©Copyright, State Press, 1994 Tempe, Arizona W ednesday, Septem ber 7 ,1 9 9 4 An Independent M orning Daily Voi. 79 No. 11 Senate narrowly defeats $500 bid for polo shirts Plaster blaster B y D a w n D eC h r is tin a Sta te P ress A bill requesting nearly $500 for 40 ASASU Senate polo shirts was narrowly defeated during Tuesday night’s senate meet­ ing. “It is a deranged thought to believe that the senators are the only people who help the stu­ dents and therefore are the only people who deserve shirts with the group name on them,” said Kevin Johnson, president of the Liberal Arts and Sciences College Council. Sen. Randy Rogers from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and Sen. Robert Wellman from the College of Business pro­ posed the failed bill. “I’m disappointed that it wasn’t passed,” Rogers said. Wellman said there is an immediate need to get shirts so constituents can recognize ASASU representatives. “Even though the bill did fail, I think the amount requested was fair,” Wellman said. “A major argument was that the senators were trying to reward themselves.” John Malik, ASASU executive vice presi­ dent, said passing the bill would be unwise. “We haven’t defined our priorities,” Malik said. The senate should define how it intends to serve students and then decide whether expanding their wardrobe is the most effec­ tive means of doing that before passing a bill of this nature, he said. Rogers and Wellman originally requested $900, then lowered it to $497.70 when it did not pass the first time in committee. Jonell Lucca, ASASU public relations director, said she did not think the bill would pass. “I think they thought if they lowered the amount (of money for the shirts) it would be more appealing,” she said. “I think the con­ cept of shirts is a good idea but the means at which they were trying to get it was not.” ASA to ask A B O R ’s help in preventing campus crime B y L orrie C o h e n Sta te P ress Theresa Boettcher/State Press Nina Cartier, a junior fine arts major, hoses plaster off the concrete at the end of her sculpture class. Feeling ASU and other state campuses could be more immune to crime, the Arizona Students Association, a state-wide lobbying group, will ask the Arizona Board of Regents in Tucson this week for help. ASASU President Alan Frost, who is a member of ASA, said he wants ABOR to dis­ cuss preventive measures instead of asking for help on specific issues. “I want to take a preventive course of action. I don’t want to react to certain past events, but rather look at the situation as a whole,” Frost said. Last semester, with help from Sen. Patricia Noland, R-Tucson, ASA bypassed ABOR and addressed a bill to the state Legislature on ways to prevent campus crimes. The bill was intended to attach stiffer penalties to campus crimes. It was thrown out primarily because it was in direct conflict with the 14th Amendment, which infringes on a person’s right to equal protection under the law. Noland is not disappointed. “I think that one of the reasons we pro­ posed the legislation was to get the issue addressed and to get some exposure and get the parties together,” said Noland, when refer­ ring to the upcoming ABOR meetings. “I am not asking for anything, just an overview.” The security act also concludes campuses are much safer than the neighboring commu­ nities. In 1993, ASU had a total of 1,340 crimes against person and property, or .8 per person, compared with 12,361 or 5.7 per person for the city of Tempe. UofA had 1,237 or .4 per person, verses 49,107 or 9.3 per person. NAU veered higher with 551 or 1.0 verses Flagstaff with 4,502 or 4.6 per person.. Fem ale condom arrives on Valley pharm acy shelves C u m b e r so m e appearance m a y d eter so m e co n su m ers, g y n e c o lo g ists p red ict B y E l iz a b e t h A p p e l e n S t a t e P ress W omen have gone from suffrage to sex in only seven decades. Feminists have won their latest battle in the genderequality war with the creation of Reality, the female condom. However seemingly effective it may be, some gynecologists say that its “cumbersome” appearance may be a turn-off. “When you see it, it may seem ponderous, but don’t prejudge it,” said Dr. Theodore Blackwelder, ASU Student Health Center gynecologist. INSIDE STA TE PRESS W eather Outlook Mostly sunny. High 105, low 82. Dr. B ruce Eich, an ob-gyn at W om en’s H ealth Clinic in Tempe, said that Reality will take some get­ ting used to. “1 think it will take someone motivated to use it,’’ Eich said. “It is a bit awkward arid cumbersome.” The female condom, which only recently has been stocked in Valley pharmacies, is a thin, soft, loose-fit­ ting polyurethane sheath with two flexible rings. The inner ring aids in insertion and placement. The outer ring and about one inch of the sheath remain out­ side the vagina, partially covering the external genitalia and the base of the penis during intercourse. Danae Brownell Rodriguez, a health educator at stu­ dent health, said the female condom was created so women would have another option for safe sex. “It’s a new choice for women and their partner,” Brownell Rodriguez said. “The more choices people have, the more likely they will find something that is best for them.” ► A promoter who withheld $5,000 from the family o f a missing ASU student has re­ offered his donation. Page 8. ^ ASU students and employees will be able to posit their ques­ tions about higher education to political candidates at a forum today. Page 9. World/ Nation Police on Tuesday captured an ex­ convict and a teen-ager suspect­ ed in a cross­ country killing spree. Page 3 Other advantages, she said, include increased pro­ tection of the fem ale’s external genitalia, increased pleasure during intercourse and a new, safe sex choice for women. The extra benefit, Brownell Rodriguez said, is that the outer ring makes contact with the female’s external genitalia during intercourse,-stim ulating the clitoral area in some women. She added that Reality will provide an alternative to women or their partners who are allergic to latex and are unable to use the male condoms. B lackw elder said the R eality condom may help reduce the number of people afflicted with the human papilloma virus (HPV) because the sheath will protect more of the female genitalia and the base of the penis during intercourse. He added these are the areas which are often infected with HPV. “HPV is the m ost common sexually-transm itted v iru s in th e w o rld ,” _______________ ___________________ T urn t o C o n d o m , page 2 . Sports Armed with size and experience, the Sun Devil offensive line will help ASU plough through a tough schedule this season. Page 15 Where To Find It Classifieds........................... 18 Comics..................................14 Crossword..............................6 Horoscopes .........................19 Opinion.................................. 4 Police Report.........................6 Sports....................................15 Today’s Activities................ 2 World/Nation.........................3 Page 2 Condom Today Entries must contain the full name o f the club or organisation, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. Deadline fo r requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working "days before publication. Only one entry pier organization per day is permitted. • A HAN A Journalism Club — First meeting of the semester. Instructions, internships, scholarships, and employ­ m ent w ill be discussed. 3:00 p.m ., Stauffer Building Reading Room, A237. • ACTIVE — ACTIVE will staff an information booth on volunteering at ASU or in the community. Info includes receiving class credit, upcoming projects, and the COOL National Conference. 8 a.m.-l:30 p.m., Cady Mall. • MUAB — Gallery Committee meeting, 3:00 p.m., MU Conference Room 2A, third floor. Recreation Committee meet­ ing, 12:30, Conference Room 2. Special Events Committee meeting, 3:15 p.m., Conference Room 1A. • Eckanar Society — Open discussion: “Begin a Spiritual Adventure.” Noon, MU Graham, Room 216. • Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Academic Union — Activity night 7:30 p.m., MU Mohave, Room 222. • Association for Childhood Education Institute — First meeting of the year, all new members interested in children’s education welcome. 5:30 p.m., Payne Student Lounge. • THEM — Science fiction and fantasy club meeting. 4:30 p.m., M cClintock State P ress Wednesday, September 7, 1994 C o n t in u ed from page 1. Hall Study Lounge. • Golden Key National Honor Society — Campus awareness table —»come find out about the organization and meet the officers. 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m., north side of Cady Mall fountain. • Alpha Mu Gamma — First general meeting. 2:45 p.m., MU La Paz, Room 223E. • L esbian/B isexual W om en’s Discussion Group — Open/ongoing dis­ cussion group for lesbians and bisexual women. 4:00 p.m., W om en’s Student Center, MU lower level. • Program for Southeast Asian Studies — Brown bag lecture: “Massacres in an Unfinished Revolution: Indonesia, 196466,” by Hermawan Sulistyo, Dept, of H istory. 12:40 p.m ., Language and Literature Building, Room C50. • MEChA — Opening reception/meeting, everyone welcome. 3:30 p.m., MU Ventana. • Am erican Association o f Airport Executives — First general meeting, food and drinks served, everyone wel­ come. 5:15 p.m.,ERC 493. • Communication Student Association — Guest speaker Barbara Bean, Director of Communications at Kitchell Corp., will speak on public relations. • P h ilip p in e A m erican Students Association — General meeting. 5:30 p.m., MU Navajo, Room 219. • Gamma Beta Phi Honor Society — First meeting of the year. 11:00 a.m., MU Cochise, or 6:00 p.m., MU La Paz. • Best Buddies — Mandatory organiza­ tional meeting. 4:00 p.m., MU Yuma, Room 211. Blackwelder said. The condom also blocks HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, as does the male con­ dom. H owever, those who have used the female condom complain it is occasional­ ly pushed into or pulled out of the vagina during intercourse and also can make noise. Both problems can be prevented with additional lubrication, according to the manufacturer. P rofessor Owen M organ o f Fam ily Resources and Human Development said that he is skeptical Reality will be suc­ cessful because it does not have an appli­ cator and has to be inserted with fingers. “I would hope that my prediction is not true, because anything that gives women more control over themselves and their vulnerability is desirable,” Morgan said. According to a flyer put out by student health, the pregnancy rate for Reality with typical use is 26 percent for one year. Based on these figures, about one in every four women would get pregnant if they used the fem ale condom alone almost all the time. The pregnancy rate for a male latex condom for one year with typical use is 15 percent; a diaphragm is 15 percent and a sponge is 17 p ercen t, acco rd in g to health center data. One Reality condom costs about $2.50 in pharmacies and about $1.25 in family planning and public health clinics. inunx morn There is more to life than news, weather and sports. Check out the comics. S T U D E N T S ] IKNOW YOUR RIGHTS, According to the guidelines of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, University policy permits the release of directory information about any student who has not indicated that the information should not be released. Directory (releasable) information includes the following: •Major •Student Name •College •Local and Permanent Address •Dates of Attendance •Local Telephone Number •Participation in Officially •Date and Place of Birth Recognized Activities/Sports •Citizenship •Weight/Height of Members of •Degrees and Awards Received Athletic Teams •Residency Status •Most Recently Attended Institution •Academic Level There are three primary ways through which your personal directory information can be released to anyone who wants it: • Publication in the Arizona State University Directory, which is automatic unless you take steps to prevent it. • Response to a request over the telephone or in person at the Registrar's Office, unless you take steps to prevent it. • Sale to an outside individual or agency, unless you take steps to prevent it. RELEASING THIS INFORMATION IS YOUR CHOICE. HERE'S HOW YOU CAN PREVENT IT FROM BEING RELEASED. If you do not want your directory information released, you must fill out a non-release card and submit it as soon as possible to Records Information or to any Registrar Site. To prevent your name and other personal information fro m b e in g p rin te d in th e 1 9 94 -9 5 A riz o n a S ta te University Directory, preventive action must be taken no later than 4 p.m. Friday, September 9,1994. In-person questions may be directed to Registrar staff in Records Information (Student Services Bldg. B-114) or in any Registrar Site, Business BA 141, Purchasing PURCH 140 (just northeast of the MU), Social Science SS 102, or to ASU-West's Registration Services (UVCTR-120). Telephone questions may be directed to Registrar staff at 965-3124. L HURRY! DEADLINE IS SEPT. 9! j _______World/Nation_______ STATE P ress ______________________________________________________________ Wednesday, September 7, 1994 ______________________ Page_3^ Around iJLrizona U.S. defense cut o f $4,5 billion recommended WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon’s operat­ ing budget could be cut by $4.5 billion next year without harming overall military readiness, a con­ gressional report concluded Tuesday. In a broad array of military activities from pilot training to commissaries to the management of spare parts, the military could get along with less than P resident C linton requested, said the G eneral A ccounting O ffice, the investigative arm o f Congress. The GAO report touches on one of the most sen­ sitive issues in this year’s defense debate. As mili­ tary spending continues to gradually decline, Republicans and moderate Democrats are warning that the nation’s readiness to fight is slipping. More than any other budget item, the Pentagon’s “ operations and m aintenance’’ budget finances readiness, a broad category that takes in the number of hours a tank is driven per year, services provided to the troops, and the maintenance of military equip­ ment. In a 20-page report, Frank C. C onahan, the GAO’s assistant comptroller general, cites an array of military activities that could be cut back with little or no impact on military power in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. Clinton requested $82 billion for military opera­ tions and maintenance in his fiscal 1995 budget, an increase over this year of $5.3 billion. The House defense appropriations bill cuts that increase by $1.9 billion while the Senate comes in $566 million below the administration request. House-Senate negotiators have yet to work out those differences. In any case, the GAO study indicates that both Congress and the Clinton administration are request­ ing too much. More than half the cuts could be achieved by reducing Army operations accounts by $2.4 billion, die GAO said. The Air Force request is too high by $1.16 billion and civilian D efense Departm ent accounts could be cut by $690 million, it said. Navy budget requests are a comparatively small contribu­ tor to the problem, accounting for $274 million in excess, it said. Here are some of the examples cited in the GAO report: • The Army, Navy and Air Force could cut their requests for spare parts by half a billion dollars by tightening management of their inventories. In some cases, the services maintain stocks of items that are no longer in demand. • All three services are overestimating the amount they will need to pay their civilian work forces by $564 million. • The Navy pays labor