Arizona State University’s By DARRlN HOSTETLER State Press ASU and the Phoenix Cardinals w ill make an effort to place disgruntled Sun Angel Foundation members in seats comparable to the ones they hald fo r Sun D evil gam es, a Cardinals spokesman said Wednesday . But K a rl E ller, head o f C ircle K Corp. and an ASU booster instrumental in bringing the Cardinals to the V alley, said that “ nothing w ill satisfy those o f us who have been m istreated.” H e said ASU’s handling o f the Sun Angels’ ticket concerns w ill h avea long­ term detrim ental effect on the University. Cardinals Ticket M anager Steve Walsh said the team w ill attem pt to upgrade seats fee the Sun Angels. The group’s members w ere bumped from seats they occupy fo r Sun D evil gam es by Arizona Outlaw ticket holders, who received first rights to the “ W e have sent everyone a letter shpaed by (Cardinals owner) B ill Bidw ell and (ASU P r e s i d e n t ) J . R u s s e 11 N e 1s o n acknowledging there is a concern about Sun Angel tickets, and asking them to fill out a form so that w e can deal w ith them and try to put them into seats unclaimed by Outlaw ticket holders,” Walsh said. The Cardinals hope to find the Sun Angels new seats by the end o f the week, Walsh said. *. M eanwhile, the Cardinals announced Wednesday they have sold 55,000 season tickets so far, and w ill place 15,000 m ore on sale Monday. The season tickets w in be priced at $250, $300 and $400. Single-game tickets w ill not be available from the Cardinals, but m ay be purchased from V alley brokers, who are selfing tickets fo r a ll Cardinal gam es on an individual basis. Complaints by Sun Angels about seating arrangements culminated in a letter sent to Nelson and the Arizona Board of Regents July 14 by 43 “ concerned foundation m em bers,” including E ller. The letter states that the Sun Angels were granted first rigbt-of-refusal to 2,000-plus loge-level seats in Sun D evil Stadium for “ a ll football activities” in 1976 by form er ASU President John Schwada in return for members com m itting m illions o f dollars to stadium expansion. But the logo seats w ere given to form er Outlaw ticket holders in the agreem ent that brought the Cardinals to Arizona. The 43 Sun Angels demanded that the seats be returned, or they w ill “ avail (them selves) o f a ll available legal rem edies against the U niversity” to regain the seats or compensatory damages. In addition, the Sun Angels w rote that “ continued support (o f ASU ) would be seriously jeopardized by the U niversity’s action in insisting that the Phoenix Cardinals grant first ticket priority to 1986 Outlaws season ticket holders.” Nelson said Friday in F lagstaff at the Arizona Board o f Regents m eeting that the “ U niversity w ill honor its agreem ent with the Outlaws.” But he expressed hope that “ some accommodation” could be reached with the angry Sun Angels. W alsh said the upgraded Sun Angel seats w ill not be the sam e loge seats members demanded, but w ill be along the sidelines Turn to TleM s, paga M . All alone A lon e student and her bike are silhouetted along a fourth-floor walkway at University T ow ers, 525 $ . Forest A ve. on state Legislature By BEN M cCONNELL State P ress 8 -y O ^ V A curious thing about the fiv e candidates running fo r the two House seats to represent Tem pe in the Arizona. Legislature: Most o f them know each outer quite w ell. Take, fo r instance, Tem pe insurance salesman G ary Richardson, a Republican. He is challenging incumbents Bev Herman and Jenny Norton, also Republicans, in the September prim ary. Only tw o q fth e three w ill go on to the Novem ber general election. Richardson used to be Norton’s insurance agent, and both entered local politics at the same tim e. Together they w ere precinct committeemen and joined the Tem pe Chamber o f Commerce at the same tim e. He worked on her 1986 campaign; “ W e know each oth er re a l w e ll,” N orton said. “ Unfortunately, the people who work fo r you when you’re a W EEK END W EATH ER Sunny and hot today and tomorrow, with thunderstorms possible in the afternoon and evenings. Humidify should drop o ff over the w eek en d .' Highs are expected around 1138. candidate a re the ones you eventually lose.” Richardson also hais worked on Hermon’s previous campaigns. T u e Jalma Hunsinger, a Tem pe real estate agent and Dem ocrat, fo the general election, he w ill be vyin g fo r one of the two House seats! Hunsinger was Norton's and Hermon’s liaison to the Arizona Realtors Association, which donated heavily to S tate E lections! Norton’s 1986 campaign. A race among friends. Dem ocrat Jim Cunningham, a Tem pe real estate agent C lassified........................................ 22 Entertainment...... .......... ................15 O pinion............................ .............. 4 This W eek......... .................. .......... 3 A S U D ELEG ATE: An ASU political science professor is in Atlanta as an Arizona delegate to the Dem ocratic National Convention. P a g e 8!. ■ M-H and businessman who is making his firs t bid fo r office, is the sole “ outsider” in this ring o f associates. Most o f the other candidates, however, kn ow of him. And from ea rly indications, the race to represent the 101,000 residents in D istrict 27 m ay not be a free-for-all-m udthrowing contest, like other contests in the state prom ise. “ I see it as a very positive race based on the qualifications o f the candidates,” Herman said. “ I ’m not running against anyone,” Himsinger said. W hile they prom ise to run a clean, “ gentlem an’s” campaign, don’t expect the candidates to hand o ver their heads in a friendly gesture o f kindred spirits. “ H there’s anything I believe, it’s that D istrict 27 has lacked leadership,” Hunsinger said. “ Tem pe is the gatew ay fo r growth in the east V alley, but leadership has not com e from the east V alley.” And the impeachment and subsequent conviction o f form er Turn to Baction, paga 6. Rapid growth precipitating ch an g es in public policies, according to study By SUZAN N E WESCHLER Stele P res* In the face o f rapid growth, Arizona w ill not enjoy its current quality o f life much lon ger m iless public policies change, according to a recent study o f urban growth conchicted by ASU’s Morrison Instititute. The $250,000, 350-page report, which was commissioned by the state Legislature and released July 15, provides policy-makers with recommendations, some o f which could affect the amount o f taxes Arizonans pay. The report presents growth-related issues and gives alternate solutions to policy­ makers that govern the state’s expanding population, said Rob Melnick, director of the M orrison Institute. One o f the recommendations, county home rule, could change the amount of taxes M aricopa county residents pay because home rule would “ let voters structure their county governm ent any w ay they want,” M elnick said. “ This could Turn to Raport, page #. fü fk fttss a ssi ca m p u s b rie fs W est cam p u s p ro fe ssso r w in s $250,000 M acA rthur fello w sh ip New A S U W est p ro vo st ch o se n ; H aden fills po sition until J a n . 1 C. Roland Haden w ill serve as interim provost and Vice president o f ASU West until Vernon E . Lattin fills the position Jan. 1. H ie Arizona Board o f Regents approved ASU President J. Russell Nelson’s appointments July 16. “ This is an unusual m ove,” Nelson said, “ but the circumstances presented us with an opportunity to provide the West Campus with exceptional leadership for the short term and the long term .” Lattin, fo r a yearly salary o f approxim ately $90,000, w ill supervise overall administration and development at ASU West. Lattin w ill w ait until Jan. 1 to begin at ASU W est so that he can first com plete his responsibilities as associate vice president fo r academ ic affairs at the U niversity of Wisconsin, Nelson said. Lattin has worked fo r the 164,000-student U niversity of Wisconsin system, which consists of IS universities, is twoyear centers and extension services since 1982. From 1974 to 1981, Lattin worked as an associate professor o f English at Northern Illinois U niversity. During his last three years at that university, as director of its Center fo r Latino and Latin Am erican Studies, he supervised curriculum development, program coordination and student advisement. Lattin earned a doctoral degree in English at the U niversity of Colorado, and a m aster’s and a bachelor’s at the U niversity o f New R P fS “ Roland w ill be passing the ASU W est position to an adm inistrator and scholar o f skill and experience,” N elson s a id . “ W e a re fortunate to find someone wi)06e talents and interests so closely match our needs at ASU West campus.” jo c k Cam pus preschool helps children, co n trib u tes to te a ch e r education The ASU College o f Education is accepting applications fa r its preschool that «d ll operate Mondays through Fridays, from Aug. 29 to M ay 12. The preschool’s teachers ecourage thinking skills development, intellectual curiosity and creative expression, said preschool director Eleanor Flake. The program w ill involve group and individual lessons, she said. As w ell as benefiting 3- and 4-year-olds, the preschool helps students prepare fo r early childhood teaching careers, Flake said. “ Enrollment decisions w ill reflect the preschool’s need to preserve a balance of ages and sexes, serve children from different ethnic backgrounds and enroll youngsters whose abilities lie in a variety of areas,” she said. . Interested parents should call 965-1460. B efore Haden served as vice president for academ ic affa irs, he was dean of A S U ’ s C o lle g e of E ngineering and Applied Sciences. Vernon E . Lattin CO O L COM PUTERS - HOT P R IC ES TH IS SUM M ER SA V E A T COMPUTER SYSTEM S CEN TERI A v a n ta g e A v a n ta g e X 2 8 6 < = * $999 Get the 286 m achine that's priced right. Includes 5 l2 K . . standard keyboard; 1 ¿m b floppy d rive and Macintosh Plus $1247 See ue lo r sp ecial Student pricing and rebetee on m ost Apple m odels. £ se ae w y /sta ie p re ss Beniamin David Brown o f M esa feed s a goat In the petting area o f the Phoenix Zoo. The 4-year-otd visitsd the zoo July 17. An ASU West professor won a $250,000 MacArthur F e llo w s h ip , an a w a rd designed to provide support fo r extraordinarily talented individuals. “ When I answered the telephone, I thought the caller was about to sell me something and I wasn’t in the buying mood,” Stephen P y n e s a id . “ T h en he m en tio n éd ‘ M a c A rth u r Foundation’ and something clicked. I was stunned . . . . thrilled . . . humbled.” The history professor can spend $50,000 a year for the next five years any way Stephen Pyne that w e wants. Pyne, author o f “ The Ic e,” a book cited by the New York Tim es as one of 1967’s best, is an outstanding scholar, said B. D ell Felder, dean o f the facu lty a t ASU West. “ The MacArthur Award is one o f the highest an academ ician can receive,” F eld er said. “ (P yn e’s) colleagues are proud o f the high distinction he brings to the ASU West campus.” Nominees for the award, which is named after John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur, cannot submit applications. Instead, a group of m ore than 100 designated nominators in various professions and regions who serve anonymous, oneyear terms propose recipients. A 15-member selection committee chooses the winners, pending approval of the foundation’s board o f directors. Pyne, a professional forest firefigh ter, has studied the cultural history o f forest fires in the United States and Australia. One of his bodes, “ Flam e and Fortune,” which deals with firefighting on the North Rim o f the Grand Canyon, is scheduled fo r publication in M arch 1969. He expects to complete his latest manuscript, “ The Burning Bush,” which is about the history o f a fire in Australia, by December 1968. Pyne said that he m ay use the grant fo r fire reseach. This issue’s Campus B riefs were com piled by Suzanne Weschler. WHERE CAN YOU BRING HOME THE BACON FOR ONLY < m t T $549 I B i The popular Avantage XT Is now more Toshiba T1000 Laptop $779 In clu des ' 512K, 8 u p e r t w l a t ^ S § | § | Screen, ft d isk drive In a 7 pound portable package. Citizen Dot Matrix Printer P In clu des tractor an d friction fe e d s. * * D o e sd ra fta n d near letter quality m odes. First Choice •W ord P ro cessin g -D atabase •Spreadsheet -Com m unications -G rap h ics & p ro fe ssio n a l^ M ^ ^ ^ rta r----------------------------------- 1 \ = = = ' look at a lowCSCr n f i | | prie®« k d E IS W * 1200 Baud Internal Modem rtgePftptaf% w J jy f S y a 1 . A ll In oriel On-line ■ BACON CHÈESEBURGER I Instead 1 Of In-line. 97« ■ when you buy a large Pepsi ■ I NEW § AT DICK'S; LOF COURSE!! ■ Computer Systems Center Phoe'nix O F C O U R S E !! N EC 24 Pin Printer G ives you the $169 AT DICK S, Tempe 1f>32 E . Cam elback Rd. Southern ft M cClintock 266-7873________________ 838-1236 f » e s t V a lle ® 35th Ave. ft Northern 838-1236 I ! I L. p ic k ’s Drive-In I I I I I B .L .T . 