state press
V o l 69 NO. 108
A rizo n a S tate U niversity
T e m p e , A riz o n a
Wednesday, March 25,1987
• Copyright, State Press, 1987
U A R e p u b lic a n n o m in a te d a s stu d e n t re g e n t
By VICKIE CHACHERE
State Press
Joseph Mikitish, a 20-year-old UA economics senior, was
nominated as student liaison to the Arizona Board of Regents
for the 1987-88 school year, Gov. Evan Mecham announced
Tuesday.
Mikitish, a Republican, was among three UA students
considered the post. He will assume the post July 1, pending
confirmation by the Arizona Senate.
. Mecham spokesman Ron Bellus said the governor had
difficulty deciding between Mikitish, Karen Kizer, a political
science major, and Michael Procter, a UA law student who
also is working toward a m aster’s degree in water resources.
Both Kizer and Procter are Democrats. Bellus said he did
not know if the governor was aware that Mikitish was the
only Republican finanlist when Mecham made his
nomination.
Mick Dalrymple, UA director for the Arizona Students
Association, a student lobbying group, said he was pleased
with Mikitish’s selection.
Dalrymple said he hoped Mikitish’s party affiliation did not
play a part in the selection process, but said: “I Wouldn’t
really say that it probably didn’t.”
Mikitish,' a long-time Tucson resident, was reportedly
ASA’s unofficial recommendation as student regent.
Mikitish said he does not know what part his political
preference played in his selection, adding he thinks Mecham
was impressed with all three candidates after meeting with
them Friday afternoon.
Mikitish said he hopes to spend time working on issues
regarding tuition increases at the three universities and
reports on the quality of undergraduate education.
“I hope to really just bring the average student’s views to
the board and be in contact and be available for anyone who
wishes to share their views,” he said.
Mikitish said student access to the universities have been
under-represented in discussions about tuition hikes, and he
would like to continue developing a series of reports on the
status of undergraduate education at ASU, NAU and UA.
Mikitish said he also hopes to open discussions for the
possibility of a student regent vote next year. The student
regent is the only non-voting member of the board.
Reader claim s banning
SDI research no conflict
with academic freedom
By MICHAEL ROWELL
State Press
An ASU political science professor,
speaking on “Science: The Prostitute of
War” Tuesday, said the University
scientific community has sacrificed .its
values in the name of objectivity.
Mark Reader said: “I guess the clearest
example that we’ve got growing from the
local scene is the recent debate on whether
or not the Faculty Senate should be able to
prohibit research into nuclear weaponry
and biotechnical wea
p o n ry on
campus.
‘ ‘The
claim of the
U niversity
p re s id e n t
and many
supporting
s c ie n tis ts
w as th a t
such a pro. _
hibition
Mark Reader
woul d
violate the cannons of academic freedom.
“That kind of value confusion is the same
kind of value confusion that animated the
Nazi war machine.”
Reader went on to say that the academic
freedom argument could be used to
rationalize experimentation on human
beings as well.
Reader said one-third to one-half of
university scientists work in some way for
the military.
“What we have got is an enormous waste
of human resource and skill, ’’ he said.
Reader had several suggestions for
change in the scientific community.
One suggestion was less expectation of
technology to solve all the world’s problems.
“Science has become a modem religion,”
he said. “We have created for ourselves
problems which we as a species may not be
able to match (with solutions). ”
Reader said scientists have a tendency to
define human existence well beyond their
competency, to pretend "to be experts on
everything.
“Since when do you take medical advice
from a physicist? ’’ he asked.
Reader said previous failures of the
government and scientific community to
notify the public of the dangers of
experimental technology exemplify science
and the government’s attempt to control
fact? vital to people’s lives, creating a
public perception desirable for their own
gains.
“They have used increasingly their
control of information to define that
Turn td SCIENCE, page 8.
Governor’s spokesman calls
ASU profs study ‘suspicious’
A spokesman for Gov. Evan Mecham said
Tuesday he is suspicious of ASU’s finance
departm ent ch a irm an 's report th at
investments in some Arizona companies
declined after Mecham’s inauguration.
Ron Bellus said Richard L. Smith’s study
is “stretching” numbers and could be part
of education lobbying efforts. He said the
study, which concluded that investments in
14 Arizona corporations dropped 17.6
percent following Mecham’s January
inauguration, “has no m erit.”
“I think (Smith) is way out of line,” Bellus
said. “He really has got to be stretching it.
“For this man to come out and make this
statement, I don’t care what kind of credit
he has got,. . . is irresponsible.”
Smith, who received his doctorate in
m a n a g e m e n t from UCLA, has served as a
consultant to the U.S. Department of
Justice, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission
and the Internal Revenue Service.
Smith denied conducting the survey for
political reasons and said he was addressing
concerns that negative publicity about
Mecham may affect state businesses.
The 14 businesses — which included
Valley National Bank, America West
Airlines and Arizona Public Services —
were purposely diversified so they could be
more accurately compared to the market,
Smith said.
“ (The study) doesn’t make a political
statement,” he said. “What 1 did was
answer an empirical question.”
Smith said he charted the stocks from
June 27,1986, to Feb. 13, 1987, and wrote in
the report the “apparent explanation for the
price declines since the general election is
that investors are concerned that the
governor’s actions are, on balance,
detrimental to the state’s economy,
particularly commerce and tourism. He said he computed the market
adjustm ent by using the average
percentage changes in the stocks from the
Dow Jones Industrial Averge, the New York
Stock Exchange Index, Standard and Poor’s
500 Stock Index and the National
Association of Security Dealers Index.
Smith said all four index behaved similarly
over the six-month period.
Smith said he found investments declined
5.1 percent after Mecham’s victory over
Democrat Carolyn Warner and independent
candidate Bill Schulz in the general election,
continued to decline 4.8 percent after
Turn to STUDY, page 8.
N o v e lid e a
Pulitzer Prize-winning author John Updike told about 175 people Tuesday that the Arizona desert
will be the setting for his sequel of his 1975 novel, “A Month of Sundays.” Updike also read one of his
works later In the MU.
inside today
ASU WEATHER
Fair skies today with
an expected high of
70 degrees. The
expected low is 45.
C lassified ................
30
Com ics .....................
14
Entertainment...................15
O p in io n .......................... 4
Police re p o rt. . . l ______13
S p o r t s .....................
21
Sports A n a ly s is ............ . 23
Today...............
2
Todd Grmn/State Preai
A m om ent to reflect
Graduate Phil Wlthlngton and senior computer science major Susan Lee discuss their future employment chances during a break on the balcony of the Engineering Building.
today
Meetings
• Native American Student Association
will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU Pinal South
Room to discuss Cultural Week and
plans for the rest of the semester.
•Council of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Students will meet at 1:45 p.m. in the
MU.
•ASU Comedy Club will meet at 12:30
p.m. to practice for this week’s show.
Anyone interested in joining the club
are welcome.
•Alpha
Lambda
Delta-Freshman
Honorary Society will meet at 6:30 p.m.
in the MU Pinal Room for a general
meeting. The meeting is open to all
members.
•Marketing Club will meet at 3 p.m. in
the Business Administration Building,
Room 254. The topic of business will t>e
new directions in marketing strategy at
American Pharmaseal.
•The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook Staff
will hold an organizational meeting at 4
p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. The topic
of business will be staff organization for
next year. All positions are available.
Come to the meeting for more
information and applications.
•START-Hometown Outreach Team will
meet at 4:30 p.m. in the MU, Room 215
for a general meeting.
Lectures
• Robert Holcomb, U.S. Geological
Survey, Vancouver, Wash., discusses
“ Submarine Volcanism.” The lecture
will begin at 3:40 p.m. in the Physical
Science Building, Room F-101.
•John Owen discusses “The WardSumner Issue: 75 Years Later.” The
lecture begins at 3:40 p.m. in the Social
Sciences Building, Room 318.
•Anthony Narendran, microbiology
graduate student, discusses “ Brain
DON'T SETTLE
FOR WALKIN!
Reactive Autoantibodies in Systemic
Lupus Erthemotosusan Approach to
Study Immune System-Nervous System
Interactions.” The lecture begins at 4:40
p.m. in the Life Science Building, Room
C-496.
Announcement
•The ABU Spring Blood Drive will be
held'today through Friday in the MU
Cochise Room from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., at
Danforth Chapel from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
and at Tyler Mall and Palm Walk from 10
a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
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State Press
Wednesda^/jarch^^l^T^
Pagé 3
Architecture college could name dean next month
By SHELLY SCH AFFER
Stats Press
The ASU College of Architecture, which
has not had a permanent dean since June
1986, may decide on a final dean next month,
the ASU vice president for academic affairs
said.
Jack Kinsinger said, “The situation is all
very delicate, but if everything goes well,
the position could be filled in three weeks.”
Louis F. Weschler, formerly assistant
dean of the architecture school, is acting
dean until a permanent dean is selected.
Weschler said due to the national search
for the architecture dean, the temporary
replacement process “has been fairly
A
P
unusual, but understandable.”
(Jerald McSheffrey ended his four-year
term as the school dean to continue the
office of vice president at ASU West last
June. Last year was the first year
McSheffrey held both jobs.
‘‘I really couldn ’t do the two jobs at once, ’’
he said.
Kinsinger said Meyer Wolfe, the emeritis
dean of the architecture college at the
University of Washington, acted as dean
from July 1 to Feb. 28. He left before his
term was complete.
Weschler said Wolfe is a national expert
on urban design and “a gifted sketch
artist.”
A
C
H
Despite the number of temporary deans,
Kinsinger said: “We are right on track.
Standard time for replacing a dean is about
one year, but I am given a list (of
applicants), and people expect me to make
a decision immediately. ”
Because the negotiations for selecting the
final dean are not complete, Kinsinger said
he could not release the names of possible
candidates.
He also said the future dean’s salary has
not been finalized, but added, “My deans
are paid between $72,000 and $100,000.”
Although he is a temporary dean,
Weschler said he has two short-range goals
for the college.
, “I plan to complete some pending hires
and get the searches done and get the
faculty hired,” he said.
Weschler said the school of architecture
will gain one faculty member to help
coordinate the graduate program and one to
work with the Council for Design of
Excellence to develop a support group for
the whole college.
“I would like to get the council in place by
the time my term ends,” he said.
Weschler delayed a year of sabbatical to
fill the dean position, but said he plans to use
the sabbatical next year to visit several
college campuses and study professional
public managers training programs.
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Page 4
Stale Pré«
, 1987
Happy graduation a la hassle
Graduating from college is perhaps the
single most important event in a person’s
life thus far. It marks dedication and a sense
of accomplishment.
Everyone who receives a diploma from a
university shares at least one thing in
common: they have worked hard for four,
five or even more years to be labeled in the
ranks as a “college graduate.”
Most seniors await graduation with bated
breath. Who could blame them? After 18 or
19 years of school, it’s only natural to want
more from life than textbooks, professors
and final exams have to offer.
If anything else, it seems that getting that
diploma means kissing a fair amount of
hassles goodbye.
You would think the University would be
more than happy to make the graduation
process as hassle-free as possible.
Many observed instances this semester
leads us to believe that this is not the case.
One example is a senior who was
informed upon return of her schedule that
she did not receive a required class she
needed in order to graduate. This was a
popular class filled with sophomores and
juniors who were let into the class ahead of
her.
Fortunately, it has all worked itself out
and she did receive an override into the
class. But not without a lot of hassle and red
tape.
While keeping an ear open during
drop/add time, it is apparent that this
situation happens often in the life of a
hopeful graduate.
What really hits below the belt is when a
senior is informed iialf-way through their
last semester and after their program of
study has been approved that they do not
have enough credits to graduate.
The kicker is when you were supposed to
take a required class, but somewhere along
the line, it was dropped from the college.
Just what does the University expect from
these students?
The red tape just keeps on piling up until a
senior is about at the end of his or her rope.
And when the graduates finally have that
diploma firmly in hand, they will fenow they
have truly earned it — red tape
notwithstanding.
letters
Psalm for Israel
Editor:
What are the first words that come to your mind when you
hear the word “ Israel” ? Chances are they are words of
controversy such as Zionism, Palestinian liberation, ArabIsraeli conflict and war. For now though, put those words of
controversy out of your mind, for it is that time of the year
when words that paint a different, more real picture of Israel
should bloom.
March 26 is the ninth anniversary of the signing of the
Camp David Accords. It is a day that will forever go down in
history as a day of peace — peace between two nations whose
people had been in a constant state of war forUver 2,000
years. Think for a moment how large a step was made on that
day, and when the picture is clear in your head and when you
can-grasp the true essence of what that day meant you will
have entered the dream of the future for every Jew and
Israeli in the world.
The road to peace is a road well-traveled in Israel. Ever
since 1980, 38 Israeli organizations whose sole purpose is to
achieve co-existence between Jews and Arabs have popped
up in Israel. Mostly manned by Jews with a few Arabs
dispersed among them, they have set out on a quest that few
have dared to journey before. Their efforts have met several
obstacles along the way, but even the obstacles themselves
have dreams of being overcome. This hope for peace is a
breath of fresh of fresh air for all of Israel.
Being that it is the beginning of spring, there is more
reason for one to allow words that paint a more colorful
picture of Israel to bloom. Words such as culture, history,
technology and beauty should fill one’s mind when one thinks
of Israel today.
No other country in the world can boast the culture and
history that Israel boasts. It is the cultural center for all the
world, and its capital, Jerusalem, is the center for three of
the world’s largest religions: Judaism, Christianity and
Islam.
No other nation of Israel’s size can compare to the
advances that Israel has made in all fields of technology
The vast majority of racks on campus are
of the “low to the ground” semicircle type
found outside the MU and business
buildings. If you have a normal 10-speed
bicycle, these racks can damage your
bicycle.
In order to lock your fram e to the rack
with a kryptonite lock (University
recommended), you must put the rear
wheel in the rack which then contacts with
the rear derailleur.
With a little normal jostling, damage can
result. If you put your front wheel into the
rack, you find that the rack is too big and
your bike wants to fall over. The front
spokes end up supporting the bicycle’s
lateral weight which bends the spokes. Also,
the best you can do is lock the bike to itself
thereby increasing the risk of theft.
Until these poorly designed racks are
replaced with ones similar to those found in
front of the bookstore, or I am reimbursed
for the damage done to my bicycle, I will not
use them.
More importantly, however, we must ask
ourselves why the University is pursuing
this course of action. I haven’t exactly
looked for it, but I haven’t noticed any
significant bicycle parking problems aside
from a few bikes interfering with
handicapped access.
There are quite a few bikes parked outside
the MU daily, but I have never seen them
interfere with pedestrian flow, nor have I
seen significant damage to lightposts or
trees.
I will let someone else talk about the
bicycle rack shortage.
Thomas Spilie
Graduate student, Public Affairs
STA TE PRESS
TOM BLODGETT
Editor
ANDREA HAN
Managing Editor
However, the heart and soul are not truly content without
the body. So for those who would like to come home to Israel
so that you may see its true beauty and grandeur in person,
please stop by the Israel Action Committee’s table on Israel
Fair Day, today, between 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. on Cady Mall.
Information about exciting and reasonable trips to Israel
will be available along with information about studying in
English in Israel and Kibbutz. We hope to see you at the table
today and in Israel in the days to come.
Israel Action Committee
’Bama bookburners
Give him the rack!
Editor:
I am writing in response to the current
ASU policy of booting bicycles not parked in
designated bicycle racks. I would like to tell
you why I don’t park my bicycle in the
University racks and don’t intend to use
them in the future.
especially agriculture. Israel was the nation that invented
drip irrigation which is now used all over the world to turn
desert into green pastures. Furthermore, the first peanut
with four nuts to a shell was developed in Israel.
