Vol. 80 No. 66 An Independent Morning Daily Thursday, Novem ber 30,1995 ASAS U j ustice defends W eber recall vote delay C y c lin g D e v ils B y T imothy T ait State P ress The Associate Students of ASU Supreme Court decided to postpone the recall elec­ tion against President Chris Weber Tuesday evening with the students in mind — not to give Weber time to campaign, said ASASU Chief Justice Kevin Myer. He said the court handed down the tem­ porary restraining order against die election committee so ASASU could investigate questions surrounding the election. “This decision simply says that some issues have been raised,” he said. “We need to look into the time, place and manner that this election will be held.” Myer said the court was concerned that students were not fully aware that an elec­ tion was scheduled and that there were only four polling cites placed on campus. “This decision has nothing to do with campaign time, nothing at all,” Myer said. “It has.to do with the conditions (under' which) the election is held. was not for Chris to campaign.” Second-year law student Brita Long filed a complaint against die Executive Committee Tuesday morning, raising the issues which ASASU will investigate. She contended that the timing of the election did not provide enough time to inform students about the recall and there were too few voting sites. Long also accused the Executive Committee of failing to follow ASASU elec­ tion procedures in setting up the election. According to Long’s complaint, ASASU needed to notify the elections coordinator one month prior to the election about the location of the polling sites. She also wrote that the college councils are required to pro­ vide information on poll workers two weeks before an election. “The previous examples show that a fair and reasonable time to hold an election is far greater than three school days,” Long wrote. “The parties and members of the association must be given an ample time period in which to plan and prepare for an election, and to become informed regarding the issues.” T urn to R ecall, page 2. and 2 bucks can get RljdentjS Super Bowl seats By BtitrAN-ANbEieoN Jim Poulin/State Press C a m e r o n R a n d a ll, s e n io r o u t d o o r r e c r e a t io n m a jo r, J o in s o t h e r m e m b e r s o f th e A S U C y c l i n g D e v ils “ R o H - A - T h o n ” e v e n t W e d n e s d a y o n H a y d e n L a w n . T h e s e v e n - h o u r d e m o n s tra tio n o f b o th m o u n ta in b ik e s a n d ro a d b ic y c le s h e lp e d p ro m o t e th e c iu b a n d r a is e d o n a t io n s . T h e c lu b p a rtic ip a te s in g r o u p r id e s d a lly a n d a tte n d s lo c a l ra c e s . . ; Odds g f|^ jiq |n j| yjtilKbe based on th e T t^ ^ W jftf raffle. Students, faculty and. staff who didn't .s HSr x . Safety Escort Service director Lisa Mertz has resigned from her position with the service because of a lack of time to dedicate to the job. Mertz, a graduate anthropology student, was hired in late August, but said, “I think I do the service more of a disservice because I can’t give it the time it needs.” Her resignation is effective Dec. 8. in the meantime, SES will continue to operate. I “Even if we don’t get a director hired by the (end of this) semester, it’s not like SES will stop running,” said Andrea Van Bemmel, Associated Students of ASU campus affairs vice president. “We have two very capable assistant directors.” V an B em m el p ra ise d M ertz’s w ork during her semester as director. “She’s done a really good job of making the volunteers feel very appreciated,” she said. She praised Meitz’s efforts in getting additional sites for the service. A satellite base at Sonora Center should be operational early in the spring semester. Currently, SES operations revolve around one base in the Memorial Union. As of Tuesday night, SES had completed 4,348 escort runs this semester. About 8,000 runs were provided during both semesters combined last year. Van Bemmel said the applicant interviews will be conducted this week. Anyone interested in filling the position should jack up an application on the third floor of the MU from ASASU. Van Bemmel said applicants do not need to have experi­ ence with SES, but she added that she is looking for “someone with management experience, someone who’s very dynamic, and someone who’s very comfortable in groups and talking to University personnel.” The position pays $87 every two weeks, and it is a very big time commitment. “People don’t do it for the money,” Van Bemmel said. Meriz plans to continue woridng for SES as a volunteer escort “The service exists so that people can feel safe when they’re out on campus,” she said. “I wouldn’t say the peo­ ple that use our service fear for their lives, but it certainly makes them feel comfortable,” In addition to seeking a director, SES continues to look for more volunteers. Currently, the program has 60 volun­ teers, but Van Bemmel said the service needs closer to 100 so the volunteers aren’t overworked. “The people who make up what the SES is are so dedi­ cated,” Mertz said, “(but) everybody is getting burnout.” SES, which is funded and sponsored by ASASU, pro­ vides rides for students from 6:30 p.m. until 12:15 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and from 6:15 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday nights. Hours of operation will be extended until 3 am . during finals week, Van Bemmel said. To receive an escort, call 965-1515. To volunteer as an escort, pick up an application in the memorial union on either the first or third flo o r from the ASASU offices. Sell Your Textbooks Back to Rother’s Highest Prices Paid • Fast Service Plenty of Free Parkins R O T H E R ’S B O O K S T O R E Y o u r C o lla g e B o o k s t o r e Broadway C L O S E T O A S U ! O P E N 24 H O U R S O n I te C o rn a r of Superstition Fwy. R ural & S o u th ern S t o re 829-7799 . P h a r m a c y 829-1857 20 Stores on Campus... under One Roof! >Pharmacy* Video Rentals* First Interstate Bank *AH eadurer Budget Rent-A-Car* 1-Hour Photo Lab* Mr. ,8 » pons Mother Cellular* Floral Shop* Chinese Kitchen* Liquor / n Dept* Dry CLeaners* Nutrition* Cosmetic* <>uPon$ Bakery* Service Deli* Groceries* Produce* Charge Everything You 111 Meat/Seafood* Bulk Foods* Customer Service Center...Check Cashing, Lottery Tickets, UPS THS AO GOOD Mastercard, Visa, Bank Service, Phone Cards, Money Orders, Western AT Debit or Discover Card. Union, Stamps, FAX Service, Copy Machine Buy at Smith's with any ___„ BANANAS .. RUBALA SOUTHERN STORE nov. 2v thru dec. m o ss Hunt's Tomato Sauce 4,**1 10~$1 FEED YOUR FINALS FEARING M IND. EATA PIZZA Golden Ripe 8 oz. Regular, Limit 10 Please Angel Soft Swanson Bath Tissue POT PIES 4-RoH, Limit 2 Please 7 oz. Beef, Chicken, Turkey, Limit 3 1 3 0 1 E. University Campbell's Country Style A McClintock Cream of Mushroom Spare Ribs 69 SOUR. 2 * 99* 10.75 oz., Limit 2 Please 89e, Pork Shoulder, Bone-in UiOvTOty BetweenRural Sunny's CREDIT CARDS GOOD ON DELIVERY P a ge8 Thursday, Novem ber 30, 1995 , St a te P ress Group seeks sponsors to aid families at Christmas B y P atty K in g S tate P ress If Santa’s sleigh doesn’t venture into south Phoenix this year, a few carloads of ASU volunteers will. ASU and the Community: Together in Volunteering Excellence (ACTIVE), a campus community-service refer­ ral program, is recruiting sponsors for the Adopt-A-Family Christmas program, a county wide effort run by the Society of St. Vincent de Paul that provides holiday gifts and meals for needy families. “I really feel that ASU students want to get involved in the community and they want to volunteer and help, but their biggest obstacle is ... not knowing how to begin,” said Erin Murphy, ACTIVE coordinator. “(This program) is an easy start.” ACTIVE, which links students interested in volunteer work with 65 Valley non-profit agencies, will be accepting sponsors for the Adopt-A-Family program through Dec. 6. The Society of S t Vincent de Paul began the Adopt-AFamily for Christmas program in October 1983 and oper­ ates it out of 25 locations in Maricopa County, including Surprise, El Mirage, Chandler and south Phoenix. “We are anticipating 900 to 1,000 (families) this year,” said Shannon Stafford, assistant coordinator of the program at St. Vincent de Paul’s office in south Phoenix. She said anyone wishing to be a sponsor must agree to provide each m em ber o f a fam ily w ith a new , wrapped gift. They also provide the uncooked ingredi­ ents for a full Christmas dinner and bring the items to the family themselves. “We ask that our sponsors deliver the gifts and food on or before Dec. 23,” Stafford said. Tiffany* Chen, graduate assistant for ACTIVE, said any­ one from ASU can become a sponsor, including an individ­ ual, a campus organization, an office or department, a