state press
Vol. 71 No. 100
Arizona State University’s
Morning Daily
Copyright, State Press. 1969 Tempe. Arizona
Tuesday, February 28, 1989
Education students com plain to regents
By TER ESA OWEN
State Prase
Forty graduate students in ASU’s College o f Education
have named several complaints about the college and dean in
a letter to the Arizona Board of Regents, including Gov. Rose
M offord, saying they hope their questions finally w ill be
^
Jo h n sto n
“ It was a last resort,” said one
graduate student who asked not to be
named because she fears reprisals
from Dean Gladys Styles Johnston.
“ T h ere h ave been attem pts to
communicate with the dean, but they
weren’t successful,” the student said.
“ She treats us like children, and it’s
h ard to h a v e an a d u lt-to -a d u lt
conversation with her,” j
Johnston said she could not comment
on the letter because she has not yet
seen it.
However, M ike McCormick, one o f M offord’s assistants,
said he spoke with Johnston last week about the letter.
But Johnston said her conversation with McCormick
regarded faculty recruitment. “ I don’t know what you’re
talking about,” she said. “ I don’t have a copy o f the letter.”
McCormick said this is the first letter M offord has received
o f this nature.
“ This is rare,” McCormick said. “ Seldom do w e hear from
students.”
Th e le tte r lists problem s w ith cu rricu lu m and
expenditures, but it does not cite any specific charges.
The graduate students’ previous concerns include the
U niversity spending $80,000 to redecorate the dean’s office,
adjacent lobbies and other adm inistrative offices while
simultaneously reducing benefits fo r students.
Records in the Com ptroller’s office show that nearly
$60,000 was spent to renovate those areas. '
P a t Tackett, another ASU graduate student, said the letter
was written because there are many issues with which
students are concerned, and they are m erely raising
questions.
“ There are so many issues, and we didn’t want to point
fingers,” Tackett said. “ Our m otivation is just to have our
questions answered.”
The letter requests an audit of the college by an
independent agency.
“ It is the only way to be objective,” said a graduate student
who wishes to remain anonymous.
Regent Andrew Hurwitz said he received a copy of the
letter and added that an investigation m ight result.
“ H ie letter is of concern,” he said. “ Once I see m ore
information I can make a decision. They have done the right
thing by putting their concerns in a letter.”
In the letter, graduate students say there are numerous
curriculum problems that are causing the quality of the
college to decline.
“ In addition to the curriculum issues brought to your
attention by (student regent) Patrick McWhortor, w e believe
. . . this has significantly affected the m orale o f students
Turn to Latter, page 6.
Landlord fined for
renting home to
unrelated tenants
By »CH AR D VIGIL
Stater Press
A Tem pe landlord was fined $1,000 and sentenced by
Tem pe Municipal Court Monday to one year probation for
violating a city ordinance forbidding m ore than three
unre la te d person s to occupy the same single fam ily dwelling.
Kevin Cabianca, 25, was convicted of allowing fiv e people
to liv e in a house at 720 E. Solana D rive, Tem pe. He is the
first person prosecuted under the rarely enforced city
ordinance created to control groups o f ASU students who live
together to reduce rent costs.
Cabianca had been convicted on Nov. 17, 1988, of allowing
four unrelated ASU students to liv e in a house at 300 E. 14th
St.
During his testimony at the sentencing hearing today,
Cabianca said he owned “ 15 or 20” houses in Tem pe, all
within one m ile of ASU.
Cabianca, sentenced by Municipal Court Judge Stephen
M irretfi, declined comment mi the advice erf his attorney,
Paul Blunt. But Blunt said Cabianca’s conviction w ill be
appealed to M aricopa County Superior Court.
Rinni said Cabianca w ill appeal on the constitutionality of
the Tem pe law, saying it was selectively enforced against
Cabianca.
During his dosing arguments, Blunt said Cabianca was the
first landlord tried under the ordinance which has “ been on
the books fo r decades."
Pahianr»« testified that he believes 75 percent of rented
single-fam ily dwellings in Tem pe are rented to groups and
are in violation of the city ordinance.
“ Many of these types o f homes are rented to m ore than
three unrelated persons with or without the landlord’s
knowledge,” Cabianca said.
.
Prosecutor Geraldine M attern asked fo r a sentence of
three years’ probation, a $3,000 fine and 30 days in jail.
J»efcW . B m la ÿ . J rjlS M a P i n
ASU wraattar Andy McNaughton light» lo r posHkat with Cal Poly SLO'a Robert Taberaz at the Pac-10 Wraattltig Championship»
Monday night at the Activity Cantor. The Sun Davila claim ed their fifth coneecutive conference championship. Story on page 1S.
Turn to Landlord, pago 6.
Goldwater takes stand against ValTrans
By LORI ZUBALIK
State Prow
Form er Sen. Barry Goldwater said Monday he probably
w ill vote against Proposition 300 because the measure would
increase taxes, disagreeing with the m ajority of panelists
aagAmhipH m the MU to discuss the mass transit system in
Phoenix.
I f approved by voters, Proposition 300 w ill provide funding
to build and operate ValTrans, the Maricopa County-wide
pnRH/» transit system which combines automated rapid
transit, commuter ra il and an expanded bus service.
“ Transportation has always been a problem ,” Goldwater
told m ore than 250 people who had gathered for the first o f a
series o f lectures featuring Goldwater.
“ I have been livin g in the Valley for 80 years now, and I
can’t rem em ber a tim e when there wasn’t a transportation
problem ,” Goldwater said.
I f Proposition 300 is passed, the main portion of funding
w ill be derived through a half-cent sales tax that w ill cost the
average household an estim ated $44 a year.
*
“ I don’t want to see m y taxes raised,” Gqjidwater added.
But C yril Hodgins, staff consultant fo r the Regional Public
Transportation Authority, said that ValTrans w ill be more
than worth the expense.
Hodgins presented a slide show which illustrated what be
saw as the many benefits o f the proposed mass transit
system. A decrease in personal automobile expense, labor
fo rce enhancement, environm ental : im provem ent and
conservation o f energy w ere among those mentioned.
“ ValTrans w ill cut down on car operating expenses, as less
m iles w ill be used fo r Short runs into town,” Hodgins said.
“ And if you believe in the adage ‘tim e is money,’ you’ll
appreciate the fact that public transit alleviates the lost tim e
spent w hile driving,” Hodgins added.
Hodgins said he predicts that if Proposition 300 is passed,
ValTrans win have a direct im pact on the labor m arket by
1995.
Is
“ Public transit, by making m ore jobs available, w ill
enhance the labor force in the V alley by im proving
employment access,” Hodgins said.
P a t Gober, an ASU geography professor, said she is
T urn to Q oM w ater, peg* »■
W EATH ER
The heat wave is expected to continue, with sun
ny skies again forecast for today. The high
temperature should be in the mid 80s, with an
overnight low near 55. Wednesday could cool off
slightly, with a high in the upper 70s.
INSIDE
Major Stanislav Levchenko, the highest ranking
officer of the KGB to defect to the United States,
is scheduled to speak at 8 tonight in the MU
Arizona Room. The lecture, sponsored by
ASASU Lecture Series, is free to students.
Page 10.
Classified.......................................................
18
Comics.............................. ........ ........••...... ........14
Opinion............ .....
4
Police Report.,............ ........ ,........ — ------ •— 7
Sports..............
......15
Today...............,..,,.......— ..——- — “ ............. — - 2
Page 2
SW » Pm «
Tuesday, February 28,1989
vvorld/nation in brief
Investigation into disaster
of United jumbo jet continues
HONOLULU (A P ) — Airlines worldwide w ere advised to
check the cargo doors of their Boeing 747s on Monday as
federal investigators focused on the cargo door latch
system of a United jumbo jet that ripped open at 22,000
feet.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Samuel Skinner said he
thinks “ it’s very important that w e not jump to conclusions
until that report (on the investigation) is done.’’
“ The prelim inary indications, of course, are that the
(ca rgo) door opened or at least the skin peeled around the
door, but let’s w ait until the board reports. Then w e’ll know
fin ally what went on,’ ’ Skinner said in an interview Monday
with ABC’s “ Good Morning Am erica.”
United’s Flight 811 was gaining altitude 100 m iles south
of Honolulu after taking o ff fo r Auckland, New Zealand,
early Friday when a 10-by-20-foot section of the fuselage
ripped away, including the right front cargo door.
Nine passengers disappeared when 10 seats in the
business class on the right side were blown out through the
gaping hole, investigators said.
There was no indication from the ground crew or cockpit
crew that anything was amiss when the cargo door was
secured for flight, said L ee Dickinson, a National
Transportation Safety Board investigator.
Death toll triples world’s annual
average in 1988 earthquakes
WASHINGTON (A P ) — Earthquake deaths last year
nearly tripled the w orld’s annual average, largely as a
result o f the tragic Armenian tremor, the U.S. Geological
Survey reported Monday.
The year’s loss of life in earth tremors was the worst in
m ore than a decade and occurred despite a decline in the
total number o f significant earthquakes reported during the
year, survey officials reported.
Lawyer’s illness could force a
mistrial in Night Stalker case
LOS ANGELES (A P ) — The attorney for “ Night
Stalker” murder defendant Richard Ram irez is suffering
from trial-related nervous exhaustion, the judge said
Monday, and the prosecutor said they m ight have to start
the trial over.
“ Probably the chances of a m istrial are good,” Deputy
District Attorney P . Philip Halpin said. “ We can’t keep this
jury hanging around indefinitely.”
A m istrial wotild mean a new ju ry would need to be
selected in the 3%-year-old case.
Ramirez, 28, is charged with 13 murders and 30 related
felonies in a series of grisly nighttime attacks that terrified
Southern California in the summer of 1985.
The exact number of deaths remains unknown but is
likely to nearly triple the average annual toll of about
10,000 fatalities worldwide.
A doctor’s report submitted to the judge said attorney
Daniel Hernandez is suffering from stress-related nervous
exhaustion resulting from his participation in the longdelayed trial. The doctor recommended psychological
counseling and said recovery could take six weeks.
hosted by College of Education Council from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. between Payne Building and Farmer Education
Building.
•Young Dem ocrats at A SU Issues facing Democrats at 1
p.m. in the.MU Navajo Room.
•Liberal A rts and Sciences College Council general
meeting, recruitment of new members, and search for
Committee chairs at 3:45 p.m. in thé MU Pinal Room.
•MUAB Film Comm ittee meeting at 12:30 p.m. in MU
Room 221.
•Alleluia Lutheran Church join us for Bible study about
singles and sexuality at 7:30 p.m. at 1034 S. Mill Ave.
(across from the Music Building).
•Alpha Mu Gamma general meeting and election of
1989-1990 officers at 3 p.m. in the Language and Literature
Building C-Wing 421.
•Peer Advising (Educational Suport Program) will be
conducting a free test-taking strategies workshop for those
mid-terms you don’t want to fail at 3:30 p.m. in the Student
Services Building, Room A-362.
•Fellow ship of Christian Athletes will meet at 7:30 p.m. at
the Cholla Recreation Room.
•Sigma Sigm a Sigm a 2nd annual Robbie Paige Memorial
Teeter-Totter-A-Thon from 10 a.m. to 10 a.m. Wednesday in
front of the MU fountain.
•Hillel Jew ish Student Center Come and enjoy our trendy
cafe food and atmosphere at our weekly “ Tuesday Lunch” .
Cost is $1.75 for the best deal in town from 11:30 a.m. to 1
p.m. at the Hillel Jewish Student Center, 1012 S. Mill Ave.
•MUAB Culture and A rts Com m ittee “A Celebration of
Human Rights” from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the MU Fine Arts
Gallery. Reading from Interpreter Theater from Department
of Public Programs.
•Educational Support Program P P S T Writing Review
from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at the Student Services
Building, Room 373.
•Campus A lco h o lics Anonym ous a support group for
those desiring to quit using alcohol or drugs. Meeting at
noon in the Yavapai Room.
