State press i A riz o n a State U n iv e rs ity T em p e, A rizona LGAU offered proposal to resolve ASU lawsuit H p By DARRIN HOSTETLER S tate Press é l ■ ÜSfil H .... . «** H m w .. . . . . ^ - i * íé ¡¡é HH V r W® • • J •'* & .... ::J¡j m m ■ ■ ■ Sources within A ssociated Students revealed Wednesday a “proposal” has been offered to the Lesbian and Gay Academic Union to resolve the LGAU’s lawsuit against the University. But Paula L. Ettelbrick, a lawyer with the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund which is representing the LGAU, said she is pursuing the case. Contacted at her office in New York, Ettelbrick called the actions of the ASASU Senate, who have repeatedly denied the LGAU funding, “ridiculous.” “I think it is unbelievable that a relatively sm all group of people (the senate) could deny funding to one group in the manner they have,” she said. “At this point, we have decided to go ahead with (thelaw suit).” The LGAU filed the lawsuit in federal district court Feb. 17, claim ing ASASU infringed upon the group’s constitutional rights to free speech, association, equal protection and due process by denying them funding. Ettelbrick admitted an offer to settle the lawsuit had been discussed between herself and ASU Legal Counsel Bruce Meyerson, but she declined to comment on the details. ASASU sources said the four-point proposal was drafted by Meyerson and contained the follow ing “ ideas for settlem ent:” •The office of legal counsel would conduct a legal education seminar for the ASASU Senate with an eye toward informing senators of their responsibilities, legal status and liabilities to avoid future “unconstitutional” senate actions. •ASU Vice President of Student Affairs Betty Turner Asher, with the advice of legal counsel, would “disapprove” any ASASU bylaw change that is “unconstitutional.” •Asher would “disapprove” an entire bill if the senate action was based on a bylaw deem ed “ unconstitutional” by legal counsel. ■ ■ All stacked up A IIs m C raft, 17, glance* ovsr the stack of books she has used throughout her College career at ASU. C raft w ill graduate M ay 15 w ith a bachelor’s degree In biology. See related story, page 16. •The University would host a forum on homosexual' problems. Meyerson could not be reached for comment. Campus Affairs Vice President LeeAnne Seall said if implemented, the annual legal sem inar would be an “indoctrination session.” “The administration sim ply wants to fund the gays, and they w ill find a way to (convince the senate) to do that,” she said. Executive Vice President Bridget Shelton said she feels “the adm inistration would be stepping (into student government) a little too much with the plan.” Meanwhile, the senate rejected two bills Tuesday night aim ed at funding the LGAU. Senate Bill 91, which would have provided $117 to the group for the film “Pink Triangles,” and Senate Bill 102, which furnished $312 for fall programming, encountered stiff opposition. College of Business Sen. John Colombo said: “By funding (the LGAU) we set a precedent, and it’s a precendent I’m not ready to set. “I’m not ready personally or on behalf of the the people I represent, the majority of whom are opposed to funding. “Homosexuality is not a behavior that is acceptable to give student funds to. It would be wrong to do so on behalf of the University community.” Colombo asked LGAU co-chair Denise Heap if she felt students would be “alienated” from attending the showing of “Pink Triangles” because a homosexual group was presenting it. “I think it is a pretty farfetched argument to say the nature of the group won’t keep students away,” Colombo said. Heap disagreed, saying only “closet homosexuals” are afraid to attend LGAU events. “ H eterosexuals have no problem attending our m eetings,” she said. The LGAU claim s the film is “an award­ w inning docum entary” about the Turn to ASASU, page 22. Official seeks funds for University investigation By VIC K IE CHACHERE S tats Prass PHOENIX — An Arizona Board of Itegents official is requesting that part of the state funds being considered for Gov. Evan Mecham’s inquiry into government spending be used to fund a separate board investigation. Sen. Jam es Sossaman, R-Higley, told a Senate Appropriations Com m ittee W ednesday • that regent Executive Director Molly Broad asked him to recommend that $500,000 of the money allocated under House B ill 2190 be used for the board’s own examination of university operations. The regents’ plan conflicts with Mecham’s plan because it allows regents to oversee the investigation while the governor’s plan forbids anyone with ties to state agencies to serve on his com m ission. HB 2190, which is on hold for at least two weeks, would allocate $1.5 m illion to set up Mecham’s com m ission to investigate spending in all state agencies. Mecham, along with Senate President Carl Kunasek and Speaker of the House Joe Lane, asked lawmakers to approve hinds to pay for an investigation into state spending. The regents voted to set up their own investiga ting com m ittee in March to “exam ine, assess and make recommendations that w ill promote excellence, efficiency and com petitiveness of Arizona’s universities with peer institutions.” Regent President Jack Pfister will oversee the board’s i n q u ir y , with other regents and community leaders serving on the commission. Donna Carlson, Mecham’s legislative assistant, said the universities, along with the remainder of the education system , w ill be included in Mecham’s com m ission regardless of the regents’ inquiry. She said the governor initially suggested that $1 m illion be used for the investigation but added another $500,000 to his request to handle the education investigation. “If we are going to get to the bottom of the university system , w e want people com pletely divorced from it,” Carlson said. “Perhaps they are lobbying on this bill because they don’t want this to happen. I don’t know what their motivation is.” Carlson said if Mecham’s inquiry is replaced by the regents’ own study, it would defeat the purpose of the investigation. “We really want a group of outside professionals looking into this, who have no ties to the university and no ties to state government at all, ” she said. “1 think it would defeat the purpose of an overall study if the money was diverted out and put under the control of the Board of R egents.” * Broad said the regents’ decision to create the task force was prompted by Mecham’s remarks about quality at ASU, NAUandUA. She said the board does not intend to replace Mecham’s investigation with one of its own, adding she expects the two examinations to uncover different problems at the universities. “It is our understanding that both studies w ill go on simultaneously and in cooperation with each other,” Broad said. “There is no intention to replace the governor’s com m ission.” s pRsaman said he w as surprised that Broad approached him about the inquiry since m ost state agencies are not “overjoyed” about any kind of investigation. “My sixth sense — the one you develop when you spend a lot of tim e at the Legislature — is that state agencies do not look forward to this type of com m ission com ing in and taking them apart piece by piece,” he said. M«cham told the State P ress Wednesday morning that he did not think the regents could be com pletely objective investigating university operations. “I am just looking at the human tendency,” M echam said. “I don’t think the regents can conduct the study because it tilts it. Just as it would anybody.” «i / inside today DOUQ ANDERSON The professor has been appointed director of the journalism and telecommunication' School. Page 3. ASU WEATHER Clear skies today with an expected high of 93 degrees. The expected low is 65. C la ss ifie d ........... .......... . . . . . . ____ 30 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . ___ ____ . . . 15 O p in io n ............... .. 4 Police report ........... ........ . . . . . . 9 Sports ......... .............................. 23 T o d a y ...................... . . . ............ .. 2 today Meetings •Society pf Hispanic Professional Engineers will meet *Libertate Omnibus w ill m eet at noon in the MU Navajo Room for election o f new officers and to discuss the ASASU election and com plaints. •Real Estate Association w ill m eet at 4:45 p.m. in the Business A dm inistration Building, Room 241 for a general club m eeting. •University Toastmasters w ill m eet at 5:15 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. The topic of business w ill be elections fo r new officers. •Public Relations Student Society w ill m eet at 5:30 p.m. in the MU Turquoise Room for an awards reception. Everyone is welcom e. at 6 p.m. in the Engineering Center G-Wing, Room 347 for elections fo r next year’s officers. •MEChA-Movlemento Estudiantil de Aztlan will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU, Room 210 for elections for fall officers. This w ill be final m eeting of the semester. •The Arizona Outing Club w ill hike to Fossil Springs near Payson. They w ill leave Friday at 6 p.m. from the Burger King and return Sunday. For more information, call Bob Krauth at 375-1206. le lH Lectures •ESP offers a “Tim e Management for Finals” seminar at 12:40 p.m. in W est H ail, Room 219. •Department of Communication presents “ Literary Theatre," at 4 p.m. at M itchell School Theatre, located at Ninth and M itchell streets in Tem pe. C orrection A March 24 story about President J. Russell Nelson’s rejection of an ASU holiday honoring M artin Luther King Jr. incorrectly reported Gov. Evan Mecham rescinded the state holiday the day he assumed office. Mecham actually signed the recission order one week after taking o ffice. The State Press regrets the error. 1i Breaking a sweat Purchasing em ployee D ean Davie returns a volley Irom P h y s ic a l P la n t e m p lo y e e Roger Cobb at the racketball courts near the bookstore Wed­ nesday afternoon. StephanMountMr/State Pratt m ■ III % T kE H I s O e a t n .. 0 0 0 At The Commons On Lemon! Get your OWN BEDROOM this summer while you enjoy the ultimate collegiate student lifestyle! Deposits are now being accepted on a first come, first serve basis. Hurry and reserve your space now and receive a free Commons t-shirt. Ask about our special summer rates! THE CO M M O NS' STATE PRESS r Arizona’s Seventh Largest Daily T-SHIRT SALE STATE PRESS T-SHIRTS AND SWEATSHIRTS ARE ON SALE NOW T-SHIRTS $5 SWEATSHIRTS $10 HIGH QUALITY 50% COTTON/50% POLYESTER REM Real Estate Management Corporation 1215 East Lemon Street CALL (602) 968-6437 or OUT OF ARIZONA (800) 247*6141 S-M-L-XL A VAILABLE IN WHITE - MAROON - BLUE GREEN - ORANGE - RED - GREY - TAN - YELLOW Stop by the STATE PRESS office in Matthews Center basement between 8 a.fn. 5 p .m .. . . and bring your friends! State Press Page 3 Thursday, April 30,1987 Provisional reaccreditation suggested for school By b e n M c C o n n e l l Stata Press À advisory com m ittee has recommended the Waiter Cronkite School of Journalism and T elecom m unication be given provisional reaccreditation, and ASU officials are fighting the recommendation. The final decision w ill be handed down May4. A provisional reaccreditation would be sim ilar to the College of Business’s recent provisional reaccreditation. Earlier this month, the A m erican- A ssem bly of Collegiate Schools of Business ruled the College of Business m ust im plem ent-new policies within one year to keep its accreditation. The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Telecommunication would have to satisfy the recom m endations of the Am erican Council on E ducation in Journalism and Mass Communications within one year. Jack Kinsinger, ASU’s vice president for Academic Affairs, said the University is “dickering” with the ACEJMC and wants full accreditation for the Cronkite school. He said an internal seven-year plan to provide greater m onetary resources through the ASU Foundation should rule out a provisional accreditation decision. The provisional recommendation comes from the ACEJMC com m ittee, according to Suzanne Shaw, an ACEJMC member. The com m ittee makes its recommendation to the group’s council, which begins its m eeting in New York City today. Shaw said the 35-member council will decide the accreditation fate of 20 journalism schools in the country. The council m^kes one of three decisions on each school’s accreditation: full accreditation, provteional accreditation or loss of accreditation Shaw said the council can accep t th e c o m m it t e e ’s recommendation for each journalism school or it can make a different, final decision. Kinsinger said the internal plan is going through final formations, and he declined to provide details. Eldean Bennett, ASU’s Walter Cronkite S ch ool of J o u r n a lis m and Telecommunication chairman, said the AECEJ reaccrediting team , in its report, recommended the school add two or three full-tim e faculty positions and reduce the number of part-time faculty. The report also recommended the school provide additional equipment for student use, he said. But Bennett said speculating about the v a lid it y o f th e c o m m it t e e ’s recommendation should remain with the group’s council. “The council can go any way they want,” he said. “Any story would be com pletely premature.” Currently, nearly 1,100 students are enrolled in the school. Bennett said a majority of the school’s problems stem from a large infusion of UA students sev era l years ago. UA’s broadcasting dean left the school, and the program crumbled, he said. “The rules for journalism schools are always changing,” Bennett said. Journalism instructor appointed director of school Dr. Douglas A. Anderson, an ASU journalism instructor for eight years, has been appointed to head the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Telecommunication, a University official said Wednesday. Jack Kinsinger, vice president for Academic Affairs, said Anderson’s appointment as director w ill be forwarded for May approval by the Arizona Board of Regents. If approved, he will assum e the post July 1. Kinsinger praised Anderson as an “excellent instructor and a very bright m an.” “Doug has been offered positions sim ilar to the one w e’ve offered, so we’re very lucky to get him ,” he said. “He was the best candidate, and I’m very optim istic for him .” Anderson said he is “very, very pleased” by the appointment, adding, “I’m excited to be working with good teachers, a good group of students and an administration committed to provide us with good resources. ” Anderson will succeed Eldean Bennett, who is stepping down as department chairman. Bennett said he w ill take a fall sem ester sabbatical to Africa, then return to full-tim e teaching. “I think Dean Bennett has really done an excellent job the last eight years,” Anderson said. Anderson also w ill appoint a deputy director to assum e assistant director duties July 1. The addition of that position “really complements the work Dean has done,” Anderson By T h * Associated Press Charity food service to ban ‘Deadheads’ SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — A charity kitchen that serves about 200 needy people a day has banned groupies of the Grateful Dead rock band. “They obviously don’t want to work, and they don’t want to change,” Said Michael Grabianowski of the St. Francis Catholic Kitchen. Grabianowski said the so-called “Deadheads” have money to spend and “just try to find places where they can eat for free.” said. The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Telecommunication has “a solid foundation,” Anderson said, adding the school deserves further promotion and recognition. With an endowment fund, Anderson said he hopes to establish a faculty chair to attract distinguished journalists to teach for a sem ester or half a sem ester. Anderson was managing editor of the Hastings D aily Tribune in Hastings, Neb. for two years. He also has published six textbooks, which are used extensively in the journalism department. — b e n M cC o n n e l l He said as many as 100 fans eat free lunches at the kitchen when the San Francisco band plays in the area. The ban is to start May 11, when the food service organization begins its sixth year of operation. The Grateful Dead is to play at Laguna Seca on May 9. Kitchen director Peter Carota said last week he will interview diners to ensure that the kitchen is helping the truly needy. Volunteers at the kitchen should have little trouble identifying the Deadheads. FABULOUS FUTONS AT UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS TRUCKLO AD SALE! 2 DAYS ! Sat. & Sun., M ay 2 & 3 AT OUR MESA STORE 1840 w. southern Ave., Mesa (Across fro m M esa com m , college) STUDIO SLEEPER W ITH FUTON! BRAZILIAN A-FRAME BLACK LACQUER COMPLETE! FUTONS Reg. $409 includes Futon! by ZENKURA SLEEP SHOPS OPEN: Mon.-Fri. 11-8 • Sat 11-6 • Sun. 11-5 THE SAMURAI CONVERTIBLE WITH FUTON (unfinished) COMPLETE! Remember, our other adver­ tised specials still honored In both stores — a ll WEEK! MESA: 1840 w. Southern Ave. 962-0021 Phoenix: 509 E. cameiback Rd. 263-8866 AnrII State Press 1ÛB7 Potpourri of political issues deserving of critique At the end of our fraternity m eetings, we have a tradition. It’s knows as “rags and roses.” People receive a “rag” for something poorly dime, while a “rose” is given for something good. I w as planning on listing all the rags and roses when I realized how few things are deserving of a rose. So instead, here is my laundry list of a ll the things I’ve just been wanting A* MflfCUS BntOVtCn tosay Columnist . . . Why do m ost of the members of the radical groups on campus seem to look like 1960s throwbacks? It seem s like they could get a little more respect and sympathy if they made an effort to be reasonable. But 1 guess they are too busy looking for a reason, to put down the “im perialist U.S. governm ent.” In reality, they have a brilliant disinformation cam paign. I am also sure com rades Gorbachev and Ortega appreciate it. As Ho Chi Mihn once said about Vietnam,. “We w ill not win (the war) in the field of battle, but in the streets of Am erica.” Maybe som e of those people should sit back and think about what they are doing. • • • Then there alw ays seem s to be som e new left-wing cause. This year it is Evan Mecham. Now, I am sure there are some people out there with justified com plaints, but m ost students have a hard tim e expressing them. I wonder if that is because they really don’t know the issues. 1 had a person say to m e, “E v’s a car dealer, that’s where he belongs.” should realize that he is just making their totalitarian state more efficient. V The next president should also continue to push for the Strategic Defense Initiative research. F irst, it is not a specific violation of the 1972 ABM treaty (which the Soviets have already violated). Secondly, it w ill play a vital role in our future defense, either as a bargaining chip or a space shield. ............. ■ ^ , • Now, nowhere in the Arizona Constitution does it exclude car dealers. Our whole country was founded by a group of non-politieos. There is just nothing worse than being against someone just because everyone else is. • f- • • Another issue that I w ary, about on campus is Acquired Immune D eficiency Syndrome. A recently released report stated that as many as 80,000 people in Arizona may have the deadly virus and not know it. Right here cm campus, three people are known to be affected by the disease. Shouldn’t their names be released? The whole issue of privacy becom es null and void when they are shaking the very foundations of it. Society cannot go on without people. AIDS is obviously a public risk. When people have m easles and other deadly diseases, they are quarantined. Why shouldn’t AIDS victiiiis? -■ ' .