K Arizona State University’s à  n M in h D a ily disqualification, Heap maintained filin g an “ inaccurate” The Associated Students Supreme Court mi Friday disqualified College o f Liberal Arts Senator-elect W ill Daly and third-place finisher Denise Heap from the ASASU elections, allowing fourth-place finisher Christopher Stiles to claim the second seat in the college. The court, voted 3-1 to penalize D aly 20 points, meaning automatic disqualification, fo r failin g to turn in his first financial statement on tim e March 29., The Supreme Court posted its decision, which overturned a pre-election ASASU Election Commission ruling allowing D aly and Heap to rem ain in the senate race, Friday morning after a hearing late Thursday. , The ASASU Election Commission ruled on complaints alleging cam paign infractions and was em powered to post penalty points i f the candidates w ere found guilty, with a total o f 20 points meaning disqualification from the April 5 and 6 ASASU elections./ The commission did not disqualify an yoiiefofc year. . th e court ruled “ the Election Commission erred in its interpretation of the Election Code” A pril 6 by penalizing Defyonly.'-Tt®;- points, or one short o f disqualification, and allowing lam to rem ain in the Senate race. In the C ollege of lib e r a l Arts election, D aly placed second with 27 percent of the vote to first-jplace finisher Mark Escobedo, who garnered three m ore votes (454). -' - . The court ruling meant that third-place finisher Heap would have filled the Senate vacany /opened up hy D aly’s disqualification. But the court also disqualified Heap, who appealed a 19-point commission penalty she received for 'T h e thing is, things have to b e clarified; w e have to estab lish the rules o f the law . A rid I d o n 't think they w ere. ’ . . — Denise .Heap afiogoHiy filin g an inaccurate financial statement March 29. Heap’s decision to pursue the appeal in order to have her penalty points erased backfired, as toecou rt agreed with the commission's ruling that her financial statement was inaccurate and equal to filin g no statement at all, like Daly. Jack W . Baaclc y Jr./State prase Soviet gymnastic coach Leonid Arknev spots gymnast Elena Shoushounova during a practice session in the PE Earn gym Friday. The Soviet men and women's gymnastic teams com­ peted in the USA-USSR McDonalds Challenge last week Hi the Veteran's Memorial Coliseum. Story page IS. Therefore, by a 3-1 vote, the court sustained the commission’s ruling and added the point which disqualified Heap and placed Stiles in the the open Senate seat. Heap made three separate appeals to the court. She dropped her second one asking fo r D aly’s disqualification because it was sim ilar to her first appeal. In the third appeal, which ultim ately led to Heap’s statement should not be considered equal to not filin g a statement. In addition, Heap argued she was not n otified ;of her Election Commission penalty points im m ediately and was not given enough tim e to prepare fo r h er defease when the commission first heard the complaint A pril 8. In a 2-2 deadlock vote, the court sustained the commission’s decision and decided H eapw as notified on tim e. B efore the commission in itially penalizedDaly, he had said he expected teh edisqu alified. “ O f course I was disappointed with the outcome o f the O f cou rse / w as d isap p oin ted w ith the outcom e o f the hearing, b u l l c a n 't sa y I w as terribly su rp rised b y their d ecisio n . ’ — Will Daly hearing, but I can’t say I was terribly surprised by their decision,” Daly said Friday; “ When this whole thing first started out, I knew m y chances w ere slim .“ ; Heap said Sunday that she d id not agree with the court’s ruling but has not decided if she w ill fight the case further. “ I ’m not certain if I have enough energy to do anything this w eek,” Heap said. But Heap added that the court was unfair in ruling that an . amended financial statement is sim ilar to no financial statement at all. She said she w ill talk to her attorneys and decide what to do. Stiles was unavailable for comment. • “ Obviously w e got each other kicked out— there’s no doubt about it,” Daly said. “ I think Denise could have saved herself by withdrawing her,appeal on her case.” D aly admitted he would not have pursued a complaint against anyone other than Heap, adding he would have rather avoided any controversy altogether. “ It’s not very healthy; it’s not good for ASASU; it’s not good for the election; it ’s not good fo r students,” D aly said. Heap said she would have pursued her case even if it had not been against Daly. “ It doesn’t surprise m e that that’ s D aly’s attitude,” she said. Election Commission officals said in a State Press interview April 7 that they had hoped to maintain a fair election by not disqualifying anyone and giving the voters a choice o f candidates. Dafy said the election commission should be given the authority to have discretion in making decisions, so that Turnto P»cMon, rap* *• Regents OK building of stadium skyboxes, press box By VICKIE CHACHEI& and SHERI JOHNSON State; Prase TUCSO N— The Arizona Board o f Regents has granted ASU officials the authority to sign an agreem ent with the Metropolitan P h o e n ix S p o rts A llia n c e In c ., fo r construction of 60 skyboxes and a new press box at Sun D evil Stadium. In its monthly m eeting Friday in Tucson, the board also voted to c a ll a public hearing within the next month on the sale o f alcohol fo those skyboxes during Phoenix Cardinals games. The alliance, a non-profit corporation co m p rised o f A rizo n a bu sinessm en, including regents Donald P it t and Jack Pfister, has agreed to finance construction o f the skyboxes at no cost to the University. ASU needs to reach an agreem ent with the Alliance before the Cardinals w ill sign a lease on Sim D evil Stadium. Victor Zafra, ASU’s vice president fo r business a ffoirs, said that the skyboxes should be com pleted by August 1909 if construction begins next January. those fimds going to reimburse ASU if ticket sales should drop. The b ill, currently before the Arizona House W ays and Means Comm ittee, has been held indefinitely by com m ittee Chairman Rep. Chris Herstam, R-Phoenix. “ There is one important principal, that is, there is no cost or liability to ASU ,” said P itt. “ T o m e that means neither cost or liability or econom ic risk.” A public hearing on alcohol sales to the skyboxes w ill be scheduled within the next month. Current U niversity policy prohibits the consumption and sale o f alcohol to the Tim A llian ce agreem ent includes a guarantee that ASU w ill be compensated for any lost ticket revenues over a 5-year period once the Cardinals begin playing in Sun stadium. The proposed aleohol policy also would allow ASU President J. Russell Nelson to ftogjgnate areas that could be used for tailgate parties before Cardinals games. D evil Stadium. Saturday, toe board endorsed legislation that would create a separate account fo r sales taxes from the Canltoals tickets, with inside ASU WEATHER Clear and mild today with a high in the 80s. Tonight: continued clear with a low in the 50s. Any changes to the alcohol policy would not affect ASU football games. Alcohol would still be banned, according to an THE W ALL HITS PHOENIX: Pink Floyd comes to the Valley. Page 13. ex ecu tive regents. sum m ary released b y the P fister bad objected to a public hearing becan «» he believed alcohol sales in the skyboxes was a m ajor provision in bringing the Cardinals to Phoenix. “ The question is not whether to serve alcohol but whether the Cardinals w ill be to the stadium,” P fister said. A ll but one National Football League tonm prohibits alcohol consumption to skyboxes. I f approved, alcohol service would be provided b y a food-service contractor. Regent Esther Capin said a public hearing on the alcohol issues is needed given the public outcry at a U ofA proposal last year to serve alcohol at Arizona Stadium. Classified.... ......... 22 Comics...................;..,....... ....18 Entertainment....................... ..........13 Opinion . . . . . . ..... 4 Sports.... ........................ 19 Today........................... 3 Soviet economic reform problems not likely to improve in near future face to a nation that throughout its short history has often found itself isolated and a target of international criticism . But others said they won’t iet it spoil toe party. “ You have seen toe people o f Israel truly rejoice, going out fo r picnics, going out into the streets,” said A vi Pazner, toe Prim e M inister Yitzhak Shamir’s aide, referring to last week’s Independence D ay celebrations. “ Nobody can take that aw ay.” W ASHINGTON (A P ) — Soviet leader M ikhail S. Gorbachev’s economic reform program rah into problems last year and things a re not likely to im prove in the near future, U.S. intelligence agencies said in a report released Sunday. Organizers said many tog names remained on the guest Unless Gorbachev can do something to turn the economy list, including .m ovie director Robert. W ise and Indian-born around, he m ay find him self in trouble, said the bleak Zubin Mehta, conductor to both the New York and Israel review which was conducted jointly by the C IA and the Philharm onic orchestras. M e n s e Intelligence Agency. Israeli organizers had planned an im pressive lineup of “ Tension w ithin society and the leadership w ill poetry readings, film festivals and theater performances as increase,” it said. “ Bureaucrats w ill becom e increasingly highlight» of fa ra d 's 40th anniversary celebration. frustrated by loss o f privileges and status and fay dem ands But in toe midst o f preparations, the Arab uprising that they show greater initiative. M ilitary leaders are erupted fiv e months ago, and televised im ages o f Israeli likely to becom e m ore and m ore uneasy if benefits from soldiers clubbing Arab youths and razing houses sparked the industrial modernization fa il to m aterialize.” “ Soviet citizens w ill need to see some im provem ent in an international outcry. M ore than 170 Arabs and two livin g standards if the regim e is to achieve necessary gains Israelis have died in the unrest. in w orker productivity and avoid widespread discontent,” the study said. The report concluded that “ failu re to head o ff these tension» would, a t a minimum, m ake it m ore difficult to W ASHINGTON CAP) — Education Secretary W illiam J. pursue his economic program vigorously and could ultim ately call into question his strong political position at Bennett says the Am erican education system has made little progress in the fiv e years since a searing report home.” ™»n 5 ' It is a rare event when exceptional leádership and Opportunities on the state and university level combine at one time. But they have. And the prospect is for a very good year. unemployment and substance abuse, you tell me where anyone o f these social issues are not found. The Navajos have the same problems as the rest o f the United States and w e are addressing them. And yes, we are doing it with the aid o f the Federal Government. Editor:..; I am writing in response to M ike R itter’s article “ N avajo Child is the Victim of Absurd Tribal Battle.” First, ! would like to say Mr. R itter should stick to being an a rtist Second, he should have more regard for our Tribal Courts. I am sure the Navajo Trib al Courts w ill make a wise,decision as to the best interest o f the child in question, and it w ill do so without taking into account any monetary considerations. M r. R itter has made an assumption, like so many other non-Indians, that N ative Americans individually receive money from the Federal Government. He is partly correct in that N ative Americans do receive aid, just like other non-Indian people who receive, it in the form of public aid programs. I believe Mr. R itter thinks N ative Americans receive money just for being Indian. Now, that’s absurd. Third, Mr. R itter has down-graded our home — the Reservation. I have to tell you the Reservations are a ll w e have left of our ancestoral lands and we do love the land we currently live on.. True, it is not the best place, but w e are there to stay. Fourth, as fo r the comment on poverty, So what do you want from us? W e have already given up our lands, culture, traditions and language in the name of assimilation. So what if w e’re trying to protect our people and what we-have le ft of our past? The trib a l Courts w ill not take it s laws and impede it on the people it governs just because o f federal m onetary aid; W e do not run our N avajo Nation solely on federal programs. The N avajo Nation also relies on its ro y a ltie s from uranium , tim ber, agriculture, natural gas, coal, etc. Not all N ative Americans (o r should I say Navajos) live in poverty. W e can take care o f our own. In conclusion, M r. R itter, you have insulted a ll N ative Am ericans by stating that w e are m ore concerned with keeping our people on the Reservations so as not to jeopardize federal funding. S. Baldwin Graduate, Health Science . . . and blurts out absurdities Editor: In response to the editorial concerning the eight-month-old Navajo child who is facing the hypocrisy o f the' 1978 Indian Child W elfare A ct: True, the A ct does need some revisions, but culture and heritage are the main concern. We are a people who have been propelled into a technological society and it is this situation that overwhelms our conservative nature. The Federal Government realizes this and tries to alleviate the problem through federal aid, I am appalled by your statement that the Tribal authorities do not allow its people to m ove about freely. One child is not going to jeopardize federal funding. W e are not a helpless people. W e have lived, on these United States lands for centuries without aid from the Federal Goveraiqent. It is your racist undertime that sets apart the stereotype you project that suggests N ative Am ericans rely heavily on Federal handouts. A well-inform ed w riter does not jump to such a conclusion and blurt out such an absurdity. Perhaps your sheer disgust about the whole situation caused you to lash out at the N ative Am erican population. What you did was paraphrase what the media reported then insert a racially directed statement a f the end of the editorial. Perhaps you should stick to your miniscule com ic strip and lea ve the lucid w riting to the well-inform ed professional. O. Bluehouse Graduate q u o ta b le " W hy sh o u ld n ’t truth b e stran ger than fic tio n ? Fictio n , after a ll, h a s to m ake s e n s e ." , . — Mark Twain ‘ ‘Thet truth is m ore im portant than the fa cts. ” ‘ ...’ t ^ T- •' . — Frank M$yd Wright STATE PRESS TRAC Y SC O TT Editor GREGORY ROBERT KRZOB Managing Editor > * i . City Editor....... ...............1 ....... ...l.'l^ .C ^ ;.;......„ ....M A R fY SAUERZOPF Aaat City Editor....... ...... SCO TT LUCK Opinion Editor...;«^..,;,..... ............................ .,.....,..L ..::D A n ftlN HOSTETLER Aaat Opinion Editor ...... ................V r -n . ED SCHUBERT W ire Editor....... ........................................................... .SUZANNE W E8CHLER News Editor.._________ ____ _____ .................. „ ..............“ „'...J O A N McKENNA Alto E ditor....'........,. '..'J .;,.... ..,..i.,‘..^ ...„..;.„4 ...^ .,i„-.^ ..,....,: 0 AVEM iLLER A aat Arto Editor....... ................................„ .............................. LAURIE SMITH Sperta Editor...... ................................................................ .....OAVEHOOGES Aaat. Sporta Editor.................... ................................ „ .................DAVE BIGOS Copy Chief...:........ ............... ............................................ MICHELLE ALLMAN Photo Editor...... .............................................SU NO IKJENSTAD REPORTERS: Victor Barajas, Mike Burgess, Vickie Chachere, Kristi Edis, J. Michael Hoahn, Shari Johnson, Robie Kakonge, Ban McCbnned, Cant Mitchell, Teresa Owen, Kelly Pearos. ARTS REPORTERS: Jill Herbranson, Matthew Undenbuig. Howad J. Malham Jr., Tod McCoy, Bruce Peteraon, Scott C. Socket, Jessie Simon, Mish Ted. SPORTS REPORTERS: Chris Dorsey, Dean GyofQy, Gary Jackson, Chris Nackino, Chris Pirkey. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jack Beasley, JM Lindsey Clarke, Stephen Mounteer. CO PY EDITORS: Raymond Brown, Shawn Dahl, JiU Herbranson. ARTISTS: Garth Heckal, Mike Rkter. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academ ic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room IS , Arizona State Unhiersity, Tem po AZ 85287. Newsroom: 965-2292. Advertising A Production: 986-7572 Th eS ttoe Press is the only newspaper exclusively published tor and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and »lew s published In this newspaper are not hooeeaarily those o l the ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. ■■■H H ■hsmmmhm) State Prest Larry Speakes: Fink, liar, back-stab a lp s t - and jerk M ike Royko Tribune Mediä Services I don’t like seeing anyone out o f work, but I didn’t lapse info a funk when Larry Speakes was dumped from Ms $250,000 job as a front man fo r a New York banking house. Technically, Speakes resigned. But he left because M errill Lynch shoved him out the door. They w ere uncomfortable having an adm itted lia r and fink as their public relations man. This, I believe, is an exam ple o f what the Mp generation describes as: ■“ What goes around, comes around.” Or m aybe it’ s the other way. W hatever, it was perfect justice for a fink. Speakes has always thought o f him self as a clever fellow . W atching him perform as WMte House press secretary, you could alm ost see him ooze self-satisfaction. He Mid a w ay o f looking down his nose at those who have the m iserable assignment of covering the W Mte .House and trying to find out what the executive branch o f the governm ent is bungling today. Although he had never been a reporter,; p referrin g â career as a flunky fo r Washington politicians, he obviously felt superior to those who earn their livin g by asking questions. A n d to d e m o n s tra te h is m e n ta l nitwhieneai, as he nówádm its, he hooked up phony lines and told tire press that President Reagan had said them. Actually, the lines weren’t especially m em orable or profound. On a slow day, Jesse Jackson Can crane up with a dozen that áre better and make tiiem rhym e, too. But Speakes was proud o f them. So proud, in fa ct, that when he recently put out a book about his WMte House spokesman days, he couldn’t resist bragging about puttingwords in Reagan’s mouth. This becam e news, although I don’t know why. There’s nothing now about flunkies composing sentences foé politicians. Most politicians m e hired speech w riters. Some pay others to w rite entire books rat wMch they slap their names. B efore becom ing president, John F. Kennedy won a Pulitzer P rize for a history book without having to tap a single typew riter key. F o r that m atter, Speakes wasn’t literate enough to w rite Ms own fink book. He paid s o m e o n e to p u t h is w o r d s in t o understandable, although banal, form . About the only thing that m ade his disclosure interesting was that Reagan said he wasn’t aw are that Speakes had been makingjUp quotes. That meant Reagan either didn’t know what he had said or, when he read his words in the newspapers, he thought that he had said them. Or m aybe it meant that he sim ply didn’t pay any attention to what the ¡Moss said he said. This, to some Washington observers, was evidence that Reagan m ight be “ out o f touch” with what is happening around him. There’s nothing shocking about that. Only recently, w e w ere told that when Reagan meets with visiting dignitaries, aides give him little cue cards so he’ll rem em ber to say “ good morning, George,” or “ welcom e to the WMte House,” or “ nice to m eet you, too.” A lm ost from the beginning o f his presidency, Reagan has been hailed as one o f the most out-of-touch presidents in our history. That’s been one o f the secrets o f Ms success. In a w orld that is too complicated, the m ajority o f Am ericans choose to be out o f touch with reality. Some use drugs or booze to disconnect. Others fade into their T V sets. And with their votes, or lack of Hum, they said they preferred an out-of­ touch leader. Being a clever fellow , though, Speakes figured that b y finking about how out o f touch Reagan was, and how he, Speakes, could put words in Reagan’s mouth, the book would get oodles o f free publicity that would help rales. And I ’m sure it has. But it turns out that Speakea is surprisingly dopey fo r someone so clever. It didn’t occure to him that an im age­ conscious outfit like M errill Lynch m ight ra y: “ H oly bottom line, w e’re paying this guy $250,000 a year to be our spokesman. And now he’s telling the w orld that he’s a lia r and a tattle-tale fink. I f he’d fink on a president, how do w e know he won’t fink on us? T e ll him to turn in Ms key to the executive washroom. And change the lock.” So now the clever fellow is out o f work. The quick-fix publicity w ill subside, and in a week or tw o his book w ill start gathering dust in the bookstores. And Speakes w ill discover that $250,000«year jobs aren’t that easy to com e by. It’s ram thing to walk out o f the WMte House with a lot erf political clout and a reputation fo r being able to think fast on your feet. It’s something else when the most recent item on your resum e is that you w ere racked by M errill Lynch. I suppose he could take out an ad. I t could say something like: “ Position wanted. Top-level experience as congressional aide, W Mte House press o fficer and corporate spokesman. Advanced training m fift e r y , back-stabbing and ingratitude.” Lots o f luck. But he’d be w ise tocheck tiie location o f his nearest unemployment comp office. C A R S H O W & C A S IN O T E N T Rods, Customs, Classics, Trucks 8 P .M .-C L O S E Slots, Blackjack, Craps, Roulette (Try your luck for some great prizes!) M a y 2 n d • 8 a .m .-4 p,m . WHITE RUSSIANS * LONG ISLAND ICE TEAS • • PO N Y PIC H ER S... 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A pplicants should be h igh energy, extroverted ou tdoor types w ith recreation, sports or theatrical experience. Japanese language not essential out prefer­ red. W illingness to learn Japanese is neces­ sary. Vie p rovide housing, m eals and other frin ge ben efits including round trip airfares. F o r m ore inform ation, com e attend an orientation m eeting on A p ril 26 at 7:00 pm at M em orial U nion, 209 Yavapai, o r contact M artha M artin ez at Career Services. Page 6 _______________________________ Mondaa_^jnMj^jg8s___________ National study will test blood of collegians for AIDS By b e n McCo n n e l l State Prees A national health organ ization has em barked on a yearlong study that w ill test blood samples o f 20,000 U.S. college students to determ ine how many collegians are carriers of Acquired Immune D eficiency Syndrome (A ID S ). But unless their college health centers tell them, students may never know they are involved in the project. ASU was not asked to participate because the U niversity has a high percentage o f outof-state students who m igrate to Arizona from other U.S. regions and a large number o f students not representative o f traditional college students, according to student health director Monty Roth. U ofA backed out of the study after o fficia ls w ere not convinced students’ anonymity was guaranteed, a school officia l said. The director erf N AU ’s student health center said the F lagstaff university was not asked to participate. “ This study should fin a lly g iv e us concrete data on the levels o f infection (fo r A ID S ),” said M iguel Garcia-Tunon, the W project’s coordinator fo r the Am erican College Health Association. The ACH A is a private, non-profit R ockville, M d., organization that has provided U.S. colleges with educational tools and health inform ation since 1929. Its study on AIDS, which began A pril 1, is funded by the Centers fo r Disease Control in Atlanta, but Garcia-Tunon refused to disclose its cost. Helene G ail, a CDC epidem iolgist who is coordinating the I N G center’s work on the study, referred all questions to Garcia-Tunon. The project w ill measure the sere prevalence — or strength Of students immunity systems — by testing 1,000 leftover Wood samples provided by 20 college health centers, Garcia-Tunon said. H e declined to disclose the colleges involved, saying it was the decision o f the schools to reveal involvement. But stodents who go to their health center fo r any test requiring a blood sample may never know I f their blood w ill be slipp ed o ff to Atlanta fo r CDC sero-prevaience tests a fter toe health center is done with it. “ Those leftover vials of blood, marked only by a student’s sex, age and race, are the only identifiers . . . no one is identified by name,” Garcia-Tunon said. “ T his is a com pletely blinded survey,” he said. G arcia-Tu non said c o lle g e s decide whether or not to tell their students about the study. * •*’ > í .•• Although she is an ACHA board member, U ofA ’S AID S task force director Joy G reenw ay said the Tucson university • backed out o f the study because officials w ere not convinced that, among other things, students would be guaranteed total anonymity. “ W e have never participated in a study with the CDC and had never had a comparable experience,” Greenway said, adding officials w ere concerned that the 1000 random ly selected samples m ay not be rep resen tative o f the sch ool’ s 30,000 students. “ Plus, w e would have needed to gain students’ confidence and cooperation,” she said. “ It turned out to be a b ig public relations question, too. So it wasn’t any one thing that stopped us.” ADDS is an affliction J n which a virus attacks the body's immune system , leaving victim s susceptible to a w ide variety of infections and cancers. “ W ith this study, w e seek to get concrete inform ation rath er than hypotheses,” Garcia-Tunon said. AIDS is most often transm itted through s e x u a l c o n t a c t . O th e r m e a n s o f transmission include blood transfusions and Turn to Study, page a. S S u n d a y & M o n d a y s 1/2 O r d e r F re e « [ 15 - $ 2 . 9 5 3ft 45 — $ 7 . 3 5 2ft 30 — $ 5 . 2 5 4ft 60 — $ 9 . 4 5 ^ W oodshed 1 Mill & Baseline 831-WOOD V a i* - W oodshed II -T í sp..«a G e o rg e C ru m b Dobson & University 844-SHED WOMEN I ^ m u sic / I COMMUNICATIONS, presents , M A R ILY N M O ATS KEN N ED Y Events: Solo Piano Works of George Crumb Monday, April 25 - 2:40 p.m. Music Theatre The Haunted Landscape" Lecture by the Composer Tuesday, April 26 - 4:40 p.m. Music Recital Hall Chamber WOrks of George Crumb &.A Lecture by the Composer Wednesday, April 27 - 2:40 p.m. Music Theatre Seminar for Composers and Choreographers Wednesday, April 27 - 3:40 p.m. Dance Studio Theatre, PEBE "An Evening of Music by George Crumb" New Music Ensemble Thursday, April 28 - 7:30 p.m. Music Theatre Sponsored by the College of Fine Arts and the School of Music. Funded in part by the Office of the Vice President for Research. Also this week: University Symphony 7:30 pm . April 25 at Gammage Center. "Patches" Jazz/Rock Ensemble 7:30 p.m. April 26 at the Music Theatre. "Romanticism and Impressionism* Chamber Music Concert 7:30 p.m. April 27 at the Music Theatre. ' All events ere free and open to the public. For more information, call 965-4225. A uthor of the Jo b Strategies C o lu m n in Glamour to speak on LEAD IN G C H A N G E at the 1st Annual Year-End-Banquet A P R IL 29 6 p.m. FIESTA INN at The Other Place of Dale Anderson 2100 S. Priest, T empe Tickets (includes dinner) $15 m em b ers $20 n o n -m e m b e rs MARILYN MOATS KENNEDY has m o re than 21 y e a rs o f teaching, career planning and ^ c o n s u l t i n g experV i e n c e . S h e is the ^ fo u n d e r and m anaging partner o f C a re er Strategies, a career planning and m an agem ent firm headqu artered In W ilm ette, Illinois. S h e has written six books, including O ffic e P o litic a and S alary Strategies: Everything You N e e d to K n o w to G et the Salary You Want. In 1986 s h e lau nched K en n ed y ’s C areer Strategist, a 1 6 -p a g e m onthly new sletter on career planning strategies. Reservations by W ednesday, A p ril 27 3 p.m. Chris, 966-3470 £ £ 7 Monday, April 25,1988 State Pr»«« . ■ J QttSARIZOIVA STATE STUDENT FOOTBALL SEASON TICKET INFORMATION P U R C H A S E D E T A I L S : Full-time ASU students carrying seven o r m ore hours may purchase student season tickets fo r the 1988 Sun D evil season. G eneral adm ission student tickets p ric ed at $25.00 each fo r a six-gam e hom e schedule. Students participating in the season sale must fill out an o rd er form (o d e a p p lic a t i o n p e r s t u d e n t ) and m ail it to the Sun D evil Ticket O ffice along w ith appropriate payment. D I S T R I B U T I O N : The distribution process w ill begin on Thursday and Friday o f the first w eek o f classes. Pick up dates w ill b e assigned alpha­ betically according to the first letter o f the student’s last name. A t h r u H , T h u r s d a y & F r id a y , A u g u s t 2 5 & 2 6 ,1 9 8 8 ; I t h r u P , M o n d a y A T u e s d a y , A u g u s t 2 9 A 3 0 ,1 9 8 8 ; Q t h r u Z , W ed n esd a y A T h u rsd a y , A u g u st 3 1 A S e p te m b e r 1 ,1 9 8 8 . Students must pick up their season tickets personally at the Sun D evil Ticket O ffice and sh o w valid student I.D. Students must b e registered full-tim e ( 7 o r m ore h o u rs) fo r the fall sem ester 1988. An over-the-counter sale w ill b e conducted Saturday, Septem ber 3, 1988, selling any unclaim ed tickets G E N E R A L I N F O R M A T I O N : 1 ) A valid student I.D. must b e presented along w ith the ticket in o rd er to enter the stadium. 2 ) Student tickets w ill not b e upgraded to general p u blic tickets. 3 ) Students enter the stadium through designated student gates. 4 ) Student gen eral adm ission sections w ill b e m arked. 5 ) Seating w ill bet on a first-com e, first-serve basis. U n der no circum stances w ill saving seats b e perm itted. 6 ) N o on e is perm itted to exit and re-enter the stadium until the start o f the second quarter. 7 ) N o refunds o r exchanges. 8 ) Lost, stolen o r destroyed tickets cannot b e replaced. 1 9 8 8 A S U S C H E D U L E : S e p t. 10 vs. I l l i n o i s , S e p t . 1 7 v s . C o lo r a d o S t a t e , Sept. 24 at Nebraska, O c t . 1 v s . N e w M e x ic o , O c t . 8 v s . W a s h in g t o n , O ct. 15 at Stanford, O ct. 22 at W ashington State, Oct. 29 at O regon, N o v . 5 v s . O re g o n S ta te , N o v . 12 vs. S o u th e rn C a li f o r n i a , Nov. 19 o pen date, Nov. 26 at Arizona. T IC K E T A P P L IC A T IO N S A C C E PTE D T H R O U G H W IL L TH E BE M A IL to students. O N L Y , as a prioritization process. Applications must b e postm arked betw een June 1 and June 30, I . D . / S P O U S E C A R D S : Students must present a student p h oto I.D. card, validated fo r the 1988 fall sem ester, w h en picking up tickets. Student photo I.D.s can b e validated at the Gam m age o r Sun D evil b o x offices. Students w ill n eed validated I.D. w h en gaining adm ission on student tickets, 1988. Applications not conform ing to the processin g tim e p e rio d w ill b e returned to the applicants. Ticket orders w ill b e p rocessed as they are received by the ticket office w ithout regard to class standing. Confirm ation receipts w ill b e sent to those students receiving tickets. Applicants not receiving tickets w ill have their checks/applications A n A SU student w h o is m arried and is registered fo r seven o r m ore hours may purchase a s p o u s e c a r d ( i f spouse is not ASU full-tim e student). The cost is $15.00 and is g o o d fo r athletic events during the semester. The spouse may then purchase tickets at the student rate. Applicant must present validated student I.D. and p ro o f o f m arriage. retu rn ed S t a d iu m D ia g r a m : Student section s in shaded areas. 1 9 8 8 A S U F O O T B A L L S E A S O N T IC K E T A P P L IC A T IO N Phone. Name. STATE I.D . # Spouse Name. UNIVERSITY VisaD MCD AMEXD (checks payable to ASU) ' _______ _______ ‘_____________ 1Expiration date. (fo r spouse cards only) ------- O R D E R F O R M ------$ _______________ Return to: Sun Devil Ticket Office UkC, Room 110 Tentpe, AZ 85257 S i t e Pu m i D e cisio n OonUmiadtmmpag* 1. candidates with intent to break bylaw rules can be separated from those m aking honest mistakes. “ I don’t think in either party’s case that anyone was trying to be fraudulent or corrupt,” D aly said. “ I had zero expenditures. I had nothing to hide. I spent $20 on m y entire campaign. But I screwed up, I made a a mistake, and I got hung fo r it. I ’m not blam ing this on anyone but m yself.” Heap and D aly both scored victories in court but lost their seats in the process. “ Denise knew what risks she was taking «h en she apppniod, but she had nothing to lose, because sire wasn’t a senator,” said David Jordan, the ASASU Political Union director. “ W ill would have preferred to leave it a ll alone altogether.” . . Heap said she pursued the third appeal becasue she wanted to “ d e a r m y reputation because there w ere some people that think i did it intentionally. I should have dropped the « l i t The thing is, things have to be clarified; w e have to establish the rules o f law. And 1 don’t think they w ere.” Jordan added that the court’s decision is final, and that it Study. Continuad frompag* S. the sharing o f contaminated hypodermic needles or syringes by drug users. One can carry AIDS anti-bodies but not show signs of infection for years. AIDS can also be passed from mother to child a t or before birth. When the ACHA study is completed a year from now, it w ill disclose how common the AID S virus is in fiv e U.S. regions, GarciaTunon said. The regions are the P a cific Coast, the Rocky Mountain Central region, the Southeast-Southw est re gio n , the Midwest and the Northeast M id-Atlantic area. C h a n g in g H a n d s 414IM A venu e M 6-1 «03 OldTownTampa Men - Women Sell us your summer clothes! C .C .’s Closet Classics “ They’re not just having sex, they’re having lots of it,” he said. “ W e have to educate students to the very real risks that exist. Students don’t plan their sexual • (East o f After the Gold Rush) Typesetting: 9 6 5 -2 0 9 7 — ^ Mihtraukees Best e p k ............ $1.59 Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream , Adult M agazines, Groceries, Ice, W ines, over 40 im ported Beers. 967-9079 UNDER $ 1 .1 6 Per Day 829-1966 R en tal N etw ork COLORBURST PH O TO COLOR FILM 4 x 6 L a r g e P rin ts 3 6 ex p . $ 6 .9 5 2 n d Set FREE Mo High Prices, 'Jo Hassles; Mo Appointments, N o Inconveniences, Mo Waiting, Kinko's is the place o r quality copies, binding, passport photos, resumes, and self-serve typewriters. kinko's Tem pe 894-9588 715 S. Forest * a n d N IG H T C L U B Serving Tem pe Since 1 9 7 7 9 6 7 -3 0 7 3 967-2941 $3.75 (includes salad & g a rlic bread] •H A N D M A D E N E W Y O R K S T Y L E P IZ Z A 1 0 7 E. BROADWAY, I S S S m j u 5 a DW,NER8 CHECK N EW TiM ES OR CALL FOR INFO ON NIGHTCLUB ACTS Ô R e g c tfis & fr TEMPE | p iz z a * ALL you CAN EAT PIZZA& SALAD& PASTA. Buffet Only $099 Res. $3.39 With this ad Every day For Lunch 11-2 Now Available Tuesday & Wednesday Night 5:00-8:00 for dinner Now Sunday thru Wednesday Nights Every Week TEMPE CENTER Ü L 10TH - ALSO AVAILABLE: LUNCH, SATURDAY & SUNDAY 11 AM-2PM CO M E IN AND PICK UP YOUR 10% STUDENT DISCOUNT CARDS TEMPE • 945 S* MILL (At 10th) KMs under 5 tat M il • Ages 5-10 only soc pgr year of age o Checks accepted with Guarantee Card DELIVERY C O U PO N 894-1797 933 Ë. University 9 2 1 -0 1 6 8 2 fo r $ 7 .0 0 933 E . U niversity Suite 108 Tem pe, A Z 85281 University & Hardy (C O U P O N ). _ ■areI ' S OPEN A T 4 P.M . DAILY DINE-IN OR TAKE-OUT Call for information on self-serve compu ters, laserprinting and cassette dupli eating. P a ssp o rt P h o to s 967-2624 Y Y O R K E R RESTAURANT WITH TH IS-CO U PO N Mo Fooling. VCR Rental N ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT $3.71 Sauza Tequila 375 m i............ $3.52 O ★ M O ND AY NIGHT SPECIAL ★ Oust east o 'P rie et) ......... *2.96 “ This study w ill let us know if w e have to get m oving faster to educate students.” 968-2688 Mon-Sat 10-6 University Andre Cham pagnes. “ Students have to become responsible for their sexual habits or be prepared to face the consequences o f AID S,” Garcia-Tunon said. “ But w e don’t know how many students carry the AIDS antibodies. 1250 E. Apache, 104 1324 W . M aster Brau 12 pk T N E W LIQUORS &MKT. Naw Location XXXII And m ore opportunities fo r picking up not only AIDS but veneral warts, syphillis and a handful of other sexually transmitted diseases, he added. NEED CASH ? BUNDLE’S 1 encounters, it’s easier to let them happen. T h ese a re p rim e o p p o rtu n ities fo r unprotected sex.” But even if AIDS m ay not be gripping sm aller, rural campuses like NAU, GarciaTunon said tod ay’ s co llege students apparently are unfazed by the prospects of contracting AIDS. Display Advertising: 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 BUY • SELL • TRADE the hearings this week. . . .. „ _ , The Supreme Court heard a total o f three cases lasting about two hours. In the last case, President-elect John Fees also successfully overturned a commission decision. By a 3-0-1 aM ^ n in g vote, the court dedded to elim inate Fees’ 16-point penalty assessed by the commission. Fees had been penalized fo r distributing fliers that w ere too large and posters that w ere too small. Len W righ t, N A U ’ s student health director, said the F lagstaff university was not asked to participate because “ let’s face it, the number of AIDS cases is pretty low up here.” The areas identified with high seroprevalence rates w ill be targeted fo r intense AID S education blitzes. “ I ’m not sure what it w ill reveal in the ‘big picture,’ ” Garcia-Tunon said. “ It won’t dispel any myths or create any myths about AID S.” , Tw en ty-five colleges w ere contacted about participating in the study, he said, adding that some declined to become involved because of the cost o f gathering and m ailing 1,000 blood samples. The $5,000 stipend was not enough to cover those costs, which U ofA officials estim ated to be nearly $10,000, Greenway said. S T A TE PRESS Your books at Changing Hands. For quality doth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% o f our re­ sale price in cash or 50% in badotn credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no tradeins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three boors of: •N ew & U sed Books •Art Prints & Posters •Calenders & Cards •Handbound Journals M -F 10-9 SAT 1 M SUN 12-6 cannot be appealed to any other body on campus. Heap added, “ It’s not over yet.” The Supreme Court is expected to give a w ritten opinion of 969-3326 1840 W. Southern F J ? m « ¿ T V ’’ Sr j * 894-1934 $2.00 OFF $1.00 OFF ANY LARGE PtZZA ANY MEDIUM PIZZA G ood for eat-in, carry-out, delivery Limited Delivery Area OMget/i\ % pi z z a Present this coupon when ordering. Or* coupon per customer. Not good with any other offer. COUPON EXPrtES 5/14/86 Li'JiuHapagfcaMM lBBW Monday, April 25,1988 StatcPreM M an allegedly shot in face by ex-wife lu c k y to be alive’ By MIKE BURGESS State Press >, ’ wLfi If M ichael Lew is Franklin had opened Ids front door another inch F riday night he would be dead. Instead, the 39-year-old Tem po man is recovering a t St. Joseph’s Hospital from a .22-caliber gunshot wound to the face. ■». ,, , t “ I ’m just lucky to be a live,” Franklin said Sunday during an interview . “ The bullet went through m y left check and cam e out by m y (righ t) ear.” Franklin works the graveyard shift as a room -service w aiter fo r Westcourt A t The Buttes. He sleeps during the days. But a knock at the front door of his trailer, 4604 S. Priest D rive, a t about 6:15 p.m. ended his slumber. “ I opened the doer part w ay and before m y eyes could adjust to the light she shot m e,” Franklin said. Tem pe police arrested 36-year-old Rhonda L. Foresee, his ex-w ife o f three years, in connection with the shooting and charged her with attempted murder. She is being held at M aricopa County Jail on $13,700 bond. police report •Someone stole $215 cash from a 1984 Volkswagen Jetta parked in the north end o f Lot 51, police said. F ifty dollars worth o f dam age to the car w as reported. •Someone stole a poster featuring the 1988 Seoul, Korea “ It ’s just like that m ovie ( “ F atal Attraction” ), said Franklin, who has since rem arried, “ She kept calling m e . . . this is unreal.” In other incidents: •Three people w ere arrested Saturday after a Tem pe mounted police o fficer and his horse w ere assaulted when they attem pted to break up a fam ily dispute at Kiwanis Park, police said. Arrested w ere Ernestina Fatigoni, 51, and Am paro Fatigoni, 28, both of Phoenix, and M ary Esparza, 28, in connection w ith the incident, police said. They w ere booked into Tem pe City Jail on charges o f aggravated assault. P olice said O fficer D ave Hubalik was hit several tim es after the suspects allegedly caused him to lose control o f his horse and fa ll off. •Someone caused $700 worth of dam age to three vehicles in Lot 53 by throwing rocks at them, police said. Olym pic Games, from the MU McDonald’s, police said. Loss is $100. •Someone sliced two six-inch cuts into the vin yl roof o f a red 1966 Volkswagen parked in south end o f Lot 51, police said. Dam age is $90. •Someone stole three Pink Floyd concert tickets and two computer discs from a backpack that was le ft unattended in the MU, police said. Loss is $74. •A student reported that a man exposed him self to her on Palm W alk in front o f the Computer Services T railer, police said. •An ASU student was charged with escape after she allegedly fled when she w as arrested fo r minor in possession of alcohol, poUcesaid. P olice said Shelia Rose, a sophomore liberal arts m ajor, was booked into Maricopa County Jail in Mesa. POOL TIME IS HERE! H A Y D E N ’S F E R R Y R E V IE W Get that dark, lean and hard look is now accepting applications for the following positions on the 1989 Editorial Staff: POETRY EDITORS FIC TIO N EDITORS AR T & DESIGN EDITORS To apply you must be a full-time student in good standing at ASU. (Undergrad, 12-plus hours; Graduate, 9-plus hours; Graduate Assistant, 6-plus hours). * A P P L IC A T IO N S LOCATIONS: ARE A V A IL A B L E AT TH E F O L L O W IN G ^ * English Department- First Year Composition Office, LLC 325; Student Publications- Matthews Center, Room 133 & Information Desk in Basement; w TEMPE. ARIZONA Last chance before summer School of Art- A R T 102. DEADLINE: Wednesday, April 27th, 5:00 p.m. at the above locations. 2 mo. $50 noinitialfee For further information please contact Salima at 965-5937. , 'H A Y D E N ’ S. £ L F E R R Y with this ad ¿ ¡I R E V I E W Student Publications. Matthews Center.- Ariaona State University. Tempe. Arisona 86287 WOLFETANNING$25mo. (unlimited) D O N ’T F O R G E T : M em b ersh ip s ca n b e fro ze n fo r s u m m er. G all fo r d eta ils. 829-0088 510 S. 52nd St. A Get Rolling. * . And Save! 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N ot the Doug Henning kind — no disappearing elephants are involved. To P r o fe s s o r F ra n k H o y ’ s E le c tr o n ic Photojournalism class “ m agic” means “ die m iracle o f technology,” and the opportunity to learn about a cam era that requires no film. Sundi Kfenstad/State P res» The March 30 debate between Robert Dietz and Walter Brown was the first use of the still video camera to cover a news event at ASU. State Press Photo Editor Sundi Kjenstad took the photo, but it did not ran in the newspaper. THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO . BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY. A nd they’re both represented by the insignia you wear as a m em ber o f the Arm y Nurse Corps. T h e caduceus on the left j means you’re part o f a health care j system in which educational and career advancem ent are the rule, not the exception. T h e gold bar on the right means you com m and respect as an Army officer. If you re earning a BSN , write: Arm y Nurse O pportunities, P.O. B ox 77.13, Clifton, NJ 07015. O r call toll free 1'800-U S A 'A R M Y .7 ARM Y NURSE CORPS. BE A U YOU CAN BE. WE’RE COOL MAN! Sure sounds like magic. The camera of the future is here, and Hoy’s class is getting the country’s first lode at it. His class, which teaches students to use the electronic camera, is the first of its kind in the country. “ The (W a lter) Cronkite School (o f Journalism and Télécommunication) is a test site fo r its use in a classroom setting,” Hoy said. The revolutionary camera, completed in 1966 and now in use in a few newsrooms around the country, uses a computer-type disk instead of film . ASU, following Ohio State U niversity’s lead, recently purchased the camera and its playback unit. The camera records images on magnetic disks instead o f using film lik e the conventional 35mm camera. The thin, square disk slips ihte the back of the camera (called a “ Still Vidéo Camera” ). The disk is composed of videotape that contains 380,000 pixels, which a re particles that convert ligh t into electrical signals. When the disk is inserted into a recorder resem bling a video cassette recorder, it decodes these signals. The system reorganizes these signals into the original im age, which is displayed on a television set. Prints can then be made in four minutes, “ They (Ohio State) are perfecting the quality so much that it looks as good as other newpapers that use the 35mm cam era,’ ’ said J e ff Dowd, a western regional representative fo r Canon Inc., the company that first introduced the camera. One o f the most am azing aspects of the electronic system is that a photographer can view his picture im m ediately after it is taken. Throughout history, photographers have never been sure if negatives have turned out until after the film is developed. B y the tim e the process is com plete, it is often too late to reshootthe event or subject. “ It’s fantastic,” Hoy said. “ I f the picture isn’t what you want, you can retake it.” Another advantage o f the disk is that it takes 50 pictures, whereas the largest, prepackaged roll o f film only takes 36. Ron K u czek J r., a Mesa Tribune photographer, said it w ill be convenient to use the disk because he w ill not have to change it as many tim es as he does with a roll of film . Turn to Photo|oum oNam , page 11. Is the B lessed V irgin M ary appearing d a ily to som e young p e o p le in M e d ju g o r g e , Yugoslavia? G et the answer from the ASU students w ho recently w ent there!!! W edn esday, A p ril 27th MU Pima Room Noon-12:40 p.m. or 1iOO-1:40 p,m. Everyone is W elcom el THERE'S A FUTURE FOR YOU ÜP1P S u m m e r S to ra g e AIR -CO O LED Climate-Controlled S T U D E N T D ISC O U N T r a n r a iT m T i $ 7 0 ,0 0 0 EARNING P O T E N T IA L 5 0 ° / o W I T H O T H I S F F A D O F F E R E X P IR E S 5-15-88 -, INNER SMCE M M KROR4GE 2950 N. 73rd S t. » S c o t t s d a l e «9 4 1 -5 8 1 1 C heck the res t...w e're th e B e s t! m High volume GM -Toyota dual dealership needs motivated, self-starting individuals. Excellent benefits of health, holidays, incentives & THE BEST in w orking conditions! SALESPEOPLE Aggressive domestic & im port new car sales people needed. EXPERIENCE N O T REQUIRED—outstanding training program provided. C ontact Suzy Voelkel. * Lon & Chris Hoeye’s F it A n C M » O ld sm ob ile • Toyota L3-Q1 W. Broadway • M(?S3, Àrizònà 35202 State Press Monday, April g5 ,1988 Continuedfrompage 10. In Hoy’S Electronic Camera class, taught h ere fo r the firs t tim e this spring, jo u r n a lis m s tu d e n ts s u c c e s s fu lly photographed assignments ranging from food illustrations to portraits o f a custodian, Huy said. “ Thè students in Journalism 494 found the cam era an excellent tool fo r working out creative ideas without the old-fashioned darkroom work,” he said. “ The print quality is still not Sufficient fix', regular newspaper use, but it is being im proved.” In a Wall Street Journal article published recently, reporter C lare Anhberry said the quality o f the disk is very high, but there are problems with the printer. “ The final {Hint looks like a good copy from a Polaroid cam era,” she wrote. “ Since it is printed digitally, there are horizontal lines running through the picture.” The electronic cam era’s digital im ages can be sent over a telephone quicker than any w ire service systems, and many newspapers believe im m ediacy is a m ore important factor than perfect quality. USA Today said it decided to use electronic cam era photographs o f the 1987 W orld Series because they would not have made its deadline using the w ire service. The color photograph that appeared on the Another advantage o f the disk is that an im age can be erased and a new M a g e can be photographed in its place. W hile the disk is in die recorder, a few buttons can be pu sh ed add th e im a g e d is a p p e a rs permanently. “ Companies that use a lot of dim w ill save m on ey," Dowd said. “ They w in only need to buy a couple disks that cost about $10 each, instead o f man^ rolls of film .’’ F o r exam ple, real estate: firm s and the U.S. governm ent have been our biggest bu yers because th ey ta k e: so m any photographs, he said. The disks also can be rem oved from at inserted into the cam era at any tim e. Many tim es a photographer needs to rem ove a roll o f film in the m iddle to take a blade and white picture when a roll of. Color film is in the cam era, o r Vice versa. By using the disk, the photographer need, not waste h alf a roll o f film . Since the im ages are stored on the disk dectronically,. exposure to light, which norm ally ru in s, film , wiU not dam age the im ages. In addition, the cam era abolishes the need fo r a darkroom. The disk can be inserted into an electronic system attached to a printer. The im age is digitany transfered onto paper. “ This is a dream com e true,’ ’ said Andy Mrozihski, a freelance photographer. “ It frees the photographer from a ll file technical work in the darkroom. This w ay he is able to concentrate m ore on taking pictures because be’B have m ore tim e to take them.” Jacques Barbey, a news photographer for the Phoenix Gazette, agreed any tim e spent im proving photography, and not in the darkroom, is a plus. “ I ’m not a technician,” John Sctww M ConM butln g p h o to gra p h * he said, “ and I ’d rather spend less tim e A studio HgMIng assignment using the still video camera for Professor Frank Hoy’s Electronic w orrying about chem icals.” Photojournalism clase. Fhjita Prima FRESH SOUTHWEST FOOD & FAST SERVICE FEATURING GREAT FAJITAS fo r o n ly III■* 1 f a l l i Freeh malta the difference B A R G A IN PRICE SHOWS BIFORE«PMM ON--FRI (EXCEPTHOICATS) SATUROME SUNDRY & HOLIDAYS FIRST SH OWONLY POCA FIESTA STANDa DELIVER(P8| 12:15,2:30,4:45,7:15,9:45 ABOVETHELAW(R) 12:45,3:00,5:15,7:30,10:00 SUPERSTITION 0 C2ES9 M ESA AT S L0N G M 0R E A SUPERSTITION THELASTEMPEROR|PS13|. Sun-Th: 12:00,3:30,7:30 Fri/SatOnly: 12:00.3:30,7:3010:«_________ PERMANENTRECORD(PG13I 12:15,2:30,4:45,7:15,9:30_________ SUN DEUIL BLUEI8UANA(R) 1:15.3:30.5:45.8:00.10:15.12:15 THEUNHOLY|R) 12:15,2:30,5:00,7:45,10:00,12:00 BEETLEJUICE|P8) 12:30.2:30,5:30.7:30.9:45.12:00 TRI-CITY DOLLAR THEATRES MASQUERADE(RL2:15,6:00,9:45 SNOOTTOKILLIRL4:00,7:45 POLICEACADEMY5(P9p:30; 6:15,10:00, APPT. WITHDEATHtPOl 4:15.8:00 MESA AT. 1020WEST SOUTHERN 835-0404 3 MENANOABABY(PR 12:30,3:00,5:15,7:45,10:15 FATALATTRACTION(R) 12:00,2:30,5:00,7:30,10:00 an option,” he said. “ I think the 35 m illim eter cam eras w ill rem ain our main cam era. The electronic cam era w ill be used fo r special incidents such as accidents. We w ill look seriously into purchasing the unit in two to fiv e years, when the quality is improved. “ As o f now the resolution isn’t high enough,” he said. Resolution refers to the crispness o f the photograph. The cost o f the cam era and its accessories have been a m à jo r restriction in purchasing it, Milburn said. The Canon RC-701, the best still video cam era according to Modern Photography magazine, costs about $2,600. The Canon RP-601 transceiver costs around $7,000. “ Other companies such as Conica, and Casio are developing a less expensive unit,” s a id J a m e s C h a lifo u x , a T r o x e ll Communications Video Systems Consultant. Applications are now being accepted for the University o f Pittsburghsponsored Semester at Sea. Each fall or spring 100-day odyssey aboard the American-built S.S. Universe literally offers you the world. Tfou can earn 12-15 transferable units w from your choice o f more than 50 lower and upper division courses, while calling upon places as culturally diverse as Japan, Hong Kong, India,Thrkey, the Soviet Union,Yugoslavia and Spain. . ,> It is a learning adventure designed to transform students of every color, race and creed into true citizens and scholars of the world. C o rn ersto n e Rural & U niversity 921-1230 Gazette. “ The Gazette is looking at the cam era as TheW *MfcStill The Qeatest Classroom ■ H r .. * 2 .9 9 Takeout orders w elcom e front page o f the Oct; 19 edition was.the first o f its kind to be published in Am erica. Hoy said the Still Video Camera system is perfect fo r the fast-breaking news story because it can be sent very quickly: “ The w ire service now takes six to eight minutes to send a photograph, but the transceiver (fo r the electronic cam era) only takes about 15 seconds,” he said. Chad Surmick, an Associated Press photographer, said the w ire service w ill be among the f i s t to use the system. “ A P is now looking into