costs for work performed at its shipyards based on estimated rather than actual costs, resulting in overpayments of $40 million ft» work done on six ships T urn t o S tory , pa g e 1 3 . A s s o c ia t e d p r e s s Lewis Gilbert is escorted from New Mexico State Police headquarters in Santa Fe Tuesday afternoon. Gilbert, 22, and Eric Elliott, 16, were captured by police as they slept under a bridge in Santa Fe early Tuesday. Police capture suspects in m urder, auto theft strin g in N ew M exico ‘N ig h tm a r e is over’ SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — An ex-convict and a teen-ager who allegedly made their way across the country by killing people and stealing their cars were cap­ tured by p o lice T uesday as they slept under a bridge, weapons at their side. Acting on a tip from a Santa Fe man who had given the suspects a ride Monday night, eight state police officers wielding 20-shot assault rifles arrested the pair in a concrete culvert in the high desert country just outside Santa Fe. Eric A. Elliot, 16, and Lewis E. Gilbert, 22, both o f Newcomerstown, Ohio, are suspected o f killing four people in Ohio, Missouri and Oklahoma and using each victim’s car to get to their next crime. “ The nightmare is over,” said Bob Hawk, spokesman for the FBI office in Cleveland. The men were scheduled to appear in court T uesday on federal charges o f unlawful flight from prosecution. Both also face state charges of burglary and kid­ napping in Ohio. The men were found about 9:30 a.m. sleeping on blankets near a dry gully. Two high-powered rifles, a shotgun and a hand­ gun w ere found nearby. One o f the weapons was between the two men. State police Lt. Garry Walsmith said police quietly approached the bridge and shouted for the pair to surrender and put their hands up. The two sat up immediately but didn’t raise their hands before officers rushed in with guns drawn. The pair said nothing during the arrest, Walsmith said. “ Because of the element o f surprise ... nothing bad happened,” said State Police C hief John Denko. “ Luckily they were sleeping.” Authorities believe Gilbert and Elliot met on A ug. 15, the day G ilbert w as released from prison after serving time for stealing a boat. Elliot is awaiting trial on charges o f breaking into a bowling alley July 26. The men are suspected of breaking into the farmhouse of Ruth Lucille Loader in Port Washington, Ohio, about 80 miles south o f C levelan d . The 7 9 -year-old woman was missing Tuesday, and family members feared she was dead. Authorities in Ohio used dogs, heli- copters and boats to look for the woman, who had undergone cancer surgery in April and weighed only about 82 pounds. Mrs. Loader’s car was found Thursday night, 650 miles from Port Washington at Fulton, Mo., near the home of a slain cou­ ple. W illiam Brewer, 86, and his w ife, Flossie, 74, each had been shot three times in the head. The Brewers’ car was found Sunday near the body of Roxie Ruddel, 37, a secu­ rity guard at a marina near Oklahoma City. The FBI believes the pair drove off in Ms. RuddeTs silver-gray pickup truck. A simi­ lar pickup was found three m iles away from the sleeping men. The capture came a half-hour after state police received two calls about peo­ ple fitting the descriptions of the man and ' teen-ager. One came from a man who said he had given them a ride. Police said the man took the pair into Santa Fe about 7 p.m . Monday, then gave them a ride back to the culvert near Interstate 25. Police would not identify the man. Pope cancels Sarajevo trip; parishioners’ safety in doubt VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope John Paul II called off his trip to Sarajevo on Tuesday after failing to win guar­ antees of safety for the people of the besieged capital of Bosnia. The decision to call off Thursday’s visit coincided with heavy gunfire around the Sarajevo airport and a fierce artillery attack by Bosnian Serbs east of the city. The pope had said he wanted to be a “ messenger of hope for the martyred population” of Sarajevo, and held out hope to the end that he would be able to go Thursday as planned. His bulletproof “ poperaobile” was flown to Sarajevo on Tuesday afternoon iri anticipation of his arrival, U.N. officials said. But the pope had made clear that he would only make the trip if security could be guaranteed for those who turned out to see him. “ Unfortunately, so far there aren’t such guarantees, despite numerous contacts with all sides,” the Vatican said Tuesday evening. In addition to safety worries, there was also “ the con­ cern that the visit to Sarajevo could be misinterpreted and add to the tensions,” the Vatican said. Residents of Sarajevo, beleaguered after 29 months of civil war and deprivation, were eager to receive the pope — especially the city’s approximately 30,000 ethnic Croats, who are mostly Roman Catholic. The Muslim-led government of Bosnia had welcomed the visit as a sign of solidarity. But Bosnian Serbs, who are mostly Eastern Orthodox, said the pope’s safety could not be guaranteed and that they would be blamed if anything happened, no matter who was responsible. John Paul still hopes to go "as soon as circumstances permit him,” the Vatican said He will “ keep up every effort so that he will be able to carry o u t... this pastoral visit and this mission of peace.” The pope will still leave Saturday for a two-day trip to Zagreb, the capital of predominately Roman Catholic Croatia. The pope had originally hoped also to go to Belgrade, capital of Serb-dominated Yugoslavia, but that trip didn’t materialize. Some Serbs have accused the pope of siding with C ro atian s in the co n flict betw een the form er Yugoslavia’s Croatians, Serbs and Muslims. The pope will still give the sermon he would have delivered Thursday at the planned public M ass in Sarajevo. Radio and television will broadcast the sermon to the “ faithful of Sarajevo” in Serbo-Croatian, and the pope will devote Thursday to prayer for the city, the Vatican said. Ivo Tomasevic, general-secretary of the Sarajevo arch­ diocese, said he felt sorry “ both for the people and for the pope because both wanted so much for him to come. “ He is like a father ... who wants to rescue his chil­ dren from the burning house,” Tomasevic said. “ But those who are guarding that house say, ‘We won’t let you save your kids because you will not be safe.’ You can imagine how the father feels.” Tomasevic said both U.N. officials and Bosnian Serbs were to blame for the cancellation. Bosnian government officials said the^decision followed a letter from Yasushi Akashi, the top U.N. envoy in former Yugoslavia, to the Vatican, warning of the serious risks and the limits of U.N. protection. Die artillery fire Tuesday by Bosnian Serbs was the worst violation of a 12-mile heavy-weapons exclusion zone around Sarajevo since T urn t o S tory , page 13 . Opinion P age 4 T 7 Wednesday, September 7, 1994 St a t e ‘P ress Sit State Press ihditorial $ 5 0 0 ? F o r p o lo s h ir t s ? Ah, government. For all you hungry, poor students ou t there, take heart: you don’t have to go to Washington, D.C. to hear tales o f government m isspending, you can ju st stroll u p to the third floor o f the M .U. It se e m s th e re w a s a m o v e m e n t w ith in ASASU to procure som e spiffy polo shirts fo r d ie 24 senators — the basic idea being to give m ore visibility to A S U ’s beloved student gov­ ernment. And it tom s out it would have “only” c o s t $ 5 0 0 . L u c k ily , th e b ill w as d e f e a te d T uesday night in the senate. B ut the fact that they had the audacity to propose such a b ill, though, seems beyond reason. Now, before you m ight question tins, ASASU is being careful with your money —- die original e stim ate w as $900. T h a t’s a savings o f o v er $400! N o, the phrase “ y o u r m oney” w a sn ’t erro ­ neous — the shirts w ill be paid fo r out o f the common fund that all students “get” to pay for (and for that matter, what are the shirts going to be m ade out of? Gold?). O f course, as memory serv es, la st y e a r stu d en t o rg a n iz a tio n s w ere inform ed that organization T-shirts would not be funded by ASASU out o f programming funds. C o n sid erin g yon “b ac k -to -sch o o l c lo th es” shopping trip comes after the traditional $1,300 A SA SU student leadership retreat, the public relations staff o f Associated Students will proba­ bly get a chance to strut its stu ff in the near future. B ut it’s not actu ally the am ount o f m oney that’s galling — the shirts actually com e down to about a penny contribution per student, indi­ cating that the com bined spare change nestled in ASU student’s sofas could probably pay for the things —- it’s that m embers o f ASASU assume that they have the divine right to appropriate fees extracted from students to whatever office funds they want. Not only is every student required to kick in said ASASU fee, but there is very little public accountancy for what it’s spent on — ergo, how else could the B usiness C ollege C ouncil have received $1,200 for jasm ine carpeting last year? So th e re ’s m ore th an $ 6 5 0 ,0 0 0 o u t th ere , somewhere, that’s being spent — and how many students know what it’s being spent o n ? W hat program m ing subsidies are requested by what club, and where are those m onies being spent? O f course, asking an ASU student to actually actively look at the proceedings o f the student governm ent is probably misguided hope... Maybe ASASU does deserve more recogni­ tion; and, to its credit, no few senators have pub­ licly stated they feel a fund-raiser is more in order than allocating student programming fund­ ing. Still, let’s hope the new senators learn quick­ ly. The first shirt request may be a mistake. The second shirt request will be just plain bad government. STATE PRESS TAFF Crim e bill frenzy neglects w hat is really im portant: ed u cation G What an achievem ent the United States has in its new KRISTOPHER crime bill. This grand piece of legislation will do little in the STROUD true war on crime, despite the Columnist rhetoric being generated by Washington. The analysts know this, the papers know this, yet apparently the word has yet to reach the gilded halls of either the Capitol or the Oval Office. You may ask, so what? Truckloads of legislation are produced by Congress on a yearly basis, most of it having little to do with real problems and even less to do with solv­ ing them. Congress has consistently addressed fewer and fewer legitimate issues facing this nation. This particular bill annoys me, though, because of both the massive price tag it brings and the audacity of the rhetoric attached to it by both parties. Again, President Clinton waffled on provisions of yet another bill he desper­ ately needed passed, inducing horrific flashbacks, I’m sure. There are those of us who remember all too well the pathet­ ic NAFTA debacle in which the whole point of the treaty was tossed for the narrow interests of Southern tobacco monopolists and Western cattle ranchers. You remember — free trade with a catch. After the typical Washington merry-go-round of “I’ll scratch your back if you’ll scratch mine,” supposedly a crime bill was passed. Turns out, for a mere $30 billion the taxpayers get smiling politicians who can now boast of doing something about crime, but yet have actually done nothing. Zero. Nada. Zip. Again, our elected elites have done little. Again, we’ve been gypped, or at least swindled. For $30 billion, they’ve told us, we get 100,000 new cops, better use of the death penalty and a ban on a few weapons which are somewhat rarely used in crime in the first place. What they didn’t tell us, though, was that in actuality the best guess at the num­ ber of new cops on the street is 25,000. That’s minus administration personnel, you see. Hmm, 25,000 spread amongst all of the United States’ urban disaster areas, and well, you do the math. It’s too depressing for me. The ruling class entrenched in Washington seemingly has abdicated its collective throne. They won’t make tough decisions. They won’t even make sensible deci­ sions. They can’t. It’s not their nature. They cannot see that the best thing that will help this nation’s crime ills is a sweeping, radical reform of the education system. They cannot realize that if they spent those kinds of dollars in a manner according to a commit­ tee’s recommendations about our present system that we will do a much better job in solving this problem. No amount of punishment can cure an impoverished mind. No amount of whip can deter a weak mind. While better education is not an instant panacea to our problems (which I know quickly makes it a bad option in today’s era of immediate gratification), it can’t be a bad start. Simply put, educated people don’t resort to crime to solve their problems. It’s proven time and time again. A better educat­ ed populace makes for a more civil society, which is some­ thing all of us can benefit from. Without exaggerating the crime problem, in order for this country to work toward solving some of its rather large social problems we must start with a citizenry which can presumably reach, or at least have the ability to reach, its full potential. If we don’t do that, or even try, then we’ve failed as a modem nation-state, and we need to seriously rethink our priorities. Let’s face it: the “level playing field” so commonly touted in this country is rather nonexistent. The uneducated, locked in the vicious cycle of poverty, have no equal opportunity. They can’t even see the field, much less play on it. If it sounds like I’m a bleeding heart, you’re wrong. If you think there is no problem with this nation’s educational system, you’re wrong. If you think that we can ignore the real crime and hopelessness in this country and produce useless, irrelevant “solutions,” you’re wrong. I’m a realist, nothing more, nothing less. If you still think that our schools are first class, I suggest you take a trip to a local high school, or better yet, a school in an impoverished district. If you still ask whether the United States has no educational or crime problems, open your eyes. Your answer is right in front of you, and your elected officials sure as hell won’t remind you of it. Christopher Stroud is a senior political science major. JASON OWSLEY, Editor DAVID STRÖW, Managing Editor KRIS FRIDRICH............................................................. NightEditor Readicker. GARIN GROFF...................... City Editor PH O T O G R A P H E R S : Theresa B oettcher, Jim Poulin, GREG ZEM EIDA.........................................Asst. City Editor Scott Trimble. DAVID LASPALUTO.....................................................NewsEditor UNSIGNED EDITOR: James Frusetta A. MARJORY KAMINSKI........................................OpinionEditor COLU M N ISTS: Brian Anderson, James Frusetta, Barry CRAIG MACNAUGHTON............................................ PhotoEditor Kelley, Diane Lopez, James Mahin, Mike Stevens, Chris RICHARD KOMUREK........................... Asst. Photo Editor Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whitlach. CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. JEREMY STEIN ............................................................. SportsEditor DAWN WAGNER................................... Asst. Sports Editor GRAPHIC A RTIST: Yam ini Prabhakara. KEN COLLINS.........................................................MagazineEditor PR O D U CTIO N : Aaron Brutcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth ANNA U LINICH................................Asst. Magazine Editor French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, R E P O R T E R S : M ika A k ik u n i, E lizab eth A ppelen, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. C hristina Bailey, Sheryl B ottner, Lorrie Cohen, Dawn S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : E m ily B erger, D an DeChristina, Lisa Gonderinger, Christine Granados, Dave Ellstrom, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Megan Owsley, Proffitt, Karyn Riedel 1. Jen n ife r P ittm an, K aryn R ied ell, S hane S iren, B ill VanZanten, Marc Wolfe. SPO R T S R EPO R TE R S: Todd Kelly. Dan Miller, Lee Newman. C O P Y E D IT O R S : N ick B acon, Kim H erm an, Lynn Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 15, Arizona State U niversity, 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 o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S ta te P r ess P h o ne N u m bers Information.............. 