■ • • • I think the next president is going to have to deal carefully with the Soviets. Those who point to Gorbachev’s reforms letters . Who w ill be the next president? I don’t think there are too many quality candidates on either side. H ie Democratic front-runner, Gary Hart, w ill run into credibility problems. I can see the South backlashing against him because he is tying him self in too tightly with the “Hollywood Crowd.” I think Bruce Babbitt is the Dem ocrats’ best man, but he has a charisma problem. On the Republican side, Alexander Haig and Jack Kemp would probably be the best choices. The public might have trouble adjusting to them, though. Keeping that in mind, George Bush or Robert Dole might take it. But no m atter what, Elizabeth D ole w ill be the next vice president. Egad, a woman second in charge of the greatest country in the world? Thank goodness Mrs. Dole is capable of handling it.. A. Marcus Brnovich is a junior m ajoring in political science. O f When the humanist looks at a text, he asks: what is behind it? The poet cries: let m e tell you a story; let m e tell you about the world that is in front of the text, the world that is the text. When we talk about what lies behind a text, we are trying to control the truth. We are suggesting that there is another truth that gives us something to hang onto in certitude, that this “behind of” truth is more important than the text. Our great temptation is to assum e that what we find underneath or behind is an absolute. The poet w ill not let us get away with that. She gives us another text. She says, no, there is m ore than certitude and control, let m e tell you the truth. The poet is a voice of freedom and survival. Most of life, even in a university, is lived in captivity to methods, greed and preconceptions. The poet tells m e that there in a dignity to everyday human existence. The loves and com m itm ents of people living in trial and error, suffering and childbirth, accidents and dream s, cry out like freedom itself. Life is so much bigger than our efforts to control it. If w e are dedicated only to certitude, we give up our efforts to control - it. If we are dedicated only to certitude, we give up freedom . It is better to survive without certitude than to live without freedom. There is such a thing as imagination. It is what m akes m e free. Without it, reason enslaves us; with it, reason constructs a livable world for a ll humanity. Without the poet, life is left in the hands of controllers. Without the poet, life is m ere function and record. Without the poet, greed is sanctified and the world appeals to our , low est qualities. I celebrate the parable of our Pulitzer poet. 1 hope the presence of one so honored w ill recreate the University as a community of understanding. We have enough of processed information and the fragm ented functionalism that sets one department, school and college against another. Management is not the m easure of a university; it is the mark of its death. Richard Ev Wentz Professor, Religjous Studies JB N 8 6 6 f lU > H t ®>0U MUiT SHOW UP IN OPP02-TO RM5A OA45. ©R9RK.RIND5 AK- NOT A v ia ute sn ack Alt er n a t iv e . ® IT W ES AT LEAST M ÛUARTER5 Tb ray A LOADOF LAUNDRYJW m e «Offe ® eeeg. & ® mp4 a rau£. Afte a raufr. ® SIDEWALKS ARE non REFERRED TO AS * MAU.5*. < £ S « if* TRUE WHATTHEY5A/, ^ COUE&e 15THE «AT 9EVEM YEARS OF Vt»UR UFE!. & ¡S k s= - LETTER POLICY Letters should be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages. Any submissions not in adherence with letter policy will not be published. Letters are subject to editing on the basisof clarity, length or conform ance to new spaper style. include your full ñame, class standing and major, or other affiliation with the Upiversity, along with your phone number. Requests for anonymity are granted if a reason is given. Bring letters to the new spaper's front desk in the basem ent of M atthew s Center. Picture I.D. is required. TOM BLODGETT Editor Strike one Editor: It was with amusement that I read about D ale Johnson’s demonstration of the current arms race in the April 9 State P ress. Johnson poured gasoline on the ground, stood in its m idst and brandished a box of m atches. “Im agine that each side holds a box of m atches. Either side could light the m atch that would destroy both sid es,” he said. A couple of questions for Johnson. Why does he apparently infer that the United States would strike the m atch first? If the • ; m e I IfARMEDIM COLLEGE: A parable named Rita Dove Editor: The award of the Pulitzer Prize for poetry to our colleague, Rita Dove, confronts the local academ ic realm s with a parable, the parable of poetry itself. Professor Dove is a parable in our midst. Of course, a parable is not a moral tale, as is so often assum ed. A parable is a delegitim izer of controls. It com es as a surprise and overthrows expectations. It tells us that things are not as we want them to be, not as they appear to be. A parable informs us that the opposite of our assumptions may be true, that those truths and methods which we give so much authority are fragile indeed. We made them up— the m ost functional and “scientific” of them. Poetry exists in this utiltitarian society as a form of protest. Who reads poetry anymore? Who hears the voices of protest? So very few. But a Pulitzer Award. The Award informs us that someone reads the protest and says it is worthy o f attention. The Pulitzer poet in our m idst is a reminder that the standards of certitude and control on our society are not absolute. H ie governor m ust face the poet in her corner. The legislators m ust listen to the voice. The corporate and business world m ay take notice; and the com placent academ icians m ay find them selves in disarray. The very existence of the poet poses many questions. You cannot m easure a university by the standards of business, or even by the standards of government. There m ust be an institution in our society that is relatively free of evaluation by records, controls, productivity and work ethics. The poet reminds us that the University m ust be such an institution. There must be public support for a free institution that challenges the very axiom s upon which government end business are based. The poet tells Us: we are h ereto face the truth; we bring no homage to success or scientific pride. We m ust think and feel and break asunder the chains of power, a We live ordinarily in a world where certitude is honored. We keep records, devise methods and regulate existence. • United States is predisposed to light the first match, why didn’t we do so soon after World War H when only the Soviet Union was standing in the puddle of gasoline and we stood a safe distance with the world’s only box of m atches? Even if his analogy is a correct one, is the United States then i m p r u d e n t to attem pt to build a device that would blow out a lit Soviet match before ft hit the puddle of gasoline? Alan J, Tindell ANOREA HAN Managing Editor City Editor ................. Asst City Editor......... New t Editor.. Opinion Editor.......... Asst Managing Editor Photo Editor , , 1 . ; .,. , Asst Photo Editor. . . . Sports Editor............ Asst. Sport* Editor .. . Copy CM af.. Arts E ditor................ Asst Arts E ditor....... Analysis Editor . . . . . . ...............KARI BLAND ....... KIM MATTINGLY . . . . . . . TRACY SCOTT , PATRICK J, KUCERA a m y f r is c h k n e c h t .. ANDYMROZINSKi -----RON KUQZEK JR . . . . . . . . . BOB HBLER . . . . STEVE BRENNAN . . . CATHY CZAGANY .. .KHALI CRAWFORD . GREGORY R KRZOS ......... ED SCHUBERT Sports Analysis Editor DEAN ÛBENAUER Tha State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15. Arizona State University, Tampa, AZ 85287. Newsroom: 985-2292. Advertising & Production: 965-7572.■ • Ip P W - 1 The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. Tha newsand views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of tha ASU administration, faculty, staff or «tudent body. a n a ly s is Siate fiat Thursday, April 30,1987 Page 5 R ita D o ve A S U P u litz e r la u re ia te d is c u s s e s h e r p o e m s ’ im a g e ry R ita Dove, recently awarded the P ulitzer P rize for poetry, m et with State Press w riters D avid M iller and Ed Schubert to discuss her prize, her poetry and her life. The poem s discussed are reprinted on this page. State Press: What is your favorite poem, that you’ve written? PARSLEY I. The Cane Fields There is a parrot imitating spring in the palace, its leathers parsley green. Out of the swamp the cane appears to haunt us, and we cut it down. El General searelics for a word; he is all the world there is. Like a parrot imitating spring, Dove: As a single poem, I think I like “P arsley” a lo t— maybe because it took me so damn long to write and it resisted me for a long tim e. It’s a political poem and it’s . . . an attem pt to get into the head of a very evil person. In this poem one of the basic problems w as that I had the event from the beginning. In 1957 the dictator of the Dominican Republic, Rafael Trujillo, had ordered 20,000 Haitian blacks who worked in the cane fields — they used to com e across the border — to be killed. And the way he differentiated between the Haitians and the Dominicans is that the Haitians spoke a dialect of Spanish in which they did not roll their “R s,” but instead it cam e out as an “L.” So he chose the Spanish word for parsley (perejil) and had them each speak it. When it cam e out as an “L” rather than an “R ,” he had them executed. we lie down screaming as rain punches through ' and we come up green. We cannot speak an R— out of the swamp, the cane appears and then the mountain we call in whispers Kaialina. The children gnaw their teeth to arrowheads. There is a parrot imitating spring. El General has found his word: perejil. Who says it, lives. He laughs, teeth shining out of the swamp. The cane appears in our dreams, lashed by wind and streaming. And we lie down. For every drop of blood there is a parrot imitating spring. Out of the swamp die cane appears. 2. The Palace Stoplwi HoiUMr/Stoto l»w When I read of this . . . I was just m e. I was just going to follow it to the end. com pletely blown away. F irst of all, there I was working with the idea of a primer as was the sheer number of people killed—and . som ething which in elem entary school is then to have them pronounce their own supposed to teach you the standards of life, death sentence. I didn’t know what I was even though it’s ostensibly supposed to teach you som ething else, like how to read. Prim er for the N uclear Age A t the edge o f the m ariner’s m ap is w ritten: "Beyond th is p o in t lie M onsters.” S om eone left th e lig h t on in the pantry— there’s ; a Skull in there o n the sh e lf When I w as going to school, the kind of readers that w e had w ere “A lice and Jerry,” with A lice and Jerry and their dog Spot. A lice was blond and Jerry had light brown hair, and they w ere these great little white kids and they had this dog and everything was fíne and they were always well-dressed, except that Alice’s socks were .alw ays falling down. This is what we picked upsublim inally: this is our America. that talks. B lue eyes in the air, b lu e as an id io t’s. A ny fear, any Now, in doing (“Prim er for the Nuclear Age” ), I was trying to create an alternative with the kinds o f sym bols happening in our own age of uncertainty, with the threat of total annihilation. m em ory w ill do; and if y o u ’ve g o t a heart a t a ll, som eday it w ill k ill you. Itstartsoff: “At the edge of the mariner’s map is written: ‘Beyond this point lie M onsters.’ ’’ We used to think about m onsters and falling off the edge of the going to do with this, but I put it into my notebook. Promises It haunted m e so much that I kept trying to find a way into it, to try to understand. E ach h u rt sw a llo w e d is a sto n e. L a s t w o r d s w h isp e re d to h is d a u g h te r a s he p la c e d h e rfin g e rtip s lig h tly in to th e p a lm q fh e r g ro o m . I suppose what m akes it a favorite poem of m ine is that— all the stuff that happens in term s of hofer he thinks up how to kill them is im aginary. Who knows why he chose the word parsley? What I was trying to do w as ; find a parallel: som e way of getting into this guy’s head so you felt like you knew him, and to be a little horrified to even kind of understand why he did this. Those are all difficult things to try to work out, and it took m e a long tim e to w rite it. (In discussing another of her poem s, “House Slave,” Dove elaborated on the a r t. of combining poetic beauty with politicar horror:) I. think one of the things I w as doing ih flus poem, too, was to m ake the poem beautiful at the sam e tim e it was talking about something very horrifying. It becom es more; horrifying when the vessel it’s poured intois lovely. The thing that m akes P icasso’s “Guernica” so absolutely horrifying is that ; it’s beautiful. State Press: to going through your work, one poem that was really striking was “Prim er for the Nuclear A ge.” Could you explain it? Dove: Well, this is a poem which started to bits and pieces, and as I w as writing it, I w asn’t sure exactly where it w as leading She sm ile d u p w a r d s to J e su s, th e n T h o m a s, p a r tin g h e r b a c k a s p o lite ly as: p o s s ib le . I f th a t w e re th e c a se he w a s a m o u n ta in a f sh a m e . P o is e d o n th e sto n e s te p s o f th e ch u rch , sh e tr ie d to fo r g e t ■his H ulk in th e v e stib u le , c lu m sy in b la g serg e, h is fin g e r s w o r r y in g th e lu c k y b e a d in h is p o c k e t B en eath th e a ir b o r n e b o u q u e t w a s a m e a d o w c f v irg in s u rg in g Be w a ter, b e lig h t. A d e e p b r e a th , a n d sh e p lu n g ed th ro u g h su n b e a m s a n d k is s e s , ric e d ru m m in g th e b o th -o f th em b lin d . world, and in a certain way, we don’t know any more than that now. Beyond the nuclear age, w e just don’t know; w e’re all guessing. The im ages are more surrealistic than to a lot of m y poems. Scary, nightmare im ages: the skull on the shelf, toe blue eyes. Whereas blue eyes are usually considered the ideal to America, here they’re vacant and frightening. I wanted to get across this sense of paranoia. ' What’s the underside of the nuclear age? It’s that anything can kill you, even your own heart, so you don’t care about things, to a way what I’ve said is: This is where w e’re at today. State Press: The poem that’s been quoted most often is “ Prom ises,” from Thomas and Beulah, the collection of poems based on thè lives of your grandparents for which you actually won the Pulitzer. Could you talk about that poem, and also a little about your grandparents? Dove: “Prom ises” is from Beulah’s section; it’s her wedding poem — what she’s thinking'aS she’s getting married. I always felt that moment — there’s a feeling that m akes m e cringe — the moment of having a father hand you over to a husband and say, “She’s yours.’’ I mean, you’re really a piece of property being handed over. This is the moment that rarely gets talked about after toe wedding. You talk about what toe m arriage was like, what the wedding was like, toe ring and the cake and so cm. But what goes through your head right at this moment? to a way, it’s a moment that’s supposed to be a very happy moment, but there’s that gray area. It’s a moment when cages start shutting down again, too, on a political level. She’s delivered over to the husband. Jesus is sm iling down on her; another patriarch is sm iling down on her; And then she’s supposed to throw the bouquet to the virgins, who want her to be light and buoyant You go through the rice, and here starts this new life. You have to enter blind; you don’t know what it’s going to be like. I Drink (my grandparents) did a pretty good job of it. It’s a very, very uncomfortable moment, that moment at the altar. State P ress: Your grandparents m ust have fascinated you. . Dove: Well, yeah. They were great. I mean, they told stories and they were kind. F o r about a year after my grandfather died — I w as in my teens — I would spend Friday nights over at my grandmother’s house. I T he word the general's chosen is parsley. It is fall, when thoughts turn to love and death; the general thinks of his mother, how she died in the fall and he planted her walking cane at the grave and it flowered, each spring stolidly forming four-star blossoms. The general pulls on his boots, hr stomps to her room in the palace, the one without curtains, the one with a parrot in a brass ring. As he paces he wonders Who can I kill today. And for a moment the little knot of seteams is still. The parrot, who has traveled alF the way from Australia in an. ivory cage,-is, coy as a widow, practising spring. Ever since the morning his mother collapsed in the kitchen while baking skull-shaped candies for the Day of the Dead; the general has hared sweets. He orders pastries brought up for the bird; they arrive dusted with sugar on a bed of lace. The knot in his throat starts to twitch; he sees his boots the first day in battle splashed with mud and urine as a soldier b ib at his feet amazed— how stupid he looked!— at the sound of artillery. / never thought it would sing the soldier said, and died. Now the grneral sees the fields of sugar cane, lashed by rain and streaming. He sees his mother's smile, the teeth gnawed to arrowheads. He hears die Haitians sing without R’s as they swing die great machetes: Kaialina, tliey sing. Kataliita, mr motile, mi amol en muelte (rod knows his modirr was no stupid woman; site could roll an R like a queen. Even a jxirTot can roll an R! In die bare room the bright feathers arch in a parody of greenery, as the last pale crumbs disajiprar under the blackened tongue. Someone calls out his name in a voice so like his modier’s. a startled tear splashes die tip of his right boot. Afy mother, m y love m death. The. general remembers the tiny green s|aigs men of his village wore in their capes to honor the birth of a son. He will order, many, diis time; to be killed for a single, beautiful word. “Primerforthe NuclearAge“and“Parsley"amreprintedfrom “Museum," copyright 1M3 and “Promisee” la reprinted from "Thomas and Beulah,” copyright 1Mt, by permteelon of the author. slept with her and then went to the store with her on Saturday. It becam e a part of a routine. I loved it. It w as a totally different world, but a very fam iliar one. State Press: What inspires you to w rite a poem? Dove: It’s different every tim e, I just try to stay very curious. And I keep a notebook. So what happens is that when I see something, I write it down. I don’t ask m yself what I’m going to use it for, w h a tit m eans, or anything like that. It could be ' anything: an overheard conversation, som eone walking down the m all who has a very interesting face — so I want to try to describe it. So the sam e tilings inspire me. It’s life. It's all of life. Turn to DOVE, pao* 11. Paseó Slate frag« 1987 Hahn treated for stomach, chest pains, friend says p.m ., said another friend, Barbara Bencivenga, who drove her to the medical center. Hahn had been scheduled to appear on ABC-TV’s “Nightline” program Wednesday night, but her appearknce was canceled after she was taken to the clinic. “Jessica got very sick because of what they w ere saying in the paper, that she was begging for m oney,” said Bencivenga, who lives in the bottom half of the two-story house where Hahn occupies the top floor. “She was crying hysterically, she just said it wasn’t fair they should do this to her. By The Associated Press WEST BABYLON, N.Y. — Jessica Hahn, whose sexual tryst with evangelist Jim Bakker touched off a religious controversy, was treated by a doctor Wednesday for pains in her chest and stom ach, a friend said. The 27-year-old former church secretary was taken to Omni M edical Group clinic in Lindenhurst then was sent home and told to rest, said the friend, who asked not to be identified. Hahn began vomiting about 7:30 p.m. and was taken to the doctor shortly before 9 “What she was trying to say was that money was not the issue and that she wanted peace,” Bencivenga said, referring to a news conference Hahn held Tuesday in front of her home. At the news conference, Hahn said she was angry at those who accused her of releasing information about her tryst with Bakker, who stepped down from the PTL presidency when the encounter became public in March. Some $265,000 in PTL money had been set aside for Hahn, $150,000 of it in a trust fund, to ensure her silence about the encounter with Bakker. Attorney Norman Roy Grutman, counsel for the PTL board, said the m inistry no longer would make the monthly payments because her public talk about Bakker violated the provisions of the payments. Bencivenga said the continued news about the PTL controversy had taken a toll on Hahn. “She’s been under tremendous pressure, and it’s with the grace of God that she’s held up this long,” Bencivenga said, adding that Hahn had to be carried up the stairs to her apartment after she was treated. C om m erce D e p a rtm e n t M ain e co n o m ic gauge rose in M a rch B y The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The government’s main economic forecasting gauge rose a moderate 0.4 percent in March, the fifth advance in the past six months, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. H ie Reagan administration said die increase was consistent with its belief that the economy w ill perform at a much faster pace this year, but private econom ists w ere not as upbeat, with som e citing rising recession fears. The gain in the department’s Index of Leading Indicators matched a revised 0.4 percent increasein February. In another report, the government said housing sales fell 3.6 percent in March to an annual rate of 699,000 units. The median price of a new home shot up to a record $101,500, a gain analysts blamed in part to demand outstripping supply in the Northeast and California, two hot sales areas. For the entire country, home sales this year w ere 11.8 percent lower for the first three months of this year than during the sam e period of 1986. With the sharp, jump in mortgage rates in April, analysts expressed concern that this trend would continue. White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater called the rise in the leading index “good news” and said, “The March figures indicate continued economic growth and portend economic health for the next few months. ” ’ Commerce Undersecretary Robert Ortner said the increase was consistent with the administration’s forecast for overall economic growth this year, as measured by the gross national product, of 3.2 percent. But private econom ists said they saw nothing in the new figures to make them change their forecasts for continued sluggish GNP growth this year. The GNP expanded at a rapid 4.3 percent irate in the January-March quarter, but analysts are looking for that to dip to a meager rate perhaps as low as 1 percent in the AprilJune quarter because of sluggish consumer spending. Many analysts are looking for the economic growth for all of 1987 to be very close to last year’s 2.5 percent rise in the GNP, the poorest showing since the end of the 1981-82 recession. Some economists have been lowering their growth forecasts recently because of concerns that the big drop in the value of the dollar and rising inflation w ill force the Federal Reserve to tighten credit conditions. Some analysts contend the tightening has already begun. Economist Lyle Gramley, while not forecasting a recession this year, said concern over a possible downturn was higher than a few months ago because of the turmoil in financial markets in the past month over rising interest rates and the falling dollar. It's You, Only Better! • U nw anted H air R em oved P erm anently . by E lectro ly sis ' Free Confidential Consultation 8 2 9 -7 8 2 9 S h a ro n V aught D esert E lectro lysis C en ter 1050 E. S ou th ern A venue, C -l, T em pe rW V V FAST. FREE DELIVERY • FOR ASU LOCATION CALL 829-1717 ■P iz z a s w/one ®^ *6.99 — Biliala« One coupon per p in e . Good at'ASU location only. Espires £-6-87 Onecouponperpine. Goodet ASUlocationonly. Expire»5-6-87 12" 1 T o p p in g J 12 ” 2 T o p p in g s I 16 ” 2 T o p p in g s *5.35 One coupon per p in e . Good et ASU location only. Expires 5-6-87. t 16 ” 1 T o p p in g »10" 'L a r g e 16" N. TEMPE 933 E. University ! *6.15«.! *7.99 One coupon per p in e . Good et ASU location Only. Expires 5 6 S 7 , 8 2 9 -1 7 1 7 8 3 8 -2 2 2 7 NOWOUR 32-oz ORINK O N L Y (1.00 I ■ One coupon per (tine . Good at ASU location only. Expires 5 6 -8 7 N. MESA 635 N. Country Club 8 2 7 -1 9 9 9 9 2 8 -1 1 0 0 1 1 A LITTLE ROMANCE . . ? Personal Telephone Ads for Singles PHOENIX • M ESA • TEMPE • SCO TTSPALE 'EASIEST ANP MOST FUN WAV TO MEET SOMEONE N EW T h is is n o tim e to w o r r y a b o u t 5 NO MEMBERSHIP FEES NO 'COPECr A PS h o w y o u ’r e g o i n g t o g e t y o u r s t u f f h o m e . ALL. PHONE NOMBERSI CALL ANYTIME 28 HOOR3I HEAR A U NEW APS EACH TIME VOU CALL BACKI FREE ANSWERING SERVICE FOR LAPIES 1-9 7 6 -4 0 0 0 The good news is there is life after finals. And we can make it a little easier. At Ryder we can rent you any size van or truck you need. Vans that are fun to drive. (Fun... what’s that?) Many are automatics. Most have power steering, air conditioning and an AM/FM radio. We can also help with boxes, hand trucks, even tips on loading a truck. Which could help take a load off your mind. Whatever’s left of it. Moving Services We’re there at every turn.« $10 OFF local ran tal $40 OFFI one-way fontal Offer expires May 20, 1987 S f t « P rm Thursday, April 30,1987 P age 7 Graphic design students work on new Tem pe logo Seniors aim to create ‘streamlined’ emblem ByAARYN KEMP S tate Press ASU graphic design students are creating a new im age for Tempe by redesigning the city emblem. Twenty-two senior design students w ill present their designs and ideas for using the emblem to the Tempe City Council at a May 11 reception at Tempe Mission Palm s Hotel. John Murdock, a senior graphics design major, said council members w ill review die designs and decide if they want to work with the students. “It’s unclear on what’s going to happen after the council decides (on the design it likes b est),’’ Murdock said. ASU art professor Jim Rowley, who is supervising the students and their work, said the new emblem w ill be used on city vehicles, stationery, brochures and other city property. “The students’ work is voluntary,” he said. “The only thing the city is paying for is the supplies the students are using for their designs.” Research on the project began last fall as students reviewed the history of Tempe, landmarks with the current logo and other city seals, Murdock said. He said the design students also m et with Tempe Mayor Harry M itchell and the city administration before beginning the project this spring. “The council told us that Tempe has the highest standard of living in the V alley,” Murdock said. “They said it is a high quality place, (and) they’re looking for a ’The Council told us that Tempe has the highest standard of living in the valley. They said it is a high quality place, (and) they’re looking for a more progressive image.’ — John Murdock more progressive im age?’ Tempe’s current emblem also is difficult to read and reprint because of its detail, he said. The emblem, adopted in 1971, consists of a circle around a letter T, with Hayden’s Ferry pictured above the T, and Grady Gammage Auditorium and the Tempe Municipal Building in its lower half. The students are designing a more modern, graphic emblem, saying the traditional seal with Words and pictures w ill be abandoned for a more stream line look. Murdock said he is glad Tempe officials decided to use the ASU graphic design department for the project. “The main purpose for having the students do the design is to provide real-world experience,” he said. “It gives the seniors something to walk away from graduation with. It w ill be a great addition to a portfolio.” Marjorie Phillipie, a senior graphic design student working on the emblem project, said it is not really a competition. “We don't compete against each other,” she said. “We help each other.” But Murdock said there is a “com petitiveness among the students, just because there is a chance one of the designs might be chosen. ” Andy Mroztonkl/SMn Praw Graphic Daalgns m ajor M arjorie P hilllppi, 23, works on her Idea fo ra C ity of Tam pa logo. Tha projact was glvan to tha senior class of the Graphics Design Departm ent earlier this semester. « WOKSROM “P Ï T H O r P t K M W D W I t B I t B t ABOUTM U R UT! © 1986Miller Brewing öo., Milwaukee, Wl ♦ TRANSLATION: A SUPERBLY BREWED. FINE TASTING PILSNER BEER. Page 8 State Pues» Thursday, April 30,1987 Israeli official’s visit canceled due to investigation By M ICHAEL ROWELL S tate Press An appearance by a key figure in the Israeli government at Gammage Center Tuesday was canceled because of his involvement in an internal investigation in Israel. Eight U.S. appearances by Abba Eban were canceled due to Eban's involvement in the Israeli Parliam ent’s investigation of thé Jonathan Pollard spy case, a New York-based booking agency told organizers of the Hillel U nit» of Jewish Students’ annual fund-raiser last week. Pollard, an American, recently w as arrested, tried and convicted for spying in the United States for the Israelis. The current investigation in Israel is to determine how many high Israeli government officials had knowledge of Pollard’s activities. Eban is a member of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, and chairs the Knesset Foreign Affairs and_Defense Committee. He has held a variety of offices* in the Israeli government, including ambassador to the United States and the United Nations. A spokeswoman at the Israeli counsulate in Los Angeles said she did not know why Eban had canceled or if he had left Israel. Liz Tregor, a spokeswoman for Hillel, said the cancellation caused “quite a problem ,” financially and in scheduling another speaker. The organization unsuccessfully tried to find another speaker, and many ticketholders w ere not aware of the cancellation until they arrived at Gammage Tuesday evening. Tregor said Hillel members hope people who bought tickets w ill consider them a contribution, but she added any tickets returned to the place of purchase by May 4 will be refunded. She said she could not estim ate the loss of funds Hillel suffered because of the cancellation. “At this point w e haven’t even assessed it,” Tregor said. Gorbachev stands behind police state, official says By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Even though Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has instituted som e “alm ost revolutionary” liberalizing m easures, he rem ains com m itted to preserving a totalitarian police state, the State Department’s human rights chief says. Richard Schifter made those observations in an interview this week after conferring with a number of Soviets, including government officials and dissidents, while accompanying Secretary of State George Shultz to Moscow earlier this month. Schifter, assistant secretary of state for human rights and humanitarian affairs, said the m ost striking change is the way Soviet citizens are now permitted to criticize local officials, police, factory managers and others in the economic sector. “All of that which was heretofore sacrosanct is now open for discussion,” said Schifter, who was bom in Austria and served as deputy U.S. representative in the U.N. Security Council before assum ing his present duties last year. “That is something that really reflects Gorbachev’s conclusion that the country has not been operating-well econom ically and that something must be done to turn the system around to make it work better. The way to do it is to involve the people in critiques of what it is that’s going on in,day- to-day operations.” Schifter said Gorbachev’s policies are totally consistent with the ideas of Lenin. “If you reread Lenin, that’s what he was fo r /’ Schifter said. “He would castigate people for trying to sweep under the rug what was being done wrong in a particular government department.” Gorbachev has proclaimed his loyalty to Lenin, which means he is committed to the concept of “maintaining a totalitarian police state . . . So we start with that framework. That has not changed,” Schifter said. While m atters that affect the daily lives of people are now open for debate, he said, Limousine.. .to and from The Cloister as the guests of Tempe Mission Palms. Dinner.. . features your choice o f C ontinental Susine and international ■ i- • m * s discussion of national policy remains off lim its. There is, for exam ple, no open debate over Soviet policy in Afghanistan or the way national resources are allocated. He said Gorbachev also has sought to improve m orale of the intelligensia, particularly scientists and engineers. They now have access to books never before published, enabling them to “breathe easier so they don’t feel constantly hemmed in,” he said. In the treatm ent of dissidents, however, Schifter said there has been “very, very sm all m ovem ent.” R eleased dissidents have been forced to sign statem ents saying they w ill cease political activities, he said'. spiritsfrom the new menu. 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N a m e ----- ,----- ----------------- .----------- ------- --------- - P h o n e -_________ Street A d d r e s s --------------------------- ,____ City. State. Z ip ___ M a il to o r call collect for In form a tion : (6 0 2 ) 966-1800 L o s P ra d os Tow nhom es, 6 2 6 W. 14th St. Tem pe. A Z 85281 ' Stale Press Page 9 Thursday, April 30,1987 police report knife, police said. Police said the women watched the man ip a courtyard south of the building after they reported seeing a gun under his shirt. •A dumpster on the northwest ramp in Sun Devil Stadium ASU police reported the following incidents ending noon Wednesday : •An allegedly despondent man yelling at several women near the Architecture Building was advised to leave campus Tuesday night after officers found him clutching a hunting sustained $400 in dam ages from a fire Tuesday, police said. •An unknown person caused $50 dam age to a truck in Lot 53 by walking on its roof and hood, police said. — M IKE BURGESS Goetz court statement admits intent to murder kids By The Associated Press NEW YORK — Bernhard Goetz intended “to murder” the four youths he shot on a subway car — “to make them suffer as much as possible,” he told police in a recorded statem ent played Wednesday at his trial. “I admit, for those guys, all this tim e, I wanted to do the worst possible that a human being could do,” Goetz, sounding nervous and at tim es emotional, told police in Concord, N.H., where he surrendered Dec. 31,1984. Nine days earlier, Goetz drew a gun and shot four young men he claim ed were trying to rob him on the subway. His trial on attempted murder charges began Monday in state Supreme Court, the trial-level court in New York. Goetz described his own actions as “disgusting” and “monstrous” in the twohour audio tape, interspersing descriptions of the subway encounter with digressions on his background and explanations of his fear of being victim ized. “You have to think in a cold-blooded way in New York,” said Goetz, 39, an electronics specialist. He had carried a gun since he was mugged in 1981, he said; in winter, he went without gloves so he could draw the weapon. The tape included Goetz’s statem ent that after shooting the youths he checked one, Darrell Cabey, said, “You seem to be all right. Here’s another,” and shot him again. If he were thinking more clearly, Goetz said on the tape, he would have “put the barrel against his forehead and fired.” Cabey was paralyzed by his wounds and suffered brain damage. Goetz’s prosecutor, Gregory Waples, on Monday called Cabey’s shooting “little more than a cold-blooded attempted execution.” But defense lawyer Barry Slotnick said Goetz, “full of stress and fear,” told the police things that did not actually happen. Goetz told Concord police Officer Warren Foote and D etective Christopher Domian that his contact with the youths began when one, Troy Canty, lounging on the subway bench on his right, turned toward him and asked, “How are you?” He felt “a very strong implied threat” at the approach, Goetz said. “I just looked up at him and I said, ‘fine.’ But you kind of keep, them in the corner of your eye.” Soon Canty and another of the youths rose and stood on his left, Goetz said, while the other two stood on his right. “He said, ‘Give me $5,’ ” Goetz said. When he looked at Canty’s face, he said, “his eyes were shiny. He was enjoying him self. ... At that point, you’re in a bad situation.” Before he drew his gun, Goetz said, “I needed absolute verification” that he was being robbed. “So I asked one more tim e .... He said, ‘Give me your m oney.’ ” “When I saw what they intended for m e, my intention was, was worse than shooting,” Goetz said, according to a transcript of the tape. Domian asked: “OK, was it your intention to kill these people? ” Goetz: “My intention was to, do anything I could do to hurt them. My intention, you know, I know this sounds horrible, but my intention was to murder them, to hurt them, to make them suffer as much as possible.” The youths have said they were only panhandling, although Cabey told an interviewer that they intended to rob Goetz. Prosecutors charge that Goetz had no justification to open fire. Goetz said on the tape that he turned him self in because he would have been caught eventually. But he also indicated that he wished to face judgment for his acts. “If what I did is wrong then what I did is wrong, OK, and I have to live with that;” he said. 7 -y e a r-o ld liv e r tra n s p la n t p a tie n t d ie s a w a itin g 4th o p e ra tio n By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH — Ronnie DeSillers, a plucky 7-year-old Florida youngster who received three liver transplants after an outpouring of support from President Reagan and thousands of Americans, died Wednesday while awaiting a fourth transplant, his mother said. Ronnie died at 8:15 p.m. in the intensive care unit at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, his mother, Maria, told reporters at a news conference at the hospital. The boy’s condition took a drastic turn for the worse Sunday night, a day after he was placed back on the waiting list for a fourth transplant. The third liver, which he received April 23, never began to function properly, hospital officials said. Ronnie first made national headlines in February when Reagan called him and contributed $1,000 to his fund. There was an outpouring of support after about $4,000 in funds raised by his schoolm ates was stolen from his Fort Lauderdale, F la., school. Mrs. DeSillers received another encouraging letter from the White House on Tuesday, saying President and Mrs. Reagan were praying for Ronnie. The money raised by his classm ates was stolen in early February. The money w as part of $89,000 already raised by his mother, a former public relations consultant without insurance. Contributions poured in from around the country. By the tim e the 38-pound boy arrived with his mother at Children’s Hospital on Feb. 17, an estim ated $400,000 had beenraised. Doctors in Pittsburgh said a transplant was Ronnie’s only hope and that the boy had only weeks, perhaps less, to live. He had been born with liver ducts too sm all to expel fluids. The condition led to cirrhosis, which caused his liver to fail. An Invitation to ASU Students LUNCH WITH THE PRESIDENT PROFESSIONAL CENTERS Friday, May 8,1987 11:45 a.m.-l:00 p.m. FREE LSAT SEMINAR “How To Increase Your LSAT Score By 10 Points” and “How To Get Into The Law School Of Your Choice” T h u rs d a y , M a y 7 * 6 p .m . N a v a jo R o o m , M U $100 D isco u n t To A ll Who E n ro ll A t S em inar LS A T Classes Begin M onday, May 19. F o r re s e rv a tio n s a n d fin a ls w e e k d is c o u n t, c a ll V a le rie a t 9 6 9 -8 9 5 3 . President Nelson is hosting a luncheon meet­ ing to provide a n opportunity for students to discuss m atters of interest to them. To facilitate discussion the* num ber of partic­ ipants is limited to nineteen, so interested students should RSVP early. (No cost to participants.) To RSVP: CaU Lin Phillips 9 6 5 -5 6 0 6 President’s Office göPERSTTTIOfl Office Hour« M-F 8:30-5:30 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 10-4 JOSE CUERVO $ 3 6 7 W T OR G O LD S U P E R IO R $799 $ 2 9 9 ■J M ove-in D iscounts on Selected Units 30 West Carter Drive 1 S TR A W B E R R Y 1 R EG ULAR 1 SALT $ 3 9 9 C A R TA B LA N C A $ 3 9 9 $299 HUSSO NG S $ 3 9 9 KEG BEER! KEG » 15.5 GALLONS OR 180-200 SERVINGS N P ! i • SAFEW AY L IQ U O R B A H N ■ ROADW AY ROAD SO U THERN 750 ML MR. & MRS. T MARGARITA MIX COMBO $2^9 A (S W corner of Superstition Freeway and M ill Avenue) Professional phone agents needed. Efficient, courteous & able to work well under pres­ sure, fulltime/parttime. No phone calls please. 1915 E. Buchanan M-F 9-3. 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Spacious Studios from $365* 1 Bedrooms from $440* 2 Bedrooms from $555* CHAUFFEURS: Do you have what it takes to be a TEMPE 930 E Broadway 894-1067 OFFER GOOD THROUGH 5-8-87. COORS SUITCASE $085 P a» 10 1 Thursday, A p ril 30,1987 7 ,, Committee suggests new U.S. embassy in Moscow Current building termed ‘giant antenna’ by panel By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Senate Intelligence Committee recommended on a 15-0 vote Wednesday that new U.S. Em bassy offices in Moscow be torn down and another structure erected because the incomplete building is “a giant antenna.” The two senior m embers of the panel said at a news conference that the U.S. government also should consider forcing the Soviets to vacate residences they have occupied since 1979 at their new em bassy complex atop a high hill which intelligence experts say allows them to eavesdrop on official Washington. At the U.S. Em bassy in Moscow, said com m ittee chairman Sen. David Boren, D-Okla., “it is very clear that w e cannot assure ourselves, based mi a ll the evidence available to us, that we can ever have adequate levels of security . . . The' DON’T WAIT ANY LONfiiRI aam any as 25 Bouree* o f scho larsh ip s an d fin a n c ia l assistance fo r y o u . . . o r ■Jmmix return a u m s plus SEND YOU OUR PRINTOUT FOR FREE! ACADEMICFINANCIALRESOURCES OCA * A A C PHONE TODAY F8RFREE INO H I I - 1 1 I U O F flfiM A îi& OBLIGATION. WHATDQ YOUHAVE TOLOSE? longer we wait, the more likely it is that more funds will be w asted.” “It w ill be virtually impossible to take countermeasures against the (Soviet listening) devices already ih place,” said Sen. William Cohen, R-Maine, the panel vice chairman. “We are not going to wait three years (for U.S. technicians) to find out it is just one giant antenna,” said Cohen. Boren also described the new em bassy as “an antenna broadcasting everything that goes on inside that building to a hostile power.” The lawmakers declined to go into specifics for security reasons. “People would be very surprised to find out the degree of sophistication in the Soviet effort,” said Cohen. “I think it caught the American experts by surprise. ” The report urged the State Department to renegotiate 1969 and 1972 agreem ents which gave the Soviets Mount Alto and allowed them to build large parts of the U.S. offices in Moscow away from American supervision. U.S. intelligence officials say that Soviet workers incorporated structural devices in the building, 65 percent complete, to achieve a “tuning fork effect” to pick up voices and im pulses from electrical devices and hidden microphones for relay to receivers outside. Using U.S. companies, rather than a Soviet firm , to build a replacement em bassy in Moscow “m ay not adequately address security dilem m as presented by the occupation of the residences on Mount Alto by the Soviets,” the report said. “The com m ittee suggests that this m atter m erits further intensive consideration by the intelligence and diplomatic communities, and recommends that consideration be given to removing the occupants of the residences . . . until such t im e as the security concerns. . .a r e resolved.” Cohen said that it was likely the Soviets w ere already using the apartment buildings to gather intelligence. At the State Department, spokesman Charles Redman reaffirmed the U.S. policy of not allowing the Soviets to occupy their new offices in Washington until American diplomats do likew ise in Moscow. LAST PARTY WEEKEND AT TEMPE LENT AYE. MARBLE CLUB The original Lunt Ave. M arble Club is closing after 14 years. W e’d like to thank all o f o u r old friends, loyal patrons, past em ployees, and ASU students for your support. Help us celebrate th e end o f a Tem pe tradition w ith these great specials. *The original 1/4 price BOMB *954 Long Island Iced Tea *$1.00 Budweiser draft — with a special appearance from “Spuds McKenzie” *Original food specials featuring burgers and Chicago style deep dish pizza. Join us under th e big te n t for live rockin’ m usic: F rid a y n igh t — 8 :00 -m id n igh t THE RAVE S a tu rd a y a fte rn o o n THE JEFF DAYTON BAND S a tu rd a y n ig h t — 8:00 -m id n igh t THE RAVE D on’t miss this chance to see all o f your old friends at th e Tem pe Lunt Ave. Reunion Party W eekend! L u n t Ave. Ì Í M arble C lu b I M INI-STORAGE 967-3900 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK STUDENT SU M M ER SPECIALS 4 M o n th s F o r T h e P ric e O f 3 * •Y o u r Lock, Your Key •F u ll Security, TV Surveillance •Fenced, Lighted, Electronic Gate •V IS A & MasterCard Accepted 1905 E. APACHE BLVD. On Apache, Between McClintock & Price ‘ N ot to be used with any other specials. Lunt Ave. M arble Club 1212 E. Apache Tem pe, Arizona 967-9192 S titt R u m Page 11 Thursday, Aprii 30,1987 Dove. C ontinued from page 5. State Press: What do you want your readers to get out of your poetry? And what do you want them to know about Rita Dove? Dove: Oh God, I don’t know! When I write a poem and it gets published, I realize that the audience that ends up reading the poem probably is not going to know me. In a way, that’s not important. What I want them to get out of the poem, they m ust get it out of there or else I’ve failed. In that sense, I tend to think that there’s nothing that Rita Dove wants anyone to know about herself. I find m yself a little uncomfortable making all these pronouncements about language and literature, because I also think that despite what I say, there are a thousand other ways of doing it. State Press: How do you feel about winning the Pulitzer right now? Dove: Well, after all, it’s been about ten days. I should know b y now, hut I still don’t know. It certainly feels good, but I don’t know what that m eans in the larger realm of things. In poetry, you’re alw ays starting over in a certain kind of way, so I don’t think it w ill m ake me feel different when I sit down to w rite m y next poem — which I haven’t had tim e to start yet. State Press: Are things quieting down a little bit? Dove: They are, somewhat, though it doesn’t look like it at this moment. They are, in that the phones have stopped ringing constantly. Which is nice. State Press: Are you tired of doing this interview? Dove: No! No! (laughing) It’s important. I welcom e the chance to have people talk about it, to have people read this kind of interview and realize that poetry is not something that’s done in an ivory tower, that it’s not incomprehensible, that it’s not about gods and goddesses. One of the things that always makes me happy when I’m teaching a class, particularly a beginning class, is at som e point a student w ill say, “Gee! Poetry’s like this? You know, I thought it was boring, but this is really good stuff! ” And that’s basically the point because, yeah, it is. It’s good stuff. TOYOTA A ztec S to ra g e C e n te r FANN TOYOTA STUDENT SPECIAL “5 x l0 ’s” #1 Toyota D e a le r in Sales , S ervice & Parts Pay fo r two m onths get one m onth FREE. STORE NO W P A Y LATER! W e a ls o n e e d S u n d a y help. Call For Details '87 STANDARD DED '87 COROLLA FX16 3-DOOR LIFTBACK •O u r lowest-priced, tough Toyota Truck •Strong and reliable 2.4 liter engine •Sm ooth-shifting 4-speed manual transmission •O u r newest, sporty runabout •Responsive 1.6 liter tw in cam 16-valve engine •Front-w heel drive for added traction •Room y and versatile 9 6 6 -7 0 2 1 M ini-W arehouse & R.V. Parking 1700 E. Curry Rd. 