Arizona State University sta te p r e ss Vol. 6 9 No. 85 • Tempe, Arizona Tuesday, February 1 0 ,1 9 8 7 Copyright, State Press, 1987 P ro fe s s o r file s $ 7 5 0 ,0 0 0 c la im a g a in s t re g e n ts By TIN A DAUNT State Press Tension and bickering continue to plague ASU’s political science department as one faculty member awaits reaction from the Arizona Board of Regents to his $750,000 claim that ASU administrators broke their word in conducting his promotion evaluation. Douglas Dalgleish, an ASU associate professor of political science, claims University officials broke an October 1985 agreement prohibiting Patrick McGowan, former political science departm ent chairman, from participating in his evaluation. In a Jan. 26 letter submitted to the regents, Dalgleish states that McGowan participated in his evaluation where he was Asserts agreement broken when ex-chair took part in evaluation denied a promotion to full professor by a 6-5 vote. According to the letter, McGowan accused Dalgleish of “gross unprofessional conduct including lack of ability as a teacher” and “as a scholar and writer.” Dalgleish claims- that both Academic Affairs Vice President Jack Kinsinger and College of Liberal Arts Dean Samuel Kirkpatrick knew of the breach of contract but “did nothing to correct the situation.” University officials have refused to release the 1985 agreement, claiming it contains a confidentiality clause. McGowan, who is on sabbatical leave, would not comment when questioned at his Paradise Valley home Monday. In the letter, Dalgleish claims he continually was denied equity and a promotion for many years because of the “biases and prejudices” of McGowan. Dalgleish, who has been at the University since 1962, was promoted to associate professor in 1973. Other political science professors have voiced similar complaints about McGowan in the past. In 1985 four professors, including Dalgleish, contacted Rep. Jim Cooper, RMesa, claiming McGowan awarded more merit-pay salary adjustments to professors who concentrated on research. Cooper, now Goy. Evan Mecham’s e d u c a tio n a l a d v is e r, found th a t “favoritism” was given to researchoriented professors. McGowan denied the allegation. In the letter, Dalgleish seeks an immediate promotion to full professor; $300,000 in six years of back pay, benefits and salary adjustments that he would have received as a full professor; $440,000 for injury to his reputation; and $10,000 for attorneys’ fees. Committee approves bill to make abortion illegal; opponents expect suits By VICKIE CHACHERE Stats Press Traveled art Traveling gypsy Rom Cody works at his craft ot string art on Cady M all early Monday afternoon. Cody, who Is * from G erm any, makes bracelets and necklaces for a living and has bean on campus w ith hla dog Rossi, a 2-m onth old Irish Setter, fo r the past two semesters. ASU W EATHER P artly clo u d y skies w ith an expected high o f 72 degrees. The expected low is 54. PHOENIX — Abortions would be illegal in Arizona under legislation approved by the House Judiciary Committee Monday, but opponents of the two bills say the measures are bound to cost the state in lawsuits. The R e p u b lic a n - c o n tr o lle d committee approved House Bill 2201, which extends the definition of “person” to include fetuses, by an 8-5 margin. A second bill, House Bill 2113, which requires parental consent for abortions performed on women under the age of 18, was approved, 11-1. But one Phoenix lawyer called HB 2201 “blatantly unconstitutional.” Karen Carter, who volunteers on Planned Parenthood’s legal staff, said the Supreme Court already has stated that abortions are within women’s legal rights in the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion. The bill states the term “person” means a human being, “including the unborn offspring of a human being at every stage of the offspring’s biological development, irrespective of the offspring’s age from conception. . . ” Carter said if the hill was approved by the Legislature and Gov. Evan Mecham, the state would be setting itself up for a series of expensive lawsuits. “This bill, without a doubt, will be challenged," she said. “This is a bill that should not be passed by this committee and not be passed by this Legislature.” Berry Sweet, president of Arizona Right to Choose, called the committee’s approval of the bills “typical” and said she doesn’t think the full House will approve the measures. “This committee is so very stacked anti-abortion there is a forgone conclusion that any bill with the word abortion in it will pass,” Sweet said. “I never take real seriously what happens in House Judiciary. ’’ Students considered replacing the current Sun Devil w ith a “nordic” devil during the 70s. Page 3. SPARKY Rep. Benjamin Hanley, D-Window Rock, said he voted against the bills because defining a fetus as a person will create legal problems for the state. “I look to the future, if these bills pass and legal rights are extended to a single ce ll. . . this would be a bonanza for the lawyers,” Hanley said. The parental consent bill would force abortion clinics to obtain parental approval before operating on a girl younger than 18. Current law only requires that the girl’s parents be notified. Rep. Bev Hermon, a Republican, supported the bill although she said she is concerned that the parental consent bill will force some teens to go to other states or Mexico for abortions. John Jakubyczk, a member of Arizona Right to Life’s board of directors, said he was pleased with the committee’s action on both bills and credited his organization with approval of the legislation. Arizona Right to Life lobbied lawmakers last month to support the parental consent measure. “I know we are going to get (the parental consent) bill passed, and I know we are going to get it signed,” he said. “We will now have a law on the books that will respect the rights of parents.” But Sweet said in states such as Massachusetts and Rhode Island where the parental consent laws have been in place for several years, judges have never denied anyone an abortion. Jakubcyzk said he also is happy with the committee’s decision to define a fetus as a person. “l am pleased with the Legislature acknowledging what scientist and biology teachers have known for years,” he said. “To argue that an unborn child is not a human being is to argue that the earth is flat. ” Mecham would not say whether he would sign the measures until the House and Senate vote and the bills are on his desk. C la s s ifie d ................» ---------- ----------- 18 C o m ic s ............. ................... .............. . . . 8 O p in io n ............. ...................... 4 Police re p o rt. . . ------- r * . . . . » ~ 7. R o y k o ................................ 5 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 5 T o d ay....................................... 2 Pase 2 State Press Tuesday, February 10,1987 today M eetings • Re-Entry Connection w ill m eet at noon in th e MU S anta Cruz Room . The topic of discussion will be “T est A nxiety.” •ASU Chapter of United Campuses to Prevent Nuclear War w ill m eet from 3 to 5 p.m. in th e M U A pache Room . Keith S hcolnik, ASU graduate and ed ito r of Nuclear Concerns w ill s p eak on “ M o rality and R esponsibility in th e N u clear A g e .” There w ill also be a videotape of th e N evada T est S ite protest. •AISES w ill m eet at 6 p.m. in th e MU for a general m eeting. V ic e president and secretary position ele c tio n s w ill be held. •SKA-Shotokan Karate Club w ill m eet from 5:30 to 7 p.m. in th e Physical E ducation Building W est. B eginner lessons are available. •Justice Studies Student Association w ill m eet from 2 to 3 p.m. in th e MU C ochise Room fo r a general m eeting. •ASU Skydiving Club w ill m eet at 8 p.m. in th e M U Navajo Room . G uest speaker w ill be C hris Knight from Skydive A rizona Inc. Sign up for your first jum p. Everyone is w elcom e. •Public Programs College Council will m eet at 4:30 p.m. in th e MU. The m eeting is open to all students in th e Public Programs C ollege. •Campus Alcoholics Anonymous will m eet from noon to 1 p.m. in th e MU Yavapai Room. Lectures *ESP w ill give a tim e m anagem ent w orkshop from 1:40 to 2:30 p.m . in the Language and Literature Building, Room C-38. A PPST G ram m ar Review 'workshop w ill also be given from 2:40 to 3:30 p.m. and again from 6 to 7 p.m. in th e Language and L iteratu re‘B o n d in g ^ Room C-38. •Dale B. Furnish, A SU C ollege o f Law, discusses “ T h e Flow Northward: Drugs and Im m igration from Latin A m erica to th e U nited S ta te s .” The lecture will begin at 2 p.m. at th e Kerr Cultural Center, S cottsd ale. T he sponsor for the lecture is th e friends o f th e C en ter for Latin A m erican Studies. •W riting Center Workshop w ill offer “ Sum m ary: Short and S w e e t,” fo r ASU students interested in improving th eir w riting skills. The lecture w ill begin at 3 p.m. in th e Language and Literature Building, Room C-146. •Jo h n A lc o c k , A S U Zoology D e p a rtm e n t, d is c u s s e s “ In s e c t M achism o in A ustralia and C osta Rica.” The lecture w ill begin at 4 p.m. in th e Life S cien ce Building, Room C-498. R efreshm ents w ill be served at 3:30 p.m. •Jim Smith o f M otorola, Phoenix, d iscu sses “ C urrent C h a lle n g e s in S em ico n d uctor Processing,” and Tim Sim on, also o f M otorola, discusses “ T echniques o f V LS I Fabrication-A P erspective.” The lecture w ill begin at 7:30 p.m. at th e Tem pe M ission Palms H otel. Entertainm ent •S ir Georg Sollt conducts th e Chicago Sym phony in a concert o f w orks by Mozart, Berlioz and Ravel at 8 p.m. at G am m age Center. T ickets are $28 and $26 and are available at D illard’s ticket o u tlets and G am m age box o ffice. POWDER HOUNDS SKI CLUB Staphwi M o u n tw /S U te Pratt Freshman business management m ajor M ichael M cCracken dribbles a soccer ball w ith his head on the lawn outside of Palo Verde West Monday. 1 ^S - - — - M eK McKELLIPS&SCOTTSDALERDS.(ABCC)ShoppingCtr.) HUNT S T U D E N T D IS C I 20% O FF DRV CLEi ANING or Bilan 966-0816 or Roa 966-7556 SSÜSS SHOW I D. CARD WITH INCOMINt3 ORDER Valentine Cup BALLOONS & S W E E T S State Press Tuesday. February 1 0 .19 8 7 'Sparky’ alm ost exorcised from ASU after 7 1 vote and gained 2,400 signatures in a week. The Associated Students of ASU put the matter on the ASASU spring ballot and allocated $177 to run a full color ad in the State Press so students could see what the new logo would look like. ByEDSCHUBERT S tate Press A controversy over “Sparky” is coming to ASU. Indeed, it’s already here. Indeed, it’s already over. In 1970-71, students were divided over ASU’s mascot and a move was afoot to dump Sparky as the school logo. But while people seeking to ban Sparky today are Christian fundamentalists who consider d e v il logos to be “satanic,” Sparky’s foes in the early 70s wanted to replace him with another devil. According to the 1971 edition of ASU’s yearbook, the Sahuaro, ASU graduate Barry Shepard designed a new “Nordic” Sun Devil logo-and submitted it for consideration as the official University emblem. According to the Sahuaro, Shepard’s proposal led to the realization that the Sparky logo had never been formally adopted by the University. Sparky had been purchased from Walt Disney Studios in 1947 for $75. But the mascot had been used since then without any official vote of the faculty, students or alumni. Shepard’s logo defeated Sparky by a margin of 918 to 638. But in the meantime, Arizona Republic sports columnist Frank Gianelli had written that the new logo resembled a “Nordic ogre.” This brought the controversy to the attention of the alumni, many of whom were against dropping the quarter-century old, Disney-designed logo. Citing the low voter turnout as evidence that the vote was not reflective of student opinion, the Alumni Office commissioned an opinion poll. The poll questioned over 2,000 students, and showed 16 percent favored the new logo, 72 percent favored Sparky and 16 percent either favored a different logo or had no opinion. Shepard’s logo was greeted enthusiastically by many students. A petition in favor of the new logo was circulated The poll saved Sparky, but not before he was temporarily bumped from ASU football helmets and the yearbook by the “Nordic ogre.” G ra d e p o in t averag e s fall fo r m ore than half of A S U ath letes By b e n M cC o n n e l l State Press Although fall 1986 grade point averages dropped for more than half of ASU student athletes, the academic vaults of the women’s gymnastics team kept the overall athletic GPA from crashing. In a report prepared for Monday’s Faculty Senate meeting, statistics showed men’s teams accounted for most of the falling GPAs. Of the 19 ASU athletic teams included in the report, 12 dropped in academic performance. Eleven of those were men’s teams. But the report — prepared by Marianne Jennings, acting associate dean in the College of Business and fatuity athletic representative — showed a steady 2.58 cumulative GPA for University-sponsored sports teams in both summer and fall 1986. The figure is up from a 1985-86 cumulative average of 2.47. The women’s gymnastics team saved the 1986 fall averages