^Copyright, State Press. 1995 Témp®, Arizona Speakers do battle over tenure at ABOR meeting B y C o d y V . A ygock S tate P ress FLAGSTAFF — A representative of the Arizona F aculties C ouncil defended tenure Wednesday at the Arizona Board of Regents meet­ ing at NAU from claims that the time-honored sys­ tem deprives students of a quality education. Thomas McGovern, faculty représentative for the AFC. said#tenure may need to be reviewed, but he expressed the three state; university fatuities' view that the system should not be eliminated. Regents are currently debating the merit of the method used to evaluate Arizona’s faculty. The dis­ cussion could result in dismantling tenure and replacing it with an alternative review system. Jim Houston, a graduate of NAU’s Center of Excellence in Education, blasted tenure, saying it allowed his professors to commit consumer fraud and educational malpractice. “It is all tenure-related,” he said. “They (profes­ sors) are untouchable when they get it.” ■ Friday, O ctober 2 7 ,1 9 9 5 An Independent Morning DaHy Voi. 80 No. 47 Grade ‘A’ painters Houston alleged that some of his former profes­ sors taught ten-year-old curricula because of tenure. He called his degree in educational leadership “bankrupt,” and offered to exchange it for a refund of his tuition. He said he is so disillusioned with his education that he has not taken his certificate out of the package it came in. McGovern attempted to defend tenure in the face of Houston’s remarks. ; “Our pride, our morale, our commitment are diminished if any of those allegations are true;” he said. McGovern also addressed the concerns from the three campuses’ faculties that regents did not trust them to present objective information to the board. The board rejected a plan to involve the faculty and administration in the discussion last month. “University professors believe they have the skills, the professionalism and ethics tri research topics in an objective way,” he said. T urn to ABOR, page 2 . Program steers y o u n g m in o rity stu d en ts tow ard scien ce careers By K elly W endel S tate P ress A S li’s College of Engineering and Applied Sciences is expanding the horizons of young minor­ ity students through a unique program designed to ignite their interest in science. The M athematics, Engineering and Science Achievement program fosters minority high school and middle school students’ interest in math and science using fun projects and demonstrations. Students in the program have built rockets, com­ peted in bridge-building contests and are currently working on a standing-wave generator. Sponsored by the O ffice o f M inority Engineering Programs and various Valley high-tech manufacturers, the program includes 500 students from more than 15 high schools and middle schools across the state; “This is the beginning of a process to excite young people in terms of entering careers in math and sci­ ence and technical fields,” said Mary Ann McCartney, director of Minority Engineering programs. Today is the last day students are at ASU as part of a three-day event that brought students from across the state to participate in workshops and D iann e R . Bartsch/State P r e s s S tu d en t Alum ni A sso c ia tio n m em bers (from left) W endy Po tter, J.D.W altace and Ryan Krostue repaint the “A” from pink to ASU gold late Thursday afternoon. It took five gallons of paint to coat the con­ crete “A” w hich has received an estimated 95 layers sin ce its construc­ tion in 1955. It Is not Clear who painted the “A” pink. The association w ill take “drastic m easures” th is year to prevent it from being painted blue and red before this year's matchup between ASU and UofA. T urn to P rogram ) page 2 . One-man play takes unusual look at white-male stereotypes B y D a v id J . K ovacs S tate P ress Actor and w riter Kurt Brungardt perform s a segm ent of h is show titled White L ie s Thursday at the Prism Theater in the Ritter Building. Brungardt, who p lays a variety of characters, said the show is “an unm ulticultural, uni-racial comedy.” INSIDE Shttp://Rspin.RRU.edu/provlder/StetePre*» TATE PR ESS Weather Outlook Sunny and wanner. High 88°, low 56°. Can’t dance? Can’t jump? Manic-depressive? If these attributes make you picture a white guy, then you’ve been listening to White Lies. White Lies is a play satirizing white-male stereotypes. “I call it an unmulticultural, uni-racial comedy,” said writer and performer Kurt Brungardt, 30, of his one-man play. It introduces what he calls the “archetypes” of white, heterosexual males. Characters range from nerds and ranting liberals to chau­ vinistic coaches and date-raping stockbrokers, he said. Brungardt said the play also deals with emerging issues of depression and suicide in white men that have evolved from being, the dominant majority, “There’s almost an assembly line that .you can hook into if you’re white,” he said. “It’s going to carry you through. It’s going to give you a wife, a nice car, maybe a second home in die country . “It’s hard to quit a system that gives you everything you need.” He said the luckiest peoplq are the ones kicked out of this system: “Then you ... have to really find your own way, as opposed to all of a sudden you’re in your middle 20s or middle 40s and you’re thinking, ‘What the hell did I do? W orld/N ation A Republican budget plan that would balance the budget by 2002 passes the House, but a Clinton veto looms. Page 3 I’ve lived this life that has nothing to do with what I am.’ ” Whether or not audiences will empathize with the white males in the play remains to be seen, said director David Barker, professor of theater at ASU. “What it does is turn the table on the minority issue and makes the white heterosexual male look like a new minority,” he said. Barker said the play is not supposed to be “message, the­ ater,” but that he welcomes the, debates it might spark. “I think it’s great if any theatrical production can encourage a better understanding of who and what we are as people and then articulate.it,” said Barker. “If this show can do that, then wow, that’s terrific.” Gus Edwards, associate professor of theater and program director of Prism Theater, expects the play to be controversial. “Any good play that asks hard questions will be con­ troversial,” he said. “T hat’s part o f the vitality of a good work.” White Lies opens at 8 p.m. tonight at at ASU ’s Prism Theater, located inside the Ritter Building at Rural ana Terrace roads, and runs through Oct. 29 and again Nov. 25. The play, is produced through Phoenix’s Playwright Workshop Theater. Tickets cost $5. Additionally, a discussion o f the issues raised by the play with its author will fo l­ low the Nov. 2 perfomance. . Sports The Sun Devil football. team is going Duck hunting in Oregon th is . Saturday at 1 p.m. Page 15 Where To Find It C lassifieds........................... C om ics...................... ..... Crossword......................... Horoscopes .................. ...... Opinion................................. Police Report................ ..... Spans, -v.:,.:..................... Today’s A ctivities.............. W orld/Nation...................... Page 2 S t a t e P ress Friday,, O ctober 2 7 ,1 9 9 5 ABOR T oday C ontinued from page 1. In other business, representatives of-the three Arizona universities’ athletic departments presented a report on the education-of student athletes. Regent Judy Gignac recently expressed concerns about the education and graduation rates of student athletes, par­ ticularly those of male athletes. She said overall graduation rates of athletes look good, but ‘if flm T tx ia y Section Is a dally calendar o f avants p rin ted a s a service to thé A SU community. fta q u a stsa re accep ted on a first-com e, firstserved b a sis and are printed a s sp ace perm its. Cam pus d u b s and organizations m ay subm it written en tries to the State Press in the basem ent o f M atthews Cantar. R eq u ests m il not be taken ovar the phone or via tax. : En fria s m ust contain the to il m am o f to e Chib o r eiganbu 0an , a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. AH re q u e sts a re su b je ct to ed itin g to r con ten t, sp a c e an d cla rity. tncom ptob o r Ifhg tae » tatas1 b e dfscardeifP't-t ,¿5DoadHrn fo r taquéala is noon the day b a to n publication and entries wHt not b e accepted m ore toan tom e working days before publication. Only one entry p e r organization p e r day is perm itted. g ¡ || Prograi C ontinued from page 1. • AlcohoHc* Anonymous — Drily campus meeting. Noon to 1:15 Nwsmen Conter, Aquinos l lellln ft« besom m t * • A nthropology D epartm ent — Talk by Agfcprt Trotter on -Cultural Model« of HIV T ran sm issio n a n d S ocial N etw o rk s.’ 3-5 p.trt.; Anthropology Budding, Room B-203. ( • Arizona Horizon P rotect — Weekly meeting tor sotar and electric race car team s New m em bers w elcom e. ¡M S p.m .; MU M ohave Noam. ** : . «A sian Students Association — All-members meeting tor today's Halloween dance party at the Temps Community Center 3 p a n : MU •e Ream 212 ^ • ASU Table Tennis Ctub — Open play. AH welcome. 7 p.m. Friday. 6 p.m. Sunday; Student Recreation Complex, Green Gym. *" - • Farce Side Comedy Hour — ASU1* finest comedy sketch ttoupe wW make you laugh at t i e lunch tm e show. 12:40 p.m.; MU PropmmMdng jtOMB^e. : -, • HHlel — Greek Shabbat Dinner and services tor fraternities and soror­ ities. 6 p.m.: A E Pi House • S oclaty to r Human Naeource Management — Selling ASU Cottage of Business T-shirts. $ 12.9 a m . to 3 p m : BAC Dean s P a ie . • Student en v ironm en tal Action CoaNttane — General meeting to discuss current issues. New members welcome. 11:45 p jn .; MU m id floor, Conterenoe Room .2. . • S tu d en t U e Learning flaeource Center — Free computer skids workshop: Advanced Word Perfect. 10a.m.; SSV 361 A. • University Biped Oervloee — ASU v. UofA Mood drive challenge. 9:30 a m to 4 p.m.: Cady Mafl and Tyler Mad. demonstrations that focused on the engineering, math and rebuild the items. “It’s fun to do. Instead of giving them (students) a sterile science fields. As part of the MESA program, 40 students from Peoria problem to demonstrate they can do a task, we’ve couched it under this um brella of High School visited ASU this artifact p ro ject,” Thursday to tap the skills _ _ _ _ = = _ _ _ _ =====„ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ McNeill said. “We want to of engineering majors. This progmm helped me get excited make their experience in Students in Dr. Barry engineering interesting so about engineering. Before, I really M cN eill’s introductory they will stay interested and engineering class used wasn't sure about what I wanted to do, see what we (ÀSU) have to common household appli­ but now I know / want to be an engineer. offer” ances such can openers, For Peoria High junior — Darrell Lindsay, telephones and VCRs to Darrell Lindsay, the MESA demonstrate skills needed junior, Peoria High .School program helped crystallize for problem solving to the his goals for the future. high schoolers “This program helped me get excited about engineering,” he The ASU students took the devices apart, then wrote detailed m anuals on how to reassem ble them . The said. “Before, I really wasn’t sure about what I wanted to do, Peoria High students then came in as< “w orkers” to but now I know I want to be an engineer.” a; Saturday: • Golden Key National Honor Society — New membfer induction cer- . emony and recechan. Alt new and current members welcome. Come meet the officer and be recognized tor you r achievements. 2 pah.; MU Arizona Baflroom, • MUAB Film Festival — Kids tickets $3. 7 p.m.; MU lower level, MU Cinema. StatePress INtemet j Sunday: ' • ASU M en's S o c c e r — ASU v. Arizona m en's Southw est region ¿ game. 2 p.m.: ASU Bandtield. • Hidel — Dating, mating and relating: P assion and intimacy in the ‘90s. featuring relationship expert EHen GootbtatL 11:30 a.m.; Hiftel 1 at 1012 S. MW Ave, :i *v j v a V* _________ - -, • On the World W ide Web http://aspin.asu.edu/provider/StatePress/ V; A sk Fo# Today's Sno Flavo rs A .S .U . W E E K E N D W IT H O U T including » watermelon strawberry * pineapple cherry • lemon SU B SA N D W IC H ES— — AH served with provolone cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, onions, choice white or wheat sub roll and pickle. Chips included. 12" Subs. C orner o f L e m o n & R u ral 9 6 7 -1 1 1 4 12" 4.95 4.96 4 .8 5 4 .8 5 4.95 6" .......3.95' SPARKY-Roast beef , turkey and h a m ................3 .% ' L a b a f e .. BRAWNY BEEF-Roasi beef PORKY Ham. spiced ham, 8afe»ra.,„i................3.501 .....„3.50 PIGLET-Haroor salam i ...... ................... ....... .......33.50 50 ; PR jG R M SPECIAL-Turkey................. .......3-95 SOI. COTTO-Saiami, Pepperoni, flatan dressing, black oSues '* __ ~~—i —3.65 CHICKEN U ftlE -C h le k e n salad ............3.95| ....... 3.95 CHARLIE TUNAr-Tunasaiad .- ... . . . W & ...... M 3.70 H U VEGETARIAN-Provolone, Muenster & Swiss cheeses, : sseheeses, ‘ cucumber, befl pepper, sprouts, mushrooms, is, lettuce lettuce,._ ___33.70 onion, baton .drcektfl B taratatees ■................— .7 0 I BEEF ’N SP1CY/CHEDDAR CHEESE SAUCE" Roast beef and spicy cheese (no veggies)......... 3.65 BABY-Q-Roast beef, tasty barbecue sauce. provolooe cheese (no veggies) .„w ...,...c.._....,.3.65 PASTRAMT+iighJy spiced & smoked beef, mustard, provolone cheese, pickles (no veggies)....... ...... 3.65 4.65 4 .9 5 4.7Ó -TODAY’S SN O - StaolSraJ W'MShnriMM 1M V IO L E N C E The Office of Student Life is sponsoring Parti in thefour pari series of "A.S.V. Weekend Without Violence" programs to promote a more safe and caring community. Friday, October 27th, on Cady M allfro n t 9:00 a.m. • 2:00 p.m. 4 ,7 0 Part I: A.S.U. United Against Violence The Women's Student Center, along with A.S. V. student organizations, and community groups have joined efforts to unite against violence. Please unite with us!! ■mi 3' GOODFOOD & COOL COMPANY l*Bi OS«el 1 * you take out the women (athletes), we are not doing that well.” Kim Wilkinson, vice president of student affairs, pre­ sented information about ASU’s admission requirements for athletes. She said they are just as stringent as the requirements for non-athletes. The board decided to gather more information about the issue and discuss it at future meetings. GMNT SlIBS-You choose ton ingredients.......24.00 )"" -SN A C K S Hctt Dog O lili PotohDog........... -------- M Ê ......... . w. . 225 Pretti.................. . i... 2 C h» Cheese D o g ...........f ' 'I ..110 • A Graffiti Board -"share your story” PARTY ORDER SNO <5 sal. bucket) 19.00 Cnocolal Banana C oconut Pina Colada Vanilla AN Y 12" SU B Coupon good through 11/1 7 /9 5 . Not good with any other offer. CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL 967-1114 • Displaying o f the N-O.W. Silent Witness Project • Domestic Violence Month Ribbons fitt *!■* W $1.00 OFF • Information Booths Butter Pecan M ango • Personal Pledges Against Violence-"sign your pledge” Introductory Sp ecial! T ropical Fruit B ars Coupon good through 11/3/95 Not good with any other offer, CORNER O F LEMON & RURAL we willjoin Tamara's Hope and the E. Valley Victim's Assistance Assc. for a Candlelight March and Vigil. Programs begin at 5:30 p.m. at Daley Park (College St.