State press Vol. 71 N o. 77 Arizona State University’s Morning Daiîy Copyright, State Press, 1989 Tempe, Arizona Th u rsd ay, Jan u ary 2 6 , 1989 Regents give support of ‘ third campus At left, students come and go Wednesday from the new addition to Hayden Library via the stairwell on the south side of West Lawn. Below, a sign has been posted to inform disabled students that their only access to the ex­ pansion for now is through the old structure. By TYRONE MEIGHAN State Press Some Arizona lawmakers and members of the Arizona Board of Regents said Wednesday they support the idea of an ASU branch campus in Maricopa County, but they need more details. “ I am one who believes the regents need to start planning for another branch in Maricopa County,” said Regent Jack Pfister. He added that further study must be done to determine the location of the branch and how it will be funded. Related story, page 7. The regents’ Task Force on Excellence, Efficiency and Competitiveness reported last fall that ASU needs to look for a branch campus to provide for students’ needs in the future. ASU officials have indicated that the branch should be in the southeast Valley and have set up a study committee to examine the prospects of an ASU East Campus. Student regent Pat McWhortor said the board is looking at the the task force’s recommendations and that he agrees there is a need for ASU to deal with its growth. “We need to make some tough decisions about the Tempe campus and its growth,” he said. “We have to ask ourselves if we can effectively deliver education to the students.” He added that creating another branch campus will be difficult. “ The p r a c tic a lity of another branch campus is not good,’’ he said, adding that it will be difficult to get the funds for a branch campus. Sen. Doug Todd, D-Tempe, s a id t h a t ASU’s W est Campus should be a model in m ake some studying the prospect of another branch campus. tough decisions “ W e h av e a su c c e ss about the pattern at ASU West,” he Tempe campus. ’ said, and added that growth a major problem facing — Pat isASU in the decades to follow. Regent Andrew Hurwitz .M c W h o rto r said he wants to see more Turn to Cam pus; page 7. » VterySorry!«The entrance for Disabled Users is at the Hayden Library until February 7 Jam ie L ytle/S tate Press Irw in D augherty/S tate Press Disabled decry access to new library By ROBIE KAKONGE State Press Disabled students have complained to University officials that ramps in the new underground addition to Hayden Library are not accessible fra wheelchairs and a construction delay has left disabled students with limited access to the facility. George Carrillo, who is director of Educational Development and is currently actingias the associate director fra Disabled Resources, said he has been receiving complaints from disabled students since the ' library opened Monday. The students most often complain that the ramps leading from the underground expansion to the original structure are too steep and too long. The ramps make it difficult for those with hand-operated wheelchairs to move from one area of the library to the next. “Disabled students have approached me with concerns about the new library and I have asked them to be patient,” Carrillo said. Furthermore, Students are upset because the elevator, Turn to M u ta te d , page 7. Official says sexually active people will meet with disease By LORI ZUBALIK State Press Anyone who is sexually active will eventually come into contact with a sexually transmitted disease, an ASU health official said Wednesday. Chuck McDuffie, the coordinator of health education at ASU’s Health Center, said STD examinations and treatments rank among the top five reasons why students go to the Health Crater. Other major reasons include colds, influenza and blows to the body. Patty Hunt, a certified nurse practitioner at the Health Crater, said chlamydia and genital warts are the most predominant STD’s treated at the Crater. Chlamydia, dubbed the “silent STD” because it often goes undetected by its victims, is a bacterial infection that is spread through sexual intercourse and oral and anal sex. Genital warts, or condylomata, are fleshy growths which appear in the genital area. They are caused by the papilloma virus and are usually contracted through sexual intercourse. “ If they (victims) are lucky they have symptoms that bring them in,” McDuffie said. Common STD symptoms are painful or burning sensations experienced during urination, and an unusual discharge from the penis or vagina. However, some STDs go unnoticed because their carriers don’t have any symptoms, McDuffie said. This can be particularly hazardous to people because some diseases, such as chlamydia, can lead to pelvic inflammatory disease in women and nongonococcal urethritis in men. Pelvic inflammatory disease is a condition that causes inflammation of the entire female reproductive system. Each year an estimated 11,000 women in America become sterile from PID and 3,600 suffer eptopic or tubal W EATHER IN SID E Mostly cloudy skies are forecast for today with a chance of showers or thunderstorms. The high tem perature should be in the upper 50s, with an overnight low in the mid 40s. Former A SU professor Robert Ripley, a 13-year graduate school professor in the College of Business, writes a book on “ managing it all." Page 10. pregnancies, according to Abbot Laboratories in Abott Park, Illinois. In males, chlamydia is the leading cause of nongonococcal urethritis, an inflammation of the urethra. If untreated, NGU can lead to epididymitis, an inflammation of the testicles that can cause sterility. However, Hunt said chlamydia is easily and painlessly treated with antibiotics after it has been detected. Hunt said that she finds an STD in about every three out of five women who come in for their annual pelvic exam. “The woman is usually suprised to find she’s got an STD,” Hunt said, stressing that many STDs are hard to detect. Taking a culture for chlamydia is a normal procedure at the Health Center when a patient comes in for a pelvic exam. “A lot of times students come in because of the signs accompanying the STD but don’t realize that their problem is Turn to D isease, page 6. C lassified..................................... ............................... 17 Com ics.......................................... ...............................12 Insight........................................... ....................... ....... 5 O pinion.......... ................ ........... ............................... 4 Police Report............................. .............................. 6 S ports...................................... ......................... ......1 3 Today............................................ .............................. 3 P ases State Press Thursday, January 86,1989 world/nation in brief 4-m ile-lo n g ditch to stem drug sm uggling U .S .-M exican border WASHINGTON (AP) — A four-mile-long ditch that a Justice Department official compared Wednesday to a “buried Berlin Wall” is planned for a stretch of the U.S.-Mexican border to stem drug smuggling into Southern California. But the plan is being criticized as “too little too late” by a group that advocates building fences along the border and blasted as “ repressive” , by immigrant rights organizations. Associate Attorney Gen. Francis A. Keating II said he proposed the idea last fall as a way to discourage drug --_'3 lere from driving loads of cocaine, marijuana and heroin across the border near San Diego. The plan being undertaken by the Immigration and Naturalization Service w a s . approved last month by Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, Keating said. The ditch, which Keating likened to “our buried Berlin Wall” will be deep and wide enough to discourage smugglers from driving trucks and cars across the border along a four-mile stretch of flat desert east of San Ysidro, Calif. The associate attorney general, who is leaving office with the start of the Bush administration, said the desert stretch in the OUiy Mesa area east of San Ysidro is a major drug smuggling route. “The cocaine, marijuana and heroin from Mexico is being carried across the border between the points of entry” that are operated by the Customs Service, Keating said. R eagan contracts publishing com pany to print m em oirs NEW YORK (AP) — Ronald Reagan has signed a contract with Simon & Schuster to write his memoirs, the publishing house said Wednesday. Father of C ontra m ovem ent assassinated by gunm en TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) — The former armed forces chief who founded the Nicaraguan rebel movement in Honduras was assassinated on Wednesday by six men who riddled his car with gunfire, officials said. Former Gen. Gustavo Alvarez Martinez died of gunshot wounds near his home in the capital’s Florencia district, said Salvador Lobo, director of emergencies at the State Hospital School. Radio America, a local station, said anonymous callers claimed responsibility oh behalf of the Popular Liberation Forces, a leftist group, but police said they had no evidence to confirm the claim. The financial arrangements were not disclosed. “The It was the third assassination in Honduras in the last term s are private between President Reagan and Simon & Schuster,” said Reagan’s spokesman Mark , three weeks. The previous killings involved a Nicaraguan rebel commander and a reputed druglord’s lawyer. Weinberg. Before the announcement, literary agent Irving “Swifty” Lazar, a longtime Reagan friend, said every major publisher was bidding for the Reagan book. He added, “ It will probably bring $5 million to $7 million ” As head of the national police in 1981, Alvarez became the godfather of the Contras by telling CIA director William Casey that anti-Sandinista forces eoiild operate from Honduran territory. Senate sponsors rejection of proposed pay raise WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly a quarter of the Senate sponsored legislation Wednesday that would reject a proposed 50 percent congressional pay raise and would roll back the increase if the House lets it become law by ducking a vote. The senators, 10 Democrats and 13 Republicans, made clear they wanted to turn up pressure on the House, which appears headed toward allowing the increase to become law automatically. Senators Larry Pressler, R-S.D., and Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, chief sponsors of the legislation, said the rollback feature would keep pressure on the House even if the raise becomes law through House inaction. If the increase takes effect, Grassley said, House opponents of the raise could try again and again to attach a rollback to crucial legislation. 4 Form er President Ronald Reagan proposed increasing rank-and-file congressional salaries from $89,500 a year to $135,000, a raise that becomes law Feb. 8 unless both the House and Senate vote to stop it. Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, has R-Okla. promised a vote on rejecting the raise before the deadline, Mitchell told reporters: “I favor a comprehensive but House leaders have expressed no interest in allowing approach that includes enactment of the ethics bill the such a vote. president vetoed, campaign finance reform, a ban on Until now, critics of the raise have centered on stopping the honoraria and enactment of compensation to offset the loss in increase by the deadline. honoraria.” The Pressler-Grassley bill and comments by lawmakers in The ethics bill, vetoed by Reagan and introduced again both houses Wednesday, have raised the possibility of action Wednesday by Thurmond, would restrict lobbying by former after the deadline to reduce the raise. members of Congress, their staffs and top executive branch Senators joining Pressler and Grassley ita sponsoring the officials. Campaign finance reform would impose limits on bill are Harry Reid, D-Nev.; Jesse Helms, R-N.C.; John campaign spending. McCain, R-Ariz;; Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz.; Paul Simon, DRep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., sponsor of the House version 111.; Gordon Humphrey, R-N.H.“ David Boren, D-Okla.; Quentin Burdick, D-N.D.; Strom Thurmond, R-S.C. and of the ethics bill, said he believed the House also would address the pay raise as part of a reform package after the Howell Heflin, D-Ala. Also, Senators Robert W. Kasten Jr., R-Wis.; Nancy increase went into effect. Kassebaum, R-Kan.; Tom Harkin^D-Iowa; Christopher S. Frank said he favors a package that includes the post­ Bond, R-M o.Richard H. Bryan, D-Nev.; Pete V. Domenici, employment ethics ■bill, elimination of honoraria and a R-N.M.; Dan Coats, R-Ind.; Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn. ; Carl $27,000 pay raise that would be a tradeoff for the honoraria Levin, P-Mich.; Richard C. Shelby, D-Ala. and Don Nickles, loss in the House. I l l l i ■ I I 1 9 9 1 1 (1 1 1 1 1 I I H in m m i mm I COLLEGE COUNTDOWN E f i i Y ÎS Ü B 8 1 M 5 fo r I d rin k p ric e s fro m 8 p m 9 p m a n d co u n tin g d o w n e v e ry h o u r! Sun D evil House 430 N. Scottsdale Rd. • Tempe A lo t in C o m m o n . •• As an A S U s tu d e n t, y o u r vv‘" fin d th a t w e h ave a c o m m o n g o al. . «A t.th e C o m m o n s w e w a n t to m a k e a g re a t life s ty le p ossib le b y o ffe rin g yo u special featu res such as sand v o lle y b a ll/ b a rb ecu es, h e a te d p o o l an d a ja c u zzi. You can also e n jo y p la n n e d social a c tiv itie s w h e n yo u are n o t h ittin g th e books. W e o ffe r ah u n c o m m o n lo catio n as w e ll as an u n c o m m o n p ric e , rates start a t $265 p e r m o n th u tilitie s in c lu d e d .* Plus e v e ry su ite has a w a s h e r/d ry e r, i d ish w ash er, an d m ic ro w a v e . C o m e see h o w m u ch w e h ave in c o m m o n ! '1215E. LEMON 968-6427 - 1111 E. APACHE - p fic e Pe r person. Limits o n u tility usage apply. A ik fo r details 3? m m W Ê m THE COMMONS r ¿ i ________r i i I r iWimoworTI ' 829-0933 í m une S t e j t j f r o _____ Page 3 ____________________________ ________ Thursday, January 26,1989 today The Today section is a daily calendar o f events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. 6:30 p.m . in the Student Services Building Multicultural Lounge. •C entral Am erica Solidarity Committee “ U .S. W ar in El Salvador: Eyewitness report and slideshow at 7:30 p.m. at the Newman Center (College ancTUniversity). •A m erican Indian C olloquium Series “ Dropouts, Fadeouts and Graduates: Navajo and U te youth at School and at Hom e” by Donna Deyhle, P h.D ., from 2 p.m . to 4 p.m . in the M U Mohave Room. •Am erican Israel Cultural Education Society first meeting o f the spring sem ester at 4:30 p.m . at the H iliel Center, 1012 S. Mill A ve., Tem pe. Agenda for the sem ester will be discussed. •T h e W h itefield S o ciety Topic: "C o n tinu ity and Discontinuity - How are People Saved in the Old Testam ent?” from 12:40 p.m . to 1:30 p.m. at Danforth Chapel. •A lph a Kappa Psi Professional Business Society “ Sm oker” traditional presentation from 7:30 p.m . to 9 p.m. in the MU Pim a Room 218. Business attire. For more inform ation, drop by th e D ean’s P atio, Business AdminStration Building. •Cam pus Crusade fo r Christ Thursday Night Live - Special edition with Dan Hayes at 7:30 p.m . in the Physical Science Building 100. •W om en Studies Topic: “ How to Have a Constructive Crisis,” a brown bag lecture series on ways to isolate and confront your crisis so that you are in control. Lecture at noon in the Social Science Building 103. •B aptist Student Union will have a free lunch and devotion from noon to 1 p.m . at 1322 S. Mill Ave. •Counseling and Health Advisory Committee general business meeting and discussion of upcoming events from 4 p.m . to 5 p.m . on the third floor of the Student Services Building, Counseling and Consultation. •Lesbian and Gay Academic Union Organizational and planning meeting for spring 1989 at 5 p.m , in the MU Yum a M eetings •P S I CHI The National Honor Society in Psychology will have a new m em ber initiation meeting at 4 p.m . in the MU Pim a Room. •Lam bda Sigma Tau Rush orientation will be at 7:30 p.m. in the M U second floor. Come out and see the Co-Ed Alternative. •Student Alumni Absociation membership drive - stop by and see what SAA is ali about from 9:30 a.m . to 1:30 p.m . on Cady M ail. •P I Sigm a Epsilon Rush W eek for students interested in a professional business fraternity. On the Dean’s Patio, Business Administration Building, G-Wing from 7:30 a.m . to 3 p.m . •Business College Council “ Activities W eek” featuring all clubs and associations within the College of Business from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m . on the Dean’s Patio, Business Administration Buildjng. •M uslim Students Association Topic: “ Islam Among the R evealed Religionsr> by Jam al Zarabozo at 6:30 p.m . in the Social Science Biiilding, Room 105. •Travel and Tourism Student Association Nominations and elections for club officers will be held: Mem ber and non­ members welcome at noon meeting in the MU Pima Room. •P .R .L D .E , Continued discussion of cultural diversity and how people relate in diverse environments from 5 p.m . to / - T " ’" ' § K Avantage XT j ] E Q U IT Y ASU Professore own an Avantage. Get one for lessi Includes floppy drive, keyboard, and monitor. *125 EPSON REBATE1 Avantage 286 $899s 1+ Sk $899 . . __ I •P eer Advisers at the Educational Support Program offering a free workshop on “Test Anxiety” from 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m . in the Student Services Building A361. •G raduate Women in Business Meredith Stewart will speak on “Fitting in with Corporate Culture” at 9 a m. in the Business Administration Building 226. •Snow Devil Ski Club Club meeting and Purgatory ski trip information at 6 p.m . at McDuffy’s Bar and Grill at 5th and 'MSl •C am p u s \ A d ult C hildren of . A lcoholics offering awareness, speakers and support. Alex J. Romero will speak on the 12-step program from noon to 1 p.m. in the lower level of the' MU Student Organization, Room 58E. •Cam pus Alcoholics Anonymous offers . support for anyone desiring to quit using alcohol or drugs. Meeting at noon in the M U Yavapai Room. •G D AT, Student Chapter NAEA/AAEA will discuss upcoming convention and other business at 7:30 p.m . in the Art Building 226. Professor Laura Hicks will speak on Art Education issues in A rt 220 at 5 p.m . •Sigm a Tau Delta International, English Honor Society will have another English action session at 8 p.m. Discussion, reading, criticism and up to three euphemisms per paper will be held at Casey M oore’s Oyster Bar, 9th and Ash. •N .A .A .C .P . m eeting at 5:30 p.m. on the second floor of the M U . Room to be announced. Get the 286 machine th afs priced right Includes 512K, etd. këyboard, K c y u u a iu . 