state pje «
I H a M
H B H H B a H iM
Arizona State University’s
M orning Daily
B H H H B a a B B B a a H a a H a H B I
V o l. 71 N o . 6 7
•Copyright, State P ia n , 1988 Tempe, Arizona
W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 3 0, 1988
Nelson offers
to exchange
staff holidays
By T E R E S A OW EN
State P ress
Presidents Day will be eliminated from ASU’s 1989 holiday
schedule if the Board of Regents approves ASU President J
Russell Nelson’s decision to cancel the Feb. 20 holiday.
Nelson had eliminated Dec. 26 as a holiday in exchange foi
the [Jan. 16 Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. Under Nelson’:
plan, Presidents Day would replace the Dec. 26 as a workday
and will be effective this February if the regents approve ii
Saturday.
Nelson said he chose Presidents Day because he believes i
will cause the fewest problems.
“ I thought it was the most broadly accepted alternative,’
he said.
Two weeks ago, Nelson asked the Classified Staf:
Association, Associated Students and the Faculty Senate foi
alternatives to the 1989 holiday schedule because ASl
staffers complained that working the day after Christmas
would disrupt time with their families.
In addition, staffers also
were upset because a Dec. 2«
workday would not have
affected students or faculty
because it was during a
«
semester break.
In its suggestions, the 3,600
m em em b er a s s o c ia tio n
recommended they work
Veterans Day in order to
observe the Martin Luther
K ing J r . h o lid ay . Thé
staffers chose Presidents
Day as their second choice.
Associated Students did
not make a suggestion, and
th e F a c u l t y S e n a t e
recommended exchanging
Veterans Day or Presidents
J . R ussell Nelson
Day for the King holiday.
“ 1 do not see eliminating Presidents Day, Labor Day nor
Independence Day, as these are distinctly Americanized
holidays,” said John Fees, Associated Students President, in
a letter to Nelson.
State law allows state employees, including ASU staffers,
10 paid holidays.
Vince Micone, Associated Students campus affairs vice
president, said ASASU is pleased that tin: University is
recognizing the King holiday, but he said ASÀSU’s “first
choice was and still is Dec. 26 because it would affect
students the least,’’ he said.
Micone said Presidents Day will affect everyone equally,
but he expects many students to respond negatively.
,,
“ Everyone will share the same responsibility,” he said.
“ But Presidents Day is recognized to represent the history of
our nation. Neither Veterans Day nor Presidents Day should
be negated to observe the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.” .
A ssociate prolessor Barbara La fiord, left, and Peter Horw ath, chairm an of the Departm ent o f Foreign Languages, are faced Tueedey
with having to turn away m ore than 1,000 students w ho pro-registered fo r foreign language clasaes. O fficia ls said the problem ie due to
lack o f classroom space, not Interest In expanding the curriculum . T h e Language and Literature Building b o u ses the department.
ASU department runs out of room
B y SHERI JO H N SO N
State P ress
More than 1,000 ASU students who pre-registered for
foreign language classes for the 1989 spring sem ester will be
shut out.
And one language professor said that even if the University
were to add 100 teachers and sections to accommodate the
students, there wouldn’t be any place to put them.
“There just simply isn’t any more room,” said Barbara
Lafford, an associate'language professor. “With all of this
construction going on, not one of those buildings contains a
classroom
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B y M ICH ELLE ALLM AN
S ta le P ress
Nearly 350 students lined up for measles vaccinations
Tuesday, an effort organized by ASU and county officials
who hope to stem a possible epidemic of the disease on
CampUs.
Nurses with the Maricopa County Health Department
joined nurses with the Student Health Center for more than
six hours to administer special measles vaccinations for
anyone who felt they could be infected.
The free immunizations, which will continue today in the
MU and year-round at the Student Health Center, were
stepped up following the measles diagnosis last week of Sun
Devil linebacker Drew Metcalf.
“We’ve had a fair response, especially from the football
team and athletic department,” said health center nursing
supervisor Deon Rasmussen.
Students in Metcalfs classes are advised to get a measles
Wednesday, November 30,1988_________________________________________
Shot if they were immunized before 1968 or before they were
15 months old, Rasmussen said. Students who are unsure of
their innoculation date also are advised to get the shot.
The gestation period for measles is about 14 days — the
exact amount of time between Metcalf’s suspected exposure
to the disease and his diagnosis. The most communicable
period of the disease came when Metcalf was unaware he had
measles and was attending classes.
Meanwhile, Metcalf is recovering well, said Dr. Monty
Roth, the director of ASU’s Student Health Cepter. The
starting linebacker for the Sun Devils was hospitalized
Thursday and released Monday.
“ It sure is a sobering experience for him,” Roth said.
A spokeswoman for Arizona’s Department of Health
Services said state health officials fear that Metcalf’s
measles could spur an epidemic similar to the one in 1985-86
at Northern Arizona University.
“We want to prevent that from ever happening again,”
said B. J. Laing, Department of Health Services nursing
consultant for vaccine-preventable diseases.
“This is a highly communicable disease. There could
definitely be another,épidémie.”
Laing said college-age students are at the highest risk of
being seriously ill with measles.
“They get higher fevers and more secondary infections,”
she said, adding that most people 18 years and older who get
measles spend time in a hospital.
Laing said there currently are several suspected cases at
ASU, although none have been reported to the University or
Maricopa County since Metcalf’s diagnosis.
“So far, there have been no other cases,” said Charles
Juels, the Maricopa County Disease Control director. “There
is always a chance, though, that some people caught it before
they got shots.”
U of M p resid en cy finalists d iscu ss experience
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Talk of experience in dealing with
university problems was à common thread Tuesday as the
three finalists for president of the troubled University of
Minnesota discussed their qualifications for the position.
A Swedish-born vice president of the University of Arizona
with 18 years’ experience at Minnesota; the Minnesota Law
School dean, and the University of Maryland’s interim
president held news conferences the day before one is to be
named to head the 54,500-student University of Minnesota
system.
" l am a relatively low-key person and I don’t think I scare
people,” said Nils Hasselmo, 57, who noted his handling of a
dispute involving Arizona's Mexican-American community
and the University of Arizona’s Spanish and Portuguese
departments.
Hasselmo, who joined the University of Minnesota in 1965
as an assistant professor in the Scandinavian department
and rose to vice president of administration and planning
before leaving in 1983 for Arizona, also emphasized his
rapport with those outside the university community.
“Through my work as a linguist . . .1 felt I got to know
rural Minnesotans,” Hasselmo said.
While doing research on Swedish settlers in the Chisago
Lakes área of Minnesota in the late 1960s, the Swedish-born
Hasselmo said, he m ade lasting friendships while
interviewing and staying with elderly immigrants.
Hasselmo said he is being considered for other jobs but
declined to identify them.
William E. Kirwan, interim president of the University of
Maryland, initially said he had not made up his mind about
whether he would take the Minnesota job if chosen. Láter,
when asked about his reservations, Kirwan, 50, said he didn’t
have any. “ My expectation is that I would accept it if
offered,” he said.
Kirwan stressed his outsider’s fresh perspective, and his
handling of the fallout from University of Maryland
basketball player Len Bias’ cocaine-induced death in 1986
and a merger that expanded the university system from five
to 11 campuses.
“When you’re in the center of the maelstrom, so to speak,
you get the perception that things are worse than they really
are,” he said. “This institution is much larger than any
particular set of circumstances that occurred.”
Stein, 50, like Hasselmo is a former vice president of
administration and planning at Minnesota. He has been dean
of the university’s Law School since 1979. Most recently he’s
been interim President Richard Sauer’s liaison with athletic
programs since men’s athletic director Paul Giel was fired in
July.
“Although we have been through some difficult times in
recent months, there is much to look forward to with high
expectations,” said Stein, who emphasized a desire to put
behind the university’s troubled past and restore trust.
“ I believe the ’90s can be a golden era for the university —
a time of renewal and revitalization,” he said.
Hie candidates’ public interviews with the Board of
Regents will start Wednesday morning, with the selection to
follow.
The new president will replace Kenneth Keller, who
resigned March 13 amid a controversy over cost overruns in
the remodeling of his campus office and official residence.
Sauer, who said from the beginning that he did not want the
permanent position, recently announced that he will leave at
the end of the year to head the National 4-H Council in Chevy
Chase, Md.
Hasselmo, Kirwan and Stein were selected as finalists
from a pool of 227 applicants and nominees.
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Page 4
ySiatCPnu
. November 30.1988
editorial
Tuition vote
OH, ISn t
C om prom ise is the w ay
It’s going to be freezing in Flagstaff this
weekend.
But it’s going to be boiling inside the
building at NAtJ where the Arizona Board of
Regents will m eet to discuss the hot topic of
tuition hikes — and to decide if some
students are going to be forced out of school
and into the cold.
The 500-plus students who jammed into
the Great Hall at ASU’s College of Law
three weeks ago to protest a. proposed $156
tuition hike did have an impact, at least on
Arizona Board of Regents member Andrew
Hurwitz.
And when the regents head for the high
country Friday to debate and cast their final
votes on the fate of financially strapped
students at Arizona’s three universities,
that impact may produce tangible results.
Hurwitz, arguably the most student
conscious regent on the 11-member board,
has come up with a brilliant plan for his
colleagues to discuss. A plan that is the
perfect compromise; because while it
acknowledges th at tuition m ust rise
somewhat, it provides help for those
students who simply can’t squeeze out
another dime for academic fees.
The proposal calls for either a $84 or $118
tuition hike, with a so-called “harmless
clause” attached that would give waivers to
students who qualify, exempting them from
paying the increase.
The plan demonstrates that at least some
of the regents recognize the validity of what
hundreds of students told them during die
tuition hearing a t the Great Hall — that a
large number of students are going to be
forced out of college and out of an education
if a large increase is approved.
There are some questions about the
Hurwitz proposal — such as which students
will qualify for the waivers and how their
need will be determined — and such a plan
would thus require careful and constant
attention on the part of student leaders to
ensure it is executed fairly. But the idea is
innovative and speaks to the major concern
of the student body — protecting the
educational future of those who are living on
the edge of exclusion from the University.
The idea is a good one, but the battle is
hardly won. There will be opposition by
those who don’t fully understand what is at
stake for some students.
If the plan is to succeed, inspired efforts
by student leaders will be necessary in these
final days before the Flagstaff meeting to
get enough regent votes lined up on the side
of the $84 compromise. And that means the
Arizona Students Association, made up of
delegates from the three universities, must
present a united front up North and firmly
endorse the Hurwitz plan — which is
probably the best chance students have to
cut a workable deal with the regents. And it
means that students should let the regents
know their feelings about it, too, with lastminute phone calls to their offices.
Never before have Arizona students
turned out in such force to fight for their
educational opportunity, and a student
victory, of sorts, is possible this weekend.
Let’s hope that the regents keep in mind the
stories they heard three weeks ago as they
meet on the icy campus of NAU. The stories
of students who are struggling for the basics
of life — food, clothing and shelter — while
fighting to get their degree.
And let’s hope they exempt such students
from any tuition increase.
That way, no one will be frozen out of a
college education.
'
HEdflT
H |
N
Gex&ocb
X
wim
1WRED
letters
Day care a necessity
Editor:
I, for one, applaud Mr. Hostetler’s series
of columns involving the necessity for
adequate day care for ASU faculty and
students.
Drop in services are not a luxury, they are
a necessity for a progressive university that
cares about community involvement and
availability of higher education for all.
Tha ASU administration must recognize
that a university is not successfully
marketed solely with high-tech research
contracts and 8 by 10 glossy catalog photos
of impressive buildings and “green space.”
The University has an obligation to stand
behind the needs of the people they hire and
minds and attitudes they help form.
Dorie Sanders
Senior, Social Work
Column repeat unfair.
Editor:
I am writing this letter in response to the
editorial article by Darrin Hostetler that
appeared on the opinion page of the State
Press on Nov. 18, and which originally
appeared on July 21.
My wife and I are the. parents of the 15
year old who has been charged with the
murder of Christine Buffone. I emphasize
the word “chargéd” because he has not
been proven guilty in a court of law for the
crime, just charged.
When the article in question originally ran
on July 21, my wife and I were upset
because it seemed to us that our son was
being tried and convicted in the press. It
wasn’t only this article, but all of the other
articles that had run in all of the Valley
newspapers. It upset us then and it really
upsets us now. The second time it was run,
Nov. 18, all of the details in the article had
nothing to do with appealing to ASU to
provide child care facilities.
I personally feel th at if Maricopa
Community College can afford to have a
child care facility for its students, then why
can’t Arizona State University. It’s not like
the parents/students are asking for the
world, but for a place where their children
can be taken care of while they are
attending classes and/or labs.
Richard A. Mellem
Majority rules
Editor:
I have a question about Carolyn Hofig’s article of Nov. 17.
In her column titled “Mofford should reconsider s i t i n g 106
into law” Hofig asks if “ a ‘majority’ is always right — or
simply more numerous?” Well isn’t the point of a general
election that the majority is both?
Our nation’s system of government is based on the fact that
no power may govern without the consent of the governed.
More than 50 percent of the voting population of this state
voted “yes” on Proposition 106. It must become law just as
the next gubenatorial candidate who receives more than 50
percent of the vote must become governor.
If there is something illegal about 106, let the Supreme
Court declare it unconstitutional. Or better yet, in the
possible election another proposition should be put to the
voters to repeal 106. If the majority of voters wish it to be so,
it will be.