965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising.............. 965-6555 Classifieds................ 965-6735 Opinion STATEPRESS Page 5 Wednesday, September 7, 1994 O fficia l “G ood C andidates to Vote fo r ” G uide Everything to know about the Primary Elections So, it's six days to the Sept. 13 prim ary election and you haven’t got a clue of who to vote for. What primary election? TIERNEY Check out the gaggle of cam­ paign signs on every corner. C olum nist Did you think they were up for decoration or something? In the interest of educating voters everywhere, may I pre­ sent the O fficial “Good Candidates to Vote for” guide. Because of the strong bi-partisan tendencies I am known for, both Democrat and Republican candidates are listed. No m atter what party y o u ’re in (m inus G reens and Libertarians) you can cut this out of the newspaper and take it to the polls as an informed citizen. From the top: Governor (Republicans) The polls show most Republicans have decided to re­ elect the Fife. Symington’s primary opponent, Barbara Barrett, touts an impressive resume, but has wasted nearly a million bucks on a generally clueless campaign that has failed to connect with voters. Recently she launched a barrage of slick TV ads attack­ ing the governor. Good looking ads, but really poorly thought-out. Too much of Barrett’s negative campaigning focuses on the same Symington problems that have made newspaper headlines regularly for four years. Voters have simply shrugged their shoulders at what sounds to them like old news. Governor Symington has delivered three tax cuts in a row, enacted tough “truth in sentencing" legislation to fight crime, took on unfunded federal man­ dates and nearly got a school choice program through the A rizona Legislature. Personal and staff problems aside. Governor Symington has provided the type of leadership Arizona needed after the less than illustrious Ba sha: c o o l Mecham/Moffard Administration. b u m p e r st ic k e r s Official recommendation: Vote for the Guv. Governor (Democrats) This race is much more interesting to watch with two former Phoenix mayors and a supermarket magnate battling it out for the right to take on Symington. Form er Phoenix M ayor Terry Goddard, darling of Arizona liberals and the guy who came from ahead to lose in 1990, appears to have the lead. Paul Johnson, who resigned as Phoenix mayor to run and entered the race standing 10 feet tall, seems now to be at five feet and shrinking. Johnson’s poor standing is surprising, but understand­ able given that supermarket magnate Eddie Basha pulls vot­ ers from the same pool of m oderate to conservative Democrats. Official recommendation: Basha fo r Governor. His bumper stickers are definitely the coolest, and he has never been mayor of Phoenix, which earns him points in my book any day. Basha also has a much more diverse track record of civic involvement than Goddard or Johnson and has faced the pressures of making payroll. Attorney General Nobody but the incumbent Grant Woods has bothered to run (unless you count Libertarian Jon Karow, whom nobody has ever heard of). That doesn’t mean Woods has earned your vote. Grant Woods has performed well in some areas, but has spent a lot of his time unsuccessfully trying to line up a new job (like governor). He has also injected himself unnecessarily into state legislative races and gener­ ally made a nuisance of himself. Official recommendation: Write-in “Rick Romley. ” Richard Romley is not seeking the post this year, but is cur­ rently the Maricopa County attorney and has done an excel­ lent job. He would undoubtedly spend more time working and less time politicking than Woods. Secretary of State (Republicans) Former House Speaker Jane Hull and businessman Jim Irvin are vying for the Republican nod, and either would likely do an excellent job. Hull’s leadership in passing the largest tax increase in Arizona history has not endeared her to people who like to keep the government’s hands away from their wallets (or purses!). Irvin is a very successful businessman, a husband and father, and has a good track record of civic involvement. His business skills would undoubtedly be a plus in making the Secretary of State’s office run more efficiently. Official recommendation: Vote fo r Jim Irvin. Secretary of State (Democrats) The race pits former Senate President Pete Rios versus State Senator Stan Furman. Furman, a former Democratic Party District Chairman, was forced to abandon his state Senate seat or face certain defeat this November to rising GOP star John Kaites, who has more energy than an atom bomb. Both bring strengths to the race, but the scale definitely tips toward Rios. He has the experience of being senate president, and is a genuinely likable guy who can get along with Republicans and Democrats alike. Official recommendation: Rios fo r Secretary of State. Corporation Commission (Republicans) Winston Churchill said something along the lines that politics was the one form of warfare where the dead could rise to do battle another day. This is certainly the case with candidate Carl Kunasek, who as a sitting senate president was thrown out by the voters of his own district and replaced with a political goofball. Kunasek helped pass the largest tax increase in Arizona history, which I suspect will Check the gaggle o f campaign signs on every corner. Did you think they were up fo r decoration o f something? affect his vote tally in Sun City. Kunasek faces State Representative Greg Patterson, also known as the "Bad Boy” of GOP politics. Patterson, a certi­ fied public accountant, has been involved in issues sur­ rounding the Corporation Commission. As commissioner, Kunasek would be adequate, but Patterson would be excel­ lent and a lot of fun to watch. Official recommendation: Greg Patterson fo r Corporation Commission. Corporation Commission (Democrats) Debbie who? Official recommendation: Don’t bother. U.S. Senate (Republicans) There is only one Republican in the race, Jon Kyi, so the prim ary election choice here is n ’t a d ifficu lt one. Congressman Kyi gained notoriety (and a lot of enemies) in Washington when he lead the charge to have the names of congressional check bouncers released to the public. Making Kyi a U.S. Senator would be a positive contribution towards ruining Bill Clinton’s day and putting America back on the right track. Official Recommendation: Skip voting fo r Kyi in the pri­ mary, then vote twice fo r him in the General Election. (Just kidding.) U.S. Senate (Democrats) This one could be anyone’s race, depending on who shows up at the polls. Congressman Sam Coppersmith, Secretary of State Dick Mahoney and two lawyers are slugging it out. “New Age” Mahoney has really cool TV ads taking “New Democrat” Coppersmith to task for vot­ ing to keep the public in the dark about the now-indicted congressman Rosty Rostenkowski and abusing his franking privilege. It comes complete with a moving mustache on Coppersmith’s S y m in g t o n : face. (Nice touch!) "T r u t h in My favorite candidates are State S e n t e n c in g " Senator Cindy Resnick and Dave Moss. Resnick is smart, fair and a refreshing change from the same ol’, same ol’. She hails from Tucson and is the only woman in the race, both pluses in Arizona Democratic primaries. There seems to be more to her than just a profes­ sional politician. If there was ever someone to take on the establishment, Dave Moss is the man. He is unafraid to tackle tough issues, and his views would appeal to independents and Republicans. Unfortunately, his campaign has lacked the funds to get his message out. The man shoots from the hip, which is what the nation expects from Arizona politicians. Official Recommendation: Vote fo r Cindy Resnick or Dave Moss. (But definitely don’t vote for either of the attor­ neys!) U.S. Congress, District 1 (Republicans) This race does not suffer from a lack of Republican candidates. State Senators Matt Salmon and Bev Hermon, lobbyist Susan Bitter Smith and Linda Rawles are battling it out in a fight to the finish. Bev Hermon has a distinguished record and has returned every con­ stituent call promptly for years. But she voted to raise taxes and has run a low key (translation: underfunded) cam­ C o p p e r s m it h : paign. I could be wrong, but I don’t M r . M o v in g think she’s going anywhere. M oustache Linda Rawles is definitely running the most technically competent campaign, but scandal looms over her head. Linda moved to Arizona two years ago and fell in love with attorney Tom Rawles, who promptly left his wife of over 15 years and moved in with Linda. Together they have been campaign­ ing ever since. Tom successfully ran for C ounty Supervisor, and has since used the position to essentially extort campaign contributions for his wife’s campaign from anyone needing anything from county government. Eyebrows were raised earlier this year when employees of an ambulance company contributed over S I5,000 to Linda Rawles campaign one day after winning a million dollar ambulance contract from the county, a contract Tom was key in obtaining. Investigations are said to be under­ way. Rawles might still win the primary, but she would be lit­ erally eaten alive in a general election. Susan Bitter Smith started as a bit of a darkhorse, but has really made progress in getting her message out to voters. Her connections as a lobbyist haven't hurt fundraising much either. Some polls put her in second place behind Salmon. The front-runner is Matt Salmon. Salmon is a father of four and harbors a healthy fear of big government. It would have to snow in hell before Matt could ever be talked into raising our taxes, which is exactly what most voters want. Salmon served this year as Assistant Majority Whip in the state Senate and has assembled a diverse coalition of conservative, m oderate and liberal Republicans. He is endorsed by Senator John McCain, the NRA, the AMA and most everyone else. H erm onOfficial recommendation: Send Mr. U nderfu n d ed Salmon to Washington U.S. Congress, District 1 (Democrats) Sole candidate state Senator Chuck Blanchard is gener­ ally thought of as smart by most political observers. They are wrong. Harvard-educated, Blanchard is brilliant. His road signs aren’t terribly original, but he has a healthy cam­ paign war chest and is ready to pounce on whoever wins the Republican primary. In the General Election, Blanchard will attempt to label his opponent (whoever he or she might be) as some sort of scary right-wing nut who froths at the mouth and steals little children in the middle of the night. Hopefully voters in the know will catch on to this type of/ scare tactic. Blanchard’s opposition to the death penalty probably won’t help his chances either in this Republican dominated district. Official recommendation: Write-in “Bert Tollefson. \ Bert is a very strange person running a hopeless campaign for the Republican Congressional nod. He would probably appreciate your vote. (Even if it is in the Democratic prima­ ry-) This week the daily papers will be carrying profiles of candidates for every office. Check them out and make a point of voting this Tuesday. Bill Tierney is a senior education major. Page 6 State P ress Wednesday, September 7, 1994 Police Report A SV police reported the follow ing incidents Tuesday: • A female student reported someone broke into her vehicle and removed a car stereo w hile the vehicle was parked in Area 8. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was contacted at the Memorial Union for disorderly conduct. He left thè area after being advised of trespassing and loitering. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: • A 41-year-old man was arrested for disorderly conduct in Tempe Beach Park after he disturbed several people attending a picnic. The man threw a skillet containing cooking pork chops on the victim, who deflected the skil­ let. The pork chops fell on both men and caused minor bums. • A 34-year-old man was arrested for disorderly conduct and impersonating a public servant after he was running around naked and knocking on the door of a house in the 100 block of W. Jeanine Street. He told the person to let him in the house because he was a police officer. When questioned by police, the man stated that he had been kidnapped. 1 .= 0 00=3 3:00 TO 5:00 MU GALLERY REFRESHMENTS SERVED Com piled by State Press reporter Karyn Riedell EVERYONE INV1TEDÎ EXHIBITION DATES: SEPÎ. 6 - OCT. 9 CROSSWORD by T H O M A S JO SEPH ACROSS A c c e p te d a t m o r e DOWN 1 Detroit 1 Canape product topper ■ tar 2 Top flyer 7 Watch ■ R ome 3 Actor part R E F jH g . Kilmer t In ' s ^h I a ’ 11 Maine 4 That is v 'l~ |N rYlL national e '¡r | o ' d e 5 “— She park R O WE D Sweet?” 12 Islands 6 Velocity dance Friday's Answer 7 Speed 13 Let up 33 Rival of messages skater 14 Buffalo’s Graf 19 Feverish Young lake 35 Pretend 8 Appearing 21 Singer 15 Intervene 36 Little bitBaker 9 Yale 17 Owed 37 Attained 22 Less player amount 38 One — crazy 10 West of 20 Pseudo­ million Hollywood 24 Jockey’s nym 40 Have a garb 23 Flightless 16 Made bite 25 Exist roads bird 41 Avail 17 Judges 30 Banded 24 Grassy 42 For each 18 Computer rock plain 26 Corn 8 9 10 2 5 j 1 3 helping ^ 1 2 ^ h 27 Wrath 28 Tonic's 13 partner T i 29 Blended 15 31 Western 17 18 21 22 Indian 32 Move 23 vampishly 28 26 33 Box 27 34 Scottish 30 3, 29 monster 37 Leslie ■■■■33 32 Caron film 34 1 3^3^" 39 Hide out 43 Burden 39 ¡40 41 42 37 38 44 Relaxed 44 I 45 Timothy 43 Hutton ■ 45 film 46 Appren­ 9-7 tice’s boss 4 th a n y o u w e r e rw ~ ■ 14 ■ tO CM T r 1 ! 1 . T ■ ÍT M K. 1 ;• ■ 1 1 ■ frj !j p 1 1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it; AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 9-7 X t '$ e v e r Y ' v ^ 1 0 1 , 0 •you'waïtt to be. CRYPTOQUOTE C H L H U EQLH JQJJXXHO C Q F H , SGJE C X J T X W U M H I D QCT SXFQC’M H L H C E H U GCGJGQIM. — SXOHEXWMH O Via« U.S.A.. Ine. 199* Friday's Cryptoquotc: ANSWER NOT THE FOOL IN HIS ERROR. FOR YOUR ATTEMPT TO INSTRUCT HIM WILL ROUSE HIS HATRED. - ARABIC PROVERB 0 1994 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Page 7 Wednesday, September 7, 1994 St a t e P ress MAMA'S If II I ED' lilL 29 W it h FREE 3 2 -O z . K JF • D ■ Italian leg jj Home of the 'Killer' CeUzont * 3 .9 5 1 r in k Reg. CALZONE 3-lb. burrito tilled with red and green chile, double-w rapped in fresh tortillas, lettuce, tom ato & cheese. Choice o f chicken o r beef. I Expikes 9-28-94 I O n e coupon p er custom er p e r v is it M am a k n o w s b e s t Tem pe: 216 E. University - just east of Forest - 829-6026 Phoenix Locations: 12th St. & Van Buren, 253-1511 • Central & Southern, 276-7531 32nd Ave. & Van Buren, 272-3239 • 59th Ave. & Bethany Home, 934-6635________ SPEN D *50 G ET *5 BACK! SPEND S1 0 0 A N D GET $10 BACK! Shop any Tri-City Mall shop between August 15 and September 15 and save your receipts. Present receipts totaling $50-$ 100 and receive a $5 gift certificate. Receipts totaling $100 or more get a $10 certificate. Certificates good at all mall stores. Redeemable at Ask Arizona located in west mall. JC P e n n e y * H a rk in s D isc o u n t T h e a tre s * W a lg re e n s * Fo o t L o c k e r G e n e ra l N u tritio n C e n te r • A n d A V a rie ty O f O th e r S h o p s Tri-City Mall Northeast comer of Dobson and Main (Apache Blvd) I F0ra$t 106 ( University Dr* 894-MAMA Hi *4.75 You ch oose 2 fillin g s. W ednesdays, 11 a.in. - 2 p.m . M ade 943 d elicio u sly d iffer en t wavs.