-1/4 mi. south 967-1114 ofApache). The march-will organize at 6:30 p.m. and proceedfrom Daley Park on FREE LARGE SODA & CHIPS with purchase of any 6" sub I L. $ 5 .0 0 OFF W itch's Brew! Party B u ck et o f S n o College St. to A.S.U. Hayden Lawn (approx, a 15-20 minute walk). Speakers will follow at A.S. U. D eep P u rp le B lue/R ed R aspberry Flavor Coupon good throu^i 1 1 /1 7 /9 5 Not good with any other offer. CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL 967-1114 967-1114 Coupon good through 1 0 /3 1/ 95. N ot good w ith an y other offer. (F o r m ore inform ation, p lea se c a ll the W om en's Student C en ter at 965-9511 ) . A round iir iz o n a Bankruptcy judge denies limits on gov’s hearing PHOENIX (A P) —• A federal bankruptcy court judge denied requests Thursday to limit creditor’s questions at Gov. Fife Symington’s bankruptcy hearing next week, allowing die case to instead “go for­ ward unfettered.” -. Attorneys for the governor had asked Judge George B. Nielsen to limit creditors to 15 minutes of ques­ tioning during a public hearing Tuesday. U S. Bankruptcy Trustee Louis Movitz will preside over the meeting, during which Symington is expected to answer questions under oath about his financial demise. Nielsen said he trusted creditors to ask reasonable, legitimate questions that are not meant to be harassing, embarrassing or abusive, “If I grant this motion, I would be undercutting the role o f the U.S. trustee,” Nielsen said, later adding, “I don’t believe I have a live controversy in front of me that requires resolution.” On Sept. 20, Symington filed for bankruptcy, claim ing $61,795 in assets and nearly $25 million in debts stemming from his failed real-estate development ventures. His creditors include several Arizona banks and a consortium of six union pension funds. They are expect­ ed to question the governor about apparent discrepancies in the financial statements he riled to obtain loans. ‘Alien defense rejected; jury convicts m urderer TUCSON (AP) — Jurors quickly rejected Robert Joe Moody’s claim that space aliens made him murder two wom en and convicted him Thursday o f two counts o f firstdegree murder. The Pima County Superior Court ju ry d elib erated on ly two hours before finding Moody guilty of the November 1993 murders of Michelle Malone, 33. a friend, and Patricia Magda, 56, a neighbor. Deputy County Attorney David White said he’ll ask for the death penalty at a Jan. 19 sentencing hearing. Moody adm itted killing the women, but said he was under the con­ trol of space aliens and was powerless to resist their commands. They began abducting him daily in late 1993 and forced him to ingest massive amounts of crack cocaine “to break my will,” Moody testified. The killings, he stud, were “involuntary acts.” Moody told ju ro rs the aliens planned for him to be convicted and executed so they could resurrect him. Arizona lottery director hired for N.M . games SANTA FE (AP) — The board of the New Mexico Lottery Authority voted Thursday to hire Arizona lot­ tery chief Ralph Decker to head the new state lottery. A search committee selected Decker . from a field o f five finalists. The authority approved him unanimously. Doug Cole, a spokesman for Gov. Fife Symington, said Thursday was Decker's last day with the Arizona lottery. He said Sam Wakasugi, the current assistant director for market­ ing, would serve as acting director “while we search for M rfbecker's replacement.” Associated Press House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Georgia, left, and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas sit behind a national debt clock during a meeting of the Republican Joint Budget Steering Committee. The House passed a milestone budget-balancing bill Thursday and the Senate Is now preparing to address the plan. GOP budget plan passes House Bill would balance budget by 2002; Democrats pledge future opposition WASHINGTON (AP) — In a momentous break with the past, the House passed a Republican balanced-budget bill Thursday that would shrink the federal government, cut taxes and return power to the states. Democrats battled to the end against the measure. The vote was 227-203,, with 223 Republicans and four Democrats approving the bill. Opposed were 192 Democrats, 10 Republicans and one independent. “The people should understand that in seven years, we will in fact balance the fed­ eral budget and save this country and Save the next generation,” said House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich of Ohio. “We’ve done our job.” A cheer went up from the Republican side of the cham ber as the vote count climbed past 217, the number needed to assure passage in the 433-member House. GOP lawmakers pumped their arms in the air in triumph. Across die Capitol, the GOP-controlled Senate was expected to approve a similar bill Friday, a m ajor m ilestone in the Republican revolution launched last winter. “W e’ll be all rig h t,” predicted Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan. As the day gave way to evening, Senate Republicans systematically turned aside Democratic efforts to restore two-thirds of $270 billion in savings proposed from Medicare, as well as additional funds for Medicaid and a program of tax breaks for the working poor. President Clinton has threatened a veto, and congressional Democrats are certain to sustain it. “Their agenda is to get rid of Medicare,” House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, DMo„ said of the Republicans. “Their agen­ da is to give huge tax breaks to the wealthi­ est Americans.” A veto would set the stage for a widely anticipated effort at compromise in late fall between the White House and conservative Republican majorities in the House and Senate. The GOP plan, designed to balance the budget in 2002, relies on hundreds of bil­ lions of dollars of savings ’from Medicare, T urn to B udget , page 13. Yeltsin hospitalized for heart trouble MOSCOW (AP) — President Boris Yeltsin was rushed to a hospital by helicopter Thursday with his second appar­ ent heart attack in four months, reviving doubts about whether he is healthy enough to govern Russia. The 64-year-old Y e l t s in Yeltsin has dominated post-Soviet Russia, and his health is a matter o f constant speculation, particularly with parliam entary elections scheduled- for December and presidential elections in June. The illness came two days after a summit in the United States where Yeltsin succeeded in boosting his and Russia’s role in efforts to settle die war in the former Yugoslavia. Aides said Thursday night that Yeltsin did not appear to require surgery. ' “I’d say his state is less serious than in July,” spokesm an Ig o r Ignatiev told reporters at the Kremlin. “The president is in charge.” Yeltsin was hospitalized for almost a month, then took a long holiday after an attack in July of acute ischemia, a condition that restricts blood flow to the heart. Presidential aides initially tried to play down that attack, claiming it was only a minor ailment. Yeltsin later called it a heart attack. Top presidential aide Viktor Ilyushin said Thursday that Yeltsin was suffering from the same ailment, and he blamed it on overwork. “The president’s condition does not evoke great optimism,” he told a news con­ ference. “It’s unlikely he’ll be back at work in the next few days.” He said Yeltsin has canceled a trip to China early next month, and is making other changes in his immediate schedule, A decision was to be made today on whether T urn to Y eltsin, page 1 2 . Officials search crash site for clues in fatal accident FOX RIVER GROVE, HI. (AP) — The driver of a school bus struck by a fast-moving commuter train may have had had almost no time to react before the collision that kilted seven students, a source close to the investigation said Thursday. Investigators are trying to deter­ mine why the bus carrying 35 stu­ dents was still waiting at a traffic light with its rear end in the path of the train on Wednesday. They began testing the light overnight and were seeking police phone logs to check for complaints about the signal. “The timing doesn’t appear to be proper,” National Transportation Safety Board member John Gt^lia sad. The NTSB said approaching trains trip sensors embedded in the tracks that prompt warning gates to lower, lights to flash and bells to ring. At the same moment, the traf­ fic signal begins to change, eventu­ ally turning green to allow vehicles to clear out of the way. Tests done since the crash showed 23 to 25 seconds elapsed between the time the train trips the sensor and arrives at the crossing, tile NTSB said. But the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the time span may have been much shorter on Wednesday when the accident occurred. “She may have T urn t o C rash , page 12. A u o c ia t M l P ra M A woman reacts after reading a sign placed at the scene of W ednesday’s scho o l bus accid ent in Fox River, III. The wreck killed seven students and Injured about 3Q others. On Thursday, investigators tried to determine whether a malfunctioning light held the school bus on the railroad tracks a s a commuter train slammed info it. Opinion Page 4 ' - S tate P ress Friday, October 27, 1995 v ,/ V\ ': -f , : ‘ STATE PRESS 1 # Boos & JDravos BRAVO — To the Mathematics, Engineering and Science Achievement program — a program within die College of Engineering meant to spur the interest of young minority students in these fields. Qualified minority scientists and engineers are sorely needed in this country . We hope that this pro­ gram will inspire a few more kids to make these fields their career choice. '#1-BRAVO — The Chris Weber recall count stands at 1,450. • • "Vv It took a dramatic event to do it, but students ape finally standing up and saying “No mote!” BOO— To Quebec's idea o f pseudo-independence. Let’s see i f we’ve got this straight -Quebec wants to be recognized as ‘indefMsndtn*,” but they want to continue to use the Canadian dollar and .. Canadian passports (which would logically make them Canadian citizens). Either Quebeckers should to completely and totally leave the Canadian confederation, or they should stay where they are. Trying tp have it both ways smacks of absurdity. y j s ™_ : ' § Considering that Quebec can’t even hang on to a • " NHL team (toe Nordiques recently left tor Denver), it would probably be unwise for that province to assume , it has what it takes to be a sovereign country. ' *- BRAVO — To the outpouring of community support for Peggy Thomas, a former ASU employee who lost her assistance dog, Moose, to a deliberate act of ani­ mal cruelty earlier this week. After Moose died, residents of the Valley flooded Thomas, a quadriplegic, with condolences and dona­ tions. The agency which gave Moose to Thomas nine years ago vowed to get her another dog when the grieving_process had ended. Ami we don’t think we can BOO the neighbor that poisoned Moose enough. Setting out antifreeze-laced cat food- was an act o f sheer cruelty—- both to the pets she was intending to kill, and to the owners to whom the animals meant so much. And, while we’re at it, we all probably deserve a BOO for giving this as much attention as it go t Don’t get us wrong — this act was as despicable as they come, and this dog was as valiant as pets come. B ut in toe end; the death of a dog is tearing us up more tout the deaths of any number of human beings that also died this week — human beings that toed in acts just as deliberate as the poisoning o f cat food wtto antifreeze for neighborhood pets. The death of an animal should never be considered more tragic toan the death o f a person. BOO — To Arizona’s attempt to snatch the 1999 Super Bond from San Francisco. We’ve said it before, and we’U say h again — Sun Devil Stadium is not a proper Super Bowl facili­ ty, and never will be. Yet rather to n putting up toe cash to build such a facility. Valley politicos just keep trying to ow n more Super Bowls into a com­ munity and a facility that cannot handle them — and Jg ' continue to completely ignore the needs and rights of ASU students, faculty and staff. ltofM J«T M B ^8uperB <’wl*! s ™ E irrri ' I ' A t g 1-4 Message clear — no teens on Mill Avenue Remember how tough it was being a teenager? It was bad S teve enough knowing that your par­ FO RSBERG ents didn’t want you mound. Just im agine how much worse it Columnist Would have been if you had nowhere to go to get out of their hair, If the Tempe City Council gets its way* local teenagers will find out ju st how m uch o f a bummer that situation can be. The message is loud and d ear — “We don’t want teens on Mill Avenue.” At this point many of you are probably wondering why I am wasting your time with an issue that affects mere high schoolers when we college students, of course, are of a higher order. As that popular cliché of the Nazi era relates, “When they came for the Jews I said nothing, because I was not a Jew When they came for me, there was no one left to speak out." Mill Avenue isn’t just starting to look bad for teenagers, it's starting to look bad for us older students as well. The immediate issue is the continuance of teen nights at* Club 411. The Tempe City Council is apparently moving toward having them eliminated. Any one of the ostensibly humanitarian reasons given to any student who has both­ ered to stay awake through their Business College core classes will be able to boil it all down for you: Not enough profit margin. Teens don’t spend a great deal of money, they ju st kind of hang around. And even worse, they might scare off people who do spend a great deal of money, namely Yuppies. “Bars don’t need to be making money on kids,” says Councilman Joe Sprecale, betraying a hint of moralistic righteousness. If liquor were really such a menace, Tempe could set a good example by effectively banning it altogeth­ er. That, of course, would wreck Mill and end the stream of tax revenue it generates. “When you’re dealing with (younger teens) during the week, their place is with school activities,” opines Councilman Ben Arredondo. In other words: “There are no school activities on Mill, so get lost.” Teenagers need somewhere to hang out — why not Mill Avenue? Because, as I said earlier, the profit margin is not high enough. Given an econom ic survey that showed teens spending $30 to $40 dollars a night, the council members would probably enforce mandatory teen nights. Unfortunately, the youth hanging out are reiative- ly poor. Crowds of kids need some policing, naturally. The city chafes at patrolling people who can’t pay for their own protection (shades of British imperialism) and wants the kids elsewhere. “Let some high school pay for their security” would be a typical Mill merchant’s stance. The days when providing places for youth to be entertained was an important civic duty seem to be long gone. The new attitude is to try and shunt them off onto someone else. Maybe I’m way off base here or maybe I’m just being paranoid, but I’m beginning to feel kind of like a teenager on Mill Avenue. Mill used to be a college hangout. The usual University-associated crowds of Greeks, geeks and freaks intermingled for the purpose 6f pursuing human relationships and drowning their collective sorrows in ; soma (booze for you non-Huxley fans). Low covers, loud music and flowing taps were the primary attractions, with a collection of offbeat places like small bookstores, coffee houses (I can remember when they were offbeat, not over­ done) and delightfully cluttered little shops where one could find all sorts of nifty and affordable junk with which to decorate a dorm room. Nowadays the place is beginning to look like a neon yup­ pie mall. Gone is the hole in the wall Chinese place where you could get a $2.99 lunch special. In its place is a “bistro" where you can overpay for pasta. Edsel’s Attic is history — ‘ in its place there will be a “sports bar” where one will no doubt be able to munch on overpriced buffalo wings and rub shoulders with ail manner of invading suburbanites. Hooters? In a college bar it is the patrons, not the waitress­ es, that are supposed to provide the revealing clothes. Gone, too, are the run down little shops with so much atmosphere. Instead " ’“ get Urban Outfitters, where one can find beautiful arch. ,.ure and lighting but few products actually worth their price tags. And the Crocodile Cafe, where one is lucky to get out for under $15 bucks a person. There is a place for such businesses. I'll admit, but isn’t it over in Scottsdale somewhere? University students; like high schoolers, don’t spend enough money. As Mill grows even more beautiful, driving up real estate even further, will it be too long until Changing Hands and the Valley Art Theater go the way of the other old businesses? The Tempe City Council will no doubt be jumping for joy at the increased tax revenues. We University students will be asking every high schooler we see, “Hey, know anywhere good to hang out?” Steve Forsberg is a senior studying economics. DAVID STROW, Editor GARIN GROFF, Managing Editor MICHELLE MARIE SHEETZ .... . . . . . Night Editor DAVID PRpFFITT..... ................ KENNES BOLIG............. CHRISTINA BAILEY .. . BRYN CHANCELLOR ......... JIM POULIN ........... DIANNE R BARTSCH . . . . . . ...... ..Asst. Photo Editor DAN MILLER........ ... DAMIAN SHAW-.. . . . . . . . JOSH KRIST.... ;.................. ............ ADR1ANNA GAXCtA.............. .... :A*st. Magazine' Editor REPORTERS: Brian Anderson, Cody Aycock, Tim Baxter, Ruth Ann Hogue, Patty King, David Kovacs, Angela Mull, Timothy Tail, Kelly Wendel, Greg Zemeida. SPORTS REPORTERS: LtsaEskey, Dustin Krugel, Ron Matejko, Dawn Wagner. COPY EDITORS: Andrea Healey, Kim Herman, Liz Montalbano. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Paul Besing, Robert Anderson, Tim Hacker,.Mark Kramer. COLUMNISTS: Enrique Chaurand, Betty Fairish, Steve Forsberg, Tina Holder, A. Marjory Kaminski, Delia Maldonado, Liz Montalbano, Gregg Pekau. CARTOONISTS: Drew Aquilina, Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, Steve Tansley, Hayden Williams. PRODUCTION: Aaron R Brutcher, Jodi Goldblatt, Diana Kessinger, Jeremy Meyer, Prashant Sampat, Skip Schrader, Eloise Young. SALES REPRESEN TA TIV ES: Naomi Cobb, Cari Dewald, Dan EUstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, NsckeUe Kastein, Mike Logan. Jess Rankin. Shane Siren. 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: DAVID STROW Editor GARIN GROFF Managing Editor CHRISTINA BAILEY Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the A$U campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S tate P ress P h o ne N umbers Inform ation...... ...9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N ew sro o m ..... a ........9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 M agazine...... ............. 9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 A dvertising................ 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 Classified^*..........5,965-6735 sëÏÏsL; i STATE P r e s s . Opinion Friday, O ctober 2 7 , 199S . ______ _________ ___________ Greeks held to standards other groups aren’t ciate membership is the first step to reeducating these indi­ - • There are 65 fraternities with 6,000 chapters on more T his colum n is in part a viduals who were lured by the media’s ever-present Animal than i?0§ cam puses In: th e United States and Canada, response to some of the negative e x a n d e r S. House portrayal of Greek letter organizations, to understand include .400,000 undergraduate members and a total livmg coverage p f G reeks and the WYLIE ' membership of 4.5 bullion people. T ’ that there is so much more to being Greek. Greek system, and in part to help ^ The' National Panhellenic Conference-has 26 member Radier than call names and point fingers, I wish to focus G uest C olum nist those who have only seen nega­ groups with more than 2,660 collegiate chapters Throughout On a few of the positive aspects of the Greek system. tive occurrences, which happen to a few individuals, understand why it is that fraternities Already this semester alone has seen the machine of the - the United States and Canada with a combined total mem­ Greek phikmthropic system pump literally thousands upon bership of more than 2.5 million women; ■ * and sororities come under so much scrutiny: Ón one hand, we, as Greeks, should be somewhat flat­ thousands of dollars into the hands of local and national • The Professional Fraternity Association has. over 1.5 mil­ ___’ , tered. We are constantly being held to a standard that charities. Hundreds of men’s and Women’s horns have been lion members and 2,60Q chapters. ' A fraternity or sorority should .exist for two very basic donated, and members of Greek organizations have taken other groups in the ASU community are not. That alone says something about what Greek letter organizations rep­ on volunteer and paid positions in other campus organiza­ reasons: the development of its members arid to service die resent. If, say, an individual ASU student who just hap­ tions and administrations from Undergraduate Academic institution that fosters it. Unfortunately; we are not perfect, and all individuals and all chapters do not always fulfill pens to be a member of Ski Devils gets involved in an Services to Devil’s Advocates and far beyond. their mandate. For all practical purpos­ altercation, Ski Devils do riot have to justify their exis­ . . The failure of our sys­ tence. Obviously, fraternities are different organizations es, without Greek Alumni, ^ tem to display the potential altogether. We hold each other accountable and strive to there would be no home­ advantages with which fra­ com ing. G reek Alumni inculcate in our members a higher standard of conduct. Greeks on this campus, or anypther, ternities and sororities are make up some of the most Other groups simply are not concerned with such spiritu­ endow ed, esp ecially at ality, and thus áre never faulted when they stumble or fail generous contributors to are not ju s ta bunch o f drunken, lazy, ASU, exposes us to the crit­ universities nationw ide, snobbish brawlers and rapist&j to achieve a non-existent benchmark. icism that frustrates us all. Having said that, it does bear mentioning that, contrary and ASU is no exception. .... : Our mission is to promote to the beliefs of some, we have not failed in our mission. The fact of the matter is, "!— unity first within the Greek Greeks on this campus, or any other, are riot just a bunch of Greek organizations and system and then within the ASU community which we are “heir members” have a tremendous impact, one which you drunken, lazy, snobbish brawlers mid rapists. Do a small all so much a part of. We will strive to hold the State Press will almost never read about in the State Press or many number of us fight occasionally? Yes. Do we drink too and the local media responsible for being fair in their other forms of media. In case you didn’t know: much on some weekends? Of this, we can be sure. Do we reporting of Greek events, but we all know what kind of • Seven out of 10 people listed in Who’s Who are Greeks. have a propensity for making a bad name for ourselves? stories grab headlines. • All but a few of the presidents since 1900 have been Greek. Read the State Press. The perceptions of some will remain negative no matter However, substitute in those sentences the idea of a • Three-fourths of Congress is Greek. what we do, but 1 believe that the vast majority of faculty, • Of the Supreme Court Justices since 1910, 85 percent Greek individual with that of any other college-aged staff and students are sympathetic to our interests and we American man or woman and you’ll realize that we all have have been Greek. need only make them plain and to follow through with our • Forty-three of 50 of the nation’s largest corporations are som e.of the same problems. The pool from which we chapters’ and system’s design. lead by Greeks. recruit our members is the same 18-year-old group of high • Two-thirds of presidential Cabinet members since 1900 school graduate freshmen whose antics are those of movie Alexanders. Wylie is a senior justice studies major. and media legend. More often than not, pledgeship or asso­ have been Greek At; t f O T I T t r n m Women still ‘blatantly illogical’ GROWL 'A .U S . f o r c e i n B o s m a w lÜ b e ite b i$ « é s ¡2 BARK SSSw Ä * > SIT S-TA-Y P a rty y $ V HUH? s/ g. ■■**?■+** w / /• vAkJ •* , -a . //rJ % BIGGEST, MEANEST D06 ONTHE BLOCK GETS MISORDERS ASU students major in apathy As a concerned fraternity member who passed out blood drive flyers yesterday afternoon, I felt compelled to write this letter. I was amazed at all of the selfish and apathetic responses I got when I asked people to donate: “I have all the blood I need,” “I can ’t spare any” and other responses which shouldn’t be repeated. Since I have donated blood over a dozen times, I feel I can offer a unique perspective. The whole donating process takes about half an hour, donating isn’t all that painful and the cookies and juice are pretty good too. I would like to thank everyone who has donated blood and passed out fly­ ers. For those of you who haven’t, please donate — you have until this afternoon to help your community save the lives of others. Let’s end the perception that ASU students major in apathy and start a tradition of giving. Jonathan G. Sweeney Senior Political Sdence. This letter is in response to Dawn Wagner’s article titled “NFL class shows women perpetuate own stereotypes” in the Oct. 26 issUe of the State Press. It’s just like a woman to overreact like that. Of course, it’s not your fault; There is plenty of evidence that a per­ son’s potential for logical behavior can be ranked into three discreet levels according to certain obvious physical attributes. " • Level one — extremely logical: Pointy ears, flat chest, e.g., Spock — “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of a few, or the one.” • Level two: Round ears, flat chest, e.g.. Men — “I just spent all day with you, I want to go out with my friends tonight!” • Level three — blatantly illogical: Round ears, bumpy chest, e.g , Women — “Honey, when we get married Saturday, I think you should stop sleeping with your old girlfriend.” Or maybe your loathing of NFL 101 stemmed not from being logic-challenged, maybe it was just PMS. And you probably didn’t think all this was funny, either. See, you women have no sense o f humor. But seriously, that was a really cute picture in the paper, are you busy Friday night? A bunch of us are going to get together, maybe play some poker. W ould you like to come? Oh, and could you bring some sandwiches? A ll part of the human race Recently, I have noticed numerous columns and editorial letters that seem rather racially divisive. If the United States is to survive as a nation, we need to look beyond the color of one’s skin, and realize that we are all members of one race the human race. We need to come together and work together to solve the problems that our nation faces and will continue to face unless we take steps to solve them. Let’s not become another Bosnia. Instead of focus­ ing on our differences, let’s focus on what we have in common and build upon that. I may be an idealist, but I still think that we can all learn to get along with, and appreciate each other. We may look different on the outside but on the inside, we are all the same and that’s all that really matters. JeffKlebunan Graduate student Colin Roberts Senior Engineering uotabCes... Asking a working writer what he thinks about critics is like asking a lamp-post how it feels about dogs. — Christopher Hampton. St a t e P ress Friday, O ctober 2 7 ,1 9 9 5 P a g e6 P olice R eport A SV police reported the follow ing inci­ were escorting him out of the bar. He later pushed over a bar employee’s motorcycle dents Thursday: • ASU police recovered a 1995 Nissan in retaliation for being kicked out. Truck that Glendale Police reported as • A 29-year-old woman was arrested for stolen. The vehicle was found at 800 S. theft after she bought $39 worth of items Mill Ave. and was in driveable condition. for $8.52 in food stamps at Fry’s, 2700 W. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest­ Baseline Road. She said she knew that the ed on an outstanding warrant form the items cost more than $8.52, but Claimed Maricopa County Sheriff s Office for con­ that some of them were not bought with tempt of court. He was able to post bond food stamps. and was released. • An 18-year-old man was arrested for pos­ • The fire alarm was activated at 606 Alpha session of a vapor-releasing substance after Drive, set off by residents throwing a foot­ inhaling paint from a spray can with his ball. The responding officer found the area friend at 2600 W. Vineyard Road. secure and reset the alarm. • A 25-year-old man was arrested for • A male student was arrested for posses­ in tim id a tin g b e h a v io r, m isco n d u ct sion of marijuana, possession of drug para­ in v o lv in g w eapons and assau lt after phernalia, reckless driving and misrepresen­ threatening to kill his girlfriend while tation to buy alcohol at 1201 S. Forest Ave. holding a vehicle "Club" in the parking • Two non-affiliated male juveniles were arrested for felony flight, possession of lot at 825 S. River Drive. He then pulled on her shirt and hair. Police later found a stolen property, reckless driving and crimi­ nal damage at 750 E. 14th St. after stealing concealed gun in his car. • A 18-year-old man was arrested for bur­ a car and crashing it into a brick wall. glary after breaking into Pep Boys, 1747 E. • Two bicycles were reported stolen, Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ Apache Blvd. Police saw the man enter the store by breaking a garage pull-down glass dents Thursday: • A 20-year-old man was arrested for door. When the man saw police, he fled and assault and criminal damage after fighting was later caught. He tampered with two with security guards at the Electric- vehicles in the store. Ballroom . 1216 E. Apache Blvd. He C om piled Ay State Press reporter Greg scratched and punched two guards as they Zemeida MONEY SAVING R E A S O N S T O P A T H F IN D E R U S E M tu d eiss evlan W FO O D RETAIL SERVICES W ednesday, Scottsdale Center for the A rts A .S .U . Thursday, Nov 2 • 8 :0 0 Gom m age Auditorium P H O E N IX Friday, Nov 3 • 8 :0 0 UA Christow n M all Sunday, Nov 26 • 5 :0 0 & 8 :0 0 Sym phony H all Tickets available at Dilard's Ticket Outlets, SidPro, Ski Chalet andtheTheater Box unices. . SWCHHiOWt S K ip g O SKI CHAMET FUN • SUB FACTORY • SCHLOTZSKYS • POPPERONIS • SUNNY’S PIZZA* LONG WONGS • COSMIC PIZZA • HOGO YOGI • GUMBVS PIZZA • PERKINS • SAFEWAY » BAHAMA BUCKS • ROCKY MOUNTAIN CHOCOLATE FACTORY • COUSINS • JAKE'S PIZZA • CARDINAL'S PIZZA • WENDY'S • MILL AVE. CREAMERY • SHOE MILL* CAMPUS CORNER • TEMPE BIKE • BICYCLE WHEELERS • SAFEWAY • BOARDS-N-BLADES • DIANA'S BEACH HOUSE • 30 MINUTE TAN • BARGAIN BRAKES >TUCKER BRAMSEN TIRE • AMERICAN 5 STAR TRANSMISION >USA LUBE* PARADISE BEACH • KINKO'S • CHRISTOPHER STEVENS • CABANA TAN >N.MAXIM SALON «TEMPE FLORIST • KOLBYS BILLARDS « CLUB 411* VIDEO ROUNDUP PICK UP YO URS 7VDAY/ P ag;e 7 Friday, Octobere 27,1995 State P ress A SU group plans to ‘make a difference’ in com m un ity a landscaping cleanup project all Saturday morning,” Murphy said. “We’ll be planting About 150 ASU students will join thou­ trees, cleaning up and doing a beautifica­ sands of volunteers from across the Valley tion of the neighborhood.” in an attempt to “make a difference” in Architecture sophomore Brian Williams South Phoenix on Saturday. will be a team leader at the elementary Make A Difference Day is a national school project. He said he wanted to help program to encourage cities and towns to Make A Difference Day make a difference get out and do something good in their in South Phoenix. communities, said Erin Murphy, program “I saw it as an opportunity for communi­ coordinator for ASU and the Community: ty service, and to.get better involved in my Together in V olunteering E xcellence residence hall community,” he said. “I’ll be working with those people — kids from the (ACTIVE). The event, which is sponsored by the school and people from the neighborhood.” Points of Light Foundation and USA Today, Williams said although critics might say will include neighborhood cleanups, paint­ a one-day program might not make a last­ ing over graffiti, food donations and litera­ ing difference, he feels it is an opportunity cy campaigns. to start a building process. About 50 students will staff the Red “This program is designed to build a Ribbon March, a march against gangs, vio­ relationship with the community," he said. lence arid drugs, Murphy said. It will con­ “I’d like to think it’s not a one-day thing. clude with a rally at America West Arena I’d like to be there for the long haul." featuring singers and motivational speakers. Williams said he also thinks the pro­ T he rem aining students will be on gram is valuable because it will help . Cleanup duty in South Phoenix. people help themselves.. “In the Rio Vista community we will be “I’d like to think this is a starting point working w ith the C aesar Chavez,, and the. people can move on and enrich Elementary School and their parents doing themselves," he said. ,By T im B axter S tate P ress « -¡Il 1 2 THE EINSTEINS n t h e p a Weather worries? S e e t h e fo r e c a s t o n t h e b o t t o m o f P a g e 1. t i L u n c h a t M o n t i ’s LUNCH MENU S E R V E D 1 1 A .M . T 0 4 P .M . N o Coupons N ecessa ry —B e st V alue A n yw h ere! 7. Pork C hop with C h eese Toast, Lettuce, Tomato, 1. Ground Sirloin Steak Sandwich from Ground B eef, on C h eese Toast with S lice o f C h eese, Choice o f French F rie s or Spa gh etti............ ........... ....... $3.10 w ith ba co n .... ...................... $3.50 Choice o f Baked Potato, French F rie s o r Spaghetti, A p p le sa u c e .... ................... ............. .....,....$3.00 8, Diet Center Salad P late Shrim p, S liced E g g on 2. Cubed Sirloin Steak Sandw ich on C h eese Toast B ed o f Lettuce, Choice o f Diet Salad D ressing, C rackers (approx. 23 gram s o f p ro tein )........... $4.65 with S lice o f C h eese, Choice e f French F rie s or Spa gh etti.............................,...............................$3.45 Withbacon f ill 1 1 ..........- ■ M IC R O B R E W S Come sample Tempe s largest selection of handcrafted micro brews and specialty beers. We've got 100 taps pouring beer from the Pacific Northwest and countries around the world. PACIFIC NORTHWEST • BELGIUM • FRANCE • ENGLAND IRELAND • CANADA • MEXICO • AUSTRALIA HOLLAND • NEW ZEALAND • GERMANY 9.1/2 Order Baby Back BBQ Pork Ribs S a la d : . 3 . 7-oz. Prim e Rib C hoice o f Baked Potato, French F rie s, o r Spa ghetti............................................... S6.00 B read & Butter, Choice o f French F rie s, Baked Potato or Spa gh etti........ .................. ............ $7.00 4. Breaded and Deep-Fried Catfish Sandwich 10. C asa Burger 1/2 lb. with Lettuce. Onion with Lettuce* Tom ato, C h eese & P ickles, Choice o f French Frie s Or Spa gh etti. $2.90 and P ickles, C h oice o f French F rie s or Onion R in g s.. ............................ .......... ............. $3.50 with c h e e se .... .... .....................................$3.60 ; 5. Filet Mignon Steak Open-Faced ori. C h eese Toast, Lettuce, Tomato, Choice o f Baked Potato, French F rie s o r Spa ghetti..... ....... $4.90 6. Bar B -0 Beef with French F rie s ....... 1 O O $3.85 11. Italian Chicken Season ed F ile t o f Chicken on W hole W heat Bun with Choice o f Vegetables, French F r i e s ............ .... ...................... $3.65 .... S2.90 And Don't Forget Dinner - Served 11A.M. to Closing M o n t i's F a m o u s D in n e r S p e c i a l s S e r v e d a f t e r 3 p .m . M O N D A YS TU ESD A YS W ED N ES D A Y S 7 oz. PORK CHOPS 6-7 oz. FILET MIGNON $6.25 Ä O R$5.25 BEEF KABOBS bell peppers, tomatoes, mushrooms, Onions $5.99 SIRLOIN $5.99 AH E n tre e s S e rv e d w ith O u r S p e c ia l H o t R o m a n B re a d a n d T o sse d S a la d . H o n e y M u sta rd . G a rlic . lOOO Is la n d . R a n c h o r F re n c h D re ssin g . B a k e d P o ta to o r F re n c h F rie s o r S p a g h e tti o r R ic e . 3 W e st F ir st S t r e e t T E M PE 2 V A T T H E F O O T O F T H E B R ID G E ■1 8 7 4 - 430 N. Scottsdale Road Tempe, Arizona 85281 (602) 894 6779 fu st a Short W alk from ASU! PLENTY OF PARKING, TOO. TAMOTTB WOM STBAKS Sunday - Thursday 9 6 7 -7 5 9 4 11 A.M- t o .ll P.M. Frid ay- Saturday — 1 t A ^ t p Midnight State P ress Friday, October 27, 1995 Page 8 Local bar gets perm it, but w ith teen -n igh t stipulations Councilwoman Carol Smith said age limits are necessary to keep 13-year-olds In keeping with recent intense discus- , separate from 18-year-olds. “The problem is not within the build­ sions by Tempe City Council Subcommit­ tees about the safety and w elfare o f ing,” she said. “The problem is what hap­ teenagers, the council extended Rockin’ pens outside in the parking lot and when Rodeo ’s permit to operate as a bar and they leave the property.” Lewis said any rules the council makes nightclub Thursday but added stipulations regarding teen nights must apply to all regarding teen night activities. The country-western establishment at nightclubs as opposed to having different 7850 S. Priest Drive received a two-year rules for different clubs. Another condition of the license is that extension of its permit but must obtain licenses for its teen-night events. The once teens leave the building, they cannot licenses require that Rockin' Rodeo notify return. Smith said the condition is necessary the council of the type of music played because teenagers will drink in parking lots these nights and that Tempe police approve and then go back inside the nightclubs. “People have to learn to take responsibil­ the establishment's security plan. In addition, pending a Nov. 16 council ity for their actions,” she said. “No one meeting that could revise the age limit for wants to slop people from enjoying them­ teen nights. Rockin’ Rodéo may be prohibit­ selves, but we don’t want trouble to ensue ed from admitting younger teens. One possi­ from that enjoyment.” Barry Nelson. Rockin' Rodeo general ble outcome of the meeting could prohibit anyone under 16 from participating in teen- manager, said the establishment will have night activities. Under current Maricopa no problems obtaining a license. In addition County curfew, 16-year-olds are required to to providing more than adequate security, be at home by 11 p.m., but many teen-night Rockin' Rodeo will adhere to any teennight age limits, he said. activities ran past midnight. “Whatever they say, we do,” he said. “They Co tine ilrnan Jo sep h Le wi s s ai d an y „ council decision at the Nov. 16 meeting make die decisions, and we follow them.” Rockin’ Rodeo is not the only Tempe must be fair to teenagers and nightclub nightclub requesting a permit extension. establishments. "We’re going to have to look at all of the Club 411,411 S. Mill Avenue, is also, but a tentative recommendation by Tempe offi­ issues." he said. B y A ngela M ull State P ress R obert A n d erson/State P r e s s Barry Nelson, general manager of Rockin’ Rodeo, said the bar will adhere to any teen-night standards the Tempe City Council sets. cials would prohibit teen nights.'The issue is scheduled to be heard Nov. 16 but may be delayed until D ecem ber due to the absence of two council members. • In other business, the City of Tempe Community Services Department received a N ational.G old Medal Award from The Sports Foundation Inc. for excellence in H o r o s c o p e ' s guaranteed OR YOUR MONEY BACK! S ta te P r ess RBI? G RE •TO EFL •LSAT mm S alon 2000 G reat selectio n o f study gu id es to help you score better. 3 5 0 -9 0 0 7 9 a m - 8 pm vC $ ^ sVvH parks and recreation administration. Tempe won the award in the 100,000 to 250,000 population category. Councilman Ben Arredondo said the award signifies the quality of the experi­ ences of those who visit Tempe’s parks. “The award symbolizes the quality of life to people who come here,” he said. A lot more than ju st textbooks! 966-6226 704 S. College Design Texture Cuts Color Weaves Spiral Perms Body Waves iCKMC* ire r University ! m m zxn •Enjoy a style & Cut During "Happy Hour" Com plim entary Beverages [» 3 60 Shows before 6PM » A dvance Tiekot Solos • Storoo Surround Sound JFREE Rofill on Large» Popcorn A Largo Drink • Best of Phoenix Gourmet Snook Bar S h o w tim e s g o o d fo r F rid a y. O c to b e r 2 7 - T h u rs d a y . N o v e m b e r 2 ■UM ill and niversity Beauty Supplier Featuring: ABBA • Paul M itchell • G raham W eb b • Rusk • Senscience a n d m ore! 966-66S5 C O P Y C A T ,. ¡ 1 0 % Discount on A L L Services for Students w/ASU ID! I ____ __ ________________________________________________ __ J POWDER. 3136 S. Mill, T em pe o n c o rn er o f Mill a n d S o u th ern in Sm itty s S h o p p in g C en ter » G E T SH O R TY n ▲ (DaHv) 12:40.3:4C, 7:00.10:0b (12:50 am Fri. Sat) IH & U W IW L (Daily) 11:20,1:50.4:30,7:35,10.10 _______________(1245: am-FA, Sañ T O (DaiM 12:10.2:50. 5:20. & 00.10:30 (12:55 am F t, Set) I f f iU M H T IIL ■ ." : ' - ' '■1. áíLhUNdUdOMi Rural and University 829-8899 2 4 5 ,7 :4 0 ASSA SSIN S 30,1 0 2 5 JA D E m 1 M ALLRATS,»,* - (Daily) 1230, 2:45,5:05,7:30,950 I 1 VOOD O O « A Harbins Exclusive! (Daily) 2:50.8:00 | 1 NOW AND THEN («et (Daily) 1245,3:00,5:15,7:46.10.05 | & (Driy) , Ü W IÜ L 1 f c S ÏS P l S a iÎA L D . ,« * « ! 1:00.4:00.7:00. KWO I I UNSTRUNG H ER O ES x a (Daily) 12:55.5:25.10:10 I N EV ER T A LK T O ST R A N G E R S « a (Daily) 1 2:2 0,2 :30 ,5 :00 ,7:1 5,9:4 5 J ■ ¿DANGEROUS MINDS n (Daily) 11:40,2:10.5:30.7:55,1005 (1230 am Fri, Sap (Daily) 11:30,2:00:4:40,7:15,0:45 (12:30 am Fri, Sat) usp^ r- - mm *- - ~ mm ^ M • • • 1 O N h iity __S F O i r r s . s p ir it s amp . p r i l l .___ 1250 E. Apache Blvd., Tem pe & 3544 W. Glendale Ave., Phoenix r 0M 4m .u .. Headquarters! COPYCAT. (See bar guide for daily specials!) FREE STEAK DINNER -------------Join us any Tuesday 7-9pm for a FREE 12 oz. Top Sirloin with all the fixings! ._ OPERATION*DUMBO DROP ro t C A S P ER WATERWORLD rô ti) UNDER S M Q E 2 «» D ESPERA D O et VIRTUOSITY ff» A W A LK IN T H E CLO U D S (PS) W HILE YO U W E R E S LEEPIN G ipg.s) A P O L L 0 13 (pc) BATMAN FO R EV ER irei». POCAHONTAS to (N ext to E lectric B allroom ) Green Bay Packers \ Pittsburgh Steeiers • > a F ie s t a 4 (Daily) 1:0 0,4:008:15 (1210 amFfl, Sap (Fri-Sun) 1200,2:30, 5:00, 7:30,10:00 I (Daily) 1:10; 4:50.8:10(Mdntf4 F t, $4) T ’T t B w ff O 'm a a n , STRAN GE DAYS * (Mon-Thur) 2 :3 0 ,5:00.7:30.10:00 I (Fri-Sun) 12:40, 3:00,5:20,7:50,10:15 I D EA D PR ESID EN TS «. I JA D E ff» ’> (Mon-Thu) 3:00,& 2 0 .7:50.10:18 I (0*^1150,2:30.5:10,7:46,10:26 (1:15 am Fil.Sat) NEVER TALK TO STRANGERS f fi> A (Fri.Sun) 12:15,220,4:40,7:40,10:10 HOW TO M AKE AN AM ERICAN Q U ILT m * (Sa9 1215,220,440.10:10 (Mon-Thur) 2:20,440,740,10:10 (DaHy)V.2Q 4:10. B:20. (1040 cm F/i Sat) (Fri-Sun) 12:30; 6:10,9:50 (Mon-Thur) 5:10,9:50 VO ODOO ff» TO DIE FO R «h (Deny) 1200.220,500.740.1045 (Pally) 2:40. 7:20 A SSA SSIN S fft (12:40 am f*, Sap« |— 1 5MÍAUQ HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS (pq>a Sat 10/23 7:40pm S E V E N .. P _______ _ _ , (W acfl1:20,4:20,7:25,10:20 (1:10 am Fr( SaljI PT A I C B west of Resta Matt 8 3 4 -4 6 0 0 (Fri-Sun) 11:20,1:50.4:30.7:40,10:10 f T r i- C it y 5 * 1 “ n/ J M oyMm (Mon-Thur) 1:50,4:30,7:40,10:10 for Pmprice ofone' insidetheTrvOty Mall 464-0800 1520SIxngmore Now Open On Campus... y T (R o c T H E S C A R L E T LETTER«« I l f* t 2:20, 7:00 12:10.4:50 0 3 0 2:30. 7:30 12:20. 5:20.10:15 1 23 0.5:00,9:20 2:40. 7:10 3:16,7:40 1 :0 5 .5 :3 0 .0 5 5 7:20 10:05 (Daily) 12:55,3:05, 5:10 »Scottsdale videt*me & Camet>acic 4 2 3 -1 4 0 0 (Fri-Sun) 12:00,4:00,7:10, IffcOQ (12.30 am Fri, Sal) (Mon-Thur) 1230,4:00,7:10,1030 f l g p B I f l l L (FW, Safi 1135,220,5:10,750,1040 __ _ / 7 / 0 , T H R E B /ty tS H E S ro ) (Sen) 11:35.2:20, 5:10,730,10:10 y v (Mon-Ttw) 1200,2:30,5:10,7:45 lOtlOTTRmenilt. N EV ER T A L K TO S T R A N G E R S a (Fri. Sat) 11:46.200,4.30,7:20. »40. MtirigN (Sun-Thur) 11:45,2:00,4:30.720,»^6 JA D E ff» (Fri. Sat) 11:50, 2:30.5:20,8:00,10:20,12:35 (Suro ÌiSQ .2 3 0 .530.750 10:15 (Mon-tour) 12:10.240,5:15,75010:15 HOW T O M AKE AN AM ERICAN Q U ILT «*.», . (Fri. Sat) 11:15.1:45.455.74Ó,'1030 (S ir) 11.15,145,4 5 k 740,10:05 _______ (MoryThut) 1150.2:1$, 4 *6 .7:40,10:05 TO DIE FO R m (Fri, Sat) 1125,2:10,4:45,7:30,10:10,1220 (Sun) 1135,2:10,445.7:30,4:50 (Móft-Thuif 11« 210.4:45,730, »50 (Fri, Sat) 1220,3:45,7:00; 050,1225 ami ' (Sutt-Thur) 1220,246,7.00,0:46 POWDER. (Fri-Sun) 11:40; 2:10,4:45,720. 9:45 (Mon-Thur) 2:10,4:45,7:20, 9:45 (Fri-Sun) 11:30,2:20.5:00,7:50.10:20 (Mon-Thur) 2 2 0 ,5:00,7:50.10:06 NOW AND THEN D EA D P R ES ID E N T S a» (Dally) 1:40; 4:20,7:10.9:55 (Fri-Sun) 1150,215,5:05,7:30, 10:00 DANGEROUS MINDS at C a m e l v TVMvrhrn P r i W n F a K -a 1 W y V lIm A i e w *ifommMffffLara*AtMorim-t*Mat \ /W .Mon-Thur)2:15.4:45,7:15.9:45 (Skt Surÿ1150,2:15,4:45,7:15,9 : 4 5 l B (Fri) 230, 5:00,9:Q0.10:30 ($at-Sun) 1215,230,5:00; 800,10:30 « (Mcn-ThuriUm. 4:40,730,950 (Fri) 2:46, 5; 10,7:45.10:16 J U M Í (Sal-Sun) 1200,2:45,6:10,7:45.10:15 (Mgn-ThuÄ 2:45. 5:10,7:45.10:05 NOW AND THEN yo-i» (Fri) 1:45,4:15, 7:30.9:50 (Sat-Sun) 11:15,1:45,4:15,7:30.9:50 (Mon-Wad}VAS. 4:15.720.230 (ThUri 1:45,4:18; 950 (DàUy)T :00,4:00,7:00,10:00 SCARLET LETTER (») G ET SHORTY o»A rCoam fScoelback ttsdaleFa 9 6 9 -5 2 0 0 (Daily) 3:00,7:30 (Fri, Mon-Thur) 4 55 (S à j Sun) 125S. 45S M A LLR A TSm a ASSASSINS«» STRANGE PAYS,^ (Fri, Mon-Thur) 4:00,7:00 (SatSunJ 1:00,4:00, 7:00 UNSTRUNG HEROES#** (Fri. Mon-Thur) 3:15. 5:15,7:15 , ^ 3 W T ; 1 R 3 : 1 S ; 5:15,7:11 S h o w t im e s s u b j e c t t o c h a n g e . P le a s e c a ll t h e a t r e t o v e r if y , a d e n o t e s s p e c ia l e n g a g e m e n t P ag eJ) Friday, October 27, 1995 S t a t e P ress Staff, students unite to end violence B y P atty K in g S tate P ress Elton John sang that Saturday night:s all right for fighting during the 1970s, but the ASU’s W om en's Student Center hopes to foster a different attitude around campus this weekend. The center, along with the Office of Student Life, is sponsoring a “Weekend Without Violence.” They are asking students to refrain from activities that victimize others or put themselves in situations where they can be victimized. Center staff and members of Concerned Students for a Safer Campus will be out on Cady Mall today from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. to encourage students to make smart choices in their weekend activities and to invite students to sign a pledge to help stop sexual abuse. “You (won't) sexually exploit anyone who’s intoxicat­ ed." said Kris Ewing, associate director of the WSC. “You're not going to batter or sexually assault anyone. You’re not going to be an accomplice to an assault." To promote the event’s second theme of “ASU United Against Violence," 17 campus organizations will set up tables on the mall to show their support for the non-violent MEASURE YOUR TOE THE COOL & JEWEL Toe Rings _ Ankle B ra ce le t ^ \ Nose Rings (Fake Nose Rings) Hoops, Cuffs, Studs and Lots of Single Earrings weekend. Ewing said the groups are diverse in terms o ethnic group, gender, religion and career goals to show that violence crosses all boundaries and affects all of society. “Perpetrators don't ask for a resume on their victims,’ she said. “They don’t ask if you’re a woman, or if you’re ii a career, or if you’re Christian or if you're Jewish. Safety i an issue that is personal to all groups.” Today’s events will include a graffiti board in front o the Memorial Union where people can record their reac tions to violence. The Arizona chapter of the Nationa Organization for Women also loaned 24 lifesize silhouettes to the Women's Student Center. “On each one of the silhouettes is the story of someone who has died due to domestic violence,” said Lenn: Erickson coordinator for Judicial Affairs and Victim’ Assistance, a program within the Office of Student Life. Erickson said today’s activities will also include the Vigilance or Violence Candlelight Walk and Vigil. The walk begins at 5:30 p.m. at Tempe’s Daley Park, located at College Avenue and Encanto Drive and will reach Hayden Lawn at 7:00 p.m. It will feature four speakers who are sur­ vivors of domestic violence and information booths about Valley domestic-violence services. J"* CROSSWORD b y THOMAS JOSEPH DOWN ACROSS 1 32-card 1 Herring’s kin game 2 Surround­ 5 Dagger's partner ing glow 10 Bruce Lee 3 On 4 Skeptic role 5 Wall 11 Baby's Street place worry 12 Baseball’s Yesterday’s Answer Matty 6 Mistake 7 Keats 13 Jacket 19 Longings 33 Type of Creation 20 Tiff features hygiene 14 Pentagon 8 The works 21 One 34 Lyme 9 "Star Trek of the disease VIPs Voyager" causer Jacksons 16 Unbal­ character 22 Harvest anced 35 Fifth 11 Thunder 25 Pinup guy Avenue 20 Italicize, sounds 26 Catch perhaps store 36 Kernel 23 Middling 15 Candidate 28 Some­ Perot holder what grade drunk 37 Mimic 24 Docking 17 Pinnacle 18 Turn 30 Kiosk spots 38 Great suddenly 31 Surveys expanse 25 Macho fellows 7 6 è 9 3 1 2 5 27 One-Time ;V j 10 link 28 Radio dials 12 29 Features „ 1 of some r L ; tennis 17 16^ IfT 16 shots 32 Coiffure 2D features 24 26 36 Cellist * y Pablo 39 La Scala * j 31 30 song 29 , J 40 Without 33 32 secrecy 41 Torture 37 36 36 device ■ “ 40 42 Rosary items « 43 Fraternal *2 9rouP 10-26 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. ^ C o m p lim e n ts of A.S.U. State Press 6601 Sooth Rural Road ; V O D O O SCR EA M T empe, A rizona 85283 (6 0 2 ) 8 9 7 -0 9 9 0 1 2 1 6 E. Apache B l v d , Tempe INFO: 894-0707 / 21 & over w /I.D . A u to A c c id e n ts and P erso n al In ju ry D U I an d C rim in a l D e fe n se Com plim entary Adm ission for Two Introducing a new fragrance by HUGO B O SS HUGO th e w o rld i s g e t t i n g s m a lle r sm e ll b e t t e r . J u ■ Í7 ■ 10-26 CRYPTOQUOTE N DH WXEHWN NDH MDAG YVV K VHBBYS'W WDYXBZHE AW RJ GKNNAPF D AT Like the people for whom it was created. Hugo, the fragrance, Is multi-faceted, rather than one­ dimensional, strikingly individual rather than uniform...by definition a fragrance that defies definition. Th e Hugo Collection: Eau de Toilette, 1.3 oz. 26.00. Eau de Toilette, 3.4 oz. 37.50. Eau de Toilette, 5.1 oz. 50.00. After Shave Lotion, 3.4 oz. 30.00. Body Massage Oil, 6.7 oz. 26.00. Deodorant Stick, 2.5 oz. 14.00. YP N D H S KJ NY R KM Q . — K P Y P J - TYXW Yesterday's Cryptoquote: EVERYBODY WANTS TO BE SOMEBODY; NOBODY WANTS TO GROW.