But most importantly, no country in the world has the
beauty that Israel possesses. The land, the people, the
culture and the history all add up to provide a setting that is
unequaled on the face of the earth. Israel is truly the
homeland of everyone’s heart and soul.
Editor:
Kudos to Ed Schubert for his well-written
and cogent article about the uniformed,
anti-intellectual
“ bookburners”
in
Alabama. Not only do they not “understand
what secular humanism is,” they would
gladly take away our basic rights under the
Constitution.
As a native of Alabama, I must admit that
I am embarrassed by this turn of events,
especially since the state has yet to acquit
itself as a place where humanism can
thrive.
Howard L. Simmons
Visiting Scholar
Painting with broad brush
Editor:
In response to Scott Miller’s March 20
letter to the editor, I take exception to his
comments that enlistment in the Natonal
Guard takes less moral commitment than
spending time in jail for protesting nuclear
weapons.
Miller infers that someone’s motives for
joining the National Guard may be other
than moral. While it is true that some
individuals enlist in the Guard for financial
reasons, it is also true that other individuals
join the anti-nuclear weapon movement
purely for the social fraternization.
I do not question Miller’s moral support
City Editor KARI BLAND
Sports Editor BOB HEILER
A s ti City Editor KIM MATTINGLY
Asst Sports Editor STEVE BRENNAN
News Editor TRACY SCOTT
Copy Chiaf CATHY CZAGANY
Asst Managing Editor AMY FRISCHKNECHT Arts Editor KHALI CRAWFORD
Photo Editor ANDY MROZINSKI
Asst Arts Editor GREGORY R. KRZOS
Asst Photo Editor RON KUCZEK JR.
Opinion Editor PATRICK J. KUCERA
Analysis Editor ED SCHUBERT
Sports Analysis Editor DEAN OBENAUER
REPORTERS: Michael Burgess, Vickie Chachere, Tina Daunt, Kerry Fehr, Judie
Gaillard, Darrin Hostetler. Aaryn Kemp, Benny McConnell. Lauren Millette,
Michael Rowell. Shelly Schaffer.
ENTERTAINMENT REPORTER: Carolyn Nelson.
SPORTS REPORTERS: Steve Adams, Carol Boos, Chris Dorsey. David Hodges,
Doug McManus.
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Todd Green, Stephen Maunteer.
COPY EDITORS: Rob Coombs, Marty Sauerzopf, Jessie Simon.
for the anti-nuclear movement. But, I feel
that it is unfair for him to judge the moral
ideals of many National Guardsmen based
upon the few who do so only for financial
gain.
The fact that most National Guardsmen
are willing to lay down their lives for
Miller’s freedom of speech shows a very
high moral commitment.
I only wish that Miller could show the
same moral tolerance.
Steve M. Goitia
Senior, Broadcasting
2nd Lt., 1059th Ordinance Co.
STAFF ARTISTS: Jon Basalone. Michael Ritter.
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Charles Hadd
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L
Sut» Pro»
Page 5
W ednesday, M arch 8 5 ,1 9 8 7
Vanity, selfishness show through in teen suicides
I’ve received my first phone call from a
teenager who indicated that she was
contemplating suicide.
Actually, she didn’t call to tell me that.
Not at first. She opened the conversation by
asking if I knew the phone number of any
suicide hot lines.
I told her I didn’t, but suggested she call
information to see what they had listed
under “suicide.”
She Said: “I have to talk to someone. ”
I said: “Why? Are you thinking of killing
yourself?”
She said: “ I don’t know. Maybe. I’ve been
feeling depressed.”
“About what?” I asked.
“Oh, things. Just things.”
I said: “That’s too bad. Try the
information operator. ”
Her voice, which had sounded flat and
dull, suddenly became shrill, and she said:
“You don’t care. You really don’t care, do
you?” .
“If you kill yourself? Yeah, I don’t think
you should do it. It’s kind of a dumb thing to
do. But if you insist on doing it, it’s not going
to affect me one way or the other. That’s
about all I can tell you. ”
1
I sawUhis man’s grief when his only son,
at 46, was buried after a heart attack. I was
with him at the funeral of his daughter who
died at only 44 of a stroke. And I was there
when his wife could no longer keep up her
brave fight.
The old man suffered and wept. But he
never once said, pity me, oh please, feel
sorry for me.
He didn’t say it during those terrible times
and he didn’t say it when diabetes caught up
with him and the doctors had to cut off one
leg above the knee. Then the other leg. What
he said to one of his grandsons was: “Well,
now I guess you are the tallest in the family
and I am the shortest.”
Now he spends his days and nights in a
bed in a nursing home. And if I’ve ever
known anyone who would be justified in
taking a handful of pills and swallowing
them, it’s that old man.
But he hasn’t done it, because if he did, he
would not see his grandsons anyfnore. For
all he’s lost, he still has them. And they, as
well as his courage and many wonderful
memories, are enough to keep him going.
So, I’m sorry, but I can’t get weepy when
those who are 17 and healthy say they can’t
Mike Royko
Tribune Media
Services
“Well, thanks a lot,” she snapped, and
hung up the phone.
Now, I feel bad. Not because I didn’t
sound deeply concerned about what she
might do, because I’m not. But I should have
taken the time to tell her why I wasn’t
deeply concerned.
There is this old man I know. When I first
met him, many years ago, he was tall and
handsome and proud. He worked hard in his
electrician job, had a sweet and intelligent
wife, a tall son and a beautiful daughter.
They were a close, loving family.
When his wife was in her late 30s, she was
stricken with multiple sclerosis and spent
the rest of her life in a wheelchair. A tough
break for both of them. But they made the
best of it. I never once heard either of them
complain.
go on after being jilted by a boyfriend: life is
too painful. Or they aren’t popular enough in
school: life is too painful. Or their parents
don’t listen when they talk: life is too
painful.
Don’t tell me pain is relative. Like hell it
is. There’s a big difference between a pin
prick in the finger and a knife to the gut.
However, if someone out there insists on
going into a garage, turning on the car and
fading into oblivion, don’t kid yourself about
what you’re doing.
You probably fancy yourself a tragic
figure and believe that others will, too.
Forget it. Few people will care.
And this might sound harsh, but that is
really all you deserve, because what you’ll
have done is nothing more than an act of
vanity, selfishness and weakness.
* Of course, you will cause considerable
grief for your parents, sisters and brothers,
which might be your motive.
So that’s why I didn’t spend much time
trying to soothe the young woman who
called me. Most of us, except for saints,
have only so much compassion stored away.
I prefer to dole mine out to the truly
deserving.
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State Prêts
W ednesday, M arch 25,1 98 7
Page 8
' '
p K ill s
|3?5 3TO
*1^
ËË.
'/M
Recalled con traceptive p ills
not stocked by health center
B y JU D IE G A IL L A R D
State Press
ASU’s health center does not stock the
birth control pills that were recently
recalled due to incorrect packaging, the
director of Student Health said.
Dr. Monty Roth said, “The health center
stocks three or four companies, but none are
ones that were recalled.’’
The birth control pills in question were
manufactured by Gynex, Inc. Thé pills are
low-dose, estrogen-based contraceptives
labeled Gynex 1-35E-21, Gynex 1/35-28,
Gynex .5/35E-21 and Gynex 5/35E-28.
An estimated 300,000 packages of birth
control pills were recalled two weeks ago
because inert pills may have been
mistakenly placed in slots reserved for
contraceptive pills.
Roth said the mix-up does not provoke any
danger or sickness.
“The only problem would be that they’re
not equally effective,” he said.
Gynex, Inc. ordered the recall to prevent
confusion and unintended pregnancies due
to the misplacement of the colored active
pill and the white placebos.
“I would think people would be able to
recognize the difference in the pills,” Roth
said. “Undoubtedly, it was a packaging
mistake.”
The health center stocks the following
types of birth control pills:
•Ortho Novum 7/7/7*28.
•Ortho Novum 1/56-28.
•Norinyl 1/35-28.
•Nordette-28. .
•Tri-Norinyl-28.
•Triphasic-28.
•Ovral-28.
•Demulen 1/35.
•Demulen 1/50.
Science____
Continued from page 1.
reality,” he said.
Reader said technical information should
be more freely available for the public to
decideits best use.
“I don’t trust experts when it comes to
matters of my life, liberty and happiness,”
he said.
Reader said the military-industrial
complex is perpetuated, not by a concrete
threat to national security, but by
nationalism, anti-communism, capitalism
and national and international inequality.
He said scientists need to use their skills
for the benefit of humanity as a whole and
not for money, status, power and “to defend
the national interest.”
Reader said in order for this to happen,
society as a whole needs to think more long
term and in a world interest.
Moving away from a military/product
so c ie ty to w a rd a serviceA hum an
d ev e lo p m e n t
so c ie ty ,
le sse n in g
international inequalities, doing away with
“organized violence” and limiting the use of
non-renewable resources would help
accomplish this goal.
“I think if we move in these general
directions, we’ll have the best crack at
survival,” he saidReader added that “the probability is
against success,” , but he did not think
succumbing to overwhelming odds “is the
way to run life.”
Study
Continued from page 1.
Smith said a study he conducted several
years ago concluded that political
instability does have a negative impact on
property prices and businesses. ’
“I don’t know in the end if is going to be
good or bad,” he said. “ If you ask an
investor from out of state, it appears to be
that they think he is bad. ”
Bellus, a former radio and television
advertising salesman, said figures can be
manipulated to make it appear that
Mecham is responsible for the drop in
investments, adding he is suspicious of the
study because the decline began in June, a
month before Mecham announced his
candidacy.
“I am not saying that the controversy,.or
supposed controversy, that surrounds the
governor doesn’t have anything to do with
it,” Bellus said. “But to blame the whole
thing on him . . . is stretching it.”
He said he was not sure if there is an
organized lobbying effort against Mecham
on the part of ASU professors but said he
believes the report to be part of the
“ m isinform ation”
th at
U niversity
professors and students are generating.
Mecham announced his plan to rescind the
King Holiday, and dropped the final 17.6
percent after the inauguration.
The declines come at a time when
investments in U.S. and global markets are
increasing, Smith said.
He said other statewide concerns, such as
problems with the state’s budget, have been
ruled out because the budgetary problems
were in existence before Mecham took
office.
Smith said drops in investment usually
are related to activities in the state, adding
most of the news about Arizona broadcast
outside of the state dealt with Mecham’s
rescinding the Martin Luther King Jr.
holiday.
He said the King issue may have caused
bad feelings about Arizona, causing a drop
in the number of people visiting the state or
relocating here. Nine of the businesses
Smith charted are affected directly by
either tourism or migration.
“It’s conceivable that the cutbacks in
education are partly responsible if public
perception is that the state university
system is important,” Smith said.
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State Presi
Page 9
W ednesday, March 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
Updike focuses lecture on career, future projects
Author intends to center next novel
in Arizona desert; sequel to 7 5 book
By KERRY FEHR
State Press
Pulitzer Prize-winning author John
Updike told a standing- room-only crowd
Tuesday afternoon that he will use the
image of the Arizona desert in a sequel to his
1975 novel, “A Month of Sundays.”
Updike, who warned against discussing a
novel before it is written, only would say the
sequel involved a female in the desert, and
he wants to use Arizona as the archetype.
But he cautioned, “In a strange way . . .
the fantasy of Arizona in my book is pretty
impervious to the real Arizona.”
Updike invoked occasional laughter from
the audience of about 175 people, many of
whom appeared to be aspiring authors by
their choice of questions.
He said his favorite poem, “Seagulls,”
which he wrote in 1961, was prompted by a
day at the beach when he realized the ocean
birds look stuffed when viewed up close.
Fearful of losing his thought, Updike said
he found a piece of charcoal from a
campfire and wrote the poem’s opening
lines on a big board, which he carried with
him during the day and later put in his car
trunk.
Updike, who wants to be remembered for
his poetry, said he began writing as a poet
and still enjoys the “sensation of sitting
down and writing a poem.”
“A poem should top itself and keep
topping itself,” he said.
Updike said the creative era of the 1950s
allowed him entry into the writing field,
although he preferred cartooning like his
idol, Jam es Thurber.
Updike said as a child he was fascinated
with Walt Disney’s Donald Duck and wanted
to live in the character’s house and sit on his
furniture.
The 55-year-old author said he writes at
least one novel a year, which he said his
critics assure him is too many.
But Updike said he works every day to
become more serious about his art.
He said his first novel, “The Poorhouse
F air,” pleased him because the publisher
bought it “on sleezy onion paper” with few
revisions.
“So my literary persona got off to a good
start,” he said.
But Updike said his favorite novel was his
1963 “The Centaur” because he liked the
subject of the story—his father.
“I’ve been criticized for not loving
enough,” he said about his other novels,
John Updike
adding that reviewers praised him for his
handling of “The Centaur.”
Updike said the novel was based on his
father’s experience as a high school teacher
who “suffered terribly” while trying to
control his students.
Martin hopeful
son still living,-
BUNDLE’S
MARCH AIR FORCE
BASE, Calif. — Entertainer
Dean Martin held out hope
Tuesday that his son may be
alive somewhere on snowy
Mount San Gorgonio where
the actor-flier’s jet was
believed to have crashed, a
family spokesman said.
Military rescuers who
scoured the 11,500-foot
mountain in an extensive
a ir-a n d -g ro u n d s e a rc h
expressed optimism that the
two-man crew may have
e je c te d a n d s u rv iv e d
temperatures in the teens
and snow depths up to eight
feet.
“We still have a lot of
hope. We still have our
fingers cro ssed,” Sgt.
Carolyn Hamilton said. “We
haven’t given up.”
Clearing w eather and
diminishing winds aided the
search, officials said.
Dean Paul Martin, 35, a
California Air National
Guard captain who was
piloting the F-4C jet, and the
fighter’s weapons officer,
Capt. Ramon Ortiz, 39, of
L as
V egas,
N e v .,
disappeared Saturday over
th e S an B e r n a r d in o
Mountains.
F o u r a i r c r a f t m ade
sweeps over the looming
mountain 70 miles east of
Los Angeles and six threeman National Guard rescue
teams were ferried to the
7,000-foot level at dawn to
begin combing the steep
slopes, Hamilton said.
The National Guard was
r e la y i n g
d e ta ile d
information to Dean Martin,
who was awaiting word at
his Beverly Hills home, and
to the Ortiz family, the
sergeant saidDean Martin’s publicist,
Warren Cowan, said thee ld e r
M a jtin
w as
w ith h o ld in g
com m ent
pending the outcome of the
search.
“No one has given up
hope," he said.
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By The Associated Press
The younger Updike, who was one of his
father’s students for three years, Said he
suffered with his father.
He described him as “both a pious man
and a great kidder.”
When asked about writing for an
audience, Updike said, “The writer
murmurs into the reader’s ear.”
He said when he writes, he envisions
“certain trusted readers,” including his
wife, although he confessed “you don’t
marry your ideal reader.”
He said writers should aim to reach a
vertical audience as did Henry James, an
author who Updike said was criticized by his
contemporaries.
“All this talk about a writer’s role and a
writer’s hope boil away . . . under the
stressful bliss of trying to write your day’s
quota,” he said.
Updike said he writes three to four pages
of prose each day and spends the rest of the
day answering letters and fulfilling
requests.
“There’s more to being a writer than
meets the eye,” he said.
Updike, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his
novel, “Rabbit is Rich,” in 1982, promised
he will complete the Rabbit trilogy by the
end of the decade because he needs to write
something that will “close it out in a sort of
mega-novel.”
“I want to end it to the outer limits of
possible integrity.” he said.
