Arizona State University’s inursaay, iwtarcn « p ivoo By MIKE BURGESS StatePress ' ' '' aL A 50-unit Tempe apartm ent complex that housed mostly ASUstudents was destroyed Wednesday night by a sweeping three-alarm fire, displacing a t least 150 residents. Damage a t H ie Villas, 1717 S .Jentilly Lane, is estim ated at m ore $1 million, Tempe A ssistant F ire Chief Jim G aintner said. There w ere no known fatalities or injuries, although several people w ere treated for smoke inhalation. “ It’s the biggest fire we’ve had in six o r seven years,” G aintner said. “The whole complex is gone.” Tempe fire investigators said they do not know what caused th e blaze. They will begin sifting through the rubble searching fear possible victim s and clues today. nainhw r said there m ay be fatalities because the Maze, spurred by high winds, m ay have trapped some residents. Displaced students information; pago 10 HHH > I «. Ji«, r i.-* -r WM . • v , - jr.i’Ss/ jmUndMycäKHihtaPraM Firefighters battis a blaze at 1717 S . JentIHy U m e, whleh gutted The VHIçs apartment complex Wednesday night. The lb» was Tempo’s biggest (Ira Hi more than six years, official» said. 4 ,** ' jp Firefighters originally responded to the 7:30 p.m . call with :two engines and a ladder truck. Thirty m inutes later, 12 engines and 100 firefighters converged on the chaotic scene. By 9:02 p.m ., Tempe fire w its — assisted by Chandler, M esa and Phoenix units — had contained the inferno. “By the tim e w e got on the scene, about a quarter of the complex w as involved,” G aintner said. “Five to 10 minutes later, the complex was totally involved. “As rapidly as that fire was moving, it was virtually a m iracle we got it under control.” The fire, which began in the southeast corner erf the complex, spread through the attic of the building with the help of 25-mph winds. ASU students ware among the throng of people who Turn to F k t, pigs 10. Senate dismisses charges on loan concealment bœSSKfflfS&fêfâ By ben McConnell State Praas PHOENIX — The Senate on Wednesday dism issed charges that impeached Gov. Evan Mecham trier! to conceal a $350,000 campaign loan from Tempe developer B arry Wolfson, a move th at surprised some senators. M echam , sp eak in g to a group of Republicans in Phoenix Wednesday night, «mid it would be “inappropriate” for him to . comment on fite dism issal, ■ I t w a s c a lle d th e “ D e m o c ra tic Steam roller,” a s all lit Democrats in the Senate joined w ith five Republicans to ' dism iss' the concealm ent charges contained in A rticle II against Mecham. The dism issal cam e after senators m et secretly for m ore than an hour. The motion itself was debated for about 20 minutes and: passed on a 16-12 m ajority vote. Sens. Hal Runyan, R-Litchfield Park, arte Greg Lunn, R-Tucson, w ere out ill. Sen. Jones Osborn, l>Yum a, led the. Democrats in arguing th at Mecham’s April 22 crim inal case would be {«ejuificed if the im peachment court heard testimony and examined evidence on the Wolfson loan charge. “From the looks of my m ail, people from all four co ro n a of the state are watching this trial (and) reading about it in the newspapers and m agazines,” he said. ^We might to let the American system of jurisprudence decide.” Mecham faces six felony counts charging . ... ' .. .a Wt. 1 * . - a ll him w ith concealing the Wolfson loan, then lying about it to the state grand jury. Wolfson said th e dism issal all i>ut guarantees a Senate conviction. - “ I see Gov. Mecham on the Titantic, polishing Hie brass and rearranging the furniture,” he said. One senator claim ed the dism issal was prem editated by Democrats, designed to force an early vote on the two im peachment articles already heard. “It becam e quite clear the Democrats wanted to get the issue dism issed,” said g te . P eter Kay, R-Phoenix, adding if there are not enough votes to convict Mecham on the other two articles, “it could backfire on the D em ocrats.” But Democrats denied they planned the _Z._ n J J.» « * /\m ik l« n n n à vote, adding th at ar» DRepublican introduced the motion. “ It cam e as a com plete surprise to m e,” said Sen. Carolyn W alker, J)-Phoenix. “But it sounded like a good motion.” . W alk» introduced a motion two weeks ago requesting a vote afte r hearing testim ony on charges th at Mecham tried to obstruct a Departm ent of Public Safety investigation into an alleged death threat. Senators rejected the motion. “The timing of the vote was a surprise,” said Sen. Lela Alston, D-Phoenix. ASU P ro fesso r an d R ep. Heinz Hink, RS c o tts d a le , a B o a rd of M an a g ers prosecutor, said he also was surprised the count w as dismissed. ASASU candidates present issues in forum B yK fiM pTPEAR CEState P ress - „ .* * * * .s * : ■J i B B r Associated Student presidential and cam pus affairs vice presidential candidates took the hot seat Wednesday afternoon on the Student Services lawn to field student questions on their goals and campus issues. John Fees, T erri Hoffman, P atrice Cabianca and Mark Stark, in initial speaking order, were allotted four minutes each to explain their platform s as less than 40 onlookers contended with microphone problems and wind. At the end of the forum, the audience bad the opportunity to ask questions of the candidates. College of Public Program s Senator Scott Thomson opted to test the candidates by directing one question to each of them . T hom son q u estio n ed F e e s ab o u t h is slo g an “programming not politics” and asked him What he has donefo prove he is an effective student body spokesman to the Arizona Legislature and the Arizona Board 'of Regents. “1 will have the professionalism to build a consensus, which is leadership. Leadership is not one person dealing with the Board of Regents or the legislature. It’s a ll of us working together,” Fees said. Thomson asked Hoffman why she resigned her ASASU state relations director post she held last y ear. She Turn to Forum , pug* 10. T urn to T rM , page 7 . inside ASU WEATHER Coder today with a high in the 70s. Tonight: clear with a low in the 40s. ASASU UPDATE: A took at the Fine Arte candidates running for ASASU office. P age 13. Patrice fighlarwe, Tetri Hoffman and John Feet, take part In a forum il candidate» In front of tiw Student Services Building. Classified................. 26 Comics.... ..............-2 2 Insight........:..........*.. 5 Opinion................... 4 Police Report...........11 Sports...«..,.............. 23 Today.............. 3 w orld/nation in b rie f ttam pdow n fails to stop violence; soldiers kill 4 Arabs, wound 39 BEIT SAHUR, Occupied West Bank (AP) — Hundreds of ¿ J ib s defied a m assive security crackdown and battled Israeli troops in the West Bank on Wednesday to m ark a Palestinian anniversary. Soldiers killed four Arabs and wounded 39 others, officials said. The arm y’s toughest restrictions in m ore than 20 years of occupation failed to contain the violence. The m easures included m ass arrests, the deployment of thousands of extra police, restrictions on m edia coverage and a ban on Palestinians traveling in occupied areas. “We can’t say th at Land Day was quiet. It was not,” said West Bank commande r Maj. Gen. Avraham Mitzna. The day com m em orates a confrontation on March 30, 1976, when Israeli Arabs protested the forced sale of 1,600 acres of their land for Jew ish settlem ent. Six Arabs were killed, Wednesday’s fatalities brought the Arab death toll to ,123 since the unrest began Dec. 8, according to U.N. figures. One Israeli soldier has also been killed. The arm y closed the Arab-owned Palestine P ress Service for six months, further illustrating the seriousness Israel attaches to reducing m edia coverage. The agency, the only Arab inform ation service, has b eat a vital source of breaking news for foreign journalists since Israel ordered the territories closed Monday. The arm y barred reporters from entering the West Bank and Gaza Strip except in news pools with an arm y escort. Army spokeswoman Ofra P reuss said reporters violating the ban would be prosecuted with the maximum penalty being five years in prison. that closed an estim ated 90 percent of the nation’s business and industry. , L ater, the city’s leading pharm acies reopened, as and it was getting campus to facilitate movement. Not to belabor the point, because we’ve already had fun at about as dark and gloomy as it can get for the senators who w ill soon decide the fate of our governor-in-exile, Evan Mark’s expense, but this guy wants to be president of ASU/Disneyland, complete «nth Tomorrowland and a Mecham. It appears as though the long, statew ide ordeal of an constant “ international festival” in progress. What’s next? Space Mountain east of the fountain? im peachm ent trial will come to a sudden clim ax Monday No amount spent cm signs or fliers is going to overcome when the Senate will vote on whether to convict Mecham and th at kind of a platform . hurl hi"» out of the nam ing in the May 17 recall election and into the history books, where he will be left to rot for all The forum, although sparsely attended, was significant for eternity. And wouldn’t you know it, the biggest state political story several reasons besides Stalk’s Comedy act — a strong of the y ear will probably be going down cm the eve of the showing by presidential candidate John Fees, the emergence biggest University political story of the y ear — the ASASU of T erri Hoffman as his prim ary competition, and the appearance of an interesting dark-horse candidate for the elections. campus affairs vice presidency: Damon Day. It’s true. You can have too m uch fun. Day faces a tough battie in trying to unseat incumbent But before ASASU is eclipsed by the Mecham saga, there is «till tim e today and tomorrow for a few observations on the VinCe Micone — a fight Day himself m ade even tougher Tuesday when he tinned in bis financial statem ent 30 battie for student government offices. m inutes late, a tardiness that could disqualify him from the • • •’ The candidate» filed initial cam paign expenditure election. Day speaks eloquently on the issues and offers concrete, statem ents Tuesday with Ok ASASU Elections Departm ent, constructive ideas for involving students and improving and the figures are qrnte interesting. The spending leader, so far, is presidential-hopeful and cam pus affairs prog-amming. Day seemed im patient with the lack of progress made infamous festival-planner M ark S tark —who has forked over $1,814.41 for campaign m aterials. Staik, an a rt m ajor from during the last year on some program s under Micone’s Newport Beach, Calif., evidently subscribes to tee theory adm inistration. Speaking of the Book Exchange, a program that althmigh money can’t buy happiness, it can buy a boat designed to provide students with a higher resale value for (or in this case, political office) that will sail right next to it. their textbooks, Day said: “We don’t need promises on what Other big spenders include Todd M artensen, a candidate the program «rill be or why it’s not working. We need the for Activities vice ¡»resident, who has spent $1,434.29 and program to be functioning.” Micone is vulnerable to Day and his new ideas because presidential aspirant T erri Hoffinan, who has surrendered Vince seem s to be running a carbon copy of last year’s $1,152.22 In her run for office. When ASASU abandoned the campaign spendinglimits of Campaign — even featuring the sam e “inspirational” quotes EDITORIAL BO ARD |ip Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial, board. Individual members of the board write editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: , Tracy Scott EDITOR Gregory Robert Krzos MANAGING EDITOR Darrin Hostetler OPINION EDITOR Ed Schubert ASST. OPINION EDITOR in his stum p speeches. The problem is that it doesn’t make any sense for Micone to promise the sam e new “things in store” for the Book Exchange and the Course Source booklet after a full year in office. If his campaign highlights this tim e around are the sam e as last spring, «teat can we deduce? Perhaps that not much has happened in the Campus affairs office the last 12 months: If Day can escape expulsion from the race, h e may have a shot a t unseating Micone. If not, he can a t least establish the time of tiie debate and present new, fresh solutions to old problems. That in itself would be a service. Fees showcased him self a t the forum as the most informed, experienced and prepared candidate for the presidency. He answered questions clearly, specifically and forcefully, coming down especially hard on parking issues. Pledging to fight “nickel and dim e” expenditures facing students, Fees said, “We’ve got to ask seriously why parking tickets are $10 in Tempe and $18 a t ASU.” He also blasted ASU Parking Services, saying-he is “frustrated” that parking tickets serve as “rev alu e enhancem ent for the U nivasity” •*V’t s A devious little adm inistration ¡dan— that Fees said never made it out of the bade offices — to raise the ¡nice of parking decals while decreasing the am ount of tickets w ritten proves that «teat m otivates Parking Services is not thé pursuit of efficient student parking but prafit. .If he continues to em phasize his knowledge of similar adm inistration plans — along with his strong opposition to them — Fees stands to gain many votes from students who are tired of being bled dry by the cost o f transportation and the other sm all but accum ulative costs of life a t ASU. Hoffman did well a t the forum too, proving that she is the only other candidate besides Fees who answ ers questions with specifics, not glittering generalities. The latter is the tradem ark of Patrice Cabianca, the personable and well-liked “other” candidate for président. Cabianca answered questions «rite soft-spoken obscurities that sounded nice and filled tim e hut didn’t quite say anything. Next to Fees and Hoffman, she sounded wellintentioned but a bit lost. ..I f B B KppT- | - » • • ■ Vÿ§Jf T o d a y ’s f o r u m w ill o f f e r s t u d e n t s a c h a n c e t o a s k questions of executive and activities vice president candidates on the Student Services lawn à t 1 p.m . quotable ‘7 am not apolitician ... and my other habits are good, also. ” — Artem us Ward H itt ft» » Itiunday, March 31,1988 W Êm a n d A m e r ic a n over accord L ast Thursday evening Lew is ta m is , form er ambassador ( to C osta R ica a n d a n a rc h ite c t o f th e R eagan adm inistration's Central American policy, m et in the Memorial Union w ith Nicaraguan Political Counselor M artin Vega fo r a public debate oh the Contra war am i the recently declared truce. The following is a condensed version o f their Ü rem arks. . TAMBS: As you’re probably aw are from the newspapers, : there bas beén an agreem ent reached between the Nicaraguan government and die Democratic Resistance (Contras) headed by Adaifs Calero. To m e this a very promising development. It is ihy understanding that the two sides have agreed to a 60 day cease-fire beginning on the first of April. Then die two sides will m eet in M anagua, where they wiD sit for talks on a perm anent truce, and die rebels will move into centralized zones in Nicaragua during the first 15 days of April. The Sandinista government will grant gradual am nesty and allow for all political exiles to return to the country without fear of ; prosecution, and they will also release 100 Contra prisoners. Additionally, 1,800 fram er National Guardsmen imprisoned since 1979 will be released a s soon as the truce is signed. The Contras will accept only hum anitarian aid from a neutral organization. And finally, the Sandinista government guarantees freedom of expression without restriction. We therefore have a move which is a vindication of President Reagan’S policy. Reagan’s policy is based on the so-called Reagan Doctrine, which says that the Umted States has the right — perhaps even the m oral obligation — to help insurgents who are willing to fight for their own country. The doctrine specifically mentions die Nicaraguans, Angolans, Ethiopians, Cambodians and, of course, the mujahideen in Afghanistan. I think we should be honest; the Soviet government’s offer to pull the Russian arm y out of Afghanistan is because of the success of the Afghan freedom fighters. The United States contributes