group of friends or members of a residence hall. Sponsors choose the size of family they are able to help, she said. They can select a small family of three to four people, a medium size group of five to seven people or a large family of eight or nlore people. Stafford said sponsors should estimate that die cost of providing food and a gift for each person will be roughly $20 per person. “Sponsors can do as much as they want to,” she said. “That’s just the minimum requirement.” Anyone interested in participating can sign up with ACTIVE at Student Services B-229. They can also sign up directly through St. Vincent de Paul calling 261-6820 before Dec. 13. wm w, ■jj >** The Fharm acyP ^ ^ m rrica Trusts Store 921-9002 • P harm acy 921-8013 NOW OPEN 24HOURS! CLOSE TO ASU! WalgreensCoupon E V E R Y I I I IJ R S I 1 I yX 1V1 - 2 F*IV I H o m e o f th e ‘K ille r ’ C a lzo n e l block East of Mill Ave. on University 894-MAMA M A M A K N O W S BEST : Mma Broadway Only Low Prices lo Lots Of Places Everyday G reyhound m akes it so easy to get there w ith low fares everyday on every bus. Just w alk u p and buy your ticket. W e can take you to over 2400 destinations around the country. To find ou t about low fares and convenient schedules, call 1-800-231-2222. Flagstaff L asV egas F rom T em peto: L osA ngeles $24 $32 T ucson $29 $12 HAVILAN D THIN M IN TS C hocolate Covered 6 oz. Good thru 12-7-95 « Go Greyhound. end teme the driving loml O 1995GreyhoundUhm. Inc. Pnc««aubjoct tochange Sonn»raatnctkx*and linvUlions mayapply. St a te P Page Thursday, November 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 ress THURSDAY, NOV. 30 Try this on for size D O M E S T IC DRAFTS CARDINAL PRE-GAME PARTY FR EE T R O LLY TO G AM E SS H APPY 2 fo r t HOUR till 12 lO O M IC R O C r a ig S te a d m a n s h o w s o ff o n e o f th e m a n y s w e a te rs h e s e lls o n C a d y M a ll. T h é s w e a te rs , w h ic h a re w o o l a n d h a n d -m a d e in E c u a d o r , s e ll f o r a b o u t $29 a n d th e A S U S k i C lu b b e n e fits fro m e v e ry p u rc h a s e . S te a d m a n w ill b e o n c a m p u s a g a in T u e s d a y and W ednesday. 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 T a k e i t t o B o o k m a n 's ! W E PAY CASH FO R CDs, Tapes, Software, M agazines, V ideo Games.,. O h veah and B ooks too. 430 N. Scottsdale Road Tempe, Arizona 85281 (602)894-6779 Open 7 days a week Mon-Sat 0am-10pm Sun llam -7pm 1056 S. Country Club Dr. MESA 835-0505 9 St Thursday, N overobei 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 Partners in Health The Student H ealth Center w ill b e CLOSED D ecem b er 25-January 1 for the holiday. PLAN AHEAD: *Get needed prescriptions in advance. *Check your insurance plan to learn where to go if you need medical care. IF YOU BECOME ILL OR INJURED: ^Students w ith Samaritan Campus Care, call (602) 727-7000 for advice. *Seek medical treatment if necessary. •Try an urgent care center. •Check in advance to make sure you w ill be covered by your insurance plan. FOR EMERGENCIES: *Dial 911 ♦To avoid billing problems, select an em ergency care center covered on your insurance plan (whenever posible). Move a XWPTy; from the sta ff ofilSV.STXLDEOff m Normal Hours: MON.-WED.-FRI. 8-5 TUES.-THURS. 9-5 INFORMATION LINE: 965-3346 All students are eligible for services. Fees may apply. A SU Student H ealth Just south of the University Bridge on Palm Walk • & a te P ress St a te P P age 11 Thursday, Novem ber 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 ress ATTENTION DECEMBER BUSINESS GRADS G raduation. £ onvóCiCTiqn I.■ mbtfn-w¡MUrwft «fi iT u 4 Ir—‘IfI pv ^ IF y Thursday, December 14, 7995 Unhi^rsityAefMiy Center Arizona State University Reception Prior to the Convocation on the University Activity Lawn. For More Information Contact Corey at 965-8710 S t a t e P r e s s ----S e e W orld news. Cartoons. P olice R eport ASU police reported the following inci­ dents Wednesday: • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for trespass­ ing at 1201 S. Forest Ave. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for trespass­ ing at 551 E. Orange St. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for driving on a re s tric te d lic e n se at A pache Boulevard and College Avenue. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for disorderly conduct at 600 E. University Drive. • Someone stole a male student’s back­ pack from the dining hall at Manzanita Hall. • Someone stole a slide projector from the Old Main Building. • Two bicycles were reported stolen. Tem pe p o lic e rep o rted th e fo llo w in g incidents Wednesday: • A 32-year-old man was arrested for misconduct involving a weapon and dis­ orderly conduct after he cut a sweater off if y o u ' re m e n t io n e d i n t h e efodmct of his girlfriend with a bayonet. He was very confrontational with police. He also beat hi$ head against a wall, the interior of the police car and the interior of the transport van. • Two men, ages 22 and 31, were arrest­ ed after attempting to sell 100 pounds of marijuana to undercover narcotics detec­ tives in the 4400 block of S. Rural Road. • A 36-year-old man was arrested for sh o p liftin g , assa u lt and giv in g false inform ation to police after stealing a VCR and a 12-pack of toilet paper from Walmart, 1380 W, Elliot Road. He also assaulted a man and then fled. When police caught him, he gave them a false name. • A 25-year-old man was arrested for dis­ orderly conduct after getting into a fight at Tommy’s Bar, 7700 S. Priest Drive. He and another man were yelling at each other, and they fought inside and outside the bar. Compiled by State Press reporter Greg Zemeida tem p® m . 704 S. College Ave. One Block North of ASU 966-6226 State news. Classified ads. Sports. Coupons. ASU news. Crossword puzzles. W e e k ly m agazine. Theater ads. P o lic e Report. Comic strips. Opinions. C r y p to q u o te p u z z le s . In-depth features. Help wanted WE EXCH AN GE CASH FO R BOOKS PLU S 10% G IFT C E R T IF IC A T E ON A L L BUY-BACK S OVER $30.00 CAPS - G O W N S & A N N O U N CEM EN TS A BASEM ENT O F B O O K S We'll p a y c a sh for y o u r b o o k s p lu s g iv e y o u a 10% gift certificate w ith n o ex p iratio n d a te , g o o d o n a n y th in g in th e store. W h e n y o u self y o u r u s e d b o o k s for $ 3 0 , y o u g e t $ 3 0 c a sh a n d a gift certificate for $3. if y o u g e t $ 4 0 for y o u r u s e d books, you'll g e t $ 4 0 c a sh a n d a gift certificate for $4. ■ M O N .-TH U R S . 8-7:30 C a p s & g o w n s n o w a v a ila b le . W e 'v e g o t r e a d y - m a d e a n n o u n c e m e n t s t o le t e v e r y o n e k n o w y o u 'v e m a d e itl ER L 8-5 SAT. 9-5 ■ S U N . 1 1-5 Page 12 Thursday, Novem ber 30, 1995 St a te P ress A S U S t u d e n t s • F a c u lt y • S t a f f Respond to this ad and you could win a new seat! O f course, to sit in it you're required to attend Super Bowl XXX W IN your way to the Super Bowl courtesy o f ASASU! Purchase chances to win a Super Bowl ticket at the Gammage A uditorium and Sundome Box Offices. O pen to Students, Faculty and S taff Chance to win on sale^NOW through Jan. 19 |L- V-;-: Students: $2 per chance. O ne Super Bowl ticket per w inning chance. 86 tickets available to win. Faculty/Staff: $10 per chance. Two Super Bowl tickets per w inning chance. 14 tickets available to win. There is no lim it on the num ber o f chances you can purchase; however, a valid ASU identification card m ust be presented to purchase chances. Gammage Box Office H ours : M -F 10-6 S a l 10-4 - Sundom e Box Office H ours M -F 10-4 W inners only will be notified after Jan. 19. W inner will be required to pick up ticket(s) at Sun Devil Stadium on game day w ith picture I.D . Ticket(s) may n o t be transferred or sold. j|»gel3 Thursday,November 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 S t a t e P r ess big fis h Pub State P ress Tem pe’s N ew est Live M usic Club S w i m , * P aVS,n' H om e o f the 34oz M o n ste r Fish M u g only S3 ^e>e oot a^rd ld to eat the C w tm a rossw ords G o a head ... d o j u l l selectio n o f d ia m o n d s a n d o th e r gem s. “C o m e in a n d see o u r en g a g em e n t rin g s!” th e m in ink. «DCSJDQGO fo r n ii . w / PS 191 c m e m b e rs o f Tow nees> % NOV 30 fri DEC \ S S at DEC 2 lin w / N e w R ed M a c h in e a n d S to re C irc le Innuencfl w / PS 191 a n d 1 0 th & A s h B attle o f th e Bands DEC 3 (y o u c a n t 1 p la y i f y o u d o n 't c a ll) m?H Tempe's only open mike With Karaoke House/PA available Bring your instrument, band or voice! 