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Page 10
State Presi
W ednesday, M arch 8 5 ,1 9 8 7
$2 billion Disney park outside Paris to open in 1992
By The Associated Press
PARIS — Mickey Mouse and the Magic
Kingdom are coming to Europe, under a
contract Prem ier Jacques Chirac signed
.Tuesday for a $2 billion Disney theme park
outside Paris.
The world’s fourth Disney park is to open
in 1992 on a 4,400-acre site in rural Mame-laVallee, 20 miles east of Paris.
French officials say it will create 30,000
new jobs and should draw about 10 million
visitors a year.
“We think France is the ideal country to
welcome Eurodisneyland,” Michael D.
Eisner, president of the Walt Disney Co.,
said at the signing ceremony.
Speaking in French, he told reporters, “It
is difficult to imagine a country richer in
artistic traditions. It is as respectful
beneficiaries of this cultural richness that
we come to France. ’’
Chirac told a news conference the venture
marked the first time France signed a
contract with a private foreign company for
a project on French soil, “but I’m sure it
will be a great success because it’s Disney
Co. and France.” The French negotiators,
sensitive to inroads on their culture, won
what they consider important concessions
from the Walt Disney company aimed at
guaranteeing a French and European flavor
to the theme park.
Negotiations took nearly two years. JeanRene Bernard, negotiator for the French
g o v e rn m e n t, s a id he e s tim a te s
Eurodisneyland will contribute $500 million
a year to France’s gross domestic product.
Eurodisneyland is to include 13,500 hotel
rooms, camping grounds, sports facilities
and a large commercial complex spread
through five villages. Total cost could go as
high as $7.5 billion, with the first phase to be
completed in 1992 and other themes to be
completed in 1995, officials said.
“Like the world’s three other Disneyland
them e p ark s, the centerpiece of
Eurodisneyland will be the Magic Kingdom
dominated by a huge Cinderella castle and
populated by familiar Disney characters.
But Eurodisneyland will differ from the
parks in Anaheim, Calif.; Orlando, Fla., and
Tokyo.
“The Disney culture ... will be brought to
France intact, but it will be different in that
it will respect French culture, ’’ Eisner said.
He noted that Cinderella and many other
characters originated in European fairy
tales.
France’s Culture Ministry said Monday
night that the Disney people agreed to
guarantee the primacy of the French
language at Eurodisneyland and create an
attraction with a French and European
theme:
Mickey remains Mickey in France, and
Donald is still Donald.
But Cinderella is Cendrillon, Goofy is
Dingo, and Donald Duck’s Uncle Scrooge is
Picsou.
Donald’s nephews Huey, Dewey and Louie
are Riri, Fifi and Loulou.
And Snow White is Blanche Neige.
The characters are all well known in
France from Disney comic books, Disney
movies and French TV, which shows two
hours from thé U.S. Disney Channel every
Saturday night.
A recent poll found 85 percent of the
French surveyed welcomed Disneyland.
But protests came from carnival operators
and from local farmers who object to being
moved from their land.
1987
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State Press
Page 11
Wednesday, M arch 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
Implementation of new A ID S rule faces delays
By The Associated Press
PHOENIX — There have been delays in
the state’s implementation of a new rule
requiring the reporting of names of people
testing positive for the AIDS virus, but
health care providers already are beginning
to comply, a state health official said
Tuesday.
The reporting requirement formally went
into effect on Jan. 28 when Secretary of
State Rose Mofford signed the rule, but
officials said there have been delays in
providing providers with forms to report
positive test results.
“We will be happy to get the information
from them, but we’ll be understanding if
they don’t (comply) until they get the
forms,” said Dr. Steven Englender, a DHS
infectious disease specialist.
DHS officials have said the reporting is
necessary to help monitor the spread of
AIDS, or acquired immune deficiency
Would require officials to report names
o f p e o p l e w h o t e s t p o s it iv e f o r v ir u s
syndrome, and to make sure that possible
victims have access to counseling.
AIDS-virus tests do not show whether a
person has AIDS or will necessarily develop
the deadly disease, which breaks down the
body’s immune system. The tests indicate
whether a person has been exposed to the
AIDS virus.
In early February, another senior DHS
official had said the forms and other
materials probably would be provided that
month to laboratories, hospitals, physicians
and other providers.
However, there have been various delays
and the forms still are in the process of
being printed, which should be complete
within approximately a month, Englender
said.
“They’re all drafted,” he said of the
forms. “They’re either at the printer or in
the process of getting to the printer.”
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State Press
VI/»Hn#cHiiu JUütrrh OS 10R7
April fools concert unleashes world of humor with music
Members of the ASU music faculty will
present their brand of musical shenanigans
and tomfoolery in an April F&ol’s Day
concert “A Sense of Humor” at 7:30 p.m.
April 1 in the ASU Music Theater.
P art of the University Chamber Music
Series, the concert will coincide with the
sixth annual World Humor and Irony
Membership conference running April 1-5.
The program will open with Sonata for
Viola Four Hands Harpsichord, by PJD.Q.
Bach, reputed to be the last of Johann
Sebastian’s 20-odd children.
Likely the only piece composed for two
people - playing one viola, it will be
perforated by harpsichordist Professor
John Metz and violists Professor Carol
Porter and Professor Denice Haney.
Rossini’s ‘‘Duet for Two Cats” will
feature Professor D arlene Kliewer,
soprano, and School of Music Director
George Umberson, baritone, in the title
roles.
The New Art String Quartet (violinists
Professor Frank Spinosa and Professor
Eugene Lombardi, violist Professor
William Magers,, cellist Professor Takayori
Atsumi) will perform Paul Hindemith's
satirical “Minimax.”
Kliewer will team up with Professor
Daniel Swaim, contrabass, for Eugene
Kurtz’ “The Last Contrabass in Las Vegas,”
a narrated work featuring a solo double
bass.
Concluding the program will be the
“Carnival of Animals,” by Camille Saint-
Saens. Professor Ronald deKant, on clarinet
will conduct the work and Professor Jerry
D oan,, h a rito n e , w ill r e c ite th e
accompanying Ogden NaSh verses.
Assisting in this number will be faculty
artists, pianists Walter Cosand and Robert
Roux, percussionists Mervin Britton and
J.B. Smith, and flutist Eric Hoover.
The concert is free and open to the public.
The ASU Music Theater is located in the
Music Building, 10th Street and Mill
Avenue. For more information call 965-3371.
Symposium to discuss romance, chivalry of ‘Don Quixote’
“Don Quixote,” the famous Spanish golden age classic
novel by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, is the topic of a
special symposium Friday at ASU.
A group of Cervantes specialists from major Southwestern
universities will come together under the theme “Don
Quixote: Text and Context.”
Featured speakers for the day-long symposium are Jam es
A. P arr, of the University of Southern California; Carroll B.
Johnson, University of California at Los Angeles; Eduardo
Urbina, Texas A & M; Robert ter Horst, UA; and Edward H.
Friedman, ASU.
The free symposium, to be held in the MU Coconino Room
217, will begin with registration and coffee from 8:45 to 9 a.m.
Jeanie R. Brink, director of the Arizona Center for Medieval
and Renaissance Studies at ASU and co-organizer of the
conference, will give welcoming remarks.
“The Subversion of Narrative Authority in Don Quixote” is
the first presentation to be given by P a rr at 9:15 a.m.
Johnson will present “A Gallery of Decadents: Society in
Don Quixote, P art II,” beginning at 10:30 a.m. Friedman’s
presentation, “N Readers Reading: Don Quixote and
Theories of Aesthetic Response,” will begin at 11:30 a.m.
The Memorial Union Activities Board
is accepting applications through Friday
to fill eight chair positions on the
Executive Committee for the fall
semester.
Applications are available at the
MUAB office in the basement of the MU
from 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Personal
interviews will be arranged at the time of
application.
There are no requirements tor age,
grade point average, or a major in a
specific field.
According to MUAB president Chuck
Hopkins the only requirements are hard
MUAB seeking students
to fill executive chair
positions for next fall
work and a dedication to the job.
Hopkins, who is running for ASASU
president, will be leaving his post at
MUAB this semester.
The MUAB’s 12 committee chairs
allocate $75,000 to organize programs run
for students by students. There are chair
openings in the following committees:
Host and Hostess, Gallery, Culture and
Arts, Film, Entertainment, Special
Events, Issues and Answers and
Advertising.
The Film Committee chair runs the
MU Cinema, selects the committee who
then chooses the season’s movies. An
•
WILL NOTBE
BSSSmH
liB B fS S l?
At 1:30 p.m., Urbina will present “Chretien de Troyes and
Cervantes: Beyond the Romances of Chivalry.” “Biology,
Dynasty and Parody: Cervantes and the Problem of
Propagation in Fielding and Scott” is the title of Horst’s
presentation.
At 3:30 p.m., after the final presentation, participants will
have the opportunity to met with the individual speakers for
informal discussion. Friedman, co-organizer of the
symposium, will make the concluding remarks at 4:15 p.m.
For more information, contact the Center for Medieval and
Renaissance Studies a t 965-5900.
$18,000 budget is apportioned between
rentals, projection, ticketing, and
running the concession and office.
The Culture and Arts Committee chair
schedules activities from a symphony
concert to a ballet o r . < . anything. For
example, this spring’s activity is a Polo/
Ralph Lauren fashion show at the Tempe
Mission Palms hotel on April 15th. All
participants are students, all the way
down to the models. The show will benefit
Child Help USA, an organization for
battered children.
-SCOTT C.SECKEL
Unive/iAcU
I V
The Valley’s
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an d Enigm a R ecord ing A rtists
WEDNESDAY WEEK
th is F rid a y n ig h t in the M U.
A REPRESENTATIVE O p THE MASTER OF
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W ednesday, M arch 2 5 ,1 9 8 7 _ ________________________________________________________________________ Pagg_19^
art
ASH researchers show art of scie n ce in photography exhibit
By TOD McCOY
Stata Press
Two worlds will collide in “The Other
World; The Art of Science,” an unusual art
show featuring.ASU artists/ researchers
that will open from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday at
the Alwun House.
The exhibit will run through April 18 by
appointment.
The more than 40*piece show will combine
the visual aspects of the science world with
the aesthetic values of the arts by
presenting magnified electron photographs
of scientific images as works of natural art,
in both 2- and 3-D formats.
Contributing ASU researchers are D.C.
Bailey, Douglas G. Chandler, Charles J.
Kazilek, Carolyn L arabell, Robert
McGaughey, David Rasmussen, William P.
Sharp, J.R . Swafford and B arbara
Terkanian.
“We’re using scientific equipment in a
very aesthetic manner,” said Assistant
Research ¡Specialist Charles J. Kazilek, the
brainchild of the exhibit. “The concept is
that science is a little boring and stuffy, and
basically we’re trying to break that mold. ”
Kazilek, who earned his bachelor’s degree
in .fine arts at ASU, explained that the
images used a re taken from the
ultramicroscopic world, using a scanninglight micrographic process of an electron
microscope.
The subjects range from the cortex of a
sea urchin to the DNA molecules of a fly.
When magnified these tiny objects show
seemingly huge landscapes of bills and
valleys in great detail.
Kazilek said that the photos were
This photograph by Douglas E. Chandler of a platinum replica of the cortex of a sea urchin quick frozen in liquid helium as viewed by electron
microscopy Is part of “The Other WotM: the art of Science” exhibit, which opens at 3 p.m. Saturday at the Alwun House.
o rig in a lly tak en by in stru m e n ts
tra d itio n a lly used for sc ie n tific
investigation, then sorted out later for their
artistic appeal.
“It is not a science fair,” he said. Instead,
the exhibit sheds some light into a world
dark to most people.
To get an image, a sample of the material
is coated with platinum followed by a thin
layer of carbon which produces a cast of the
original subject, better known as a freezefractured replica:
ARIZONA SCHOOL OF
PROFESSIONAL BARTENDERS 1
The replicas are placed on a slide
approximately one-eighth of an inch long,
then photographed under an electron
microscope and magnified as much as
400,000 times.
Such a magnification is equivalent to a
line one inch long magnified 60,000 times. On
this line,- 357 Volkswagen Beetles, could be
placed end to end and 39 wide for a total of
13,923 cars.
The 3-D technique has been used in
scientific journals for many years, but this
is the first time any such pictures have been
used for aesthetic purposes.
“You would have no idea how much depth
there is. We are not stressing the scientific
aspect ^a* much as the beauty,” Kazilek
said. ,
“T hereV a spirit there that’s éxciting to
all scientists and artists alike — the spirit of
discovery.”
The exhibit will be free to the public, and
live music and refreshments will be served.
Alwun House is located at 1204 E. Roosevelt
in Phoenix. For more information call 2537887.
ONCE A
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1523 East A pache, Tem pe
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIliHlllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfir
Louise Lincoln
Heir cultural center
FIFTH ANNIVERSARY SEASO N
H O R SE SE N SE
S o n g s o l th e W estern S o il
Saturday, March 28 • 8 p.m.
Tickets: $8
eee
M USICA DOLCE
(
M usic from th e 1600s
Sunday, March 29 • 8 p.m. •
Tickets: $7
eee
ASU Friends of Music present
8 9 4 -8 3 3 7
UP TO
2 0 4 E. U n iv e rs ity — T e m p e
5 0 % “7 5 % -9 0 %
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f f * SAVINGS!!
TWO DAYS ONLY! THURS., MARCH 26& FRI., MARCH 27
9:30A.M.-5:30P.M.
Film
THE NEW ART STRING QUARTET
Spend an afternoon with Friends
Sunday, April 5 • 4 p.m.
Tickets: $6
eee
QUINTESSENCE
Cameras
"C lassics O ld an d N ew ”
with Susan Duer, Quest Pianist
Arizona's premier woodwind quintet presents a varied program that is scheduled
to include Opus No. Zoo (Children's Play tor Wind Quintet) by Luciano Berio.
Georg« Parle's 1985 Pulitzer Prize-winning wind Quintet No. 4 (a Southwest
premiere) and Quintet for Piano and Winds, Op. 16 by Beethovsn.
Tuesday, April 7 * 8 p.m.
Tickets: $7
TICKET DISCOUNT POLICY:
ASUstudent«, faculty and staff maypurchase ONE or TWO ticket» for Haif-Price with
presentation of ASUT.D. Studants will be required to show a validated photo I.D.
when purchasing their tickets as well as at the door on the night df the concert.
DARKROOM
Page 20
Stale Press
W ednesday, M arch 8 5 ,1 9 8 7
German prints shown
at ASU Art Museum
Renaissance exhibit
A slice of the graphic arts in its earliest form ■>—prints
from the “Golden Age of German Printmaking” — is on
display through April 19 at the ASU Art Museum.
Adapted from wood and metal engravings, these mini
masterpieces by Northern Renaissance artists Albrecht
Durer, Martin Schongauer, and Albrecht Altdorfer
represent the earliest examples of printed works.
P art of the museum’s permanent collection, biblicallyinfluenced scenes containing Christ, prophets, saints,
kings, and the Virgin and Child are their primary images.
In the Renaissance E ra “pieces portraying a religious
m atter became devotional objects,” said Cindy Gedeon,
museum curator. “Prints became works of art in their
own right and were not used purely as illustration. ”
Of the 28 works in this exhibit, most belong to Durer, the
most ingenious printmaster of the late 15th and early 16th
centuries. Durer, born in Nuremberg, Germany, traveled
to Italy where he became influenced by the great Southern
Europe arttöts such as Mantegna. Mantegna’s work,
particularly his ^St. Sebastian” , surfaces in Durer’s own
“Man of Sorrows by Column.” Not only had Durer been
influenced by the Italians,-but he is also accredited for
having brought the Italian Renaissance to Northern
Europe.