1.2mb i . a iiiu floppy drive arid more. EVER YTH IN G , FEB. 18-20, PRESIDENT’S DAY WEEKEND. FINAL PAYMENT FOR PURGATORY IS FEB. 2 Dot Matrix Printer C O N TIN E N TA L A IR LIN ES 1-800-525-0280 Authorized Dealer P erfect lo r papen and program lis tin g s : Ih d u d » tra cto r 4 M cHon feeds and > o n t ra to r t chto ty p c c ty toc. ^ Thémostpowerful Apple H mud*. Ito uophtelicatod grajaNca » sound main EPSON Equity LT Laptop Ifo ru c h o o lo r • Lage „„Jaimm st AppoComputer, Ine. Hot NEW Borland Languages Roxanne w ill sign autographs tonight, 7 p.m. at: Sunny’s Pizza & Pub 1301 E. University Special Thanks To: Luigi, Jack, Dave & Jim fo r a record party last weekend. 9 K E G S th is S atu rd ay. Let’s beat the record! Details at m eeting. gs «749 | : PURGATORY $179 3 DAYS SKIING , INCLUDES W ow! Epson Power and Quality for this low price. In­ cludes m onitor. 640K, Dos, and more. Net Cost Is $774 Include U onltor Monitor not Included. and welcomes anyone to join us from 5:30 p.m . to 7:15 p.m . in the Physical Education W est Building, Room 101. •InterVarsity Christian Fellowship Speaker Rick Foss on "Self-Esteem ” at 5:30 p.m . at Danforth Chapel. •APICS guest speaker Guy Dobbins, C PIM Phoenix Chapter Apics at 4 p.m . in the Business Administration Room 312. | ; getintotheactlon...statepresssports r ? » Apple H Room 211. •Shotokan Karate Club will practice a traditional m artial art $899 (Next to Beauvais) FOR M O RE IN FO CALL: Dave or J a y .......... ,.9 6 8 -3 3 0 3 Jeff or C laudio . . . . . 966-2304 MOK, lOnthz, battery powered, 41) Includes Debugger! Turbo C 2.0 Turbo Pascal 5.0 ■ 1200 Baud Get On-line Instead Of In-line. So^n~ t i — Sf - ü b T s * u§FJ1J Mac External 2400JEUhjk^ l£ > This ad sponsored by: #1 Test Preparation b w b n PROFESSIONAL CENTERS Intock 35th Ava. & Noi E V J 450 MEMBERS STRONG Internal Modem First Choice (RlñPg -W ord Processing -Database $q a •Spreadsheet ’r O a •Communications •Graphics |U y S R o b o tic s LSAT&G M AT R E V IE W C O U R S E S 9 6 9 -8 9 5 3 MBA/GMAT SEMINAR, THURSDAY, FE8- 9. MU 6 PM opinion Page* Stote Press ^hursda^am M j^M ^W ^ Barbecues, talk-show host trivialize gravity of capital punishment D a v id Jordan Colum nist With the execution erf Ted Bundy on Tuesday, the impassioned advocates on either side of the death penalty have once again taken center stage on an issue that has twisted the conscience of this,nation into knots. Moralists ranging in stature from S u p rem e C ourt J u s tic e s to college newspaper columnists have expressed the dire consequences that will befall society if we continue or discontinue the modern death penalty. But this particular execution seems to have brought a more fevered pitch to the age-old “to be or not to be” debate. The killings of Ted Bundy were so well publicized that advocates and antagonists of capital punishment alike have had to continue this debate with the sickening realization that in this case, we were dealing with a truly deranged psychopath. I have often reminded myself of the social justifications for capital punishment. Between deterrence and retribution, I can see the value in a system that promotes consequences for violent criminal behavior. The death penalty, it seems, is the ultimate expression of moral outrage. What has been disturbing about the affair, however, has been the amount that people have trivialized his execution. Bundy barbecues have abounded. A bar in Denver offered “Burn, Bundy, Burn” beer. A T Shirt in Florida read “Roast in Peace.” His final moments were m et with firecrackers, sparklers and cheers. As Bundy’s last moments ticked away, a collective bloodlust crept across the nation. It was not our proudest moment. ASU’s addition to the effort will be the Morton Downey Jr. ¿how. In an ongoing attem pt to ensure that all of the most important issues of our day a re treated as frivolously as possible, Morton Downey Jr. will have a show at Gammage a t 7:30 p.m. on Saturday. During his show, which will not be aired, Downey will “ discuss” with a panel the controversies surrounding the death penalty. Not since USA Today introduced color weather maps has such a blow been struck for the cause of superficial journalism. As anyone who has ever seen Downey in action can attest, such panel discussions have nothing to do with the rational discussion of issues. Instead, Morton Downey Jr. merely uses significant topics as an excuse to let loose a bloodthirsty crowd on a panel of innocents. I am at a loss to explain what the fascination is with trivializing the death penalty in general, and the execution of Ted Bundy in particular. Execution is not a joyous occasion. It is not a g re a t achievement of modern civilization. Capital punishm ent is a trag e d y , it is an acknowledgement by our society that one of our m em bers w as so psychotic, so maladjusted, that he can no longer be tolerated as a living being. Perhaps it is the truly shocking nature of the crimes of Ted Bundy that fuels “Bundy Barbecues.” And yet, I can’t escape the feeling that if revenge alone justifies -our actions, then we have evolved little from the Middle Ages. We seem to have left the days MoHOn Downey Jr. of “an eye for an eye” behind us, and yet to watch men like “ Mort” one could almost believe that we have changed little since the days of trial by sword. And yet civilized society tells us that there are good justifications for the modern death penalty. Despite the incredible debate on the issue, there does appear to be some deterrent effect from executions. And the same policies that justify taking away the liberty of criminals — namely a retributive idea that the criminal somehow deserves to pay for his crimes - can apply by extension to the societal taking of a life. My problem is that while I can see society justifying the death penalty, I can’t see treating it frivolously. The USA Today mentality may help soothe our conseionce regarding executions, but it does not encourage the serious reflection that the taking of a life must always command. Morton Downey Jr. may make us feel less disturbed about capital punishment. I think, however, th at on this issue it is important to be disturbed. The very fact that executions do disturb us ensures that we will use this penalty in only the most extreme cases. It will serve as a continuing check on our use of the ultimate penalty. So perhaps we shouldn’t use this cathartic response — we shouldn’t justify men like Morton Downey J r. and the approach they take by buying tickets and attending. Maybe it is time to make a true statement for the sanctity of life by not participating in this event, But if you do go, you’ll probably see me there, "jen V ua:* ... letters Ritter cartoon pushes w rong ‘buttons’ E dit«’: I am wntting this letter to express my displeasure with Mike Ritter’s' political cartoon of Jan. 24, 1989. It is the definition of bad taste. The comparison of the murderous killing spree (of children) to anything is sickening. Not only is this a pathetic cartoon, Mr. Ritter portrays the killer as a larger-than-life, niuscular, “Rambo”-type macho man. Don’t glorify a weasel who turned an automatic weapon not on his drug competitors, not on his ex-boss, not even on his unfaithful wife but on a schoolyard of totally innocent children! Show him for what he was — an asshole. The civil rights and the abortion comparison don’t deserve any acknowledgment. We do need people like Mike Ritter to piish our buttons and make us think, I commend him for this. However, he should rethink his views on violence and its glorification. Alan Montemayor Senior, Political Science Students need day off in mid-semester, not after Christmas break Editors: Well, it was great to start the semester a day later than we should have, thanks to President Nelson giving the University the day off due to the celebration of Dr, Martin Luther King’s birthday. However, this day off, as does everything else at this University, comes at the students’ expense or without the students having a chance to voice their opinions. Because Dr. Nelson decided that the. school should have the day off to honor Dr. King, he arbitrarily decided that the school would have to compensate by not taking Presidents Day off. Thank you, Dr. Nelson; just what toe students want: A day off from school after we’ve just had a month off for C hristm as break. From a student’s perspective — and we all know that our’s is the last to be taken into consideration at ASU — we don’t need a day off attached to what is already a month off. We would much prefer the day off after we’ve been in school for six weeks without a break in our q u o ta b le Groucho Marx Paul F Horstein Senior, Broadcasting STATE PRESS “ Military intelligence is a contradiction in terms. ” - routines. As it is* Presidents Day was conceived to remove a day off from our schedules. Remember when we used to get both Lincoln’s and Washington’s birthdays off? MARTYi X A M J^ttyE d ito r. ERZOF,F ^» « ^» H N W N JOAN MCKENNA Managing Editor f “ 0 T 0 e n A p H E "S ;,jrw ln Daugherty. Carol LeMastsr, Ja m * Opinion Editor..... .......................................„„..».M IKE RITTER Asst. Opinion Editor ............................. BRIAN TASSINARI DOPY EDITORS: Troy Bausinger, Susan D eere, Wendy ^ H U e T T E R P O L IC V H I The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full nam e, class standing and m ajor (or other affiligtion with the university) and phone num ber. Requests for- anonymity will be granted with’ an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. A ll letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front desk in the basem ent of Matthews C enter or else addressed-to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tem pe A Z 85287-1502. Wire Editor...;...,....^...‘...¡..¿.....„..¿¿„„ADRIANE-HOPKiNS ®r0<)e^ ? * * . ^ i °a n Cincera, Omar Foster, Chad Frazee, Mike C o p y ...... ......................M ICHELLE a l l m a n ^ aye8, Pau* Lee, Brian Newman, Shannon McCue, Renee Photo E d itor...............ia p k r paq i c v Rich Toltzman, Laurie Zeleny, Ray Zickel. Peter Aest. Photo Editor | ^ D G R ^ N Ztebron ^larv^H aum oi B* W 8$’ Krm M n S L lw i68, Hoi? \ !_Rob‘e Kakon9e' Michele r S >r^?hal!ir^ . . ^ fli85a M ichael, Michael Van Dyka, Richard V igil, Kathleen Winstead. Lori Zubalik. ARTS REPORTERS: David Berberick, J ill Herbranson Jenniter Lynn Johnson, Matthew Linden burg, Mish Tell. I Th® State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe. Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not answer qu8stior'8 P* a 9 «neral nature. Advertising and P roduction:. (002) 965-7572. COLUMNISTS: Darrin Hostetler, David Jordon, Ed Schubert. ®’?,e Press * ih# only newspaper exclusively published SPORTS r p p o r t p q c . n o .„ r-___ 1 lor and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views Hodges Kvle Ena Chris Narkinn ¡L iF 'd H siler, Dave published ill this newspaper are not necessarily thoss o f the p o d g e s , Kyle Eng, Chns Nack.no. Kelly Pearce. Chris Pirkey. ASu adm inistration, faculty, staff or student body State Prate Page 5 Thursday, January 26,1989 Time for a change ■ ■ ^ , Proverbial American Dream isn’t all it’s cracked up to be By G. LYNN NELSON ___ — __________ — ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ “The world is a m ystery,” he said. “And it is not a t a lia s you picture it. ” — Don Juan in Castaneda’s “Journal to Ixtlan” The other morning, 1 drove out to the reservation to Delmar’s place. 1 parked my truck beside his old adobe house that blends with the desert, turned off the engine and just sat there for a while in the sunshine and silence. The dog came first — tail wagging, smiling. I scratched his ears and talked to him for a while. Then Delmar appeared, walking in from the trail that leads back to his ceremonial grounds in the desert. His long, raven hair was pulled back in a ponytail. As always, his dark Apache face was open and clear and friendly. We shook hands Indian-style, gently. He rode with me to show me where to find some willows for my meditation-hogan. As we drove down a back trail past some desert that was being bulldozed for cotton crops, Delmar pointed to a lone cottonwood tree in the distance. “There’s a hawk nest in that tree,” he said quietly. “They raised two babies in the spring. I was afraid the Farms! people would bulldoze it.” As we got closer, I could see the nest high up in the tree — and a large red-tailed hawk on a branch nearby. About twenty yards out from the tree in each of the four directions, someone had placed tall branch-poles in the ground. From the top of each pole fluttered a small rag of color marking that sacred direction. And the bulldozers had turned aside. '• • • • So here we are at ASU, ready for another semester of partying and fraternity riots and “getting an education.” So why am I talking about some Indian out in the desert? Because that Indian out there in the desert represents a slim but growing hope for the future of the world. You and the world would be much better off if you spent four years studying with him than four years here at ASU. Because the leading edge of our yet ¿mall knowing is coming back to his vision — away from the bulldozer of the American Dream and back to the tree and the hawk and the sacredness and unity of all tilings. A people’s dreams arise from their vision, from their “picture” of the world, from their paradigm of reality. “Paradigm” is a word coined by the scientist Thomas Kuhn to describe the structure of beliefs and assumptions through which we view the world, it is the accepted view of reality . It is the frame of the window through which we see. Therefore, it is seldom questioned — except by poets and prophets and children and the insane. And it is always questioned at great price (witness Socrates, Jesus, Copernicus and Galileo), ■Business-fs-usual is killing the e a r t h . . . The Am erican Dream is filling our air and polluting our w ater and washing up on our beaches from sea to shining sea . ’ because egos and empires are built upon it. The American Dream arose from a vision of reality, a paradigm, brought here from Western Europe and shaped by several hundred years of a growing and relentless reliance on science, on left-brain logic and its dualistic-mechanistic perceptions of reality. And over the last two centuries, some amazing technological feats have been accomplished within the narrow bounds of this vision. But its terrible flaws were there from the beginning. The same vision of reality that gave birth to the American Dream also allowed us to “discover” a country that was already inhabited — by a people of another vision — and to destroy them. It further allowed us then to occupy and exploit that country through the enslavement of yet another people. So, the Dream that was born in sickness has done its clever tricks and danced its frantic dance. But now the paradigm is changing — and the American Dream must change too, or it will, like Ahab’s twisted vision, drag the ship of the world down with it. Because now science itself — the heart of the old paradigm, the god of the American Dream *■ has seen beyond its own narrow vision into a work of mystery and wonder. A work that people of another vision knew was there all along. Listen first to one of Delmar’s people, Chief Seattle, speaking in 1855 (when the bulldozer of the American Dream was decimating the last of His people ): “Humankind has not woven the web of life* We áre but'one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect. Whatever befalls the earth befalls the children of the earth.” And then list«» to Fritjof Capra, a theoretical physicist, writing in 1975 in his book “The Tao of Physics” : “ Quantum physics forces us to see tiie universe not as a collection of physical objects, but rather as a complicated web of relations between the various parts of a unified whole.” This is the heart of our changing paradigm. This is the vision of the future — if there is to be a future. But sadly, this is not the vision you will be helped to see here at ASU. What you will get at this University (as at most American educational institutions) is a traditional training for business as usual, life-as-we-see-it, get a degree and buy a Mercedes and grab a chunk of the American Dream. But business-as-usual is killing the earth . And life-as-wesee-it has become a narrow, m aterialistic/ left-brained, tinseled coffin. And the American Dream is defunct. The American Dream is filling our air and polluting our water and washing up onvour beaches from sea to shining sea. So, whether we care enough to recognize it or not, we are at a turning point in the history of humanity on Earth. We must now begin to embrace a new vision of life and a new way of being, or perish. And this is not evangelistic Armageddon crap. This is simple fact. Acid rain is falling oif'our parade. The American Dream is over. The earth cannot afford it any longer. And that is what we should be teaching here at ASU — in every class, in every department. But for the most part we won’t tell you that. We will, in fact, do very little to help you see a better vision of file world, a better way of being. Because you want your Mercedes and we want your tuition (and grants, awards and “prestige” ). And because old dreams die hard. So we will take your tuition and go on teaching you the old lies, the lies that are killing us physically and spiritually. Einstein described it this way: “A human being is part of the whole called by us the universe . . . He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings, as something separated from the rest, a kind of optica] delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us . . . Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.” So you would do well to be aware of these lies so that you might attend ASU not as a school of technology only — and not allow us to further imprison you in this “delusion of our consciousness.” Because we will, for example, instill in you the lie that rational, logical, linear knowing is all-knowing. In this way, we will teach you that feelings do not count. We will teach you to be unfeeling. This lie will ruin all your relationships and give you ulcers and cancer and make both you and your life so incredibly empty and boring that you willprobably have to drink a lot and take lots of drugs during your lifetime in order to feel anything at all. And by the way that we teach you and by what we teach you, we will lead you. to believe the lie that learning is basically the memorization of facts — that all knowing worth knowing can be found in Hayden Library and stored in a computer and carried in a briefcase. We will not teach you to seek and learn from solitude, to “be still and know.” We will not point out to you — because we will have forgotten to wonder ourselves — how those such as Jesus, Buddha, Gandhi, Schweitzer and Mother Theresa were able to do their work without a briefcase and a computer. Thus, we will say to you, “Lo, here it is,” or “There” (always pointing away from yourself) — but we will not suggest to you that (according to both Jesus and current holographic theory) there might be a kingdom within you. We will lead you to believe that learning and knowledge is purely a linear and incremental affair which, if you choose, you can follow to its ultimate (a Ph.D.). The implication being that you will then know all there is to know. We will not tell you that this educational track is too often a process of learning more and more about less and less. We will not tell you that Ph.D.s, too, quarrel with their lovers and lie awake at night in fear of death and wonder how far out the stars must reach and how a bumblebee can fly. These lies are just part of a greater and more general lie that we teach you by implication — the lie that we humans know what is going on in the universe. We will not teach you file truth that neither we, your parents, the president nor anyone else really knows what it’s all about. Seldom will we remind you that if we put the history of the universe (16 billion years?) on a scale of one year, that humanity’s time on earth has been only the last thirty minutes of that year. We will not tell you that by the universal clock, we have just gotten here — that we are but infants in the universe, children of the earth. So we will not teach you to have soft eyes and a beginner’s mind. Rather, we will teach you to have hard eyes and an expert’s mind, teach you to pretend, give you the dangerous illusion that you know a lot because you have memorized ‘We will not tell you that this educational track is too often a process of learning more and more about less and less. We will not tell you that Ph.D.s, too, quarrel with their lovers and lie aw ake at night in fear of death . . . ’ some tiny facts within the narrow band of knowing which we call reality. Seldom will we suggest to you (because we ourselves forget) that this narrow band we call reality undoubtedly exists within some immense spectrum of knowing most of which we have not yet even dreamed. In this way, we will do little to teach you to treat the world with humility and awe. Rather, we will teach you to drive bulldozers over the earth and each other — when we should be showing you how to tie rags of color to mark the sacredness of all things. Thus we will not teach you that real learning involves us wholly (holy) — body, mind and spirit t- that it is a wondrous, wild circling that never ends, and that it is forever filled with pain, fear and sweet joy (but never boredom). And so we will not teach you reverence and love', which mostly the world needs from you. G. Lynn Nelson is a professor o f English at ASU. Page 6 State Press Thursday, January 86,1989 T e m p e P o lic e d iv e rs re co ve r stolen J e e p from lak e By MIKE BURGESS State Press Police scuba clivers recovered a stolen truck Tuesday from the bottom of a Tempe lake where it had been submerged since September. The $28,000 1988 Jeep Cherokee, which was reportedly taken fi*om Earnhardt’s Jeep Eagle, 3230 N. Scottsdale Road, was discovered about 6:30 p.m. Monday by a resident who was boating in the The Lakes community near the ilOO block of E ast Lighthouse Lane, police said. The m an told police the propeller on his boat hit a large submerged object, and on Tuesday divers determined it was a Jeep lying in about 15 feet of water. D isease Continued from page 1. sexually related,” McDuffie said. He added that although some people suspect they have contracted an STD, they deny it. •The ASU Police Department’s Bicycle Enforcement Safety Team issued 2S citations. •Two students were arrested early Wednesday after they were seen urinating on the north side of the Physical A suspect in the theft was arrested by Scottsdale police in Education West Building. They were cited and released. September. •A student’s purse and contents valued at $io were stolen Tempe police also reported: Tuesday from the main lounge at the MU while she was •A bandit who handed a bank teller a hold-up note Monday reading a newspaper. took off with an undetermined amount of cash. •Three bicycles were stolen Saturday from the bicycle racks The suspect robbed the Merabank branch at 1745 E. outside the entrance to Packard Stadium. Loss is $450. Guadalupe Road about 3:58 p.m. No weapon was seen. ASU police reported the following incidents ending 7 a.m. •A student was arrested on a driving-under-the-influence charge in the 900 block of East University Drive. Wednesday: p o lic e rep ort ‘bad’ people. They are just looking for a place to grow and reproduce.” All exams are strictly confidential and the staff is nonjudgmental, McDuffie added. “The signs may go away, but the STD isn’t going to,” he said. “Many people feel that they are ‘bad’ people if they are diagnosed as having an STD. “The viruses are not distinguishing between ‘good’ and ¡¡ligi N o w T h ro u g h S u n d a y T R A D E -IN ! T R A D E -IN ! IBemtifidQjrls '**’ Sunglass TRADE-IN Salel y w/Matching Go " m th this ad mdimSkkool 1R.d. 4Ó8-OIOO GRAND OPENING DELIVERY AREA FIRST ST. I Q U IN E S E Toy™ ■(I)o A fl N f | UNIVERSITY o s O 0) M TO 4 2 3 -0 0 9 5 BROADWAY IS 2334 N. Scottsdale Rd., B102 Hours: (Prices include tax.) Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-10p.m. Minimum delivery order $10. 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Brent Brown, ASU’s university relations vice president, Said Tuesday that a study committee has been set up by President J. Russell Nelson to study the needs of east Valley residents. “Student population is going to increase by the year 2000, and we need to start planning for it now,” Brown said Monday. It has been projected that ASU’s enrollment will reach 60,000 by the turn of the century. A September 1988 report from the Arizona Board of Regents’ Task Force on Excellence, Efficiency and Competitiveness called for immediate planning for additional learning facilities away from the main campus. The report called for “an additional upper-division and m aster’s degree branch campus or learning centers in Maricopa County.” The study com m ittee, f o r m e d by N e ls o n in response to the EEC report, is com prised of all six university vice presidents and Frank Sackton, director of the Affirmative Action office, ASU Provost Richard E. Peck, chairman of the study committee, said the group will decide whether there is a need for a new facility and where it is needed most. Richard Peck Peck said the committee’s first step will be to examine demographic data being gathered by an independent group. He said that while a new branch campus is ribt out of the question, the committee will also examine the possibility of opening learning centers sim ilar to ASU’s downtown facility. ASU is currently leasing from the state of Arizona 1,200 acres of land in east Mesa as a possible site for a branch campus. “It would be foolish to build there if the need isn’t there,” Peck said. Brown said if a branch campus is to be built it will have to be on ASU-owned land. If the east Mesa site is chosen, the land will have to be acquired by the University. which eventually will allow disabled students to enter through the underground facility, is not operating.: The University posted a sign outside of the" partially completed elevator directing students to an entrance in the original building until Feb. 1 Lynn Park, a communications graduate student who is confined to a wheelchair, said the underground library is “one more hard thing for me to get around on this campus.” “Life is hard, but it is even harder in a wheelchair,” said Park, who has a manual wheelchair and said the most difficult thing will be trying to push herself up the ramp while holding books on her lap. Jane Conrow, assistant dean of planning and space management-for Hayden Library, said the elevator is not operating because the wrong parts were ordered. She said University officials did not realize that the elevator would not be working in time for the library’s opening until the final stages of construction. Conrow said she does not see a solution to shortening the length of the ramp. “I don’t think there will be any adjustments on the ramp because there are standards that must be met when you build a ram p that connects two buildings.” she said. Conrow said if the ram p had been shorter, the incline would have been steeper and more difficult for manually operated wheelchairs. Chad Johnson, vice president of Nielsen Construction Company, the Tempe-based company that built the underground addition, said the elevators are not functioning because the doors are not operable. “Basically is is not rmjonr’rrfnnjt at ASU, nor is it a design problem,” he said. “Whek the project was completed the elevator doors were \e v e rs e d ; we are working on it and it should be settled inVweek.” Carrillo said he plans to bring ih an ortHbpoedic doctor within the next few weeks to identify qfher possible problems for disabled students in the librar ■ Ü I _____ 1024 E. Broadway • 967-8875 E V E R Y TH U R SD A Y. Jam ie L ytle/S tate P rate A student attempts to get her hand-operated wheelchair up the underground ramp leading from the Hayden Library expansion to the original structure. Disabled students must enter and exit through the tunnel until the new building’s elevator is hinetkming. C ontinued from page 1. HMDy | -I—yen} morning the ^tcite Pres? rises with the sun. 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Snifter O nly $5 FREE BBQ, Ribs, Corn on the Cob, and Potato Salad “ Snifter Saturday” , . 4-7 p.m. MuwmHMMiHSSgg a «¡wifi details about a third ASU branch campus. “ I want to know more,” he said. “But I have no objection to providing services to people in the east Valley.” McWhorter said that a third ASU branch campus doesn’t have a lot of support yet. “There’s not a consensus that we need to do it,” he said. “But we need to do it.” PRANKSTER’S — FLAX CO., INC. 10th Street & Jeiferson • 254-0840 Hours: Mon.-FrL 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 Lots oi free parking Page 8 Sta*» Pie«« Thursday, January 86,1989 Goldw ater’s m em orabilia chronicles 6 0 years of flying By MICHELE MCDONALD State Press A collection of retired Sen. Barry Goldwater’s military memorabilia adds a new dimension to his legislative career, the d ire c to r of th e A rizona H isto rical Foundation said Tuesday. Barry Goldwater The “Pilot’s Log” collection, recently received by the Foundation, is on display through January in the lobby of the First Interstate Bank Plaza in Phoenix. The lobby is open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday. “ (The display) helps people to gain an understanding of Barry Goldwater’s long love affair with aviation and his tremendous support of the Air Force,’’ Richard Lynch said. The exhibit shows a collection of photos, paintings, plaques and books written by or about Goldwater. “It is a very handsome display and we are very proud of it,” Lynch said. A photograph of nationalist Chinese air cadets trained by Goldwater during World War n, “is a very human part of the display,” Lynch said. The cadets signed their names in Chinese above the picture calling Goldwater “our dear instructor.” Also on display is a photograph titled, “The Man from Phoenix,” in which Goldwater is Shown sitting in a jet plane. Along side of the photograph is a poem about his significarit effect on aviation. Thé viewer comes away understanding Goldwater’s involvement in aviation and flying, Lynch sâid. The Goldwater Squadron, which was formed in 1981 to promote the Air National Guard of Arizona, obtained the collection from Goldwater’s congressional office when he retired. “It (the collection) demonstrates that the senator is â multi-faceted Arizonan who not ortly has been a concerned citizen but contributed on an international and national level,” said Bill Bonelle, president of the squadron. “He exemplifies the type of individual that we look back at in history,” he added. Lynch said the collection pays tribute to Goldwater for supporting the military and for his committment to passing legislation for aviation. Goldwater has been piloting since 1929, and continues to fly for a hobby. In 1967 he retired from the military as a ma jot-general after serving 37 years in thé U.S. Artny Reserves and Air Force Reserves. The fo u n d atio n , cu sto d ian of the c o lle c tio n , is a p r iv a te , non-profit organization created in 1959 by Goldwater. Located in the Hayden Library, the foundation also houses 'th e Goldwater. Congressional Papers-and the Goldwater Family Collection. However, these documents do not display as well as the “ Pilot’s Log,” which will create an awareness of the foundation, Lynch said. The exhibit, the foundation’s only military display, is the second collection sponsored bÿ the foundation to tour the state of Arizona. The display will travel to the annual air show a t Luke Air Force Base in March, and ASU may have the display later this spring, Lynch said. Berkeley ‘safe-sex kit’ proposal sparks debate BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — City officials hoping to stem the spread of AIDS are considering a proposal that would require innkeepers to put safe-sex kits beside the ‘good book’ in each hotel room. • ' “Certainly if hotels can have a Gideon Bible in every room, they can include a safe-sex kit,” said nurse practitioner Leland Traiman, a clinical AIDS researcher who proposed the idea. ' 1 “There could be a sign with each kit saying, ‘The Bible may save your soul, but this will save your life,’ ” said Traiman, who served on the city’s AIDS health commission last y e a r.. The proposal was on Wednesday’s agenda for the City Council’s Committee on Public Safety and Health and is also scheduled for a hearing before the city’s Community Health Advisory Committee next month. City Councilwoman Ann Chandler, who chairs the council committee, said she is not sure safe-sex kits should be required by law. But she added, “Given the crisis caused by AIDS, we must do all we can to educate the community. It’s an issue that needs to be discussed.” Each kit would contain condoms and information about how AIDS is transmitted. David Morris, chairman of the Community Health Advisory Committee, said he knows very little about the proposal but that it “didn’t seem like a half-bad idea.” Not surprisingly, some hoteliers disagree. “My boss is hitting the ceiling,” said Doris Flood, manager of Traveler’s Lodge, a few blocks from the University of Calif(xnia. “ He’s called the home office, and the home office has called England, and I’m not even going to tell you what England said,” said Flood, whose hotel is owned by the British-based Trustforte Inc. “We are three blocks from the University. A lot of our clientele is associated with the University. Tliey are mostly older people or professors or people from Europe; it’s not conducive to our clientele here,” Flood said. She also worried that a faulty condom could leave the hotel vulnerable to a lawsuit. Steve Rodri, general manager of the Berkeley Marina Marriott Hotel, said his Mormon-run franchise places the Book of Mormon in each room and doesn’t even allow Playboy Magazine in the gift shop. He said the hotel is not about to place condoms in the rooms, “The Marriott organization has always stood for high morals and professional ethics,” Rodri said. “I think it could be difficult to ask a housekeeper of deep religious convictions to handle these types of items.” Traiman said the idea was born last year when the city’s Health Commission tried to persuade hot tub and sauna owners to post AIDS warnings and to provide safe sex information. 1116 managers of one sauna refused. “They told us they wouldn’t cooperate until there are safesex kits in all hotel and motel rooms in Berkeley,” he said. “ ‘Voila!,’ we said. We all thought it was such a good idea that we decided to pursue it.” SH O W U S Y O U R S T U D E N T I.D . Y O U ’L L G E T A D IN N E R This year we’re doing it again! 