s ta te
arem
V o i. 71 N o . 8
A rizona State U niversity’s
M orning D aily
W ed n esd ay, A ugust 3 1 ,1 9 8 8
•C o p yrig h t Stala P a i. 1968 Tampa, Arizona
Foes: Search
for rec center
director slow
By KELLY PEARCE
S tate Press
John F ees, Associated Students president and member of
the search com m ittee to find a directin’ for the Student
Recreation Center, said he is frustrated with the length of
tim e the com m ittee is taking.
He said that a director should have been named for the
$12.7 million recreation center a year ago.
“I’m disappointed that it’s taken so long. I think we should
have a director on line by this tim e,” he said.
A director was to be hired by this summer for the center,
currently under construction on the southeast end of campus,
but the pending departure of Associate V ice President for
student affairs M arvalene Hughes, the person to whom the
center’s director would report, has put things behind
schedule, said John Schlaeter, a professor of marketing in
the College of Business who is the chairman of the search
com m ittee.
Hughes will leave the University Friday to becom e the vice
president for student affairs at the University of Toledo in
Ohio.
A nationwide search for a director to run the center, which
w ill house an indoor sw im m in g pool and racquetball courts,
has been narrowed to seven candidates from a field o f 180,
Schlacter said.
“A lot of people feel this is the prem ier job of its kind being
advertised in the Country,” he said. “ (And) it is one of the
m ost significant positions to be hired on campus.
“There is plenty of tim e for the candidate to com e on
board.”
The candidates include Keith Jacobson, ASU director of
ihtramurals; Juliette Moore, ASU assistant director of
intramurals; Bill Jinski, from the University of Missouri at
i n splpp
IP »
■
Construction began th is sum m er o n th e $ 1 2 .7 m iffion Student Recreation Center, located next to th e perking gerage on the
southeast end o f cam pus. ASU stm is In th e process of M ring s director fo r th e p ro je c t
Kansas City; Sandra Musso, from the University of
Minnesota; Gary M iller, from the University of Michigan at
Ffad; and Gerald M aas, from the University of Wyoming.
Jinski, a recreation director at the $14 m illio n Swinney
Recreation C olter at the University of M issouri, said he
didn’t anticipate the search faking this long, but said it is
understandable because of summer vacations and the tim e it
took to form a search com m ittee.
R egents expected to O K dorm s
By SHERI JOHNSON
S tate Press
An Arizona Board of Regents com m ittee is expected to
approve preliminary plans Thursday for a new $10 million
residence life building project to be located east of Sahuaro
Hall along Rural Road, according to a regents official.
“I would expect that thay w ill approve the plans,” said Bob
W illiam s, the regents associate director for capital
development.
The regents are expected to act on the recommendation
during its Sept. 9 m eeting.
The project includes about 118,000 square feet of dorm
rooms for about 400 students, a social activity center, a
central plant building and a swimming pod.
T h a g ra s s y a m * loeatad east o f S alw aro H all alona R u n ) Road
la th e aits o f a plannsd $10 mHNon raaidsnco H a buHdkig
project.
PLANE PATROL:
in s id e
' WEATHER
ASU’s 12 dormitory halls currently house about 5,000
students.
.
^•
LarBjorum , ASU design project manager, said he hopes
the project w ill be com pleted by April 1990.
“We don’t have an exact schedule,” Bjorum said. “There’s
a study that has been done that gives us som e indication of
which way to go.”
The study,, initiated by ASU Residence Life Director Cliff
Osborne, laid out a blueprint for the project’s needs.
“We recognized the excessive demand (for resident
housing) and com m issioned the study,” Osborne said.
“I H i«* it’s been fairly w ell established that w e have had,
over die years, more demand for campus residence life
space than what w e have available. We presum e the supply
and demand curve w ill be closer by the fall of 1980.”
Vance Linden, acting associate director of ASU Planning
and Construction, said die project currently is in “the
infancy stage.”
Linden said that as long as the project’s budget is not
exceeded, he expects the regents’ to approve far the next
plBisa.
;
“I don’t see any reason why w e wouldn’t,” he said. “But I
can’t say what they’re going to do. It’s up to the regents.”
The regents gave ASU approval earlier this year to begin
the dttign process and also approved lim ited funding far the
project’s first phase. Those funds allowed ASU to hire J-D
International as construction m anager.
KnoeU A Qiddort Inc. and W iliam Turnboll A ssociates are
developing the prelim inary design drawings.
lin d en said representatives from ASU’s Planning and
Construction office w ill request approval for the project’s
next phase a t the m eeting. The design process w ill fake up to
a year, he added.
.f a iS M B
Mostly sunny and hot today wtth
tem peratures expected to reach a
high of 103. Lows should drop to
around 80.
Continued noise pollution from Sky
Harbor International Airport has
prom pted the city of Tam pa to hire a
W ashington, D.C., attorney to look
into th e m atter,
Page 3.
“1 w as in contact with Dr. Hughes three weeks ago, and she
asked m e to be patient and work with her,” he said. “The
approach I’m faking is to w ait patiently. ASU w ill m ake the
decision when they’re ready.”
Betty Asher, vice president for student affairs, w ill take
the search com m ittee’s recommendation and m ake a final
decision. She said she is in no rush to fill the position.
T urn to C enter, page 8.
Nurses in short supply
for ASU, local hospitals
BpM KSM BAE ALLMAN
S tate Press
Valley hospitals and ASU’s nursing school, have been
hit hard by a shortage of registered nurses that a federal
report calls “real, widespread and of significant
magnitude.”
The report, issued earlier this month by the U.S. Health
and Human Services Secretary’s Commission on Nursing,
said unfilled job openings more than doubled between 1963
and 1987.
“We (ASU’s College of Nursing) w ere consistent with
the national average in that our enrollment decreased 30
percent from 1984 to 1986,” nursing Dean Janelle Kreuger
said. “Admission is going back up but so is demand.”
In 1963, total enrollment in ASU’s nursing program w as
1,085, according to U niversity statistics. In 1984,
enrolllment dropped slightly to 1,064, and by 1986 it w as at
an all-tim e low of 775. The U niversity estim ates that the
fall 1988 enrollment figures are slightly m ore than 800.
“Thirty years ago women w o e very interested in
nursin g as a profession,” Kreuger said. “Since the
women's movement, women have had the opportunity to
take traditionally m ale jobs. The percent of high school
students interested in nursing has been cut in half of what
it w as 20 to 30 years ago.”
The com m ission's report said that 76 percent of the
nation’s hospitals have at least som e degree of shortage,
and 19 percent of those have shortages that are considered
“severe,”
T u rn 1» No
C lassified......
C om ica...........
Entertainment.
Opinion
Sports
th
, p ro » r t .
25
20
13
4
21
. 2
w orld/nation in b rie f
Bush says Dukakis would
advocate U.S. defense cuts
ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. (AP) — Republican presidential
nominee George Bush Tuesday called rival Michael
Dukakis “another liberal governor coming out of nowhere’’
and suggested the Democrat would advocate unilateral
cuts in U.S. defense m uscle.
H ie vice president, continuing on the strong defense
them es he has been sounding over the past few days,
sought to depict Dukakis as inexperienced and weak on
defense.
Bush toured a Bendix defense plant where fuel system s
are m ade for fighter planes, and was shown a replica of the
carburetor used in the World War II fighter plane he had
flown in the Navy.
Later, he was to address an American Legion post at
Fort Campbell Army base in Kentucky.
“This plant keeps the m uscle of our defense strong,”
Bush told a group of plant em ployees. He suggested that
Dukakis favors “unilateral cuts in the m uscle of the
defense of the United States.”
The vice president earlier told a $500-a-ticket fund-raiser
that, while he didn’t “want anything to do with tearing
down” Dukakis, “We should not gamble America’s future
on another liberal governor coming out of nowhere.” That
w as a reference to former President Carter.
The vice president also warned against complacency in
dealing with the Soviets — despite recent moves by Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev toward improved relations with
the United States.
Foreign m inister says Iran
w ill make no concessions
Walesa to hold talks
with Polish leadership
GDANSK, Poland (AP) — Solidarity founder Lech
Walesa will hold his first talks with the Polish leadership in
six years Wednesday in a governm ent effort to end two
weeks of labor turmoil, his aides reported Tuesday.
Walesa w ill confer in Warsaw with Interior Minister
C zeslaw K iszczak a t a m eetin g atten d ed by a
representative of the Roman Catholic Church, senior
Solidarity adviser Adam Michnik said.
GENEVA. (A P) — Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar
Velayati said Tuesday that his country would make no
concessions to Iraq as peace talks to end their 8-year-old
war remained stalled for a fourth day.
“That is Iraq’s dream . . . but if they couldn’t get any
concessions during this long war with so many casualties,
of course they w ill not be able to get any concessions or
anything beyond their legal rights during the peace talks,”
Velayati told The Associated Press in an interview.
U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, who is
conducting the negotiations between Velayati and his Iraqi
counterpart Tariq Aziz, said the talks were stalled over
im m ediate troop withdrawal and freedom of navigation.
There was no im m ediate government announcement of
the talks. On the contrary, Kiszczak’s m inistry and the
armed forces general staff issued a statem ent saying: “in
/.ago of the continuation of the illegal strike action,
appropriate lawful m easures w ill be taken.”
•A lpha K appa P si, the professional business fraternity, will
be having rush events today and Thursday. Stop by the
table in the D ean’s Patio for more information.
•T h e Native A m erican S tudent A ssociation will be
holding a m eeting at the M ulticultural Lounge' in the
Student Services Building at 3 p.m.
•C hristian S tu d en ts Fellow ship will m eet at 12:40 p.m. in
th e MU Yuma Room 211 to discuss “Exodus-God’s
Corporate Purpose.”
•T he In stitu te o f E lectronic and Electrical Engineers will
host their first m eeting at 1:30 p.m. in Engineering Center,
Room G224 to plan the fall agenda.
•B lack S tu d en t Union will hold a special meeting in the MU
Graham Room a t 5:30 p.m.
•M echA will m eet in the MU Cochise Room at 3 p.m. to
introduce new officers and talk about goals. Refreshments
wil be served.
•B usiness C ollege C ouncil is hosting Activities Week, a
chance for students to m eet business d u b s and
organizations, from 8 a.m . to 3 p.m . on th e Dean’s Patio (in
front of Business Administration builiding) Jessica Hahn
from Y-95 radio will appear betw een 11 a.nt. and 2 p.m.
Solidarity spokesmen said there w as no agreem ent for an
immediate end to the strikes, in which a central demand
has been making Solidarity legal again. It w as suppressed
after the declaration of m artial law in Decem ber 1981 and
outlawed in 1982.
Tadeusz Mazowiecki, another senior Solidarity adviser,
called the decision to hold talks “a historic moment.”
today
Meetings
•P hi Alpha D elta pre-law fraternity will m eet at 3 p.m. in
the MU Yuma Room 211. The Dean of Admissions from the
ASU Law School, Fausto Ramos, will speak.
•AH S ain ts C atholic Newman C enter will hold a bible
study this afternoon at 12:40 p.m. in the MU Navajo Room.
The Gospel of Mark will be the topic.
•A m erican H um anics will m eet in the MU S anta Cruz
Room 213 a t 5:30 p.m. Their topic will be Ron Huddleston,
“Prospecting.”
•D elta Sigm a Pi wiH m eet a t 7:30 p.m . at 1646 E.
M anhatton in Tempo for a wine and cheese recruiting party.
Semi-professional dress is required.
•T he Am erican M arketing A ssociation a t ASU is holding
rush week activities on the Dean’s Patio at the business
college.
829-1743
Hours:
M on-Sat 10-9
Sun
12-6
Start the NEW SEMESTER
off in style with the
Look of ASU
Area’s LARG EST SELEC TIO N of
A R IZO N A STA TE U N IV E R S ITY
Clothing & Souvenirs
•MUAB Special E vents C om m ittee will m eet in the MU
Yavapai Room 209 at 1:30 p.m . to discuss upcoming
events.
•Young D em ocrats of ASU will be on Cady Mail near the
fountain from 10:30 a.m . to 1:30 p.m. to register voters and
sign up new m em bers.
•ASU’s W restling Team needs assistants, scoregirls,
towel girls and timers for this year’s m eets. A meeting for
those interested will take place Sept. 2 at 5:30 p.m. in the
University Activity Center. Room 35.
S W
lf im i
_____________________________
campus b
___ W ednesday, A uguN 31f 1 9 8 8 _____________________________ _
r i e
f s
;
...
New director appointed
for advising center
Mofford to speak Thursday
to Hispanic business students
Rose M offord
*'■
Mary Jo Fox has b eat appointed director of the
University Academ ic Advising Center, pending approval of
the Arizona Board of Regents.
“ (She) has extensive experience in m eeting student
needs at a ll levels of education, including die University
academ ic advising center,” said Sam Kirkpatrick, dean of
the College of Liberal Arts. “She has special expertise in
the academ ic performance of minority students (also).”
The center, which is located on the main flow in
Matthews Center, advises undeclared, transfer and visiting
students about their academ ic careers and objectives.
Fox w ill supervise a staff of 15.
Gov. Rose Mofford w ill
a d d r e s s th e H isp a n ic
B u s in e s s S tu d e n ts
Association at 3:30 p.m .
Thursday in the MU Gold
Room.
Mofford is expected to
address what she has said
is . her favorite subject:
education.
Minority recruitm ent and
reten tio n , co n tro v ersia l
subjects for som e ASU
adm inistrators, also are
expected to be addressed.
“The high dropout rate
among Hispanic students
nationwide is no secret,”
HBSA P resid en t Sandy
Mendez said.
PM »?
60 spaces still available
in campus residence halls
ASU’s residence halls have space available for about 60
students, according to Residence Life.
A $150 deposit is required as part of the application
process. Rooms in the dorms are assigned at the tim e of
application.
v■
The cost for campus living space ranges from $915 to
$1,827 for the fall sem ester. Costs for the entire 1988418
academ ic year range from $1,528 to $3,048.
Students interested in joining the ranks of the 5,000
students who live on campus should call the Residence Life
office at 965-3515.
Hahn, Y-95 morning show
to broadcast from campus
Jessica Hahn, whose claim to fam e stem m ed from an
alleged sexual liason with a television evangelist in 1987,
w ill be on campus today as part of a recruitment week for
the College of Business.
Hahn and m em bers of “Y-95 Morning Zoo” from KOYFM radio, w ill broadcast live from the “dean’s patio,”
which is on the south side of campus near the business
buildings. The broadcast w ill begin at 10 a.m ., and Hahn
w ill appear from 11 a.m to 1 p.m.
“It’s my way of encouraging students to come over
here,” said Richard Huxtable, president of the Business
College Council.
Compiled by State Press reporter Victor Barajas and other
staff members.
Tem pe hires attorney to legally muffle airport noise
By KRISTI ELLIS
S tate Press
.•
The city of Tempe has hired Washington, D.C., attorney
Eliot Cutler to legally m uffle the noise the city hears from
jets taking off from Sky Harbor International Airport.
“Our m ission is to reduce the noise im pact from Sky
Harbor. The city has unsuccessfully attem pted to do that for
the last 20 years,” City Attorney David Merkel said.
Cutler, a partner in the law firm Cutler and Standfield,
specializes in environmental and aviation law and public
sector negotiations. The Tempe City Council voted Aug. 25 to
hire him.
“We felt he (Cutler) had expertise in this area, and we
wanted to add him to the team ,” Merkel said.
The “team ” includes city attorneys Merkel, Jay Dushoff
ami Stewart Udall and city technical consultants Gerry
Bogan and Jerry D allas,
Merkel said the team w ill spend about $100,000 to $200,000
from now until July 1,1989.
The city w ill pay Cutler $200 per hour. Dushoff and Udall
charge about $100 per hour for their services.
Cutter recently helped negotiate the aircraft noise dispute
involving Denver’s Stapleton Airport and surrounding
communities.
As a result of those negotiations, Denver finalized plans to
construct a new regional airport.
During a retreat in Sedona in July, the Tempe City Council
determined its primary objective is to push for a regional
airport, which would supplement Sky Harbor and' help
alleviate the noise.
“We have developed a strategy that we hope to use to
convince Sky Harbor to officially do things in the future that
it has not dime in the past,” Merkel said.
Two years ago, Tempe and Phoenix signed an agreem ent
containing four provisions to m itigate noise problems, but
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three of the points haven’t been implem ented by Sky Harbor,
said Randy Gross, assistant to Tempe Mayor Harry Mitchell.
“That’s one reason we hired attorney Cutler,” he said.
The Tem pe/Phoenix agreem ent says:
•Aircraft should fly further east before turning for their
destinations.
•There should be a 50-50 split of planes take off to the east,
over Tempe and to the w est over Phoenix.
•Changes should be made in navigational procedures to fly
over more of the Rio Salado river bottom and reduce noise.
“Our objective is not to close Sky Harbor, but we can’t see
growth (expansion) there because of the existing noise
problem ,” Gross said.
Another option is to require airlines to use quieter planes
for nighttim e travel, Gross added.
“At the very least, we would like them (Phoenix) to
implem ent all of the points that they agreed to; that would be
helpful,” he said.
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933 E. U niversity
1717
opinion
S te le P ress
Wednesday, August 3 1 ,1 9 8 8
SAVE ’88
:
November hopefuls to ‘face the students in campus forum
D avid Jordan
Colum nist
I have often thought that morality m ay perhaps consist
solely in the courage of making a choice. .
—Leon Blum (1872-1950)
Let’s be honest. When a columnist begins whining about
low voter turnout, students at ASU quickly turn to the com ics
page, condemning any thoughts of civic duty to a quick,
gruesome death.
Sadly, the typical student “What, me worry?” approach to
voting has led to the election of legislators feeling more
allegiance to the rights of Saguaro cacti than they do to the
everyday needs of students.
Consider the evolution of one student issue — the
placem ent of a student on the Board of Regents.
Although the student regent has consistently proven to be a
valuable asset to the Board of Regents and an indispensible
tool for students, the development of this idea in Arizona was
more controversial than Dan Quayle’s draft card.
•In 1977, Rep. Pat Wright, R-Glendale compared the idea to
an inmate running a jail.
•In January of 1978, Rep. Jim R atliff, R-Sun City, opposed
the bill because of his belief that all students wanted on
campus was “birth control and liquor”.
•Rep. Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, in October of 1982 expressed
his strong discontent over the idea of a voting student
member of the Board of Regents because of his belief that
“having a student voting on things that are going to be
involving students is hot a good thing.”
Taken together, these four insights illustrate an essential
truth about our legislature. As long as students neglect their
ability to vote, members of our legislature will continue to
treat them as third class citizens who are not to be trusted.
That legislators would have this attitude toward students is
hardly surprising. In the primary election of 1984, voter
turnout in the Tempe 4th precinct, which consisted at .the
tim e of the fraternaties on Adelphi Drive and all of the south
campus residence halls, was a pitiful 3.5 percent of
registered voters. Compare this with turnouts in areas with
older populations such as Sun City, which averages between
85 to 90 percent turnout in elections.
Simply put, student voting is so low that we are not
' . . . h a vin g a stu d e n t voting on things
th a t a re g o in g to b e involving students
is n o t a g o o d thing. ’
— Rep. Jim Cooper, (R) Mesa
considered constituents, but annoyances.
Sadly, this has had a devestating impact on ASU student
interests: in the legislature. The student regent still does not
have voting rights on the Board of Regents, and tuition has
been increasing much faster than financial aid, resulting in
dram atic increases in the financial burden to students,
More startling, the Arizona Universities System Budget
Study Report of Feb. 2, 1988, sponsored by the Board of
Regents found such extraordinary inequities in the budgets
for ASU and UofA, that it recommended a $5,316,000 change
in the base budget of ASU to rectify this situation.