Altdorfer, seven years Durer’s senior^ subordinated his
subjects to the landscape within his prints.
On exhibit are excerpts from one of the most
elaborately illuminated books, the “ Nuremberg
Chronicles.”
Works by these artists are on display in conjunction
with the Renaissance Society of America’s national
conference which has been organized this year by the ASU
Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies.
The ASU Art Museum, open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday and 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, is located on the
second floor of the Matthews Center. The gallery is
accessible by wheelchairs.
— CINDY VALE
“The Virgin and the Monkey” by Albrecht Durer (1471*1528) will
be on display in conjunction with other Renaissance prints
through April 19 in the ASU Art Museum.
Tequila • 80 proof • Imported and bottled by The Fleischmann Distilling Co., Lake Success, ty.Y. © 1987.
Tuba ensemble
blows variety
in ASU show
ASU’s tuba ensemble,
directed by music Professor
Dan Perantoni performs in
concert at 7 p.m. Sunday in
the ASU Music Theater.
The free concert will open
w ith
th e
e n s e m b le
performing Camille SaintS aëns’
“ A d a g io ,”
tr a n s c r ib e d by S tev e
Hanson; a sonata from “Die
B ankelsangerlieder” by
D a n ie l
S p eer;
and
D ivertim ento by David
Spears.
A tuba quartet, including
Michael Colburn, M ark
Brumbach, Art Levin and
Jeff Chronister will perform
Maurice Ravel’s “Bolero.”
T hree “ F ancy Dances
(1972)” by Walter Ross will
be performed by a tuba trio,
including Jeff Rideout, Tom
Holtz and Martin Glenn.
After intermission, the
ensemble will perform the
Pachebel
C anon,
“ C onsortium ” by John
Cheetham, and the Sousa
m arch “Hands Across the
Sea.”
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no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.)
Browse through our three floors of:
•New & Used Books
•Art Prints & Posters
•Calendars & Cards
•Handbound Journals
M-F 10-9
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966-0203
sports
Page 21
Wednesday, March 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
Women’s tennis
to face Wildcats
in Tuscon today
By ST EV E B R E N N A N
S ta te P r e s s
Ron Kuczek Jr./State Proas
ASU'« Carol Coparanls, preparing to hit a back hand, Is getting ready for her match against the Wildcats today.
Staff reports
The Phoenix Gazette reported Tuesday that Sun Angel
Foundation executive director Dan Devine was resigning
to accept a post as special assistant to ASU President J.
Russell Nelson.
Devine, who has served on the Sun Angel Foundation for
more than three years, could not be reached for comment
Tuesday before State Press deadlines.
Devine quits Sun Angels
After an easy week of matches at home last week, the ASU
women’s tennis team will have its hands full this week with
three tough road matches against UA, USC and UCLA.
The 16th-ranked Sun Devils meet the Wildcats today in
Tucson for what ASU coach Sheila Mclnerney calls “a good
kind of rivalry’’ beginning at 2:00 p. m .
“It’s intense,” Mclnerney said. “We get along well off the
court, but it’s very competitive on the court. The matches
usually come down to the doubles. ”
ASU, 9-7 overall and 1-3 in the Pac-10, defeated UTEP and
New Mexico easily last week, but Mclnerney said the team
has to look at the upcoming matches one at a time.
“With our conference the way it is (six of the teams are in
the top twenty), you can’t look ahead or you’re dead,”
Mclnerney Said. “This is going to.be a tough stretch.”
Mclnerney said the team is developing into a solid unit,
something that is crucial for a team that must play 18
matches against top twenty teams in a season.
“All of our kids are playing well,” she said. “There really
isn’t any one individual standing out. I feel pretty good about
the way we are playing.
“Any time you have to play top ten teams, you need to play
solid as an entire team,” she said.
Against the Wildcats (11-5, 2-2), the Sun Devils will be led
by Laura Glitz at No. 1, Carol Coparanis at No. 2. Therese
Arildsen will be playing in the third spot, and freshman Lisa
Haldas will be playing No. 4.
Mclnerney said she is pleased with the way Haldas has
performed so far this season.
“Lisa is playing well,” she said. “She is a little up and
down at times, but she had a real good win against USC
(March 7).”
The Wildcats will be led by Susan Russo and Betsy
Summerville, but Mclnerney said the ’Cats have plenty of
weapons.
“They are pretty deep all the way down the line,” she said.
“I think it is going to be a good match. ”
. Turn to TENNIS, page 27.
Nelson refused comment on thé resignation, and did not
deny nor confirm whether a special assistanceship was in
Devine’s future.
Rich Wanninger, assistant sports information director,
said he knew no more than he had read in the Gazette, and
pointed out the Sun Angels have no official affiliation with
the athletic department.
Doesn’t wash
Claim s to sporthood ought to meet minimum criteria
Why is it that so many people try to claim the status of
‘sport” for their favorite pastime? It seems that every clown
vho can come up with a way to kill time, exercise or have fun
vants to get away with claiming his invention is a sport. .A
gw examples i
>Hacky-sack: What you’ve got here is an activity involving a
eather bag full of beans. It does many good things; it’s
nildly amusing to play, it can be good exercise and it
ievelops foot-eye coordination.
But even with all that going for it, I somehow don’t see it
joing Olympic in ’88. Then again, I never would have
predicted synchronized swimming and rhythm ic
gymnastics either.
•Aerobics: This is a whole lot like hacky-sack, minus the bag
)f beans. You jump around a lot, and you listen to tapes of
music. For the truly hard-core athlete, videotapes are
available.
. _
These tapes can be invaluable, since they do remind The
exerciser to breathe. I know when I get really into jumping up
and down, I can tend to forget little things like respiration.
•Body-building: First of all, this is more like a chemistry
experiment than exercise for most enthusiasts. Every few
veeks, you hear about a new anabolic steroid one that has
;he technology. It can make you bigger than you were before;
aigger, stronger, more unable to father children.
Now certainly weightlifting is a useful and healthy pursuit.
It can improve one’s performance in all sorts of sports, as
well as in everyday tasks and overall health. But I ve always
thought of it as a means to an end,, rather than something
lone for its own sake.
•Karate and other martial arts: In this “sport, your main
ipponent is a certain thickness of pine. (Had Hoss Cartwright
known TaeKwondo, he probably could have been a
lumberjack). And another thing. You are taught from the
beginning that the skills you are learning are never to be used
Bob Heller
Sports Editor
in anger.
Now when else are you going to want to snuff somebody?
When you’re in a good mood? I can see this coming in real
handy for self-defense; but if you’re stranded in Watts and a
guy asks nicely for your wallet, aren’t you going to get
slightly angry? And then you’re back to square one, and you
can’t pummel the guy.
•Skateboarding: Nothing that is practiced by scruffy
adolescent thrashers with hair in their eyes can possibly
qualify as a sport. In fact, skateboarding barely qualifies as a
mode of transportation, which I assume was what the
inventor of the skateboard had in mind.
That is, unless you grab onto cop cars and coast like
Michael J. Fox in “Back to the Future” — that was pretty
COOl.
•Curling: No, this is not another shot at weightlifting. There
really is a sport called curling, played in a specially-modified
hockev rink with stones and brooms.
\Tow this does tome close to being a legitimate sport. There
are two competing teams, it requires a certain skill perfected
with practice — it’s kind of like shuffleboard, which is one of
our state’s favorite geriatric sports.
But anything that uses brooms is a little hard to swallow as
a true sport. If we let this go, the next thing you know we’ll be
watching Australian rules sponge-mopping on ESPN.
•Bocci: Italian lawn bowling. People really play it. It’s even
a lot of fun.
But here again, the thin line between pastime and sport is
being blurred. Horseshoes falls into the same pit. It’s just
real hard to justify a sport in which no one sweats. Even
regular bowling can make you sweat.
Now granted, if you play this game in Phoenix in July,
you’re going to sweat. But if that’s the criterion, we also have
to be prepared to call grocery shopping a sport.
In any event, it’s easy to see how these enigmas arise.
Since no one has ever really defined “sport,” people can get
away with slipping all kinds of strange things into the
category.
So here goes. I’ve got this space to say whatever I want,
and it’s about time somebody cleared this whole thing up.
Activities must meet the following criteria to qualify as
sports:
•competition between two or more individuals or team s;
•performance of tasks requiring strength, agility,
coordination and/or special skills;
•generation of perspiration under normal atmospheric
conditions (70-80 degrees Fahrenheit, 10-50 percent relative
humidity);
•absence of objects or devices found in the average
American kitchen closet;
•absence of chemical substances that adversely affect
virility;
•absence of Jane Fonda from the general sphere of activity;
•absence of beans in any capacity.
And last, but certainly not least:
•activities must not present a clear and present danger to
plant life.
State Press
wednesda^^rcMjj^VOT
Page 22
Looking up
c a p t u r e 7 th a t
------- 5
By STEVE ADAMS
State Press
With its ’season at a dose, the Sun Devil women’s
swimming team has met some goals and now looks toward
next year with even more promise.
The ASU women’s swimming team went into last Weekend
and the season-ending NCAA championships with one goal in
mind: to improve on last year’s 18th place finish.
That goal became reality for the Sun Devils, as they picked
up 152 points and a seventh place finish in Indianapolis.
“We had no expectations but we felt that we could be in the
top 10,” coach Tim Hill said.
Texas repeated as NCAA champion for the fourth straight
year compiling 648.5 points, followed by runner-up Stanford
with 631.5 points. The rest of the top 10 went as follows:
Florida, California, Clemson, Georgia, ASU, USC, North
Carolina and Michigan.
“We could have beaten Georgia, but then the way things
were going there were a number of teams who finished
behind us that could have finished ahead of us,” Hill said.
“It is nice to know we finished ahead of USC, UCLA and
North Carolina,” he said; “We definitely swam better up and
down the line than they did.”
This year’s NCAA meet had more records broken than any
other NCAA women’s competition, with six American marks,
an NCAA record and two other U.S. open records established.
Betsy Mitchell of the Longhorns was named the m eet’s
outstanding swimmer, winning the 200-yard backstroke in
1:55.16 and setting a U.S. Open and NCAA record. She was
also the only triple-winner, capturing the. 100-yard
backstroke and 200-yard individual medley.
Though no Sun Devils were included among the group of
NCAA record-breakers, there were a number of swimmers
who set new school records.
Stephanie Lister was the first to tackle the record books,
finishing sixth in the 100-yard backstroke with a time of 56.5.
This was good enough to set the new school mark and move
Lister from second to first in ASU career best marks in this
category. Terry Baxter showed that she too had what it took to set a
new ASU record, touching the pad in die 100-yard
breaststroke with a timé of 1:03.4.
A third school record fell later in the day, when Beda
Leirvaag finished with a time of 2:03.1 in die 200-yard
individual medley.
“Our four seniors (Baxter, Leirvaag, Lister and Tracy
Cox) were the biggest key to our success,” Hill said. “But all
11 ■
11111«
m
Ife
Ron Kuezek Jr78tate Press
Terri Baxter, shown hare In action earNer this season, set an ASU record of 1:03.4 In the 100-yard breaststroke.
Turn to SWIMMINO, pago 24.
In th e “g o o d o ld d ays,”
w om en h a d c la s s . . . b u t
th e y d id n ’t h a v e c h o ic e .
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analysis
State Press
Page 23
W ednesday, M arch 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
Final Four off to New Orleans in search of dream
By D EAN A. O B EN A U ER
UNLV
Indiana
UNLV is on a roll.
i
»
''i
Jerry Tarkanian’s troop bombed away at a 19-point
deficit and beat a shellshocked Iowa team, 84-81, on the 3point shooting of Gerald Paddio and Freddie Banks Sunday.
The win raised the Rebels win streak to 22 straight while
raising their record to 37-1. The win also tied them with last
year’s Duke team for most wins in a season.
Tarkanian had stressed that the key to a national
championship was heart, and the Rebels showed plenty of it
in their comeback.
The Rebels, who have had a soft schedule overall this
season, proved that they can play defense when they really
want to in the Hawkeye comeback. Indiana is going to have
to slow the fast break of UNLV in order to beat this fast
runnin’ team.
Bobby Knight is in the Final Four. Again.
Rick Calloway tipped in a shot with seven seconds left to
lift No. 3 Indiana past LSU and into another Final Four
appearance.
Can they beat UNLV?
It isn’t a question of whether or not they can run. They
can. They scored 107 points on 60 percent shooting against
Auburn earlier in the tournament. However, the Hoosiers
play much more in a control offense than do the Runnin’
Rebels.
They will need a better game from their All-America
guard Steve Alford, who scored only 2 points against LSU in
the second half after scoring 18 before intermission.
The Indiana-UNLV match-up will mark the first time
Knight and Jerry Tarkanian have ever coached against
each other.
S la t e P r e s s
In the beginning there were 64 hopeful teams.
Now, only the few, the proud, the Final Four remain.
In the end, only one team of young men will get their r ing
fingers sized for this year’s NCAA National Championship
ring.
The Runnin’ Rebels of UNLV, Hoosiers of Indiana,
Orangemen of Syracuse and Friars of Providence are headed
to New Orleans for a late Mardi Gras and possible National
Championship celebration.
This year’s tournament, which had its share of mild upsets
in the,early rounds, really broke loose this past week.
The West and Midwest’s No. 1 seeds (UNLV and Indiana)
have lived up to their part of the bargain, but it was hardly
easy. UNLV had to rally against a 19-point Iowa lead while
Indiana squeaked by LSU to make it to this year’s Final
Four.
In the E ast and Southeast regionals, favorites North
Carolina and Georgetown weren’t so lucky. Underdogs
Syracuse and Providence made sure that the Tar Heels and
Hoyas couldn’t hold up to their half of the bargain and won
trips to this year’s Final Four showdown in the process.
Not to take anything away from Syracuse and Providence,
but when West top seed UNLV meets Midwest top seed
Indiana it could mean the national championship. UNLV, (371) and Indiana, (28-4) are the better of the four teams on
paper.
In thé East, Syracuse and Providence match-up to prove
who is hotter than who. Syracuse, (30-6) and Providence, (258) certainly have a full head of momentum coming off their
brilliant upsets of North Carolina and Georgetown,
respectively.
The winner of the Orangemen-Friar game will try and pick
up where Villanova, Louisville and North Carolina State have
left off as they go into the National Championship as
underdogs against eventual favorite UNLV-Indiana winner.
Syracuse
Providence
Syracuse has finally proved themselves.
The Orangemen have been overlooked up to this point in
the tournament. They were not supposed to get this far.
Center Ron Seikaly, who questioned the media hype of.
freshmen centers Dwayne Schintzius of Florida and J.R.
Reid of North Carolina, proved himself right. Seikaly, who
has played against Patrick Ewing and Navy’s David
Robinson, held Schintzius to six points and Reid to 15, while
scoring 33 and 26 points, respectively.
Against heavily favored North Carolina, the Orangemen
managed to out rebound the Tar Heels in the first half 29-12
and 42-32 for the game.
The Orangemen have used the 3-point shot sparingly
while Providence has shot the supershot often on their road
to the Final Four.
Believe it or not, Providence is in the Final Four.
The funny thing is that they did it the old-fashioned way —
theyeam edit.
The Friars are for real. They have beat AlabamaBirmingham, Austin Peay, Alabama and Georgetown.
In their first three tournament wins they used the 3-point
shot from the hot hand of Billy Donovan (the tournament
leading scorer at one point) to continue in their Southeast
bracket.
In their last game against Georgetown, however, they
changed their game plan and, under the instruction of
Coach Rick Pitino, took the ball inside against the Hoyas.
The key to beating Syracuse lies in the hands of center
Steve Wright. Wright, who had 20 points and seven blocks
against the Hoyas, will have his hands full with Orangeman
Rony Seikaly.
