A rizo n a S tate U n iversity’s M o rn in g D aily s t a le p r e s s Voi. 71 No. 89 C opyright, S tate Press, 1^69 M onday, February 13, 1989 Tem pe, Arizona - Regents give ASU’s Harris 3-year deal By TYRONE MEIGHAN State Press TUCSON — The Arizona Board of Regents awarded ASU Athletic D irector Charles Harris a $288,939 threeyear contract Friday, making him Arizona’s first university athletic director to receive such a deal: ASU President J. Russell Nelson ha,d pushed for a university policy change last year that allows for the m ulti-year contracts. Nelson said he wanted the board to adopt a policy that would allow athletic directors to receive contracts sim ilar to those offered to university athletic coaches. The regents approved the policy change in December and voted 7-1 to grant the new contract to Harris. Regent Donald P itt cast the only dissenting vote, saying that he opposed the m ulti-year contract because other university administrators are not offered such a deal. He added that he believes H arris has done a fine job as athletic director. Under the new contract, Harris w ill receive $96,313 annually plus yearly bonuses of up to $5,000 if studentathletes achieve superior academ ic perform ance, the ASU basketball team participates in the NCAA Championship Tournament or if the football team participates in a bowl game. Nelson said Friday that H arris did not ask for the contract, but added, “ We had conversations about it.” Nelson said the new contract is not a reward for H arris’ efforts at ASU and acknowleged that H arris has had other job offers. “ I ’m aware that Charles has had o p p o rtu n ities to go to o th er institutions,” Nelson said. Under the contract, Harris would have to pay the U niversity $10,000 if he terminates the contract. The money would be used to offset the costs of hiring a new athletic director. ASU m ay term inate the contract at any tim e without cause. If Harris w ere to be fired this year, he would receive 25 percent o f the contract’s worth. Should he be fired with two years left on the contract, he would HaiTIS receive 25 percent of the contract’s worth. Should he be fired with two years left on the contract, he would receive 50 percent o f the pay and after three years he would receive 75 percent. Turn to Itanto, P«B» •• J a m l* L y tte /S ta t* P ra u Arizona Board of Regents members and university officials, from loft at table, Harman Chanen, Regent Executive D irector M olly Broad, UofA President Henry Koffler, Donald Pitt, Andrew Hurw ltz and Esther Capln discuss giving ASU Athletic Director Charles Harris a new $288,939 three-year contract a t a meeting Friday in Tucson. The measure was approved. Board seeks pay raise information TUCSON — The Arizona Board of Regents w ill hire a consultant to study faculty and staff raises at the state’s three universities, the regents’ executive director said. “ We have concluded that the EEC task force report m ay w ell be correct in its conclusion that w e have lost our com petitive edge in faculty salaries,” M olly Broad said. The Excellence, E fficien cy and Competitiveness task force report titled “ No Challenge Too Large, No Step T oo Sm all,” contains 24 recommendations to im prove higher education in the state. Broad said the Consultant’s study should be completed this summer. “ W e may not be able to hire a sufficient number of qualified faculty in the coming year,” she said. Broad said the cost o f hiring a consultant has not yet been determined, “ We an ticip ate that there w ill be bu dgetary im plications and that they w ill be reflected in our budget request,” she said. In other business, the regents voted to oppose legislation that would require regents to be elected cmthe 1990 ballot. Regents are currently appointed by the governor fo r an eight-year term. The regents also voted to support an Arizona Senate bill that would allow fiv e appropriations’ o f $750,000, one in each fiscal year starting in 1989-90 to ASU fo r the “ Instrumented Factory Gears Program ,” known as INFAC. Also, the regents adopted the state’s three universities’ responses to 16 recommendations by Arthur Young & W e m ay not be able to hire a sufficient num ber o f qualified faculty for the coming year. ' — Molly Broad Company, consultants of the Arizona Cost Efficiency Commission. The universities disagreed with the consultants that full-tim e students pay a $5 per visit fee to the universities’ health centers. The universities also disagreed with the recommendation that university students should have mandatory insurance. Health official tells of insurance com plaints By MICHAEL VAN DYKE State Press Numerous student complaints about late hospital claim payments show that Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona was not prepared to become the provider o f student health insurance fo r ASU, a Student Health Center official said. Anna M arie Shivers, insurance clerk at the Health Center and liaison between t SU students and Blue Cross, also said many students have problems contacting the insurance company’s personnel over the phone. “ This is a problem com pletely beyond our control at the Student Health Cento-,” she said. In response to the problem, Shivers said Blue Cross has placed a representative on campus three mornings each week to handle student problems. But M arien Gleason, a Blue Cross spokesman, denied that the company was unprepared to handle the program. “ W e knew that w e would be able to handle insuring students,” he said, “ Our program is new to university students, but w e have made the necessary m odifications.” Gleason said there have been problems with programm ing new members into the system electronically. “ T h e s y s te m w e u se is h ig h ly computerized, and there have been some delays,” he said. “ We w ere not staffed to handle the (student) m em bership w e received. This is a new program and we need to do some regrouping.” Gleason said he expects Blue Cross w ill be back to its normal rate of processing by the end of the month. But one ASU student said his problem with Blue Cross has been “ the biggest mess I have ever seen or heard o f.” Stephen L eon , an ASU E le c tr ic a l Engineering graduate student, said he tem porarily lost his eyesight in Novem ber after irritation by his contact lenses. Leon was admitted to the em ergency room at Desert Samaritan Hospital Nov. 6, and the next day he visited a doctor referred by the Health C ento. Under the provisions of his Blue Cross Preferred Care Student Health Insurance plan, Leon is entitled to 80 percent coverage of a ll expenses up to $4,000 if he visits a “ preferred and participating” hospital and doctor. Both Desert Samaritan Hospital and the d o ctor L eon saw fo r his follow -u p examination are preferred providers, yet Leon said he has not been fu lly reimbursed for his m edical costs. Leon said it took Blue Cross six weeks to pay the two bills from his em ergency visit. He added that he had to pay interest on the bills. Leon said, he has not been reimbursed for the follow-up visit to the doctor on Nov. 7. M argot Davis, manager o f information systems, fo r the Health Center, said the in su ran ce com pan y’ s d iffic u ltie s in processing the claim s is due to changes in the com pany’s policy coverage. The changes w ere made just prior to the company becoming the. health insurance provider for ASU in August, she said. “ I realize that this must be a pain in the neck for students, but they w ill eventually get paid,” Davis said. “ I am optiiMstic that this problem w ill be cleared up .shortly.” Gleason said that usually student health insurance holders are not required to pay the doctor themselves, but rather Blue Turn to Insurance, page 10. — TYRONE MEIGHAN WEATHER Increasing clouds and cooler temperatures are forecast for today, with a high in the mid 60s. The over­ night low should be near 45. More of the same is expected Tuesday and Wednesday, with things warming up by the weekend. INSIDE The ASU women’s gym­ nastic team, coached by John Spini, tabulates its best score of the year Saturday night but loses to Utah. Page 17. Classified..... .............. ................... 21 Comics........................ 16 Entertainment.......................... 11 Opinion................................ . 4 Police Report............. ..................... 10 Sports.............................. 17 Today............................... 2 ' _ _ _ _ mmmm^ — _ _ mmmmmmmm^ aaaiaai^ world/nation in brief ..» *»'nm when to warn the public. Federal Aviation Administration officials told two congressional committees last week that airlines have greatly increased security measures for foreign flights since the bombing o f Flight 103. A ll checked baggage is X-rayed. Passengers are denied any access to baggage after check-in. Passengers are matched with bags to guard against unaccompanied baggage. Additional measures prevent unauthorized access to luggage or planes. And more passengers are subjected to random enhanced screening with suitcases actually opened by inspectors. N ew spaper reports M andela’s w ife w hipped abducted youths JOHANNESBURG, South A frica (A P ) — A m ajor newspaper reported Sunday that black activist Winnie Mandela, the w ife o f jailed ANC leader Nelson Mandela, joined in beating some boys allegedly abducted by her unofficial bodyguards. One o f the boys, 14-year-old Stompie Seipei, is missing and feared dead. The report deepened the controversy surrounding Mrs. Mandela, who has denied wrongdoing and im plied allegations against her w ere fabricated to hurt her husband. The Sunday Star, a Johannesburg newspaper which opposes apartheid, said in a front-page story that Mrs. Mandela whipped four boys brought to her house in Soweto last month by young men loyal to her who call themselves the Mandela United soccer team. The paper did not identify its sources. Mrs. Mandela, 54, in responding to allegations against her F'nday, told CBS News, “ It ’s not going to destroy M andela.” E lection o f wom an bishop ends long struggle fo r clergyw om en Pan Am bom bing prom pts tig h t secu rity fo r U .S . airlines W ASHINGTON (A P ) — The still unsolved bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Scotland has brought more stringent security for U.S. airlines, congressional inquiries and a m ove to increase international efforts against air terrorism . Although tight airport security has a ll but elim inated hijackings in the United States, the Dec. 21 bombing of the Boeing 747 that killed 259 people en route to New York and 11 m ore on the ground raises the spectre of a m ore deadly kind o f air terrorism . It also raises questions about how to respond to the more than 900 threats against U.S. airlines each year, including Form er C ongressm an confident POW m ission w ill be successful HONG KONG (A P ) — A form er U.S. congressman who helped launch balloons bearing offers o f a $2.4 million reward for the release o f Am erican prisoners of war said Sunday he is confident the balloons w ill reach Vietnam and Laos. W illiam Hendon, 44, said he and relatives of three American servicem en missing from the w ar released 600 to 700 balloons from a traw ler 40 m iles south o f Hong Kong and 375 m iles o ff the Vietnam ese coast over the weekend. “ Our balloons w ill stay up 36 hours and I feel confident some w ill land in Laos and Vietnam ,” Hendon said in an interview. BOSTON (A P ) — The barriers of two millenniums of an all-m ale hierarchy have been broken, and to the women who paved the way for Barbara Harris to become an Episcopal bishop, her elevation seems like a m iracle. Each helium -filled balloon carries a message in Vietnamese and Laotian offering the reward in cash or gold to anyone who turns over to U.S. custody one or more American prisoners of war. “ I feel very, very happy. In my life, I can see the first woman bishop,” said the Rev. Florence Tim-Oi Li, 81, the first clergywom an in the worldwide Anglican communion. “ It made me hopeful. Things are realized now.” C om puter exp erts fa u lt new FBI plan o f trackin g suspects L i stopped functioning as a priest in 1946 in response to pressure from Anglican bishops outside of China, where she was ordained in 1944, but on Saturday she and other pioneer clergywom en helped consecrate Harris. W ASHINGTON (A P ) — Plans to expand the FB I crime computer to include tracking o f suspects not charged with any crim e pose serious problems fo r constitutional rights, a panel of computer scientists said. The ceremony made Harris the first woman bishop in a church that believes in apostolic succession — that the church leadership can be traced to the apostles. “ The files pose a potential threat to the privacy and civil liberties of persons included in the files and to the civil liberties of the public in general,” said the report by Com­ puter Professionals for Social Responsibility. “ I think its really helped a lot of us see how history is made,” said the Rev. I. Carter Heyward, one of 11 women “ illegally” ordained in a service in Philadelphia in 1974 that paved the way for the Episcopal Church’s approval of women clergy two years later. “ M y experience in the Episcopal Church is that it really does take some pushing, and I doubt that that’s over.” The report, prepared at the request of Rep. Don Ed­ wards, D-Calif., was made publie Sunday. Edwards is plan­ ning to hold hearings in March by his House Judiciary sub­ comm ittee on F B I plans to update its crim e computer. Edwards praised the computer organization’s report and said the “ F B I should drop the tracking proposals.” today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University com m unity. Any campus club or organization can subm it entries fo r publication to the S late Press, located in the basem ent of M atthews C enter, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Valentine Day carnation sale on Cady Mall in front of the MU from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. •Cam pus Overeaters Anonymous support group for those with an eating disorder will meet at noon in the MU. Check monitor for room information. •P i Sigma Epsilon Make A Heart Decision - Give your Valentine balloons, mugs, teddy bears and Hershey kisses. Stop by at our pre-order booth from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. near the Business patio (north of the MU). •S .T .A .R .T . - Student Admissions Relations Team M e e tin g s •Am erican Crim inal Justice Association is having a $1 data systems Deadline for application are due before 5 p.m. today. Turn applications into Student Services Building C113. •ASU Ski Devils Rally for Purgatory ski trip on Feb. 18. Meet at Roxanne’s house at 8 p.m. •ASASU candidates meeting for Executive and Senate offices of ASASU at 3 p.m. in the MU East Room 212. •Arizona Outing Club Bobby Holliday from the Arizona Wildlife Coalition will present a slide show at 7:30 p.rri. in the MU Cochise Room. The Outing Club plans hiking, biking, cross-crountry skiiing trips. No experience neccesary. •Christian Science Organization at ASU will be holding our weekly inspirational meeting at 1:40 p.m. at Danforth Chapel. We re on campus! 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TheReward himDeserve. mw m * DATA SYSTEMS Teb. 13-17 Dille — C 1989ArtCamd Class Kilims 10:00-4:00 Time A S U Bookstore P lace D e p o s it R e q u ire d f ; S 8 S Page3 Monday, February 13,1989 W om en’s activist w ants ERA am endm ent ratified By RICIÎARD VIGIL State Press PH O EN IX — National Organization for Women President M olly Yard told a group of women’s rights activists Saturday that women w ill not receive equal, treatment in every aspect of Am erican life until the Equal Rights Amendment is ratified. In a 20-minute speech at the YW CA Leadership Development Center that was sponsored by the ASU College o f L ib eral Arts and Science Alumni Association, Yard also told the group of about 160 activists that existing women’s rights legislation is in danger of being repealed because, women “ are not a part of the Constitution.” The ERA, which failed to be ratified in 1982, has been reintroduced in the U.S. House o f Representatives. To achieve ratification, the amendment must be passed by both houses and ratified by the legislatures of 38 states, threefourths of the total. • NOW w ill be attempting to bring the attention of the Nation’s lawmakers to the E R A with a march in Washington, D. C., April 9. “ We are not talking about 100,000 women marching,” Yard said. “ We want to bring 800,000 people to Washington to show our lawmakers the overwhelming support for the ERA. “ One of the most important victories of the Women’s movement was the passage of the E R A by Congress in 1972.” Thirty-five of the states voted in favor of tKe ERA. Yard said the amendment failed by two votes in the three other states needed. Another important victory, she said, was the passage of T itle IX , which guaranteed equal educational opportunity for Women. In 1984, a U.S. Supreme Court decision severely hurt T itle IX , Yard said. The measure was revived by Congress in 1988. “ I f the E R A had been a part of the constitution, the Court could not have done that to us,” Yard said. Besides the E R A , Yard said other issues which concern women include: • Equal pay for men and women. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estim ates women are paid 65 cents for every dollar men make. • Poverty. “ By the yedr 2000 almost all of the poor in this country w ill be women with their children,” Yard said. •' Abortion. The Supreme Court decision to review cases which could affect Roe v. Wade, the 1972 case which legalized abortion, has women’s activists concerned that, the case could be overturned. Citing a 1987 Harris poll, Yard said a m ajority of people in this country favor “ safe and legal abortion.” The nationwide poll showed 57 percent o f Americans are opposed to overturning Roe v. Wade. ‘ ‘We should have birth control that is so good we don’t need abortion,” she said. A fter the speech, which was frequently interrupted by spontaneous applause from the m ostly fem ale crowd, Yard was joined by a panel of local civic and media personalities. The panel was comprised of State Sen. Carolyn W alker, DPhoenix; attorney Paul Eckstein, who worked with Special Counsel W illiam French in impeaching form er Gov. Evan Mecham; G loria Feldt, executive director of Planned Parenthood o f central and northern A rizona; Jana Bommersbach, associate editor of the New Times, and Arizona Republic columnist E. J. Montini. Each panelist was given tim e to explain how he or she became a fem inist, and then they answered questions from moderator Louis Rhodes, executive director of the Arizona chapter of the Am erican C ivil Liberties Union and from the audience. «89H Avantage XT Write Better- Without Cheating! Many ASU Professors own an Avantage. Get one for lessi Includes floppy drive, keyboard, and monitor. 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EPSON Equity LT Laptop Hot N E W Borland Languages I a r Ü R ig h tW rite r There w ere disagreements between the panel members, but they agreed that all people should have the opportunity to achieve anything they want. “ I took the hormonal route to an appreciation of fem inism ,” Montini said jokingly. “ When I was in college I thought (fem inists) w ere the kind of women I had the best chance with.” Dot Matrix Printer M o n ta r not Included. Includes Debugger! y J a c k W . B e asley J r./S ta te P ress M olly Yard, President o f th e National O rganization fo r W omen, speaks as part of a forum conducted Saturday by the College of Liberal Arts and Science. Tempe South on Central Just Pasta McDowell* West Valley 2 5 7 -0 3 8 0 $ McClintock 35th Av». I Wortham 1632E,CamelbackRd. Southern«* J Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Di Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Picatta, Veal Marsala and orders to g o ARE NOT INCLUDED in the 2-for-1 special. in Old Town Tempe 4th Street and Mill 9 6 6 -3 8 4 8 i opinion Page 4 State Press Monday, February 13,1989 Notes Regents say ‘no,’ FIJIs are back, and ASASU bloodbath looms Darrin Hostetler Columnist Notes and stuff: Regents to Nelson: Go to Colorado, go to hell It appears as though ASU President J. Russell Nelson wants his proverbial cake and the right to eat it too. But the Arizona Board of Regents isn’t serving the departing president any extra dessert — or portions from the porkbarrel, as the case m ay be. Word has it that Nelson journeyed to Tucson this past weekend to make a special request of the Regents during the segment of their monthly m eeting called “ executive session” — where no press or spectators are allowed. And what did our fearless leader ask of the Regents behind closed doors? Nothing much. Just the right to be classified as a “ professor on leave” from ASU when he departs to assume the dean’s chair at the University of Colorado’s Business College in September. That w ay, if Nelson ever wants to return to Arizona he could retain his tenure — and the salary that goes along with it — rather than having to start over as a new professor. This is more than an em ergency contingency plan for Nelson, who is expected to make his way back to ASU after a few years at Colorado. Nelson even plans to keep the new home he is building in Tem pe’s Alameda Estates in preparation for his return. Unfortunately fo r the president, who has never enjoyed a love a ffa ir with the Regents, his financial security plan was rejected. Sources say the board voted down the request unanimously after little discussion. It’s hard to muster any sympathy for a man who had engineered a very sweet deal for him self at ASU — a year sabbatical (read : vacation) starting in June at full salary followed by a substantial pay raise and a return to the faculty — but tossed it all aside to go to Colorado. Now he wants to keep his status at ASU while jumping ship to another school. But no one — not even a university president — can have the best o f both worlds. At least that’s the way the Regents seem to feel. And their attitude m ay mean that Nelson is going to spend a lot longer up north than he plahned. Ship o f fools ASU’s outlaw fraternity, Phi Gamma Delta (F IJ I), has hit on a new gim m ick to promote their brotherhood. The F IJ Is are infamous fo r creative hazing tactics — like piling goat feces on pledges — that got them kicked out of their Old Row house last year. But despite the loss of their home base, a disaster of epic proportions that usually sinks a fraternity chapter, the F IJ Is have managed to survive. This in itself is a m iracle, as the fraternity has diligently labored over the past three years to achieve new lows in human behavior by running the gamut of perversions — from operating a prostitution service out of their campus house to beating pledges on the buttocks until they could no longer walk. Most people thought that, deprived of their house, the fraternity would dissolve and F IJ I members would quietly drift o ff to their natural habitats: drug rehab clinics, unemployment lines and federal prisons. But survive they have, like an incurable strain o f venereal disease, and now this group of delinquents is playing o ff their indestructable, never-say-die im age. F IJ I members have taken to dressing like urban “ pirates,” with trademark bandanas wrapped around their heads. The idea is to portray themselves as a tough band o f skulland-crossbones outlaws who thumbed their noses at the ASU administration and managed to keep their fraternity alive. The reality is, o f course, that the U niversity beat these junior pirates senseless, took their ship away and made the whole m otley bunch walk the plank right o ff o f ASU property. Which is exactly what they deserved. At least the boys picked the right im age for themselves. Pirates have always been illiterate, crude and barbaric. They are social outcasts, losers. And no m atter how long the F IJ Is strut around in their Halloween costumes, indulging them selves in this bit of false bravado, they w ill only succeed in looking childish and pathetic. Disassociated Students It’s only February, yet the ASASU offices are turning into a battleground as student politicos jockey fo r position in the upcoming student governm ent elections. The president’s race promises to be a tough contest, as bad blood exists between some of thè candidates — and as at least two hopéfuls have decided to bow out o f the race, one citing disatisfaction with the “ process.” Activities Vice President Todd Martensen, considered by many to be a frontrunner fo r the presidency, has reportedly opted not to run. Martensen has expressed disgust that some students have been discouraged from running for office because an elite group o f ASASU insiders have “ pre­ selected” a candidate for the presidency. Lynn Vavreck, assistant to Campus A ffairs V P Vince Micone, also flirted with the idea of running this week, but backed out at the last minute — presumably after she sized up the competition as too tough. With Martensen and Vavreck gone, ASASU staffer Sal Rivera and State Relations D irector Paul Larson — who are already engaging in a bit o f intra-office feuding — are the two high-powered candidates expected to duke it out for the office. R ivera is probably the target o f Martensen’s charge, as he has picked up early support from ASASU President John Fees and student Regent Patrick McWhortor. These candidates are ready to fight, and it’s going to be a long, mean, ugly campaign. f RITTER letters H onors dorm w oes Editor: I was glad to see Melissa M ichael’s article about McClintock Hall. I have resided in the dorm for three semesters now, and I do not feel cheated by the new honors students. I do, however, resent the attitude people have that the honors students “ do extra work, take harder classes, etc.” It is a gross assumption that the rest of us at the dorm do not “ deserve” the facilities provided at the dorm. Many girls here have to maintain high G PA ’s for scholarships, or work while taking a fu ll load o f courses. Last year the residents were told that the only w ay to save McClintock H all from destruction was to turn it into the honors dorm. Taking the lesser of two evils, we gave up the larger first floor rooms to honors offices and allowed a lot of freshmen and guys into the dorm. A point neglected in the article are the new problems my neighbors and I have observed with the co-ed residence. I do not blame the young men solely fo r these problem s; the new freshmen to the dorms are equally responsible. McClintock used to be one of the quietest dorms. I am tired of the loud shouting, screaming and door slamming that occur at all hours o f the night I still feel McClintock is the friendliest and nicest dorm on campus. I just hope the Honors College is w illing to share its wealth and knowledge with the rest o f the residents: after all, we could have voted to tear the dorm down! Diana Mohr Sophomore, Interior Design q u o ta b le STATE PRESS "The worst moment for the atheist is when he is really thankful and has nobody to thank. ” M ARTY SA U E R 20P F E ditor JO AN M cKENNA M anaging E d itor — D a n te G a b rie l R o s s e tti lP^ LETTER POLICY The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers or> 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 name, class Standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. Alt letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID tp the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287-1502. T0Q RAPH ERS: lrw in C a rol LeM astar. Jam ie O pinion E d ito r...................................................¿......M IKE RITTER A set. O pinion E d ito r......................................BRIAN TASSINARI EDITORS: T ro y B ausinger, S usan C leere, W endy g w a ? * .................................... ............AD R IAN E HOPKINS ..... ........................... -PATRICIA VAN COURT S trode' PRODUCTION: V ic to ria C u lver, E rin Feeney. N ancy Ness, A sst. A rts E d ito r.........:...: . . Maf>< N othaft’ *-ynn ®9nze*1' Jason S ilve r, E ric Zotcavage. ............L TOD M cCQT S ports E d itor ............... ".'.¡¿¡ARY JAC KSO N ' ADVERTIS,NG REPRESENTATIVES: V irg in ia Boss, Don A sst. 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W e do not answ er , I, . ■*' H erbranson, Jenn ifer Lynn Johnson hU8s"o n s o f a general nature. A d ve rtisin g and P roduction: K e ith Pond, M ish T e ll, Jenn ifer Yee. (602) 965-7572.. CO LUM NISTS: D a rrin H ostetler, D avid Jordon, Ed S chubert SPORTS REPORTERS: Dean G yorgy. Dave Hodoes Eng, Tom i M cElroy, C hris N ackino, K e lly Pearce C h rte P irv L , - W , i-n ris rirx e y . The s ,a ,° Press ia 'h e o nly new spaper exclu sive ly published cj r?u!a,ad 00 'h e ASU cam pus. The new s and view s aoT V s * in lh is new8PaP®r are not nece ssarily those o f the ASU adm inistration, fa c u lty , s ta ff o r student body. S late Press Page 5 Monday, February 13,1989 Oh, never mind Campaign promises may come back to haunt Bush Jeff Greenfield Univeral Press Syndicate NEW YO R K — Rem em ber E m ily Litella, the ditzy woman played by Gilda Radner on the original “ Saturday Night L iv e ? ” E very week, Miss Litella would o ffer a thundering denunciation o f some outrage, such as “ sex and violins on T V ” or “ aid to Soviet Jew elry.” Once corrected, she would sm ile, lode into the Camera and say, “ Oh — n ever mind.” I ’m beginning to think E m ily Litella has been appointed communications director of the Rush White House. Rem em ber all the charges during the campaign that Mike Dukakis was hopelessly weak on defense fo r even suggesting that w e could survive with less that 15 ca rrier groups? Guess what Bush officials have been discussing — on background, o f course — as a w ay to hold down the defense budget? Cutting back on the number o f carrier groups, or even mothballing some of our ships. What’s that about our naval power being the key to our defense posture? “ Oh — never mind.” And rem em ber the vision o f Ronald Reagan, em braced by the New Right as the key to our defense strategy in file 1990’s of a strategic defense shield protecting the United States from Soviet m issiles? Guess what Defense Secretary-designate John Tower told the Senate Arm ed Service Committee a few day ago? Any such notion o f a ‘ ‘Star W ars” system to protect the population was, he said, “ unrealistic.” Oh — never mind. And rem em ber that muscular Bush warning to drug dealers that “ You are history?” It turns out, according to the president, that w e really don’t have the money to fight a war on drugs — assuming anyone could figure out how to wage such a w ar — so w e’re going to rely on “ education.” History w ill be a little late this year. You m ay also rem em ber that Mr. Bush promised to put his vice president in charge of this war, which apparently means that Dan Quayle w ill fight yet another w ar from the equivalent o f a National Guard arm ory in Indiana. Now the idea that presidents often abandon their campaign postures once elected does not exactly deserve a cry of “ Eureka!” From Franklin Roosevelt’s call to reduce the federal budget in 1932, to John Kennedy’s m issile gap in 1960, to Richard Nixon’s “ law and order” pledge in 1968, to Ronald Reagan’s balanced budget promises o f 1980, candidates for president have not found it excessively burdensome to jettison, their election rhetoric. There is, however, ode crucial distinction that m ay return to haunt the new president. A ll of the past examples w ere outsiders, challengers, candidates running on the prom ise of change. George Bush ran as the candidate o f continuity. W hile he deliberately sought to show his differences with Reagan, he also ran as the legitim ate heir o f a successful president, who knew how government worked and w ho1was free from the woolly-headed naivete o f his Dem ocratic rival. Is there a point at which this parade o f policy shift begins to undermine the new president’s credibility, and to suggest that the great Republican electoral advantage o f experience and solidity is in part built on sand? Maybe not; except fo r the “ Read m y lips: No new taxes” promise, which is sim ply too vivid and too strong to betray, it’s possible that the entire dialogue of the 1968 campaign has faded into dim memory. Yet, as one who maintains stoutly that voters do pay George Bush attentimi to the broad sweep of political discourse, I can’t help believing that if the Bush administration begins by repudiating a substantial m easure o f its campaign assumptions, the electorate may have a sim ple response to M r. Bush when he appeals fo r their trust when a crisis errupts: “ Oh — never mind.” V ic a rio u s th r ills c a n b e ff>und in th e S ta te Press Personals. : CHOOSING A CAREER CAREFULLY AND CRITICALLY A T ™ Another smile courtesy of California Casualty. Trust. Believing in promises, having confidence in someone’s word. You wouldn’t dream of planning your family’s security without it v . and neither would we. With more years of experience in groupsponsored auto and home insurance than anyone else, we have the expertise to under­ standyour diverse needs. And a personal commitment to helping you meet them. Thafs why we developed PLUS. Personal Lines Underwriting Service: broad coverages, unique benefits, competi­ tive group rates. Backed by1a network of responsive sales, service and claims experts dedicated to customer satisfaction, it’s easy to understand why we’ve enjoyed consistent A ratings from A. M. Best, insurance company reviewers. At California Casualty, trust and integrity go hand-in-hand with service and value. Find out what a difference that can make. Call today for no-obligation information. T H E Q U A K E R IN O A T S C O M P A N Y O P E R A T IO N S Quaker Oats is as interested in your potential as you are. We'll utilize your talents, stretch your abilities, and p la ce you in a position where you can start achieving. Right now. Our Grocery Products group is 9,000 men and women strong, involved in all phases of manufacturing thé products that earned us over $3.1 billion in sales last year. That's potential you can take home. W e now seek the following support for our vast operations across the country: Production Supervisors Engineers If you want an atmosphere of achievement, you ca n wrap up your search with Quaker. Just talk with our Quaker Oats Representatives at our presentation in Memorial Union, 215 South Pinal Room, on Thursday, February 16, from 6-8 pm. FOR FACULTY AND STAFF-ONLY Q 2102 W . Indian School Road, Suite 11 • Phoenix,AZ 85015-4909 Phoenix 253-6329 • Tucson 326-0606 • or toll-free 1-800-841-4736 u a k e r WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU THERE! We are a n e q u a l o p p o rtü n iiy em p loye r Pageò State Pres Monday, February 13,1989 Students unaware of Financial Services Committee By KATHLEEN WINSTEAD State Press The Student Financial Services Advisory Committee is suffering from a lack o f funds and o ffice hours, students are unaware that it exists and student representatives have not been contacted about the com m ittee’s meetings, a member o f the com m ittee said. C liff R o sen stein C liff Rosenstein, one of the student re p re s e n ta tiv e s who s e rv e s on the comm ittee, said the com m ittee is supposed to meet twice a year, but that there was not a m eeting last semester, and no m eeting yet this semester. “ There is a lack o f interest in the comm ittee by the U niversity,” Rosenstein said. Paul Barberini, the director o f the Student Financial Assistance office, said he is arranging for a m eeting of the comm ittee some tim e this semester. The com m ittee “ doesn’t suffer from anything,” Barberini said. Rosenstein said the com m ittee was designed to help students with financial aid problems, but apparently ASU students are la rg e ly u naw are o f the co m m itee’s existence. The com m ittee was form ed so students would have a place to discuss their financial aid concerns, ideas and opinions, as w ell as find programs that would benefit them, Rosenstein said. “ We’re there to find new and different programs and to establish programs for financial assistance at the federal and state level,” he said. Rosenstein said the com m ittee has not been productive because no students have e v e r approached the com m itee with questions. He said he recently attempted to establish a com m ittee o ffic e in the Associated Students of ASU offices in the MU, but was unsuccessful. ASASU President John Fees said he was not aware of a need for such an office. Barberini said the committee was not established to serve students directly, but is a faculty committee of which student members are a part. “ It is a committee where students could bring up issues, but they usually bring them” to the student financial assistance office, Barberini said. Furthermore, the committee is designed to advise Vice President for Student Affairs Betty Turner Asher on financial aid issues, Barberini said. Barberini works with the chairman o f the committee, Associate Professor o f History W illiam Wootten, to convene meetings every year and to raise issues. The comm ittee was established by ASU President J. Russell Nelson as a method of hearing student financial aid appeals, Barberini said. He said there haven’t been any appeals during the past few years. “ Financial aid has become such a big topic that the issues are dealt with by the Board o f Regents or John Fees directly,” Barberini said. P a u l B a rb e rin i In the past, the com m ittee heard mostly appeals from , student athletes whose scholarships w ere being altered, Barberini said. A few years ago, a student appealed the reduction o f a scholarship, which was being reduced because o f performance and discipline problems, Barberini said. 