Arizona S ta te University's M orning Daily Voi. 7 0 Nò. 130 §§!~-' — — l i— Running fo r PRIDE From MR, 1964 Olympic gold medalist Billy Mill speaks to participants of the “Fun Run" Thurs­ day morning. The run was sponsored by PRIDE — People Relating in Diverse Environments. Par­ ticipants of the run head down Orange Street on campus. Delta Tau Deltas to move into FIJI house By KENNETH WALSH State Press ■ Delta Tau D elta fraternity w ill become the new occupant of the Old Row Ph i Gamma D elta (F IJ I) house in June, Residence l i f e D irector C lifford R. Osborne announced Thursday. But members of fraternities competing fo r occupancy rights said they w ere stunned by the decision, due to the relative newcom er status o f the D elta Tau Delta fraternity. H ie fraternity is considered a colony and has not yet received chapter status because it has not been established fo r a sufficient period o f tim e. H ie 406 Adelphi D rive Tenancy Committee, charged specifically with selecting a new tenant fo r the soon-to-bevacant F IJ I house, unanimously recommended the Theta Gamma chapter of Delta Tau D elta as the new occupant. “ Delta Tau D elta was seen unanimously by that comm ittee as demonstrating some vary excellent strengths. One in particular that stands out is the devotion to academ ic excellen ce," Osborne said. The house’s form er occupants, Ph i Gamma Delta, are vacating their home as a result of University sanctions for having violations o f Ole U niversity Code of Conduct. Osborne said a ll applicants must m eet 14 minimum to ubec aselected fo r nnew tenancy. w w w u m ow m n w iv j. criteria order C X ItttrtIft lin it U iu n ‘ ‘The com m ittee review ed each o f the applicants in ligh t of the minimum criteria, and they screened the applicants on paper," Osborne said. Once the finalists w ere selected, Osborne said they were interviewed before a final recommendation was made. Several fraternity m em bers from chapters that w ere not selected called the State Press Thursday to complain about the decision. The m embers, who wished not to be identified, said they w ere upset because Delta Tau Delta is a colony, w hile their houses are established chapters that have long served the ASU community. The Sigma P i and Beta Theta P i fraternities w ere the other finalists m the bid fm the F IJ I bouse. “ It was real shocking,” Sigma P i house President Tom Hope said. “ W e honestly fe lt w e w ere the best candidate. Sigma P i has shown a lot o f stability in 414 years, having no problems. It was disappointing to lose out to a colony. ” Rope said he was unsure about the reasons fo r the decision and teat he hoped the com m ittee would give an explanation fo r its selection. Sigma P i’s vice president, John Achoukian, said he fe lt the decision was based, on m onetary issues rather than crechbility issues. “ Obviously ASU has based its decision on finances only and not as te r on im pact on the campus,” Achoukian said. “ W. e’ve been chartered h ere since 1964," Achoukian said. 7 ' “ W e’v e won blood drives and been very active. Our entire fraternity is very upset about the decision.” The Beta Theta P i fraternity’s published phone number was not serviceable on Thursday. In selecting the new occupant, Osborne said monetary considerations w ere only (me of the 14 judging criteria. “ Certainly there are financial criteria that are applied,” Osborne said. “ Any group that could not address the financial criteria satisfactorily would not have progressed with any degree of success." Drew Diedrich, D elta Tau Delta house president, said he felt his house was as qualified for the recommendation as any other fraternity. He added he was not surprised by the outcome. ■ >* “ W e’re a ll real excited,” Diedrich said. “ The house is going to give us a chance to enhance a tot o f our programs. Osborne said: “ It was a very objective and, I believe, thorough process. It utilizes a ll 14 selection criteria ." D elta Tau D elta’s colony status did not hurt the fraternity because being chartered is not one o f the minimum criteria fo r selection o f new tenancy, he said. “ This is the first changeover in tenants in many years, so this is kind o f a model of how I believe the University w ill continue to approach replacement o f groups in the event groups fa il in some way and need to m ove from their houses,” Osborne said. Mofford appoints ASU student to board of regents R -' K M . 1. is m in ....... i ........ • Ssi By VICKIE CHACHERE State Press Gov. Rose M offord has appointed Patrick McW horter, an ASU political science m ajor and Associated Students senator for the College of Liberal Arts, as the student member o f the Arizona Board o f Regents. McW horter, who currently serves as an intern fo r thè Dem ocratic leadership in the Arizona House o f Representatives, m il join the regents Ju ly 1 if he is confirm ed by the Arizona Senate. McWhOrtor w ill succeed Joe M ikitish of U ofA. A student regent is selected from one of Arizona’s three universities each year on a rotating basis. F o r m e r A S A S U P r e s id e n t C h ris Cum m iskey, an undeclared gradu ate __l .. S mSBSn ! IS < J fiSScK stu d en t, and P a u l L a rse n , re g en ts coordinator fo r ASASU’s state relations and a pre-m ed student, w ere the oth er applicants, “ She (M offord) was very im pressed" with McWhorter, said Vada Manager, a M offord spokesman. “ He exulted a lot of confidence.” M anager said M offord liked M cW horter's “ futuristic” approach to dealing with education issues and belief that the regents should set a long-term plan for developing higher education ip Arizona. “ She fe lt this was g o n g to be m ore than a casu al acqu ain tan ce w ith edu cation issues," Manager said. ‘‘ \ McW horter, who w ill be the only nonvoting participant of the 11-member board, ._ _ .. » • ». • »■ it _ said he considers rising tuition costs the biggest problem facing Arizona university students but added the “ most im portant" issue is how those tuition dollars ore spent. “ I don’t want it to be perceived that tu itio n in c re a s e s a r e In e v ita b le ,” McW horter said. “ There are a lot o f important issues,” he said’. “ The biggest problem facing students is tuition. That’s the case year after year. “ But I think the most important issue w e need to approach is how that tuition is being u tilized." McW horter said he would like to see the Board develop a comprehensive, tong-range plan fo r the universities and said he wants to emphasize the universities’ importance to the state’s economy and future. m L . J L * » ^ » f «4 m 1 a m o a m h / v ifA in ir In The share of state revenue going to the universities has declined from almost 20 percent in 1977 to 16.5 percent in 1987, according to state budget re c o ils . The universities also face a possible $45 m illion reduction in operating budget to help offset a $350 m illion deficit in the state budget. “ I want to make sure that the universities’ budgets aren’t seen as an easy solution to the budget deficit on a statewide basis,” he said. M cW bortor said he also ¡dans to make university students m ore aw are of the regents’ operations and encourage m ore student input into board decisions. “ People don’t understand who the regents are and how many important decision the regents m ake," he said. inside ASU WEATHER Continued cool and cloudy with a high in Fie 70s. Tonight: increasing winds with a chance of rain and the low in the 50s. RAMBO SPEAKS: The creator of the popular “ Rambo' films is featufpl in Entertainment. Page 11. '' Classified....... Comics........... Entertainment Opinion.... . Sports.......... Today.......... 18 14 11 4 15 2 Reagan ‘very concerned’ that Senate may not ratify treaty before summit S PR IN G FIE LD , Mass. (A P ) — President Reagan said Thursday he is “ very concerned” that the Senate m ay not ra tify the pending U.S.-Soviet arms-control treaty before he goes to Moscow fo r summit talks with Soviet leader M ikhail S. Gorbachev. In a quesfion-and-answer session after a speech to the W orld A ffa irs Council o f W estern Massachusetts, Reagan was asked by a law student what the effect on the talks would be if the Senate had not yet ratified the treaty. “ I think it would be very upsetting and would put a strain on the summit if the Senate has not ratified the treaty by the tim e w e go there,” the president said. “ W e hope and pray that they w ill, but their scheduling of it has been such that I am very concerned w e m ay have to go without having had it ratified ,” he said. Senate M ajority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., said the Senate won’t rush to ra tify the treaty. “ W e want a good treaty, that is our objective,” Byrd said, telling reporters that the approach o f the Moscow summit “ doesn’t guide m e at a ll.” He said: “ I ’m not going to rush to judgment.” The pending treaty, covering intermediate- and shorterrange m issiles, was signed by Reagan and Gorbachev at their summit m eeting in Washington in December. When the two leaders m eet again in Moscow M ay 29 to June 2, one o f the issues confronting them w ill be a treaty still being negotiated that would cover longer-range intercontinental nuclear missiles. O f this treaty, Reagan said, “ There is a great question as to whether it could be ready for signature at the summit. Higgins to be tried for spying by pro-Iranian kidnappers B E IR U T, Lebanon (A P ) — The pro-Iranian kidnappers o f Lt. Col. W illiam R. Higgins said Thursday the Marine o fficer w ill be tried on charges o f spying for the United States. “ This crim inal w ill be turned over today to the tribunal o f the oppressed to try him for the crim es he has committed,” the Organization o f the Oppressed on Earth said in a typewritten statement delivered to the Reuters news agency office. . Higgins, 43, of Danville, K y., was serving with a U.N. observer group in south Lebanon when, he was abducted by gunmen Feb. 17 near the ancient port o f T yre; 50 miles south of Beirut. . The statement came three-days after the Chnstian-run Voice of Lebanon radio station claim ed Higgins was killed during clashes between pro-Syrian and Iranian-backed Shiite militias in south Lebanon earlier this month. It could not be known whether Thursday’s communique was meant to refute the radio report or set the stage for announcing Higgins’ death. Thursday’s Arabic-language statement from the S u ite Moslem group was accompanied by a black-and-white photograph of Higgins, apparently to prove its authenticity. The picture showed the balding Higgins with a stubbled gray beard and wearing a dark field jacket, his eyes lniAing down and away from the cam era. It was the first phntngraph of Higgins released by his captors since his kidnapping It was not known when it was taken. today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU. Any campus dub or organization*can submit entries to the calendar for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries will not be taken over the phone. The deadline for entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day . Entries may be edited due to content or space. M eeting •United Jewish Appeal will meet Sunday at Hiiiel. For more information, call 967-7563. Announcem ents •ASU Comedy Club will present a free “The Farce Side Comedy Hour,” headlined by professional comedian Marty Ludlow today from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. in the MU Cinema. Everyone is welcome. •The Physics of Turbulent Boundary Layers is the title of a speech that Dr! Micheál Reischman of the Office of Naval Research will give today at 2:40 p.m. in, the Engineering Research Center, Room 324. •MUAB Flint Committeee will show “ The 20th Tournee of Animation’* tonight through Sunday night at 7 and 9:30 in the MU Cinema. •A free recital will be given by Anthony Ptog tonight at 7:30 in Recital Hall. Plog Is a trumpet soloist, composer and Los Angeles recording artist. •The ASU Tuba Ensemble and Brass Choir will give a free concert Sunday night at 7 in the Music Theatre. •ASU’s Choral Union and Concert Choir, conducted by Douglas R. McEwen, will sing Gabriel Faure’s Requiem and John Rutter’s Requiem during a free concert Sunday at 2 p.m. at St. Francis Xavier Church, 4715 N. Central Ave., Phoenix. Correction In Tuesday’s issue, the State Press inadvertently attributed quotes to Jean Eisel, director of career services, when the quotes should have been attributed to Marvalene Hughes, assonM«* vice president for student development. The State Press regrets the error. New State Press editor nsmed for fall semester M arty Sauerzopf was named editor o f the State Press fo r the fa ll sem ester by the Student Publications Advisory Board Thursday. Sauerzopf, 21, currently is the city editor. H e also has been assistant city editor, copy chief, a copy editor and a sports reporter. He has been with the newspaper since January 1967. “ I ’m thrilled that I. got the job ,” Sauerzopf said. “ I ’m looking forw ard to continuing the high-quality work I think w e’ve been doing this sem ester.” Sauerzopf, a graduate ofBrophy College Preparatory in Phoenix, is a junior journalism m a jo r.. “ I ’m planning to continue producing a newspaper that students at ASU can be proud of,” he said. Sauerzopf w ill be replacing current editor T racy Scott who w ill be graduating in M ay. _____ G et TW O toppings fo r th e ■ of on~ Write a Personal on the STATE PRESS brick wall for the May 3rd lssue-(last one of the eemesteri): $ 5 / b r ic k o r , $3/partial brick Deadline la Thursday, April 28th, 10 a.m.! Matthews Center (south basement) % H A Y D E N ’S FERRY R E V IE W o '* is now accepting applications for the following positions on the 1989 Editorial Staff: P O E T R Y E D IT O R S F IC T IO N E D IT O R S A R T & D E S IG N E D IT O R S T o apply you must be a full-tim e student in good standing at A S U . (U ndergrad, 12-plus hours; Graduate, 9-plus hours; G raduate Assistant, 6-plus hours). A P P L IC A T IO N S ARE A V A IL A B L E - AT TH E F O L L O W IN G L O C A T IO N S : v» English Departm ent- First Y e a r Com position O ffice, L L C 325; Student Publications- M atthew s C enter, R oom 133 & In form ation Desk in Basement; School o f A rt- A R T 102D E A D L IN E : W ednesday, A p ril 27th, 5:00 p.m. at the above locations. F o r further inform ation please contact Salim a at 965-5937. 