slate press Voi. 12 No. 1 A rizona State U niversity T e m p e , A riz o n a Tuesday, June 2,1987 e C opyright, State Press, 1987 D ism a n tle m e n t o f F ra n k e n b e rg H o u s e b e g in s By d e n m c c o n n e l l S tate P ress With fencing already surrounding it, the historic Frankenberg house on University Drive and Forest Avenue slow ly w ill be moved this month— brick by brick. Gary Rouho, owner of Building Remodelers in Tempe and the contractor who will m ove the house, said he is beginning a month-long project today that w ill carefully dism antle the house, which he w ill store and rebuild later. The Frankenberg house, listed on the National R egister of Historic P laces, once was destined to fall to the wrecking ball. Now it w ill fall to workmen’s hand chisels. The history of the house’s fate goes back to 1986, when v RtiUM; read in the State P ress the house was going to be destroyed to make room for the (11.5 million College of Architecture expansion. But fancying him self as a preservasionist, Rouho decided to petition the University to m ove the house. His efforts, along with those of Susan Harter, a greatgranddaughter of one of the house’s builders, convinced administration officials to solicit bids to have the house moved. Rouho won the bidding war and set out to m ove the house intact. But after consulting with Tempe building officials on redevelopment codes, Rouho said the costs were “astronom ical.” Plus, he had nowhere to move it. Rouho said the $80,000 project is the best way to preserve the house without destroying it because he has been unable to find a suitable location to move it to. “ I’ve been looking for a place somewhere in downtown Tem pe,” he said. Expecting to pay $150,000 for an empty lot and an additional $100,000 on remodeling, landscaping and paving a parking lot, Rouho said this house-saving project w ill probably cost him nearly $350,000. Rouho said he hopes to resurrect the Frankenberg house in Tempe within “the next year or two.” S ean L. M ohr/Stale P ra te Th* Frankenberg House Is set lor dismantlement and relocation due to one Tempe businessman’s attempt to ease the historic structure. With documentors on hand to carefully photograph the dismantling, workers w ill remove the roof, examining its strength and structure to determine if it should be saved. Then carefully chipping a t the cem ent holding the aged cem ent blocks together, workmen w ill slowly remove the blocks, unravelling the house’s facade. Since most blocks are of relative size, Rouho said, blocks w ill not have to be put in the sam e place when the house is rebuilt. “There’s a lot of partitions on the inside with no reason to save them ,” he said. “But w e’ll save the facade, the porch, windows, fireplace and floor joists. And w e’ll save as much of the interior woodwork as possible. ” Rouho w ill receive $15,000 from the University once his project is completed. The amount represents how much it would have cost the University to destroy it. To com plete the painstaking project, Rouho’s crew has until July 1, when construction for the School of Architecture expansion is slated to begin. And how long will it take Rouho to reconstruct the house somewhere else? ‘‘About four months, just like a regular house. ’’ ASU foreign student admits to shooting roommate B y M IKE B U R G E S S State P ress Copyright, 1987 PHOENIX — ASU sophomore Teshome Abate religously followed his horoscope for more than a year. It told him he would find a new roommate in May. It didn’t tell him he would kill her. “I loaded my gun and went to her room ,” Abate said in a jailhouse interview Thursday. “When she saw the gun, she began shouting . . . I just remember my hand was shaking. I don’t remember how many tim es I shot her. I saw her, then I shot.” Abate, 28, is being held at the Maricopa County Jail in lieu of $206,000 bail on one charge of first-degree murder. Gilbert police detective Mike Edwards said Abate allegedly shot 35-year-old Catherin Zabka McIntosh five or six tim es with a .38 caliber pistol at her Gilbert home on May 17. . “One of the bullets basically went right through her heart," Edwards said. “The m edical exam iner said death was alm ost instantaneous.” Quietly speaking through the bars of a cramped vis tors room, a frail looking Abate, dressed in sky blue jail fatigues, said he killed McIntosh because he “was losing in sid e today ‘When I’m upset I get out o f control. I d o n ’t kno w what I did at that time, I cooled dow n after she fell dow n.’ — Teshome Abate confidence” in the United States after she told him to move out at the end of May. “When I’m upset I get out of control,” Abate said calm ly. “I don’t know what I did at that tim e,” Abate said. “I cooled down after she fell down. ” Abate, an Ethiopian national, cam e to ASU in 1984 to study engineering science. He and a 27-year-old man, who police declined to identify, were renting bedrooms rooms in McIntosh’s three bedroom home in the 100 block of E. Tremaine Avenue. Abate said his rent was $210 a month. Edwards said Abate m et McIntosh through a State Press advertisment. “She went through a fairly thorough job of selecting a roommate,” he said. “She didn’t just pick anyone. She did everything right.” Abate said he was sitting in the living ASU W EATH ER C le a r sk ie s today with an expected high o f 104 degrees. room of the home choosing his summer classes when McIntosh returned from a neighbor’s house that Sunday and told him she and the other roommate “ felt uncomfortable” and wanted him to move out at the end of the month. “I asked her why she felt uncomfortable and she said, ‘this is m y house and I can do what I want to do’.” “What upset me is that I changed my work place because I trusted her,” he said. “I worked for the house, keeping it -clean . . . I feel it was my house. Besides that I was upset because of som e problem which happened to me in August of 1986.” The “problem” Abate said, was when he was found guilty of allegedly assaulting a woman he asked out for a cup erf coffee. He maintains he was unjustly found guilty. CO PS SEQ U EL Eddie M urphy is back in “ Beverly H ills C o p II.” Review on Page 8. “That was happening on Friday May 15 in my mind. I was losing my confidence in this country. I cam e to live in this country because of the freedom and fair judgment. “I was sitting down thinking about my life in this country until now, and after that my mind becam e dizzy and I was thinking ‘Oh my God’ ”. Abate also said he was attracted to McIntosh and wanted to have a relationship with her, but she showed no interest. “I tried to have a relationship with her before 1 moved in,” he said. “But she told me could only be friends and roommates. ” Bryan Flam ig, 29, McIntosh’s boyfriend since m eeting at a Christmas party last December, said it has been difficult coping with her death. “It’s been pretty hard,” Flam ig said. “There’s not much you can say. We talked about living together and stuff, but we knew we would probably get married. I just wish I was over there at that tim e.” “It’s a real sad thing,” he said as he voice cracked. “Things were really coming together for Catherin. We were getting close, she was happy with her job . . . the whole thing is pretty senseless. “She was a really special person. ” C la s s ifie d ................................ C o m i c s . . . . ......................... 5 Entertainm ent................ 7 O p in io n ................................. 4 S p o r t s .................................................. 13 15 StatePress J jg d a ^ jn e ^ 1 W 7 P age 2 w orld news 44 children sent to death camp, witness in Barbie trial testifies LYON, France — Some children rounded up at a Jewish foster home east of Lyon were sent straight to the gas cham bers upon arrival at the Auschwitz death camp, a w itness said M onday at the trial of former Lyon Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie. H ie 73-year-old Barbie is on trial on charges of crim es against humanity. He is accused of deporting hundreds of Jew s and French R esistance members to Nazi death cam ps, including 44 Jew ish children seized in a raid April 6,1944, at a foster home in Izieu. Edith Klebinder, an Austrian-born Jew who had im m igrated to France, told the court she was deported from France an the sam e rail convoy as many of (he Izieu children, arriving at Auschwitz in German-occupied Poland on April 15,1944. Mrs. Klebinder, 73, said she was used by the German guards as an interpreter while children and adults from her train were being separated into groups— m ost adults told to walk to the cam p, while children and pregnant women were put on trucks. “ ‘Get on the trucks, you’ll arrive faster.’ It w as a phrase they used frequently,” Mrs. Klebinder recalled, in a voice shaken by sobs. She said she thought giving the children and pregnant women rides on the trucks w as an act of hum anity— until she noticed a few days later there w ere no children in the cam p and questioned a German guard. “You didn’t see the chimney smoking? Now you’ll understand,” w as the guard’s reply, Mrs. Klebinder said, gripping the bars of the w itness stand.“Indeed we understood.” Even then, she said, the evidence that thousands of people were being killed in gas cham bers “took a while to sink into people’s m inds.” Of the 44 children rounded up at the stone farmhouse at Izieu, a tiny village hidden in the foothills of the Alps 40 m iles east of Lyon, 34 were on the convoy with Mrs. Klebinder. The other 10 children were deported within the next few weeks. None survived. There w ere also seven adults, of whom only one survived deportation— Lea Feldblum, who testified last week. Two children and one adult who lived at the Izieu home, but left before the raid, testified today that it had been a joyful and hopeful place. “It seem ed to me an island of peace for these children,” said Paulette Roche, 60, who worked there during the summer of 1943 and took photographs showing the children gathered on the terrace overlooking a mountain view and playing in a meadow. “There were happy. They laughed and played,” she said. Barbie refused to attend the proceedings, as he has since May 13, the third day of his trial. Since then, he has appeared only mice, when he was brought in against his w ill last week to be identified by five w itnesses. Barbie contends his expulsion from Bolivia was illegal. After working for U.S. Army intelligence in post-war Germany, he was aided by the Americans to escape under a false name to South America. He was unmasked in 1972, but Bolivia refused to extradite him. A new government stripped him of Bolivian citizenship and expelled him in 1963. He was then brought to France for trial. Stark officers probed for failure to order air-defense maneuver WASHINGTON— M ilitary investigators studying the Iraqi m issile attack on the USS Stark are asking why the ship’s captain and other officers did not order certain precautionary m aneuvers as an Iraqi warplane approached the frigate, Pentagon sources said Monday. The sources, who agreed to