from plummeting by increasing from 2.85 in the summer evaluation to 3.11 in the fall. The team was the only squad to average above 3.0. The Sutt Devil football team dropped from a 2.25 average in the summer tally to a 2.12 in the fall. The baseball team fell from 2.36 to 2.24. Jennings said she is more optimistic about freshmen averages because of tougher entrance requirements introduced last fall. Although she did not provide freshmen statistics, Jennings said student GPAs for freshmen football, baseball and basketball are rising. Of the 511 students in the University athletic program, 102 students, or 20 percent, were on academic probation last fall. Fourteen of those students were disqualified and four were reinstated this semester. Twenty-eight percent of the 103-man football squad was placed on academic probation last fall. Seven of the players were disqualified from playing for faulty grades. “We’re not doing too well with the undergraduate GPAs,” Jennings said. In other senate action, President J. Russell Nelson told the group the proposed University Club is in danger of folding because of inadequate faculty support. The University Club is a proposed faculty meeting and dining center to inhabit the deserted Fine Arts Annex. “If it’s not a success, it may be a long time before we have the opportunity to have another chance to have one,” Nelson said. “It would be a great loss.” Currently, more than 300 faculty members have signed charter memberships for the club. But club planners say 800 to 1,000 members are necessary to continue with club plans. “The drive is not at the level (planners) have hoped for . . . and now is the time (to act) if we want to have a University Club,” Nelson said. He also hinted at future headaches which might be caused by the Hayden Library addition slated to begin in June under West Lawn between Hayden and West Hall. The $11.5 million project will add 97,000 square feet for 375,000 books and seats for 1,500 students. The project is expected to be completed by February 1989. Nelson said the expansion will obstruct Cady Mall traffic for 18 months but will be an “altogether favorable benefit to the University.” ASSOCIATED STUDENT LECTURE SERIES 1987 — p r e s e n ts — the nite club S enator W illia m P ro xm ire o f W isconsin TERRIFIC TUESDAYS SPEAKING ON TH E ISSUES A FFEC TIN G A M ER IC A N S TO D A Y 4:00-7:00 250 DRINKS W EDNESDAY FEB. 11,1987 12:30 P.M. A R IZO N A ROOM M E M O R I A ] - U N IO N Questions Call 965-3161 Free with ASU I.D. $2 General Public P ' RANSOM JUSTIN TYME SNAKE EYES 1123 west broad way tempe informer line 968-6224 o p in io n Page 4 j j j t t Press Tuesday, February 10,1987 Rose Mofford’s in the bullpen When an elected official displeases Arizonans, the citizens have the right to circumcise them of their power. Some citizens feel Arizona is the laughingstock of the nation, and they are beginning to take action. Come July 6, Gov. Evan Mecham will face one of the toughest tests of his administration; petitions calling for a recall vote will begin to be circulated. The Mecham Watchdog Committee is a group of citizens from both political parties who believe Mecham is more of a liability than an asset to this state. With Mecham’s current track record, no one can blame those who are hoping to get 216,746 valid signatures and have Mecham taken out of the copper dome. It is no coincidence th at m any automobiles in the state are sporting “ Mecham for Ex-governor” bum per stickers. The citizens of this state — including some of those who supported Mecham — are not happy with his first month in office. According to Jam es Galgano, president of the ASU chapter of the American Federation of Teachers and University Employees, “I’m trying to prevent Ev Mecham’s dream of making Arizona become a nightmare.” Galgano has recently distributed those aforementioned bumper stickers on Cady Mall to get students, faculty and staff geared up for the great petition race. We find it ironic that the petition­ gathering officially begins two days after the Fourth of July. This move will allow Arizona the chance to gain its own independence from a governor who has repeatedly broadsided the interests of the people of this great state. Some have called the recall drive premature and have said Mecham has not been given the chance to prove himself. However, the Arizona constitution clearly allows recall as a right of the people. This is not a call for a lynching, but if Mecham thinks he is doing a good job, then he should be all for the recall initiative and sign the petition. It must be remembered that 60 percent of Arizona’s voters did not have the intention of electing Mecham to office, but a threeway race threw a wrench into a clear majority electing Mecham. Let the people exercise their rights and let’s support the petition attempt. What do we have to lose? ‘S c h la fly In d e x ’ rem o vin g fun from sch o o l d ays A couple of years ago, the Eagle Forum, a conservative, “pro-family” organization headed by Phyllis Schlafiy, issued what amounts to a Grinch’s guide for turning our public schools into boring, unhappy and miserable places. The document in question is a one-page form letter which parents on the Eagle Forum ’s mailing list were urged to sign and send to their local school boards and principals. The letter demands that their children be exempt from certain classes, subjects and teaching methods which Phyllis Schlafly considers harmful to traditional American values — as defined by Phyllis Schlafly. More than 70 objectionable topics and practices are listed, including: •Values clarification; use of moral dilemmas . . . survival games including life/death decision exercises. •Curricula pertaining to alcohol and drugs. •Instruction in nuclear war, nuclear policy and nuclear classroom games. •Education in human sexuality. •Organic evolution. •Discussions of witchcraft, occultism, the supernatural and Eastern mysticism. •Political affiliations and beliefs of student and family. •Autobiographical assignments: log books, diaries, and personal journals. In short, Schlafly is against just about everything that makes school interesting and fun. I’m surprised she left out recess and lunch. As it happens, I’m an education m ajor currently doing my Ed Schubert Analysis Editor ffjÄ student teaching at a local junior high school. It seems that such topics as alcohol and drugs, nuclear war and the occult are among those which most interest the seventh graders I work with. In a recent American history class, for example, we read a couple of short articles — one pro, one con — on nuclear testing and Strategic Defense Initiative. I was surprised at how quickly and enthusiastically the kids grasped the basic arguments and began to form their own views and debate them in class. We encouraged the kids to ask their parents what they thought about these issues. But to Schlafly, this is a no-no. “Instruction in nuclear w ar” is high on her list of taboo subjects. It also violates her ukase against discussions of the political beliefs of students and their families. So I began to wonder. Could Schlafly’s list of “don’ts” be turned into a list of “do’s” for the creative teacher? Could the Eagle Forum’s form letter (reprinted in the May, 1985 issue of Harper’s) be used as a mini-guide for creative lesson planning? Might we even develop a “Schlafly Index,” which would rate the creativity of lesson plans based on how many of Schlafly’s 70-odd educational prohibitions are violated? For example, Geri Roberts, my cooperating teacher, will soon be starting her English classes on “Me Books.” Care to guess what a “Me Book” is? You got it. “Autobiography assignments: log books, diaries and personal journals. ’’ So give Mrs. Roberts a big “four” on the Schlafly Index. In history, we will soon begin a unit on populism and the election of 1896. My idea is to use L. Frank Baums’s “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” to introduce the unit. “Oz” happens to be a very clever allegorical satire on the 1896 presidential contest between William Jennings Bryan and William McKinley. In the book, Dorothy wears silver slippers as she travels the yellow brick road (silver and gold, i.e., bimetallism) to the Emerald City (Washington, D.C.) and meets the duplicitous Wizard (McKinley). But “Oz” also has more witches than you can shake a broom at, thus violating Schlafly’s strictures against “witchcraft.” That should start me out with at least a “one” on the Grinch. . . er, Schlafly Index. To education m ajors and ASU profs who are looking for ways to spice up their lesson plans, my suggestion is this: Get to know Phyllis Schlafly’s philosophy of education. Familiarize yourself with all the things she says never to do. And then do them. le tte rs Here’s a story by a man named Brady CAUSA logo offensive Editor: This letter is directed to the very untalented and incredibly unfunny Mike “Draw ‘Tippy’ ” Ritter. I think the “ Ivory Towers” so-called comic strip stinks. A day does not go by that the student body has to put up with the dull and unimaginative illustrations you seem to think are funny. I don’t like your ideas, I don’t like your characters, and I think if I met you, I wouldn’t like you. You are just a detail person with no creativity. I do not think I have ever seen the background of a cartoon drawn in such detail and the main theme so dull. You should stick to, maybe, placemats in a diner instead of humiliating yourself with what you call funny ideas and a funny strip. Who cares about Ivory Towers and the goings-on there? I don’t. You probably look Editor: I was rather amused at the letter in your paper from CAUSA objecting to the use of Sparky as a mascot. Without entering into the controversy over Sparky, I would like to say that I object to CAUSA’s logo. Their motto, “One world under God,” is illustrated with a globe swathed, not in any like the guy and get a big ego trip every time it runs in the press. Your cartoon reflects the personality of a very dull and simplistic person who enjoys the truly stupid things of life. Maybe you are the kind of guy who hangs around Circle K and plays video games on a Saturday night. Is that where you get your dumb ideas for the strip or .maybe out.of a book of people who need a real personality, but will never get one? Well, I just thought somebody should tell you how bad you are before you keep going towards what you may think is funny stuff. Keep the bricks on the wall clear and beer cans detailed and discover unemployment or a job detailing cars and figurines. Greg Brady Senior, Communications Oral’s countdown: 49 days Editor: Skeptics should beware. Does anyone know if Oral Roberts has a voodoo practitioner on payroll? Ney Lopez Jr. Junior, Anthropology STATE PRESS TOM BLODGETT Editor ANDREA HAN Managing Editor divine insignia, but in the “Stars and Stripes.” It rather suggests “One World under the U.S.” — an imperialistic ambition I as a non-American find quite distasteful. Would CAUSA care to redesign their logo in light of the sensitivities of the rest of the world? Name Withheld Upon Request Strike up the bland Editor: A tympani of kudos to Dean A. Obenauer for his latest line of machine-gun spray at the ASU band/mutual admiration society that appeared in the Jan. 30 issue of the State Press. I too, have had it up to my tuba hole with the chorus of letters that follow every sentence written about the band that does not include the word “fantastic.” I like the band. Usually I give them a big 68 on the rate-a-record meter — not great to dance to, but it’s got a lot of soul. But before they cut an ASUSDMB rap video (a real mother to rhyme, by the way) there are some questions they should consider. Th» State Press ta published Monday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthew« Canter. Room IS. Arizona Slate University Tempe. AZ S52S7. Newsroom: SW-2292 Advertising & Production: M5-7S72 Why is it every time you play the“StarSpangled Banner,” every Hungarian in attendance cries and beats his chest? Why are you insecure about uniforms that look like my little sister’s first attempt at butterscotch pudding? With Liberace’s untimely death, did you guys move up one slot on the active all-time worst-dressed list? Why is it every time I hear a trumpet solo I’m reminded of the show“F-Troop? ’’ Actually, I don’t think Dobbs was quite that bad. But in the end, my fine chromed compadres, Dobbs took his share of heat and so must you. J e r r y B ro w n The State Prase la the only newapeper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published In this newspaper are not necessarily those ol the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State Press Tuesday, February 10,1987 Page 5 Allergic reaction to w ife’s cats nothing to sneeze at The allergy doctor made a series of about 40 tiny scratches on my arms. Then the nurse dabbed each scratch with a different fluid. The idea was to determine why I frequently break into sudden fits of sneezing, my eyes water, and I feel like I have a cold when I don’t have cold. “It takes about 15 minutes for a reaction, ” the doctor said. “I’ll be back.” As I waited in the examining room, I wondered if I hadn’t made a mistake by taking the tests. What if he told me that I