£SS£®£SSS3í»¡ Arizona State University’s Summer Weekly Thursday, July 14, 1988 •OopyrigM.SIM PMH.19M Tonipo, Artzono V o i. 1 3 N o . 7 ÂSU minority situation controversial fo i year toe Chicano coalition said it would re-issue its resignation demand. In its letter last year, the group presented The Arizona Chicano Coalition, which nine concerns, including allegations that e a rlie r this sum m er ca lle d fo r the School o f Social Work Deain Jesse McClure resignation of ASU President J. Russell misused school funds and forced out the Nelson, has complained about conditions for Hispanic sta ff member, who was in charge m inorities at ASU fear nearly a year. o f recruiting fo r the school. In a letter to Nelson dated Sept. 24,1987, The group charged in the letter that the coalition said it was disappointed with McClure used revenues from the New Nelson’s “ leve l o f toqtory” during a Choices program, a $100 education program previous m eeting it had with Nelson about fo r V alley residents convicted o f driving the School o f Social Work and the roles While intoxicated, to “ A rbitrarily reward Hispanics play in ASU’s administration. faculty andi staff.” ft asked that Nelson The letter was given to the State P ress b y; appoint a certified public accountant to state Sen. Jesus “ Chuy” Higuera, Dinvestigate. Tucson. Tbe letter asked Nelson to appoint M cC lu re qn W ednesday c a lled the an independent investigator to examine coalition’s charge “ a vicious lie.” H e said “ va ry Serious violations o f personnel Nelson did not contact him about the group’s p ractices and procedu res,” including charge. • charges o f misuse to funds and strong-arm In addition, Medina charged that “ one of tactics against a Hispanic staff m em ber in Dean M cClure’s firs t actions w as to the School o f Social Work. sy stem a tica lly rem o ve th e ro le and “ You r response was that you did not see responsibility o f the only effective Hispanic any significant problems a t the School of recruiter the School o f Social W ork has Social Work, and that only a m inority of had.” faculty appeared to be raising concerns,” “ Ms. M aria Gardner had winked fo r toe w rote Manuel Medina, file coalition’s tw o previous Deans at the School o f Social president. “ W e fee l that an adequate Work. She had spent an entire decade investigation would confirm very serious d ev elo p in g a n etw o rk o f re c ru ite rs ~ violations o f personnel practices and throughout the Southwest, fit addition, she p r o c e d u re s . ; . an d a ls o ' C o n firm personality operated the only effective dissatisfaction by Hispanic faculty and staff retention counseling and resource program with the lack o f responsiveness by ASU toalmost single-handedly. m inority issues.” “ The forcing out. o f that individual has Nelson, contacted at his home, would not resulted in a gradual decline o f those efforts comment about the letter. R e said he would and are reflected to the loss o f m inority “ fee l much m ore com fortable” discussing applications to the School and the number o f the issue if he had a copy o f the letter in. m inority students.” front o f him. McClure said, “ That’s a . lie, too.” The group becked o ff its ca ll fo r Nelson’s resignation after the president presented a . added that Gardner retired. McClure sa id Hispanios comprise 22 percent of the School 21-print plan, “ Action Now,” in early June o f Social W ork’s faculty, and m inorities that requires that eight new m inority account fo r 46 percent o f the school’s faculty and a m inority-faculty recruiter be faculty. • hired. Th e plan also earm arks money for “ That high of a number doesn’t exist m inority scholarships. ^“ *ftimto Liltor, pig» 7, Should the plan fa il to be implemented, By BEN McCONNiLL State Brass -• fK g U r «MCKw ny/aaw ru n Construction w orker A ree lE . Henry adjusts th e flam e on an acetylsne torch. Henry w as using the to rc h to cu t m etal etude near th e McDonald’s in th e basem ent o f the MU. See story» page 7. fo r state Senate race Todd, TAXE S: “ Any tim e taxes are raised it should be absolutely the last re s o rt” B i l l V a l e n t i e , 39, republican challenger. Has not held political office. Partner in Tem pe D rywall Supply, Inc. and farm er. Was a legislative page for 1968-70 sessions. Received ASU undergraduate degree in 1970 in agricu ltu ral economics. Received law degree from Lew is and d a rk College to Oregon. Mem ber of Arizona Bar Associatimi. ______ in S id C ,f ■ “ M A R T IN L U T H E R K IN G JR. H O LID AY: “ A paid M artín Luther King holiday would cost taxpayers a tremendous sum o f money. I would have a very difficu lt tim e creating another holiday.” ASU: “ ASU has done an am azing job over the years. I ’m to favor to parity (w ith U ofA ) across toe board. Growth (a t ASU ) m ay have to be capped in th e com in g years. H a vin g sa tellite campuses (other than ASU W est) is a good exam ple of forw ard thinking.” By b e n McCo n n ell State Braes This is the firs t o f a tw o-part series looking a t the races to represent Tem pe in the 3Sth Arizona Legislature. The two-man prim ary race fo r the state Senate seat representing Tem pe’s D istrict 27 is heating up, with incumbent Republican Doug Todd firin g the first shot o t what m ay he many volleys of hot rhetorical le^d. Tem pe businessman B*U Valentic, 39, is challenging Todd to the September prim ary for the Republican nomination. The general election is Nov. 8. No Dem ocrats are running for Todd’s seat this fall.. Todd charges (hat Valentic is part of the d rive that form er Gov. Evan Mecham, whom Todd helped oust from office, is State Elections! organizing to change the face o f the next Legislature, i , “ He (V alen tic) has no ties to the community. H e’s running because some ladies disagreed with m y opinion on Evan Mecham,” Todd said. “ He is backed by Forward Arizona Turnto pagt t. feu ' . , A : WEEKEND WEATHER The mercury keeps on rising as sum­ mer continues to pour on the heat. Temperatures are expected near 111 degrees today and much of the same is predicted for the upcoming weekend. HONOR GUARD: The Arizona Board of Regents get set to approve plans for an ASU Honors College while student leaders warn the college could promote “ intellec­ tual elitism." Page 6. TAXES: “ Close a university, close a prison and don’t take to the chronically m entally ill and you don’t need taxes.” M A R T IN L U T H E R K IN G JR. H O LID AY: I have a couple o f votes on record to not supporting it (k m c h oliday).” ASU ; ‘ ‘ W e h a v e tw o o th e r universities answering the needs o f education in other counties. The community co llege system is very efficien t and the best in the cou n try a t a d d ressin g specialty needs.” D o u g T o d d , 59, in cu m ben t rep u b lica n . Vying fo r second Senate term . Previously served four House term s. R etired farm er. M arried 39 years, fiv e children. Graduate to ASU (when it was Arizona S t a t e C o lle g e ) w it h undergraduate degree in agronomy. ........... ............22 Classified Entertamment................................15 Opinion........... ........... ......... . 4 This Week.........'...........ì........»..... 3 y It m Prct« J u ly 1 4 , 1 9 8 8 c a m p u s b r ie fs Pulitzer nominee will join faculty, teach graduate poetry workshop A S U a c q u ire s n e w IBM, C ra y system s to g a in s u p e rc o m p u tin g c a p a b ility A i a 1987 Pu litzer P rize nominee fo r poetry, w ill teach at ASU this fa ll and increase to four the number o f faculty poetry instructors who have won Guggenheim Fellowships. English Department Chairman Nick Salerno said that ASU is toe only university represented by m ore than two poets who have won Guggenheim Fellowships. The John S »"»»» Guggenheim M em orial Foundation in New York grants about 300 fellowships annually to support artists and scholars. -• A i 999 Avantage Get the 286 machine that's priced rtoht. IIncludes 512K. standard keyboard, MM ' drive more. Macintosh Plus $1247 Toshiba T1000 Laptop See us for special $ 7 7 9 student pricing and rebates on most Includes Appje models. Jl Citizen Dot Matrix Printer 512K, Supertwist Screen, A disk drive hi a 7 pound portable package. Are you a hard workings sales oriented people person in search of a flexible job th a t has great earning potential? 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Southern & McClintock 266-7873 838-1236 JA CK IE ELDRIDGE • 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 [OR STOP BY MATTHEWS CENTER BASEMENT] West Valley 35th Ave. & Northern 838-1236 TODAY ' ^... ............... ~ ....... ........... RITTER Christos Anesti Is Dukakis a Greek Orthodox in the ‘significant sense?' Campaigning fo r the presidency in 1960, John F . Kennedy was constantly dogged by a llegation s and insinuations that his Catholicism somehow disqualified him from the office. A reporter once asked Mrs. Kennedy what she thought of these prejudices. “ You know, if Bobby w ere the candidate I could understand it ," Jackie replied. “ But Jack’s such a had Catholic.” It would be nice to think that religious prejudice was a thing o f the past, and that a presidential candidate’s religion would not becom e an issue in the 1988 campaign. But lo, 28 years after Kennedy’s victory, M ichael Dukakis’ Greek Orthodoxy has become a campaign issue. O f course, Dukakis’ detrators can’t come right out and use his religion against him in any direct way. Their strategy is m ore subtle: It ’s not that Dukakis is Greek Orthodox, w e are told, but that he is such a bad Greek Orthodox, r . i The complaints against Dukakis are these: •The Greek Orthodox Church condemns hom osexuality; Dukakis, by contrast, supports gay rights. •The Greek Orthodox Church opposes abortion; Dukakis supports freedom o fi choice. •The Greek Orthodox Church forbids m arriage outside the traditional Christian faith; Dukakis’ w ife, K itty, is Jewish. •The Greek Orthodox Church requires its m em bers to b a p tize th e ir ch ild ren according to church ritual; the Dukakis children w ere never baptized. To be sure, none o f this would have become an issue except for a ga ffe on the part o f the candidate him self: Dukakis stated that he was a member in good standing o f the church. His claim now appears questionable. Dukakis, through his lack of form al observance, m ay have rendered him self “ self-excom municated” an d in e lig ib le to r e c e iv e ch u rch sacraments. This raises an interesting question: How many others who consider themselves Greek Orthodox would find themselves excommunicated if their religious lives w ere given the same degree o f scrutiny as has M ichael Dukakis’ ? Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Muslems — any member o f an organized religion — might ponder the same question. The p ro b lem h ere is th a t la y m e n and clergym en, irrespective o f denomination, tend to have different attitudes as to what constitutes membership in a religious confession. To the clergy, it is a m atter of strictly defined ecclesiastical law. To laym en , on the oth er hand, church membership is m ore a m atter o f personal affection: One describes oneself as a Catholic, a Baptist, a Mormon because one fe els C atholic, B aptist, Morm on. W e identify with a particular church: perhaps grew up in it, return to it occassionally, feel a certain bond with our co-religionists. This is what Dukakis means when he says he is G reek Orthodox. He wasn’t thinking or speaking as a clergym an; he isn’t a clergym an — why should he? He was thinking and speaking as a laym an — the same w ay most o f us think and speak when w e discuss our religious affiliations. Last spring, a Greek-American friend of m ine invited m e to a G reek Orthodox Easter s e r v ic e . A lth o u g h P a u l w a s n ’ t a particularly dutiful son o f the church, he none-the-less spoke with obvious pride as he descibed the beauty o f the cerem ony: beginning at midnight, the huge ^phurch dark and the congregation silent, each m em ber holding an unlit candle. Then, a single candle is kindled at the altar, and its ‘How m any others who consider them selves Greek O rthodox w ould fin d them selves excom m unicated if their religious lives were given the same degree o f scrutiny as M ichael D ukakis?’ * flam e silently passed from candle, to candle until the icons and murals on the walls shim m er in an otherworldly light. As the service cam e to an end, the celebrants began to greet one another with the words “ Christos A nesti.” “ Christos A nesti” Paul said again and . again as he greeted friends and relatives. Later, as w e drove back to his parents' home fo r an ea rly morning feast, I asked: “ What was that phrase everyone kept repeating at the end of the service?” “ Cbistos A n esti?” Paul said." “ That m ean s‘Christ is Risen.’ " “ I see," I said, then asked, “ Do you believe that?” “ In C hrist?" He sort of frowned and sm iled, then said, “ N o ." A fter a pause, he continued: “ I believe in God and a ll that, but in term s o f m y beliefs I ’m not really Christian.” Not Christian. But nevertheless, in some significant sense, Greek Orthodox. L ike M ike Dukakis. le t t e r s Here’s to us Editor: It was with great pleasure that I read D arrin H ostetler’s column (June 30) concerning the incident involving Sen. Leslie Johnson and her remark about the death penalty. Darrin managed to capture the important point highlighted by Johnson’s foolhardy rem ark: that w e have only seen the beginning o f a long and disgusting performance by Mechamites state-wide who are bloodthirsty and out for a kill this fall. T h e n arrow -m in d ed , sh ort-sigh ted thinking o f people like Johnson threaten the very well-being of the state, and the sooner théir trivial, ridiculous accusations and half-truths are exposed fo r the bull droppings they are, the better o ff we w ill all be du rin g and a fte r the upcom ing campaign. In any case, in the column Darrin once again exhibited the writing skills and analytical powers that make him one o f the ' most interesting and readable columnists in the V alley. I haye experienced journalism programs in three different universities (one on both coasts and in the heart of the country, Kansas) and I have never seen a w riter o f his caliber working for a college publication. During the Mecham episode it was a joy every few days to read the State Press and Darrin and see that someone in Arizona was connecting his pen w ith his mind as w ell as the paper. Again he shows that he w ill go far if he continues to serve as the insightful analyst he has shown he can be. A ll o f the young w riters on the Sta te Press are doing a great job, and they should be commended fo r being what a college newspaper should be: a trader on the » campus and among students. The State Press is a hell o f a paper all the way around. Speaking fo r a lot o f readers, I hope the good papers keep coming. Nikky Robbins Y , Sophomore, English Editor’s Note Hunter Thompson is on vacation, and thus his colum n does not appear in this week’s issue. The colum n w ill return to the State Press next week. quotable LETTER POLICY The S tate Pres» welcomes and encourages w ritten response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full nam e, class standing and m ajor (or other affiliation with the University) and phone num ber. Requests "Most men’¿ anger about religion is as if two men should quarrel for a lady that neither of them care for.” for anonymity w ill be granted with an appropriate reason. — All letters are subject to editing a t the discretion o f the opinion page editor. Lord Halifax (George Savile) Bring letters to the State Press front desk in the basem ent of M atthews Center. Photo I.O . is required. Letters m ay also be addressed to: State Press, 15 M atthews Center, Arizona S tate University, Tem pe, AZ 86287-1502. ------------- ----------------------— — — —~------- STATE PRESS D A R R IN H O S T E T E E R Editor A rts E d it o r ’" v r P h o to E d it o r ..................................................................... J A C K B E A S L E Y A r t is t ...................... ........... ....v...„....™ ........>..u.................M IK E R IT T E R C O N T R IB U T IN G W R IT E R S : V ic k ie C h a ch ere, Chris D o rsey , D a v e H o d g e s , G a ry J a ck so n , B e n M cC on n ell, H o w ell J. M aih am Jr., Carri M itchell, S cott S e c k e l, E d S ch u bert, L a u rie Sm ith, N ick V a n N ic e. M ARTYNSAUERZO PF M a n a g in g Editor N e w s E d it o r ............. .................................... . ----------------------------------- --------;-------------- P R O D U C T IO N : L eig h a yn G re e n SUZANNE W ESCH LER ■J D A V E M IL L E R A D V E R T IS IN G R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : L e s lie Dillon, h au l D e b b ie M orlock, Patti S ch m a u tz, R ich T o ltzm a n , R a y Zickel. Lee, C ^ A T I V E C O N S U L T A N T : R ich Toltzm a n . T h e S ta te P r e s s is published o n T h u rsd a y during th e S um m er sem ester, at M atthew s C enter, R o o m 15, A riz o n a S ta te University, T e m p s , A rizo n a 85287. N ew sro om : (6 0 2 ) 965-2292. A d vertisin g and Production: (602) 965-7572. .. TTie S ta ts P r e s s is th e on ly n ew sp a p er ex c lu s iv e ly pu blish ed for a n d circulated o n th e A S U cam p u s. T h e n e w s an d v ie w s p u b lis h e d in ¡¡«w s p a p e r a re not n ecessarily th o s e o f t h e A S U administration, faculty, sta ff o f student b o d y 1 S ta te Press pages Thursday/ July 14,1968 H io i A it■ V I S I O il ■ M inorities, quality of education and funding for students are top priorities for Regents Patrick McWhortor Editor’s N ote: P a trick M cW hortor is the new student representative to the Arizona Board o f Regents. The student ■representative te a non-voting m em ber o f the board but m ay ' participate in debate and discussion o f issues vita l to the university com m unity. M cW hortor, a senior p o litica l science m a jor who w ill graduate a t the end o f the sum m er and return to A SU to pursue graduate studies, w ill represent students on this im portant university policy-m aking body during the next year. D u rin g that period, M cW hortor w ill b e penning several columns fo r the State Press, in which be w ill rep ort to the student body concerning the board’s activities and present an account o f the ongoing process o f governing the three state universities. The future of Arizona is the issue in F lagstaff this weekend. WiH Arizona’s universities m eet the challenges created by a burgeoning population, changing demographics and ever tightening budgets? The w ay in which the Arizona Board of Regents answers - that question this week during its annual retreat has a direct and pervasive im pact on the future o f this state. Over the past few months, the board has been directing its efforts toward change: both in the way it manages its internal affairs and in the w ay the universities are managed. The culmination o f these efforts w ill appear tomorrow when the board discusses issues laid out in a report o f the Task Force on Excellence, E fficien cy and Competitiveness and presents an internally-developed plan to alter its operations. These m ay appear to be dull matters, but imbedded in them are decisions about whether ASU and its sister institutions w ill successfully m eet future heeds and demands. What are the challenges? The most prominent issue today is the poor record of recruitm ent and retention o f m inority students. ASU President J. Russell Nelson recently conferred with Hispanic leaders to allay their concerns that ASU was doing too little to diversify its student body. The m inority issue is o f such concern because nearly^fOur out of every ten children who enter kindergarten this fa ll in Arizona w ill be from m inority fam ilies. It is estim ated that Arizona’s “ m inority” population w ill be a “ m ajority” by the year 2000. I f these groups continue to be under-repreSented in our institutions of higher learning, the long-term im pact on the state WiH be severe and felt by us all. The board has unanimously identified this issue as a priority item fo r consideration and one in which it should provide direction. A second challenge involves the quality o f undergraduate education. The perennial problem of how to build our universities’ prestige as providers o f a sound, high quality undergraduate experience has not disappeared and many are not satisfied with measures already taken. Public pressure, as w ell as concerns expressed by students, w ill keep this issue before the board. A third important area is the scarcity o f public funds for higher education, and the universities’ difficulty in getting the kind o f monies it nCeds from the state legislature. As long as revenues fa ll short o f basic state expenditures, there is no room for an increase in resources to m eet tom orrow’s problems, including those discussed here. It is crucial that Arizona makes a firm commitment to its systems o f higher learning. That commitment must come from citizens and their representatives in the legislature. If Arizona does not develop com petitive institutions, its heyday o f growth ami economic prosperity w ill be over shortly/ You m ay ask what plans the board has to tackle these difficu lt problems. Everyone who follows the board's activities hopes that the changes promised w ill allow it to focus a greater amount of ‘If these groups continue to be under-represented in our institutions o f higher learning, the long-term im pact on the state w ill be severe and fe lt b y us all. ’ tim e on these substantitve, overarching areas o f concern. In the past, the board has been m ired in detail and specific management chores that have deflected its attention from the larger issiies. The purpose o f the board should be to provide a guiding hand to university presidents and their administrations. The boardshould serve as a determ iner o f philosophical purpose and goals, leaving it to the administrators to take the universities in the board-determined direction. This does not m ean that the board revokes its accountability to the public, leaving salaried bureaucrats to determ ine higher-education policy fo r Arizona. Instead, the board should monitor administrators to assure itself that the direction it wants the universities to take is being taken. Without actually involving themselves in directing sta ff operations, board members should ensure that the results ‘The p ast fe w jjio n th s , the board has been directing efforts tow ard change.’ they desire are being achieved. I f they are not, the board m ay step in and re-direct administrators. It is also essential that in delegating m ore adm inistrative functions to staffers and in im proving the efficien cy of board meetings, the valuable input o f students, faculty and the public is not lost. In fact, because the substantive issues that these groups care most about w ill fin ally be addressed in board meetings, this is the tim e to guarantee that their voices are being heard fu lly by the board. Students have m ade great strides in this decade in playing a part in the board’s decision-making process. This role of students should be maintained and enhanced in the future. Faculty should play a m ajor part in the board’s deliberations as well,* since it is they that determine how much prestige the universities ultim ately w ill possess. Current requests by faculty to gain a greater voice' on the board should be acted upon and included in any restructuring plans. Finally, the board should continue its open process, allowing those who are most concerned about the future of higher education in our state to present their viewpoints to board members. Some administrators talk about a “ window of opportunity” fo r Arizona’s .universities today. Our situation is such that the chances fo r establishing the universities as a m ajor partner in the growth and development of our state is great. However, if w e do not take advantage of these opportunities in the next fiv e to six years, that window m ay begin closing and Arizona’s position m ay be locked in. It is essential that the board recognize that fact and lead the effort to build a solid future fo r Arizona. A t the same tim e, it must answer some very difficu lt questions about what kind o f universities w e w ill have in the 21st century. The m eeting this weekend in F lagstaff can be the beginning of a great change in our state. It can be the beginning o f a great future. c a rto o n s uktu m u sh J k Æ , AM 1.0. OFA SAU5A6C, was WITH JT AN 'ARM S-FORrHOSttfitS/ deal, when TOLD WJOURNALISTS! VICE PRESIDENT 6EOM E BUSIL FOREI6N AFFAIRS EXPERT AND N.S.C. KINS PIN, KNEW IT WAS AN *AR *ASFOR'HOSVAAES* DEAL, WHEN Y X P 0 f JOURNALISTS! BELIEVE IT, OR NOT/ ¿«H P x 'ftUIOCSFflER USNOUR HELP WITHOUR MJSBfPlCRKflON SHOT, uusr wwr eoawow Youdo ?