The thorough indifference that the legislature has shown to
the needs of ASU students has m ade one thing perfectly
clear. When you decide not to decide, som eone w ill make the
decision for you.
The only possible solution to this problem is for students to
decide what is in their best interest, decide who best
represents those interests and to show up on election day. A
quiet student populace w ill continue to be ignored. An active,
united student front w ill have to be recognized.
It is in this spirit that ASÂSU has initiated Students Are
Voting Everywhere ’88. SAVE ’88 is an effort to increase
student participation in the electoral process. The effort’s
major objectives include informing students on how our
representatives stand on student issues, registering students
to vote and encouraging them to cast their ballots on election
day.
>
As a part of this effort, the ASASU P olitical Union is
sponsoring a forum featuring the candidates for the state
legislatu re from those d istricts that have a high
concentration of students. The forum w ill take place
Thursday in the MU Pim a Room from 11:00 a.m . to 1:00 p.m.
It is efforts like these that offer you the opportunity to
learn, to question and most importantly to decide. These
people want to represent you. You have a right to ask them
exactly what they w ill do in office, how they w ill decide and
where they w ill stand.
It is im perative this year that students make use of
opportunities such as these and m ake use of their right to
vote. If we fail once again to vote then w e w ill have only
ourselves to blame when candidates who care little for our
needs win a seat in the legislature.
We w ill have only ourselves to blam e when someone else
makes our decisions for us.
-R IT T E R -------------
letters
ç jè s s ie a H & h n
The mark of Caine
Editor:
Criticizing m inorities is, and always has
been, an avenue taken by the majority
population in its futuile attempt to justify
the centuries of racism , discrimination and
bigotry that has been perpetrated upon
m inorities of all classes.
In Darrin Hostetler’s column of August 29,
his lack of sensitivity and misunderstanding
of what affirm ative action hopes to achieve
is quite apparent in h is su p erficial
explanation of what this program really
does, in his. IT PROMOTES POSITIVE
ACTION.
Although it cannot close the mouths of
gainsayers nor sensitize the hearts of
inflexible prejudgers, what it can dp i^ right
som e of the wrongs of not only past
generations but also the one in which we
live.
Affirm ative actum is wrong only to those
who realize and disagree with the fact that
the American Dream has been made
accessible to individuals and groups which
were previously excluded.
The programs are wrong to those who did
enslave others, who did draw a line of
demarcation on our southern borders but
placed an open-door policy at our northern
border.
There should be no statute of lim itations
on injustice. “Your” responsibility is one
that can never be m et because o f the
inhumanity of your ancestors, and the blood
of our forefathers are indelibly marked on
your foreheads.
A ffirm ative action is a feeble yet
n ecessa ry attem pt to correct m any
m istakes of the past. The sad fact is that it
m ust be adm inistered by the offspring of the
culprits of injustice.
With your attitude towards this program,
I am sorry to say the only “equal shot” you
would be willing to give us is ONE IN THE
BACK!
I wonder if an unqualified white person
has ever been hired by this University. Also,
I wonder if any white students ever flunked
out of this school. No, that could not be the
case, because surely you would have
reported it in one of your “editorials.”
In closing, I want to go on record as saying
that I hate to see Dr. Nelson step down.
However, it was not a band of dissident
m inorities who drove him out. He admitted
that, I wonder if it was his conscience. If so,
I pray that his m antle w ill one day fall on
you.
Mark Madison
Junior, social work
a ss e s s e s M
J
BUSINESS MfeJoRfi
ON-
w m trie a modern
WOMAN*
Affirm ative action: m eaningful but not p erfect
Editor:
are genetically lazier or just less inclined to success, then he
A colum nist who does not support affirm ative action m ust adm it environmental conditions are the cause of the
programs is not at the top of my list of social deviants like a less hospitable world of m inorities.
used car salesm an or a granny-basher.
Affirm ative action programs reverse the discrimination in
But a colum nist should recognize that support for such the environment by providing opportunities and motivation.
programs does not stem from fears of being labeled a bigot. A university like Arizona State is an important area to
Affirm ative action programs are meaningful, though not provide that motivation.
perfect, solutions to the injustice of today’s discrimination.
If a minority student works diligently in high school but is
Darrin Hostetler claim ed in Monday’s State Press that not accepted to college or, if accepted, cannot pay for college,
affirm ative action programs are reverse discrimination. then he or she is not rewarded for that hard work. If that
They are, but the programs are not designed as an apology student’s sister or neighbor or cousin sees the lack of reward,
for past discrimination; they are attem pts to reverse the then he or she m ay conclude that work on his or her own part
covert discrim ination occurring in 1988. “ R everse w ill be equally futile. Some w ill never take the college
discrim ination” m eans a reversal of the discrimination that entrance exam because of the perceived futility. Some will
forces more m inorities than whites into unemployment, never even think of attending college. Some w ill drop out of
alcoholism , welfare and m im e.
high school com pletely. The prohjem is a lack of motivation.
U nless Darrin is willing to defend the argument that
Affirm ative action creates the necessary motivation for
blacks, Hispanics, women or other disadvantaged minorites minority students to take what belongs to them — an
quotable
“ Your every voter, as surely as your chiefmagistrate, exercises a public trust. ”
— Grover Cleveland
education. When a student is given extra flt««*i»! aid or is
admitted on the basis of color, he or she gives their younger
brothers or sisters m otivation to work because there are
rewards to work.
As to affirm ative action hurting ASU’s credibility, I cannot
accept that as true. An institution is judged not only by its
actions but by its character. If ASU rem ains an institution
that discourages m inorities by failin g to encourage them,
this institution w ill remain as credible a s a backwater
M ississipi school that failed to adm it a single black student.
Also, when minority professors and students speak on this
campus, they offer som ething m ore educational than a few
extra years teaching experience or 2 5 SAT points: they offer
culture and a different point of view . Any institution,
especially an institution like ASU, can use the cultural
understanding of a diverse and equal u n iv ersity population.
Joel Sannes
P olitical Science
STATE PRESS
MARTY SAUERZOPF
Editor
Opinion Editor..................
JOAN McKENNA
Managing Editor
. ..JU U E TOELLNER
News Editor....................
..LAURIE SMITH
Arta Editor..»...................
Asst. A rts Editor.............. ........................ m a t t u n d e n b u r g
...DAVE HODGES
Sporta E d ito r...................
JEFFSHAIN
Asat. Sporta Editor..........
..........SHAWN DAHL
Copy C hief.......................
SUSAN SCHUMAN
Photo E ditor.............. .
i
P ages
State Pneu
Bush and Q uayle: The best defense is a good offense
avaminatmn and reflection. But what it has to do w ife the when Quayle entered into the Guard, President Johnson had
. question of whether young war hawk Dan Quayle was already tw ice rejected the m ilitary’s request for a Guard and
cheering on escalation while using fam ily pull to evade that Reserve call-up, precisely because there w ere too many wellconnected sons in those units.)
escalation is a tot difficult to establish.
J e ff G re e n fie ld
The point of all (his, of course, is not the validity of the
This weekend cam e the George Bush Patriotism Defense.
Quayle defenses and counter-attacks, but the speed and
Universal Press Syndicate
At a m eeting in front of friendly veterans the presidential
intensity with which they were offered. The Republicans, no
nnminuft pounded the podium and angrily asserted that Dan
doubt, have learned from the Eagleton embarrassm ent and
Quayle didn’t flee to Canada, didn’t burn his draft card and
from the Ferraro fracas: If your campaign has to disavow or
“damn sure didn’t burn the American flag!” That sw ift
apologize for the vice presidential nominee, the dam age is
descent from the eloquence of his acceptance speech into
somewhere between serious and fatal.
NEW YORK — If you don’t think the Republicans want to
1950’s demagoguery did not exactly establish the standard by
So the alternative is to take the offensive: Loudly proclaim
win this election, you haven’t been watching them respond to which m ost Americans judge candidates for national office.
your pride in the candidate; assail the bloodthirsty media for
the Quayle m ess. If sheer intensity were an accurate
(“Quayle for veep! He never burned the flag!”)
picking on a bright, decent young man; equate fee questions
m easure of a party’s prospects in November, you could chalk
F in a lly cam e the countercharge b y -N e w York about Quayle’s fam ily m uscle with an attack on all those who
up the Bush victory right now.
Congressman Gerald Solomon, who challenged Michael served in fee National Guard; and above all, try to redefine
Between the candidates, the cam paign, and editorialists
Dukakis for finishing his college education during the Korean the question away from just what Dan Quayle did back then.
and commentators of the right, more than half a dozen
It is an im pressive show of m uscle and determination by
War
before asking to be drafted.
separate and distinct explanations and counteroffenses have
the Republicans. In fact, there is only one sm all problem.
been aimed at the Quayle-as-draft-dodger cloud. It began
This charge, to put it sim ply, is hogwash. Dukakis is no war
Thursday night on the convention floor in New Orleans, when hero, but he did serve som e 16 months near the dem ilitarized What if the facts show that, despite Quayle’s claim that
Rep. Newt Gingtich of Georgia roamed the convention floor zone in Korea — surely an area more likely to be the scene of “there were vacancies” in the Guard, there was a lengthy
backlog of applicants over which Quayle was somehow
asking reporters, “Wouldn’t you make a call if your kid combat than the National Guard armory in Indianapolis.
leapfrogged?
wanted to go mto journalism ?”
What if the facts show that Quayle had already passed his
(Quayle,
by
the
why,
asserts
that
he
would
have
gone
to
This, of course, is the Richard M. Daley Memorial Defense:
Vietnam if his Guardim it had been called; but by mid-1969, physical, that his student deferment was about to expire, and
When the late mayor of Chicago w as once asked why he had
that there w as no other
apparently steered a lucrative insurance contract toward his
cred ib le reason for his
son, he replied; “What kind of country have we becom e if a
sudden determination to join
father can’t help his own son?”
the Guard than a w ellLast Friday, the Republicans unveiled fee Oliver North
founded fear of being drafted
Memorial Victim of the Media Ploy; they put Quayle in front
at the height of the Vietnam
of a regim ent of news thirsty reporters on the courthouse
fighting — at the very tim e
steps in his home town in Indiana and played the press
that Quayle, as a young man
conference to an assem bled crowd of Quayle’s supporters.
w as urging his countrymen
Just as Col: North looked lonely and brave in front of two
on to victory in Vietnam?
dozen congressm en last summer in Washington, Quayle was
As the president said in
cleverly positioned as the injured party in a tableau that
New Orleans la st w eek,
featured threatening boom microphones, cam eras and
“ F a c t s a r e s tu b b o r n
notebooks pressing in on him from all sides.
things ” If the answers to
Over the weekend, stories and comments began appearing
th ese questions are the
that challenged the right of the m edia to confront Sen. Quayle
wrong ones, then the one
on the patriotism issue. Given the high percentage of babyquestion that rem ains is one
boom and middle-aged journalists who used educational or
no amount of spin control
occupational perm its to avoid service during Vietnam
can wash away: Wbat did
(present company included), this has to constitute the So’sG e o r g e B u sh an d h is
Your-Old-Man Defense.
cam paign know about Dan
In fact, this “dirty little secret” of the ’60s generation —
Quayle and when did they
And so. in
o m oF bæ m is (u tti£ T * h r * ih sudcênlv pound h im s &if
that those without enough education or pull w ere by and large
PoRTf S5CÖND PRESIDENT OP THE UNITED STATES.
know it?
those who fought in Vietnam — is a serious subject for
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M anslaughter charges dropped, co-w orker dies
By MIKE BURGESS
State Press
A worker killed Monday after a fight with a co-worker died
of head injuries, and m anslaughter charges against die co
worker have been dropped.
Paul Eugene Powers, 25, of Cedar Grove, Tenn., died of
“blunt force injuries to the head,” a Maricopa County
m edical exam iner’s spokeswoman said Tuesday. The death
has been classified as a hom icide, she said.
M anslaug h te r charges against M ichael John Beauchamp,
30, were dropped at his initial appearance Tuesday morning
in Tempe Justice Court, Tempe police spokesman Roger
Austin said.
“Even though the coroner is saying it was a blunt force
injury, they were unable to say what really caused the blunt
force injury,” Austin said.
Austin said Powers apparently had m edical problems in
the past but would not say what they were.
“There’s a good chance that after w e sort through the
police report
m edical problems that we w ill com e back with another
charge,” Austin said.
Powers and Beauchamp had been remodeling a room at
the La Quinta Motor Inn, 911S. 48th St., when they got into a
playful argument that developed into a fist fight, police said.
There were no weapons involved.
After the fight, Powers had difficulty breathing and
collapsed, police said. He was pronounced dead on arrival at
Maricopa County M edical Center.
In other incidents:
•Someone broke into six businesses at a Tempe office
com plex and stole m ore than $18,000 worth of computer
equipment and other property, police said.
Police said the burglary occurred at 1430 W. Broadway
Road som etim e between Monday night and Tuesday
morning.
.
•A University em ployee told police Monday that she found
three obscene magazines while she w as cleaning the men’s
bathroom on the fourth floor of Hayden Library, police said.
•A University em ployee told police her purse and its contents
were stolen while she took a shower Monday in the Physical
Education E ast building. Loss is $289.
•A student told police her car w as dam aged when a tree fell
on the vehicle in Lot 53, north of Palo Verde Main Residence
Hall, som etim e between Friday and Sunday. The amount of
damage is unknown, police said.
•Someone stole a student’s w allet and its contents Sunday
from Room D-222 at Sahuaro Hall, police said. Loss is $78.
•A University em ployee told police Monday that someone
stole her purse from a desk in the acquisitipn department in
the lower level of Hayden Library. Loss is $40.
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Blind workers strike over low pay, discuss forming union
Texas (AP) — Fifteen blind workers who
make m ilitary equipment for the government at a workshop
for the blind have struck the facility, demanding that they
receive the sam e pay as their sighted co-workers.
The em ployees walked off the job last week at the
Southwest Lighthouse for the Blind after they were told they
would have to pay $65 a month for health insurance.
The strikers are asking that all blind workers be given the
$3.35-an-hour minimum wage earned by sighted em ployees
instead of the present $2.05 wage. They also want companypaid health insurance.
“I think it’s about tim e for som e changes to be m ade,” said
Teresa Wiggins, 28, as she walked a picket line outside the
LU B B O C K ,
Lighthouse. “I’ve been here since 1984 and there’s hardly
anything here for the blind. We need better opportunities.”
The 15 strikers also want assurances that their jobs and
pay won’t be affected by the walkout.
Wiggins grosses $320 a month, an amount supplemented by
a sm all Social Security check. But her rent alone is $320 a
month and she has a guide dog for whom she m ust pay.
“Some of (the workers) also pay $20 a month for
transportation in the Lighthouse van,” said William Harmon,
a former workshop em ployee and president of the Lubbock
Chapter of the National Federation of the Blind. “They would
be losing $85 a month out of a $320-a-month income” with the
health insurance requirement.
Dick Edlund of the Kansas City, Kan., office of the National
Federation of the Blind told the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
that under federal law, blind workers can be paid only 25
percent of w ages paid to sighted workers.
The Lighthouse, which provides jobs for blind people, is
under federal contract to produce m ilitary helm et pads and
chin straps.
The facility’s director, Dale Odom, declined to comment on
the walkout or whether the strike would affect the
Lighthouse’s ability to fulfill the m ilitary contract.
The strikers also have been circulating union cards from
the Team sters union, in hopes of gaining enough support to
hold an organizing election.
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Page 8
C enter_________
C ontinued from page 1.
“We’re shooting for October,” she said.
“We w ill make the decision mice w e’ve considered all of the
options,” she said.
Student Life Dean Leon Shell agreed. “To get a good
candidate, it does take tim e. Hopefully there w ill be an
appointment soon.”
A director should be announced within two months,
according to Janet Mullen, assistant to the vice president of
student affairs.
In 1985, students w ere surveyed on whether or not they
would like to have a recreation center. Students voted to
access a $25 per sem ester student fee (in tuition) over a
30-year period. The fee w ill begin when the center opens its
doors
The two-story recreation center is slated to be completed
by August 1989 and also w ill include informal classrooms,
weightrooms, intramural offices, an exercise room for the
handicapped and a pro shop.
The structure is being built next to the parking garage on
Apache Boulevard.
“It will be an absolute first-class operation,” Schlacter
said.
The director’s job description includes management
r e sp o n sib ilitie s, and ca m p u s a c tiv ity p lan n in g,
implementation and programming. ,
Oakland Construction is the contractor for the project,
which began this summer.
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W ednesday, August 3 1 ,1 9 8 8
WASHINGTON (AP) — A 65-foot tall Latin cross
erected 22 years ago at a Marine base in Hawaii must be
removed or replaced by a nonreligious sym bol, a federal
judge ruledTuesday.
U.S. D istrict Judge Thomas F . Hogan said the cross,
which w as lit nightly at Camp H. M. Smith in the suburbs
o f H onolulu, appears to be an unconstitutional
endorsement of religion by government.
“H ie principal sym bol of Christianity, this nation’s
dominant religion, is too laden with religious meaning to
be appropriate for a government memorial assertedly
free of any religious m essage,” wrote Hogan. “While the
court is unwilling to say that a Latin cross is ipso facto (by
the fact or act itself) unconstitutional, it is constrained to
find its use inappropriate in tins case.”
Judge orders M arines
to remove Latin cross
However, Hogan said his order would not go into force
for 60 days to give the government an opportunity to seek
a further stay from an appellate court while it appeals his
decision.
The Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A. contended in its
suit that the wooden cross, on a prominent point at the
M arine base, violated the Constitution’s ban on
governmental endorsement of a particular religion.
Origin of the cross was disputed during the trial.
According to one account, the cross w as built in April 1966,
for Eastern sunrise services to which the public was
invited. A former commanding general of the Fleet
Marine Force, P acific, Lt. Gen. Victor H. Krulak, said it
w as built to serve the purely secular purpose of honoring
Marines killed or m issing in action in the Vietnam war.
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SH O W US YO U R
STU D E N T I.D .
YO U ’LL G ET A
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Men’s Group
-
Mondays 3:00-5:00
Wednesdays 3:00-5:00
Personal Imagery Group
Women’s Group
Tuesdays 1:00-3:00
Tuesdays 3:00-5:00
Alcoholism In Families Group
Building a Competent Self
Tuesdays 3:00-5:00
W ed n esd ay s 1:30-3:00
Children of Dysfunctional Families
Mondays 3:00-5:00
A ssertiveness T raining
Thursdays 3:00-5:00
Eating Issues
Group
Starting Over, Again!
Transitions Group
Thursdays 3:00-5:00
W ednesdays 5:30-7:00
Incest Survivors Group
Stress Management
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To Be Announced
Thto year w e're doing It again!
Every Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday),
Mike Puk» of the Spaghetti Company
w ill give you one FREE dinner* tor
each dinner you order! It’s our 2 to r 1
SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL. And It's good
to r the whole school year at both our
Tamps and Phoenix locations.
Any d e y o ith a week, tor lunch or
dinner, The Spaghetti Company Is known
to r a greet meal at an affordable
price. B ui the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL
makes our already te rrific prices even
b e tte r! O ur dinners Include a lu ll course
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Open at 11:30 a.m . to 11 p.m . Sundays
Groups at Counseling and Consultation are
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^ p a g lie t t i
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9 0 5 -6 1 4 6
P h o en ix
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valley briçfs
‘Sting’ operation results
in 42 arrests near Chandler
Test-m arketing to begin
fo r new type of cigarette
Motorola plans restructuring,
w ill elim inate up to 600 jobs
CHANDLER — A U.S. Border Patrol “sting” operation
has restilted in the arrests of 42 suspected illegal aliens
near Chandler Heights.
Most of die people " arrested Monday were from
Guatemala and the Mexican state of Oaxaca, said Manny
Escobedo, supervisor of the Border Patrol’s anti-smuggling
unit in Tucson.