1987 N CAA Basketball Tournament
UNLV (33-11
N. Carolina (29-3)
N. Carolina
UNLV
Idaho State (15-15)
Penn. (13-13)
UNLV
N. Carolina
Georgia (18-11)
Navy (26-5)
Michigan
M h IIS o L
M ichigan (19-11)
Kanasa S L (19-10)
UN LV
N. C a r o lin a
Notre Oame (22-7)
V irg in ia (21-9)
Notre Oame
Wyoming
Mid Tenn. St. (22-6)
Wyoming (22-9)'
Notre Oame
Wyoming
TCU (23-6)
UCLA (24-6)
TCU
UCLA
CenL M ich. (22-7)
West
Oklahoma (22-9)
Oklahoma
U N LV
— S y ra cu se
M arshall (25-5)
East
N.C. St. (20-14)
Tulsa (22-7)
.
í
Florida (21-10)
Florida
Florida
Oklahoma
Purdue (24-4)
Pittsburg (24-7
Prudue
Pittsburgh
Northeastern (27-6)
M arist (20-9)
Io w a
S y ra cu se
W. V irginia (23-7)
UTEP (24-6
W. Kentucky
UTEP
Arizona (18-11)
W. Kentucky (28-8)
Syracuse
Iowa
Syracuse (26-6)
Iowa ( 2 7 4
Syracuse
Iowa
Ga. South (20-10)
S. Clara (18-3)
National C h am p ion sh ip
Indiana (24-4}
Georgetown (26-4)
Georgetown
Indiana
Bucknell (22-8)
Fairfield 115-15)
Georgetown
Indiana
Auburn (17-12)
Ohio State
Auburn
Ohio State (19-12)
San diego (24-5)
G e o rg e to w n
In d ia n a
Duke (22-8)
Kansas
Duke
Kansas 123-10)
Houston (18-11)
Texas A S M (17-13)
Duke
Kansas
Clemson (25-5)
M isso u ri (24-9)
SW Mo. St.
Xavier
Xavier (18-12)
SW Ma. St. (21-5)
Midwest
St. John’s 120-81
St. John's
In d ia n a —
— Providence
Southeast
Providenco (21-8)
Providence
Ala-Birm . (21-10)
W ichita St. (22-10)
Providence
Illinois (19-11)
OePaul (26-2)
Austin Peay
OePaul
Austin Peay (19-11)
La. Tech (22-7)
LSU
P r o v id e n e a
Now Orleans (25-3)
6a. Tech (16-12)
Now Orleans
LSU
BYU (21-10)
LSU (21-14)
LSU
Alabama
Alabama (264)
Temple (31-3)
Temple
Southern (10-11)
Kentucky (18-10)
Alabama
N. Car. A S T (24-5)
Page 24
Stet» Pres»
W ednesday, M arch 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
Swimming.
Continued from page 22.
Ron Kuezeit Jr./State Press
Freshman Bente Bist and senior Stephanie Lister enter the water. Lister set an ASU record of 56.5 In the 100-yard backstroke.
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the swimmers contributed greatly to our score.”
Two downfalls to the meet, according to Hill, were that
Brandi Suttle was not able to compete because of a pinched
nerve and the team was worn out because of the numerous
events each individual had to swim (two or more).
“We were the only team with everybody involved with
scoring and it really wore some of us out,” Hill said.
Leirvaag may have been one of the swimmers most
affected, according to Hill, as she swam in the relays along
with her individual events.
“She used up so much energy in the relays that when she
got to her individual events she was tired and it showed,” he
said.
One other disappointment for Hill and the team was that,
due to their seventh place finish in the NCAA, the team
cannot compete in the Dual Meet Championships in Los
Angeles April 24-25. Only the top four finishing teams are
invited to the meet.
“Though this was not a top priority for our team, it would
have been something that would have been a nice boost,” Hill
said.
Despite the downfalls and no first place finishes for Sun
Devils swimmers, Hill looked at the championships and the
whole year realistically.
“We thought we were a good team and I think we showed
that by our consistent performance this year,” Hill said.
“The girls really showed great strides and made a definite
improvement over last year’s finish.”
With the season now over, Hill is already looking forward
to next year and the possibilities that it may bring.
“We only have four people graduating so we are not losing
too much strength or depth,” Hill said.
“Thekey now will be how our recruiting goes,” hesaid.
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State ft««
Page 25
W ednesday, M arch 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
Devils finish sweep
of series over ’Cats,
prepare for Huskers
By DAVE HODGES
State Press
If Arizona State had been playing at Atlanta’s Fulton
County Stadium Monday against Arizona, Chief Nocahoma
would be dead from exhaustion.
The Devils had to settle for Tucson and Sancet Field, but
ASU’s baseball team showed they do know how to knock a
homer—and then some.
ASU belted a school-record seven home runs Monday, en
route to a 15-4 thrashing of Arizona and a sweep of the
defending national champions.
The 25th-ranked Devils will attempt to continue their
winning ways at 7 tonight as ASU wraps up a two-game series
with 21st-ranked Nebraska at Packard Stadium.
The previous Sun Devil record for most homers in one
game was six, set in 1975 and 1982.
The victory, viewed by only 891 on a chilly Tucson night,
was the Devils’ seventh in a row heading into Tuesday’s night
game with the Corahuskers..
The series sweep was the first time the Sun Devils have
taken three straight games from the Wildcats in Tucson since
1976.
“We’ve dominated U of A in most sports for so many
years, but lately that hasn’t happened,’’ ASU coach Jim
Brock said Monday after the game. “We’re used to beating
them in every sport in every year. ”
Brock said it was a tribute to his players to come back only
nine months after being “completely embarrassed” last year
in Tucson.
In 1986, the Cats swept the Devils in Tucson, outscoring
them, 49-17. In this series, the Devils outscored the Cats, 3311.
«
With the three victories, ASU (16-13, 4-5 in the Pacific-10
Conference Southern Division) moved one game ahead of the
Wildcats, ( 19-12,6-9) into fourth place in the Six-Pac.
The Devils—who hit only 27 homers in their first 26 games
—hit 13 in the weekend series against the Cats.
On the weekend, Mike Benjamin, Mike Burrola and Dan
Rumsey powered three dingers each. Ted Dyson smashed
two roundtrippers for the Devils, and Martin Peralta and
Tony Mattia each crushed a homer.
“College baseball is a very emotional and momentumTurn to BASEBALL, page 27.
Ron Kuczak Jr./State Praaa
Sophomore right fielder Dan Rumsey, No. 6, goes for a high five with senior shortstop Mike Benjamin after Rumsey hit a home run
earlier this season. Rumsey hit three home runs during last weekend’s road trip.
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Page 26
State Press
J W e d n e s d a y J ^ a r c h ^ f i^ J Ç ^
Softball team takes d o u b le h e a d e r from O reg o n
By CHRIS DORSEY
State Press
It was a good feeling to be back home for
the Sun Devil softball team, and win in front
of the home crowd for a change.
Ninth-ranked ASU played for the second
time this year on their home field against
Oregon Monday night. Coach Mary
Littlewood’s squad swept the twinbill from
the visiting Ducks, 9-1 and 2-0.
The two victories put the Sun Devils five
wins shy of their total wins last season.
Littlewood, in her 18th year coaching ASU,
will be looking to take her team to the
College World Series this season for the first
time since 1982.
“Everybody feels good,” Littlewood said.
“They were aggressive offensively in the
beginning of both games.”
Defense has been the key all season, and it
continued to shine in Tempe against Oregon.
In the two games Sun Devil pitching allowed
only seven hits on the evening and one run.
On the season ASU has outscored their
opponents 61-26, while outhitting the
opposition 160-96.
“ Our pitchers have done w ell,”
Littlewood said. “We struggled until the
Florida tournament. I am more pleased
with pitching than I was two weeks ago.”
The first game was scoreless until the
fourth inning, when ASU notched two runs.
Pitcher Becky Stevens had not allowed a hit
until the bottom of the fourth inning, when
Duck catcher Cheryl Coryell tagged a triple
to right. A throwing error allowed Coryell to
score for the Ducks’ only run of the evening.
A five-run sixth inning insured an ASU
victory. With one down, second baseman
Karen Fifield struck out, but reached first
on the passed ball. Following this incident
the visitors began their decline.
Hits by centerfielder Kathy Escarcega
(.284), Dina Buccola (catcher) and a suicide
bunt by leftfielder Sheila WincheU (.293)
sparked the Sun Devils in their big inning.
‘Moving the plate back makes the games more
offensive, and you must score runs to win
— Mary Littlewood
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the plate back makes the games more
offensive, and you must score runs to win. ”
ASU was the aggressor offensively in the
second game. The Devils picked up where
they had left off in the opener.
Cheryl Persinger, third base, (-247)
pounded a shot in the gap for a triple. Fifield
followed with a screaming liner that the
third baseman mishandled, allowing
Persinger to cross the plate. The Sun Devils
were unable to capitalize in the first inning
when they had the bases loaded.
The scoreboard would not tally another
run until the fifth inning. Escarcega drove
in Fifield to round out the Sun Devil scoring.
The night was filled with spectacular
defensive plays that will not appear in the
box score. Throughout the night Fifield
dazzled fans with diving grabs while her
double play partner, shortstop Linda Neely,
added her share of fine plays.
The second game was more of a pitchers’
duel than a slugfest. Donna Stewart
received die call to duty; on the season she
has been the most successful as far as
statistics are concerned.
Stewart, a sophomore, has notched 13
wins thus far to only two losses.
“We discovered not many teams have a
strong pitcher,” Littlewood said. “Moving
o n d B a fro ad
is
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Insuring Tomorrow 1987 Issues Conference
M arch 2 8 ,1 9 8 7 • 9:00 a.m .-3 :3 0 p.m .
T h e Pointe, S ou th M o u n tain R esort
S P R IN G B R E A K
S A V IN G S !!
$10 Registration Fee covers all conference materials
and luncheon at the Pointe, South Mountain Resort
Make checks payable to: The Sun Angel Foundation.
The Sun Angel Foundation and A s s o c ia te d Students
in vite you to p a rticip a te in a unique lead ersh ip
enrichm ent experience.
INSURING TOMORROW is a program offering student
lead ers an o p p o rtu n ity to in tera ct w ith th e ir peers and
m any of our V a lle y ’s p ro fe s s io n a l and c iv ic leaders.
T h is selected grbup w ill meet to d is c u s s such to p ics as
drug testing and lia b ility la w s.
The one-day con feren ce is designed to
level of d is c u s s io n between the student
p a rticip a n ts. T o p ica l p resen ta tio n s w ill
s m a ll group s e s s io n s and w ill a llo w
exchange of o p in io n s and reactions.
p ro vid e a high
and Sun A n gel
be fo llo w e d by
fo r a p o sitiv e
E nrollm en t is lim ited. Please co n firm yo u r attendance
by returning th is form by M arch 26 to the A s s o c ia te d
Students Com plex in the M em orial Union.
m
$5 O F F
any purchase of
$25 or more.
Insuring Tomorrow 1987 Issues Conference, March 28, 1987.
E x p ir e s 3-30-87.
4
lliy v e rë ity
Name
1038 S. Mill
Address
Across from
Phone_
sporting goods 968-7725
For Office Use
Zip.
Return to Associated Students,
MU 208, by March 26, 1987.
A ffilia tio n
Reg/Recd
G r o u p A s s ig n m e n t
state Ptc»
Page 27
W ednesday, March 8 5 ,1 9 8 7
Tennis
Continuad Iront pago 21.
Concerning the Los Angeles trip this weekend, Mclnerney
said she is confident about what is ahead.
“I feel pretty good about playing USC and UCLA,” she
said. “The match was closer than the score against UCLA
and we beat USC,
“They (USC) are going to be out for some revenge,” she
said.
Mclnerney said along with taking one match at a time, she
really isn’t overly concerned about the Sun Devils record in
the conference, because of the high quality competition.
“I have a tendency to look at the season from a national
viewpoint,” she said. “When you have to play teams like
Stanford, UCLA and the others, where we end up in the
conference isn’t really that important. Last year we finished
fifth in the conference but we were eighth nationally.
“I don’t worry about where we finish in the conference. ”
Following this week’s road trip, the Sun Devils will return
to the Whiteman Tennis Center for matches against U.S
International University April 2, and Grand Canyon College
April 7.
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THE HORSES’
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TEM PE
Ron Kuczek Jr./Stalo Prara
ASU’s Therese Arlldsen eyes the net as she prepares to serve
earlier thls-eeason. Therese will be playing In the third spot for
ASU against UA today In Tucson.
Baseball
Continued from page 25.
oriented sport,” Brock said. “When you can intimidate the
other team with some home runs, it makes everything
easier.”
Along with the barrage of homers, the Devils stiffened up
defensively. Benjamin made an Ozzie Smith-Uke play on a
ground ball during the third inning. Running into left field,
Benjamin fielded the grounder and threw an off-balance
strike to Peralta at first, beating Wildcat Frank Halcovich by
one step.
ASU also turned two key double plays off line drives.
During Monday’s game, Dyson knocked his third and
fourth homers, Burrola had has fourth and fifth, Rumsey
stroked his fifth, B e n j a m in crushed his sixth and Mattia
muscled his 11th.
„
ASU coach Jim Brock called the game and series a
confidence builder,” but cautioned the team cannot become
cocky
“We would be foolhardy to walk around saying, ‘This is the
real us. We’re this good,’ ” Brock said. “Obviously, it was
just a great weekend for us.
f
“We were a shaky bunch of folks for a while.
, ,
The Devils jumped on top early against Wildcat starter
Gary Alexander. With one out in the top of the first inning,
Rumsey and Dyson connected on back-to-back homers.
ASU added one homer in the second, two dingers in the
fourth, one in the fifth and one more longball in the sixth for a
12-1 lead.
,
,
„
Alexander — despite being knocked out as the starting
pitcher during the fourth — joined in the home run der y,
knocking a solo shot in the second and a three-run job in
seventh.
, ,,, D
“I hope we’re as good as we looked this weekend, Bt
said.
(frU N E X
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Page 2 8
State Presi
W ednesday, M arch 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
P rovid en ce not really a surprise Final Four team
By The Associated Press
what they have done, they just put it together at the right
time.
“That’s what we did, and back in 1983 when North Carolina
State won, they did pretty much the sam e thing. They lost
nine. That was a lot of losses at that time.”
Valvano remembers and agrees.
“ I still have my slipper,” Valvano said. “On my mantle.
Size 11.
“I think right now they (Providence) are the only
legitimate Cinderella team. . . . A legitimate Cinderella has
to have more losses in a weekend than most of those (other
teams in the Final Four) have in a year.
After a flurry of upsets spiced the first two weekends of
action, Providence, lightly regarded when the NCAA picked
the 64 teams to vie for the basketball title, is in the Final
Four.
But Providence’s feat was not that much of a surprise to
Hugh Durham of Georgia and North Carolina State’s Jim
Valvano, whose team s were the surprise of the 1983 Final
Four, with the Wolfpack winning the title.
“We did basically what they did,” Durham said. “We upset
two teams — St. John’s and North Carolina — and to do that
we had to have a pretty good team. For (Providence) to do
Arizona wins
against Utes,
streak ended
12.
Utah, 4-7, scored its only
run in the seventh inning on
Kyle Johansen’s RBI single.
Gilbert Heredia, (6-2) got
the victory with Utes starter
Craig Sudbury, (1-1) taking
the loss.
Arizona was scheduled to
play Linfield College in a
night game Tuesday at
Sancet Field here.
Tum to NCAA«, page 29.