50c Well, Wine & Draft 8-10 PM • No Cover fu e s Dave W ave % DEC 5 spinning old and n‘e w punk, disco & hip hop 50c Well, Wine & Draft 9-11 PM w H ollow w / Q uixotic e d DEC6 ■■■■ n si ■■■■ ■■■ ■■■ ■■■ MflHB W ÊIÊÊÊM SHH 1 9 5 4 E. U N I V E R S I T Y - TE/VIPE U n iv e r s ity , ju s t E^tst o f M c C lin to c k 9 6 6 - 5 0 1O J / I E L D T O T H E I N F I N I T E K L A Instruments is the world’s leading m anufacturer of O ptical Inspectioh Equipm ent for the Sem iconductor Capital Equipm ent market. Located in the heart of Silicon Valley. K L A will be visiting Arizona State University for a corporate presentation on December 4th from 6:00-8:00pm , a s well a s on-site interview s on December 5th. S e e C a re e r C enter for details. K\B KLAINSTRUMENTS CORPORATION Page 14 State P ress Thursday, N ovem ber 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 United Effort State P ress po u ce R epo rts Too bizarre to be anything but real. There's a place set just for you at « EAST SIDE MARIO’S * Where you'll be filled with food &fun from the wood fired brick oven pizzas &pastas from around the world to the Mew York Burgers &Chicken, Ribs, &Steak... It's a variety of food S fun! 1 1 2 5 W . E llio t on Elliot between Kyrene & Priest - Thn Hacker/State Press Open: Sun.-Thgrs. 11am- Midnight Weekends:! 1am - 1am P re s id e n t La ttie C o o r s p e a k s to a u n it o f U n ite d W a y re p re s e n ta tiv e s , c o m p r is e d o f A S U fa c u lty a n d s ta ff, th a n k in g th em fo r th eir e ffo rts in r a is in g $223,000 th is y e a r fo r th e fo u n d a tio n . T h e u n it h a s a w e e k a n d a h a lf t o m e et th e ir g o a l o f $255,000. C o m e a n d c a ll th e p la y T O D A Y ! K a r a o k e N ig h t o n T h u r s d a y s . 05e n rg e Sc î î r a g n n J a e s ta u ra n t S iq ß u h p re s e n ts CollegeNightonMondays S t a t e P r es s • Happy Hour All Night w/College ID $2 Wells & $1 off All Drinks George & Dragon offers B e s t S e le c t io n o f E u r o p e a n B e e rs i n t h e V a lle y 21 B e e rs o n T a p in c lu d in g : • M urphys • N ew C astle B row n • H a rp • G u in e s s • D o u b le D ia m o n d • Ja g e rm e u te r B e s t B r it is h J u k e b o x Classifieds The bargains are in the back. C D 's f r o m B r it a i n Sun • Pool T ournam ent / Mon • M onday N ight Football Thurs • In House PromoAnyone wearing a G & D shirt gets Happy H our Specials 4 2 4 0 N . C entral Ave., P h oen ix (N. o f Indian S ch ool) 241-0018 1810 N. Scottsdale (betwd SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY « SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY « SUPER TUESDAY £ 5 m ". • .■ < o a. a SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUI ¡5 o SA V E 20 % SUPER TUESDAY Stock up before finals and that long winter vacation. § You need it? W e have it! 2 ■■e Christmas purchases •Wellness Kits • Massagers • Gift g Certificates • Vitamins • Herbs • Books »Herbs »Sports Nutrition £ Minerals •Cosmetics • Food • Gloves • Clothing ¿» $5«gncgoldcardj PURCHASE G N C PRODUCTS ess tORAMHOHEffi TUE1. Dec! i Of Exp. 12/25/95 | NOT VAUDWITH ANV OTHER OFFERS Tempe Center 913 S. Mil) Avenue. Tempe' ' S.£. Corner Mill & University 967-2060 Mon.-Fri. 9 To 9 * Sat. 10 to 6 • Sun. Noon-5 Arizona Center M 0 455 N. 3rd Street Suite 244 * Phoenix (Upstairs, Next to French Knot) 1 252-3101 Mon. -Thurs. 10-9* Fri. & Sat. 10 to 10 • Sun. 11-5 SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY • SUPER TUESDAY S t a t e P r ess Pagje_l£ Thursday, Novem ber 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 L o c a t e d in th e A r c h e s P la z a University Groom! Humans 0 H air Studio 966-5462 L e e c h FIRST-TIMECLIENTSPECIAL St Thursday, Novem ber 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 a te P ress D eregulated T V tran sform s Taiw anese p o litics TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Two years ago, when the gov­ ernment gave up its monopoly on the electronic media, Lee Tao quit the military-controlled television network and started a prime-time talk show on cable TV. Today, he is Taiwan’s equivalent of Larry King. With legislative elections set for Saturday and presidential elec­ tions for March, he is perhaps the most sought-after man in Taiwan. The rise of Let’s Speak O ut is part of a media revolution that has accompanied Taiwan’s eight-year transition from dictatorship toward democracy. As soon as it was launched, Lee’s show appealed to a populace fed up with the three pro-govemment networks. The two-hour show now reaches 3.5 million households 60 percent of Taiwan’s 21 million people — over a group of 200 cable stations collectively known as “the fourth station.” P o n u t a y o c u o r If a computer is one of the gifts you’ll be giving this holiday season, why not get one that leaves you some cash for the others? Used or new, a computer from Computer Renaissance is always less expensive than a computer from another computer retailer. Big Presents. Not-so-big Prices! m p u g i f t Every day, Lee is besieged by politicians anxious to reach voters through the live debates. The show takes view­ ers’ calls, although Lee says some dial for a year before getting through. During the election campaign, Lee has taken the show on the road with weekly outdoor debates. At one o f them. Su Chen-chang of the Democratic Progressive Party squared off against Tsai Pi-huan of the ruling Nationalists. Su accused the Nationalists of nominat­ ing candidates with criminal records and using underworld gangs to secure their power. Tsai’s response — that repentant hooligans deserve a second chance angered many viewers. “I will tell my son if he wants to be a gangster he must first become a Nationalist,” said one caller. Such a debate would be impossible on the three net­ works, which show only paid political advertisements. t e r “ There were fears that debates on sensitive issues would sharpen confrontation,” Lee said. “But now, people can make their voices hernd. They no longer feel shut out, and they are learning to respect other people’s right to speak.” Lee spoke in his spacious office at the Television Broadcasting Super Channel, of which he is now general manager. TVBS was established in 1993 by Taiwanese media tycoon Chiu Fu-sheng and Hong Kong investors. The political fare has done the investors well. L ei’s Speak Out is expected to earn $360 million from advertiser ments during the election campaign. Other television com­ panies have rushed to copy Lee’s format. Lee Hsien-rong, a Nationalist, hosts a weekly talk show that takes calls from his constituents in Taipei county-. “Few voters would stand in the cold and listen to our speeches,” he said. “So I meet'them in their living rooms.” CLIMBING TH l i s t . HMay SpedabU AST 486 mMmiopodipymdmkt AST 14' .28 SVGAmonitor $999 8 H a nbrv-Riddle Aeronautical Univer­ sity can prepare you for a better future by providing "real world management education." Semi Hosier h r the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, postrophes, the length and formation of the words are ll hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTES 1 1 -3 0 : h e v z i i TKWTX TKXQ q t a t x EQ IT D D JH p t C H E MHIIHV k M Z XDJ KQW PT T W. — J Z H X Z H Y e ste rd ay 's C ry p to q u o te : IF WE WOULD iUIDE BY THE LIGHT OF REASON WE MUST -ET OUR MINDS BE BOLD —LOUIS D. BRANDEIS C 1905 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. 715 S. M c C L IN T O C K ♦ T E M P E * 966-1911 Page 18 S t a t e P ress Thursday, Novem ber 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 Pope praises feminism in defending dignity of women her a “narrow domestic” symbol, rather than a spiritual figure. St. Mary serves as a “valid response to the desire of women’s emancipation” because she is the only person who embodies “divine love,” the pope said during his regular general audience. What prompted the need for feminism, John Paul said, was a “lack of appreciation for the value of woman, often forced into a secondary, or outright marginal, .role,” - VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope John Paul II praised the achievements of feminism Wednesday, saying it has championed the dignity o f women and contributed to a more balanced view of womanhood. The pontiff, who has reached out to women in state­ ments several times this year, said feminism has reacted against all that has “impeded the value and full develop­ ment of the feminine personality” in politics and society. John Paul, however, criticized “feminist currents’’ that undervalued the figure of the Virgin Mary in considering “The role and dignity of the woman are particularly claimed, in this century, by the feminist movement,” he said. His remarks reflected the sentiments of his July letter to women worldwide, in which he apologized for the Church’s shortcomings regarding women through the ages. They also followed a statement Nov. 11 by the head o f the C h u rch ’s d o ctrin al o ffic e, C ard in al Joseph Ratzinger, that the ban on women priests is irrevocable. P A ID P O L I T I C A L A D V E R T I S E M E N T G R A D U A TE FRO M H IG H S C H O O L T O H IG H -T E C H . Look in the mirror. You’ll see a young person who could probably qual­ ify for high-tech training in the U.S. Army. Satellite communications...avionics...digital systems.