Don't miss all of the great deals and lots of fun things, too! S t a t e P r ess Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Page 28 TUESDAY "LADIES "•T H G INc o m p l im e n t a r y buffet (6:30-8 p.m.) • 1< ANY DRINK IN THE HOUSE o-spm.,. $1 ANY DRINK IN THE HOUSE • N O CO VER (6 p.m.-close) f o r la d ie s ALL NIGHT! THURSDAY • 25< WELL, WINE & DRAFT<8-1ipm) NO COVER w/COLLEGE I.D. BEFORE 10 p.m. 2 FOR 1 ANY DRINK (.10m COMPLIMENTARY BIIFKT "LADIES NIGHT" • • $1 <5-6:30 p.m > SATURDAY 99< LONGNECKS (8-10:30 p.m.) WILL, WINE & DRAFT (for ladies all night!) N O COVER FOR LADIES BEFORE 1 0 p.m . SUNDAY "UNDER 21 NIGHT”. . . 20 y r s . o r y o u n g e r • Doors open at 8 p.m. • $5 COVER DRESS CODE STRICTLY ENFORCED '•V 77 I I- J t . / 7 '<•, >')<)', ViU' )V/ii j %jjj %j ':) ■>v -7 77