______ ■m rarciraEii a c u r a i CAR SPECIALISTS IN D E P E N D E N T S E R V IC E •F R E E Estimates •F air Prices •O n e Day Service on Most Repairs >Com plete Parts D epartm ent «FactoryTrained Technicians P eople Who Know Use Valvoline- $14.95 O IL C H A N G E & O IL FILTER (Includes up to 4 quarts) Check Our Low Price on 15,000 & 30,000 Services 968-5989 1 8 2 0 E. A P A C H E B LV D . TEM PE TW O LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU One-way trips toASU 954-7923 3 0 3 9 E. T H O M A S RD. P H O E N IX A S U T eleF und Is N o w H iring S tu d e n ts! Try something different this Fall; get a position that will enhance your resume! Working for the TeleFund, you will talk to ASU Alumni and make great networking contacts. We offer a very flexible evening and weekend schedule so you can work and devote enough time to your studies. You'll start at $5.00 per hour plus a nightly bonus as well as have the opportunity for quick monetary advancements. If you're inter­ ested, please give us a call at 965-6754 or stop by to fill out an applica­ tion at the Solar House, 800 E. University on the northwest corner of Rural and University. This really is a great opportunity. Don't miss out. ASU TeleFund 9 6 5 -6 7 5 4 P age 8 State P ress Wednesday, September 7, 1994 After controversy, promoter re-offers Nilsons $5000 B y G r e g Z e m e id a S t a t e P ress A $5,000 donation that was withheld last week from the family of missing ASU stu­ dent Kimberly Nilson has now been made available to them. Nilson, an ASU exercise science major, was reported missing on Aug. 22. She was last seen by her roommate sleeping in their apartment at 6:30 that morning. The donation, made by R osenblatt Productions, was originally held back last Thursday because of poor media turnout at the Big Surf Water Park where the donation was supposed to be handed over. A ccording to D arryl R osenblatt of Rosenblatt Productions, Nilson’s brotherin-law Alan Millar called him yesterday and asked if the money was still available. Rosenblatt said it was available to the fam­ G e t o u t a n d ily and made arrangements for Millar to pick it up. Rosenblatt added that he has received a lot of negative media coverage since first holding back the donation, but that it was undeserved because the money was there for the family any time they wanted it. Rosenblatt Productions is working with the Big Surf Water Park to promote a new club it is opening in the park. The donation was part of this promotion, Rosenblatt said. “The whole thing just got completely blown out of proportion,” Rosenblatt said. “I had no desire to hurt this family.” He did admit that the original donation could have been handled better. Rosenblatt also offered an additional incentive to w ould-be donators: h e ’ll donate 25 cents to every dollar collected by the family. For example, if $1,000 were o f in t o f r a t e r n it y T H E t h e t h e o n s a y DATAPRO p u s . O F AAO INFOPRO Student Specials from $899 We configure YOUR system to meet YOUR special needs. 8 3 1 - 0 3 3 9 CALL NOW T O D A Y • Leadership For In fo Development 2 0 5 t 3969 • Personal Growth Rushevents happeningNOW SUPERSTITION FREEWAY CARTER Ever Perfect Systems 4720 S. Ash Ave. Tempe, AZ 85282 |p S < 1 BASELINE R)r once, a cut in educational spending that actually helps students. Power Maanlosb' with CD-ROM, Appi? 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They have sent out more than 40,000 flyers so far in Arizona and surrounding states, she said. “We are working constantly on this,” Nilson said. “All of our full-time jobs are finding Kimberly and bringing her home.” Contributions to the Kimberly Nilson fund can be made at any Bank One office under account number 46473436 or checks can be mailed to the Alleluia Lutheran church at 1034 S. Mill Ave. There also is a reward of $25,000 for any information leading to Kimberly’s safe return and a separate $20,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and con­ viction of Kimberly’s possible kidnappers. COM PUTERS c lo s e t c a m B R O T H E R H O O D donated, his company would add $250. Sondra Nilson, Kimberly’s sister, was originally angry with Rosenblatt’s with­ holding of the donation, but said she is now happy that her family will get the money. “He is being very generous by offering us this money,” she said. “It’s a huge help.” Nilson said that Rosenblatt did contact her after originally withholding the dona­ tion, but she said they couldn’t come to an agreement that would allow for her family to get the money. The police and the Nilsons are still look­ ing for K im berly. Tem pe Police spokesman Sgt. Tom Ryff said police still have no significant leads at this time. “We are constantly developing new information. However, the overall status of the investigation still remains the same,” he said. Apple' PowerBoof 150 4/120. Only (1,269.00. With Applet special low student pricing, you can get a terrific deal on Macintosh* the best-selling personal com puter on college cam puses today. You can choose the afford­ able Macintosh Performa? which comes complete w ith lots of powerful software to help get you through college. You can also choose the portable Apple* PowerBook* or the Power Macintosh' Perform? 636 with CD-ROM, Appli ColorPlus AppIeDesigrf Keyboardand mouse. On M acintosh"- the worlds fastest M ac And because Macintosh is still the easiest personal com­ putet; you won’t have to dig through complex m anuals. Plus, with low student pricing, a Mac is as easy to afford as it is to use. All of which makes it the ideal tim e to discover the power all college students need. The power to be your best! Apple1 POW ER For more information visit ASUComputer Store Mon-Fri 9:00-5:00or call 965-4488 C1994Apple Computer, Inc All ffcfcr named. Apple, êeAppte logo, MadnM, Modulai) Quadra, Performa, PowerBookm i “Itepowerto beyour beU"an rep/Ueredtrademark: ofApple Computer, tnc.AppteDesi^i, Macand PowerMacmtosbare trademarksofApple Computer, tnc. Candidates to appear at USPAN forum ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY S tate P ress B y L is a G o n d e r in g e r St a t e P ress You'll never know unless you read your horoscope. In the classified section. I SPECIAL STUDENT FARES R o u n d tr ip fr o m P h o e n ix BOSTON............... .358 SALT LAKE CITY....... .98 COLORADO SPRINGS..178 DURANGO............ .209 ORLANDO............ .358 BELIZE................. ..497 BRAZIL................ .694 CABO SAN LUCAS.... .100 COSTA RICA.......... .381 CHICAGO........... ...218 DENVER.............. ...148 SEATTLE.............. ...198 RENO................. ...118 ST. LOUIS............ ...228 GUATEMALA CITY. .....357 TOKYO............... ...590 CANCÚN............. ...398 MEXICO CITY........ ...286 Other Cities Available M ILL AVENUE TRAVEL 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 Discounts Also Available To Faculty & Staff Restrictions Apply. Subject to Availability. flU H a r k in s L u x u r y T h e a tr e s $ *»00r.e'res>« f Gourmet Snack Bar. Stereo Surround Sound 6S‘.‘ / A denotes Soeciol Engagement AlmaScbool 835-1 ASU faculty, staff and students will have the chance to put Arizona House of Representatives candidates on the spot regarding their positions on higher education at two forums today. The forums are sponsored by the University State Public Awareness Network (USPAN), a faculty group whose main goal is to educate the university community about government. William Arnold, professor of communication and last year’s Academic Senate president, is mediating today’s forums. “In the past, we have been kind of complacent and thought that if administrators and regents were out there working on our behalf, we would be OK,” he said. “But that is not enough. We need to have faculty, staff, students and alumni aware of what the issues are so that they can vote and make a difference.” Each candidate will give a prepared speech and then the audience will ask the candidates questions. Arnold said he hopes the discussions will address funding for growth, funding for faculty and staff salaries and funding for pro­ gram development. Dickinson McGaw, director of ASU’s School of Public Affairs, helped organize USPAN two years ago and said that the forums have elicited some candid comments from candidates in the past. “The nature of the forums encourages dialogue about the issues, so you can go right up to the candidates and ask them where higher education fits in their list of priorities,” he said. “But of course, you may have candidates who will respond like typical political candidates.” Arnold urged members of the university community to get involved because the Legislature is placing greater emphasis on health care, crime and K-12 funding Than on higher education, he said. The candidates who survive the Sept. 13 primaries and go on to win the November elections will have a strong effect on ASU because they will set the budget for higher education and other programs for the next two years. The candidates from District 27, which covers ASU, are M arian Shea, Gary D ’w ater, Laura Knaperek, Mike flMwt Thui»;12Æ6 ,2 :3 0 ,4 3 0 .7 :IS. 9:40 1 Him) 11:4 0 ,2 :10.4 :4 5 .7 :15, 9:45 IS2DSlongmote M tfrk a lK M CLEAR ANDPRESENT DANGER — (Wed Thun) 12:30,3 3 0 .7 :10,1 0 0 5 ................. < S S IWad Thun) 1:10.4 :10. 7 5 0 _________________________ (Wed. Thun;1:10,4 :10,7 :10,10:10__________________ CORRINA. CORRINA «, (Wed Thun) 11:46,2 2 0 .4 6 6 .7 0 0 . 1 006 FORREST GUMPfoo N NATURAI BORNKIILBS, \{W ed T h u n )U Æ ,2 3 6 .&0 6 ,7 :4 5 .1 0 3 6 (Wed) 1:4a 4 :4 0 .7 :4 0 ...........................e tO U 1 ÜÄ (Thun! 1:4 0 ,4 :4 0 ..................... ih m :nun; i:oo. 4 :0 0 ,7 0 0 . i&oo. o n tw o s c r e e n s i null 12 JO . 3 TO 7 JO . « 5 5 N (WM Thur»;11:5 6 ,2 3 6 ,4 :SS, 7 2 5 . Í 834-4600 •rñ n z r s . . CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER FORREST GUMP*» ^ « m.« The Student Affairs Research Office is looking for ASU students to conduct telephone surveys from September 18, 1994 through S ep tem be r 22, 1994. S urve ys w ill be con du cte d from 4:30 pm - 9:00 pm (some afternoons). $5.50/hour CAMP NOWHERE ^ IHM Thun;12:10,2:3 6 .4 6 0 .7 .06 . 0 2 0 VBA LOCA. rrCOULDHAPPB1TOYOU (Wed Thun) 1 2 0 .5 2 0 .0 5 6 D O U BLE FEATURE! *.1* WAGONS EAST «, ___________(Wed Thut) 3 2 6 ,7 :4 5 i WM, Pm i; 12:0 0 .2 :3 0 .4 :5 5 .7 3 0 TRUE LIES«, (Wed. Thure)1 2 :3 0 ,4 :1 5 ,7:20 Tn-City Man 4 6 4 -0 8 0 0 I LOVETROUBLE|R (W ed Thun) 12:00.2 2 0 .5:00.7 6 0 . /Wed, Thun) 1:8 .4 2 0 .7:40 (W ed Thun) 1:15.4:10,730 (W ed Thun) 1O0 ,4 2 6 ,7:10 MAVPNCK(POia THEFUNT5 TONE8 (PGt(W*d. Thun) 1 220.2:45,5 0 5 ,7 2 0 t ( iW t'M - m js ? ~ g t- ti ’- ™ * LION KJNQio, /m e Thurs) 1 2 :0 0 ,2 :0 0 ,4 :3 0 ,7 0 0 AÑORE rc (Wed Thun) 11 :S5 ,2 :15,4 :2 0 , 7:10 A S A forum on interactive T V B y L is a G o n d e r in g e r St a t e P ress Gubernatorial candidates will be participating in a unique statewide forum this evening, communicating with students, faculty and staff from Arizona’s three universities via interactive television. The open forum , hosted by A rizona S tu d en ts’ Association, is the first of its kind in Arizona. Instead of attending six different forums for all of the main and branch campuses as they have in the past, candidates can attend this one forum and reach members of the university communities across the state. “Not only is this more convenient for the candidates, but it also is a great way for the universities to show candi­ dates what they are doing and why they are important,” said Jennie Garcia, ASA public affairs director. Republican candidate Barbara Barrett, Libertarian can­ didate John Buttrick and Rep. Bob Edens, who will be standing in for Gov. Symington, will gather in room 328 of the business administration complex from 7 to 9:30 p.m. Democratic candidates Eddie Basha and Paul Johnson will be at the UofA. Members of the NAU community will also be gathering in Flagstaff. The forum is open to the general public. Each candidate will be allowed three minutes to make opening remarks, then two questions will be taken from the audience at each campus. Although plans will not be finalized until today, Garcia said ASU is working to have the show broadcast on the cable channels on campus. C o t The Com puter Blues? $ $ F a s t$ $ M il k M o n e y , ___________ (Wed Thun) 12:0 0 ,2 gQ. 4 3 0 .7 :0 0 ,9 2 0 I THE LITTLE RASCALS <*» 1 (W ed Thun) 12:1 5 ,2 :4 5 , 5:00_______________________ L ITCOULD I lATFCMTOYOUrot (Wed 7>M^ 7aO.JCMa G ardner and John M acDonald. They w ill be in the Memorial Union Pima Room from 9 to 10:30 a.m. A forum for ASU West’s area, District 16, is scheduled for 4 to 5:30 p.m. in the ASU West Ballroom for Frank Davidson, Becky Jordan and Jim Weiers. Arnold said several more forums will be held before the final elections, which he hopes will be sponsored by stu­ dent political action groups. f£ZS£Ss A Simpl«Twisti Fat« M i l k M o n e y « .,. - Page_9 Wednesday, September 7, 1994 St a t e P ress Rent Your Own System! 963-0726 •Access Hayden Library via m odem •Prepare and print reports at hom e •Send and receive faxes on your com puter System s start at $ 165.00 per semester! To apply stop by Student A ffairs Research located In the Memorial Union Room 110 or call 965-4070 for more information. •Printers ‘ Modems *CPU ‘Color Monitors NW CORNER OF FOREST & UN VERSITY S h o w tim e s G ood to r W e d n e s d a y . S e p te m b e r 7 & T h u rsd a y . S e p te m b e r B Restaurant & Lounge Specializing in North & South Indian Cuisine University Groomirv MLa s g Bt iS & sffB w/bOiqK fisa •4“ Buffet Including South Indi&n Itemfi. L u n c h 11:30-2:30’ D in n e r 5-10p m ' SAVE UP TO 6 5 % § Humans 0 Hair Studio (excluding alcoholic beverages) 966-5462 L Exp. 9-21-94 M-Th 9-8 Fri 9-6 1845 E . Broadway (at S E corner & M cClintock) • 967-5834 Sat 9-5 ON ALL SUNGLASSES Ta k e an addition al 3 0% O F F all sunglasses w hen you SAVE pre se n t th is coup on. See exam ples below for terrific savings. NAME BRAND COUPON PRICE FROM RAYBAN SUNCLOUD $2 7 " Sugg, retail from $75.00. Our everyday low price from $39.99. SERENGETTI s9450 $52s° Sugg, retail from $135.00. Our everyday low price from $121.50. GARGOYLES Our everyday low price from $75.00. PE2 Optical quality glass lenses.Compare values from $83*$156. Our everyday low price from $25.99. / J GM AT 0n Q yo u r B u s in e s s S tu d e n ts!! HEALTH INSURANCE $2961 Orig. priced from $84.60 Our everyday low price from $42.30 C flO /x up to Is t h is y o u r la s t y e a r o f s c h o o l ? W ill y o u g o o n t o e a rn an M B A d e g r e e ? If SO , you should take your GMAT in October! Studies show that students who wait until they've graduated to take the GMAT score 30-40 points lower than those who don't. So don't wait. Call today! N O W Y O U C A N H A V E PEAC E O F M IN D ! •Designed for Students-Faculty-Staff-Dependents •Very Affordable to fit your budget •One Million in Comprehensive Benefits •Benefits at Student Health Center will be reimbursed •Worldwide Coverage at any Medical Provider •Your Choice o f any Doctor or Hospital •Top Rated "A" Excellent • Since 1938 $ 1 8 2° SAVE 30% FORREST GUMP EXAMPLES: 18-24 MALE FEMALE 25-29 MALE FEMALE T-SHIRTS & HATS Get the OFFICIAL hot new t-shirt and hat from the hit movie Forrest Gump, featuring the ‘ Bubba Gump Shrimp Co * logo. T-shirts orig. $15. COUPON PRICE $10.5011 Hat orig. $16 COUPON PRICE $11201! OFFER GOOD WITH COUPON ONLY THRU 9-11 -94. LIMIT 