* ^ Thursday, Jùlÿ 14> 1988 — — ■— ^ S ta te P r é « — — I . -1 ... ..... H i— Regents expected to approve ASU H onoajpollege A com m ittee o f regents staffers and academ ic vice presidents from the three state univarsities unanimously The Arizona Board o f Regents, meeting in Flagstaff this recommended the proposal be approved by the fu ll board, weekend, is expected to approve a proposal granting ASU citing the the need to attract able and ambitious students and faculty to ASU and to give special recognition and incentives authority to form an Honors College. The college, slated to replace the current University to outstanding scholars. But some student leaders are worried that an Honors Honors Program , is touted by the program ’s director as a College w ill refocus attention from overall undergraduate “ m ajor step forw ard” in the academ ic standing o f ASU. But some student leaders have voiced concerns that the education to the honors students. John Fees, Associated Students o f ASU president, said his college could be view ed as elitist and used as an excuse to allow academ ic concerns in the University at large to go “ greatest concern about the college is that it m ight become an excuse for acceffting m ediocrity in the other areas of unaddressed. , , Philosophy Professor Ted Humphrey, honors program undergraduate educatimi. “ I -can see whore the idea could develop that w e only need director, said the college w ill operate in the same w ay as the Graduate College, by coordinating the academ ic careers of to expect excellence from the Honors College, but w e should students from a ll of the U niversity colleges, schools and expect and demand excellence everywhere.” ASASU A ctivities V ice President Todd Martensen agreed, departments. “ (The Honors College) w ill s a v e as an adm inistrative saying “ the concern I have is that the college w ill raise thè umbrella fo r students ‘who choose to pursue an honors level ofedu cation fo r just a select group . . . a ll studente should have the same access to top facilities and professors.” education,” he said. % Fees said the Honors College is a good idea if it is used as a Humphrey said 819 students are currently enroUed in the tool for recruiting top scholars to ASU and as an honors program. Humphrey said the regents proposal is designed to provide enhancement to the educational process of a ll students.. “ Otherwise, it promotes intellectual elitism ,” he said. a blueprint fo r the college’s development and give the honors “ And that’s a lot of garbage.” concept m ore prestige. Humphrey, who said he expects to assume the deanship of “ When you become a college, that status obviously presents greater opportunities fo r achievem ents and the college, said he had heard “ absolutely no criticism ” of the honors plan and defended the college concept. recognition,” he said. “ W e even refer to McClintock Hall as a scholars’ hall The regents proposal calls for ASU to spend nearly $300,000 from already-allocated U niversity funds during the next rather than an honors hall, meaning that it w ill be open to three years to establish the college and renovate McClintock students who have high academ ic qualifications, regardless Hall into a “ Scholars’ Residence H all” to accommodate o f whether they are honors students,” 1 » said. However, Humphrey said honors studoits would be given a honors students. “ McClintock would serve as the focal point fa* the college preference over other students who want to live in and would be the site of a regular schedule o f cultural, McClintock, and would be selected individually by a academ ic and recreational events that would enrich the com m ittee of Residence L ife personnel and honors college staff. university experience,” Humphrey said. By DARRIN HOSTETLER S tate Prase John Fees The drive for an ASU Honors College began in 1983 when form er Academic A ffairs V ice President .Jack Kinsinger recommended the concept. Humphrey said Kinsinger’s replacem ent, C. Roland Haden, spearheaded the plan and “ m ade it a reality.” . < F ees said overall academ ic achievem ent should be «mphagjgAd by ASU, and “ as long as students remain concerned and involved, their education w ill not -be endangered” by the honors college. But he urged the administration tp provide “ continued loadorship for the college to insure that it doesn’t become an excuse for m ediocrity,” ' \ -r'■ Fees said: “ We have got to ask ourselves, do really great institutions o f learning have honors, colleges? Does Berkeley? Does Stanford? “ W e can’t let the presence o f an honors college mean that w e give up the battle on overall quality o f undergraduate education.” Need to sell your motorcycle? Pick up the pace with an ad in the STATE PRESS Classifieds! 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Licensed Doctors o f Optometry 100% refund on contact lenses if not completely, satisfied within 30 days* • Specialty lenses not included Open Monday-Saturday ? »SOME RESTRICTIONS A PPLY SEVEN C O N V E N IE N T VALLEY L O C A T IO N S OPTIONS AVAILABLE AT ADDITIONAL CHARGE CHANDLER 2050 N. Alma School PARADISE YALUY/SCOmSALE K/HF. corneraf Alma School/Wamer Acrossfirm Weiss Guys CarWasb 786-1074 SoftCootaci* 3241 E. Shea Blvd. 996-9639 D A ILY S O F T C O NTAC TS FOR A S T IG M A T IS M (TORIC)______ ...______ ______$199.99 Hydrocwve CO LO RED SO FT EX TEN D ED W EAR C O N T A C T S______________ _________Two Pair $99.99 Oae colored, one dear Outside contact lens prescriptions welcome with corneal measunaents (K-Readings) OTHER BRANDS AVj AT AN ADDITIONAL PHX/SCOTTSDALE 3620 E. Thomas Rd. AcrossfromTarget m.SunshineSquare PHOENIX 5130 N. 19th Ave. OneNocknorth of CameihackRd 956-2012 242-5292 , MESA. 43? S. Gilbert Rd. Southeastcornerof BroadwayC-GilbertRd 8 4 4 -7 0 9 6 GLENDALE 5030 W. Peoria #103 One Neck east of Sid 9 5 7 -1 0 4 7 State P ro a MU undergoing renovations; post office officially unveiled Our N e w W e e k e n d Nights a re worth waiting a w e e k for! By MARTY SAUERZO^F State Preee The M U is currently enduring a w ave of construction projects and renovations to the tune o f afipost $350,000, the associate director o f the building said Wednesday. Randy Johnson said that projects in the 9 basement near McDonald’s, in the old MU G allery and in Thé Club w ill be finished by the first week o f August. , “ McDonald’s is putting in à new floor, new seating, new ceilin g and lighting to com pletely convert the store into a full McDonald’s operation,” he said. He said the $250,000 renovation o f the restaurant is being conducted com pletely by the McDonald’s Corporation, and is being done through outside contractors. Johnson said work on the new Fin e Arts Lounge near the north entrance o f the building is proceeding on schedule and w ill be completed before the fa ll semester. The project combines the MU G allery w ith the old R esidence L ife offices. Residence l i f e has m oved into the new student services building. “ W e are going to m odify the entrance so w e can use the M ezzanine level offices,” Johnson said. “ Th ere w ill be a new glass entrance area that w ill be facing the stairw ell heading down to the rec center.” Johnson estim ated the cost o f the new Fine A rts Lounge at approxim ately $30,000; On Use east side o f the M U, The Club is in the midst of a $60,000 construction project. “ The Club renovation is a complete renovation to include carpet, tile, paint and beverage counters, new seating, tables and chaira,” Johnson said. ^ In addition to these (projects, a recently com pleted addition to the building was o fficia lly unveiled lasrw eek. A ribbon-cutting cerem ony was held last Friday at the new Ü.S. post o ffice in the basement of the M U. The contract station offers a ll the services of a regular post office, except post o ffice boxes. “ F’tw a number o f years, w e have been tryin g to im prove the m ail services provided to the U niversity community and the surrounding community,” ASU m ail services director Joseph Barnett said at the cerem ony. V - “ Opening a contract station in the student union is a m ajor step in our objective.” Also attending the cerem ony w ere Victor Zafra, ASU vice president fo r business a ffa ir s ; C h arlie D a vis, rep resen tin g Phoenix area postmaster D ave Bakke; and G il Montanez, Tem pe postmaster. Zafra, who came to the cerem ony armed Page 7 Thursday, M y 14,1968 s THURSDAY MONSTER 32 o z .W e ll D r in k s V ictor Zafra w ith a letter ready to be m ailed, called the new post o ffice “ symptomatic of our com m itm ent to services in ' business a ffairs.” “ I would like to say that on any given day w e have 50,000 people on this campus,” Zafra said, “ which makes us the seventh largest city in Arizona, so it is only fitting that w e have our own postal station.” D avis said, “ This is ^ n exam ple o f how working with .A S p ^ w e’ve been able to provide . . . a rfnirthat can serve the 45,000 students and additional facility and y&itors from ASU; ” jF ~ The post office,, located near McDonald’s, is equipped with two stamp machines. The postal kiosk north o f the M U w ill soon be rem oved. The station w ill be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 8 a.m. to noon on Saturday. “ i t (the post o ffic e ) w ill be m oving to the main floor after the building expansion takes place,” Johnson said. “ W e’ll start construction in June o f ’89 and w e w ill be in by July o f ’90.” Johnson said that efforts are currently underway in conjunction with the ASU Purchasing O ffice and the Tem pe Chamber o f C om m erce to obtain oth er re ta il operations in the MU fo r next year, such as a convenience store and a travel agency. m $ 1.95 Lon g Island IceTeas- S eabreezes Jungle Juices •Tom Collins Screwdrivers - Rum & Cokes * etc F re e A d m issio n b e fo re 9 p m Hallelujah Mecham’s return to public office lacking voter support, poll finds Alm ost three quarters o f Arizona voters would not support form er Gov. Evan Mecham if he decides to seek re-election to a public office, according to a recent poll. The Rocky Mountain P oll, conducted by the Behavior Research Center of Arizona, found that 74 percent of registered voters would oppose Mecham if he w ere to make a bid fo r U.S. Senator, Congressman or a return to the governor’s chair. The poll also found that 80 percent o f voters would oppose a Mecham attempt at election to the state attorney general’s office, The poll was based on persona! interviews with 550 registered voters in early July. The attitudes against Mecham w ere most intense in his home county, Maricopa. Eighty-fiYe percent o f voters in that county sa id th e y w ou ld oppose M ech a m ’ s candidacy. fo r attorney general and 78 p e rc e n t opposed h is retu rn to the governorship. In Pim a County and rural areas o f the state, m ore than 70 percent of voters saiid they would not support his candidacy for those offices. Dem ocratic voters, as expected, were strongly opposed to Mecham’s return to public office, but there was also no strong show o f support fo r the form er governor among Republicans. 29 percent o f Republican voters said ould support Mecham’s re-election as governor, 20 percent $rould support his bid fo r attorney generalJand 26 percent would choose him fo r Congressman or Senator. The poll has a 4.96 m argin o f error. S —MARTY SAUERZOPF CO UNTD O W N 5fbrldrink prices 8p m -9p m Accounting down every hour AFTER HOURS l:l5 am -3 3 0 L e tte r----- _ _ for th o se 18 6t older o r w/valid college ID C ontinued from p ag * 1. anyplace else on campus,” McClure said. Apparently, Nelson told the coalition the ® ® * teá se R T A R T IN R AT at STARTING 7 P.M. o w Spaghi5*** G>«|pai0 * Restaurant P h o en ix South óñ Central Just Pasta McDowell 2 5 7 -0 3 8 0 Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Oi Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Picatta, Veal Marsala ARE NOT INCLUDED In the 2-for-1 special; in O ld T o w n Tempe 4th Street and Mill * 9 6 6 -3 8 4 8 Page 9 Thursday, July 14,1988 1320 E. BROADWAY TEMPE, ARIZO NA (at Broadway ft Oomy) 894-0636 WEDNESDAY MENS NIGHT Coors & Coors Light Draft 75 $ Coors Extra Gold & Shooters $1.00 J P S D A Y L A D IE S N IG H T 104 »W©ll, b W ine, D rsft( 7-12PM) Live: Animation, 9 PM Bodacious Island Sundays 390*Coronas 12-3 PM This W eek: July 17th Auction Snow! Saturday Fri.