this new camera because it is great fo r sending spot news photographs,” he said. “ W e w ill probably be using it by next year. W e are just w aiting until the quality of the print is im proved upon.” The still electronic cam eras are the trend o f new photojournalists, said Dan Milbum, lab oratory' technician a t thé Phoenix For foil information, including a catalog and application, call 1-800-854-0195/1-412-648-7490 in PA. Or write Semester at Sea, Institute for Shipboard Education, University of Pittsburgh, pT 2E Forbes Quadrangle, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260. Then prepare for the learning adventure of your life. J MILAGROBEANFIEL0WAR(0) 12:00,2:30.5:007:45,10:15 BLUEtfiUANA|R| 12:00,2:15,4:30,7:00,9:15 CASUALSEX(R1 1:15,3:30,5:45,8:00,10:15 TH E C O R N E R S TO N E R U R A L & U NIVERSITY 829-0344 RETURNTOSNOWYRIVERII|PB| 12:00.2:15.4:45,7;15,9:30,12:00 COLORS|R) 11:30.2:00,4:45,7:30.10:15 BILOXIBLUER(PBI31 12:15,2:45.5:00,7:30,10:00,12:00 $1.00 ALL SEATS-ALL SHOWS 461-1070MAINST . A DOBSON flOt. IN MESA School daze iri 12:15.2:4$, 5:15.7:45,10:15 JOHNNYIE ROODIPRI3L2:00,5:45,9:30 18A8AINIPSL3:45,7:30 em m rnm sm m m m m sm S e m e ste r at S e a V id e o a n d In fo rm atio n S e s s io n s T U E S D A Y , A P R I L 26 3 p .m . a n d 7 p .m . M U 214 Stitt Preis 6 ASU students will travel to exotic lands for Peace Corps Latim er said that teaching productive and practical techniques to the native people is im portant because that is what they lack the most. F iv e o f the total 12 people chosen through ASU’s Peace Corps program to participate are ASU students who w ill be graduating in M ay. The other ASU student has already graduated and the other six volunteers are from Tem pe and Phoenix. Latim er said that he could not reveal the names o f the volunteers because that would invade their privacy since they had not yet signed a release form . Latim er said that six students selected from one university is a large amount because every university that has a contract w ith the Peace Corps must nominate 20 applicants to fu lfill a required quota. The contract also states that SO percent o f the people nominated by a university must be accepted by the P eace Corps. “ ASU has not only m et its quota, it has m et its 50 percent requirem ent,” said Latim er, adding that ASU has nominated 31 applicants and 12 have been accepted. Latim er said that applicants w ere chosen after a strenuous, three-leveled selection process because o f their strong interests in the philosophy o f the Peace Corps. SPECIAL OF T H E W EEK ARE YO U A FU N HOG? Is your space taken up by toys that you can’t live without, and you want more? I f to, then... CAMPUS MINI STORAGE is just minute» from ASU! Located at; 1020 W. 1st Street Campu* ^ Tempe, A Z M in i' ifc" W. Iti Street Storage Priest By TERESA OWEN State Press Six ASU students have been selected to travel to exotic lands to teach productive and practical skills to the natives as part o f a 27-month tour in the Peace Corps program , ASU Peace C o il» liaison Dennis Latim er said. The volunteers w ill spend 27 months in such countries as Guinea, M arshall Island, Micronesia, Tunisia, Nepal and Honduras. “ T h e T h ird W o rld c o u n trie s a re requesting people with skills and leadership (because) the countries already have the man pow er,” said Latim er, who spent four years in Honduras as a Peace Corps volunteer. Each volunteer w ill receive three months training in their particular countries, where they w ill learn the language ami customs o f the people and practice die skills that they w ill teach to the native people, Latim er said. The volunteers w ill teach skills such as agriculture techniques, education methods and health practices. He added, that the purpose o f Peace Corps is an “ interpersonal exchange where you (d ie volunteer) w ill learn from them (the native people) and they w ill learn from you.” New s: 965-2292 « 1 ! Storage Sizes University Dr, CALL 968-3133 FOR INFORMATION 25%Discount Off 1st Month’s Rent, Plus 10%Monthly Discount With Student I.D. Mailboxes With 24 Hour Access______ ' . - WHAT’S A DEGREE GOOD FOR? GYROS ONLY ( ) PfiE-APPROVED CREDIT FROM FORD CREDIT ( ) $400 CASH BONUS FROM FORD WITH THIS AD (up to 4 sandw iches) OFFER GOOD THROUGH APRIL 30,1988 H ours: M o n .-Frl. 10-9 • s a t. 10-6 (]/) B0J0 829 s. Rural Rd. 966-5543 Jjl ALL OF THE ABOVE AT Earnhardt's Auto Center STUDENT U FE ill CULTURAL DIVERSITY COMMITTEE Spring '88 ¡F ilm F e s t iv a l 26 APR La Frontera -1982 & Chutas Fronteras ■ 1976 (Spanish with English subtitles) 3 M AY Viva Zapata ■ USA 1952 All screenings are Tuesdays at 7 p.m. In the Memorial Union Cinema, lower level south. (Except Storm y Weather, March 1, at 5:30 p.m .) F rse. Y ou a re encouraged to join knowledgeable discussion leaders following each film (except Storm y W eedier) for an examination o f the relevant issues and a cup o f co ffe e with new friends. »H o w d o e * "c iv iliza tio n " im pact upon native cultures? •H as intolerance reared its u g ly h ead again in the 00 'a? • "T h e Am erican Dream ": ia it for everyone? • “ C elebration i" . . . and viewers choices, o f course! C o-sponsored by Student U fa Cultural Diversity Committee, the M U A 0 Film Committee and McDonald’s. | At E A R N H A R D T S , your degree is worth a lot. If you've graduated, or will graduate, with a Bachelor’s or advanced degree between October 1,1987 and Janu­ ary 31,1989, you may qualify for $400 from Fora and pre-approved credit from Ford Motor Credit Com ­ pany. 1b qualify for pre-approved credit, you need: (1) verifiable employment beginning within 120 days after your vehicle purchase; (2) a salary sufficient to cover normal living expenses plus a car payment; and (3) if you have a F o rd M o to r C r e d it Com pany credit record, it must indicate pay­ ment made as agreed. The $400 from Ford is yours whether you financé or n ot Keep it or apply it to tee purchase or lease of an eligible Ford or Mercury vehicle. For all the details, contact us or call Program Headquarters, toil free, at 1-800-321-1536. But hurry. This limited time offer is only available between Mante 1 and December 31, 1988. Take advantage of the Ford/Mercury College Graduate Purchase Program now. . l / o VC/ 1 ;j : ; 777 E. BASELINE TEMPE 838-6000 > FORD ■ m s arts & entertainment State P ie « Monday, April 25,1988 P in k F lo y d f f - S H H H Perennial rock giants prepare to make Valley ‘Moment’ By SCOTT C. 8ECKEL State Preaa i .istpning to Pink F loyd is like looking ait an enormous, ancient city, with huge swooping spires and solid, attackproof w alls; die awesome sweep and strength o f their music generally causes most fans to look into the distance ami say, “ W ow.” - . ; ; The arch itectu ral^ sound but poh ticallydivided British band launches its legendary show upon die V alley at 8 p.m. today in Phoenix M unicipal Stadium. Many Floyd diehards m ight be unsure whether to attend the concert, considering co-creator and bass guitarist Roger W aters won’t be playing. A chasm in the band opened in 1983, when W aters, unsatisfied with the work on the “ The Final Cut,” sim ply le ft Since then, a veritable w ar o f words has flown back and forth between W aters and co-founders D avid Gilmour and Nick Mason. W hile “ A Momentary Lapse o f Reason,” the band's latest album, is not “ Th e W all,’ ’ W ater’s towering achievement, it can be optim istically construed as a new turn fo r the band. A fter a ll, 20 years o f stardom is a virtual miUenium in the music w orld; only a handful o f groups can stroke their grey beards and stake that claim (the Rolling Stones, the Grateful Dead and the Kinks are a few that Come to m ind). i.tetening to ea rly albums like “ The P ip er at the Gates of Dawn” -should tell any astute fa n that Pink Floyd, like any great group, drives a llo v e r toe road instead of being trapped in a muddy rut. And in that lies part Of their greatness. “ Lapse of Reas«®,” a moody album with Waters-inspired sound effects and the clean roar of Gilmour’s guitar, does contain the cries from a lost soul that com e through on “ The W a ll” ; T h e album also h as b itin g, W ater’ s-style comm entary, and in that, fans can be reassured. This is still Pin kF loyd . A striking cut on the L P , “ The Dogs of W ar,” could be cm the soundtrack if a m ovie is ever made about the Iran-Contra a ffair. Hell opened up and put on sale, Gather round and baggie. For hard cash we will lie and deceive, Even our masters don’t know the web we weave. Invisible transfers, long distance calls, Hollow laughter in marble halls. M ixed reaction to the new album hasn’t put a damper on ticket sales here. The lasers, toe sound (which broke noise ordinances in Sacram ento), the fighter plane and (o f course) toe P ig , not to mention toe giant video screen and computer­ generated animation, are bringing fans in to see what is increasingly being called “ the best concert I ’ve ever seen.” • O f the original group, three members are cm tour this season: Gilmour, doing vocals and guitar, Mason on drums and Richard W right (an old member present, so far, only for the tour) on keyboards. The other eight members o f the present Floyd lineup are : Jem Carrin on keyboards, Scott P age cm saxophone, Guy P ratt replacing W aters cm bass guitar, Tim Renwick on rnytnm guitar, ana uaiy ™ uma. The first show is sold out, but there are tickets available for a Tuesday show recently scheduled, at various ticket outlets in the V alley. C olors’: Hopper’s fringe im age fails as cinem a effort By DAVE MILLER State Prase “ C olors” is M erlon P erk in ’s m ost debaucherous nightmare. P erk in s w as a docum entary man, dedicated to Sailing in the bush in search of rhinos m ating and lion prides spending an easy Sunday. N o anim al ritual was too bizarre fo r film footage, or too hazardous to send assistant Jim in fen a closer look. But he never documented the habits o f the strangest animal, the one that w ill steal your car and throw up in your back seat if you leave the keys in. I f he had, he m ight have m ade a film like “ Colors,” which would’ve been Ins crowning achievem ent: a gang-war documentary of the strangest, most bizarre, most prim itive, most obscene behaviors ever exhibited by a group o f animals. It would top even shark C a m it i l u C ibi footage, or “ Lifestyles o f the Rich and Famous.” But it never occurred to Perkins. It took a m an as twisted and on the frin ge o f modern life as Dennis Hopper (director and star of “ Easy R ider” ) to reveal the sickening social flagellation occurring within the boundaries o f east Los Angeles. And it almost worked. Ironically, it doesn’t work because of Hopper’s good intentions. What “ Colors” sets out to do is display, in fu ll force and Hying color, the nauseating melodrama being acted out by the “ Crips” and the “ Bloods” and the cops, in which hundreds have died and hundreds m ore bleed. The film begins by announcing that 378 gangrelated deaths occurred last year in L.A . And Hopper has filled the screen with re­ C o lo r s ★ ★ (out of four) Orion "Pictures presents “ Colors.” Directed by Dennis Hopper; produced by Robert H. Solo; screenplay by Michael Schiffer; starring Sean Penn, Robert Duvall and Maria Conchita Alonso. Rated R Sean Penn administer* hi* own form m f™ "™ ""’’" , — member painting a wall in Dennla Hopper a Colors. -------'------------- catch a gang enactments o f tins carn age— he’s spared no amount o f style and energy to get the message across: this is real, and this is happening right now. What he doesn’t do, however, is m ake a movie about it. “ C o lo r s ” s u ffe r s fr o m te rm in a l schizophrenia. Hopper can’t decide if he wants to depict the gang wars as they really happen o r t k l the story o f two cops dodging bricks and developing love interests in the o ff hours. This indecisiveness makes spaghetti o f “ Colors,” good intentions and all. Sean Penn plays Sean Penn here: the real life sawed-off hothead, eager to show his cajones at a m om ent’s n otice. H e’s adequate as the brash rookie, but the question is ‘Why bother?’ — he’s been so good in other roles. Is this the kind o f part he rea lly wants to play? M aria Conchita Alonso is wasted in a gratuitous part as Penn’s love interest. She’s also been much better in past roles. Robert Duvall, as a seasoned cop, is “ Colors’ ” saving grace. He acts rings around his co-stars in every scene, and injects originality into a stereotyped part. His final scene is brilliant. Hopper, like Alonso and Penn, has done better, if not m ore ambitious work. As a report mi a real social disease foam ing and spewing in our streets, his film succeeds with flyin g colors. As a m ovie, toe effort seems wasted. ■ M M IW ri S M Page 14 ■■■■■■HHHHHPPI B N S iiS i W R I Monday. April 25,1988 The Pavarim: Israeli folk so fg s with a decided twist By JESSIE SIMON State Press In th e sa lm o n -co lo re d trow els o f Gam m age Auditorium Lsraeli-natives Yossi Hury and Ori Harpaz calm ly discuss their music and their lives, only an hour before they are to perform some o f the many folk songs they’ve acquired o ver the years. The much-touring duo is logically known a s T h e P a r v a r im , w h ic h m e a n s “ suburbanites” , and they have com e from Israel to Tem pe at a tim e m arking that country’s 40th anniversary, celebrated last week. “ (It is ) once or tw ice a year that w e have a ch an ce to tou r d iffe r e n t J ew ish communities outside Israel. But most o f the work is done in Israel,” Harpaz said. The Parvarim have been to Arizona three, m aybe four tim es — neither m em ber seemed too certain. One thing is fo r sure, though, they enjoy the United States. “ W e enjoy Phoenix. It’s like hom e,” Hury said. “ W arm clim ate; people are warm. There are many cultural events (in the states), many things to see.” But they don’t really have tim e to sight* see w hile they tour. Hury and Harpaz, after 11 years together, have com piled an extensive collection of folk songs — enough fo r 18 albums. They select a specific group o f songs fo r each city, in which they stay for only b rief periods o f tim e. “ W e’ve collected so many songs that cover everything,” Hury said. “ W e started with Israeli folk songs at the beginning,” Harpaz said. “ W e still sing some o f them, but during the years w e’ve developed ourselves and w e started to sing modern folk songs. And w e sing, uh, it’s our style — South Am erican. W e just love South m u sic Am erican songs. “ Our show is very colored, w e have songs from everyw here,” he said. “ W e used to sing in Greek, and w e sing in Spanish, but not here. “ W e sing songs that are South Am erican songs, but they’re translated into Hebrew. W e didn’ t come here to the states to show that w e can sing songs in Spanish. That's silly. Most o f the songs are in H ebrew,” Harpaz explained. “ W e’re trying to sing different songs from different cultures,” Hury added. In fact, they even perform songs off Am erican groups, including the work of Simon and Garfunkel. “ It ’s w eird fo r you, m aybe, fo r Am ericans to listen to Simon and Garfunkel in Hebrew — but w e get good review s,” Harpaz said. “ W e prefer campuses to anywhere else w e go,” Hury said. “ It ’s the best audience w e have.” The Parvarim have a funny sort of versatility — they speak English and Hebrew, but have only a slight knowledge o f Spanish and none o f Greek or, surprisingly, Yiddish. On the serious side, Harpaz and Hury are not w orried about the tensions between Palestine and their homeland. “ Most artists are peace lovers that I know,” Harpaz said. “ It just so happens that in Israel everyone is regarded as a political party. “ W e’re optim istic. W e b elieve that somehow peace is going to win, even though many people are in the w ay.” Ä S ‘It’s w e ird fo r A m erican s to listen to Sim on a n d G arfunkel in Hebrew , b u t w e g e t g o o d re v ie w s.r C O C A IN E ABUSE By C h o k e. . . Not By Chance • A bortion Services •Free p a p sm ear with birth control exam •Birth control exam only $35includes free pkg, o f pills •Free pregnancy testing and early detection pregnancy test $12 •Affordable gyn exams S.T.O.P. Structured Treatm ent O utpatient Program M ed ically supervised d etoxifica tion and reco very available w h ile you m aintain you r d rily schedule. CALL N O W 897-7044 2123 E. 