siate prese V oi. 70 No. 103 •Copyright Stai* P ia n . ISM A rizon a State University's M orning Daily Tuesday, M arch 15,1988 Tampa, Arizona Student dies in Mexico; second vacation fatality B y VICKIE CHACHERE S ta te P r e ss Jack 0 ** il*y/8tata Pia** D u n k in ’ D e v il S p ark y, A SU ’s m a sc o t, d o e s b a ck flip s du rin g a tim e-o u t at th e ASU v s . W ash in gton S ta te m en ’s g a m e. T h e g a m e , h eld b efo re sp rin g break, sa w A SU lo s e it’s eig h th stra ig h t g a m e o f th e s e a s o n . An ASU freslim an was killed in a Rocky Point, Mexico, car accident last week, ASU officials said Monday, the second University student to die in Mexico during spring break. M elissa Jane Dykes, a unspecified liberal arts m ajor, died Friday when the car she was riding in rolled over, said Student Life Dean'Leon Shell. Shell said details of the incident are sketchy and that neither ASU officials nor Dykes’ family was informed of her death until Monday. He said Mexican authorities identified her through her drivers’ license and ASU identification card. Dykes is the second ASU student to die in Mexico during spring break. M arch 5, Dylan John Phillips, an 18-year-old aerospace engineering m ajor, died after falling from a train bound for M azatlan, Mexico. Dykes,.who graduated from Greenway High School in 1984, had attended Mesa Community College before transfering to ASU in the fall of 1987. Memorial services will be held today for Phillips, a Manzanita Hall resident, in his hometown of Glendale, N,Y. Phillips’ body was found along side the railroad tracks about 14 miles north of 1Hermosillo, Mexico. He had been traveling with three friends as p art of M azatlan tour package offered by College Tours, a division of Phoenix-based Cerkvenik-A nderson Travel Inc. Ray M cGrath, vice counsul for the American counsulate in Hermosillo, said no one witnessed the accident, but Phillips apparently lost his balance while trying to walk between passenger cars sometime during the night. He said Mexican authorities did not perform an autopsy to determ ine cause of death before they released the body to Phillips’ family. He added there is no suspicion of foul play. But one of the students traveling with Phillips, who asked to rem ain anonymous, said tbat $150 Phillips had been carrying in his pocket and a turquoise bracelet he was wearing was missing when authorities recovered the body. Phillips’ traveling companion also said that two other girls fell from the train when it was traveling a t about 5 mph, and that the doors on the train would fly open when the train would round curves. Linda Phillips, Dylan Phillips’ mother, spent several days in Tempe talking to her son’s friends about the excursion and issued a statem ent Friday warning students to be cautious of traveling on the train because: . “This train was totally out of control.” She said she learned that train was “totally unsupervised” and that the lighting on the train blacked out several times during the trip. Furtherm ore, there was no lighting in the passageways between cars and that part of the tra in becam e unhitched and the conductor had to back the train up to retrieve the loose cars, she said. Phillips added that some students brought coolers with alcohol and that peddlers sold beer on the cars, despite Mexican laws prohibiting anyone to bring alcohol onto the train. “You are striving to be responsible adults and also to have fun in your college years, but these conditions are beyond what you im agine you can handle,” Phillips said. “This was not a ‘fun tour’ but a living nightm are and a death trap. ” Russ Symmes, general m anager for College Tours, denied that the train was dangerous and said the areas linking the cars together were enclosed with one door and a solid m etal flow. He said there would be “no way to fall through the floor” and the only access to the outside was through the door. Symmes said he also talked with Phillips’ room m ates, and they said the last time they saw him was when he left them at about 11:30 p.m . that night to go to a sleeper car. Phillips’ friend said that the passengers’ party on the train “was really out of Tum to Doaths, page 12. Form er student file s su it over alleged fraternity assau lt B y SCOTT LUCK S ta te P r e ss A form er ASU student has filed a $100,000 negligence suit in M arirnpa County Superior Court against the Arizona Board of Regents, c la im in g she was assaulted sexually a t a Delta Sigma P hi fraternity party two years ago. L aura Brosch, a form er resident of M anzanita Hall, previously filed a $3 million suit against three members of the ASU Delta Sigma Phi fraternity for alleged assault and battery, defam ation, and intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The suit, which also nam es the fraternity as a defendant, riaim s Brosch was the victim of an alleged attack occurring a t a D elta Sigma Phi fraternity party on Feb. 26,1986, after she consumed enough “floaters” (Bacardi 151 and CocaCola) to pass out. Brooch’s suit claim s: “On or about the evening of Fèb. 26, 1986, the counterdefendants (three fraternity m em bers). . did force, and against the consent of counterclaim ant (Brosch), assault, rape, ravish and gain carnal knowledge of her,Although counterclaim ant resisted such acts . . . to the utm ost of h er ability.” Brosch testified that she was unconscious during the alleged assault and has no personal recollection of the night’s events. ASU Legal Counsel Bruce Meyerson said the regents have not yet been served with the suit. “As fa r as I know, we’re not M e c h a m a tto rn e y s c la im B y b e n McC o n n e l l S ta te P ra m PHOENIX — Attorneys for impeached Gov. Evan Mecham called for a m istrial Monday, charging that the Depjartment of Public Safety is trying to intim idate witnesses. | T erri Fields, who testified in M echam’s jpnppnchment trial last week, was arrested Friday on an o u tsta n d in g w a rra n t. She is an adm inistrative assistan t to Peggy G riffith, director of the governor’s Office of Women’s Services. The Senate Court of Im peachment did not hear argum ents for a m istrial, in which Mecham is flCCllgari of trying obstruct an investigation into an alleged threat. M echam’s attorneys did not file the motion a day before it is to be heard, as rules require, but it is expected to be the first order of a party of the lawsuit, yet,” Meyerson said. Meyerson acknowledged that Brosch filed a claim against the board, but it was rejected. Meyerson said he was “not at liberty” to divulge why the claim was denied, but he added, “I think I can say, in the final analysis it was because we concluded there was no m erit to the claim .” Counsel (Bentley, Brandes and Brandes, a Phoenix law firm ) for the fraternity m em bers have argued that Brosch’s case is based solely on hearsay evidence. National Delta Sigma Phi adm inistrative assistant Leslie Collins said from her Indianapolis office that the fraternity is aw are the University had conducted an investigation but was not aw are of the results. Turn to Suit, paga 10. DPS in tim id ation business on today’s agenda when the court reconvenes a t 9 a.m. Attorneys for toe prosecution and defense apparently m ade prelim inary argum ents for dism issal before Presiding Officer Frank X. Gordon during a 90-minute closed-door session. Although a court reporter was requested for toe m eeting, Gordon assured senators that testimony and witnesses were not heard. The m eeting was a follow-up to a Saturday news conference that Mecham attorney Fred Craft held, charging DPS with trying to intim idate defense witness Terri Fields by arresting her on an outstanding w arrant of obstructing justice and willfully disobeying a court order. “I’m not sure that we view obstruction of justice and willful disobedience of a court order as sm all,” said DPS spokesman Allan Schmidt. “ It may be misdemeanor, but it’s not a petty offense.” Craft also claim ed that witness Antonio Corio, a D epartm ent of A dm inistration electro n ics technician, was intim idated by DPS officials before he took toe stand last week. C raft asked that Corio be declared a “hostile witness” because his testimony differed from what he told defense attorneys beforehand in private. Gordon denied toe request. Craft said Saturday that he would ask Gordon for witness protection. Fields’s arrest stem m ed from a DWI arrest and p u rp o rted ly fa ilin g to a tte n d A lcoholics Anonymous classes. She was released after Craft posted a $1,000 bail. Turn to Hearings, paga 14. inside ASU WEATHER Clear and mild today with a high in the 70s. Tonight: cool and breezy with a low near SO. CAPTURED ON KODAK: A spring break wrapup in photos. Page 9. Classified................ 22 Com ics....................18 Opinion................... 4 Sports..................... 19 t o d a y . . » ......., ...... ...... 3 Page 2 S te t ç t o s , worid/nation in brief Israeliswound 11 Arabs, set curfew, close market; more police resign Supreme Court as well. Darden, who has m aintained his innocence in the 1973 fatal shooting of a Lakeland furniture store owner during a robbery, was scheduled to be electrocuted at 7 a.m. Tuesday a t Florida State Prison near Starke, a north Florida town. E arlier Monday, the Florida Supreme Court refused to grant Darden a stay, the eighth lim e the high court had upheld either his conviction or death sentence. Darden, 54, had claim ed that he had ineffective legal counsel and that the trial court’s finding that the crim e was “heinous, atrocious and cruel” was unsupported. Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court by a vote of 7-2 refused Monday to postpone the execution of Wayne R. Felde, who was scheduled to be put to death in Louisiana on Tuesday. F eld e had claim ed he w as denied com petent representation at his I960 trial on charges of killing a police officer because his attorney joined him in asking for the death sentence. JERICHO, Occupied West Bank (AP) Troops shut down oik of the biggest produce m arkets in the West Bank on Monday, turning away 70 trucks of food grown by Arab fan n ers and tightening the economic noose on the occupied territories. Soldiers also shot and wounded a t least l l Arabs, and a 3-year-old girl was in serious condition after she was hit in the right eye by a rubber bullet, hospital officials said. The Israeli arm y also developed a new way to ferret out rock-hurling protesters, spraying them with paint from helicopters so they can be identified and arrested, the daily Yeiot Ahronot reported. The arm y imposed a nightly 10 p.m. to 3 a.m . curfew over the entire occupied Gaza Strip for the first tim e since unrest began in the territories Dec. 8. A spokesman said the curfew is in effect indefinitely. Prim e M inister Yitzhak Sham ir arrived in Washington with w hat he said w ere new ideas for Mid-east peace talks. Pentagon chief to ask Soviets Also on Monday, another 150 Arab policemen in Gaza reduction in forces ■■ announced they would resign, joining 450 other officers in for possible II -. V jp 3 'i,;: the occupied territories who quit earlier, according to an WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Frank Arab reporter who watched m any turn in their uniforms. Carlucci was to ask his Soviet counterpart a t talks Israeli authorities acknowledged some police quit but beginning Tuesday in Sw itzerland w hether highly gave no figures. About 1,000 Arab police worked in the publicized agendas in Kremlin m ilitary doctrine mean occupied territories. reductions in Soviet forces. The resignations w ere ordered by the P alestine Carlucci, m eeting Tuesday through Thursday with Soviet Liberation Organization two days after the slaying of a Defense M inister Dm itri Yazov, will also discuss arm s Jericho policeman accused of collaborating with the control, human rights, the proposed Soviet withdrawal Israelis. from Afghanistan and such dangerous m ilitary situations “It is clear their resignations were not handed in freely, as a collision between UK. and Soviet warships in the but because they fear for their lives,” Gaza police Black Sea last month, a senior Pentagon official said com m ander Shimon Levy said on Israel radio. Carlucci has said he does not want the meeting to pre­ Judge refuses stay of execution em pt talks on rechtcing nuclear and conventional forces, but he does want to ask Yazov about the emerging Soviet for convict sentenced to chair doctrine of “reasonable sufficiency.” STARKE, F la. (AP) — Legal options dwindled Monday “We would like to get an idea of where they are going,” for convicted m urderer Willie Jasp er Darden, who was said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. scheduled to die in Florida’s electric chair Tuesday after “We will be asking them if this (new doctrine) is . . . surviving an unprecedented six death w arrants. truly a change in their policy and not just a public U.S. D istrict Judge William T. Hodges in Tam pa late recitation,” the official said. “What changes in Soviet Monday refused to grant a stay of execution to Darden, the equipment will we see? Will there be a shift in force focus of an international cam paign against capital structure?” punishm ent.. • .* > “ Over the years, we have seen quite a disparity The case im m ediately went to a federal appeals court in (between) their nuclear doctrine and what force structure Atlanta. Defense attorneys had already filed with the U.S. they have actually acquired,” the official said. ^ U.S. sends 100 troops to Panama as ‘prudent’ security measure WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon on Monday dispatched about 100 M arine and Air Force security personnel to Panam a in w hat it described as a “ prudent m easure” to help safeguard Am erican personnel and facilities there. Cmdr. Robert Prucha, a Pentagon spokesman, said a 60-man M arine security force - r including a six-man dog handling team — was flown to Panam a on Monday from Norfolk, Va. In addition, a 44-man Air Force m ilitary police unit was flown to the Central American nation from Shaw Air Force Base, S.C., Prucha said. “This is simply a prudent m easure to augm ent the security personnel who are already in place,” Prucha said. There are currently about 600 servicem en assign«*! to security duties in Panam a w ith the U.S. Southern Command, which is headquartered there, Prucha said. All told, there are about 10,000 Am erican troops in Panam a. Pentagon officials who asked not to be nam ed said the dispatch of the troops had been approved on Monday by Adm. William Crowe, the chairm an of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Reagan adm inistration has been using finsnriq) pressure in a bid to oust Panam anian strongm an Gen. Manuel A. Noriega “and we don’t w ant to be caught unprepared if he responds by trying to rabotage canni equipment or other facilities,” one official said. U .S. may not ask for extradition if Noriega flees to 3rd country WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reagan adm inistration hinted Monday that it m ay be reassessing its position on seeking the extradition of Panam anian strongm an Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega if he is forced to flee to A third country. ' M eanw hile, ad m in istratio n o fficials havê~B égun discussing economic steps the United States would take to aid Panam a’s recovery if Noriega departs the country. Both the White House and the State D epartm ent were unusually circum spect in their public comments on whether the adm inistration will follow through ‘with the drug trafficking indictm ents th at w ere handed down against Noriega last month by two federal grand juries in Florida. . . H E R E 'S T H E S P A R K Y O U 'V E B E E N LO O K IN G FO R Let Sparky tell you the time. Get your Sparky W all Clock at a new low price. A perfect gift or souvenir. You have to see them to believe how nice they really are; Done in your school colors of crimson body, white face, and easy to see gold num bers and pitch fork. RayKorte Chevrolet Everyone can use a Sparky Clock I Quartz movement ASU Six year warranty approvaci] M ade in U.S.A. 16" high 12" wide 1/2” deep A A battery not included Y ou c a n s a o a Sparky C lock a t th e S ta te P r e ss #19.95 SENIORSYOU C A N G E T FINANCED NOW ! FIRST TIME B U Y ER S P R O G R A M CASH FO R R EFER R ALS H B B m NO P R E S S U R E NO H A S S L E S R 4.00 S h ip p in g & h a n d lin g Total $23.95 ¥ o r credit card orders Card # and expiration date needed Your m oney back if not completely satisfied. W e have never had a Sparky returned. Pim a Print -W m r . -* KEITH JENKINS or RICHARD L U C A S C a ll N a m e ... MaHto A d d re ss R ay A rm stro n g & A sso c . 