— GOETHE X C 1995 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. V QPYMQ D illard’s Not available at Chris-Town. P i ^ P ageJO State P ress Friday, O ctober 27, 1995 Dream Weavers S tu d e n ts in th e B e g in n in g and A d van ced W eaving c la s s w ork on their sem ester projects. Lyn Shepard (ab o ve), a part-tim e stu d en t, u se s wool on the loom to m ake a jacket. Sen io r Tia Eiten (rig h t) w in d s her warp, or layers her yarn, in prepara­ tion fo r u se in th e lo o m s. S e n io r S u sa n R ubin co n ce n tra te s on the tapestry she is making. All students u se a fo u r h a rn e ss loom and a re allowed to use a variety of m aterials in their projects. NW CORNER OF FORESTA UNIVERSITY Hair Studio 966-5462 M-Th 9-8 Fri 9-6 Sat 9-5 Professor Jones knows the laws of thermodynamics. Now she knows the dynamics of life insurance, . And her family couldn’t be happier. To learn more about life insurance, call the TIAA Life Insurance Planning Center. Weekdays, 8AM to 8PM, E.S.T. 1800223-1200 Dept 726 Thu offer is available to (acuity, staff, administrators and their spouses. ■ h I Teachers Insurance and I Annuity Association Been a while since your mom had a good photo of you? Need a little more recent shot for your resume? The yearbook will have a professional photographer at the MU for one week to take official yearbook photos. A ll sittin g s o n a w alk-in b a sis n o a p p o in tm e n ts ta k en R o o m 2 0 6 A - t h e P la ta R o o m 2 n d flo o r o f t h e M U O c t . 3 0 & 3 1 - M o n . & T u es. - 9 a m .- 5 p .m . N o v . 1 & 2 - W ed . & T hurs. - 1 1 a .m .- 7 p .m . N o v . 3 - Friday - 9 a .m .- 3 p .m . 730 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017-3206 Ensuring the future fo r those who shape it-“ For more information, call 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 . P r ess H Page 11 Friday, October 27,1995 S t a te P ress ig h fib er l o w fat . Pre-registration gives students head start on Spring schedule B y B rian A n d er so n State P ress and the College of Business. Amy B oylan, co o rd in ato r of O utreach Advising Services, sAid students who register early may eliminate some of the hassles associated with the process. “(Students) can avoid waiting in long lines,” she said. “They have a better chance of getting the classes that-they want to get at the times they want them.” Boylan added that In-Touch, ASU’s on-line registration system, will not be available until regular registration begins Nov. 29. • Early-bird students who want to worm their way into those elusive classes will have about a week to do so when pre-registration begins Monday. Students will be allowed to register at any of the three sites on campus between Oct. 30 and Nov. 7, Schedules of classes and registration sites'can be found in the Social Sciences B uilding, the U ndergraduate Academic Services Building (the old Purchasing Building) State Press on the World Wide Web http/ /aspin .asu.edu/provider/StatePress/ 1ST A N N U A L B O N E S H A K IN H A L L O W E E N "BEAVER" B A S H ! SA TU RD AY, O C T O B ER 2 8 • 8P M -S p e c ia lsSunday 2for1 HAPPYHOUR 3-Bpm •Domestic Draft •Premium Well •Long Islands •Margaritas COSTUME CONTEST! CASH PRIZES! W ORKSHOP COFFIN RACES! CASH PRIZES AND SPECIAL CUEST NFL FOOTBALL College Football v\ n » i * s r $3.25 Pitchers ALL DAY $2 Long IslandTeas $1.50 Exotic Shots Virtual Reality Game 6pm-Close y S P O N S O R E D B Y M IL L E R LITE & T H E A M E R IC A N H E A R T A S S O C IA T IO N □ . Maloney's 1001 E.8TH STREET TEMPE 350-9888 RU RA L & APACH E S R llV 8th Street 1Dorsey I Friday DEAD HOT ■ BEAVER THIRflTY Terrace Apache SHOW US YOUR CURRENT Friday Friday Friday Friday Friday Friday Friday Friday Friday This year we’re doing it again! Every Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday). Mike Puios of The Spaghetti Company will give you one FREE dinner* for each dinner you orderi lt sour2-for-1 SUNDAY ASU SPE­ CIAL. And it’s good for the whole year at our Tempe, Phoenix and Scottsdale locations. Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner, The Spaghetti Company is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL m akes our already terrific prices even better! Our dinners include a full-course meal with aU the trim­ mings - from salad to dessert. So. dollar for dollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you ca n t beat The Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! With 2 dinners for the price of 11 -tj <*■Wms&Xii -But you M UST h ave yo u r cu rra n t, valid ated stu d en t I.D . ca rd , fee receip t or ach ed ule w ith you to take advantage of thie o ffe r. 15% g ratu ity added to atf diecounted ch ocks (excep t een io r citizen d isco u n ts} Chicken Cordon Blue. Steak Dl Jan , StuDed R e t Ot Sola. Tenderloin. P itcher Martel«, Veal Marsels. Three Paata Opera. Chicken Parma«an. Chicken Ceaew Salad, CMcfcan Fettudni AJhedo and nrrtare to go ASC NOT Included In the 2-tor-1 special OPEN A T 11:00 A.M. TO 11:00 P.M. SUNDAYS! . OPEN AT tO A.M. ON GAME PAYS! E n jo y o u r n ig h tly d r in k » p « c ie l« . | PHOENIX SCO TTSDALE South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. Just North of Indian Bend 257-0380 493-5669 OLD TOWN TEM PE 4th St. & Mill 966-3848 4 2 3 -8 4 9 9 S W C o r n e r o f S c o tt s d a le R d . & M c D o w e ll Page 12 S t a t e P r ess Friday, October 27, 1995 Pumpkin patch you pick up a S ta te P r e s s ? Members of Sigma Nu fraternity and the Tempe Boys and G irls Club show off the fruits of their labor after an evening of pumpkin carving Thursday- Th is is the second year the fraternity had organized a special event devoted to the children, Sigma Nu president Patrick Harlan said. “We like to spend time with'the kids one-on-one because it's more beneficial to them.” Thé group also spent time playing basketball, volleyball and enjoying a barbecue. ;__ Crash ; Yeltsin C ontinued fr o m page 3. 1 -___ _ t had almost no reaction time,” the source said. Moments before the collision, the police chief and an engineer arrived at the crossing to inspect the balky signal. Village president Bill Vocius said residents have been complaining for several months about the poor coordination between the gates and signals at the crossing and the stop light at the intersection just beyond. Other residents said the lights have been a problem for at least a year. "People have been saying something's going to happen because it's just not timed right." said Jim Homola. who was in his car behind the bus when the train hit. Truck driver Charlie Ward said he was caught in a danger­ ous squeeze at the same intersection only a half hour earlier. Each S tate P ress provides your daily requirements of 11 ESSENTIAL VITAMINS AND MINERALS.________ Invitation to apply for ARIZONA SNOWBOWL YOUR BEST TICKET TO SAVE O N SKIING! * Our season ski pass offers unlim ited skiing at the Arizona Snowbowl and Flagstaff Nordic Center. For the best value, act before Novem ber 1st. if » % A ONLY n w T v z_ « $425.00* $ This price is available through Oct. 31, 1995 'Price does not include 5.5% tax. Must show Student l.D. (Full-time Students Only!) * JOB FAIR ^ WINTER EMPLOYMENT OCT. 28 & 29 HART PRAIRIE LODGE * TOR INK On Campus C ontinued from page 3. Yeltsin would host a planned summit Tuesday of die leaders of Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia. Acute ischem ia can be caused by stress, high cholesterol, age or chronic high blood pressure. Symptoms include difficulty breathing and chest pains. Throughout his presidency, Yeltsin has had periods of poor health and has been dogged by rumors of drinking. He has appeared fitter recently, however, and aides have talked about his making a bid for a sec­ ond presidential term in June. Yeltsin has said he is waiting until after parliamen­ tary elections to decide. His popularity has been hurt in recent years by the country’s declining economy and other problems. $ If you didn’t get a “recycled” State Press in one of your classes, you can pick your copy upat: S tate P r ess E d it o r s h ip The ASU Student Publications Advisory Board is now Soliciting applications fo r the State P ress editorship for th è Spring Semester 1996. Applicants for the position of editor: must be a full-time student at ASU in good standing (not on academic or disciplinary probation); : must have a cumulative grade index of 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the State Press; must have completed a minimum of 15 hours of journalism courses including news writing, reporting, editing and journalism law; .. must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. Applicants must also: submit at least jwo letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles of all journalism •; courses completed and the grades earned in those 1 courses; : submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story, or editorial written for the State Press or another newspaper; and describe on the application form thè functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State Press or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the State Press office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. , The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon¡ Thursday, November 9,1995. Bruce D.Itule Director Student Publications Matthews Center, Room 133 , "Administration Building . Alumni Center \ ASU Bookstore ASU Visitor Center Business Building, east side Campus Police Cholla Halt Engineering Research Forest Mail kiosk (by Payne) j Gammage Auditorium Hayden Library Law Library Mail Services ■ Manzanita Hall .•■■■ Manzanita kiosk Mariposa Hall V Memorial Union Info Desk Murdock Hall •. Nobel Library North Cady Mall Noth Cady Mall kiosk North Forest Mall , Ocotillo Hall >: Orange Mall (by MU) Orange Mall kiosk (by fountain) Orange Mall kiosk (by MU) Palo Verde: East, West, and Main Palo Verde kiosk (between PV East & PV West) Physical Plant PS 3. 4 - Sonora Hall , South Cady Mall kiosk (by Business building) South Cady Mall at Lemon South Forest Mall (by Parmer) Sun Devil Stadium Student Health Student Publications Student Recreation Center Student Services Building ’ Tyler Mall. Cady Mall kiosk - Tyler Mall, e a s t . ~i Tyler Mall. Forest Mall Tyler Mall, Palm Walk kiosk University Activity Center Universjty Club University Relations Off Campus , * Associated Bioscience Balboa Cate Bandersnatch Brew Pub Beauvais Gym , Blimpie Sandwiches & Subs , Browns on 6th Campus Comer Cart’s Jr. Restaurant Chuckbox Cinnamon Tree Plaza Circle K (University 7 McClintock) Circle K (Apache / Price) Club Rio Coffee Plantation College Street Dell College Store Cornerstone Mall Espress Yogurt Grooming Humans Salon Howard Johnsons (Apache) Jam 's Restaurant Kelly's Cafe Kinkos Kolby's Corner Pocket La Tolteca Long Wong’s Mama's Pizza Mesa Community College. Administration Building » Mesa Community College, Kirk Center Mill Avenue Shops Minder Binders Ozzie's Warehouse Deli . ' ‘Perkin? Restaurant & Bakery Rother’s Bookstore Schlotsky’s Sandwich Shop Spaghetti! Co. ' Stan's Metro Deli Sub Stop Sunny's Pizza Sun Stop Food Shop Tem pe Police Station Tower Apartments Tower Records > “ Vine (The) Walgreens Wendy's W herehouse Records ' 6th Street Newstand S ta te P ress Page 13 Friday^October27ji 199S Budget ___ C ontinued from page 3. The early pioneers of A m e r ic a enjo yed a special recipe of strong spirits, natural wild herbs and a touch of fire-brewed cocoa. Here is that drink of the frontier. Better than a Screwdriver! Enjoy a Wild O.J. Lots of ice • 1 oz. Wild Spirit • 4 ozs. Orange Juice Medicaid, welfare, student loans and other social programs that have flourished since the New Deal and Great Society eras. The bills ran to 1,754 pages in the House and 1,949 in the Senate. Aside from the Pentagon, the measures scoured the entire government for savings — some­ times down to the penny. Annual cost-ofliving increases for certain veterans’ bene­ fits would be rounded down to the nearest dollár, a provision estimated to save $520 million over seven years. Billions moré would.be saved from pro­ grams affecting farmers; federal workers would pay more for their retirement bene­ fits; the Commerce Department would be abolished under the House measure. The plan includes $245 billion in tax cuts, including a $500-per-child tax credit and a break bn taxes on profits from investments. The proposal was crafted with assistance from the governors, who agreed to accept slower growth in funding in Medicaid and welfare in exchange for a loosening of fed­ eral strings. Shortly before the final vote, the House rejected, 356-72, an alternative drafted by conservative Democrats to balance the bud­ get without tax cuts. The plan would ease the impact of the GOP’s planned savings from Medicare, Medicaid and other gov­ ernment programs. The measure represents another mile­ stone in the conservative revolution launched last winter by the GOP majorities in the House and Senate. D em ocrats conceded the m easures Would pass, but spared nothing in their attack, and said Republicans were misread­ ing the country’s mood. They took heart from a New York Times poll reporting that 67 percent of those responding said that in a hypothetical trade­ off, they would prefer preventing Medicare from being significantly cut, while 27 percent said they would prefer balancing the budget. There's more to life than the po l ic e r e p o r t and the comic« ... try reading the NEWS! World news. C a r to o n s . State new s. C la s s ifie d a d s. Sports. C o u p o n s. A S U new s. C ro ssw o rd p u z z le s . W eekly magazine. T h e a te r a d s . Police Report. C o m ic s tr ip s . Opinions. C r y p to q u o te p u z z le s . In-depth features. H e lp w a n te d a d s . © 1995 Virgin Records America, Inc. Letters to the editor. D a ily h o ro sco p es. City S tate P ress All albums available at See . The