had a terrible, life-shattering affliction, such as being allergic to booze, pork shanks, smoke-filled piano bars and blonde women? After several minutes, a couple of the scratches began to redden and itch like mosquito bites. The doctor returned and peered at the festering little bumps and said: “Dust.” “Dust?” “Yes. You said that your eyes sometimes water when you read the newspaper in the morning?” “That’s right.” “Some types of paper give off dust Mike Royko Tribune Media Services particles.” “Ah. And all along. I thought the tears were brought on by my liberal remorse in reading all those accounts of man’s cruel follies.” The doctor studied the bumps further. Then he nodded and said: “It’s cats.” “Cats?” “Yes. You said you had two cats at home, didn’t you?” “That’s not exactly true. They aren’t my cats. Never in my life have I willingly acquired or possessed a cat. These two animals belong to my wife. They came as part of the deal.” “Deal?” “Getting married. But it could have been worse. I have a friend who married a widow with five sons. Two become dope heads, one 10 M E N 10 W O M E N wears women’s undies, the fourth watches dirty movies 16 hours a day and the eldest lad is doing two td Tour for being a nocturnal porch climber.” “Well, the cats are your main allergy,” the doctor said. “But I seldom get near them. The one I call ‘—head’, he’s cross-eyed, thinks I’m a large dog and he hides under furniture when he sees me. The other one, I call her ‘The Slut’, thinks I’m a piece of raw liver and she sinks her chops into my arm every chance she gets.” “You don’t have to get near them,” the doctor said. And he went on to explain that the problem stems from something in the cats’ saliva. They lick their coat, and the sneezeproducing agent eventually falls off the hair, gets all over the house and eventually winds up in my nose. Then I get up in the morning feeling like I have a hangover. After he explained this, I said: “Doc, could you do me a favor and write a note to my wife?” “Why?” \ j No Experience Necessary Large national manufacturing company is looking for men and women to work with local distributor. ALCOA founded the aluminum industry and is a recognized leader in the EXTERIOR BUILDING MATERIALS tech­ nology worldwide. Take advantage of our 100 years of expérience and earn while you learn. || “Just say in the note that in the interest of my health, it would be best if I put the cats in a burlap sack and slung it into the Lincoln Park lagoon.” He said he couldn’t do that. But he did give me some pills that I can take before I go to bed. And a device that I use to squirt something in my nose four times a day. Here I am, a grown man. Not necessarily mature, but grown. And four times a day I have to squirt something in my nose. I hate squirting things in my nose. It is undignified. But in order to co-exist in my home with one cat that fears me and another that attacks me, every four hours I have to squirt something in my nose. So I asked the doctor: “Tell me, is there any indication that I’m allergic to any other kinds of animals, such as dogs?” He said no. In that case, I might stop at a kennel on the way home. I wonder what one of those mean little pit bulls sells for these days. C. C. C u tte r s & Co. ] Specializing in H air D esign fo r Y oung A d u lts IN T R O D U C T O R Y O F F E R Perms Highlighting Haircuts j $ 2 2 *® I (transferperms extra) ^ ^ j Cellophanes' *6 $2 0 \ _____ ___ „ WITH THIS AD (aUcolors) I DON’T FORGET ~ Fraternity & Sorority Day Every W ednesday — Haircuts $ 7 | 9 6 8 -6 6 8 $ J j C om er o f L em on & Terrace • Terrace Square Don’t Disqualify Yourself! Full-time / Part-time / Weekends Only Apply in person. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12 3 p.m . S h a rp U n io n B u ild in g A p a c h e Rm. 2 2 1 M E X IC A N M A D N E S S at Shepherds SPONSORED BY ASU STUDENT EMPLOYMENT (R U R A L & A P A C H E ) LEG AL N O T E S IF YOU ARE PARTIALLY AT FAULT IN CAUSING A N ACCIDENT, CAN YOU RECOVER COMPENSATION? You are involved in a car accident. The accident is only 25% your fault. The other driver is 75% at fault. Can you recover anything from the other driver's insurance company for your property damage and personal injuries? Arizona has enacted what is known as a comparative negligence law. In general, under this law you are entitled to recover for your damages even though you may be partially at fault. However, your damages would be reduced by the percentage of your fault. Thus, in the example given above, you may still be entitled to recover 75% of your damages. T h ese L egal N o te s are o n ly in te n d e d to p ro v id e g e n e r a l in fo r m a tio n . T h e b e s t a d v ic e to a n y o n e w h o h a s b een in ju re d in a n a c c id e n t* is to see a p erso n a l in ju r y la w y er. Prepared by Attorney John R. Baker 4625 W. Wendler Drive, Suite 111 Tempe, Arizona 85282 Telephone 438-1212 * Y o u r q u e s t i o n s a n d i n q u i r i e s a re w e l c o m e . $1 [jo r o n a , Margaritas Strawberry Margs & SHOTS of GOLD FREE TACOS 7-10 L a d ie s B a ck To S ch ool S p ecia l 500 Well, W in e & D ra ftfo r L a d ie s MON.-THURS. 7 P.M.-9 P.M. NEVER 5ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, a cover charge. Page 6 State Press Tuesday, February 10,1987 ASU students remain in school longer due to urban location, researcher says ByA A R YN K EM P S tate Prase ASU’s “melting pot’’ population is one reason ASU students overall take longer to graduate than the national average, an ASU research analyst said. Sarah B. Lindquist said because ASU is an urban univarsity with a high commuter and part-time student population, its students tend to stay in school longer and graduate later than those who attend rural universities. She said the majority of students at a rural college live on or near campus, which results in higher graduation rates. A Department óf Education study released in January found that 49 percent of college students in the country receive their degrees in the traditional four years after high school. But a 1984 study by ASU analyst S. Leellen Brigman found that only 21 percent of ASU students who were freshmen in 1978 graduated in four years. Sixteen percent of the students had graduated in five years, and the remainder had not yet graduated at the time of the study. In comparison, the federal study was based on an analysis of the college transcripts of 4,400 students in the high school class of 1972. Besides the almost half that graduated in four years, the department’s Center for Statistics found 27 percent of the students took five years to graduate. Nine percent took six years, 5 percent needed seven years and 10 percent spent up to 11.5 years in school before earning a college diploma. “Because ASU has such a high urban population, students tend to take longer to graduate,” Lindquist said. “There are people who began school at ASU in 1980 that are still enrolled.” aumiiimiiiiHiiHHiHiHiiiHHiiiniiHHiiniNnniiHmimiHHHiHimiimiiHiiiiiHiœ ARIZONA SCH OOL OF 1 1 PROFESSIONAL BARTENDERS I W v b n PRO FESSIO NAL CENTERS FREE GMAT SEMINAR How To Get Into The Business School Of Your Choice” FREE POOL 11 a.m.-2p.m. Mon.-Fri. Beer - Booze - Pool Food - Games in the Memorial Union Apache Room $100 D ISC O U N T to all who enroll at seminar VALLEYWIDE JOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE NATIONWIDE 3129 S. Mill, Tempe EARN EXTRA MONEY ASSEEN ON TELEVISION (N.E. Corner of Mill A Southern) 9 6 7 -9 7 8 1 9 2 1 -9 2 9 2 1523 E ast A pache, T em pe llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllim illllllllllllllllllllH IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM M IIIrc ht Sb “ SENDA TEDDY BEAR WHEN YOUREALIY CARE” Honey Bears w ith B alloons f o r n il n c m f iin n s O rd e r N o w Phoenix 9 9 8 - 4 2 7 5 7441 E. Butherus Rd. Scottsdale fo r Valentine’s Day Tucson 6 0 2 - 3 2 5 - 4 9 6 9 Feb. 14th F R E E D E L IV E R Y I n t h e “g o o d o l d d a y s ,” w o m en h a d c la s s . . . b u t t h e y d id n 't h a v e c h o ic e . Today, women can choose when, and if, they want children. If you're facing this choice, see the caring, supportive staff at FPI for information on: BIRTH CONTROL (exams, supplies and counseling) PREGNANCYTESTING (FREE urine test or low-cost early detection test) ABORTIONSERVICES (one-day procedure, no long waits for appointments) FAMILY PLANNING INSTITUTE TEMPE: 2525 & Rural #4 968-7471 1 Tues., Feb. 17 at 7:00 p.m. T E A C H IN G BARTENDERS SINCE 1979 •FULL OR PART TIME JOBS •FLEXIBLE HOURS & PERSONALIZED TRAINING •START ANY DAY OR EVENING •TERMS — COED COURSES •CALL FOR COURSE DESCRIPTION PHOENIX: 9100 N. 2nd St 997-7493 Combletely Confidential T e r r a c e R o ad A p a r tm e n ts WALK TO SCHOOL! L G M A T Classes Begin Feb. 23 For Reservations, Call Valerie at 969-8953.  P .P .S .T . R E V IE W EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT PROGRAM (ESP) IS OFFERING REVIEW WORKSHOPS IN MATH AND GRAMMAR NOW. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 9 6 5 - 6 2 5 0 OR COME TO THE ESP OFFICE IN THE BASEMENT OF THE MATTHEWS CEN TER ROOM 50. AVANTAGE X BASE TU RBO „ CITIZEN PRINTER Term Paper Quality SYSTEM Full Graphics INCLUDES: Floppy Disk Drive, MS-DOS, 640k Memory, Enhanced Keyboard & CSC EXCEPTIONAL CARE WARRANTY High Speed Draft GET “ ON LINE INSTEAD OF “ IN LINE’t TURBO PASCAL STUDENT FLIGHT WORDPERFECT SIMULATOR EV ER EX 300/1200b M ODEM 1/2 block from Campus. Huge well-furnished 1-bedroom 1-bath, and 2-bedroom 2-batHs, all utilities included, plus large heated pool, spacious laundry facilities and cable TV. PHOENIX 1632 E. CAMELBACK 266-7873 TEM PE SOUTHERN & McCLINTOCK 838-1236 _ 9 5 0 S. Terraco Rd. NORTH PHOENIX 14644 N. CAVE CREEK RD 867-8932 STORE HOURS MO N.— FRI- 10-7 SATURDAY 10-5 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 2 Ü! ^Ï 2£__ _ — — _ _ _ _ nj «da y^ Fe br ua f ^ 0^ 987_^ _^ ASU police report University police reported the following incidents in the 24-hour period ending 7 a.m. Monday: •Police said someone broke into a gumball machine at the north side of the Engineering Center and took most of the gumballs. •Police said they saw two students throw a women’s pink Murray 10-speed bicycle over the courtyard wall on the west side of Manzanita Residence Rail. One of the students told the officer the bike was his, but the officer impounded it, police said. Warrant checks on both students proved negative and no theft report had been filed on the bike. •Someone pushed a concrete trash receptacle off Parking Structure One. It landed in broken pieces on the first level, police said. Estimated damage is $300. •The T-top of a 1982 Camaro sustained $150 in damage after someone threw rocks at it, police said. The car was parked on the north side of Lot 57. •Police broke up a “verbal confrontation’’ after a member of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity called a pizza delivery boy a “slumbucket.” Police told the manager of the pizza restaurant to tell his drivers not to involve themselves in “verbal confrontations” while working. — LAUREN MILLETTE Tempe police report Tempe police reported the following incidents ending noon Monday: •Two unknown men robbed Ricardo’s restaurant at gunpoint and got away with $400, police said. Police said the two men ate at the restaurant at 1402 S. Priest Drive, and one approached the cashier with the gun. The other took the money from the register. •A Phoenix woman was shot in the head with an unknown type of weapon and refuses to furnish information to police about the incident, police said. Police said the women was walking through a parking lot •/ at 1338 E. Apaché Blvd. with a friend when a truck drove up and a person in the vehicle fired at her. The women was taken to Maricopa County Hospital by a friend. X-rays showed a bullet lodged above her skull in the right front portion of the women’s head, police said. •An unknown man exposed his penis in front of two Tempe women as they were getting into their car, police said. Police said the man stopped 20 feet from the vehicle and pulled his running shorts up and over his right side exposing his flaccid penis. The victims told police the man looked at them and smiled Lottery official claims findings clearly 'biased’ By The A ssociated Press PHOENIX — The Arizona L o tte ry has little supervision, spends too much bn itself and conducts investigations even though it lacks authority to do so, the state auditor general’s office said Monday in findings disputed by the lottery. In a 59-page report to lawmakers, Auditor General Douglas Norton said his review was hampered by his inability to find any minutes of the lottery commission’s executive sessions. But lottery officials said th e a u d ito rs show ed “editorial bias” and used “editorial shortcuts” in the study, ignoring a law that a u th o r i z e d so m e investigations and rules that r e s tr ic te d w h e re the c o m m is s io n ’s m o n ey went.The two agencies agreed on two things: that the commission should retain less money and that it s h o u ld s e e k c l e a r e r authority to conduct its investigations. But Charles Buri, who was replaced by Bill Henry as the lottery’s executive director last month, agreed with little else in