•MUAB Film Com m ittee is showing this week “The
Manchurian Candidate” at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. in the MU
Cinema.
today
¡Meetings
•Engineering and Applied Science College Council
Career Fair for the Engineering College students also Derby
Day preliminary races from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. between
Engineer G-Wing Building and Physics Building.
•Am erican Society fo r Personnel Adm inistration Diana
L. Doss, president of Human Resource Network will speak
about “The Executive’s Search” from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. in the
,MU Yuma Room 211.
•Alpha Epsilon Delta Pre-Med Society Dr. Pizzaconi of
the bioengineering department will be talking about medical
technology and other issues at 6 p.m. in the Physical
Science Center F-Wing, Room 101.
• O rd e K International meeting at 7 p.m. in the MU Yuma
Room.
•ASU Lacrosse C lub will practice at 3:30 p.m. at the new
Lacrosse Field on University Drive behind the Cornerstone
Mall. For more information, call Clark at 926-4865.
•College Republicans at A SU organizational meeting at 7
p.m. in the MU Coconino Room.
•College o f Education C o u n d l “ Lunch with the Dean”
CABANA
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Page 3
Tuesday, February 28,1989
Physician stresses illness prevention health briefs
By ROBIE KAKONGE
State Press
Health Center to conduct
weight-management program
The future well-being of college students rests soley on
themselves and not with their physicians, according to a
Phoenix health and fitness doctor.
A rt M ollen said in the future, contemporary m edicine w ill
benefit m ore individuals who learn how important it is to
take care o f themselves in an effort to prevent illnesses like
cancer and heart diseases.
“ Students may look great now, but unless they start to
excercise and have a balanced diet, it is very unlikely that
they w ill continue to be as healthy,” he said.
“ It’s like going to the dentist; people don’t go only when
their teeth hurt, they also go fo r check ups or cleanings to
make sure that, in the future, nothing w ill hurt.
“ The question w ill no longer be, ‘What can your doctor do
fo r you?’ ” Mollen said. “ It w ill be, ‘What can you do for
yourself to prevent illness?’ ”
Mollen, who founded the Phoenix 10K road race and is the
author o f “ Run fo r Your L ife,” plans to speak about health
issues at ASU at 7 p.m. Wednesday, in the G reat Hall o f the
College o f Law.
Mollen, the founder and director of the Southwest Health
Institute, said too often college students fa il to attend to their
health unless they are suffering.
And those who seek professional help in the health area do
so because they want to lose weight and look pretty.
“ Most college students are in the first stage of life, the
grace stage, when you are 25 years or younger and you think
‘nothing is going to happen to m e’ ,” he said.
“ This is the stage in which students m ay think they may
never get fat, ill, have cancer or any other ‘serious’ illness
and so they think their bodies w ill be just fine,” he said.
Mollen said the other tw o stages are the reaction stage and
the destruction stages.
“ The reaction stage occurs between the ages o f 25 and 50,”
he said. “ This is when the body reacts to the abuses like
alcohol, tobacco and medication.
“ Destruction — the final stage — is when the body is
overwhelmed by a ll the stress and people get heart attacks,
cancer and other illness.”
Mollen, who works out two hours a day, said the key to
making a real difference is to set a priority and to work out
for at least 10 minutes a day.
The Student Health Center w ill be conducting a weight
management workshop beginning March 16. The fiveweek session w ill be on Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 6:30
p.m. Students can register by calling 965-4721.
FDA Issues standards for
non-prescription medicines
The Food and Drug Administration on Monday issued
standards fo r ex p ectora n ts in n on prescription
cough/cold medicines that allow only one proven active
ingredient to remain on the market.
Guaifenesin was the only ingredient found by the FD A
to be safe and effective in increasing sputum or phlegm
volume and making it easier to cough up.
About 20 other expectorant ingredients w ere found not
to be useful and products using these ingredients w ill
have to be reform ulated or taken o ff the m arket within
one year..
A rt M ollen
“ Getting into shape doesn’t have to be threatening, just
incorporate the things you enjoy doing into routine
excerrises.”
M ollen said not having tim e or enough w illpower are
excuses he used when he was in college.
“ I used to lift weights when I was in college, but I never
really thought how excercise connected to m y w ell being
until I was in med school and saw what sort o f shape the
doctors were in,” he said. “ A t that tim e I decided that if I
didn’t want to look like them, I had to start taking care of m y
body.”
Mollen, who also wrote “ The Mollen Method” book, said
his personal health success was based on it.
“ I finally realized that there were no quick fixes to getting
healthy, and that in fact, quick weight-loss gim micks only
make you gain the weight back that much faster,” he said.
Mollen said, “ The Mollen Method” diet program and
excerise program works because it combines diet and
exercise with a positive m ental attitude.
“ I have done the program for the last 17 years and I still
didn’t have to give up, my favorite food, pizza. I just learned
that some things like red m eat where not good fo r me and
now I eat veggie pizzas,” he said.
“ Getting in shape can be done, a ll it takes to get started is a
Id-minute walk, jog, swim or taking the stairs instead of an
elevator,’.’ he said.
Mollen, who has run the Boston Marathon three times,
participated in fiv e triathlons and 10 decathlons, said,
Scientists study ways to tag
smokestack pollutants
Scientists are studying ways to “ tag” smokestack
pollutants much the w ay biologists tag birds and
animals as part o f research into pinpointing the
chem icals that contribute to acid rain.
In tests begun last summer, W. Robert K elly o f the
National Institute o f Standards and Technology and
U niversity of M aryland aerosol chemist John Ondov
injected an enriched isotope o f the m etal neodymium
into smoke from a coal-burning power plant in northern
Virginia.
K elly and Ondov are seeking an Environmental
Protection Agency grant to study whether the particle
tracing w ill work over longer distances. The E P A is
testing isotope tracers in diesel fuel used by public
vehicles in Roanoke, Va.
Acid rain is form ed from sulfur dioxide and nitrogen
oxide released by the combustion o f coal and other fossil
fuels. In combination With w ater, they form nitric acid
gas and sulfuric acid droplets, which dissolve in rain.
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opinion
Page 4
Staffe Press
; Tu«d2£iFfeBruwy?^J989<
editorial
Trust fund
Time to speak out
Once again, it’s tim e for fin a n c ia lly
strapped students to speak out.
Last sem ester, when hundreds o f students
turned out in the G reat H all o f ASU’s
College o f Law to protest an increase in
tuition that they sim ply couldn’t afford to
pay, the Arizona Board o f Regents listened
— and the result was an unprecedented
student victory and a m ore manageable
increase.
T h is tim e i t ’ s the A rizo n a s ta te
Legislature that needs to hear from students
who are facing tough tim es — and who
recognize the need for a comprehensive
financial aid program for Arizona students.
Wednesday m orning at the Arizona
capitol, the House of Representatives
Education Committee w ill consider a bill
that would create a student trust fund which
would generate $1 m illion a year in direct
aid for students by form ing a fin a n cia l
p a rtn e rs h ip b etw een stu d en ts and
legislators.
Students would pay $6 per sem ester into
the fund, which would be matched by equal
monies from the Legislature. H alf of the $1
m illion raised from this a rrangem ent every
year would be made available as outright
grants to deserving students, while the other
half would go into a trust fund to accrue
interest for future use. In other words, the
trust fund would grow and benefit more
students every year.
Students who are in the critical “ notch
group” — those middle and lower-middle
income students who don’t qualify for
federal or state aid, but at the same tim e
don’t have enough resources to get through
school — w ill be the first to benefit from the
trust fund, as w ill minorities and students
with children or other dependents.
. It’s vital that students m ake the trek to
the Legislature Wednesday to voice support
fo r the plan — or at least show support by
being there — and to d rive home the fact to
legislators that for many students, the trust
fund m ay m ake the difference between
graduation and elim in a tion .from the
university.
Associated Students w ill be offering van
rides to the Legislature Wednesday m orning
fo r students who wish to attend the trust
fund hearing. Those interested should
contact ASASU State Relations at 965-1151
o r 965-3161.
3
AIMAMERICANÉjX»aHON.(COi#tUtf»
letters
Resurrection at ASU!
Editor:
Regarding the Feb. 20 article, “ Upcoming Events for School o f M usic:” I was delighted
to learn that Benjamin Britten is now a professor in the School o f Music. L et m e be the
first to congratulate ace reporter Jennifer Lynn Johnson for unearthing this astonishing
and little-known fact. Most of us in the School of Music had foolishly believed reports that
the British composer (famous for, among other works, “ The Turn o f the Screw ,” “ War
Requiem” and “ Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra” ) had died in Decem ber of 1976.
Thank you for setting us straight.
I look forward to further revelations.
' Laura Beth Francken
Senior, Music Composition
Koran written by God, not prophet
Editor:
Recently, Salman Rushdie’s novel “ The
Satanic Verses has caused pandemonium
within the Moslem community. Many
Moslems have judged the book as being
blasphemous due to its denuciation of the
prophet Muhammad and the Koran,
Islam ’s holy book.
The “ Satanic Verses” portrays the
prophet Muhammad’s w ives as prostitutes
and it suggests that Muhammad wrote the
Koran him self rather than receiving it
directly from God. However, it is written
in the Koran in Sura XCVI, “ The BloodClot,” that the prophet Mohammed could
not read nor w rite. Furthermore, in the
Koran, the number 19 is a mysterious
number for the following reasons:
• The Koran contains 114 Suras: 114
divided by 19 equals six (whole number).
• The number of occurences of each
letter in the Koran is evenly divisible by
19.
• Each Sura starts with the following line
in Arabic: “ In the Nam e o f God, the
M ercifu l, the Com passionate” which
contains 19 Arabic letters
It is very difficu lt fo r a man to construct
an entire book in which these rules apply.
Therefore it is only logical that the Koran
is the work o f God.
It can only be assumed that the major
reasons fo r an author to w rite such a book
as die “ Satanic Verses” are publicity and
monetary objectives. Y et, Rushdie’s work
only brought him unfavorable publicity
and a life o f indefinite concealment. As far
as toe monetary objectives are concerned,
several m ajor bookstores already refuse to
distribute the book due to the controversy
it involves.
In conclusion, we, the Islam ic world, are
for human rights and free expression, but
w e must respect the sen sitivities in toe
beliefs o f others. When these beliefs are
unjustly criticized, w e lose both toe real
meanings o f free expression and human
values.
Said Lablan
English
Fine Arts Complex radiates “self-expression”
E ditor:
As concerned architecture students, w e o ffer a response
to Tod M cCoy’s article printed Feb. 23 in toe State P ress:
“ Architecturally Speaking: New buildings on campus just
don’t seem to fit in.”
W hile it is true that Frank Lloyd W right believed that a
building should be an extension o f the environment, for
McCoy to arrogate W right’s disapproval of the Fine Arts
Complex is inappropriate and wholly irrelevant.
New structures fo r ASU should m eet the follow ing
criteria designated by the Design R eview Board:
“ Buildings should be designed to reveal cultural artifact
in their own right, rich in allusion and metaphor, symbol
and ordering; they should stimulate engagement and
reward contemplation.”
We believe that Antoine Predock’s Fine Arts Complex
meets these qualifications. It is a fortress because it
demonstrates the strength o f art in our society. It is a vault
because art should be valued.
Predock’s concrete and steel arch is a symbolic gateway
to ASU, and serves to com plete Orange Mail The
rectangular columns on the M ill Avenue facade draw
visitors into the building where their perceptions are
manipulated by varied ceding heights. Predock is most
quotable
STATE PRESS
‘Extraordinary how potent ch e a p m u sic is . "
— Noel Coward
ED ITO R IA L B O A R D
Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual
m em bers of the editorial board write editorials and the board d ecid e s on their
merit. T h e editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State P ress staff as a
whole. Board m em bers include:
ip
Marty Sauerzopf
EDITOR
Mike Ritter
OPINION EDITOR
Joan McKenna
MANAGING EDITOR
Darrin Hostetler
COLUMNIST
*■w
ür« .mi t ei * uu»a
successful in designing the play o f light and shadow. His
glass block windows and m etal grillw ork illum inate toe
unruffled planes.
Predock’s Fine Arts Complex radiates self-expression;
this is appropriate for the creative endeavors of the College
o f Fine Arts.