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Wear it proucfly o* ^ ° 0 °c tO c V ■ CANTERBURY OF NEW ZEÀLAND Biltm ore F ashion P ark U pper Level 957-2161 S tale Pres* Page 9 Thursday, January 26j 1989 V irg in M ary statu e sp a rk s s m a ll-s c a le relig io u s w ar LYNN, Mass. (AP) — A nine-inch statuette of the Virgin Mary that a police official put on his desk sparked a dispute with his deskmate that has spiraled into a debate on the division between church and state, authorities said Wednesday. The small-scale religious war erupted last year between Lt. Eugene V. Begley and his supervisor, Capt. Bruce Hogan, when Hogan placed the pale yellow plastic Madonna on their desk. The officers, who were commander and second-incommand on the evening shift, began trading insults and jibes as the argument escalated last fall. Hogan alleged that Begley shrouded the religious icon in newspaper whenever Hogan stepped out for a meal and ordered him never to touch the statue. “ I never touched it,” responded Begley. “I just put the cup over it.” The spat came to an abrupt conclusion in November when Chief John F. Hollow transferred Begley to dayside detective duties. Hollow has said the transfer had nothing to do with the religious dispute. On Tuesday, a state arbitrator heard Begley’s claim that the transfer, which he says will cost him thousands of dollars a year, was indeed religiously motivated and was improper. Three more hearings are scheduled through March. Lynn, a factory city of about 78,000, has seven Roman Catholic Churches and a police force of 180 officers. “I’m as good a Roman Catholic as anybody, but that statue has no place on a police captain’s desk,” Begley said. “We have Catholics, Protestants, Jews and I’m sure a few Moslems in this department. Hogan has no right to push his religion on other people. He should not be flaunting it.” Calls to Hogan’s office Wednesday evening were answered by an officer who said that department employees had been ordered not to discuss the case with the news media. David Hoffman, an attorney for the Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, said the group had not been asked to become involved in Begley’s case but said it raised important issues. “ (We) are often concerned when government officials in a position of authority use displays of religioas objects in a way that might suggest to the public or to employees that there is a particular religion that is favored by the agency,” Hoffman said. “Such a symbolic link between church and state raises issues under the establishment clause of the First Amendment.” Begley claims the transfer cost h i m $ 4 5 ,0 0 0 i n annual pay because by working days he can no longer accept extra assignments for traffic control on road construction projects. Department officials had little comment on the case Wednesday. “It should never have left the in-house stage,” said Lt. Joseph Rowe, Hollow’s spokesman. “The department certainly didn’t plan to go public with it.” E N G IN E E R IN G G R A D U A T E S H a s M M ic r o - R e l C h a lle n g e s to e e t Y o u r A b ilitie s . Begin your career with a company that of­ fers the challenges that you've been prepar­ ing for— Micro-Rel, a division o f Medtronic, Inc. We’re industry leaders in the develop­ ment and manufacture o f custom IC ’s and Hybrids utilized in medical, industrial and government applications. To help us meet our ambitious goals tor the future, we’re now seeking E L E C T R IC A L E N G IN E E R S . Entry level, rotational positions are now available in a range of exciting specialties. If you're a highly motivated individual driven to excellence, we’d like to speak with you. At Micro-Rel, you ’ll enjoy a highly competitive salary and comprehensive benefits. 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Sorry, 1/cu3tom er; Valid w /coupon, expiresJ_-31-89. j mow i c in rc c. university oa*t-8337 (Behind the Chuckbox) Page 10 Slate Pleat Thursday, January 26,1989 Form er ASU professor 'm anages it all’ in new book By MICHAEL VAN DYKE State Press Nine years after leaving the University because of a “research over teaching” emphasis, a former ASU professor has written a book that explains how to better manage both business and personal affairs. In his book, “Manage It All,” Robert Ripley tells readers they can learn to manage their boss, control other people in meetings and effectively control stress. Ripley, an ASU graduate school professor in the College of Business for 13 years, resigned from the University in 1979 to devote himself to his consulting practice and to “search for the true meaning of success.” The book, released last week, is available at the ASU bookstore and every community college bookstore in the Valley. In the book, Ripley explains why he left ASU. Ripley said that while at ASU he encountered controversy because he considered teaching to be more important than research. “As a professor at the University your duty is to be a teacher first and a researcher second,” Ripley said in an interview. He added that while at ASU, his desire was to research the phenomenon of personal success and to teach it to graduate students. In his book, Ripley writes that he is concerned with the techniques of teaching emphasized at ASU and other American universities. “Universities are primarily achievement-oriented in their teaching instead of success-oriented (inner-directed),” Ripley states. Ripley began his research on success in 1977. “The first step in my research was to go to the University library and ask for a computerized search on personal success development,” Ripley writes. “However, to my surprise only a few articles on the subject were found, and those dealt mostly with achievement.” Refusing to be discouraged with the lack of results, Ripley asked the librarians to inquire about materials at the University of Southern California, Harvard University and the University of Minnesota libraries. But again the research provided nothing. Ripley was forced to research the subject himself. “ I had to go to the public bookstores and used bookstores throughout the United States to find material on the topic,” Ripley said. He then researched the topic for more than two years. Ripley stated that in 1979, after considerable difficulty, he received permission from ASU to teach a seminar for one semester on personal success development to 25 graduate students. “One of the women in the class has been named the National Outstanding Community College Adminstrator and is now a consultant to presidents of community colleges,” Ripley said. “ Others (from the class) include a Dean of Women at a prominent college, a vice president of a large company, a television personality, a head of staff development for a large city hospital, a founder and president of a highly successful company and on and on.” At the completion of the course in 1979, Ripley resigned from the University. “To prove to myself that the subject of personal success development could be taught, I resigned from the University and devoted ;all my time to consulting with individuals and organizations on building and maintaining their success,” he said. Since leaving the University, Ripley has served as a consultant for the U.S. Department of Labor, U. S. Department of Education and various corporations, including Motorola and Bobby McGees Conglomeration. With a doctorate in Educational Psychology, Ripley has always been a follower of the American pragmatic method of applied psychology, according to his wife Marie Ripley. “I feel he is one of the few who has been able to defend the behavioral sciences in the business world," she said. “Rip has been able to make a case for the validity of the behavioral sciences that stands up to the engineers and scientists.” Because of his desire to prove that psychology should be incorporated in the business world, Ripley said he decided to write a book on the topic. “This book ,is the result of the struggle of several years to bring enlightened behavioral sciences to America’s talented scientific and business community,” Ripley said. In the book Ripley discusses eight of the areas that he was questioned most often about while training corporate executives and workers. “ If you are a college business m ajor and have an interest in understanding how to be a successful business person, or if you just want to know more about better mapaging yourself and others, then this book is for you,” Ripley said. Esperanto: Jes, you too can do the ‘linguistic handshake’ By KATHLEEN WINSTEAD State Press Foreign language professors say there are certain words and phrases that every student learning another language should know, like jes (yes) and ae (no) and kie estas la p lej proksima necesejo (where is the nearest bathroom?) But learning a foreign language can be time-consuming and tedious to some — that’s why the language Esperanto was created. E s p e r a n to is sp oken around the world by people in more than 100 countries, said Jay Kamchi, president of the Esperanto club. “Esperanto is a linguistic handshake across lands and across countries,” Kamchi said. Esperanto is designed to be the international second language, and not a substiJay Kamchi tute for national or ethnic languages, said Mickey Giannini, who teaches a beginner’s class in Esperanto. Bill Shanks, the founder of the Esperanto club at ASU said, Esperanto is very easy to learn because there are only 16 rules of grammar, with no exceptions, no irregularities and no masculine and feminine nouns to learn. Esperanto is 10 times easier to learn than any other language and once it has been learned, will aid students in learning a second language four times as fast, said Kamchi, a 21-year-old computer science major at ASU. Esperanto has been used in elementary school systems in Hawaii and California to teach the basics of the English language and foreign language exploration, he said. Esperanto helps students learn English in two ways, said Bill O’Ryan, who teaches the advanced classes in Esperanto at ASU. First, the gram m ar follows a set pattern and gives the Student a feeling for grammatical concepts, he said. Second, the parts of speech in Esperanto are indicated by the endings on the words. In Esperanto, verbs end in “i,” nouns end in “o,” adjectives end in “a ” and adverbs end in “e.” fBJROST CONTROVERSIAL FILM OF THE YEAR l i BEST PICTURE OF THE Y E A R !" Janell Larson, a former ASU student who attended Esperanto language classes for a year, said that she became interested in Esperanto not only because she wanted to meet new people, but because she heard that learning Esperanto would make it easier to learn Spanish. Esperanto vowels are similar to those in Spanish and Italian, while the Esperanto alphabet is very similar to the Latin alphabet, Kamchi said. About 80 percent of the Esperanto vocabulary is derived from Latin roots. Latin, Spanish and Italian are romance languages, which makes Esperanto very similar to Spanish and Italian, O’Ryan said. Esperanto is easier to learn than Spanish because the gram m ar is much more regular, O’Ryan said. There is only one sound for each letter. GAM M AGE CENTER Tem pe Sponsored by ASASU and KTSP-TV "An Outspoken Evening with M orton Downey, Jr.! Saturday, Jan, 28, ?:00 pm ASU S tudents receive $1.50 Ticket D iscounts at G am m age Box Office with S tudent I.D. at: Gamm age C enter Box O ffice , , and charge by phone (602) 965-3434. THE NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW l i “Learning any language makes learning another easier,” O’Ryan said. Shanks, who sometimes teaches Esperanto language classes, said that a wide variety of individuals attend the classes. He said that most of the students are American, but that 10 to 20 percent are not. BEST M OVIE OF THE Y E A R ." ' Roger Ebert, SISKEL & EBERT Iff "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST !1 « —TIME • —THE NEW YORK TIMES • Richard Schickel Vincent C anty • Peter Travers— PEOPLE MAGAZINE • Mike Clark —USA TODAY • •Joel Siegel— G O O D MORNING AMERICA • Je ffLyons —WPIX-TV • • Put Collins —WWOR-T V • Stewart Klein —W N YW-TV • • Susan Granger—W M CA-AM Radio • Gary Franklin —KABC-TV • GENE HACKMAN WILLEM DAFOE I ài ALAN PARKERF ill MISSISSIPPI w u 24 oz. PEPSIS PAPA JAY'S PIZZA * FREDERICK Z0L10 M ri.ii ALANPARKER m GENEHACKMAN WILLEM DAFOE "MISSISSIPPI BURNING" «p m h IREVUR JONES w * GERALDHAMBUNG.ue m m m M p i PHILIP HARRISON GEOFFREYKIRKLAND M in i* * PETERMZIOtLiu m v CHRIS GEROLMO wPnrwt*(HW i FREDERI CK ZOLLO* ROBERT E COLESBERRY m u ALAN PARKER MAÛtHf SIGNETPAPERBACK IWO N , P M U f N (M IT SMaSME LARG E CHEESE PIZZAS FAST FREE DELIVERY Limited Free Delivery Area 804 S. Ash, Tem pe $4.95 Minimum Food Order (Lim ited Free Delivery Area) nOmoîi'p NOW PLAYINGAï THEATRES EVERYWHERE. 966*1003 HOURS: Mon-Thurs4-12 Sat 12-1 Friday 4-1 Sun 12-12 Topping, $1 extra per pizza 9 6 6 -4 2 9 2 State Press Page 11 Thursday, January 86,1989 Bundy rem ained ‘coldblooded’ despite pleas SEATTLE (AP) - Despite his tears, executed killer Ted Bundy remained cold­ blooded and manipulative to the last day as he dribbled out information on his victims in hopes of delaying his execution, an investigator said Wednesday. Robert Keppel, a state attorney general’s investigator who tracked Bundy for nearly 15 years, said he believes Bundy may have killed more than 100 girls arid women. As Keppel spoke at a news conference, the Florida prosecutor who sent Bundy to the electric chair Tuesday estimated he may have slain as many as 50 young women. The FBI said it was still analyzing the confessions given to a parade of law enforcement officers Bundy invited to the Florida State Prison beginning late last week. “The whole thing was orchestrated from the very beginning,” Keppel said of the confessions, in which he participated. He dismissed as phony Bundy’s final interview putting some of the blame for his activities on pornography. “ P o rnography is m aybe one onethousandth of the whole problem he had,” Keppel said, adding that the interview with James Dobson, a religious broadcaster and psychologist, “was totally self-serving.” He said the only remorse Bundy felt in his final hours was for himself. Bundy, 42, admitted during his final days to killing 22 women, including 11 in Washington state, officials said. He was convicted of killing three others. Keppel said he believes the- toll is much higher, and that the exact numbers and details will never be known. “My feeling is he has killed way over 100,” said Keppel, who as a King County detective investigated the eight “Ted” killings in the Seattle area that occurred in 1974. Bundy confessed to those crimes, and to killings in Utah, Colorado and Idaho. Keppel has interviewed Bundy several times in the past few years, and said he would take the information gathered in his FOR YOUR latest sessions and present it to other law agencies in hopes it will help solve stillunexplained murders. During the final interviews, Keppel also questioned Bundy about the Green River killings of western Washington and Oregon, primarily to gain insight into how a serial k iller thinks and acts. Bundy was imprisoned in Florida when the Green River killings began in the early 1980s. Keppel played a tape he had recorded during a session with Bundy on Friday, when the former Tacoma resident and law school dropout admitted to killing the eight “Ted” victims. In the tape, Bundy describes how he lured a University of Washington student, Georgann Hawkins, to his car, beat her with a crowbar, and then drove her to a secluded, grassy spot in the hills near Issaquah, east of Seattle. Keppel would not play the part of the tape where Bundy detailed how he killed and apparently mutilated her and other victims, out of respect for the families of the victims. “I was shocked,” he said of the way the victims were treated. He said investigators hadn’t known Bundy’s methods because the victims were found weeks and months after their deaths, and many bones had been strewn by animals. Keppel said Bundy used stalling tactics during the last days, even as he invited law enforcement officers from various states to the prison to talk about murder cases. Bundy would “let ’em squirm, let ’em dangle, for a little more information,” said Keppel, hopeful'that such tactics would win him a last-minute respite from the death penalty, if only temporarily. However, it was only because death was imminent that Bundy did confess at all, added Keppel. Had the Florida governor indicated in the slightest way he would spare Bundy to allow law officers more time to question him, Bundy would have clammed up, Keppel said. 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UPNEWEXPRESSIVE HORIZONS/ WE'VEUBERATEL THE FIRSTAMENPMENT ÏV E ALWAYS OPUS. w u r ea-v \U KRL I ) mm. State Press Thursday, January 26 ,198 ? w antepto WHICH POESN'T CHANGE THEFACT 7VATTM ft \U m \HEflP. F fm im p w p e s SAY THAT HERE „ P vB ucty. / By GARY LARSON THE aNPTHE Fm EC W N - B |'¡ ¡ ¡ ¿ it 4 fy *% ? M by Bill Watterson Calvin and Hobbes I GET A LOAD OF W S DUMB ASSIGNMENT/ I'M SUPPOSEP TO WRITE ABOUT AN NNENWPE I ’VE HAD.' haven' t wad anv adven­ t u r e s ? W UFE HAS BEEN ONE BtG BORE FROM TVE BEGINNING/ I HAVE I EVER BEEN ABDUCTED BT PIRATES? HAVE I EVER FACED DOWN A CHARGING RHINO? HAVE I EVER BEENIN A SHOOT-OUT, OR ON A BOMBING RAID? NO/ I NEVER GET Tb HAVE ADVENTURES/ \ WHAT ABOUT THE TIME VOU BACHEDTHE CARTHRCNGH THE GARAGE DOOR? VûU CALI THAT AN ADVENTURE? 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State Press Tonight at 7:05 p.m., a capacity crowd in the University Activity Center will have the opportunity to check out the talent of the sixth-ranked UofA basketball team. Last season the Wildcats qualified for the NCAA Final Four, where they were defeated by th e national cham pion Oklahoma Soopers. However, the Wildcats are not on tour, making à guest appearance in the UAC. The ASU basketball team will take the. court with hopes of upsetting its rival opponent. “We’re not looking for a moral victory — we’re looking to win,” Sun Devil coach Steve Patterson said. “We’re going to give everything we’ve got. We want a ‘W.’ ” Perhaps for two Sun Devils there is more at stake than winning the game. Starting guards junior Mike Redhair and freshman Adrian Brown are JuCson natives. “I think we’ll play harder,’’^Redhair said. “IPs a big opportunity for Adrian and I to play well, and not have to hear our friends joke about it when we go back to Tucson. “I think any time you play a top-20 team that there’s a reason to get excited, and the rivalry really adds to it.” A victory will not be an easy task for the Sun Devils (9-7,3-5 Pac-10). UofA (13-2,7-1) leads the series, 106-68, and has a 9-1 advantage in the previous 10 games. ASU will have to take the court without thé services of senior forward Torin Williams, junior guard Tarence Wheeler and sophomore center Emory Lewis. “I’m trying to put all the injuries aside,” Redhair said. “I’m looking at it (the game) as how we can beat these guys.” Although most people have ruled out a Sun Devil victory, Brown said he will be playing with intention to win. “This game means a lot to me,” Brown said. “ I want to play well in this game, obviously. I want to get a ‘W’. Earlier this season, ASU had a balanced attack and the ability to earn the respect of its intrastate rivals. Now the strength of the offense is possessed by the frontline: senior forward Trent Edwards, junior toward Alex Austin and junior center Mark Becker. “They have had to pick up the slack,” Patterson said. “ Inside scoring is really our strength. The rock is our inside.7’: Patterson said Edwards, who is the foundation for the team, has? been the most productive for the Sun Devils this season. “Right now people are loading up on him and concentrating on shutting him down,” Patterson said. “He’s our man inside and I don’t expect him to let down. “I wish I had three or four more guys like him.” " §| On defense, the Sun Devils take pride in its half-court traps and man-to-man coverage, Patterson said. “When we work at it we are a pretty good defensive team,” he said. “We just have to be a blue collar team on defense.” The hard work has to carry over for (he entire team to be successful, Patterson said. ‘‘Everyone has to be serious on the floor, ’’ he said. “Although we have had setbacks, we’re continuing to improve as a team.” Although ASU’s performance began to decline after suffering a loss of personnel, Patterson said the team is on the rise. “We haven’t given up on this season by a long shot, but it hasn’t gotten any easier,” Patterson said. “They are great. They pick themselves up, dust themselves off and try again. “We want to get better every game, with improvement a lot could happen.” Anything is possible, especially during rival match-ups, but the UofA has been a powerhouse since Lute Olson took office in 1984. “Sean Elliott is probably the best player in the country and Anthony Code is a very strong inside scorer,” Patterson said. “They have a tremendous 1-2 punch. “I dont think we can get into a running game — We have to be patient in order to be successful. The Wildcat defense provides an equal threat, Patterson said, pointing out the team’s quickness and ability to create pressure for opposing ball-handlers. “ They’re a good defensive team ,” Patterson said. “Everyone knows they’re a good offensive team, but you don’t hear too much about how good a defensive team they are.” > Last season UofA won both encounters with ASU, drenching the the Sun Devils 99-54 Turn to Hoops, page 14. S tate Press photo ASU center Mark Becker drives the lane against the Wildcats’ Anthony Cook two years ago at the McKale Center in a game they lost. The two will match up again tonight in the University Activity Center at 7:05. Sellout expected for UofA game By KELLY PEARCE State Press 'J sssm m m A view 70-63. the University Activity Center crowd on There will be two rarities tonight in the University Activity Center when the Sun Devils attempt to upset the sixth-ranked Wildcat basketball team — a sold-out crowd that is dominated by ASU fans. ASU has not drawn a crowd to its 14,287-seat Activity Center of more than 14,000 since 1981, although attendance has exceeded capacity seven times in the past, including a record crowd of 14,733 to see the Sun Devils play Alabama in the NCAA playoffs on March 15,1975. At press-time Wednesday, only a handful of tickets were left in the ASU student section, and Sun Devil Ticket Office Supervisor Diney Mahoney said those were expected to be sold by the end of the day. “For this game we have opened up more sections than we usually open up,” Mahoney said. These are sections that last year were filled by cheering UofA supporters. Before the 1988 UofA-ASU game in the UAC, between 6,000 and 7,000 tickets were put on the market for the general public: UofA fans quickly bought a majority of the tickets and dominated the audience at the game. To prevent another UofA-ruled crowd this year, a massive marketing campaign was conducted to increase the number of ASU fans. This drive was organized by the “Dirty 30,” a group of ASU alumni and boosters who often play dirty tricks on the UofA. Their plan was a success and only 2,000 were left for the public. Also Wednesday morning, 700 tickets in the ASU student section were put on sale, but they did not sell out. ASU head basketball coach Steve Patterson said that he was disappointed in the lack of student turnout at the box , - r r ■. Turn to Crowd, page I t. Page 14 I asu golf The ASU women’s golf team rallied to win the team title at the USC Yahama Invitational in Glendale, Calif. Wednesday after entering the final round trailing by nine strokes. This tournament crown marks the first ASU victory of the campaign after earning four successive top-four finishes during the fall season. ASU entered Wednesday’s action nine strokes better than the Aggies, who led after both the first and second rounds. Individually, Michiko Hattori of Texas recorded the day’s best score with a two over par 74 and won the event by six shots over San Jose State’s P at Hurst. Sun Devil all-America Pearl Sinn placed third for her fourth consecutive top-10 finish. Sinn’s teammates, Lypne Mikulas and Phoenix’s Missy Farr, finished sixth and seventh, respectively. The Sun Devil women’s golf team returns to action on Feb. 13 at the Arizona Invitational in Tucson. WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS ASU WOMEN’S GOLF USC Yahmaha Invitational a t Giandala, Calif. Final raauita TOP TEAMS — Arizona State, 323-307-315-945; New M exico State, 313-308-332-953; Southern Cal, 325-309-320954; Texas, 334-309-314-957 and San Jose State, 322-321-318-961. TOP INDIVIDUALS — M ichiko Hettori (TEX), 78-73-74-255; Pat Hurst (SJSU), 74-8077-231; Peart Sinn (ASU), 81-73-70-232; Lori Poling (NMS), 75-77-81-233 and A.J. Nealy (NMS). 75-77-83-233; Lynne Mikulas (ASU) 8077-79-230 and Missy Farr (ASU), 7078-80237. OTHER ASU SCORES — Amy Fruhwhth, 91-7070248; Heather Hodur, 83-81-05-249. pac 10 PAC-10 GAMES W L Pet. GB 7 1; .875 6 2 .750 1 .714 5 *5 3 .625 2 571 2V2 3 : *■3 4 .429 m 3 5 .375 4 2 A .333 4 .143 5% 1 « 0 6 s» p 6 Arizona Stanford UCLA Oregon State California Washington Arizona State Oregon Washington State Southern Cai " ALL GAMES W L Pet. .867 13 2 14 4 .778 .667 10 5 12 4 .750 .722 -13 5 6 9 .400 9 7 .563 7 9 .438 6 10 .375 7 10 .412 college basketball h u r a d a j ^ a n u a r ^ S ^ I ^ ————^ ^ J H ä Ü Ü S iä C ia k b e c o m e s d o m in an t fo rc e By KYLE D. ENG State Press Height is not the only reason women’s basketball center Fran Ciak is looked up to. The junior hoopster, who stands 6-foot-2, leads the conference in rebounding, hauling in 10.3 a game. Ciak is also second on the team in scoring, averaging 13.3 a game. Both statistics should make her a candidate for the most improved player on the team, which is 7-9 overall and 1-5 in the Pac-10. “Fran Ciak is having the best year of her career, including her high school days,” Assistant Coach Debra Stephens said. “She was a student of the game for two years and now she has become a player.” As evidence, Ciak averaged only 4.8 pts. and 3.7 rebounds in her first two seasons for the Sun Devils. Her career-highs were previously 11 points and IQ rebounds, until this year. Ciak has scored 22 points and has grabbed more than 10 boards in a game seven times. Ciak said she feels she owes some of her improvement to others. . “We owe a lot to the fans for the way we are playing on the road,” she said. “ It just doesn’t seem we can put together and play a solid 40 m inutes of basketball. “I think we also owe a lot to Coach (Maura McHugh) for not giving up on us. We’ve just got to get the five girls that, are out on the floor for us to play 100 {»ercent for the entire time they’re out on the floor.” Ciak is no stranger to being a leader. “I think the girls look up to her as being the leader as far as playing with emotion,” Stephens said. “There’s always one girl on ydur team that pumps up the rest the girls, that’s what Fran does for this team. F ran is just a great team leader. When she does something the girls listen and follow. She pumps them up.” ; Ciak was a First-Team All-State, AllCounty and All-Metro while a prep at Roselle Park High School in New Jersey. In her senior season she averaged 23.6 points and 14 boards a game. Ciak and the Devils will take their act to Tucson Friday, were they will take on Arizona at 7 p.m. ASU will be trying to end a four-game losing streak, a streak that has put them ahead of only Arizona (5-11, 0-6) in the Pac-10 standings. Ciak has a prediction. “ The streak will end here. After Friday night we will have ended the losing streak. We have practiced hard, and we’re ready for the Wildcats.” Ciak said. “I’ve got too many friends who play down there to lose to them.” Stephens echoed the same victory prediction for Friday’s game. ’’Since Coach McHugh has been here we haven’t lost to “them. I don’t think the girls want to start either. We want to be 3-Qagainst Arizona,” she said. Ciak Said she’s looking for a good game from Arizona but added, “We’ll win. Were pumped, and were definitly due.” Hoops Doyouknow w iiat h appen s w hen y o u d o n ’t u s e State Press Cl a s s i f i e d Advertising? Nothing. Continued from page 13. success“, Olson said the Wildcat’s will treat this like any Pac-10 road game. at McKale Center and 101-73 at the UAC. , However, last year’s victory at ASU was UofA’s next opponent will be Stanford, not as easy as the score indicated, Olson who ended the Wildcats 14-game conference said. winning streak this season: “We played as well as we could in the first half,” he said. “We were lucky to go into the “There’s a possibilty they could be more locker room with the lead.” concerned with the game on Saturday Despite having strong support from against Stanford, but there is the rivalry Tucson fans and Phoenicians who would like and I dont think they’ll take us lightly,” to see an Arizona team achieve national Patterson said. Wednesday’s results 4. Oklahoma (16-2) beat Colorado 122-86. 7. North Carolina (17-3) beat Wake Forest 88-74. 9. Salon Hat (17-2) lost to Pittsburgh 82-79. 13. Nevada-Las Vegas (14-3) beat Utah Stale 94-68. 18. Kansas (183) beat Wichita Stale 8886. Affordable Phone Answering! STA TE P R E SS C M “ take them personally! national basketball association • No Equipm ent, to Buy o r Rent Wednesday’s results NEW & RECYCLED FASHIONS Philadelphta 120. Chicago 106 Detroit 105, Golden State 104 Indiana 103, Boston 94 ¿Dallas 11?. LA. Clippers 96 Utah 107, San Antonio 103 • No Service Calls • No Lost Messages Buy«Sell »Trade Thursday’s schedule Sacramento at New Jersey, 5:30 p.m. Indiana at Washington, 5:30 p.m. Denver at Miami, 5:30 p.m. L A Clippers at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at Utah, 7:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Portland, 8:30 p.m. I always find something funky and • No P uttin g Callers on HOLD diffèrent that I can't find anywhere • No B ig B ills else. I can change my wardrobe whenever I want to, so I don't get bored with my. clothes. Buffalo AMVOX Telephone Answering and Messaging Service. The Right Answer* ; Exchange is my favorite store in Tempe—or Los Angeles, Friday’s schedule or R io .. New York atPhoenix, 7:30 p.m. Sacramento at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Golden State at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m. Cleveland at Detroit, 6 p.m. San Antonio at Dallas, 6 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 6:30 p.m, Atlanta at Seattle, 3 p.m. Charlotte at L A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. ' Adrienne Parry Call: 86 6-1 984 national hockey league Wednesday's results 227 W. University Dr., Tempe 968-2557 Boston 2, Toronto 1, OT S t Louis 3, Hartford 3, tie Buffalo 6, Detroit 3 Pittsburgh 5, Winnipeg 4 Chicago 6, Edmonton 3 Thursday’s schedule St Louis at Boston, 5:35 p.m. Washington at Philadelphia, 5:35 p.m. Winnipeg at New York Islanders* 6:05 p.m. Quebec at Minnesota, 6:35 p.m. New York Rangers at Calgary, 7:35 p.m. Vancouver at Los Angeles, 8:36 p.m. p e rfe c t w ay to s ta rt y o u r day... BR EAKFAST AT T R IC K S Friday's schedule Montreal at Buffalo, 5:35 p.m. Toronto at Detroit, 5:35 p.m. Hartford at New Jersey, 5:45 p.m. Delicious, healthy food at reasonable prices. 6:30-9:30 a.m. T uesd ay- Friday Call these student representatives for more Info: check the listings Arizona at Arizona State, 7 p.m. Channel 3 and 27. KTAR 620, KCKY 1150 and KRDS 1190 Lute Olson Show, 6:30 p.m., Channel 27. ~965^4200T 7^ ~~ Call the Sun for additional information on Arizona State University intercol­ legiate athletics. The hotline features interviews with ASU coaches and student athletes as welt as scheduling and ticket information on ASU events The hotline is changed daily and updated night with m at otey'a raauita. Paul T ro p id ....... Paul Tees . . . . . . Mike Bergemann Mark Qershaw.. PeteBiOletto . . . Paul Haggerty.. Amy Hoffnwn .. Laura D avis__ Michael Korn . . . 833-3481 967-6809 966-4923 829-8258 892-2778 892-2778 968-3056 784-9862 784-9357 Heather Vaughn___ .. 784-0195 Tina Parisi ............... .. 784-0167 Judy Wallace........... ..899-0481 Joal Narnia............... ..838-1217 Misty Stolldorf.......... ..730-0226 Christy Gllm our___ .. 464-2409 Amie G ra u ............... .. 437-8151 Dana Scherer........... ..988-3056 Suzzana Martinson . .. 967-2481 Chris Westerland .. ...831-6990 Dawn D u ffy ........... . . . 947-9565 Michael Neuman... . . . 784-9626 JohnAedHorse . . . . . . 820-3600 Jodi Patterson....... . . . 951-2928 Dan Tierney....... . . . . 829-7239 Dave Tierney.......... Karri Carmody____ ...926-7920 FOR MORE INFO CALL ">• 829-6611 or 957-4400 GROUP TRAVEL SPECIALISTS. INC. H n | 114 E. 7th St. , 968-1114 stale Pww» Page 15 JhjjrSda^JaruiaryìójJM ^ Court decision allow s NCAA to keep secret files MISSION, Kan. (AP) — The NCAA’s ability to investigate schools might have ended abruptly if the Supreme Court had not protected its right to keep secret files, the NCAA’s chief enforcement officer said. In that sense, this recent Supreme Court decision was much more significant than the earlier, highly publicized case of Nevada-Las Vegas basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian, David Berst said Wednesday. “ If we had lost this second case, I think it would have had a chiding effect on our ability to conduct investigations,” Berst said in an interview. “It could have been very detrimental to our efforts.*’ By refusing to hear an appeal from the 5th U.S. Court of Appeals on Monday, the Supreme Court let stand the lower court’s decision involving the NCAA and the Texas open records law. A suit filed by the A.H. Belo Corp., owners of The Dallas Morning News and Dallas television station WFAA, against the NCAA and the Southwest Conference sought to force the NCAA to turn over records and documents involving the Southern Methodist football scandal. A state court ruled in favor of Belo, then the NCAA won a reversal at the appellate level. NCAA investigators have been at odds with news organizations in several states over open meetings or “sunshine laws,” and Berst said the high court’s decision is an important precedent. “I don’t think we could continue on if we had to face that kind of release of information in every state,” he said. “I would definitely say this is more important to us than the decision in the Tarkanian case.” The high court ruled 5-4 late last year that the NCAA did not violate Tarkanian’s constitutional right to due process in ordering Nevada-Las Vegas to suspend the basketball coach for two years. Tarkanian was not suspended while he appealed, and since then, the NCAA has delayed a decision on what punishment Tarkanian will eventually receive. “This case is more important because it involved the ability of media representatives to gain access to our official files, memos and documents during the course of our investigation,” Berst said. “We would have had to investigate and turn over the information to the public as we gathered it. I think that would have assured that we would have been unable to develop any significant infractions cases. “We believe we could operate quite well if we had lost the Tarkanian case. But in this case, if we had to give up our files and information as we gather it, I really don’t know how we could proceed.” The NCAA is hopeful the Supreme Court’s action will supercede efforts by news organizations to invoke sunshine laws in other states. D W Y E R ’S Simplified C ou rt R epo rtin g C e n te r E a rn $ 2 0 K to $ 3 0 K a y e a r Learn Court Reporting: $40/week Note Reading: $30/week Learn to read and write Court Reporting! Only night school in town! (602)730-1180 S j S & S f L . . . su i,e 25 EAT IT e* A L 'R s s o c ia tio n in t e r n a t io n a le d e s E tu d ia n ts e n S c ie n c e s E c o n o m iq u e s e t C o m e rc ia le s In t e r n a t io n a l A s s o c ia tio n o f S tu d e n ts in E c o n o m ie s a n d M a n a g e m e n t „\3 V » *US How can AIESEC g ive m e a world of business experience? How can AIESEC give m e business experience in a foreign land? AIESEC is a student-run non-profit organization th at offers its members contacts and training in national - and international businesses in the United States and 67 other countries in every com er of the world. Show u s your stuff. Well show you the world. AIESEC