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Page 12 STRAIGHT FROM THE HORSES’ MOUTH!!! state press PRO FESSIO NA L CENTERS FREE GM AT SEMINAR How To Get Into The Business School Of Your Choice’ and “Increase Your GMAT Score By 100 Points” Wednesday, May 6 • 6 p.m. in the Memorial Union Pinal South $100 D isco u n t To A ll Who E n ro ll A t S em inar B G M A T Classes B egin M ay 20. For reservations and finals week discount, call Valerie at 969-8953. . ^ Summer Storage A IR -C O O L E D Climate-Controlled 3 rd m o n th FREE w ith 2 - m o n th re n ta l! EA R N H A R D TS A U TO C EN TER S INTRODUCES A SPECIAL PROGRAM FOR F IR S T -T IM E B U YER S, R EC EN T G RADUATES, OR ANYONE WHO HAS BEEN UNABLE TO QUALIFY FOR A NEW CAR OR TRUCK LOAN. • • • • • • Have Have Have Have Have Have no indication of previous hew automotive finance experience. verified driver's license & S.S.N. verified satisfactory employment verified residence. reasonable expense-income ratio. physical damage insurance. LOWEST PRtCED 4 x 4 IN AMERICA! I M mm M M # 2950 N. 73rd St. • Scottsdale • 941-5811 Check the rest..we're the Best! AIR CONDITIONING OR ANY SUZUKI SAMURAI ACCESSORtESj COUPON _______ J Valid w/purchase only 3 4 5 -9 6 6 6 EVERYBODY NEEDS A YUGO SOMETIME! PURCHASE NOT LEASE INCLUDES 12/12 WARRANTY 838-6000 ‘ Yugo. $500 down plus tax & lie. V4 off not valid w/any other offer, must present coupon to salesman upon arrival. NO BULL V SINCE 1951 BETWEEN MILL & RURAL, ON BASE UNE TEMPE W ith less than % \ the calories of ice ' cream, Penguin’s fro zen yogurt fills you up, not o u t So pig out a t Penguin’s. ij A nd outfox r everyone else. Coupon good for a sm all, m ed­ ium o r large cup of yog u rt vj * 11110091110611111 3rd & Mill • Hayden Square Expires 5-14-87 State Press Page 13 Thursday, April 30,1987 Falwell takes over PTL pulpit after Bakker resignation By The Associated Press FORT MILL, S.C. — The Rev. Jerry Falw ell took over as host of the “PTL Club” television show Wednesday and assured donors the m inistry would survive, complying with “the rules and regulations of man as w ell as of God.” Falw ell characterized turmoil in the m inistry as God '‘cleaning house.” PTL is trying to rebuild following the resignation of Jim Bakker as its head and revelations shortly afterward of his sexual liaison with a church secretary in 1980. Disclosures about the m inistry’s finances, including payment of $1.6 million in salary and bonuses to Bakker and his w ife, Tammy, in 1986 have prompted the Internal Revenue Service and the South Carolina Tax Commission to challenge PTL’s tax-exem pt status and to seek m illions of dollars in back taxes. The success of the $129 m illion ministry and Christian retreat, however, depends on donations, Falw ell said. “Join us ... to see to it this ministry never becomes just a page in history,” he said during his first appearance as host of the program. Falw ell said he would remain as host of the show until a permanent replacem ent was found. But he said he did not know how long that would be. The syndicated talk-show, which features music and Christian entertainm ent, is the cornerstone of the ministry founded by Bakker and is its main fund-raiser. “ I want to share heart-to-heart with you what happened 7 want to share heart-to-heart with you what happened here. I believe a sovereign God is cleaning house.’ — Jerry Falwell here,” Falw ell, a fundam entalist evangelist, said from his office in Lynchburg, Va. “I believe a sovereign God is cleaning house.” The new PTL board chaired by Falw ell agreed Tuesday to stop all paym ents to the Bakkers and to Jessica Hahn, a former church secretary who agreed to a settlem ent of $265,000 if she would remain quiet about the incident with Bakker. Bakker, a charism atic, turned the m inistry over to Falw ell on March 19. The new board on Tuesday banished Bakker and his top aide, the Rev. Richard Dortch, from the PTL pulpit and agreed to investigate allegations of homosexuality and wife-swapping at PTL. Falw ell said Dortch would receive no remuneration, but he did not make clear whether that included severance pay. The majority of the board, with legal control of PTL’s operations, ignored Bakker’s plea to turn the m inistry over to charism atics, with former U.S. Interior Secretary Jam es Watt as chairman. Watt now is the only charism atic on the eight-member board; the remaining m embers are fundam entalists. Combining fundamentalist leadership with the flashier m inistry developed by Bakker w ill be difficult, said Falw ell, a television evangelist and founder of the Moral Majority. The 500,000-member PTL m inistry w ill m ove toward a more balanced approach to Christianity, he said. But the board’s biggest problem now, he said, is sorting through PTL’s finances — protecting donors’ investm ents and paying off creditors. The m inistry has a $50 million debt and may have to pay m illions of dollars in back taxes. Falw ell also made an appeal for someone to take over as host of the “PTL Club” television show. “We’re looking for a person who can speak for the whole Christian fam ily,” Falw ell said on the show taped for broadcast over his own Liberty Broadcasting Network and the PTL cable network. In a broadcast interview earlier in the day, Falw ell ruled out an appearance soon by Bakker on the program. “I certainly am never going to say ‘never’ to anyone, but I can only say this: At this tim e or even anywhere in the foreseeable future, a guest appearance would be out of the question,” Falw ell said on NBC-TV’s “Today” show. He also apologized to TV evangelist Jim m y Swaggart for allegations that Swaggart had attempted a hostile takeover of the PTL ministry. School funding In Texas ruled unconstitutional By The Associated Press AUSTIN, Texas — The Texas system of funding public schools discrim inates against students in propertypoor d istr ic ts and is unconstitutional, a state judge ruled Wednesday. S tate D istrict Judge Harley Clark said he found nothing to explain why children living in propertypoor sc h o o l d is tr ic ts shouldn’t have the sam e opportunities as those in wealthier districts. “The court does not detect in the evidence or the law a c o m p e llin g r e a so n or objective that would justify c o n tin u a tio n o f th is discrim ination,” Clark said at the end of the 2%-month trial. “If one district has more access to funds than another district, the wealthier one w ill have the best ability to fulfill the needs of its students,” Clark said. Trial began Jan. 20 on a law suit filed against the state in 1985 by 67 propertypoor school districts which argued that the current division of state school funds is discriminatory. The state, joined by 48 other local school districts, claim ed the distribution set up by 1984 school reforms was fair and adequate. A basic allotm ent is made of about $2,900 for each student in a tte n d a n c e . O ther payments are made for special-cost students. But the state’s 1,000 school districts m ay supplement the state funds with local school tax funds. A verage spending per student was $2,978 in the poorest districts, and $7,233 in the 100 w ea lth iest districts. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in March 1973 that T ex a s’ school funding system did not violate any p r o v is io n of U .S . Constitution, but Clark said it violated the T exas Constitution’s requirement for “an efficient system of free schools.” ~ The speaker of the Texas House said the ruling, if it stands, could have more im pact on governm ent finances than the prison reform lawsuit that has cost Texas hundreds of millions of dollars. M VETN A M THE W IND DOESN'T BLOW IT SUCKS Stanley Kubrick's FULL METAL JACKET STANLEYKUBRICK'S FULLMETAUACKET LEEERMEY DORIANHAREWOOD ARLISSHOWARD KEVYNMAJORHOMRD EDO'ROSS producerJANHARLAN PRESENTS STARRING MATTHEWUOOiNE ADAMBALDWIN VINCENT T ^ S a W lB d l MICHAELKERR . PRODUCED AND . DIRECTED BY BASED ON THE NOVEL THE SHORT-TIMERS BY CO PRODUCER A WARNtRCOMMlNKATRJNSCOMlftxV State Preti Thursday, April 30,1987 Activist names North as Iran-contra conspirator WASHINGTON — Conservative activist Carl R. “Spitz” Channel! pointed to former White House aide Oliva: North as a fellow conspirator on Wednesday as he pleaded guilty to the first crim inal charge of the Iran-contra affair. Channell was form ally accused of defrauding the government by telling contributors to his National Endowment for the Preservation of Liberty that their gifts would be tax deductible even though the money actually was used to provide m ilitary aid to the U.S.-backed contra rebels in Nicaragua. Channell pleaded guilty to a single count and agreed to cooperate in independent counsel Lawrence E . Walsh’s investigation. Walsh’s formal charge, known as a crim inal information, said Channell was UNIONTOWN, Pa. — A science teacher accused of teaching religion in his classroom prom ises to appeal the Department of Education’s decision to uphold a school board’s decision to fire himThe Laurel Highlands School D istrict received word Monday confirming its termination of George F. Rhodes THE MASTERS OF THE MACABRE STEPHEN KING AND GEORGE A. ROMERO WELCOME YOU TO IÎi “Diaícity 4 7He»tf CKKPSHO! s A A 1 n A Walsh had said Tuesday he hoped the Iran-contra com m ittees wouldn’t grant immunity to North, even though he had earlier agreed to that prospect, which would have led to public testim ony by North no earlier than June, Wednesday’s charge, to which Channell pleaded guilty, carries a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment and a $230,000 fine. Jr., said Superintendent W illiam Gregg. Rhodes was suspended Aug. 28 and fired Oct. 13 following three days of hearings. Gregg said the district had received complaints about Rhodes’ teaching of religion during his 23 years with the district and had warned him to stop presenting his personal views during lectures. By The A ssociated Press In s tru c to r to a p p e a l re lig io n c a s e ru lin g Former National Security Adviser Robert M cFarlane w ill follow Secord, the panels’ leaders said. Channell’s guilty plea cam e as McFarlane was testifying before the grand jury empaneled by Walsh. M cFarlane, who traveled to Iran in 1986 in an attempt to close an arm s-for-hostages deal, declined to comment as he left the grand jury room. crim inal activity in the secret sale of weapons to Iran and in the funding of the contras. The developments cam e less than a week before congressional panels are to open public hearings on the Iran-contra affair and just one day after Walsh suggested prosecutions would be endangered if C ongress granted im m unity from prosecution to any more principal figures in the investigation. On C apitol H ill, lead ers of the congressional panels said retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Richard V. Secord, a pivotal figure with key financial information on the affair, w ill be the first public w itness in the hearings that begin on Tuesday. Secord, who declined to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee earlier, w ill appear without an immunity grant. involved with a government official, but the charge did not identify that official. However, when Channell was asked in court by U.S. D istrict Judge Stanley S. Harris to nam e the people with whom he conspired, he replied sim ply, “Col. North, an official of the National Security Council.” When Walsh aide M ichael Bromwich was asked later if a sim ilar charge could be expected soon against North, he said, “We’re not prepared to do that at this tim e.” At the White House, presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater declined to com m ent. “ We’re not in vestigatin g ourselves and I don’t expect to elaborate on these kinds of issues,” Fitzwater said. Under the agreem ent Channell entered into with Walsh, the fund-raiser and several of his em ployees said they would cooperate with Walsh’s investigation into possible By The Associated Press The M ost P o p u lar, Fast a n d Fun .W ay fo r G ay M an an d W om en to M e e t S om eone N e w ... RED HOT SUMMER SPECIAL J -976-4 MEN % That is, 1-976-4636 First M in u te 55 4, E a A d d ’I M in u te 4 5 4 R e c o rd e d P e r s o n a ) G a y A d s * NO 'CO PE 17 APS * ALL PHONE NUMBERS * FREE -RECORP VOOR OWN «3 A P AFTER LISTENING T O OTHERSI ^ A S U S tu d e n t D isc o u n t P ro gram s A v a ila b le . TRAVEL L IG H T A N D STORE YOUR EXCESS ITEM S WHILE YOU E N JO Y THE SUM M ER C lose and co n ven ien t to A SU R eserve e a rly to ensu re a space FO R T K N O X M IN I-S T O R A G E 1964 East University Orlve between Price & McCMntock Tempe, A U . NEW APS EACH TIME HEAR Y O U C A LL . B A C K ! GOOD TO THE LAST GASP. B IG S P R IN G C L E A R A N C E 1986 Best Bike Shop NBW WORLD PICTURES ncssns a LAUREL PRODUCTION CR5PSH0W2 swung I0B CHUS GEORGE KENNEDY DOR0IHYIAM0UR andIOM SAVN A S Tw aar mscomfosb) w Iß REE)a» RKX WLKEMAN associati producer MITCHELL GALJN executive pitooucBtRICHARD P. RUBMSTBN soffimy by GEORGE A. ROMERO basedonsm s bySTEPHEN KNG PRooucEDby DAVID BALL dkcthi byMICHAEL GORNICK NEW WORLD PICTURES Clf*7NiW WOMOnCTUMS All MGMTS M lflVID New Times critics choice 1 3 J jT /S ." . • te A 1 O PENS FRIDAY, MAY 1st AT A TH EATRE NEAR YOU. THE TEMPE BIKE SHOP S to re H ours: 8 -8 M o n .-T h u rs. 8 -6 F ri.-S a t. 11-5 S un. 330 W. University • Phone 966-6896 Slate Prass Thursday, April 30,1987 Dukakis begins bid for U.S. presidency HELLO? ' suppen success services, inc. ? MYCLIENTWOULDUKE io atm. Your'perns By The Associated Press m e P oem e \ MANCHESTER, N.H. — M assachusetts Gov. Michael S. Dukakis embarked Wednesday on his long-shot quest tor the 1968 Dem ocratic presidential nomination, saying Americans “deserve a president who knows what’s going mi, and who knows what he’s doing. ” x He pledged that, if elected, he would make America “greater, better, stronger, prouder and more beautiful” than before. Dukakis, a son of Greek immigrants who has been elected governor of his state three tim es, said his fitness for the White House should be judged by his performance in the statehouse. “Because as sitting governor, I’m tested every month, every week, and every hour,” he said. Dukakis’ cam paign began with a speech that combined soaring rhetoric and an attack on Reagan administration policies, with a subtle jab at Dem ocratic front-runner Gary Hart thrown in. “Ask more than whether we have new ideas. Ask whether we have already made new ideas work,” he said, in words seem ingly directed at Hart’s self-described campaign of “new ideas.” Dukakis becam e the fourth Democrat to make a formal declaration of his candidacy, joining Hart, a former senator from Colorado; Bruce Babbitt, former governor of Arizona, and Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri. Others expected to enter the race are Rev. Jesse Jackson and Sens. Joseph Biden of Delaware, Paul Simon of Illinois and Albert Gore Jr. of Tennessee. Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton also is considering a race. by Berke Breathed BLOOM COUNTY RI6HT... ft HOMEIN LA. 30 VM S WC6ER THANHENEEP5... ft PORSCHE...ft HftRLEY FORIMftOE.. ft PtSHONESTPERSONAL BUSINESS MftHftóER.. ft dOOKm NT 7HE 'P EU -AIP" CONCERT, ft PtTZY FASHION MOSEL PORft WIPE... msfek UHISTER /'mSFER \ mm. Ivo ry Tow ers b y M ich ael H itle r VP M i1 .///,* 'ft/A ///A ftA m MIKE... A LITTLE j / tter V ’BOUT YOUR FINALS? V /✓ -¿h V//A. \ •Mawr//. « i 'Mm* no»*. -àa&F .-rm utm wbm ■'mwiym'Mti m w am & n ÿ . ///* seaaar //- < * * wm m \ ’/ m i J G \\l.aAI\ . )aM0 ü 'I Z J r n - ir -Z 1 C I -C-'W- A. 4^v\/lJI>A^A^''Vullv.v>^vLVA.ÌU>lL’‘U aaI Shoe b y J e ff M a c N e lly Dukakis’ declaration of candidacy w as made at a . renovated m ill building in New Hampshire, where he was joined by his w ife, Kitty, their children, John, Andrea and Kara, and the governor’s mother, Euterpe Dukakis. P!£A£EME£T tiÖURfÄ£TYAT From New Hampshire, Dukakis drove through snowcovered New England back home to Boston, where he repeated his desire to be president at an outdoor rally of several thousand people gathered on blustery Boston Common. AI&INE TICKET TZ TICKgS c o u n ts. There, Dukakis was joined by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DM ass., whose own try for the party nomination ended in defeat in 1980. “I’ve thought for a long time that what America needs is a president from M assachusetts,” he said. “And my choice is Mike Dukakis.” D O N 'T S E T T L E F O R W A L K IN ! T a k e a r id e o n t h e w ild s id e w i t h A Z ’s f t i v o lu m e s c o o t e r D ea ler. from ESTABLISHED OVE? 25 YEARS $479 •GREAT ON GAS •LOW INSURANCE •EASY MAINTENANCE •EASY PARKING •BRING IN YOUR ASU ID . FOR DISCOUNTS SHOW US YOUR STUDENT I.D. YOU’LL GET A DINNER (C o m p This year we're doing it again! Every Sunday (b u t ONLY on Sunday). Mike Pulos of the Spaghetti Company will give you one FREE dinner’ for each dinner you order) It’s our 2 for 1 SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL. And it's good for the whole school year a t both our Tempe a n d F’hoenix locations. JH L "B rin g us your best deal & we’ll beat it" Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner. The Spaghetti Com pany is known for a great meat a t a n affordable price. But the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL . SAME DAY FINANCE makes our already terrific prices even bettor) Our dinners include a full course meal with all the trimmings-from salad to dessert. So. dollar for dollar, when you're hungry a n a you need a break, you can't b eat The Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! With 2 dinners for the price of 1! But you MUST have your student I.D. card with you to take advan­ ta g e at this offer. Openat 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays M O N .-F R I. . . . . ....... 8 * 9 S A T . . . . . . . . . . . ....... . 8 - 6 SUN. 1 0 -6 T ire ^ p a g lie t t i (o n fp a ijV ’ "YOUR AUTHORIZED HONDA DEALER" w e ste rn H onda OF SCO TTSDALE 6717 E. McDowell Rd. 994-8400 f f ß i o f Mike Pul°s> MCDOWELL "ONLY 5 MIN. AWAYÌ” PHOENIX South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 2 5 7 -0 3 8 0 ft ESTAI 'RANT in Q ld T o w n TEMPE C h ic k e n C o rd o n B lu e, S te a k D i Jo n , S tu ffe d F ile t o f S o le , T e n d e rlo in , C h ic k e n P ic a tta , V ea l M arsa la ARE NOT INCLUDED in th e 2 -fo r-1 s p ec ial. 4th Street and M ill 9 6 6 -3 8 4 8 0 Page 16 Sirte Press Thursday, April 30,1987 Associated S tudents L e c tu re S e r ie s 1987 and P o lit ic a l U n io n p re s e n t “Arms for Hostages: The Inside Story” 17-year-old ASU senior prepa Teen-age biology major uncertain of future plans By DANALEONARD Contributing W riter While most teen-age girls are worrying about spring fashions and prom dates, 17-year-old Alissa Craft is trying to decide if she wants to go to m edical or graduate school. Craft w ill graduate from ASU May 15 with a bachelor’s degree in biology as the “youngest student I know of to graduate from ASU,” according to Debbie Lawyer, assistant director of the ASU Center for Academic Precocity. Craft then w ill be off to m edical school or back at ASU to work toward a m aster’s degree in health administration. “All my life, I’ve known that I want to be a doctor,” she said. “My dad’s a doctor, and I remember following him around the hospital as a child and knowing that’s what I wanted to do. “My ultim ate goal has always been to be a surgeon. I’m still keeping that in mind, but I’m also considering other possibilities.” Craft, born in New York and raised in Phoenix, is a petite powerhouse of energy who many say seem s older than her 17 years, Mother Barbara Craft said her daughter, the oldest of three children, showed unusual intelligence at an early age. “She taught herself to read by watching ‘Sesam e Street’ when she was 2-and-a-half,” Mrs. Craft said. “She started kindergarten when she was four, but she was only there for a week. Then they * moved her up to first grade.” Although academ ically gifted, Craft had no trouble fitting in with other children, her mother said. “A lissa’s always been very outgoing, and she’s fit in with others very w ell,” Mrs. Craft said. “She was in Girl Scouts; she learned to play the violin and the piano; she took dancing lessons. She did all the normal things kids do. She’s a very well-adjusted person.” But Craft described herself as a child who was “shy, quiet and not very involved in school.” “ I started high school when I was 12,” she said. “I went to Phoenix Country Day School: a very sm all, elite high school in Paradise Valley. I found m yself pretty bored there, so I started getting into trouble with school officials. “Only seniors were allowed to leave the school grounds. I was a freshman, but I was taking senior classes, so I used to leave the school grounds and go buy Slurpees, bring them back to school and sell them to m y friends for more money. “ (School officals) could never quite peg me, but they were keeping an eye on m e.” It was during her freshman year that program sponsored by ASU’s College of I children. The Center for Academic F Project for the Study of Academic Pi classes for children who attend high schoi Craft said she was ready for a challeni her up, and she began life as a part-time < “I really liked the advancement I was said. “I took all the classes the progi through the math. That was when I learnt Craft also attended PSAP’s summer freshman year in high school, shfe dec college full tim e. Lawyer said PSAP recommended Craf in fall 1983, “I didn’t want to go to high school at a! m y parents wanted me to go at least that “They didn’t want me to go to colli making trouble in high school, they agret And so, at age 13, Craft joined 40,001 pursue higher education—without a higl “I was concerned when Alissa went to ( “But parents are always concerned abo< college, regardless of age. Anyway, I wanted. I wouldn’t force her to do anythii Lawyer described Craft as “very brigh DAVID JACODSEN y ASU’s College of Education for precocious anybody that age would act. She’s very congenial with everyone. er for Academic Precocity, form erly the dy of Academic Precocity, offers evening “She never makes people feel dumb by being ‘uppity’ to them. vho attend high school during the day. She doesn’t act like she’s better than anybody else.” i ready for a challenge» so her mother signed Jackie Gans, a 20-year-old economics senior at ASU and Craft’s n life as a part-time college student. roommate in an off-campus apartment this year, said Craft is advancement I was offered in college,” she “mature for her age.” le classes the program offered. I whizzed tat was when I learned calculus.” id PSAP’s summer program, but after her igh school, si* decided she was ready for *recommended Craift for full-tim e adm ission ;o to high school at all, really,” she said. “But ne to go at least that first year. it me to go to college, but when I started gh school, they agreed, to let m e go.” t, Craft joined 40,000 other ASU students to tion—without a high school diploma. when Alissa went to college,” Mrs. Craft said, ways concerned about their children going to of age. Anyway, I knew it was what she Dree her to do anything she didn’t want to do. ” Craft as “very bright.” “We’re both young for seniors,” she said. “We get along really well. Any differences we may have are due more to a lack of experience than maturity. “A lissa’s a very effervescent person! She’s also self-confident and determined. When she sets her mind to do something, it gets done.” Craft said involvement in extracurricular activities has helped her fit into the college scene. She works at the HiUel Union of Jewish Students 10 hours per week, doing “whatever needs to be done,” and at Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital 10 to 30 hours per week m patient affairs or m edical records. She also did volunteer work for Associated Students. “Being involved helped me fit in,” Craft said. “One of my main goals in college was to dispel the ‘nerd’ im age. “People think that if you’re sm art, you have thick glasses and braces; you’re short, fat and dumpy and you’ve always got your face in a book. That’s not always true. We’re people just like everyone else.” N O W T A K IN G F A LL R E S E R V A T IO N S W e ’r e F i l l i n g U p F a s t i Until the luxury and convenience of University Towers. These unique and exciting co-educational student resi­ dence suites combine the best of apartm ent and dor­ mitory living. Ideally located within 2 blocks . of Arizona State University academic facilities, and across from Sun Devil Stadium. University Towers offers furnished 2 bedroom residence suites including utilities, full kitchen and many extras. COORS MISS SUPERCROSS CONTEST TONIGHT W inner will present trophies In A S U Stadium and will represent Coors for the weekend. • 24-hour security • Escorts if requested • 24-hour emergency maintenance • Garage parking N • Pool, jacuzzi, volleyball, elevated sundeck • Satellite cable television Stop by our leasing office today, located on 5th Street between College and Forest in Tempe, or call (602) 894-2300. Hours: 9:00 am . to 6:00 p.m. Evenings and weekends by appointment Out of Phoenix area, call collect kprivate student llA " $ CORONAS FOR ALL S . M IL L , T E M P E • 968-0527 UNIVERSITY TOWER S Page 18 Terrace Road Apartments The Puzzle A C R O SS 1 6 11 12 14 15 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 26 27 State Press Thursday, April 30,1987 Vessels Beg C hinese skiff F ree from binding Allow ance for w aste C o llect R iver in Italy Sin Suppose T orrid French artic le F ru it C en ter Chosen N arrow , fla t boards L ean -to 28 29 31 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 45 47 48 M ast Perform ed Calum ny M an 's nam e N arrow openings Concerning Sailor: colloq. Incline Type o f pension: inlt. Latin conjunction Precipitous Tiny particle H arvested G oes in Junctures W anders DO W N 1 C ontainer s s s w _v 0 a 3 w 0 J. V _a 1 3. a a 3 a s JL V 3 a o 1 0 H O d N 3 L a V s s Vi a 3 a 3 d V 3 N 3. _d 3. j [ 1 S J. V J. d. O i S 0 V JL 1 1 a 3 a N V 1 a 3 1 0 V d a 3 H _S a 3 J. O 3 2 1 S 3 0 El 2 . _d d V 3 .N ± d O m0 0 S V Vi 0 a dm V o O i ■ 3 1 d S m_y JL s s s s ■ s H a 3. 