E a rn $ 7 -$ 8
OUTBOUND SALES REPRESENTATIVES
By The Associated Press
TUCSON
—
Gary
Alexander and Glenn Baxley
slugged solo homers as
defending NCAA champion
Arizona beat Utah 12-1 in a
non-conference baseball
game Tuesday.
Alexander’s ninth homer
of the season capped a fourrun first inning to give the
Wildcats a 4-0 lead. Steve
Strong had a two-run triple
and Frank Halcovich lofted
a sacrifice fly in the inning.
Baxley’s homer, his first
of the season, made it 5-0 in
the second inning. He added
a two-run triple in a five-run
fourth inning as Arizona
coasted from there to snap
its three-game losing streak
and improve its record to 20-
“You have (Providence Coach) Rick Pitino, who’s only in
his second year,” Valvano said. “They certainly were ugly
when he got there and now they’re beautiful, so they are the
Cinderella.”
A preseason pick to finish about fourth in the Big E ast
Conference, Providence, 25-8, built its early season record
with victories over teams like Rhode Island, Brown, Siena,
Rider, Howard, Maine and Hofstra — not exactly basketball
powers.
But the Friars were ready when Big East play began,
beating Villanova twice, St. John’s twice and splitting home-
DESERT VISTA
HOSPITAL
and
ASU*s Clinical
Psychology Center
present the
FIR ST ANNUAL MENTAL HEALTH
FILM SERIES
Thursday, M arch 26 • 7:30 p.m.
EXPERIENCED telemarketers earn $6/hr. for 20 or more hours worked per week.
NON-EXPERIENCED people earn $5.50/hr. for 20 or more hours worked per week.
Both receive paid training, vacation, bonuses and incentives.
Join the wave of telemarketing for your career choice.
Over 50 permanent part-time positions are available with scheduling to include
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If you are neat in appearance and possess strong communication skills,
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PRESENTED AT ASU College o f la w G reat Hall w ithin
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Desert Vista Hospital
OPUS
C H R IS T I
INFORMATION: CONTACT NICK ADAMS,962 3900 o r 1-800-338-NEED.
You a n d ...
G R E A T
E N T E R T A IN M E N T
together at G a n n i t a n e
VANCOUVER — ISLE OF WONDER
with In-person narration by
Tom Sterling
Wednesday, March 25 • 8 p.m.
Tickets: $6 all seats
eee
STUDY
SERVICE
in the HOLY SPIRIT
, 31 MARCH 1987
7:00 P.M.
Old Church All Saints Newman Center
D am on R unyan's B roadw ay love sto ry will b e on th e G am m age
sta g e for five exciting perform ances. Bring th e w hole family.
Friday, March 27 * 8 p.m.
Saturday, March 28 • 2:30 and 8 p.m.
Sunday, March 29 • 2:30 and 8 p.m.
Tickets: $15, $13
WRITE A
“PERSONAL”
TO A FRIEND
FOR ONLY A
BUCK.
If you’re a stud en t
you're In luck. You
can place a 15-word
Personal for only a
buck.
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Center basement
from 8 to 5 or the
MU Classified
Booth from 10:45
to 12:45 daily.
S tate
P ress
eee
CANDIDA
Presented By
Monday, April 6 * 8 p.m.
Tickets: $15, $13
TKffllHMtl
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For further Information about
Gammage Center events, call 9 6 5 - 3 4 3 4 .
8university plasm a center
T IC K E T D IS C O U N T POLICY:
A ssociated B ioscien ce o f Tempe, Inc.
GAMMAGE CENTER — Students m ay p u rc h a se ONE o r TWO
tick ets fo r HALF-PRICE with p resen tatio n of a validated stu d e n t
p h o to I.D. S tu d e n ts will b e ask ed to p re se n t th eir p h o to I.O. with
th eir tick ets a t th e d o o r on night o f perform ance. Faculty and S ta ll
receive a $2-per-ticket d isc o u n t on all sc h ed u led se a so n events.
MOTB; SPECIAL EVENTS are not included In this discount policy.
1015 S o u th R u ral R oad
Tempe, A r iz o n a 8 5 2 8 1
P h on e 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9
a m iw n
Page 29
N C A A s________ _
Continued from pago 28.
and-home games against Georgetown. In the Big East
postseason tournament, Providence stopped St. John’s for a
third time before losing to Georgetown.
And it was Georgetown standing in the way of a Final Four
spot when Providence gained the Southeast Regional title
game. This time it was Providence 88-73.
“We probably saw Providence one too many times this
season,” Georgetown coach John Thompson said. “They
play with the kind of intensity I respect. ”
According to the seedings, Providence wasn’t supposed to
be around to beat Georgetown. The Friars were supposed to
be second-round losers to third-seeded Illinois.
But Illinois was upset in the first round by Austin Peay, a
LPGA tourney
underway with
skins matchup
Staff and Wire Reports
PHOENIX — Defending
Turquoise Classic champion
Mary Beth Zimmerman won
$7,000 in Tuesday’s nine-hole
“skins” game, the first ever
to precede the LPGA
tournament that gets under
way here later in the week.
Jan Stephenson, runner-up
in last week’s LPGA Tucson
Open, won the other $3,000 of
the purse, and P at Bradley,
last year’s top money winner
on the LPGA tour, and Hall
of Fam er JoAnne Carner
came away empty-handed.
The first three holes were
worth $500 each, the next
three $1,000 each, the next
pair $1,500 and the final hole
$2,500.
But when no one emerged
a winner on the first two,
their prizes carried forward
and Zimmerman birdied No.
3 to pick up $1,500.
The $1,000 for No. 4 also
was carried forward, and
Stephenson then birdied No.
5 for $2,000. She then won No.
6, bringing her total to $3,000,
and Zimmerman picked up
the $1,500 for No. 7.
With a tie on No. 8, the
ninth hole then became
worth
$4,000,
and
Zimmerman took it all.
It was only her secondever skins game — she had
won $8,000 on her first, last
fall.
i *•*
*
“I was on quite a roll at the
time,” she, said, before
Tuesday’s competition. “So I
love ’em. It’s a good way to
add much more interest to a
tournament,”
Camer had said she’d
watched skins games during
men’s tournaments and that
they looked like fun.
“ I guess it depends on
whether you win,” she
added.
The tournament starts
Thursday, and it will
number among it’s entrants
ASU golfer Pam Wright.
Wright is the only amateur
that has qualified to play in
the tournament.
— state press— i
team Providence nipped 90-87 in overtime. Then came
Alabama, seeded second behind Georgetown in the regional.
Bombing from the outside with 3-pointers, Providence
stopped Alabama 103-82, then toppled Georgetown.
“They only lost five games (actually eight), so you know
they played real good all year,” Durham said. “They are not
a surprise team.
“A lot of people thought it was an upset that they beat
Georgetown. They had to be good. You can’t play the
schedule they played and go through the Big East and only
lose five games.”
Seven of their eight losses were to tournament teams:
twice each to Pittsburgh, Syracuse and Georgetown, and
once to Tulsa. The other was to Big East rival Boston College.
classified advertising
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Page 30
State Press
W ednesday, M arch 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
classifieds
A n n o u n c e m e n ts
THE M.U.
STATE PRESS
CLASSIFIED AD
BOOTH WILL BE
CLOSED MARCH 24,
25,26. YOU CAN
PLACE YOUR
ADS AT THE
STATE PRESS IN
THE BASEMENT OF
MATTHEWS CENTER
8 A.M.-5 P.M.
DAILY. THANK YOU.
MARCH IS Women’s History Month.
Who invented the push pedal trash
can?
A u t o m o b ile s
1977 BMW 320I. AC, AM-FM cassette,
dual option, sunroof, tinted windows,
reupholstered, mechanically sound.
__________
$4100 OBO. 835-0083.
1981 CAMARO, one owner, 41,000
miles, dark blue, 305, 4-speed. AC, PW,
tilt, full instrumentation. Best offer
takes it. 968-1011; or leave message,
894-2523.
___________ __________
USED CARS under $1000. All models.
DM Auto Brokers, 256-1377._____ .
B usiness Opp.
ASSEMBLE OUR devices, learn this
trade. We send instructions, parts, and
check for assembly. Call 813-327-2996,
ext. J. (AZ-CAN)________ _
WOMEN’S APPAREL: Needs partner
wanted for small specialty store with
unique concept. 964-2970._____ _
Por S a le
H e lp W an ted
Help W an ted
GUEST HOUSE for rent, one block from
ASU. $215 plus utilities. Call 894-2685.
RED, 1984 HONDA Aero, 1600 miles,
warranty, $780 OBO. 829-6551.
LA CRESENTA Apartments. Spacious
studios, one and two bedrooms from
$325. Special: first month free plus 19”
TV with a year lease. 1050 S. Stanley
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_______ ~
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flashing arrow sign $339! Lighted,
non-arrow $329! Unlighted $269! Free
letters! See locally. Call today! Factory
direct: 1-800-423-0163. (AZ-CAN)
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $17,500-$60,975
per year. Now hiring. Call 1-619-5651657 ext. J23AZ for current federal list.
24 hours. _____ ________ -•
P ART-TIM E
COM PUTER
sto re
receptionist- Local computer retail
store needs a person with: - some
clerical experience, neat appearance
and professional attitude. Call Mr.
Christoff at 838-1236,10 a.m.-5 p.m.
SELECTION OF available Tempo, Mesa
house rentals, $495 to $600, students/pets OK. Call 1-976-MART. 24 hours.
$.75 per minute.___________________
STEEL BUILDINGS: Factory direct
specials. 30x40x12 now $3,995.;
40x75x14, $7,995.; 50x100x15, $12,695.
Discount for immediate purchase and
delivery. Call: 214-342-3668. American
States Building Systems. (AZ-CAN)
P o r R e n t o r L e a se
SUNSET VILLA Apts. 1415 E. Apache
Blvd. Studios, one and two bedrooms.
Furnished units. Free Utilities. Clean
quiet atmosphere. Call 894-0932.
TWO FEMALES needed to sublease
nice apartment.at University Towers.
Only $450 for the whole summer. For
info, cal1829-3535._____ .
WALK TO ASU. 2 bedroom, 1 bath
house. AC, unfurnished. Water paid.
$450.965-4376,968-0659evenings.
WALK TO ASU. Small 1 bedroom
duplex. Unfurnished. Evap. Water paid.
$250.965-4376,968-0659 evenings.
Por S a le
1000 SUNBEDS, Sunal-Wolff. Save
50% Call for free color catalogue and
wholesale prices. Commercial and
residential units. MC or Visa accepted.
Call 1-800-226-6292. (AZ-CAN)
1973 MERCURY Montego Brougham,
PS, PB, AC, AM-FM, good engine, new
brakes, $575 OBO. 966-6462._________
CLASSIFIEDS WORK.
1986 RED HONDA Spree, brand new,
Only 400 miles, 85 mpg, $450/offer.
829-3726.___________ .
EXCELLENT CONDITION, 5-piece
fiberglass Ludwig drum set. $425.
784-9565.
LIGHTED BEER signs. Excellent conditlon, some new 11Call 230-2884._____
PAPAGO PARK • College/Curry. Bike to
ASU. Two level condo, vaulted ceilings.
Approximately 1135 square feet. Two
bedroom, two bath, appliances in
cluded, tile entry, pastel colors.
$78,500. assume or refinance low down
FHA loan. By owner/Realty Executives.
Principles only. Call 948-8871.
Clothing
Buyers and sellers of the
valley’s finest pre-owned
clothes — NATURAL FIBERS.
1250
E. A p a c h e
(E. of Lunt Ave. Marble Club)
968-2688
We buy ail sizes,men & women.
3/23
B o r R e n t or L e a se
2-3-4 bod room condos, townhouses,
houses, near ASU for sale and rent.
Call Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor
Realty, 951-5800,86(M>460.___________
2/3 BEDROOM condos, townhouses for
rent, Mesa-Tempe areas, from
$37Sfmonth. 953X030.______________
$585 MONTH plus utilities. 3 bedroom,
2 bath block house. Near ASU. Call
Paul. 968-2603.
_________________
910 E. Lemon, across from ASU. Large
2 bedroom, 2 bath. Pool, laundry. $425,
all utilities Included. 9600704.________
/ FORGET! \
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“c l a s s i f i e d A D
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Center Basement
BEAUTIFUL NEW large two bedroom
apartments, walk to ASU, pool,
laundry, one block south of University
on 8th Street and Gary. Ask about
mova4n specials. 968*5238. 1_______
8 a.m.-5 p.m. daily
or the M.U. Booth
11 a.m.-l p.m. daily
CONDO: 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace,
sunken living room, vaulted ceiling,
bar, 1% miles from ASU. $650 month.
897-9552._______ _________ ■'~
965-7572
CUTE 3 bedroom, 2 bath house, den, 2
miles to ASU. Students/pets OK. $495.
Call 1476-MART. 24 hours. $.75 per
minute.
___________.
STEREO SPEAKERS MCS 3 ways, can
handle 65 watts, asking $150. Mike
990-3357 evenings, weekends.________
U2 TICKETS. First show April 2nd,
good seats, lower level, 839-0461._____
U2 TICKETS for sale. First show. Call
829-3661.
F u r n itu r e
WAREHOUSE SALE- Desks from $44,
chairs from $5, end tables and coffee
tables from $24, typing tables, compu
ter tables, bookshelves and more.
437-2224.
HELP W ANTED
A FULL-TIME (30 to 40 hours per week)
person needed for family practice in
Scottsdale. Must type 60 wpm and
have CRT knowledge. Apply in person
9-5, 7701. E. Indian School Rd., Suite E,
Scottsdale.
A GREAT part time job with great pay
could really help pay for your educa
tion. If you or someone you know has
the brains for school but not the bucks,
Call the AZ Army National Guard and
see if you qualify, at 267-2574.
(AZ-CAN) ________ •. - -
B u y it. Sell it.
Fin d it.
in T h e C la ss ifie d s.
AIRLINES CR UISELIN ES hiring!
Summer. Career! Good pay. Travel. Call
for guide, cassette, newsservice!
(916)944-4444 ext. 3.
ATTENTION ALL undergraduate busi
ness and pre-law majors. We are now
interviewing for full time summer work
positions. Earn $4300., college credit
and excellent resume experience. Must
be independent and willing to relocate.
Call 234-8010.__________________ ___
CHILD CARE program coordinator for a
small, innovative company. Part-time
to start. Child development back
ground and experience working with
individuals in' child care necessary.
Need individual with initiative, good
people skills. BS/BA required. $9 per
hour. Contemporary Ventures in Child
Care, 820-9844,
NOW OPEN
C.C.’s
CLOSET CLASSICS
T h e K in d You L ik e !!
The STATE PRESS disclaims^!! respon
sibility for quality arid prices of goods
and services offered in both classified
and display advertising by its adver
tisers.
VISA • MASTERCARD
CASH «CHECK
COCKTAIL WAIT staff needed im
mediately. Desperado’s, Tempe. 8946423, Laura.
_______
COLLEGE STUDENT, earn $6-10 per
hour working part-time bn campus. For
more information, call 1-800-932-0528.
DRIVERS, DISPATCHERS and cashiers
needed for airport shuttle service. Must
be neat in appearance and have
outgoing personality. Drivers must
have, clean driving record. AM, PM and
GY shifts available. Females en
couraged to apply. Apply at Sky Harbor
Parking, 44 N. 44th Street.
DUN KIN DONUTS; help wanted, apply
in person, counter positions available
for ell shifts. 2009 N. Scottsdale Road.
EARN $8+ per hour while keeping your
grades up. Call 829-8955 to set up an
interview. _____________ ~V .
GOVERNMENT JOBS! Now hiring in
your area, both skilled and unskilled.