933 E- University • H A Y D E N ’ i S F E R R Y R E V I E W Student Publications. Matthews Center. Arizona* State University. Tempe. Arizona 85287 32oz. SODA ONLY 49« W ITH TH IS AD 1717 HHHHHMHHHINHMI State Press MsaM******** Page 3 Friday, AprH « , 1988 K unasek rem inisces on 'exp erien ce of a lifetim e’ By KELLY PEARCE But her father never pushed her into politics — his interest in it sparked interest in his daughter. Kunasek was involved in high school governm ent and later did some party politics. Then last year she embarked on her journey to the ASASU presidency. “ The opportunity was there, and I felt I was prepared,” Kunasek said. “ I f I felt there was someone m ore qualified, I wouldn’t have run.” And she won in a runoff election against Steve Escobedo and began lea n in g the ropes — dealing with the Arizona Board o f Regents, Arizona Legislature, ASU administration and students. She reflected on her accomplishments over the last year. “ I don’t thing it’s one thing. I think it’s a collection o f many things. A lot o f decisions that aren’t very glamorous were made, and I think they w ere beneficial,” Kunasek said. “ Associated Students has been able to do a lot more positive things for the campus as fa r as providing services, providing programs, dealing with the Legislature,” she continued. “ A ll these little things w ere much m ore positive than some o f the negative types o f news that Associated Students used to produce.” A legislative luncheon, a breakfast with Gov. Rose M offord, Insuring Tom orrow, Homecoming and debates with State Press The biggest problem facing the incoming Associated Students ¡»resident w ill be growth management, according to the current student body leader. Karrin Kunasek sat in her office that w ill soon become President-elect John Fees’, While she reflected on the past and looked to the future. “ The’ larger the campus grows, the m ore difficu lt it is to foster a sense o f community — a sense o f identity,” Kunasek said as she sat in an overstuffed blue sofa in her a iry office on the second flo w o f the MU. “ It is one o f the biggest problems.” Kunasek, a 1963 graduate o f Mountain View High School in Mesa, w ill graduate from ASU in M ay with degrees in history and political science. But she is not w orried about handing the presidential reigns to her successor. “ John (F e es) knows U niversity politics very w ell. He knows the players o f the gam e. He is as comm itted to this university as anyone I ’v e ever m et,” Kunasek said. As the Mesa native spoke inform ally about Fees’ future, she speculated oh her own. The Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority m em ber said she w ill either go to law school or take a year o ff and work as a congressional intern or full-tim e staffer in Washington, D.C. “ I have no plans fo r a future in politics. A year and a half ago, I had no plans to be student body president,” Kunasek said. “ Twenty years from now, if I ’m in a position where I feel I ’m the most qualified and recruited to run fo r an office, I w ill,” she continued. “ But I am not, nor w ill I ever be, a career politician. I tend to question their m otives.” But Kunasek grew up with politics. H er father, Carl Kunasek, R-Mesa, is the bead of the Arizona Senate. “ M y father a n d l have always been close. I grew up next to him in the drag store,” she said. H er father worked as a pharmacist before entering politics and his daughter, Karrin, worked at his side for eight years. The past year has been interesting fo r the Kunasek fam ily because of the senator’s involvem ent in the trials o f form er Gov. Evan Mecham. “ W e’ve a ll been getting an education with the Mecham trials. It’s very exciting. D ay to day you get to keep up on what’s happening,” Kunasek said. She continued: “ This state has a bright future, but this state also has some tough problems that need to be tackled. So I see m y father being challenged, and he thrives on challenges.” And so does the ASASU president. “ It ’s (h er year in poHtical o ffice) been the best education anyone could have,” Kunasek said. experts on campus w ere inaugurated or strengthened in the Kunasek administration, she said. Also, the ASASU president fought fo r issues she believes in, including a conduct policy, in which ASU President J. Russell Nelson extended the reigns o f the U niversity to include off-campus actions. Kunasek believed it was unfair to students. “ And that’s why w e’re here,” she said. “ W e’re here to m ake a positive impact. I ’m not here to get a ll the press or glo rify Associated Students or Karrin Kunasek.” She ¡»raised the other three ASASU executives. “ W e a ll have our faults — w e a ll have our flaw s, but when it comes down to it, nobody could be accused o f not devoting 100 percent to ASASU,” Kunasek said. But her stint in office was not picture-perfect. Kunasek w ill leave her position with issues and problems yet unsolved. In her eyes, the figh t to keep tuition as affordable as possible is most evident. She said she fought the regents all year, but tuition fees continue to rise. “ This is probably the most frustrating point o f the year,” Kunasek confessed. But she would do it a ll over again if she had the chance. Kunasek thrives on challenges and pressure. “ It was the experience o f a lifetim e. It is unfortunate that not a ll students can go through it,” she said. Outgoing ASASU President Karrin Kunasek (right) sits with former ASASU President (1986-1987) Chris Cummiskey. S tate Prass photo WALT RICHARDSON & RAMA LAMA 8 p m -M id n igh t 2 p m -5 p m T H E F IR S T A N N U A L Ì É Ì . m ; , ; , BEACH PARTY S atu rd ay • April 23rd • 2 pm-1 am at THE POINTE SOUTH M O U N TA IN (48th Street & Baseline) LOOK FOR THE BIQ TENTI POINTE SOUTH M O UNTAIN Baseline TO BENEFIT BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS O F M E T R O PO LIT A N PH O EN IX opinion S ite P ré« Friday, April 22,1988 *2 L L Shocking S caring juvenile delinquents straight By KHALI CRAWFORD Outside some o f the boys are engaged in a gam e o f softball, while others lift weights or shoot hoops. Bob and Jim , clad in jeans and sneakers, stroll along flower-lined sidewalks from the cafeteria to Toasty’s ice cream stand before joining their buddies at the bunk house. Inside the 11-bed quanset hut, John is listening to his stereo and reading a letter from home. Bob takes a quick drag from a cigarette and then heads out to the hobby shop to finish a m iniature wooden carriage. Inside the shop, Scotty is making belt buckles and Frank is tooling a leather Bible cover. And in the library, Chuck and D avid are reading the latest editions o f Sports Illustrated and T im e magazines. I t ’s just like a typical boys summer camp, except most of the guys won’t be going home at the end o f the summer. There is a 50-foot w ire fence to m ake sure o f that. This is the home o f the medium security unit of the Arizona State Prison Complex at Florence. And it m ay be the future sight o f the “ Shock Incarceration” program , pending approval by the state legislature. The Arizona House o f Representatives has already recdmmended the Special A lte rn a tiv e In ca rc era tio n P ro g ra m designed to shock youthful first-tim e offenders with a view o f prison life. But w ill this camp-like prison be enough to shock them “ straight?” In theory, the m ilitary style program is a good idea — sim ilar program s across the country have revealed a high success rate — 79 percent o f those who completed the program did not return to prison. In addition to changing the crim inal behavior o f our young people, one could h a rd ly a rg u e w ith th e p ro g ra m ’ s overriding goal o f reducing costs and overcrowding in prisons. The legislation would allow the court to order a first-tim e offender, age 18 to 25, who is convicted o f a class 4, 5 or 6 felony and who is sentenced to probation to enter the program . The “ Shock Incarceration” program would last four months and would include in ten sive ph ysical ex ercise, strenuous physical labor and academ ic education. The 150-bed site would carry a price tag o f only $542,000 — to be paid from the state’s general fund. And furtherm ore, the savings from deterring crim inal behavior now rather than incarcerating hardened lawbreakers later is projected to be more than $35 m illion over a fiv e year period, Theory aside, in practice these gains won’t be realized unless the program works — unless 321 participants each year are given a view o f prison life that shocks them so badly they won’t want to com e back. W h at asp e c ts of accomplish this goal? prison m ight The cram ped 9-foot by 6-foot cell. The stabbings. Uncompassionate guards. The gang rapes. But none of these ghastly aspects o f prison life are present in the summer camp atmosphere provided by “ Shock Incarceration.” As proposed, the program would be housed in an existing medium security unit and would be separated from the adult prison population by a fence. The inmates w ill share services, but interaction among the two groups is prohibited. ‘They ca n o n ly see it as w h a t it a p pe ars to b e a C lub M e d fo r b a d b o ys. ' Despite the professed stringency of the program , participants who w ill see prison life from behind a chain-link fence can only conclude that our penal system compares to Camp Wauneemucka. The ju v e n ille delinquents in this program won’t discern that this facility is not representative of a ll prisons. They won’t view prison life as normal inmates do. And they won’t understand that administrators view the program as a rehabilitative project. They can only see it as what it appears to be — a Club Med for bad boys, isolated from society. I f you’re going to shock them, do it right. Send them to the “ Super Maximum” security unit fo r a month. The $60,000 a bed cement fortress, the first o f its kind in the country, could do much to deter young, impressionable criminals-in-training. The fa cility houses the most volatile inmates in the state. In the unit, the inmates rem ain in their cell a ll day, except fo r a shower and one hour o f solo exercise in a cem ent room h alf the size o f a raquetball court. L et them be fed in their cell. L et them have no control over when their lights go o ff and on. L et them be escorted in belted handcuffs to see visitors who rem ain behind a plexiglass window w hile they are locked in a cage-like room. L et them look upon the faces o f men and see an im age of them selves in 5 o r 10 years. L et them desire their life and their freedom while it is still ours to give them. L ife is not a summer camp. Why should prison be? K hali Craw ford is a fo rm e r State Press ed itor curren tly interning a t the Arizona House o f Representatives. letters Walsh promotes fatigue Editor: This is getting really tiresom e. E very month or so, someone has to w rite in and set the record straight after Kevin Walsh gets finished with his latest assault on capitalism and W estern civilization. This tim e it’s his lam e defense of closed-shop unions and his moronic insistence that a $l5.83-per-hour minimum wage is both feasible and justified which have to be corrected. Walsh states that A FTU E dues are set by the local union and voted on by thè membership, thiis the dues aren’t rea lly forced upon them in an undemocratic way. Funny how none of the regular members wrote in and told us th is— it was the student vice-president (a titled member of the union o lig a rc h y ) who did it. W hat W alsh conveniently forgets, or, m ore likely, chooses to ignore, is the fact that if a University em ployee one day chose not to pay any dues at a ll to an organization which m ay or m ay not have his best interests at heart, he wouldn’ t be a University, èmployee for very long ; people like Walsh would force him out of his job. The reality is that denying jobs to those who choose not to join and support the union amounts to de facto coercion. N ext is the garbage about the higher m inim um w a ge b ein g a m a tter o f re d is trib u tio n . Im p lic it in W a lsh ’ s argument is his notion that someone has the right to “ redistribute” the law fully earned wealth off one person to another person who doesn’t 'have exactly the same amount. Aside from taxation to provide for national i defense, safeguard our God-given rights and maintain our infrastructure, no one has such a right. Most o f the private wealth in’ this country has been earned by people who made the best o f opportunities to succeed in lite by using their talents and working harder than others w ere w illin g to work. To say that unreasonable amounts o f money should be taken from these people simply because they achieved m ore than their neighbors is absurd. T o suggest that we take individuals who have had the courage and savvy to better their lot and bring them down to a level o f those who didn’t is to say that superior effort ánd achievem ent count for nothing. O f course, K evin Walsh would know this if he w ere not the slavish adhérent to Communism that t e is. It ’s no wonder he always sounds so frustrated — his ideology has lately been exposed fo r the fraud it really is and has been discredited both in theory and practice by the wretched showing o f nations under Communist rule around the world. M ay 1 respectfully suggest that those wishing to defend the gen ocid a l human rig h ts record and caveman economics erf communist theory confine their discussions to little white padded cells. In doing so, the rest o f us can go about confronting the challenges that face our nation without having to endure the unendurable din created whenever leftist pseudo-intellectuals get together to spout nonsense. E r i c S tic k e ls P r e -L a w Messages Editor: I w as moved to tears w ten I read M ichelle Allm an’s account of her father’s m essage to the w orld: Keep smiling. M y father is also a source o f strength fo r m e, but for different reasons. Since m y mother died 11 years ago, he has been m y livin g reminder that hard tim es pass and happiness returns. He raised the four o f us as if he w ere four people rather than one. He’s done an incredible job. M y mother also left m e a legacy, a sim ple phrase that has kept m y life in perspective. M y mom touches m e everyday w ten I think o f te r gentle advice: “ Love, love, love.” Best wishes, Ms. Allman. KamiUe Nixon Journalism W 6 E H&W&.. .A litiWEOFGREATNATIONALBÓ^EPOW,TUBPEOPLESEARCHTÓRREASSURANCE*,,, q u o ta b le . “ Never put off till tomorrow what you can do the day after tomorrow. ” M ark Tw ain State Pics» Page 5 From New York to lra n :i‘he campaign trail moves on Hunter S. Thompson North American Syndicate Some o f the best minds o f our generation h ave been follow in g this presidential campaign about 20 hours a day fo r three years, and they have not com e up with much wisdom. They w ere stunned by G eorge Bush’s blitzkrieg fo r the GOP nomination, and now they are weeping and jabbering lik e c h im p a n z e e s a t th e b a fflin g phenomenon o f Jesse Jackson. On the eve o f the term inally critical New York prim ary, nobody in politics seems to have had any idea what would happen when the votés w ere counted, or even who would w in . Th e on ly question le ft on the Republican side is how much longer Bush wants to gnaw the skulls of his dead enemies — but the Demo race has been intolerably strange from the start and is beginning to look even stranger. With the nominating process two-thirds finished and closing fast, the only rem aining contenders are a humorless Greek from Massachusetts and a radical black preacher from Chicago who has called New York City “ Hym ietown” and still expected to win the state. There is a powerful elem ent of craziness at work here, and it has le ft the experts in ruins. M ichael Dukakis, the winner o f the New York prim ary, is the front-runner for the Dem ocratic P a rty’s nomination, and the losers are instructing their most trusted sta ff people to start making notes and taking names fo r the 1992 campaign. There w ere 275 delegates at stake here, but the larger prize is the perceived shift o f weight and momentum that w ill alter the outcome o f the fin al few big prim aries, in Ohio, P e n n s y lv a n ia , T e x a s an d , fin a lly , California. The im age of a winner on television is worth about 33 percent in the stretch. • . .