slate pfess V o l. 7 0 N o. 8 5 •C opyright, state P u n . 1968 A rizo n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity ’s M o rn in g D aily M onday, F eb ru ary 8 ,1 9 8 8 Tam pa, Arizona B ab b itt e x p e c ts 'stro n g sh o w in g ’ in Io w a caucus B y V IC K IE CHACHERE S ta te Press DES MOINES, Iow a — An optim istic Bruce Babbitt, who ranks fourth among Dem ocratic presidential hopefuls in a weekend poll, said Sunday his campaign is “ prepared to pull o ff a surprise” in tonight’s Iowa caucuses. Babbitt, responding to reporters’ questions after appearing on CBS’ s “ Face the Nation,” said: “ Expectations are low and I am prepared to pull o ff a surprise. “ I ’m absolutely certain that w e a re going to make a strong showing.” ... The form er Arizona governor, who tied with the Rev. Jesse Jackson fo r fourth in the Des M oines R egister poll, is the favorite of 9 percent o f those polled by the newspaper. The caucuses, the first voter measure o f a candidate, w ill begin tonight at 7:30. Related stories pages 4, 6, 7 and 8. “ Rem em ber, as ea rly as Jan. 1 ,1 was at 2 or 3 percent,” Babbitt said. “ I think the motion is there.” Babbitt added that he would definitely go to New Hampshire on Feb. 16 and participate in the M arch 8 “ Super Tuesday” prim aries and caucuses in 20 states regardless of his showing in Iowa. “ I ’m going to New Hampshire and I am going to stay in the race because I really believe I can make a difference,” Babbitt said, adding that he has spent a year cam paiging there. Babbitt, appearing on the news program, said: “ I read those polls as good news fo r Bruce Babbitt. “ Rem em ber who was fourth in 1984? G ary H art.” The Babbitt campaign, which has operated in Iowa fo r two years and was jioned Sunday by Phoenix M ayor Terry Goddard, was bolstered in Decem ber by a televised debate T u rn to B ab b itt, page 9 . S tava M ountaar/S tata -- I _____ D .l F o rm er A rizo n a G ov. B ruce B a b b itt speaks w ith h is su p p o rters a t th e G reen w ay E lem en tary S chool in D es M oin es, Io w a . B abb itt v is ite d th e sch o o l T h u rsd ay. B a b b itt and o th e r p re s id e n tia l h op efu ls arriv ed In D es M oines la s t w eek fo r th e b eg in n in g o f th e Iow a caucu ses. H ou se to v o te on S e n a te ’s im p eac h m en t articles By b e n M c C o n n e l l Sta te P ress PH O E N IX — As acting Governor Rose M offord m eets with impeached Gov. Evan Mecham today to tem porarily replace his administration, the House o f Representatives is expected to vote on articles o f impeachment for the Senate. F iv e managers elected by the House Friday a fter its vote to impeach the em battled first-term Republican m ay present up to 55 impeachment articles to the House fo r debate and vote, some representatives said Sunday. “ I ’ve heard rumors that anywhere from three to 55” articles w ill be presented, said Rep. Jenny Norton, R-Tempe. Meanwhile, Mecham’s troubled automobile dealership suffered close to $100,000 in damage to cars and o ffice equipment during a vandalism spree early Sunday, Glendale police said. Most of the dam age was the result o f broken glass in 22 automobiles and three buildings. P o lice have arrested Vernon Bradley Jordan, 21, the son o f a dealership em ployee, in connection inside_____ ASU WEATHER Sunny and mild today with a high near 70. Tonight: clear with a low in the 40s. CARDINAL RULE: There will be a new alcohol policy for Arizona Cardinals games, once the team houses Sun Devil stadium in the fall. Page 10. Classified................. 19 Comics,.....,...,.........16 Entertainment......... 11 Opinion.............. 4 Sports.................... 17 with the incident. He has been charged with three counts o f burglary, one count of trespassing and one count of crim inal damage, according to Glendale police spokesman M arshall Downen. M echam had no com m ent, w h ile press secretary Ken Smith said he knew nothing about the incident. The governor has said the controversies surrounding him has hurt his dealersh ip financially. It has been w idely reported that Mecham Pontiac has been for sale fo r several months. Heinz Hink, a Scottsdale Republican who was selected chairman o f the House’s m anagers for drafting the impeachment articles, m et Sunday with House special counsel W illiam French and the four other managers to draft the language of the articles. Hink and French did not return repeated State Press phone calls Sunday. Hink also is a political science professor at ASU. Rep. Bev Hermon, a Tem pe Republican and one of the 46 legislators who voted for impeachment, said today’s action w ill m ove quickly. Republicans w ill caucus early today, then go to the floor at 10:30 for debate and a vote. Norton said representatives have a “ strong feeling . . . to do this with a ll fairness.” E arly on, most House members believed three articles would be written, charging Mecham with alleged obstruction of justice, w illfu lly concealing a $350,000 loan on financial disclosure form s and illegally borrowing $80,000 o f the state’s money. But the articles likely w ill be “ subdivided” to m ake the charges m ore precise. The House voted Friday 46-14 to impeach Mecham. A select comm ittee heard 33 hours of testimony from witnesses, including Mecham, who testified fo r 14 o f those hours. A t his Friday appearance, Mecham told the comm ittee that an impeachment vote would “ not be the end of the w orld.” M offord, according to the state’s constitution and an opinion issued by Attorney General Bob Corbin, becam e acting governor when Mecham was notified Friday night o f the impeachment vote. *\ MECHAM’S CALENDAR ✓ Today — Meet with acting . Gov. Rose Mofford to iron out details of moving out of his ninth-floor executive office. ✓ Feb. 10 — Likely day he w ill move out of his office. Mofford has said “ a few days” should be enough for him to leave. ✓ Feb. 17 — Pre-trial hearing on six felony crim inal counts handed down by the state grand jury. ✓ Feb. 29 — Tentative start of Senate im peachm ent tria l. ✓ March 9 — Criminal trial begins. ✓ May 17 — Recall election neld. Already, nearly a dozen candidates want to be placed on the ballot. C o n fid e n tia l m ath d o c u m e n t stolen, c irc u la te d B y SC O TT LUCK S ta te Press A confidential ASU Mathematics Department faculty-rating document was rem oved from the math office headquarters at the beginning o f this sem ester and distributed anonymously to faculty members, many o f whom are upset about the incident. Included in the document, which was provided anonymously to the State Press, are Math Chairman W illiam “ Tom ” Trotter’s “ subjective ratings.” . The document lists the math faculty members and ratings for research, teaching, service and an o v e r a ll s c o re d eterm in ed b y th e m ath department’s personnel com m ittee. Underneath are Trotter’s ratings broken down into six categories, with a rating from one to six. However, the document provided to the State Press was apparently altered. On the State Press’s version of the document, next to the “ Chairman’s Subjective Ratings,” is a clause which states: “ Those in categories I, II, and I I I are to be encouraged to leave.” Th irty o f the 45 rated faculty members fa ll into categories one through three. However, Trotter said he did not w rite the “ encouraged to leave” message. “ I duthot w rite such a statement and would not m ake such a statement about any faculty member in the department,” Trotter said. Several faculty members within Trotter’s categories of one to six confirm ed that their versions of the document did not contain the “ encouraged to leave” clause. No one claim ed they ever saw such a statement on any o f the copies. Trotter said the document was stolen from the math department office. “ It (the document) was rem oved illegally from the departm ent It has been altered and done so in a way, which at face value, I think, is an effort to be very disruptive and dam aging,” said Trotter, who took over the chairmanship in M ay. Trotter previously served as the math department chair at the U niversity of South Carolina. Trotter said he did not have any idea who took the document or who distributed it. However, several math professors claim ed they knew who had, although they would not elaborate. Trotter said he is cooperating with ASU legal counsel and campus police, and he has been advised not to discuss the document’s content. ASU Police Chief C. Russell Duncan said it is policy fo r campus police not to confirm or deny whether an investigation is being conducted. John McDonald, a math professor who served on the ratings personnel comm ittee, said he thought the docum ent’ s d istrib u tion w as “ irritatin g” and an “ invasion of p rivacy.” Turn to D ocum ant, pago 9 . Page 2 State Presi February 8,1988 world/nation in brief PLO chief demands liberation of 2 kidnapped Scandinavians 2IHDON, Lebanon (A P ) — PLO guerrillas Sunday surrounded a house holding two kidnapped Scandinavian United Nations employees and their abductors, and PLO Chief Yasser A rafat ordered the hostages freed. T h e P a le s tin e L ib e ra tio n O rg a n iza tio n ’ s Sidon commander, Anwar Madi, who issued the order in this southern Lebanese port city, said his guerrillas m ight use force to release the two captives. “ W e shall try to gain their freedom with peaceful means. But if this proves in effective, w e shall resort to other means,” M adi told reporters. “ We expect they w ill be free in 48 hours.” Sources close to Madi said the two captives — United Nations R elief and Works Agency em ployees Jan Stening, 44, o f Sweden, and W illiam Jorgensen, 58, of Norw ay — w ere being held in a deserted house that had been encircled by PLO guerrillas near Sidon’s Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp. “ W e bave clear orders from A rafat to storm the hideout if the captors fa il to free the two captives peacefully,” said cme source, who spoke on condition o f anonymity. Stening and Jorgensen w ere traveling in an UNRW A car from their base in the southern Lebanese port of Tyre to Beirut on Friday when they w ere intercepted and kidnapped by. masked gunmen on Sidon’s southern outskirts. They w ere the first Scandinavians to be abducted in Lebanon. An UNRW A communique released Saturday said it had been'festablished that the captors w ere Palestinians “ acting individually without a political m otive,” Economists see Federal Reserve ready to push down interest rates W ASHINGTON (A P ) — The Federal Reserve is poised to boost the faltering U.S. economy by pushing down interest rates. The moves are certain to be welcomed by home buyers and Republican presidential hopefuls. Many economists believe the central bank has already set in motion further easing moves because o f the widespread belief the economy is about to slide into a period o f very weak growth. Top federal policy-makers who sit on the Federal Open M arket Committee w ill m eet behind closed doors Tuesday and Wednesday to assess current economic conditions and set monetary policy fo r the year. Justice Department gives go-ahead to private contra aid efforts WASHINGTON (A P ) — The Justice Department says private supporters of the Nicaraguan contras can legally raise funds for the rebels. The contras’ backers w ill have to step gingerly, though, if they want to avoid past mistakes that have led to c r im in a l charges or made them — both w ittingly and unwittingly — part of the Iran-contra a ffair. For instance, U.S. law would prohibit the private backers from sh ip p in g arms now in the United States to the contras without State Department approval. And the department would have to agree before U.S.-made arms could be sent from other countries to the rebels. Other laws prohibit the launching o f private m ilitary operations from U.S. soil and require registration of anyone operating as an agent of a foreign entity. The Internal Revenue Service rules say that tax-exempt charitable organizations must raise money for food, clothing and shelter — not fo r weapons. Private contra backers said last week they would try anew to raise money for the rebels because o f the House’s rejection of $36.2 m illion in aid. today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU. Any campus club or organization can submit entries to the calendar for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries will not be taken over the phone. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m; the previous business day. (Room 211). They welcome anyone interested in medicine and engineering. Tshirts will be available. •Young Communist League meets today from 4 to 5 p.m. in the MU Navajo Room for a discussion of the significance of the INF treaty and what students should do about it. Entries may be edited due to content or space. •Black Interpreters Theatre meets tonight at 4 p.m. in Stauffer Hall, Hoorn 318 to plan a show for Black Heritage Month. •Coalition for World Peace meets today at noon in the MU Santa Cruz Room-with guest speaker William Kennedy, artist and victim of Agent Orange. •United Campuses to Prevent Nuclear War meets today at 4 p.m. in the Social Sciences Building, Room 325 for a discussion of spring semester events. •Biom edical Engineering Society discusses semester activities today from 2:40 to 3:30 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room •PRSSA (Public Relations Student Society of America) meets tonight at 5:30 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room (Room 211). •ASU Kundalinl Yoga Club meets tonight at 7:15 p.m. in the MU Graham Room (Room 216). They will team to stretch, breathe and relax through the art and science of Kundalini Yoga. Ed Moser of Phoenix’s largest PR firm speaks on climbing the ladder to success and the benefits of being a PRSSA member. They will also have a planning session. •United Jewish Appeal meets tonight at 5:30 p.m. at Hillel Jewish Student Union for a solicitation seminar and dinner. •Sigma Tau Delta English Honor Society meets tonight at 6 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building, Room C-319. They will serve refreshm ents, welcom e everyone. •Cam pus Am bassadors Christian Fellowship meets tonight at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel for “ Sermon on the Mount.” «Sky Diving Club meets tonight at 7 p.m. in the MU Coconino Room (Room 217). They welcome first jump students. •Peer Advisement (Educational Support Program) offers a test taking skills seminar from 4 to 5 p.m. today jn Room A-362 and a reading skills seminar from 5 to 6 p.m. tonight in Room A-372. The ESP offices are on the south end of the third floor of the Student Services Center. •MUAB Gallery Committee holds a Fine Arts poster sale today through Friday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Orange Mall at Cady Mall, or in case of rain, in the lower level of the MU. We’ll Cross Flaming A SU STUDENTS Coals To Make You V O T E ! A Great Hamburger. For your favorite TV station at Carls Jr. in»the Cornerstone □ KTVK Channel 3 (U n iv e rs ity & R u ral) □ MTVCharm ^ KPHO Channel 5 □ KNXV Channel 15 □ KTSP Channel 10 □ ASPN Channel 18 □ ESPN Channel 11 □ CNN Channel 30 □ KPNX Channel 12 □ KUTP Channel 45 Bring This Ballot In Before Feb. 19 And Receive A Free Regular Fries C a r l’s J r . G ood only a t the University & Rural location. Expires 2-19-88. 516. Cmje W estern Bacon C heeseburger $ 1.49 Good only a t the U niversity & R ural location. Expires 2-21-88. 166 ITM Monday, February 8,1988 Stet» Pres» ASU possible location for compulsory AIDS testing B y V IC TO R BARAJAS; S ta te P ress Unsure exactly what Surgeon General E verett Koop meant at an AIDS conference in England recently when he suggested., testing an entire undetermined university fo r AID S, health officials are not ruling out ASU as a passible site. “ There’s always that possibility,” said Edward Sunderland, chairman of the AIDS Education Coalition who is opposed to any type o f mandatory testing. “ It would have to be done in-a blind testing situation. Neither the investigators nor the students would necessarily know who turned out positive.” Sunderland added that ASU would not be a proper site, since the combination of commuter and residential students makes the university untypical. A New York or San F ra n cisco u n iversity w ould a lso be untypical, since those universities would tend to have higher positive results than the national average. ASU law professor Jane Aiken said she opposes m a n d a tory te s tin g in an y university, especially at ASU, because people who test positive in Arizona have to be reported by nam e to the health department. , “ T h e re m ay be b rea ch e s o f co n fid e n tia lity that w ou ld’’ resu lt in enormous amount of discrimination, and that’s a bad idea,” Aiken said. “ It probably would be nice to have data on what’s happening in our university populations.. but I ’ m not su re th e re’s su ffic ien t confidentiality in any state to protect people from that. “ I feel like you’re putting a population of people at risk.” High risk groups to the disease are h o m o se x u a l o r b is e x u a l m en and intravenous drug users. Lower risk groups a re h em oph iliacs, blood transfusion r e c ip ie n t s a n d n o n -m o n o g rm o u s heterosexual men and women. AIDS is infecting people in high- and lowrisk groups alike. Between 1981 and 1987,190 people in Maricopa County w ere infected, resulting in 104 deaths. A survey taken last spring showed a high level o f knowledge o f AIDS at ASU, but no significant changes in sexual behavior. Other universities’ surveys confirm that finding. Monty Roth, ASU director of student health, said he would rather continue the current voluntary AIDS testing program being offered than enforce a mandatory program. “ Fm a ll fo r having the program available to college students,” Roth Said. “ I don’t really think it (mandatory testing) w ill be enforced.” The ASU Student Health Center began offerin g AID S tests fo r students last summer. Over 200 students have taken the tests so far. The first part o f the test is a screening. If the test is positive, then a m ore specific confirm atory test is given. A ll tests are confidential and coded when taken for laboratory testing. The center charges $5 for the screening and $58 for the confirm atory test. Bob Henning, a volunteer fo r the Arizona C ivil Liberties Union, questioned whether or not mandatory testing was constitutional. “ We would be com pletely against it because we do not believe in testing for AIDS without probable cause, and w e prefer it only on a volunteer basis,” Henning said, “ The mandatory AIDS test on federal em ployees could be stopped becasue it’s unconstitutional. I just don’t think they could do it to students.” Sunderland, who w ill speak against a bill Tuesday that would require AIDS testing before a m arriage licenses is issued, said education is a better solution to AIDS than tests. He said the tests would cost between $30 and $100 per student. Eye of the needle “ Testing a ll students (in the country) would be stupid and costly,” Sunderland said. T ris h a C arle n o , 2 4 , a B FA d e s ig n /te ch . m ajo r, sew s a je s te r’s h at F riday in G am m age fo r th e firs t p ro du ction o f th e y e a r, th e Ita lia n com edy th e “ V en etian T w in s .” Blow your love a kiss with a Valentine’s Day Pcüdnal Tell your love ju s t how m uch they m ean to you with a personal ad in the Friday, February 12 sp ecia l classified section !! AVOID THE RUSH . . . DO IT NOW DEADLINE IS WEDNESDAY, FEB. 10 AT 5 P M. r jjs e th is handy o rd e r form to say “ I LOVE Y O U .” S T A T E P R E S S V A L E N T IN E A D O R D ER NAM E. .P H O N E . ADDRESS. $ 1 .2 5 fo r 15 w o rd s 150 each additional word C A S H * C H E C K w/Guarantee Card V IS A • M A S T E R C A R D DEADLINE IS 5 P.M . WED. - M a ll it in . n ■v m A B rin g it in . 