For list of jobs and application, call
615-383-2627, ext. J519. (AZ-CAN)
HIRING NOW! Construction all
phases, drivers, machinists, welders,
electricians, mechanics, airlines. Some
entry level positions. (Up to
$32.6Q/hour). Transcontinental Job
Search. 308-382-3700; 303-452-2258.
Fee required. (AZ-CAN) _____ _
LONG DISTANCE trucking. NorthAmerican Van lines needs owners/operators! If you need training, we will
train you. You will operate your own
tractor. If you don't have one, NorthAmerican offers a tractor purchase
program that can get you started for an
initial investment of $1500. If you are 21
or over and think you may qualify, we'd
like to send you a complete informa
tion package. Call any weekday,
toll-free, 1-800-348-2191. Ask for Dept.
24. (AZ-CAN)
W ANTED
PROGRAMS
AND
PROGRAMMERS
For IBM XT/AT Software
“C ” & Assembly
995-1105 • Phil
MANAGER TRAINEE for expanding
retail business. Must be a positive,
selfmotivated, honest individual. Retail
experience and references required.
Night and weekend shifts, part or full
time. Contact Dennis after 3 p.m.
8354)995. ______ .
______ __
MODELS FOR swimwear and ac
cessories needed for Cady Mall. Please
call Martha, 892-8831.
NOW HIRING; immediate openings
part-time or full-time summer. Neat
appearance, basic math sk ills,
scholarships available. $8.95. 969-5979,
8-Noon.
_____ __________ *
OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, year
round. Europe,. South America,
Australia, Asia. All fields. $900-2000
month. Sightseeing. Frbe info. Write
IJC, Box 52-AZ3, Corona Del Mar, CA
92625.
__________
PART-TIME sales manager and per
sonnel. Commission plus. Call 277*
2399.
______ ■
PART-TIME SALES clerks needed for
swim shops in Phoenix, Scottsdale,
and Mesa. Cal) Monday through Friday,
10-6,264-7774.
PART-TIME WORKERS needed for a
good cause: Babbitt for President
Committee needs phoners for after
noon and evening work. $4 per hour, up
to 24 hours per week. For more info,
call Tony at 956-6611.
_____
.
TEMPORARY POSITION open for
engineering student to assist in
mechanical design work on computer
peripheral project. To apply, call
279-2816.
H e lp W an ted
PHOTOGRAPHER NEEDED for ASU
Marketing Club event. For information
cali Ruth at 894-0899. ____________
PRESSMAN 9 unit Goss Community,
SC with balloon. Mechanical and
process color experience. $7.15/hour to
start. Gallup Independent, PO Box
1210, Gallup, NM 87301. (AZ-CAN)
SENIORS/GRAD students: Manage
on-campus marketing programs for
Fortune 500 companies. Excellent
business opportunity^ Call Campus
Dimensions, Gene or Michelle, 1-800592-2121.
__________
SPARE TIME Income; electronics, no
experience. Others. For more info, dial
504-6414)091, ext. 1060.7 days.
STUDENTS EARN $6 to $10 per hour.
Leads make our telemarketing easier.
4:30-9:00, M-F. South Scottsdale office
is close to campus. 947-0508.________
START EARNING money today selling
fashion jewelry, cosmetics, ladies
accessories, and more. Full, part-time.
No experience necessary. 998-7111.
EARN WHILE
YOU LEARN
$8/H O UR T O S T A R T
D uring 8-week
Training period
N o e x p e rie n c e n e ce ssa ry .
S e ll in d u s tria l to o ls an d
s u p p lie s fo r n a tio n a l firm .
R a p id
advancem ent
o p p o rtu n itie s.
WALK TO ASU
829-3190
WANTED: PART-TIME electrical en
gineer. Experience with sub-miniature
systems design and fabrication.
Flexible schedule and salary negotia
ble based on experience. Please
contact The Thunder Group at 991-5531
for ah appointment.
________
Instruction
TEMPE MARKET research firm needs
telephone interviewers evenings and
weekends, absolutely no sales. $4.00
per hour to start. 967*4441.
AEROBICS CERTIFICATION workshop
by National Aerobics Training As
sociation weekend of April 11 at ASU.
963-9415.
THE LOOP, a new fast food concept In
a totally authentic setting of yesteryear
Chicago. Needs male or female help
for 10 a.m.-4 p.m. weekday shifts. Can
be part-time. Apply daily, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
SW corner of Lemon and Terrace,
Tempe.
_____ _
SPIRITUAL DEVELOPMENT and ex
ploration group! Meets Thursday
evenings. $15. Call Sheryl, 966-8810.
THOMAS NELSON Corporation will be
hiring several personable, energetic,
goal-oriented students for summer
intern program. We offer hard working
students an opportunity to develop a
great resume and earn $4800, regard
less of major. On campus 3-30 and 3-31.
Call 234-6982 to arrange interview.
WAIT STAFF needed, Rockin' Freddy's.
Apply after 8 p.m. Wednesday through
Saturday. 222 S. Mill Ave.
MCI
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
—N OW HIRING—
PT telemarketing positions
available. Perfect hours for
Students, 5 p.m.-9:30 p.m. M-F,
$5/hr. + bonuses!
CALL NOW FOR DETAILS
246-1143
E0E ADIA
no fee
.
TheEmployment Pe n ile
SM
• Car pools available •
4/3
WANTED PART-TIME bartender and
part-time waitresses. Apply at the
W areho use
C a fe , 5444
East
Washington Street. 1 mile over Mill
Avenue bridge.
_____ _________ _
J e w e lr y
________
CASH FOR gold and diamonds. Mill
Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 104,
Tempe. 968-5967.
___________ _
L ost 9
F ound
ADS ARE FREE EVERYDAY!
We limit them to 20 words
and run them for two days.
Just call the STATE PRESS
classified department,
965-7572
LOST: 1985 East Anchorage class ring.
Reward offered. 784-9895.___________
LOST: RED suede artistry jacket at PE
West Bldg, on 3-18-87. Phone, 784-8237.
Miscellaneous
ON LEAVE fall semester? Rent your
home to a visiting lecturer (with one
wife, no children and impeccable
references) who will care for it. Ring
965-6719 (day) or 820-6393 (evening).
Motorcycles____
1978 HONDA Express for only $275!
Great condition and low mileage! Call
Jenifer, 267-8217.
¿
1980 SUZUKf 850L. Immaculate. 30,086
original miles.' Black, dressed, shaft
drive- $1100 OBO. 838-4345.
1983 HONDA XL185, low maintenance,
perfect student transportation. $400
includes helmet. Call Shannon, 9677476 evenings._______J_______
A N Y H RS A V A ILA B LE
S5-S10 Per Hour
Dlatamerica Marketing, the nation's finest telemarketing firm, is
now accepting applications for the following shifts:
12-5 p.m. 5-10:30 p.m. 6-10:30 p.m. Weekends
O ur salespeople work in a modern, comfortable business
environment contacting established customers on long distance
lines. Guaranteed salary or commission, whichever is greater and
averages $5-$7 an hour.
OUT Tempe office is located approximately 5 minutes from
xam pus.
Please call Dialamerica Marketing lor details.
1983 KAWASAKI GP2550, perfect
condition, 10xxx, Kerker, Metzler tires,
racing seat, best offer. Todd, 7844)439.
1984 80 HONDA scooter. Good condition. $595 or best offer. 899-6578._____
1984 YAMAHA RIVA 50cc, 149 miles,
excellent condition, $400. Tríela, 9685178.__________________
;
1986 NINJA 250R, 2000 original miles,
excellent condition, black and red,
$1700 includes accessories. 894-5451.
EASTER BUNNIES and camera
operators wanted for Los Arcos Mall.
Part-time, no experience needed. Call
966-6258.
,’
' / • ^
829-1140
ENJOY LOSING weight. No counting
calories, no hunger, no drugs, no
tasteless meals, doctor recommended.
I lost 35 pounds id 35 days! Call
Marlene, 714-592-1111: (AZ-CAN)
SECURITIES SALES
1987 KAWASAKI 250 Ninja, black and
red, 4800 miles, excellent condition,
$2100, CallQeorge, 964-9296.
The Stuart-James Company has opened offices in the
Phoenix area. W e are seeking highly motivated pro
fessionals who are ready to unleash their full earnings
potential. The Stuart-James Company is a growing
investment banking firm looking 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.
80 YAMAHA 250 Exciter. New chain,
front and rear sprockets, runs well.
$250 obo. 966-2946.________________
EXCELLENT INCOME for home as
sembly work. For Info, call 504-6461700. Dept. P-1308. (AZ-CAN)
FESTIVAL HELP wanted, April 3, 4, 5.
No phone called Apply in person
between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. weekdays
only. Hob Nob Thrift, 414 S. Mil).
FRY COOKS and lead cook wanted.
Call Paradise Bar and Grill or apply
within, 8294)606.
FUN ON the phone! 4:30-9 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. Start at $4 per
hour plus bonuses. Ask for Miss Yacks
after 1,921-9396.
FUN PART-TIME student job. Largest
company of its kind in Southwest.
Pleasant working conditions. Call, ask
forMr, Strickland, 9521-6495.
1986 XT350 ENDURÓ great condition,
red, white, Tots o f‘ power, 2400 miles,
$1700 obo. 966-7424.
Call Jean Wheeler for an appointment 248-8530.
’84 HONDA Elite 80 scooter, needs
work - new ignition. Price reduced, $450
OBO. JoA nn, 967-6560.
RED 1985 Honda Arrow 80. Low miles,
great condition, lots qf fun. $500 neg.
Call 947-0521 leave message or 8290029 after 6 p.m.
_________________
YAMAHA 400, 1981, 7000 miles, runs
good, excellent condition, $500. Call
921-1359.
STUART-JAMES INVESTMENT BANKERS
Investment Bankers
Member NASD SIPC
3/31
001 GREEKS- Today is the deadline for
next week’s Greek Review! Turn in your
photos tonight. Call 784-0210 for
details.
Statt Pro»
P e r s o n a l__________
ADOPT: EDUCATED, happily married
couple wish newborn. Can give love
and security. Let us help make this
difficult time easier for you. Con
fidential, legal. Call collect after 7 p.m.
and weekends. 212-535-6537. (A2-CAN)
ADOPTION: WARM, sensitive academ
ic couple wishes to welcome infant to
our loving home. Expenses paid. Legal
and confidential. Call collect, 607-2776262.
______________
AGD’S GRETCHE and Heather K.- Say
baby! I Luv SM, VM, EB, DS.
ALPHA
GAM M A
DeltaWe're
psyched!! Love, Dianna, Elizabeth,
Sharon, Vicki. ___________________
Page 31
Personal
Real E s ta te _______
Coll 24 Hours!
TDw Uma 4
IHotf
Recorded Gay Personal Ads
•
•
•
•
N ew A d s Daily
N o ‘CodecT Ads
A ll Phone Num bers
N o M em bership Fees
1-976-4 MEN
Dial 1-976-4636
First Min 55f/Ea Add I Min 45«
*••!—AfterNatenMgtotoday'sads
yeu*8 be able te place year ewnl
ALPHA PHI, Lambda Chi, Kappa Delta,
and Sigma Nul Greek Games is cornin'
up! Get ready to tear up that field! Your
coaches. Tina and Chris.__________ .
INTRODUCTION LINE where women
meet women, dial 1-976-WYMN. Gay
date line where men meet men,
1-976-3800.
ANOREXIA, BULIMIA, compulsive overeating. Private and confidential coun
seling. Gennie Monroe, ACSW
(recovered bulimic). 437-9420 or 2488204.
_________ _________
I TOOK it all off! 50 pounds in 2 months
and a ton of cellulite. Call Tonni
collect, person-to-person, I’ll tell you
how. Phoenix, 602-973-6228. (AZ-CAN)
ATTENTION ASU waterskiers: Does
the possibility of unlimited year round
sklng, in an environment which caters
to everyone from beginner to the
advanced competitor sound of extreme
interest? Where only competition ski
boats and experienced drivers will be
employed. Those with the desire to
start a permanent water ski club and
team, please call Arizona Water Ski
Association. 234-6657._______
1-976-TALK
AR IZO N A'S HOTTEST
LIVE PARTY LINE
$.95, first minute
$.45, each additional minute
TKE AM’S- May Friday night cause not
a fright and bricks be thiefed in the
night.________
•
TKE BIG bro Bob- McMahon must be
jealous, eh? What an arm on that guy!
TO ALL Alpha Gams- Your new pledges
'love you- Elizabeth, Dianna, Sharon,
Vicki.
T.S., I love you so much! Let’s make it
together! P.M. ____________ _____
U2, LIZA Minelli, Alabama, THowie
Mandell, and others. Rows 1-9. 8290196.
____________________
U2 TICKETS! Best seats, lowest prices,
floor and lower tiers. Call Marc,
391-0652. Both shows.
A Little Romance?
THE LOVE LINE
NEW CREDIT card! No one refused
Visa/Mastercard. Call 1-619-565-1522
ext. C23A2.24 hours.
PREGNANT? CONSIDER adoption. We
may be able to help with housing and
medical expenses. For pressure-free
counseling at no charge, call South
west Adoption Center, Inc., 602-2342229 or 1-800-423-2229.
SIGMA CHI Jeff Lepley: I am so glad I
got you for a little brother. It’s gonna be
a great year. Luv, your big sis.________
SIGMI CHI Mike D., do you think babies
drink tequila? Lynn._____ __________
BALLOON BOUQUETS... with Champagne, Corona» bunnies, cookies... and
more! Call Balloon Express for more
info... 968-44461
SINGLE? CALL Cupid’s Heartline at
$.60 per minute. Listen to personal ads,
then leave your own. We don't code
ads. 1-976-1000.
BIG BROTHER Joe Trevino: Get
psyched for the TEKE Olympics. Your
little bro P at._______ •
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Caucasian
couple (San Diego) looking to adopt
baby. We can give your child a good
home with much love and happiness.
Call Karen and Stu collect evenings
and weekends, 619-587-9761.
M o st e x c itin g w ay to
, m eet so m eo n e new.
1-976-6000
55« per minute
• A ll p h o n e n um bers
N o m e m b e rsh ip fee s
Free — after listening to
today's ads you w ill be
able to place you r own
C a ll 24 hours
Real Estate
ALAMEDA ESTATES: Price reduced to
$169,900. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2450
square feet, pool. Must sell. George
Cannon, OwnerAgent, Trade winds.
820-3333,966-4477,
DELTA SIGS Kevin, Steve, Eric, and
Gary: Boom, Boom, Boom, let’s go
back go our room so we can Padre all
nite, again. Spr. Break ’87 is one we’ll
never 4-get. “Sht. Happens.” Love,
Lisa, Laura, Paula, Linda, and Stacy.
A STEAL at $55,500. Owner loses, but
you can win with this 3 large bedrooms,
1Vi bath home in well-kept, quiet,
carefree townhouse community near
Price/Southern. Over 1320 square feet.
If you like a kitchen with lots of counter
space and room, generous storage,
this is it! A private, landscaped
covered patio leads out to your 2
covered parking spots. Low utilities,
easy maintenance, and .excellent
location are included. Call Melinda,
Tradewinds Realty, 820-3333,838-7428.
“ FOR PEP and vitality and lots of fun,
we can't beat the girls that we’re
among!” We're proud new AGD
pledges! I ______
-____________
BIKE TO ASU. Low down, no qualifying,
10% loan. Three bedroom, two bath
townhouse. A ll appliances, recreational facilities, security. 921-9904.
BYRON H ill What’s with all this
niceness lately? I know you’re up to
something no good. Pammy AKA
Penny.__________
BUY A 3 bedroom, 2 bath contemporary
condo for “a place of your own” .