97« on whole wheat bun when you buy a large Pepsi NEW I AT DOCS; OF COURSE!! D ick’s Drive-In Valid only 855 S. Rural Rd. I Valid only 855 S. Rural Rd. with coupon Tempe, AZ | with coupon S i Tempe, AZ W m WB Jbujteaj^Jugril^eae^ *» 2 (h is w e e k M onday, „'a,* ¿ S i C * . Entries m ay b e edited d u e to content o r sp ace. have taken some college courses but have not chosen majors offered by the University Academic Advising Center. The workshop will be held in the Matthews Center Lobby today from 2 to 4:30 p.m;, Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and Wednesday from S to 7:30 p.m . Students must make reservations before attending one of the workshops. For more information, call 965-4464. •G a ry S h a n d lin g will perform at the Celebrity Theatre tonight at 8 p.m. Today Friday ■ T h * T h is W eek section Is a w eekly calen d ar o f even ts h appen in g at A S U an d hi D ie Untveralty com m unity. A n y cam pu s c lu b sir organization can subm it en tries fo r publication in th e calen d ar to th e State P re ss, located In the basem ent o f M atthew s C anter, R oom IS . Entries w ill not b e taken o v e r the ph on e. T h e deadlin e fo r en tries la 1 p.m . each •A S U W o m en ’s Studies P rogram B row n B S # S e rie s Win sponsor a lecture on l will perform at Chuy’s Friday from 10:30 p.m. to 2:45 a.m. and Saturday from 9 p.m. to 1 a.rn. There will be sin $8 cover charge. •T h e B o n ed ad d y s “ Creativity” by KristirrValentine4oday from noon to 1 p.m. in the Social Science Buikfing, Room 104. • “ H ow to C h o o se a M ajor” is the title of a workshop designed to help students who Saturday •AC/DC will perform at the ASU Activity Center Saturday at 8 p.m. Sun day •A rizon a Hum ana Society has dogs for adoption for $40 and cats for $30 from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.daily at 9225 N. 13th Ave. The adoption donation includes spaying or neutering, shots and a 10-day trial period. For more information, call 997-7585. •The University A rt M useum , in its "Birds, Bears and Beasties” display, is showing animal-related works by various artists. The gallery is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays. •M aria Conchfta A lo n so an d F ranco will perform at the Celebrity Theatre Sunday at 7:30 p'm. Fifth Estate W ednesday night. Monday •R onn ie M ontrose and A llan Hokteworth will give two shows at Chuy’s Monday at 7:30 and 10:30 p.m. Tickets, at $13.50 ($14.50 day of show), are available at Dillard’s. •H all an d O ates will perform at Compton Terrace Monday at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday will perform in an all-ages show at the Mason Jar Tuesday at 6 p.m. •D .R .I. W ednesday •C am p u s A lco h o lics A n on ym ous will meet Wednesday at noon in MU 209. •Christian S tuden ts F ello w sh ip will study “God’s Ultimate Goal” Wednesday from 12:40 to 1:30 p.m. in MU 217. Everyone is welcome and drinks will be provided. • P a t r ic k O ’H e a rn will perform at Anderson’s Fifth Estate Wednesday at 7 and 9:30 p.m. The Bonedaddys SHOW US YO U R STU D EN T I.D . YO U ’L L G E T A DINNER Pets are available fo r adoption at the Arizona Humane Society. TONIGHT MELT DOWN P ro g ressive M u sic FRIDAY «i the B lu e ske e p e rs k with Hans Olson TU R A R . open T h is year w e're doing it again! Every Sunday (but O N LY on Sunday). M ike Pulos of the Spaghetti Com pany w ill give you one F R E E dinner* lor each dinner you order! It's our 2 tor 1 SU N D A Y STU D EN T S P E C IA L. And it's good lo r the whole school year at both our Tem ps and Phoenix locations. Any day of the w eek, for lunch or dinner. Th e Spaghetti Com pany ia known for a great m eal at an affordable price. But the SUN DAY STU D EN T S P E C IA L m akes our already terrific p rices even b etted O ur dinners Include a full course m eal with all the trim mings - from salad to dessert. So , dollar for dollar, when you're hungry an d you need a break, you can 't beat The Spaghetti Com pany! E S P E C IA L L Y ON SU N D A YS! W ith 2 dinners for the price of 11 But you M U ST have your student I.D . card with you to take advan­ tage of this offer. L a d ie s D ri Open at 11:30 a.m . to 11 p.m . Sun d ays S p a l h p t t i C o m p a n d Restaurant Phoenix South on Central. Just Pasta McDowell 257-0380 Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Di Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken PJcatta, Veal Marsala ARE NOT INCLUDED in the 2-for-1 special. In O ld T o w n Tem pe 4th Street and Mill 966-3848 Blossom M e Feedbags 1001 E . 8th S t. 9 6 8 -5 8 0 2 ie c / |¡® opinion J jM iP riu ■RITTER- e d it o r ia l Registration deadlines Monday, July 25 is the last day that Arizonans may register to vote in the Sept. 13 prim ary election. This stipulation w ill ex clu d e num erous p o ten tia l v o te rs , especially in D istricts 27 and 21, which contain the highest percentages o f ASU students. Many students leave the state fo r the summer, tem porarily lose track of Arizona issues and do not decide to vote until after they return to the state, usually after the July 25 deadline. Others, including new stu d en ts and fo rm e r lo n g -d is ta n c e commuters who decide to live closer to campus, m ove into D istricts 27 and 21 after July 25. S im ila rly, the Sept. 19 registration deadline fo r the Nov. 8 general election w ill exclude potential voters who change districts or decide to vote after the 50-day period tween those two dates begins. Extending registration deadlines to 15 days before elections, as som e have proposed, would be a m ore suitable and practical policy. This allowance would not prompt masses of people to register at the last minute — since many people renew their voter registrations at the same tim e they renew their driver’s licenses — but would provide voting opportunities for those who a re disenfranch ised hy cu rrent registration restrictions. The original reason for far-advanced pre­ registration — the potential fo r vote fraud and “ graveyard voting’’ — no longer exists in this computerized age. It is now practical and possible fo r people to make later decisions regarding their district and intent to vote. Voting is a privilege and a right, and every opportunity to provide easy access to the ballot must be exercised. MaMflÉi iw w w * •É ,V ^h,cauteli lag w ail q jJ j epa High cost / ■ ■ -i B r Tragedy points out vital need for ASU day-care eating her cornflakes and watching ‘Mr. Rodgers,’ her favorite show. She was fine,” Buffone said. “ And then there was a knock at the door. “ And she just freaked out.” R icky was at the door, ready to resume his babysitting job. Buffone went to school and work that day. And for several days after. D a rrin H o ste tle r Editor Carol Buffone couldn’t afford to keep her 18-month-old daughter Christine in a local day-care center because the cost was too high. “ They wanted $80 a w eek,” Buffone said. “ I only had $40 to spend. It was all I could do. But it wasn’t enough,” So the ASU freshman engineering m ajor, who doubles as a secretary for the University, was naturally pleased when a friend and co-worker offered the services o f her 15-year-old son, Richard “ R icky” M ellem , as a baby sitter. “ It’s not easy being a working student and parent. M y husband and I just couldn’t afford the high cost o f day-care,” Buffone said. On July 12, her husband burst into the ASU office where she worked, hyperventilating and screaming her name. “ Christine is dead.” Jim Buffone had arrived home in the afternoon to find Christine lying on the bed, bruised and barely breathing. R icky said m erely that the baby had a “ seizure” earlier in the afternoon and had died. The baby was rushed to the hospital, but doctors could not revive her. Later, police arrested Ricky Mellem and charged him with the murder of Christine Buffone. An autopsy o f the baby revealed her death was caused by massive internal injuries, some of which bad been caused over an extended period of tim e; Christine had been slow ly beaten to death. “ When we found Ricky, .1 thought m y prayers had been. answered.” . Carol Buffone sat in m y o ffice on Monday dry-eyed as she But over the July 4 weekend, after Ricky had been told m e the story above. But as she spoke of Ricky, how he had bought a new bike with the earnings from babysitting babysitting for a few weeks, Buffone and her husband Jim noticed that Christine was listless. She seemed to weaken how she had trusted him, how they had eaten lunch together every day after that, vom iting and running a fever. after taking Christine to the doctor, how he had babysat for Both Buffone and her doctor concluded that Christine had other couples in their apartment complex . . . she cried. an infection. And then she hit the chair with her fists. And she screamed. R ic k y , a p p a re n tly co n cern ed abou t C h ris tin e , accompanied Buffone to the doctor. Carol Buffone poured out her g rief onto the floor of the “ I thought it was so nice of him to go along. He seemed State Press and asked a very sim ple question. genuinely w orried about her,” Buffone said. “ Why can’t there be a place at ASU where mothers can The doctor prescribed medication and instructed Buffone take their children while they work, where they can trust that to stay with her daughter until her condition im proved. their little ones won’t be beaten to death? ” Why indeed? And after a few days, Christine seemed to be back to normal. Although ASU has a child development laboratory, the lab “ She was such a happy baby,” Buffone said. “ Everyw here can only accommodate a few classes o f 18 children each, and w e went she would make people sm ile.” is not reserved fo r ASU faculty, students and staff — but is So Buffone planned to go back to school. open to the entire Valley. “ Christine was sitting in front o f the T V that morning, M ary Lam parski, the lab’s coordinator, says the lab staff EDITORIAL BOARD Unsigned editorials reflect the view s of the editorial board. Individual m em bers of the board write editorials and the board “ does everything it can” but enrollm ent is severely limited by finances. “ There is a real need for low-income care fo r the children of students and staff,” she said. Mesa Community College sponsors a program that accomodates 155 children a day — at the m inim al cost of $1.50 an hour — and Lam parski thinks ASU should mount a sim ilar effort. “ I know ASU needs a day-care program because of the size of our waiting list and the amount o f calls w e get.” Nationwide, corporations and universities are adopting day-care programs - - sim ply because the cost o f quality child care is so high, ranging from $80 to $150 per week, and . because they know that if it w eren't fo r their programs, parents would be forced to turn to unreliable and dangerous private baby sitters. And sometimes the results of that can be deadly. Carol Buffone dried her eyes and looked up blankly. Then she took took a color portrait o f Christine from a long, yellow m ailing envelope and stared at m e as she pointed to the picture of the baby in the frilly white party dress. “ She was bruised here. “ She was bloody there. “ She was tom there.” Buffone has suffered the pain of losing a child — a pain for which there is no cure, no relief, no escape. A ll she can do is taUc about it. And give us a glim pse o f what it is like. Buffone says she doesn’t want what happened to Christine to happen to other children. So she is mounting an effort to obtain 30,000 signatures on a petition requesting that ASU start a comprehensive day-care program fo r the children of University-affiliated parents. “ I don’t want to read about another child and her parents going through this h ell,” Buffone said. “ I want to stop it from happening again. “ And Christine would want that, tod.” The question that w ill undoubtedly b e asked in these tight budgetary times is whether w e at ASU can afford to expend funds on a day-care program. If you don’t know the answer to that question, spend some • tim e with Carol Buffone and her picture o f Christine. And you’ll know that we can’t afford not to. LET T ER PO LICY The State P re ss w elcom es and encourages written response from our readers on e n , topic decides on their m erit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State P re ss staff as a w hole. Board m em bers include: Darrin Hostetler EDITOR Marty Sauerzopf MANAGING EDITOR Suzanne Weschler NEWS EDITOR Dave Miller ARJS EDITOR S T A T E P R ESS DARRIN H O STET LER Editor M ARTY SA U ER Z O P F Managing Editor News Ed ito r............. ............................... .......... SUZANNE W ESC H LER A r t s ............ ................................ .......... DAVE M ILLER "° ^ for anonymity will be granted with an e p p ro ^ a te fe ^ <" * * >ff"iaMon *> be eKgibte tor puWteHon. “ “ Umvenslty) and phone number. Requests All letters are subject to editing at the discretion of the opinion page editor Bring tetters ‘o th e State P re ss front desk In the basem ent of Matthews C enter Photo ID is m atured Letters m ay also be addressed to-State Press i s „ . ^>m«r r-noro i.u . a required. e ss, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University. Tempe, AZ 85287-1502. Photo Ed ito r................................ y................................. JA CK B E A S LEY CR EA TIV E CONSULTAN T: Rich Toltzman. A r t i s t .........i .................................. ............ ........... m ik e r it t e r CO N TRIBUTIN G W R ITER S: Vickie Chachere, Chris Dorsey, Dave Hodges, Gary Jackson, Ben M cConnell, Howell J . Malham Jr„ Carri Mitchell, Scott Seckel, Ed Schubert, Laurie Smith, Nick Van Nice. The State P ress is published on Thursday during the Summer sem ester at Matthews Center, Room 15. Arizona State University, lem pe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (802) 965-2292. Advertising and Production: (602) 965-7572. PRO D U CTIO N : Leighayn Green A D VERTISIN G R EP R ES EN T A T IV E S : Leslie Dillon, Paul Debbie Morlock, Patti Schm autz, Rich Toltzman, Ray Zickel, Lee, P fess is the only newspaper exclusively published for thin no atep ° n cam Pus The news and view s published In fnm,n? „S.P! f er are not necessarily those of the A SU administration, faculty, staff or student body Stete Pics» T h u re d a v J u lv Q I 1988 Spoiled Sun Angels are proved to be children by letter HfffO yew B rrc H ff David Jordan Columnist I have bécòme firm ly convinced that the sm ell of pigskin has a narcotic effect on public leaders. Nò m atter how rational these leaders m ay seem under normal circumstances, thè introduction o f a football into the discussion seems to make them take leave o f their senses. On July 14, 43 members Of the Sun Angels (the selfproclaim ed fa iry godmothers of ASU ) hand-delivered a letter to President J. Russell Nelson threatening to stop supporting ASU if they did not receive the choice seats that are currently being allocated to Outlaws ticket holders due to contractual obligations. Horrors. Furtherm ore, the 43 promised to utilize “ a ll available legal rem edies against the U niversity ” to make up fo r the damages they fe e l they “ w ill sustain by not being accorded priority seating” in the stadium during Cardinate’ games. Like spoiled children, this group is arguing that priority seating at ASU gam es, priority parking and priority treatm ent fò r bowl gam e tickets is simply, not enough, they want first priority fo r seats fo r the professional football team in Sun D evil stadium as w ell. I find m yself extrem ely w eary of these power brokers grabbing student hostages every tim e they aren’t getting their way. I f these Sun Angels ca red lia lf as much for the U niversity as they do fo r football this letter Would never have been sent. In essence, the letter verifies what most students already knew — that the “ generous gifts” awarded the U niversity have little to do with the w elfare of ASU but are instead designed to obtain special privileges from the U niversity. Now faced with the prospect that the U niversity may not bend to their every whim and desire, the Sun Angels are threatening to discontinue thè flow of those “ generous gifts.” W ell, I hope they do. No m atter how one looks at it, this whole situation is collegiate blackm ail, and if this is the price of these “ generous gifts” then that price is sim ply too high. ASU is a public university which exists prim arily o ff o f tuition and taxpayer support. Though welcom e, w e can live without gifts and w e can certainly live without gifts from people who w ill throw tantrums the moment that the U niversity doesn’t “ play nice.” I seriously wonder if President Nelson had the whole thing to do over again, he would have told the Cardinals to stay in the Midwest. The sim ple truth is that a'university’s function is education, not professional football. And so fa r the Cardinals have caused fa r m ore pain than they are worth. I am even m ore intrigued at the threat o f legal action to repair the damages sustained because of lack o f priority seating. This to m è expresses an arrogance of the highest m agnitude Not only do w e as a U niversity owe the Sun Angels priority seating, but the failure to seat this group anywhere but the 50—yard line w ill cause damages serious enough to warrant a lawsuit against ASU. 1 wonder how a ll the football fans who don’t have the cash to be able to afford the best seats in the house get along Some (gasp) even have to watch the gam e at home. I wonder if the same Sun Angels would want us to pay damages to everyone who doesn’t get to sit in the loge. The Sun Angels have truly been generous to the U niversity over the years. I am grateful for the support that they have given us and I am convinced that their support has generally im proved the University and its activities. But I don’t believe that support gives these people the right to dictate ASU policy — especially as it pertains to contractual obligations with other groups. Money buys a lot, and as w e learned with the alcohol in the skyboxes issue, it can even buy a change in U niversity policy. But it should not be used to blackm ail ASU into abrogating contractual obligations. The Sun Angels have rightfully been treated w ell by a U niversity to which they have donated a lot. It has been a mutually beneficial relationship that neither group should abuse. The sad thing about the Cardinals coming to town is the fact that it appears to have brought out the worst in just about everyone. Although w e can’t go back to change what has happened, w e can accept the reality that the Cardinals are here, they are going to {flay in Sun D evil Stadium and not Everyone is going to get the seat they want. Perhaps none o f this w ill m atter after two 4-12 seasons, anyway. % New priorities Regents must acknowledge shift in importance of romance languages Mike Ritter Staff Artist The ubiquitous wise-yet-anonymous sage once spun, “He who speaks three languages is trilingu al; he who speaks two languages is biliúgual; and he who speaks but one language is ah Am erican. ” As a people, Americans are notorious for our “ unilingual” character. The m ajority of our citizenry lives and works in com plete isolation from non-English speaking people. Thus, foreign language instruction has never achieved the same priority in this country that it enjoys in others. While the U.S. education system seems hard pressed to create a populace fluent even in its native tongue, it has nevertheless made foreign language study a prerequisite for graduation from most Am erican high schools. The curriculum has concentrated almost exclusively on French, Spanish and German. Spanish continues to be an important language in this country, but elsewhere tim es have changed. The question ‘The cru x o f the m atter depends upon o n e’s perception o f what co n stitu tes a “ critica l language. ” ’ arises: A re French and German still as critical or relevant to Am erica as they once w ore? Many educators believe Russian, Japanese and Chinese are the languages which w ill challenge U.S. business and political leaders in the future. Last week, the Arizona Board of Regents voted to spend a portion o f a federal grant — ear-marked for programs in “ critical languages’’ . — on French, German and Spanish programs. In doing so, fo r the second y e a rin a row, they rejected a funding request fo r a Russian language program. The Russian proposal, put together by Associate Professor Stephen Batalden o f ASU’s Russian and East European Studies Consortium, was designed to provide some expertise to non-Russian language teachers on the high school level and provide their students with entry-level Russian video tapes. According to Lee Croft, ASU associate professor of Russian, the regents cited two points against the Russian proposal: (1 ) Too few students would benefit because (2) there does not exist a foundation of trained Russian teachers on the secondary school level. By this “ Catch-22” criteria, it would become nearly impossible to institute a new language program o f any kind: I f the regents aren’t w illing to fund a program to educate Russian instructors, how can they cite a lack o f Russian students as a reason to withhold funding? To the board’s credit, regent and State Superintendent of Public Instruction C. Diane Bishop, Regent Donald P itt and Student Regent Patrick McWhortor (a non-voting board m em ber) spoke out against the allocation because it ignored the non-traditional languages. At the sam e tim e, Regent E sth er Capin recom m ended m odifyin g the funding procedure fo r next year. ^sThe crux of the m atter depends upon one’s perception of what constitutes a “ critical language.” I f the sole purpose of foreign language instruction is to “ broaden one’s horizons” and fu lfill a liberal arts requirement, then w e could a ll take two years o f Lithuanian and be done with it. But foreign language instruction should also have a practical goal based on the realities of modern society. A t one tim e Latin was the common language of all educated people of every Western nation. Today, as one com ic put it, Latin would only come in handy in the unlikely event that one was “ kidnapped by the pope.” What if today Latin was the only foreign language offered by our schools m erely because for hundreds o f years it was deemed critical to higher education? Sim ilarly, decades ago when French was designated as a “ critical” language, it was the undisputed medium of international politics and business. English has since copped that title. Likewise, German is no longer the dominate language o f science as it was in earlier generations. No one is advocating that w e drop German or French from our class schedules. But new societal factors no longer support the notion that they are m ore “ critical” to our national security or trade when compared to other languages. Our economic and political ties with Western Europe are under no threat of foundering due to a dearth of French-speaking Americans — the same cannot be said about our potential relationship with the Soviet Union and far-eastern Asia. But of course there are less tangible, m ore personal reasons why w e cling to certain languages. For many, French, German and Spanish are part of our fam ily heritages. Also, most everyone has an opinion about the aesthetic value of various languages and which ones are “ harder.” There is also the element of fear. W estern European languages share a common alphabet and the exotic looking Russian letters m ay frighten potential students. Actually though, compared to the Latin-based languages, Russian is almost entirely phonetic. (In fact, this w riter has struggled with both German and Russian and has only this to say about German: Any language with m ore than a dozen different ways to say the word “ the” has some real problems . . . no wonder they could never win a w orld w ar. Russian doesn’t even have a “ the! ” ) Today, interest in non-traditional languages is on the rise among future college-bound students. Central High School in Phoenix has the most successful Russian program o f any secondary school in the state and California has declared Japanese a critical language. Simply put, the regents need to realize the importance o f a language program which serves both our individual interests and the broader interests of our society. quotable “ Never learn anything: if you don’t learn, you’ll always find som eone else to do it for you .” — Mark Twain “ He not only overflowed with learning, but stood in the slo p .” — Sydney Sm ith P age 6 Jim Cunningham B ev Hannon Jalm a Hunsinger Jenny Norton * Supports tax on except medicine. Supports restructured tax base and spending less. Supports restructured tax base. Opposes sales taxes. Supported legislation that c lo s e d ta x lo o p h o le s . Supports restructured tax base. Says universities need more m on ey. Supports sta teissued bonds for m inority loans and scholarships. Says ASU is bending over backwards fo r m inorities an d mus t not l o w e r minimum academic standards. Says ASU and Maricopa County should represent s ta te ’ s p ow er base fo r legislative funding. Says w e’ve been blindfolded to the m inority problem at the universities and that the p r o b l e m n e e d s m o re assessment. Favors enhanced minority recru itm en t, but not by relaxing academic standards. Supportsidea. Undecided. Supports idea. Supports idea. Supports idea . Supports light ra il, opposes regio n a l a irp o rt. F avors upgrading existing airport facilities. Supports regional airport and light rail. S u pports lig h t r a il. Is u n d ecid ed on re g io n a l airport. Supports regional airport and light rail. Supports lig h t regional airport. Supports enhanced drug education program s and m ore block watch efforts. Against death penalty. Supports enhanced drug ed u ca tio n p ro g ra m s, to red u ce c rim e. Supports death penalty. Supports intensive probation to r e lie v e prison o v e r­ crowding. Supports death penalty. Sponsored new laws that c re a te “ shock in ca rcer­ ation” programs and keep prisoners at home under electronic surveillance. Supports death penalty. Favors separating “ new” inmates from “ old” ones in state’s prisons. Abortion Against abortion except in cases o f rape, incest or endangerment o f m other’s life. Opposes abortion. Supports parental n otification and consent requirements. Pro-choice. Opposes abortion. Cam paign Budget $10,000 $15,000 $40,000 $20,000 The Issued: T ax es ASU Student Regent Vote Transportation Crim e services G ary R ichardson Favors zero-based budgeting and “ spending restructuring.” ra il and Against abortion except in cases o f rape, incest or endangerment o f mother’s life. $30,000 Election___________ Continued from page 1. Gov. Evan Mecham, which germ inated in the House, m ay be a fire trap for Hermon and Norton in the Republicandominated district. v “ A ll of us who voted to impeach Evan w ere warned 7- quite brutally — that our seats would be in danger this to ll,” Norton said. “ I ’m sure we lost some people to G ary o ver the impeachment vote.” Hermon and Norton voted to impeach Mecham. He later was convicted by the Senate. “ I think anybody would have to be dead and buried not to be w orried about the im plications of impeaching a sitting governor,” Hermon said. Mecham’s political action group, Forw ard Arizona, which was form ed to target legislators who voted fo r impeachment and conviction, is not expected to be a factor in a race with two dem ocrats and two republicans who said “ aye” to expelling the form er governor. But Richardson said he would accept money from the group, without promises to retain its ideology of being “ divinely” guided. “ I ’d accept money from just about anybody,” he said. One debate between the candidates has been scheduled for late August. In the meantime, here, in alphabetical order, are capsule biographies o f the candidates: Jim Cunningham One o f the two Dem ocrats in the race, Cunningham, 30, is making his first bid fo r public office. Born and raised in Arizona, he is m arried, and his w ife is expecting their first child. Cunningham charges that incumbents Hermon and Norton have not provided adequate leadership. He said the two are not doing enough to capitalize on the recently-crea ted B e gin ""! Public Transportation Authority (R P T A ). C u n n i n g h a m , who owns a self-serve car w adi in south Tem pe and is a real estate agent fo r Century 21, favors a half, cent sales tax increase to finance light ra il construction in the V alley. He also favors mandatory day-care for children of working women. Asked about his chances, C u n n in g h a m said: “ It’s going to be tough because I ’m the new face on the scene.” own business after working extensively fo r Polte Homes. A fter graduating from high school in Tem pe, he went to work in construction. Hunsinger does not favor reliance on sales taxes and says the 1988-89 state budget w ill be the “ number one challenge” facing the Legislature. Bev Herman Once a teacher in Iowa, Hermon, 55, is making her fourth bid fo r the Arizona House. ‘ A self-described fiscal conservative, Hermon has been w idely praised fo r her work to bring ASU’s budget in closer parity to U ofA’s. F or future legislation, Hermon favors creation of a task force to clean up the “ brown cloud” of pollution that hangs over Phoenix and implementing w ider use o f solar power. She also favors requiring utility companies to install power lines underground; repairing crumbling freew ay noise barriers; a n d 'creatin g a task force to lure high-tech companies to the V alley. B efore first being elected to the House, Hermon served two term s on the Tem pe City Council. She is m arried to a Tem pe civ il engineer and has three children. Jenny Norton Norton, 43, is an incumbent and m a k i n g her second bid for office after first winning her House seat in 1986. She was a Dem ocrat until 1980 when she jo in «! Republican ranks. Norton, who comes from a fam ily o f political activists and conservationists, is working on legislation that would regulate ground water use in rural Arizona to protect farm ers and creation of an energy policy task force to research future energy use. She works part-time for Am erind,'a firm that builds lowrent housing on Indian reservations. Norton and her husband, Bob Ramsey, own and operate Southwest Medical Services, commonly known as Southwest Ambulance. Jalm a Hunsinger Hunsinger, who tags him self a conservative democrat along the lines o f Arizona Sen. Dennis DeConcini, is making his first run fo r o ffice since 1968, when he lost a bid for a seat on the Tem pe City Council. He has been actively involved in behind-the-scenes political work as a lobbyist for the Arizona Realtors Association. In the course of recent campaigning, H u n s in g e r , 51, says he is '^humbled by the fact that, a whole lot o f people don't know m e.” A real estate agent for over 30 years, Hunsinger owns his Gary Richardson Richardson, an Independent Insurance agent, is making his first bid for office. He has been involved in local politics as a member o f Tem pe’s Design R eview Board and the Chamber of Commerce for the last 10 years. Richardson said he started t e lli n g people at the beginning of that he wins going run for the House so he would not be branded a “ reactionary” if Mecham was impeached from • ?