A ctive architecture needs controversy to encourage
people to take notice o f their environment.
C.M. Ball
Sophomore, Architecture
Kenneth Kilday
Sophomore, Architecture
-jt«t-apuAqu.
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-“ t '¡¡ t é n u « * lien» * fr* i
M ARTY SAU ERZO PF
Editor
JO AN M cKENNA
M anaging Editor
....................................... VICKIE CHACHERE
S l" r v , Ed',0ri a Ü ......................................... MIKE RITTER
Asst. Opinion E d ito r..............................BRIAN tASSINARI
W ire Editor.................................... ....... ADRIANE HOPKINS
News Editor...................................... PATRICIA VAN COURT
^ T Ä it o r
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PRODUCTION: Victoria Culver, Erin Feeney Nancy Ness,
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The State Press is published Monday through Friday during
the academ ic year except holidays and exam periods, at
Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe,
Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not answer
ARTS REPQ RTERS: David Berberick, J ill Herbranson, Jen questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production:
nifer Lynn Johnson, Matthew Lfndenburg, Mish Tell.
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The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published
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op-ed
State Press
Pages
Tuesday, February 28,1989
George doesn’t need an itchy trigger finger
Jeff Greenfield
Univeral Press Syndicate
NEW Y O R K — A month into his
administration, George Bush is o ff on his
first foreign trip amid concern that he is
losing the “ strategic in itiative” to the
Soviets. Despite the cries from the sidelines
fo r the president to “ gallop and charge,”
here’s one observer quietly murmuring
“ W hoa!”
I f there was one clear m essage that
George Bush managed to communicate in
last year’s election, it was his conviction
that the foreign and defense policies of the
United States w ere essentially on course.
Even M ichael Dukakis began asserting
that he was closer to Ronald Reagan on
foreign and defense policies than was Bush.
It didn’t have a lot of credence, but it sure
made the point that Ronald Reagan -S
through design or dumb luck — had
managed to leave the United States in an
enviable position.
So if the Bush administration has not yet
named an assistant secretary of state of
European affairs, or for Asian and P a cific
affairs, does that refect a m ajor foreign
policy dilemma?
Or look at it from Mikhail Gorbachev’s
side of the world. The Soviet leader seems to
be everyw here at once, now m oving to patch
up the 25-year-old rift with China, now
signaling new interest in a Mideast peace
accord, now aggressively courting Western
Europe with the Soviets’ energetic “ peace
offensive.”
Why .is this happening? Because the
Soviet Union is hemorrhaging on a ll fronts.
Afghanistan has been an acknowledged
disaster — and the Brezhnev Doctrine that
proclaim ed the irreversibility of communist
ascension in a country lies in tatters.
The “ union” of Soviet socialist republics
has never been so disunified. From the
Moslem republics in the south, to the long-
sim m ering resentments in the Ukraine,
m inorities within the Soviet Union are using
glasnost to challenge root premises of
Moscow’s domination.
To the east, Poland and Czechoslovakia
appear once again ready for revolt — or a
protest as close to a revolt as a nation can
manage while occupied with the armed
fo rc e s o f a su perpow er. Cuba and
Nicaragua increasingly appear on the
Soviet ledgers as the costs, rather than the
assets, o f em pire.
And a ll of this is being played out at a tim e
when the Soviet economy, the standard of
living, life expectancy and self-confidence
are a ll heading down.
O f course Gorbachev is m ore active than
George Bush — in the same sense that a
man whose house is on fire is undoubtedly
m oving much m ore energetically than the
man whose house is not.
M oreover, there is nothing inherently
adm irable about a new administration
racing o ff to establish the initiative around
the world. We have only to rem em ber the
b righ t-eyed en erg y o f the K ennedy
administration, convinced that Am erica
had grown soft around the middle, eagerly
setting o ff to demonstrate its muscularity in
Southeast Asia. In hindsight, a period of
reflection and study might have served the
nation a lot better.
Yes, it would be helpful fo r Baker,
Scowcroft and company to figure out
something convincing to tell West Germany
about why the importunings of Moscow need
to be treated cautiously.
Yes, it would be good to remind Western
E u r o p e th a t th e d e p lo y m e n t o f
intermediate-range m issiles in the early
1980s was a powerful magnet that drew the
Soviets back to the bargaining table.
But the. new administration need not pace
itself to the demands o f an impatient
Washington, or even to the deadline
schedules of newspapers and TV news
broadcasts.
Demanding that President Bush get
moving is sim ply too reminiscent of the
character in an S. J. Perelm an story who
jumped on his horse and rode o ff in a ll
directions. That’s no way to get anywhere.
more letters
Moslem countries not free from “ vice”
Editor:
I am w riting in response to Samaria Jones’ letter (Feb.
23). I seems to me that Ms. Jones made her comments
about Am erican society out o f ignorance by im plying that
Am ericans are: crim inals, rapists, child molesters,
prostitutes, drug users and homosexuals. I do not know of
any Am erican that fits that description.
What makes Moslems so much better? Am erica does not
send 13- and 14-year-olds and old men into battle. Am erica
does not send terrorists onto airplanes or into international
airports with explosives and automatic weapons to take
civilized humans as hostages. I wonder if Ms. Jones could
{‘ i f
[v L
7ik l
have written such a letter in the press o f a Moslem country
without the w orry of not waking up the next morning.
Now, as to the Bible,, here in Am erica everyone has the
right to worship what they please, as they pleased That is
not a God-given right, but a right of what w e Americans
like to refer to as the B ill of Rights. I w ill have to agree on
one thing with Ms. Jones: some of M ike R itter’s cartoons
are insulting, but he has the right to express him self as he
pleases as does the State Press fo r the above reason. I w ill
adm it I do not know as much about the Islam ic religion or
about Moslem countries, but I know and understand enough
SPRING BREAK ’89 y * S
TR A IN IN G
SESSIO N :
B
that if I had to be, I ’d rather be a crim inal, rapist, child
molester, prostitute, drug user, homosexual and liv e here
in this “ m odern-day Rom e, Babylon, Sodom and
Gomorrah” i f that is what it takes to be a free Am erican in
the eyes of the Islam ic people. Oh, one m ore question to
Ms. Jones. I wonder if m y head is worth $7 m illion to some
religious leader (narrow-minded, terrorist leader hell-bent
on wreaking havoc on the w orld) o f some Moslem country.
Learn the truth Ms. Jones.
M ichael Arriaga
Junior, Manufacturing Engineering
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Continued from page 1.
skeptical of the ValTrans proposal.
“ Phoenix is a m etropolitan area that is turning itself inside
out,” Gober said. “ The fixed ra il component seems costly
and aimed at a higher income group.
“ ValTrans is too risky a development compared to
alternatives that could be utilized.”
Rob Melnick, director of ASU’s Morrison Institute for
Public Policy, said that he recognized the need fo r a good
mass transit system, but said he lodes at the proposal as a
“ quality of life ” issue.
“ We do know that we have a terrible problem in mass
transit in the V alley,” Melnick said. “ Not only is a mass
transit system necessary, it would be good fo r the city’s
image.
“ Unfortunately, voters w ill base their decisions on
economic value rather than a quality o f life issue.”
Ron Pulice, president of the Association of General
Contractors, said he was in itially against ValTrans but now
is a serious proponent of the mass transit system.
“ Our problem with the freew ays was that w e didn’t see the
need for them 20 years ago, and now w e’ve got problem s,”
Pulice said. “ I don’t want us to vote down Proposition 300 and
in 20 years say ‘hey, w e need Valtrans.’ ”
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StatcPress
Jju«da^Februar^28^22»
M an excap es from police
after 4-mile freeway ch ase
UNIVERSITY
^ TOW ERS
By MIKE BURGESS
State Press
A man driving a Ford Mustang with stolen license plates
escaped from Tem pe police early Monday when he ditched
the car and ran into a group of townhouses after a four-mile
chase on the Superstition Freew ay, police said.
W hile police w ere guarding the suspect’s car, a Phoenix
man suffered minor injuries when his ca r slammed into the
back of an unmarked police car, said O fficer R oger Austin, a
Tem pe police spokesman.
Randolph Goeman, 38, was taken to Desert Samaritan
Hospital in Mesa where he was treated and released, an
em ergency room nurse said.
Austin said the chase began about 3:39 a.m. after O fficer
Steven Wozniak spotted the white Mustang speeding on the
Superstition Freew ay near McClintock D rive and stopped the
car at Minton and Alder D rives.
Just after the Mustang stopped, the driver sped o ff and got
back on the freew ay driving west until he stopped at the
ram p to southbound Interstate 10, he added.
The suspect fled on foot into a group of townhouses at 1600
W. V illage Way. A police dog was brought to the scene, but
officers w ere unsuccessful in finding the suspect, Austin said.
He said the Mustang was possibly stolen from Tucson.
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Law School wins competition
By M ICHAEL LEW IS
State Press
A team o f three ASU law students beat out
teams from 20 other schools to win a
national collegiate environmental law moot
court competition Saturday in New York.
The winning team consisted o f David
G oldberg, John M ayo, and M ich ael
Running, a ll th ird-year law students
planning on graduating this May.
The competition consisted o f each team
subm itting a case b rie f by m ail in
December, follow ed by six rounds o f oral
arguments against other teams over three
days that w ill end this Saturday at Pace
University in White Plains, N .Y.
Joe Feller, associate professor o f law and
coach of the winning team, said winning this
competition is a feather in the students’ cap.
“ It shows their ability to deal very
competently with an extrem ely complex
legal problem ,” F eller said Monday. “ They
were rea lly dedicated and put in a
tremendous amount o f hard w ork.”
Teams from the ASU Law College have
done w ell in recent competitions, said
Kathleen N eitzel, development officer at the
Law College. Last year ASU won the
national negotiations competition, and this
year placed second in the region al
competition in Los Angeles.
“ The ASU College of Law is gaining a
national reputation fo r the increasing
quality o f the oral advocacy skills of_its
moot court teams, ” Neitzel said.
Team member Mayo said: “ It’s nice for
ASU to get recognition at a national
competition.”
Mayo said he is planning on spending one
year as a clerk for a judge in New Jersey
after graduating.
Three teams from ASU entered the
competition. One team, consisting of second
year law students Michael Burke, Myron
Scott and Laurie Stewart, made it to the
quarter final round. That team also won an
award for having one of the three best
briefs.
A third team made up o f third-year law
students Peter Schelstraete, Brenda Taylor
and second-year law student Vernon Harris
won their first prelim inary round of the oral
arguments.
F eller said the competition case was a
very difficult one.
The case revolved
aroUnd the m ost cu rren t issues o f
environmental law, he said.
“ It was a dispute between the state
government, an industrial polluter and a
citizen ’s environm ental organization,”
F eller said. In each round, the team had to
represent a different side o f the argument,
he said.
F eller said he judged nine practice rounds
where the ASU teams could engage in
arguments in front of law professors and
attorneys from the Phoenix area.
Mayo said the questions the professors
Ja ck W. B easley Jr./State P ress
John Mayo, left, Dave Goldberg, and M ike Running, a ll third-year law students, were w inners of
the National Court Com petition th is w eekend in New York.
and attorneys asked w ere very helpful in
preparing them for the intensity o f the
competition.
“ We could anticipate the most difficult
questions,” he said.
The winning ASU team also won a
prelim inary award for having the best legal
brief in the competition. The high score on
the brief helped that team win all six rounds
o f oral arguments this weekend.
F eller said the Law School Alumni
Association and the Law College raised the
money that made it possible to send the
three teams to where the competition was
held.
The winning team w ill be honored at a
sm all reception today at 11 a.m. at the
College of Law . The school w ill soon be
receiving the traveling trophy fo r this
c o m p é titio n , w h ich is a s p e c ia lly
commissioned w atercolor painting of a
landscape, F eller said.
Archeologists attempt to save unexcavated land in Tempe
By MICHELE MCDONALD
State Press
An unexcavated segm ent of the largest
HoHoKam v illa g e in Tem pe w ill be
d estro y ed i f A m e ric a n C on tin en tal
Corporation does not cooperate with
archaeologists when building a com m ercial
development at Baseline Road and Hardy
Drive, a professional archaeologist said.