Auditor General Douglas Norton’s report to lawmakers. “ By fo cusing upon minutiae, distorting fact and p re s e n tin g in co m p lete analyses, the Auditor General paints a biased picture and then calls for changes.” The lo tte ry w as established July 1,1981 after Scientific Games Inc., a major supplier to lotteries, helped finance a voter initiative calling for a state lottery to be controlled by a commission that would be largely free of control by either the Legislature or the executive branch. While most state lotteries spend less than 20 percent of th e ir in c o m e on administration, especially after start-up costs, the Arizona Lottery retains up to 25 p ercen t fo r administration. — M IKE BURGESS in the lobby. Jett, who plays a rock singer and unwed mother in the film which also stars Michael J. Fox, saidshe was leery of playing a musician. “I didn’t want people to say that it was Joan Jett playing herself.” But it is her music that will get her primary attention. “I won’t do just any script. This took like 10 months out of my life. I’m a rock ’n’ roller first and foremost.” By The A ssociated Press Singer makes first film, prefers musical career as he exposed himself. •An unknown man robbed Circle K, 3408 S. Mill Ave., at gunpoint. He took a case of cigarettes and an unknown amount of cash, police said. Police said the man entered the store and asked the clerk for a pack of cigarettes. After the clerk gave the man the cigarettes, he said, “I wanted a case of cigarettes.” When the clerk returned, the suspect placed his hand inside his coat and said, “I want all the money also.” WARWICK, R.I. — Rock star Joan Jett quietly took a back seat at Warwick Mall Cinema for her first start-tofinish look at “Light Of Day,” in which she makes her film debut. Jett, her raven hair sprayed into spikes, wore her trademark black leather jacket and tight black jeans Sunday night. She stayed after the show to answer questions from the audience, and then signed autographs RAYBAN SUNGLASSES Save to 50% V a l e n t i n e 's D a y S p e c i a l Olympic Classic Metals N O W *4260 iSug , ret. $71) (Sug. ret $94) now * 5640 Wayfarer (Sug. ret $59) NOW * 2950 SAVE O N O U R H U G E S T O C K OF R AYBANS by Bausch & Lomb! •Newest colors and styles •San Diego’s finest selection •Excellent protection from ultraviolet rays of Classic Metals, Wayfarers, •Perfect for skiing, biking, general use Olympias, Street Neats, etc. •G reat for men & women •Optical quality glass lenses Give a Gift of Love and Protection this Valentine’s DayI W ith th is ad o n ly th ro u g h 2-15-87. The World’s finest sunglasses are at the world’s finest sunglass store. WE WILL MATCH ANY PUBLISHED SUNGLASS SPECIAL OR DISCOUNT — WE WILL NOT BE UNOERSOLDI ' p a c i f i c Ê y e s & T ’s Christown Mall (By Dillards) 433-2949 Westridge Mall (By Dillards) 873-2607 Tower Plaza (38th St. & Thomas) 244-9119 T empe: 725 S. Rural Rd. (Cornerstone) 966-5560 Page 8 ______________________ s u t « P reti Tuesday. February 1 0 .1987 Com m ittee m ajority votes in perm anent student regent spot By VIC K IE CHACHERE S t i lt Press PHOENIX — The Arizona Senate Education Committee approved a bill Monday that, would make the student member of the Arizona Board of Regents a permanent post. The bill, passed by a 7-2 vote, now goes to the full Senate for approval before it is sent to the House of Representatives. Voting against the measure was Wayne Stump, RGlendale, and John Hays, R-Yamell. The committee approved the measure despite concern from legislative legal counsel that the bill was unconstitutional because it violated Gov. Evan Mecham’s power to appoint anyone he wants to the board. The bill states that a student must be appointed to the post, which now brings the number of members on the board to nine. No other gubernatorial appointment has similar requirements. The committee asked the state attorney general’s office to deliver an opinion on the bill, but withdrew the request last week. Stump said he voted against die measure because he does not believe the question of the bill's unconstitutionality has been answered. “I was going to vote ‘yes’ on it, until (Committee Chairwoman Hacqu Steiner) brought it up,” Stump said. “I have nothing against student regents.” Tempe Sen. Doug Todd, a Republican and sponsor of the bill, said the board’s lawyers reviewed the bill and decided that the violation was not serious because the student regent is not allowed to vote. The student regent is the only non-voting member on the board and under current Arizona statutes, the post is reviewed andean be eliminated every three years. The student regent post was created in 1978. Todd said he doesn’t expect the bill to be challenged even if it is a violation of the governor’s powers. He said he does not know if Mecham will support the bill, but added he will approach the governor about the measure. Mecham will not comment on any legislation until it reaches his desk. “My next step is to see that (Mecham) is in step with the program,” Todd said. CO PIES: 5« FULL SERVICE 44 SELF SERVICE whita, on* side, 8 1/2 x 11,20 to. OPEN 24 HOURS • Binding • Passport Photos • Word Processing • Enlargements • Reductions • Cassette Duplicating MESA — 1840 W. Southern — 969-3326 Tem p* I — 715 S. Forest — 894-9588 Tem p# II — 933 E. U niversity — 894-1797 Also Available: K ln ko 's Lasar W ord P rocessing Plue 933 E. University Ste. 1 0 8 -9 6 6 -2 0 3 5 Public Programs College Council p r e s e n ts . . . a Patio Reception ? \ k / \ February 11 1 0 a .m .-l p.m. Stauffer H all Patio %Helpful information on Career A w areness through clubs. %Refreshments and fun. ANNOUNCING RA POSITIONS FOR ’8 7-’88 ACADEMIC YEAR ----------------- — M IN IM U M Q U A L IF IC A T IO N S — — ---------- 1. A minimum of 2.25 cumulative G.PA (2.5 preferred). 2. At least 25 semester hours completed prior to employment as a Resident Assistant. 3- Enrollment in CED 498 (Seminar in Residence Hall W ork) during the first semester of employment. 4. Previous residence hall living experience. IN F O R M A T IO N A L M E E T IN G S Sunday, February 8 Monday, February 9 Tuesday, February 10 Wednesday, February 11 Thursday, February 12 9 p.m. 8 p.m. 7 p.m. 9 p.m. 7 p.m. 9 p.m. 8 p.m. Best C PV West Manzanita Ocotillo Cholla PVEast Sahuaro A d d itio n a l in fo r m a tio n o r Study Lounge Cafeteria Copper Lounge Lounge Rec Room Fishbowl Cafeteria c a ll: 9 6 5 - 1 5 3 5 c o n ta c t a n y r e s id e n t h a ll d ir e c t o r State Press Tuesday, February 10,1987 Page 9 services to By LAUREN M ILLETTE State P re ss \ Signs prohibiting drivers from parking large vehicles on the ramps of the ASU parking structure at McAllister Drive and'T yler Streep-should mean less fender benders, the assistant director of ASU Parking and Transit Services said. Richard Landreth said the “crazy” way students drive and an excess of accidents in Parking Structure One mandated that parking services stencil signs on the ramps’ stalls that say “compact cars only.” He said he hopes the signs will eliminate the “hazardous” parking that has caused several minor accidents this semester, “This should hopefully reduce accidents in the structure,” Landreth said. “But the crazy way students drive through there is a sight to behold. “It seems as if many students look at driving up and down the ramps as if they are in the Indianapolis 500.” Students aim for the divider line as if it were a target, he said. Landreth said large vehicles, parked on the ramps’ stalls, extend into the roadway and become obstacles for entering and exiting vehicles. “We are tired of people parking in a manner that constitutes an impediment to the flow of traffic, and we have done something to help us reduce the problem,” he said. Landreth said drivers of large vehicles who park in the compact-cars-only stalls will be issued $25 tickets. Todd Gruen/Stata P r m New signs were posted In the parking garage at M cAllister Drive and Tyler Street to help prevent accidents. Schedule announced for ASASU officer, senate elections By DARRIN HOSTETLER S tate Press The following is a list of dates for potential candidates: •Feb. 24: A mandatory meeting for all potential candidates will be held at a time to be announced. Each person will receive a packet containing the rules and regulations for the campaign. Potential executive candidates will need 750 petition signatures to be placed on the ballot. They cannot campaign during the signature-gathering process. •Feb. 25: Petitions for potential candidates will be available at 10 a.m. Associated Students announced the 1987 spring election schedule for all senatorial and executive officer candidates Monday. Patrick McWhortor, ASASU elections director, announced the dates after they had been confirmed by the ASASU Executive Committee. All executive and senatorial positions are open to potential candidates. E a c h c o lleg e w ill choose two representatives to serve in the ASASU Senate during 1987-88. •March 16: Petitions and senate candidate nominations are due at 10 a.m. The petitions will go through a verification process, and the potential candidates’ GPAs will be checked to insure they have at least a 2.2 GPA and are carrying a minimum of six semester hours. •March 17: A short mandatory meeting will be held to go over the election code and make all candidacies official. •March 22: Campaigning officially begins at 10 a.m. •March 30: A candidate forum and reception will be held at a time and place to be announced. The reception will offer students a chance to meet all executive and senatorial candidates. •April 2: A second candidate forum will be held at a time and place to be announced. •April 8-9: The general election will be held from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. •April 15-16: Run-off election (if needed) 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. •April 16: All candidate financial statements are due by 4 p.m. FIVE CONVENIENT VALLEY LOCATIONS n a t io n w id e P H O EN IX M E SA GLENDALE 9130 N. 19th Ave. 437 S. Gilbert Rd. 5030 W. Peoria #103 One block north, of Camefback Rd Southeast corner of Broadway &Gilbert Rd. One block east of 51st 2 4 2 -5 2 9 2 8 4 4 -7 0 9 4 “A t Nationwide Vision Centers The Cost o f Quality Eyecare Isn't Out o f Sight. . 9 9 7 -1 0 4 7 PH X/SC O TTSD ALE 3620 E. Thomas Rd. Acrossfrom Target m Sunshine Square 9 5 4 -2 0 1 2 “N E W ” eyeg lasses Make Your Brown Eyes Blue $ 1 7 9 * 9 9 * FR EE EYEGLASSES ..................... Two P air $ 3 9 . 9 9 Free tin t on second pair — any com bination of regular o r sunglasses, same o r different styles. Single vision only. BIFOCALS . . . . . . . . . . . Two P air $ 7 9 - 9 9 DAILY WEAR CONTACTS & GLASSES ..................... B oth P air $ 3 9 - 9 9 EYE EXAM Includes Glaucoma Test Contact Lens Consultation FR EE Tint on 2nd Pair of Glasses FR EE Sunglasses with Contact Lens Purchase Free tin t on second pair. . . . . . . $18*00 Contact lens fitting and follow-up care additional. Outside Eyeglass Prescriptions Welcome D r. Mark A. Hechtauui — D r. Neel A. W daatda A Aeeec. U t caaed Oerters e f Optometry 100% Refund on contact lenses if not completely satisfied within 30 days. Specialtylenses excluded. Qpen Mon.-Sat. C ontact P rescriptions A vailable The Same ’ Some restrictions apply. CO NTACTS* one p air DAILY WEAR . . . . . _____ Two P air $ 3 9 . 9 9 EXTENDED W E A R .............Two P air $ 5 9 . 9 9 DAILY WEAR COLORED S O F T ............... Two P air $ 7 9 . 9 9 One colored, one clear. DAILY SOFT CONTACTS FOR ASTIGMATISM (to r k ) . . Two Pair $ 1 9 9 . 9 9 Hydrocurve. COLORED SOFT EXTENDED WEAR CO N TA CTS.............Two Pair $ 9 9 . 9 9 Two pairs tinted. Outride contact lent preteriptiout welcome with corneal meaaurements (K-leadingt) Page 10 State Press T àn d em skydiving lets amati ByROBERTKOSCHEKA Stata Press Imagine jumping from a plane at 11,000 feet and falling at over 120 mph to earth. Sound frightening? Would it ease your mind if you had the security of a professional skydiver right To fly is one thing. To fly with the Marine Corps is something else. They’ll show you the meaning ofwings. From die wings of the F-18 H ornet to die wings you w ear as a Marine aviator, this is flying at its b est And your ticket to fly is your college diploma. If youd like to be up there, contact your local Marine Officer Selec­ tion Officer. 2 6 1 -3 8 8 0 . behind you? Tandem .skydiving . - allows even the inexperienced jumper to ride along with " experienced skydiver by strapping the novice tH the professional. 10 The passenger is tied to the skydiver See Marine Corps representative from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. on Cady Mall Feb. 11 and 12. M a rin e s W erelo o kin g fo ra few good m en. - * Jeff Newtonls prepares reporter Robert Koscheka fo r a tandem skydive from 11,000 feet. heavy-dul front of secured« A fter« gets out c with two gear, hol< more inst the diver, The on skydiving did. It start ASU’s Sk; showed ir familiariz “Tande more me “Even a experienc After w thought t difficult.’' it wouldn’t “The sk; of the woi passenger is enjoy th Icouldn attitude wi on the win; We left Coolidge Arizona. On the Skydiving “Right i “Some of V “We ex (ASU stud wearenov Herndoi activity st “Skydiv “Advance dropped 1 drasticall; I love you for only a buck. w ith a V A L E N T I N E ’S D A Y P E R S O N A L 1 3 spec la ss ifie d in th e Fri., Feb. H U R R Y . . . d e a d lin e is W ed., Feb . 