*cfiar^son suPPorts having international offices to lure industry tii Arizona. H e . also proposes that recently incarcerated inmates not be housedwithlong-termprisoners in order to reduce violence and h a r d e n i n g o f new inmates.” M am ed and the father o f six children, Richardson is 40 years old. 1320 E. BROADWAY TEMPE. ARIZONA («V Broadw ay & D orsey) McCUNTOCK li Ì 2 DORSEY & RURAL W ED N ES D A Y M EN S N IG H T COORS & COORS LIGHT DRAFT 75$ COORS EXTRA GOLD & SHOOTERS *1°° W T fty R S D A Y 1 L A D IE S N IG H T ♦ 1 0 0 W ell, W ine, Draft <7-12p.m.) Saturday Groove Merchants Bodacious Fashion Auction Show Saturday 7 p.m. Island Sundays 390 Coronas «-* P.». This wook, July 24 West Maui Beach Band s-? P.m. The “ Coors” Brothers i- n » P age 8 ¡■ » H Thursday, July 81.1988 T h e R ace F orT he White H ouse Convention picks Dukakis a s nominee A TLA N TA (A P ) — Michael Dukakis celebrated with fam ily and friends and raised his fist in victory Wednesday night as delegates from the state of California cast the votes putting, him oVer the top in his bid for the Dem ocratic presidential nomination. Dukakis, his w ife, K itty, and children John, Kara and Andrea watched the televised proceedings of die Dem ocratic National Convention from their hotel less than a m ile from the convention half. Sitting behind them was Dukakis’ mother Euterpe. Friends and senior aides sat with them in the room. The assembled group toasted his victory. Arkansas Gov. B ill Clinton, declaring Dukakis has “ the character, the record and the vision” to be president, form ally nominated his friend and fellow Dem ocratic governor in a speech to delegates. “ He hasn’t just played with issues, he’s wrestled them to the ground,” said Clinton. Dukakis had the delegate strength to assure his nomination on the traditional roll call of the states, having captured a numerical lock on the nomination with the California prim ary on June 7. He needed 2,082 delegate votes, a m ajority o f the delegates at the convention, to claim the nomination. B y arrangement, it was the votes of the state of California that put him over the top. • A t the moment o f victory, Dukakis broke into a sm ile and raised his right arm in a fist. His w ife, appearing more exuberant, cheered, clapped and hugged her daughter. Dem ocratic officials, eager to have the nominating roll call occur during the prim e-tim e television view ing hours, cut o ff floor demonstrations for Dukakis after fiv e minutes, following Clinton’s nominating speech. But the long roll call ran beyond 11 p.m. on the East Coast, the end o f the prim e network view ing hours. Jesse Jackson officia lly ended his m averick presidential bid later in the evening, throwing his delegate support to Michael Dukakis in a unity gesture after the Massachusetts governor clinched the Dem ocratic nomination. Jackson watched on television from his hotel suite with his fam ily and advisers as delegates to the Dem ocratic National Convention voted in the roll call o f states to give Dukakis the prize for which the two men had so long competed. Jackson won 1,218.5 votes, fa r m ore than his 1984 showing, but still w ell short o f Dukakis’ 2,876.75 nominating m ajority. Then, when the jast votes had been counted, Jackson’s campaign chairman, California Assem bly Speaker W illie Brown, stepped forw ard to m ove that “ in the spirit o f the Jackson campaign and in the interests o f unity” the Dukakis nomination be made unanimous. The motion carried overwhelm ingly, with a huge chorus of Virginia delegate Jim Jones o f AM gton, Va., left, leads the cheer from the convention floor when his delegation la Introduced in a‘ *' . “ A yes” and only a sm attering o f “ Nos” from disappointed Jackson supporters. Jackson had sent word from his hotel that he would dispatch Brown to “ urge the convention after the official vote to make the nomination of Governor D u k a k is u n a n im o u s ” “ This is the appropriate tim e for the transition of leadership for the fa ll campaign to take place,” Jackson said. Feelings ran strong among many Jackson delegates, and several from M ichigan threatened to walk out when Dukakis was nominated. The protest was averted when two Dukakis delegates agreed to switch their votes to Jackson so the M ichigan delegate count would end in a tie, according to M ayor W alter M oore o f Pontiac, Mich. Jackson’s name was placed in nomination by W illiam W inpisinger, president of the International Association of Machinists, who said the candidate had “ ignited the passionate fires o f justice in our souls.” “ Not .since Hubert H. Humphrey has a presidential candidate elevated the aspirations of workers and championed their quest fo r worker rights to such heights in the mainstream political dialogue,” he said. ' ’ *■ E arlier, Jackson lunched with Dukakis a t the nominee-tobe’s request and also met with Dem ocratic stalwarts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy o f Massachusetts and New York Gov. M ario Cuomo to talk, he said, about helping the Democrats win. The Dukakis-Jackson meeting, the second in three days, lasted about 30 minutes, while senior sta ff members talked for an additional 45 minutes, Dukakis spokesman Dayton Duncan said. “ They have been foes in the prim ary,” Jackson said of the campaign aides. “ They w ill be friends in the fo il.” He said the session was “ basically a get-acquainted meeting for staff and key policy advisers, most o f whom do not know each other but now must work together since we are in the same boat with a common objective -*• that is, to win in Novem ber.” Jackson, speaking before his n am e, was placed in nomination, said that moment would be ‘ “ a great feeling personally. But really, it’s m y name put into nomination for the people who voted for me, but also fo r the people who made it possible,” he said after addressing a brunch sponsored by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. ASU professor jumps into heat of convention battle By M ARTY SAUERZOPF State Press A sso cia te d P re ss photo Dem ocratic presidential hopeful Michael Dukakis, right, shakes hands with the Rev. Jesse Jackson after a m eeting between the two In Atlanta. Dukakis and Jackson met privately to help build cohesion in the Democratic Party. By representing Arizona in the state’s delegation to the Democratic National Convention in Atlanta, ASU political science professor Keith Nicholls has gone from the heat o f the desert to the heat of a {»residential election. “ It’s hot here — in a lot of ways,” Nicholls said in a telephone interview from his hotel Wednesday. Nicholls, attending his first presidential nominating convention, said his election as a delegate was a two-step process. “ In one phase, anyone who is a registered Dem ocrat comes to vote for a presidential candidate and a delegate. The delegates they vote for go mi to a regional caucus. “ I was elected to go to the caucus in the Maricopa County E ast region.” From there Nicholls was selected to represent the state, as a delegate for M ichael Dukakis, at the national convention to participate in the nomination o f a presidential candidate and approval o f a so m ew h a t a b b r e v ia te d D e m o c ra tic platform . “ I had some mixed emotions about it at the outset,” he said about the normally voluminous Dem ocratic platform , which this, y e a r on ly co vers “ about eight typewritten pages.” “ A fter experiencing some of the situation here, I ’ve come to believe that it is a relatively good idea. It is good in its brevity because you can read it.” Nicholls made headlines Tuesday night by voting with Jackson delegates on the issue o f including in* the party platform a statement advocating a “ no first use” policy on nuclear weapons. The “ no first use” statement and the tax provision w ere both defeated. “ That (the exclusion o f the ‘first strike’ statement) suggests that under certain circumstances the United States would be w illing to destroy the world, or initiate the w ar to destroy the world. I think it’s time to rethink our position on certain issues. “ To suggest that w e would be wilting to destroy the world is wrong because w e’re not. So w e’re being in a sense inconsistent. I ’m not suggesting that I know exactly in what direction a new policy should be, but I would like to see some debate on it.” Nicholls praised Tuesday night’s speech by Jesse Jackson as “ a tremendously moving experience fo r all o f us. I haven’t heard anything negative about it.” He did say that a cartoon appearing in the Phoenix Gazette on Tuesday caused a stir among members o f the delegation. The cartoon, which Nicholls described as picturing Jackson as a statue on the White House lawn with a caption o f “ The Democrats finally found what to do with Jesse JacksOn,” was considered offensive by many of the delegates, he said. “ Most of the delegation thought that it was tremendously offensive and insulting in Jesse Jackson’s shining hour to take that approach, and the delegation talked about some sort of response to the Gazette.’- State Press Page 9 Thwsda^Juj^St^l^M Report. ConttniM d from pago 1, include taxing authority, 'ñutes m ay or m ay not increase, depending on what charter (counties) pick.” The state currently sets tax rates. But M aricopa Comity Supervisor Tom Freestone said implementation o f the recommendations would create a m ore costly and less effective government. Although Freestone and House Speaker Joe- Lane, RW ilcox, said they do not agree with the general direction of the report, they approve o f county home rule. In addition, the report also recommends a state-wide sales tax on services. A t present, the state charges taxes “ only m i n i m a l l y , on certain services,” Melnick said. Although Arizonans pay taxes on m ovies, hotel visits and restaurant meals, they do not pay taxes on haircuts, shoe repairs, dry cleaning, accounting, m edical care, legal aid and most other' services, he said. The state must collect m ore tax revenue in order to build and maintain roads, mass transit, schools, hospitals, governm ent buildings and other necessities for. the 3 million residents expected to live in the V alley by the year Melnick said. Sales taxes on services are a good w ay to raise revenue, he said. “ W here is it written that products a re taxed and services are not?” Melnick said, adding that the service industry is grow ing by a ' ‘Wide m argin,” captm ing 90 percent of a ll new jobs before the year 2000. The report also suggests a state-wide tax on real estate tiransfers. Although this tax would apply to the sale o f real estate and not rental payments, “ it could conceivably raise rent” if rental property owners w ere to pass the cost o f the tax oh to their tenants, Melnick said. “ But what w e áre talking about is about a 1 percent increase” in real estate transfer taxes, he said. “ Is 1 percent going to m ake the difference between bring able to rent an apartment or not? Probably not.” I f real estate transfer taxes sim ilar to those recommended in the report had been imposed on a state-wide basis last year, Arizona would have raised another, $150 m illion in revenue, Melnick said. Arizona was the third fastest-growing state between 1980 and 1987, with its populations rising 25 percent, according to analysis o f a recent U.S. Bureau of the Census report by ASU’s Center fo r Business Research. Arizona’s population rose from 2,718,000 on A pril 1,1980, to 3,386,000 on July 1, 1987, an increase o f 668,000. N early twothirds o f the increase was due to m igration from other states. Press contributed to Otis report. The recommendations include: •State-wide sales tax on services. •State-wide tax on real estate transfers. •County home rule. •Less construction on undeveloped land. •A state economic plan. •Regional governments within counties. •A new method of taxing undeveloped urban land. •Heavier compensation for rural areas losing water to urban areas. •Sharing of sales and property tax revenues among Phoenix arid neighboring cities. The state must collect m ors tax revenue in order to build and maintain governm ent buildings, such a s Tem po City Hall (pictured abo ve left), and other necessities fo r the 3 million residents expected to inhabit the Valley by the year 2000, M orrison institute director R ob NM nick said. 