operates an international student exchange. We here in the United States are busy finding training Jobs for AIESEC members from foreign lands. They, in turn, are lining up jpbs for us in their countries. Each year we place over 350 foreign students with American offices, and they find an equal number ofjobs for us. What d oes AIESEC have to offer m e that other cam pus business organizations don't? AIESEC gets you involved in business, both national and international. Only AIESEC offers you the chance to make so many contacts with so many major corporations, or to train with an international company in a foreign land. With AIESEC. you can see the world before you go out into the world. How long would I work abroad? From six weeks to longer than 18 months. Jobs range from accounting to finance to marketing to economics and beyond. Where would I live? AIESEC members there would help set you up. AIESEC provides housing, insurance, transportation, and visas—even, helps you with your social life. What if I d on t want to train in another country? Many AIESEC members choose to stay in the U.S. They gain invaluable experience and business contacts when they approach companies to persuade their top management to participate in AIESEC's program. Vi PRICE on Homemade Onion Rings w/purchase of Sandwich & Drink 1044 S. Terrace • T em pe • 921-7575 The AFTERM ATH APPAREL • CO. UNISEX C lothing • C reep ers D r. M artans »Jew elry & Accessories What does it take to becam e an AIESEC member? A willingness to participate! We re looking for doers and leaders. No special grade averages are required. Wé will ask you to pay dues for membership and activities. ORIENTATION MEETING FRIDAY JANUARY 27TH 4:00 P.M. MEMORIAL UNION ARIZONA B ROOM C o rn e rsto n e Plaza 2nd Floor 437-5188 m V T S D A f I f V SPECIAL N I C H T f / LD l l ION Featuring... DAN HAYES G etaw oddof business experience with AIESEC. I Thursday, January 26 Phy. Sci B -100 7:30 p.m. Sponsored by: Cam pus Crusade for Christ Stale Pieu. Page 16 M artin to trade football for a baseball bat By DEAN GYORGY State Press Key injuries have taken some steam out of the Sun Devil baseball express, but the track is still laid, and the first tie is one day away. Broken bones suffered Tuesday in the wrists of starters Steve Willis and Eric Helfand have the Devils scrambling to prepare for the season opener at 2:30 p.m. Friday a t Packard Stadium. “ When it first happened, I think everybody was a little down,” senior captain Kevin Higgins said. “But we had a little te a m m eetin g a f te r p ra c tic e (Tuesday), and just decided everybody else is going to have to turn it up a notch to make up for their loss.” The abilities of Willis and Helfand will undoubtedly be missed, but there are a number of people and possibilities to plug in during their absence. ASU coach Jim Brock said Wednesday that sophomore Steve Martin will replace Willis at first base. Martin, a wide reciever for the Sun Devil football team, was originally recruited for both football and baseball, but an injury suffered just before the the Rose Bowl game in 1987 kept him off the diamond until now. Martin had been working at the middle infield positions, and must now learn the mechanics of first base. He batted .BOOas a senior at Tucson Saguaro High School. “ Even before the injuries, we felt Martin was among the top nine offensive players,” Brock said. “He has very good bat speed, runs very Well, and is a great competitor.” There are three candidates to replace Helfand a t catcher; sophomores Jim Henderson, Tucker Hammargren, and freshman Dave Robson. Brock said there are 11 games, including junior varsity contests, before the team travels to play Florida State, Feb. 4 and 5, In that time, under the close scrutiny of the Sun Devil coaches, all three will get playing time and the opportunity to emerge as players. Helfand had great knowledge of the pitching staff, and the coaches had confidence in his game-calling ability. Without him, pitching coach Dub Kilgo said he will have to call the pitches from the dugout, which is not as effective as from behind the plate. “The hardest part about opening day is the loss of our starting catcher (Helfand), because he was a big part of our pitching staff,” Kilgo said. “ I feel that a t the start of the season anyway, we’re going to be somewhat hampered. I would guess somewhere around a two-run differential when we change catchers initially, but before long we hope to narrow that gap a little bit.” The early prediction is that Willis will miss six conference games, and Helfand will miss 12 because everyone heals at different rates. Higgins said he broke the sam e bone as Helfand did, the navicular, in his first year at Harbor Junior College. Higgins’ cast was off in three weeks, and he was playing within a month. Helfand is expected to be out eight to 12 weeks. For Willis, sitting on the sidelines may be just as painful as the injury itself. “ It's going to be really, really tough, especially since it’s my last year of college baseball,” he said. “Injuries aré just part of the game, and I’ve been fortunate up to this point because this is the first time I ’ve been hurt. But I’ve been working really, hard this year, making some changes in my swing, and that makes it hard.” Crow d______ Continued from pag« 13. office. “There were very few student tickets sold,” Patterson said. “I guess there will be less than 1,000 (ASU) students in the section. “This is very disheartening to a team that has worked so hard. I’m disappointed that there is not better student support.” The remainder of the ASU student tickets will be sold to the general public at the box office before the game. UofA will once again have the opportunity to snag the tickets. “There will be UofA people in our student section next to our band,” the coach said. Patterson said he did not understand why students did not seize the opportunity to not only get a chance to see a state rivalry, but see a nationally-ranked basketball team in action. Even though there was a setback to the marketing attack, the basketball coach is excited that there will most likely be more maroon and gold than the red and blue of the UofA in the stands. “This is a real departure from the past,” Patterson said. “ It is always nice to play in front of a big crowd—it is always nice to play in front of a crowd th a t’s rooting for you. ” He added that this will be one of the first years that ASU will have the home-court advantage. Only 500 student tickets were available to the Wildcat fans, said Larry Woo, accounting clerk in the ticket office. But UofA head basketball coach Lute Olson said his supporters could have utilized additional tickets. “From what I understand, not that many tickets Were allotted to us,” he said. “ We’re hoping that they (UofA fans) found some tickets someplace else.” ASU was only provided with a mere 100 tickets for the upcoming contest against the Wildcats in Tucson Feb. 23. Mahoney said the ASU-UofA matchup in the UAC was also a sellout last year, but only 12,785 people Showed up for the Jordan reaches milestone PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Chicago’s Michael Jordan scored his 10,000th NBA point Wednesday night in the Bulls’ game against the Philadelphia 76ers, reaching the career milestone in fewer games than all but one other player in NBA history. Jordan, who started the game despite a sore knee, hit an 8-foot bank shot with 5:39 to play in the fourth period to give him 33 points in the game and exactly 10,000 points in his NBA career. When the feat was announced over the public address system, Jordan received a minute-long standing ovation. The game was Jordan’s 303rd. Wilt Chamberlain reached the milestone in 236 games. 101-73 Wildcat victory over the Sun Devils. A ft« the game, Olson said he was upset that tickets were distributed for $1 each if bought in lots of 20 to attract a larger ASU crowd. If the tickets had been sold at face value, Olson said there would have been a larger number available to the general public, and more UofA fans would have made the trip to see the game. “ I think it’s unfortunate, if there are people who want to watch the game, to not sell the tickets to them,” Olson said. “ I think it would be nice for both teams to have a full house, regardless of the distribution. Also during that game, a few ASU fans shouted obscenities and personal remarks at former UofA guard, Steve Kerr (now wearing a Phoenix Suns jersey). The University made a formal apology to the Tucson school for the embarrassing behavior. Sophomore and Junior Women Chamberlain and the Los Angeles Lakers’ Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who did it. in 318 games, are the only players to reach 10,000 in their first four seasons. Jordan easily would have been in that category if he had not missed 64 games of his second season because of a foot injury. Hersey Hawkins, the 76ers’ rookie assigned to guard Jordan, led the NCAA in scoring last season at Bradley. I n V ie w ; a serious new magazine about the em otional and physical w ell-being o f w om en in college, is looking for sophom ore and junior w om en interested in posing for the cover. Asked Tuesday what he thought about 10,000 points, Hawkins said: “ it makes me think he’s in a league by himself. It would seem by now people would have come up with something to stop him. But he’s still a mystery.” Come w ith minimal make-up, everyday hairstyle and relaxed clothes. We are looking for attractive, confident, and intelligent real wom en. If interested, please call 965-6547 for tim e and place. Call no later than January 31 • Thank you for your participation. We look forward to hearing from you. $1°° O F F * Any Purchase of 2 Scoops or More At wizards we custom-blend ice ere. flavors, choosing vanilla or chocolate ice cream, or yogurt. We add your choice of our fruits, nuts, candies, cookies and special items, blending your combination into a personal ice cream flavor — served in a waffle cone or basket. Offer expires February 2, 1989 WE DELIVER 966-0022 937 E. Broad' SE Comer Broadway & Rural, T< Beside Wherehouse Records & 1 State P ro s Page 17 ■■¡I ■■m classifieds LINER RATES__________ ________________ 15 words o r less is $3.00 per day fo r 1-4 days ~ $2.75 per day fo r 5-9 days $2.50 per day fo r 10 days & ud (15C each additional word) The firs t 2 words are capitalized. No hold face or centering VISA CLASSIFICATIONS: 1 {MasterCard; FOR CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES AND FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL: 965-6731 CLASSIFIED ATTRACTIONS and ask fo r PEGGY MCGINN Classified Advertising M anager OR STERLENE MORRIS Classified Adviser Free B irthday Ads: Limit 20 words; must show proof o f birthday. $1 V alen tine tovellnes: Make an everlasting impression. Deadline 2-9-89 at 4:30 p.m.. Rental/Sale Special: Apartments, townhouses, AUTOMOBILES FURNITURE CONSTRUCTION CAREERS lecture by Mr. Reed Neilson o f Bechtel. The Depart­ ment of Construction invites you this Friday, January 27, at 6 p.m . in the Pima Room (MU). Free food. 1986 VW GTI. W hite/gray interior, air, Alpine stereo, disc brakes, 5-speed, $8750/offer. 759-9338. 42” DRAFTING Table. Mayline. Like new, $75. 984-1863. DO YOU know Jesus? W ould you like to know Jesus? Call First Christian Church, 838-2424. DREAM INTERPRETATION Workshop Saturday, January 30, 2-4:30. Bring a dream to work w ith, $12. C laire Le Normand, 945-9572. MINI BIBLE Studies available. Call Fellow­ ship of Christian Students, 838-2424. SPIRAL PERMS. Lasting, flowing curls. Triangular perms fo r th a t high-tech, futur­ istic, crimped look. $39. 435-1030. VALENTINE’S HORSE and carriage rides for 2 in romantic Old Towne Scottsdale, Friday-Tuesday. $22. 947-5741. For those w|io love to dariceJ ^ Tempo's First Dance Jam at Tem pe C om m unity Center, Friday, January 2 7 ,7 :3 0 p.m. All kinds of riiuslc in a casual atmosphere. 1987 VW Cabriolet convertible. Sparkling white. 16,000 miles, 5-speed, air, AM/FM cassette. One year factory warranty. $12,399. Ann, 957-4100 day, 864-4797 home. 83 HONDA Civic, 4 door, great for student, 100,(too miles, new interior and airconditioning, runs great. Come see, close to ASU; $2500. Sharon, 731-3604 days, 946-4534 nights, 84 MUSTANG GT Convertible. 31,000 m iles, 5 lite r V8, air-conditioning, charcoal gray, power w indows. $8000. Jeff, 921-3540. GS850 SUZUKI, 1980, w ith windjammer and accessories, shaft drive, very clean. $875. 926-0761 after 5 p.m. REMQTE AUTO Alarm system- key chain remote control, With flashing red LED ind ica to r, chirp,, in te rio r microphone s e n ^ in te rio r shock sensor, and dverride switch, lifetim e warranty, new in box, *U.S. made, cost $410, must sell $159. 893-8774. Classified liner ads can begin 1 DAY a fte r they are placed (if placed before noon). MOTORCYCLES 84 YAMAHA FJ600. Very clean, fast, dependable. New tires, brakes, battery. W ith cover, helmet, and more. Call 897-0040. 86 HONDA Spree. Excellent condition, $350, includes basket and lock. 893-6766, message. For M ore Info Calf 274-5432 Donations Accepted AUTOMOBILES 1968 PONTIAC LeMans. 100% original, immaculate condition. Runs excellent. A sking $2600. L is a , 967-5278 o r 831-7932. , 1973 SUPER Beetle VW, new tires, new paint, nice student car. $2000. 966-5881. 1974 SUPER Beetle convertible. Larger engine, new interior, needs new top, otherwise excellent condition. $2700/offer. 496-0655. 86 YAMAHA Scooter. 80cc, red, runs great, w ith helmet, $450. 966-0850, Kristen. BICYCLES 1988 COLNAGO w ith a ll Campy compo­ nents. Includes one pair o f Nisi racing wheels. W ill sell separately. 833-4929, ask for Andy, evenings. MAN’S 10-SPEED bike 27” . Aluminum hubs/crank. New, $179. Asking $100. Jeff, after 5, 829-8099.________________ NISHIKI OLYMPIC 12-speed, 27” , good condition. Must sell, $150/offer. 443-8434. FURNITURE 12" BLACK and white television, 13" color television, platform bed, wicker chest. Best offer. 820-4044. $100 DOWN for townhomes near campus. Save thousands -Y rent? Greg, Realty Executives, 423-3605. TICKETS 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo. Den/ bedroom, am enities, upgraded. C all 391-2935, evenings. rows. CLASSIFIEDSWORK. Use one today!! COMPUTERS EPSON GENEVA 120K, great condition lots of software (W Star, Portable Cal), p rin te r available. P rice negotiable. 943-2844. USED COMPUTERS! Computer M ulti System s, Tem pe (n ext to B uffalo Exchange), 225 W. University. 966-1388. WE BUY/SELL used computers. Compu­ ter M ulti Systems, Tempe (next toB uffalo Exchange). 225 W. U niversity. 966-1388. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 25” COLOR television. Floor model, walnut finish, $100, must sell. Ray. 254-1412. GOLDEN'S HEALTH Spa membership. I w ill pay transfer fee, you just take over monthly payments of $35. Membership good until May 1990. Call 963-8576 and ask for Cteig. HERTZ CAR rental certificates, good in any city, $35 to $45 fo r 3 days, mid size to fu ll size car. Call Dave, 464-8938. KINGSIZE WATERBED, includes under dresser, foam padding, bookcase headboard, $75. Angie, 461-9747, leave message. 2 BROWN lounge chairs and ottoman, 1 Chinese-red lounge chair, 2 end tables, cocktail table. Electronic robot, 19" high, walks, talks, sic. Also 1 indoor dried eucalyptus tree. Reasonable. 640-2041. i960 HONDA Accord, very good condilion, front wheel drive, econom ical, auto­ matic transm ission, power-brakes, power­ steering, air-conditioning (tV i years old), 4'?oor' r®d, new carpet, 2 studded snow tires plus spare. AM/FM cassette. Call Dave, 943-3654 day/evening. 3 PIECE sectional sofa, hide-a-way, earth tone colors. Excellent condition, $250. Wade, 968-7925. ■ STP 420 book for sale. “ Introduction to Statistical Methods and Data Analysts,” 3rd Edition by Lyman O tt. $25/offer. 829-8780, leave message. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE SYNTHESIZER: Roland Juno-1. Complete MIDI, custom sounds, m int condition. Includes stand. $550 or makd offer. 829-0608. 1981 CHEVY C itation. Good transporta­ tion. new tires and brakes. $1988. 893-2556. 1981 NISSAN Maxima, original owner, 69.000 m iles, loaded. $4680. Dave, 966-5881. 1982 SCIROCCO 5-speed. Great shape, new tires, excellent stereo, sway-way bars. $3900 732-^567. 1983 DODQE Shelby Charger. Only 30.000 mites, extra clean, air, AM/FM stereo, $370Q/offer. 894-0837, Julie, leave message. 1985 PLYMOUTH Horizon. 38,000 miles, 4 door, autom atic, perfect condition,$2900. 784-8318. SKIS- OUN 870 w ith Tyrolia bindings. Great interm ediate skis, only 3 seasons old. $125. 966-9122. Cancellations: Liner ads must be canceled before noon. 1 day prior to publication. No refunds w ill be given. State Press Errors: Check your ad the FIRST day it runs. Call 965-6731 w ith any corrections, before noon. The State Press is only responsible fo r the firs t day the ad runs incorrectly Cor­ rected ads will be extended one day. Changes called in after the firs t day will not qualify fo r a make-good. By Mail: State Press Classifieds Matthews Center. Rm 15 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Please enclose payment w ith ad. By Phone: 965-6731 Payment w ith VISA/MC only. $6 minimum on all phone orders. The State Press reserves the righ t to reject any a d v e r t i s i n g copy submitted. Customer Errors: Corrections must be made before noon. Compensation w ili: n o t be given fo r customer error. Classified display ads can begin 2 DAYS after they are placed (if placed before 1 0 a jru REAL ESTATE APARTMENTS LOW, LOW Down. Hud homes are selling fast. We specialize. James Murray ERA Carew, 897-9000. M - - II TOWNHOUSE. MCKELLIPS and M iller. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, wet bar, vaulted ceiling, double garage. No qualifing, 10%% FHA. $5000 CTM. 947-5797. BEAUTIFUL CONDOS, townhouses, start­ ing at $30,000. ERA Carew is working for you, 897-9000._____________ BIGGEST HOME, best price. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 story. James Murray ERA Carew, 897-9000, 921-2482. CONGRATULATIONS JAMES MurrayM ulti-m illion dollar producer in Tempe area for ERA Carqw. COUNTRY CLUB living at its best. Gorgeous 2 bedroom condos. 