annually to the mujahideen about $500 (million) to $600 million. The fact is th at the Soviet helicopter force — consisting m osdy of the H ind helicopter, which is a m arvelous m urder m achine also found in N icaragua — has been badly hit. , Now in Central America since 1961, with some $¡200 million in aid, we la v e kept the pressure on the Sandinista regime. I do not think you will find that a M arxist-Leninist regim e will actually come to term s and begin a dialogue if there is no pressure. . _ _ United States policy in Central America is dedicated toward peace and national reconciliation, and basically has had five instrum ents through which it is brought to success. T hese in stru m en ts a re : dem ocracy, developm ent, disarm am ent, demilitarization and, naturally, defense. With regards to dem ocracy, President A rias of Costa Rico has repeatedly stated that there is no peace without dem ocracy — and his nation is obviously an example of that. We now have four civilian, dem ocratically elected presidents in C entral America* Costa Rica, Honduras, Guatemala and E l Salvador. Unfortunately, the only nation which is a holdout is Nicaragua. Nicaragua is run by a m ilitary junta. . ï'-ïk Of course, one of the tragedies of N icaragua is that the igandjniatng were originally à broad front who were dedicated to overthrowing the tyranny of (form er dictator Anastazio) Somoza. Unfortunately, the M arxist-Leninists took control after the July, 1979 departure of Somoza. Now, the C arter adm inistration helped the Sandinistas (come) to power. But we cannot ever accuse Mr, Carter, of wanting to establish a M arxist-Leninist regim e in Central America. It’s just not true. He, in fact, has fe}t betrayed by what has occurred. I rem em ber, during his last Visit to Managua in 1966, he faced Thomas Borhe, the m inister of interior in charge of the security forces, and accused hiin of violating his prom ises. Mr. Borhe did not reply. Democracy has not been fulfilled. There is another tiling T want to m ake d e a r. There is ffAmottiing else which is inherent in the R eagan Doctrine. When the president talks about Nicaragua and Afghanistan, he’s really saying something else, too. And th at is that democracy is not an aspiration which is lim ited to people of European descent The fact is that dem ocracy — ami human rights and human dignity — is for everybody. It’s for brown people; it’s for black people; it’s for orientals. A ndthat’s why I think die Reagan Doctrine is very im portant: It’s saying very clearly that all of mankind deserves justice and deserves democracy. Hopefully it (the truce) is going to bring us to national peace and reconciliation, am nesty and a move toward a dem ocratic future, as was aspired to by the Nicaraguan people in 1979 when they overthrew Somoza. VEGA: N icaragua is m oderately optim istic that the negotiations for a cease-fire can progress and implement on 1 April first a cease-fire for a period of six weeks. From there, we hope to achieve much m ore than a cease-fire, bringing an end to the w ar which in eight years has caused 50,000 victim s in Nicaragua. A poi"t should be added to the agreem ents relating to the JMLMmvCMWSM* I Martin Vega, political counselor for the Nicaraguan embassy release of the prisoners. Recently the International Red Cross was allowed to carry out a census in N icaragua, and in sp iteo f the exaggerated claim s m ade by the White House — that there existed 10,000 political prisoners in Nicaragua — the Red Cross said that there are approxim ately 3,300 form er Somozista National Guardsm en who have been tried and convicted for such crim es as bombing N icaraguan cities with 500-pound barrels filled with petroleum . Fifty percent of them will actually be released mice the cease-fire is . initiated, and the o tte r 50 percent will be released once we háve been able to achieve a definitive cease-fire. The Contras are basically concentrated in the cease-fire zone. They would autom atically be allowed to so ld representatives tee th e process of national dialogue. N icaragua also h as ratified th a t those persons coming finan the outside of N icaragua will be aide to participate in Ambassador Lew is i sm os upcoming elections, whether they be for the Central American Parliam ent, for municipal elections or for the national elections slated for 1990. And im portantly enough, given the factor of m istrust that has existed, there is going to t e a verification commission to oversee compliance. I guess the m ain thesis to .be challenged here is (fiat the R eagan adm inistration’s policies have te e n correct. I guess tiie other hypothesis is th at Nicaragua is th e only country yet to dem ocratize in C entral Am erica. I’d like to refer to this last point first. What do we view as being dem ocracy in the region? I would like to go back to the period that extends from the revolution on to the present day. M r, Tam bs te s spoken of the R eagan adm inistration’s policy as being a continuation of the C arter policy. We m ust be very careful in assessing how the C arter policy developed toward Nicaragua and toward the Sandinistas until their trium ph. When Somoza fled to M iami (in 1979), the National Guard disintegrated. The United States actually m aintained its m ilitary advisers in N icaragua in support of Somoza up until the very mid. - .4 v As a m atter of fact, after the bombings by Somoza of d ifférait Nicaraguan cities in 1978, the son of Anastasio Somoza was actually bestowed a m edal by the United States government. In June, a t the height of the w ar, the United S tates gave Somoza $40 million, which was pushed through, the International M onetary Fund. This was to provide Somoza with oxygen in the latter phase of the w ar., ; So we’ll say that the Sandinista victory was considered to be a very sorry moment for the C arter adm inistration. And therefore there had to te a serious reassessm ent of what the policy would be toward the Sandinistas. There was a thrust by both countries to try to understand one an o th er.! would say th at over the last eight years the Sanriinistas have learned m ore about the United Skates and the com plexities of (its) government than the Umted States has learned about the Sandinistas. too, m et with President C arter when he was down in Nicaragua (in 1986), and I can te l you one thing that’s very clear. Even though President C arter did not agree with everything we did, he never, never conceived of carrying out a w ar against the Sandinista government. That is a clear, d e a r distinction between the C arter adm inistration and the Reagan adm inistration. We still have indications th at President Reagan has not abandoned this policy. Robert P erry of Newsweek said, “President Reagan still feels that by the tim e he leaves the White House a t the end of January 1989, the Sandinistas m ust b eo u to f power.’’ So, d early , United States objectives don’t have to do with democracy. They have to do with the overthrow of the Sandinista government. Creationist, evolutionist debate origins of human existence By TER ESA OWEN State Press The origin of all life form s was under debate Wednesday when creationist W alter Brown and evolutionist R obert D ietz challenged one another to scientifically prove their ideas on the creation of life. Brown, d irecto r of th e C enter for Scientific Creation, cited m any sources of evidence in support of his theory th at life was created instantly by à superhum an being and has not evolved from lower life forms. Dietz, an ASU geology professsor, refuted Brown’s theories with th ree argum ents: th at present life form s have evolved from lower life form s, the earth is much older than 6,000 to 8,000 years and th at the features of the earth w ere not a result of a worldwide flood. Brown, who was an evolutionist until 1970, said th at life form s are too complex to have been formed by natural processes over tim e because evolutionary processes would have disabled lower animals before a more complex anim al could have been formed. He said that a reptile would have bora disabled as the reptile’s leg changed to the wing of a bird. Showing pictures of a man-m ade arrow head, Brown said th at an intelligent human had to bavé created i t The audience, which filled the MU Fim a Room, agreed. Brown then said that if an intelligent human can create something as sim ple as an arrow Robert Dlptz head, then some type of super hum an being had to have created m an. “There are hundreds of gaps (between different evolutionary levels of life),” B row h sa id . ‘‘T h ere is no g ra d u al development of sim ilar form s.” B ut D ietz said th a t recapitulation, repeated stages of evolutionary growth, supports the theory Of evolution. He also said th at there are fossils th at support the belief that lower form s of anim als slowly evolved te more complex life forms. ■ “N-j m am m al fossils have ever been found because they haven’t evolved yet,” said Dietz. Brown also said th at the age of the earth is about 6,000 to 8,000 years and that the r a d io m e tr ic d a tin g p r a c tic e s o f evolutionists are incorrect and inconsistent. “This reasoning is circular,” Brown said. “Using geologic dating techniques are fallacious.” « However, Dietz said that radiom etric dating is very accurate and that the claim th at the earth is 4.55 billion years old only has a 2 percent m argin of erro r compared to the 20 percent m argin of error of the claim s m ade by creationists. In support of the old age of the earth, Dietz said th at it to«* 330 million years to create the salt in the ocean and it took 6 million years to create the green river shale in Wyoming. Brown said that the features of the earth w ere created as a result of a worldwide flood. Fossils, which can connect different levels of life, were buried rapMly in the worldwide flood, creating gaps. Dietz said that there are records of floods that occurred during ancient tim es, but that is no reason to believe that one worldwide flood instantly created the features of the earth. “Many thought that the sky was going to f a l l . . D i e t z , who uses the plate tectonic theory to support the creation of the features of the earth, said. Brown said th at creationists advocate three ideas: Religious doctrines should not be taught in the schools, all origins of all sciences should be taught, and if evolution is taught In the schools, then studies that oppose evolution should also be taught in the schools. “Students are being taught w hat to think and not how to think,” said Brown. But Dietz said th at because the U.S. Supreme Court ruled th at creation is a religion, then it should not be taught in the schools. “D on't bring Sunday school into Monday school,” Dietz said. V Sùndl K |an stad /S tats Pima Did you HARE the news. Classified Work. 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Mecham said he once questioned the Arizona Board of Regents’ handling of construction a t the state’s three universities during a regents m eeting last year, but was m et with hostility from board members. “I was about as popular at that m eeting as a polecat at a slum ber party,” Mecham said. Mecham also said that th e universities need to concentrate on offering quality education rather than competing with the community colleges for students. Mecham also criticized acting Gov. Rose Mofford’s signing of lease-purchase legislation that would provide funding for construction of ASU West, saying, “I’ll have to see when I get back what I can do about it.” Mecham fought against lease-purchase plans during the 1987 legislative session, saying that Arizona’s constitution forbids the state from going into debt. Lease-purchase allows the universities to raise money for construction by contracting a company to build a structure and then buying it back over a period of years. Mecham said lease-purchase plans are foolish unless the government is assured that it can afford to make the yearly payments. If not, the contractor can repossess the structure. “How would you like to see that happen to the library that they just dedicated,” Mecham said, referring to the Wednesday dedication of the ASU West Campus library, the first building on the 300-acre site. T r ia l._______ C ontinued from page 1. Mecham attorneys Jerris Leonard and Fred Craft said they were pleased with the d ism issal and did not question the Dem ocrats’ motives. “I wouldn’t suggest there was any ulterior motive a t all,” Leonard said. “I think the Senate, over these weeks, has seen that (dism issal) was the proper thing to do.” The m otion w as introduced “ w ith prejudice,” by Sen. Wayne Stump, RPhoenix. He said an im peachment and crim inal trial put Mecham in “quasi-double jeopardy.” “With prejudice” m eans a charge cannot be resurrected. Ironically, during some verbal ping-pong about rules of order prior to the vote, Stump said he did not expect m ore than three supporters. Stump apparently slipped out a back way and did not talk with reporters after the vote. The “with prejudice” clause apparently slipped by some senators, Alston said. She described it as “a technicality that a lot of us did not think about.” “But we can reconsider it,” she added. Senators can change their minds about the “with prejudice” clause, but m ust do so within one cm1 two days, according to ASU College of Law Dean Paul Bender. But Bender said the clause should not have even been approved because the court did not hear the m erits of the charge. And, the Senate would not have been violating Mecham’s rights had it taken up the dropped article, he added. “The Constitution of Arizona clearly contem plates that impeachment m ay come before a crim inal trial,” Bender said. Presiding O fficer F rank X. Gordon announced that each senator will receive a synopsis of evidence and testimony on Articles I and III, along with instructions for voting, to study this weekend. Attorneys for both sides will present closing argum ents Monday. The Senate will be left to decide if Mecham should be acquitted or convicted of charges of obstructing a crim inal investigation and illegally borrowing $80,000 from his protocol fund. Meanwhile, a form er Mecham Pontiac bookkeeper testified earlier in the day that the dealership was in financial difficulty when Mecham loaned it $80,000 from the protocol fund. Lee Christman said she cam e forward to testify after hearing her form er boss, Dennis Mecham, “lie” on the witness stand. Christm an testified Mecham Pontiac needed at least $497,000 in July just to m eet bills. “We had trouble through May and June,” she said. “It became critical that funds had to be brought in.” The Mecham Pontiac buildings and property were sold Tuesday to Oldsmobile d«aipr Kemp Biddulph for m ore than $4 million Figures for how much Biddulph ppiri for the Pontiac and Renault lines Mecham carries were not disclosed. Christman’s testimony contradicted the Mechams’ testimony that the dealership was financially strong when the governor ordered his form er chief of staff to cut an $80,000 check. In addition, Dennis Mecham said Tuesday at a news conference announcing the dealership sale that the dealership’s sales How they voted Here is how senators voted in dism issing impeachment Article II, which charges Gov. Evan Mecham of concealing a $350,000 campaign loan from Tem pe developer Barry Wolfson: F or dism issal: Lela Alston, D-Phoenix Jan Brewer, R-Glendale Tony Gabaldon, D-Flagstaff Jaim e Gutierrez, D-Tucson A .V. “ Bill” Hardt, D-Globe Jam es Henderson Jr., D-Window Rock Jesus "Chuy” Higuera, D-Tucson Jeff Hill, R-Tucson Jones Osborn, D-Yuma Manuel "Lito” Pena, D-Phoenix Pete Rios, D-Hayden Jam es Sossam an, R-Higley Alan Stephens, D-Phoenix W ayne Stump, R-Phoenix Carolyn W alker, D-Phoenix Pat Wright, R-Glendale. A gainst dism issal: Pete Corpstein, R-Paradise Valley Bill DeLong, R-Tucson John Hays, R-Yamell Peter Kay, R-Phoenix Carl Kunasek, R-Mesa Carol Macdonald, R-Safford John Mawhinney, R-Tucson Doug Todd, R-Tempe Bob Usdane, R-Scottsdale Jack Taylor, R-Mesa Tony W est, R-Phoenix Jacque Steiner, R-Phoenix. Absent: Greg Lunn, R-Tucson Hal Runyan, R-Utchfield Park. started falling in 1986 when his father began his fifth bid for the governor’s seat. In other court testimony, Mecham adviser Jo h n M angum sa id th a t in a u g u ra l co m m ittee ch airm an B ill Long had authority to sign an agreem ent between the com m ittee and the M aricopa County attorney’s office. Mangum was brought in by prosecutors to counter testimony of defense witness Robert L’Ecuyer, who said Long did not have power to OK the agreem ent, thus making the deal void. The dism issal of the concealm ent article, which som e called the m ost serious allegation Mecham faced, signals a definite, impending end to the trial, which has lasted five weeks. If Mecham is not convicted by the Senate and beats the six crim inal counts, he still will have to face a May 17 recall election. But if Mecham is convicted on the im peachm ent counts, questions have arisen if Mecham will still be able to run in the recall election. ASU’s Bender said Arizona’s constitution already has a built-in “Dracula clause” which would bar Mecham from running in the recall. “Regardless of the ‘Dracula clause,’ he is barred from office for the rest of his fouryear term ,” Bender said. “But, of course, there is debate on that (because) some say that is unconstitutional.” If Mecham is convicted, his name will be removed from the May 17 ballot, but Bender said the governor could take the m atter to the state’s Supreme Court. State Press reporter Vickie Chachere contributed to this report. ATAT Phone C enter 990-8169 Ambet t edor Shop 431-3923 A rt M arket 990-8120 BerteHe Studio 947-4383 BIN'S S ight A Sound 990-8811 B roadw ay Southw est 481-2100 C ards Plus 946-2001 C atherine’s S tout Shop 947- 5878 Cinem a N 949-8501 Com ing Event M aternity 990-0096 D avid's DeH 941-2083 D iana's Hallmark Shop 946-8901 D ocktor P et C enter 945-9559 Ethel M. 