4 ITEMS PER CUSTOMER. FALL $124 $180 $144 $172 SPRING $186 $240 $216 $288 SUMMER $ 93 $120 $108 $129 The Princeton Review YEAR 8ST2 $480 $432 $510 9 6 7 -1 4 8 0 The Princeton Review is not ufililiutcd with Princeton University C all fo r Quotes on O ther Ages and Dependents Includes special purchase prices and all other brands we carry!! Offer good with coupon only thru 9/11/94 and cannot be used In conjunction- OerpoûcfmoJUstkt difât+tesc/y ^ m with any pther coupon offer. r a te is i “pacific £ y e s & T ’s Œ CORNERSTONE MALL, X s H S K S ons 2121 South Mill Ave.. Suite 206 • Tempe, Arizona 85282 966-5560 across the street from ASU L J GM ÄI Page 10 Wednesday, September 7, 1994 S tate P ress S tu d en t-ru n C hannel 2 changes form at to sh ow m ovies B y C h ristina B ailey S tate P ress From a pipe-dream to a reality, the student-run Channel 2 TV station is o ff and running. Channel 2, which originally had KASR radio in the back­ ground with text screens or information such as dining room hours, library hours and intercollegiate sports dates and times, has changed. Now. the nearly 5,000 students living in the residence halls have access to a variety o f premiere movies offering entertain­ ment, cultural and educational benefits. M ovies such as Last o f the Mohicans, Philadelphia, Boyz-n-the-Hood and Apocalypse Now, play monthly for the students at no cost. “It has been more successful than I ever thought it would be,” said Colby Granville, the student director o f Channel 2. The station w as d esign ated as a u n iversity station by Dimension Cable and given to the Residence Hall Association to use at its discretion, Granville said. The $5,400 start-up costs for the station was sponsored by have an alternative video show produced by KASR that is shown on the weekends,” Copyrights for the m ovies cost approximately $800 per month to run, an expense that will be paid by RHA for the first two months. After that period, the residence halls w ill decide who w ill pay the fee, said Debra Sells, assistant director o f Residential Life. “If the students think that this program is important enough to fund it, the halls w ill have to get together and make other financial arrangements,” Sells said. Student-directed programs and the Farce Side, a studentproduced comedy show, w ill be com ing to the station soon, said Granville, who is looking for more volunteers to put the programs together. The student-directed programs w ill cover campus events like intercollegiate sports, RHA meetings and other entertain­ m ent ev en ts that are u su a lly p assed up by other m edia, Granville said. The station may even have a talk show. the Associated Students o f ASU. “It’s not only good for the students but it is good for the residential assistants or faculty,” said RHA President Tina Nunziato. The residence advisers pick one o f the five movies shown each m onth, and ask students to w atch the m ovies in the lounge or meet after the movie is over to discuss the m ovie’s content, Nunziato said. Channel 2 ’s planning took longer than the actual technical set-up. One o f the delays was with KASR over airtime. “KASR wasn’t thrilled because it took away their air time,” Granville said. “They were on 24 hours a day and with the movies playing, they would be o ff the air from 5 p.m. until 12 p.m.” KASR, which recently purchased a transmitter that w ill allow the station to be heard on portable radios all over cam­ pus, still plays an active role with Channel 2. “W e are still going to provide audio for the text screens,” said Frederick Leigh, faculty adviser for KASR. “W e also MODELS WANTED MALE & FEMALE FRAGRANCE MODELS • 2 WEEK VALLEY-WIDE PROMOTION FOR cK ONE • NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED Just Fashionable, Outgoing, Fun People I c UTYOURSELF A DEAL 1 1 1 ■ I 1 ____________ I I ■ \§ p i^ 1 • SEPTEMBER 22 - OCTOBER 6 CALL TODAY CLASS ACT MODELING AGENCY 945-2300 | j ! ! 1 A devil deal. 1 ASU’s coupon book. 1 Saving you money all over town. | 1___________ G E T S M A R T A B O U T S E X ... Partners in Health S e x u a lly A c tiv e ? G e t c h e c k e d ... N o S y m p to m s -------------- ► g e t c h e c k e d . • You ca n c a tc h sexually transmitted disease (STD) from partners w ho have do symptoms. • You can have an STD and not experience symptoms. • Even people with HIV m ight not know it. S y m p t o m s ---------------------- ► g e t c h e c k e d . M e n 's a n d W o m e n 's R e p r o d u c t i v e H e a l t h E x a m s --------------------------- ► g e t c h e c k e d . • For STD's • For pregnancy • For HIV — confidential or free anonymous testing offered P re v e n t P ro b le m s g e t s m a rt. • Practice safer sex. • C om plete treatm ent prescriptions. • D on 't "d o it" unless you're ready. HOURS: MON.-WED.-FRI. 8-5 TUES.-THURS. 9-5 INFORMATION LINE: 965-3346 All students are eligible for services. Fees may apply. ASU Student Health Just south of the University Bridge on Palm Walk Wednesday, September 7, 1994 j i r t i t 1' k ESS P a g e lli D r u g o f f e n d e r s m ay a v o i d tir r e W EDN ESDAYS mi 8 -1 1 BOSTON' S 910 N. McCLINTOCK could develop a worthy substitute. John Wesley Hyatt came forward with Celluloid, the world's first plastic. Hyatt had bought the patent from B y Karyn R iedell S tate P ress The slogan “D o drugs, do tim e,” is not necessarily true in Arizona. O ne a ltern a tiv e to ja il o ffe r e d in the sta te is a d iv e r s io n p ro g ra m fo r d ru g offenders. D iversion programs have recently been g e ttin g sp e c ia l a tten tio n b ec a u se o f the Cindy M cCain case. A c c o r d in g to a N ew T im es a r tic le , M cC a in m ade fa lse c la im s that she had com pleted a diversion program through the U .S . A tto r n e y ’s O ffic e . A sp ok esp erson from the O ffice said M cC ain had m erely applied for the program. R eb ecca E ven , director o f com m unity affairs for the U .S . A ttorney’s office, said M cCain has not yet been accepted into the diversion program. “ In g e n e r a l, the p r o c e ss ta k es a fe w w eeks to be accepted,” E ven said. “W hen sh e is a c c e p te d , w e w ill n ot b e a b le to release a statement because o f the privacy act.” N ot ev ery o n e is elig ib le for the diver­ s io n p r o g r a m s , sa id an a s s is t a n t w ith M aricopa C ounty’s diversion program for drugs w ho w ould identifiy h erself only as Mary for security reasons. “Y ou have to m eet certain criteria,” she said. T hese criteria state that drug offenders must have no prior felon ies, must not be on • • • • • probation and may not be gang members. O ffenders found w ith m ore than three, drugs in their p o sse ssio n , th ose w h o are charged w ith sellin g drugs, those w ho do n ot h a v e an ad d ress, and th o se w h o are charged with more than one felony offense are also ineligible. In a d d itio n , it is n o t p o s s ib le to g o through the program more than once, Mary sa id , and th e o ffe n d e r m u st stay c le a n w h ile in the program. If the program is offered to the offender before the ca se g o es to court, there is no permanent record, she said. The ju d ge m ay also offer the program w hen it gets to court. But since the case has already b een file d in the sy ste m , it w ill alw ays be on permanent record, even if the charges are dism issed. In ad d ition to the d iv ersio n program s o ff e r e d b y th e c o u n ty and b y th e U .S . A ttorney’s o ffice, a diversion program for m isd e m e a n o r o ff e n s e s is a ls o a v a ila b le th ro u g h the c it y , sa id S h a r ie O c c h in o , se n io r a d m in istra tiv e cler k fo r T e m p e ’s diversion program. T hrough su ch program s as m ediation, c o u n s e lin g , an d w o r k s h o p s , fir s t- tim e offenders can avoid prosecution. T hey can p ay $ 7 5 fo r a th ree-m o n th program for false identification or m inor in possession o f alcohol. Great food at great prices Burgers • Steaks • Sandwiches Fresh baked goods Daily specials Senior Citizen discount I ‘Y o u ’d h a v e t o j C 1 | g o b a c k p r e tty FARj c=MonVri1am =:% =::::=:=::===i4 3 0 N. Scottsdale wllORd. ! t@ fin d P r ic e f t h is J 894-0533 BODY HEAT i g o o d o n film a n d j MALE DANCE REVUE .ßjum& j processing. j tamonds As Seen On: / a .a r f ilM \\ . — 1Sally Jessy Raphael ' Maury Povich ■MTV 1In Playgirl Magazine TARGET F U I DEVELOPMG COUPON EXHRES 90094 $1 OFF Qualex color film processing Enclose this coupon and one toll of 110, disc o r 35mm full frame color print film or single-use camera (C-41 process only) ' FILM D EV ELO PIN G in a film developing order envelope. O ne coupon per order. May not be combined with any other offer. We d o your pictures, too. Free Food B uffet from 6pm till 8pm 750 Ladies drinks from 6pm till 9pm ^500 Ladies drinks from 9pm till Close y MANUFACTURER’S COUPON EXPIRES 9/30/94 O F F Ai|yrollofKodak ^ / ^ / r v / I JL color print him. I Valid only on film with “Proof of Purchase U.S A ” symbol. CONSUMER; Coupon good only on purchase of Kodak amateur color print film. (Black-and-white and professional film excluded.) Limit one coupon per purchase, copied, transferred or used with any other Kodak offer. You pay any applicable tax. RETAILER: Kodak will reimburse you for the face value of this coupon plus 8 cents handling allowance, provided you property redeem it on retail sales of the described Kodak film. Upon request, you must iumish proof-of-purchase of sufficient product to cover all redemptions. Failure to observe above terms may void all coupons submitted o r constitute fraud. MAIL TO; Eastman Kodak Company, CMS Dept. 41771, One Fawcett Drive, Del Rio, Texas 78840. Reproductions not accepted. Void where prohibited. Cash value 1/20 cent. Good only in United States and Puerto Rico. Kodak and Gold are trademarks. I I L C A SH IE R Use MFG Coupon Key. W e do your pictures, too. 41771 1 0 4 5 ^ 1 LADIES!!! Call for Reservations 231-0631 HEY G U Y S!!! emm°j&■ ■ Longneck Beer jEnim Tuesday N ig h t la m o tts /^ c 6:00 - 9:00pm W h e re c a n y o u fin d o v e r 3 0 0 w o m e n p rim e d a n d re a d y to p a r ty a t 9 :0 0 p m S H A R P ? A t D e n im & D ia m o n d s . G E T IN F R E E W IT H Y O U R C O L L E G E ID . 40th St & Thomas • In Tower Plaza/Phoenix P a g e 12 Wednesday, September 7,1994 State P ress I came, I saw, I worked... "Pizzayouwontbelieve." Bar-B-Que Blast ( f or the S t a t e P r e s s ) Status Grilled marinated chicken, red onions, fresh cilantro, smoked gouda and mozzarella cheese with bar-b-que sauce on die side. Wow. Pressum •$4 off any large pizza with ASU I.D. Caesar the m om ent W o rk for the State Press The State Press is currently hiring reporters to cover various beats and write three stories per w eek. A pplicants should be reliable, highly m o tiv a ted and ab le to w rite on d e a d lin e . Experience from journalism classes or writing Chicago style pizza - stuffed or thin and crispy $3.95 64oz. Bud & Bud Light Pitchers 921-0333 V for other p u b lica tio n s is preferred but not required. A pplications with clip s or writing samples are being accepted in the basement o f the M atthew s C enter. C all the State Press today at 965-2292 for more information. t . Z f ? | ? l 1 1 A ll 2155 E. University Want $23,500 for college? T he A rm y Reserve c an h e lp y o u ta k e a big b ite o u t o f college expenses, How? If y o u qualify, th e M o n tg o m ery GI Bill co u ld pro v id e y o u w ith u p to $6,840 for college o r ap proved v o /te c h tra in in g . W e'll also p ay y o u over $105 a w eek en d to start. T raining is u su ally o n e w eek en d a m o n th plu s tw o w eeks' A nnual T raining. By a d d in g th e pay for Basic T rain in g a n d skill tra in in g , y o u 'll earn over $16,750 d u rin g a s tan d a rd e n listm en t. So, if y o u c o u ld use a little fin a n c ia l h e lp g e ttin g th ro u g h sch o o l— th e kind th a t w o n 't in te fe re w ith sch o o l— sto p b y o r call: “Simplify, sim plify” H e n ry D a v id T h oreau “Hey, that’s not a bad idea.” 9 6 7 -1 6 1 1 A I& T BEALL YOU CAN BE. ARMY RESERVE MAKE AN INVESTMENT IN Y O U R LIFETIME Order your copy of The 1993-94 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook today! Matthews Center basement, Rm 50 965-6881 ÄKST Universal MasterCard. The credit, cash and calling card. All in one. The AT&T Universal MasterCard. No annual fee— ever. Access to cash at over 350,000 locations. P lus a n AT&T c a llin g card . B e c a u se life s h o u ld b e c o n te m p la te d . N ot c o m p lic a te d . Call 1 8 0 0 438-8627to request an application. S.W corner Price ¿University Page 13 Wednesday, September 7,1994 S tate P ress D efense P o p e_____ C o n t in u e d from page 3. C o n t in u ed from page 3. Germany that are unlikely to come through. The GAO recommends cutting those funds from the budget and increasing pressure on Germany to pay for its share of U.S. forces in Europe and for the value of assets left behind at closed U.S. bases in Germany. • The Air Force plans to train 500 pilot candidates next year when the number of spaces available for them is in sharp decline. The glut of pilots is leading to a reduction in training time the GAO noted. examined by the GAO. The Navy told the GAO it plans to adjust its labor estimates downward in future years. • The Pentagon could save $403 million by streamlining commissary operations, including closing 20 commissaries that have annual sales of $15 million or less and are with­ in 20 miles of another commissary, and combining operations at 72 other locations. • The Army is also assuming in its budgets that it will receive reim­ bursem ents and paym ents from it was imposed in February under threat of NATO airstrikes. Maj. Dacre Holloway, a U.N. spokesm an, said Serbs fired 11 artillery rounds inside the exclusion zone Tuesday morning. Holloway also reported heavy gunfire around the airport, where there has been increased shooting over the last week. Thursday’s visit was not the first papal trip canceled for security fears. A trip to Lebanon set for May 1993 was scrapped after security deteriorated. And in 1979, the Vatican canceled a trip to Northern Ireland during a papal visit to the Irish Republic. ° LMent FdlYllLY HAIR CUTTERS' Free S h a m p o o w / C u t $£?s (Reg. $8.95) ONLY -d p p m m * m m Exp. 9-28-94 m H A IR C O LO R REDKEN $ m 19 _ |9 5 ONLY ■ (Reg. $24.