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Pagen Honors college at ASU receives from Board of Regents By DARRIN HOSTETLER State P ra n The Arizona Board o f Regents descended from their mountain-top retreat in Flagstaff last weekend after running through a light summer agenda that included the approval o f a plan to farm an ASU Honors College and a decision to grant university employees m erit flay hikes. | 1* , ' In addition, th e ' regents voted 7-2 to a p p ro v e fe d e r a lly fu n ded la n gu age education program s in the “ critica l” foreign languages o f French, German and Spanish. The board m ade its decision despite criticism that Russian and Japanese — languages deemed by some regents to be supplanting the old “ roihance languages” in importance — w ere unfairly left out. Regent and State Superintendent of Public Instruction C. Diane Bishop told the board that the annual $106,200 federal grant earm arked for training elem entary and high school teachers in language instruction should be p artia lly allocated to Russian and Japanese, languages that are “ growing in importance in today’s w orld and must be offered to students by qualified educators.” “ French, Germ an and Spanish are important, but w e must not neglect Others, e s p e c ia lly R u ssian , fo r reason s o f economics and national security,” Bishop said. Regent Donald P itt echoed Bishop’s comments, saying “ w e are rem aining tied to what used tob e instead of what is going to be.” He asked the board to allocate funding to a Russian program. “ W e need to realize that if w e are going to be factors in the international m arket, w e’re going to have to make Chinese, Russian and Japanese available/’ P itt said. The language program s w ere selected by a regent advisory panel o f state university and college professors, which evaluated the proposals and made recommendations to the board. Regent Jack P fister said that since “ there is no indication o f im propriety in the p ro g ra m s e le c tio n p ro c e s s ,” a r e ­ examination would be too expensive and time-consuming. R egent Esther Capin su gg ested th a t o th er la n gu a ges be considered in next year’s selection process. The regents also voted to grant university administrators ami faculty an average pay C . Diane increase o f 2 possibility o f earning m erit increases. The Arizona Legislature gave other state em ployees a 3.5 percent across-the-board pay hike this fiscal year. C lerical and technical sta ff at the universities w ill receive the fla t 3.5 percent increase. Each university is allowed to use 1.5 percent of its total salary budgets fo r m erit pay. ASU has m ore than $1.5 m illion available fo r m erit raises. P fister praised the m erit system, calling it “ vital to raise competitiveness to obtain quality within the university. W e need our universities to work hard, and when they do, they need to be able to garner some rewards.” The ASU Honors College, which w ill replace the U niversity’s honors program, was approved by unanimous consent. Honors College Dean Ted Humphrey said the co llege is necessary to prom ote academ ic excellence and to “ serve as an a d m in istra tive u m b rella” fo r honors students. The new college w ill occupy McClintock H all, which krill house study facilities, a computer room, office space fo r honors administrators and residence hall facilities fo r honors students and others with high G PA ’s. * W HITE RUSSIANS LONG ISLANDS PONY PITCHERS TUBING DOWN THE SALT RIVER y i A l I T \ \ \ \ \ A A R ide « T u b e D ow n the S e ll River T U B E R E N T A L AM D S H U T T LE B U S SE R VIC E A L L -D A Y B A T E S $6.00 p er day per person —' grou p rates available « f f l B \ O r Shuttle B u s ticket only $3 all day \ *4,000 tubes tor rent lo r W * - no p ic k V »o p e n 7 days a w eek, 9 am -7 pm 1 fiver Located 9 m iles north M E SA ■nd tu tfo # 1 at fiie (unction o f Beieh and a ttfl f m U eery H ighw ays. For m ore ¡i\ _ . 0| X T j ) inform ation, phone pow ■ . (0 02) 984-3305 o r write fo r you r free brochure and river map. Authorized by U .S . Forest Service. °* >°v-gc V p- — —— 9 BOTTLED DOMESTIC BEERS QUAALUDES W ATERM ELONS n !$100 f t P P T U B E R EN T A L I V r I Monday thru Friday I 4 of ¡Bring this ad with you for jMRSV 1 CORONAS PACIFICOS MARGARITAS STRAW BERRY MARGS I HûVf T o G e r r t o r n p h o b H/k t o fü ñ j S ^ i J* SC0T7SWW.f; g£2 F I FOR V E 3 40 I O Starting at 7 P.M. N \W m ù»l 4*KMTÙK P.O . Box 6568 M esa, A Z 85216 M£S* T ù li ;« BEEF) m t W ELL & u W INE Ü * MARGS &» SCH N A A PS1 « L.I. ICE O TEAS O ■R E up spi M W Thursday, July 81,1968 WANT TO LOSE WEIGHT FAST? N E V E R BE H U N G R Y A G A IN !! THE SA FE, NATURAL HUNGER SA TISFIER Developed by one of America’s Leading Bariatric Physicians • • • • • • M ED ICA LLY SOUND CLIN ICA LLY T E S T E D SA FE IN EX PEN SIV E E F F E C T IV E PA TEN TED CALL TODAY For Free Sample & Detailed Information UNIVERSITY A.S.U. Mention This Ad For Discount! CAM PUS B U Y • S E L L • TR AD E Your books at Changing H ands. Fo r quality doth and paperbacks (no text­ books. please) w e pay 30% of our re­ sa le price in ca sh or 50% in trade^n credit w hich m ay be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no tradein s on S at. or Sun.) Brow se through our three floors of; •N ew & U sed Books •A rt Prints & Posters •C alen d ers A C ards •Handbound Journals M -F 10-9 SA T 1 M SU N 12-5 K R I S T T S C han gin g Ha n d s 414IMM A venue 966-0203 O ld Tow n Tam p a Arizona's newest and most exclusive talent agency <§* RUNDLE’S z d T K UQU0RS&MKT. N e w Location llfxxxll 1324 W. ( f l v University (just east of Priest) G e o rg e D ic k e l # 8 2 0 0 m l....$ 2 .8 2 A n d re C h a m p a g n e s .............$ 2 .9 6 Milwaukees Best 6 pk...... 4 1 4 $ Used Playboy M agazines..$ .04 Haagen Dais Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines, Groceries, ice, Wines, over 40 imported Seers. j j p | 5705 N. Scottsdale Suite 125 Scottsdale, AZ 85253 967-9079 Ü Call for your audition! Fresh Food Carefully Prepared Daily i Takeout & Delivery i Available Starr D u n n Y 829-1402 9 E .5 U IS L O U lAeroes from the Tempe Mission Palms Hotel) •H e ad ach es • B ack P a in • W h ip lash • N e ck P a in • Shoulder P a in • A ccid en tal Inju ries • A u to A ccid e n t Injuries We will accept your insurance, provide a student discount, with little or no out-of-pocket expense to yo u. Passport Photos 2 for S6.S7 DOUBLE PRINTS 2 fo r 1 8? or F R E E FILM M o n d a ys Wednesday on Develop & Print orders SUNSET CAM ERA Temp« Center — Mill & Univ. 829-0424 TEMPE 9 M | I NEAR ASU ^ £ 3^ Whiplash! 9 6 6 -1 6 3 5 Dr. Donald Nelson 3910 S. Rural Rd. #E StiHNeck &Back! I mcc untem i,:. I P a g e 13 in Chile By ED SCHUBERT S tate P to s* An upcoming plebiscite to decide the fate of Chilean strongman Augusta Pinochet U garte is likely to be very close, according to a Pinochet opponent. Father R afael Maroto, a Catholic priest who has been imprisoned fo r his political activities, told a group o f 20in the MU Coconino Room last week that “ ‘yes’ or ‘no’ could win by 52 percent.” M aroto is a leader o f toe Movement fo r Popular Sovereignty, a m ajor coalition opposed to toe Pinochet and vote "n o.” M aroto listed numerous complaints against Pinochet, including the regim e’s use o f torture and political assassination tom aintain order. H e also said the governm ent has turned vita l social services — schools, public housing, and police — o ver to the private sector, dam aging the public w elfare and Chile’s economy. “ Today the governm ent has given Australian-based multinational corporations rights to the best copper mines and gold mines, and the telephone company,” M aroto said. He said the Oct. 10 plebiscite w ill decide whether Pinochet should rule fo r another eight years. Pinochet cam e to power in a 1973 m ilitary coup which ousted the M arxist regim e o f Salvadore Allende. Marato said toe election is stacked in favor o f Pinochet. Speaking through an interpreter, Maroto said that although the plebiscite would be conducted by secret ballot, “ who knows what toe heck is going to happen. Many things can happen. N egative influences have many ways of influencing the system .” He said that although Pinochet’s opposition is divided over whether to boycott the election, most opponents o f the regim e, including the Communist Party, plan to participate He said the Australian-based BH P Corp. has been given rights to Chile’s best capper mines, w hile the Bond Corp. has been given rights to Chile’s gold mines and telephone company. “ (Th e Bond Corp.) w ill have absolute control o f a ll telephones in Chile,” although the governm ent retains the rig h tto tap phones at w ili, he said. JAPANESE FOOD The $1.99 Chicken Meal Plus! Chile’s mines had been nationalized under the Allende regim e. “ Allende nationalized copper much to the happiness of the people,” M aroto said. “ A t that tim e the people o f Chile felt something special was happening, and that they w ere the ‘boss’ o f their own wealth.” J a c k S M ila y /S ta ta P ie w Father Rafael Maroto, an opponent o f the Chilean regim e of A gusto Pinochet, speak« In the M U Coconino Room. FOR SHE DlSCRtMlSAXINO TASTE! OK O ttlt F A M O U S T F R 1 Y A K I ' • CMICKfiN FO BO N LY SS.ro •TW O PIECES O F CHICKEN (dark or mixed) •REGULAR FRENCH FRIES OR MASHED PO TATO ES ( W h it e s A * 1 0 % O ff any purchase o f $5 o r m ore (excluding aw srd Jackets, B oy Scout equipm ent A sale item s.) •A 14-OUNCE DRINK An alternative to fo u r ro tarn e d tram?.' • SU-TH11 am -IOpm F R -S A 11 am-12 pm Good Only at Apache n j i w i i v aand i i u Terrace le u «* « ^ sJ 1 3 5 E. A P A C H E , TEM PE STUDY LESS LEARN MORE 967-3798 A LL YO U C A N EAT SUSHI BA R •INCREASE CONCENTRATION POWER •OVERCOME PROCRASTINATION AND FEAR OF EXAM S •INCREASE MOTIVATION AND SELF-DISCIPLINE •LEARN SELF-HYPNOSIS •BUILD POSITIVE THOUGHT PATTERNS W E ARE OPEN CALL NOW FOR OUR SU C CESSFU L STUD EN T PROGRAM T IL ARIZONA INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL HYPNOSIS P e r P e rso n 1:00 Between 5:00-6:30 pm Every day, 7 days a week Expires 8-31-88 AM FRI & S A T LLOYD H KOELUNG, M.D. — DIRECTOR 998-0660 i Sum m er Styling with PHD J $ 1 2 .0 0 H aircu ts Reg. «17.00 SA V E «5.00 j includes Shampoo Conditioner & Cut (With Coupon) Reg. $40 In clu des sham poo, conditional A cu t Cellophàne $22.00 S Highlight $30.00 (includes conditioner) | j~ ~ ------------------------— ~ TANNING SESSIONS i M A W rau n ;" 1 A r iz o n a 5Ä 1 IM I Aeach flft h vvisit is it $10 down,« $1.50 Unlimited For One Month (First time clients only with this ad) ¡ r lJ T O J M A j A A f i d d d Mr_in)aäÖpM 9 0 0 - 0 1 1 1 c a lis i f **»**»«* p 933 E . University É Mon.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 1130-4:00 SE Comer Rural &University 5 Ä B e a c h RESTAURANT 1435 E . U n iv e rsity S u ite 11 U n iv e rsity P la za T e m p e , A Z • 967-6911 Thursday, July 21,1988 Tickets C ontinu ed front p eg * 1. instead of in the end zone as originally planned. E ller said the “ accommodation” plan presented is insufficient to pacify angry Sun Angels. “ ASU has kicked its best customers in the teeth, and they are going to have a tough tune in the fa ll selling their season tickets,” he said. “ I would be lying if 1 said that this isn’t going to a ffect how some o f us support the U niversity. “ I f I could get m y money back from the University, I would.” The Sun Angels support ASU’s athletic, education and research program s with money and volunteer efforts. E ller and others who signed the letter, including Pinnacle W est President Keith Turley, financially contributed in the effort to bring the Cardinals to Tem pe by pledging support to build luxury “ skyboxes” at Sun D evil Stadium — a m ove crucial to luring the National Football League franchise. Sun Angel Foundation President Bob Davies said E ller and the other discontented members had “ very legitim ate” concerns, but that the purpose, and mission o f the foundation would be unaffected by the outcome o f the ticket controversy. “ Several o f these upset people put their names and dollars on the line to bring the Cardinals to town, and they deserve some consideration,” he said. “ But our mission is to support the U niversity, and that w ill not change.” Davies said the foundation has received about 100 phone calls and m ore than so letters from members angry about being kicked out o f their seats. H A P P Y H O U R S P E C IA L S THE KAPLAN CURRICULUM FOR CAREER CLIMBERS: W fZ Z A R D S LSfiX GMÄT, MCÄT, GRE, DAT, A dvanced M edical Boards, TOEFL, Nursing Boards, N T E C m , In tra to Law, Speed •C olor. •P erm s Fu ll Set N ails. A U nisex Hairstlyling Studio Tues-Thurs 9a.m .-7p.m . Fri & Sat 9a.m .-5p.m . 1041 E .; Lem on Tem pe 987-2360 AND MORE. Leaving for the coast.. . ;; For nearly 50 years, Stanley H. Kaplan h as prepared over 1 million students for adm ission an d licensing tests. So before yo u take a test, prepare with the best. Kaplan. A g o o d score m ay hek> change yo ur life. Get your Honda checked by certified Honda technicians at the lowest prices in the Valley. Come see... 2 FOR! With less than lith e calories of icecream, H e H o nd a D o cto r • 15,000 m ile service___ _______ $90 • 30,000 m ile serv ice..................S i3 5 • F u ll T une-up (79 & up)_____.,...$54 fills y w up. not out So w pig out at Penguin’s. And vj outfox everyone else. \ Coupon good for a small, medium or large cup of yogurt - fl v (Includes parts ft labor) (Summer Classes Starting NOW) Enroll now and receive the next two test dates FREE! • F o r A m erican car rep air call 966-8542 717 S. Hacienda Dr., #107 • Tempe CA LL 967-7282 3rd & Mill, Hayden Square Not va8dwith any other coupon. Hours: M on.-Fri., 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. • Tues, ft Thurs. *0 8 • S a t, 9*1 (Tues, ft Thurs. by Appointment Only) a p o F4nIYIILYu H4nIR CUTTERS" e n s F R E E S H A M P O O WITH THE Try State Press Classified Advertising... before you reach the end of your rope. A P e r f e c t C u t E v e r y T im e No appointment necessary ever! Bring the whole family V B I orient D e s ig n e r P e r m ” | FdmiLY HdIR CUTTERS University & Rural Rd. CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 968-8008 H o u rs : M o n .-rFrj. 9 -9 • S a t. 9 -7 • S u n . 