Escobedo said undercover agents posing as sm ugglers
offered to take illegal aliens to the E ast Coast for $400
apiece.
Harold Ezell, western region com m issioner for the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, said the roundup
was part of a year-long, m ultistate investigation that has
resulted in the deportation of about 9,000 illegal aliens,
m ostly Guatemalans, and the arrest of about 100 sm ugglers
and labor contractors.
“These people are exploited badly,” Escobedo said.
PHOENIX — A new cigarette aim s to eliminate
“sidestream ” smoke, but som e doubt it w ill create any
middle ground between those who Smoke and those who
don’t.
R .J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. said Tuesday it would begin
test-m arketing a new sm okeless cigarette Oct. 1 in St.
Louis and in Arizona’s two largest cities. Phoenix and
Tucson w ere picked because of the large number of
“sophisticated” sm okers in the state, the company said.
“If they (Reynolds) think this is going to be a solution to
the ‘cigarette w ars’ that have been going on for the past 15
years or so, I think they’re deluding them selves,” said
D ave Brenton of M esa, the founder of the Smokers Rights
Alliance.
Representatives of the American Heart and American
Lung associations said they suspected the new cigarette
would be no more healthful than the rest.
SCOTTSDALE — Motorola’s Government Electronics
Group expects to elim inate 400 to 600 jobs in the Phoenix
area as part of a restructuring plan, officials said.
In addition, 1,650 em ployees w ill be transferred from the
Scottsdale-based group’s Radar System s Division to
Motorola’s McDowell Road facility.
Lawrence Moore, manager erf public affairs for the
Government Electronics Group, said the radar division will
be integrated with the Communications Division and
Tactical Electronics Division.
“It’s a major reduction for (the Government Electronics
Group),” Moore said. “But w e’re integrating (sim ilar)
businesses and technology, scaling down. It’s a posturing to
m ak e us more com petitive for the future.”
Town embarrassed
by ‘voodoo’ mayor
w
I
H
.IESTA
BOW L
QUEEN
CONTEST
J M
1988
Fiesta Bowl Queen Contest is open to all young ladies who have not previously married or
have children, who have obtained the age of 19 years but have not attained the age of 23 years
during the calendar year of 1988. Each contestant must presently be enrolled as a full-time student
taking a minimum of 12 academic hours, in good standing and not on scholastic or social
probation, in an Arizona college or university. Previous Fiesta Bowl Queens and Court members
are not eligible for any future Fiesta Bowl Queen Selections.
The
Seven finalists will be chosen to participate in the Queen Selection Dinner on October 24 at which
time the 1988-89 Fiesta Bowl Queen will be selected. H ie remaining six finalists will all be
members o f the Queen's Court and will receive a $500 scholarship in addition to other gifts and
prizes.
W H A T Y O U C A N W IN IF S E L E C T E D A S T H E Q U E E N :
■
■
■
■
$1,000 scholarship, provided by First Interstate Bank o f Arizona.
Broadway Southwest wardrobe, ball gown and accessories.
Buick courtesy car during the month of December
Trip to Portland Rose Festival in June, 1989
The Queen and her Court are sponsored by First Interstate Bank of Arizona
Cu t
h ere
1988 F iesta Bow l Q ueen C o n test
Official Entry Application
(please print o r type)
Name
Age
Present Address
Street
cuy
. Street
city
zt>
Home Address
Phone (home)
(Work)
Unhrerslty/Coiiege
Claes
FR
SO
JR
(circle one)
SR
Residence MaltrSorortty
Number of Credits Canted this Semester
M ^o r
School A cllvlie e
Other Activities
I oerlify that a l «bove Inform ation i f true and correct and agree to a lo w the F leet* Bowl u s e r* my photograph and application. I have mad, and
lu lly understand and agree to the rutee and regulations regarding ap p la ude fo r the 1988 Queen and her C ourt.
Applica»! Signature _______ ________________ ;______
.
■
_______
All applicatane must be submltted to thè Fleeta Bowl Oueen C ontaci. 5144 E. Cametoack Rd., Phoenix, Arizona. 85018-3018, eltber
pereonaily o r by m a l on o r b ifo re Septentoer 21,1988. A photograph must be induped whh thè applcation. Upon reoeipt of your application, you
w il be contaOad by Iettar conceming Information for thè inltial Intervie«*. 1 you barn any questiona, please cali Karért Churchard at thè Fleeta Bowl
olfice. 952-1280.
D ates to R em em ber
SEPTEMBER21 OCTOBER1OCTOBER 8 .
OCTOBER13OCTOBER24*
As many as 600 em ployees w ill be offered a voluntary
severance package, Moore said.
Al applicaiansmutib#postmarkadbytiwdate.
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ANDALUSIA, Ala. (AP) — Fiorala Mayor H.T. Mathis,
accused of em barrassing his town with “voodoo” antics,
testified Tuesday that he granted pardons to convicted
offenders because he has a soft heart.
“My m ission on earth is to help people,” the 85-year-old
former tire store owner testified as the defense began
presenting its case at his impeachm ent trial for alleged
incompetence and m isuse of office.
Before taking the stand, he told reporters: “Satan is trying
to destroy Florala’s governm ent. I love Fiorala.”
Prosecution w itnesses depicted Mathis as a . man who
undermined the law by abusing his pardon power. He is
accused of pardoning more than 160 traffic offenders,
including 27 drunken drivers.
“I have more power than Ronald Reagan,” Mathis was
quoted as saying by City Clerk Betty Hooted, the final
prosecution witness.
In Alabama, rem oval from office is decided by a civil
proceeding conducted much like a crim inal trial. Covington
County Circuit Judge W illiam Baldwin w ill send the case to
the jury Wednesday morning.
In closing argum ents, M athis’ attorney, Jam es Prestwood,
said it would be cruel to im peach Mathis.
“Why go to all this expense?” Prestwood said. “They’ve
done everything in the book to make H.T. Mathis look bad.”
But Attorney General Don Siegelm an described the
situatimi in Fiorala as “the m ost abusive case I’ve ever
heard of in the United States.” He said the impeachment
complaint was brought “to prevent a tragedy” such as a
highway death caused by a drunken driver who had been
pardoned “at the whim of a m ayor.”
Hooten said she told the mayor som e of the offenders
getting pardoned had been highly intoxicated. Asked about
his reaction, she said, “It didn't seem like it mattered to
him .”
Questioned by prosecutors about the pardons, Mathis said
people cam e to him with sad stories and he w as just trying to
help them.
“I’m just a little soft-hearted,” he said.
In earlier testim ony Tuesday, w itnesses told the jury that
Mathis once threatened a councilm an with a knife and asked
the police chief to give him confiscated wine.
The mayor of Fiorala, a town of about 5,600 on the Florida
line 20 m iles south n f A ndalusia, w as charged with
corruption, incompetence and w illful neglect of duty by the
grand jury that called for his ouster.
Mathis’ critics also deplored his July proclamation of
“National Voodoo Week” and his earlier purported attempt
to scare the police chief by sprin k lin g so-called “voodoo
powder” around City Hall, council cham bers and down
corridors to the jail.
In his testim ony, the mayor elaborated on the caper.
Mathis said he did not believe in voodoo and the yellow
powder he spread at City H all was su lfu r powder not meant
to harm anyone. After the incident w as reported by the
media, the mayor said he decided to capitalize on publicity.
“I don’t even know what voodoo m eans. .
I made a
m istake in the way I did it,” he testified.
Police Chief A.V. Patrick testified Tuesday that he was not
influenced by the. mayor’s voodoo joke. Patrick, however,
sebi the mayor’s abuse of pardoning power turned Fiorala
law enforcement into a joke.
He said arrested m otorists would laugh a t officers and one
told him: “I don’t mind you arresting m e. I’m going to get a
pardon.”
The mayor’s attorney tried to show Tuesday that the
pardons granted by Mathis demonstrated Ids concern about
the cost of housing people in the city jail and his belief that it
was better for them to be working, earning an income.
Mathis defended his performance in office over the last
four years, citing annual increases in the city’s sales tax
collection from $850,152 in 1964 to last year’s $930,365.
In her testim ony, Hooten said the pardons granted by
Mathis, who was elected in 1984, cost ih e city $27,767 in
canceled or refunded fines. She said the mayor told her he
didn’t think som e of.thè arrested offenders were guilty.
Mathis’ term expires Oct. 3. But Florala’s city election has
been postponed by a federal court, and thè mayor, barring
removal through impeachment, could hold the office for an
indefinite period as a result.
S ja t e P r c M
Wednesday, August 3 1 ,1 9 8 8
Page 11
ASU, Valley hospitals lose nurses to other fields
Continued from page 1.
The report included critical care, m edical-surgical and
nurse managem ent positions as posing the greatest
recruitm ent problem.
At Tèmpe St. Luke’s Hospital, 1500 S. Mill Ave., specialized
care is the hardest hit.
“To date, our shortage has been »'specialized areas like
labor and delivery and thé nursery,” said Melanie Swisher,
vice president of patient and physician services at Tempe St.
Luke’s.
The fédéral report added that the inablity of hospitals to fill
vacant nursing positions has resulted in the closing of
hospital beds. Forty-five percent of hospitals reported they
w ere forced to close beds temporarily in 1987 due to nurse
shortages, the report said.
W e (n urses) a re n o t
p o rtra y e d a s
in tellig en t professionals. *
— J a n e lle K re u g e r
“We haven’t had problems there (with beds) yet,” Swisher
said, “That won’t happen to us in the near future.”
The problem, according to health officials, is complex.
The starting salary of about $22,000 for a registered nurse
in Arizona “is about average for m ost fie ld s/’ Kreuger said.
“The problem is, though, that in 10 or 20 years the increases
in pay doesn’t equal those of m ost other fields.
T w o n urses go o v e r th e books a t T em p e S t. L u ke’s H o sp ital on T uesday. T h e h ospital is Just o n e in th e V a lle y b ein g a ffe c te d by a
.
“More than the m oney, there is the whole im age of shortage o f nurses. nursing; we are not portrayed as intelligent professionals.
The com m ission report blamed the shortage on an increase
We don’t feel the im age reflects what nurses are really in demand for nurses rather than a decrease in supply.
about.” ^
Currently there are an estim ated 2 m illion licensed RNs in
Denise Halford, executive director of the Arizona Nurses the United States — 35 percent more than in 1977,
Association, said: “Nurses need autonomy to do their jobs.
Right now they are just following orders from the doctors/’
She added that nurses are turning to employment outside
of hospitals. The m ost popular method is pool, or agency,
employment, which allows a nurse to pick and choose jobs.
“With this method, they can stick with their specialty and
1,085
decide when and if they want to work,” Halford said.
1983
Hospitals, which employ two-thirds of all registered
1,064
1984
nurses, suffer the m ost because they have to hire nurses from
881
agencies. For exam ple, the federal report said that in 1987,47
1985
percent of U.S. hospitals reported having to hire agency
1986
775
nurses in order to have a workable staff.
ASU C o lle g e o f N u rsin g
T o ta l E n ro llm e n t F ig u re s
‘R ig h t n o w th ey (nurses)
a re ju s t follow ing
orders from the doctors. ’
— D e n is e H a lfo rd
“The problem is that the hospitals can’t hire enough nurses
to fill their shortage,” Halford said. “Nurses aren’t choosing
hospitals (for employment) anymore.”
1987
1988
806
800(+)
According to the report, the unemployment rate among
registered nurses has declined in recent years to a record low
.9 percent.
Along with the shortage of hospital nurses, there is a rise in
illness severity caused by “the aging of the population, lifeextending technological advances and the spread of the AIDS
epidem ic,” the report said.
Kreuger agreed. “There is a greater demand for nurses
because of the increasing num b«- of elderly people, and the
fact that people are sicker now than they have been,” she
said. “Also, there are just sim ply more sick people.”
The need for more nurses is illustrated by the report’s
finding that between 1983 and 1986, hospitals have increased
the number of full-tim e equivalent RNs they employ by
approximately 6 percent — about 38,000 nurses.
Not only does an undersized staff affect the nurses, the
report found that patients have suffered due to the increased
nurse workload.
The report said “an increase in workload per nurse
appears to alter the way RNs care for their patients. Care is
‘There n e e d s to b e
a c h a n g e in nursing
ed u catio n prog ram s,
p e rio d .1
— M e la n ie S w is h e r
often prioritized and only care which is deemed absolutely
essential is provided.”
Kreuger said a possible solution to the nursing problem
could be the introduction of RCTs, registered care
technicians who would be trained to perform sim ple tasks in
order to free RNs for higher-level functions. But Kreuger
added that nurses generally are opposed to RCTs.
“It is hard enough to get nurses,” she said. “RCTs would
have fewer skills and responsibilities and therefore less
autonomy and a sm aller salary.”
The future does not look encouraging, the federal report
said.
“In the short term , the quantity of care provided by the
existing pool of RNs w ill be difficult to increase,” the report
said. “In the long term . . . the future supply of RNs w ill not
be adequate to m eet the anticipated demand.”
Things do not appear to be much better in Arizona, even
though new adm issions to the ASU nursing program are up.
this year, said Geraldine Ellison, a nursing professor. She
said new adm issions total 142, up slightly from the fall of
1987.
A t Tempo St. Luke's Hospital, officials said the specialized care unit was the
“Even if we w ere to double our enrollment in the next two
to four years, we would not be able to get them (new nursing
school graduates) out into the marketplace soon enough,”
Kreuger said.
At least 24 states, including Arizona, are considering or
have passed legislation to deal with the shortage.
“We’re writing a bill we hope to enter to legislation by
1990,” Halford said. “It would require a four-year BA degree
in order to take the RN exam and a two-year degree for the
LPN (licensed practical nurse) test.”
Swisher agreed the primary solution lies in educational
reform.
‘
“There needs to be a change in nursing education
programs, period,” Swisher said. “We need to put these
programs into play as soon as possible.
“ (At St. Lukes) we have looked at new recruiting efforts
that have not been done before. Also, we want to cross-train
to utilize the staff we already have. We would like to see the
team concept, where LPNs, orderlies and nurses’ aides are
better-trianed and play a larger part in health care.”
O fficials agreed there is a need for better cooperation and
communication between nurses and their em ployers.
“We’d like to see the hospitals work with nurses m ore,”
Halford said. “The worst thing is the hospitals could go
bankrupt. What then?”
State Prêt»
W ^nesda^ugurt31iJ988
E 22L Ü
in court decision
PHOENIX (AP) — An 18-year-old mother of three ordered
to practice birth control throughout her child-bearing years
is pregnant again, but the judge who sentenced her for child
abuse said she won’t revoke the probation.
“I have not been presented evidence that she is not in
compliance with the court order,” Maricopa County Superior
Court Judge Lindsay Budzyn said during a hearing Monday.
She noted that no method of birth control was foolproof.
“Pregnancy doesn’t necessarily constitute a violation,”
Budzyn said.
The judge sentenced Debra Ann Forster to lifetim e
probation last May 24, with the birth-control stipulation. The
judge, who could have imposed a 30-year jail term , said it
was the only way to make sure Forster did not have other
children to abuse.
Forster, who has appealed the sentence, pleaded guilty in
April to two counts of attempted child abuse stem m ing from
a May 1987 incident in which she left her sons, William, 1%,
and Scott, 6 months, alone in a Mesa apartment for three
days. Authorities said the apartment had no air conditioning,
and both babies were dehydrated and near death when found.
L o o k in g d e v ilis h
The birth-control order attracted protests from such
disparate groups as the Roman Catholic Church, which
proscribes birth control, and the American Civil Liberties
Union.
M arie Catinella, 22, a senior fashion merchandise m a|or exam ines a photo she |ust took o f resource management student Eddie
Kachnik, 24, Tuesday in front o f th e M U . Kachnik posed as Sparky to raise m oney fo r the business fraternity, Pi Sigma Epsilon.
Budzyn said Monday she would not order Forster to have
an abortion nor issue any abortion ruling.
New law may ban obscene dial-a-porn services
She also said she would rule by Friday on motions from
Garrett Simpson, Forster’s public defender, and the ACLU to
modify the terms of probation and delete the birth-control
requirement.
„
Sundi Kjenstad/State Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Supreme Court Justice Sandra
Day O’Connor on Tuesday allowed the government to begin
" enforcing a new law banning sexually obscene dial-a-pom
* m essage services, pending the full court’s review of the
statute.
O’Connor denied a request by Sable Communications of
California Inc. for a stay of a Los Angeles federal court ruling
that upheld that portion of the law banning telephone
services whose m essages fall under the legal definition of
“obscene.”
H ie California court, however, also ruled that federal
regulators may not ban “indecent” m essages from phone
lines. The government has appealed that decision and both
portions of the law are now before the Supreme Court.
The justice’s denial of a stay m eans the government ban on
obscene telephone m essages is in effect and the Federal
Communications Commission will begin enforcing it, said
Diane Killory, FCC general counsel.
“I don’t see any basis for us to hold up enforcement,” she
said.
Sable attorney Richard Simon said he was not surprised by
O’Connor’s action but said, “ I think we can m ake a very
convincing case that the statute as written is unconstitutional
and we expect to do that."
The FCC considers m aterial “indecent” if it depicts or
describes sexual or excretory organs or activities in a
patently offensive way.
The com m ission deem s m aterial “obscene” if it depicts
sexual acts in a patently offensive way, appeals to the
prurient interest of an average person and lacks serious
literary, artistic, political or scientific value.
The ACLU attorney, Colin Campbell, argued that the order
was invasive, amounted to cruel and unusual punishment
and violated freedom of religion for Forster, a Catholic.
Jeff Sandler, a deputy county attorney, countered that the
sentence served useful purposes in rehabilitating the
defendant and protecting others.
The judge learned in court of (he new pregnancy —
Forster’s fourth — from Simpson, who said it was confirmed
last week. The baby is due April 23, he said.
He refused to say whether Forster w as practicing birth
control when she becam e pregnant.
While awaiting trial this year, Forster gave up the rights to
her sons and a daughter, who w as born in jail. According to
court records, all three have been adopted.
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Page 13
Wednesday, August 3 1 ,1 9 8 8
|
■' ;
The famous American jukebox rapidly becomes dinosaur
By HOW ELL J. MALHAM JR.
S tate Press
There are few symbols these days that
represent the American tradition, mostly
because no one’s really sure what an
American tradition is — any more.
It’s become increasingly more difficult to
id en tify an A m erican tradition, any
tradition, especially in the 1980s.
Europeans have it easy, at least when it
com es to culture. Centuries of ruins, art and
history provide foreign countries with a
tangible identity, whereas America settles
for Lee Iaacoca, condoms and the Love
Canal as postage-stamp candidates.
Sadly enough, what little culture America
retains is slow ly fading into oblivion and
b ein g r e p la c e d by th e s o c ia l and
technological efficien cies of apathetic
progress.
There’s living proof illum inating from the
desecrated confines of the once lightless
W rigley Field.
Subtle, gradual change that delicately
im poses its fortes is practically ; non
ex isten t in a confused so ciety with
stream lined priorities, .
The culture of the 1980s thrives
appearing to be informed, cultured,
w hen sa tisfie d su p e r fic ia litie s t
traditions suffer.
Although there have been many symbolic
fatalities of change, the bulk being in the
twentieth century due to the rapidity of one
technological advancement exploding into
another, there is one tradition that remains,
w ou n d ed an d in d a n g er o f b ein g
compromsied by the shallow pleasures of
progress — The American Jukebox.
The restaurants, taverns, howling alleys,
soda shops and cafes that have dotted the
freew ays and lined the heartland of
America for the past 50 years have alm ost
certainly relied upon a Seeburg, Wurlitzer
or Rowe International jukebox for m usical
entertainment.