*) Includes: Blow Dry & Style T p N t W IIS f f ' S n ä G S . Exp. 9-28-94 ___________________________________- - - - - __________ ! W arehouse Prices 10% OFF A L L B R A N D NA M E PR O D U C TS Paul Mitchell Sebastian REDKEN iniiEinEe NEXUS ¿SB1ÖLAGE Exp. 9-28-94 D e sig n e r Perm $2 9 95 (Reg. $34.95) Shampoo, Perm, Cut & Style included. Long hair and specialty wraps extra. Exp. 9-28-94 University & Rural „ Void with other o tters on s a m e service O n e coupon p e r custom er. Cornerstone Center 968-8008 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-7 S un 10-5 lease join us at the Memorial Union Open House, Wednesday September 7, 1994 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, at the Memorial Union, south end. B Sponsored by • Me Donald’s • Campus Dining • American Express • • Folletts • Photo America • Flowers on Campus • • N. Maxim Salon • MU Recreation • ASU Mail Services • • Bahama Buck's • AZ Credit Union • ASU Fast Copy • • Bank One • Book Store Connection • State Press • State P ress W e d n e s d a y , S e p te m b e r 7, 1994 P a g e 14 Generation HeXed by S tacy H olm stedt TH E F A R S ID E By GARY LARSON "u/ open 'S studies /o r ISN'T A GREAT PLACE. TO "PICK UP SABES'.' Calvin Hobbes and V1ELL, HOBBES, WE MIGHT AS HE1LGWE0P. L CANT FIGURE OUT HOW TO MAKE A ROBOT. THIS ONE OctSHT DO ANTTU'NG. , by Bill W a tte rs o n I ITS PAST TOUR X OK., MOM. BEDTIME, CALVIN. OURiOOsT GOSH, AND WE SPENT ALL DAS ON VT,TOO. 1 THOUGHTI For sure our robot would “Got him, Byron! It's something in the Vespula genus, all right — and ooooweeeee does he look mad!” Calvin Hobbes and CALUIN, WOULD't TOU LEAD THE ' C l a s s in the PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE7 r W/ by Bill W a tte rs o n | WUAT DID THE SuPREME COURT DEQDE A90UT TRAT ? IS.TUIS A PRATER? DONT TOU UAUETO READ ME MT RIGHTS ? I DoHT REEP UP WITU THIS STUFF' I'M IUST A KID/ ,\ A TH E F A R S ID E By GARY LARSON IM GNU HERE BECAUSE MT PARENTS MARE MEGO/ L Dont want td b e a t e s t CASE/ I DONT EVEN KNOW WHAT CEURJ DISTRICT I'M IN CAU. ON SOMEONE ELSE ! ~x~ ■ /| “ ° il 0° \ \ o _____ j D o o n e s b u ry I CONGRATULATIONS ON BECOMING OUR \ THANKS ' NATION'S V'0UN6ESTVERT I EVER RECIPIENTOR MUCH, THE FREEDOM rïïT \ MRS I MEDAL, MIKE1 I CLINTON. JÀ- BY GARRY TRUDEAU I DONT KNOÙU HOU TOUMAN­ icouum HAVEDONE AGED TOSOLVE ALL OUR NATIONS BANDS SUPPROBLEMS SO OUICKIV! kk. / . “I make no claims about all my su cc ess, Bernard. I never went to school, I never worked hard, and I’m not particularly bright.... I'm just a lucky skunk, Bernard.” WILD ”WINGS"DAY □ 0 Only $ 8.99! s V) ifi b 5< SN OÜ Û CL o Z< SN OÜ sFor a Medium Pepperoni Pizza & 12 Wings. O Q. Specials Valid at this location only. 968-5555 9 0 3 S . R ural R d . Use your Marriott Maroon & Gold Card Here. (Subject to an administrative fee). LATE NIGHT SPECIAL $11.99! For 2 Large Pepperoni Pizzas. Available Daily after 9:00pm only. item substitutions available w here applicable. Not valid with any other coupons, offers or specials. C ustom er pays all sale s tax w here applicable. Limited delivery a re a s to e n su re safety. O ur drivers carry less than $20.00. Sports _____ Wednesday, September 7, 1994 S tate P ress ________________P a g e _ l^ Solid offensive line provides ASU with needed experience Fractured hand may keep Brewer out of practice Quincy Brewer, a 6-foot-5-inch sophomore ASU basketball player, may miss the first two to three weeks of practice after having surgery on a fractured left hand. Brewer, who injured the hand just over a week ago, has a history o f , costly injuries. He missed the entire 1992-93 season with a fractured right patella (kneecap) and then missed the first 20 games of last season after aggravating the kneecap in an exhibi­ tion game. Basketball practice begins on Oct 15. UCLA, WSU players honored W ashington State linebacker M ark Fields, UCLA flanker Kevin Iordan and UCLA punter Darren Schager have been named the Pae-10 Conference Players of the Week. Fields, a junior scored the lone touchdown in W ashington State's 10-9 upset of Illinois this weekend. He returned a fumble recovery 71 yards for toe touchdown. Jordan had six receptions for 152 yards in UCLA’s 25-23 victory over Tennessee. Schager averaged 43.2 yards on five punts in toe game. K y sar, V a u g h n , c o m p a n y to c la s h w ith 5 th -ra n k e d re a d y M ia m i B y T o d d Kelly S tate P ress With all of the youth and inexperience spread around the 1994 ASU football team, it’s ironic that the Sun Devils offensive line is its most experienced position. The offensive line is arguably the most important group on the football field and many times it’s the starting block of any strong football program. ASU’s line fits that mold. Solid from the left side of the line to the right, Jeff Kysar, Juan Roque, Troy Martz, Joe Cajic and DeMario Vaughn form an imposing offensive front line for any defense. Kysar (6-foot-7-inches, 320 pounds), Martz (6-3, 260), Cajic (6-4, 289) and Vaughn (6-5, 283) are all seniors. Roque (6-8, 312) is one of the nation’s largest players and has quickly become one of A SU ’s best players'. Pat Thompson (6-1, 303) is another sophomore and should also get quite a bit of playing time this season. Fourteen ASU players saw their first action in college last Saturday against Oregon State, but toe offensive line is a different story. The front five that helped ASU beat OSU has a combined 36 starts among them - Kysar (17) and Vaughn (15) have the most. Vaughn, in his third year as a starter, knows that prepaT urn t o L ine , page 16 . Correction lit toe Sept. 2 issue, the State Press mistakenly reported that toe Los Angeles Rams had not been in the playoffs in toe last 10 years. The Rams have reached toe playoffs five times in toe past 10 years, most recently in 1989. Compiledfrom staff and AP reports Senior offensive lineman DeMario Vaughn, who weighs in at 283 pounds, will play a big part in ASU’s success this season. C ardinals dum p you th , gain experience Ryan praises M oore s, W illiam s’ efforts B y D a n M iller S tate P ress Raiders running back possibly lost for season Los Angeles Raiders running back Napoleon McCallum was expected to be lost for toe season after surgery to replace a ruptured artery in his left knee. McCallum’s knee was dislocated on a tackle In toe third quarter of toe R aid ers’ 44-14 loss to the San Francisco 49ers on Monday night. He underwent two hours o f surgery Monday night at Stanford Medical Center. “It would he premature for me to sp ecu late on the sev e rity , h u t it would be fair to assume this was at least season-ending,” Raiders execu­ tiv e assista n t A1 LoC asale said Tuesday,' Raiders spokesman Mike Taylor said M cC allum would rem ain at Stanford for at least another day. McCallum was listed in stable condi­ tion wad was resting comfortably. McCallum, 30, had not yet under­ gone an MR1 to determine toe extent of additional ligament damage to toe knee. Craig Macnaughton/State Preaa Aaaociated Preaa Buddy Ryan was busy Tuesday shaking up the Cardinals’ roster and giving rare praise to Ron Moore and James Williams for Sunday’s game. On the heels of the Arizona Cardinals’ sloppy weekend perfor.mance against the Los Angeles Rams, Coach Buddy Ryan continued to juggle his.roster Tuesday. Ryan had already released third-string quarterback Shawn Moore Monday in favor of journeyman Jay Schroeder, who was dismissed Aug. 29 by the Cincinnati Bengals. “He really wanted to come here,” Ryan said in a press conference Tuesday. “We could’ve signed him a week before this.” On Tuesday, Ryan relieved QB Chris Swartz of his practice squad duties to make space for former ASU linebacker Bryan Hooks, who is still overcoming an ankle injury that stalled his signing. He also excused rookie comerback Perry Carter from the taxi squad in order to sign former San Diego Charger comerback Herschel Currie, who had been unemployed for the last two weeks. Carter was one of two fourth-round draft picks by Cardinals this season. The other fourthrounder, defensive back John Reece, was released earlier this season. “We’re going to-add a couple people,” Ryan said. “We’ve got some getting physicals and some trying out.” Ryan emphasized the Cardinals’ inability to seize the moment as a major reason for the lackluster showing inthe opener: “When the opportunity is there, you’ve got to make those damn plays,” he said. “Their offense had a hell of a lot more problems than ours did.” But the crafty veteran tries not to dwell on what could’ve been. T urn t o C ardinals , page 17 . T ou gh lo ss gives R yan fo o d for th o u g h t All year there has been toe hype, the expectations, the buzz for a stellar season for the Arizona Cardinals. Buddy Ryan said _ that we have a w inner in town. Season tickets N e w m a n skyrocketed. Most S p o rts preseason predic­ C olum nist tions had the C ardinals in the playoffs at year’s end. Arizona was hot. They began the preseason by beating the San i Franciscan 49ers. This was our year. Then we got shutout by toe Chicago Bears. We also lost to toe Detroit Lions and toe Denver Broncos for a 1-3 preseason. Hey, that’s alright. Every other year the Caniinals had a great preseason but blew it when the games meant something. It was JL/EE fÜ 1 M alright. We have a winner in town. We’re going to win when it counts. Nothing to worry about. Rams (14, Cardinals 12, Hello! What happened? Wasn’t this our year? Now true, it’s only one game. The season isn’t in utter ruins quite yet, but the L.A. Rams? I think the Rams lost an exhibition game to a group of boy scouts visiting Disneyland. If the Cardinals want to be a playoff contender, they can’t lose to the likes of the Mickey Mouse Club. Ryan was extremely verbal about his displeasure of his team ’s perform ance Sunday. What could he have been thinking while he was laboring through the holiday? Here are the top 10 things Ryan said the day after Arizona’s disappointing loss. 10. “How do I get my phone number changed? Bugel kept waking me up all night laughing his head off.” 9. “I just thought I’d call and apolo­ gize, Mr. Gilbride. By the way, are you interested in a job?” 8. “Warren looked kind of pale out there.” 7. ‘That Gump fella everyone keeps talking about. Is he available?” 6. “I know Arizona hasn’t had a foot­ ball team for a tremendous amount of time, but does the offense realize they’re sup­ posed to move the ball upfield, and I don’t know, maybe score?” 5. “What do you mean he can’t play quarterback? KJ passes in the NBA, doesn’t he?” 4. “Why is everyone calling me Buddy Ebsen? And what the hell is Texas tea?” 3. “Can’t the defense play the whole gam e? I think we would have a better chance at scoring.” 2. “Of course I was telling toe truth when I said you have a winner in town. Correct me if I’m wrong, but I think we won a game in preseason, didn’t we?” 1. “Ultimatum? Hey Bidwell, I know toe perfect place to shove that bowtie.” Page 16 State P ress Wednesday, September 7,1994 L i n e ______ C o n t in u e d from page 15. ration never ends. “Me and Jeff Kysar, this is our third year starting together, so it should come a little more easy but sometimes, like today, it d oesn’t," Vaughn said after a tough Tuesday practice. “We still have to work at it just as if it's our first day out here. You can never let up." Kysar is also starting his third fall cam­ paign for the Sun Devils. He started all 11 games in 1992, and started 10 of 11 games last season, missing only the Oklahoma State contest. He said that getting ready for the No. 5ranked Miami Hurricanes is quite a task. “W e’ve got to be prepared for them. They’re a great team,” Kysar said. “We’ve got to play great every play to be success­ ful. It’s going to take a lot of practice and a lot of concentration.” The adjustment from Oregon State, a team that ASU has beaten 14 of 22 times, to Miami, a team ASU has never met on the football field, is drastic. “They hit you in the mouth, and we like that,” Kysar said. “Oregon State wasn’t doing that. They'll play us head on and I think the offensive line is really looking forward to that.” ASU Head Coach Bruce Snyder noted the vastly different defensive styles . “I t ’s a huge difference because we blocked a three-man front (against OSU) last week and it’s a four-man front this week,” Snyder said. “They (Miami) seldom blitz their linebackers because their four down linemen are so good, you don’t have to. Oregon State blitzed almost every time, so it’s really a dramatic change for our offensive line.” “The defense is totally different,” Kysar said. “It’s from a 50 to a 4-3 (defensive for­ mation). We have to concentrate on our fundamentals, but we’re going to have to be a little bit more explosive, more physical. We’re going to really have to come off the ball against Miami.” Craig Macnaughton/State Presa At 320 pounds, third-year starter Jeff Kysar will be a key player in protecting the pocket for sophomore quarterback Jake Plummer this year. State Press SPORTS-We cover good sports, bad sports, rich sports and poor sports Last class begins on September 8 Find out about T a r g e t e d T r a in in g , and Get a H igher Score! 1-800-K A P-TEST KAPLAN 310 S. Mill Ave. (Behind Kelly's Gafé) at Hayden Square “I want car insurance I with a good price... I and great value.” I It’s Easy... | • • • • • • L ow down-paym ent E asy paym ent plans Immediate coverage M oney-saving deductibles 24-hour countrywide claim service F ree rate quote | I I I Call us today or stop by our local office: 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 ■ If you’re a student with a good driving record... - Call l GBCQ I I .................................................. t P ageJ^ Wednesday, September 7, 1994 St a t e P ress C a rd in a ls -COUPON- C ontinued MEXICAN FOOD ~ Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week "GOOD NEWS" Your Body W ill Thank You C O M IN G S O O N TO ROSITA'S - W ATCH O U R A D FOR DETAILS. ► 1/2 P R IC E D IN N E R from page 15. “I’ll lick my wounds and cry and whine until I show the team the films,” Ryan said. “But in this business, you can’t celebrate too long, and you can’t whine too long.” Despite the loss, Ryan did single out the performances of cornerback James W illiams and running back Ron Moore as being among the strongest. “Moore ran well and blocked super,” he said. “That twenty-yard run he made in the third (quarter) was as good as any run I’ve ever seen Walter Payton make.” This Sunday, the Cardinals will entertain the New York Giants at Sun Devil Stadium. Their NFC eastern foe defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 28-23 in their season opener. The Cardinal’s overall inconsistency is Ryan’s biggest concern heading into Sunday’s match-up. “W e’ll have one (player) break down and three play well, or three break down and one play well,” Ryan said. 9 With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 9-15-94. Mesa Happy H our B u ffe t 4-7 p.m. Monday-Friday 2023 W. Guadalupe (Southwest Comer Dobson & Guadalupe) 897-9411 Tempe 960 W. University (Northeast Comer University & Hardy) 966-0852 -COUPON- I 1m ally« r o ll in ly Hull w ill cfimigc llu* w a y you th in k . (Im*w a y and iiio h I you in*I, BE A FROCK STARCOME TO THE Ca m p u s Corner in ifm rta n tly ... Ih«1 w a y you «Ircfw. 712 S. College (C o lle g e & University) 967 -4 0 4 9 Two LOCATIONS •Beer 8, Soda •Photo Developing •Health 8 Beauty Aids 609 S. Mill (Across from C offee Plantation) 858-0567 Everyday Low Price TODAY 1 1 :4 0 -1 2 :3 0 MU PROGRAMMING LOUNGE And watch your peers lip-sync to their favorite songs and compete for prizes! GRAND PRIZE Other prizes include soundtrack CDs and cassettes, t-shirts, posters, pennants, key chains, buttons, movie passes for the September 8 screening of "Priscilla" at Harkins Centerpoint and more. Come watch a great show and pick up your complimentary admit-two passes to the Sept. 8 screening of "Priscilla". Offer good while supply lasts. SPONSORED BY mm Questions? Call 965-6822 24 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS color C-41 process Best price in town St a t e P ress Classifieds Solitude is a good place to visit, but a bad place to stay. -Josh Billings HOMES FOR RENT RENTAL S H A R IN G _ _ _ _ _ LARGE STUDIO, 115 W. Broad­ way, $260/mo. Old Town Tem­ pe, 3 bd, 1 ba, w/addition, $775/ mo. Tim, 894-0288. HAYDEN SQ. M/f, n/s, w/d. Free cable (HBO/SHO) 2 blks ASU $360mo+l/3 util. Eric 598-2797. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2BD 2BA d u p lex near ASU. Pool, nice front yard. $450. 7319901, ask for Patty or Dave. ANNOUNCE­ MENTS AVON PRODUCTS, buy or sell. Call 970-0965. HAIR MODELS needed. Matrix hair show, free hair services. Call 788-2337. APARTMENTS 2 BLOCKS/ASU, 1 bd, clean, fum, $275. Call 966-2957 or 8445900, Jacob, John Hall & Asso. FIRST MONTH free! 2 bd, 1 ba, new appliances, $430. Cali 7597104 or 921-0517. BEAUTIFUL LG 2 bd apt. Very safe, near ASU. Free cable, laun­ dry , pool. Call 966-4797. LUXURY 1 bd, 1 ba at Cameron Creek. 