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AWAY RESERVATIONS • RECORD A HIT SINGLE • DO A D O U B L E TAKE mm • CH ECK IHHHtlM OUT A FLICK • CHANGE YOUR HAIR • CHANGE YOUR CLOTHES • C H A N G E Y O U R HIGH T O P S • AN D D O N ’T F O R G E T T O F A T IH » IT ’S ALL IN ONE PLACE» S C O T T S D A L E AND MCDOW ELL ROADS» ASU, state officials dedicate West Campus library — .-••M S»«® -»..- 'S H aS k '-.-. «A , I .IH.inumiL. I., - !.. , - M . g J Ü1 . :" By SHERI JOHNSON State Press ASU West’s Fletcher Library, the first building to be completed on the 300-acre cam pus a t 4701 W. Thunderbird Road in Glendale, was dedicated Wednesday. The library, nam ed in honor of Robert and Sally Fletcher who established a library endowment fund in excess of $1 million, covers 95,113 square feet and cost m ore than $8 million. The entrance to the library is m arked by bowed windows extending 45 feet high, and the building, which has three stories and a basem ent, has a copper roof. There are currently 35,000 volumes in the library. It has a capacity of 300,000. The one-hour dedication ceremony began with a speech by Gerald R. McSheffrey, vice president of ASU West and a m ajor coordinator on the library project. The m aster of cerem onies was Don Riggs, ASU West librarian. The speakers a t the cermony w ere Rose Mofford, acting governor; C. Roland Haden, ASU vice president; Donald Shropshire, president of the Arizona Board of Regents; Sterling Ridge, R-Glendale; B.. Dell Felder, academ ic dean of ASU West. Haden, filling in for ASU President J . Russell Nelsoh, who was unable to attend, pointed out that for Arizona, this was the first opening of a state university campus in m ore than 100 years. “The bringing of this concept from what really was only a notion, to a dream and then to a plan, and now finally to reality, belongs to all the individuals that had a p art in this,” S te ri Johnson he said. “We’re very grateful to all of you.” Haden also said the library will be connected to main Acting governor R o m Mofford and Arizona Board of Regents Preaidant Donald Shropshire pull the dedication bell In front of the new campus libraries through a com puter system , so students ASU West Campus Library In Glendale. “This campus will become the focus of West Valley tim e for her. will have access to books on both campuses. He also said that “It’s the moment that symbolizes for faculty and for the library will be a “m ulti-purpose” building for a while. cultural activities,” he said. “This fall the third floor is set aside for classroom Ridge talked about the occasional difficulty incurred by students and for me the establishment of a campus that we struggled for many years to create,” she said. The library those wanting a West Campus. purposes,” he said. Mofford took a look a t the past during her speech. “People used to laugh when we tried to tell them there will be the “heartbeat” for ASU West, she added. “I cam e here 47 years ago,” she said, “and the population were people here who worked, raised kids and put in all that In appreciation of the Fletchers’ contribution to the of Phoenix was the sam e as the enrollm ent a t ASU today. I tim e and they w ere still wanting to continue their schooling, library, Haden presented R obert Fletcher with a plaque, and rem em ber 20 years ago when the Legislature first talked and they couldn’t afford three hours of commuting to Anne Lindeman, president of ASU W est’s advisory about the need to create this cam pus to m eet the growing Tempe,” he said. “ Now they’re not laughing any m ore.” committee, presented Sally Fletcher with a bouquet of yellow Ridge also said some people told hiih it couldn’t be done, roses. population needs.” Mofford also said there was special meaning in the library but he didn’t believe them. The ceremony closed with Mofford and Shropshire ringing being the first building constructed on the site. “This was not just one of those beautiful m arriages that the ASU West bell. The bell, which weighs about 1 ton and “ It’s a symbol of the commitment to learning that is the was m ade in heaven,” he said. “It took 16 years. .A lot of that was cast of bell m etal in 1904 by the Stuckstede Bell Foundry core of existence of this cam pus,” she said. Shropshire reflected on events leading up to the building of was convincing people a t ASU that they needed us. We knew in St. Louis, was first rung on the West Campus on Feb. 26, 1986 a t the groundbreaking for the new cam pus. Officials said the library, calling the building of the West Campus “a love that we needed them .” ringing the bell will become a campus tradition. Felder said in her speech that this was an “emotional” story.” BIG BED ttSA LEtt The M iraculous M icrocassette R ecorder Make Studying a Breeze with the “ Class Act” Microcassette Recorder. • Tape Lectures • Study Sessions • Oral Reports • Memorization • Note Taking • Daily Reminders • Business Meetings 5 P ie c e O a k F in is h B e d ro o m S et S158 / C T « » '— N ow Only • "V T) S o fa & ^ I M $29.50 Love S e a t ^B $|w Tw in S e t $ 7 8 Fu ll S e t 88 Queen S e t 128 K ing S e t 188 Been Beg 28 1 W A lso sets at #248 and $288 plus(2.50s/h) 2 AA batteries and microcassette tape not included FUBNOT 30 Day M oney Back Guarantee Order Toll Free 1-800-628-2828 ext. 990 C le a r a n c e C e n t e r In T e m p e r * K iU 8 7791 East Osborn Rd. Suite 226, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 We accept Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Check, or Money Order 966-6252 University ______ ASU F.P. 2077 E. 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Oeegem.% a- p i z z a Checks accepted with Guarantee Card Any Large Specialty Pizza and two 32 oz. drinks ONLY $8.99 One coupon per customer, not valid with any other offer. $ p iz z a SP ■ A State Prass Thursday; March 31 1988 £2S£ Psychiatrist: Elim ination of ‘sco rin g ’ mentality cu rb s date rape By CARR 1 MITCHELL State P re ss H ie best way to stop the incidences of dote rape in the future is to de-emphasize the “scoring” m entality among men, said a visiting psychiatrist Wednesday during a speech a t the Student Services Building. M ary Koss, a psychologist from UofA, said the “saw ing” m entality is not a m ature m an’s view of sex. Koss has conducted a survey of 6,139 college students on the cam puses of 32 different universities and has found that one in four women has been the victim Ufa rape or attem pted rape between the age of 14 and college age. Koss also found th at one in 13 college-age m en had com m itted (Ms act, Koss’ speech was part of the “Take Back the Night,” activities held Wednesday by ASU’s Office of Student Life. In the study, Koss said, 84 percent of the women knew the m an who had attacked them and 57 percent of the offenders w are dates. Koss said she defined rape during the study as penetration by force, or threat of boditybarm. Koss said men and women are raised differently and this often leads to misunderstandings and violence. Koss said men are raised to be the aggressor, and to initiate sexual conduct. “Boys are raised to believe that girls do not like sex and that for this reason girls usually say n o . . . so a young boy is led to expect that a girl will say no and net necessarily ultimately mean no,” she said. Respondants to Koss’ study said often what women viewed as being a rough sexual attack, men see as being a successful seduction. “What surprises people is that it is not a violent crime. The typical force used by a man to date rape a woman was bedding her down. - It wasn’t punching or slapping or using a weapon. It was holding her down. “Hte typical resistance. . . was trying to reason or plead with the guy,” she said. Koss said in her study she did find same common traits among the men who had committed a violent crime against a woman. ? , She said some of these characterizations are growing up in a violent atmosphere at home, current behavior that reduces inhibitions against sexual aggression like alcohol use, extensive reliance on Join our Family For A Festive Holiday .Buffet. Start With Our Tempting Soup And Salad Bar. A ' F E A T U R IN G LEG O P SPRING LAMB Carved l ¡ t a r iw m . t É s IÌ& ì With Buerre Blanc R aisin a a l M t S i m le a f B ou rgu ign on » Com bread stuffing in Burgundy Wine i tm k Qntry, Mo*MMSa?. M a u w e aehedee n e e Oer im e n e i D w * t IW e M iiM U tio iX k « M O riO titeee $450 EVER! 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Do you know how many students lived in there?” said Neal Thomas, a 22-year-old senior finance m ajor who resided a t the complex. “Where are we going to live?” , - v" ss|* if> Salvation Army Lt. Carole Abeila, who was on the scene, said the Howard Johnson Hotel, located a t Apache Boulevard and College Avenue, is providing 20 rooms far about 30 people, who a re mostly students. Red Cross field representative William Phillip Sawyer said the agency was placing students in other local hotels and shelters and will act as a m iddleman in accepting donations for the displaced residents. ASU Dean of Student Life Leon Shell said the University will try to relocate students in vacant residence hall rooms. “We’ll do w hatever we can to get those students accommodated,” Shell said. “1 can’t rem em ber this kind of displacement of students, ever.” At one point, the. flam es w ere so unpredictable and dangerous th at firefighters were called from the building for their own safety, G aintner said. He added th at fire officials were considering evacuating the D esert Palm s apartm ent complex, located due east of The Villas, because of the winds. Gaintner said only one or two of the apartm ents were searched before firefighters were forced to retreat. Forum. ConUfHMd from pogo 1. claim ed a t the tim e that it was for personal reasons. “F irst off, I m ade th at departm ent work from the beginning I m ade it (me of the. largest departm ents of ASASU. But I had to take a chance to see if it could m ake it on its own,” Hoffman said. Thomson asked Cabianca, form er president of the Greek Panhellenic Council, how she plans to break down the elitist quality th at ASASU possesses and what d ie has done to try to break down the elitist quality of the Greek system . “In order to break down these im ages, you have to understand tee organization and the purpose of the organization, whether it be the Greek system or. ASASU,” Cabianca said. Thomson questioned Stark about why he is running for president, when his platform better resem bles that of activities vice president, because he endorses festivals and concerts. “ I te d it is very im portant ^ integrate these activities to get students involved, I want to m ake these activities on TAKE THE COURSE. WEIL PAY FOR IT. The Army Reserve’s Tuition Assistance Program offers Reservists financial help in meeting bills at nearby colleges, trade schools, art schools and business schools. \b u train one weekend a m onth, usually, plus two weeks annual training, and you’ll be putting extra money in your pocket—over $80 pier weekend. T he sm art move is to call us right now at: 967-1611 2020 S. Mill Avenue He said heavy swirling winds contributed to the rapid read in g of the blaze. d ad in anASU sw eatshirt, A visibly repeatedly said,, “Everything’s gone!” Many people on the scene said they were shocked a t how said. “I couldn’t get anything otó this is unreal. not a Villas resident, described ■ te e ‘fire.’ We looked lif tih 'the corner where ¿ sta rte d - you could see smoke ripping out, so you knew it was spreading. “The whole building was on fire,’ Dupre said. Several people were able to escape when their neighbors pounded on doors to alert them. the fite and are interested jn »We were watching television,” 19-year-old Tony Johnson Residence Life, said. “All of a sudden a guy cam e down and pounded on the 1 9 , u io u iu v ia v u u u m s w i »»■ door, and we ju st got away.” H you want to donate textbooks, ctothing or money to the The building did not have fire alarm s or a sprinkler lisplaced students, call th e American Reid[CroM Bf 461-1100. A meeting for ail displaced students will be hekf at 10:30 a.m. system , Gaintner said. It did have fire w alls. ; DniMinn amphitheater. amnhHhAfltAr Tamnorarv and in the Student Services Building Temporary and Only H id in g « constructed after 1985 are required to have permanent housing possibilities will be discussed,n sprinkler and fire alarm system s, G aintner said. Breakfast for displaced students wiH be held from 7 a m. to i o “I would bet if it would have been a sprinkler building, it a.m . In toe M U Maricopa Room and toe cafeterias of Manzanita and Sahuaro residence halts from 7 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. would have been a sm all fire,” G aintner said. Lunch will be served from 11:15 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. in toe MU After ft»» «oaring flam es w ere finally doused, charred palm Maricopa Room. __ • - • trees loomed overhead, and the fire walls were all that Counselors will be on hand at the Howard Johnsons hotel rem ained standing. * and Tem po M eyer Elementary School tg address students Ironically, a State Farm Insurance appraiser, who lived at suffering from trauma. / . i:..* Displaced students wishing to use bathroom facilities may do the complex, adm itted he did not have any coverage for his so in Sahuaro Hall. possessions. “What can you do?” said 41-year-old Rick Usrey. quickly the fire moved through the 15-year-old complex. “ I went toJack-in-the-Box for 20 minutes, and when I came State Press reporter Ben McConnell contributed to tins back everything was gone,” 23-year-old resident Todd Denny report. W h e re to c a ll; Univereity.” ■ 1 J W campus for the students,” Stark said. f!nhianr»n said, “We need to build on traditions, not tear On the other side of the podium, campus affairs vice : *T presidential candidates .Damon Day and incumbent Vince them down.” And Hoffman and Stark targeted communication between Micone w ere asked about services' they are planning to target students and adm inistration. ASU’s commuter students. ^ Hoffman «aid, “I will work with Residence Life to get more Day said, “By involving them in the program s, W would housing on campus, particularly fam ily housing.” significantly increase tee number of students participating. Stork «mid, “I'm fully aw are of all the shortcomings that Everyone uses the library. Why is tee libary not used to let ASU has. The solution is communication.” people know what is available to them?” , As the presidential candidates expressed their positions on Micone said, “It is increasingly im portant to figure out how to reach com m uter students. One way to do this is through a campus issues, they also presented their prim ary goals. Commuter Town Hall which will be held later this month. We Hoffman said, “I want to achieve issues of quality. I will will ask the students themselves how we can help them and represent, you — the student.” how we can service them ,” Cabianca said, “I want to m ake this University a caring When the p residential candidates delivered th eir campus.” introductory speeches, they centered on campus issues. Stark said, “My m ain goal is to get bureaucracy out of Fees and Cabianca said University expansion is a campus a sa su .” „ problem, and tradition is suffering because of it. Fees, said, “My goal is one of commitment — commitment Fees said, “We need to realize the importance of historical ; ... hiiiiriings that have been threatened by the expansion of the that you can tru st.” mfBy W a l k 3 É ^ ■ F H ■ o r M a n k i n d W e r a is e d 1 / :■ — over S IO O O T ra je e ! C o n c e r n , » fo r : KAUTOBCMim ARMY RESERVE. Y our c o n v e n ie n t a lte rn a tiv e to fru s tra tin g .Qian [aojo D e l' O re o r l p n a r t m e n f « i t n r e ■ s h O D D illil appfcalionS available fis uueeK thl5 uieefe meetirtg b in Rm. 2)5 of thè fìì.U. 5 0 0 le Datino Cíame 9 0 0 (tiara« Cafeteria march 31; manaj malversi Hiarip tò 5geu» tour tapinate April to Ôp.m.