American Continental Corporation has
not received zoning approval from Tem pe’s
Planning and Zoning Commission and the
commission does not have any definite
information about the archaeological site,
said Ash Campbell o f Tem pe’s community
development.
If approved, the development would
include a shopping cen ter, th eater,
restaurant, car wash and apartments.
The village, called Los Homos (the
ovens), is oval and measures one m ile long
and one half-m ile wide. Located on the
northeast corner o f Baseline Road and
Hardy D rive, the villa ge is the largest and
last of a series of sites in the area.
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“ W e (archaeologists) never really stop
projects,” Howard said. “ W e very rarely do
that (in terfere with scheduling).
In 1988, an exposed site near P riest D rive
was opened to the public and m ore than
2,000 people turned out to see the ancient
site.
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1975, local citizens monitored and did some
excavation in the utility trenches but they
did not extensively excavate the location, he
said.
However, the new development would
obliterate the archaeological features.
Howard said the { M i c e and length o f the
ex ca va tio n depends upon “ a lo t o f
variables.”
Excavation can cost anywhere from
$40,000 to $3 m illion and could last three
months to one year depending on the
amount o f artifacts, Howard said. But the
cost probably is not in the high range, he
said.
W ATER BO TTLE & C A G E
w ith the p u rch ase o f an y new b ik e
W ith T h is C o u p o n ($12.95 value).
VA LLEY W IDE D É L IV E R Y - N A T IO N W ID E S H IP P IN G
| Don't Forget 1
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I 10% O ff
respects,” Howard said. “ People in the
V alley have been intrigued with people
livin g in the desert.”
Howard expects to And archaeological
features that w ill help the community learn
more about the HoHoKams, who had a
culture sim ilar to that of the Mayans in
Mexico.
“ We know from our records that there are
several large features called compounds
. . . at the site,” Howard said.
C om pou n ds re s e m b le a p a rtm e n t
complexes with open-air plazas, he said. A
compound measuring 60 meters long and
capable o f inhabiting 30-50 people m ay be at
the site.
Also, Howard said pit houses, like single
fam ily homes, along with trash pits m ay be
located on the site.
A platform mound with recreational ball
courts, sim ilar to the pyramids in Mexico,
was bulldozed at a nearby site in 1957. A
sim ilar mound m ay be at the area, Howard
said.
When the Casa Fiesta R V Park, located on
the site, was under construction around
Rural
A
BEAR
AFFAIR
Continental Corporation and developer of
the proposed center, said she did not know
about die archaeological site until Feb. 10
and does not know exactly what w ill be done
in the area.
“ We hope to determine exactly what the
site is,” Johnson said. “ It’s something that
has a tremendous impact on the area.”
“ A t most sites in Arizona, we have been
able to see pieces o f it (HoHoKam village)
but not the whole site,” said Jerry Howard
of Soil System Inc. and the Southwest
Archaeological Team .
“ Seeing the site
change as a whole has been the most
interesting feature,” Howard said.
The HoHoKams lived at Los Homos from
A .D . 500 u n til th e ir u n e x p la in e d
disappearance in A.D. 1450. They had a
lasting effect on the Valley because without
their culture and canal system, early
settlers m ay not have survived, Howard
said.
“ They w ere the only ones using canal
systems,” he said. “ Our canal systems
followed theirs.”
“ I think it’s significant in a lot of
e
d
k
coimes
State Fra*
Tuesday February 98,1989
Page 14
by Berke Breathed
BLOOM COUNTY
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State P rm
Page 15
Tuesday, February 28,1989
S u n D evils claim fifth co n secu tive title
By CHRIS D O RSEY
State Press
It was a night o f peaks and valleys for the
ASU wrestling team as it claim ed its fifth
consecutive Pac-10 crown.
But Sun D evil coach Bobby Douglas was
not o verly pleased w ith the team ’s
peformance.
“ That was not a thing a beauty you
watched out there tonight,” Douglas said. “ I
was pleased that w e won the tournament,
but I was not pleased with the w ay w e did
it.”
Defending conference champions Zeke
Jones (118 pounds) and Thom Ortiz (150
pounds) su ffe red losses. Jones said
following Sunday’s action that the team
looked a bit sluggish and it carried over into
the championship round.
ASU won the tournament with 88.75 points
while Oregon claim ed second place with
70.50. Boise State was third with 45 points,
Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo took fourth place
at 42.75, Cal State B akerfield garnered 41
points, Cal State Fullerton at 35.50, Fresno
State with 30.75, Oregon State tallied 19.75,
Stanford with 14 points and Utah State
rounded out the field with 10.50.
The Sun D evils and Oregon filled the top
two positions last year but the m argin was
cut drastically. ASU held the top position
with a secure cushion o f 55.5 points.
“ The conference has gotten a lot better,”
Douglas said. “ They are im proving.”
Some bright spots on the evening were
seniors Jim G ressley (177 pounds) and John
Ginther (190 pounds) earning their first
Pac-10 title. The Sun D evils have been the
bridemaids o f the conference throughout
their career.
Gressley earned three runer-up medals
but in front o f a crowd of 1,472 claim ed the
177 pound title. He decisioned Curt Stramm
of Oregon, 4-3, despite wrestling the final
two period with injured ribs.
“ I am happy for Jim m y,” Douglas said.
“ He struggled with torn rib cartlidge.”
The senior had to come from behind but
earned the title when he scored a reversal
with 1:33 left to wrestle in the match.
Gressley never looked back.
Ginther recorded a pin over Fred King of
Oregon State with only three ticks left on the
clock to go out in style. He dominated the
entire match and finished o ff his opponent
with a fall, which was one of two ASU pins.
“ It was a good stepping stone for
national,” Ginther said. “ I finally had a
good tournament.”
The Muncie, Ind., native missed last
year’s meet after suffering a torn groin
muscle.
The Pac-10 meet serves as a qualifying
tournament for the national m eet March
16-18 in Oklahoma City. ASU w ill send eight
grapplers to defend its national title, which
seven Sun D evils brought home in 1988.
“ We are not sending the quality as we did
last year,” Douglas said. “ We need to keep
everyone together and have that team
unity.”
Turn to Cham pions, page 17.
Oregon’s Dan Vidlak controls the action in his 118 pound championship match with Sun Devil
Zeke Jones. Vidlak was named the tournament most outstanding wrestler with his 17-12 victory.
Track coach uncertain of Devil’s uncoming meet
By KELLY PEARCE
State Press
With the first track m eet o f toe season a few days away,
distance coach Ken Lehman said anything could happen.
“ I ’m never quite sure what to expect until th efirst m eet is
over,” he said. “ But a fter it’s over, I ’ll know what to expect
for toe rest of toe season.”
The ASU m en’s and w om en’s track and fie ld team w ill play
host to T exas T ech and U C -Irvin e Saturday a t Sun A n gel
Stadium.
Lehm an, w ho is in his th ird y e a r as an ASU assistant track
coach, said he has high expectations fo r to e w om en’s team
w ith seniors Lau ra LaM ena and T eresa B arrios a t the helm .
“ In w om en’s distance w e should be p retty com p etitive with
anyone,” Lehm an said. “ T h ere is a lo t o f talen t th ere.”
LaMena, who competes in toe 1500-meter, 3000-meter,
5000-meter and 10,000-meter runs, earned All-Am erica
accolades in the 10,000-meter event in 1987. She also captured
a ninth-place finish at toe 1987 NCAA Championships in toe
same event. Last season, she set toe school record in this
event with a tim e of 33:45.
“ Lau ra is one o f the best co lle g ia te runners in toe United
Barrios, Who competes in the same events, qualified for
cross country nationals in 1988 after placing fourth in the
Pac-10 championship. She did not compete in the 1988 track
season.
“ I think Teresa w ill have the best season she’s ever had,
barring sickness,” Lehman said.
Other talent for the distance women’s team includes junior
Am y Komitzky, who w ill compete in the longer distances;
and juniors Kathy Jarvis and Kim M cKay, who w ill
participate in the shorter distances, Lehman said.
On the men’s squad, the top competitor is sophomore Todd
Lewis.
“ He is definitely the top distance (runner),” Lehman said.
“ Even though he’s young, he’s quite good.”
Lewis w ill compete in the longer distance events, including
the steeplechase.
In the 800-meter event, Sun D evils junior Darren Viner,
freshman Chuck Belcher, junior Mark Bowland and senior
Dave Spargo w ill compete.
“ Strength fo r this team is definitely toe shorter distances,”
Tubman said. “ We’relooking for younger distance runners to
taka advantage of the chance to compete and step in and do
toe job.
* ‘
"
J i||j||i|J Itob D orf w ill anchor toe team
in the longer distance events.
“ We are a little short on number,” Lehman said. “ We have
a lot o f work yet to do.”
With the first o f a four-home-meet schedule, the distance
team is focusing on fast-type workouts.
“ We’re cutting back on the longer distances,” Lehman
said. “ Concentration and relaxation are what I ’m yelling
right now.”
Lehman said his runners are the least affected by the twoyear track probation that went into effect last summer.
“ They got to com pete in cross country,” he said, adding
that the team was able to travel while the track team cannot.
Lehman said the distance runners are making the best of
the probation by having positive attitudes.
“ They’re making a bad situation into a good situation,” he
said.
For many, the sprint events are m ore exciting for the fans,
but the distance events are just as thrilling, Lehman said.
“ We look at sprint events as extra tim e fo r distance people
to rest between their events,” he said. “ I ’ve seen the fans get
excited in the 1500-meter on the 12th lap when it comes down
to a sprint.
v
“ But naturally the sprinters get a little more attention
because it’s short and fast.”
Saunders claims 142 pound
crown in Pac-10 tournament
By KYLE D. ENG
State Press
It w as business as usual fo r Junior
Saunders last night.
ASU 142-pounder Junior Saunders salutes the crowd of 1,472 as he displays his Pac-10 con
ference title card. The junior decisioned John Martin of Cal
riiiii l i titem»«
The fifth-ranked Saunders claim ed the
142-pound crown for ASU at the Pac-10
wrestling tournament in the University
A ctivity Center.
The ASU grappler defeated Cal P o ly San
Luis Obispo’s John Martin, 8-3. The win
extended Saunders’ perfect record to 11-0 in
conference competition and 33-4 overall.
I t w a s S a u n d e r s ’ f i r s t P a c -1 0
championship as w ell as his inaugural year
w restlin g in conferen ce com petition.
Saunders, a junior, sat out last year on a
redshirt transfer. Two years ago, he
claim ed the NCAA Division II 142-pound
crown wrestling for Cal-State Bakersfield.
“ This one feels good,” an exhausted
Saunders said after his match. “ It was a
tough match, and it feels good to w in.”
Saunders has com e a long w ay since his
1985 socond-place finish in the state
tournam ent b e fo re gra d u atin g from
Torrance High School in California.
“ It’s been a long road,” Saunders said.
“ But I guess this is the reward you get when
you put in all those long hours in practice.
Douglas has helped m e tremendously
making the transition of Division I and
Division II.”
In the championship match, Saunders
opened the scoring in the first period with a
two-point takedown at the 2:22 mark.
M artin then reversed out o f a Saunders hold
gaining one point at 1:52 in the period.
With 1:10 left in the first period Saunders
scored a takedown, but M artin quickly
reversed Saunders’ hold earning a point. At
the end o f the first period, the score stood 4-2
in favor of the Sun D evil.
The second period was nearly scoreless
except for a reversal by M artin with 1:54
left. Going into the final period, Saunders
held a narrow lead, 4-3.
In the final period Saunders took control.
He scored four straight points on takedowns
at the 1:24 and the 1:18 marks in the period
to wrap up the match.
Although he is now a con feren ce
champion, Saunders said he likes to take a
back seat when it comes to the spotlight.
“ I leave it up to (158-pounder) Dan (St.
John) and (118-pounder) Zeke (Jones) to be
in the spotlight,” Saunders said. “ I think it’s
m y job to be a quiet leader.