2 mi/ASU. Cheaper than going rate. Avail immed. $465/ mo. 839-6316, Steve o r Laura. HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd, 2ba, w/d, pool, fans, park light. $585, 510 W. Univ. 966-0987. M/F FOR 2bd, 2ba apt in Ahwatukee. Be energetic, no smoking and fun. Please call 496-6869. M /F TO share 3bd 2ba w/pool, must be clean/reliable $194mo 1/3 util. 68th/Thomas Jill 9902292 ROOM AVAIL in 3 bd house w/d, pool table, yard, 1/3 util on $235 ren t M/F. Call 491-8776. NEAR ASU- lbd t/h. $675. Pool, cvrd prkng. 731-9901, ask for Patty or Dave. ROOMMATE TO share 3 bd/2 ba near campus. Wanted: cool, re­ laxed m/f to pay $300 + $40-60 for util. Call Dave at 894-6895. RENTAL SHARING ROOMMATE WANTED $350/ mo incl util. Nice Tempe house. 820-8408, ask for Jennifer. CHRISTIAN F rmmt. to share 4bd, 2ba hse near ASU w/mid 20s girls. $157/mo+l/4 util. 967-5983 WANTED RMMT m /f to share ig. house across street from ASU. $325 + 1/2 util, available 9/1.9673664 or pgr. 223-8932 FEMALE ROOMMATE to share fully furnished house in Tempe w/pool, w/d, etc. Lg private bed­ room, share bath. Must love my small dog. Prefer upper classmn/ grad. $300/mo (incl pool/lawn svc) + 1/4 util. 756-2647. FEM A LE W ANTED to share lo v ely hom e in S co tts. N /s. M ust like anim als. $550+util. 998-4367 R O O M S FOR RENT WANTED: $150 mo, n/s, to help p/t w/disabled husband. Exch for nice fum bd & ba w/jacuzzi, nice neighborhood. 437-2332. State P w i t l i u M Natte«»* Gastar I m w h I TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE GREAT FOR students, no down, no closing costs, 2 bd, 2 ba, fire­ place, ground floor condo near pool, excellent M esa location w/quick freeway access. Assum­ able with qualify. 892-0281. ONLY $42,900! 10 m in from ASU! 2bd, 1 1/2 ba condo, incl. refrigerater, new carpet, new paint, new dishw asher & new fence! Dana H ubbell, Re/Max Anasazi 838-7772. B uy O f T he W MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE K IN G SZ soft side w aterbed $300, end table $15, wedding dress sz 10/12 w/train $500, CD player $50, kitchen table $20 high c h air, bum per seat, rock in g horse. 966-3203. SCALES, LIKE new. Ohaus Tri­ ple Beam ounce/gram scales. Sell or trade. Afternoons or evenings. Call Bart, 966-4320. SECURE YOUR life, home & auto with the latest high-tech se­ curity products. Top quality bat­ tery operated protection at low prices. Call Linda, 661-9794. eek P a p a g o P a rk H wants you! Nice 2bd, 2ba, all appl, pool, spa, $68,000. B o b B ullock R ealty E xecutives 9 9 8 -2 9 92 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE DRAFTING TA BLE 32"x 48” all wood, fully adjustable. $100, 820-6239. KING SZ soft side w aterbed, $300; end table, $15; wedding dress size 10-12 w /train, $500; CD player, $50; kitchen table, $20; high chair, bum per seat, rocking horse. 966-3203. FURNITURE COMPLETE BD set, incl bed, 2 nightstands, dresser, chair & mir­ ror. Exc cond. Kim, 967-9280. LIQ U ID A T O R S Over 200 offices of furniture to sell: desks, chairs, files, bookcas­ es, computer tables & more. AZ Office Liquidators, 5064 S. 40th St., (1/2 mi S of Broadway), Phx. M-F 9-5, Sat 10-3.437-2224. C A R P E T YO U R R O O M ! Inexpensively!! Wholesale distrib utor is liquidating 1000's of yards. Call for appointment: 966 -0 6 83 • 8 3 5 -0 8 02 1700 S. McClintock FURNITURE WE HAVE it! Used furniture, mattresses, linens, kitchen ware, vacuums, TVs, lamps, shelving, tools & more. 966-7021. WHITE QUEEN headboard $30, white 6 draw er dresser $45, 2 white nightstands $25ea., vacuum cleaner $25, white floor lamp $10. 970-4788 lvmsg. COMPUTERS MAC PLUS, ext drive, software incl. Mcsft Word, Excel & draw prog. $450obo. Nancy, 967-3489. MAC SE w/hd & printer, excel­ lent cond. L oads o f so ftw are $550.00, 941-3595. t NOTEBOOK COMP, NCR 3170, never used. 386 4M B RA M , 120MB hard drive, 14,400 baud V .42bis and MNP-5 data com ­ p re ssio n fax m odem c e llu la r ready. Comes with Windows, bat­ tery pack, external drive, carry­ ing case and warranty. Valued at $3,000. Will sell for $1,200. Call Julie at 965-0982 M-F. REPLACEMENT BATTERIES, for laptop/notebook/PC's, cam ­ corders, cellular. Visa/M C. 1800-544-8421. STA TPR O C O R P We do statistics, send us your data. 2 hrs data entry, computer analysis (basic stats only). SPSS output on your disc. Student rate $85,837-1999. COMPUTERS R O C K G A R D EN 40 line monster BBS w/20,000+ files, chat, games, Internet mail, online pizza, more! 602-220-0001 XEROX M EM O R Y W RITER word processors, Lotus 1-2-3/ Windows 4.01.837-9036. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu: gold, ster., pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave. Tempe Center 968-6074. TICKETS PH A N TO M TIC K E TS. G ood seats at face value (I need cash). Call Tom, 545-7577 or 965-2053. TRANSPORTATION I'LL PAY for gas!? Commute to ASU? I live at 7th St. and Mc­ Dowell. Call Jennifer today at 271-9384 to carpool. AUTOMOBILES $C A SH TO DA Y !$ I buy all used cars, trucks, mise, items. Call Al, 994-4369. 69 JAG XK2, 2+2, fast, excellent condition. Call ic, 264-1200, 553-8047 eve.’ CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Sta te P ress W e d n e s d a y , S e p te m b e r 7, 1994 Page 18 HELP WANTEDGENERAL AUTOMOBILES 83 NISSAN Sentra. Tan, low­ ered, stereo system w/Alpine CD, fender trim, custom wheels, runs great. $2500 obo. Call Todd, Iv. msg. 519-0044._______________ $300+ A WEEK Local company needs 6 people to d istrib u te bottles to hom es in local area. Must be in good phys­ ical condition and available to work M on-Fri 3-9pm . For in ­ terview call Brenda, 966-0093. Tempe location. 84 CELICA GTS, red, fully load­ ed, all elec, sun ro o f, stereo w/graphic equalizer, custom tires w/locks, very low mileage, mint cond, $4200 obo. 494-0420. $5-$12 PER HOUR 89 TOYOTA Tercel EZ, std, a/c, fm cass, 2-dr, orig ow ner, tint wind, exc cond. 105K. 460-3431. Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Universal Portraits. Call Rachel or James, 496-0255. 93 NISSAN 240 SX coup, auto, cass. 6yr 100K mi W arr. Only 13,000mi. $13,800. msg 8991244, 831-1881. $7.45 TO START 18 retail openings. No exp req. Flex hrs. S ch o larsh ip s. All majors. Call 11-3, 968-4797. MOTORCYCLES" A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office person. Will train. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd., Suite 108.__________ 83 YAMAHA CV 80K, only 2400 mi, looks & runs like new. $800. 380-6170.____________________ A H W A TU K EE FO O TH ILLS YMCA is currently accepting ap­ plications for recreational super­ visors for school-age children. Perfect p/t position for college students at ASU. MCC, etc. seek­ ing exp in a school setting. 3233 E. Chandler Blvd., Suite 6B. HONDA ELITE 150. 87, red. Perfect condition. Runs like new. $775. Call 894-0616. TRAVEL 4 DAY trips to Cabo San Lucas starting at $199- rt air. hotel. Erin at D&G Travel, 926-8161. AZ EXPLOSION! DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. ROCK CLIMBING, rappelling, guided trips. 209-4913. Secure a management position in a growing company. We just ex­ panded into Tempe to capitalize on a booming market. Call now! 829-8105. BUSY HEALTH Club needs ft/pt help. 1465 N. H ayden. W orld Gym. 945-6060.______________ CHEVRON STATION, p/t island attnd/ maint. 2:30-8pm & wee­ kends. Call Mr. Martin 941-8899. CUST SERV, no selling, flex hrs, guaranteed hourly plus bonus up to $10/hr possible. 949-7615. CUST SVC rep/dispatcher, f/t 11 am-8pm M-F. Good customer svc skills, some comp exp. Full insurance prov. 277-3033, Ken. DANCERS/CASH Now hiring females for bachelor parties. No exp nec, must be dep, serious inq only. C all Randy, "Only the Classiest," 997-6698. TRAVEL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL DELIV. DRIVERS, flex eve hrs, $10/hr incl tips. N. Scotts. Take­ out Express. 951-9144 aft 5pm R E C EPTIO N IST FOR busy Scotts./Indian School Rd. office. £am-4pm M-F. Must be respon­ sible & organized. Phones, cleri­ cal & computer duties. 994-9188. W ESTERN R ESE R V E C lub, family sports center, has immed opening for youth coordinator. 12-15 hrs/wk, wages & free mem­ bership. Apply in person 2140 E. Broadway, Tempe. P/T OFFICE help, filing, phones, know ledge o f v a lley a m ust. C lose to ASU. T ues/T hurs 27pm, alternating wknds, 8-4pm. Citywide Plumbing, 966-9571. DELIVER FLAMINGOS p/t, late night wacky job. Truck or van preferred. 867-3700. ASSIST DISABLED students on & near campus. Call Dave 9666873. Disablity Health Care Svcs. DRIVERS & HELPERS at TriRentals, Tempe. All hrs avail.ft/pt, flex schedules. Apply at 1895 S. Los Feliz. 966-3474. EDUCATION MAJOR wanted to help high school English teacher with prep work. Must be avail 47pm M on-T hur & Sun a fte r­ noons. Pay nego. Call 968-6284. FREE LANCE Editor w /solid exp. creative/fiction writing. For a m etaphysical/religious book. Flex time. John Zerio 978-7158 FRIENDLY, OUTGOING, en­ ergetic people to work at Fid­ dlesticks, 1155 W. Elliot. FUNDRAISING C hoose from 3 different fun­ draisers lasting either 3 or 7 days. No inv estm en t. Earn $$$ for your group plus personal cash bo­ nuses for yourself. Call 1-800932-0528, ext. 65._____________ G Y M NASTICS OR dance in­ structor. E xperienced, en th u ­ siastic teacher, ages 5-12.7th St./ Glendale, $9-U /hr, M-Th 2:455pm. 955-7805.______________ IN SU R A N C E R EQ ’S fem ale d rivers fo r d isabled w om an's van. M ust be 21 or over, good driving record, must be available early a.m. and mid-p.m. Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur & Sat or Sun. Pay negotiable. Call 968-6284. SCREENPRINT ARTIST p/t to do paste up, design etc. 40th St. & Broadway area. 470-0833. SCR EEN PRIN TER NEEDED now. F/t or p/t. Exp. preferred. 40th St/Broadway 470-0833 SPORTS COUNTRY club look­ ing for pool cleaner. Work 8-12 hrs per week. $6 per hour + free membership. Will train right per­ son. Apply in person only, West­ ern Reserve Club, 2140 E. Broad­ way Rd., Tempe, 85282. EOE. TEACHER ASST, needed. Ahwatukee Preschool M-Th. 12-3 $245/mo. Elem. Ed. major pref. 893-2531____________________ THE BLUE Note, Blues Night­ club, now hiring all positions, 8708 E. McDowell, Scottsdale. THE STATE Press is hiring de­ pendable students to pick up in­ serts that fall out o f the State Press and land on the ground creating an eyesore and safety hazard. We need students to fill blocks of time from 8am to 3pm on the days there are inserts in the paper. This is a job where you will be bending over and picking up inserts all over campus. The compensation is excellent! This position is on an as-needed basis and requires dependable people. Come by room 47 in Matthews Center today and drop o ff your class schedule, indicating when you w ill be available M onday through Friday. Include your phone number. Questions? Call Jackie Eldridge, 965-6555. LAWN SERVICE Needs p/t help. $6/hr. 966-3269. MARKETING/B AR MANAGER Flakey Jake's Tempe. Prefer 3rd year marketing student with fra­ ternity or sorority affiliation. Call 967-3192 for appt. Ask for John or Bill. OUTGOING, FRIENDLY peo­ ple! P/T work is available for you a t Red R iv er Opry. D ay/evening shifts avail. Cash handling and customer service ex­ perience req. 730 N. MHl Ave., Attn: Tristin. PHYSICIST, CHEM E or Elec E, to conduct tests on multi-chan­ nel analyzers. Set up system. 1520 hrs/wk; $6-$10/hr DOE. Ur­ gent need! Express Personnel Services, 11 W. Baseline, Tempe 85283,413-1200. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Tempe Wholesale Bakery needs NO SELLING •Delivery drivers pt/ft •Office help pt/ft •Artist (drawing skills) Must be available to work during school holidays. Call for interview between 10am-1pm & 4-6pm: UNLIMITED POTENTIAL: Na­ tional company, new to area. We need 8 top performers who need to make unlimited wealth. Our reps set appointments for Lake Tahoe resort. Guarantee + com­ mission. We pay top. Only above average people need apply. Call 831-2049 today, start tomorrow. Ask for Dawn. 9 6 7 -5 4 4 1 222-3875 AZ COUNTRY Club hiring p/t p.m. food servers. No exp nec. Must work wknds. Apply 5668 E. Orange Blossom, Phx. EOE. BLIM PIES SUBS and Salads. Apply in person. B rw y/R ural. Tempe. Help wanted p/t, 18-24 hrs/wk, 10:30-2:30 or 11-3. CLUCK-U-CHICKEN NOW hir­ ing cdoks & delivery drivers. Earn top $$$. Apply in person, 855 S. Rural Rd„ 1 blk S. of Univ. CORK ’N CLEAVER Acc. apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t , concern w/appearance, reliablility & personality are import­ ant. Apply in prsn. M-F 2-5pm. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 9520585________________________ JOHNNY ROCKETS Now hiring cashiers, asst, mngrs, f/t & p/t. Fashion Square Mall. Apply in person. 423-1505. HELP WANTEDGENERAL NOW HIRING: servers, bussers, hosts, c ash ie rs, cooks, prep cooks, dishwashers, exp not req. N ative New Y orker, A lm a School/Wamer, Chandler; or Gil­ bert Rd./Freeway, Mesa. P/T BEVERAGE cart salesperson and p/t kitchen help. Apply in person: Pete's 19th Tee, 1405 N. Mill Ave, 1 mile north of Mill Ave. Bridge. PRESTIGIOUS PRIVATE Club located in the heart o f campus seeking prof, enthusiastic indiv. w/1-2 yrs fine dining exp. flex hrs, competitive salary & benefit pkg. Qual. candidates may apply in person between the hrs of 810am & 2-4pm M-F. University Club is located adj. to Student Health Center, comer of Normal Lane & University. RED ROBIN Tempe has immed. openings for wait staff, bussers, & host/hostesses w/daytime avail­ ability. 1375 W. Elliott. Dengyii HIRING: EXPERIENCED COOKS ft SERVERS Apply: Alma Schl/Baseline. EOE HELP WANTEDGENERAL Is that M onthly Allowance not going far enough? How about a part-time job? Customer Service Assistants Wanted!!! Near Campus HELP WANTEDGENERAL If you're interested in a'part-tim e income or a career o p portunity, w ith cash h andling aptitude, we'll train you! All shifts available! If qualified and interested, please apply at the following locations: Excellent opportunity 9» 829*7326 TELESC REEN ER S NEEDED by H arris, K ovacs, A lderman, one of nation's leading physician re c ru itin g firm s. P o sition in­ cludes contacting physicians daily and assisting recruiters in licens­ ing and referencing physicians. Must be efficient in sales & tele­ phone skills. Must be dependable & professional. $5/hr + commis­ sions. M -Th, 3-8pm . C lose to ASU. Call Carla at 894-8440. ACCEPTING APPS for: D riv­ ers, up to $8/hr incl tips; Counter help. Sammy B's Pizza, 945-8850. "am/pm mini markets " Teach small groups o f high school students Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, and SAT and ACT preparation. The ideal candidate will be proficient in all these areas, but will consider proficiency In a combination of these areas. Necessary for formal interview: Two written references, evidence of CPA and SAT scores. Part-time hours between 1-9 p.m. tw o to four days/week, Monday through Thursday. Must be able to w ork 9 m onths from September, 1994 through May, 1995. Summer hours possible. Pay ranges from $8-$15/hr, DOE. Very steady hours are guaranteed. Located in Scottsdale. Must have reliable transportation. ART LOVERS! Higginbotham Associates P/T SALES person, wknds only, selling auto accessories. $6+/hr. Call to set up appt. 267-0864. HELP WANTEDF O O D jg R V IC |_ f G ra d u a te Students!^ lob Hotline 730-4123 Assertive? Sales Oriented? Articulate? Have fun selling ticket pkgs. via phone for the Phoenix Symphony! P /t eves. Sun.