-computers... lasers...fiber optics... The Army gives you a choice of over 50 specialty skills on the cutting edge of today’s technology. Any of them will give vou a big edge on a bright future. Look in on your local Army Recruiter and ask about high-tech training for your future in today’s modern Army. 1 - 8 0 0 -USA-ARMY moratorium and secure our re illegitimacy. interests are P r o p â i l s for tax reform are well aridgood, bu needs itiuch more. Pat Buchanan has a complete program to aet us on right track. 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A P A C H E B LV D . » T E M P E » 2 6 7 -5 4 4 5 CO Sports STATE PRESS ________________________________ Thursday, November 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 S u n D e v il w re stle rs h o s t r iv a l O r e g o n State ASU All-American Mollica to face Renner; O SU s Gutches poses tall order for Strand B y D a n M iller S t a t e P ress Jim PouHiVState Press There are currently only four active coir legiate wrestlers in the country who have already won NCAA championships. Two of them will be on display at 4 p.m. today when the fourth-ranked ASU wrestling team clashes with seventh-ranked Oregon State at thé University Activity Center. The match is the first and only home dual this year. Sun Devil senior 167-pounder, Markus Mollica, a three-time All-American and two-time NCAA champion, and Beaver senior 190-pounder, Les Gutches, the defending 177-pound NCAA champ, head­ line the list of combatants. Mollica, who is ranked No. 1 in the country at 167 pounds, is scheduled to face Chad Renner, who finished third at NCAA’s last season. Mollica was 2-1 last year against Renner, who edged him at last year’s dual in Corvallis, Ore. “There could be real showdown there,” ASU Coach Lee Roy Smith said. “He’s a very formidable opponent for Markus.” Mollica acknowledged that Renner has experienced some success against him in the past, but added that doesn’t mean he’s overly concerned. “I’m not worried as much about what he can do,” Mollica said. “It’s not so much of a worry as it is a challenge. I’m just con­ centrating on myself. “I know he’s not the best conditioned person in the world so I’m just going to try to break him mentally.” A S U 1 4 2 -p o u n d e r R o b M c M in n e n d th e re e l o f th e to u rth -ra h k e d S u n D e v il w re s tlin g te a m w ill ta k e o n N o . 7 O r e g o n S ta te at 4 p .m . to d a y a t th e T urn to A SU wrestling , page 2 2 . U n iv e rs it y A c t iv it y C e n te r. D evils pack s for 3-game trip to California B y R o n M atejko S tate P ress The ASU Ice Devils (8-0) will look to build on their best start ever when they travel to California for a three-game road trip. ASU will play three games in three nights starting with Cal-Berkeley at 9:45 p.m. tonight, followed by back-to-back games with Stanford Friday and Saturday night. A game originally scheduled for Sunday after­ noon against Cal-Berkeley has been canceled. Coach Gene Hammett said the Ice Devils have a good chance of sweeping the series despite some play­ ers being unable to join the team for the Cal-Berkeley game. He did say they will join the club in time for PAGE 24. Paul BMing/State Pr**< T h e le e D ev il» tra v e l t o C a l B e rk e le y f o r a th re e -g a m e a et th is w ee k e n d . ‘B o y l e -i n g ’ h o t A SU junior forward B oyle shows w orld-class ab ilities on hardwood B y D a m ia n S h a w S ta t e P ress Scoliosis. According to Webster’s it’s a lateral curva­ ture o f the spine. For the ASU women’s basketball team, it’s the rea­ son why it has Melissa Boyle, a junior forward who coach Jacquie Hullah has likened to an internationalcaliber player. “Melissa is very versatile; I think her style of game is similar to that of an international player,” Hullah said. “Melissa moves very, very well without the ball, and she’s very intelligent on the floor.” Boyle was diagnosed as having scoliosis in fourth grade, and, as a result, doctors advised her to get involved in physical activities. After trying swimming and gymnas­ tics, Boyle, who was always taller than the other kids her age, gave basketball a try. She’s been moving without the ball ever since. Boyle is 10th on the all-time ASU blocks’ list and enter­ ing her junior season she may be able to reach the No. 1 spot by the end of her career. But when asked about her personal goals, Boyle can only talk about her team. “Personally I want my team to win,” Boyle said. “I want to do whatever I can physically or vocally to help our team win.” Aside from being dedicated to helping her team win, Boyle equally concentrates on scholastic concerns. According to Hullah, Boyle works just as hard at prac­ tice, which has allowed her to become a better basketball player each year. “I've seen a lot of development in Melissa in her fleshman and sophomore years,” Hullah said. “Now going into her junior season probably her best asset to go along with everything is that she’s learned her confidence.” That growth has included being able to go to the hoop M e lis s a B o y le , a ju n io r fo rw a rd w h o c o a c h J a c q u ie H u lla h h a s lik e n e d t o a n in te rn a tio n a l-ca lib e r p la y e r, h a s u s e d b a s k e tb a ll to o v e r c o m e c h ild h o o d s c o lio s is . with both hands. “I decided last year that I would develop my left hand as much as my right,” Boyle said. Hullah agreed that her dedication has paid off. T urn to Boyle, page 23. Page 22 State Press Thursday, November 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 A SU w re stlin g C on tin u ed from page 21. Gutches, an alternate for the World Championship team last year and one of the few collegiate U.S. Olympic hopefuls, will likely wresde at 190 pounds, although there is a slight chance he could drop to 177, where he is ranked No. 1 in the nation. “He’s a man wrestling a lot of boys,” Smith said. “He keeps real good position. He’s aggressive and he’s tenacious.” The man who has drawn the tall order of wrestling Gutches is redshirt-freshm an Casey Strand. Strand, who holds die nation­ al high school record for career wins (228) and is a true 177-pounder, said he has noth­ ing to lose. “There’s really no pressure on me,” said Strand, who added h e ’ll probably try employing his speed to find an early open­ ing. “I’ve been waiting to wrestle guys like this. I like wrestling guys like this to show them what I can do . I feel like I can go with these high-ranked guys. A lot of them don’t know my style.” S ta te P ress Smith said he is confident Strand will be equal to the task. “Casey w ill w restle him ;” he said.. “He’s not going to go out there just to try to keep it close.” ASU sophomore Aaron Simpson, an NCAA qualifier as a freshman who lost to Gutches in last season’s dual, will do batde at 177. Since the Sun Devils appear to have a slight edge in die lower weights, Smith said Oregon State would like to be jn striking distance a win by the last few bouts. “I’m sure they’re hoping that's it’s with­ in their grasp going into the 190-pound match where it can be decided at 190 and heavyweight,” Smith said. “But you can never assume anything.” ASU heavyweight Jason McCloud, who was held out of the Sun Devils dual with BYU last Saturday due an elbow injury, will be back in action. Smith said. He will likely face Chad Flack, who advanced to die Pac-10 finals last season at 190. Junior 142-pounder Rob McMinn will also be back in the lineup after missing the BYU match. McMinn is rebounding from an ankle injury he incurred after being hit by a car while riding his bicycle last week. The follow ing Sun D evils are also scheduled to wresde today: All-American and two-tim e conference champ Danny Felix (118); Shawn Ford (126); T ra c y Brown (134); Michael Douglas (150); and defending Pac-10 champ and NCAA quali­ fier Matt Suter (158). Brown, a sophomore, has been filling the void left by All-American Steve St. John, who is recuperating from reconstuctive knee surgery and should be back eajjy next year. “Tracy’s starting to come into his own. It’s just a matter of confidence,” Smith said. “He’s physically and technically capable of being at an All-American level. It’s just a matter of him getting more matches. He trains as well as anybody.” The Beavers, who have won two straight Over ASU, nipped the Sun Devils, 26-20, last season and hold ah 8-7 series edge. They placed second at the NCAA, champi­ onships, while ASU finished fourth. “ It’s going to take a total team effort to beat Oregon State. W e’ve got a healthy rivalry going,” Smith said. “It’s an opportu­ nity for us to take advantage of us compet­ ing against good competition here at home. We need to dp a better job of wrestling ear­ lier in the year. Last year I don’t think we did as good a job of wrestling earlier in the year as maybe we should have. But we’re a little older now.” There will be no rest for the Sun Devils, who will leave immediately for the presti­ gious Las Vegas Invitational which starts Friday and continues through Saturday: ASU will join six of the country’s top seven teams in the 34-team invitational. © Share in the GLORY of victory and the AGONY of defeat. W orld news. Cartoons. State news. Classified ads. S p o r ts . Coupons. ASU news. Crossword puzzles. W e e k ly magazine. Theater ads. ■ m .w M . P o lice R e po rt. Comic strips. Opinions. Cryptoquote puzzles. In-depth features. 