4 blocks to ASU. Start $49,500. Realty Executives, Pat/Kathy. 893-2888, 730-0130, 893-1722. EXECUTIVE HOME, Northeast Mesa on 4,2 acres. ERA Carew, Frank Richardson, 897-0222,831-3106. — Ideal fo r Students •Affordablestudios from $295 utilities included •G reat locationdose to ASU •Privacy1-level apartments mature landscaping MARIANNA APARTMENTS 1214 E. Orange 9 6 6 -8 5 9 7 ASU STUDENTS welcome. % m ile, 2 bedroom, appliances, near new, water paid. RSVP Realty, 838-3898. 2 MASTER bedrooms, 2 bath condo, Questa Vida. Bike to ASU. A ll appliances included. $66,500. Patty, Century 21 Realty Plaza^93V i30& & b 3 BEDROOM, Broadway and Rural area. Always immaculate, m ust see to appreci­ ate. O riginal owners. $79,900. David Cam pbell, Tradew inds, 820-3333 or 961-3190. Ads may run fo r any length o f time. Canceled ads w ill be credited to your account. Sorry, no refunds. REAL ESTATE PAPAGO PARK Condo. Veteran, assume VA loan, no down. Six months mortgage paid. 835-6146, Bonnie. WAREHOUSE SALE: Desks from $49; typing tables from $15; chairs from $5; computer tables, files, office supplies, plus lots more. Arizona O ffice Liquidators, 4010 S. 43rd PI., between 40th and 48th St., north of Broadway. 437-2224. MORTON- DOWNEY. 1st lo u r $3035. 829-8503. HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: in Person:' C ash. C heck , ( wi t h guarantee card). MC, or VISA Matthews Center Basement (South End) M—F. 8 am .—5 p.m. North MU inform ation Desk M—F. 9 a m —2:30 p.m. PAPAGO PARK, 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Upstairs u nit, many upgrades. CokfweH Banker. Dana, 839-8200. KING SIZE Waterbed, complete- matress, liner, heater, dark brown, extra thick padded side rails (custom), $100/offer. 820-5448 or 496-7141 (message). 1980 CHEVY CIO, 4x4, dark green, AM/FM cassette, good condition, great engine» re-built transm ission (1987), new carpet (1985), new front drive lin e (1986 low miles) Pathfinder HD tire s plus spare, white fiberglass shell- sliders, front, and sides w ith light. C all Dave 943-3654 day/evening. 2 KING size waterbeds, nice. Make an offer 8 9 4 - 0 2 8 8 _____________ MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FUTON BED. w ith 12 drawer pedestal. Queen. 4 months old. Excellent condition. $350/offer. Oak kitchen table and 4 chairs. Excellent condition. $175/offer. 897-6769. AIRLINE TICKET one way to Denver. Continental. Must be used before Febru­ ary 14. 784-0668, Mark. HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? condos, homes; 10 days for S10, 15 words or less. ANNOUNCEMENTS . Announcements 2. Autos 3. Trucks 4. Motorcycles 5. Bicycles 6. Furniture 7. Tickets For Sale 8. Miscellaneous For. Sale 9. Real estate ForSale 10. Apartments For Rent •11. Townhomes/Condos For Rent 12 . Homes For Sale 13. Rental Sharing 14. Business Opportunities 15 Help Wanted 16. instruction 17. Jewelry 18. Free Lost/Found 19. On-Campus 20. Personals 21. Pets 22. Services 23. Transportation 24. Travel 25. Typing/Word Processing 26. Wanted 27. Adoptions 28. Miscellaneous AT 1709 N. 25th Place. Large 1 bedroom, pool, appliances/water included, $279. ; J9% b3471,9Sfr41t3. ^ '' APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM, free u tilitie s and redecorat­ ing. Safe, very quiet. $375/unfurnished, $400/furntshed. S pecials. 967-6620. Landmark, 1 BLOCK ASU. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, pool, no pets. $300/month, including utilities. 1339 S. Sunset Drive, Apartment 9. 921-1084, 967-3658. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, washer/dryer, walk to ASU. $400. January % o ff. 490-0562. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, Broadway/Cotlege. Over 1000 square feet, patio, vaulted c e ilin g s , p o o l, co v e re d p a rk in g . $500/month. 844-5900, Ken K. ASU AREA: Studios, 1 and 2 bedrooms, $260 and up. Pool, no dogs. 966-8838. BEAUTIFUL NEW large 1 and 2 bedroom. Walk to ASU. Pool, laundry room. One block South of U niversity on 8th Street, Cape Cod Apartments. Phone 968-5238 fo r special. CLEAN, QUIET 1 bedroom apartment dose to ASU. Lots o f am enities. Hidden Glen Apartments, 968-8183. LARGE 2 bedroom, 2 bath, upstairs unit in Mesa. $400. After 7 p.m ., 890-0241. SPACIOUS 2 bedroom, 2 bath $475 (indudes utilities). One/tenth m ile to ASU. 910 E. Lemon. 966-8704. UNIVERSITY TOWERS $274/m onth, sublease. Sean, 644-1155. Pay 4 month total upfront or m onthly. ASK FOR SPECIALS REAL ESTATE U S . G O V E R N M E N T SALE Only xh Mile from ASU All Areas—Anyone Can Buy ..: Special Terms—No Escrow Fecs^ I CALL PAUL...For A Free Let! BR/BA 2/1 3/2 2/2 ÌH 4/2 4/2 DOWN SI,400 $1,700 $2,300 $3,100 $1,900 $3,400 PRICE $38,000 $44,600 $56250 $62,000 $61,900 $77,700 Financing: 10% APR, 30 year, must qualify. PAUL PASTORE, 831-0322 ________ REALTY EXECUTIVES________ APARTMENTS APARTMENTS H as ju st been redecorated. V er­ tical blinds, ceiling fans, choice o f new carpet, 3 p o o ls, laundry facilities. 2 bd flats & 2 bd townhouses. The Fountains 1028 E. Orange 967-0409 ! 950 S. Terrace Road, Tempe 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 ir Page 18 State Press Thursday, January 26,1989 TOW NHOMES/ CONDOS RENTAL SHARING LUXURY 2 bedroom condo. Security system, attached garage, fireplace, pool, ja cu zzi, w eightoom . A va ila b le 2/1. 831-5628. PAPAGO PARK Luxury condo. 2 bedroom w ith loft, all appliances, available March 1st. $80Q/month, $400 deposit. 968-6969, evenings. Vi MILE ASU. 2 and 3 bedroom townhomes. W asher/dryer and much more. 967-4908, Pat. s B ea u tifu l C o nd o m inium s F o r R an t From $875 Lavishly furnished. ALL 2 bedroom, 2 bath condos conveniently located within minutes of ASU. This studentoriented community features: •Scandinavian Furniture •Pooi/Jacuzzi/Sauna •W eight Room/Volleyball •R ec Room w/BIg Screen TV •Extra Lush Landscaping Perfect for Roommate W orthington Place 9 6 8 -9 9 2 3 6 16 S . H a rd y , T am p a 1 Mock north ot University HOMES EOR RENT FREE CABLE. Furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath, garage, spacious, quiet, clean. ASU close. $700/month. 581-0541. WINTER VISITORS. Lovely furnished, equipped Chandler home on monthly basis at low rent. 839-1446. RENTAL SHARING 1 OR 2 females needed fo r roommates. 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo in Papago Park by Devil House. Quiet, clean and spacious. $250/month plus u tilities. Already fur­ nished. Cali 829-9437. 1 OR 2 female roommates wanted. Spacious 2 bedroom/2 bath near campus. $245. 966-0850, Kristerf. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath apartment within walking distance of ASU. (Quadrangles Apartments). $286/month, % utilities. 966-7759. 2 ROOMMATES needed, share townh ou se n e a r A S U . A lt a m e n itie s $250/m onth p lu s Vk u tilitie s . C all 894-6091. ASU FACULTY needs childcare 3 days/ week in exchange fo r living accomoda­ tions (own living room, bedroom, garage) and board. Call Maryann at 839-9820, 965-4868. FEMALE NON-SMOKER, great apart­ m ent. M ust se e l F u rnished. Own bedroom/bath. W asher/dryer, fireplace, pool. 10 m inutes from ASU. $290/month plus Vi utilities. C all Rachel, 969-8750. Leave message. HELP WANTED FEMALE ROOMMATE. Clean, quiet home, 2 bedroom, 1M* bath, washer/dryer, pool, $230/m onth, Vfe u tilitie s . Call 921-3225. FEMALE TO share large apartment, Meri­ dian Comers. Own bedroom and bath, $250/month. Cheriese, 967-2302. FURNISHED ROOM to rent, Dobson Ranch, 5 mites campus. Female, nons­ moker, $170/month, V* utilities. 838-5797. GRAD OR serious student to rent T bedroom, own bath. Pool, walk td ASU. $275/month. 894-0288. HAYDEN SQUARE one bedroom avail­ able. $30Q/month. 966-4699. LARGE, QUIET furnished room, private entrance, kitchenette, private bath. Avail­ able for quiet, serious grad student. ASU 3 m iles. 831-7264. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES GYM FOR sate, well equipped for boxihg and weight training. Ideal fo r Physical Education major for part-tim e work. Owner retiring. Phone 279-1314. ‘ HELP WANTED AAA PART-TIME job, full-tim e pay. Flexi­ ble hours, great for students. One block from campus. Contact Mike, 894-2049 or 968-7013. ARTIST WANTED to do t-shirt/poster design for Old Town Tempe Spring Festi­ val of the Arts, to be held March 31, A pril 1 and 2 1989. If you're interested in subm it­ ting a design, please stop by the MAMA office at 520 S. M ill Ave, number 201, Tempe, between 9 a.m.-6 p.m. or can 967-4877. Deadline for. submission is Friday, February.3. MALE/FEMALE share quiet, dean home. Own bath, big walk-in closet. Washer/ dryer, fireplace, cable, storage. Must be cle a n , re sp o n sib le . N ear D obson/ Guadalupe. $235/month plus % utilities. 897-6769. ATTENTION SWIMMERS. Retail swim store needs part-tim e help, between 20 and 30 hours/week. Swimming back­ ground helpful. Please call fo r an appoint­ ment between 10 and 6, 264-7774. MALE/FEMALE Nonsmoker fo r own room and bathroom in 2 bedroom apartment. $250/month plus VS utilitie s. Pool, jacuzzi, and laundry; 1 m ile from campus. Wayne, 966-3466. BUSINESS AND COMMUNICATIONS MAJORS MALE UPPERCLASSMAN, nón-smoker, no pets. $20Q/month, u tilities included, furnished, washer/dryer. 967-3658 or 966-4550. Advertising firm needs an outgo ing, professional sales person to help with local promotions. Choose own schedule. NEED ROOMMATE. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, near ASU. $265 induding utilities. Stacy, 990-9545 after 5. Call 921-7755 for Personal Interview OWN ROOM, spacious, furnished condo. Complete with laundry, dishwasher, pod. 1VS miles to ASU. $195 p lu s utilities. 253-1210. ROOM FOR rent, new 3 bedroom Tempe house. Pool, garage, yard. Kevin, 838-2689, Brian, 730-3433. ROOM FOR rent in two bedroom townhome. Has backyard fo r laying out. Partly fum sihed, including washer/dryer, cable, and fu ll kitphen. Call 894-0374. ------- f ----------- -— ----------ROOM FOR rent Vi mite horn campus. Only $128 a month. First come basis. Call 966-0299, ask for Tom. ROOM FOR rent, furnished, great loca­ tion, Hayden/Roosevelt. Grad student, fem ale, non-smoker wanted. 946-7505. ROOM M ATE W ANTED fo r new 2 bedroom, 2Vi bath townhouse. Washer/ dryer. $225/month. 844-7509. ROOMMATE NEEDED, 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. W asher/dryer. $200/month plus share utilities. 838-6743. ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom condo in Southeast Scottsdale. Close to ASU/SCC. W asher/dryer, cable, pet okay. $250 plus Vi utilities. 947-1705, leave message. TO SHARE a room, Condo, dose to ASU. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pod, jacuzzi, cable, furnished very nice. Including utilities, $200/month. 966-8989, Jason. TOWNHOUSE. COZY private lo ft. Share spacious kitchen, living, and dining room plus utilitie s w ith 2 ASU mate students. 1 m ile North ASU. $275/month. 957-8271. HELP WANTED ATTENTION ALL students! Leam to sell and earn $6-$8/hour. 23 hours weekly, near campus. Have fun.w hile you learn professional sales techniques. C all 966-8788 for January openings. BANQUET SERVERS needed immediate­ ly for days, nights and weekends. A ll valley locations. Must have black and whites. C all Executemps at 234-1600. CAMELVIEW CINEMA is now hiring a part-tim e concession attendant/cashier. Prim arily needed to work 3. weekday afternoons, 12-5:30. Perfect job fo r student, flexible scheduling. Apply 'in person, 70th Street, North o f Camelback Road, behind Dillards in Scottsdale. CORK’N CLEAVER excepting applica­ tions fo r lunch waitresses and lunch hostesses, w ill-train. Shorts shifts, conve­ nient hours, fun atmosphere. Concern w ith appearance, personality, and reliabili­ ty are im portant. Apply, in person MondayFriday, 2 to 5 p.m . or by appointment, 5101 N. 44th Street (44th andCam elback), 952-0585. COUNSELORS- 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 follow ing: tennis, W .S.I., sailing, w aterski, softball, basketball, soccpr, lacrosse, arts and crafts, photography, horseback, dance, piano, drama, ropes, camp craft, gym nastics. Call or w rite: Camp Vega. Box 1771, Duxbury, Massa­ chusetts 02332. (617)934-6536. We w ill be holding on-campus interviews: January 30, room 217, 1 p.m.-6 p.m ., Memorial * Union Building and January 31, room 219, 11 a.m.-6 p.m ., Mem orial Union Building. COUNTER HELP, lunch and weekends. Double Rainbow Ice Cream, 491-0117, ask for Mrs. Carlson. HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP W ANTED COUNSELORS- BOYS camp in Berkshire M ountains,-' W estern M assachusetts. Good salary, room and bdard, travel allowance, beautiful modern facility, must love children and be able to teach one of the follow ing: tennis, W .S.I., sailing, waterski, baseball, basketball, Soccer, lacrosse, wood, arts and crafts, rocketry, photography, archery, pioneering, ropes, piano, drama. Call o r w rite: Camp Winadu, 5 Glen La., Mamaroneck, NY 10543. (914)381-5983. We w ill be holding oncampus interviews: January 30, room 2 i 4, 1 a.m.-6 p.m ., Memorial Union Building and January 31, room 216,11 a.m.-6 p.m. , Memorial Union Building. GREAT JOB for students: Valley Shopper is looking for part-tim e customer service reps/telem arketers for 3-8 p.m. shift. Must be motivated and organized. Great job and pay. Call Mary, 433-7355 PART-TIME WORK, full-tim e pay Great summer and school year opportunity for those who qualify. $5/hour plus bonuses. Must havé neat personal appearance and be able to work 4-9 p.m . Monday-Friday. For personal interview call Mr Forman at 921 -2897. CUSTOMER SERVICES representative. M ust enjoy com m unicating w ith people. Evening hours, fun environment. Excellent part-tim e job fo r students. $5-$6/hour. 966-8788. DAY S ITTE R , com panion needed Monday-Friday for 70 year old woman in nursing home. W ill arrange hours around your schedule. Between 3-4 hours daily. Duties include conversation, rocking and loving companionship. Starting salary $5/hour, N. Scottsdale area. Call Robin or Lynn, 391-1580. DOES YOUR club or organization need a fundraiser? I need a club to distribute my publication on-campus February ts t and 2nd. The fee w ill be $500 cash. I need an organized, efficient d u b to respond imme­ diately. No flakes. Call 805-683-3342 today fo r details. EARN $$$ w hile going to college. Become a VAXA distributor. VAXA amino acids aid in relief o f chronic pain,. PMS , allergy sinus, depression. Also weight loss, body building and basic health maintenance. All natural. No inventory or distributors. Fee. 948-7799. ENGINEER TECHNICIAN (mechanical), 2nd or 3rd year. Mechanical engineering o r technology. Some related experience desired. Must be available 12 months at a minimum of 20 hours per week between the hours of 8 a.m.-5 p.m . Call 956-8200. $5/hour and up. ★ EXTRA MONEY ★ !s nice, but you can help people too: Earn $ 120 + a m onth S A F E R ,„ F A S T E R P L A S M A D O N A T IO N O N L Y A T A B I C E N T E R S DUE TO A U T O M A T E D P R O C E D U R E . $5 bon u s to h e w d on o rs o n firs t d o n a tio n w ith th is ad. A sk about a d d itio na l Saturday). bonuses. (M onday- University'Plasma Center , A sso cia ted B ioscie n ce, Inc. ' 1015 S. R ural Rd. GREAT SUMMER opportunity, Jewish summer residential camp seeks excep­ tional young adults for staff and specialists positions. Capital camps is located in the heart o f the scenic C atoctin Mountains only one hour from the W ashington D.C* area. The camp has over 300 acres of beautiful forest, hiking trails and lakes. If you are interested in the challenges and excitm ent of working w ith campers in grades 3-10, or if you have & specialty in a particular area, we want you on pur team. Good salaries, great fun. Our director w ill be on campus during the week o f February 6th. For more inform ation and an appoint­ ment, call collect 301-656-camp! HELP WANTED. We need banquet servers, bartenders, cashiers, waiters/ waitresses. Work around your schedule. Must have phone and transportation: Call im m ediately, 831-0145. Same week pay. LARGE MARKETING company moving into your area, needs, approximately 50 students to handle m ail. Send SASE to K.C.R. Products, PO box 21451, Pikesville. MD 21208. Arizona Renaissance Festival needs people to help the King's Court eat, drink and be merry! Over 100 will be employed for weekend work February 18-March 19 in food preparations and serving, safety services, parking and m aintenance. Apply ¿n person at the festival site only between 1 and 6 p.m. Tuesday, January 24, Friday, January 27 and Sunday, January 29. 7 miles east of Apache Junction on U.S. Highway 60 (Apache Trail). No telephone calles. EOE. MEDICAL OFFICE needs fuH and parttim e help. Must type. Apply in person, 7701 E. Indian School Road, Suite E. MODELING: HAVE questions about modeling? Call Diana Baines Workshop for a free facts sheet on how to break into modeling. 95S4588, Pam. MODELS NEEDED. A ll body types required. C all Linda between 11-4, 894-0508. NATIONAL MARKETING firm seeks ambi­ tious, mature student to- manage oncampus prom otions for top national companies this school year. Flexible hours w ith earnings potential to $2500. Call Lisanne or Rebecca P. at 1-800-592-2121. PART-TIME WAREHOUSE person. Some heavy lifting . Must have good driving record. $4/hour. Apply in person at Metro Furniture, 517 E. Camelback Road. SALES LADY, Career fashion boutique. Hours flexible to your schedule. For appointm ent call Nancy, 253-2890, Towne Square Shop, Phoenix Sheraton. ADJUNCT FACULTY Nationally known university with satellite campuses seeks adjunct faculty to teach evening and weekend courses in Arizona. Master's degree required, with substantial portion of doctoral coursework completed in busi­ ness, public'administration, or related field. Reply with curri­ culum vitae to Dr. Richard Thompson, 10640 North 28th Drive, Suite C-205, Phoenix, AZ 85029. EOE/MF. SITTER NEEDED Monday-Friday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m . for 5 and 8 year old in North Scottsdale. Must have reliable transporta­ tion. Starting salary $5/hour. Ask fo r Robin or Lynn, 391-1580. SIZZLING HOT p rofit $$. Sell exotic lingerie, no experience required. W rite: Private Passions, 8129 N. 35th Avenue, Suite 2-203, Phoenix, AZ 85051. STUDENTS: DISTRIBUTE Health Trek Products. No front money, no MLM, nice income. Contact: America’s Choice, P.O. Box 527. Chester, MD 21619. STUDENTS WANTED to hand out samples o f lecture notes in front of auditorium s on campus. We schedule you to work in between classes. $3 for 10 m inutes work. Call 829-6849 fo r informa­ tion, or apply at Student Book Center, 704 College Avenue. SUMMER JOBS outdoors. Over 5000 openings! National parks, forests, fire crews. Send stamp for free details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispeli, MT 59901. TESTERS NEEDED imm ediately. Must have 3.0 GPA. Carol, Disabled Student Resources, 5-1234. TUTORS: ENGLISH, math, accounting, science. "$5.20/hour.” Diverse popula­ tion. South- Mountain College, 24th Street and Breeline. 243-8189 (Liz). Tem pe 968-6139 EXCEPTING APPLICATIONS for counter help and drivers, fujl/part-tim e, day .or night. Earn up to $8/hour at Sammy B’s Pizza, 945-8850. EXPERIENCED DATA base programmer, C Language, part-tim e fo r 1 to 2 years. 230-4345 fo r Frank. EXPERIENCED BARTENDER for local neighborhood sports bar. 20-30 hours/ week, $8-$12/hour. Apply The Woodshed, 19 W. Baseline, 2 p.m .-4 p.m. only. MANAGER AND maintenance person to manage 96 unit complex close to ASU. Please Send resume to PO box 32862, Phoenix 85064. NOTETAKERS NEEDED im m ediately. Must have 3.0 GPA and very organized w riting. Sandy, Disabled Student Resources, 5-1234. ON-CAMPUS, STUDENT worker, half­ tim e, to help w ith weekly faculty/staff newspaper. Must work Tuesdays 11a.m . to 6 p.m ., other hours to be arranged. Typing o r word processing, driver’s license, proofreading ability. $4.09/hour. Apply in person at the News Bureau, ASB 112. SCOTTSDALE AIR Park insurance agen­ cy needs general office person to do computer input, generate leads, and other office functions. Must be dependable, versatile, and energetic. C all Tony, 991-4525. TUTORS NEEDED im m ediately. Areas in Business, Physical Sciences w ith strong math background, Communication and Spanish. Lisa or Alan, Disabled Student Resources, 5-1234. WANTED: VOLUNTEERS for the Arizona State Hospital. It you are interested, please contact Susan, 220-60t4. WE NEED enthusiastic people fo r full/parttim e positions as front desk clerks. Please apply in person, Q uality Inn, 110 and E lliot Road. . WESTERN RESERVE CHib Courtside Cafe. AM sh ift available fo r counter person. Free membership w ith employ­ ment. Apply in person, no cptls, 2140 E. Broadway, Tempe, 85282. EOE. A CCELER ATED ACCELER ATED ACCELER ATEP P R O F E S S IO N A L P R O F E S S IO N A L D EVELO PM EN T D EVELO PM EN T P R O F E S S IO N A L D EVELO PM EN T P ro fe ssio n a l o p p o rtu n itie s are currently available in the areas o f business and aviation. A naval officer w ill be on campus January 27 from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. to conduct interviews. There is no obligation in exploring these options. Call 1-800-228-8961 fo r an appointm ent, or stop by the Career Placement Center between classes. P ro fe ssio n a l o p p o rtu n itie s are currently available in the areas o f m edicine, nursins, and other health care specialties. A naval office r w ill be on campus at the Nursing College January 27 from 9 a.m.-1 p.m . to c o n d u c t interview s. There is no obligation in exploring these options. C all 1 -8 0 0 -2 2 8 -8 9 6 1 fo r an appointm ent, o r stop b y the Career Placement Center between classes. S E C U R IT Y S E C U R IT Y B E N E FIT S B E N E FIT S S E C U R IT Y B E N E FIT S TRAVEL TRAVEL TRAVEL V A R IE T Y V A R IE T Y V A R IE T Y / P ro fe ssio n a l o p p o rtu n itie s are currently available in the areas o f nuclear, mechanical, and electrical engineering. A naval o ffice r w ill be on campus January 27 from 9 a.rn.-4 p.m. to conduct interviews. There is no o b lig a tio n in exploring these options. Call 1-800-228-8961 fo r an appointm ent, or stop by the Career Placement Center betw een classes. Stale Press 19 INStRLJCTlON PERSONALS PRIVATE PILOT ground school. Course starting 1/26. Corporate Jets- Flight School, Scottsdale. 948-2400. MARGARET MARY? from Davis CA. Met you in drop/add line at engineering site last Friday. You were trying to add a (sociology?) course your friend was drop­ ping. Also aerobics MWF/10:40-11:30 How/when can we meet again? Please call Dave, 834-8269. CASH FOR gold, diamonds, sterling, etc. We have Sun Devil watches and Sparkies. M ill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. M ill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. CASH PAID. Jewelry of a ll kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion,- 921 S. M ill Ave., Tempe Center, 968-0074. TKS The Fraternity for Life Looking for friendship that u iill lost foreydr? Join SUNDEVIL LOGOWATCH, high-quality, super-thin, quartz movement. Excellent timekeeper. Free delivery, satisfaction g u a r a n t e e d , c o 1:6r b r o c h u r e . 800-44M-OGO. TRU KflPPfi CPSliONI Bush Info 968-2662 ABRACADABRA ALACAZAM! Now that we got your attention, call the Sigma Pi Rushline at 967-2818 to find out the magic of fraternity brotherhood. SIGMA PI Comedy Night at Rancho Los Palmas with Jimmy Bunn and the Farce Side: "Frankly, that’s the craziest thing I ever heard!” THE CLIMAX to a great Rush week w ill end at the Beta House with the annual trash can bash on Friday. Call 829-7363 for the bèst time you’ll ever have. THE GREEK Week Games Committee w ill meet at 9:45 on the Kappa Kappa Gamma floor today. UNCLE CHARLIE: Hey hot thing! Have a Happy 22nd Birthday! Lots of love, Beth, Marnie, and Scottie. ALL LADIES.of ASU: The Men of Sigma Phi Epsilon welcome you back and invite you to our rush blowout Friday night at the Sig Ep House- By far the best on the row! Delta Sigma PI Professional , Business Fraternity is having Rush Events all this week! AMERICAN SOCIETY fo r Personnel Adm inistration (ASPA) Rush Party, 7-9, Pizza Hut, 1030 E. Apache. Friday 1/27/89. ¡888888888888881888% S igm a S igm a S igm a S o ro rity S p rin g Rush 89 All events on Tri Sigma Floor For Rush info Call Becky 784-9270 CHUCK: HAPPY 20th! Expect strange and mysterious things to happen tomorrow! I love you! Maree. DELTA SIG J.B.- H it the slopes lately? Thanks for helping me out of the snow! P i Phi love. FIJI ROB: Roses are red, violets are blue. When are we going to make our big switchardo?? Let’s ge t muddy!! K.H. GORGEOUS GRADUATÉ Guy seeking "class act” coed to help m aintain "concentration.” Peter, Best C box 142. LADIES, the Men of Sigma Pi invite, you to the Little Sister rush party of the semester. This Sunday from 1-6, Minder Binder's is the place to be. For info call Mike at 967-2818. LEMONADE GIRL: Pizza Place around 10:45 TTh w ith brown hair, black jacket, glasses. Interested? Paul LOST: MY m orals, ethics, dignity, friends, and self-respect. If found please call B ill V. PFC. WANTED LA MANCHA athletic and racquet dubs are looking for enthusiastic, weK trained aerobic instructors. Successful applicants • w ill be strong, dependable, highly skilled, knowtedgable and paid top wages. Call 995-1234. RESEARCH ASSISTANCE. Largest library of information in U S. Toll-free hotline: 800-351-0222. BROKEN TOYS wanted fo r toy safety study. Toys must be intended fo r children ages 3-6 years old. Please call John, 968-9501. Student Publications GUIDE TO « GRAPHICS SERVICES WANTED SOMEONE to teach me the Japanese language. If interested call Beth, 784-9806. fo r 921-3109 TRANSPORTATION ALL STATES Driveaway- Cars available21 or older. 992-5200. SHARE THE RIDE! 4625 S. W endler Dr. #1.11 Tempe, A Z 85282 or call TRAVEL CRUISES UNLIMITED specializes in discounted student and group rates on fantastic cruises worldwide. Barefoot to luxurious! Excape with the greatest vaca­ tion value around! Free ticket delivery and bon voyage gifts! Unforgettable! Call the friendly cruise professionals toll-free: 1-800-GO-TO-SEA! Arizona's number 1 agency. (602) 438-9331 or 1-800-777-9331 ADO PTIO N ADOPTION. WARM, loving home ready to welcome newborn. Can provide good education, security. Please call attorneys Ravel and Lach collect 24 Hours at 408-288-7100. (A-169). c o m p o s it io n C om position includes design, la y o u t ty p e se ttin g , cam era w o rk and pasteup. Feel fre e to c o n ta c t us concerning th e se services. T Y P E S E T T IN Q W e have ty p e s e ttin g fa c ilitie s th a t o ffe r m ore th a n TOO d iffe re n t typ e s ty le s in sizes fro m to 7 4 p o in t ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. , Student discount. Call for more informa­ tion, 969-6954. P FEDERAL AND S ta te tax re tu rn s prepared, reasonable prices. Leave message, 897-6576. HEALTH INSURANCE- Major medical coverage. You need it, I got it. Reasonable rates. John Coleman, 998-3999. LET US do your d irty work for you. Pick-up, wash, dry, fold, and deliver your laundry. Very reasonable. The S o^box. Call 967-5433._______' __________ 8*^asst. QUALITY TYPING- proof-reading- editing next day guaranteed. 897-1038. a y m e n t B x o a lle n o a In t y p e s e t tin g a n d g r a p h i c d a a lg n . TELL YOUR SWEETHEART HOW MUCH YOU CARE, OR LET THAT SECRET SOMEONE IN ON THE SECRET IN THE Saturday, February 4th o n ly t48.HO m Includes: lift ticket, transpor- d Station (party bus). K RSVP by 1/28/89 e Call Brian R i Tuesday, February 14 • Only $1 B ring yo u r a d to eith er o f our 2 Convenient Locations: COME BY: M atthews Center Basement SERVICES 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. or our window in the MU 9 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. about the STATE PRESS . OR MAIL: the ad order below with a check or money order to: ASU STATE PRESS M atthews Center, Room 15 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 97 STATE PRESS VALENTINE AD ORDER WORD PROCESSING— $1.50 per page. Resumes* design, editing, & laser printing available. Call 921-3770 evenings & weekends. W ORD PR O C ESSIN G , s e c re ta ria l services. 23 years experience. Student discount. SW corner, M iller and Chapar­ ral. 994-8145. STATE PRESS VALENTINE’S DAY PERSONALS SHORT OF time? I can help: Reasonable. Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academic. Call Jessie 945-5744. WORD PROCESSING/Typing. Resumes, term papers. Pick-up, delivery, laser. Additional services available. W rite Solu­ tions, 946-7880. a n n e ra V arious cam era processes a re des igned to reproduce yo u r graphics to your p rin tin g sp e cifica tions. O ur ca p a b ilitie s include P M T lin e sh o ts, h a lftones, p o ste riza tio n and re ve rse s. Film sizes fo r re p ro d u ctio n a re 1 2 x 1 8 fo r P M Ts and 2 0 x 2 4 fo r film negatives. O riginal a rt w o rk can be reduced to 2 5 % o r , enlarged to 3 0 0 % . Issuing o f b lanket re q u isitio n s fo r th e e n tire fis c a l year is encouraged. If ybu do n o t have a blanket re q u isitio n , a sp e cific re q u isitio n is needed fo r each jo b W e win b ill re q u isitio n s m onthly on approxim ately th e 2 3 rd o f each m onth. Questions MESA SECRETARIAL Service. Term papers, theses, dissertations, resumes. Q uality work on laser printer. 844-1876. PROFESSIONAL WORD processing. Guaranteed next day service. $2/page. Call 892-2793. c ARTW ORK PREGNANT?? HAPPILY married couple in California desire to adopt healthy, white newborn. S trictly legal and confidential. A ll expenses paid. C all collect anytime, 619-340-9326. FLYING FINGERS offers typeset quality w ith a Mac II and laser printer. Call Susan, 945-1500 PROFESSIONAL TYPING se rvice s, $ l.5 0 /p a g e . Resumes $30. P ickup/ delivery available. 10 years experience. Theresa, 971-1493. W orking w ith yo u r o riginal a rtw o rk , photographs a n d /o r copy, w e wrNa s s is t you w ith la yo u t and design to produce cam era-ready a rt fo r p rin tin g purposes. This includes brochures, p o ste rs, flie rs , n e w sle tte rs, c h a rts and graphs, le tte r­ heads, envelopes and business cards. W e have a la rg e lib ra ry o f d ip a rt available fo r yo u r u se W e w il a lso w ork w ith yo u r o rig in a l a rt d r logo a r t HAPPILY MARRIED couple want healthy infant to adopt. W ill provide warm, secure loving home. Call our attorney collect 24 hours 408-288-7100 ext.A165. FAST RETURN, experienced academic typist. W ill edit spelling, punctuation, grammar. Dependable, accurate. Joan, 839-0772. A SOFT Touch Electrolysis. Student discounts. Remove unwanted hair, perma­ nently. 12 yéars experience, near ASU. Call 829-7829. CALL N am e. Phone. 965-7572 $1 f o r 15 w o r d s o r less I5C e a c h a d d it io n a l w o r d Cask • Check • Visa • M astercard 8am-5pm DAILY (Sorry, no billing.) SERVICES Valentine's Spadai 10% OFF B Sigma Epsilon all lingerie photography. Free Valentine's garter uuith every purchase. National Professional Fraternity in Marketing, Sales Management and Selling offers You THE PROFESSIONAL EDGE Come and see us at the Dean’s patio this week! ■ : •; • •- SURROGATE MOTHERS needed. Very special, very loving women needed as surrogate mothers to help give the gift of a child to long waiting, loving, but infertile and childless couples. Must be age 21-34 and have child , bearing experience. Living expenses, allowances, life insurance, medical, legal and counseling ser­ vices paid. Make written request for application: N ew C o n cep tio n s CEREUS WORD Processing, quality guar­ anteed. Fast experienced. Term papers, resumes, form letters, dictaphones, edit­ ing. 947-7796. 45 CENTS per pound. W ill wash, dry, fold and hang your laundry. Excellent service. N.W. corner of Price and Apache. 1*A m iles East of campus. 967-5433. PERSONALS For inform ation ca ll Brian is a service of S tu d e n t P ublications, housed w ith in th e STATE PRESS in M a tth e w s C enter basem ent W e ere ve rs a tile professionals eager to w o rko n yo u r special p ro je c t ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. SERVICES 921-3109 Graphics Services $119 per person • M arch 6-9 ACCENTS IN Typing. Typing service near ASU. Quick turnaround. Over 30 years secretarial experience. 946-9982. See w baf a co-ed businessfraternity is ail about/ I SPRING BREAK ’89 House Boating Lake Havasu $1.50 AND Up. AAA Q uality work and laser printer. 33 years experience. Call Marian, 839-4269. Tues. Jan 24th 7:30-9 p.m. Thurs. Jan 26th . 7-9 p.m. Call 954-5678 TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING Tonight: Bar-B-Que Volleyball Priday: Cocktail Party See us on the Dean’s Patio (betw een the BA & BAC buildings) for more information. BRENDA CHARLES: Laura from LA visit­ ing Tempe. Contact 784-8337. wed. Jan 25th 7:30-8:30 p.m. ‘ ■Z” TOUCH Word Processing- fast, dependable. Pick-up/delivery. Discount for stu d e n ts . Law stu d e n ts w elcom e. 833-5559. if you can grow hair with Minoxidil Rogain. PI SIGMA Epsilon offers you the profes­ sional edge! Professional development, National network, sales training, leader­ ship development, professional contacts, social opportunities. Come and see us at the Dean's Patio (between the BA and BAC buildings). LOST NIKON Suhtouch camera, black/red carrying case.'Lost over Christmas break'. 464-0928. PERSONALS 1 month test to see ASU Departments fREE LOST/FOUIMD REWARD: GOLD link bracelet lost 1/19/89 somewhere between BA and Memorial Union. Very sentim ental. Please call 946-8043. TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING MANY THANKS to all administrative personnel who made it possible for me to attend ASU. P.B.H. JEWELRY LOST/STOLEN- Considerable currency, envelope m arked Standard Federal Savings- Disabled Student. Rewards: Large amount of cash and a clear consci­ ence. Please call Thelma, Mariposa Hall, 965-6107, leave message. SERVICES p p ■ d r K t ; 1 ADAM & €V€ ■ * » —. Photography & lin g e rie ‘ 1835 £ University • Tempe ' 921-2333 $1,15. $1.30 $1.45 $1.60 $1.75 $1.90 $2.05 $2.20 $2.35 Ad deadline is February 9 , 4:30 p .m . Page 20 State Press Thursday, January 86.1989 ALPINE SKI & SPORT SALE J r L SALE STARTS TODAY! 9:30 A. M.-9:00 P.M. ALPINE SKI &> SPORTS SALE HOURS The valley’s leading specialty ski shop, featuring top quality name brand skis and sporting goods, is staging an incredible sale for skiers starting today at 9:30 a.m. Save 20% to 50% on our huge inventory of famous brand sporting goods. W ED.-FRI. 9:30-9 SAT. 9:30-6 »S U N . 12-5 SAVE 20°/o-50%ANDMORE! DON’T WAIT . SKI EQUIPMENT S K IS .............from $99.99 BOOTS . . . . . from $79.99 POLES .. . . . .from $13.99 BINDINGS ..fro m $79.99 Rossignol, Salomon, Nordica, Lange, Olin, Look, K2, Pre, Dynastar, Tyrolia, Head, Atomic, Scott, Smith & more! SKI PACKAGE BLIZZARD SPRINT SALOMON 457 *17900 POLES, MOUNT, PREP Reg. *40000 SKI W EAR 20% TO 50% OFF MENS & LADIES PARKAS.... ..... fro m $79.99 XC SKI PACKAGE BIBS.......... .... fro m $39.99 TRAK NOVA STRETCH from $99.99 SHELLS from $39.99 SALOMON 451 SALOMON AUTO ______ FOOTWEAR > .. DON’T D . _______ *179" Reg. »36000 SWEATERS..... fro m $29.99 1400 SKI RENTALS CAMPING PLAN YOUR TRIP TODAY! N O R TH F A C E • JANSPO RT M A R M O T « LOW E 20%-30% OFF EVERY SPORT SHOE IN STOCK RACQUET SPORTS 20%-50% OFF T E N N IS A N D RACQUETBALL E Q U IP M E N T & A C C E S S O R IE S 1989 MODELS NIKE • REEBOK • AVIA KAEPA • TIGER ASIC GEL RUNNER NIKE AIR PEGASUS REEBOK DL 1400 AVIA 500 VISA Reg. SALE S A V E U P T O 40 % O FF $55 $43.99 ALL NEW FROM PRINCE!! $66 $49.99 $40 $27.99 $63 $43.99 TRI C O M P GRADUATE APPROACH Reg. $110 $220 $225 SALE $ 99.99 $179.99 $199.99 SAME DA Y STRINGING SELECTED ITEMS TENTS » PACKS • BAGS WATER SKIS H .O .» C O N N E L L Y » J O B E LA P O IN T • O ’B R IE N • K ID D E R N E W F O R 1989 S K IS • V E S T S • R O P E S & M O R E SAVE U P T O 30% O FF!! Ipine Ski & Spoils L IM IT E D T O S TO C K O N H A N D IC O R N E R BRO ADW AY & M C C L IN T O C K • 968-9056