discuss the m atter only if not identified, stressed that the Defense Department still believes the Stark had no reason to expect the Iraqi warplane would actually open fire on the ship on the night of May 17. But the sources said the investigators were nonetheless questioning the ship’s officers about why the Stark failed to execute a standard air-defense maneuver by turning its stern toward the airplane when it drew closer than expected. Such a maneuver is considered necessary for a frigate like the Stark to overcome blind spots in its radar and electronic detection coverage caused by the ship’s superstructure. Moreover, the frigate’s last line of defense against a m issile attack— the so-called Phalanx anti-m issile gun — is located on the ship’s stem . D etails of the investigation were reported in Monday’s editions of The New York Tim es. The sources said Monday that the investigators had not ruled out the possibility of equipment problems on board the Stark, but said they were “concerned” by the fact the ship never changed its heading. The Iraqi plane fired its m issiles at the Stark alm ost head-on toward the bow. “There was no reason to think that plane w as going to fire at the ship,” said one official. “But the ship perhaps could have defended itself if it had turnedaround. ” Officials have told The Associated P ress that in the current situation jn the Persian Gulf, U.S. ships w ere to assum e that Iraqi planes were friendly and do nothing. The sources said the skipper of the Stark, Capt. Glenn R. Brindel, and three other officers had been named “interested parties”. — or subjects of the inquiry — and been assigned lPgni counsel. The sources described that step as routine for any such m ilitary inquiry. Thirty-seven sailors died in the attack, which both the United States and Iraq have described as a case of mistaken identity. Iraq has issued a form al apology for the attack and agreed to discuss compensation. In a related development, the sources said the guidedm issile cruiser Fox steam ed through the gulf to Bahrain today to serve as an escort for the destroyer tender Acadia. The tender is to help with repairs to the Stark so that it can sail for home later this summer. CIA official affirms involvement of agency in bid to aid contras WASHINGTON — Suspended CIA station chief Joe Fernandez, in testim ony released Monday, contradicted an assurance given to the House Intelligence Committee last October by the CIA’s chief of covert operations that the agency had not even indirectly aided a private resupply effort for Nicaraguan rebels. Fernandez’s comments, made in Friday’s closed session of the House and Senate Iran-Contra hearings, included his answers to questions by panel m em bers, including Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga. The 240 pages of testim ony w ere released only after numerous passages were blacked out at the request of the CIA. 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NAU received $54,845,900. Mecham signed the budget despite previously warning that he would not agree to any funding for the universities more tfaain$422 m illion. The universities had originally requested $439 m illion, and the Board of Regents has maintained that a budget of at least $432 m illion is necessary to operate the universities without laying off em ployees or cutting studentservices. Sen. Doug Todd, K-Tempe, chairman of a Senate Appropriations subcom m ittee handling university budgets, First m ajor tenant g iv e s research park needed aid said ASU fared well in the final budget, but could have done better. “We wanted to do better but w ere unable under the severe budget restraints placed on the appropriating com m ittees by die revenue projections for the next year,’’ he said. “I think the universities have a very responsible budget this year,” Todd said. “It addresses needs. We have tried to address the growth situation and w e did address the accreditation problem at the College of Business.” Todd said $1.9 m illion was earmarked specifically for the College of Business, and $700,000 was set aside for the Engineering E xcellence program. Todd compared the budget, which is 2.47 percent more than the budget allocated to ASU last year, to a general state budget growth of “about 7.5 percent,” and said that while it should cover University costs, it could lim it growth. “I think it will probably fall a little short of addressing the needs of the growth (at ASU),” he said. “But compare that to how short it would be if we paid attention to the governor. I think it’s totally unrealistic to look at his program for the universities in light of the growth that has taken place at all three universities.” Mecham originally asked for a $384 m illion budget for the ASU’s fledgling Research Park received a boost recently when it recruited its first major tenant. Officials for ICI Americas Inc. recently announced the ICI Advanced M aterials of Wilmington, D el., would be relocating a large portion of its research and development, technical service laboratories and related adm inistrative functions to the park. ICI Americas is the U.S. branch of the fifth largest chem ical company in the world, London-based Imperial Chemical Industries PLC. Research Park executive director Michael Ammann said the park is exactly the type of tenant the park was looking for. “It also gets us over the hump from a financial standpoint,” he said. ICI w ill first move its Fiberite Composite M aterials division from its current locations in Orange, Calif., Winona, Minn., and Greenville, Tex. to the park at P rice and Elliott Road in Tempe. The Fiberite division’s move is expected to be completed by the Fall of 1988 and occupy 12.5 of the park’s 324 acres. Fiberite’s com posite m aterials products are used in aerospace, defense, sporting and industrial applications. universities, but later increased his suggested state expenditure to $406 million. But Mecham spokesman Ron Bellus said the governor still feels $427 m illion is excessive. “Don’t expect that to be the start of bargaining next year,” Bellus said. Bellus said the governor was w illing to allow the $427 m illion to go through this year, but expects the universities to be able to justify their budget requests next year. “They couldn’t even justify $406 m illion, and they got $427 m illion,” Bellus said. Bellus said the governor is willing to give the universities whatever they need if they can justify their demands. ASU officials could not be reached for comment. Board of Regents assistant director for public affairs Allan Price, who acts as a liason between the leg islatu re and the regents, said the universities did “adequately” in the final budget. “I wouldn’t say we did great,” he said. “I wouldn’t say that we walked away with the store. ” P rice said the universities received enough to continue operations at current levels, plus an additional “sm all amount” for critical areas such as the ASU College of Business. ICI Advanced M aterials plans to eventually expand and occupy an additional 29.3 acres and possibly develop manufacturing facilities off-site, employing between 1,000 and 2,000 people. Ammann said ICI w ill be moving into an existing 41,000square-foot building at the park this summer, and w ill be constructing an additional 50,000-square-foot building. Sen. Doug Todd, R-Tempe, said ICI is the type of corporation the legislature had in ,mind when it adopted enabling legislation for the park in 1983. “That type of corporation, a mega-corporation with business all over the world, heavy into research and development . . . is exactly the type of corporation we talked about when we promoted the bill, ” Todd said. Ammann said ICI’s presence “certainly won’t hurt” the park in drawing attracting additional tenants. ICI w ill be leasing the property from ASU, and w ill be purchasing the first building from D el E . Webb Properties Corp. Ammann said tenants who lease land at the park do not pay property tax on any improvements they make, but do pay a services fee to the City of Tempe. 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R u ra l R d (38th St. & Thomas) (Cornerstone) 244-9119 966-5560 Pagc_4___________ ; Tuesday.A ine2[ 1987 ____ Slat« h « i Purveyors of parking justice deserve the boot If anyone else had subjected m e to that kind of harassm ent and humiliation, I could hope at least for som e kind of legal vindication. But this was ASU’s parking services tormenting m e, a division of the U niversity’s Insult and Injury department. May 15 was a happy day for a few thousand maroon-dad souls in the process of graduating. It also was a fairly festive tim e for the ranks of friends and fam ily cheering through the assorted cerem onies. But while I w as watching friends graduate in the College of Public Program s’ cerem ony, those imperturbable purveyors of parking justice saw fit to apply the dreaded rhino boot to m y car when Meter 13 decreed m y tim e up. Evidently, the official ASU list-m aker added m y license plate to the tally of particularly evil parking perverts for having three Unpaid tickets. M em bership in that club en titled m e to an uncomplimentary m igraine-style headache and a new yellow rhino boot, monogrammed with the U niversity’s initials. So what if I had m ailed a check for the tickets Monday. So much for the party mood. Because it was 7 p.m . and parking services was theoretically closed for the weekend, I telephoned the alternate number on the shiney yellow paper taped loudly to m y windshield. I got to talk to an annoyingly sm ug, blatantly unconcerned and basically unhelpful man with the ASU police. After putting m e on hold and much ill-concealed patronizing, he managed to rouse someone official at parking services. The fellow at parking services quoted m e a price to get the boot off my car. “But sir,” I pointed out as I summoned the last shred of my patience. “I’ve already paid those tickets.” Carolyn Nelson Arts Editor I was informed that I’d have to take that up with Appeals on Monday. (Of course, m y car would be towed by Sunday afternoon, which would involve another $70 fee and at least two more headaches.) So I’d have to pay the whole ransom to have m y car liberated. Oh, and could I hurry because they were closing up. I walked to my bank and withdrew $105 in atonement — $50 to exorcise the boot-demon from my rear passenger wheel and $55 to appease the angry gods of parking. However, w alking—even in the blind-fury fram e of mind I was entertaining — is a very slow business. My bicycle was parked nearby, legally, and it occured to me that the bike ought to save the happy parking crew fidgeting in the former Campus Inn a few impatient minutes. There was the sm all m atter of navigating in the dark, particularly that little rough path behind the P .E . buildings. Just in front of the raquetball courts, I failed the task painfully. I think som ething caught in the front wheel of the bike. I don’t remember exactly, because the first thing I did was to fall squarely on m y head. Momentum saw to it th at! scraped a good