-1a.m. ASHflquafc brino Pictures to Itali Council for colooe ■ A ladies' d esig n er form alw ear leasing service is th e answ er to ail your form alw ear needs. 4 2 2 5 E. Indian School Hd. Phoenix, Arizona At the A-Frame 6 9 9 0 £ S h e a Blvd. Suite 105 Scottsdate. Arizona (6 0 2 )3 8 1 -0 0 2 6 (6 0 2 )4 8 3 -2 7 1 3 : m ThufKlay.MWCh 31,1968 Man robbed by stranger outside adult bookstore By MIKE BURGESS State Press •A Phoenix m an was robbed after he started talking to a stranger as they left a Tempe adult bookstore late Tuesday, police said. ■' \ Police said Jam es A. Clark, 34, was leaving Modern Book World, 1812 E. Apache Bivd., about 10:15 p.m ., when the m an told him he had a gun and ordered him to the re a r of a plumbing shop north of the bookstore. w | At the rear of the shop, the m an displayed a long-barreled revolver and dem anded money. Clark handed over $12 and a Valley National Bank Visa card, police said Both men then walked to (he front of the shop where the suspect said, “Let’s find a bank.” When a ca r pulled into the p artin g let the suspect fled northwest on foot, police said. A police canine was called but could not b ad e down the suspect. Police described the suspect as Caucasian, 6 feet 2 inches, ISOpounds with la w n hair, a thick beard and stained broken teeth. He was last seen wearing a jacket, Levi’s and boots. In other inddents: •ASH and Phoenix police arrested a m an Monday night in connection with an kidnapping th at took place in Tempe Center earlier th at day, police said. Police said the victim , Jacqueline Burke, received 32 stiches to her head but refused to press charges against the suspect who is her ex-husband. Burke was reportedly abducted by three m en who beat her then grabbed h er by the hair and dragged her into a vehicle in front of Stabler’s M arket, witnesses told police. She told police the car w as hers and th at she had been drihking, police •A Tempe m an, wanted in connection with a one-mile, high speed chase that caused two collisions was arrested Tuesday, police report police said. Bradley M ichael Simps«», 23, 30 W. C arter Drive No. 16-108, was booked into Tempe City Ja il and charged with felony fleeing and leaving the scene of an accident. Simpson, jin America West Airlines employee, was arrested a t Tempe police headquarters. He is accused of leading police on a chase th at injured two Tempe men late Monday, pedice said. •A m em ber of (he Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, 414 Adelphi Drive, reported th at someone burned a file cabinet and its contents on their volleyball court Tuesday night, police said. Pedice said the file cabinet contained receipts from fraternity business. Damage is $350. F ratern ity m em bers told police they a re undergoing “local de-chapterization” of current m em bers and suspect the expelled m em bers in the arson and other property daimage, police said. Burglaries: •Someone broke into a home a t 1896 E . Don Carlos Ave. and stole $1,015 in property am} jewelry, police said. The suspects entered hy climbing through a kitchen window. •Someone ottered two apartm ents a t 1140 E . Orange Street, using a pass key, add stole $274 worth of desks and chaws, police said. •Someone forced open a carport door and ransacked a residence a t 2940 S. Fairw ay Drive, police said. •Someone broke into a residence a t 1951E . Oxford D rive and stole $260 in Cash and credit cards from a w allet, police said. •Someone broke hito Staff Builders, 64 E . Broadway No. 175 and stole $1,875 worth of office equipment and other item s, 7TuSmQid 965-6881 H O N E YW E LL BULL IN C . W ill b e r e c r u itin g a t: A R IZ O N A S T A T E U N IV E R S IT Y A p r il 2 2 , 1 9 8 8 S T A T E PR ESS polieesaid. Auto thefts: •Police recovered a stolen blue 1986 Honda motorcycle from the north side of Irish Hall A-Wing during a security check Tuesday. The motorcycle to valued a t $1,000. Bike thefts: •Someone stole a red 27-inch men’s Schwinn 10-speed Mesa Runner Mountain bicycle from the north side of Tower Center, police said. Loss to $275. •Someone stole $215 worth of personal property from a red Nissan truck on cam pus, police said. The truck was unlocked. •Someone stole a blue m en’s Ntohiki 15-speed bicycle from the north side of the Physical Education E ast Building, police said. Loss to $200 and there are no suspects or leads. •Someone stole a white Schwinn cruiser from the re ar of 701 Alpha Drive, police said. Loss to $150 and there a re no suspects or leads. •Someone stole a silver 26-inch KHS Winner 10-speed bicycle from the bicycle racks on the southeast side of Ocotillo Hall, police said. Loss to $100. Crim inal dam age: •Someone broke a window at the Business Adm inistration Building, police said. Loss to $75 and there are no suspects or leads. •Someone used a m agic m arker and wrote “M88” on a white Ford Mustang, police said. Loss to $2 and there a re no suspects or leads. Thefts: •Someone stole $72.36 w orth of w ater hoses and equipment from the north side of the tennis courts on Apache Boulevard, police said. There a re no suspects or leads. •Someone stole $60 to cash from the desk draw er of an employee a t M anzanita Residence Hall. News: 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 Typesetting: 9 6 5 -2 0 9 7 O ur com m itm ent to rem ain a w orldw ide lead er in large-scale com puter s y s te m s h a s never b e e n stro n g er. The s tru c tu re of Honeywell Bull Inc., d e d ic a te d only to co m p u ters, o ffërs positive proof o f th is grow ing stre n g th a n d ded icatio n to leadinge d g e c o m p u ter tech n o lo g ies. W e will be interviewing c a n d id a te s grad u atin g w ith a B achelors o r M asters D egree in: E L E C T R IC A L E N G IN E E R IN G Honeywell Bull Inc. is involved with product planning, d esig n a n d developm ent of m edium a n d largeuscale c o m p u ter s y ste m s. O ur hard w are developm ent p o sitio n s focus, on th e d e sig n and im plem entation of s ta te of-the-art hardw are tec h n o lo g ie s including: high d en sity c u sto m e r se m ic o n d u cto r c h ip s (VLSI), adv an ced d esig n m ethodologies, logic an d m em ory circuit d e sig n s, m icro-processor driven d e sig n s, a n d high p erform ance in terconnection sy stem technologies. uj*h this coupon offer « p írea 5/1 3 /M . NotvoikJwithanyother Trendy Accessories WILD B6AUTIRJI FLAMBOYANT UUPHIS O F 6R R R IN G S. . . UJffTCHCS THaT m i KNOCK SO U fi SOCKS O F F . . . FIND UU€ HfiVC SOCKS TO O ! 4 2 0 S Mill fiv e, a t 5 th 8949017 If you will b e grad u atin g th is spring or sum m er with a d eg ree in th e above discipline, w e would like to talk to you. S e e your placem en t office to sc h e d u le an interview or subm it your resu m e to: Charley Hull, Professional Staffing, Honeywell Bull Inc., P.O. Box 8000, M .S. Y-1005, Phoenix, AZ 85066. O FF Honeywell Bull C O M P L E T E PETAIL SERVICE (WITH THIS AD) OuaHty Auto Grooming _ • •EXTEfllO H*INTEBIO R»ENGINE Window Writing , V i v. ¿ tí^ . Æ U l* Equal Opportunity Employer ScoteMmt efyr. wmBityon BN re nwwew 969-9013 63 E. McKeMpe 10 MINUTES FROM ASU Good thru 4/30/88 March 31,1988 Proposed ordinance to require restaurant non-smoking areas each violation thereafter. The drafting of the new ordinance was State Press requested by Vice M ayor Frank Plencner a t The Tempe (Sty Council win consider an a Feb. 25 council m eeting. ordinance a t tonight’s m eeting th at would During th at m eeting the council voted on require all Tempe restaurants to contain changes in the city’s non-smoking ordinance nonsm oking areas. drafted by the City Council Health and A ssistant City Attorney Dennis O’Neil Human Services Committee. s a id th e p re s e n t o rd in a n c e s ta te s However, several non-smokers’ groups restaurants with less than 100 seats are not said the changes did not go fa r enough and required to have a specific section for nonasked the city to require all restaurants to smokers. have non-smoking areas. O’Neil said the ordinance the council will Plencner said he views the proposed consider a t 8 tonight, in the Tempe City Hall ordinance as another step in protecting the council cham bers, would req u ire the rights of non-smokers. sm aller restaurants to set aside SO percent ...; “I think it’s' a health hazard to have of their seating for non-smokers. someone sitting there blowing smoke in R estaurants th at do not create the non­ your face,” he said. smoking area would face a $25 penalty on Turn to O rdinance, page 21. their first violation and $50 penalties for Stereo Theatres TWILIGHT SHOWS3.00 By J . M ICHAEL HOEHN • HARKINS 4 Channel Sound rizona sta te universa SHOWTIMES BETWEEN 4:304 6.30. PHOENIX C R ITIC S R A V E! 'G r e a t m o v ie , e n t e r t a i n m e n t , a n d a f ilm c la s s ic ." , nìck saiem o. im m à t m m m i ASU INVOLVEMENT AT IT'S BEST! HURRY ENDS SOON! Scottsdolé Rood grid McDowell t?d BAST I AST E M PE R O R Muir'S BIGGEST NOMINATO FOB 9 AC/UXM Y A W A g D S jj^ ' 0015 SCREEN "i' 1*V/ li ypm st Worth oi Comoitaock Rood Comeibock 5d westotScotts BdtRÌ eanfiel 44th Sheet and Thomot good æ COMING SOON ' END OF THE LINE" l l COMING SOON " A MONTH IN THE COUNTRY" m BH SAA Homecoming Float - Fall 1987 Every year the SAA plans the ASU Homecoming Ball. - REDESIGN NEW IM AGES OF YOURSELF Tun In the Mud' during SAA'» Annual OOZE BALL tournament. Open to all! CHANGING FOR THE FUTURE! ■■.is*»' Design C uts: S hort H air S 12 . Long Hair $ 1 5 1 1 2 6 N . S co ttsd a le Rd. a t C u rry , B 2 1 -7381 The SAA is pleased to announce the creation oi a 30-member board oi directors. This selected group of ASU students w ill work to: •Actively participate in Fall Orientation Week •HQmecoming Ball •Annual Oozeball Tournament •Student.Out o l State Parties ■ •Student Day on the job SCRATCHING BRUSHLESS AUTOM ATIC INCLUDES UNDER CARRIAGE WASH Q*. W HAT IS THE CRITERIA FOR THE BOARD OF D IRECTO RS? (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 ) ’i»tê ONLY $2' A: SIMPLE, WE ARE LO O K IN G FOR: TERRACE & APACHE CHECK I /~\iurtr *: unc s o (O tte’ block _ east o f R ural) 4t KARATE-MART { A 1 4 ♦ V A 1 - f f V A I - i f V A1 V V (FORMERLY FIGHTING ARTS UNLIMITED) • Leadership Experience or Potential • Good standing in your college •WILLINGNESS TO COMMIT YOURSELF y V Most Competitive Prices In Town ! V •UNIFORMS KARATE & JU D O •W EAPONS •TRAINING & PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT •NINJA EQUIPM ENT y 831S. RURALRD. * y Al SC CORNER Of RURAL 8 umsuYmrmBcm o n •BO OKS & MAGAZINES •VIDEOS HOURS: MON.-SAT. A £ M M « 0 j 4 ’0 / /O FOR FURTHER IN FO RM A TIO N PLEASE C O N TA C T . 10 A.M.-6P.M. y Al -t f V A 1 4 Ve A1 -It •Ken Douglas, President, 966-0713 * -^Robert Hahn, VP Membership, 784-0025 •S.A.A. OFFICE 965-5276 a s a s u m ü State Press Page 13 Thursday, March 31,1988 4 Public Programs candidates compete for 2 senate seats What is your position on This is the third installm ent in a series o f previews on the the senator apathy problem race for the 20 Associated Students senatorial seats and what would you do to representing the U niversity’s 10 colleges. ASASU elections improve involvement? will be held April 5 and 6. Greene: “ 1 think what Four students are nam ing tor the two Associated Students needs to be dime is th at Senate positions in Oie Collège o f Public Programs. students need to be involved Candidates are M ichael Greene, a justice studies senior, from the very beginning, M ike Pressendo, a public programs senior, Todd Raish, a once they get on campus. senior communications m ajor and Roo Springer, a junior T h at goes back to th e organization-communication m ajor. freshm an experience survey What aré two of your goals th at you would accomplish if they did, and I think there you are elected? are filings they need to do Greene: “My goal is to get student involvement with from there.” activities. Also, l would like to work with Maricopa County. Pressendo: “As with any Being a justice m ajor, I w ant to try to get a victim ami organization, you can make witness aw areness group started on campus in association - _ the experience fun and with the M aricopa County program .” Ren Springer worthwhile. Pressendo : “I’d like to heighten student aw areness of what Everyone should go out and do Something th at is not business the senators can do for them and how cam pus involvement and th at m ight improve involvement.” can benefit the students. Also, in the communications Raish: “Being p art of ASASU this past year (as departm ent, we are a dumping ground for people who can’t parliam entarian), senator apathy seem s to be integrating get their GPAs high enough ih their own college to get into their professional program s. They come to our college their college’s needs with student council needs. I’ve been to every general session because it’s p art of my job, and they’re because we have alow er GPA requirem ent.” RaiSh: “The, first goal would be to m ake students in the very active with legislation and arguing over bills. But it College of Public Program s m ore aw are of what the services seems to be m ore organizational-oriented rath er than are. They seem to be unaware Of what is ottered through speaking for a college.” Springer: “ I realized a lot by going to college council ASASU. The second gopl would be to m ake sure th at services meetings. I want to m ake sure I am known as senator, and from ASASU give a fair share to my college, because it is my people are free to come to m e with their opinions. I don’t job to m ake sure th at the needs of my college are looked think there is a problem within the senate itself, but when after." represehting the college, there is a problem .” Springer: “I w ant to g et m ore awareness of the college. What is the biggest problem facing ASU students today? There’s a lot of people who don’t know it exists, or if they do, Greene: “Again I think it is lack of involvement. I think we they don’t know w hat m ajors are in it. The other goal would see a lot of students who, as freshm en, leave. We toy to draw be to stay on top of issues and not only use my opinion but try our students here, but mice they get here, they spend a year. to get the opinions of other people in the college.?’ They get lost because we’re so large, and they do leave. The What is your position on campus growth and on campus answ er is not cutting down enrollm ent but doing things with destruction, especially West HaU? Greene: “I just h ate to see the destruction of anything that what we’ve got.” Pressendo: “I ’d say tuition increases. It’s been going up is historical or th at has meaning or tradition. I think th at is since I’ve been here. The affordability and the quality of the one way to get student involvement — through tradition. But education.” I think there is a need for growth.” Raish: “They gp to school here and then go through maybe Pressendo: “I am for preserving the older buildings on three or four years of school here, and they’ll finishhere, but campus, because it adds character to the campus. I’m not they never really know everything that goes on. They don’t against growth of the University as long as it’s not a t the know how they can improve their educational experience. expense of the quality of education.” They put a lo t of tune and money into school, but they don’t Raish: “ I’m not too sure that I’m so much in favor of get returns on their investm ents, because they don’t participate in outside activities.” keeping it (West Hall). Springer: >“ The biggest I think campus expansion should be regulated so that it one would have to be the lack is in tune with the whole of quality education. There campus layout. On the other is not enough emphasis mi hand, I think the campus is education. The classes are sm all in comparison to the too big. They’re pushing too s i z e o f t h e s t u d e n t many people into too many population, so I think we classes.” have to do whatever it takes W hat is th e b ig g e s t to acco m m o d ate th o se problem facing students in students.” your college? Springer: “ I think we G reene: “ One of th e should keep some of the older buildings, just to keep biggest problems in this area some of the natural history is a conflict w ith—I’m going here. West Hall — I think to u se th e C o lleg e of Business as an exam ple — Michael Greene Todd A . Raish they should keep th at.’ we cannot get in to the business college, which we need to. As m ajors in the public sector, we need a background in economics or accounting. And because id the size ot the College of Business, we cannot go into their classes, and we are being shut out of jobs.” Pressendo : “Our college is a haven for people who just want to get their GPAs up and (have) no intention of pursuing a degree. I’d like to influence the U niversity policies of these type of Mike Pressendo issues.” Raish: “The biggest problem in our college is that kids are unaw are of what they can do with their degrees in the job m arket. As they get in upper-division classes, there is real lade of focus. Students should lode a t college as a step to the job m arket. They seem to be caught in the present rath er than the ftature.” Springer: “It would have to be the lack of em phasis on education; especially in our college. Also, in our college, it would have to be all the other people from other colleges coming over and transferring into communications or public program s just to get th eir grades up, then leaving.” How do you d s n to go about solving these two problems? Greene: “About the problem with invdvemient, I would like to see a program initiated where, as juniors and seniors, we can maybe form an organization where the students them selves can take freshm en coming into the University around and get them acquainted. By doing that, they will get invdved. And the other problem — students them selves will have to become aw are of w hat is happening to their educations.” Pressendo: “Possibly the raising of the GPA requirem ent will elim inate that. If it’s up, they wouldn’t have anywhere to go.” R aish: “More information to the students about what’s out there as fa r as activities and resources that are available. Everybody talks up the $1 million budget, and everybody gets their fair share, but most don’t know this. It comes as a shock to m ost kids.” Springer: “In bring elected, I would be a leader in which something would be dime. Over the past year, no change has been seen within the college itself, and I would like to see m ore progress go into the college and m ake the nam e stand out.” Do you describe yourself as conservative or liberal on the political spectrum ? Greene: “I think I’m m ore down the m iddle. I think there are things we need to do, but I don’t think it needs to be done in a radical way.” Pressendo: “If I had to be characterized as one or another, I would be conservative.” Raish: “I’m a rules-oriented person. I would be m ore on towards the conservative side because this is a conservative cam pus and adm inistration.” Springer: “I’m a Democrat, but I would not support a Dem ocratic candidate for this election ju st because there is no one qualified. I would probably say I’m m ore on the conservative side.” Candidates for senate position in college of fine arts address issues Two stoftonts are running for the two Associated Students positions in the College o f Fine A rts. Candidates are M arc Almaraz, a junior pictography m ajor and Stacey Vogel, a sohpomore theater major. What are two of your goals that you would accomplish if you are elected? Almaraz: “I’d like to effectively address two issues on /»pmpna — one being tuition. Tuition is increasingly going up, and that’s forcing many students to obtain Guaranteed Student Loans. What I would like to do is help activate senators to address this issue. Another issue is the child care center, because many students have children, and many Hmm they have to attend classes, but they have children to take care of.” . ! *, ■, ■ ; Vogel: “ Not to necessarily get tuition lower, but to get the added money from tuition to benefit the students. Secondly, to rive some positive outlook for the College id Fine A rts.” What is your position on cam pus grow th an d on c a m p u s d e s tr u c tio n , especially West Hall? Alm araz: “I think We should preserve West Hall because it’s part of our tradition and heritage, and I’d like to see us keep historical buildings for ASU. As fa r as campus growth is concerned, I think i t ’s f i n e t h a t w e ’r e expanding ASU for more students, and I think the quality of growth is what we should t e concerned with.” Vogel: “I’m for buildings being constructed on campus to benefit the students, but I’m not for the destruction of West Hall. It’s one of our last older pieces of architecture on campus. I feel that we should not modernize those pieces of tradition.” What is your position on the senator apathy problem and what would you do to im prove involvement? Almaraz: “The student and senator apathy problem is relative. You have a senate that is not addressing and is not flpppssihle to stqdent needs, so the students feel that the senate doesn’t care, so the students don’t care. I think ASASU is m ore apathetic than students are. I would like to solve this problem, and I think I can, because I will address issues, and I’ll take a stand on issues and fight bureaucracy and nitpicking, which would slow down the process.” Vogel: “ I don’t know much about the senator apathy problem with the exception of the apathy between the College of Fine Arts. I know we have senators this year th at didn’t speak up a t a ll.” What is the biggest problem facing ASU students today? Almaraz: “Financial aid — that’s the num ber one problem because you have students graduating with $7,000 to $8,000 debts, and many students cannot pay their loans off. If tuition goes up, then I think financial aid should go up.” .... ' ASASU coverage reported by Victor Barajas and Kelly Pearce Vogel: “ Apathy tow ards ASU.” What is the biggest problem facing students in your college? Alm araz: “I think w hat we need to do is to m ake sure there are consistent student council meetings and make sure there is funding for c l u b s in t h e a r t departm ent.” Vogel: “Apathy towards the college council and ASASU.” How do you plan to go about solving these two problems? Stacey Vogel Alm araz: “ If we get enough students showing up in student council meetings, I will represent them, and I will m ake sure to address it. These are legitim ate d id » , and they deserve funding like any other d u b .” Vogel: “ In being elected, I would be a leader in which something would be dime. Over the past year no change has been seen within the college itself. And I would like to see m ore progress go into the College of Fine Arts and m ake the nam e stand out.” Do you describe yourself as conservative or liberal on the political spectrum ? Almaraz: “A radical.” Vogel: “ I’m a dem ocrat, but I would not support a Democratic candidate for this election, just because there is no one qualified. I would probably say I’m m ore on the conservative side.?’ « i Stete Preti STUDSNCal T O O H A R D ? T H E N T R E A T Y i BREAK STUDY CHICAGO STYLE VIENNA BEEF HOT DOG HEAVEN Buy any Hot Dog/Sandwich with fries & medium drink and get a Hot Dog/Sandwich (of equal or lesser value) A B S O LU T ELY FR EE! 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EVERYTHIN G “ S s 5 $19 Cleaning, X-Rays, & Exam E c D g é (betw een C ollege & Mill) *w /coupon: excluding sale item s, expires 4-15-88 I j h A k ln # 1 _ L o s A rco s M a ll ’ V M M ûiâ£au*o*c uTkCT r /v iio ic T c o r u i c n r o v M i i i c o a 947-1745 » •■ w rw : AMERICAS MOST COMPLETE ATHLETICEOOTUlEAflc rSTOflE B R ITISH K N IG H T S • • AVIA 4M AIR W ALK Dr. Ronald J . Mclnnes* call for appointment 961-4888 c E • HEY E V E R Y B U N N Y ! VISIT VIC’S G ET ALL YOUR EASTER GIFTS • Easter Baskets • Easter Tins for a • 5 0 ° Off E aster BAG OF POPCORN! FROM 580 S. C ollege In University Tow ers 968-3670 Expires 4-4-88 expires 5-15-88 • Easter Balloons PurCh“ e T H E SM A R T C O O K IE University 921-9988 & M cClintock S ' marche' A very unique dining experience C ountry French and M editerranean Cuisine are o u r specialities in this quaint c afe . Evening Dining: V M m i n l r^ ^ a e ffte M B a L tel: 994-4568 4121 Marshall Way * Indian School 1 R E N T A L N ETW O RK Expires 4-15-88 for 1 Movie Rentals (with this coupon) • Free Membership • Absolute Best VHS Selection No Deposit on Movies • Open 7 Days til Midnight mmm R E N T A L N ET W O R K 903 S. Rural Rd. 106 829-1966 E3 March 3 1 ,1 9 8 8 Fine Arts B y KENNETH W ALSH Hie" Fine Arte Complex was d esig n ed ly Albuquerque, N. M., arch itect Antoine Predock. Predock-was selected for the job as a result o f an international design competition th a t attracted 57 entries, Rosen said. Five architectural firm s were invited to subm it plans, and Predock’s design was chosen in November 1985. ( Rosen said Predock is a “very interesting architect’ because of his southwestern and post-modernist approach to designing. „ “You get a sense of an adobe village, without the adobe, Rosen said of the complex’s design. The 500-seat Paul V. Galvin playhouse was paid for by a $1 million donation from Scottsdale philanthropist Virginia Galvin P iper, Rosen said. Rosen said he feels the new playhouse will increase the visibility of the departm ent’s plays. “We’ll be looking forward to getting m ore students to come to those,” Rosen said. The fine arts college recently commissioned three works in a rt, music and dance to be completed by March 1989, for the grand opening of the complex. Rosen said it was no m istake that ASU faculty members w ere commissioned for the works. “The new Fine Arts Complex is an im portant step in the development of the college into a m ajor national arts institution,” Rosen said. “We want to showcase what our faculty can do with the new space and facilities.” The works were funded in p art by the office of ASU Vice President for Research Henry C. Reeves. The commissioned works are: a “fantasy sculpture garden” by ASU professor of sculpture Ronald Gasowski; a composition for orchestra and chorus by ASU professor of nwfieio RandaU Shinn; a modern dance piece by ASU dance professor Ann Ludwig. ■ ' Rosen said the works are to complement the new facility in some way, but {he artists creative content has. been left completely open to the discretion of the artiste. ; “These works will be representative of what we do here — a rts research. Giving talented people the freedom to take ..hniw»«« and to explore new possibilities is what we are all about,” Rosen said. • Construction of the $15 million Fine Arte Complex and Paul V. Galvin Playhouse is on schedule and should be finishedby mid-November, according to the dean of the College of Fine Arts. In sid e the 90,000-square-foot com plex w ill be a 40,000-square-foot museum, a 7,000-square-foot dance studio and theatre, five classroom s, as well as the P aul V. G alvin' Playhouse, Seymour Rosen said. Building of the 90,000-square-foot west campus complex hogan May 14, 1987, and some classroom s should be ready for the 1968 fall sem ester. Although the fine arts expansion is giving the departm ent some of the needed room it has long sought, Jam es Hathaway, publicity coordinator for the College of Fine Arts, said m ore room is still needed. “We’re really underfacilitated,” Hathaway said. “This is ju st the beginning of the building we’d like to do.” Rosen said some departm ents, like dance, which will have lim ited space in the new complex, will have to w ait for later phases of the expansion project to have enough room. “We all wanted m ore,” Rosen said. “We hope in the second phase to bring dance over to this side of cam pus.” However, Rosen said the new complex will finally perm it many of the fine arts departm ents to come together to a central location. _ . Rosen said the new complex will allow ASU fine arts to become m ore visible to students, as well as the general public. The complex’s new museum will directly face Mill Avenue, which, according to Rosen, should make the school s a rt m ore accessible to the public. t 1 - ,T- ~ .. ; “We’ve always encouraged the public,’’ Rosen said, “but it’s difficult to find us in the middlffTif cam pus.” Rosen said the new museum will increase the departm ent’s showroom space by 8 percent. 1 s? ~ “This will hflsieally double our current museum space, Hathaway said. The new museum will also give the departm ent m ore storage space, hum idity control and b etter lighting conditions, Hathaway said. C H IC O S H APPY HOUR f c ij g e o is Æ lll) C is c o ’s C o m es Alive! Now, Tempo's finest Mexican restaurant w ill be host to Tempe's finest high energy dance band. 0 0 *1 .B E E R S IM P O R T S M A R G A R IT A S T t f f iH E A T FREE H O R S D ’O E U V R E S M O N .-F R I. 4 -7 P .M . Presenting every Thurs., and Saturday... C I S C O ’S 2 f o r I $2.95 M ON -FRI 2 7 0 0 S. M ILL, T E M P E 9 6 7-0 3 05 BARRY, o w n 0 0 0 ... ■ OFFER NOT VALID FOR TAKE-OUT OR WITH OTHER SPECIALSONEPERTABLEPLEASE. EXPIRES4-21-88. ¡ 2 7 0 0 S . M ill A v e . • 9 6 7 - 0 3 0 5 j L U N C H SPECIALS d O B t'Y ONE AND RECEIVE ONE OF EQ t'A L OR LESSER VALUE FREE. $ 1 .2 5 A L L D A Y E V E R Y D A Y No cover. No minimum. I s w /coupon ON ALL COMBINATION PLATES AND CHIMIS. 9 OZ. MARGARITAS Come alive with us in the casual but exotic surroundings that has made Cisco's unique. Sundl K|mw M /SM * P**M Construction work continues on the future site of ASU ’e Fine Arte Complex. The protect is scheduled to be completed In fa«. Your Own Room For The Summer l a s Winner of th e 1 9 8 ^ Tchaikovsky International Piano Com petition in M oscotf plays Tchaikovsky’s renowned Piano C oncerto w i t h ____ lee V9Í THE PHOENIXSYMPHONYORCHESTRA In c lu d in g U tilities* w h ite e n jo y in g a n A SU w a y o f life . JAMES SEDARES, Conductor A p r il 2 , S a t , Gam m age Center A S E I — A pache pan. 8 (Concert Sponsors: Arizona Bank, Society for the Arts, M/M Conley Vifotfswinket) $750 WAGNER: Lohengrin; Prelude. Act 1 TCHAIKOVSKY: Plano Concerto No. 1 BARTÓK: Concerto for Orchestra $ 5 all Fo r Summer | (Own room) C O M M O N S ' S T U D EN T R U S H D IS C O U N T $ 9 0 0 For Summer (Own room) Fo r Summer (Shared room) seats J S K , ill SIB/1BBRS 0N1Y I I $700 For Summer (Shared room) lease length 5/29-8/6 í» ^ Deposits are nofw being accepted ($175.00 Deposit) H u rry a n d reserve y o u r space now A ccep tin g a p p lica tio n s fo r th e fa il! ! PHOENIX • SYMPHONY EXPERIENCETHESOUND ( ’Some lim its apply) TH EO ALCAWTARA. M USIC DIRECTOR B u s Service AvaiaMe CM for ' Group Discounts Tickets available at Phoentx Symphony Box Oflce 3707 fi. 7th f t or DBaid's # 1215 iirn is ta ~ ~ SMsito a & - ; m e. Apache 14300-247-6141 829-0933 J22S£&**!E!