1-800-COLLECT Save Up To 44% . For long-distance calls. Savings based on a 3 minute AT&T operator-dialed interstate call Help wanted' ads. S tate P ress ~ Sta te P Page 23 Thursday, N ovem ber 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 r ess B o y le C o n t in u e d from page 21. “She’s developed to be very ambidex­ trous with her right and her left hand, so she’s somebody too that we can bring away from the basket,” Hullah said. “She reads defense’s very well — so whether she’s back-dooring somebody, or getting the ball and going around somebody, or getting the ball and going around somebody who’s maybe a little more slow-footed, she’s comfortable out away from the basket.’” . M O The Sun Devils have started with a 1-2 êS b L record, but Boyle said she thinks it’s evi­ dence that the fairly new team hasn’t learned to play together yet. “I think it shows that we’re a new team Tim Hacker/State Press because we have five new players,” Boyle Tw e n ty -y e a r-o ld M e lis s a B o y le , w h o is 10th o n th e a ll-tim e b lo c k lis t fo r A S U , said. “As the season progresses we'll gel h o p e s to s o m e d a y o c c u p y th e n u m b e r o n e s p o t. together and learn to read each other better. “I think how we can best use MelisSa is to give her some I definitely expect better results in the near freedom of movement and let her compliment her team­ future. We’ve already made great strides toward that.” She said that she believes change is right around the mates on the floor on the offensive end. She’s a pretty good passer too, for a forward and post up player,” Hullah said. comer for the squad. “I think we're more team-oriented,” Boyle said. “We “On the defensive side of the floor, we’re going to utilize her on the wing in our zone defense. I think with her size trust one another more I think than we did last year.” Boyle has three blocks on the season already, and has she’ll create some problems. been steadily improving on her five points and three And as for the scoliosis? “It’s been gone ever since I started playing basketball,” rebounds a game from last year. Hullah believes she etui be Boyle said with à smile. effective on the defensive and offensive ends of the court. T o ri 0 O T P E R FO R M A N C E W E A FO O TW E A R JOIN THE STATE PRESS SPORTS TEAM! IN THE CORNERSTONE 829-7473° PERFORMANCE FOOTWEAR CHRISTMAS BLOWOUT! O FF S H O E P U R C H A S E A N Y $ 2 0 OFF SELECTED STYLES! With Coupon thru 12-5-95. Not Valid with Other Offers. INI TEHE C O R N E R S T O N E ^ m M I M M I mm ■ | ] I The Sports desk is currently accepting applications for reporting posi­ tions for the spring semester. Applications are available at the State Press offices in the basement o f Matthews Center. Interested students are encouraged to complete and return their applications ASAP. 8 2 9 -7 4 7 3 GIANTS WAmerica West Vacations s S P * SANDS REGENCY - 3 NIGHTS * 2 • for *1 Happy Hour PRE & POST PARTY AT 3-6 pm *$2 Domestic 34 oz Steins 9-Close * Bring in your game ticket and we will buy you a dozen free wings. * B u s to and from games. Includes roundtrip air and 3 nights for the price of 2 at the Sands Regency, located in downtown Reno, plus dollars off coupons on ski lift tickets to Alpine Meadows, Northstar and Diamond Peak. Depart Sunday through Tuesday, January 2 - 30,1996. A il packages include 500 bonus FlightFund® miles. For reservations and information, contact your Travel Agent or America W est Vacations toll free at I^BOO-356-6611. GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE! 801 E. APACHE 894-2662 'Price shown is perperson, based on double occupancy and is subject to change without notice: may not applyto group travel, or during holiday or meeting/convention dates, as specified by individual hotels. Terms and conations and M ed availability apply. Booking fees of $25 per person will apply on bookings made less than 8 days before departure. At least one person traveling must be 21 orover. ©1995 America West Vacations/America WestAirlines. Inc. St Thursday, Novem ber 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 Page 24 a te P ress Ice D evils____ C ontinued Stud y A Is broad in C r e d it | THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF U JERUSALEM T E L AVIV ■ ■ UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY A PASADENA, Calif. (AP) —- Northwestern coach Gary Barnett is happy for die Wildcats to meet Kermit the Frog. But throwing JekyU and Hyde into the mix confuses him. Kermit will toady up as grand marshal of the 19% Rose Parade. Jekyll and Hyde is the description USC coach John Robinson applies to his own team. Welcome to Hollywood, Wildcats. “I’m going to go watch the Jekyll and Hyde movie because I don’t know which one I want showing up,” Barnett joked Wednesday as Northwestern was represented at the Rose Bowl coaches’ press conference for the first time in 46 years. “Are Jekyll and Hyde their quarterbacks?” Barnett, considered something Of a miracle worker for turning perennial loser Northwestern into the Big Ten champion, said the upcoming trip to the Rose Bowl is caus­ ing quite a stir back home. “Evanston, the entire Chicago area has gone crazy over what’s happened,” he said. “It didn’t happen all of a sud­ den, it happened over the course of the year. It’s changed the whole atmosphere on campus.” B E N -G U R IO N u n iv e r s it y H A IFA ” u n iv e r s it y Programs fo r undergraduate and graduate students: ONE YEAR PROGRAMS ' SEMESTER PROGRAMS SUMMER COURSES CO UR SES TAUGHT IN ENGLISH FINANCIAL AID “We try to keep everybody thinking about the team and all the guys are doing that.” Steve Hammett has been on a roll, scoring six goals in his last two games. He now leads the team in scoring. The special teams have been effective so far this sea­ son with the Ice Devils converting on 34 percent of their power-play chances and killing off 97 percent of their penalties. When asked about the big series against UofA that fol­ lows the road trip, Hammett laughed and said, “we haven’t even talked about it,” Wildcats, coach going Hollywood BA R -ILA N ML 21. both Stanford games. With the Ice Devils off to the hot start, it would appear that Hammett would have an easy task in coaching the squad, but he said it’s quite the contrary. “It makes it harder for me,” he said. “I have to be more creative to find things for the guys to work on, but I don’t want to upset the apple cart and find things that don’t really exist.” Hammett said he has been making sure that the good start doesn’t begin getdng to his players’ heads. “We’ve been trying not to glorify anybody,” he said. r a el for from page a v a il a b l e For more information please call: Hebrew University 1-800-404-8622 Tel Aviv University 1-800-665-9828 Bar-Uah University 1-212-337-1286 Ben-Gurion University 1-800-962-2248 Haifa University 1-800-388-2134 S t a te P r ess And Barnett suddenly is hearing from long lost friends inquiring about the possibility of getting a couple of tickets on the 30-yard line. “There are a lot of people coming out of the woodwork, and that’s OK, because there’s room on our bandwagon,” he said. “There are no tickets, but there’s room.” Northwestern, ranked third nationally, will bring a 10-1 record into the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1. USC, ranked 18th, is 8-2-1. Robinson spoke of Northwestern’s emergence and said, “ We, on the other hand, have not had a magical season. From midseason on, we have been wildly inconsistent, very much a Jekyll and Hyde type of team.” The Rose Bowl will be only the second postseason appearance ever by Northwestern. The W ildcats beat California in the 1949 game. USC’s Trojans, meanwhile, will be making their 28th trip to the Rose Bowl, where they are 19-8, but their first in six years. Robinson, now in the third year of his second stint as the Trojans’ coach, took them to the Rose Bowl in 1977,1979 and 1980, and won all three. Rain or shine, cheer or whine, we're there! Phoenix 3101 E. McDowell Rd. 2 6 7 -1 0 3 6 Paradise Valley 3004 E. Beil Road 4 9 3 -0 2 1 1 Tempe 208 W. 