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( A P ) — The rom antic effect of giving someone a heart-shaped box o f chocolates on Valentine’s Day could be m ore than sentimental. “ Chocolate does have amorous value,” said George Higgins, a pastry chef instructor at the 8,000-student Johnson & Wales U niversity in Providence, one o f the biggest cooking schools in file world. “ A chemical in the chocolate hits a pleasure center in the brain,” Higgins said. “ As a g ift from a lover to a lover, it would certainly help do the trick.” Chocolate contains phenylethylamine, or P E A , a natural mood-altering chem ical also found in the human brain. “ Win a lottery, get a promotion, fa ll in love, especially fall in love, and your P E A level shoots -up. You’re optimistic, sociable, and peppy,” according to “ Chocolate, An Illustrated History” by M arcia and Fredrick Morton. “ But if things go wrong, especially if something goes wrong in your love life, you turn listless and depressed because your PE A level is down.” Cocoa butter m elts at about body temperature, “ so when you put good chocolate in your mouth it begins to melt, it becomes a sensual thing,” said G ayle Steinhart, of Gayle’s Chocolates in Newport, in a telephone interview from her store in Royal Oak, Mich. She said her sales are 20 times normal on Valentine’s D ay and the day before. “ The taste of chocolate is a sensual pleasure in itself, existing in the same world as sex,” sex therapist Ruth Westheimer wrote in her column, “ Ask Dr. Ruth.” But there is also an argument against the romantic effects of chocolate. “ I really wonder whether giving chocolate for Valentine’s Day is really the best type of g ift if one wants to pursue any type o f intense, rom antic a ffa ir,” said Judith Wurtman, a research scientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s department o f nutrition and food sciences. “ The high fat and the high sugar content m ay make you very sleepy. “ I f you’re dealing in a situation where the woman is being pursued by the man, it might slow her down theoretically enough that she can be caught,” Wurtman added. W hatever the real effect o f chocolate, the origins of chocolate-giving on Valentine’s D ay are obscure. Centuries ago in Central A m erica, chocolate was associated with divinities and so cam e to represent health and well-being, according to “ Chocolate.” By the 18th century, chocolate’s reputation as an aphrodisiac had spread over Europe and North Am erica, according to “ The Language of Sex from A to Z” by Robert M. Goldenson and Kenneth N. Anderson. It was “ probably the o rig in a l a lle g e d ap h rod isia c o f the W estern Hemisphere.” Or maybe chocolate and valentines have a sim pler relationship. kappa a lp h a ORDER INTEREST GROUP. Deaims 923 S. M ill A v e . T e m p e C e n te r 9 6 6 -3 0 6 2 1112 N. H ig le y R d. B a s h a ’s S h o p p in g C e n te r Mesa 9 8 1 -8 8 2 8 is seeking a ll alumni, legacies, transfer initiates and other interested parties who would be enthusiastic about becoming part of a new tradition of Kappa Alpha Order here at ASU. P le a s e c o n ta c t J eff, 829-8169; Tim, 967-1782 anytim e. Please leave message. BUY 1 SELL * TRADE Y o ur b o o k * a t C hanging Hands. For q u a lity d o th and paperbacks (no te x t­ books, please) w e pay 304k o t our re­ sa le p ric e in cash o r 50% In trade-in c re d it w hich m ay be used to purchase a n yth in g in th e sto re . (S orry, no tradein s on S a l. o r S un.) Brow se thro ugh o u r thre e flo o rs o f: •N e w & U sed Books •A rt P rin ts ft Fosters •C a le n d a rs & C ards •H andbound Journals M -F 10-9 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 C h a n g in g H a n d s 414 MUI Avenue 966-0203 OM Town Tampa - ■ State Press fe g e . Monday, February 13,1989 C o lle g e a p p lic a t io n s d e c lin e NEW YO R K (A P ) — A drop in the number o f high school graduates and mounting concern over tuitions are driving down the volume of applications to some o f the nation’s most prestigious colleges fo r the first tim e in years. Harvard U niversity spokesman Peter Costa estim ates a 5 percent to 10 percent drop in applications compared with a year ago, the first such decline in at least two decades. N early a ll other Ivy League schools are reporting declines in that range. The application deadline fo r next fa ll’s freshman class was Feb. 1 at many Selective schools around the country. Stanford U niversity’s fa ll applications have dropped about 6 percent, from 15,828 to 14,869, according to Lynne Madison, a s s is ta n t d ea n o f u n d e rg ra d u a te admissions. A t highly com petitive U niversity of California at Berkeley, applications are also down, from 21,944 to 20,835 fo r next fa ll’s entering class. “ Its really got to be the decline in the number of high school graduates,” said Linda Davis Taylor, dean of admissions at Amherst College, in Amherst, Mass., where fa ll applications have dropped about 4 percent. “ I ’ve been calling around m yself, and most o f the colleges I ’ve talked to are experiencing declines at least as great as ours,” she said. “ I consider this a yellow light. We a ll kind of anticipated this,” said Bradley Quin, admissions director o f Lafayette College in Easton, Pa., where applications are down about 5 percent. “ I don’t mean to im ply that w e’re not concerned. This is a com petitive business, and it’s going to m ake it that much harder to increase the quality o f our classes,” School officials say it is too soon to draw hard conclusions, but they cite several factors in explaining the sudden reversal. In effect, they said, higher education has been defying gravity fo r most of the 1980s. T o th e s u rp ris e o f m a n y, c o lle g e enrollments have grown from 12.1 m illion to 12.5 m illion ¿ince 1980, and are up at 54 percent o f the nation’s colleges and universities, according to an annual survey by the Am erican Council on Education. An increase in the ranks of older students and higher percentages of high School students attending college helped offset a steady decline in the number of graduating high school seniors. But the current drop in applications m ay be the first sign that population changes m ay fin ally be taking their toll. Roughly 3 m illion 18-year-olds attended college in 1980; but the high school class o f ’88 has shrunk to an estim ated 2.76 m illion, and is expected to bottom out at 2.44 m illion by 1992. Students also m ay be cuffing down on the number of schools they apply to after a decade in which m ultiple applications increased sharply. An annual survey o f entering freshmen by the Am erican Council on Education and the U niversity of California at Los Angeles found that a record 37 percent applied to at least three colleges last fa ll, compared with 26 percent in 1980. T h at in crea se has. g e n e ra lly been attributed to students wanting to im prove their odds of getting into a top school, and also to shopping around for the best financial aid deals as tuitions have soared. But students are apparently starting to think twice about submitting a dozen or m ore applications now that application fees have hit $50 and more. “ When you start talking about $50 fees, you get m ore selective,” said Sanford R ivers, associate director o f admissions at Carnegie Mellon U niversity in Pittsburgh. Finally, some admissions officials believe that the continued rapid rise in tuitions at top colleges m ay be having a chilling effect. Few colleges have announced their rates for next fall, but costs rose 7 percent last y e a r' and have exceeded inflation throughout the decade. “ I think there’s a great possibility that tuitions are a part o f it,” said Taylor of Amherst. “ I don’t know of any topic that’s bein g discussed m ore by boards o f trustees.” sendaPersonal Adtosomeone 8-10 PM ANY COIN ANY DRINK Job Guide EVERY LADY WILL RECEIVE A CHOCOLATE ROSE ONE SPECIAL LADY WILL WIN BLUE SAPPHIRE AND DIAMOND YENNIS BRACELET VALUED AT $ 2 £ 0 0 0 0 C H O C O L A T E R O SE S P R O V ID E D BY— 1 < [ P x £ . m ic % (Ih o io la t z i C ream y C h o co late Roses D elivery A vailab le T o O rd e r C a ll 967-1330 9 1 9 E . A p a c h e B lv d • T en çe, A Z • 9 2 1 -9 7 7 5 The first step In your o n -th e -jo b -tra in in g is th e m ost im por­ tant. Your choice o f JOB Cigarette Pa­ pers m eans you’ve picked th e fin e s t quality rolling paper availabletoday. O nly then can you sit back and enjoy som e real job satisfaction...with the jo b th at's right for you. ROLL WITH ™ MAMUFACTUWW«COUPOWI m m U M W lM « » 1 SAVE as* r ir d D C T T C V /K á A n C l I C DADCDC “ M rC n O RETAILER : You »re authorized to a c tre o u r agent lo r redem ption a t th is ooupon. W e w ill reim burse you 384plua 88 handling prou id in g th a t you and the com um ar ham com? plie d w ith th e te n re o l o u t a lta r. Void w hore ptor ifaded, ta za d o» restricted by law . G ood only in the U .S.A. Caen value 1/204. Tneeoneutrierm uet pay any taire ta x . Any other use conatftutaa fra u d . Mae eoupon to R epublic Tobaooo C o , P.O. Bo« 8511. P rospect Height», IL 80070. C301 ©Ropubltc Tobacco 1989 35# S to tt Press Monday. February 13.1989 R o le -p la y in g big p a rt of W izard s & W a rg a m e rs By KATHLEEN W INSTEAD State Press A xis & A llie s , B lood R o y a le and Battletech are not names of soori-to-be released m ovies, but are board games p la y e d b y m e m b ers o f a stu d en t o rg a n iz a tio n know n as W iza rd s & W argamers. The club has 20 members, but w ill allow any ASU student to join. There are no G PA requirements and no membership dues, said Tom McGrath, the vice president o f the club. The only requirement is that potential members be interested in gam ing, McGrath said. Members can play any strategic, tactical or any role-playing gam es they want. Members play for a variety o f reasons, McGrath said. McGrath, a 21-year-old physics m ajor, said playing provides him with a “ break in m y monotonous studies.” Club member Brett Franks, a 22-year-old philosophy and economics m ajor, said he plays for “ rest and relaxation.” Club m em ber R obert Dhondrup, a 22-year-old political science m ajor, said he plays as an “ outlet for creativity.” Playing these games “ allows one to use a variety of different ideas and decisions in different scenarios,” he said. “ It makes you a better decision m aker.” Club member Russell Moulton, a 22-yearold ASU em ployee, said he plays games because playing “ takes up spare tim e.” Some, members become too involved in the gam es, McGrath said. Gaming “ affects everyone’s grades, but it’s m ore of a danger among freshman,” he said. “ M y grades have suffered because of gam ing,” said club member Rusty Watrous, a 35-year-old business m ajor. “ But there are some classes where it actually helped, such as ‘ancient w arfare’ and ‘U.S. m ilitary history.’ ” Watrous said playing these games also can become all-consuming. “ One summer, I spent entire weekends (playing gam es),” he said. “ I began on Friday afternoons and played all night.” He added that the gam e playing usually finishes by Sunday nights. The W izards & W argamers club does not lim it its members to the playing of board gam es only, McGrath said. Members also play fantasy role-playing gam es, in which each player adopts a character and that ro le ’s strengths and attem pts to be su ccessfu l in a v a rie ty o f m ilita ry encounters. Dungeons & Dragons is one of the most popular role-playing games members o f the club play. The role-playing gam es require the presence of a gam e master, someone who coordinates the gam es and organizes what actions w ill occur fo r a particular game. In the board gam e Battletech, based in the 23rd Century, each player is provided with a C a ro l L e M aster/S tate Press From left Paul Chanduri, Tom McGrath, Tim Grimm, and Daniel C. Herandez are members of the W izards & W argamers Club. The club meets every Friday at 6 P.M . on thé second floo r of the MU. fantasy robot. To win the gam e, one player’s robot destroys a ll of the other players’ robots, Watrous said. Axis & Allies is a historical simulation of W orld W ar I I , w ith p la stic p ieces representing the various parts of an arm y, each player attempts to win the war, Watrous said. In Blood Royale, a Middle Ages-based gam e, each player is a dynasty in England, France or Italy. Beginning with a royal fam ily, each player competes to take as much land and as much money as possible, Watrous said. The club meets every Friday at 6 p.m. on the second floor of the MU. Students who want to join can play the gam es the club plays or bring their own. Design conference to discuss living accommodations By MICHELE MCDONALD State Press Livin g accommodations for the elderly, the handicapped and the homeless w ill be the topic o f discussion at the fourth annual student interior design conference which w ill m eet at the MU Thursday. “ We are not here to make your livin g room look cute,” said Karen Shepherd, conference organizer. “ W e are here to change the environment you live in.” resign in g for the needs of the homeless, the handicapped and the elderly “ is a very hot issue” in the design community,'Shepherd said. The conference w ill emphasize general building design and not lim it itself to interior design as in past conferences, she said. Design requirements are changing in hospitals, Shepherd said. The emphasis is moving from sim ply fulfilling the p a tien t’ s p h ysica l n ecessities to s a tisfy in g th eir psychological needs, she said. David Guynes, a designer who creates therapy centers for the handicapped in hospitals, w ill be among the conference speakers. His original approach towards creating rehabilitative environments for hospitals has impacted the design community, said Shepherd. Guynes created “ Easy Street” at Phoenix Mem orial Hospital, where model buses and cars line the street and the patient can experience a trip to the bank, the store and other daily encounters to prepare for the outside world, she said. Shepard said by the end o f the year, 40 “ Easy Streets” w ill be in hospitals across the country, Shepherd said. Antonio Torrice, who designs shelters fo r the homeless, and Leland Knight, an ASU associate professor of design, also w ill address the conference. Terry Master, conference organizer, said the conference w ill give students a new insight into the areas of design and w ill help them realize that design affects everyone. “ I think it (the conference) gives them a broader view about what the profession is a ll about and what is expected of them,” Master said. M aster expects 100 to 125 interior design, industrial design and architecture students from ASU, NAU, UofA, the Southwest and California to attend the conference. PERSONAL INJURY — ---- LAW------- , Baker and Marcus 5 0 * O ff 7 5 * O ff $1.0 0 O ff Attorneys at Law 5 ” Sub 8” Sub 12” Sub ____________ expires 4-30-89 (FREE CONSULTATION) (6 0 2 ) 4 3 8 -1 2 1 2 any any any ' The substance o f o u r sub sandw iches is te n d e r, lean, q u a lity ** ' g o u rm e t c u ts o f m eat, d a iry fre s h cheese, fre s h baked fre n c h and w h ole w heat bread, and g a rd e n -fre sh vege tables. [ Corporate Fountains 4625 & Wendler Dr., Ste. 111 Tempe, AZ 85282 O n ly th e b e st...N o B a lone y. ! 