Pro-lifers, wake up!
Editor:
Up until recently, I have taken comfort in
calling myself “pro-life” and in donating
money to the pro-life cause. I am grateful
that through my recent pro-life, directaction involvement and my participation in
Operation Rescue, I am how painfully
aware of how little I have done. Those of you
who, like me, know that abortion is murder
and do so little, wake up!
Oh, that poor little aborted baby. How her
A confusing message would be sent to the public if our
government were to say, “ Everyone get out there and vote,
not that it really m atters. If we don’t like the results we will
do what we feel is correct.” The rights of the minority must
be protected. But never a t the expence of the power of the
vote.
Marc Bradley Petrine
Junior, History
King holiday: How about Fourth of July?
heart beat and how she moved around,
avoiding that suction machine in her last
few moments of life!
And how we shall grieve when we look
upon that tiny child; no name, no babtism,
no funeral.
Oh, and how with accusing eyes she
should look a t us, we who knew.
Mary Ann Sullivan
Senior, Accounting
EDITORIAL BOARD
U n sig n e d editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, individual
m em bers of d ie editorial board write editorials and the board d e cid e s on their
merit. T h e editorials d o not reflect the opinion of the State P re ss staff a s a
w hole. B oard m em bers include:
Marty Sauerzopf
ED ITO R
Mike Ritter
OPINION EDITOR
Joan M cKenna
M AN AG IN G ED ITOR
Darrin Hostetler
C O LU M N IS T
LETTER POLICY
The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on
any topic.
Ail letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length
to be eligible for publication.
Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the
university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be gránted with an
appropriate reason.
Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor.
All letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front
desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15
Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe A Z 85287-1502.
Editor
I have an idea concerning the Martin
Luther King Jr. holiday. Why not celebrate
him and what he fought for on July Fourth?
It- is my understanding that this day is the
day we celebrate our independence.
My impression is that Dr. King wanted all
men and women to be included in that
celebration. Now thanks partly to him, it is a
day on which we can fully celebrate the
freedom and independence of all men and
women in America without ignoring our
veterans. It seems to me that if we give Dr.
King a holiday we would need to give serious
thought to giving Susan B. Anthony a
holiday.
“ vevt’s
, o vc u
tub
i/ ra
ia tte
v
u ie
v ir
ii
ii ivem
/ ii ioory
ij
L
e le
th
m
by
celebrating their message on the day that
has already been set aside for it1-—. July
Fourth.
! j
Ned Fuller
Junior, Accounting
quotable
“Gef
out of the way of Justice. She is blind. ”
—
Stanislaw Je rzy Lee
STATE PRESS
•
M ARTY SAU ERZO PF
Editor
f y g - i - g ..... ......- ••-••‘ •/••••..-•■••.••-•-••.•BEN M cC O N N EU
Aw t C ttyEW of
...... VICTOR BARAJAS
OpintonE d to f................................. ■............. MIKE RITTER
.... ■;.... .... ..... - ......... ADRIANE HOPKINS
..... . ................ ........ PATRICIA VAN CO URT
.... —.-.< e.^ .LA U n iE SMITH
..................................................SHAW N DAHL
t e Ä Ä Ä i i u i S ' srr
JO AN M cKENNA
Managing Editor
CO PY EDITORS: Troy Bausinger, M att Berriman, Stacy
Haymes.
v
ARTIST: Garth Hackai.
PRODUCTION: Lynn Downer, Leighayn Green, Janice Hill,
Steve Kricun, Scott Mao Fariand, Nancy Nasa, Lynn Senzek,
E ric Zotcavage.
ADVERTISING REPRESEN TATIVES: L e slia Dillon, Marie
Guerrero, Charles Kyler, Paul Lae, Carey O ’Bannon, Heidi
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CREATIVE CO NSULTANT: R ich Toltzman.
The State P ress is published Monday t h r o F r i d a y during the
acdem ic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews
Canter, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tampa, ¡Arizona
“ s S * * Car°lyn H° "9, Darrtn Hos«e«ef. David Jordan. 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. W a do not answer
questions of general nature. Advertising and Production: (602)
Jackson, Dean Gyoray Chris 965-7572.
Nackino, Christina Pirkey, Clay Tucker.
yoi8' ' u nr“Tha State P ress is tha only newspaper exclusively published
for and circulated on the ASU cam pus. The news and views
.PH O TO GRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty Sundi
c.
published in th is newspaper are not necessarily those of the
phen Mounteer. Jam es Mumaugh
K)
hum an M ntcaa...now they naad
m otivated, aducatad profaaatonals
to w ork In thair ranks.
Tha A H dagraa program at A S U
Sanaa to attract, prapara and plaça
studante Into n o n -p ro fit agancy
w ork. C araar o p p o rtu n llia s fo r
graduates hava navar baan batter
AmericanBartendersSchool
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JU N IO R ACH IEVEM EN T
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A S U S tu d e n ts , ta k e a d v a n ta g e o f
M A K IN G A C A R E E R A
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o u r h o lid a y s p e c ia l r e g is t r a t io n fe e
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CONSIDER
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Local and National Job Placement
F o r Iurthor Inform ation about th is dagraa program
and tha Am artcan Hum anics Student A ssociation,
c a ll MS-7291.
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I
• I *• o a I A i U te f p te > 9 • a t I U 9 « A A » I O N * • « I I I
1 5 2 3 E ast A p a c h e , T e m p e
B u y D irect from the Indians
T h e Sou thw est is ab u n d a n t with legends, but there is o n e that
rises a b o ve in T e m p e history. T h is leg end is C h ie f D o d g e , w ho ca n
be seen d aily at his Indian Jew elry store in O ld T o w n T em pe.
W hite visiting h is store, y o u c a n se e him b u sily d e sig n in g and
sellin g his quality w orks o f art.
F o r over 15 years, C h ie f D o d g e h a s b een in T e m p e . H e h a s been
involved with Indian arts all o f h is life. H is fa m ily is a lso involved in
the b u sin ess. E v e ry o n e co n trib u te s th e ir different a rea o f expertise
to m ake th is a s u c c e s s fu l operation . A ll are know led g eab le, not o n ly
on the su b jects o f new and o ld e r jewelry, but a lso in the area of
pottery and rugs.
V isiting the gallery-like store c a n be very e d u catio n a l, a s th e C h ie f
an d h is fa m ily a re a va ilab le to a n sw e r a n y q u e s tio n s y o u m ay have
c o n c e rn in g Indian art a n d fo lk lo re . T h e C h ie f even o ffers app raisal
services fo r in su ra n ce p urposes.
C h ie f D o d g e ’s aim is “to create quality jew elry that re c o rd s the
Indian cu ltu re.“ W hen creatin g Indian sym b o ls, he w ants to create
e a ch p ie c e a s an heirlo o m to p a s s fro m o n e g eneratio n to another.
T h e store o ffers a w ide variety o f Indian art, a s well as iewelry.
Items su c h a s u n iq u e K a c h in a d o lls, han d m a d e pottery and sand
paintings.
?*jj4 I p l p K # '^ ■»
Á s a cu s to m e r o f C h ie f D o d g e ’s, yo u ca n involve y o u rse lf in the
entire p ro c e s s o f creating a c u sto m item, from helping with the
d e sig n to w atching the p ie ce being m ade.
C u s to m e rs ca n se lect sterling silver and g o ld a s settings fo r tur
q u o is e a n d other stones.
C h ie f D o d g e is p ro u d to have cu stom jew elry fo r P resident Rea
gan, B a rry G o ld w a te r an d ro ck g ro u p s su c h a s U2, W hite S n a k e and
G u n s a n d R oses.
W ith this notoriety, C h ie f D o d g e has a fin e reputation an d has
b e co m e a trusted nam e in jewelry.
If you k n e w
w h at th e y fe lt lik e,
y o u ’d b e w earin g
th em now .
“ S h o rts of
all S o r t s !”
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Wednesday. November 30,1988
aa& L
M a sk e d b an d it ro b s T e m p e b u sin e ss
B y MIKE B U R G ESS
State P ress
Tempe police are looking for a gunman who robbed a
Tempe business of $780 Monday night after he forced
employees to crawl to a safe and open it, police said.
lire masked bandit confronted employees at Federal
Express, 4435 S. Rural Road, as they were leaving work
through a rear door about 7:04 p.m., police said.
The suspect used a long-barreled semi-automatic handgun
to force the employees back into the business, where he had
them crawl to a safe, police said.
He took the cash and an undetermined amount of money
and credit cards from an employee’s purse before he fled on
foot. A police canine was called to the scene but could not
track the suspect, police said.
Police described the suspect as black, possibly in his
mid-20s, about 6 feet and 190 pounds. He was last seen
wearing a ski mask, gloves, blue jeans, a yellowish sweater
and white high-top shoes.
Police also reported the following incidents :
•Someone stole 87 compact discs from a room on the 14th
floor of Manzanita Residence Hall sometime last week. Loss
police report
is $870.
•Someone stole a black 1987 Honda Spree scooter from the
south side of Ocotillo Hall sometime between Monday night
and Tuesday morning. Loss is $850.
•ASU students Sheri Lynn Pleasants and Kimberly Jane
Conlon were arrested Monday at Sahuaro Residence Hall for
investigation of possession of marijuana.
•Someone stole a $250 time card clock Friday from the
University Activity Center.
•Someone stole a men’s black Fuji 10-speed bicycle from the
courtyard at McClintock Residence Hall. Loss is $250.
•Someone stole a men’s Shogun 26-inch mountain bicycle
from between the A and C Wings at Best Hall sometime last
week. Loss is $250.
•Someone caused $100 damage to the north side basement
door of Matthews Center.
•Someone stole a beige telephone handset from an
emergency call box ip Lot 11 last week. Loss is $10.
R e a d th e S T A T E PRESS C la ssifie d s,
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Pagc9
Wednesday, November 30.1968
Economy^_
Continued from page 1.
think tijere’s been any focus on what it is
that Arizona should strive for.’*
Shank, office manager at RE-MAX Anasazi
Realty in Tempe.
But she added that in Maricopa County
alone, there are over 200 foreclosures every
month and over 3,000 this year.
“ I don’t know if it will ever be booming
again,” shesaidKivett said foreclosures and bankruptcies
in Arizona are higher than they’ve ever
been, adding that bank officials deny they
have foreclosures but the numbers tell a
different story.
“Somebody is not telling that they’ve got
foreclosures,” she said, “They don’t want to
say our bank has a ton of them.”
With construction a losing proposition for
the state, Rex said the state’s economy is
shifting its dependence to the service
industry.
“The service industries as a whole are
probably where the strength is today,” he
said. “But they’re not going to be the
creator of new jobs.”
Arizona has 1.4 million total employees
and the services industry, including finance,
insurance, real estate, government and
retail industries, employs 1.1 million people.
But construction and manufacturing must
improve and drive the economy again
before the services industry can create new
jobs, Rex said.
“ If you've got a good-producing industry
like construction in a recession, it’s going to
have an impact on everything else,” he said.
“Evert though they're (services) the bulk
now in the employment and output, they still
have to wait for the others.”
Rosemary Reardon, an economist for the
Arizona Department of Economic Security,
said that while the service industry is
helping Arizona where other industries
aren't, the economic outlook is still bleak.
Rex said Arizona can continue to build
and prolong its long-term problem ot build
less and have a severe short-term problem.
Sushki added that real estate markets
around the country are weakening, but
Arizona is especially hurt.
"Since we are so heavily committed in it,
we are perhaps hurt even more,” she said;
Tom Rex, manager of' ASU’s Center for
Business Research, said overbuilding has
largely put the wild pitch and yaw into
Arizona's economy, forcing people to leave
because of few job opportunities.
“We overbuilt in the mid-1980s, and
vacancy rates went way up," he said. “The
construction industry currently is in a
recession.”
• A good measure of a recession is looking
at employment, he said.
In 1986, the construction industry
employed 115,000 Workers, but in 1988 it has
employed only 93,000.
In addition, the people who are getting
forced out are the ones who most often move
to the state — the 20 to 29-year-old workers,
a prime segment of the workforce, Rex said.
Even apartment complexes are affected
by overbuilding, especially in the studentrich East Valley. In 1985, the vacancy rate
for apartments was below 5 percent, but this
year the rate is 15 percent While office
vacancies are 20 percent,
¿ “Every sector of real estate is overbuilt
right now,” Kivett said. Overbuilding in 1986
was due much to apartment builders trying
to get tax breaks before tax incentives
created in the early '80s were taken away,
she added.
"Apartment builders were wanting to go
ahead and get these permits out and get
these units on line while they could take
advantage of the tax breaks,!’ shesaid. “We
had an extra amount of construction.”
But despite the overbuilding in Arizona,
the area around ASU does especially well in
single-family housing sales; said Linda
State P re ss photo
Construction w orkers tear dow n the old ticket booths at the south end of Sun Devil Stadium
earlier th is year to make way for new athletic offices. B uilding projects have becom e a com m on
sight at A SU a s w ell as in the Valley, despite what experts see as an econom ic tsilsp in existing in
the state.
“Just as during the early ’80s things fed
upon themselves in a positive sense, things
are chipping away at themselves in a
negative sense,” he said. “It will probably
be three to four years before you get
vacancy rates even down to an average
level.” ■Y y y ’' ■ .
‘
The average vacancy rate level for
Arizona is 6 percent, compared to Arizona’s
current rate of 15 percent.