“ I like to lead by exam ple so to speak — I
, «9# .
to
”.
«mMM
State Press
Tuesday, February 28,1989
Page 16
Keeping Horn could be big bargain for ASU
Gary Jackson
Sports Editor
ASU and U ofA have produced one of
the biggest rivalries at the collegiate
level.
And at this very moment the Sun
D evils are preparing to go one up on the
W ildcats.
The U ofA administration w ill have to
fork out alm ost $30,000 fo r a new and
exciting, super deluxe “ A ” logo —
that’s like the Pentagon dishing out
$10,000 for a screw driver.
But now the ASU men’s basketball
program has a tremendous chance to
make U ofA ’s preposterous expenditure
seem like monopoly money when the
dollar figure is established fo r a new
head coach to be named next month.
The largest sum m ight be buying out
a current contract. One big-name
candidate would come equipped with a
$200,000 price tag just to sign with ASU
— sorry, no successful season is
guaranteed in the deal.
The program could go into debt by
just luring a coach here.
In w h a t o th er w a ys can the
University dispurse fundage?
How about enticing a coach with a
car, a house, a w ife, kids and two dogs.
How about asking ASU interim head
coach Bob Schermerhom to keep his
current position. He already has two
sons, and at 44, it is unlikely that he w ill
be paying any m ore m aternity bills.
Like any coach coming to ASU, the
U niversity could o ffer Horn a TV
coach’s show. The man is a stand-up
comedian. W hichever station lands
Horn w ill notice an instant increase in
ratings during that half-hour slot.
Everyone in the media knows what
Horn’s personality is like. But a new
coach m ight not attract viewers, or
spectators in the U niversity A ctivity
Center for that matter.
A new coaching staff m ay result in a
conflict with the players — shades of
what occurred last season.
Form er head coach Steve Patterson
weeded out the bad apples, and now
Horn and his staff are ready to work
with the grade-A players. The current
Sun D evils seem to have adapted to his
style o f play, but w ill the athletes be as
receptive to a new coach?
This season Horn began his second
year at ASU as a basketball coach and
added recruiting coordinator to his list
of responsibilites.
In N o vem b er, H orn a ttra c te d
forward Marlon Jones o/ Mesa Dobson
High School and guard Brian Camper of
Lakewood High School in California.
Both w ill be among the top prospects
from their respective states.
In A pril, additional high school
recruits w ill sign on national letter of
intent day. It is questionable whether
ASU would be a worthwhile ticket if
there is an unproven coach at the helm.
Keep in mind that previous records at
other schools do not always carry over.
So far, rumor has it that candidates
have been coaches who are currently at
schools in the East.
U ofA head coach Lute Olson would be
the exception to the rule, but not really.
Although Olson previously was the head
coach at Iow a (1974-1983), he began his
tenure at Long Beach State and various
C a liforn ia high schools. H e was
fam iliar to the West Coast style and
was clearly effective with the Wildcats.
Although no Pac-10 school w ill be able
to dethrone the Tucson NBA-caliber
team, Horn could re-establish ASU as a
top contender in the conference.
P rio r to a four-year stint at Southern
Utah State, Horn coached at Cal-Irvine,
C h a ffey J u n ior C o lle g e , O range
Community College and Canyon High
School, a ll California schools.
But Horn w ill have to battle the odds
of stepping up to head coach because he
follows in Patterson’s footsteps by
taking the interim route to the position.
But the two are different coaches in
separate situations.
Patterson began his coaching tenure
in 1981 as opposed to Horn, who has
been coaching for 20 years.
During Patterson’s initial year as
head coach, the ASU basketball
program was under NCAA probation.
Horn would not have to begin with this
handicap.
Any coach w ill shoot fo r the moon
when negotiating a contract, but Horn
w ill not be a six-m illion-dollar man.
With the potential high cost o f luring
a new coach to ASU comes the risk of
sending the basketball program into
bankruptcy.
A to p -d o lla r co a ch (jo e s n ot
necessarily mean a packed house or a
good basketball team — if ASU sticks
with Horn, the team w ill be able to
afford new shoes next season.
Jam ie Lytta/State Pre ss
ASU interim head basketball Bob Scherm erhom .
A S U swimmers complete Pac-10s, look to NCAAs
By CHRISSY NACKINO
State Press
The ASU men’s and women’s diving teams turned in top
perform ances o ver the weekend during the Pac-10
Championships at the Mona Plum m er Aquatic Center.
Sun D evil freshman Janae Lautenschlager placed second
in the one-meter, sixth in the three-meter and seventh on the
platform .
Two ASU freshmen contributed top-10 finishes: Jessica
Tudos, who finished eighth, and Lisa Cribari, who finished
ninth on the platform .
Stanford’s K atie Connors won the three-m eter competition
while UCLA’s Karla Goltman took top honors in the one-
m eter.
Stanford’s M ike Burton and Stella Kahn recorded top
honors in the men’s and women’s platform diving
competition.
On the ASU men’s team, freshman Rick Sawtell placed
sixth and junior Josh Appel took 10th on the platform .
Both the Sun D evil men’s and women’s teams w ill finish
the season with the NCAA Zone in early March and the NCAA
Zone E Championships cm March 10-11.
Additional action took place this weekend as the ASU
women’s swim team competed in the Pac-10 Championships
in Cerritos, Calif.
The 200-meter freestyle relay team consisting of freshman
Let Me Get Right To The Point » . .
S T U D IO S T O 3 B E D R O O M S
3 M IL E S F R O M A S U
Heidi Hendricks, sophomores M ichelle Thompson and Nancy
Osborne and senior Missy Allington won the event with a
tim e of 1:33.43.
Top individual Sun D evil scores w ere produced by
Thompson, placing fourth in the 50-meter freestyle and fifth
in both the 200-meter and HKHneter freestyle.
Hendricks also ended with honors finishing fourth in the
100-meter breaststroke and eighth in the 200-meter
breastroke.
The women’s team w ill train fo r the next three weeks in
preparation for the NCAA Championships at Indiana
U niversity on March 16-18.
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State P»cw
Page 17
, February 28,1989
Cham pions—
Continued from page 15.
T h e Sun D e v ils w ill h a ve m ake
reservations for Jones, Ortiz, Ginther,
Gressley, Dan St. John (158pounds), Junior
Saunders (142 pounds), M arco Sanchez (126
pounds) and G.T. Taylor (167 pounds), as
they w ill represent ASU a t nationals.
St. John notched the Sun D evils’ first pin
of the night to claim his second Pac-10 title.
He recorded a fa ll over K.C. Lane in 1:56,
which coincidently was the deciding factor
in ASU’s championship.
“ISSUES FACING
DEMOCRATS
"
by guest speakers
JA C K WHITEMAN, President and Chairman of the
Board of The Empire Machine and Tool Corp.
FRED D U VA LL, Chairman of the presidential cam
paign to elect Bruce Babbitt.
T O D A Y 1-2:15 N A V A J O R M ., M U
“ I had a slow sta rt but I cam e up to w here
I should b e,” St. John said. “ I am looking
forw ard to the b ig throw down in tw o
w eeks.”
The junior, touting a 40-1 record, is the
leading contender for the national title at 158
pounds this season.
Saunders earned his first Pac-10 title with
an 8-5 victory over John M artin o f Cal Poly
San Luis Obispo.
Jones and Ortiz took second place after
suffering disappointing losses.
Oregon’s Dan Vidlak, the tournament’s
most outstanding w restler, defeated Jones
17-12 for the 118 pound crown.
“ I have never seen him before,” Jones
said, “ but I didn’t take him lightly. He just
outwrestled me.
Jones fe ll behind ea rly despite scoring the
firs t points o f the m atch on a takedown.
“ I could te ll from the beginning that he
w as out there confident and could w in ,”
Jones said.
Ortiz lost to Richard B aily of Cal Santa
Barbara, 7-1. It was the same case with
Ortiz as with Jones, falling behind out of the
blocks and being unable to catch up.
Freshmen Sanchez and Taylor earned
third place honors in their inaugural Pac-10
m eet. W hile Andy M cNaughton (134
pounds) and M ike Anderson (H W T )
garnered fifth place to round out the D evil
scoring.
¿¿I
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State Press
Tuesday, February 88,1989
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lent, must sell. 968-0842.
1987 YAM AH A S R X 250, Cafe Racer,
5 8 0 0 m ile s , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n ,
$1500/offer.,JC, 966-8089.
1988 FZR 1000. Excellent condition, 3400
m iles, pearl white/blue. S till under warran
ty. C a ll 468-9243.
B A BY COMING, m ust se ll 1986 Honda
E lite 150. M int condition, make offer. C all
John, 945-4074.
ELITE 150 Deluxe. Grey blue, 1200 m iles,
looks brand new, $1400/offer. 784-9968,
Christy.
YAM AH A QT50, only 45 m iles, perfect
condition. $500. 941-8433 Shirley, or
345-0145 Todd.
BICYCLES
M ISCELLANEOUS
FO R SALE
FLO R ESCEN T CONDOM S: Safety can be
fun and fashionable. They glow in the
dark, are sparm addal, discreetly pack
aged, prompt delivery, 6 condoms. Send
address and $6.50 to C lassic Imports, 515
E. Grant Road 141, Suite 173, Tucson,
Arizona 85705.
GUITAR AND Amp. like new. Rad, Bentley
series 10 guitar with tremak) and G orilla
amp. $220. 784-9839, Neal.
MINOLTA 35MM cam era. XG-M model.
Tokina zoom s lens, 80-200mm. A il in
excellent condition. $220/offer. Bob Zubia,
weekdays, 965-6146.
and ask for
PEGGY MCGINN
Classified Advertising Manager
OR
STERLENE MORRIS
Classified Adviser
APARTM EN TS
FREE
RENTAL INFO
1, 2, & 3 bd with p o o ls
& v olle yb a ll. W alk to
A S U . Furnished/unfurn ish e d . L o s P rad o s,
W orthington & others.
P ic k up free list at
U niversity Realty
808 S. M ill
968-9331
N EED TO se ll 3 trips to M azatlan with
College Tours. Deposits are in, and 3
spots reserved. Sleeping car on train and
upgraded hotel. W ill se ll reservations for
$25 each ($50 value). $217 balance due.
967-45|9.
3 BEDRO O M , 2 bath apartment. Covered
parking, refrigerator, dishwasher, laundry
hook-ups. 949 S . M cQ intock (between
Apache and University) 897-0516, Jess.
O AKLEY SU N G LA SSES. Spring special,
a ll Types. C a ll 833-2971.
ASU AREA: Studios, 1 and 2 bedrooms,
$260 and up. Pool, no dogs. 966-8838.
PANASO NIC ELECTRIC Typewriter. Dot
m atrix, battery adaptable, never used.
Own carrying case, portable. A ll accesso
ries. 994-1186.
Q U E E N S IZ E W A TER B ED , bookcase
headboard. Excellent condition. $100.
Dani, 831-1327.
__________________
TO A LL of ASU; Crystal Spa Rentals is
looking forward to supplying you with a
jacuzzi for your enjoyment. 464-8075.
W EDDING GOW N, size 8. Matching hat.
slip included, $150. Cheryl, 894-6616 or
829-3461.
W EIGHT LO SS Patches available. For 30
day supply, $29.95. For further information
ca ll 844-7000.
Restaurant Fo r
Lease to H ung ry
Entrepreneur
2,900 sq . ft.
R estaurant
S h e ll/B a r
at
1090 W. 5th St.
U p to 8,800 sq. ft.
C a ll F lip W eber
949-9977
Ideal for Students
•Affordablestudios & 1 bedrooms
from $295
•Great locationclose to ASU •Privacy1-level apartments
mature landscaping
MARIANNA APARTMENTS
1214 E . O ra n g e
9 66 -8 59 7
si..1.: m c s a s M i
BEAUTIFUL NEW large t and 2 bedroom.
W alk to ASU . P od , laundry room. One
block South of U niversity on 8th Street,
Cape Cod Apartments. Phone 968-5238
for special.