-Sat. Azz Izz 7 PM A zz Izz 3-7 PM Chuck E. & Nate 8-12 PM (F ro m C h u ck E. & T h e A llsta rs ) marquee ASU taking steps to prevent ' But it is more important for the athletic department to prevent further tampering with the marquee than to try to identify the Although police are not conducting an hacker, which would cost a lo t of tim e and investigation into the identity o f the hacker money, he said. who program m ed unauthorized messages The University would have to spend “ at on the Packard Stadium marquee last week, lpast several hundred dollars and police ASU administrators said Tuesday that they tim e” if officers w ere to set a trap fo r the w ill take steps designed to prevent the hacker, Collins said. Also, the same hacker crim e from occuring again. would have to program unauthorized A soon-to-be-purchased modem w ill messages three tim es before a trap would require that anyone entering the computer be feasible, he said. system that controls the marquee use a During Salder’s em ployment a t the passw ord, sa id Tom S ad ler, events University, an ASU marquee has displayed coordinator fo r ASU. The modem is “ a little unauthorized messages one tim e other than m ore hack-proof than a password alone,” he last week, he said. In March o f 1968, the said, adding that if he w ere to explain the marquee near Sun Angel stadium displayed new equipment further, he would jeopardize “ th e sam e kin d o f (u n a u th o rized ) its value as a security device. messages.” “ It w ill be much m ore difficult, if not March’s unauthorized messages w ere “ a impossible” to access the system, Sadler little m ore obscene” than last week’s, said. The Department o f Public Safety is Thornhill said. gathering inform ation about the new Collins said the unauthorized messages equipment fo r ASU, he said. that appeared in March “ didn’t mean The unauthorized messages - “ Nancy anything. It was nothing that made any Reagan drops a d d ” and “ K ill the Facists” sense.” — appeared July 6 after a hacker gained Collins, Sadler and Thornhill said they access to the marquee by dialtog its could not rem em ber the exact wording of computer phone number, said Tom Collins, the earlier messages. an assistant athletic director at ASU. • P olice have not identified the first hacker, No password was required, Sadler said. Thornhill said. Bruce Thornhill, the police officer in charge o f the case, said that after one of the “ There wasn’t much security on that officers on his squad saw the unauthorized line,” , he said. “ Just about anyone could messages, the marquee was blacked out and have dime it.” . re-program m ed. A ft e r th e u n au th orized m essages Computer fraud is a class six.felony th a t. appeared in March, “ they (the athletic department) -changed the phone number,” could lead to a year and a half in prison, Thornhill said. “ That was it.” . Thornhill said. By SUZANNE WESCHLER State Preae The m arquee located on th e outside of the centerffekJ w all o f Packard Stadium recently flashed unauthorized message» thanks to a coum puter hacker. ASU o fficials are attem pting to make hacking into the system m ore difficult. again.’* J * But M ike Alden, an assistant athletic director at ASU, said, “ w e don’t see (the unauthorized m essages) as that big a problem. It was rea lly kind o f stupid stuff; nothing vulgar, nothing obscene.” H e added , that what the hacker d id is not as harmful as some other kinds o f computer fraud that could affect a university, such as tampering . with academic records. Anyone with a com puter that has automatic dialing — a device that can dial phone numbers until it gains access to a system — could have obtained the new number, he said. Sadler said: “ These are unfortunate circumstances in the athletic department. W e are taking it very seriously and are faking steps .to make sure it doesn’t happen T O N IG H T 6-9 PM in trcd u ctcry o ffer 75* KAM I-KAZIS $1.00 CORONAS $ 1 € . O C H a s h & è u t S t y le P e n . S 1 3 -S 1 7 W it h C o u p o n ALSO D.J. P L A Y IN G REQUESTS T H IS SATURDAY^ M onte Carlo Night! W in a trip to Laughlin 1 e r yo u r n ext a p p o in tm e n t $1.00 SHOTS AND DRINK SPECIALS c a ll 9 0 6 - 1 3 9 1 1120 E. A P A C H E - 967-1129 O ff R u r a l I c itim i C irc le 6 1465 N . H ayd en 9 4 5 -6 0 6 0 (& £. com er I ofHaydent 5 m in u te s I L from ASU y Ride a Tube Down the Salt River tu b e r ental and W e n to e w — * AND A E R O B IC S OF SCOTTSDALE lor W*er . nlck ■ into et ett gl 1 locations o l A3 O THER LO C A TIO N S TH R O U G H O U T T H E U N ITE D STATES, M C AN AD A Æ & EUROPE m SHUTTLE BUS SERVICE ALL-DAY HATES $6.00 per day par parson group rates available Or Shuttle Bus ticket only $3 all day •4,000 tubaa for rant > »open 7 days a week, 9 am-7 pm Located 9 miles north ot MESA at the Junction ot Bush and Ufery Highways. For more information, phone (602) 984-3305 or write for your free brochure and river map. Authorized by U.8. Forest Service. ■B ring th is a d w ith y o u fo r $25 Initiation Fee Only $25 a Month No Contracts •15,000 sq. ft. •Woiffe tanning beds •Pro shop •The World Cafe •Brand new spacious facilities •Hourly aerobics •Air-conditj^ned •Trainers available S $ 1 00 r iC C TU B E RENTA L M onday thru Friday Húw to ô €T Ftu>m PH oetj/t r o scorrerai» PHóa/ir »? * H £ TUA* P .O . B ox 656 8 M esa, A Z 85216 Wt£S* i 0 ?MM£ TiA tL State Press Page: 11 Thursday, Juty 14, 1988 M edia coverage of rape suspect’s arrest criticize d By MICHELLE ALLMAN Stats Press A Tem pe police spokesman on Wednesday criticized the V alley’s m edia fo r reporting “ inaccurate inform ation’’ a ft«* the arrest of the man accused p f being the “ Rental Agent 'Rapist.’ ’ flam boyant enough .... let’s change it.’ ” . , Clay added that W edding is not accused o f being the Real Estate Rapist. There are certain facts about the R eal Estate Rapist’s attacks that are being withheld that ensures that this (W edding) isn’t the R eal Estate Rapist,” he said. Wedding, who is accused o f being the “ Rental Agent Meanwhile, Randy Joseph Wedding, a 33-year-old father of / three and co-ovrâiér of Wedding-Morgan Architects in' Rapist,” bears almost no physical resem blance to the Real Phoenix, is being held in M aricopa County J ail on $1.5 m illion Estate Rapist, who is still being sought fo r the rapes o f real bond. He was arrested Monday hi connection with 13 rapes Of estate agents, Clay said. V alley apartment leasing agents in the last two years. * / “ W edding is 6-feet-l, 180 pounds, balding, with a full beard Wedding is facing 23 felony counts, including four counts each o f burglary, aggravated assault and kidnapping. He pleaded innocent to all charges. and brown eyes and brown hair,” Clay said. “ The Real Estate Rapist is believed to be about 5 inches shorter, considerably heavier, and about 35 to 45. | f. _ On Wednesday, Tem pe poUce spokesman R oger Clay said, “ Channel 3 at 6 called him the Real Estate Rapist, but reported d ie correct inform ation at 10 after a phone ca ll frtnn us. Apparently the media say to themselves ‘this isn’t “ They are not even close; there’s not even a rem ote resemblance. The only sim ilarity you can m ake is they both attack fem ales.” „ A spokesman for K TV K NewsChannel 3 claim ed “ that (incorrect inform ation) w as not on our a ir,” adding that K TV K “ made efforts to re fe r to him at 10 as the rental rapist.” . But Clay said, “ I don’t know how much clearer w e can make it (the inform ation). The papers don’t get the angry phone calls, w e do.” Clay said this kind o f inaccurraey had occurred before, adding that “ if a retraction was later printed it was usually The purpose o f the program,^vhich began Sunday evening and w ill continue through the end o f next week, is to help m inority high school students and recent graduates prepare fo r college journalism curriculum and journalism careers. M ario Mercado II, a participant who graduated from Mountain V iew High School in June, said that the workload is heavier than a t other journalism program s he has attended. The students each worked on three news stories the first day. Leom ard M acias H I,a June graduate o f Mesa High School, agreed: “ Tltey are killing us, but it pushes i s to w rite better, Turn to Institut*, page 14. , W m Jack Seel ey/state Prie» Diana Brubaker, night supervisor o f composition fo r Student Publications, train » p a ftid p a n ts in th e Sum m er Journalism Institute on th e com puters in VhsState Press newsroom . The students are (from left) Lassie Kim , Leonard M arlas III, .M artin G axlola, Mario Mercado B, Erick Braxton and Uosa FSrdowemakan. KNOW ? Fresh Food C arefully Prepared D a ily 4 T a k eo u t & D e liv e ry A v a ila b le 829-1402 9 E. 5thSt. Headaches ' * Wfëplash Back Pain ~ • Neck Pain f / ’ • AutidTAccident Injuries (A cross b o m the Tem pe M ission Palm s H otel) • Shoulder Pain • Accidental Injuries ’ We will ¡accept your insurancey provide a student discount, vt \ with little or no .X % ., )7jl ouf-of-pockeiexpense to you. Auto-fed, 8%X11, shite, 20# bond N E A R A SU the copy center 9 6 6 -1 6 3 5 Whiplash! Dr, Donald Nelson 3910 S. Rural Rd. #E Stiff Neck & Back! Tempe 715S. Forest/894-958S’ 933E. Univeisity/894-1797* University& Hardy/921-0168 Mesa 1840W. Southcm/969-3326* *Open 2 4 Hours! MODELING&TALENTINC. A r i z o n a 's new est a n d m ost e x c lu s iv e t a le n t a g e n c y 5705 N. Scottsdale Suite 125 Scottsdale, AZ 8525a-/ Passport Photos 2 to r $6.57 DOUBLE PRINTS 2 for 1 FREE FILM C a ll f o r y o u r a u d it io n ! M onday & Wednesday on Develop & P rint orders. SUNSET CAMERA Tempe Center — Mill & Univ. 829-0424 rr Dunn U r ttfte w Page 13 Thursday,*Juty 14> 1988 m m mm t h e $1.99 C hlcken M eal Plus! Y KNOT PARTY SHOPPE W edding and Party Specialists” SUMMER SPECIALS I ' • Helium Bailopns • Flower Arrangements (Visa & Mastercard Accepted) any purchase,of $5 o r m ore (excluding award Jackets, •two Pieces OF CHICKEN (dark or mixed) •REGULAR FRENCH FRIES O R MASHED POTATOES •A 15-OUNCE DRINK 987-4495 QoodOnlykt Apache andTerrace University Plaza 1415 E. University, M Temps, a z 85281 MW Vrn 9 8.m .-5 p.lH, Sat 10 a.m .-4 p.m. SU-TH Ifam-IOpm FB-8A11 am-l2 pm 967-3798, J13S E. APACHE, TEMPE HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS FRESH-CUT FRIES OUTSIDE OF IDAHO?? •H air C u ts............. •C o lo r.................... m s .,..,....,..;..... • F i# S etN ails........ WISH WER ATDICkX OFCOURSES U n is ex H airstlyllng 9 1041 E. Lemon Tempe 967-2380 T u e e T Ia Fri & S a t K* ¿hr: > ays * -or O fW saiurda? ’t a M i M Q N t I H AW H O U R msmm C h arb ro ilerB B O C h ickenSan d w ich ■ hours 1 am All natural breast of chicken ROORSi C h arb ro iler C h ickenC lu b . mm -Vil natural breast of chicken. At Jr V «»iakA tender natural breasts o f ch kken w ith o u t th e skin, c h a ib rd l th e ta p u t th em on cklfcious honey w h eat buns a rK lae ate tw o great c h t o s a n d w ic h ^ H v» C h a rh rriW C h k te n C M ) w ith bacon, Swiss cheese a n d sprouts. A n d o u r original d a a r i * ^ Cad’s o w n hickcnybaibecue sauce. S an d w id i w ith C S f f f i J V B M B w f l* "Ky’0ne"T?^ i!3 |----------- ""Buy One " " " * "^««T | Charbroiler Chicken Club Sandwich™ i Charbroiler BBQChicken Sandwich™ | Get One Free. . Get One Free. - I P r e s e n t this co u p o n w h e n y o u p u rc h a se a n y C h arbroiler Chicken Ctub S a n d w ic h ™ a n d r e c e iv e a a a c o n d C h arbroiler C h icken Clu b I Sandwich™ of equal or lesser value tree. O tter ffer valid vaMd dirauoh through July Julv 2 28. 6 ,1 1068 * 8 St at the U nlverakyand R urallocstion.” j H ■' | I i ■ A . O n e c o w x w p w c u te w n w p w v *. « Cart fó rc h e , Enterprises. Inc 1987. W o T lS t U . k 'S j f f— *■ i i d P r e s e n t this co u p o n w h a n yo u p u rc h a se a n y C h arbroiler B B Q | C h ick en S a n d w ich ® « a n d r e c e iv e a s e c o n d C h a rbroiler B B Q C h ick en S a n d w ic h s « o f eq u a l o r le s s e r va lu e fr e e , o tte r valid through July 2 8 ,1 9 8 8 w the 'J" ~ “ " '" T 1T T * T ----------- ----University and .U n h a w R ta a d Rural R e d telocation. cW se. One coupon par custom er par vWK. One dtecounr per coupon. ^ Carl to c h e r E ntaptlses. In c 1087. V A Af \ B < U j 4 B a W _ f * J - 1^ 1 \ xM M l ? / I- A .I/M | ^ State P reis Thursday, Ally 14,1988 Pasc 14 In s t it u te C onttniM d tra in paga 12. and to go out and do interviews. I feel pressured to dcr my best.” i| | ¿ “ They are first-rate students,” said Douglas Anderson, director o f ASU’s W alter Cronkite School of Journalism and Telecommunication, “ and w e are indeed working them hard. This is an intense program .” M arias said that he is gaining m ore than skills. For exam ple, the program has caused him to think about what kind of journalism education and work experience he should pursue. Some of the participants indicated on their applications that they w ill consider attending ASU. “ W e hope that those who are not sure would spend two weeks here, like us and decide to com e to ASU,” Anderson said. Marias intends jo study journalism at ASU starting in the spring o f 1989, after spending one sem ester at Mesa Community College. M ercado frfans to enter ASU in the fa ll of 1988 if his first-choice university, Northwestern, does not Fefdowsm akan o f Marcos dfi Niza High School, M artin acceptrhis application. Mdfcias and Mercado, who both served as editor o f their Gaxiola o f .Thunderbird High School and Leezie Kim of '¿ a ., — high school news|>apers, m et at last summer’s A rizon a- Saguaro High School. '„ .Ja ’ H S ife fn o i jffepuhficahd mePhOemx Gazette are p ty itg Interscholastic Press Associafion jriirnaHim icam p. ' r But M acias’ interest in journalism began before high the costs of file program — about $400 per student. The program ’s co-directors, Anderson arid Bruce Itule, school. A fter he was excluded from an eighth-grade journalism class because his advanced-placement test director o f ASU’s Department erf Student