-Thur. 5t30pm-9:30pm ARIZONA’S LARGEST insurer, the Prudential, is seeking profes­ sionals for sales career. Exc train­ ing. Compensation to $20,000 + com m issions, + benefits. Call Cindy W oodring at 955-7371. EOE/M/F/V/H._______________ W EEKEND RECEPTIONIST, Sat/Sun only, busy phones, light clerical, energetic, positive per­ son required for exciting compa­ ny 10 S. of ASU, fax resume to L. Muncey 602-796-0660. COSMIC PIZZA, is now hiring exp. pizza cooks & del. drivers. We offer flex. hrs. competitive wages, a fast track to manage­ ment & great w orking condi­ tions. Apply @ 1523 E Apache Blvd. (No phone calls please). LAWN CARE Help people with dis­ abilities help them­ selves. PT/FT shifts, paid training, Telephone Research Survey Flex hours available Tues-Fri 2-9:30pm & Sat. 9-5 Start at $5.50/hour plus bonuses HELP WANTEDSALES Ultimate Lawn Care is hiring f/t & p/t, $5.50/hr to start. Exp nec; own trans req. Early moms., flex 20-40 hrs M-F. C all M arlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. TC H HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDFO OD SERVICE HELP WANTEDGENERAL 1 1 Call 9 5 3 -3 0 7 0 Monday-Thursday between 1:30-8:30 p.m. for an interview. ......................... ................. — 2188 E. Southern Ave. @ Price OR 2309 E. University @ Price OR 980 W. University @ H ardy J T Come Join the W in n in g Team!!! A r e t h e N o -M o n e y B l u e s G e t t in g Y o u D o w n ? Then pick yourself up with a part-tim e job at D ia l A m e r ic a !!! We are currently looking for energetic & motivated students who enjoy communicating in a fun, professional environment. Great New Location The Valley's BEST plasma donation center just got even better! AB1 has moved to a great new facility at 1334 E Broadway! (across from Native New Yorker) We now have MORE MACHINES to serve you better! This is your perfect opportunity to perform a vitally needed service and earn $150 - $185 per month at the same time! It couldn't be easier! New Donors earn $25 CASH theirfirst donation! Open 7 days a week for your convenience! Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1334 E Broadway, Building A Tempe (Acrossfrom Native New Yorker) BROADWAY & DORSEY 968-6139 IÀÀAAÀAÀÀ-ÂÀÀÀÀÂÀAÂÀÀÀÀÂÀàAAAAÀÀàÂÂÂÀÀAÂ4à4ÂAààÂÂà*ÂÀA DialAmerica offers: •Paid Orientation - $7.50/hr guarantee •Guaranteed hourly wage/commission $8-10/hr. •Weekly paychecks •Flexible scheduling •Morning, afternoon, and evening shifts •Short walk from ASU S o i f y o u 'r e t ir e d o f s in g in g t h o s e _____________ n o - m o n e y b lu e s ___________ Call for a confidential interview - 8 2 9 -6 3 9 3 D ia l A m e r i c a M a r k e t in g , I n c . HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE RESTAURANTS/ BARS STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers and din­ ner bussers. Apply in person M-F 10am-5pm, 5001 E. Washington. WAIT STAFF, evenings/days, 4 shifts/week. Must be able to work weekends. Apply in person, 430 N. Dobson. Mesa. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE B A B Y SIT T E R N EED ED , on call, late aft. & eve. for baby, pre­ schooler. 13th/Hardy 967-9307. BABYSITTER WANTED- Mon/ Wed mornings when needed. Rural/EUiot. Call Ellen, 897-1618. NANNY, LOVING & exp. for 14 mo old boy. A hw atukee. 3 nights/wk. Lv msg. 496-8968. WORKING COUPLE needs help w/child care & housework, eves. Trade for free room. 345-2969. JOB OPPORTUNITIES IR IS H M U S IC SLp.m.-1 a.m. NO C O V E R • BANDERSNATCHl 5th St. & Forest BREWPUBl MUSIC REGGAE BAND- Talented nine piece with strong playbook avail­ able for hire. Dave, 956-7904. FREE LOST/FOUND LOST - Blue topaz ring, senti­ m ental value, bet Lang & Lit Bldg & Sub Stop or inside L&L Bldg. 784-8824. I'm devastated w/o it!! 9 LOST- OHIO drivers license, 831, vicinity parking structure 2. Reward. Call 496-0854, Dale. NATIONAL PARK employment. Over 25,000 openings! Excellent benefits & bonuses. For infor­ mation call: 1-206-545-4804 ext. N59181. AA n WELCOMES our Fall 94 Alphas. You're the best! Pata! Pata! Pata! Tlv. your sisters. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES GOLD, THE investment o f the future. Network m arketing the business o f the future. Together they spell success! You can turn $150 into $3000 in Gold. Page Donna 310-0073. RESTAURANTS/ BARS A DOZEN roses, $20. We also deliver after hours. C all 8943419. XQ LOVES their new pledges! Congratulations. EN H A N C E YOUR love life, roses 990 each. The Rose Place. 1835 E. University. 968-7804. TBB LOVES their new mem­ bers! Love PKE, The Actives. T o n ig h t 9-Close HOW ARE YOU paying for school? We can help you find educ. funding. Call 1800-836-0750. PAST CREDIT problems? Start a new credit file. 100% legal. Call today 994-4722.___________ JOIN THE brothers o f Delta Upsilon tonight at 6:30 p.m. for a post-rush event. For info or rides call B rett, 967-8921 or Steve, 350-9351.____________________ STILL INTERESTED in a Fra­ ternity — It's not too late! Come meet the Brothers o f ATA this T hurs. fo r d in n e r a t the D elt House, 5:30 pm (behind Mariposa Hall) Ts or need a ride - Call Rick 784-9002. THINKER - So, you want to be a soldier? What a sacrificial lamb you are! And good looking, too. B&B. YOLI - Happy Birthday! I didn't forget...Happy 20. MR. St a t e P r e s s C l a s s if ie d s V Greeks The R olfing Studio M ill Ave. N ear ASU Steve 966-1776 PRIVATE MONEY FOR COLLEGE No GPA, Income or A ge R equirements ! Call 945-0317 for Info !! ! I MCD Lite jpj^HiB* * * I S h o ts N O CO VER D O YO U T H IN K YO U 'RE C A Y ? Rural & A pache SALADS*!i SUBS & SALADS 21 - 9222 ) 1 O FF ANY S A N D W IC H Every weekday, w e give you the State Press absolutely free. Great news. Great features. Even a magazine. Crosswords and horoscopes. Not to men­ tion the huge savings from all the coupons. We do this for you every day. Will you do something for us? Good! Thanks! When the State Press has inserts, they tend to flop to the ground and create a safety hazard as well as an eyesore. Would you be so socially cor­ rect as to bend over and pick an insert that might slip out of your State Pressi Thanks. TUTORS COM PUTER HELP - Serving ASU since 1983. 838-5966. I NEED a Japanese tutor for JPN 101. Please call Erin at 892-6336. Can only pay $10/hr. PASS MATH! Free trial tutoring tonight! Includes free sample test. PSF 210 first session 3:00. Call for your class's time. 491-3363. PRIVATE ART Teacher wanted. Pen & ink, 2 hrs. / every 2 weeks, $10/hr. Ask for Lynda 644-1291. TUTORS ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE Ever had a tutor that didn't show up? Never happen at Matrix. Ever had a tutor that you felt you knew the subject better than they did? Never happen at Matrix. Ever had a tutor that wanted to discuss your personal life instead of tutoring you? Never happen at Matrix. These are just a few of the many legitimate complaints we've heard. If you're looking for a no nonsense tutor, give us a call. We offer tutorial for the following classes: MAT 106, MAT 114, MAT 117, MAT 170, MAT 119, MAT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271, PHY 111, PHY 112, QBA 221, PSY230, CHM 101, CHM 113, CHM 115, CON 221, CON 323 and many more! "It's not w hat we do, it's how we do it!" Fall registration is going on now. Call us today for our schedule: HEALTH & FITNESS 968-4668 Matrix Education Center "Simon" Cornerstone Mall CERTIFIED PERSONAL Train­ e r w ill get you in shape fast. G uaranteed. 10 yrs experience Cybergenics Spokesmodel. Harry Thanos 858-9709. QmttfilGttl? WEDELIVERj For Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Y ou’ll be reaching an im por­ tant agreement early in the day, b u t th e e v e n in g h o u rs may b rin g a d o m e stic u p set. I t ’s continued progress for you in business. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to M ay 20) Mental interests are highlighted now, but you may not see eye to e y e w ith a c o -w o rk e r. A cycle begins today that favors romance and partnership inter­ ests. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Y ou’ll enjoy heightened cre­ ativity today. A troublesom e w o rk s itu a tio n is h a p p ily resolved by d a y ’s end. Guard a g a in s t ro m a n tic s p a ts and overspending after dark. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Catch up on reading and corre­ spondence today. A m atter at home could upset you at night. A cycle that favors your love life an d p le a s u re in te re s ts begins now. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) T h e re ’s a s p e c ia l a c c e n t on fam ily and hom e entertaining today and in the weeks ahead. M orning hours are yo u r best tim e for reaching agreem ents with others. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) C o m m o n s e n s e a id s yo u in fin a n c ia l d e alin g s today. An u p c o m in g tr ip w ill have romantic overtones. Tonight, a friend may be out o f sorts. Try not to quarrel. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Y ou’ll be purchasing today or in the next few weeks an item th a t y o u ’v e lo n g w a n ted . C om m uni-cations are favored now, but a higher up has to be Sta te Press unDtewcwriT? Personal Training is your answer! Qualified Trainer for ?'s and appts. call john handled with tact. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to^lov. 21) Y ou m ay be a d ding to your w a rd ro b e o r c h a n g in g yo u r a p p e a ra n c e to d a y o r in the coming weeks. Research activ­ ities are favored now. Try not to argue with an adviser. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Privacy abets rom ance today and in the w eeks ahead. You m ay begin an artistic project. S o c ia l in te re s ts are fa v o re d now, but avoid money disputes if possible. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Social interests will be accent­ ed to d a y and in the c om ing weeks. Singles will m eet with new romance. Career talks go well, but keep peace with part­ ners tonight. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Business and pleasure will mix to your advantage now and in the coming weeks. A co-worke r, th o u g h , m ay be to u c h y today. Enjoy mental and cultur­ al interests. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) T a lk s w ith a c c o u n ta n ts and financial advisers are fruitful now . T oday and the com ing weeks favor travel for pleasure. Watch spending after dark. YOU BORN TODAY have an analytical m entality and have all the q u a lific a tio n s to be a good researcher. U sually you work better on your ow n than in partnership. A t tim es, you m ust be careful not to be too fu ssy and o v e rly p a rtic u la r. Learning to see the -other per­ so n ’ s point o f view w ill ease your path in personal relation­ ships. You often shine in a pro­ fessional career. Birthdate of Elia Kazan, producer/director; B uddy H olly , rock star; and Grandma Moses, painter. State Press Classifieds ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Classified Ad O rd er 858-9275 TYPING /W ORD PROCESSING $2/PG, $15 resum es. Proofed. L aser. Fast. Sam e day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. AAA- KINKO'S C opy C enter m akes the grade! G et reports, resumes, & flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & m uch m ore! O pen 24 hours! Rural & University, 966-2035. Q Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10 + days, $ 1.00 per line, per day s 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. □ ¡li H Ê Ê mi W I “Q - M IP PtìoopetOay i J ip i $ Bank Card Number Expiration Date 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 086 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Lost/Found . : # o f Days '-X', Total l. M ' $ ' Classification Name/Nurnber: Name on Card Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. Near ASU. 966-1984. 967-2360 C heck# rI IvI f lP V NB Mf f I WANT IT NOW! editor. Service includes full editing. Improve your grades. Fast. Accurate. Rural Rd./University area. Call jim. Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per lirw, per day 5.9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10 + days, $1.15 per line, per day P l e a s e in clu d e FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses. MLA/ APA, las­ er, fax. Pat, 897-1741. TYPING. Experienced D ■J A T 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> 0 PROJECT SAFE PLACE Sponsored by: Delta Lambda Phi Fraternity, Lambda League and the Campus Environmental Team. : Frances D rake : MISCELLANEOUS WRITERS BLOCK? Call 1-800603-3637 for help in almost any academic field. Custom and non­ custom research material avail­ able. CO Need someone to talk to...someone you can trust? Look for these pink and green magnets around campus to find a trusting, friendly face pre­ pared to get you in the right direction. Y our Individual H oroscope HONEST FEMALE, single par­ ent, unemployed, needs financial aid. Can supply resume. Write: 454 S.Hill St.#C. Globe,AZ 85501 M ARK 'S TY PIN G Services. Fast, professional, affordable, laser printed. Tempe. 491-5931. ASU AREA. APA/M LA, free editing. Low cost resumes. Trans­ cription. Laser. 966-2186. I ] Ic e h o u s e i ] WANTED IN BLACK and White, Executive Word Processing Services, Etc. to your rescue. Call 894-2762. Close to ASU. The best body therapy available for athletes and stressed students. Student discounts available. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. Revolving TYPING /W ORD PROCESSING Massage & Rolfing I LOVE my baby - Dot Clancy. Mom. THE WOMEN of XQ would like to congratulate all the sororities on an outstanding rush! s. m Av»., sua» im J ELECTRO LY SIS BY Degna. M ulti-probe & blend methods. Rural/Southem area. 921-1146. HEY ARAB Boy - This is for 6, 7, and 8. Thank you for making everything special. I love you. Amy. TANYA, YOU'RE the best dot! Sigma's lucky to have you. Mom. Fot a Good Tima call 986-1300 B O TTLED W A TER costs $ 1/gal. on average. I can get it to you for pennies/gallon. Stop pay­ ing too much! Call for free dem­ onstratio n 784-2274 or 9687312. ™>B NEW members are the best. Tubing the Salt was a blast! SARAH D. from Mass. If your mom didn't give you my # it's 966-3913. Please call Edward. SATELLITE ADOPTION: NORTHERN Cali­ fornia college sweethearts with adorable, gentle yellow lab wish to adopt newborn. We are eager to share our beautiful home, our cabin in the mountains, and a life time of love, laughter and secur­ ity. Please call Liz and David an­ ytime 1-800-606-4686. PERSONALS 4 GUYS from Miami coming in town for ASU/JM game. Look­ ing for dates to hang out with & party. Call Mike 1-305-220-0810. INTERNATIONAL EMPLOY­ M EN T- M ake up to $ 2000$4000+/mo teaching basic con­ versational English in Japan, Tai­ wan, o r S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For info call: (206) 6321146 ext. J59181. ADOPTION SERVICES CRUISE SHIPS now hiring- Earn up to $2,000+/month working on cruise ships or land-tour compa­ nies. W orld travel. Seasonal & full time employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206-6340468 ext. C59181. V <04 P a g e 19 Wednesday, September 7, 1994 St a t e P ress . 088 052 049 101 074 072 073 070 071 030 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health & Fitness Help Wanted-Child Care Help Wanted-Clerical Help Wanted-Food Service Help Wanted-General Help Wanted-Sales Homes for Rent 040 102 107 103 056 076 015 120 050 045 Sony, we cannot acceptpersonal ads through the mail. Homes for Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale, Mobile Homes 063 082 090 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars 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 State P ress Wednesday, September 7, 1994 Page 20 HAIRCUT MEN & W OMEN NAILS NEW CLIENTS $ | Ç $8 . " New clients 99 n I Your idea of a great cut is ours, too. So if you want your hair trimmed just one inch, we w on't stretch it to three. And if you want the latest trend, we'll create just what you asked for. W e even have the perfect way to keep your hair healthy-looking, shiny and manageable-Systeme Biolage® shampoos, conditioners and styling Full set - sculps/tips products from MATRIX® ESSENTIALS. It's the natural hair care system. Call us today. I 19 W lZ Z A R D S Ill HAIR STUDIO 903 S. Rural Rd., Tempe 967-2360 ill Hj(j|j11 | 3 l | i Until the w orld is a safer place for |y \ ESSENTIALS your hair, there's Biolage.™ There is more to life than news, weather and sports. Check out the comics.