Now, however, with the insurgence of
m usic videos and compact discs, the
jukebox fa c e s it’s m ost threatening
competition to date.
Walking into a bar, slipping 25 cents into a
dusty box, and hearing a crusty copy of
“Mack the Knife” saunter through a couple
of blown speakers m ay very w ell be a
historic event.
Renovations on the jukebox began in 1986
w h e n S e e b u r g , a f t e r f i l i n g fo r
reorganization seven years earlier, ^traded
in their obsolete 45s (which now make up
only 5 per cent of the record marketplace)
for com apct discs, the ultim ate inimical
experience.
B illy’s c a fe n o n »
Rowe International, one of Seeburg’s
formidable competitors, did the reborn
company one better a id produced a box that
played both 45s and
not only to
preserve a tradition but to promote the
alm ighty sm ackeroo — $1 gives you three
CD selections, $5 gives you 18.
D espite Rowe’s attem pt to sustain
popularity of the ailing 45, the trademark of
the jukebox, they along with Seeburg,
corrupted its nostalgic essence by catering
to the sophisticated listening tastes of a
modernized market.
Along with this realization has com e the
fact that there are too many technological
distractions which have forced the jukebox
to play second fiddle.
Kurt Kirkendall, manager of Garrison
Vending, claim s that big screen televisions
and video gam es have drawn people’s
interests away from the jukebox, thus
causing a decrease in box rentals.
“People’s attitudes have changed through
the years, too,” Kirkendall said and added
that people in the 1960s and 1970s were more
interested in what the jukebox provided
than today.
This harsh reality has caused som e bar
owners to seriously re-evalute their need for
a jukebox.
A company’s success ratio depends on its
ability to adapt to the everchanging market.
It’s a pity, though, that financial survival
som etim es calls for a treasured sacrifice.
J u st ask D avid Im an, ow ner and
proprietor of the auspicious 6 East, he’ll tell
you.
“It dosen’t make any m oney,” Iman said,
referring to his seven-year-old Rowe, that
sits in a rem ote corner of his rustic
establishm ent.
“It costs m e $30 a week to rent and that’s
just like throwing $30 aw a y . . . a w eek,” he
said.
Iman believes the entertainment value of
his jukebox is lim ited because “the people
keep playing the sam e songs all night.”
The 41-year-old owner, who describes his
neighborhood bar’s custom ers as working
class and students, said he is scrapping his
jukebox for a reel-to-reel tape machine, an
event that should go unnoticed.
“I don’t think the custom ers w ill m iss it,”
he said confidently of his box whose
selections include R.E.M , Dire Straits, The
Sm ithereens, Robert Cray and Hank
W illiams Jr.
Since the vending company provides
Iman with only top-40 selections, unless he
specifies a selection, he feels that the tape
m achine w ill allow him to provide exactly
what his customers want.
Scott Edwards already seem s to be doing
just that at the Sawm ill, with a welcomed
tw ist — his jukebox is free, which just m ay
m ake it the best box this side of Yuma.
"It’s alw ays on free play,” Edwards said,
which is part of the reason for its success
and longevity.
T m to J rtw b m , pag* 1B.
Fascism in American
raises many valuable quesnons
By LAURIE a SMITH
Stale Prat*
■'
I would like to see Morton Downey Jr. get
a bold of the characters in “Betrayed,” a
Him about underground fascist movements
in the United States.
He would, I im agine, vent a storm of rage
upon the bigots and racist murders who
formed the basic {dot for the film .
And, bad he had som e “loud mouth” input
in the film , perhaps he would have left the
feeling a bit more redeemed than
director Costa-Gravas ( “M issing”) does.
But, then again» redem ption is not the goal
of this movie.
•
. ...... ^ l i
ft's goal is to shock audiences by exposing
frightening aspects of human personality
and to stir their emotions through the m oral
dilem m as its m ain ch aracter, Cathy
W eaver (Debra W inger) m ust face and
overcom e.
%
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ÉSS
In this w ay, Casta-Gravas has succeeded
S 3 ??
b eau tifu lly
“Betrayed” la a compelling film with a
astoriUng thorns that is absolutely worth
'
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T he sto r y opens w ith * b ru ta lly
unexpected miardtr and the suspense is
Immediately intense. Cathy Weaver is
assigned to investigate the main suspect,
G a r y S im m o n s (T o m B e r e n g e r ,
“Platoon” ), and goes undercover as a
combine operater named Katie Phillips.
Through her involvem ent with Gary,
Cathy is soon drawn into a sinister and
angry world in which white m en perceive
men of other races as a threat to their
freedom and to their pursuit of the generic
“American Dream .”
cinem a
These men are not simply bigots — their
rage is extrem e. Tbeyjustify the actions of
groups such as the Ku K hn Klan and they
believe their mission is, to wipe-out those
people who they view a s unfit for their
These are men who literally hunt other
m en to r sp o rt
Cathy is both shocked and frightened by
w hat she experiences and m ust call on
enormous personal strength in order to
m aintain her own m oral values and identity.
“This m evie is a th riiisr,’’ Costa-Gravas
said. “And far me, a good thriller a n t a
when you toel very personally involved with
th e
Santana strikes chord in music scene after decades
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — When jazz great M iles Davis
recently praised the originality of CarkK Santana, the towkey m usician expressed satisfaction that he still strikes a
singular chord on the m usical scene after two decades.
“For Miles to tell m e this, hey, that’s a great compliment,
but it shows that I’m not on stagnant w ater,” said Santana,
who’s admired for his stirring guitar solos. “Stagnant water
stinks. You need water to go out, you need w ater to com e in —
all the tim e. And in order to do it, you have to become a
student. Once you have a m aster’s and you know everything,
it’s a drag.”
To keep his m usic flowing, Santana w ill release a threerecord UP early next month and has launched a tour that
reunites Gregg Rolie, Jose “Chepito” Areas and Michael
Shrieve, three original members of the band that evolved
during jam sessions in San Francisco’s heavily Hispanic
M ission D istrict.
The Santana Blues Band made its debut in 1968 at the
Fillm ore West w hereSantana recently held court at a sm all
side table overtookiag busy Geary Street, talking about his
hew «Pawn, the feelings behind his m usic and the popularity
of Latin-rhythm groups.
“We want to serve the people with our m usic,” he said.
“Music is a healing force if played correctly. I really believe
that, aside from being the universal language, it’s a healing
force and reminds us that w e have m ore things in common
Hum we think.”
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Page 18
Jukebox
have live m usic during the week, and we
use the juke box in between sets,” he said.
It is without doubt that the Sawmill’s
jukebox has become an intricate part of the
establishm ent, shelling out popular songs
that set the bars tempo for drinking, playing
and partying. And since it’s free, it’s sees
constant action.
Edwards believes that even if it wasn’t
free, people would still empty their quarters
in the box — anything to be a disc jockey for
a night.
“The jukebox w ill always make you a lot
of money — unless, of course, you’ve got one
that’s free,” Edwards said.
Aside from the bars such as the Sawmill,
which has kept the jukebox flourishing, not
out of necessity, but as a courtesy, there are
few other hopes for resuscitating the
45-spinning box.
C ontinued fro m page 13.
In light of thè fact that the role of the
jukebox, once a colorful vehicle to promote
the 45 single, has changed into an oversizedrecord playing dinosaur, Edwards is
convinced the box is here to stay.
“The jukebox will always be around,” he
said, concluding that there is always a
market for a good sounding system .
And what makes a good system , besides
being free?
“Variety, and also a good power amp
behind it, with good speakers,” said
Edwards, who runs his box through the PA
system .
Although today the focus of the Sawmill’s
entertainment is live m usic, it wasn’t
alw ays that way — it was just a jukebox.
“It used to be only the jukebox, with live
entertainment on the weekends. Now we
One phenomenon, however, that has
succeeded in re-establishing the jukebox
among the ranks of audio entertainment,
has been the renewed interest in the 1950s.
Nostalgia from that era has run rampant
through the country, m anifesting itself in
everything from fashion to food.
Flat top haircuts, bermuda shorts, cat
eyed sunglasses and soda fountains, have
succeded in seeping back into the social
m ainstream of America, making sim ple,
outrageous conservatism fun again.
That’s part of the reason for the sucess of
B illy’s and their deliciously ornate 1937
Wurlitzer juke box.
“When people com e in here, the jukebox
brings back old m em ories,” said Ray
Samora, manager of the ’50s styled cafe and
bar.
“People always ask ‘Where do you get
them’ and ‘can w e buy it from you,’ ”
Samora said.
The selections, which conform to the
vintage m otif, provide selected hits from the
’50s and early ’60s and set a nostalgic pace
for this classic cafe.
“It’s here for the people to enjoy the
m usic and the machine. It’s the nostalgia,
it’s not to make m oney,” Samora said.
If th a t r a re s e n s itiv ity b eco m es
infectious, then perhaps the endangered
jukebox could find a place among the more
efficient technological ranks, not as a
. means to pay the rent, but as a sym bol and a
reminder of a tim e in America that may
soon be forgotten.
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W ednesday, August 3 1 ,1 9 8 8
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Tangerine Dream
In an increasingly dehumanizing, narrow-focused world, it
is not this machine-made collection of “sonic cues” mid
“sequencer melodies” that is needed, but a musician
communicating to a listener.
All day long computers screw up lives, bank m achines eat
cards w e have been told we must carry to make life “easy”
and our friends’ recorded voices tell us to call back later for
“quality tim e.”
There is a need for m usical artists, now more than ever, to
strike emotions with an angry, individual empathy and fight
exactly this sort of slick, lulling m ental fat.
Even the boldest teen love ballad in the 50s still had som e
elem ent to identify w ith; “yeah, that’s happened to me. But
she le f t . . . ” It isn’t lim ited to rock, either; the vanity of a
noble effort without hope in Tchaikovsky strikes nervous
system electricity In recalling a hard-fought race where the
winner has been seen crossing the line far ahead.
Both genres have a common elem ent — the feeling that
there is someone out there who knows how it feels. A solution
is left to listeners, but they are no longer as alone.
Tangerine Dream m akes listeners feel like a dog that has
been left in the house with the television set on, “so it has
company. It’D never know.”
But it does know, and it gets lonely. This is an unacceptable
substitute for any lover of m usic. And those like the runner on
the cover of “Optical R ace,” that slip and say, “Why make
the effort to get up?” are complacent enough to settle for
anything.
Any listener, complacent enough to be satisfied with the
lowing of a machine is concurrently complacent enough to Sit
down and get m entally spoon-fed by someone else’s thought.
A tod , in other words. And that’s exactly what produced this
album.
Tools.
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C om e jo in th e P U R C H A S IN G C L U B a t A S U .
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D O N 'T M IS S O U R F IR S T M E E T IN G !
W ednesday, S ep tem b er 7
UNDERSTANDING
THE BIBLE
A W ednesday Noon Bible Fellowship
This fall semester the Christian Students Fellowship
(CSF) is having a book by book survey o f the Old
Testament every Wednesday in the Yuma Room
(211) o f die Memorial Union Building from
12:40-1:30 p.m . Bill Freeman, from ‘‘Ministry o f the
W ord" radio broadcast, will be sharing. A ll are
welcome! The subjects are as follows:
Fall Sem ester - Genesis to Song o f
Solomon
Aug. 2 4
Aug. 31
Sept. 7
Sept. 1 4
Sept- 21
G EN E S IS - God's Original ThqugMIOrMan
EXO D U S - G od’s Corporate Purpose
LEVITIC U S - Worship and Fellowship
N UM BERS - How God Deals with Failure
D EU TER O N O M Y - God’s Faithfulness Toward
His People
Sept. 28
O ct. 5
Jp S H U A - The Life of Fatih
JU D G ES & R UTH -TheReauSa of Going Our
Own Way
O ct. 12
O ct. 19
O ct. 2 6
Nov. 9
1 4 2 S A M U E L -A Man After God’s Own Heart
1 & 2 K IN G S - Unity and DMalon
1 & 2 C H R O N IC LES - The Zealfor God’s House
EZRA & NEH EM IA H - The Recovery of God’s
N ov.
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.
ESTH ER - God’s Providential Care
JO B - God's Dealings with the Sell
PSALM S & FR O VER B S - Mforah$> and Wisdom
EC C LESIA STES A SO NG O F SO LO M O N -
House
16
23
30
7
Vanity and Purpose
RURAL & APACHE
9 6 8-0243
Christian Students Fellowship
1315 South College • Tem pe, AZ 85282
For Information, call (602)948-4488
com
State Press
Page 20
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Wednesday. August 3 1 ,1 9 8 8
Dream job
.
'
"V ^
- • Page 21
•
Track coach calls ASU ‘premier’ opportunity
B y GARY JACKSON
State Prase
Sometimes dream s do com e true.
“I think every coach has a dream school that he wants to
work a t,” said Tom Jones, the newest leader of the ASU track
and field program. “This is one of the premier jobs in the
country.”
\
Jones, who w as named as coach Aug. 10, said ASU always
has been at the top of his list because of its budget and
national recojpiition.
But for the second tim e in his coaching career, Jones has
inherited a team sentenced to two years of probation.
Last season’s Pacific-10 Conference investigation of the
ASU trade program marked the third tim e since 1981 that
violations have been found.
“I’ve been around long enough to know the program will
continue to exist,?’ Jones said. “The university and the
tradition of ASU is bigger than the problems that have come
up in the past.”
Jones com es to the Sun D evils from Texas-El Paso, which
was under probation from 1986 until 1988. Therefore, Jones
said he knows what to expect this season at ASU.
“It’s just a m atter of not making any m istakes,” Jones
said. “It’s going to be tough to recruit. It’s going to take a
couple of years for the program to recover.”
Despite 11 rule violations and past blem ishes, the ASU
track program avoided the “death penalty, ’’. which would
have prohibited the Sun D evils from fielding a track team.
“I was m ost im pressed in the way (athletic director)
Charles (Harris) handled the process,” Jones said. “I also
felt he echoed what I believed in.”
After form er coach Clyde Duncan was fired in January, the
ASU track program felt the aftershock. Various reactions by
the athletes surfaced, putting som e team members on
opposite sides of the dispute.
Jones, who arrived at ASU last week, held private
m eetings with returning members and said he was optim istic
about working with the athletes.
“I think the athletes love ASU. They want to finish school
and get a degree,” hesaid. “A lot of them feel they really got
screwed. It wasn’t their fault, so why do they have to pay the
price/”
As part of the probation, Sun D evil athletes cannot compete
in away or postseason m eets as a representative of ASU.
However, there is a possibility that the probation w ill be
reduced to one year if a Pac-10 review at the end of the season
is favorable.
“If we get through this évalutation we can be over this in a
year," Jones said. “From my understanding, if we are in
com pliance and do not make any m istakes, which we do not
H aw n S r h m w n /flw P r»w
Tom Jonas, hired as ASU’s head track coach on Aug. 10, to not bothered by the program ’s troubled history. He said th e ASU posi
tion to a “ prem ier” opportunity.
Jones raid m ost of the newcomers m ost likely w ill be
intend to do, we could be off probation on July 1, 1969.”
Until then, Jones raid he would try to work with the “midterm kids” who attended junior college. In addition to
athletes to do what w ill be best for them during the probation. being able to com pete at the university level, he said they
Some of the track members w ill com pete and use their should be prepared to handle ASU’s academ ics.
Jones said he always has emphasized academ ics to his
experience this season as a stepping stone for the next.
athletes. He said that while he w as coaching at North
Others w ill redshirt to extend their eligibility, he said.
However. it w ill be difficult for Jones to improve the future Carolina State, the graduation rate was between 80 percent
of the track program, since the probation prevents off- 'and 90 percent.
Jones said his style mirrors that of Dr. LeRoy Walker, who
campus recruiting for a year.
“I think you have to have the ability to go out and evaluate w as the team consultant for the Sun D evils last season.
them personally,” Jones said. “Of course, you have to Coaches often use ideas of other coaches in developing their
evaluate when they win and the level of competition, but a lot own philosophy, Jones said, and Walker influenced him the
of it depends on luck. I took a chance on som e who really most.
Turn to DREAM, page 24.
blossom ed.”
Johnson to redshirt; hoop squad looks for players
S taff and w ire reports
Joey Johnson
The ASU basketball team is looking for a
few good men.
With Monday’s announcement that senior
guard Joey Johnson win not play this
season, ASU head coach Steve Patterson
now searching for baisketbaU player;
Johnson, who w ass benched briefly last
season for sw earing
ing at Patterson at
h alftim e on a road gam e, w in sit eu t the
1988-89 season as a redshirt.
Patterson said the redshirting of Johnson
and sophomore center Em ilio Kovacic, a
transfer from Phoenix’s Grand Canyon
CoUege, leaves his squad with only l l
players.
He raid he win use walk-ons (non
scholarship players) to fill out the roster
when preseason practices begin Oct. 15.
Johnson, whose older brother is guard
Dennis Johnson of the NBA’s Boston Celtics,
wiU rem ain on scholarship but win not be
allowed to practice with the Sun D evils this
year.
Patterson said Johnson is academ ically
‘On a cam pus this size,
there are probably a few
players who are pretty good.’
— S tev e P atterson
eligible to play and the redshirting is just for
him to take a year off from last year’s
‘This wiU give him an opportunity to
spend more tim e on the books and lead the
life of a normal student,” Patterson raid
Monday.
T he 6 -fo o t-4 , 185-pound J o h n so n
reportedly was unhappy with his lade of
playing tim e and swore at Patterson in the
locker room at halftim e of a Jan. 16 gam e at
Oregon State.
Johnson played little the rest of the
season, 'averaging 7.9 points and 3.0
rebounds in 27 gam es overall.
He later was a high jumper with the track
team , utilizing his 50-inch vertical leaping
ability.
Johnson, from W ilm ington, C a lif.,
transferred to ASU after leading Southern
Idaho to a 37-1 record and the national junior
college title in 1987 by averaging 19.5 points,
eight rebounds and three blocked shots per
gam e.
Fans can mix with players Saturday at football photo day
By JEFF SHAIN
S tfh iP lfii
"■
For those who csfa’t get started on the season soon enough,
this weekend offers hard-core Sun Devil football fans help in
getting through one more weekend without an Arizona State
gam e.
The Sun D evils w ill host a Team Photo Day on Saturday
morning, giving fans a chance to m ingle with players on the
field and m aybe take a few snapshots them selves.
“The coaches are trying to be more receptive to the fans
and build tip support,” said John Davis, assistant athletic,
director for marketing and promotion. “It’s something
where kids can com e out and have their picture taken with
the players.”
' •
The session wijl begin for the general public at Sun Devil
Stadium at 10 a.m ., although the players w ill be on the field
earlier to take the annual team picture.
Fans w ill be allowed on the field to m ix with the players,
who w ill be made available to sign autographs, pose for
snapshots or just stand and chat.
“This gives the fans a chance to be a news reporter,” Davis
said. “They can walkup, snap a shot and talk to the players.”
Following the aqtograph-and-photo session, a short
scrim m age w ill begin on the stadium field at noon, with the
public encouraged to attend. The workout w ill not be a full
scrim m age, but a short run-through of selected elem ents,
lasting about 30 minutes.
Davis would not predict how many people he expected to
attend the session, but hoped fora turnout of between 500 and
1,000 spectators. He raid he hoped the affair would grow to
where it would draw as many as 5,000 people annually.
Those fans attending also w ill receive giveaw ays. The first
300youths age 16 and under w ill receive photographs of one of
six selected senior players* which w ere taken earlier this
year at Camp Tontozona. Adults w ill receive either one of 150
“Marmie’s Army” T-shirts or one of 150 disposable cam eras
with film , donated by Fuji Film .
The football Team Photo Day is the first of four planned
photo days this year. D avis said sim ilar sessions also are
planned for basketball and baseball, as w ell as the spring
football gam e.