£!l£»^£SLi Page 18 Tburxiay, March 31,1968 Rare first edition of P o e ’s NEW YORK (A P )—A ra re first edition of E dgar Allan Poe’s first book, a collection of poetry w ritten wlien he was 14, is to be auctioned by Sotheby’s, which calls it “the m ost exciting book discovery in many years.” In the 1$1 years since its publication, only 11 other (»pies of “Tam erlane and Other Poem s” have been found. Published in 1827 by an obscure Boston printer when the poet, short-story w riter and critic w as 18, it could bring as much as $300,000 a t auction on June 7. This 12th copy of the book w as discovered in a bin of early 20th-century pam phlets on fertilizers and farm ing m achines by a, M assachusetts book collector while he browsed lit an antique barn' in New Hampshire The price was $15. Recognizing the title from an article he had once read, the collector contacted Sotheby’s for an inspection and appraisal. “It was qtdte a thrill,” said Jay Dillon, an assistant vice-president in Sotheby’s Rare Books Departm ent. “God, it was thrilling. . . . Here’s a fabulous rarity , famous to anyone who’s ever taken m ore than two Find makes 12 copies of ‘Tamerlane’ courses in Am erican literature.” The M assachusetts m an, who has been collecting works on local history for the past three years, wishes to rem ain anonymous, D illohsaid. Pde, who was born Eh Boston in 1809, orphaned when he was i f and raised in Richmond, Va., had the volume published during a short visit to Boston. The literary im portance of the 40-page book, which nam es th e author only as “A B ostonian,” is considered negligible; rather, the work’s viilue has to do with the fact th at it’s the first work of one of America’s greatest w aiters and a lim ited num ber of copies w ere printed. How m any w ere printed? “(hie can guess, but they are all wild (guesses),’* Dillon said. “1 think' the range would be from 50 to 250.1would be am azed if m ore than 500 were printed.” The softbound book has its original, teacolored paper w rappers and is in unrestored condition. “The wrappers are frayed, as one would expect in a 161-year-old pamphlet,” Dillon said. “There’s also a light stain on the front cover running through the first few pages. “But the condition of a book like this is not a m atter of jr e a t im portance among connoisseurs. The question with this book is how can you get one a t all. I would prefer it to be in better condition. . I also would prefer to have Poe’s signature on it.” Nine of the other copies a re in public institutions, one te owned privately and the other’K w hereabouts is tuApown, Dillon said. The first copy didn’t surface until 1859 when an antiquarian bookseller in Boston sent it along with a consignment of books to an agent in London who promptly snatched it up for the B ritish Museum. A second eopy turned up 23 years later in a bookshop’s sidewalk box. It cost 15 cents and later sold a t auction En 1892 for $1,850. §f O tter Copies have surfaced over the years through collections and dealers. The U th eopy was discovered in 1954 and Was auctioned by Sotheby’s in 1974 far $123,000. ;. The p o m s included in ti» book are “Tam erlane” and a group Poe called “The Fugitive Pieces.” They are: “To — “D ream s,” “Visit of the Dead,” “ Evening Star” (never again printed), “ Im itation,” “Stanzas,” “Poeto,” “A, W ilder’d Being,” “TheH appiest Day” and “The Lake.” The adolescent collection'was not exactly the literary hit of the day. (toe critic noted, “A book the critics read without praising, and the ladies praised without reading.” However, the complex and tortured a rtist was vindicated in later years through hiS s i n i s t e r and compelling stories such as “The P it and the Pendulum ’Vand “The M asque of tee Red Death” and his m usicitl and sensuous poems such as ‘‘Annabel Lee’’ and "The Raven.” He published two other volumes of poetry after ’’Tam erlane,’* in 1829 and 1831. Poe died in 1849. $195 CHILI DOG W/CHIPS 6 0 0 , 0 0 0 FLAVOR FANTASIES! ad into Wizards receive two cones for one. The free cone m ust be of same or less value. While there, enter our fabulous flavors contest. The w inner receives a 1987 C orvette Mini Car. Deadline for entries is. March 31. A taste test will be Mmmmmmmmmmm good! M ake y o u r ice cream fantasies come true a t the new Wizards ice Cream Magic Shop in Tempe. it's very special. . . with 600,000 ice cream combinations available. We mix your favorite candy — like Snickers or M&Ms — with your favorite ice. cream or yogurt, fru it and cookie. It's your own, personal­ ized iCe cream cone. WELLS MARGS «1 at R u ra l & A p a ch e WINE LONGNECKS $ 2 5 0 pitchers 9 37 E . B ro a d w a y (S E C o r n e r B ro a d w a y & R u ra l, T e m p e ) B esid e W h e re h o u se R e co rd s a n d T a p e s WE’RECOOLMAN! Sum mer Storage A IR -C O O L E D C lim a t e - C o n t r o l le d TO U R F IR S T S T E P T O W A R D SUCCESS IS T H E O N E YOU S 0 U L D T A K E T H IS S U M M E R . ■ S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T 50% OFF W I T H T H I S A D OFFER EXPIRES 4-14-88 m ?W At Army ROTC Camp Challenge you’ll learn what it takes to succeed—in college and in Hie. You’ll build self-confidence and develop your leadership potential, Plus you can also qualify to earn an Army Officer’s commission w hen you graduate from college. Army ROTC Camp Challenge, ft m ay b e just what you n eed to reach the top. Find out more. Contact Tom G ibbons at (602) 965-3318. EADERSHip IAcellenc SR4CE AR M Y ROTC MN-STOR4GE THE SMARTEST COLLEGE 2 9 5 0 N. 7 3 rd S t. • S c o t t s d a l e • 9 4 1 -5 8 1 1 C h e c k t h e r e s t . . . w e 'r e t h e B e s t! coorse too can take. S22LH Thuradw, March 31,1988 W ell, W ine, Draft 8-1 Opm Wednesday C O C K T A IL S N p C O V fc R B E F O R E 9 p I i F O F lk , B E E R V P M M m wm ■ m m HMNm h ì Statt Press ì '* ì AIDS outreach program confronts cultural barriers MEXICO CITY (AP) — Alarmed by the quick spread of AIDS hare and hoping to halt it, Mexican authorities are using a novel approach to educate those m ost likely to be afflicted. The cam paign, called Cascade Education, is directed a t m ale and fem ale prostitutes, the homosexual community, street-gang kids and the poor to teach them AIDS prevention, so they can teach others in turn. Most e£ the effort is being concentrated in Mexico City, a m etropolis of 18 million people, where the high-risk underdog is so m e tim e s h a rd to re a c h th ro u g h newspapers and other traditional m eans. “We are teaching th a n to become health care prom oters and sending them into their com m unities,” said D r. Glorias Ornellas Hafl, director of the National Center for AIDS Inform ation in Mexico City. The center is p art of the federal Public Health .D epartm ent, which is coordinating the cam paign. . “We believe that using the m edia to give inform ation is not enough fo change behavior patterns. Only face-to-face contact can do th at,” she said. “The b est way is for them to reach th eir own communities in th e ir own lan g u a g e . T h a t in clu d es prostitutes reaching out to prostitutes, homosexuals to homosexuals, even deafm utes to deaf-m utes.” , According to the canter, there were-1,126 confirm ed AIDS cases in Mexico as of Féb. 1, and the num ber is doubling evory seven months. F or every confirmed case, there are another SO to 100 people who have been exposed to the virus, says Dr. Jaim e Sepulveda Amor, the departm ent’s director of epidemiology. Sepulveda, who is also president of the governm ent’s N ational Commission on AIDS Prevention, estim ated during a recent interview the num ber of people confirmed to have AIDS will reach over 25,000 by 1991, making' it the second or third leading cause of death for people in the 25-44 age group in Mexico. The virus initially spread in Mexico among m ale homosexuals. A severe blood contam ination problem aggravated its spread before the government ordered blood testing, then banned sales altogether. By foot, Sepulveda said, blood supply contam ination rates had reached nearly seven percent in the cities. . -¿ .aj donation * .. .. . of « a —.m i__ AAMiinmr received 10 million condoms from the U.S. AID. The center also has trained dozehs of Mexico (Sty residents in its Cascade Education program , offering clashes in instruction, but leaving the teaching approach to each individual. “We give them th e b asics, - then leave the sty le of presentation in their own hands,” Hall said. F or the first tim e, the center’s staff has reco itly begun training street-gang leaders and visiting jails to Çeach police officials and detainees.-' Ah economic crisis jjow in its sixth year has m ade jobs increasingly scarce and induced an entire sub-culture of young man to take to prostitution to m ake a ; living; Mexico is the only country with a high incidence — about seven percent — of minors infected by sexual transm ission, Hall said. An initial Health D epartm ent survey imuontori that about 30 percent of the m ale homosexual community in Mexico City has ‘Some say AIDS is punishm ent from God, end others, th a t w itchcraft can w ard it off. In a country w ith cu ltural setbacks th at include religious beliefs, ignorance and cultural taboos th at do n o t allow the use o f condom s, we found th a t this program has w orked.’ — Glorias Ornellas Hall Since then* the virus has spread to the heterosexual community, with the male-tofem ale ratio of infection dropping to 15-to-l. P artly funded by the World. Health Organization, the P an American Heatth Organization and the U.S. Agency for International Development, the commission has purchased blood testing equipm ent and p rin te d p rev en tio n lite ra tu re . It is conducting detailed census and behavioral surveys, and ovorsees the free distribution of condoms. Since it was founded last year, the center has broadcast its services on radio and television and through bum per stickers, posters, keychains and matchbooks with condom s a tta c h e d . M exico re cen tly Ornellas said many of the Cascade volunteers origiiially visited the center to be tested fa* the AIDS virus and, with counseling and support, have joined the program. She said the best of them are those who have tested positive. One prostitute ringleader trained by the co tter, known only by his nickname of Jaim ito, regularly visits Mexico City m arkets to sing a “ranchera” song that he w rote and recorded called, “What is a ® 87” n«U called Jaim ito “one of our great prom oters." A m ale prostitute, a deaf-m ute who cam e to the center to learn about AIDS, is another Cascade prom oter. “He uncovered a whole Purgatory, Colorado APRIL 1st— 3rd been exposed to the AIDS, virus. Ortega brings youths belonging to w hat he «»nils “controlled groups” of prostitutes to the center to be examined and learn about AIDS prevention. Ornellas Hall and other health officials say the Cascade approach is essential not only in re a c h in g p re v io u sly -h id d e n subcultures but in confronting m any m yths about AIDS. “We’ve come across m any beliefs,” Ornellas Hall said. “Some say AIDS is punishment from God, and others, that w itchcraft can w ard it off. In a country with cultural setbacks th at include religious beliefs, ignorance and cultural taboos that do not allow the use of condoms, we found th at this program has worked.” Currently, Ornellas Hall said the center is receiving 50 visits and 100 telephone queries a day from people wanting to find out about AIDS, adding, “It’s new th at they shad'* come out a t all.” “The very lowest class is the m ost a t risk, and the hardest to get to. .There’s a disrespect for life (among them ); they don’t care if they die,” she said. R un y o u r c la s s ifie d à d fo r 3 d ay s, g e t an e x tra d a y F R E E / SPRING FLING O miVtAiiitiiro of nf deaf-mutes dAsf'iuutes who prostitute prostituì subculture themselves to make a living. We found that many feel they have no other way to earn moiey,” she said. 965-6731 TRIP INCLUDES; • round trip trans­ portation $109 2 day lift ticket • 2 nights lodging, F Contests & races quad occupancy SPRING .. . SKI at PUftGATO H Y , '8 8 . . . . You’Dse e d an impressive resume, le t us ty p eset it for you! STATE PRESS Prodhk&ionH Department PRIZES FO R B E S T SKI O UTFIT (the one with the feast) SEND YOUR RESERVATION TO : SKI AM ERICA 648 N. Linden Circle M esa, A Z 85288 ’J M x itnT mtrt m Claas of Matthews C enter basement Cash • Check • VISA • MasterCard 965-2097 Sponsored by Ski Am enca & Durango Econo B u y it. S e ll it. F in d it. In The Classifieds. DID YOU KNOW? YOUR S R INSURANCE COVERS CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! W §| s • Headaches • Back Pain Passport Photos 2 fo r $6.57 Film Processing 2 fo r 1 or FREE FILM Monday 4 Wednesday on Develop 4 Print orders GÛJ Photo Paper 25 — 8x10 h 00 — 8x10 B b 966?$635^* a . SUNSET CAMERA i 829-0424 m N EARASU $10.47 $35.97 Tempe Conter —Mill &Univ. • Shoulder Pain • Accidental Injuries We w ill ac c e p t y o u r insu ran ce, p ro v id e a studen t discount, H w ith little o r no out-of-pocket expense to yo u . W ILFORD • W hiplash • N eck Pain • A uto A ccident Injuries Whiplash! Dr. Donald Nelson 39io S. Rural Rd. #E Stiff Neck &Back! Page 21 j2222ti^Slllul2£i Date ra p e ___ ConUmMd from peg* fc pornographic m agazines and a m ale peer group. K oss sa id a th le te s an d fra te rn ity m em bers are not necessarily the people who commit these acts, but men who are in a situation with other m ales where sexual acts are encouraged and expected, do have a higher instance of com m itting rape. Koss said the women in the survey who were victim s did not have any differing O rd in an ce__ C ontinued from p ag e 12. Plencner said while he has not received any opposition from restaurant owners, he expects strong opposition to the ordinance from certain m em bers of the council. “I think it’s going to. be a really close vote,” Plencner said. Councilman P at Hatton said she and Councilman Don C assano oppose the ordinance because businesses have not had time to conform to non-smoking m easures passed in February. Cassano could not be reached for comment. ‘‘I prefer . . . to be in an area that is non­ smoking,” Hatton said. “But 1 feel when dealing with the city’s business community, you need to give them tim e to respond.” Hatton said the ordinance is not necessary PUZZLE SOLUTION “ l qualities from the women who w ere interviewed and were not attacked. Koss said preventing a date rape requires the sam e behavior as resisting a nonaquaintance rape. She said women should be appropriately wary of being in a private situation with a date. She also recommended that as soon as a woman feels threated she should run away and that she should scream and yell and draw attention to herself. because most restaurants would probably bow to public pressure to create non­ smoking areas. “Businesses are going to listen to the public’s request,” she said. “ If they are good businessmen, they will give the people what they want.” Steve Snyder, president of the Tempe Chamber of Commerce, said they have not heard of any opposition to the ordinance from citizen s or Tem pe re s ta u ra n t personnel. Several restaurant owners in the ASU area, including the College Street Deli, Substop and Jam ’s Cafe, said they did not know about the proposed ordinance or were not concerned because they already have non-smoking areas. ACROSS 1 Reward 6 Nautical: cease) 11 Looked intently 12 Tried 14 Teutonic deity 15 G oddess of discord 17 Sheet of glass 18 Snake 20 Aquatic mammal 23 Dry measure: abbr. 24 Space 26 Rescued 28 Com pass point 29 Look pryingiy 31 Rumors 33 Fat of swine 35 Nerve network 36 39 42 43 45 46 48 50 51 53 55 Refrain from Prying device A s far as Pintail ducks Withered Twitching Remain erect Fall behind Winglike Harvest A continent: abbr. Retreat' Glossy paint Cook in oven Happen again 56 59 61 62 m V 9 3 b S 3 1 3 a 1 ils V 0 M ■ n0 3 b wV N 3 JIM 1 p 3 b u V 1 V l d V 3H l Bo N V i S Bo 1 '1 3 s S 3 3 w s ■ o J. N 1 V i sTi V A 3 T li 1 3 b a y y ■1 à d 3 d 0 0 N s lib O n| a 3 A V s n 0 O b V 9 b 3 1 l o| d S V U 3 N V d l s i b 3 a 3 u .1 3 d 3 1 S 3 1 3 Z 1 y ài 1 S V A V 3 s V b 3 DOWN 1 1ndividual 2 Concerning 3 Anger 4 Cipher 5 Redacts 6 Busy with 7 Brother of Odin 6 Viper 9 Antlered animal Sell it. Buy it. Find I t State Press Classifieds AREAL TREAT MatthewsCenter N. Basement 10 Occupant 11 Fruit: pi. 13 Erases: printing 16 Asterisk 19 Bodies of Water 21 Without end 22 Repulse 25 Protective ditches $7 Lavishes fond esson 30 English baby carriages 32 Carouse 34 Food program 36 Essence 37 Cistern 38 Approach 40 Rubber on pencil 41 Royal 44 Scoff 47 Roman statesman 49 European 52 Inlet 54 M occasin 57 Rupees: abbr. 58 Latin conjunction 60 Greek letter 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 2 BANDS The Knights and N ovices of Sigma Nu Fraternity Congratulate DELTA G A M M A 1988 G reek W eek Banner Recipient and SIGM A PHI EPSILON T e a m u p to p r e s e n t th e b e s t R o ck N Roll s h o w In th e valley T H U R S, FRI, SA T n ite s, 9 p.m . S ta rt S p e c ia l G u e s t A p p e a ra n c e F riday, April F o o ls D ay SPUDS (in person) Dance anti party on our outdoor patio, w eather perm itting. Casual dress code; I.D. required $2.00 cover after 9 pm, Fri. & Sat. 910 N. Hayden Rd. Tempe *966-1766 1988 G reek W eek Banner Recipient / W AREHOUSE D eli & Pub s ir ^ S e i? « tr y s nh W xy* V0 s u r r u L U c A L n m ic c C o n te m p o ra ry & V in ta g e C lo th in g For M en & W om en y y [% • v «9 130 €. University Dr. • 966-7788 €stob. 1975 Vour Hosts—"The Family" comics Thursday, March 31,1988 Pase 22 B L O O M C O U N b y T Y B e r k e State Pres» ... ............................ B r e a t h e d T M M R M M By GARY LARSON e m m c e iR e m u e p . ï m Been 7HINKIN6 CF09. QUCH6. IV UKB YOU70 CONStPFR fim /e m /L M L O F c m - M rrmNT /tup g m tk m a l . .PORITY- A n n SPRIN G FEST v l# k L# STAND & DELIVER |PG) 12:15,2:30,4:45,7:15,9:45 vL# Today FRANTIC (R| 1:15.5:30,9:45 SHOOT TO KILL (R) 3:30,7:45 THE IM T EMPEROR |PRI3| Sun. - Tues. 12:30.4:00.7:30 Fri. « Sat. 12:00.3:30.7:00.10:15 A NEW LIFE IPG13) 12:00,2:30,4:45,7:30,10:00 VICE VERSA |Pfl) 1:30,5:30.9:30 THE FOX AND THE HOUND (6) 1:00,3:00, 5:00,7:00,9:00 0 MASQUERA0E |R| 3:30.7:30 THE CORNERSTONE RURAL &UNIVERSITY SUN DEUIL ANEW U FE (PB13I 12:00,2:30,4:45,7:15,9:30 BEETLEJtHCE (P8) 12:15,2:30,4:45,7:15,9:45 W i. W e s t C o c h is e R o o m of thé M e m o ria l U n io n MESA AT S L0NGM0RE &SUPERSTITION SUPERSTITION * I W IL W H 835-0404 3 MEN AND A BABY (Pfi| 12:30,3:00,5:15.7:45.10:15 FATAL ATTRACTIONS 12:00,2:30,5:00.7:30,10:00 JOHNNY BE 600D |P6| 1:30,3:30,5:30,7:30,9:30 B o o t h M e e t in g a t 3 :0 0 * * M ESA AT 1020 W EST SOUTHERN POCA FIESTA «T* * B A R G A IN PR IC E SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM MON -FRI (EXCEPT HOUOAYS) SATUROAY SUNOAY & HOLIDAYS FIRST SHOW ONLY^ MOONSTRUCK (PR) 12:45,3:15,5:30,8:00,10:15 829-0344 D.0A (R) 12:30,2:45,5:15,7:45,10:00 ROOD MORNING VIETNAM (R) 12:00,2:30,5:00,7:30,10:00 ^r BtLOXI BLUES (P613) .L 12:15.2:45,5:00.7:30.9:45 (Sorry No Bargain Day) TRI-CITY DOLLAR THEATRES BL000 SPORT (Ri 2:30,6:15,10:00 ]f ACTION JACKSON 4:15.8:00 JL JIMMY REARDON (R) 3:30,7:30 'f SHE'S HAVING A BABY IP61311 30,530,9 30 .L $1.00 A L L SEATS*ALL SH O W S 461-1070 maimst s oooson rd .in mesa OVERBOARD (PG) 12:30. 5:00,9:30 HOPE AN0 GLORY (PG13) 2:45,7:15 THROW MAMA FROM THE TRAIN |P0I3| 1:45.6 00.10:00 WALL 8TBEET (R) 3:30,7:45 \ J 'f J \ J sports C l s tif fita Sp0rtShortS Pagej23 Thunday, March 31,1988 U rb a n g f o i m f ] | | | | | p ASU gymnast loves ‘second ch o ice ’ B y CHRIS D O RSEY State P ress Bedford co n fe sse s to ch em ical d e p e n d e n cy PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — Detroit P istons b ack u p c e n te r William Bedford’s chronicle of involvement with drugs continued Wednesday when he turned himself in for treatment of chemical dependency. Bedford, 24, was scheduled to fly out of Dstroit W ednesday night for treatment at the Adult Substance Abuse Prografh in Van Nuys, Calif., Pistons spokesman Matt Dobek said. “William felt. it was time that he needed assistance,” Pistons general m an ag er J a c k M cCloskey said Wednesday. “ He contacted the league security department, which in turn contacted me.” Bedford is suspended with pay during his treatment and likely will not return to the team this season, McCloskey said. Bedford played last year for Phoenix, , which picked him in the first round of the 1986 draft after he starred at Memphis State, Last year, he was named in an indictment stemming from alleged drug use by Suns players. The indictment said Bedford either witnessed or knew of drug transactions by foam members. He was not charged and reportedly was granted immunity from prosecution for his testimony before the grand jury investigating thè alleged dealings. He testified to using cocaine once while with the Suns when he attended a party in Phoenix. McCloskey said Bedford would be treated for cocaine addiction and marijuana use. King to defend title at Dinah Shore event RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (AP) — Betsy King has played a lot of golf, practice and competition, during her 11 years on the LPGA tour. But she says she can never get enough of the game. “I don't get sick of it,” she said. “I like to practice and play in tournaments. ■‘'In fact, I think lflike to practice more than I do playing competitively." While she may prefer practice, King has dons quite wed in competition. She has earned more than $1.5 million during her tour career and won four times last year, including. the prestigious Dinah Shore tournament. King is back at Mission Hills Country Club this week, defending her title in the the $500,000 Dinah Shore event that begins Thursday. She broke though with a dramatic victory here last year, holing a 45-foot bunker shot for a birdie on No. 16 to tie Patty Sheehan, then winning the event on the second playoff hole. “It was so dramatic, my playoff with Patty, and it was exciting to be doing it on television In the Nabisco Dinah Shore,” King Said- It m ight have seemed like a nightm are for K arli Urban when San Diego State dropped its gymnastic program three years ago, but now it appears to be a dream come true for the Sun Devil gymnast. U rban signed a letter .o f intent to participate at SDSU. But before attending the university, it dropped (he program , sending the junior from Omaha, Neb., looking for another school to m ake use of her talents. “ I am lucky SDSU dropped its program ,” Urban said, “because I love it here.” ASU was the All-America’s second choice. Following the turn of events, Urban called Sun Devil coach John Spini and informed him of the problem. Since making the transition, Urban has become one of the top gym nasts in the Pac-10. H ie .Sun Devils are gearing up for the regional m eet April 9 and Urban is hoping the team can qualify for the NCAA Championships later in the month. But achieving All-America status for the second consectitive year is not the main goal in the mind of Urban. It is the success of the team , and how they fare in the national championships. I want the team to do well,” Urban said. “ I want to finish with them in the top three.” Gymnastics is usually thought of as an individual sport, however, the midwestern native feels it is just as much a team sport. “ It is not an individual thing for m e,” U rban said. “Itw ould be ho fun for me to be out there by m yself.” The coaching staff said they can see this personality in their veteran perform er. “She is a real team person,” assistant coach T,isa Zeis said. “She is a great leader and real confident. Her confidence makes the other girls feel m ore confident.” The exuberant m otivator is always there to answer any questions or help her team m ates; a job th at Urban enjoys. “I try to get them going or calm them down,” she said. “ I like having that extra responsibility. “They know I will always be there for them , if they need m e.” ; ; Her experience and helpfulness is also seen in the eyes of team m ate M arika LeSieur. “She is very energetic and determ ined,” LeSieur said. “She is the mo6t competitive person I have ever m et. It wouldn’t be the sam e without h er.” In order to finish high in the all-around a t the Regional m eet a t the Univeristy of O klahom a, Urban will rely m i her strong events — the balance beam and vault. However, she mijoys the new routine that has been inserted for herifioor exercise. “ I like to do floor best,” Urban said. “I score higher on my new routine, but my highest averages have been m i beam and vault.” As a sophomore, Urban earned AllAmerica accolades after placing fourth on the balance beam in the NCAAs while finishing 16th in the all-around competition. But improving these m arks m ay not be too difficult for the m ore m ature gym nast. “I think I’ll do b etter because I have m ore confidence and experience,” she said. With a year under her belt and the fututre looking promising, this could be the year when Urban awakes from her nap. S p ik e rs to tone dow n training regim en By j o a n Mc K e n n a State Press ASU students tend to cherish the sum m er break as a tim e for kicking back and relaxing. But ASU’s volleyball team m ay have gone overboard last year,, and assistant coach Steve Scfalick said 1» would like to avoid it happening again. “L ast year, when they left school (in May), they were in excellent shape, but I think they were m entally drained,” he said. “They wound up taking m ore tim e off than was acceptable for sum m er. Schlick said the 1987 spring workouts may C a c tu s L ea g u e S eattle vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale, noon Chicago Cubs vs. Oakland at Phoenix, 1 p.m. Milwaukee vs. Cleveland at Tucson, 1 p.m. ■ Karli Urban Debbie Brown have been too intense. But w hatever the cause, he said the slump resulted in a record num ber of Sun Devil injuries in the fall. Head coach Debtee Brown had difficulty p ittin g together a consistent lineup and often was shuffling her starters just prior to match-tim e. The Sun Devils last spring used weights and running to condition. Schlick deleted running from the 1968 schedule. “This sum m er, we’ll give them a running program ,” he said. “Hopefully that will be a little m ere efficient.” NCAA rules lim it coaches from requiring sum m er wMkouts. “All we can do is make suggestions,” Schlick said. “The girls have to be in condition when they get back. August 15 is the first legal day of practice.” Intensity seems to be no problem a t the moment. The Sun Devils recently defeated the A ustralian junior national team in four out of five gam es, plus finished third in a 12-field tournam ent in Las Cruces, N.M. ASU h a s th r e e re m a in in g A p ril competition dates, two against UofA in Tucson. But Schlick said the off-season is m ore of a tim e to analyze individual skills. He said he has a talented team , only improved by the addition of freshm en recruits Debbie Penney and Jennifer Rogers. “Both hit fairly hard, winch is what we w ant,” he said. “We want people th at can pound some balls." Penney is a 6-foot middle blocker and left- Ü side hitter from Burbank, Calif. Rogers, a 5-11 outside hitter, is a senior a t Buckeye’s Agua F ria High School, alm a m ater to Randall McDaniel. Schlick said the 1988 starting lineup will be up for grabs. “In a num ber of positions, we have people who a re pretty equal,” he said. “We’D have a good battle for playing tim e this faD- It’s good to have competition for positions. They wind up pushing them selves.” ASU’s third scholarship is going to 1987 redsbirt Bobbi Bloom, a transfer from Northern Arizona, who will be vying with sophomore Noelle Fridrich for starting setter. The spot was left vacant by outgoing senior Regina Stahl. Schlick is sh a rin g coaching duties with assistant coach Sue Woodstra while Brown, on, leave untQ Oct. 1, assists coaching the 1988 U.S. Olympic team preparing for Seoul, South Korea. S | Brown, in town for a week, was able to attend the team banquet Sunday night. Woodstra, also an active player, is retu rn in g from a successful season in the Japanese volleyball league. Her team , Nippon E lectric Company, defeated eightyear champion Hitaqhi for the the league title. “Basically it (Hitachi) is the national team from Japan,” Schlick said. “This being an Olympic year, they beat a highcaliber team .” -6 ! Thursday March 31,1988 w By CRIS NACKINO State Prase Form er ASU swimmer Andy Jam eson defeated his longtime riv al to capture first ¡dace in the 100-m eter butterfly a t the U. S. Indoor Championship this past Saturday in Orlando, Fla. “It was the first tim e that I sw am against him (Pablo M orales) in a long pool (Olympic size). I definitely swim b etter then,” Jam eson said. “It was a very nice victory.” Recruited in 1983, Jam eson’s original plan entailed swimming for ASU for a year, then returning home to Liverpool, England. After one season, Jam eson found th at the nnnrhing a t ASU was better than he could receive in a t home so he m ade the decision to stay the rem aining three years. During faiis four years at ASU, Jam eson’s swimming exemplified superior ability and W iW 1 title Form er Su n Devil sw ilhfner A lthough Jam eso n w as o rig in a lly recruited for his backstroke, the tough com petition of NCAA swimming eventually forced him to concentrate solely on the butterfly. Beyond his achievem ents a t ASU, which included AH-America honors all four years, his efforts outside the team w ere equally as im pressive. In the sum m er of his freshm an year, he travelled to the 1984 Summer Olympics to place fifth in the 100 butterfly for G reat 1 B ritain. In his sophomore year, he not only was nam ed the 1985 B ritish swimmer-of-theyear, but also placed second in the E uropean C ham pionships in th e 100 butterfly. The following year was even m ore successful for Jam eson. His efforts a t the Commonwealth Games earned him first place in the 100 butterfly and helped to establish Mm as one of the premies* butterfly swim m ers in the world. “ It was the first tim e that 1 had competed in a m ajor international m eet and it helped,” Jam eson, said. “ I won.. Getting second or third is nice, but then again, it isn’t winning.” C o n t i n u i n g .on to t h e W o r l d Championships in M adrid, Spain; Jam eson won a bronze m edal, but considered it to foe a disappointment. . “ It was OK. It was the best tim e th at I ever had, and I seemed to pass a great b a rn « :,” Jam eson Said; “I kind of wish that I had won it.” : After completing his final year, for ASU, Jam eson left for thé World University Games. “ I wanted to know if I could swim fast b e f o r e I w e n t to th e E u r o p e a n ChampionsMps to face G ross,” (Michael Gross was the 1984 100 butterfly gold m ed alist a t the S um m er O lym pics) STATE PRESS TypsssTTMtti S U N DEVIL SPARK YEARBOOK M a tth ew s C en ter, b a sem en t • 9 65-6881 Y ou r books a t Changing Hands. For q u ality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% of our re-sale p rice in cash or 50% in tradein cre d it w hich .m iy be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, ho trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) Brow se through pu r three flo o rs of: •New & Used Books •A rt P rin ts & Posters •C alendars & C ard s •Handbound Jou rn als M -F 10-9 S A T 10-6 SU N 12-5 C h a n g in g H a n d s 414 WIN Avenue 966-0203 _____ Old Town Tempo Jam eson said. Jam eson left the gam es with both the confidence to swim against Gross and two first-p lace m edals (100 b utterfly and freestyle). , i ^ He then returned to the European Championships but this tim e Jam eson would leave with first {dace (100 butterfly) and defeat Gross. “My real goal a t the gam es was to seek revenge on my ’85 perform ance,” Jam eson said. “My m ain concern was Gross, but I guess that turned out all right.” Entering into this year’s swim season, Jam eson would no longer be able to compete as a Sun Devil. But his days as a swimmer are not over. His win on Saturday* a t the U.S. Indoor Championships was a great stepping stone on the road toe Olympics, While Jam eson was a t ASU, the strongest com petition he faced w as S tanford’s M orales (the current world record holder in the 100 butterfly). f “Pablo w as the national champion and the NCAA holder all four years while I was at ASU. It was tough competition,” Jam eson said. But his current win over M orales proved th at h e is a strong contender to beat his record at the Olympics and earn a gold m edal for G reat Brittain. is VCR ; ' % ATTN ALL DORM RESIDENTS Rental 6 8 0 AM fCASR p r e s e n ts th e UNDER $ 1.16 Per D ay 829-1966 Reniai Network G R E A T S C A V E N G E R H UNT! W in a $50 g ift c e rtific a te fro m th e Student Book Center 7th & College a n d m u c h m o re . L iste n to 6 8 0 AM fo r d e ta ils . m Andy Jameson Jam eson’s plans for the future prim arily revolve around the Olympics in Korea this summer. “I would like to win the butterfly,” he said. “It has been the goal of m y life.” SA LE« MattIiews C enter, Imsement • 965*2097 * ■ PEANUT BUSTER $|29 PARTAIT r,vV Pf RUNDLE’S LIQUORSA MKT. New Location 1324 W. University (just east of Priest) M eister Brau 12 pk ............... $3.76 Andre Cham pagnes $2.96 « ■ P ll 2 It The Shoe Fite, Repair It At John's! Baseline6 W! UmvenHyA 967-9079 W ITH THIS CO U PON Good for any “ SM ASH-IN”' o r sundae lee cream *n sandwiches 4 1 4 S . M ill Ave OPEN jpejRHÿrà^|: * ^ S p e cie / Low R a te * 950 S. 