528 W . B ro ad w ay j 9 66 -6 70 7 GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL IN A CAR n u b T ACCIDENT? WhenIts Oik " N o t Y o u r F a u l t ... Call A uto A ccident Attorneys W ho Pays For Your H ospital and M edical Bills? W ho Pays For Your Pain and S u fferin g? W h o Pays For Your T im e Lost A t W ork? } ■ ■ W h o Pays For Your Damaged Car? ■ FREE CONSULTATION ■ F e e Only From R ecovery It’s Im portant That You C all For A FREE Appointm ent ! G E O R G G IN & S H A N N ATTORNEYS AT LAW MESA PHOENIX 1201^5. ALMA SCHOOL RD., SUITE 795Ó MESA, ARIZONA 85210 3030 N. 3RD. ST., SUITE 930 PHOENIX, ARIZONA 85012 464-9900 ARIZONA MANAGING PARTNER; JOSEPH A. SILENCE; MEMBER. ARIZONA SUITE BAR; 265-9900 ERNEST G. GEORGGIN ANO MICHAEL A. SHANN; MEMBERS. CALIFORNIA BAR ONLY. University of Arizona offers more than 40 courses: anthropo l­ ogy, art, bilingual edu­ cation, folk music and fo lk dance, history, phonetics, political sci­ ence, Spanish langu­ age and literature and intensive Spanish. Sixweek session. July 3August 11,1989. Fully accredited program. M.A. degree in Span­ ish offered. Tuition $510. R oom * and b o a rd in M e xica n home $540. e e q / a a W rite Guadalajara Summer School Education Bldg., Room 225 University of Arizona Tucson. AZ 85721 (602) 621-4729 or 621-4720 if State Press Page 9 Monday, February 13,1989 Harris I’ ü s'! Continued from page 1. won their first Iv y League football championship in 23 years Nelson said that he does not think* the contract w ill tie the during his tenure. Since taking the ASU position in 1985, Harris has expedited hands of the new ASU president. “ It gives him or her a p o ssib ility ^ work on other issues ►the construction of the 100,000 square-foot, six-story ICA without having to address the athletic director as an open building * com pleted last fa ll that houses his office, issue,” he said, “ It brings the salary m ore under control of classrooms, a weight room and offices. He also helped to assure the construction of a University the U niversity.” Harris was out o f town on University business and was golf course on land adjacent to Packard Stadium. But Harris has not been without criticism . unavailable fo r comment. In 1987, some students criticized Harris for providing only Under the contract, Harris w iil be allowed to enter into agreements with other parties to provide services such as 10,000 student football season tickets. Harris has recently been criticized for his hiring of track consulting that are not included within his ASU contract. The contract also prohibits Harris from receiving anything coach Clyde Duncan in 1985, who has been fired after being of economic value such as a g ift or loan in excess of $250 found responsible for rule violations. In 1987, Harris decided to allow ASU linebacker Stacey without the president’s approval. Harris, a Virginia native, was appointed as ASU’s athletic Harvey to continue playing although he had not completed director in 1985 after serving as athletic director at the the proper number of academ ic credits for eligibility. Nelson sided with Harris on the decision, prompting the U niversity of Pennsylvania from 1979 to 1984. W hile at Pennsylvania, Harris adopted the school’s first resignation o f Faculty Athletic Representative Marianne officia l athletic policy in three decades. The Quakers also Jennings, who had made the decision to sideline Harvey. T h a t* s th e tic k e t! S ta te Press C lassified s “Quality Sandwiches For Nearly Three Decades" OFFER GOOD THROUGH FEBRUARY 18,1989 ONLY GOOD WITH AD • AS MANY AS YOU WANT Hours: Mon.-Frl. 10-9 • Sat. 10-6 BOJO 829s. RuralRd.966-5543 N ow you can have the official PH O EN IX ( A P ) — Form er U.S. Sen. B arry Goldwater, the granddad of Arizona’s Republican Party, has lashed out at party leaders, saying the organization has been taken over by “ a bunch of kooks.” Goldwater, in a letter to the editor published Sunday in the Arizona Republic, said forces supporting televangelist and form er Republican presidential candidate Pat Robertson and impeached form er Gov. Evan Mecham “ should invite themselves out” of the party if they cannot live with the GOP’s founding principles. He described those principles as an adherence to the Constitution and a firm belief in liberty and the rights of men and women to do what they want as long as it doesn’t hurt anybody. “ I don’t like the party being taken over by a bunch of kooks,” he said in an interview with the newspaper. Goldwater begins the letter by saying he was prompted by the party’s passage of a resolution defining the country as a Christian nation. “ We have all kinds of religions residing in this country, and a religion should be respected,” Goldwater wrote. Goldwater said such resolutions rpake the party look foolish. Mecham said there is no argument about the United States being a Christian nation because “ it was founded on Christian principles.” ASU SUMMER PROGRAM IN ITALY ASU SUMMER PROGRAM IN SPAIN SPECIAL OF THE WEEK GYROS o n ly *2” Goldwater calls party leaders‘bunch of kooks’ Ju n e 18-July 28 Ju n e 13-A ugust 3 A se v e r b - w e e k culturally oriented ses­ sion includes tw o weeks stay in modem apartments on the beach in Almunecar (near Malaga), four weeks jn Madrid, and fifteen days of cultural travel through most of Spain. Courses, offered both in Spanish and English, con­ centrate on Spanish civilization, language and literature. ASU students, faculty, staff, and members of the community are invited to participate. The program cost of $ 1,695 includes room and breakfast, all cultural travel, and six hours of ASU academic credit (undergraduate or graduate). An in­ formational meeting w ill be held on Thursday, February 16 at 7:00 p.m . in Room A-18, Language & Literature Building. A video film of last year’s pro­ gram w ill be shown. For information and application forms contact Michael J. Flys of the Department of Foreign This year the ASU Summer Program w ill start in Ferrara (June 18-July 1) and continue in Florence (July 1-28). ASU students, faculty, staff and members of-the community-are invited to participate in the program, which offers courses in the Italian language, European history, and the art history of Renaissance Florence. The program cost o f $1,900 includes room and breakfast for the duration of the program, seven hours o f ASU academic credit, the transfer from Fer­ rara to Florence and two in-country excursions. An orientation meeting w ill be held Tuesday, Febru ary 14 at 1:00 p.m. in the Language & Literature Building, Room B-225. Slides and a video w ill be shown. For information and application forms, contact Dr. Pier R. Baldini. 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I Expires 2 -1 5 -8 9 ^ Page 10 S ta te *««« Monday, February 13,1989 Insù rànce_____ P o lic e o ffic e r a lm o s t s h o t d u r in g b r a w l C o n tin u e s tr o n i p a g e 1 . By MIKE BURGESS State Press Tem pe police officer Rick Vasquez was a click away from being shot with his own gun. Vasquez had responded to a crim inal damage call about 4:55 p.m. Saturday when he spotted a man matching the suspect’s description at the Plasm a Center, 1015 S. Rural Road, police said. The officer saw the man go inside the business and when he tried to talk with him, the man tried to hit Vasquez with a four-foot long piece o f pipe, said Tem pe police Sgt. Vern Hull. Hull said Vasquez managed to block most of the blows, but the two men wrestled to the ground where the man took Vasquez’s .38-caliber service revolver from his holster. The man pointed the weapon a t Vasquez, who was able to put his hand around the gun’s cylinder and kept it from firing, Hull added. Police arrested C lifford Kevin Thompson, 34, on an aggravated assault charge and was booked into Tem pe City Jail. Thompson has no known address, Hull said. Hull said Vasquez suffered minor cuts to his arms and legs but did not need to be hospitalized. ASU police reported the following incidents ending at 2 p.m. Sunday: A fem ale student told police a man reached through an open window at Best Hall and pulled her hair early Sunday r Cross is billed by thé participating doctor. However, Leon said that the doctor he visited demanded payment before he left* . “ Doctors are harassing patients by demanding payments,” Leon said. “ They (doctors) are Smart to ask for imm ediate payment. I don’t blam e them. They know how long it w ill take to get payment from Blue Cross.” Shivers said that Leon’s case is proof that there is a problem of communication between doctors and Blue Cross. Davis said: “ Participating doctors have agreed to receive payment from Blue Cross. Something is wrong with the way Leon’s doctor handled the situation.” Gleason said doctors have agreed to adhere to Blue Cross’ regulations and allowances. “ I would indicate to any doctor that bills an insured patient that they had agreed to bill Blue Cross first.” Gleason said Blue Cross would be glad to work on a oneto-one basis with an individual having problems. But Leon said receiving help from Blue Cross is not that easy. “ Blue Cross doesn’t know how to handle m y certain circumstances,” he said. “ Something definitely needs to be done about this system. The students are getting the shaft. ” p o lic e re p o rt after'h e rummaged through a basket at die end o f her bed. Nothing was taken during the 4:25 a.m. incident. •Auto theft: Thursday, Lot 3. A thief stole a $12,000 red 1987 Pontiac Trans AM . There are no suspects or leads. •F alse reporting a rrest: 2:42 a.m . Sunday, Cholla Apartments. A m ale student was cited and released for falsely reporting a fire alarm . •Minor in possession of alcohol arrests: 10:30 p.m. Friday, Palo Verde West. Three m ale students w ere cited and released on their own recognizance after police seized a keg o f beer and two bottles of alcohol. •Theft: Friday, Manzanita dining hall. A thief stole a Jansport backpack and its contents valued at $75. •Impounded weapon: Thursday, 714 Alpha D rive. An ASU safety inspector found a Winchester rifle while conducting a safety check o f the fraternity house. •Burglary: between 5:50 p.m. Thursday and 9:25 a.m. Friday, Business Administration building. A thief stole a $160 JVC portable stereo. •Recovered vehicle: 9 a.m. Friday. Phoenix police recovered a $12,000 1986 Chevrolet that w?s stolen from Lot 57 a few hours earlier. 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Gas and insurance extra. • Sleeps 10 Comfortably • Full Kitchen/Microwave • Air Conditioning • Stereo System • Water Slide jj• Upper and Lower Command Bridge • 500 Square Foot Sundeck Call H20 & Snow V acations (619) 274-SNOW 1-800-637-SNOW (O utside CA) 8 1 0 E m erald S t., S an D ie g o , C A 9 2 1 0 9 arts & entertainm ent S *8* * ^ 11* ” Page 11 Monday, February 13,1989 C o n d u cto r includ es variety of p ieces in co n cert By JENNIFER LYNN JOHNSON State Press The U niversity Symphony Orchestra at Arizona State, conducted by Eugene Lombardi, typically draws a large crowd to its annual “ Concert of Soloists.” This concert features soloists from the School of Music, perform ing selections that range from the classic to the modern, depending on the tastes and abilities o f the chosen soloists. Daniel Schweer, flutist; Anthony R. Kniffen, tubist and James Heath, pianist w ere featured this year; both Schweer and Kniffen played twentieth-century solos. Lom bardi explained that each fa ll sem ester, a competition is held in each o f the six areas in the School of Music . . . voice, keyboard, brass, woodwinds, strings, and percussion. The top soloist in each area, as determined by a panel of judges, is invited to perform at a winners’ recital. Lombardi then chooses three o f these soloists to appear with the orchestra. Lombardi takes various factors into account as he chooses the soloists, such as the piece of music they chose to perform, what the piece w ill teach the orchestra, and how the selection w ill balance out the other selections on the program. Anticipated public reaction to the work perform ed is also im portant to Lom bardi. Traditionally, classical and Romantic music, such as that by Beethoven or Tchaikovsky, is the best choice to ensure a large audience. This year, however, two of the soloists . . . Daniel Schweer and Anthony Kniffen . . . perform ed twentieth-century pieces. Lombardi said that he would like to play more twentieth-century music on his concerts, but programm ing unorthodox pieces is a chancy business, “ I f you program a twentieth-century concert, and then no on® comes to hear it, you’re defeating the purpose,” he explained. “ Sometimes you can program -a twentiethcentury piece between two classical pieces . . . the audience comes to hear the things they know, but sometimes they’ll hear the (new music) and say, ‘W ell, that wasn’t so bad.’ The music is, in general, m ore accepted than it was thirty years ago. I see that (tren d) continuing.” In his thirty-two years as conductor of the orchestra, Lom bardi has seen the ensemble grow from a tiny group that needed help from the faculty to fill out the sections, to the well-rounded ensemble it is today. “ It was a very sm all group, when I came back in 1957. Strings w ere rather hard to come by. It took quite a w hile to get the orchestra to m ove, as far as getting m ore people in. As the school got bigger, w e had more students from outside the music department that were interested. “ The building of Gammage (in 1964) helped a lot, surprisingly. That seemed to invite people in . . . people seemed to say, ‘I ’d love to play in there, I ’d love to play on that stage.” ’ Lom bardi doesn’t think that orchestral instruments are harder to learn than band instruments, but he does think that the lack o f ‘salesmanship’ on the part o f orchestra directors Dan Ray/Stata Press Arizona Stafe’s University Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Dr. Eugene Lom bardi perform s various types of modem and classical music. has a lot to do with the chronic lack of good string players that he first noticed back in 1957. “ Sometimes . . . the person who directs the orchestra doesn’t ‘sell’ the orchestra the w ay the band director ‘sells’ his group,” he explains. “ O f course, the band has exposure . . . they play at football gam es and parades and a ll th a t. . . The orchestra just doesn’t get that kind o f exposure. “ You also have the problem of budgeting. I f a problem comes up with a lack o f funds, the band usually doesn’t get cut because it’s needed fo r football games . . . and the orchestra suffers. Many times, the person they put in charge o f the orchestra is not one who is knowledgeable about orchestra. He m a j be a musician, b u t. . . if you put a person who doesn’t know anything about strings in there, the program w ill flounder.” , Lombardi suggests that orchestra conductors in public schbols concentrate on the music itself as a selling point. “ You have to appeal to them with the literature, and the pride in being able to play the instrument. The kind of literature that w e play is world-renowned.” The orchestra perform s about four times a semester, with a season that begins when classes start in the fall. This is also when auditions take place, and Lombardi says that these auditions are open to everyone. “ In the orchestra right now, there are thirty-three different m ajors represented,” Lom bardi says. “ Of course, most of our people are in music . . . by ‘most,’ I mean that the percentage is much larger in music . . . but w e have everyth ing from broadcasting to in terior design to architecture to pre-med. In fact, m y concertm aster for the last six years was an electrical engineering m ajor.” Future orchestra concerts for this sem ester are scheduled fo r Monday, March 20, and Friday, A pril 28, both at Gammage at 7:30 p.m. Gallery exhibits reflect reality through works of art By TOD McCOY State Press James Robson’s “ Uncle Donald Drove a $tudebaker” w ill be displayed in the “ Synthesis” artex hlb lt, showing this w eek at the Harry W ood Art G allery In the Art Building. 