bit of skin off my face, arms and legs. Impact set m y head to ringing like a security alert, and I couldn’t see too well. A graduate student in engineering picked m e up and dusted me off. He very intelligently suggested I sit down a moment, but all I could think about was parking services and that cancerous yellow contraption on m y car. I raved a little, I suspect I swore a lot. The grad calm ly collected the remains of the bike under one arm and me under the other and started in the direction that I seem ed to w anttpgo. I hope I succeeded in expressing m y gratitude for his kindness and wisdom, two qualities that the evening conspicuously lacked otherwise. I paid my penance in the proper office. Thanks to the accident, they even got blood. Someone with a badge was dispatched to remove the offending device. Then I considered staggering all the way back to Lot 11 and m y car. “Has that cop already left,” I asked, hoping to catch a ride. He had. Hmm. Plan B : “Then do you folks have a first-aid kit?” “No.” I hoped then that there was no fine for getting blood on the floor of the parking building. I thought I’d readsom ewhere of a law requiring public buildings to have first-aid kits. _ Of course, having just fallen on m y head, I w as in no condition to remember the statute number (nr even who to ask about it . Meanwhile, back in Lot 1 1 .. It took three policemen and one parking services office worker to remove the boot, which, I w as informed, was one of those newfangled numbers. While the Cushman troops had the equipment to put the new boots on, no one seem ed to have the right tools to get the boot off. At this point, I was more amused than amazed. letters Adult responsibilities put in hands of children Editor: As a longtime supporter of Arizona State U niversity and ASU students, I was appalled at the irresponsible manner in which the State Press handled an article on April 24 regarding the elections on campus. My company did w ork,for one of the students in the election, an d w e charged a fair price for the work that was done. This candidate’s campaign was singled out for “supposed” irregularities which w ere later found to be untrue. Because of the investigation on campus concerning the elections, a reporter on your staff, Mr. Darrin Hostetler, called our company and attempted to interview m e over the phone. When told that I did not do phone interviews, Mr. Hostetler made an appointment for an interview for April 22 at 2 p.m ., which he later cancelled. His reasons for canceling was that he didn’t have a stray, the elections were over. Two days later, a story in the State P ress credits m e with quotes from an interview which I feel never took place. This is not my idea of responsible journalism and I hope this is not indicative of the character of students at ArizonaState. I have taken {Hide in the long-form friendships I have made with ASU students, but Mr. Hostetler made m e feel dirty by his mudslinging coverage of the elections. It is perhaps unfortunate that on one of the leading collegiate newspapers in ' the country, adult responsibilities are often put into the hands of children. I feel that the university 1 have taken pride in supporting a ll these years, has let m e down. Students m ust realize that when their actions on campus affect the lives and reputations of those off-campus, their responsibilities becom e trem endously large. I hope that m y future dealings with ASU students w ill be as such to bring back the Sun D evil pride I once had. M annyVrigue Constitution should celebrate liberty Editor: This year w e celebrate the 200th birthday of the Constitution erf the United States of America. What do w e celebrate? A scrap of paper? An outdated, m eaningless document? An unreadable, tedious treatise, sprinkled liberally with Latin legal phrases? Wrong! While we have the original Constitution preserved in the archives in Washington, the real, living Constitution m ust be preserved in our hearts. It is the law that the government itself m ust obey. It is the character of our liberty, not given by the government to the people, but the other way around, to authorize our public servants to perform certain lim ited functions. The Consitution declares itself to b e “The suprem e law of the land.” All the courts and government agencies give at least “lip service” to that. \ The chances are, when you last saw the Consitution, it was in fine print at the back of a civics textbook. It (civics) was a required course that you weren’t interested in, the teacher an old fuddy-duddy, the home team was on fire and that good-looking kid in third period had alm ost a monopoly on your thoughts— so you didn’t pick it up. Som etim e between putting down the State Press and going to bed, look up a copy erf the Constitution and see what the greatest country on Earth is celebrating. Glenn Jacobs STATE PRESS GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS Editor M s t M a ...................................................................... CAROLYN NELSON 8P°rt» EdHor......................................... ................. ...... DAVID MILLER REPORTERS Mlk* Burgwt, Brad HalvorMn, Oairln Hootetter PHOTOGRAPHER: S o n L. Mohr.. STAFF ARTIST: MIchMl Ritter. FREE LANCE REPORTERS Amy Frischfcnocht Chuck Hadd, Bob Halter, Anthony Lobaido, Tod McCoy, Twyte Pumroy, M il» Rowte. ADVERTISINO REPRESENTATIVES: OanteUa Carbore, Carolynn Dateny, Toth Hutchlaon, Mark Pateraon. PRODUCTION: Laighayn Graan, Mark McKinney. Tha State Prate la publlahad Tuaeday and Thursday during the summar sessions at Matthews Canter, Room 18, Arizona State Univarsity. Tampa. AZ 88287. Newsroom: 968-2292. Advertising 6 Production: 968-7872. The State Press is the only newspaper exdusivety published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published In this newspaper are not neceeaarky •hose ot the ASU administration, faculty, start or student body. L E T T E R PO LIC Y Letters should be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages. Any subm issions not in adherence with letter policy will not be published. Letters are subject to editing on the basis of clarity, length or conformance to newspaper style. Include your full name, class standing arid major, or other affiliation with the University, along with your phone number. Requests for anonymity are granted if a reason is given. Bring letters to the newspaper's front desk in the basement of Matthews Center. Picture I D. is required. Stote Press Tuesday, June 2,1987 BLOOM COUNTY b y B erk e B reath ed Page 5 Pilot viewed as hero after flight in Russia FRANKFURT, West Germany — M athias Rust’s daring flight across the Soviet Union to the Kremlin is making the 19-year-old pilot a national hero, a West German David who outwitted the Russian Goliath. A radio station asked whether he could be nominated for the country’s highest civilian decoration. A senior Defense Ministry official said W est German air force pilots could learn from his deft low-level flight to Moscow. The government form ally condemned Rust’s exploit and said Monday it hopes the Soviets, who now have him in prison, w ill be lenient with the young man. Since he buzzed Lenin’s tomb and landed on the cobblestones outside St. Basil’s cathedral Thursday evening, Rust’s adventure has dominated news in West Germany. The pilot from Wedel, near Hamburg, got his license a year ago and had logged about 25 hours. He left Helsinki, supposedly for Stockholm, but changed course and flew his rented single-engine Cessna unimpeded through 400 m iles of Soviet air defenses to Red Square. Many newspaper com m entaries have centered on the subsequent firing of the chief of Soviet air defenses and the forced retirem ent of the Soviet Union’s 75-yearold defense m inister, Sergei Sokolov. ...i pronounce you WATERFOWL ANP wife. you m y mwipe. Kiss ? but tvenever kissep anyone m s ts it . Bvcmoo. JUMP - which, c a m e m e w , OURHERO PIP. uphereanp P tw r m . BEFORE/ I WPS SPNItto MYSELF FOR MARRIA6E. WHAT HAPPENEP NEXT woulp notonlyaffect FUTVREEVENTS IN WtfS UNIMA6INEP. BUT WOULPALSO HI6HLI6HT A MARITAL PROBLEM HERETOFORE UNPiSCOVERÈP... r-» “Cessna-David and MiG-Goliath,” said the headline of a commentary Monday in the conservative Frankfurt paper N eue Presse. “One young man has brought the downfall of one of the three m ost powerful m o i in the Soviet Union,” it said. “With one sport plane, hé tricked the m ilitary high tech — a slow bird duped MiGs, radar and m issiles.’’ Most W est Germans greeted the event as a prank of an audacious youth. The shakeup of the Soviet defense establishm ent made clear, however, that those in the Kremlin were not am used when an intruding aircraft landed just outside the door. The Foreign Ministry said Monday it disapproved “of the foolish violation of Soviet air space. ” Despite his “flying perform ance,” the m inistry added, Rust’s act could have created “m ost u n fo rtu n a te c o n se q u e n c e s and p o litic a l com plications.” Page 6 State Press Tuesday, Jung 2,1987 Can you afford to gamble w ith the LSAi; GMAT, GRE,or MCAT? Gall 966-2150 HAPPY HOUR s e lf s e rv e COPIES 1s u n t a n c e n t e r Probably not. Great grades alone m ay not be enough to impress the grad school o f your choice. Scores play a part. And that's how Stanley H. Kaplan can help. The Kaplan course teaches test-taking techniques, reviews course subjects, and increases the odds that you’ll do the best you can d o .. So if you’v e been out o f school for a while and need a refresher, or even if you’re fresh out of college, do what over 1 million students have done. Take Kaplan. Why take a chance w ith your career? 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PITCHERS O F B€€E Buy D irect From E lim inate The M iddlem an (SMter, Miller UK & Bud) P IZ Z A 3 PM-8 PM (DoHy) •NOT VfflJD ON D aw tties •RODI ITEMS X-TRfl 3 99 ( A N Y T IM E ) For information & prices call 967 -80 9 1 TEM PE CEN TER T 8 9 7 -6 4 3 9 (CO RN ER O F MILL & UNIVERSITY) Terrace Road Apartments GREAT SUMMER RATES RESERVE NOW FOR FALL TOUR 1/2 block from Campus. Huge w ell-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 . 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 'fo o d * * * CHINESE RESTAURANT Fine din in g in a d e l i g h t f u l a t m o s p h e r e . Featuring C antonese, M andarin, and Szechuan . C uisine. C ocktails & Carry O u t. b o th B U F F E T & G O U R M E T a v a ila b le ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET lu n c h 32s dinner 393 ORDERS TO GO 1 1 1 2 E. APACHE BLVD. » 829-7939 (Next to Tempt Bowl) TEMPE SUMMER SPECIALS fro m 97" OPEN DAILY ll-e.m .