“We’re talking to people (sponsors) about a big package —
football, basketball, baseball and the spring football gam e,”
D avis said.
Traditionally, the team picture has been taken at the Sun
D evils’ annual Media Day, held the day before the squad
leaves for Camp Tontozona. However, the Media Day
activities were moved to the MU this year because of a
Phoenix Cardinals football gam e the night before.
Therefore, the rescheduling of the team picture provided a
window for the fan photo session.
“We’ve had this in the works since about mid-summer,”
Davis said. “The coaches said we should have a day where
they (the fans) can com e in and m eet the players.”
StatePres»
P aggJrè
R oster left at 12 players
as basketball cuts m ade
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. (AP) — Brian Shaw,
the first-round draft choice
of the Boston Celtics, was the
final player cut Tuesday as
the U.S. Olympic men’s
basketball team reached its
12-player limit.
Shaw, the Pacific Coast
Athletic Association player
of the year last season at
University of CaliforniaSanta Barbara, was caught
up in a numbers problem at
guard. Shaw was the best
rebounder of the group, but
his floor leadership never
really showed during the
eight exhibition games the
Olympians played against
teams made up of NBA
players.
The guards on the 12-man
team that will defend the
gold medal a t Seoul, South
K orea, next m onth are
Vernell “Bimbo” Coles of
V i r g i n i a Tec h, Mitch
Richmond of Kansas State,
Willie Anderson of Georgia,
Jeff Grayer of Iowa State,
Hersey Hawkins of Bradley
Seoul
1988
an d C h a r le s S m ith
Georgetown.
of
The frontcourt players
who made the 12-man squad
w ere D avid Robinson of
Navy, Danny Manning of
Kansas, who has seen some
tim e at guard on the tour,
Charles Smith of Pittsburgh,
J.R . Reid of North Carolina,
Dan M ajerle of Central
M ichigan and d efen siv e
specialist Stacey Augmon of
Nevada-Las Vegas.
Cards’ defense would rather pass on facing Esiason
PHOENIX (AP) — Phoenix Cardinals coach Gene
Stallings, whose NFL team was plagued by a porous
secondary last year and through all of this preseason, isn’t
looking forward to facing Bengals quarterback Boomer
Esiason in Sunday’s season-opener at Cincinnati.
“He can really throw the football. He’s a take-charge
guy, a little like (H all of Fam e quarterback) Roger
(Staubach) w as,” said Stallings, who was an assistant
coach at D allas when Staubach played for the Cowboys.
“Esiason is very effective. He’s big, he’s strong and he
looks like a great competitor. Their team has a lot of
ability, a lot of lug-play players. I’m a little tmeasy going
into every gam e, but especially against a team that
throws w ell.”
The Cardinals ranked 25th in the 28-team league last
year in overall defense and pass defense, allowing 358.9
yards total offense and 225.5 passing yards per gam e.
They gave up 30 touchdowns through the air and
DESERT
Thompson has to present
the final roster to Olympic
officials by Sept. 2 and no
changes m ay be made after
that, even for an injury?
SPORTSW EAR
asu briefs
•FOOTBALL STUDENT SEASON TICKET PICK-UP — Students
who ordered football tickets w ith the first le tte r of th eir last nam e
beginning w ith an Q through Z m ay pick up th eir tickets today a t the
Sun D evil T icket Office. To claim tickets, students m ust present the
receip t they received this sum m er and a validated ASU ID.
• ASU BASEBALL WALK-ONS MEETING — F o r those interested in
trying out fo r the ASU baseball program , there w ill be an
inform ational m eeting a t 5 p.m . T hursday in Room 35 of the
U niversity A ctivity C enter. P ractice fo r w alk-ons begins a t 5 p.m .
Sept. 6 and w ill run m ost of th e week. T hursday’s m eeting m ust be
attended in ord er to fill out the necessary eligibility form s.
sports briefs
• LAW SUIT CLAIMS HOCKEY STAR SEXUALLY ASSAULTED
GIRL — A civil law su it filed Tuesday claim s th a t s ta r St. Louis Blues
center Doug Gilm our had sexual intercourse repeatedly w ith a
14-year-old g irl and seeks a t least $1 m illion from the N ational Hockey
League player, his wife and th e team . It also alleges th a t th e Blues,
w hile pretending to negotiate paym ents to the g irl and h er fam ily, w as
secretly attem pting to trad e G ilm our to another NHL team w ithout
letting the o th er team know of the allegations o r th at claim s w ere
pending.
• TOMEY WON’T ANNOUNCE STARTING QUARTERBCK —
Arizona coach Dick Tomey says he won’t nam e a startin g
quarterback fo r Saturday’s opener w ith Oregon S tate because doing
so would help no one except Oregon S tate. Senior Bobby W atters, who
started the first th ree 1987 gam es before being sidelined w ith a thum b
injury the re s t of the season, and sophom ore Ronald V eal, the
W ildcats’ leading rusher who started seven of th eir la st eight, a re so
even th ere’s no point m aking a choice now, Tomey said.
•O IL E R S’ OWNER RECEIVES DEATH THREATS — P eter
Pocklington say s he is getting death th reats over his trad e of NHL
sta r center W ayne G retzky from the Edm onton O ilers to the Los
Angeles K ings. “ I t’s incredible — w orse than ugly,” the m illionaire
businessm an and owner of the O ilers said in an interview w ith the
Edm onton Sun. Pocklington said m ost of the th reats have been
anonym ous and he isn’t w orried about his safety.
intercepted only 14 passes — nine by their secondary — in
a 7-8 season.
Phoenix had a 1-3 record this preseason and gave up 10
touchdowns, eight through the air.
Tuesday, the Cardinals claim ed former Chicago Bears
cornerback Reggie Phillips off the waiver wire.
Phillips, a fourth-year pro who started for Chicago in
1986 and returned an interception 28 yards for a
touchdown in die 1985 Super Bowl, was cut by the Bears
Monday.
“Hopefully, he can do the thing we got him for — to
cover,” said Cardinals pro personnel director Larry
Wilson. “He’s supposed to be a good man-to-man guy.”
The 5-foot-10,175-pound Phillips had two interceptions
and 12 pass deflections last year with one interception and
10 pass deflections in 1986.
“I don’t know that much about Reggie. I haven’t seen
him play here yet,” Stallings said.
1 5 4 6 W e s t U niversity D rive
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Saturday 10-6
W eekdays 10-9
Sunday 12-6
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major league baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
TUESDAY’S RESULTS
WHERE DO TH€
CANDIDATES
STAND
Chicago 4, Detroit 1
Cleveland 4, Kansas City 1
Milwaukee 6, Toronto 2
Texas 8, Minnesota 6
Seattle 7, New York 1
Baltimore 5, California 2
Oakland 1. Boston 0
W EDNESDAY’S SCHEDULE
Toronto (Flanagan 11-11) at MtwaufeM (August 7-6), 1035 a.m.
Boston (Smcthaon 8-4) at Oakland (G.Daws 134), 12:15 p.m.
Detroit (Monis 11-12) at Chicago (McDowell 5-10), 530 pjn.
Cleveland (Mndei 14-12) it Kansas City (Leibrandt 9-11), 536 p.m.
Minnesota (Viola 196) at Taxas (KUgus 11-11), 5:36 p.m.
New Votk (Rhoden 7-10) at Seattle (Bankheed 7-8), 735 pun.
Baltimore flU a 4-12) * California (Fraser 10-10), 7:36 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
TUESDAY’S RESULTS
Cincinnati 6, Pittsburgh 4
Los Angslas 4, Montreal 2
New York 1, San Otago 0 .
Philadelphia 7. San FrandaooS
S t Louis 9, Attantat
Houston 7, Chicago 4
W EDNESDAY'S SCHEDULE
San Diego (Hewidns 12-10)« New York (Fernande 9-10), 10:35 a.m.
J 0 r Chicago (SutcNtle 10-11) at Houston (Deshaies 9-10), 11:35 a.m.
Loa Angeles (Belcher 104) at Montreal (Dopaon 36), 435 p.m.
PMahtagh (Smiley 1M) at Cincinnati (Charta! 02), 436 (M*.
8 » Francisco (Rsuachal 17-7) at PWxMptM (Freaman 92), 436 pm
a Lou* (Tarry 5-3) at Atlanta (P Smrth 7-12), 4:40 p.m.
RSU’S FINANCIAL FUTURE?
■
W
Legislature Candidate Forum
Thursday, September 1
11 a.m .-l p.m., Pima Room MU
Sponsored by flSflSU Political U nlon/SflV€ '8 8
state Pre»»
Page 23
NCAA tests reveal w idespread steroid use at some schools
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — An off-season program begun
last spring by the National Collegiate Athletic Association at
25 schools found nearly one-third of football players at some
colleges tested positive for steroids.
“The range w e saw was from zero to up to 30 percent
positive at som e schools,” Frank Uryasz, director of sports
sciences for the NCAA, told The Kansas City Star. He told
The Associated Press that the overall average of players who
tested positive w as between 3 and 4 percent.
Steroids, synthetic versions of the m ale sex hormone
testosterone, have been linked to increased sports injuries
and serious health risks.
NCAA officials said the findings, to be released in greater
detail this fall, suggest the current policy of testing players
only prior to NCAA championship events and bowl gam es
may deter steroid abuse but has not endedit.
Last fall, only 1.3 percent of 1,589 athletes tested positive
for drugs before NCAA championships and bowl gam es. Only
seven athletes tested postive for steroids.
Uryasz said the off-season testing confirmed suspicions
that college athletes are switching from oil- to water-based
steroids to avoid detection. Some experts say water-based
steroids usually wash out of m ost athletes within 14 days, so
NFL franchise
Behring, 60, told a news conference at
Seahawks headquarters that he w ill own 51
Percent of the 13-year-old team and that Ken
Hofmann, another northern California land
developer, w ill own 49 percent.
Hofmann; 62, whom Behring described as
a longtime friend and fishing and hunting
Partner, did not attend the news conference.
“I’ll he the one who’s out in front,”
Behring sa id . “ He (Hofm ann) loves
football. He enjoys it as a gam e. He does not
want to be involved.’*
Three-quarters of NFL owners must
I
Former Oklahoma star Brian Bosworth, banned by the
NCAA from the 1987 Orange Bowl for steroids, claim s in a
book that the drugs w ere “about as common as Anacin in our
locker room.” He estim ated half the team took steroids.
With only a handful of lim ited surveys, scant information
exists on the extent of steroid abuse in colleges.
But som e college football trainers maintain their own
testing finds little steroid abuse.
George Sullivan, Nebraska’s bead trainer, estim ated only
about 1 percent of the Comhuskers test positive. Lynn Bott,
athletic trainer at Kansas, said the Jayhawks hadn’t had a
positive test in four years.
A poll of 1,010 men at three colleges, published in the July
issue of the Physician and Sportsmedicine magazine, showed
2 percent using steroids. Among 53 varsity athletes, 17
percent were users.
However, Bott said som e m ight slip by since the school
seldom tests players “unless w e have a classic case.”
Uryasz said about half of the approximately 800 NCAA
member schools test athletes for drugs, and only about half
of those test for steroids. But many schools don’t use NCAAapproved labs, and many don’t report their findings to the
NCAA.
maintains that the . . . (USOC) test results
were erroneous.”
The fam ily said “appeals are presently in
process through the proper legal channels,”
but did not elaborate.
In a written response to questions Monday
from her hom etown new spaper, the
Americus Times-Recorder, the swimmer
said the USOC discouraged her from
seeking legal help when she was dropped
from the team.
“As soon as I heard (of the explusion), I
called my fam ily,” she said. “I guess I
should have called a lawyer. But the United
States Olympic Committee said w e didn’t
need one in Colorado Springs for the appeal.
Of course, they flew their lawyer in from
Los A ngeles.”
Myers said she was “past the point of
crying and being upset. I’ve worked hard
my whole life with one goal in mind: to
make the Olympic team .. . . I knew it would
all be worth it. My dreams were finally
coming true.”
Myers reportedly tested positive during
the recent trials at Austin, Texas. USOC
officials doubted that M yers’ birth-control
pills w ere m istakenly showing up as
steroids. V
“We have tested hundreds of women who
had taken all sorts of birth control p ills,”
Mike Moran, the USOC’s public information
director, said in Los Angeles. “The level of
substance which birth control pills produce
is very easily detectable. We know exactly
what we’re looking for, what level.
“ B irth c o n tr o l p ills p ro d u ce
characteristics of a disqualifying substance,
but the level and dosage is where it occurs.”
The fam ily has said M yers had a
prescription for Ortho-Novum, a birthcontrol pill which has nearly “ identical
characteristics to the steroid the USOC
c la im s (Myers) was testing positive for.”
“Angel firm ly maintains that she has not
taken any banned substance and that the
test is in error,” the fam ily said in a
statem ent. “There must be som e other
explanation.”
Myers set two national records in the
recent trials and had a shot a winning five
m edals in swimming at the Seoul Games.
Behring to be n ew Seahaw ks ow ner;
partner joins in $80 million purchase
KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) - New Seattle
Seahawks owner Ken Behring, a wealthy
northern C alifornia land d evelop er,
disclosed’Tuesday that he has a partner in
the reported $80 m illion purchase of the
Even those who do play in a major gam e are unlikely to be
tested, Uryasz said. Less than 2 percent are tested at NCAA
championship events and only about one-third of the players
are tested at bowl gam es.
Uryasz, who oversees the NCAA’s drug testing program,
believes steroids still pose a “real threat to the integrity of
the sport.”
Myers battles Friday deadline
in bid to return to swim team
AMERICUS, Ga. (AP) - With time
running out before Friday’s certification
deadline for U.S. O lym pic a th letes,
swimming star Angel Myers worked on at
least two fronts Tuesday in an attem pt to get
back on the team .
The 21-year-old M yers, expected to be a
strong contender in five swimming events in
Seoul next month, was dropped from the
Olympic team Sunday after failing two drug
tests.
Supporters o f th e sw im m er from
Americus said the test m istakenly read her
birth-control pills as prohibited steroids, but
U.S. Olympic Committee officials said they
doubted tiu t.
Myers’ coach and father, Kirt Myers, said
she would go to Indiana University’s
Indianapolis campus for an independent
drug test.
People at the facility were aware of the
case, but said they had been told to make no
comment about it.
Only four facilities in North America are
equipped to perform the specific test
involved. The other three — UCLA,
Vanderbilt and a center in Quebec, Canada
— turned her down because of contractual
ties to the USOC, the father said.
“The procedures are not absolutely
standard everyw h ere,” said attorney
Michael Fennessey, chief of Myers’ legal
team and a p r o fe sso r a t G eorgia
Southwestern College. “We felt it important
to get a second opinion. There is some
subjectivity involved.”
The fam ily also was pursuing appeals
with U.S. Swimming Inc., the swim m ers’
sanctioning organization. A conference-call
hearing with that group and M yers’
attorneys w as exp ected Tuesday or
Wednesday.
U.S. Swimming could ask the USOC to
entertain another appeal, although Myers
already has been turned aside in an appeal
to the U S. Swim Team.
U.S. athletes m ust be certified by 11 a.m .
EDT Friday w ith the Seoul Olympic
Organizing Committee.
A statem ent issued by the Myers fam ily
Tuesday afternoon said, “Angel continues to
deny ever taking any banned substance, and
“Drug testing just does not provide a true picture of drug
use in college athletics,” Uryasz said. “Most athletes can go
through their entire college careers without being tested for
steroids if they never play in an NCAA championship or bowl
game.”
players preparing for bowl gam es have tim e to clean their
system s of the drugs.
‘‘Where sam pling is done with little advance notice to
athletes, w e’ve seen positive rates (for steroids) as high as 30
to 40 percent,” said Dr. Don Catlin, director of UCLA’s
Olympic Analytical Laboratory, an NCAA-approved lab.
approve Behring and Hofmann as the
team ’s new owners. Behring said he
expected that approval.
“I’d like to have it before .Sunday,”
Behring quipped.
On Sunday, the Seahawks open the
regular season in Denver.
“I know quite a few of the owners,”
Behring said. “I’v e had business dealings
with a number of them through the years.
They’ve all encouraged m e.”
Behring and Hofmann a r e acquiring the
Seahawks from the Nordstrom fam ily of
Seattle. The fam ily has been trying to sell
the team for two years so they could devote
their tim e to a chain of upscale fashion
stores.
Behring said the purchase had been done
“in principle.”
The NCAA’s last nationwide survey in 1984 showed 4
percent of the 2,048 college athletes polled used steroids. The
survey w ill be repeated this fall.
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W E D E L IV E R
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Page 8 4
'V W -
S te le P itt»
J ¡ü ¿ ¡í£ 5 S 2 1 ^ S B £ 2 2 ti2 2 i
McEnroe, Sw edes advance at U.S. Open
NEW YORK (AP) — John McEnroe, a four-time champion
turned underdog, breezed to an opening-round victory at the
U.S. Open on Tuesday, while Mats Wilander and Stefan
Edberg moved a step closer to a Swedish Grand Slam.
McEnroe, whose last Grand Slam title cam e at the 1984
U.S. Open, beat Leonardo Lavalle of M exico 8-3,6-4,6-4 at the
National Tennis G oiter.
“It could have been 6-1,6-1 (in the last two sets) but instead
it went 6-4,6-4,” said McEnroe, who is seeded 16th, his lowest
ranking at the U.S. Open since 1977.
“That’s a great waste of energy, especially in a major like
this when you want to get off the court as quickly as you can. ’’
In a night m atch delayed for 25 m inutes when the stadium
lights went out, fifth-seeded Boris Becker beat American
Todd Nelson 6-3,6-0,7-6 (7-5).
In women’s play, Martina Navratilova opened her bid for a
third straight U .S. Open title with a 6-1, 6-3 victory over
,N avratilova, seeded second behind Steffi Graf, played
aggressively as she elim inated Lindqvist in 55 minutes.
“I’ve been playing a lot of matches this year not to lose,
and I’m determined not to do that at this tournament,” she
said.
W ilander, the Australian and French Open winner, beat
form er NCAA champion Greg Holmes 62,6-1,6-4 in a match
that w as suspended by rain Monday.
W ilander, who lost to Ivan Lendl in last year’s final, was
leading Holm es 6-2,6-1,1-2 when the match was suspended.
A fter play resum ed Tuesday, the Swede broke Holmes in the
seventh gam e and then held serve the rest of the way.
“It wasn’t that bad,” Wilander said of the overnight wait.
“When you’re up two sets, you don’t feel threatened.”
Edberg, the reigning Wimbledon champion, posted a
routine 6-2, 6-2, 6-4 victory over Libor Pim ek of
Czechoslovakia.
If Edberg or Wilander wins the Open, it w ill give Sweden a
sweep of the m en’s Grand Slam titles this year.
“It’s a possibility,” Edberg said. “Mats and m yself have a
good shot here, but there’s no pressure to do it and I don’t
even think about it.”
McEnroe, fined $17,500 and suspended for two months
following an obscene outburst at last year’s Ü.S. Open, was
w ell behaved Tuesday.
.
**•
“My attitude is a lot bettor,” he said. “When I cam e back
the first tim e, 1 w as still bitter about the goings on on the
circuit and I was losing any sort of control I h a d .. . . I was
driving m yself nuts.”
In the first big upset of the tournament, 183rd-ranked Kim
Steinm etz shocked eighth-seeded-Natalia Zvereva 4-6, 6-3,
6-4.
“D efinitely, all thé pressure was on her,” Steinm etz said.
“She made a few errors today that really helped m e.”
Steinm etz, who had to win three preliminary m atches to
qualify for the main draw, figured to be an easy first-round
opponent for Zvereva.
But the Soviet teen played erratically against her 36-yearold opponent from St. Louis, who never has won a title on the
main women’s tour.