308 W . M a in , B o x 1093 Buona V ista , C o 81211 • C it y ....... Z ip , Card # . )a te B E T ’ H. 947-3535 ||p|| 7224 E .M C D O W E LL A T S C O T T S D A L E RD. MM Paoej Tuesday, March 15 1988 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 Stats Press, located In the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries not be taken over the phone. The for entries Is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Entries may be edited due to content or space. «M Lindsay Ctartca/Stua Press J e ff A n d erso n , a g ra d u a te In th e M usic B u ild in g . tu b a . A n d erso n p ra cticed M onday a ftern o o n •Women’s Studies Program meets today from noon to 1 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room. Psychologist Susan Schwartz will speak cm "Dream s in Everyday Life.” They w ill also meet today at 7:15 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. Dr. Patricia Cam pbell will speak on "Gender Values in Applications of the and Social Sciences: The Uses and Abuses of Educational Research and Technology.” •The Council ’88 meets today at 3 p.m. in BA 286. They welcome all business students. • A m e ric a n S o c ie t y of W om en Accountants meets today at 4 p.m. in MU 211. H a llie M o r r is ,. an investm ent counselor, w ill speak on "Talking Money.” •The Undergraduate Law Club meets today from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. in M U 215. Attorney. M ichael R ipp w ill d iscu ss corporate real estate and there w ill be registration for the March 26 practice LSAT. •Eating Disorder Support Group, a support group for people with anorexia and bulimia, meets tonight at 7 in the Student Health Center lobby. There is no cost. •Baptist Student Union meets tonight at 7 for. Bible study on “ Speaking the Word in Love” at the B.S.U. Center, 1322 S. M ill Ave. They also meet Thursday from noon to 1 p.m., at the B.S.U, Center for lunch and devotional. There w ill not be a charge. Oh Friday, they w ill have a “ Pig Out” party a t6 p.m. at the B.S.U. Center: There win not be a charge. • O vereaters A n o n y m o u s m e e ts W ednesday and Thursday at noon, upstairs in the MU. •Clrcie-K International meets tonight at 7 in MU 217. •Campus Alcoholics Anonymous meets Wednesday at noon in MU 209. They offer free help with alcohol and chemical dependencies. •Campus Aglow, an interdenominational group, meets Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •Circle for Research in Computational Linguistics meets Wednesday at 1:45 p.m. in ERC-490: Jonathan Slocum of Austin, T e x a s w ill s p e a k o n “ M a c h in e Translation.” ' •Ad Club meets Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the BAC lobby. They will distribute maps and form car pools for a tour of the Gannett outdoor production facilities. •ASU College Republicans m eets Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the M U Alum ni Lounge. They w ill elect officers for 1988-89. •American Marketing Association meets Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. in B A C 218 with guest speaker John Sing of International Business Machines Corp. •Graduate Women In Business meets Wednesday at 4:45 p.m. in B A C 226. Ross Reck, management consultant, coauthor of W in-W in N egotiations and former ASU professor of management, will speak on current issues in management. A reception w ill follow the presentation. •National Association of Accountants meets Wednesday at 4:45 p.m. in MU 222 with guest speaker.Debbie Powell. •American Humanlcs meets Wednesday at 5:40 p.m. in the MU Coconino Room. •Association for Computing Machinery meets Thursday at noon in ERC-393. They will discuss general business and elect a new'secretary.-. a&tsntfi 'vh*.,'.;A G R A N D O P E N IN G W E D N E S D A Y M A R C H 16th A Z ’S ONLY REAL PROGRESSIVE CLUB (W E D N E S D A Y ’S O N L Y ) uw der W A L K IN D A N Ç E Q Ù fe # jÈ MARGARITA’S A L L N IG H T a;.- : \ it.SO SHOOTEn-s *»M ght K H S ■m m Doors Open At 8:00 After Hours 1:00 a.m. till 3:00 *m (AFTER HOURS — 18 A Oldor) 019 E. APACHE BLVP TEMPE (NEXT TO HOLIDAY IHN) Stater o f I M P b c e D e m o c r a t s m a y r u n w it h G o r e a n d J a c k s o n in ’8 8 . . . SKH R EnW I Ed Schubert A sst Opinion Editor - ftwnoL& idNW RS. _ KNowhJ S I’ll m ake a wager: A1 Gore will be the next Democratic nominee for ¡resident. And Jesse Jackson will be his running m ate. Now, this assum es that the pattern established on Super Tuesday holds and the Democratic race rem ains a three-way contest between Gore, Jackson and Michael Dukakis. If so, each candidate will arrive in Atlanta with roughly a third of die delegates. Some log rolling will have to be done — and to say th at Jackson will be a “power broker” is, a t this point, an understatem ent. Jackson won’t be the nominee, but he’ll decide who the nominee will be. H ere’s the scenario: Jackson throws his support to Gore rgiving the Tennessee senator the nomination — and in return Gore gives Jackson the vice-presidential slot: A perfectly fa ir and sweet deal. But why should Jackson prefer Gore over Dukakis? A fter all, A1 Gore — referred to by some as “Sam Nunn with hair” —is easily the m ost conservative Democrat in the race. Jackson is the m ost liberal. Dukakis is somewhere in between, much closer to Jackson on many issues. But there m ay be a bond between Gore and Jackson th at is stronger than political ideology. As- the New Republic has noted — in the course of a ringing endorsem ent of Gore (M arch 7) — both Gore and Jackson share much of the sam e base of support. The Democratic Conference, an association of black elected officials based in Alabama, endorsed Jackson as their first choice for the nomination and Gore as their second. And throughout the South, Gore is the first choice of many black leaders over Jackson — even in Jackson’s home state of South Carolina. Also, there appears to be a personal bond between the two men. They seem to like each other, and that can be an im portant factor in political chem istry. Still, there are the problems of Jackson’s “radicalism ,” his “ irresponsibility” and his “ lack of experience” —■ complaints raised by otherwise sym pathetic liberals. These people are. probably m ore concerned about Jackson’s lade of experience than they are by his political philosophy. Not having held office, we can’t know if Jackson has the flexibility to tem per his ideology with realism . Is he . . .a n d th e WSAW*»M&lK»fc‘ RttiJflMfoÛOfc'rfÂHaf Every company has one. You know, the guy who has been with the firm forever, but always seems to get passed over for the big promotion. He is competent, but also a bit dull, and he lacks that intangible something that makes him executive m aterial. But he is loyal, and is with (he company for the duration. So eventually, whether through attrition of bis peers, well-placed flattery or sim ple endurance, he sometimes gains a leadership role. Occasionaly, the company feels that the guy has been around so long that they owe him a shot ait the top. That is how m ediocrity rises. And that is the problem the Republican P arty of America, Inc., now m ust face. The company’s chairm an of the board, Ronald Reagan, is taking his gold watch and retfring to] California, leaving mediocre George Bush, albeit fresh from a Super Tuesday victory of epic proportions, as the heir apparent. But while we m ust acknowledge (hat only the finger of God descending from the heavens to point directly a t Bob Dole could Tsr. pw ju st r esw æ s , known is'O » aiPROP ’ ®f His OPSVWWTlXJ^WVANnbHBK? « motnmch Took B o w urn*. Q E tt NJBm G O RZ. lNW flW , KHOWNTDWSAt**»* • m s tè t e 'O PV m slSN A M E. WÜ3V46CRK': 'WW&TWE AMP?' capable of compromise and accommodation? How well would be hold up under the conflicting pressures of elective office? As vice president, could he support the programs of a president less liberal than he? Many of us who were aghast a t Ronald Reagan’s victory in 1980 took solace, nevertheless, in the fact that he had served two term s as governor of California, and there displayed a genial ability to abandon his political agenda a t tim es when it was necessary to keep the State functioning. As president, fieagan has again and again dem onstrated this ability to • change and grow in office. By contrast, Arizona’s Evan Mecham, whose only preparation for the governorship was a two-year term in the state legislature 10 years ago, was a pig-in-the-poke. We didn’t know w hat we were getting because he didn’t have a political trade record — and the result has been disasterous. We have the sam e problem with Jackson. If elected president, he m ight prove a success — or an E v Mecham on a national scale. But the vice-presidency is a different m atter. If Jackson R e p u b lic a n s Darrin h osteller Opinion Editor 6 EN.JESSEJACKSON, BAIONEOFYOU-' f a c e prevent Bush from capturing the party crown, there are indications that the Bush ascension could cause Republican stock to plummet. Bush is the Republican’s W alter Mondale. Both had heavy debts they cashed in to insure their no m in a tio n — Bush from big business and Mondale from organized labor — and both were inevitable nominees, a B u s h w Republicans in November — showed Bush losing to Democrats Michael Dukakis, Albert Gore and even Richard G ep h ard t, who took a severe beating on Super Tuesday.. And Bush, already trailing two men who m ay be the Democratic nominee — and even one who alm ost certainly won't be (Gephardt)— in a key election state, is FÇPUBLICAMS WHOTCOK Gen. pot Robertso n , MME* VOLUNTEERS OkutD’o® sw aw sw jr » ms j# o » « moons. RMMMsaM'iWEYaubK t______p u err iQ w lK L V W fMWMtS'QtP GEHGeoegeB M p OU® '0U> V**Pl" 5* WS APORMGTltoOK. JhlCANgOCf: ‘ÔQUttMNWk'Wtf'-ttoCHECf'toU! despite initial challenges. But winning a partisan castle does not win the war, and like Mondale, Bush is doomed in the general election. A recent Los Angeles Tim es poll of California voters — a state crucial to the ' s s w r * K m tó o ìf '•i tw tr °*« of *)u g u rftu O n q il m e ^ iR ! ' G diO A R fH A R C l^O L O . REVOU)KTBERS,»»CWNTOHIS AP0RM6KQXKN5'aPNBM RW^CK^tBCSTteBWIBOS? were elected vice-president and proved inept, he would be quietly dropped from the Dem ocratic ticket a t the next convention. If, on the other hand, he Were to serve successfully for four to eight years, he would be in a superb position to become our first Made president. True, there is an elem ent of risk in placing a man as inexperienced as Jackson a heartbeat Away from the presidency. But it is sometimes necessary to take such risks — the alternative could be worse. If Jackson does as well in future prim aries as he has done thus far, he will have earned the den-presidential nomination. If it is denied him , it would not only be b la d e who would fe d disowned and betrayed by the Democratic party.. One final prediction: If the Dem ocrats do nominate GoreJackson, and the Republicans nom inate The G reat Wimp (as they seem hell-bent on doing), then the Dem ocrats will win in ’88. Jesse Jackson will be vice-president of the United States, and the days of the White; House as a “ « b ite m ales’ only d u b ” will be vanished forever. d e a d ly 1ST. I S« B /W 6EU01 . VbtüWTEERS, V M M I A J £ £ i « S » ' V l LU C TWKFWBff’ , WHBWftNS I TROOPS iflU tfeG C tt: vulnerable to attacks on an issue that hasn’t yet taken center stage in the presidential race: the Iran-contra debacle. With indictments over the affair set to come down within the next few months, Democrats will have a fresh gun to aim at h a c k in g Bush. And while fellow Republicans have b ea t reluctant to press the edgy vice president on the m atter, his Democratic opponent won’t hesitate to fire away in search of an explanation th at Bush may or m ay not have to offer for Ms involvment in the arm s sales fiasco. Add that to Bush’s basic lack of charism a and his uncanny ability to snatch a measure of defeat from the jaw s of victory (rem em ber the comment about “kicking a little ass” following his debate with G eraldine F erarro in 1984, wMch he otherwise dom inated?), and you have a recipe for one country club Republican who is destined to be a bridesm aid y et again. Bush has b eat a good soldier; and he has worked hard as a , m em ber of the party faithful for years»#A sign supposedly hanging in h is office sum s up his philosophy: *r ; Press on. Nothing ip the world can take the place o f persistence. Talent will not: nothing is m ore common than unsuccessful m en w ith ta le n t. G enius w ill not: unrewarded genius is alm ost a proverb. Education atone will not: the world is full of ed u ca ted d ere lic ts. P e rsiste n c e and determination alone are omnipotent. Well, maybe not omnipotent. P ersistence an d old political IQU’s collected over years in public life will be enough to c a p tu re th e R ep u b lican nomination for Bush. But they aren’t likely to take him any farther than that. q u o ta b le “ W hat Is p o litics b ut persuading the p u b lic to vote fo r this said support th at an d endure these for h ie prom ise o f those? Gilbert Hlghe State Pics» S B .5. Tuesday, March 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 The Generation of Swine control the Fourth Estate Hunter S. Thompson North American Syndicate DEAR WILL: Here is an idea: We should buy the New York Post. Those pigs, Murdock and Kalikow, have already devalued it by $30 million, and if Kalikow now tries to kill the paper and sell the building as just another real estate property in lower NYC, we can guarahtee him that his nam e will stbik in history and his children will wallow in sham e and be treated in school the sam e way Evan Mecham’s children were treated during his tim e of ugliness and relentless hum iliation in the national press which would, of course, be compound«! by a factor of nine in the case of a shyster who bought and sold the nation’s oldest newspaper (founded by Alexander Hamilton) to some tugboat captain from Staten Island who will tow it off on a garbage scow and dump it somewhere in the south . . . Like maybe a huge black hole in the Virgin Passage (actually, in the Puerto Rican Trench a t a point ju st north of Hispaniola — 8,648 m eters; deepest point in the Atlantic Ocean), which was once called “The Milwaukee Deep,” and the dock ra ts looking for work in St. Thomas always said it was 45,000 feet d eep . -Jw ho knows?" Anyway, itis plenty deep enough to bury a newspaper. Look what they did just to polish the Statue of Liberty, which is really just a big nouveau French gim crack compared to the New York Post, which is the oldest living monument to the F irst Amendment, and Kalikow plans to sell it for ju st about what it would cost him to buy a mid-size town house in Tokyo. If the m edia is so goddamn POWERFUL, like they say, how is it that we can’t keep these greedheads from buying us and selling us like dumb anim als? In fact, we represent one of the most consistently honorable professions in the history of modern man. Hell, a t least we can claim to stand few Truth . . . What other profession dares to claim th at as a prim ary raison d ’etre? Lawyers? Doctors? P riests? Stockbrokers? Senators? Mike Ditka? George Bush? 7 •j No, Will, we are alone on this end of the seesaw and I don’t know about.you, but personally I can’t feel real sm art when I’m sitting high up in the a ir and looking straight down th at long green board a t a gang of Dumb People who are sitting down there with their Gucci-wrapped feet on the ground. Yeah, th at’s how the seesaws work: And if Dumb is Heavy and Sm art is Light, this is truly a Generation of Swine . . . The exact reversal, for instance, of the balance that existed in 1776, or even 1960. If we can bring down crooked governments and crush Bad Guys aU over the world and run monstrous crooks like Nixon & M arcos & Papa Doc & Boss Tweed & Idi Amin & that Nazi bastard who used to run the U.N. & now runs J Austria, and if we can beat Evan Mecham and J . E dgar Hoover and m ake a worldwide legend of M artin Luther King and work consistently for things & ends & notions & causes like trailing the whole Israeli-PLO w ar around in the eyes of the world, simply by putting it on TV and honoring lonely bastards like Loren Jenkins with a Pulitzer Prize because he told us the tru th about Israeli brutality a long tim e ago . . . and if we can m ake Woodward & Bernstein national heroes instead of the yo-yos and liars the president & the White House & and all those dumb bastards down there on the other end of the seesaw said they w e re .. . If we can do all these things, and even if public-opinion polls call us m ore right than wrong, why are we constantly a t the financial m ercy of the sam e crooks and thieves and shysters and low-rent whitetrash hustlers that we assign the best and brightest among us to expose for the swine they are? Anyway, I think we should buy the Post . . . As a m atter of fact I am going to send Kalikow a telegram today, offering to buy it im mediately for $1 million m ore than he paid for it. I will tell him I represent a consortium of powerful journalists who can turn him into a national m onster in the history books» worse than Charles Manson or even F atty Arbuckle. I won’t mention any nam es except mine and Bill Kennedy’s and maybe yours and Ja n n ’s and Nicholson’s and Arm and Hammer’s and George Plim pton’s in my initial telegram /offer . . . but I will sure as hell get it in the big-time gossip columns & on CNN & in the Boston Globe, and-1 will fram e it in language so elegant & so noble that you will have a hard tim e dism issing it or denying it when the N ew York Times calls. If the Post is worth what Kalikow is paying for it, it will be w rath that (on the real estate m arket) two years from now, or even five. All we have to do is sham e Kalikow into selling it to us for a sm all profit that we will allow him to claim as a huge profit, so his peers can adm ire him for his preterhum an greed, and the rest of the world (and history) can adm ire him for the lOb-foot-tall bronze statue of him with the SWORD OF TRUTH in his hand that we will erect to him on a pedestal in a fine little green park that we will create in front of the Post Building even if we have to rip a chunk out of that ugly lobby. He will go for it, I think. He is rich & he doesn’t need the money. And he doesn’t need his nam e tarred & feathered in history as one of the worst scum bags of all tim es — along with Spiro Agnew & Ivan Boesky & the D irty Little Coward Who Shot Mr. Howard & William Zan Zinger, th at wretched pig from the E astern Shore of M aryland who beat H attie Carol to death with a cane. We don’t need this paper, we ju st w ant it. We need a place to relax and m ingle with our own kind. This lam e notion that journalism can’t m ake money is absurd on its face. We know better. Our riches will flow like heavyweight motorcycle grease. Sic Temper Tyrannis. S T A T S P R E S S KdW: 965-229? fiùf&m M m tih Q9 65-7572 CbMigcd AAwttowg.