• Despite this huge w eight and importance that has been worth m illions in high-tech research and fees to prestigious polling firm s, the outcome in New York remained a hopeless m ystery 24 hours before the vote, and the consensus among experts was that the deciding factor would be whether o r not it rained. Jackson’s people don’t care about rain, they said. Foul weather w ill only m ake them angrier and m ore determined to vote. A monsoon would be better, and a murderous h ailstorm would alm ost guarantee a Jackson victory. . . . But if the day dawns bright and sunny, they said, hordes of yuppies w ill turn out in jogging shorts and Reeboks to vote for Dukakis. The conventional wisdom says thè prospect o f a brokered convention is dim. Not since the advent of m assive TV coverage in the ’50s has either party let its process go beyond the first ballot. Once Teddy W hite and the Four Horsemen of NBC got involved, there was no more privacy in the back room. In the good old days, before television, a political boss from someplace like Buffalo or St. Louis could sit down in peace and sell his delegates by the pound to the highest Udder. But not now. The last local boss who could get away with that was M ayor D aley from Chicago, who was croaked by McGovern insurgents in 1972 and died soon afterward. Since then, it has been m ore and more high tech. You can’t even smoke in the back rooms any more. The conventions have become giddy rubber stamps and whoopee sessions that mean nothing at a ll, except to the pros and the players who are not always the same people, or at least not at first. The political business in Am erica can make a pro o f just about any good amateur, and a whore out of any pro. It is just a m atter of tim ing and balance. Nothing else. But so what? These things are too w idely understood, unlike the heinous realities o f a genuinely brokered convention which w ill ruin the lives o f a ll those involved in it, except the T V people. Just because it hasn’t happened since M arilyn Monroe first posed naked doesn’t mean it can’t happen again. Which is terrifyin g but absolutely true. It almost happened last tim e, in fact, when G ary H art won California and didn’t realize it until three days later. The loss o f New Jersey in the morning sent him into such a funk that he locked him self into W arren Beatty’s penthouse at the B everly W ilshire Hotel and refused to talk to anybody, including his ranking staff people, who w ere trying to tell him that he had swept California by midnight by enough votes to offset N ew Jersey and ¡«e v e n t W alter Mondale’s nomination on the first ballot. I was on the phone with P a t Caddell and Frank Mankiewicz most o f the night, but they couldn’t reach him. W arren’s security was too tight. It was som e tim e around noon the next day when G ary fin ally learned that a ll he had to do to force the convention into a second ballot —- where he would have been a sm art money favorite to beat Mondale — was make a few personal phone calls in the early morning, or just about the tim e George W allace was having breakfast down in Alabama. W allace had about 40 delegates to sell, and he liked G ary better than he liked Mnndala — but G ary didn’t call, and G eorge did, and the rest is grim history. . . . And now, ye gods, the T V news has erupted with news bulletins about our new w ar in Iran. M arlin Fitzw ater has called a press conference a t the W hite House at 3 o ’clock in the morning, which has never happened b efo re. . . or at least not in m ore years than anybody in the Washington press corps can rem em ber.. . . It is a grim scene and the newsroom has gone wild. Who needs political comm entary at a tim e like this? 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Naperville, it. 60540 (Full refund wjtbiipftdsiys if product is returned unused) State Press Friday, April 22,1988 Page 6 Navajo custody battle resumes today $8 million cleared for TU B A C IT Y ( A P ) — Rick and Cheryl Pitts, hoping to adopt Allyssa Kristian Keetso, spent à rainy Thursday relaxing with the 9-month-old N avajo child and her mother pending F riday’s resumption o f a tribal custody hearing. “ I ’ve been holding m y breath. The tension is high, the anxiety is great,” sàid Rick Pitts, a 33-year-old contractor from San Jose, Calif. A t issue is whether the Pitts w ill be able to retain custody of Allyssa and eventually adopt the child they have cared for since her birth. Meanwhile, N avajo Tribal Children’s Court Judge Manuel Watchman appointed Loretta Nez o f the N avajo Legal Aid O ffice to represent Allyssa in the hearing. She replaced Robert W alters, who Watchman had disqualified during Wednesday’s beginning o f the temporary-custody hearing. Watchman took no testimony before recessing the closed hearing to give law yers tim e to prepare answers on several motions. A California state court ruled last week that under the federal Indian Child W elfare Act, the N avajo court holds jurisdiction in determining the baby’s custody and approving her adoption. The California court ordered the child be turned over to tribal officials fo r a temporary-custody hearing. Congress approved the law in 1978 to give Indian tribes m ore say in adoptions o f children by non-Indians nationwide. An attorney representing the N avajo tribe has said there are 75 sim ilar N avajo cases pending. Allyssa’s natural mother, Patricia Keetso, 21, and her grandmother, Susie Keetso, reiterated that they favor Allyssa’s adoption by the Pitts. Tribal officials, while acknowledging that Patricia Keetso approves of the adoption, have contended the tribe transfer to S S C fund intervened in part because of what spokeswoman Karen Diakun called ‘ ‘ a strong desire expressed by the grandparents that they wanted the ehild returned to the reservation.” But the elder Keetso said she always has wanted the child to be adopted by the Pitts. She said a tribal social worker had pressured her to sign papers to initiate having the child taken to the reservation. The child was handed over to tribal authorities on A pril 14 in San Jose and was kept separated from the Pitts until Sunday, which they said helped make the child sick. The Pitts also contend that Allyssa had been neglected while in the care o f a foster parent on the reservation, allegations that tribal officials have denied. On Wednesday the baby was placed in the P itts’ care until Friday’s hearing. P itts said Thursday that whenever his w ife “ steps out of sight, you can see that she’s (A llyssa’s) frightened.” W ASHINGTON ( A P ) t The Energy Departm ent w ill be allowed to transfer $8 m illion from its adm inistrative budget to site evaluation fo r the superconducting super­ collider, Rep. Carl Pursell of Michigan said Thursday. PurseQ said the transfer o f the money was cleared by an agrwTnpnt between House and Senate subcommittee chairmen concerned with funding fo r The $4.4 billion project, which physicists hope to use to study the basic structure of matter. The comm ittees last month denied the Energy Department’s request to transfer the money amid substantial congressional opposition to the project. Seven states, including M ichigan and Arizona, have been selected as potential sites fo r the super-collider, which w ill include a circular 53-mile-long particle accelerator. Some in Congress have said the project would divert too much money from other scientific research. “ Congressional concerns (about) the reprogram m ing w ere satisfied; the money can now be used fo r continued research, development and site selection,” said Pursell, a Plymouth, Mich., Republican and a m em ber o f the House energy appropriations subcommittee. “ Obviously, this approval demonstrates a certain level o f support for the project within the subcommittee leadership which, as an advocate o f the project, I ’m delighted to see,” Pursell said. Requests to transfer money that has already been appropriated require the consent o f the chairman and ranking m inority member of the House and Senate appropriations subcommittees handling the money. The $8 m illion had been appropriated fo r the 1988 fiscal year. “ I know that she probably can’t understand it, but I wonder if she’ll ever fo rgive m e fo r having to hand her over (to tribal representatives),” P itts added. “ She was in m y arm s in San Jose, and then I gave her to those people, and she looked at m e with that ‘what are you doing’ (lo ok ).” Sen. P eter Wilson, R-C alif., has said he is concerned about the Keetso case; and his deputy press secretary, Linda Royster, said Thursday in Washington, D.C., that Wilson m ay look into it to see “ what failings” of the law may produce such situations. “ The senator’s not made any conclusions whether this act needs to be changed,” she cautioned. “ But this case has heightened his awareness, and he feels it m ay be necessary to look into it.” BIG BED ttSA LEtt 5 Piece Oak Finish Bedroom Set CAMPUS TAPES #1 Video $158 The beautiful college campus and surrounding area, w ith its breathtaking skies and sights, are now yours to w atch and ta lk about. Think about it, a video o f the beautiful area where we a |l liv e fo r a sm all, im portant pa rt o f our lives, to take back home and review o r add-on la te r. CAMPUS TAPES #1 is the firs t in a series o f videotapes consisting of video clips o f the Tempe area, the campus, Papago Park, Gammage, A c tiv ity Center, Devilhouse, fo o tb a ll stadium , and many more which w ill alw ays bring back memories. INTRODUCTORY PRICE $14.95 I e r * • * T nI -7 ■ ¥' T w in S e t $ 7 8 F u ll S e t 88 Q ueen S e t 1 2 8 K in g S e t 188 B een B eg 28 Sofa & Love Seat 9 1 9 ID O $249and$299 ftnüakbit TEMPE: 966-4650 *S P L U S W— K IW A N IS iia ii University W on c - a 207 7 E. U n iv e rs ity S S mmm Omga/t&îr E - D A Y FR I., APRIL 28,1988 1 :0 0 -D U S K Clearance Center 9 6 6 -6 2 5 2 In Tempe ■ p iz z a Hayden FUBNIT U-TAN Z 0 O 3 ■ F .P . ? * ALL you CAN EAT PIZZA & SALAD & PASTA. P^ RK Buffet Only ReS. $3.39 With this ad & Every day For Lunch 11-2 Now Available V 8 fo r Dinner Sunday & M onday Nights Every W eek UNIVERSITY SALE AT ECG A LV under 5 eat FREE• Ages 5-10 only SOCper year of age • Checks accepted with Guarantee Card ■ ■ ■ ¡¡■ ■ B t | “ .......... m m ' Good for eat-in, cany-out, delivery Limited Delivery Area FOOD, BEER, MUSIC, AND FUN SPO NSO RED BY E N G IN E E R IN G / A P P L IE D S C IE N C E S C O L L E G E C O U N C IL rnmmmmmmmmmm “ D O J V iR ip o U P O # 1' ? l $2.00 OFF $1.00 OFF AN y LARGE PIZZA ANY MEDIUM PIZZA | 894-1234 O n e g a * * ’* p iz z a I Present th is c o u p o n w h e n o rd e rin g . O n e c o u p o n p e r cu sto m e r. N o t I g o o d w ith a ny o th e r o ffe r. COUPON EXPIRES 5 /1 4 /8 8 . State Press Page; 7 Friday, >April 22,1988 6 0 oz. P itch ers o f Long Island Iced Teas - $2.99 Sundi Kjenstad/State Presa Peeling? ASU theater ma|or Kristina Kreyling removes a sequined mask she crafted Thursday. She said she wears It as she performs mime. H it-a n d -ru n in cid en t leaves student in critical condition By MIKE BURGESS State Press . Tem pe police said they are searching for a suspect involved in a hit-and-run accident Saturday night that le ft an ASU student in critical condition at Scottsdale M em orial Hospital. Sean Ring, a 20-year-old sophomore communications m ajor, suffered a broken hip and a fractured skull. P olice said Ring, a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity, Was driving his Honda scooter west on U niversity D rive hear Casitas D rive at about 9:30 p.m. when he struck a vehicle that made a left turn in front o f him. The vehicle fled the scene. ' A passenger on the scooter suffered minor injuries. Witnesses described the vehicle as a red 1973 to 1976 AMC Jeep with a white bikini top and a loud engine. The scooter damaged the right rear end portion o f the vehicle. The driver was described as a Caucasian m ale with a thin build and short black hair. He was last seen wearing a white T-shirt. Anyone with inform ation about ¡the accident should call Tem pe police -at 731-8346. plus these Happy Hour specials: 2 5 i ChiliRellenos 250 Corndogs 250Burgers 250 Pizza Slices 250Thcos ™ 8 p m -1 2 :3 0 = Dancing forthose 18&older Tucson w om an’s car, 1-year-old sop repossessed while in store parking lot TUCSON, A riz. (A P ) — Cynthia Moreno, 31, says she w ill never again leave her 1-year-old son, Scott, alone in the car. Scott was sleeping in the back seat of Moreno’s car when it was repossessed Wednesday in a hardware store parking lot, and was still asleep when police o fficers, arrived at the car lot to which the vehicle had been taken. Repo man M orris Supersad drove the car with the sleeping baby about 7 m iles while police w ere taking a stolen-vehicle report from Moreno. “ M y husband went in the store, V she said, “ and I had forgotten to tell him we needed a vacuum cleaner part. So I went after him with my other two kids, but Scotty was sleeping in the back, and I didn’t want to wake him up.” Moreno said she wasn’t gone m ore than two minutes, and when she cam e out, the car Was gone. P olice said the repossession company, Arizona Recovery, reported beforehand that it was planning to take die car. Police notified the repo company that Supersad was not alone in the vehicle. Moreno said she went into shock during the 30 minutes it took for her to find out that her car had been repossessed. When police returned Scott to his mother he was laughing, his mother said. Keep in step w ith the comings and golngsi in town w ith the STATE PRESS Classifieds. ASU’s one-step m arketplace! 