11 at 3 p .m .!! U S E TODS H A N D Y O lra T O S A Y *T L O V E Y O U !” H U R R Y ! D E A D L IN E I S F E B . 1 1 A T 3 P .M . I STA TE P R ESS V A L E N T IN E A D O R D E R N am e _ Phone. $1 fo r 1 5 w ords o r leas 1(K eac h ad d itio n al w ord C ash • Check • V isa • M as tercard (Sony, no billing) VISA « CASH • CHECK • MONEY ORDER 15 MATTHEWS CENTER STATE PRESS ASU. TEMPE, AZ 85287 OFFICE OPEN 8 am .-5p.m . dally e \e y e r iM W i t MU BOOTH OPEN 11 am .-l p.m.daüy » 0 0 - 7 5 7 2 8 18 0 81.10 81.20 81.40 8180 81.70 81.80 81.30 81.80 -— A d d ead lin e is F eb ru ary 11 before 3 p.m . ■ j m ail it iiL bring it in. CCLll it ITl (and place It on VISA o r MASTERCARD). State Press an iateurs ju m p w ith experts heavy-duty clips' at the shoulders. Sitting in At the Coolidge airport, I met the man who front of the diver, the passenger is further would escort me out of the plané: Jeff Newtonis, secured with two harnesses around the waist. a professional skydiving instructor with over After reaching the “drop zone,” the skydiver 1,800 jumps to his credit. gets out of the plane and stands on the landing showed me the equipment we would îr with two gear, holding on to the wing strut. After a few useNewton for the jump. more instructions, the skydiver jumps off with the diver, which happened to be me. He brought out the 375 square feet of nylon The only way to fully understand tandem which often is mistaken for a parachute. skydiving is to experience it first hand — so I Newton said it actually is a rectangular “ram did. air glider.” “The ram air glider performs It started at the home of the president of much like a hang glider,” he said. “It is ASU’s Skydiving Club, Scott Herndon. Herndon controlled by two steering toggles, allowing the showed me video footage of a tandem jump to skydiver to steer towards his landing spot. ” familiarize me with the technique. After a brief training period on the ground, we “Tandem jumping is a way we hope to attract were on our way up. The Cessna 182 took off and more members to our club,” Herndon said. “Even a person who has never jumped can was at the “drop” altitude of 11,000 feet in 25 minutes. experience skydiving with very little training. ’’ As we made our final preparations, I got the After watching the video several times, I feeling you get before you drop 10 stories on a thought to myself, ‘That doesn’t look very roller coaster. Of course, it was about 10 times difficult.’ Herndon assured me that I was right, as strong! it wouldn’t be difficult. Newton said I wouldn’t get that “roller “The skydiver you jump with will be doing all coaster” feeling when we jumped. of the work,” Herndon said. “You’re simply a passenger along for the ride. All you have to do “You have to realize that when we exit we will is enjoy the view.” already be going 90 mph,” he said. I couldn’t wait to see the view. But 1 knew this Newton then yelled into my ear, “Well Rob, attitude would change as soon as we climbed out are you ready to skydive? ” on the wing. I really wasn’t ready for a 11,000-foot fall, but We left the morning of Feb. 8, en route to I yelled back positively. Coolidge Municipal airport in Coolidge, Arizona. As the door opened, I wondered why I was On the way, Herndon told me about the doing this. But as we began to fall, I wondered why I waited so long to do it. Skydiving Club. I looked up and realized that for the first time “Right now we have 40 members,” he said. in my life, I wasn’t next to anything. There was “Some of who have as many as 400 jumps. “We expect the number to increase when no falling sensation. I was hovering above (ASU students) learn about the tandem jumps earth. we are now offering.” Newton pulled the chute. We started our slow Herndon said skydiving is no longer an descent to the airport. While gliding, Jeff demonstrated spins and stalls with the chute. activity strictly for daredevils. We made a soft touch down on a strip of grass. “Skydiving is becoming a sport,” he said. “Advances in equipment and technique have Anyone interested in tandem skydiving should dropped the number of skydiving casualties attend the ASU Skydiving Club’s meeting Feb. drastically in recent years. ” 10 in the MU Navaho Room. even the 8 with an «novice to S P EED R E A D IN G C O U R S E S FEB. 1 1 T H R O U G H M A R C H 1 8 ,1 9 8 7 A special five-week course, based on the Sack-Yourman Speed. Reading Program, will be offered to graduates, undergraduates, faculty, staff and the comrpunity. This special program requires pre- and post-reading rate testing, reading of timed passages, and development of college level vocabulary. R E G I S T R A T I O N : February 9 - 1 1 , 1 9 8 7 M o n .-W e d .— 1 0 a .m .-2 :3 0 p.m. Payne Hall — Reading Education — Room B - 1 1 2 COLLEGE OF EDUCATION S E C T IO N S : A. W ednesday 6 :0 0 p .m .-8 :3 0 p.m. FEE: $30 L O C A T I O N : CLASSES HELD IN F A R M E R BU ILDING , R O O M 1 0 1 O N TH E A S U C A M P U S F O R M O R E IN F O R M A T IO N : C A L L 9 6 5 - 7 7 6 6 Sun: All Ages 8:00-12:00 $3.00 COVER Mon: Modern Music Monday with 250 Drinks from 9:00-11:30 $3.00 COVER Tues: Champagne Ladies Night 500 Champagne for ladies — no cover Wed: College 1.0. Night no cover with current college I D. $1.50 Domestic Beer Thurs: 250 Drinks from 9:00-11:30 $4.00 COVER Fri-Sat: 250 Drinks from 8:00-10:30 Door open at 8:00 J j£ c $ ~ J fig /d a ï (¡m jfittis. H o C over, ôo * C h a m p a g n e fo r C o d es m m S . îu Q é & fc k œ K E l!^ X: Page 12 State Press Tuesday, February 10,1987 Had changed program to better serve students By JUDIE GAILLARD S tate Press Health Dimensions coordinator Billie Lindsey has accepted a position with the University of New Mexico as a health educator a t the student health service. Her last day is Friday. Lindsey, who has been a t ASU since June 1986, primarily was responsible for the redesign of the P.I.E.S. program, which included the name change to Health Dimensions. “I think we’ve accomplished a very successful first sem ester,” she said. “We’ve presented about 100 programs ranging from stress management, alcohol and drug abuse, nutrition and AIDS. ” Dr. Monty Roth, director of ASU Student Health, said the program has changed dramatically since Lindsey joined the staff. “Billie has refocused the issues for the program,” he said. “It’s unfortunate tfiat she’s leaving, she’s done a lot for our program. “P.I.E.S. was a good program, but we were not able to get effective patient education off the ground. ” Lindsey said one of the focuses of Health Dimensions is to promote wellness philosophy: physical, mental, social, emotional and spiritual. She said ASU’s program is highly successful compared to other universities. “We’re reaching a lot of students,” she said. Lindsey said a problem with health education programs among universities nationwide lies in the student services area. “Many student services are understaffed for the increasing demands for services and expectations,” she said. Lindsey pointed out that the lead story in last week’s Chronicle of Higher Education was about stress and academia. “A lot of the University faculty and staff are presented with too many tasks and too little time,” she said. Lindsey said her life was not balanced because she was working more than 50 hours a week. “I love what I do. I like to conceptualize, design, market and implement health education programs,” she said. “There is always so much to do. ” Lindsey said she plans to complete her doctorate in health and physical education at the University of New Mexico. “My job is my first love and priority,” she said. “I need to place my doctorate higher on the list.” Lindsey said there is a strong and newly-designed health education program at the University of New Mexico. She also will teach classes at the university. Lindsey said Health Dimensions is off to a great start, but it still needs additional funding for full-time staff members. She said it is understaffed for a large university. Roth said he hopes Lindsey’s replacement would have similar background and direction. “Our search should be completed in about three weeks,” he said. “We want to fill the position as soon as possible. We’re prepared to continue the program while we’re searching. “It’ll slow down a little bit, but if we get the right person, we will not change the program direction.” Lindsey said Danae Brownell will act as coordinator until a replacement is found. She will be assisted by Annette Starrantino, who is a substance abuse counselor. Hearing for alleged drug trafficker held amidst tight security By The Associated Press JACKSONVILLE, F la. — A m an prosecutors say is among the world’s leading and most dangerous cocaine traffickers was ordered held without bond Monday on drug charges a t a hearing where security was so tight the nails in people’s shoes set off an alarm. Innocent pleas for 11 drug-smuggling counts were entered by U S. Magistrate Harvey S. Schlesinger on behalf of Carlos Lehder Rivas, 37. The drug ring authorities say he operates is responsible for 80 percent of the cocaine imported into this country, according to prosecutors. Lehder is “among the premier —if not the premier drug trafficker— in the world,” U.S. Attorney Robert Merkle said at the detention hearing. Merkle said he had received reports of the weekend assassination of a Bogota, Colombia, councilman who belonged to the political party responsible for approving the treaty under which Lehder was extradited last week. But Merkle did not tie the incident to Lehder. And Bogota Mayor Julio Cesar Sanchez said the councilman was injured, not killed, by two men trying to steal his car and has since left the hospital. In Coral Gables, near Miami, the Colombian consulate received two telephoned bomb threats during Monday’s hearing, forcing a two-hour evacuation of the building, said police Sgt. Bob Robkin. But dogs found n6 bomb, and he would not say if the threats were related to Lehder. Lehder has adm itted publicly to “unprecedented violence,” said Merkle, who called him “the personal embodiment of a narco-terrorist.” Schlesinger scheduled a March 23 trial TU ESD A YS U n iversity & D ob son 8 4 4 -S H E D su n ta n c e n te r TEMPE: 55 E. B ro ad w ay (a t Mill) VALENTINE SPECIAL O f t C e r tific a te s AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD RESTAURANT Taco, Beans or Rice, Med. Soft Drink *1.95 “I have been hounded by the Colombian army for the last four years,” Lehder said, “I’ve been in the jungle for the last four years disconnected from civilization.” He said his funds had been frozen by the Colombian government, which also was acting to freeze his Bahamian assets. The U.S. Internal Revenue Service on Monday slapped a $70 million lien on Lehder’s earnings estimated a t up to $300 miUion in the early 1980s. R A R E LION 1 /3 lb. BURGER-FRIES DRAFT $ 2 .9 9 Total N B A & College on Satellite TV and appointed counsel for Lehder, who said he was broke. % 7 visits $2500 C lo th in g 9 V in ta g e & C o n te m p o r a r y A c c e s s o rie s 9 S h o e s. H a ts . G lo v e s • CALL A v a ila b le B uying • Selling • Trading 9 6 6 -2 1 5 0 J e w e lry 9 R h in e s to n e s . G la s s B e a d s 0 C o lle c tib le s 9- A n tiq u e s 0 i w ith th is aa or ASU I D.) E xptres.2 -1 5 -8 7 . V 10-6 M on.-FrL » 1 0 -6 Sat. 722 S. M ill AveM Tem po ® 968-6074 w /cou p on Expires 2-28-87. 7 3 5 E. U niversity S /W c o m e r R u ra l & U n iv e rsity EAT IN 968-0066 TAKE OUT, DRIVE THRU OVERWEIGHT? GRAND OPENING SPECIAL Pre-pay 6 weeks, receive 7th week free! New dieters only. •P rofessional • Q uality • Convenient •C u ts »Perms »Styling At Diet Center you can lose 10 pounds in two weeks. .. be tw o sizes trimmer in three weeks. It's quick. It’s safe. And perhaps best o f all, you won’t see the weight you lost come back. Don’t face weight loss alone. You can work with a Diet Center counselor everyday o f your diet. Callfo r you r first consultation. A f r e e gift is waitingfor you! N E W L O C A T IO N p v . . _ TEM PE • 9 6 7 - 1 3 7 1 6 B I 1 i M cdintock Garden Offices 818 W. Broadway #107 2246 s. M cdintock #3 Tem pe, AZ (2 biks. S. of Broadway) Open daily 7 a.m.-6 p.m. 829-9694 Center Give meyour tired, your pcxwfyprepared, your anxious m asses yearning for the best score. The Stanley H. Kaplan credo. It’s helped guide over one million test-takers into safe harbor for the past 50 years. Kaplans test-taking techniques and edu­ cational programs are the shining light in the test prep field. Many of our students raise their scores well above the national norm, and well above their expectations. So if you want to be free of PSÄT, SÄT, LSÄT, GMÄT, GRE, or MCAT anxiety and want a better score, come to Kaplan. And get a bigger pieoe of the American dream. CONGRATULATIONS TO THF I.A1W OF I iw pbt v FROM THE FATHER OF TEST PREP. 1KAPLAN STANLEYH.KAPlANEDUCATIONALCENTERLTD. The World’s Leading Test Prep Organization 2 HRS. FREEONTAPETUTORING 967-2967 State Press Liberace’s death caused by infection, coroner claim s By The Associated Press INDIO, Calif.