-1 0 p.m. I 2 FORI Penguin’s frozen yogurt tastes just like ice cream. But it has less than %the calories. So visit Penguin’s soon. And use this coupon for any small, medium or large cup at yogurt. ■ I VBffUMCAIORIEFROZENYOGURT 3rd & Mill Hayden Square E x p im : 6/9/87 Im m m man B ip em i 2 FOR I ■ ■ £ * ■ ■ ■ ■ e M Cim ^ eeM 'eim ‘>ra * Pansuin( Pl,ca' 198^ jj entertainment State Frees T uóda^ ùné^ lSS? Page 7 Oh Harry . . . Hints, delectable* and other tangy tidbits from the cluttered files of the entertainment desk. Producer talks of possible hit Theater •LOT opens its 25th season Friday night at 8 In the Music Theatre when Rodgers & Hammerstein’s musical revue, "Som e Enchanted Evening” takes the stage (see related story, page 11). The show, directed by Dr. Kenneth Selpp, features Christy Welty and Michelle Katzenbach of Christy & Co., along with students of LOT. The show runs through June 21. Curtain Is 8 p.m., except for Sundays, when the show begins at 3 p.m. Tickets at $9.50 for adults, $5 for children can Ire purchased at . ail Dillards’ box offices or at Gammage. For more Information, call 965-3434. By G R EG O R Y R O B ER T KR ZO S State P ress •The Black Theatre Troupe, Inc. presents Simply Heavenly at 8 p.m. Friday at the Black Theatre Troupe Playhouse, 333 E. Portland In Phoenix. The musical comedy is directed by Mike Traylor. Tickets are $7.50, $6.50 and $5.50 for children and are available art all Dillard's ticket outlets. For reservations and more Information, call 258-8128. Pop G o the Gershwln-ites: •The People’* Pops 1986-87 season flpale tributes George Gershwin. The show is 7 p.m. Sunday, June 7, in Phoenix Symphony Hail, 225 E. Adams in Phoenix. Soprano La Rose Saxon and baritone William Drake are highlighted in the concert. For ticket prices and other Information, call 256-3341. Box O ffice Gossip: •Warren Beatty and Dustin Hoffman star in “ Ishtar," the $40 million fllmed-ln-Morocco adventure about a couple of zany nightclub singers caught In international intrigpe. “ Ishtar” is showing at Sun Devil 6 Theaters, located In Cornerstone Mall on the com ers of University and Rural Road. G eorge Henderson (John Lithgow ) c o pes with having an eight-foot-tall creature Invade Ids household In “H arry and the H endersons.” Henderson plot gets too hairy, too fast K r #*. ||| 8» D ustin H offm an and W arran Beatty alar as a couple Of dow n-on-thslr-iuck singer/songwritara In “latitar.” Music: •King Sunny Ads performs at 8 tonight at After the Gold Rush, located on Apache Boulevard, Just East of Terrace-in Temps. tickets for the show are $15.50. •George Benson is coming to town. Benson highlights two shows at 7:30 and 10 p.m. Friday, June 12 at the Celebrity Theater, 440 N. 32nd St. T icke ts are $17.50. For more information, call 244-0404. The publicity departm ent over at Universal Pictures isn’t having any trouble with Harry — of this summer’s “Harry and the Hendersons” that is. Universal is keeping hush-hush over the entire project and Harry in particular, who thus far has been compared to Bigfoot and E.T. and bad: again. But the film company isn’t fretting. A publicity gim m ick is a publicity gim m ick, and “Harry and the Hendersons,” opening Friday around the V alley, is a gim m ick if there ever was one. The film stars Academy Award-nominee John Lithgow and revolves around the plight/delight that a sm all suburban Seattle fam ily faces when a strange forest creature (Harry) winds up camping out in their bi­ level home. In a recent interview, producer Richard Vane didn’t reveal much about Harry other than saying, “We’re keeping Harry under wraps. We feel as w e did with ‘E .T .,’ that if w e show still shots of Harry, you’ll ruin the surprise.” Vane, a form er location m anager for several Steven Spielberg film s (“E .T ., the Extra-Terrestrial,” “Twilight Zone — The Movie” and “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom”) seem ed thrilled about the the story — which, he predicts, w ill charm summer audiences to no end. “The story has something to say about what m akes a human being a human being and what m akes an anim al an anim al,” hie said. “Perhaps Harry is close to what we once were, and in the course of the film , the Hendersons learn about their humanity from him .” Nevertheless, the masterm inds behind “Harry and the Hendersons” m ay be playing footsy with dynamite. Another big m ovie star — Eddie Murphy — has already begun stomping around in lag bucks with “Beverly Hills Cop II” and there’s no foot big enough to fill that monster’s shoes — or is there? IP' r “Harry and the Hendersons,” Universal Pictures’ newest entree on the summer m ovie menu, does’t quite go beyond the tepid mark on the popularity thermometer. Unfortunately, this story of a Seattle fam ily m eeting up with a bizarre forest creature while camping out in Washington looks more like a rehashed Disney film without the Disney touches. It even borders on being a revamped, down-to-earth and overly syrupy “E.T.” story gone mad. “Harry and die Hendersons,” which opens in the Valley Friday, is supposed to be a film with meaning, with heart. The only problem is the film gets too hairy, too fast. Oscar-nominee John Lithgow heads the cast as George Henderson, a sim ple family-man-turned-Bigfoot-babysitter. Although the film has som e promise, this sappy tale of how humans and animate interact rarely reaches the level were the audience becom es concerned about what’s happening. And there’s no reason to care here — the story’s been done before and there’s only so many tim es one can sit through an “E .T.” goodbye scene. The film begins slowly: the Henderson fam ily on a pleasant camping trip. On the way home George hits what appears to be an ape. After the fam ily ponders what to do with the supposedly dead body, they decide its wierd enough to take home and possible get big bucks promoting the find. (Hie thing leads to another and, wouldn’t you know it, the hairy thing is still alive and looking for food in the fridge come midnight. From here the film follows the natural “I’m new hare, what’s a telephone”-type of story. The fam ily eventually calls the beast Harry and discovers the true meaning of “love thy neighbor and/or an im al” as poor Harry sheds tears at the sight of a stuffed dear hanging on the w all. When Harry gets out on his own and parades through the streets of a Seattle neighborhood, it’s Steven Spielberg flashbacks galore. W illiam Dear directs with m ediocrity. The supporting cast —- 'M e lin d a ———,— r_ ,v-, ■'____ ______________ D ilio n , D on tin “Harry «Ml S fv ld s u c h « are b a sica lly H«Mlarsoiis” Universal Pictures if if Directed by William Dean emotional at the wrong moments. The main problem with “Harry and the Hendersons” is the script. The idea of the lengendary Bigfoot turning out to be a sw eet, sentim ental slob is an interesting concept, but the ride’s too bumpy this tim e around. Incidentally, look for “Harry” dolls to pop up this summer if the film does w ell. Universal could save a lot of money if they’d just promote the toy instead of the m ovie— it would be more entertaining. — G R EG O R Y R O B ER T K R ZO S Fage^ S á fe Pu m i J J j2 S ïü i2 L â J 2 L flick s S c o t t s d a le ’s M ost E xclu sive Salon A rre s tin g Expands to Tempe ‘Cop IP runs in hot pursuit of predeces portrayed again by Ronny Cox, is shot while investigating thè thefts. Further thickening the plot is the new Beverly Hiiic poijc€ ch id , Harold Lutz (Allen G arfield), who makes Hitler look like the Little Old Lady from Pasadena. It seem s Lutz has re-assigned officers Taggart (John Ashton} and Rosewood (Judge Reinhold) — Larry and Curly to Foley’s Moe in “Beverly Hills Cop” — to traffic duty just for trying to bè good cops. In the m eantim e, Karla Fry, the lethal beauty with à stopwatch played by Brigitte N ielsen ( “Rocky IV,” “Cobra”)] carries out increasingly diabolical robberies. Jurgen Prochnow, the Berlin-born actor who played thé submarine captain in “D as Boot,” lends his sinister visage to By C A R O LY N N ELS O N State Proas Eddie Murphy is bade. Only this tim e, he has co-written the story, which means Paramount Pictures’ “Beverly H ills Cop II” boasts more copsand-robbers stuff— to say nothing of Murphy-esque raunchiness — than its blockbuster predecessor. Axel Foley, the fast-talking undercover agent played by Murphy, is pounding the Detroit streets in a red F errari— all in the line of duty, naturally. But when his persecuters-cum-fishing buddies on the Beverly Hills police force face the baffling, high-money “Alphabet Crimes,” Foley returns to California's m ost elite address. The stakes are upped when Captain Andrew Bogomil, and ASUf Photo: Rich Milter Hoir Rumors/Makoup Lm h Soagraves. In i Hair Design & Make-Up Tempo Hayden Square 350 S. Mill ■ ■ ■ ■ i $5« O F F Any Service ™ ■ ■ 1/3 O ff M ake-U p FR EE 1/3 OFF MAKE-UP | • 996-1866 694-1886 I FR EE Make-up Application Tempe Only • Scottsdale 6204 N. Scottsdale Rd. t Make-Up Application Scottsdale Store I With this coupon. Eddie M urphy's back as A xel Foley In “Beverly H ills C o p 11.” I---------------- *----------- -- Summer School SPECIALS WATER BOTTLE AND CAGE WITH EACH NEW BIKE I s O n ... (Bring in this coupon and receive aw extra 5% discount) 0 0 « At The Commons On Lemon! 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Benotto 800 WITH SHIMANO SIS SALE (B E N O T T C S REG. $399°° $325 oo Fuji 1 Speed TH E 1215 East Lemon Street CALL1 SALE C r u is e r ^ (Many bright colors) Cycle Pro Locks Reg. $18900 $16“ $139 REM or OUT OF ARIZONA (800) 247-6141 12% Student Discount available on non-sale items aoM EH K s 1004 S. 00 Cable Locks Special Reg. $12.95 (602) 968-6437 laal EstateM—sgsmrntCorporation the cl badgi D ei Dean Stone A ft Gilbei Foley Def movii hones Hov talkie Murp Anc Ant Murp indue b a re sex i chars stand down appet Heine Altl most arefli M ill A v e ., T e m p e 967-7700 O p e n 7 d a y s a w e e k SALE $995 The was i volati Scr turne stand The Foley the pi The cater of a t first] As; Am custo “B( Sunt S ts te F rm Tü C td ay, June g, 1987 J S C i f 20 % O FF n L M S ïH P DRY C LEA N IN G FO R S T U D E N T S W ITH A S U I.D. decessor’s success iating thé ills policé r look like m Ashton) to Foley’s yingtobf y with à ‘Cobra” )! layed thé visage to the character of arm s dealer Maxwell Dent, the picture’s chief badguy. Dent’s right-hand man, Chip Cain, is played by Him veteran Dean Stockwell, who has appeared recently in “Gardens of Stone,” “Blue V elvet” and “Paris, Texas.” A few characters rem ain frond “Beverly Hills Cop,” including Gilbert H ill, the real-life Detroit police inspector who plays Foley’s, Inspector Todd. Departing from the mostly-for-laughs antics of the first movie, “Beverly H ills Cop II” features plenty of relatively honest, if utterly fantastic, police work. However, com ic relief again com es in the form of Foley talking his way into and out of tricky situations. It’s Eddie Murphy doing what he does best. And it’s dam good. Another sign o f the Murphy touch, “Cop H” “ Beverly H ills Cop II" includes more of the b a r e ly c o n c e a le d Param ount Pictures s e x in e s s th a t characterizes Murphy’s ★ ★ ★ % stand-up act — right down to a cam eo Directed by Tony Scott appearance by Hugh Hefner, publisher of Playboy magazine. Although Murphy’s character somehow seem s to have gotten most of the best lines, the characters of Taggart andRosewood are fleshed outin the film . In Rosewood’s case, that is not necessarily