'A long-held theory says that art im itates life, but can never achieve the same state of beauty and perfection. But, if we .could synthesize life, and change it into art, what would it look like? The latest exhibit at the H arry Wood A rt G allery reflects that statem ent about life. Titled “ Synthesis,” it displays nearly 20 d iffe r e n t w a y s o f p e r c e iv in g life , synthesized through the eyes — and talents — o f their creators. The exhibition, which w ill run through Friday, is a collection o f works by BFA upper division students and professors in the School of Art. M aterials used in the pieces range from wood to metal to reconstructed video games to a hood ornament from an old Studebaker. The show was put together by the ga llery’s guest curator, David Venezky, a senior in the ASU sculpture program , who believes that “ it is im perative that the public becomes aw are o f the new generation of sculptors who work in this area.” “ Sculpture is the bringing together of m aterials . . . that use more than one medium,” said M ichael O’Hare, a Fine Arts m ajor in the sculpture department. He is displaying two .works, “ Thinking o f the Future,” and “ Human M ortality,” both reflections on the frailty and brevity of human life. “ Thinking of the Future” is an abstract piece, O’Hare said, comprised of cast bronze, wood and pottery. Forged in the shape of a chessboard, it represents “ the chronic illness o f staying in the hospital for extended periods o f tim e.” F o r his second piece, O’Hare inscripted one o f his poems on a m irror, placing a red neon light beneath the m irror to enhance the poem. Shining down from above is a blue neon light, m ixing together on the glass like a pool o f light. P a rt of the poem reads “ Born man I ’m a player in a gam e that is life .. . I ’ve been told I can’t win yet been ordered to stay/And shown that m y loss w ill affect not the game if . James Robson’s piece, “ Uncle Donald D rove a Studebaker,” is based on an age-old id e a l o f the death o f h an d-crafted workmanship, yet updated a hundred years to m ark the en tran ce o f com puter technology and automated factories. “ Cars used to be made out of steel,” Robson said, “ not stamped out like they are now,” Robson poked around and found a Studebaker in an old car junkyard in Colorado. For his exhibit, he took the hood ornament and placed it within a coffinshaped box containing photocopies of promotional m aterial for the car. On the outside of the box are inscribed the “ dates” of the car. “ It not about a death,” Robson said, “ but m ore o f a rememberance. There’s a certain romance (associated with) the worker and the workplace.” Robson said the idea was based on his real Uncle Donald, a railroad man who really drove a Studebaker. Other artists and exhibits in the show include “ P iece fo r Do,” by Chari Jagelkas and “ Windshield Approaching Front,” by Lewis Alquist, an associate professor in the School of Art. The gallery, located on the first floor of the A rt Building, is open from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. An opening reception w ill be held from 7-9 p.m. today in the gallery. Page 12 Stet« F re n Monday, February 13« 1989 Owners hope ‘Tuna’ swims American Criminal Justice Association presents "Valentine Carnation Sale' $ 1 .0 0 Feb. 13 & 14 9 a.tn.-2 p.m. Cady Mall in front of M U Co-sponsored by ASASU Indulge Y ourself forV(dentine s (Day ____ M ill Avanue Theatre owners Ben Taylor (le ft) and Bruce Miles perform In ‘G reater Tuna,’ playing at the theatre through February. By TOD McCOY State Press Something sm ells fishy in the heart, of Tempe, and it’s not coming from one of the local restaurants. It sm ells enticing, almost as if .. As if something culturally stimulating has manifested itself in Tem pe — and that sm ell? W ell, it’s ju st a gust of fresh air. It is coming from the old Tem pe Hardware Building, where a new, 20-foot high sign has been painted on both sides, marking the home of the new M ill Avenue Theatre, one of the most stylistic theaters to hit the town in many years. It is making waves around the V alley as one of the best new theaters to open in years. The second floor (w here the theater is located) has had its share o f renovations — it was originally built fo r a group known as the International Order o f Odd Fellow s in 1898 (the group is still around today) and was last used by an art gallery that has since m oved to Phoenix. Now a new pair o f odd fellow s have moved in — Bruce M iles and Ben T yler, form er radio personalities and theater perform ers from around the V alley, have rented out the space and transform ed it into a sm all but cozy theater fo r the perform ing arts — and they perform every single character in their first production, “ G reater Tuna.” The theater, which holds 156 people, Opened on Feb. 9, is the newest addition to the nearly 100-year-old section of town, which is still expanding and contracting new shops to the area. In an incredibly short span of tim e, M iles and Tyler finished their perform ance of “ G reater Tuna” at Theater Works in Glendale, decided to do the show, got the funding, found the location and got the show rolling. The building of the theater commenced only a month ago. “ It was very tough, but very rewarding, too,” M iles said. “ It (the theater) has only had about a five month history.” Neither owner w ill adm it exactly how much they invested to get the theater started, only that it cost m ore than $5. The first production — “ G reater Tuna” — w ill be playing through the end o f the month, or until ticket sales drop, M iles said. “ We feel the show has a particular draw for college students,” M iles said, “ in that it’s a cult kind o f a show — not H O W T O BUY U .S . G O V T . H O M ES LIQUORS & MKT. FR EE S E M IN A R New Location Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. 1324 W . University Anyone can bid... best bid wins! (juvt east of Priest) exactly a ‘Rocky Horror Picture Show’ — but it does have an awful lot o f appeal,” The show is an off-Broadway production basedon the small town o f Tuna, Texas. There is a very m acabre based humor to the show, M iles explained, that pokes fun at sm all town life and the people who live in them. , “ G reater Tuna” was picked because of its long-run potential and wide-range appeal. So far, it has survived in San Francisco for three years, two years in Denver and had long runs in Dallas and Houston as well. One of the features o f the show is that M iles and Tyler each get to play about 10, characters apiece, utilizing about 25 different costumes. The costume changes, they figure, take anywhere from eight seconds —■their fastest — to a minute and a half. “ That’s forever,” said Tyler, “ In this show, a minute-and-a-half is an eternity.” Anyone in the downtown Tem pe area looking for a little show to go with their lunch w ill be delighted to learn that beginning about mid-March, the M ill Avenue Theatre is planning to hold one-act lunch-time plays. They are expected to last a half-hour and give the theater-goer just enough tim e to digest his lunch. Lunch and culture digested in the same hour — Quite a concept. M iles and T yler both consider their entrepreneurship as one of the few “ true” professional theaters in the Valley, although they are already working with students from ASU and hope to be collaborating with theater students in the summer to try some experim ental plays. “ We are working with professionals,” M iles affirm ed. “ Everyone who comes here is professional by virtue of the quality of their work, and also we pay our actors, staff and crew people. Because we do, we can pick the cream of the crop whether they are ASU students, faculty or residents of the greater Phoenix area.” Still up in the air, however, is what production w ill be staged next. I f the current production succeeds, chances are the theater w ill be looking fo r fa r greater tuna on the horizon. “ We can’t just offer ‘tuna’ up every tim e they come in,” T yler said. And if it fails, m aybe they could just sell tunafish sandwiches in the aisles: RUNDLE’S Volska Vodka, TSOrrtl........ $4.98 Meister Brau, 6 pk....___ 1.88 RC-Crush, 2 Itr......... ................ 99 Used Playboy Magazines....... 94 Call for more info 897-9000 ERA Carew Realty Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream , Adult M agazines, Groceries, Ice, W ines, over 40 imported Beers. 1660 S. Alma School Rd. (at Superstition Freeway) Fiesta Crossing Plaza Room 124________ 967-9079 UAVSf T tZ 93 0 W . S O U TH E R N . S U IT E 4 844-0420 M ESA . A Z 8S202 T IB S H R A E N Y PLAZA 3 1 6 8 6 . In dia nS ck oo l 408-0/OO H O T DOG HEAVEN Specializing in Bridal and Formal W ear With Personalized Fittings ,0% off m h ad W . 903 S. Rural Rd. Cinnamon Tree Center 1 Block South of University 968-4833 V Page 13 State Prest M ovie critics to celebrate w ith anniversary show HOUSTON (A P ) — Am id the tackiness of the recent syndicated television convention here, were those defenders of good taste, or at least good entertainment, film critics Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times and Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune. In a “ cave” Buena Vista Television had constructed in back o f the exhibition hall, the two critics took their places in front o f a Snackbar and popcorn machine to announce that next month they w ill tape a one-hour retrospective of great moments from their m ovie review show. the pair, such as the one in the m ovie “ Hollywood Shuffle;” best and worst film s; and interviews with stars who get to say what they think o f the critics. Long-tim e competitors in the Chicago newspaper market, Siskel and Elbert became an underground hit when they first began bantering on public television. They later left public TV for a m ore lucrative syndication deal. As evidenced by their appearance at the National Association o f Television Program m ing Executives here, they have also gotten an effective stand up routine down pat. Originally, they w ere paired on the PBS series, “ Sneak Preview s,” but more recently in the syndicated series “ At the M ovies” and “ Siskel & Ebert at the M ovies.” The clips retrieved from 12 years on the a ir together w ill be titled “ Siskel & Ebert’s 500th Show Celebration.” “ We don’t know if it’s the 500th show,” said Ebert. " I t ’s around the 500th show. It sounded better than ‘Siskel & Ebert’s 503rd Show Celebration.’ ” They said the highlights o f the special, to a ir in June, w ill include best arguments; outtakes; collections of parodies of wtei w e 'r e lo o k in g lo r a . A lA W m S t E V E N T * W e ft W ings, W in e 4 W om en fir e c r a c k e r . lo r 1 W e ll D Sc W r in k s 'WÈà .someone explosive to ignite fire in our advertising department. Tilts person will be responsible for selling, designing and creating advertising for 30-40 local ac­ counts, as well as cold calling. The successful candidate must be an advertising, marketing or Jour­ nalism major, possess a reliable car, be committed to excellence, dependable as a Rolex, a pro In tim e management and extremely self motivated. if this challenge Is for you, call me, Jackie Eldrldge, 965-7572. TOP THIS iit e t * - S fit fm l V 1988 Cetdmiol Pfedge d m ex tketi odivolm Emily Arison Laura Batchelor Bronwyn Benz Tracy Bower M ia Canzona Leah Carbonneau Michelle Crowe Cheryl Dem ko Kim Fanzo Dawn Grooters Leigh Hardy Jennifer Harrison Jennifer Hinkel Daisy Kinsey Karen Kipp Kristen Krock Linda McGovern Vicky Parks Tracie Pendleton Dawn Petrotta Cherryl Ricketts Audra Shine T in a Smith Peggy Strahm Jen Struck Katy Symms Shelly Tanske C&ruiÿ úind s e je . V a le n t in e 's D ay / Balloon Bouquet... features one mylar and 5 latex balloons VALENTINE’S BALLOON BOUQUETS 16" E xtra L arge C heese P izza For Just $689 (plus tax) 1 mylar 5 latex.............. $6.50 2 mylar 7 latex.............. $9.50 3 mylar 8 latex............$12.50 W K a J Oi h o ltiU u . Dak O FFER G O O D JANUARY 16th THRU FEBRUARY 19th 1989 ONLY. Call now. At this price you can afford to fo p off a large ch eese pizza any way you like. Load it up with the toppings o f your c h o ic e fo r just $1.25 each . And o f course, w e ’ l l d e liv e r your custom-made pizza hot and fresh No coupon necessary. Just Askl _ ^ _ C C E E to your door in 30 minutes or less. Guaranteed! 9 0 0 ™ l3 l 0 w O 90 3 S. R u ra l HOURS: 11:00 am -1:30 am Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 am - 2:30 am Fri.-Sat. Our drivers carry less than $20.00. Limited delivery area. © 1989 Domino’sP izza J n c^ U lM UtO fe CARDS-GIFTS «ETC. With every $10 purchase between now and Valentine’s Day, you can enter to win for your sweetheart a FREE Giant Stuffed Valentine’s Day Lion presented by Applause. 725 a Rural Rd. • Tempe • (At the Cornerstone) 829-9399 Deliveries $3.50 w ithin a 3 mile radius. ,____Monda^_Februatyj3Li 9 8 9 _ ^ _ _ ' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ — Knotts borrows old character fo r n e w LOS ANG ELES ( A P ) — Don Knotts has been reunited with his old pal Andy G riffith on television and you might notice a little of Barney F ife in his new role. Knotts honed his fam iliar characterization from his earliest days in television, when he was the tense little man on “ The Steve Allen Show.” He twitches and fidgets and speaks in a voice that rises in nervous inflections. Then in the 1960s on “ The Andy G riffith Show” he won five Em m ys as Deputy Barney F ife, the bumbling lawman with childish pretensions and a nervous tic. The character got another incarnation as Ralph Furley, the bombastic landlord on “ Three’s Company.” Now, Knotts, who first teamed with G riffith in “ No Tim e fo r Sergeants” on Broadway and in the film , is hack with G riffith in NBC’s “ M atlock.” He plays Les Calhoun, a retiree and self-described “ king of plastics,” who m oves in next door to Ben Matlock, the crim e-solving Southern law yer played by G riffith. Calhoun is a man frequently in trouble because of his inability to leave w ell enough alone. Knotts, in person, displays none of the hilarious and sometim es exasperating mannerisms. His voice is soft and his manner is alm ost courtly. “ It sure is fun to wort: with Andy again,” he says. “ In th e first show w e had a chance to sit down and do some of the things w e used to do in ‘The Andy G riffith Show.’ Just talk. That was real fun. “ I try to keep him different from Barney, but some o f it’ll creep in. W orking with Andy it’s hard to stay away from it. A n d ! don’t know that I should stay totally aw ay.” Knotts and G riffith had last worked together three years ago in the NBC m ovie “ Return to M ayberry,” a reunion of the gang from “ The Andy G riffith Show.” “ I got a call from Andy in North Carolina last summer during the w riters strike,” Knotts said. “ He said he’d been talking to the producers about working m e into the show. I thought he was kidding. But he wanted to add something to the show. He kept calling. “ I was in Traverse Qity, Mich., doing a play. He called me again after the strike was over and said we need to talk business. And I realized then that he really meant business. I wasn’t sure.” : When Knotts got home from doing the play the first script had already been written. “ It went through a lot of rew riting,” he said. “P eople don’t realize it but Andy does a lot of rew riting. The stuff w e had talked about he made sure got in there.” . Knotts quit “ H ie Andy G riffith Show” a t the end of five years, but returned regularly for guest appearances. ‘ ‘Andy said he was going to leave after fiv e years, so I said I would, too,” he recalls. “ Universal offered me a picture ^ ^ 5 5 2 S L l5 2 i ro le deal. I left, but Andy changed his mind and stayed. I spent fiv e years at Universal doing one picture a yehr.-Then I did m y variety show on NBC but it didn't do very w ell. It did go the fu ll season, and after that I free-lanced. I sort o f wound up with a picture contract at Disney. They guaranteed m e a picture a year.” Then cam e five years on ABC’s “ Three’s Company.” He also did h alf a season as the school principal on the syndicated comedy “ What a Country!” Knotts grew up in Morgantown, W. Va., where he was called “ Spider” because of his w iry build. He also excelled in basketball and wrestling. He was attending the U niversity of West Virginia when he was drafted during W orld W ar il. He was in the Arm y show “ Stars and Stripes” and toured the South P a cific with a comedy act. A fter the w ar he returned to get his degree and do postgraduate work at the U niversity o f Arizona. But he was soon in New York doing radio. “ I played the old-tim er oh a W estern series,” he said. “ I borrowed Gabby Hayes’ voice and the guys used to kid me about it. One day Gabby visited the studio and the guys set m e up. I was rehearsing and he burst through the door and gave m e hell for using his voice. I was scared to death. Then everybody started laughing.” N e e d c a s h fa s t? p R E A C H n F O R T H E S T A R S /äjslwk Sell it in the State Press \ f P r 7 1 Classifieds • 965-6731 Read the Arts & Entertainment Section, State Press m m t i i m M m m i i H m i i m i t m M m M n. B a s e m e n t M a tth ew s C e n te r ... R A R E LIO N R E S A L E D W Y E R ’S Simplified Court Reporting Center A F jtfE SELECTIO N O F Q U A LIT Y Earn $20K to $30K a year BUYING L earn SELUNG C o u rt R ep o rtin g : $ 4 0 /w e e k N o te R e a d in g : $ 3 0 /w e e k TRADtNG U s € d c l o t h i n g . A n t iq u e s , C o l l e c t ib l e s , a n d Je w e l r y R a re De a l s at * R o a r in g G o o d P r i c e s Mo n . ■S a t 10 a .m . - 6 p .m . U n iversity Learn to read and write Court Reporting! O n ly night s c h o o l in town! w o t S K v e , Su ite 25 Students • (602) 730-1180 Faculty S h o w • Staff y o u r p r id e • Alumni In • 921 S. M ILL T e m pe T e m pe C e n te r (NEAR PlC-N-SAVE) 9 6 8 -6 0 7 4 Friends A S C II Turn in your old Arizona plates for die new In s u r in g TÒMORRÒW Arizona S tate University Collegiate Plates at the Alumni Center (southeast com er of Apache and McAllister) O U TSTA N D IN G LEADER AWARDS For ASU Students w ith Ju nio r-Y e ar Status Motor Vehicle Department representatives will be there on W ednesday, February 15 T h e Insuring T o m o rro w program w ill re c o g n iz e an o u ts ta n d in g s tu d en t lea d e r from each u n d e r­ g rad u ate co lleg e at A S U . to accept your old plates and issue new ASCI plates. Cost is $ 25 for the plates, with a $25 per year annual renewal charge. Personalized plate applications are available, and can be mailed in to the Motor Vehicle Department (applications take four to six weeks to be processed). Plates must be exchanged by the registered owner (or spouse) of the vehicle, and you must have your current registration with you. If you are exchanging your plates during your regular registration renewal period, you will need your emissions test compliance form and your additional registration fees. Fee payment is by cash or check only. For each plate sold, $17 goes to the M edallion of M erit scholarship fund at A S U . Pick up your plates this W ednesday at the Alumni C e n te r!; For m ore infonnation’ call 965-3566. Applications available: -e a c h D e a n ’s o ffice of yo u r co lleg e -A s s o c ia te d S tudents M U 2 0 8 -J Deadline: 5:00 p.m. Wednesday, February 2 2 ,1 9 8 9 A ssociated Students M U 208-J State P re » P a geJ S ^nda^FfcbnjanM c^989 By MISH TELL State Press ASU graduate-student Diana S. Greene has written a book which hopes to help newparents cope with the blundering red nosed, teary-eyed infants that have just invaded their once peaceful household. In her novel,“ 79 Ways to Calm a Crying Baby,” which can be found in the ASU bookstore, Greene explores new sensations on how to occupy a baby’s mind so the little goochy-goochy stops bawling. Through humorous creations, Greene takes the new parent on a journey of invention. Using techniques such as “ oral salutions, motions, and sounds,” the baby learns to focus on thoughts other than crying. For instance: “ Bagels and Bones” is one idea where the parent is taught to let the infant suck on a miniature size bagel or large chicken bone just to give the little one something to do instead o f crying. “ M y d a u g h te r M a ris s a w as the inspiration (fo r this book),” she said. Marissa, who was said to have been a real “ cry-baby” le ft Greene no choice but to become inventive with new anti-crying devices. But how does one, with a baby bundled in open arms, com e up with so many ingenious ideas? “ Through tria l and error and through the grapevine, talking to the parenting m afia and I did a lot of research too,” Greene said. “ But most of it was through experience and R Ubr testing, and being forced t o . . . what do they say? ‘Necessity is the mother o f invention?’ (It was like) being forced to,” she said. Greene’s book explores more than just ways to help stop a baby’s cries. She explains the stages o f growth and why a baby needs to cry as w ell as a baby’s communication skills and how a parent should read into the cries. The book, “ 79 Ways to Calm a Crying Baby,” states that “ some babies are just m ore demanding, less tolerant than others, or perhaps it’s better to think of these kids as active rather than passive, extroverted rather than introverted.” Greene keeps her sense of humor throughout the book while relaying the message that a baby’s cries can be conquered. Complete -with illustrations by Robert Mansfield, the book w ill keep a smile of relief on any new parent’s face. " I think a lot of the tim e leavity is what helps me through the hard tim e situations, so I try to make jokes to help me get by,” she said. Greene, who is hoping to w rite another book on child care and parenting soon, feels the best technique, at least the one that worked best for her daughter, was called “ Matress M agic.” “ It was like becoming a one-man-band but it combined into being the most effective tool w e had,” she said. Greene just gave birth to her seeond child about two months ago. And this baby? As calm as they come! e a d a b o u t t h é p a s t .„ a n d t h e p r e s e n t . aJL r P ER SO N A L D EV ELO P M EN T W ORKSHO P ^ HOW DO I LOVE ME? HOW DO I LOVE ME? This Workshop utilizes a new approach to building self­ esteem. Participants will become familiar with methods of gainings—and keeping—high self-esteem. There will be much interaction and a variety of group activities. Presenter: Helen Johnson, M .C., author of How Do 1 Love Me: Let Me Count The Ways; she has been a talk show guest in Chicago and Minneapolis, presenter at many national con­ ventions; served as a counselor at a local community college since 19571. FAST FREE DELIVERY! ^ e r v ic e ^ u ijd in SIGN UP NOW FOR THE ULTIMATE SPRINGJREAK CLUB MED SONORA BAY, MEXICO THEULTIMATEFIRST-CLASS SPRINGBREAK. Thistripisonlyforthose whodraerveanddemandthebest Nolongtrainridesaidroaaairalodtoin off-beach hotels. You are at Club Med, on the ocean, for a fall seven days -Saturday to Saturday. Thereis nocomparisonif youconsiderwhatyouget. ALL THE FOLLOWING IS PROVIDED AT NO ADDITIONAL COST TO YOU: • Lodging (2 per room) • 8 C M to l M M t o M (All you can eat) C l l r i . 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Ash Tempe, AZ 85281 • A ll th e K H and B to you can conauine d u rin g lu n ch & d in n e r Party daily on the private beaches alongwith TOO around the world and nightly at the Disco from 11:00 PM —4:00 AM on the beach under the moon. A (Limited treo delivery area, $4.95 minimum food ordor)$l p e r to p p in g Seating is limited, $3 in advance; $5 at the door. Your check reserves your place. For registration, call 965-6547 or come to the Student Life Office, 2nd d e n $ PLUS TAX 1 1 1 S IS | PAPA JAY’S I % PIZZA ft U IHttio ffl T U E S D A Y , FE B R U A R Y 1 4 ,1 :4 0 P .M .-3:30 P .M . C O C H IS E W E S T , M U ^ J o o r ^ t u M il. _ LARG E CHEESE P IZ Z A S Mon.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Syr».-11:30-4:00 One Coupon j j comics Page 16 BLOOM COUNTY Monday, February 13,1989 b y B e rk e B re a th e d T P L m w ftFOiMize yeoTBRPfirs m u y tm w c n m p satirical attack on m v / c e Fueaom rs ¿amy wife THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON 6 1980 Chronicle Feature« Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate for "AAAAAAAIbert!' Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson By GARY LARSON "You n e v e r seen a h am o p e ra to r b efo re? " sports surte P ro » Page 17 Monday, February 13,1989 ASU gymnasts lose to Utah; tally highest score of season By CHRIS DORSEY State Press Peaks and valleys can best describe the ASU women’s gym nastic team ’s perform ance following its last meet with perennial power Utah Saturday night. The high point of the evening saw freshman Tracy Butler score a 37.70 in the all-around to lead the Sun Devils and junior All-Am erican Suzy Baldock tallied a 9.8 on the uneven bars to give ASU its highest single-event score for the competition. However, the Sun D evils and mentor John Spini went down in defeat to the tune of 190.20-189.75. It was the second time this season the Utes edged ASU. But despite the loss, Spini’s crew tabulated its best score of the year — a score the ninthyear coach was shooting for prior to the meet. “ We w ere a ll psyched for this m eet,” Butler said. “ The excitem ent level was really high, you could just tell w e were going to do w ell.” The Sun D evils did not have a competitor finish in the top three in the all-around. Butler was the highest finsher for ASU, notching fourth place honors while teammate Molly Carpenter trailed close behind with a 37.60. This was the first tim e Butler competed in the all-around since the beginning of the season. Butler scored 9.25 on the vault, 9.6 on the uneven bars, 9.45 on the balance beam and 9.4 on the flo w exercise. “ I was happy I could do so w ell and help the team ,” Butler said. Carpenter earned second place honors with scores of 9.65 on the floor exercise, 9.5 on the uneven bars, 9.45 on the vault and 9.0 on the balance beam. “ Everything is starting to com e together,” Carpenter said. “ I am a slow starter. I am upset with (balance) beam, I shouldn’t be taking fa lls.” This m eet produced different results than in previous com petition. Senior A ll-A m erican K a rli Urban has By t o m i M c e l r o y State Press ASU sophomore Anthony Manahan batted 4-for-4 and hit the gam e winning R B I in the ninth inning to lift the Sun D evils over the Texas Tech Red Raiders, 9-8, Saturday at Packard Stadium. “ I ’ve been trying to go to right field a little bit m ore,” Manahan said. “ They (the coaches) have been working on m y swing trying to get m e to spray the ball more because I was pulling the ball too much.” Manahan’s hit between right and center field brought in senior Dan Rumsey who led o ff the inning with a single to left. ASU senior left-hander Davis Cassidy started the gam e, but was replaced in the consistently led the Sun D evils in the all-around scoring but a fa ll on the floor exercise dropped her score to a 9.0 and sent her home with a 37.50, putting her in a three-way tie with teammates Colette Anderson and M ichelle Colavin. Urban finished the evening with scores of 9.7 on the vault, 9.55 on the balance beam and 9.25 on the uneven bars. Colavin scored high in every event, but suffered the same disapointment as Urban, fallin g on the floor exercise, which earned her a 9.0. She boosted her all-around score by posting marks of 9.55 on the vault and uneven bars and adding a 9.4 on the balance beam. Spini saw his junior, Anderson, score evenly throughout the match. She contributed scores of 9.5 on the vault, 9.45 on the floor exercise, 9.35 on the uneven bars and 9.3 on the balance beam. “ Everybody got together Saturday night,” Colavin said. “ We started out just great, which is a change.” The Sun D evils have been slow in starting the meets off with a good vaulting performance, but against Utah they posted a 9.5 average. Since returning to competition after suffering a knee injury last season, Baldock has continued to im prove her scores with each meet. Agaist Utah, she took part in three events: vaulting, balance beam and uneven bars. In those three events Baldock scored a career-high on the uneven bars while turning in the highest score of the night for the Sun D evils with a 9.8. She added a 9.6 on the balance beam and 9.5 on the vault. “ She (Baldock) did great,” Colavin said. “ During h er bar routine she looked scared to death, and it was the best routine I have seen her do.” It was rumored that Utah coach Greg Marsden intimidated the judges into giving them higher scores which produced the Ute victory. “ It is frustrating, to have a good m eet and lose because of their coach is intim idating the judges,” Colavin said. fifth inning by freshman Sean Rees. “ That was Cassidy’s best effort of the last three, but he was very inconsistent,” ASU head baseball coach Jim Brock said. “ Rees was fine the inning he came in, but he did the same thing he did in Florida — he came in and got them out, seemed to have pretty good stuff, (but) came back and was flat. “ It was like he didn’t have the same arm or command.” Rees pitched one inning before senior Dave Alexander took the mound. This was the third appearance for Alexander in the Sun D evils’ last four games. “ You want to bring him in and have every ball in the zone be a slider,” Brock said. Alexander struck out three batters, and ASU sophom ore M ichelle Colavin perform s her routine on the balance beam Saturday night during the Sun Devils’ loss to Utah. Colavin scored a 9 .4 in the event. walked one in his three and one-third innings o f relief. He gained his third win of the season, boosting his record to 3-0 and sporting a clean E R A slate. “ Alexander certainly pitched w ell fo r us,” Brock said. “ He’s the guy we have to make the plays for. He was tired before w e used him, w e’ve definitely overused him.” The Sun D evils rallied twice in the gam e before putting it in the bag. Trailing, 7-4 in the seventh inning, ASU scored one run and followed with three in the eighth inning. The Sun D evils w ere ahead, 8-7 going into the ninth inning, when Texas Tech’s Shanon Hays took first base on an error and second base on another. Red Raider Brian Roper drove in Hays with a double, tying the score, 8-8. A fter the gam e, Manahan said the comeback victory was beneficial for the Sun Devils. “ We need games like this because w e’re young,” he said. “ W e need them to build our confidence. I ’m glad it cam e early — w e need to have a few more before we get into the Pac, because in the Pac, we usually have two out of the three gam es like this.” In Friday’s 7-1 victory, senior left-hander Rusty K ilgo picked up his first win of the season for his complete gam e performance. K ilgo surrendered a run in the first inning, and the Sun D evils scored one in the second. T u rn to Baseball, page 19. Ice Devils slip to All-Stars; gain valuable experience aafi| By DAVE HODGES State Press B e asley J r./S ta te P ress SU goalie Derek Cheif trip , up UCLA's Greg Anderson durtng e battle te r puck S rtu rte y ight. The Ice Devils w ere forced to play close to th eir own goal, losing 9-» to the Bruins. PH O EN IX — For one period Saturday at Tow er Ice Palace, the Ice D evils played like a well-drilled collegiate hockey team. But, unfortunately for ASU, there w ere three periods in the gam e. A P h oen ix A ll-S ta r team , m ain ly consisting of form er collegiate, hockey players, overcam e a 3-1 deficit after the opening period and beat the Devils, 10-4. ASU coach Dan Murphy said he was not overly concerned about the loss, mainly because it was an exhibition gam e and the hockey skills o f the All-Stars are better developed because many w ere involved in m ajor college hockey programs. “ T h e y (P h o e n ix ) e x e c u te d w e ll, something we weren’t doing,” Murphy said. “ They have a lot m ore hockey experience.”; About the only bright spot fo r the Devils (2-8) was the play of senior forward Dan K elly, who earned a hat trick with three goals. “ He’s one of the most im proved players on the team this year,” Murphy said. “ He’s always in oh lots of second efforts.” K elly started the scoring nearly four minutes into the gam e on a wrist shot o ff a rebound in front o f the net. But Phoenix came right back, scoring a minute later on a slapshot by John Martin. The D evils then stretched the lead to 3-1 on goals by K elly and Artz. T h e f i r s t p e r io d fo r A S U w a s characterized by crisp passing, good forechecking and solid goaltending. But the rest of the gam e was just the opposite. Phoenix erupted fo r four goals in the second and five in the third against two goalies as the contest quickly turned ugly. All-Star G reg Anderson, who scored two goals Saturday, put his own rebound into the net just nine seconds into the period. G eoff Cook followed less than two minutes later, and the rout was on. ASU goalie Derek Chaif, who played brilliantly during a 2-1 victory over an Alburquerque team last weekend, was replaced by Chuck Slessman with 8:14 remaining in the period and Phoenix leading, 4-3. It didn’t help. Although Slessman only allowed one m ore goal in the second period, Phoenix added fiv e m ore in the final stanza. T h e D e v ils w ere w ith ou t s e v e ra l defensemen and Murphy said many o f the lines w ere unorganized. Several key players also may be left behind this weekend when the club travels to Colorado for two big gam es with the U niversity o f Colorado and Colorado .U niversity because they don’t have enough money to make the trip. State P u « Monday, February 13,1989 PagelS pac 10 Sun Devil linksters invadeTucson PAC-10 STANDINGS PAC-10 GAMES Pci.* GB .923 .833 1% .750 2% .667 3% .615 4 .417 6Vi .308 8 w L 12 t 10 2 9 3 8 4 8 5 5 7 4 9 3 9 2 10 0 11 Arizona UCLA Stanford Oregon State California Washington Arizona State Oregon Washington State Southern Cal ALL GAMES W L Pet. .857 18 3 .782 16 5 .783 18 5 .782 16 5 .708 17 7 .429 9 12 .500 11 11 .364 8 M 233 7 14 .304 7 16 Wi 9% 11% 250 :167 .000 Arizona State 98, Oregon 94 EUGEME, Ore. (AP) — Torin Williams made four straight free throws in the final 37 seconds to lead Arizona State to a 98-94 comeback victory over Oregon in Pacific 10 Conference basketball on Saturday The Sun Devils had trailed the entire second,half until a basket by substitute center Emory Lewis put them out in front, 88-87, with 2:30 to play. * Oregon briefly regained the lead, 89-88, on a shot by forward Randy Grant with 2:10 to go but a Williams' basket and two free throws put Arizona State in front 92-89 with 1:10 to play. Oregon guard Frank Johnson tied the game on a 3-point basket with 51 seconds left before Williams gave the Sun Devils their victory margin. The victory was the first in three tries for Bob Schermerhom since he became interim head coach at Arizona State. It moved the Devils into seventh place ahead of Oregon with a 4-9 record in the Pao-.IO,11-11 overall. Oregon now is 3-9 in the conference and 8-14 overall. Arizona State was led by center Trent Edwards, who had 25 points before fouling out with 2:58 to play. Williams had 22 points. By DAVE HODGES State P re u Riding the momentum o f its recent victory, the ASU Women's go lf team w ill attempt to im prove on its No. 3 ranking when play begins today at the Arizona Invitational in Tucson. The Sun D evils, who overcam e a nine-stroke deficit entering the final round to win the USC Yam aha Invitational on Jan. 25, w ill be battling many o f the nation’s top teams at the tournament, which continues through Wednesday. Head coach Linda Vollstedt said ASU m ay have some extra incentive as the men’s team won the Arizona Invitational last weekend. “ I know they’re really looking forw ard to it,” Vollstedt said. “ Their spirit is high and the confidence level is high. “ They’re really excited coming o ff the win.” But a victory in Tucson won’t come easily, the D evils w ill have to compete with some of the nation’s best teams, including Texas, San Jose State, Stanford, New M exico State, Southern California and host Arizona. Vollstedt said ASU’s competing golfers w ill be Pearl Sinn, a two-time All-Am erican who finished third at the USC Yam aha tournament; Lynne Mikulas, who placed sixth; Oklahom a 82, Arizona 80 M issy F arr, a seventh-place finisher; Am y Fruhwirth, who finished sixth at Arizona in 1987 and Julie Shephard. Shephard, a freshman from Scottsdale, w ill only be making her third tournament appearance. Sinn is the first golfer to ever win the U.S. Amateur and the U.S. Public Links Championships in the