—Liberace died of a disease caused by AIDS, the Riverside County coroner said Monday, reporting the results of an autopsy on the entertainer. Coroner Raymond Carrillo said he believed that an opportunistic infection triggered by AIDS killed Liberace, who died Wednesday at age 67 in his Palm Springs home. "I believe the AIDS virus causes all these. ... It allows all these microorganisms to develop,” said Carrillo. The report contradicted denials by Liberace aides that he had contracted acquired immune deficiency syndrome. It was first reported Jan. 24 by the Las Vegas (Nev.) Sun that Liberace was suffering from AIDS. The newspaper attributed the information to unidentified sources. Denise Collier, a spokeswoman for Liberace, said Liberace had pernicious anemia, heart disease and emphysema. On Jan. 26, publicist Seymour Heller had said Liberace’s anemia was caused by a two-month, weight-loss diet of nothing but watermelons, although Liberace’s Las Vegas physician later disputed that. Dr. Ronald Daniels, a physician who treated Liberace, reported the cause of death as cardiac arrest due to heart failure brought on by subacute encephalopathy. That means the heart stopped due to a gradual loss of the heart’s ability to pump brought on by some chronic problem in the brain. Riverside County officials refused to accept the death certificate signed by Daniels when they discovered the coroner had not been contacted as required in the case of possible contagious diseases, and because a doctor wasn’t in attendance when Liberace died, Carrillo said. Coroner’s investigator Sabas Rosas said if proper procedure had been followed, it wouldn’t have been necessary for his office to hold a news conference on the cause of death, offending Liberace’s fans. “It’s too bad it went to this extent,” said Rosas. “If protocol had been followed the way it should have been, it probably wouldn’t have ended up where we’re at. ” “We’re doing our duty under the law. We owe it to the public we serve. The mortuary had an obligation to notify us,” Rosas said. Medical records showed that before Liberace’s death, the entertainer tested positive in January for the presence of antibodies to the AIDS virus, Rosas said. A positive test means only that a person has been exposed at one time by the virus and formed antibodies to it, and not necessarily that the person was still infected with the virus or actually developed acquired immune deficiency syndrome. About 10 percent to 30 percent of those testing positive develop AIDS, scientists believe. On Sunday, fans of Liberace expressed outrage about the autopsy to see whether the entertainer had AIDS. “It just made me sick when I heard all this digging up dirt,” Edie Petersen said Sunday at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills, where Liberace was entombed. “I resent anyone going into anyone’s private life. ” W infrey holds talk show in Forsyth County ROLLS BACK PRICES TO THE 1970’S. WHAT A SAVINGS! Tunex®includes our superior 40 point diagnostic engine analysis, valued at $24.95...FREE...with every tuneup. We’re not here to sell you repairs you don’t need. GREAT WORK. NOSURPRISES...GUARANTEED. 1976 Eldorado Convertible R O L L B A C K P R IC E 4 cy. w ne-up. regular price $49.95 HOW ONLY ^ O Q 9 5 ™ PRICE Price $54.95 P’ re®u,ar NOWONLY By The Associated Press s4 4 95 B O L L B A C K P B 'C E 8 c y r w n e -u p . regular p ric e $59 95 . - H O W O N L Y ^ fc f^ J B R IN G T H IS AD IN FOR AN A D D ITIO N A L $5 D ISC O U N T TEM PE 3135 S. 48th St. Just north of Southern on S. 48th St. Tempe, AZ 85282 431-0222 TUNEX KEEPS YOU RUNNING SMOOTH! M a z a tla n E x p re s s M arch 7-14, 1987 ■ . —iVEL SPECIALISTS IN C “ * “ ; *1 9 9 0 0 % T rip Includes: * 5 Nights Lodging at the Los Sabalos Hotel & Resort. A Five Star Resort right on the beach in Mazatlan. ★ Round Trip Train Transportation Nogales-Mazatlan. ★ Mazatlan Express T-Shirt. ★ Private Party at El Cid Disco & Joe’s Oyster Bar. ★ Nightly Cocktail Party. ★ Beach Events & Much Much More. Sign Up Now! For more information contact your campus representative or call: Group T ravel S p e c ia lis t s • 957-4400 YOUR CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE: David Llsem ............ ..............^ . 968-3233 Debbie Olshefsky ......... 784-8146 Gary Baldus ............. ............ ............784-8247 Nick Miliotis . . . . . . . . ............. 784-0433 Chris Cooke .............................. 784-0509 Bob Enright . . . . . ...... 784-0662 ........ . 784-9555 Frank Burns _...___ . . . B. J. Carlson.......... ............ ............ 784-9269 Matt G aa l................................. 784-0249 Brad Gouch ..................... 987-2369 Alicia Vickonoff. . . . . . ............ 898-8143 Debi Spieler . . . 784-2710 Jeff W olf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 784-0155 Andrew N enninger.......... 784-8491 CUMMING, Ga. — Black talk show host Oprah W infrey b r ou g ht h e r program to Forsyth County on Monday to. hear out its white residents, some of whom argued they should be able to keep blacks from moving into their communities. Outside, civil rights activist Hosea Williams was among eight people arrested for picketing over the exclusion of blacks from the show. Winfrey mentioned the arrests during her broadcast but said her purpose was to find out “why this community has not allowed black people to live here since 1912.” Asked later if she felt comfortable in Forsyth County, she said, “Not very comfortable at all. I’m leaving.” Dozens of people in the audience of 100 said they supported the rights of black people to live and work in the county, but some said they feared violence from white neighbors if they publicly welcomed blacks. And one woman said, “We have a right to have a white community.” Another said she participated in last month’s civil rights demonstration that brought the spotlight to Forsyth County “because I felt it was important for Forsyth Countians to be there and to make it clear that we welcome all lawabiding people in our community.” Williams, an Atlanta City councilman, had asked to appear on “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” but Winfrey and her producers said they w a n t e d o nl y c o u n t y residehts. Sheriff Wesley Walraven said Williams and the others were charged with unlawful assembly as they picketed outside the restaurant where the show was broadcast. Williams also was charged with blocking a state highway. ‘‘Rev. Williams was screaming, ‘A rrest me, arrest me,’ ” Sheriff Wesley Walraven said. So Williams vowed to fast in jail. He was offered a chance to leave jail but refused, as did three other pickets, including W illiam s’ daughter, Elizabeth Omilami. “Hosea has decided to stay in jail,” said civil rights activist C.T. Vivian of Atlanta, who also was arrested. Page 14 State Brest Tuesday, February 10,1987 C h attin g dolls at cen ter of to y show conversation animated talking Teddy Ruxpin, now has come up with Julie. Unlike past dolls that shot wit random phrases with little relevance to what a child said, Julie has more than 100 soundactivated responses in her computer chip memory. She recognizes voices and words. When she hears someone say he or she is hungry, Julie will respond, “Let’s eat.” Take her into a dark room and she’ll ask, “Can you see OK? It’s kind of dark.” The doll can even be trained to only respond to its owner’s voice. Yes, there is a limit to the dolls’ intelligence — they, only react to specific words or stimuli. The next step in interactive toys are those like Axlon’s “Tech Force” ($250 for a dual-control set). As Tech Force characters battle evildoers in a television show, their toy counterparts will charge around the' living room floor firing laser lights, in response to inaudible signals sent via the cartoon’s soundtrack. The developers say such toys will make television watching participatory, instead of merely reactive. Critics say they will rob children of their imaginations, become sales tools for the toys and create rifts between children who have the toys and those who don’t. There still are plenty of plush toys that just sit there, waiting to be hugged. Board games range from thé old standbys to the “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” and a junior edition of “Wheel of Fortune.” Tinker toys return in their familiar convenient tub. But most of the attention at Toy F air is focused on the new and different. Nolan Bushnell, the founder of Atari and creator of Tech Force, envisions moving the video game off the screen and making it 3-dimensional: “Three-D is not when you put silly glasses on — it’s when something runs over your left foot,” he said. International fair unveils new com puterized toys By The A ssociated Press NEW YORK — Once upon a time, dolls just sat there and looked pretty. Then they wet, they talked, and they walked. Now they hold conversations with each other without a child even being in the room. At the 84th annual American International Toy Fair, which started Monday, manufacturers unveiled animated talking toys that not only communicate with each other, but “understand” what a child says to them and respond with an appropriate answer. Also introduced were high-tech action figures that will take electronic cues from signals beamed by new animated TV shows. Manufacturers are hoping such toys can enliven the relatively flat $12.5 billion toy market. Rick Anguilla, editor of the trade publication Toy and Hobby World, said, “We see the area of growth in true interactive toys — not just toys that have something to say and randomly say it, but those that almost seem to think and can have real conversations.” Put two Talking Cabbage Patch Kids ($100 a piece, retail) in a room and press the buttons on their stomachs. They’ll sense each other’s presence and begin chatting. They may discuss ice cream — some are programmed to like vanilla, others chocolate or strawberry. Children can join in the discussion too, of course. The new dolls know what’s going on around them. Take them for a bumpy car ride and the doll might say, “OK, that’s enough. All this bouncing up and down makes me dizzy.” Kiss the doll’s cheek, and it’ll say, “Thank you for the Such toys “ force people not to be passive,” he said. “The kiss. May I have another one, please?” dead toys don’t have any chance. Only the live ones will make Worlds Of Wonder, the company that introduced the it.” By The Associated Press SAN DIEGO — A man posing as a newspaper subscription salesman forced his way into an apartment and grabbed a box containing five bottles of wine worth about $12,000, police said. The victim, who asked not to be identified, said the thief apparently grabbed the box of wine as an afterthought after taking $635 in cash. The robber carried a 4-inch knife. T h ie f g r a b s v in ta g e w in e w o r th e s tim a te d $ 1 2 ,0 0 0 IIE S F E K A D O a V BAR & GRILL V Montezuma Tequila Drinks CornerofBroadway&Roosevelt $1.50 6p.m.-la.m. 524 West Broadway • 894-6423 Tuesday TACO BAR First Drink 39vc SAT 10-6 Por Sale H elp Wanted FOR SALE: 10-speed Ross bike, $80 OBO. Call 921-9540 o r 921-9538. IBM-XT, 2 drives, 20MB with 20MB tape backup, 1200b Hayes, Hercules color, EGA monitor, software, year warranty. $5500 retail, asking $3200 OBO. 8267804, Erie. GOURMET DELI- Downtown Phoenix business district. Part-time. Sandwich prep and counter help. No weekends. Apply In person, 301W. Roosevelt. ASU JU N IO R S /S eniors/G raduates: Need new car and money? No credit check, no down payment. You can drive a new lease car and earn money part-time, sim ply show others how they can drive a new lease car. Dynamic company tha) . has J u s t gone national. Serious people only. Al, 894-6348. F o r Rent o r Lease -SUN 12-5 2*3*4 bedroom condos, townhouses, houses, near ASU fo r sale and rent. Call Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Realty, 951-5800,860-0460. C h a n g in g H a n d s 414 Mill Avenue 966-0203 Old Town Tempe BEAUTIFUL NEW large one and tw o bedrooms, w alk to ASU, pool, laundry, one block south o f University on 8th Street and Gary. Ask about move-in specials. 968-5238.________________ McIiINGUS 8 Go. A FINE DRINKING ESTABLISHMENT D o n ’t m iss it! 1954 E. University, Tem pe • 894-8993 1977 MALIBU, PB, PS, AT, AC, four new tires. Body rough, reliable transportation. M ust sell l $300 OBO. 844-2033. '^ G o d fa th e r tP iz z a . ALL YOU CAN EAT SOFT DRINK INCLUDED *3.09 M O N .-FR I. 11:30-1:30 TEMPE CENT— C orner oMOth « Mill Ave. 1980 BUICK LeSabre, good condition, loaded. What a bargain! $2500 OBO. Call Cathy, 964-5499.________ 1981 SUBARU 5-speed, AC, stereo, $3500. Excellent shape. Call .a fte r 7 p.m., 894-8505 or 345-2453.___________ 1982 CHEVROLET Camaro V6, auto­ m atic transm ission, lig h t blue color, excellent condition, $4800 or best offer. 887-4231. _________ _ 1983 NISSAN Sentra, 2-door deluxe model. AT, 36,000 m iles, AM-FM, excellent condition. $2800 OBO. 9613661.______________ • Babysitters wnted NOMINAL FEE towards rent In ex­ change fo r child care evenings, etc. 3 m iles from campus; m ust have references. Let's talk. Kathy, 921-0640. B icycles SMALL PETS welcome! 