for tide better. The once-proven formula among the actors is as electric a s it was in tbe first m ovie, perhaps only to be outshined by the volatile new combination of writers. Screenplay w riters Larry Ferguson and Warren Skaaren have turned wit an engaging script that m anages to live up to the standard set by “B everly H ills Cop.” The pattern— detective-dram a scene followed by a bit of Foley’s razzle-dazzle — becom es too fam iliar at som e points of the picture, but the pacing and action maintain the interest. The m ovie could have easily fallen into the lousy-sequel catergory for film s that must sim ply to Capitalize on the success of a blockbuster that probably dohsn’t need following up in the first place. As a sequel, “Beverly Hills Cop H” is downright arresting. And on its own, it m akes a great argument for protective custody. “Beverly H ills Cop II” is rated R and is playing at the Mann Sun D evil 6 cinem a. ★ ★ ★ ★ Excellent, a certain m ust-see; ★ ★ * Good, an evening’s entertainment; ★ * Fair, maybe the discount show; ★ Flop, double check the TV Guide. Gardens of Stone * * * * Fourth tim e’s the charm for the team of director Francis Coppola and actor Jam es Caan in Tri-star Pictures’ en g aging addition to the barrage of Vietnam War flicks in theaters about now. Caan, who appeared in Coppola’s “The Godfather” in 1972, stars as CleU Hazard, a sergeant in the Army Old Guard, a special detail whose main duty is to bury war casualties in Arlington National Cemetary in Washington, D.C. A combat veteran of the Korean War, Hazard is torn between his belief that a soldier’s place is on the frontlines and his disagreem ent with America’s involvement in the Vietnam ese conflict. Anjelica Huston stars as the opinionated W ashington Post reporter who falls in love with Hazard despite their diam etric difference in opinion on the war. In his first major silver screen role, D.B. Sweeney plays Jackie Willow, the ambitious and idealistic newcomer to the Old Guard who sets his sights on becoming an officer and fighting in Vietnam. The picture is a striking look at Vietnam’s other front — the home front — from the director of 1979’s “Apocalypse Now.” “Gardens of Stone” israted R and is playing at various local theaters. Ishtar (3iydl3EEBlx a r i ^3 H a ir C u ts $ 1 1 . 0 0 R e g .$15 In c lu d e s sh a m p o o , c o n d itio n e r & c u t. W ith cou p on . Expires 7/2/67 $5.00 O ff Perm R eg. $40 In c lu d e s sh a m p o o , c o n d itio n e r, C e llo p h a n e $ 2 2 . 0 0 H ig h lig h t ANV FOOT LONG SUS Ofl SfllflD Buy any foot-long sandwich or salad ond medium drink and get o sandwich o f equal or lesser valu* for 99t. $30.00 In c lu d e s c o n d itio n e r. Dustin Hoffman gets out of drag and Warren- Beatty trades in his sudsy fingers for this $40 m illion exercise in self-glorification. See, there’s these two guys in New York, and neither at them has much talent, but they both have this relentless desire to be popular singers. They’re sure they could make it if they only got the. chance, and they’re willing to do alm ost anything to get that opportunity. Such eagerness leads the dud-namic duo of Chuck Clarke (Hoffman) and Lyle Rogers (Beatty) to the sm all, Middle Eastern country of Ishtar, where they are alternatively recruited by the CIA and a local socialist revolutionary faction and generally embroiled in all sorts of international intrigue. If this sounds like any good Abbott and Costello routine — to say nothing of a Bob Hope/Bing Crosby “Road” picture or two — it’s because Tshtflr means “Deja vu” in som e obscure language. Ishtar, rated PG, is playing at theaters across the Valley. S a n d w ic h e s & S a la d s i W ith cou p on . Expires 7/2/87 ★ .« S U B W A Y 51 «SUB McKellips and Scottsdale in the ABCO Shopping Center W ith cou p on , Exp ires 7/2/87 Silver Solarium High Tech Tanning S in g le . . . . . . . $4.50 5 session . . . . $19.00 12 session . . . $40.00 FREE TAMING SESSION w /purchase o f any tanning session package W ith coupon, Expires 7/2/87 966-6111 C all For Appointment Mn&*braftjfcr9|4ng M on.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Su n . 11:30-4:00 933E. University SE Corner Rural & University SUMMER FUN FOR STUDENTS N ow ! Enjoy our ST U D E N T MEM BERSHIP at the award-winning W estern Reserve Club. M ention this ad to receive 30% O FF the current initiation fee. A great student m em bership opportunity at great savings! UJith this coupon • Not voHd with other orders O ne coupon per customer Offer expires June 9th, 1987 S a n d w ich e s & S a la d s O ff ANV FOOT LONG SUB Oft SALAD UHth this coupon - Not voHd with other orders O ne coupon per customer Offer expires June 16th, 1987 «SUBWflV* S a n d w ic h e s & S a la d s ANV FOOT LONG SUB OA SAIAD Sale «SUBUIRV* Buy any foot-tong sandwich or solod and medium drink and get o sandwich of equal or lesser value for 99<. S a n d w ic h e s & S a la d s UJith this coupon • Not valid with other orders O ne coupon per customer G ood June 10th- 16th. 1987 WE BAKE OUR Tempe-ASU OWN BREAD ” Corner M ill &10th St. ne ^ «suBmv? ^ ^ ■ - « 829-7213 S a n d w ich e s & S a la d s Tennis Racquetball Wailybail Basketball Olympic Swimming Pool Sand Volleyball Indoor Volleyball • Social Activities • Nautilus • Free Weights • CAM n • Lifecycles • Steam /Sauna • Co-ed Spa • • • • • • • Suntan Beds Locker Rooms Aerobics Martial Arts Clubhouse Big TV Screen Courtside Cafe Call or visit b efo re June 3 0 ,1 9 8 7 and you can spend your summer toning up in the w eight room or relaxing poolside at the Courtside Cafe and Patio at sim ply the finest sports and fitness club in Arizona. O p e n 7 days a w eek . < /f ' WESTERN RESERVE CLUB BY D A V E B R O W N Broadway West of Price »Tempe, AZ • 968-9231 State Prezs Tuesday, June 2 ,1987 Page 10 Art gallery warms to summer through July 19. “ H uge,” “ grand” and “ m a ssiv e” describe the July 19-August 23 exhibition titled “Art on a Large Scale.” The classic landscape m otif w ill enliven the w alls of the gallery from July 12-August 16 as “The Artist’s View: Landscapes from the Permanent Collection” is presented. Concluding the summer ASU art exhibited series, the black-and-white etchings of “Frank Benson: Amerian Etcher” w ill be on display July 26-August 30. The ASU Art Museum is located on the second floor of Matthews Center and is acessible by wheelchair. The gallery is open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m . weekdays, 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays and closed holidays. Admission is free. For more information, call 966-2874. Six art exhibitions w ill grace the w rils of the ASU Art Museum during the upcoming summer months as the gallery kicks off its summer exhibition schedule. “Portraits and Self-Portraits from the Permanent Collection,” currently being displayed and continuing through July S, features self-portraits of Rembrandt van Rijn, Diego Rivera and David Alfaro Siquieros and other artists. Hard-edged geom etric form s in various media make up “Art Without Objects,” an exhibition of non-objective art. Works by Tony DeLap, Dennis Jones and Jack Reilly w ill be displayed through July 5. In keeping with the patriotic feeling of July 4, “The American Revolution: Prints by Kurz & Allison” can be seen June 7 ■COUPON“ Penn charged with driving while drunk tmner T fl SINGLE BURGER I FULL MEAL DEAL \ By T he A sso cia te d P ress LOS ANGELES — Actor Sean Penn, already facing up to six months in jail for allegedly violating probation by fighting with a m ovie e x tr a , w as ch arged Wednesday with drunken driving, authorities said. Pehn w as charged with driving under the influence of alcohol and driving with a blood alcohol level in excess of die California legal lim it of 0.10 percent, said city attorney’s spokesman Mike Quads. The 20-year-old actor, fr e e d on h is ow n recognizance shortly after his arrest early Monday, must appear June 1$, for arraignment, Qualls said. If con victed of th e misdemeanor charges, he faces a possible six-month jail sentence and a $1,000 fin e,b esaid . Penn, husband of singer Madonna, was stopped on Memorial Day after police said his 1983 Chevrolet was speeding a t SO mpb in a 35 mph zone and went through a red light, Qualls said. Police Lt. Dan Cooke said Penn failed both a field sobriety and a breath analyzer te st The actor wasn’t cited for tbe alleged traffic violations. Penn, star of such m ovies as “At Close Range" and “ The F alcon and the Snowman,” was described as cooperative during the arrest and booking. CAREER OPPORTUNITIES 1988 8RADUATES GRADUATE STUD EN TS A UNDERGRADUATES A career in foreign intelligence requires an investment of your time and energy. Commence the employment process this summer with tests, interviews and application. Submit your interest form and we w ill contact you over the summer: C E N T R A L IN T E LLIG E N C E A G E N C Y PO B O X 6127 S O U T H E L M O N TE, C A 91733 - C I A INTEREST FORM Nam«:____ Univarsity:. Malar:____ GPA: I I I I I I School A ddress: . Look what you get! 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If found guilty of a probation violation, Penn could face up to six months in jail, said Qualls. A hearing on the issue is set for June 23. A Perfect Cut Every Time No appointment necessary ever! Bring the whole family Designer Perm 1 T he drunken driving charges aren’t considered a probation violation because P enn’s probation w as technically suspended after the fight on the movie set, Qualls said. m enc HAIR CUTTERS U nive rsity & R ural Rd. CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 968-8008 l Hours: M on.-Fri. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 • Su n. 12-5 $2 6 °° ! Includes: 'S h a m p o o and Designer Perm •Perfect Cut •Styling to n g h air slightly higher 1981 No Appmnimenl» Family H a. Cutlers I J Stet* Press Tuesday, June g, 1987 LO T plans magical anniversary B y TO D M cC O Y kingpin of Broadway m usicals.” Other productions for the year include Georges Bizet’s “The Pearl Fishers” in November, Jerom e Ken’s “Showboat” in Febuary and in April, Benjamin Britten’s “Albert Herring. ” “There are five kinds of m usical theater planned for this season, each one a little different,” Seipp said. “Some contemporary, som e traditional. “Most performing companies toy to specialize in a particular genre. We try to diversify. ” Seipp has been working with the Lyric Opera Theatre since 1963. “The past 25 years have been successful for me. I enjoyed most of that tim e,” Seipp said. “I like to direct (at least) one a year. I have a lot of people here just for directing. ” “A Little Night Music” runs June 6,12,13,19 and 20 at 8 p.m. and June 14 and 21 at 3 p.m. i Tickets are $9.50 for adults, $5.00 for students. Season tickets are available. All performances except “Showboat” will be held in the ASU Music Theatre in the Music Building, located at the corner of Mill Avenue and Gammage Parkway. Showboat w ill be performed in the Gammage Center for the Performing Arts. For more information call 965-2858. State Prase The silver anniversary season of ASU’s Lyric Opera Theatre begins Friday night at 8 when Rodgers & Hammerstein’s m usical revue, “Some Enchanted Evening,” opens in the Music Theatre. Directed by Dr. Kenneth Seipp, the founder of LOT, the revue w ill feature Christy Welty and M ichelle Katzenbach of Christy & Co. performing with the students of the Lyric Opera Theatre (LOT). “The Lyric Opera Theatre is a m usic theater performing organization,” Seipp said. “We’re committed to a variety of m usical works and Broadway type revues. There are no books or stories . . . just m usic from many different shows structured to m ove from one song to the next.” Some of the well-known show tunes included in the performance of “Some Enchanted Evening” w ill be: “Surrey With The Fringe On Top,” “There Is Nothing Like A Dam e,” “If I Loved You,” “Shall We Dance,” “This Nearly Was Mine” and “Sixteen Going On Seventeen.” The 25th season continues in fall when Stephen Sondheim’s “A Little Night M usic,” opens Oct. 2. The show w ill be directed by faculty associate Brian Wayne Hall. “Sondheim is perhaps the m ost important composer of the last two decades,” Seipp said. “He (is acknowledged) as the LOW AIR FARES iΫ ü P 9 TRAVEL 7155 E. T hom as, S u ite 106 S cottsd ale, A Z 85251 9 4 9 -8 8 8 8 O p e n S a tu rd a y 9 a .m .