Zvereva, a finalist a t the French Opto, took a 3-2 lead in the
final set after breaking Steinmetz’ serve in the third gam e.
But Steinm etz cam e back and broke Zvereva twice to win the
match.
“I feel great,” said Steinmetz, who has lost in the first
round a t her last three tournaments. “I’ve never felt better
after a match.
“Usually, when I win a match I’m not very exuberant
because I feel for m y opponent. But today, with the crowd
clapping, I felt like I was walking on air.”
Also advancing were fourth-seeded Pam Shriver, No. 5
Gabriela Sabatini, No. 16 Claudia Kohde-Kilsch, No. 13 Mary
Joe Fernandez and No. 16 Larisa Savchenko.
Sabatini beat Argentine countrywoman Bettina Fulco 6-3,
66.
“¡a » played very w ell, but I played well too,” said
Sabatini, the only woman to defeat Graf this year.
Shriver beat American Anne Smith 6-4, 6 3 ; Kohde-Kilsch
defeated Angeliki Kannellopoulo of G reece 6-4, 6 2 ;
Fernandez downed Jenny Byrne of Australia 6 1 , 6 2 , and
Savchenko topped Laura Golarsa of Italy 7-6 (7-4), 62.
Advancing in m en’s play were eighth-seeded M iloslav
M ecir, No. 10 Henri Leconte, No. 11 Brad Gilbert and No. 14
Andres Gomez.
M ecir beat Tomas Smid of Czechoslovakia'7-5, 6-4, 6-0;
Leconte downed Javier Frana of Argentina 6-4, 3-6, 6 3 , 6-4;
Gilbert ousted Milan Srejber of Czechoslovakia 6 3 , 6-3, 6 2 ,
and Gomez beat Javier Sanchez of Spain 6-4, 6 2 ,6 2 .
During Jones’ last two years at UTEP, the Miners were not
allowed to com pete in the NCAA Championships because of
rule infractions imposed on the program before he arrived.
Before going to UTEP, Jones ledNC State to three straight
Atlantic Coast Conference men’s track titles from 1982
through 1984. The women’s cross country team won three
straight ACC crowns from 1978 through 1980 and won the 1980
and 1981AIAW championships.
In 1978, his Alabama team finished fifth at the NCAA
Indoor Championships, with 22 of the 23 points scored coming
from athletes recruited and signed by Jones.
Jones, a 20-year coaching veteran, is the fifth head track
coach at ASU in the last 10 years.
Senon “Baldy” Castillo coached for 29 years until Len
Miller took over in 1979. While Jones coached at UTEP, ASU
went back to Castillo in 1985 and then to Duncan in 1986. Jones
said he was com m itted to UTEP at the tim e, even though he
would have liked to apply for the ASU job.
Hream ________ _
ConHmiMl ftoit pae* ai-
W alker spoke in Georgia at the first clinic that Jones
attended a s a high school coach, he said. In addition, Walker
w as a t North Carolina Central while Jones coached at NC
State.
“W alker has a lot of charism a and knows how to handle
people,” Jones said.
Jones is the president of The Athletics Congress Border
A ssociation and 200-meter sprint chairman for the Olympic
Developm ent Program . He also coached the South track
team at the U .S. Olympic Festival in 1987 and at its
predecessor, the National Sports Festival, in 1985.
As director of the track and field and cross country
program s at UTEP since 1984, Jones coached 22 allA m ericas. He w as named the Western Athletic Conference
Coach oi the Year in 1986.
1
F ra te rn ity & S o ro rity se c re ta rie s
If your House is listed below, we
have e ith e r no phone list o r an in
com plete phone list fo r th e Creek
D irectory. Please g e t us one (IFC Box,
ato booth by th e M.u. o r ATO House,
Room 1).
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After Duncan was fired last spring, Harris received 70
applications for the head coaching position.
“When this tim e cam e around I felt I was in position to take
the job,” Jones said.
While competing for UCLA, Jones was the Pac-8 sprint
champ and an all-America in 1966. During the NCAA
Championships that year, Jones won the 226-yard dash and
ran on the 4x406-yard relay team that tied a world record.
Jones was named UCLA’s Outstanding Athlete in 1966 and
the team captain and Outstanding Senior Athlete in 1967.
After graduating, he participated with the U.S. Army allArmy team from 1967 to 1969.
BE A PART O f THE
1988-89 ASASU
CONCERT SERIES
The Concerts Office is looking for
enthusiastic students for the upcoming
season. As a volunteer usher you can
take advantage o f the variety of events at
the University Activity Center by assisting
patrons. If you’re dependable and enjoy
working with people, consider joining the
Volunteer program.
COMING UP THIS SEMESTER
Crosby, Stills
and Nash
9/8
Sinatra, Davis
and Minelli
9 /1 8
John
Denver.
16/5
r 'j s » '-
fo r details call 965-5480 or see the sign
up sheets at the Concerts Office located in
the Memorial Union, Room 208-II.
state Pros
Page 25
Owner says Taylor stays out
until drug problems resolved
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) —
Lawrence Taylor w ill not play football again
until he successfully com pletes a substance
abuse program, even if it takes longer than
30 days and four gam es, New York Giants
owner Wellington Mara said Tuesday.
Taylor, a seven-tim e pro Bowl linebacker
who has been one of football’s dominant
players, was suspended Monday for 30 days
by the NFL for violating the league’s
substance abuse policy for a second tim e.
“From what I have read, there is a
misconception,” Mara said. “This is not a
30-day suspension. This is a 30-day
minimum. In order for him to com e back, he
must follow a rigorous program.. . . I think
no half treatm ent is called for. I think we
owe it to Lawrence Taylor to be hard on
him.”
Taylor has every intention of complying
with NFL rehabilitation guidelines and
plans to m eet with league officials by
Friday, said Gary Kovach, Taylor’s agent.
“What w e are doing is waiting for the NFL
to give us our lead and go from there,”
Kovach said, adding Taylor could begin
rehabilitation this weekend.
Kovach said in a telephone interview from
his Houston office that league officials
would outline the type of rehabilitation
program they wanted Taylor to undergo. He
did not know where Taylor would go for
treatment.
Taylor’s, treatm ent w ill be supervised by
Dr. Forest Tennant, the drug adviser to the
league.
Tennant would not discuss the NFL drug
program, his secretary said in a telephone
interview.
NFL spokesman Jim Heffeman could not
confirm whether Taylor would m eet with
league officials by Friday, other than to say
they will m eet. He said the league does not
disclose w here it sends players for
substance abuse treatm ent.
“We really don’t have anything to say,”
Heffernan said. “It’s in the doctor’s hands.”
The league has not said what substance
Taylor was abusing, although Newsday
reported the substance was cocaine. Taylor
underwent rehabilitation for a cocaine
problem at M ethodist Hospital in Houston in
1986.
*
Mara said he would not discuss if the
Giants would pay Taylor his weekly salary
of $62,500 w hile he underwent treatment but
admitted Taylor is very special to him.
“He has done more for this franchise and
gone above and beyond,” Mara said,
recalling Taylor’s m agnificent performance
in last year’s third replacem ent gam e
during the strike against Ruffalo. Taylor
broke the picket line to play in that contest,
“He walked up to Bill Parcells before the
gam e and said, ‘I don’t know if any one man
can win a gam e, but I’m going to try,’ ”
Mara said. “In all my years in football I
don’t know if I have ever seen a player put
forth such a concerted effort for as long as
he did.”
Mara was just as quick to say he was not
happy with the current state of events,
“You have to have hatred for the crim e
and compassion for the crim inal,” he said,
“We owe it to Lawrence Taylor to be as hard
on him as we possibly can. That’s his only
chance to lick this. To be easy on him would
be unkind. He has to follow the program 100
percent.” .
Taylor will m iss the Giants’ first four
gam es this season, beginning with the
sea so n -o p en er Monday a g a in s t the
Washington Redskins. If he crtmplrfpH his
treatment in 30 days he would be eligible to
return for the fifth gam e of the season, also
against Washington,
Dr. Peter Herridge, the m edical director
of the neuro-psychiatric unit at Fair Oaks
Hospital in Summit, said most substance
abuse programs begin with an evaluation
and alm ost all involve m eetings with peers,
He said the cocaine abuse program at
Fair Oaks lasts eight weeks and he felt a
four-week program might be too short to
treat someone addicted to cocaine, noting
that he was speaking in general.term s.,
“There are 28- to 30-day programs and the
people in the programs think they work,” he
said. “. . . I think six- to eight- to 10-week
programs are as short as you should get.”
Herridge said the goal of every program
is to get the person to admit and recognize
they have a problem, while at the sam e tim e
letting them know that they are still loved.
“The most difficult type of person to deal
with are the arrogant, rich-boy types,” he
said. “You have to submit to fe e program,
The more famous and arrogant you are, the
harder it is to treat.”
Taylor said last year in his book, “LT:
Living on the Edge,” that he conquered his
addictions by playing a lot of golf.
Olajuwon cuts cameraman in scuffle;
reacted to form er girlfriend’s law suit
HOUSTON ( A P ) — A t e l e v i s i o n
cameraman suffered a cut to his head
Tuesday when Houston Rockets star Akeem
Olajuwon grabbed his video equipment
after a reporter questioned him about a
lawsuit filed against him by his former
girlfriend.
KHOU-TV cam eram an Jim Shipley was
treated and released at a local hospital for
the sm all cut to Ins forehead and w as doing
fine, according to Marc Watts, a sports
reporter at the television station. Shipley
did not need any stitches, Watts said.
The incident began when Watts and
Shipley went to Olajuwon’s house a t about 11
a.m. to get a comment from him about a
lawsuit filed late Friday by Lite Spencer,
who cla im s th e 6-foot-ll-in ch center
deserted her because he wanted a taller
woman to bear his sons.
-; >
Spencer is »«king for $9 milium in
damages on grounds that Olajuwon refused
to marry her after she becam e pregnant in
an attempt to ¡Move to him that she could
bear children.
Watts said Olajuwon becam e angry when
be opened the door and realized a
cameraman was w ith the reporter.
“He started shouting at us and told us to
Set away,” Watts said, adding that the two
started to leave the house.
But Olajuwon ran after the cameraman
and grabbed his video equipment, causing it
to hit Shipley’s forehead, Watts said.
Olajuwon went back into his house, the
photographer went to the hospital and Watts
waited outside for about an hour before
some of Olajuwon’s friends cam e outside
and returned the equipment — minus the
cassette tape, he said.
Watts waited a w hile longer to try and get
Ibe tape, but Olajuwon told him he had
destroyed it and then left in his car. The
reporter said Olajuwon’s behavior was
uncharacteristic.
“Something just snapped,” Watts said.
“I’v e never seen him that upset off the
(basketball) court.”
Watts said Olajuwon told him that he
didn’t want to comment about the lawsuit
y et and that when he did, he would call a
press conference. Olajuwon’s telephone
number is not listed and he could not be
reached for comment.
The lawsuit asks a federal judge to bar
Olajuwon from leaving the United States,
^aim ing that he had threatened to play
haritethall in Italy and take his assets with
him.
Spencer contends Olajuwon left her for “a
tailor woman who is more likely to bear tall
sons worthy of his genetic heritage.” The
suit contends that Olajuwon breached a
contract when he backed out of his promise
to marry Spencer.
Because of Olajuwon’s Moslem religion,
she said, he demanded that she prove she
could bear children. She becam e pregnant
with him and bore a girl last month, the
lawsuit said, but Olajuwon refused to marry
her.
Olajuwon’s contract with the Rockets was
renegotiated in November 1906 and calls for
the Rockets to pay him an estim ated $23,5
mjllinn through the 1997-98 NBA season.
Spencer contends that Olajuwon is
attem pting to negotiate a new contract that
would increase his salary by $1 m illion per
V ear.
The Houston woman said Olajuwon told
her she w ill never collect any money from
him because his attorney w ill destroy her
character and reputation.
“When basketball season starts, I will
have something to say,” Olajuwon said.
“Until then, I have no comment.”
classifieds
announcem ents
m otorcycles fo r sale
furniture fo r sale
WANTED, MALE models fo r flattop
naircutting workshops Mondays. Phoenix
H a ir C om pany. C o n ta ct R ica rd o ,
258-1906.
1982 HONDA Silverwing 500. Interstate
package w ith cover. Must sell or get
divorced, $649. C ali Jeff, 899-7254.
A FURNITURE sale; 7 piece bedroom set
$189, twin sets $48, fu ll sets $58, queen
sets $88, 5 drawer chests $39.95, sofa
sets from $169, plus much more. 3332
Furniture, 3332 W. McDowell Road,
233-2236 or 137 W. Main, 898-1456.
1983 HONDA Sabre V45 w ith fairing,
black, 8640 miles, excellent condition.
$1800/Offer. 998-0145.
SEPT. 8TH
U.S. M ALE
T IL L Y ’S
P H O EN IX GAY
Y O U TH G R O U P
A support and social gro up
fo r guys and gals u nd er 23.
Info: 897-8909
1984 HONDA Aero 125.5000 miles. $500.
894-8434.
BRASS BED, lovely queen size HB-FB.
Never used matt and foundation factory
wrapped. $225. 829-8984.
1985 HONDA 150 Elite Deluxe scooter.
Blue, great shape, has trunk. 921-2631 or
966-9741. $1200/offer.
DAYBED, GORGEOUS white w ith brass
camelback design. Never used. Includes
trundle and 2 matts. $170. 829-8984.
1965 NINJA 900. 13,500 m iles. New
M etzlers. Very dean, very fast. Indudes
c o v e r, lo c k , h e lm e t. $ 2 2 5 0 /o ffe r.
275-8577.
DINETTE SET, solid natural oak lo p and
base, four chairs, never used. 829-8984.
1965 RED Honda Aero 50 scooter, only
1100 miles. Tags good through 5/89.
$450.968-3637.
1986 HONDA 150 Elite scooter, red,
custom e seatcover, m int condition,
894-1341 days or 892-6317. $1095/offer.
U .S . M A L E
SHOW
1986 YAMAHA Riva scooter w ith 2 bell
helmets. Low mileage, $850. Must sell.
7840508.
T I L L Y ’S
86 YAMAHA Riva 125 scooter. Great
condition, $850. 5854033.
HOT
ELITE 80 scooter, 1986. Excellent condi
tion. $800 or best offer. 8290131.
autos fo r sale
1976 FIAT Spider Convertible. New paint,
top, and interior. $1700/best offer. C all Pat
after 5:90 p .m , 921-1311.
1978 HONDA C ivic, 84,000 m iles,
5-s» *e d , AM /FM ca s s e tte p la ye r,
$850/negotiable. Contact 968-2874.
1982 BUICK Skyhawk. 4-door, white,
83,000. New brakes, air, battery, alterna
tor, etc. This car’s been taken care o f and
it shows! $3250/offer. 969-4723.
1982 VOLKSWAGEN R abbit D iesel.
4-speed, 4-door, 78,000 m iles. $1400
negotiable. Tracey, 497-8649.
1984 FORD Mustang. Power steering,
power brakes, AM/FM radio. Going over
seas, m ust s e ll! $35 0 0 /o ffe r. C all
921-Ó740.
1984 JETTA LE. A ir, sunroof, Sony stereo
system, 44,000 m iles, excellent condition,
$6500/offer. 947-3704. 921-7363.
1985 PONTIAC Fiero, 5-speed, loaded,
must seti. Best offer. Call Kevin at
894-1958 or 835-1683.
1985 STANZA GL 4-door. Ivory, one
owner, 20,000 miles, air-conditioning,
power, AM/FM cassette. $7800,837-2545.
72 CHEVY Im pala. Air, AM/FM cassette,
runs gfbod, good interior, $800. Mike,
829-7364.
M O TO R C Y C LE /
SC O O TER
SER VIC E &
PARTS,
IN SU R A N C E
ESTIM A TES,
FA C TO R Y
TR A IN E D
M EC H A N IC S ,
P IC K -U P &
D ELIVERY.
TOYOTA 4x4 fo r aale. Runa great, all
maintenance la current. F u l graphics
package, aporta Interior, Pioneer atareo,
air-conditioning, and oversized tires, if
intersafad plea ts c a l Robert a i 7300524.
SOFAS FROM Scottsdale luxury home
builder’s models. Contemporary styles
and fabrics. Three to choose from . $250,
retail $700. Matching loveseat $200.
829-8984
STUDENTS! Large sofa fo r extra room or
party room. Good condition, $30. 7x12
wool area rug, $40. Dan, 461-0785, even
ings and weekends.
TWO DORM room carpets. WHI cover
entire room. O ffer. Andy, 829-7364.
WAREHOUSE SALE. Desks from $49;
chairs from $15; bookshelves from $19;
end tables, typing tables, com puter tables,
dining tables, file cabinets, plus lots more.
Arizona O ffice Liqusdatiors, 4010 S. 43rd
Place, between 40th Street and 48th
Street, North of Broadway. 437-2224.
FUTONS
FACTORY O UTLET
789-9747/N W PHX
254-5943/D W N TW N
tickets fo r sale
R IS IN G S U N CYCLE
19 00 N . H a y d e n R o ad
ONE PHOENIX/Boston roundtrip ticket.
Leave Friday, 9/2, return Monday, 9/5.
Was $240, now $150. Contact 921-0110 or
968-9199.
9 4 5 -6 9 1 2
ONE PHOENIX/Los Angeles roundtrip
ticket. Leave 9/14, return 9/18. $38. If
interested call 8394)452.
bicycles fo r sale
LANDIS. CYCLERY. Good selection o f
new and used bikes.
SCHWINN WORLD Sport. 21 inch, black,
excellent condition. 966-4902.
USED MOUNTAIN bike. Call John at
967-9600.
trucks fo r sale
S O F A B E D , $ 1 3 0 ; 4 8 ” d ia m e te r
conference/game table with 4 swivel arm
chairs. $300; Desk chair, $35. 991-9364.
4 5 ,0 0 0
m iscellaneous
fo r sale
1000 SUNBEDS, toning tables. SunalW otff tanning beds, SlenderQuest passive
exercisers. Can fo r free color catalogue.
Save to 50% . 1-800-22*0292. (AZ-CAN).
Readers D aily • 965-6731
Eddiejohnson is help ir^ kids shoot for th e stars. So can you. By attending an all-star
gam e to benefit th e Valley Big Brothers and Sisters.
Be there w hen Eddie team s up w ith M ark Aguirre, Spud Webbt Fat Lever and th e
others to have th eir day on d ie co u rt A ll-star coaching w ill be provided by Lute Olson
and Suns A ssistant Coach WestphaL So crane to ASU on Labor Day weekend, and see
th e stars shine.
Sept 3,1988 730 pm
ASU Activity Center
T H o o p s^ K id s
ALL-STAR ■B A S K E TB A LLG A M E
Tickets available at all Dillards outlets and at the Valley Big Brothers /Big Sisters.
264-9254 __________________
Page 26
J £ £ n « d a ^ A u ^ t3 ^ 1 9 e8
m iscellaneous
fo r sale
' JW»
COLOR TELEVISION, portable, $80;
console, $100, works perfect. C all Ray at
254-1412.
COMPAQ PORT-U model-2 640-KB hard
disk, floppy MS mouse. M int condition.
Software included. $230Q/offor. Robert,
896-3135.
FOR SALE- 100% IBM com patible XT
turbo. From $499, at turbo from $1095.18
m onth warranty. 837-1641.
FOR SALE- 72 International % ton truck
bed, $150. Excellent condition. 921-1101
a fte r5 .
HP-28C FOR sale. Like new, complete
manuals, $75. Before 6, 752-6150, after 6,
991-3326.
MUST SELL- w ill take best offer, 1978
14x52 m obile home. 1 bedroom, 1 bath in
Tempe fam ily park. Pull awnings, fenced
back yard, auto sprinkler system. New
cooler, a ll e le ctric. Dan, 897-0204,
437-2153.