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MALHAM JR. women (in their view ) and scapegoating the m ale race for State P r»n ■ > t " ;;; E S T every im aginable tdnl ‘ Women. * ' ~ ^ ^ - « % iSp #However, this predominantly fem ale production seriously You can’t live with ’em, you can’ t make a m ovie about ’em .: backfires into the bras o f its creators due to its over-zealous, That’s a theme o f the fifes “ Casual Sex?’ lo ia c t, this new, subjective approach. . harmless and weU-disguised comedy is anything but what its In an attempt to expose every despicable fault o f the m ale luring title suggests. race by m erely stereotyping every person in pants, “ Casual A fter tw o hours o f post-menstrual dialogue and jokes which Sex,” instead displays the neurotic insecurities and sexual |garnered laughs only from women in the audience, this inbalances o f the fem ale race — at least the fem ale race o f mistake should have perhaps chosen “ I ’m a Fem inist this film . Dammit, But I H a v e ' Feelings Too, You Know,” as its And just when women w ere fin ally getting some respect, i working title. too. M ostly because that’s what “ Casual Sex” is really a ll about The film revolves around Stacy (L ea Thompson) and j — illustrating the frustrating needs and desires o f today’s M elissa (V ictoria Jackson), two long-tim e friends and working-class women in search o f the perfect sexual experience. /This o f course is rem arkably difficu lt, especially when your partner selection is lim ited to men. Stacy, or the “ Slamhound” as she playfu lly labels herself, has been a dilligent participant in sex since she was 17. M elissa, on the other hand, can count her sexual experiences on three fingers, but she’s not even sure if the she was there fo r the first two. With the grow ing threat o f AIDS, and the On-set o f sexual doldrums, the two decide to head fo r the confines o f a poor man’s Club Med and, with a little luck, find som e healthoriented satisfaction and the perfect man. Obtaining mineral w ater is the easy part. Finding M r. Right is something else. W hile on their life discovering vacation, our tw o confused heroines struggle with the fact that men are, and always w ill be, slaves to their groins. Oddly-enough, that seem ed to be the kind of men they ware looking for. This m ovie isn’t about love or relationships. It is the overly-fem inist answer to “ Spring Break” m ovies everyw here. mi ■Jßmm m “ Casual Sex” It was actually one step above prom oting lesbianism as the answer fo r every g irl who wants to fee l needed.. (out of four) When the two fin ally find their “ better halves,” it’s m erely a total compromise on their part. Universal Pictures presents "Casual Sex.” Directed by G enevieve Robert; pro­ duced by Ilona Herzberg; screen p la y by W endy Goldman and Judy Toll; starring Lea Thompson and Victoria Jackson. Rated R They have no choice — men a re the only alternative. The film “ Casual Sex” succeeds in dam aging both sides of the human spectrum sim ply by exaggerating the natures of both sexes. Women, as depicted in this film , who loved all-night sleepovers with girlfriends and staying up the entire night wondering about “ lengths and widths,” m ay enjoy this technicolor waste. But anyone with a sense o f dignity and an appreciation for human emotions w ill find “ Casual Sex” nothing m ore than a ’ ‘Lávem e and Shirley Losing their V irginity in the ’80s” -type adventure — thanks to d ie likes o f Lenny and Squiggy. ^ : ...... Victoria Jackson (left) and Lea Thompson search for the ever-elusive perfect man In “Casual Sex.” 1-HOUR FO TO , e 12exposure. 1 5 /2 4 e x p 3 © exposure SINGLE PRINTS DOUBLE PRINTS 2 .9 9 3 .9 9 5 .9 9 3 .9 9 5 .9 9 7 .9 9 1W, 126,35mm. Disc Color Print Film Photoliniahing (041). Not good with any othar coupon/offar/dlacount. COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER. C olor Enlargem ents.............5*7 $ 3 .4 9 ........ . 8*10 $ 5 .9 9 Video Transfer Special..............----- $ 7.99 s e t u p /8 4 per f t 3228S.MillAve .¡.19664836 930W.Broadway.... 9644583 1738E.Broadway.... 967-7590 5110S.Rur.lRd.....8304834 I Coupon good through 5-154)8. D ID Y O U K N O W ? YOUR ASU INSURANCE COVERS CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! • Whiplash • Neck Pain • Auto Accident Injuries Headaches Back Pain do; • Shoulder Pain • Accidental Injuries We w ill a c c e p t yo u r in su ra n ce, p ro v id e a stu d en t d iscou n t, with little o r n o o u t-o f-p o ck e t exp en se to you. Lost your w allet? Found a jacket? The S T A T E P R E S S has a FREE Lost & Found s e c t i o n in our C lassifieds. Com e down to M atthews Center B a s e m e n t o r c a ll 965-6731 to place a free Lost & Found ad. -V c |1$ mpe NEAR ASU . W h ip la s h ! 9 6 6 -1 6 3 5 - Dr. Donald Nelson Lose your teddybear? _ S t if f N e c k 3910 S. Rural Rd. #E & B a ck ! PiijijiÍÉi iji.i H M H ifììjMiHwW Monday, April 85,1968 entertainment briefs Form er first lady protests Ja n e Fonda's latest film W ATERB U RY, Conn. (A P ) — Form er first lady Rosalynn Carter has joined the debate over the film ing o f the m ovie “ Union Street” here. Local veterans organizations have criticized the m ovie’s star, actress Jane Fonda, because o f her visit to North Vietnam during the Vietnam W ar, and say she is not welcom e in town. In a letter published in F riday’s editions o f the Waterbury Republican-American, Carter said Fonda was not alone in strongly objecting to the Vietnam W ar. “ It is true Fonda was a m ilitant objector during the V ietnam W ar and did things o f which I strongly disapproved,” Carter said. “ However, it is good fo r us to realize that m illions o f Americans^, young and old, strongly opposed some o f the actions o f oiir governm ent during the conflict.” ( Carter said Fonda has since expressed regrets about the methods she used to oppose the w ar and has supported the cause o f Vietnam veterans. “ Ours is a nation whose principles perm it us citizens to express differences o f opinion — even to criticize publicly our own governm ent,” Carter said. “ M y hope is that those who still condemn Fonda and would deprive her of the right to practice her profession are a sm all m inority and that other citizens of W aterbury w ill speak up for the right of free speech in our country.” ••• COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P ) — W atergate conspirator-turnedm inister Jeb Stuart M agruder says im m orality that once was frowned on in this country has becom e the norm. “ In the first 200 years after the founding o f this country, unethical behavior existed, but it was not tolerated,” M agruder said as he opened a panel discussion cm ethics Saturday. “ But today I ’m afraid, unethical behavior is part o f the norm . . . it is expected.” ,-. M agruder cited an episode o f “ The Oprah W infrey Show” in which young women spoke about their lives as “ groupies,” WeigHt loss stays lost. C e n te r You're going to make it this time. fans who are obsessed w ith rock state. One woman churned to have had sex w ith about 2,000 musicians, he said. The woman appeared to be proud of her liaisons and “ obviously it was o f interest to the public because it was on national television,” he said. M agruder, a Presbyterian m inister here, spent seven months in ja il fo r Iris role as a Nixon Administration staffer in the W atergate a ffa ir, which he calls one o f file greatest ethical scandals o f m odem times. Since he was ordained a m inister in 1961, he has divided his tim e between church duties and speaking to groups about ethics. Last month, he was appointed head o f the city’s 15-member Commission on Values and Ethics. ARLIN G TO N , Texas (A P ) — Ted Turner, president o f Atlanta-based Turner Broadcasting System, Inc., says he is convinced man w ill eventually destroy both him self and the environment. Nonetheless, he praised Soviet leader M ikhail Gorbachev fo r his disarmament efforts, saying they a re a sign that peace and stability are still achievable. Speaking here Saturday at a peace conference, Turner said he has been'a peace activist “ passionately” for the past 10 years. / Man has been fighting him self and.the planet since tim e began, and both wars have accelerated ih the last hundred years, Turner said. “ The w ar against each other is going pretty w ell,” he said. “ But the w ar against the environment, w e’re winning that hands down. A tre e doesn’t have much Chance against a man with a chainsaw.’ ’ ■ . • In a wide-ranging talk to about 150 people a t the Robert M uller School, Turner said that next to nuclear war, overpopulation and depletion o f natural resources are the w orld’s mo6t pressing problems. t Turner was critical o f the Reagan administration, saying Ronald Reagan would have been a good president 100 years At Diet Center you’ll see last results. Without gimmicks o r drugs. Without special foods to buy. Without hunger. And when those pounds and inches are gone, they’re gone! Your first personal consultation is absolutely free. So please. You’re ¡going to make It this time. 10% O F F y o u r d ie t p ro g ra m w / A S U ID McClintock Garden O ffices m 2246 S. M cC lin tock #3 9 6 7 -1 3 7 1 And w ell teach you how. 952-8850 We Score More. Your Campus Hair Care Center 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe In tro d u cin g N a ils b y K e lly 968-5946 With This Ad R E G U L A R PRIC ES •S h a m p oo • P r e c is io n C u t » C o n d it io n » B lo w D r y MEN *14 • WOMEN *16 OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY TUES., WED. & THURS. TILL 9 P.M. A N D T H A T ’S W H A T Y O U G E T EVER Y M O N D A Y & W EDNESDAY 2 fo r 1 — D o u b le Prints o r F r e e F ilm R e c e i v e t w o p r in ts f o r t h e p r ic e o f o n e a t t h e tim e o f d e v e l o p m e n t , o r g e t a f r e e r o ll o f film ; y o u p ic k . T e m p o C e n te r 829-0424 'M i l l & h u m p s ’* HtiLY mm miBÜlOIRKä THE HOTTEST SPOT ON BROADW AY C a l l f o r appt. 8 9 4 -1 1 5 2 STUDENT SPECIAL $4.00 w/ASU ID P R IN C E T O N R E V IE W UlTEffc With Participating Stylists H YA N N IS, Mass. CAP) — Irish Prim e M inister Charles J. Haughey attended Mass on Sunday with one o f the nation’s best-known sons o f Ireland, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, then traveled to New York fo r a m eeting with Cardinal John O’Connor. Haughey was the Massachusetts Dem ocrat’s guest at the Kennedy fam ily’s Cape Cod compound this weekend foUowing a speech he delivered at Harvard U niversity on the recent trouble in Northern Ireland. Irish Consul General Brandon ScanneB said Haughey would m eet Sunday afternoon in New York with the Irishdescended cardinal before returning to Dublin. /.SAT 6M T ■- SAT THE $5 00 O F F SELIG M AN, Aria. (A P ) — Borrowing the Ime from a song, “ get your kicks on Route 66,” W ill Rogers Jr. kissed the governor o f Arizona at a dedication o f the celebrated eastwest link as a national historic highway. Hundreds showed u p Saturday from as fa r aw ay as New York and Detroit, including Gov. Rose M offord anddozensof people driving their vintage, mid-1950s cars. The celebra tors hoped to ca ll attention to the route that was the main link between Chicago and Los Angles until Interstate 40 made the heyday o f Route 66 little m ore than a memory. “ I f you want to make history today,” M offord told Rogers, “ you can k ite thè governor. It’D be the only governor you ever kissed.” ' And Rogers, son o f the Depression-era humorist, obliged. M offord joined in a group singing o f Bobby Troup’s “ Route 66,”- even though she admitted that she didn’t know aD o f the words and “ I can’t ca tty a tune, even in the shower.” • BogiHonts o f Seligman hoped that designation o f Route t t as a national historic highway would help breathe some life into the tiny towns lining the route across northern Arizona — towns that have seen hard tim es since they w ere bypassed. Raise your The LSAT, GRE and GMAT can be tough, but we can make them a whole lot easier. The Princeton Review has helped thousands of students dramatically raise their scores." Small classes (8 to 12students) geared to your strengths and weaknesses and a detailed computer analysis throughout the program make us the most effective, efficient and enjoyable way to dramatically improve your scores. You'll score more when you know how. '■ '■~ _ _ _ _ _ _ The W eight loss p ro fe s s io n a ls ago, “ wheh w e hadmaChine giins and the other guysjust.bad U n iV . O PEN 7'DAYS A WEEK S.E. CORNER OF BROADWAY A N D R U R A L HHHHKMWlHPPPlìflHNI State Press Page 17 Monday, Aprii 85,1988 •“ Calm Sea and Prosperous V o ya ge:" The above composition by Mendelssohn, along with W agner’s Prelude to A rt II I o f “ Lohengrin” and Grondahl’s “ Concerto for Trom bone and Orchestra’ * w ill be perform ed by ASU’s Symphony Orchestra today ip a free public concert in Gammáge Center at 7:30 p.m. The symphony w ill feature soloist G ail Wilson. For m ore information call 965-3371. v\ •Two fo r the price o f one: Japanese Kabuki and Elizabethan Theater: ASU ’ s D epartm en t o f T h ea tre presents W illiam Shakespeare’s seriocom ic (day “ Measure for Measure” in a version that combines the drama o f the Orient a id the style of Elizabethan perform ance. The play w ill run in the Lyceum Theatre Tuesday through Sunday. Showtime is at 8 p.m. with a 1 p.m. m atinee Sunday. Tickets are $6 and $4 for students and facility. F or m are inform ation call 968-5359. ^Escape the Monday bhws: The Foreign Language Department and the French club, La Fafa, w ill o ffer an excursion from Monday monotony. They’ll sponsor a free showing o f “ Les Lettres de mon Moulin,” the classic French film adapted by M arcel Pagnol from three stories by Alfonse Daudet. Tbs m ovie w ill be shown at 2:40 p.m. in room A18 o f the Language and Literature building. •And yet another film fo r free: T h e Student C u ltu ral D iv e rs ity C om m ittee and McDonald’s continue their free film series this week and w ill be showing “ La Frontera” and “ Chulas Fronteras” Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the MU Cinema. •Oscar nominee Vincent Gardenia takes to the stage: ; The Tony Award-winning Broadway play “ I ’ m Not Rappaport” w ill be ¡»resented at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in Gammage Center. This celebrated play about a couple o f older men who battle out an unusual friendship on a Central Park bench stars Vincent Gardenia (nominated as Best Supporting Actor fo r “ Moonstruck” ) and Glynn Turman. Tickets are $18 and $16. •Theatre o f the Absurd: ASU ’s Departm ent o f Th eatre tackles the mindchallenging work of French playwright and absurdist Eugene Ionesco in their production o f “ The Chairs.” The ¡day, directed by Brian O’Riordan, closes the department’s Scholarship Series and w ill be presented at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday in Drama City. Tickets are $5. Stew art’s son nam es ‘P u n ch the Big G u y ’ album NEW YO R K (À P ) — A t his A pril performance at New York’s Bottom Line, John Stewart joked, “ I ’m going on ‘The Oprah W infrey Show’ next week as one of those singers who won’t go aw ay.” With his resonant voice, which can throb with present urgency or echo with regret fo r past losses, a devoted group of listeners doesn’t want John Stewart to go away. For them — and now listeners are welcom e — Stewart has a new album, “ Punch the B ig Guy.” A fter writing its 10 songs, he asked his 7-year-old son, Luke, what the name of the album should be. Luke cam e back, without a moment’s pause, with “ Punch the R ig Guy.” “ I don’t know what it means,” Stewart said. “ And he doesn’t either.” Stewart is a big man, but he’s sure his son meant a threatening figu re ami not Dad. “ I ’m not inviting any punches,” Stewart also has three grown children and a grandchild. He has been perform ing since 1960, made three records with John M ontgom ery and G il Robbins as the Cumberland Three, replaced D ave Guard in thè Kingston Trio and was on 13 records with Nick Reynolds and Bob Shane from 1961 through 1966. His first record after that was “ Signals Through the Glass” STATS PRESS Kaw: 965-2292 N IV ER SITY NO DEO m e m b e r s h ip ' r e q u ir e d Under N ew Ow nership 847 W . University Dr. Tempe • 894-2865 S.E. Comer of University A Hardy R en t 3 V id eo s and r e c e iv e a A n y M o v ie 9 9 * FREE BLANK TAPE Limit 1 Dtyfaj AM miç 965-7572 Cbwfltai T R A C Mopeds Honda Scooters A LL M O D ELS O N SALE from only t 'lQ Q O O u n# ^7 ^7 (Save $200” ) wr™ ™ B COUPON ExpirM S-1M8 E VE RY Mon., Tues. & Wed. W e Rent VCRs with Buffy Ford. They’ve been m arried for the last 11 years. known her fo r 17 years, I think. Perseverance is the most She sings on one track, “ Night o f a Distant Star,” mi Ids new important ingredient in trying to be a musician or w riter. If album. Rosanne Cash sings on two, “ P rice o f the F ire ” and you don’t go away, they cán’t ignore you. You w ear them “ Angels with Guns.” A John Stewart song, “ Runaway down.” Train,” w ill be 0 » next single from her “ King’s Record Stewart’s biggest hit song has been “ Daydream B eliever,” a No. 1 hit fo r the Monkees worldwide and a country hit which Shop” album. “ I ’ve always written,’ ’ Stewart said. “ I always .thought, ' crossed over to pop fo r Anne Murray. “ The royalties have kept m e a live,” he said. ‘What am I going to w rite about?’ One day a year ago, I started to w rite what 1 was thinking about instead. A ll these His fans most often ask for “ July You’re a Woman.” “ It was on the chart six tim es by different people, but it was songs came pouring oqt.” never a big hit,” he said. “ Everybody did that song from Pat The first one was “ Botswana,” Stewart says. “ As a w riter, you try to w rite how to deal with that. The song is about not Boone to Robert Goulet to E ddie Arnold. ” dealing with it and how you really can’t deal with it. “ Mother Country” is another Stewart song that fans think “ Some songs com e through you like you w ere a radio was a hit and wasn’t. But “ Gold” was, in 1979. He said, “ The album on RSO, ‘Bombs Aw ay Dream Babies,’ was a top-10 receiver. A ll o f these did that. They were gifts, I guess. I wrote them very quickly. The songs you labor over seem to album, and it had ‘Gold,’ a top-5 single, and two top-20 singles, ‘Midnight Wind’ and ‘Lost H ere in the Sun.’ not be as good.” “ It is real easy to hear a hit after it is a hit. It is very hard One song be wrote, “ Sweet Dreams W ill Come,” was a duet with Texas folk singer Nanci G riffith. “ It was going to be on to hear it before it is. I took ‘Daydream B eliever’ to a lot of ‘Punch the B ig Guy,’ ” Stewart said. “ It seemed to fit her groups, and they passed emit. I was convinced ‘Dream ers on the R ise’ o n ‘The Last Campaign’ album would be a hit. I sent ‘lit t le Love A ffairs’ album better. it to Anne M urray. She sent it back.” “ She’s just now getting the recognition she deserves. I ’ve T o w n & C o u n try H o n d a 1701 N . A riz o n a A v e . • 899-9088 3 miles south of Superstition on Country Club 965-6731 Tamas»9=965-2097 W A K E U P L A T E A G A IN ? Do you occasionally find yourself still snooz­ ing when that early morning class is over.. .or your important meeting has started without you?? CALL FOR WAKE-UP SERVICE 468-9733 DON’T BE LATE AGAIN! CHENG U BUFFET Fantastic Chinese Food in Peking, Shanghai and Szechwan Style ALL YOU CAN EAT Menu Changed Daily LUNCH $ 3 .9 5 # DINNER $ 4 .6 5 (20% discount cxi lunch and dinner with this ad) ALSO TRY OUR FANTASTIC CHINESE RICE BOWL MENU # $2.75 (20% discount not applicable) OPEN 7 DAYS 11 AM-9:30 PM 968*9482 818 W . B r o a d w a y R d ., T e m p e BROADWAY RESUM ES •SAME DAY SERVICE •WRITING & CONSULTING •CLOSEST TO ASU •LAYOUT & DESIGN •LASER PRINTING 1 _____ UniY°rs!,y 1 I "CORPORATE RESUME” KOLLS WELLS BUSINESS COMPLEX N.E, CORNER UNIVERSITY & 48th ST. SUITE 108, BUILDING 455 T E L : 966-0709 co m ics State Press Monday, April 25,1988 Page 18 by Berke Breathed BLOOM COUNTY i came as soon M I HOW'HOW HE'S HYMNG A UBEAAL Tm.usreN.. i-N irs e if.w m FOR A L HAIG LAST FEBRUARY. NOW (M L OUT. HW i^-TOHT ■ w e FIRSTBUCK IN m m ure m use w ill se AOONsemrm. TTS JUST NOT OUR TURN THIS YEAR. ITS SOCIALLY OKAY 1Ü PISUKE JESSE, TDMt « Rena*. &rT lMuli, \ fSSBk /m m (.FO B S A ft “You know, it w a s su p p o se d to b e. just a story a b o u t a little kid d n d a w olf n, but off a n d on , I’ve b e e n dressin g u p a s a gran dm oth er ever since.” BY GARRY TRUDEAU D o o n e sb u ry I DONTKNOW,REN. I KNOW THATMARRIAGES GOTHROUGH PERIODS OF DOLDRUMS,BUT J THINGS DONTSEEM TO B E 1 GETTING ANY BETTER! 