9 0 5 *7 P 7 Z C all it in . (W ith VISA o r M C ) STATE PRESS MATTHEWS CTR. BASEMENT TEMPE, AZ 85287-1502 $1.25 $1.40 $1,64 $1.70 $1.85 $2.00 $2.15 $2.30 $2.45 $2.60 $2.75 $2.90 $3.05 $3.20 $3.36 $3.50 $3.65 $3.80 o p in io n Page 4 State Prêt» .February 8,1988 C aucus eve Io w a : R u m in a tio n s o v e r ru m a n d C o k e a t th e K irk w o o d D a rrin H o s te tle r Opinion Editor “ skywalks” — an im pressive system of enclosed bridges that join downtown buildings. This blessed urban renewal project not only facilitates a ccess. to candidates and w ill centralize activities on caucus night, but prevents our tender Arizona skin from being constantly exposed to 50 below wind chill factors. - iff * W e w ere out in such conditions Saturday, watching Richard “ H ie Human W affle” Gephardt conduct a “ street w alk.“ Instead o f walking down an average Des Moines s tre e t, m in g lin g with the locals and answering questions, Gephardt lured the p r « § to a fiasco that bordered on the insane. The Missouri congressman walked down a short section o f sidewalk — about 5 11:15 P.M . DES MOINES, Iow a -r- It’s Saturday night at the Kirkwood in Des Moines, and the hotel lounge is sparsely populated. Most of the national press corps is ensconced at Guido’s, located % the adjacent, bustling Savery Hotel. The S a v o y is the in place to stay and to drink, if journalism is your profession and you have spent die entire day chasing presidential hopefuls through cornfields and watching them kiss babies. The Savery bar is fun and unique — on any given night one can watch John Chancellor argue with Connie Chung over a rum and Coke — but the 75-year-old Kirkwood, with heavy dark paneling and historical charm, is a m ore peaceful place to work. Io w a d u rin g C a u cu s tim e is a smorgasbord fo r political junkies — a 24 hour education in the political process with a frantic intensity that grows almost intolerable as Caucus tim e nears. There is a sense o f history and fraternity here, a sense > that w e are a ll participating in something vita lly im portant and momentous, yet also uniquely absurd — something distinctly Am erican. Th ere isn’t anything to do in this m idwestem backwater after* dark except drink in the hotel bars and talk politics, and anyone who remains here fo r long gets very good at both. And while 1 can’t yet claim proficiency at either, I can listen, and what I hear spells success fo r a man who fits in just storefronts in length — separted from the fin e a t the less pretentious, classic press and public by a rope barrier, much Kirkwood; a man who is presumably sound like a ticket line at Disneyland. He then asleep 12 floors above me. dodged questions and sped o ff to a rural I f that man, form er Arizona governor farm to pose with piglets and bless the Bruce Babbitt, perform s as w ell as it is Am erican farm er. being wispered in Iowa press circles that he Seldom has a “ fron tru nn er“ in a w ill, then something distinctly Am erican presidential contest appeared so shallow. w ill have occured — the triumph o f an His campaign sta ff is sophomoric and inept underdog. and his comments com e straight out o f the :y. . .. . . fit 'j V y ■ cliche encyclopedia. The rest o f the self-proclaim ed “ State Q u ite sim p ly, th ere is nothing to Press Iowa Bureau’^ — photographer Steve Gephardt, and yet he seems to be doing w ell Mounteer and reporter Vickie Chachere — in the polls. are asleep somewhere up there above m e H e is a man without firm convictions, a too, and fo r good reason. They have had a political beast addicted to the glittering busy couple o f days, with m ore to come. generality. I f G eorge Bush is a wimp, The Iowa Dem ocratic Party hosted a Gephardt is just breaking into training bras. “ dress rehersal” Saturday in preperation But he is now the leading Dem ocratic for tonight’s caucus, and if that is any candidate fo r President o f the United States. indication, a chaotic a ffa ir is in the offing. The entire top floor o f the Des Moines One o f the most interesting rumors Convention Center has been transformed com ing out o f Iowa is that Gephardt is into a m assive press cen ter— com plete with busing in suppoQers to stand up for him at a giant blue tote-board fo r displaying Monday’s caucus. caucus percentages as they slow ly role in Unlike an election, there are no residency and huge phonebanks to gather the totals. requirements fo r a caucus-goer. According The entire downtown area is now a media to Ph il Roeder, spokesman fo r "the Iowa cluster — network satellite dishes obscure D em ocratic Party, anyone can participate the skyline — as 2,500 journalists prep fo r in a Dem ocratic caucus as long as they are the big night. registered party members. The Gephardt Fortunately, almost a ll o f the campaign cam paign denies it, but some Babbitt aids hotels and offices are connected by gigantic m ain tain G eph ardt su pporters from neighboring Missouri are coming over, and in a situation where some delegates are chosen by a one or two person m ajority, this event could be significant. I f the caucus is close, you can bet there w ill be some digging into that accusation. ■ ■H p ... . Iff . ■ | The caucus is going to be close. Very close — except for Gephardt, who apparently has a lock on first place; presumably because of his wholesome good looks and pandering farm policy. The latest Des Moines R egister poll lists Gephardt on top (25 percent), followed by Paul Simon (19), Michael Dukakis (15), Undecided (15), Babbitt (9 ), Jesse Jackson (9) and everyone’s favorite philanderer, G ary H art (7 ). I watched Jackson perform at a rally this weekend in north Des Moines. He is simply the prem ier orator of his tim e, gluing 300 people to their seats fo r over an hour. When Jackson speaks, it is like an oldtim e revival m eeting, He is a lightening rod — when he talks, sparks fly. I was sitting alone on the balcony of the Masonic lodge where Jackson was tô speak, when his guard of Secret Service agents arrived to “ sweep“ the building. Jackson is the beneficiary of ziplock security, for obvious reasons, and the unseemly combination o f a long-haired reporter with bulging tote-bags sitting on the balcony looking subversive must have m ade the SS men a bit edgy. I was “ asked“ to empty the contents of m y bag — the overly polite man with the w ire coming out o f his eàr uncovered a deadly tape recorder and some notes— and o rd e r e d m e to p ré s e n t m y p ress credentials: NOW, Thank you. I like Jackson anyway; he handled the crowd w ell, spike inspirationally about his gréât patchwork “ Rainbow Coalition,” and fielded questions about the sensitive Middle East issue from the press — inclu ding queries from an Israeli reporter — with aplomb. F or a man accused o f being antisem etic, he demonstrated great sensitivity to Israel’s security needs. H is closin g rem arks w ere m iming campaign stumping a t its best: Jackson (a d d ressin g the c ro w d )— “ Where are you going to go Monday?” Crowd: “ T o get together!” Jackson: “ And what are you going to do?” “ V ote!” Jackson: “ And who are you going to vote for?” “ Jesse!” “ Who?” “ JESSE!” The sound threatened to collapse the walls, If f In a ll o f his appearances this week, Bruce Babbitt has shown w it and a willingness to take on the issues — traits conspicuously lacking in his opponents. And if it is true that Iowans enjoy a little Tabasco sauce in their, candidates, then Babbitt, through his attacks on Simon, Gephardt and Dole in recent days, has shown plenty o f spice. The most important factor this late in the Iowa race is mat at least 15 percent of the electorate is stiff undecided about who they w ill stand up for at tonight’s caucus. Simon is w idely believed to have the “ softest” constituency, (Babbitt is the candidate of second choice fo r 60 percent of Simon’s supporters) and Dukakis’ cold demeanor bores many Iowans used to the flash and fla ir o f the campaign trail. Jackson is lim ited by demographics, Hart is virtually a joke among average Iowans, and most im portantly: Babbitt is held in high esteem — by Republicans and Democrats alike— fo r his intelligence, if not his politics. What does a ll this mean? That I ’m about to test the waters and venture a guess, fo r what it’s worth, that Arizona’s favorite son, Q riice Babbitt, is going to be the surprise o f the Iowa Caucus — finishing a strong third to Gephardt and Simon. Babbitt’s enthusiastic young staff has been working overtim e, along with the candidate him self, fo r over a year. And it appears the work m ay yield dividends. 12:55 A.M. As I sit here on this blustery, freezing night, looking out from the Kirkwood lobby through the huge front window, the early editions o f the Des M oines R egister are going to press. The copies w ill contain a front-page story headlined; “ Arizona’ s Mecham Impeached by House. ” And as Evan Mecham prepares to fight his eviction from the ninth floor of the captiol half a continent aw ay — with the p ossib ility that he m ay be dragged scream ing and clawing out o f office by DPS officers authorized by Attorney General Bob C orb in — a com m ent B a b b itt m ade Saturday comes to mind. to response to the question, “ W ill the Arizona Senate convict M echam ?” Babbitt replied: “ I really don’t know. I ’m not that in touch with Arizona politics anymore. “ But I can tell you what’s going on in Iow a’s state house.” No doubt he can. And m aybe he knows m ore about what’s going on to the minds of the average Iowan , too. q u o tab le ‘The dlmmycraticparty a in ’t on speakin’ term s w ith its ilf.’ — Mr. Dooley ‘A fanatic is a man that does w hat be thinks th ’ Lord w ud do ' if He knew th ’ facts iv th f case. * — Mr. Dooley (Finley Peter Dunne) t a t t Press iß Page 5 Monday, February 8 ,1988 George Bush: Nobody knows the troubles he’s seen Mike Royko Tribune Media Services It appears that George Bosh is rea lly on a roll. He’s quickly shedding his old im age as a wim p and an elitist. F irst there was his triumphant-shouting match with Dan Rather, which let us know that he is nobody’s patsy. And now he wants us to know, that he’s not really the wealthy, well-born, well-bred aristocrat that he’s been portrayed. Yes, he’s known hard times. Despite growing up in a sprawling Connecticut mansion with cook and maid, attending the finest prep schools and Y ale, and having a m illionaire father who was a U.S. senator, Bush has known what it’s like when the w olf is at the door. He revealed this while making a campain speech in Wyoming, where the economy is depressed because of the oil price slump. To let these sim ple folk know mat he understands that they’re going through, he talked about his days in the oil. business ahd about how tough it can be. He said: “ I think having started a business and m eeting a payroll, and knowing the agony of having to lay someone o ff when the going gets rough, that’s no fun.” What a heart tugger . It shure brought a lump to m y throat. H e had to fire someone, and it wasn’t fun. I now see Bush in an entirely different light. I had known he had his own successful oil company in Texas before he was 30 — which he had started with fam ily money. But I wasn’t aware that he had gone through the personal “ agony” of having to fire someone. Naturally, Bush didn’t say how many people he had fired, or describe the intensity o f his agony. A real man doesn’t wallow in self pity. But it’s easy to im agine what those hard tim es must have been like fo r him. “ Sit down, Festus.” “ Yes, sir, M r. Bush;” •" c “ Festus, I ’m experiencing agony.” “ Gosh, I ’m sorry, M r. Bush. Something you ate?” “ No, Festus, it is m y bottom line. It has grown weak.” “ I thought you w ere looking a little pale.” “ Yes, Festus, and I ’m also in agony because of m y sluggish cash flow ,” ‘Yes, (Bush) has known hard times. Despite growing up in a sprawling Connecticut mansion with cook and m a id . . . Bush has known w hat it’s like w hen the w olf is a t the door.’ “ Is there anything I can do?” “ As a m atter o f fact, there is. You can clean out your locker and accept this check fo r two weeks pay in lieu of notice.” « “ You mean I ’m fired ?” “ Yes, Festus, that’s another reason I ’m in agony. This is such a nasty chore.” “ W ell, heck, M r. Bush, don’t go fretting over the likes of me. Being thrown out o f work is nothing. M e and the little lady and our three tykes, w e’ll get by somehow. It’s nothing compared to the agony you’re going through for having to fire m e.” “ Thank you, Festus.” “ Don’t mention It, M r. Bush. Why, if I had known that firin g me was going to be such agony for you, I would have hung m yself to save you a ll this suffering.” “ You’re a fine fellow , Festus, I feel better already.” “ That’s what really counts.” “ Goodbye, Festus. And don’t forget to turn in your company access card to security.” It is strange how we can watch someone like George Bush . on T V for years, yet w e don’t really know him as a sensitive human being. We see him as supremely confident and cheerful in his tailored suit and power tie and he seems to have his world by the tail. But do we know about the rough road he has traveled? Have any of you ever looked at him and said: “ There stands a man who went through the agony of firin g an employee. How did he endure it? ” It brings to mind a song called “ Hard Travelin,” written by Woody Guthrie, the old Okie folk anger, during the hard days of the Depression. With a few changes in lyrics, the song could apply to George Bush. I been havin’ som e hard tra velin ’, I thought you knowd, I been havin’ som e bard tra velin ’ way down the road, I been firin ’, I been cuttm ’, I g ot m y fin g er on the dismissal button, I been bavin’ som e hard tra velin ’, Lord. I ’m glad George Bush has shared this intim ate and painful part of his past with us. It has caused me to think o f him in a different way. And from now on, whenever I see him, I ’ll rem em ber that old saying: When the going gets tough, the tough get out those old pink slips. 3333 S. Rural Rd. (c o m e r o f R u ral & S o u th e rn ) 730-8194 ITALIAN RESTAURANT c FREE B ring in coupon w ith college l.D. Monday thru Saturday 1T-3 PM ALL YOU CAN EAT!! ! LUNCH o r DINNER Select on e o f th e follo w in g Lunches o r Dinners and g e t th e second on e FREE spaghetti and Garlic Bread •C h ic k e n P a rm ig ia n a •v e a l P a rm ig ia n a •L a s a g n a •M a n ic o tti $ 3.25 indudes unltm ltea soup or salaci & garlic Basket (50C extra for meat sauce) | V a lid S u n d a y th r u T h u rs. O n ly N o t v a lid w ith A n y O th e r O ffe r O ffe r good up to 6 people Expires 5-20-88 ___________ jj___.__________ I FotmNo. 1770 W OLF CREEK- PURGATORY MOST SNOW IN THE ROCKIES! Right now like always, W olf Creek has the most snow in Colorado, so why take chances anywhere else? 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Single 720K 3-1/2” Floppy Disk Drive suggested retail price: Special Student P rice: Single Floppy 1499 Dual Floppy Hard Disk $899 V is it you r nearby Z en ith D ata System s Cam pus C ontact today: COMPA&S data Palm Walk systems g65.5939 THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON . Ask about how you can qualify for easy monthly payments with a Zenith Data Systems Credit Card! Special pricing oiler good only on purchases through Zerith ConieoMe) M e d above by students, faculty and stai far their No other discounts J apply* apply, Limit one personal computer and one monitor .per individual m any 12-monjh period. rOfata aupiecttQ 01967, Zenith Data Systems j- change without notice. Page 6 S W tP w u Monday, February 8,1988 Campaign ‘88 Iow a poll show s G ephardt in lead a t caucus B y V IC K IE CHACHERE an d DARRIN HO STETLER S ta te P ress DES MOINES, Iowa M iss o u ri R ep . R ich a rd Gephardt, once lulled as a darkhorse in the race fo r the D em o cra tic p resid en tia l nomination, leads the other six Democrats in Iowa with support from 25 percent of the likely caucus-goers, a Des M o m s R egister poll said Sunday. In the Republican race, Kansas Sen. Bob Dole is Iowans’ first choice with 37 percent, while Vice President George Bush follows with 23 percent. Illinois Sen. Paul Simon, who was endorsed by the R egister a week ago, follows in the Dem ocratic race with 19 percent and Massachusetts Gdv. Michael D u kakis ranks third at 15 percent. Form er Arizona; Gov. Bruce Babbitt is tied for fourth with the Rev. Jesse Jackson, at 9 percent. An estimated 250,000 Iowans w ill m eet tonight in caucuses around the state to cast their support fo r the candidates. The six Republicans and seven Democrats have spent as long as two years wooing Iowa voters in hopes of winning the caucus and capitalizing on increased financial support and media attention that follows. Robert Beckel, cam paign m anager during W alter Babbitt makes decision to stay out pf recall race The M o n ey M an ager IR S A dvisem ent Em ploym ent Mondale’s 1984 bid fo r the presidency, said two or three of the Dem ocrats w ill be financially forced out o f the race if they do not capture at least third place in the caucuses. Beckel, appearing on CBS’s “ Face the Nation,” said Gephardt is “ in very good shape,” but has to win in Iowa to save his national campaign. “ I f you don’t finish first, second or third in this state, unless you are Jesse Jackson, then you are in real trouble,” Beckel said. Gephardt, who has campaigned in Iowa fo r two years, told a group o f farm ers Saturday, “ This election is a fight; it’s a cause. It’s about changing Am erica and making it different than it is today.” The hour-long rally, staged in a hog barn at a Kellogg, Iowa, farm , drew a standing ovation from farm ers who, during recent years, have seen crop prices drop and their livelihood threatened. Gephardt pledged im proved trade policies with Japan, in clu ding opening Japanese m arkets to A m erican commodities and domestic programs that would make use of surplus food. “ How does it feel to work hard every day to make a product and then it rots in stacks a ll across Am erica,” Gephardt said, referring to the unsold corn that has been piled next to grain elevators around Iowa and is now rotting. Gephardt said the U.S. government spends $11 billion each year on com subsidies, m ore than the federal education budget, fo r the com that is left to rot. He proposed a federal policy that would manage crop production, and in the case o f com , convert the grain to ethanol. “ I don’t like a country that’s in decline and America doesn’t have to be in decline,” he said. “ W e have the strength and w e have the power to turn Am erica in a new direction and w e are going to change the leadership o f the White House . . and w e are going to m ake Am erica good and strong again.” Gephardt’s trade policies, which have been labeled as protectionism by critics, have been attracting support from the farm ers who want to let com m odity demand determine prices fo r their crops. Later Saturday, form er Colorado Sen. G ary Hart, during a rally with supporters at a Des Moines restaurant lounge, told supporters, “ I say, let’s let the people decide.” Hart, who was favored by 7 percent o f those polled, re­ entered the race two months ago a fter dropping out in May amid reports o f womanizing and adultery. H art has since run a shoe-string campaign and has few paid s ta ff members. Hart, who drew about 70Qsupporters at an earlier rally and another 200 at thé Des Moines gathering, rocketed to national notoriety after finishing second in the 1984 Iow a caucuses and winning the New Hampshire prim ary. V He later lost the Dem ocratic nomination to Walter Mondale. “ People who have w ritten m e o ff this year, had written me o ff then,” Hart said, referring to 1984. “ The voters of this state and of this country have not been heard from yet. “ I don’t think the numbers m atter so much,” he said. “ I think what m atters is that the voters o f this state are heard from on who they think the serious candidate should be.” Hart, lashing mit at the Reagan adm inistration’s economic B y V IC K IE CHACHERE S ta te P ress m ove on. And I ’d rather be president.” On Friday, the House voted 46-14 to im peach Mecham, who has been charged with trying to conceal a ca m p aig n loan, embezzlement o f $80,000 from the governor’s protocol fund and trying thwart a state investigation into a death threat m ade b y a Mecham aide. The em battled governor is also faced with a M ay 17 recall election and crim inaTcharges stem ming from his handling o f a $350,000 campaign loan from Tempe developer B arry Wolfson. “ Everyw here I go, people are asking me, ‘What in the world is going on in Arizona?’ ” Babbitt said. “ It has become a tremendous embarrassment. DEIS MOINES, Iow a — Form er Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt told a television audience Sunday that he w ill not run in the recall election o f Gov. Evan Mecham. Babbitt, who praised the House o f Representatives ’ vote to impeach Mecham, said on OSS’s “ F a ce the Nation,” that he has no intention o f returning to the office he vacated inJanaury 1987. “ You can’t cross the same string tw ice,” saidBabbitt, a contender fo r the Dem ocratic presidential nomination. “ L ife is about m oving on. “ Those w ere great years, but I did it once, it’s tim e to Turn to O w rio cn ta, page ( . Grants Loans B IA Scholarships R esidency Classification FINANCIAL AID FAIR Febru ary 16,1988 Tom orrow m orning R o b e rt Taylor w ill present his thesis on ‘E fficien cy in G o vern m en t.5 H e n e e d s th e K ro y C o p y C e n te r, Pajlic. Memorial Union W est Cochise Room At Kroy Copy Center we take the panic out o f presentation preparation. We have the skills and equipment to meet tight and producean overhead transparency gnqihlc for it, or give you 50 free photocopies to really make your presenta­ deadlines with quality print­ ing and business graphics 9:0Q a.m .-3:00 p.m. tion stand ou t Making you look good hi a hurry is just services to make yopr message memorable. Learn to ‘Stretch Your Funds' o r . . . to study — EAT — play . . . with a MINIMUM of \ worry! part o f our Panic Prevention M icy. Stop by tire Kroy Copy Center today and get your tinreplanning instead o f printing. You images improved — for fiee. work on great ideas while we work on great graphics and printed documents for your presentation.The result: You get an unfair iJ B m advantage; while you plan, we do the dirty woA (printing, drill- r— — — -------— — — ing, collating and binding). |r? ? ? ,Î ,h * , K ,® * C ow r C o n te r Improve your image*- We’re so certain B o re Air Force • Financial Institutions Graduate Assistance Gh» us your dirty work. Spend your Re-entry Residence Iü e you need the Kroy Copy Center that we’re willing to give you a FREE sample to tatroA te ourselves to you. Brisg us ydur report (with the coupon In this ad) and we’H bind it, or design Copy Center TJ 411S. II# I fenpe. Arizona 85281 □ M ak e m in e a co m p u ter-g en erated graph. 1(602) 986-9363 □ I ’D tak e SO fas t cop ies. □ G iv e it th e fin ish in g touches. B ind m y rep o rt. R eq u ired info rm ation : Nam e—^_______ __________ S ch o o l P h on e , - Addreta. C ity . -S ta te -,__ Z ip . B i Wi M i — . ■ Phx. ASU L_ Onecouponper customer, please. Offer endsMarch24,1968. Kroy Copy Center, Kroyand Your image is our business are trademarks ofKmy ine !Your image I is our -I business. *■» m u ^Monday^FebfuafyA^VH^^ ^ 2 2 £ éL •ill Campaign ‘8 8 Dole becomes Republican frontrunner, edges out Bush B y V IC K IE CHACHERE and D A R R IN H O STETLER S ta te P resa DES M OINES, Iowa — Kansas Sen. Bob Dole, who has sprat the last .week warring with V ice President George Bush, is the favorite among Iowa voters likely to attend tonight’s caucuses. According to a Des M oines R egister poll, Dole is the first choice o f 37 percent o f the 660 likely caucus goers 'polled. Bush, in Second ¡dace, was picked by 23 percent of the voters. P a t Robertson, a television evangelist, surprised critics by placing third at 13 percent, followed by New York Rep. Jack Kem p at 11 percent. Form er D elaware Gov. P ete du Pont, with ? percent, and form er Secretary o f State ALexander Haig, with 1 percent, round out the GOP field. L a ter tonight, an estim ated 250,000 Iowahs w ill m eet to publicly stand up for their choice for president. Dole and Bush have spent the past week trading barbs after Bush issued a press release last week that acciised Dole of “ cronyism .” Bush charged that Dole had im properly helped a form er aide obtain a government contract. Dole admits that he did w rite a letter for the aide that secured a no-bi&contract from the Sm all Business Administration to fund $30 m illion in m eals in F ort Leonard Wood, Mo. A report issued last week by the House Small Business Committee sta ff said the aide was clearly unqualified to receive toe contract. Dole, responding to the charges, said he had done nothing out of toe ordinary in w riting a letter o f support fo r his form er aide. The cam paign hostilties culm inated Thursday when Dole, Senate m inority leader and President Ronald Reagan’s closest congressional ally, confronted Bush on the floor o f toe Senate, demanding an apology. D ole responded to the “ cronyism ” accusation Thursday during a meeting with editors at the R egister when he said that Bush’s form er chief of staff now runs a Washington public relations firm that h a n d le s a $406,000 c o n tr a c t w ith Panam anian m ilita ry strongman Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega. S Noriega was indicted last week in United States federal court on charged of drug smuggling. Bush, who m et. with a sm all group of uncommitted caucus-goers Sunday night, said he is “ hurt when he hears of anyone betraying tho public trust. “ As president, I would hold up a high ethical standard,” Bush said. Bush and his w ife Barbara capped a hectic fin al day o f state-wide campaigning with two cocktail parties in their honor in suburban Des Moines. H ie vice president m et briefly at one reception with two members of the Japanese parliam ent and stressed toe importance o f Asian-American relations. “ I think toe first priority is to maintain national security and then promote good re la tio n s w ith our frien d s lik e the Japanese,” Bush said. Bush urged those present to “ vote for me at toe caucus. “ M y national numbers are very, strong, but I want to win with Iowa on m y side too,’ 7 Bush said. “ I wouldn’t be standing here as vice president without Iow a.” O ther Republican cam paigners and political analysts have admonished Bush and Dole fo r squabbling and demeaned toe importance o f their clashes. Kem p, responding to questions Friday, said, “ They should be embarrassed by it. I think toe Democrats are pleased to see it. I think it diverts attention.” Robertson called the altercations between Bush and Dole “ a dog and cat fight.” „ s ie v e M oum eer/sim e rre s s P res id e n tia l h o p efu l, R epu b lican Jack K em p , add resses p ressin g issu es a t th e S avery H o te l in D es M oin es, Io w a. Kem p spo ke b efo re a cro w d o f low an s Thrusday. 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M ill Ave., Tempe Tempe Center (near Pic-n-Save) Page 8 S W e P re s s Monday, February 8 ,1 9 8 8 Campaign ‘88 Party caucuses begin in Iowa, first step taken in ’88 election Cam paigns build as party gathers B y D A R R IN H O STETLER S ta te P ress DES MOINES, Iowa — When Republicans and Dem ocrats convene throughout Iowa tonight to fire the opening gun in the 1988 presidential race, they w ill be engaging in a unique political ritual — the party caucus. U n lik e a p rim a ry e lec tio n , w here registered voters go the polls to show support fo r a candidate, tonight’s caucus w ill be a sm all gathering (on the precinct level) of party members who com e together to debate candidates and policy, form coalitions and elect delegates to county conventions. In 2,487 precincts across Iowa, Democrats w ill divide into groups — with each faction supporting one o f the p a rty’s seven presidential candidates. Each group must achieve a “ viability level“ o f 15 people before it is entitled to elect county delegates — who w ill in turn choose the state convention delegates who w ill attend the national convention in Atlanta this summer. The groups elec t county delegates proportional to th eir strength in the precinct. F or exam ple, if Paul Simon has 20 supporters in a precinct where 60 people attend the caucus, approxim ately 33 p erm it o f the delegates elected to the county convention w ill be Simon devotees. T h e o v e ra ll p ercen ta g e o f county delegates a candidate has in each precinct w ill be totaled and released by the Dem ocratic Party. The Republicans conduct a secret-ballot straw poll, which means that everyone at the caucus votes fo r a candidate and the results are tallied. The caucus system has been described as unwieldy, confusing and inaccurate, but Iowans have engaged in the tradition since the early 1800s and have strongly resisted changing the system. In an effort to m ore faithfully pinpoint candidate support in this crucial ea rly test, several independent polling firm s and the three television networks w ill also be conducting polls -of caucus-goers and releasing the results to the press. C A SU A L! ATTITUDES CONTINUE AT BANDERSNATCH MON. LIVE RICK GONZALEZ . GUITARIST WELL DRINKS TUES. WED. 2 FOR 1 ISLAND KAZI’S & WATER­ MELONS THURS. LIVE RHYTHM BY FRANK SERAFINI GUITARIST MmmtMiystate I P resid en tial h op efu l Jack K em p m eets h is sup po rters b efo re spesld ng to th e D ee M oines C hem ber o f C om m erce F riday aftern o o n . Date/Acquaintance Rape occurs in all segments o f today's society. Current research indicates that institutions o f higher learning m ay w ell have a higher probability for rape and sexual violence than other segm ents of society. In 1985, Dr. Mary Koss, Kent State University, com pleted the Ms. M agazine Campus Project on Sexual Assault, revealing that one in four w om en in college today have been victim s o f rape or attem pted rape. Rape and sexual violence does occur on virtually all college and university campuses, and institutions are beginning to recognize the need to address this issue. A t Arizona State University, the O ffice o f Residence Life is taking measures to insure that the issues o f date/acquaintance rape are addressed. $ 1 75 REM EM BER A LL YOUR During Interpersonal Relationships W eek, February 8-14, 1988, the Date/Acquaintance Task Force is planning programming interventions throughout the campus. Residence Halls, Sororities and Fraternities, and various academic classes w ill have presentations which address dating expectations and male/female com­ munication. For more information please call thè O ffice of Residence Life, 965-1531. • ^ T 'r r x r c s j SHOWS BEFORE 6PM MOM -FRI (EXCEPT HOUOAYS) SATURDAY, SUNDAY t HOUOAYS FIRST SHOW ONLY „ PO C A F IE S T A MESA AT 1020 WEST SOUTHERN 835-0404 FATAL ATTRACTION (R) 12:00,2:30, 5:00,7:30.10:00 OVERBOARD (PG13) 12:00,2:30,5:00,7:30,10:00 S U P E R S TITIO N Q MESA AT S. LONGMOBE &SUPERSTITION ...w ith a Hallmark card and gift on Valentine's Day Sunday, February 14. w PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOS (PG13) 12:30,2:45, 5:00, 7:15,9:30 RURAL«, UND/ERSTTY THE COUCH TRIP (R) SERPENT AND THE RAINBOW (R) 12:00,2:15,4:30,7:00,9:30 FATAL ATTRACTION (R) MOONSTRUCK (PG) BxehdadonTuesday rollettsGftShop YOUR HALLM ARK HEADQUARTERS T R I-C IT Y DOLLAR THEATRES s100 Ml SEATS*ALLSHOWS 461-1070 MAIN ST & DOBSON RO.. IN MESA BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED (PÖ13V 12:30, 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:15 DIRTY DANCINQ (PG13) 3:30, 7:30 RUNNING MAN (R) 1:30, 5:30, 9:30 DEADLY ILLUSION (R) 2:00, 6:00,10:00 STAKE OUT (R) 3:45.7:45 State Press Page? Monday, February 8 , 1988 Babbitt C o n tin o M from p eg * 1. during which Ire “ stood up’ ’ for a national sales tax to help offset the federal deficit. But some political analysts believe Babbitt’s push fo r the tax m ay have scared voters, as it did in 1984 when W alter Mondale pledged to raise taxes. “ I ’m not trying to commit suicide, I ’m trying to Win,” Babbitt said. “ I think the Am erican people ate ready to listen to candidates who talk honestly, although it’s not exactly whatthey want to hear. “ It ’s not 1984, it’s 1988. They (the voters) have seen the effect o f Reagan economics.” The sales tax, which Babbitt plans to be about 5 percent, has been criticized by those who believe it would have the worst impact on the middle class. But Babbitt said it w ill be the rich, who buy m ore expensive products, who w ill be taxed the hardest. “ There are not loopholes,” Babbitt said. “ Think o f al] those cocaine dealers, they don’t pay income tax at all. They w ill pay m y tax when they go out to purchase the tools o f their trade, a Citation je t or a Mercedes, or what have you.” Babbitt, who has eased his week-long verbal attacks oh other Dem ocratic and Republican candidates, responded to questions that the tactic backfired, by saying, “ An election is really not a tea party.” Babbitt has been harshest with his own Dem ocratic opponents, atacking Illinois Sen. Paul Simon’s public work program s,, and lambasting the campaigns o f front-runner Missouri Rep. Richard Gephardt and Massachussetts Gov. M ichael D u kakis “ They are good people, they are good candidates. But their programs are really inadequate, they are demeaning to the Am erican people,” Babbitt said. “ Don’t you think an election is about making those kind o f contrasts? “ Should it be about silence? Is it supposed to be a cattle show? A beauty pageant?” Babbitt, referring to Simon, Dukakis and Gephardt as the “ three am igos,” said Friday be has been trying to “ lure them out,” by questioning their campaigns. Friday, Babbitt brought his cam paign tp a Des Moines elem entary school, where he kidded with elem entary school children while attempting to draw support from their parents. “ I ” m here just to sm ile with you, and celebrate what’s going on here,” Babbitt said, drawing giggles from a group of 7-year-olds who gathered around him. Tennesee Sen A lbert Gore has chosen not to appear at the Iowa caucus and is channeling his resources into Super Tuesday. Simon, sporting his fam iliar bow tie, joined the ra lly to the tune of “ Happy Days are Here Again,” Franklin D. Roosevelt’s theme song. “ I got into this not because I wanted to live in a big white house, or hear the band playing ‘Hail to Ore Chief,’ or a ll that that goes with the presidency,” Simon said. “ I got into .this because I believe w e can build a better future fo r this nation and this w orld.” Massachusetts’ Dukakis, speaking at a breakfast for his Iow a precinct captains Sunday morning, urged his supporters to “ pull out a ll the stops, because this race is very tight. “ It’s just about even at this point, folks. F orget about what you read in the newspaper this morning,” Dukakis said, referring to the R egister poll. Jackson, in a Saturday rally, told his supporters that they should not overestim ate the importance o f the Iow a caucus. “ It’s one gam e that w e play Monday, there are 49 left to go after that,” Jackson said. A country-western band played fo r the 500 Jackson supporters in the packed hall while Jackson fielded questions from reporters concerning th e ' explosive Middle East. Jackson has been accused o f anti-semitism by pro-Israeli groups, stemming from a 1964 rem ark referring to New York City as “ Hym ietown.” “ W e have to insure that Israel understands w e are dedicated to their security, while providing justice fo r the Palestinians,” Jackson said. Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore has chosen not to appear at the Iowa caucus. department, although Trotter denied that was true. Hans Mittelmann, a math professor, said he had “ heard rumors” that the ratings exposure had caused a m orale problem, but he could not substantiate them since he usually does not work closely with other math professors. McDonald said, “ That depends on who you talk to. It hasn’t bothered m y m orale any.” Associate math professor John Quigg said, “ I thought it would cause a lot of unrest, but so fa r {'h aven 't heard that much.” Several professors said people in the department have been feeding information to the press fo r years. “ We have in recent years had a lot o f trouble in the department, and the State Press was w riting articles, but people w ere even contacting' The Arizona Republic, and I have the strong feeling that some of those people are now active again,” Mittelmann said. M ittelm a n n added that the ratings issue should not be fought in the press. “ Even if I had not been in group . . . (number deleted), I would not have seen the reason to complain to the State Press.” Trotter said he does not believe there is anything wrong with his ratings, and he w ill defend them if he is asked to do so. “ It is not an embarrassment to me. I have no trouble d efen d in g this. If I g o to the dean or the vice-president with this th in g , I w ill defend this information com pletely,” Trotter said. D e m o c ra ts C ontinued from p a g * 6 . policies, said that the country w ill have to “ pay for. the Reagan mess” by raising taxes for the rich and large corporations. He said the country needs an economic restructuring to m ake Am erican businesses m ore productive, adding that improvements in education also are needed. H art also said, if elected, he would upgrade U.S. conventional m ilitary forces so he would be able to negotiate a treaty with the Soviet Union calling for a 50 percent reduction in a ll nuclear weapons. Sunday, Illinois Sen. Simon drew 1,000 to a ra lly at a downtown Des Moines hotel, and told them, “ W eared ow n to the final hours, and what you do in these final hours is very important. ” Docum ent_____ C ontinued from pag> t . McDonald said the ratings w ore based on one year’s perform ance and would not affect tenure and promotion decisions. “ From the point o f view o f raises and that sort o f thing, it doesn’t mean anything,” McDonald said. “ It means a lot to people’s egos, though, when they see these ratings. It just upsets a lot of people.” ' " j McDonald added that the ratings m ight have affected m erit pay, “ but there isn’t going to be any m erit pay in the math department this year.” Tw oprofessors, who wished to rem ain anonymous, said the document’s distribution has caused a m orale problem in the * T O N Y 'S N E W ^ R E S T A U S c rea m in g deals on M a c in to s h s ! ! * M esa C om puter M a rt 4 is a d ealer fo r A p p le 4 Com puter H ig h e r E d u catio n Pu rch ase P ro gram . Y O R K E R R A N T a n d N I G H T C L U B Serving Tempe Since 1 9 7 7 O PEN A T 4 P .M . 