same year, a feat she accomplished last summer. With the cancellation of the Betsy Rawls Invitational, March 17-19, ASU only w ill compete in one m ore tournament (M arch 3-5) before the annual Lady Sun D evil Invitational, A pril 10-12 at Stone Creek Golf Corse. Vollstedt said the team ’s goal is to always finish in the top three, but she also wants the team to play with some consistency, especially in the early rounds. “ The m ain goal would be to come out with a good round on the first day and break 300,” she said. And there is always that little incentive of playing, in Tucson against UofA. The last tim e ASU played in the Arizona Invitational, in 1987, (he Sun D evils cam e away with a victory. “ We get pumped up a little more anytim e w e go down to Tucson,” Vollstedt said. “ It’s great to get a win in Tucson " f o r a b e s t se lle r? Stacey King scored 24 points and Oklahoma overcame a seven-point second-half deficit Sunday to beat the top-ranked Wildcats 82-80. Since Oklahoma beat No. 3 Missouri this week, second-ranked Georgetown lost to Pittsburgh and fourthranked Louisville lost to Florida State, the Sooners probably will retake the top spot Monday in this week's Y -K N O T PA R T Y S H O P P E W e o ffe r a Associated Press poll. Arizona became the third straight top-ranked team to lose in its first week as No. 1. Oklahoma did it two F or AU Your Wedding & Party N eeds d iffe r e n t weeks ago and Illinois last week. Sean Elliott scored 26 points for Arizona, 18-3, which had its KVgame winning streak snapped. EHiott, who went nearly eight minutes in the second half without scoring, pufied the Wildcats to 77-73 with a STATE PRESS C la s s ifie d A d v m J is i^ Valentine’s Day Special P A R T Y 3-pointer with 1:44 left. The two teams traded baskets, then Mookie Blaylock made a free throw with 33 One Dozen Roses for $32.50 E X P E R IE N C E seconds remaining to put the Sooners ahead 78-75. Blaylock’s second free throw bounced away, but William Davis grabbed the offensive rebound and was fouled. He made both shots to make the score 8675. '** ¡ ^ V ^ E io tt made a jumper with 20 seconds left, but Blaylock came back six seconds later to make both ends of A ll rides into picturesque Superstition wilderness! ApacheJti Az.. a one-andone. Matt Othick made a 3-pointer with seven seconds left. "I didn’t think it would come down between me and Stacey," Elliott said. "I thought it would come down to. being able to hold onto the ball and hold them off. We were able to hold onto the ball, but we couldn’t hold C ALL ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ And Leave Message ★ A ll New Facilities ★ Live Entertainment asu wrestling Also: Floral A rrangem ents Gifts B alloon B ouquet $ 1 5 (Reg.) 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The Hawkeye victory came less than 24 hours after Iowa upset No. 1 Oklahoma State, 20-17, Saturday. Anderson could have tied the meet for ASU by dedsioning Haman, and won it for the Sun Devils with a pin. But Haman overcame an early 1-0 lead by Anderson to win the match. Brothers Terry and Tom Brands of Iowa, who usually wrestle at 116 and 126 pounds, respectively, both moved up a weight class and collected victories for Iowa, which ran its record to 16-2. Arizona State fed to 15-3-2 with the loss. national basketball association >2 W eek U n l i m i t e d - *22# S in g le S essfonàv . . *, Now Available B o d y T o q lh g T a b le s .^ S tu d en t Rate#; W W IT H S T U D E N T I.D . HOURS: 930 W. Broadway, No. S . _ NBA ALL-STAR GAME (Between Beck _ ' r m Mon.-Fri. &Hardy) 966-3894 {j^*y 8 a.m.-IO p.m. ^ 9 p'm’ W EST 143, EAST 134 East West , 31 28 37 38 - 134 47 40 24 32 - 143 W EST (143) E nglish 3 1 3 0 9 16, K.M alone 12-17 4 9 28, O iajuw on 3 1 2 2 9 12, E llis 12-16 2-2 27, S tockton 5 9 0 9 11, A bdukJabbar 1 9 2-2 4, D rexler 7-19 0-0 14, C ham bers 4 9 6 9 14, M ullin 1-4 3 2 4 , W orthy 4-7 0 9 8, E aton 0 9 0 9 9 , D uckw orth 2 9 1-2 5. T otals 81-113 A ttendance — 44,735. HOUSTON (AP)— Playing without the real Magic, Karl Malone and John Stockton created some magic of their own Sunday, carrying the West to a 143134 victory over the East in the NBA An-Star Game. Stockton, the only point guard on the West team after scheduled starter Magic Johnson was injured on Wedneday night, directed a record-breaking attack in the first hall, wowing a record Alt-Star crowd at the Astrodome. The West led by as many as 31 points an route to an 87-59 halltime lead, breaking by one the Ail-Star record lo r points in a half eat by the West in 1962. The East got as dose as seven in the fourth quarter before faltering. Stockton had an All-Star record nine assists in the first quarter, breaking Johnson's 1984 mark of sight, although he didn’t play the last 3:18. Malone, Stockton's Utah Jazz teammate, scored 18 of his 28 points in the first hall and was 84or-9 from the field in the first two periods, most of them on dunks or feathery layups. Malone was selected the game's Most SPAIN Beginning with the 1989 fall semester, SMU’ s study abroad program will move to the highlyregarded José Ortega y Gasset foundation. Live and study in Madrid. Earn transferable SMU college credit in art history, finance, history, marketing, political science, and Spanish. All courses, except Spanish, are taught in English. fo r detailed information, return the coupon below or call (214) 692-2338. W e S c o re M o re. SUPER MEAL —— DEAL----+LARGE 1 6 " CHEESE PIZZA (Extra items $1.05 each) irCHOICE QF BEER OR SODA PITCHERS *TOSSED SALAD OR GARLIC BREAD (50* extra) Return to: Southern Methodist University International Programs 105 fondren Library West Dallas, TX 75275 $599 plus tax OFFER GOOD HAPPY HOUR ONLY Name (5-9 p.m. Monday-Satiirday) EAT IN ONLY assists lor the East. Kareem Abduklabbar, in hie 20th andast season, appeared in Ns 18th A *9tar Game, missing hie first five shots and scoring lour pointi. He aet the career A3Star scoring record last year. The attendance of 44,735 broke the A»-Star record of 43,146 at the Indianapolis HooeierOomein1985.lt THE PRINCETON REVIEW 952-8850 w ith S outhern M e th o d is t U niversity Valuable Player. Dale EMs scored 27 paints and Alex English 16 lor lor the West. Stockton finished with 11 points and 17 assists. Michael Jvdan scored 12 of hie 28 points in the fourth quarter to lead the East, which still leads Hie All-Star sarlas 2314. The East had won seven ot the previous nine games. Isiah Thomas added 19 points and 14 The LSAT, GRE and GMAT can be tough, but we can make them a whole lot easier. The Princeton Review has helped thousands of students dramatically raise their scores. .......... . Small classes (8 to 12 students) geared to your strengths and weaknesses and a detailed computer analysis throughout the program make us the most effective, efficient and enjoyable way to dramatically improve your scores. You’ll score more when you know how. __________ Spend a S em ester or Tw o in 1 3 2 3 143. 3 -point goals — Thom as, P rice , Jackson, E llis , S tockton. Fouled o u t — N one. Pabounds — E ast 64 (M .M alone 8), W est 65 (D rexler 12). A ssists — East 26 (Thom as 14), W est 38 (S tockton 17). T o ta l fo u ls — East 17. W est 23. 6MAT or SAT And w ell teach you how. EAST (134) B arkley 6-11 5-8 17, W ilkins 3-8 3-3 9, M .M alQne 3-9 3-3 9, Jordan 1 3 2 3 2-4 28, Thom as 7-13 4-6 19, Ew ing 2-8 0-4 4, C um m ings 4-9 2 -2 10, Nance 5-9 0-0 10, P rice 3 9 2-2 9, Jackson 3-5 2-4 9, D augherty 0 9 0 9 0 , M cH ale 3 7 0 9 10. T otals 54-114 2 3 9 6 134. Raisf your G R C - L 3 A T Fraternities & Sororities. Welcome! :; Address was the largest NBA crowd ever away from the Pontiac Skverdome, which has the four largest aver. asu briefs City ASU Softball The ASU softball games wars rained out Thursday against United States International University and Fri­ day thru Sunday at the San Diego State Tournament. The Davila w * play host to Oregon, which w i mark both the season home opener and the Pac-10 opener for ASU. The double header w i begint at 6 p.m. at the Sun Devil Club Stadium. Send me infor­ mation on SMU’ s other study abroad programs: State Zip Summer Semester —^.Copenhagen __ Austria. ___Japan ___Oxford __ Paris ___Rome ___Tours ARIZONA— ITALIAN DINNERS P IZ Z A ----- -------------S P A G H E T T I--------- SUB D EV IL SUB SANDW ICHES — RESTAURANT , . L University & Mill 967-8091 -------- ------------BEER----- -----------— w in e c o o l e r s VIDEO GAM ES­ JUKEBOX-— — ] State Page 19 Monday, February 13j, 3989 , use By TOMI McELROY State P ress ASU Head Tennis Coach Lou Belken said he is hoping tim e o ff from competition w ill prepare Ins team for the upcoming matches against USC, UCLA, and Pepperdine in California this weekend. “ Going over to L.A . is always a tough spot to play, just as w e hope it’s tough fo r them coining over h ere.” Belken said. Last yea r at Whiteman Tennis Center, the Sun D evils defeated the Trojans, who always have been a tough rival. “ They’ll be out to beat us, they’ve got a good strong team .” Belken said. U C LA seem s to be th e tou gh est competition. The Bruins have their entire team from last year returning. Pepperdine has traditionally been one of the top in the country. “ We’re getting in the part o f the season where the schedule is brutal,” Belken said. “ No,other schedule can com pare to that of tennis.” . ¡ ¡ I The last home matches w ere Feb. 3 and 4. The Sun D evils earned a split, losing to UC Santa Barbara, 6-3, before defeating 25thranked Minnesota, 5-4. In the Sun'DeVil No. 1 spot, Brian Gyetko split his matches, which brings his record to 2-4. Dave Lom icky, in the No. 2 spot, won both his m atch es and is 5-1 in sin gles competition. “ Dave has been a consistent player through the first six matches,” Belken said. “ H e’ s settlin g down and becom in g comfortable with the surroundings, like I hoped he would.” Gyetko and Lomicky teamed up to boost their record to 5-0 as the No. 1 doubles seed. The Sun Devils have not used the same line-up in their first six matches of season play due to sicknesses and injuries. “ It’s good news and bad news,” Belken said. “ It’s a little frustrating because w e’d like to have all our starters in there. The good part of it is everyone is getting playing tim e and correcting themselves. “ Every tennis team has its injuries down the road, so everyone w ill have m ore experience i f those come about.” The Sun D evils were not invited to the National Indoors, which resulted in the additional break from competition. The tournament invites eight teams regionally and 12 teams at large, based on pre-season rankings. ASU was ranked 23rd preseason. “ I ’m happy about the tim e o ff to try and get everyone healthy,” Belken said. “ It ’s also nice because we have kids that are adjusting. A t this tim e you learn how to get a handle on stuff. It’s a good break for us.” The Sun Devils do not play at home until the week of Spring Break in March, when they start a very busy schedule, with 10 matches throughout the month. ASU is scheduled to leave Thursday for California, playing USC Friday a tl:30p.m ., U C L A S a tu rd a y a t 1:00 p.m . and Pepperdine Saturday at 1:30 p.m. Thp gam e rem ained dead-locked, 1-1, until the sixth inning when ASU freshman Mike K elly knocked a two-run homer over the left-center field w all. “ I was looking for something on the outer half of the plate . . !■, and just reacted to anything they threw inside,” K elly said. “ I got a hanging curve ball on the inner half and turned on it.” Kelly, who h it his. second home run of the year, leads the team With 12 RBIs. The Sun D evils added two more runs in the sixth inning oh a two-run double by first baseman Steve Martin. K ilgo yielded seven hits, walked one, and struck out seven. “ I kind of caught a second wind when we got those runs,” K ilgo said. “ It took a little pressure o ff me. I was throwing with a little more aggressiveness.” H ie Sun D evils scored two runs in the seventh inning on back-to-back R B I doubles by seniors K evin Higgins and Dan Rumsey, leading to the final score. ASU w ill have three days o ff before playing host to Texas fo r a three-game series beginning Thursday. Upcoming preparation for the series seems to lie within the pitching. ‘ "The third spot is a concern, it’s up fo r grabs.” Brock said. Junior Oscar Rivas and Freshmen Sean Rees and Kip Yaughn w ill a ll pitch in junior varsity gam es this week to determine the third spot starter. Sooner be No. 1 than a Wildcat NORMAN, Okla. (A P ) — The record crowd o f 11,950 at the Lloyd Noble Center was doing exactly what the script called for. Their fifth-ranked Oklahoma Sooners had just beaten No. 1 Arizona 82-80 Sunday, and the fans were chanting in unison the refrain used by many but deserved by few. “ We’re No. 1, w e’re No. 1,” they chanted. O ff in the distance, one could also hear a sim ilar chant: “ For One W eek, F or One Week.” This “ Tw iligh t Zone” beer comm ercial could have taken place any of the past three weeks. The scenario goes something like this: jump to No. 1, check out the view , lose on the road and hope the fa ll isn’t too long. “ Have you ever noticed everbody who gets number one gets tough road games all of a sudden?" Sooners coach B illy Tubbs asked after his team seem ingly locked, up the top spot with the victory over Arizona in a week with losses by Nos. 2,3 and 4. “ Last tim e we w ere number one we went Kansas State and Oklahoma State on the road. This week, if it should fa ll on our shoulders, we have Kansas and Colorado on the road. “ I think there should be some kind of a clause put in there that you can change your schedule if you become number one and you get to stay home for two weeks.” Since, it couldn’t be retroactive, the top dog clause can’t help Illinois, the Sooners and Arizona. When Duke finally lost after holding the No. 1 spot for nine weeks without facing any ranked teams, the Fighting m ini went to the top for the first tim e in 37 years. THE NATIONW IDE BESTSELLER -N O W IN SIGNET PA PE R B A C K ! WjRlLjMPHAKT NAIIOKAi BfSTSflliR • L i v e C o lle g e B a s k e t b a ll o n B IG S C R E E N • F r e s h B r e w e d A le s ARIZONA’S 1ST AND ONLY BREW PUB. ■ M 5th S T R E E T & F O R E S T 966-4438 l BREWPUB MONDAYS S T A R T IN G A T 7 P M Urntn$c *a i*rg B a s e b a ll ContInind (ram page 17. MONDAY IOC WING NITE DRAFTS at Rural & Apache BEST LU N C H ES IN T H E P A C 101 Frank Cariucci Former Secretary of Defense under Ronald Reagan “A View from the Pentagon” ë Coming February 15th at the Memorial Union Arizona Room, 8 p.m. ; “ C h illin g , gru eso m e, i b ra v e ...a s tra ig h t I fo rw a rd , harrow ing I acc o u n t o f A p arth eid .” —Kirkus Reviews I “ L ik e ...C la u d e B row rts ManchUd in the Promised ¡Land. . . in every w ay as im - Free with ASU I.O. ê ! p o rtan t a n d a s excitin g .” ■r TRUESTORY OF A BUCK YOUTH’S COMING 0FAGE IN ABARlHaD SOUTHAFRICA — Wàshington Post [ kanaautobiography f f ir b o y by M ark M athaban e $4.95 © SIGNET Sponsored by: Associated Students/Lecture Series -¿r State Pré»» Monday« February 13,1989 Page 80 ASU beat in closing seconds D evils tried to shut down Kasperaski, but she still was effective fo r the Ducks. “ You got to give Oregon credit,” he said. “ They got the ball into her, and she had a very good night — she didn’t miss many shots.” Despite the loss, ASU received positive results from reserve guard Rosalind Senior, who capitalized from three-point range and at one point had a string of six consective three-pointers. Senior made six o f seven 3-point attempts and finished with 22 points. “ RoS is a very good shooter,” Clark said. “ She is probably best described as a streak shooter. I ’d say she kept us in the gam e and put us up at points.” ASU cam e out in the first h alf looking to avenge Thursday’s loss to Oregon State, and held the lead until the 10:53 mark when Kasperski hit a four-footer in the lane to give Oregon a 14-12 advantage. The gam e was close for the rem ainder o f the h alf with no team leading by m ore then fiv e points. The D evils regained the lead in the first h alf on a three-pointer by Senior with 4:01 left, making the score 27-26. ASU went into the locker room at h alftim e w ith a com fortable fiv e point lead, 39-34. A SU h ead coa ch M au ra M cH ugh emphasized the need to “ box out” the Ducks, who out-rebounded the Sun D evils 42-34. ASU was led in scoring by sophomore guard Karen O’Connor, who scored 23 points and made four of fiv e three-point attempts.! The D evils play host to USC at 7:30 p.m. Friday and UCLA at 4 p.m. Saturday. Both contests w ill be played at the U niversity A ctivity Center. Devils fall to Oregon; O ’Connor scores 23 By K YLE D. ENG S tate Press H ie ASU women’s basketball team lost a close gam e at the w ire for the secondconsecutive night, with the Oregon Ducks edging the Sun Devils, 75-74, Friday. A University A ctivity Center crowd o f 300 watched ASU (8-13, 2-9 Pac-10) fa ll to Oregon (16-6, 8-3) in the final seconds o f the gam e. The Ducks scored late in the gam e on a drive to the hoop by junior Jackie Semeniuk (eigh t points and nine rebounds) to put Oregon up by three points, 75-72 with 45 seconds to play. ASU m oved down the floor and worked the ball around to center Fran Ciak (nine and 14), who hit a 16-foot jum per to pull the D evils within one at the 28-second mark. The D evils could not stop the clock until they fouled Oregon’s Brooke Allen (11 and fou r), with 11 seconds left. Fortunately for ASU, Allen missed the front end o f the oneand-one free throw attempt, giving the D evils the ball. ASU called a timeout with six seconds left on the clock. The D evils, who had difficulty inbounding the ball, dished it to Ciak whose shot was blocked by 6-foot-7-inch center Stefanie Kasperaski (34 and 12) with two seconds left. ASU guard Carolyn D eH offs (14 and 6) running tip-in attempt fe ll short as the buzzer sounded. ASU assistant coach Bob Clark said the Todd Graon/Stato Press Center Fran C iak and forw ard Dawn Bantum fight over a rebound w ith an Oregon Duck in Satur­ d ay's night loss. ^ ^ T 9 6 fr 7 7 8 ¿ ^ P j 1726 E. Southern Avenue, Tem pe W AREHOUSE I I I I I * i i s D ELI & PU B 130 E. University Dr. « tt\t ! 