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North of Betttany Hom e R d. w m M 0N.-FRI. 8-5 • S A TU R D A Y 8-2 • SU N D A Y C L O S E D Classifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting motley be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer.The Stole Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding die investigation of an advertisement, please contact die Better Business Bureau at 264-.172L Freedom is exemption from the stress of authority. - A m b ro s e B ierce AN N O U N CE MENTS AN N O U N CE MENTS CELEBRATE NEW Year's Eve at the Arizona Center! Over 80 aits performances plus kid's ac­ tivities. First ni^iL For mote in­ formation 331-3220. NEED MONEY For college? Funds g o unused every year. Computer Resources can help you. 1-800-887-0716. FREE FINANCIAL aid! Over $6 billion in public and private sector grants & scholarships is now available All students are eligible regardless o f grades, in­ come or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext. F59I82. cT h \ for th e n ex t M iss A rizo n a USA. W o m en b e tw e e n th e a g e s of 18-27 w h o w o u ld lik e th e o p p o rtu n ity to c o m p e te fo r th e title of M iss USA & a p riz e p a c k a g e o f o v er $ 2 0 0 .0 0 0 ... C a ff 6 0 2 - 9 4 5 - 6 7 7 8 fo r a fr e e brochure. -Interview , ¿ ¿ w lm w e a r & Kvenlnu (^ o w n C ompetM °,rtS Apache Terrace Apartm ents 1 block from ASU 1-bedroom Apartment Now Taking Applications for January 1st #475 a month call 968-6383 HOMES FOR RENT SHOP AT Smiths near Rural & Southern. 4bdrm/2ba. $1000/m o. + $500 sec. dep. Cali 944-6073 or 431-8532. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 1BD, IB A with fridge, washer Si dryer, community pool & spa, walk to ASU, avail. 12/1 $395/mo. McDermott 345-1919 TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT QUESTA VIDA 2 master suites poolside. Refrldgerator, w/d, ceilin g fans, $775, Bob B ul­ lock w/Reality Executives 9982992. . SPACIOUS 3BR, 3ba pvt pa­ tio, com pool, app. incl. W/D incl. Near ASU $945/mo. 4514609. SPACIOUS 3BR, 3ba pvt pa­ 3BD, 2BA condo with ceiling fans on Price & U niversity $750/mo. Call Reggie before 5, 266-3077 & after 5pm 8394542. ■ tio. com pool, app. incl. Npar RENTAL | H A R IN G _ _ _ GAY MALE to share 2br 2 baapt one mile bom ASU. $276 + util. 804-0703 RMMTE. WANTED. Female, $325 + half util. Own bed/bath, wd, R oosevelt & Hayden. 675-0331. RMTE NEEDED D ec. 15 to Aug. 15, fern, mstr bd, own bath, 370 Papgo, Tempe. Emi­ ly 902-0573.________________ • RMTE NEEDED, female. Com­ mons on Lemon. St., walk to ASU. $295/month. Call Lianne at 858-0529 alter 6pm or before 11am. ASU $945/m o. A vail. 12/1. 451-4609. ROOMATE TO share 2bd/2ba Spence St. Walk to ASU. $280/mo +1/2 util. 966-9769 Page 25 A N N O U N CE MENTS R O O M S FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS $250 + UTIL, pool, w/d, walk to campus, call 731-4609. SOLOFLEX MUSCLE machine comp, w / butterfly & leg at­ tachments. Over $1500 invest­ ed. $600.Call 986-8029 or 671-9326 A BEDROOM w/private bath, 4 miles from campus, just off Ru­ ral, $275/mo. Carl 838-3261. THANKS ASU! w it h A S U S t a t e P ress Thursday, Novem ber 30, ,1995 I .D . Buy 1 Item, 2n d Item 1 /2 OFF! OLD TOWN TEMPE attheoomerof 5th &Mill 425 S. MSI Ave., Tempe 966-9199 ARIZONA CEN TER Nextto Player's Eatery 455 N. 3rd St., L-126, Phoenix 252-7525 RMTE WN.TD- 3bd/2ba, 1 mi. east o f A SU. N ice place w/a n ice room. $225/m o + dep. 894-8849. ROOM FOR Rent, cozy bdrm in house near Rural/Broadway. Pool, washer/dryer, quiet nbrhood. Not avail till 12/15, $20Q /m o+I/4 util, Paul 8296365 ROOM FOR rent, pdol, wd, ca­ ble. $221 + 1/4 util. Roomy, Mesa area, avail, now. Call Bob or Keith at 464-0603. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE PAP AGO PARK 2 largest th 2 bed/ 2 bath, w/d/refrig/balcony, great place. Ann grl 814-8807. Buv Of The Week Questa Vida, 3bd 3ba, 2 story townhouse 2 pools, raquetball court $79.500 B o b B ullock R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 BOOKS $$$ FOR BOOKS! Cash or credit for your quality used books. Trading hours: Mon-Fri. 10am - 8pm. Chang­ ing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue, 966-0203. A U T O M O g lLg L M OTORCYCL|S_ 83 CJ 7 4 spd straight 6. en­ gine exclnt, needs body work $2200 894-8310 Tod. 1985 YZ 125, excellent cond., incl. helmet and extras. $1,275 obo. Call Andrew at 423-7894. 86 MUSTANG SVO, 4 cyl, tur­ bo, rare, power everything, 5spd. all original^ never hit, 79,000m ls. $6500 obo. Lve. message, Dan 953-7059. BICYCLES $T0P DOLLARS For Your Auto Today Call Brian Now 246-3499 tdg C O M P y rre R S _ _ 386, COLOR, windows, $375286, color, all software, $275. XT, color, all software, $175. VGA color monitor, $100. Carl 838-3261. SAVE $$$$ new computers! Up to 70% off. Used computers as low as $399. 1-800-6138365. TICKETS ~ CO WB O Y S /C A R D IN A L S TICKETS. Mon: night football, Dec. 25. 1 pair, $160 obo. 3509207. . ''.'.y'/ v / PHOENIX SUNS & Minn , Tri night, Vancouver Tues. night. $25 & up. All other games available. Steve at 678-0932. ; 1994 M 50 RALEIGH, good Cond., front suspension fork. $250 obo. Call Andrew 4237894 89 BLUE VW Jetta GL 4 door sunroof, 4speed 47>000mi $5800 o t best offer. Karla @ 481-0138. 95 GEO METRO, 2dr, bright white, like new, great gas mile­ age. $8,995. Darner Motor Sales. 969-7311. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL* Cheap in your name. I specialize d quick departures. Most places worldwide. I also buy transfer­ able coupons/awards. 968-7283 SCUBA DIVING, South Car­ ibbean Beginner to Advanced PADI Certifications. $1299 All in clu sive & unlim ited dives. Jan. 6-1 4 Call Sm all World Tours 303-0393 or Mill A ve­ nue Travel 966-6300. CONVERTIBLE 91 GEO Metro 29k m iles, exl gas m ileage, runs like new. 5 speed, cruise & air bag. $5500. Call 9409064. NEEDED BADLY, transporta­ tion vehicle. Some work OK. Have cash. Please call 265-0551. HELP WANTED GENERAL 9 5 7 -7 7 7 0 PEOPLE NEEDED • Resort B a n q u e ts» v* Private Parties • Catered Events (Black & White Attire Needed) Concession Jobs Also Available Can GOLDSTAR STAFFING 264-4260 C om e w ork in an E nthusiastic & P rofessional atm osphere. ■1» Flexible part-tim e and hill-tim e positions available $5 to $7 per ho u r to start CALL NOW Midwest Publishing 968-4457 Weil take it from here. $6 PER HOUR O utgoing, energetic appoint­ ment setters for Universal Por­ traits. Call James or Carey, 4960255. $7 TO S17.50HR Last month our 3 newest stud­ ents earned over $ 11.75 per hr. in our tel renewal dept. You can too. No exp. nec. Mon/Fri 3-9pm. Pleasant W. Tempe of­ fic e . Contact Mr. Scott 4.38 ■? 8095 for interview. vancement potential. 4020 N., Scottsdale Rd. Ste 108. Please apply in person. ADVERTISING OVER the phone, close to campus, no sellin g, 4:30-8:30 weekdays >only, call Lisa 894-9442. ANSWERING SERVICE 7:302pm M-F, phone & typing exp. req. Scottsdale 947-7351. ARIZONA COUNTRY Club hiring p/t . food servers. No exp. necc. Apply at 5668 E, Orange Blossom Ln. Phx (56th St,/Thomas) E.O.E. ASSEMBLY JOBS f/t, p/t light electronics assem­ bly wrk. $7.50/hr Scottsdale Air Park Call Terry at 998-0325 C L U B T E R R A V IT A IM O W M IR IN G • Servers• Locker Room Attendant • Bussers• Golf Àtténdant Staff • Cooks •Dishwashers Located just 20 minutes from Scottsdale Off Scottsdale Rd. & Terravita Way - just south of Carefree Hwy. W e hire and d e v e lo p the B e st Pe o ple SGGHTSDALE PRIN CESS A Princess Hotels International Resort. BANQUET SERVICE TRAINING Are you looking for a job w ith flexible hours? Have you always wondered how to become a Banquet Server? Come learn with the BEST Banquet Dept, in the Valley. We'll train any­ one with the enthusiasm, energy and team spirit to help serve our guests, Must he 19 or older, Become a member of our qn-caU. staff! We will be hosting training sessions soon. Apply in Human Resources at : E.O.E. W e comply with ADA NCM, Inc. Now M ore Than E ver With Christmas Just Around The Comer We Know How Important Some Extra Pocket Cash Can Be. So We Have Made It Better Than Ever To Work At NCM Set Your Own Schedule! $8.00 P er Hour Casual Dress Code Comprehension/Paid Training Perm anent FT & PT telephone sales positions available Call 894-9816 Today! 2020 S. MID, Suite 200 Tempe, AZ 85282 SC OTTSDALE PRINCESS 7575 E . Princess D rive N orth o f Bell R d., E a st o f S cottsdale Rd. EO E Aspiring Bartenders M O W H IR IN G * R eceive Your Bartending Certificate In 2 W eeks or Le ss. * Local & Nationwide Placem ent A ssista n ce 9k C la sse s available to m eet Customer Service Representatives offers competitive salaries, advancement opportunities excellent benefits in clu d in g m e d ic a l/d e n ta l /v is io n insurance, interline travel privileges, paid time-off, tuition assistance and much more. Please apply in person or send a resu m e to; DHL Worldwide Express, Human Resoures W. University Drive, Tempe, AZ 85281. N o EOE. :" V; .1 /. $ CRUISE Ships hiring! Stud­ ents needed! $$$ + free travel! ! Seasonal/perm anent, no exp nee, Guidé. 