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Shoe by Jeff MacNelly HERMAN ÛpH "It's not m y fau lt if I th ought it w as 'in d ig e stio n '!" S p o rts Page 19 Stet« P i l i — — — — —— — ¡ 22— Devils regain 1st place with 15- o w in S p o r t i Horts Gym nasts place 8th at C ham pieiiships The ASU women’s gymnastics team f i n i s h e d e i g h t h in t h e N C A A Championship m eet Friday at Salt Lake City, Utah. Sun Devil Karii Urban led the team in the all-around with 37.75 points and tied with ASU gymnast Heather Carter for 11th in the uneven parallel bars with a 9.50 score. Th e ASU score of 185.10 points gave thé team its seventh consecutive top-10 finish. N fL D ra ft N EW Y O R K (A R ) — First round selections in Sunday’s N F L draft: 1. Atlanta, Aundray Bruce, lb, Auburn. 2. Kansas City, from Detroit, Neil Smith, de, Nebraska. 3. Detroit, from Kansas City, Bennie Blades, db, Miami, Fla. 4. Tam pa Bay, Paul Gruber, ot, Wisconsin. 5. Cincinnati, Rickey Dixon, db, Oklahoma. 6. Los A n geles Raiders, Tim Brown, wr, Notre Dame. 7. Green Bay, Sterling Sharpe, wr, ASU,I .QtanfnrH Stanford cnlit split 1_Qt 1st 2; winning streak,ends at 23 By DEAN GYORGY State Press £ A fter having its winning streak snapped at 23 on Saturday, the ASU baseball team bounced back with the resiliency o f a simper ball.. The Sun D evils pelted fiv e Stanford pitchers in defeating the Cardinal, 15-6, on Sunday in Palo Alto, Calif. The victory gave ASU a one-game lead over Stanford in the Six-Pac standings. The series was shifted back a day a fte r ra in postponed F r id a y ’ s contest. The fin al gam e w ill he played at 1 p.m. today. Troy Paulsen in the third and Paul Carey in the eighth both hit two-run shots. A solo rim in the fifth and an unearned run in the ninth rounded out the Cardinal scoring. & “ Ingram did not overpower them,” Brock said. “ He pitched with the lead that he had, m ade the big pitches when he needed to, and stayed around fo r nine (innings), which Certainly helps our situation fo r (tod ay). He (fid an outstanding job, but the day probably goes to hitters.” In the Sun D evil second, Tim Spehr Singled home Steve W illis fo r the first run o f the gam e. Ricky Candelari “ This was clearly the biggest followed with a three-run homer to ballgam e o f the year for us,” ASU m ake the score 4-0. coach Jim Brock said after Sunday’s Candelari, who had dropped to the gam e. “ I was concerned that the longer the win-streak went, and w hen. eighth spot in the batting order, w e did lose a gam e, what affect it broke an 0-for-16 slump with his 12th would have — and whether w e’d be homerun of the season. His four R B I able to bounce back quickly or not. on the day brought him to a team­ lead in g60. I ’m proud o f our kids.” In the third, Kevin Higgins tripled Linty Ingram (14-2) went the distance, allowing six runs on 11 hits. and scored on a S teve W illis He struck « i t 11, tying a personal- iupierun. Dan Rumsey backed up high, while walking only two. He also W illis with a solo shot to make it 7-2. ASU scored three in the sixth and kept pace with E ric Stone o f Texas and Rich Crane of Fresno State, who three m ore in the eighth. Tim Spehr are all tied fo r the nation’s lead in finished the onslaught with a two-run homer in the ninth. wins with 14. The four Sun D evil home runs Ingram , who had given up only five home runs in 122% innings this year, marked their highest sin glegam e total o f the season. gave up two on Sunday. Linty Ingram went the distance on Sunday as the Sun Devils regained first place in the Six-Pac with a 15-6 victory over Stan­ ford. The Cardinal ended ASU’s 23-game winning streak Satur­ day by beating the Devils, 5-3. “ This is a good place to hit home runs,” Brock said. “ When it’s clear and dry, file ball carries a great deal. W e’re very thankful m ost o f them went our w ay.” Gordy Farm er (5-0,3.77) gets the call today. He w ill face Stan Spencer (4-1,2.97) W ith Ingram going the fu ll nine innings on Sunday, the D evil bullpen is strong. “ W e’re stUl in their ballpark,” Brock said, “ and they’re still an outstanding college baseball team , but it certainly has tipped to where we lik e where w e a re right now.” South Carolina. . 1 8. N ew York Jets, D ave Cadigan, ot, Southern Soviet gymnastics team visits Valley, A S U California. 9. Los A n g eles Raiders, from Los A ngeles Rams, through Houston, Terry McDaniel, db, Tennessee. 10. N ew York Giants, Eric Moore, ot, Indiana. 11. Dallas, Michael Irvin, wr, Miami, Fla. 12. Phoenix, Ken Harvey, lb, California. 13. Philadelphia, Keith Jackson, te, Oklahoma. 14. Los A n geles Ram s, from Buffalo, Gaston Green, rb, UCLA. 15. San Diego, Anthony Miller, wr, Tennessee. 16. Miami, Eric Kumerow, de, Ohio State. 17. N ew E n g la n d , Joh n S te p h e n s , rb, Northwestern Louisiana. 18. Pittsburgh, Aaron Jones, de, Eastern Kentucky. 19. Minnesota, Randall McDaniel, og, Arizona State. x-SeatUe, used first-round pick in last year's supplemental draft for Oklahoma linebacker Brian Bosworth. 20. Los An geles Ram s, from Indianapolis, Aaron Cok, wr, Arizona State. y-21, Cleveland, Clifford Charlton, lb, Florida. y-22, Houston, Lorenzo White, rb, Michigan State. 23. Chicago, Brad Muster, rb, Stanford. 24. N ew Orleans, C raig Heyward, rb, Pitt. 25. L os A n geles Raiders, from San Francisco, Scott Davis, de, Illinois. 26. Denver, T e d Gregory, nt, Syracuse. 27. Chicago, from Washington, W endell Davis, wr, LSU. y-Cleveland w as supposed to pick after Houston but selected ahead o f the Oilers, who temporarily passed after using up their allotted 15 minutes. Other A S U players drafted: Round two: Eric A llen Sltawn Patterson by Green Bay and by Philadelphia. today’s ASU sports WOM EN’S GOLF — The highly-ranked women's golf team competes in the Pac-10 Championships today through W ednesday at Seattle, Wash. BASEBALL — The third-ranked Sun Devils will attempt to extend their lead in the Six-Pac as ASU concludes a threegam e series with Stanford today at Palo Alto, Calif. \ l'. \ Joe* w . B»Mi»y jm sm » pt— U.S. gymnast Tim Daggett Is examined by e Soviet teem'doctor end Daggett’s private coach, Yefim Furman, who is a former Soviet coach. The Soviet and American teams practiced together Friday at ASU In preparation for a Saturday competition in Phoenix. * By GARY JACKSON Press Tw o o f the w orld’s biggest rivals came together as competitors and friends Friday in the P E W est gym at ASU in preparation fo r the USA-USSR McDonald’s Challenge gym nastics meet. T h e S o v ie t w o m e n p r e v a ile d , 198.255-195.300, and the men dominated, 295.650-291.175, over the United States during S atu rday’s m eet a t Veterans M em orial Coliseum in Phoenix. Y u ri K orolev scored tw o of four Soviet 10s to win the men’s all-around competition. The gym n astics m eet provid ed an opportunity for the teams to observe each others’ program s, fiv e months prior to the 1988 Summer Olym pics in Seoul, South Korea. The crowd o f20,894, an Arizona record for a gymnastics meet, watched the men and women o f the United States and the Soviet Union compete. An alternate training site was needed because the Phoenix Suns w ere scheduled to play the Los Angeles Lakers F riday night and the gymnastics equipment had to be dism antled in the Coliseum. “ Th e Russians needed a place to workout,” said ASU gym nastics coach Don Robinson. “ They said they liked our workout system here.” Soviet team m anager Helen Galinovskaya said the visit to Phoenix was a good experience fo r the gymnasts and the practice session at ASU went very w ell. “ The relations between the two teams is very good,” Galinovskaya said. “ F o r the stu d en ts, th e fa c ilit ie s a re r e a lly im pressive.” Robinson said the interaction between the two teams should be a lesson fo r the political leaders to follow . “ I f the politicians would let the athletes rule the world, they could do it,” he said. “ The greatest ambassadors w e have in the w orld today are athletes.” To Robinson, the Soviets training at the ASU gym was on the sam e level as Catholics having the opportunity to see Pope John Paul H at Sun D evil Stadium, he said. * “ There is a big difference from seeing a guy on film and shaking hands with him ,” Robinson said. “ T o m e that’s rea lly exciting.” . Turn to Gym nm ta, pago 20. -Æ.4, StatePrcs» Monday, Aprii 85,1968 20 M en’s golf team takes fourth at Sun Devil tourney By DAVEBIGOS State Press Th e second-ranked ASU g o lf team finished in a disappointing fourth place at the rain-shortened Sun Devil/Phoenix Thunderbird G olf Classic Saturday at M cCorm ick Ranch G olf Club in Scottsdale. Top-ranked Oklahoma State won the 36-hole event that was origin ally scheduled fo r 54 holes. F riday’s round was cancelled due to weather conditions and was not rescheduled because o f a lack o f course availability and traveling needs of dm other teams. OSU finished the tournament 6-under par with fiv e o f the team ’s six players turning in sub-par scores. The only Cowboy not to finish under par Was NCAA champion Brian Watts. OSU golfer M ichael Bradley beat out Arizona’s Mike Springer in a sudden-death playoff fo r the individual victory. ASU coach Steve L oy’s team was faced with added pressure in the final round as Jim Strickland failed to appear fo r his tee time. “ F irst thing, Jim Strickland made a very crucial m istake which doesn’t ever happen to golfers,” Loy said. “ He overslept, so w e w ere one player short. “ Instead o f haying the best fiv e out o f six scores, w e had to go with fiv e out o f five, leaving us no room fo r error.” ASU shot a 742, 28 strokes behind OSU’s 714. Arizona finished second with a 731 and defending champion UCLA was third a t 740. Tom Stankpwski turned in the best score fo r the Sun Devils. Stankowski was tied fo r first place in the tournament after the first round with a 69 but struggled in the second round, turning in a 76 and finishing in a fie fo r 10th overall with a 145. Scott FriSch tied fo r 13th (72-74-146) and U.S. Amateur Champion B illy M ayfair finished in a fie fo r 17th (72-76-148). T o round out the ASU team scores ; John Bizik shot a 152, Scott Sullivan shot a 155 and Strickland had a one-day total of 69. Sun D evil golfers playing as individuals w ere; David Cunningham, 149; Todd Kem aghan, 149; and Bobby Richardson, 154. “ I thought overall w e should have played a lot better,” Loy said- “ B asically w e m ade mistakes with club selection and course management. We got o ff to a la d start and things began to compound after that. “ Now we have to w orry about correcting our mistakes and thinking about the Pac-10 tournament.” The Sun D evils w ill travel to the Pac-10 Conference cham pionships M ay 2 through 4 in Berkeley, C alif., to try and better their second-place finish in last year’s event. “ It w ill be between us and U ofA,” Loy said. “ W e just have to go there and prove w e can beat Arizona.” So fa r this season, ASU has finished ahead o f the W ildcats in four o f six tournaments. Loy said he fe lt that, although U CLA finished ahead o f ASU this weekend, they w ill not be a factor at the Pac-10 tournament. “ U CLA didn’t really play that w ell,” he said. “ U C LA’s perform ance was due m ore to the other team ’s poor finishes.” A fter the conference finals, the Sun D evils w ill travel to Los Angeles fo r the NCAA Championships. In 1987, ASU finished in 16th place in a field o f 35. G y m n a sts Conllnuwl from pago IS. Two U.S. gymnasts present, Dan and Dennis Hayden, are fam iliar with the ASU facilities. In 1986 the Haydens led the Sun D evils to their first N CAA title. “ It’s a warm feelin g to be working out at the ASU gym and being with Robinson,” Dan Hayden said. Training with the Soviets has given the U.S. team a better idea o f abilities o f the two squads, Hayden said. “ It ’s great to see where they’re at and where w e’re at,” he said. “ Now w e know what w e have to do to beat them. Dennis Hayden said he enjoyed training at the gym he once spent so many hours working out at. “ It feels great,” Hayden said. “ I fee l right at home.” Dennis Hayden is recovering from a foot injury and did not com pete in the exhibition Saturday. NEW CR E A M Y 100% N ATU RAL N O N -D A IR Y SOFT SERVE TREAT! i nvi Includes shampoo, conditioner A cut. With Coupon BED HOT SUMMER SPECIAL $5.00 OFF PERM A S U Student Discount Programs Available. C e llo p h a n e $ 2 2 . 0 0 STRAW BERRY . LEM O N • W ILD BERRY and PASSION FRUIT. T R Y IT ! if* IOC OFFVITARI TRA VEL L IG H T A N D S T O R E Y O U R EX C E S S ITEM S W HILE YO U E N J O Y TH E SUM M ER C lo s e an d c o n v e n ie n t to A S U - R e s e r v e e a rly t o e n s u re a s p a c e - at L « « 8— $30.00 Includes conditioner. (First time clients only With this ad.) T A N N IN G S E S S IO N S each visit kAnnth 1964 East UnfversKy Drive Tampe, bBtween Price & McCBntock Cell For Appointment 966-9071 SWEET STUFF 933 E. University M on.-sat. y:3U-ö:3U in the Memorial Union c o u p o n H ig h lig h t FORT KNOX M INI-STO RAGE Hurry...Explr*» 4-29-88 Available R e g . $40 Includes shampoo, conditioner & cut. Only 20 calories per fl.oz.! And it com es in PEACH • PINEAPPLE Cuts$12.00 Reg. $17.00 SAVE $5.00 COUPON1 It’s th e the opportunity to work with the Soviets,” K arolyi said. “ W e w ore able to watch them closely. It gave us a lot o f indicatimi about everybody.” K arolyi said ASU was a good selection fo r an alternate site fo r the gymnasts to practice. “ It ’s alw ays a good opportunity to workout in differen t {daces,” K arolyi said. “ It ’s a nice fa cility and w e had a decent workout.” H a ir LATE FOR AN IMPORTANT DATE?] Apologize with a STATE PRESS Personal. Hurry down to the basement of Matthews Center. Time is running Out! Open 8 am-5 pm, Mon-Fri. 965-6731. V R A M ... “ I feel I ’m in real good shape,” Dennis Hayden said. “ I feel real positive. I have a little m ore tim e to perfect m y routines.” It was beneficial fo r the USA and USSR team s to train in the same gym , Bela K arolyi said. K arolyi, who is a private coach fo r some o f the current U.S. women gymnasts, has trained form er greats Nadia Comaneci, Many Lou Ration ami Julianne McNam ara. “ Tim niain purpose o f the tour was to have SECorner Rural $ University Sun. 11:30-4:00 , Sell It in the State Press Stash Your Stuff For Summer! ANDLOCKNTO A GOODDEAL. «SSÖ*** SS»* 968-1021 2422 W. Broadway (Masai 2 7 9 -1 1 3 1 Eliminate the hasetee on your flight to freedom. Check into ourstoragefacilitlee and with every rented unit receive a free padlock. □ REASONABLE RATES. q n o o e p o s it . □ ELECTRONIC SECUM TY. □ SIZES TO FIT EVERY NEED. Qf CLEAN * MODERN FACILITIES. A-AAAKEY 965-6731 Delta Delta Delta seniors oik your initiation into the CIRCLE DEGREE Patty Busby lisa Kennedy HoHi Schneider Kerri Cham an Lisa Krolik Nancy Schroeder Kerry Gabriel Melissa Kunde Robin Swanson Aaryn Kemp Karen Logan lisa Underwood 3089 M. 30th Ava, (Phosnixl Lisa Naylor 272-0146 4002 W. Indian School (Phaenix) Kerry Nowicki 948-9220 502 M, Hayden Rd. (Scottsdale) Andy Poisner Stacey Schecter HURRY!OFFEREXPIRES06-15-88! Debbie Schemmel Page 21 Monday, April 25,1988 Football scrim m age leaves Marmie with mixed reviews JM U n d M y Clarke/State P re s s g the annual Maroon and Gold Larry Marmie said there were by the Maroon, 17-14. Quarterback Daniel Ford acrimmage Friday night at Dobao both poaWve and negative aspect By CHRI$ DORSEY State Frees Spring football carries many luxuries and disapointments fo r a coach. First-year ASU coach L a rry M arm ie agrees with this statement after seeing his Maroon squad slip past the Gold, 17-14, Friday night at Dobson High School in Mesa. “ I think like most spring gam es,” M arm ie said, “ there w o e things I liked and some things I didn’t.” The new Sun D evil mentor said he was not the least bit pleased with the number of penalties assessed dining the annual spring scrim m age. “ It is disappointing as a coach to see the penalties,’ ’ M arm ie said. “ I am concerned with th a t ’,’ But overall, the coach said he was happy -with the play on both teams. Quarterbacks Daniel Ford and Pau l Justin called the signals fo r the Gold and Maroon teams, respectively. Justin, who was not expected to play due to a thigh bruise, platooned with redshirt freshman Bobby Valdez for the victorious Maroon squad. The pair combined fo r 98 yards in their aerial attack; Justin completed fiv e o f nine passes fo r 46 yards while Valdez completed both o f his passes fo r 48 yards. M arm ie sa id h e was happy to learn that Ford would be back after the NCAA granted the senior one last year of eligibilty. Ford, last year’s Freedom Bowl M VP, outdid his collegues by tossing the pigskin fo r 101 yards and com pleting seven of 12 passes. Entering the 1988 season F ord is listed as the top quarterback with Justin serving as his backup. Both Sun D evils threw a touchdown pass in the spring gam e. “ I think a ll three quarterbacks at times threw the ball w ell,” M arm ie said. “ Paul m oved around better than I thought he would.” Both squads w ere blessed with the presence o f electrifyin g running backs: Victor Cahoon and David Winsley. “ Both backs showed some explosion,” M arm ie said. Cahoon averaged 4.2 yards a carry last season while serving as a backup.