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D H U A U W A Y CHECK NEW TIMES OR CALL FOR INFO ON NIGHTCLUB ACTS TEMPE | D O N T FORGET YOUR VALEN TINE SEND YOUR S W E E T -^ A UNIQUE GIFT FROM THE SMART COOKIE BE A PART OF UNIVERSITY TOWERS CHOOSE FROM: WE ARE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR RESIDENT ADVISORS 1988-89 AND •LONG STEM COOKIES •12-INCH SHAPED COOKIE •VALENTINE HELIUM BALLOONS •VALENTINE BALLOON BASKETS RESIDENT ADVISORS ALTERNATES FOR FALL *89 WE DELIVER T o q u a l if y y o u m u s t h a v e o u e y e a r r e s id e n c e i n a d o r m i­ t o r y , m in im u m 2 .5 G P A . M o r e in f o , a n d a p p lic a t io n s a v a ila b le i n p e r s o n a t U n iv e r s it y T o w e r s o f f ic e , F o r e s t . H o u r s o f a p p lic a t io n UNIVERSITY TOWERS 9 :3 0 S. a .m .- 5 : 0 © p .m . I n t e r ­ v ie w s w i l l b e s c h e d u le d t h i r d w e e k o f M a r c h . MH o p h o n e c a lls , p le a s e .w 525 THE SMART COOKIE (SE CORNER U N IVER SITY & M cCLINTO CK) 9 2 1 -9 9 8 8 P a s e l O ^ ^ ^ Stale P im _ _ _ ^ ^ n d «fc F e b m «Y § ^ 2 !£ Robbery suspect caught after recognized by victim B y M IKE BURG ESS SUrt« P ress A man who Tem pe police believe m ay be responsible for three arm ed robheries in the.cityw as arrested after a victim o f one o f Urn robberies recognized him at a Tem pe bar, police said. P olice said Andrew M. Jaicks, 36, o f 720 E. Solano D rive, was arrested Thursday night in connection with the Feb. 1 arm ed robbery at Merabank, 1005 E . Broadway Road. F iv e people w ere robbed o f $1,000 at gunpoint in front o f an ATM machine. Jaicks, a carpenter, was arrested at Casey M oore’s Restaurant, 850 S. Ash A ve., without incident. R e was booked into Tem pe City Jail and charged with arm ed robbery and possession o f cocaine. Police say Jaicks m ay be a suspect in the arm ed robberies at Subway Sandwiches & Salads, 4 E. 10th St., Jan. 31 and Payless Shoe Source, 830 S. M ill A ve., Jan. 28. police report In other incidents*; ggigl | || | •A construction w orker fe ll from a cement column in the 'Hayden Library Expansion pit, Thursday and broke two bones in his left leg, police said. Eugene S. Boeshans, an em ployee of Nielson Construction, was taken to Tem pe St. Luke’s Hospital. •Alm ost $800 in cam era equipment was stolen from a room in the Architecture Building, police said: •A blue Dominoes pizza sign was stolen from the top of a vehicle parked in front o f 620 Alpha D rive early Sunday, police said. •A student reported he was assaulted by his roommate during an argument about furniture arrangement and visits by his girlfriend, police said. •A student reported that another student damaged his sljpes and sweater by leaving the shower and faucet running on the second floor o f Hayden H all, police said. •Police interviewed a student a fter a smoke alarm had been activated in the second floor laundry roofn o f Palo Verde West. ■ ~'r~ ‘ ■ The student had an Uzi-type w ater gun and w ater was dripping from the smoke alarm . •Police are searching fo r six people who fled the Dash Inn Friday night without paying th eif $14.64 bill. The suspects w ere last seen leaving the bar partin g lot in a vehicle with out-of-state license plates. •An unknown person stole three fire alarm s from the sixth floor of Manzanita Residence H all F riday night. •An unknown person smashed $470 worth o f windows at the Business Administration Budding Saturday, police said. Proposed policy allows alcohol sales at non-student events B y K R IS T I E LLIS S ta te P ress An alcohol policy has been recommended to the Board o f Regents that would allow the U niversity to sell alcohol at campus events where “ the prim ary participants are not students.” The policy states that alcohol m ay be served, a t cultural and entertainm ent events, in Sun D evil Stadium skyboxes during National Football League gam es and at continuing education events sponsored by the University. E ach . even t must be approved by President J. Russell Nelson, although he does not need to be present at these events. ASASU President Karrin Kunasek said she is “ adamantly opposed“ to the alcohol policy concerning University-sponsored events. “ I think it’s a doublé standard for die U niversity which is trying to promote activities not dependent on alcohol, and then they allow people the opportunity to purchase alcohol,” Kunasek said. In a letter to the Board o f Regents, ASASU pointed to the heightened awareness of the administration and student body about the role o f alcohol on campus. There have been policies such as a dry Fraternity Rush and program s such as Alcohol Awareness Week. Kunasek said events not spoosored.by the U nivërsity, such as Cardinals gaines, are not double standards because they are not under the University’s direct control. According to Charles Bethea, assistant director of operations for ASU Public Events, the entertainment events are in the Fine Arts and include classical music and theater. . “ We’re aim ing at a largely non-student audience. We hope students are present at these events, but largely the audience w ill be non-student,” Bethea said. Locations where (events may be held include Gammage Center, Louise Lincoln K err Cultural Center, Sun D evil Stadium, Sundome Center fo r the Perform ing Arts, U niversity A ctivity Center and the MU. “ W e are prepared fo r receptions and providing it to the public, but w e’re not. ready to sell alcohol,” Bethea said. - “ H ie policy gives us flexib ility to provide appropriate services to the public. I don’t see any problems with the policy because w e exercise discretion.” ' ASU is currently working on a draft lease fo r skyboxes in which alcohol would be served at the Cardinals football games. However, alcohol w ill not be sold as general s a le » in the stadium. ^ Alcohol w ill be sold when the skyboxes are complete, in about 1% years, Bethea said. Under the policy, com plim entary alcohol m ay also be provided by a host, provided no state-appropriated funds a re used to purchase the alcohol-. This would include offcampus groups purchasing their own alcohol fo r events on campus. GREASY TONY'S D o n 't le t th e n a m e sca re you. sou» tfOAGJtV I'm n o t in sa n e! o r Creasy!! M y fo o d Is a b s o lu te ly fa n ta s tic! C o m e in a n d try us . . . V A L E N T IN E 'S DAY SPECIAL 5 0 « off Valentine’s Day cards Over $2.00 50C o f f a n y w h o le sub / with this ad / T u e s d a y S p e c ia l Valentine’s Day cards / \ \ \ 216 E. University 18-in pizza $ 7 .0 0 / Over $5.00 F re e D e liv e r y W e F eature V / A m erican G reetings / & R ecycled X P aper X c a rd s ! y y i 2 S. C o lle g e CAMPUS DRUÇS 3 2 1 E. u n iv e r s it y Rural & University 8 9 4 -8 8 6 8 O P E N 7 D A Y S A W EEK 1 0 A .M -2 A .M . (A c ro s s fROM A SU ) A R T ATTACK? S pring ’88 F ilm F e s tiv a l Relief! ON 3-13-88. STUDENT LIFE CULTURAL DIVERSITY COMMITTEE > Instant, Low Priced ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY 9 2 1 -3 6 0 0 F R ID A Y & S A T U R D A Y 10 A M . 3 A M. o ffer good T hro ugh H aving an N O R T H A M E R I C A N P R O D U C T IO N 5 2 5 S. F o r e s t university Towers Find Your Friends Picasso, Chagall, Eschar, The Impressionists * (Monet, of course) And More . . at FEBRUARY 18 & 19 TO INTERVIEW GRADUATING BUSINESS MAJORS (BBA): Black Orpheus ■France, 1959 (Portuguese with English subtitles) M e m o r ia l U n io n A c t iv it ie s Bo a r o . FINANCE ACCOUNTING MANAGEMENT GENERAL BUSINESS FOR MORE INFORMATION, SEE THE NORTH AMERICAN PRODUCTION SEC­ TION OF CONOCO’S RECRUITING BIND­ ER IN YOUR C A M PU S PLACEM ENT ~ OFFICE. M/FatPLovat QatCery Committee Sale of Posters and Fine Arts Reproductions M on., Feb. 8-F ri., Feb. 12 9 :0 0 a .m .-5 :0 0 p m. O ran g e at C ad y.M all (M U ) (Low er Level ttti 23 FEB Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad ■USA 1964 ;j All screenings are Tuesdays at 7 p.m. in the Memorial Union ■i; Cinema, lower level south. (Except Stormy Weather, March 1, at 5:30 j p.m.) Free. You are encouraged to join knowledgeable diacuaalon leaders ; following each fllm (except Stormy Weather) fo r an examination of j; the relevant Issues and a cup of coffee with new friends. »How does *j‘ ;j ;lj “cMIb&tlon" Impact upon native culture*? • Has intolerance reared m V y lm tl again In the W e? •"T h e American Dream” : la It for • “ Cabbrattonl" . , . and viewers choices, of course! 1 ty Student Ufa Cultural Diversity Committee, the MUAB Film Committee and McOonafcfa. arts & entertainment jjjt e jjW j _______________ Monday, February 8,1988__________________________________________________________________________________ P ^ S S - ll Old West is colorful in black and white B y j o a n M cK e n n a Starts Press Hints, délectables and other tangy tidbits from the cluttered files o f the entertain­ ment desk. CINEMA: •“Jim Thorpe, All American” will be shown Tuesday night in the Memorial Union Cinema as part of a series of free screenings sponsored jointly by the Stu­ dent Life Cultural Division Committee and the MUAB Film Committee. •“Amadeus, a traveler In Italy” traces Mozart's footsteps through the coun­ tryside of Italy and its principal cities. The film will be shown at 8 p.m. Tuesday at The Scottsdale Center for the Arts as part of a series of travel adventure films. Tickets are $4. For more information call 994-ARTS. •“The Last Emperor” is the epic tale of Pu Yi, China's “ last emperor” in a time of world war and revolutionary chaos. THEATER: • “Last of the Red Hot Lovers” will be presented this week by the Winterstock Regional Theatre Company at the Mesa Community Center at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Thursday and 2 and 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Tickets are $5 and, $6. For more infor­ mation call 890-3328. •“You can’t Judge » Book By Look­ ing at the Cover” is a collection of tales and anecdotes taken from literature told by the character Junebug Jabbo Jones. The play will run this Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Kerr Cultural Center. Tickets are $10. For more infor­ mation call 965-5377. E m press W an Jung (Jban C hen, r .j becom es sn opium a d d ic t in C olum bia Pic­ tu re s ’ “ T h e L as t E m peror.” ARTS: •“Cool Blue, Red Hot and Mellow Yellow” is an exhibit featuring an ex­ ploration of color and light hosted by the Phoenix Art Museum at 1625 N. Central. Admission is $1 for students and FREE every Wednesday. For more information call 257-1880. Turn to SpotHgM o, page 14. C tC e e e “ I rem em ber walking out and seeing this 50-foot can o f spinach. It was like “ 2001,” hut on bad a d d .” — C om edian R o b in W illia m s on attending Rim openings, including that o f the semi-successful “ Popeye.” B ill Leverton wanders the Arizona roads capturing unspoiled nature for those staying at home. He wanders the roads alone these days . . . but he walks in long-cooled tracks left by Dane Coolidge, a little-known early 20thcentury w riter. Coolidge traveled the Arizona Territory to get a taste o f the real West. And he took photographs for reference when he later would pen his 40-plus books. Ironically, his cam éra work m ay be the ticket out of lingering obscurity. The A rizona H istorical Foundation, housed in ASU’s Hayden Library, has reprinted several Coolidge negatives, and 41 o f the images are on an 10-month state-wide tour. The collection’s latest stop is the Arizona H all of Fam e, located downtown in old Carnegie lib ra ry . A plaque at the door states, “ The photos w ere printed with a ll the technical flaws and aesthetic violations intact,” and explains that C oolidge“ was neither a literary genius nor a master of photography. He was a talented pragm atist who viewed thé West outside the confines of romantic myths.” Coolidge stares from a photo next to those words, looking unsure of how to take them. Beside him rest his works. Portraits o f Indians line one w all — sliceof-life glim pses o f everything from dances to trail rides. Another w all holds several cow girl shots, shattering a ll expectations o f Audra Barkley having lived. These women are rough and sturdy, looking capable o f holding their own on the range. Their steeds show signs o f having gone a few too many miles. The cowboy photos have the widest range ' These women are rough. A ll expectations o f Audra Barkley having lived are shattered . ' o f emotion, catching some men working, others playing and a ll too many sitting. CoOlidge really wanted to capture the W est as it existed,” foundation director Richard Lynch said. “ Not the West as glorified in posed shots . . . not through lenses that said people w ere more heroic or dangerous . . . not as some authors did to sell books. “ And he was not as popular because that’s what people wanted — great shoot-outs, massacres, herpes riding in to save the day from savage Indians. But most peace officers weren’t the ‘High Noon’ type.” Coolidge (1873-1940) took tim e to prepare for his profession before he hit the trails in 1900. He studied four years at Stanford, traveled a year abroad in Western Europe and finished his education with a year at Harvard. “ O ld M an P e a c h ,” p art o f “ Im agea fro m a C hanging W est” b y D ane C o olidge. The author was a Western version of race­ horse novelist Dick F ran cs in that he had a feel for horses, knowing how to think their way. A scene from “ Long Rope,” written in 1935, showed his sensitivity for breaking a wild stallion. “ It had been a fight to the finish and Bowman had won b u t. . . Rufus (the horse) showed no resentm ent. . . It was the fear in his heart which had put him on the warpath, and now that he found . . . man was his friend he just bucked enough to be sociable.” Coolidge rode a rough storyline to make his world believable, but balanced the script with poetic device. One keenly satiric barkeeper in “ Long Rope” probably was the w riter himself, laughing at a legal drama unfolding. “ Your honor,” the barkeeper said. “ The attorney for the plaintiff has attempted to prove that his good name has been irreparably damaged, while the learned gentlemen who represent the defendant have denied in toto everything which reflected on their client. “ That is what they are paid for and I make no complaint. But at the same tim e it is evident that, had they been engaged by the other side, white would be black and black white.” C oolidge spread the good qualities around, unlike better known contemporary Zane Grey. “ He (Coolidge) captured the flavor o f how they talked,” Lynch said. “ And his dialogue was much more realistic. The characters are not black hats/white hats, but m ore com plex.” Coolidge is receiving new acclaim due to Arizona legend B arry Goldwater. The form er senator was given the glass-plate negatives 15 years ago anonymously by a Californian. Goldwater him self is an accomplished outdoor photographer and has published a black-and-white book, “ People and Places,” and a color one, “ Barry Goldwater and the Southwest.” He founded the historical foundation in 1959 and donated to it several collections for the state’s enjoyment. But Lynch said lack of funds have kept the Coolidge treasure hidden so long. “ They (the negatives) had come to us in packing boxes w ith soiqp pieces o f cardboard between them,” hesaid.- “ Just in 1985, we w ere able to apply for a matching grant. The National Historical Publications and Records Commission equalled Lynch’s $4800 budget, enabling him to hire ASU student Evelyn Cooper to print the plates on archival paper. “ We fin ally saw what a good collection we had,” Lynch said. The series moves to the F irst Interstate Bank Plaza on Feb. 18, followed by a trip to the Sundome March 8. Lynch said the response has been enthusiatic from every show since the exhibit’s Novem ber debut in -ASU’s Gammage Center. Prints are being sold in lim ited editions of 100. Ninety have been sold so fa r at $100 a piece, with the money going to the non-profit foundation. Coolidge fans can find original copies o f his books among Hayden’s stacks. And three of them have been republished in paperback. The historical foundation is a bit m ore obscure, sitting in a back corner o f the lib ra ry ’s fourth floor . . . perhaps a handicap furthering Lynch’s claim that it is one o f the best well-kept secrets. That is, until now. “ W e want tp be used/’ he said. And Coolidge m ay lead the way once -again, . - % Page 12 S M tP re u Monday, February 8,1988 cinema Karate king refuses to retire lethal hands and feet B y BRUCE PETERSO N S ta te P ress * This Is the second sequel to the original “ M issing in Action, ’ ’and it’s tim e this series gets old. But, like both the “ Rocky” and “ Death Wish” series, Braddock seems indestractable. When are the producers going to fin ally k ill him off? Ideas begin to blend with those from sim ilar m ovies until characters are mixed He just w ill not die. Norris is back once again as “ BraddocSTTMi^sing iryAction in .” As usual, buUefs a retlyin g and people are falling, but he nevetyseems to be phased by this. C huck N o rris in “ B raddock: M issin g h i A ctio n IH .” THE ASU MEAL DEAL! A V y y for only $ 1 .9 9 •TW O PIECES OF CHICKEN (DARK OR MIXED) •REGULAR FRIES OR MASH POTATOES •A 15-OUNCE DRINK - ......... ^ NEW HOURS 11 BJik'IO p.m. 8u>11t «.m. Midnight Fr-Sa for only $ 1 .9 9 •A CHICKEN BIG SANDWICH •REGULAR FRIES OR MASH POTATOES •A 15-OUNCE DRINK with any other offer. O ne coupon per custom er per visit. Not valid «nth . y y y • uniform s KARATE & JUDO •WEAPONS •TRAINING & PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT •NINJA EQUIPMENT •BOOKS & MAGAZINES •VIDEOS HOURS: MON.