Geraldine Fibbers live 10/31 at Gibsons Comics State Press Friday, October 27,1995 Page 14 f. '[nCrAtiiN HbXed Calvin and Hobbes TOM KNOW, SCHOOL WOOIDNT BE SO BAD IF SCJM OlDNT HAVE TO GO EVERS DAT RUBES H o U w íí^ í By Leigh Rubin by Bill Watterson .AMO \F TOO DIDNT HAVE.TO LEARN ; AMSTH IN G.. AND i f SOM.’TOOK A WAS ALL THE TEACHERS AND ALL THE OTHER K ID S TF IT WAS CCWPLETELS DIFFERENT, , SCHOOL WOULD B E G R E A T .. \ D o o n e sb u ry BY GARRY TRUDEAU J A KWV HOW i & sue? HeU.YCe! HCY, YOUBROU6HT YOURINSUR­ ANCECARP, PlPNT ' YO¿ U?M M sn u iN A COMA, S t a t e P r e ss i l i Drew Aquilina G re e n p ie c e s UTILE BOX/.. WE’RE ; GOINS TRICK OR TREATIN G/.. .BUT Vb6?.... SOU ARE MY FTÎIEAIP... „AND WHEN-I-1ELE SOU,-_ YOU HIT THAT BUTTONÄ OK? j THANKS ID CABBY and m e A W C iC N fT YOU SET ONE TREATINGÜ WE'RE?.. C B iK P (D æ a ri Too bizarre to be anything but real. WHAT BOX?' & T A Tfi f r u i i 712 S. C o lleg e (College & University) 967-4049 - SWEATSHIRTS «j Cam pus P i y i T R i •Photo Developing 0health A Beauty Aids 609 S. Mill (Across from Coffee Plantation) 858-0567 H ENRY WEINHARDS ALE, RESERVE, RED 12 PACK BOTTLES Sales ends 10-29-95 LOWEST PRICE ANYWHERE! B e e r only at C o lleg e A y e . ^ Regular $2$*$9 or more i f u m iv i m an * * * ** # ♦ * # ♦ * * * \ Duck Roast ■ ... E ugene i|c £ 4 t * i |e # 9 |M |M |t # ] iM |c 4 c P age 15 Friday, October 27,1995 State P ress ' in ■ ■■ ' . • r ■■■■■. ■ - ■ . ' . .. .. " R obert A n d e rso n / S ta te P re ss The ASU football team hopes Sparky will be doing pushups all afternoon Saturday when the Sun DeVils face the 10th-ranked Oregon Ducks at 1 p.m. at Autzen Stadium. Traditionally, the ASU m ascot does a pushup for every point the Sun Devils score. -% jrr " Sun Devils hungry for date w ith By D an Miller „ State P:■ress .v • . -x . . ••• •; With fresh legs from a week off, the urgency of keeping slim bowl prospects afloat and a quiet yearning for revenge, the ASU football team should have more than enough fuel for its game with the 10thranked Oregon Ducks Saturday. “There's a chance to be stale when you don’t play,” said ASU Head Coach Bruce Snyder, whose team will kickoff with O regon Saturday at 1 p.m. at Autzen Stadium in Eugene. “Hopefully, they are What are you going to be for Halloween this year* I hate H allow een m ore than anything. B ut if I could be anything I th in k I ’d be a pim p, like a 70 s pim p. Pim ps w ere cool back then but now they g et a bad rap. just hungrier than heck to play. My sense is we will be emotional and be really ready to play. I think they feel like they can win their last four games. 1 think we are fresh­ ened up. I hope so.” Recent history and the numbers both do not bode well for the Sun Devils (3-4, 1-3 in the Pac-10), who were blindsided by the Ducks, 34-10, last year. The Ducks (6-1, 31), who are in third place behind conference leaders USC and Washington, have beaten the Sun Devils in five o f their last six encounters, including the last three in a What’s your best dance move? I don't dance. Ever since bieakin’ went out, I couldn’t dance anymore. If I can’t wear my parachute pants out to clubs, I don’t go. How about your favorite infomercial? I t I like Richard Simmons and those Deal a Meal commer­ cials. I feel for those fat people. But I can’t get into infomercials. I like Saved by the bell, though-1 mean it's on every hour, you might as well watch i t B lab Press Photo Illustration row. They also boast a three-game winning streak at Autzen Stadium. “There’s no way we should not be phys­ ically and mentally prepared,” said Oregon Head Coach M ike B eilotti, the form er offensive coordinator who moved into the front office this year for an NFL-bound Rich Brooks. “We’re not good enough to overlook anybody.” The Sun Devils, who last triumphed over Brigham Young two weeks ago, desperate­ ly need to piece together a win-streak. They haven’t won two games in a row since Ducks 1993, when they took four straight in the latter part of the season. The Ducks, mean­ while, are riding their second three-game winning streak of the season after decking Washington State 26-7 last Saturday. “The problem with Oregon, for us, is they move around so damn much,” said ASU linebacker Pat Tillman. ‘‘They’re not a Very complicated team, but they switch. They move the guys. They motion and they get people confused. As long as we keep out heads focused we’ll be finé.” T urn to Football, page 16. A SU volleyball team w ants to surprise N o . 4 Cardinal By D awn W agner State P ress With a new starting setter and its top blocker out of the lineup for this week­ end, the No. 9 ASU volleyball team will have to pull out all the stops when it plays No. 4 Stanford and California at home. S e n io r m id d le b lo c k e r A n n e tte Monsen, who pulled a back muscle two weeks ago, will be forced to miss both gam es this w eekend because o f back spasm s, which leav es the Sun D evils moving their lineup around to compen­ sate, said Coach Patti Snyder-Park. “It gives us no flexibility in substitu­ tions,” she said. “W hatever lineup we put in, it has to work. And if it does. great. If not, we’re up the creek.” The Sun D ev ils m eet S tan fo rd on today at 7 p.m. and tqke on the Golden Bears Saturday at 7 p.m. Both games will be held in the University Activity Center. Sophomore outside hitter Jenn Snyder ■said the movement in positions will be a burden, but the team still has a chance to defeat unbeaten Stanford. “It’s always possible,” Snyder said. “But it’s going to take a lot on every­ o ne’s part. W ith Annette not playing, people will have to play positions they aren’t used to, but 1 have confidence in T urn to Vollevball, page 16. Page 16 Volleyball Football C S t a t e P r ess Friday, October 27,1995 o n t in u e d f r o m page C IS . Added Snyder: “They are as talented in some areas as anybody in our league. There are some other areas they are trying to cover up, but they are doing a great job doing that. They have some real skilled athletes.” The Duck who may pose one o f the biggest threats is senior tailback Ricky Whittle. Whittle, who is second in the Pac-10 in rushing, is tanked fifth in the country in all-purpose yardage, averaging 189.9 yards of offense per game. “They’re a pretty aggressive team,” said senior tailback C hris H opkins. “I ’m sure they think they’re going to be able to push us. around like they did last year. We’ve had two. weeks to pre­ pare for them so I think we’re going to make the most out of it this time.” ASU Oregon Kickoff....... . o n t in u e d f r o m IS . everyone. / “It can be done.” But it will take a great game from new starting set­ ter Tracy Heflin, who will replace the injured Jolynn Faatulu. • ^ Snyder said the team is excited about Heflin- run­ ning the court and is confident in her abllity. “Tracy is a great setter,” she said. “As far as l am concerned, everyone completely supports Tracy hav­ ing to step in and take over. She’s doing job.” * 7 ; ‘ , Heflin, who had a strong performance two weeks ago against the W ashington'schools, said she thinks the Sun Devils have the same opportunities to win against the Cardinal then any other team in the Pac-10. “We just need to worry ahout our side of the net,” Heflin said. “Stanford has really good nights and they have some not so good nights. Hopefully, that’s when we’ll catch them. They’ve lost before.” Snyder-Park added that one other very important thing will be crucial to two wins this weekend. “It will have to be an element o f surprise against Stanford and one against Cal,” she said. Senior m iddle blocker Annette Monsen w ill m iss th is week- j end’s volleyball m atches against Stanford and California due | to back spasm s. Both gam es will be at the University Activity : Center tonight and Saturday. ............. 1 p.m. at Autzen Stadium TV....................... . . . . . . . . . . . Channel 3 (tape delay) S tate press sports “Picks R a d i o ........................................................ k t a r 62oam L a t e s t L i n e ** of the w eek ” ............ . ...,..... . .. Oregon by 12 C o a c h e s ................ * • Bruce Snyder - ASU (3-4.1-31 18-22 at ASU (4th Season) 86-83-5 Overall (15th Season) 3-4 vs. Oregon in his career LisaEskey ' Reporter Recmd (13-13) Recoud(16-6) Ream! (13-13) Reœrd (14-12) Ream! (14-12) Record (9-17) Mike Bellottl - Oregon (6-1, 3-11 6-1 at Oregon (1st Season) 6-1 Overall (1st Season) S nyder .BEiiom : S e r ie s - — ASU leads series 10-5 R ecord Last meeting - Oregon won 34-10 at Autzen Stadium in 1994. Keys t o ........... A SU VicTouy pag e ASU (3-4) vt Oregon (6-1) Dan Miller Damian Shaw Dawn Wagner Dustin Krugel Ron Matejko Spore Editor Asst SportsEd Reporter Reporter Reporter Oregon 31 ASU 17 Oregon 30 ASU 16 Oregon 34 ASU 21 Oregon 31 ASU 27 Oregon 34 ASU 17 Oregon 35 ASU 24 Cardinals 20 Seattle 10 Cardinals 14 Seattle 13 Cardinals 31 Seattle 17 Cardinals 20 Seattle 13 Cardinals 28 Seattle 24 Cardinals (2-5) vs. Seattle 28 Seattle (2-5) Cardinais 7 Upset Picks* •Must keep game low scoring and match Oregon's ■gangsmen" defense. Gémè t f the Week Kansas S t vs. Kansas Jererm Stcm/Statc Press TCU20 Arkansas 40 Auburn 23-. : BOO requires compliance wdh its'Requirements for Proper Coupon Redemption." Copy avadable by wrtlino to the address bdoyr , Cash value 1/100 of 1*. Consumer must pay any sales tax Coupons not property redeemed wN he void and hold. Reproduction d this coupon is expressly prohibited (ANY OTHER USE CONSTITUTES FRAU0,) ftb t to :. Bantam Doubleday Deb, S u e 1625,1540 Broadway, New VMt, NY 10036. Void whore tailed or restricted Tender Code *56 U N I T O N E C O U P O N M l ITEM P U R C H A S E D , ' : O fficia l R e g is tr a tio n L o c a tio n . N e w T im e s P h o e n ix 1 0 -K . E a r ly R e g is tra tio n S e p t . 2 6 -N o v . 5 1---------------- r i D i PE R h O R I V I A N C I filili'- EO o rw ■ ■H e ,ML I Not vahd with any ANY P U R C H A S E ! Ml IN C O RN E RSTONE I I II with: th is C O U P O N thru S t a t e P ress Friday, October 27, 1995 P a e e l7 C r o s s country h e a d s to P a c - 1 0 ’s B y D u s t in K r u g el S ta te P ress ASU cross country coach Ken Lehman wants any­ thing but another m en's eighth-place finish in the Pac10 championships at Stanford in Palo Alto, Calif, on Saturday. The Sun D evil m en have been stuck in eighth place the last three years in the test against its Pac10 competitors. "That would be very disappointing,” Lehman said. "There's five teams ranked in the, top 20. It’s a very tough conference. We could run great, finish sixth or seventh and still have a respectable showing. We just have to step it up.” Junior Matt Repak, who topped all'Sun DbVils with a 40th-place finish last year, said it would be a major disappointment finishing eighth again. "It’s more or less what we’ve been working hard toward all season,” Repak said of the big meet. “I hope we don't get it. We have one of the best teams 1 ran with.” Lehman said the men are more mentally prepared to have a good showing than their last meet. The men fin­ ish ed a d isa p p o in tin g six th p lace at the ASU Invitational two weeks ago. “I think the attitudes changed,” Lehman said. “There was a lot of things going on that week with tests, with illness and stuff. Everybody’s pretty healthy.” The Pac-10 meet may be the last meet o f the year if the Sun Devils do not fare well. Lehman said he is using this weekend as an incentive for the runners. If they run w e ll, they w ill go to the D is tric t 8 Championships in Ames, Iowa on Nov. 12. “It depends on ho\v we do (this weekend),” Lehman said. "They know this. They know they need to make a very respectable showing at the Pac-10 meet to go to the district meet.” Repak said he was aware his season could come to sudden halt if the Sun Devils don’t step up. “As far as this race, this may be the last race,” he said. Repak’s first two races at the Pac-10 championships have been a stark contrast. In his first race, Repak was ip the lead early, but quickly ran out of steam, asserting too much energy early. L ast y ear, R epak ran too co n serv ativ e and fell behind by too much. “Hopefully I’ll be conservative (and) take it easy, but also stay with the leader,” Repak said. Lehman is confident that Repak’s third go-around will run much smoother. “T his is his third year running with the team. He should know what to do,” Lehman said. . Lehman said he expects big things from freshman Andy Carusetta this weekend. Cani setta is coming off his best meet of the year at ASU Invitational. He led all Sun Devils with his 12th-place finish. “If you look at this m eet. I would say C arusetta would be our top finisher,” Lehman said. “With what he’s done lately, he’s become one of the leaders.” For the women, ASU senior Kim Barrett hopes to fin ish among the top 20 runners. The women have struggled this year with several new runners. , “As a team, we need to run together,” Barrett said. “We ran well as a team last week. We don’t want to get” humiliated.” Robert AndersorVSUte Press Matt Repak and the re st of the m en’s and w om en's c ro ss country team s are headed to Stanford th is weekend for the Pac-10 Cham pionships. Series goes to game i f A SU swim m ers dawn caps for N A U B y L isa E skey S ta te P ress The Sun Devil swimmers open their season today at 2 p.m. at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center against NAU, CLEVELAND (AP)—The Cleveland Indians b a t base-, a team it swept last season in Flagstaff. ball's best pitcher, Greg Maddux, and the Atlanta Braves Men’s coach Ernie Maglischo is expecting some good 5-4 Thursday night, anting the World Series to 3-2. races against the Lum berjacks, who have been rapidly improving in th e ir conference in the past few years. The NAU men won the Pacific Coast Sw im m ing C onference title last season, while the women finished second. “I’m just watching and w aiting to see how we Go a h e a d . M a k e our day. The 1 9 9 S / 9 6 S p a r k Y e a r b o o k is d o ,” M aglischo said. "Overall, I think we have a c c e p t i n g e n t r i e s for the G a l l e r y s e c t i o n — you know, the depth to beat them.” t h a t cool part of the book where t h e r e 's no r u l e s ? We're W omen’s coach Tim Hill agreed, saying NAU a c c e p t i n g pre tty m u ch e v e r y t h in g t h i s year, so give us is m uch im proved, and he e x p e c ts som e good your best sho t! W e'll m a k e ya f a m o u s ! competition. “It’s an in-state meet, S h o r t s t o r i e s - 8 0 0 words or l e s s so everybody w ants to swim well,” he said- “Our Poetry - 3 0 l in e s or le ss freshman are psyched for their first meet and if our P h o to g r a p h y seniors perform well, then I think we should come A rt away with a win.” Songs? D iving coach W ard O’Connell said his team is Cartoons? more advanced than other teams in the past, and he W hatever. is looking forward to this meet. “We’re the best we’ve ever been this early in the year,” he said. ‘T hey are im proving daily and I ex p e ct them to do an excellent job.” Ju n io r m id d le-d isNr iMft ihfftrmatfon; calf MS-6881 IP N S48tt tancer Mike Melley won three events in the meet last year and junior Nolan Shifren swept the breast stroke events. S enior Jennifer Cnota won both P lease include th is form with your subm issions diving events for the women’s team. Name:-■’ V ': ' '■ ■ Ice D e v ils to ta k e on Student ID: ; •: - ■ ; -: ^ ... L u m b erjack s in tw ogame slate M ajor:‘ ~ : The ASU Ice Devils Y e a r:_________________________ _________________ • (2-0) play a hom e-andhome series against rival Get Creative Get Published W eekend S ports P review N orthern A rizona University (0-3) today and S aturday night. T oday’s game will be played in Flagstaff’s J. L ively A rena at 4:30 p.m., while Saturday’s home-opener will be at 7 R obert A n d araon /State P r e s s p.m. at the O ceanside Jann Baltron and the rest of Ice Arena in Tempe. the women's and men’s swim­ NAU won the season m ing and d ivin g team s w ill series 2-1 over ASU last open the se a so n today at 2 year in th ree clo sely p.m . a g a in st NAU at Mona p layed and physical Plummer Aquatic Center. gam es. The rivalry has strengthened recentiy with the play becoming chippy and hard-hitting. During recent games referees have handed out roughing penalties and misconducts like Halloween candy. The last time the teams met there were nine roughing minors and two misconducts whistled. Coach Gene Hammett will look to keep his team from getting overconfident after his squad swept its opening series against Boulder last week. Freshman goal tender Greg Powers brings a stingy 2.00 goals-against average into the series. — Ron Matejko Men’s soccer club wraps up season The ASU m en’s soccer club will play in its final games of the regular season this weekend against UofA. Saturday’s-game will be played at 2 p.m. in Tucson, while Sunday’s game will be played at 2 p.m. at the Student Recreation Complex field. Sophomore forward Jason Hight is out for the rest of the season due to a knee injury. Following the teams reg­ ular season finale this weejkend, the team will play at a regional tournament in Las Cruces, N.M.,. on Nov. 4. Water polo team takes a swim The men’s team is hosting a small invitational starting tonight at the SRC pools. Eight teams from California, New Mexico and Arizona will be competing over the weekend. “This is just a warm-up for our season, ju st to get some experience,” Coach Chris Lawrence said. “Our sea­ son doesn’t begin until February, but we still attracted some high-calibbr teams for this tournament.” Rugby scrum • The Sun Devils men’s rugby team will be competing in the Scottsdale Halloween Tournament this weekend at Chaparral Park. About 12 teams will begin play early Saturday morning. According to Coach Tim Ronan, the team expects to do well after advancing to the finals in the Camelback Tournament earlier this season. — Lisa Eskey Classifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For mote information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-17? 