1. d V 3 T 3 1 S EOI B roke suddenly W oodw orker's to o l B e d efeated Dawn goddess Equally Expel from country G ravestone M em oranda G en tle in nature C hose H idden supply Pained S o cial groups C hem ical com pound Freshet Footw ear L ater Boxes W ild plum M istakes P aper m easure: 2 H ebrew m easure 3 Likely 4 Sym bol fo r tantalum PiW in ter vehicles S talk D etail H ealth resort Indonesian Diphthong N egative GREAT SUMMER RATES RESERVE NOW FOR FALL 1/2 block from Campus. Huge well-furnished 1-bedroom 1-bath, and 2-bedroom 2-baths, all utilities included, plus large heated pool, spacious laundry facilities, brand new barbeques, and cable TV. 9 5 0 S . T e rra c e R d . FREE scoops of ICE CREAM and cinnamon sauce when you purchase an apple I cinnamon roll. S o m e like it h ot S o m e lik e it co ld Y o u 'll lo v e it a la -m o d e N ^ 2 1 5 E . 7 th S t. S u it e 1 1 2 7th St 8 9 4 *0 1 2 3 H ours: 6 a.m -7 :3 0 p.m . 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 I w /th is co u p o n University 1984 United Feature Syndicate COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE A D ollars Has more than just the m ost interesting earrings in the Valley. It has the lowest prices. BELTS $ 1 .00 EA. OR BUY 5 GET ONE FREE EARRINGS $ 1 .00 PR. OR 3 PAIR FOR $2.50 ^ LACE a SATIN BOW BARRETTES S2.00 ^ n e w S u b a r u SU N G LA SSES $3.00 Everything we sell looks like it cost lots more, but you pay a lot less. f o r 414 S. Mill #207 Tempe (above Spaghetti Co) 829-1127 y o u , DOLLARS FASHION ACCESSORIES Dollars. It's not just our name, it's our prices! YA G O TTA L O V E IT A S U ! The Sundowner Lounge at Howard Johnson's invites you to enjoy Nightly Drink Specials Hors D'oeuvres Bar Darts & Games "Y o u c a n h e a r y o u r s e lf t h in k " ASU Employees redeem this ad for a 99f Pitcher What a deal! S T O P IN T O D A Y fo r d etails! SCOTTSDALE SUBARU 7520 E. mcdow ell rd . SCOTTSDALE, AZ 225 E. Apache 967-9431 9 4 5 -4 0 0 0 State Press Page 19 Thursday, April 30,1987 1987-1988 ASSO CIATED STU DEN TS P O SIT IO N S OPEN The positions with Associated Students listed below are open to any qualified student willing to serve the student association during the 1987-88 academic year. A previous or current involvement with the association is not a prerequisite and all students wishing to become involved are urged to apply. Applications are available in the ASASU offices located on the second floor of the Memorial Union (room 208) from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. Student Employment referrals, available at the On-Campus Student Employment Office, Matthews Center, M U ST accompany all applications for salaried positions. Questions concerning interviews or the selection process will be answered by calling 965-3161. All positions are one-year terms, unless otherwise noted. Please submit applications before May 8,1987. ASASU is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer and does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, ethnic origin, creed, color, age, handicapped or veteran status in its programs or employment. A ll P o s itio n s A re P e n d in g F in a l B u d g e t A p p ro v a l EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT EXECUTIVE ASSISTAN T T O TH E PRESIDENT: (One salaried position) Assists the President In researching, analyzing and formulating University affairs policies; coordinates Presidential Commission System; prepares correspondence and issue papers; serves as student ombudsperson for ASASU. A D M IN ISTR A TIVE ASSISTANT T O T H E PRESIDENT; (One salaried position) Assists the President with general office operations, provides communication links between the President and ASASU administrative areas; coordinates student representatives on University committees; manages implementation of presi­ dential special projects. STATE RELATIO NS OFFICE: (Two salaried positions, Director and Asst. Director; three volunteer Coordinators) Works with the President in research, monitoring and advocating issues of higher educational concern for Arizona State University. Members serve as delegates to the Arizona Students Association as well as lobbyists before the Board of Regents, Legislature, and University administration. PUBLIC RELATIO NS OFFICE: ( One salaried Director; three volunteer Coordinators) Serves as the ASASU Information office. Institutes and coordinates a communication network to create campus awareness of ASASU programs, services and policies. Publicizes and coordinates local and campus media coverage, of issues through press releases and personal contact. Establishes communication links between ASASU and the surrounding community. BUDGETARY ANALYST: (One volunteer position) Assists the President in the ASASU budgetary process. Coordinates budgetary information between the President's office and the three Vice Presidents. LEGISLATIVE LIAISON: (One volunteer position) Assists the President in matters that concern the ASASU Senate. Attends Senate meetings and coordinates any communication between the Senate and the President’s office. M O B ILIZA TIO N OF VOLUNTEER EFFORT (M OVE): (One volunteer position) Responsible for the promotion, coordination, and development of a student volunteer program within ASASU. CAMPUS SERVICES: (One volunteer position) Responsible for all special events and programming under the office of the President. Monitors the complaint/suggestion boxes dispersed throughout the campus. PRESIDENTIAL AIDES: /(Two volunteer positions) Assists the President on special assignments, in exercising Presidential functions, arid general assistance duties as necessary. UNIVERSITY P O U C Y ANALYSTS: (Three volunteer positions) Works with the President in researching, analyzing and formulating policies that deal with academic, business, and student affairs issues. ASASU SUPREME C O U R T (Three volunteer positions) The Court interprets Constitutional, Bylaw, and Rules-of-Order documents as well as adjudicating statutorial and procedural disputes. All positions are two-year terms. OFFICE OF THE EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT LEGISLATIVE ASSISTANT: (One salaried position) Assists the Executive Vice President with budgetary management, senate operations, and coordination of college councils. Researches current issues facing Associated Students and facilitates campus relations work. SENATE PARLIAMENTARIAN: (One volunteer position) Secves as parliamentarian for senate meetings. Must be able to attend all senate meetings and must be experienced and familiar with parliamentary procedure and Roberts Rules of Order. BUDGETARY ASSISTANT: (One volunteer position) Assists the Executive Vice President with budget management. Responsible for updating balances in accounts. Also provides assistance to Senate Finance CommitteeCOLLEGE C O U N C IL ASSISTANT: (One volunteer position) Assists Executive Vice President and College Council presidents in planning and implementing college council programming. OFFICE OF THE CAMPUS AFFAIRS VICE PRESIDENT CAMPUS AFFAIRS VICE PRESIDENT ASSISTANT: (One salaried position) Assists the Campus Affairs Vice Président with administrative duties concerning all Campus Affairs departments, correspondence, budget­ ary management, scheduling and facilitating the direction and work of the Vice Presidential aides and staff. CAMPUS AFFAIRS VIC E PRESIDENTIAL AIDES: ( Three volunteer positions) Assists the Vice President in special projects and programs within Campus Affairs departments. BIKE C O -O R D IRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for managing all operations, budgetary matters, and inventory of the Bike Co-op. Oversees Bike Co-op staff operations. Works with the Campus Affairs Vice President to establish new methods of servicing students concerning bicycle security and safety on campus. Assists students with maintenance and repairs. BIKE C O -O P ASSOC IA TE D IRECTOR: (One salaried position) Directly responsible to the Bike Co-op Director. Assists students with maintenance and repairs. BIKE C O -O P ASSISTANTS: (Two salaried positions; one workstudy, one non-w/s) Directly responsible to the Bike Co-op Director. Assists students with maintenance and repairs. BOOK EXCHANGE: (One volunteer position) Responsible for further development and publicity of the Student Book Exchange. FCEP DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for managing all operations and budgetary matters of the Faculty Course Evaluation Program. Responsible for compiling, analyzing and distributing The Course Source, and correspondence with the faculty, staff, and administration. FCEP A SSOCIATE D IRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible directly to the FCEP Director in budgetary, management, coordination of volunteers, compiling and distributing the pubication. Office maintenance wilt be included. FCEP AD SALES COOR D IN A TOR : (One salaried position) Directly responsible to the FCEP Director for selling advertising to local vendors to assist in ensuring revenue requirements. GRADUATE S TU D E N T A S SO C IA TIO N DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for managing operations and budgetary matters of GSA programs, correspondence and office maintenance. The director Will establish a volunteer committee to review grant applications, and will work with the Campus Affairs Vice President to develop relevant graduate programming. GRADUATE S TU D E N T A S SO C IA TIO N ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Directly respon­ sible to the GSA Director, assisting with operations and GSA programming. M IN O R ITY AFFAIRS BOARD DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible tor managing operations and budgetary matters of the MAB, correspondence, office maintenance, and representation of ethnic and cultural concerns through initiating cultural and academic awareness programming. M IN O R ITY AFFAIRS BOARD ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR: (One volunteer position) Directly responsible to the MAB director, assisting with operations and MAB programming. SAFETY ESCORT SERVICE DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for managing operations and budgetary matters of the SES, and promotion and coordination of escorts. SAFETY ESCORT SERVICE COORDINATOR: (One salaried position) Directly responsible to the SES Director. Assists in budgetary management, coordination of escort scheduling and promotion of SES. STU D ENT COUN SELIN G S C O N SULTA TIO N ADVOCACY C O M M ITTEE DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for the direction of SCCAC, working with Counseling & Consultation on career counseling, crisis hotline, and the development and implementation of new programs for SCCAC. STU D ENT HEALTH ADVISORY C O M M ITTEE DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for managing operations and budgetary matters of SHAG, coordinating scheduled events, and program development relative to student health issues, working closely with the Student Health Center, and acting as a resource and information center for student complaints and health related issues. TEN A N TS /C O M M U TE R STUDENT ASSO C IA TIO N DIRECTOR: ( One salaried position) Responsible for all operations and budgetary matters of the department. Oversees all operations for the Guide to Off-Campus Living, housing fair, current vacancy listings, tenant/landlord cases and workshops. TEN A N TS/C O M M UTER STUDENT A S SOCIATION ASSISTANT DIRECTOR: (One salaried) Directly responsible to the Director. Assists in all operations and budgetary management of department. Specific responsibilities include weekly publication and distribution of vacancy list, advertisjng of the department, maintenance of vacancy list files/forms, and overseeing the Guide to Off-Campus Living. C O M M UTER COORDINATOR: (One salaried position) Directly responsible to director, assisting with all operations and budgetary management of commuters. Facilitates rideshare computer system, Commuter Update, commuter day, and works with administration of Phoenix Transit and Parking Services. TENA N TS CASEWORKERS: (Two salaried workstudy) Works with landiord/tenant complaints, assists in publication of weekly vacancy list, works with ASASU Legal Services concerning tenant/landlord laws. Does daily tally lists and special projects/activities. C O M M UTER CASEWORKER: (One salaried position) Assists commuter coordinator in placing data in computer, computer day, new programs, and may assist with tenant/landlord problems. PUBLIC RELATIONS DIRECTOR: (One volunteer position) Responsible for publicity of the nine depart­ ments within Campus Affairs. ASSISTANT FOR M ER C H A NT SERVICES: (One volunteer position) Responsible for planning and implementing a commercial salessystem on the mail, including developing policy and negotiating contracts for vending activities. OFFICE OF THE ACTIVITIES VICE PRESIDENT A C TIV ITIES VIC E PRESIDENT ASSISTANT: (One salaried position) Assists the Vice President with administrative duties, cprrespondence, and special projects. Acts on behalf of the Vice President in his/her absence. Communication and organizational skills essential. VICE PRESIDENTIAL AIDES ¡(Three volunteer positions) Assists the Vice President in special projects and acts as liaison within the Activities area. A S SO C IA TIO N G R A PHICS A ADVERTISING DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Oversees all levels of work in A G A — artwork, bookkeeping, distribution end client relations. Experience in advertising/graphics is essential. Responsible for the management of the office as well as the maintenance of the AGA budget. AGA AR T D IRECTOR: (One salaried position) Oversees the production and design of all artwork in AGA. Responsible lo r quality of artists' work. Maintains deadlines and produces work at minimum cost for ail clients. Portfolio required. AGA ARTISTS: (Three salaried positions) Must be proficient in all areas of design. Needs ability to design artwork for Associated Students departments within time and budgetary constraints. Reliable, dedicated individuals needed. Portfolio required. A GA O FFIC E ASSISTANT: (One salaried workstudy position) Responsible for assisting the artists in prepàring artwork for completion. Reliable and dedicated individual needed. CO N C ER T DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for management of Associated Students Concert program. Acts as liaison between ASU Public Events staff and Associated Students. Administrative and communication skills and ability to negotiate complex agreements essential. C O N C ER T C O O R DINATOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for day-to-day function of Concert program. Oversees production of all ASASU concerts. ASSISTANT C O N C ER T COORDINATOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for volunteer usher program. Assists concert coordinator with daily office functions. LEADERSHIP IN S TIT U TE DIRECTOR; (One salaried position) Responsible for development of leadership skills within campus programming through retreats, conferences, and the organizational skills series. Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Leadership institute. Communication and organizational skills ............. .........................— ,.......essential. LECTURE SERIES DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for all aspects of the Lecture Series. Arranges for speakers to come to campus and all their accommodations and arrangements. Coordinates ail promotion and press conferences. Administrative and communication skills essential. LECTURE SERIES ASSISTANT DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Assists the Lecture Series Director with lectures, promotion and advertising. Administrative and communication skills essential. P O LITIC A L U N IO N DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Arranges forums and debates pertinent to local and national issues. Responsible for all promotion. Works closely with Lecture Series Director. Administrative and communication skills essential. SPECIAL EVENTS DIRECTOR: (One salaried position) Responsible for the planning and scheduling of special events that meet the wants and needs of ASU students. Responsible for programs such as Alcohol Education, Spirit Rallies, and Personal Challenge Day. Public relations skills needed. A C TIVITIES INFO RM A TIO N BUREAU DIRECTOR: (One volunteer position) Responsible for collection and distribution of all information relating to events happening on and off campus. A C TIVITIES INFO RM A TIO N BUREAU ASSISTAN T DIRECTOR: (One volunteer position) Assists the director in the day-to-day functions of the bureau. BUDGETARY ASSISTANT: (One volunteer position) Assists the Activities Vice President with budgetary management. PUBLIC RELATIONS DIRECTOR: (One volunteer position) Responsible for coordinating publicity of the seven departments within Activities. S TU D ENT ATHLETIC COORDINATOR: (One volunteer position) Responsible for coordinating various events to promote ASU athletic programs and increase enthusiasm and spirit by working with Student Athletic Board, Student Alumni Association and Memorial Union Activities Board. UNIVERSITY COMMITTEES The follow ing university com m ittees include appointed student members: •University Hearing Board (2 students) •Library Committee (2 students) •Research Council (1 student) •Hum an Subjects Research Review Committee (1 student) •Undergraduate Admissions Board (3 students) •C areer Services Advisory Committee (3 students) •Private Enterprises (1 student) •Parking and Transit Services Committee (3 students) •Parking Appeals Board (3 students) •Financial Aid Advisory Committee (5 students) •Registrar's Advisory Committee (3 students) •Grievance Committee (S students— j unlors, seniors or graduates only) •Intercollegiate Athletics (2 students) •Auxiliary Services Committee (3 students) •Residence Classification Appeals Board (5 students — Arizona Residente only) •Scheduling Board (6 students) •Board of Equal Opportunity •Disabled Student Services Advisory Board (3 students) •G raduate Council (1 graduate student) •Student Affair Advisory Board (7 students) •Affirmatitive Action Review Board (2'students) •Student Health Service Advisory Committee (5 students) •Intram urals-Club Sports-Recreation Committee (1 student) •Perform ing Arte Board (7 students) •S afety Committee (2 students) Page 20 Stott Press Thursday, April 30,1987 Couples become alike during marriage, study says By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA — Married couples become more sim iliar over the years, but w ives are more likely to change and even adopt the personality and intellectual abilities of their husbands, according to a study, “The explanation is that it’s a function of the fam ily environment and economic resources available in that particular environment and how successful the man is,” said Dr. K. Warner Schaie, a professor of human developm ent at Penn State University. The average age of the w ives in the study , ranges from the mid-40s to the 90s. “We have a lot of couples where the husband is the primary breadwinner,” Schaie said in an interview. Men with better jobs are able to create a fam ily environment that is conducive to intellectual growth, including traveling, attending plays and taking adult education classes, he said. Schaie, who has been administering psychological and intelligence tests to 175 randomly selected couples every seven years, began the project in 1956 while a graduate student at the University of Washington in Seattle. Schaie predicted the changes w ill become more sym m etrical as women become more responsible, for fam ily income. He plans to study the couples again in 1991. Previous findings show it is a natural tendency for people to seek a partner who is sim ilar in intellect and ability, but would not have predicted a change in the sim ilarities after m arriage, Schaie said. “We see now they start scoring alike on the tests,” he said. “Even their math ability increases, or decreases, depending on their spouse.” Spouses tend to quickly adopt each other’s personality traits and intellect during the first seven years of m arriage, but then level off for another seven- to 14-year period, he said. As they age and their children leave home, they again become increasingly sim ilar, according to Schaie. Coincidentally, the couples say they are the happiest with each other in the early years of m arriage and after their children leave home, he said. Couples with children report they are less happy when their offspring are sm all children, he said. The study can be used as a guideline for couples contemplating m arriage, he said. “The study should reinforce the notion that although you don’t necesarily pick someone exactly like you, the liklihood of a m arriage lasting is increased by picking someone sim ilar to you,” Schaie said. “The m arriage is more likely to stay intact.” Over the last 31 years, Schaie, who is also director of Penn State’s Gerontology Center, tested 3,000 selected volunteers from the Seattle area on communication and verbal skills, personality traits, reasoning ability, math skills and spatial ability. The m arital sim ilarity study, which is funded by the National Institute on Aging, is part of the Seattle Longitudinal Study, which has tracked the mental ability of people as they age. C o u rt re v e rs e s w e lfa re a c t d e c is io n in c h ild c u s to d y c a s e By The Associated Press PHOENIX — An appellate court has ruled that a Coconino County court improperly decided the Indian Child W elfare Act did not apply to a custody case involving the child of a Navajo Indian. The Court of Appeals said Tuesday a court m ay dray custody to the unwed Navajo father of the child only if he is ruled to be an unfit parent. The girl had lived with her non-Indian mother, Cindy Jensen, off the Navajo reservation until an abuse allegation was made against her stepfather, Bradley Jensen. The Coconino County court then placed the child in a nonIndian foster home, ruling that the Indian Child W elfare Act did not apply to the child’s case because the law w as intended to keep children who were raised in an Indian environment from being removed to a non-Indian environment. However, the Court of Appeals said that even though the child is not used to an Indian environment, she is an enrolled Navajo and the federal law gives her father custody rights unless there is a likelihood of serious emotional or physical harm to the child. The appellate court did not order the girl placed with her father, Alan Brown, saying officials m ust resolve an allegation of sex assault against Brown made by Mrs. Jensen’s sisters. H H H ) about pushing this now? Plenty, we’re glad to say. Because Mountain Bell Oper­ ator Service is back. Back with the same personal attention you received before the “break-up,” , Need-assistance in placing local or long distance calls with­ in your Mountain Bell calling area? Just dial “0." Our oper­ ators are there with a friendly voice and friendly help to make all your calls easier. Need help in making calls outside your M ountain Bell calling area? Dial “0 ” plus the num ber you want to reach, or call your long distance com­ pany for ad d itio n al dialing instructions. So remember, the next time you dial “0,” you’ll not only get answers. You’ll also getthe friendly service you’ve come to ap­ preciate from Mountain Bell. Mountain Bel A US WEST COMPANY Answers. —----- ----------------—_ ,, - _____ . 