So, why is there still so much building in
Arizona?
“You’ve still got a group of people today
that are highly optimistic about what’s
going on,” he said.
“We have real estate consulting firms in
the Valley that are not saying anything to
anyone about ‘don’t do this,’ “They may he
cautioning them in some regard, but
basically they have a very positive outlook.
“Doing so at times gets you into trouble —
like now.”
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, November 30.1988
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'
P8gc11
Coming to a theater near you. . .
N e w C h ris tm a s re le a s e s fu ll o f p ro m is e a n d p o te n tia l
THE THIN BLUE LINE
A Miramax Films Release, An American Playhouse
Theatrical Presentation directed by Errol Morris, musidal
score by Philip Glass. Opens Dec. 2.
Twelve years ago, Dallas policeman Robert Wood and his
partner pulled over a car traveling without headlights at
night. Wood approached the car and was shot five times and
killed. Wood’s partner didn’t bother to take down the car’s
license number and couldn’t remember the make.
One month later David Harris, a 16 year old from Vidor,
Texas, was arrested after boasting to bis friends that he'd
“offed a Dallas pig” — Harris claimed that h e’d only been
Joking•
And although the murder weapon was found in a swamp
near Vidor, and he admitted to stealing a car and driving to
Dallas at the time of Wood’s death, Harris said 27-year-old
Randall Adams was responsible for the officer’s death.
Harris, who had a lengthy criminal record, was set free*
Adams, whose record is,without blemish, was convicted and
sentenced to death.
Errol-Morris’ new film“ The Thin Blue Line” examines the'
Wood murder as a classic case of perverted justice. “ In
many ways,” Morris said, “it's a terrifying story about ends
justifying means — and here the prosecution is the most
culpable. They broke the rules in order to get a conviction.”
The director certainly seems to understand the caseirdm a
particular perspective but, as he explains, the film attempts
to maintain some objectivity: “We talk about truth as
something obvious, something that hits us over the head, but
it’s often quite elusive. Finding it isn't all that easy.”
The film features several interviews — including talks with
Adams and Harris — and a recreation of the crime and
subsequent events.
“The recreations,” the director said, "‘don’t mean to tell
you what happened. There’s no way I can tell you that. I only
know what people say they saw or believe they saw. I have no
privileged access to reality,”
Morris enlisted the aid erf Philip Glass, who composed for
films like “ Mishima” and the critically acclaimed cinematic
duo, “Kpyaanisqatsi” and “Powaqqatsi” and has worked on
several operas, to write the stirring movie score.
“The challenge for us," Glass said, “was to create a
separate atmosphere for each character in the music without
interfering with the dialogue___ I had to write music which
would work with each real-life character, as well as enhance
the overall drama of the film.”
Glass seems to have involved himself nearly to the extent
that Morris has.
The director has, in his own words, become obsessed with
the Wood’s murder case. ‘T v e been trapped by this story. It
has taken control of my life.”
MY STEPMOTHER IS AN ALIEN
A Weintraub Entertainment Group film starring Dan
Aykroyd, Kim Basinger and Richard Benjamin, directed by
Richard Benjamin. Opens Dec. 9.
The press release begins as follows:
Dan Aykroyd, a dedicated scientist searching for
extraterrestrial intelligence, has^ an unexpected close
encounter when he becomes romuhtically entangled with
beautiful Kim Basinger in “My Stepmother is an Alien.” ^
What to think?
Probably that this latest Richard Benjamin escapade, due
im Basinger and Ôan Aykroyd star in the questionable com -
D irector Errol M orris o l the ‘T hin Blue Lin e,’ an unusual dram a baaed on the true story of a m ysterious 1976 D allas cop killing.
u iwimeiiet com poser, P h ilip Qtass com posed the m usical score lo r the film w hich w ill be released on D ecem bers.
for release over the upcoming Christmas season, will be
another of his stale, tongue-in-cheek attempts to muster
nothing more than confused giggles from a handful of movie
goers.
There may be some remote possibilities that could save
what appears to be two hours of the sophomoric humor that
Benjamin occasionaly dishes out.
One is if the chunky Aykroyd proves he is not the
comical/acting misfit that we see on the screen (i.e. be funny
and believable at the same time and quit serving us
“Saturday Night Live” leftoyers).
The other is if Kim Basinger disrobes frequently
throughout the movie and keeps her mouth shut. Well, that
may be a bit harsh, but Ms. Basinger has revealed just about
everything except her acting abilities. On the other hand,
with those skyscraping legs, pouty lips, billowing hair aind, of
course, the bountiful bust, who needs depth or talent?
According to Benjamin, Basinger was perfect for the film.
“We said our actress had to be absolutely beautiful and
warm and funny. The list isn’t that long. The movies have
been looking for this girl since there have been movies. Jean
Harlow, Marilyn Monroe, Carole Lombard, I mean the list is
short. Kim has aU-.the right, wonderful combinations,” he
said.
| .■ '
..-.i
1
You can interpret ¿hat literally , if you like. "
••
"Alien” has Aykroyd playing a widowed scientist who
stumbles upon a buxom extraterrestrial. The real funstarts
when his 13 year old’begins to have serious developmental
problems With her soon to'be stepmother who looks nothing
like EIT. •'
■ ’ ' .■.’V.;
•
Sound interesting, mildly amusing or down right
nauseating?
Maybe, on all three counts.
Remember, kids, having ohly a press release, pictures and
the aforementioned folks’ track records allows barely
enough room for speculation. But, in spite of what we have,
this may be one movie to judge by its title.
TEQUILA SUNRISE
*
A Warner Bros, film starring Mel Gibson, Michelle
Pfeiffer, Kurt Russell and Raul Julia, written and directed
by Robert Towne. Opens Dec. 2.
“The script (of “Tequila Sunrise” ) depicts a wonderful
story about friendship, betrayal and loyalty, what price those
traits exact from us in life and what we're willing to pay for
them,” said the film’s producer, Thom Mount.
“What also struck me was that this was a truly adult film
for our generation, like (Robert) Towne’s ‘Shampoo’ was 10
or 12 years earlier.”
^
The film centers on the relationship between two high
school friends whose lives have gone in two very different
directions. Mac McKussic (Mel Gibson) is a drug dealer
looking for a way to exit his rather unpopular profession,
while Nick Frescia (Kurt Russell) is a cop assigned to
provide his friend with an even less popular exit — into a jail
cell.
Meanwhile, Jo Ann Vallenari (Michelle Pfeiffer); a
restaurant owner, is torn between her emotional involvement
with both of them.
“This is a story about drug dealing,” explains the film’s
director Robert Towne, “But it’s also about love and
*friendship and what it takes to love somebody, .whether it’s a
Kurt R ussell (left), M ichelle Pfeiffer and Mel G ibson star in “ Te
quila S u n rise ," written and directed by Robert Tow ne. T h is
action-thriller Is due fo r release D ec. 2.
guy who has been in trouble, like McKussic, or a man who is
in a respectable position, like Frescia.
“Jo Ann falls in love with the man who trusts her the most,
the one who is consistently truthful to her.
“Because of his candor and honesty, she has enough faith
in him to trust his future is what he tells her it’s going to be —
regardless of the past.”
“Tequila Sunrise” is more than just another suspense film
for its cast and director, though.
It has been heralded as the film that will bring Mel Gibson
into recognition — apparently all we’ve seen of Gibson is
potential.
It has been regarded as the film that will bring Michelle
Pfeiffer out of her pretty-girl-with-the-blond-hair mold and
garner her some long-awaited praise.
And it has been viewed as the film that will allow Kurt
RussellAo.graduate to more “m ature” roles in the future.
That’s a lot of responsibilty for one film.
But that’s not the end of it. Many critics see this as a
breakthrough for director Robert Towne who hasn’t seen his
name in credits since 1982 when he directed “Personal Best.”
Premiere Magazine has called “Sunrise” Towne’s “come
back victory,” and claims that “Robert Towne is too good to
linger in the shadows.”
’ J
'
Thom Mount agrees. “As a producer I always try to
support a specific passionate vision. 'Tequila Sunrise’ was a
project very close to Robert’s heart — a contemporary film
about an area he grew up in and for which he had a personal
fondness.
PagC^lj
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M ovie hits on video arrive on time for gift season
B y The A ssociated P ress
There have been far funnier movies in the
past couple of years than “Three Men and a
Baby” but none that have made as much
money — a phenomenal $167 million at last
count.
Any film that successful has to have
something going for it. In this case it’s one
awfully cute baby (played by 5-month-old
twins Lisa and Michelle Blair) and three
awfully cute grown men — Tom “Magnum
P .I.” Selleck, Ted “Cheers” Danson and
Steve Guttenberg of “Diner,” “ Cocoon”
“Police Academy” and other movies.
In this adaptation of the French comedy
“Three Men and a Cradle,” the men play
well-to-do bachelors whose carefree,
romantic lives on Manhattan’s Upper West
Side are rudely interrupted by the arrival oh
their doorstep of a baby girl.
It see m s D anson, who p lay s an
irresponsible, not-too-bright actor, is the
father, and the mother is a struggling
actress who temporarily just can’t cope
with both motherhood and a career.
At first the guys are horrified, but
gradually they learn to bathe the baby,
change her diapers, hold her when she cries
— and finally, to love her and want to keep
her.
This makes for some good-natured fun,
needlessly com plicated by a subplot
involving drug dealers whose smuggled
heroin has been dropped off in the bachelor
pad.
Selleck, whose previous film roles as a
romantic swashbuckler left audiences cold,
is appealing in a low-key way ; Danson is
more or less the same egotistical clod he
plays on television; Guttenberg comes
across as the most genuine of the three.
The movie was directed by Leonard
Nimoy, Mr. Spock of “Star Trek” fame. His
style is efficient but unimaginative, perhaps
IDEAL GIFTS
For Your Family At Home!
in keeping with his television roots.
twists along the way to Wendy’s becoming
lead singer in Hiro’s band.
“Tokyo Pop” (Warner Home Video; VHSBeta, $89.95; Rated R)
“Tokyo Pop” is a fairly routine story of
young love, dressed up in punk clothes and
shipped off to Japan. Still, it’s charming and
fun.
Wendy (Carrie Hamilton) yearns to move
from backup singer to lead in New York
City’s downtown music scene. Down on her
luck, she gets a post card from a friend in
Tokyo, and decides to join her.
Hiro (Yutaka Tadokoro of the Japanese
band Red Warriors), meanwhile, is a very
westernized Tokyo rocker, singing “Blue
Suede Shoes” in a band whose members are
convinced they will make it big if only they
can find a gaijin, or foreigner, to sing with
them.
You can guess most of the rest of director
Fran Rubel Kuzui’s film, though there are
For all its rebellious appearance, “Tokyo
Pop” is moralistic. There are no drugs, and
the' characters drink only moderately.
Wendy and Hiro do wind up in bed, but
there’s no promiscuity. What the kids in the
movie want is a straight version of success
and happiness.
The small touches of the movie give it its
charm. Wendy, finding her friend has gone
to Thailand, spends her first night in Tokyo
in an inn called Mickey House and lavishly
o v e rd e c o ra te d w ith Mi ckey Mouse
paraphernalia.
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Scenes of young Japanese imitating
Western rockers in a park are fun, as are
other signs of the mix of E ast and West in
modern Tokyo.
But the movie misses its chance to explore
deeply the-inevitabje culture clash between
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P ag e1 3
Wednesday, November 30,1988
Wendy and Hiro, and instead relies on
repeated lam ents of “ you wouldn’t
understand” and focuses on their common
troubles.
The movie is partly in Japanese, with
subtitles.
Hamilton and Tadokoro are quirky,
energetic and engaging and keep “Tokyo
Pop” from being merely the kind of fluff
Wendy complains about having to sing.
“The Seventh Sign” ( RCA-Columbia
Pictures Video; VHS-Beta $89.95; Rated R)
God has just about had it up to here with
humanity, and anybody who rents this
hokey bit of dreck about a modern-day
biblical apocalypse will understand why.
It’s a miracle that direetor Carl Schultz
wasn’t struck by a bolt of lightning.
We know the world’s up the proverbial
creek without a paddle because God’s pock
marked messenger (Jurgen Prochnow) is
making all thèse nasty things happen.
It’s snowing in the Israeli desert; a
Nicaraguan river runs bloody; there are all
these dead fish off the Haitian coast and
let’s not forget the rotten weather they’re
having in Southern California,- what with
golf ball-sized hail, hurricane-force winds
and earthquakes.
Naturally, the only person who can
deliver the world from God’s wrath is a
pregnant yuppie, played by Demi Moore
with all the passion and perception that has
marked her many other unforgettable
performances.
The seventh sign has to do with Demi’s
baby; when it’s born, dead and souless,
that’s all, folks. Unless Demi can come up
with a miracle.
If you can hang on that long — that in
itself would be a miracle - h there’s a
hilarious scene at the end where Demi goes
through the shortest labor in history while
bleeding profusely from a major bullet
wound during an earthquake that would
have caused California to drop into the
ocean.
. Don’t bother.
Demi M oore's hair w asn’t the only thing that was all wet in Tri-Star’s “ The Seventh Sign.
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Initiation Feo/625 M onth Mo C o n tracts/N o Salasman
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5 M IN U TES FR O M A S U
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Page 14
B L O O M
'j |
Wednesday, November 30,1988........................................................................
C O U N T Y
axtP've Béeu woRse..