Superb space, location, and asking
price at $83,900. Results confirmed by
an upcoming May '87 grad. Call for
info: Bobbye, 951-0413 evenings.
Giva the bars a braakl
Recordad Personal Dating Ads
BY OWNER, townhouse, Northwest
Phoenix. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool,
tennis, playground, $44,500. Good
deal! 992-4249 evenings and weekends.
CONDO: 800 square feet of living space
on University and Price. Only $35,900.
Call Rae Lynn, 893-2888, Realty
Executives.______________
Easiest ami Most Fun Way to
Moot Someone New..
DESPERATE, MUST sell this week! One
bedroom, one bath condo near ASU
West. Amenities include pool, spa,
BBQ, free air conditioning, and much
more!! $1700 down, $399 P&l. Call
Dennis Eaton, agent, 995-8876 or
owner, 997-8324._____ ______ ______ .
* N o M em bership F e a s
* N o'CodacT A ds
* A ll P hone Num borsl
1- 976-4000
First Min 66f/Ea Ackfl Mm 464
ENJOY LUXURY living. Close to
University. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths,
community pool, spa, tennis courts,
skylights and vaulted ceiling. $56,500.
Gerson Realty, 831-9535.
_______
•AllerMrtanMftoledey'teda
N W be «Me le piece peer ewnl
Cad 24 Hours!
g a y MEN, meet the valley’s best
conversation line (up to five callers at a
time), 1-978-6253. One on one confer
ence line, 1-976-4297. Gay Exchange,
the ultimate in gay introduction
services, 1-976-1100.________________
LAKE MEAD. Perfect weekend or
retirement getaway actually inside
Lake Mead National Recreation Area.
Spectacular views, trophy fishing,
minutes from Lake Mead and Grand
Canyon. Residential lots $6995 (from
$350 down, $85 month, 10-year 12%
APR). Homes or mobiles, paved
streets, utilities. Rapidly growing
community. Meadview Co. 1-800-2256928. (AZ-CAN)
___________
HAVE TWO tickets in section U1 for the
U2 concert April 3. W ill trade for two
tickets anywhere on April 2. Contact
Pet, 784-0860. ____________________
HERPES SUPPORT group for singles,
Tempe area. East Valley Group, PO Box
2710, Scottsdale, 85252._____________
HEY BRO, do you want to get stoned?
No, I’m for F.A.D. (Fraternities Against
' Drugs). Coming Friday l
__________
LOW, LOW down, was $65,000 now
$53,500.2 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath plus den
with wet bar. Great North East Mesa
location. Owners desperate, all offers
looked at. Call Century 21 Realty
Showcase 892-2000 or Toy 834-5862.
HEY! HAVE you heard the latest
F.A.D.? Fraternities Against Drugs.
Coming Friday.
HEY, MARK Hiland, importing some
California stuff, huh? You’re gonna get
some!
C L A S S IF I E D S D O IT.
^PORT FRIENDS ... .95 a call ... ... ....
Ii5 £ p !a y .... Join us!
FEMALE, NON-SMOKER wanted. 2
bedroom, 2 bath apt. near ASU. $230
month plus half utilities. Call Tammy.
833-0116.
_______ _
FEMALE NON-SMOKER, 2 bedroom, 2
bath apartment. $240 per month plus
utilities (Tempe.) Monday, Wednesday,
Friday. Work 966-4655, otherwise
966-7778, Lori._______ ____________ _
FEMALE NONSMOKER to share very
nice 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment.
Microwave, dishwasher, pools. Super
stition Park Apartments, Mill and
Freeway. $290 per month includes
utilities. Call 820-7377. ____________
MALE, OWN bedroom/bathroom, to
share luxury apartment Va mile from
ASU (Quadrangles) starting in May.
Just $230/month + ’/a utilities. Call
Tracy or Maureen, 829-3535.______ _
U2 TICKETS for sale. Six great first tier
seats. Call 947-1459 or 831*5642.
YOUNG SINGLES camping club being
formed, ages 18-30, to enjoy the
peaceful outdoors and meet new,
friends. 247-5181.
-------
TWO BEDROOM, 891 sq.ft, unfurnished
condo. Refrigerator, washer, dryer
included. Pool, tennis courts, 2 car
parking. $440 month, Nadine L., John
Hall and Associates, 948-0550 or
998*7437.
—
UNIQUE PASSIVE solar home needs
unique new owner. 4 bedroom, 2 bath,
solarium, patjo, large lot, citrus trees.
$90,000. Burke, 4020 Tierra Vista Dr.,
Lake Havaau City, AZ 86403. (AZ-CAN)
Transportation
Typing________
CARS AVAILABLE • 21 or older. All
States Drive-away, 992-5200._________
FREE ONE-WAY transportation to
Orleans, Cape Cod, Massachusetts for
safe driver to drive 1981 Toyota Wagon
in late March. Will provide AAA Triptic,
maps, fuel allowance. Car excellent
condition. References required. Andy,
953-5921, nine to nine._____________
Travel
CHICAGO OVER Easter, round trip
airline tickets. Departs Thursday 4-16,
returns Sunday p.m., 4-19. Three
tickets, $178 each, 266-1980.______
Typing_______ _
$1.50 PER PAGE. On campus. Grammar/punctuation corrected. Papers,
resumes, correspondence. 947-5200.
438-9202. OUR computer checks your
spelling, punctuation and grammar.
Editing help available. Costs a little
more, but your grade is worth it. APA,
MLA member. ______ ______ ______
A-T PROFICIENT typing. IBM Selectric.
Lorajne, -833-8365. At University and
Dobson in Mesa.
________
MALE/FEMALE, own bedroom, own
bath, washer, dryer, pool. $275, !6
utilities. 921-1879. Available now._____
A-1 WORD processing. Get your papers
and resumes laser word processed at
Kinko's, 933 E. University, Suite 108.
MALE/FEMALE, half block ASU. Own
bedroom and bathroom, (two bedroom,
two bath apartment.) Furnished, kit
chen, w/d, in complex, cable TV,
answering machine. $227.50 per month
plus half utilities. Includes rental
furniture. Available immediately. Call
Thane 967-7976, leave message.______
AAAA WORD processing. All papers,
resumes, theses. Prompt, accurate
service. Reasonable rates. Jodi, 9459790,839-6045.__________ ■ . .
Services
10% DISCOUNT: Bikini waxing re
gularly $15; electrolysis regularly
$33/hour. Through March 31, 1987.
About Face and Hair Design (a full
service salon) 1133 S. Dobson, 9692667.
CONTACT LENSES: Name brand re
placements and spares. Soft lenses
from $19.95 each. Fast service
nationwide. Eye Contact, 1-800-2552020 toll-free.____________
'
' •
AAA WORD Processing Service. Quick,
guaranteed, professional services.
Reasonable fees. Rush jobs ok. Color
graphic services available. Ron, 8335532, or leave message.__________
AAKURIT TYPING- Short papers, over
night/ long papers, prompt service/
transcribe tapes/ good rates. Linda,
831-0349.
_______
ACCURATE TYPING. Cheap too! Same
day service. MLA and APA. Caroline,
831-2434.
ACCELERLATED TYPING: Overnight
service for 5-10 pages; 24 hour service
for 20-25 pages. 838-1977.___________
ACCURATE TYPING: Research papers,
group projects, etc. Spelling corrected.
Quick turnaround. Linda, 838-6830.
CÁLL ME for fast, accurate, quality
service at competitive prices. Close to
ASU. 966-2186.
FAST, AFFORDABLE, accurate Word
processing. Pick-up and delivery
available. Call 860-6065 or 997-8569.
FORMER ASU staffers! Word Process
ing. Experience with APA, MLA and
other formats for dissertations, theses,
term, and research papers. Rates
quoted. Members NASS. Call Donna or
Joan, 945-6302 or 947-0402.
LETTER PERFECT Word Processing.
Rush jobs no problem. Dissertations,
term papers, resumes, theses. Quality!
839-9103.
NORTHWEST PHOENIX. Typing, word
processing, term, theses, resumes,
cover letters. Professional, fast, and
accurate. 439-1434.
C L A S S IF IE D S D O IT.
SAVE TIME, call me first. Word
processing- theses, dissertations, re
sumes. Professional typist. Mesa
Secretarial. 844-1876.
THE PAPERWORKS- Thesis, report,
and resume typing. IBM compatible
word processing. Near ASU. 921-9575.
TYPING, EXPERIENCED secretary with
own word processor. 6 years legal
experience for term papers; legal
memorandum; theses; dissertations.
Phone dictation available, rush jobs
welcome. Call Susan, 279-6897._______
TYPING SERVICES: Term papers,
manuscripts, resumes. 949-9196.
$1.25-62 per page. Overnight service.
WORD PROCESSING- Manuscripts,
legal documents, resumes, term
papers, and theses. Close to ASU.
438-8864.
________ ' :' .
WORD PROCESSING and typing ser
vice. Professionally typed term papers,
theses, manuscripts, and resumes. Will
do charts, graphs, and tables. Stored
on disc for fast, easy access. ASU
pick-up. Call Barb at 897-7212.________.
FINANCIAL AID is available. Nation
wide computer matching program
guarantees results. For details, write
JAS, 1705 14th St., #191, Boulder, CO
80302.
HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair
removed permanently by electrolysis.
Free consultation, located in Tempe.
Call Sharon at Desert Electrolysis
Center, 829-7829.__________________
F I N A N C I A L A ID ?
Before you spend money
to find money, see an ASU
Financial Aid Officer in
Matthews Center FIRST.
It won’t cost you a cent!
965-3355
’INCOME TAX • accounting. Over 9
years prior experience working for IRS.
Bob Soper, CPA. Phone 946-9192._____
MATH TUTORING- Beginning to ad
vanced. NW Phoenix and Tempe. Rick,
838-2901. $7/hour.
__________ :__
MATURE WOMAN available to house
sit for 1987-1988 school year. 866-9469.
MONEY, MONEY...Every year millions
of dollars of private financial aid go
unused. Let us help you tap in on these
vast resources. Academic financial
services guarantees at least 5 to 25
sources of private financial aid. A
special introductory offer of $35. Call
today! 967-6611 Academic Financial
Services.
FOR SALE: Luxury townhome in Los
Prados community, 13th St./Hardy.
This 2 bedroom, 1Vi bath can be yours
with only $5500 down to assume
nonqualifying loan. Priced at $71,000
(below builders current prices). Call
Melinda, Tradewinds Realty, 820-3333,
838-7428.
_______________^
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Jennifer! Hope you
have a totally super day. Delta love and
all mine, Patty.
_________________
$15 HOT tub special! You and a guest
can enjoy 2 hours in luxurious private
hot tub suite for only $15 Sunday*
Thursday with college ID. Fresh water
spa, waterbed, ceiling mirror, private
bath. Tempe Hot Tub Spa, 967-5636.
Roommate Wanted
FEMALE TO share three bedroom
house close to ASU. W/D, fenced back
yard, $200 plus 1/3 utilities. 966-1790.
JAMES: LOOK up, Vertigo. If the shoe
fits?! Is that it? Vered!
JAMES, YOU'RE a fabulous friendShuwa glad you’re my big brother
Vertigo!
______________
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U
repair). Delinquent tax property. Call
1-619-565-1657 ext. H23AZ for current
repo list.
________________
APRIL FOOLS’
AD CONTEST
T he fu n n iest ad in ou r sp ecia l
STALE MESS c la ssified sec tio n
w ill w in a STATE PRESS sw eatshirt!
W inner will be a n n o u n ced In April 1 STALE MESS.
You can place your ad 3 ways:
CALL: 9 6 5 - 7 5 7 2
COM E BY: Matthews Center Basement
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
or
our window in the MU
11 a m .-1 p.m.
STATE PRESS
APRIL FOOLS* AD ORDER
Name___ ____________ _________________
Phone________ ______________________
$1 for 15 words or less
lO t each additional word
Cash • Check • Visa • Mastercard
(Sony, no billing)
PREMIERE’S MAGICAL Hands for
fulfilling athletic massage. (Weightlifters’ Discount.) Phone: Certified
masseur, 279*2313. -______________
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE. Largest
library of information in U.S. - all areas.
Toll-free hot-line: 1-800-351-0222.
THE MARGARITAVILLE Duo plays
Jimmy Buffett's music for your party.
Rick Wheeler, 867*0259 or 867*9317.
WRITING HELP. Will edit papers, write
resumes. $10/hour negotiable. B.A. in
English. Jane, 967-3202.________ _
Transportation
ATTENTION: FREE cars to all major
cities. 21 or older. Call AAA Orlveaway,
277-9979.________________________
$
1.00
S I .10
$1.20
81.30
S1.40
$1.50
$1.60
81.70
$1.80
$1.90
Ad deadline is March 30 before 3 p.m.
Pase 32
State Press
W ednesday. M arch 2 5 ,1 9 8 7
SALE HOURS
SAVE 20% to 50% NOW! -r
Wed.-Fri. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30-9:00
Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30-6:00
Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12:00-5:00
—.>
•
TE N T S
HIKING BOOTS
Reg. SALE
Reg. SALE
N ORTH FA C E
VE-24
VE-23
BULLFROG
$425
$360
$310
PIVETTA
*299"
*249»
*199»
MUIR TRAIL
FLYTE
k—
$285
$270
$250
$210
$160
*209»
*189»
*169»
*149»
*109»
CAMPING ACCESSORIES
Everything you need to make
your trip complete and more...
•STOVES »FOOD »FUEL
•MOUNTAINEERING NECESSITIES
•HAMMOCKS «THERMAREST PADS
MINARET
PCT
SIERRA LITE
710-LADIES
SLEEPING BAGS
Reg. SALE
$60
$48
$38
*9»
*39»
*29»
$90
*19”
SUPERLIGHT
BLUE KAZOO
CAT’S MEOW
CENTAUR
MOHAVE
$240
$140
$128
$140
$98
*179»
*119»
*99»
*69»
*49»
KESTREL
GROUSE
$249
$169
*199»
*129»
1987 EQUIPM ENT
available for rent!
TENTS, SLEEPING BAGS, INTERNAL
& EXTERNAL FRAMEPACKS
---------
f
*
CLIMBING E0UIPMENT
CHOUINARD SNOW SHOVELS
CHOUINARD SKI POLES
*149»
*119»
*99»
*
RENTALS
NORTH FAC E
JA N SPO R T
$198
$160
$120
*43»
NEW BA LA N CE
Reg. SALE
D2
D3, D5
CASCADE
$79
HI-TEC
MARMOT
B ACK PACK S
*49»
VASQUE
JA N SPO R T
RONGBUK
LHASA HOTEL
MESA VERDE
YELLOWSTONE
GATEWAY
.... '
$100
30% OFF
30% OFF
WILD COUNTRY
#3.5,#4 FRIENDS
30% OFF
LATO K
N ORTH F A C E
TL-100
MORAINE
$200
$160
*129»
*99»
LOW E
UINTAH
APPALACHIAN
CONTOUR II, III
$165
$145
$129
*89»
*99»
*99»
TRI-CAMS
L O U W H IT T A K E R
•WORLD RENOWNED MOUNTAINEER*
S A T U R D A Y A F T E R N O O N , M A R C H 28
S L I D E S H O W • T H E H I M A L A Y A S • 7 P.M.
F R E E TO TH E P U B L IC
35% OFF
REG. SALE
FIRE
CLIMBING SHOES
$93
*79»
$16
*11»
KINNALOA
CHALK BAGS
•
HURRY! LIMITED TO ST O C K ON HAND!
MM
Ipine Ski & Sports
Layaw ay
CO R N ER BROADW AY & M cCLINTOCK, TEM PE * 968-9056