-SAT. «A 831 S. RURAL RD. St CORNEROFRURAL& UNIVERSITYNtXTTOBOJO'S A * _____ J A A 1 n TheRice University Publishing Program KARATE-MART y y THE ASU SANDWICH COMBO! L— y y y y y GOOD O NLY AT 1135 E. APACHE TEM PE I l S.IW. MMnight Fr-Sa GRAND OPENING (FORMERLY FIGHTING ARTSJJNLIMITED) U P T O 1 0 % OFF O N SELECTED ITEM S! y O ne coupon per custom er per vM L Not valid with any other offer. GOOD O NLY A T up. Braddock and Rambo would get along like Butch and Sundance if they met because they have so much in common. Interchanging their names really wouldn’t matter. Y e t Norris gives his best performance ever, thrashing people in the same manner as before, with his famous kicking and necksnapping. But in part three we get a lot m ore— more action, m ore emotion — and a surprise, domestication. And he tries a new James Bond im age as he works his way back into Saigon. Instead of renting a beat-up boat and quietly slithering down the river, he has a sm all, je t powered one on hand, turning Vietnamese beads-as he outruns enemy warships and Cruises up the river to his destination. Right idea . . . wrong movie. It ’s a nifty gim m ick fo r Bond, who is supplied with toys from his crafty British Secret Service buddies, but Braddock is supposed to run a smooth one-man war. Once in Vietnam, the plot unfolds and Braddock must rescue his w ife and child and return them to safety. The sentimental, emotional side o f the ruthless Braddock appears when he meets up with his fam ily. A t first he believed his w ife was killed and was unaware he had a son. A touching reunion scene is an unexpected break from the action. The fam ily is reunited briefly before their escape attempt to the speed boat falters, and they are separated. Braddock becomes enraged, and ify o u ’ve seen “ Lethal Weapon’’ and “ Ram bo,’ ’ you’ve already seen what happens next. The lack of originality is boring. A fter a sufficient amount o f enemy torture, Braddock is ready to dodge the bullets and end his visit to Vietnam, but not without being a hero. So his son trails along A ^ T. r ^ • * y y y y y ya 1 BOt as enem y bullets fly , it is amazingly unreal. Rounds of ammunition are shot at Braddock, and without any wounds, he turns around a id picks people o ff with single shots. A final explosion throwing him 20 feet in the a ir does scrape him up, but he is nowhere near dead. And he can still aim a gun. Does this mean there’s going to be a “ Missing in Action Bart IV ? ’ ’ L et’s hope not. It’s tim e fo r Braddock to retire from thè screen. Among Vietnam movies, the Missing in Action series is not the best one. Classics such as “ Apocalypse Now ,” “ The K illin g Fields” — even “ Rambo” — are much more entertaining at the box office than Chuck N orris’s dry personality. He has proven that even his best perform ance in “ Missing in Action I I I ” falls short of being worth the price o f a ticket at the box office. “ Braddock: Missing in Action III” ★ ★ . (out o f four) Cannon Films presents a Golan-Globus Production of an Aaron Norris film, starring Chuck Norris. Written by James Bruner and Chuck Norris. Produced by Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus. Rated R TEMPE BOWL J59P $ ; ASU Special!! 9 p .m .-12 m idnight M om -Thurs. $1.50 per game y D aytim e Special 12 noon-6 p.m . M o n .-Fri. y 75€ per game y W ayne Zahn's Tem pe Bow l y 894-6778 siZS ZÏk X A. I 4 f with a whole mission full of Amerasian children, making the rescue attempt slow and suspenseful. yA1 4 f 1100 E. Apache Blvd. • 967-1656 THE 2 fo r \ Movie Rentals (w ith th is coupon) Good through 2-20-88. f T h e R ice U n iversity P u blishing Program , June20-July 15, is designed to develop talent, skills and career opportunities for persons interested in book and magazine publishing. T h e program is designed for college juniors, seniors and graduate students in English and other Humanities, Journalism;. A rt, Social Sciences, Business and other fields, professionals w h o wish to broaden their knowledge, and th e publishing novice w ho seeks intensive exposure to the business. T h e roster o f guest lecturers includes over forty to p profession' als in editing, graphics, marketing and production from throughout the country. A recruiter will be on the Arizon a State University campus, February 24. For m ore in fo rm a tio n or to schedule an appointment, contact your Career Planning and Placement Office. T h e R ic e U n iv e rs ity P u b lish in g P ro gra m is offered by the O ffice o f Continuing Studies, Rice University, ED, Box 1892, • Free Membership • No Deposit on Movies • Absolute Best VHS Selection • Open 7 Days til Midnight Hiit lSmurrufy n an £DZAA Employer. 7 09 S . F o r e s t A v e ., T e m p e Introducing Nails by Kelly D o You want m o re ? 968-5946 Movie rentals are just one part of Rental Network’s services, also available by the month, by the week, or by the day. W ith T h is A d • Color Television • Microwave Ovens • Compact Refrigerators • Vacuum Cleaners • Cordless Telephones Houston, Texas 77251-1892. Telephone (715) 520-6022 or 527-4803. Your Campus H a ir Care C enter R E N TA L N E TW O R K • Telephone Answering Machines • Typewriters • Macintosh Computers • Video Cameras $5 °° O F F W ith P a r tic ip a tin g S ty lis ts R E G U L A R P R IC E S •S h am p oo »C o n d itio n • P r e c is io n C u t »B lo w D ry 903 S . Rural Rd. 106 MEN *1 4 • W OMEN *1 6 829-1966 O PEN M O N D A Y TH R O U G H SATU R D A Y TU ES., W E D . & T H U R S . T IL L 9 P .M . State ñ *| » Page 13 ^^nda^FebfuarySjJWS^ entertainment briefs South Koreans m ilted a t Rolling Stone hum orist LOS ANG ELES (A P ) — Rolling Stone magazine w ill publish an apology demanded by the Korean community for an article saying Koreans all look alike and behave like machines, the m agazine’s executive editor said. “ Rolling Stone’s record over the last 20 years of supporting c iv il rights in this country and around the world demonstrates that it is not a racist organization,” magazine executive editor Marshall W allace said Thursday. W allace attended a City Hall news conference and delivered “ a sincere apology” fo r an article on South Korea in the Feb. I t issue that was w ritten by humorist P.J. O’Rourke. The article, intended to be humorous, said Koreans look alike, behave like machines and lack a sense of humor. “ It’s really outrageous and unacceptable for a publication o f the stajure o f Rolling Stone,” Councilman M ichael Woo said at the news conference, adding that readers “ deserve better than this piece o f racist d rivel.” W allace said the m agazine w ill accede to many of the demands made by Woo and Yoon Hee Kim , president o f the Korean Am erican Coalition, including publication o f an apology. Rolling Stone also w ill publish a contrasting view of South Korea written by a Korean and include letters o f complaint. It also w ill create an internship at the m agazine for AsianAm erican students. * * * singles chart and 81 on the pop chart in January. O’Neal co­ wrote “ C riticize” with Jellybean Johnson. The third single, “ N ever Knew Love Like This,” a duet with Cherrelle, jumped on the pop chart at 87 and is clim bing in early February. Side 2 of “ Hearsay” is ballads. On Side 1, uptempo songs are linked by conversations at a party. O’Neal says he discussed that with Jim m y Jam and Terry Lew is, the album’s producers and w riters of nine of the 10 songs. “ I feel like I ’m the people’s choice,” O’Neal says. “ People have been fooled so much by artists who say they’ll give you their heart and soul. I think they see something in me they believe in. A t the risk o f sounding egotistical, I think they want a man. I ’ve played football, baseball and basketball. I hope I keep giving people exactly what they want.” O’Neal was born in Natchez, Miss. He was captain of the football team and All-State player in high school. He attended Alcorn State University in Lorman, Miss., for two years. (A P ) — The romantic ballad-singer spot that was once held by Teddy Pendergrass has not been filled. There are many contenders. Among them is Alexander O’Neal, 33, once fired by Prince, whose most recent studio photograph has something of the tim e and aura o f Claris Gable about it. O’N eal’s second album on Tabu, an E pic Records label, “ Hearsay,” went to No. 19 on the best-selling pop chart last October and the first single from it, “ Fake,” went into the top 20. On the black contemporary album chart, the album went to No. 4. “ Fake” also hit No. 1 on the dance singles chart. “ C riticize,” the second single, went to No. 9 on the dance Turn to B riefs, page 14. High-rise Phoenix bird entrances office workers PH O E N IX (A P ) — One of nature’s fastest hunters spends its day perched near the top o f a bank building, on a narrow concrete ledge, scanning the high-rise canyons and vacant plots of land fo r prey. As workers in nearby office buildings watch, the peregrine falcon suddenly spreads it wings and pushes o ff from the ledge to effortlessly circle the building. “ It’s beautiful,,r said G il Samaniego, a Mountain Bell supervisor, whose o ffice is on the 19th floor o f the recently refurbished Citibank P laza, in midtown Phoenix. Samaniego, 41, is a native o f New M exico and an outdoorsman. He has seen w ild things a ll of his life, but some o f his co-workers have not: “ There’s a lot o f excitem ent about them, especially here in downtown Phoenix,” he said. “ Everybody is interested in them. Once someone spots them going around, everybody goes to a window to watch them. “ Sometimes you see them swoop down o ff the building and head straight north until they disappear.” Samaniego said there are about 50 employees on his floor and “ everybody is hyped up on them:” The peregrine was placed on the endangered-species list xm after a sharp decline in the population was recorded in the mid-1950s. W ildlife researchers discovered that the pesticide DDT had entered the food chain and was weakening the bird’s eggshells, preventing successful incubation and hatching. In recent years however, researchers believe that the DDT threat has abated and peregrines are making a comeback, although they rem ain endangered. Their natural habitat is on cliffs from which they can swoop down on their prim ary food — other birds — at speeds up to 200 mph. Robert Mesta, a w ildlife biologist for the U.S. Fish and W ildlife Service, believes that is why peregrines are w elladapted to city life. “ An urban environment affords them a high perch site from which they can hunt,” Mesta said. “ It also provides them abundant prey in the form o f semi-domestic pigeons. Peregrines are “ great for the city people because there usually is a problem with urban pigeons and peregrines can help control that problem ,” Mesta said. “ Peregrines’ main prey are other birds, and they capture them in flight,” occasionally offering spectacular action for office-bound workers, he said. Samaniego said he has not seen a pigeon caught in flight, but he has seen a chase or two. He thinks there are two peregrines, one larger than the other, but he has not seen them together. ~ “ W e’ve seen the big one take o ff and chase a pigeon,” he said. Mesta said urban peregrines create “ no conflict with the people in the environment.” “ It ’s good fo r an endangered species to have a safe site in which to breed and feed,” he said, “ and it’s good for the office workers, too, because they can come in some lim ited contact with a truly w ild creature.” T erry Johnson, the endangered-species coordinator fo r the state Game and Fish Department, said he plans to use sightings by building employees in an effort to learn more about the bird. “ So far, its activities seem to be very regular, though there only seems to have been a single bird,” Johnson said. « f i a » * * SLOPPY JOES W/CHIPS tau 25° ^ MARCH 5-12 C a ll t h e s e s t u d e n t r e p r e s e n t a t iv e s f o r m o r e in f o : Warren Apel................... 784-8348 Curtis Rau.......................784-9121 Mark Gershaw................ 829-8258 Mike a , ........ .................. 784-8560 Pete Biototto...................... 897-0209 Jeff Kirke......................... 784-0517 Lance W itt.......................... 829-8751 Rod Medrano.................. 978-2032 Debi Spieler.................... 784-8727 Steve Dark....................... 7840525 FOR MORE INFO CALL a t R u ra l & A p a c h e DRAFTS 9 6 8 - 3 2 3 3 or 9 5 7 - 4 4 0 0 and The fo r " S S “ GROUP TR A V E L S P E C IA LIS TS INCO RPO RATED T u rn y o u r two-cents worth into $1 ,0 0 0 Students» make a statement and nominate your favorite professor fo r the 1987-88 a «»final College o f Fine Arts Distinguished Teacher Award. W inning professor receives an award and a one thousand dollar prize. Forms are available at your department or school office today. ^W AREHO USE D eli & P u b T ry our breakfast SUPER SPECIAL (3 scrambled eggs, homemade potatoes and toast) Q Q 4 **,,■* , . - mad. I was distraught by file w ay it went down; it was a very tritum atic experience fo r m e. ” “ I started recording with Prin ce in fos studio at his hdtise. Love confession fro m an an tfaem an iac -T j As you know, anthemaniacs like myself just go crazy around flowers. So what does m y Valentine send m e on Valentine’s Day? The F T D * Love Note Bouquet! W ell, let m e tell you, when I saw those beautiful flowers in that fine porcelain bowl it drove m e wild. Besides, this glorious bouquet also cam e with a note pad and pencil w ith which I’ve written m y Valentine every day. And sm art Valentines know it doesn’t cost much to send us anthem aniacs into this flower frenzy. Just ask your florist to have FT D send erne for you. •A n tfa M c d tia d o u k o fF T C *. « 9 8 8 FTC*. A102 Intro, to The Short Story When Carla told me that my date was a little short, I thought she was talking dollars and cents, not feet and inches. So there I was at the door, in my spiked heels, staring at the top of my date’s head. All I could think was, how do I get myself out of this? I could imagine now my legs would ache if I had to walk around with, my knees bent all evening ; So to stall for tim e, while-figuring out how to fake malaria, I made us some Double Dutch Chocolate. When I brought it into the living room, I discovered that Gary was a chocolate lover too.- Ahh, a man after my own heart. Okay, I de­ cided I’d give him a chance. So we sat down and saw each other faceto-face for the first time. He had a nice smile. After some small talk—I mean conversation—I discovered that we both love Updike, hate the winter weather, ana both have minia­ ture schnauzers. So, we made a date to introduce Shadow and Schatzi next week. S ite Press G R A N D Thb Valentine's Dau try our . "T ake Includes: • Black ca via r p ie (w ith co ckta il rye bread) 1 Tossedgreen salad w ith vinaigrette dressing M ain Course •C hicken Breast W ellington, w ith m ushroom sauce • Salm on flo re n tin e , w ith tarragon sauce • Veal Blanquette Page 15 Monday, February 8,1988 8 LARG E Show iis y o u r ASÜ I.D . and e n jo y these specials! O u t ROMANIK DINNERfor TWO $40 alm ondine •G inger carrots • french baguette w ith sweet bu tte r • House Wine Orders m ust be placed by Thursday feb ru ary 11th. Pick-up on Saturday feb ru ary 13th between 2pm and 5pm. marche' a n d a c o m p lim e n ta ry he art-sha pe d ch o co la te ru m cake (Entrees to be baked w ith sim ple and easy directions.) WOLFF SYSTEM u n ip F a fecacl lannipg com plete • french c u tgreen beans O P E N IN G •Unlimited Tanning......... $ 3 7 .5 0 • S i n g l e S e s s io n s . .. . . ................. $ 4 .0 0 (3 0 m in . m a x .) 4121N. M a rsh a ll Way. S cottsda le (across from The Im peccable Pig) 994-4568 H ou rs: 930 W. Broadway, No. 5 (Between Beck & Hardy) M on .-Fri. 966-3894 Saturday Sunday HOW 1MADE $ 18400 FOR COLLEGE ■ «-S i When my friends and I graduated from high school, we all took part-time jobs to payjfor college. They ended up in car washes and hamburger joints, putting in long hours for little pay. Not me. My job takes just one weekend a month and two weeks a year. Yet, Fm earning $18,000 for college. Because I joined my local Army National Guard. They’re the-people who help our state during emergencies like hurri­ canes and floods. They’re also an important part of our country’s military defense. So, since Fm helping them do such an important job, they’re helping me make it through school. As soon as I finished Advanced Training, the Guard gave me a cash bonus or $2,000. Fm also getting another $5,000 for tuition and books, thanks to the New GI Bill. Not to mention my monthly Army Guard paychecks. They’ll add up to more than $11,000 over the six years Fm in the Guard. And if I take out a college loan, the Guard will help me pay it back-up to $1,500 a year, plus interest. It all adds up to $18,000—or more —for college for just a little of my time. And that’s a heck of a better deal than any car wash will give you. THE GUARD CAN HELP PUT YOU THROUGH COLLEGE, TOO. SEE YOUR LOCAL RECRUITER FOR DETAILS, CALL TOLL-FREE 800-638-7600,*O R MAIL THIS COUPON, ¿v • In H a w a ii: 7 3 7 -5 2 5 5 ; P u erto R ico: 7 2 1 -4 5 5 0 ; G uam : 4 7 7 -9 9 5 7 ; V irg in Islands ( S t C ro ix ): 7 7 3 -6 4 3 8 ; N ew Jersey: 8 0 0 -4 5 2 -5 7 9 4 . In A lask a, consult yo u r local phone directory; C 198 5 U n ite d S tates G o vernm ent as represented b y th e S ecretary o f D efen se. A ll rig h ts reserved . ^ MAIL TO: Army National Guard, P.O. Box 6000, Clifton, NJ07015 .□ M O F NAM E ADDRESS C IT Y /S T A T E /Ö P . US C IT IZ E N . □ YES □ NO AREA CODE PHONE B IR T H D A TE SO CIAL S E C U R ITY NU M BER E333JE OCCUPATION S T U D E N T □ H IG H SCHOOL □ COLLEGE PRIOR M IL IT A R Y SERVIC E □ YES □ NO BRANCH RANK A F M /M O S _ _ _ SLMGUONÉVQURflQCMlfltCUMWNU m W u i t w ii i t Ô ^ W W A i W VMMQCM. 9SCUMTVNuuacn ,w i i — t o w n i a m w i o i w u i «uTMomrv k m c w A1CAPC01028NP Army National Guard W p er m o. Am ericans A t T heir Best. 8 a.m . to 10 p .m . 8 a.m . to 6 p .m . N o o n to 6 p .m . comics State Press Monday, F « b « ja r y ^ 9 8 ^ ^ by B erke Breathed BLOOM CO UNTY .verh o w e a s il y < m o w n u rn e c o n fu c tb - HERE ME 6HIHER10 FUNNY, th e s e HUMAN h e lp s h a p e th e FUTURE OF PEMOCRACY AND THE FUSE WORLD*. p r io r it ie s OF OURS \ TH* FAR SB» By G A R Y LA R SO N A U6HT f c a n p is t r a c t o u r focus. a 1 fl- I ; a.' l .a . pentho use je a n s w here b k l ih e c an pipr te ? -me wfomcmy m er m HE'S IN AN UH..ANYBOPY KNOW IT S BEEN A FUN WEEKENP, ANO 1 5AY ITS ABOUT wrm cens KIRKPATRICK 5C A n m -m e, a e cm s te X 9 r2 p la y in g ' c atch •Mpeesmmir CANAPAIE / RMCMKi &om 66 A mite ¿è a mimi \IIfttoVs a v e rti Heyl You wanna kick me? G o aheadl Cm on, tough guyt C at got your tongue? Maybe he took your whole brahA ... C’monl Kick met'’ caucus Doonesbury BY G ARRY TRUDEAU THE GENERAL'S GOTMOPE S IM S THAN THIS BEACH o n a G oon am , a n d you CALL HIM A LIEUTENANT! B00PSIB, I CAN'T BEUEVE YOU G AUEPHIM ÌU E U T B N A N T ^ H AIG ! NO , TM SONRy, BU TT PONT THINK RANK IS A TR1BMEASURE OFTHEM AN! P0Y0UTHIHK.RANK EVERMATTERS)ROAM OF US WHOWORKEP ON CORPORAL- \s~^^>< SH R N E R $ _ 4 ASPIRIN. PORPADPYS HEART. HU ... WHERE'S MY HAIRSW FF?... m ITS CALLED RETINA. JEFF. ITS A CREAM, WHATS TOGET R ID OF i THAT, WRINKLES. ^ 1 PAPPY? \ / \C A M fW H ? JOANIB? P IP YOUPROP OFFM V MINOXIDIL PRESCRIPTION AT THE DRUG S T O R E *- M ANIES AND WHAT'S THAT? J SL YOURS HUNGUP! HE'S TURNING 4 0 , M OM. UB. WHAT PO ABOUT IP O ? EVERyTHtNG. Out there, ominously moving toward its destiny, was a truck with Reuben's nam e on n. 2-8 by Jeff MacNelly H H O W H tV U K E 6A£Y R?R RZEftpENTf l HART REAUH'?... H&U THINK \ m e^ p e a l t w it h t w h CHARACTER \ 9 & )£ rT T ¡¡f, h es a am crez, AU.R16MT., .. AVBQVATGlk'?