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ANPtrPOeS LOOK
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Calvin and Hobbes
By G AR Y LARSON
©1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed bv Universal Press Syndicate
M AT?
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Page 15
Ita tsP w w
r o w d e d
h o u s e
F a n s u p p o r t v ita l fo r w r e s t le r s a g a in s t O U , P S U
3y CHRIS D O RSEY
;ontributirig W riter
Since returning to the practice room on
Monday, Douglas has had the team working
ASU wrestling coach Bobby Douglas is
on wrestling on the mat, ah aspect that did
hoping his 10 wrestlers get some help in
not please him in California.
Crowding out two national wrestling powers
“They had a good week of practice,”
(today.
Douglas said. “Their intensity level is up. I
The second-ranked SUn Devils return
thought we needed to work on conditioning. ’’
home today in their final match of 1988 to
On paper, the Sun Devils and Sooners
Race Portland State at 1 p.m. and 12thappear very similar.
Iranked Oklahoma at 7:30 p.m. in the
“We match up fairly even with Oklahoma
¡University Activity Center.
at this time of the season,” Douglas said.
The Sun Devil Ticket Office estimates a
“The heavyweight contest could determine
crowd of about 1,000 people, but Douglas
the winner, but the 134- and 177-pound
Raid he is hoping for a much larger homematches could be the highlights of the
meet.” ;
Icourt advantage;
“We need a crowd,” Douglas said. “If we
T.J. Sewell returns for the Sooners a t 134
can get a crowd we will go after them hard.” ’ pounds, w here he w ill fa ce Andy
McNaughton, who has a 4-2 record for the
Students are" .adm itted free with a
Sun Devils.
¡validated ASU ID.
; "We will know how good of team they (the
ASU (4-0) notched three dual victories to
Sun Devils ) really aré after Oklahoma and
[its credit after a trip to California over the
Portland State,” Douglas said.
¡weekend.
th e Sun Devils will be without redshirt
i t will be an exciting dual meet with
freshmán G.T. Taylor (167 pounds), who has
¡Oklahoma,” the ASU mentor said, referring
been sidelined for a^week with a skin
[to the wish of filling up the University
infection. Senior Travis Fagen (4-3) will fill
¡Activity Center Seats
his shoes.
Last season, the Sun Devils downed
ASU will go with the usual lineup: Zeke
¡Oklahoma 25-15 and 27-14. However, in the
Jones (6-0), 118 pounds; Marco Sanchez
[series the Sooners hold a 9-4 advantage.
(3-3-1); 126 pounds; McNaughton, 134
“They have a lot of talent and are well
pounds; Saunders, 142 pounds, Ortiz, 150
[coached,” Douglas said.
pounds; St. John, 158 pounds; Gressley, 17t
ASU boasts four undefeated wrestlers:
pounds; Kelly Gonzales (2-4), 190 pounds;
[Junior Saunders (7-0), Thorn Ortiz (6-0),
and Mike Anderson (4r2d) at heavyweight.
¡Dan St. John (641) and Jim Gressley (6-0).
“We are going to have to have a good
"We didn't look that good last weekend,”
showing from our veterans,” Dotólas said.
[Ortiz said. “But weplan to do better starting
“They bear the responsibility of the m at.”
[Wednesday.”
S tate P re ss photo
Dan St. Joh n (right) and h is team m ates are hoping for good crow d support today when the Sun
D evils play host to P ortlandState at 1 p.m . and 12th-ranked Oklahom a at 7:30 p.m . at the Univer
sity A ctivity Center.
Portland State is an NCAA Division II
powerhouse, placing seventh a t the Divsion
II championships last year.
Dan Russell won a national title at 150
pounds and has jumped a weight class to 158
pounds.
“Portland State has some outstanding
people,” Douglas said.
Following the dual meet, ASU will travel
to Las Vegas for the annual Las Vegas
Invitational Dec. 2 through 3.
“We have to take one match at a time,”
St. John said.
C ard s self-destructing as penalties, turnovers, losses mount
By The A ssociated P ress
»
Neil Lom ax
Phoenix coach Gene Stallings said Tuesday that his
Cardinals are self-destructing and will have to make a lateseason rally if they hope to make the playoffs.
“We had five offsides penalties last week. That really hurt
us. At one time, we had the fewest amount of penalties in the
National Football League. Now, we have the fifth or sixth
fewest (with 79 for 666 yards),” Stallings said at his weekly
news conference. “There are two ratios we’re always
emphasizing — turnovers and quarterback traps. Instead of
being plus 5 in turnovers as we once were, now we’re minus 6.
And the quarterback traps (49) compared to our sacks (32) is
becoming an área of concern.”
Phoenix, 7-6 after a 31-21 loss last Sunday at Philadelphia,
has now lost two straight games and must win its remaining
three to stay in contention for at least a wildcard berth.
The Cardinals play *at the New York .Giants this ¡Sunday,
then return home to face the Eagles again Dec. 10 and close
out the regular season by hosting Green Bay on Dec. 18.
New York and Philadelphia a r e both tied atop the NFC
East with 8-5 records.
“ I don’t see how we can get in if we don’t win this game,”
Stallings said. “Of course, I thought last week’s game was a
musft game, too. I thought the easiest way to make the
playoffs was to win all four of our last games. Now, even if we
win three, we still might not get in.
“But we need to get some help now somewhere down the
line. Somebody has to beat the Giants or Eagles for us. You
got to split with the teams in your division. We’ve done that
with Dallas and with Washington. We beat New York (24-17
here Nov. 13) and we can possibly sweep. We still got to come
back and split with the Eagles.
“Last week, I thought we lost our poise. It’s the players’ job
to perform. I think all of our jobs are on the line every week
— mine included.”
Stallings said kick returner Vai Sikahema and quarterback
Neil Lomax, both two-time Pro Bowlers out with partiallytorn ligaments in their left knees, are expected to return to
practice Wednesday and may play Sunday.
“I think Vai’s definitely OK and Neil feels like he’s going to
be able to maneuver,” Stallings said. “As of right now, I
think both of them will he able to practice. We’ll have to see
later in,the week if they can start.”
StalHngs said Earl Ferrell, despite making a costly fumble
a t t h e Philadelphia 3-yard line last week, is having a Pro
Bowl season with 853 yards and six touchdowns on 175 carries
— the best totals of his seven-year NFL career.
“He’s got a 4.9-yard average. That’s No. 4 in the league.
He’s on his way to a 1,000-yard season and that’s a lot of yards
for a fullback,” Stallings said.
For better or worse: Devils were both in M arm ie’s 1st season
Dave Hodges
Sports Editor
It wasn’t that bad.
ASU head football coach Larry Marmie ended his first
season with a 6-5 overall record and a fifth-place finish in the
Pac-io —‘very respectable numbers for a team that was
expected to be worse.
The Devils lost some games they should have won
(Washington and Stanford) and beat some teams they maybe
shouldn't have (Washington State and Oregon on the road).
But the two that hurt the most were the 50-0 rout by
Southern Cal and Saturday’s 28-18 loss to Arizona.
Yes, the streak continues. ASU has not defeated UofA in
seven consecutive tries now; but it’s not the end of the world.
Really.
Despite some presumptuous talk by UofA players, ASU
will beat UofA again.
.. .
Why didn't ASU beat UofA Saturday? The Devils simply
were outplayed in the second half, when the game was on the
Who’s fault is it? Nobody’s really. Sure the kicking game
had its problems and probably cost the Devils six points with
a missed field goal and a missed’extra point, which carried
over to two missed two-point conversion attempts.
And it’s certainly not Marmie’s fault.
Marmie’s Army displayed courage in its effort at Arizona
Stadium. There was emotion there. Marmie (and his
players) did not underestimate the importance of the Big
Game.
Although he does not look the stereotypical football coach
and he wears that God-awful tie, Marmie will be a success at
A-State.
The players like him. That’s part of the trick. When you
have the respect of your team, it’s easier to teach and point
out mistakes without a mutiny.
Former coach John Cooper, who already is feeling some
heat at Ohio State, openly criticized his players and blamed
them for losing games.
Marmie blamed himself for ASU not winning a few more
games.
At the beginning of the season, the Pac-10 Skywriters, a
group of West Coast journalists that evaluates each team,,
predicted a seventh-place finish for ASU. The State Press
predicted a fifth-place finish in September, which is where
the Devils ended up.
ASU was plagued With injuries all year. Throw in a few
vehicular accidents and a case of measles (thanks, Rodney)
and the Devils were operating on a skeleton crew; In fact,
Terence Johnson w asthrust into the inside linebacker spot (a *
position he had never played before) against the Cats, after
some more ASU injuries.
There are many good, young players at ASU and the future
looks very promising. Marmie will end the losing streak
against Arizona.
But it will be 12 long months of UofA gloating before that
can happen.
.
.• • •
One streak did end over the weekend — an even longer one.
After 10 consecutive losses, the ASU men’s basketball team
finally won a game, defeating Baylor Saturday in the
consolation game of the Central Fidelity Classic at
Richmond, Va.
The Devils led by as many as 26 points on their way to an
89-73 victory over the Bears. ASU (1-1) lost the first round
game to eventual-champion Alabama, 79-78 in overtime.
If the tournament is any indication of what is to come,
guard Tarence Wheeler could be on his way to a great year.
Wheeler was named to the all-tournament team and was
absolutely deadly from three-point range.
Head coach Steve Patterson’s squad appears in much
better mental shape than last year’s. ASU has been picked to
finish in ninth or 10th place in most preseason polls, but don’t
be surprised if the Devils surprise a few teams.
The next chance to saw* ASU in action is at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday against IndiamkBtdte in the University Activity
Center. The Sycamores areted by Eddie Bird, the brother of
the Boston Celtics’ Larry Bird.
page 16
asu golf
A SU M EN ’S G O LF
FEAR FINALS NO MORE!
LA S V EG A S IN TERCO LLEG IATE at L a s Vegas, Nevada
R e su lts after tw o rounds
TEAM S — A rizon a State, 298-291-589; Oklahom a State, 298-293-591; Fresno State,
295-299-594; Nevada-Las Vegas, 300-299-599; San Jose State, 301-298-599.
INDIVIDUALS — Kevin Wentworth (OSU), 69-71-140; P h il M ickelson (ASU),
72-72-144 and David Sutherland (FSU), 73-71-144; Aaron Bengoechea (Pacific),
72-73-145; Todd K em igan (ASU) 74-72-146 and Hub Goyen (U NLV) 75-71-146.
O THER ASU SCO RES — Per Johansson, 75-73-148; Jim Strickland, 78-74-152; Scott
Sullivan, 77-77-154.
asu football
8521 E. McDowell Rd.
PAC-10 STAN D IN GS
PAC-10 G AM ES
W L T Pet. Pts Opp
8 0 0 1.000 289 121
6 2 0 .750 219 150
5 3 0 .625 254 241
5 3 0 .625 179 171
3 4 O .429 103 184
3 5 0 .375 168 169
3 .5 0 .375 144 186
2 5 1 .313 163 215
1 5 2 .250 149 152
1 5 1 .214 109 188
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IR V IN E P A R K
A LL GAM ES
W L T Pet. Pts Opp
10 1 0 .909 356 162
9 2 0 .818 375 187
8 3 0 .727 391 261
7 4 0 .636 279 218
6 5 0 .545 192 277
6 5 0 545 254 223
6 5 0 .545 279 206
4 6 1 .409 246 280
3 6 2 .364 238 216
5 5 1 .500 243 244
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phoenix suns
SU N S 124, R O C K E TS 107
Phoenix
35 35
35
19 -
124
Houston
39 22
27
19 -
107
PHOENIX (124)
Chambers 10-19 56 26, Giffiam 14-20 7-8 35, Lang 0 6 0-0 0, Hornacek 7-14 06 14, K.Jobnson 6-12 5-5
18, West 3 6 66 12, E.JohnsOn 3 6 2-2 B. Majerle 4-9 0-1 9, Perry 0-1 0-2 0, Corbin 1-5 9 0 2, Crite 0-1
0 6 0 . Totals 48-95 25-34 124.
HOUSTON (107)
B.Johnson 9-16 1-2 19, Thorpe 6-12 5 6 17, Otajuwon 6-12 4-4 16. Floyd 1-4 2-2 4 . Woodson 7-17 0 6 14.
McCormick 7-12 1-2 15, Short 28 0 6 4, Leavell 4-10 1-2 9. Chievous 91 0 6 0, F.Johnson 2r5 1-2 5,
Brown 18 2-2 4. to ta ls 45-100 17-22 107.
3-Point goals — Chambers, K.JohnSon, Majerle. Fouled out — None. Rebounds — Phoenix 56 (West
13), Houston 60 (Thorpe 19). Assists — Phoenix 29 (KJohnson 13), Houston 27 (Floyd 8). Total fouls 2 Phoenix 20, Houston 26. Technicals — Olajuwon, Gilliam.
Attendance — 16,611.
national basketball association
T U E S D A Y ’S R ESU LTS
Late Games Not included
Phoenix 124, Houston 107
Charlotte 99, Miami 64
Boston 100, New Jersey 93
Atlanta 120, San Antonio 104
Indiana 107, Detroit 98
Milwaukee 119, Portland 114
New York at Denver, (n)
Utah at Seattle, (n)
Chicago a t Golden State, (n)
L A. Clippers at Sacramento, (n)
Ü A X IM IZ E
YO U R W EEKEND.