M UST M OVE. Commons on Lemon, Vii
m ile ASU . Male, take over lease. Dave,
948-0340, leave message.
SPACIO US 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool,
laundry, 1/10 m ile ASU . $475/month
includes utilities. 910 E. Lemon. 966-8704.
$199
MOVE-IN
SPECIAL
U tilities Included
C R ES T CANO ND ALE. New, never been
ridden, $500. C all 890-8765 anytime.
Need to sell.
TH R EE BEACH Cruisers- great condition.
M ens and womens. Price negotiable
($30-60). Contact Heidi, 921-3659.
FURNITURE
BRAND NEW Futon furniture- Bed, couch,
tables, etc. Must sell. Mark, 921-2747.
TICKETS
LO S A N G ELES, round trip, 3 plane tickets, $38 each. Buy one or all. C all Tony,
944-5380.
M ISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE_________
B U Y YO U R Yearbook now! The price is
on ly $30. C a ll 965-6881 fo r m ore
inform ation.
CO LO R TELEVISIO N. Looks and works
perfect. $85 m ust sell! C a ll 27 T 0697
CU STO M G O LF clubs. Tour M odel II and
others. 3-PW, $136. M edal woods from
$29. 838-7764.
REAL ESTATE
CO NDO FO R SALE, Papago Park Village.
3 bedroom, 2 bath, private patio, fireplace,
pool, reserved parking, R V parking.
Corner of College and Gilbert Drive. Just
across river from Sun Devil Stadium. Easy
walk or ride to cam pus. Fully equipped,
like new. $95,000, no realtors. C a ll Linda,
275-1917 to see.
D E LU X E CO N D O M IN IU M clo se to
cam pus, 2 bedroom s, washer/dryer,
dishwasher, pool, Jacu zzi, many extras.
$59,000. 894-6205.
STEAL $3995 12x65 M obile home. Lists
for $8000. 1W m iles from ASU . Nice
interior, partially furnished, air, swamp,
private fenced yard, quiet and secure
park, pool, laundry. C h ris or Kathy,
967-2045.
BUY OF THE WEEK
Papago l l t $75,000
2 bd., sp iral stair entry, sun screens,
m irrored din in g room. Im m aculate
cond ition . Assum able, no q ualifying
loan at 10.5%. LB . TP: 966-3834.
Bob B u llo ck • Realty Executives
998-2992
We’re here for you, ASU !
Stete Prese Classifieds
Only
Mile
fro m A S U
H as just been
redecorated. V er
tical blinds, ceiling
fans, choice o f new
carpet, 3 pools,
laundry facilities.
2 bd flats & 2 bd
townhouses.
The Fountains
1028 E . Orange
9 6 7 -0 4 8 9
TOW NH OM ES /
CO N D O S
CLASSIFICATIONS:
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
12. Homes For Sale
13. Rental Sharing
14. Business Opportunities
15. Help Wanted
16 . instruction
17. Jewelry
18 Free Lost/Found
19. On-Campus
20. Personals
21. Pets
22. Services
23. Transportation
24. Travel
25. Typing/Word Processing
26. Wanted
27. Adoptions
28. Miscellaneous
HOW TO PLACE A
CLASSIFIED AD:
in Person:
HOW TO CORRECT V
OR CANCEL YOUR AD:
cancellations:
Liner ads inust be canceled
before noon, 1 day prior to
publication. No refunds wiH.
be given.
M—F. 8 a.m.-5 pm.
NorthMU
Information Desk
M -F, 9 a.m.^2:30 p.m.
State Press Errors:
Check your ad the FIRST
day it runs. Call 965-6731
with any corrections, before
noon. The State Press is only
responsible for the first day
the ad runs incorrectly, Cor
rected ads will be extended
one day. Changes called in
after the First day will not
qualify for a makegood.
C a s h , C h e c k ( w it h
guarantee card), MC, p r
VISA..'
Matthews Center
Basement
(South End)
By Mail:
State Press
Classifieds
Matthews Center. Rm 15
Tempe. AZ 85287-1502
Please enclose
payment with ad.
By Phone:
965-6731
Payment with visa/m C
only. $6 minimum on an
phone orders.
The State Press reserves
the right to reject any
a d v e rtis in g copy
_____
submitted.
Customer Errors: /
Corrections must be made
before noon. Compensation
w ill not be given fo r
customer error.
WHEN WILL YOUR A D 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 am.).
Ads may run for any
length of time. Canceled
ads will be credited to
your account. Sorry, no
refunds
H O M ES FOR RENT
H ELP W AN TED
H ELP W ANTED
REN T ME! Two bedroom, one bath. W alk
to ASU. $42S/month. C a ll Curt, 829-3460
or 838-5640.
BROADW AY SOUTHW EST Distribution
Center has a part-time opening in our unit
control office. Applications are being
accepted Monday-Friday, 9-3, 1524 W.
14th Street, Tempe.
GO VERNM ENT JO B S- Forest Service,
transportation, banking, engineering,
custom s. For inform ation package call
968-1041 ext E3. (sm all foe).
RENTAL SHARING
$220 MONTHLY, utilities and phone
included. Q uiet, nonsm oker, fem ale
preferred. C lo se cam pus. 829-9654,
968-5630, evenings.
FEM ALE FO R own room, near campus.
Laundry, pool, storage. $50 off March rent.
Affordable rent. Cara, 921-1764.
M ALE/FEM ALE roommate needed for 4
bedroom, 2 bath house with a small
library. Washer/dryer, VCR, microwave,
$200/month plus 1/5 utilities. 838-6743,
ask for Sterling.
M A LE/FEM A LE RO O M M ATE needed
im m ediately. Own room and bath.
$225/month, Vk utilities. Adam, 890-1806.
NEW FURNISHED room at com er of
University and Hardy. $240/month plus 16
utilities. C a ll 829-0602 after 6 p.m.
PRIVACY! FEM ALE, nonsmoker, share 3
bedroom, 2 bath home, pool. Close to
A S U . $295/m onth plu s 16 u tilitie s.
423-0348.
RO O M M ATES N EED ED im m ediately.
Furnished Scottsdale home from $200.
Fem ales preferred. Shannon, 941-5944,
please leave message.
R O O M M ATE W AN TED im m ediately!
Male/fem ale, 2 bedroom townhouse, furn
ished, $265 plus utilities. 829-7144.
SO UTH SCO TTSD ALE home. Room with
private entrance. Kitchen, washer/dryer,
pool privileges. $275 includes utilities.
947-2884.
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
CASH FLOW Problem s? How about a
part-time job remedy which is sure to help
you out- $1500-$3500 in just 9-12 Weeks,
20 flexible hours weekly. Want to know
how? C a ll 498-0399.
CO M M ERCIAL O FFICE cleaning, parttime, flexible evening hours. Friday/
Saturdy n ights off! $4-5/hour plus
bonuses. Scottsdale locations, advance
ment opportunities. C a ll 945-4994.
CO N SU M ER RESEARCH Interviewers
needed for early evenings and weekends.
Flexible guaranteed hours. Not a sales
position. We interview people nationally
on the phone about many subjects. No
experience needed. W e train you on our
com puterized interviewing system . Start
ing at $4.75/hour with .regular increases.
C all 483-8214 or 483-7544 or come to
Market Solutions Group. 8687 E. V ia de
Ventura, Suite 310, Scottsdale.
345-8212
CU STO M ER SER VICE representative.
Must enjoy comm unicating with people.
Evening hours, fun environment. Excellent
part-tim e job for students, $6/hour.
966- 8788.
G YM NASTICS CO ACH. $6 to $10 hourly
Flexible hours. M agicland Gym nastics,
evenings, 946-9493.
DELIVER FU E R S part-time, a.m. Earn
$5-$7/hour. C all 730-5954 evenings.
ENG INEER TECHNICIAN (mechanical),
2nd or 3rd year. M echanical engineering
or technology. Som e related experience
desired. Must be available 12 months at a
minimum of 20 hours per week between
the hours of 8 a.m.-5 p.m. C all 956-8200.
$5/hour and up.
H ELP W ANTED
FEM ALES W ANTED for research. Earn up
to $20. You must binge eat to qualify.
Leave message for Ju lie H ill, 965-7296
AAAA TELEP H O N E interview ers for
Tempe marketing research firm. Absolute
ly no sales. Flexible evening/weekend
hours. Start at $4/hour. Rapid raises for
good people. O’Neil Associates, Susan,
967-4441.
APPOINTM ENT SETTERS. 10 positions
available, 4-9 daily, salary plus bonus. Call
Rich at 820-3487 between 12-7 p.m.
A R T AND Business oriented student
wanted to woric with artists and publishers
for licensing painters works for various
reproductive uses. Part-time, flexible
hours, $5/hour. 230-4195, leave message.
ARTIST NEEDED. M ust have illustration
skills and good craftm anship. C all Brad or
Doug, weekdays, 894-2290.
2 BEDRO O M , 2 bath, washer/dryer
included. Price/University. $450.994-1991
or 941-3729, ask for Eric.
A T T E N T IO N A L L stu d e n ts! E arn
$6-$10/hour. 23 hours weekly, near
cam pus. Have fun w hile you leam profes
sional sales techniques. C all 966-8788.
EA SY W ALK to ASU from this clean 2
bedroom, 2 bath condo with refrigerator
and pool. $500. Ken Kempton, 844-5900.
John H all and Associates.
ATTENTION STUDENTS. Leading firm in
it’s field opening new on-cam pus location.
$6-$8/hour to start guaranteed. Flexible
evening hours. Call P h il Lind at 264-3426.
LUXURIO US TOW NHOM ES, 2 and 3
bedroom s. W asher/dryer, pool, spa,
tennis, sportcourt, W m ile A SU . 967-4908.
BIT’N PIZZAS now hiring all positions,
fuH/part-time. Apply in person, 3030 N.
68th Street, Scottsdale.
N eed
housekeepers for
hotel,8a.m.-3p.m.
Call Norrell
CRUISE SHIPS now hiring a ll positions.
Both skilled and unskilled. For information
ca ll (615)779-5507 ext. H178.
EX CELLEN T O PPORTUNITY with public
affairs organization. Phoners needed to
start immediately. Vote survey, no sales.
Guaranteed $6/hour. C all Debbie Murphy,
263-9699.
$350/DAY! AT Home! Process phone
orders for our products. People call you.
Nationwide. Free details. C all (refundable)
1-518-459-8697 ext. K203.
G R EAT SU M M ER opportunity, Jewish
sum m er residential cam p seeks excep
tional young adults for staff and specialists
positions. Capital cam ps is located In the
heart of the scenic Catoctin Mountains
only one hour from the W ashington D.C.
area. The cam p has over 300 acres of
beautiful forest, hiking trails and takes. If
you are interested in the challenges and
excitm ent of working with cam pers in
grades 3-10, or if you have a specialty in a
particular area, we’want you on our team.
Good salaries, great fun. For more infor
mation call collect 301-656-CAMP!
CREATIVE COOK with references to
prepare spicy and low fat evening m eals in
private home. 585-0119.
B E OWN Boss. Good money in spare
tim e- Guaranteed. Free inform ation.
W isdoip Publishing, 2912 East Indian
School AS310, Phoenix, 85016.
$10-$660 W EEKLY/UP m ailing circulars!
Rush self-addressed stamped envelope:
Department AN-7CC-63, 256 S. Robert
son, Beverly H ills, CA 90211.
G R EAT O PPORTUNITY! Insurance and
leasing agency looking for am bitious,
aggressive, young adults to work parttim e. Tremendous opportunity!! C a ll Bob
at 990-7901.
FU LL AND Part-time help wanted for
Pardners. W alking distance from ASU.
Buffet type line work and cashier. Pick-up
applications at 825 W. University Drive,
967- 9221.
“ G O LF AM ERICARD” part-time, flexible
hours. Sports-minded individual to se ll and
manage summer golf pass program.
Unlim ited earnings. 838-9129.
GO T THE Gift of the G ab? W ell then, how
about making some extra cash while you
exercise your jaw. Earn up to $2500 in 9
weeks. C all 893-0411 for details.