-. - 4 CAMPAIGN i£ IN e& iM s> T i lô ü T T H A r r a e ttr ? m w (Z B NOTATAU-... ■ VÜE'RE rtOUTlNGr 9fJU<0EHittp STEAPYAT3# * n o o p w io n ! W E U .,H E '6 A U ^ Y $ W A P A 0E.TTÊJ?orsakhzatwn, HERE IN IOWA. 2 m ''R e m e m b e r w h a t you learned yesterd ay. Y o u 'v e g o t to s it up Here behind th e w h e e l/' sports Stele Pie»» Monday, February 8,1988 Page 17 Big win SportS h o rts ASU beats UofA in swim meet; men’s team loses The fourth-ranked ASU women’s swimming team beat 16th-ranked Arizona Saturday at Mona Plummer Aquatic Center, 161-118. ASU (6-2) were led by double winners Michelle Thompson in the 50 and 100-yard free s ty le , and Robyn, Benincasa in the one and three-meter diving competitions. ASU ledi 52-51, after the first six competitions, but extended its lead to 79-58 after the 50 and 100 freestyle events. The Sun Devils placed first through fourth in the 50 and grabbed first, third and fifth in the 100. * Jenny Hau was also a double winner for ASU, capturing the 100 and 200-yard breaststroke. The third-ranked men’s swimming team sew its record fall to 1-5 as the Sun Devils lost to sixth-ranked UCLA. Paul Howe led the way for the Sun Devils, winning the 200 and 500-yard freestyle competition. Other ASU winners included Yan Cardineau in the 1,000 freestyle, Scott Benesch in the 50 freestyle; and Ross Anderson in the 100 freestyle. Golf team finishes 6th Devils win series with 7-1 victory B y DEAN G YO RG Y S ta te P ress Ninth-ranked ASU passed its first test of the season, splitting die last two gam es and winning a three-game series with 15thranked L o yo la M arym ount o ver the weekend at Packard Stadium. The difference in the gam es was like night and day. S atu rd ay’ s 7-1 w in looked s te lla r compared to the whipping the D evils (9-1) received on Friday: an 18-6 loss. David Cassidy (2-0) went the distance on Saturday, giving up one earned run on eight hits, striking out three and walking two in front of the season’s largest crowd o f 2,149. Lion second baseman Bob De Jardin opened the gam e by getting hit with a Cassidy pitch. He worked his w ay around the bases and was dejjyered to the plate by a Travis Tarchione single. But that would be the extent o f the Loyola offensive production. Cassidy was in good command o f his pitches, and a ll eight Lion hits w ere singles. “ H e’s real consistent,” ASU catcher Tim Spehr said, “ and he’s got real good control. He can throw any pitch a t any tim e fo r a strike. It’s nice to have confidence in calling any pitch that he can throw. “ I was a little concerned, because the past two days they hit a ll the soft stuff, the curveballs and changeups. But today, Dave just put them where they needed to be. ” ASU coach Jim Brock had almost decided not to pitch Cassidy. He said Loyola is a disciplined ballclub, and Cassidy’s off-speed pitches are m ore effective against free- Billy Mayfair finished in a third-place tie to lead the ASU men’s golf team to a sixth-place finish in the Miami Invitational Sunday. The Sun Devils finished 26 strokes behind champion Arizona, who finished with a four-round total of 879. Mayfair ended with a total of a oneunder par 217, five strokes behind champion Larry Silveira of UofA. Other scores for ASU Include Jim Strickland at 227, Scott Frisch at 230, Dave Cunningham with a 235 and Tom Stankowski at 236. Bartholomew qualifies ASU’s Jacinta Bartholomew qualified for the NCAA Indoor Championships with a second place finish in the long jump competition at the Dallas TimesHerald invitational on Saturday in Dallas. B a rth olom ew , A S U ’ s lone representative, placed second in the long Jump with a jump of 20 feet, onehalf inch. 1972 A ’s, Reds tie The 1972 world champion A’s and the 1972 Reds, who had a memorable seven-game World Series that year, battled to ft 4-4,10-inning tie in the third annual “ dream Game” for charity at Phoenix Municipal Stadium. ASU Sports Calendar BASEBALL — The ninth-rahked Sun Devils play host to Cal-Baptist at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday at Pack­ ard Stadium. MEN’S TENNIS — The ASU men’s tennis team plays hpst to U.S. Interna­ tional at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Whiteman Tennis Center. David Cassidy «Nil C tarke/S tate Press A n A SU basem nner dives back to firs t o n a p ic k o ff a tte m p t b y L oyola M arym ount o n S atu rd ay. T h e D e v ils w on th e g am e, 7 -1 , and w on th e s e rie s , 2 -1 . swinging teams. “ I changed m y pitching pattern early in the gam e,” Cassidy said. “ They like a lot of off-speed stuff, so w e threw fasthalls. I got them frustrated early, and then went back to pitching the w ay I usually do.” “ If you give Cassidy a lead and three innings of frustration, he’s about as tough as anybody,” Brock said. The D evils tied the score at 1-1 in the third inning as P a t Listach walked and eventually scored on a Mike Burrola sacrifice fly. Cassidy was given a com fortable cushion by his teammates in the fourth. ASU sent nine men to the plate and scored four runs. Back to back singles by Steve W illis and Tim Spehr, followed by an R B I double by R ick y C an d elari sparked the ra lly . Candelari and Listach later cam e across to make the score 5-1 after four innings. The Sun D evils added (Hie in the fifth, and one m ore in the sixth to make it a final 7-1. ASU had 11 hits on the day. “ W ith some ballchibs,” Brock said, “ execution breaks down on the third day of the series. You get a little tired. But (the D evils) executed w ell. They put it together today.” Brock equated Saturday’s finale with the traditional “ Sunday” gam e o f conference p la y , and th e path to post-season tournaments. “ The older players know this,” Brock said, .“ but I told the younger players that this is what the Six-Pac is a ll about. The team that plays w ell on Sunday w ill continue to play when everyone else is through.” Saturday’ s optim ism and jo cu larity quickly erased the gloom o f Friday’s loss. ASU starter Kurt Dempster (2-1) allowed one run on two hits in the top of the first. It was an sign of things to come. Dem pster walked two in the second before being pulled. “ He was given instructions he did not follow and that’s why he was rem oved from the gam e,” Brock said. Brian Dodd was the second ASU pitcher of the day. He lasted 1% in n in g s , allowing three runs. Gordy Farm er tote the ball in the third, and prom ptly served up a grand slam to De Jardin. You get the idea. Six ASU pitchers, 18 runs, and 3:36 later, the contest m ercifully ended. It was the gam e that tim e forgot. “ W e did a lot o f things very poorly,” Brock said. “ We to te a ll the mistakes w e hadn’t been making, and a ll the getting out of tough innings w e had been doing, and coughed it a ll up at the same time. “ In a gam e like that, there is some kind of benefit in the fact that you get a chance to see some other people pitch. It’s m ore o f a benefit if they happened to pitch w ell, which they didn’t.” ASU finally got on the scoreboard with two in the sixth, one in the seventh, and three in the ninth. Kevin Higgins and Dan Rumsey had three hits apiece for the Devils. Playoff hopes dimmed after loss to Stanford B y CHRIS DORSEY State Prate It started out as a joyfu l day when the ASU basketball team walked into Maples Pavilion to play Stanford, but after 40 minutes of basketball the Sun D evils left em barrassed and in sole possession of fifth place in the Pac-10. The Cardinal (15-7, 7-4) had pulled o ff a big upset over No. 1 Arizona Thursday night and the momentum carried over as they issued ASU a 96-63 shelacking to keep a strong lock on second place. Sun D evil coach Steve Patterson was left searching fo r answers as he played e v e ry o n e , tr y in g to g e t th e r ig h t combination to stop the Stanford offense. P rior to the gam e, ASU (13-8,6-5) was in a tie with the Cardinal and U CLA for second place in the Pac-10 standings. But Todd Litchi and company dealt a serious blow to any hopes o f postseason play fo r the Sun Devils. ASU started the second part of the conferen ce schedule in fin e fashion, defeating California, 88-80, in Harmon Arena on Thursday. This was a task that has been difficult fo r the Sun D evils in the last two years. E arlier in the season at the A ctivity Center, ASU pounded the Cardinal, 104-80, and seven Sun D evils w ere in double figures. But in Palo A lto it was a different story. Stanford held the D evil starting lineup to only 34 points in the game. ASU point guard Tarence W heeler finished with a team-high 13 points and E ric Holloway, who matched a career-high 26 points against the Golden Bears, scored 1J,points. They w ere the only players clad in maroon and gold to score double figures. The Sun D evils pulled out to a quick 64) lead and looked as if they might beat the Cardinal. ASU held a 10-9 advantage before Terry Taylor hit a three-point basket to give Stanford the lead. Litchi, who scored only 14 points for Stanford, was responsible to the outburst. In that tim e, the junior guard sparked his team and created the momentum to get the Cardinal rolling. The gam e’s leading scorer, Howard W right with 20 points, totaled m ore than ASU’s starting frontline combined: Mark Becker (three points), Joey Johnson (tw o points) and Holloway (11 points). Stanford was given many second chances in which it converted into baskets. The Cardinal outrebounded ASU, 53-35 — a figure that dictated the game. But the big question Patterson had to be asking him self: what is Wrong with Arthur Thomas? H ie senior guard shot a horrid 1-12 from the field and finished with only four points. This performance cam e just after he hit fo r 25 points against Cal on Thursday night. Thomas had been bothered by an injured fin ger on his non-shooting hand, but after the gam e with the Golden Bears, he proved he can score. Even though the Sun D evils w ere being blown out, ASU’s bench refused to quit. Trent Edwards, Torrin W illiam s and Em ory Lew is each scored eight points in lim ited playing tim e. Patterson watched his team shoot a m iserable 33 percent from the field w hile the opposition hit 51 percent from the floor. The Sun D evils return home this weekend to play the Oregon schools and w ifi attempt to avenge earlier losses to both schools. Page 18 State Press Monday, February 8,1988 Ice Devils win 2 games from Cal State-FuKerton By D AVE HO DG ES State Press Sundl KJenstad/State Press Fast action M*» A n A SU ru g by p la y e r trie s to ru n fro m th e re s t o f th a p ack d u rin g S atu rd ay’s c o n feren ce g a m * w ith C am elb ack a t S ah uaro F ie ld . T h e D evils w on th e g am e, 4 4 -0 . The ASU Ice D evil hockey club P en ged two earlier losses to C al State-Fullerton by defeating the Titans, 11-7, on Saturday, and 11-5, on Sunday at Tow er Ice Palace. The victories were hard-earned, as the Titans ware in second place in the P a cific In tercollegiate Hockey Conference going into Saturday’s game. “ These gam es w ere really a big boost,” coach Buz Essel said. “ It was a real character builder.” / Sunday’s gam e was not as close as Saturday’s, as the Devils jumped out to a 4-0 lead after the first period and led, 7-2, at the end o f two. D ave Peterson scored two goals and tallied fiv e assists, while Dan Geir posted two goals and three assists. D ave Dibellus scored a hat trick and Peterson added two goals as the Ice D evils (7-12-2) picked up their first victory in six games on Saturday. , . The first period was a classic exam ple of the teams “ feeling out” each other, as the defenses dominated fo r both teams. Fullerton had the only momentary lapse o f defense as the Devils netted two goals in less than 30 seconds. Center Kevin Adam put the D evils on top, 1-0, with 6:42 remaining in the first period. Only 18 seconds later, Dibellus scored his first goal to end the scoring for the period, with the Devils leading, 2-0. The second period could be characterized as an entirely different gam e. Whereas the first period was a defensive struggle, the second was a w ild offensive shootout, much to the delim it of .the estim ated crowd o f 500 people — the season’s largest. The scoring occurred early and often as Fullerton’s Todd Nelson scored just 35 seconds into the second period, cutting Turn to HO CKEY, p a g * 24. * •F IL M D EV ELO PIN G , C U STO M ENLARG ING •D A R K R O O M SU P PLIES •R E N TA L S , R EPA IR S •C A M E R A S , LEN SE S, G A D G ET BAGS •F IL M , FR A M ES, P H O TO ALBUM S •B IN O C U L A R S , TELE SC O P ES •V ID E O TR A N SFER •P U T Y O U R M O V IE S A N D S U D E S O N V ID E O TAPE1 CAM ERA Rural & A pache 9 6 8 -0 2 4 3 «►* LENSES • VIDEO • TELESCOPES "» BINOCULARS ASU TEMPE 204 E. University (Behind The Chuckbox) 8 9 4 -8 3 3 7 7 valley locations G roup , #5o-6:oo p.m. n t Group -i:30 p.m. * ■ fflJ H ff 1011 DON'T GET INTO THE GMU> SCHOOL OF HOUR CHOKE? Sure, there are other schools. But w hy settle? Kaplan prep courses help Students raise their scores and their chanoesof being adm itted inio th eir first-choice schools. Fact is, no one has helped students score higher! W alk-in AIDS Info Sessions ' Mondays. ■1 3 ^ 5 0 p.m.Fitness Assessments By Eating Disorders Group Tuesdays, r:OQ-8:oo p.m. Gentle Streêth Class lays, JU5«6:i5 p.m. For information and registration call Free to full-time ASU students 965-4721 BAR REVIEW, & OTHERS The Health Dimensions Program ASU Student Health Center — 965-4721 Page 19 Monday, February 8,1988 Young tennis team rolls; beats NAU, Washington B y DAVE HO DG ES S ta te P ress A young ASU women’s tennis team continues to roll along as the Sun D evils defeated Washington, 8-1, on Friday, and Northern Arizona, 9-0, on Sunday at Whiteman tennis Center. The Sun D evils (3-0) swept the singles matches on Friday, with nobody losing a set the entire way. Especially im pressive, according to assistant coach Becky Callan, w ere freshmen Karen Bergan and K risti Jankosky and sophomore Jill Hamilton. Jankosky opened the dual m atch by d efea tin g Washington’s Monique Matheson, 6-1,6-1. “ K risti Johkosky has been playing really well, Callan said. “ It’s hard fo r a freshman to play No. 1.” “ I ’ve been playing pretty good lately,” Jonkosky said. “ Just hitting with the girls has helped. “ I ’m getting better and better and better.” Also in singles action, Jennifer Rojohn defeated Whitney Clarice, 96,6-4; Barbara Thompson defeated Beth Baronsky, 6-3,6-1; Paola Conte beat Cindy O lejar, 6-3, 6-3; Bergan was victorious over Leslie Ferkins, 6-1, 6-2; and Hamilton whipped Susan Cahoon, 6-2,6-0. “ Karen Bergan is starting to play good again,” Callan said. “ Sim had shoulder surgery last year and began serving at Christmas.” In doubles action, the team of Bergan and Hamilton defeated Ferkins and O lejar, 7-5, 6-1; Jankosky and Conte beat Matheson and Clarke, 6-4,7-5; and in thejonly loss o f the match, Rojohn and Thompson fe ll to Baronsky and Mindy Mounger, 5-7,6-1,4-6. “ The team looks good,” Jankosky said. “ W e’re young, mostly freshmen, but Sheila (head coach M clnerney) has helped us a lot. She’s a really great coach.” “ It’s good to get some playing tone,” Callan said. “ This team hasn’t played much this year.” The team w ill next compete at the Arizona Invitational Feb. 12-14 at Tucson. HONEYWELL BULL INC. W ill b e r e c r u itin g a t: A R IZ O N A STA TE U N IV ER SITY A n A SU ten n is p la y e r retu rn s a v o lle y a g in s t W ashin gton on F rid ay. T h e S un D evils d efe a te d th e H u skies, 8-1 Our commitment to remain a worldwide leader in large-scale computer system s has never been stronger. The structure o f Honeywell Bull Inc., dedicated only to computers, offers positive proof o f this growing strength and dedication to leadingedge computer technologies. W e will be interviewing candidates graduating with a Bachelors or Masters Degree in the follbwing disciplines: COMPUTER SCIENCE MATH ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Auditions in Phoenix March 25 Stepfonie Kramer Danny DeVito Am erican Academy o f Dram atic A rts Founded in 1884, the A cad em y has trained m ore professional actors th an an y other school or co lleg e in Am erica. A cad em y alum ni have w on nom inations for 82 Oscars, 62 Tonys an d 104 Emmys. For Admission to Study a t the Academ y in California or New York O v e r ¡0 0 years o f tra in in g actors A u d itio n s b y A p p o in tm e n t O N L Y - C a ll N ow For In fo rm a tio n (W ith softw a re sxp s rionc s a n d interest) F e b r u a r y 12, 1988 Honeywell Bull Inc. is involved with product planning, design, development and manufacture o f large scale computer system s. Our Software Engineering develops softw are programs, including operating system s, file system s, data base system s, com pilers, assemblers, communications system s and test and diagnostic system s. Toll-Free (8 0 0 ) 356-8890 M onday thru Friday — 11:00 a.m . to 6:00 p.m. J u lia D u ffy R o b ert R edford m ) «M R THAN If you will be graduating this spring or summer with a degree In the above disciplines, we would like to talk to you. See your placement o ffic e to. schedule an interview or submit your resume to: Charley Hull, Professional Staffing, Honeywell Bull Inc., P.O. Box 8000, M.S. Y-1001, Phoenix, AZ 85066. O N & Opportunities are also available at our Los Angeles, California facility. Honeywell Bull A N D T H A T ’S W H A T Y O U G E T EVERY M O N D A Y & W EDNESDAY 2 f o r 1 — D o u b le P r in ts o r F r e e F ilm Equal O pportunity Em ployer Receive two prints fo r the price of one as the tim e of developm ent, or get a free roll of film you pick. 829-0424 1 c m,[ini Center M ill & U.niv. Page go u Monday, February 8,1988 Unbeaten Tate knocks out Sibson in 10 rounds to retain ti Boxing Council title in 1986. Sibson’s tentative approach disappointed his legion of volatile follow ers, some o f whom w ere involved in violent sem es before the fight. Some fans tried to gatecrash without tickets and exploded gas canisters as they fought with security officials. F or a month, the fight had been dwarfed by a battle between the IB F and the British Boxing Board o f Control over its length. Until an announcement Saturday by President Robert Lee that the fight would be reduced to 12 rounds, the IB F stuck to its rules governing w orld title fights ahd said the bout would be 15 rounds. It maintained 16 rounds was a true test o f a STAFFORD, England (A P ) — Unbeaten Frank Tate o f the United States knocked out Britain’s Tony Sibson with a smashing right hand to the head in the 10th round Sunday and retained his International Boxing Federation m iddleweight title.Tate, 23, a form er Olym pic junior m iddleweight champion, im proved his record to 22-0-0 in the scheduled 12-round bout. The stylish Tate, from Houston, rarely was in trouble against Sibson, 29, who was attem pting for the third tixhe to win a w orld title. Sibson, whose record fe ll to 55-7-1, had lost to form er m iddleweight champion M arvelous M arvin H agler in 1983 and to countryman Dennis Andries in a bid to win the W orld w orld champion. British officials followed the line o f the other two world governing bodies, the WBC and the W orld Boxing Association, in restricting bouts to no more than 12 rounds on the grounds o f safety. It refused to sanction the match over the longer distance, and although the fight went ahead With IB F officials, the BBBC threatened to withdraw the licenses o f Sibson, prom pter Frank W arren and any other Britons on the underCàrd connected with the show. A fter L ee’s announcement, which he stressed was fo r this fight only, the British Board withdrew its threat and agreed to supply officials for the undercard. W IM G S - S u n d a y & M o n d a y s 1 /2 O r d e r F r e e * € t 15 - $ 2 . 9 5 3CC 4 5 - $ 7 . 3 5 20: 30 - $ 5 . 2 5 40C 6 0 - $ 9 . 