- 965-673 n a t io n w id e u i/ b n c e n t e r ' " " " J j5 f o r EYEGLASSES Eyeglasses* 3 D ay S ervice Most Prescriptions * ? ,. 1 and co n tacts SAVE ON RAYBÀN SUNGLASSES AT DISCOUNT PRICES **New99 Make Your Brown Eyes Blue . *159 P l u s Y our Choice O n e P air C lear C o n ta c ts O r E y eg la sses 9 9 * Soft Contacts* Sam e D ay S ervice M ost Prescriptions FREE* 100% refund o n con tact len ses if n ot co m p letely satisfied w ith in 30 days. * Specialty len ses n o t inclu d ed . *Some restrictions apply. EYEGLASSES EYEGLASSES »**«•«***•**»*»»»»•*•*•**«* T w o P air $ 3 9 .9 9 . Single visiononly. '* „ IHMBOCALS.»«»»•«*«.»«•.«••»»•««»••»«»** Tw u Pnlr $ / 9»99 DAILY WEAR CONTACTS f t txLASSE8............................. B oth P air 6 3 9 .9 9 EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS & GLASSES..............................B oth Paiir $ 5 9 .9 9 EYE EXAJME includesglaucomat e s t . $ 1 S . 0 0 Contact tens fitting and follow-up ente additional. Outside Reglas» presci^tioos welcome. O ther options available at an additional charge. Dr. Mark A. H cchtm an Dr. Neal A. W einstein f t Assoc. Licensed docto rs o f optom etry. S IX C O N V E N IEN T VALLEY L O C A T IO N S PARA NSE VAJLLEY/SCOITSDALE 3241 & Shea Btvd. Ama from Weia Onjn Cerreti 9 9 4 -M 9 SO FT C O N TA C TS* DALLY WEAR scornateli,co4............... T w o P air $ 3 9 .9 9 EXTENDED WHB&R T wo P air $ 5 9 .9 9 DAILY WXAR COCOREO SOFT. T w o P air 6 7 9 .9 9 ' ii '.v*” , » DAILY SOFT CONTACTS ' Ù ¡ ¡S FOR ASTIGMATISM .......... T w o P air 6 1 9 9 .9 9 w m U tm m ‘ »ft«» gm COLORED SOFT EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS «.«■«•*.«.ci*«........... T w o P a ir 6 9 9 .9 9 Most contact prescriptions available the same day. Outsidecontactteasprescriptionswelcomewithcornealmeasurements(K-readlng$} O ther brands available at an additional charge. Open Monday-Saturday PHX/SCOTTSDALE 3620 E. Thomas Rd. PHOENIX 5130 N. 19th Aw. MESA GLENDALE 437 & Gilbert Rd. 5030 W. Peoria #103 Acrossfrom Target in Sunshine Square One Mock north of CameUmch Kd Southeast co rn er c f One block test of 51st B roadw ay & G ilbert R d 956-2012 2 4 2 -5 2 9 2 844-7096 987-1847 m ove PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona’s long w ait for a National Football League franchise may finally be rewarded Tuesday when team owners vote on the St. Louis Cardinals’ proposed move to the Phoenix area. NFL Commissioner P ete Rozelle said a t a new s c o n fe re n c e M onday th a t th e C ardinals’ situation is a t the top of Tuesday’s agenda at the league meetings being held a t The Arizona Biltm ore resort hotel. “This week, we’re going to be deciding on a num ber of issues, from rule changes to the C ardinals’ move to Phoenix. We intend to rule on the C ardinals’ situation in tomorrow m orning’s m eeting,” Rozelle said. A local group from St. Louis called Civic Progess is scheduled to make a last-m inute plea to the NFL owners to keep the team in St. Louis, where it has played for the past 30 years. i '-* C ardinals owner W illiam V . Bidwill informed the league on Jan. 15 that he was relocating his club to play at ASU’s 70,000-seat Sun Devil Stadium in suburban Tempe starting next season. Bidwill said ' he is' displeased with 55,000-seat Busch Stadium — one of the sm allest in the league — and Arizona offered better financial opportunities. The opposition group claim s Bidwill did not follow proper procedures in his decision to leave town. Rozelle said the group would m ake its proposal a t 10 a.m . Tuesday “ami then Mr. Bidwill will make his presentation: Then, there will be extensive discussion. I’m not saying it will all be completed tomorrow. We wtil sta rt on it, thoi^h. It’s possible we will have a vote and an announcement by the mid-day break.” Bidwill needs a two-thirds m ajority vote from the NFL’s 28 owners to get his planned move approved. “I need 21 ‘yes’ votes,” Bidwill said. “Make that 20 since I am one of the owners and you already know how I’m going to vote.” Most of the other owners reportedly favor Bidwill’s plan, and som e say the vote could even be unanimous. ‘ “ I assum e he’s talked to some of them ,” Rozelle told reporters. “I haven’t taken a straw vote of the owners a t all. I know what Cardinals officials seemed certain the move would be approved. “ We felt for some time that this would not be a problem,” said Thomas Guilfoil, the team ’s generàl counsel. “ I’ve always thought the owners know the situation. I have ho reason to believe there will be any opposition.” Another group — Arizona NFL Expansion Ltd. — has invested some $2 million and eight years trying to get a team here themselves. The group is headed by former American Football League Commissioner Joe Foss, Hall of Fam e quarterback Bart S tarr and one-timeU.S. Olympic Committee exécutive John Colbrunn. Colbrunn said his group will wait until the voté is taken before deciding to disband or {dan strategy to land an expansion team in another city like Baltimore or Oakland, Calif. If the move is approved, Bidwill may be forced to pay indemnity —the bffset cost the league might charge him for taking away a prim e expansion territory. Figures bandied aboutTange from $1 million to $30 million. F orm er A rizona H o u se M ajority L eader Burton B arr h o ld s u p a n A rizon a C ard in als sw ea tsh irt a t a ca m p u s m e etin g a b o u t th e C ard in als’ m o v e earlier th is se m e ste r . -ttY * t d i ! J GRAND OPENING> y KARATE-MART l y (FORMERLY FIGHTING ARTS UNLIMITED) £ y UP TO 20% OFF ON SELECTED ITEMS! I y A ,> V ^ «UNIFORMS v, & KARATE JU DO «W EAPONS «TRAINING & PROTECTIVE £ £ f V y ‘ r EQUIPM ENT «NINJA EQUIPM ENT «b o o k s & m a g a z i n e s «VIDEOS y * y 831 S. RURAL RD. , y in stcofiNtROfmm.s UNtvtssnynexttobojo's D R Y C L E A N IN G FO R S T U D E N T S WITH ASU I D, r > r r 9 6 £ - 2 2 j § y £ o n x ' r« i,vo MON.-SAT. r OUh 'D //O 10 A.M.-eip.M. M - t t y x M t v 4 0 J HOWS: GOOD THROUGH S. M 1 L L A V E I I I 3-3I-M $ 2 . 0 0 O F F A N Y LA R G E PIZZA , (with this coupon) * t 'At Charbroiler BBQ Chicken Sandwich™ Get One Free. Charbroiler BBO Chicken Sandwich All natural breast of chicken. Present this coupon when you purchase any Charbroiler BBQ Chicken Sandw ich5“ and receive p second Charbroiler B B Q Chicken Sandwich5“ of equal or leaser value free. Offer valid through March 3 1 ,1 9 8 3 at th e University and Rural location. One coupon per cum mer per visit One discount par coupon. NotVMManyotherofferordteoount _ M l) O C a il Karcher Enterprises Inc. 1087 Charbroiler Chicken Club. All natural breast of chicken. At Carl’s Jt we take tender natural breasts of chicken withoutthe skin, chaibroil them, put them on delicious honey wheat buns and aeate two great chicken sandwiches. The Charbroiler Chicken Club with bacon, swiss cheese and sprouts. And our original Charbroiler BBQChicken Sandwich withCaiis own hickory barbecue sauce. C a r l ’s J r . A J fc flr w X T -t/ ■ JU b ^ ^ N J S " Buy One Charbroiler Chicken Club Sandwich™ Get One Free. Present this coupon when you purchase any Charbroiler Chicken Club Sandwich^“ and receive a second Charbroiler Chicken Club Sandw ich™ of equal or lesser value free. OHpr valid through March 31, iM l at the University and Rural location. One coupon per cuetomar per visit. One discount per coupon. • Notvalidwithanyotherotterordiscoent. O C «Il Kirchsr Entw priies Inc. IM 7 a ___ / \ | J . . a.- ■ VOf | f | S a I P / A , \ lucsoay, M aten i s , ly a a Regents appoint new English department chair B y SCOTT LUCK S ta te P re ss TUCSON — The Arizona Board of Regents has approved the appointment of Gretchen B ataille as the new chair of the ASU English Departm ent. Bataille, who is now the acting associate dean of instruction a t California Polytechnic University in Pomona, Calif., will replace current chair Nick Salerno Aug. 1. B ataille will be paid $60,000 a year. Salerno was unavailable for comment. The regents m et Friday a t the UofA. B ataille earned her doctorate degree from Drake University and was a professor a t Iowa State University before taking the California job. “ I’m really very pleased about the appointment, and I’m looking forward to arriving and getting to work,” B ataille said in a telephone interview Monday. She said she will have to become m ore acquainted with the departm ent before she form ulates any personal goals. “My agenda is going to bo determ ined by the needs of the departm ent and what direction the departm ent intends to go,” B ataille said. Samuel K irkpatrick, dean of the College of lib e ra l Arts and Sciences, said B ataille has had “ considerable adm inistrative success,” in addition to being one of the United S tates’ leading scholars in Native American literature. ' B ataille said ASU’s location neac several Indian cultures s o re d as an extra enticem ent to co n e to campus. K irkpatrick said, “She has strong support for heightening the visibility of the English D epartm ent and for building on our current strengths in instruction and scholarly activity.” The English D epartm ent has a staff of 160, including 55 ftdltim e faculty. B ataille served as coordinator for undergraduate studies a t Iowa State as well as chairing the Iowa State Humanities Council and the Iowa Civil Rights Commission. In addition, she edits the journals Explorations in Ethnic Studies and Journal o f the N ational Association fo r Ethnic Studies. In other action the regents: •Gave conceptual approval fpr a $15 million parking garage construction project that would add approxim ately 3,100 parking spaces to ASU’s current total of 15,060. •Approved the initiation of plans, for a m usic building addition. ASU President J . Russell Nelson said the addition originally had been planned for completion 14 years ago, but other University priorities superceded the expansion. “The proposal here then is to carry out something we had expected m any years ago,” Nelson said. “This project has now risen to the point w here it should proceed.” As a side note, the regents agreed Friday’s m eeting was th eir briefest in recent history. The m eeting had been moved to the UofA from ASU so m em bers could attend the Pac-10 Conference basketball tournam ent that was simultaneously occurring a t the Tucson campus. The UofA won the tournam ent. Regent President Donald Shropshire jokingly suggested the appearance of acting Gov. Rose Mofford, who was attending her first regent m eeting as ex-officio m ember, was responsible far the succintness. Mofford replied, “ I wish I had the sam e effect on the state Legislature.” ASU holds Student S ervices ASU students, faculty invited dedication ceremony today* to attend budget discussion ASU officials will hold a day of dedication activities for the new $9.5 million Student Services Budding today beginning a t 10:30 a.m . All students, faculty and staff are invited to attend the activities, which w ill last until 12:15 p.m. ASU officials will dedicate the building, located east of Gammage Center, a t 11:15 a.m . Students from the ASU jazz program will provide live m usic and th e D evil’s Advocates will lead tours of the building. There will be an open house and reception for Valley educators in the afternoon, followed by an invitation-only dinner in the evening. The th ree -sto ry , 100,000-square-foot budding opened in December. The budding h o u ses R e sid e n c e L ife , R e g is tra r, U ndergraduate Admissions, Student life , Student Financial Assistance, Counseling an d C o n su lta tio n , C a re e r S erv ice s, Educational Development, Educational Support Program , M inority Assistance Program , Student Inform ation Systems, S tu d en t F ee P ay m en t, Student. Aid Disbursement, Cashier ami Faculty Athletic Representative. ASU students, faculty and staff are invited to participate in a discussion of the University’s budget from 9 a.m . to noon Wednesday in the MU Arizona Room. The presentation has been developed prim arily for University adm inistrators, m anagers and supervisors, but all m em bers of the campus community are welcome to attend. Several ASU adm inistrators will give presentations, including F rank Sackton, Display Advertising: 965-7572 Classified Advertising: 965-6751 • S a m e D a y S e r v ic e • L a se r P rin tin g • L a y o u t a n d D e sig n o ff > •P r o fe ssio n a l W ritin g a n d C o n su lta tio n •C lo se to A S U (J u st E. o f R u ral) •FULL OR PART TIME JOBS •FLEXIBLE HOURS & PERSONALIZED TRAINING •START ANY DAY OR EVENING •TERMS - COED COURSES •CALL FOR COURSE DESCRIPTION 9 5 7 -3 7 7 0 1523 East A pache, Tem pe WOMEN ACCOUNTANTS STUDENT CHAPTER attend generat m eeting w ith gu^ W speaker Investment Counselor 921-1129 TODAY, March 15 1 0 0 0 E. A p a c h e , S u it e 106 Tem pe 4 p.m., Yuma Room, MU EARN EXTRA M O N E Y TELEVISION df HALLIE MORRIS VALLEYWIDE JOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE NATIONWIDE AS SEEM ON Interested parties m ay reserve a seat by calling the training section of the personnel departm ent a t 965-4751. Snodai. State Press». Basement Matthews Center RESUM ES TEACHING BARTENDERS SINCE 1933 T opics w ill in clu d e c u rre n t fisca l conditions in Arizona; the 1967-68 budget reductions; budget prospects for 1968-89; and the im pact of strategic p la n n in g on the budget process. Send a Personal M to someone 10% A m e r ic a n B a r te n d e r s S c h o o l chair of the University Budget Council; D arrell Ohlhauser and Jim Sliwicki of the University Budget Office; and Lowell C rary of the Vice President lor Student Affairs Office. B y SCOTT LUCK S ta te P r e s s Professional Dress Go-sponsored by ASASU '• • • • • • • SiWÊS •'-:'•r< » '*-•#« U T T E lg • • • ; •. • ■K*--' %- : • 01 Your Cam pus Hair Care Center 709 S. F o rest A ve.. T em p e In tro d u cin g N ails b y K e lly 9 6 8 -5 9 4 6 W ith T h is A d $5 °° OFF W ith P a rtic ip a tin g S ty lis ts R E G U L A R P R IC E S •S h am p o o • P re c is io n C u t • C o n d itio n • B lo w D r y MEN *14 • WOMEN *16 OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY TUES., WED. & THURS. TILL 9 P.M. K*•'*V •' ■ S’*:-"• pk- • • • » • • • ••• • • • e *5.