-1 p .m . •Credit ca rd s accepted »Free ticket delivery Dom estic Round T rip Airfares: M inneapolis/ C h ic a g o ..........$128 D e n v e r........... $138 St. P a u l . . . . . . . . $138 New Y o r k .......$198 Los Angeles .. $ 38 San D iego . . . . $ 38 Miami . . . . . __ $198 San Fran cisco $ 98 International R ound T rip A irfares London ........ . $526 ST A T E P R E S S C L A S S IF IE D A D S REACH 45,000 READERS DAILY WITH THIS AD OR ASU I.D. NEW SOFA & IO V 6 SERT $169»* Your Campus Hair Care Center 5-PI6C6 STURDY O flK FINISH B E D R O O M SET new North of University • Behind the Chuck Box • In Oxford Square -BCD SALE- 968-5946 $158 4-Drawer Chest 709 S. Forest A v e ., T em pe Twin S et $58 Full S e t $68 Q u e e n S et $4°° E xp ires 8-30-87 R E G U L A R PRICES EVERY M O N D AY & W ED N ESD AY F U R N IT U R E 2077 E. 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Ride a Tube Down the Salt River T U B E R EN T A L AN D S H U T T L E B U S SER V IC E ALL-D AY R A TES S6.00 per day per person group rates available O r Shuttle B u s ticket on ly S3 ail day •2.000 tubes fo r rent •open 7 days a week. 9am-7pm Located 9 m iles north of M ESA at the junction of B u sh and U sery Highw ays. F o r m ore inform ation, phone (602) 984-3305 o r w rite fo r yo u r free broch ure and river m ap. A uthorized by U S . Fo rest S ervice. Offer good May 1 through Sept. 30,1987. 1 (COUNTRY CLUB & SUPERSTITION FREEW AY) 1600 S. COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE. MESA. AZ 85202 CALL FOR RESERVATIONS TODAY AT (602) 964-7000 ASU I.D. required at chack-ln. B rin g t h is a d w ith y o u fo r CONFUSED — NEED MONEY 1 SI .00 O F F TUBERENTAL Monday-thru Friday fo r undergraduate or graduate school? . 0 7m s Our objectives are: ^ h e f p ^ ^ e n t s find financial aid money—scholarships, grants wTo help students with free diagnostic testing: SAT - A C T GMAT - LSAT - CPA - GRE •T o help students with the best methods for navigeting the financial aid maze. R E S U LT S G U A R A N T EED C A LL NOW ! (602) 894-9665 University Office Plaza 1000 E. Apache, Suite 115-116 Tempe, A Z 85281 educational e x D e r ie n c e ^ R O . B o x 6568 M e s a , A Z 85206 To te r m om pho & j /x to H p(b 5E & ì fü a í Page 12 State Press Tuesday, June 2,1987 Bowie gets down with uneven album David Bow ie— Never Let Me Down * * * David Bowie’s new LP, Never Let Me Down, is a lot like the proverbial little girl with the curl in the middle of her forehead. heated work bn the “Labyrinth” soundtrack. The title track is a sort-of love song sung with such sappy sincerity as to gag even the Bee Gees. Frampton really com es alive on “Zeroes,” the final song on Side 1 and one of the album’s best interludes. When it’s good, it’s very good, but when it’s bad, it’s painful. Once again, Bowie has equipped this effort cm EMI America with a diverse and im pressive contingent of m usical talents. Guitarist Carlos Alomar and bassist Carmine Rojas continue their lengthy tenure with the Thin White Duke. Lead guitar duties fall to Peter Frampton, the bubble-gum add rock idol of the early ’70s. Often this conglomeration of ability pays off in premium tunage. However, the united front also crumbles into FM drivel; w itness “Day-In,.Day-Out,” the album’s first single, an inappropriately bouncy number with a big brass section that chirps through the bleak prospects of a poor girl in die city. From “Day-In, Day-Out’’ the album moves into “Time Will Crawl,” a notable m usical improvement. Although the former manic behind Ziggy Stardust is riding somewhat behind the crest of the trends— the song mentions the m ovie “Top Gun” — he dem onstrates his ability to put together a lively, new-sounding song. “Beat Of Your Drum” sounds annoyingly like Bowie’s half- Y o u can sta y o n to p o f th e hew s b e ca u se w e do. The second side opens with the spoken-word piece, “Glass Spider,” whose pretentiousness m ay be rivaled only by “Future Legend” from Bowie’s 1974 LP, Diamond Dogs. “Shining Star (Makin’ My Love)” sounds like it could have been an outtake from any recent Prince album. Bowie’s attem pt at rap — with screen actor Mickey Rourke, of all people— sim ply sounds stupid. But then the album takes a turn for the better than usual with “New York's In Love” and “Too Dizzy.” “ ’87 and Cry” features Alomar’s distinctive guitar work as w ell as interesting lyrics. At the end of it all is a fairly convincing, albeit Bowie-ized, cover of Iggy Pop’s “Bang Bang. ” Despite its uneveness, N ever L e i M e Down is a decided step up from Bowie’s last effort, 1984’s Tonight. If that’s saying much. The quality and promise that most of the m aterial on N ever L et M e Down exhibits is also a cheery indicator of the future —David Bowie hasn’t let rock ’nrroll down. sun o f f «av Parmigiano Dinner EARN EXTRA MONEY AS S EE N ON TELEVISION VALID ON DELIVERY TOO! 1 5 2 3 E ast A pache, T em pe GAM E DEPOT j GREAT PIZZAS i dm only $ 9 . 4 9 « tax •F a m ily Games «R o le Playing Games •S tra te g y Games •M in ia tu re s •M agazin es •D ic e , Playing Cards •C h ess and Accessories •H isto ric a l Reference M ag/Books Just north o f ASU 708 S. Forest Ave. 966-4727 | Not vahd with other otters Nat valid on Steihan; Not valid with other offers. Expires 6-15« COUPON kfevco | VALID ON DELIVERY TOOl I ExwtSi&tf Summer School Professor Publishing sf y ATTENTION PROFESSORS ANNOUNCING W BBSS 9 2 1 -9 2 9 2 I Large size pizzas with cheese and one Item I Extra items and extra cheese available at I additional cost. One coupon per custom er — Veal, chicken, eggplant— Includes salad & garlic bread E. University, Tem pe VALLEYWIDE JO B PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE NATIONWIDE fo r th e g a m e s p e o p le p la y OPEN FOR SUMMER! DAILY SPECIALS! 106 T E A C H IN G B A R TEN D ER S SINCE 1979 •FULL O R PART TIME JOBS •FLEXIBLE HOURS & PERSONALIZED TRAINING •STA R T ANY DAY O R EVENING •TERM S - CO ED COURSES •CALL FOR COURSE DESCRIPTION — C A R O LY N N ELSO N M A M A G E L A R D rS 8 9 4 -M A M A ST A T E P R E SS 15 M ATTHEW S CENTER ASU ARIZONA SCHOOL OF PROFESSIONAL BARTENDERS Let Kinko’s transform your loose class notes, diagrams, reading selections, lecture synopses and homework problems into bound class readers. • No charge to you or your department Low cost to your students Alternative to library reserve room or copious class handouts Quick turnaround W e’ll help organize and assemble materials Pick up and delivery C A L L U S F O R M O R E IN FO R M A TIO N OPEN 24 HOURS, 7 DAYS A WEEK TEM PE I 715 S. Forest 8 9 4 -9 5 8 8 (* Cassette duplicating, oversize coping available) T E M P E II M ESA 933E. University 1840 W. Southern 8 9 4 -1 7 9 7 9 6 9 -3 3 2 6 sports StttSPW M Tuesday, June g, 1987 Page 13 Strike Devils given ticket home in College World Series B yB R A D H A LV O R SEN State Pres* OMAHA, Neb. — ASU departed from America’s m ecca of college baseball Monday after its quickest and least successful College World Series in 14 appearances. But, according to coach Jim Brock, this was, in a way, his most successful team . “In all honesty, I’ve coached 16 years at Arizona State University, and that ball team accomplished the most with what it had to work w ith,” Brock said. “If any one Of them walked out of the ball park with their heads down, they just don’t understand what they accom plished.” This was the first year an ASU team retqrned w inless from Omaha’s double-elimination tournament. Past team s averaged playing in five of a possible six gam es. Then again, no ASU team had ever qualified for the final eight after lim iting scholarships from 13 to eight due to NCAA and Pac-10 sanctions. Though outsized by the taller and heavier Oklahoma State and Florida State team s, ASU held tough through early innings. But costly runs surrendered late in the gam e gave the Cowboys an 8-3 victory Friday and the Seminóles a 3-0 triumph Sunday. Oklahoma State, Louisiana State, Texas, Stanford, Florida State and Arkansas are still vying for the tifie. Georgia was also elim inated Sunday. After thunderstorms and tornado warnings halted Saturday night’s Stanford-Georgia gam e, 11,000 fans witnessed a scoreless pitching duel through six innings Sunday afternoon at hot, muggy Rosenblatt Stadium. And just as quickly as a sm all tw ister touched down only blocks from the hotel housing ASU’s team in the southwest outskirts the night before, Florida State spoiled Mike Schwabe’s shutout with an unearned run in the seventh. Two key plays later, the Sem inóles bad built a comfortable lead and pitcher Chris Pollack handed ASU its first shutout in 14 months. First, centerfielder Ron Lewis robbed ASU’s John Finn of extra bases with a diving catch at the warning track. “ (Pollack) had been pitching a curve on the first pitch most of the day,” said Finn, who led ASU with four Series hits. “I just tried to drive it to the opposite field. I thought it would drop. As a m atter of fact, I thought I may have had an inside-the-park home run.” Then, in the eighth, Seminole Ed Fulton drove a Schwabe breaking pitch that was “com pletely opposite of what I wanted to throw” over the rightfield fence to ice the gam e. “It was supposed to go low and aw ay,” said Schwabe, who gave up two hits through the first six innings while retiring the side in order four tim es. Florida State pitcher Ch rle P ollack Is congratulated by teammates after his six-hit shutout of A S U In the C o llege W orld Series, Sunday. S u n D e v il y o d e le r fin d s re a s o n to s h o u t fo r A S U OMAHA, Neb.