4 5 Woodshed I s fs> < PHOENIX Woodshed I I M i l l & B a s e lin e Dobson & University 8 3 1 -W O O D 844-SHED S K Y D IV E ! "Th e M ost Fun You Can H a v e " Make a first jumpthisweekend. (W IT H C L O T H E S O N ) ASUClubMeeting• Tonight, Feb. 8 7p.m. • MUCoconinoRoom217 MOREINOCALL968-0160 State Press Classifieds The TOP BANANA 9656731 COMPUTERS FOR RENT PC - XT I AT and Portables A t T h e A rc h e s Call 921-0980 • W h ip la s h • N e c k P a in •H e a d a ç h e s • B a c k P a in • S h o u ld e r P a in • A c c id e n ta l In ju rie s C h a n g in g «14 M il A n n . O M Tow n T«m p» «44.020» AlfnaSchoOl and Warner We accep t a ll com petitor's coupons. TEMPE Southern & MHJ Couponm uott» presented with item». o«er expire. >3i-ae. N a tional S cre e n p rin t 1 Imprinted Sportswear I 1 E & i& T RBf . K Î T H Y WSF E E P 2t21 S. P R IE S T 1 » 1 .9 ' TEM PE 9 6 6 -7 2 3 7 - 1 W e w ill a c c e p t y o u r in su ra n c e , p r o v id e a s tu d e n t d isco u n t, with little 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 . 9 6 6 -1 6 3 5 Dr. D onald N elson 3910 S. Rural Rd. #E S t if f N e c k S U N 12-5 H ands n l l . man. - - CHANDLER I MESA TEMPE B U Y • S E LL• TRADE SA T 10-6 SCOTTSDALE Scottsdale fid. & Shea Dobson & Baseline Thomas Rd. A Hayden Southern A Country Club D IO Y O U W * « YOURASHINSURANCECOVERS CHIROPRACTIC^CARE!!! Your books at C hanging Hands. For qu ality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) w e pay 30% o f our re-sale price in cash o r 50% in trad ein cred it w hich m ay be used to pur­ chase anything in th e store. (S orry, no trad e-in s on Sat. o r Sun.) Brow se through o u r th ree floo rs of: •N e w & U sed Books f j f i j »A rt Prints & Posters •C alen d ars & Cards •H an $»o u n d Journals M -F 10-9 13th St. & Northern 20th St. & Camelback W h ip la s h ! & B a c k ! I S t o tt P T M » Page 21 Monday, February 8,1988 Women lose to Stanford, California By CHRIS 0O R S E Y S ta te Praas The ASU women’s basketball team team has seen better days as the Sun D evils dropped two Pac-10 games. For first-year coach Maura McHugh, it has to be a disappointment. In both contests ASU had a,chance to take the lead and win but failed to convert the opportunites. The Sun D evils (7-11,2-7) w ere beaten Friday night, 84-79, by tenth-ranked Stanford and also suffered a 74-67 setback to California on Saturday. Stanford cam e out on fire against the Devils, outscoring ASU, 10-0, before Lisa Jones put ASU on the scoreboard with 16:08 remaining to play in the opening half. The Cardinal continued their assault, building a 19-point lead and holding on to the double digit advantage until halftime. A t intermission, Stanford led, 47-35, and the Sun Devils were left to try and come back. And they did. ASU began a massive comeback against the country’s tenth, best team. McHugh’s squad cut the deficit to four points, 75-71, with 2:13 remaining in the gam e following Cindy Vyskocil’s 12-foot jump shot. But this would be as close as the Sun D evils would come , as Stanford held on fo r the five-point victory. ASU was paced by Rosalind Moore, who scored 15 points and dished out fiv e assists. but Die Sun D evils had four other players in double figures; Stephanie Osburn finished with 13 points, Karen O’Connor sew ed 12 points, while Shamond M osley and Fran Ciak each contributed 10 points in the losing effort. Mosley was a force fo r ASU on the boards, the senior hauled in 18 rebounds o f which 11 w ere offensive. The Sun D evils Were hoping to redeem themselves against Caifornia, but it was not to be. The gam e was nip-and-tuck fo r the opening minutes as the lead changed hands nine tim es before the Golden Bears took the lead fo r good in the opening half. California held a 35-30 adavantage at halftim e. Foul trouble plagued the Sim D evils. Jones, Moore, Osburn and Carolyn D eHoff w ere crippled with four fouls. Jones and D eHoff fouled out. ASU remained within striking distance throughout the second half. The Sun D evils cut the lead to one point tw ice but failed to tie file contest. The Golden Bears w ere outscored, 8-1, in a three-minute span, as ASU cut the nine-point deficit to 59-58. But again missed opportunities deflated the Sun D evils hopes as it marked the second loss in row for them at the University A ctivity Center. Mosley pulled in 16 rebounds while scoring a game-high 22 points. DeHoff hit for 10 points and pulled down eight rebounds. The Sun D evils outrebounded California, 46-40, but shot a m iserable 36 percent from the floor, w hile their opponents shot 44 percent from the field. M argl« B abcock/S M aP raas ASU w ill head to Oregon this weekend to play the Ducks and Beavers in Pac-10 action and w ill not return home until Feb. 19 when they play host to UCLA. S tep h an ie O sburn w atch es h er layup ta il th ro u g h th e n et d u rin g A S U ’s 7 4-67 loss to C a lifo rn ia S aturday a t th e A c tiv ity C e n te r. O sburn fin ish ed th e gam e w ith n in e p o in ts. MVP Jordan leads East to 138-133 win in All-Star Game CHICAGO (A P ) — M ichael Jordan followed up his NBA slam-dunk title with a Most Valuable P layer performance in the All-Star Game Sunday, scoring 40 points as the East defeated the W est 138-133. Dom inique W ilkins, Jordan’s slam-dunk riv a l in Saturday’s competition that went down to Jordan’s final dunk, was barely overshadowed again as he scored 29 for the East, which now leads the series 25-13. The East built a 15-point lead in the fourth quarter although Jordan sat out fo r eight minutes with foul trouble. The West got no closer than the final m argin after that as Jordan returned to score 16 points in the final 5:50. Jordan, the unanimous M VP after hitting 17 of 23 field goal shots, was only two points shy of the All-Star record o f 42 by W ilt Chamberlain in 1962. He m ore than doubled his total of 18 in two previous All-Star appearances. K a rl Malone led the W est with 22 points, Akeem Olajuwon had 21 and Lafayette Lever scored 17. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 10 points and became the alltim e leading All-Star scorer with 247 points in 17 appearances. M agic Johnson had 17 points and 19 assists fo r the West. The West, which trailed by as many as 10 points in the first half, got two three-point plays from Johnson to close the deficit to 78-75 with 6:43 le ft in thé third quarter. Jordan went out with his fourth foul at that point, but the East went on an 18-8 run to regain control. W ilkins had three baskets and Danny Ainge two 3-pointers during that spurt. Ainge had his third 3-pointer and Doc R ivers hit a free throw, giving the East a 109-94 lead with 9:16 remaining, and Jordan’s return moments later helped assure the East o f the victory. Jordan scored 18 points in the first half as the East opened a 60-54 halftim e lead. The East spent the first quarter playing catch-up, tying the score four times but never taking the lead. Malone, making his first All-Star appearance, scored eight points in the first 8:05, liftin g the West to its largest lead, 24-16. A 9-2 spurt by the East made it 26-25 before Clyde D rexler scored six points in less than two minutes as the West gained a 34-27 advantage with 11:37 left in the half. Î ? 1st A n n u a l A S U W O R LD C A R N IV A L F U M IM I ( IH P l| East Lawn, Student Services Building M USIC AN D DANCE RIPRESE CULTURES AR O UND THE W yÿ£& ..... .............................£ » T u o e n r M i L i s e CULTURAL M V m S fT Y C O M M U T O A t N oon a Brasilian Batucada Line o f Music and Dance Generates Energy and Excitement Beginning at the Cady Mall Fountain G raduate Student Association ATTENTION COLLEGES, DEPARTMENTS A N D STUDY CENTERS G raduate students are encouraged to subm it proposals for am ounts betw een $ 2 0 0 and $ 2 ,0 0 0 for research study. Spring semester applications are available through M arch 4, 19 88 in the G raduate Student Association office, ASASU, M em orial U nion For additional inform ation, call 9 6 5 -1 2 6 3 . >W77, C a m p B e v e r l y H i l l s VALENTINE SPECIAL 10%-40% off all items Modem clothes for the entire family. Camelview Plaza/70thSt. & CamelbackRd./Scottsdale/990-0770 Second level (across fromBullocks). Open every day, Thurs. & Fri. until 9 pm. Don’t Study Harder — Study Smarter! !! 76% P A S S R A T E We cordially invite you to attend our first Theory and Practice, Law or Auditing lecture Complimentary M aterials Provided oonvisei^mraer i j j n ^ ^ I r e v ie w 1-800-237-8415 Classes start February 9 The nation's fa s te s t growing CPA review course Page 22 State Press Monday, February 8 , 1988 ftp* ^ Tell th a t special someone ju s t how m uch they mean to you w ith a personal Valentine's Day ad. ....... AVOID THE RUSH . . c la s s ifie d s DO IT NOW DEADLINE IS WEDNESDAY, FEB. 10 AT 5 P.M. Ad Rates: 15 words or less $2.75/day, 1-4 (toys $2.50/day, 5-9 days $2.40/day, 10 or m ore days each additional word .•Check Isstercard billing) r Use th is handy order form to say Ml LO VE Y O U /’ n STATE PRESS VALENTINE AD ORDER NAME. ADDRESS. BRING KEYX backl Petition driva, etc. M ore inform ation o r to help, 946-2056 or 990-3924. $ 1 .2 5 fo r 15 w o rd s 15$ each additional word autos fo r sale C A S H * C H E C K w/Guarantee Card V IS A • M A S T E R C A R D 1973 CH EVY Im pale, ugly but runs great, very reliable, d ean Interior, only $460. Call DEADLINE IS 5 P.M . W ED. 965*7572 STATE PRESS M ATTHEW S C TR . BASEM ENT TEM PE , A Z 85287-1502 YE S, STIN G , Guns and R otas, Johnny M athis, Andy W illiam s, G allagher, George W inston, Chuck M sngtooe, and others. Also paying top dollar lo r ASU/UoCA basketball and rights to ASU and Cardinal football tickets. Tkskat Exchange at Cornerstone M ad, 829 0196. m ifccibm eous fo r sale .PHONE. M a il it in . A S . B rin g it in . C a ll it In . (With VISA or MC) tickets fo r sate 967-3276._________ ' $1.25 $1.40 ______________ 1975 DATSUN 710, 4-epeed, AM-FM cassette, runs great, $975. 784-9889, $1.55 $1.70 $1.85 $2.00 Kevin. $2.15 $2,30 $2.45 ' $2.60 $2.75 1978 CAMARO AT. 350, V-8 engine, AM -FM cassette, runs great, $1700. 839-9160, 224-5584 Debbie.____________ $2.90 $3.05 $3.20 $3.35 $3.50 $3.66 $3.80 1978 TO YO TA C é lica G T llftb ack, 5-speed, air, sunroof, new tires, new paint, 90,000 m iles. $1800 Dim. 835-7233. 25” CO LO R console (floor m odal), modem style, excellent condition. $125. CaB 254-1412, R ay. ______________ COM PUTER FO R sale, IB M PC with opti-m ouse, printer, m any program s, 840K. M ust sen Im m ediately, 81500. CaH Tom , 9 6 8 8804. GUARANTEED CR ED IT, IHS-G old credit card, preapproved $800 line of credit. No turndowns. 345-0205. IN FIN ITY RS4B speakers, new, incredible sound, 250 W PC maximum. Price nogotF able. CaH Dave, 8 2 9 4 5 1 3 . ________ . KEYBOARD; PROPHET V ' synthesizer, sequential circuits, 135 program m ed sounds, $600. A m plifier Sunn SL160, 2 channel equalizer, reverb, $200. Distortion peddle, $75. CaH 832-7074 after 6 . LADIES SM ALL light blue ski pants, brand 1981 MAZDA RX-7 GSL, good condition, many extras including cover, bra, sunro o t, new en g in e, exh au st. D oug, n ew , $ 5 0 . message). 968 4519. PO RTFOLIO S! MADE of 100% oxford nylon, $25. C all 9 3 8 1 3 3 2 . Assorted colors. 1984 HONDA Accord 2-door hatchback, 5-speed, air, doth seats, A M FM cassette, high freeway m iles. $4000 firm . Call Fatooq, 965-6605, leave message. 1984 TRANS Am , H .O . engine, 5-speed, loaded, Sony stereo. $7900/offer. Chris, 921-7041., 1985 TO YO TA Corolla 4-door sedan, autom atic, air, AM -FM , new tlree, m etallic blue, doth seats. $5500. Call 835-7233, message. 1986 MAZDA 826LX. air, AM -FM cassette, cruise, power locks and windows, only 22,000 mHes, $10,000. Call 921-7876. 1987 SUZUKI Sam urai- 500 m iles, brand new, teal green, custom interior, custom paint, brush guards, up-graded radio, sight speakers, soft top, ah, extended warranty, etc. $10,500 or best offer. Moving, must sett. 9084)158. M UST SELL, 1978 Otdsmobile Cutlass, 2 new tires, transm ission rebuilt, runs great. $1450. Cali 9 68 4836. K aren 2854588 (le a v e CONDOMS Buy discreetly by m ail. Highest quality surgical latex. 8 4 2 .9 5 • 12-$4.95 '• 24-$8.95 postage paid, tax included Send check or m oney order to: SA F-W A Y PRODUCTS P O Box 900 31, P h oenix, A Z $8060 furniture fo r sale DESKS, CHAIM S, lam ps, tables, drapes, and mlsceHaneous item s. Reasonable. Royal Tam pa M otor Lodge, 9 67 4891. real estate fo r sale $100 DOW N for Uke-new townhomes near ASU at prices $15 ,000 430,000 under m arket! M ove-In cost less than ranting, parents con co-purchase! G reg, Realty Executives, 947-2773. m otorcycles fo r sale 1986 HONDA Elite 160. Excellent condi­ tion, great looks, on-campus parking through August. Don’t settle'fo r walking! $796. CaH 966 4821. 1985 KAWASAKI G PZ750, now tires, just serviced, excellent condition, two helm ets, riding gloves, all black, runs great. First $2100 gets it. 730-9981. 1985 RED Honda Aero-50, super condi­ tion. $375. CaH Tom , 9 4 7 4 1 1 9 . $3000 TEST THE LIMITS OF YOUR IMAGINATION WIN Enter the 6th Annual H O N E Y W E LL FU TUR IST A w ard Competition V uioa Imagtariwa Technology. Tlie worid 25 years from now. Today's dreams become tomorrow’s reality. Write your vision of the world in 2013 and enter Honeywell’s 1988 Futurist Award Competition. If you’re a full-time student at an accredited U.5. college or. university, we invite you to use your imagination and knowledge of technology to write a 1,500 word essay on the advances you foresee in one of several tppics-~-electronics, industrial automation, aerospace, semiconductors, or * automation in homes and buildings—AND their social impact on the world of tomorrow. If your ideas are among the most imaginative and technically feasible, you may be among the 10 winners awarded $3,000. For Futurist Contest rules, entry form and a free 17 x 22 color poster of the Jean-Michel Folon print pictured above, call this toll-free number 1 (800) 328-5111 E x t 1581 Don’t delay. You must request your entry form by March 4, 1988 and mail your entry by March 1% 1988. 1988 HONDA E lite 150- Sky blue, 59 mHes, brand new, parked In living room. A$ digital, 3 year extended warranty. M oving, must sell, $2230 loan, buyout, no extra money needed, Just take over loan. 9 08 4158. 1986 HONDA E lite 80 scooter, only .1800 mHes, 8750 or best offer. Amy, 966-5521. 1986 HONDA Spree scooter, $250 or bast offer. Excellent condition. C all PaL 391-1041. 1987 KAWASAKI EX-600, excellent condi­ tion, only 1600 m iles. M ust sell. CaH 784 -06 20, Gordon. 1987 YAMAHA FZ600, sport bike, must sell, brand new. 894-0820. 3 BEDROO M , 1% bath townhouse, good condition, $2000 assum e FHA m ortgage, 224-5584, 2 4 4 4 7 0 2 Debbie. CO NDO M INIUM AT University Ranch com plex, 5 m inutes from cam pus, only 2 years old. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ail appliances including'm icrowave, fuH size washer and dryer. Fireplace cathedral ceiling, top-grade carpeting. - Pool on prem ises. 993-9554. NEAR A 8U W est cam pus, 3 bedroom , 1% bath, fam ily room wHh fireplace, 2 car garage. O wner must seH. Call owner, 8 4 3 -1 )4 1 o r G eorge Row e R e alty, 242 4711. NO Q U A L IFY IN G -1,2,3 badrooom condos and townhouaes. Papago Park Village from 8 6 8 ,0 0 8 102,000. Bob BuHock, Realty Executives, 9B 82992. TEM PE FO UR bedroom, 2 bath, tri-tevel home. 879,400, non ,assum able loan. 2% mltoe ASU. 867-3868. ~ 3 r# apartm ents fo r re n t 82 YAMAHA S eca 6 5 8 8000 mîtes, runa great. $1075 or bast offer. 907 4667. R ISIN G SUN Cycle- Service and parts for sil Japanese brands, insurance work done. 1900 N . Hayden, Tem ps, 9 4 5 4012. M anday-Frtdey 9 4 , Saturday 9 4 . YAMAHA 1 2 8 G reat bike to use tor school. Need to sell, 8200. B ill, 967 4348. bicycles fo r sale Honeyw ell $100 DO W N, a great deal: Governm ent sale of 3 yeqr old M ess condo. This beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath unit wiH be aokl approxim ately $25,000 below cost. Act now) Rick a t ERA Carew , 897-9000 or 3 ^ -5 5 0 0 . CO LLEG E C Y C LE , 909 E. Lem on, M ooday-Friday 8 4 , Saturday 2 6 . Student d is c o u n ts . F a s t, frie n d ly s e rv ic e . 868 0842. W O M A N ’S D IA M O N D B A C K cru iser, 8 7 8 /o fte r; m en’ s S chw inn LeT o u r 1 0 -s p e e d , 2 5 " fra m e , $ 1 2 5 /o ffe r. 9 8 7 4 2 4 1 , Dawn. 2 BEDROOM, quiet, w alk to downtown/ ASU, pool, laundry. 8388, first month free. 1014 Fenner. 9 8 8 7988. W A L K TO ASU A b e a u tifu lly fu rn ish e d huge one bedroom , one bath, walkin closet, cable TV, all u tilitie s paid. Heated po ol, spacio u s laun dry fa cilitie s. Only 1/2 b lo ck fro m cam pus. Friendly, cou rteo us m anagem ent. T errace Road A partm ents 950 S . T errace 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 Stale apartm ent! fo r re n t 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, unfurnished, carpet, appliances, pool, lease (4 9 5 a m onth. 5 1 0 W . U n iv e rs ity . K athy, 909-7173; Jan, 988-6292.______________ 2 OR 3 bedroom apartm ent, utilities paid, ASU Vi m ile. $300 o ff with ad, 968-8945. la r g e Page 23 Monday, February 8 ,1 9 8 8 2 bedroom. Q uiet neighborhood, heated poo l, s p a , ex e rc is e room , barbeque’s. $425 plus electric. 227-9934 PAPAQO PARK Village I, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, a ll am enities. $800/m onth, available now. 947-8189.__________________ _____ Q UIET, ADULT com plex w ith pool. All utilities paid. $345 w ith 4 month lease. Great location, m inutes to ASU. 967-8620. SAVE MONEY!! Sublease through me. Premium unit at University Towers. Call Nicole, 829-3776 or 943-3553. _________ SEVEN M INUTES to ASU! Sunrise Apart­ ments has one and two bedroom apart­ ments from $360. Pool, d ean laundry rooms. 1014 E. Spence. Tuesday-Friday rental sharing OVERSEAS JOBS, summer, year around. Europe, South Am erica, Australia, Asia. All fields. $900-2000 month. Sightseeing. Free information. W rite U C , PO Box 52-AZ03, Corona Dei M ar, CA 92625. R O O M FO R ren t, close to South M ountain. Must be clean, quiet, responsi­ ble, nonsmoker. No pets. Own bath. $225 plus % utilities. 431-1460, weekends or after 6. PART-TIME ATTENDANT for 33 year old w heelchair-bound m an. Apache and Terrace area. Inquire, 968-8871. ROOM FOR rent. Nice poolside townhouse. Close to ASU. Volleyball, tennis, Jacuzzi, etc. $260/m onth, % utilities. 921-1601. ROOMMATE W ANTED for completely furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment with w asher/ dryer and lots of extras. Very close to ASU. Must see! $295 plus Mr utilities. Call Steve, 966-5629. SUBLET ROOM a t The Commons on Apache. No deposit. $200 per month until 5/18. 820-6580. STUDIO O R 1 bedroom apartm ent, pool, tennis courts, covered parking. $300 off wHh ad, 833-8332.________________ _ STUDIO O R T bedroom apartm ent. U tili­ ties paid, pod , saunas, w eight, recreation, game rooms. 962-6222. SUBLEASE AT The Commons on Apache. Any apartm ent, your choice, great price. FLEXIBLE HOURS If you are in need of extra money, Physical Plant wants 16 students who are concerned about the looks of our cam pus. Hard-working, interested students inquire. Call 965-1800 C a t Beth, 966-1178.___________________ WALK TO ASU, junior one bedroom, $265; two bedroom, $400. Adults, no pets. 1031E . Lemon. 966-2679,933-4364. homes fo r rent HOUSE FOR rent across from 'G rady Gammage. Check It out. 8 9 4 0 2 8 8 , call anytime. rental sharing AVAILABLE IM M EDIATELY, University Towers, sublease own bedroom , parking pase, $35 0 m onth. M ountain view . 829-3606,966-4405. CLEAN, LARGE room In com fortable home. W alk to ASU . C IO per month. Kevin, 921-1773. FEMALE NONSMOKER: Own room In fumiahed condo. W asher, dryer, m icrowave. Lots of apace, juet 2 m iles from ASU. $196, Vt utilities. 