HAAGEN-DAZS Ice Cream Shop Scoopers. Scottsdale shop needs personable,
dependable, hard-working individuals.
Day and night positions available. Call
Monday-Friday, 8:30-5, 941-0400.
LAW N SER VICE needs part-time help.
W ill work into summer job. Clean driving
record necessary. $5/hour. 966-3269.
M AINTENANCE PER SO N for apartments
close to ASU. Need experience. Part-time.
C all 894-0521, Monday-Friday, 9-5.
M A R R IO TT’ S M O U N TAIN Shadow s
needs certified lifeguards mornings and
aerobic instructors. 5641 E. Lincoln Drive.
948-7111.
MODELS: TAKE the first step to opening
up a new world. Top agency in Denver and
Phoenix is looking for new faces- K risti’s,
representing models in New York, Los
Angeles, Chicago and Europe. Fashion
shows, print ads, prom otions, film extras,
and com m ercial print. Don’t let a photo
studio guide your career with useless
photos. Come and talk to the professionals
at our exclusive agency in Scottsdale. C all
Susie at 946-9000.
M O NEY... BEAU TY... W isdom... didn’t
your mother tell you that these are the 3
elem ents you need for happiness? W ell,
our highly inovative and dynam ic company
would like you to see your way to fulfilling
your money goals. C a ll us at 893-0665 for
the scoop.
SuperShuttle
Airport Ground Transportation
Ladies/M en,
J o in the g row in g team of cu sto m e r servicerprofessio nals p roviding airport g ro u n d transp orta
tion th ro ug h ou t the greater m etropolitan P h o e r
nix area. W e are seeking qualified in dividu als
w h o are áva ilab le to w ork F T & P T , w eekends,
flex ib le sc h e d u le s. T ra in in g c la s s e s to be held
M a rch 4-24.
Requirem ents: M ust be 21 y e a rs old; valid A riz
o n a driver’s license; p ro o f o f citizensh ip; M V R
report.
P lease a p p ly in p erso n at:
1915 E. Buchanan, Phoenix
M o n .-T h u r., 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
EO E
State Press
Paae 1V
Tuesday, February 28, Í989
■ a s H b iM
h elp w a n ted
JEW ELRY
PERSONALS
TRANSPORTATION
TRAVEL
AD O PTIO N
NEED 3 sales trainees for afternoon
shifts, Monday-Friday. Up to $6/hour
guaranteed. Mark, 966-5765.
CASH PAID. Jewelry of a ll kinds, including
gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc.
Rare Lion, 921 S. M ill Ave., Tempe
Center, 968-6074.
TINA COLEMAN: M ay a ll your wishes
come true and a il the tacks fly! Happy
Birthday! Love, Li-.
AAA DRIVEAW AY. Free cars to most
major cities. G as allow ances available. 21
or older. C all 279-2000, then 4530.
SPRING BREAK f^azatlan Express. Trip
for 2 valued at $400. W ill take best offer.
835-6093.
TO THE Sigm a Chi Coaches for the Kappa
team: You guys are awesome! Same time,
same place, next year?!
B A BY TO Adopt. W anted by happily
m arried C a lifo rn ia co u p le . L e g a l.
Expenses paid. CaH collect, Kitty or John,
213845-9638.___________________ ___
A LL STATES Briveaway- Cars available1
21 or older. 992-5200.
TRIDELT JEN N Y Harrison: Happy 19th
Birthday! Tonight w ill be a blast and so will
next week! Can’t wait. Vicki.
TRAVEL
FREE
CAMERA
LOANER
With any Travel T o u r
or Cruise
TRI SIGMA- We m ade a great team!
Thanks for your winning spirit! Love,
Kappa.
AIRLINE TICKETS. No restrictions. Chica
go, Detroit, St. Louis, Philadelphia, New
O rleans, other cities. $260. 947-9233.
PETS
CONDO IN Acapulco from 3/6 to 3/13. I
paid $400, you pay $300. C all Eric,
947-4264.
NEW ENGLAND Brother/Sister Cam ps
(Mass). Mab-Kee-Nac for boys/Danbee for
girls. Counselor positions for program
specialists: A ll team sports, especially
baseball, basketball, fie ld hockey, soccer,
and volleyball; 25 tennis' openings; also
archery, riflery, and biking; other openings
include performing arts, fine arts, year
book, photography, cooking, sewing,
rollerskating, rocketry, ropes, camp craft;
all waterfront activities (swimming, skiing,
sailing, w indsurfing, canoeing/kayak).
Inquire J&D Cam ping (boys), 190 Linden
Avenue; Glen Ridge, NJ 07028; Action
Camping (girls), 263 M ain Road; Montvilfe,
NJ, 07045. Phone (boys) 201-429-8522;
(girls) 201-316-6660.
NEW HOT Dog restaurant across fromn
Sky Harbor Airport. Flexible weekday
hour?, 267-7464._____________________
NOW ACCEPTIN G applications for fitness
trainers. Some experience needed, men
and women, fu ll and part-tim e positions
open. C all Arizona Body Sculpturing at
968-1105 between 9 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.
Monday-Friday. Ask for John Allen.
O FFICE POSITION, part-tim e or full-tim e.
Must be able to work Monday/W ednesday/
Friday 8 a.m.-1 p.m. B asic computer skills
helpful. C all 273-7248.
PART-TIME W ORK, full-tim e pay. Great
summer and school year opportunity for
those who qualify. $5/hour plus bonuses.
Must have neat personal appearance and
be able to work 4-9 p.m. Monday-Friday.
For personal interview ca ll M r Forman at
921-2897.
S7/HOUR
TO START
NO EXP. NECESSARY
Sell industrial tools
and supplies for na
tional firm . W e w ill
train. 2 shifts
a v a ila b le . W alk to
ASU.
Call Dave G reen
254-TOOL
PART-TIME JO B, custom er service and
clerical work. Flexible hours, close to
campus. $5/hour. Contact Matt, 894-9175.
PART-TIME H ELP wanted for disabled
male student, two days a week. Dependa
bility a must. 966-8450.
PERSO NAL SEC R ETA R Y for busy grad
student, 5-6 hours/week. Pay negotiable.
Responsibilities include billing, filing, odd
jobs. C all Mike, 967-1247.
RESTAURANT D ELIVERY Driver. Flexi
ble hours, reliable person with reliable car.
Call after 11 a.m. 423-0095.
RETAIL SWIM shop needs a m. and
Saturday help. Experience with swimwear
and accessories helpful. C all 264-7774,
10-6, Monday-Friday.
SUM M ER JO B S in Alaska with ARA
Outdoor World. Positions in all aspects of
hotel operations. Located in D enali Park
(Mount McKinley), Alaska. Sign up for 3/16
interview at student employment, 2nd floor
Student Services building.
SUM M ER JO B S available. Salary plus
board and room. Positions are: Life
guards, office attendants, snack bar atten
dants, maintenance, com bination cook.
W rite to Astoria M ineral Springs, Inc. Star
Route box 18, Ja ckson, Wyoming 83001.
SUM M ER W ORK. The Southwestern
Company is now interviewing for full-tim e
summer work positions in sales and
business management. W ork back East
and earn college credit and $407 a week
plus gain valuable experience. Call
222-8114 for an interview.
T E LE M A R K E T E R S W AN TED . Fund
raising for local law enforcem ent organiza
tion. On-campus location, $6 to $8/hour
guaranteed. Flexible evening hours. Call
Mr. Lind, 264-3426.
TEM PE YM CA. Part-tim e after school
child care positions available. Apply 7070
South Rural Road.
WAITER POSITIONS available at Salt
Cellar Restaurant, 550 N. Hayden Road.
947-1963, apply after 4 p.m.
W AITRESS PART-TIM E. Apply in person
at Pete’s 19th Tee at 1405 N. M ill Avenue,
Tempo (1 m ile North M ill Avenue bridge),
Rolling H ills G olf Course.
je w e l r y
CASH F O fl gold, diam onds, sterling, etc.
We have Sun Devil watches and Sparhies.
M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. M ill, Suite
101, Tempo. 968-5967.
FREE LOST/FOUND
LO ST ELEPHAN T pin, silver. Wednesday,
February 22nd. Reward. Leave message,
461-7110.
ON-CAMPUS
Are you hinny?
S ig n up now for the
U .S . C o lle g e C o m e d y
C om petition in the M U
A ctiv ity C e n te r o r call
9 6 5 -M U A B .
CO CKER SPANIEL, 6 weeks old. Male,
buff, AKC registered. If interested call
839-8413.
FO R SALE: Round trip ticket to Denver
from M arch 3rd til M arch 10th. $185 or
best offer. C a ll 784-7419 for more details.
FR EE 1989 International Youth Hostel
Pass with purchase of Eurail Pass. Both
issued on the spot!. Am erican Youth
Hostels, Inc. Arizona Council, 1026 N. 9th
Street, Phoenix. 254-9803, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
Monday-Friday.
SERVICES
PERSONALS
$25 O FF
AG D M ARYELLEN: Happy 21st B-day!
Sorry this is late! Now you can buy the
booze! Love, Claudette.
Your next O u b Med vacation (air
& package) valued at min.
$700.* per person. New book
ings only, please. Limit one per
person, per reservation.
ATO MATT, Scott from Oklahoma: I like
your tie! Guns N’ Roses rule?!?! Love,
Sigm a Kappa Jen and Erika.
Club Med
AXO MOM Gayelyn: You are the best
mom ever! And I love ya tons! Thanks for
always being there and being the raddest!
No more pledgeship! Activation! Luv, your
dot.
DG DOG Ju lie M.- Congratulations on
becom ing initiated! You are the best! All
my love, Leslie.
DOM INO'S PIZZA tuition giveaway March
15th. Order your Sun Devil Spark Year
book today to be entered In the
sweepstakes.
G IG G LEFACE AND Frank Lloyd WrightFriday Night Thriller: Dr Jeckyl and Mr
Hyde meet M r Rude and Obnoxious.
Alcohol does strange things. -The Tues
day Twins.
*
JEANNIE- W E w ill Rage in California and
T J! Lookin’ forward to It! Tans are mandat
ory! FF, Kim.
M S ANONYM OUS- what fun we have!
Here’s to Tropicana Juan Valdez morning
chats, not so secret desires, ping pong
matches, TVATPA, DHD’s, Dragon Lady
(you’re such a turn off), M iss Soul Train
(very scary), skeletons in the closet.
Friends always, Florence Nightengale.
SIGM A CHI Boy: You can really party.
You’re fantastic. I think you're hot. A
Secret Adm irer.
SIGM A K APPA Snerd.Starkero- Congratu
lations! Who is the next exchange going to
be with??! There’s only one right answer
to that question! Love, Kristen.
SIGM A KAPPA: The men of Sigm a Pi
congratulate you on your successful Rush.
iSuch a collection of quality ladies can only
look forward to nothing but success at
ASU .
______________
SIGM A PI Congratulates: Pledge of the
sem ester- Shea Stickler, and Active of the
sem ester- Scott Hume. Good work, guys!
Reservations by
TR 4 V U MAG/C\
40% O FF Spiral perm s given with spiral
rods for beutiful, long, flowing curls.
Ricardo, 230-5259.
A SO FT Touch Electrolysis. Student
discounts. Remove unwanted hair, perma
nently. 12 years experience, near ASU.
C all 829-7829.
ELEC T R O LY S IS - P ER M A N E N T hair
removal. Remove unwanted hair forever.
Student discount. C a ll for more informa
tion, 969-6954.
HOW TO get a better girl than you think
you deserve. Women’s secrets revealed
for college men. For details write Datch,
PO box 80187, Phoenix, AZ 85060.
INCOME TAX preparation, Federal/State,
experienced, reasonable rates. Free pickup/delivery. 230-3544.
M O D ELS N EE D ED - Com plim entary
makeovers. Stylist/make-up artist updat
ing portfolio. Contact Afton, 963-2775.
PERM SPECIAL at Fresco, a new hair
salon in the Lemon Terrace Plaza. 20%
discount with this ad. C all 967-5799 for
appointment. Offer good til 4/1.