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F o r LSAT c la s s e s b eg in n in g M onday, M ay 9, 1988 For re se rv a tio n s cedi V alerie a t 969-8953 REGULAR PR IC E S •Sham poo •Precision C ut «Condition «Blow Dry MEN *14 • WOMEN *16 OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY TUES., WED. & THURS. TILL 9 P.M. I Thursday, inarch 31,1968 Sun Angel Stadium to play host to ‘world cla ss' meet By GARY JACKSON I want to win this race’ so I shifted into overdrive. “Usually I have a stong kick anyway.” f Sun Devil Robert Rucker ran a 51.22 tim e to the 400 hurdles, improving by .85 seconds oyer last week. In tee last two m eets, Rucker has been the only athlete to even come close to Bugg in the race. Bugg also ran on te e first-place 4x400-meter and the thirdplace 4xl00-meter relay team s. ASU sprinters Bugg, Sean Greene, E d Lovelace, and Curtis Moss sped to a 3:07.99 tim e in the 4x400.* Their 3.40 second improvement over last week brought them within .11 seconds of qualifying for the NCAA championships. . TÎae Sun Devils substituted Greene for Chip Rish, who competed in tee 800-meters, but has been resting a ham string injury. . «AaS&g . Louisiana State ted during the 4x400, but the Sun Devils closed the gap and pulled ahead for the win. “I made up m ost of the ground,” Bugg said. “It was a pretty dose race until Curtis Moss.” If th e 4x400 re la y team can m ake th e Pac-10 championships, it can beat the 3:05.72 tim e required to qualify for the NCAAs. “I know we are capable of 3:05, and I know we can go a tat faster than th at,” he said. Jeff Smith ran a personal best 3:44.87 tim e in the 1500-meters, beatinghis previous m ark by 4.30 seconds. Last week Smith ran. the 5000-meters, taking first in th at event. Pole vaulter M ark G ersten cleared 16-8% to take first in the Bugg qualified for the NCAA Championships in the 400-m eter interm ediate-hurdles with a tim e of 50.69 seconds. m eet. Three vaulters from BYU jumped the sam e height, but “One of the m em bers of our team got in front of m e for a Gersten’s previous best gave him the win. M ark Boyd won the 110-meter high-hurdles with a (Pac-10 while,” Bugg said “ I thought, ‘weO I’d better do something if Stats Brain .. The 9th Annual Sun Angel Track Classic sponsored by Coca Cola, will a ttra c t top-rated talent to the Valley a t 4 p.m. Saturday a t Sun Angel Stadium. “It’s an outstanding m eet — The competition is going to be spectacular,” coach Ed Gorman said. “This is not just college, this is a worid class m eet.” M edalists Dwayne Evans (ASU alum nus), Danny Harris and Kelvin Sm ite twill spotlight the field of m ore than a dozen past Olympians who will compete in the open meet. Division I national champion UCLA and Division JI victors Abilene C hristian will attem pt to defend their titles in the nine-team field. Two ASU track sta rs said tee Sun Pfevils are tough and it will not be easy for the other team s to fare well against them at home. “We have a strong team ,” All-America Gordon Bugg said. “We’re coming together pretty well and should have a good season.” ■ Sun Devil Toinette Holmes said she is expecting a challenge . • “The com petition a t Sun Angel is always hot,” Holmes ¡mid. “We are very strong and can handle anything that comes hare.” Last week a t Sun Angel Stadium, ASU enjoyed several top qualifying) tim e of 14.0 seconds. Boyd ranks am ong the topfive in ASU record books for the 110 high-hurdles and the 400 interm ediate-hurdles. F or the women, Lynda Tolbert will provide a challenge for any athlete stepping on the sam e track with her. Tolbert led the pack-in the 100 w ith a (Pac-10 qualifying) tim e of 11.65 seconds, .23 seconds away from a trip to tee NCAAs. L ast week Tolbert qualified for the 100 high-hurtfles with a 13,0 second time. Holmes ran the 400-meters in 54.78 seconds (Pac-10 qualifying), leading the other com petitors by alm ost one second to win the race. “ Ife lt it wasn’t how I wanted toTun it,” Holmes said “ I’m having problems with my start. Last year I went out much faster.” But Holmes said she is hoping im prove for the Saturday m eet. Ill . “ I should do pretty w ell,” she said. “ I’m confident and I’m training pretty hard on my sta rt.” Jacinto Bartholomew took third place in the 200-meters with a (Pac-10 qualifying) tim e of 24.17 seconds in last week’s m eet. Bartholomew, Holmes, Tolbert, and Dana Jemes team ed together to finish second (46.59 seconds) in tee 4x100 relay. “ Í think we should place in the top three in te e both relays (4x100 and 4x400),” Holmes said, “Everything is coming together and everyone is getting to shape. “ I think we should be really stong this year, even stronger than test year.” O klahom a co a ch sa ys W ildcats w on’t run against S o o n e rs NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs was told that N s opposite num ber a t Arizona, Lute Olson, said it wouldn’t be in Arizona’s best interests to run with the Sooners in their F inal Four m atchup Saturday. “If he doesn't w ant to run around with me, I don’t want to run around with him ,” Tubbs said. “ W hatever’s in his best interests is fine with m e.” But seriously, folks. Although Arizona pushes the ball up the floor — the W ildcats averaged 85 points a gam e in going 35-2 — Tubbs probably would have been surprised if Olson had said his team would run with the Sooners. Only one team this year has been successful playing Oklahoma’« gam e. That was M issouri in tee second-to-last game of the regular season when tee Tigers, playing a t home, heat Oklahoma 93-90 in overtime. Everyone else who has tried to m atch the Som ers sprint for sprint has gone away a loser. Oklahoma is 34-3 thanks to its breakneck pace, averaging 104 points per gam e. Based on those num bers, Olson’s statem ent was understandable and sound. Still, Titobs sounded unconvinced. “They’re good enough to run with us,” Tubbs said of the Wildcats. ‘"K ey can play a running gam e with us, “But I’ll bet Arizona doesn’t change their gam e plan one b it for Oklahoma, because I don’t think Oklahoma has changed their gome ¡dan one bit for Arizona.” If te a t’s tee case, the Sooners will employ their full-court, pressing defense from the sta rt in an effort to quicken the tem po as much as possible. Arizona likely will use its solid zone defense, although guard Steve K err said it was the W ildcats’ man-to-man attack th at turned their gam e around against North Carolina in the West Regional championship. O klahom a guard Mookie Blaylock, fo r one, said he would like to see Arizona line up in the 1-1-3 zone it used to put the clam ps on N orte Carolina’s J.R . Reid. “ If they do, my eyes will light up,” Blaylock said. The reason? Blaylock and Oklahoma’s other perim eter players, point guard Ricky G race and forw ard Dave Sieger, all have the green light to let it go from 3-paint range. Sieger is shooting 39 percent from th at distance, Blaylock 38 percent and Grace nearly 37 percent. Display Advertising: 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 Classified Advertising: 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 TO ISU i V f NIG i r a s AHAT A (Harona night! 8 PM- Close 1.00 CORONAS $1.50 MARGARITAS 1.00 CUERVO SHOTS T-SHIRT GIVEAWAYS STARTING AT 8 PM 1120 E. A PA C H E • 967-1129 ■ n p s ^ iiy is f v R i Your Nissan and Datsun Sendee Specialists are offering The Knights and Novices of Siesta Nu Fraternity Congratulate TOM DORN ZY791 on being selected GREEK MAN o f the YEAR 19*» •Nissan-trained technicians •Genuine Nissan parts •Q uality m aintenance and repair work •Reasonable prices / discount »MITH MESA NISSAN 'ARTS & SERVICE HOURS M onday 7:30 a.m.-8:30 p m . Fues.-Fri. 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. PARTS OPEN SAT. 8:30 a.m.-12:30 o.m. 1 0 % on a ll a e r v ic e a n d counter parts to all ASU sty faculty & staff with ASU I.O. c a r d . *To be present at time of purchase. 1701 W. Broadway, Mesa Exoires Mav 31.1988 834-3366 Service ■ P arts 834-0255 m m m Ticket to NCAA Final Four toughest purchase in years (AP) — The World Series is cheap. The Indianapolis 500 is child’s play. The Wimbledon tennis tournam ent is an easy ticket, liven Bruce Springsteen isn’t in the sam e league. The NCAA Final Four is something else. “These people are m ortgaging their house in order to buy tickets,” ticket broker John Langbeih of Phoenix said. “Its definitely a sellers’ m arket. And the price depends on location and availability. It’s worse than the stock m arket.” You w ant a ticket to college basketball’s F inal Four, which will be held Saturday and Monday a t the K em per Arena in Kansas City, Mo.? The listed price on the ticket is $50. Be prepared to pay more. “ I’ve been paying between $500 and $1,500for tickets,” said Langbein of Ticket Exchange. “We sell them for $700 to $2,250.” F or $2,250, you get seats six rows up just off the center of the court. Wm, A Chicago broker said she. has upper-level tickets for $800. A New York broker is selling them for $750 to $2,000. K athleen Leinan of Iowa a d v e rtise d 1 in a ' Tucson new spaper, asking for up to $3,000. And all say they have plenty of buyers willing to pay foe price. “It’s the hottest show I’ve had,” Langbein said. “ It’s because of three things: the proxim ity of the schools, the size of the venue and thefollow ing o f these schools.” The U niversity of Kansas is ju st 45 m iles from the 16,420-seat arena. Oklahoma is also a m em ber of the Big E ight Conference. The other finalists are Duke and Arizona. i^in an said her telephone has been continually ringing since her ad appeared. "People have called people —- called alum ni — the word has spread,” she said. “ I’ve had calls from 11-, 12-, 13-year-old kids who have saved fte ir money. It breaks my h eart.” ; * Leinan said she is selling tickets for her classifieds sons and they want $3,000 or the best offer. “ I could have sold them a long tim e ago, but the boys said hold onto them ,” she said. “But the boys don’t have to answer the telephone.” In W ichita, Kan., Oz Travel is charging $750 to $1,250 each for tickets, spokeswoman Donna Shuffer said. “We have about 80 calls a day for m ein,” she said. “They’re not obtainable in Kansas City anym ore and people are calling down here asking for them .” Fans are offering m ore than money for the ra re tickets. An advertiser in the Los Angeles Tim es will swap his Lakers tickets for the NBA playoffs for tickets to the Final Four. Tjinghein said, “One guy wants to trade his time-share in a condominium for a couple of tickets, and another fan wanted to trade an 18-foot skybox at an NFL game — the whole skybax.” Only 200 tick ets w ere m ade available to students a t th e U ofA. T h at h as prom pted classified newspaper ads in Tucson in w hich som e people a re asking up .to $4,000 each for tickets. “I think m ost people know it’s ju st im possible to get t h e m , ” A r i z o n a AllA m erican junior forw ard Sean E lliott said. “Tickets are extrem ely hard to find.” i jm ghein said tickets to the World Series go for $500, and he will get $600 for the Indianapolis 500 and $900 for Wimbledon tickets. The New York broker is asking $150 to $500 for Springsteen tickets a t the Nassau Coliseum in suburban New York. Not all of the tickets to the Final Four will necessitate a second m ortgage, however. “ B ob,” in n o rth eastern O klahom a, advertised in the D aily Oklahoman that his wife is sick and he is selling his two mid­ court tickets, 23rd row, for $55 each. U o f A e n jo ys s p e c ia l attention p ro v id e d b y T u c s o n citiz e n s som ething,” K err said. “ I haven’t bad the TUCSON (AP)- — The University of tim e for it lately because we’ve been so Arizona’s first-ever trip to the Final Four is busy, so I ju st stick them in my desk. I’ve getting plenty of attention in Tucson. got about 100 letters in there now.” So m uch in fact th at W ildcats Coach Lute “ I’m about 1,000 behind,” Elliott said. Olson says he will b eld ad when his second“One fan sent m e a bottle of cologne. I hope ranked W ildcats leave Thursday for Kansas it isn’t a violation- It was a pretty big bottle. City, Mo., and the site of the NCAA “The fans are going crazy right now. We Tournam ent windup. can’t go anywhere without people saying, “Everybody is talking about the team /* something about the (North Carolina) gam e he said. “You pick up the paper, you turn on or asking about the Final Four.” the TV, you see the W ildcats. It’s definitely Or about Final Four tickets, which some a focal point. people a re asking up to $4,000 each for in “ Some of th e kids w ere saying they’re getting standing ovations when they walk classified newspapers ads. into th eir classroom s. I ju st hope one of the “ I think most people know it’s just people applauding is the instructor.” im possible to get them ,” Elfiptt said. “Tickets are extrem ely hard to find.” Arizona, 35-2, faces - 34-3 Oklahoma in The hoopla should quiet down som e — or Saturday’s sem ifinals. The W ildcats have will by Olson’s design — once his team been installed as 7-5 favorites to go on and reaches Kansas City. win Monday night's title gam e. Olson took his Iowa team to the Final Four “We’ve been saying «B along our goal is to in 1980 a t Indianapolis. His Hawkeyes lost get to the F inal Four,” said senior center 80-72 in the sem ifinals to Louisville* which Tom Tolbert. “ B ut|obviously, if you say then beat UCLA in the finals for the NCAA th at, you w ant to w in the whole thing. We know U lereare two m ere gam es to play.” title. ' * $0^1 f “ If you’ve done anything before, you learn “Everybody excited and everything,” the first tim e and ask w hat you would do if said All-América junior forw ard Sean you had to do it again,” Olson said. “ I felt Elliott. “ But we still realize there are two th at after th at (1980 trip ), wé didn’t control gam es left and we still have our mind set on the players’ tim e as m uch as we should the national championship. have. I allowed a few m ore things to happen The team rettilhed |ro m the reg io n al in because Iowa needed the exposure. The Seattle to a cam pus reception Sunday night program wasn’t w ere it is today. a t McK&le C enter $§ith 9,000 scream ing “With this team , we don’t do anything fan s.;4 s| s^ « :S | ^ » ^ m ore than the NCAA requires us to do. Once “ I felt like a rock sta r,” said senior guard we get them there on Thursday, we’ll Steve K err. “I m e É p h e hoops were up, but control the tim e. We’H tell them when to get we obviously w erenT there to play a gam e. up, when to eat, when to go to the b is, when It was a com pletdyJB fferent feeling. All we to go to the movies, when to shoot, when to did Was w a tt out.. Ipm agine that’s w hat a go to bed. That’s the way it’s been all year rock s ta r feels like * when we’re on the road and th at’s the big K err and E lliott said they also are thing I don’t want anything to be any different than what it’s been all year long in starting to receive lffcavy fan m ail. term s of preparation.” «‘j try to answ er them with a card or bicycles for ta lc r*a* estate fo r sarte S T A T E PR ESS Matthews Confer Basement Newsroom........ 965-2292 Display Adv...... 965-7572 Classified Adv...965-6731 Liner Ad Rates: IS words or less $2.75/day, 1-4 days $2.50/day, 5-9 days $2.40/day, 10 or more days 15* each additional word F. MOSER 22V4” , Columbus tubing, Campy g aits, Kavlar sew-ups, only 200 mttee. « 0 0 . Randy, 828-13«._______ _ NEAR. ASU. 4 bedroom , 2 bath, tri-level, excellent condition. 1732 ;Eaot U Jolla, Terr**. $78,000 nen-aatum sbla mortgage. 967-3658. WOMANS BLUE Raleigh 3-speed bike, used, 26 inch. $85. C eil daytim e, - 9680180. 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