1. RENTAL SHARING APT SHARE, S.E Scotts. Resp. grad student seeks same. Own bed/bath; Incl: ceilin g fans, balcony, new carpet/paint, storage area + more, $310/mo + 1/2 util. + 1 month dep; Call Veronique 994-3182, FEMALE ROOMMATE 2bd /Iba, prefer serious student, lite weekend partier, $280/m o + 1/2 utilities, 1 mile from cam­ pus. Call Beth at 894-0455; GRAD-STUDENT/FEMALE TO rent own furnished bdrm. New home in A hw atukee. 10 mi. from ASU- Pool. Quiet. $ 3 7 5 /m o includes util. 706OfrlS. : ; ''I V ;. LOOKING FOR a clean room­ mate. $250/m o, furnished. Call Antonio 804-0756. M/F, N S, WANTED To share 2bd/Tba apartment. 1 m i. to A SU, pool, laundry room. $23G/mo +1/2 utils, 968-3533 AN N O UN CE­ MENTS ATT: ALL advertising* mkig. design St comm stdnts spend the day with a professional in :your field. Shadow Day 1995 is N o v . 14 free lunch @ the Plaza.C lub dbwntown 9966255 for info. $20 > $35,. 12-Spin. 824 S. M ill Fielder Studro, 966-8343. co stum e S t a t e P ress Friday, October 27,1995 Page 18 rental HALLOWEEN PARTY W ith Shadowplay. Boston's. 8:3Qpm Oct, 31. all ages! LIVE-WIRE BBS on line chat games Doom IL 4 hours Free with modem call 277-002$. ' : "•-■ ' ■'. . • NEED MONEY For college? Funds go unused every year. Computer Resources can help you. 1-800-887-0716. RMTE NEEDED 2bd/Iba apt .1H mile from campus $290/mo Call 894-1672 RMTE NEEDED fern pref. $220/month+part util, walk/bike to ASU Call Martha 967-4276 COMPUTERS CD ROMS, Myst, Doom, D escent, US Navy Fighters, Lion King & many more, Call for info, or Ive msg 858-9747 COMPUTER FOR Sale. Com­ paq Deskpro 186, WordPerfect 5.0. chess game. 5.25 floppy and hard drive, monitor, and keyboard incl. $50. Call Jim 894-0173 Eve 5pm TICKETS OZZY TICKETS Mon Oct. 30 $80/pair 8972067. - -•V;/.' REM 4 tickets, $50 ea. obo. 7562269 A Ü T O M O |ÍL ¡|“ 1984 TOYOTA CAMRY, 5spd, silver, excellent condi­ tion S2500 obo 829-9113. 74 VW VAN, Rebuilt engine with only 10,xxx mis. Needs some work. Great restoration p ie c e ! U $ 1,500 obo. 7562269. V v-.y;/.' \ . ; ■ 88 PORSCHE 924S. 2nd ownr, 37k orig. n ils., dark gray, 5spd. ac. mint cond, $8500, 258-8840 ROOM IN beautiful 3bd 2ba hom e with pool and large fenced yard 2 car garage nVs $500/m o + 1/3 u tilities 9451586 or 800-777-6556. 90 DODGE Spirit ps pb am/fm cass. Gray metallic excel, cortd. 77006m $5000 786-4497 X53863 ROOM S FOR RENT 92 TOYOTA Paseo rçd auto sunroof 56k. Must see. $9000 820-6393. 2 LG NEW bdrms w/new fum. $380/$395 Incl util, cable TV washer/dryer, tennis/bsktbl, pri­ vate pool, ns . Baseln/ M c­ Queen area 545-1126 93 BMW 3251$, at. 2-door,, sun roof, computer, excellent cond,, 27.000 miles ; $23,900. 965-4630 • , 1- BEAUTIFUL LG 2bd apt: Very safe, near ASU. Free cable, laun­ dry, pool. Call 966-4797. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE MAZDA 323 1986, ac/am-fm cassette. Runs very w ell, priced to sell. now. $1350 obo 949-6134. NISSAN SENTRA *93, $8206 Or best offer. XE. charcoal grey, 2dr. 5spd. drivers side air bag. great À/C; 23.000 m iles, one year left on warranty, original owner. Call 258-5263 ext. I l l B uy O f T he Week $CASH T0DAY$ Papago Park Village ibd, shows like a model $61.000 I buy all used cars, B o b B u llo c k R e a l t y E x e c u t iv e s trucks, mise, items. 990-2992 Call Al 994-4369 A [ A jy M | N T S _ I & 2B D /1BA Evaporative co o lin g . Hardy & 1si str. From $350, utils ia c l. Good credit req. 899-5967 8^4p.m. EL DIABLO Apis, 1201 S, Mc­ Clintock Dr. Tempe quiet luxu­ ry living 1bd $480, 2bd $590600,921-0699 HOMES FOR RENT 2 BLOCKS From ASU lbd/lba guesthouse. $ 5 10/m o., utili­ ties included. 894-0288. LAS PRADOS 3bd/2ba $800 a month. Beautiful 3bd/2ba w/balcony $800 /month Tim 8944)288 M ISCELLANEOUS FO R SALE M O T O R C Y C L E A ADD-ON cable tv descram­ bler: Gets all channels including pay per view $165. 840\y : 1993 KAWASAK^iinja 250cc runs great, w/hornet alarm, 2 helmets, tank bag. $2400 call Mike 730-7704. PIONEER CD Player, detach­ able face; $200. Dino Detour; $150. FCR 400; $2000: Tama drum set, 9pc w/frame St symbols, $2000. 3924)501. 80 KAWASAKI £ 2 7 5 0 , Great deal on great ruhning bike. $900 obo. 858-9108. FURNITURE MOVING SALE kingsize water bed, full size couch, oak comp. table. Must sell 598-3542. POOL TABLE $600 obo, new cover. Moving Sale: waterbeds, couches, tables, futons, weight bench, lamp, etc. M ak e offer 438-0766. SOFA SET $2 9 5, Queen bed $85, King $180, day bed $ 135, D inette $160, futon $180, Sleeper $265. 3513031. COMPUTERS TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT 486 IBM Thinkpad 5 0 0 4 mb ram, 170mb hd. DOS, Win, WP carrying case, J year old St hardly used, $900obo 8388502. •V 2BD/2BA FOR rent 15 min walk from ASU, furnished, $800/mo + cleaning & sec dep 966*5809 AST 2 8 6 W /Golor monitor. Dos, WordPerfect, QuattroPro, Minitab. 5.25 & 3.5 drives. $200 obo. 464-3542. RENTAL SHARING 3 BD CONDO w/ 2 other male ASU students $300/m o +1 /.3 util w/d, pool, tennis courts 483-6175 or 967-5269, 82 VIRAGO 750. 24km i Good student bike. ‘ Minor Work. Has new starter/forks/tires. $600 obo. 4643542. _ : TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL; Cheap in your name- I specialize in quick departures. Most places worldwide. I also buy transfer­ able coupons/a wards. 968-7283 HELP WANTEDGENERAL $ CRUISE Ships hiring! Stud­ ents needed! $$$ + free travel!! Seasonai/perm anent, no exp nec, Guide. 919-929-4398 ext. CIQ50. . : : y ; y ;, " . y ' $6 PER HOUR Outgoing, energetic appoint­ ment setters for Universal Por­ traits. Call James or Carey, 4968Q29 ■ •/ $7.50 AN HOUR p/t, f/t Tempe business needs six individuals to sell tools to contractors. Call Scott 966-. 5765. State I n n Classifieds MsHhtws Cintar IllH m t 96S+73S HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL *$7/HR + CA$H5* IMAX THEATRE Set fun free appts., for health services. Friendly office, hear Fiesta Mall in Mesa. Eves & Sat. or f/t. Join our team now! Call 649-9586 anytime! In Scottsdale is currently hiring friendly people to fill staff po­ sitions. Weekday availability a plus (llu id -5 p m ) all avails needed $5.00/hr 15-30 hrs/week Apply at the IMAX box office (11 am-9pm) 4343 N. Scottsdale Rd Suite 2501, Come join our team! A MEDICAL o ffice in S cot­ tsdale needs p/t front & back of­ fice person, will train. Good ad­ vancement potential. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ste 108. Please apply in person. AIRPORT SHOP Cashier/ salesperson needed immed. for our giftshop. Full & part time avail. Insurance bene­ fits & good salary. $6/hr. to start. Must have exp. & enjoy working w /people. Call 2731803 ALPINE SKI & Travel-sales people/rental techs, heeded for ski season. Flex, hours, part/full time, ski exp. helpful. Contact Doris at 992-0567. ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chan­ dler p/t cln up, pm hours. Please call dfc mng 963-2340. ANSWERING SERVICE 4pm7pm, M-F, telephone & typing exp, req; Scottsdale 947-7351. ARIZONA COUNTRY Club hiring p/t p;jn, food servers. N o exp. necc. Apply at 5668 E. Orange B lossom Ln. Phx (56th St/Thomas) E.O.E. ARIZONA SHORTS is looking Tt> hire hard Working and reli- • able sales associates. Day & evening positions available. Apply at Arizdna Center 2527525 or 5th & Mill 966-9199 ♦ASU STUDENTS Wanted. Short, short surveys, easy, avg. pay $ 7 -$ l lper hr. M-F, call 784-2270. ATT. STUDENTS! Great p/t jobs available! 4 or 5 sfifts/wk. 4:30-8:3C^m- No wkhds! Call Steve between 4 -8pm @ 8949442. ,. • •' ■•/ B AGEL SHOP/DELI seeks friendly, responsible people to work counter & sandwich prep. Parttime mornings & afternoons Call 970-6165. COLD STONE Creamery, 5th & M ill, is hiring strong, reliable, & fun em ployees. Must be available Weekends & Christ­ mas break. Day & evening po­ sitions available. Excellent tips. Apply today! 92L7456. F/T, P/T positions available providing assistance to adult individuals with mental & physical disabilities. Paid ben­ efits & training, no exp. née. Call 438-8617. FLEX. PT telemarketing. Set sales appts. $8/hr. Must have good speaking voice, be or­ ganized St sales oriented. 956■1838: LOT ATTENDANT/DRIVER. Enterprise Rent A Car. Hours vary between 8-6 m-f. Call 8293970 for details, ask for Kerry or Dan. MECHANICAL TECHNICIAN FT7PT, ‘48th St & Indian School Rd Start $6-$8/hr. 956-8200, MODELS/ACTORS/EXTOAS ALL types needed immed; for music videos. Pays $250 up 9416922. ; ' ' - ¿ y „/•' NATL INSTITUTES of Health M ale volunteers needed for re­ search study: 18-24 yr. old lean, health, non-smokers $670 offered for time and participa­ tion1. Call Chris at 220-0299 or leave a message. NEED 25 students who want to lose 2 0 or more, pounds 100% natural, doctor recommended Call Bill 971-9042 NIH & ASU- Persons with par­ aplegia needed for research stu­ dy. 2-day hospital stay, $ 145. A ges 18-5Ò, healthy« n’onsmoker. Call Mary Beth 9657524. . NOW HIRING A ll position s. Manage, bar, wait, door, bus. Apply Th-Sat 8am-1 lam St 25pm. 715 S. McClintock. 966l 9 i t for info/ NOW HIRING Servers, hosts, cashiers, buyers, dish washers, St cooks. Native New Yorker, Gilbert Rd/Freeway, Mesa. PRESTIGIOUS HEALTH club cafe is now hiring p/t attendant. Will train energetic, enthusias­ tic people Benefit/competitive pay incentives Apply in person 4444 É. Camelbacic or call Eve at 840-6412 HELP WANTEDGENERAL SEEKING FAMILIES with young children 30 to 36 months old for child language research. Pays $15 for two 1hour observation sessions. Contact Professor Matthew Rispoli, Dept, of Speech and Hear­ ing Science, ASU, at 727-6054. SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flexib le hfs/wk. Call Mike for int., 9218282. /-Vj ; :x ; STRUCTURE IS hiring PT sales & stock help for Metro St hew Fiesta loc. Apply at "Fiesta cost serv. desk or an ASU mall Fri. Oct. 27 8am-4pm. STqpENTS EARN money, 700 companies offering legitimate hom e employment opportuni­ ties, No exp. required. Free in­ formation. Rush SASE: KNR Distribution, 1228 W estloop Ste. 268, Manhattan, KS. ■66502, -; w '! y SUPERVISOR POSITION avail­ able at Arizona Shorts. Enthu­ siastic, organized, & reliable in­ dividual in retail sales.; "Peo­ ple" skills req. Retail exp. wel­ comed. Day pos. avail; Arizona Shorts. 5th & M ill, 966-9199 see Donna. TEMP HELP wanted, lite manu­ facturing $7/hr Located in Chandler 940-7722/ Tom. TRADER JOE’S p/t clerks wanted, flex hrs: good pay. Scottsdale 9489886. YOU CAN be part o f the big­ gest & best haunted house in Arizona, Silo X! Elliot & Hardy in Tempe. Additional perform­ ers needed. 598-8713 PARENT'S HELPER: Infant boy. 32-40 hrs/week, Tues-Friday.; Mom works from home, allow s for flexib ility. Wage based on exp. Call 461-1881. HELP WANTEDF O O D lIR V lC i^ A CHINESE restaurant needs delivery drivers. Contact : K.C. Chang at 990-0388 Scottsdale COCKTAIL St FOOD servers, security & barbacks. Apply in person at Madison's on Stetson in Scottsdale. 7108 E. Stetson. 949-8453. HIRING: COOK positions available, flexible hours, com­ petitive pay, apply @ Vine Ta­ vern on Campus, SOI E. Ap­ ache Bly. Tempe. JAPANESE REST, needs waitstaff p/t lunch/dinner help $3/hr+tips .51 St/E lliott 5980506 LOOKING FOR a smiling face to hostess in a fun cajun rest. Call Shannon M-F 9^11:30am or 3-5pm Ive msg 955-0011. MAJERLE'S GRILL HIRING ALL Positions. Exp. Nec. Apply in person between 9-11 & 2-4. 24 N 2nd Str: Phx. MANAGER Gumbys Pizza is seeking an experienced General Manager. Competitive salary 8 bonus plan. Call Todd 655-9803 leave m essage. HELP WANTEDSALES MAKE S400/WK make f/t in­ come for part time work. Call for interview 1-800-874-5566 HELP WANTED- PRODUCTION MGR For screen printing shop. D uties incl.: prod, scheduling, hiring, shipping, ordering. Bring re­ sume to Pipeline Graphics. 18Í5 E. Apache. Jim, 9660300. EXECUTIVE ANSWERING Service has immed. openings for p/t operator. 6am-10am« MF, 6:30 am - N o on - Sat, $7/hr, type 45+ words/min, know 10 key by touch, have conip. exp. 264:4000 V RECEPTIONIST - DUTIES incl taking appts, answer phones, + retail sales. Icon Hair, Scotts. Fashion Sq. Charlene, 9418656 GENERAL OFFICE help, Fil­ in g/ data entry/ answering phones. Must have legible hand w riting and computer sk ills. 30+hrs/w k., Call Tim 92U8533. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! HELP WANTEDCLERICA L MODELING Female Student Modeling • No Experience Needed • Must be 18 years or older 1996ARIZONA COED CALENDAR GIRLS HELP WANTEDGENERAL $$$ FAST $$$ The Student Affairs Research Office is looking for ASU Students to conduct telephone surveys from November 5th to November 16th. Surveys will be conducted on Sundays from 3:00 PM - 9:00 PM and Monday thru Thursdays from 5:00 PM : 9:00 PM. There is a mandatory paid training session on Frtday, November 3,1995 from 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM. $5.5Q/Hour To apply stop by Student Affairs Research located in the Memorial Union Room* 110 (by the Art Gallery) or call 965-4070 for more information. HEADQUARTERS 'RETAIL store needs p/t Scf/t help, In­ quire within.966-6093 A m erica n S tu d en t B od ies New C offee Bar/Cafe open auditions Sunday, Oct. 29 MESA SHERATON HOTEL 8am-5pm Opening mid November at Sky Harbor Airport. Permanent/part-time openings. No experience necessary. Benefits/incentives. Flexible schedule. A fun place to work! Leave m essage at It takes a college education AND practical experience to make it in today's competitive marketplace. $FUN & MONEYS $8/hr + Commission AM or PM Shift^Avallable Your degree will be worth more IF it's combined with solid workexperience. Do you have the right stuff? 