12 -5 Includes: • Sham poo and D esig n er Perm •P e rfe c t C ut •S ty lin g t,ong h«ir slightly higher 198 ’ IMP Appoinim enis Eam ity W ar CuW m arts & entertainment State m s g Thursday. July 91.1988 P age 15 Tempe’s Chuck Hall endears the sizzling blues to our town too early to tell,” H all says o f how the tapes w ill be received. play in downtown Tem pe instills unmistakable ¡Hide*. H e’s hero, sawing chords in a local pub, and making noises like the b ig players, providing b elief that one day he’sgoin g to be famous. But for now Chuck HaD is raising the roof with us. O f course, neither Chuck H all nor his Brick WaH, Tem pe’s B o y blues/not blues bar band, belongs to anyone, much as the patrons o f Long Wong’s and Tony’s New Yorker nightclubs would have it otherwise. He’s m erely a favorite son; a secondnephew with loads of potential seem ingly about to graduate to bigger horizons. Popular feelin g is that with luck, it’s only a m atter o f tim e before the Brick W all makes the b ig tim e. Chuck H all, nearing the eve o f another stint on the road, this tim e up the coast of California, would obviously hope so. His toinr, beginning around August l, w ill concentrate on the San Francisco Bay Area and Fresno dubs, where M iller Genuine D raft w ill precede them. M iller has been providing the group with Manager Paul Dorman says som e word has com e in , h o w ever, m ost o f it disappointing. “ A lo t won’t even look at ’em if they’re unsolicited,” he says o f demo tapes. “ V irgin and RCA both turned it dwrn.” RCA, however, w ill feature H all, along with the 26 other M iller D raft bands, on a “ it’s a great association (w ith M iller Genuine Draft). It’s like, ‘H ere co m es a sh ow from out o f tow n. ’ ” compilation disc, according to Dorman. The band’s prem iere release, an album sim ply titled “ Chuck Hall* and the Brick W all,” was w ell-received by critics — “ Hall finds his own raucous voice, tone-wise,” said G u itar P la y e r February 1988 issue. m agazin e in its H all says the band’s current demo reflects a newer, much-evolved version o f the group. publicity in exchange for letting Hall grind out their ad themes. Chuck H all is one o f 26 bands from around the U.S. enlisted by M iller to do promotional radio and (Hint ads. Other groups on its list include college favorites the Untouchables and the K iller The company, in turn, provides promotion for the band’s appearances. H all’s M iller Genuine D raft radio ads can currently be heard on Phoenix radio stations. Those ads have been one sign fueling the fears o f Tem pe, that Chuck wUl be heading out soon. “ It’s a great association,” he says o f the pairing with M iller. “ It’s like ‘ Here comes a show from out o f town.’ It ’s much better than goin’ in od d .” Ic y receptions are not a b ig weary, however. Years o f playing clubs have made the Brick W all solid; fo r now it divides energy between playing strong gigs and searching fo r larger numbers. The band’s currently in the process of m ailing demos to m ajor record labels. “ It ’s He soys he’s as happy with the first album, released in Novem ber 1987, as he could be. “ It ’s a good representation o f the band a t the tune,” he says, “ but it was already kinda dated when it cam e out.” Recording fo r it was actually completed in September 1986. Th e group, including bassist Scott Andrews and drummer Mark Riggs, has changed considerably since 1966, H all says. Previously faithful to the blues, his newer stuff is “ half blues, half progression. There’s m ore soul and feelin ’ in it.” It’s a much bigger sound, he indicates, and suited fo r a larger audience. “ It’s tim e to conquer a few new grounds,” he laughs. His tone, however, suggests he’s avoiding too confident a stance — he knows there’s still every chance the W all could rem ain in Tem pe. E xclusively in Tempe. But that m ight not be so bad. “ This is our home base,” H all says. “ We’ll never be too big fo r Tem pe.” The collective sigh o f relief, em anating from Tem pe’s many blues and rock clubs, can almost be heard over at RCA. The Duke: AN the jazz from those who knew him best By LAURIE SMITH Sbrte P ress Does the impending w ail of “ Mood Indigo!’ m ove you into an instinctive sway? Does the promise o f “ Ad Lib on Nippon” fill you with nostalgia for the im m ortal “ Jazz A ge?” Does the sensual sound of the “ Creole Love Call” give you chills and leave you longing for steam y Harlem clubs and even steam ier jazz? I f you answered yes to any o f the above then you w ill probably be more than melancholy if you missed “ A Duke Named EUington,” shown on K AE T, Channel 8 July 18. Ducky for EUington fans, the program was only part one of a two-part tribute to Edward Kennedy Ellington, better known as “ The Duke.” P a rt two w ill a ir a t 9 p.m. Monday, July 25. It is a tribute that should not be missed. •Another reason beside “ Sesame Street” to watch PBS: “ A Duke Nam ed EUington” is presented as part of the acclaim ed “ Am erican M asters” T V series produced by Susan Lacy and presented by WNET/New York. The absence of irritating com m ercials and the typical pressure com m ercial channels are- subject to has offered PBS the opportunity to create a feature on the Duke that is not only inform ative, but also enjoyable. It proceeds from fram e to fram e in a relaxed pace, aUowing the die-hard television Ellington fan to sit com fortably in his own sentiment. The credit belongs to Terry Carter who produced, directed and narrated “ A Duke Named EUington. ” He has com piled a tribute that is just that — a tribute. Carter has kept editorializing down to an absolute minimum so the music creates it’s own history, it’s own story. P a rt one concentrated on the growth of the EUington band and the unique success it generated for more thap 47 years. Carter opened the series, explaining that this is “ the story of the EUington expérience as revealed by Duke him self and those who knew him best.” Marvelous black-and-white footage (m ost o f which was shot in Europe and la now to Am erican audiences), along with testimony from Ellington’s faithful band members took view ers on an excursion through the Jazz Age o f t|he 1920’s. The Cotton Club and the “ Harlem Renaissance” are the real stars of the series. Interview s with band members such as trumpeter Clark Terry, drummer Louis Bellson and singer Adelaide Hall bring the era. to life and outline Ellington’s talents in much earned praise. Tu rn to Th e D uke, page 19. “ A Duke Named Ellington,” a two-part musical portrait o f the com poser and band leader, prem iered on KAET Channel 8’s “ Am erican M asters” July 18. Part two airs Monday, July 25. Page 16 Thursday, July 81,1988 Caff Class-ino: This could be a beautiful friendship By SCO TT C . SECKEL State Press Back during the twenties and thirties, there w ere sm all restaurants and cafes in the great cities o f the w orld where intellectuals (dotted revolutions, authors spent their royalty checks fo r the next month in one night and painters swapped canvases fo r drinks. These (daces w ere cramped, but appealing to the customer’s sense of aesthetics. But what happened to the hangouts w here m odernist art and literatu re w ere developed? Is cafe society dead? W ell, the revolutionaries have awoken to an ugly morning and the w riters are penning workout books, but som e of the bistros are still around. A new place in the old tradition is A n n a ’s Cafe, located at 9 E. Fifth St., Tempe. Anna’s, an intim ate restaurant o f nine tables, until now has served lunch, but w ill also open for dinner lata* this week. A fresh look and humbly superb food are the ch ief attractions at Anna’s. Attention to detail, usually the tradem ark of a good place, is im m ediately evident in the cleanliness and the decor. The feeling that the owners bought an art gallery, installed tables and chairs, and, by the way, just happen to serve food, comes across. Photo collages are displayed along the white w alls (properly installed at eye level fo r view in g), the floor is painted in gray and white m arble-like swirls and the tables are criss-crossed with pink and gray lines o f paint. The art is the work o f Susan Zimmerman, and according to co-owner lin o Scalise, is on consignment from the Elaine Horwitz G allery in Scottsdale. Scalise said that the exhibitions w ill be changed periodically. In spite o f the sense o f re lie f brought on by the discovery o f a cafe where im a g i n a t io n has triumphed over the neon-anddisco tyranny currently prevalent in Tempe, looks aren’t everything; substantial bliss sinks in with the first plate set down in front o f a hungry gullet. The cafe specializes in salads and sandwiches, but a sm attering o f hot m eals are also on the menu. Prices are extrem ely reasonable, ranging from $3.50 to $5.95 for last Tuesday’s special (N ew Zealand cockles cooked in their own broth with julienned vegetables and fresh baguette), I inn Ire tta o .p art owner rtf fttmn’i Cafe, ° g 5th f ■, teihpe, stands in front of his eatery,which features a variety of san d w ich ««, ««tad« «nd a— food. The cockles w ere tender, but not overwhelm ed by the chives and garlic. An extra plate fo r d ie em pty shells was considerate and the French bread to sop up the broth was excellent — unpretentious and tasty, too. Smoked trout with pasta was sampled. The plate w as a little «m all but it was gooood. The fish is home-smoked, as is the chicken. It was a novel taste; apparently not enough. Co-owner P e t » Dower puts great care into every dish and frequently com es out to ask diners if they’re enjoying their m eals. Service was attentive and sincere. The latter is rare; ■ cuisine ■ it’s in itially difficu lt adjusting to not feeling the staff wishes you w ere elsewhere, or that you’ve comm itted the m ortal sin o f actually asking fo r something, like a few places close to campdh, not mentioned here by name. A ll seafood is fresh. I f it isn’t, it won’t be served. Scalise Turn to Anna's, pags 1 i. 79° 99° Well Drinks everyday Coors Light Draft Day & Night everyday FuH Service Bar $ 1 .9 9 Pitchers Everyday N ew Attraction G reat Selection of Food with D aily Lunch & D inner S p ecials W e accept V isa & M asterCard S cre e n T .V .s S p o rts & C ab le 625 East Apache I[Just West of Rural) 829-9440 n ■ ■ m■ ■ ■ u Q u e s t io n : L e t What’s Cookin’ at Banders ¿ M e G e t R ig h t T o T h e P o i n t . . STUDIOS TO 3 BEDROOMS 3 MILES FROM ASU A n sw er: 39 s a q s iQ e ^ s e j ‘s x a S x n g ‘s d n o $ a p B u ia u io j j v N O W O PEN F O R L U N C H & D IN N E R N O W SERVING F id d jrftc m d CHRISTOPHER-JOSEPH CREAMY LIG H T & PREM IUM ALE C oae risk Arizona’s 1st ft only Brew Fab and taste freshly brewed beer with no chemicals or preservatives. BOTH C O R A L POINT AND LAGUNA O FFER: Rich with Amenities and Activities Laguna & Coral Point offer Furnished ft Unfurnished Units Cable T.V. Available Custom M ini Blinds Throughout Washers / Dryers la select uniti W oodbum ing Fireplaces in select units Large Sparkling Heated Fools And Jacuzzi Sand VolleybaH Court A P iIC H E B LV D ./M A IN S T M E ET m A SU i 2 0 • Ë z Ul O S 8 . 0. 1 • • • • • • • z o *W 9 g COMAL POINT O LAGUNA POINT O (Mention this ad for Additional Savings) e SUP Service a Mountain Befl Telephone Service Stud ent D isco u n ts 2343 W est M ain Street, M esa Private Pattar / Balconies Fifth St. & Forest 9 6 6 -4 4 3 8 M A K E I T A P O IN T T O S E E C lub Room s Tennis C ourts In d o o r raquetball Cxorcise Facilities Ramadas & Barbeque areas C overed Barking P u b lic Transit to A SU 150 S. R o o sevelt, M esa T H E M B O T H ! S ta ic i Page 17 Thursday, July 2 1 ,1 9 8 8 G e t t in g C h ills Living the summer in a place not fit for the M arcos family degrees. M y mother can bake a nut roll at 116 degrees. So can m y father, on a good day. Needless to say, that’s hot, no m atter what kind of heat it is, and it takes a special kind of individual to brave the temperatures of what Omar Sharif called the Sun’s Anvil. Howell J. Malham Arts Or was it Larry Linville? Regardless, those who choose to carry out a desolate yet sem i-fulfilling existence here, in the Valley of the Sun, should have some type o f social agenda to make life slightly more bearable. A fter months o f spiritless research and scores o f. collect calls, I accomplished nothing. How does one spend a summer in Arizona? Some locals, say you go to California. Others sim ply claim that since the sun offers a “ dry kind o f heat,” you tough it out. W ell, that makes fo r good sm all talk until the m ercury scream s out a “ dry” 116 However, after a few spins around Tempe, I managed to honestly examine the 1 ■ si pr H H mm Su san Schum an/State P re ss A lioness endures the heat at the Phoenix Zoo. IlSm il FRESH-CUT FRIES OUTSIDE OF IDAHO?? A T DICK'S, OF COURSE!! ,A Z DICK’S Í social atmosphere o f the V alley. What follows is an array o f activities carefully designed to shatter the nagging myth that Arizona is nothing but heat, Circle Ks and' chiropractors. •A day at the Zoo — A fter any Goldwater’s outlet store, the Phoenix Zoo is the place to be, especially in mid-July at high noon. One can derive an indescribable amount of pleasure by visiting a ll the exhibits with no anim als: Though the sm ell lingers, the heated beasts usually disappear into the pleasures o f cooler confines. The em pty c a g e s , c o m b in ed w ith th e s p a rs e attendence, are really quite uninspiring, but the zoo’s cheaper than cable television, which, incidentally, is currently showing “ H arry and the Hendersons” fiv e tim es an hour. •Clubbing for Dollars — As in any bustling metropolis, the V alley’s after hours scene is . a vast, florescent wasteland, where shark and salesman bump elbows in an effort to find a m ate fo r life, or for the moment. But if the perpetual fea r o f spending $75 in one evening and only getting two drinks out o f the deal is too discouraging, head for Tem pe’s best kept secret — The Am igo Room at Denny’s, 1343 W. Broadway Road, Tem pe. The pale vinyl booths and shag carpet w all hangings succeed in making the Am igo’s ambiance as quaint as M axim ’s and cozier than a hardware store. Regulars are rumored to include G ore Vidal, Malcom Forbes, Cher, Catherine Deneuve, J.R. Nelson, L a rry L in ville (carpools with Malcom Forbes) and B ill Wyman (carpools with Sam Donaldson, Ted Koppel, Joe G aragiola and C haro). Perhaps that description’s a little lofty, but the place does have a reputation to keep up. •A Pledge to the G reeks— Now, w e a ll know ¡COCKTAILS Susan Schum an/State P re ss Denny’s restaurant, 1343 W . Broadway Road, hides Tem pe’s beat-kept secret, The Am igo Room. how difficu lt pledging a fraternity can be during the summer months. But you aspiring members should get a jump on fa ll rushees and become acquainted with some o f the fraternity die-hards, and if you’re lucky, get a spanking on your buttocks. This means they like you. •Some miscellaneous pastimes — Dialing any o f toe numerous so-called “ gab” phone services, including the UFO hotline, the E lvis hotline and Freak Phone, to name a few. Other personal, econom ical and obscure favorite summer pastimes happen to be hanging out in the parking lot o f the ABC W elding School and redirecting traffic, and fittin g Phoenix M ayor T erry Goddard for steel-toed w ing tips, with matching leather knickers. Go on, take your guess! And though few o f th e preced in g suggestions a re form idable methods of b ra v in g the Sonoran Sum m er, th ey certainly are m ore enjoyable than spending tim e prepping your cooler fo r the upcoming losing season o f the Phoenix Cardinals . . . that is, unless you’ve got a skybox. Y KNOT PARTY SH O PPE B E S T DAM N B R E A K F A S T IN TH E W EST! May’s Best of the West Restaurant SW Corner of University &Hardy Mon-Sat 6a.m.