NEON BAR Sign, M ichelob on tap, $50.
IBM electric typew riter, $25. Rowing
m achine, $75. Gas barbeque g rill, $30.
962-3858.
NISHIKI 10-SPEED, $35; Fuzzbuster, $50;
Teak stereo case, $35; Business desk,
$50. C all 921-0740.
OAKLEY'S- ALL makes (blades, razor
blades, etc.) at great prices. Call 962-5865
fo r more inform ation.
R ANG : BLONDE finish w ith bench, great
starter piano. $700/best offer. 965-2348,
home 967-2817.
I
QUEEN SIZE futon, $75. Twin futon and
fram e, $150. O livetti portable typewriter,
$125. Sharp home entertainm ent system:
19 inch color TV w ith rem ote, VCR w ith
rem ote, tuner, dual cassette, graphic
equalizer, turn table, 2 speakers, 2
cabinets, $800. WHt separate TV and VCR.
A ll new, m ust go. Make offer. Carl,
967-2587.
Ï
PROFESSIONAL PHOTO D arkroom
com piale, $300. Panasonic cam corder
extras, $860. Days, 2568141, Doug,
820-7083.
REPLICA WATCHES. Highest quality
available. Rolex, Gucci, Piaget, Perpetual
movemen t, and Louis Vuitton purses.
$86$12S. 3768662.
SAVE MORE T hrift Store, 1915 N. Scotts
dale Road (2 blocks North of McDowell).
Q uality clothing and home furnishings,
desks, chests, sofabeds, etc. 990-3364.
SEWING MACHINES, $1291 Brand new
surplus models. (Due to many school
districts reduced purchasing allowances).
Heavy duty (all metal body and parts). Also
available , a few "teachers model” freearm machines w ith 10 stitches, including
overtook. W hile they last! $169J (List
$479). 20 year guarantee. Check/ credit
cards/ COD/ layaway. Prompt free deliveryl 1-714-5464425. (AZ.-CAN)_________
SINGLE SIZE waterbed, $125. Dark wood,
head board w ith m irror, good condition.
9663707.
STEREO SYSTEM for sale. MCS model;
16 month w arranty.'W ill sell for $800 or
best offer. C all Lisa, 730-5377.
TIE DYE bed sheets and banners. All
colors at your selection. Call 9663037 for
details.
$65,500,1905 E. U niversity. Bank foreclo
sure, condo, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 100%
financing for owner occupant. Terrific
term s. Dyana Edmunds, M errill Lynch,
991-3300/9467251.
A C Q U IR E D FO R E C LO S U R E and
repossessed homes and condos fo r sale in
Tempe area. C all certified public accoun
tant and a realtor. Call Rick a t Tradewinds,
392-5500.
m iscellaneous
fo r sale
A complete personal
computer package
(from software to
printer) for $995.
•D ual Floppy Disk Drive
•N ear Letter Q uality Printer
, «High Resolution.Monochrome M onitor
•W ord Processing Software w ith SpeN
Check, DOS, Basic, Data Base and Spread
Sheet
•2 0 Month National W arranty
COMPUTER MULTI SYSTEMS
.\
MOBILE HOME on campus. M ust sell.
Furnished. $3800. 2 bedrooms, 12x56.
Matt. 9665209 or 8963065.
NICE 3 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse w ith
fireplace. W asher/dryer and refrigerator
stay. M ill and Broadway area. $59,500.
ERA Am erican, ask fo r Maggie, 839-4950
o r 497-1031.
QUESTA VIDA. Fully furnished setup fo r 4
students. Fireplace, 2 patios, 2 pools,
recreation center. $69,750. RE/MAX 100
Realtors. John, 8260500.
WALK TO ASU. T bedroom condo. Pool,
a ll appliances. $34,000. Call Leona,
2666110 or 996-8959.
NO Q U A LIFY IN G
1, 2 , 3 b e d ro d m c o n d o s &
townhouses. Papago Park Village
from $58,0004102,000.
Bob Bullock
Realty Executives
9962992
1 BEDROOM apartm ents in sm all
com plex w ith pool. W alk to ASU.
$295/month. 897-0099.
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, new carpet and
paint upon move in. 2nd story pool view.
Blocks to ASU. 2nd St. and Hardy.
$400/month. Jon, 9667952.
BRAND NEW Apartments, new lower
rates, special sem ester leases available. 2
and 1 bedroom, free cable, pool, covered
parking, lots more. Just a few blocks
behind Old Town Tempe. 921-3036.
EL DIABLO Apartm ents. One and two
bedrooms available. C all Debora at
921-0699.
QUIET ADULT Complex has 1 bedrooms
available, unfurnished, $395, furnished,
$420. A ll u tilitie s included. 3 blocks to
ASU, near Broadway and Rural. Quiet
people only please. 9678020.
RANCHO LAS Palmas Apartm ents, 1
bedroom apartm ents available. Nice
stu d e n t com m unity. C ali D avid at
829-9607.
TEMPE, 829 S. Farmer. West o f MM, off
U niversity. 2 bedroom, 2 bath duplex.
$475/month. 9664000.
SPECIAL OFFER
LEADING ED G E M O D EL D
Just West o f
Buffalo Exchange
HOUSE FOR sale by owner. 1500 square
feet, 3 bedroom, 2 fu ll baths. 2048 S.
College. $79,900. John, 921-2080.
apartm ents fo r ren t
C O LO R A D O W ILD E R N E S S p a rk !
Reposessed 40 acres. 3 back payments,
assume note $17.000.17. Cool, treed,
secluded mountains. W ildlife, tra ils, great
b u ild in g s ite s . O w ner m u st s e ll.
1-719-8464588. (AZ-GAN)
t
BUY RIGHT. Questa Vida, 1% m iles from
campus. 2 m aster bedrooms, fireplace,
lowest price in oomplex . RE/MAX 100
Realtors . John, 8260600.
real estate fo r sale
BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo with
fire p la ce . W asher/dryer, refrigerator,
microwave stay. U niversity and McClin
tock area. $69,200. ERA American, ask for
Maggie, 839-4950 or 497-1031.
%
real estate fo r sale
225 W. U niversity, Tempe
9861388
Open: 9 8 Weekdays • 9:30-3:00 Saturday
VISA
MC
Close to ASU
Studios & 1-bed
room s, utilities
included. $295 & up.
M arianna Apts.
1214 E. O range
966-8597
w w n n o m ei/
condos fo r rent
2 BEDROOM tow nhouse, $53,000.
Aaeumable loen, skylights, near ASU.
G reet student area. M errill Lynch Realty,
Pat, 481-5200.
2 BEDROOM, 1% bath, washer/dryer, no
pets, near Thomas and Scottsdale Rd,
$480,8369299.
2 BEDROOM condo. d o se to ASU.
$495/month. Days, 862-5213, evenings,
581-0928.
2 BEDROOM apartment (duplex), 1 m ils
from ASU. P refer g rad /sta ff/fa culty.
$335/month. 2662066.
2 STORY Los Prados townhouse. 2
bedroom, 2% bath, % m ile from ASU.
W asher/dryer, pool, tennis. $700/month
plus u tilitie s. Wendy, 784-2472.
rente! sharing
AVAILABLE NOW! Roommate wanted. 2
bedroom, 2 hath, furnished. $25Qftnonth
plus % utilities. Mate/fomale, nonsmoker.
South Central Temps. 7308306.
ROOMMATES WANTED. 3 bedroom, 2
bath, 2% m iles horn cam pus. Pool,
washer/dryer, $186 phis u tilities. CaR Jos,
827-8838._________
'
CONDO, UNIVERSITY and MeCHntock.
M ale, nonsmoker, $200/m onth, $100
deposit. $77-2048.
ROOMMATE WANTED to share 4
bedroom house 1.5 milee from campus.
Prefer graduate student, faculty, o r older
undergrad. $280 plus utMtiee. Call Pat,
861-7426, day» o r 9688866 after 7.
FEMALE CHRISTIAN roommate wanted
to share 2 bedroom, com pletely furnished
condo. Points South Mountain. Call after
5,4368010.
FEMALE ROOMMATE to share beautiful
luxury home in Tempe Lakes. 4 bedroom,
3 bath w ith pool. Fully furnished w ith all
the extras. $325/month plus 14 utilities.
Call Lisa or Eric, 831-2501.
ASU AREA. Newer 2 plus 2% townhouse
loaded w ith extras, by pool, $650.
961-1946.
FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted to share
two bedroom, two bath at W orthington
Place. $225/month % electricity, fu lly
furnished, extras. Shannon, 921-7919.
Available now!!
FULLY FURNISHED, dishes, etc., 2
bedroom, Papago Park II. Mature females
only. No pets. $700. Joanie C - Realty
Executives, 998-0676.
FEM ALE ROOM M ATE W a n te d . 3
bedroom, 2% bath, fully furnished, pool.
$30Q/month plus utilities. Grad students
preferred. Jennifer, 9-5, 997-7335.
PETS OK. 3 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse.
R efrigerator, washer/dryer, Southern and
Hardy. 697-0099.
FEMALE ROOMMATE: share 2 bedroom,
2 bath. $270.50 plus Vk utilities. Washer,
dryer, microwave. 4 miles from ASU.
Sheila, 8358220.
WALK TO ASU. 1 bedroom. Pool, all
appliances. $360. C all Leona, 2668110 or
9968959.
BUY IT ! SELL ITI
Find it In th e C lassifieds!
homes fo r rent
ACROSS FROM ASU. Huge studio w ith
private entrance. Fireplace, walk-in closet,
kitchen, bath. $245. 967-4248.
14 MILE to ASU. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2
bath plus study room. $695/m onth,
967-4248,
rental sharing
1 FEMALE roommate needed to share
master bedroom, own bath in 2 bedroom
Tempe condo. 2 m iles from ASU. Washer/
dryer, fuH am enities. $230/month, % u tili
ties. C all after 2 p.m. 8948736.
$200/MONTH plus V* utilities. Nonsmok
er, new house, Brown and Power.
9818149 after 8:30 p.m ., 9638673, 1 8 ,
Monday-Friday.
$200 PER Month, u tilitie s included. Male/
female nonsmoker. Vi m ile from ASU, 2
bedroom apartment, your own bedroom.
921-9088, after 6 p.m .
$26Q/MONTH plus V* utilitie s. 1 bedroom
in beautiful 3 bedroom home in Dobson
Ranch. Fully furnished except your
bedroom. Call Cathy, 838-4012, leave
message.
$275 PER m onttt'ptus Vk u tilitie s. Grad
student only. Share 2 bedroom house, 5
blocks from ASU. Pet oksy. Gardener
included. 9665816 o r 9668521.
$280 PER Month plus V» u tilities. Furn
ished bedroom and bath in townhome Vfe
m ile from campus. Has backyard fo r laying
o u t 8948374.
apartm ents fo r ren t
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed. Own
bedroom/bath. Close to ASU. Has ail
am enities, beautifully furnished. 2 pools,
Jacuzzies. $250 plus 1/ft utilities. Papago
Park II. Jolaine, 967-5248.
HAVE YOUR own bedroom and bathroom
in a 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom apartment
m inutes from ASU. Pool, cable, covered
parking, laundry, plus more. $235 plus Vfe
u tilities. Cali John, 9660181 or call
9678568.
LARGE BEDROOM available immediately
in house. W alk to campus. Unfurnished.
Full house privileges. $275 including
u tilities. 921-2080.
MALE/FEMALE: 2 bedroom, 2 bath near
ASU at W orthington Place. Fully furn
ished. Pool, Jacuzzi, volleybaH. immediate
a va ila b ility. Own room, $250/m onth.
Share, $18Q/month plus V» utilities. Lisa,
921-3551, Chuck, 894-5516.
MALE/FEMALE nonsmoker. 2 bedroom
apartment 1 m ile to ASU. $225 month
includes u tilities, phone, cable. $100
deposit. CaN 921-1101 after 5.
MALE ROOMMATE needed: Rancho Las
Palntas, dose to ASU, 2 bedroom, 2 bath.
$180 plus % utilities a month. Cali
9688954 after 6 p.m .
MALE ROOMMATE needeck 2 bedroom, 2
bath condQ. W asher/dryer, pool, Jacuzzi.
$175/month, % utilities. 892-2778.
MASTER BEDROOM, $275; com fortable
loft, $225. % u tilitie s each. Resort condo,
sp lit level. 9908494.
RESPONSIBLE NON-SMOKER to share
peaceful house near Southern and
M cClintock. Largs room, quiet room
mates. $250, u tilitie s included. Robert,
831-5595.
ROOM IN 2600 square foot house. Very
spacious, Jaccuzzi, nice neighborhood.
Asking 190/month plus utilitie s. Ask for
Robert, 7308624.
h elp w anted
NEED AN APARTMENT?
EP TU R B O X T SYSTEM
C O M P L E T E S Y S T E M W IT H :
NOW
ONLY
$519
•-8 0 8 8 /1 0 M H Z
•1 Floppy Drive
•2 5 6 K RAM
• 8 Exp. Slots
•S tan d ard Keyboard
NO COST TO YOU!
Screaming Deals on Macintoshes!
Special Student, Faculty, & Staff Education Buy
Program Through Apple & Computerland
Macintosh Plus
Macintosh SE
Macintosh n epu w /1 drive
Color Monitor fe»- Mac II
Video Card for Mac n
Keyboard for S E / n
$ 1149.00
$ 1706.00
$2311.00
$ 649.00
$ 299.00
$ 80,00
Come in and see all that a Mac can do for you. For prices on
additional items and computers call Todd at C om puterLand
962-6732 or stop by at 706 W. Southern #4 in Mesa.
*
WANTED: 2 fem ale roommates to share a
3 bedroom, 2 bath townhome. Alma
S ch o ol and U n iv e rs ity . 464-2414,
Madeleine.
business
opportunities
ASSEMBLE OUR devices, learn this
trade, we send instructions, parts and
check fo r assembly. Call 816327-2996,
ext. J. (AZ-CAN)
MAKE YOUR FORTUNE
W rite fo r free details on 101 enor
m ously p rofitable yetam azingiy easy
businesses anyone can start. One
w ill be perfect fo r you! W rite to :
Am erican Business Enterprises
P .O .B ox 136$
B ryn M awr, PA 19010
help w anted
$108660 weekly/up m ailing circulars!
Rush self-addressed, stamped envelope:
Dept. AN-7CG-G, 9300 W ilshire, Suite
470, Beverly H ills, CA 90212.
ACCOUNTING- LEAD setters. $5/hour
plus bonus. Paid weakly. 9688880.
APPLICATIONS BEING accepted fo r a
part-tim e bartender, must be able to work
from 4-10 p.m. Need friendly and outgoing
person. Apply at Q uality Inn, 1-10 and E lliot
Rd.
A RESPONSIBLE person w ith experience/
applicable education is needed to m onito'
the operation o f a Tempe group home piu
teach self-help and independent liv tr
skills to m entaily/physicaity handicappe.
individuals. Monday-Friday, sp lit sh ift, 6 8
a.m. and 2 8 p.m . $5/hour plus benefits.
Tsri/Kevin 894-2355 or apply at 1822 W.
3rd Street, Tempe.
ARIZONA ROSE is now hiring rose girls
fo r part-tim e help to se ll rosee in night
clubs. Please call fo r interviews, 9967611.
ASU IS C alling on you... to become a
member of the ASU Telefund team!
Orvcampus location, can work 6 1 6 hours
per week, Sunday-Thursday evenings
5:308:30. Earn $4.10/hour plus bonus
plus commission, great nightly incentives,
gain valuable telem arketing experience
speaking w ith alum ni nationwide. If you
have sales a bility, caM 9658754 (last
training on Thursday).
ATTENTION SWIMMERS; Swim shop
hiring sales personnel. Typing and office
s kills desireable. CaN 284-7774, MondayFriday, 1 08 p.m .
1301 E. University
968-6666
A LL P O S IT IO N S A V A IL A B L E
100s o f Apartm snts With O ne CaMf
ACTIO N APT. RENTAL SERVICE
1460 N. Scattsdsls A d ., Tem pe
CALL COMPU-SOURCE AT 602/834-1194
TWO ROOMS for rent in condo dose to
campus. $225 a month plus V» utilitie s and
phone. Call Jack at 8267241.
S u n n y ’s Pizza & Pub
CALL 945-6000
ACTION
SHARE BEAUTIFUL home in Dobson
Ranch. $245 plus % utilitie s. 8208963,
Bob.
Fill out application at
FREE APARTM ENT
RENTAL SERVICE
•M onochrom e M onitor
•M o n o /G rap h ics Bd
•150W Power Supply
•P arallel Prtr Port
•1 2 M onth W arranty
rente! sharing
W ALK TO ASU!
Only Vi block from cam
pus. Beautifully furnished,
huge 1 bedroom, 1 bath; 2
bedroom, 2 bath apart
ments. All bills paid. Cable
TV; heated pool, and
spacious laundry facilities.
Friendly, courteous
management. Stop by
today!
Energetic people needed for hot new pizza parlor opening in Tempe. Cooks,
cashiers, pizza makers and delivery
persons.
$
•T o p comm issions paid
•N ic e s t office in town
•F le x ib le hours available
•G u a ra n te e d salary
C all today, M esa
A p a rtm e n ts
9 6 6 -8 5 4 0
$
G reat w ay to earn a lot of m oney it you
can read, and have a pleasant but ag
gressive personality.
T e rra c e R oad
9 5 0 S. T e rra c e
PHONE SALES
$
926-0516
$
state Press
help w anted
W p wanted
ATTENDANT (FEMALE) neoded to assist
disabled student. Various h a m available.
NO experience necessary, ideal to r oncampus residents. 96/hour. C a l Barb,
784- 8502 .
Page 2 7
W ednesday, August 3 1 ,1 9 8 8
____________________________________
ATTENTION CHEMISTY student. Parttime lab technician needed to r Chandler
Solvent company. Experience w ith Qas
Chromatography Interpretatlona and lab
distillations. Knowledge o f PH m eter and
Kart Fischer Titrations. Flexible hours.
86.75/hour. C a l U niforce, 921-0888.
BABYSITTERS AND nannys wanted tor
live-in or out positions. Paradiae Valley,
Scottsdale, Temps- Mesa, Can work well
with school schedule. M ust have transpor
tation. 2/7-5909.
_____
BABYSITTER/HOUSE M anager. Profes
sors home dose to campus. 93.35/hour.
965-2348, home 967-2817. SO hours.
BARTENDER/GRILL cook needed to r ton
neighborhood sports bar. Flexible sche
dule. $8-$12 per hour. Apply Woodshed I,
Mill and Baseline.
BREAKFAST/LUNCH cafe needs parttime/fulMime waitresses and kitchen help.
Apply at Kevin's Comer Cato, 1725 W.
University, Suite 1, Tempe.
PART-TIME CHUD care position. Help
mom care to r 3 young children. Near
Paradise Valley Mad. Transportation
necessary. 992-2846.
CORAL BAY hiring sta ff, dishwashers,
cooks and bartender. Apply TuasdayFriday, 2-4:30,8380 Via Da Ventura.
CORK N Cleaver new accepting applica
tions for lunch waitresses and hostesses.
Short shifts, convenient hours, ton atmo
sphere Also accepting applications fo r
evening hostesses and evening cocktail
waitress. Apply in person Monday-Friday
2-5 p.m. o r by appoM m enL 5101 N. 44th
Street, Phoenix, 44th Street and Camelback, 952-0585.
COUNTER HELP, D ry cleaners, toft-tim e.
Thomas and Hayden, Ocottsdale: South
ern and MW, Tempe. 947-7530, Aftordtorle
Dry Cleaners.