919-929-4398 ext. C1050. tsdale needs p/t front & back of­ fice person., will train.-Good ad­ Club Terravtta • 34034 N. 69th Way • Scottsdale • W hen you open the door to a career w ith D H L you have opened the door to the world. A world w here people and language are as different as land and w a te r . . . where custom and commerce reflect centuries of tradition. This w orld o f o p p o rtu n ity aw aits you at DHL W orldw ide Express, the leading international air express netw ork w ith over 1,600 offices in 200 countries. Come experience the w orld and, a t the end of your shift, go home. Full- and part-tim e positions. Will assist customers in track­ in g shipm ents and resolving actual o r potential problem s, while ensuring continuation of positive business relationship w ith DHL. Promote future business for DHL by exceeding cu sto m ers' expectations in term s of q uick an d m utually agreed upon problem resolution. Qualifications include pre­ vious customer service or sales experience; the ability to type at least 25 w pm ; superior judgm ent, problem -solving and com m unication skills; an d the ability to w ork a flexible schedule; w indow s environm ent experience preferred. HELP WANTEDGENERAL A MEDICAL office in Scot­ Full-time and Part-time Positions Available • Year-round Employment Great Pay and Excellent Benefits Package Available Please Apply Monday through Thursday HELP WANTED GENERAL CHRISTMAS JOBS SPRING BREAK 30 shopping days left! Don't procrastinate! Now is the time to guarantee the low est rates and best hotel selection for Spring.Break. After Jan. 1st, prices w ill increase qnd hotel Choices will be limited Leisure Tours has packages with air to South Padre Island and Cancun. Free info.* 1-800-8388203. '^ARIZONA ” REPUBLICAN PARTY NEEDS YOU! PART-TIME HRS. S4+/HR. MAT OR JAKE • too HELP WANTED GENERAL TRAVEL any schedule WINTER BREAK & AFTER WE OFFER: • Paid Training a t $8.00 per hour guaranteed • G reat Pay $9-$ l 2 average per hour Highest Earnings up to ... $ 19 per hour! • Flexible Hours to work with your school schedule • Bonuses... $ • Professional/Fun Environment : • Sharpens Com m unication/Career Skills/Resume Builder • Nearby Location a t 209 E Baseline, Mill Town© Center CALL 345-9509, EXT. 437, FOR INTERVIEW St a te P HELP WANTED GENERAL ASÜ STUDENTS. Need a job for the holiday break? The ASU Telefund is now hiring asso ­ ciated to contact ASU alumni. We start our em ployees at $5.50 /hr. plus bonus. Choose your evening and weekend shifts every week. Only r e -. quired tq work 10 hrs. mini­ mum, but you can work mofe. This position* is : great for resumes. Network with alumni nationwide. Possibility o f con­ tinued employment for spring seuiester! Call 965-6754. B1-LIÑ G Ú Á OPERATOR^ Needed for our floral order, cenr, rer. Full/pari-time available day and evening bours Call Shelly at 84CI-2604 B R O W S CAFE/CAFE Vintage on 6th has employment opps. avail: Dan at 9 68-4884 for. tnfo ; Page 26 Thursday, N ovem ber 30, 1995 ress ' B U S IN E S S M A JO R S Learn hoW lo run a business! The State Press' is n o w hiring’ two advertising sales represen­ tatives to begin immediately. Must be available over break and Spring semester to prepare for .the Super Bowl special edi­ tion; as weJl as selling advertisiirg for the daily State Press and special sections. Looking .. lor dedicated, dependable peo? pie who want to gain valuable experience in the world o f busi­ ness while getting paid! Inter­ ested? Cali Jackie Eldridge at 965-6555 today! . 42 MODELS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY Screen Artist Talent, out of Beverly Hills, is seeking modejs for upcoming events in your area. Jobs Will pay $9-825 per hour. Contact Bob at (310) 281-0384. HELP WANTED GENERAL CASHIER. FULL time. 3-11pm shift, health/vacation benefits. Chevron Wariier/McQueen Gil­ bert 545-6664. CHRISTMAS CASH working parades & festivals selling toys. 829-2475, leave name & number. CINEMATIX STUDIOS Inc is looking for computer game pro*gramraers with good C, C++ & 8086 asm exp., knowledge of game mechanics & real passion for comp* games, Call 8380140. r: HELP W ANTED GENERAL HELP WANTED GENERAL FREE MOVIES! All Harkins Theatres are now hiring floor staff and asst: managers. Flexi­ ble schedule! Exciting en v i­ ronment! Apply in person. GREAT PAY! Great Benefits! Great Oppty. To See Asian Cul­ ture! Teach basic Eng. to young students in S. Korea. Apt; provided, no exp. nec. BA/BS req. fax resume to (602) 73Q-9I74 Janie. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: experience & enthusiasm a must, work well w/chrldreh,"820 hm/wk. 940-4041 CONSTRUCTION PROJ ECT GYMNASTICS TEACHER, enManager/ Estimator: General construction & estim ating ■ th u sia stic . happy, in shape. Teachers who! love to teach 3knowledge; ability to run small 12 yr olds gymnastics. Central crews for various jobs; Strong Phx area. $6-9/br! P/t 955course work in construction: 7805. !! Expérience a plus: Salary nego­ tiable: M ail resumes to WhiteHELP THROUGH The h o li­ riv.er Construction P.O. Box 1749 Whriefiver. A 2 85941 or : days. Start immediately, pt & ft positions available! Retail Fax (520) 338-F3 59 (no phone clerk. Call Headquarters for cal Is p lease ). . info.. 966-6093 DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD INTERNATIONAL EMPLOY­ DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD MENT - Earn up to, $25* DRIVERS WANTED immediately $45/hour teaching basic con ­ $ 4 .2 5 -S 16/hour. part and full versational English in Japan.» timew flexible hours..Must have Taiwan, or S. Korea, No teach­ own car and insurance, clean ing background or Asian lan­ and courteous. Need drivers for guages required. For info. call holidays and Super B ow l Call (206)632-H 46 ex t J59182 220- 0000 , dddddddddddddddddddddddd dddddddddddddddddddddddd dddddd DJ ASST. Know '50sr'90s mu­ sic. Like, to dance. No éxp. nec. part-time. Mesa Call 854-0433. E X X O N H IR IN G Students needed for immediate .P/T sales pos. $8/hr. to start* Rex. hrs, avail. Will train. Call forint. 921-8282 LOOKING FOR people to su­ pervise daily activities for after school & teen programs. $8.289,48/hr. 18-24hrs/wk. Contact Tim or Emily at 262-6111 or 262-4742 MALE QUADRAPLEGIC seek­ ing p/t attendant. Rural/Univ. David 731-9113 lv msg. M A R K E T IN G F/T. P/T positions available ' providing assistance to adult individuals with mental & physical disabilities. Paid ben­ efits & training, no exp. nec. Call 438-8617. FREE EDUCATION! G R AN TS • SCHOLARSHIPS FELLOWSHIPS RECEIVEGIFTMONEY FORYOUR BXJCATKHB G U A R A N T E E D !!! Christmas help needed. Inter­ national Co. looking for pt/ft positions to fill. Call 852-0604 for appointments. MODELS/ACIORS/EXTRASALL types needed immed. for music videos. Pays $250 tip 941 6922. RESEARCH INFORMATION Largest Library of Inform ation In U S -all subjects Order Catalog Today with Visa/Mc or COD ORDERING H OTLINE I 8 0 0 -3 5 1 -0 2 2 2 o r (310) 477-8226 Or, rush $2.00 to: R esearch Information 11322 Idaho Ave.. *206A. Los Angeles. C A 90026 DO YOU Need a job? Call 18Ó0-331 -2084 for more info. NATL INSTITUTES o f Health Leave a message. Male volunteers needed for re­ search study: 18-29‘ yr. old GROWING SPECIALTY mar­ lean! health, non-smokefs $670 • keting company paying com ­ offered for time and participa­ petitive wages with bonus op­ tion. Call Chris at 263-1556 or. portunities needs people with leave a message. retail of electronics experience in Phoenix, Tempe! and Scot­ OUTDOOR ADVERTIStsdale locations: Füll & part ING/HANDING out brochures, time positions. 841-3900 Jea­ M-F 4-8, start now, X-mas break nette. Off, call Lisa 894-9442. PART TIME front office help in Tempe doctors o ffice, morn­ ings/ flexible Call 838-2277. B O T H E R 'S Bookstore. Now accepting ap­ plications for p/t & f/X winter: break help. Apply in person: 625 E. Apache. S P O R T S M IN D E D Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flexib le hrs/wk. Flex, holiday Jits.« avail. Call Mike for iht., 9 2 18282 . ■'• SUMMER CAMP Counselors. Coed residential camp seeks live-in counselors and instruc­ tors: Art, dance! drama, music, fencing, fly fishing, english & western riding! mtn. biking, na­ ture, rope«. swim m ing.;target sports, tennis & more! Brush Ranch Camps. PO Box 5759, Sam e Fe, NM 87502-5759 / Call Scott Rice 505-757-8821. VALET PARKING attendants for; special events:2-3 nights/wk. Must be available weekend nights. At least 20 years old, good driving record, clean cut, w illin g to. drive to Scotts, Phoenix, etc. Apply at 34 W. Dunlap m -f b e tw een ! 