-2p.m. Tempe Sun &Holidays 7:30 a.m.-1 p.m. 967-9607 “Wedding and Party Specialists” SUMMER SPECIALS • Helium Balloons • Flower Arrangements (Visa & Mastercard Accepted) 9 6 7 -4 4 9 5 University Plaza 1415 E. University, #6 Tempe, a z 85281 t 0 0D & C 0 0f c ■S * * » « « « f MOIVFn 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat 10 a.m.-4 p.m. P I Z Z A ’* A ll YOU CAN EAT PIZZA & SALAD &PASTA. V« ■ With this ad Buffet Only • LAR G E SODA & C H IP S W IT H PU R C H A SE OF A N Y 6” SUB Res. $3.39 B y P o p u la r D em an d ! N ow A v a ila b le E v e ry N ight fo r D in n e r 5-8 E v e ry D a y fo r L u n c h 11-2 UNIVERSITY N O T G O O D W ITH A N Y OTHER OFFER. C O U PO N EXPIRES 7-31-88. CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL • 967-1114 B U Y O N E SN O A N D G E T TH E 2N D O N E O F E Q U A L O R LESSOR V A L U E F R E E ! N O f GOOD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. COUPON EXPIRE? 7-31-88. CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL • 967-1114 3 TEMPE • 945 S . MILL ( A t 10th) O n egcu , FREE S N O ! TEMPE CENTER i i $2.00 OFF D elivers Freel Kids under s eat FREE0 Ages 5-10 only 394 per year o f age 10TH D E U V E R y C O U P O N ANY LARGE PIZZA 8 9 4 -1 * 1 PH . i $1.00 OFF ANY MEDIUM PIZZA | Good tor eat-in, carry-out, delivery Limited Delivery Area O w / c u t * '* p iz z a j | Present tNs coupon vrften ordering. One coupon per customer. Not 30CXJ with any.other offer. COUPON EXPIRES 8-4-88. Jjj P ag e 18 me* Thursday, July 81,1908 S ta te F l W Guitar great Les Paul still plucks the strings at 13 NEW Y O R K (A P ) — Les Paul sat on a stool at a basement ja zz club on the Low er East Side, the fingers of his left hand cascading down the neck of his guitar in soft, precise steps. A t 73, the greatness o f his guitar still draws laughs, sighs and applause from audiences at F at Tuesday’s. F or the past four years he and his three-piece group have been playing clubs, perform ing the same m ellow standards Paul has done for decades. Some of them — “ Via Con Dios,” ‘ ‘How High the Moon” — w ere songs made famous during his long partnership with his ex-wife, the late singer M ary Ford, from whom he was divorced in 1962. Younger musical stars such as Led Zeppelin’s Jimm y Page, D ire Strait’s Mark Knopfler and Dutch guitarist Eddie Van Halen come to pay tribute and sit in with a musician who did it first and who many believe still does it best. “ In m y lifetim e, the guitar hasn’t changed enough to put in your hat,” Paul said, picking an im aginary guitar. “ Whether you’re Segovia or Van Halen, you can’t do anything unless you can do it here.” Paul, a musician-composer-designer-inventor, is the acknowledged father o f electronic music. In 1937, he became the first m ajor artist to play electric guitar when the 65 members of Fred W aring’s Pennsylvanians big band voted unanimously to let Paul play his am plified contraption. “ Suddenly it was recognized that power was a very important part o f m usic,” he said in an interview . “ To have the dynamics, to have the w ay o f expressing yourself beyond the normal lim its of an unam plified instrument, was incredible. Today a guy wouldn’ t think o f singing a song on a stage without a microphone and a sound system. “ But today, there are a lot o f parents who blam e Les Paul for all the racket going on in their basement,” he .said with a sm ile, a reference to the thousands o f teen-agers whose love a ffa ir with the guitar is expressed in decibels. For seven years in the 1950s, Paul and Ford broadcast a TV show from their home in Mahwah, N.J., which the Listerine C o.— sponsor o f the show — bought fo r the couple to get them to m ove to New Jersey from California. It was with Ford that Paul developed two-track recording, known today as dubbing, a process that revolutionized recording in the ’40s and is the backbone o f studio work today. The guitar that bears his name, the Les Paul, is a legend in its own right made by the Gibson Co. of Nashville, Tenn. The list o f rock and fusion jazz musicians who choose to play it reads like a who’s who o f m odem popular music: blues m aster B.B. King, P ete Townsend o f The Who, Steve Howe of Yes, jazz great A1 DiMeola, Led Zeppelin’s P age and Paul McCartney, who with Paul’s help designed his own custom version o f the guitar. In turn, two generations o f aspiring guitarists have saved their money fo r Les Pauls. The most popular model today sells fo r between $800 and $900. It is the Les Pauls’ bigger, “ fatter” sound that attracted musicians back in the late ’50s, when the first o f the classically inspired guitars was produced. The Les Pauls’ innovation was the use o f two double-coiled pick-ups that reduced the twang of other guitars and gave the musician a broader range o f sounds as the change the tone or volume on each pick-up. Paul Jernigan, Gibson’s marketing director, said sales figures for the guitar are kept confidential but the 12 Les Paul models continue to grow in popularity and the company now has six months worth o f back orders. The instrument’s main competition for nearly two decades has been the Fender Stratocaster, a lighter guitar with a dram atiely molded body. The Stratocaster, or Strat, as it is commonly known, has its own claim oh guitar aristocracy: Jim i Hendrix played a Strat (and burned several on stage); E ric Clapton and Robin Trow er both prefer the Fenders. Ironically, Paul said, most kids these days know what a Les Paul is, but not who he is. He also has m ixed feelings about today’s rock ’n’ roll and the w ay his guitar is now being used. He hates distortion and electronic gim micks. “ They’re just ways o f hiding what the guitarist can’t do with these, ” he said, w iggling his fingers. SPECIAL STUDENT FARES FIRE ENGINE TOURS SEDONA Round tr ip from Phoenix CHICAGO................... .$175 NEW YORK....... I------ $ 1 » DENVER................ $148 MIAMI..... $2581 MILWAUKEE.........;.......$170 BOSTON ............ l......,.$1«8 SALT LAKE CITY.......... $188 CEDAR RAPIDS........... $178 PORTLAND......... ....... $188 ORLANDO....;................$258 DETROIT..... ..„.,..........$188 KANSAS CITY.....,*.„..,.$150 COLORADO SPRINGS..$148 MINNEAPOLIS.............. $188 SAN FRANCISCO.........$116 SAINT LOUIS..... * 17* Catch the Tours in Old Sedona or For Special Tours call OTHER CITIESAVAILABLE M IL L T R A ll 282-6085 966-6300 RESTRICTIONS APPLY. SUBJECT T O AVAILABILITY. The Latest Nagel poster! Only "Seo.OO” framed with this coupon... Order yours now! FR EE SEM IN AR ON LAW SCHOOL AD M ISSIO N S ’How you can get into the Law School of Your Choice." Guest Speaker: BHdll Mllfpliy (Director of Admissions, ASU Law School) H A N G IN T H E R E August 3 ,1 9 8 8 , 6:00 PM Great Hall (Law Building) 3 E. 5th S t * 894-1520 For more information f KAPLAN 967-2967 STANLfY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. UTTER« BIG BED SALE- Your Campus Hair Care Center Piece Oak Finish Bedroom Set 709 S . F o r e s t A v e . , T e m p e Introducing Nalls by Kelly S158 968-5946 W ith This Ad $500 OFF Sof$ & Love Seat 4% £% 9 IDO W ith P a r tic ip a tin g S ty lis ts R E G U L A R P R IC E S •Shampoo •Precision Cut / ‘ Condition ' »Blow Dry MEN *14 • WOMEN *16 OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY T w in S e t $ 7 8 F u ll S e t 88 Q ueen S e t 1 2 8 K in g Set,, 188 B ean Bag 28 s u til **P L U 8 Clearance Center 9 6 6 - 6 2 5 2 In Tempe flNNHB triadi 2077 E. U n iv e rsity U-LjOilJ A ls o s e ts at $249 and $299 Page 19 U l t PW » The Duke. Oontliwsd from pogo IS. • A r t fu l direction makes it a sin to miss Part Two Clark T erry seemed to say it best: “ (H ie Duke) could actually ¡day the band the way the average cat plays his instrument.” Keeping with tradition, Carter allowed Fiiingtnn to “ play” his series as w ell as he played his band. Carter’s direction profiles the band memebers in a w ay that gives the view er an understanding o f how they w ere able to juggle successfully with every demanding E llin gton note. H e p rofiles Ellington directly through his music — allowing the power of The Duke’s genius to parade on screen in smooth, m usical movements. The unassuming narration only highlights the distinctive w ails that wrap around your ears and leave an unmistakable Ellington imprint, inside and out. Part two w ill naturally proceed from where the first part left off. Carter w ill profile the later years of the Duke’s career, following his transition from jungle music into m ore extended works such as ballets and sacred music. I t w ill fe a tu re h is m ost fam ou s compositions — “ Take the A Train” and “ Mood Indigo” — along with the historic Newport Jazz Festival and the Duke’s partnership with composer B illy Strayhom. P a rt one proved a rew arding and entertaining hour. It was an inform ative, suave feature that supplied a il o f the jazz, all o f the enthusiasm minus the hype a com m ercial channel would typically inject. Ellington fans who missed the first part can only hope the second is equally enticing. Tune in Monday to find out. Anna’s Continued from pogo A M asters-ful Listing The following is a list o f the programs that w ill be part o f the PBS series, “ Am erican M asters” : •July 25 at 9 p.m .: “ A Duke Named Kiiington — P a rt Two” w ill feature the life and works o f Edward Kennedy Ellington, featuring interview s with the Duke him self as w ell as his band members and those who w ere influenced by Mm during the “ Jazz A ge” of the 1920s. •Aug. 1 at 9 p.m .: “ Directed by W illiam W yler” w ill profile the director o f such m ovies as “ Wuthering Heights,” “ Ben Hur” and “ Funny G irl.” •Aug. 8 at 9 p.m .: -“ Andre Kertesz of the Cities” is a tribute to photographer Andre K ertesz that w ill trace his travels through New York, Budapest and Paris and define the influence those cities had on the work completed during his 73-year career as a photojournalist. •Aug. 15 at 9 p.m. : “ The Ten-Year Lunch: The W it and Legend o f the Alogonquin Round Table” won the 1987 Academ y A w ard fo r Best Featu re Documentary And profiles the famous group that spent its lunch tim e a t the Alogonquin Hotel during the 1920s. H ie group included Dorothy Parker and Robert Benchley. •Aug. 25 at 11 p.m .: “ Aretha Franklin: The Queen of Soul” follow s Franklin’s career from her days as a gospel singer to her present status. It includes interview s with Whitney Houston, Ray Charles and Smokey Robinson. •Aug. 29 at 9 p.m .: “ R ivera in Am erica” is a portrait o f M exican artist Diego R ivera who was “ credited with the réintroduction o f classic Renaissance fresco painting to the architecture of public building and spaces.” 16. said that the bread, tomato sauce and desserts are all homemade. Tom ato sauce is m eaty, not soupy. Parm esan cheese fo r the pasta is ground at the table. The honey lemonade is worth a shot, as is the espresso. The espressos w ere so good that one customer fe lt the need to drink three. Cappucino also awaits. I f Anna’s can hang on until fa ll, it looks like it’ll be a tot. The abundance o f art and lack o f a T V set w ill hopefully fend o ff th e b iirrito-a n d -d o u b le-k n it crow d , p ro vo k in g conversation instead. W ith very reasonable prices, great service and a loose ambience, D ower and Scalise are fillin g a gaping hole; let’s hope they succeed. N ow A v a ila b le HAYDEN'S FERRY REVIEW 3 ASU’s lite ra ry m agazine featuring □ p o etry □ a rt □ fiction □ interview w ith John NOW available M atthew s cen ter ASU Bookstore Changing Hands Bookstore Books E tc Shakespeare Beethoven in The Borgata MORE THAN COPIES Copies • Floppy Disks Binding ' V- • Specialty Papers Cutting, Padding, & Folding * Passport Photos Fax Service • Oversize Copies Stationery & Office Supplies • Color Copies kink»*» the copy center ¡8 8 1 kinko's am center t 1/2 X VI’ 7»Stumim*»' 933I Univnsity/IH-W Unmnity It Hardy/921-Olil B40WSouthmi/#*-5516 •O p *« 2 4 H ew n ! At-CarfRJr «ip take tender natural breasts ot chicken witnout me sign, cnarraoii m b d , put than on delicious hooey wheat buns and create two great chicken sandwiches. The Charbroiler Chicken dub with bacon, swiss cheese and sprouts. And our anginalCharbroiler BBQ G i ^ fja w fs Cad's own hickory barbecue sauce. Buy One Charbroiler Chicken Club Sandwich™ I Get One Free, I rvalidthroughAugust4,1988atthe I OUnttelvaralty *ndRural location. P re se n t th is co u p o n w h e n yo u p u rc h a se a n y C h a rb ro ile r C h ic k e n C lu b S a n d w ic h ^ a n d re c e iv e a se c o n d C h a rb ro ile r C h ic k e n C lu b S a n d w ic h ™ o f e q u a l o r le s s e r v a lu e fre e . Goad thru August 31, 1988 One coupon p ar customer par, vUt. One discount par coupon. 