1 2 :5 0 -3 :3 0 A FT E R H O U R S 18 b o ld e r Dont forget SATURDAY COUNTDOWN starting at 8pm State Press 1988 14 ASU professors face approval for Regent honor By State Pro®# Staff Fourteen ASU professors have been selected as nominees fo r the' initial Regents’ Professorships, honoring faculty for exceptional achievem ents in teaching and research. The professors w ill fa ce Arizona Board of Regent approval during its Tucson m eeting this weekend. Upon confirm ation; each professor w ill receive a $5,000 salary increase and a medallion patterned after the official U niversity mace. The 14 w ere selected from among 76 candidates by a faculty com m ittee. The 14 include: John Alcock, zoology; Robert B. Cialdini, psychology; Jeffrey Cook, architecture; John M. Cowlèÿ, physics; LeR oy Eyring, chem istry; M artin T. Farris, purchasing, transportation and operations ; David K . F erry, electrical and computer engineering; G ary D. K eller, foreign languages; Sheng H. Lin, chem istry; Lee Meyerson, psychology; W arren E. M iller, political science; Carleton B. Moore, chem istry and geology; Dennis J. Palumbo, justice Jeffrey R. Cook John ML Cowley studies j and M sryBcth Stearns, physics. Alcock, who has been a m em ber of the ASU faculty sirwe 1972, has written m ore than 120 papers and four booxs, including “ Anim ai Behavior: an Evolutionary Approach. ^ He was one of the first recipients of file College of Liberal A rts Quality Teaching Award for commitment to the classroom, Cialdini, who joined the ASU faculty in 1971, is considered one of the leading authorities in the world in the study of faceto-face behavioral influence. He has presented the Theodore Johnson lecture at Reed College and the Karen Weiss Distinguished Lecture in Psychology in Cornell University, Cook joined the ASÜ faculty in 1961 and is considered an internationally renowned researcher, w riter and proponent of biochmatic design. He received the 1981 Solar Energy Institute of Turkey Distinguished Contribution Aw ard and the 1985 Passive Pioneer Award of the Am erican Solar Society, :s ' Turnto rrot»«»ori, pro**, LeRoy Eyring J o h n A lC O C k Robert B. Cialdini Martin T. Farris David K. Ferry Gary D. K eller Carleton B. Moore Dennis J. Palumbo MaryBeth Stearns asm- » Sheng H. Lin Lee Meyerson W arren E. M iller SATURDAY APRIL 23 Jo in us to n ig h t at C lu b B ongo d u rin g o u r draw ing fo r a FREE Fall T u itio n ! Be th ere at 7:30 p.m. W e w o u ld lik e to th a n k o u r pro u d sponsors fo r h elp in g us su p p o rt T H E M A K E -A -W IS H F O U N D A T IO N p.m. « r W u im TO PS LIQ U O R tb û iû , kinko's* iSWanjfcte. Statt Press F rid a y , A p r il g g ,1 9 8 8 Regents will study report on ASU, UofA, NAU deficiencies By VICKIE CHACHERE Stale Press H ie Arizona Board o f Regents w ill receive a r e p o r t o u tlin in g d e fic ie n c ie s in undergraduate education at Arizona’s three universities today at the board’s monthly m eeting at U ofA. The report, which is critical of academic advising services at ASU, w ill be presented by the Arizona Students Association — a student lobbying group made up o f student leaders from ASU, NAU and UofA. The board w ill not act on any o f the recommendations during the A pril meeting, which is scheduled to continue through Saturday. Cowley, who becam e an ASU faculty m em ber in 1969, has developed ASU’s electron m icroscopy fa cility into one of the best in the world. He is a fellow of the Royal Society o f London and has received the highest awards of the International Union of C ry s ta llo g ra p h y and th e A m erica n Crystallographic Society. E yring, an ASU faculty member since 1961, has published m ore than 140 articles and books that have made important contributions in the Held o f chem istry. He served as chair o f the ASU chemistry department and coordinated and directed the new Center fo r Solid State Science. F arris, who joined the ASU fa cility in 1957, has published m ore than 70 journal articles in die field o f transportation. H e has r e c e iv e d th e C o lle g e o f B u sin ess’ Distinguished Faculty Researcher Award, the ASU Alumni Association Outstanding F a cility Achievem ent Aw ard and was named Transportation Man of the Y ea r by th e In t e r n a t io n a l T r a n s p o r ta tio n Fraternity. F erry joined the faculty in 1983 and his work has advanced the understanding of interactions in dense integrated circuits that p la y an im portant ro le in the development of synthetic neural systems.. He has published m ore than 225 refered journal articles and earned fellowships in the Am erican Physical Society and the Institute o f E lectrica l and Electronic Engineers. K eller, who joined the ASU faculty in 1986, has ach ieved renow n fo r his works concerning Chicano literature and Hispanic education. He founded the Bilingual Press and the Bilingual Review , which are considered two of the greatest outlets for bilingual education. Lin, a m em ber o f the ASU faculty since TH The board also is expected to receive a report on financial aid services for m inority students as part of a continuing study of m inority recruitment and retention. H ie ASA report, which is prepared annually, called on the regents to use their influence over the universities’ programs to upgrade undergraduate education and develop a long-range plan fo r those improvements. “ Presen tly, the qu ality o f differen t aspects o f undergraduate education vary at the individual universities and within individual departments at each university,” the report said. P ro fe s s o rs _ ContliHM d from p a ge 8. YOU’RE INVITED TO OUR 1965, is internationally recognized for his Work in photo-chemistry, rate processes and multiphoton spectroscopy. He is a member of the Académ ica Sinica, the highest honor awarded a person o f Chinese descent for achievements in science, engineering and literature o f arts. Meyerson, a faculty member since 1962, is recognized for his sem inal contributions to the field o f somatepsychology. He is a Fellow o f the Am erican Psychological Association and is the founding editor of the journal Rehabilitation Psychology. M illar, a faculty member sincé 1954, . received prominence in 1960 for his political science book, “ The Am erican Voter.” He is a past president o f the American.. Political Science Association and the Social Science History Association. Moore joined the faculty in 1961 and has helped make ASU’s m eteorite collection the largest university collection in the world. M o ore s e rv e d as p resid en t o f the Arizona/Nevada Academ y of Science for the past eight yéars. Palumbo, who becam e an ASU faculty m em b er in 1983, is n oted fo r his co n trib u tio n s in the area o f policy evaluation, which have helped cla rify and rationalize many social service programs like drunk driver programs. He founded the Center fo r Public A ffairs and journal Policy Studies Review while he instructed at the U niversity o f Kansas. Stearns, a member of the ASU faculty since 1981, was the first physicist to explain why such m etals as iron, cobalt and nickel are permanent magnets — an explanation that eluded the science w orld for m ore than 40 years. She is a Fellow o f the Am erican Physical Society and has held a fellowship fro m th e A le x a n d e r von H u m boldt Foundation. ANNIVERSARY RASH! AFTER THE GOLD RUSH IS T H A N K IN G EVERYONE FOR A N O TH ER G REAT YEAR W ITH TH E VALLEY’S B IG G E S T CASH P R IZ E S F O R BEST BEACH A T T IR E A N D O THER S U R P R IS E S COVER WITH BEACH ATTIRE U FO ’S AND TH E HUMAN RACE H e ar th e fam ous lecturer and investigator of U F O s w ith over 4 0 years of research: Dr. Frank E. Stranges, Pli.D. • W ho is behind the UFO cover-up and conspiracy? • Why will this matter becom e so important to ail inhabitants o f planet Earth before the end of this century? • W ho are these “ out of this world” visitors? • What is the m essage they bring to the human race? • What are the time facts about this enduring enigma? • Do we have anything to fear? • What’s in this for you? HAWAIIN DRINKS •B lu e Hawaiins •P in a Coladas •B lueK am i-K azi’s •Sex on the Beach P lu s $ 1 .5 0 M ille r L ite A ll N ig h t! S e e color slides o f Interstellar S pacecraft and hear the astoun­ ding stories behind th ese close encounters as w e ’ll take you to things beyond your w ildest dream s. T h e facts w ill stagger your im agination!! J F rid a y, A p ril 2 2 ,1 9 8 8 , 7 :3 0 p .m . Safari Hotel « Donation $5 4611 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 968-2446 1216 E . Apache Blvd. State Press 80-year old man dies after being hit by car in crosswalk By MIKE BURGESS State Press An 80-year-old Tem pe man was killed Wednesday a fter he was struck by a car w hile crossing Rural Road at Spence Avenue, police said. Robert B. Rapp, of the 1500 block o f East W illiam s Street, was taken to Scottsdale M em orial Hospital where he died at 10:54 p.m. P olice said Rapp was walking east in a crosswalk at Rural when he was hit at about 1:48 p.m. by a southbound 1972 Dodge sedan driven by 43-year-old R ita C. Magana o f Tem pe. N o citations have been issued, and the accident is still under investigation. In other incidents: •A pizza delivery man was robbed o f $30 Wednesday by two men, including one who he said looked like Jed Clam pett o f the T V show “ The B everly H illbillies,” police said. P olice said the 21-year-old Domino’s delivery man was robbed at about 10:40 p.m. a fter he delivered a pizza to an apartm ent at Butterfield V illage, 4505 S. Hardy Drive. One suspect pretended he had a gun under his jacket while his accom plice said: “ G ive m e yotur money. I f you don’t, I ’D kick your ass.” police report They w ere last seen w alking casually out o f the parking lot. P olice said both suspects w ere Caucasians in their 30s. One suspect was 5 feet 10 inches ta ll and 180 pounds with short brown hair, a fu ll beard and a mustache. The second suspect w as 6 feet 3 inches tall and 175 pounds with brown shoulder-length hair and a mustache. Both are possibly transients, police said. •An 18-year-old Tem pe man was arrested and charged with " I I Two for One. I T F la vo r co n te s t w in n e r w ill b e se le cte d A p ril 30th a t 1 :^0 p.m . G uest judge; S heilah W agner M esa Tribune them,” police s a id ,. ¿ 'V One of the men fled and returned with a blowgun before police arrived and arrested Sutton without incident. The men told police they w ere chasing Sutton’s roommate bonpiwa. he had apparently been running up and down the halls disturbing tenants. •A Phoenix man and a juvenile w ere arrested early Thursday after they allegedly h ied to steal a m otorcycle from 1216 E . Vista D el Cerro and put it into the back o f their pickup truck, police said. % CONGRATULATIONS!! ON YOUR GRADUATION Rew ard yourself w ith a new P ontiac o r GM C Create Your Own Magic 600,000 Ice Cream Fantasies N o w W iza rd s Ic e C rea m M a gic is dou bly deliciou s w h en you b rin g th is coupon in to o u r store. T h e n y o u ll g e t th e second con e o f sam e o r less value absolutely free! A t W iza rd s w e cu stom blen d ice cream fla vo rs, ch oosin g va n illa o r ch ocolate ice cream , even van illa yo gu rt. W e add y o u r ch oice o f o u r fru its, nuts, candies, cook ies and special item s, blen din g yo u r com bin ation in to a personal ice cream fla v o r — served in a w a ffle con e o r b a sk et., to castrate two men using kitchen knives, police said. P o lice said Oscar W. Sutton, 1115 E . Lem on St., N o 411, was w afting toward the picnfc area a t Lem on T errace Club Apartments to cook some steaks, when his room m ate ran by with two men chasing him. Sutti?" allegedly stopped the men in an attem pt to protect his roommate and said, “ L et’s cut their balls o ff, let’s kill • Up to $1400 rebate • No paym ents fo r 90 days • No previous cred it needed Call S teven Colucci o r M ark Dom in fo r a ll th e d etails Expires April 30, 1988 P O N T IA C -G M C 937 E. B roadw ay P O N T IA C &. SE C o rn er B roadw ay R u ral, T em p e Beside W h ereh ou se R ecords & Tapes G ET A JU M P ON SU M M ER FREE R EN T!!! STA R T M O V IN G IN N O W ... A N D A V O ID TH E RUSH WhereìbuAIwaysGetThe Dea) YbuDeserve! 4635N.7th S t (Sa of Camelback) •264-2481 TR U C K T O N IT E Ü RAS I & GDUB PRODUCTIONS proudly presents Live from Jamaica BURNING SPEAR FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! and his 10 piece M O V IN G VAN AVAILABLE FOR M O V E -IN S BURNING BAND M OVE IN N O W A N D REC EIVE O N E M O N T H FREE RENT!! CALL US FOR DETAILS m C a ll and reserve yo u r u n it now ! v t in t e e t c p = M IN I= l/T O M C E 968-2212 1450 S. McCLINTOCK (Vis Block South of Apache Blvd.) Tempe, Arizona 85281 WE ACCEPT A ll sizes availab le! Friday, April 22,1988 TWO SHOWS: 8:00 p.m. anjd 10:30 p.m. Magic Tpuch 5025 N . 7th A v e .,- 265*0533 Tickets $14 at the door I arts & entertainment State Pire» fear and Loathing ‘FirstBlood’ author created a peace-lover in superhuman realm By DAVE MILLER Slate Pram “ Rambo” could be grading papers. It ’s entirely possible. H e sounds a bit flushed and could be in the m iddle o f a project requiring the verve of a college prof. H e gives o ff the same analytical a ir a teacher holding your grade in the balance might. Or he could be thihhing about wiping the floor with some commies. n It’s hard to tell the difference. Ón one hand, w riter David M orrell is an award-winning author and form er U niversity of Iowa professor. On the other he’s the author o f “ F irst Blood,” the novel that inspired Sylvester Stallone’s “ Rambo” and inadvertantly caused the screen deaths of 200,000 extras. Would such a dichotomy k ill a normal man? Probábly. But M orrell is not your everyday college professor and his characters are hardly normal. They’re also misunderstood, he says. The original Vietnam w ar protester o f “ F irst Blood” has become ‘ ’Rambo the Barbarian,” and gotten a bad rap in the process. “ A t the end o f the Rambo H book, I have Rambo explicitly denounce Am erica’s involvem ent in Nicaragua,” said M ortell, who w rote a “ Rambo H I” novel to accompany the film , due fo r release in M ay. “ He says A m erica’s involvem ent there is Vietnam a ll over again, and he asks ‘What’s the m atter with these politicians? They’re sending our men over to get killed in a foreign country.’ “ This is not a statement people who are casually aware of the character would fe e l he is capable o f making. But that’s the kind o f guy Rambo is. He just loathes being this w arrior.” M orrell could also loathe the Hollywood treatm ent o f his character, which moves his peace-lover into a superhuman realm , able to leap tall rednecks in a single bound and level the egos o f entire communist countries. It could be said Stallone has taken a few liberties with his character. But M orrell feels he’s been treated fairly. “ I feel closer to this one than I have to the others,” M orrell said. “ It was m ore o f a collaboration. “ You’v e gotta rem em ber the first objective of these people, the producers, is to make a state o f the art action adventure, and I think they do that clearly. “ However, the first one had the extra advantage that it played up the character. The second, I call ‘Star W ars in Vietnam .’ ” < This was where M orrell and Stallone’s Rambos differed. “ It’s ( “ Rambo I I ” ) essentially an anthology o f action, not a lot of characterization,” he said. “ (A fte r its release) the producers and Sly and I talked — they a ll agreed that maybe that other stuff should be brought in, and then, of course, w e got the backlash, which surprised the hell out o f everybody. “ Nobody thought w e w ere gonna be controversial. “ And they said ‘W e’ve got to be a little bit more prudent here, and they decided that they really wanted m ore characterization. “ To give you an exam ple, I haven’t seen ( “ Ram bo.H I” ) but I ’m told that in the beginning Rambo is in a Buddhist monastery in Bangkok. That’s how badly he wants to get away from the turm oil.” M orrell probably considered hiding away in a monastery him self follow ing the criticism of “ F irst Blood P a rt II.” Its creators w ere accused of everything from creating com m unist h ysteria to in citing violen ce to callin g inform ation fo r numbers easily found in the book. This tim e charges won’t be easily leveled, M orrell says. “ The natural thought here would be to say there w ill be accusations o f red-bashing,” M orrell said. “ But these have been offset by two facts: what the Soviets have done in Afghanistan is mind-boggling ( “ Rambo I I I ” is set in that country) — they’ve killed one m illion people, they’ve driven fiv e m illion out o f that country, either into Iran or Pakistan. On that level alone, this is a legitim ate evil. “ The other thing they’ve done is . . . tried hard not to make this like ‘Rambo Against the E vil Russian Em pire.’ They’ve tried to make it a personal story.” Most o f that care, and much of the work done on the project, can be attributed to Stallone. “ He’s really thrown him self into it, and he’s not at a ll difficu lt to work with,” M orrell says. “ H e is really a nice person, and I don’t understand this bashing he gets. “ (On the set) he never complained, never snarled — he wasn’t difficu lt. He said ‘A ll right, what do you need m e to do next?’ “ This is v a y personal to him.” M u s ic a lly n a u g h ty J e rk s th riv e on fa s t-p u ls e so u n d They have dominated the thrash/punk scene fo r quite some tim e. They’v e been labeled a cidtphenomenon. And their music is still tucking up speed. The Circle Jerks They are the members o f the C ircle Jerks, and they w ill perform tonight a t 7 at the VFW H all Post 720, 4853 E . Thomas Road. The C ircle Jerks, though m usically naughty, are a hardcore band that can screech guitar lides com parable to the speed o f light. W ell, m aybe not that fast. But the band feels confident in its underground role as a top cultish punk rock band. The Jerks’ music still contains the same originad, fastpulse sound, even after plowing through the punk domain fo r eight years now. But yes, the group has witnessed some changes. “ A I d o f kids are into speed m etal, which is a lot m ore com m ercial than hardcore punk,” guitarist G reg Hetson said when asked about the changes he’s experienced. “ When w e first started, there was a lot o f older people, but now the crow d is progressively younger,” he said. But despite the younger crowds, the typical underground thrasher is still looking fo r the rebellious sound of hardcore music, and the Circle Jerks don’t disappoint. . “ W e have the same attitude, but w e don’t play any 30-second songs anym ore,” Hetson said. What about the music? Com m ercially, hardcore punk seemed to die out some tim e ago. The media has abandoned the fam ed “ slam dancing” scare, and outrageous haircuts aw l heavy silver jew elry are now socially acceptable. But the Circle Jerks’ brand o f music has continued to grow, according to Hetson. “ It (the music) is the same intensity and the same concept,” Hetson said- “ You’re going to see pretty outfits or smoke bombs with us. But w e’ve evolved as song w riters.” Hetson also emphasized that the amount o f energy in today’s thrash music is as stro n gH iever. .' ,, * W e’re obnoxious,” Hetson said. “ W e’re loud and fast and rock.” But with a name like the C ircle Jerks, it’s no wonder the band has aroused some c o n tr o v e rs y . D e s p ite its o ffe n s iv e connotations, the name serves a purpose — it gets rem em bered. “ W e thought it was a silly name,” Hetson said. Being “ silly” has had its negative effects, too. The C ircle Jerks w ere actually banned from playing in Las Vegas last year. “ Because of our name — or really the meaning — w e couldn’t p lay,” Hetson said. “ I think they w ere afraid o f the hardcore. They w ere afraid o f the crowd.” * ‘Y ou’re n o t g o in g to see p re tty o u tfits o r sm oke bo m b s w ith us. B u t w e ’ve e vo lve d as so n g w riters. * The Las Vegas show, though, has been the only perform ance hindered fay the band’s name. And a fte r eig h t y e a rs o f p la yin g increasingly faster sounds and banging heads at top speed, the band is still heading in the sam e direction — only faster, harder and louder. “ I can sit around home and play m ellow ,” Hetson said. “ I enjoy the energy, and people enjoy the energy I put out, so why ruin a good thing?” Morrissey’s heartbreak anthems in the contracted words. “ Viva H ate’’ Morrissey ★ ★ ★ By MISHTELL State Press “ The Smiths w ere almost like a painting. E very month you’d add a little here and a little th e re. . . but it wasn’t complete, and it w as whipped a w a y ," said M orrissey, form er lead vocalist o f the Smiths. Ironically, M orrissey must enjoy painting because his debut solo L P , “ V iva H ate,” is a lithograph of early Smiths m aterial. Lyrically, M orrissey has expanded to m ore prophetic concepts than when he wrote for the Smiths. But listeners may wonder, is the vocalist really happy without the Smiths, or does he have regrets? The lyrics to “ Break Up the Fam ily " a r e a prim e exam ple of M orrissey’s confusion. “ Im so glad to grow older to m ove away from those younger years. Now Im in love fo r the firs t tim e, and I dont feel bad/ L e t m e see m y old frien d s— le t m e put m y arm s around them because I rea lly do love them now/Does that seem m ad?” Notice the artistic absence o f apostrophes . v <- n : Many of the songs on the L P head in this direction. But though the lyrics reveal a different, m ore personal point of view , the album is nothing less than pure M orrissey, and it is undeniably reminiscent of that sincere Smiths sound. “ The Ordinary Boys” is a score that could have easily been a big jukebox hit in the e a r ly - ’ 50s. The ballad, though m ore profound than an old-time m ellow doo-wop, has that “ Put Your Head on M y Shoulders” drag to it. . . , “ Alsation Cousin” and “ Suedehead” are typical heartbreak anthems. “ Alsation Cousin,” though w ritten in conversational form , wallops precision, well-thought-out guitar. The collaboration between the music and the anger in M orrissey’s voice in this song depicts a strong em otional edge present in the entire album’s music. Other songs like “ Everday is Sunday” , “ I Dont Mind If You Forget M e” and “ L ittle Man. What Now?” prove M orrissey’s vocal capabilities are still true to his art. M orrissey has taken a painter’s m allet and replicated the Smiths, but using his own true colors. with hairy legs and chests stuffed into 6h-so-feminine pnfitiimps w ill grace the Gammage stage tonight when the New York dance troupe Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo tiptoes into the Valley. The show starts at 8 p.m. and tickets range from $12to$22. For information call 381-0184. ■ »v_: ___ v\ W ♦ •L ive from Jam aica: Burning Spear (his mother knows him as Winston Rodney) and his 10-piece Burning Band w ill breeze into the V alley tonight with hot reggae sounds fresh from the islands. You can catch them at the M agic Touch, 5025 North Seventh A ve., from 8:30 to 11 p.m. F o r m ore information call 265-0533. •“ La Cage aux Folles” revisited: It’s ballet with a twisted new perception. Bulky ballerinas •“ V ertigo:” James Stewart stars in this 1958 Hitchcock thriller about a retired police detective with a dizzying fea r of heights. The staircase scene and twisted ending are unrivaled, and Kiin Novak is at her seductive best. Showtime is 8 tonight and Saturday at The Scottsdale C e n t« for the Arts. Tickets are $2.50, $2 for students. For m ore information call 994-ARTS. •Cosby fans, jazz groupies unite: Grammy-winning jazz vocalist (a.k.a. Claire Huxtable’s dad on “ The Cosby Show” ) Joe W illiam s and singer Dianne Reeves w ill team up fo r some steamy jjazz Saturday at the Scottsdale Center for the Arts. They w ill jam through two shows at 7 and 10 p.m. Tickets are $15. F o r m ore information call 994-ARTS. •Culture at Hayden H ie next tim e you’re strolling through Hayden, stop by the display tables in the lobby and indulge in the talents o f ASU’s Creative W riting Department. The cases feature poetry from ASU w riters and poets the department has brought to campus for special readings. The poems are presented as true works of art on beautifully decorated pages and provide a unique cultural excursion. •Victorian vices and virtues: . The final performances of L O T ’S production of Benjamin Britten’s com ic opera, Albert Herring, w ill be held in the ASU Music Theatre tonight and Saturday at 8. Tickets are $9.50 and $5 for students. F or m ore inform ation call 965-3434 or 267-1246. $1 RfiminGO HKUTM SHOT SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER ON $10 W A S H & C U T STYLE Reg. $15-117 xm $10 $35.00 M ANICURES SILKW RAPS R eg. $45.00 FOR YOUR NEXT APPOINTMENT CALL 966-1391 OPEN M O N .-S A T. 965 E. LEM ON f ir s t t im e c l ie n t s o n l y C oupon Exp. M ay 1st at lauern R u ra l & A p a c h e BOYSENBERRY KAMAKAZIS $195 BBQ BEEF W /C H IPS UtteIE Your Campus Hair Care Center 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe In trod u cin g N a ils b y K e lly 968-5946 With This Ad $500 O F F With Participating Stylists R E G U L A R P R IC E S •Shampoo •Precision Cut ¡SM •Condition »Blow Dry M E N 514 • W O M EN *1 6 O PE N M O N D A Y TH RO U G H SATU R D AY T U E S ., W E D . & T H U R S . T IL L 9 P .M . 1977. C a m p B e v e r l y H il l s 10% off any item w ith an A.S.U. student I.D. M odem clothes for the entire family: toddlers, children, women and men. Camelview Plaza/70th St. & Camelback Rd./Scottsdale/990-0770 Second level (across from Bullocks). Open every day, Thurs. & Fri. until 9 pm. S t f _________________ F rid a y , A p r il 2 2 ,1 9 8 8 P a^ e 1^ Poet’s Corner: Prolific lyrics w ith ja zzy versa tility By JESSIE SIMON . " Stats Press Superstitious people have declared the number seven “ lucky.” But the seven members o f Poet’s Corner, who w ill play Saturday night at The Sun Club, 1001 E. Eighth St., don’t need Superstition or luck to know they have a good thing going. The musicians believe their satiric, socially conscious music appeals to a ll groups. They typically attract crowds ranging “ from the jazz people to the ihohawks, ages 10 to 60,” drummer Steve B otterw ig said. “ There are a lot o f people who a re serious heavy m etal, punk people, and those people just don’t grasp us. “ W e did a g ig at The Jamaican with A zz Izz, and w e didn’t go over at a ll,” he continued. “ They wanted to hear reggae, and w e go in there and start cranking out our bizarre musk: to a dining crowd, trying to eat creole food and digest our music. “ P ete (Cannon, vocalist,) sa id ,‘ Go ahead and eat your dinner realm ng there are people starving a ll over this world. For our next number . v .’ There w ere people laughing at us. You could see them.” ¡SS music Along with Bottdrwig, the members of P o e t’ s Corner are trom bonist M ark Perschbacher, saxophonist G reg Lyko, trumpeter Rich Cross, bassist D arryl Icard and “ head poet” Peter Cannon. The m ajority o f the lyrics are written by Cannon, who, his bandmates contend, “ has no musical talent whatsoever.” Cannon claims he gets his ideas “ by w a tc h in g C N N . T h e y c o m e fr o m everyw here — from personal life, from what I see, discussions with friends.’ ’ ' But he insists that, aside from hipiself, the band perform s flawlessly. ' T ’m the only one onstage who ever makes mistakes, and these guys are com pletely cool,” he said. “ They just go, ‘Oh, P ete’s fucking up again.’ “ Fortunately, not that many people know the lyrics, so, you know . . . ” But whether they know the lyrics or not, the words are worth listening to. 