Publications, are scores w ere not high enough, he wrote an appeal that responsible for most of the instruction, but other ASU faculty m em bers and R e p iib lic and G azette profession als convinced his principal to let him into the class. volunteered to lecture on special subjects, such as “ That (class) was a Mast,” he said. Macias is also enthusiastic about the Student Press, the . photojournalism and broadcasting. Mercado said he was impressed when Phoenix Gazette newspaper that the group w ill produce as part of the reporter Jennifer Dokes told him that when she worked in program . , Mercado said that Institute participants derided not to another state, a brine for people with severe head injuries elect an editor. “ As a group, w e derided to a ll be reporters,” was established after she wrote a news/feature story about he said, adding that a ll w ill share in the editorial duties as young people with such injuries who had to liv e in nursing homes. w ell. Mercado said: “ You have a purpose as a journalist not just Besides Macias and Mercado, the participants are Erick to inform the public, but to serve the community.” Braxton and M ario Rodriquez o f Glendale High School, Rosa Let M e G et R ight To The P o in t . STUDIOS TO 3 BEDROOMS 3 MILES FROM ASU r n r r hHht B O TH C O R A L P O IN T A N D LA G U N A OFFER: Custom Mini Minds Throughout A P A C H E B L V D T M A iN S T R E E T Washers / Dryers in select units X W o o d burning Fireplaces in select « units la rg e Sparkling Heated Fools And DC ASU K * o s CORALPOINT Ç LAOUNAPOINT Q Jacuzzi Sand Vofleyball Court (M e n tio n th is ad fo r J A d d itio n a l S avin gs) Private Patios / Balconies • SRP Service • M ountain Bed Telephone Service ’ "S tu d e n t D is c o u n ts 2343 W e s t M a in S tre e t, M e s a &chips W IT H P U R C H A S E O F A N Y 6 ” SU B Rich w ith A m enities and A ctivities Laguna & | p i C o ral Point o ffe r Furnished & Unfurnished Units Cable t.V . Available large soda N O T G O O D W IT H A N Y O TH E R O F F E ll C O U P O N EXPIRES 7-31-8». 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Now Available Every Night for Dinner 5-8 Every Day for Lunch 11-2 r i i i < d i TEMPE • 945 So MILL (A t 10th) i 9 6 6 -4 4 3 8 UNIVERSITY 'Í % F o re s t With this ad Delivers Free! i i i 8 9 4 -1 2 3 4 i I a-10 rirty sac jwr ya*r of age pn 10TH DELIVERY COUPON $ 2 .0 0 OFF $ 1 .0 0 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA ANY MEDIUM PIZZA G ood fo r eat-in, cany-out, delivery Lim ited Delivery Area a- p iz z a Present this c o u p o n w h e n ordering. O n e c o u p o n p e r customer. N o t I kmc under s eat F B iaaag M TEMPE CENTER good^w ith any other offer. C O U PO N B « R £ S 7-31-88. I arts & entertainment I j2 ïï2 â 2 i2 !ÎllÎL î2 2 £ Raising California m ...and Tijuana; getting to know the magic western kingdoms Dave Miller Arts Editor In Bob Woodward’s book “ W ired,” actor Robin W illiam s said o f Hollywood: “ The dange r o f that place is that if you don’t have people there to ground you down, that you just start w hirling. There are people there that w ill support any.mood you want.” But although W illiam s was speaking of Tinseltown in particular, o f its weUdocumented high life and state o f drug fornicatu-au natural, it’s not true that only Hollywood is bonkers; actually, most o f the. Southern California region is a little oh die loopy side. Even its most popular Wonderbread tourist havens — the places visited by grandmas and aunts and uncles — h a w moments of debauchery: in Disneyland, M ickey Mouse is really a g irl and flirts, and Gepetto w ill try to connect the dots oil your girlfrien d’s shoulders if you’re not careful. And if you’re not careful in other touristy hot spots, such as Tijuana and parts of northern M en co, you’ll have a lot m ore than connected dots to w orry about. So, sadly fo r W illiam s, there’s no solace when com paring most western hot spots to Hollywood. There’s just as much dust in the air, and the lines are even longer. A t least they w ere last weekend, when we said “ screw the sun belt” and decided to hit two o f the W est’s biggest tourist stops: Disneyland and its antithesis, Tijuana, M exico. Both attract hundreds o f thousands of tourists each year. One is the M agic Kingdom and one, w ell, is not the M agic Kingdom. | We’d had 4t with analyzing why anyone would’ve chosen Phoenix as the place to live and prosper. I mean, Bullhead City is a stupid place to live too, but at least no one took the settlers’ heed and actually m oved there. No, there are fa r better places to visit, and there are {daces where you can swim and not get sweat in the poot Honest. A t lea sts few o f our forefathers had the decency to keep m oving west. Actually, m ore than a few m oved west. Los Angeles has a population o f 12 m illion people, give or take a few m illion. Roughly h alf o f them stood in line with m e Friday for Disneyland’s “ Star Tours.” “ Star Tours,” the latest collaboration between Disneyland and G eorge Lucas, boasts the best that the amusement park has to offer. A t least their advertisements do: “ Experience toe U ltim ate Adventure,” they say, touting space chills and thrills, B illy D ee W illiam s-style plummets to neardeath and three-and-a-half minutes of a ll the different languages. A fter an eight-hour shift T il bet these kids couldn’t give a damn about M ickey Mouse, 60th birthday o r not. Most, however, would serve B ear Country burgers over B ig Macs any day. When asked if it was truly “ The Happiest P la ce On Earth,” a squeaky-looking blonde named V al replied “ about 90 percent o f toe tim e.” I M aUn* tim e a t th e M agic Kingdom, clockwise from upper left: Prancing spacem an Michael Jackpon; M ickey Mouse leads his 60th birthday parade; C-3PO, at th e entrance to “ Star Tours” ; th e Neptune subm arine. IH rtm a l Jackson courtesy W att D isney P rod uction s rocket’s red glare you can stomach without barfing up your Tomorrowland fries. And the ads don’t lie, at least not as fa r as the dips and turns go. “ Star Tours” is not, however, the ultim ate adventure. It’s fun a ll right, and it shakes the hell out of you, like any good roller coaster should — it’s not really even a roller coaster — it’s m are like riding a subway car down the expert ski trail at Steamboat, or d r iv in g a Saab on the Santa Monica Freew ay. “ Star Tours” is extrem ely spacey and high-tech. Too bad the ride length is also measured in light speed. But that’s OK — 45 minutes spent w aiting in line at Disneyland can provide a year’s worth o f insight into the nature o f A m erica’s vacationers. T o mo6t o f the thousands of m o m s , p o p s , k id s , d o rm s q u id s , cheerleaders, churchgoers, real estate agents, science nerds, rap masters, Asians, choppy-haired white kids and Sigm a Nus on toe make, having fun at the M agic Kingdom is hard work, ami vacationing is nothing to laugh at. Don’t even think about trying to cut in line there, unless you want a royal whupping right in the m iddle of “ The H appiest P la c e On E a rth ,” a m ost em barrassing thing. That ad’s also interesting — when you d rive in, the signs tell you you’re entering “ The .Happiest Place On Earth,” but if you park there a fter 1 a.m. they’ll tow your car. Somehow getting towed from the M agic Kingdom just doesn’t seem right. A lot o f the help at the M agic Kingdom doesn’t seem right, either. Most of them, h igh sch o ol-a ged And trem en dou sly wholesome, appear to be in a constant daze, as if toe big gam e or chatting with Aunt Flossy kept them up too late. I t ’s understandable, what w ith the constant barrage o f folks after food and souvenirs, and with the kids having to tran slate bu rger toppings into seven guess even the M agic Kingdom has its share o f booehead managers. V al, incidentally, was working “ The Matterhorn,” an extrem ely painful moving experience. The cars are not padded and all the subsequent bouncing around your limbs do when the ride heats up makes you wish it wasn’t three tim es as long as Star Tours, or the incredibly short “ Space Mountain.” Another experience that could’ve been shorter, yet was still entertaining, was “ Captain E o,” featuring the w orld’s most lovable dancing nebbish, M ichael Jackson. Since it’s too easy to pick on M ichael’s m asculinity gulch, or the fa ct that he makes about as believable a candidate fo r starship captain as Mrs. Kravitts, let’s just say the special effects and his dance moves make “ Captain E o” truly exciting. The 3-D gets old after about three seconds — it never looks like rea l 3-D (you know, the kind in which you see the guy’s feathered cap, bobbing directly in front o f you and a ll but Mocking your view o f the screen). But .toe d ip is extrem ely detailed and im aginative, and the music (set at HIGH volum e) is a ride in itself. Jackson should release his original score to “ Captain E o " — it’s better than anything o ff his “ Bad” LP . “ Captain Eo” sort o f exem plifies the modern M agic Kingdom. O verall, as part of a w h ite bread va ca tion ex p erien ce, Disneyland is fa r from bad. The place is like a giant m ovie set, superbly crafted and detailed, and set up fo r the big kids: youngat-heart adults who can appreciate the work that goes into it. Turn to V a catio n , page 1 1 Page 16 ff¡u n d ^ J u ¡} M ^ t9 & Merrill provesia patrician among modern comedians LO S A N G E L E S (A P ) Sum m er m oviegoers m ay be surprised to find the patrician beauty Dina M errill among such com ics as Jackie Mason, Dan Aykroyd and Q tevy Chase in “ Caddyshack II.” M iss M errill herself is cool about it: “ A fter a ll I worked w ith Jerry Lew is” ; hot to mention “ I ’ll Take Sweden” with Bob Hope. When she was approached by W arner Bros., she admits, “ M y initial reaction was that they’d found the wrong person. M y agent assured m e that there was indeed a part that was just right for me. So I went, and ended up with the job. “ I play Bob Stack’s w ife, and he is the president o f the . country club. Jackie Mason’s daughter and our daughter are best friends, and Jackie’s daughter wants her father to join the country club. H e’safar-ou t character who wants to develop a ll the land around the country club. Needless to say, terrible things happen when he tries to join.” Mason is the veteran com ic whose career zoomed with his one-man Broadway show. He was a last-minute replacem ent for Though she obviously wanted fo r nothing, she was determined to make her own name in life. Born Nedinia Hutton (h er parents expected a boy to be called N ed), she chose the acting name o f Dina M errill. “ I guess the work ethic comes from m y parents,” she observed. “ M y father was a very hard-working guy, and m y mother in her own w ay was, too. It was always just drilled into m e.” H er parents w ere unprepared for their only child to be an actress. “ There would be total disbelief when I cam e home and said, T got the best job! ’ This kept going on, then I got m arried and retired and they said, ‘Whew! That’s over now. She can do what she should do: be * w ife and m other.’ And I did, but then I figured out I could do both.” Dina was m arried first to socialite Stanley Rum bough with whom she had a son, Stanley Jr., and a daughter, Nina, and then to actor C liff Robertson, with whom she had a daughter, Heather. They have been separated, and a divorce is expected in the fall. H er ca reer has encom passed film s ( “ Operation Petticoat,” “ Butterfield 8” ), lip PROJECT BEST DAMN BREAKFAST IN THE WEST! May’s Best of the West Restaurant J U g lf SW Corner of University & Hardy it PITCH-IH J 6 a.m.-2 p.m. Sun & Holidays 7: m.-t pin. Tempe 967-9607 WANT TO LOSE WEIGHT FAST? NEVER BE HUNGRY AGAIN!! THE SAFE, NATURAL HUNGER SATtSFIER Developed by one of America'! Leading Bariatric Physicians • M E D IC A LLY S O U N D • C L IN IC A L L Y T E S T E D • • • • SA FE IN E X P E N S IV E E F F E C T IV E PA TEN TED 1988 UiMUICRR CALL TODAY For Free Sample & Detailed Information 962-0602 Mention This Ad For Discount! COVER G IR L PAGEANT Sponsoredby: 9M AU - a Jackie M ason, le ft, and Chevy Chase star In “ Caddyshack II.” Rodney D angerfield, who starred in the original “ Caddyshack.” Miss M errill found Mason a puzzlement. “ I never could figure out when Jackie was putting m e on and when he wasn’t,” she said. “ H e’s very straight; he looks at you and talks with this serious face. He doesn’t even twitch. “ F irst you think he’s putting you on. Then he looks so serious you decide no, he isn’t. That’s when he’s gotcha. A ll of a sudden you see the twitch, and you say, ‘I ’ve been had.’ “ H e’s a lo to f fun, but he was kind o f bored with the film . He kept saying, ‘You really like this?’ I said, ‘Yeah ,’ and he said, ‘B orin g!’ He couldn’t understand why he had to do it over and over, and he missed that feedback from an audience.’’ Nothing seems to perturb Dina M errill. She maintains her cool serenity in all situations, and laughter comes easily to her. H er career has been am azingly varied, considering the fact that she has never had to support herself. She was born with a platinum spoon, the daughter of Edward F . Hutton and M arjorie M erriw eather Post o f the cereal fortune. th e ater ( “ A n gel S tre e t,’ * “ Any Wednesday” ) and television ( “ Roots H ,” “ Hot Pursuit” ). Tw o years ago she made her debut in musical comedy, playing Broadway and touring with “ On Your Toes.” She is now a partner in a film • company, Greenroom Enterprises, and has appeared in its first film , “ Twisted/’ with m ore in the works. From her New York base, she devotes her energies to such causes as the Juvénile Diabetes Foundation and the Kennedy Center fo r the Perform ing Arts. She also is the only woman on the board o f directors of the Shearson Lehman Hutton brokerage firm . Reflecting on her heritage, she said:. “ I w as very fortunate that I d id have everything I wanted handed to m e on a silver platter, so to speak. But I also had good training from both parents about the work ethic, about the fact that I was lucky, as they were. Andthat a lot o f that had to be put back into the world, to help other people get a start and to be fortunate, too, in their w ay.” BEER N ational w inner w ill receive $100,000 In c head.” Streisand is joined by a wonderful cast in the courtroom drama that shows o ff the talents o f Maureen Stapleton and K arl Malden as Claudia’s mother and stepfather, E li WaUach as a psychiatrist, James W hitmore as the judge, Robert Webber as the prosecuting attorney and Richard Dreyfuss as her reluctant, court-appointed law yer. The performances are striking. And as Claudia’s future is determined, the tension among the characters is painful and gripping. But it turns, unfortunately, to edginess. Nuts is too drawn out as Claudia, with immeasurable help from Dreyfuss’ Aaron Levinsky, resolves a life ’s worth o f troubles before the w orldly judge. Still, Nuts has something to say and is worth hearing. B y M ary McVean, Associated Press W riter. i Preliminary Prizes Provided by &UndaC. Soft Rive* RecMafion. Barbra Streisand leads the list of stars ‘crazy’ for video •“ Nuts” (W arner Home Video, VHS-Beta and available with Spanish subtitles, $89.95; Rated R ) “ Nuts” asks and answers the question of just who is crazy. , Claudia Faith D raper, a sm art and oh-sohigh-priced hooker played by Barbra Streisand, is fighting desperately fo r the righ t to go on trial — and avoid a mental institution — fo r killing a customer. Her harrowing competency hearing is the focus o f M artin R itt’s 1987 film . Streisand, also the film ’s producer, is by turns funny, frightening and touching. Her character is rarely off-screen, forcefully arguing her sanity based on her rules, not the court’s or society’s. “ I know what you expect m e to do,” she says. “ But I ’m not just a picture in your t t h prizes! m vM t maaffeaiAiiea Ift n a * * ? e w lii¡B S a jH a flF IT N E S S « M B w a a N « V 919 E. APACHE BLVD. TEMPE 921-9775 w StatePress Page 1” Thursday, Juhr 14,1988 c in e m a SeqfeliHell ' I ':. ‘Arthur 2’ settles it Drinking and screenwriting just don’t mix By LAURIE SMITH State Press W hy do studios m ake sequels? That’s easily answered — to make money o ff of an original idea that m ade lots o f money several Ah — but why do studios make bad sequels? Now that’s a question that could drive P la to to trite his fingernails. The truth is, there is no valid reason why producers churn out terrible renditions o f original flicks. And there’s no apparent reason why the creators o f “ Arthur” thought their version of '^Arthur 2 On the Rocks” would enchant or even entertain educated audiences. Sound a bit harsh? T ry sitting through two full hours o f a script that desperately clings to Dudley M oore’s talented but well-worn role as a rich drunk and relies heavily on overexploited punch lines. Although Dudley Moore is m ore than adept in his role as Arthur Bach and l-fca Minnelli is consistently charming as w ife Linda, neither o f them has talent sufficient enough to override Andy Beckman’s suffocatingly uninteresting script and Bud Yorkin’s insensitive direction. The characters are as unoriginal as they com e— the butler who never understand’s Arthur’s pranks, the vindictive father Of the woman Arthur left at the altar in the first film , the wealthy grandmother who hires a muscle man to exercise in front of her 'because it’s “ good fo r her health.” But the problem with “ Arthur 2” is m ore than one of originality. It sim ply isn’t fu m y . plot’s nothing to giggle at, either. As the film opens, w e find Arthur in his typical state — one which was humorous, at one tim e — being chauffeured thoughout New York with a scotch in hand. He is laughing hysterically in the back seat and asks the chauffeur, “ Why aren’t you laughing?” “ Because you haven’t said anything.” “ Oh, I see, you’re w aiting ’til the last m inute!” And, like the chaffeur, the audience waited, and waited, until the last minute, holding its breath should an excuse to laugh present itself. 1 The plot offered no release. As ibtbegins, Arthur and Linda are happy and as much in love as they w ere at the end o f the first film . They have even decided they want to have a baby. Because Linda has been told that she can never have children, they decide to adopt — but they are still happy. Dudley M oore and Liza M innelli star In “ Arthur 2 On The Rocks. W AREHOUSE D ELI & PUB Están 1975 "The F a m ily " "Good F o o d & D rin k ” 130 E 9 6 6 -7 7 8 8 U n iv e r s ity D r. a t F o r e s t L e t 's G e t A c q u a in te d B r e a k fa s t Served M o n .-Fri. 7 :0 0 -1 0 :3 0 a m 3 scrambled eggs hashbrowns wheat toast butter & jam T.m *>*,*«,, w *i. 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There are, however, other vacation alternatives, even if the term “ M agic Kingdom ” doesn’t come to mind upon entry. ★ ★ * In stark contrast to anything W alt Disney ever imagined, the second part o f our tourist getaway involved heading south to San Diego, and hopping across the border to Tijuana, a place m ore m iserable than summertime Phoenix by leaps and bounds. For grins in Tijuana the peasants im agine lounging in Tempe, which shouldn’t ever be done by people in a western nation. Someone, however, forgot to tell Tijuana it was part of a western nation. Stepping into Tijuana is like stepping directly into the Third W orld, and the neatly trim m ed grass' and fat border patrolmen on the Am erican side «truly accentuate this. I use the word “ peasants” because that’s exactly what most of the residents o f Tijuana are. It’s not like here, where someone says “ H ey dude, I ’ve only got enough money for peasant dollar theater,” it’s prim al, urine-stained, passedout-on-the-steps peasantry— the kind you don’t expect to find in a North Am erican city, 30 feet from the U.S. border. Tijuana is funny in a demented sort o f way, in that it attracts herds o f tourists and supposedly brings in silos of money, yet-it can’ t decently clothe or feed or house its own children. It’s also an interesting vacation stop, because the college kids who visit Tijuana are more-than-adequately clothed and fed, decked in L iz Claiborne and sporting beer bellies. Some of them a re peasants in a very different sort of way. The ones w e saw saved their prim al behavior for after three or four shots o f cheap tequila. “ Get the hell o ff m e,” yelled one flat-topped indignant to & sm a ll Mexican boy pulling at his sweats. Bruiser jerked his leg away and raised his hand, obviously meaning to give the kid the business end o f his volleyball arm. He stopped him self, perhaps realizing that Sandy Duncan could’ve knocked this kid cold. Or m aybe it was just because his friends w ere around. The Tijuana residents, at least in the open-air tourist markets, seem used to this sort o f behavior, however, and ■merely sm ile and pitch hand-made birds, blankets, pots, gun belts, bullwhips, velvet posters (John Wayne and Boy G eorge), Corona beach w ear, piñatas and little guitars —• guitarettes — to the tom istas. Lupe, age 5, sells roses to Am ericans fo r $1 in Tijuana, M exico. They also push something called “ Horse Shit Cigarettes” — not a big seller, but a m over nonetheless. There w ere no exploding cigars or fa rt spray, but every other tacky g ift item was available, and selling like crazy, as if next week the people^would be producing fiber optics instead. That was in the open-air markets about a m ile from the border. A little further w ere tequila houses stocked fo r students psyched to binge and purge, and the residents’ housing, if you can call it that. Homes here sit side by side, in front of, and on top o f one another. The city’s lighting gives yet another allusion to Tijuana’s Third-World nature — the ligh t« appear as unorganized, individual dots in the hlaeknes« , compared with San Diego, which has blanketed nighttime scenery. You can always tell an im poverished nation b y the w ay its cities glow after dark. A t night, a fter the tourists have stopped m illing through the shops, the residents close up and return to those lights. At 9 p.m., “ The Happiest P lace on Earth” begins its tremendous fireworks display, a spectacular nighttime spectacle, just over Cinderella’s Castle, or right over the heart o f Fantasyland, if you are stuck across the border in Tijuana, Mexico. 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July 14,1988 V oices Carry . . The sound behind a sensation, ‘Roger Rabbif takes it in stride By DAVE MILLER S tate Press fo c u s Even Toons need a break sometimes, and Charles Fleischer, alias the voice o f Roger Robert Zemeckis ( “ Back To The Future” ) Rabbit, is no exception. originally spotted Fleischer perform ing at a He pulls a couple of pillows up and Los Angeles com edy club and offered him a stretches out on his plush Arizona Biitm ore screen test fo r the voice o f Roger. couch. It was someone’s hare-brained idea The opportunity was perfect. ’“ The very fo r him to do 12 interviews today. fact that I ’m talking to you now is an But that doesn’t stop him from requesting indication of that,” he says. a sponge bath, in fu ll Rabbit-ine voice-over. It has a eerie effect: You hear the voice and Though no novice film perform er — he’s you can almost see the ears poking out — had parts in “ Nightshift,” “ The Hand” and sure targets for a Samurai Bob Hoskins, . “ Nightm are On Elm Street” — Fleischer poised in a Biitm ore towel and pouncing out says “ R oger Rabbit” left its mark. from the bathroom to yank them, one last HI love making film s,” he says. “ I always tim e. envisioned m yself doing this. I take great No such luck. Such things only happen in pleasure in making people laugh.” * the w orld of Toons, in the world according to R oger Rabbit. But that doesn’t mean it’s Likew ise with his alter-ego: “ R oger is a great guy,” he says “ One o f the lines in the entirely easy to separate actor from cartoon script sums him up: T m a Toon, Toons are character. F le isch er, a W ashington D .C.-born supposed to make people laugh!’ H e’s a ham, a wonderful, zany, sweet Toon.” / humorist, - actor, musician and “ closet mathem atician,” insists he’s not a methodFleischer says it was popular feeling actor there’s no danger o f his ever am ong the “ R o g e r” crew , including bringing R oger home to watch videos. But Zemeckis and executive-producer Steven defining his role as the rabbit was nothing to • Spielberg, that m uch m ore than just take lightly, either. another film was being made. “ I practice trans-projectional acting,” “ W e always knew w e w ere involved with Fleischer says with a straight face. He something historic,” said Fleischer. “ I explains that although Roger Rabbit is a knew that from the very beginning.” cartoon, a m ake-believe figure stenciled onto plastic film cels, the part was the same Hoskins, who developed a strong working to him as any other acting assignment: just relationship with Fleischer, has said of him, as if he was doing Othello’s Iago or a “ He’s a natural actor. Most guys who train sensitive ’80s man. fo r twenty years aren’t in the same league “ It was an acting job, just like anything as Charles.” else,” he says, “ f t was not just a v o i c e . . . I Fleischer, however, shrugs o ff such talk, had a Roger Rabbit costume I w ore live on and looks to his next historic venture. “ I ’m the set with Bob Hoskins (gumshoe Eddie an actor, and I create characters,” he says Valiant in the film ). I do characters, not just with a loopy grin, as he awaits his sponge voices. I becam e R oger Rabbit.” bath. “ Who Fram ed Roger Rabbit” director 4ÉÜ k .Alley Cat py & k Wm ^ ■ :J # JT # Think m odular."Think knits. M odular Knits are s o ft, supple k n it separates to ih ix , m atch and layer; a w ardrobe-building system w h e rg ig i everything w orks ■ to g e th e r, for ; § day FornJght. w tw s season ana next. Carefree c o tto n /p o lw s w r fo rfa h u io u s fit. A n d a ffo rU W ly t ’ Chart«« Fleischer, th e real Roger Rabbit: “ It was not just a voice. I had a Roger Rabbit costum e I w ore live on the set w ith Bob Hoskins. I do characters, not just volcss.” LOWEST PRICES!! Ì THE HONDA DOCTOR “ W e don’t bandage the problem, we fix it!” IBM C O M P A T IB LE S C O M P LE TE S Y S T E M S Leaving for the coast.. . The Honda Doctor • v , Special $7.95 O IL C H A N G E 25% OFF t ~ /c o iie g e i.D . j (with tune-up or brake work) M M I , i -"’t T i « ^ p rice d *; o th e r c a s u a l d o tfte s , to o ! 