W ED N ESD AY’S SCH ED U LE
New Jersey at Boston, 5:30 p.m.
Portland at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Miami. 5:30 p.m.
Indiana at Detroit, 5:30 p.m
Houston at Dallas, 6:30 p.m.
Chicago at Utah, 7:30 p.m.
Seattle at L A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m.
New York at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m.
THURM
M O N D AY’S R ESU LT
LA. Lakers 109, Philadelphia 104
national football league
N FC E A S T STAN D IN GS
Pet.
.615
,615
.538
.462
t54
Philadelphia
N Y. Giants
Phoenix
W ashington
Dallas
P F PA NFC DIV
314 275 6-3-0 4-1-0
266 258 8-5-0 4-3-0
303 305 6-3-0 3-3-0
291 324 5-5-0 3-36
213 317 2 -86 1 6 6
S U N D A Y 'S S CH ED U LE
Phoenix at New York Giants. 11 am .
Buffalo at Tampa Bay, 11 a m
Dallas at Cleveland, 11 a.m;
Green Bay at Detroit, 11 a m .
Indianapolis at Miami, 11 am .
San Diego at Cincinnati, 11 a m.
San Francisco a t Atlanta, 11 am .
Seattle at New England, 11 a.m
Washington at Philadelphia, 11 a m .
New Orleans at Minnesota 1 p.m.
New York Je ts at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Denver at Los Angeles Raiders. 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh a t Houston, 6 p.m.
FRM
Join Max for Ladies Night. Every Friday Get Jazzed Up
Starting with ANY COIN with Max’s Happy Hour be
ANY DRINK FOR EVERY ginning at 4:00PM. Check
ONE at 8 « then $1.00 out some of the VALLEY’S
Ladies Drinks for the rest of TOP NAME ENTER
the night. Plus MAX will give TAINERS LIVE0NSIAGE
awây $1000.00 in PER while enjoying 2 for 1
SONAL CHECKS TO TEN ,cocktails and Complimentary
LUCKY LADIES. And ibex Hors d’Oeuvres.
is Never a Cover for the
Ladies on Thursdays.
SATURDAY i l l E
Tonight IT’S A MAX
ORIGINAL “ANY COIN
ANY DRINK.” You bring in
any type of money from
around the world and Max
will exchange it for your
choice of any drink in the
house till HfcOOPM. Then ex
pose yourself tolntemational
SPICE UP YOUR SUN
DAYSand GET R.LP;PJE.D.
Every Sunday all the Valley’s
Restaurant Industry em
ployees are invited to get Rip
ped with $1.00 Cocktails, 50C
Oyster Shooters and Max
SPECIAL SPICY HOT
CHICKEN WINGS for
JUST 10(. And every Sunday
Max will introduce you to the
Willey's Premier Performing
Talents beginning at 960PM
Live on Stage.
M O N D A Y’S S C H ED U LE
Chicago at Los Angeles Rams, 7 p.m.
national hockey league
T U E S D A Y ’S R ES U LT S
Late Games Not Included
Washington 4. St. Louis 3
Philadelphia 5. Boston 1
Detroit 5. New York Islanders 3
New York Rangers 4 . Winnipeg 3
Minnesota 5, Chicago 2
Vancouver at Calgary, (n)
New Jersey at Los Angeles, (n)
W ED N ESD A Y ’S SCH ED U LE
Montreal at Hartford, 5:35 p.m.
Quebec at Buffalo, 5:35 pirn.
Washington at Pittsburgh. 535 p.m.
Vancouver at Edmonton. 7:35 p.m.
M O N D AY’S R ES U LT
Edmonton 7, Quebec 4
919E. APACHEBLVtt •TEMPE *
S trtrP i—
Page 17
V ^ n « d a ^ |o v n n b w 3 ^ J9 m
posasse
n iii
it in e n c
HUIR CUTTERS'
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you reach
the end
of your rope,
Designer Perm 1
im ene
ram ar M
965-6731
or
965-6735
ir c u tter s
*45**
University & Rural Rd.
Includes:
CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER
968-8008
Basement
I
• S h a m p o o an d D e sig n e r Perm
• P e rfe ct C u t
• S tylin g
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Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 • Sun. 12-5
1581 N o ‘A ppointm ents Family Hair C u tte rs
Matthews
I
Center
N ow thru S unday
SUNGLASS SPECTACULAR
SnV€15%TO50%
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This week’s super special.
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< $ 0 6 9
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15% oFF
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L a F ra n c o ise s
B o llin g e r S p e cia l
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C o vet
M u m m ’s C o rd o n R o u g e .......... ... •17,t
Canadian Club
Saagrams
750ml
Exp.
10- 7 -8*
ICE COLO
READY TO QO
M iller or
Light 1/2 Keg
Lowest Sunglass Prices Guaranteed
i$36";
retail store.
Your Ultimate Arizona Gift Store!_____
in Tem pe —
SMOADWAV ROAl)
'pacific £yes & T s
Tow er H aas
J8 th S tre e t A Thom as
» M i«
w e tt r ld g e tw il
7 5 tlt Avenue t Thom as
•79 -M O T
930 E. Broadway
894-1067
T em pe C o rn e rsto n e
Ctr.
725 S. Rural M.
•ee
T he newest “denom inación de
origen” is Ribiera del Duero. The
vineyards surround the sam e
river that's known as D ouro in
Portugal. T he native grape is
Tsm pranillo, but som e vintners
plant Cabernet Sauvignon, Meriot
and M albec to make a fam ous
Bordeaux-type bland.
• ••
Penadas, too, sends us good red
wine, thanks to enterprise o f one
o r two top winemakers. They
offer excellent value, good w ines
at reasonable — even bargain —
prices.
• ••
V.O.
W e wilt match any price co u p o n o r advertised special of any
C h ris to w n M a li
19(1) Ave. l Bethany
Hom e
435-2949
There's more to Spain than
Rioja and bullfights. M ore good
w ines from other parts of the
country are now com ing our way.
Gladly accepted.
O P EN : Mon.-Thurs. 9-9
Fri. 9-11
Sat. 8-11
Sun. 12-9
Fu ll-bo died, rich-flavored rad
w ines also com e from the T o ro
regioh. These are big wines, more
like Chateauneuf-du-Pape than
Bordeaux, and of high quality.
•••
But Rioja remains Spain's biggest
name. That's where French wine
m akers want to make w ine after
F r a n c e 's v in e y a r d s w e re
destroyed by phylloxera. The
c la s s ic R io ja s a re b ig and
som ew hat oaky, but som e wines
are made lighter for more m odem
tastaa.
■ sea-'
Spanish w ines? S i, si; You’ll find
a good selection chosen fo r your
enjoym entat
Liquor Bam
Page 18
JW ednydgy
Be d ifferent this C h ristm a s...w ish y o u r friends a M e rr y C hristm as w ith a
personal lin e r ad in the State Press C h ristm a s Shopper Classifieds Decem ber 6,
$1 w ill b u y y o u IS w o rd s o r less. B rin g in a friend and we'll give both o f yo u 10
extra w ords in y o u r ad fo r F R E E ! D eadline is D ecem ber 2 at noon, so don't be late!
S P ECIA L L U N C H E O N C O M B IN A T IO N S
S Z E C W
S
W
1
M
RAISINS
69 E, B ro ad w ay
^
Tempe, Â Z 85282
LABLANCA T f P
A N D
f iV
1. S w eet and Sour Pork
. . . . . . . . 3 .75
2. A lm ond C h ic k e n ...................
3.75
3. B eef w ith Snow P e a s ................................3.95
4. M ongolian B e e f .......................................... 3 .95
5. Sw eet and Sour S h rim p ........................... 4.25
6. Shrim p w ith L obster S a u ce..................... 4.25
7. Pork Egg Foo Y o u n g ..................................3.75
*8. R ung Pao Shrim p .....................
4 .25
*9. R ung Pao C h icken...................................... 3.75
’ Indicates h ot and spicy dish
A ll th e above Luncheon Specials served w ith
Egg R oll, Fried W onton, Fried R ice, and
F ortune C ookie.
Soup not included w ith take out lunch.
C om plete m enu available.
C O N C E P T IO N
TO GO ORDERS AVAILABLE
M A N Y
Broadway
ALSO
UNIQÜ
CLOTHING
Ç A
TO'
L
1 F O R
N E W
YOU CAN BUY A NÈW FURNISHED
TOWNHOME FOR $ 4 2 7 A MONTH
Y
$5000 OF FREE FURNITURE INCLUDED!!
If you invest Jug N ew Trade Winds Townhom c right now , w e ll throw in S5000 w orth o i
furniture. Or, if you prefer, take $2,500 worth o f furniture and get a *2,500 discount on the
price o f your new townhom e.
And fust imagine how good all that furniture w ill look in your new townhom e, w ith features
like soaring vaulted ceilings, spacious master suites, and W hirlpool ¡qjpliances that include
your ow n private laundry, Townhomes priced from the 140’s to the ISO’s . . .
E A 8 1 B K O O K TO W N H O M ES
S27-S496
TEMPE
SCOTTSDALE
219 E. Baseline
College & M ill
839-9600
8390 E. Via de Ventura
at E l Pueblo M all
998-7566
W rap
Z-286 B a sic W orkstation
80286 processor. 20Mb hard
disc drive and one 5.25"
(1.2Mb) floppy disk drive,
AT-com patible with four
open expansion slots, one
serial and parallel port, VGA
compatible video and MSDOS and Windows included.
Com plete
20M b
System ,
with high resolution monitor
$1,699.00
3% Co-Broke
W
MODEL HOURS
MONDAY-THURSDAY 1000-7:00
FRIDAY-SATURDAY 10:00-6:00
Clond Suodqr
^ADE W in DS
IT H
@ h riü p a |i
a n d save up
t o 50% off
retail price!
Supersports weigh less than 11 pounds and
feature backlit display, 640K RAM 8/4.77Mhz
switchable clock speed, MS-DOS, serial port,
parallel port, RGB/composite video port, inter
face for an external hard disc drive,
detachable/rechargeable battery and A C
adapter.
ZWL-184-HR Laptop
20Mb Internal Hard Disk Drive
1200 Baud Internal Modem
$1,799.00
Supersport 2 Laptop
Dual Floppy
$1,299.00
•If you’re thinking about a computer, now’s the time 4 0 do it (and
just in time for Christmas!) Zenith Data System s offers a fabulous
educational discount to
_____ ^_ __
:
_______
A S U faculty, staff and
'
'
students at a savings of
up to 50% off retail
prices!!
DATA SYSTEM S
Z-157 features four open expansion slots,
5,12K RAM, 16 bit 8086 microprocessor,
Hercules with color video card. MS-DOS
included.
20Mb system with ZVM 1240 amber
monitor and M S Windows
$999.00
•Zenith offers a variety of
m odels to fit everyone’s
n e e d s . '; :
•Stop by the M ouer Building
and test drive a Zenith!
•Wrap up a Zenith for
Christm as...
and save!!
For m ore inform ation: •
Com e any day to C om p ass
in the M ouer B u ild in g , Room 1Ò8
o r ca ll C o m p a s s at 985*2379
Hours: Monday & Wednesday.2-5 p.m
Tuesday & Thursday 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Friday 11 a.m,-l p:m.
o r ca ll H eath Zenith Com puter Store
at 279-6247
vm
Stete Prêt»
Questions
C h ristm as Classics!
K eep your
t i p s up
w ith
„
.
OOarnen Mi Iter/
Send a little joy to the world
with Hallmark boxed cards. A
variety of styles, from $6.50
to $16.00. Only at Hallmark.
w
about the
STATE
PRESS
■"
Ü »
Page 19
Wednesday, November 30,1988
E S C A P E TO SKI
w ith
For the holidays, or any occasion, Deann's Hallmark
has a wonderful variety of gifts, as well as festive gift
wrap and cards for every occasion.
Personal Appearance by
W A R R EN M ILLER
We're just a short walk from the ASU campus, so
stroll over today and tackle your holiday shopping
list!
SAT., DEC. 3 • 2, 7 & 10 p.m.
TICKETS: $9
FR l., DEC. 2 • 7 & 10 p.m .
Ticket discounts for ASU faculty, staff
& students! 1/2 price tickets for
students, $3 discount for faculty &
staff. Call for details, 965-3434.
- '
CALL
965-7572
8 a m - 5 p n t DAILY
•Gifts
•Cards
•Decorations
•Stuffed Animals
•Calendars
•Party Goods
•Gift Wrap
•Ornam ents
•Candles
•Planners
A
I
t 2
O
N
A
S T
A T
I
DEANN'S HALLMARK
TEMPE CENTER « 9 6 6 - 3 0 6 2
AMMAGE
923 S. M i l l A v e n u e , T e m p e
N lo iu la y -S a lu rd u y 9 :3 0 -8 p .iii.; S u n d a y 11-5
C E N T E R F O R THE P E R F O R M I N G AR T S
New Wave x a K .
Military
Attire from
^
Around the World
A LL You Can EAT!
PIZZA *2* v A
PR O G R E S S IV E
Clothing for
P R O G R E S S IV E
People...
W Starts at 2 p.m."^.
u
“T e a s
2nd Floor
Cornerstone P la za
437-5188
L iQ lr J T
k All Light Draft1
X
2 for 1
Hockey
K nights
b y the 48 oz. P itch er
*7*° from 8-10 p.m.