- In Friday’s gam e, the sophomore ran fo r 106 yards on 18 carries. He had a long run o f 33 yards in th efirst quarter pacing Ms 57-yard first h alf performance. However, W insley was the leading ground gainer on the evening with 115 yards, including a 61-yard touchdown. “ Based on the overall spring, Victor would be our starting tailback,” M arm ie said. ‘ ‘But you can’t p la y with one tailback.” The Sun D evils return 32 letterm en but face a m ajor rebuilding project; having to fill gaps on the offensive and defensive line. “ W e had a good spring,” M arm ie said. “ We have made progress in a lot o f areas.” McDaniel excited to play for Vikings; was 1st Sun Devil drafted So when it becam e apparent to Lynn that the highly rated, 6-foot-4, 268-pound McDaniel would be available, Lynn ruled out any trades. ED EN P R A IR IE , Minn. (A P ) — Arizona State’s Randall M cDaniel, the Minnesota Vikings’ choice as the best offensive guard available, on Sunday was drafted No. 1 by the N F L team. Vikings coach Jerry Burns had hoped to draft a defensive player w ith the 19th-overall pick. But the top prospects — end N eil Smith o f Nebraska, safety Bennie Blades o f M iam i and cornerbacks Rickey Dixon o f Oklahoma and T erry M cDaniel o f Tennessee, w ere chosen w ell before Minnesota drafted. General M anager M ike Lynn had said before the draft that he would likely m ake a trade. He had also said that he w ould take one of the 12 “ bluecMp” players on the Vikings’ list if one was available, regardless o f position. “ W e have a sheet up there that shows the neqds o f every dub in the National Football League,” Lynn said from the basement b f the team ’s headquarters. “ O f a ll the teams’ needs, there w ere not any guards. So w e knew we had the opportunity to get the top guard in the country. The decision was m ade that as long as McDaniel was there w e’d select him ; if not, w e would have traded down.” . Burns said he began to think that McDaniel would be a good addition to the team — even though he wasn’t a defensive M ayer — after v w seeing a recent interview McDaniel had with a Twin C ities television station. “ He was a ll excited about the possibility of going to the Vikings, a contending team, a wouldbe hopeful Super Bowl team,.” Burns said. “ He talked about playing with Anthony Carter and what-not. That really sold me on him. I was sold on a guy who wants to come here to play and I told him so on the phone. I told him I ’ll put him in a room with Anthony Carter.” Asked if pass-blocking or run-blocking was his strength, M cDaniel told a telephone news conference: “ Pass. Run. I ’m just ready to go right now. I ’m happy. I ’m excited. Minneapolis is a great place.” , ; UNDER NEW OW NERSHIP Solar Powered A M e FM Stereo Radio C LE A N E R S & LAU N D RY ★ Weather Resistant ★ 4-Way Power ★ Earbud Type Earphones 843 W. U niversity Dr. T e m p e 829-1633 (S.E. Corner of University & Hardy) Satisfaction Guaranteed Pants, Skirts, Ties i 11« To order your solar radio, send your check or tndney order to: | r M ' VrOFF I I I MEN’S PLAIN T H E MQ H ARM ES CO . 8129 North 35th AY«., Suite 2-144 S ; -. Phoenix. AZ 85051 .... 'U ium isrsd SHIRTS *79< L\ . — Allow 6-8 weeks for delivery SwitA M ES A NISSAN Your Nissan and Datsun Service Specialists are offering • N i s s a n - t r a i n e d t e c h n ic ia n s • G e n u i n e N is s a n p a r ts • Q u a l i t y m a in t e n a n c e a n d r e p a ir w o r k • R e a s o n a b l e p r ic e s 10 % g m itm K u re a M icctN S S o S S Monday 7:30 a.m.-8:30 p m. discount on afi service work faculty 8 staff w i* ASU I.D. car,, p re s e n t at tas s i r - 'jm r : p7 T 8:30 a.m:-12:30 p.m. Expires May 31.1988 6 5 0 Per plea, _______________ | DROP OFF ***""" LAUNDRY É I É Ì 654 lb. I I (7 lb. minimum) R eg. 80* lb. I I BLUE JEANS I ! W M I "" s u it s ” ' I P la in M an 's & W om an 's (rag. 2“ ) *~ ~ w t f o f o c o m t n g .. w m I T - 3-pc. ordere onVTKpTra» 5-13-88 W AR E H O U SE *Deli&P u b ’/• ;. Try our breakfast ' Today's 3 Lunch Specials: SUPER SPECIAL BBQBeef Hoagie Soup or Salad (3 scram b led eggs, ho m em a d e .and Fries Fries ViVeagle Freak potatoes and toast) Specials are and countsf parts to all ASU student, * jQ p e ^ "I r DRAPERIES I 1701 W. BfOadwaV, MeSS serv,ce parts 834-3366 834-0255 mow 235 Q<# FREE TICKET DELIVERY M exJUviera 7 Nigh M ay 8. , a u to s fo r sa le 1973 VOLKSW AGON Superbeetle. AM/ FM cassette, sun roof, reliable, great tor college. $1496.966-0647 or m essage. 1962 TO YO TA Tercel 4-door, AM/FM. air, automatic, super dean, good condition, 55.00CK, doth Interior. $2700. 829-8954 1963 HONDA Civic. Excellent condition, extrem ely dean , AM/FM, 5-speed, air. Must sell. $2750. 7845614. 1903 VOLKSWAGEN QTI. Black, 50,000 m iles, excellent condition, regular mainte­ nance, bra and cover. $4500.394-5451. 1965 PLYMOUTH Caravelle, automatic, air, tHL cruise, good gee m ileage, 81,000 miles. $3999. 926-1521. 1966 FORD Bronco I I 4X4. Overdrive, air, low m iles, wen maintained, pampered. $9,900 negotiable. 9925196. s te e rin g , AM/FM s te re o c a s s e tte , burgandy/rsd, doth Interior. $6500. TotaHy loaded. 807-7978, le a n m essage. 1967 DODGE Daytona. Low, tow miles. Fully load ed , must s e ll! 263-0415, evenings. 1997 SAM URAI JX Deluxe. Air, stereo, 15,000 m iles. P erio d condition, $7000. 4835538, days; 9455696, after 5. IS IT true you can buy Jeeps tor $44 through the US government? G et the fa ct» -today) Can 1-312-742-1142; ext 9162-A. rune great, UNIVERSITY RANCH 3 bedroom . 2 bath, HONDA SPREE red, brand new, only 7.7 mHes. Prize from raffle. $500 or beet. 9213074. NSR INTERCEPTOR 500. Flawless. Must see. CaH tor details. With trailer. $2300. 9665262. bicycles for sale $375. 6665776. 1965 HONDA Elite 80 Scooter., G reet condition, runs great. Must sell. 966-7702: ■ jO to r 1 Movie Rentals (with this coupon) • Free Membership • No Deposit on Movies • Absolute Best VH S Selection • Open 7 Days til Midnight Do You want m are? Movie rentals are just one part of Rental Network’s services, also available by the month, by the week, or by the day. Color Television • Microwave Ovens • Compact Refrigerators • Vacuum Cleaners • Cordless Telephones • • Telephone Answering Machines • Typewriters • Macintosh Computers • Video Cameras 903 S . R u ra l R d. 106 8 2 9 -1 9 6 6 1966 HONDA Rebel 250- Low miles, excellent condition. Many extras. $1000 firm. Can J eff, 921-2582. 1986 SPREE, 1966 A ero 60, both in excellent condition. Low mhos, fun. $325, $350.964-7561. 1997 HONDA Magna, 5000 m ies. Candy apple red. Center Une rear w heel. $3600. Call Leonard, 461-0107 or leave m essage. MOTORCYCLE/ SCOOTER SERVICE ft PARTS, INSURANCE ESTIMATES, FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS, PICK-UP a DELIVERY. RISING SUN CYCLE 1900 M. Hayden Road 945-6912 2 O R 3 bedroom apartment, utilities pakir ASU 14 m ile $300 o ff with add, 963-8945 9085238.' events. $200. 8945451. LOVELY OONDO, furnished. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer, dishwasher, pool. 3 furniture fo r te le may »h ere. $595.8355294. ' ■■ ■" BLUE COUCH end queen size bookcase NEW LY REMODELED Tem p» com plex. Large 1 arto 2 bedroom , pool, laundry, w sterbed with side pads. Both groat condition. 996-7702. ____________ 894-1575. Buy/Sell Pjnk Floyd, G eorge Michael, Dana Carvay, Kool and the Gang, Jay Leno, Bill Cosby, Rat Pack, ASU football and Phoenix Cardinals. National Events: Grateful Dead, Springsteen, Jackson, Indy 500, Kentucky Derby. Also paying 61000 tor rights to good Cardinals tickets. The Ticket Exchange at the Cornerstone Mail. 829-0196. m isce lla n eo u s fo r sa le 1963 RAMBLER with rebuilt VS engine. Rim s wed. G reat tor restoration. $1150. 968-9858 after 6:00 p.m. ATTENTION ALL Athletes: Runners, football, basketball, baseball players and atc.B you want to Increase your oxygen Intake, your indurance, your mental alertness, and possibly your strength, I have the product tor you. This product It new and FDA approved. CaU 985-4229. BELL AND Howell slide projector, 35mm, monitor, rem ote control phis trays, screen. B e i and Howell m ovie projector, 8mm phis reals and other Items. 957-6655. COMMODORE 64 computer with external Happy disk drive, joysticks end software. *300.9655868 after 6:00 p.m. RADIO CO NTRO L care, R-C 10 offroad, Porsche 966, Lamborghini Countach. Com plete set $200.6945451. REPLICA LOUIS Vukton and Q ued bags. Vlnnie, 968-3180. Prados. $2500, take over payments o f $696. N o qualifying FHA loan. Must sell, (214)3703328. 1960 HONDA 750 cc, new tune-up, very good condition. $600.9665776. apartments fo r rent RACING BICYCLE, 12-speed, 22” frame, 1978 Olym pic and W orld Champion 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath townhouae In Los 1976 HONDA 750 cc. Very good condition. 9945433. BEAUTIFUL NEW la rge 1 and two bedroom s, walk to ASU, pool, taumky. ona Mock south o f University on S h Street and G ary. Ask about m ove-tn specials. m otorcydcs fo r sala Price s subject to change. R estrictions may apply- washer/dryer, refrigerator, pool, covered periling. $62,500. R ealty Executives. COLLEGE CYCLE. 909 E. Lem on. G et your bicycle boxed, $6.96. Fast, friendly service. 9650642._________________ ' real estate fo r sa le Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat.-Sun.11-3 943-3383 CB 360T, tick e ts fo r sa le 1986 HONDA Civic 1500OX 5-speed. 40 mnea/gaHon, 30,000 mHee, air, power R.T. A IR F A R E • O P E N 7 D A Y S • W E ’R E LO W ER HONDA dependable. “ It’s a diehard.” $395/oftor. CaH Matt. 921-7420. 951-3197. 40 FOOT 2 tip-out. Awnings, skirting and shed. $7500toftor. Call attar 6 p.m. 9601775. DORM TIRED ?? Parents want a tax brook? Consider two master bedrooms with washer/dryer, m icrowave, more. U nder $80Q/month. C a l Bob Gray at Realty Executives, 926-3400. LARGE 1 bedroom , 1 bath townhouae. No down, assume toon. Near ASU. Must e e l. 732-9637. LARGE 2 bedroom , 2 bath townhouae. Lawn system , large fam ily room, near. ASU. 9808035. LUXURY COND O 'S. WMk to Phoenix Cardinal* gam es or to classes at ASU. Loosing available. Low down payment. No qualifying. Financing. Lota o f extras. Hurry! Only a tow left. C a l Craig at Merrill Lynch Realty, 602-4815200. NO Q U ALIFYIN G -1,2,3 bedrooom condos and townhousee. Papago Park Village from $58,000-~ 102,000. Bob Bullock, Realty Executives, 9952992. OW NER: TW O bedroom house. One m le ASU. Assumable FHA. Excellent condi­ tion. Fenced yard. $80,500.8299264. PAPAG O PARK odndo. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, near pool. $73,000 or best offer. 9645201. _________________ SAVE, SAVE, save. H ave your parents write-off your co llege housing. Establish residence and save $6000 on tuition with this luxury 3 bedroom townhouae. Ameni­ ties include 2 oar garage, fireplace end vaulted ceilings. Ask tor Jeanne. Century 21, a m ., $31-1114. move-in special. $250. 121 E. Broadway. " ■" V ',' QUESTA VID A Condo- 3 bedroom , 2 bath, $700 per month. Washer/dryer In unit. CaH Erin, 92153Q3.________________ ! - ■. SPACIO U S 2 bedroom , 2 bath, pool, laundry, 0.1 m le from A SU . ,$475 includes all utilities. 910 East Lem on. 9655704. STUDIO, 1 Mode to ASU . Own bath, kitch en ette, firep la ce, $285. K evin , 921-1111. - v W ALK T O ASU, junior one bedroom , $265; two bedroom , $400. Adults, no pets. 1031 E. Lemon. 965-2679.933-4364. W ALK TO ASU! S u m m e r D is c o u n t s O n ly Vi b lo ck from cam ­ pus. B e a u tifu lly furnished, huge 1 bedroom , 1 bath; 2 bedroom , 2 bath apart­ m ents. A ll b ills paid. C able T V , h e a te d p o o l, and spac'ious laundry facilitie s. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S t o p by today! T e rra ce R o a d A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra c e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 hornet fo r rent FURNISHED 2 bedroom . G orgeous view on g o lf coureeAake. Retirem ent area. G arage. $60Q/month plus utilities. May 15-Ootober 15. 8933265. LUXURY TOW NHOU8ES. 3 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished o r unfurnished, aH appliances. 114 m iles ASU. Pool end tennis. Available May 14th. $6605595. Call Judy t_ or Ruth, 831-1300; 759-1146, evenings. rental sharing 1 OR 2 roommates need ed. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished except bedroom , begin­ ning In Fell. $185-$266/month plus VI to W utilities. C a l Deri, 9293605. $190 PLU 8 W utilities to share townhouae. Nonsmoker, washer/dryer. P rice and University. 9663706. C O N D O RO O M M ATES n eed ed for summer. 2 bedroom , 2 both. Full ameniMee. 2 m ile» from campua, 6945736. FE M A LE N O N S M O K E R room m ate needed to «h ere 2 bedroom (pertinent. Rent at Quadrangles for F a t and Spring s e m ester '8 8 -'S 9 . C a ll r S ttp h a n ie , 7945192. rf FEMALE. ROOMMATE wanted. Share 2 bedroom /2 both furnished apartment at Meridian Com ers. 6297/month plus half utilltisa. CaH Mlchetia. 9675441, leave m essage. FEMALE- RO O M M ATES) to Share 2 bedroom , 2 bath D esert Palm VNage. $255, 14 utilities; or $130, Vi utiDtes tar two. Angela, 8295019 FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted tor condo at Papago Park 1. $250 plus 14 utilities, own room. C ell 242-1333, after 5. HOUSE-MATE NEEDED. Scottsdale, » bedroom , 2 bath, pooL $22S/month plus Vk utilities. Can after 6 p.m „ 9415634. State P r w rental sharing help wonted HUGE 3 bedroom , 2 bath apartment, pool, jacuzzi, m icrowave, South Scottsdale. MALE/FEMALE ROOMM ATE needed immediately, must h e feapon sW e and eonsidereto. 2 bedroom , fam ished, W m de ADVERTISING SALES Rep for Arizona so ftb a ll new spaper. Full-tim e, Mayfrom ASU. $210 ea c h ,« phone. Cad Ed, gee-7741, la sys msn a g i • Septem ber, «4 0 0 base s a la ry ' plus commisssron. Must have own oar. Call m a l e , FEMALE or 2 fem ales wanted t o . (206)364-6227 or sand resume: Slowpltch sharo beautiful 4 bedroom , 3 b a *i hom e in the Lakes. Pool plus extras. «300/month. News, 2300 NE 0 6 », Seattle, W A 96116. Cad Eric, 831-8105- BOOKKEEPER W ANTED «648/hour. G eneral accounts receivable, accounts payable, Inventory, payroll, etc., 1916 hours/week. C a l Monday, W ednesday, Friday betw een 191. Specbum Electron­ ics. 9684002.________________________ ___ V needed tor summer, near A8U: own room. Quadrangle Apart­ ment». 6259/month. CMI «672721. MALE ROOMMATE NEED A piece to stay for the summer? Own Hvtng room, bedroom , garage, utiHUss and board In exchange tor babysitting my children throe days p er week. Call COLLEGE STUDENTS part-time. W e need 6 enthusiastic college students to work 4-9 Monday-Thursday, 192 Satur­ day. $6 hourty plus bonuses Call Mr. Rod, Maryann. >38-0620. IM M E D IATE LY,, fem a le ■«21-2167. non- smoker. $290, Includes uMItlss, microwave, paoL jacuzzi. Sandy. «204000. ___________________ COM PUTER DATA Entry- Easy money, flexible bourn. Caft 7390943, If no answer After 5,9904099. STUDENTS, TEACHERS- 8ummertime M uss? Earn m ire cash working fo r one o f th e nations largest tem porary help rervtceo. CaH 9397993, Fareonrisl Pool. GUATEMALA VOLUNTEER. Spend July wllh the World Student 8erviee Corps. Caff Steffen, 9664677 tor details- daz. Com ar Of Scottsdale Road and . . NANNIES 31264400/ week. 100’s o f positions available nationwide with loving femmes, focal support, exesttent benefits, airfare paid. National Nannynatwork. Call local recruiter Melinda Barney, 8364620. COOK FOR rmktenttal treatment center, p.m. and weekends. Send employment history and aalaty requirement: PO box 8600, Phoenix 86068. _________________ pooL deck. «210, Vi utilities. H ands«, 0004091 or «004170. NON-SMOKING FEMALE to Shaw patio tome. PooL microwave, waaher/dryer, dose to ASU. « 220, utPWeo. 4614007. COUNSELORS FOR boys cam p bi Maine. Openinge In moat activities! W SI, tennis, ROOM FOR rant. M ale, nonem aker. «200 per month, indudse utilities and phone. b a s k e tb a ll, a t e .) U p p ercla ssm en preferred. W rite Camp Cedar, 1758 Beacon Street, Brookline, MA 02143 or Rich, 877-2046. _____________-■ ■ ca9 (317)2774080. ROOMMATE NEEDED for summer. Rural COUNSELOR NEEDED. Full-time at Co-ad residential treatment center tor. EH adolescents. 2 years college and/or exper­ ience. Evenings/ weekends; $12,000. Sand resume: PO box 8600, Phoenix and University; «136 month plus Vi utili­ ties. Fully furnished. Bab or Tyler, 829-1090. THE POINTE South Mountain! Room mate wanted to share Impressive 2 story townhouse, located on go lf course with pictur­ esque city view s. All am enities included. 5 minutes to ASU. Non-smoker preferred. COUNSELOR (FEMALE) at residential treatment center tor EH adolescents. 10 p .m .4 a.rti. shift; «19344. Sand resume: Contact D ave, 438-0922 (m essa ge phone). 6295/month plus Vk utHtfiea. TOWNHOME CLOSE to A8U I Tw o tomato roommates needed (nonsm oking)42S0 Can now: .9081219, M ichele. Available " ' business opportunities akdls. Call far Uriel view 663 0411 e x t 460; TELEVISION PROGRAM MING W btoo part-time. National TV advfeory service el Cornerstone. Apple computer experience n ao w ia ry . 6944736. TH E LOOP,' an new fast-food concept In a totally authentic tatting o f yesteryear Mitch at 941-2100. Chicago, nooda mate or tamale help tor the summer. Apply Monday» 25th, through Thursday, 28th, 3 4 p.m . Southwoot com er o f Lemon and Terrace, Tam pa. - - R E S T A U R A N T D E LIV E R Y d riv e rs wanted. South Scottsdale. Flexible hours, scheduling around your cteeoee. G ood pay. Must h aw own vih id e. 423-0006. TUTO RS NEEDEOI ATO P Academ y. Earn SALES REP for fire equipment Company houre). Cad 6292798,6 a.m .4 p.m. needed tor field work. Musi have engineer­ ing background. 