— ASU shortstop Mike Benjamin strolled up to the plate, assum ed his stance and awaited the first pitch of the 1987 College World Series. But before Oklahoma State pitcher P at Hope took the mound, a pitch of another sort em erged from the first baseline stands that made ASU fans and players feel closer than 1,300 m iles to home. “GOOOOOOO, De-VILS, GOOOOOOO!!” This Pavarotti-style voice has echoed through ASU’s Packard Stadium for the last five years, ever since Ernie Stewart retired from his job as chef at Pinnacle Peak Country Club in north Phoenix. And Friday, it rang out in Omaha for the first tim e since ASU’s most recent Series appearance in 1984. “When we beat Arizona those three gam es” at this season’s end, Stewart said, “I knew there was no stopping us. I was getting ready for Omaha.” Flanked by b is friends and colleagues from Packard Stadium, Stewart was one in a scattering of maroon-andgold-clad ASU fans who made the trip from Tempe. As expected, Stewart followed his usual routine by belting out his call just before the D evils batted in the first, third, fifth, seventh and ninth innings. He added an extra in the eighth, trying to boost the D evils from a 6-3 deficit. “The first tim e I did it was 20 years ago at an ASU football gam e,” Stewart said. “I was up in the stands, and it was a third-down situation. I just got up and did it. From then on, I’ve been doing it ever since.” His hollers at Rosenblatt Stadium attracted cheers from the crowd, reinforcement from his buddies and a spot on ESPN’s nationwide coverage. The next day, however, he attended a gam e where his Brock had complained that ASU played Oklahoma State without the emotion that carried them into the Series. Sunday, the emotion and performance improved, but wasted opportunities stifled chances of an ASU victory. After five innings ASU had stranded seven baserunners, failing to take advantage of five hits and four Seminole errors. “You have to give credit to Pollack for that,” Brock said. “He had the big pitches at the right tim e.” Florida State coach Mike Martin saw it differently. “We know how to spread our errors around,” he said. “In one gam e against Florida, eight of our players had errors. We were hollering at the umpire to give (second baseman Edwin) Alicea an error on a questionable call so we could have all nine and make Sports Illustrated.” Martin said ASU was the victim of Pollack’s best gam e and best fastball of the season. “Two nights ago, when w e got beat (by Louisiana State), he went back to the room and called his buddies back in California to get som e ideas on Arizona State,” Martin said. “You don’t see that very often at this level.” Pollack, a lefthander, also caused Brock to rearrange his starting lineup to utilize more righthanders. Consequently, Martin Peralta (.268) replaced Tony Mattia (.317) at designated hitter and Jeff Bridges (.266) started over Dan Rumsey (.326) in rightfield. The Devils could m uster only one extra-base hit during the Series in Mike Benjamin’s first-inning triple Sunday. cheer was unusable. Twenty-four hours after arriving in Omaha, Stewart packed his bags again and flew to Kansas City to watch former ASU star Oddibe McDowell and the Texas Rangers take on the Royals. Sunday he was back in Omaha. Stewart has gone to ASU football gam es as a season-ticket holder for 25 years, but finally found the tim e to frequent baseball gam es after retiring. He has m issed few gam es since. “I haven’t m issed a gam e yet this year,” Stewart said. “Well, maybe one. But if I did, I can’t remember which one it w as.” Stewart, white-haired with a faint mustache, pauses to raise his right pant-leg to reveal a sizeable scar. “I had full knee surgery last year and had to m iss a few,” Stewart said. “But I still cam e to som e of them. I sat out there in the bleachers with m y crutches.” As Bob Dombrowski nears home plate for the start of the ninth inning, Stewart stands up for his final effort, still hopeful that ASU can erase an 8-3 deficit. “I always do it after they announce the batters, when the crowd gets settled down,” he said. Still standing, Stewart tugs at his pants, stretches out his arms in circular motions, ami cups his hands over his mouth. “GOOOOOOO, De-VILS, GOOOOOOO! !” Thé surrounding crowd, far the sixth tim e, applauds his actions. But, unlike the first inning, the D evils iaU to scream and fall into the loser’s bracket. Showing a “we’ll-get-’em-next-time” attitude, Stewart appears to take the loss well. As long as the D evils are still alive, Stewart w ill always be there to throw out the first pitch. — BR AD H A LV O R S EN Page 14 State Press Tuesday, June 2,1987 Point blank ASU archer nails season finish, pulls Olympics into sight * r By DAVID MILLER State Press It was a typical ASU archery finish. Six players went to the National Championships andcleaned up six of the top spots. For Marie McKinney, who placed second in the May 18 end-of-season event, however, it w as a- little more than that. It w as a typical finish to be sure, but it was also a mean leap towards landing a spot on the best archery unit in the country, the Olympic team , t H It’s a distinct possibility. And while the Olympics are still a year away, Marie knows now is the tim e to capitalize. He knows what he wants to do. “My confidence is high, and now I’m just working on m y m ental gam e,” he said. “The m ental gam e plays so much a part of the overall picture.” It is often the deciding factor in a match, he says. Too often players w ill be standing tall on technique in practice and lose it all under the spotlights and booming silence of an archery m eet. There are so many obstacles. “You just have to have your confidence together,” he said. “Every little thing m akes a difference. He feels he’ll be ready tor his upcoming summer shooting scheduler “As long as 1 concentrate on making good shots I’ll be OK,” he said. LMahr/SMaSraw ASU archer Mark McKinney prepares lo r a possible bullseye. And he w ill be. Mark consistently shoots high scores on a team whose members “usually fall in the top three spots in a m eet.” That ranks him among the best in the national collegiate field. Add to that four years of college shooting experience and instruction by Hie 1988 Olympic archery team coach and what results has toe unmistakable sm ell of success. He credits his surroundings. “We (ASU) are consistent finishers. Last weekend everyone shot really w ell and we kind of ran away with i t “Sheri (Rhodes), our coach, is the 1988 Olympic team coach, and that shows how good she is. And w e’ve got Rick (McKinney, Mark’s uncle), an Olympic silver m edalist (in 1984), as our assistant coach. “Things are just bettor here than anywhere else,” he said. Marie, though^ doesn’t ponder over all that, nor does he take it for granted. He just wants to shoot. “The level of com petition is high, and this w ill be the first tim e I ve competed against m y uncle, and he’s better than I am." “I’m looking forward to playing against the big boys,” he said. The first trial in a seriej was held here last weekend. The Western Regional Championships, ¡atryout competition for the U S. Olympic F estival, pitted Mark against the best shots of the western portion of the United States. Skill, poise and a little luck w ere all on his side. He secured a spot on the team. “ It w as m y best score ever, the best of my life,” he said. “I finally shot average in everything, instead of dropping down in one or two things.” The U.S. Olympic Festival, previously known as the Sports Festival and identical to the ’88 gam es except for the exclusion of n on -U .S r p articip a n ts,. m akes its appearance in mid-July. The Pan Am Games w ill wrap up the summer, and then it’s off to the REAL races: the competition for the Olympic team . u i suty reiaxeu an a concentrate i should be okay,” he said. “I do relaxation and visualization exercises and that helps. “It’s all part of working on the mental gam e,” he said, again emphasiring the basic archery elem ent needed to produce winners. ■ A n /1 ho c Ii a i i IH Irnntn TAKE CHARGE Get your career moving as fast as you can. Lead the adventure as a Navy officer. Today’s Navy is top-flight people working with the best in their field. It’s also sophisticated technical and management train­ ing in executive, managerial, professional, scientific and technical positions. This goes together with the kind of experience that only being a Navy officer can provide to give you a head start up the ladder of success. Navy officers earn good starting salaries with additional allow­ ances adding more to their income, and benefits like free medical and dental care, and thirty days’ paid vacation each year. Minimum qualifica­ tions require that you be no more than 28 years old, have a BA or BS degree and be a U S. citizen. For further information, call Navy Management Programs, 800-228-8961. Make your first job a real move up in the world. CALL FOR INFORMATION THROUGHOUT THE SUMMER É §| I Ü É » ssmâêm m THERE’S NOTHING LIKEJIMMY’Z FOR THE SUMMER AND NOTHING LIKE SPORTING CLUB. .,. Cornerstone Mail 894*2254 » Men's/wonxen's ... Hayden square 986-7904 1 StatePiètt Tuesday, June g, 1987 vbn m c l a s s i f i e d s The STATE PRESS disclaim s a ll respond slb ility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by Its adver- P R O F E S S IO N A L COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY SURVEY RANKS BAR/BRI BEST PROGRAM over Kaplan LSAT LSAT Classes at ASU begin in September. Call 969-8853 to SAVE $100 on tuition Announcements H elp Wanted M iscellaneous Real Estate DENTAL PLAN. Single, fam ily, business memberships. No charge for visits, exams, teeth cleaning, x-rays. Free brochure. Dentrex, TO Box 2687, Prescott, AZ 86302. 602-4464948. (AZ-CAN)________________________ _ ALTERNATIVE TELEPHONE w ill be hiring 3 or 4 business majors for summer Internships. Positions require typing 50 wpm, w ill train on word processing. C all M elissa at 8294100. A WONDERFUL fam ily experience. 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Es­ tablished clients. *45,000. 1-602-5374446. (AZ-CAN).__________ UNDER $50,000, established local businesses. Easily managed. No In­ ventory. Minimum employees. Invest­ ment recouped first year. G ross over *100,000. Arizona baaed company. 421-0036. (AZ-CAN)_____________ ' 77WANT LUXURY?? Car? Clothes? Bank account? Peace of mind for tuition? Make your above goals come true In your leisure tim e with the choice of champions! C all 986-5064 for appointment._____________________ WORK AT home. Make up to *275 weekly clipping newspaper articles for magazine editors. W ill pay up to (25 each. Apply nowl C all refundable, 213-938-2900 ext. 55001. (AZ-CAN) • buffalo /'bof-e-i lo / the a ct of renewing one’s wardrobe by m eans of trade for cash and/or select clothing items. BUFFALO EXCHANGE Six from now you could be 25 lbs D aft LetAnotherWeekGo By. O ur d ieters lose an average of 17 to 25 lbs. in ju st six w eeks. And so can you. O ur counselors w ill show you bow to lose w eight q uickly feel ©peat, and keep the w eight on. So ca ll now fo r a free consultation. Diet« Center You’re going to make It thl» time. 10% O F F you r diet program w/ASU ID M cC lin to ck G arden O ffices 2246 S . M cC lin to ck #3 967-1371 CUSTOMER SERVICE representative, nights, weekends. Must hove good telephone and organizational skills. C all 921-6900.