*5®° from 1 0 -C lo se
/
A
'F r e e head band
with each
d o u ble
ALL LIQUOR
2 for 1
f
pitcher
^
S DAILY
8 p.m .-Close
S h o ts, C o c k ta ils
& S h o o te rs, etc.
a
*150 M oosehead C a n s
8 p.m .-Close
f f i l i
*4®° M olson Pitchers
6 p.m.-Close
230 W. 5th Street
966-3490
COMPUTER PORTRAITS BY MAIL!
FU LL CO LO R
S end u s your photo. W e will enlarge a n d transfer it to the product of
your ch o ice listed below and return your photo unharm ed. Clear, well-lit
photos required.
F A S T S E R V IC E FO R Y O U R GIFT N EED S
F O R IM M E D IA T E S E R V IC E A T O U R LO C A TIO N , C A L L 945-5868
Code Letter
A. Portrait with F ra m e (13” x16 ” ):........................................................... $7.00
B. T o te B a g .... ........................................................................................... 12.00
C. 1989 C a le n d a r (15 ” x27” )........................ ....................
.....................12.00
D. P u zzle (10” x13” )..... ............. ............................................................... 5.00
T-S h irts:
E. Adult (circle size) S M L XL.................. ........................................... .......13.00
F. Youth (circle size) X S S M L,..... ............................... ............................... 7.00
Code Letter
From Above
Quantity
Price Each
Total Price
Name:
Address:
%
City:
State:
Sub-Total
Sales Tax (AZ’Residents Only) 6.5% (.065)
Shipping & Handling (.15 per item)
G ra n d Total
_____ _
Zip:
S e n d o rd e r form w ith y o u r c h e c k o r
m o n e y o rd e r to:
D avid E . P o lo s k y
C o m p u te -A -F a ce C o m p u te r P o rtra its
P .O . B o x 60212
P h o e n ix , A Z 85082
Jjjfednciday, November 30,1968
Loy hoping that history, Sun Devil men’s golf team both repeat
B y D EA N G Y O R G Y
State P ress
It is said that history repeats itself, and the ASU men’s golf
teaim is hoping this week that it does.
The Sun Devils play their final round in the Las Vegas
Intercollegiate tournament today, the final event of the fall
season.
The Devils came from behind in the final round last year to
pass Oklahoma State and win the tournament.
Last season’s Las Vegas victory also vaulted ASU to the
top of the national rankings, and ASU coach Steve Loy can
see the same scenario building.
“ It’s quite possible we could do the same thing this time
around,” Loy said.
After two round! of play, Loy’s prophecy remains intact.
ASU is in first place by two strokes over Oklahoma State,
589-591.
Two Sun Devil golfers are in the top five. Phil Mickelson
with a pair of even-par rounds of 72 sits in second place, four
strokes off the lead. Todd Kernigan is tied for fifth at
74-72-146.
The Devils were ranked ninth going into the Nov. 17
tournament at Hilton Head, S.C. ASU came away with a
second-place finish and what Loy called “definitely the best
outing of the year .” Loy said he felt that performance would
push the Devils to “no worse than fourth or fifth” nationally.
No new rankings were available before Las Vegas, but by
being the defending champions and one of the favorites, ASU
could move into the top spot with a win, something Loy and
company have been desperately seeking.
“Everybody’s on a real high,” Loy said. “We want to finish
our season with a big win.’’
Other Devils competing this week are Jim Strickland, Per
Johansson^ who is tied for eighth, and Brett Dean.
Study shows athletes tend to ignore academics, have less money
WASHINGTON (AP) — Most college football and
basketball players devote more time to athletics than
academics, and most of them claim to have less money for
personal expenses than other students, a study released
Tuesday showed.
The study, commissioned by the NCAA Presidents
Commission at a cost of $1.75 million, was based on
interviews with 4,083 college athletes and Students who
participate in extracurricular activities such as the band and
the student newspaper.
“ I do not believe there are any great surprises in these
results,” said Martin Massengale, chairman of the NCAA
Presidents Commission. “But they will provide data for us to
use in considering policy issues for many years into the
future.”
According to the report, college football and basketball
players spend 30 hours a week practicing and playing in
games when their sport is in season. In contrast, the average
player uses 12 hours to study and 14 hours attending classes,
and misses about two classes per week.
CITY OF SCOTTSDALE RECREATION DIVISION
Peace unto tbis land
W AN TED :
AICES (Am erican Israeli C ultural
Education Society) presents:
PICTURE FRAMING AND POSTER GALLERY
Q O Q N - M aqJen, p p O - p l 3 Q
B o ,« a n d
2 5 9 6 o ff all {-named porter?
BASKETBALL
CO ACH ES & OFFICIALS
$ 6 .0 0
per
(Reg. i 9 .99 - 49 .99 )
hour
For application Information contact the Student
Employment Office
Isx a el A w a ren ess W eek
G irls
M -R: 10-6
Sot: 1 0 -4
Job Referrel #5092J
Monday, J e n u a r y
Nov. 2 8-D ec. 2 from 8 am-2 p m
o n C a d y Matt
D el ail fro m
E R IK R R E Y f iA N
Applications will be accepted until
9.
I_a M t r le r ie u r e
C all H illel 967-7563 for details
994-2482
RESUMES
W a sh
SCRATCHING
BRUSHLESS AUTOMATIC
IN C L U D E S
UNDER CARRIAGE WASH
•SAME DAY SERVICE
•WRITING & CONSULTING ®
•CLOSEST TO ASU
|
•LAYOUT & DESIGN
“*
•LASER PRINTING
50t SELF SERVE
TERRACE & APACHE
I
7TT
CHECK
us o u t :
1C
/m
l
(O ne block east o f Rural)
salme
~
|
*
Baseball & Softball
Batting Range
sporting goods
concessions
U n iv e rsity
Across from Big Surf
990-7742
x
Sun-Fri 12-10 pad., Saturday 10 a.m.-10 p.m.
P.S. BUSINESS CENTER
1 7 2 5 W. UNIVERSITY
SUITE 6
$2 OFF
Æ
W È Ê Ê Ê Ë m Ê Ê I& Ê P M
Basement Matthews Center
R eceive on e free-round
w h en you buy tw o rounds
one, per customer
HI— B A LL
TEL: 966-0451
Chanuka Dinner and Debate
W EDNESDAYS
STAR TIN G A T 7 PM
■Hi
L a tk e s o r H a ntantasch en
. . .W h ich is better?
For the Latkes:
Prof. Joel Gereboff - Religious Studies
Prof. Bob Chubrich - Speech & Hearing Science
For the Hamantaschen:
Prof. Jim Weinstein - School of Law
Prof. Sheryl Homa - Zoology
Sunday, D ec. 4
C o st: {¿/Student, $6/Other
R eservations required by D ec. 2
H illel Jew ish Student Center 967-7563
SKYDIVE
W it h P A I R - A - C H U T E , I N C . , at D E S E R T S K Y R A N C H
F r e e F a ll o n Y o u r F i rs t S k y D i v e
431-9279
386-2258
or
Gift Certificates and
Student Rates Available
ONE FREE
ROUND
R eceive $2 OFF a
H alf H our G am e o f
7seas.
But not alone
Place a
STATE PRESS
Personal Ad.
hitting lessons
baseball memorabilia
1605 N. Hayden Rd.
"CORPORATE RESUME"
( r e c o m m e n d e d b y a ll' o w n e r s m a n u a l s )
ONLY $ 2
*
Casey
at the Bat
Learn with the BEST
USPA Licensed Instructors
DRAFTS
iatirnt Sc ttttrrg
at Rural & Apache
A 8 I D
S T U D E N T
BEST LUNCH
IN THE PAC 10
R E Q I Q N A J .
C O N F E R E N C E
1
S 8 S
Th e C o n fe re n ce a d d re s s e s design is s u e s involving th e “sp e cial
needs" of th e elderly, handicapped, and th e hom eless.
B p a a k a rti
•Psychologist Antonio F. Tor rice
•Designer David Guynaa
•Professor and Designer Leland Knight
D ata:
- _•' )
February 1 6 - 1 8 ,1 9 8 9
Applications:
ASU College of Architecture Design Office
December 1,1988
F u n d e d in p a r t b y A s e o o ia t e d S t u d a n t a o f A S U
PagejZI
By C hoice. . . Not By Chance
*Abortion Services
•Free pap sm ear w ith birth control
exam
•B irth control exam includes free
package o f pills
•Freepregnancy testing and early
detection pregnancy testfo r $12
•Affordable gyn, STD and infection
treatm ent
FAMILY PLANNING INSTITUTE
Phx. 997-7493 l“" H Tempe 968-7471
9100 N. 2nd St.
424 W. Broadwav
classifieds
announcements
furniture for sale
A LL ASU singles who have accepted
Christ as Lord of their life- meet others!
How? C a ll Joy Unlim ited Introductions at
820«0001.
JOIN THE H iilei Jew ish Student fam ily as
we bring Chanukah Candle lighting to the
dorms Decem ber ¡M O For details and
schedule, caH H iilei. 967-7563;
STUDENT SH ABBAT services. H iilei is
having a “ Shabbat” in Jerusalem Dinner,
Friday Decem ber 2, following services.
Services start at 6:30 p.m. Cost is only $3
for students. Caft 967-7563 by November
30th for reservations.
W ITNESS SO UGHT for October 27 at 12
p.m. collision of maroon Grand AM by
white Chevy pick-up at intersection
University and McANister,in Tempe. Phone
JiH. 649-0250.
1970 TOYOTA Corona. Rebuilt engine,
30,000 m iles, runs great, dependable,
clean, $650/offer: M ust sell. 921-0346.
« R M H C O U I i I on ali service work
SMITH MESA NISSAN and counter parts to ail ASU student,
PARTS & SERVICE HOURS faculty & staff with ASU i.t). card.
M onday 7:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
Tues.-Fri. 7:30 a.m .-5:30 p.m.
PARIS OPEN SAT.
8:30 a.m ,-12:30 p.m.
*To be presented at
time of purchase.
Expires Dec. 31 ,1988\
1701 W. Broadway, Mesa
S e r v ic e
P a rts
834-3366
834-0255
The College of Business will honor its
December 1988 Graduates
December 16,1988
TIM E: 12 noon— 1:00 p.m.
PIA C E: New Business College Patio
Adjacent to Fountain Area
Buy‘Sell «Trade
S U PER SINGLE size waterbed $80, 2
desks $20 each. CaH 966-4920 ask for
Marsha.
U SED SKI equipment, an sizes, bools $20
to $30. S kis with bindings $35 to $45.
820-2657 or 827-0180.
tickets for sale
2 TICKETS round-trip to Chicago tor
Christm as break. $200 a piece. CaU
588-7395.
1977 CO RVETTE- W ire wheels. T-roof,
loaded, needs m inor work, $5000.
275-0258.
ASK SANTA to share h is great gift idea for
Mom and Dad. CaH Rudy, 829-9432.
1978 TOYOTA Cetica GT, 5-speed, airconditioning, new tires, new battery.
$2500/offer. 894-2290.
B EER SIGNS, lighted and neon, $15 and
up.
A lso sexy snap-on dock, $50.
275-0258.
D ECEM BER 8 from Phoenix to Nashville/
Midway Chicago. Return from Saint Louis
to Phoenix Decem ber 11. Best offer,
897-0370.
1979 HONDA Accord hatchback, 5-speed,
co ld air-conditioning, stereo/cassette,
cloth interior. $2100/offer. 638-8086.
CO LO R TELEVISION. 19 inch, $85; 25
inch console, $125. B lack and white, $30.
CaH Ray, 254-1412.
1983 HONDA Accord LX hatchback,
5-speed, air-conditioning, - stereo, new
brakes, new tags. $3500/offer. 967-1270.
CO NCO RD AM PLIFIER. 140 watt. H i
Fidelity stereo am plifier. Nearly new and
cranks! $150/offer. Elaine, 894-2023.
JE T ASU 80VW Jetta 4-door, sunroof,
5 -speed , tin t, ste re o , sh e ep skin s.
$ 2 0 0 0 /o ffer. C a ll P a u l, 921-3357,
921-9551.
FO U R TR ACK recorder: Fostex X15.
Brand new with warranty. Band break-up.
$350/obo. Sim one 921-3247.
TH E C O N V ER T IB LE you’ve alw ays
wanted* 1976 Fiat Spider. New paint, top,
and interior. Must see. $1700 or best offer.
CaR Pat, after 6 p.m., 921<-1311.
motorcycles for sale
1981 KAW ASAKI 550 LTD. Good condi
tion, must sell, $500/offer. 894-0221, leave
message.
b lcy d es for sale
PINK G IRLS Schwinn 1-speed bicycle.
Great for college cruising. $125 or best
offer. Elaine, 894-2023.
miscellaneous
for sale
m s
DESPERATED N EED 8 Fiesta Bowl tick
ets or as many as possible! 829-7495.
FIESTA BOW L tickets wanted. Paying $90
to $200 per ticket. F irst cofhe- first serve.
C on fid en tiality assured. The T icket
Exchange at Cornerstone Malt, 8294)196.
F L Y PH O EN IX to D enver/Colorado
S p rin g s round trip . Leave 12/22.
$160/offer. 493-5109.
HEAD RADIAL Carbon skis. Brand new in
box, never mounted, $175. 957-4240,
evenings.
FO R SALE. Southwest Airline, roundtrip
ticket to San Antonio, Texas. December
24 through Decem ber 29. O riginal $138,
se ll for $100. CaH Richard, 833-3063 or
968-7382.