9697810, John. WANTED: VOLUNTEERS lor the Arizona State Hospital. If you are Interested, SCOTTSDALE DOCTOR’S o ffice needs temporary filing help. Hours flexible, 83.36/hour. Cell Keren, 9497277. YARD W ORKER tor welding supply com pany, fillin g b ottles, answ ering phones, general yard work. 9697610, SCOTTSDALE RESORT accepting appli­ cations in deH sandwich shop. Positive . John. attitude, neat appearance. Apply in ’ person. N o Camelback. ¡phone ca lla l 6302 - E A R N W H ILE YO U LEA R N SECRETARY, PART-TIME, minimum 20 8 » ¿91 part-time To Start SUMMER JOBS. G et a head start with tntenw et M arksffng. Spring, summer tele­ marketing programs. Peft-dme/ evenings, weekends. Flexible hours. Prom ote Ameri­ cas number 1 family cable channel. B ees salary plus bonus, up to «7 .8 0 hourty. Cad 8034411 ext. 866, between 12 and 3:30 _______ ___ _________ CRUISE SH IPS new hiring all positions. Both akdtod and unskMed. For inform ation. rals and leads provided. Guaranteed Income, excellent training and experience. can (616)2924900, extension H-179. If you are 18 years and older and W eroatad, cad Gary Leney at 14093224621. help wonted 20 M Am ETING EXTRA CASH. Students needed tar even­ neecarc hers needed. Your positive attitude and dean cut appearance w9l aaro you extra money. A9 shifts, Thursdays through Sundays. No experience neceeeory. Cell 9097993AAAAA TEM PE MARKET research firm needs telephone interviewers. Mostly evenings and we e kends. Absolutely no sales. 64/hour to start. Rapid raises tar reliebta people. Suean, 967-4441. ACCOUNTING MAJOR student represen­ tatives tar naftonal C P A review course to bo hoM in Phoenix. Please c a l Dick, 9981614; ing marketing work at our offices. Salary plus commleekm. Great tar resume. Call 844-4443, Goodman Financial.___________ INVESTMENT BANKER seeking rising star. You provide organizational assis­ tance, I provide cash and Invaluable exposure to real world business. Account­ ing, word-procsssing, and epreadeheat experience helpful. 9614118. MARKETING ASSISTANT, full-time, shop­ ping center advertising/retafi environment, experience or qualifying degree a must. Central East Phoenix area. Send resume. p :0 . Box 80070, Phoetllx 860090070, EOE. $9009612,000 pkie tor tw o months on Ashing vessel. O ver 6000 openings. No experience necessary, meta or tamale. For 62 'page em ployment booklet, send $6.95 to M&L Research. Bon 84006, Seattle, Washington 98124. 30 day, u n con d ition a l guarantee. 1009b m on ey b ack A MARKETING company in Scottsdale need* a full-time secretary. Must type we8. 7701 E. Indian School Road, Suite E. 941-3812. _____________ BOOKEEPER. GENERAL o ffice help wanted. Part-time and summer em ploy­ SUMMER JOBS. W e have many positions available tor general labor, warehouse, assem bly, and clerical work. Apply at 3023 S. McCttntock (Just North o f Superstition Freeway). 2290810, T*dTem poraries. No Experience Necessary. W e wiH show you how to earn $500-$1000 a week selling contrac­ tors tools and supplies via Watts. Two Shifts Available C a l Dave G reen 2 54-TO O L SU M M ER JO B S Wg am hiring 100 students & teachers for a variety of temporary clerical positions. If you have office skills such as typing, reception, clerical, wpo, secty, etc., please call for appointment: 264-4537 STIVERS TEMP. PERSONNEL 784-9384._______________________________ typing/ word processing Tem ps. 9696067. WQrd Processing, 8393026. ___________ ' ftee tosVfound S e c u rity O ffic e rs 834-1367, _________________ _________ INTERIOR DECORATING: American Insti­ tute o f Interior Design. 6 month course. Classes atari weekly. 16865 E. Parkview, Fountain HHk. 9499601. Immediate Openinge • Fu ll or Part-time Som e graphics available. C M Debbia, «61-1496. Cad to Identify. Mm Robinson, 8294802 AAA d a y», 0692915 evenings. ______________ «1.50/page. 10 years experience. Fast turnaround. Cad Unde, 9624076. LOST: 4 month old brawn puppy with black face. German abepand mix, grey Hertz collar. Lost 4/21. Cad Angela, LOST: BRANO new H P 17-B calculator 4/19 am . Please return to Lost and Found MU or cad 2699104. Please, please, please! papers, group projects, etc. Spelling corrected. Quick turn-around. Linda, 838-6830. ANYTHING TYPED IBM/laser, typing/ . wordprocessing. Fast, dependable and 8291509/8334532._____________________ LOST: RED recquetbad racquet. Cad A T KINKO 'S w e typeset papers that make the grade! 933 E . University. Call personals AGO LARA Pita: Happy Bkthdayt The big 2..0.. H ave a great day! Leva, Stressed Room ie. _________ _________ ' AiM EEQ .XO . Thank you tor the wonderful tim e last w eekend. Can’t waft to do M again. Love Swanie.________ . ALPH A PH I Triah Strong: Congrats active Netorl AOE love Mom.___________________ DELTA CHI Pre-tush BBQ Saturday, April 30th, 5 p m at the house. Par more inform slton cad C oco at 821-3024._______ H 20 PO LO -W ednesday was fu l o i fun! Ifs a sham e about Thursday. W hy? Am I a doorknob? The Vlatan.___________________ tripsl I love you (yea— BIG Bunches!). SHANAHAN: THESE are the times to remember. Happy Birthday to a real psycho-kitty- B esl roomie._______________ 9692035._______________________________ ATTENTION: RESUMES. Experienced career counselor/ recruiter gets you results. Laser printed original». CAS, 4696709._______________________________ CALL ME forfaat, accurate, quality service at com petitive pries*. Close to ASU. 9992169. _______________________ __ PAST RETURN- Experienced typist will edk spalling, punctuation, grammar. Accu­ racy guaranteed. Joan. 8390772. FLYING FINGERS now h as a Mac II and laser printer! Resumes, reports, etc. „ B u s t, 9491500. FORMER ASU staffers- W ord Peftoctand Xerox memory writers. Experienced with APA, MLA, graduate school, ate.- gradu­ ate students and faculty work welcom e. 9496302, Donna and Joan. GRADUATION IS almost here! Let us professionally typeset your resume. W e w rit» resumes and print them tool UniPrint, 9690799 or 967-1651.____________ PRO FESSIO NAL W ORD processing, accurate, quality work. «1.50 double spaced page. Cad Paula after 1 p.m., 921-1161. TO M Y sw eat Eskimo baby pis. I’d love you forever. You’re the b eet Na-Na-Na- Q U A L IT Y , Q U ICK T ypin g. Papers, reports, resumes. Pick-up/daHvary avail­ able. One day service avadable. Glnny, «664163.________________ ______________ SAVE TIME. Cad me first. W ord processing, theses, diasartions, resumes, protossktnal typist Maaa Secretarial, 844-1878. transportation R E SEARC H A S S IS T A N C E : L a rgest dbreiy o f Informaban In the United Stefa»Toll-free hotline: 1-809361-0222. ALL STATES Drfve e way - Cars available - PAN PIZZA ACCURATE TYPIN G o f research/ term ASTUTE COMPUTING, form erly AAA W ord Processing Service, specializes in large, rush . jobs. Guaranteed. Ron, original, pretoeelenel Im age 6604100 lese then the competition (9664758). VANGUARD S E C U R IT IE S AAKURfT TYPING - Short papers, over­ night; long papaia, prompt service. Tran­ scribe tapes. Good rates. Linda, 831-0349. LOST: PAIR o f sunglasses, gold with mirrored lenses. In Architecture Computer Love, Denise. • Uniform s Provided p r o c e s s in g . reasonable. W ordsttong, 9534465. i AAHAI RESUME design by WordemMh-An • Paid Training/ vacations _________ T Y P IN Q / w o rd 9684124. Reward. TR I SIGMA Colony Members: Remember one year ago today? Happy Anniversary! services • Minim um A ge 21 «1.50 PE R page. Any Type W ord Process­ ing. Spelling and grammar corrected. FOUND NEAR Broadm or Elementary School: 2 ptaetic sleavee o f 36mm adder PATRICIO: TR Y to stay away from those’ care from now on, ok? Can't wait for our ENGLISH TUTOR and typist avadable tor composition writing skids, term papers, research papers, reports, resumes. Cad «1.25/PAGE, TYPIN G and word process­ ing. South Scottsdale a n r 994-3141 or 243-3000, Roberta.__________ ____________ «1.60 PAGE for prompt, quality work. Tem i papers. Cad anytime! Sesam e Street Chubby.________________________ - Instnictlen $1.25 AND up: P rofessional word proces­ sor and form er English teacher. Laser ience. Marian, 636-4269 HEY SMELLY: I’m thinking o f you. Thanx for ad your support. I krv u so much. • Various Locations ALASKA SUMMER employment- fleherlee. Earn 1800 pluafweek In cannery, Ohio. Leaves M ay 19th. »180 or beer offer. CASH FOR go ld .a n d diamonds. Mill Avenue Jewelere, 414 S. MM, Suite 104, 7644610. e 4 A b f 8.W0®k L O S e d u c a t io n a l p u b lis h e r . «6000410,000 summer earn Inga. R efer­ EXCELLENT CASH money. Assem ble products at home. Jewelry, toys, electron­ ics, m orel Full-time and part-time avail­ able. 1-6194693636 exl. 8203,24 hours. ONE-W AY TICKET on Delta to Columbus, *1.50 DOUBLE spaced page. A-1 letter quality word processing. 32 years exper­ Jewelry »Me. Reward. Cad M. Martin, 9697218. $250/ fuS ke STATE-LOCAL Government jobs. Infor­ __ mation 504649-7922, ext. S-3507. p.m. 784-6290. Kan. printer. Boh/Claudta, 964-9012. ________ QUIT SMOKING. Conducting scientific study. WIN supply free product plus payment tor those who want to qu it Or Uppman, 947-1994. LO ST MICRO-EYE Cyclom eter at the LL Budding, 4/13/88. Please cad J eff at E. duel North o f Curry) ki Tem ps. _________ ________________ ~ please contact 8u «en,;2204014. at Bobby M o ose's M esa. Must b e 21 or older. Contact Christina, Guy, or Don, 9094800, evenings. 7304266. MONEY FOR education. Locate the m oney you need tor your education. Cad «4.5046-SQ/hour, Monday-Friday (flexible SUMMER JOB opportunity with a leading FANTASTIC O PPO RTU NITY tar studentsmall vending route, d o e s to ASU- Must sell. «2796 or offer. C a l 921-3103, 8293630. ____________ ___ far our 8prfng Sates Program . Base salary plus bonus, up to «7 4 0 hourty. Part-time evenlngNwirehandi , up to 30 houre weak­ ly. Must possess axcadant communication Mondsy-Friday, 9-4 p.m. Jarretare Finan­ cial Services, 1221 N. C ollege Avenue cad Chris, 431-1266. deta ils, PART-TIME PHONE solicitor tor estab­ lished stockbroker in Scottsdale. CaH East Thom fie area. Send resume, P.O . Botr 80070, Phoenix 960690070. EOE. DEPEN DABLE DELIVERY Person- G ood working knowledge o f Meaa/Tempe, own reliable transportation. W ok Express, C a ll lo r 961-2423. «100 CASH 1st place, prlzse for runnersup. Swimsuit oompstWon Tuesday nights AVON- BEiyour own boss. High earning potential. Fbr information and Interview legitim ate. 947-7831. PART-TIME COOK. Preschool W est 2162 W . Broadway, Tem ps. 6944338._________ COUNTER PERSON tor copy/print shop. per minute typing and CRT experience required. Afternoon shifts m eltable. These positions offer • com petitive salary and comptata benefit package. Apply in pereori consultation, located In Tem ps. Cad Sharon at Desert Electrolysis Center, TELEMARKETING-W E hava 40 openings PO boot «600, Phoenix 86068.___________ CREDIT EVALUATORS: Zalee regional credit center Is seeking highly mothreted Individúale who ere Interested In pert-tkne permanent employment end enjoy work­ ing In a fast-paced environment. 46 words receive cofte g e credit while earning « 1500/nionth. C ell 2393006 for Interview. 8297829.__________________ _ _ _ _ _ _ NATIONAL MARKET research company wllh Phoenix location Is hiring home econom ics and aocM science majors. Part-time work available while {bushing school, with full-time opportunities alter g r a d u a tio n . C a ll 2 6 5 -2 8 9 0 lo r appointment. Pay depends on experience. hqure/Week. secretary .skids, shorthand desired not necessary, Lotus, Word Perfect knowledge helpful. 40th Street and experience helpful. 9890788. HAVE UNWANTED fa d e! or body hair removed permanently by atectrolyiia- Free D ress, Part-time, mornings. Xerox and retell plus Vi utilitto» monthly. Fully fumlehedl Washer/dryer, microwave, sic. Loaded!! M a y io i __________ SUMMER W ORK. W e a re now interview­ ing students tor taVMIme summer work. Gain valuable reeume experience and ONE W AY plane ticket for sale. Departs May 13. Must sad Immediately. 670. Cad TALL GAL needed to m odel and g e t a tan. NONSMONER, OW N room, near campus. Air-conditioning, ANOREXIA, BULIMIA, com pulsive over­ eating. Private and confidential counsel­ ing. Qkmie Gram Monroe, ACSW , recov­ ered bulimic, 437-9420, 4093860. Health Insurance w elcom e._____________________ HELP WANTED, dW iwaeher, busboys and waitresses. Apply In person, ChopanMcKalftpa.____________ travel services help wonted help wonted ATTENTION GRADUATES. Develop a career in marketing/sales. May begin before com pleting coftege. Training avaHahie. Great Income opportunity for the right person. Scottsdale. 901-4625. *260. V*. Tim, 2M-31>S. NEED Page 23 Monday, April 85,1988 21 or Older. 992-6200. _________________ ATTENTION: FREE ca n to ad m ejor cities. 21 or older. Cad AAA Oriveaway, 277-8079. SHORT O F TIME? 1 can Malp. R ea­ son ab le. P rofessio n a l. G uaranteed. Experienced In academ ic. Cad Jessie 9464744, _____________________ STUDENT TYPE and Copy, Univanity Tow ers. Across from Sun Devil Stadium. 24 hour turnaround. 921-9695. THE PAPERW ORKS- Thesis, report and resum e typing. IBM com patible word procaaalng. N ear ASU. 921-9575:________ travel 2 ONE-W AY tickets to Newark. One 5320 N. 16th St. Suite 103 Equal Opportunity Employment ONE 12" CHEESE PIZZA ONLY $1.99 leaves May -13, other May 14. 8100 each. 764-6662._______________________________ 5 0 » extra fo r each additional topping. O ffer good fo r pick-ups only. 2 ONE-WAY tickets to Newark, May 2. Baal offer, 764-0968.____________________ PIZZA BO Y 966-0070 Unlverelty/Priest TYPIN G SERVICE near ASU. Quick turnaround. O ver 30 years secretarial aarvlc». 9499992._______________________ W ORD PROCESSING, papers, resumes, th e s e s . «I.S O / p a ge. C a ll Jody at AIRLINE DISCOUNTS: Fly Continental USA. Stay ad summer, changes permitted, 8291231._________ «379 round trip; Alaska 6550. W orld wide discounts. Som a restrictions apply. Travel Tips Unlimited. 9697266. TYPIN G - TERM papers, resumes, corres­ pondence. (2 / page double-spaced. 8396081 or 9697937. ment. 9697810, John. AFTER CLASS HOURS AFTERNOON EXPANSION»5.50 per hour guaranteed Dkdurarlea Marketing, the nation’ s finest telemarketing firm, Is now accepting applications far the fallowing ehins: 1-«p.m.6-6:30p.m.0-9:30p.m. Weekend« Also Available Our salespeople work In a m pdepi, distance environment contacting established customers w J L > tnr anc< lin es. Guaranteed salary o r corowisslon, whichever is greater. O u ^ e m ^ o ff ic e 't o located approximately 5 minutes from campus. P lease caH D iaiam erica Marketing for details. 829-1140 __ s EURAIL PA SSES •PRESCHOOL X • CHILD CARE i •PROF. TEACHERS • LOW ADULT/CHILD RATIO •REASONABLE FEES 15 D ay«.........298 21 D ays....___ 370 1 Month.........470 2 Months.......650 YOUTH PA SSES Dr. Loren & Bonnie Vaughn ) Owners/Directors 'mefioofWesb « E Leading the Utile Ones.. K 8 f 1 M o n th ......320 2 M o n th s.....420 U ntjm itecl T ra v e l In 16 C o u n trie s M ILL A V E N U E TR AVEL 966-6300 adoptions A D O PT. CH ILD LESS lovin g couple wishes to adopt W hite newborn. Our hearts are reaching out tor that special aoreeone to love. Medical and legal expanses paid. Confidential Cad collect. Sherry end Bob, 7184493005. CARING , LOVING, financially stable couple looking tor white newborn to adopt Legal, confidential, expenses paid. Cad U nde or Stave collect, (602)4397107. PR E G N AN T? CALIFO RNIA Christian couple want to add to their family by adoption. For profile call 209732-2575. Monday, Apr» 25,1968 C la ss o f Lon l i / l ip j W |V T I f 1 &Chris H oeye’s l V 1 l w T W I • You m ay q u a lify to bu y o r le a se a N E W O ld s m o b ile w ith as little as 5% dow n p a ym e n t o f the p u rch a se p rice! * If you're a se n io r in a 4 -y e a r college, registered nu rsin g degree program or graduate degree p rogram and w ill graduate w ithin the next six m onths, you m ay q u a lify far the O ld s m o b ile car o f your ch o ice — and have on e year from receipt o f you r degree to take advantage o f this program . B rin g us a current d riv e r’s license and p ro o f o f e m p lo y m e n t or jo b offer, and G M A C ’s sp ecia l fin a n c in g p ro g ram for co lle g e grads and se n iors cou ld be the easiest course in advanced e c o n o m ic s ever offered! So, co m e in today for a test drive and an o rie n ta tio n to 5 % D O W N fin a n cin g , where Y O U + BIG T W O = S U C C E S S ! ! i j A ll-n ew & fu lly-rem odeled w ith the rjde & look o f th e 1990'a • Bowerful standard 2.8-liter multiport fu el-In jected V6 en gin e • A sleek, contem porary & aerodynam ic cart > CASH SELLING PRICE 410,497.60 m onthly pints, o f *239.13. $400 rebate to be used as down paym ent. Total pm ts: $14,347,80.10.5% A.RR. on approved credit. P o w e rfu l 2 .3 - lite r Q u a d 4 m u ltip o rt fu e l-In je c te d e n g in e 1 Unique standard sp lit-fo ld in g rear seat w ith trunk pass-th ro u gh Spirited ride, practical luxury and unbeatable co m fo rt & s ty le 4 A 1 *TO P U R C H A S E : 5% dow n paym ent of purch ase p rice required, pro­ vided the am ount fin an ced d o e s not exceed 95 % 'of m an u fa c tu re rs su ggested retail price, and the retail.price of valye - added,.dealerin sta lle d o p tio n s p lu s.G M P rote ction Plan (at m an u factu re r’s s u g ­ gested. re ta il price), tax and license. TO L E A S E : A dow n paym ent of. the registration e x p e n se s p lu s a se cu rity d e p o sit equal to two m on­ thly-paym ents rounded up to the n earest.$25'is required, provided the am ount fin a n ce d d o e s not exceed, the m a n u fa c tu re rs s u g ­ gested retail price p lu s value-added, d e a le r-‘in sta lle d o p tio n s plus G M P ro te c tio n Plan (at m anufacture r's su ggested retail price). P ro o f of in su ra b ility and no negative credit history required. Offer expires April 30j" 1988. Vehicles subject to prior sale. Some models not exactly as shown. -rtfE CLASS f ) F ’88! 470 S. A lm a S c h o o l R o a d M e sa