__________ •/ EXTRA MONEY Is n ic e but you can help people to o l Donate plasma for up to *120 per month. F irst donation In a calendar week *10, second donation In same calendar weak (20 (M-S). New donors receive (2 bonus on first donation. University Plasm a Canter Associated Bioscience Inc., 1015 S. Rural R d ,’ Temps, AZ. 9084139. Effective until further notice. ______ GOVERNMENT JO BSI Now hiring In your area, both skilled and unskilled. For lis t of Jobs and application call 615463-2627 axt. J519. (AZ-CAN) H ELP WANTED part-time evenings or weekends to assist general house cleaning and housework. Transporta­ tion required.! *6 par hour. Call 9452003. ___________' H ELP WANTED: General assignment reporter/photographer, Including sports, for aeml-weekly In Holbrook. Experience preferred. Contact Francle Payne, 5244203. (AZ-CAN)___________ IMMEDIATE OPENINGSI Construction (all phases), drivers, welders, mechan­ ic s , e x -m ilita ry , e le c tro n ic s , m achinists, HEO, assemblers, some entry level. (Up to *6000 month.) Transcontinental Job Search, 3064823700. Fee. (AZ-CAN)________________ F or Rent or Lease LAWN SERVICE needs part-tlme/fulltlm e employees. *5fhour. 9064208. 5 BEDROOM house, pool, McCIIntockf Baseline area, *850 per month. Bob at 887-4282 o r994-3324._________ ' ROOM AND board In exchange for child care and light housework. Karyn, 991-5254 evenings.________________ BEAUTIFUL NEW large cne and two bedroom apartments, walk to ASU, pool, laundry, one block south of ‘ University on 8th Street and Gary. Ask about move-ln specials. 968-5238. STATE TITLE Co., Inc. is seeking 2 experienced escrow officers. One for Bullhead City office and one for Kingman office. C all Robert Roose, 8554191 days or 855-5646 evenings. A ll ca lls contldantlal. (AZ-CAN) ______ OWN ROOM In sm all house, prater “vegetarian", no tobacco, biking dlatance, *125 plus utilities. 9666944. Tempe: 968-2557 227 W. University Dr. CASHIER DISPATCHERS wanted, parttim e, mole or female, *4 par hour, near Sky Harbor Airport. C all between 9 em .-5p.rn. M-F, 244-1618.___________ For Sale CONCRETE FORMS: 109 3‘x8', 20 3'x4', fille rs and accessories. Aluminum smooth bricktaca, excellent condition. Morgan Concrete Piece, 09' W hite freightllner, 46' float. 1-496-0243. (AZCAN) _________ H ALF PRICE! Save 50% I Beet, large flashing arrow sign *3391 lighted, non-arrow sign *3291 Unllghted *2991 Free letters! Sea locally. C all todayl Factory direct: 1-800-4234163, any, time. (AZ-CAN) ____________ CLASSIFIEDS WORK Personal DLH: THX fo r a great semester. You re a lly . made a difference. Thanx especially Monday nigh t 1 w ill m iss you. Love you lota. P.S. Don't let your nalla grow aooo lonfll DJH. ________ TELEPH O N E B U L LE T IN BOARD •Adult Messages elntroductions •Personals •Rendezvous •Fantasy UNCENSOREO INSTANTLY U PD A TED 1-976-6600 95c per minute LOVE LINE, 1476LOVE. The beet phone dating service. C all now to make your dating connection. Gals- leave a message that's played, get a free (10 gift certificate from e major department store! A ll cans $40 a minute. MEET CHRISTIAN tingles. Local, worldwide, by phone or mall. Find love, doting, marriage, meaningful com­ panionship todayl Free brochure, samples. Feet service. C all 1400425 6113 ext. 233, (AZ-CAN)_____________ NICE G l|Y looking for white good looking female to be friend and lover. Must like going to movies and nights at home. C all Dan, 894-1400 ext. 537. H elp Wanted A GREAT part-time Job with great pay could really help pay for your educa­ tion. If you or someone you know has the brains for school but not the bucks, call the Arizona Army National Guard and see If you quality at 287-2574. (AZ-CAN)________’________ __ REPO SPAO N IA State Bank: Lekefront, m ountains, orchard; acreages, residential, s its , fixeruppers, superb retirement area, re­ creation. 305527-4122 (or 3696), Box 697, Paonle, CO 81426. (AZ-CAN) Roommate wanted FEMALE, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, *175 plus electric, one m ils from ASU. Neat, nonsmoking, serious student. C ali 694447». ______________________ FEMALE: 3 bedroom condo. Tennis, pool, fully furnished, washer, dryer. *21(Vmonth plug 15 electric. 965115». FEM ALE TO share home with females. Nonamoker. Near ASU. *180 plus 1k utilities. 2551210.________________[ M/F ROOMMATE ASAP: 2 bedroom, t bath apartment % m ile from ASU. Must be mature, responsible. *195 summer rates. Ed, 9657^41 (leave message). QUIET ROOMMATE In quiet home one block from campus. 9175 per month, \4 u tilitie s , d ep o sit. 9659278 fo r appointment._____________________ ROOM IN private home, 1 male student. Everything furnished. Pool, spa, cable, etc. Electric Included. 947-4912. B u y it. Sell it. Fin d it. In The Classifieds. Services FREE DIAGNOSTIC testing and tutor­ ing for GMAT, LSAT, SAT, GRE, ACT, SAT. Information on scholarships, grants, loans available. Results are guaranteed. C a ll now l 894-9665. National Scholarship Resource In­ stitute, 1000 E. Apache Blvd., Suite 115116, Tampa.___________________ STOCKBROKER NEEDS surveyors. Articulate, good phono voice. No sa lo s /a p p q ln tm a n ts . P a rt-tim e , eveninga/weekends. *5fhour to start. 9564505._________________________ TELEMARKETING EVENINGS, Scotts­ dale location, top dollar, pleasant personality required. C all Alan or M itch, 988-2B45. _______________ Swap’ll Trade EXCHANGE HOMES: One year. My southeastern Vermont home for your home near ASU. Alice, 694-8444(H), 985-7192(0).__________ - TEMPE MARKET research firm needs telephone Interviewers, daytim e and evening shifts. Absolutely no sales. *4/hourto start. 967-4441.__________ Travel Instruction AVAILABLE MISSION Beach or Bay, San Diego, June through A ugust 1-53 bedroom condos. Tri-Star Realty, Joan Hansen, 602-972-9752, 10323 W. Coggins Dr., Sun City, AZ 85351. (AZ-CAN)_____________ ___________ OLYMPIA INTERNATIONAL Report Deluxe electric portable typewriter model SKE, nylon ribbon, *100. 9479684 after 3 p.m. ________________ STEEL BUILDINGS. Factory direct sp ecials: 30x40x10. now (3,885: 40x50x12 (5,685; 50x75x14 *9,485; 100x100x16 *19,965. Reduced for Im m e d ia te p u rc h a s e . C a ll 214442-3068, American States BulktIng Systems. (AZ-CAN) ____ PRICED FOR quick sale: 2 bedroom, 2 bath, large living and dining area, vaulted calling, fireplace, nice kitchen with dishwasher/diapoaai, refrigerator and breakfast bar. Newly painted and claaned. Evelyn, 831-1152, ERA Karatotter._______________________ Typing bBDDO cblnese*karate AAA WORD Processing Service. Quick, professional services. Rush ok. Graph­ ic s available. Ron, 833-5632, or maaaaga.______ . ______________ S P EC IA L IN TR O D UCTO R Y CO URSE 1733 E. M cKelllps C A L L 945-1733 H elp Wanted ARE YOU LOOKING FOR THAT SPECIAL SUMMER POSITION? SALES POSITIONS WITH TEEN SO UR CE, the official directory for teenagers will be hiring commission sales representatives to call on business accounts. If you like high commissions and can work M-F, this is the position for you. For personal interview please call 391-3544 or 947-4187 SEPARATES %Qaisins BEST SELECTION O f SW IM W EAR M TOWN/! For Unique Styles Ftin Shorts, Shirts A Accessories REACHCIV» WEST 839*9600 219 E. Baseline Shorts h Shirts Tool Beal Estate LAKE MEAD. Perfect weekend or retirement getaway actually Inside Lake Mead National Recreation Area. Spectacular views, trophy fishing, minutes from Lake Mead and Grand Canyon. Residential lots, *6996 (from (350 down, *95 month, 10 year 12% APR.) Homes or m obiles, paved streets, utilities. In rapidly growing community. Meadvlew Co., 1-805225 6928. (AZ-CAN)____________________ ACCU RATE WORD processin g: Theses, dissertations, papers, re-, sumas. Reasonable. High quality work. South Temps. MaryAnn, 838-4302. A LL WORD processing projects done accurately, promptly, and reliably. Experience with research papers, theses, and d issertation styles. Satisfaction guaranteed. Linda Brewer, 9357906.________ ALW AYS AVAILABLE for typing. C all Susan atS8»4373. _______________ C A LL ME for teat, accurate, quality service at com petitive prices. Close t i A8U .9652186. ____________ ' ; FAST RETURN: Experienced typist w ill adit spelling, punctuation, and gram­ mar. Accuracy guaranteed. Joan, 8350772._______________________ LETTER PERFECT Word Processing. Rush Jobs no problem. D issertations, term papers, resumes, thetas. Quality! 8359103._________________________ WORD PROCESSING, secretarial ser­ vices. 23 years experience. Student discount. SW comer, M illar and Chaparral. 9944145.________________ W anted WANTED: TO buy used zither In good condition. 1-9344549, Mr. Mitchell. * Tjuesda£June^9$7 FOR EVERY SPORT SALE ft\\ ¿ f r SPORTS ium ” S U M M ER “W ELC O M E STAR TS TO D AY SPORTS SHOES KAEPA 180 AVIA 460 K SWISS-LADY SALE REG. $43.99 139.99 $19.09 $53 $47 $42 •REEB0K*REEB0K*REEB0K* ACT 600 LX 8500 CHARISMA PHASE! $31.99 $39.99 $27.99 . $31.99 $57 $85 $45 $48 ‘ HIKING BOOTS* VASQUE FLYTE HI-TECPCT HI-TEC K-2 MUIR TRAIL ASOLO VOYAGER $39.99 $37.99 $47.99 $69.99 $43.99 WATER SKIS SPORTS SURCLASSES FU LL SELECTION OF VUARNET SUNCLOUD RAYBAN REVO BOLLE Ropes • B indings • Vests * AHa S U N C L O U D A M B E R 20% O F F V U A R N E T PX2000 - 20% O F F $80 $47 $56 $100 $80 RACQUET SPORTS >RAISINS»CATCH IT!»M 1ST RAIL« •EXPO ZAY*SPEED O*AREN A* •HAND *HEAD«FILA* ROPES VESTS GLOVES COMBOS KNEEBOARDS S LA LO M S SKI BOBS $ 15.99 $ 23.99 $ 9.99 $ 59.99 $ 79.99 $129.99 $ 59.99 ASK ABOUT OUR DEMOS 'LOW EST PRICES OF THE SEASON* CAMPIRÒ 20%-50% OFF •SAVE 20%-50% O F F ! R a r n iio f e Everything you need to make your trip complete and m o re ... 20% - 50% O F F SALE PRINCE GRAPHITE110 PRINCE GRAPHITE125 HEAD TXD HEAD TXE KENNEX/GOLDENACE KENNOX ACE COMP from from fro m from from fro m from Complete Service Department SELECTED FASHION SW IM W EAR Huge S elèction of Racquetball, Tennis •KIDDER ►O’BRIEN •JO B E •CO N N ELLY •H.O. •M A S T E R C R A F T $169.99 $129.99 $179.99 $129.99 $49.99 $89.99 •TENTS »SLEEPING BA G S « PA C K S •STO VES «FOOD »FUEL REG. $250 $325 $300 $250 $ 72 $110 M o u n ta in e e rin g N e c e s s itie s H a m m o c k s • T h e rm a re st P a d s «CLIM BING E Q U IP M E N T * by CHOUINARD, WILD COUNTRY RENTALS AVAILABLE SAILBOARDS SPORTS H U G E S E LE C T IO N THE NEW EST S T Y L E S AND COLORS •CLUB*PATA60NIA* •R0BBINS*N0RTH FACE* •BIG 006S*KAHALA*RAISINS* •C0NNELLY*0’NEILL*SP0RTIF SAVE 20%-30% OFF SELECTED STYLES THE VALLEY’S LARGEST SELECTION OF COMPETITIVE SWIMWEAR M ISTR A L HJFLY O’BRIEN •GOGGLES •KICKBO ARD S • P U L L BUOYS »TOW ELS »RAFTS • M A S K S •SN O R KELS »FINS and MORE, M UCH M O R E ... from $799 from $699 from $449 SAVE 2Q%-30% Ol ^SELECTED GAASTRA SAILSi •BIOGAASTRA*FLEETWOOD* RENTALS AVAILABLE A LL SALE ITEMS LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND STORE HOURS Mon.-Fri. . . . . . . . 10-9 Saturday . . . . . . . 10-6 Sunday.. J , . . . . . Ipine Ski & Sports 1 7 5 3 E . B R O A D W A Y , T E M P E • 9 6 8 -9 0 5 6 12-5