JV C RX150 am plifier 1 tuner, 55 watts 1
channel, 7 band graphic equalizer, 16
station memory, great condition, 4 year
warranty, $175/offer. Barry, 894-2300 ext.
3611.
FR E D D Y JA C K S O N , W illie N elson.
Superbowl, aM bowl games, ASM and
Cardinals. M ichael Jackson, Pat Benetar,
Jeffery Osborn. The Ticket Exchange at
Cornerstone MaH, 829-0196.
*
NEW JV C color television, must setl!!
Bought for $350, w ill s e ll'fo r $250.
966-2283. -
O NÈ-W AY TICKET to Denver, December
16 (afternoon). $50. Catt 921-1352.
O A K LEY S U N G LA S S E S ,
Special“ . CaU 962-5865.
“ Christm as
REM O TE AUTO alarm system- key chain
remote control, with flashing red LED
indicator, chirp, interior m icrophone
sensor, exterior shock sensor, and over
ride switch, lifetim e warranty, new in box,
U .S. made, cost $410, must se ll $159.
893-8774.
SKI SALE. O lin Com p S L skies, only used
once, cheap. CaU Chris. 897-2762. t
TANDY 1000 SX monitor, keyboard, Ddrive. 6 months old. Must sell, $600. Rob,
894-0458.
A complete personal
computer package ,
(from software to
printer) for $995.
L E A D IN G E D G E M O D E L l
•Dual Floppy Disk Drive
•Near Lattar Q uality Printer
•High Raeoiution Monochrome Monitor
•W ont Proceeaing Softw are w ith S p all
Check, D O S, and Baaic.
•20 Month National Warranty
Refreshments w ill be provided
NEW & RECYCLED FASHIONS
Q UEENSIZE W ATERBED. New pedestal,
very comfortable, sheets, etc. $100. Shirv
suke, 921-1311.
TYPEW RITERS: DUE to school budget
cuts, Sm ith Corona offers brand new
electronics. W ith fine lift-off correction
memory. Auto centering, relocate, return,
foreign language keys. $1691 List much
more. Co. Guarantee. Check/credit cards/
C O D /ta y a w a y . F re e D e liv e ry !
1-714-548-4425 anytimel(AZ-CAN).
AIRLINE TICKET for sale. Phoenix to
Rochester, New York. $150 or negotiable.
CaH Kelly, 894-8647.
1987ISUZU pick-up. 10K m iles, air condi
tion, automatic, AM/FM stereo, sun roof,
camper, $7500. 893-7991.
DECEMBER GRADS
M UST S E LL sofa with matching loveseat,
queen waterbed, and dresser. A ll for
$250/offer or seperately. 966-8114.
TW O LADIES watches- d e g Cassini,
Diamond, brand new, $195 each, firm.
921-3559, leave message.
miscellaneous
for sale
trucks for sale
ATTENTION
FOR SALE- W aterbed, lam ps, black/white
TV, stereo stand, toaster, must se ll by
Decem ber 10th. Sherry, 921-2880.
- W» «all resultai
State P ress Advertising
autos for sale
Your Nissan
AA FURNITURE sale. Sofa and chair or
loveseat $399.95; 4-piece bedroom set
$149.95; mattress/box, twin $99, full.$119,
queen $149. New and used, buy or rent.
1870 E. Apache. 829-1212.
miscellaneous
for sale
COM PUTER MULTI SYSTEM S
Next to
225 W . U n iversity, Tem pe
B u ffalo Exchange
966-1388
A m » . D C lA/nnLrimu, m
. fr4fLS.fM Calnnlau
PHOENIX TO Chicago, one way, Decem
ber 4. $110/offer. 893-2104.
ROUND-TRIP AIRLINE ticket, Phoenix to
Tampa, December 21 to January 1. $300.
926-1324, 965-6651.
TICKET TO Japan. V alid till April, $200.
CaH Shinsuke, 921-1311.
real estate fo r salé
A ROMANTIC and funner lifestyle. Un
believably low priced townhomes, beat
investment available. CaH 827-8498.
B EST BUY. M obile home across street
from ASU . 2 bedroom, 1 bath, excellent
condition, many extras, must sell, $4990.
9684)345.
B Y OW NER. M ilitary fam ily must move.
Bike to ASU . 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Honey
w ell security system and ceilin g fan stay.
1067 square feet. Papago Park H.
$74.500. 968-9041.
TO W N H O U SE
M u x » 3 BR. 2 Bath, ceding
fan», w ashar/dryar, »malt
back yard, 2 mdee from ASU.
B21-122S
‘ I like the Buffalo because the buyers are really
selective. They choose the best to buy, so we
get qualify clothes. The clothes are always
in fashion. There's always something new.
You w on't see the same things day after day
because they are constantly buying. ’
^Holiday Shopping
-Leslie Smith
with a Personal in the
Christmas Shopper, December 6.
$ 1 will buy you a personal liner ad ( 1 5 words or
less,’) Bring in a friend and w ell give both of you 10
extra words in your ad for FR EE!
Hurry, deadline is noon, December 2nd.
Matthews Center, South Basement
STATE PRESS
P
■ ■
■w
GÌ
ì
227 W. University Dr.
Tempe, AZ 85281
(602)968-2557
Page 2 2
f*a i
Wednesday, November 30,1988
estate fo r sale
GO VERN M EN T HOMES! SI (Ü repair).
Foreclosures, tax delinquent property.
Now selling this area! Call (refundable)
1-518-4S9-3546 ext. H 203 tor listings.
N O N E E D to qualify- owner will carry on
this 2 bedroom condo. *49,500. Call
Mary/Brenda, CoMwell Banker, 840-8222
PINEWOOD VACATION home, 3 plus 2
with llreplace, country club, golf, skiing.
S125K, fuHy furnished, motivated seller,
870-7767.
REPO- COLORADO Mountain wilderness
park! Forty treed acres with fantastic
views. Pay 3 back payments and assume
morfthly payments. For brochure call
owner, 719-846-4588 (AZ-CAN)
YO U R OWN mobile home at zero net cost.
3 bedroom near ASU. Sale price $6990.
Can for free information packet, 829-8143.
Buy of the Week
Lender acquired, 2 bedroom
condo, Papago II. $0 down, 8%
thirty-year $650 monthly APR.
Bob BuNock
Realty Executive«
t*e 2882
apartments fo r rent
$200 O F F !
F R E E UTILITIES!
W a lk to A S U . S p a c io u s 2
b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts, a ir
co n d itio n e d , fu rn ish e d o r
u n fu r n is h e d a v a ila b le .
From
$380/
Beautiful
m onth.
pool
area,
la u n d ry fa c ilitie s
a b le .
a v a il
FIESTA PARK
APARTMENTS
12 2 4 E A S T L E M O N
8 9 4 -2 5 3 8
APACHE
TERRACE
’ARTMENTSI
fN e w &
M odem
-1 block off
¡campus.
pool, laundry, pets ok. Terrace and
Apache, 844-7100, 730-9040.
¡a p a rtm e n ts .
-private storage
¡Starting a t . .
$389/m onth
¡ 2 0 0 m ove In credttj
C A LL NOW
Y O U
C A N
rental sharing
O N E BEDROOM apartment. Regularly
$385, will take. $335. Microwave, covered
parking, large patio. Free for rest of
November. Discount on December rent. .
899-0529.
2 GIRLS looking for a female roommate. 3
bedroom, 2 bath, 2 story townhouse, Mill
and freeway. Prefer Junior or Senior. For
more information ca ll Krista at 938-6367 or
Janice, 439-5976, after 5, work number,
589-3617.
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath house on golf course
in Phoenix, near Tempo. Need 2 more
roommates. Washer/dryer, nonsmokers.
$250 pfus utilities. 947-7229.
help wanted
ANSWERING SERVICE needs part-time
and full-time help. Typing and phone
experience required 947/7351. jp* ~
BIG SURF, Arizona's only ocean, is
looking 1pr marketing/sales people To,
handle our group -sales- and private
-party- department, includes initiating
phone calls to potential customers.
Required: self-motivated and self-starter,
pleasant personality, good communicatiori
skills, creative, and common sense. 10 to
,30 hours/week at $4.50/hour Accepting
applications at 1500 N, Hayden Rd
(between Curry and McKellips) between
10:30 and 1:30, or call 947-2478.
CASTING! ROCK opera/musical drama.
Actresses, dancers, actors, singers. Open
auditions Tuesday/Wednesday, 7-10 p.m..
January opening, UP Inc., 968-7397
CHILD CARE, 2 adorable children, near
Paradise Valley Mall. Tuesdays. Julie.
867-0122.
STUDIO COUNTRY cottage, beautiful
woodwork, new bath, very private,
secluded, must see. Phoenix. Available
now, 248-0000 or 967-6000.
FEM ALE ROOMMATE needed to share 3
bedroom/2 bath condo. 'A mile from ASU.
Furnished, app lian ces, cable. Call
Teriann, 921-3476
CHRISTMAS VACATION camp. YM CA
Camp North of Tucson is looking for
counselors and program staff with experi
ence in repelling, arts and crafts, archery,
riflery, or nature. Kitchen and mainte
nance staff are needed, too. Camp runs
December 27-January 2. Salary plus room'
and board. Call 1-884-0987 or write YMCA
Camp, 516JN. §th Ave, Tucson,. AZ 85705
for applications and information’
TIRED OF the noise? Tired of dorms? San
Miguel Apartments has spacious 2
bedroom, 2 bath, 1000 square feet; $475
includes all utilities. One-tenth mile from
campus. 910 E. Lemon, 966-6704.
FEM ALE ROOMMATE Wanted. Clean,
quiet, responsible. Laundry, pool, private
room and bath, $250. 921-3225.
CHRISTMAS $$$$ Go-getters! Earn high
commissions wrappin' about our terrific
health-oriented product. Judy, 829-9432
2 FEM ALE ROO M M ATES to share 4
bedroom, 2 bath home near 13th Street
and Priest. Washdr/dryer, jacuzzi, VCR,
microwave, large kitchen. Smokers, metalheads, and geeks need .not call. Low
deposit, $190/month plus 'A utilities
Available January 1. Ask for Charles,
968-8150.
CLOTHING STORE, Tempe, needs sales
girls. Experience including sales required.
967-1017.
townhomcs/condos
fo r ic n l
2 B ED R O O M unfurnished available
December 1 . Has everything. 994-0963.
DELUXE 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Vi mile ASU.
Swim, tennis, spa, view Camelback from
deck. $750/month. 966-6053.
W ALK TO ASU!
O n ly Vi b lo c k fro m c a m
p u s . B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d ,
h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 bath; 2
b e d ro o m , 2 b a th a p a rt
m e n ts. A ll b ills p a id . C a b le
T V , h e a t e d p o o l, a n d
s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s .
Friendly, courteous
m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by
to d a y !
A p a rtm e n ts
950 S . T e rra c e
966-8540
H A V E IT A L L A T
A ll the am enjties in a small and quiet
com m unity P L U S the personal attention
that Y O U deserve.
•Individual Security System
•Cable Ready
•Covered Assigned Parking
•Close to ASU and Hayden Square
, Don’t wait...Stop looking...
Start living... Call today, 967-6568
1065 W. 1st St. (between B eck & Hardy)
FEM ALE ROOMMATE needed to share 2
bedroom, 2 bath Tempe condo. Share
master bedroom. Furnished, washer/
dryer, full amenities, $230/month plus Vb
utilities. 2 miles from ASU. Christie,
894-0735.
FINANCIALLY RESPO N SIBLE nonsmok
er. $200/month, V5 utilities. Near ASU. 3
bedroom house. Evenings, 947-4512,
Cathi.
. FR EE FIRST Month. Need a place to live
next semester or now? $225 a month plus
’/3 utilities. Male to share room. Worthing
ton Place, all amenities, fully furnished.
Call 966-6720.
HAVE OWN room in 3 bedroom townhouse. Quiet, comfortable, rtonsmoker.
, $210 plus f t utilities. 964-7651.
LIVE CHEAP! Roommate needed for
. beautiful Questa Vida condo. Share room/
bath, $150 deposit, $155 per month. Move
in December, don’t pay until January.
Females only; Chris, 967-5396.
CO U N SELO R (FULL/PART-TIME) at resi
dential treatment center for EH adoles
cents; 10 p.m .-8 a.m. shift; $10,344. Send
resume, P.O. Box 8500, Phoenix 85066;
EOE/M/F/H/V,
BABYSITTER WANTED for 4 ybardld boy.
days only, in exchange for room and
board. Call for interview, 839-8914. -
A LL BILLS, only $200 monthly. Walk to
ASU. Female nonsmoker to share a large
bedroom in a house. Anytime 12/1 to 1/1.
Call 968-4377.
V ER Y LARGE 1 bedroom apartment th a
4-plex, air-conditioning, V* mile ASU.
Available 12/15. Very affordable. Call
248-0000 or 967-6000.
CO U N SELO RS *1 GIRLS camp in' Maine.
Good salary, room and board/ travel
allowance, beautiful modern facility, must
. love children and be able to teach one of
the following: tennis,. W.S.I., sailing,
waterski, softball, basketball, soccer,
lacrosse, arts and crafts, photography,
horseback, dance, piano, drama,: ropes,
camp craft« gymnastics Call or write:
Camp Vega. Box 1771. Dux bury. Massa
chusetts 02332. (617)934-6536.
ALQT MORE than a doggie in the window.