1987 Mountain Belt SW W PPW Page 21 Thursday.A p ril30.1987 C o n g re s s m a n s u g g e s ts G e n e ra l E le c tric d iv e s t its e lf o f N B C By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — A congressm an suggested Wednesday that General Electric Corp., a major defense contractor, be required to divest itself of NBC because of a potcfiH»! conflict of interest in owning a news organization. But news chiefs of the three networks insisted there w ould be w holesale resignations, including theirs, should any par«nt company seek to influence a network news division. “I think w e’re an enormous porcupine that would be indigestible under those circum stances,” CBS News President Howard Stringer told a hearing before the H o u se E n e r g y a n d C o m m e r c e subcommittee on telecommunications and finance. NBC News President Lawrence K. Grossman said neither GE nor its predecessor, ECA, a lso a d efense contractor, had ever tried to exert influence over NBC News. However, Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kans., contended that an appearance of conflict of interest could be as damaging as actual conflict of interest. “Maybe we should consider legislation requiring GE to divest itself of NBC,” S A L E STA RTS: news story. “If we don’t find out about it, our competition w ill, ” he said. Slattery said. “If different people were there, the opportunity would be there where a major network could become the salesperson rather than the watchdog of its owner.” Grossman also cited the recent NBC documentary, “A Trillion Dollars for Defense, What Have We Bought?” that, in part, criticized weapons projects produced byGE. He noted that GE has a financial interest in the Strategic Defense Initiative, the Reagan administration’s ambitious m issiledefense effort still a subject of debate reported in the news. G rossm an su g g ested that every corporation has an interest in some area of public policy and that any corporate intrusion upon news would itself be a hot After the hearing, called to exam ine the effects of corporate takeovers on network news, Slattery said he and colleague Dennis E . Eckart, D-Ohio, would research the GENBC issu e and perhaps introduce legislation. THURSDAY, APRIL 3 0 ,7AM-1QPM THROUGH SATURDAY ONLY! EACH PIECE GARMENT-WASHED SHIRTS, PANTS A SKIRTS (Juniors »13; S-M-L) VALUES $20-24 T A 99 HANG TEN f t & OTHERS TANK D RESSES (S-M-L) VALUES $16-21 “ 1 4 ‘9 TXJNlys’ ONE ft TWO-PIECE SWIMSUITS Ja p g g S * (Junior A Misses 5-14) VALUES $27-38 ?6 1 0 0 % COTTON TW ILL S H O R T S (S-M-L) VALUE $20 INSTANTCLAMOUR « O i r i M C K c ^ K ia ) l19 9a 9W -M O ” m Æ M LIM ITED EXPRESS® I $ 100% COTTON SHIRTS (S-M-L) VALUE $28 99 OUTBACK RED® COTTON-BLEND PANTS (Misses 6-14) VALUES $44-52 5 99 io o % conoN ROMPERS 3 KNIT OVERSIZED C R O P TOPS (SM-L) VALUE $7 (S-M-L)VALUES $16-20 ^ ■ R IB B E D -K N IT TANK TOPS (S-M-L) VALUES $66 PA SH K A G AL FVERYDAY SAVINGS O F U P TO 7 0% O N FIRST QUALITY NAM E BRAND FASHIONS FOR JUNIO RS & MISSES PHOENIX J g h A v » .ft ¿»aOT.^HOURS:’ WATCH FO R T H E Q U A N D O P E N IN G OP O U R P H O E N IX W IS T P L A Z A S T O R E -O U R N IN T H P H O E N IX A R E A L O C A IfO N l ^ * Thursday, April 30,1967 Page 22 State Pre«a Convict found innocent of failure to register move By The Associated Press PHOENIX — W illiam Archie Fain, who served 16 years of a life prison sentence for murder and rape in California, w as found not guilty Wednesday of failing to register as a convicted sex offender after he moved to Arizona last summer. Fain, 40, was arrested October 22, two months after he moved to Mesa from San Jose, Calif., and was charged with violating a state law requiring convicted sex offenders to register with the county sheriff within 30 days after they m ove to Arizona. Judge Robert Weber of Maricopa County Superior Court ruled Wednesday that Fain was not aware of the law when he moved to Arizona and that he registered soon after learning of the requirement in September. Fain had waived his right to a jury trial and was tried before Weber. R. Wayne Ford, a deputy Arizona attorney general, had argued that Fain moved to Arizona about Aug. 1 and had spent considerable tim e in the state before offenders to register with the police. “When I explained to him that I had to register in California and asked if I had to register in Arizona, he asked me if I was on parole,” Fain said. “I said ‘no,’ and he said as far as he knew I was not required to register in Arizona for a crim e I committed in California.” Fain said he was in California when he learned of the registration requirement and that he contacted the Maricopa County sheriff’s office and was told that there would be no problem if he registered after returning to Arizona. Fain said he returned on Sept. 15 and registered the following day. Winnie Baker, Fain’s sister and the manager of the Mesa apartment complex where be lives, testified on Tuesday that she had been contacted in August by Mesa police D etective B ill Richardson. Richardson told her he was checking on Fain for San Jose, Calif., authorities, she said, and did not mention Arizona’s that, forming a roofing maintenance company in Mesa and opening a checking account in that company’s name in July. Because Fain had registered in each of the three California cities where he had lived since getting out of prison in 1983, Ford argued, he should have realized that A rizona probably had a sim ila r requirement. But Fain testified Wednesday that he first learned of the Arizona law from his California attorney on Sept. 9 and went to the Maricopa County sheriff’s office to register a week later. A jury in Modesto, Calif., convicted Fain in 1967 of murdering a 17-year-old youth and raping two teen-age girls. He originally was sentenced to death, but that punishment w as overturned and he later was sentenced to life in prison. He was paroUed in 1983. Fain said he spoke with a Mesa police officer shortly after he moved to Arizona on Aug. l l and w as told that there w as no requirement in Arizona for convicted sex By The Associated Press PHOENIX — A soon-to-be lawyer from Phoenix who graduated from the University of Iowa m ade the highest score am ong those who passed the Arizona bar exam ination in February, the bar association announced W ednesday. Timothy Jam es Agan headed the list of 178 who passed the exam . P h o e n ic ia n s c o re s best on b a r exam ASASU Continued from f»0*1- persecution of homosexuals in Nazi death camps during World War II. Heap had no comment on the settlem ent proposal but expressed disappointment over the senate’s refusal to approve funding. “At som e point in the senators’ lives, I hope they realize what they are doing,” she said. “They are impinging their biased and irrational personal beliefs on their public duty.” registration requirement. Baker said she asked Richardson “if he (Fain) had to do anything.” She said Richardson replied, “No, you don’t even have to tea B ill I was here if it would upset him .” Robert Billar, Fain’s attorney, produced an Aug. 20 story from The Mesa Tribune about Fain’s m ove to Mesa. Sylvia Lopez, a spokeswoman for the Maricopa County attorney’s office, is quoted by the newspaper as saying Arizona has no registration requirement for convicted sex offenders. Had Richardson informed Fain or Baker of the registration requirement, or if Lopez had not beep quoted by the newspaper as saying there was no such requirement, it is unlikely that there would have been a trial, Weber said ip explaining his ruling. He said it w as his belief that F ain could not be convicted of violating a law that he did not know existed. Elizabeth Carol Hollister of Phoenix, a University of Colorado graduate, and John Frederick Knoeckel of Tucson, a Harvard grad, shared second-place honors. Warren Richard Darrow of Prescott, a University of Wyoming graduate, w as third. They and their colleagues w ill be adm itted to the Arizona bar in May 9 cerem onies in the Centennial Hall at the University of Arizona. What goes great with morning coffee? Ettelbrick called the senate’s continued denial of funding “unlike anything I’ve every seen at a University before.” She said her group has achieved “victories” in sim ilar cases at Texas A & M, Texas Tech and several other universities. A hearing on the lawsuit w ill be June 5, when M eyerson w ill argue tor a motion to dism iss the case. I ' t TH E every weekday morning THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY. A nd they’re b o th repre­ sented by the insignia you w ear as a m em ber o f th e A rm y NuTse 1 C orps. T h e caduceus o n the left m eans you ’re p art o f a health care System in w hich educational and career advancem ent aré th e rule, not th e exception. 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D s p o rts State Press Thursday^Aprit 30f 1987 .... _ _ _ Page 23 Restless Fans create own excitement in baseball game By DAVE HODGES S tats Press There w as not m uch'excitem ent during the awaited matchup between the ASU and Grand Canyon College ha ««»hall team s Tuesday night at Packard Stadium. There w ere no bench-clearing brawls and the game was played without any incidents between the two team s. The last tim e the two team s m et, there were two bench­ clearing incidents. The second — a full-scale brawl — left several ASU players with injuries. In fact, the only suspense during the Sun D evils’ 19-4 rout of the «lumping Antelopes was whether or not the 972 fans would get in a fight. Fierce shouting m atches between fans of the two schools turned momentarily ugly in the ninth inning when a Grand Canyon fan sitting behind the Antelopes’ dugout caught a foul hail The fan threw the ball across the field, in an attempt to hit a group of ASU fans behind the Sun Devil dugout. The ball narrowly m issed a woman several sections away fro™ its target, and the fan was im m ediately escorted out of the stadium. “I think we have to take a long hard look at whether it’s in the best interest of both schools to continué the rivalry,” ASU coach Jim Brock said, “As far as on our part the decision will be made by (ASU athletic director) Charles Harris. “I don’t think either school is happy with the im age that has been projected this year either in the stands or on the field.” There was a gam e Tuesday night, but it wasn’t much of rate. ASU scored 14 runs during the first three innings and cruised to a 19-4 rout of the Antelopes. The gam e showcased two team s going in opposite direction?. ASU (31-22) — which has won seven of its last eight gam es and 11 of its last 15 — swept the three-game series from Grand Canyon. The defending NAIA national champion Antelopes (35-27) — ranked No. 1 earlier this year — have dropped six straight and 15 of their last .19. The main problem for the Antelopes during the skid has been pitching, which w as evident Tuesday. Canyon entered the gam e with a 7.16 team ERA and left with a 7.29 mark — the highest in Antelope history since 1953 —the first year the Phoenix school fielded a team. “Obviously the Antelopes are struggling badly right now after a very long, difficult road trip, and this wasn’t what they needed, ” Brock said. ASU, leading 4-0 after one inning, broke the gam e open during the second. The D evils pushed across seven runs on four hits during the inning. The big blow was a grand slam by catcher Tim Spehr. Tony Mattia — who previously played for grand Canyon before transferring to ASU — also hit a towering homer during the eighth inning onto First Street. “It was as sw eet as biting kiw i,” Mattia said. “I was just looking to hit the ball hard; the homers w ill com e.” Mike. Schwabe (8-5) pitched the first five innings and picked up the victory, although he was not particularly im pressive, Brock said. ASU |unlor Bias M inor was the biggest plus fo r the Sun Devils Tuesday night, according to Coach Jim Brock. M inor gave up one hit, allowed no runs and struck out five batters In three Innings against Grand Canyon College. Brock said he was most pleased with the relief performance of BlawMinor, who allowed no runs, struck out five, and gave up only one hit in three innings. “Probably the biggest plus for us w as Minor,” Brock said. “For the second tim e in a row he looked very dominating. ” “He has tremendous command of what has become a very good fastball, and his slider becam e a factor tonight.” The D evils (12-12 in the Pacific-10 Conference Southern Division) travel to California this weekend in a conference series. With only a home series with Arizona remaining after this weekend, ASU is in third place in the Six-Pac, two gam es ahead of UA and Southern California. “ T h is gam<» is gonna create momentum going into Berkeley, and provide the unity that we need,” Mattia said. “This was kind of a ‘lam e duck’ type of gam e,” Brock said. “It would have been easy to ease back and not give it everything. But I thought we battled pretty w ell until the game was put out of reach.” Devil passed up in draft Non K ucnk Jr./Stal* Nran ASU senior quarterback Jeff Van Raaphorst, who owns the school record fo r career com pleted, was suprisingly not selected In yesterday's NFL draft. passes What went wrong? The NFL draft is over now, and all of those big questions have been resolved. Vinny is going to Tampa Bay, Cornelius was taken by Indianapolis, and the Boz isn’t going anywhere — yet. ASU w ill have its usual high representation in the NFL next season: Scott Stephen, Danny Villa, Bruce Hill, Skip McClendon, Dan Saleumua, Jim Reynosa, and Jim Wame. They w ill no doubt join all of those countless Sun D evils who have gone to the NFL and made big waves. But Jeff Van Raaphorst didn’t get drafted. Those of us on the sports desk spent all day and most of Tuesday night following the draft, and as each hour passed we wondered when Jeff’s hame would join the list. It never did. It seem s ironic that one of the few players who brought attention to the fact that we weren’t the Arizona State Wildcats at the Rose Bowl wasn’t selected. Don’t get m e wrong, though. Everyone on the ASU football team did that last year. But one would think that the man who broke Danny White’s career record for most passes completed in a career (White certainly was drafted), and who holds the record for most passing yards as a Sun D evil, might at least be a charity case for Steve Brennan Asst. Sp o rts Editor som e beleaguered pro football team. As most Sun D evil fans might agree, it is slightly irritating to think that Alfred Jenkins (who most likely won’t play quarterback) w as drafted. Jim Harbaugh, the man Van Raaphorst outplayed in the Rose Bowl, was picked in the first round. NFL scouts said they questioned Van Raaphorst’s poise and consistency. Well, I can’t disagree with that, much as I might like to. There is nothing w orse than an in con sisten t quarterback and Van Raaphorst has shown that flaw on occasion, namely against Washington State and UA this season. The first exam ple in my mind of a sim ilar player in the NFL is Dave Krieg. He jumps to the peak of stardom and drops to the depths of humility on a weekly basis. But Turn to BQENNAN, pago 24. S ta trP rm Thursday; April 30,1987 Golf team tied for 1st going into final round By C H R IS DORSEY S tate Press The top-ranked ASU women’s golf team found itself in second place after the first two rounds of the inaugural Pacific-10 Conference Tournament, seven strokes behind Southern California. * Two rounds still remain in the tournament, which concludes today at Oro Valley Country Club in Tucson. USC had combined rounds of 304 and 301 for a total score of 605. ASU and Stanford are tied for second at 612, with host Arizona two strokes behind.' The Sun D evils w ere at the top of the leader board following the first round with a two-stroke advantage over USC. But as afternoon winds kicked up, the Sun D evils faltered with a second-round310. USC shot a 301 in the second round. The Trojans — Tracy Nakamura and Kim Saiki — are in the running for m edalist. Nakamura fired a 3-under par 147 to lead the field while team m ate Saiki shot a 1-under 149. Cathy Mockett is the third golfer in contention for USC, at 5over 155. For ASU, Pearl Sinn was low, with a 2-over 152 to finish4n seventh place. The top guns for the Sun D evils — Danielle Ammaccapane and Pam Wright — are tied for eighth place with 154s. The two shot reciprocal rounds of 76-78 and 78-76. The best round for ASU was turned in by Amy Fruhwirth. She was one of four golfers to fire a 2-under 73. But the feeling Brennan ContlniMd from page 23. Van Raaphorst is no Krieg. He m ight not be as good, but he certainly isn’t as inconsistent. But when exam ining the whole situation logically, it sort of m akes sense. The “Home Boys,” who w ere the most fearsom e force in the Pac-10, made Van Eaaphorst’s job quite a bit easier all the way through the season. Two of them, Villa and Warne w ere selected. Very few people knew their nam es outside of Arizona, but everyone from here to Ann Arbor felt their irresistible force on the field. That goes the sam e for guys like Stephen, Saleaumua, Reynosa and McClendon, (McClendon w ill join David Fulcher on the sam e defense, which is a scary thought for opposing team s). It was the Sun D evils’ defense that brought them to the Rose Bowl, and it was the defense that won it. No doubt a few NFL scouts were impressed with the second half of that particular bowl gam e, when the ASU defense held Jam ie Morris to -1 yards. I hope Jeff makes it into the NFL. He certainly is more than good enough. It w ill probably require that he go the free agent route. But who knows? A lot of others have done it with success. Like, Dave Krieg. In related news, I read that the Los Angeles Raiders drafted Bo Jackson, even after Jackson said in no uncertain terms he of being the leader would not continue into the second round as she had hoped. The freshman’s second round w as an 82, dropping her to 11th place. The last golfer for the D evils is Missy Farr, tied for 18th with a 7-over 157. The hosting W ildcats have two golfers in the top six spots: Kathryn Im erie and Kris Hoos. Im erie is shooting an evenpar 150 to hold third-place honors. Hoos is tied with Sinn with a 152. At the end of two rounds, only four team s appear to have a realistic shot of winning the overall team title. UCLA is 25 strokes behind the USC, while sixth-place Washington is 32 strokes off the pace. The NCAA Championships w ill be held May 27-30 at Albuquerque, N.M. does not want to play football anymore. Maybe they can work a deal with the Royals to trade Marcus Allen and Marc Wilson for Jackson and George Brett. - One has to wonder why the Chicago Bears picked Harbaugh. It’s not as if they don’t have any decent quarterbacks. One would think that Jim McMahon, Doug Flutie, Mike Tomczak, and Steve Fuller just might be able to handle the job. If they are lucky, they might be able to swing a trade with Atlanta for Chris Miller, move Walter Payton to wide receiver, and not use any running backs in the backfield. Who ever knows what Mike Ditka is really up to? Tampa Bay big winner, grabs top picks in draft NEW YORK (AP) — The poor got richer in the NFL draft. Some of the rich got richer, too. While coaches and personnel executives unanimously applauded them selves, and sages pointed out that it w ill take years to determ ine the draft’s real value, a few winners and losers jumped out of Tuesday’s 13-hour selection process. Winners: the Tampa Bay Bues, Houston Oilers, Pittsburgh Steelers and Buffalo B ills. And two of the last three Super Bowl winners, the San Francisco 49ers ana New York Giants. Losers: The Chicago Bears and, as usual, the St. Louis Cardinals. The Bucs, a big loser last year when top pick Bo Jackson opted for baseball, won by default. By som e wheeling and dealing, new coach and general m anager Ray Perkins had 20 picks, the m ost since the 12round draft w as instituted in 1977. The assumption is that 20 new guys can’t be any worse than 20 who played on the 2-14 Rues last year, particularly when No. 1 is Vinny Testaverde, the quarterback around whom Perkins w ill rebuild. “We got m ost of the players we wanted. Now it’s just a m atter of how good a job we did evaluating,” said Perkins, who m ay have snared a star on the second round in M ississippi State quarterback Don Smith, who w ill be turned into a running back. The Oilers, with an extra first-round pick from the trade of Jim Everett to the Los Angeles Rams last year, added two potentially explosive elem ents in Miami fullback Alonzo Highsmith and Haywood Jeffires of North Carolina State, considered the top wide receiver. They also may have the pass rusher they need in Walter Johnson of Louisiana Tech, one of six straight linebackers picked in the second round. The Steelers benefitted from sheer luck and curious picking ahead of them, notably by the always curious Cardinals, who took .Colorado State quarterback Kelly Stouffer with the draft’s sixth pick. That set off a chain reaction that dropped Purdue defensive back Rod Woodson down to 10th and also allowed Philadelphia to take Miami defensive lineman Jerome Brown with the ninth, setting up a potentially awesom e front featuring Brown and Reggie White. Pittsburgh had tried unsuccessfully to trade to get Woodson, the best defensive back available and maybe the best pure athlete in the draft. “It’s like Christmas in April,” said defensive coordinator Tony Dungy and Coach Chuck Noll said: “We spent lots of tim e looking at other people because we thought he’d go very, very high People fall in love with certain people. I’m in love with him .” Buffalo, which wanted Penn State linebacker Shane Conlan, had the third pick but figured it could get Conlan lower. So it exchanged places with Houston, which held the eighth choice, added a high second-round pick, and still got Conlan. Then, the B ills parlayed that second-round choice into a deal with Tampa Bay that gave them the first pick of the second round and another top-defensive back, Nate Odomes of Wisconsin. Longnecks Well & Schnapps Margaritas & Wine t t t f $2.50P itchers tm nnv soP attyM elt at Rural & Apache 11:30-8:00 MOVE UP TO LUXURY LIVING! UP to $450 MOVE IN ALLOWANCE (w ith 12 m o nth lease) Large One Bedroom $390 Two Bedroom $475 •Moodbumlng »Insta n t Phone access fireplaces • Assigned covered parking • Custom mini-blinds through-out • Large sparkling heated pools and jacuzzi • Cable TV available • Two racquetball courts • Exercise facilities • Sand VoNsybaR courts •Ram adas & Barbecue Areas •S in gle parent discounts •D esigner arched, windows •Private patios and balconies •C lu b Room M A IN Z ★ EVERG REEN V E J J IQ E 8 CD s C O R A L P O IN T 2343 W. M A IN , M ESA 844-4000 State £ 2 2 *2 5 Thursday, April 30,1987 Gymnast endures pain; gains admiration of fans By CAROL BOOS another tide, Burrell went back to the gym. “It was hard to tell Mo (Moses Dungca). We were motivating each other. I told Mo, ‘Go out and win it for both of us.’ I thought I had made a decision. “As we marched in I heard the National Anthem play, and I got a sudden burst of inspiration and thought ‘No, I can’t give up now.’ ” So Burrell went against his original instinct and decided to compete. Assistant coach Scott Barclay applied more tape to his ankle. “I had so much tape on my ankle it was like a cast. At that point I becam e so pumped up. “I was next. I heard ‘Jerry Burrell up on floor.’ “The judges were having a conference on the guy that was before me. So it gave m e a couple more minutes to think about it. But, I decided to stick with it. I saluted the judge and started my routine. “I was thinking ‘it’s just you and me God.’ ”, But this year, the All-America could only make it halfway through his routine. “Talk about pain. After I did my double back (flip) I landed, and the pain went up my leg. “In the middle of a press, I decided I couldn’t do it. I did one more Skill, saluted the judge and walked off, ” he said. As he walked off, coaches stood, people in State Press Jerry Burrell went into this year’s NCAA Championship heavily favored to win the floor exercise. The defending champion led the nation the entire season. He finished in 73rd place, beating only one gymnast. Burrell was the man to put all your blue chips on to win. But the odds turned aginst him as an injured right ankle alm ost prevented him from competing at all. “I guess I w as waiting on a m iracle,” Burrell said. For two weeks he did nothing but train mentally. The co-captain and 1986 AllAmerica said prior to this year’s championships: “I’m looking at it as an advantage; it gives m e more tim e to train m entally.” So the 5-foot-10 gym nast prepared to defend his title. “I stretched before the m eet. It wasn’t only the pain in m y leg, but the strength wasn’t there,” he said. “I could have handled thé pain.” Unsure of what further dam age he could do to his ankle, Burrell scratched from the meet. “1 went to the training room and saw a couple of my fraternity brothers. They got die head trainer and doctor and they told me I couldn’t hurt it anymore if I could ‘suck up’ the pain.” Still unsure whether to risk his ankle for Turn to BURRELL, pago 29. ASU gymnast Jerry Burrell w ent Into this year’s NCAA Cham pionship a heavy favorite to win the floor exercise. He ended up w ith an Injured right ankle and a 73rd place. 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MS Magazine “Judy Davis is a marvel.” - (mHuitn.lOWMHIHIIW WINNER BEST ACTRESS - |U D Y DAVIS AUSTRALIAN ACADEMY AWARD 2 ). ^ 4 KANGAROO SPEC IA L LIM IT ED ENG AGEM ENT f C o m e ib a c k R oa d »ONE O F THE M OST 1 f c i i EXTRAORDIN A R Y M OVIES 1-------O F OUR TIME* I WEEK! f in a l v Scottsdale Rood and McDowell R o y } Bill Jones PHOENIX GAZETTE A C A D E M Y A W A R D W IN N E R B e s t F o re ig n F H m h u r r y ■BBIHIT *a p o w e r f u l , T U c im m iH I T T H E ||§ |^ ||||L | PO ETIC FILM ‘ kR o o m w i t h a V i e w ] ~(ga)3 A c a d e mzyim Aw ma ir d s J a EXTREME i MUIAN ‘PREJUDICE! m i A R im C W $ The ALLnighter s USANNA H O F F S (fH E BANGLES) 4305 North ScotHdol» Bood ¿EAST VALLEY-S BIGGEST SCREEN Su c c e s s Sow i MEN w e e k K.Thomas. LA TIMES iPGi [Jmroc^ State Press J h u n d g ^ A p r M j ì^ 1 9 8 7 B ro w n ta k e s fir s t- r o u n d le a d in ra in -s h o rte n e d to u rn e y By The Associated Press LAS VEGAS — Ken Brown of Great Britain put on a fast finish for a 64 and the lead Wednesday in the storminterrupted and uncompleted first round of the $1.3 million Las Vegas Invitational. Play was held up for alm ost three hours by a series erf early afternoon thunderstorms that struck this desert resort with rain, wind and lightning. Officials eventually called play for the day at 6:30 p.m ., PDT, with half the field of 156 pros and 624 am ateurs still on the three courses used for the first three rounds of this event. They marked their positions and were due to return at 9 a.m ., PDT, Thursday to com plete first-round play. Due to the size of the field — and a forecast calling for more thunderstorm s— no further play is scheduled Thursday. The second round of the 5-day, 90-hole tournament is set for Friday. PGA Tour officials said no decision has been made on the Jefferson gains fame for being final draft pick By The Associated Press BATON ROUGE, La. — Norman Jefferson can take a joke, even when it’s an elaborate ribbing directed at his long-shot status as the last man chosen in the NFL draft. “If you can’t laugh at yourself now and then, you’re not much of a human b ein g ,” J efferso n said Wednesday. Jefferson, a cornerback at Louisiana State University, was the 335th player chosen, at 2:05 Wednesday morning, taken by the Green Bay Packers — the last pick of the last round. “I’m glad to have the opportunity to make the team . I’m glad I was drafted,” Jefferson said. He wasn’t sure, as the 18hour draft wore on, that he would ever get a call. “I didn’t give up on m yself, but I had given up a little on them calling m e,” he said. As the last player drafted, Jefferson has been invited to be the guest of honor in June at Newport Beach, Calif., for the 12th annual Irrelevant Week, during which he w ill, receive the annual Lowsman Trophy. “It’s a gorgeous bronze trophy. It features a football player, mouth agape, just dropping the football. It’s a laugh, but it’s a gorgeous trophy,”, said Betty Bottorf of Sports Depot, prime sponsor for the civ ic occasion. D u r in g th e w eek , Jefferson w ill be part of a boat parade, shake hands with Mickey Mouse during a day at Disneyland, have a race named for him at Hollywood Park and share a dais with baseball Hall of Fam er Mickey Mantle at a sports award banquet. There will be a superstar sports competition in such events as a wet sweatsuit sw im and a blindfold rowboat race. He will be taken to Reno, Nev., for the nightlife, then back to Newport Beach for farewell cerem onies. “ It sounds like fun,” Jefferson said. “It’s not like som eone trying to put you down, just everyone having fun.” He said he wasn’t sure whether he would enjoy m ost shaking hands with Mickey Mouse or M ickey Mantle. “I g u e ss M ick ey M ou se, because be w as alw ays the storyteller for kids when I was coming up,” he said. STATS P U S S CLASSIFIED ADS REACH 48.000 READERS DAILY tournament schedule beyond Friday, or whether the tournament w ill be reduced to 72 holes. Brown, who splits his season between the American and European tours, made the turn in a modest 34, then ripped the back nine with a burst of six birdies in a stretch of seven holes. That string was interrupted by the long delay. He cam e back three hours later and paired the final hole, completing the back nine in 30. The original schedule called for the pros to play one round, each day with a different four-man amateur team , on each a t three courses before the field is cut for the final two rounds at the Las Vegas Country Club. Andy North, a 2-time U.S. Open champion, was making a run at the early leaders when play was suspended for the day. North, playing at the Las Vegas Country Club, was five under par after nine holes. Defending title-holder Greg Norman a t Australia was at even-par through nine holes at the D esert inn. Jim Colbert, playing at the D esert Inn, and David Edwards, at Spanish Trail, each made the turn in 33. D enis Watson of South Africa, whose last American triumph cam e in this tournament in 1984, birdied the last hole from three feet to take second among the Wednesday finishers at 65, seven under par. Watson, like Brown, played at the Las Vegas Country Club. Bob Tway, the PGA champion who has been in a slump ft»two months, had a 66 despite a bogey on his last hole at the Spanish Trail Country Club. He was tied with Mark P feil and veteran Leonard Thompson. P feil also played at Spanish Trail and Thompson was at Las Vegas. The group at 67 included Hale Irwin, Ronnie Black, Joey Sindelar, Jack Renner, Woody Blackburn, Sam Randolph, Tim Simpson, Ken Brown, Blaine M cCallister and Lennie Clements. D ID Y O U K N O W ? TOUR ASU INSURANCE COVERS CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! • W h ip la s h • N e c k Pain •H ead ach es • B a c k Pain • S h o u ld e r Pain •A c c id e n ta l Injuries W e w ill a c c e p t y o u r in s u r a n c e , p r o v id e a s tu d e n t d is c o u n t, w it h lit t le o r n o o u t-o f-p o c k e t e x p e n s e to y o u . TEMPE 9 6 6 -1 6 3 5 SCOTTSDALE 9 4 1 -2 9 0 9 Dr. Donald .Nelson Dr. Stephen Nielson 3910 S. Rural Rd. #E 7333 E. Thomas Rd. Stiff N eck & Back! Whiplash! mM PRANKSTERS ARH BRILL 1024 E. B R O A D W A Y • 967-8875 HAPPYHOUR REVERSE HAPPY HOUR MON.-FRI. 4-7 P.M. MON., tUES. & THÜRS. 10:30 P.M.-1 A.M. 10-fo ot FREE food bar special prices oh a lt drinks m. Jm ¿v r Viva Mexico! ^ /T o n ig h t Final Drawing fo r ^ th e F R E E T r ip to M a za tla n ! pr S ix m o re n a m es w ill b e d ra w n a n d w ill b e e lig ib le to w in. Special prices on Cuervo & Corona. Previous winners m ust be present to win. FREE Giveaways & Prizes • Recapture the spirit of Spring Break! B E S T B O O D & FEVERAGE IN TEMP Et ' state Press Supersonic shys from return trip By The Associated Press Dale E llis doesn’t want to go back to Dallas. Considering he sprat three unhappy years there as a bench warmer with the M avericks,.the feeling is understandable. But the Seattle guard has another reason, too. If the SuperSonics beat the M avericks Thursday night in Seattle, E llis and his team m ates w ill win their best-of-five playoff series 3-1 and avoid a fifth and deciding gam e in Dallas. “There’s still one more gam e to go,” E llis said after scoring a career-high 43 points in Seattle’s 117-107 victory over the M avericks Tuesday night. “I just want to send those guys hom e.” The Houston Rockets can also wrap up their series against Portland with a victory Thursday night in Houston. The Rockets lead the series, 2-1. On Wednesday night, Milwaukee is at Philadelphia; Detroit at Washington; Atlanta at Indiana; the Los Angeles Lakers at Denver; and Utah at Golden State. Detroit, Atlanta, Los Angeles and Utah can sweep their series 3-0 with victories. Milwaukee and Philadelphia have split their first two gam es. The winner of the Milwaukee-Philadelphia series w ill play Boston, which swept Chicago 3-0 in their opening-round series. E llis, who w as traded to Seattle in July for A1 Wood, has cmne back to haunt the M avericks with 75 points in the first two gam es of their playoff series. “I don’t think (D allas Coach). Dick Motta really knew what he had in m e,” he said. “He never really turned m e loose to prove what I can do.” Rills averaged 8.2 points in his three seasons with Dallas. As a starter with Seattle this season, he tripled that average to 24.9, eighth best in the NBA. Although they lost all five of their regular-season games with D allas, the SuperSonics are confident they can win the playoff series. “I’ve taken som ewhat of a role in convincing the team that we’re as good as they are,” E llis said. “D allas is the only team that outplayed us during the regular season. All we wanted to do is get them in a close gam e. ” Motta thinks the M avericks w ill rebound from two straight losses to the SuperSonics. “If w e lose three gam es in a row, we go home,” he said. “We w ill have fallen into an emotional and psychological trap. But I don’t think w e’re ready to go home yet. ” ‘Fluke goals’ force sixth game for Philadelphia By The A ssociated Press UNIONDALE, N .Y .— Thanks to a little bit of luck and a lot of defense, the New York lslanders are still alive in the NHL playoffs. And die Philadelphia Flyers find it absolutely amazing. "They’re a dram atic hockey team ,” said Philadelphia right wing Rick Tocchet of the tenacious Islanders. “They never give up. You have to keep going at them. ” “It seem s the farther they go, the better they get,” Flyers defenseman Mark Howe said. “I have never seen a team like this. They just play better and better in the series. ” The Flyers played w ell them selves, but not well enough, against the Islanders in losing Game 5 of the Patrick Division finals 2-1 Tuesday night. Thus the Flyers m ade still another trip to New York with a 3-2 lead and needing only a victory in Game 6 Thursday night to wrap up this best-of-seven series. “We have to play good, solid hockey there,” Howe said, I mean, 60 minutes of hockey.” It wouldn’t hurt to get a break or two, though as the Islanders did with both their goals Tuesday night at the Spectrum. The Islanders literally had the bounces go their way in Gam es. Rich Kromm’s second-period goal dribbled past Ron Hextall when the F lyers’ goaltender tripped and sprawled on the ice. Randy Wood’s game-winner in the third period went in off his skate during a scram ble in front of the net. “The goals were flukes,” Flyers Coach Mike Keenan said. “On the first one, Ronnie caught his skate and tripped when he was com ing up to make the stop. The second one was also a fluke.” While the Islanders were lucky to score, they weren t giving up too much, either. That was the result of one of their strongest defensive performances of the playoffs. It hardly looked like the sam e defense that gave up six goals in a 6-4 loss to the Flyers Sunday night that propelled Philadelphia into a commanding 3-1. “We had quite a practice on our defensive coverage Monday,” Islander goaltender Kelly Hrudey said. We knew pretty much what w e had done to ourselves on Sunday“Tonight we cam e out and our intensity showed from the start I think we had eight shots before they had any and that really made~a difference rightfrom the beginning. page 27 jr h u r e d a ^ ^ r il3 ^ 9 8 7 RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION Elections for next year's officers and committee meeting TH U R SD A Y, APRIL 3 0 5 :3 0 Social s c ie n c e s Rm. 215 RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION WOULD LIKE TO THANK: Richard Landreth Joe om en Kim Clauss Dave Miller Cliff Osborne Dawn Ferguson Sandy Naatz Jeanne Prine Dave Fredricks Fred Najjar Jim Rund Tom Hutchison and all council Representatives and Presidents SPECIAL THANKS TO: Rob Gagne, Jackie Hoover, Corby Howes, Audra Jordan, Michelle Lazovich, Vince Micone, Pat O'Rourke, Paul Pyrz, Jenny Ryan, Mark Winfield SOME HEALTH CARE PLANS C A N LOOK PRETTY ATTRACTIVE. U n til they snap back at you w ith the cost o f deductibles and co-payments. A lot o f health insurance plans look pretty inexpensive, especially when you don't use them . But when you do, you can get trapped and squeezed by the high cost o f deductibles and co-payments. W ith Intergroup, there are no traps w aiting for you. There are no deductibles, ever. A nd only tw o co-paym ents—a small one for emergency room visits and $2.00 per prescription. T hat’s all. From there, the rest o f your health care is covered from the rirst dollar. So if your health insurance looked inexpensive, and now you’re gettin g squeezed by the deductibles and co-paym ents, consider Intergroup. It’s health care, w ith no springs attached. ARIZONA’S HMO irrte ig ro u p < 9 OF ARIZONA M T 4801 S. Lakeshore Dr., Suite 105 /Tem pe, A rizona 85282 / (602) 820-1441 707 N. Alvem on, Suite 300 / Tucson, A rizona 85711 / (602) 326-4357 A60/7-86 Thursday, April 30,1987 Page 28 Met completes treatment By The A ssociated Press of the center. NEW YORK — New York Mets pitcher Dwight Gooden left a drug rehabilitation center W ednesday, ending his 28-day treatm ent for cocaine use. Gooden, wearing a green windbreaker and blue sw eat pants, walked briskly out of the Sm ithers Alcoholism and Treatment Center shortly after 4 p.m . EDT. He entered a waiting car, and w as driven away. H ie 1985 National League Gy Young Award winner was surrounded by a crowd of about 50 people outside the center, but did not speak. However, he did w ave to a group Of people gathered in a second-floor window Gooden, 22, entered the center April 2 after testing positive for cocaine. He is expected to resum e pitching in the major leagues by June 1 following a training program that w ill include private workouts at Shea Stadium and a couple of starts at Class AAA Tidewater of the International League. Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth m ust give perm ission before Gooden is activated. Ueberroth had threatened to suspend the pitcher unless he sought treatm ent for his drug problem. Leafs shutout by Detroit By The Associated Press DETROIT — Glen Hanlon notched D etroit’s first playoff shutout in 21 years as the Red Wings beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 3-0 Wednesday night to stave off elim ination in the Norris D ivision finals. Lee Norwood, Adam Oates and Brent Ashton each scored a goal as the Red Wings forced the best-of-seven series to a sixth gam e Friday night in Toronto, with the Maple Leafs leading 3-2. Game 7, if necessary, would be played Sunday night at Joe Louis Arena. It was the ninth shutout of Hanlon’s nineyear NHL career and his second in the playoffs. His only other playoff shutout was against the NeW York Islanders in 1984 while playing for the New York Rangers. Hanlon, who faced 50 shots in a 3-2 overtim e defeat Monday night in Toronto, handled 30 shots in Game 6. H o m e ru n s s p a rk B lu e J a y s By The A ssociated Press TORONTO — Lloyd Moseby and Ernie Whitt each snapped home run droughts to propel the Toronto Blue Jays to a 8-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins Wednesday night. Joe Johnson, 1-2, allowed only three hits and walked three in seven 1-3 innings before Mark Eichhorn relieved. Kirby Puckett had a leadoff single in the fourth, Tom Your Morning News Daily Brunansky singled in the eighth and scored on a double by Greg Gagne against Johnson. The victory was Toronto’s third straight, its longest yrin streak of the year. Right-hander Mike Smithson, who entered the gam e with only two wins in eight career decisions against the Blue Jays, suffered his first loss of the season against three wins. He walked two and struck out one. STATE PRESSI Ca//965-7572 RESUMES >We h av e developed th e m o st w idely u sed resu m e fo rm ats and w ritin g sty les. >We w ill ty p e a p erso n alized le tte r fo r th e sam e p ric e as a form le tte r. I T ’S T R U E . U H 'H U H That’s righ t Now you can place your STATE PRESS cla ssified ad at th e booth in th e MEMORIAL UNION from 11 a.m . to 1 p.m. daily and SAVE TIME! It’s easy. C onvenient. And you can w rite a personal ch eck or put it on your VISA or MASTERCARD! / Stop by today and g et a “Personal" ad for on ly $1.00! A sk for d etails. BUFFALO YOUR CLOTHES FOR SPRING - o * U N I-P R IN T •b u ffa lo /'b e f-a -ilo / the ac t of renewing one’s wardrobe by m eans of trade for cash an d /o r select clothing items. Quality Printing &) Copying For All Your Printing Needs T em p e: 1605 W . U n iv e rs ity . 829-1834 P h o en ix : 1661 E. In d ia n S ch o o l 241-9071 T em pe: U n iv e rs ity C om m ons 215 E. 7 th St. (O p e n in g A p r il 30} 968-0799 T em pe: 1035 E. L em on (O p e n in g A p r il 20) 9674651 Tempe: 968-2557 227 W. University Dr. BUFFALO EXCHANGE S ta ta F r w Page 2 9 Thursday, April 30,1987 Babbling W ho is running the NCAA these days, anyway? In the immortal words of Arizona Republic colum ist Norm Frauenheim, adjusted so as to more accurately depict reality just babbling: A quick look at the sports section of yesterday’s USA Today raises a few questions. For exam ple: Who is running the NCAA these days? NCAA president Wilford Bailey says the candidates for executive director of his organization w ill be paired to four or six by early next week, and that the successor to Walt Byers should be named by late June. But this is hardly the m ost interesting question about the NCAA that arises from yesterday’s reports. The real question is, who do these guys think they are? It seem s that the NCAA is considering adding alcohol and tobacco to the list of substances that w ill be disallowed for athletes, and tested for in the new mandatory program. Now there’s a clear thought. It’s ideas like that which allow silly people to m ake arguments against drug testing on the grounds of privacy invasion. NCAA chairman John Toner defends the proposition by saying that, ‘one of (NCAA’s) goals is to protect the health of the individuals.’ Certainly lim iting or elim inatng alcohol and tobacco use the roster, use their first round draft pick to take M ichigan’s Jim Harbaugh, who was expected to go late in the second round at best. And here com es the real kicker; the Bears could have used their 26th pick on Lonzell Hill, Washington’s game-breaking wide reciever and then used their ninth round, 249th pick to take ASU’s own Jeff Van Raaphorst. Who taught Woody Stephens the shell game? Horse trainer Woody Stephens isn’t letting on much of anything about Kentucky Derby hopeful Conquistarose. The horse has been in, out, back in again, and is now questionable for Saturday’s classic. Tuesday, after claim ing Conquistarose was definetly in the derby, Stephens waffled again, saying the horse would be in ‘if he blows out good Thursday.’ Stephens also announced a jockey change, saying the colt would be ridden by Jerry Bailey intead of Eddie Maple. In other Derby news, it cost John Ed Anthony, owner of soon-to-be-derby winner Begone (100 to rem ove the apostrophe that erroneously designated his horse ‘Demon’s Begone’ on the offical derby entry. But since the horse has won over $400,000, and stands to win a bonus of $1 million more at Churchill Downs Saturday, anything with only two zeros in it might as w ell be all zeros. Bob Heller Sports Editor will have this effect. But is the NCAA within it’s right to implement the program? I think not. Testing for controlled sustances is one thing; anybody using them is in violation of the law. Testing for steroids can be justified on grounds of fairness; .athletes unwilling to take the health risk of steroids used ought not have to compete aginst those who do. Neither of these arguments extend to alcohol or tobacco. Use of these substances is neither illégal nor unfair to other competitors. It would be wonderful if all collegiate athletes avoided the substances. It would be even more wonderful if the NCAA didn’t stick it nose were it doesn’t belong. Are the Bears Crazy? The Chicago Bears, who aleady have four quarterbacks on Burrell lA f in w Í M g ¡ « ¡ l | saö . 643-4593 ana Btu. r o d > LETHAL WEAPON|R| 12:00,2:30.4:45,7:00,3:30.11:45 RA1SIN0ARIZONA(P813I 1:15.3:15.5:15.7:15,9:15.11:30 BUKOBATE|PSI3| 1:00,3:00,5:15,7:30.9:45,11:45 PLATOONOH 1:30.4:15.7:00.9:30.11:45 MYDEMONLOVERIPS13I 12:00. 2:00. 4:00.600.8:00.10O0 PROJECT* IP813) 12:15.2:45.5:00r7:30.10:00 O The Cornerstone Rural & University TINMEN|R| 11:45.2:15.4:45.7:15,9:45 *KI=MMWi;isl CAMPUS MAM(P0| 12:10.3:50. 7:30 0U08LAR(0) 2:00.5:40.9:20 H00SIERS (P8| 12:00.2:20.4:40.7:00.9:30 AN8T0CATSI6I 12:30.2:30.430.6:30.6:30 BLACKWIDOW|R| 12:15.3:55.7:35 , MIMflMiBBTJIN2:10.5:50.9:30I FRIDAY & SATURDAY MESA »T SO '.ONGMOfif & SUPE RS1IU0H > MKM WHNHm HIN 120L445.915 CNOCMNLEDUNDEE|P813| 2:30,7:00 MYDEMONLOVEDIP613I 11:30.1:30.3:30,5:30,7:30,9:45 KCNET OF MYSUCCESS |PSI3) 11:30.2:00.4:30.7:15.10:00 NUMPIESTILSKIN|fi| 11:30.1:30 OMINI SHOP(P6I3I ^ 5:30,7:30,9:30 o o c n d fM M E S A AT 1020 0JD -U 4 W W E ST SO U TH ER ! MIDNIGHI SHOWS ^ 834-5767 B N (PC) 11:45.2:00,6:00.10.00 I HI. HR IKUI 4:00.600.8:00 THENHSNTSTALKERIN) 1200.200.400.806.10:15 LETHALWEAPONIB) 12:45.3:00.5:15.7:30.10:00 MY0EM0RLOVER(P613| 1:30,3:30,530,7:45,9:45 PLATOON(R) 11:45, £15,4:45,7:30,10:00 ja m a ra EXTREME PREJUDICE(R| 12:00,2:15,5:30.7:45,10:15 BECBETOF MYBUCCESI |P013) ^ 12:00,2:30.4:45,7:15,9:45 « 7 0 0 R9Q V. B A R G A IN PR IC E ALL SH O W S BEFO RE 6 P M M O N THRU FRI S A T . SU N A HO LID AYS FIRST SH O W ONLV 249-2843 57 C 7N O « I ■■ thave ^ LETHALWEAPONINI 12:00.2:30.5:00.7:45.10:15 THEMONT' ..MKENIPBIBI 12:45.3:00.5:15.7:45,10:00 IECNETOFMYSUCCESS|PN13| 1t-45.215.445. 7:30.10:00 MYDEMONLOVESIP8I3I 1:30,3:30.5:45.8:00.10:15 ■BMMMSSIBBTINVX. 5:15,9:00 POLKEACADEMY4 |PBI3) 3:30.7:15 Jeny Burred ConUmM from paga a t,, the crowd stood and the applauding began. “I felt so many em otions. I was upset, sad, hurt and glad. I w as glad that I tried. I didn’t give up. I fe d like I did what I could. I f you do what you can then you’ve won anyway.” Coach Don Robinson said: “I think it brought tears to a lot of people’s eyes. They saw a champion who couldn’t.” The scoreboard showed his low est ever — an 8.2. But for the gym nast who couldn’t do a handstand three years ago, the season was hardly a flop. Earlier this year, one judge gave the senior from Denver, Colo., a perfect score chi a routine. That scored averaged with the second judge’s score (9.80) gave him a 9.90 and the best score in the nation. “This (his experience at NCAAs) has been a definite learning experience,” Burrell said. .'“I don’t think people, can realize the magnitude that I’m refering to by just saying it. “I t forced m e to take a deep look at life. L ife isn’t what you expect. Here I was in first place all year, and then I can’t even compete in the last competition. But life goes on.” Which is exactly the attitude the senior marketing major is taking. “I’m graduating In May, and there is much more I have more to offer than just gym nastics. ‘‘I could sulk for days and days and I could cry. But there is no way in the world I’m going to. “I felt die pain and the pain is over. But I’m still learning a lesson from it. If I had to do it all over again, I would. “If you ask m e if I did everything I could, I refused to spend three weeks in rehab. There’s too much else to do. So, no, I didn’t. ‘‘There may have been so many things I co u ld have done. And it m ay have cost m e a national championship- But I feel good about having gone out and tried. I just didn’t hand over my national title. I went down fighting.” V i V xc r SP&ssfr i Sh op ¡MR -Ú>,vO°.T^ cP &^ . read the i m STATE PRESS everyday - o y v .e y MAY 11-15 DATÉ 9:00-4:00 TIME ASU BOOKSTORE PLACE 0 1986ArtCarved Oms Rino» Page 30 Thursday, April 3 0 ,1 9 8 7 SIX» Pitta classifieds Clothing Announcements STATE PR E S S T-Shirts $5 • Sweatshirts $10 A variety of colors! S-M-L-XL M atthew s Center Room 15 (Basem ent) NOW OPEN C.C.’s CLOSET CLASSICS Buyers and sellers of the valley’s finest pre-owned clothes - NATURAL FIBERS. The Kind You Like!! 1250 E. Apache (£. o f Lunt Ave. Marble Club) 968-2688 We buy all sizes,men & women. POP QUIZ: Which African nation provides more educational oppor­ tunities for its native black population? AFSA (Answers tomorrow.)___________ Automobiles 1972 VW Super Beetle. 12,000 m iles on re-built engine. Runs great. $1100 OBO. Jeff, 949-0568. _____________ . 1975 MERCURŸ Cougar, very good condition, must sell, $850 OBO. 784-8820. ___________________ 1976 TOYOTA Celica for sale. Runs fantastic. I am a Toyota mechanic and bought a new car, so I must get rid of this. C all 461-9258, ask for B ill. Best offer sells.________________________ 1978 HONDA Accord 5-speed, 32 MPG, air, AM-FM cassette. Runs gréât! $2500.943-8927.___________________ _ 1978 MUSTANG Ghla, 37,000 actual m iles, power, $1995. Phone 946-6684. 1982 SENTRA hatchback, 63K m iles, autom atic, AM-FM cassette, AC, white exterior, $2500 OBO. Mike, 893-2626. ‘ 1982 VW Rabbit convertible. Low m ileage, all options, one owner. Complete service record. $7800. 8200468. 1985 DODGE convertible, perfect, earphone, 32K m iles, white/red, one year left on factory warranty, $9000 negotiable. 827-2085, Dan (leave message). Also, 1980 Toyota Starlit, BO. - GET PERSONAL fo r $1.00 S to p by th e S T A T E P R E S S C lassified D ep t, d aily betw een 8am and 5 pm to place y o u r classified ad in th e P E R S O N A L colum n. It’s a g reat w ay to g et a special m essage to som eone. A nd best o f a ll, th e y ’re o n ly $1.0 0. S T O P BY T O O A Y I! state press 15 M atthews Center North Basement 965-7572 Automobiles ASU STUDENT Handbooks are here! If your office or department would like copies of the 87-88 Student Handbook, c a ll Jackie E ld rid g e, Student Publications, 965-7672._______ _______ POP QUIZ: Which African nation provldea s tra te g ic m inerals fo r America's oil refining industries? AFSA. __________________ _ THE ARIZONA Blue Grass Association w ill host an open lam session at Klwanis Park Lake on Sunday, May 3rd at 2 pjn.Evoryone‘s Invited.__________ 1985 MUSTANG convertible, fully loaded, grey with white top, AM-FM cassette, low m iles, $235 month lease. Call 829-8296. _________ _ 1985 VW Cabriolet, all w hite, custom 'stereo, alarm, 35,000 m iles, $10,000. Call 481-0106, leave message. 69 VW Bug, new tires, new interior, runs great, body in good condition, $875.784-0102. 77 280Z, maroon, great condition, runs great, AC, new clutch, $3200.968-9915. 78 GRAND Prix, runs good, $1500 OBO. 968-3480. _________ ■ ' ; ., 78 TOYOTA Corolla SR5 H/B, 5-speed, AC, deluxe interior, perfect running condition, $1250 OBO. Farooq, 8357233,965-3131. 85 JEEP CJ7 hardtop, red, AC, auto, PS, AM-FM cassette, and more. Call Jerry, 820-3661._______ . ' ,- .. / . VW BUG for sale. 1971, yellow, runs perfect, $1500. CaH Nancy, 381-0225, leave message, or 277-9947.__________ Bicycles_______ 10-SPEED BIKE- Schwinn Traveler. Moving, m in t sell... $45 OBO. Call 921-1620, Trad.___________________ __ MOUNTAIN BIKE- GT Backwoods, high performance parts, new Ritchey tires, excellent condition. $500 bike, $300 OBO. Chris, 829-3679.____________■ TAKARA MENS 21" 10-speed. $75. Contact Betty, 967-4583 after 9 p.m. or leave message.__________ __________ M -f- 10-9 C SAT 10-6 h a n g in g SUN 12-5 H ands 414 MIN Avenue 966-0203 Old Town Tempe BEAUTIFUL NEW large tw o bedroom apartments, walk to ASU, pool, laundry, one block south of University on 8th Street and Gary. Ask about move-in specials. 9685238. ______ HOUSE FOR lease, N orthw est Phoenix, 10 m inutes from ASU West campus. Three bedrooms, $750 per month. Available in August/September. 938-3397.________________________ __ LUXURY TbW N HOUSES, biking dis­ tance to ASU, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, appliances, tennis courts, and pools. Ranging from $535 to $565 depending furnished or unfurnished. Available May ,16th. Call and ask for Ruth o r Liz, 831-1300; Ruth, 759-1145. _______ ONE ROOM available in a two bedroom apartment starting end of M ay. Very close to campus. One person, $215; two persons, $134 each. Call 921-1037, ask for Ken.________________________ ONE TO four people to sublease two bedroom, two bathroom condo for the summer. Close to ASU. Ask for Jenny or Kim, 968-8959. One person wanted to share a bedroom for the fall semester. PAPAGOII condo. Nonsmoker to share furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Available for first summer session, May 16 to July 4. Price $280 plus utilities for entire tim e. 968-2214._________ __ PAPAGO PARK, 3 bedroom townhouse available May -15 thru August 15. Furnished, all appliances. $650/month plus utilities. Mark, 967-6833. ______ QUESTA VIDA. 'Two bedroom plus loft,(3rd bedroom), two story unit» includes w/d, pool, spa, racquet ball and more. Near University and Hayden, $725. per month plus utilities. Available August 1. Call 991-5735 after6:00 p.m . QUESTA VIDA 2 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, upstairs, all appliances, pool. 961-3706 evenings^ Todd.____________ THE SEMESTER IS ALMOST OVER... i for you w and us too. B T h e la s t e d ito ria l iss u e w ill b e th is F rid a y , M a y 1. T h e r e w ill b e a S h o p p e r issue next Tuesday, M a y 5. C la ssified d ea d lin e Is today!! before 3 p.m. BM’TMISSYOURLAST Business Opp. 2 *3*4 bedroom condos, townhouses, houses, near ASU for sale and rant, p all Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Realty, 951-8800,860Q460.___________ DON’T M ISS out I At Terrace Road Apartments we have two openings: a large two bedroom, two bath, and a spacious one bedroom, one bath. Laundry facilities, beautiful pool, courteous management, Vi block from campus, 950 S. Terrace Road. 9669540. KEISTERBMUBEER 6-pad YUKOKCREAMALE Had UNITEKT. WMECOOLER Hk DtAMOWWIRECOOLER nitar $ 1.88 $ 2.59 $ 2.49 $ 2.35 Haagen Dazs Natural IceCream , Adult Magazines, Groceries; Ice, Wines, over 40 Imported Beers. 967-9079 SUMMER SUBLEASE: The Commons/ Lemon. $l95/m onth plus utilities. Fully furnished. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Jennifer, 9684267. TWO BEDROOM, one bath ASU condo, 700 W. University. Quiet, clean. Pool, spa, washer, dryer. Rent $425 per month or buy for $52,000. Phone 935-3658. W executive! I196 4- 16 Utilities. 8365270,965-3885. FALL 87: Own furnished 11x14 room, share 3 bedroom house w ith graduate student 4 miles (M eed, diving pool, fenced yard, w/d, microwave, TV, etc. M /F, some pets ok. 6250, Vi utilities. Cell 836-7233.______________________ FEMALE, FOR summer session: 3 bedroom condo. Tennis courts, pool, AC, washer, dryer. >215.963-1150. FEMALE FOR sum mer 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Desert Palm. AC, tannla, pool. $230. Leeae, 9663911._______________ FEMALE NONSMOKER to Share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment starting A u g u s t. 14 m ils fro m ASU (Quadrangles). Brand new, furnished, cable, pool, Jacuzzi, Individual security system. $320 per month plus Vi utilities. Call MaryBeth, 7844908 or leave message, 9966680.____________ FEMALE NONSMOKER to share large four bedroom house. Pool, satellite TV, washer, etc. $200 month, 14 utilities. Call Arthur. 9667283.________________ HUGE MASTER bedroom w ith own b a th . A v a ila b le fo r sum m er. S190/month, Vi utilities. 831-2639. Most exciting way to meet someone new. 1- 976-6000 554 per minute eAll phone numbers No membership fees Free — after listening to today’s ads you will be able to place your own C a ll 24 h ou rs TRI SIGS: Stay away from the yellow snow. Can't wait tor Thursday night. The men of Delta Chi.________________ TRI SIG’S, the temperature Is rising! Time lor a Polar Party. Delta Chi.______ TRI SIGS, watch out for the live Polar Bear! Delta Chi.____________ ________ UP TO $5000 to the flrat person with Information leading to the Identity of a large, bearded man with a dark colored side-loading van who was In the Terrace area of Temps lest November. Contact PO Box 255, Payson, Utah 84651._________._________!_______ __ MALE/FEMALE wanted to share 3 bedroom 2 bath apartment, own master bedroom. Nicely furnished, fireplace, microwave, pool, tennis court, 1 m ile from campus. Must be neat and responsible. $250 plus 14 utilities. Contact Sam, 9684I906.______________ MATURE, SEMI-RESPONSIBLE male, female to share nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath cul-de-sac home. Pool, w/d, cable, all amenities. $225/month plus utilities. No couch potatoes or squares! Call Dennis, 968-4501.___________________ M ERIDIAN CORNERS- Roommate needed for summer. Pool, tennis court, Jacuzzi, microwave. $175 4- Vi utilities. Gary, 8944)871._____________________ M /F, NEW 2-story, 3 bedroom house, nicely furnished w ith all the upgrades, S250 u tilities Included. 8961488. Room m ate wanted QUIET NONSMOKER. Available 5-25 to 8-20. Furnished, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $150 plus Vz utilities. 967-6842.________ ROOM FOR rent, luxury condo, own bath, w/d, pool, close to school, Los Prados, $250/month, OBO. 966-2668. SHARE COMPLETELY furnished 2 bedroom house, Broadway/College. W/D, micro, ceiling fan, private patio, yard. $225 Include» all. 968-3507, Lori. SHARE CONCEPTS: Shared housing available now and for fall. Valley-wide service. 990-8488.___________________ TWO NONSMOKING, responsible, working females. 3 bedroom, 2 bath house. Fireplace, pool. 3 blocks from ASU. $250 month, Va utilities, $250 deposit, first month’s rent. Peggy, 966-4643,966-5289.____________ . WANTED: 1 ($300, U r ^utilities) or 2 ($200, Va utilities). Female, nonsmok­ ing. Beautiful new furnished, Wor­ thington Place. Pool, Jacuzzi, sauna, weight room, volleyball. Convenient to campus. Nlckl, 784-9074._____ _______ S e rv ic e s _________ BUYER BEWARE! Many private com­ panies charge a fee for computer assisted searches for scholarship and grant programs. ASU does not endorse any product or service. These services are not connected to any University (including federal or state) financial aid programs._________________________ FREE STORAGE: May through August or? Pay for three months, get fourth month free. 5x5x8, $65 total; 5x10x8, $80 total. Your lock. Share with a friend! Dobson Ranch Mini Storage, Alma School at Guadalupe, 836-7500. GRADUATE STUDENT and cousin (m ales), nonsm okers/drinkers to housesit for summer. Available imm edlately. 231-9345. _____________ HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation, located in Temps. Call Sharon at Desert Electrolysis Center, 829-7829.___________ ________ RESU M ES Th« kind that work for youl UNI-PRINT 829-1834 MOBILE MOTORCYLE repair. Honda, Kawatakl, Yamaha, Suzuki. Save S, free eetlm ates, flat tires no problem. 582-2600. _________ _________ NEED A scholarship? Free Information. Scholarship Finding Service, 286 W. Palomino, *181, Chandler, A Z86224. PERFECT PLACE for private parties. Let us do the catering. Indoor and outdoor facilities. Call Casa, 9663442 for more Information. ___________ RESUMES- NEED help? Contact Snider and Associates, 59 S. Homs, *7 , Mesa. 9660682. Quick Service._____________ WRITING HELP. W ill edit papers, write resumes. 810/hour negotiable. B.A. In English. Jana, 967-3202._____________ Transportation ATTENTION: FREE cars to all major cities. 21 or older. Call AAA Driveaway, 277-9979. _______ ___________ CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All States Drive-away, 992-5200.__________ Travel CHICAGO/MIAMI: $150 round-trip. Negotiable. Leave May 1, return May 4. Muet sell. Call B ill, 921-0433._________ Typing____________ $1.50 PAGE Spelling, punctuation, grammar corrected. Fast. Accurate. Quality work. Free pick-up, delivery. Evenings, 966-5217. _______________ 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._______ ______________ NONSMOKING MALE for summer and/or fall. 8185 plus Vi utilities. Located at Worthington Place, one m ile from campus. Call 921-9420 for more Information.__________.________ A-1 RESUMES professionally written and printed. Your resume is their first impression. Word processing also available. 968-4670. _____________ Services Services INJURED IN AN AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT? VINCE- THANX for the pinning. It was great! You are the beet! I love you. ■ C o l a t t t . _______ i__________ _ Facing insurance companies represented by experienced adjusters and attorneys? NEW CREDIT cards for secured amounts through financial Institutions. Credit restoration available. Call 1-616 5634)101 for Into. ______ __________ _ P ut y o u rs e lf on equal fo o tin g ! R eal Estate_______ BIKE TO ASU, 10% FHA assumable. 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom townhome. All appliances, recreational fa c ilitie s , patio. 921-9904. _____________ _ Thomas P. McVay, Attorney at Law 426 N. 44th St., Suite 124 Phoenix, AZ 85008 For appointment call FREE Consultation! 220-0555 Typin g___________ A-1 PROFICIENT typing. IBM Selectric. Loraine, 833-8365. At University and Dobson in M e s a ._______ _________ _ AAAAA. TYPING/word processing. Quick- Professional- Reasonable rates. Same day or over night. 8206878, leave message.__________________________ AAA TYPIN G /w ord processing. $1.50/page. 10 years experience. Fast turnaround. Call Linda, 962-8075. AAA WORD Processing Service. Quick, guaranteed, professional services. Reasonable fees. Rush jobs ok. Color graphic services available. Ron, 8335532, or leave message.______________ ACADEMIC PAPERS to resumes at The Word Center. Prompt- Reasonable. 984-7034 daily 9 6 , weekends by appointment.______________________ ACCU-QWIK Word Processing - Rea­ sonable rates • Legal - Medical Statistical • Thesis • Dissertations • Business. Evenings and weekends by appointment, 820-4034.______________ ACCURATE TYPING. Cheap too! Same day service. MLA and APA. Caroline, 831-2434.__________________________ ALLISON’S TYPING Service. IBM Correcting Selectric. $1.25 per page Pica. 12 years experience. 941-1275. T Y P IN G Fast, accurate, quality typing. Close to ASU. UNI-PRINT 829-1834 ALL WORD processing projects done accurately, promptly, and reliably. Experience with research papers, theses, and dissertation styles. Satisfaction guaranteed. Linda Brewer, 8367905._____________ ____________ ANY TYPE Word Processing. Papers, reports, resumes, etc... $1.50/page. Pick-up and delivery service available. Call Pebble, 961-1495.____________ ___ CALL ME for fast, accurate, quality service at com petitive prices. Close to ASU. 9662186.____________ _________ CEREUS WORD Processing. Quality gu aranteed. Term papers, dis­ sertations, theses, form letters, re­ sumes, Dictaphone, weekends. 9477796. _____________ CUSTOM TYPING. Fast and accurate. Cloa# to ASU. 967-2363.______________ 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 Donnaor Joan, 9466302 o r947-0402.___________ GUARANTEED ACCURATE, quality typing. Resumes, cover letters, theses. Prefer 100 page papers. Reasonable prices. 8363306. _______________ _ NORTH PHOENIX typing. Dependable, fast, accurate. Spelling, punctuation checked. Vicinity Cactus and Cave Creek Rd. Kathy. 482-6592.___________ PROFESSIONAL WORD processingreports, theses, resumes, etc. Busi­ ness, legal, engineering experience. Rush jobs okay. 9460058.____________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING service- Term papers, theses, etc. Low rates, quick turnaround. Pat M ottet, 897-1832._____ SAVE TIME, call me first. Word processing- theses, dissertations, re­ sumes. Professional typist. Mesa Secretarial. 844-1878.________________ P M *! i »MLA FORMAT •APA FORMAT j «24-HOUR TURNAROUND \ J »Spelling J | »Laser Quality J "per double spaced page I i 4 3 8 -8 9 1 6 ! | Expires 5-5-87. | I__________________________ I SHORT OF TIME? I can help. Re­ asonable. Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academ ic. Call Jessie 945-5744.___________ / _____________ THE PAPERWORKS- Thesis, report and resume typing. IBM com patible word processing. Near ASU. 921-9575.______ T Y P IN G , W ORD P ro c e s s in g , Mailmerge. Near McCIIntock and Southern. Please call after 6 p.m. 8361715.________________ __________ TYPING SERVICE: Letters, resumes, reports, ate. S tatistical specialist. Low, low rates. Satisfaction guaranteed. Crown Typing Service, 8361617.______ TYPING SERVICE- 81 per page. MesaTempe area. Call Janlna, 832-4418. WORD PROCESSING, secretarial ser­ vices. 23 years experience. Student discount. SW com er, M iller and Chaparral. 994-8145._________________ WORD PROCESSING- Theses, term papers, etc. 32 years experience. $1.25 double spaced page. M arian, 839-4269. ■■■■■■ ^aiaiiMMHMlMMatflNMHIÉÉMHHHHMMmiiniaaMianCIMn Page 32 State Press Thursday. April 30,1987 For All Of YouMovers Who Thought lim’d Be LivingInThe Same Place ForYears COME SEE TH E NEW W Aff* AMERICAS GOING TO COLLEGE W orthington Place H as It A ll T here’s M ore O f Everything Save A Fortune O n C ollege Expenses M oving has to be # 4 on the stress list. Right behind death, a C minus and losing your expense m oney N ow you can live in on e place for your entire college stay. N ew W orthington Place is designed for students - for living, relax­ ing and studying. C lose to cam pus and all o f Tempes activities. A nd, because we’re totally student oriented, you’ll m eet interesting people, join in our year-round social activities and parties, make lifetim e friendships. Wfe offer more activities and am enities than anyone else in Tempe. Sw im m ing pool, jacuzzi, lush courtyards, lighted sand volleyball court, barbecue and party area. Clubhouse w ith large screen television, weight training and exercise equipm ent. Even studying is a pleasure. W orthington Place is designed w ith individual study centers in each residence so that even w ith a foil house you have privacy and a place to h it the books effectively. W orthington Place is a fabulous deal for you and your parents, "foil’ll b e in the best place in Tempe and your parents can benefit from incredi­ ble savings. In fact, there may be more benefits in ow ning a student condom inium residence than there are in ow ning their ow n hom e. It may even be possible to substantially reduce the costs o f your college lodging expenses through our W orthington R ace program. STUDENT Come and SeeThe O nly W ay To Live, Study and Play M odels & Sales O ffice: 616 So* H ardy Apt* 148, Tempe, A Z 85281 O pen 9-5 daily; weekends 10-6. (602) 968-9923 (If out-of-town, call collect for complete information). A Development of Roland University Properties, Inc.