1:30-4:30, Directions to; apply from Tempe: Squaw Peak Free­ way north to Glendale, go left to central, go right to Dunlap, go left. American Valet Co. is 1 1/2 blocks up on the right. VIDEO PRODUCTION Co in N. Scotts: seeking a marketing/sales manager. Back­ ground in video production preferred; but not necc. Flex. . hours. Pro 1 V ideo Produc­ tions 948-9310. WORLD’S LARGEST^ student travel co. seeks organized, de-: tail-minded individual w /gen . comp, skills for f/t admin, posi­ tion. Start $ 14,000 + bonus. Join our growing, team. Fax re­ sume & cover to: Robin 602922-0793. SEASONAL EMPLOYMENT OVER$6BILLIONWAITING TOBE CLAIMED ( 6 0 2 ) 351-3 9 9 5 The HoneyBaked Ham Company is now accepting applications forseasonal full- and part-time positions: • 4635 E. Cactus, Phoenix 996-0600 • 506^ . Olive, Glendale 245-000 Mesa 464-1200 • 2303 N. 44th St., Phoenix 224-0444 • 5350 E, Broadway, Tucson 745-0700 T E A M . - . J oin H ost M arriott! W e’re expanding at S ky H arbor Airport, and we have full- and part-tim e positions available for Food ft Beverage a n d M erchandise A ssociates. Y o u c o u ld b e w orkin g in o u r restaurant or on e of ou r sn a ck b ars, cocktail lounges or gift shops including: • J o h n n y R o c k e t s • O a sis D e u • P izza H u t «Na th a n 's *TCBY • S tar bu cks • M r s . F ield s C a ll our 24-hour job lin e for cum tit epaningft and to schedule an Interview. 1-800-555-5718 E x t 4003 We offer the beetbeneflte end wages In the industry! EOE M/F/V/D Drug-Free Workplace ■ H 4 Retail Sales . • Food Service Production • Custom erService • D eli • Catering • Phone . • 705 W. Southern, A p p ly b y P h o n e o st M a r r io t t _gai¿umm HELP W ANTEDS A tfS X-MAS HELP Needed, pt sales person for sports apparel store» must be here for the holidays. Cactus Sports921-1278. HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL ADMIN. ASST, p/t, N. Scotts. Computer Skills, general office exp., refs req. Call Verb or Donna at 502-9000. v PHONE SURV EY/NOT sales-, market research Co. located near 1-10 & Baseline needs pt shifts m-th 5-9 & sat. 9-3. Must be dep ¿ enjoy phones, ofc expiénce desired. $5.50/hr, Emi­ ly 443-8883. HELP W ANTEDFO O D SERVICE BUSY REST., Biltmore área, seeks host/ess. Dinners only. Apply M-F 2-4pm at Tarbell's se corner 32nd St. &Camelback. JO B OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Students N eeded! fishing In­ dustry. Earn tip to $3,000$6,000+ per month. Room and Board! Transportation! Male or Female. No experience neces­ sary. Call (206)545-4155 ext A59Í83 ' COMPUTER PROGRAMMER P/T pos. for student w/ Fox Pro programming exp. Training at Main, work at ASU West. Pos. starts at $10/hr. Call: 543-8183^ JO B G U ID E TENNIS HOST/ESS must be at least 1-9 yrs old. .Answ er phones, operate cash registers,, snack bar & Pro Shop & reserve court times: p/t weekends 12-18 hrs/wk $5 .50/hr 7720 E Gai­ ney Ranch Rd. Susan 9512879, ¿ RESTAURANTS/ BARS BABYSITTERS to work at re­ sorts & residential home«. D ays, weekends & holidays. : Must have reliable transporta- .• tion. Gayle at 955-265 L JOB OPPORTUNITIES 990 20k» DRAFTS til 9 p.m. $1 V JAGËRS 9 p.m - 1a.m.. Balboa Cafe i 404 S. Mill. Ave. . V 966-1300 y ASU's #1 Late Night Eatery Open fill 2 a.m. PETS U pscale Atm osphere • Breakfast Sat. & Sun. T/2 Your Wing Order Free Sim . A Mon. FREE TO Good home - two cute kittens, with some food, and. supplies* Call Bob @ 9 6 7 i. ' 37Q3. . 1 -,-J TWO TURRETS Wahvhlg cage& supplies. Call Al @..759- U n iv e rs ity ft D o b s o n 8 4 4 -S H E D 75U,.v; .. . PERSONALS ALFREDO, YOU Stud! I hear your running the condom Olympics Dec.. 1st 11:00am Hayden Lawp. Cool- Patricia. ; R E D R O B IN BABYSITTER, P/T near Para­ dise Valley Mafl,$6.50/hr own transportation ! , needed. 78M 333* .' FLOOR 894-2112 . Sports Grill • Tempe, AZ 4 Satellites 20 Screens HELP W ANTEDC H ILD CARE Wfîrô W oodshed I I HIRING ALL Positions. Exp. Nec. Apply in person between 9-11 & 2-4. 24 N 2nd Str. Phx. TIMBER WOLF is now hiring wait staff. Apply at 740 E. Ap­ ache Bfvd. M-F, 3-6pm. TÒ N IG H TLIVEI C LU C K -U HIRING COOKS, doorman and servers at The Vine on campus. : 801 Apache Blvd. Tempe, Az 894-2662. •We Show All N F L G am es Immediate openings for wait staff and cooks. Apply in person at 1375 W Ellicrt Road. V3 £ * V Nationwide, Send name/permanent address to; D*J.R. A sso­ ciated P.O. Box 879, Church St. Station, New York. NY 10008. - M A JE R L E ’S G R IL L PARADISE BAR & Grill 401 S. Mill Ave, will be accepting aplicarions for host/ess, servers, and door staff Tues. Nov. 28th Thu. Nov. 30th. All applicants must be avail, during Christ­ mas. We will train exceptional people. RESTAURANTS/ BARS Now accepting application», Monday-Friday, 2-4 p.m., for the following pdsitiona: •aervera • bussers • host/hostess •cooks TGI FRIDAY'S SCOTTSDALE TIRED OF the high cost o f going out? Get an Entertain­ ment *96 Book and save 50%.. on dining, movies, car washes and more. Only $35 in the ReEntry. Centef, Lower Level o f the MU. 4343 N. Scottsdale Rd. 6IU T EFÜ L DEAD X K iirr with E X T R A T IC K E T Featuring Don Young m f è Ê , "Every Thursday!* BOSTON'S M c tlin tó c lT « C u rry " 921-7343 ropAf A'f 12:101* M $257,000 MY 2nd yr ipcome: 2yrs out oP college. Not multi le v e l, just an honest way to make good money. Call 9263870 for free info. HOSTESS/HOST POSITION evenings* w ed-sat, approx­ imately 30hrs/wk. Easy work in a great atmosphere. Apply Pepin 7363 Scottsdale MalL 990-9026. HELP WANTED GENERAL HELP WANTED GENERAL MU PROGRAMMtNQ LOUNGE LOWER LEVEL MU SPONSERED BY PEPSI HELP W ANTED GENERAL THEnjH O N EYBAKED HAM C O M P A N Y I BANQUET STAFF I SER VER S BARTENDERS COOKS 700 Needed! H olidays, Fiesta Bowl and Think Globally. Work Locally. Dress Casually. SUPER BOWL!! Be Part O f Our Team For A ll O f The M edia, NFL & Tailgate Parties! HOSPITEMPS 808-9161 2600 N. 44th St., Suite 20.1, Phoenix . Just Off Loop *202 A W hen you open the d o o r to a career w ith DHL, you have opened the door to the world. A w orld w here people and language are as different as land and w a te r . . . where aisto m and commerce reflect centuries of tradition. This w orld of o p p o rtu n ity aw aits y ou a t DHL W o rld w id e Express, the le ad in g international a ir express netw o rk w ith o v er 1,600 offices in 200 countries. Come experience the world and, at the end of your shift, go home. PCSoftware Applications Support Representative Will call upon your excellent com m unication and interper­ sonal skills w h en p ro v id in g ongo in g , train in g a n d tro u ­ bleshooting w ith DHL's p ro p rietary softw are resid in g on DOS-based PCs at o u r custom ers’ locations. 2+ years' cus, tom er service experience and a background in troubleshoot­ ing w ith DOS-based PCs over thie phone are required. DHL offers competitive salaries, advancem ent opportunities an d ex cellen t b en efits in clu d in g m e d ic a l/d e n ta l/v is io n insurance, interline travel privileges, paid time-off, tuition assistance and m uch m ore: Please apply in person or send a resu m e to: DHL Worldwide Express, Human Resoures Dept., 1900 W. University Drive, Tempe, AZ 85281. N o phone calls please. EOE. ûÊÊÊÊm Well take it from here. Page 27 ADOPTION TYPING/WORD ADOPTION I am an adorable three year old looking for a new bom brother or sister to share my loving par­ ents and beautiful home. Twins Welcome. Please call Bob and Lisa any time 1-800-6192186. _______ FUN-LOVING, SECURE. & de­ voted Christian couple with 2 adopted sons waiting to be big brothers, are looking for a baby to join our fam ily. Legal A m edical. Richard & Tammy 897-0130. | s r v ic | s _ ^ SMONEY FOR c o lleg e! $6 6 billion unclaimed! send lsase to Southwest iEduc.'Sves. to PO Box 66, Safford, AZ 85548 ATTN ALL Students! Grants A scholarships are ofrd by pvt rector. Qualify regardless o f inc or grds. For more info call 1800-400-0209 EXAM, TERM Paper Success! PhD teacher will help you. Call 867-6811 (24 hrs/day). FOREIGN STUDENTS. DV-1 greencard program available. 1800-660-7167 HUNDREDS A THOUSANDS o f grants ft scholarships avail­ able to all students. Let our years o f research benefit you. Immediate qualification. Call 1800-270-2744. SC H O L A R S HI PS / M O N EY AVAILABLE for college-record­ ed m essage g iv es details. (602)838-3123 \_ 0 \N LOW A St Thursday, N ovem ber 3 0 ,1 9 9 5 LO W CO ST SS2/PG. S15/RES. Proofed Las­ er. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. Low est C o s t P lan s p e r sem ester or m onth I M ost pre-existing | co n d ito n s O K ■ In te rn ation al H ealth ; I Plans (• D e p e n d e n t | H ealth Plans FREE Western Health Services A m m noN ALL STUDENTS!!! 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