R E S E A R C H A S S IS T A N C E . Largest
library ..of information in U.S. Toll-free
hotline: 860851-0222.
The Club Med Experts
226 N. Gilbert
892-8477
HAWAII $389- Includes 5 nights, roundtrip
air. For details call Travel Services Inter
national, 967-8383.
INDIANAPOLIS O NE-W AY ticket. Leave
Sunday, M arch 5. $75/offer. C a ll
_______
784-9846.
ROUNDTRIP AIRLINE ticket Sky Harbor
to Ontario, California. 3/4-3/12, $40.
Mario, 921-3073.
________
SKI UTAH Spring Break. 6 days lodging/
lifts, transportation, parties/race. $359.
C all John. 8298684.
PASSPORT
PHOTOS
ONLY
$095
PANDATRAVEL
An Agent of W ilson Camera
894-8337
204 E. U n iv e rs ity
With coupon.
Expires 3-8-89
J U N N Y ’J
(Desmerr
PIZZA & PUB
TRJW6L
SIGM A PI congratulate daughters of Athe
na: Angela DeForge, Kerri H ollis, Kelly
Johnson, Lynn Kiko, Sue Schm id and Liz
W hiting. May you be as positive an asset
to Sigm a Kappa as you have been to us.
$ 1 .7 8
SNU GGLE: HAVE a great break. Be
careful. Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do
(ha-ha)! Stud.
60 oz.
Pitchers
Greate Memories
that Last
a Lifetime
THETA BUDDY Staab. how’ve you been?
Ju st your secret Theta thinkin about ya!
Theta love.______
______
.
TIGGER, I’M so happy you’re back!! I luv
you soooo much! Your sweetheart,
A s k A b o u t Our
g ift'R e g is try
For
graduations
or
Honeymoons
968-6666
F re e D e liv e ry
to A S U Area
839
TRAVEL
m
-I8 5 5
a i r p o r t
TEETER-TOTTER-A-THON
2nd A nnu al
R o b b ie Paige
M em orial
An Agent of
Wilson Camera
894-8337
204 E. U n iv e rs ity
With coupon
Expires 3-8-89
TYPING/W ORD
PROCESSING
$1.25 A page, block from ASU. Same day
service. 967-6034.
$1.50 AND Up. AAA Q uality work and
laser printer. 33 years experience. Call
Marian, 839-4269..............
$1.50/PAGE.
Quick turnaround. Call
V irginia anytime, 831-8450.'
ACCEN TS IN Typing. Typing service near
ASU . Q uick turnaround. Over 30 years
secretarial experience. 948-9982.
ACCU RATE word processing can help
you make that A... Can Terrill, 345-7204.
$1/page. Q uick turnaround available.
CtLBIRT JRAVU
T a n k Up
Tuesdays
SORORITY O FFICERS- Thank you for
attending dinner, we hope your semester
w ill be a success. See you again, Delta
Sigs.________ ___________ _________
PANDATRAVEL
PARK
s p r in g
AND TRAVEL
e > F X .P ^ s p e c c a i
402 S. 40th St.
1 B lock South o f W ashington
R ight Behind Greyhound Park
D A IL Y WITH THIS CO U PO N
Febru ary 28
10 a.m.
thru
M arch 3
10 a.m.
•5 MINUTES FROM YOUR CAR TO
YOUR AIRLINE.
SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA
•LESS EXPENSIVE THAN PAR KIN G
AT T H E AIRPO RT.
O il C h a n g e , F ilte r a n d L u b e
with
Delta T a u Delta
•LESS HASSLE, W E H AN D LE TH E
DRIVING ANO THE BAGS.
$19.95
R E G U LA R $4.00 D AILY RATE
•FREE 24 HOUR SHUTTLE SERVICE
A N D S E C U R IT Y : F E N C IN G .
LIG H TIN G & PATRO L.
•NEW AUTO SERVICE CENTER
AND LIM O USINE S ER VICE.
get
A SCH O LARS Helper. Editing, thesis and
disertations. Free pick-up and delivery
included in service. CaH for prices.
8838691, 488-2910.
ASU AREA. Typing, word processing,
editing. Fast, accurate. C a ll anytime.
Prices com petitive, negotiable. 966-2186.
C ER EU S W ORD Processing, quality guar
anteed. Fast, experienced. Term papers,
resum es, form letters, dictaphones, edit
ing. 947-7796.
FLYING FIN G ERS offers typeset quality
with a M ac II and laser printer. CaH Susan,
945-1500.
FO RM ER ASU staffers! Word Perfect,
Xerox Memorywriters. Experienced with
APA, M LA, graduate school, etc. Gradutate students and faculty work welcome.
CaH Donna or Joan, 945-6302.
(KINKO’S PA PE R S make the grade).
K inko's typesets papers, resumes, fliers
and much more. 933 E. University,
Tempe. C all 966-2035 for details.
into
the
action.
M ESA SECR ETAR IAL Service. Term
papers, theses, dissertations, resumes.
Q uality work on laser printer. 844-1876.
P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P IN G /w o rd processing (letter quality) service. Low
rates, quick turnaround, Tempe area.
897-1832.
Q UALITY TYPING- proof-reading- editing
next day guaranteed. 897-1038.
Q UICK QUALITY typing. Papers, reports,
resum es $1/page.. 24 hour service avail
able $2/page. Northeast Phoenix location.
Ginny, 956-5163.
SHO RT O F tim e? I can help. Reasonable.
Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in
academ ic. C all Jessie 945-5744.
W ORD PRO CESSING— $1.50 per page.
Resum es, design, editing, & laser printing
available. C all 921-3770 evenings &
weekends.
_______
.
______
state
press
W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c re ta ria l
services. 23 years experience. Student
discount. SW comer, M iller and Chapar
ral. 994-8145.
W ORD PRO CESSIN G IBM PC, letter
quality printing. Fast, low cost. CaH Jackie,
831-8635.
W ORD PRO CESSING . Letter quality, fast,
accurate. Carrie, 990-2066.
W AN TED
BRO KEN TO YS wanted for toy safety
study. Toys must be intended for children
ages 3 8 years old. Please call John,
968-9501.
?
A
O V ER SEAS JO B S. $900-$2000/month,
summer/year round. AH countries, a ll
fields. Free inform ation. W rite U C , PO box
52-AZ03, Corona Del Mar, C A 92625.
TUTOR NEEDED for econom ics. CaH
8298358.
W ANTED: PRO LO G Tutor. Someone Who
can spend a lot of time over Spring Break.
W ill pay big bucks! A-star alogorithm, Al.
Mark. 8298627.
Have your car serviced
while you're away!
AD O PTIO N
Studant Special
PLEA S E H ELP us to be the wonderful
parents we know we can be. W e are
happily married but want a child to make
us a fam ily. W e w ill provide a good, warm,
secure home for a newborn. CaH our
attorney collect 24 hours at 408-288-7100.
A-180.
ADOPTION: LOVING couple, married 8
years, w ishes to adopt infant. W ill provide
a warm, caring, and happy home for your
baby. Expenses paid. Legal and confiden
tia l. C a ll Ja n e t an d B ob co lle ct,
718891-7497.
sports
State Prêta
Tuesday, February 28,1989
Page 20
CUP ft SAVE
CAMPUS
AUDIO
2 1/24
Self-Serve
Copies
966-2695
OPEN
M-Sat 10-6
10 32 8. Terrece, S eite 1
Tem pe, A Z 85281
j
If
\
$19900
. -
R e g .$219°*
JV C
JVC Package Deal
R-18 A M -FM Cassette w/Digital Tuning, Auto
Reverse, separate bass and treble and clock.
M IU
8 1/2x11 20 lb. white
Bond - Any Quantity
968-7771
, • JV C
M s s .fd & f,u d e s JV C C S 4 1 4 sP e a k e r s *
3 M b wed o f
Financing and Installation Available
M S on University
O n e C o U p o n Per C usto m er
Expires 3-29-89
_______
CAMPUS
AUDIO
FREE
DETAILING
c, B O D Y
body work over $300
C h e c k O u r P ric e s
CALL
.E
U n iv e rs ity
g"
T O D -Z D j j
717 S. H A C I E N D A SUITE #101
1 5
C h e c k O u r P ric e s
%
!
j *
O FF
i- 1
a n y d e t a ilin g
s
■
■
g
Un
n iv
iv ee rs
rsiity
U
g
CALL N O W 921-2048
- Ç r? p 7 'V
}
MAKE THE MOST OF
YOUR SPRING BREAK
with Sun Reflectors & a Large selection
of Suntan Lotions, Sunscreens & Hair Lighteners
from: CAMPUS DRUGS 10% OFF w ith th is ad
712 s. college
O il & Filter T H E
C h an g e DHOOCNTDOAR
_____
_x_y|
'm
Hondas Only
717 S. H acienda Dr.
o n ly . . .
C all 967-7282
o
_______________ _
Installed
Reg. *299°°
'
N orm al Installation I n d u d e d l
Financing Available
O n e C o u p o n Per C usto m er I
MS & Farmer
3 b ib West of
MM on Univenky
CAMPUS
AUDIO
966-2695
OPEN
M-Sat 10-6
-M IU
XfARMEE
717 S. H A C I E N D A SUITE #101
U r e a t K e f l e c t io n s
$249°°
8400 RT A M -FM Cassette with separate bass j
and treble, auto reverse, high power, includes I
Clarion 6261 6” 2-way speakers.
miu
M
U
K r im n i
‘ OCMon _e»ee«T"sJj |''JP’
C larion Package Deal
OPEN
M-Sat 10-6
W
O
N
9 21-2048
p i
$19900
Installed
Reg. *209”
M etrosound Anti-Theft Pull-O ut
A M -FM Cassétte with digital tuning, auto
reverse, separate bass and treble, loudness
^f^rm^ontrol. Quantities limited - hurry!
3 bib West ôf
Financing and Installation Available
„5
O n e C o u p o n Per C u s to m e r
M B on Univenky
.
CAMPUS
AUDIO
966-2695
M
M
.
»
»
.
25% Off All
Radar Detectors
and Personal Stereos in stock.
Bel Fox • Toshiba and. morel
OPEN
M-Sat 10-6
Financing and Installation A vailable ]
O n e C o u p o n Per C ustom er
Expires 3-28-89
MSS. Farmer
3 M b W ed of
MM on Univenky
L O W E S T P R IC E - S M A R T A D V IC E
YOUR
PH O TO N EED S
K odak o r Ilford Photo Paper
tg tt
i.e. Kodak Polycontrast 11 R C (E, F or N); Ilford
Multigrade III R C Rapid (any surface). Sorry,
t/customer; Valid with coupon.
$995
W ils o n
A SU TEM PE 204 E. University 894-8337
■ ■ & ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
(B ehm dttie Chuckbox)
Hours: M o n .-F it 7:30 a.m -5:30 p.m. • Tues & Thurs *til 8
(Tues., Thurs., & Sat. by Appt. O n ly)
FREE Oil &
Filter Change
with any major repair over $75
(4 qts. oil and filter)
w/coupon, Honda only
_____
Castrol 20/50 G TX
THE
HONDA
DOCTOR
717 S . H acienda Or. «104, Tam pa
Buy any sized yogurt and get the next
«rev
sm aller size FREE!
Offer good only with coupon.
H O N EY TREA T Y O G U R’km
¿Emm C all 967-7282
"Expires 3-14-8?
Hours: M o a -F ri. 7:30 a.ra.-5:30 p.m • T u ts & Thurs ’tU 8
_________ ______
894-6924
20% OFF
ANYTHING
9-hole golf course in Tempe.
Lighted driving range (till 8 p.m.)
(254 draft w/every bucket)
Exp. 3-15-89
•
W O RLD FA M O U S OFFER
GOLF* SHALIMAR
Tee Times 838-0488 • 2032 E. Golf
TEM PE CEN TER
on your 1st visit special
Newcomer Get Acquainted O ffer
948-7771
10 32 8. Terrace, S aite 1
Tempe, A Z 85281
This is our way of showing you why
we're so popular
■ ■ ■ H iM H m in ra m m a n M m
_Exgires 3-29-89