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U niversity, D204 Tem pe, A Z 85282 89) (2nd Floor, Cornerstan State Prêt» Page 21 Monday, February 13,1989 CLASSIFICATIONS: LINER RATES____________ __ FOR CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES AND FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL: iS w ords o r less is $3.00 per dav fo r 1-4 days ' $2.75 per day fo r 5-9 days $2.50 per day fo r 10 days & up (15C each additional w ord ) The first 2 w ords are capitalized. No bold face or centering 965-6731 ¿C LA S SIFIE D A T T R A C T IO N S Free B irthday Ads: lim it 20 words; must show and ask fo r PEGGY MCGINN Classified Advertising M anager OR STERLENE MORRIS Classified Adviser p ro o fe f^ rth d d y . * $1 V alentine Lovelines: Make an everlasting im pression Deadline 2-9*89 a t 4:30 p.m. • sp ring Break T ravel special: Liner ads- 10 days for $10; Display ads- 1x 2 for $10,4x3 for $15 (must run minimum of 4 times). ANNOUNCEMENTS COMPUTERS ALL ASU sin g le s w h o have accepted C hrist as Lord o f th e ir life - m eet others! How? C a ll Jo y U n lim ite d Intro d u ctio n s at D IG ITA L RAINBOW C om puter 100A w ith p rin te r* 64K , n o t: IBM c o m p a tib le . $1995/O ffer. 282-4448. 820-0001. BUY. YOUR Y earbook how ! The p rice is* only, $ 3 0 . C a ll 965-6881 for. m ore inform ation. . 4 , W E EU Y/SELL used com puters. Compu­ te r M u lti System s, Tem pe (next to B uffalo Exchange), 225 W . U n iversity. 966-1388. . ‘G IVE YOUR S w eetheart Love and Kissqs fo r V a lentin e's D ay.” S top by and order your K isses a m i balloo ns. Today is the la s t da y!! C ady M a li; next to the fountain. S ponsored b y AM A. VO LU N TEER L IT T L E le a g u e coach wanted M onday and Thursday, 5:15-6:30 p.m ., S o uthe rn/M cQ into ck. N elson, a fte r 6 p.m , 897-6945. TICKETS PRIM E SEATS To: J u lio Inglesias, G eorge .S traight, Suns, a ll lo cal and national e ven ts' T icke t Exchange, 829-0196. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE LOUIS VUITTON and G ucci hand bags and w a lle ts : G re a t p ric e s . V ih n y , 966-2053. ROLAND ALPHA Juno-2 synthesizer. Five octaves, touch and ve lo city sensitive! Com plete M ID I, awesom e sounds. O rig i­ nally $1295, s e ll fo r $950 o r best o ffe r. I need m oney. 829-0608. 2 BEDROOM condo, % m ile ASU, fu lly fu rn is h e d , w a sh e r/d rye r, re frig e ra to r. AUTOMOBILES $54,000. 991-2868. 19765 BMW 53QI, v e ry good cond ition, AM /FM cassette. N ice bocly and in te rio r, A ir cond itioning, 107K, $1975. 831-2445. GOVERNMENT HOM ES from $1. *‘U R epair.” A lso ta x delinq uent property. C all 805-644-9533 e xt. 1 0 9 2 'fo f inform ation. M GOVERNMENT HO M ES! $1 (U nrepair). Foreclosures, tax delinq uent property. Now se llin g th is ' area! C all (refundable) 1-518-459-3546 e x t H203 fo r listin g s. 1979 FORD Fairm ont. C lean, new in te rio r, tir e s , ru n s g re a t I ' 6 4 ,0 0 0 m ile s . $2500/offer. 784-9398. 1980 TO YÓ TA C o rolla. 5 *p e e d , 2 door, stereo, a ir-co n d itio n in g , re b u ilt carburetor, new tags, 104K, runs gre a t, $1400. A lan, 829-7343. G iy e '^ l's p ^ .j^ o ti'' "up... E & MOTORCYCLES 1986 ELITE 150 D eluxe. L ik e new, 125 m iles, d ig ita l dash, p a id $2300, s e ll fo r $1200/offerl 1987 E lite 50. black and lavender, 36 m ile s ltu B rand new , ju st tuned w ith dot helm et, $66 0/offer. C a ll 835-0673 o rle a v e m essage a t 890-1125. 1986 HONDA E lite . New tire s , batte ry, fHter. B lue book, $725, s e ll fo r $675. Brad, 894-8375. 1986 SUZUKI GjS550ESG. 8000 m iles, excellent con d itio n . C a ll S co tt, 966-8040. 1987 HONDA E lite 150. O nly 3000 m iles. $ 7 5 0 /o ffe r. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . C a li 491-1083. —i- y B ob B u llo c k • R e alty E xecutives -CmkitlCuiii Bnuquci £ ® 998-2992 Btat Bouquet fi ® i r r "i Call T I m e Tempe Balloon co. « » M a f l 3R O TH ER 380 C o rre c tro n ic w o rd >rocessing typ e w rite r. Brand new! 16K nem ory, dictio n a ry, hundreds o f features. »67-8385. F o r Y o u r V a le n tin e H ig h e s t Q u a lity 1989 HONDA E lite 50cc. 125 m iles, year w a rra n ty , p ric e n e g o tia b le . R o bb, 869-9447 evenings, w eekends, M onday/ W ednesday/Friday, days 863-2462. L .A . M e n s & W o m e n s F a s h io n D e s ig n s HONDA AERO 50, 1985. Low m ileage, helm et, good c o n d itio n . C ash, $400/offer. 945-4347. Louis V uitton, MCM an d G u c c i p u rs e s , b rls te a s s s , w a lle ts , and luggage. H ig h e s t q u a lity re p lic a w a tc h e s : R olex, Polo, Piaget. 5-yoar w arran ty on all w atches. A ISO ...M C M w arm ­ ups • Sunglasses • A cid W ashed Jeans. . , W e G uarantee W hat W o S ail • D elivery A vailable YAMAHA 400, low m ile s, exce lle n t condition. $550. 894-6469. YAMAHA Q T50, o n ly 45 m iles, perfect cond ition. $500. 941-8433 S h irley, or 345-0145 Todd. BICYCLES 1978 BATAVUS. E xce lle n t con d itio n , 100 actual m iles. 110 m ile s/g a llo n . $300. 9533841 a lta r 6. 3 bd. T H , m u lti-le v e l, new carpet, vaulte d c e ilin g , fire p la c e , a ll a p p li­ ances. LB. HURRY! LENDER w o rkou t! Papago Park tow nhouse, 2 bedroom plus lo ft. Linda O m stein/R uss Lyon 840-7132 991-2929. PAPAGO PARK. V eteran, assum e VA loan, 6 .m onths m ortgage paid. ERA B eil and A ssociates, 835-6146. TOW NHOUSE. DELUXE 3 bedroom , 2 bath, ce ilin g fans, w asher/dryer, sm all backyard, covered parkin g, 2 mHeS from ASU. Loan assum able. 921-1229. TOW NHOUSE FOR sale, 3 bedroom , 2 bath, 1300 square fe e t. FHA’s fu lly assum ­ able 9% % 30 year fix e d low dow n. Pool, spa, tennis, sportcourt. 607 W . 14th S t., Tem pe. Pat, 967-4908. $100 DOWNL Save Thousands Papago Park I, beautiful 2 bedroom with spiral stair­ case and vaulted ceilings. O nly $54,000 - Save $20,000! Questa Vida, 3 bedroom in new com plex with r e # tile roof and appliances. Only $54,000 - Save $ 18,0001 30 MEG Seagate, $210. 360K Teac FD, -------— — h - -------- --------- $ 5 5 . P h o n e 2 7 8 -2 3 9 7 , 894-9193, days. M inh. . e v e n in g s ; COMPUTERS -, . '. By M ail: 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 right to reject any adve rtising copy submitted.____________ State Press E rro rs : 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 a fte r the firs t day will not qualify fo r a make-good. C ustom er Errors*. Corrections m ust be made before noon. Compensation wi l l n o t be g ive n f o r customer error. • WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? Classified liner ads can begin 1. DAY after they are placed (if placed before noon). Classified display ads can begin 2 DAYS after they are placed (if placed before 10 a.m.). Ads may run fo r any length o f time. Canceled ads will be credited to your account. Sorry, no refunds. TELLUR ID E SUMM ER d up lex u n it avail­ a b le 7/15-8/25. R esponsible adu lt(s), $ 1 2 0 0 p lu s d e p o s it. R e fe re n c e s . 303-728-5220. N ew ly re d ec o rated 1 and 2 b ed ro o m a p a rt­ m en ts. C lo se to A S U . HOMES FOR RENT M AKE LOTS o f m oney, s ta rt your own business w ith o nly $19.95. No other expense necessary to represent d ie unique and unusual new “ R oni B” desig­ ner sunglass lin e . Send $19.96 fo r com plete d e ta ils and s ta rte r k its. Includes a sam ple p a ir o f unique R oni B sunglas­ ses. The Jugger N aut C o., 1309 E. N orthern, S uite 904, P hoenix, AZ 85020. T em p e W est A p artm e n ts 8 9 4 -6 4 6 8 1 BEDROOM w ith kitch e n , la rge yard. C om er C ollege and 15th. $395/m onth. 986-5062. 3 BEDROOM hom e availab le across from G rady G am m age. F irep lace, patio , nice yard. C a ll 8944)288. C L A S S IF IE D S W O RK ASU AREA: jS tudios, 1 and 2 bedroom s, $260 and up. Pool, no dogs. 966-8838. BEAUTIFUL NEW la rg e 1 and 2 bedroom . W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry room . O ne block South d f U n iversity on 8 th S treet, Cape Cod A partm ents. Phone 968-5238 fo r special. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. Take over lease at R ancho M urietta, Viz m ile ASU. 966-9755. Ideal fo r Students •Affordablestudios from $295 utilities included •G reat locationdose to ASU •Privacy1-level apartments mature landscaping MARIANNA APARTMENTS 12X4 E. Orange 966-8597 RENTAL SHARING FEM ALE NONSMOKER share de a n , q u ie t house. 1 m ile to AS U . $225/m onth', Vs u tilitie s . C all 966-6921. FEMALE ROOMM ATE w anted to share tw o bedroom apartm ent a t Cam eron C reek. C a ll 894-1833 o r 968-2260. GRAD, FACULTY, s ta ff, nonsm oker to share b e a u tifu l 3 bedroom , 2 bath. 2 car garage, la rge yard w ith poo l, pets ok. Share w ith one room m ate, $295/m onth plus Vz u tilitie s . 423-0348. M ALE CHRISTIAN room m ate w anted, $160/m onth plus u tilitie s . 5 m iles ASU. 898-3462. M ALE UPPERCLASSM AN, non-sm oker, no pets. $200/m onth, u tilitie s in duded, fu rn ish e d , w a sher/dryer. 967-3658 or 966-4550. NEED ROOMM ATE. 3 bedroom , 2 bath, near AS U . $265 in clu d in g u tilitie s . Stacy, 990-9545 a fte r 5. TOW NHOMES/ CONDOS O NE BEDROOM fo r rent. M ale/fem ale, nonsm oker to share 4 bedroom house. V* u tilitie s , $17 5/m onth. 3 m iles ASU. 897-8587. LUXURIOUS! TO W NHO M ES. 2 and 3 bedroom s. W a sh e r/d rye r, po o l, spa, tennis, sportcourt, V i m ile ASU. 967-4908. Q UESTA VIDA M aster bedroom suite. W asher/dryer, m icrow ave. $290 plus Vs SRP. C a ll Dave, 967-6930. 'L U X U R Y PA PAG O P a rk co n d o , 2 bedroom w ith lo ft, 20’ ce ilin g s, firepla ce, a ll appliances and upgrades. $785/m onth, $40 0 s e c u rity . A v a ila b le M a rch 1. 968-6969, evenings. ROOMMATE W ANTED to share hom e in M esa. O wn bedroom , bath, liv in g room . $275/m onth plus Vs u tilitie s . 644-9850. * HELP W ANTED 1 PART-TIM E jo b ava ila b le from 5 a.m . til classes sta rt. N ear AS U , in o ffice sales, w ill provid e a ll tra in in g and leads. G urantee p lu s com m ission. C a ll M ark, 966-5765 o r le ave m essage on m achine. $7/H O U R TO s ta rt, p a rt-tim e jo b . M ust know th e m eaning o f th e w ord hustle , d o se to cam pus. Ju$t c a ll 968-7013 o r 894-2049, M ike. ALASKA SUMM ER Em ploym ent- Fishe­ rie s. E arn $600 plus/w eek in cannery, $8000-$12000 p lu s fo r tw o m onths on fis h in g vessel. O ver 8000 openings. No experience necessary. M ale o r fem ale. For 52 page em ploym ent booklet send $6.95 to M&L R esearch, box 84008, S e attle W ashington 9 8 1 2 4 .3 0 day, uncon­ d itio n a l, 100% m oney back guarantee. ★ EXTRA M O N EY* P a rt-tim e , s ix S a turdays. Dem o fu n p ro d u c t In lo c a l su pe rm arkets. S ta rt m id -M a rch , apply now . $ 5 /h o u r p lu s m ileage and bon us. 10 ope nings. Call Ms. Segovia, collect (213)277-5030. ANDERSON HOUSE R estaurant. Experienced hostess needed, fu ll-tim e , M ondayF riday, lunch s h ift. A p ply anytim e in person, 7373 N . S co ttsdale Rd. ATTENTIO N A LL students! Learn to sell and earn $6-$8/hour. 23 hours w eekly, near cam pus. Have fu n w h ile you team p ro fe s s io n a l sa le s te c h n iq u e s . C a ll 966-8788. ROOMMATE NEEDED, 3 bedroom , 2 bath house. W asher/dryer, television , VCR, m icrow ave. $225/m onth p lu s Vs u tilitie s . M ale, non-sm oker. 968-6264. ATTENTIO N BUSINESS and Com m unica­ tio n m ajors. The S outhw estern Com pany is now in tervie w in g fo r fu ll-tim e sum m er w ork p ositions in sales and business m anagem ent. W ork back E ast and earn college cre d it and $407 a w eek plus gain valuable experience. C a ll 2 2 2 8114 fo r an intervie w . TW O BEDROOM, 2Vt bath tow nhouse 5 m inutes from AS U . C a ll Rosem ary, 279-9447 o r display pager, 239-9073. ROOMMATE NEEDED to share tow nhom e. V« m ile from cam pus, p a rtly fu rn ­ is h e d , fu ll k itc h e n , has b a ckya rd . 894-0374. BANQ UET SERVERS needed im m ediate­ ly fo r days, nights and w eekends. A ll va lle y lo ca tio n s. M ust have M ack and w hites. C a ll E xecutem ps a t 234-1600. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS PAPAGO PARK. R ent la rge t bedroom , w asher/dryer and re frig e ra to r, po o l. ERA B e ll and A ssociates, 835-6146. 4 j j »1 W hy Rent? G reg Askins, Realty Execs 423-3605 759-5039 3 9 7 -2 2 8 5 COMPUTERS C a ncellations: Liner ads m ust be canceled before noon, 1 day prior to publication. No refu nds will be given MOVE-IN SPECIAL BUY OF THE WEEK Papago Park VIHage I, $93,900 -m m _ © WWW Dflwiuet \ HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: in Person: Ca s h , C h e c k ( w i t h guarantee Card), MC, or VISA. Matthews Center Basement (South Enb) M—F. 8 a.m.—5 p.m. , North MU information Desk M—F, 9 a.m —2:30 p.m. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES REAL ESTATE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: TOW NHOMES/ CONDOS APARTMENTS BUY YOUR Yearbook now ! The p ric e is o n ly $30. C a il 965-6881 % m ore inform ation. 1. Announcements 2. AutOs 3. Trucks 4. Motorcycles 5. Bicycles 6 Furniture 7. Tickets For Sale 8. Miscellaneous For Sale 9. Real. Estate For Sale 10. Apartments For Rent 11. Townhomes/Condos For, Rent T2. 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 APARTMENTS -— SIMPLIFY YOUR LIFE FOR ONLY $995! A Complete Package Includes: •D u al Floppy Disk »Near Letter Quality Printer »High Resolution Monochrome Monitor (add $175 for color monitor) •W ord Processing w/Spellcheck »DOS, Basic & Spreadsheet Software *20Month National Warranty 1 BEDROOM, free u tilitie s and redecorating. Safe, vary q u ie t. $375/unfum ished. $ 4 0 0 /fu rn is h e d . S p e c ia ls . 987-6620. Landm ark. ______ ,______ 1 BLOCK ASU. 1 bedroom , 1 bath, pool, op pets. $300/m onth, in clu d in g .u tilitie s . 1339 S. Sunset D rive, A partm ent 9. 981-1084, 967-3658. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath apartm ent. Covered parking, re frig era tor, dishw asher, laundry hook-ups. 949 S. M cC lintock (between Apache and U niversity) 897-0516, Jess. COMPUTER M ULTI SYSTEMS 224 W. University, Tem pe next to Buffalo Exchange 966-1388 • Financing Available ASU STUDENTS w elcom e. V4 m ile, 2 b e d ro o m , a p p lia n c e s , n e a r n ew , $395/m onth. RSVP R ealty, 838-3898. M m ss ^ M on d afcF eb n ia jyl^ vev HELP WANTED HELP W ANTED HELP W ANTED HELP W ANTED HELP W A N T t b - JJ,i HELP W ANTED ComputerProgramming,EngineersandAccounting/Finance Professionals OpenHouseFor Entry-Level ComputerServices Professionals Jump Into A Career That W ill Take You Places At EDS If you’ve been looking for an opportunity that will open up avariety of career possibilities, consider the entry-level positions at EDS. We’re the world’s leader in computer and communications services, and we offer outstanding opportuni­ ties to begin acareer in one of the world’s fastest-growing industries. EDSis a place for achievers— people who makethings happen. If you’re interested in applying your talents in the computer services industry, you won’t find a better placeto growthan EDS. Our highly-respected developmental programs are nationally recognized as models for the industry. They provide technical challenge, professional expertise and thebusiness savvy you’ll needto become one of the industry's bestprepared professionals. » Interested? If so, attend the EDS Open House to find out more about one of these developmental programs: Systems Engineering Development ► 4-year college degree (any major) with a 3.0/4.0 overall GPApreferred >> Demonstrated technical aptitude Engineering Systems Development >■ 4-year college degree in electrical, mechanical, industrial or chemical engineering with a 3.0/4.0 overall GPA preferred Accounting and Financial Development > BS/BA in Accounting and/or Financewith a3.5/4.0 overall GPApreferred All positions require: >- Excellent communication skills >Good customer skills >- A strong record of achievement > Flexibility to relocate nationwide Planto take the first step toward achieving your highest career potential. Attend the EDS Open House in Phoenix Monday or Tuesday, February 13th or 14th 11:00 a.m. -7:00 p.m. Holiday Inn - Corporate Center 2532 W. Peoria Avenue (1-17 at Peoria Exit) If you cannot attend the open house, please send your resumeto: EDSDevelopmental Recruiting 11060 White Rock Road Suite 110, Dept. 20G0449 Rancho Cordova, CA95670 EDS also has outstanding opportunities for experienced Information Processing professionals. Principals Only. An Equal Opportunity Employer, IWF/V/H. help w a n t e d 1: CUSTOM ER SER VIC E representative. M ust enjoy com m unicating w ith people Evening hours, fu n enviro nm e nt. E xcellent p a rt-tim e ' jo b fo r s tu d e n ts , $6/hour. 966- 6788. HELP,WANTED PETS TRANSPORTATION TRAVEL W ANTED PART-TIME W ORK- P osition fo r com puter ope rator available. $6/hour to sta rt. Hours fle x ib le . 3 m iles from cam pus. C all Paul 820-0879. AKC ROTTW EILER V alentine pups- 7 weeks, e xtra la rge , ready to go, dep osit w ill h o ld . S ire 145 p o u n d s . $500-$875/trade? 230-9489. A LL STATES D rtveaw ay- C ars available- SKI UTAH S pring B reak. 6 days lo d g in g / lifts , tran sportation , parties/ra ce. $359. C all John , 8298684. O VERSEAS JO BS. $9008200