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K a p la n h a s p r e p a r e d o v e r 1 m illio n stu d en ts fo r a d m is s io n a n d lio e n s in g tests. S o b e fo r e y o u ta k e a test, p r e p a re w it h th e b es t. K a p la n . A g o o d s c o re m a y h e lp c h a n g e y o u r life. caiiior 9 ÆC KÉfaEtertpâBS 966-01 1 1 A»m wm w *5 ■ / «»■*>* Mm&Mbn«sHr90ng . W ~ — ^933 E. University 1 SE Comer Rural & University j (Summer Classes Starting NOW) Enroll now and receive the next two test dates FREE! 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 ■2 FORI I I I WithlessthanVidie caloriesof icecream, Penguin’sfrozenyogurt fillsyouup, notout. So pig outat Penguin’s.An outfoxeveryoneelse. i Coupongoodfora small,' mediumorlargecup * of yogurt. ^EXPIRES 8-15-88 3 rt& M “1, Toppings Bxtra | 8quwe _2F0R_1j S ta te Ew a» Page 21 Thursday, July H , 1;968 A rth u r Continued from pag* 17. B B Enter doom in the form o f Burt Johnson, the father of the stilted bride, Susan. I f you remem ber, he was a big man who was fond of guns and not so fond of Arthur’s decision to leave his daughter fo r a waitress from Queens. Now he is out fo r blood. Through some m agical financial twist, Johnson manages to gain control of the Bach family company. He has promised to allow the company to remain in operatimi on one condition — they strip Arthur of every penny and every opportunity to earn a penny. Yes, this is w here the fun starts. We get to watch Arthur turn from a rich drunk into a pathetically boring poor drunk. He tries to get a job; the predictable ensues. Eventually he is reduced to talking to bums and sleeping in shelters. ju st as h eìs about to give up a ll o f his pride and succumb to Johnson’s demand that he m arry Susan, John Gielgud steps in as the ghost o f Arthur’s favorite butler, Hobson. For the fiv e minutes Gielgud was onscreen, the film was actually good. H e has not lost the charm he brought to his role in the firs't film andHobson’s advice and encouragement seemed to actually enliven a m isplaced sympathy for Arthur. But fiv e minutes is fiv e minutes and it can’t save a m ovie from a plot drowning in its own Slovenly corn-ball humor. There’s no reason to te ll the rest — it’s quite easily predicted.; j •Dudley M oore fans step aside. It takes more than intoxicated laughter to heal this film . The best thing about “ Arthur,” most would argue, was the u n c o m p r o m i s i n g t a l e n t o f Dudley M oore; He was tiré reason people went to see it the first tim e and he is probably the reason people would feel driven to see a sequel. * '• But, in “ Arthur 2,” his talent hasbeen compromised, not to mention tram pled on. No m atter bow w ell he stumbles through a restaurant and no m atter how loud or how many times he laughs that inimricating laugh, M oore sim ply doesn’t have the power to turn bad jokes into amusement. That perhaps is the mo6t disappointing aspect of “ Arthur 2.” Moore looks as tired as the jokes he uses and, desiate his talent, he is rarely able to arouse sympathy fo r his character. Without Arthur, the film sim ply reels along without one redeem ing character or personality. Hackneyed punch lines, hollow {dot and shallow characters do not a comedy make. Now, why didn’t someone tell that to Hollywood? MORE THAN COPIES SPECIAL STUDENT FARES Rouncl tr ip fro m P h o e n ix Copies Binding Cutting, Padding, & Folding Fax Service Stationery & Office Supplies NEW YORK.... ...........» 1 « PORTLAND............ $188 CEDAR RAPIDS..... .....$17« MINNEAPOLIS... . $1M SAN FRANCISCO........ $110 SAINT LOUIS... ..... $17» DETROIT...«...:.,;.:.::..^.4168 TULSA... ............... ...S168 COLORADO SPRINGS..S148 PITTSBURGH... ........1258 CHICAGO....... ..... ... 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Southem/969-3326 2 4 H o u rs ! 282-6085 Music Makers: Jane Wiedlin defines politics NEW YO R K ( A P ) — Fans o f the Go-Go’s w ill recognize the catchy pop music on Jane W iedlin’s new album, “ Fur.” They may be surprised, however, to hear what she has to say. “ This is not any easy life, it’s hard to hang on to hope,” Wiedlin sings on “ Inside a D ream ,” the first single. “ There’s so many things need to change. W ell, I wonder how w e cope.” “ The w orld’s a really crum my place, but w e can’t give up because w e know that,” W iedlin said: “ W e have to keep fighting to im prove things.” I Wiedlin was the rhythm guitarist fo r the Go-Go’s, an all­ fem ale band whose debut album, “ Beauty and the Beat,” went number one in 1982: Their videos presented an im age of five cheerful, carefree young women. “ The Go-Go’s w ore always perceived as being upbeat but there was a lot o f suffering as w ell,” W iedlin said. “ Fur” is W iedlin’s second sedo'record. Anyone fam iliar with Go-Go’s songs such as “ Our Lips A re Sealed” and “ Head O ver H eels” -m ay not be prepared for the more serious mood o f “ Inside a Dream ,” but W iedlin is not concerned. “ I ’ve learned a lesson because o f the Go-Go’s, and that’s not to w orry about how people see m e,” she said in an interview. W iedlin has become m ore politically active since leaving the Go-Go’s in 1964. On her first solo L P , she included postcards to be sent to President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, urging them to dismantle nuclear arms. She becam e a vegetarian fiv e years ago and has campaigned actively fo r anim al rights. “ The Go-Gob’ s w ere a combination. It’s just me and my personality now and m y ideas,” W iedlin said. “ I ’ve been m ore outspoken on w orld events and anim al rights and so forth.” The title song on “ Fur” is a direct plea not to w ear aninal ■fura. ■:£■| v-'V “I w ore a fur coat ta the band and it really never occurred to me, the violence behind it,” W iedliu recalled. “ W h en lsee people wearing fiiT, they overlook the violence. I want people to connect fu r coats with animals. “ I just feel that people should take m ore responsibility for their actions.” “ Fur” was W iedlta’s favorite song on the album. “ I ’m most proud o f ‘Fur’ because it’s reíd difficult to w rite a song about social issues without sounding preachy or holier-than-thou,” she said. “ I ’v e been trying to do that for years.” W iedlta co-wrote a ll the songs on “ Fu r.” A t the suggestion of her record label, EMI-Manhattan, she used several different partners, including Regina Gole, who wrote “ Baby Love” fo r Regina, and P eter Rafelson and Garder Cole, who have worked with Madonna. “ I went with fifis idea,” W iedlta said. “ I don’t like writing by m yself anymore. Working with someone, you can talk about things.” HOT DOG HEAVEN UTTElg Ill I I I I I I I I I I ! I Your Campus Hair Care Center 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe Introducing Nails by Kelly 9 6 8 -5 9 4 6 W ith This A d $500 q f f Pizza, Burgers and Subs? NEED A CHANGE? 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Bruce W eitz had made up his mind to step into “ Frankie and Johnny in the C lair de Lune,” a two-character romantic com edy that suggests people older than 40 can fa ll in love. In die youth-oriented entertainment industry, that’s a novel idea, but the play has turned out to be one o f the biggest hits o f the 1967-88 off-Broadway theater season. Now famous and not-so-famous film actors and actresses o f a certain age are trekking to the Westside Arts Theater to size it up as a stage or screen possibility. W eitz savors the role as a terrific theatrical opportunity. “ What attracted m e to the play was the w ay it was w ritten,” says the 45-year-old actor, a w iry, intense perform er. “ A ll I saw was good w riting. Besides, I wanted to (to something in New York .” “ Frankie and Johnny” was written by veteran playwright Terrence M cN ally, author o f “ Bad Habits,” “ The R itz” and “ It’s Only a P la y,” The story concerns two em ployees o f a Manhattan greasy spoon — Frankie, played by Carol Kane o f television’s “ T a x i,” and Johnny, played by W eitz. Frankie, a waitress, brings Johnny, a short-order cook, back to her one-room tenement apartment. During a long night, the two blue-collar lovers discover they have something that could be the start of a relationship. When the show opened last October, it starred Kathy Bates and Kenneth Welsh. They departed in M ay, and Kane and W eitz replaced them. F ot W eitz, “ Frankie and Johnny” was a big step — at least pyschologically. Although a theater veteran, he hadn’t been on stage in eight years. Until last spring, television was his main concern, particularly “ H ill Street Blues” w here he had a seven-season run and earned an Em m y Aw ard fo r his o ff­ beat portrayal o f detective M ick Belker. “ Coming back to the stage was hard on the central nervous system, but it was not difficu lt physically,” W eitz says. “ H ie approach to the theater is the same as it is to film .” “ The difference is that in film most o f it is from here up,” adds W eitz, pointing to his head. “ So you don’t have to use your body quite as much. On stage, you have to use the whole instrument. Body language is important on stage. Otherwise, the techniques are the same. You just have to be a little bigger and a little louder on stage.” Audiences expecting to see another off-the-wall Belker on stage in “ Frankie and Johnny” are in fo r a jo lt. Johnny is a bit o f a romantic, a man who quotes — and misquotes — Shakespeare and who’s not afraid to make a permanent commitment, unlike the skittish Belker. “ Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune” is a verbal tennis match. “ M entally, it’s difficu lt,” W eitz says. “ There is no place to rest. Carol and I get to the theater a little early each day and talk about the changes. W e’re still working on it. Thére’s a lot o f m aterial there to sort out. “ I think that I d rive the play, and she has a ll the good laugh lines — which is fa ir.” His journey bade to N ew Y ork and off-Broadway from Los Angeles and television was not part o f any grand design. W eitz, born and raised in Norwalk, Conn., says none o f his career w as planned. “ I just knew that when I graduated from college, I wanted to work in a regional theater fo r a little w hile,” he says. “ That was all. The rest just happened.” “ A little while” turned into nearly nine years, but they w ere years where he honed his craft doing Shakespeare, Shaw and many other playwrights in between. His first job a fter graduating from Carnegie Tech, now Carnegie Mellon, in Pittsburgh was a t the Long W harf Theater in ConnecticutHe spent a year there, then several m ore at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis and fin ally four years at Arena Stage in Washington. “ Those jobs cam e from people seeing m e work,” W eitz says. He eventually m oved to N ew York and landed roles in several Broadway plays inducting “ Normán, Is That You?” and “ The Basic Training o f Pavto Hummel.” Flagstaff to host wine­ tasting, Miss Grape trial F L A G S TA F F (A P ) — Arizona vineyards, hoping to increase state awareness o f their products, aré combining a wine-centered festival w ith a beauty contest this weekend. The two-day “ Wine in the Pines” festival that opens Saturday a t F ort Tuthill just south o f F la gstaff w ill include a M iss Grape contest, spokesman Gordon Hanke says. Each contestant w ill be judged 50 percent on swimsuit cnmppHtinii and 50 percent on her explanation as to “ why I want to be squeezed.” Other events include water-waitress races, a blind wine judgin g, and wine cooking demonstrations. About 40 Arizona wines w ill be featured. Doors open at 11 a.m. Saturday and noon Sunday. Proceeds w ill benefit Northland Hospice, a non-profit organization supporting term inally ill patients and their fam ilies, and several other aid organizations. Sponsors include Arizona Vineyards, R.W . Webb, San Dominique and Sonoita Vineyards. Hanke said they hope to m ai»» it an annual a ffa ir at which new wines are introduced. Thursday, Jufy 14> TV88 classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 forniture fo r sale announcem ents W ANTED, FEMALE models with long hair for spiral perm classes. Phoenix H air Company, Ricardo, 258-1906. FU R N ITU R E LIQUIDATIO N 102 beds, 36 bedroom sets, 60 sofa sets, 92 dinettes, 4 0 lam ps, 28 dressers, 12 sleepers, doybeds, trundles, w all units, table sets, much much more. W holesaler, 1828 W est Broadway. Suite 10, M esa, 833-1797. TW O SO FAS, beds, end tables, m lpcellaneous. C S II943-7599 or 9 6 6 4013. autos fo r sale 1980 RABBIT deisel, air-conditioning, sun­ roof, m anual transmission, 120,000 m iles. $1200 or best offer. 