263-9666 493-7392 or 460+745 DELIVERY DRIVERS Immediate positions available. Flexible hburs. Cash daily. Perfect (or students. Call Toby after 5pm. 921-3278 Come join our teatti in Tempe, work 9am to 1pm M-Sat or 5pm to 9pm M-F w/Sat 9 to 1 in a great environm ent - not a boiler room! You'll set appts. by phone for our Sales force. We offer a GUARANTEED salary + comm + bonuses that can earn you $250.00 per week! Call for an interview 894- 2322 . Ask for the personnel director. Are You Experienced? At ENTERTEL, IN C , you'll develop good communication skills, profit from professional sales training, and be paid while gaining valuable experience. Call TODAY for an interview, andstart earning the experience you'll need tomorrow. Adaptible schedules for students. ENTERTEL, INC.In a Class by itself) 8010 E. McDowell, Ste. 218 (NE comet McDowell & Hayden) Scottsdale, AZ 85257 941-4240 S , P ta t e HELP WANTED* FOOD SERVICE RED ROBIN Immediate openings for wait staff and cooks. Apply in per­ son at 1375 W Elliot Road HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE BABYSITTERS & Nannies. "Set your own schedule. Days, eves &/br wknds. $4. 25 - $6 .7 0/hr. 460-1200. WANTED: babysitter for infant & toddler in Cen. Phx. area 2days/wk & occational wkends Refs, a must. Pam 375-3259, F/T CHILD CARE for 6 yr old feoy in my home, Sun-Thurs. Own trans., CPR, ref. req'd. $5/hr., start immed. CaW 2273192, pager. NANNY FOR 1 1/2 yr & new­ born in my hom e, ft/pt, flex, hours. Mom works at home; Scptts. & Lincoln: 922-1965. Statt Praii ClinifítSi Mattkiwi Cattar Baiimtnt 96S-6735 RESTAURANTS/ BARS CLUCK-U JO B OPPORTUNITIES JOB OPPORTUNITIES $35 0Ô0/ŸR. rNCOME poten­ tial . Reading books. Toll Free (1) gOO-898-9778 Ext, R -1676 for details. MONTESSORI Tchng Asst.,exp. w/children, 2:30-6, M-F 6415 Sk>uth Lakeshore Dr. 730-8886 BUSINESS " OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA JOBS- Earn up to $ 3 ,0 0 0 -$ 8 ,000+/m o. working in fish in g industry Room & board! Transportation! Male/Female. No experience necessary! (310)285-0085 ext. A-48810 EXTRAORDINARY PEOPLE wanted to work w/us at the top level of our MLM Co. Be sup­ ported, trained & valued. Cail l800-862-9072 or 602-9666835. ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Students Needed! fishing In­ dustry. Earn up to $3,000$6.000+ per month. Room and Boared!. Transportation ! Male or Female. No experience nec­ essary. Call (206)545-4155 ext A59182. SPORTS MARKETING Firm heeds reps to recruit clients for legal Offshore sports betting 1800-55-Wager. FREE LOST/FOUND CRUISE SHIPS & Vacation Re­ sorts Hiring! Earn. Up to $3,200/m o working in travel industry. World Travel & Exot­ ic Resorts. No experience nec­ essary ! Transportatiori ! Room & board! (310) 271-4147 ext. C- ' 488 JQ :■ FOUND: NICE Looking insu­ lated lunch box on bike path. Cáll 965-1260, identify it and it’s yours. (Warning; W ill eat contents by 10/30/95). V'/".'--'7 PERSONALS CRUISE SHIPS now hiring Earn up to $2,000+/m onth working On cruise ships or land-tour com panies. World travel.. Seasonal & full-time em­ ployment available. No, experi­ en ce necessary. For more in­ formation call 1-206-634^0468 éxt, C59182. ; V;-; :>’ EK AMANDA - 1 week is com­ ing up soon. I hope you aré looking forward to it; Love; your guardian Angel. SIGMA DELTA Tau and Theta Chi, good luck with the Hal­ loween party. A S U 's #1 Late N ight Eatery Open tilt 2 a.m. 894 -21 1 2 W o o d sh e d I . E s t. 1979 • F o o d A Drink Tempe. AZ. •.Late night Happy Hour iQ:30p -100« . • Cash Pdpf Tourney Sat Nrte 9:00: *Pool. &Darts »Satellite T V. (NFL) * . •We Show AHGreen.Bay Packer. Games »1/8 Your Wing Order Free Sun. &Mon Baseline & Mill P a g e l9 Friday^ October 27, 1995 ress MOTION PICTURE & T ele­ vision shows now hiring! Earn to $3.000/mo: Work with your favorite .sta rs ! World travel. : Transportation! Room ¿Aboard!. N o experience necessary ! Parttime & full-tim e; (310)2850085 ext . M-48801 FARCE SIDE COMEDY HOUR TODAY AT NATIONAL PA^KS Hiring Seasonal & full-time employ-* ment available at National Parks. Forests & Wildlife Pre- • s e r ie s. B enefits + bOttusesi Call 1-106-545-4804- ext.: N59181, • 831-W O O D 12:40PM MU PROGRAM M ING LO U N G E LOW ER L E V E L MU SP O N S E R É D B Y PEPSI TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G SERVICES PERSONALS iN fb N S b ANU More! scents from around the lyorld. Evoke your Own special mood. Cata-! logue $2.00 credited on first or* der. Free incence with each or­ der. The Lotus Eater 311 North Tejón St. Dept 116, Colorado Springs ,CO 80903 TRI-SIGMA NEW members - In­ itiation is right around the com­ er! Your actives love you! ADOPTION HAPPILY MARRIED white couple longing to, adopt infant4 yr Old, P lease help answer our prayers for a family i f you are unable to care, provide, etc. for your child. We are finan­ cially. secure and will provide the best o f everything for yOur child. Easy to meet or talk to. Call Pat after 6pm 1-800-2370058. S g g V IC |^ _ _ ^ ATTN ALL Students! Grants & scholarships are ofrd by pvt sector. Qualify regardless of inc or grds. For more info call 1800-400-0209. CALL HOME For free!! Up to $1000 in free long distance. Call 602-834-8251 for info. HUNDREDS & THOUSANDS of grants & scholarships avail­ able to all students. Let our years of research benefit you. Immediate qualification. Call I800-270-2744. i INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS. DV-1 greencard program avaiK able. 1-800-660-7167. JAPANESE ÀLCP & BA MA or PhD students/having trouble with TOEFL? Need help edit­ ing? Call Mark 966-4649 MA in English & 10 years in Japan. S CH O L A R S H IP S / M O NÉ Y AVAILABLE for college-record­ ed ! m essage g ives details, (602)838-3123 V • State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement AFFORDABLE- TERM papers, reports, theses, resumes. Fast turnaround. T ow nsend W/P, Maureen, 955-0909. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. Amazing Logic Riddles! Astonish Yourself and 1-800-239-1620 24hr. recorded message 3 new riddles presented weekly! V 1 IB City, State PHOTOGRAPHY" 96S-6735 RESUMES FROM SCRATCH TYPING/WORD P R O Œ & IN G _ CREATIVE, INNOVATIVE, PROFESSIONAL $1.99 PG. Fast. Accurate. Las­ er! APA/MLA Experienced edi­ tor. Rural/University. Jim, 9672360. $$2/PG, S15/RES. Proofed. Las­ er. APA/MLA. Same day- DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. Resumes, cover letters, updates in one visit. 100% Success! Personal Service 968-7735 610 W. Broadway. (W. of Mill) Mon.-Sun. 8am-9pm Busy Bee .JBS Commiter Svc A ll Tour Typing Needs - AAA TYPING/ word processing. $ 1.50/page. 15 yearn experience. Fast turnaround. Call 962-8075. Papers • Resumes • Reports 50% Student Discounts Experienced (MLA/APA). Free P /U & DeUvcrv 6 4 1 -1 0 0 6 Resum es T h a t G et . R esults! t l i e W r ite R e s u m e " 9 6 7 -0 1 2 5 I f f ■ , " T " - :- ■ " | • ■ | ■ ■ I • 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 086 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Lost/Found 088 052 049 101 074 072 073 070 O/! 030 Fundraising Furniture Garage Saie6 Health &Fitness Help Wanted-CMd Care Help Wanted-Clerical Heip Wanted-Food Service Help Wanted-General Help Wanted-Sales Homes tor Rent 0$) 102 107 103 056 076 015 120 050 045 W e appreciate your help. And so does the earth. ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST ! by Sydney Omarr Friday, October 27,1995 Etta: “W in! gives me a th rill," deflates Etta James, 37, Aquarian ja iz tad blues singer, “is when people come to me after i concert to tell me that my songs carry them along!” EUa James, legend i i f her own time,-on comeback trait She 2p currently resides in Riverside, C ali, fornia. Classic Aqusrius, she adheres Commercial 1day, $2.20 per line 2-4days, $1.65 per fine, per day 5-9days, $1.40 per line, perday 10+days, $1.25 per line, perday 3 fineminimum. Adda boldheadlineforthe cost of 2 lines. * W hen the State Press has inserts, they tend to flop to the ground and create a safety hazard as w ell as an eyesore. W ould you be so socially cor­ rectas to.bend over and pick an insert that might slip out of your State Press? Thanks- / BANDERSNATCH Business Phone Party R 1-4days,frivaie $1.35 pertine, per(toy A 5-9days, $4.30per fine, perday 10* days, $1.15 perline, perday T Home for Sale Housedeaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes W e do this for .you every day. W ill you do something for Us? Good! Thanks! 5 y DNEY Q mARR to her awn unorthodox style, one that people w ill not soon forge!. Other Aquarians: Victor Mature, Jack Lemmon, Lina Turner, Joe Fesci, Clint Block, Franklin D. Roosevelt E S Every weekday, we give you the Statefress absolutely free. Great news. Great features. Even a magazine. Crosswords and horoscopes. Not to men­ tion the huge savings from a llthe coupons. Y O U R G A M E D A Y H E A D Q U A R T ER S S in c e 1 9 7 5 O u r 2 0 th y e a r se rv in g A .S .U . Fans! 2 1 2 1 S. M ill #206 1 1 /2 blks S. o f B roadw ay Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. Please be sure tocheck your ad. Make sure It reads exactly as you wish 1 to appear in the State Press, Including punctuation. Please checkyour ad the first day It appears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost ol the ad and credit may be given for the first Insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. No refunds w i begiven, but if you need to cancel your ad a cred# will be heldon account for futureadvertising. NEED PHOTOGRAPHED To shoot new furniture lin e .. Call for details. 491-3087. A STRO LO G ICA L FORECAST . Entry Level Experts. Special Student Discounts! Complete CAREEK SUPPORT SERVICES. ;,. § f§ ||ff|| Jjf-' •"!;•-> Address I W ANT IT NOW ! Statt Praia Claitifiedt ASU Box 871502 Home Phone ASU AREA. APA/MLA exp. IBM/laser, WP5/6, transcription Charts/graphs 966-2186 any­ time C om position, editing, propfreading, etc. Stacyann 8589346. Classified Ad Order Form Name 1 -•-;! .•!>. --"v-!: MATH TEST PAPERS! Call NOW! Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-8484 Office: 965-6735 LOOKING FOR individuals to provide in home tutoring to au­ tistic child, p/t, flex hrs. $7+/hr; Training provided. 10 miles from ASU. I -10 & Ray B d.759-8390! Crain sessions by Miracle Tutoring for MAT 106, 117, 119, & 210.- $20/session. Notes & test provided. Ph. 9 6 7 -1236 or e-mail tutoring@indirect.com D esktop Publishing: Typing, resume service, charts & graphs. On campus! 966-1984. Your F riends! ¡u T o ig _ _ _ 063 Motorcycles 082 Music 090 Personals 084 fete . 110 Photography 097 Pregnancy Counseling 647 Real Estate 035 Rental Sharing ' 080 Restaurants/Bars 037 Rooms for Rent 10Q Services 081 Sports &Recrearon 058Tickets 031 Townhomes/Condos for Rent 041 townhomesCondos for Sale 060 Transportation 067 Travel * , 106 Tutors 105 Typing/Word Processing 110 Wantéd 1 ■ " | ■ 1 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Weekend gets under way, you confer with Capricorn native concerning aspirations, career, emotional ups and downs. Focus on organization, ambi­ tion, willingness to sacrifice for your principles. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Long-range prospects highlighted you're on precipice of fame, fortune. What was lacking is made available, including funding. Check Aries mes­ sage. Lot go of burden not your own in first place. GEMINI (May 21-Jurte 20): You’re free! Excess baggage flies away, you'll be lighter on your feet and this works to your advantage. Fresh start indicated, new direction, independence, memorable love rela­ tionship. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Peo­ ple pay attention, yet only recently it seemed you were invisible. Some will say, “It is inspiring to listen, to be with you!" You’ll bring order out of chaos, Aquarian retumslavor. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Lunar aspect coincides with physical attrac­ tion, stirring of creative juices. Focus oh entertainment, social activities, invitation to exclusive affair. Gemini, Sagittarius persons in dominant roles. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Atten­ tion revolves around durable goods, repair work, testing recipes, checking automobile engine. Review invoices, you'il be surprised by refund re­ ceived in mail. Scorpjo figures in scenario. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Qct. 22): People talk about you, relative involved. Visitor arrives unannounced, expects to be treated as if royalty. Maintain humor, equilibrium. Get: some writing done. Your thoughts, ideas are: well received, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov, 21): Mon­ ey picture bright, lost article re­ trieved. Taurus, Libra persons p!ay significant roles. Major domestic ad­ justment involves possible change of residence, marital status. Check color coordination! SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Cycle high, test waters, present product, display talent. See people, relationships in realistic light. Myste- , rious Pisces says, "Please see more of me!" Virgo also represented. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Your kind of day! Pressure on, you'll win. Knowledge of time astounds friends, associates, Relationship in­ tense, no longer are you taken for granted. Cancer, another Capricorn piay roles. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll be challenged, tested, ques­ tions hurled at you hoping tq embar­ rass. Maintain independence of thought, action; Say in effect, “Is that the hardest you can hit?” You emerge asbig winner! PISCES. (Feb.-19-March 20): ; Those who neglect you will pay price. Don't depend on idle people - if you want something done, ask busy per­ son. Fresh start required, different kind of love on horizon. Leo is: involved, IF OCTOBER 27 IS TOUR BIRTHDAY: You have knowledge of many subjects, are practical but often lean heavily on metaphysics. You provide inspiration for others, many confide problems in you. You are better at aiding strangers than at promoting your own cauae. You are dynamic, impulsive, headstrong and romantic. Whether you admit it or not, you believe firmly in a soul mate, Aries, Libra persons play major rotes in your life. Travel in November, reunion with individual currently residing in foreign land. c 1995, Los Angeles Times Syndicate Page 20 S t a t e P ress Friday, October 27,1995 We have w hat you w ant ON S h o p early—sa v e BIG ! i S a v e w ith u s t h is w e e k ! Y o u 'll f in d d e e p d is c o u n t s o n f ir s t q u a lit y b r a n d - n a m e c tp th in g , a c c e s s o r i e s a n d andpj t a k e a d v a n t a g e o f C Y C L E S A L E ' S m u it i- s t o r e b u y in g p p # e & l® '-1“ - ' ' . " / B S H H h DAYS ONLYGigantic Clothing Clearance ' , \ Save on: • SHORTS • HELMETS • GLOVES • SHOES « SOCKS •TIGHTS «JACKETS • T-SHIRTS • KNICKERS • SHOE COVERS • RAINWEAR A ccessories Cycling's more fun when you have th s M ast gadget You’ll save a bum Seon racks, packs, car carriers, bicycle lights, lubricants and elec­ tronic items. i: Friday, October 27, 9:00am-9:00pm Saturday, October 2 8 ,9:00am-6:00pm Sunday, October 29,11:00am-5:00pm Components/ Parts/Tools All '95 Bicycles Priced to Sett 10%«50% Off Make it better than new. Whether ITs handlebar tape, new rims, or Hems; from Shimano, Mavic and Campy-youll find them all reduced. Come se e and save on aN: • KLEIN • RITCHEY • ROSS» SEROTTA •BALANCE «WHEELER • HARO • GT • MAS! Tires/Tubes B IC Y C LES ON S A LE 95's hottest bikes PLUS floor models, dem os, pro bikes, one-of-a-kind special j M deals-shop early and SAVE BIG! Sumer savings on your favorites, including the latest mountain » id race designs from fam ous brands includ­ ing Ritchey, Avocet, IRC, Paimraeer and Continental. Spare tubes, regular Presta or SchratfaMI to r & M . SAVEUP TO $9.8t 3 BIG DAYS!!! 27 , 9 : 00 a m - 9 : 00 p m S a t u r d a y , O c t o b e r 28 , 9 : 00 a m - 6 : 00 p m S u n d a y , O c t o b e r 29 , 11 : 00 a m - 5 : 00 p m F r id a y , O c t o b e r Save on All Bicycles, Parts, Clothing & Accessories! 3 DAYS TO SAVE! Storewide savings on hundreds of items! Full list of sa le item s available a t store during sale. No pre-sale, layaway, phone or mall orders. S ale prices apply only to stock on hand. TEMPE BICYCLE 330 W. University • (University &Farmer, 4 blocks west of Milt) * 966-6896 Financing Available • 90 Days Same as Cash