COURTYARD BY the M arriott Hotel now
accepting applications fo r the foftowirrg
positions; servers, housekeepers, desk
clerks, cooks, dishwashers. Apply in
person only. 2621 S. 47th S t., (where
University Drive meets Hohokam Express
way). 966-4300. EOE. M/F/V.
BUSY STAY at home mom teaks respon
sible person sensitive to needs of toddlers
to Itaipcare fo r 2 young b oyt agaa 3 yean
and 18 months. Flexible hours,-part-tim e,
95/hour. Vicki, 947-1044.
CRUISE SHIPS now hiring a ll positions.
Bottt skilled and unskWed. For inform ation
caft 615-2928900, ext H-5Q9. (AZ-CAN)
CRUISE SHIPS now hiring. Summer and
career opportunities. (W ill train). Excellent
pay plus world travel. Hawaii, Bahamas,
Caribbean, etc. C a l now! 206-736-7000,
e x t 102C- (AZ-CAN)
DAY PERSON needed at Los Arcos
Cinema, 1383 N. Scottsdale Road. Apply
kt parson.
DELIVERY DRIVERS o r Küchen help
wanted. Call between 2-4 p.m. o r 6-7 p.m .,
804 0000. Minimum plus $1 each delivery.
Ask to r John.
help M M c d
GOVERNMENT JOBSI Now h iring in your
area, both shifted and unaMla d. For lis t of
jobs and application, c a l 6183833627
Ext. JS19. (AZ-CAN)
PART-TIME SUBSCRIPTION sales. Cardi
nal report, 20 plus % commission on ado.
Earning potential excaia nL C a t JR,
8293030.
GROUP HOMES neqd energetic,' hard
working people to help teach physically/
mentally handicapped individuato inde
pendence: FulMfrne, 3rd shift (should Mte
to cook); toft-Ume live-in (includes room
and board); part-tim e weekends (lots of
re c re a tio n a l a c tlv itis s ). T o ri/K e vin ,
694-2355 o r apply at 1622 W . 3rd Street,
Tempo.
PART-TIME EARLY m orning- Customer
service representstive needed fo r compu
te r wholes sis company. Enjoyable work
and good pay. 5 m inutes from campus.
C a l Jackie, 437-3798.
HELP WANTED; Drivers, cooks, and
counter help. Good pay and ItaxH e hours.
Call 8294)064 or 9213446, ask fo r M ike.
John, or M r. Simpson.
HEY YOU! Pm a full-tim e ASU student and
I make over $400 every week working
part-tim e in an ak-condHkmad office.
Sound good? Call Jon, 9633785.
DEPENDABLE PERSON to slay w ith 6th
grader in my South Tampa home (WarnerRural area) from 3-8 p.m . MondayThursday. Calf 730-9623. evenings.
HEY YOUII Yea, the wfld, crazy one!
Became a part-tim e DU lo r private parties
and get paid to r being a ham! Caft
957-1057.
DISABLED FEMALE- PV East, needs
„tom ato attendant, morning and availing,
hours flexible, good pay, no experience or
liftin g necessary. 784-8078.
INSTALL PLANT and rock m aterial, exper
ience helpful. F u i o r part-tim e. 84.50 to
start. 945-1015.
DISABLED STUDENT needs help parttim e. Approximately 10-12 hours/week.
85/hour. No experience necessary, wW
tra in . R eferences re q u ire d . L iftin g
required (100 pounds). 8294)927.
DISHWASHER PREP part-tim e evenings.
Tony's New Yorker. Apply in person, 107
£ Broadway.
EARN »1000/SALE, video greetings
booth. Male/female. Part-time. 263-1036.
EARN MONEY at hornet Assemble jowol
ry, toys, electronics, others. Fuft-tkne and
part-tim e work available. C a l (refundable)
1-407-7443000 ext. S203,24 hours.
EXTRA MONEY is nice, but you can help
people too. Earn $120 ptos a month.
Safer, faster plasma donation only a t ABi
Cantors due to automated procedure. 95
bonus to new donors on first donation w ith
th is ad. Ask about additional bonuses.
(Monday-Saturday) University, Plasma
Cantor, Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015
S. Rural Rd, Tempe, 9603139.
FINANCIAL SERVICES company expand
ing locally. Looking for mature adults who
want to supplement their income. C a l Mr.
C harles N elson, 838-1108, Monday
through Friday, 2 3 p.m. lo r interview.
h e lp w anted
UVE4N, UVE-OUT nannies. Weekend,
day, evening babysitters warded. Own
transportation. C a l Friends Forever CM dcare, 4381099.
MALE MOOEL& Versatile male models
needed by photographer who w ffi be In
Phoenix in October. Those r efected w ii
earn top doftar. Send recent photos. Me, to
J.Q ., 5600 Cr o acreefc Lane, Subs 1075,
Fort W orth, TX 76109.
PSYCHOLOGY OR Education m ajor
needed to ihre-in as a big sister to
teenager. Soma housework in exchange
to r ream and board. Ranee, 256-2645.
R E S T A U R A N T 'D E L IV E R Y D rive rs
w w itod, part-tim e and fuOttm e, lunch/
dinner sh ift. Advancem ent available.
South Scottsdale. C a l a fter 11 a.m „
4234X195.
DELTA GAMMA activee: Paly, Healhor,
Tiffany, BW r, Robin, MertdWh and Rachael
are ready!?!
FRATERNITY/SOHORITY MEMBERS: To
guarantee your name is in the 1988 Greek
D irectory; stop by the ATO booth In front o f
the MU from 9 a.m . to 2 p.m . Tuesday
through Thursday.
GOING BACK to Caftfomia, driving to
Beverly HRs, Loe Angeles on 9/9, back on
9/13. Mead company. Caft 844-3695.
JIM . WELCOME back from
Please c a l me. Shoftoy.
SHERI (HON). Happy 2 year arm iversaiy! I
love you! Let’s make ft forever. Tom.
THANK YOU St. Jude to r prayers
answered, Your help is sttll needed. JMP.
SENIOR LAW student wante d to assist to
preparaHnn and research to r California
S ta te A p p ea l. $ 5/h ou r, negotiable.
9483807. Caft after JMy 29.
VISIT THE Professional». Deka Sigma PI,
cm the Dean's Palio of the Busm en
College.
STUDENTS: PART-TME work, M M to n
pay. Great opportunity to r those who
qualify. For pereonal interview caft CBS
Supply, Inc. between 9 a.m .-4 p.m .
Monday-Friday, 921-2897.
TEACHER ASSISTANTS needed to r
Tempo C h id (to re Cantor. • months
SKpsrioncs desired, b trt vHN train. Plaaaa
caft 6043370.____________________
THE BROTHERS o f AEPi w o rld like to
walcomo the 42 man Faft 98 pledge class.
You m ads the right choice!
SUNDAY CONURE (Parrot)- M ale, handfad, 2 years. Lovaabtof Talks! Needs
immediate good home! Cage. $250toffer.
8843519.
services
EXPERIENCED MATH tutor avaftabto to r
W aal aide erodente. MATÜ77 through Calc
3 . Reasonable rales. Tom, 9787918
PERSONAL W BGHT Training- Private
gym- S al your own hours- One on one
M V or DRUG SCREEN
$29 each
35+ BLOOD CHEMISTRIES
with 10 study URINALYSIS
(n ckxftng explanation o f test)
$39 special
WANTED: C H IU ) cam p en tirn e , 8-12
hours,a weak. 2 boys ags 6 and 1. Salary
nagpNMite, 9883437.
Know your unique profile. Early
warning of intocBons. dietary prob
lems, enzymes, heart risk factors,
cholesterol, HDL, LDL, triglycerides.
996-7600
transportation
ALL STATES P rivoaway- Cars avaiabie21 o r older. 992-6200.
typing/
HOURS:
• S ell lo n g d is ta n c e *
{ phone services for a {
| Fortune 500 co m p an y.»
» $5 per hour guaranteed. {
i R aises & b o n u s e s . {
j Looks great on your |
J resume. O ther oppor- j
Stunities a v a ila b le in {
{ o th e r d e p a r tm e n ts *
J after 30 days. Central j
j Phoenix location.
{
{
Ask for
Jill or Barb
!
2 2 4 -5 6 2 5
!
m iscellaneous
CASH FOR your bust deed, contract,
mortgage. Any size, term , loctekm . Fast,
fa ir confidential quote«. Caft today, no
obftgatton. M B7778.13083481731, N ée
B ro ker, o f Am erica. (AZ-CAN)
D O YOU s a l your house and carry back a
note? We wR pay cash fo r your payments
Fast dosing. Deal direct. Mayftowar Capi
ta l 1-8088253080 o r 13063213366 aid.
719. (AZ-CAN).
SCHOOL MONEY problems? Don’t leave
school in debt. S tart now w ith us and we
wR pay you. give you, tha new G. I. BR,
and pay o ft the m ajority o f your student
loans, whfts you serve, not after. C a l
287-2574. Your Arizona Arm y National
Guard Recruiter.
SEPT. 7TH
SEÑOR F
TILLY’S
Naw Tim as ‘ B ast o f P hoenix" 1987
I FOR 1 DINNER SPECIAL
Buy 1 d in n e r entree 6 receiva tha 2nd fo r FREE
(equal o r laasar value) Sun.-Thura. w ith th is ad.
N ot va /kl w /th othtr coupons. Expires 9/36/88
D inner 8 1 0 3 0 p.m . • C ocktails • Batty Dancing
CASH FOR gold and dtamontto. MB
Avenue Jewelers. 414 S. MR, Suite 101,
Tempe. 9833967.
PHOTO EDITOR
T h e S U N D E V IL S P A R K
y e a rb o o k is lo o k in g fo r a n
e x p e rie n c e d , re s p o n s ib le
in d iv id u a l to s e rv e as th e 1 9 8 8 1 9 8 9 p h o to e d ito r. A p p lic a tio n s
w ill b e a c c e p te d th ro u g h
S e p t. 9 ,1 9 8 8 . P ic k u p a p p li
c a tio n s lo w e r le v e l M a tth e w s
C e n te r.
966-6881 (ask fo r T in a )
e o e _{
VHS/BETA. Any copy o f the movie
“ Mother Jugs and Speed.** Money is no
o b je ct Please contact M fce o r Pete at
730-1887. Help settle (h ie b e t, efidd
TH E M O RO CCAN RESTAURANT
Jewelry
F o r m o re in fo , c a ll
ADDTEM PS
¡.N o F ee^
A A K U R IT TY P IN G - s h o rt p ap e rs,
overnight/ long papers, prom pt service/
transcribe tapes/ good rates/ Linda
831-0340.
PIANO MSTRUCTUN. Accepting new
Mudante now, sdutte and chftdm n.NM ionatty cattWad teacher and pttmtoL Ask
about apodal offers. 1st toaoon free.
886-139«.
i
Mon.-Frl.
MAT 116 Algebra tutor needed. Top d o ia r.
C a l 961-0220, leave message.
CLASSKiAL GUITAR instruction- develop
any style o f piay- firs t lesson to prica- caft
9583821.
} 7:30 a.m .-4 p.m . {
{ 1 4:30-9 p.m .
!
}
w ord processing
ARABIC LANGUAGE. Profossionsi teach
e r. I ten ags. 8043125. ______ ■
!
MCI;
{
I
TE LEC O M i
i M U N IC A TIO N S {
|
IS H IR IN G
i
w anted
PAY OFF your b ite and reduce your
m onthly payments w ith a new home
owners conatii d U n n lean. C a l us now for
a very fast approvaL 1st and 2nd m ort
gages available. C M now: 602-4833878.
W oridwyn Acceptance Company, a firm
you can trust. MB3011 (AZ-CAN)
EARLY HEALTH
ALERT
AEROBIC INSTRUCTOR C ertification
workshop by N ations! Aerobics Training
Asaoriteion a t Phoenix Canto r to r Spam
l lid irln a. Waakand o f September 30th.
C a l 9633415.
QUALITY, QUICK typing. Papers, reports,
resumes. Pick-upfdalvary available. One
day service avaftabto. Gmny, 9683163.
10Q FREE diet pR x For datela, c a l
1300 906 1099 o r w rite to : P a M , P.O.
Bax 1822, Janeevls. W l 53547. (AZ-CAN)
(Alcohol, TCP, TH C 3K .)
mseucoon
FORMER ASU staffers: Word Perfect,
X e ro x M e m o ry w rite rs , M c In to s h
com puter,laser graphics. A rtist available
fo r charts, ettagrarns, and desktop publish
ing. Experienced w ith APA. MLA, gradu
ate school, ale. Gradutate students and
faculty work welcome- Caft Donne or Joan,
9483302.
THE PAPERWORKS- Thesis, report, and
resume typing. IBM compattbfa word
processing. Near ASU. 8213675.
pets
WAITRESSES WANTED fo r fun neighbor
hood sports lounga/restauram . n aaMe
schedule, good $. Apply Woodshed X,
Dobson and University, after 5 p.m .
Complete traininig pro
gram. Our custom ers call
us. Beginners earning
$300 per week; Young,
c a s u a l a tm o s p h e re .
S e c re ta ria l p o sitio n s
open. Established na
tional company.
START
I IMMEDIATELY*
CEREUS WORD Processing. Q uick,
experienced, quality guaranteed. Term
papers, theses, form totters, resumes,
Dictaphone. 947-7798
SEEKING CRIMINAL justice, social Work,
couneaknq or rotated degree senior o r
graduate student w ith experience in youth
servics fo r position as teen program
director at the Tampe Boys and G iria Club.
Please send resume to P.O. Boa 916.
Tampa, 85281 by 9/9/88. 2D houra/waak,
work study accepted
Confidential testing
at a lab near you.
___
AT KINKO’S ire typeset papers that make
the grade! 933 E . U niversity. C all
9682035.
FLYING FINGERS now has a Mac H and
laser printed Resumes, reports, etc.
Susan, 9481500.
l i e BORDER'S Edge is now aocepBng
applications to r several poalBona to bo
flftad im nradtolaly. Ocrean printer, campus
sates rep, dtotrict salsa rep. artist.
Resumes are betag accepted a t 618 S.
Co llege. Tem pe, AZ. PoritoMoa are
required fo r artiat position.
KARISM A
947-0142
ASU AREA. Typing, word processing,
editing. Fast, accurate. C a l anytime.
Prices com petitive, negotia ble- 9682186.
M ANO AR O U KAI: As ta ve m ytiu,
viso u m e t... sikandus katanus, to o l
(Pardon die spelling.) Luv, Mikute.
FULL-TIM E PAY
^ ---------« v k u t m
London.
ACCENTS M Typing. Typing service near
ASU. Quick turnaround. Over 30 years
secretarial experience. 0463882.
ROYAL PALMS ton now hiring busboys,
w aiters. 5200 C am elback, Phoenix.
8403610/
NUFtStNQ STUDENT, grad o r undergrad,
help care to r to rn ito ALS patient on
respirator. Lifting rsqdred. Flexible hours, ’
evenings/w eekends, posatola live -in.
Tempe vicinity, R ura fflo se lne , 8383084.
PART-TIM E H O U R S/
ANYONE INTERESTED in playing (A)D
and 0 plaaaa caft 1881833.
FAST RETURN. Experienced typist. WR
edit spoffing, punctuation, grammar. Accu
racy guaranteed. Joan, 8384)772.
TEACHER AIDES. Preschool W est.
904-6338.
PAR T-TIM E M O RNING S. D e liv e ry /
counter positions, $450 plus. C a l Pastry
Courier, 2304)200.
typing/
w ord processing
KEIXIW . I sttll want to take you swimming,
a lto to dinnor. How about lunch?
Anything? I love you. Bob K. C a l me!
MALE STUDENT nurse fo r morning hours,
8 3 a.m. Monday-Friday, $K M nu r to r 19
year ok) male w ith Cerebral Palsy. Would
consider student from spsclwl sd program
o r social work o r someone w ith medical
knowledge, p.m . hours also treaded.
South Scottsdale, 9044500.
PART-TIME SECRETARY. U ghi « pin g
plus PC. Close to ASU. Apply in person,
3702 E. Roeser Rd, Suite 19, 10 u s .4 ..
p.m.
personáis
CUSTOM GOLDSMITHING, sHversmithing and jsw eky repaire. MR Avenue
Jewelers, 9685967.
free lo s ÿ fo u n d
services
FOUND: NEW York alate d riv e n «cerne.
Kkn M aidrino, bionda, blue eyes! Caft
Alan, 829 8832
FALL SPECIAL i
LOST: EYE gtosane at ASU DoMaaore.
W ire fram ed, brown and black. Reward!
Please c a l Am ie, 9880723,
personals
-
ASU STUDENTS; W in y o r trip to M a z*lan next spring break. Enter a t the ATO
booth to r MOA raffio in front o f th e MU.
CONGRATULATIONS TO o ur new Presi
dent Jon Merman and aft the other now
members o f the Executive Board. Your
A S * Brae.
services
i
SHAMPOO, CONDITIONING
Cut &BlowDiy STYLE
R eg. »25
NOW 410 !
PHOENIX HAIR COMPANY
7 4 8 E . M cD ow ell
B y Appt. only w ith R icardo 2 5 8 -1 9 0 6
l
NEW CLIENTS ONLY
L___________ .-Uà,—
—
_____________________ .1
I
Page 28
W ednesday,,
t\4 i Q & tíL
iW -luriqW *
rcbl bwh Wy che. Swhf«ap
OPENS
S E P T E M B E R 1, 1988
Max arrives in Tempe, for the SNEAK
PREVIEW of his new exciting nightspot in
the Southwest. The secret is out, Max has a
passion for the Ladies, because of this he is
giving away $1000.00 in Personal Checks*
Max also wants all ladies to pay only $1.00
for their choice of any drink in the house
and there is never a cover for laches on
Thursday Nights. It starts at 8:00PM and
this is your chance to be the Erst to see
what everyone is talking about...
S E P T E M B E R 2 , 1988
Call your friends because the party starts
here at 4:00 PM with 2 for 1 drinks until
8:°°PM
everyoneto his very
iT *513
^ 7 7 ^ 7 7 ^ 1? ^ W!!th
to em u g c from AZZ 1ZZ.
t^ v a H e y s
Funky Reggie playing from 5:00PM to
8:00PM and Complimentary Hors
d’Oeuvresfrom Mr. B's. Then at
8:00PM welcome MAX to Hie VALLEY
as the SNEAK PREVIEW
CONTINUES...TIL 3:00AM for
AFTER HOURS* *
SM f
S E P T E M B E R 3, 1988
This
ThisisisMAX’S
MAX’Sfavorite
favoriteparty
partynight
night.Party
Party
early
earlyatat8:00PM
8:00PMwith
withaa‘‘MAX
“MAX
ORIGINAL”, bring any coin and MAX will
giveyou
youany
anydrink
drinkuntil
until9tiOPM,
9:00PM,then
thenMAX
MAX
give
International
connects you directly
directly to
to International
... , . . . .
'
Nightlife till 3:00AM Wth
with Anzoaa
Arizona’ss
BIGGEST after
after hours
hours party.
party. Come
Come and
and
BIGGEST
experiencethe
theNEW
NEWexcitement
excitementininTempe,
Tempe.
experience
L A B O R
D A Y
This is MAX’S day to relax! Because MAX
is always looking for an excuse to
CELEBRATE, the Labor Pay Holiday is
perfect. MAX will open the doors id
8:00PM for the chance to dance, drink and
celebrate a DAY OFF from the Hustle and
Bustle of School. Alt Drinks are HOLIDAY
PRICED for $1.00 (tom Choice...) JUST
ASK FOR MAX...
;
l
•E very Thursday 10 Ladies w ill each receive $100.00 in ce rtificate s to be redeemable fo r any merchandise at M A X S 919.
**M u st be 18 years o r o ld e r w ith proper A rizo n a ID l
6 0 2 -9 2 1 -9 7 7 5
• 919
A R I Z .O J S I J K