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WITH OEATH |P6) 4:15.8:00 JOHNNY BE GOOD IPGI31.2:00.5:45,9:30 18 AGAIN |P6L 3:45,7:30 State Pro» Friday, April 22.1988 ASU, Stanford collide ^ " ‘Shorts Sun Devils to play annual spring game The annual ASU maroon and gold football game will be held at 7:30 p.m. today at Dobson High School in Mesa. There will be no admission charge. The Sun Devils’ scrimmage is the final drill of the 21 days of practice allotted for the spring. Making his apppearance after a long waiting period is quarterback Daniel Ford. Last year’s Freedom Bowl MVP was granted one final year of eligibility by the NCAA after appealing the first decision declaring him ineligible to play for ASU this season. H ow ever; hot playing in the scrimmage is nose tackle Richard Davis. The Jenks, Okla., native broke his elbow in the final scrimmage preparing for the spring game. Davis, who missed last season because of a broken elbow, reinjured his elbow during the first play. The 1988 season will mark coach Larry Marmie’s inaugural year at the Sun Devil helm. He was named head coach after serving as the defensive coordinator for the past two years under former ASU coach John Cooper, who is now at Ohio State, ASU ticket holders gain priority tor Cards PHOENIX (AP) -!» A judge ruled Thursday that an estimated 55,000 season-ticket holders to Arizona State University football games are entitled to priority rights on the purchase of tickets for the NFL’s Phoenix Cardinals. Maricopa County Superior Court Judge William Sargeant III granted a motion dismissing both ASU and its main athietic booster organization, the Sun Angel Foundation, as defendants in a lawsuit filed by a group called Sportsfans for Equal Access to Ticket Selection, Or SEATS. However, Sargeant refused to grant a motion for dismissal filed by the defunct USFL Arizona Outlaws, whose owners, creditors, former employees and fans own about 11,800 season tickets sold for the team. The. judge ordered a hearing in his court to determine the validity of a 1986 contract between ASU and the Outlaws granting Outlaws season-ticket holders first priority on tickets for any future NFL franchise playing at ASU's Sun Devil Stadium in suburban Tempe., A ruling regarding Outlaws ticket holders is expected today. in battle for 1st place By DEAN GYORGY State Press The race for the Six-Pac crown heats up this weekend as first- place ASU and second-place Stanford clash in a three-game series in Palo Alto, Calif. ASU (43-8 overall, 14-7 in the SixP a c) is riding a ¿-ga m e winning streak, the second longest in school history. D efendin g n ational cham pion Stanford (29-14,13-8) is coming o ff a weekend in which it won three o f four games on the road. “ I think w e’re healthy and as ready, as w e’ll ever be,” Stanford coach Mark Marquess said. ASU swept the Cardinal earlier this season at Packard Stadium by scores of 9-1,11-10 and 10-7. Marquess said his team is anxious to play but not frothing at the mouth. “ I wouldn’t say it’s ‘revenge’ , b u f w e don’t like to get swept by anybody,” he said. “ W e want to play, w ell, and w e’d like to bounce back and win a few against them.” I f ASU is to continue its recent d o m in a n c e , it c o u ld ta k e a commanding lead, with only six conference games to play after this weekend. "Y o u ’re getting towards the end,” Marquess said. “ I f they (the D evils) win two out of three, or sweep us, it would be real tough to catch them.” A t one point, the goal for the D evils was to just m ake the playoffs. But now, the conference championship is within reach. “ (A S U ) is p la y in g w e ll, ” Marquess said, “ to come back from 2-7 and win 12 in a row in our conference, especially this year — because I think it ’s the most balanced it’s ever been — is quite an accomplishment.” T h e 12 s tra ig h t c o n fe re n c e victories ties a Six-Pac record, set by the 1981 National Champion Sun Devils. “ This has been an am azing six weeks fo r our club,” ASU coach Jim Brock said. “ Sweeping four quality conference teams in a row is sim ply u n b e lie v a b le . I t ’ s a m a jo r accomplishment to sweep a single series in this league, not to mention four. This team does what it takes to win each day about as w ell as any team I ’ve ever had.” ASU’s expected pitching rotation fo r the series is: Bias M inor (5-1, 2.36) (m Ftiday, Linty Ingram (13-2, 3.15) on Saturday and Gordy Farm er (5-0,3.77) on Sunday. Stanford w ill counter with Mike Mussina (8-1, 3.77), Lee P lem el (6-6, 5.18) and Stan Spencer (4-1,2.97). Notes— •In his last three starts, Farm er is 3-0 with a 1.44 E R A and 28 strikeouts in 25 innings. •Dan Rumsey, who leads the team with 57 R B I, hit three homeruns in his first 36 games. He has hit six in his last 15. •Steve W illis leads the club in hitting (.384), doubles (20) and multiple-hit gam es (23). •Linty Ingram leads the Pac-10 in wins (13), strikeouts (103), com plete gam es (8 ) and innings pitched (122%). He is 20-3 since March 31, 1987. ?I Drenched Sun Devil golfer Tom Stankowsld putts onto the green during the soggy first round of the Sun Devil/Phoenix Thunderbird Golf Classic at McCormick Ranch Golf Club. Stankowsld fired a 69 and is tied for first in the three-day event. ASU is in second place behind Oklahoma State. ASU gymnasts ready for Championship test By GARY JACKSON State Press The NCAA Championship m eet creates tremendous tension fo r those who qualify, except fo r the ASU women’s gymnastics team, assistant coach Lisa Zeis said. “ I think the girls are as ready as they have ever been,’ ’ Zeis said. “ They’re really «(c ite d and pumped. Hopefully w e can take advantage o f that in Utah and have a good m eet.” ASU is seeded No. 9 o f12 team rcom peting in nationals. The m eet is designed to have the No. 7 through 12 teams competing this morning and the top-six perform ing in thé afternoon at Salt Lake (Sty» Utah. “ I f w e hit our routines, w e have as good a chance to win as anyone,” she said. “ It’s just going to com e down to which team hits.” The 12 teams w ill com pete today fo r the national title, and the fop-10 gymnasts from each event advance to the finals in hopes of a ch ievin g in d ivid u a l re co g n itio n on Saturday. • j£ a g N w -s weekend ASU sports BASEBALL - The third-ranked Sun DevNe bring their 23gam s winning streak to the Bay Area as ASU battles second place Stanford today- through Sunday a t Palo Alto, Calif. MEN'S G O L F - T h e second-ranked ASU m en's g o tftM m continues play at the Sun OeviVPhoenbt Thunderbird Classic today and Saturday at McCormick Ranch G olf Club In Scottsdale. TENNIS — The m en's and women’s tennis teams continue play a t the Pac-10 Championships today through Sunday at p ta i, CaHf. SOFTBALL - The ASU softbaH foam travels west to battle top-ranked UCLA in a doubleheader today at Los Angeles. WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS - The ASU wom en'* gymnastics team competes in the NCAA Championships today and Saturday at S alt Lake City, Utah. TRACK AND FIELD - The ASU track and field teams participate at the ML SAC relays Saturday and Sunday at W alnut, CaW. , a — The top-eight gymnasts in each event receive All-Am erica honors. Zeis said the Sun D evils are prepared for the competition and have a good attitude going into the championship meet. “ John (Coach Spini) has been telling them to have a good tim e and to relax,” Zeis said. “ You can’t go in there a ll stressed out thinking this is the last m eet.” The ASU gymnasts are fired up and cannot w ait to compete, despite being in the second rotation, which was a setback for the team, Zeis said. “ Usually the scores are a little low in the first rotation,” she said. “ The judges are just starting, and the scores are a little tight.” Sophomore M olly Carpenter said the Sun D evil gymnasts are confident about their possibilities even though the teams in the first rotation are not expected to do as well. “ Last year w e w ere in a better position to w in, being in the second rotation ,” Carpenter said. “ It takes a lot o f pressure o ff being in the first rotation, and w e are a better team than our ranking.” All-Am erica K a rli Urban said the first ro ta tio n is v e r y c o m p é titiv e . But considering the disadvantages of being in the second, the Sun D evils should just try to perform clean routines and hope for the best, she said. “ This is going to be a fun m eet because there is no pressure on us to do w ell,” Urban said, “ Everyone is psyched, and I think we m ight surpass some people.” The Sun D evils have been consistent in the last four meets, and the experience of competing in nationals last year should im prove their chances o f receiving top scores, Zeis said. “ W e look 100 percent better than last year — everyone is ready,” Urban said. “ I think everyone on the team has a good chance of being an All-Am erica.” Urban, who finished fourth on the balance beam, and sophomore Suzy Baldock, who took fourth on the vault, received AllAm erica honors in the championships last W e lo o k 100 p e rc e n t b e tte r than la s t y e a r— everyone is ready. I th in k everyone on th e team has a g o o d chance o f b e in g an A ll-A m erican. ’ — K a rli U rban u.% “ Even if they (the Sun D evils) don’t place high, they should still be happy if they hit their routines.” H ie chances o f advancing should be even fw all o f the gymnasts, no m atter what section they are in, Carpenter said. “ It w ill be up to the judging,’ ’ she said. “ It should be equal. I f you hit your routines, you should deserve to go into the finals.” Senior M ichele Hanigsberg w ill make her fin a l bid fo r A ll-A m erica status on Saturday. H anigsberg redsh irted last season because of injuries. ASU had six freshmen on the squad that 'fin is h e d f if t h a t th e 1987 N C A A C h a m p ion sh ip s. S op h om ore C o le tte Urban said she is hoping to be recognized Turn to G YM NASTS, page 1 ». year«, 5 Michèle Hanigsberg fo r her abilities in m ore events this weekend. “ I ’d like to end up in up in the top-three in the all-around,” Urban said. “ I ’d like to be an All-Am erica in the flo w , beam and vault.” Baldock, who is not competing because of an injury, said it w ill be m ore difficult fw the Sun Devils to earn that status this year since they are in the first section. “ It ’s going to be really hard because of the section they are in,” Baldock said. “ K arli would easily be an All-Am erica in the allaround if she was in the first section.” Im pressive routines by ASU and U CLA could persuade the judges to give higher scores in the first rotation, Baldock said. “ It ’s going to be tough, but hopefully the scores w ill be raised with the help of U CLA,” Baldock said. “ Everybody knows how good they are. . . Friday. April gg, 1968 A p p lic a tio n s a v a ila b le fo r S u n D evil fo o tb all tic k e ts By DAVE HODGES State Presa It m ay only be A pril, but it is tim e to begin thinking about ASU football. Applications are now available fo r students who wish to order season tickets for the 1988 season. But ASU officials wanted to make sure that there was not a repeat of last year’s “ riot” during ticket sales. Last season, many people camped out and stood in the hot August sun. fo r m ore than 12 hours in an effo rt to buy tickets to Sun D evil football games. This season, ASU has devised a plan that would keep w aiting in lines down to a minimum w hile still ensuring that people who want the tickets the most w ill be able to purchase them. Diane Y eager, Sim D evil Ticket O ffice manager, said ASU officials form ed a com m ittee last year after the August innirient, to form ulate a different ticket distribution procedure. “ W e tried to com e up with a policy that would elim inate lines people had to w ait in,” Y eager said. Under the new policy, students must m ail the applications, with payment, to the Sun D evil Ticket O ffice. But the office w ill not accept any applications unless thay are postmarked between June 1 and June 30. The first 10,000 applicants w ill receive tickets. “ I think it w ill help as fa r as lines go,” Y eager said. T h e stu d en t tic k e ts a re g e n e r a l admission, and the cost of the season tickets is $25 fo r a six-gam e home schedule. ASU’s home season begins on Sept. 10 against Illinois and concludes Nov. 12 against Southern California. In between, the Sun D evils face Colorado State, New M exico, Washington and Oregon State. Y eager said incoming freshmen w ill be aide to fill out applications in brochures that are being sent to them. Confirmation receipts w ill be sent to those students re c e iv in g tick ets, and any applicants not receiving tickets w ill have their checks and applications returned. G ym nasts__ Continued fro m p a ge IS . the e x p e rie n c e a t n a tio n a ls last year w ill reduce the tension for the Sun D evils this tim e around. “ Since a ll o f us have been there before, except for M ichelle Colavin, it w ill be an advantage.” Anderson said. “ But I think M ich elle w ill be able to handle the pressure.” Colavin, the only freshman on the squad, A n d e rso n s a id said she is not intim idated by a large crowd and, in fact, prefers to have one during meets. ASU is fam iliar with the teams competing, which should also help to ease the tension. “ W e know exactly who w e’re going up against,” Colavin said. “ W e have competed against most of the teams during the season.” A n d erso n s a id a la r g e cro w d is Papa Jay's Pizza HANDM ADE NEW YORK STYLE PIZZA e O Q C B HP B HB BBO aO B O DOOO SERVING ASU SINCE 1972 804 S. ASH, TEMPE HOURS . FA S T FREE D E U V E R Y $4.95 M in im u m Food O rd e r (L im ite d Free D e live ry A rea) 2 LARGE CHEESE PIZZAS M on.-Thürs. 4-12 Friday 4-1 Saturday 12-1 Sunday 12-12 ' Distribution o f tickets w ill begin during the first week o f classes, and pick-up dates w ill be assigned alphabetically, according to the first letter o f the student’s last name. A through H distribution w ill be Aug. 25 and 26,1 through P on Aug. 29 and 30, and Q through Z on Aug. 31 and Sept. 1. “ W e’re spreading out distribution so everybody won’t be there at the same tim e,” Y eager said. Ticket applicants must be full-tim e ASU students (seven or m ore hours). Any unclaimed tickets w ill go on sale to students Sept. 3. Y ea g er said she expects Sun D evil Stadium to be sold out fo r the entire season, even w ith the 2,000-seat expansion. “ W e’re working on our w aiting list,” she said. “ W e’re coming close to being sold out again.” Y eager said sales to the public often dictate how student sales w ill go. “ G enerally you can get a feel by what the public does,” she said. “ I didn’t expect quite as much of the demand as w e had last m otivational, even fo r the visiting teams. “ I think it helps when the crowd is involved,” Anderson said. “ The crowd w ill be up fo r whoever does w ell, as w ell as the home team (U tah ).” Carpenter said the ASU gymnasts are excited to compete. “ The last three meets o f the season are 1988 ASU FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Sept. 24 Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Oct. 1S Oct. 22 O ct. 29 Nov. 6 Open Date at Arizona year.” Y eager said the com m ittee contacted various schools with high attendances in an attempt to get ideas on how to distribute tickets, but she said almost every school conducted sales differently. “ You really don’t know what’s going to happen until w e go through with it,” she said. “ I f w e need to make changes, w e w ill.” Ticket applications are available at the M U, Sun D evil Ticket O ffice and various residence halls. always spread w it — it builds up the intensity,” she said. Anderson said the ASU gymnasts w ill be aggressive in their routines. The Sun D evils could take the title if they hit their routines like they have been in the gym , she said. “ I think w e’re peaking at the right tim e,” Anderson said. “ W e’ve had some good workouts a ll week.” The Army Reserve’s Tuition Assistance Program offers Reservists financial help in meeting bills at nearby colleges, trade schools, art schools and business schools. You train one weekend a month, usually, plus two weeks annual training, and you’ll be putting extra money in your pocket—over $80 per weekend. The smart move is to call us right now at: 967-1611 OREGON STATE SOUTHERN CAL Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Nov. 26 TAKE THE COURSE. WE'LL PAY FOR IT. 2020 S. Mill Ave., Su 102 ILLINOIS COLORADO STATE at N ab n ik a NEW MEXICO W ASHINGTON at Stanford at W ashington Stata at Oregon S apt.10 Sept. 17 flttQ n Q vil C n a rlf EAST VALLEY’S BEST 2 DRAFTS SI .30 4-7 PJL. 2 Satellites 6 Screens I t ALLTOUCAN ML A R M Y RESERVE. O N L Y $ 6 . 