7»SFonst/89*WM* 93J E. Umvetsity/894-W University & Hardy/92I-OI68 M esa 1840 W. Soulhem/969-3326 * O p * n 2 4 H o u rs ! _ Buy One TM Charbroiler BBQ Chicken Sandwich Get One Free. P re s e n t th is co u p o n w h e n yo u p u rc h a se a n y C h a rb ro ile r BBQ C h ic k e n S a n d w ich *™ a n d re c e iv e e se c o n d C h a rb ro ile r BBQ C h ic k e n Sand w ichSM o f e q u a l o r le a s e r v a lu e fre e . Otter valid through August 4,1988 at the University and Rural location. ■» . » Not vMw ithanyotherotterordiscount P a M W JEW j Jj&ÇatlKarcherEnterprises. Inc. 1987. w » w .f One coupon par cuatomar par triad. On# discount par coupon. MotvaWwithanyaltarotterordknint ^ Kaw^ierEnteIPri* s' tac 1987. Carfs Jr. Page 20 * Thundaft July 81,1988 ^ ^ i......... .... THE CORNERSTONE \ R u ra l & U n ive rsity open K M o W 'Su t JjjfiM BaS 829-1743 y ^ “ v y Sun 12-6 dont forget the. . o n4t/gcsr/5~/.; ? ---------- ------ M ,, ' ----------------------^ K e Q C h A S U W u b a 0V * d / « f t / S Thc^Area’s Largest Selection of ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Clothing & Souvenirs : ~~ M /eey— V * deadh*t Ao^u^t/o// y . lfftlI a hapri Arc you 3 hard. working, sales oriented people person in search of a flexible job that has great earning potential? ■ ■ ■ Then we've got a great job-for you as an advertising representative for the ASU Student Hancfoook and Calendar. Successful candidates must be.mature, business oriented, dependable, aggressive, motivated, communicative, eager to make money and able to work as e team to achieve sales goels. Good presentation skills are a must. Earning potential is unlimited and the hours are extremely flexible. A car is needed as well as professional dress. rT> if; I p o iM f r H > l f'S h U tcrfu M ! ^ f ,. • e T A ig - p R g ^ s ~ , ■^^HEvop'I^Sp . j ^ ^ A P M C e n s g g S V __ • , . jj^ H L ^ -. a& a i | f r ' .^X National s O^T V winner will J2 m y \ - ¡¡¡¡¡j ™. \«K T w •”' -• b ^ ¡\ iRABireaisitea \ § v C« \ J* te ^ 88® M r : - * • ________ ^S aB r H P IS I I . pvh«*,v __JEWEtKiis ■ ' R ^ ^ g Jjp P ^ T * ^*'"^ :;,^ ¿^ jp p P p t .; j_ N /g jfiffiflSfci I R 3 M S IM M S M M H iff jJ L a u ig jL jAdKIE ELDRIDGE • 965-6555 (OR STOP BY MATTHEWS CENTER BASEMENT] ' w - _ _ — — ------------------------------- )w w Thursda£J¡í£ Musical bands slated to visit the Valley in upcom ing w eeks in­ clude, clockwise from left: Peter Murphy, Thursday, A ug. 11 at the Celebrity Theatre; M arla Conchlta A lonso Band, Sunday, July 24 at the Celebrity Theatre; Bruce Hornsby and the Range, Monday, A ug. 15, at the M esa Amphitheater. Keep your cool all summer in cottons from Buffalo Exchange We buy, sell and trade fashionable clothing in natural fibers. Just what you need for summer. Expires 11/30/86 525 S. Forest Tempe 921 -3611 227 W. University Or. Tempe •968-2557 W AREH OUSE D ELI & PUB Esiab. 19' 'The Family " G o o d F o o d & D rin k " 9 6 6 -7 7 130 E. University Dr. at Forest Let s Get Acquainted Breakfast scrambled eggs hashbrowns wheat toast butter & jam 921 E. University Tempe 894-8868 CHEESE STEAKS. HOAGIES, PIZZA, ITALIAN DISHES, CALZONES Fajita Prim a FR ESH SO U TH W EST FOOD & FA ST S ER V IC E FEATURING G R EA T FAJITAS All Natural Ingredients/No Additives or Preservatives N EW ! Served Mon.-Fri. 7 :0 0 - 1 0 :3 0 a.m FatttaUt* only 250 colorios $ 1.69 Cornerstone ummmmmmmmmmmmm Rural & University BREAKFAST 921-1230 Takeout orders welcome Fast * Fresh make the difference Thursday, Ju ly g l, 1989 classifieds announcements autos for talc R EN A U LT EN C O R E S L8 5 5-door hatch­ back, fully equiped, new transm ission. W AN TED, FEM A LE, m odal* with long hair for aplrai perm d e sse s. Phoenix Hair Com pany, Ricardo, 258-1906. $3009. 831-8798. ifioÉoiicyclcs for airtps for sale 1980 KAW ASAKI 750 LT D , black. 4 cylinder, 4 stroke, low m ileage, great condition, super transportation. $900. Can E ric . 831-2501. 1963 R A M B LER . Power steering, power brakes, AM radio. Rebuilt V8. R un s well. $900. 968-9858. 1963 M ITSU BISH I Oordia, air, 4-speed, AM/FM, best offer. Contact Ron, after 5, at 829-1634. 1981 KAW ASAKI 650 C S R . Fully dressed, stereo, runs great. $700. C all Rod or R andi 861-3831. 1984 C O N V ER TIB LE Rabbit, cham pagne color, low m iles, new top, alarm . $8000 or best offer. 995-9318. 1986 HONDA R eflex, 200cc, on/off road, like new . 850 m iles. $900.969-8457, leave m essage. 1985 FIE R O , red, loaded, everthing electr­ ic, like new, low m iles. $5500/offer. M ichelle, 238-5782 or 759-9215. 1987 HONDA Elite 50. like new , low m ileage. $600 or best offer. Rainee, 8948687. bicycles for sale 1987 FO R D Tauru s M T5, fully equiped plu s. Excellent condition. 16K m iles. $9500.831-8798. B IK ES - N EW Shoguns, used 3-speed cru isers, 10-speeds, repairs, trade-ins, used bikes from $20 to $125. Th e B icycle Store, 986-6070. BIKES - WHY FAY MORE? NEW USED TRADE-INS Repairs - Prices for You 1034 E . Lemon T ie S icy e U Sto n e At Lemon & Terrace forniture for sale 966-6070 furniture for sale Rental Experts WE RENT A N D SELL •bedroom sets •couch & loveseat Low prices »dinettes *m attress/box springs Easy qualifying Rent to own. Valley wide delivery 8 2 9 -1 2 1 2 1870 E. Apache, Tempe furniture for sale real estate for sale ALM O ST N EW , quality Q ueen-size bed. Includes m attress, box and (tém e. $150 or best oder. 967-5469. FU R N IT U R E LIQ UIDATION 102 beds, 36 bedroom se ts, 60 so fa se ts, 92 dinettes, 40 tam ps, 28 d ressers, 12 sleep ers, daybeds, trundles, w all units, table se ts, m uch m uch m ors. W holesaler, 1826 W est Broadw ay, Suite 10, M esa, 833-1787. B IK E TO cam pus. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, fireplace, com pletely furnished. AH like new. Assum able loan. C a ll John at Rem ax 100,8204)500. K IN G StZE W A TER BED set, 6 p ieces, $1000. Solid oak com er desk, $ 1000. Must se e to appreciate. 087-4090. B Y O W N ER, Chandler condo, 1 bedroom* 1 bath, large loft with sp iral stairs, all appliances, pool, sp a. 899-8675. . W A R EH O U SE S A L E . D esks from *4 9 ; ch airs from $15; bookshelves from $18; CON DO, 2bedroom 1% bath up, 1A bath down. O nly 5 years old, Includes w asher/ dryer, garbage disposal, dishw asher, draperies. H as 2 skylights. Below apprai­ sa l at $5 5,000. Excellent condition. 841-8917. end tables, typing tables, com puter tables, dining tables, file cabinets, phis lots more. Arizona O ffice Liquidation, 4010 S . 43rd P lace, between 40th Street and 48th Sh eet, North of Broadw ay. 437-2224. CO N D O FO R sa le. 2 bedroom , 1 Vfe bath. Excellent condition. N ear Motorola. C lo se to A S U . A ssum able. 946-8683, 994-3181. FUTONS FA CTO R Y O U TLET 789-9747/NW PHX 254-5943/DWNTWN M O BILE HO M E on C&mpus! 2 bedroom,. 55’x12’. Q uiet and secluded. G reat invest­ m ent. 96 6520 9. M eeiage: 89 63065. miscellaneous for sale B U Y O U R com puta»,.. N ew and quality used com puters for sa le. 886-1388. A P P LE IM AGE W riter II (printai). Practical­ ly new . $325. CaR Jo e or Rhonda. 966-5053. 1000 SU N B ED S, toning tables. SunalWotff tanning bed s, StenderQuest p assive exercisers. CaR for free color catalogue. S ave to 50 % . 1-800-228-6292. (AZ-CAN). A U CTIO N , SA TU RD A Y Ju ly 23, 10 a.m ., Granby, Colorado. Sam i, dozers, loaders, excavators, backhoes, blades, trailers, tractors, m otorhom as, hom e site s, subdivi­ sion, boats, coH adoris autos, tools. R & J Auction, 303-945-9723. (AZ-CAN) L O S E O R gain weight. M y roommate lost 22 pounds w hile I gained 12 pounds in the sam e month. Guaranteed results. Free shipping. CaR D enise, 303-980-8776. (AZCAN) real estate forxalc 4 BED RO O M , 2 bath tri-level. Excellent condition. 1732 E . La JoNa, Tem po. $76,400. 967-3658, 3454)484. 840 R EM O TE and heavily wooded acres. Spectacular view s. W ater wed. $120,000. Top of the W orld R eal Estate, P .O . Box 338, Auem ado, NM 87829. 505-773-4863. In N IC E 3 bedroom , 2 bath townhouse with fireplace. W asher/dryer and refrigerator stay. Mid and Broadw ay area- $59,500. E R X Am erican, ask for M aggie, 639-4950 or 497-1031. N O Q U A LIFY IN G -1 ,2,3 bedroom condos and townhouse«. Papago Park Village from $58,006- 102,000. Bob Bullock, R ealty Executives, 9962992. P A P A G O P A R K V illag e tow nhom e. August 1. Cad Bob Budock; R ealty Execu ­ tives. 99 62992. PA PA G O PA R K condo. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, near pool. $73,000 or best offer. 9544)201. W ALK TO A SU . 1 bedroom condo. Pool, ad appliances. $34,000. Cad Leona, 2666110 or 9968959. W ILD ER N ESS P A R K! BRA N D N EW contem porary 1 bedroom apartm ent, vaulted ceilings, tile, fireplace, celling fan s, private patios, to m ile ASU . «375. 24 8000 0, 967-6000. SC O T T SD A LE FO U R -FLEX , 2 bedroom, 1 bath, ground level. Refrigerator, range with oven, disposal. Betw een McDowell and McKeHIps, off Hayden. S375/month. 968-4000. ______________________________ SCREA M IN G D E A L. 1 bedroom apart­ m ent, targe fence, private yard, quaint, evaporative cooled, pets okey. 1 mile A SU . 8250. 2484)000, 867-6000. . S P E C IA L 810DOK first m onths rant. Studio $248, 1 bedroom $289. POOL tennis, handball, basketball, laundry, cable avail­ able. 964-8097. STU D IO APARTM EN T: brand new , 500 square feet with kitchen and bath. $275 includes utilities. W alk to A SU . 8944203- Cod Southern Colorado Mountain dream land. Proper­ ties, 40 acres. Seclu sio n, trees, wildlife, view s, trails, etc. Financing, owner must se ll! Frank (W LA) 1-7196468353 or 1-7196469824. (AZ-CAN) W HY PA Y REN T? 2 b r, 1% ba TH near A S U . Sharp sin g le level, firep lace. O nly $51,900. P le ase ca ll B arb ara Lutes 844-MOO Jo h n Had & A sso c. apartments for rent A S S U M A B L E , N O -Q U A LIFY tN G , 2 bedroom Springtree condo at M cCiintock and Broadw ay, $61,900. O n ly $1400 cash to m ortgage. Monthly paym ent $810, 10.54b interest. New carpet and tile. C hris, 966-8347. B EA U TIFU L N EW large 1 and two bedroom s, w alk to A SU , pool, laundry, one block South of University on 8th Street and G a ry . A sk about m ove-in sp e c ia ls. 968-5238. G IV E AW AY! $2000 down. Assum e noqualifying loan. Papago Park. Upper condo, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, vaulted ceiling. Owner/agent. Can Chantal, Realty Execu ­ tives, 996991 0 or 9468871. N EW LY R EM O D ELED Tem pe com plex. Large 1 and 2 bedroom, pool, laundry. Last m onths rent free with 1 year lease. Other sp ecials available. 121 E . Broad­ way. 894-1575. TEM P E 2 bedroom, 2 bath duplex. Refrigerator, range with oven, disposal, fe n ce d b a ck y ard . O ff U n iv ersity. $47Q/month. 968-4000. TW O BED RO O M , one bath duplex at 12018 E a s t W eber, Tem pe. $396/month. P lease do not dtolufb the residents. Available in Ju ly. CaR Tania, 868.7173. to D U PLEX near A SU . 2 bedroom, student couple preferred. Leave m essage. $325 96 6981 5. __________ W ALK T O A SU , Junior one bedroom, $285; two bedroom , $400. Adults, no pets. 1031 È . Lem on. 968-2679, 933-4364. W ANT T O live at the Com m ons on A pache? W e have two apartm ent deposits for sa le , 8210 each , regularly $265. Prim e spot near pooUvofleybaR court. W e w ill sign our toaisee over to you. CaR Jodi or G ina anytim e at 829-3693. W A LK TO ASU ! Summer Discounts Only Vi block from cam­ pus. Beautifully furnished, huge 1 bedroom, 1 bath; 2 bedroom, 2 bath apart­ ments. AH bills paid. Cable TV, heated pool, and spacious laundry facilities. Friendly, courteous management. Stop by today!' ~ T e rra ce R o ad A p a rt m e n t s 950 S . T e rra ce 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 fowntKHire»/ condos for rent 1 BED RO O M condo, 5 minute walk to A SU . ‘AH appliances, w asher/dryer in unit. $375. 2574758. 2 BED RO O M , 1 bath condo. 48th and M cD o w ell a re a . G ra d u a te e o u p le preferred, no pets. $ $ 7 5 .9 6 7 -4 0 5 9 .. CA LIFO R N IA B EA C H condo, slee p s 4 30 m iles North of San Otago. Kitchen, swim­ FURNISHED tPARTMENTS T O T A L M O VE IN 7. Announcem ents 2. A utos For S a le 3. T ru ck s F o r S a le 4. M otorcycles Fo r S ale 5. B ic y c le s Fo r Sale 6 . Furniture Fo r S ale 7. T ick e ts F o r S a le 8 . M iscellan eo us For S a le 9. R eal Estate Fo r S ale 10. Apartm ents Fo r Rent 11. Tow nhom es/Condos For Rent 12. H om es Fo r Rent 13. R ental Sharing 14. B u sin ess O pportunities 15. Help W anted 16. Inetruction 17. Jew elry 18. Free Lost/Found 19. O n-Cam pus 20. Perso nals 21. Pets 22. Services 23. Transportation 24. Travel 25. Typing/W ord Processin g 26. W anted 27. Adoptions 28. M iscellaneous *349 : ; LA S C A SITA S 710 S. Hardy, Tem pe (at University) 968-0101 3 GOOD REA SO N S T O .-.. STO P LOOKIN G AND STA R T LIVIN G outstanding t and 2 bedroom apts in super convenient lo catio n slll » e ■ e e S ,■ ’ a« .M’ IKTM IN TI Lap Modi e Pitvate PdUoi J k u / ii —• Assigned C oscicd rwrtung Free CaMc f i Co» Counts Views Cd» Orili» • to n u l» l im i D oviuotm Tempe ^ÜBÜiS WÌL RIVL R KUN APARTMENTS 9 O u i - » ASO CaWe Ready e HcdtrdHwT • Laundry FsoUie» • C as Unfi • C oM fRl Assigned Parking . « Pîii't4dcc* ' '"..e A Small and OumCommun 5 34 3 E . T a y l o r 1046 W. Pinet 8t. P h o e r tf x /T e m p e B o n i e r Tempe >7-6568 275-7997 ________ ____ townhomes/ condos for rent LU X U R Y CO N DO , 2 bedroom , 2 bath, pool, w alk to A SU . $475 p ar month. 610 W . Untiroralty. Tem po. 968-7173.__________ LU X U R Y TO W N H O U SES. 3 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished, refrigerator. 1to m iles A SU . Pool and fannia. Available now. $575. CaR Ju d y L . or Ruth, 831-1300; 769-1145, evenings. W ALK T O A SU . 1 bedroom. Pool, aH appliances. *300. C all Leona, 2684110 or 9964959. W ALK TO A S tf Newer 2 bedroom . 2to both including w asher/dryer. Pool, apa, tennis, covered parking. 8650. Available August 1 .8 3 4 4 5 1 3 . homes for rent N o qualifying, LA K E M EAD, Grand Canyon, sp ectacular lake area lots, paved roads, ad utilities, hom es or m obiles, from $4996, $200 down, $70/monttL «Meadvlew, Colorado, 1-800-2256928, (AZ-CAN) AAAA DO BSON R anch townhome, 2 story, 2 bath, professionally decorated. Excellent assum able financing. Low down, owner w ill carry. N ear Fie sta Mall and ASU- B y owner. 820-2340._________________ ' SCO PE B EA U TIFU L 2bèdreom , 2 bath condo with fire p la ce . W asher/dryer, refrigerator, m icrowave stay. U niversity and M cClin­ tock area. $89,200. E R A Am erican, ask for M aggie, 639-4950 dr 497-1031. apartments for rent W « offer o u r ow n Room m ate R eferral S erv ie« Available to residente who desire to live ih our com m unities ming pools, hot tubs. W eeks available 7/29-8/5, 9/3-9/10. Norm ally $11