Help wanted. Join our team, Docktor Pet
Center, Los Arcos Mall. Bring resume:
CARDINALS PIZZA hiring delivery (drivers.
Phrase call John, Mike or Pat, 829-0064 or
921-8446.
F;UNDRAiSING ‘TEEN Suicide Preven
tion” . Great for college students! Other
programs available. No selling. Will train
the right individual. Guaranteed salary
plus bonuses- up to $9/hour. Located near
The Pointe at South Mountain. For an
interview call 496-0399.
CO R K 'N CLEA V ER; accepting' applica
tions for lunch waitress, evening cocktail,
will train. Short shifts, convenient hours,
fun atmosphere. Concern with appear
ance, personality, and reliability are imporr
lant. Apply in person Monday-Friday. 2-5
p.m. or by appointment. 5101 N. 44th
Street (44th and Camelback). 952-0585.
COUNSELORS- BO YS camp in Berkshire
Mountains, Western Massachusetts.
Good salary, room and board, travel
allowance, beautiful modern facility, must
love children and be able to teach one of
the following: tennis, W .S.I, sailing,
waterski, baseball, basketball, soccer,
lacrosse, wood, arts and crafts, rocketry,
photography, archery, pioneering, ropes,
piano, drama. CaH or write: Camp Winadu.
5 Glen La., Mamaroneck, NY 10543.
(914)381-5983.
CRUISE SHIPS, now hiring all positions,
both skilled and unskilled. Fbr information
call (615)779^5507. ext. HI 78.
TYPIST. IMMEDIATE opening, 60-65
wpm. evenings or morning hours avail
able. Salary, $5-5 25 to start. Call Kimi for
interview, 496-0399.
G O V E R N M E N T J O B S ! $18.03? to
$69,405. Immediate hiring! Your area. Cali
(refundable) 1-518-459-3611, ext. F203 for
federal list 24 hours.
B u y it, S e ll
ROOM FOR rent. 3 bedroom, 2 bath
house. Heated pool, Jacuzzi. $208 plus Va
utilities. 990-3625.
ROOM- PRIVATE home. Large backyard,
older area, 2% blocks to ASU. Mildly
handicapped okay. 967-4796.
. TWO ROOMMATES needed to share 4
bedroom townhouse, M ill/Baseline.
$200/month, $200 deposit. Call Rich or
Vat, 967-4056.
UNIVERSITY TOWERS! Sublease right
now. Only $200/ December until May. Call
Frank 894-2300 ext.3672.
help wanted
$1000 CASH commission. Find a buyer for
my nice 3 bedroom mobile home near
ASU. Buyer can live at zero net cost. Sale
price $6990. Call 829-8143 for free infor
mation packet.
AID IN financial analysis of commercial
income property and real estate brokerage
activities. Approximately 20 hours/week.
Sorjne computer skills helpfull, prefer
business majors. Class credit may be
available. Contact Ellena or Gary at Grubb
and Ellis 954-9000 ext. 270.
$450 PER 100 payment gauranteed. Easy
work, no experience necessary. Age no
barrier. Write to or call Coast EnterprisesZL PSL, FL 34984.(AZ-CAN).
ft, F in d it, T e ll it
GOVERNM ENT JO BS! Now hiring in your
area, both skilled and unskilled. For list of
jobs and application, call 615-297-7844
Ext P506. (AZ-CAN)
GOVERNM ENT JO BS! Now hiring in your
area^ both skilled and unskilled/ For fist of
jobs and application, call 6 f 5-297-7844
Ext. P506 (AZ-CAN)
HAAGEN-DAZS fee-Cream Shop, scoopers. Scottsdale shop needs personable,
.dependable, hard-working individuals.
Day and night positions available. Call
Monday-Friday, 8:30-5. 941-0400.
H ELP WANTED; - W e need banquet
servers.. bartenders, cashiers, : waiters/
waitresses. Work around your schedule
Mqst have phone and transportation. Call
immediately, 831-0145. Same week pay
I MAKE $400/week part-time selling a
product to businesses that need, use and
buy it. Bring a positive attitude. I’ll teach
you therest! Jon, 966-5765;
IS IT Time for you to make some money?
Great! We have part-time positions,„even-:
ings Monday Thursday and Saturday
mornings. You make $5/hour plus
bonuses^ and it’s not telemarketing, Call
92Ì-2897. ask for.Mr. Leighland
JO B S IN Australia, immediate openings*'
for men and women. Construction, engi
neering, secretaries, sales, etc. Hundreds
of jobs listed in nearly everyoccupation
Call now! 206-736-7000, ext. 102A. (AZCAN)
LEARNING VARIOUS aspects in public <
finance and marketing two municipalities.
Pay $4.50/hour plus bonuses. Public
System s E xch an ge, M ike Seftner.
953-6555.
'
| L IC EN S ED LI FIB and health agent 7
needed. Quality products, high commis
sions with advance before issue, lead
system and benefits. (Must qualify for
benefits). Cali 1-800-456-4277. (AZ-CAN)
MAINTENANCE HANDYMAN Part-time.
MODELS/ACTORS AUDITIONS- National
commercials and workshop; head shot
and resume to sG s Ltd* 5535Vfe Welland
Ave.. Temple C»ty- California 91780 .
818-442-9148
MODELS/TAtENT- Tired of the run
around? Let the industry consultants at
Chicago's very own Tondu Studios assist
you in your new career. Call today,
264-3530.
MC)NEY DEBUTANTES: Tired of working
at low-paying jobs? Know you're worth
more? Call 392-4123
N EED A S X p - Tutor for high school
freshman Spanish student Please call
258-3T75?or 946-8198 (aftdr 6 p m ).
N O T fT A K E R S W AN TED for Spring
Semester. All graduate students eligible.
Undergraduate Upperclassmen with a 3.3
GPA or above eligible. Information and
applications available at Student Book
Center, 704 College Avenue.
NOW HIRING, futon t assemblers. No
experience necessary. Available 30 hours/
weekly. 966-8031,
OPENING FO R hairstylist with clientele.
Warnef and Alma School area. Part ;pr
full-time 963-1633.
O V ERSEA S JO BS. $900-2000 monthly
Summer, year round, a ll countries, all
fields. Free informatioh. Write IJC, PO box
S2-AZ03. Corona Pel Mar. CA 92625.
PART-TIME JOB. fuil-time pay. Flexible
hours, great for students. One block frdm
campus. Contact Mike. 894-2049 or
968-7013
PRE-SCH OO L S T A fF mornings or after
noons Love children, positive attitude.
Mesa. Jean. 926-3464.
S T O C K Y A R D S R E S T A U R A N T hiring
' lunch waitresses and busboys for MondayFriday shifts and dinner waiters, hostesses
and busboys. Apply Monday-Friday from
1:30^4:5001 E. Washington.
SWENSE.N'S TEM PE has immediate
openings for hardworking and enthusiastic
individuals to fill the following positions:
cooks, waitresses, counter help, bus/dish.
, Full and part-time, days/nights available.
Interviews Monday-Friday. 3-5. p.m.. Price
and Baseline.
TELEMARKETEFi- INTERNSHIP for 4th
year marketing student. Product is Compu
ter arid construction oriented. Hourly base
salary plus commission of no less than
$100 per sale. Contact Pete Guthrie at
Roctek Corporation,; 945-8098.
$ 1 0 / H O ll R
TO S TA R T
NO EXP. N E C ESS A R Y
Sell industrial tools arid
supplies for national
firm, We will train. 2
Shifts available. Walk
to ASU .
66 unit complex near ASU. Married
student preferred. Mqst have basic skills
in plumbing, painting, etc. 967-1072,
Call Dave Green
MAKE 1GO’S in your spare time; placing
posters. No selling. Call (918)33MONEY.
2 5 4 -T O O L
★ EXTRA MONEY ★
Is nice, but you can help people too:
M ALE ROOMMATE wanted for quiet
townhouse apartment. Fully furnished,
pool/jacuzzi The Commons on Lemon.
$265/month, no deposit. Call Brian
Webber between 10 and 6, MondayFriday, 1-800-633-8986.
help wanted
help wanted
AAA R E SEA RCH assistant for Arizona's
premier opinion research firm. Preference
to under class person interested in multi
year traming/internship program, with
career commitment. O 'Neil Associates,
967-4441.
O N E B ED R O O M furnished, utilities
in c lu d e d . P o o l, la u n d r y ro o m .
$300/month, 2 blocks from ASU. 1339 S.
Sunset Drive (1 block South of Apache, 1
block West of Rural), Apartment 9 (mana
ger). 967-3658.
R IV E R R U N A P A R T M E N T S
•Heated Pool
•Fireplaces
•Laundry Facilities
•Gas Grill
966-8597
1214 E. Orange
LAR G E APARTMENT, 2 bedroom, in a
4-plex, air-conditioning, private fenced
patio, V* mile ASU , available now. Great
price! Call 248-0000 or 967-6000.
T e rra c e R o a d
1123 E. A P A C H E
TEM PE, A Z ^ f
M a ria n n a A p ts.
LAR G E 1 bedroom apartment in a 4-plex.
Air-conditioning, pool, covered parking,
very quiet, Vi» mile ASU. Call 248-0000 or
967-6000.
9 6 8 -6 3 8 3
10-6 M on.-Fri.
12-5 Sat.
NO RENT DUE UNTIL
JANUARY 1 6 ,1 9 8 9
FOR LEASE (cheap) University Towers
Reisdence Suites. All utilities ihcluded.
$1000 for 2nd semester. 894-2300 ext.
3828, call after 10 p.m.
M O V E IN S P E C I A L
|— vaulted ceilings
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
FOR STUDENTS!
Store your stuff in your
new apartment for free
during Christmas break.
BRAND NEW Apartments, new lower
rates, special semester leases available. 2
and 1 bedroom, free cable, pool, covered
parking, lots more. Just a few blocks
behind Old Town Tempe. Roommates
also needed. 921-3036.
apartments fo r rant
-spacious closets
TWO BEDROOM, 2 bath, near University
and Dobson. Tennis, pool, covered park
ing, all appliances, $450. 955-7313.
BEAUTIFUL NEW large 1 and 2 bedroom.
Walk to ASU. Pool, laundry room. One
block South of University on 8th Street.
Special move-in price if deposit put down
before holidays! Cape Cod Apartments.
Phone 968-5238.
I— covered parking
j—Pool
SKI SUNRISE, Pinetop. 1 bedroom luxury
condo, recreation center 12/23-1/6, $950
total or $525/week. 961-3578.
AFFO RD ABLE, SPARKLIN G clean 2
bedroom. Bike to ASU. $200 off first
month. $350. 966-2750 or 836-0817,
owner/agent.
MESA. IMMACULATE 2 bedroom, 2 bath
condo near ASU, TriCity Mall, and Motoro
la. $375 plus deposit. 946-3198,831-9337.
-1 & 2 b d rm .
in
apartments for rent townhom cs/condos
for lent
$275 PER Month. Large, one bedrooms,
STUDENTS
Earn $120 + a month
SAFER, FASTER PLASMA
DONATION ONLY AT ABI
C E N T E R S DUE TO
AUTOMATED PROCEDURE. $5
bonus to new donors on first
donation with this ad. Ask about
additional bonuses. (MondaySaturday).
U niversity Plasm a Center
E A R N W H ILE Y O U L E A R N
Aggressive telemarketing firm near A S U
needs you. Morning and afternoon shifts
available. Earn up to $700 weekly.
C a ll B ob
Associated Bioscience, Inc.
1015 S. Rural Rd.
Tempe
9 6 7 -6 5 5 5
11 a .ik - 4 p.m ., M o n .-Fri.
■. 7 a . m . - n p.m ., Sat. .'
______968-6139
MANAGEMENT
TRAINEE
W e ’re ex pan ding !
R e ta il e x p e r ie n c e a
necessity. A ctivew ear
b u y in g b a c k g r o u n d
p re fe r r e d . F u ll-tim e
d a y ho u rs.
S e n d resum e to:
425S. Mill
Tem pe
85281
DIALING FOR
* $5.50
guaranteed I H H H H B
*AM/PM hours to fit y o u r sch e d u le .
*5 m inutes from cam pus
Dialamerica Is leading the w ay in telemarketing.
Our sales team enjoys the leads and products
that allow them to make $8^10/hoia' while work
ing In a modern, comfortable and motivated
office.
■■:
Call today to becom e a part o f o u r successful
sales force.
A s k fo r M s. Fo rd
8 9 4 -0 2 6 4
S ta te
help wanted
STUDENTS NEEDED to pass out flyers.
Earn $2 SO per class. Call 966-4225 for
more details.
TELEPHONE I APPOINTMENT Setters!
Name your pay!! Great working condi
tions. Training. Long term employment for
highly motivated. Close to campus.
829-6837 now!!
TUTOR NEEDED for S T P 420. preferably
someone who has had the class. Call
Jennifer, 829-8760. leave message
UJENA SWIMWEAR now hiring! FuH and
part-time . available. Apply in person.
Cornerstone:Mall. Tempe.
US SENATOR Dennis DèConcini is now
accepting applications for internships in
his Phoenix and Mesa offices for the
Spring 1989 semester. For more informa
tion caH Mike Crusa at 261-6756.
W AITRESSES W AN TED , experience
necessary, full or part-time. Need to apply
at 1024 E. Broadway. Prankster's Gar &
Brill. ■' ' "
J
WAITRESS AND dishwasher, part