0 0 + TAX TOPPINGS $1.00 EXTRA PER PIZZA 966-1003 o r 966-4292 ST. GEORGE’S UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Affiliated Hospitals in G REN AD A ST. V IN C E N T New York State New Jersey Great Britain • T h e G eneral M ed ical C ou ncil o f G reat B ritain o ffic ia lly recognized St. G eorge’s U niversity on February 9, 1988. • A p p roved February 4, 1987 by the N ew York State Educa­ tion D epartm ent fo r the purpose o f conducting a clin ical clerkship program in N ew York teaching hospitals. • St. G eorge’s received a sim ilar approval in 1985 from the New Jersey Board o f M ed ical Exam iners. • O ver 700 students have transferred to U.S. m edical schools. • St. G eorge’s has graduated over 1,275 physicians: T h ey are licensed in 45 states; Th ey h old facu lty position s in 22 U.S. m edical schools; 25% have gon e on to be C h ief Residents in their specialty? (♦accordin g to a 1986 survey.) • St. G eorge’s students qu alify fo r Guaranteed Student Loans. O u r students also q u a lify fo r the P L U S / A L A S loans and, under certain conditions, V A loans. St. G eorge’s grants loans and scholarships to entering students. For information please contact: S t George’s University School o f Medicine O ffice o f Admissions, Dept. 488 c/o FMSSC • One East Main Street Bay Shore, N Y 11706 • (516) 665-8500 Student Alumni Association Congratulates -------- — New ---- ------------ Initiates Jill Moshier Leslie Day Brad Goff Usa Pershing Chris Powell Thomas Helms Suzie Valdez Mike Rich Brian Roper Mike Savioe Karen Koerper Kevin Dorian Glen DeBusschere Russell Dawn Usa Leightman Eric Rumbold Catherine Coffey Greg Johnson r Lauren Browning Charles S. Hopkins "and also returning Board M em bers jja g e jr S tate P re st National pastime suffers as Ueberroth wheels and deals Dave Bigos A sst. Sports Editor Step right up ladies and gentleman and see the Amazing Peter transform the national pastim e right before your very eyes. That’s right, P eter Ueberroth, the commissioner of hflgphali, is turning the gam e into a carnival attraction. Somehow, through a series o f artful moves, Ueberroth has managed to get tine umpires and owners to cater to his every whim. Before P ete had even seen his first gam e as commissioner, he was wheeling and dealing with the umpires — laying out a new foundation to keep the boys in blue a happy crew. He even talked a few o f them (and how many umpires take criticism w ell?) into losing a bunch of unsightly pounds. The rewording and subsequent enforcement of the balk rule pretty much lets runners steal at w ill. A new strike zone, made to benefit pitchers, has done just the opposite. M e n -W o m e n ' UNDER Per Day 9 6 8 -2 6 8 8 829-1966 R e n ta l N e tw o rk (E a st o f A fte r th e G o ld R ush) W A W tO P L A T E AGAIN? ....... 1324 W . University (just east of Priest) 1250 E. Apache, 104 Mon-Sat 10-6 BUY • SELL • TRADE INew Location $1.16 C .C .’s Closet Classics A t this rate, and by using purely scientific and mathematical means, the M ajor League E R As in the year 2000 w ill be about 6.5 in the National League and over 7 in the always pitching-dominated Am erican League. How can anyone expect to see expansion when the teams can’t even fill a decent starting rotation now? The w ay the hitters are taking advantage of this situation, LIQUORS & MKT. Rental S ell us your sum m er clothes! Face it, the pitching situation in M ajor League Baseball is garbage. In 1987, the ERAs o f the National and Am erican leagues w ere 4.08 and 4.46 respectively. Just three years earlier, those ERAs w ere 3.59 and 3.99. RUNDLE’S VCR NEED CASH? Let’s see now. With the urgings o f Pete, w e have the umpires calling balks m ore often than the Bleacher Bums in W rigley call for beer, and the new strike zone has made pitchers about as com fortable as Bob Knepper at a “ Women in the W orkplace” seminar. Ueberroth also managed to dangle a pretty big carrot in front of the owners. He’s telling them that they’ll be able to receive, at the very least, a 33 percent revenue increase from television contracts if they “ tailor” their product to the audience. And what better w ay to appeal to the mass audience than with action — runs, hits, stolen- bases, you know, arena baseball. Pitching? Defense? Nah. Meister Brau 12 pk....... $3.76 Andre Champagnes ............. $2.96 Sauza Tequila 375 m i........... $3.52 Milwaukees Best e pk...... .. $1.69 Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 imported Beers. 967-9079 C ha n g in g H ands 414 M ill A venu e 986-0203 O ld Tow n Tem ps JOHN’SSHOE& LUGGAGEREPAIR •O rthopedic W ork •C om plete Line O f Shoe Care Products •B irkenstock Repair •H a t B locking ^C le a n in g If The Shoe Fits, Repair It A t John’s! 1 0 % o ff w ith this ad. 'C H E O A S IS ¡MAGERYI MiöOJe EasteRN SupenManket V W V (S ave $200°°) T o w n & C o u n try H onda 1701 N . A rizo n a A ve. • 89 9-9 08 8 3 m iles south o f S u p e rstitio n on C o u n try C lub Fajita Prima 2 Taccs for 99 cents & Free Refills cn Larne Sett Drinks •Faiafel, Tahini •Vegetarian •Indian, Oriental Foods •Herbs & Spices •Custom Meat Order 616 S. FoRGSt, T e m p e • 966-9429 DESIG N CU TS: SH O R T H A H $ 1 2 , LONG H AIR $ 1 5 < O Q Q O O W S a la r v i M a u R e t •Halal Meats •Lamb, Goat •Chicken, Beef •Fresh Dates •Pita Bread H onda Scooters ALL MODELS ON SALE from o n ly (N o t g o o d w ith a n y o th e r o ffe r.) PERSONAL U S B N. SC O T T SD A LE RD. A T C U R R Y , 9 8 1 -7 3 8 1 T R A C M opeds 967-9101 CALL FOR WAKE-UP SERVICE REDESIGN NEW IMAGES OF YOURSELF The STATE PRESS has a F R E E Lost ft Found, section in our C la ssified s. Com e down to Matthews Center Basement or call 965-6731 to place a free Lost ft Found ad. (S.E. C om er Univ. & Priest) Do you occasionally find yourself still snooz­ ing when that early morning class is o v e r.. .or your • important meeting has started without you?? S I a Tu o i n Ì Lost your wallet? Found a jacket? 1335 W. University, Tem pe ~.............•-•••••..................— 46 8 -9 7 3 3 DON’T BE LATE AGAIN! Your books at Changing Hands. For quality doth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) w e pay 30% o f our re­ sale price in cash o r 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the state. (Sorry, no tradeins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three boors oh •N ew & Used Books •Art Prints & P ostal« •Calenders & Cards •Handbound Journals M -F 10V SAT 1 M SUN 14-5 they m ight as w ell be playing tee-ball. Why not just put the designated hitter on the mound and do aw ay with pitching altogether? Better yet, the center Beider could probably use the company. Skillful defensive alignments? Why bother positioning players when the balls are going over the fences every thin! pitch? G ive the center fielder a seat in the bleachers. H e’d have a better shot of catching a ball out there. Managers don’t even have to think about strategy any more. They have their computers to do that fo r them. Too bad the computers can’t teach (hem how to act in the several com m ercials they’ve been talked into. When it comes to acting, these guys have the charisma o f roadkiil. For those o f us who enjoy a ll the aspects Of the gam e, Ueberroth’s transformation is a joke. Then there are the ones who say that the gam e is too slow and, God forbid, dull. But the idiot-savants of the sport know better. Baseball is supposed to be laid back. It’s a gam e. I ’d k ill fo r a pair of masterful pitching performances that would result in a 1-0 contest now and then. How could that be boring? I ’m sure that if I learned the ins and outs o f knitting, it would no longer seem boring to me. I would probably spend thousands o f hours creating fabulous quilts. It’s just a m atter o f giving it a chance — as is. . Peter, if it ain 't broke, don’t fix it! Cornerstone Rural ft University ' 921-1239 T a k e o u t O rder« W e lco m e Fast 8 Fresh make the difference P resen ts -PIP OCTOBERLEABOE SULHIELIVE! PHOENIX E S DAIHATSU H P CHARADE BY DIAHATSU $129 $129 DOWN PER MONTH ISLAND FEVER C O N TIN U E S A T BANDER'S WE BE JAMMIN. . . T H i 20TH INIC R N A T I O N A L TOURNEE OF animation C'1987 Expended.Entertainment Stk.# Phone 279-0585 12th St. & Camelback at Coulter Cadillac Paym ent« $ 1 » dn * 80 mos. ot $129 plus ta* & ' > nn l T n t a l n i n a u fiu m tl J0046 CRAWLING DISTANCE FROM SUN DEVIL STADIUM Friday thru Sunday 7 and 9:30 p.m. Adm ission $ 2 .5 0 ($1 with sem ester pass) Located in th e M U C inem a ENDS SUNDAYI C L A S S IF IE D S START HERE motorcycles fo r sale tickets for sale apartments fo r rent 1982 HONDA M agna 760cc. 1300 miles, mint condition, $1900.921-1950. PINK FLOYD tickets for sale. 6th row bleacher seats, Monday night. Best offer. $190 MONTHLY- Includes utilities, Have own bedroom , share bathroom. Need non-smoking lady. Oozy, d o s e to ASU. _________ ’ Cad 9665420. Call 8267813. 1964 KAW ASAKI Q PZ 1100.11,000 miles. New rear tire. $1606/offar. 7846185. announcements BUSINESS MAJORS needed! Volunteer positions on the Sun Devil Spark Year­ book business staff offer students hand-on experience in business and leadership skills. Positions on the 1968-1989 staff are now available. Applications are being taken until May 10,1988 for Ad Manager, A tf Reps and Marketing Reps. For more information call 965-6881. FREE GRAND Opening. New location special. Contact lenses, buy 1 pair of daily wear, $39.95, get one pair free. Som e restrictions apply. National Eye and Ear, 987-3197.___________ ___________________ _ SCOTTSDALE MARINE Center presents: 1968 water skis from HO- ConnettyKidder- M astercraft. ASU ski dem o special, $5 with student ID. 483-8538. 1965 HONDA A ero 80, rad, looks/runa great! Low m iles, helmet, ASU Decal. $450. 9661826._______________ _________ 1985 HONDA Elite 80 Scooter. Great condition, runs great. Must sell. 9667702. 1966 HONDA Rebel 2 5 6 Low miles, excellent condition. Many extras. $1000 FtN K FLO YD tickets fo r Monday night show, 6th row, four in ad, sed separately? 431-1585._____________________ __________ real estate fo r sale 40 FOOT 2 tip-out. Awnings, skirting and shed. $7500totter. Cad after 6 p.m. 9661775. _________ - ________ __ firm. Call Jett, 921-2582. 1907 HONDA Magna, 5000 mdes. Candy apple red. Center line rear wheel. $3500. Call Leonard, 461-0107 or leave m essage. A S S U M A B L E . N O -Q U A L IF Y IN G 2 bedroom condo. Vaulted ceiling, new carpet. Near McCdntock and Broadway. $2400 CTM, 10.5% $62,900 by owner. 9666347. AERO 125 Scooter, red, low m ileage, excellent condition. $72S. Call Mike, 967- 3578._______________________________ AERO 125 Scooter, excellent condition, gold. $650. Cad 8261369 or 967-2732, leave m essage, phone number. STATE PRESS Classified Advertising is now located a! the South end o f Matthew’s Center basem ent. W e’re open 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday. Com e see us soon! ELITE 250. G reat com M onl $1100 or best otter. 9667702, 921-182H ____________ WANTED: MODELS for advanced haircut­ ting and perming classes. Contact Ricar­ do, 4-6 p.m. daily, 877-2568. 921-3074.________ _______________________ W E W ANT your testimonial about an item you sold with a State Press classified ad. And w e're going to give you a free liner ad for your time! Stop by the State Press classified offices in the south entrance (room 46) o f Matthews Center basement for details. area. 894-0531, HONDA SPREE red, brand new, only 7.7 m iles. Prize from raffle. $500 or best. MOTOBECAN MOPED 1976 Runs, but needs to be cleaned. $170. Great for ASU NSR INTERCEPTOR 500. Flawless. Must see. Call for details. With trailer. $2300. 968- 8252. __________________ bicycles for sale LIGHT W EIGHT tw elve-speed “ Trek " bicycle. Excellent condition, few miles. G R AD U ATIO N ANNOUNCEMENTS! N ow available M EN 'S UNIVEGA 10-speed. Maroon, 23” fram e, good condition. $100, 965-4019, 9661663.________________________________ Student Book Center 704 College 966-6226 RACING BICYCLE, 12-speed, 22" fram e, 1976 Olympic and W orld Champion events. $200. 894-5451. SCREAMING DEAL!! Nishiki Cascade mountain bicycle. Purchased $600, will sell $280. 921-3020. Transferring, must autos fo r sale option, or lease purchase. Contact Jim Pierce, 957-6183 or 957-9830. Russ Lyon Realty. . DORM TIRED?? Parents want a tax break? Consider two master bedrooms with washer/dryer, m icrowave, more. Under $60Q/month. Call Bob G ray at Realty Executives, 926-3400. FANTASTIC CONDO for college kids. $ bedroom , 2 bath, multi-level, 2 fireplaces, great location. Features water, trash. Asking $66,800. Cad D ossie Carter for I details. Coldwed Banker, 8360688. 1977 TO YO TA Corolla, personable, blue, 2-door, new battery, starter, 4 new tires, low miles. $900foHer. 966-9334, m essage. 1982 TO YO TA C elica liftback. Excellent LARGE 1 bedroom , 1 bath townhouse. N o down, assume loan. N ear ASU. Must sell. 732-9637. condition inside and out. Loaded, runs great, «3600. 921-1950. _____________ 1982 TO YO TA Tercel 4-door, AM/FM, air, automatic, super clean, good condition, 55.000K, doth interior. $2700. 829-8954 1983 VOLKSWAGEN G Ti. Black. 50,000 m iles, excellent condition, regular mainte­ nance, bra. and cover. $4500. 894-5451. 1965 HONDA Prelude SI. Must sell! Red, 5-speed, all options, excellent condition. BLUE COUCH and queen size bookcase w atetbed w ith side pads. Both great condition. 9667702_____________________ miscellaneous fo r sale 949-9333, 451-0537. 1963 RAMBLER with rebuilt VS engine. ' Runs wed. G reat lor restoration. $1150. 9669858 after 6:00 p.m. 1965 PLYMOUTH Caravelle, automatic, air, tilt, cruise, good gas m ileage, 81,000 m iles. $3999. 926-1521. BELL AND Howell slide projector, 35mm, monitor, rem ote control plus trays, screen. Bell and Howell m ovie projector, 8mm plus 1966 CHEVY Cavalier. Excellent condi­ tion, pow er locks, seats, windows. Digital In stru m en ta tio n . T o m v 7 3 0 -1 5 3 4 . $7000/offer.__________ 1986 HONDA Civic 15000X 5-speed. 40 miles/gallon, 30,000 m iles, air, power s te e rin g , AM/FM s te re o c a s s e tte , burgandy/red, doth interior. $6500. Totally loaded. 697-7978, leave m essage. 1967 DODGE Daytona. Low, low m ies. Fully loaded, must sell! 263-0415, reels and other items. 957-6555. COMMODORE 64 computer with external floppy disk drive, joysticks and*software. $300. 9669856 alter 6:00 p.m. IBM-XT COMPATIBLE for sale. 2 drives, color/green monitor, 640K, Epson FIX-80 printer, color card, professional keyboard. $1250, 784-9602. ___________________ RADIO CONTROL care, R-C 10 offroad, Porsche 956, Lamborghini Countach. Com plete set $200.894-5451. LARGE 2 bedroom , 2 bath townhouse. Lawn system , large fam ily room, near ASU . 