3 bedroom, 2 bath patio home. Double garage, pool, yard, AC, fridge, unfurnished, $595. North Mesa. Call 994-8491, 9464272, 9684812. WALK TO ASU, studio, $285; 2 bedroom, $395. Adults, no pets. 1031 E, Lemon. 9662679,9334384.___________ Por Sale 1976 RABBIT 4-speed. AC. Runs great. Glendale area. $750. Call 9369708. 1985 ELITE 80. Good condition, red, $750. Call 921-9471 or9661758. 1986 YAMAHA JOG 50. Excellent condition. Must sell. Call 9361492 after 6:30 p.m. $450 O B O .________________ First Minute 554, Ea Add"! Minute 454 R e c o rd e d P e rs o n a l G a y A d s 3 KEG cooler, $300. 9047 N. 36th Dr., 9765632, after 3:30 p.m._____________ Looking for a house to ren t? F ind it in T he C la ssified s. HEAR ALA. NEW APS EACH TIME YOU CAIO. SACK! BUY IT. SELL IT. CLASSIFIEDS DO IT. 1984 HONDA Aero 80. New engine, excellent condition. $600 or best offer. Call Jim, 9674563.__________________ T h a t is. 1 -9 7 6 -4 6 3 6 * 10/7 1977 VEGA. Good body, clean interior, all options. $650. Call evenings. 9463996. _______________ _______ 1-976*4 MEN NO 'COPED' APS ALL PHONE NUMBERS FACE -RECORD YOUR OWN AP AFTER LISTENING TO OTHERSI 15 MATTHEWS CENTER 8-5 DAILY *965-7572 ONE BEDROOM apartment for rent, all u tilitie s paid, numerous amenities, near ASU. Call evenings, 9650141. Tha Most Popular, Fast and Fun Way for Gay Mon and Woman to M oat Somoono Now.. * * STATE PRESS SUPER TOYOTA M R 2,24,000 miles, fin, air, loaded, $9700. 965-2870 or 866-7403. M ust sell._________________ Tka&cuf 4 TK m f Dial Call the STATE PRESS at 965-7572 and place a FREE “LOST AND FOUND” CLASSIFIED A D ... and find your teddybear! 0ATSUN 260Z, good condition, fast, $2000 OBO. Two seater sports car. Call Lie«, 9 4 6 1 5 0 3 ._____________________ 5-SPEED CRUISER Sandstreak, like new, black, used only one semester, paid $250, asking $125; Cryptonite-4 u-shape lock, $16; bike rack, works on any car, $23; bike stand exerciser, $10. 844-1697. Í Í $ Lose your teddybear? DON’T MISS out! At Terrace Road Apartm ents we have tw o openings: a large tw o bedroom, tw o bath, and a spacious one bedroom, one bath. Laundry facilitie s, beautiful pool, courteous management, Vi block from campus, 950 S. Terrace Road. 966-8540. CLASSIFIEDS DO IT. STA TE PR ESS NORTH BASEMENT 15 MATTHEWS CENTER 96 5 -7 5 7 2 OPEN DAILY 8 A.M.-5 P.M. VISA* MASTERCARD»CHECK»CASH NEW QUILTED Levi’s jean jacket, $35; red Powell Peralta skateboard, excellent trucks, $60,9674229. __________ CLASSIFIEDS WORK. REFRIGERATOR: STUDENT size. Per­ fect fo r dorms. Runs good. $60. 967-6252.___________ _______________ SCUBA EQUIPMENT. Everything you need for a fun and safe dive. Excellent condition. $750.784-9703._______ - VACUUM CLEANERS. New and used, as low as $39.95. Also rent and repair. Baseline Sew-Vac, 831-9238.__________ Automobiles COVER! MEN’S 16SPEED Centurion bicycle w ith com bination lock, $66. Call evenings, 9674161, Steven. Keep trying.___________________ _________ SLEEPING BAGBlue, sm a ll, Polarguard in excellent condition. Very warm. $60/OBO. James, 968-5023, leave message.____________________ _ SC HO LARSHIPS, GRANTS, aid available fo r college, graduate school. Let o u r com puter match you w ith aid! S c h o la rs h ip M a tc h in g C enter, 1-800-USA-1221, ext. 6132.____________ 1977 HONDA Accord 5-speed. Good condition. Silver. 80,000. $1600. Call 945-3757 evenings. ____________ _ LIVING ROOM furniture; 3 piece sofa, loveseat, chair, matching set, $200; coffee table, $45; end tables $20/each. 9667580. __________ . SHARP CALCULATOR printer for all Sharp calculators. Used very little. $35. Gary, 965-2658,968-4210. __________ SAFE SEX seminars. Examine your sexuality. Make inform ed choices. $15 fo r 2 hours. 279-2886,827-1345. 1968 MG Midget, rebuilt transm ission and brakes, new top. Very good condition. $1600.894-5326. The STATE PRESS disclaim s all respon­ s ibility fo r quality and prices of goods and services offered In both classified and display advertising by Its adver­ tisers. B icycles________ B usin ess Opp. B U Y • S E LL• TRADE Your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% of our re-sale price in cash or 50% in tradein credit which may be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three floors of: •N ew & Used Books •A rt Prints & Posters •Calendars & Cards •Handbound Journals DON’T FO R G ET! S tate Press ARTIST SUPPLIES. Unused Grumbacher water color tubes, assorted colors. Brand new quality oil and water color paint brushes. W ill sell cheaply. Call Kerri after 5,9444242.__________ _ BIANCHI RACING bike, all campagnola, celeste green. Must sell in a hurry! $500. Call Ken, 7848813 or 784-8000. ______________________ BIANCHI RACING bike, Columbus tubing, Campagnola parts, 56, red, $425. Call David evenings, 967-7459. FRANCISCO MOSER touring bike for sale. Excellent condition. $400 o r best offer. Call anytime, 897-7316._______ __ HP12C FINANCIAL calculator. Asking $50.9345518 o r 7840190.____________ XT-TYPE PERSONAL computer, $825 with 256K memory, monitor, floppy drive, keyboard, one year fu ll warranty, and toads o f free software. The Computer People, 234-8850.________ __ P um iture_______ WAREHOUSE SALE- Desks from $44, chairs from $5, end fables and coffee tables from $24, typing tables, compu­ ter tables, bookshelves and more. 437-2224. ________ __________ H elp Wanted A D M IN IS T R A T IV E A S S IS T A N T needed. Investment advisory firm needs person w ith secretarial skills who understands that an executive secretary does more than Just type letters. F*art-time, could lead to full* tim e after graduation. Business or LA student preferred. 840-03859-5._______ A IR LIN ES CRUISELINES h irin g ! Summer. Career! Good pay. Travel. Call fo r guide, cassette, newsservice! (916)944-4444 ext. 3.____________ • A IR L IN E S NOW h ir in g . Reservationists, flig h t attendants, and ground crew positions available. Call 1-619-565-1657 ext. A23AZ, for details, 24 hours. ____________________ ARE YOU an algebra whiz? Want to make a substantial amount o f quick cash? C all Marilyn at 968-0442 for detall8l ______________ • BIG SURF now accepting applications for life-guards, security, medical, cashiers, food service, maintenance. 1500 N. Hayden Rd., Tempe. DANCERS, PHOENIX'S classiest want­ ed for Strip-O-Gram service. Short hours, excellent pay. Ask fo r Randy or Cheryl, 9395591. DELIVERY PERSONS needed. Tem­ porary, Valentine’s week. M ust have transportation. Teddy Bear Express, 955-9430. _________ ________ . DOORMAN WANTED. $5 hourly cash. Small Tempe sports bar, 3-4 nights per week. Apply The Woodshed I, M ill and B aaellne._______ ' ' FULL/PART-TIME In office sales. Salary/commission. Close to ASU. C o m m u n ity o rie n te d p o s itio n . 947-9008, Tim, 10-4. HIRING IMMEDIATELY! I Experienced telemarketing sales reps. Realistic potential of $25 to $50 per hour. Beautiful 9th flo o r o ffic e overlooking Tempe. 3 month m inim um experience required. Call Eva for appointment, 3468400. JOIN OUR summer sta ff! Two o f M innesota's finest youth camps seek college students to work as counselors for June-August. For an application and Interview contact Ju dith after 6 p.m. at 602-9474)944. Birchwood/Gunflin t, S team boat Lake, Lap o rte , ____________ __ Minnesota 56461. NATIONAL COMPANY now hiring students to do marketing by phone. Excellent working conditions, on the job training, hours may be flexible to fit class schedule. $4/hour to start w ith bonuses and advancement for high achievers. Call afternoons, 8263486. NEED PERSON to deliver pastries 8:4610:45. Person w ill need to supply photo to C ity o f Tempe along with fingerprints. Commission sales but guaranteed route. W ill be carrying basket. Call attar 12.8261466.________ NOW HIRING fo r full-tim e graveyard position. Apply in person at Kinko’s Copies, 933 E. University Dr., Tempe. GOLOWATERS Students • Part-time We are building a staff to receive, check, and mark merchandise. Will be scheduled 2 6 2 5 hours per week between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., and pos­ sibly 8 hours on Saturday to fit your availability. (Must be available 4-8 hours per day.) Apply: 10-12 & 2-4 M onday-Friday D istribution Center 4405 E. Baseline, Phoenix (5 m iles S/W o f ASU) 2/11 OFFICE HELP. Flexible hours. Highspirited, young, growing company. 9663866. ______________ <_______ OUTSTANDING MARKET research firm located In Scottsdale needs Inter­ viewers. Absolutely no selling. Reading and com m unication skills a must, typing helpful. Computer assisted system, w ill train. Starts $4.25/hour. 4867505,4867544 Part-time._________ OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, year round. Europe, S o u th A m e rica , Australia, Asia. A ll fields. $9062000 month. Sightseeing, Free Info. Write IJC, Box 52-AZ3, Corona Del Mar, CA 92825. ______________ • PART-TIME COMPUTER clerk, local com puter retail store needs a person w ith: Good w orking knowledge of M 6DO S and m icros, neat appearance, and professional attitude. Call Mr. C hristo ff at 8361236,10-5.___________ PART-TIME CLEANING person wanted, evening o r weekend. $8/hour, transportatlon required. Call 945-2003.______ PART-TIME SALES position available fo r ladies and mens clothing store at The Borgata In Scottsdale. Experience required. Call Ports International, 991-0976.__________ __________ _ PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST for small Tempe plumbing company. Flexible hours. Call 9669117 before 2 p.m. PART-TIME WORK, good pay. Offering Ideal hours fo r ASU s tu d e n ts . Openings In our advertising depart­ ment. Must have neat appearance. Contact Mrs. Doorman fo r Interview appointment, 921-9396. _________ _ SECURITIES SALES The Stuart-James Company will be opening offices in the Phoenix area in the near future. We are seeking highly motivated professionals who are ready, to unleash their full earnings potential. The Stuart-James Company is a growing investment banking firm look­ ing for people with an eye towards management. If you would like to be a part of a winning team, we would like to provide you with the training and support necessary to help you realize your maximum earnings potential. Call Jean Wheeler for an appointment 1-800-325-6036. STUART-JAMES INVESTMENT BANKERS Investment Bankers Member NASD SIPC 2/27 Help Wanted Summer Staff Wanted for Camp Akela at Shadow Valley Ranch, a children’s resident camp in Prescott, Arizona. Interviews during the end o f February. Contact Student Employment for applications. 2/10 PART-TIME HELP wanted, saies/picture framer, 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. MondayFrldsy; 12-5 p.m. on Sunday. Hang In There, 3 East 5th St., Tempe, 894-1520. REAL ESTATE researcher fo r com­ mercial brokerage company. Work for In-depth experience, shopping center brokerage (no pay). 279-3363._________ RESORT HOTELS, cruiselines, airlines, amusement parks, now accepting applications. For more Inform ation and an application, write: National Col­ legiate Recreation Service, PO Box 8074, Hilton Head, SC 29938. STUDENTS EARN $6 to $10 per hour. Leads make our telemarketing easier. Part-time evening hours available immediately. South Scottsdale office . Is close to campus. 9474)508._________ Motorcycles Personal miles, bought new In October. Must sell. Aral F-1 helmet. Tom, 894-0136. dates. New names added every 24 hours. 80 cents a minute.____________ 1986 HONDA 150 Elite, 4 months old, best otter, Nancy, 345-2118 after 4 p.m. LOVERS WILL be looking fo r their ads in the STATE PRESS Valentine’s Day Personals. Don’t disappoint yours. The deadline is Wednesday, February 11, before 3 p.m. And it’s only a buck! We have a window in the MU from 11-1, or come down to the basement of Matthews Center from 8-5.___________ 1986 HONDA Helix. Like new, 325 miles. $2000 OBO. Cindy or Steve 4384)757.__________ _____________ OLD MAN (54) has red '84 Honda Aero 125 tor sale. Showroom condition, low miles, special cloth seat. Priced right $825,949-7200. Patío Sale MCI TELECOMMUNICATIONS —NOW HIRING— FT telem arketing positions available. P erfect hours fo r students, 5 p.m.-9:30 p.m. M-F, $5/hr. + bonuses! CALL NOW FOR DETAILS 246-1143 APIA TheEmpkyment People SM 2/13 TOP TALENT agency seeks bookkeep­ ing assistant fo r 90-day internship in Phoenix. Must be aggressive, show attention to detail, have professional attitude. Flexible hours. Must be career oriented in the entertainm ent industry. Call Olivia ó r Bàrb at 248-8109. Give the bars a break! Personal Recorded Pereonel Deling Ade AGD SISTERS: Congratulations! We’ll make Delta Xi the best Alpha Gam chapter ever! Love, Gloria. Balloon Bouquets from $12.50 ACCENT WITH BALLOONS 954-5152 VISA/MC • 24-Hr Phono 2/10 A HUGE greeting card for Valentine’s Day. $4.95 plus $1 P/H. 48 character message. Banner Grams, 833-5532. ATO PLEDGES, congratulations on choosing the right house. P.S. Please forget your pins, I’m getting thirsty. Brian._____ _____ _________________ ATTENTION SINGLES: Join Arizona’s all new dating line. A fun way to meet interesting people. Leave your free ad. 285-8315. CONGRATULATIONS AGD actives, we struggled hard fo r 5 long months together with lots o f zest and energy in preparing for installation weekend, but with our sisterhood love and sincerity for Alpha Gam and one another, we pulled together to make the AGD’s “ Beginning and Never Ending" colonlzationat ASUIII_________________ CONGRATULATIONS NEW active Alpha Phi- Jenny-Bear!!! We love you! Love, your fa m ily .