*T • ■* •. • **■ M ite M É è ite è te te • • • • • • • kMtete State Pres« Workshop helps re-entry students adjust to college By KELLY ARNOLD C on tribu tin g w riter College re-entry students worried about how to recapture old study habits, refigure finances and examine career options can attend ASU’s sixth annual adult re-entry workshop March 26. The workshop, titled “A Chance for Change: A Return to Education,” will be from 8 a.m . to 2:45 p.m . in the MU. The $10 fee includes a luncheon. The featured speaker will be Dr. Christine W ilkinson, assistan t vice president of s tu d e n t a f f a i r s a n d d i r e c t o r o f undergraduate adm issions. There also will be inform ation on adm issions, academ ic advisem ent and specialized discussions. The workshop is sponsored by the undergraduate adm issions office and the Association of Women’s Active R eturn to Education, a student organization offering leadership and scholarship development. M arilyn M ason, coordinator of the workshop, said encouraging adults to m ake a com m itm ent to academ ics is the purpose of the workshop. She is an inform ation specialist in undergraduate adm issions, as well as adviser to AWARE. . T he m orning sessio n w ill include discussions about adm issions, financial assistance and career options, followed by academ ic advising w ith individual colleges. Specialized workshops slated for the afternoon will focus on re-entry resources, classroom success, academ ic support services and alumni advice. Mason said the expected enrollment will be about 160 people, and she encourages early registration. Reservations can be m ade by calling 965-2622. Mason said most of the adults who come to the workshop have had some previous college experience, but a few have never been to college. - .. “They’re coming back to finish a degree that they started some tim e ago or to enroll in another program ,” she said. Mason said the goal of the program is to help students get the information they need about adm inistration processes and other services available to them. “There is a national trend of adults going bade to school,” she said. “This is one way we can help th at population get started .” Julie Ford, an education m ajor, said she had been out of college for m ore than 20 y ea rs before atten d in g th e re-en try workshop last year. “ I was real apprehensive about going back to school, and the workshop and people I m et who answered my questions m ade the transition much easier,” Ford said, “i le a rn e d a lo t of in te re s tin g , good inform ation.” '■ jt& .jt-- ■..■ As a m em ber of the re-entry student panel this year, Ford said the panel will discuss the final workshop topic, “How it really is” when going back to school. Firm establishes sch o la rsh ip program in C o lleg e of Law By KRISTI ELLIS State P iets A new scholarship program has been established in the College of Law by the Phoenix law firm of Jones, Skelton & Hochuli to provide financial aid to students working in the college’s Law Clinic. Each year, two third-year law students working in the c lin ic will receive one-sem ester tuition waivers. The re cip ien ts of th is y e a r’s Jo n es, Skelton & H ochuli Scholarship are Bonnie Chevelle and Cindra White. White started working in the clinic in January 1987 and has been there for three sem esters. She has worked on a divorce case and is currently working on a year-long civil rights case. “ i t ’s difficult to work a lot when you’re in the law school, and this scholarship eases that pressure. It also helps me fin a n c ia lly and encourages m e to stay in the clinic, which is a valuable experience,” White said. The Law Clinic serves as a sm all law firm where students in their second and third years of law school can gain practical experience in lawyering. Under the supervision of faculty, the students handle a variety of actual cases, from civil to crim inal, often representing clients in open court. K ristine Smith, assistant dean of the Law college, said, “This scholarship program encourages them (students) to become m ore active in the clinic. If they are second-year students and have the possibility of getting a scholarship, they m ay take a more active interest in the clinic.” Third-year students working in the clinic are selected on the basis of outstanding perform ance in clinical and trial practice during their second year. Students are eligible to enroll ip the clinic after 1% years of law school. There will be a reception a t the home of Dean P aul Bender on M arch 23 to honor the students and representatives of the Jones, Skelton & Hochuli firm . 1 Tuesdays i R E T R O S P E C T I L A B and F R A M E S E R V IC E S | B/W Processing — N IELSEN FR A M ES — M ats [ Ragboard — Windows Cut 1096 OFF [with conxm] 1/3 lb . B U R G E R F r ie s 0^ D ra ft W INNER EVERY 1987 READERS PO “The Best Ice Cream in Tucson WITH THIS COUPON Good for any " ir V "SMASH-IN" to* cream to san d w ich es Matting snd Framing w/Nielson Frames 4 1 4 S . M ill A ve j 414 S. Mill #212 • 829-8565 I (A b ove the Sp a gh e tti C o .] Woodshed II Limit: 1 custom er D obson & U n iversity nD E M w t* C I T I or sundae ailpmsurrtlw. t i 1 :3 0 am Fri & S at percoupon Expires 3 -2 2 -8 8 N O W TH RO UGH SU N D A Y 1 R A Y B A N ® S A L E - S A V E U P T O 50% «8® PHOENIX’S FINEST SELECTION OF RAYBAN SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB • Choose from the Wayfarer,Metals, StreetNeats, Cats Sport Series, Expressions and more. . . • 100%Ultraviolet protection. • Optical quality glass lenses, • Great for sports, biking, driving, GREAT SERVICE ft LOW PRICES M AK E PACIFIC EYES & T ’S A TERRIFIC STORE! Tow er Plaza 38th St & Thomas ic £ y o s & T s 244-9119 W estrldge M all Chrfatow n M all 19th Ave. & Bethany Home % 433-2949 C o rn ersto n e C en ter 75th Ave. & Thomas Tempe: 725 S. Rural Rd. 873-2607 966-5560 Tuesday, March 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 Spring Break Wrap-up — South o f the Border Photos by Sundi Kjenstad :«ei .... V*'III II Mill C lo ck w ise from to p : D uring a h a zy M arch d a y , a g ro u p o f M exican lo c a le a s s is t a to u r ist a s h e la n d s M e p a ra -sa il n ear th e El C id H otel In “ rrrttTin; M arta S a n ­ c h e z , a y o u n g m ex lca n glri g r ip s her b ab y d o lt w h ile w a n d erin g M o ee to th e co u n try ’s border; a w om an a lts o n a b u sy s tr e e t w ith h er s o n a n d a s k s fo r m o n ey from pe e e ers-b y; a n o th er tou rtet ta k e e tim e o u t t o e n jo y e g o o d b o o k w h ile rela x in g u n d er a stra w h u t o n a M azatlan b e a c h . ■u'Tjgi'’ir■'mariit'wmw?i»tgia>M iN. ^ Tempe 96S-‘ P 424 W. Broac A pache # 9 0 0 For Summer (O w i room ) CO M M O N S $ 7 0 0 F o r Summer (Shared room ) le a se le n g th 5/29-8/6 D e p o s it s a r e n o w b e in g a c c e p t e d ($175*00 D e p o sit) H urry and reserve your space now Accepting applicationsfo r tbs fa ll!! * 1215 B. L a m o n 968-6437 * ( ‘ Some lim its apply) O u fs ld e A 2 : T O B E -C O B U R N S C H O O L F O R F A S H IO N C A R E E R S N EW Y O R K C IT Y Take a giant step toward a career in the fashion industry! Study, in the nation s fashion ce n te r... New York City! For 50 years, graduates of Tbbe'-Cobum School have been industry lead ers... a s buyers, stylists, m an agers, ed ito rs. Jo in our corp s of distinguished alumni. College g raduates an d tran sfer stud en ts fnay qualify lor the A ssociate D egree in'just one year Financial aid available Classes start in July. Septem ber and January Tobé-Coburn School. Box 'f l f t 1^800-247-6141 « A p ach e NAME STREET CITY, PHONE 1 ■HS GRAD DATE . ÇÔ tLEG C 686 Broadway. New York. NY 10012 (212) 460-9600 State Pro» Page 15 Tuesday, March .íS , 1983 Extrem ely rare d isease afflicts Navajo infant TUCSON ( A P ) N a v a j o baby Barton Jam es is earning a place in m edical history. He is believed to be the only baby ever afflicted with a disease so ra re it is known to have occurred only in five or six others — all of them Navajo. The disease, known as Navajo neuropathy, gradually destroys nerves and muscles, paralyzing and eventually taking the lives of its v ictim s.. But Barton’s story also is one of hope. After 13 months in hospitals, the 15-month-old baby soon will move into a private home « h ere his m other will join a team of round-the-clock nurses to help with his care. Barton’s care will be covered under what m ay be an unprecedented agreem ent among federal, state and private health-care providers. Ron B arber, a local program m anager for the Departm ent of Economic Security, sums up the agencies’ commitment: “Even if Barton does not live a long life, I believe that every day we’re trying to give him, we’re giving him as much quality of life as he can have.’* Barton’s strange m edical journey began Jan. 25, 1987, when he was 2 months old. The norm al, healthy baby had been sick with a cold. When he began having trouble breathing, his m other took him to the Gallup N.M. Indian Medical Center, 40 miles east of their home on the Navajo Reservation in northern Arizona. Barton was adm itted to the hospital, where his condition worsened. At one point, he suddenly stopped breathing. Doctors placed him on a ventilator and prepared to transfer him to a larger hospital. The pediatric intensive-care beds in Albuquerque were full. So on Jan. 29, Barton was flown to University Medical Center in Tucson. Barton was placed in the center’s pediatric intensive-care unit, where he continued on the ventilator, unable to breathe on his own. He began haying seizures — the result, doctors thought, of the few moments he went without oxygen. He was pBGsed on anti-seizure medication while doctors began searching for a diagnosis. It would elude them for months. By the end of Barton’s first month a t the center, his breathing difficulty had worsened to the point where he could not come off the ventilator. About that tim e, he started showing early signs of paralysis in his arm s and legs. In May, doctors decided to move Barton to Tucson Medical Center’s pediatric special care unit, a facility m ore geared toward long-term care. In July, doctors perform ed the first of three biopsies on nerve and m uscle tissue taken from Barton’s legs. The diagnosis was that of an “unusual neuropathy,” or nerve disease. Four months later, the diagnosis was certain: acrom utilating, paralyzing neuropathy —nicknamed Navajo neuropathy. The disease is so ra re that nothing has been w ritten on it since 1976. It is believed to be genetic in origin, since it has been documented only in five or six Navajo children and adults — never in a baby. Barton is the first known case in his family. His older brother TeeJay, alm ost 3, is as healthy as Barton,used to be. B arton’s legs are paralyzed and he has little movement left in his arm s. He is fed through a tube in his stomach. Doctors now say he will never come off the ventilator. His m edical care is fairly straightforw ard, says his prim ary physician, Dr. Richard Lemen, a lung specialist. B arton gets daily doses of vitam ins, anti-seizure m edication and antibiotics to fight recurrent kidney infections. Despite his physical problems, Barton rem ains bright and cheerful. He turns his head to see who’s near and sm iles readily evenfor strangers, l i e ventilator tube in his throat makes learning to talk impossible. He has learned to communicate anyway, by spitting and making little popping sounds with his tongue. He has soft toys to cuddle, and a colorful kite hangs over his bed. He loves to watch Sesame Street. His favorite music is the Chipmunks’ punk rock album. And he gets constant attention from Judy Schrank and other nurses in the special care unit. “You get real attached,” Ms. Schrank said one morning last week. Taking Barton’s hand in hers, she gave him a big kiss on the cheek, then gently began flexing his arm back and forth. Exercises are im portant, she said. Doctors and others involved with Barton’s care consider him a trailblazer. Barton’s situation has dem onstrated what agency heads adm it is a'com plete gap in financial program s for the chronically ill in Arizona, particularly chronically ill children. Barton’s care — currently estim ated to cost about $30,000 a month — has been covered by the federal Indian Health Service and the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System’s Pim a Health Plan. The Indian Health Service poured nearly $77,000 into Barton’s hospitalizations last year, said Dr. Tim Fleming, director of the Gallup Indian Medical Center in New Mexico. The agency, which considers itself a payor of last resort, quit paying after about six weeks, when AHCCCS agreed to take over the costs. AHCCCS stopped paying in midFebruary, citing restrictions limiting its services to acute, short-term care. UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN ADMINISTRATION: COURTS, LEGISLATURE, FEDERAL, STATE, ' LOCAL GOVERNMENTS T h e U n iv ersity o f Sou th ern C aliforn ia S c h o o l o f P u b lic A dm inistra­ tion, o ffer s a program lea d in g to a M aster in P u b lic A dm inistration degree in clu d in g su ch sp ecia liza tio n s a s J u d icia l A dm inistration, P u b lic F in a n cia l M anagem ent, H ealth S e r v ic es A dm inistration, A p p lied B eh avioral S c ie n c e , P u b lic P o licy and Internation al P u b lic cu u A dm inistration. FREE TACOS 10 P.M TILL ? D r. D o n a ld P u ller, D irecto r o f the Internation al P u b lic A d m in istration C enter, w ill be on cam pua M arch 2 1 , .. 1 9 8 8 , to sp ea k w ith in terested stu d en ts. C ontact P la cem en t O ffic e a t 9 6 5 -2 3 3 0 . • MARGARITAS « • SHOTS OF GOLD * S Í .5 0 10 P.M. TILL CLOSE NEW HAPPY HOUR 11 - 8 P.M. 7 DAYS / WK r & 1 . S U A NY SINGLE SHOT DRINK (WELL OR CALL) A N D A N Y BOTTLED BEER ( DOMESTIC OR IM PO RTED) CORONA » HEINIKEN « MICHELOB « TANQUERAY • STOLIS * * * * * the lo o k is turning to ♦ ♦ J 839-9600 219 E* Baseline Tempe Between College & M \\ D -J.A N P D A N CIN G g I P W A R E H O U D e li & P u b S F ajita P rim a E Delicious Southwest Food Featuring Tuesday Night is B W I N G E S T R E A T FA JIT A S t N o artificial ingredients or preserva­ tives, just Healthy Homemade food prepared and served fresh. N I G H T (Hot and Spicy Chicken Wings) 9 fo r 9 9 * plustax Every Tuesday 7 pm-10 pm (on premises only) C orn erston e R ural U niversity A 130 E. University Dr. Estab. 1975 966-7788 9 2 1 -1 2 3 0 Takeout orders welcome F a st & Fresh m alta tha d iffé re n ce Y our H osts — "The Fam ily" SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM MON - FRI (EffiEffiWKlDAVS) SATÚROAVÜSUWAyi&HOliOAySfÌRST-SHOWOW.Y • E d c e l s M E S A AT 1020 W E S T S O U T H E R N POCA FIESTA t t i c THREE MEN MB A BABY (PS) 12:30, 3:00, 5:15, 7:45. 10:15 SHOOT TO KHL(R) 4 d i S treet& M Ê Avenue'D ow ntow n Tem pe'2 n d Flo or» R ear Entmnce *894-0015 ; W E ’V E G O T T H E u / , w e T N IG H T S SUPERSTITION 0 835-0404 MASQUERADE (R) 834-5Z67 * r FRAHTIC(R) MESA AT S, L0N6M0RE $ SUPERSTITION BLOODSPORT (H11:30, 5:15. 9.00 ACTION JACKSON |R| 3:15, 7:00 THE LAST EMPEROR (P613) Fr. A Sat Only 12:00 12:30, 3:30, 4:00, 7:00, 7:30, 10:15 SUN DEUIL SHY PEOPLE (R) Ifc & M S , 5:15, 7:45, 10:30 HAIHSPRAY |PG| SHE’S HAVING A BABY (P6131 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7:15, 9*5 TRI-CITY DOLLAR THEATRES 91.00 A l l SEATS*ALL SHOWS 461-1070 MNMSt.iQ0a80NHn.HMB» WALL STREET fR) 3:30, 7:45 BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED (PO) 12:30, 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:15 DIRTY DANCINS (PG13) 1:30, 5:30, 9:30 PLAYINO FOR KEEP8 IP0I3) 3:30, 7:30 TWI8WW>»l»FilllT»ETMMHf«1H 1:4S,>.