967-3424. FEMALE TO share bedroom with another fem ale. W orthington Place. 6180/m onth, Vt utilities. Furnished. U sa, 921-3551. LOOKING FOR nonsmoking fem ale to share 2 bedroom apartm ent 10 minutes from ASU, 52nd Street and Thomas. Q uiet com plex, $ 2 1 0 p lu s e le c tric . C a ll Candace, 8 40 4302. M ALE/ FEMALE nonsmoker- 4 bedroom house. P o d , w asher/ dryer, microwave, gas grill, furnished, pets ok. $185, V4 utilities. 1V i m iles ASU. M ark or Jennifer, 8304071. ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE, 50 Imme­ diate openings. Good communication skills, aggressiveness, paid training, p le a s a n t, p ro fessional atm osphere, daytlm e/evening hours. Call now for Inter­ view , 8 93 0411, Inter-W est Marketing Corp. Equal opportunity employer. ALASKA NEEDS summer employees. Insider detailed report on canner/tourist seeking employees. Send $5; Destine Alaska, Box 231894, Anchorage, Alaska 99623. APPLICATIONS ARE now being accepted tor full and part-tim e weight trainers. Some experience needed. M en and women. Apply in person a t 1400 S . McClintock, Suite-4, Tem pe. O r call 963 1106 before 12 and after 3 p.m . Ask tor John Alton. ARÉ YO U tired of fighting fat? W e can help. Health company introduces new scientific breakthrough. New revolutionary product combines with food you eat and m akes you absorb toss fat. FDA approved. G uaranteed results. Need 100 overweight people Im m ediately. C all Lisa, 8447117. CH ILD CARE: Provide hom e day care tor 214 year and 10 month old boys. Own transportation. 7 a.m .-5 p.m . Good pay. Cafi V ic, 965-3381. COLLEGE STUDENTS part-tim e. W e need 8 enthusiastic college students to work 4-9 M onday-Thuisday, 1 3 2 Satur­ day. $5 hourly plus bonuses. C all M r. Rod, M ALE/FEM ALE w anted to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartm ent. O nly 1 m ile from campus. Vaulted ceilings, fireplace, wall-to-wall, cable, balcony, dishwasher, pod, launBry, $255. Call John, 960 0181. MALE RO O M M ATE needed, 1 bedroom apartm ent, im m ediately. $190 monthly, utilities included. C all 9 a.m .-3 p.m ., Mark, 967-7791. D O N 'T BE shy. Open up a new world. The top agency in Denver has branched out to Scottsdale and Is searching for new talent to m odel/ act. Call Suzie, 9439006. NEED SLEEPING room for Christian m ale student near cam pus. 1-977-1838. EASY W ORK! Excellent pay! Assemble products at home. For information, call 50464 1-8 003, ext. A-7836._____________ RESPONSIBLE ROOMM ATE wanted to ■hare great condo. Own room, share bath. Lots of extras. Very nice place. $250. Paul, 8941530. RESPONSIBLE ROOMM ATE, 1 bedroom, fum iahed, w aaher/dryar, $200/m onth plus Vt utilities. 844-7808. RESPO N SIB LE FEM A LE, have own m aster bedroom and bath In Desert Palm s, 2 blocks from cam pus. All common areas furnished. M icrowave, p o d , tennis and m bre. $270 plus Vt utilities. Call Leesa or BJ, 968-3911. h elp Wanted PART-TIME OPPORTUNITY at Pruden­ tial. Are you looking for a part-tim e job that fits your busy schedule and pays enough to be worthwhile? W e have openings in our north Scottsdale office for part-tim e Telephone Customer Service Reps. Hour­ ly rate is $6.37 and . up depending on experience. Applicants should possess strong oral communication and telephone skills and the ability to deal effectively in a fast-paced, service-oriented environment. Prior telephone customer service experi­ ence and fam iliarity with computers are a plus. If interested, call 483-4294 between 10 a.m .-4 p.m . for an appointm ent, or send resume to: Prudential Property and Casu­ alty Insurance Company, PO Box 52102, Phoenix, AZ 85072. Equal opportunity employer. PHOTOGRAPHY STUDENT w anted to help with photos and layout. Definite opportunity to expand your portfolio! Call Rob at 784-8008 or Fid at 784-9410. PRESCHOOL DIRECTOR and staff, new in Chandler, Kids Are People Too, 926-3464. P R O F E S S IO N A L LE A T H E R S M 1T H wanted. M ust be versatile and honest. Part-tim e opportunity for the right person. 966-4042. PROFESSIONAL HAIR-CARE company, M atrix Essentials, seeking models for Phoenix sem inar. Free cuts, perms, colors. Call M ary Jane, 990-7463, before February 20. COUNSELORS- G IRLS camp in M aine. Good salary, room and board, travel allowance. Beautiful modem facility. Must love children and be able to teach one of the following: tennis, W SI, sailing, w aterski, softball, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, arts/c ra fts, photography, horseback, dance, piano, dram a, ropes, cam p craft, gymnastics. C all or w rite: Camp Vega, Box 1771, Duxbury, Massachusetts 02332. 617-934-6536. AGD ACTIVE Paula, congrats! You made it through!!! I’m so proud of you! You are the best! Love, Vicki. AGD U S A and GaH: Congratulations on you activation! You m ade it!! Your 5th roommate. AGD VY: “You, you’re the o n e...” Congrats little sis on going active! You’re simply and adoringly the best. Your Bros. A-PHI ACTIVE Sister Jenn: Congratula­ tions my dot! I love you! AOE mom. A-PHI CANDEE Colwell: I’m glad every­ thing worked out- congrats! Love, Mommy A-PHI LORI Cox: Congrats on activation! Mommy loves you! Karen. A-PHI LO RI G arrett- O ur job has begun. Hang in there! Love, Steph. A-PHI M ELODIE P ain ter Congratulations! You are an awesome daughter! Love mom. P .S .- let’s do lunch. GENERAL O FFICE position available. Part-tim e. Flexible hours. C all IAS Labor­ atories at 273-7246.___________________ HOUSEKEEPING. ROYAL Tem pe Motor Lodge, 967-8891. _________________ Sara. DEEGEE MOM Anne Y . is the best ever) I love you! Kathryn. DG HEZ: Hi Mommy! I wanted to wish you a happy day and a fun sem ester. I’m going to miss you next year so let’s m ake the most of this sem ester. Love, Paty. DG KRISTEN: Hey mom! You’re the best. Love, Steph. DG KRIS W alton- Your dot thinks you’re hot! I love ya, Christine. DG M OM Christe: Thanks for everything. Let’s go out soon. Love your dot, Blair. DG MOM Connie- Activation? Tomorrow? Can’t w ait! W e love you! Julie and Cindy. DG MOM Courtney: Thanks for being the best mom in the world. Your daughter loves you a bunch. DG Love always, Brooke. DG M OM Dina: Thanks for everything. You’re awesome! DG love and m ine, Adrienne. STUDY W HILE working, dental front office, part-tim e mornings or afternoons. Ron 967-0442 or 996-2300. DG M OM JW: You’re the best! I can’t w ait until activation. Your pledge dot loves you, SUM M ER WORK: Now interviewing for full tim e summer work In a sum m er sales and business management program . Earn $395/ week and college credit. Call 230-3006 for an interview. DG M OM Jody: Your dot thinks you’re hot and she loves you afot! Love, Tiffany. DG MOM JeaneHe: Thanks for being such a great mom! Activation??? Love your DG DG MOM JiM: So glad you’re my mom. I think you're the greatest! Can’t w ait to go active!! Love your dot, Juanita. DG MOM JHI- Your dot thinks you are great! Let’s go out soon! Love, Rachael. Linda. MAKE EXTRA money: W e need vendors to work the spring training baseball games for the M ariners, Cubs and Brewers. Call 9638022. N eed m oney now? Earn while you learn! Students Faculty - Staff PIT $50 31500 • F /T $20036000 W e w ill train C a ll J .D . E n terprises, 278-0666 A FTER CLASS HOURS AFTERNOON EXPANSION $5.50 per hour guaranteed Dialam artca M arkatlng, the nation’s finest telemarketing firm , Is now accepting applications tar the tallowing shifts: 2-6 p.m. 310:30 p.m. 7-10:30 p.m. Weekends Also Available Our salespeople work in a modem, comfortable business environment contacting established customers on long distance lines. Guaranteed salary or commission, whichever is greater, and averages $S-$7 an hour. O tir Tempe office Is located approximately 5 m inutes from campus. Please call Dialam erlca M arketing for details. 8 2 9 -1 1 4 0 ACADEMY OF RECORDING SCIENCES now offers training in audio engineering in Phoenix. 4 9 3 -9 8 9 8 DG MOM Karin B .I Can’t w ait for activa­ tion! Lots of love, pledge dot, Leslie. DG MOM Kelly M accardican: You’re the best mom!! Thanks for everything. I love you, M arcy. DG MOM KeHy H .- You’re the best! Love ya, dot Barrie. DG MOM KIMBERLEY: Your dot luvs u very m uch... can’t w ait for activation!! Luv, Kristin. DG MOM Kristi- I love you! Your dot, Heather. DG MOM M egan- Thanx for everything you’ve done for m e. You're the best! Luv your dot, Jaqkie. DG MOM Shari B.- W hen am I going to be one of the big guys? Luv your little little J.S . DG M OM Susannah: You are the hottest pledge mom ever) Your dot loves you lots. Love, Kristin. DG MOM Tammy: You're the best! Let’s party! Activation?? Love your dot. DG MOM Tashia: You’re the hottest. Love dot Stacey. jew elry CASH FOR gold and diamonds. M ill Avenus Jewelers, 414 S- M ill, Suite 104, Tem pe. 983 5987. DG M OM Julie: Your dot loves you lots and thinks you’re great!! Let’s go out soon! Love, Corrie. DG MOM Lisa Shelly: Your dot loves you and is ready for activation. ENGLISH TUTO R and typist available for composition writing skills, term papers, research papers, reports, resum es. Four years experience. CaM 834-1367. ’ __________ free lo sV fo u n d LOST: PRESCRIPTIO N sunglasses: dark brown, thin w hs, h all fram es wHh roes to grey gradient lenses. Lost early Decem­ ber. Reward. 827-8230. m iscellaneous SMALL O FFICE suites ta r rent.Downtown Tamps. W alk to ASU. 9830812. INCOM E TAX- Federal/ S tate, starting at $25. Free pick-up, delivery. Day, even­ ings, weekends. Van, 967-5971. LORI LUX- Congrats active sister! AOE luv, Stepmonster. OUR BUDS: Kareem , Italian Mama, KP, and The Crip- You’re all our idols. Love ya guys, Doctor J. and Sport. PHI J- You’ll always be the anchor in my eye! Harriet. ROONEY TAYLOR: Today is your birth­ day, we’re gonna have a great tim e! So excited to celebrate with you. Love always, Usa. SAE J.K .- M arilyn’s? DEE G EE M ichele Touby: You’re the greatest pledge mom. I love you! Your dot, dot Kris, Instruction services USA CAMPBELL- Congrats active sister! AOE luv, Mom. SNOOKUMS. YO U ’RE the best! Your snuggler. STUDENT EM PLOYM ENT, part-tim e or full-tim e. Assist at airport and hotel with activities related to m edical m eeting from April 30-M ay 7. Flexible hours. Interview­ ing February 16 at Princess Hotel. Call Arcan Association, 1-800-227-5910 for appointment. W ANTED: VOLUNTEERS for the Arizona State Hospital. If you are interested, please contact Susan, 220-6014. Break Escape? Let’s go!! Love, Bufferin's girlfriend. ATO DAVE: This w eek has to be different. I missed you! Christine. DG MOM Heather Johnson: Thanx for everything. I luv you, love your dot Ing. W AITER/W AITRESS, retirem ent resort, no tips, $4.50/hour, part-tim e. 262 E. Brown, M esa, 969-9394. HEATHER M .- Is M azatlan our Spring SIGM A NU Court of Honor welcomes all ladies of ASU to their little sister rush February 9-10 at 8 p.m . Come m eet the men and women who are a part of the finest greek organization on campus! SPARE TIM E income; electronics, no experience. Others. For more information dial (504) 641-0091, ext. 1060. Open 7 days. T.C . EGGINGTON’S Brunchery, an excit­ ing breakfast and lunch restaurant is interviewing for cook/food preparation position. Apply in person daily after 2:30 p.m ., 1660 S. Alm a School Road, Suite 129. personals transportation Karen. 921-2897. COUNSELORS- BOYS cam p in Berkshire Mountains, W est Massachusetts. Good salary, room and board, travel allowance. Beautiful modem facility. Must kwe child­ ren and be able to teach one of the following: tennis, W SI, sailing, waterski, baseball, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, wood, arts/crafts, rocketry, photography, archery, pioneering, ropes, piano, dram a. Call or write: Cam p W inadu, 5 G len Lane, Mam aroneck, NY 10543. 914-381-5983. ONE BEDROOM, m ale nonsmoker, large house, coveted parking, $200 monthly. 8948141. personals ROOM FOR Rent, plus bath and kitchen privileges. Unfurnished. M ature, quiet grad student only. Non-smoker. $250 monthly. 15 minutes ASU. 820-1664, evenings, weekends before 8 p.m. help wanted from 2-5 p.m .______ help wanted SPORT: YO U are too cool, and you’re my idol too! Love ya, Doctor J. THETA BECKY and Julie- Congrats!! on activation. I’m so proud of you girts. I love you guys, Paty. THETA JOANNA: Congratulations on acti­ vation. I’m so proud of you. You are the best)! I love you, Paty. DG PLEDGE Mom Joanne- You are hot! C an't w ait for activation! I love you, Jen. ELIZABETH- I’M watching you!! Hope your day is great!! Secret RA. GEORGE, DANNY and Rags: You said, “ O h, w e're even." But that’s w here you’re wrong. Stand back and get ready- the war’s just begun! DONNA, W HEN are you going to get around to doing somie work? ATTENTION: FREE cars to all major cities. 21 or older. Call AAA Driveaway, 277-9979. I NEED to rent a ride from west Southern to and from ASU, 8 a.m .-4 p.m . M ildred, 965-3190. STUDENT PARKING less than Vz m ile from campus. Park your car all day for just $2, shuttle service included. 998-5220 or 948-5262. travel AIRLIN E CO UPONS w anted: U nited Bonus Tickets, Delta, W estern, or North­ w est. W ill pay up to $450 each. 1-800-255-4060. THE W ILD W oman: (AKA Dorothy) Happy 19thi! Seven years of friendship and counting. Enjoy yourself- tim e flies when you’re having fun! P .S . You w in. W hat’s dinner- Chinese? Mish. BU SINESS STUDENTS interested in traveling Europe or the O rient this summer and earning college credit? Find out how! International Business Sem inars inform a­ tional meeting W ednesday, February 10 at 1:40 in BA 401. Discover the exciting world of International Business) TO LAMBDA J.B .- W here’s the wind headed? If in any direction of an ASU woman please answer in tom orrow's State Press or soon after. Luv, guess who? SPRING BREAK, South Padre Island, 7 luxurious nights in condos. VodeybaM, sailing, surfing and more. Dave, 964-8863 (message). TO M .B . (Hungry Eyes)- Some expression in your eyes, it took m e by suprise. How was I to know? I was there on 2/5 at 12:04 a.m . if you get the picture, where were you? Talk to me. Your P.M . TR ID ELT COLLEEN: The taps are open, the beer is flowing, so let’s celebrate your a c tiv a tio n 11 C o n g ra tu la tio n s ! I T h e Bartender. T R ID E LT Devin- Don’t lose faith. I wil pull through this sem ester. I’m looking forward to being one of them like you. Love, your HI. TRI-DELT EVA: Congratulations on activa­ tion! I’m so proud of you!! U sa. TR ID ELT JEN - Needed: m ore diet coke chats! You’ve given me so much- friend­ ship, big-sisness, and especially yourself. I Deltaluv U! Lisa. TRISH STRONG- Keep up the good work! I luv ya! Mom. services ty p in g / word processing $1.20 PER page. On-campus drop off and pick up spot. Lazer je t printer; IBM com patible equipm ent; 24 hour turn­ around; d p art; 10 years experience. CaM Robyn anytim e at 996-8874 (Arizona W ord Processing). $1.50 DOUBLE spaced page. A-1 letter quality word processing. 32 years exper­ ience. M arian, 839-4269. $1.50 PER page. Any Type W ord Process­ ing. Spelling and gram m ar corrected. Some graphics available. CaM Debbie, 961-1495. AAA M ICRODATA (W ord Processing) S e rv ices . P rofessional, guaranteed: typing, resumes, graphics, etc. Fast! Near ASU. Ron, 967-0019, 833-5532. A A A T Y P IN G /w o rd p ro c e s s in g . $1.50/page. 10 years experience. Fast turnaround. Call Linda, 962-8075. ANOREXIA, BULIMIA, compulsive over­ eating. Private and confidential counsel­ ing. Ginnie Grant Monroe, ACSW , recov­ ered bulim ic, 437-9420. 468-3850. Health AT KINKO’S w e typeset papers that make th e grade! 933 E. University. Call 966-2035. insurance welcome. CALL M E for fast, accurate, quality service at com petitive prices. Close to ASU. 966-2186. DUST COVERS, padded cases, outdoor accessories, sewing, alterations, mend­ ing. Blue Moon Stitchery, 967-3143. R E SE A R C H A S S IS TA N C E . Largest library of information in the United States. Toll-free hotline: 1-800-351-0222. STUDENT PARKING less than Vi m ile from campus. Park your car all day for just $2, shuttle service included. 998-5220 or 948-5262. Valentine Balloon Bouquet! Send a 4-ft. heart to the oneyou love. $ 1 2 .5 0 Free delivery for pre-paid orders. 898-1740 844-1931 ERROR FREE letter quality computer word processing and resume writing. $1.25 per page. Contact Business Design Consultants, 784-8010. 24 hours. FLYING FING ERS now has a Mac II and laser printer! Resumes, reports, etc. Susan, 945-1500. FORM ER ASU staffers- W ord Perfect and Xerox memory w riters. Experienced with APA, MLA, graduate school, etc.- gradu­ ate students and faculty work welcome. 945-6302, Donna and Joan. LEGAL, MEDICAL, personal documents. 24-hour turnaround. Free pickup and delivery. Reasonable. Close to ASU. 967-7174. Q U A L IT Y , Q U IC K T yp in g . P apers, reports, resumes. Pick-up/deHvery avail­ able. One day service available. Ginny, 956-5163. SHORT O F TIM E? I can help. Rea­ so n ab le. P ro fessio n al. G u aran teed . Experienced in academ ic. Call Jessie 945-5744. TH E PAPERW ORKS- Thesis, report and resume typing. IBM com patible word processing. N ear ASU. 921-9675. DG MOM Tracy D .-1 love you! Dot Toni. DG PAIGE: You're the best mom ever! Love your dot Danyde. P .S .- W hen’s activation? ALL STATES Driveaway - Cars available 21 or older. 992-5200. jg N g H ^ s 8 2 9 -1 7 1 7 W EST CAMPUS typing, $1.50 per page. Professional, accurate. CaM 86341964. W ORD PROCESSING, $2/page. M esa, Chandler area. 831-6218. We deliver a better pizza! LUNCH SPECIAL JONATHAN’S SUPREME SANDWICH * 3 49 o n ly p lu s tax plus a FREE LITRE of PEPSI w anted W ANT 20 tickets tor ASU /U oM m ans' basketball gam s, February ZT. Sequential tickets, please. C all Don, 747-2361. W ANTED- TEST prep tor M GT 301 with KrsNner. O ld notas, ale. $7/hour. C a i 6 23 7360. . ^ -.1 ,.:-, Al Y our L u cky N um ber H ockey C o ntinued from page i i , the Ic e D evils’ lead to 2-1— but not fo r long. ASU ’s Peterson cam e right back and scored 14 seconds later, but Fullerton refused to give up as Todd Langenbaw scored 26 seconds a ft«* that. The two teams almost went an entire minute without scoring before Fullerton’s Trent N oller tied the score at 3-3 with 12:55 rem aining in the stanza (the Ice D evils play 15-minute periods). When the period fin ally ended, the Ice D evils found them selves leading, 8-4. Both teams scored three goals each in the final period, although Fullerton did narrow the gap to State Press Classifieds 9-6 at one point. Dibellus scored his final goal on a breakaway with 44 seconds le ft fo r the final m argin of victory. 985-6731 W e needed a couple games like these to bring the team together,” Easel said. “ W e’re young, not as much as age but because w e haven’t been playing together for long. SAVE 20% OFF OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICES “ We’re quite happy qwith the number of people who came in and watch us play Saturday.” (W ITH TH IS AD) •SAM E DAY WASH A FOLD SERVICE •N E X T DAY DR Y CLEANING •FR EE 16-rn. COKE W ITH EVERY WASH The Ice D evils are o ff until Feb. 26-27 when they travel to Colorado to m eet the U niversity of Colorado-Boulder. ASU returns home March 19-20 against UCLA. (W ITH THIS AD, WHILE SUPPLIES LAST) •T V - VIDEO GAMES State free s 965-6731 C la s s ifie d s N. Basement Matthews Center IRVINE PARK CRIMPERS LTD 8521 E. McDowell Rd. Attention G irls!!! 50% OFF HAIRCUT. 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