9868035._________________ __ LUXURY CONDO’S. W alk to Phoenix Cardinals gam es or to classes at ASU. Leasing available. Low down payment. No qualifying. Financing. Lois o f extras. Hurry! Only a few left. C a ll Craig at Merrill Lynch Ready, 602461-5200. NO QU ALIFYING -1,2,3 bedrooom condos and townhouses. Papago Park Village from $58,006 102,000. Bob Bullock, Realty Executives, 9962992. OW NER: TW O bedroom house. O pe mde ASU. Assumable FHA. Excellent condi­ tion. Fenced yard. $60,500.8269264. PAPAG O PARK condo. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, near pool. $73,000 or beet offer. 954-0201._______________ 21, a.m „ 831-1114. SH ARP 2 bedroom and 3 bedroom in Papago Park. Low down payment. Linda O rn stein /R u ss L yon . 840-7132 or 991-2928. HONDA CRX 1966. Excédant condition, reasonable. 941-2542.__________ ' Papago Park Village. Assumable loan with low payments. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, vaulted ceilings, picturesque views, community pool. Like new! $65,000. Cad Carol Johnson-Rutt, 8360688. UNIVERSITY RANCH 3 bedroom , 2 bath, washer/dryer, refrigerator, pool, covered parking. $62,500. Realty Executives. 994-9433. UNUSUAL motorcycles for sale 1976 HONDA750 cc. Very good condition. $375.9666776.___________. _________ 1960 HONDA 750 cc, new tune-up, very good condition. $600.966-8776. 1980 SUZUK11100. Clean, must sell. Only $400. Good condition but needs new clutch plates. 8362912. 4 BR HOME NEAR ASU ■ BY OWNER 2 PINK Floyd tickets, 6th raw center, Monday 4/25. Best otter. Cad Lee, 967-2564, Very clean , new carpet $ paint. Large 4th bedroom can b e excellen t etudy/- library/tamf ly room . A ll appliances & furniture included. Low 70s: C a ll/ le a v e m e s s a g e , 967-5940 Buy/Sed Pink Floyd, G eorge Michael, Dana Carvey, Kool and the Gang, Jay Lano, Bid Cosby, Rat Pack, ASU football and Phoenix Cardinals. National Events: Grateful D eed, Springsteen, Jackson, Indy 500, Kentucky Derby. A lso paying $1000 apartments for rent for rights to good Cardinals tickets. The Ticket Exchange at the Cornerstone Mad. 8260196. S u m m er Discounts announcements Vi O n ly b lo c k fro m cam ­ h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 b a th ; 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th a p a r t­ m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le TV, tH E M O RO C C AN R E STAU R AN T: a FO R , LUNCH OR DINNER SPECIAL Buy 1 lurch o r doner e n tre » and receive the 2nd lo r FREE [equal o r tesser value] Sui.-Thurs. with this ad. O nsoou xm p er table. ________________ _ _ _ _ _ BELLy DANCING NIQHCLV Live Muaic Fri./Sat. Night S i» (1 block north o f Inden School} M 7 -M ÌO Open 7 days a week Catering & Parties • Cocktake Lund) 1 1 :3O -3:00 m Dinner 5-10:^0pm h e a te d p o o l, and s p a c io u s la u n d r y fa c ilitie s . V'v" _________. PAPAG O I CONDO for rent- 2 bedroom, $550 monthly. Cad Karen or Steve, 921-3219. Available May 15. Q U IE t DUPLEX, $3S0/month. 2 bedroom, air-conditioning, laundry, water paid. 1130 S. Stratton. Cad 9760113. SPACIO US 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pod. taundry, 0.1 mde from ASU. $475 indudes ad utdities. 910 East Lemon. 868-8704. STUDIO, 1 block to ASU. Own bath, k itch en ette, flre p la e , $265. K evin, F rie n d ly , c o u rte o u s m anagem ent. Stop . today! T e rra c e R oad EC A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra c e 966-8540 help wanted rental sharing A MARKETING company in Scottsdale needs a fult-tlme secretary. Must type w efi. $190 PLU S Vk utilities to share townhouse. Nonsmoker, washer/dryer. Price end University. 9663705. 7701 E. Indian Schod Road, Suite E. ■ 941-3812.; ._____________ ANIM AL CUNIC in Chandler needs clean­ two. Angela, 829-0019. 9662340. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted tor condo at Papago Park 1. $250 plus Vk utilities, own room . Can 242-1333, attar 5. ARIZONA ROSE Is now hiring pleasant, woU-groomed persons to sell rases In valley’s hottest nightclubs. FteHabHtty to a must. For interview p lea se call 8968548 HOUSE-MATE NEEDED. Scottsdale, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, pool. $225/month plus % umities. Call after S p.m „ 941-0634. MALE/FEMALE ROOM M ATE needed immediately, must b e responsible and considerate, 2 bedroom , furnished, Vk m ile from ASU . $210 each, t t phone. Call Ed. SUBLET JUNE, July. August. 1 bedroom, furnished, p od, laundry, walking distance to ASU. $289. 9676062. TOWNHOUSE FOR ren t 2 bedroom . 2 bath, washer/dryer, 1100 square feet, quiet. Cad John at 9664875, leave m essage. W ALK TO ASU, junior one bedroom, $265; two bedroom, $400. Adults, no pets. 1031E . Lemon. 9662679,9334364. w ith a 3 m o lease A qu iet and cozy com m unity minutes from ASU and downtown Tem pe. 967-6568 1065 W e st 1 st S tre e t, T e m p e • P ool • L a u n d ry F a c ility • G a s G rill • C a b le R ea d y • C o ve re d A ssig n e d P a rk in g • F ire p la c e s > • V a u lte d C e llin g (2 n d F lo o r) open 11-5:30 M-F 10-5:00 Sat 12-4:00 Sun Ladue M ANAG EM ENT, IN C . hornet fo r rent BEAUTIFUL TOWNHOUSE. 3 bedroom , 2 bath, Los Prados townhouse (13th Brest/ Roosevelt). Call Rosem ary, 2660008 or evenings, 272-8147. FURNISHED 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, iVk miles ASU . Dishwasher, washer/dryer, p od. 3 may share. $800.8360294. FURNISHED 2 bedroom. Gorgeous view on g o lf course/lake. Retirement area. Garage. $600/month plus utilities. May 15-October 15.6963265.________________ LUXURY TOW NHOU8ES. 3 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished or unfurnished, all appliances; 1% mites ASU. P o d and tennis. Available May 14th. $560-8595, Call,Judy L. or Ruth, 831-1300; 7561145, evenings. rental sharing 1 OR 2 roommates needed. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished except bedroom , begin­ ning in Fail. $185-$265/month plus Vk to Vk *a_ ,1 \ or 9961816. - ATTENTION SERIOUS tomato runners/ cyclists! You may be eligible for free assessm ent o f your body composition. W e will pay $40 to each out o f town subject who can visit our lab in Tucson. Vk day trip (tw o hours to our lab plus round-trip,drive). Any day of the w eekl W e are looking tor women having Irregular (o r no) menstrual MALE, FEMALE or 2 fem ales wanted to share beautiful 4 bedroom , 3 bath home in the Lakes. Pool plus extras. $300/month. cycles for at toast the past 3 months. Call C o n n ie M ier, 326-4167. e v e n in g s , weekends. Caii collect!_______ __________ Csk Eric, 831-6105. ___________ __ MALE O R fem ale roommate needed for summer. WHi have own room. Rancho Murietta. $214.968-5477.___________ __ MALE ROOMMATE needed tor summer, near ASU , own room. Quadrangle Apart­ ments. $250/month. Call 967-2721. NEED IM M ED IATELY, fem a le nonsmoker. $290, Includes utilities, microwave, pool, jacuzzi. Sandy, 8205896. A lters, 8966599._____________ Air-conditioning, p od , deck. $215, Vk utilities. Randall, 9664691 or 9665175. NON-SMOKING FEMALE to share patio home. P o d , m icrowave, washer/dryer, •d ose to ASU. $225, utilities. 461-6097. N O N SM O KIN G FEM ALE room m ate wanted to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo near Fiesta Mail. N o pals. $250 plus Vk utilities, ate. 926-3752.___________________ ROOM. FOR rant M ale, non-smoker. $200 per month, includes utilities and phone. Rich. 677-2046. ~ ROOMMATE W ANTED- Share large 2 bedroom condo in Chandler. Tub, p od , deck, washer/dryer. 6300/month, utilities. 961-4241. ' . ...... . : ; ’ ROOMMATE TO share condo. Close to ASU. Very nice. $250/month plus Vk BREAKAWAY.- up person and vet assistant part-time evenings, Monday-Friday and Saturdays. 9667741, leave m essage._______________ ’ STUDIO O R 1 bedroom apartment. Utili­ ties paid. P o d , saunas, weight, recreation, gam e rooms. Up to $800 off. 9626222. "/ V -. FEMALE ROOM M ATE®) to share 2 bedroom , 2 bath Deaert Palm Village. $255, Vk utilities; or $130, Vk utilites tor NONSMOKER, OW N room, near campus. . STUDjO O R 1 bedroom apartm ent P od, tennis cou rts,covered parking. Up to $600 W A LK TO ASU ! p u s : B e a u tifu lly fu r n is h e d , announcements 8941578. SPLASH PARTYI Join the fun and Hve In __________________ tickets for sale NEW LY REMODELED Tem pe complex. Large 1 and 2 bedroom , pool, laundry, move-in special. $250. 121 E. Broadway. RIVER RUN APTS. SAVE, SAVE, save. H ave your parents w riteo ff your college housing. Establish residence and save $6000 on tuition with this luxury 3 bedroom townhouse. Ameni­ ties include 2 car garage, fireplace and vaulted cedihgs. Ask for Jeanne. Century REPLICA LOUIS Vultton and Gucci bags. Vlnnle, 9663160. ■ PA Y RESIDENT Tuition- Buy a condo. 2 m aster bedroom s, 2 bath, fireplace, 3 patios, ad appliances, 2 pools, spa, racquetbail, more. 10 minutes from ASU. 8660464.________ ___________ ___________ evenings. 1967 SAMURAI JX Deluxe. Air, stereo, 15,000 m iles. Perfect condition, $7600. 483-8538, days; 948-8696, alter 5. MOVE BEFORE the heat sets In and get rest o f April free, and $200 o ff May rent. Large 2 bedroom , 2 bath. Q uiet, adult, p od. 8946466. off:8336332. m essage.____________________ . __ _______ furniture fo r sale BEAUTIFUL NEW large 1 and two bedroom s, walk to ASU, pool, laundry, cine block south o f University on 8th Street and G ary. Ask about m ove-in spscials. 9665236. 921-1111. sell. TURQUOISE WOMEN’S Cruiser. Great for ASU ! $80. Cad 8267228. Leave a 2 BEDROOM apartment, utilities paid. ASU % mde. $300 o ff. Also f ' and 3 bedroom s available. 9668945. ______________________ £ ASU STUDENTS: Why pay rant when you can own for less? 3 bedroom townhome in Papago Park Villages fo r sale, lease, lease $365. 9661826._________________________ at th e V» Statt Press Friday, Apf« « , 1988 Page 18 utilities. 967-7937.__________ _ _ _________ THE POINTS South Mountain! Roommate wanted to share im pressive 2 story townhouse, located on go lf course with pictur­ esque city views. A ll amenities Included. 5 minutes to ASU. Non-smoker preferred. C on tact D ave, 4 3 6 8922 (m essa ge phone). $295/month plus Vk utilities. TOWNHOME CLOSE to ASU I Two tomato roommates needed (nonsmoking)-$250 plus Vk utilities monthly. FuHy furnished! Washer/dryer, m icrowave, etc. Loaded!! Call now. 9661219, M ichele. Available May 151 ATTENTION GRADUATES. Develop a career in marksting/Satos. May begin betore com pleting coltoge. Training avail­ able. Great Income opportunity tor the right person. Scottsdale. 961-4525. BEHIND ON BILLS? Earn extra $$, work when you want. Banquet senring. Must have black and whites, own transporta­ tion. Call TAD Tem poraries, 267-7254. BO O KEEPER,' GENERAL office help wanted. Part-time and summer employment. 9667810, John. _________________ BOOKKEEPER W ANTED $5-$8/hour. G eneral accounts receivable, accounts payable, Inventory, payroll, etc., 1615 > hours/week. Call Monday, W ednesday, Friday between 10-1. Spectrum Etoctronice. 9665002. ________ ' CAREERS IN data processing. From entry level to highly technical, in the state of California. W rite to us to receive more information and your fre e copy. 2404 E. Nutwood A ve., ,03 2, Fullerton, CA 92631. COLLEGE STUDENTS pert-firne, W e need 8 enthusiastic co llege students to work 4-9 MCnday-Thursday, 10-2 Satur­ day. $5 hourly plus bonuses. Call Mr. Rod, 921-2897. ■-■" -s COOK FOR residential treatment center, p.m. and weekends. Send employment history and salary requirement: PO box 8500, Phoenix 85066. COUNSELORS FOR boys cam p in Maine. Openings in most actlvittoe( W SI, tennis, b a s k e tb a ll, a t e .) U p p e rc la s s m e n preferred. W rite Camp Cedar, 1758 Beacon Street, Brookline, MA 02146 or caB (617)277-8080. COUNSELOR NEEDED. FuH-time at ooed residential treatment center for EH adolescents. 2 years coltoge and/or exper­ ience. Evenings/ w eekends: $12,000. Send resume: PO box 8500, Phoenix 85 0 6 6 .______________________________ COUNSELOR (FEMALE) at residential treatment canter tor EH adolescents. 10 business opportunities p.m,-8 a.m. shift; $10,344. Send resume: PO box 8500, Phoenix 85068. FANTASTIC O PPO RTU NITY for studentsmall vending route, close to ASU. Must sd i. $2795 or offer. Call 921-3103, 8293530. COUNTER PERSON tor oopy/print shop. Part-time, mornings. Xerox and retail experience helpful. 9660799. EARN W H IL E YO U LEARN h e lp wanted 20 MARKETING Researchers needed. Your positive attitude and clean cut appearance will earn you extra money. A t shifts, Thursdays through Sundays. N o experience necessary. Call 9667983. AAAAA TEMPE MARKET research firm needs telephone interviewers. Meetly evenings and weekands. Absolutely no sales. $4/hour to start. Rapid raises for reliable people. Susan, 967-4441. ACCOUNTING MAJOR student represen­ tatives for national CPA review course to be held In Phoenix. Please c a l Dick, 9961614." .;:V / . y-ALASKA SUMMER employment- fishe­ ries. Earn 8800 plua/week in cannery, $8000-812,000 plus for two months on fishing vessel. O yer 8000 openings. N o experience necessary, m ale or fem ale. For 62 page employment booklet, «en d $6.95 to M&L Research, Box 84006, Seattle, Washington 98124. 30 day, u n con d ition a l 100% m on sy b ack guarantee. $250/ £ & *4 A £ J B W B©k $ 1 4 9 / part-time To Start No Experience Necessary. We will show you how to earn $500-$1000 a week selling contrac­ tors tools and supplies via Watts. Two Shifts Available Cal Dave Green 254-TOOL utilities. Call Dan. 8263505._____________ FE M A LE N O N SM O K E R room m ate needed to share 2. bedroom apartment. Rent at Quadrangles for Fall and Spring sem ester ’ 88-’ 89. C all S teph an ie, _____________________ ■ 7840192. by FEMALE, RESPONSIBLE, clean and quiet, Share 2 bedroom apartment with professional woman 32 and daughter 4. R u ra l/ S ou th ern . $ 2 5 0 / n e go tia b le . 7393253._______________________________ FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. Share 2 bedroom/2 bath furnished apartment at Meridian Com ers. 8287/month plus half utilities. Call M iehdto, 987-8441, leave m assage. AFTER CLASS HOURS AFTERNOON EXPANSION1550 per hour guaranteed Diatomsrica Marketing, th o n a tio n ’s fin e s t te le m a rk e tin g firm , is n o w a cce p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r th o fo llo w in g s h ifts : 1-5 p.m. 5-9:30 p.m. 6-9:30 p.m. Weekends Also Available O u r sa le sp e o p le w o rk in a m o de m , co m fo rta b le , b usin e ss e n v iro n m e n t c o n ta c tin g e s ta b lis h e d cu sto m e rs on lo n g d ista n ce lin o s . G u a ra n te e d s a la ry d r co m m issio n , w h ich e ve r is g re a te r, a n d a ve ra g e s $ 5-5 7 a n h o u r. O u r T e m p o o ffic e is lo ca te d a p p ro xim a te ly 5 m in u te s fro m ca m pu s. P le a se c a ll Dtotomerica Marketing fo r d e ta ils . 829-1140 State Prest Friday. April gg. 1988 help wanted help wanted CRUISE SHIPS now hiring an positions. Both elditod and unskilled. For information call (815)282- |co OUMMMl ■ < . SMMMOOM •70S ALMASCHOOL fcl<1 SOutHERN j superstition freeway I I 1301 W. B ro a d w a y R oad * Mesa i