968-1136, after 3 p.m . 1981 S U B A R U G LC , 2 -d o o r, a irconditioning, nevir battery, insurance until S e p te m b e r. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n ! 894-9259, Trish. W AREHOUSE SALE. Desks from $49; chairs from *1 5 ; bookshelves from $19; and tables, typing tables, com puter tables, dining tables, file cabinets, plus lots more. Arizona O ffice DquM afkxs, 4010 S . 43rd Place, betw een 40th Street and 48th Street, North 61 Broadway. 437-2224. m iscellaneous fo rc a te 1982 DOOGE Aries wagon, biue/gray, 70,000 m iles, 4 cylinder, air, AM /FM stereo, very good condition. Best offer over $2000. C ali Elaine, 834-3729. 1983 M ITSU B ISH I Corrila, air, 4-speed, AM /FM , best offer. Contact Ron, after 5 , at 829-1634. 1984 CONVERTIBLE Rabbit, champagne color, low m iles, new top, alarm . $8000 or best offer. 995-9318. 1987 FORD Taurus M T5, fully equiped plus. Excellent condition. 16K m iles. $9500. 831-8798. RENAULT ENCORE SL85 5-door hatch­ back, fully equiped, new transm ission. $3000. 831-8798. m otoicydes for sale 1980 KAWASAKI 750 LTD, black, 4 cylinder, 4 stroke, low m ileage, great condition, super transportation. $900. Call Eric, 831-2501. 1984 HONDA Aero 50. Blue with basket. Lock and helm et included. $325. Desnne, 834-5027. 1986 HONDA Scooter 156, 1000 m iles, red w ith trunk. $1500 or best offer. Must sell. 893-1956, Andy. 1987 HONDA E lite 50. like new, low m ileage. $600 or best offer. Rainee, 8 94 4687. ' 1000 SUNBEDS, toning tables. SunaP W otff tanning beds, SlenderQuest passive exercisers. C all for free color catalogue. Save to 50% . 1-800-2284292 (AZ-CAN). 2 COCKATIELS with cage, *2 5 . 50 gallon fish tank, $35. Call 846-8266 evenings. BUY O UR com puters... New and quality used com puters for sale. 966-1388. SELF DEFEN SE tear gas. Protect yourself with curb ON tear gas device. The law enforcer’s tear gas. Most potent of any tear gas w eapon, more potent than mace. M ust be 19 or older. M ust use street address for UPS delivery. O nly $11.25, shipping Included to: SQA M arketing, 2354 W . University, number 2163, M esa, Arizona 85261. real estate fo r sale 4 BEDROOM. 2 bath tri-level. Excellent condition. 1732 E . La Jotta. Tempo. $76.400. 967-3658, 345-0464. A S S U M A B L E , N O -Q U A L IF Y IN G . 2 bedroom Springtree condo at McCIlqtock and Broadway, $61,900. O nly $1400 cash to m ortgage. Monthly payment $610, 10.5% interest. New carpet and tile. Chris, 966-6347. real estate fo r sale BIKE TO cam pus. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, com pletely furnished. AH like new. Assumable loan. C all John at Remax 1 6 0 ,8 2 6 6 5 6 0 . BY OW NER, Chandler condo, 1 bedroom, T bath, large loft with spiral stairs, aH appliances, pool, spa. 899-6675. CO N D O , 2 bedroom 116 bath up, V i bath down. O nly 5 years old, Includes washer/ dryer, garbage disposal, dishwasher, draperies. Has 2 skylights. Below apprai­ sal a t $55,000. Excellent condition. 841-6917. . U -';,:'" ■ CO NDO FO R sale. 2 bedroom, 1% bath. Excellent conrfltlon. Near M otorola. Cloae to A S U . Assum able. N o qualifying. 948-8683, 994-3181. COZY 2 bedroom, 1% bath. 2- story tow nhouse. R eserved p arkln g /p o o l, enclosed patio. Plenty of storage. 4 miles to ASU. By owner. W it carry with reason­ able down. $39,500. Financing negotiable. 44th Street and Broadway. 872-1075!. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath single level townhome near 13th S t and H ard y, 1500 square Idol block building w ith living quarters, zoned com m ercial. Just W est of ASU. Asking 90,000. Red Carpet-W eary, 968-3414. __________ . FO R SALE or lease; near ASU, 3/bedroom, 2to/bath patio hom e. Fireplace, garage. No undergradutates. 829 0411. LAKE MEAD, Grand Canyon, spectacular lake area lots, paved roads, all utilities, homes or mobiles, from $4995, $200 down, $7Q/month. M eadvlew, Colorado, 1-000-2280928. (AZ-CAN) M OBILE HOM E on cam pusl-2 bedroom, 55’x 1 2 \ Q uiet and secluded. G reat invest­ m ent. 966-5209. M essage: 898-3065. NEAR ASU. House, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, large fam ily room, fireplace, heated pool and apa, and m ore. See to appreciate. 9% FHA assum able, no qualifying. 967-4090. N IC E, CLEAN, large 2 bedroom, 2 bath, very private, fireplace, vaulted ceilings. Close to M CC, Desert Sam aritan. 5 m iles to ASU. Evelyn, 831-1152. ERA Karetetter. bicycles fo r sale G IVE AW AY! $2000 down. Assume noqualifying loan. Papago Park. Upper condo, 2 bedroom , 2 bath, vaulted ceiling. Owner/pgent. C all Chantal, Realty Execu­ tives. 996-9910 or 948-6871. NO Q U A L IFY IN G -1,2,3 bedroom condos and townhouses. Papago Park Village from $58,000- 102,000. Bob Bullock, Realty Executives, 968-2992. BIKES- NEW Shoguns, used 3-speed cruisers, 10-speeds, repairs, trade-ins, used bikes’from $20 to $125. The Bicycle Store, 966-6070. BEAUTIFUL PAPAGO Park Condo. Own for less than rent. Take tax advantages. 2' bedroom , 2 bath. Century 21 a.m ., 831-1114. Ask for Judy W agner. O W N INSTEAD of renting. 122 S. Hardy, num ber 8 , 2 bedroom, $52,900, very low down. C all E laine, ERA Save-Com , 831-0999/ 899-9003. forniture for tale forniture fo r sale Rental Experts WE RENT AND SELL •bedroom sets «dinettes •couch & loveseat •m attress/box springs Low prices Easy qualifying Rent to own. Valley wide delivery PAPAGO PARK condo. 2 bedroom,, 2 bath, near pool. $73,000 o r best offer. 954-0201. R O O M M A TE P E R F E C T . 2 m aster bedrooms, each has own bath, split plans, w asher/dryer, refrigerator included. 2 m iles ASU. Evelyn, 831-1152. ERA Karetetter. W ALK TO ASU. 1 bedroom condo. P od, all appliances. *3 4 ,0 0 0 . C all Leona, 268-0110 or 996-0959. real estate fo r sale W ILDER NESS PARKI C o d Southern Colorado Mountain dream land. Proper­ ties, 40 acres. Seclusion, trees, w ildlife, views, trails, sic. Finsndng, owner must sob! Frank (WLA) 1-719-846-8353 or 1-719-8489624. (AZ-CAN) apartm ents fo r ren t BEAUTIFUL NEW large and two bedrooms,,w alk to ASU. p o d , laundry, one block South o f University on 8th Street and G ary. A ik 968-5236. m ove-in specials. ? ¡fa n * BRAND NEW contem porary 1 bedroom apartm ent, vaulted ceilings, file, fireplace, sailing tana, private patios, V. m ile ASU. $ 3 7 5 .2 4 8 9 0 0 0 ,9 6 7 9 0 0 6 . NEW LY REMODELED Tem po com plex. Largs 1. and 2 bedroom, pock laundry. Last; months rent free with 1 year lease. O ther specials available. 121 E . Broad­ way. 8S4-1575. SCREAM ING DEAL, 1 bedroom apart­ m ent, large fence, privets yard, quaint, evaporative coded, pets okay. 1 mile ASU. *2 5 0 . 2 4 8 9 0 0 0 , 967 9000. SPECIAL *1 0 0 off first months rent. Studio $249, 1 bedroom $269. P o d, tennis, handball, basketball, laundry, cable avail­ able. 964-6097 STUDIO APARTM ENT, window seat, glass block, full kitchen. Use o f w asher/ dryer, storage sR ace. Furnished if required. N ear Cam dbackM th Street. __________ ________ 840-7615. STUDIO APARTM ENT; brand now, 500 square feet with kitchen and bath. $275 includes utilities. W alk to ASU. 894-5203. TW O BEDROOM, one bath duplex at 12Q1B East W eber, Tem pe. $3B5/month. Please, do not disturb the residents. Available in July. C all Tania, 968-7173. M DUPLEX near ASU. 2 bedroom, student couple preferred. Leave message. $325. 966-9815. W ANT TO live at the Commons on Apache? W e have two apartm ent deposits for sale, $210 each, regularly $265. Prim e spot near pod/voHeybaN court. W e will sign our leases over to you. C all Jodi or G ina anytim e a t 829-3593. W ALK TO ASU! S u m m e r Discoun ts O nly 1/z block from cam ­ pus. B eautifully furnished, huge 1 bedroom , 1 bath; 2 bedroom , 2 bat+i apart­ m ents, Alt b ills paid. Cabfe TV, h e a te d p o o l, and spacious laundry facilities. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by .today! WALK TO ASU. University and Priest, 4 bedroom, fam ily room, fireplace, cul-desac, 1600 plus square lest. O riginal owners, $78,900. Call Elaine, ERA SaveCom R ealty, 831-0999 or 899 9003. T e rra c e R oad A p a rtm e n ts 9 5 0 S. T e rra c e 829-1212 1870 E. Apache, Tempe about 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 apartm ents fo r rant 3 G O O D R EA SO N S T O .... S T O P L O O K IN G A N D S T A R T L IV IN G outstanding 1 and 2 bedroom apts In super convenient locations!!! 3 1 1. A n n o u n c e m e n ts 2. A u to s F o r S a le 3. T r u c k s F o r S a le 4. M o t o r c y c le s F o r S a le 5. B ic y c le s F o r S a le 6. Fu rn itu re F o r S a le 7. T ic k e t s F o r S a le 8. M is c e lla n e o u s F o r S a le 9 . R e a l E s ta te F o r S a le 10. A p a rtm e n ts F o r R e n t 11. T o w n h o m e s / C o n d o s For Ren t - 1 12. H o m e s F o r R a n t 13. R en ta l S h a rin g 14. B u sin ess O p p o rtu n itie s 15. H e lp W a n te d 16. In s tru c tio n 1 7 . J e w e lry 1 8 . F re e L o s t/F o u n d 1 9 . O n -C a m p u s 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. P e r s o n a ls P e ts S e r v ic e s T r a n s p o rta tio n T ravel T y p in g / W o rd P r o c e s s in g 26. W a n te d 27. A d o p t io n s 28. M is c e lla n e o u s A Up Hoop • EnveteP-tuos Jecuorr- • AssignedCorned Fortuno • FreeCubic • GodCootie View» • GeeGui* e MinuHre(ioni Downtown Tempe 8 S 4 9 E . Taylor . • • ' p a r t m e n t s P h oen ix/Tem pe Bordar © s ¡ s s e s k R IVE R R U N A P A R TM EN TS • Orne » ASU • CaMeReedy • HM niiW ♦ LaundryFoote*» O Ç ntiid • CoveredAsugncdParking • Fu. |4jce» ÓA SmallondQuietCommunity 1065 W . F irs t St. Tam pa 275^687 O W a o ffe r o ur ow n Room m ate R eferral Service Available to residents who desire to live In our communities FURNISHED PARTMEN~~ AL MOVE IN 49 710 8, Hardy, tem p e (at University) 9 6 8 -0 1 0 1 sute Prot apartm ents fo r ren t rental sharing WALK TO ASU , junior ona bedroom, FEMALE ROOMMATES needed » share a beautiful luxury home hi Tem po Lakes area. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, with all the extras. Beautiful pod and a free health c lu b m e m b e r s h ip In c lu d e d . $223$300/m onth. C e l Eric at 831-2501. $265; two bedroom , $400. Adults, no pets. 1031 E . Lemon. 966-3679,933-4364. townhom es/ condos fo r le n t help wanted help wanted 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath condo, 46th and McDowell a re a . G ra d u a te c o u p le preferred, no pets. 337 5.96 7-4 059. LUXURY CO NDO, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, w alk to ASU. $475 per m onth. 510 W . University, Tem po. 966-7173. LUXURY TO W NHO USES, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished, refrigerator. 1Vt m iles ASU- EoM am i tennis. Available now. $ 575. Call Judy L. o r Ruth, 831-1300; 759-1145, evenings.___________________ TW O BEDROOM condo, 210 m iles East of ASU. Leasefpurchase option. Im m ediate occupancy. 834-0466. ' s ffB I WALK TO ASU. 1 bedroom . P o d , aH appliances. $360. Call Leona, 266-6110 or 9966959- , re n t, ASU A D VE R TISIN G M A JO R S/M IN O R S. If you're serious about a career in the field of Advertising, you know how com petitive the Job m arket is today: W hen you graduate, you’ll need something m ore than a degree to land a job. You'D need some preprofessional experience. W e offer this type of experience in the State Press advertising departm ent. G et your career on target! Call Jackie Eldridge today, 965-7572. ATTENTIO N: FLEXIBLE hours, salary, commission, bonuses. Exciting, fun job near campus. Earn up to $10/hour, no experience necessary. 966-6665. 2 BEDROOM home, i t block from ASU. $475/m onth. C all 894-0288 anytim e. FO R $850 GROSS part-tim e, handling Hormel, Cam pbell’s food products. No selling. Service commercial accounts. National census show gross $3400 per month. You n e e d $ 8 0 0 0 -$ 1 6 ,0 0 0 c a s h . C a ll 1-800-327-6826, ext. 721. (AZ-CAN) - homes fo r ren t HO USE Page 23 Thunday, July 14,1988 3 m iles. Furnished, washer/dryer, 3 bedroom, 2 bath $695/m onth. Joe, 818-880-5682, 8 1 8 6 8 8 6 2 9 0 , collect. RESPONSIBLE PERSON to own/operate vending route. Minimum cash investm ent $3475, For detalle call 602 -99 06536 or write: Coin Sales, 3431 W . Thunderblrd, 13344, Phoenix, A Z 85023. (AZ-CAN) rental sharing ATTENTIO N: EXCELLENT incom e for home assemble work. For info call 504-64