-00, 1ft(in MU Clan« of m ... You’ll se e d an imprensive resume. Let un ty p eset it for you! STATE PBESS Production Department Matthew» C enter Basement 965-2097 D I D Y O U K N ? CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! ® We will accept your insurance, provide a student discount, with little or no out-oi-pocket expense to you. f W jm p il ■ § 9 6 6 - 1 6 3 5 966-0921 ‘Dr. Donald Nelson 39 iO S. Rural Rd. #E *12°° p e r m o n th •pha $50 OM-lim membership lee O n ly ona mita on tha bike path off S cottsdale B ridge.. On the sooth side el Curry Head between Millar AHayden W youiÉa su insurance covers •W h ip la s h • H e c k P ain •H e a d a c h e s • B a c k P ain • S h o u ld e r P ain • A c c id e n ta l In ju ries THORBECKE'SGYM O Stiff N eck & Back! Whiplash! V-fc'-V ■:;i-,v (awt&s State Enei» Page 17 Tuesday, March 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 'Caught off guard’ theme of Greek Week B y ROBIE KAKONGE S ta te P r e ss “Caught off guard,” the them e for the 23rd consecutive Greek Week, is becoming a reality because of the early arrival of the event due to Gammage scheduling. Brian Roper, Greek Week system publicity chairm an said: “Normally Greek Week is held in early April, but since the Gammage Center only had end of April and mid-March openings, we decided to take this time although it is m a k i n g a lot of people nervous since there are only a few days left.” Greek Week kicks off Friday as 13 sororités and 22 fraternités compete against each other in various events in an attem pt to raise $15,000 for needy organizations, $3,000 m ore than last year. Last year Greek Week raised $12,000 to grant two children’s wishes through the Arizona chapter of Make-AWish Foundation. Roper said this year Greek Week hopes to use p art of the money to purchase a new motorized wheelchair cart for ASU’s Disabled Student Resources. The rest of the money will be donated to term inally ill children at Make-A-Wish Foundation. Roper said: “People should not look a t these gifts as an attem pt to clean-up the greek image, we are ju st carrying on a tradition and helping out some people along the way.” He said Greek Week is a positive booster for the greek r system . “What we are trying to do is not only establish good relations among ourselves by working together but also involve the community. No m atter how you look a t it, it is an all-around positive experience.” Throughout Greek Week, which is a national event, each house participates in events to gain points toward the Outstanding ChapterA ward. , The first event on Friday is the opening ceremony, which will be held a t the Mesa Am phitheater. This event is open only to sorority and fraternity m em bers and rickets are $2 pre-purchased and $3 a t the door. The Greek Games will be held a t the ASU intram ural field Saturday, and breakfast, which is being sponsored by M arriott, will be served. On Saturday speaker Will Keim will present a leadership lecture in the MU. Arizona Room. E xtra points will be given to sororités and fraternités with the most canned food goods gathered for the event. Sunday morning is devoted to a 5K Fun Run which will sta rt on New Row. Other events throughout the week will include a pizza eating contest and a blood drive. Greek Sing will consist of about three sororités and three fraternités competing in a m usical held a t Gammage Center on March 24. Tickets are $6 and the event is open to Greek m em bers only. B izarre m ed ical c a s e s foun d hard to sw allow CHICAGO (AP)— Many have brushed, but only a few have swallowed. So say researchers^ who scrutinized m edical literatu re and found exactly 31 cases in all recorded history of people somehow m anaging to swallow their toothbrushes. Four of those incidents occurred in Durham, N.C., in recent years, Dr. Allan D. Kirk of Duke University Medical Center and colleagues reported in the March issue of the Archives of Surgery. Two of the North Carolina swallowers apparently had drunk a large quantity of alcohol, while a third was a 60-year-old woman who had a seizure while brushing her teeth. She complained only of throat pain but exam ination revealed the brush stuck in the esophagus and it was removed with forceps. The fourth victim was a 20-year-old woman who developed a violent coughing spell while brushing her teeth. The brush made its way to her stom ach and surgeons snared it with a w ire dropped down through her mouth. "Despite the unusual cluster in Durham, “This problem should probably not be considered endemic to this p art of North Carolina,” the researchers wrote. Ü 1 -H O U R iis F O T O . SINGLE PRINTS lZexposure.. 15/24exp 36exposure DOUBLE PRINTS 3 S O F T S H E LL TACO S Z . 99................ 3 . 9 9 3 .9 9 5 .9 9 WELLS MARGS WINE LONGNECICS 5 . 9 9 _____ 7 . 9 9 110,126,35mm, D isc C o lo r P rin t Film Photofin ishin g (C-41). Not good w ith any other coupon/offer/discount. CO UPO N M UST ACCO M PAN Y GROFF!. ia u r r n Color Enlargements........... 5x7 $ 3 .4 9 ............. 8x10 $ 5 .9 9 Video Transfer Special.... .......... $ 7 .9 9 set u p /8 4 per f t L 9226 S. Mill Ave 966-6836 930 W. Broadway 968-8593 1739 E. Broadway 967-7590 5110 S. Nural Rd 839-6834 j H Coupon good through 5-15-88. § j | at R u ra l & A p a c h e $ 2 50 PITCHERS S m C tâ M E S A N I S S A N Y o u r N is s a n a n d D a t s u n S e r v ic e S p e c i a l i s t s are offering •Nissan-trained technicians •G enuine Nissan parts •Quality maintenance and repair work •R easonable prices H A N D M A D E N EW Y O R K STYLE P IZ Z A ¡ F A S T FR E E D E L IV E R Y S IN C E 1972 S4.9S M inim um Food O rder (Lim ited Free D elivery Area) TEM PE hours Mon.-Ttmn. 4-12 Friday 4-1 Saturday 12-1 Sunday 12-12 1 0 % d i s c o u n t on all service work and counter parts to all ASU student, SMITH MESA NISSAN faculty &-staff with ASU 1.0 , card. PARTS & SERVICE HOURS O N LY 9 D * V U ♦ TAX Si-do ex tr a per p iz z a t o p p in g s 9 6 6 -1 0 0 3 o r M onday 7:30 a.m .-8:30 p.m. Tues.-Fri. 7:30 a.m .-5:30 p.m. T o be present at time of purchase. PARTS OPEN SAT. 8:30 a.m .-12:30 p.m . ' G o o d th rou g h M a rch 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 . 1701 w. Broadway, Mesa S erv ice P a rts 834-3366 834-0255 9 6 6 -4 2 9 2 IT’S A BED LOVEANDTHECOLLEGEFEMALE 9 2 9 .2 5 Fascinated, captivated; sm itten, bitten (coll.); hard hit (slang), far gone. R o g e r has m u c h to say to y o u a b o u t lo v e . So d o w e . O ur SATE LOVE KIT #1 p rovid es all y o u n eed fo r safer sex p r o te c tio n : con tracep tive in serts and con d om s -com b in ed u se gives you MAXI­ M UM PROTECTION AVAILABLE against pregnancy an d sex related d isea ses (h erp es, AIDS, e tc .). PLUS, lubricating g e ls, panty sh ield s, B id ette w ip es, and 2 safer sex pam phlets. 47 STERILE WRAPPED ITEMS! SAFE LOVE KIT #2 in clu d es Kit #1 PIU S tw o h om e pregnancy tests. (D o u b le V alue! D ou b le A ccuracy!) SAFE LOVE IN C has n ew ideas ab o u t lo v e . Enjoy ou r privacy and co n v en ien ce. T hen g o ah ead . G et sm itten . IT'S A CHAIR IT’S A SO FA *4 drawer chest * Bed Sale Twin set Full set Queen set Bean Bags $ 69 $ 79 $119 $ 28 COLLEGE B O N U S: FREE SATEEN COSM ETIC PURSE K it #1 ...$ 1 5 .0 0 P lain w A p p a ck a g e K it # 2 .. $25.00 M o n e y b a ck g u a ra n te e +$2.00 s h ip ./ h a n d lin g E n jo y p riv a cy a n d c o n v e n ie n c e Send ch eck o r m oney order, w ith your add ress, to : S ll, BOX 1300, G reat N eck , NY 11023 SAFE LOVE, INC. New Ideas About Love $ 1 6 8 O ther specials! IT'S A BED 'Sofa & Love Seat 5 Pieçe Oak Finish Bedroom Se t $ 1 6 8 A lso sets: at $249 a n d $299 » 1 5 8 F u r a r **P LU S Clearance Center In Tempe 2077 E. U niversity 966-6252 U niversity F .P . M arch 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 By G A R Y LA R SO N BLOOM C O U N TY ' yesterday. st ev e p a u a s WAS V/OLENItY ABDUCTED BV A PASSNG AUEN spa c esh ip .. V tm ONLYWITNESS m s LEFT A CONFUSO?. b c a b o e k in g , f is h e n t m il s - e a t in g m a n ia c ~ 'u n s R ir m s m u ,. pmmmpHE excuse m um eem hmself/ \ r ■■ me h eck ot/roF \ st o len fro m ..m st o len eart h attorney o r b it s som eWHERE /NONE W THE EVIL HENOS OF SCHEMING ALIEN S.. me m m EMBRACE OF TERM f ir m a ... O ..b u t w hatever m m n e f a r io u s p la n s . s r m w il l h p m the ru w u im pow er o f h u m a n in s t in c t to s e f a c e t h em / 00 w . zoom/ ummsmio FETCH e im W O R P o u ts ' mm/ rrm t ' " tm /s u r r ^ i oo you l UNDERSTAND < m e w o rds *T r f i *mmeY mmsT/. Secret tools of the com m on crow BY GARRY TRUDEAU D o o n esb u ry YOUKNOW THERES A LOTOF TALK THESE OATSABOUTHOtU THE COMING GENERATION LACKS «COMPETITIVE / FIRE... AND ESPECIALLY, TRY ...PARTICULARLY IN RELATION TO THEIR ASIAN COUNTERPARTS. u e u ..m w u m m A T T D THIS HIGH SCHOOL AND T HIS / C LA SS! H0AN6, VAT-FANG, KM , WOULD VOU STAND UP} P tE A SE UM...DO WEHAVE TELum rnoTH Etm u STUDENTS IN THISCLASS WHOHAVEJUST BEEN NAMED NATIONAL MERIT SCHOLARS! T O T^. HOANG! OBEfOUR. TEACHER! MUSTBEEAHERTO B E A GRIND IF VOUGROW UP IN AN A SIA N FAMILY. *__ / H UH ? HEV,GOOD GOW'ON THE NATIONAL MERIT SCHOL­ ARSHIP. K IM ! FAIRLY AWESOMEI THANKS, SEAN. JEW ISH ? VO! SAY NO MORE! I'M ADOPTED. MV PARENTS ARE JEWISH. WOULDNT KNOW. 1WASNTT PLANNING © 1988 UtovfSrt Press Syndlwte Whole dust baths by Mike Ritter Ivory Towers HAVINGGOTTENOFF THE TRAIN T tU W m M TOBUYA SOUVENIR. MIKEFINDSHIMSELF!EFT STRANDED IN A '*«=• Bur RER iTHiNG X OWMK ON TWT TRUN» ¿ I DONT SUPPOSE THERE'S A RACE M «€ - A PERSON « TU FECUUAR PREDICAMENT l P W W P T P SH am TOA « UMTEPSWTE5CCWSU.!! COULDRNP SHELTER..PEWAPS P X ' VOUMENH THERE y \ 6 ) G ) tfiE NOMORE TRAINS 1 ---------- T * POLICIA MW8F~ THROUGHNSRETILTHS cwe/uecnccnES - B are you kuwm&. sei«R..we DONT EVEN GET “THS COSeVSHOW- KWN_ •HERE- iMMlfeü SACK NEXT M EEK* by Jeff MacNelly Shoe e HOWWTA I 'M O N THE Wt&fiCN ¿3UICK P R lN K 00%VfSRHCA) WHICH HA$ A WHOLE. NEW MEANlKiCr HOTHANKS "E xcu se me ... you're blocking the a isle !" S p o r t s State P ro s n o m in a t io n ;! S p 0 rtS h o r t s : ' ;! W ild c a t s c a p tu re 2 n d P a c - 10 c ro w n B y CHRIS DORSEY S ta te P re ss ASU baseball team sweeps Rainbows ASU’s baseball team broke a sixgam e losing stre a k over the weekend, sweeping the Hawaii Rainbows in Honolulu for the first timé in eight visits. Linty Ingram (7-2) threw his sixth complete game of the season Sunday as the 20th-ranked Sun Devils beat Hawaii4-L Brian Dodd and Bias Minor picked up the other two victories. Before toe series at Hawaii, ASU (23-8, 2-7 in toe Six-Pac) was swept in consecutive series by California and Southern C alifornia a fte r beginning toe season 20-2. * The Sun Devils resume action on Friday at Packard Stadium against Tennessee. 2 track members honored nationally Two members of the ASU track team received; All-America honors on Sunday a t toe NCAA Indoor Çhampionships in Norman, Okla. Í Lynda T o lb ert and Ja c in ta Bartholomew finished in second and third .piece, respectively, to earn the honors and lead the women’s team to an 18th-place finish in toe nation. ; In the 55-meter hurdles, a photo finish showed defending national champion LaVonna Martin of toe University of Tennessee finishing .01 seconds faster toan Tolbert’s time of Bartholomew's 20-10 leap .in toe long jump was equal to that of Yvette Bates of Southern Cal, who finished second. Bartholom ew finished third, however, as Bates’ second best distance was longer. Bartholomew’s jump in toe last indoor meet of the season was a personal best. Jackie Belzner cleared 5-10 in toe high jump to tie for 13th. Belzner’s best jump oS the year was 6-0, which would have given her third place honors in toe fñéet. For toe men, Jeff Smith ran a 4:04.18 mile in finishing lito in toe nation. In the pole vault, toe bar was set at 17-2 for an opening height. Mark Gerstea’s best mark this season was 17-3%, but in this meet the initial height was too much, as he and five others dropped out in the first round. C a c tu s Le a g u e s c o re s Cleveland (ss) 1, Milwaukee 0 Cleveland (ss) 8, Chicago Cubs 6 San Diego 9, San Francisco 4 Seattle 9, California 8 today’s ASU, sports S O FT B A LL — The ASU softball team will play a doubleheader with rival Ari­ zona today at Tucson. TUCSON — Two team s representing the state of Arizona mitered the Goodyear Pac-10 Tournament aim ing for the sam e goal — a postseason title. H ie Wildcats prevailed as the winner of the second annual tournam ent while ASU continued its losing streak, bowing out after the first round. Arizona (31-2), led by Pac-10 Player-of-. the-Year Sean Elliott, pummeled Oregon State, 93-67, en route to capture its first conference tournam ent title in front of a record crowd of 13,796 in the M cKaleCenter. Elliott was named the tournam ent’s Most Outstanding Player after scoring a careerhigh 32 points against Stanford and collecting 20 points in the championship gam e. The 6-foot-8 junior was third among the Pac-10 scoring leaders averaging 18.1 points per gam e earning him first-team AllAmerica status. The Wildcats jumped out to an early lead against OSU and never looked back, leading a t one point by 31 points. Beaver coach Ralph M iller was without the play of center Bill Sherwood. The senior participated in OSU’s first two games despite playing with a severly sprained ankle. Sherwood led the team in sew ing this season with 15.1 points-per-game average. He was held to only 16 points during the tournam ent. But guard Gary Payton and foward E arl M artin m ade up for Sherwood’s absense. Payton, also named to the All-Tournament team , took Charge for the Beavers scoring 58 points in three games. M artin, who sew ed a career high 26 points in tfie îirst game against Washington, was denied a spot on the honor squad despite hitting for 25 points in the championship game. While one Arizona team savored the sweet victory, the other watched in Tempe only to think of next season. The Sun Devils (13-16), losing in the first round to Washington, departed for home after recovering from their 96-82 loss. It was ASU’s ninth consecutive loss, the longest in the conference this season, and Coach Steve Patterson was unhappy with the finish. Turn to HOOPS, page 21. Jack Beasley/State Prass ASU guard Arthur T h om as d r iv es tow ard th e b a sk et during a gam e a g a in st W ash in gton S ta te . T h e c o n te st w a s th e la st r eg u la r-sea so n g a m e T hom as p la y ed a s a S u n D evil. Despite quality, tournament w as enjoyable ASU’s postseason media guide. Patterson waved a white towel a t the officials after Mike Redhair was called for an intentional foul. ASU was whistled for 12 fouls in the first half, compared to three for Washington. It did not get any better in the second half, as ASU fell behind by 23 points to a team that won only one road game all season — at .ASU. The „players were disgusted with the TUCSON — It was a basketball junkie’s effort, ASU drew one of the sm allest crowds dream . Nine gam es in four days. The in the history of the Activity Center (2,621) quality of the team s may not have been the in the regular-season finale ag ain st greatest, OK it wasn’t, but it was basketball. Washington State, and rum ors are already It Was the Goodyear Pac-10 Basketball circulating about P atterson’s coaching Tournament. status. Sure, UofA was by tar the best team in the The nine-game losing streak that ASU tournam ent, and playing on its home court ended with m atched the longest since the didn’t exactly hurt in the W ildcats’ 93-67 1969-79 squad, which also ended With nine victory in Sunday's championship game straight losses. over Oregon State at the McKale C rater. After beginning the season with a 10-3 But the tournam ent was fun, for. both the record and aspirations of an NCAA bid, the players and fans. Sun Devils lost 13 of the final 16 games and So, after watching m ore basketball games did not win after Feb. 4. than most people should legally be allowed Something needs to be done. to do in a forovday stretch, here are some S T E V E K E R R I N C I D E N T NOT observations: FORGOTTEN — People still have not ASU LOSES. . . AGAIN—The Sun Devils forgotten about the verbal abuse about his m ade a quick exit in the tournam ent, losing father that Arizona guard Steve K err had to Thursday night’s first-round gam e to lastendure a t the ASU/UofA gam e at the place Washington, 96-82. Activity Center on Feb. 27. The gam e was ugly and m arked the In fact, the whole thing has been blown out perfect ending to a not-so-perfect season. of proportion so much that it is now almost During the first half of the game, ASU as sickening as the incident itself. coach Steve-Patterson was whistled for his I t’s even getting into cartoons. In se c o n d technical foul of the season. It would have made an appropriate picture to put on Monday’s Tank McNamara, a few fans were depicted in the comic strip as yelling comments a t an opposing basketball player because his m other had just died, saying it m ight give the home team a psychological advantage. As I was explaining the incident to various members of the out-of-town media over the weekend, many of them were shocked to hear it was only about four people who were doing the yelling. Most of them said they were under the impression that it was the whole student section. That’s what the rest of the country thinks, and it’s terrible for ASU because the school now has a bad reputation. I’ve received letters from people all over the country, most of them with this sam e impression. ' Hopefully, it will finally be laid to rest. ARIZONA FANS GET EVEN WITH ASU — It wasn’t nasty or tasteless, and there were no rude comments. UofA fans had their own way of getting even with ASU, and it was easy — root for the other team . UofA fans cheered for Washington as if it were the home team when ASU m et the Huskies late Thursday night Standing ovations, raising arm s and yelling “whoosh” after every successful UofW free throw, and scream ing “UofA” every tim e the ASU band and cheerleaders said “ASU” were the order of the night. But a t least ASU was not alone in the biased cheering. UofA fans did the sam e against UCLA. Turn to HOOGES, page 22. Page 20 State Press Tuesday, March 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 Weather cools off A SU golfers at Texas tourney By DAVE BIGOS V State Press High winds and cold tem peratures resulted in a sixth-place finish for the ASU women's golf team a t the Betsy Rawls Intercollegiate last weekend in Austin, Texas. H ie third-ranked Sun Devils fought gusts that produced a wind-chill factor of 30 degrees, to finish with an overall score of 942. Top-ranked Texas won the tournam ent with a team score of 900. “ I wasn’t happy a t all with the way we played,” ASU coach Linda Vollstedt said. “We should have played a much better round.’” - •sr ASU will now turn its attention to the Lady Sun Devil Invitational in Aprril. ¡1 “The good news is th at we have a month off until the next tournam ent, which is our tournam ent,” Vollstedt said. “We’re really looking forward to it, and We’D be ready.” H ie month-long hiatus will give the team some tim e to work «Hi the key elem ents it lacked during the Betsy Rawls tournam ent. “We’re going to work on our short gam e and putting,” Vollstedt said. “ We’re also going to work on course m anagem ent and everyone will work on their m ental gam e.” Vollstedt blam ed w eather conditions and lack of m ental control for the ¿he Sun Devils’ sixth-place finish. “They really let the conditions control them ,” Vollstedt said. “Once they lost control and succumbed to the w eather and the course, it was hard to catch up.” Pam W right had the best total for the Devils, finishing in fifth place with a score of 228. “Pam had a real good round,” Vollstedt said. “It was a good tournam ent for her.” Pam W right Get your BUNS in h ere!! D-E-L-I-C-I-O-U-S MUFFINS [ j Blueberry, Banana-Nut, Bran, Pum pkin, Pineapple-Coconut UNIVERSITY L in d a V o lls te d t The Sun Devils had a chance for a higher finish going into the final round on Sunday. “We weren’t doing that bad,” Vollstedt said. “We had a chance for third on the final day. “We played with Arizona and UCLA and they both played better titan we did. We should have been able to beat both of them .” Arizona (ranked 10th) and UCLA (ranked 11th) finished fourth and fifth, respectively. Other team s that finished ahead of ASU w ere eighthranked Georgia (second) and 12th-ranked San Jose State (third). -------1 I ! (co ffee, m ilk o r so d a ) j I a gourmet cinnamon j Try o n e o f th ese m outh-w atering 7th ST. 1 2 — i with the purchase o f I CINNAMON ROLLS J 8 »BANDAS ‘They re a lly le t the con d ition s control them. O nce they lo st co n tro l and succum bed to the w eather and the course, it w as hard to catch up. ’ SWEA D R I N K | P earl Sinn posted the next best score for ASU with a 234. Her final round of 81 kept Iter from another top finish. Sinn tied for sixth at the P atty Sheehan Invitational. “P earl had two pretty good rounds,” Vollstedt said. “But she didn’t play well the final day.” Rounding out the'field of Sun Devils who Competed were Eve-Lyne Biron, 240; Amy Fruhw irth, 240; and Heather Hodur, 255. ’ * . s, U , V vJ “Amy played pretty consistently,” Vollstedt said, “and Eve-Lyne had a couple of bad holes th at got in her way. “Heather didn’t play w ell a t all.” roO or muffin cinnam on rolls and you ’ll b e back for m ore!! APPLE, ZUCCHINI-WHEAT, 8 RASPBERRY CAHOOT COCONUT A THE ORIGINAL • j SAVE UP TO j O FFER EXPIRES 4-3-88 t —— I PHOENIX — J 13th S t &Northern 20th St&Camdlback MIRANDA'S CINNAMON ROLLS 215 E. 7 th STREET, SUITE 112 IH i J D V V Alma School .and Warner We accept ell competitor's coupons. m mmmm J u u f lh m A A f I Purgatory, Colorado •SYSTEMS •SERVICE •UPGRADES ^ MOST BRANDS SERVICED AT A LOW COST! M O N .-F R I. 9 A .M .-5 P .M h is e *u n i v e r s i t y dr . ASU students, faculty and staff are invited to meet A . C h a rle n e M c D e rm o tt Provost and Vice-President for Academic Affairs, The City College erf The City University o f N ew York. CANDIDATE FOR THE POSITION OF VICE PRESIDENT FOR ACADEMIC AFFAIRS AND PROVOST TODAY, TUESDAY, M ARCH 15 1:40-2:30 F o r F a cu lty an d Staff 2:40-3:30 F o r Students ALUMNI LOUNGE NORTH, MU A O I U TRIP INCLUDES: * round trip trans­ portation • 2 day lift ticket * 2 nights lodging, • Contests & races quad occupancy PR IZES FO R B E ST SKI OUTFIT (the one with the least) SEND YOUR RESERVATION TO: io ia UNIVERSITY PLAZA 3 -3 1 -8 8 . BIKINI SPRING FUNG l l v EXTRA QUALITY HOURS; Southern & Mill Coupon must be presented w ith item s. O ffer expires CHANDLER 894-0123 Ä . 1 1 SCOTTSDALE Scottsdale Rd. & Shea Dobson &Baseline Thomas Rd. & Hayden Southern &Country Club SPRING ■ ^ SKI at PU R G ATO fiY _ _____ Sponsored by Ski Am erica & Durango Econo Lodge4 6 4 8 N . L in d e n C ircle Mesa, A Z 85203 DISTINGUISHED TEACHING D NOMINAflONSi and Sciences No eacher ELIGI DEADLIN Nomination l Information Dei Arts and Science! College. lit the Memorial Union rthe Dean, College of Liberal ind in each department office in the mm* State Page 21 Tuttdg^M arthlSjJW S E llio tt n a m e d to A ll-A m e ric a te a m NEW YORK (AP) - Danny Manning average, the highest since Freem an of Kansas was nam ed to The Associated Williams of Portland State averaged Press All-America basketball team for 38.8 in 1877. He is also the first player to t h e . second straight year Monday, score 1,000 points in a season since joined by Hersey Hawkins of Bradley, Williams in 1977. the highest scoring Division I player in "H e's the consum ate collegiate 11 years. player because he has an absolute great Joining the two seniors on the first demeanor for the game and has seen teani were senior Gary G rant of every type of defense thrown a t him Michigan, junior Sean Elliott of Arizona and he’s unflappable, yet rem arkably and sophomore J.R . Reid of North consistent inasmuch as he’s averaging Carolina. 36 points,” Bradley coach Stan Albeck T he team w as se le c te d by a said Monday. 20m em ber p an el of sportsw ritersBradley, 26-4, won the regular-season representing the AP and m ember and p o stseaso n M issouri V alley newspapers.. Conference championships and will be Manning Was the only non-senior on the ninth seed in the Southeast the first team last season and the RegionSl. 6-foot-lO forw ard m anaged a fine G rant was known as much for his perform ance tins year despite injury defense as his im pressive 22.0 scoring and academ ic problems that plagued average. He led the Big Ten in steals Sean Elliott the highly regarded Jayhawks. t h r e e c o n s e cu t iv e s e a so ns an d “I think he’s had a phenomenal year averaged 6.9 assists per gam e this T ar Heels went 24-6 and were tabbed considering w e’ve had so m any season as the Wolverines went 24-7 and second seed in the West. problems this year and it’s added extra were named third seed in the West Pittsburgh’s Jerom e Lane, who was responsibility to Danny and he’s done a Regional. voted to the third team as a sophomore tremendous job,” Kansas coach Larry Elliott averaged 19.0 points and 5.8 last season, was named to the second Brown said Monday. “ It’s an honor to rebounds for the Wildcats who w o e team this year, along with Temple be a repeat choice and that doesn’t ranked No. l'fo r six weeks this season freshm an M ark Macon, Duke junior happen too often.” and are 31-2 and the top seed in the Danny F erry and seniors Steve K err of Manning averaged 22.3 points and 8.9 West. The 6-foot-8 forward shot 57 Arizona and Jeff G rayer of Iowa State. rebounds this season as Kansas went percent from the field. The third team included Sherman 21-11 and was seeded sixth in the Reid enjoyed a solid sophomore Douglas of Syracuse, Fennis Dembo of Midwest Regional. season as the 6-foot-9 forward averaged Wyoming, Bryon Larkin of ¿Xavier, Hawkins, a 6-foot-3 guard, enters 17.9 points and 8.7 rebounds while Ohio, Will Perdue of Vanderbilt and tournament ¡day with a 36.0 s c o ria shooting 61 percent from the field as the ’ Michael Smith of Brigham Young. Qwsfisw stoat Shtdeat PuUieaiitm? Call 965-7572 C all F or A ppt. 3 4 5 -6 4 2 5 /9 2 1-O20O 3 9 1 0 S. R u r a l R d ., S u ite 0 *9 Haircut & Style Perm *29 Facials. . . MU E x p ire s 4-1 -88 can 941-0037 2240 N. Scottsdale Road • Tampa • J u st N o rth o f M cK e llip s Hoops C onttnuad h o rn p a g e i s ; “Of course we are disappointed,” Patterson said, “ It’s been a long stride for us to finish the season.” ASU appeared to b e ready to face the Huskies in the early goihg of the first half leading three tim es before slipping and being unable to get back up. Patterson’s inexperienced squad looked a t tim es as if they were running in place, falling behind by 23 points a t one point |n the second half. ? “ I thought we w ere properly prepared and ready to play,” ÿ atterso n said. “Tonight we lost as a team . I felt we went down fighting. We ju st sim ply couldn’t get started. We "Wanted to, but we couldn't.” ■ The Sim Devils faced two setbacks: the crowd and three technical fouls. The crowd adopted the Huskies; giving them somewhat of a home court advantage. “It really got us pmnped up to have the crowd behind us,” Washington guard Eldridge Recasner said, “For once I played in front of a lot of people that were for us,” Pac-10 Freshm an Player-of-the-Year Mike Hayward said. The Huskies shot a Pac-10 record 36 free throws in defeating ASU. In the first half, the Sun Devils had 12 fouls called against them while Washington was charged with three. “They shot very well from the line and they had am ple opportunities to do th at,” Patterson said. Patterson was assessed a techinical foul with 2:38 remaining in the first half, after waving a towel at the officials. “I was adm itting we couldn’t beat the officiating,” Patterson said. “We were stressed beyond the realm of reason.” At halftim e, assistant coach Frank Arnold was called for the team ’s second techinical. Reserve guard Mike Redhair also received a techinical foul after yelUng a t an official in frustration. Sun Devil A rthur Thomas, playing in his last collegiate gam e, scored a team-high 16 points while team m ates Mark Becker, Torin Williams, and Trent Edwards each finished the season with 10 points. F or Washington, Recasner led the pack of five Huskies in double figures with 24 points. Hayward pumped in 19 points and Mark West garnered 17 points. Jeff Sanor and Troy M orrell finished with 13 and 12 points, respectively. The surprise team of the tournam ent was Washington State. The Cougars upset UCLA in their first round game, 73-71. WSU 7-0 center Todd Anderson crippled the Bruins, scoring 30 points to lead his team . The Cougars w ere predicted to finish last in the Pac-10 but shocked everyone completing the season 12-15, and holding down the sixth-place slot under first-year Coach Kelvin Sampson. But Sampson’s squad lost to OSU in the semi-finals. But not before giving it their all. It took the Beavers two overtim es to elim inate WSU, 74-68. “They were like flies over us,” Payton said. “They were fired up after beating UCLA. I kept wishing they would die, they finally died.” Next year’s tournam ent will be held at a neutral site; the Forum in Los Angeles. H air C u t s $ 1 2 . 0 0 Reg. $17.00 SAVE $5.Q0 In c lu d e s sh a m p o o , co n d itio n e r & cut. W ith C o u p o n $5.00 O F F PER M R eg. $40 In c lu d e s sh a m p o o , co n d itio n e r 6 cut. C e llo p h a n e H ig h lig h t $22.00 $30.00 In c lu d e s co n d itio n e r.. (F irst tim e clie n ts o n ly with th is a d .) TANNING SESSIONS $10 down, $1.50 each visit U nlim ited F o r O ne M onth 966-6111 M o n .-S a t. 9:30-8:30 S u n . 11:30-4:00 Cell For Appointment 933 E. University SE Corna Rural & University 'T W O Ë f lÉ INCOME TAX PREPARATION 10% D ISCO U N T WITH ASU I.D. ELECTRONIC FILING FOR A SPEED REFUN D (A v a ila b le R e g a rd le s s O f W h o P re p a re s Y o u r R e tu rn s ) 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 E D N E S D A Y 2 fo r 1 — D o u b le P rin ts o r Free Film le c e iv e t w o p r in t s f o r t h e p r ic e o f o n e a t t h e t im e f d e v e lo p m e n t , o r g e t a f r e e r o ll o f f ilm ; y o u p ic k . W &L . S tu tn n u n tilo w in a u t r a m tm 438-9375 students score higher! 4 7 1 5 E S o u th e r n OTHER COURSES: MCAT. OAT, NCtEX, KITE. CF*. BAR REVIEW, & OTHERS Enroll in next test and get the next two test dates F R E E . 967-2967 Accounting | Income Tax Savers Ken’s Accounting I ' 863-4925 . I! .-VWUnionHill,Pi 244-0435 4t3?E M cU ow vl. S W ehw e Tuesday, March 15, 1,988 NFL owners oppose underclassmen draft PHOENIX (AP) — NFL Commissioner P ete Rozelle said Monday th at the league’s owners seem firm ly opposed to loosening league rules to allow underclassm en to be drafted and a t least one influential figure said he would be willing to test that stand in court. “ Coaches and general m anagers and owners that I talk to ju st Biink it ju st doesn’t m ake sense to change for anyone,” Rozelle said a t a news conference following the opening session of the annual w inter meetings. “P articularly in football. You have to be completely developed physically. You take a kid who’s a sophomore in college, he signs an initial Contract, then he doesn’t m ake it and hie also doesn’t have a college education. People I talk to are just very mu£h opposed to it.” The NFL is the tally professional league th at does not regularly d raft underclassm en, allowing only those players to be drafted who have completed four years of eligibility, have spent five years in school or have graduated. B ut the eligibility issue has become increasingly controversial in recent years as underclassm en, declared ineligible for college play for reasons stemming from misconduct to illegal contact with agents, have petitioned for either the regular or supplem ental draft. Last year, for exam ple, the league held a supplem ental d raft for Ohio State wide receiver Cris C arter, who was declared ineligible for college play because he signed with an agent. He was subsequently taken in the fourth round by the Philadelphia Eagles. This year, Craig “ Ironhead” Heyward, an alm ost sure high first-round choice, has applied for the draft after being declared ineligible for his senior year a t P itt. The C arter d raft was held reluctantly because of the threat of a lawsuit challenging the NFL’g policy. Asked if the NFL’s policy could survive a legal challenge, Rozelle replied, “I don’t know, I don’t know.” But Tex Schramm , president of the D allas Cowboys and one of the league’s m ost influential figures, said he’d be willing to test the NFL rules in court. “There are a lot of people who are sim ply afraid of a suit,” he said. “I say, ‘Let’s go to court and see what happens.’ ” Monday’s session was basically a talk by Rozelle, although the owners later went into executive session to discuss financial m atters. One of the m ain item s on the agenda, the proposed move of the St. Louis Cardinals to Phoenix, will be discussed Tuesday with a group from St. Louis, Civic Progress, making a lastditch plea to the owners to keep the franchise there. However, the m ow is expected to be officially approved with the owners setting a figure th at the Cards m ust pay an indem nityrepresenting the difference between the value of playing in Phoenix as opposed to a . Louis. However, Rozelle said th at it was unlikely th at the owners would take up the financial problem s of the New England P atriots before the m eetings end Thursday or Friday, although the item was originally on the agenda for the meeting. The Sullivan fam ily, owners of the team , are an estim ated $125 million in debt and are involved in several court fights. Rozelle said the com m ittee that includes him self and owners Norman Bram an of Philadelphia and Ralph Wilson of Buffalo is still close to the situation, which involves a t least two court cases. “We don’t w ant to do anything to interfere with their efforts to sell the team ,” Rozelle said. “But we continue to monitor the situation closely.” * The owners also heard a report from the competition com m ittee, headed by Schramm and M ia m i Coach Don Shula on a series of m inor rules changes. They m ay be voted on Tuesday. H od g es C on tM iad (ram paga 19. MORE CROWD NOISE — Sunday’s championship gam e crowd of 13,796 set a tournam ent record, along with the five session total of 66,477. Next year’s tournam ent will take place a t the Forum in Los Angeles. ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM — Three Wildcats were nam ed to the All-Tournament team . Steve K arr, Tom Tolbert and tournam ent MVP Sean E lliott joined Oregon State’s Gary Payton and Stanford’s Todd Lichti on the team . PAC-l* AND POSTSEASON — Arizona and Oregon State both received bids for the NCAA tournam ent, while Stanford and Oregon both gained NIT bids. The W ildcats will play Cornell a t UCLA’S Pauley Pavillion on Friday while OSU will battle Louisville on Thursday in Atlanta. The Ducks will play host to Santa Clara on Thursday while Long Beach State will play a t Stanford on F riday in the NIT. classifieds announcem ents S T A T E PR ESS Matthews Center Baeement D isplay A d v.........965-7572 C hasm ed A d v ...965-6731 U V IN a TO G ETH ER ? Couples are needed Uner A d Rates: 15 words or less $2.75/day, 1-4 days $2.50/day, 5-9 days $2.40fday, .10 or more days 15* each additional word for a rssaarch project at ASU. Each DeSdHne: 1974 R E D /Upha Romeo convertible. New top and interior. 61,000 original mdse. Beautiful condition. 884-0347. 2 T a co s fo r 9 9 cents & T re e R e fills on L a m e Soft D rin k s Cornerstone Rural A University 921-1230 T ak eou t O rder* W elcom e Fast A Fresh make the difference participant wM to given a chance to win $100. Phone 936-0036. a u to s lo r sale Noon, one day prior to publi­ cation 1860 HONDA Prelude- Excellent condi­ tion. Stereo, equalizer, sunroof, toatcovers, new tine; $2500 or best offer. David, The State Prats will not accept employment ade baaed on race, religion or aax unless such qualifying factors are eaaentW to a given poeWoh. 938-0693. 1980 TO YO TA Tarm i 2 door. Naw vahiaa, brakes, transmission, 6-epaed. air, tony The State Press raaervaa the right to edit o r reject any ad deem ed objectionable. dock. *1300. 842-7203. Check your adl'The State Press wM 947-4810, Or 888041T.~ only be reeponelble lor one incorrect Ineertton. E m m must be reported before noon the first day your ad appears. I trucks fo r sa le The State Prase disclaim s afl respon­ sibility for quality and prices o f goods end sirvice s offered in both ctasaiflsd and d isp lay advertisers. advartising by NU C A R CorporallonlLsaalhg. H ast prices to the public. Save up to $1500 to $2500. 1981 RED Toyota 4x4 truck! Cool air, rune perfect, tint window», good tires, exceient ' co n d itio n . 962-0802. $4200/offer. C a ll M ika, Student prices. CaN 81mm, 9683180; M U ST SELL; tan sofa, $160; glass top table with 6 ch a in , $160; brown reclinar, 60% O F F tin t months rant In luxury 2 badroom split lew) condo. Near Fiesta $40; mena 10-epeed, $50. Stave or Robert, 9624033. M a ll. $226 plus ona-thlrd utilities. 836-7008._________________________ N EED TO kna thorn extra pound*? Collection of 10 aucceea proven dtata. You chose. Saw hundreds $. Send $6 to Prestige. P.O . Boa 2020, Show LOW, QUIET, AD U LT complex. One badroom, unfurnished. Walk to to stores (3 blocks to ASU). Free month with 9 month lease, large pool. $376 Indudee all utilities. Graduate students preferred. Landmark Apartments. 967-6620. LOUIS VUITTON. AN bags and wallets. Arizona 86801. RAN CHO LA S Paknoe has luxurious one and two badroom apartments from $380. Clubhouse, walghtroom, pod, 2 Jacuzzis. W flk to campua. Open Monday- Saturday, 8288807._________________________ DIAMONDS ENGAGEMENT SET S AB size» and qualities. Som e examples V5 Ct. VS H-l *300-$400 Vi ct. VS-SI H-i $700-3850 If you think you've found a bettor buy, toti us. We want your business. Cad 835-8148 for more kiformetton. THE DIAMONDCONSORTIUM First Interstate BankPtaza 20 E.MaHlSL, Suite 808 Meta . “ Shorts of all S o rts!” Its •The State Prase never knowingly accepts deceptive or misleading advertising. Any ofler requiting an investment should to thoroughly kmoatigalad. If you have a complaint regordlng a particular ad, it should to reported in writing toe The- Belter Buelneee Bureau, 4428N . 12th S t, Phoenix, AZ 85014. H igh Prices, H assles, Appointm ents, Inconveniences, W aiting, No Fooling. Kinko's is the place for quality cop ies, binding, passport photos, resum es, and self-serve typewriters. Call for inform ation on self-serve com pu­ ters, laserprinting and cassette dupli­ cating. kinko's Tempe 894-1797 933 E. University 921-0168 1 University & Hardy Mesa 969-3326 1840 W. Southern with ad. 8333332. STUDIO O R 1 bedroom apartment- Utili­ ties paid, p o d , saunas, weight, recreation, gam# rooms. 9628222. TW O BEDRÜOM Special. Vary dee. section 8 welcome. Call Karan, 288-6617. h om es fo r ren t 3 BEDROOM , 2 bath townhpme. Pats okay. Washer/ dryer, pod. 3 miles from cam pus. Model sharp. $660/ month. C a l 904-2613. F R E E M ONTH with M ass. W alt to ASU . 2/ 3 bedroom, roommate apartments. Microwave, dishwasher, washer, dryer In each apartment. Linens and furniture available. 1979 VESPA P200 scooter. Looks good, rune groatil Chroma included. $MQ(offer. Fast and sharp. 4239874. $200 per parson. 8638961,973893*. ROOM FO R rant In funtiatod house. Large fenced yard, doe» to campus, parking, a l amsnitisa. $200/ month. 8843141.. 1881 HONDA 900F. 8000 m ies. Ornaient condition. $1000 Or beet ofler, 894-0347. condition, looks gréai, tow' miles, muât aee. $1800 or beat offer. 821-1821 No No No No No STUDIO O R 1 bedroom apartment, pool tennis courts, covered parking. $300 off rental sharing m o to rcycle s fo r sa le E U T E 2S0CC. Must sell. Perfect running Follow Your Nos apartm ents fo r rent $360 O F F - La Quinta has 1 and 2 badroom apartments. CtubhouM, sauna, pool, apa. Bast location in Tempo. 838-3901. 1878 CH EVY Luv- runt great. Air. Call Michelle. 921-8424.1800 or tom offer. Caah«Check Visa* Mastercard (Sorry, no biding) 894-9588 715 S. Forest Fajita Prima |H FR EE BEACH towel when you sign up tor an AT& T card by the MU at the AT»T table. Newsroom..........965-2292 m iscellan eo u s fo r sale RISING SUN Cycle- Service and parta fcr a* Japanese brands, insurance work done. 1900 N. Hayden, Tem ps, 946-6612. Mcnday-Friday 9 8 . Saturday 8 4 . real estafo for a lii ASSUMABLE/ NO quMHytng, 10.6%, 2 bedroom condo, new carper. Near McCfintodt/ Broadway. C a to to mortgage $2400, $610 payment Asking $82,900. Owner, 9833347. M O TO R CYCLE/ S C O O T ER SERVICE a PARTS, INSURANCE ESTIM ATES, FA C TO R Y TRAINED M ECH AN ICS, PICK-UP & DELIVERY. CONDO- 2 bedroom, 2 bath, MeCRntock and Broadway, Tampa. AN applianceswasher, dryer, custom built wins rack and aN upgrades. $600 down, attum c loan. FH A 246 12.75%, balanca $66,500. Owner win lease with option to buy. C a l owner at 967-4467. RISING SUN C Y C L E 1900 N. Hayden Road LOW DOWN, no qualifying, 3 bedroom 945-6912 tick e ts fo r sa le CUSTOM MOBILE Home- 2 bedroom. ' Birchwood Interior, tile, large fam ed yard, pete okay. «8800,9240361. FO R SALE by owner. Condominium, only 2 yam s old, vicinity, Price and Unlwmity. 3 bedroom», 2 baths, cathedral caMnga, fireplace, patio, a l appliance» Including microwave and full Mzs w atoer and dryer. Assum able FH A mortgage. $72,000. 8938554. house. Convenient to ASU . low 60’s. Pleats c a l now. Janet or LI a l Hanna Properties. 8834800. LUXURY TOW NHOU8E, split level, no qualifying, assumable mortgage. $3000 down. Take over payment«. Bruoe, 890-2691. b u sin e ss .. o p p o rtu n itie s AD O ' A etoekbrokers Mearas to )jdur bachelors d e g n e . O ur evening stockbrok­ er training program I» betng oftored tor $396. F o r m oro 602-230-9434. Inform ation 'c a ll G UARAN TEED ISSUE M^or w ed» card program. NO cdlaterd required! For mors information c a l Ron, 7308606: h e lp w anted ALASK A 8UM M ER jobs- AR A Outdoor World. Positions in a l aspects Of hotel operations located in D enali' Park (M cKM ey Alaska). Must to 21 years d d by June 15th. Stop by- student employ­ ment office tor application and interview time«. APPLICATIONS ENGINEER. Growing hitech com pany needs Individual to assist in product planning, development, and Integ­ ration o f com putar-baaad draw ing managemant and coversion systems. WM t o reepondbto for evaluating new technofogies Into current and future product tines, competitor analysis, and sales material preparation. Requires B8 In Computer 8ctonee or Engineering with strong knowledge o fC , Unix, and/or DOS, CAO/CHM and technology research. Send resume to: G TX Corporation, Attention Human Rooouroes P-2, 8838 N. 23rd STING TICKETS: *60 each. One pair. Price and location vary negllable. Simone, 921-3247. NO QUALIFYING-1,2,3 bedrooom condos Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 86021,. and townhousee. Papago Park Village ta rn *68,000- 102,000. Bob Bullock, Realty Executives, *002992. 4 r t i s t POSITION open tor part-time marketing assistance. Salary negotiable. Contact Fraida Fall at Southwest Proper­ forniture fo r sa le W AREHOUSE S A LE. Desks from *49; ehaim bom $16; bookshelves bom $19; and teblsa, typing table», oomputer tables, dining tables, Me cabinets, plue lots mdre. Arizona Office Liquidators. 4010 South 43rd Place, between 40th S tra ti and 48th Street, north of Broadway. 437-2224. m iscella n eo u s fo r sale TEM PE POUR bedroom, 2 bath, tri-level home. $79,400, non araumable loan. 2% m ise ASU. 987-3068. Park-Like Setting toar ASU, Molorai*. M e m Reserve Chib. Neel tor »nee who enjoy being near school, work end pity. Chooen angle làmi or M ery toes bedroom townhemoo with garage. Ooad tome. Cal now tor derate, Chris KJokioio, Q.R.I. eerseaso fweoaoez Reeity Executives Louis Vuitton and Gucci Purses and Wallets, Luggage, Briefcases, Beits, Hats, and Jackets Highest Quality Leave Message, 934-4793 or 498-7144 ATTEN D EN T (FEMALE) needed for disab­ led student starting immediately. No medi­ cal experience niceaaery. 36 per Iwur, 2-10 hour» weekly. 2 hour» early Tuaiday morning essential. Meal for student Dying on campua. C a l Barb tar information. 7848602._____________ ___________ ATTENTION SPRING Graduates) Work and live In San Dtogo. Excellent careers in a l fields after graduation. Ptoses send tor free career report. Walker Marketing Group, Box 0603, La Jo la . C A 92038. ASU AREA Louis Vuitton Men and Women ties. M GW OO. UNUSUAL4 BR HOME very olean, new paint A carpet. AM appliances and furniture If desired. L a rg e 4 th b ed ro o m .e x c e lle n t famtty/hobby/study room. Low «70s. BY OW NER. 967-5940 CHILD CA R E Helper to care tor 2 young, darting children afternoons. Near Paradise Valley M ai, own transportation necessary. 982-2848. j p CHILD CAR E- grad student essklngllve-in loving care tor 3 and 6 year olds. Room/ partial board. 6160/month through August. 841-4482. apartm ents fo r rent 2 O R 3 bedroom apartment- Utilities paid, ASU W mila, $300 off with ad. 9893646. CO LLEG E 8 TUOENTS part-time. Wa need 6 enthusiastic 00809» student* to work 4 9 Monday-Thuraday, 108 Satur­ day. 36 hourly plus bonus**. C a l Mr. Rod, 821-2387. Ü M ÍW i h elp w anted help wanted h e lp w anted COOK (PART-TIME) tor rastdanttal treat­ EASY WORK! Excellent pay! Assemble ment center; p-m. end weekend#. Send employment history end salary require­ products at horns. C a l for information, 504841-8003, Ext. A-7836. O VERSEAS JO BS, summer, year around. Europe, South America, Australia, Asia. AN ftokto. 9900-2000 month. Sightseeing. Free Information. Writs U C , PÒ Sox 52-AZ03, Corona Pal Mar, C A »2625. ments. P.O . bo« »600. Phoenix. 85068. c o m 'N Cleaver accepting applications 1C night cocktail waitresses and lunch I..illu n e Part-time, flexible hours, fun atmosphere, nice people. Apply In person g. 5 p.m. Monday through Friday or by appointment. 5101 N. 44th Street, Pho­ enix. 862-0686. _______ '___________ COUNSELORS- PRESTIGIOUS axed Berkshire, M A summer camp seeks skHed college juniors, seniora, and grads. WSI, tennis, sailing, windsurfing, waterskl, canoe, athletics, aerobics, archery, golf, gymnastics, fltness/welght training, arts and crafts, photography, elver jswelery, theater, piano, dance, etagefteeh, com­ puter, edenes, rocketry, camping, video, woodworking, newspaper. Have a reward­ ing and enjoyable summer. C a l anytime! Camp Taoomo. »14-782-2820._________ DELIVERY FULUPAH T- «me. $6-110/ hour, flexible hours, paid training prog­ ram, employee meal plant, driver incen­ tives. Must have own bar, insurance and good driving record. Call Pizza Hut Deliv­ ery, at gas-2357. Egual Opportunity Employer. Page 23 Tuesday, M arch 15,1988 ______________ DICK'S HAM BURGERS now accepting applications. A l hours available. Apply at Dick's. 865 South Rural._____________ DISC JO CK EYS, mobile, part-time, we train, dependable vehicle. Call Monday through Friday, 12-6 p jn . 9688698. DOBSON ASSOCIATION now aooepUng applications tor assistant swim coach. Hours are approximately 6 a.m.-10 a.m., Monday-Friday, with some evenings and Saturday meets. FaalloiH unaS-1 through 8-1 . Competitive swim and coaching experienee.requlied. Work with 180 child­ ren, ages 5 «trough -IS. Duties Include pod cleaning, set-up tor pmettoe, on-deck and/or In-pool work wflh swimmers, deetv up after precoce, attend aft practices, meets, fundraisers and sodato. Salary range $100041400, tor summer. C a l 831-8314. Applications accepted through 3-25. DOBSON ASSOCIATION now aooeptlng appftoaBnrw tor summer recreation staff pcsMono. swimming Instructors, tot-time instniotore arid p o d attendants. A ll appDoSrits should ItaveCPR oetmieatlon; recre­ ation staff and p o d attendants need advanced Hfeeavlng certllkiallon; swim instructors must be WSI certified, lot-time instructors with previous daycare experi­ ence preferred. Salary range $3.50-88.00. Cat 5316314. Apptyby 4/1/1988. TECHNICIAN (mechani­ cal), second Or third year mechanical engineering or technology. Some related e n g in e e r in g èxperisnœ desired. Must be «vaHabte a minimum of 20 hours per week. $6.00 and up. 9636200 EN TH U S IA S TIC AN D H ardw orking Individuale- Ckcto K|s Hiring in your area. We offartuttlon reimbursement, beneflta package, paid training, and convenient work locations. Interviews held 1128 8. Terrace Rd. 8:30-1 Monday and 3239 N. 20th 8 t 3 2 Monday «sough Friday. EX C E LLE N T MARKTING C arter for account executives marketing long distance services to commercial/ reakfanttol customers. WHI trahi. CaD 838-4748 aftar 7 p.m./evenings. PART-TIME CHILD care end general aeeletonce to A8U faculty family. One c h ild , fle x ib le hour*. $4.50/hour. 968-9922. EXCITING SUMMER job near O.C.Jewlsh residential summar camp in the beautiful Catoctki Mountains. Looking tor counaatora and specialists In wetorfront gymnastics, tannls, boating, atttlaHca, aria and crafts, sto. Great salary, greet loca­ tio n , g rea t job. G ive ua a c a ll, 301-853CAMP. PART-TIME NANNY. Light housekeeping. Mutt love children. Experience preferred. References necessary. South Tempe loca­ tion. Call tor interview. 897-8434 of leave m en ag e831-7782. > RELIABLE RESTAURANT delivery driver» wanted. Two shifts. Part-time/Fufl-tlme. South Scottsdale. WM train. C a l between 10-12 tor appointment. 423-0006. EXPERIENCED BANQUET servers. Muet have btack/whHe. Starting at 86/hour. Call Immediately, TAD Temporaries, 287-7254. RESEARCH FO R’ book. Do you know someone who has proven reeeeroh abWtty to do research tor a non-fiction book? We are looking for a futt-ttme employee for the EXTRA M ONEY to nice, but you can Iwlp people tool Donate plasma tor up to 8120 a month. First donation In a calendar week next 3-4 months with proven reeeareh experience- either a Masters o r Ph.d. candidate or someone Wfth comparable skills, n eeearcher to needed Immediately as submission deadline to Simon & Shus­ ter la July 1868. Salary negottabis. Please apply at Sultock Enterprises, 4327 North Scottsdale Road, number 299, Scottsdale, Arizona 85251. 610, second donation in same calendar week 820 (Monday-Saturday). New donors receive $6 bonus on fket donation with this ad. University Plasma Canter, Associated Btoadence of Tem ps Ine., 1015 S . Rural Rd., Tem pt, AZ. 9684130. Effective until further notice. FULL/ PART-TIME advertising sales people tor exciting, new, "Campus-type Directory." 888-1706,277-4742. R ESO R T HOTELS, cruiselines, airlines, and amusement parks now accepting applications for summer jobs, internships, and career positions. For information and HOST INTERNATIONAL Inc., a Marriott company end the leader In airport food and beverage operetlona is looking for frierxfty, out-going individuals to All a variety of postions In ttte food and bever­ age faculties located In terminal 3, Sky Heritor Airport Current openings Include office clerk, snack bar attendant, bar uflUty, but parson (Continental Dining), cafeteria Una server and cafeteria utility. W i offer an outstanding compensation package which includes top wages, a liberal meal eflowence, tuition assistance tor certain majors and full benefits for as little a s 30 hours par weak. To apply tor employment or tor more Information see our representative on campus Wednes­ E. NEED MOTIVATED persons to work poolside at valley resorts selling suncare and 86021. sun wear. Mutt be personable and have own transportation. C a l 941-2751 tor Interview. SOFTW ARE ENGINEER. Growing hHech company needs individual to develop automatic Raster to Vector conversion software. B S in Computer Science or Mathemattct required. Muet be familiar wfth Image processing, pattern recogni­ tion, C and MC880XO. Creativity and ability to work In a team environment necessary. Send resume to: G TX Corpora­ tion, Attention Human Resources S-4, 8836N. 23rd Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 86021. N EED PERSON for deliveries and general offioe work (copying filte, filing, etc., no typing). For Monday/ Wednesday/ Friday, 5 hours each day, t-m . or p.m . Must be 20 years or older, good driving record, own auto. Downtown Phoenix tow firm. Contact Margaret, 254-8481 after 10 a.m.______ P A R T -T IM E M A R K E T IN G O P P O R T U N IT IE S ■ "S alea - Representatives,, M.e r a B a n k , a l a e d i r ig financial Institution currently has •eversi part-time positions avallabto. 6 xq e l le n t o p p g r t r in it y t o g a in h a n d s - o n m a r k e t in g expsrienoei . -' Requires proven safes, custom er service arid eemmuntoritlon skills. The ability to moot salos/srirvice goals within «com petitive environmant and to toarn m ultìple produets/servlces quickly to essential. Excellent advancement opportunities. Shifts available: M onday-Friday, 9 am-1pm. We offer a com petitive com penaaUon package. Send your resume Indicating «m et available p r. inter­ view appointm ents to: Mera Bank Corporate S taffin g. Dapt, A S U , 20002 N, 19th Avo.. Phoenix, A Z 85027. Part-time, flexible hour*, and good pay! Call Job information line a l 994-2365 or Recreation Division a l 994-2408. SUM M ER W ORK: Work white back EastIntarviewing now tar hdMimo summer work in a sate« and business management program. Maks $1488 monthly and excel­ lent resume experience. Cafl 230-3008. ^ SW EN SO N'S, TEM FE is hiring hard work­ ing and enthusiastic IndMduala tor the following poeltton»: night cooks and day bua/dtoh. Interviews M onday-Friday, 34:30 p.m. Price and Baeettne. TH E M OROCCAN Restaurant now hiring waitresses, waiters and kitchen help. Part- ‘ time. Apply In person: 4223 N. Scottsdale Road. Phone 947-9690. TU TO R N EED ED tor CSC220. 9674164 (leave message). Call 8 WORK at home 8- Company needs worker« statewide to man circulars. Free supplies/poetage sent to your home. No Investment. Free inform ation. Send S A S .E . to: JW F. Box 87084, Phoenix, Arizona, 85082-7084. ___________ W OULD WORKING only weekends be perfect? Do you own a dependable truck with covered bed? (Not door to door sates). Students or housewives apply. Salary plus commission. Room for 'advancem ent. Sunset Apartm ents. 759-1196 (leave beat time to call). SUMMER WORK The Southw estern Co. is n o w in te r v ie w in g s tu d ­ e n ts fo r fu ll-tim e su m m e r w o r k . G a in in v a lu a b le s a le s a n d b u s in e s s m a n a g e m e n t OPPORTUNITY SU M M ER R E C R E A T IO N LEADERS ALASKA SUMMER JOBS Part-time $5.52-$7.48/hour TEM PE COMMUNITY SERVICES DEPARTM ENT 655 E. Southern Tempe, AZ SE N D NOW1 F o r 4 complete information packet, 731-8381 s e n d $ 7 to : PROSPECTOR PUBLISHERS P O Box 1403 Soldotna, Alaska 99669 Squat Opportunity Employer B IG S U R F O P E N IN G A P R IL 15 Now accopting applications fo r Spring/Sum m ar positions: M u st A-PHI TIFFIN): Rocky Point was awesome, we definitely had the time of our Uveal Christine. PS- it was worth itt “ARIZONA G R EAT Oates” - hundreds of Inexpensive things to do, most free! Just $2, to Interpersonal Enterprises, Box 6243V, Scottsdale, Arizona 85281. CAROL: YOU are truly special and I can’t wait tor Thursday! Happy Anniversary! I love you, Your sweetie, Landon. PS- Can Hector, Hal, and G u t coma with us? They miss you! in d e p e n d e n t, h jr d w o r k e r , a n d w illin g to r e lo c a te . Room 2 1 4 (on A pache Blyd.) P lease arriv e 1 5 m inutes early to selected interview . Instruction ENGLISH TUTOR told typist available tor composition writing skills. term papers, research papers, reports, resumes. Four yean experience. C a l 834-1367. 493-9898 Security (current C P R helpful), $4/hour. M a in ten a n ce, E le c trica l & M ech a n ica l, ex p e rie n ce h e lp fu l, $3-$5/hour. ■ ^ ‘ jewdry CASH FO R gold and diamonds. MM Avanue Jewelers, 414 S. MM, Suite 104. Tempe. 958-5967. U fo g u trd /S lld o g a trd , currant advanced lifesaving required. M ust pass B ig Su rf's m edical aid. lo g ic, 8X1118 & fitness testa. Lifeguard, m iscellaneous M ERABANK A p ply M onday-Friday t 10 am-12 pm A 3-5 pm 1500 N. H ayden Rd. CO U PLES ARE needed to participate In a research project Each member of the couple wiH be given a chance to win $100. Only 50 couples are needed so act now. nw«Si!*«ijr«-auttawtotoVira«.«m ««a»«»«•a» »«ft 81.50 DOUBLE spaced page. A l letter quality word processing. 32 years exper­ ience. Marten, 838-4299.' KEVIN GWINNER: Happy Birthday, sweet peal Twenty-two candtoe could bum the house down! How ‘bout hutch on me? With ANYTHING TYPED IBM/laaer, typing/ wordprocassing. Fast, dependable and reasonable. Wordstrong, 9533465. love, Met MARK (MR College Street Dell)- Coffee and horoscopes ... read 'em lately? Haircut. POW WOW: Thanks tor a great, wonder­ ful, fantastic, romantic «me In Mexico. Let’s make plans tor next year! Love, Pee Wee. PS- You never know when they might come In handy) S.A.- GRAND Canyon, again? Maybe In another two or three... Years!! I had the m ost w onderful tim e! Thank you, sweetheart. I love you!! Jen. A S TU TE COM PUTIN G. Professional, guaranteed: typing, resumes, graphics, etc. Fasti Near ASU. Ron, 829-1609, 8336532. BU SY ? LE T me type your term papers, reports, and resumes tor you. Reasonsbte. Evening«, 8292411.____________ C A LL ME tor fast, accurate, quality service at competitive prices. Close to ASU. 963-2196. EXPERIENCED, ACCU R ATE, Cheerful typist near'Southem and Rural. 831-7337. SNO O ZE W HAT'S cute, wet, naked and more fun than studying? Egothrob. FA S T RETURN- Experienced typist win edit spelling, punctuation, grammar. Accu­ Thursday last was wonderful. racy guaranteed. Joan, 8394772. TAMURA: I heard some guy had a great time down In Mazattan. I hope you had half as much fun. Love, Oatmeal. FLYING FINGERS now has a M ac II and laser printer! Resumes, reports, etc. Susan. 946-1600. FO RM ER ASU staffers-W ord Perfect and Xerox memory writers. Experienced with ANOREXIA, BULIMIA compulsive over­ eating. Private and confidential counsel­ ing. Gkmie Grant Monroe, ACSW , recov­ ered bulimic. 437-9426, 468-3859. Health Insurance welcome. DU ST CO VER S, padded cases, outdoor accessories, sowing, alterations, mend­ ing. Blue Moon Stttchery, 967-3143. G UARANTEED ISSUE Major credit card program. No constant required! For more Information call Ron, 7304896. HAVE UNW ANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by stectrolyelt. Free consultation, located In Tempo. .C a ll Sharon at Desert Bectrolysto Canter, 829-7829. R E S E A R C H A S S IS T A N C E . Largest library of Information in the United States. Toll-free holline: 14094614222. WINDOW TINTING- Low prices, free phone quotes, near ASU- 225 W. Universi­ ty, number 112,8944503. A P A R T M E N T F IN D E R S - Free Rental Service 70,000 Units To C h oo se •From 894-1391 Tem pe Office AUTO ACCIDENT? A P A MLA, graduate school, etc.- gradu­ ate students and faculty work welcome. 9464302, Donna,and Joan. LETTER P ER FEC T word processing. Rush jobs no problem. Dissertations, term papers, resum es, 820-7773 th eses. O ualltyt PROFESSIONAL R ESU LTS at reason­ able rates. Term papers, correspondence, resumes and more. Ceft Patty at The Write Choies, 8294206 (39 p.m.) Q U A LITY, Q U ICK Typing. Papers, reports, resume«. Pick-up/delivery avail­ able. One day service available. Gitmy, 9636163. QUALITY TYPING or word proceeding cheap! Free pickup/delivery. Shelley, 8904960. , __________________ SA V E TIME. Cafl me first Word process­ ing, theses, dissetttons, resumes, profes­ sional typist. Mesa Secretarial. 844-1878. SH O R T O F TIME? I can help. Rea­ sonable. P rofessional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academic. Ceil Jessie 946-6744. TH E PAPERW ORKS- Thesis, report and resume typing. IBM compatible word processing. Near ASU. 921-9675. TYPING SERVICE near ASU . Quick turnaround. Over X years secretarial service. 9434982. ■ W EST CAM PUS Typing. Laser prim avaHabta. Call 8634984. WORD/INFORMATION PROCESSING at affordable prices. Letters, resum es, theses, reports, mailings, real astate/legal, spreadsheets, accounting documents. Telephone 7834366. Former Phoenix Police Officer. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c re ta ria l services. 23 ye an experience. Student discount. SW comer, Milter and Chapar­ ral. 9944146. Lim ited to personal injury and fam ily law. Free consultation in accident matters. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G / s e c re ta ria l service. North Contrai Phoenix location. 9438063 KEVIN SCHWARTZ 2653800 W ORD PROCESSING. Fast, secútate and professiona) Service, torm papera, ttwees, letters, reporta, topad transcription available. Cali Julia, 8294663 transportation A LL STA TES Driveaway - Care avallabto 21 or oktor. 992-5200. ATTENTION: F R E E c a n to all major dites. 21 or oktor. Call AAA Driveaway, 277-9979. T fe te f SaMan, Baach Renfs/a, FoodServ/ca, Surf Shop, experience handling cash Helpful- »Ut not necessary. $3.50/hour. 81-15/ PAGE. Campus pickup/ delivery. 24 hour turnaround. 8 yean experience. Gloria, at 8354428 961-1495. INTERIOR DECORATING: American Insti­ tuto of Interior Design. 8 month course. Classes start weekly. 16865 E. Parkview, Fountain HHIs. 9434891. .now. o ff e r s training m audio e n g in e e r in g in P h o e n ix . typ in g/ w ord p ro ce ssin g EMTD- Thanx, D.L., HANG GLIDE! Gently sloping hill Just south of Tempo. Sato and exciting. S u p e rb group ra te s. W indeporte, 897-7121. A C A D E M Y OF R E C O R D IN G S C IE N C E S IRELAND- RECONCILIATION Seminar, July 322,1036. Dublin Factories, castles, m usic and literature. Details, Or. fl. Axford, 839-3266. 81.60 PER page. Any Type Word Process­ ing. Spelling and grammar corrected. Some graphics available. Call Debbie, I n te r v ie w s to d a y a t 4 :0 0 p .m . 4c 7 p .m . travel K-OEE G O LF Tournament Committee: Don’t forget mooting tonight, 8:391!!! be $5.25/hour; Slideguard, $3.75/hour. Equal Opportunity Em ployer M/F/H/V ttte beet «me, hope you guys did tooltt Please, next «me no Hotel Dtosunl Heidi. INCOME TAX preparation. Reasonable ratea. 2334206 or 4864559. $ 1 4 0 0 fm o n th . Q u a lif ic a t io n s : COM PUTER CO N FUSED ? Training on systems, operations, qnd software. Low rale». Cell SO S Consultant», 989-7381. Alaska offers num erous well-paying s e a s o n a l p o s itio n s in T o u ris m , Seafood Processing, Parks & Re­ creation* We have compiled a precise gu id e t o sta te w id e , s u m m e r em ­ ploym ent. A-PHf CHRISTINE and Tiff: Que peso? Rocky Point will never ba the same! I had e x p e r ie n c e w h ile m a k in g H o w a r d J o h n so n 's EXCELLEN T MARKTMG/ Management career opportunities tor self-m otivated/ ambitious men and women wfth the world'e largest producer personal growth/ training programs- -Send resutpe: 142 W èst C a ro V n e ìÀ n fi Tam ps, AZÌB6264. SUM M ER POSITIONS Avallabto: Life­ guards, instructors, M ilitant pool mana­ gers, and pool managers needed at tha City of Scottsdale's three aquatic tacHtttee. W AITRESSES, BARTENDERS, end flyer distributers. Desperado«, 524 W . Broad­ way, Tem ps, 8944423. Sun/ Unix highly deskabto. Creativity and abHKy to work In a team environment necessary. Send resume to: G TX Corpora­ tion, Ailentfon: Human resources 5-3, 8838 N 23rd Av»., Phoenix, Arizona fufcttme general help. WM train bright person. 7701E . Indian School Road, Suite tenance staff, horseback riding, nature, arte and crafts, and swimming staff are also needed. Good «alary plus room and board. C a l 1-8844087 or write: YM CA Cam p, 516 N. 5lh Ave., Tucson 86795 tar applications or information. SECRETARY/ RECEPTIONIST needed at residential treatment center for EH adoles­ cents, starting 4/1. Good phone skills, type 70 plus words per minute, must know word processing on Apple lie (prsferrabfy), assist In variety of secretarial duties, 2 years computer/ clerical experience. 812,384. South Phoenix location. Send resume : P.O. Box 8699, Phoenix, AZ SOFTW ARE ENGINEER. Requires M S in Computer Sdence/Engineering with a thong background In Artificial Intelligence and. profletom^ in C . Industry-related experience in Expert System design and Implementation, familiarity with MC88QX0, MEDICAL O FFICE In Scottsdale needs «tie summer June S to August 21. Counse­ ls » , dksotora, kitchen, program and main- VER Y BRIGHT person wfth excellent typing tklttt needed tor unique full-time position in Scottsdale. 941-3812. S EC R ETA R Y / TY PIST. W est M esa insurance office. 12.30-4:30, MondayFriday. 84/hour. C a l 964-5014, mornings. KRISTI'S, TH E Valleys newest and moat exclusive agency to seeking new talent. If you ham past experience or potential to' model or act call Susie, 9464000. SUM M ER CAM P Jobs! YM CA camp outside of Tucson In Oracle to Woking for students, graduates, and teacher* to work application write National Collegiate Recreation, P.O . box 8674, Hilton Head Island, S C 29938. 86095. day, March 16 in the Memorial Union, room 214 GHta from 9-11 a m . or room 221 Apache from noon-2 p.m. ______ p e rso n als h e lp w anted travel AIRLINE DISCOUNTS: Fly Continental U S A Stay an summer, changes permitted, 8375 round trip; Alaska 8550. World wide discounts. Soma restrictions apply. Travel Tips Unlimited. 9637283. BUSINESS STUDENTS- Interested In traveling to Europe or the Orient this summer and earning college credit»? Find out hour! International Business Seminars Informational masting Thursday, March 17. at 1:40 in BA365. Discover the excitlnq hsa.a* PAPER PROS le t u$ d o your term paper* - Quality laser printing. Personal service - we care! Pick-up & Drop-off near University & College Call 964-6012 w anted FEM ALE M ODELS tor advanced haircut­ ting, perming and cokxfng d is s e s . Broad­ way Southwest Bit:more Fashion Park. Contact Ricardo, 4662175. a d o p tio n s CARINQ, LOVING, financially stable couple looking for white newborn to adopt. 4 Stet« Preti Page 24 ìM é n b ì 1 APPtoftNQW gl Soup Up Your Skills Positions Avail­ able, ’88-’89 * President ‘ ‘ ‘ Applications for new M U AB officers available, M .U. Activities Ctr. *Pop-Up, O ctober League, Band 12 •1p.m .l RL ‘ Film , Storm y Weather, 5:30 p .m .U C (Free) gm ^ SATU RD A Y ‘ Film , Attaok of the KMer Tom atoes 7 5.9 p.m., U C "Film , The G ood Earth, 7 p.m., ' ■‘ Film , Pradafor, 7 &9:30 p.m. U C ’. 1 ■ ‘ Pop-Up, Th* Pr*dlcam*nta, Band 12 - 1 p.m., RL 19 ‘ The Faroe S id e. Com edy. 1230-1:30 p .m .,U C U C Free • ST. PATRICK'S DAY 20 21 ‘ N o r m 8 ftraet Hom e. Photo­ graphy &Poetry Exhibit (thru 3/30), Reception 5 - 7 p.m .. U G 27 28 22 ***MUAB new Officer appli­ cations DUE, 5 p.m. "Jazz Trio 12 - 1 p.m. RL P "Film , The Untouchables, 7 & 9 p.m., U C 24 .‘ Casino Night Prom o 1,2 - 1 p.m., RL 29 30 ‘ Host & Hostess, S*r*ndfpity daily, M U Wast Lawn (thru 4/1) •Film, Hopi: Songtol th* Fourth W orld, 7 p.m., U C Indian Rights, Indian Law, 7 Jazz Band, 6-7 p.m. 25; ( 26 "Pop-up, Slow Bum , Band, 12 , , * 1 p.m., RL (Casino Night Promo) The Fbroe Side, Com edy 1 -4 p.m., U C ‘ Film ; A Raisin in ttie Sim , 7 p.m ., U C FR EE ^rls & Craft* Fair, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. PALM SUNDAY 23 |f Special Events, CA9IN O NIGHT, 8 p.m . - 1 p.m..: 31 , Mar. & S . Terr. |i;if C a sin o A Ja zz Band. Slow Bum Admission: $2 at door *1 advanoo(M.U. Activities ctr.) R o tk ft Reggae Fast 12 p m -7 pm P.V. Beach CDG McMonw. UmoMAenvnic* Bo m » “ ‘Student De v e lo p m e n t