______ __________ BALLO O N EXPRESS •Champagne bouquets •Bear & Bunny bouquets •Gigantic mylar balloons •Corona bouquets •Cookie bouquets Instruction Valentine’s Day Specials DONNA VOSS: They are back by popular demandl Rod M&M's! (Ain’t it great?) P.S. HI Pevo-____________■ “ GINGER, GINGER, Ginger... Ginger...” AOS ARE FREE EVERYDAY! We lim it them to 20 words and run them fo r tw o days. Just call th e STATE PRESS classified department, 965-7572 FOUND: HOUSE keys. Found in my red Honda parked in Lot 51. Cali Steve and identify. 784-8393 evenings._______ _ FOUND LISA Borawski’s credit card. Please pick it up at the State Press, Matthews Center basement. Bring photo iP. ____________ ____ FOUND: MIXED Doberman pup, about 4 months old, male, well-trained. Found in North Tempe. Needs home. Please call 945-4128. __________ ________ LOST: MAROON leather wallet in Language and Literature Building. If found please ca ll 438-0829. No question» asked.___________ _______ _ PLEASE HELP me! I lost m y prescrip­ tion Ray-Ban sunglasses Friday and I’m blind w ithout them I Reward! Call 854-0922, leave message._______ _ ★ No Membership Fees ★ No'CodecT Ads ★ A ll Phone Numbers! FEMALE NEEDED! Live in University Towers for only $895 for whole semester! Luxury, pool, recreational facilities and u tilitie s included. Call Karen, 820-6565,844-8474.___________ FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share two bedroom, one bath, semi-fumished apartment 2 m iles from ASU. $240 month, utilitie s included. Call 968-9882. N u l • AHsrll#»iilm irthday! Let’s make it the best, because we all know, it only comes once. Happy birthday. Love ya tons, Elizabeth Ann. TO THE man who found my wallet. Your honesty was greatly appreciated. Thank you, Wendy. ________________ H tL P IN writing, editing from top M.A. graduate. $8 hour. Call Lenore, 8206383 p.m. ____________________ VALENTINE SPECIAL BALLOON BOUQUETSI From $12.50 HELP. WILL edit papers, write re­ sumes. $1Q/hour negotiable. B.A. in English. Jane, 967-3202. _________ Accent W ith Balloons 954-5152 I’LL IRON 820-1556. WENDY MERKEL- W ill you be my valentine? 10-1.____________________ WITNESS A Christian m usic group in concert, Newman Center, Friday, February 20,7:30 p.m. F r e e . _____ fo r GLENDALE- NEED it typed? Call Sherri at 938-3037. High quality typing at a low, reasonable price._______________ LETTER PERFECT Word Processing. Rush jobs no problem. Dissertations, term papers, resumes, theses. Quality! 839-9103. _______ RESEARCH ASSISTANCE. Largest library o f information in U.S. • all areas. Toll-free hot-line: 1-800-351-0222. NORTH PHOENIX Typing. Dependable, fast, accurate. Spelling, punctuation checked. V icinity Cactus and Cave Creek Rd. Kathy, 482-6592. _________ WRITING AND editing assistance. Themes, resumes, etc. $8/hour. The English Prof., Allen, 968-1586.________ NORTHWEST PHOENIX. Typing/word processing. Term papers, theses, cover ______ letters, resumes. 938-3397. Transportation ATTENTION: FREE cars to all major cities. 21 or older. Call AAA Driveaway, 277-9979._________________________ _ NORTHWEST PHOENIX. Typing, word processing, term, theses, resumes, cover letters. Professional, fast, and accurate. 439-1434.__________ ______ CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All States Drive-away, 992-5200.________ ■ PROFESSIONAL WORD processing using NBI equipment. Term papers, theses, resumes, books. Typeset quality. The Write Type, 8934)738. Travel $200 CASH paid minimum! Buying United and Western Airlines bonus/extra “ bumped” tickets. David, 5846575. ____________ _________ ___ PROFESSIONAL QUALITY word pro­ cessing. W ill edit and correct spelling. Carolyn, 8384)959._______ _• ~ SHORT OF TIME? I can help. Re­ asonable. Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academic. Call Jessie 9455744. THE ULTIMATE a lte rn a tiv e to Mazatlan: 7 days in luxurious con­ dominiums on South Padre Island. $169 per person. Dave, 844-4333.______ THE PAPERWORKS- Thesis, report, and letter typing service. IBM com­ patible word processing. Near ASU. 921-9675.______________ _______ _ Typing $ 1.5 0/P A G E , w o rd p ro c e s s o r, mailmerge, professional typist. Call after 3:00 p.m. Margie W illis 834-4583. ACCURATE QUALITY typing. Rea­ sonable rates and fast return. 831-8642. $1.50/PAGE- W ill do typing/word pro­ cessing. Quality work. 15 years experience. 897-9013._________________ WORD PROCESSING- Manuscripts, legal docum ents, resumes, term papers, and theses. Close to ASU. 438-8864._______________________ ;__ ACCURATE TYPING, word processing. West valley. Cece, 272-9215.__________ ALL PAPERS typed to your complete satisfaction. Convenient. Reasonable. Mrs. Oakley, 967-0802._______________ WORD PROCESSING- Theses, term papers, etc. 32 years experience. $1.25 double spaced page. Marian, 839-4269. ALWAYS AVAILABLE for typing. Call Susan at 833-0373. ___________ WORD PROCESSING, secretarial ser­ vices. 23 years experience. Student discount. SW comer, M iller and Chaparral. 994-8145._______ __________ CALL ME for fast, accurate, quality service at com petitive prices. Close to ASU. 966-2186. ________ YOUR MANUSCRIPT put into smooth p ro fe s s io n a l shape. L ine-by-line correction o f spelling, punctuation and phraseology. $1.50/page. Special rates for book length MSS: 263-8396. CLOSE TO ASU. Overnight typing! Reports, term papers, resumes, proof­ reading. Accurate service. 966-4523 before 4:00._______ ' FORMER ASU staffers! Word Process­ ing. Experience w ith APA, MLA and other fdrmats for dissertations, theses, term, and research papers. Rates quoted. Members NASS. Call Donna or Joan, 945-6302 or 947-0402.___________ W anted CASH FOR cavities. Dentist seeking patients for Arizona Board* exam. Contact 893-8735. TELL YOUR SWEETHEART HOW MUCH YOU CARE. OR LET THAT SECRET SOMEONE IN ON THE SECRET IN THE COMPUTER TERMINALS for rent or sale with modem. $35 per month. Also PC/XT o f AT complete. 246-6172. HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation, located in Tempe. Call Sharon at Desert Electrolysis Center, 829-7829. ____________ edit spelling, punctuation and gram­ mar. Accuracy guaranteed. Joan, *839-0772. ________ _ RESEARCHING SOURCES for project takes tim e from study. Call on American Information Center for help. Write specifics AIC for opportunity to assist. AIC, Box 7657, Phoenix, AZ 85011.____________, CLEANING SERVICE- Company? Par­ ents coming to town? Busy? We will clean your apartment, dorm, or condo spotless. For info call 829-3535._______ DOCTORAL STUDENT available to house-sit summer ‘87 and school year 87-88. Single, nonsmoker, excellent references. Call Peggy, Arizona Wes­ tern College, 726-1000 ext. 274, or 344-3682.___________________________ Typing vanced. Tempe and NW Phoenix. $7/hour. Calf Rick, 938-2901.__________ Services RUSH Services ROOM IN private home, female stu­ dent. Everything furnished. Pool, spa, cable, etc. E lectric Included. 947-4912. WORTHINGTON PLACE. Need male nonsmoking roommate to share beau­ tifu l condo. Pool, jacuzzi in complex. $200 plus 16 u tilitie s per month. Half o ff firs t month’s rent with signed semester lease. Contact Jeff, 968-1892 ASAP. 9 6 8 -4 4 4 6 DELTA SIGMA PI guy- HI! How are you? You’re the greatest! Really! P.S. You’re c u te l_____________________________ WALK TO ASU, $4000 down, assume no qualifying loan for 1985 model. Sharp Los Prados townhome 13th StJHardy. Way below new models, a steal at $68,000. Melinda, 838-7428. Tradewinds, 820-3333. _____________ $175-»- 16 utilitie s. Nonsmoker. Grad student wanted in patio home, Rural and Baseline area. 820-7810. ______ First Min 66S/ES Addi Min 45# Candy Kisses, Teddy Bears, Champagne & much more. WE PAY MORE! D’Lites fast food at University Towers needs help, all shifts. Crew' • crew leaders - delivery people. A great place to. work. Top salary. No experience necessary. Apply afternoons in person, 525 S. Forest at University Tow ers., . L ost 8* Found K l' 1-976-4000 Free Tempe Delivery Student' Rates NICE FOR profs I Lease/purchase option. North Mesa, $74,900. 3 bed­ room, 2 bath detached patio home. Double garage, fenced yard, commun­ ity pool, AC, washer hook-up, fridge, H 00 square feet. Call 994-8491, 945-4272,968-6812.____________ ___ Roommate Wanted Eaxlest and Mo«t Fun W ay to VALENTINE------SPECIAL! townhome. 2 bedroom + loft, 2 bath­ room, covered parking, patio, large rooms + more. Mirft condition. $99,500. 968-1504: WHY RENT? When you can own. Perfect for ASU student. (3) bank owned condos. Washer, dryer, re­ frigerator included. W ith low down you rcan own. Let your money work for you. Call Llmto'JaolgrtS, Century 21 Plaza Realty, 831-1300. - AGD RANDY-LOU, Happy Valentine’s Day! Congratulations on activation! Who still loves ya? Love, Glo~. TYPIST/WORD processor fo r part-time or occasional work. 279-3363. HYPNOSIS. LEARN self hypnosis easily. Improve memory and con­ centration. Remove stress, tension, test anxieties. Develop social self confidence. S top sm oking. Lose weight. Free telephone consultation, all questions answered. LJndsey A. Brady, certified hypnotist, over 14 years experience. O ffice near campus. Arizona Hypnosis Institute. Special rate for students. 966-6571. NEW CREDIT card! No one refused Visa/Mastercard. Call 1-619-565-1522 ext. C23AZ. 24 hours. WEIGHT LIFTING bench with long bar and weights, $45. Like new. Call Sam, 844-1697. THE DEVIL House Is now accepting applications fo r female and male bartenders. No experience necesssry. Must be at least 21 years old. Apply at 430 N. Scottsdale Rd.________________ THE DEVIL House is now accepting applications fo r kitchen help. All shifts available, all ages welcome. Apply at 430 N. Scottsdale Rd._____________ Real Estate STATE PRESS V A L E N T IN E ’S D A Y PERSO NA LS Friday, February 13 • o n ly $1 You can place your ad 3 ways: CALL: 9 6 5 - 7 5 7 2 C O M B BY: Matthews Center Basement 8a.m.-5p.m. or our window In the MU 11 am .-l p.m. you. Call Kathie, _______ __________ INCOME TAX - accounting. Over 9 years prior experience working for IRS. Bob Soper, CPA. Phone 946-9192._____ PHI MU Alpha, men’s music fraternity, w ill be selling V alentine’s Day serenades on Cady Mall from 8:3012:30 today. Only a lim ited number will be sold. STA TE P R E SS V A L E N T IN E A D O R D E R NamePhone. $1 fo r 1 5 w ords o r lesa 10$ each ad d itio n al w ord Cheese ft UNne Florist Cash • Check • Visa • M astercard (Sorry, no billing) We offer custom cheese and wine baskets for all of your special occasions. — V a le n t in e ’s D a y — HEY KKY pledges! Forget sleep, get ready for a pillow fight! Candy, Scott, Karen, W h itn e y !_____________ _____ KAPPA DELTA III sis Kim, have a great white rose week and a happy birthday. Lovs, Denise. ______ _________ Motorcycles_____ KKY PLEDGES- The 22ncf is iust around the corner! AEA. Scott, Candy, Whitney. Karen I ___________ ______ 1985 HONDA Elite 80, great condition, very low mllee, $700 OBO. Must sell! 829-3823.829-3622. LATE NITE wetspot: Fun baby ... vision dreams o f passion. Lots o f luv, your sklbunnles.________ _____________.___ Birthday • Get Well £ 1.00 5 8 1 -8 1 6 6 81.20 We deliver valley wide. For your convenience, we accept major credit cards. 2/18 $1.70 $1.80 81.90 Ad deadline is February 11 before 3 p.m . * •■*•*■*-*****• a* r r #■.**** Page 20 State Press Tuesday, February 10,1987 G REAT FOOD d a » « * * * * cc Y o u c a n s ta y o n to p o f th e M i1 6» new s because w e do. m m Fast Pood Grown Up D'Lites a t University Towers will deliver all around cam pus. We have terrific ham burgers, croissant Sand­ wiches, taco salads, th e b est salad b a r in town an d dozens of o th er delicious devourables. We're open for breakfast an d stay open u n til 2 a.m. on weekends. Stop by a n d try th e b est food in Tempe, a t p rices you can afford. If you d o n ’t feel like m aking the trip to see o u r fantastic, beautiful an d nice looking re sta u ra n t th e n call, w ell deliver. D’Lites 5 2 5 S. F orest 0 6 7 -6 7 0 7 Inside University Towers $2 Pitchers t nf; $1BBQBeef ¡H tU Sandwich taum at Rural & Apache H H H If 11:30-8:00 AYI lYtffltfflft SWTCi Yj I/U L« • Tuesday! Well be on campus February 24 i p i ■ — . U h rn ä a a r i » ~t~ — VA? «sr jc « r n H M U HLjfe Ilin S & B S f Wmf naie; \O t B u h lt tm tU b w Qualified college students are invited to meet with us and explore the career opportuni­ ties. . .the innovative technology.. .the industry leadership that is Motorola's Semiconductor Products Sector. Engineering and other professional openings exist for: Electrical Engineers M echanical Engineers Physicists Com puter Scientists Chemical Engineers M aterials Scientists Finance and M ateriels Specialists For more information, stop by your College Placement Office or write to Manager, College Recruiting at the appropriate address below. A rizona O pportunities Motorola's Semiconductor Products Sector 725 South Madison Tempe, AZ 85281 (602)994-6812 Texas O pportunities Motorola's Semiconductor Products Sector 1112 W. Ben White Blvd., Suite 200 Austin, TX 78704 (800) 531-5183 An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer