A riz o n a S tate U n iv e rs ity ’s M o rn in g D a ily V oi. 7 0 N o. 104 •Copyright, SM*Pim lM Tompo, ArizoM W e d n esd a y , M arch 1 6 ,1 9 8 8 jggMfli Reagan’s co n trad icted by A S U , D eConcini By VICKIE CHACHERE State Press Arizona Sen. Dennis DeConcini and an ASU official refuted Tuesday President Reagan’s claim th at $10 million in federal funds the University received to build an engineering center is <*wasteful, unnecessary and low priority.” DeConcini, a Democrat, said in a telephone interview that Reagan is singling out the B arry M. Goldwater Science and Engineering Center as a waste of federal dollars because the president would have rath er allocated the funds to another university. D ie engineering center, which w ill receive about $35 million in federal funds when the project is complete, was appropriated $10 m illionin the. 1968 budget. D ie 1988 allocation and the $5 million the University was Awarded in the 1967 budget, are sd ey for construction of the c& iter. Equipment, lab m aterials and research costs will be paid for by ASU. Reajgan singled out the center as being a w aste of federal dollars last week when he released a list of 107 item s from die 1968 budget that, he says wastes about $1.54 billion of taxpayers’ dollars. Reagan also targeted a $4 million research grant for the UofA copper recovery center. D ie president called the research “unneeded,” adding th at the grant was not aw arded fairly. Reagan did not ask Congress to rescind any of the budget Tim to poConcM, pogo 8. S o n g s of the South Matt Fesnsy, tram loft, Ellen McWhirtor and Larry Winthrop stag protest gongs as part of United Campusos to Pravsnt Nuclear War's (UCAM ) rally honoring Individuals arrested during a recent protest of U .8. nuclear testing In Novada. The rally was held on Cady Mall Tuesday. Related story, page 12. Touchdow n: N F L team s approve C ard in als’ m ove Staff and Wire Reports D ie St. Louis Cardinals’ move to Phoenix received a form al vote of approval Tuesday from the 28 NFL team s who are holding th eir w inter m eetings a t the Arizona Biltm ore. The NFL team s voted 26-0 to approve the move, with the Los Angeles R aiders and Miami Dolphins abstaining. - “I feel a little am bivalent,” said Cards | owner William V. BidwiQ. “I’ve enjoyed 28 years in St. Louis but it’s lim e now to become p art of a new city.’* The vote on the Cardinals followed a lastditch effort by a St. Louis civic group, which offered to build a 70,000-seat domed stadium if the Cards stayed. But the NFL owners said it was too little end too late, and ratified what had been a foregone conclusion. The team will go from 53,000-seat Busch Stadium, built prim arily for baseball, to 70,000-seat ASU Sim Devil Stadium. \ D ie need tor a larger stadium was a m ajor argum ent advanced by Bidwill in discussions with city and county officials in S t Louis. D ie Cardinals, for the last three years, inside ASU WEATHER Mild today with a high in the 70s. Tonight: coot with a low near so. ! '' DEDICATION: ASU President J. Russell Nelson kicks off the dedication of the new Student Ser­ vices Building. P age 12. C lassified.^.............. 26 Com ics.......... ............22 Entertainm ent..... .....13 Opinion........... . 4 Sports............... Today..................... 2 averaged under 40,000 a t the gate in a league Bidwill said that he had the final choice of where average attendance is around 60,000. what to call his team . He said he wanted the team nam ed for the city of Phoenix rath er B rent Brown, ASU vice president for University relations and a m em ber of the than the state because of an NFL tradition ASU-Phoenix-Tempe group th at negotiated to have team s in cities. Only one, the the Cardinals deal said, “ I think it’s a show Minnesota Vikings, is nam ed after a state. of siqipart for M r. Bidwill. We, of course, “I wanted to go back to the traditions of a re happy th at the owners thought th at this the league,” he said. “We’ve always been would be a good area for pro football.” nam ed after a city. Most of the tram s in the Phoenix Mayor Terry Goddard said, league now are named after a city and we’d “ Certainly if any credit is to be handed out, like to keep it that way, “I im agine there are people who would it deserves to go to ASU and B rent Brown, like it to be the Arizona Cardinals and who have been the people who have really helped to pull the effort together since the people who want it Phoenix Cardinals. But they’re getting an NFL tram , and with it, beginning.” the NFL tradition.” The two abstentions in the vote w ere tied Brown said , “ T h at’s Mr. B idw ill’s together by a lawsuit involving the move of decision. He can chose the nam e of the the Los Angeles Raiders, in which the court team .” held the NFL didn’t have the right to block transfers. Tempe Mayor H arry M itchell said, “The point is th at it’s got a bit of all of Arizona and Miami’s Joe Robbie said he abstained for all of Arizona had something to do with two reasons because he is a close friend of making it successful. I guess the im portant Jo e F o ss, who headed th e Phoenix thing to th at the Cardinals are in Arizona. expansion group th at is no longer in That’s the im portant thing.” business, and because of the ruling in the . The move results in an NFC E ast that will Raiders case. stretch 2,500 miles from New York to BidwiU’s team will be known as the Arizona. Rozelle said th at there will be no Phoenix — not Arizona — Cardinals. realignm ent until expansion, a t least three years away. “ Our riv alries a re in the E astern Conference. Our rivals are ail eastern team s and it should stay th at way,” Bidwill said. “We have no rivals in Phoenix yet. But I keep hearing from some people th at they don’t like Dallas and. they want us to b rat the Cowboys every season.” Before the vote, the Cards were expected to have to pay somewhere between $10 million and $24 million to the league — a figure representing the possible difference in revenue between St. Louis and Phoenix. However, the owners sim ply approved a vaguely-worded resolution th at said: “The Cardinals agree that they will pay to the league a sum of money representing any excess value of the Phoenix expansion opportunity over the St. Louis expansion opportunity as of this date as calculated on the sam e basis and under the sam e methodology as is applied in the action involving the transfer of the R aiders from Oakland to Los Angeles.” It also said that if agreem ent couldn’t be reached, it would be put to binding arbitration. G oldw ater takes stand on cam paign issues By CHRIS PIRKEY Stats Press B arry Goldwater, who had endorsed vice president George Bush lo r the Republican presidential nomination, told a group of ASU students Tuesday th at he w ill sw itch his endorsem ent to Kansas Sen. Bob Dole if Bush is further im plicated in the Iran-Contra Scandal. But Goldwater, a form er Arizona senator and the Republican presidential candidate in 1964, added that he doubts any new inform ation about the scandal will show Bush acted im properly in the sale of arm s to Iran and subsequent diversion of funds to the Nicaraguan Contra rebels. Bush has refused to divulge how much he knew about the arm s sales and w hat rale he played in the scandal. Dole is Bush’s chief rival for the GOP presidential nomination.' “ I ju st don’t see it (the scandal) as a big issue,” G oldw ater said . “ Not enough people are concerned with ft.” Goldwater also said he would like to see the Rev .Jesse Jackson on the Democratic presidential ticket, and added that M assachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis would be the hardest candidate for Bush to b rat in the November general election. Tuesday, Bush won a ringing victory in the Illinois prim ary, but Dole vowed, “we’re staying in the race” for the nomination. In the Democratic race, Illinois Sen. Paul Simon led Jackson in the battle between Democratic favorite sons. Goldwater also criticized the series of caucuses and prim aries used to aw ard convention delegates to the presidential candidates. Goldwater said he would rather see one nationwide prim ary, rath er than the states spread the process over a fivemonth campaign season, On local issues, Goldwater said Arizona needs to concentrate on ousting impeached Gov. Evan Mecham from office. Mecham is currently facing a Arizona Senate im peachment trial, a M aricopa County crim inal trial and a May 17 recall election. “I would like to see the Senate im peach him, (but) I’d like to see it done peacefully,” Goldwater said. “He’s done a lot of dam age to the state. “It’s wrong to have a m an for governor who has so m any people questioning him .” 4 Goldwater, who had called for M echam’s resignation in October, said the best {dan of action would be to let acting Gov. Rose Mofford complete the rest of the term , and then elect a new governor in the 1990 general election. Goldwater also said the Arizona constitution’s clauses dealing with im peachment need to be amended because it does not clearly state how the proceedings should be handled. The Associated Press contributed to this report. ______ __________ S tM c h tts W ednesday, March 16,1988 w o rld / n a tio n in b r ie f Nicaragua begins large offensive against Contra rebels in north J¡ WASHINGTON (AP) — Nicaraguan forces launched a m ajor offensive Tuesday against Contra rebels in the northern p art of the country and also sent forces into neighboring Honduras, U.S. officials said. The officials, who asked not to be identified, said battlefield reports w ere sketchy, adding th at there were no firm estim ates on die num bers of troops involved. The State D epartm ent had said earlier th at preparations by governm ent forces appeared to foreshadow “the largest offensive we have seen the Sandinistas undertake.” L ater, one official said, “The attack is beginning.” He added th at initial reports indicated (hat the Sanriinist»» m ay be intent on a “knockout Wow” against the Contras. But House Dem ocratic aides, also speaking on comfition of anonym ity, said the offensive by Sandinista troops was m erely “ business as usual” and ah attem pt to “soften up” the Contras before ceasefire negotiations scheduled to resum e on Monday. Separately, m ilitary officers who briefed reporters said th at between 1,000 and 1,500 Contra forces ware in die Bocay area where the Sandinista troops had been fath erin g . „ 'W fi They said th at the Sandinistas m ay be intent on gaining th e upper hand m ilitarily in order to im prove their bargaining position once cease-fire talks between the Sandbiistos. and the Contras resum e next week. . The report of the Sandinista offensive cam e hours after congressional leaders reacted icily to a White House {dm for renewed aid for the rebels. “ It doesn’t realty seem to make total sense,” House Speaker Jim W right, D-Texas, said of die urgent request, conveyed to bipartisan congressional leaders a t a White House m eeting. W right said it was House Republicans, acting in concert with President Reagan, who defeated a $30 million package of food and clothing for the rebels two w e d s ago, just after their U.S. aid pipeline had run dry. Shultz says he has not resolved differences with Israel over plan WASHINGTON (AP) -4 Secretary of State George P. Shultz said Tuesday he was unable to bridge differences with Israeli M im e M inister Yitzhak Sham ir over a U.S. plan for opening M ideast peace negotiations by May 1. But he called the first of three days of talks with Shamir constructive and said “we fe d encouraged to continue our efforts to work with Israel and others in the Middle E ast.” Sham ir underscored one of the main differences. He said th at in Israel's view, the Middle E ast peace conference Shultz wants to convene next month to set the stage for negotiations could not {day “any positive role.” President Reagan sought, meanwhile, to reassure Shamir he would not be put under U S. pressure to agree to any particular solution to Israel’s 40-year dispute with the Arabs. ^ * But Reagan stressed that “making progress toward peace in the Middle E ast not only serves m utual interests, it to urgent. Civil servants demand paychecks; rally against Panamanian police PANAMA CITY, Panam a (AP) - M edical workers hurled firebombs a t police outside a hospital on Tuesday joining a wave of prtflic em ployees rallying against the cash-strapped governm ent of Gen. M anuel Antonio Noriega. ' ■ Hundreds of civil servants took to the streets to their paychecks, and riot squads responded with tear gas, w ater cannons and shotguns loaded with birdshot. At i»ast a dozen were injured. Abo an Tuesday, Panam a ordered Terrence Knw»hpnp director of the U.S. Inform ation Service here, to leave the country within 48 hours, a U.S. Em bassy source said. The United States said it would ignore the directive. The government also said it would begin m aking at least partial payments to its 130,000 public employees, who comprise one-fifth of the workforce. But employee union leaders rejected the plan and dem anded full salaries. The w ont of the dem onstrations occurred a t the main Social Security Institute hospital on the city’s north side, where medical workers with flam ing gasoline bombs battled police outside the spraw ling facility. “T histe a hospital!” shorted a nurse. “ How can they do tote? We are under siege!” Firing tear gas grenades, rio t squads pushed the workers behind a heavy w ire fence surrounding the hospital snmP employees, wearing surgical m asks against toe gas, used m etal tabletops as shields to throw rocks a t the police. to d a y Meetings •B ata A lpha P»1 m eets for breakfast today a t 7 a.m . in MU 218. •O v ereaters A nonym ous m eets today and Thursday a t noon, upstairs in the MU. •C am pus Aglow m eets today at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •C hristian S tu d en ts Fellow ship m eets today from 12:40 p.m . to 1:30 p.m. in MU 211. •W om en’s S tu d ies Program m eets today from 12:40 p.m. to 2 p.m. in the School erf Music Recital Hail, Room 510. •C ircle fo r R esearch in C om putational Lingu istics m eets today at 1:45 p.m. in ERC 490. • Ad Chib m eats today at 2 p.m. in the BAC lobby and will tour the Gannert outdoor production facilities. •MUAB E ntertainm ent C om m ittee m eets today from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m . in MU 216. •N ative A m erican S tu d en t A ssociation m eets today at 3 p.m. on the second floor of th e MU. mind, gratifies the senses SSt-a l l b a í •MEChA m eets today at 3:30 p.m. in the •ASU C ollege R epublicans m eets today at 4 p.m. in the MU Attenni Lounge. •A m erican M arketing A ssociation m eets today at 4:30 p.m. in BAC 218. •E ngineering C ollega Council m eets today at 4:30 p.m. at Oregano’s Pizza on 10th Street and Mill Avenue. They welcome alt studente. •G raduate W omen in B usiness m eets today at 4:45 p.m. in BAC 226. •N ational A ssociation o f A ccountants m eets today a t 4:45 p.m. in MU 222. •A m erican H um anlcs m eets today at 5:40 p.m. in the MU Coconino Room. Announcements •M echam Recall C om m ittee a t ASU will register voters in front of th e MU today from 1,1 a.m . t o 1 biih. •C om m ittee In S o lid arity w ith the Palestinian U prising will dem onstrate in support of the Palestinian people today at 11 a.m . in front of th e MU. . I ff a PANEL M DISCUSSION o» AIR QUALITY PHOENIX “!• then hope forcleenelrln PhoenixV PARTICIPANTS WILL INCLUDE: • Peter W yckoff a s s is t a n t g e n e r a l c o u n s e l (Environmental Protection Agoncy) • David Baron A r iz o n a c e n t e r f o r la w IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST • Robert U sdane • Ja ck Jew ett • G ary Neuroth s t a t e s e n a t e m a jo r it y l e a d e r s t a t e r e p r e s e n t a t iv e a z. d e pa r t m e n t o f f O O PS/ 5S f SPILLED BEER. ONM Y LUCKY I CHARMS ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY • P au l Jo h n so n • Jo s e p lr Feller p h o e n ix c i t y c o u n c i l m a n p r o f e s s o r o f la w , a s u W ED N ESD A Y, M A R C H 16 at 7:30 In thn G nat Hall, Armstrong Hall Ùjfe. A&V College o f Law jfpSPONSORED BY ASU BAR ASSOCIATION S ta te Pres« Page 3 M offord refuses to suspend M ilstead, DPS o ffice rs By b e n Mc C o n n e l l State Press ■V t ft e !r PHOENIX — In a Tuesday letter to im peached Gov. Evan Mecham, acting Gov. Rose Mofford buffeted his request that oep artaien t of Public Safety D irector Ralph M ilstead and two of his subordinates be suspended because of his allegations of witness tam pering requesting that Mecham use his envoy a t the Capitol, Ray who “has complained recently about not being sufficiently utilized.” Meanwhile, the prosecution filed wbat is, essentially, its own complaint of witness tam pering In a deposition that accompanies argum ents against a m istrial, Antonio Corio, a Departm ent of Administration electronics technician, said that Mecham attorney F red C raft barked a t him and intim idated him ju st one hour before he was to take the stand. C raft assum ed that Corio would testify that; be discovered bugs in the governor’s ninth-flow office during an electronics sweep. But Corio did not and C raft later charged that DPS officials intim idated Corio to change his story. According to the deposition filed Tuesday by the prosecution, Corio said he toM C raft in the w itness cham ber prim- to testifying: “I don’t want you to tear me up like you have other w itnesses.” Corio said C raft’s reply w as: “If you answer my questions, I won’t. If you don’t, I will.” Corio’s deposition also states that C raft said: “Do you know Ralph M ilstead f— the widows of fallen officers to console them ?” On the Senate floor, Craft blasted Corio’s claim s. “1 find this scurrilous in the extrem e,” he said, his. face reddenning. “It is not accurate; it is a lie.” The prosecution’s counter-allegations overshadowed Mecham’s dem and Monday th at Mofford suspend M ilstead and Lt. Cols. Jam es Chilcoat and Gary Phelps because they allegedly tam pered with w itnesses in his im peachment trial in the Senate. Mecham is charged with obstructing an investigation into an alleged death threat. But Mofford said unfit she receives a full report from DPS officials today, “I have no inform ation a t the moment which would w arrant sum m ary suspension of the individuals accused in your letter, and do not plan to take such drastic actions before the facts a re ascertained.” Currently, the FBI and Pim a County Attorney Steve Neely also are investigating the witness tam pering charges, brought about by Craft, Craft has charged th at Corio’s testim ony and the F riday night arrest of T erri Fields, a secretary in the Governor’s Office of Women’s Services and a witness for the defense, constituted “gestapo tactics” to intim idate witnesses. C raft subsequently called for a m istrial on Monday, a motion th at was put off by the Senate Court of Im peachment Tuesday until today. “Why are we afraid? We’re afraid in this state because we’ve got a runaway police state,” C raft told senators Tuesday. H ie Senate also has requested a report on Fields’s arrest by DPS and Mesa Police officials on an outstanding m isdem eanor w arrant for alleged obstruction of justice and willful disobedience of a court order. Prosecutor William French told the juror-senators that Mecham has proved he does have a defense and is trying to move the spotlight on the DPS. Turn to Trial, page 10. City council candidates, mayor debate quality of Tempo living B y J . MICHAEL HOEHN State Prose * In the last debate before Tempe’s M arch 22 prim ary election, Tempe’s city council c a n d id a te s an d th e one in cu m b en t candidate for m ayor answered questions Tuesday night about Tempe’s im age, city development and neighborhood protection. The debate, sponsored by the Tempe D aily News Tribune and the Mill Avenue M erchants Association, was the first in which all seven city council candidates participated. The candidates are vying for three seats . in the prim ary, election. Any candidate capturing m ore than 50 p e rm it of the vote will be elected. The remaining seats would be filled in a general election on May 10. All the candidates said they see Tempe prospering m ore in the next 25 years, but they expressed concern over issues such as transportation and quality of community services. Incum bent M ayor H arry M itchell said th at since Tempe cannot annex any m ore land, city government does not need to worry about expanding, but only worry about im proving the qualify of city services. “The tone and tenor of the city are M itchell said. “W hat we have to im prove th at.” M itchell said in order to handle the city’s transportation problem Tempe needs to work with the Regional Public T ransit Association in developing m ass transit system s, such as a light-rail system and increased busing. Candidate Viyenne Campbell said the city needs to m ake decisions based on the eftects those decisions will have in the future not only on im m ediate consequences. Incumbent Councilman Don Cassano said Tempe has to become m ore involved in TUmto Dofcoti , pago 10. IUnd—y CMbSIi I« Pr— sandidates debate Tuesday night at Tempe M ission Palms. W hy n o t t r y th e b e st ¡Uzza in t o w n to n ite ? ’ B uy a n y TOWARD SUCCESS IS COULD TAKE THIS SUMMER. A t A zm y ROTC C am p C h a lle n g e youi’U le a rn w h a t it ta k e s to s u c c e e d — in c o lle g e a n d in life. Y o u ll b u ild se lf-c o n fid e n c e a n d d e v e lo p y o u r le a d e rs h ip p o te n tia l P lu s y o u c a n a lso q u alify to e a rn a n A rm y O fficer’s co m m issio n w h a n you g ra d u a te from c o lle g e . A rm y RO TC C am p C h a lle n g e - R m ay b e ju st w h a t you n e e d to re a c h th e to p . F in d o u t m o re . C o n ta c t T om G ib b o n s a t (6 0 2 ) 968-3318, ICELlEHC ARMY ROTC T H E S M A R T E S T COLLEGE C O U R SE T O D CA N T A K E . size original pizza a n d g e l th e s e c o n d o n e FREQ! Press Page 4 | A n g ^ p it f a y P f % ; '; ‘ I g p p i : ; î B Adult children of alcoholics begin healing process G reg Krzos Managing Editor Boy, was I really angry today. Big deal, right? Well, yes. It wasn’t your orthnary kind of anger. It was an anger that stem m ed from being an adult child of an alcoholic. Now that sounds funny doesn’t i t f Adult child of an alcoholic? Itis hard to define to regular term s, but in its sim p lest form ad u lt ch ildren of alcoholics are ju st that — children of alcoholics «dm, as adults, m ay suffer some ill effects of an uncertain childhood. Attention to ACOAs is on the rise. The issue is reaching epidem ic proportions. Suddenly, it’s something to deal with tmd it’s becom ing today w hat Alcoholics Anonymous was over .a decade ago. to fact, the alcoholics of the past two decades seem to have bred a crop of individuals who now need to find out w hat the hell is wrong with them . L ast year Judy, a close friend of mine, moved to the coast. We’ve spoken on the phone three tim es a week ever since. And three tim es a week we’ve moaned and groaned about the sam e things — our troubled relationships and why nobody understood us. It wasn’t until I finally started reading a book by P a tty M cConnell titled “ A Workbook for Healing Adult Children of Alcoholics” that it dawned on m e - Judy and I were in the sam e predicam ent; our fathers w ere alcoholics. BINGO! Like myself, Judy had adm itted te a t her father is an alcoholic. She grew up in an “A Workbook for Healing . ...” lists 21 possible behavior traits which children of alcoholics can form growing up in such a household fear of abandonment, intimacy difficulties, distrust, intensiveness, mood swings, low self-esteem, eating disorders, alcoholism or alcoholism in a significant o th e r, ly in g , ex citem en t ad d ictio n , dependency, casual sex or other sexual disorders, violent behavior or such in a significant other, excessive over/under responsibility and reaction, impulsiveness, critical judging, inability to relax, need to ‘Like alcoholics, the adult ch ild o f an alcoholic w ill g et nowhere denying there is som ething w rong.’ emotionally shaky environment — afraid as a child to adm it there was anything wrong — terribly insecure about herself and the fam ily aroimd her. The alcohol in both our households becam e the enemy and everyone else — the victim s. The problem eventually distorted our perceptions of having stable relationships arid, to an extent, curved our own re a litie s. We becam e em otional m elting pots, and as we grew up and went* out on our own, we discovered that the thought patterns formed a t a young age didn’t work for us as adults. control, need for approval and compulsive behavior or such in a significant other. 1 was overjoyed and uncertain after reading the list. Overjoyed because at last I knew I wasn’t really an emotional moron and uncertain because out of 21 traits, I had acquired 19. There was a lot of work and healing that needed to be done. But that was OK. One point this ACOA workbook stresses is th at it’s all right to adm it you have a problem, to fact, it’s greatly encouraged. Like alcoholics, the adult child of an alcoholic will get nowhere denying there is something wrong. That’s not to say every child of an alcoholic is emotionally offwhack. It sim ply m eans m any of. them are a t a g re aterrisk of developing troublesome behaviors and em otions, such as codependency — one of the m ore common traits found among ACOAs. to short, co­ dependency refers to individuals who rely heavily on other people to obtain happiness. Admittedly, I am no expert on this subject. l ean only express from my point of view th at being a child of an alcoholic is surely an adventure. But it’s one that m yself and others should not be totally unwilling to deal with. There is help available and like mo6t things, it starts a t home. So, as this literary piece crescendos off into the sunset after attem pting to stir a few psyches, I’ll leave you with this — Were you really angry today? Yesterday? The day b e fo r e t-M S ^ S s . v ' The day before that? L ast w eek?. . . There are several groups around the Valley that assist ACOAs. ASU’s Counseling and Consultation provides Such a service each sem ester — 9654146. Other groups include several Phoenix chapters. The main num ber to call is 266-1661. le t t e r s $3.35 is a crim e Editor: S ince1938, the United States has had a minimum wage. It was designed as a safety net to protect working people from starvation wages and extrem e poverty and to ensure some kind of decent standard of living for all. It was not established out of the goodness of the hearts of business executives and corporate stockholders, nor of the charity of wealthy philanthropists; it was won by the working people and their unions against strong opposition from big business and the upper class. Since 1938, the politicians allied with big business have continuously fought against increases in the minimum wage, and this opposition still exists as we approach its 50th anniversary. In 1968, the minimum wage was $1.60 per hour, which was 54 percent of the m ean hourly wage. As the economy moved from an industrial base to a service base, union m em bership declined and wages failed to increase w ith productivity. Betw een 1976 and 1986, w orker productivity increased by 50 percent, bid a t the sam e tim e, real wages decreased by 10 percent. It is not m ere coincidence that union m em bership declined continuously during this period. Worst hit were the working poor, and by Í961, the minimum wage had increased to its present level of $3,35 per hour. While this was an increase in absolute term s from the 1968 minimum wage, it is only 43 percent of the m ean hourly wage, a decline.of 11 percentage points. The minimum wage had lost real value, since $3.35 in 1981 dollars was wily $1.28 in 1968 dollars. Since 1981, it has contmued to lose real values, to 1965, the minimum wage was only $1.13 in 1968 dollars. The last increase in the minimum wage took place on the first of January, 1981, just 20 days before Ronald Reagan and his reactionary anti-labor adm inistration came to power. To add insult to injury, Reagan has not only refused to stop the downward sp iral of living standards of the working poor, he actually suggested lowering the minimum wage “to create jobs for young people,” implying th at business people cannot afford to pay their workers $3.35 per hour. This argum ent is not a t all uncommon among unionbusting corporations and reactionary politicians. They claim th at workers are overpaid and that they will have to settle for less or face losing their jobs to foreign competition. This may seem plausible a t first glance, but let’s look at the facts, to 1984, tiie total labor force in the United States, civilian and m ilitary , em ployed and unem ployed, w orkers and m anagem ent, was 115,692,000. The gross national product during th at year was $3,622,800,000,000. Divide money by labor force ami you get $31,660 per year per member of the — R IT T E R O ne out of two course for use as eligibility hours. Editor: The front page article of the Feb. 12,1988, Scott Luck’s article from the Nov. 13,1987, State Press made an inaccurate reference State Press accurately covered the Mike to the final Mike Slive re p o rt The article Slive report. The report found th a t the stated: academ ic advising to the student was not at fault but th at it was ignored. Axi excerpt “Harvey, a fifth-year ASU student, took two correspondence courses last sum m er from Scott’s article illustrâtes this: th at did not apply toward U niversity credit. ^ “The report exonerates Charlotte Kim, one of two academ ic advisers to football “He never consulted Jennings about the players, for h er role in advising Harvey. classes, even though it was an athletic ‘Charlotte certainly did everything she d ep artm en t requirem ent. Instead, an should have (tone,’ Slive said.” acad em ic ad v iser in a th le tic s OK’d Harvey’s schedule. I am d isap p o in ted th a t in c o rre c t statem ents were a m ajor component of the “to the end, Harvey was two credits short Feb. 12 article. It is unfair and irresponsible of having the yearly credits football players to the adviser and the University to print m ust have. Jennings ruled that he could not in c o rre c t in fo rm atio n m onths la te r, play.” especially when the State Press reported it To correct the statem ent, the student took correctly once. one correspondence course and it did apply Jill DeMichele for graduation credit. D r. Jennings was consulted about U s options on July 30. Also, Assistant Athletic Director Academic and Student Services the adviser didn’t OK the correspondence q u o t a b le “Knowledge without conscience is the ruination of the soul.“ — Francois Rabelais labor force in value of goods and services produced. Divided by 40 hours per week, 50 weeks per year, this yields $15.83 per hour. This is what we could pay as wages to every worker and compensation to every unemployed person by depriving big business of its profits. They can well afford to pay $3.35. Even if the minumum wage w ere doubled, big business would still m ake huge profits off of the workers. The corporations are not interested in protecting the workers from foreign competition when they speak out against increasing the minimum wage — They’re interested in lining their own pockets. As trade unionists, we have a responsibility that extends beyond our local or our union, to all working people. It is our duty to fight all injustices com m itted against working people, and if is therefore our duty to fight for an increase in the minimum wage so that walking people can obtain enough of the fruits of their labor to live in health, com fort and dignity. The evils of Reaganism have been exposed for the country to see, and the people are demanding justice. Now is the time to tell our legislators that $3.35 is a (rim e. Kevin Walsh Student Vice President American Federation of Teachers and University Employees W ednoda^MartíilójJIÍSS ssa si Term s of endearment: Agent of the Devil colum nist exam ple, one of the letters was {M inted below a headline th at said: “Royko Ju st Adds to M oral Decay.” Mike Roy ko Tribune Media Services Ajournalism student recently asked me w hat I liked best about my job. That was easy. I told him the paycheck. “No,” he said, “what gives you the most professional satisfaction?” That was harder, since I seldom think about professional satisfaction. Mostly, I think about getting the job done, turning out the office light and grabbing a beer. But now that I’ve given it some thought, I suppose the most satisfying thing aboutm y job is th at I can be more than one person. If I m ay boast, I*m sometimes amazed by my 6wn versatility. Fin* example, lately I have been an agent of the devil, a corrupter of American values. I’ve been told this by countless people from all over the country who are angry because I don’t share their adm iration for P a t R obertson, the p reach er turned politician. They not only w rite or phone m e, but they send letters to many of the newspapers that publish my column. In Paducah, for The w riter of the letter had said, “Royko and others like him contribute to the spiritual s » ! m oral decadence of A m erica.” From his letter, 1 couldn’t tell what die w riter’s favorite brand of decadence is, so I don’t know if I can take any credit for his private antics. In f a c t, I c a n ’t e v e r re m e m b e r encouraging decadence. I assum e th at those who w ant to get a little depraved can do so without my help. Take Jim m y Swaggart. I didn’t introduce him to th at loose young lady. If he had asked m e, I would have told him to a t least w ear false whiskers. Or Jim m y Bakker. If die impulsive little fellow sought my advice, I would have told him, “ N e v er! ev er, fool around w ith the secretary.” After he was elected, I wrote that there was no reason for whites to get into a dither, th at he’d probably do no worse than previous m ayors and he should be given a fa ir chance. prom inent nose. I dropped him a note saying th at Jim m y D urante also, had a heroic nose, but he wasn’t Jewish. And the m an sent another letter saying: “So you’re a lousy dego.” You just can’t please some people. I was im m ediately deluged with calls and letters describing me as a “nigger lover.” Yet, things have a way of balancing out. And from tim e to tim e, when I’ve done less than fawn over some of Israel’s policies, I’ve been accused of being an anti-Semite. That m ade m e so upset th at I thought about getting a nose job. As tim e passed, I found reason to criticize s o m e a s p e c t s 'o f W a s h in g to n ’s adm inistration. So I was again bombarded with calls and letters calling m e a “racist.” It later occurred to m e that I had m issed the chance to conduct a useful social experim ent. I should have saved all of those letters, invited the w riters to a big party and stood off a t a safe distance and watched the fun. Another example of my versatility cam e when the late Harold Washington became the first black m ayor of Chicago. Over the years, I’ve also found m yself in the role of “kike” or “sheeny” or “hebe.” These are words used by decent, God­ fearing Americans to describe those who don’t worship the way they do. During his cam paign, I suggested that he fully explain some of the problem s he had once had with the Internal R evalue. I would have asked that of any candidate, white, black or from M ars. Some thought I was Jew ish, which I’m not, because I have a num ber of views that some readers thought w ere too liberal. For ex am p le, I’ve alw ays been a g a in st lynching. There was the im m ediate outcry that I was a racist. But one m an found another clue. He said he knew I was a Jew because I have a of the I believe in capital punishment, so I’m called bloodthirsty and insensitive. When I’ve w ritten about police brutality, I’ve been called a crim inal-coddling wimp. Can a wimp be bloodthirsty? Some shrink should study th a t.. . . Anyway, to paraphrase the old saying: You can enrage som e of the people all of the tim e and all of the people some of the tim e, but you can’t enrage all of the people all of the tim e. Maybe. But I’m not going to stop trying. 08180*8 M E X IC A N 4 An Invitation to ASU Students During the Vietnam War, I wrote that we should get out. I was called a commie dupe. When I said that people like Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin w ere kind of goofy, I was c a lle d a ru n n in g dog of c a p ita lis t im perialism . That really m ade m e nervous. No m atter who won, I’d be put against the wall. FOOD* SPURTS. I/o COLLEGE O f PUBLIC PROGRAMS Now , Tempo’s finest M exican restaurant will b e host toTbm pe’s finest high energy d an ce band. H A P P Y H O U R a a BEERS 9 | U U lM P O R T S M A R G A R IT A S JL FREE H O RS D ’OEUVRES M G N .-FR I. 4 -7 P.M . Presenting every Thurs., Friday and Saturday... C I S C O 'S 2 I f o r w /coupon O N A L L C O M B IN A T IO N P L A T E S A N D C H IM IS . m BUY ONE AND RECEIVE ONE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FREE. C om e alive with u s in the ca su a l but exotic surroundings that has m ade C is c o ’s unique. N o cover. N o minimum. M e et P ro fe s s io n a ls a n d M ak e C o n ta c ts Sponsored by Publie Programs College Council a n d Associated Students. OFFER NOT VALID FOR TAKE-OUT OR WITH OTHER SPECIA LS. ONE PER TABLE PLEASE. EXPIRES 3-30-88 L U N C H SPE C IA L S $ 2 .9 5 M Ö N -F R I 2 7 0 0 S . M ILL, T E M PE fi* P L¥ | tO W Soup Up Your S kills. Positions Avail­ able, ’88-*89 ★ President ★ Vice President ★ Secretary MEMORIAL UNION UNCON DENSED Committee Chair positions ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Advertising Comedy Culture & Arts Entertainment Film Gallery Host & Hostess ★ Special Events Cream of— ACTIVITIES .NET w t : 8 COMMITTEES^ ‘T he M em orial U nion A ctivities B oard plan s th e C ream o f A ctivities th ro u g h p ro g ram s and service**film s, m usic, exhibits, com edy, special events, advertising, craft fairs“ *in an d aro u n d th e M em orial U nion. ‘T h ese volunteer positions offer op p o rtu n ities for lead ersh ip developm ent, activity planning, w orking with faculty, seeing your id eas com e alive and m ak­ ing new friends. ‘R equired: m inim um 2.0 QPA, p art o r full-tim e ASU stu d en t, L eadership O rganizational an d Com ­ m unication skills. A pplications Available, MU A ctivities C enter, 965-MUAB C om pleted A pplications d u e M arch 22 Interview s M arch 26, S at­ urday, 1:00-6:00 p.m. U 2 7 0 0 S. M ill A y e. • 9 6 7 -0 .l° u 9 6 7 -0 3 0 5 Council to evaluate possible ‘academic reorganization’ By SCO TT LUCK State Press ASU acting Vice President of Academic A ffairs C. Roland Haden has appointed a council to study a possible process for an ASU “academ ic reorganization.” The study will eventually determ ine if related academ ic areas m ay be unified for m ore efficient program s, Haden said. “ Tim reaso n s fo r exam ining p o ten tial academ ic reorganization are to determ ine if m ore energy m ight be obtained between sim ilar or related areas,” Haden said. Haden added that the need to study the relationships between program s is “to determ ine if better program s m ig it be delivered to students through realignm ent or to improve efficiency of operation, research program s, community outreach or the general quality of the institution.” H ie Council for Academic Reorganization is chaired by chem istry professor Joseph H arris and consists of 12 other m em bers, including five college deans. In Haden’s charge to the com m ittee, he states that w om iring reorganization m ay be beneficial becam e ASU’s “ academ ic o rg an izatio n al s tru c tu re h as rem ain ed essentially unchanged, although the institution has changed dram atically.” As examides, Haden listed im provem ents in ASU’s graduate education, research and the overall quality of students and research. . The reorganization study will'be conducted simultaneously with the current rew riting of ASU’s “Mission and Scope Statem ent,” or statem ent of present and future goals erf the University. . . Haden identified two areas as the prim ary targets of the initial study. These include criteria for evaluating reorganization processes and evaluating organizational scenarios. Concerning the reorganization processes, Haden lists as the prim aiy question, “What is the appropriate set of processes to be used which will allow adequate input from those affected, yet will proceed in a timely m anner?” Subquestions include what mechanisms should be usurped for faculty and adm inistrative input and identifying opportunities which allow ' for maximum benefit with • minimum disruption. The council m ust also determ ine if reorganization would “result in an outcome that would be in the best interest of the University.” In evaluating the scenarios, the council has been instructed to review the effects a change m ight have on the budget, personnel, program and adm inistration. H arris said the council will have its first meeting sometime C. Roland Haden later this week. HOW I M U D E $ 1 * 0 0 0 m a ïa M H M M i lH ü â s ; ¡ | n B Y W ORKING W EEK EN D S When my friends and I graduated from high school, w e all took part-time jobs to pay for college. T hey ended up in car w ashes and hamburger joints, putting in long hours for little pay. Not me. My job takes just one weekend a month and two w eeks a year. Yet, Fm earning $18,000 for college. Because I joined my local Army National Guard. T hey’re the people who help our state during em ergencies like hurri­ canes and floods. T hey’re also an important part of our country’s military defense. # So, since I’m helping them do such an important job, they’re helping me make it through school. As soon as I finished Advanced Training, die Guard gave me a cash bonus of $2,000. Fm also getting another $5.000 for tuition and books, thanks to the New GI Bill. Not to mentiQn my monthly Army Guard paychecks. They’ll add up to more than $11,000 over the six years Fm in the Guard. And if I take out a college loan, the Guard w ill help me pay it back—up to $1,500 a year, plus interest. It all adds up to $18,000—or more —for college for just a little of my tim e. And that’s a heck of a better deal than any car wash will give you. TH E G UARD CAN HELP PU T YOU THROUGH COLLEGE, TO O . SEE YOUR LOCAL RECRUITER FO R DETAILS, CALL TOLL-FREE 800-638-7600,* OR MAIL TH IS COUPON. •In H aw aii: 737-5255; Puerto R ico: 721-4550; G uam : 477-9957; V irg in Island* (S t Croix): 773-6438; N ew Jersey: 800-452-5794. In A laska, consult your local phone directory. C 1985 U n ited States G overnm ent as represented b y the Secretary of Defense. A ll righ ts reserved. MAIL TO: Army National Guard, P.O. Box 6000, Clifton, NJ 07015 -DM ay N AM E AD DRESS CITY/STATE/ZIP AR EA CO D E . US CITIZEN. Q YES Q NO PHONE SOCIAL SECUR ITY NUM BER ' BIRTH D A TE OCCUPATION T S TU D EN T □ HIGH SCHOOL a C O LLEG E PRIOR M ILITAR Y SERVICE O Y E S O N O BRANCH IM « A FM /M O S K to MSso aulHOmrr «UK-MM A 1 C A JC 14 03 8N P ArmyNational Guard J Americans At TheirEiest. S W e P rm ÏS S È l Wcdniesday^ March IA 1988 Campus group holds anti-nuclear rally recognizing Nevada test By KRISTI ELLIS Stats Praw United Campuses to Prevent Nuclear War staged a rally at the Cady Mall fountain Tuesday to give recognition to one of the anti-nuclear demonstrations ever held a t the nation’s nuclear weapon’s testing center in Nevada. Approximately 1,400 people were arrested a t the test site. An estim ated 5,000 people took p art in the protest over the weekend. State Press Classifieds 965-6731 UCAM m em bers and others spoke about the effectiveness of the dem onstration and stressed the need to slow down the escalation of the arm s race. Scott M iller, a spokesm an for UCAM who a t t e n d the dem onstration in Nevada said, “It was effective in the sense of getting our m essage out and educating the public.” M iller, a senior history m ajor at ASU, stated; “With each new stum ble toward socalled refinem ent of nuclear weapons, our leaders seem all too willing to ignore (the - A t T h e A rch es Call 921-0980 BUY «SELL »TRADE Your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% of our re-sale price in cash or 50% in tradein credit which may be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three floors of: •New & Used Books •Art Prints & Posters •Calendars 6 Cards •Handbound Journals M-F 10-9 SA T 10-6 SU N 12-5 C h a n g in g H a n d s «1«MMA«wkm W MM Q id Town T w ig . F o llo w Your No High Prices, No Hassles, No Appointments, No Inconveniences, No Waiting, schools and colleges. According to Green, approxim ately 500 junior high and high school students attended the dem onstration in Nevada. “It was the largest preplanned civil disobedience in the history of the U.S., and it was empowering to talk to others who believe in what you believe in,” Green said. Approximately every 3Ms weeks, a nuclear explosion takes place in the Nevada desert, and only 2 percent of these teste are used to test existing stockpiles, according to Green. D evil H oüs Jt ^ i A n n u a l} ^ COMPUTERS FOR RENT PC - XT - AT and Portables consequences), that is, what goes around comes around.” M iller claim ed th at refinem ent of nuclear testing is “ultim ately creating our own undoing.” Another speaker, Naomi Green of Youth for Life, stressed the im portance of creating national organizations. Youth for Life is a coalition of high schools th at believe in the right to a full life, Green said. It is making plans to sta rt a national network of youth peace activists in high > S T . P A T R I C K ’S D A Y W Dawn to Dusk Par ty 1 • M a r c h 1 7 ,1 9 8 8 * Doors open at 6am ¡jL £ . , ------------- . * ■ .....— ----------- Free St. Patrick^ D a y Tees to first 98people at 6am & to first 98 people at 6 pm j| | I’ —!---—-—— F re e B re a k fa st No Fooling. Kinko's is the place for quality copies, binding, passport photos, resumes, and self-serve typewriters. Call for information on self-serve compu ters, laserprinting and cassette dupli­ cating. kinko's $1.98 Teas & M onster Beers plus . CO LLEGE COUNTDOWN startin g at 8pm T e m p e 894-9588 715 S. Forest 894-1797 933 E. University AFTER HOURS til 3=30 for those 188colder or w/ valid college ID 9 2 1 -0 1 6 8 University & Hardy M S u n D e sa 969-3326 1840 W. Southern H o u s e e v i l D e C o n cin i ConUm wd tram pag* 1. allocations, DeConcini said, but issued the list to show where he disagreed with the Democratic-controlled Congress on government spending. DeConcini said Reagan likely targeted the center because it was a line-item allocation, meaning th at the center was specifically listed in the budget to receive the funds. The president does not have a line-item veto. DeConcini said if $10 million had been earm arked for an engineering and research center, but not been specifically aw arded!»* university, the D epartm ent of Education would have had final say over which university received the funds. fie said Reagan is probably upset because the Education D epartm ent has no control Over the $10 million and would have rath er seen the funds go to a university he supports. “We are as entitled to an excellent center as MIT (M assachusetts Institute of Technology),” DeConcini said. “ It’s pork b arrel from w hat the president says. To n » , it’s good government.” B arbara O ay, a spokeswoman for the Office of M anagement and Budgets, thé agency that prepares president’s budget request, said Reagan targeted the center becam e the Departm ent of Defense had refused to fund the co iter in 1986 when the University first requested federal She added that the center is not a federal responsibility and if ASU wanted to expand its engineering program , University officials should have asked the Arizona Legislature for funding. B rent Brown, ASU vice president for University relations, said: “Obviously, we agree with (Reagan’s) assessm ent. “This is probably some of the best federal spending that can be accounted for because it’s putting money into areas where our country needs to be com petitive.” Brown said Reagan probably “doesn’t understand what s involved in this facility or he wouldn’t have m ade such a statem ent.” DeConcini added th at he does not consider the ASU center anym ore wasteful than Reagan’s proposed allocation of $7 million to buy leather jackets for m ilitary pilots. Dennis DeCdncini FITNESS EVALUATION APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE graded exercise bike, body composition computerized assessment feedback by Barbara Norrld, MS ëPKSk’ ; and Sciences ■ M É K O e a c fte r DEADLIN W alk-in su b stan ce A b u se in fo rm a tio n Ask Annette starrantino, m s w , questions you've always wanted to ask about substances, informal, confidential, no appointm ent needed Fridays, 10:50 am-1200 Health Dimensions Reception Area For inform ation about either o f these services call: j p i f at the Memorial Union Jfm m e Dean, College of Liberal nd in each department office in the Nomination fdH Information D es Arts and Science! College. P 965*4721 ju s t a fe w o f th é services o ffe re d b y B The Health Dimensions Program th e ASU student wellness program sponsored by A S U S O a d e m H ia itii C o m m u n ity S in ß -a -Io n g with H A IR & N A IL SA L O N e j I it s o! Dani.r. Mu s k . Poetrv. Film and Photography 1 In-;Avce'k is co-sponsored by Arizona Im printed Sportsw ear C all 965-6547 for m ore in fo rm atio n . CAMPUS REP KATHY FEE Ail f v e n t s a r e t r e e and: o p e n ■ Â-, . to the. pu lain • ' A . 2121 S. P R I E S T *119 TEM PE 9 6 6 -7 2 3 7 O f f i c e of S t u d e n t Life, Memorial U nion inform ation Desk, : a-Ov el Las in t h e S T A T E P R E S S . A B A R G A IN P Iî ï c l SHOWSBEFORE6PM MON-.FRI (EXCEPTHOLIDAYS! SATURDAYSUNDAY&HOLIDAYSFIRSTSHOWONLY POCA FIESTA M E S A AT 1020 WEST SOUTHERN Just One o f O u r T h ie Ihstes o f M EX IC O 835-0404 THREE MEN AND A BABY (PB) 12:30.3:00.5:15,7:45,10:15 SHOOT TO KILL (HI 12:15.2:45.5:00,7:30,10:00 S U P E R S T IT IO N 0 mesa at s longmore a superstition BL00DSP0BT (ft) 1:30,5:15. MO ACTION JACKSON |N) 3:15,7:00 VICE VERSA PfQ THE LAST EMPEROR (PG13J Fr. A Sat Only 12:00 12:30,3:30,4:00,7:00,7:30,10:15 Large Shrim p w rapped in bacon strip s, b a ke d w ith a O axaca cheese topping, red an d green bell peppers, onions ana hew s. SUN DEUIL SHE’S HAVtM A BABY (PD1S) 12:15,2:30.4:45.7:15,9:45 SHY PEOPLE (R) 12:15,2:45,5:15,7:45.10:30 | M ....... - TRI-CITY DOLLAR THEATRES BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED (PD) 12:30.2:30.4:45.7:00,9:15 DIRTY DANCING (PB13) 1:30.5:30.9:30 PI AYINBFOB KEEPS (P813) 3:30,7:30 1.00a u . se/cts-a l l SHOWS $ 461-1070 MAINST-B008S0NRP, WMESA WALL STREET (8)3:30,7:45 THROWMAMAFB8MTHETBAH|FB13| 1:48,6:00.10:00 OVERBOARD (P8| É Experience the taste ofMexico's finest regional cuisines, oniyinTempeat... y T h e C l o is t e r Entrees from 10.95 up. M onday through Saturday 5 p.m . to 1 0 p m . . March 16,1988 T rial. Contfcw d from p«Q» »■ “This motion is a sm okescreen,” French said. “Let’s get to the November dates; M ’s get to the defense. Let’s get on with this thing.” Although Mecham has yet to m ake an appearance at his Senate trial, he has beat busy writing Mafford. In what could be construed as her first admonition of the im peached Republican Debate. Continued front p p A . regional issues and problems in the future aM neqds to create a solution to those problems by working with other cities. “We’re just now beginning to realize we don’t live in a vacuum ,” he said. “Every city relies on every other city .” Candidate Ride Godwin said when the city plans on future growth it m ust plan for future revenues. He encouraged work on a regional airport som ewhere in the V alley to cut down on traffic and noise from Sky Harbor Airport. Godwin said he also wanted to see the development of a regional m all in Tempe. governor, Mofford wrote on Tuesday, “In 0 » future, it would expedite m atters if you would use Mr. R ussell to contact m y office. We can respond m ore quickly that with an exchange of letters. “Mr. Russell w as stationed at the Capitol at your req u est. . . ” Mecham has written Mafford several tim es since he w as tem porarily forced out of office Feb. 5, when he w as impeached. M eanw hile, th é dry testim o n y of witnesses in the impeachment trial got juicy Tuesday, as Christina Johnston, who claim ed to be Milstead’s former lover, charged the DPS director is “corrupt, an egomaniac and power-hungry.” “ Fm sorry, but that’s the truth,” said Johnston, who has been married six tim es. No sooner had Craft’s questioning of Johnston began than a 20-minute legal tussle between Craft and Prosecutor Pau Eckstein ensued. P at Hatton, a three-term incumbent, said city government is mitering a new era in Tem pe because at die arrival of a new city m anager, fire chief and police chief: She said Tempe wifi gain new resources in the arts with the construction programs that A$U is conducting. Hatton said city government needs to be concerned with the revitalization of older city neighborhoods. Incumbent B ill Ream said the city needs to keep up high standards in community growth, business development and quality of life. “As long as w e pursue this idea of quality w e ll have quality of life,” Ream said. Ream also encouraged Tempe to work with surrounding communities on regional issues. Candidate Barbara Sherman proposed that a panel of advisers be appointed by the city to advise the Council on the city’s economic progress and the wnys Tempe can improve its economic posture in the future. Prentice Williams agreed the city had a bright futuro but said he .was worried the other candidates were not offering solutions to problems such as traffic congestion and increased police protection. “The problems remain the sam e, it's all right to have quality but w e’ve got to solve! problem s,” W illiam s said. All four non-incumbent candidates said] they favored term lim itations for city! council m em bers and the mayor but were] divided on how m any term s mem bers] should hold and how the lim itations would] bo implemented. Sherman and Campbell said term s for] councilmen should be lim ited to two years, i Sherman wanted four two-year term s for ] the mayor, but Campbell said the mayor ] should only serve two. ■■ William s said be would “frown upon” any] person running for m ote than three term s. 2 FO R 1 BUY ONE ENTREE, RECEIVE SECOND ENTREE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FREE! ■ ■ fa jita Ifim a B I 2 Taccs for 99 cents & Tree Refills on Larne Soft Drinks IWTmTHlSADI W E D N E S D A Y $2.50 PITCHERS O F BUD & B U D U G H T $ 3 .5 0 P IT C H E R S O F W A T N B Y 'S 50 * P O T A T O S K IN S 15-10 P.M.) TH€ T H t lK S D A T $ 1 .0 0 F O S T E R S T U E S .- T H U 8 S . 10« W IN G S 15-10 P.M.I R41NTR! 933 M O N .-F R I. H APPY H O U R 4-8 P M . S A T .-S U N . H APPY H O U R A L L D A Y SUN. 10« WINGS ALL DAY E. U n iv e r s it y , Te Eckstein objected to Craft’s exploration into the personal aspects of Johnston’: relationship w ith M ilstead. P residing! Officer Frank X . Gordon had ruled last! w eek that questions about M ilstead’» personal and sexual history were noi] relevant to die im peachm ent trial. T he STATE PRESS P roduction D epartm ent w ffl ty p e se t any th in g from a fly e r to a book for: ' • ASU D epartm ents ~r ? * C am pus C lubs/O rganizations • Individuals C o rn ersto n e Rural & U niversity 1 (onUnwwWtyjusteastofRural. nexnoKlntoe) ■ 894-6700 9 2 1 -1 2 3 0 Takeout Orders Welcome Fast 4 Freeh make the difference W e’re lo cated in th e b asem en t o f * M atth ew s ■.C e n te r, •. or call 9« 5-*o*T By Choice *.. 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IWHAT IF YOU I DON'T GET INTO THE GRAD SCHOOL OF TOUR CHOKE? i HUMAN SIMAiuM m UnM ttCW atn. S u re, th e re a r e o th e r sc h o o ls. B u t w h y settle? K a p lan p re p c o u rs e s h e lp I s tu d e n ts raise t h e ir s c o re s I a n d t h e ir c h a n c e s o f » b e in g a d m itte d i n t o t h d r first-choice sc h o o ls, fa c t is, n o o n e h a s h e lp e d students score higher! OTHERCOURSES:MOW,DAT,NClEX, NTE,CRA,BARREVIEW&OTHERS Enroll in next te s t a n d g e t th e next tw o te s t d a te s FREE. ADVERTISING 967-2967 WED.MTE IS BACK AT B A N PE flS C O N TIN U E TH È ASU PARTY TRADITION . • . Bw pBp 25 O Z. O IL C A N S PITCHERS BUD, BUD LT., C O O R S LT. $ 2 76 DON’T FORGET. . . ST. PArS DAY TOGA PARTY TH U R S. MARCH 17 •P R IZ E S FOR THE B EST TO G A GUY & GIRL •L IV E . . . FRANK O’SERAFINI BREWPUB <ï M A JO R S: - 1 W e need: creative dedicated motivated outgoing organized persuasive Advertising Sales Reps. . . T h e S ta te P ress is lo o k in g fo r s e v e ra l n e w a d v e rtisin g sa les re p s to b e g in tra in in g n o w to w o rk n e x t s e m e s te r. T h e re w a rd s a re m a n y . . . y o u 'll g a in v a lu a b le e x p e rie n c e in s a le s , la y o u t, d e s ig n , p ro d u c tio n a n d c o m m u n ic a tio n s . T his jo b is n o t fo r e v e ry o n e , h o w e v e r. It's h ig h ly d e m a n d in g a n d re q u ire s e v e ry s p a re m o m e n t o f y o u r t i m e . . . 25 to 35 h o u rs p e r w e e k . A n d y o u m u st b e a n a d v e rtisin g o r m a rk e tin g m a jo r w ith a n in c re d ib ly s tro n g d e s ire to le a rn a b o u t a d v e rtisin g a n d th e in sig h t to u n d e rs ta n d th e b e n e fits o f th is p re -p ro fe s s io n a l > o p p o rtu n ity . If y o u h a v e a d e m a n d in g class s c h e d u le o r lo ts o f e x tra -c u rric u la rs , th is jo b 's n o t -for y o u . '" J " B U T . . . if y o u h a v e a s e n s e o f p rid e in d o in g a g o o d jo b ; a re c re a tiv e ly in c lin e d ; fe e l y o u c a n h a n d le 30-40 lo cal a c c o u n ts , as w ell as y o u r classe s a n d a n o t to o w ild so c ia l life ; d o n 't n e e d a n y o n e to g e t y o u g o in g e v e ry m o rn in g a n d a b o v e a ll, o p e r a te w ell u n d e r th e p re s s u re o f a d aily d e a d lin e . . W E NEED Y O U !!! IS THIS Y O U f C A LL 965-7572 TO D AY. ASK FO R JACKIE ELDRIDGE ASU officials dedicate student building construction of the building took only one year and th at now many student services w ere under one roof. .... “We wanted to create a friendly warm environm ent. . . this symbolizes a helpful, caring environm ent th at the University wants to create,” he said. Kunasek said she fe d s the building will help bring in new students and help m ake a good impression on them. “It’s a wonderful commitment to fulfill obligations to new students,” she said. Both Nelson and Kimasek pointed out that before the building was completed, students h a d to travel across campus to over 10 different locations in order to use thé various services. By CARRI MITCHELL State Press “The University and the new Student Services Building are focused on students and serving students,” said ASU President J . Russell Nelson a t the dedication of the $9.5 million building Tuesday. Nelson, along with Vice President of Student Affairs Betty Turner Asher, ASASU P resid en t K arrin K unasek and sta ff m em ber Jeanine Malone, spoke a t the ceremony. ■" ■ , H ie cerem ony featured tours of the new building offered by the Devils’ Advocates, Jazz selections played by students from the School of Music and refreshm ents. N elso n s a id h e w as h ap p y th a t Nelson said that the building was placed in an area of campus close to students and that it,w as built in order to consolidate all the services. “Those obstacles were there for much too long,” he said. The three-story building now houses 74 in d iv id u a l d ep a rtm en ts an d o ffices including Undergraduate Admissions, the R egistrar, Residence life . Financial Aid, S tu d en t L ife, C a re e r S erv ice s an d Counseling nod Consultation. The building also features student study areas and an outdoor patio. “This is a very satisfying outcome,” Nelson said. “ I hope students are as satisfied as f u n .” Undaay Clarko/Stato P J . Russell Nelson Tempe police investigate fire at printing shop, suspect arso By ROCHE KAKONGE State PreM p o lice re p o rt Tempe police are investigating a Tuesday m orning fire a t R ft R Printing, 4820 S. Ash St., as arson, police spokesman Roger Clay said. Police said no one was injured in the incident but one man The Maze, which ignited a t 12:05 a.m ., caused extensive w as in the trailer a t the tim e and said that bullets “whizzed” dam age to the shop, Clay said. He said firefighters have by his head and struck the table he was rittin g a t. located two separate points of origin for the fire in the shop. •Police still have no suspects or leads on equipment valued at In other incidents: $8,930 th at was removed last December from the University •An unknown gunman fired several shots a t a trailer located Activity Center before the U2 concert. within the Motorola compound a t 2100 E . Elliott Road, police ~ The item s included one tim e code state, one radio receive?,, said. three model D.T. headsets, one battery operated bullhorn THE ASU MEAL DEAL! FR EE L O C K O FFER for only $1.99 •TW O PIECES OF CHICKEN (DARK O R MIXED) •REGULAR FRIES OR'MASH POTATOES •A 15-OUNCE DRINK One coupon per QOOO O N LY AT 1136 E . APACH E TEM PE NEW HOURS: 11 .flL -1 0 p m S u -lb 11uxAMpIftM E per «ML Not v a M iiM i any «Mar offer. CHURCH'S ^ FRIED CHICKEN ' NEWHOURS: 11aja..fOpm. Bu-Th 11«.m.-MkHgNFr-Sa G O O D O N LY A T 1136 E . APACH E TEM PE and five Motorola walkie-talkies. The item s were located j the h o n e team locker room. •A Sahuaro Hall window was broken Monday when it w struck from the outride with a blunt unknown object, poly said. There are no suspects o r leads. •A brown Ford Mustang was dam aged with a 6-inch sera on the hood and an 8-inch scratch on the roof when a malfunctioning gate arm dropped on the ca r when the driver! was exiting the parking lot. Dam age is estim ated a t $30. •A student reported $120 in cash m issing from his room on Alpha Drive, police said. S T . P A T ’S D A Y T O G A P A R T PYR THE ASU SANDWICH COMBO! -a THURSDAY, March 17 Noon-1 am Sign up with Shurgard Self Storage of Tempe for one month and receive a solid brass lock with a hardened steel shackle, absolutely free. Just clip this coupon and bring it to Shurgard's facility at 409 South H ay d en Road, T e m p e, Arizona— (602) 966-5722. (Offer valid through 6/30/88) ' for only $1.99 •A CHICKEN BKS SANDWICH •REGULAR FRIES O R MASH POTATOES •A 15-OUNCE DRINK -One coupon per cuatomer per «ML Not «aid wife any ofear offer. I B S S€tf 5TOfìfìG€ 5th & Forest 966-4438 409 S o u th H ayden R oad, T em pe (602) 966-5722 Form No.-1770 ‘It w as clear to folks ii\ Buchanan. City that Clint w as sw eet on Ginny. But there he was, trying to get her married to somebody else, like his whole future depended on It.” ...to b e c o n tin u e d SENStMS -NM SHELDON MBHT I M I A SUÛHT E M E IM THE S36 MARKET,HIT « 1 D ESTO BUY A ZENiTH PERSONAL (DMPOTER. . . 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tqn« Credit Card* th o u » Zct Ui CaatacUariMed one personal computer and a r ts & e n te rta in m e n t State Press JX ^n«d^M arcJt4^_19^ Nothing Like TheSon ' • Ex-Policeman Sting set to arrest attention with new music By DAVE MILLER sam e. M iserable.” At that tim e Sting says he carried with him a “horrible obnoxiousness,” constantly prepared to fight if he didn’t get his way. Now, with the last Police album having been released in 1986 (‘Every B reath You Take — The Singles’), and Sting touring to promote his second solo album , he’d as soon be done with arguing for points. “I’d rath er not be in a band if there’s going to be any conflict,” he said. “ (I want) absolute commitment to what we’re doing, but no tension and no aggression. “I’ve gone through that and I don’t want it. I’ve done th at phase of my life.” Judging by the them es of “ . . . Nothing Like The Sun,” Sting is now willing to let the life out of his form er feistiness. Where the key before was friction, now the emphasis is on fem ininity. “I suppose it’s about fem ininity, the yin instead erf the yang,” he offers of the album. “I m ean, playing music and singing, w riting songs, are definitely activities that are right-brained. . “It’s fem ale, it’s intuitive, it’s gentle, it’s not aggressive . . . I’m not saying music always ends up wimpy. “I just think it can m ake you grow as a person to m aturity, and th at m aturity, as Jung says, m eans accepting the feminine principle, accepting sensitivity into your life as p art of you and not as something that’s alienating and frightening. “I m ean, if someone cam e up to me and tried to beat m e up I’d kick the shit out of ' them ’cause I’m very fit and strong. “So it’s not a m atter of being a wimp, or scared of aggression. the light of his new “Sun,” can still recall shadier career moments. “Yeah, I hated being in the Police after thé first few years,” he told Spin magazine. “It was very difficult to balance what I wanted to do with my creative life with what the band wanted to do as a whole. “ In other words, the criteria for this, new band that I’m forming is- not whether they’re the greatest m usicians in the world. I want people that I can get along with and love for a year.” That year beganm onths ago, when Sting opened his “ . . . Nothing Like The Sun” tour with his new band in Latin America. The tour continues this week as he brings his troupe to America. He’ll m ake a stop in Tempe a t 8 p.m. Friday in ASU’s Activity Center. It’s fitting that Sting’s next stop be a university, since a form er occupation of his was schoolteacher. He still carries his lesson plans. “The people I influence have not really come into power yet,” be told -Miami reporters. “ If you encourage a 14-year-old kid to read Jung or Shakespeare, to me th at’s a contribution.” StUl, he wouldn’t force Jungian thought on any unwilling soul, and says be never has. But his critics scream “pretension” anyway, convinced Sting m akes music for Sting’s sake. They say his work lacks passion. That’s misnomer num ber one, he claim s. “ I’m so sick of this word ‘pretentious,’ ’’ he said. “I am not a preachy perform er. Anybody wants to get into what the songs are about, they do it vohintarily.” But for Sting, the sm arts from that argum ent, among others, are all p art of his occupation. There have always been argum ents, from within his bands and without; from the year 1977 when an English trio scrapped to put together a pop song that would m ake the right moves up the charts. The three, Sting, guitarist Andy Summers an d rh y th m a tis t S te w a rt C opeland eventually would strike a pop chord — a slew of them. With 1979’s “R egatta De Blanc,” the Police’s second album, the group received its first Grammy. With 1961’s “Ghost In The Machine” and ’83’s “Synchronicity,” the trio becam e one of the h u g est pop-rock groups in recording history. It didn’t came without conflict. “ I’ll tell you an interesting story," he said. “When we first started to record with the Police, I w rote some hard-driving rock 'n roll songs, like ‘All I Want Is To Be Next To You.’ “ Andy and Stewart said th at I shouldn’t w rite a love song, that the future was in pseudopolitical songs, or whatever. “So I said, ’Well, I’ve w ritten this, why don’t you try and w rite something else?' “I still have that as a component—but it’s only half the tru th .” Tied to th at aw areness of femininity, during the m aking of “ . . . Nothing Like The Sim,” was his m other’s illness, which worsened as the sessions wore on. She died a few weeks before the album was completed. “I quite literally got m usic from my m other,” Sting said. “It was her who encouraged m e to play the guitar, it was her who listened to me. “At the sam e tim e it was her who created a lot of tension in me. I was the first child, and I think the first m ale child has a bigger psychological burden to carry than other children, because it’s like a love affair. It’s love . . . it’s sexual love, without mincing words, it’s actual sexual love. “That’s something I’ve only recently com e to understand about my m other, this kind of love affair, this kind of sexuality. hated being in the Police after the irs t few years. It was very d iffic u lt to balance w hat I w anted to do w ith w hat the band w anted to do as as a w h o le / ‘v -Vrfi “I have to say that I’m very free now, particularly since she died. Largely because I believe that she was trapped in this body th at was no use to her. — S tin g “So they both went home with the song’s backing tracks and Andy cam e up with ‘I’m Not Going to Take a Gun to You’ and Stew art cam e up with something alm ost the R oaster —- revised th eir famous R at Pack trio this month when they em barked on their first American tour in over 20 years. However, the three singing cavaliers look a bit under the w eather. Age, being the dastardly foe to m any, has definitely caught up with the bunch. D ear Dino, who’s fam iliar with the bottle, eventually ended up holding a drinking glass during m ost of the trio’s first concert perform ance, while Frank Sinatra tried following along with Sammy’s floating boom-chinga-booms . . . and speaking of . . .th e latest word from our spokesperson a t Capital Records in Hollywood, is the Nancy Sinatra comeback th at’s taking L A, by storm . Ms. Sinatra, F rank’s daughter, rose to rxcateratod heights in the late-60s with the pop h it “These Boots Are Made For Walking.” We’re happy for Nancy, and the whole R at Pack bunch, but we fear th at this whole revival thing m ay get out of hand. You see, even as we speak, Jim m y and K risty McNichol are out painting their bus and plan on starring in the revam ped William Conrad series, “Jake, J immy, Kristy and the Fatm an.” Stay tuned. ••• ■ •It’s Wet, It’s Dry, It’s Over: ^ Perpetually receding and renowned egomaniac Brace m n i. has been dropped as sole spokesman for Seagram s •Of Mice, Men and M ini-skirts Revisited: Old tim ers Sammy Davis J r., Frank Sinatra and Dean Wine Coolers. It’s like this — Bruce, unlike Michael Jackson, M artin — also known as the Candy Man, Blue. Byes and The believes he shouldn’t sponsor a product he hasn’t sam pled — “She was a very free sp irit. . . my m other was a scarlet woman, an adulteress. But she couldn’t stand rules. So now she’s free.” a lo t. Willis reportedly has been bumped due to a chemical addiction. And since Seagram s wouldn’t pick up the tab for the Betty Ford Clinic, Bruce pulled out. Hopefully Devilwood Spread still has Bruce on file. Word has it “F atal A ttraction” ’s Anne Archer will grip the Seagram ’s bottle, along with several other national comedians. Meanwhile, Bruno’s off to sister city Tucson to begin film ing “Sunset,” also featuring Jam es G arner, and directed by Blake Edwards. ••• •Top 14 Things Stack in the Seventies: 14. J.R . Nelson’s glasses. 13. Dick Van Patten, entire Van P atten family. 12. “The White Shadow,” including Ken Howard. U. Shag carpet. 10. Rainbow-colored tube socks with individual toes. 9. Anything corduroy. 8. Bean bag tic-tac-toe gam es. 7. “The P rice is Right.” 6. “Brady Bunch,” “P artridge Fam ily” fans 5 .AMCGremfins. '■ 4. Bunk beds. 3. Most ASU buildings. 2. Anything involving B ert Convy. 1. NFL bedsheets. Page 14 vttttttttttttttfttmnttt /" *r i .#» W ELCO M E B A C ar^ •M É i B S 9PRING BREAK I COLLEGE I.D. NIGHT N Q C D V E R W /C O LLE G E I.D. “IT’S THE BEAT” ¡is,’. I. a ■ -•* 1 'f»»if®Rf; H8 S W E L L , W IN E , D R A F T s < ’» w #B i a p $ ■ MWKl v * V ,.; V Page 16 Wednesday, March 16,1988 L a c k o f s e n s e d r a o s la te st V ie tn a m s a a a to n e w lo w By SCO TT C. SECKEL State Press “Civilians, troops, gangsters, cowboys, refugees, deserters, druggies, insects, blade m ark eteers. * Buck McGriff (Willem DaFoe) describes Saigon in 1968 to his partner Albaby Perkins (Gregory Hines) in the film “Off lim its.“ Anyone sorry they’ve seen Twentieth Century Fox’s latest m istake will get the sam e picture if they try to im agine w hat the cast and crew w o e like. M cGriff and Ferkins are plaindathe&cops for th e Army’s Crim inal Investigation D e ta c h m e n t a t th e h e ig h t of U .S. involvem ent in Vietnam . A series of m urders of prostitutes is possibly the work of a high-ranking American officer trying to cover his trail. This should have been fairly good. Scat of a “Lethal Weapon 10 Y ears Before.” You have cops, w ar, Willem Dafoe, fresh out of great flicks like “Platoon’’ and “To liv e and Die in L.A.” Gregory Hines from “White Nights,” Scott G lam in his latest since the interesting and sharp-looking, if not very well-scripted, “Man On F ire.” What happened? One theory form ulated while getting edgy in the darkness is th at DaFoe, usually a strong actor in all his pictures, was drunk when he w ent to work. It was as if he said, “Well, this lodes like something a tough guy would do, and if I slur my lines so absolutely no one can understand them , then th at’D create a convincing tough guy.” c in e m a Hines follows the film “Running Scared,” as well as “Sophisticated Ladies” and “EuWe!” on Broadway, with “Off lim its.” Well, he isn’t really atrocious. The script probably said, “Be a wild m an, a cop above the law.” And lo, Hines went a tad overboard doing a “Hill Street Blues” Mick B elker-type thing, only with testicle» instead a ears. It’s not new, we’ve seen it before, we’re not even rem otely amused. Most of the tim e the feeling comes across that Perkins would rath er be sleeping or reading a book instead of hanging out in topless bars and pulling Ids guns on any Vietnamese he doesn’t like. I know I would’ve. This Hide was a m om entary lapse of taste on both our parts. Is anything good here? Yes — an outrageously good Saigon circa 1968. Production designer Dennis Washington has “ O f f L im it s ” ★ ff e ÿ r - (out of four) . Twentieth Century Epx Pictures pre­ sen ts die film “Off Limite” ; written by Christopher Crowe a n d Ja c k Thibeau; directed by C hristoph# Crowe; pro­ duced by Alan Barnette; starring Grégory Hines and Willem DaFoe. Rated R Oragory Hinas, left, and Wiliam DaFoe star In the film "O ff Limits. " Raise your G R & . /.S A « Nautilus GMAT nr SAT The LSAT, GRE and GMAT can be tough, but we can make them a whole lot easier. The Princeton Review has helped thousands of students dramatically raise their scores. Small classes (8 lo 12 students) geared to your strengths and weaknesses and a detailed computer analysis throughout the program make us the most effective, efficient and enjoyable way to dramatically improve your scores. You’ll score more when you know how. A nd we ll teach THE you how. PRINCETON ! ■ REVIEW 952-8850 done a painstakingly detailed job of creating everything from girlie-bar streets for GIs to carouse in to the battlefield of Kbe San (by the way D oinis, helicopters never could land there during the high point of the battle bid, other than that, all the details w ere authentic). Ik e film was shot in Thailand. S co tt G lenn ( “ T he R ig h t S tu ff,” “Silverado’.’) is another good point. He plays a totally psychotic com m ander of an infantry division. Actually, he was a hell of a lot of fun to watch. He is devoted to his role and gives an intense, creative portrayal. The cam eram an w as also possibly (bunk. From the first shaky pan across a sleeping nude to the last grainy, badly composed s h o t, “ O ff L im its ” sh o w s slo p p y cinem atography. U nde Otis took better pictures of & Grand Canyon with his VHS last summer. Amanda Pays plays a lovely young nun (!?!) who puts the cops onto a few dues, (hie d u e that .McGriff gets is th at hey, nuns can be pretty sexy after all. Any tim e two screen w riters get together and w rite movies involving sexy nuns th at don’t m ind having half-naked grim y soldiers in their room, you wonder if they’ve been in (hdiforda too long. Pays does do a reasonable perfom ance. At any rate, she’s b etter to look a t than anyone else in the flick, and th at’s the reason she w as put in in the first place. Any “Platoon” fans w ill rem em ber Keith David with glee (he played King in th at film ). H o e, he’s a conniving w heder-dealer and earns his pay with quality acting. Hopefully, he’ll do something else before he starts getting typecast as a generic Vietnam movie bit-part player. If he does, hopefully it’ll be in b etter film s than this one. TNESS A rizo n a ’s B e st G ym We have m em bership r a te s fo r s tu d e n ts ! -4T Vfe Score More. OPEN 7 DAYS M on-Fri 5am -m idnight Sat-Sun 8am -m idnight Is R ig h t N ext to A S U ! W h y b u y w h e n y o u c a n le a s e ? YOUR FIRST VISIT Lorn & o n m i & v jja ir ^ A ladies' designer formalwear leasing service is the answer to all your formalwear needs. 4225 E. Indian School Rd. 6990 E- Shea Blvd. Phoenix, Arizona * Suite 105 - At foe A-Frame -Scottsdale, Arizona (602) 381-0026 *602) 483-2713 1301E . U n iversa 921-9551 IS F R ÍE W e d n g d j^ p G R A N D O P E N IN G | | .^ T O IW A N T I ! A Z ’S O N L Y R E A L P R O G R E S S I V E C L U B f P P "5 (W E D N E S D A Y 'S O N L Y ) W A LK IN D A N C E O U T a l l n ig h t fKgoreirs Doors Opon A t 8s00 A fter Hours 1 sOO a.m. till 3:00 a.m (A F T E R H O U R S - 9 1 9 E. APACH L V D « T E M P E ( H E X T T O H O L I D A Y IN N ) 1 8 A ORcter) rim ,.v - E Z S I ia H H I By JESSIE SMON State Pram * ' v ||l |g B The Renaissance culture brought society troubadours — m instrels who wandered the countryside singing of love and g reat deeds. H ie late 1900s has a troubadouric version of its own, and he’s currently visiting thé ASU campus. h■ : , : .......... toi E at ASU Patiently sitting on Cady Mall, between Matthews Center and the Social Science Building, sits P eter Gault, soaking u p th e s u n , m e e tin g p e o p le a n d s e llin g “Goldenrod,” his novel. Gault is an unconventional fellow in everything from Ids dress to his method of sales to the way he w rites his books. I Péter G ault, author of “ Gokterobd.’ - a tM te C k M ite i “ It’s just an itch, really. W riting is like an urge —r a sex urge. You don’t know why you have to do that act, b ut you do. “That’s sort of the way it is with m e with writing. Ju st like a physical urge in my body.” . F rom th a t u rg e, G ault had m ain character, golden-boy Ken Harrison “stuck in my head. I was just perceiving the world the way he perceived the world for about six months before I started writing i t Once I got the first line, the book just wrote itself. I could walk away from the typew riter, and it would keep going.” Starting “ Goldenrod” wasn’t a strenuous action for Gault. He equated his creative process !» that of Elvis Presley’s. “To me, it's not such an idea as a sound. I was watching Elvis Presley cm TV and the interview er was asking, ‘How do you m ake the music you m ake?’ which, you know, is impossible to answer. “He doesn't know bow the hell he does it. He was saying,. ‘I have this sound in my head and I just let it out.’ “That’s baskally.w hat I do as a w rit» . I just have this sound in my head which represents die sp irit of the guy o r the style. “ I don’t care about a story or a plot th at much. I care about a character. Watching the evolution of the chfuracter i s , what interests m e, and die d o ry will evolve naturally out of toe character.” Even when Gault fid leave his typew riter, though, he never left the book, “When you w rite a book, the whole world becomes a book. Everything you see seem s to somehow reflect your bode.” Gault, a native Canadian, completed his tale of a “golden bey” — a young m an so perfect he can’t help but love him self — six years ago, when be was 23. He began m arketing “Goldenrod” in Toronto, and although it sold wen, Gault felt he needed a change. “I was m iserably depressed. My book was doing well but for some reason I was ju st aU messed up a t die tim e.” rtT .’ O T S t n f r ’x r 1 - ............... - - 1' - L - 'W riting is like a sex urge. You d o n 't know w hy you have to do th a t act, b u t you d o .’ P e te r G a u lt One tem porary cure for depression is taking a bath. Gault went for m are chrasdc m easures agd bought a boat, using it to sail south to Charleston, S.C. By that thne, he was broke. “I had 100 copies of my book on board the boat, so I went to the local m arket and started'selling them. ' j Turn to GkM onrod, pago 20. M an b r e a d s his w ings a t I D IS C O U N T S INFORMATION A S U N iK M n N m ty pufehaao O N E or TW O tick«» lor H ALF-PR ICE with olle««] I.O. ASU F A C U LTY and S TA FF ra c« w « #2 per tick« «»count upon MM-f PRICE S tü P È H T pr*»»n»ttonOtABUI.O. PISC0UN73 Thursday, March 17,8 pm Friday, March 18,8 pm Satuiday, March 19,2 & 8 pm Sunday, March 20,2 & ? pm TO THE BESTS«»» mrowN...at q a MWGE// m GONNARUN-NOT WALK/ JUST TICK ETS: $ i 8, $16 SUMMER SESSIONS ’88 Do vou see UNIVERSITY OF C A L I F O R N I A JU N E 20 JU L Y 29 a diangtftffedthe. chatUnge or tfu a&ra units? stin g disorders show up in many I ways, and are not always obvious. T htsch edd ist can hdpdeterm ine if an eating disorder is controlling your life, o r th e life of someone you love. Summer Sessions at UC Santa Barbara offers an enriching academ ic and cultural experience in a setting of unique beauty. The mild clim ate and seashore location tna.ke UCSB ideal for summer study; an ideal setting for make new friends and take challenging and intriguing courses in a wide variety of disciplines and special programs. The classes are smaller and the campus Is less crowded. Special programs are planned in Culture-Sport-Society, Portuguese, Vocal Performance, Chamber Music, and Masters1 Degrees in French and German. Continuing students, high school graduates and students from other colleges and universities are eligible to enroll. • is dieting the m ost im portant area of your life? i ■« • H as food become a power struggle between you and your family o r friends? » A re you unable to eat in a norm al social setting w ith other people? • If you have lost or gained a great deal of weight, do you fed powerful because of it? There are no out-of-state tuition fees. • Do you feel depressed ¿ o u t your body image? am ' • Have you felt isolated from your family and friends? f W rite for your free B ulletin & A pplication- J Ht» D o others try to get you to eat m ore, /¡even though you dunk you lode “fine”? If you answered “Yes" to one o r m ore of these questions, call to set up an appoint­ m ent for an evaluation. 941-8002. If you have questions for us, please call. W ll help you get control of your eating so you can get control of your life. SUMMER SESSIONS OFFICE C headle H all 1317, D ept. AZ U niversity o f C alifornia S anta B arbara, CA 93106 Phone:(805)961-2047 N am e A ddress T h e Institute fo r E a tin g D iso rd e rs B a p tist M e d fc « C e n te r-S c o tts d a le C ity, State, Zip - State Press P a g e lv Wednesday, March 16,1988 album to depths B yM SH m L ^ State Prees . 1 The debut alb u m “Underneath the R adar’“by Underworld is modern m usic’s sim ple way of explaining the word aggravation. The opening song, “Glory! Glory!” is a prim e example of why this pulsating dance m usic with Indian drum beats can easily drive an insom niac to buy sleeping pills. The m usic sticks in your head and you can’t get rid of it. Although som e would probably think that’s what the musicians a re striving for, Underworld creates the type of sound that a headache w ouldfeed off of, as if the music was bacteria: to a moldy piece of bread. The singles on the album , although each are differently composed, really don’t comply with the college m usic stigm a of sounding sim ilar. It’s a nice change and probably the only lighthearted comment on die alhum The tracks do, however, run on haywire tangents, vexing th e listener from ev er m usical d ic tio n . “ Underneath the R adar” has m ysterious persuasion, but it neverdevetaps. The listener is left dangling it’s danceable, but th at all depends on how the dancer m oves, ((hie thing’s f»w»infcrJieen. CATCH THE DEVILS D A IL Y D ID Y O U K N O W ? YOUR ASU INSURANCE COVERS CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! X •W h ip lash i •N e c k Pain •H e a d a c h e s •B a c k Pain •S h o u ld e r Pain •A ccid en tal Injuries We will accept your insurance, provide a student discount, with little or no out-of-pocket expense to you. TEMPE 966-1635 In Dr. D onald N elson 3 9 1 0 S, Rural Rd. #E S th e STATE S tif f N e c k W h ip la s h ! & B ack! ■1 O sto G o ld e n r o d . WW mp&ß 'Continued frompiQt tli “And to my am azem ent, they sold like crazy. I was like the famous author in Charleston. Everywhere I was going I was handing out copies of my book and g atin g money for it.” This started a trend that took Gault down to Florida, back up die coast and on to New York, where he sold his book on Brodiw ay. H ie success and publicity he gateed a t this point led to his gating an agent and a publisher. : Selling his book on college cam puses acro ssth e country is ideal for Gault. He earns enough money from it to live, andhe has a station wagon th at doubles a s a home. The tour has taken him through N orthern and Southern California and lad him into Arizona and ASU. He plans to continue Ids, trek through the spring, and will return eventually to New York, 'j p . - * - ,a fc V 1 * 3 ? . : After taking tim e to w rite, Gault said he will travel to Boston Old head north. “Goldenrod” was w ritten by a fresh-out-of-college Gault. Loddag back on feds university years, spent a t Toronto’s University of Guelph, he said he wouldn’t w ant to return to school, re g a rd le sso fa » fu n h e had, “It’s an environm ent that doesn’t grab m e. I don’t think I have anything to learn or gain from it.” It wasn’t untS college, however, that Gault decided he’d rath er be a w riter than a hockey player. “ I started doing erasy essays. I wrote this essay on Zeus. And so, instead of w riting an essay, I really wrote a short story about Zeus coming down to m y room and he’s this big m a d » god and there’s thunder and lightning, th e room is shaking and there’s this big dram atic entrance. “ And then Zem dw m acte god comes ha and talks like this (Gault lisps femininely) and he’s a flam ing gay. “It was dirty and everything else, and I fd t ‘Well, I’m obviously going to fail it,* but I had quite a laugh w riting it and my friends got a kick out of it.” The story he had w ritten was not torn ap a rt by the professor. In fact, Gault was given the only ‘A’ in the class. “That’s w hat gave m e the idea th at m aybe I’m good a t this. I was ju st being belligerent and people w ere loving it. “ I used a quote ‘A rt is m asturbation,’ by M arcel Du Champs, so I went off on this huge tangent about m asturbating andl»w , yeah, maybe a rt is m asturbation, but m asturbation is a/o f of fun and it gets you through some hard tim es. “Once again, die professor reads theessay to the d a ss, and they love it. So I got progressively worse, and m ore daring and outrageous with m y essays. T hat’s when I had the idea to b e a w riter.” , - J y , STUDENT DISCOUNTS v 2 0 1 0 E . U n iversity, S uite 22 Hours: 9-5 •EX TE R IO n»IN TER tO R »EN G IN E W indow T inting SHB Scotchtint mm •9 yr. warranty on - «-«_a, aU|Hiaia ■ n i ■ m n s n s is 969-9013 10 MINUTES FROM ASU ME. Moine» Good thru 4/30/S8 f A re you in terested in learning more about one o r severel of th e degrees offered in th e Liberal A r ts & Sciences, as well a s career opportunities in th ese fields? W F z C a ll 9 6 5 -4 4 6 4 • ' F o rR e s e rv a tlo n s p ^ ^ B H H B ^ B I I I MEWEDITlON-rINEST FILMCOLLECTIONEVER ASSEMBLED THE BES T OF tf a m m PLUS ALL THE BLOOPERS AND MORE M O N D A Y , M A R C H 21 12:00 1 :00 2 :00 3 :0 0 4 :0 0 5:00 ^ M ATHEM ATICS - Dr. M att H assett & Dr. Hal Smith CLINICAL LAB SCIENCE - M s. Sandi W atson & M s. Diana M ass FOREIGN LANGUAGE - D r. Robert Bininger PHILOSOPHY - D r. te d Guleserian PHYSICS - D r. Bill Kaufm ann. ,' STRATEGIES!1FOR CHOOSING A M AJO R - D r. Sandra Branyon T U E S D A Y ,M A R C H 2 2 TOEMAKINGOFSTASTSEKIV"THEVOYAÄHMM". ALL3 OUTRMBOUSSLOOP— um «. TVAMDMOW» TWAILCT« CUPS OP INE STARS IN CLASSIC ROl£SBERMESTARTHEK n e v e r msjmssd pilot pootaoe, mm asms, aw none ARIZONA STATE "M Memorial Union • Pima Room Saturday, March 26? 6:15 • 8:00 • 9:45 12:00 1:00 I 2:00 3 :0 0 4 :0 0 4 :0 0 5 :0 0 RELIGIOUS STUDIES - D r. Joel Gereboff POLITICAL SCIQMCE - D r. Tom Keating SPEECH & HEARING SCIENCE - M s. Kathy Kenney COM PUTER S PE N C E - Dr. Earl Robbins ENGUSH - Dr. Nicholas Salerno CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR CLAS GRADS - Career Services STRATEGIES FOR CHOOSING A M AJO R - Dr. Sandra Branyon W ED N ESD AY, M AR CH 23 11:00 GEOGRAPHY - D r. Patricia Geber 12:00 FAM ILY RESOURCES FOOD/NUTFUTION & FAMILY STUDIES/CHILD DEVELOPM ENT -D r. Carol Johnston & Dr. S co tt Christopher 1 1 :00 ECONOMICS - D r. Hchard Winkelman 2:00 HISTORY - D r. BS W ootten Jj 1 :0 0 ANTHROPOLOGY - D r. Donald M orris 4 :0 0 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR CLAS GRADS - Career Services 5 :0 0 STRATEGIES FOR CHOOSING A M AJO R - D r. Sandra Branyon Cut & Styling .*12°® Reg. $is.oo Perms (tadudwcut L WytinQ) . >. . . . • . $40°° andup Cellophanes ............. >22°° |§ Highlighting ....*30°° and up flap. $40.00 Lash tinting. Color Weaving (First time clients only with this ad.) T A N N IN G S E S S IO N S $10 down, $1.50 each visit Unlim ited For O ne Month m*immmr909 M on.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 S u n .1 1:30-4:00 M 966-8111 C ell For Appointm ent 9%E University SE Corner Rural & University T H U fIS R A Y , M A R C H 2 4 1 2 :0 0 1:00 2 :00 3 :0 0 4 :0 0 5 :0 0 W\ I PSYCHOLO GY - Dr: Barry Leshowitz GEOLOGY - D r. Ed Stump FAMILY RESOURCES - CLOTHING & TEXTILES - D r, Betty Hunter SQ OO LOGY - O r. Robert Snow CHEMISTRY - D r. A lta i Bieber STRATEGIES FOR CHOOSING A M AJO R - Dr. Sandra Branyon JFR IO AY, M A R C H 2 2 ' 12:00 1 :00 2:00 3 :0 0 • (WITH TH IS AD) OusMy Auto Grooming f ’# M A J p n F A I R ^ ’ 8 8 •Insurance Claim Repairs ¡g • Free Estimates • Custom Paint 6- Bodywork •Best Service In Town 921-2048 O F F COM PLETE DETAIL SERVICE THE UNIVERSITY ACADEMIC ADVISING CENTER ¡ ¡ ( j an n ou n ces fcsafesftS Compare Our Prices And Save . — •, ÉÜH W O M EN ’S STUDIES - Dr. Carol Valentine BOTANY/MICROBIOLOGY & ZOOLOGY - Dr. Chuck Fouquette HUMANITIES - O r. Lawrence Cohen HEALTH & PHYSICAL EDUCATION - D r. Christine W ells REMEMBER: Early registration for Fall *88: March 31-April 8 | Page 21 W ednesday, March 16,1988 A.K.A. re c ite s after 9 months, gives birth to improved band TOD M cCOY State Press ' By l It’s backl It’s new! It’s improved! And it’s got a girl this tim e! It is A.K A ,, aIso known as one of Tempe’s first rate night eltd) bands, who have rdfhi-iiHp} a fte r a nine month hiatus to perform to packed houses all over the Valley. f H ie band will be perform ing a t 9p.m . at The Beverly G rill, 1320 E. Broadway in Tempe a t a movie prem iere party of Param ount Picture’s “A New Life.” th e term “new life” seem s to be budding around the band, hot only after their recent resurrection and the addition of singer Tonya La Grone, but also because lead singer Shawn M ills is expecting his first child. A.K.A. broke up last year when lead guitarist K eith Rosenhagen quit to seek other employment, after m ore than a year With the band. ,, IS g “We played a Christm as party after not p la y in g fo r e ig h t m o n th s ,” s a id Rosenhagen, “and we found the m agic was still on Stage and we decided a t th at point to put die band back together.” The rem ainder of the band includes bassist Glenn Peacock,'keyboardist Charles “Fig” Newton and drum m er Mike Esm ay. The music form at has slowly revolved over the past two years: into a m ere “danceaMe” form at, including rock’n’roll songs with a rhythm atic beat behind them. Songs from Richard Marx, the Beatles and INXS a re on the playlist. La Grone was added , to “expand the m usical horizons, and add another vocal dimension” to their jukebox of selections. “ I think the whole idea is to have a little bit of both (kinds of singers),” Peacock said. “We w ant to appeal to all types of people in the chib. You got the girte in there who are looking a t the guys, and the guys in there looking a t the girls. Tonya’s in there to relate to all the people we m ight have lost.” Some of the band members have mihgled w ith e ith e r p ro fe s s io n a l o r sem iprofessional musicians. Rosenhagen, for instance, played with a band called Scepter, a heavy-m etal band that opened for Stryper in Colorado. Peacock’s claim to fam e was some work he did with farm er m em bers of April Wine, Ricky and Dave Harman, to form a jazz band called Jazzm an T. A.K.A. is happy to jum p from gig to gig, and have no plans to look for the big-time — unless a recording contract just happens to Charles Newton, left, and Keith Rosenhagen, two members of the group A.K. A. . come their way. “From my point of view, I’d ju st like to estabUsh a good calling around town, be a r e a l q u o te “ c o lle g e b a n d ,” s a id Rhsehhageh. tr t 4 f Y g j *1 t V A t *f f V A t I m •FULL O R P A R T TIM E JO BS '5 •FLEXIBLE H O U R S A PER SO N ALIZED TRAINING •STAR T A N Y D A Y O R EVENING •TERM S ~ C O E D CO U R SES •CA LL FO R CO U R S E DESCRIPTION VAUEYWIDE JOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE NATIONWIDE ASSEER OR TELEVISION EARN EXTRA MONEY 957-3770 1523 East .Apache, Tempe I GRANDOPENING Y y KARATE-MART y * Y Y TEACHING BARTENDERS SINCE 1933 “ (We w ant) the nam e real well known, and when peoplethink A.K.A., they think ‘Yeah, those guys are a g reat band, and they’re a lot of fun, and they’re b etter than everybody!” (fORMERLY FIGHTING ARTS UNLIMITED) i Y Y Y Y Y RD. Y 831SECS.ORNRURAL EROFRURAL& Y y Most Competitive Prices In Town UNIVERSITYNEXTJOBOJOS •UNIFORMS KARATE & JUDO «WEAPONS •TRAINING & PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT •NINJA EQUIPMENT •BOOKS & MAGAZINES •VIDEOS E HO URS: 894-6778 %% # t Y * f - t f > a t4 ty y y y y y y y y BRUSHLESS AUTO M ATIC in c l u d e s UNDER CARRIAGE WASH ( r e c o m m e n d e d b y a ll o w n e r s m a n u a ls ) O N LY $2 CHECK I TERRACE & APACHE US OUT0 (O ne block east of R u ral) v 4 1 ■ M O H UTIILY HdIR (UTTERS GUAQkk..— SUMMER SCHOOL U niversity offers m ore than 40 c o u rs e s: a n th ro p o l ogy, a rt bilingual edu­ cation, folk m usic and fo lk d a n ce , h isto ry , phonetics, political sci­ en ce, S p an ish langu­ age and literature and intensive Spanish. Sixweek sessio n , duly 4August 12,1988. Fu lly a ccre d ite d program . T u itio n $510. Room and board in M exican hom e $540. EEO /A A A P e rfe c t C u t E v e ry D e s ig n e r P e r m U niversity & Rural Rd. CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER Education Bldg, Room 225 University if Arizona Tucson.AZ 85721 (802) 621-4729 or H o u rs: M o n .-F ri. 9-9 • S at. 9^7 • S u n . 12-5 621-4720 e N o A ppointm ent n e ce ssa ry ever! B ring th e w hole fam ily Wilts Guadalajara Summer School mm T im 968-9008 p 2 6 °« P Includes: * S h am p oo an d D e sig n e r Perm • P e rfe ct C u t • S tylin g Lo n g h air slightly higher „ • .; .. 1981 No A ppointm ents Family H a* C utters c o m ic s Page 22 ¡g S ia ti Pii»» BLOOM COUNTY BEFOREWEPUTOUR. .CAPTIVE THROUGHWE PROCESS UE CALL "GEPHARPTlZAmON* P tf COLLEAGUEM it EXPLAIN W € PROCEDURE... Berke Breathed '6EPMRPTmHM : FIRST UE TAKE A HEALTHY, IFHOT PARTICULARLY MATURE, EARTHLM OWN... nw far mdb By G A R Y LA R S O N , m rs CHILLOUT. m m m m E rm e* YOUMODE. mV IT'S S l B i l S ; " FATAL. AMUTHENTURNHALF OFrr PARME*... pagane* , /m on e* , MOREVm&PtCmßCY EMOTIONAL. ■ /K N M.mÜ s BY G A R R Y TR U D EAU NATIONALMBm SCHOLAR! HONDO ^¿¿yO U D O & ^%rT,*3M? V yJ/liim I PONT KNOU.I GUESSI JUST STUDY. NOUAT. 1 mp: ED6B* TRIEDTHAT W È UKB ONCE. YOU'VE AMT. GOFSOMBBD6E. JENNIFER? SOMEGENETICEDGE. GBTTINGG00P6RAPE5 ISA RACIALCHARAciBOsnc.iSNrrr? ANASIANTHING, a HUSMEAN I KNEWITI you no YOUGUYSARS SOMESORTOF HARM. US SEEKONLY SUPERRACE, COMPUTERS AREN'T your fOROUR > YOUNG! -NWRMS B ird c e lla r s Ivory Towers by M ike Ritter I DEMAND TO KNOW WHAT IM BEING CHARGED WITH» OOUCIA wßAM O t! 1 CANT BEA U&GGANt.îrt AREPUBLICAN mxsRwrs * rw » at BOS STATIONSM TRAILI w pos.nonoNecwrKV Cl0THES.,eAD CREDIT.. m m ct M W C (X> .M K R C m i! 1 ...f / T l irrNew« CE-UXJ9N6S ATNOON.. by Je ff MacNeily SOME PEOPLE TW$HAprai&TD8 E I PREFER TÖ TWMKOFTT WORK IN llW S T V LEO F WORKlNSr OVERDRIVE.. @1888Uni W hen I w as a little girl I used to be n afraid o f s lid in g d o w n the d ra in / CLUB MED WORK AND STUDY PROGRAM RETURNS INTERESTED IN A U N IQ U E A N D E X C IT ÌN G E D U C A T IO N A L P R O G R A M FOR A C A D E M IC CREDIT W ITH P A Y WHILE WORKING A T A CLUB M E D RESORT IN TH E CARIBBEAN, B A H A M A S , B E R M U D A , OR T H t UNITED STATES? B CLUB M E D WILL BE SELECTING 30-50 M A T U R E , HIGH-ENERGY, A D V E N T U R E S O M E , A N D SERVICE-ORIENTED STUD EN TS T O PARTICIPATE IN THIS YEAR'S P R O G R A M . INCOME TAX PREPARATION 10% DISCOUNT WITH ASU I.D. ELECTRON IC FILING FOR A SPEED REFUND Regardless Of Who Prepares " " Mm./:.";: Your Returns) CALL FOB BETAILS ABOUT O U I FASTEST REFUND A G E N E R A L IN F O R M A T IO N M EETIN G Wb M . WILL BE HELD O N MAFjiCH 22, 1988 F R O M 3:00 T O 5:00 P .M , in INCOME TAX SERVICE ■< n r »Tiny e P h y s i c a l s c i e n c e , r o o m b -io o P R O G R A M D A T E S : M A Y 15 - O C T O B E R 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 UNIVERSITY A N D CLUB MED REPRESENTATIVES WILL PRESENT BACKGROUND INFORMATION AND DISTRIBUTE APPLICATIONS. APPLICATION DEADLINE IS MARCH 28,1988 ■ W%P* «r H 4718 £. Southern <»«'* A c c o u n t ^ » s jju a g _7t?w Ureon m m O' ¡ B P iit’i y H i Milli li mi li II "I S tete P ress Page 23 Wtón«da^MarcM6jJ988 T o p freshm an sprinter leaves A S U Staff and wire reports S p 0 r t* i h o r t S O Connor honored by Stata Press A S U b a s k e tb a ll p la y e r K are n O’ Connor has been named Sfata-Press Athlete of the Week. O’Connor Set a freshman school record by scoring 35 points during ASU’s 86-69 victory over Washington State. The 5-9 guard from Hyde Park, N.Y., a lso s c o re d 28 p o in ts a g a in st Washington in the season-finale and was named Pac-IQ Player of the Week. Agajnst the Cougars, O ’Connor was 10-13 irvfiekl goals and 15-17 from the line. She also added five assists and six steals! Against tho Huskies, O ’Connor was 11-16 from the field and 6-7 from the line with three steals. O’Connor is éxpected to compete for the A SU track team this spring. Knepper speaks out against female um p One of the nation’s top-rated freshm an collegiate sprinters has dropped out of ASU in the m idst of a shakeup and investigation of the Sun Devil trade program . M aicel Malone, highly rated in the 400and 200-meter runs by TVack St Field News last year while a senior a t North Central High School in Indianapolis, withdrew Monday by telephone, acting track coach Ed Gorman said. Malone has competed in both outdoor and indoor m eets this season for ASU, mid dropping out before completion of a full school year could cost ha* a t least a yew ’s eligility. The Bud Light Invitational kicked off the outdoor season on March 5 in San Diego. Although it was only the first m eet, Malone will have to sacrifice an entire season because she competed. Malone was recruited by Sun Devil coach Clyde Duncan,, who was told last week his contract will not be renewed whether or not the Pac-10 Council issues sanctions against Staff and wire reports IOWA CITY, Iowa - Iowa will be a t a disadvantage with wily six w restlers in its bid to regain the NCAA championship this week, but Hawkeye Coach Dan Gable said the lade of qualifiers is only another challengeto take down. “That really h urt us,” Gable said of his team ’s diminished presence a t this year’s NCAA tournam ent, which begins Thursday a t Iowa State University in Ames. “But when we w ere dominant in the past, we still hardly ever qualified our whole team .” The form er Olympic gold m edalist guided Iowa to nine consecutive NCAA titles from 1978 to 1906 before the Hawkeyes finished second to Iowa State last year. “When we sew ed m ore points than ever before in the history of the sport — in 1906, 155% points — we had eight qualifiers,” G ablesaid. “ It ju st happens that all of them were high-place winners — five champions, a second, a fourth and a fifth, I believe.” This year’s tournam ent could be a wideopen affair, with the top five team s capable of sew ing a t a range of weights. Oklahoma State coach Jo e Seay said, he has to w ait until the tournam ent seedings come, out to evaluate how well his team wUl do. The Cowboys qualified nine w restlers, as did Iowa State and Penh State. Arizona State has seven w restlers in the tournam ent. M ichigan qualified eight w restlers and Northern Iowa qualified seven KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) — Houston pitcher Bob Knepper got lithe support from his teammates Tuesday, after saying women should nett be umpires because God created them to be feminine. '“ A s far as her ability for umpiring, she seen» fine. But I don't think a woman should be an umpire,” Knepper said. “ There are some things that, m m shouldn’t do and some things that a woman shouldn’t do. I think umpiring is one of them.” Knepper pitched five innings against Pittsburgh Mohday with female umpire Pam Postema behind the plate. She is being considered for a National League assignment, which would make her the first woman umpire in the majors. * ASU (17-2) qualified Zeke Jones (27-2-1) at the ASU trade program . T he P ac-10 C o n feren ce h as been investigating charges that Duncan made illegal offers to athletes, falsified an NCAA qualifying form and asked an athlete to lie to conference investigators. A Pac-10 and University statem ent about the conference investigation is expected today, but sanctions m ay not be decided until the next Pac-10 Council m eeting in June. Although no decisions have been m ade on the case by the Pac-10 officials, ASU athletic director Charles H arris said circum stances surrounding the investigation were the. reasons Duncan’s contract would not be renewed. fL** ‘ Sprint coach LeRoy' W alker, who was hired as a sprint consultant in late January, w as hospitalized last weekend in North Carolina with a ruptured appendix. W alker, 69, is the president of The Athletics Congress and was the 1976 U.S. Olympic trade coach. ASU sprinter Bruce Penning said that 118 pounds; Chip P ark ( S ir ? ) a t 126; Tommy Ortiz (32-6) a t 142; Dan St. John (36-2-1) a t 158; Jim Gressley (29-7-1) a t 167; Mike Davies (36-2) a t 190; and heavyweight Rod Severn (26-0-3). “We are one of the m ost veteran and experienced team s entering this year’s m eet and we are in trem endous physical, and m ental shape,” ASU coach Bobby Douglas Said. Iowa State coach Jim Gibbons said he could not pick out a key weight for the Cyclones. “They are all going to be im portant,” Gibbons said. “If the guys go out there and w restle like we’ve been w restling all season, we’re going to do pretty well.” Gable was hard-pessed to say which team has an edge going into Thursday’s first round a t Iowa State’s Hilton Coliseum. “If you analyze it and set it down and that kind of stuff, I guess Iowa State does,” Gable said. Oklahoma State is d o se behind, he said. “They’re balanced,” Gable said. “They a re not as individually strong as Iowa » a te .” “This year is one of the m ost open races ever at the NCAA Championships,” Douglas said. “Besides the traditional powers of Iowa State, Iowa and Oklahoma State, Arizona State and Northern Iowa are considered threats for the NCAA title.” But Gable’s not counting out his six-man squad. “We’re probably next in line from an Ws jianf—■i l i l fin fP i l l - J a • w "I have a belief that God has intended man and woman to be different,” Knepper said. “ It's a physical thing. I don’t think women were created by G od to be a physical, hard person. I think God created women to be feminine. Cactu s League scores Indians 8, Brewers 4 Giants 7, Angels 1 Cubs (ss) 4, A ’s 3 Mariners (ss) 5, Padres 4 Cubs (ss) at M ariners (ss), night Llnty. Ingram shows M s pltcNng form during an eatflsr gams. Ingram threw a complete gams Sunday, allowing ASU to swaap the Hawaii Rainbows In Honolulu. It wss the drat time any school had swept Hawaii on the island sines 1078, f- J H ~ Bobby Douglas individual strength point of view,” Gable said. Oklahoma State has the m eet’s dominant w restler in John Smith a t 134 pounds. The defending national champion has won 85 consecutive m atches, going 4241 this season. John Fisher of Michigan, the Big Ten champion, is second a t 134 in the Am ateur W restling News rankings. Iowa State’s Jeff Gibbons, 21-6-3, was third a t 134 last year. Turn to W lW STU N O , pag* 28. Sun Devils hope sweep will add new confidence p s p llli H . ¡ ¡ B i ; I ~ IlS lili B a B ll ¡¡I 1 s s iili J Sä S I t llliill fÉtyBÉ Knepper found nothing wrong with Postem a’s work but questioned her right to be in th e job. W alker was a good replacem ent if there had to be one for Duncan. But with W alker in the hospital the team needs someone who is highly qualified for the position. Without the coaching talents of Duncan, the ASU trade program will be in jeopardy in regards to both current and future athletes, Penning said. “The quality of the program increased when Duncan becam e the coach,” he said. “The grade-point average went up and the tim es of the sprinters improved since he has been here.” “The best person to do the job is Clyde,” he said. “They should let him finish the season.” Penning said the program should not be changed in the m iddle•of the season. A transition in the beginning of the season would not have been a problem he said. Malone ranked fourth in 1987 Track & Field voting for high school athlete of the year. The magazine ranked Malone first in tile 400 and third in the 200. By DEAN GYORGY State Press Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde m ust have been ASU baseball fans, because their ghosts have come back to haunt. The weekend prior to spring break, the Sun Devils (23-8 overall, 2-7 in the Six-Pac) suffered th eir second consecutive conference sweep a t the hands of Southern California. After a few days in the sunshine of Hawaii, the Devils adm inistered their own punishment by taking all three from the Rainbows. The sweep cattle as somewhat of a surprise. “There is nobody in the country who could go in there and expect to win two out of three,” coach Jim Brock said prior to the road trip, “You m ay beat them like a drum off the island, but a t home they are very tough.” ASU becam e the first team to sweep the Rainbows a t home since 1975. It also hoisted the Devils up in the rankings, from 22 to 18 by Baseball America and from 21 to 20 by Ccdlegiate Baseball/ESPN. Last year, ASU was wallowing through the early conference season a t 1-5 before the trip to Hawaii. The Devils won two, and Brock said he felt that was the turning point in a successful season. He hopes it will also be a catalyst for this season’s chib. “It was im portant for us to try to get bade on trade,” Brock said, “and Hawaii is som etimes a tough place to do that. “ It’s difficult to have really productive practices in Hawaii with a kind of spring break-party atm osphere, but our kids did an excellent job. We practiced hard all week and got a lot accomplished. (The sweep) was very im portant to us.” tu rn to B A SEB A LL, pag* 2*. -■v> M e tile Page 24 By GARY JACKSON State Press Numerous comments have surfaced in response to mitfeeason turm oil that has left the ASU track team hurting for qualified sprinting coaches. “The best person for the job to Clyde (Duncan),” sprinter Bruce Penning said. Duncan was suspended with pay Jan . 26, and was notified on M arch 8 that his contract would not be renewed. ASU sprinters are now being coached by G reg Moore, who is in his first year as an assistant coach and is now handling a lot of responsibility. Athletic D irector Charles H arris said circum stances surrounding the NCAA investigation about Duncan prompted his decision not to renew his contract. H arris saicWhere are two levels of inquiry by the NCAA. The first one is to verify inform&tion. ASU officials will receive a letter asking them w hether or not a certain event has taken ¡dace, H arris said. If an event has taken ¡dace, bid is quickly taken care of, no disciplinary action will result, he said. The second level is an official notice of inquiry. Usually an investigation follows the notice. “You have to take th at seriously,” H arris said. .H arris said the ath letes a re fru strated w ith the occurrences, but should go on with the season. “They should divorce them selves from this situation and focuS on competition, ’’ he said. “They should let this process, which is not of the institution's making, run its natural course and resolve itself.” / LeRoy W alker becam e a consultant for the sprinters when Duncan was suspended, bid is currently in a North Carolina hospital recovering from a ruptured appendix. Framing said he felt bad about W alker having to crane in' during a difficult time. “ No m atter what we said, it was going to be taken wrong by D r. W alker,” Penning said. “I don’t think he knew how hostile the athletes were, and how loyal they Were to Clyde.” Penning said th at Dtmcan has had 23 years of coaching experience, and has coached 23 athletes who have gone on to win gold m edals. Duncan’s absence has been damaging for the sprinters and to r the team as a whole. “The lack of experience is hurting us the m ost,” Penning said. “The inconsistency at practice has caused chaos.” Many of the sprinters have suffered m uscle cram ps, ¡mils and tears, he said. Bringing in a new coach would result in the sam e basic problem the team has now, Penning said. “You can’t change the program in the m iddle of the season,” he said. “If you’re going to bring Clyde back, do it now, Otherwise you’re going to have the sam e people loyal to Clyde.” ' - Any answer will be subject to criticism . Aside from the opinions about tile seriousness of the alleg atio n against Duncan, both the athletes who provoked the investigation and those who are loyal to him have to com pete together mi the sam e team . Bringing a coach in a t this point would not be beneficial, H arris said. J;« T “ I don’t see that as a good option, ” hesaid. “We will look at it closely.” ASU has a history of problem s with the NCAA, and has had three track coaches in th e last eight years. Duncan, who was in t is third year of coaching, was the fourth to be rem oved or fired in the last nine. “When you have a circum stance like this it mtdras finding a good coach difficult,” H arris said. Swim team members have lofty goals for By CRIS NACKINO State Prase |H Perhaps the nation’s finest swim m ers have competed this y ear tor the ASU Sun Devil swim team , each striving for the sam e dream —• to place high hi tile NCAA Championship Tournament in April. F or the team ’s final m eet, five additional swim m ers will travel to Tucson on M arch 19 in hopes of gaining additional qualifiers for the NCAA finals a t Indiana University. The additional swim m ers are David Fix, E ric Fuchs, Mike Noonan, John Sholl, and M arc Straueh. The team , which began competition in early November, has already qualified 10 swimmers. Two of the swimmers include Yan Cardineau, who has been ranked as high as 11th hi the world in the m ile, and P eter Boden, who has traditionally been a favorite in the Pac-10 in the 100-yard and 200-yard breaststroke. Additional swimmers traveling to Indiana April 7-9 for the championship m eet a re Ross Anderson, Neil Bradley, David Burgess, P aul Honré, Rich S tin tich , G erhard Vahderwalt and E ric Wilhelm. “We h a ré one of the best team s .tor swimming in the country,” ASU swimming Coach Johnson said. “ I think we could have as many as six swimmers going to the Olympics in Seoul.” ,g | Howe, who was a bronze m edalist in the 1964 Olympics in the 800-meter freestyle relay team , will add ability to the team along With tW exceptional freshm en swimmers; Burgess and Wilhelm. -: “Burgess and Wilhelm are two outstanding freshm en who will aid the team in the freestyle a t the NCAA,” Johnson said. B radley, considered to be rale of the top backstrokersinthe country, will be a top factor hat the team according to Johnson. “Bradley will be a th reat to distance swim m ers in the 100-yard breaststroke,” he said. Also aiding to the Star Devils will be butterfly swimmers Anderson and S tin tich . “They (Andersrai and S tin tich ) wiH give us good strength,” Johnson said. Boden, the team captain, said he w as excited about the upcoming NCAA tournam ent and the season to general. “This is my last year and m y la st m eet, so I am really excited,” hesaid. “We have 10 guys who have qualified and I think we’ll place higher than last y ear.” L ast year, the Sun Devils finished 10th overall a t the NCAA BIKINI SP R IN G FLIN G Purgatory,Colorado .:|||IS ■; TRIP INCLUDES:' ‘ • round trip transportation • 2 day lift ticket • 2 nights lodging, • Contests &races quad occupancy PRIZES FOR BEST SKI OUTFIT (the one with the least) SOUP & SANDWICH SEND YOUR RESERVATION TO: SPRING P M g S i i B i ^ SKI at P U R G A T O R Y ^ V « * ^ ^ .• g g fck; ¡ ¡ r 8 » AMERICA 1 648 N. Linden Circle & A pache Sponsored by Ski A m e ric a s Durango Econo Lodge' STUDENT U FE CULTURAL DIVERSITY COMMITTEE The Good Earth >USA, 1937 25« DRAFTS ATTENTION COLLEGE GRADUATES ./ in te r an environment rich with possibilities where your efforts make things h a p -8 pen. W e are looking fo r people who will respond to these opportunities with energy and imagination. W e anticipate openings in our Claim s and Underw riting d ep artm en ts located in ,*j o i f W astem Regional Service Office in Scottsdale, Arizona. To compete; you m ust have... ^ f • the ability to resolve custom er, sales agent, and internal inquires “ • good decision making s k is , as well as excellent oral and w ritten com­ munication s k is * • a four year degree along with stable job experience. W e offor opportunities for advancement to management com mensurate wfth perform ance as wen as an excellent compensation and benefits package in a non­ smoking environment. A re you ready to m eet the challenge? W e will be recruiting on yoy^ campus on M arch 23rd. Please contact Career Services fo r f iF t h e r 8 information. 29 MAR Hopi: Songs of[the Fourth Wortd* USA Indian Rights* Indian Law* USA AN screanings are Tuesday* at f B in . In the M em orial Union Cinem a, low er level south. (Except Storm y Weather, M arch 1, at 5:30 p.m .) Free. You are encouraged to join knowtodgeaMe discussion leaders following each ffim (except Stormy W eatha) for an examination of the relevant issues and a cup of ooffee with new friends. •How does “civilization " im pact upon native cultures? •Has intolerance reared its ugly heed'sgaln in the 80’s? •"The Am erican Dream ": b it for everyone? •"C eiebraSonr . . . and view ers choices, at course! Co-sponsored by Student Life Cultural Diversity Com m ittee, the M U A 8 Film Com mittee and M cDonald’s. The Prudential PROPERTY § CASUALTY INSURANCE CO 7337 E. Doubletree Ranch Road Scottedala, AZ 83258 State Prass C o n tin u a d JÌ29&EL W ednesday, March 16,,1,988 Irampag* 23. M i» j¡ Iowa S tate’s Tim K rieger, 22-0, is defending national chámpion a t ISO and has a 52-m atch winning streak. ISU’s E ric Voelker, 28-3, is rankedsecond a t 190 behind M ark Coleman of Ohio State despite being defending national champion. Voleker has not faced Coleman, a transfer from M iam i'of Ohio, since losing to him two years ago, . - fs: Iowa State could do well a t 167 where Mike Van Arsdale dropped from 177. David Lee of Wisconsin is top-ranked at 167. Iowa’s Royce Alger, 37-1 and last year’s national champion a t 167, has moved up to 177 and cotdd be challenged by Dan Mayo of Penn State, 30-1-1 and third at th at weight last year. One weight up for grabs is 126 where Iowa’s B rad P enrith is 36-2 for the season and top ranked. Jim M artín of P om State, 37-1-1, is l-l-l against Penrith this year and Steve Knight of Iowa State, 26-6-1, has onepoint losses to both P enrith and M artin. Another hard-fought weight could be heavyweight, where Division n champion Carlton Hasselrig of Pitt-Johnstown returns to defend his national title. Second-ranked Joel Greenlee, 26-1-3, of Northern Iowa, the only w restler to tie Hasselrig this season, could break through a t the weight. North Carolina State’s Mike Lombardo is ranked third. Rob Kali of Norm Carolina is top-ranked a t 158. Roll finished third a t last year’s championships after being upset by Iowa’s John Heffeman. Hefferaan could be a key in Iowa’s title hopes if he can break through. Oklahoma State has Vince S iv a, 32-2-2, ranked second a t 158 and Arizona State has Dan St.''John, 36-2-1, ranked third. P a t Santoro of Pittsburgh* 43-0, is top ranked a t 142 but Northern Iowa’s Kurt Shedenhelm, 32-0-1, has a chance a t the weight. At 118, Jack Cuvo of E ast Stroudsburg, 35-0, is fawned but Ken Chertow, 28-7-1, moved down from 134 and could a key for Penn State’s title hopes. pag* 23. || tim e, and totaling only five innings. After the USC m assacre, there was some On Saturday, Kilgo pitched 4% innings of concern that the Devils m ight be floating at relief, allowing just one run on two-hits* the edge of a whirlpool. while striking out five. “We just had not hit the ball,” Brock said. , “ Rusty has really come into his own, Brock said. “He’s definitely our short man, “We were averaging 2% runs a gam e over a and could go four or five innings. (In six-game stretch, th a t’s not going to win Hawaii) his split-fingered fastball was very many.” . Pitching continues to be ASU*s strong special. They had very little chance to hit it.” ¡¡| j U l point. Right-hander Bias Minor (2-1,1.84ERA), Linty Ingram (7-2, 2.20 ERA) tossed his who em erged as a dom inant reliever early seventh complete gaipe of the season on in the season, was moved into die starting Sunday, but was not overpowering. “ Ingram was shaky the first couple rotation prior to the USC series. He innings,” Brock said. “But he cam e back responded by throwing two com plete games on the trip. ‘ : through his com petitve nature. He'found m 17 innings of work, Minor allowed six good stuff'in the fourth or fifth and p a ste d earned runs on 14 hits, striking otit 10 and the rest of the way.” Ingram also collected a save on Saturday walking just two. 5 in his first relief appearance of the year. He The biggest pitching perform ance of the entered in the ninth inning with the tying run w eekw as turned in by left-hander Rusty a t the ¡date and struck out the final two KUgo. 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Doctor recommended. I’ve lost 50 pounds. very dependable baiw pattallon. 8900. Can C rd g et 8407173. Incredible Pel Absorber, trae stepping. 612942-1915. (AZ-CAN) UNDERSTANDING ID E NEW TESTAMENT BOOKS A W ednesday N oon Bible Fellowship This spring sem ester the Christian Students Fellowship (CSF) is having a book b y book survey o f the New Testam ent every W ednesday in the Yuma Room (2111 o f th e M em orial Union Buiidingfrom 12:40-1:30p.m . A lla n welcome! The subjects are asfallow s: Spring Semester — Matthew to Revelation Jan. 2donation h i.tame, calendar weak $20 (Monday-Saturdacf). Haw donors receive reboño* on firet donation with this ad. UdvamRy Plasm a Canter, Aaeodatad Btoadano* of Tam pa Inc., 1015 S . Rural RcL. Tam pa, AZ. 0009139. Effective until further nolle*. G O VERN M EN T J068I Now d rin g MgyOur and area, both d d la d unskHed. Par t e ld job* .and^ appllcallon. ca8 61S3B33627 Ext. J519. (AZ-CAN) H O ST INTBtolAIIOhlAL bw.. 6 Marriott company anti the taste r in export food and beverage operatone is looking tor friem iy, out-going kidMdual* to fill a variety d ponton* In Sw /bod and bever­ age faculties Incaled in torm ind 3, Sky Harbor Airport. C u rred apeninge includa bf8bé dará, snack bar attendant, bar utility, bus parton (Continental DMng), cafeteria Una servar and cafeteria utility. W* offer an ouiaiandtog oompanaaton package wMch indud*t top wages, a Ubami meal altowance, td to n assistance for certain majors and full benams tor a* Otto as 30 hours par weak. To apply tor amptoymant or (or more Information ito* our representative, on campus. W Sdfi*» day, March 10 to the Mamortal Unkm, room 214 G ite from 9-11 a.m. or room 221 Apacha from noon-2 p.m. off autom atically. W dcom aa guests, discourages intruders. Sim ple installation. Vast market potential. Other exciting product* available. C all Distributor, 19029669620, Phoenix. (AZ-CAN) help wanted 1 A G R E A T paritene Jobforstudsnta 17 and older. Work on* weekend a month top pay, training prodded,-bonuaea avalable. C d l 2673674, Arizona Army NaUonai Guard. (AZ-CAN) " â & v iï * ALASKA SUM M ER p i» AR A Outdoor Worid. Positions In d i aspecto of hotel Operations located In Oonali Park (MdOnlay Alaska). Must be 31 yeta* o lii by Juno JSto. Stop by etudeM employ­ ment office for epp8ca8on and Interview tens*. APPLICATIONS ENGINEER. Growing Ntooh com pany naada individual to aaetot in product ptannktg, davstapmaM, and kNagration o f cbm putqr-baaed draw ing management and oovereion eyeteme. WW be responsible lo r ayduateg now technologie« Into ounant and future product as C hristian S tu den ts F ellow ship free carear report. Walker Marketing Group, B ite 8503, LS Je te , O A 62036. Inform ation c a ll ktse, competitor inalyata, and aata* material preparation. Requires In Computer Science or Engineering wtoi strong knowledgeo f C , Unix, and/or DOS, A SU AREA ATTENTION SPRING Graduatesi Work arid 8ve to San Diego. Excellent career* to all fields after graduation. Pleaea sand tor advanced Kfesaving certification; swhn InHnietom m ud b* WSI oerttfied,toltene Inetructors wtth prerioua daycare experieno* protorrod. SH ary tenga $3.6096.00. 0*88319314. Appty by DELIVERY FULL/PART- ten*. *5910/ 8395. ForY m ore 602-2309434. microweve and M l size washer and dryerAssum able FH A mortgage. $72,000. 9939964. T9 7846602. C a l Share Concepts, 2859440. ADD A stockbrokers Hoenae to your bachelors degree. O ur averting stockbrok­ er training program is being ottered tor FO R S A LE by owner. Condominium, only 2 yearn okl, vicinity. Price and University. 3 bedroome, 2 bathe, cathedral ceilings, fireplace, patio, a i appliances todudtog poaMona, swimmlng Wahuctota, toltene inetructors and pod attendante. A ll applic­ ante should hav* CPR certification; recroaltori staff 8n8 p a d attendante need CO LLEG E 8210plus to utmUes, large townhouse with waaher/dryer, microwave, dtahwashar, pod, maid servie*. MoCtntock and South­ FH A 246 12.75%, bátanos $66,500. Owner will Has* with option to buy. Cab owner Blrchwood Interior, bis, targa fenced yard, pets Okay. $0600,9249351. o d axpattenca necessary. 88 par hour, 2-10 hours waakly. 2 hours oariy Tuesday m cnteB essential. Waal tor student Bring on campus. C e l Serb for information. 8359844 or 2644475. FEM ALE NONSMOKER to rara mom In ' do* house near ASU. F u i am anites. Big yard. $i90/month, 8849141. Vintile, DOBSON ASSOCIATION now acceptlng application* for summer rooroHton staff up. 9669200. rental sharing A LL LOUIS Vukton, O ued bags and ATTENDENT (FEMALE) needed tor (Dateled student starting Immediately. No medl- Jude: Wo** come to you! / help wa nted ATTENTION DË8IGN Students: Help needed with window dtepteye- tadtae waer. C d l LtodS, 8649606. ASU). Free month with 9 mento tea**, large pool. $375 inchxl** e l utilities. Graduate students preferred. Landmark BRAND NEW contemporary 1 bedroom palto hont*. Vaulted ceilings, tile fireplace, celling tana, private patio, near ASU. 8400/ monto, Con tadH sH n , 248-0000. STING TICKETS; $50 each. One pair. Prioe and location very negWable. Simone, M obBs Auto Consonants « bicycles for sale ABU 14 mita. WOO oft with ad. 0696846. Apartment*. 8679880. STEEL help wanted apartment! ter ram C A ofcH M and technology raasaroh, Sand resume to: G TX Corporation, Atlanlion Human Raaourcas P-2, 6836 N. 23rd Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 86021. ARTIST POSITION open tor paritene marketing assistance. Salary nagdkfcta. Contad Freída Fail d Southwest ProperDee. 9988000. ¡& W -; jttM foteiRL t e o J DOBSON ASSOCIATION now accepting applications tor aasletant swim coach. Hour* ar* approximately 6 a.m.-10 a m.. Monday-Friday, with some evanlngi and Saturday maeta. Position ran* 6-t through 8-1. Compelitlv* swim and eoachb« experience required. Stork with 160 cMIdron, ages 5 through 18. Dute* include PART-TIME MARKETING OPPORTUNITIES pod cleaning, ssFup tor pmcltoe, ondack and/or In-pod work with swimmer*, ctewv up after pracfica, abend HI practices, Representatives meats, hmdrHsem and socials- Salary range 8100631401 tor summer. Call 8319314. Application* accepted through 338,:.,' • p V - - Vj;. V SUMMER RECREATIOK LEADERS PwHIim $5.52-$7.48/h o u r TEMPE COMMUNITY SERVICES DEPARTMENT 655 E. Southern Tempe, AZ 731-8381 EquH Opportunity Emptoyar j s . ’. M e r a Ba n k, a Ia a d i n g fin ancial Institution currently ha* several part-ten* po sitene evailabl*. E x c e l l e n t o p p o r t u n i t y to g a in h a n d a to n m a rk e tin g experience! Raqulrea proven eat**, custom er te rrie s and com m unication skill*. The ability to. meet satee/serric* goal* w ithin a competitore environ­ ment end to learn multlpte .preducts/services quickly essenti H. Kxotltanl advancement opportunities. Shift* avaHabta: M ondey-Frlday, 9 em-1 pm. . We offer a com petitiva com pen-setion package. Sand your résumé indicating rime* available o r inter­ view appointment* to: MeraBank C o rp o ra te S ta ffin g , Dept. A 8 U , 26602 N. 19th A v t., Phoenix, A Z 86027. M ERABANK EquH Opportunity Em ployer M/F/H/V P ag es? Wednesday, March 16,1988 h d p w u ite d i help wonted EXPERIENCED BAN QUET aerwm. Mutt M M Utock/vdtite. Starting et «»hour. C M MEDICAL O FFICE In Scottsdale needs Nfttim e general baft. W E tram bright Person. 7701E . Indian Seheol Road, Suds m in d M dy, t a d Temporaria«, 337-7234. FULL/ PART-TIME advertising sa k e people «or exciting, new, "Cempqe-type Directory." 9361705,277-4748. PART-TIME CHILD ow e and general assistance to ASU faculty family. One c h ild , fle x ib le ho u rs. $4.50/hour. 9064022.____________ ■ KRISTI’S, TH E Valley* newest end meet . wirfiiehe «gañ ir H i f rtf"» mmr Mere If you have pent «apartara« o r potential to PART-TIME NANNY. Light housekeeping. modi) or set c M Suato, S4S-9000. Must love cM dran. EMartenoe peatened. References neoeeeaiy. South Terra* tocaHon. Cefi tor interview. 3i7-3434 or leave meaeegr 631-7732. *4?, L08ER S W ANTED. Turn tat M o dotare. MedlcM y verified new fat reduction PART-TIME H ELP to prepare and defiver dad orders. M ust be 21. Apply In person « «060 W. Main, Mesa- acmes from McOonatd*«- 6-tO a m . or 2 4 p.m ._________ coneutadofi « » 686492« . (a z -c a n ) LO SE U P M 36 pounds e month. Exper­ ienced Weight lose program needs 2 7 . overweight people. West m attes! breakth­ R B JA B LE R ESTAURAN T dsfivety driven wanted. Two ritifto. Part-time/FuH-tlme. South Soottadale. WR train. Cell between 1612 «at appointment 4236006. rough. FDA accepted, «attetection guatantaad Cali Una 7166354312 (AZ-CAN)' LO SE U P M 36 pounds a month. Weight oontrol program. Need 25 overweight RESEARCH NOR book. Do you know someone who has proven research abfifity people. .N ew medlosl breakthrough. F.O A fiosep ted- FUr fraecorauRation c a l 41748^2068. (« -C A N ) to do research tor a nonJIction book? We era looking «or a M l time employee «or the neat 3-4 months wHh proven research experience- either a «Heeler« dr F lid , MODELS N EEDED lor swimwear. Various dandkMte or comeone with comparable «Wta R esearch er Is needed Immediately as submission deadline to Simon & Shus­ ter is July IM S . Salary negotiable. Please bod» W *»- Os* ttoda, 664-0606. NEED MOTIVATED persons to work poolside at vritoy raeert e wdta g euncare tend sun wear. Must b e pweonabW end have am i transportation. C e l MI-2751 N r interview. yean or older, good driving record, own auto, Downtown Phcertix law ta n . Contact M ogfiiaL 2546481 «tier 10 a.m . ; NEW ENGLAND Brother/Slater camps(Mass.) MaMCewNac «or BoyalDanbee for Okie. Counselor poatiane tor program epwolwHata: ah Mem sports, eepecietiy baseball, basketball, field hockey, soooar, and voDeybal; 26 «entile openings; also, aroheiy, tttlesy end MMng; other opentnga M o d i performing arte, line arte, year­ book, photography, video, cooking, sewing, rofierskating, rocketry, ropes, and camp craft; at waterfront activitiee (swim­ ming, riding, am ta craft), inquire Action Camping: (boyag is o lin d e n Avs.. E le n Ridge, NJ 07028: (girls) 44 Center Grove Road, (621, Randolph, N J 0788ft Phone (boys) 2014266622; (gkle) 201-3262727. OVERSEAS JO S S , summer,, pear around. Europe, Soutil America, Austratie, Aida. AH fiekk. 3000-2000 month. Sightseeing. R afi Information. Write U C , PO Box 52-AZD3, Corona O N Mar. C A 82825. S EC R ETA R Y / TY PIST. W est M ass Insurance office. 12364:30, MondayFrtrtey. 34/hour. C M 964-8014. mootings SOFTW ARE EN G IN EB L Growing hi-tech company need* Individual to develop mrtomMc Raster to Vector convers ion software. B S in Computer SolenM or M afhiniM ka required. Must be familiar whh Imago proceering, pattern racognltion, C and MC880XO. Creativity Wld Ntifity in work in a teem environment neeeeewy. Send raeum* to: S I X Corpora­ tion, Attention Human Reeoutow 6 4 , apply at SM och Crawprta a i. 4327 North Scottsdale Road, number 200, Soottodrie, Arttona 36261. ■j& ja y - jl.. R ESO R T H O TELS, cmieefinee, airlines, and amusement part« now accepting appheatione for summer Jobe, Inlemehlpe, end career positions. For tntownaBon and application writs National Collaglata . Recreation, P .O . boot 8074, Hilton Haed w and, s c .aasta- I B B B p iB B f e CO UNSELORS- GIRLS camp In Maine. G ood «alary, room and board, travel atiwmnoe. Beautiful modem tacfltty. Must love ehldran end be afbte to teach one of the fofioering: tenitis, WSI, sailing, waterrid, eoflbaH, baakattM , soccer, lacroeeo, arte/crafts, photography, hotpaback, danoe, piano, drama, nftas, camp craft, gymnarifea C M or write: Camp Yaga, Box 1771, Ouxbury, Massachusetts 02332. 617434-8536._____________________ SECRETARY/ RECEPTIONIST needed Wt residential treatment center for EH adoles­ cents, starting 4/1. Good phone skiHa, type 70 ptua word* par mtouto.muri.know word processing on Apple tie (preterrebty), assist in variety of secretarial duties, 2 year* computer/ de rica i experience. 312,384. South Phoenix location. Sand raaunw : P.O . Box 3BOO, Phoenix, AZ SSOSft. SUM M ER CAM P Jobs! YM CA camp outekle of Tucson hi Oracle it looking Mr «htitatia, greduetee, andtenohere towork this summer June* to August 21. Couneetbra, director*, kitchen, program and maintenenee staff, horseback riding, nature, aria w ld crafts, and awimmtog atari are «No ntadad. Good aatary ptua room and board. C M 1-S844M 7 or write: YM CA Camp, 516 N. 5th Ave., Tueoon 85706 for eppHcehone or kiformetion. SUMMER POSITIONS Aw labto: Ltfo- guarta, tostraotors, aaristtnt pool manaigem, and pool m anage» needM at St* City of Scottedele’e three aquatic faculties. PatVtimo, flexible hour*, and gotid payt C M |eb toformetfen fine at 99 1 2396 or Recreation Dtvl«lon«tfi>4-240e._______ SUMMER W O R K WUrk whHe back EaetIntervta Hng now tor fUfidme summer w ort to a e riw end burin««« manegemerti program, «lake *1489 monthly and excatlent raaunw experience. C M 236300ft research project. Each member fit the couple wdl be given e chano* to »tin 3100Ortiy go aouploe fira needed an eel now. C M fita dS33 N r mura Intormation. N EED ED for CSC220. CM VER Y BRIGHT person wtih awcMant typing ekfite needed .«or unique fufi-tim* position In Scottedfito. 941-3512 W AITRESSES. BARTENDERS, and flyer dtotributora. Deeperadoe. 524 W . Broad­ way. Tem ps, 894-6423. 9 W ORK at home ft Company needs workers etetewlito to mail circulars. Free auppHeifpoetage sent to your hum*. No investm ent. Free Information- 8*nd 3A8EJW F- — t 870#*’ Ph0*nfa. Arizona, <6062-7064. wllh covered bad? (Not door to door safes). Students or houeevrtvw apply. Salary ptua commlaston. Room tor advancem ent. Sunset Apartm ents. 7561196 (leave bast time to caH). T H E COMPETITION FOR instruction JOBS & INTERNSHIPS W gV g rsaswched the Top Com pM ss, Finns & Agents for you. Now you can get lets of specific contacts on post «Nek labels to make earning resumes & letters a snap! Chaae to m M s designed tor majors in: personals Advertising MiMfMtfng Accounting Medicine, Apr* 224«, by Nattoriri Aero6 lea Training Aaaodallon. C M 9638415. AEROBIC Sy s t e m s Dlv. of K aaM c toe. ENGLISH TU TO R and typtot available tor oompoMton writing akfih, to m papem, raaaorch papers, rapuria, resumea. Four yeara exparience. C M 834-1387. ’ »«»p 822 West End Ave. 3-E New York; NY 1002« HANG GUDEI Gently doping M l just south M Tempo. Sal* and exciting. S u p e rb g ro u p ra te s. Windsports, 897-7121. _____________________ INTERIOR DECORATING: Amerioan toetttute of Interior Design. 6 month course. COUNSELORS Sum m er em ploym ent Fem ale and maleOutstanding eight week gifts cam p in Maine needs instructors in the following activities: ten­ nis, swimming (WSI), water ski, sailing, canoe­ ing, kayaking, ropes/outdoor living skills, horseback riding, costume director, theatre technical director, silver jewelry, pottery, nature aits and crafts, photography, copper enameling, fine arts, arts and crafts, newsletter* gymnastics, dance, lacrosse, field hockey, basketball, softball, and soccer. A L S required for ail waterfront positions* with WSI required, as well, to teach swimming. Excellent salary, travel allowance, room/board, laundry, uniforms and linens provided. For information and application call: Day», 301*653-3082 or 207-998-4347; Evenings and W eekends, 301-363-6309, 207-7834625, or 303-649-4147. TRIPP LA K E CAMP certification CO M PUTER CO N FUSED ? Training on systems, operation«, and aohwera. Low ret««. C M SO S ConeuHenta, 9667361. If you don't dd it NOW you wont gat the chanceyou deserve. Someone else w*. Send asif addressed ft. stamped envelope: su ccess INSTRUCTORS workshop at Phoenix Cantor «or Sport* Morflcine. April 2324. by National Aerob­ ic« Training Association. C M 9333415. Creative Writing Journalism FuM c Relations ^ A LL STUO EN TS In ti» Critogu o« Pubfio Prugranie ara krvfisd to come to Tempe Baach and iodn th* tari; wflh tood and gami a and bsveragw . March Ifith f i l i a jn . j thè A-PHI HEIDI. l’m glad car survtvedl Luekily wa dld too. Everything w w ao lun, especiafiy J J ’s SaturdayChristina. (tight! Ctaaw e atari weakly. 16855 E . Parkview, Fountain HNs. 9499501. PERSON AL pO M PU TER training end consulting. Reasonable rates. C M Diane, 671-0535. INCOME TAX preparatlon. naw onM Ia ratea. 2364206 o r Ifi8 5580. R E S E A R C H A S 8 I8 T A N C E . U rg a s t Hbrary o» Mbrmation In tha Uaited 9latea. TajHraehoM na: 1-606361-0222 WINDOW TINTINO- Low priesa, fres ptxxia quotes, m ar ASU . 225W . Unteeraity, nUmbar 112,504-6606. Siili HI MISSING FROM S ep a l Grand Canyon. O rasi FyranaSfi whtte mato, 125 pounds. Reward! Family member 5 years. Rodney Cleas rrlrkenn Sox 57, SupaL Arizona 86436. Phone 4462731. ft? miscellaneous 961-1485. , m im m m m ACCU R A TE TYPING- sprifing and mammar oonsctlon. If you haw a w r ganan * C on a paper you paid to haw typed, cM Carato», 681-2464. , ________ • ANYTHING TY PED IBMftocsr. typing wordprooaaakig . FfisL rtopenrtoble and raaasnritis. Wordefrong. 9 6 644« . A T MMTO’S we typeset papera that make the gradai 9 6 6 E . University. C M 9662036. . BU SY? L E T me type your term papera, rapata, and resuma« tar you. Reason­ able. Evening*. 8262411. .C A L L M E « orlasi secure» , quaM yw nic* et oompeUdw price*. C lo w to ASU . 966-2189. FA S T RETO«««- Experienced typtot wto edtt sprifing, punc(u«tlon.gr«mmar. Accu­ racy guaranteed. Joan, 8360772. FLYING FING&T8 n oW tw afiM as 6 and tasar primari Rasurase, raports, ato. S w an, 6461800. F ORME R ASU «tatara- W ord Perfect and Xerox memory tartara. Experienced wtih Uriah D M I was APARTMENT FINDERS Free Rental Service 70.000 Units To Choose From 894-1391 Tempe Office A FA , M IA. ’graduato scho o l ole.- gradu­ ato studente and facufly work «rateóme. 9464302 Donna and Joan. LE TTE R P ER FEC T word prsosselng. Rush jobs no problem. Dtoeertafiona, tanti p a pers, resum es, the***. Q uality! 826777ft PROFESSIONAL R ESU LTS at reason­ able ratos. Term papers, correspondence, raeumas and more. C M P M y at The Write Choice, «264206 <64 p.m ) B EEP B E E P H ill Remember wasted days and waatad nights, galting baked, lira . Roper, Ishtar. Quad, kfitor, Nick Nolto, tooting tents, Stowpoka, J .J ’s, “ cant and botttoe” , riding in backs of trucks, TanyaM and R ice, the ride home, and everything Q U A LITY, Q U IC K Typing. Papara, raports, trauma«. Pfckup Atofivary avail­ able. O ne day w rote« airMabto Ginny, 966416ft etoe I’m bagettlng. It wee raefiy good. Love, Aehtoy. ______ QUALITY TYPING or w a d processing BEEPBEEP-hill Nice U-haul... AH and Tank and G hnn and um-uh, Steve! We Lose your tertdybear? loatM IN ol BEEPBEEP-hill (B-fwt ’88!) Going to MwdcM with AH.. Guadalajara with Lam ... Srigon with Down, «toil! Love, Tertyrid. C all the STATE PRESS at 965-7572 and place a FREE “LOSTAND FOUND” CLASSIFIED AD and find your teddybear! BEEP B EEP hil Did Lara kiss peck pack or the kldnappar. Dawn, Dawn, Dawn... Aahley, A ritia y - Nice care to ta l Boaa. B O N G FEST 8 6 Rocky FM nL Singing Hatfippy BHkthdaeay toooo yooou on the way to J J .’s. Love, 8 » mooch. BRIGETTE: I’V E ntisead you title aemee tori How about a drink after d a w the 23rd? PS- «tow waa Rocky Point? BO N N ER: Som eone STATE PRESS think* you’re epectol. How about dinner and a friendship? Slu at CkK on Terrace. 15 MATTHEWS CENTER 8-5 DAILY 1 089-7572 O ELTA GAM MA Paly: Have a happy dayti Would yellH ow bout H??_______ transportation DID Y O U g oto Lake Itavw u end heve Hie time a l your N e i # eo, con» party etiti» the "*•7*1 train H M " Friday, Dash Inn, ft-QO p.m. A LL STATES Driveawey - C a n awtitobto 21 or o kta . 9965200. ________ __ ATTENTION: FR EE c a n to M major etttoe. 21 or oldar. C M AAA Oriwaway, 277-9979. FAMILY “ CR EW S" Craw: Thanks for the memori««. I lo w you a lt Laura S ick . FtG f LO TH AR mk dto «chom Buste! Dancing at Jay Jays with you «ras a M aM Let’s do H again. lOtola. 9667725. M JILL: HAPPY Bkthdayt You may not haw won in Reno, and I loat In Vsgaa, but at least a m gamtfls to paying off. H aw fun today. U w aK kk. USA. Stay M aummar, ohangw pem tiw d, 3S76 roundU p; Atoaka 3550. World wtda dtooounts- Soma raaktstiom apply- Ttaw l T» a UMntitod, 9667283. JON- V.- Neap sm ungi it’s rimo«« o«fit You’re doing a grant Job «ritti Greek Sing) C M m eri you need to talk. JM. LUC3A CABRERA. Quito, brawn eyes, S U ” , cocoa putts, tape—, seven hole — »lobe«, koochl. Te itoooo to major hoy y world of UitemeMonri Buslnew l ■' M .E.C. AN O C.S.Q .- Btin annlveraake d’onw moto- One m oia until thè big 1. M aybetwaaty wri defiver on that dayl And ! who ktapttsd tinti? Maybe B ilichi Lowya» PAM AND Kriaten. Nacd any g w money? Tho w raal ASU guys Greg and'' Joe. 966-7913. PATY: HAPPY, happy, happy BHhday. 1 low you l Joanna. 1 PATV-. YO U am g ritir* old, he. ha, W M you b etta gto ready to party. 1 lo w you. Chuckle. pfckuptttMvery. S hM ty. SA V E TIME. C M me fieri. Word procera Ing, theses, dlssertlone, resumes, protwetonri typtot M ew SscretottoL 844-1396. SH ORT O F TIME? I can hrip. Rea­ sonable. Professional. Guarantaad. Experienced to aoadarie. C M Jaseis 9464744. SPECIALIZE IN thesis, professional prompt santoe to M word pracssalng, n a a A SU , notay pubfic. 941-1261. S U S A N 'S W O R D Pro caaalng and Graphic« Orvcampu* pick-up and dritoary torio« weekly: sp ritoig and grammar correction«; ruah outer« aocepted; orgartization, Dow, Gantt charts; graphs; 31-60 doubto spaced page; 407468ft TH E PAPERW ORKS- Thesis, report told n ou n» typing. ISM compatible word processing. Near ASU. 9214678. TYPING SER VICE near ABU. Quick turnaround. Over 30 yeara eecratatal wrote«. »464902, _______________ W EST CAM PUS Typk». Laser prim «vai­ atale. C M 9634044. W OROrtNFORMATMN PROCESSING at effordaUe prices. Letters, laauoMfi, thsass, tapota, mstongs, rar i «elateri«gal, spreadsheet«, «Mounting documents. Tataphonr786030ft W O R D P R O C E S S IN G / sp e ra ta rla l aervioa. North Central Phoenix location. 9434063. W ORD PR O CESSIN G - term papen, raaumw , corraapondanca. 32/ page BUSINESS STUDENTS- IntoraaUd In doubto M acad. 8364061 » 9067 937. U aw ln g to Europe or the Orient this summer and aanting ixritoga credtte? Fbxl W ORD PROCESSING- Papere, resumes, out howl ktiamallonal Ourim aa Seminars _ theses, ti.5 0 f paga. C M 0044062 or Morm ationri meeting Thuraday, Marsh 5261231, toew m aarage. 17, at 1:40 in BA365. Discover ths exciting LOOKING FO R AeitiO Kkn: Mat at fight Had aanw lhought Watting tor reply- Guy in white car, Friday. PATY: HOW botti M your panan ris bring a day late?? cheap! Free 8604960. AIRLINE DISCOUNTS: Fly Continental Tempe. 9336967._________ free losVfound traalmenf tor your oMng probtom , p«0a w o M F ia n Kampley m 257-1301 or ramow d p armanandy by r ioc>rol»«ii. Fres eoneuttation, locatod m Tempe. C M Sheron at Deeert O actrolyri« C an ta, _________ 3667829. BEEP-BEEP Hll No pbonft n o Hgtti. no g w in ti» car,'M I a single luxuryl ti waa a trip to Rocky P o M that l’I m irar targati A la s ti otompre. Trite care. Loveetorew. R«y- CASH FO R gdd end diamonds. MW Avenue J ewel«re, 414 S . MH, SuHe 10«, FR EE TREATM ENT tor Sufimto. tf you woutd fike to meatos le a , oonfidenari H AVE UNW ANTED «aotol or body hak BEEP-BEEP Hti May everyonel Just a rantindar, Lara Klassd (ha Kktnapper in Rocky Polntt ________ __ B EEP B E E P HP Oh Va giriti aating. Priva» and oantldantial eouna ri ing. Gbxtis Grant M on os, ACtiMf, racoverad butonio, 4374420,408 SOSO. Health insufinc» weicome. i "B E E P B E E P Hti** Lsatiw r Hp ktoaw to M who survived afir awaaoma rtighta of camping k l Cocky J o M Sexycol Stay tuned tor Mamortr i Bay W aahand, Pari Two. Love Mtoaiaalppl Krtais. CAR RIE AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS certification workshop at Phosntx Cantor tor Sparta *1.50 PER page. Any Type Word Prooeaeta p Sipriing. and gtammar corrected. Sem a graphics «vaiatilo. C M Dabble. A A K U fH T TY P IN G - Short papara, ovetrtighl/ long papara, prompt aarvtce, transcribe tapes, good rato*. Linda 531-0946. ANOREXIA, BUUMIA, com puhive over- N ciw y, to kN ya, J Jto . ti» «tasi, the sarai the su n , ths man, tho Suburban, hives, peck peck, lahtar, dough and Jelly, Row ’s motera, and to finely getting homel Guys, it w et a btastil lo ve, Lara Mated S » 967-8154 (leave mooeeg«)- atari. You didn’t sound ao h e M h y M lari tima we talksd.w your lawyer and doctor I would adrtoa more “hot and humid" tratifihar on ths dance floor. Kappa Sigma YO U CA N save a Ito. Giva Mead. March following pnaMunfi: (tight cook* find day bua/dtoh. Interviews Monday-Frlday, 34:30 p.m. Price find Oaoalin«. TU TO R TRI 8IG Ftodga Cynthia: Tbankavlor getting 8pring Break off to such a great w ord p ro cessin g Ètri! S raugh 2fitii. ~SE0» B EEP HL Ham’s to Cotti* Joint Sextco, one Mg S u o krid e ,tt» corana TH E M OROCCAN Raataurant now Wring wakraoeee.waltora and khchen help. Parttime. Apply In person: 4228 N. Ocottadria Rond. Phone 947-9580. ty p in g / ^ on-campus SW ENSON’S . TEM PE to Wring hard work­ ing and antftuaiaetic individuals (or fits W OULD WORKING only w w lwnda be parted? Do you own a dependabi* truck Business Graphics Drama CO U P LES AH E ne edad to partiolpato In fl 8038N. 2 M Avenue, Phoenix, A Z 88021. product M S 'flS d ta s M iwelgM people. N EED PER SO N fordM vsrtw and g eneral office worts (copying lllee. titing, etc., no typing). For Monday/ Wedneedsy/ Frtday, Show s each day, am . orp.m . Must be 20 personals miscellaneous help wanted CHICAGO O 'H ARE to Phoenix-one plam tickat 3121-3(27. C M 8263772 N ew masaaga lor Krte. 3140. EU R O PE 32230 a day: Visft 7 countrlee bybua,cam patnlghLContectyourbm fal agent or Tradewind Traw fiara Chib, 2166864072. ________ _ SIGHTSEEING BY air, shared expenses, pilot bwhKtodl Cheap! Local trips, exam­ ple*: .Grand; Canyon, Sedone,. Painted daaert. Sm M aircraft, maximum 3 peofti*. C M Paul, 9964661. ty p to a / w oid processing wonted CASH FO R your tra« deed, contract, mortgage. Any atoa, (aim, location. Faa^; fair confidential quotes. C M today, no obttgrikxi. MB 777ft 14004461731$: N oie B roiera of Amorto«- (AZGAN) FEM ALE M O DELS f a advanced haireütting. perming and coloring daaeee. Broad­ way Southwest Blttmore Fashion Park. Contect Ricardo, 4662175. A W ANTED: M O O B 4 tor h rir and makeup. C M La U tto » « 9464862 ' adoptions ADOPTION: CARING, tovfi« ra iirw lsn . ooupl« wants to h aw a nawbora baby to A W O N DERFU L fam ily experience. Australian. Europe*", Scandinavian Mgh SIGMA CHI Todd Prado: Think you can wait a weak and two day«? Tanti. *1.15/ PAG E. Cam pw pickup/ dritoary. 24 hour turnaround. 8 ye an axparianoa. Piarla, at 6364426. low ' find chariah. A l «apenara paid, legal and w alldantiiL C M «alfieL MH» or rtochefis 7162244323. (AZCAN ) school exchange Mudante arriving ft August. Saçom a a hofi|^ W f t a Ameri­ can Intercultural Student Exchange. C M 1-600-SIBUNG. (AZ-CAN) TEXA S TECH PI Piti Mkzt: Welcome to ASUI Q a l ready to hfiw a wild spring braak. 1lo w ÿsu, Joanna. *1.50 D O U B LE apacad paga- A-« letter qustity word praosering. 32 year« oxparlenw . Merten, 6394260. CARING, LOVING, financtotiy statala coupla looking tor white newborn to adopt C M Lihdfi o r Stow , (602)4367107. . W ednode^A tordU ^: ' ISf « 1 V-"; § N M tt§ ■ 11 ;;\i ir-j gg a E 7V |ra Please join us to refreshments ami prize drawings. The Esprit Store, Biltmore Fashion Park, Phoenix 840.1941. Also visit Esprit at: Hayden Square, Tempe.l